L . . BMMBBBBBBHBBMBWMBBBMBMBBBBBBBMBBBBBMWBBBBBBMBMBBiMMB T 1 INTERNATIONAL PH | 8 ASSOCIATION. H PART II. I B CHAPTER III ( CoktiKCED. ) Hb As a. rule , the more churlish the na- H' ' ture , tbo more avaricious it is found H\ to be. My promise of liberal remun- BB / erationwas , after all , not without its H'm [ i effect upon the strange couple whose Bji refusal to afford mo refuge had so K nearly endangered my life. They cons B descended to get me some tea and HK rough food. After I had disposed of all B , that , the man produced a bottle of giu. H \ We filled our glasses , and then , with B \ the aid of my pipe , X settled down to B ' make the beat of aUlght spent in , , a HL . * ' " hard wooden chair. B } . , , . .Vhnd-cotii across strange people it B ' my travels , but I have no hesitation in B saying that my host was the sullenest , B sulkiest , most boorish specimen of human - man nature I had as yet met with. In Hfe spite of his recent ill-treatment of me HfTv I v'as nuito ready to establish matters HyL \ on a friendly footing , and made several BPS r \ attempts to draw him into conversa- B \W r tion. The brute would only answer in y monosyllables , or often not answer at M > L\ allSo I save up talking as a bad j ) job. and sat in silence , smoking , and Hr looking into the fire , thinking a good F deal , it may be , of some one I should B , have met that morning at Lilymere , K > < v had that wretched snow but kept off. V . \ * ' * * The long clock that cumbrous m > ljr J\ eight-day machine which inevitably M \ occupies one corner of every cottager's Hp , \ kitchen struck nine. The woman | | / rose and left us. I concluded she was Mfi " soing to bed. If so I envied her. Her BiEw husband showed no signs of retiring. HW * He still sat over the fire , opposite me. B By this time I was dreadfully tired ; ev- r cry bone in my body ached. The hard K chair which , an hour or two ago , Rt , seemed all I could desire , now scarcely B came up to my ideas of the comfort I B was justly entitled to claim. My sulky Bt companion had been drinking silently H , but steadily. Perhaps the liquor he H had poured into himself might have H rendered his frame of mind more B pleasant and amenable to reason. "My good fellow , " I said , "your HR chairs are excellent ones of the kind , B but deucedly uncomfortable. I am hor- H ribly tired. If the resources of your B establishment can't furnish a bed for K me to deep in , couldn't you find a mat- K tress or something to lay down before L the fire ? ' " B "You've got all you'll get to-night , " B he answered , knocking the ashes out of B B his pipe. " P "Oh , but I say ! " B "So do I say. I say this : If you B don't like it you can leave it. We F didn't ask you to come. " B "You infernal beastI muttered B anl meant it too. I declare , had I not C been so utterly worn out , I would have Bfe liad tnst bullet-headed ruffian up for a B-- , few rounds on his own kitchen floor , Bj v and tried to knock him into a more B V , amiable frame of mind. Hk > "Never mind , J' I .said , "but remem- P ber , civility costs nothing , and often Bbt/ sets rewarded. However , if you wisli % to retire to your own couch , don't let < your native politeness stand in your Bt- way. pray don't hesitate on my acV - V count. Leave plenty of fuel , and I Bk shall manage until the morning. " L "Where you stay , I stay , " he an- B swercd. Then he filled his pipe , and Bn once more relapsed into stony silence. B I bothered about him no more. I Bi dozed off for a few minutes woke L dozed off again for some hours. I was B i in. an uncomfortable sort of half sleep , B crammed full of curious dreams v B B' dreams from which I started , wonder- Bp > ins where I was and how I got there. B * " I even began to grow nervous. All B sorts of horrible travelers' tales ran B through my head. It was in just such B places as this that unsuspecting voy- B agcrs were stated to have been niur- B dered and robbed , by just such unmiti- B gated ruffians as my host I can tell B y ° n tnat altogether I spent a most B unpleasant night. B ' To make matters worse and more B ] dismal , the storm still , raged outside. RB ? The wind moaned through the trees , Hjr but it had again changed , and I knew B from the sound * on the window panes B that heavy rain had succeeded snow. Bv As the big drops of water found their IL way dev -n the large old-fashioned N chimsoy , the fire hissed and sputtered ' t B like r. spiteful vixen. Everything comB - B bintd to deprive me of what dog's sleep B I could hy sheer persistency snatch. B I think I tried every position which nt an ordinary man , not an acrobat , is B capable of adopting with the assistance B1 ° a common wooden chair. I even lay BB down on the hard flags. I actually Tw. ' * 2-ed the table. I propped up the lB upper ha f of my body against the cor- B ner walls of the room ; but found no B rest. At last I gave up all idea of Bk sleeping , and fully aroused myself. I B- comforted myself by saying that ray B - misery was onV temporary that the B longest night must come to an end. B J * companion had now succumbed B to fatigue , or to the combined effects B * , of fatigue and giu and water. His * B head was hanging sideways and he Bk slept in a most uncomfortable attitude. B I chuckled as I looked at him. feeling B quite sure that , if such a clod was cap- Bi able of dreaming at all. his dreams Bfj must be worse even than mine. I filled B | : another pipe , poked the smoldering B\v \ logs into a blaze , and sat almost nose Bt\V \ and linees over the fire , finding some Bx' amusement in speculating upon the P condition of the churl before me , and B/ thanking the Lord I was not like unto B • this man. Suddenly an idea flashed B - - across me. I had seen this fellow before. But B x -licnor where.I could not remember. Ejl " . , . - _ m . - . , - " I His feolures. as I looke 'd at them with keener 1 interest , seemed to grow more and more familiar to me. Where could I ] have met him ? Somewhere or other , but ] where ? ' I racked my brain to as sociate i him with some scene , some event. < Although he was but an ordinary # nary ] countryman , such as one sees scores s of In a day's ride , only differing from j his kind on account of his un pleasant } face , I felt sure we were old acquaintances. . When he awoke for a moment ] and changed his strained atti tude < my feeling grew stronger and stronger. , Yet puzzle and puzzle as I would I could not call to mind a for mer } encounter ; so at last I began to think ( the supposed recognition was pure ; fancy on my part. Having smoked out several pipes , I thought that a cigar would be a slight break to the monotony of the night's proceedings. So I drew out my case and , looked at its contents. Among the weeds was one of a lighter color than the others. As I took it out I said to myself , "Why , Old Brand gave me that one when I , was last at his house. " Curiously enough , that cigar was the missing link in the chain of my mem ory. As I held it in my hand I knew at once why my host's ugly face seemed familiar to me. About a fortnight before , being in town , I had spent the evening with the doctor. He was not alone , and I was introduced to a tall pale young man named Carriston. He was a pleasant , polite young fellow , although not much in my line. At first I judged him to be a would-be poet of the fashionable miserable school ; but finding that he and Brand talked so much about art I eventually decided that he was one of the doctor's many artist friends. Art is a hobby he hacks about on grandly. ( Mem. , Brand's own attempts at pic tures are simply atrocious ! ) Just before I left , Carriston , the doe- tor's back being turned , asked me to step into another room. There he 1 showed me the portrait of a man. It seemed very cleverly drawn , and I pre sume he wanted me to criticise it. "I am a precious bad judge , " I said. "I am not asking you to pass an opinion , " said Carriston. "I wanted to beg a favor of you. I am almost ashamed to beg it on so short an acquaintance. " He seemed modest , and not in want of money , so I encouraged him to pro ceed. "I heard you say you were going into 1 the country , " he resumed. "I want to ask you if by any chance you should meet the original of that drawing , to 1 telegraph at once to Dr. Brand. " "Whereabouts does he live ? " "I have no idea. If chance throws 1 him in your way , please do as I ask. " "Certainly I will , " I said , seeing the 1 young man made the request in solemn earnest. Pie thanked me , and then gave me a small photograph of the picture. This 1 photograph he begged me to keep in my pocket-book , so that I might refer to it in case I met the man he wanted. I put it there , went my way , and am sorry to say , forgot all about it. Had it not been for the strange cigar in my case bringing back Carriston's unusual 1 request to my mind , the probabilities 1 are that I should not have "thought again of the matter. Now , by a re ' markable coincidence , I was spending the night with the very man who , so far as my memory served me , must have sat for the portrait shown me at * Brand's house. "I wonder what I did with the ! photo , " I said. I turned out my letter- ' case. There it was. right enough ! Shading it with one hand , I carefully compared it with the sleeper. Not a doubt about it ! So far as a photograph taken from a picture can L go , it was the man himself. The same ragged beard , the same coarse features , the same surly look. Young Carriston i was evidently a wonderful hand at knocking off a likeness. Moreover , in l case I had felt any doubt on the matter , a printed note at the bottom of the photograph said that one joint was ; missing from a right-hand finger. Sure enough , my friend lacked that small 1 portion of his misbegotten frame. This discovery threw me into an i ecstasy of delight. I laughed so loudly that I almost awoke the ruffian. I ; guessed I was going to take a glorious revenge for all the discomforts I had [ suffered. No one , I felt sure , could be i looking for such a fellow as this to do i any good to him. I was quite happy in the thought , and for the remainder of the night gloated over the idea of putting a spoke in the wheel of one who had been within an ace of causing ; my death. I resolved , the moment I got back to civilization , to send the de sired intelligence to . Brand , and hope for the best. IV. s > HE end of that . v/PJ / Vt"lvrotcneci night i \Vt \ y Ma C ) ) ) at last * When l iDu r = ? p ! " broke , I found [ vf't'VC tbat a S 31 cuanSe ) W\\ ha(1 taken place out Y \jA&k of doors. The \ \TV % fierce . snow-storm \ V N\Vj/ had been the fare- 1 - well of the frost. . the heavy rain that j. followed had filled the roads with [ slushy and rapidly-thawing snow. I [ managed to extort some sort of a breakfast from my host ; then , having ; recompensed him according to my promise not his deserts started , as . . . . 1fW " " " ' III II IWWMIHJ..II.IW Cftl M iaa soon as I could , on the bare back of my unfortunate steed for Midcombe , which place , after my night's experience , seemed gifted with merits not its own. I was surprised upon leaving the house to find that it was of larger dl < - mensions than , from the little I saw of it during the night , I had imagined. It was altogether a better class of resi dence than I had supposed. My surly friend accompanied me until he had placed me on the main road , where I could make no possible mistake. He was kind enough to promise to assist any one I might send out in getting the dog-cart once more under way. Then with a hearty wish on my part that I might never again meet with his like , we parted. I found my way to Midcombe with out much trouble. I took off my things , had a wash , and , like a sensible man for once , went to bed. But I did not forget to send a boy straight off to the nearest telegraph station. My message to Brand was a brief one. It simply said : "Tell your friend I have found . his man. " This duty done , I dismissed all speculation as to the re sult from my mind , and settled down to make up arrears of sleep. I was surprised at the reply received that siime evening from Brand , "We shall be with yon as soon as we can get down to-njorrow. Meet us at sta tion. " F.rom this it was clear that my friend was wanted particularly all the better ! I turned to the time table and found that , owing to changes and delays , they could not get to C , the nearest station to Midcombe , until 3 o'clock in the afternoon. I inquired about the cripoled dog-cart. It had been brought in ; so I left strict in structions that a shaft of some sort waste to be .rigged in time for me to drive over the next day and meet the doctor and his friend They came as promised. It was a comfort to see friends of any descrip tion , so I gave them a hearty welcome. Carriston took hold of both my hands , and shook them so warmly that I be gan to fear that I had discovered a long-lost fathpr of his in my friend. I had almost forgotten the young fel low's appearance ; or he looked a very different man to-day from the one 1 had seen when last we met. Then he was a wan , pensive , romantic , poetical- looking sort of a fellow ; now he seemed full of energy , vitality , and grit. Poor old Brand looked as seri ous as an undertaker engaged in bury ing his own mother. Carriston began to question me , but Brand stopped him. "You promised I should make inquiries first , " he said. Then he turned to me. * "Look here , Richard" when he calls me Richard I know he is fearfully in earnest "I believe you have brought us down on a fool's errand ; but let us go to some place where we can talk to gether for a few minutes. " I led them across the road to the Railway Inn. We entered a room , and having for the sake of appearances ordered a little light refreshment , told the waiter to shut the door from the outside. Brand settled "down with the air of a cross-examining counsel. I expected to see him pull out a New Testament and put me on my oath. "Now , Richard , ' he said , "before we : go further I want to know your rea sons for thinkiug this man , about whom you telegraphed , is Carriston's man , as you call him. " "Reasons ! Why of course he is the man. Carriston gave me his photo- graph. The likeness is undisputable leaving the finger joint out of the question. " Here Carriston looked at my cross- examiner triumphantly. The meaning. 1 of that look I have never to this hour understood. But I laughed because I knew old Brand had for once made a mistake , and was going to be called to ' account for it. Carriston was about to 1 speak , but the doctor waved him aside. ( TO H3 COXTINCED.I HOUSE OF COMMONS DEBATE. Jv.ist a Fortnight Usually Favorable Time for Speaklnp. A big debate often lasts a fortnight that is to say , it is carried on during : the Mondays , Tuesdays , Thursdays > and Fridays of two weeks , the Wednesdays - days being usually devoted to the consideration - sideration of bills introduced by unofficial - official members , says Temple Bar. The order in which the leading meni- bers of the government and of the op position speak is previously arranged by the whips of the different parties , , and the speaker , being informed privately - vately of the understanding , calls on these members in the order appointed , no matter how many small men may at the same time strive to catch his ; eye. A member of the opposition always [ ways follows in debate a member of the government. The opening of a sitting - ting and toward its close , or before and after the "dinner hour" that is , from 5 till 7 o'clock and from 10 till 12 ; are considered the best and most favorable times for speaking. It is [ during these periods of the sitting . that the "big guns" on each side are brought into action. Under the rules of the house all opposed business must cease at 12 o'clock and the member who at that hour moves the adjourn- ment of the debate has the right to open it the next evening. If a member - ber of the government speaks last at night , the adjournment of the debate is moved by an opponent of the government - ernment and , vice versa , if a member of the opposition concludes his speech at midnight a supporter of the administration " istration secures the advantage of re- suming the debate on the following evening. The smallest salary ; drawn by any national chief executive in the civilized - ized world is that which the president of the republic of Andorra receives. It is § 1.50 a month , or § 18 a year. TALMAGE'S I SEKEON. "SUFFER FOR OTHERS" LAST SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. rrom : the Text : "Without Shedding : or lJlood Tlirro Is Xo Itoiulstloit of Sinn" • Hebrew * . Chujitcr IX Vergel \ A Kacrlllce That Is I'rnctlceU bj Very l'ovr Voluntarily. Tl OHN G. WIIIT- /Mjhtr TIERthelastof the m/0'l'-\ school \ great of M > O EK u American poets that Kmw * Wil l - J made the last quar- fl5gjsdjgj f * * ter of a century Min = l § I brilliant , asked me = = 2 I TBI S Ia the WhUe Mountains - \ tains one morning - ' after prayers , in which I had given out Cowper's fa mous hymn about "The Fountain Filled with Blood , " "Do you really believe there is a literal application of the blood of Christ to the soul ? " My neg ative reply then is my negative reply now. The Bible statement agrees with all physicians , - and all physiologists , and all scientists , in saying that the blood is the life , and in the Christian , religion It means simply that Christ's life was given for our life. Hence all this talk of men who say the Bible Btory of blood is disgusting , and that they don't want what they call a "slaughter house religion , " only shows their incapacity or unwillingness to look through the figure of speech to ward the thing signified. The blood that , on the darkest Friday the world ever saw , oozed , or trickled , or poured from the brow , and the aide , and the hands , and the feet of the illustrious sufferer , back of Jerusalem , in a few hours coagulated and dried up , and for ever disappeared ; and if men had de pended on the application of the literal blood of Christ. ther would not have been a soul saved for the last eighteen centuries. In order to understand this red word of my text , we only have to exercise as much common sense in religion as we do in everything else. Pang for pang , hunger for hunger , fatigue for fatigue , tear for tear , blood for ' blood , life for | life , we see e very day 'illustrated. The | act of substitution is no novelty , al though I hear men talk as though the , Idea of Christ's suffering substituted for our suffering were something ab normal , something distressingly odd , something wildly eccentric , a solitary episode in the world's history ; when I could take you out in this city , and before sundown point you to five hun dred cases of substitution and volun tary suffering of one in behalf of an other. At 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon go 1 among the places of business or toil. It will be no difficult thing for you to 1 find men who , by their looks , show you that they are overworked. They are prematurely old. They are hastening rapidly toward their decease. They have gone through crises in business that shattered their nervous system and pulled on the brain. They have a shortness of breath and a pain in the back of the head , and at night an in somnia that alarms them. Why are they drudging at business early and late ? For fun ? No ; it would be diffi cult to extract any amusement out of that exhaustion. Because they are avaricious ? In many cases no. Be cause their own personal expenses are lavish ? No ; a few hundred dollars would meet all their wants. The sim ple fact is , the man is enduring all that fatigue and exasperation , and wear and tear , to keep his home prosperous. There is an invisible line reaching from that store , from that bank , from that shop , from that scaffolding , to a quiet scene a few blocks away , a few miles away , and there is the secret of that business endurance. He is simply the champion of a homestead , for which he wins bread , and wardrobe , and edu cation , and prosperity , and in such battle ten thousand men fall. Of ten t buine mrn vhcjr. I b"rv. nj ; die of overwork for others. Some sudden disease - ease finds them with no power of re- sistance. and they are gone. Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution ! At 1 o'clock tomorrow morning , the hour when slumber is most uninterrupted - rupted and most profound , walk amid the dwelling-houses of the city. Here and there you will find a dim light , be cause it is the household custom to keep a subdued light burning ; but most of the houses from base to top are as dark as though uninhabited. A merciful God has sent forth the archangel - angel of sleep , and he puts his wings over the city. But yonder is a clear \ light burning , and outside on the win dow casement is a glass or pitcher con taining food for a sick child ; the food is set in the fresh air. This is the sixth night that mother has sat up with that sufferer. She has to the last point obeyed the physician's prescription , not giving a drop too much or too lit tle , or a moment too soon or too late. She is very anxious , for she has buried three children with the same disease , and she prays and weeps , each prayer and sob ending with a kiss of the palo cheek. By dint of kindness she gets the little one through the ordeal. After ! it is all over , the mother * is taken down. Brain or nervous fever sets in , and one day she leaves the convales . cent child with a mother's blessing , and goes up to join the three in the kingdom of heaven. Life for life. Sub stitution ! The fact is that there are ! an uncounted number of mothers who , after they have navigated a large fam ily of children through all the diseases ; of infancy , and got them fairly started up the flowering slope of boyhood and girlhood , have only strength enough left to die. They fade away ; some call i it consumption ; some call it nervous i prostration ; some call it intermittent ; or malarial indisposition ; but I call it : martyrdom of the domestic circle. Life i for life. Blood for blood. Substitu • tion ! / " - " " iaiMHI M I li li MiMHHHIll > II I J > | ] HI. < | Hmpi < Or porhapa the mother lingers long enough to see a son get on the wrong rsad , and his former kindness becomes rough reply when she expresses anxiety about him. But she goes right on , looking carefully after his apparel , remembering - membering hla birthday with some memento - mento , and when he Is brought home worn out with dissipation , nurses him till he gets well and starts him again , and hopes , and expects , and prays , and counsels , and suffers , until her strength gives out and she falls. She Is going , and attendants , bending over her pil low , ask her if she has any message to leave , and she makes great effort to say something , but out of three or four minutes of Indistinct utterance they can catch but three words : "My poor boy ! " The simple fact Is she died for him. Life for life. Substitution ! About thirty-six years ago there went forth from our northern and southern homes hundreds of thousands of men to do battle for their country. All the poetry of war soon vanished , and left them nothing but the terrible prose. They waded knee-deep in mud. They slept in snow-banks. They marched till their cut feet tracked the earth. They were swindled out of their honest rations , and lived on meat not fit for a dog. They had jaws all fractured , and eyes extinguished , and limbs shot away. Thousands of them cried for water as they lay dying on the field the night after the battle , and got It not. They were homesick , and received no message from their loved ones. They died in barns , In bushe3 , in ditches , the buzzards of the sum mer heat the only attendants on their obsequies. No one but the infinite God who knows everything , knowB the ten thousandth part of the length , and breadth , and depth , and height of the anguish of the Northern and South ern battlefields. Why did these fath ers leave their children and go to the front , and why did these young men , postponing the marriage day , start out into the probabilities of never coming back ? For the country they died. Life for life. Blood for. blood. Substitution - tion ! But we need not go so far. What is that monument In Greenwood ? It is to the doctors who fell in the Southern epidemics. Why go ? Were there not enough sick to be attended in these Northern latitudes ? Oh , yes ; but the doctor puts a few medical books in his valise , and some phials of medicine , and leaves his patients here in the hands of other physicians , and takes the rail-train. Before he gets to the infected regions he passes crowded rail-trains , jegular and extra , taking the flying and affrighted populations. He arrives In a city over which a great horror is brooding. He goes from couch to couch , feeling of the pulse and studying symptoms , and prescribing day after day , night after night , until a fellow-physician says , "Doctor , you had better go home and rest ; you look miserable. " But he cannot rest while so many are suffering. On and on , un til some morning finds him in a deliri um , in which he talks of home , ' then rises and says he must go B look after those patients. He is tolt B lie down ; but he fights his attend ; fl until he falls back , and is weaker B weaker , and dies for people with wl H he had no kinship , and far away f H his own family , and is hastily put a fl in a stranger's tomb , and only the B part of a newspaper line tells us of H sacrifice his name just mentic B among five. Yet he has touchedl H furthest height of sublimity in B three weeks of humanitarian ser H He goes'straight as an arrow toj B bosom of him who said : "I wassick : and ye visited me. " Life for life. BlVod I for blood. Substitution ! t * * ' / What an exalting principle Kiis which leads one to suffer for another ! Nothing so kindles enthusiasm or awakens eloquence , or chimes poetic canto , or moves cations , The prin ciple is the dominant one in our relig ion Christ the Martyr , Christ the ce lestial Hero , Christ the Defender , Christ the Substitute. No new princi ple , for it was as old as human nature ; but now on a grander , wider , higher , deeper and more world-resounding scale ! The shepherd boy as a cham pion for Israel with a sling toppled the giant of Philistine braggadocio in the dust ; but here is another David who , for all the armies of churches mil itant and triumphant , hurls the Goliath of perdition into defeat , the crash of his brazen armor like an explosion at Hell Gate. Abraham had at God'3 ' command agreed to sacrifice his son Isaac , and the same God just in time had provided a ram of the thicket as a substitute ; but here is another Isaac bound to the altar , and no hand ar rests the sharp edges of laceration and death' , and the universe shivers and quakes and recoils and groans at the horror. All good men have for centuries been trying to tell whom this Substitute was like , and every comparison , in spired and uninspired , evangelistic , prophetic , apostolic , and human , falls short , for Christ was the Great Unlike. Adam a type of Christ , because he came directly from God ; Noah a type of Christ , because he delivered his own family from the deluge ; Melchisedec a type of Christ , because he had no pred ecessor or successor ; Joseph a type of Christ , because he wa3 cast out by his brethren ; Moses a type of Christ , because he was a deliverer from bondage - age ; Samson a type of Christ , because of his strength to slay the lions and carry off Uic iron gates of impossibility - ity : Solomon a type of Christ , in the affluence of his dominion ; Jonah a type of Christ , because of the stormy sea in which he threw himself for the rescue - cue of others ; but put together Adam and Noah and Melchisedec and Joseph and Moses and Joshua and Samson and Solomon and Jonah , and they woultl , I llHHII , ii ii pii.iiiiji * mm iimiww ii * i WI m in ii i iiii pbwwi ! ! * & & yii / ff l m I not mnko a fragment of a .Christ , a | | H quarter of a Christ , the half of a Christ , ij , M or the millionth part of a Christ/ , | .i , B He forsook a throne and sat down " ? | ' . H on ( his own footBtool. Ho caroo from. \ H the , top of glory to the bottom of hu- [ H miliatlon ] , and changed clrcumfcr- - \ H ence ( seraphic for n clrcuraforence dla- H bolic. ] Once waited on by angels , now H hissed ] at by brigands. From afar and H high j up he came down ; post meteors B swifter ( than they ; by starry thrones. H himself raoro lustrous ; post larger j M worlds to smaller worlds ; down stairs M of ( firmaments , and from cloud to j H cloud , , and through tree-tops and Into ' M the camel's stall , to thrust his shout- B [ der under our burdens and take th j H lances of pain through his vitals , and B wrapped himself In all the agonlea M which we deserve for our misdoings , H and stood on the splitting decks of a. M foundering vessel , amid the drenching ; H surf of the sea , and passed midnights M on , the mountains amid wild beasts of H prey , and stood nt the point where all , M earthly ] and Infernal hostilities charged M an him at once with their keen sabrca H our Substitute H The mos't exciting and overpowering ; B day , of one summer was the day I spent ' H on ( the battlefield of Waterloo. Starting > B out ( with the morning train from Brussels - H sels , Belgium , we arrived in about an. H hour on that famous spot. A son of ono B who was In the battle , and who had H heard from hla father a thousand times fl the whole scene recited , accompanied. < H us over the field. There stood the old B Hougomont Chateau , the walls dented. B and scratched , and broken , and shattered - B tered by grape-shot and cannon-ball. H There is the well in which three hundred - H dred dying and dead were pitched. J There is the chapel with the head of H the infant Christ shot off. There are B the gates at which , for many hours , { H English and French armies wrestled. > H | Yonder were the one hundred and sixty - B ty gunr. of the English , and the two j B hundred and fifty guns of the French. B Yonder the Hanoverian Hussars fled , B for the woods. Yonder was the ravine i H : of Ohain , where the French cavalry. < H ! ' not knowing there was a hollow } H in the ground , rolled over and down. B troop after troop , tumbling into on * H awful mass of suffering , hoof of kick- j > H ing horses against brow and breast of < B captains and colonels and private sol- ' B diers , the human and the bsastly groaa 1 kept up until , the day after , all was B shoveled under because of the malodor ' B | arising in that hot month of June. B "There , " said cur guide , "the High- B land regiments lay down on their face3 , H waiting for the moment to spring upon H l the foe. In that orchard twenty-fivo H hundred men were cut to pieces. Hero B stood Wellington with white lips , and B up that knoll rode Marshal Ncy on his . H sixth horse , five having been shot under - H der him. Here the ranks of the French. H broke , and Marshal Ncy , with his boot B B slashed of a sword , and his hat off , and. B hi3 face covered powder and. H blood , tried to rally his troops 33 he B cried : 'Come and sec how a marshal B of France dies on the battle-field. * B From yonder direction Grouchy wa3 B MHMHH | | MHflfl HH BB | Hice B Bam ' H fuu r W HBBBI B BB man of destiny. whowasT5IffrTyTH ! ! ! M M troops Old Two Hundred Thousand , H | turned a" ay 'Ub broken h rt , and B the fate of centuries Was decided. ft , ' H fl No wonder great mound has been , H reared there , hundreds of feet high H a mound at the expense of millions of t B dollars and many years in rising , and H on the top is the great Belgian lion of H bronze , and a grand old lion it is. H But our great Waterloo was in Pales- H tine. There cams a day when all hell B rode up , led Apoliyon , and th3 B Captain of our salvation confronted B them alone. The Rider on the white B horse of the Apocalypse going out H against the black horse cavalry of H death , and the battalions of the de- l l moniac. and the myrmidons of dark- B l ness. From twelve o'clock at noon to l three o ' clock in the afternoon the B l greatest battle of the universe went on. B l Eternal destinies were being decided. iv B Ail the arrows of hel ! pierced our B Chieftain , and the battle-axes struck B him. until brow and cheek and shout- B B der and hand and foot were incarnadined - B dined with oozing life ; but he fought B on until he gave a final stroke and the B commander-in-chief of hell and all his B forces fc-1 ! back in everlasting ruin , B and the victory is ours. And on the B mound that celebrates the triumph wo B plant this day two figures , not B bronze or iron or sculptured marble. B but two figures of living light , the lion B of .hidan's tribe and the Lamb that B I'll lSir.vcli- ? . H No less than three attempts to causa B the wind to aid the bicycle-rider ia B driving his machine have recently been B inai'e by inventors , one American and. B two French. In the case of the Amer- B lean and one of the French inventions , B the apparatus constructed on the plan B of a toy windmill is attached to the B machine , and geared to the front wheel B in such a manner that the force of the B wind can be utilized in turning the B wheel. The third contrivance also B acts on the principle of the windmill , fl but its motor , instead of having fans B all facing one way , is shaped like an B empty pumpkin-shell , with the segments - | ments slightly separated and inclined j H inward. The practical usefulness of B these devices remains v .o be demon- B