i t ' " ' ' - - s i ... a The Sioux County Journal, VOLUME VII. HAKKISON, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, BEBRUARY 7, 1895. NUMBER 22. AN AUTUMN PICTURE. Tha beautiful love days are over, Ttoe weeping of summer rain, And Nature's ajur I barvest-beaped With golden fruit and grain. The leave in the forest are colored ' With the blush of the wooing breeze. And the an'i last glow i a softer red Aa it links between the trees. "i Then twilight pink and amber, , And a passing promise of snow. Is whispered through the velvet wooda When the autumn moon ia low. THE CAPTAIN'S WIFE. Old Fort Bad win consisted of a row of squat, one-story adobe houses, built In Mexican style, which were the quar ters of the officers, and a similar, though somewhat differently arranged, line of buildings, extending at a right angle from the end of the officers' quar ters, that comprised the barracks o-cu-pled by the three companies of Infantry and one troop of cavalry which made up the garrison. The storehouses, sta bles, corrals, etc., completed all there was of Fort Badwln. It was a sun-baked slope, extending toward the Gila, three rulles away, but along a pretty stream, a redeeming fea ture, having Its source In the springs at the base of the mountain which form ed the background. The landscape was till farther relieved by the extending lfnes of Cottonwood and mesquite trees which bordered the little stream, called by the Indians the "Shus-Be-To," or Bear's Water. Around this "post" the Apaches were everywhere, even stealthily crawling Inside the line of sentinels at night, or shooting their arrows at the sentinel as he walked his lonely beat On one dark night they watched the guard at the cattle corral, and during his short ab sence from a selected spot by an adroit use of their rawhide lariats succeeded In dragging several of the smeller ani mals through an opening they had forc ed between the logs, without discovery; whereat a soldier next morning rhym ed: "Lo! the poor Indian, with untutored mind, Finds calves in the corral and chokes off their wind." In the year which followed the close of the war of the rebellion, to Fort Badwln had eomi) Captain Slgourney, -.with his bride anu his cavalry troop. Oentle Mary Slgourney was a minis ter's daughter, who In the far-away New England town had Joined her life with that of the brave young captain, that hero for whom she had forsaken home and kindred, to share with him the wild, unknown life on the frontier. The fair, girlish form seemed strangely out of keeping with the rude surround ings, but she was content Barely were the soldiers given time to occupy their quarters aftpr the weary march across the sandy deserts. It was Indiuns! Indians! everywhere and at all times. Captain Slgourney, the ideal of an American cavalry offi cer, was almost constantly In the sad dle, his form a tower of physical and moral strength. His rough-rldlng troop ers were already a terror to the neigh boring bands of Apaches, who felt that their strongholds and mountain fast nesses were no longer places from which they might defy the troops of the Government. It was Sunday afternoon. The Oc tober sun shone brightly as stable-call was sounded at Badwln; but, Instead of "answering the call," both officers and men had collected In groups about the flagstaff, intent upon a strange some thing which had attracted (heir atten tion. Even the few members of the officers' families were there, In a llttlo knot but slightly removed, and the eyes of all were riveted on a common object. Gradually it wus seen to emerge from the haziness of the surrounding hills, and soon forms were distinguishable. But ere this the clear notes of the cav alry bugle rang out, "Boots and sad flies!" and the long roll of the Infantry was promptly beaten. Captain Slgour ney was already In line with his troops on the flank of the post facing old Mount Turnbull, near him the longer line of the Infantry battalion, had also halted, and now, In ominous silence, do the veterans so recently from the scenes of a civilized war, wait the approach of a savage foe. With bated breath had been passed from one to another the dreaded uamc of "Cochise," that fearless Indian whose prowess had for years main tained an absolute supremacy through out the Southwest, from the Ulo Grande to the Colorado, the mention of whom might well cause the cheek of the bor der man to pale. From bis customary haunts Cochise had heard of the work of the "blonde soldier chief on the 8hus-Be-To, and had come to punish hi in. He had brought his chosen warriors, armed with the lance, with bows and arrows, and with firearms, the spoils of many a massacre In Arizona and Honors.. Con trary to his custom, be had said he would tight the soldiers on open ground; and now, followed by a horde of paint ed fiends, be was riding on In hot haste to the devoted garrison at Badwln. On, on they moved, with almost mili tary precision, and In numbers much greater than the little body of troopers. An occasional glimpse could be caught from beneath the overhanging cloud of dust with which they were envelop ed, while so perfect was the discipline of this wonderful savage that no word was spoken, the silence being broken only by the pounding of the unshod hoofs, and the snorting of the ponies, who scented the coming fray. The Indians had advanced so that the dull sound of their coming was audible, and had reached a level piece of ground adjacent to the post, when the com mand "Forward!" was given by the cavalry captain, and the troop moved out This, in rapid succession, was followed by the commands "Trot!" and "Gallop!" Then, in the clear, brisk notes of the bugle, came the "Charge!" With ranks unbroken, and gleaming sabers high In air, sped the gallant troopers, with the swiftness of the wind, to meet momentum with momen tum. Five hundred yards were passed, and the white man and the red were for an Instant face to face, eye glaring Into eye, with silent deadly purpose; then the wild whoop of the Apaches filled the air, echoing back from the mountain side as from a thousand sav age throats, mingling with the loud cheers of the soldiers as the surging bodies met. "Turning In his saddle, the captain called: "Now, men, each one pick his In dian!" There was no time for more. At the head of the Indian band rode the hercu lean Cochise, with lance already poised, who now in broken English shouted: "Here, white man! We to fight!" The point of the Indian's lance was near the captain's breast, when, with a quick stroke of the saber he severed It from the staff and sent It whizzing through the air. Then bending as he rode, he pierced Cochise's arm; but ere he could seize the udvantage which for an Instant seemed within his grasp, the crowding horses of his troopers forced him on. Now the soldiers and the Indians were a confused, dust-enveloped, undlstln gulshable mass, each fighting desper ately for life. Quickly flashed the sa ber, alternating the thrusts of the lance dexterously parried by the practiced trooper, while from the tightly druwn bows too surely flow the murderous flint-pointed arows of the Apaches. Here In the dust they rolled, side by side, the unhorsed trooper and his wily foemnn. Then on foot they fought, with carbine, with pistol, or still with lance and snber, with the ferocity of war, and for seif-preservatlou, this unto the death. KldcrlfKH dashed the frightened po nies of the Indians and larger horses of the fallen soldiers, with nostrils wide apart, wildly snorting Into the thickest of the fight; then, as some faithful brute received his death wound, sounded that cry of equine ter ror heard mid the scenes of carnage where Destiny has ever led humanity. There was no quarter; to fall was almost certain death. Quickly was the ground strewn with the bodies of those who but now sought each other's lives; together, silently and peacefully, lay the white man and the Indian in the arms of death. All this passed In almost the space of time It has taken to tell It and the op posing forces had passed "through each other." On the other side the trumpet had already sounded the "Kally." Quickly did the. captain assemble the remainder of his men to renew the charge, but the Indians did not wait; it was not their method. The Apaches seemed almost to vanish, so rapidly did they gnlu the cover of the trees and rocks which bordered the stream at a point above the post. While the cavalry was charging the Indians on the open plain to the right, their infantry companies hud not re mained Idle. As the troop had moved out to meet Cochise, there had come from ths concealment afforded by the rocks and mesquite trees above and In the rear, another band of Indians, dis mounted. This was even a larger number than that with Cochise, and was led by a powerful savage, sec oud only to Cochise himself. Hitherto their presence had not been discover ed; and had the first party not been U'aten off, It was their apparent pur pose to form a Junction Inside the post, where a general massacre would have been the sequence. The approach of these Indians was only discovered by the Major who commanded the Infantry, In time to en able him to move his men at a rapid gait to a dace In the rear of the line of officers' quarters. Directly behind each set of these quarters had Ieen built a "dug-out," a kind of outside cellur, such as Is used In warm cli mates for keeping the family stores; these were a few feet below the level of the ground, the logs forming roofs covered with earth. Into these were now unceremoniously hurried the ter rified women and children composing the families of the officers and soldiers of the command. It was' Just possible to do this and reach a point beyond, perhaps one hundred yards distant, when the at tack began. The quiet was broken by the fierce whoop of the Apaches, which, once heard, can never be forgotten. The gaudily painted and ochared savages, !aro to the waist and clad only In breech-clout and rooooMlaa, came on at a rapid ran, In a thin, scattering line, extending far to U right and left To throw out a skirmish line waa but the work of moments, when the steady Ore of the disciplined soldiers checked the rapid advance of tie In dians, causing them to waver slightly. Quickly pushing his temporary ad vantage, the Major drove them again to shelter But now there came from the Apaches a deafening yell, the sig nificance of which the soldiers knew too well Cochise had come! Wrhen Captain Sigonrney saw that Cochise bad gone, be for the first time beard the firing In the post Moving his' troop at a gallop, he quickly paaaed over the ground of his recent charge and reached the remainder of the com mand Jnst as It was being forced back upon the rear of the line of officers' quarters and toward the little parade ground at Baldwin. Many of the sol diers had already been killed by the united bands of Apaches; with Cochise at their head, and In numbers greatly in excess of the soldiers, It seemed a forlorn hope, and that it only remained for these brave men to sell their lives as dearly as possible. But now once more rang on the evening air the welcome notes of the bugle, mingled with the wild cheering of the gallant Infantrymen, as from be tween the quarters dashed the troop ers. In the light of the setting sun again the saler flashed and did Its noiseless execution; the pistol, too, came into noisy requisition, alternat ing with the cracking carbine shots; the footmen took new heart, and their long guns sent many a red man to tha happy hunting-grounds; the bul lets pattered, and the whizzing arrows sounded like flights of birds. The struggle was desperate; Iho fate of the little garrison trembled In tlio balance. From the thickest of the fight the quick eye of Cochise fell on Slgourney. His wounded arm still smarted from the Captain's thrust, and once more he called: "Now, white man, die!" Cochise was again armed with his favorite weapon, the lancw; with a deally point he rode straight at the young commander. Again the latter attempted to parry, but this time was less fortunate. The lance entered his side and he was dismounted, the In dlan still holding the end of tUe weapon. To Captain Slgourney, helpless anl wounded at the feet of his savage ad versary, all seemed over. Done now his dream of glory, done his loyal pride In his chosen work, done everything for him on earth save, last the agon ized thought of his widowed brido. To die thus without another glimpse of the sweet face of her who was so near, to leave her in her desolation Whiz! Crack! With a mnd yell Cochise sprang Into the air, and the fallen soldier realized that not two hours ago, but ouly the space of a lightning flash, had the lance entered his side. Cochise had not time to finish his work. The fight still raged; but in place of the bloodthirsty Apache, a woman s form bent over her husband, and Mary Slgourney dropped the still smoking gun. With strength born of agony, she dragged the wounded man back to the safety of the dug-out The fall of Cochise turned the tide of battle; and, waiting only to secure the wounded chief, the Apaches scurried to the hills like a flock of quails. Then for her who had saved the day at Bud win for the Captain's wife! long and loudly did the soldiers cheer.- Wuver ly Magazine. AN UNAPPRECIATED GIFT. A Washington Woman Received One I'renent Too Many. There is a department woman In Washington whose fondness for pets Is known to all her friends. Not long ago a woman who boards In the same house with her bought a squirrel In a cage, and to give her a pleasant sur prise put It In her room one afternoon. The department woman came home and went to her room. She did not appear at dinner. There was no light In her room. Not a sound was heard from her. At last, late In the evening, her friends began to be worried about her, and one of them went np and knocked on the door. The department woman was within and in a whisper she answert'd the knock. "I can't stir," Bhe said. "Some addle headud fool has put a squirrel In here and It's got out of Its cage. Every time I try to strike a light It flies all around the room. It's torn a big hole In the lace curtain and smashed two of my vases. There's an Ink bottle on the bureau, and I don't dare move for fear he'll knock that off next What am I going to do?" There was a consultation outside, but nobody could think of anything to do. The department woman stood It until midnight, and then her wrath getting the better of her prudence she declared she'd light the gas If the squirrel broko everything In the room And when the gag was lighted there was the squirrel safe In his cage again. But the woman who bought him has found another boarding house. Washington Star. Bis Fad, John D. Loackamp, of Billings, Mont., apparently has a corner on elk teeth, having 80,000 at them In his poaseuilon. TALM AGE'S SERMON. GREAT PREACHER AT THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MUSIC. Ha Preaches Purely Ooepel Sermon Abounding; la Information and Full of Eloquent Logic A Few Kemarka About Political Reform. Pointa of Compaaa. The hearty welcome accorded to Dr. Taimage at the Academy of Music, New York, Sunday before lust, on the occasion of the eminent divine's introduction to the metropolitan pulpit, was additionally emphasized by the immense throag that greeted him last Sunduy afternoon, and which tilled every seat from orchestra to top gallery. The singing was led by Professor. Ali's cornet and the services opened at precisely 4 o'clock with the singing of the long meter Doxolngy. The subject of Dr. Talmage's discourse was "Points of Compass" and the text Luke xiii, 20, "They shall come from the east, and from the west and from the north, end from the south, and shall sit down." The mun who wrote this was at one time a practicing physician, at another time a talented painter, ut another time a powerful preacher, at another time a reporter an inspired reporter. God bless and help and inspire all reporters! From their pen drops the health or poi son of nations. The name of this report er was Lucanns, for short he whs called Lnke, and In my text, although stenog raphy had not yet been born, he reports verbatim a sermon of Christ which in one paragraph bowls the round world into the light of the milleniitra. "They shall come from the esst, and from the west, and from the north and from the outh, and shall sit down." Nothing more interested me In my re cent journey around the w.rhl than to sec the ship captain about n"ii, whether on the Pacific, or the Indian "r Bengal or Mediterranean or Ked looking through ft nautical instruim at to find just where we were sailing, and It Is well to know that, though the csptnin tells you there are thirty-two points of divis ion of the compass card in tha marine compass, there are only four cardinal points, and my text hailR them the north, the south, the east, the west. Bo I spread out before us the map of the world to see the extent of the gospel campaign. The hardest part of the field to be taken Is the north, because our gos pel is an emotional gospel, and the na tions of the far north are a cold blooded race. They dwell amid icehergs ami eternal snows and everlasting winter. Greeulanders, Laplanders, Icelanders, Siberians their vehicle Is the sledge drawn by reindeer," their apparel the thickest furs at all seasons, their exist ence a lifetime battle with the cold. The winter charges upon them with swords of Icicle and strikes them with bullet of hail and pounds them with battering rams of glacier. The Gospel In the North. But already the huts of the Arctic hear the songs of divine worship. Al ready the snows fall on open New Testa ments. Already the warmth of the Sun of Righteousness begins to be felt through the bodies and minds and souls of the hyperboreans. Down from Nova Zembla, down from Spitsbergen seas, down from the land of the midnight suns, down from the palaces of crystal, down over realms of Ice and over dominions of snow and through hurricanes of sleot Christ's disciples are coming from the north. The inhabitants of Hudson Bay are gathering to the cross. The Church Missionary Society in those polar climes has been grandly successful in establish ing twenty-four gospel stations, and over 12.000 natives have believed and have been baptized. The Moravians have kindled the light of the gospel all up and down Labrador. The Danish mission has gathered disciples from among the shiv ering inhabitants of Greenland. William Duncan preaches the gospel up In the chilly latitudes of Columbia, delivering one sermon nine times In the same day to as many different tribes, who listen and then go forth to build schoolhouses and churches. Alaska, cnlled at Us annexation Wil liam II. Seward's folly, turns out to be William H. Seward's triumph, and it Is hearing the voice of God through the American missionaries men and women as defiant of arctic hardships as the old Scottish chief who, when camping out in a winter's night, knocked from under his son's head a pillow of snow, saying that such indulgence in luxury would weaken and disgrace the clan. The .leannette went down in latitude 77, while De Long and his freezing and dying men stood watching It from the crumbling and crac kling polar pack, but the old ship of the gospel sails as unhurt in latitude 77 as In our 40 degrees, and the one-starred flag floats above the topgallants in Baffin's Bay and Hudson's Strait and Melville Sound. The heroism of polar expedition, which made the names of Sebastian Ca bot and Scoresby and Schwatka and Hen ry Hudson Immortal, is to be eclipsed by the prowess of the men and women who amid the frosts of high latitudes are this moment taking the upper shores of ICu rope, Asia and America for God. Scien tists have never been able to agree as to what is the aurora borealls, or northern lights. I can tell them. It is the banner of victory for Christ spread out In the northern night heavens. Partially ful filled already the prophecy of my text, to be completely fulfilled In the near fu ture, "They shall come from the north." Chrlxt In the Honth. But my text fakes in the opposite point of the compass. The far south has, through high temperature, temptations to lethargy and Indolence and hot blood which tend toward multiform evil. We have through my text got the north In, notwithstanding its frosts, and the tame text brings In the south, notwithstanding Its tonidity. The fields of cactus, the orange grovel and the thickets of mag nolia are to be surrendered to the Ixrd Almighty. The south! That means Mex ico atul all the regions that William II. Preacott and Lord Klngaborough made familiar ia literature Mexico In strange dialect of the Aztecs; Mexico conquered by Ilernan Cortez to be more gloriously conquered; Mexico, with its capital more than 7,000 feet above the sea level, look ing down upon the entrancement of lake and valley and plain; Mexico, the home of nations yet to be bora all for Christ. The south I That means Africa, which David Livingstone consecrated to God when he died on his knees in his tent of exploration. Already about 750,000 con verts to Christianity In Africa. The south! That means all the islands strewn by omnipotent hand through tropical seas Malayan Polynesia, Melanesia.Microne sta, and other islands more numerous than you can imagine unless you have voyaged around the world. The south! That means Java for God, Sumatra for God, Borneo for God, Siam for God. A ship was wrecked near one of these islands, and two lifeboats put out for shore, but those who arrived in the first boat were clubbed to death by the canni bals, and the other boat put back and was somehow saved. Years passed on, and one of that very crow was wrecked again, with others on the same rocks. Crawling up the shore, they proposed to hide from the cannibals in oue of the caverna; but, mounting the rocks, they saw a church and cried out: "We are saved. A church! A church!" The south! That means Ven ezuela, New Granada, Ecuador and Bo livia. The south! That means the torrid zone, with all its bloom and all its fruit age and all its exuberance, the redolence of illimitable gardens, the music of bound less groves, the land, tho seas that night by night look up to tho southern cross, which in stars transfigures the midnight heaven as you look up at it all the way from the Sandwich Islands to Australia. "They shall coma from the south." Religion in the Kuet. But I must not forget that my toxt takes In another cardinal point of the compass. It takes In the east. I have to report that in a Journey around the world there Is nothing so much impresses one as tho fact that tho missionaries, divinely blessed, are taking tho world for God. The horrible war between Japan and China will leave tho last wall of opposi tion Hat In tho dust. War is barbarism always and everywhere. We hold up our hands in amazement at the massacre at Port Arthur as though Christian nations could never go into such diabolism. We forget Fort Pillow. We forget tho fact that during the war both north and south rejoiced when there were 10,000 more wounded and slain on the opiiosito side. War, whether in China or the United States, Is hell let loose. But one good re sult will come from the Japanese-Chinese conflict those regions will be more open to civilization and Christianity than ever before. When Missionary Carey put be fore an assembly of ministers at North ampton, England, his project for the evangelization of India, they laughed him out of the house. From Calcutta now on the east of India to Bombay on the west there is not a neighborhood but directly or indirectly feels the goHpel power. The Juggernaut, which did its awful work for centuries, a few weeks ago "was brought out from the place where It has for years been kept under shed as a curi osity, and there was no one reverentially to greet it. About 3,000,000 of Chris tian souls in India are the advance guard that will lead on the 250,000,0" 10. The Christians of Amoy and Peking and Can ton are the advance guard that will lead the 840,000,000 of China. "They shall come from the east." The last mosque of Mohammedanism will be turned into a Christian church. The last Buddhist tem ple will become a fortress of light. The last Idol of Hindooism will be pitcnea into the fire. The Christ who came from the east will yet bring all the east with him. Of course there are high obstacles to over come, and great ordeals must be passed through before the consummation, as wit ness the Armenians under the butchery of the Turks. May that throne on the banks of the Bosphorus soon crumble! The time has already come when the Uni ted States government and Great Brit ain and Germany ought to intone the in dignation of all civilized nations. While it is not requisite that arms be sent there to avenge the wholesale massacre of Ar menians, it is requisite that by cable un der the seas and by protest that shall thrill the wires from Washington and London and Berlin to Constantinople the nations anathematize the diabolism for which the sultan of Turkey is re sponsible. Mohammedanism is a curse, whether in Turkey or in New York. "They shall come from the east." And they will come at the call of the loveliest and grandest and best men and women of all time. I mean the missionaries. Dissolute Americans and Englishmen who have gone to Calcutta and Bombay and Canton to make their fortunes de fame the missionaries because the holy lives and pure households of those mis sionaries are a constant rebuke to the American and English libertines stopping there, but the men and women of God there stationed go on gloriously with their work people jnst as good and self denying as was Missionary Moffat, who, when asked to write in an album, wrote these words: "My album Is In savage breasts, Where passion reigns and darkness rests Without one ray of light. To write the name of Jesus there, To point to worlds both bright and fair, And see the pagan bow In prayer, Is all my soul's delight." In all those regions are men and wom en with the consecration of Melville B. Cox, who, embarking for the missionary work in Africa, said to a fellow student "If I die In Africa, come and write my epitaph." "What ahnll I write for your epitaph?" said the student "Write," said he, "these words: 'Let a thousand fall before Africa be given up.' " ChrUttanity In the Went. There is another point of the compass that my text Includes. "Tbey shall come from the west." That means America redeemed. Everything between Atlantic and Pacific oceans to be brought within Ibc circle of holiness and rapture. Will It be done by worldly reform or evangel ism? Will it be law or gospel? I am glad that a wave of reform has swept across this lnnd, and all cities are feeling the advantage of tha mighty movement. Let the good work go on until tha mat municipal evil is extirpated. About fifteen years ago the distinguish ed editor of a New York daily newspaper said to me in his editorial room: "You ministers talk about evils of which yon know nothing. Why don't yon go with the officers of the law and axplora for yourself, so that whan you preach against sin you can speak from what yon hava seen with your own eyes?" I said, "I will." And in company with a commis sioner of police and a captain of police and two elders of my church I explored the dens and'bidlng places of all styles of crime in New York and preached a series of sermons warning young man and set ting forth the work that must be done lost the judgments of God whalm this city with more awful submergement than the volcanic deluge that buried Harcu laneum and Pompeii. I received, as nearly as I can remem ber, several hundred columns of news paper abuse for undertaking that explor ation. Editorials of denunciation, double leaded and with captions in great primer type, entitled "The Pall of Talmaga," or "Tulniage Makes the Mistake of His Life," or "Down with Talmage," but I still live and am in full smypathy with all movements for municipal reform. But a movement which ends with crime exposed and law executed stois half way. Nay, it stops long before it gets half way. The law never yet saved anybody, never yet changed anybody. Break up all the houses of iniquity in this city, and you only send the occupants to other cities. Break down all the policemen in New York, and while it ohanges their worldly fortunes it does not change their heart or life. The greatest want in New York to-day is the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ to change the heart and the life and uplift the tone of moral sentiment and make men do right, not because they are afraid of Ludlow St reet Jail or Sing Sing, but because they love (iod and hate unrighteousness. Pol itics in all our cities has become so cor rupt that the only difference between the Republican and Democratic parties is that each is worse than the other. But what nothing else in the universe can do the gospel can and will accomplish. "They shall come from the west," and for that purpose the evangelistic batter-' ies are planted all along the Pacific coast, as they are planted all along the Atlantic coast. All the prairies, all the mountains, all the valleys, all the cities are under more or less gospel influence, and when we get enough faith and con secration for the work this whole Amer ican continent will cry out for God. "They shall come from the west." But what will they do after they come? Here is something gloriously consolatory that you have never noticed, "They shall come from the east, and the west, and the north, and the south, and shall sit down." Oh, this is a tired world! The most of people are kept on the run all their life time. Business keeps them on the run. Trouble keeps them on the run. Rivalries of life keep them on the ruji, They are running from the disaster. They are run-' ning for reward. And those who run the fastest and run the longest seem best to succeed. But my text suggests a restful posture for all God's children, for all those i ho for a lifetime have been on the run. "They shall sit down!" Why run any longer? When a man gets heaven, what more can he get? "They shall sit down." Not alone, but in picked com panionship of the universe; not embar rassed, though a seraph should sit down on one side of you and an archangel on the other. Sitting; Down to Rest. There is that mother who through all the years of infancy and childhood was kept running amid sick trundle beds, now to shake up the pillow for that flaxen head, and now to give a drink to those parched lips, and now to hush the fright ened dream of a little one, and when there was one less of the children because the great lover of children had lifted one out of the croup into the easy breathing of celestial atmosphere the mother putting all the more anxious care on those who were left. So weary of arm and foot and back and head, so often crying out: "I am so tired! I am so tired!" Her work done, she shall sit down. And that business man for 30, 40, 50 years, has kept on the run, not urged by selfishness, but for the purpose of achieving a livelihood for the household; on the run from store to store,' or froin factory to factory, meeting this loss and discovering that inaccuracy and suffering betrayal or disappointment, nevermore to be cheated or perplexed or exasperated he Bhall sit down. Not in a great armchair of heaven, for tho rock ers of such a chair would imply one's need of soothing, of changing to easy pos ture or semi-individualism, but a throne, solid as eternity and radiant as the morn ing after a night of storm. "They shall sit down." "I I notice that the most of the styles of toil require an erect attitude. There are the thousands of girls behind counters, many such persons though the inhuman ity of employers compelled to stand, even when because of a lack of customers there is no ueed that they stand. Then there are all the carpenters, and the stonemasons, and the blacksmiths, and the farmers, and the engineers, and the ticket agents, and the conductors. In most trades, in most occupations they must stand. But ahead of all those who love and serve the Ixrd is a resting place, a complete relaxa tion of fatigued muscle, something cush ioned and upholstered and embroidered with the very ease of heaven. "They shall sit down." Rest from toil. Rest from pain. Rest from persecution. Rest from uncertainty. Beautiful, joy ous, transporting, everlasting rest! 6h, men and women of the frozen north, and the blooming south, and from the realms of the rising or setting gun, though Christ get your sins forgiven and start for the place where you may at last sit down in blissful recovery from the fatigues of earth while there roll over you the Ma tures of heaven. Untrained monkeys brought $10 1 In Venice In the sixteenth century; If trained, they were much mors expen sive, the price depending on the amount of the training. i V.