k k k k k k bWm * r 9 MiBB BBMBtel Btt K rf * * 'M * ? ' 'i5i"r' t frfn < * nnm > < wi > n1 1 i nm IsftSr i , * - - . . ' 5aB I ' * lailaaiiaiBBalBiaal" * MMiMrj 0MHM _ _ | L | ' WILL YOU BE JEALOUS ? BM ADELAIDE ritOCTOU. 0H I lovo , too , jo bq loved ; all Joying pra'so Mm booms like a crown upon my life , to WM i , x maks i 1 'fte8ii ! er worth tbo living , and to raise , mE I " " noaror to your own tho hearfryou ! § fl I l & U good and noblo souls ; I heard ll Ono speak of you bat latelyand for 9 nl Only to think of it ray soul was stirred m is * a tender memory of such generous M IS praleo. | i 't love all those who lovo you ; all who owo g IB Comfort to you , and I can find regret m if ] 'fciVen for those poorer hearts who once m ml could know Si -A-Qd once ; could love you , and nan now m S forget. S Will you be jealous ! Did 'you guess bo- 19. , 'oved so many things ? Still you tho ifl best w w iDoarest , remember that I lovo you more. 1B Oh , more a thousand times , than all the IK rest. , 11 ' OUFTROBIN. I f "CHAPTER VII ( Concluded ) . 1X "Oh , my foot ! I had forgolen. " m "Let me ringfor assistance , " says 1 | Harry , approaching the boll. m "Don't dare to touch tho boll ! " she ' [ < cries excitedly. "Why have you two m forced yourselves hero into myliouse Ij -without invitation ? Go , both of you , M and leave me. How dare you stop m .here abusing and catechising me ? Go , . m I say do you hero ? " i m "Yes , " answers Harry doubtfully , H ; and pulling at his short moustache. W "Had we better leave her ? " he asks W me , in an undertone. B I feel utterly incapable of offering i tin opinion on the subject ; but our Sj : mutual indecision is of little conse- H ] -quenco , for at this moment the door B ; t * opens , admitting an elderly woman H ; tastily wrapped in a warm dressing * AT own , and a look of terror on her B somehat careworn face. | B "What is the matter what has happened ? " she asks , gazing with EC natural perplexity on the group be- 9 "fore her. "I thought there were burg- PS 'lars ' in the house are there ? " WU "No , " I make response , feeling in- HH -finitely relieved by her opportune ap- 8 pearance. "You may thank her" H . pointing to the figure on the sofa , | H -"that your slumbers have been " B ' -Hold your tongue ! " cries Alice B - * and then she | -iharply addresses her- Wm self to the stranger. "There is noth- | a ing on earth thematter , Mrs. Whel- | ' lerjonlyI have been for a stroll on jf thegrbunds , and these highly imagi- PPg -native people took me for a ghost , and ISj -set dogsupon me , and chased me till pj | J. . .felland hurt my footI wish you | fi * woulLturn them out I can't. " Ill "In self-defence , " says Harry , tj | ' -while the indignant blood surges over fm nishot face , "I must correct that I -statement. The lady lying there fhas mj as you may easily see got herself Ig Tip with the view of intimidating an Hj y' over-sensitive friend of mine. Night Kjf rafter night she has personated a spirit , H -until'we were forced to devise some H . method for putting a stop to her mi d Irl pranks. " mm "Mad pranks indeed ! " echoes Alice , Ii starting up on the sofa , while her dark | fl eyes seem literally to emit flashes of M .fire. "Do you imagine that it was H only for my own pastime and to prove H the weakness of his mind that I per- H eonated Lucy ? If so , you are vastly K mistaken. It " was revenge ! I have Jl ' meditated revenge for years , only m -wondering how I could compass it. n ' He hiniself put the stick into my hand ft with which Ihave chastised him. ' I X , * was wandering one evening at dusk "V near the old summer-house , when he took it into his head that I was a spirit Lucy spirit. Was it likely that I -would throw away so grand a chance of scaring him ? If you had only left cue alone , I would have killed him with sheer fright. Why not ? He killed " my sister Lucy ; lie put the skates on her feet which lured her to Jier death. A life for a life is justice. " While Alice pours forth this wild rtorrent of words , Mrs. Wheller gazes r : in distress from one to the other. * When at length Alice sinks back ex hausted on her pillows , the companion steps up to us softly , and lays a hand I" 'On my arm. I • "I think you had better go , she ft • says , in a low troubled voice. "It ! .seems a most extraordinary affairirom " - "beginning to end , and I don't as yet r- -quite understand , it ; but X think you .tad better go. " "You are right , " I answer moving T „ la the direction of the open window ; | fr " • but Mrs. Wheller steps before me and jf. closes it , securing also the shutters as i she does so. L • 'I will let you out at the hall door , " pC-1 she says , with a glance which intimates § ? - _ . , • -that she has a few words to say to us k&- t "before we start As she leaves the Toom she closes the door behind her. "I am quite unnerved by this extra- * S ordinary occurrence , " she says , when X. ; she joins us ; "nor can I understand I gf u any sane woman playing such a paltry * * .rick. " ' "Perhaps Bhe is not sane , " suggests $ fiarry. Y f"I don't think that ; she is sane ipr1- f enough , " answers the companion , with Bg a decided nod. "I am afraid we Bf& can'fc Pufc * * down to anything but mfr malice. She always was most eccentric , g * and her mind lias got into a morbid K * tf state with , always dwelling on one P % ' -mournful subject. We have been P-s aoroad for years , and are starting g . .again shortly ; only she had a ' great i- , fancy for spending a fewweeks here P ' before her departure. She has a pre- p sentiment that she will never return , to England. " ft * . - * 'You should get heaway from here &Z r as soon as possible. " Ep - -"Of course , and I will guarantee" gfT * Tvithafaint smile "that she sha'n't jL- play the ghost again. " aSk "I am afraid she has sprained her wJm ankle badly , " I say. P "In that case she will have to keep V. .to the house. " K * ; "Uppn my word , I pity you your jL- - - task , " says Harry , with a shrug of his ; li * v shoulders. rn ZT "You are very kind , but your pity is B ' " , superfluous , " answers the companion kV- ' ' -drily. "Miss Seymour likes me , , and ' * il am most attached to her , notwith- P1 " , -standing her .eccentricities. We lead , | f • .as a rule , a peaceable , though some- E r - * what Bohemian existence , wandering Lj > ' . about the continent. " * § * ' * \ "Well , we must be going , " I remark , P4' .aftpr staring for some moments in blank s , • - * wonder at the little woman before me. * Then Mrs. Wheller unfastens the * : • * 4 Iheavy-bolts of the hall door , which are ? ' C * ' " : ' * - " m ' ewhat stiff. "Good nights" are ex- | "v " r"v • Hi. < kb % " ' - - J < • jmwjuii l.ii..m.ii.i.tii i.i.i.ni.l mil -i - * wmwui-w. A * ' / ' ' ) changod , and we step out onco more into tho brilliant moonlight. "It is about the strangest affair I over know in my life , " remarks Harry thoughtfully. "I wonder how Robin is getting on with John , " I murmur with sisterly anxiety. Durlngourhomeward walkourmlnds are naturally occupied with the re cent adventure , and yet so selfish is poor humanity in general , and poor ongaged humanity in particular , that long before we reach the end of the Lovers' Walk our conversation has re verted to. Harry's approaching depart and tho heart-brokon- ure , consequent - - ncss pn.both sides. We find Robin alono in the dining- room. She looks rather a desolate ob ject perched on one of the penitential straight-backed chairs , and my heart reproaches me for that loitering in the grounds. "Where is John ? " I question , in an eager whisper ; our movemens must needs be stealthy for fear of waking aunt Louisa. "Ho has to his " gone up-stairs room , answers Robin , in the same hushed tones. "Not to his study ? " in some sur prise. " 2fo , not to his study ; and , Mr. Rodman" turning to Harry "he told me to wish you good night on his be half , and to say that ho ielt ashamed of his folly , and hoped you would not chaff him too unmercifully to-morrow. " "Oh , Robin ! " I cry amazed. "Jack surely did not use the word 'chaff ? ' * ; "Well , no I believe you are rightf" acquiesces my friend tranquilly ; "but he gave me a message which amount ed to what I have told you. " Then Harry declares that he must be off ; so we quietly let him out of the window , and watch him till he disap pears round the stable angle , with Nell at his heels. The groom is never ex pected to wait up for Harryt When late , he saddles his own horse , having been provided with a duplicate key to the stable-door , for convenience sake. After securing the dining-room shutters , Robin and I creep cautiously up the moonlit staircase ; and as we reach the landing the hall-clock strikes two. Instead of repairing to my room , I follow Robin to hers , feeling anxious as to how John may have taken the denouement of his spiritualistic meet ings."Is "Is John angry with us all ? " I ask eagerly , as Robin , having lighted her candles , begins to divest herself of her wraps. "No he seemed too ; infinitely re lieved at the result to take much heed of the means employed to bring it about. " "That is a good thing. I had an idea he would be desperately angry at our interference. " "He is far too just a man for that , " says Robin seriously. "Do you know , Blanche , " she continues , after a mo ment's pause "I can't tell you how it is but I don't feel in the least in clined to at brother's laugh your con duct , though it is of course very ridic ulous ; but be was himself so thorough ly in earnest , so thoroughly convinced that he was in communication with a spirit. He confided to me everything as we walked home , and , instead of laughing , I actually cried when he told me of the dread , and yet longing , which seized him when he first be lieved he was holding intercourse with his lost love's spirit. " "I am afraid the brusque arousing from his dream will affect his spirits most dreadfully , " ' I remark for in truth a gloomy foreboding overhangs me. me."On the contrary , " returns Robin , with confidence , "I thinft he will re vive and become an ordinary mortal- now. The scene to-night has opened his eyes to the folly of his conduct in brooding over the past till it had be- come a monomania with him. " "He seems to have been quite con- fidential , " I say , a little jealously. • 'He was , " answers Robin , with marked emphasis ; "and , though I hope , as a rule , I am not very dog- matical , I took the liberty of giving your brother a small piece of my mind abused the unwholesome literature he has been dipping into , to my heart's content , and ended by advising him to read Longfellow's 'Psalm of Life , ' " "Your intentions , I am sure , are good , Robin , " I say with some pity in my tone. But I am afraid your advice won't be of much use ; I don't think Jack ever reads poetry. " CHAPTER YHI.n Nevertheless I feel that Robin has the best of it , when.the next morning , as we are sitting with our books under the shade of a friendly weeping ash , Jack sweeps aside its branches and enters , laden with ten or twelve vol- umes and carrying a spade. "I have come to ask you both to a funeral , " he says , smiling a little ner- vously and tapping the bright steel end of the tool against the slender trunk of the ash. "What kind of a funeral , and in what manner are we expected to at tend ? " demands Robin , glancing up brightly. "Well , certainly not as mourners , " with a look of thought stealing into his eyes "merely as witnesses. The fact is , I have been thinking over your advice , Miss Wolstencroft , and I have come to the conclusion that you-were pretty right about my poor old friends" glancing down at the pile of books under his arm almost affection- ately ; "so I am going to dig a big . hole and bury them. " J "Do let me have a peep first. Put ' off the funeral till to-morrow , " pleads \ Robin. "On no account ! " replies Jack , fall ing back a few paces as Uobin holds ; out an eager hand. "You do not ' know what you are asking ; it would be most dangerous to your peace of mind. " I do not think Robin believes this oracular statement ; but she has the good sense not to contradict him. Throwing down her book she rises with a laugh , declaring herself delighted to assist at the coming ceremony. " You-vwiiraiave to excuse me , "I say , ; "for1 fct\tbis\ monnt"Ibecome sware . that Harry is rapidly making his way between Jthe flower-beds to our retreat ; and then I further explain apologeti cally "There are so few mornings * left , you know. " "Just so , " answers Robin , laughing. "Shall I carry some of those booksf" she continues , turning to Jack. "You look rather heavily laden. " L "No , thanks , " returns my Imrfhar B ' 1 * . * ' ' * ' ' * ' - * " * r j-iT. n M iiTT''ITf"i - - - * i in , , , | . i in. .milhiTuiirr-trtif11 T resolutely ; and in my secret heart I come to the conclusion that he Is afraid to tru3t Robin with the volumes lest womanly curiosity should lead hor to peep between tho forbidden loaves. So Robin and Jaok 'disappear through the trailing branches of my arbor , and a few momenta later Har ry enters from the opposite direction. "Oh , Harry , " I .Bay oagerly , when our somewhat lengthy greeting has come to an end , " &o you know last night has worked wonders for JaokP Robin has actually persuaded him to give up those horrid old books over which he was always poring ! I shouldn't wonder if she induced him , before long , to take some interest in , the pursuits of ordinary mortals. " "I wish she would persuade him to marry her , " remarks Harry , with a meditative smile in his kindly eyes. ( to be continued. ) The Dollar Mark. Some discussion has been entered upon with regard to the dollar mark. There is no question that it comes from the Spanish dollar , and that with them it was a reference to the pillars of Hercules , which he was supposed to have set-up at Calpe as a Bign thathe- yond was the mighty ocean , and that man could go no futher than these pil lars. The Spaniards triumphing in the new world which they had gained from Christopher Columbus , placed upon their Mexican dollars these pil lars as a sign that they had gone be yond the confines of the old world. All this is conceded , but the discussion is upon the meaning which the Phoeni cians gave to these emblematic pillars. The authentic story that Hercules burst open tho mountain ridge that separated , the Atlantic from the Medi terranean is obviously a myth , attri buting to the Phoenician god a change wrought by a cataclym , which may have been local or may have been cos- mical. But in no case could the pil lars refer to this geographical change ' by which the Western Mediterranean was formed , that afterwards slowly united itself with the Levant or East ern Mediterranean. For the pillars are obviously a symbol of a Kabirel triad , and by themselves are partly meaningless. They are found in Tyre upon coins , and in Carthage upon coins , and from tho other symbol it is clear that there were two Hercules , who were the champion gods of those who worshipped the sacred tree , which is thought to be a. symbol of infinite love , and to have the same meaning as the winged globe. The two pillars stand invariably in the coins on each side of a temple , or of a conical stone associated with the worship of Astor- eth. Astoreth is the same as the sacred the , and if this symbol is tanta mount to the winged globe , then the two pillars are the same as the two serpents on each side of that symbol. This would explain that Tyrian qoin , which has on its obverse a tree around which a serpent is coiled , and it would also explain the caduceses , the rod around which two serpents are en twined. On the Etruscantombs the two Hercules are generally painted on each side of the entrance , one with lion's skin and club , the other with a goat skin and club. Little is known of the secret rites of Samothrace , where the kabiri were worshipped , but we do know that one Hercules was typified by a white goat and the other by a black goat. It is conjectured that Castor and Pollux represent the two kabiric Hercules of Italian mythology , but the subject is wrapped in great obscurity. What adds to this is the perplexing fact pointed out by Ig3 natius Donnelly , that in the Mexican museum is a large bronze coin similar to the Tyrian one in some respects. There is certainly a tree with a ser- pent twined around it. This would lead to the extraordinary deduction that Tyrian art was derived either from the Mayas or the Talotecc of this continent. , At the Theatre. "Absalom , " said the wife. , settling herself : firmly in her seat , "you have gone { out between the acts three times already. ; If you intend going again you ; will have to climb over me. I > i shall not budge. " "Tha , thass right , Nanshy , " said Mr. Rambo , approvingly , as he climbed over ( her. "You shtay right here. I c'n , ( hie ) budge 'nough f r th' whole fam'ly j , Nanshy. " A Modern Instance. "Madame , are you a woman suf- fragist i ? " 3 "No , sir ; I haven't time to be. " ] "Haven't time ! Well , if you had j the privilege of voting , - whom would _ 1 you ; support ? " ; "The same man I have supported : for : ten years. " 1 "And who is'that ? " ' "My husband. " Nebraska State , Journal. i m . 1 A Family of Physicians.J "Who is your family physician , ! Freddy ? " asked Mrs. Hendricks of the ] Brown boy. ] "We got none , " said the boy. "Pa's , a homeopath , ma's an allopath , sister ] Jane is a Christian scientist , grandpa • and grandma buy all the quack medi- ( cines ' going , uncle James believes in 1 massage and. brother Bill is a horse doctor. ' I tell you , sir , we're in bad \ hape. " l 1 m i i A Deadly Parallel. j "I can't see why there should be ] such ( a craze for Russian literature , " < remarked Hanover Squeer ; "why • should people want to know so much . about a country that nobody would ! care to live in ? " ( "Ah , my boy , you forget , " returned , Barker Carper , "that 'Dante's Inferno' j is so popular that you can buy paper J copies for twenty-five cents. " Puck. , ' ] More Than He Bargained for. j The Pastor You remember me , ] don't you , Polly ? 1 The Parrot Remember you ? I ' reckon I do. You're the copper-toed \ heretic who preaches so long that good < little Tommy wishes ' you'd die. J ( And it was n't many long days be- ] icre fiisfmother learned that Tommy i had'tieen-.giving thato bird , " dtrilyHes ? " sons ) Time. * " * Their Lot Equally Sad. First Old Bach "I wonder who thai melanoholy looking man is ? " Second Old Batch "His name is Blank and he is one of a pair of twins. One of them recently late ids wife and * he other ono recerjSy marrtecL I don't khowhick one lie ! & - " mil , jj.mii limn mmmmmmmmmmm 1 1 . 1 1 . " " ' ' ' " " " " " ' • • r ' ' r s if ANELECTRICAL DISCOURSE The Fomous and World Renowned Brooklynlte Enlightens the Masses. > The Eev. Talmage 'TTsed ' for a Subject , "The Lord Opened the Eyes of the Young Man and He Saw All. " ; Bbooklyx , April 28. At the Tabernacle to-day , the Kov. T. DeWitt Talmago , D. D. , preached a sermon appropriate to tho com ing centennial. Tho vast congregation sang the hymn beginning : Before Jehovah's awful throne , Te natloni , bow with sacred Joys. "Dr. Talmapre's text was II Kings vi , 17 : "And the Lord opened tho eyes of tho young man ; and he saw : and , behold , tho mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha. " He said. As it cost England many regiments and two million dollars a year to keep safely a troublesome captive at St Helena , so tho king of Syria sends out a whole army to capture ono minister of religion perhaps 50,000 men to take Elisha. During tho night the army of Assyrians camo around the village of Dothan , where tho prophet was Staying. At early daybreak tho man sor- Tant of Elisha rushed in and said : "What shall we dol there is a whole army come to destroyyou. . We must die , wo must die. " But Elisha was not scared a bit , for he looked up and saw the mountains all around full of su pernatural forces , and ho knew that if thove were 50,000 Assyrians against him there were 100,000 for him ; and in answer to tho prophet's prayer in behalf of his affright ed man servant , the young man saw it too. Horses of fire harnessed to chariots of lire , and drivers of fire pulling reins of fire on bits of fire ; and warriors of fire with brand- shed sword of fire , and the brilliance of that morning sunrise was eclipsed by the galloping splendors of the celestial caval- • ; ade. "And the Lord opened the oyes of tie young man ; and he saw : and , behold , the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire roundabout Elisha. " I have often spoken to you of the Assyrian perils which threaten our American institutions , but now as we are assembling to keep contennial celebration of the inauguration of Washing ton I speak of the upper forces of the text that are to fight on our sidn. If all the low levels are filled with armed threats , I have to tell you that the mountains of our hope and courage and faith are full of the horses and chariots of Divine rescue. You will notice that the Divine equipage is always represented as a chariot of fire. Ezekiel and Isaiah and John when they come to describe the Divine equipage , al ways represent it as a wheeled , a harnessed , an upholstered conflagration. It is not a chariot like kings aud conquerors of earth mount , but an organized and compressed fire. That means purity , jus tice , chastisement , deliverance through burning escapes. Chariot of rescue ? yes , but chariot of fire. All our national dis- enthrallments have been through scorch ing agonies and red disasters. Through tribulation the individual rises. Through tribulation nations rise. Chariots of rescue , but chariots of fire. But how do I know that this Divine equipage is on the side of our institutions ? I know it by the history of the last one hundred and eight years. The American Revolution started from the pen of John Hancock in Independence hall in 1770. The colonies without ships , without ammu nition , without guns , without trained warriors , without money , without prestige. On the other side , the mightiest nation of the earth , the largest armies , and the grand est navies , and the most distinguished commanders , and resources inexhaustible , and nearly all nations ready to back them up in the fight. Nothing as against im mensity. The cause of the American colonieswhich started at zero , dropped still lower through the quarreling of tne generals , and through the jealousies at small success , and through the winters which surpassed all predeces sors in depth of snow and horrors of con- gealment. Elisha surrounded by the whole Assyrian army did not seem to be worse off \ than did the thirteen colonies encompassed and ! overshadowed by foreign assault. What decided the contest in our favor ? The upper forces , the upper armies. The Green and White mountains of New England , the Highlands along the Hudson , the mountains ] of Virginia , all the Appalachian ranges were \ full of re-enforcements which the young man Washington saw by faith : and his j men endured the frozen feet , and the gangrened j wounds , and the exhausting hunger , andthe long march because "the Lord opened the eyes of the young man ; and he saw ; and , behold , the mountains 3 were full of horses and chariots of j fire round about Elisha. " Washington himself was a miracle. What Joshua was in sacred history the first American presi- dent ( was in secular history. A thousand other < men excelled him in different things , but he excelled them all in roundness and completeness ( of character. The world never ] saw his like , and probably never will see ' his like again , because there probably I never will be another such exigency. He was let down a Divine interposition. He was from God direct. I do not know how any man can read the history i o those times without admitting that ! the contest was decided by the upper forces. Then in 1861 , when our civil war opened , many ] at the north and at tho south pro nounced it national suicide. It was not courage ] against cowardice , it was not wealth against poverty , it was not large states ' against small states. It was heroism against heroism , it was the resources of many \ generations against the recources of generations j , it wa the prayer of the north against ' the prayer of the south , it was one- half of the nation in armed wrath meeting the other , half of the nation in armed indigna- tion. 1 What could come but extermination ? At the opening of the war the command- er-in-chief ' of the United States forces was a man who had been great in battle , but old age , had come with many infirmities , and he had a right to quietude. He could not mount a liorse , and he rode on the battle field in a carriage asking the driver not to jolt it too much. During tho most of the four-years of'the'-contest , on'the southern side was a man in mid-life , who had in his veins the blood of many generations of war riors , himself one of the heroes of Cheru- busco and Cerro Gordo , Contreras and Chapultepec. As the years pass- ed on and the scroll of carnage unrolled , there came out from both sides a heroism and a strength and a de- termination that the world bad never seen marshaled. And what but extermination could come when Philip Sheridan and Stonewall Jackson met , and Nathaniel Lyon and Sidney Johnston rode in from i north and south , and Grant and Lee , the two thunderbolts of battle , clashed ? Yet , ! we are a nation , and yet we are at peace. • Earthly courage did not decide the conflict. The upper forces of the text. They tell us ] there was a battle fought above the clouds : on Lookout mountain ; but. there was some- j thing higher than that. 1 Again , the horses and chariots of God : came to < the rescue of this nation in 1S76 , at . the olose of a presidential election famous - for devilish ferocity. A darker cloud yot 1 settled down upon the nation. The result of ' the election was in dispute , and revolution , ( not between two or three sections , but revo- \ lution in every town and village and city ; of the United States , seemed imminent , j The prospect was that New York would throttle New Yorkand New.Orleans would 1 grip New Orleans , and Boston , Boston , and Savannah , Savannah , and Washington , ] Washington. Some said Mr. Tilden was elected ; others said Mr. Hayes was elected : J and how near we came to universal massacre some of us guossed , but ; God only knew. I ascribe our escape not to the honesty and rigtheous- ness of infuriated politicians , but I ascribe it to the upper forces of the text. " Chariots of morcy rolled in , and though the : wheels were not heard and the flash was not seen , yet all through the mountains of : the north and the south and the east and the west , though the hoofs did not clotter , the cavalry of God galloped by. I tell you God is the friend of this nation. In the awful excitement at the massacre of Lincoln , when there was a prospect that greater slaughter would open upon this nation , God hushed the tempest. In the awful excite ment at the time of Garfield's assassination , ilodput his .foot on theneck , of the cyclone. To prove that God is on the side o this ' nation , I argue from the last eight1 Jbr .nine /reat national harvests , and from the na tional health of the last quarter of a con- , eqidemics very exceptional , and from Iury great revivals of the Church of God , Indfrom the continent blossoming with Asylums and reformatory institutions , and bom an Edenization which promises that ihis whole land is to be a paradise where God shall walk in the cool of tho day. If in other pennons I showed you what was the evil that threatened to upset and * demolish American instituioBS , I am ea- ! | • ( _ • ' * I ' - h = couraged more thnn I can toll you as \ sco tho regiments wheeling down tno sky/and my jeremiads turn Into doxologies , mad that which was tbo Good Friday of tjio uution's crucifixion becomes tho Easter morn of its resurrection. Of course God works through human instrumentalities , and this national betterment is to come among other things through a scrutinized bali6t box. By tno law of registration it is almost impossslblo now to have illegal voting. There was a timo you aud I romombor It very well when droves of vagabonds wandered up and down on election day from poll to poll , and voted here , and voto there , and voted everywhere , and thoro was no challenge ; or , if there were it amounted to nothing , because nothing could so suddenly be proved upon the vaga bonds. Now. in every well organized neighborhood , every voter is watched with severest scrutiny. I must tell the registrar . and how old .1 and how-long my.namo , < . am , < - I have resided in tho state , and how long I have resided in tho ward , or the township , and if I misrepresent fifty witnesses will rise and shut me nut from the ballot box. Is not that a great advance ? And then notice the law that prohibits a man voting if he has bet on the election. A stop further needs to be taken , and that man forbidden a vote who has offered or taken a bribe , wllother it bo in tho shape of n f reo drink , or cash paid down , the suspicious cases obliged to put their hand on tho Bible and swear their vote in if they voto at all. So through tho sacred chest of our nation's suffrage , redemption will come. God also will save this nation through an aroused moral sentiment. 1 hero never has been so much discassion of morals and itn- morals. Men , whether or not thoy acknowl edge what is right , havo to think what is right. We have men who havo had their hands in 'the public trc.isury the most of their lifetime , stealing nil they could got their hands on , discoursing eloquently about dishonesty in pibltc servants , and men with two or three lamilics of their own , preach ing elopjcntly a tout the beauties of the seventh cominandmont. The question of sobriety and drunkenness is thrust in tho face of this nation a * never before , and to take a part in onr political contosts. Tho question of national sobrioty is going to be respectfully und deferentially heard at tho bar of every legislature and ovory house of representatives and every United States senate , and an omnipotent voice will ring down tho sky and across this land and back again , saying to these rising tides of drunkenness which threaten to • whelm homo and church and nation : "Thus far shalt thou come , but no further , and hero shall thy proud waves be stayed. " I have not in my mind a shadow of dis- heartenment as large as the shadow of a housefly's wing. My faith is in tho upper forces , tho upper armies of the text. God is not dead. The chariots are not unwheeled. If you would only pray more and wash your eyes in tho cool , brieht water fresh from tho well of Christian reform , it would be said of you , as of this ono of the text : "The Lord opened tho eyes of the young man ; and he saw : and , beboldtthe moun tain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha. " When the army of Antigonus went into battle his soldiers were very much discour aged , and they rushed up to tho general and said to him : "Don't you see we have a few forces and they have so many more ? " and the soldiers were affrighted at the smallness of their number and the greatness of the enomy. Antigonus , their commander , straightened himself up and said , with in- dignation and vehemence : "How many do you reckon mo to be J" And when wo see the vast armies arrayed ajrainst the cause of sobriety it may sometimes be very dis couraging , but I ask you in making up your estimate of tho forces of righteousness I ask you how many do you reckon the Lord God Almighty to be ? Ho is our commanj der. The Lord of Hosts is his name. I have the best authority for saying that the chariots of God are twenty thousand , and the mountains are full of them. You will take without my saying it that my only faith is in Christianity and in the upper forces suggested in the text. Politi- cal partios come and go , and they may be right and they may be wrong ; but God lives and I think he has ordained this na tion for a career of prosperity that no dem- agogism will be able to halt. I expect to live to see a political party which will have a platform of two planks the Ten Com- mandments and the Sermon on the Mount. When that party is formed it will sweep : across this land like a tornado , I was going to say , but when I think it is not to be de vastation but resuscitation , I change the figure and say , such a partv as that willi sweep across this land liko spice gales from heaven. # Have you any doubt about the need of the Christian religion to purify and make decent ' American politics i At every yearly or ' quadrennial election we have in this . country ' great manufactories , manufactories of ! lies , and they are run day and night , and they turn out half a dozen a day all equipped and ready for full sailingLarge lies and small ; lies. Lies private and lies public and i lie3 prurient. Lies cut bias and lies cut diagonal. ' Long limbed lies and lies with double ! back action. Lies complimentary and : lies defamatory. Lies that some peoE pie believe , and lies that all the people be lieve , and lies that nobody believes. Lies with : humps like camels and scales like crocodiles ! and necks as long as storks and 1 feet as swift as an antelope's and stings like adders. Lies raw and scalloped and panned i and stewed. Crawling lies and jumping lies and ; soaring lies. Lies with attachment ( screws ; and rufflers and braiders and ready < wound bobbers. Lies by Christian people who never lie except during elections , and ( lies by people who always lie , but beat , themselves m a presidential campaign. I confess I am ashamed to have a foreign- ( er ' visit this country in such times. I should think he would stand dazed , his hand on his \ pocket ] book , and dare not go out nights. What will the hundreds of thousands of for eigners ! who come here to } ive think of us i What a disgust tbey must have for the land i of ' their adoption ! The only good thing ( about it ismany of them cannot understand * the ; ' English language. But I suppose the German ' and Italian and Swedish and French papers translate it all and peddle out ( the infernal stuff to their subscribers. j Nothing but Christianity will ever stop such a flood of indecency. The Christian religion : will speak after a while. The bill1 ingsgate and low scandal through which we wade every four years , must be rebuked by ] that ' religion which speaks from its two . great i mountains , from the one mountain in- ' toning 1 the command , lThou shalt not bear * false witness against thy neighbor , " and i from the other mount making plea for kindi ness ! and love and blessing rather than curs ing. ' Yes , we are going to have a national religion. ; There are two kinds of national religion. J The one is supported by the state , and is a matter of human politics , and it has great patronage 1 , and under it men will struggle for prominence without reference to quali fications ; , and its archbishop is supported by ] a salary of 875,000 a year , and there are great cathedrals , with all-the machinery of c music ] and canonicals , and roon for a thout sand people , yet an audience of fifty people , or twenty people , or ten , or two. c We want no such religion as that , no such i national religion ; but we want this kind of ( national religion the vast majority of the c people converted and evangelized , and then " they will manage the secular as well as the 1 religious. . c Do you say that this is impracticable ? No. , The time is coming Just as certain as t there is a God and that this is his book and . and that he has the strength and the hon- \ csty to fulfill his promises. One of the ani cient emperors used to pride himself on per- ] forming that which his counselors said was , impossible , and I have to tell you to-day that man's impossibilities are God's easies.J ] "Hath he said and shall he not-do it ? Hath 1 he ' commanded , and will he not bring it to 1 pass ? " The Christian religion is coming to ( take possession of every ballot box , of every m school house , of every home , of every ; valley , of every mountain , of every acre of 3 our. national domain. This nation , notj withstanding all the influences that are \ trying to destroy it , it is going to live. Never since , according to John Milton , , when "Satan was hurled headlong flaming \ from the ethereal skies in hideous ruin and ] combustion down , " have the powers of dark- ] ness been so determined to win this conti- ] nent as they are now. What a jewel it is . a jewel carved in relief , the cameo'of this , planet : ! On one side of us the Atlantic ocean < , dividing us from the worn out gov- ' ernments ; of Eurone. On the other side the \ Pacific ocean , dividing us from the sunersti- tionsofAsia. On the north of us the Arctic ) sea , which is the gymnasium in which the > explorers and navigators develop their ' couraee. A'continent 10,500 miles long , 17- j OOO.DOi ) square miles ? and all of it but aoout one-seventh 'capableof rich cultivation. . Ono hundred millions of population on ' this continent of North and South America ' one hundred millions , and room for many j hunared millions more. All flora and all . fauna , all metals and all precious woods , * and all grains and all fruits. The Appala- < chian range the backbone , and the rivers 1 tbo ganglia carrying life all through and out to the extremities. Isthmus of Darien , tbo narrow waist of a giant continent , all to be under ono government , and all free , and J all Christian , and the scene of Christ's perc F " " * ' * " * * -i * * * * t S < # ' it . , * * . , . , . ' " " " "l1111"1 u v'T'l" : : ' > i * * -n * i sonol roicm on cs. th If , according to tho i poctations of many gcod people , ho shall at last set up his throne in this world. Whc shall havo this hemisphere , Christ or Satan' Who shall havo tho shoro of bar inland seas , the silver of her Novadas , tho gclil of hor Colorados. tho tolcscopos of hor oi > sorvatorios , tho brain of hor universities tho wheat of her prairies , tho rico of hn ; savannas , tho two groat ocean beaches tht ono reaching from liaflin's bay to Torra dii Fuego , aud tho othor from Bohring strait ) to.Capo Horn and all the moral and torn , poral and spiritual and everlasting interest ! ! of a population vast beyond all human com nutation ? Who shall havo tho hemisphere ! You and I will docido that , or help to decide it , by conscientious voto , Dy earnest prayer , by maintenance of Christian instltut" > ns , by support of great philanthropies , by put ting body , mind and soul on the right Atdo of all moral , religious and national move ments. Ono of tho sevon wonders of the world was tho white marble watch tower of Pharos of Egypt Sostratus , tho architect and sculptor , after building that watch tower cut his name on it Then he covered it with plastering , and to pleaso tho king ho put tho monarch's name on tho outside of tho plastering ; and the storms beat and tho seas dashed in their fury , and thoy washed off the plastering , and thoy washed it out and they washed it down , but tho name of Sostratus was deep cut in tho imperishablo rock. So across the face of this nation there havo been a great many names writ ten , across ' our finances , across our religions , names worthy of remem brance , names written on tho architecture of our churches and our schools and our asylums and our homes of mercy , but God is the architect of this continent , and he was the sculptor of nil its grandeurs , and long after through the wash of tho ages and tho tempests of centuries , all other names shall bo obliterated , .tho divino signature and divine name will bo brighter and bright er as tho millenniums go by , and tho world shall see that tho God who made this conti- nent has redeemed it by his grace from all its sdrrows and from ail its crimes. Have you faith in such a thing as that ? After all the chariots have been unwheeled , and after all tho war chargers havo been crippled , tho chariots which Elisha saw on tho moraine of his peril will roll on in triumph , followed by all tho armies or heaven on white horses. God could do it without us , but ho will not. The weakest of us , the faintestof us , tho smallest brained of us , shall have a part in tho triumph. Wo may not havo our name , like the namo of Sostratus , cut in imperishable rock and conspicuous for centuries , but wo shall bo remembered in a better place than that , even in tne heart Him who came to redeem us and redeem the world , and our names will be seen close to tho signature of his wound , for as today he throws out his arms toward us , he says : "Behold , I have graven thee on the palms of my hand. " By tho mightiest of all agencies , the potency of prayer , I beg you to seek our national wol- fare. Some timo ago there were 4,600,000 letters in the dead letter post office at Washington letters that lost their way but not ono prayer ever directed to the heart of God miscarried. The way is all clear for tho ascent of your supplications heavenward in behalf of this nation. Before the postal communication i was so easy , and long ago , on ( a rock ono hundred feet hicrh , on the coast < of England , there was a barrel fastenl ed i to a post , and in great letters on the sido of i the rock , so it could bo seen far out at sea , were tho words "Post Office ; " and when ships : camo by a boat put out to' take and fetch letters. And so sacred were those de posits of affection in that barrel that no lock was ever put upon that barrel , although it contained messages for America , and : Europe , and Asia , and Africa , and all tho islands j of the sea. Many a storm tossed i sailor < , homesick , got messago of kindness by 1 that rocK , and many a homestead heard • good j news from a boy long gone. Would • that 1 all the heights of our national prosper ity j were in interchange of sympathies i prayers ] going up meeting blessings coming s down ; postal celestial , not by a storm * struck rock on a wintry coast but by tho Rock ; of Ages. o-i V Baising- Pup. f A pup can bo brought up in a great r many different ways , just as there are 3 more methods of killing a dog than t jj choke him to death on butter. Hero's 3 the very latest way to raise a pup. The - youngest in a family of three , a boy of g immense \ acquisitiveness and precocity , brought ' home a tiny Newfoundland ? pup ] the other day. - ' "Willie , " said the mother , "that pup c is too young it is not more than a day old you ought to take it back. " 3 "Oh , I know how to raise it , ma , " P replied the boy. "Wo1 ! ! feed it with a 3 bottle. " 3 _ After some skirmishing this young p fancier J , aided and abetted by his two y sisters , procured a large wine bottle , J which they partly filled with milk and. fa warm water. One of the giris carried the bottle which was to the pup what a hogshead would be to you and the boy held the pup's mouth open. Most of the milk and water went all . over the pup's furry body. This stylo n of feeding might have improved the E dog's coat had it been persevered in , , but ' the dog would have died had not ' of the small cried "The ; one girls : right p way to do is to pour the milk and waii ter on a rag and let the pup eat the f ( rag. " So a rag was obtained and saturated n with milk , but the pup had no connfe dence in the rag his omnivorous appev tite had not yet arrived. He declined to be fed through 'the rag. Jt Then it was the boy's turn again , j- and with a wild yell of joy he shouted : "Oh , I know the very thing. The = medicine dropper. " So the physician's instrument for j * measuring minute doses was hunted up , ; and for hours © very day since the dis- & covery that unfortunate pup has had B its mouth held open to receive nourishfci ; ment from the dropper. n But the pup is getting fat all the rc same and growing apace. Pittsburg w Dispatch. The Extermination of the Buffalo. At the present time , outside of the National Park , where aboutswo hun0 dred and buffaloes har- sixty are now - $ i bored , there are not over three hun- 3 : dred , probably not as many , left in the o whole United States , he survivors of this magnificent race of animals are P * scattered in little bunches in several b > localities. There are about one hun- U dred in Montana , or at least there were a year ago , some at the head of ° > Dry Creek and the remainder at the al head of Porcupine Creek. In Wyom- ing there are a few stragglers from the p , National Park , which , when chased , % run back there for protection. In the ft mountains of Colorado last summer re ' ? there were two bunches of mountain bison , one of twenty-five head and the : other of eleven. These have prob- ably been killed. There are none in Dakota , though eighteen months * ( ago thirty were known to be 3' ' there. It was estimated in 1887 * v that there were twenty-soven in Ne3 , braska , and about fifty more scattered in the • western part of the Indian Ter ritory and Kansas. Those in Nebraska have since been killed by the Sioux. Of the thousands that once inhabited p Texas , only two small bunches remain. Thirty-two head near the Batons , in1 the northwestern part of the Panhantc die , and eight in the sand-hills on the D1 Staked Plains north of the Pecos Kiver. , These were seen and counted on the pr first of April of last year. This estiin mate of the remnant of a great race is believed , to be essentially correjgt It was obtained from reliable and wellj" informed persons throughout the West , " , and in part from personal observation jk during the past year. Franklin Satn terthwaite , in Harper's Magazine. ? t • _ . l < Spring is with us at last ; but there are 3i many cold days ahead for tiie government pi office-holder. Puck. l , ! i _ " / i Callei Grost A Fool. ' ; | j I Private soldiers fnivo their own pri- -jm' ' j vato opinions , oven about the be- _ M havior of their commanding officers , - Jjjfr\ and now and then thoy can not help jry sxpressing them. The historian of * S the Ninety-sixth Ohio Eegiment cites f M4 an instance , attho siege of Vicksburg. \ . Jh At nine o'clock every morning , in full \ p 'm view of the forts , and always over , A3 | the same course , Geuoral A. J. Smith. * • . J | could be seen riding tho same bladk . ' M pacer at lightning speed. At that t J | j hour , therefore , the Confederate ar- V | | I tilleriats stood to their pieces , know- i | | i ing they should have a chance to < M | Bhoot at the "old white hat" whichmA \ the General always wore. As. a con- n | sequence , the boys came to expect a | pj battle shower at precisely nine g o'clock. General Granttoo , madehis g staff , apparently paying no attenW h lion to consequences , individual or f * | collective. At last he seemed to dis- tf f cover that his appearing with so p • ; many attendants caused an unnecesW sary i exposure' of his men , and next * ' day ho came alono. This did not , fe lessen tho enemy's attentions , und Jl i on i tho following morninghoappeared i % ' without insiginia of rank , and mount- J < ed ' on a mule. He halted in the rear \ % of i the Ninety-sixth Ohio , surveyed iw { the position in open view at tho ene- . ' my : , and , intent on knowledge , cooly % drew i his field-glass , took a steady * survey , apparently not being aware of ' the well-aimed shot and shell that whizzed past or exploded above and around him. This play of fireworks i over < the soldiers in the trenches was .f a i little trying to their nerves , and \t \ one . of the men became thoroughly j indignant. ' | "See here , you old fool , " he shout- t ed , to the distinguished observerwho ft was 1 only a few rods distant , "If you • ! don't < get offthatmuleyou'llgetshot ! 4 . Some one informed the man who 8 it was to whom he was administering I such peremptory advice. jl "Well , I don't care ! " he retorted. f "What's he fool in' round here for , 1 any-way ? We're shot at enough , U without takin' any chances with him. j j * Youth's Companion. | | Mi < jl A. l Tramp Killed torive Sardou a L lesson. , * Boston j Journal. , " " * * 6 Long before the world knew of his 'I existence Victorien Sardou was pass- \ ing one winter ' s night along a street in the Latin quarter. "I was asking ( myself , "he Bays , "if life was really J worth so much useless labor , and i * if fare would always be implacable. " fi Sardou was a prey to one of those j | moods of 'tter discouragement , j * which make any folly possible , more j particularly suicide. To escape the if rain , which was falling in torrentshe , stopped for shelter under a porte- I * cochere , which he left suddenly , in- l\ \ stinctively , without knowing why , jf and a ragged tramp took his place. Ij ? Just \ then there was a terrible noise. j j Sardouwho was going on , turned and j saw that an enormous block ofstone i * liad fallen from a passing dray upon J ] bhe tramp , killing him instantly. \ \ \ "I do not know what instinct , " j. says Sardou , "made me quit tho . place which destiny had marked for T J some one's death. But it seemed to f . { * ' show me that I was not raeantto die h\ \ poor and unknown that I must & & ivork , struggle and always hope. J Mv star was shining behind a som- < ) ' bresky ! " V Paper from Wood. J J The discovery of the value of wood ' [ n paper making is credited to Dr. " ° v H. H. Hill , of this city. About forty j fears ago the doctor visited thejpap- j r mill at Vassalboro , andafterlctoki i ' " ngover the machinery suggested the - ' • ' easibility of using wood , and asking "j t vhy the manufactures did not get a j i ew bales of excelsior from Augusta , Ij vhere it was made , and try the ex- ' / . . leriment of makingpaper from wood. 'It can't be done , " said the manu- ha acturers. "Have not you as much ' r gumption as the hornets , whose nests ( j ire made of wood paper ? " asked the " loctor. The result of the conversa- ' , ion was a letter , some time later , * " ' : rom the firm's wholesale agents in jf Scston , asking what they were put- * ing in their paper to make it so / nuch better than it had been. It \t ' vas the wood , then first used in this i'\ \ vay. Kennebec ( Me. ) Journal. if j • - . - . . f- ! Sustaining Strength/ofBricks. ft ) Professor Baker , of , the Illinois Si • Jniversity , writes of the , sustaining | l • ; trength of brick work , "bjr actual I ] xperiments in a testing machine , - - - J | j he average strength , from'fifteen ex- il \ eriments , of piers laid in ordinary ( \ rick : and common limenortar , | \ ] ising ] the same care as that with • ' 1 rdinary brick masonry is built , ! I' - ! tood a few pounds ( I , ami writing , t jj rom memoryover. .l,5Q.q ' .nounds ; j f er square inch ; which is equal to f5 , li 116,000 pounds per square foot , or f j" ! he weightofa column of brick 2,000 f . . et high : with ordinary Portland ] ement mortar , the strength was , $ * { ' - ' or a mean of eight experiments , § | t,500 and some odd pounds per < K - J quare inch , which is-equal to 360- ff-v 100 pounds per square foot , or the T reight of a column of brick masonrv 'r ' 1 1,600 feet high. " j , When It Pinches Us \ \ fl "It is curious , " remarks William j JM -hilpot , "to observe how much more - * " t < 1 normous and outrageous * we are apt < " V Lw account a piece of dishonesty if we | urselves are pinched by it. ' v M hought it sad , and a heinous thin , ' f vL k the land , when , the other day , v * ' 'jH ' lanin my neighborhopd was dis- | H onesfcabout an Insurance business. ' B tut when I discovered , afterwards , ' hat this same man had taken a pre- - W lium out of my own pocket and not a II aid it over , ray indignation knew | fl o bounds. Then Ifeltwhatacrime | il ishonesty was ! " St. Louis ! ? < * - > I II mi0- I . f , „ * - • , ' ' • • - - -flK- j j jl