IF MOTHER WOULD LISTEN, { Jf mother would listen to me, dears, 8he would freshen the faded gown," i Bhe would sometimes take an hour's rest, + Ad sometimes a trip to town. And it shouldn’t be all for the children, { The fun and the cheer and the plays (With the patient droop on the tired mouth, kL And the “Mother has had her day!” t Trae, mother has had her day, dears, ° When you were babies three, And she stepped about the farm and the house As busy as ever a bee. When she rocked you all to sleep, dears, And sent you all to school, And wore herself out and did without And lived by the Golden Rule. evry And so your turn has come, dears, Her hair is growing white, And her eyes are gaining the far-away look That peers beyond the night. One of these days in the morning Mother will not be here ; She will fade away into silence, The mother so true and dear. 7 Then what will you do in the daylight, And what in the gloaming dim ;-° And father, tired, lonesome, then, Pray, what will you do for him? Ifyou want to keep your mother, You must make her rest to-day, Must give her a share in the frolic, And draw her into the play. And, if mother would listen to me. dears, She'd buy her a gown of silk, With buttons of royal velvet, And ruffles as white as milk. And she'd let you do the trotting, While she satstill in her chair ; That mother should have it hard all through, It strikes me isn’t fair. —Margaret E. Sangster, in the Interior. TO THE RESCUE BY RICHARD DOWLING ¥* NTIL my dying hour I will re- member my first Sunday in Lon- don. In the middle 6f the week I had gone up on busi- ness which kept me closely oceu- pied til Saturday I was unacquainted with the night. city beyond the Strand, Chancery Lane and Arundel street, in the last of which I lived—at Weldon’s, a small private hotel. On Sunday morning came one of the thickest fogs of the year. Misled by the darkness of the midwinter morning I was late for breakfast. When I got down to the dining-room I found only onegperson, & young man of about my own age, at the table. He had arrived very late the night before, and was quite unknown tome: Hisappearance and manner attracted my attention at once. He was tall, dark, good-look- ing, courteous. Several times during the meal, at which he only drank a cup of coffee, he seemed on the point of speaking to me about something. He was restless and overwrought. felt strangely drawn toward him, and ex- perienced a feeling of relief when at last he said. “My name is Victor Grame. ~~ The landlord here knows me. Are you going to church this morning? The rest of the people have set off already.” ‘We were alone. “My name,” I said, ‘is Marcus Fall. I had intended going to Newington, butI could no more find my way there than through the centre of the earth to New Zealand.” “There is,” said he, ‘‘a pakt of Lon- don to which if do not find my way in a couple of hours I shall be a dead’man beforenight.” He groaned and dropped his head into his hands. No one could mistake his words, tone. manner. “In that case,” said I, ‘‘cf course, the fog will not hinder you.” “No, no,” said he, raising his face frqm his hands. ‘The fog will not hinder me. I could find my way if I were blind. It is the place where the girl I am engaged to lives.” He turned his pale face to the window and stared at it with eyes that did not see. ‘She is not very ill, I hope?” said L “No; not ill ; and yet she may be at the point of death, If you have fin- ished your breakfast, and can spare a few minutes will you walk outside? This place suffocates me.” / When we reached the street the fog was so thick we could not see the hause opposite. “I am in a terrible position!” said young Grame. ‘‘I do not know a man in London but Weldon, our landlord; and he is too old for help. My girl's life is in danger—in danger from vio- lence.” “Good Heavens!” cried I. aren’t there the police?” “The police!” he whispered, with a swift glance round and then a look of horror in his face. ‘‘The mere rumor of the police would be fatal! fatal! Her life hangs on a thread.” He leant against an area railing and wrung his hands. In a while he roused himself, drew his hat low over his brows, caught my arm, and turning toward the Strand, said : “Mr. Fall, under ordinary circum- stances it would be inexcusable to trouble you, a stranger, with my af- fairs. But the circumstances are not ordinary: they are extrzordinary be- yond bel»f, beyond endurance. You are young yourself. You can sympa- thize with me. If you permit me, I will tell you how I am situated.” “You may tell me with full assurance of my sympathy and assistance,” Isaid. “For twelve months,” he began, ‘‘I have been engaged to Miss Folgate, «who is now twenty years of age, and an only child. Her father, a solicitor, is tod Her mother was glad to take ‘‘But ‘| tracted girl. her mother, and now and then I come up to Durham to see her. Mrs. Fol- Lgate is only nineteen years older than her daughter. She is woman of re- markably youthful appearance and great personal attractions, romantic and painfully anxious to marry again. «For some time, a very stylish and fascinating foreigner—a count, he says —has been leading Mrs. Folgate to think he wants to make her his wife. Sir Arthur and his family are in the Riviera. The Derby Square house has been used by this foreigner as a postal address. There have been meetingsof foreigners in it—meetings of men con- nected with some illegal scheme. Yes- terday I got this from Miss Folgate. As he spoke he handed me a ragged piece of paper covered with faint pen- cil lines, crossed and recrossed. “You can’t make it out easily and there isn’t time to puzzle over it. The .| substance is this: Miss Folgate has in- voluntarily overheard what passed at one of those meetings. The conspirators discovered her, and she is a prisoner in Derby Square. If she makes any disturbance, they will kill her. If they are betrayed they will kill her mother, who is no longer in the house. To- day between 1 and 3 o'clock there will be no one in the house but my dis- I am going -to fry to snatch her from the knives of those murderous ruffians.” «And I will go with you, if I may.” He seized my hand and for a moment could not speak. 4 “If you will help me to-day you may | eount on my devotion for life,” he said at length. “Will you go armed?” “Armed? No. Ifit comes to weap- ons we are lost— we are dead jmen ; and she—but I will not think of her. It would paralyzed me, and the time for action is almost at hand.” | “How do you intend getting into the house?” «I must break in. You now know how doubly dangerous is the enterprise. It is not too late for you to draw back.” «J am with you heart and soul,” said I, taking his arm. He set a rapid pace west. “My poor girl,” he said, ‘‘is locked in an upper room, no doubt. Iintend getting in through the fanlight. Ican stand on your shoulders. Once in, I will open the front door. This fog is all in our favor.” It was a long walk, during which he never could see across the street. He seemed to find his way by instinct. He never paused or hesitated. At last he drew up. . ‘““We are in Derby Square,” he whispered. ‘The house is on the south side, No. 37. We will cross the roadway and stand with our backs against the railing of the en- closure, We have twenty minutes to wait.” “Now,” whispered he, when he drew up, ‘““weare directly opposite the house. I know the spot by this drooping ash tree.” He took off his hat and wiped his forehead. Those were the longest twenty min- utes I ever endured. To him they must have been hours. During the whole time he never said a word. He leaned motionless against the railings, watch in hand, his eyes fixed upon the dial. We could not see even the mid- dle of the roadway. At five minutes to one I heard a door open and shut softly, then cautious footsteps stealing away. I looked at Grame. He didn’t look at me. He did not move. He kept his eyes fixed on the dial like one hypnotized. Igazed at the watch myself; I found I could not now take my eyes off it. I saw the hand pass the hour: I saw itcreep one, two, three minutes beyond the hour. Had he forgotten, or was he really hypnotized by too intent thought and gaze? When the hand touched the fourth minute, he put the watch in his poc- ket, and catching me by the shoulder moved across the roadway and up to the door of 37. ‘‘How will you break the glass? Will there not bea great noise?” I whisperd. “No; the fanlight is stained glassin lead. Give me a back.” In an instant he was up, standing on my shoulders and working at the fan- light. I could not see, but he must have wrenched éut the pieces with amazing celerity and care, for in a few minutes he whispered. I am going to hang on by my elbows. Take hold of my feet and push me up.” I seized his feet and pushed them up with all my might. In another minute he hadscrambled through and dropped into the hall. He opened the door. ‘Come inside. Close the door and wait for me. If any of these men are here and I fall, fiy. All will then be lost. Save your own life.” He darted past me. For a few mo- ments all was silent. Then I heard a crash, as though of a door burst in. This was followed by the soft, joyful cry of a woman, and presently two fig- ures ran down the stairs. I opened the door, and the three of us darted out. I closed the doo softly behind. Grame led us across the road and we set offat a quick pace through the fog in un- broken silence. When we were clear of the square Grame stopped, took the girl in his arms, and crying, “Thank God! my Aggie!” burst into tears. The instinct which had guided Grame infallibly earlier in the day now failed him, and we lost out way hopelessly ; but we did not care. It was 5 o’clock when the three of us got to Weldon’s. The lovers spent that evening in the drawing room, and I saw little of them. The peril of Mrs. Folgate’s position made absolute secrecy still imperative. Next morning I met Grame at break- fast. He said there was no use of try- ing to thank me for himself or Miss Folgate, whom Mrs. bidden to leave her room, as she was suffering from nervous prostration, but the position of housekeeper at Sir Ar- thur Penny father’s town house in| Derby Square. Miss Folgate lives with | that he owed me a debt he could never pay. I was leaving by an early train tor the West, and he promised to write to me as soon as news had been heard of Mrs. Folgate. ; Four days later I got a letter saying that Mrs. Folgate had been released unharmed, and thet there would be some reference to the affair in the London papers that day or the day after. Next morning the newspapers had an account of the clever frustra- tion by the Vienna police of a daring and gigantic attempt to swindle the banks of that city by a man.calling himself Count Wolinski who, with a half dozen accomplices, was arrested just as they had brought their nefarious scheme to perfection and were about to put it in operation. “The plot,” said the Vienna dis- patch, ‘“was one of the most daring ever designed, and among other of the meens used by the swindlers to mislead was the fact that letters for their basis of operation, London, were addressed to the mansion of a well-known rich baronet, whose town house is in one of the most select West End squsres.’” A few months after I received cards and wedding cake, which assured me that all had gone well with the young people; but from that day to this I have not seen Grame, or Mrs. Grame, who was Miss Folgate the first Sunday I spent,in London.—New York Ad- vertiser. eer EG eee Flesh-Eating Plants, A familiar example of the carnivor- ous plants or flesh eaters is the little drosera, sO common in various por tions of the country. The plant is small and inconspicuous. The first one I ever saw caught my eye by a sudden flash of fiery red light, and kneeling on the damp grass I fairly caught the little carnivore in the act which has rendered it so famous. There were several tender, delicate stalks in the center, and round about it near the ground four or five singular round, pad-like objects, about the size of small buttons. These were leaves and their upper surface was covered with reddish ten- tacles that stood boldly up, each bear- ing a delicate drop of the dew that gleamed and glistened in the sunlight like a veritable garnet. Acrossthe top of the leaves a long legged fragile in- sect lay, caught butasecond before and dying a most terrible death. Five or six of the hair-like tentacles were thrown across its legs and wings, holding it down and pressing its body nearer and nearer to the leaf, while other rich blood red stalks were in all positions,. bending over to encompass the yiciim. The sight was a horror in a miniature and reminded me of the actions of an octopus, or devil-fish, as the little cephalopod is commonly called. Jt has eight sucker lined arms radiating from a small, bag. shaped body, and each arm has all the sinuosity, all the possibility of motion of a snake, ever undulating, quivering as if with surpressed emotion, while over the entire mass waves and varied shades of color seem to ebb and flow —California Magazine. ttre norm Miners Killed by Hundreds, A frightful list of fatalities is em- bodied in the report of the Secretary of Internal Affairs, which is made up from the reports of the Mine In- spectors of Pennsylvania. This re- port has just been issued, and the sta- tistics ‘contained in it and quoted by the Philadelphia Record are valuable, for they show that apparently little has been accomplished in the effort to decrease the number of deaths in the mines. The anthracite region of the State is divided into eight districts and over each district a Mine Inspector has charge. He is appointed after a competitive examination by the Goy- ernor. The bituminous coal region is also divided into eight districts, each under the super- vision of one Inspector. The total amount of anthracite coal mined in Pennsylvania in 1892 was 45,833,543 tons, and the total amount of bitumin- ous coal mined was 46,018,277 tons. While the output of the two great fields was almost equal, the number of fatalities in the anthracite collieries was about three times as great as the number in the soft coal mines. Of the eight anthracite districts, fatalities were reported from seven. The total deaths in the mines in these seven dis- tricts was 841 during 1892. The ‘In- spector of the third sent no figures, but the fatalities there added to the other seven would bring the total up to at least 870. This many men and boys were killed outright, and several times as many more were injured. Figures were given by six of the eight bituminous Mine Inspectors. In six districts 103 people were killed and probably thirty more were killed in the two districts not reported. That would make a total of 133, as against 370 in the ‘anthracite fields. Several inspectors report that the greater the proportton of foreign miners, the greater the number of fatalities. ————— I ———e A Railway’s System of Oiling. The system of oiling the engines of the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway is to allow so much oil t6 so many miles for passenger, freight, switch and work locomo- tives, making a distinction between the different classes. From thirty to thirty-five miles to a pint of lubricat- ing oil, and from 100 to 125 miles to a pint of eylinder oil is considered good service for large passenger engines or heavy trains. For consolidation freight engines twenty-five miles to a pint of lubricating oil and seventy-five to 100 miles to a pint of cylinder oil is considered good service, and for switch engines forty-five to fifty miles to a pint of lubricating oil and 125 to i 150 to a pint of cylinder oil. These Weldon had for- | figures represent good average prac- tice, but they are frequently exceeded with light trains, there being a record of a dight passenger locomotive run- ning 200 miles with but a pint of cfiinder oil. —New York News. "GRAPES OF ESCHOL REV.DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON. ——p————r The Eminent Brooklyn Divine Takes Up the Old Bible Story and Draws From It Many Lessons. te elle. Text: *'And they came untothebrookof Es- chol and cut down from thence a branch with one cluster of grapes, and they bare it between two upon a staff.” —Numbers xiii., 23. The long trudge of the Israelites derossthe wilderness was almost ended. They had come to the borders of the promised land. Of the 600,000 adults whostarted from Egypt for Canaan, how many do you suppose got there? Five hundred thousand? , DO. Not 200,000, not 100,000, nor 50, nor 20, nor 10, but only 2 men. Oh, it was a ruinous march that God's people made, but their children were living, and they were on the march, and now that they had come up to the borders of the promised land they were very curious to know what kind of a place it was and whether it would be safe to go over. o a scouting party is sent out to recon- noiter, and they examine the land, and they come back bringing specimens of its growth. Just as you came back from California, bringing to your family a basket of pears or plums or apples to show what monstrous fruit they have there, so this scouting party cut off the biggest bunch of grapes they could find. It was so large that one man could not carry it, and they thrust a pole through the cluster, and there was one man at either end of the pole, and so the bunch of grapes was transported. I was some time ago in a luxuriant vine- ward. The vine dresser had done his work. he vine had clambered up and spread its wealth all over the arbor. The sun and shower had mixed § cup which the vine drank until with flushed cheek it lay slum- bering in the light, cluster against the cheek of cluster. The rinds of the grapes seemed almost bursting with the juice in the warm lips of the autumnal day, and it seemed as if all you had to do was to lift a chalice toward the cluster and its lifeblood would begin to drip away. But, my friends, in these rigor- ous climes we know nothing about large grapes. Starbo states that in Bible times and in Bible lands there were grapevines so large that it took two men with outstretched arms to reach round them, and he says there were clusters two cubits in length, or twice the length from the elbow to the tip of the long finger. Achaicus, dwelling in those lands, tells us that during the time he was smitten with fever one grape would slake his thirst for the whole day. No wonder. then,” in those Bible times two men thought it worth their while to put their strength together to carry down one cluster of grapes from the promised land. But this morning I bring you a larger clus- ter from the heavenly Eschol—a -cluster of hopes, a cluster of prospects, a cluster of Christian consolations, and I am expecting that one taste of it will rouse up your appe- tite for the heavenly Canaan, During the past winter some of this congregation have gone away never to return, The aged have ut down their staff and taken up thescepter. fen in midlife came home from office or shop and did not go back again and never will go back again. And.the dear children, some of them have been gathered in Christ's arms. He found this world too rough a place for them, and so He has gath- ered themin. And, oh, how many wounded souls there are—wounds for which this world ffers no medicament—and unless from the " gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ there shall come a consolation there will be no consola- tion at all. Oh, that the God of all comfort would help me while I preach and that the Goa of all comfort would help you while you ear ! : First, I console you with thedivinely sanc- tioned idea that your departed friends are as much yours now as they ever were. know you sometimes get the idea in your mind when you have this kind of trouble that your friends are cut off from you and they are no longer yours, but the desire to have all our loved ones in the same lot in the, cemetery ‘is a natural desire, a universal desire and there- foro a God implanted desire and is mighty suggestiye of the fact that death has no power to break up the family relations. If our loved ones go away from our posses- sion, why put a fence around our lot in the cemetery? Why the gathering of four or five names on one family monument? Why the planting of one eypress vine so that it covers all the cluster of graves? Why put the hus- band beside the wife and the children at their feet? Why the bolt on the gate of our lot and the charge to the keepers of the ound to see that the grass is cut and the e at- tended to and the flowers planted? Why not put our departed friends in one common fleld and grave? Oh, itis because they are ours. That child, O stricken mother! is as much yours this morning as in the solemn hour when God put it spans your heart and said as of old, “Take this child and nurse it for Me, and I will giye thee thy wages.” Itis po mere whim. It is: a divinely planted principle in the soul, and God certainly would not planta lie, and He would not culture a lie! Abraham would not allow Sarah to be buried in a stranger's grounds, although some very beautiful ground was offered him a free gift, but he pays 400 shekels for MacHpelah, the cave, and the trees overshadowing it. The grave has been well kept and to-day the Christian traveler stands in thoughttul and admiring mood gazing upon Machpelah, where Abraham and Sarah are taking their long sleep of 4000 years. Your father may be slumbering under the tinkling of the bell of the Scotch kirk. Your brother may have gone down in the ship that foundered off Cape Hatteras. Your little child may be sleeping on the verge of the flowering western prairie. Yet God will gather them all up, however widely the dust may be scattered. Nevertheless it is pleasant to think that we will be buried together. When my father died and we took him out and put him down in thegraveyard at Somer- ville, it did not seem so sad to leave him there, because right beside him was my dear, good, old, beautiful Christian mother, and it seemed as if she said: ‘‘I was tired, and I came to bed a little early. Iam glad you have come ; it seems as of old.” Oh, it is a consolation to feel that when men come and with solemn tread carry you out to your resting place they will open the gate through which some of your friends havealready gone and through which many gof your friends will follow. Sleeping under the same roof, at last sleeping under the same sod. The autumnal leaves that drift across your grave will drift across theirs, the bird songs that drop on their mound will drop on yours, and then in stavless winter nights, when the wind comes howling through the gorge, you will be company for each other. The child close up to the bosom of its mother. The husband and wife remar- ried ; on their lips the sacrament of the dust. Brothers and sisters who used in sport to fling themselves on the grass, now again re- elining side dy side in the grave, in flecks of gunlight sifting through the long, lithe wil- lows. Then at the trumpet of the archangel to rise side by side, shaking themselves from the dust of ages. The faces that were ghastly and fixed when you saw them last all aflush with the light of incorruption. The father looking around on his children and saying, ‘Come, come, my darlings ; this is the morn- ing'of the resurrection.” Mrs. Sigourney wrote beautifully with the tears and blood of her own broken heart : There was a shaded chamber, A silent watching band, On a low couch a suffering child Grasping her mother’s hand. But ‘mid the gasp and struggle ..* With shuddering lips she cried: ¢ Mother, oh, dearest mother, «Sleep by my side, dear mother, And rise with me at last.” Oh, yes, we want to be buried tozwuder. Sweet antetype of everlasting residence in wach other's companionship. When the wrecker wenr down into the cabin of the lost steamer, he found the mother and child in each other’s arms. It was sad, but it was beautiful, and if was ap- propriate. Together they went down. To- gether they will rise. One on earth. One- in heaven. Is there not something cheering- in all this thought and sometHing to impress upon us the idea that the departed are ours yet—ours forever? But I console you again with the fact of your present acquaintanceship and com- munication with your departed friends: I have no sympathy, I need not say, with the ideas of modern spiritualism, but what I mean is the theory set forth by the apostle when he says, “We are surrounded bya great cloud of witnesses.” Just as in the ancient amphitheatre there were 80,000 or 100,000 people looking down from the gal- Jeries upon the combatants in the center, so, says Paul, there is a great host of your friends in all the galleries of the sky looking down upon our earthly struggles, It is a sweet, a consoling, a scriptural idea. With wing of angel, earth and heaven are in con- stant communication. Does not the Bible say, ‘‘Are they not sent forth as ministering spirits to those who shall bo heirs of salvation?” And when ministering spirits come down and see us, do they not take some message back? It is im- possible to realize, I know, the idea that there is such rapid and perpetual intercom- munication of earth and heaven, but itis a gloriousreality. You take a rail train, and the train is in full motion, and another train from the opposite direction flashes past you so Swismy tha you are startled. Allthe way between here and heaven is filled with the up trains and the down trains—spirits com- ing—Spiie going—coming—going—coming going. That friend of yours who died last month —do you not suppose he told all the family news about, you in the good land to the friends who are gone? Do you not suppose that when there are hundreds of opportuni- ties every day forthem in heaven to hear from you that they ask about you—that they know your tears, your temptations, your struggles, your victories? Aye, they do. Perhaps during the last war you had a boy in the army, and you got a pass, and you went through the lines, and you found him, and the regiment coming from your neigbor- hood and you knew most of the boys there. One day you started for home, You said: ‘‘Well, now, have you any letters to send? Any messages to send?” And they fllled your pockets with letters, and you started for home. Arriving home, the neighbors came in, and one said, “Did you see my John?” and others, ‘Did you see George?” ‘Do you know anything about my Frank?” And then you brought out the letters and gave them the messages of which you had been the bearer. Do you suppose that angels of God, coming down to this awful battlefleld of sin and sorrow and death and meeting us and seeing us and finding ont all about us, carry back no message to the skies? Oh, there is consolation in it! You are in present communication with that land. They are in sympathy with you now more than they ever were, and they are waiting for the moment when the hammer stroke shall shatter the last chain of your earthly bondage, and your soul shall spring upward, and they will stand on the heights of heaven and see you come, and when you are within hailing dis- tance your other friends will be called out, and as you flash through the pear! hung gate their shout will make the hills tremble, “Hail! ransomed spirit, to the city of the blessed I” I console you still further with the idea of a resurrection, I know there are a great many people who do not accept this because they cannot understand it ; but, my friends, there are two stout passages—I could bring a hundred, but two swarthy passages are enough—and one David will strike down the largest Goliah. ‘‘Xdarvel not at this, for the hour is coming when all ‘who are in their graves shall come forth.” The otherswarthy passage is this: “The Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout, and the voice of the archangel, and the trump of God, and the dead in Christshall rise first.” Oh, there will be such a thing as a resurrection. You ask me a great many questions I can- not answer about this resurrection. You say, for instance, “If a man’s body is con- stantly changing, and every seventh year he _has an entirely new body, and he lives on to seventy years of age and so has had ten dif- ferent bodies, and at the hour of his death there is not a particle of flesh on him that was there in the days of his childhood, in the resurrestion which of the ten bodies will come up or will they all rise?” 3 You say, ‘‘Suppose a man dies, and his pody ‘is soattered in the dust, and out of that'dust vegetables grow, and men eat the vegeta- bles, and cannibals slay these men and eat them, and eannibals fight with cannibals un- til at last there shall be a hundred men who shall have within them some particles that started from the dead body first named, coming up through the vegetable, through the first man who ate it and through the can- nibals who afterward ate him, and there be more than a hundred men who have rights in the particles of that body—in the resur- rection how can they be assorted when these particles belong to them all?” : You say, ‘There is a missionary buried in Greenwood, and when he was in China he had his arm smputated—in the resurrection will that fragment of the body fly 16,000 miles to join the rest of the body?” You say, ‘Will it not be a very difficult thing for a spirit coming back in that day to find the myriad particles of its own body, when they have been scattered by the winds or overlaid by whole generations of the dead, looking for the myriad particles of its own body, while there are a thousand million. other spirits doing the-same thing, and all the assortment to be made within one day?” You say, “If 150 men go into a place of evening entertainment and leave their hats and overcoats in the hall, when they come back it is almost impossible for them to get the right ones, or to get them withouta great deal of perplexity, and i you tell me that myriads of spirits in the last day will come and find myriads of bodies.” Have you any more questions to ask? Any more difficulties to suggest? Any more mys- teries? Bring them on! Against a whole regiment of skepticism I will march these two champions: “Marvel not at this, for the hour is coming when all who are in their graves shall come forth.” ‘The Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout, and the voice of the archangel, and the trump of God, endl the dead in Christ shall rise first.” You see I stick to these two passages. Who art thou, O fool, that thou repliest against God? Hath He promised, and shall&e not do it? Hath He commanded, and shall He not bring it to pass? Have you not confidence in His omnipotence? If He could in the first place build my body, after itis torn down can He not build it again? “Qh,” you say, ‘I would believe that if you would explain it. Iam not disposed to be skeptical, but explain how it can be done.” My brother, you believe a great many things you cannot explain, You believe your mind acts on your body. Explainthe process. This seed planted comes upa blue flower. Another seed planted comes up a yellow flower. “An- other seed planted comes up a white flower. Why? Why that wart on your finger? Tell me why some cows have horns and other cows hive no horns. Why, when two obsta- cles strike each other in the air, do you hear the percussion? What is the subtle energy that dissolves » solid in a crucible? What makes the notches on an oak leaf different from any other kind of leaf? What makes the orange blossom different from that ofthe rose? How can the almightiness which rides on the circle of the heaven find room to turn its chariot on'a heliotrope? Explain these. Can you not do it? Then I will not explain the resurrection. You explain one-half of the common mysteries of "everyday life, and I will explain all the mysteries of the resur- rection. You cannot answer me very plain questions in regard to ordinary affairs. Iam not ashamed to say that I cannot explain God, and the judgment, and the resurrection. I simply accept them as facts, tremendous and infinite. Before the resurrection takes place every- thing will be silent. The mausoleums and the labyrinths silent. The graveyards silent, the cemetery wilent, save from the clashing last funeral procession comes in. No breath of air disturbing the dust where Persepolis. stood and Thebes and Babylon. No of the Yeas long closed in darkness. No stir- ring ofthe feet that once bounded the hillside. No opening*of the hand that once plucked the flower out..of the. edge of the wild wood. No clutching of swords by the men who went down when Persia battled and Rome fell. Silence from ocean beach to mountain cliff and from river to river, The sea singing the same old tune. e lakes hushed to sleep ir the bosom of the same great No hand disturbing» the gate. of the long-barred sepulcher. Alb the nations of the dead motionless in their winding sheets. Up the side of the hills, down through the trough of the valleys, far out 6 ‘cav: erns, across the flelds, deep down into the coral palaces of the ocean depths where leviat! sports with his fellows—every- where, layer above layer, ‘height above height, depth below depth—dead! dead! dead! But in the twinkling of an eye, as quick as that, as the archangel’s trumpet comes pealing, rolling, reverberating, crash ing across continents and seas, the earth willi give one fearful shudder and the door of the family vault, without being wunlocked,| will - burst open, and all the graves of the dead will begin to throb and heave like the waves of thesea,, and the mansoleum of princes will fall into dust, and Ostend and Sebastopol and Aus- terlitz and Gettysburg stalk forth in the: lurid air,.and the shipwrecked rise from the deep, their wet locks looming above the bil low, and all the land and all the sea become one moving mass of life—all generations, all ag with upturned countenances—some kindled with rapture and others blanched with despair, but gazing in one direction, upon one object, and that the throne of resurrection. On that day you will get back your Chris- tian dead. There iswhere the comfort comes in. They will come up with the same hand, the same foot and the same entire body, but’ with a perfect hand, and a perfect foot, and! a perfect body, corruption, mortality having: become immortality. And, oh, the reunion Oh, the embrace after so long an absence! Comfort one another with these words. While I present these thoughts this morn- ing does it not seem that heaven comes very near to us, as though our friends, whom we thought a great way off, are not in the dis- tance, but close by? You haye sometimes comte down to a river at nightfall, and you have been surprised how easily you could hear voices across that river. You shouted over to the other side of the river, and they shouted back. It is said that when George Whitefield preached in Third street, Phila- delphia, one evening time his voice was heard clear across to the New Jersey shore. When I was a little while chaplain in the army, I remember how at eventide we could! easily hear the voices of the pickets .across the Potomac just when they were using or- dinary tones.” And as we come to-day and: stand by the river of Jordan that divides us from our friends who are gone it seems to me we stand on one bank, and they stand on the other, and it is only, a narrow stream, and our voices go, and their voices come. Hark! Hush! I hear distinctly, what they say. ‘““These are they who came out of great tribulation and had their robes washed’ and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” Still the voice comes across the water, and I hear, ‘“We hunger no more; we thirst no more ; neither shall the sun light on us nor any heat for the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne, leads us to living fountains of water, and God wipeth away all tears from our eyes.” : eee eee. Arithmetic of the Cambodians. The arithmetic of the Cambodians, a curious people of Indo-China, is de- scribed by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch as differing vastly from that of other nations. In the first place their sys- tem of enumeration is quintecimal by counting upg to 5, as: $Mouille, pi, beye, boun, pram (1, 2, 8, 4, 5) then going on with pram-mouille (or5and 1, and so on), In adding the Cambodian does not write his numbers in columns below ‘each other. . No matter how many numbets he may have to add he places the first fwo beside each other, as. 247,872 53,723 with a vertical line to the right! The addition is made tical. Under this first total he writes the next number and adds the two, drawing another vertical line at the side with the result as before stated until all the numbers have been added. ‘While the process isasomewhat lengthy one, mistakes are discovered at a glance. Their method of subtraction is also quite complicated. Supposing that 657,869 is to be subtracted from 796,522, the operatio which the Cam- bodians pursue is as follows: 657,869 | 128,553 786,422 First of all it will be seen that the lesser number is written above the greater one, and the operation is begun at the left. Six from ten (says the Cambodian, employing the 10 as a fictitious number) leaves 4, and by adding 7 (the first figure in the greater number) he has 11, and 10 from 11 leaves 1, the first figure in the rest. Then he goes on to say 5 from 10 leaves 5, and is 13. 1from13 leaves 12. thus giving thé first two figures of the rest. In thie complex way the remainder is at last definitely obtained. In multiplying the multiplier is placed above the multiplicand and each figure in the multiplicand is multiplied by each one in the multiplier, thus pro- ducing an innumerable amount of small series, . which must then becadded in the same manner that has been shown above. The method of division is just as complicated, but enough has already been said to show that the arithmetic of the Cambodians is not particularly brilliant for its sim- licity. s eae RS eee Aged Poet and Sightless Child. , One of the most touching things I ever saw was at the anniversary cele- bration of the Young Men’s Christian Union. Dr. Holmes and Helen Keller sat side Dy side on the platform. Between the two there evidently existed a bond of sympathy, sweet in itself and beau- tiful to see. ; During some of the remarks the sightless child was observed to lean over toward the white-haired sage,and, resting her head upon his shoulder and throwing an arm about his neck, she turned her face, beaming with intelli- gence, up to that of the aged bard. And he patted the full, round cheek and kissed her, with a tenflerness that drew tears from many an eye. Dr. Holmes, when he applauds, does so by patting one knee lightly with his hand. Of course, this makes no noise whatever and only shows that he apppe- ciates what is said. Over his face there plays a sweet smile, which, dur- ing the whole proceedings of the even- save | Ing in question, never left it.—Boston of boefs and the grinding of wheels as thy | Post. and the result:set down beside the ver- old ( mod bler do 1 spru unpr