wr I. bi i SARE TE Eee TWILIGHT, b 2A golden glory in the sky, Mirrored in waves which strive no moze; {The ery of night birds, flitting by, ~ Ard lo! the day is o'er. {The crescent moon disc, rising slow, With one attendant, radiant sphere, tA cloud across the sunset’s glow, And lo! the night is here! —Ninette M. Lowater, in Youth’s Companion. ———————me The Sword and the Altar. BI WALKER Y. PAGE. ] MONG the almost innumerable inei- dents of our Civil Wer, heroic, pethet- ic and otherwise, which from time to time have found a place in the col- umns of the lead- ing magazines and newspapers of the country, I have failed to see any mention of the sim- ple story which I am about to relate, which, while it is ‘mot wholly destitute of pathos, will at ithe same time serve to illustrate most forcibly the undercurrent of genuine religious sentiment and personal piety ithat pervaded all ranks and conditions of the men engaged in that fratricidal strife—an undercurrent none the less deep and strong that the surface was stained with the blood of brothers and strewn with the wrecks of war—the dying and the dead. In was in the early spring of 1862, rwhen the Federal forces, under Major- General B——, were advancing on that memorable campeign in the valley of [Virginia. Every foot of ground, from ithe Potomac to Staunton, had already ‘been fought over—at one time occu- pied by Federal hosts, at another by Confederate. General B had advanced his lines as far as Middletown, in the upper valley and beyond, while the Confed- erate army, under General J , Was occupying the Luray valley, near Staunton and Harrisonburg—made fa- mous in history by the not far distant battle field of Port Republic. It was one of those calm, quiet Sun- day mornings, suggestive rather of peace on earth and good will to men than of the fiery passions born of war and bloodshed, when General B rode out from his headquarters in the town, accompanied by his personal staff, on a short tour of reconnoissance. It was a sightly pageant—that well ap- pointed band, with their bright sabres flashing in the sunlight, and their gaily caparisoned steeds impatient of the control of bit and bridle. An hour’s rapid ride through field and wood brought them in sight of a emall country church, nestled away just within the vestibules of a forest, with its modest spire still pointing heavenward, having not yet had the desecrating hand of war laid upon it. As the cavalcade approached they ‘became aware of the fact that a con- gregation had assembled, and that the services had already commenced. Concluding that he was still by several miles within his picket lines, General B—— ordered a ‘halt, and after a brief consultation with his officers, and the stationing of four sentries commanding all the ap- proaches to the building, the whole cavalcade dismounted, and leaving itheir horses in charge of their order- lies, proceeded in a body to the church. The beautiful morning service—the (distinguishing feature of Episcopal 'worship—was just ending as this un- expected accession to the congregation entered. ". The organ wag pealing jorth its al- most human cry of ‘‘Jesus, Saviour of my soul, let me to Thy bosom fly,” as, quietly and with most respectful solemnity, this small but distingusihed band of officers took their seats. Small as was that little country church, there were numbers of empy pews, and those that were occupied were occupied mostly by women and children, with a small contingent of gray-haired men. There was a most noticeable absence of men worshipers—only two or three old men with whitened locks, three others, two young men and a manly boy who had seen scarcely four- teen summers, all three dressed in Confederete uniform. The momentary ripple of excitement occasioned by so unlooked-for a pres- ence soon gave way before the spell of pious devotion which pervaded that little sanctuary as though some angel had whispered to their hearts: ‘Peace, be still I” And now came from the chancel the voice of the aged pastor, as he an- nounced his text—a voice deep, sonor- ous, and pathetic. Standing there, with his long white hair and flowing beard, his very presence seemed a ser- mon in itself; but from the moment he announced his text: . “Come unto Me, all ye that are weary and heavy- laden, and I wil give you rest,” every eye was riveted upon him, every ear was strained to catch his holy utter- ances. He stood within the chancel rail, without manuscript or note. He said? ‘I come to you this Sabbath morning, my beloved brethern, with a gracious message from heaven. I come as the embassador of Christ, to offer rest to the weary, and relief to the heavy- laden—rest, sweet abiding rest, to earth’s toil-worn and sin-laden suffer- era ‘‘Let us first consider, my brethren, who it is that makes this gracious offer. When I tell you it is Christ Himself, mighty to save all who come unto God through Him, you will re- cognize not only the ability, but the willingness of the gracious offerer. We all know, my brethren, what rest means to the hungering and thirsting and | soul. It is this He offers you on the sole condition that you will come. His invitation is: ‘Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and | be that hath no money, come ye, buy and eat—jyes, | milk without money and without price. {Incline your ear and come unto Me, come, buy wine and and your soul shalllive.’ “This gracious Saviour offers a balm for every wounded heart in Divine presence this morning—the oil of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness. There are many of you, I know, who greatly need this Divine Comforter. Those habiliments of woe (the ladies of the congregation were all in mourning) speak to me of bleeding hearts beneath them. To you my text commends it- self with special emphasis. The grave has shut forever from your eyes the loved forms and faces of those who were once your joy and pride. Did I say ‘forever? Oh, no! not forever! Hear the righteous Job, and let his holy confidence be your abiding con- solation: ‘I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the earth; and though after my skin worms destroy thisbody, yet in my flesh shall I see God, whom I shall see for myself?’ ‘“Yes, my beloved brethren, be as- sured there will come a time when =all these tears shall be wiped away, when our loved and lost ones shall be re- »stored to us. when reunited we shall sing together the song of the redeemed. ‘“Come! This is the only condition He imposes. Come just as you are. Weary and heavy-laden, it may be, with the burden of your sins, heavily oppressed with sorrows manifold, many of you, like Rachel, weeping for her children, and who would not be com- forted because they were not. Come to the only Fountain that can wash away sin, the only true balm and con- solation for wounded hearts; come, for earth hath no sorrow that heaven cannot heal. ‘“Tis Jesus bids you come. Will you slight His gracious invitation? Come, my beloved brethren, to the ta- ble of your Lord, which is spread for you this day; come with your bruised and broken hearts. He has said: I will refresh you.” Come to the foot of the cross this morning. View your crucified Redeemer agonizing there. See in His feet and hands the nail prints, and the spear thrust in His side. Behold that crown of thorns, and hear that mocking ery of ‘Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews.” Was ever other king so crowned ? ‘Let us commemerate, my brethren, that scene in our hearts this day. Let us feed on Him in our hearts by faith with thanksgiving.” The above is but a meagre sketch of the sermon of that eloquent old man. When he closed, there were but few dry eyes in that hushed and awed con- gregation. Perhaps it was expected that the visitors would retire quietly at the close of the discourse. Butno! they remained and participated in the ante-communion service, and when the communicants were invited to approach the sacred table, the church presented a scene as rare as it. was impressive; eight Fedeial soldiers, together with their general, and three Confederate officers, including the boy, knelt to- gether around that holy table and par- took of the broken body and shed blood of a common Lord and Saviour. Not until all had communed, and the old pastor had invoked a blessing upon all, did these Christian soldiers offer to retire; and when they arose to go, it seemed as though they were loath to quit the sacred precincts of that old country church where they had doubtless been brought nearer to God and nearer to their loved omnes, worshipers of the same Al- mighty Father, in temples far away. With bowed heads and deeply rev- erential manner, they filed two and two out of the church, led by the com- mander, the congregation remaining in their pews until all had passed out. This soldierly cavalcade, once more ine the saddle, formed an imposing group to look upon; the general, a man of rare personal presence, seared on a magnificent charger, and sur- rounded by his staff officers, each of whom was but second to his com- mander. The spell of the sanctuary was still upon them, for as yet not a word had been spoken, and they waited in silence for the command “Forward.” It did not come. Their leader seemed pon- dering upon some thought which had taken possession of his mind to the exclusion, for the moment, of the sol- dier instinct of mental alertness. Suddenly he spoke. ‘‘Cell en or- derly,” he said. ‘When the soldier came forward, he thus addressed him: ‘“Orderly, go to the church and pre- sent General B——’s compliments to the three gentlemen dressed in Con- federate uniform, and say that he would be glad to sce them for a mo- ment.” Without a moment’s hesitation, the three came forward, accompanied by the orderly. After the salute, which was gracefully acknowledged by the gen- eral and his entire staff, the general, addressing them as ‘‘soldiers,” said : ‘I requested your presence, gentle- men, because I suppose you cannot possibly be aware that you are several miles within our lines, which have been very recently moved forward. I do not know how you propose to get back to your command, but thisI do know, that any way you may choose will be attend with much risk and perhaps cap- ture as prisoners of war. After what has transpired to-dav, I feel anxious that you should get back without being subjected to the danger and annoy- ance of arrest ard probably indefinite detention.” Then, tearing a leaf from his pocket portfolio, he wrote: Give the bearers safe escort beyond the Federal lines. Signed B y Major-General Commandin, . This he repeated three simes: only. when he wrote the boy's passport, he said: ‘‘Confederate boy soldier.” He bowed gracefully as he handed each one his passport. As he handed the boy his, he said: “My son, you are young to be a soldier; Thope you may live through this terrible conflict to be a blessing and a comfort to your mother.” The boy’s heart was fouched, for as he turned away, unbidden tears were in his eyes. The general continued: ‘Gentle. men, please present our thanks to your worthy pastor for his sermon to-day.” So, saying, “Forward! double quick!” and almost before the three Confeder- ates had rejoined their friends in the church, the Federals were out of sight in the distance. . When five or six minutes had elapsed in discussing the event of the day, and before the congregation had dispersed to their respective homes, they were startled by the appearance of a horse- man in their midst, riding a noble steel, black as a raven’s wing, except where his glowing hide was flecked with foam. The rider, who, at the head of his command, sat like a centaur, as he drew rein in front of the church, wag recognized at once by all the congre- gation as the famous commander of the ‘Black Horse Cavalry.” When in- formed of the character of their distinguished visitors, the part they had taken in the services of the day, and the generous manner in which the Confederate soldiers had been treated, he made no comment, but merely re- marked: “We knew they were here, and rode hard to capture them, and should have done so, but for the time consumed in a skirmish with their picket line.” ‘““‘After what has happened.” con. tinued the famous chief of the ‘‘Black Horse,” “Iam glad that we did not arrive in time. Even now we might cut them off before reaching Middle- town ; but let it pass! We will return to our headquarters empty-handed, as we came.” The Confederate horsemen dis- appeered as suddenly as they had come, leaving the congregation stand- ing in that old church-yard dazed and uncertain whether it had not all been a Sunday mornings waking dream, the baseless fabric of some distorted vision.—Blue end Gray. ere ee A Durable Watch. After hanging on the limb of a tree all winter, exposed to the rain and snow, a valuable gold watch and chain belonging to O’Hara Darlington, who lives a short distance above Sharps- burg, Penn., has been discovered, and to-day is keeping time just as it did before it was lost early in last Novem- ber. Mr. Darlington owns the old Darlington mansion with its broad acres at Guyasuta, where the noted In- dian chieftain bearing the same name is supposed to be buried. Last fall he was in the woods superintending the burning of some brush. The day was warm and sultry, and on his way home he carried his coat and vest over his arm. At the supper table he had occasion to look at his watch, but it was not in the accus- tomed pocket, neither was there any trace of the heavy gold chain with which the watch had been attached to the vest. A careful search failed to reveal the missing valuables. Hastily leaving the supper room, Darlington caelied his hired men, six in zumber, who in turn gathered together a large number of neighbors. Procuring lanterns and rakes, the party went to the woods and spent the entire night in searching for the miss- ing watch and chain. Eerly the next morning Mr. Darlington were back in the woods again, and the search was kept up for two weeks. The entire woodland was raked from one end to the other, but no trace of the watch and chain was found. The search was finally abandoned and Mr. Darlington gave up his watch for lost. One afternoon recently Fred and Frank Stout, sons of Harry A. Stout, manager of Tibb’s glass house, Sharps- burg, went to the wood for a stroll. The two boys had not gone far till one of them had his hat knocked from his head by the overhanging branch of a tree. Glancing up to see what he had run against, he was astonished to see right before his eyes and within easy reach a gold watch and chain. The boys approached the limb to which the watch was hanging, cau- tiously, lest by some awkward move- ment a pretty optical illusion should be dispelled. However, they soon be- came convinced that they had not been made the victims of a trick, and a few moments later they were flying homeward, with the watch dnd chain safely stowed away in one of their pockets. When Mr. Stout came home in the evening and was shown the watch he, too, was greatly surprised, for along with a party of other neigh- bors he had gone on an all-night search for that watch five months be- fore. How the watch came to be in the position in which it was found is a mystery. —Pittsburg Dispatch, —_— An Artist in Paper. It is remarkable how many wonder- ful children there are in the world in latter days. Mrs. George Dunlap, who is the head and centre of the children’s department of the World’s Fair, re- ceives almost daily letters giving an account of some infant prodigy in that especial region. One of the most unique is a youth who produces most interesting results with paper and scissors. His mother reads him a story, which he illustrates with figures, trees, houses and animals, all made of tissue paper, cut with scissors. It is said that somewhere in the Eleventh Century there was a young prince who excelled in this art, which has been lost to the world ever since.— Detroit Free Press. Ee ein There are no native kangaroos except on tke continent of Australia. — REV. DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON. An Elocyent Discourse on a Subject Seldom Selected. TEXT = *®¥nd Mirtam,the prophetess, the sis- ter of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand, and i all the women went out after her with timbrels | and with dances. And Miriam answered | them, ‘Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath tri- | umphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.”—Exodus xv., 20, 21. Sermonizers are naturally so busy in get- ' ting the Israelites safely through the parted | Red sea and the Egyptians submerged in the returning waters that but little time is or- | dinarily given to what the Lord’s people did after they got well up high and dry on the beach. That wasthe beach of the Red sea, which is at its greatest width 200 miles and | at 2s least width 12 miles. Why is the ad- | jective ‘‘red” used in describing this water? i It is called the Red sea because the moun- tains on its western coast look as though sprinkled with brick dust, and the water is colored with red seaweed and has red ! zoophyte and red coral. This sea was cut by the keels of Egyptian, | Pheenician and Arabic shipping. It was no insignificant pond or puddle on the beach of which my text calls us to stand. I hear upon it the sound of a tambourine, for which the timbrel was only another name—an in- strument of music made out of a circular hoop, with pieces of metal fixed in the sides of it, which made a jingling sound, and over which hoop a piece of parch- ment was distended, and this was beaten by the knuckles of the performer. The Israelites, standing on the beach of the Red sea, were making music on their de- liverance from the pursuing Egyptians, and I hear the Israelitish men with their deep bass voices, and I hear the timbrel of Miriam as she leads the women in their jubilee. Rather lively instruments, yousay, for religious ser- vice, the timbrel or tambourine. But Ithink God sanctioned it. And I rather think we will have to put a little more of the festive into our religious services and drive out the dolorous and funereal, and the day may come when the timbrel will resume its place in the sanctuary. But that which occupied the attention of all the men and women of that Israelitish host was the celebration of their victory. They had crossed. They had triumphed. They were free. More wonder was this victory and defeat than when the hosts of Richard overcame the hosts of Saladin at Azotus, than when at Bannockburn Scotland was set free; than when the Earl of Northumberland was driven back at Branham Moor, than when at the battle of Wakefleld York was slain, than when at Bosworth Field Richard was left dead, than when the Athenians under Mil- tiades at Marathon put the Persians to flight, for this victory of my text was gained with- out sword or catapult or spear. The weapon was a lifted and prostrated sea. ‘‘And Miriam, the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand, and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances. And Miriam answered them Bing ye to the Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously ; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.” Brooklyn Tabernacle to-day feels much as Moses and Miriam did when they stood on the banks of the Red sea after their safe emergence from the waters. By the help of God and the generosity of our friends here and elsewhere our $140,000 of floating church debt is forever gone, and this house, which, with the ground upon which it stands, represents $410,000, I this day recon- secrate to God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost. A stranger might ask how could this church get into debt to an amount that would build several large churches? My answer is, Waves of destruc- tion, stout as any that ever rolled across the Red sea of my text. Examine ail the pages of church history and all the pages of the world's history and show me an organization, sacred or secular, that ever had to build three great structures, two of them destroyed by fire. Take any of your biggest life insurance companies, or your biggest storehouses, or your biggest banks, or your biggest newspaper establish- ments and let them have to build three times on the same foundation, and it would cost them a struggle if not demolition. My text speaks of the Red sea once crossed, but one Red sea would not have so much overcome us. It was with us Red sea after Red sea. Three Red seas! Yet to-day, thanks be to God, we stand on the shore, and with organ and cornet in absence of a timbrel we chant: ‘Sing ye unto the Lord, for He hath tri- umphed gloriously ; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.” But why the great expense of this structure? My answer is the immensity of it and the firmness of it. It cost over $34,000 to digthe cellar before one stone was laid, reaching as the foundation does from street to street, and then the building of the house was con- structed in a way, we are told by experienced builders who had nothing to do with it, for durability of foundation and wall such as characterizes hardly any other building of this city. To the day of your death and mine, and for our children and grandchildren after us, it will stand here a house of God and a gate of heaven. 2 For me personally this is a time of gladness more than tongue or pen ortypecanever tell. For twenty-four years I had been building churches in Brooklyn and seeing them burn down until I felt I could endure the strain no longer, and i had written my resignation es pastor and had appointed to read it tw¢ Sabbaths ago &nd-0.se my~, rk in Brooklya forever. I feir #&ut my chief Work was yet to be done, but that I could not do it with the Alps on one one shoulder and the Himalayas on the other. But God has interfered, and the way is clear, and I am here and expect to be here until my work on earth is done. My thanks must be first to God and thento ul who have contributed by large gift or imall to this emancipation. Thanks to the nen, women and as who have helped, ind sometimes helped with self sacrifice that [ know must have won the applause of the 1eavens. If you could only read with mea bw of the thousands of letters that have ome to my desk in The Christian Herald pffice, you would know how deep their sym- yathy, how large their sacrifice has been. “I 1ave sold my bicycle and now send you the noney,”’ is the language of one noble young nan who wrote to The Christian Herald. “This is my dead son’s gift to me, and I have yeen led to send it to you,” writes a motherin Rhode Island. As a church we from this day make new leparture. We will preach more instructive lermons. We will offer more faithful pray- irs. We will do better work in all depart- ments. We will in the autumn resume our fay college. We will fill all the rooms of this magnificent pile with work for God and suf- lering humanity. More prayers have been offered for this church, and on both sides the sea, than for any church that has ever ex- sted, and all those prayers will be answered. Clear the track for the Brooklyn Tabernacle! “Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath tri- amphed gloriously ; the horse and his rider beth He thrown into the sea.” If we never shouted victory till we got elear through the struggles of this life, we would never shout at all. Copy the habit of Miriam and Moses. The moment you geta victory celebrate it. The time and place to bold a jubilee for the safe crossing of the Red pea is on its beack and before you leave it. It is awful, the delayed hosunnahs, the be- lated halleluiahs, the postponed doxologies, the trains of thanksgiving coming in so long after they are due! The time to thank God for a rescue from temptdtion is the moment after you have broken the wine flask. The time to thank God for your salvation is the moment after the first flash of pardon. The time to be grateful for the comfort of your bereft soul is the first moment of Christ’s appearance at the mausoleum of Lazarus. The time for Miriam's tambourine to sound its most iubir 1 | ON THE BANKS OF THE RED SEA | lant note isthe moment the last Israelita | puts his foot on the sand on the parted inland { ocean. Alas, that when God's mercies have such swift wings our praises should have such leaden feet! Notice that Miriam’s song in my text had for its burden the overthrown cavalry. It was not so much the infantry or the men on foot over whose defeat she rejoiced with ringing timbrel, but over the men on horse- back—the mounted troops! ‘“The horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.” Tre- mendousarm of war is the cavalry ! Josephus says that in that host that crossed the Red sea there were 50,000 cavalrymen. Epamin- ondas rode into battle with 5000 cavalrymen and Alexander with 7000. Marlborough de- ended on his cavalry for the triumph at lenheim. It was not alone the snow that despoiled the French armies in retreat from Moscow, but the mounted Cossacks. Cave alrymen decided the battles of Leuther and Leipsic and Winchester and Hanover Court House and Five Forks. Some of you may have been in the relentless raids led on by Forrest or Chalmers or Morgan or Stuart of the southern side, or Pleasanton or Wilson o= Kilpatrick or Sheridan of the northern side. The army saddles are the thrones of battle. Hurricanes in stirrups are the cav- en. No wonder that Miriam was chiefly grateful that the Egyptian cavalrymen, pursuing the Israelites down to midway the Red sea, were unsaddled, unstirruped, unhorsed. And I have to tell you, O child of God, that tho Lord, who is on your side now and for- ever, has at His disposal and under His com- mand all waters, all winds, all lightnings, all time and all eternity. Come, look me in the © while I utter the word God commands me to speak to you, ‘No weapon .>rmed against you shall prosper.” Don’t throw away your tambourine. You will want it as sure as you sit there and I stand here, and the tune you will yet play on it, whether standing on beach of time or beach of etern- ity, will be the tune that Miriam played when she cried ‘Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously ; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea.” I expect to have a good laugh with you in heaven, for the Bible says in Luke, sixth chapter, twenty-first verse, ‘‘Blessed are ye that weep now, for ye shall laugh.” We shall not spend all eternity psalm singing, but sometimes in review of the past, as Christ says, we shall laugh. There is nothing wrong in laughter. It all depends on what you laugh at, and when you laugh. Nothing, it seems, will more thoroughly kindle our heavenly hilarities after we have got 1nside the pearly gate than to see how in this world we got scared at things which ought not to have frightened us at all. How often we work ourselves up into a great stew about nothing! The Red sea be- fore may be deep, and the Egyptian cavalry behind us may be well mounted, but if we trust the Lord we will go through no more hurt by the water than when in boyhood we rolled our garments to the knee and bare- foot crossed the meadow brook on the old homestead. The odds may seem to be all against you, but I guess it will be all right with you if you have God on your side and all the angelic, cherubic, seraphic and arch- angelic kingdoms. ‘“If God ue for you, who can be against you?” But let me criticise Miriam a little for thee Instrument of music she employed in the di- vine service on the sandy beach. Why not take some other instrument? The harp was a sacred instrument. ~Vhv did she not take that? The cymbal was a sacred instrument. Why did she not take that? The trumpet was a sacred instrument. take that? Amid that great host there must have been musieal instruments more used in religious service. No. She took that which she liked the best and on which she could best express her gratulation over a nation’s rescue, first through the retreat of the waves of the Red sea, and then through the clap- ping of the hands of their destruction. So I withdraw my criticism of Miriam, ZLetevery one take her or his best mode of divine wor- ship and celebration. My idea of heaven is that it is a place where we can do as we please and have everything we want. Of course we will do nothing wrong and want nothing harmful. How much of the material and physical will finally make up the heavenly world I know not, but I think Gabriel will have his trumpet, and David his harp, and Handel his organ, and Thalberg his piano, and the great Norwegian performer his violin, and Miriam her timbrel, and as I cannot make music on any of them I think I will move around among all of them and listen. But there are our friends of the Scotch Covenanter church who do not like musical instruments at all in divine worship, and they need not have them. What a day it will be when we stand on the beach of heaven and look back on the Red sea of this world’s sin and trouble and celebrate the fact that we have got through and got over and got up, our sins and our troubles attempting to follow gone clear down under the waves. Oh, crimson floods roll over them and drown them, and drown them forever! In this world we have so little time for that, I am looking forward to eternal socialities. To be with God and never sin against Him. To be with Christ and forever feel Hislove. To walk together in robes of white with those with whom on earth we walked together in black raiment of mourning. To gather up the members of our scattered families and em- brace them with no embarrassment, though all heaven be looking on. A mine in Scotland caved in and caught amid the rocks a young man who in a few days was to have been united in holy mar- riage. No one could get heart to tell his afflanced of the death of her beloved, but some one made her believe that he had changed his mind about the marriage and willfully disappeared. Fifty years passedon, when one day the miners delving in the earth suddenly came on the body of that oung man, which had all those years been kept from the air and looked just as it was the day of the calamity. Strong, manly, noble youth, he sat there looking as on the day he died. But no one recognized the silent form. After awhile they called the oldest inhab- {tants to come and see if any one could rec- ognize him. A woman with bent form and her hair snowy white with years came last, and looking upon tke silent form that had been so completely preserved gave a bitter cry and fell into along swoon. It was the one to whom half a century before she was to have been wedded, looking then just as when in the days of their youth their affec- tions had commingled. But the emotion of her soul was too great for mortal endurance, and two days after those who fifty years be- fore were to have joined hands in wedlock were at last married in the tomb, and side by side they wait for the resurrection. My friends, we shall come at last upon those of our loved ones who long ago halted in the journey of life. They will be as fair and beautiful —yea, fairer and more beauti- ful than when we parted from them. I see them now—the glorified—assembled for a celebration mightier and more jubilant than that on the banks of the Red sea, and from all lands and ages, on beach of light above beach of light, gallery anove gallery and thrones above thrones, in circling sweep of 10,000 miles of surrounding and upheaved splendor, while standing before them on ‘seq of glass mingled with fire’ Michael, the arche angel, with swinging scepter beats time f the multitudinous chorus, crying: ‘Sin Sing! Sing ye to the Lord, for He hat} triumphed gloriously ; the horse and his rides hath He thrown into the sea.” The Retort Courteous, (He has come for her in a buggy and she objects to the turnout)—¢ ‘You are very particular; you put on more airs than a music-box.” “Well, 1 don’t go with a crank, anyway.”— Quips A Kise In Value. The painting by Millet recently sold at Brussels for $200,000 was originally sold by the artist for a cask of wine worth abouy 38, Why did she not | & SUNDAY SCHOOL bene LESSON FORSUNDAY,JUNE 11. fp *The Creator Remembered,” Eccles. xii., 1-7, 3,11, Golden Text: Eccles. xii., 1. Ccmmentary. 1. “Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them.” In the last two verses of the Xovjous chapter the young man is warned that there is a judg- ment to come, in the light of which all pres- ent things should be tested, and now he is entreated to think of his Creator in the days of his youth and strength and to consider Him who is the giver of every good and per- fect gift. Let Samuel, David, Joash and Josiah be studied es'ezamples. 2. “While the sun, or the light, or the moon, or the stars be not darkened, nor the clouds return after the rain.” This is sug- gestive of days of judgment, as in Isa. xiii., 10 ; Math. xxiv., 29; Rev. viii., 12; Jer. xiii, 16, for those who persistently refuse the merey of God. But the content seems rather to indicate the time of old age, when the senses become dull, and with no light from heaven in the soul the condition of such a one is dark and gloomy indeed. Listen to old Barzillai when invited by King David to make his home with the king in Jerusalem : “I am this day four score years old, and can I discern between good and evil? Can thy servant taste what I eat or what I drink? Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? Wherefore, then, should thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king” (II Sam. xix., 35)? Barzillai was doubtless a good man, yet he simply de- seribes the ordinary failures of the body in old age. 8. ‘In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble, and the strong men shall bow themselves, end the grinders cease be- cause they are few, and those that look out of the windows be darkened.” This is sug- gestive of the failure of hands and arms, feet and legs, teeth and eyes. The earthly house begins to decay, failure is evident in every part, and if there is no light shining from above the sun it is a dreary picture. But listen to Caleb, the friend and companion of Joshua, each of whom wholly followed the Lord: “Lo, I am this day four score and five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as I was in the day that Moses sent me. As my strength was then, even so is my strength now for war, both to go ouf, and to come in” (Josh. xiv., 10, 11). 4. “And the doors shall beshusin the streets when the sound of the grinding is low, and he shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters of music shall be brought low.” Suggestive of lips closing in upon toothless gums, inability to sleep and failure of the voice. Comment seems unnecessary ; rather consider the possibilities of an old age in the fear of God. Think of Moses, of whom it is written that at the age of 120 his eye was not dim nor his natural force abated. At that age he walked up the mountain alone and went out to be with God, and 1400 years later we find him alive and well (Deut. xxxiv., 7; Math. xvii., 3). 5. ‘‘Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and fears shall be in the way, and the almond tree shall flourish, and the rasshopper shall be a burden, and desire shall fail, because man goeth to his long home and the mourners go about the streets.” This is probably suggestive of the easily terri. fled old person to whom everything is a bur- denand nothing is satisfying. The almond tree may suggest the white head of old age, and the. grave is spoken of asthe long home, ‘‘Under the sun” is still the key, for rejoicing believer anticipates no long home in the grave, but ‘‘with Christ in paradise,” ‘‘ab« sent from the body, present with the Lord” (Luke xxiii., 43; II Cor. v., 8 6. ‘Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern.” Possibly the reference here may be to the spinal cord and whole nervous system, the brain, the heart, with its veins and arteries. However much or little the writer may have known about these things, the Holy Spirit who wrote through him was ‘perfect in knowledge” (Job xxxvi., 4). 7. “Then shall the dust return to the earth as ii was, and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it.” God said to Adam, *‘Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou re- turn.” And the psalmist wrote concerning vain man, ‘‘His breath goeth forth; he re- turneth to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish” (Gen. iii., 19; Ps. exlvi., 4). Through Jesus, the last Adam, the second man, we learn of victory over death ard of the fact that many shall never die. ‘We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump, for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed” (I Cor. xv., 45, 47, 61, 52). See also I Thess. iv., 16-18. And in contrast to this whole dreary picture of frail old age, with no light from heaven, listen to this contrast, “Though our outward man perish, yet the inward man isrenewed day by day.” By receiving Him who became man and a sin offering for us we may be sure of an endless life and eternal youth. 13. “Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter. Fear God and keep His com- mandments, for this is the whole duty of man.” But inasmuch as no mere man since Adam fell, ever kept the commandments of God there is little comfort here, ‘Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is grilty of all” (Jas. ii., 10). And it is written that the law was given to condemn man and prove to man his helpless- ness, that he might be led to receive Him who is the fulfilment of the law and the end of the law for rightenoussness to every one that believeth (Rom. ili., 19, 20; x., 4; Gal. ii., 21; lii., 21, 22). The Lord Jesus Christ is the only man who has ever done the whole duty of man. He was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him (II Cor. v., 21). Receiving Him, He becomes our life and righteousness (John i. 12; I John v., 12; Col. iil, 4; I Cor. i., 30), and His love constraining us we live hence. forth unto Him, rejoicing in hope of the glory of God (II Cor. v., i4, 15; Rom. v., 1, 14, “For Cod shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it, be good or whether it be evil.” If we are in Christ, we can rejoice that the judgment for our sins is past, and they shall be remem- bered no more (John v., 24; Rom. viil., 1; [sa xliii., 25). Every believer will, however, appear before the judgment seat of Christ that all his works as a Christian may be tried: (II Cor. v., 10; Rom. xiv., 10; I Cor. iii., 11 15; Luke xix., 11-26), and position in the kingdom will depend upon his faithfulness, Bo in due time and in due order the secrets of all hearts shall be made manifest, and onl those who are in Christ and the works whic He has wrought through them shall stand. All else shall perish.—Lesson Helper, . ——— Gen. nRICI Or Tosrage In i131ia, An old almanac for 1814 gives the following as the rates of postage pre- vailing at vhat time: For every sin- gle letter by land for 40 miles, 8 cents; 90 miles, 10 cents; 150 miles, 12} cents; 300 miles, 17 cents; 500 miles, 20 cents, and for more than 500 miles, 25 cents. No alfowance to be made for intermediate miles. Every double letter is to pay double the said rates; every triple letter, tripple; every packet weighing 1 ounce, at the rate of 4 single levters each ounce. Every ship letter origi. nally received at an office for delivery, 6 cents. Magazines and pamphlets, not over 50 miles, 1 cent per sheet; over 50 miles and not exceeding 10 miles, 1} cents per sheet; over 100 miles. 20 cents per shet.—Quincy Patriot. SG Sr 1 3 which [= o Eg, ER Os A oJ » 3 ER hi Syrsin a $SCAI Bot BRADI