I Vr Is. THt HlL.- )F GOD. We JouniT.d through the lowland shad ow. Through tli- I' M. dull mist and rain; Oh, chilling tin logs of the marshes And the winds from the lonely plain! And our hearts grow sick with longing For the besutjful patlis iintrod. For we know that kwhj above us Stretch the gla 1 green i tills of God. Our feet are chained to the valley. We plow and we ' vv and reap; There are strifes and lulls for the noon day. And a grim- l' re at night we shs'p. Ilut a something speak., within n: "I(.ok away 1 r-ysn the spade and tie rlod. O sonl. look tip f r thy birthright, And away to t 1 ; lldis of Cod; "In the wind tint sweep their sun. tods Is. healing for ml thy ills; Vp. tip! till i t.ou feid the current: Tin re is help, there is help in the bills. Iyf-t darkless aid sere disaster Hut sunder 1 1 ! i- f'p.m the sod, A ml know ihou sbsT.t thr.ve in the em. light 1 hat crow net ti the llnls of God." I'tiea Globe. A CHANGE OF When Silas Ityan, the proprh tor ami and manager of K.vuu's ranch, set bis employes at work, fencing In a large Vidy of the Inst Government land In Southern Kansas, h" stirred up a good i'zed hornet's ticsl, and brought the Insects buzzing angrily about bis Intnl. lie bad no shadow of right to the land, and naturally the settlers and home seekers rc.-ented his cool appropria tion of It to his own use. There were men who waiil-d It for homes, and who were entitled to It under the laws, and these men looked upon Hyatt's conduct km a base infringement on their rights and were not sparing In tie-ir denunciation of bim and bin or der. Near Ityiin's iam b there was a little town known as Prairie City. It was an Insignificant place, with less than 'Ml population, but It (rave promise of great things in the future. Its Inhab itants, and the settlers on the prairie about it, believed that in time Prairie City would become one of the leading tow n of Kansas, t'lifortimately, how ever, tin- hope of sliosc people were never to U realized. A railroad was Boon after built through that part of the country and It missed Prairie City by just, two miles. The result was a new town on the railroad and the death of the old one. Prairie City went the way of hundreds of other Kansas town-', its population took up their possessions, im hiding their hous es, and moved acre,.' the prairie to the railroad. In Prairie City's halcyon days, bow ever, It blasted of a newspaper, the Prairie City liable. It was not itiii'b of a paper, being -mall and poorly printed, but It was unite a.s good as Us patronage ju-tili.d. lis subscription list was extremely limited, and lis ail vcrt!ing business was dwarfed to one coiiimn of display matter and a few lines of pay locals. The Fugle, as a matter of course, stood by the town people ami the set tlers, and when Ryan set bis men to fencing in tin- public lambs for grazing purposes, it came out with a strong ed itorial uVtiotiueliifj hi ni In the seven-si terms. It pronounced bis action dis honest, as be was stealing the people's rights. It went further and said thai It whs the lowest and most contempt ible species of dishonesty, since by it he was stealing the homes from poor, struggling men and their wives and children, tbeteby robbing them of a chance to earn an honest living. "It Is the dutj of the home.see kers," It Went oil, "to prnlecl. - themselves against the eucioachmciils of this greedy cormorant, v. bo, for the Kik" of adding to bis lll-yo'Ieii wealth, would starve even the innocent, unconscious, helpless babe in it, mother's arm.s. It Is the duty of tin; .- tilers to band themselves together, to take the law In their own bands, imd cut the wire that shut them out of their own. Tear down the fence, drive off or kill the nti ItK A l 1 III. Alll.fi.l: TO II 1 I.JIIU IM RS. UMtu-K-r"8 rattle nml give bim to under stand that If the Government won't protect you, j on can and will protect yourselves." A copy of the paper containing this editorial fell Into Ryan's bauds, lie read It and boiled over with wrath and Indignation. lie was forced to admit that there was much truth In the ar ticle, but It was none the more pal atable to him for that. II" swore ven geance against ttif l.agle and Its ed itor, and vowed that not another issue of the paper bboiild be published. At dinner time be read the article to hi employen an they at at the table. They were tdx In number, recently em igrated from a ranch down In Texas, and had a reputation for being the hardest and tuost reckless dare devils that ever rode the range. When Hynn tial finished reading hp said: " "What do yon think of that?" "I think it's blamed big crowing from mighty little rooster," one of the cow- I. IJJil; I " ' '1 ! , , -a vi'b I boys replied. J "If the settlers want to take that ed- Itor'i iAe and try It on about cut another said, "Just let flud before tky get 1 through with It that they've got Into the hottest and most unhealthy Job thy ever tackled." "Then you boys will stand by me?" Ityan questioned. "uf course we will," one of tiem an swered. "We're paid to work for you, and we've not got any love for settlers. We ll see that jour fence is not cut and that your cattle are not bothered." "That's all right," Ityan said, "but there Is something else I want you to do." "What Is it?" "I want this paper squelched." "We'll soo.-b b It." "I want, you to ride over to Prairie City to-night and clean the thing out root and branch. Burn the ollice, f-mash up the old press and chasu the editor out of the country." "We'll do it." ,liisl lifter .-upper that night the row boys loaded iheir pistols carefully and buckled tin m about their waists. Then they brought out their horses, saddled ami mounted them, and rode away In the direction of Prairie City at a mad gallop. Just before they reached the town they came to a halt. One of tbeiu said: "Now, boys, we don't want to take any reckless chances in this business, j so we bad better be a little cautious. 1 jguess that eiliior is a spindle-shanked, ! goggle-eyed old rooster from the Kast ! who'd drop dead at the sight of a pis I tol, but still lie may be a varmint of a 'different color, for all we know be I may turn loose and go to pumping lend Into us at the rate of about sixty bul i lets a minute, it will be safest to kind ' of slip up on bim and take him un awares." The others agreed to this proposition, and accordingly they rode quietly into town, dismounted and tied their horses, and noiselessly .approached the Kagle ollice. A light was shining through a w indow of the little one story box building, and by one common Impulse the cowboys stole cautiously forward to this window with a view to peeping Into the room to see how the land lay. On one side of the room they .saw a rickety old typestand containing a half dozen cases of type. On the other side stood an old press, while In the center there was a zinc-covered goods 1k)x which answered In the place of an Im posing stone. Cp at the end of the room was a small table at which was seated a woman. The woman's elbows rested on the table and her face lay between her bauds. She was sitting directly In front of the window, apparently looking straight at. It, so the cowboys bad a good, square view of her features. They saw that she was young and pretty, tint much more than a child and very sad. There was a deeply troubled expressloii on her face, and once they saw her brush tears from her eyes. "The editor's wife or daughter, I reckon," one of the cowboys whisper ed. "Gtiesjs so," one of the others replied; "and like as not the old whelp's been .abusing her." "I'm going In and tall; to her," the tifst. speaker announced. "You chaps wail outside lill I come back." "A good Idea," another agreed. "We want to see a little more into this busi nes before we do anything rash." The cowboy walked around to the door and entered the ollice. lie passed across the door and stopped just before the little table at which the woman was sitting. He took off his hat, made an a'. kwanf bow and said: "Good evening, lady. I hope I find , ; on well." I A shade of fear passed over the ; woman's face and a startled look came ! to her eyes when she saw the man's i huge pistols and noted bis cowUry nt ! tire. Still, she answered calmly and bravely enough: I "I am quite well, thank you. Is there. i anything 1 can do for you?" i "Why. 1 don't know. 1 reckon mny ! be I'd like to .sis' the editor of this pa J l r." "I am the editor." J "Well, but I want to see the man ' your father or husband, or whoever he ; is." "There Is no man here. I am all i alone." "You don't mean that you are run i nitig this paper all by yourself!" "Yes, sir, except for the help of n boy, I who manages the press for me." The cowboy whistled, then stood 'staring at the woman In amazement ! At last be ejaculated: "Well, if that don't stump me. A' i woman running a paper till alone, with I no men folks to help her! Gee, but It inii-t be lots of hard work!" "It is. but I don't mind that. I'd be . willing to work night and day If I could just manage some way to keep ! the paper going." "You're not figuring on stopping It, ' are you ?" j "Yes, I'll have to slop It. I can't get j enough money to buy any more paper. My mother Is sick and 1 have to liny medicine and things for her. Poor , mother! I don't know bow I shall pro- vide for her now." j The gbi voice trembled and her 'eyes tilled with fears. The cowboy ! looked on a moment, then paced rapbl i ly two or 1 1, ice fluies across the room, j finally be . aid: "You wait lu re for me. I'll be back In a few minutes." j lie hurried out to bis companions. who were waiting at the door. He drew them away to n safe distance from the office, and then told them all he bud discovered. Tin y heard him to the end, ",So that woman," one of them said, "wrote that piece about Ityan?" "She did." "Then If we kick up n fuss with any lsidy It's got to be with her." "It has." "In that case I guess we won't kirk tip nnv fuss." "Not If I can help It. U'a all right (oiih to pile onto a man ami squelch hire), but l's a different thing wben It comes to a poor lone woman strug gling bravely to support her slk mother." "TJie paper is going to quit, any how," some one remarked, "so It's all right to let It alone. It can't do any more damage." The man who had come from the room was silent and thoughtful for a moment, then he said: "I reckon the paper's not going to quit, either. I've got money enough to tide it over a few weeks, and " "I've got enough to tide It over a few more weeks," another said, and be was promptly followed by the cithers with like propositions. 'J'be upshot of the matter was that a minute biter a roll of money was put Into the girl's hands, and before -he bad recovered from her astonishment I he cowbuvs were on their way back to the ranch. "Womb-r what Ityau will think!" one of them remarked as they rode along. "Iion't matter what be thinks," an other replied. "We didn't hire to him to make war on women. Thanks to tin aid given by the cow boys the C'igle lived; and when Prairie City moved to the new town the Kagle went with If, and there it grew and Tl 2. "(iOOll MORNING, I. ADV." prospered and In time became a prom inent paper. Hut the editor never knew the true object of the night's vis it that was paid iter by the cowboys of Ryan's ranch. Whether she would have thought any the less of them If she had known Is a matter of doubt. Naturally Ityan was displeased with the action of bis employes, the more es pecially since the Kagle kept up its fight on bim. Hut there was nothing be could do save submit, since be had contracted with his employes for a year, and he could not discharge them for refusing to do an unlawful act He was entirely helpless and when tho settlers cut bis fence and took up claims on his ranch be had to quietly give way to them and seek grazing lands elsewhere. Ullca Globe. A young whale weighing about 2mIO pounds was captured the other day off P.iddeford Pool, Me. Some sheep were frigh.eiied by dogs at Grenoble, France, and '-'12 blindly "followed their leader" over a preci pice 1,"0 feet high. A remarkable eel has been discover ed in the I'ljl Islands, It has a pecu liar formation in Its throat, which causes it to whistle when In an ex cited slate. The eel Is fifteen feet long, and several Inches lit girth. In the markets of II rax II one often sets live snakes a species of boa from ten to fifteen feet long. They are emplo.M'd In many bouses to bunt rats at night, being otherwise perfectly I, armies-. They become attached to a house line a cat or a dug. Mrs. I'litch. of Itenver. Colo., drives im c-;nch, behind which she rides In p light wagon. She Is the only woman In the world who owns a zoologic:i! garden, and manages It herself. The animal Isn't guided by the reins, but by a long whip, with which the drWor bits It on the feathers. Certainly a 'llile or "Distinction." Not long ago an Indian general, who had reiUirned home on 'tie expiry of h s term of service, was ilivilii to "dine aiwl sleep" ai Windsor, lie took ad va.utage of h!s proximity to Kton to walk ovit to the famous public school, lie there calliil on the house masiter of n young Indian prince, the son of a Itijah w ho had fhnllfh; It well to send his sun over Ui Ktudalid to be cducausl. i no general lnfmm-d the house master that he had, before leaving India, prom ised the Itajah to deliver a massage to bis son's mastfer. It was that the Itajah desired that bis son should receive no exceptional treatment In the m-1ik1 on account of bis exalted birth, and thai his fellow KludojitH should not lie en couraged to wbow him any special de ference. The bouse master baMteried to iwssure the Kajah's messenger. "lYay tell the Itijnh that there Is no reiason to be ilarim! Unit his son will receive bo great deference. You may assure bis hlgbnms that In this school his son answers to the name of 'Nigger,' and among his Intimates he Is common ly ralbsl 'CoiJ-SclHtJe.' " He I. used and Won, Tom That friend you Introduced at the club last night si-cms to be a mel ancholy sort of fellow. W hat's the matter with him?" Jack Iils.ipo!iiled In love, I Ixrtlere. Tom Too bad; got the mitten, I sup pose? Jack Oh, no; he got the girl. The long-headed clergymeui preache the shortest sermon. Talk Is cheap, but somehow goaat) alwaye gain currency. j i fT 1 1 V. spirit ef hnzM nl I is a rra igned by I r. in this sermon Tabling the downward path of the gamester Is plaiidv p.iinicil mit; text, Aeis i.. 1!'. "Aeehiiinm that to say, the field of I ! blued." The moijc.i that , Indus gave for surren dering Christ was used to purchase a graveyard. As the money was blond nnmey, the ground bought by it w as called In the Syriae tongue Aceldama, iiieaicng "the field of blood." Weii, tho-c is i tie word I want to w rite to day over every race course where wages are slaked anil every poolroom njd every gambling saloon and every table, public or private, where men and women bet for sums of money, large or sarinl!, and that is a word inrar dinafed with the life of innumerable vic tims Aceldama. The gsmhliiift spirit, which is at all times a stupendous evil, ever and iinon t weeps over the country like an epidemic, prostrating uncounted thousands. There bus never been a worse attack than that from which nil the villages, towns and cities are now suffering. While a uiong my hearers and readers are those who have passed on into the afternoon of life and the shadows are lengthening and the sky crimsons w-ith the glow of the setting sun, n large num ber of them are in early life, and the morning is coming down out of the clear sky upon them, and the bright air is redo lent with spring blossoms, and the stream of life, gleaming and glancing, rushes on between flowery banks, making music as It goes. Some of you are engaged in mer cantile concerns as clerks and bookkeep ers, and your whole life is to be passed in the exciting world of trafllc. The sound of busy life stirs yon as the drum stirs the fiery war horse, utliers are in the me chanical arts, to hammer and chisel your way through life, and success awaits you. Some are preparing for professbuml life, and grand opportunities are before yen luiv, seine of von a!read have buckled on the armor. Hut, w hatever your age and calling, the subject i.f (.'ambling, about which I speak today, is pertinent. A Worldwide Kvil. Some years ago when an nshoointion for the suppression of gambling was organized flu agent of the association (nine to a prominent citizen anil asked him to pat l'oni'.e the s.it iet y, He said: "o: I can have no interest in such nn organization. 1 am in nowise affected by the evil." At that very lime his son, who was bis part ner in business, was one of the heaviest players in a famous gambling establish ment. Another refused his patronage on the siinie ground, not knowing that his first bookkeeper, though receivings salary of only f,ioti, was losing from .foil to Jbiti per night. The president of a rail road company refused to patronize the Institution, saying, "That society is good for the defense of merchants, but we rail road people are not injured by this evil" hot knowing that at that very time two of bis conductors were spending three nights of each week at far-' tables in New York. I)irecti. or indirectly this evil strikes at the whole world. Gambling is the risking of something im re or less valuable in the hope of win ning more 1 1 1 ii 1 1 you hazanb The instru. mi nts of gaining may differ, but the prin ciple is the same. The shullbng and ileab uy of cards, however full of temptation, is hut gambling unless stakes are put up. while on the other hand gambling may be carried on w ithout cards or dire or bil liil'ds or a tenpin alley. The man who beis on hor-cs, on elections, en battles, tin man who dials in "fancy" stocks nr cot duets n hiisitu -.-.h which haza.ds e!ri cainiil er gees into transactions without foptubi t ion. but dependent upon what men Clip lllclc, ,s n g.,;nliler, V'h.itcvir you expit to get from your nel'hbor without i.nVrltur an eotiivaient In noney or time is either the product of licit or gaming, i.oiiery tickets ami Fit 1 cy policies come into the saioe got-'. iPizaars for the found. i -.; of 1 fait, schools mid churches, i onducP the lulling jv-triii, come under the a ti'- i-pi- sa iiic den iiiiina t ion. I o not, therefore, a-so-'::-1 gambling ncce-'iirily w ilh nnv iu Sl ri lueiil or game or time or place or think the principle depends up' n whether yen pity tor a glass of wine or list shuns of rail 'ad flock. Whether you pntroiiiste n c ' ii pools, French muluiils or book le.i! i -'. ' 1 I In r you em. ley faro or lul I, . v . ronon and keno, curds or bagatelle the i cry idea of the :hing is ilish.n it professes to in-slow upon yott a c W hi h you give no equivalent. The Cnr-e of i't-nl m-ii . Tl is crime is no newborn -prib t. for .ii for but haggard tl iinsgreion that comes snigger ing down under a mantle of curses through ninny centime. Ail nations, har I'lareiis and civil, zed. I. live been addicted to it. Ilut not I lie laws of the whole civilized world denounce the system. Fi.aei ineiiis have been passed, but oniy partially en forced, and at times uol enforced at ah. '1 he men interested In gaining houses and In jockey clubs wield such influence by their numbers and tililuciire that the judge, the jury and the police olllcer must be hod indeed who would array llieiu ehes against these infamous establish ments. The house of eoniiiious in Fn glaml actually adjourns on Herby that members may attend the races, and in the best circles of society in Ibis country to day arc many hundreds of professedly respectable men who are acknowledged eiimblers. Hundreds of thousands of dollars In this land are every day being won anil lost through theer gambling. Hays a traveler (lirougli the West, "I have traveled 1,(MK miles at a time upon tho Western waters anil sen gambling at every waklrjt mo aient from the commencement to tf ter mination of the Journey." The Vntttli uat ut this ouutry reeke with tbis sin. )'' - - h V 'I. In some of those citifs every third or fourth biiti-e in many of the streets is a gaming phne, and it may be truthfully averred that, each of our cities is enr.-ed with ihi- evil. Men wishing t" ;.'uiuble will find places jitM suited in their capneity not only in the uiiib-turoimd ovster cellar or at the tahle bin k of the curtain, covered with i .-."easy cards, or in the steamboat smk ng caiiin. where the bloated wretch with riiiL's in his ears d"a!s out his pack and ninl.s ill the unsuspecting traveler, pre riding free drinks ail around, but in gi'J ni parlors and amid gorgemis surround ings. This sin works ruin first by pro viding im unh'-altl.fu! stimulant. Incite ment is pleasurable. I'ndcr every sky and in every iikc men have soiiL-ht it. We must at times have excitement. A thon- aiid'siind voices in our nature demand it. It is rigid. It is healthful. 1 1 is inspirit ing. It is a c-'sire God iriveii. Hut niiytliing that 11 r. it back gratifies this appetite ami hurls ! a terrilic read ion is ih pl'.rable j d. Look out for the agitation j a rough musician, in bringing ' and wii that. III.. out tiie ume plays so hard he breaks down - the instrument, tied never made a man strong enough to endure the wear and tear of gambling excitements. TIip Koinl to Unill. A young man having suddenly inheriieil a large properly sits at the hazard tables and takes up in a dice box the estate won by a father's lifetime's sweat and shakes it and fosses it iiwny. Intemperance soon stigmatizes its victim, kicking him out, a slavering fool, into the ditch or sending him, wilh the drunkard's hiccough, snig gering up the street where his family lives. Hut gambling does not in that way expose its victims. The gHtubler may be eaten up by the gambler's passion, yet you only discover it by the greed in his eyes, the hardness of his features, the nervous restlessness, the threadbare coat and his embarrassed business. Yet lie is on the road to ruin, and no preacher's voice or startling warning or wife's en treaty can make him stay for a moment his headlong career. The infernal spell is on him, a giant is aroused within, and though you bind him with cables they would part like thread, and though you fasten him seven times around with chains they would snap like rusted wire, and though you piled up in his path heaven high I'.ihles, tracts and sermons and on the top should set the cross of the Son of God, over them nil the gambler would bap like a roe over the rocks on his way to perdition. "Aceldama, the field of blood:" Something for Notliins. Any trade or occupation that is of use is ennobling. The street sweeper advances the interests of society by the cleanliness effected. The cat pays for the fragments it eats by clearing the house of vermin. The fly that takes the sweetings from the dregs of the cup compensates by purifying the air and keeping baA' the pestilence. Hut. the giinibler gives not anything fir that which he takes. I recall ihal sen tence, lie does make a return, but it is disgrace to the man that he tierces, de spair to his heart, ruin to his business, an guish to his wife, shame to bis children and eternal wasting away to bis soul. He pays in tears and blood and agony and darkness and woe. What duil work is plowing to the farm er w lieu in the village .saloon in one night lie makes and losi s the value of a summer harvest! Who will want to sell tapes and measure nankeen and cut garments and weigh sugar when in a night's game he makes ami loses and makes again and loses again the profits of a season? John Borack was sent as a mercantile agent from P.remen to Ilngland and this country. After I wo years his employers mistrusted that all was not right. He was a der,mlfer for !? ST.lHXi. It was found that he bad lost in Ixunbard street, Loudon, S'JIUrtU); in Fulton street. New York, $10. (MMi, and in New Orleans K He was imprisoned, lit afterward escaped and went into the gambling profession. He died in a lunatic asjlum. This crime is getting its lever under many a mercan tile bouse in our cities, anil before long duw n w ill come the gt'ent es n Id ishnn nt. crushing reputation, home comfort and immortal souls. How it diverts ami sinks capital may he inf, -rivd from Mini' authen tic statement In fore us. The ten gaining loupes thii' once w ere authorized in Paris jpnss, ,) t b n jiimi francs. the banks yearly l;,i,IM10,- Source of Idhom-st y, rthermnre, this sin i the source of itiesiy. The game nf hazard itseif i a cl.eal. II ow many tricks and de ons in th" dealing of the cards! The :, cut's tin tid is oi'ti'nie.s found out by F '', . cepi "I'! fraud, may b g;l 111'.- w ink fi.rds are e designn led ior have tie lll.-iv decide marked so from the b.-e ir aceomplici the game. that me k. F.M.crt ind ne - Tin CI lia Ih; lib bei n found loaded w Ii h pia ; ilollhlels color lip i-yery f.!l!c. ia Tie se ire introduced by tl aiebior-i un- ed by the honest men iilo tli" plav, and this a Hho have ivi't i for i -'Inn j the fact that '.I'd out of Ion who gamble, t how e er w ea It h v w ben tin y In ga u. at the end are feucd to be poor, miserable, hag : gard wretches, that would not now he, n I i low ed to sit in the doorstep of the house ! that they once ow ned, j In a gaming house in San I''ralo(sio a j young man having just conic from the j mines depo-lted a iarge s,im up m the ace . and won S'J'j.iinii, I tut the tide t urns. In- tense ntlXletV comes Upon the eounte- ! miners of all. Slowly Ihe cards went i forth, livery eve is tixed. Noi a sound ; is heard uulil the ace is revealed favorable to the bank. 'I here arc shouts of "Foul! I Foul!" but the keepers at the dibit's pro I diiee their i :-'ols, and the uproar is si 1 leiiced. ami the bank has won S!l,"i,iwH. 1 1 o you e:i!l this ii game of chance'; There ! i no chain e about it. I Not ice also the effort of this crime upon I doioesta1 happiness. It has sent its rillh- b ss piov, share through hundreds of fain lilies, until the wife sat ill rags and the ' daughters were disgraced, and the sons , grew up to the same infamous practices or took a short cut to destruction across the j murderer's scaffold. Home has Ion Hll charms for the gambler. How I nine are ! the children's caresses mid a wife's devo j lion to the gambler! llow drearily the ! hre burns on the domestic hearth! There i must be louder laughter and something to win and something to lose, an excitement to drive the heart faster, lillip the blootl vid fire the Imagination. No honi, bow ever bright, can keep back the gamester. The sweet call of love botiuds back from liii iron soul, ami all endearments are con nmed la the fire of Mi fixsion. TTie Lfsmiiy Bible will go after all other treat- ures are lost; and if his rrowa in lo-area were put into his band be vuubi eijl "I!er pnpn-nne more came, my boys! On this one throw I stake tay crown of tea veil!" Ilmtroycr of Youth. A young man in London on coming of sire received a fortune ef $120H), and through guiubrlug In three years wai tlirnWT oa his mother for support. An only son went to New Orleans. He was rich, intellectual snd elegant in manners. His parents gae him on bis departure from homo their last blessing. The sharp, ers gat bold of him. They nattered him.' Tin i hired him to the gaming table and b-t 1 m win almost every time for a good while and patted him on the back ami said, "First rate player." Hut, fully in their grasp, they fleeced bim. and biaf .s'"0.Oi was lost. I. list of all, he put up his watch and !o.-t that. Then lie beganj to think of his home, and of his old father and mother, and wrote thus: , "My beloved parents, you will doubtless fool a momentary joy nr the reception of this letter from lie- child of your Ihisoih,' on w hom you have lavl lied ail the favors of your declining yen . Hut should a Veling of jcy for a n.iiuient spring up ia' jonr hea' ls, w hen ;, ci sl.oi ld have re ceived this from me. cherish it not. I have ecU fallen deep, never to rise. hairs that I should have lion teoteii I shall firing down in Those gray ri ll and pro-' irrow to the grave, oh. my p.i.s;Go. u way I w ;ll not i in -so my liestrover but, G.'d, avenge the wrongs and im- s i no tleed i: imn ed l imn the unwary in that shall best i lease hinil This, ir ia rents, is tic last letter you my '1 will ever receive from me. I humbly pray your forgiveness. It is my dying prayer. Long before you will have received this from me the cold grave will have closed upon me forever. Life to me is insupporti able. I cannot nay, I w ill not suffer tba shame of having ruined you. Forget and, forgive is the dying prayer uf your unfor tunate son." The old father came to the isistollice, got the letter and fell to the floor. They1 thought iie was dead at first, but they, brushed back the white hair from hia brow and fanned him. lie had only faint ed. "Aceldama, the held of blood!" When things go wrong at a gaming ta ble, they shout: "Foul! Foul!" Over all the gaming tables of the world I cry out: "Foul! Foul! Infinitely foul!" CiimlillnK in Churches. "Gift stores" are abundant throughout the country. With a book or knife or sewing machine or coat or carriage there goes a prize. At these stores people get something thrown in with their purchase. It may be a gold natch or a set of silver, a ring or a farm. Sharp .way to get off unsalable goods. It has filled the land, with fictitious articles and covered up our population with brass finger rings and despoiled the moral sense of the com munity, and is fast making us a nation of gamblers. The church of find has not seemed will ing to allow the world to have all the ad vantage of these games of chance. A church bazaar opens, and toward the close it is found that some of the more valuable, articles ar unsalable. Forthwith the eon- doctors of the enterprise conclude that they will raffle for tenie of the valuable articles, and under pretense of anxiety to make tlieir minister a present or please some popular member of the church fas-, ciiiating persons are dispatched through, the room, pencil in hand, to ''solicit shares," nr perhaps each draws for bis own advantage, and scores of people go, home with tlieir trophies, thinking that it is all right, for Christian ladies did the embroidery and Christian men did the raiding, and the proceeds went toward a new communion set. But yon may dc- pond on it that as fur as morality is con-! certied you might as well have won byj the crack of the billiard ball or the turn of the dice box. Io you wonder that churches built, lighted or upholstered by such processes as that come to great finan cial and spiritual decrepitude? The devil says, "1 hclpisl to build that house Of worship, and I have as much right there as you have," and for mice the devil is right. We do not read that they had a lottery for building the church at Corinth1 or at Antioch or for getl'ng up an em-! broidered surplice for St. Paul. All this I style ecclesiastical gambling. More than one man who is destroyed can say that his lirst step on Ihe wrong road was when he won something at a church fair. A Pernicious I'liHtoitt. The ga milling spirit has not stopped for and indecency. There transpired in Mary land a lottery in which pi ople drew for lots in a biirviiig ground. The modern habit of belling about everything is pro ductive of immense mischief. The most healthful and innocent amusements of vaehting and baseball pla.v ing have been the occasion of putting up excited and ex travagant wagers. That which to many has been advantageous to body and mind has been to others the means of linanctal and moral loss-. The ciisioin is pernicious in the extreme where scores of men in re. sped. -tide life give themselves up to bet ling, now on this boat, now on thai: now j on this ball club, now on that. Helling that once was chiefly the accompaniment ' of the race course is fast becoming a na i tioital habit, and in some circles any opin ion advanced on finance or politics is ae 1 cristcd with the inlerrogation, "Hqw much w ill you bet mi that, sir?" I This custom may make no appeal to j slow, lethargic temperaments, but there I are in the country tens of thousands of i quick, nervous, sanguine, excitable tem j peranienfs, ready to be lifted upon, and j their feet will soon take hold on death For some months, and perhaps for years, they w ill linger in the more polite and ele gant circle of gamesters, but after awhile their paihvvay will come to the fatal plunge, 'lake warning! You are no stronger than tens of thousands who have by this practice been overthrown. No young man in our cities can escape being tempted. Hevvare of the lirst beginnings!' This mud is a down grade, ami every instant increases the momentum. Launch not upon this treacherous sea. Splint liulUn strew the beach. Fvcriasting storms howl up and dow ii, tossing unwary craft into the Hell Gale. Oiliyrlglit, IStiR. Servant Girls. God bless the servant girls of America, whose years are nofh Ing but hard, bluer, hopeless drudger ies. Horn In an unknown home, to b buried In an unknown grave. Itcv. F, Dow il l Till wage, Presbyterian, Ohloa gw, 111. Man's Kvils. Never fau any man'a evils so that they shall consume him, but Inflame every man's gootls until they shall master hkm. Rot. W. L. I.)omorst, Conregalioualiat, o Sx . K s ft- if; ki '