INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION. CHAPTER VI. (Continued.) ' The devil take those fellows," Dick was saying to himnelf at that mo ntong, as he drove along. "They have either got a clue or tlipy'vc turned , suspicious. Snooks the other day and • .aurence now. I shall have to make up my mind to screw things up to a climax.'' But he had not now much fe*r that the climax would he a disagreeable one for him; and he drove along over the muddy roads as gayly as ever he had done between the sweet Sep tember hedgerows. Yet when ho drew up in front of the Hall It struck him that there was something strange about the place. Kor onp thing, the usual neat and well-kept gravel was cut up, und in oae place j the low box-hedge which skirted the t now empty flower beds was cut and crushed as If a careless driver bad | driven over it. He was not long left In doubt. Old Adam came to take his horse und led him off to the stable, shaking hla bead with ominous sadness, and muttering j something indistinctly about a bad i Job; ami then Barbara opened the door with scared, white face, and quiv ering lips which could not command themselves sufficiently to tell him anything. "Good God, what is It?” exclaimed Dick; his thoughts flying straightway to Dorothy. But It was not Dorothy, for In two j minutes she came running into the room, tried to speak, and then, scared nnd trembling and sobbing, she found herself somehow or other III bis arms. Dick was almost beside himself with anxiety, but he soothed her tenderly, | and patted her shoulder with a gentle, ; “There, there, darling, don’t cry like that. What is it, dear? Tell me.'" But for a little time Dorothy slm- j ply coma not tell mm. i ve oeen longing for you to come," she said at last. Oh. poor Auntie! and she iB all I have in the world in the world.” "Hut is she III?” asked he. “Remem ber that I know nothing.” "But, you got my telegram," ' she said, ceasing her sobs to look at him. "Your telegram? No! What tele gram?” ”1 sent one early this morning to you at Colchester,” she answered— “ ‘To R. Harris, 40th Dragoons, Col chester.' Was not that direction enough?” “Well, scarcely," said Dick, half smiling at his own knowledge. "But about your aunt—is she ill?” Dorothy's tears broke out afresh. "She is dying—dying,” Bhe Bobbed. "The doctor says there is no hope—no hope whatever.” "But tell me all about it,” he urged. "What is the matter with her? She was all right yesterday afternoon when I left. It must have been very sutjdden. Was it a fit?” "Paralysis,” answered Dorothy mournfully. "We were just going to lied, and Auntie got up, and all at oufe she said, 'I feel so strange, Dor othy; fetch Barbara;’ and when 1 came back a minute afterward she had slipped down on the floor by the sofa there and could hardly speak. We put a pillow under her head, and got Adam up, and Adam drove into Dovercourt and brought the doctor out as fast as he could; but Auntie did not know him at all. And as soon as lie came in, Barbara and I knew it was all over with her, for he shook his head, and said, ‘We had better get her to bed. Oh, no, it won’t disturb her, she feels nothing.' But she did feel something.’ Dorothy added, •’for | when we were undressing her she spoke several times, and always the same. ‘My poor little girl Dorothy all alone.' " and here, poor child, she. broke down again. Robbing over her "wn desolation. ‘1 begged and prayed her not to worry about me, but It was no good. Dr Stanley Mild she Oouldn't bear me, and so she kept on all uight, My poor little girl all alone.'" For some minutes Dick said never a word. "Dorothy," he said at last, "1 bhould like lo see her Where Is she’" "In her own bed,1' said Dorothy won derlttgly. "Then take me lip there. Perhaps kite will understand uie if 1 tell her something " So Dorothy took him up to the large darkeued room where the mistress of the house lay dying. Durbars, tilled with grief and dismay, tat keeping watch beside her and she stared with surprise tu see Dorothy come in. fol lowed by the tall soldier, who en tered with a soft tread and went up to the bed. where he stood for a mo ' mi in watching the dying woman, and listening tu the Incoherent, tu Holding words that f«dl from her Up* “Dor othy little girl no one atone • ah?—'* and then a long sigh enough tu break the hearts that heard It "Just pull up that blind fur a mtn tile. Mnrbara * said inch to the weep mg woman "I want to .peak tu your m Is trees and I can't tell whether she will understand me units* I .an see her face " Then aa ttnrhnia dr. • up ke iitiad and let the feeble November daylight In upon the pallid foe tying so .rt» |p among (he pillow*, he laid hi* bead upon the nerve*** on* tying upon ike t#4cov*f “Mi** (umedalc h* Mid do rnu Imm Ml, » • nut lint ns no ogn Pew •« •***» u * Miss Dimsdale, don t you Know me, Dick Harris?” For a moment there was a death like silence, then the dying woman muttered, "Dorothy—girl- alone." "You are troubling aliout Dorothy,” nald Dick, slowly and clearly, "and I have something to tell you about Dorothy. Can you hear me? Cannot , you make me some sign that you hear me? Can you move yotir hand?' But no, the hand remained perfectly still, still and cold, as If It were dead j already. "Can you make me no sign that you hear tne?" Dick urged. "I must tell j you this about Dorothy. H will make you quite easy In your mind about ; her." Still she did not move or speak, but after a moment or so her eyes slowly opened arid she looked at him. "1 see that you hear me and know me," said Dick. “You are troubling jsi know what will happen to Dorothy If you should die iu this Illness. Is that It?" "Yes.” She had managed to speak Intelligibly at last, and Dick pressed ihe cold, nerveless hand s'.ill covered by his own. "1 want to marry Dorothy at once." lie said very clearly and gently. "I should have asked you soon In any ase. But you will he quite satisfied to know that she Is safe with me, won’t you?” There was another silence; then the poor tied tongue tried to speak, tried igain, and at last mumbled something which the three listeners knew was, 'Bless you.” ■'Auntie, auntie," sobbed Dorothy, In an agony, “say one word to me—to ate and poor Barbara, do.” The dying eyes turned toward the faithful servant, and a flickering smile passed across the worn, gray face. .1 .1 . ’• .. U _ ,,..1.1 nwtro eloOP. ly than she had yet spoken. "Very happy,” and the eyes turned toward Dick. "Auntie!” cried Dorothy. ”My litte girl.” said the dying worn =^MS.^N iliillllll an, almost clearly now. ”My dear, good child. I am quite happy,” There was a moment's silence, broken only by the girl’s wild sobs, and when Dick looked up again, the gray shadows had fallen over the worn face, and he knew that her mind was at rest now. And in the quiet watches of that r.lght Marion Dimsdalc passed quietly away, just as the tide turned backward to the great North Sea. CHAPTER VII. ICI< stayed at Gravelelgh Hall until the end came, after which he bade Dorothy go to lied, and he put his horse in and drove back to Col chester, which he reached In time for the day's duty, be ing orderly olilcer .loir "1 must stay in the b.irr.u ka all to morrow, darling. 1 am on duty," Ur explained to Her; "but I'll get leave the next day and come out here in the morning Meanwhile, will you and Harbnra .say nothing of the engage ment between ns?- I want to haw- a long talk to you before an> one else knows a single word." And imrothy. of course promised, and Hatbairf promised too, lielleviug { quite that Mr. Harris wished to say I nothing about marrying and giving in , mariugr while the dear mistress of ; the house la) wild and still within It. It wa* a sad and wretched day, The news spread quickly through the neighbor iuasl, and every few minutes I inqulrera value to the door to hear th - details from tiarhara and ask kindly for tkiroihv Vud about a»ou by the time IkiroShy had dragged herself out : of b*t| and was sitting miserably l-e | side the diawlag room #re Iksvld ' ids reason rusle along the avenue an ; told HarlMis that he wanlvd la mm Mias llwiMthy Miss |s.r»»ih» ta wry pwrly an I up**' sir " said Hartmra. who had s I sort at instimt that ISaroihy would j rather sat see (his particular visitor "Van hot I moat sea h»r all ths same said I David curtly * Where V j shat*' In the draaiaa row*, sir," mb t tiarhara “*tu» I dun t think ) «** kr you g., in wit none asking Mist, Doro thy l—'' "Do you know." asked David, with exasperating calmness, "that I am Miss Dimsdale's sole executor? No. I tiiought not. Then you will understand j now, perhaps, that it is necessary that I should see her—to find out her ' wishes with regard to the funeral for ; one thing, and to give her authority to have her black frocks made for an- , other;-' and then, poor Barbara hav- j ing shrunk away seared and trembling from this new and strange David Stevenson, whom she did not seem to know at all, he went straight to the drawing room, going In and shutting j the door behind him. Dorothy Jumped up with a cry al most of alarm when she saw who had thus entered. "There" said he, cold- | ly, motioning her back to her chair, : "don't he afraid; I shall not hurt you," | and then he got himself a chair ami ret it a little way from hers. "I was obliged to come and see you at once, Dorothy,” he said, in a cold and formal way, "because your poor aunt made me the sole executor under her will. Hut first let me say how very, very sorry I am that 1 have to eome like this. I have known Miss Dimsdale all my life, and loved her al ways.” Dorothy had softened a little at this, and before be had ended his sentence began to cry piteously. David Steven son went on: "I don't want to sppak about the reason why she left me in charge of everything.” he said at least, not just now. Of course, she thought that i everything would be very different will) us. And then. too. she was a good deal mixed up with me in busi ness matters, and I believe she wished | that the outside world should know as little of her affairs as possible. Now. Dorothy. It shall be as you wish; i will either simply hear your wishes about the funeral and the mourning and all that, and tell you how your af- ' fairs stand by and-by, or I will tell ■ you now, whichever you like." "I would rather know the worst now," said Dorothy, in a very low voice. Site knew from his manner that lie had no comforting news to tell j her. “Then I will tea yon." said he. In a strained tone; "and first I mawt ask i you, did Miss Dimsdale ever tel! you that she. had great losses during the 1 past two years?" “Losses!" cried Dorothy, with open \ eyes. "No; I don't know wbat you ] mean.” "I feared not. Well, she had several terrible losses of money, and—and, to cut a long story short, Dorothy, I ad vanced her several large sums on—on the security of this property.” “Then this—go on.” said Dorothy. “At that time Miss Dimsdale and I both thought that everything would be different between yon and me, and, In fact, that I was but advancing money to you. We thought that the world—our little world here, I mean — would never know anything about it, and she was obliged to sell the Hall to somebody. 1 gave her more for it than anybody else in the world would have done, because—weil, because I wished to oblige her, and to help her over this difllculty. On no account would I have disturbed her here or have taken a farthing of rent from her, if she had lived to be ninety.” “Then this is your hi use?” Dorothy asked. “It is," he answered, quietly. “But Auntie had a very large an nuity,” he exclaimed. (To be continued.) COMPLETION OF THE BIBLE. Uiurrallr lletleveil to Have Keen Ilea, lied About A. I). ISO. Scholars differ in opinion as to the date at which the books now found in the New Testament were completed, says the Review of Reviews, but it is ; probable that this was accomplished not later than 130. Many centuries have passed since the formation of the old testament, but the new was all written within a -ingle hundred years. The decision as to which books should be received into the new canon was not so quickly reached, fur the earliest fathers of the church frequently quote from other gospels, such us one ”ac roriling to the Kgyptlans," or "accord i«. .. ,i,n tioi....... „ •• church accepted sunt# books not re ceived by that of North America or tlie western church and vice versa. There ix si legend that ut the llrxt ecum enical council of Nicaca, 325, cop:.-* of the Christian literature then current were laid beneath the altnr and the genuine book* leaped out of the inaas and rauged thein.elvea on the alts'. It probably contain* a germ of the truth that at thl* convocation it w*» de. ('tiled thkv the hooka nows received were apostolic or written under ipoa itillc direction and the other* were xporluu*. U-- that a* It may the Jodg | no-nt of several generation* of Chris tian* certainly decided upon the value of these books «* dlstlngilUbed front in any other* written at shout that lime , or later and the aougt II of Carthage ! t'lTI t* said to have lived Ihe nnun the word "canon was first used hv Sihanasiua. In the fourth century, tn the sense of accepted" or ' author j tied and Jrmme and Augustine held lit* prevent it- * teviameni a* c*„ ml | cat toil la Haw l« tsi.lUiMi., a,i John Lubb.M h malm th* remark aide atatvuieat that wh- n a* consul vr the liabitv of ant*, their autiai or gmiration Ihetr large i lumuarrieu, , .1.4 elatsorat* hatMUtianv ihsur road • ays, th.ir p.**a».«ion of 4»w..*M« I ; a Kill and even in tome .***., of •lave*. It be admitted that >bay I kata a fait vim to tank n«»t i« man ig th* mat* of Igteingegye TALMAGE’S SERMON.! THE LAW OF SELF-SACRIFICE SUNDAY S SUBJECT. «*rom flic l'ollim Injj Teat* Ifeb. U : ?’!; ’‘Without Hlirddlng of lllooil ThfW !•» No BcmliiKlon" An K«*ho of War Timed I'icturn of iurnucts Jolm G. Whittier, the last of the great school of American poets that made the last quarter of this century brilliant, asked me in the White raoun- j tains, one morning after prayers, in ' which I iiad given out C'owper's famous hymn about "The Fountain Filled with Blood,” “Do you really believe there Is a literal application of the blood of Christ to the soul?" My negative re ply then is my negative reply now. The Bible statement agrees with all physicians and all physiologists, and all scientists, in saying that the blood is the life, and In the Christian re ligion it means simply that Christ’s life was given for our life. Hence all this talk of men who say the Bible story of blood is disgusting, and that they don’t want what they call a “slaughter-house religion,” only shows their Incapacity or unwillingness to look through tlie figure of speech to ward the tiling signified. The blood that, on the darkest Friday the world ever saw, oexed, or trickled, or poured from the brow, and the side, and the bands, and the feet of the Illustrious Sufferer, back of Jerusalem, In a few hours coagulated and dried up. and forever disappeared; and if man had depended on the application of the literal blood of Christ, there would not have been a soul saved for the last eighteen centuries. In order to understand this red word of my text, we only have to exercise as much common sense in religion as we do in everything else. Pang for [>ang, hunger for hunger, fatigue for fatigue, tear for tear, blood for blood, life for life, we see every day illustrat ed. The act of substitution is no nov elty, although I hear men talk as t hnunli I tw, lil*. i . .t f'lifl . • ; (ft. »• I »l if substituted for our suffering were something abnormal, something dis tressingly odd, something wildly ec centric. a solitary episode in the world's history; when I could take you out into this city and before sundown point you to live hundred cases of sub stitution and voluntary suffering of one in behalf of another. At 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon go among the places of business or toil. It will be no difficult thing for you to find men who, by their looks, show you that they are overworked. They are prematurely old. They are hastening rapidly toward their decease. They have gone through crises in business that shattered their nervous system, and pulled on the brain. They have a shortness of breath, and a pain in the hack of the head, and at night an lu somnla that alarms them. Why are they drudging at business early and late? For fun? No, It would be dif ficult to extract any amusement out of that exhaustion. Because they are avaricious? In many cases no. Be cause their own personal expenses are lavish? No; a few hundred dollars ( would meet all their wants. The sim- r pie fact is, the man is enduring all that fatigue and exasperation, and wear and tear, to keep his home prosperous. There is an invisible line reaching from that store, from that hank, from that shop, from that sea folding, to a qluet scene a few blocks, a few miles away, and there Is the secret of that business endurance. He is simply the champion of a homestead, for which he wins bread, and wardrobe, and edu cation, and prosperity, and in such bat tle ten thousand men fall. Of ten busi ness men whom I bury, nine die of overwork for others. Some sudden disease finds them with no power of resistance, and they are gone. Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution! At 1 o’clock tomorrow morning, the hour when slumber is most uninter rupted and profound, walk amid the dwelling houses of the city. Here and there you will find dim light, because it is the household custom to keep a subdued light burning; hut most of the houses from base to top are as dark as though uninhabited. A merciful God has sent forth the archangel ot sleep, 1. - . hi.. «•!»»» .... si... ..... Hut yonder Is a clear light burning, and outside on a window casement a glass or pitcher containing food for a sick child; the food Is set In the fresh air. This Is the sixth night that mother has sat tip with that sufferer. She has to the last point obeyed the physician’s prescription, not giving a drop too much or too little, or a mo ment too soon or too late. She Is very anxious, for she has hurled three chil dren with the same disease and she prays a»d weeps, each prayer and soh ending with a kiss of the ]*l« cheek Hy dint of kill.lot's, she gel* the little one through the ordeal After It Is all over, the mother le taken down Uralu and nervous fever sets In. and oue day she leaves the convalescent child with I a mother's blessing and gives up to loin the three departed ones In the j kingdom of heaven Ufe for life Hub , stllullun' The (ad Is that there are alt Ule outlied number of mothers Who. after they have navigated u large fatal ! tly of children through all the disease# i of itifsiu v and got them fairly aiarted up the dowering slope of lei*hood and girlhood have uni* staetigih enough , left tu die the* fair awa> n, * tic tall It tun su nipt ton. *«.me iull It nerv oua prostration some iall It Ihtenu’t I lent nr maUthil indisposition hut I call It mettytdum of the domestic etr cte l.lfe fof life lib net for blood M-tbet Mutton' tie perhaps a mother lingers long enough to eee a sou get on the wrong rwad and hie foam** htndnese basomes i rough rapt* when she ehpreesee anti* . aty stwort bum Hu* *b* go** right on Probing rwrefwlly after his appwrat. re membertng bis svery btrtfctar wltb I soma memento and wben be la htuwght heme worn out wttb dtaupwtHm. nwrwea him till he gets well and starts him again, and hopes, and experts, and prays, and counsels, and suffers, until her strength gives out and she falls. .She Is going, and attendants, bending over her pillow, ask her If she haH any message to leave, and she makes great effort to say something, hut out of three or four minutes of Indistinct ut terance they can catch but three words: ‘ My poor boy!" The simple fact is she died for him. Life for life. .Substitution! About thirty-eight years ago there went forth from our northern and southern homes hundreds of thousands of men to do battle. All the poetry of war soon vanished, and left them no thing but the terrible prose. They waded knee-deep In mud. They slept in snuw-lianks. They marched till their cut feet tracked the earth. They were swindled out of the honest ra tions, and lived on meat not fit for a dog. They had Jaws fractured, and eyes extinguished, and limbs shot away. Thousands of them cried for water as they lay on the Held the night after the battle and got It not. They were homesick, and received no mes sage from thi Ir loved oiks. They died in barns, In bushes, In ditches, the buz zards of the summer heat the only at tendants on their obsequies. No one hut th§ Infinite Ood who knows every thing. knows the ten-thousandth part of the length, and breadth, and depth, und height of anguish of the northern and southern battlefields. Why did these fathers leave their children and go to the front, and why did these young men, positioning the marriage day, start out Into the probabilities never coming bark? For a principle they died. Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution! But we need not go so far. What Is that monument In the cemetery? B Is to the doctors who fell In the south ern epidemics. Why go? Were there not enough sick to lie attended In these northern latitudes? Oh, yes: but the doctor puts a few medical hooks In his valise, and sorie vials of medicine, and leavpg his patients here In the bands of other physicians, and takes the rail train. Before he gels to the infected regions he passes crowded rail-trains, regular and extra, taking the (lying and affrighted populations, lie arrives In a city over which a great horror Is brooding. He goes from couch to couch, feeling the pulse and studying symptoms and prescribing day after day, night after night, until a fellow physielau sajs: ‘‘Doctor, you had bet ter go home and rest; you look mis erable.” But he can not rest while so many are suffering. On and on, until some morning finds him in a delirium, In which he talks of home, and then rises and says lie must go and look after those p"tient.s. He Is Jold to lie down; but he lights his attendants un til he falls back, and Is weaker and weaker, and 'Mes for people with whom he had no k'ashlp, and far away from his own farni’", and Is hastily put away in a stranger's tomb, and only the fifth part, of a newspaper line tells us of his sacrifice—his name Just mentioned among five. Vet lie has touched the furthest helfbt of sublimity In that three weeks of humanitarian service. He goes stra'ght as an arrow to the bosom of Hi - who said; “I was sick and ye vlsl cd me.” Life for life. ( Blood for bltod. Substitution! I h" legal profession I see the same pr' - yle of self-sacrlfl In 184*1, William Freeman, a p uperized and idiotic negro, was at Auburn, N. V., on trial for nurder. He had slain the entire Van f est family. The foaming wrath of the community could he kept off him only by armed constables. Who would volunteer to be his counsel? No attorney wanted to sacrifice his popu larity by such an ungrateful task. All were silent save one, a young lawyer with feeble voice, that could hardly he heard outside the bar, pale and thin and awkward. It was William H. Seward, who saw that the prisoner was idiotic and Irresponsible, and ought to be put in an asylum, rather than put to death, the heroic counsel uttering these beautiful words; ”1 speak now In the hearing of a people who have prejudiced prisoner and condemned me for pleading In his behalf. He Is a convict, a pauper, a negro, will;' i.Jellect, sense, or emo tion. My child with an affectionate smile disarms mv care-worn face of Us frown whenever I cross my threshold. The beggar In the street obliges me to give because he says, '(iod bless you!’ as I pass. My dog caresses me with fondness If 1 will hut smile on him. My horse rtscoy bos me when f fill ids manger. What reward, what gratitude, what sympathy and affection ran 1 ex pert here? There the prisoner sits Look at him. Look at the assemblage around you. Listen to their Ill-sup pressed censures ami excited tears, and tell me where among my neighbors or my fellow men, where, even in hi* heart, I can expect to Itud u seutlment, a thought, not tu say of reward or of acknowledgment, or even of recog ill lion lieutlemrn. you may think id this evidence what you please, hrlug in what verdict you ran, hut I asseverate before heaven slid you that, lo the best of niy knowledge and belief, the prt* after si the bar does not at till* moment know why It I* lhai my shadow falls on >ou In-lead i f his own The gallows got Its victim, hut the post mortciu eiamlnailott of the poor ■ realore showed lo all the surgron* and lo all Ihe world that the public were wrong, and William II Howard waa riaht. and lhai hard, atony »'«i of ublw|u< in th<- Auburn mrt iwhu waa the Aral step of Ihe slatra of fan** up which he went to th* top, or to wtthtn one step of the lop lhai last dented him through the treachery of tavern an poititce Nothing su>dlme« waa aver seen In an Amarmn court room than Wllllnm II dawaid ntth o*u renard standing hetweau the full woe populace and Ihe loath**** imn • etle Auhat Hutton’ • • • a « • It waa a atnai tt ittsg lay I tpnnt on the battle field of Waterloo. Start ing out with the morning train from Brussels. Belgium, we arrived In about an hour on that famous cpot. A no.i of one who was in the battle, and w 1 bad heard from his father a tbousam times the whole socne recited, accom panied us over the field. There stoot the old Hougomont Chateau, the walls dented, and scratched, and broken, and shattered by grape shot and cannon ball. There Is the well in which three hundred dying and dead were pitched. There is the chapel with the head of the Infant Christ shot off. There are the gates at which, for many hours. Kngllsh and French armies wrestled. Yonder were the one hundred and six ty guns of the Kngllsh, and the two hundred and fifty guns of the French. Yonder was the ravine of Ohaln, where the French cavalry, not knowing there was a hollow in the ground, roll ed over and down, troop after troop, tumbling Into one awful mass of suf fering, hoof of kicking horses against brow and breast of captains and colon els and private soldiers, the human and the beastly groan kept up until, the day uflcr, all was shoveled under be cause of the malodor arising In that hot month of June. "There,” said our guide, "the High land regiments lay down on their faces waiting for the moment to spring upon the foe. In that orchard twenty-five hundred men were cut to pieces. Hf>« stood Wellington with while lips, and up that knoll rode Marshal N'ey on his sixth horse, five having been shot, under him. Here the ranks of the French broke, and Marshal Ney, with his boot slashed of a sword, and his hat off, and his face covered with powder and blood, tried to rally his troops as he cried, 'Come and see how a marshal of France C ■* on the battle field.* From yonder direction Grouchy was expected for tin- French reinforce ments, but lie came not. Around these ^ woods Bluchcr was looked for to rein force the Kngllsh, and just In time ho came up. Yonder Is the field where Napoleon sti od, his arms through the reins of th>* horae'H bridle, dazed and Insane, trying to go back.” Scene of a battle that went on from twenty-five minutes to twelve o'clock, on the 18th of June, until 4 o’clock, when the Eng lish seemed defeated, and their com mander cried out, "Hoys, you can't think of g.\ ig wuy? Remember old England!” and the tides turned, and at 8 o’clock In the evening the man of destiny, who was called by bis troops Old Two Hundred Thousand, turned away with broken heart, and the fate of centuries was decided. No wonder a great mound has been reared there, hundreds of feet high—a mound at tie expense of millions of dollars and many years In rising, and on the top Is the great Relglan lion of bronze, and a grand old lion it Is. Hut our great Waterloo whs la Palestine. There came a day when all bell rode up, led by ‘ o’!y'’n, an the Captain of our salvation confronted them alone. The Rider on the white horse of the Apocalypse going out against the Black horse cavalry of death, end (he bat talions of the demoniac, and the myr midons of darkness. From 12 o'clock at noon to 3 o'clock In the afternoon the greatest battle of the universe went on. Eternal destinies were being decided. All the arrows of hell pierced our Chieftain, and battle axps struck him, until brow and cheek and shoul der ami band and foot were Incarna dined with oozing life; but he fought on until he gave a final stroke with sword from Jehovah's buckler, and the commander-in-chief of hell and all his forces fell back in everlasting ruin, and the victory is ours. And on the mound that celebrates the triumph we plant this day two figures, not in bronze, or iron, c; sculptured marble, but two figures of living light, the lion of Judah's tribe and the Lamb that was slain. ROCK OF GIBRALTAR. Part It Might Play in it War Kpaln. (Sihriiltii I' bf>v Ilf Iho Meulilnw. ranean, was Incorporated with the Spanish crown In 1502, hut in 1701 fell Into tiie hands of Kngluud. who lias I eld it ever s'nce. While It is not a Spanish fortification, if occupies tho best strategic point on the southern coast of Spain. By Us position Gibral tar must be figured upon either as a strong ally or a dangerous enemy lu any attack upon the Spanish seaboard, says the Boston ilerald. The rock, which is 1.400 feet high, and about six miles in circumference. U honey-comh with batteries Strong foils have been built at the water port or north end of the Hue > 4|t, Mt line*, d .Staff and at Itosla. These are armed with elght 1-eh-tun guns in shtlded embrasures. The prime of Wales. In IH7U, laid the corner stone of the Alexandrine bat tery. which carried leceutly a thirty eight ton gun Klve years sgo thirty heavy guns, 1m hiding two loo ton guns, were in ihmUIoii at various p outs, hut since that time the summit of the risk has been thoroughly equipped Wllh modern guns of sufficient power to command the whole circuit of land and sea around lilhraligr The upper purl of Ihr risk cannot Ire visited ity ilvttiins and only by litirub ufft. et* under sirh i reg iiaiiuns The bsri.ur It IMdlttervutl) I II i Olftt nit 4 4 dtM'k yard fully etiulpped tor the re pairing of nien of war 1 we rock to •eld to be garrisoned with ear Mildo-1s. Hit the opposite Afrit aw »hure Jipain owns rents which wllh Kngtawd * tlilo slier might It* made is i|<* ihw ( rnuiuo tu ibe Vlolli litmus and Stake It iwtpi'.gsabie I ‘"Wig la ebleffy w*ed as a penal i ttetey and ta well ft mini by psMittoo on a piumg r«** k • Ilk ptuipo uwg little Theta ata tbtaa mows as assnt a* ale* la tka igtl af a * at •• ikw *'* lb lb* hums* aagda and tiWU.