EB RT Te Ta res UNSHED, The tears wo shed on earth God knows In agony must fall, But, oh! the tears wa never shed Are bitterer than all. For like the summer rain to flowers Come toars to those who weap, L But as the hot dust in their hearts Are those that they must keep. —Ethel Leitner, in Frank Leslie’s Monthly. | BY MUTUAL CONSENT. HERE was no doubt that the Messin- gers were fortu- nate in possessing #0 charming a house as the Ness. t was built at the head of a narrow valley shut in by two hills, and be- yond the sloping lawns stretched a wide expanse of sea. Mr. and Murs. Messinger were sim- ple unaffected people, devoted to their children, and to Nancy, Mrs. Messin- ger’s young step-sister. They treated her with a kind of reverential tender- ness, chiefly due to the fact that she was entirely dependent on them. And in her turn, Nancy filled the place ofa loving elder sister to the tribe of little ones, and of friend-in-chief to her gentle sister-in-law. One sunny afternoon in early sum- mer Mrs. Messinger sat at ths open bay window of the drawing room, read- ing. She was a placid little lady, sel- dom ruffled in mind or temper, and her sweet face and soft blue eyes were pleasant to contemplate. The opened presently, and Nancy came in rather slowly. Her expression was as sweet and gentle as her sister's, but her greet dark eyes and firmly cut mouth and chin bore evidence of much greater strength and individuality of character. She came over to the win- dow and seated herself in alow bas- ket-chair with an air of constraint. “I have had a letter from Jim,” ‘said. “Yes; I saw it on the hall table,” replied Mary, laying down her book. *‘Does he say when he is coming?” ‘Yes; he came by the same steam- ship as the letter. He will be here to- morrow, I suppose.” “Nancy! really?” asked Mary, look- ing almost excited. *‘Are you not delighted?” ¢‘[—f—have a conleszicn to make,’ sald Nancy, nervously, looking out over thesza. ‘I thought I loved Jim when he went out to India five years ago, but I was only seventeen then, and did not realize what love meant. We had known each other all our lives, and I mistook our friendship forlove.’’ “When did you make this terrible discovery?’ asked Mary, in distress. “I have felt it dimly for a year or two, but what made it all clear to me was Jim's last letter, saying that he was coming home. It filled me with dismay and fear. I felt that I simply sculd not meet him as his bethrothed wife, so I wrote last mail, and asked him to release me from my engage- ment.” . ‘‘And what does he say ?”’ Mary asked, she 3 anxiously. “He fa delighted,” said Nancy, brightening. ‘‘Hesays that his feel- ings have changed too.” “I always think of you in the future =5 his wife,” sighed Mrs. Messinger, whose mind was slow to welcome new édeas. ‘‘Are you sure you are wise, dear?” *Quite sure,” Nancy answered, firmiy. ‘‘And you willbreak the news gently to Ned, won't you? And please getreconciled to the arrangement soon. I feel so delightfully airy and free!” ““You never hinted at any change before.” said Mary, a little reproach- fully. “f only knew it dimly, or I might have done 80,” replied replied Nancy, gently. ‘‘And since I wrote to him I have been silenf, to spare you any anxiety, I have felt it for the last three years in writing to him. My |letters have never been from the present Napey, but from the Nancy as I could remember her at seventeen. In fact, I have been ‘writing down’ to the level of his in- telligence as shown in his letters, and that level is painfully low. But hap- pily, you see, he is as pleased to end our engagement as [ am.” . ‘‘He would be much more likely to object if he once saw you,” said Mary, frankly, ‘for these five years have done wonders with you in every way.” “Oh, he is so boyish that he will think me strong-minded, and therefore dislike me,” said Nancy, laughingly. ‘And I did send him my last photo- graph, you know.” “Did you send that hideous thing?” asked Mary in surprise. “Well,” confessed Mary, rather re- luctantly, ‘I believe had some secret, unconfessed hope that he would offer to break off the engagement if he once saw that hideous caricature. But here comes Ned; I shall leave you to ex- plain things to him.” A day or two later Nancy started for her nsual afternoon walk along the cliffs. Since she had been released from the engagement, which for some years past had been weighing on her spirit, she had been in a state of ex- hilaration which surprised her. The world seemed wholly beautifully ; life was an unmixed blessing; sin and poverty were raver than she had thought. Walking quickly along, absorbed in these pleasant reflections, she did not hear footsteps behind her, and was surprised at hearing herself suddenly addressed. Looking up with startled eyes she found a young man gazing at her with a puzzled, intent expression in his handsome face. ‘You are Nancy, are you not?’ he said, doubtfully, holding out his hand. “Why, Jim, is it really you?" asked Nancy, regarding him with surprise ‘‘How you have grown! When did you come? and how did you find me?” door | “T came two days age,” he said, red- dening slightly in irritation at her first words. ‘Father was anxious that I should stay with him yesterday, but 1 called at the Ness this afternoon, and Mrs, Messinger told me where I should find you.” ““Liet us go home now, and then you can see them all,” she said, turning back. “You will hardly know the ehildren ; you lett.” “‘[ certainly shail not, if they have altered as much as you have done. 1 scarcely knew you,” he said, looking they were such mites when down at her with intent gray eyes,and | beautiful, | graceful girl with the gauche school- | inwardly comparing this girl of five years since. “I am older,” she said, her heart sinking strangely. ‘He might dis- 8 gel) 8 guise the tact that he finds me a dis- appointing failure,” she thought, rather bitterly. “Of course we are no longer boy and girl,” he said. “But I hope we shall always be friends, Nancy! We have been that all our lives, haven't we?” “Yes, let us be friends,” she said. And thinking that he was eager to im- press upon her that they were to be nothing more, she added. ‘And it was very wise to break off that child- ish engagement before you came home, wasn't 142” *Y —vyes,” he said, doubtfluly, ‘‘oh, yes, of course. Your feelings are naturally quite changed, I suppose, Naney ?” “Naturally, she said calmly, but thinking to herself that she was not so suze about that, after all. ¢‘Naturally,”” he echosd, his eyes, however, becoming =a little clouded. “Those boy and girl engagements never answer, do they? People de- velop so differently from what one would expect. Judging from your let- ters, I should have thought you ntter- ly different from what I find you.” “You are equally different from what I should have expected you to be,” answered. “But let us put up with each other as we are; we need not see much of one another, you know.” They had just reached the gate lend- {ng into tie garden of the Ness, as she said this, and unconsciously she paused outside. Jim took this, coupled with her last words, as a hint that he should go, and was more hurt than he carad to own. “Good afternoon,” he said, stiffly, raising his hat. ‘‘Your suggestion is a brilliant one, and you need not fear that I shall tronble you with my pres- ence more often than is necessary.” “You are coming in?” she said, looking at him with pained, pleading eyes. “Thank you, no,” he said coldly. “I have seen Mrs. Messinger and your brother, and the children will keep.” “(tood-by,” she said, turning in at the open gate in order that he should not see the rising tears. “Good-by,” he said, freezingly, thinking her absolutely cruel in not shaking hands. She went up the little sloping avenue slowly and sadly, try- ing to crush back the tears which would rise to her eyes in spite of her efforts. She had succeeded before reaching the hall, and could answer her sister’s surprised questions quite calmly. “My dear Mary,” she said, laughing gently, ‘you forget our changed rela- tions. You must not expect him to come as often a8 he used. We have both come to the conclusion that we are quite different from what we had thought each other, and we have mu- tually agreed to see as little as possible of one another.” But when she reached her own room her self-control deserted her, and she cast herself down on the little couch and wept long and bitterly. ¢“] hate him!” she said to herself, vindictively. 4] do; I hate him! No, I dont; I believe I do the very opposite. Oh, I ought to be ashamed of myself to care for one so utterly indifferent to me! He didn’t even come in, and after all these years! He shall never know that I love him, never! However much I may suffer, 1 have enough pride to hide it. He shall think me as indifferent as he is himself.” Her mouth took a hard look, very foreign to its sweet lines, as she rose and bathed her face; and through all that evening she bore herself so brave- ly that no one guessed of the bitter- ness and wounded pride she thus smil- ingly hid. If Mrs. Messinger had been given to abstruse reflections, she might have asked herself how Jim and Nancy could possibly avoid each other, at- cording to their compact, when he was always coming to the Ness? For he came every day, and at all hours of the day, as he had been wont to do five years ago. There was one differ- ence between this daily intercourseand that of the old times, and thata rather important one. Nancy lost all her gentle brightness when speaking to Jim, and was coldly, distantly polite to him. He saw this and no doubt re- sented it, but Nancy never guessed that from his manner. He did every- thing he could think of to please her, but with no outward effect. Inwardly she knew that her love for him was strengthening day by day, and that no power of hers could prevent it. Jim was in a most trying position. He knew himself to be deeply in love with Nancy; his feeling for her had never died, as he had imagined; but with the knowledge of her as asweet, noble woman came the knowledge that he had forfeited the right to tell of his love. Her letters had been of a kind of which he had wearied when he had .ceased to be a youth. But, anxious that his own letters should not be as uninteresting to her as aers were to him he had written in a boyish, semi- frivolous strain, which he thought would be pleasing to her, as natural to herself. He conld not understand how such a thoughtful intelligent girl she | ing as he knew her now to be, eculd have written such shallow, characterless letters. He supposed that she had not cared enough for him to write about what she felt interested in. Nancy grew colder and more con- strained than ever in her manner toward him, and though every day he felt more clearly that his love was hopeless, he found it more and mors difficult to hide it from her. He was too proud and too manly to force his love on her, believing, as he did, that she disliked him; and at last, after a bitter struggle with himself, he deter- mined to return to India at once. He had never been to the Ness Iate- Iy without some valid reason, and this new decision was so good an excuse for calling that he was not slow in taking advantage of it. He found Nancy in i’: garden, arrayed in a large, white sun bonnet, busily gath- ering strawberries for tea. “You will tind it rather hot work, I am afraid,” he said, looking down gravely into her flushed face. “Let 2 me pick some now. “Thank you,” she answered, re- signing the basket; ‘‘stooping so much has tired me a little.” He had soon filled the basket, and then, at his suggestion, they seated themselves under an old apple tree to rest. Nancy took off her sun bonnet, and leaned her bare head against the onarled trunk langnidly. Jim watched her as she sat there, thinking that he would soon have only the memory of her sweet, pure face to bear with him. “f came up this afternoon to say goodby,” he said, breaking the long silence rather abruptly. Nancy started slightly and raised her eyes to his in wonderment. “Goodby ?” she said. “‘And where are you going?” “I am going back to India; TI have had enongh of England.” . «To India? At once? Oh, why?” she asked piteously, growing very white, and looking at him with frightened eyes. | An expression of tremulous hope be- gan to dawn on Jim’s face as he saw how his words had affected her. “Do yon care, Nancy?” he asked, eagerly. ‘Would yourather Istayed?” ¢“My wishes have nothing to do with the matter,” she said, rather bitterly. ‘Indeed they have,” he said, very earnestly. ‘Nancy, tell me, would you rather I stayed?” “If I say yes, would you stay?” she asked, quietly. “Only if you loved me,” he said. “I cannot stay on and see you day after day, and feel that you will never care for me. May I stay, Nancy?” “If you like,” she answered, shyly. Jim took her into hisarms and kissed her very tenderly. ‘There is one thing I want to know,” he said, presently, looking down into her eyes; ‘‘when did youbegin to love me, dear?” : “When did you begin to love me?” she replied, blushing under his gaze. “I don’t know; I have loved you all my life.” he answered. “I don’t know, either,” she said: “when I was about four or five, think.” “But, my darling, you broke off out engagement,” he said, wonderingly. did not love you. —I—1 mean—" ‘“Yes, they were stupid, but yours were silly, too, and I thought that was the kind of thing you liked,” he said, a ray of intelligence dawning in his eyes. “I thought you were terribly boy- ish, so wrote very ‘young’ letters, thinking they would interest you,” she said, beginning to laugh. “We both fell into the same mis- take, then,” he said, laughing, too, though a little regretfully. ¢‘Oh, Nancy! we might have had sucha good time! How I wish I had the letters that you might have written!” “Yes, it is a pity” she said. ‘But it is all right now, and I will write the sweetest letters to you in future.” “Indeed you will not,” he replied, in a calmly masterful tone. ‘‘I never mean to leave you again. We must look upon those letters as a part of the vast ‘It-might-have-been.’”’-— Waverley Magazine. They were so stupid. —— ee —— me A Funny State of Affairs, A very funny state of affairs is re- vealed in England through a suit brought concerning depredations by rabbits. The rabbits came out of a wood and destroyed a field of barley. The owner of the crop sued the owner of the wood for damages. It was de- cided that the plaintiff was not en- titled to damages unless the deferdant had by artificial propagation increased the number of rabbits on his land to such an extent as to be a nuisance. He was not liable, even though he had in- creased the number of rabbits by kill- off their enemies. The only remedy in possession of the man who lost his barley was to kill the rabbits which came upon the place. But this has to be done with due regard to a somewhat complicated game law. The killing must be done by the farmer or by one member of his household com- missioned by him in writing or ‘‘em- ployed for reward to kill rabbits.” In killing the rabbits the use of poisons or spring guus is prohibited, and fire- arms cannot be used at night. —New York Telegram. Coffee as a Brain Food. An eminent medical authority, in a recent number of the Boston Surgical | and Medical Journal, maintains that | coffee is a real brain food, and has the | power of absolutely increasing a man’s capacity for brain work. The writer | further says: “Opium stimulates the imagination ; alcohol lifts a man up for the moment to throw him into confusion and irregularity of acvion, | but caffeine increases his power or | reasoning. and absolutely adds to Lis | brainwork capacity for the time.” “Yes; from your letters I thought I ! ‘DR. TALMAGE ON ELECTIONS A TRUE MEASURE. ie Men Should Uso the Ten Commandments As a Guide in Voting, _— RL sae rho thom. noisc of the noiing. ~ -Exo- Tax7y: *“ ind all erings aad li We peopl 2 rend the irvmpet aud the woninlain 8 dus xx., 18, My text informs you inat ths lightnings and earthquakes united their forces to wreck | a mountain of Arabia Petriea in olden tim, and travelers to-day finds heaps of porphyry and graenstons rocks, bowlder against bowl der, the remains of thes {rst law library written, not on parchment or papyrus, but on shatterad slabs of granite. The corner- stones of all morality, of all wise law, of ail righteous jurisprudence, of all good Govern ment are the two tablets of stone on wi were written the Ten Commandmants. All Roman law, all Franch law, all Eaglish Jaw. all American law that is worth anything, all common law, civil law. criminal law, martial law, law of Nations were rocked in the cradle of thetwentieth chapter of Exodus. And it would be well in these times of great political agitation if the newspapers would print the Decalozue soma day in place of the able editorial. The fact is that some people suppose that the law has passed out of exist- | ence and some are not awar= of some of the passages of that law, and others say this or that is of the mors importance, waen no ons has any right to make such an assertion. These laws are the pillars of society, and if you remove onz2 vitlar you damage the whole structure. I have noticed that men are particularly vehement against sins to which they are not particularly tempted and find uo especial wrath against sins in whien they them- selves indulge. They take out one gun from this battery of ten gans, and load that, and unlimper that, and fire that. They say, ‘“Uhis is an Armstrong gun, and this is a Krupp gun, and this is a Nordenfeldt five-barrsied gun, and this is a Gatling ten- barreled gun, and this is a Martini thirty- saven-barreled gun.” But I have to tell them that they are all of the same caliber, and that they shoot from eternity to eternity. Many questions are before the people in the elections ali over this land, but I shall try to show you that the most important thing to be settled about all these candidates is their personal, moral character, The Dec- alogue forbids idolatry, image making, pro- fanity, maltreatment of parents, Sabbath desecration, murder, theft, incontinence lying and covetousness. That is the Deca- logue by which you and I will have to be tried, and by the same Decalogue you and I must try candidates for offee, Of course we shall not find anything like perfection. If we do not vote unfil we find an immaculate nominee, we will never vote at all. We have so many faults of our own we ought not to be censorious or maledic- tory or hypercritical in regard to the faults ofothers. for November as any other month in the year. ‘‘Judge not that ye be not judged. for with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again.” Most certainly are we not to takethe state- ment of redhot partisanship as the real char- acter of any man. From nearly all the great cities of this land I receive daily or weekly newspapers. sent to me regularly and in com- pliment, so I see both sides—I see all sides — and it is most entertaining and most regular amusement to read the opposite statements, The one statement says the man is an angel, and the other says he is a devil, and I split the difference and I find him half way be- tween. There never has been an honest or respac- table man running lor the United States presidency, or for a judgeship, or for the mayoralty, or for the shrievalty since the foundation of the American Goverument, it we may believe the old files of the newspa- pers in the museums. What a mercy it is that they were not all hung before they wers inaugurated! Ii a man believe one-half of what he sees in the newspapers in thess times, his career will be very short outside of Bloomingdale insane asylum. 1 was absent two or three years ago dur- ing one week of a political canvass, and I wus dependent entirely upon wheat I read in regard to what had occurred in these cities. and I read thers was a procession in New York of 5000 patriots and a minute after [ read in another sheet that there were 17,000, and then I read in regard to another proces- sion that there were 10,000, and then [ read in another paper that there were 60,000. A campalgn orstor in the Rink or the Academy of Music received a very cold re- ception—a very cuilling reception—said one statement, The other statement said the audience rose at him. So great was the en- thusiasm that for a long while the orator could not be heard, and it was only after lift- ing his hand that the vociferation began to subside! One statement will twist an inter- view one way, and another statement will twist an interview another way. You must admit it is a very difficult thing in times like these to get a very accurate estimate of a man’s character, and I charge you, as your religious teacher, I charge you to caution and to mercifulness and to prayer. I warn you also against the mistake which many ars making and always do make of ap- plying a different standard of character for those in prominent position from the stand- ard they apply for ordinary persons. However much a man may have or however high the position he gets, he has no especial liberty given him in the interpretation of the Ten Commandments. A great sinner is no more to be excused than a small sinner, Do not charge illustrious defection to eccentricity or chop off the Ten Commandments to suit especial cases. The right ‘is everlastingly right, and the wrong is everlastingly wrong. If any man nominated for any office in this city or State differs from the Decalogue, do not fix up the Decalogue, but fix him up. The law must stand, whatever else must fall, I call your attention also to the fact that you are all aware of—that the breaking of one commandment makes it the more easy to break all of them —and the philosophy is plain. Any kind of sin weakens the con- science, and if the conscienca is weakened that opens the door for all kinds of trans- gression. If, for instance, a man go into this political campaign wielding scurrility as his chief weapon, and hebelieves everything bad about a man and believes nothing good, how long before that man himself will get over the moral depression. Neither in time nor eternity. If I utter a falsehood in regard to a man, T may damage him, but I get for mysslf ten- fold more damage. That is a gunthat kicks. If, for instance. a man be profane, under pro- vocation he will commit any crime. I say under provocation. For, if a man will mal- treat the Lord Almighty, would he not mal- treat his fellow man? If a man be guilty of malfeasance in office, he will under provoca- tion commit any sin. He who will steal will lie. and he who will lie will steal. If, for instance, a man be impure, it opsns | the door for all” other iniquity, for in that one iniquity he commits theft of the worst kind, and covetousness of the worst kind, and falsehood—pretending to he decent when he is not—and maltreats his parents by disgracing their name, if they were good. | Be careful, therefore, how you charge that sin against any man either in high place cr low place. either in office ox out of office, | because when you make that charge against a man you charge him with all villainies, with all disgusting propensities, with all rottenness. A libertine is a beast, lower than {he ver- min that crawl over a summer carcass — lower than the swine, for the swine has no | intelligence to sin against. Be careful then, how you charge that against any man. You must be so certain that a mathematical demonstration is doubtfn! as compared with it such to the whole subjects, you must go length of investigation and tind out whether | or not he has repented. He may have been The Christly rule is as appropriate | And then, when you investigate a man on | divine forgiveness, and he may hava im- plored the forgiveness of society and the for- | giveness of the world. Although if a man | commit that sin at thirty or thirty-five years of age, there is not one case out of a thou- | sand where he ever repents. You must in | your investigation see if it is possibie that ta one casa investigated may not hava been | the exception. But do not chop off the | seventh commandment to suit the case. Do 'l not change Fairbank’s scale to sait { yon are weighing with it. Do not cut off a | yarlstick to suit the dry goods you are measuring. + the law stand and never | \amper wi! | Aboveazlii vou do not join in the i ery that [ have heard—ior fifteen, twenty | yea.s I have heard it—that there is no such thing as purity. If you make that charge you are a foul-mouthed scandaler of the human race. You area leper. Make room for that leper! When a man, by pen or type nan race that there is no such | sali is a walking lazaretto. a reeking uleer. and devils damned. We may enlarge our char- ities iv such a ease, but in no such case let us shave off the Ten Commandments. Let them stand as the everlasting defense of so- ciety ana the church of God. The conmitting of one sin opens tha door for the commission of other sins. You see it every day. Those embezziars, those bank cashiers absconding as soon as they are brought to justice, develop tne fact tbat they were in all kinds of sin. No excsption to tne rule. They all kept bad company. they nearly all gambled, they ail wont to places where they ought not. Why? The commission of the one sin opened the gate | for all the other sins. droves and in herds. You open the door for one sin that invites in all the miserable segragation. : { Some of the campaign orators this autumn | —some of them—bombarding the suffering | candidates all the week, will think no wroag in Sabbath breaking. All the week hurling the eighth commandment at one candidate. | the seventh commandment at another can- | didate and the ninth commandment at still | another, what are they doing with the fourth | commandment, **Remember the Sabbath day { to keep it holy?” Breaking it. Is not the | fourth commandment as important as the | eighth, as the seventh, as the ninth? | Some of these political campaign orators, | as I have seen them reported in other years. and as [ have heard it in regard to them, bombarding the suffering candidates all the weelr, yet tossing the name of God from their lips recklessly, guilty of profanity —what are thev doing with the third commandment? Is not the third commandment, which says, thy God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain” —is not the third commandment as impor- tant as the other seven? Oh, yes, we find in nation against sins perhaps to which theyare not especially tempted —hurling it against iniquity toward which they are not particu- larly drawn. I have this book for my authority when I say that the man who swears or the man who breaks the Sabbath is as culpable before God as these candidates who brzak other com- mandments. What right have you and I to galect which commandment we will keep and which we will break? Better not try to measurs the thunderboits of the Almighty, saying this has less blaze, this has less mo- mentum. Better not handle the guns, better not expzriment much with the divine ammu- nition. a nutshell, and you and I have seen the Lord's Prayer written on a flve cent piece, but the whole tendency of these tinyes i3 to write the Ten Commandments so smail no- body can sea them. I protest this day against the attempt to revise the Decalogue which was given on Mount Sinai amid the blast of trumpets, and the cracking of the rocks, and the paroxysm of the mountain of Arabia Petraa. I bring up the candidates for ward and township and city and State office. I bring them up, and I try them by this Decalogus. Of course they are imperfect. We ars all imperfect, We say things we ought not to say ; we do things we ought not to do. We have all been wrong; we have all done wrong. But I shall find out one of the can- didates wiio comes, in my estimation, nearest to obedience of the Ten (‘lommandments, and I will vote for him, and you will vots for Him unless you lovs God less than your party —then yon will not. Herodotus said that Nitoeris, the daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, was so fascinated with her beautiful village of Ardericca that she had the river above Babylon changed so it wound this way and wound that, and curved this way and curved that, and though you sailed on it for three days every day you would be in sight of that exquisite village. Now, I do not care which way you sail in morals or waich way you sail in life if you only sail in sight of this beautiful group of divine commandments, Although they may sometimes seem to be a little angular, I do not care which way yon sail, if you sail in sight of them you will never run aground, and you will never be shipwrecked. Society needs toning up on all these subjeets, 1 tell you there is nothing worse to fight than the ten regiments, with bayonets and sabres of fire, marching down the side of Mount Sinai. They always gain the victory, and those who flight against them go under. There are thousands and tens of thousands of men being slain by the Decalogue. is the matter with that young man of whom [ read, dying in his dissipations? ing delirium he said, dice. It is mine. “Now fetch on the. No, no! Itis gone, all is wine! Oh, how they rattie their chains! Fiends, fiends, lends! I say you cheat! The cards are marked! Oh, death! oh, death! oh, death! Fiends, flends, lends!” And he gasped his last and was gone. The Ten Commandments slew him. Tet not ladies and gentlemen in this nine- | teenth century revise the Ten Command- ments, but let them in soclety and at the polls put to the front those who coms the nearest to this God-lifted standard. On the first Tuesday morning of November read the twentieth chapter of Exodus at family prayers. The moral or immoral character of the officers elected will add seventy-five per cent. unto or subtract seventy-five per cent. from the public morals. You and I cannot afford to have bad offl- cials. The young men of this country can- not afford to have bad officials. The com- mercial, the moral, the artistic, the agricul- tural, the manufacturing, the religious in- | terests of this country cannot afford to have | bad officials, and if you, on looking overthe | whole field, cannot find men who in your estimation come within reasonable distance of obedience of the Decalogue stay at home and do not vote at all. I suppose wiaen in the city of Sodom there were four candidates put up for office, and Lot did not believe in any of them, he did not register. I suppose if there came a crisis in the polities of Babylon, where Daniel did not believe in any of the candi- dates, he staid at home on election day, | praying with his face toward Jerusalem. i But we have no ‘such crisis. We have no | such exigency, thank God. But I have to | say to you to-day that the moral character of | rulers always affects the ruled, and I appeal | to history. | tone of all the Nation of Judah and threw them into idolatry. Good King Josiah lifted up the whole Nation by his exzsllent example. Why ig it that to-day England is higher up in morals than at any point in her National | history? It is because she has the best ruler in all Europe—all the attempts to scandalize { her name a failure. The political power of Talleyrand brooded all the political tricksters of the last ninety years. | presidency of Aaron Burr blasted this Nation ! until important letters wers written in cipher, because the people could not trust the United States mail. And let the court Louis XV and Henry VIL[ march towed by the debauchad Nations. The higher up youn put a bad man the | worse is his power tor evil. oat, {ol- yn his knees before God and implored tha ' ulist says that the pigeons were in fright at Sins go in flozks, in | all departments men are hurling the irindig- | Cicero said he saw the ‘‘Iliad” written on | | pigeon a day. a kite flying in the air, and so these pigeons hovered near the dovacote, but one day the kite said: **Why are you 30 araid? Why do you pass your life in terror? Make me king. and I'll destroy all your enemies.” So the pigeons made the kite king, and as soon as he got the throns his regular diet was a And while one of his victims was waiting for its turn to come it said: Served us right!” The malaria of swamps s from the plain to the height, but moral malaria descends from the mountain to the plain. Be caraful, thersfore, how you ele- vate into any style of authority men who are | in anv wise antagonistic to the Ten Com- or tongue, u:ters such a slander on the hu- | thing as | purity I know right away thatthat man him- | is fit for no society better than that of | “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord | | In his dy- | | mandments. As near as I ean tell, the most important thing now to be done is to have about 40,- 000,000 copies of the Sipaitic Dscaloguo printed and scattered throughout the land. It was a terrible waste when the Alexandrian library was destroyed, and the books were taken to heat 4000 baths for the citizens of Alexandria. It was very expensive heat. But without any harm to the Deecalogue you could with it heat 1090,000 baths of moral purification for the Amuarican people. I say we want a tonic -a mighty tonic, a corrective, an all powerful corrective -and Moses in the text, with steady hand, notwith- standing the jarring mountains and the full orchestra of the tempest, and the blazing of the air, pours out the ten drops —no more, no less—which our people need to take for their moral econvalesesnce. But I shall not leave you under the dis- souragement of the Ten Commandments, be- cause we hava all offended. There is an- other mountain in sight, and while ono mountain thunders the other answers in thunder, and while Mount Sinai, with light- ning, writes doom, the other mountain, with lightning, writes mercy. The oniy way you will ever spike the guns of the Decalogue is by the spikes of tha cross. The only rock that will ever stop the Sinatic upheavals is the Rock of Ages. Mount Calvary is higher than Mount Sinai. The English survey expedition, I know, say that one Sinaitic peak is 7000 feet high, and another 8000, and another 3000 feet high, and travelers tell uz that Mount Cavalry is only a bluff outside of the wall of Jerusalem, but Calvary, in moral significance, overtops and overshadows all the mountains of the hemispheres, and Mount Washington and Mont Blane and the Himalayas are hillocks compared with it. You know thal some- times one fortress will silence another for- tress. Moultrie silenced Sumter, and against the mountain of the law I put the mountain of the cross. ‘The soul that sinneth, it shall die,” booms one until the earth jars under the cannonade. ‘‘Save them from going down to the pit. I have found a ransom,’ pleads the other, until earth and heaven and hell tremble under the reverberation. And Moses, who commands ths one, surrenders to Christ, who commands the other. Once by the law our hopes were slain, But now in Christ we live again. Aristotle says that Mount Etna erupted one day and poured torrents of scoria upon the villages at the hase, but that the mountain divided its flame and made a lane of safety for all those who came to rescue their aged parents. And this volcanic Sinai divides its fury for those whom Christ has come to res- cus from the vad ruin on both sides. Stand- ing as I do to-day, half-way between the two mountaing—the mountain of the Exodus and the mountain of the nineteenth of John—all my terror comes into supernatural calm, for the uproar of the one mountain subsides into quiet and comes down into so deep a silence that [ can hear the other mountain speak-— aye, I can hear it whisper, **The blood, the blood, the blood that cleanseth from all sin.” The survey expedition says that the Sinai- tic mountains have wadys or water courses— Alleyat and Ajelah—amptying into Feiran. But those streams are not navigable. No boat put into these rocky streams could sail. But I haveto tell you this day that the boat of gospel rescue vomes right up amid the wa- tercourses of Sinaitic gloom and threat, ready to take us off from under the shadows into the calm sunlight of (od's pardon and into the land of peace. Oh, if you could see that boat of gospel res- cue coming this’ day you would feel as John Gilmore in his book, **The Storm: Warriors,” says that a ship’s crew felt on the Kentish Knock sands, off the coast of Fingland, when they were being beaten to pleces and they all felt they must die! I'ney had given up all hops and every moment washed off another plant from the wresk, and they said, “We must die ; we must dis!” But after awhile they saw.a Ramsgate, lifeboat coming through | the breakers for them, and the man standing highest up on the wreck said: *Can it be? It is, it is, it is, it is! Thank God! Itisthe »amagate lifeboat! It is, it is, itis, itis!” And the old Jack Tar, describing that life- boat to his comrades after hz got ashore, said, ‘‘Oh, my lads, what a beauty it did seem, coming through the breakers that awful day!’ May God, through the marey in Jesus Christ, take us all off the miserable wreck of our sin into the beautiful lifeboat of the gospel ! tier r ret Unthinkable Distances. The distance to the nearest ‘fixed star has been computed by the best astronomers to be about 20,000,000,- 000,000 miles, which, by putting it in ‘another way, would mean 20,000.000,- 000,000 of ‘miles, a distance so vast that a trip to our own sun seems but What} a pleasure trip in comparison. The next in distance is about four times further away. If we attempt to fix an average distance for the fixed gone! Bring on more wins! Bringon more | stars we cannot safely place them | nedrer than 4,000,000,000,000 of miles | | away! And what does this involve! Light, which reaches us from the sun in eight and one-half minutes, would take seventy years in making a journey between the average fixed star and our little world. ; If the volume of space included within our solar system were occupied by one huge globe 5,600,000,000 miles in diameter, even such a mighty mass would be but as a feather in the marvellous spread of space surround- ing it. The sea of space would con- tain 2,700,000,000,000,000 of such globes, each swinging at a distance approximating 500,000 miles apart! How can the human mind be expected to comprehend such immensity >—New York Journal. re een —— Compressed Air. Mr. Ferris, he of the wheel, pro- poses to make Chicago a seaport. He says that the chief item of cost in canals is the building and maintenance of locks, and that this ean be avoided by the use of compressed air. “There is no reason why & box could not be constructed into whick the largest | ocean ships could be floated, the box Wicked King Manasseh depressed the moral | closed, and the whole box—water, ship and all —raised by compressed ait as easily as you lift an elevator.” We have no doubt this is true. Dr. Gat- ling, who invented the compressed air | drill, but was not allowed to patent it, circles of The great fab- | | | has always claimed that there was | practically mo limit to the work that 'I'ae dishonest vice- could be done by means of compressed ’it. eC. Among the Kondeh people, who live on Lake Nyassa. in Africa, the favorite form of suicide is to enter the water and allow one’s self to be devoured by a crocodile. | | gel 4 =u (|