- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - " i - ' . - - - - , - . . . - - - . - - . ' -r- - : Jr t , I . rftk 0 0W G 7rifr : G r r , GYCLu YRY 1 © 1 4p } id , UU 4 0 ! ; CUA'TER XIV-CoNTisuEo,1 " 'But I ruined all your' happiness ! 0 ' Regina ! my wife ! It has been this accursed - ( - cursed pride that has wrought it all ! If we but haal our lives to live over again ! " " 'Hush ! ' she said softly. 'Let it be as God wills ! He knows best. And there is , a hereafter where all these broken goiclen threads can be taken up , and joined again together. In that we find our compensation , ' "She remained with him until he died. Two days of watching passed , and one morning he quietly breathed his last in her arms. We took his remains - mains home to Auvergne , and there we burled him beneath a tree that he had planted on the day of his marriage. "On an examination of my father's affairs , it was found that he had left his whole vast possessions , without reserve - serve , to his wife ; and counselled me as the son and heir prospective , to make every exertion to discover my lost ter. " : try mother survived him only about six months ; she had been failing gradually - ally , but we did not think her in any mmedlate danger. One day she called us to her and made me promise that wlien she was dead I would dispose of t the estate in France , and go home to , my grandfather in England. And then , having seen Genie provided with a suitable - able home , she desired me to cross the Atlantic , and ascertain if possible the fate of my sister Evangeline. I promised - ised her faithfully to attend to her requests - quests , and then I left her-she wanted to sleep , she said. When we returned to her room she was sleeping the steep . eternal ! " St. Cyril bowed his face in his hands for a moment , then mastering his emotion - tion , continued "I had little to guide mom n my search , but I determined to undr-rtatce it at once. I disposed of my estates in France , and took my sister to England. We were greeted warmly by our grandfather - father , who had sincerely repented his cruelty towards my mother , and after remaining with him a few months , I made arrangements to come to this country. Genie insisted on accompany- lug me. We could not persuade her to stay behind. We took passage in the Alsamo , and ten days out she encountered - tered a gale which made her unsea- worthy , and the captain was about to ' return to the nearest port , when we fell . in with a merchant vessel , bound to I Portlea. The captain of this vessel very kindly offered to take us on board , and those of us who were anxious to reach the States accepted his proposal , my sister and myself being among the inm- ber. I think providence must have directed - rected us to the very spot where we know that our search is ended. Now that I know the fate of Evangeline , it only remains for me to discover the villain - lain who abducted her. I would give balf my life this moment for the privilege - lege of putting a pistol shot through his heart ! " 1 "BY what means can you trace him ? ( how identify him. „ asked Ralph , "I have seen him once. I remember his face distinctly. It was dark , strongly marked , heavily bearded and lit up by eyes that gleamed like fire. " Some sudden thought seemed to strike Ralph rather forcibly. He I started up and paced the floor with Iuur- ried strides. "Was there no peculiarity ? Nothing by which this man could be distinguished - guished from all other men with heavy , beards and dark complexions ? " "There was. He had lost the third and fourth fingers of his right hand. " Ralph gave a sudden start. St. Cyril noticed it. "You have seen him ? " he said. "You know of him ! Only give me a clew to his hiding place , and my life shall be at your service ! " "I think I have seen him , " said Ralph guardedly , "but I am not sure. IIr. St. Cyril I thank you for the confidence you have reposed in me. I will help you to bring this man to justice , if he still lives. I must go home now. I will see you again before night. " The two gentlemen shook hands cor- dially. Ralph bowed to Miss St. Cyril , and left the house. All of his terrible dread of the past night came over him the moment he stepped out into the sunshine - shine and saw the glitter of the sea. He ' shuddered as he passed the little cove where last night they had embarked in the boat. He felt like one suddenly bereft - reft of all power over his body as he turned into the path leading to the Rock. What should he find there ? Had the body of Imogene been tossed up on the shore , or had she made a repast - past for the fishes ? God help him , ' His brow felt as if an iron band bound It round , the world was dark as night , bis head whirled so that he had to steady himself by the door knob before he lifted the latch. He heard voices in the sitting room. Wit > a desperate courage he approached - preached the door. He might as well face the worst at once. He entered the room ; all was bright and cheerful. His mother was sewing in her great chair 1. ' before the fire , and there sitting quietly by the south window , witli some fancy knitting in her hand , was Imogene Trenholme ! CHAPTER Y.V. " RALPH stood like one thunderstruck. He was tempted to pinch himself to make sure that ho was not dreaming. "Come in , Ralph , " said his mother ; "we have been anx- ' bus about you , o Where did you go so early ? " "I-I was called away , " he answered , with some agitation , looking into the pale face of his wife. But she betrayed' no conscious sign that she knew any- thing-perhaps she did not. He could not tell. Just tlmen he could not hear to go in to listen to his mother's kindly i gossip. He wanted to be let alone to collect his scattered faculties. He started to go up to the library. On the upper landing he met Helen Fulton - ton , She was singing gayly a stanza I fronn "Comin' thro' the Rye , " but something - thing in her face made Ralph Tren- holme lay a strong hand upon her arm. "Miss Helen , where were you last night ? " lie asked abruptly. I "In the body , at your service , Mr. Trenhome : , " dropping him a curtsy. "Don't trifle if you please. Answer Inc truly. Did you save me from the commission of a crime the remembrance ! of which must have embittered my whole life ? " "I ? Pie ! Mr. Trenholme ! What did you intend to do ? Kiss the soulery : maid ? She's rather good looking , and } her hair would be auburn if it wasn't red. " "I do not want to jest , Miss Fulton. I am in earnest. " i „ Lord bless us ! I-low solemn the man looks. Did you ever hear about the toad ? " "I do not know to n list you refer. " " Well , once upon a time , a very good nan , a member of the church , I guess , became so disturbed in his mind that sleep forsook his pillow. He grew pale and haggard. His anxious wife inquired - quired the cause , and after a great deal of hesitation lie informed her that lie had committed a murder , and buried his victim under an apple tree in the garden. The good woman got a couple of men to dig for the unfortunate re- mainis , and after a hard two hours' work they turned up the skeleton of a toad. Now I would respectfully inquire if you have killed a toad ? " "You are incorrigible ! But you shall not evade my question. Were you out in the boat last night ? " "Don't ! You hurt my arm ! And you'll break my bracelet. And it cost a heap of money. Yes , I was out in the boat. " "Did you go to the Rover's Reef ? " "I did. " "For what ? " "To see the Rover , of course. " "Pslmw ! Did you see me when I went there ? " "I did ; but unfortunately you were not the Rover. You are not dark enough , and you don't wear a mous- tache. Why don't you ? " "Will you be serious and tell me who you found on time reef ? " "You are inquisitive , Mr. Trenliolme. If I were speaking to a third person , I should say you were impertinent. Can't I go to meet my true love a1 ! by the shining sea without giving an account of it to you ? " "Who did you find there ? " "I found Mrs. Innogene Trenholme and a man bTck as Othello , Moor of Venice. Only I did not know that the Moor had cut off two of his fingers" "How came you to go to the reef ? " "I saw that my lady and her gallant had lost their boat , and thought it almost - most too cold a night for salt sea bath- jug. " "And you took them off ? " "I did. And they offered ine untold gold if I would keep it a secret. I told them I'd never tell of it unless 1 changed my mind. But I'm in a great habit of changing my ntincl. I've done it several times in my life. " "I should think so. Well , Helen Fulton - ton , you know something about me that no one else knows ; you can keep it to yourself or not , as you choose. I will tell you something more. That man has ruined my peace ; he has destroyed my confidence in my wife. A terrible temptation to leave them there to perish - ish beset me last night , and but for you I should have been a murderer. You do not know how deeply grateful I am for my salvation ! " "Thank you. And if you will allow me to offer you a bit of advice , keep quiet on this matter ; the boat drifted away from the reef , you know. " "But this man-this Moor , as you call him-what became of him ? " ' Ah ! You want a litttle more vengeance - geance , do you ? " ' "I want to know whither he went ? " "He went in time direction of Portlea. I know no more. Don't tease me fur- ther. I must dress for dinner. " And she danced away. Ralph went to his room , and sinking on his knees he thanked God from a full heart that he had been saved from this terrible sin. By and by he returned - turned to the parlor , and sitting down beside his mother he told her the story of the St. Cyrus. Mrs. Trenholme IIs- tened with Interest , and was delighted when he had closed. "Then Marina was of noble birth ! " she cried , delightedly ; "and it was no mesaliance : for you to love her , Ralph. Popr child ! 1Ve must have her brother and sister up here at once. " "Just my owns thought , mother , " then turning to Imogene , "Have you anyoh- jection to offer ? " "None , " she answered coldly ; "Mr. Trenholme's friends will always be welcome - come at this house. " So after dinner the Trenliolme carriage - riage and Ralph went down to the Reef House and brought up Mr. and Miss St. Cyril. They met with a cordial welcome - come from llrs. Trenholme and Agnes. But when Imogene was brought face to face with Genevieve , tha agitation of the haughty woman was something almost - most appaling to witness. She turned white'as marble , her eyes glowed with feverish fire. But in a moment she recovered - covered herself and bade Miss St. Cyril welcome with a grace that few could equal. e S 0 4' Time passed. Still the St. Cyrus lingered - gered at the Rock. They were pleased with America , and Ralph would not listen - ten to them when they spoke of going away. His mother was delighted with the brother and sister ; it was very pheasant to have such distinguished persons for guests. It gratified the pride of the good lady. Before a fortnight had elapsed Guy St. Cyril was in love with Helen Ful- ton. And such a life as the gay girl led him ! His tenderest speeches she laughed at ; his flowers she made into wreaths to deck Quito , and when lie asked her to walk or ride she said she must stay at home and finish a pair of stockings she was knitting for her papa. But one day , by sonic stratagem , he beguiled her out to ride. They had not gone a mile from the Rock before she challenged to a race. She rode Agnes' horse Jove , and Guy was mounted on a stout but by no means agile beast that he had taken at random from the stables. The road was smooth and a little de- scending. IIelen gave the word , and off they started. She dicl not put Jove up to his best pace , for she wanted to be near enough to witness Guy's discomfiture - fiture when he shou.'d discover that his horse was not built for sneed. They swept down the hill at an easy canter , down to where the highway was crossed by a brook that was spanned by a stone bridge. Helen was looking back laughing - ing at the sorry figure Guy cut with his heavy going horse , and did not perceive that the late rains had torn the bridge away , until she was on the very brink of the gorge. It was too late to wheel Iner horse ; she gave him the bridle , closed her eyes , and lie leaped the chasm. Guy came up on the other side and hesitated. Helen felt reckless. "I-Ia ! " she called out to him , "so you are afraid ! There i s a ford a few rods above , where you can come through and not get drowned. The water isn't more than two inches deep. I'll warrant you that ! " Her tone stung him. He knew the inferiority of his horse , but he could not endure to be dared thus by a woman. He struck his beast a sharp blow. The animal reared and plunged over. Time water was deep and time current - rent rapid , but the horse was strong and reached the opposite shore , but not before he had cast his rider headlong upon the rocks in the bed of the brook. Helen looked back pale and startled. Her heart felt cold. She turned Jove and plunged into the water. Guy had been partially stunned by the fall , but time coldness of the water had brought him to consciousness. She reached out her hand to him. "Come , " she said : "let me hcp : you out of this. I suppose they will all say I got you in. " Do you want to help me , Helen ? ' ; tTO ] 5 CO.\TLNUEU. ) Identified by Ills Halo. Signor Luigi Arditi , the famous conductor - ductor of opera , and the composer of much delightful music , is entering the fiftieth year of his public career , and on its completion will publish his remin- iscences. The conductor of an operatic orchestra soon learns more about great singers than they themselves could tell him. He knows their moods , can un- clcrstand their temperament , and is , probably the only person to accurately gauge the limitations of their art. Hence Signor Arditi's book will throw a new and interesting light on many favorites of time operatic stage. To all opera goers the halo surrounding Signor - nor Arditi's head is familiar , and the maestro tells a good story about it , at his own expense. It was in the days when the Mapleson opera company , from Her Majesty's , was in America , and at one of the towns Arditi went to cash an open check payable to himself and made out by the impresario. He , reached the bank and presented the paper to time cashier , who looked first at the check , then at him , and said , "I must have some proof of identity. This is an open check ; you may be Mr. Ar- diti or you may not. " This was awk- ivard , for the musician had no card or papers with him , whereby to set the question of identity at rest , and he did not want to have a journey back to his motel. At last a bright idea struck him. "Do you ever go to opera ? " he asked the cashier. "Yes , I have been several times , " replied the cashier. "Then , " cried the musician , turning round suddenly - denly and lifting his hat , "do you mean to tell me you don't know Arditi ? " The familiar back-view at once convinced the cashier , and , with many apologies , the money was paid.-From the Sketch , A boa constrictor in Indianapolis has , diphtheria. Think of the amount of . throat his snakesltip has to gargle.-- Chicago News. ALM AGL JX01. , "AMERICA IS FOR GOD" LAST SUNDAY'S SUEJECT. "And I Bolloid 11not1ier Beast Coming Up Out of tiw Barth ; and lie Mad Ttro lorn3 Like a Lamb , , cncl io Space ns z Drag on"-Itcv. , xiii : 11. - S America mentioned - tioned in the Bible ? Learned and consecrated - secrated men who have studied the inspired books of Daniel and Revelation - lation more than I have and understand - stand them better , agree in . saying that the leopard mentioned in the Bible meant Gre- cia , and the bear meant Medo-Per- sia , and the lion meant Babylon , and the beast of the text coming up out of the earth with two horns like a lamb and the voice of a dragon means our country , because among other reasons it seemed to conmo up out of the earth when Columbus discovered it , and it has been for the most part at peace like a lamb , unless assaulted by foreign foe , in which case it has had two horns strong and sharp , ad the voice of a dragon loud enough to make all nations hear the roar of its indignation. Is it reasonable to suppose - pose that God would leave out from he prophecies of His Book this whole Western Hemisphere ? No , no. "I beheld - held another beast coming up out of the earth ; and he had two horns like a lamb , and he spike as a dragon. " I start with the cheering thought that the most popular book on earth today is the Bible , the most popular Institution on earth today is the church , and the most popular name on earth today - day is Jesus. Right from this audience hundreds of mein and women would , if need be , march out and die for Him. Am I too confident in saying "Ameri- ca for God ? " If the Lerd will help me I will show the strength and extent of the long line of fortresses to be taken , ' and give you my reasons for saying it can he done and will be done. Let us dccn m.e , in this battle for God , whether I we are at Bull Run or at Gettysburg. i There is a Fourth of Julyish way of bragging about this country , and the most tired and plucked bird that ever flew through the heavens is the Ameri- t can eagle , so much so that Mr. Gladstone - stone said to me facetiously , at Hawar- den : "I hear that time fish in . your ' American lakes are so large that when one of them is taken out the entire lake is perceptibly lower , " and at a dinner given in Paris an American offered for i a sentiment : "Here is to the United States-bounded on the north by the aurora borealis , on the south by the procession of the equinoxes , on the cast by the primeval chaos , and on the west by the Day of Judgment. " The effect of such grandiloquence is to discredit the real facts , which are so tremendous they , need no garnishing. The worst thing to do Ji any campaign , military or religious , is to under-estimate an enemy , and I will have no part in such attempt at belittlement. This land to be taken for God , ac- ' ording' to Hassel , the statistician , has fourteen million two hundred and nineteen - teen thousand nine hundred and sixty- seven square miles , a width and a length that none but time Omniscient can appreciate. Four Europes put together - gether , and capable of holding and feeding - ing , as it will hold and feedaccording to Atkinson , the statistician , if the world continues in existence and does not run afoul of some other world or get consumed - sumed by time fires already burning in the cellars of the planet-capable , I say , of holding and feeding more than one billion of inhabitants. For you must remember it must be held for God as well as taken for God , and the last five hundred million inhabitants must not be allowed to swamp the religion of the first five hundred million. Not much use in taking the fortress if we cannot hold it. It must be held until the arch- angel's trumpet bids living and dead arise from this foundering planet. You must remember it is' only about seven o'clock in the morning of our nation's life. Great cities are to flash and roar among what are called the "Bad Lands" of the Dakotas and the great "Columbia Plains" of Washington - ton state , and that on which we put our school-boy fingers on the map and spelled out as the "Great American Desert , " Is , through systematic and consummating irrigation , to bloom like Chatsworth Park and be made more productive than those regions dependent - ent upon uncertain and spasmodic rain- fall. All those regions , as well as those regions already cultivated , to be inhabited - habited ! That was a sublime thing said by Henry Clay , while crossing the Allegheny mountains , and he was waiting - ing for the stage horses to be rested , as he stood on a rock , arms folded , looking off into the valley , and some one said to liim , "Mr. Clay , what are you thinking - ing about ? " He replied , "I am listenIng - Ing to the on-coming tramp of the future - ture generation of America. " Have you laid our home missionary scheme on such an infinitude of scale ? If the work of bringing one soul to God is so great , can a thousand million be captured ? In this country , alreauy planted and to be overcome , Paganism has built its altar to Brahma , and the Chinese are already burning incense in their temples - ples , and Mohammedanism , drunk in other days with the red wine of human blood at Lucknow and Cawnpore , and now fresh from the diabolism in. Armenia - menia , is trying to get a foothold here , and from the minarets of her mosques will yet mumble her blasphemies , saying - ing , "God is great , and Mohammed is His prophet. " Then there are the vast- er multitudes with no religion at all. They worship no God , they live with no consolation , and they die with no hope. No star of peace points down to the manger In which they are born , and no prayer is uttered over the grave into which they sink. Then there is alcoholism , its piled up demijohns and i beer barrels , and hogsheads of fiery death , a barricade high and long as the Alleghenies and Rockies and Sierra Nevadas , pouring forth day and night their ammunition of wretchedness and woe. When a German wants to take a drink , he takes beer. When an Englishman - glishman wants to take a drink , ho takes ale. Whin a - acoiciiman wants to take a drink , lie takes whisky. But when an American wants to take a drink , he takes anything he can lay his hands on. Plenty of statistics to tell how much money is spent in this country for rum , and how , many drunlcards die ! But who will give us the statistics of how many hearts are crushed under the heel of this worst demon of the centuries - turies ? How many hopes blasted ? How many children turned out on the world , accursed with stigma of a debauched - bauched ancestry ? Until time worm of the distillery becomes the worm that never dies , and the smoke of the heated wine vats becomes the smoke of the torment that ascendeth up forever and ever ! Alcoholism , swearing-not with hand uplifted toward heaven , for from that direction it can get no help ; but with right hand stretched down toward the perdition from which it came up- swearing that it will not cease as long as there are any homesteads to despoil , any magnificent men and women to destroy , any immortal souls to damn , 1 any more nations to balk , any more civilizations to extinguish. Then there is wlmat in Ammerica we call Socialism , in France Communism , and In Russia Nihilism-the three names for one and time same thing-and having but two doctrines in its creed : First , there is no God. Second , there shall ho no rights of property. One of their chief journals printed this sentiment - ment : "Dynamite can be made out of the dead bodies of capitalists as well as out of hogs. " One of the leaders of I Communism left inscribed on his prison ! wall where lie had been Justly incarcerated - cerated , these words : "When once you i are dead , there is an end of everything ; therefore , ye scoundrels , grab whatever ! you can-only don't let yourselves be grabbed. Amen ! " There are in this country hundreds of thousands of these lazy scoundrels. Honest men deplore I it when they cannot get work , but those of whom I speak will not do work when , they can get it. I tried to employ one ; who asked me for money. I said , "Down I in my cellar I have some wood to saw , and I will pay you for it. " For a little while I heard the saw going , and then I heard it no more. I went downstairs , ! anti found the wood , but the workman had disappeared , taking for company both buck and saw. Socialism , Comnmunism and N hilism mean , "Too wicked to acknowledge God , and too lazy to earn a living , " and among the mightiest obstacles to be overcome are those organized elements i of domestic , social and political ruin. There also are time fastnesses of infidelity - fidelity , and atheism , and fraud , and political corruption , and multiform , hydra-headed , million-armed abominations - tions all over the land. While the nmiglitiest agencies for righteousness on earth are good and healthful newspapers - papers and good and healthful books , ; and our chief dependence for intelligence - gence and Christian acimievement is j upon them , what word among words in our vocabulary can describe the word of that archangel of mischief , a corrupt - rupt literature ? What man , attempting - ing anything far God and humanity , has escaped a stroke of its filthy wing ? ; What good cause has escaped its bin- ; derment ? What other obstacle in all the land so appalling ? But I cannot name more than one-half the battlements - ments , the bastions , the intrenchments , the redoubts , time fortifications to be stormed and overcome if this country is ever taken for God. The statistics are so awful that if we had nothing but the multiplication table and the arithmetic - metic , time attempt to evangelize America - ca would be an absurdity higher than the Tower of Babel before it dropped on the plain of Shirar. Where are the drilled troops to march against those fortifications as long as the continent ? Wliere are the batteries that can be unlimbered'against these walls ? Where are the guns cf large enough calibre ) to storm these gates ? Well , let us look around and see , the first of all , who is our leader and who will be cur leader until the work is done ? Garibaldi , with a thousand Italians , could do more than another commander with ten thousand Italians. General Sherman , on one side , , and Stonewall Jackson , on the other , each with ten thousand trcops , could do more than some other generals with twenty thousand troops. The rough boat in which Washington crossed the icy Delaware with a few half-frozen troops was mightier than the ship of war that , during the Amen- can revolution , came through the narrows - rows , a gun at each porthole , and sunk in Heil-Gate. Our Leader , like most great leaders , was born in an obscure l place , and it was an humble homeabout five miles from Jerusalem. Those who' were out of doors that night said that there was stellar commotion , and music that came out of the clouds , as though the front door of heaven had been set open , and that the camels heard his first infantile cry. Then he came to the fairest boyhood that mother was ever proud of , and from twelve to thirty years of age was off in India , if traditions there are accurate , and then returned to his native land , and for three years had his pathway surrounded - ed by blind eyes that he illumined - ined , and epileptic patients to whom he gave rubicund health , and : ' atit _ _ _ < - r tongues - that he loosed from silence ink t , song , and those whose funerals he stopped that he might give back to bereaved - j reaved mothers their only boys , and whose fevered pulses he had restored to rhythmic throb , and whose paralytle 1 limbs he had warmed into healthful circulation-pastor at Capernaum , but # flaming evangelist everywhere , hush- lug crying tempests and turning roll- ing seas into solid sapphire , and for the rescue of a race submitted to courtroom - i room filled with howling miscreants , and to a martyrdom at the sight of which the situ fainted and fell back In f the heavens , and then treading the ' clouds homeward , like snowy moun- ( ' tam-peaks , till heaven took him back r again , more a favorite than ho had ever been ; but , coming again , he is on earth now , and the nations are gathering to his standard. Following him were the t Scotch covenanters , the Thoban legion , the victims of the London Haymarket , the Pledmontese sufferers , the Pllgrint Fathers , the Huguenots , and uncounted multitudes of the past , joined by about four hundred millions of the present , and with the certainty that all nations shall huzzah at his chariot-wheel , he goes forth , the moon under his feet and the stars of heaven for his tiara-the , Mighty Leader , he of Drumclob , and Bothwell Bridge , and Bannockburn , and the One who whelmed Spanish Armada - mada , "Coming up from Edom , with dyed garments from Bozrah , traveling In the greatness of his strength , mighty to save , " and behind whom we fall into line to-day and march in the campaign that is to take America for God , Hosanna - sanna Hosanna ! Wave all the palm- , branches ! At his feet put down your silver and your gold , as ht heaven you will cast before him your coronets. i With such a Leader do you not think we can do it ? Say , do you think vro , , can ? Why , many ramparts have a- ready been taken. Where is American slavery ? Gone , and the South , as heartily as the North , prays "Peace to Its ashes. " Where is bcstfal polygamy ? Gone , by the fiat of the United States government , urged on by Christian sentiment - timent , and Mormonism , having retreated - treated in 1830 from Fayette , New York , to Kirkland , Ohio , and In 1533 retreated to Missouri , and in 1S4G ro- treatedto , Salt Lake City , now divorced from its superfluity of wives , will soon retreat into the Pacific , and no basin t smaller than the ocean could wash out ' its pollutions. Illiteracy going down under the work of Slater and Peabody funds , and Sabbath schools of all the churches of all denominations ! Pugilism - ism now made unlawful by congressional - sional enactment , the brutal custom knocked out in the first round ! Corruption r ruption at the ballot box , by law of 1 registration and other safeguards , made almost impossible ! Churches twice as t large as the old ones , the enlarged supply - ply to meet the enlarged demand ! Nihilism - ism getting a stunning stroke by the summniary execution of its exponents f after they had murdered te policemen in. Chicago , received its deathblow from ' l the recent treaty which sends back to Russia the blatant criminals who had been regurgitated on our American I t 's shore. The very things that have been's quoted as perils to this nation are go- , Jag to help its salvation. Great cities , 3 r so often mentioned as great obstacles- the center of crime and the reservoirs of a1 ! iniquities-are to lead in the work of gcspelization. Who give most to home missions , to asylum , to religious education , to all styles of humanitarian and Christian institutions ? The cit- ies. From what place did the most relief go at the time of Johnstown flood , and Michigan fires , and .Charleston earthquake , and Ohio freshets ? From the cities. From what place did Chnit send cut his twelve apostles to gospel- ize the world ? From a city. What place will do more than any other place , by its contribution of Christian men and women and means , in this work of i taking America for God ? New York city. The way Paris goes , goes France. The way Berlin goes , goes Germany. The way Edinburgh goes , goes Scot- land. The way London goes , goes En- gland. The way New York and a couple - ple other cities go , goes America. May the eternal God wake up to the stpen # deus issue ! _ OBSERVED OF OBSERVERS. One of the latest re-enlistments in the navy is that of Tohmi R. Knowles , the sailor who lashed Admiral Farragut to the rigging of the Hartford in her memorable - , orable fight with the confederate iron- clad ram Tennessee in Mobile bay. t Knowles has been in time service forty- seven years. 4 Mrs. Levi P. Morton and eighteen other women well known in New York in various branches of philanthropic ' work have undertaken to establish a t co-operative employment bureau for tha u Supply of .its patrons with all sorts of , w " ' help. The British chemist who recently found in a terrestrial mineral the clement - ment helium , hitherto believed to exist , only in the sun and a few stars , was Prof. William Ramsay. Miss Braddon intends to write no S more novels. She has already given to - the world more than fifty worlcs of fiction. Monsignor Cape ] , the well known Re- man Catholic ecclesiastic , became a ranchman in California a few years rage ago , and is now said to be very m wealthy. Formerly , the pink of perfec- t tion in dress , lme has ron become indifferent - I different to his garb , and alwrays appears - pears in the rough costume of m } ranch- man. He was a brilliant social figure in London , and ] s said to be the original inal of Catesby in Disraeli's "Lothair. " The Tennyson memorial to be erected near the poet's old home on the Isle of Wight will bear the legend : "Erected by Friends In England and AmcIca. " The late Oliver Wendell Holmes was the first American contributor. Hiram S. Maxim , the inventor , says that New Englanders are the best mechanics - chanics in the world , and that the French are the best mechanics in Europe. Some folks ara a long timo-in finding out , ' that it never pass to worry. Eery man makes uucrltten la ra th others have to keep. r ; - r