f A Fascinating Romance by Alan Adair , , , CHAPTER III. Richard Dempster had never entire ly trusted Hutchinson.Although he had been a member of his firm 'or years he had never made him a partner , and the utmost he had done was to allow him a very liberal salary , and a com mission on what he had made. There fore it was not a difficult matter to get rid of him ; but the interview between the three men was one which neither forgot. Alan Mackenzie , who , as he told Veronica , wanted no one to do his dirty work , was present , and unfolded document after document of incrim inating matter. If he had not made the discovery it would have come to it that the Brazilian government would have arraigned the firm of Dempster on the charge of selling firearms - arms to the insurgents. Richard Dempster knew that the confidence in them would be shaken unless he be haved firmly. He dismissed Hutch inson , offering him no consolation ; the man must consider himself dis graced. His imprecations against Mackenzie were deep and terrible. Alan would not have cared if it had not been for Veronica. After all , the , man was Veronica's father , although the girl had never rightly understood why she had never been acknowledged. There was a mystery which Hutchinson - son alone knew , but he was a quiet and reserved man , steeped to the brim in plots , and he could be dangerous , as quiet people alone can. Dempster's adieux to Hutchinson were short "You would have betray- ed me , " he said to the man who had been in his employ for years , more years than he cared to think , "if it had not been for Mackenzie ! My word has always been well thought of until now , my firm an honorable one ; but you would have dragged me down ! " Hutchinson said nothing , but glared at Mackenzie. "That young cur ! " he said ; "but I will be even with him yet ! " When it came to sayying goodbye to Alan it was another airair. The elder man had taken a great liking to Alan ; he had full confidence in him. "Look here , my lad , " he said , "I sha'n't leave you at Santa Rosa I'm not sure it will be worth your powder and shot ; but go there now , and I will move you on to San lago in a little while. " Alan thanked him and went. His head was full of Veronica. The girl was about to show her confidence in him in the fullest way a woman can. True she was leaving nothing but unkindness - kindness and tyranny ; but Veronica was young , and very beautiful , and many men would have rejoiced to have secured her for life. He had made all arrangements for the girl. She was to leave Rio at once and go and wait for him at Santa Rosa , He had sent her money , and had found a lady who would look after her until he came to claim her for himself. They would be married at once , and he would begin his life there a married t man. He was looking forward to thisv new life. He wanted a companion a woman. Sometimes he felt that , if I it had been possible , he would have preferred a woman who would deli mand more of him , for as long as he was simply joined to Veronica she si was perfectly happy. Poor child ! she gi had had so much unkindness in her v short life , for she was but seventeen ! n Alan Mackenzie was not a man who makes plans that come to naught. Before - I fore another three months were over w he was established at Santa Rosa , si married to Veronica. She had a sur prise in store for him. She told him hi that Hutchinson had come home from cc the momentous interview vehemently hi abusing Alan. tt She had stood up for him , and then ai he had flown into a violent rage and tt had abused her , telling her that she cc was not his child , and that she had no se claim upon him. In some strange way hi this rather pleased Alan. He had very si definite ideas as to duty , and it had st vexed him that it was his fate to undr mask the father of the girl he was to h marry. Therefore , Hutchinson's hj words that she was not his child ci rather relieved him. sn And now there began some mon&s n of quiet , uneventful , pleasurable life , it Veronica was sweet , gentl" , loving , H and very beautiful. It was impossible pi not to become fond of her ; and though hi Alan knew that there were possibilye itiee of love within him which she pi never drew out , yet he never regretted Si his chivalry. She was not very use ful , but she made a home. She always to looked charming and made the rooms lo pretty with flowers and ornaments , fis She was always there , too , to talk to th him when he wanted to talk , to ride fu with him when he wanted to ride. She to seemed to live simply to give him pleasure. True , he never discussed th any serious topic with her , and there en was a part of his nature that was a sealed book to her ; but that did not pa prevent its being a happy , easy life , be But it only lasted four months. Alan lit and his chief corresponded two or ba three times a week , but only on busihe ness affairs. If Richard Dempster vfi heard a rumor of Alan's living at Sanea ta Rosa as a married man he did not sa attach much Importance to it. Alan ju was doing such good work that he was th : almost wasted at such a small center wz as Santa Rosa. He knew it himself , ne but he had been grateful for the opdc portunity of establishing himself | there. Now Richard Dempster wished him to go further down the coast , to the growing town of San lago , to es tablish a branch of his business there. It was four days' journey by steam er , and Alan thought that the best plan would be to leave Veronica in her own comfortable little house , with her own servants , until he could find a suit able place for her in the new town. The news of this separation was like a blow to Veronica. She clung so to Alan that it seemed to him that she led no life apart from him. But she made no demur ; everything that he said was law to her. She only lifted a pale face , down which tears were streaming , to her husband , and said : "But not for long , Alan not for long ! " "Not for a week longer than I can help ] , darling , " he said fervently. He , too , would feel the separation ; he loved ] her as one does an affectionate child who idolizes one. She never pre tended to bs on equality with him , and she was quite content to be just loved by him arid petted ; but she loved him with all the force of her nature. She saw that if she made any difficulties- it i would only worry him , and so she made none ; but Alan could not but notice that she grew thinner day by day. "Do you mind my going so much , dear little one ? " he asked her , on the eve before his departure. They were sitting on the verandah together , on one of those moonlight nights which always reminded Alan of the first time he had seen Veronica. Pie , too , was feeling sad. His poetical nature was easily touched , and his wife's quiet , dignified grief made it more dif ficult to leave than any noisy demon- stration of woe. "Mind it ? " she said , her voice vi brating with passion. "Mind it ? You don't J know what it is to me ! It is like tearing soul from body ! " v He had not thought she had real depth within her. "If you feel it like that you will make me miserable , " he said. "Will I ? " She smiled , as if pleased that she could make him feel miser- able. "You will understand when I say that I am pleased , won't you , Alan ? " "My dear child , it is only a matter of weeks ! I don't suppose that I shall have been there a fortnight before I shall have found something suitable for you. And then , you know , I have arranged for this house to be taken off your hands , so that you may not have any trouble. " "It is a dear little house ! " she said , with half a sign. "I shall always be grateful to it. It is the only place I have ever been happy in. " He pinched her . .cheek. Men do not always ! understand why a woman d likes one house and not another. "I shall remember that you like a ver W andah with flowers round it , " he said. "Have you any other likings about a house , Veronica ? " be "Only that you must be inside it , " tt she laughed , with rather a pitiful at d tempt to be merry. "Alan , you must ar write the instant you arrive , and you must not mind if my letters are short ; t- write such bad letters. " "But mine must be long is that it , P1 ° little one ? " She laughed again and then she stopped. "How many days before you get there , Alan , four or five ? And you will be on that horrid black water at te night : ! Oh , I hate the thought of it ! " at He laughed outright at this. "And m a sea captain's son ! Why , I love the ID water , Veronica ! I could willingly TO spend my life on it ! " hi The very next day he left. Veronica ca had exercised all her strength and sc courage , and she nerved herself to wish ta him goodbye ; but she had dreamed of fiv the man who she had known as father , wl and that always alarmed her. Still , wi though she was nervous , she was no sc coward , so she kept her fears to her- eij self , only she prayed earnestly that no sii harm might come to her beloved , and < ie she showed him a bright face before jle she left. Alan accomplished his four days' voyage in safety , and wrote home to his wife constantly. As he had predicted , there was no great diffi culty in finding n home which would suit Veronica. He only placed the a necessities of life in it , knowing that im would please her to make it pretty. tal He got servants , and saw that the tic place was full of flowers ; and though the his work engrossed him to the utmost , wi yet he began to look forward to the lai pleasant home life he had enjoyed in las Santa Rosa. toi : "I must not become selfish , " he said ini himself. "A wife like Veronica , so loving and yielding , makes a man sel thi : fish ; but I will not be that. " He th : thought how he could make her life fuller , by encouraging her to read and know more of the outside world. "Just now I fill up her life , " he thi : thought. "I may not always be wr snough for her. " to : And then at last the day for her departure tei : parture came. He had booked her berth for her in one of the best of the ' foi little coasting steamers the best was Ne bad , as we reckon steamers and then , waited for his wife. The weather ' 'or was stormy , and he was rather un- jasy. Veronica would surely be a bad sailor , and she was not very strong fust then. He was so little used to hink of weather and winds that he ME was rather astonished to think how up upme icrvous he had become. He put it me Jown to his love for Veronica. vas Anyhow , he was down at the quay 17 early on the fourth mnrnlns , and still more Tmeasy ai "heaxtns that tTiorc was no ncrwa of the steamer. He haunted the quay all the next day , rather to the detriment o2 Ms work , and at night ho could not sleep. Thoughts of Veronica's fears and suf ferings obtruded themselves. Ht blamed himself for leaving her , foi not having returned to fetch her , al though ho could not well have left She had always hated the water and feared it , and he had loved it. The next day he was down at the quay again , trying to get some information about the steamer. In a little while not he alone , but the owners of ths boat , began to get frightened. They could get no news. No other boat seemed to have seen anything of her. By and by there were stories of some of the wreckage of a steamer being washed ashore , and at the end of a fortnight the haggard man who spent his days at the quay looking out for the boat which would never return to the town had to give up all hope. The steamer had assuredly gone down , and all hands Avith it ; and Veronica , his wife , was lost with the others ! And so ended this brief little episode. Alan had been very happy with his gentle wife , and South America was loathsome to him now. He began to long , with a longing that had been stifled during .his brief married life by the drawing out of other parts of his nature , for England and things Eng lish. The white , clear moonlight , the scent of the tropical flowers , the soft , dark eyes and liquid accents of the Spanish women , the songs they sang , the very guitars they played , remind ed him of his poor Veronica , now ly ing fathoms deep under the restless sea. sea.But But as she had never stirred the passionate depth of his nature , so her death never drew out passionate grief. He felt lonely , that was all ; and the glowing land , where everything was so beautiful and yet seemed so ephem eral , became distasteful to him , sohe gladly accepted Richard Dempster's offer to manage the export part of his business i. in London , and to return to English shores. In a short time his South American experiences almost faded out of his mind. Veronica became a sweet mem ory to him , which moonlight nights freshened. He was very successful In his work , and in four years time had gained a good position for himself. He was ambitious , too , and began reading for the bar , which he found he could do together with his work for the firm. And four years after he left South America saw him respected and much made of as any young man of twenty- six might be who is beginning to be known as a man who may become im portant. < ( To be continued. ) Debarred from Koyal Presence. ; Now and then one hears of society ladies being offered large sums and. laac accepting them for presenting an ambitious acbi bitious woman at a drawing room ; bibi but money will not always secure ol of the lord chamberlain's cards of ad ofm mission. For example , the wife or daughter of a retail tradesman , how ever large his business and however 6AW wealthy he may be , is never allowed fr to enter the royal presence , and twc frvc Ol three other classes are rigorously vc barred. There is also an objection tc ctw the wives of company promoters. In w deed , when there is a drawing room tl announced the clerks in the lord cham- w herlain's office have quite an exciting n' . time in inquiring into the position of , those desiring to attend. Lender Chronicle. gj is Scalped Thirteen Indians. th thw Wichita correspondence Chicago In w ter Ocean : Fred Grabby , aged 64 , died nc Strand , Kan. , last week. Grabby an made himself famous by scalping IS tie Indians in one bunch 14 years ago. He de was traveling through Oklahoma with his family. Thirteen young Indians came upon him and demanded his ha scalp. He fled to the wagon and ob pi tained a lasso. This he threw around 11 five Indians and bound them together th while his wife held the others at bay an with a rifle. After he had killed and W scalped the five hs killed the othei hi eight. Such a feat was never before or pe since heard of. To commemorate the th deed Grabby settled on the spot where killed the Indians. apmi mi Immensity of China. exwl China and its dependencies have sh total area of 4,218,401 square miles anc tie : population : of 402,680,000. In area il it itwl includes nearly one-twelfth of the to wl ; area of the globe , while its popula bo tion includes nearly one-third of all kn people in the world. As comp.ared : he ivith the United States , the latter's is foi land possessions being excluded , China of 800,000 more square miles of terri- cri : ory and more than five times as many itir inhabitants. The population of China ju proper per square mile is 292 ; that of he state of Rhode Island is 254 , and di hat ! of Texas six. : as ed. Prince Shocked by Vaudeville. His more or less royal ex-highness , inwo Prince Kalaminanole , of Hawaii , wo vho is now in New York , went alone as see a vaudeville show there to de- is isgrz ermine if it was a proper place to grz ake his wife , and though the per- wo 'ormance was mild enough from a yoi Sew York standpoint , he was greatly of shocked and decided it would not do the princess. mo all hei Jonnthin Edwards'Memorial. thr The First Church of Northampton , en1 Mass. , will , on June 22 , place a tablel of ipon the walls of its sanctuary in of nemory of Jonathan Edwards , who if pastor of this church from 1726 to yoi L750. est SESS TALMAGE'S SERMON. DRAWS A LESSON FROM A NOBLE WOMAN'S LIFE. To Tliosc Engaged In Alleviating Human Distrois Self Sacrificing Work Aasurcc of a Klcli lieivard Ilorcnftcr Praluc for the Needle. ( Copyright , 1900 , by Louis Klopsch. ) Dr. Talmage , who is still traveling in northern Europe , has forwarded the following report of a sermon in which he litters helpful words to all who are engaged in alleviating human distresses and shows how such work will be crowned at the last ; text , Acts ix , 39 , "And all the widows stood by him weeping and showing him the coats and garments which Dorcas made while she was with them. " Joppa is the most absorbing i ity of the orient. Into her harbor once float ed the rafts of Lebanon cedar from which the temples of Jerusalem were built , Solomon's oxen drawing the logs through the town. Here Napoleon had 500 prisoners massacred. One of the most magnificent charities of the cen turies was started in this seaport by Dorcas , a woman with her needle em broidering her name ineffaceably into the beneficence of the world. I see her sitting in yonder home. In the doorway and around about the build ing and in the room where she sits are the pale faces of the poor. She lis tens to their plaint , she pities their woe , she makes garments for them , she adjusts the manufactured articles to suit the bent form of this invalid woman and to the cripple that comes crawling on his hands and knees. She gives a coat to this one , she gives san dals to that one. With the gifts she mingles prayers and tears and Christ ian encouragement. Then she goes out to be greeted on the street corners by those whom she has blessed , and all through the street the cry is heard , "Dorcas is corning ! " The sick look up gratefully into her face as she puts her hand on the burning brow , and the lost and the abandoned start up with hope as they hear her gentle voice , as though an angel had ad dressed them , and as she goes out the lane eyes half put out with sin think they see a halo of light about her brow and a trail of glory in her pathway , night a half paid shipwright climbs the hill and reaches home and sees his little boy well clad and says , "Where did these clothes come from ? " And they tell him , "Dorcas has been here. " In another place a woman is trimming a lamp. Dorcas brought the oil. In another place a family that had not been at table for many weeks are gathered now , for Dorcas has brought bread. But there is a sudden pause in that woman's ministry. They say : "Where is Dorcas ? Why we haven't seen her for many a day. Where is Dorcas ? " And one of these poor people goes up and knocks at the door and finds the mystery solved. All through the haunts of wretchedness the news comes , "Dorcas is sick ! " No bulletin ccfli flashing from the palace gate telling the stages of a king's'disease Is more ttai anxiously waited for than the news from this benefactress. Alas , for Jop pa there is wailing , wailing. That voice which has uttered so many cheerful words is hushed ; that hand which has made so many garments for the ] poor is cold and still ; the star a which had poured light into the mid 1)1 night cf wretchedness is dimmed by CV'm the blinding mists that go up from the m . river of death. In every forsaken , place in that town , wherever there is a sick ( child and no balm , wherever there hunger and no bread , wherever 01 there is guilt and no commiseration , to wherever ] there is a broken heart and IK comfort , there are despairing looks tli and streaming eyes and frantic ges- O\J ticulations as they cry , "Dorcas is th dead ! " th The Miracle of Peter. IK They send for the apostle Peter , who ui happens to be in the suburbs of the uiWl place , stopping with a tanner of the st name i of Simon. Peter urges his way th thWl through the crowd around the door Wl and stands in the presence of the dead. th What demonstration of grief all about ; of him ! Here stand some of the poor j an people , who show the garments which ' te this poor woman had made for them. | at Their grief cannot be appeased. The fie apostle Peter wants to perform a fly miracle. He will not do it amid the ed sxcited crowd , so he orders that the ha svhole room be cleared. The door is Ai Aim shut against the populace. The apos- m stands now with the dead. Oh , CO is a serious moment , you know , the vhen you are alone with a lifeless bu jody ! The apostle gets down on his of tnees and prays , and then he comes to SO' . lifeless form of this one all ready tin : the sepulcher , and in the strength the him who is the resurrection he sis sisi ries , "Tabitha , arise ! " There is a In the fountains of life ; the heart lai lutters ; the nerves thrill ; the cheek thi : lushes ; the eye opens ; she site up ! ro We see in this subject Dorcas the rowi : lisciple , Dorcas the benefactress , Dor- wi the lamented , Dorcas the resurrect- wi . no If 1 I had not seen that word disciple at my text , I would have known this atme voman was a Christian. ' Such music Me that never came from a heart which tin not chorded and strung by divine we . Before I show the trace. you needle cai : work of this woman I want to show gr her regenerated heart , the source tin a pure life and of all Christian fin liarities. I wish that the wives and cai : oothers and daughters and sisters of ma the earth would imitate Dorcas in tht discipleship. Before you cross the hreshold of the hospital , before you res nter upon the temptations and trials wh tomorrow , I charge you in the name sin God and by the turmoil and tumult nol the judgment day , O women , that It ! attend to the first , last and great- a gen duty of your life the seeking for 'nly ' ] God and being at peace with him When the trumpet shall sound , there will be an uproar and a wreck of mountain and continent , and no hu man arm can help you. Amid the rising of the dead and amid the boiling of yonder sea and amid the live , leap ing thunders of the flying heavens calm and placid will be every wo man's heart who hath put her trust in Christ calm notwithstanding all the tumult , as though the flre in the heavens were only the gildings of ar autumnal sunset , as though the peal ol the trumpet were only the harmony ol an orchestra , as though the awful voices of the sky were but a group of friends bursting through a gateway at eventime with laughter and shout ing , "Dorcas the disciple ! " Would God that every Mary and every Martha would this day sit down at the feet of Jesus ! PraUo of the Nocdlo. Further , we see Dorcas the benefac tress. History has told the story of the crown ; epic poet has sung of the sword ; the pastoral poet , with his verses full of the redolence of clover tops and a-rustle with the silk of the corn , has sung the praises of the plow. I tell you the praises of the needle. From the fig leaf robe prepared in the garden of Eden to the last stitch taken on the garment for the poor the needle has wrought wonders of kindness , gen erosity , and benefaction. It adorned the girdle of the high priest , it fash ioned the curtains in the ancient tabernacle - ernacle , it cushioned the chariots of King Solomon , it provided the robes of Queen Elizabeth , and in high places and in low places , by the fire of the pioneer's backlog and under the flash of the chandelier , everywhere , it has clothed nakedness , it has preached the gospel , it has overcome hosts of penury and want with the war cry of "Stitch , stitch , stitch ! " The operaa tives have found a livelihood by it , and through it the mansions of the employer are constructed. Amid the greatest triumphs in all ages and lands , I set down the con quests of the needle. I admit its crimes ; I admit its cruelties. It has had more martyrs than the flre ; it has punctured the eye ; it has pierced the side ; it has struck weakness into the lungs ; it has sent madness into the brain ; it has filled the potter's field ; it has pitched whole armies of the suffering into crime and wretched ness and woe. But now that I am talking of Dorcas and her ministries to-the poor , I shall speak only of the charities of the needle. This woman was a representative of all those who make garments for the destitute , who knit socks for the barefooted , who prepare bandages for the lacerated , who fix up boxes of clothing for mis sionaries , who go into the asylums of the suffering and destitute , bearing that ] gospel which is sight for the blind and hearing for the deaf , and which makes the lame man leap like a hart and brings the dead to life , immortal health bounding in their pulses. What a contrast between the practical be I nevolence of this woman , and a great de.il of the charity of this day ! This woman did not spend her time idly planning how the poor of the city of Joppa were to be relieved ; she took her needle and relieved them. She was not like those persons who sympa thize with imaginary sorrows , and go m out in the street and laugh at the boy a who has upset his basket of cold vie- ev tuals , or like that charity which makea Y rousing speech on the benevolent pr platform and goes out to kick the beg gar from the step , crying , "Hush your orWl Wl miserable howling ! " Wlm "Woman's lionet olencu. si I am glad there is not a page of hi the world's history which is not a rec th ord of female benevolence. God saya gn all lands and people , Come now and ni hear the widow's mite rattle down into du the poor box. The Princess of Conti Pi' sold all her jewels that she might help SI the famine stricken. Queen Blanche , As the wife of Louis VIII. of France , Fr hearing that there were some persons unjustly incarcerated in the prisons , went out amid the rabble and took a stick and struck the door as a signal that they might all strike it , and down went the prison door , and out came the prisoners. Queen Maud , the wife fie Henry I. , went down amid the poor tie : and washed their sores and administered Thin tered : to them cordials. Mrs. Retson , in Matagorda , appeared on the battle field while the missiles of death were i flying around and cared for the wound- tUJ : d. Is there a man or woman who He lias ever heard of the civil war in America who has we not heard of the wo men of the sanitary and Christian Se commissions or the fact that before lor smoke had gone up from Gettys .he burg and South Mountain the women spi the north met the women of the edj south ' on the battlefield , forgetting all lee heir animosities while they bound up wo wounded and closed the eyes of the soi slain ? Dorcas , the benefactress. spi ; I come now to speak of Dorcas , the tot amented. When death struck down soi ; hat good woman , oh , how much sor- cer : ow there was in the town of Joppa ! elt suppose there were women there thr vith larger fortunes , women , perhaps , the vith handsomer faces , but there was am grief at their departure like this the death of Dorcas. There was not he nore turmoil and upturning in the poi Uediterranean sea , dashing against wharfs at that seaport , than there ret vere surgiugs to and fro of grief be- sto ause Dorcas was dead. ere . There are a freat many who go out of life and are nit inmissed. There may be a very large he ; imeral , there may be a great many ent arriages and a plumed hearse , there out nay be some high sounding eulogiums , ble bell may toll at the cemetery gate ! ofwit here may be a very fine marble shaft wit eared over the resting place , but the son i-hole thing may be a falsehood and a ham. The church of God has lost J lothing , the world has lost nothing , usi is only a nuisanca abated. It is only ten grumbler ceasing to find fault. It Is an idler stopped yawning , it is - fashionable part0a only a dlaslpated _ _ prophet , "Howl , fir tree , for too has fallen ! " Widowhood comes the departed which shows the garments lifted up to ed had made. Orphans are look Into the calm face of the sleeping vagrancy benefactress. Reclaimed of he. cold brow comes and kisses the who charmed it away from sin ana all through the streets of Joppa therp Is mourning mourning because Doi , - cas is dead. When Josephine of Franco was carried out to her grave , there and women of were a great many men pomp and pride and position that went out after her , but I am most af fected by the story of history that on that day there were ten thousand of the poor of France who followed her coffin , weeping and wailing until the air rang again , because when they lost Josephine they lost their last earthly friend. Oh , who would not rather have such obsequies than all the tears that were ever poured in the lachry mals that have been exhumed from ancient cities ? There may be no mass for the dead ; there may be no costly sarcophagus ; there may be no elabo rate mausoleum , but in the damp cel lars of the city and through the lonely huts of the mountain glen there will be mourning , mourning , mourning , be cause Dorcas is dead. "Blessed are the dead who die In the Lord ; they rest from their labors , and their works do follow them. " Resurrection of Dorcas. I speak to you of Dorcas , the resur rected. The apostle came to where she was and said , "Arise , and she sat up ! " In what a short compass the great writer put that "She sat up ! " Oh. what a time there must have been around that town when the apostle brought her out among her old friends ! How the tears of Joy must have started ! What a clapping of hands there must have been ! What singing ! What laughter ! Sound it all through that lane ! Shout it down that dark alley ! Let all Joppa hear n ! Dorcas is resurrected ! You and I have seen the same thing many a time ; not a dead body resusci tated , but the deceased coming up again after death in the good accom plished. If a man labors up to fifty years of age , serving God , and then dies we are apt to think that his earth ly work is done. No. His influence on earth will continue till the world \ ceases. Services rendered for Christ never stop. A Christian woman toils for the upbuilding of a church through many anxieties , through many self denials , with prayers and tears , and then she dies. It is 15 years since she went away. Now the spirit of God descends upon that church , hundreds of souls stand up and confess the faith of Christ. Has that Christian woman , who went away fifteen years ago , nothing to do with these things ? I see the flowering out of her noble heart. hear the echo of her footsteps in all the songs over sins forgiven , in all the prosperity of the church. The good that seemed to be buried has come up again. Dorcas is resurrected ! After awhile all these womanly friends of Christ will put down their needle forever. After making gar ments for others , some one will make garment for them ; the last robe we ever wear the robe for the grave. You < will have heard the last cry of pain. You will have witnessed the last orphanage. You will have come in worn out from your last round of mercy. I do not know where you will sleep i , nor what your epitaph will be , but there will be a lamp burning at that tomb , and an angel of God guarding it , and through all the long night no rude foot will disturb the dust. Sleep on , sleep on ! Soft bed , pleasant ' shadows , undisturbed repose ! Sleep on ! Asleep in Jesus ! Blessed sleep From which none ever wake to weep ! NEW KIND OF FLY. solder , Fooled by Tuning ; I'ork Daiuo.l on It. An astonished , but apparently satis- led spider , was one upon which a gen- leman recently made an experiment. The result of his investigations is told Public Opinion. While watching some spiders one day , it occurred to lim to try what effect the sound of a uning fork would have upon them. r had a strong suspicion that they vould take it for the buzzing of a fly. selecting : a large , fat spider that had eng been feasting on flies , he sounded < fork and touched a thread of the spider's web. The owner was at one sdge of his web. and the thread se- ected was on the other side. Over his vonderful telephone wires the buzzing iound was conveyed to the watching pider. but from his position he could tell along which particular line the ound was traveling. He ran to the enter of the web in hot haste , and all round until he touched the bread against the other end of which fork was sounding. Then , taking mother thread along with him as a irecautionary measure , he ran out to fork and sprang upon it. At this loint he found out his mistake. He etreated for a short distance , and topped to survey this new buzzing reature which should have been a fly. < was strangely unjike any insect had ever se n. At length , appar- ntly convinced that the object at the uter edge of his web was more suit- for amusement than for an article diet , he got on it again and danced pleasure. It was evident that the ound of the fork was music to him. Jones "That bald-headed man I3 sing hair restorers. He must be con- amplatlng matrimony. " Johnson- Very likely he's Just got a divorce " -iSiew York Journal.