BMmatMrnamBmBmBmammam " " - 'rL ' . - ' . r-V-' aIv li BED CLOUD CHIEF A. C. HCSMER, Proprietor. pct rrrn. TCFP.RASKA THE REASON WHY. Xt isn't that I've got a thin g ag'ia yoa. Parsoa ee: Korpela the many tried aa' true. It met xnere ev'ry week. It's not fi.r tLts re stayed away so many Sab- ba days TToni the mtle xaouat'ia meetia'-house, where ort Tve fiaed la praise. But listen if yoa care to know aa I will tell you ill. Ztoiak 'twas "boat two year ago, or wae it tare last fall! The wealthy members voted that they'd hae the seat made free. Andmcstofcs was willia with the notioa to agree. Perhaps the meaaia' o' the word I dida't quite uaderstiad; For the Sunday after, wall-ia'Toag wit Elsie haad la fcaai Toa kaow the little blue-eyed girl; her mother bow is dead: And I am Elsie's jrraadpi: but let me go ahead. Well, thialtla e the Master, aad how horse-like It would be To take a seat most anywhere, sow that the seats was free; I walked in at. the open door, aa up the center aisle An sat dowa tired, tot happy, in the light e-f Elsie's stsile. X listened to your preachla with aa "Amen1 in my heart: Aa whea ihe hvnias was Eivea out, I tried to do my part. Aa my love seemed newly kindled for th one great Power abore. An' sometaia' seemed to answer back, "For love, I give thee love." But when the beaedictioa come, aa we was pasiia out. A Tew words whispered with my name, caused me to turn about Twji not exactly words like these, bat that which meant it all; "It's strange that ptv-pers never know thslr place is by the wall. It wasn t 'bout myself I cared. Tor what the speaker said: Bet the little bios: oat at sy side with pretty upturned head. An lookia down at Elsie there. I thought ef Elsie's mother. An thoughts my bet'er natcr' scorned, I tned ia va:a to smother. I've teea to meetia" tTice siace then, aa" set dowa by the wall: But kept a tttnkia' thinkia till my thoughts was turned to gall: Aa whea the old familiar hymns was j-ivea out to sic;:. One look at Elsie's shiaia' curls would choke my uttena. Aa so, I thought it best awhile to stay at home aa' prai'e. Or take a walk in field or wood, aad there trace oat Hii ways. "It's better so. my old heart said, -than gather withtteth'oas. Aa let yonr i eelia's rankle o'er a real or fancied wrong." Bet ra prayin" Parson, all the time, aa wish you'd help me pray. When cse an" all are gathered home, la the great romin da?: When men are ;udged by honest deeds, aa" love to fellow eta, I shan't be thouzat a pauper, ia the light I'm teen in then. KathaKse H. Terry, ia Good Housekeepias- MADGE. The Plucky Girl Who Saved the Bed Gulch Stage. "Click, click, click, click." treat the types as they were thrown into their respective boxes "by the type setters ia the Daily Cal liope oCice. It was early Sunday morning and they -were almost through with the night's work. One of the compositors, a dark-haired girl, was particularly deft at her task; aad the nim'oleness of her stained fcurers as. without an error, she rapidly sorted the letters, was a sight worth watch in?. Though the only lady in the office, and but a child at that, she was as quick aad rapid a worker as any. The Calliope was one of the experimental dailies, that had started in western towns lor "booming"' purposes. The city would be called a mere village by Eastern visitors, but standing as it did Jar out on the plains, amid the foot hills of the liockies. it hid quite a metropolitan ap pearance. After fce lcuraes upon leagues of unbroken prairie or rolling bluffs and precipitous banks, it really appeared like a center of civilization, and despite the ram bling character of its buildincs and the srnallness of its population, its daily paper, electric lights and waterworks did not seem so much out of the way. As the fingers of the girl were nearing the end of their task, a voice was heard behind her. She recocnized it as that of ilr. Fer rard, the editor. He said: "Miss JIadge. here are three short items 1 wish you would put in type. Take pains, please, for I will rot have time to look at your work.' The morning paper was nearly ready for the press and handing her three slips of manuscript covered with his almost un readable scrawl, he left her and went to at tend to other matters demanding his at tention. I wonder what that can be, thought the ciri. puzzling over the badly-writtea sen tences. "Ob. yes. I see now," and she quickly put into type : To-day ia the glorious anniversary of the resurrection Easter. The word is sw;t with s-uj-j-estica. It speaks of bepe. ' joy. of a iir lire. That oar readers may enjoy hope and hap piness and that a new life may come to each heart is our wish." It was a short editorial squib. Then she took up the next one. a news item: -We learn tnat Ben Haven, the well knows taqe driver on the Colorado and Kaa-as line between ttere aad Eed Gulch, has been dis charged aad his place filled by Joan Horns. Horns started out on hU first tr.p Friday morn ing, aad w-11 return to-morrow night." The girl hesitated. She disliked having the words go forth to the world. They told of her father being thrown out of employ ment, and though the editor had not said so, every body would know that Ben Haven had "lost his Job" on account of his dissi pation. "I must do it. though,' be thought, "for I want to keep my place here now." aad this item, too, was made ready for the press. The third, and her last work: of the night, had evidently been handed ia from th tele graph ofllce. It read: - -A temble blizzard, said to be the worst of the season, is ragtag la Wyoming aad "Western Nebraska. It is sweeping southward and will reach here about coca Sunday. Comiag so late ia the season KwUl find maay unprepared and do much camare." That was ail. and throwing her thin cloak around her, she left the office and, through the chill, gray morning, sought her unat tractive home a frame cabin, perched far beyond the outskirts of the town, on the side of Indian hni, with only the govem meat staae road between it and the Smoky river. There was a peculiar clearness is the airjsd the stars twinkled with a strange masmetic riCIlTk! it. bover. stfc ' -Easter s flu'rutc cr noisv carrier bays delivered the morning CaHf i feepv' , trz from -ke M. - e "JLadge." called her father, six hoars . '- t . ha .! ' -1 later. "haven't you ale pt long enough ? rm hungry. Get up and fret me some dinner." The girl wearily arose aad began s-ettint; the meal that her father had so roughly de manded. They two were alone in the world, aad the double dnty of the printing office and the kitchen fell upon the girl's shoulders. Her father had come to make bis days much like hers, when he was cot employed sleep nearly all day. and alas! be down town all night. Now he sat by the kitchen stove lazily blinking at the morning Calliope which had long ago arrived. Madge, did you sea this about me!" he suddenlv exclaimed. What, father J" "About my being discharged and that worthless Joe Harris taking my placer "Yes, I saw it, was the meek response. ""Why didn't you keep it out then! I don't see why the editor should attack me that way." "I couldn't keep it out, father. What do you suppose I have to do with things that go into the paper!' "O, you don't care. You're like that worthless brother of yours; if you were a boy, you'd desert me like him that's all you care about your father.' He was in a grumbling mood to-day and did not spare the patient slave who served him. She would not allow, however, the allusion to the boy who, four years ago had gone forth with a mother's blessing, to seek an honorable livelihood. "What has Will done!" she asked, hotly. To be sure, he has never come back, bat be has sent you money and will some day come to us. But never mind, dinner is ready." She saw that he was waited on. and then went to the window. Far down in the town she could see the people thronging church ward, for the special Easter services had been widely advertised and the churches would be crowded. The sky was covered with a gray, misty cloud that was drifting swiftly to the southward. She listened to the gusts of wind that shook the building, and she thought of the blizzard that the dis patch had said was coming. "I'm goin' down town, Madge," said her father as he rises from the table. "Stay with me," she pleads, but a slam of the door is all the answer she receives. It was a long and dreary Easter. The biting north wind grew fiercer and wilder. At three o'clock the snow commenced fall ing. Not in large, feathery flakes as in well regulated Eastern skies, but in tiny, icy par ticles, that pierced the skin of the traveler exposed to them. The storm bowled on, and by five, when Madge saw her father come unsteadily around the corner of the house, on his way home from a favorite lounging place where he had spent the day, the snow was blinding and the cold had almost con quered the feeble efforts of the kitchen stove. 'Well, air ye goin' to the office!" asked Haven, in a somewhat liquor-weakened voice. "So: there is no paper on Monday morn ing, you know," replied the compositor. "That's so, forgot about it. It's mighty cold here: what's the matter!' The coal is nearly gone. Didn't you get some yesterday!" "Didn't have no monev, an' now I'm out of a job. I can't get none. What'll we do, Madce!' I'll have my month's wages soon, and then it'll be all right." "I heard somethia' ter-day." What was it, father!" That Horris told on me, so as to get my job. Said to the comp'ny that I was a good- for-nothin' an' got me discharged. I'll get even with him, doggonhisdoggoned picter," and the man clenched his hands angrily. Suddenly his face lighted up with a strange expression. "He comes back to-night from the Gulch, doesn't he!' he blurted out, and then went to the door. The wind was still fiercer, and the air was fairly black with snow. The thermometer had been register ing below zero for two hours, and now was drawing near to the twenty degree mark. No church bells could be heard; indeed that Easter Sunday is to this day remembered as one upon which no evening services were held, on account of the terrible storm. Cp from the stream to which the steep banks, separated from the house by the narrow wagon road led, came the roar of the waters as they dashed eastward, as if getting a good headway for their long, sluggiah jour ney across the plains to the sea. Til fix him. the girl heard him mutter in his half -drunken frenzy, and then taking a lantern from the closet he went with it out into the night. " What can he be doing!' she thought, and waited with breathless anxiety for his re turn. It was a long time, but whea he came it was without the light and with a bluster ing and blowing that told he had been facing the storm. "Where is the lantern, father!' she in quired. 'It went out, and I had to drop it, to hang on to myself," he replied with a leer. Sheisnotsatisfied.butcaa get no otheran swer: and. as the fire is dyingand the bitter cold is creeping over her fiesh, she goes to the single up-stairs room of the swaying cabin, where she prepares to sleep. Before doing so. she peers through the curtainless win dows. She can see nothing, but she can feel the dust-like snow sift against her face as it is driven through some crevice in the walL All is black outside Just as she is turning away, however, she thinks she sees a twinkle of light toward the river. She looks again- Yes, surely it is there. Can a traveler be abroad in such a tempest! Surely not. for the light remains stilL She puzzles over it a moment and then a thought comes to her that makes her tremble. It is the lantern which her father has hung out why! There can be but one an swer to misguide his rival, who must force his way through the storm to-night and bring through the mail and stage from the Gulcli-. The lizht will cause him to turn to the right and throw stage driver and horses over the bank, aad send them rolling to a death plunge in the ice filled river below. "In his drunken fury be is not himself. she thinks, in excuse of the deed, and deter - -iz:ZZ-i- .v-.-. .:f -. .,k... mines to undo the crime wmen about to be committed. Hastily wrapping a cloak around her shivering form, she creeps back to the lower room. Her father is sitting before the stove, apparently brooding over his coming revenge. As noiselessly as possible she opens the outer door; arid though the man turns and sees her supping through, she has vanished into the blackness of the storm be fore he can call to her. In an instant he recognizes her errand; the thought of the slight girlish form bat tling with the fearful tempest, sends the blood back from his heart and makes a sober man of him in a flash. He rushes to the door and calls, "Madze ! with all his strength. It is of no use. Noth ing but the wind and the roaring Smoky re ply. Putting on his overcoat, which, ragged as it was, would afford some protection, he starts to the rescue. He turns thecs-afcer of the house, and as the blast .strikes him, he i almost driven- back. Baf har -srgles on and reaches the spot where be thinks he left the lantern none is there, nor can he find a trace of the daughter whose bodviia. iSifHrnltv be takes his course, aad in aconv e takes his course, in agony rir-: udI auras TT. j? f3 JL -I. m -m t . m m 'Bless no, driver, but this ia a hairy sort V ' .!: j,. lis' ' t Q T fa eight, sad the only passenger of the Bed Gulch stage drew bis ulster closer about hi -n aad even the shivered a littls with the cold. -Yes. we'd orter her stopped back vender until mornin', but the mail haz ter go through if we kin git it. Ye see, they is awful pertie'lar about it an' I ain't been on the route before. I don't want ter fail on say first trip." "You don't mean to say you don't know this road!' -Wa'aL I calc'late I know t pretty well, but I ain't a regler driver, that's alL The horses hcz ben along here often enough." "Are there any bad places!" "One that's right bad, 'bout two miles this side o' town, 'long side of Indian hill. The road's between the hill and the Smoky river. Haven (he's the old driver) used to have a light in his house along there to guide him when he came m late. 'Spect there'll be one to-night. The horses'll just bear off to the right o" the light, an' we'll be all O. K." The rickety old stage lumbered on for an hour. It was quite dark and the horses, weary and confused by the now whirling snow, were picking out the way slowly. "We're almost thar," volunteered the driver, Joe Horris. "Most where !' asked the passenger, who bad forgotten the former conversation. Most to the river cut by Haven's house." "Say, driver, I know Haven and I guess Til get out at the house. You can take my things on dtfvn to the hotel, and 111 be down in the morning." They had reached Indian hilL and the river's angry roar came up from below, vie ing with the northern blast for supremacy of sound. Suddenly, midway in the cut, the horses stopped. As Horris attempted to urge them on, a weak voice came from the blackness beyond their' heads. "There's somebody there exclaims the passenger, and in a moment he is groping his way to the heads of the horses, and thea lifting from the drift a little, girlish form which, while being carried to the wagon, dropped into insensibility and was like a dead thing ia the man's arms. When, an hour later, the storm-beatea company drew up to the hotel and the light of the office lamp streamed full upon the girl's face, the bystanders, who were watching for signs of returning life, were surprised to see the stranger kiss her lips and cheeks passionately. "See hyar," blurted out Horris, "me in sults, young sun, in these parts. We know Madge Haven too welL" "Insults !' repeated the youth (for he was scarcely more), as he relinquished his charge to the hands of the landlady, "she is my sister." And so it proved: for when he signed his name upon the register, it read, "William Morris Haven, Portland. Ore." An hour later. Ben Haven came to the village to organize a searching party. His relief when be found his child safe, though chilled and still insensible, at the hotel, can not be told in words. The shock and the agony of that nighi made a new man of him, and his tender ness toward the daughter who shared witt him the secret of his remorse, though they never spoke of it to each other, was re marked by all who knew thein. So effectual and lasting was this reform that the Daily Calliope was able to give, a few weeks later, on the same day that it told of Miss Madge's first appearance upon the street, this item: "Mr. Ben Haven has accepted his old po sition on the Red Gulch stage line, his suc cessor, Joe Horris. having resigned to go to the n-ines." Charles M. Harger, in Yankee Blade. m m LIFE IN MADRID. Th Spaalsh Capital's Prado aad Its Sstfae tive .attractions. Although the French fashionable bonnets are gradually invading Spain and becoming much, in vogue among the Spanish belles, the elegant national costume, the mantilla, is still predom inating. It is worn and arranged with a natural grace which enchants the be holder. A Spanish lad v seems always to have some little matter to adjust which sets off to advantage the quiet elegance of her deportment. The man tilla is drawn a little more forward or gently moved a little less; it is crossed in front or uncrossed, and through its transparent network of blonde lace are seen the lovely head and beautiful throat rising from a bust of most ele gant contour. These mantillas are both white and black, but the latter are, to my taste, the most becoming. And the abanico! the fan! O, what magic there is in that little zephyr coaxing telegraph! Folded and un folded with a careless ease which none but Spanish women can display, moved quickly in recognition of a passing friend, elevated, opened over the head to frame it, so to speak, the fan plays an important and most attractive part in the hand of a Spanish lady. During the delightful summer nights, when the moon sheds her pure light around, the Prado presents the most romantic picture. Canopied by the blue vault of heaven, with all its bright spangles, many a love tale is there told and listened to with favor. In the Prado Is assembled nightly the cream of the society of Madrid, and it may be said with truth that there is a sociability on this beautiful promenade that does not exist in places of analogous resorts m InTKTAi" WArwinnlirnn nttio Inrii. .. ," ,. ... , " , viduals and families are known to each other, there is a succession of saluta tions and greetings, and to a looker-oo it seems as if the promenaders were ast lines of family or friendly connec tions. The botanical and public gar den, called "las delicias," which ad. join the Prado, add greatly to the beauty of this lovely promenade. The roval oalace. which is one of th nra nxmi ft , mrfliu T.. 1 I ucrab umuiuixu. viatica iu EurTJLrc, I rises dazzling white against theUky 4r the opposite side of thecty ifchetarlsV of 100 feet bSr9& the ancient Moorish Alcazar and occu- f pies an arfca-or2216tt) iqTiaxe-reet' Maarialiettflr.io wot c aid; -wWSttral i'Zjt epmb r iar-yia rw -wlSwTfifcic, PjosteSeipA.tff: grpoeryfltorein-Biaa-D Seld. S. J., and put an end to bumeM .'or the day. At night they were de stroyed by burning" stup'Sur: .U)Hn k fj'i'i 'tlT FiftF-twe chicks f rax fifty eggs is a necocdlhat LeaaweeCohnrjrj'Michi.'! aw ui wuutj r.'-7'wu W9 ucUoll VI UCflK of h8 hatfthinjj hens.- --;-- " i.jr w H-i-i "tf lias -- ' -, 'iJ jjf MAKING FKIEND& Dr. Tabnage on the Friendships of This Ufa. Th Iaaportaae of Treating- Others Proa- rijr Takta; Part With th Abi rriMdahia Bct Frieadshij G4 th Traest Frtead. In a recent sermon at Brooklyn upon the stibj .-ct: How to Make Friend," Rev. T. D Witt Talmage took hit text from Proverb xvui. t4: "A man that bath ixitads must show himself tr.e-iuly." He said: AIout the sacred and divine art of mak ing aad keeping friend I -peak a utj-ct oa which I never heard of any oh a preach ing and yet God thought it of enough isaportanc to put it ia the middle of th Bible, these writing of Solomon, bouudl oa one side by tne popular Psalms of David and on the other by the writing of Iaiah, the greatest of the prophets. It Mini all a matter o! haphazard how taaar frirnds w hav. cr whether we bar any friends at a L but there is noth ing acci leotal about it. Thtre is a law which governs the secretion and disper sion of friendship. They did not "just happen so" any more than the tide- just happen to rise or falL or th san just happen to risj or set. It is a science, an art, a God -given regulation. Tell me how friendly you are to others and I will tall you how irieadly others are to you. I do t say that you will not have enemies; inda.'d, the best way to get ardent friends is to have ardsnt enemies, if you got their enmity ia doing th right thing. Good men and women will always have enemies, because their goodness is a perpetual rebuko to evil; but this antagon ises of foes will make more intense the love f your adhermts. Your friend will gather closer around you because of th stacks of your assailant. Human nature was shipwrecked a boat fifty-nine centuries ago, the captain of that craft, one Adam, and his first ma e running the famous cargo aground on a snail in the river Hiddekel; but there was at Ieait one good trait of human nature I that waded ashore from that shipwreck, ! and that is the disposition to take th part of thoie unfairly dealt with. When it is thoroughly demonstrated that iomi one is being persecuted, although at the start slanderous tongues were bny enough, defender finally gather around as thick a honey tees on a trellis of bruised honey- 1 suckle. If, when set uron by the fur:, you can have grace enough to keep your . mouth shut, and rrescrve your equipoise, I and let others fieht your battles, you will find yourself after awhile with a whole cordon of all es. Had not the world given i to Christ on His arrival at Palestine a very cold shoulder there would not have been one-half a many angels chanting glory out of the hymn books of the sky bound in black lid of midnizht. Had it not been for the heavy and jagged aad torturous cros Christ wool 1 not hav been the admired and loved of more peo ple than any being who ever touched foot on either the Eastern or Western hemi sphere. Instead, therefore, of giving up in despair because you hare enemies, re joice in the fact that they rally for you the most helpful and enthusiastic ad mirer. In other words, there is no viru lence, human or diabolic, that can hinder my Uxt lrcm coming true: A man that hath friends must show him elf friendly." It is my ambition o proj-ct especially upon the young a thought which may be nignly shape their destiny for the here aad the hereafter. Before you show your self friendly you must be friendly. I do cot recommend a dramatized genia.ity. There U such a thing as pretending to be en rapport with others when we are their dire destructants and talk against them and wish them calamity. Judas covered up his treachery by a resounding kiss, and caresses my be demoniacaL Better the mytholrgical Cerberus, the three-headed dog of hell, barking at us than the wolf in sheep's clothing, its brindled hide covered up by deceptive wool and its deathfu.1 hol cadensed into an innocent bleating. Before you begin to show yourself friendly you must be friendly. Ge: your heart rieht wita God and roan and this grace will become easy. You msy by your own resolution get your nature into a semblance of this virtue, but the grace of God can sublimelv lift you into it. Sailing on the river Thames two vessels ran ap round. The owners of one got 100 horses and pulled on the grounded ship and pulled it to pieces. The owners of the other grounded ve-sel waited 1 11 the tides came in and easily floated the f hip out of all trouble. So, we may pull and haul at our grounded human nature, and try to get it into better condtion; bat there is nothing l:ke the oceanic tides of God's up lifting grace to hoist us into th s k n-ines I am eulogizing. If whea under the flash of the Holy Gjost we ee our own foibles and defects and depravities we will be very lenient and very easy with others. We will look into their characters for things commendatory and not damnatory. If you would rub your own eye a li tie more vigorously you would find a mote in it, the extraction rf which would keep you so busy you would not have much time to sbon lder y our broadaxe an d so forth to split up the beam in your neighbor's eye, la a Christian spirit ksep en exploring the character of those you meet, and I am sura ycu will find something in them delight ful and fit for a foundation of friendliness. Oh, my friend, better cover up the faults and tx'ol the virtue, and this habit once established of universal friendliness will become as easy as it is this morning for a syrinca to flood the air with sweetness, as easy as it will be further ou ia the season for a quail to whistle up from the grass. When w hear something bad about somebody whomwe always sappseeTfstw' b good, take out yoar lea&rssiafcitfiBd sav: "Let arte see. BeioraJaij-j-2tha$ balefal story against that mauVcharacta'r,, I will take off from it twenty-flv tier cent, for th ambit toMiatiMeh belongs thsjaAwhe trst-- ? then I will take off. twenty-five PiCab for th addit-ons which the spirit of-gossip hiiIerf -YemSriltlrr laifputJ--ipetfBae lriaaistoiy;miiwaUhtfcwmihjt fire per cent from th fact Xbat.tha jmrnm. -eyf& Hvrpoa r have been put tnto circuan-aareajar rpTwet'empaafoiScaV m m -- tatafcv oat-amCTlC-sr:eanc-'-fcyT -j-n-j-'iliflnave not beard his side of the sH&detJ u. ?a ?? ,J aw?--1 Kf-Wa ! .V maiatag twenty-Eve per cent." xvxraue mevsir. TelowHBele-a'wonf-if It 1sH nafatatweatafiT sveirtr-ejsisa;r t-aa-.qucldi-W-aer thft iaet-ac therepsusYne so1aie"Bre.7 -5ok -- smoke fof-yarrarouiu"Jn'ner.efStrtH. ducer of vaccination 'an -' Sssseia around Colamtai. t ha discoverer, and th smoke arcand Martitt Luther and Savona rola and Gaffie Wrfaol'-ana iTohn and Cfcost aad mJttaMtrahan was s tre? That ia-caa-jotj tha. satanic vUlata;! smiake' ' without ir. .Slander, like thai o-jq us jj-3E-:.ml a - r'kji .. -t7n. u orld. may Le mad out ft nothing. If the Christian, lair-nun-led. conininas ical spirit iu retard to o her predomi nated in th world we should Uave the millenn am in about six weeks, for would not that b Iamb aad lion, cow aad leopard lying down tcg:her? Nothing but th grac of God can aver put us into such a habit of mind aal heart as that. The whol tendency is in th opposit direc tion. This is the way th world talks: I put my aarse oa the back of a maa'j note and I had to pay it aad I will aever agaia pat my name on th back of any man's nots. I gave a beggar ten cents and &rs miuutes .if.er I saw him entering a liquor store to spend it I wilt never again give a cent to a beggar. I i-elped that young mai start in business and lo, afier awhile be came and opened a store almost next door and stole my customers. I will never again help a younr ma start in business. I trusted in what my neighbor promised to do and h broke his word and the Psalmist was right before he corrected himself, for '"all men ar liars." So men become sus picious and saturnine and selfish, aad at every additional wrong done them they put another layer oa the wall of their exclusiveness, and another tolt to th door that shats them out from sympathy with the world. Thsy get cheated out of a thou sand dollars or misinterpreted, or disap pointed, or betrayed, aad higher goes ths wall and faster goes another bolt, not re alizBg that while thsy lock otpers oil they lock themselves in; and sots day they wak up to find themselves impris oned in a dastardly habit No friends to others, others are bo friends to them. Now. supposing that you have, by a di vine regeneration, got right toward God and humanity, aad you start cat to prac tice my text. "A maa that hath friends must show himself friendly." Fulfil this by all forms of appropriate salutation. Hav you noticed that th head is so poised that the easiest thing on earth is to give it a nod of recognit.on? To swing the head from side to side, as when it is wagged in derision, is unnatural and unpleasant; to throw it back, inv tss vertigo; but to drop the chia in greeting is accompanied with so little exertion that all day long and every day you mightpracfec it without the least s-mblance of fatigue. So, also, the structure of th band indicates hand shaking; the knuckles not made so that ths finders can turn in. as ia clasping bands divided from and set aloof from the fingers, so that while ths fingers clasp your neighbor's band on one side, the thumb takes it on th other, and. pressed together, a'l th faculties of the hand give emphasis to tie salutation. Five sermons in every healthy hand urge us to handshaking. Besides this, every day when yea start our, load yourself up with k nd thought, kind words, kind expressions and kind greetings. Wh n a man or woman does well, tell him o, tell her so. If you meet some one who is improvd in health, and it is demonstrated in girth and color, say: "How well yon look!" Bat if on the other hand, under the weir and tear of life he appears ra'e and exhausted, do not intro duce sanitary subjects or say any thing at all about physical conditions. In the case of improved health you have by ycur words given another impul-e toward the robust and the jocund; while in the ease of the failing health you have arrested the dec ine by your silence, by which he concludes "It I were really so badly off. h would have aid something about it." We are all, e-p?cially those of a nervous temperament, susceptible to kind words and discouraging words. Form a con spiracy against us. and let tea men meet ns at certain points ou our way over to bu-iness, and let each one say: "How sick you iot-k!" though we should start out well, after meeting the first and hearing his depressing salute, we would be gin to examine cur symptom. After meeting the second gloomy accosting we would conclude we did not feel quite as well as usual. After meetinz the third our sensation would be dreadful, and after meeting the fourth, unless we supected a conspiracy, we would go borne and go to bed, and the other s;x pessimists would be a useless surplus of discouragement. 3Iy dear sir, my dear madam, what do you mean bv goinz about this world with dishearten ment? Is not the supply of g'ocm and troub'eand m'sfoitune enough to meet the demand without running a factory of pins and spkss! Why should you plant black and blue in the world when God so seldom plants them? Plenty of scarlet colors, plenty of yellow, plenty of green, plenty of pink, but very seldom a plant. black or blue. I never saw a black flower. and there's only here and there a blue-bell or a violet; but the blue is for the most part re-erved for the sky. and we have to lookup to see that and whn we look up no color can do us harm. Why not plant along the path of others the brightnesses instead of the glooms? Do not prophesy misfortune. If you must be a prophet at al! be an Ezekiel. and not a Jeremiah. Ia ancient times prophets who f retold evil were doing right, for they were di vinely directed; but th prophets of evil in our time are generally false prophets. Some of our weatberwis people are prophesying we shall have a summer qf unparalleled scorch. It will not be tnat at all. I think we are going to hae jf summer of great harvest and universal health: at any rate I know as much shout! it as they do.' Last fall all .the weaftfei prophets agreed in say'sg we should have a winter of extraordinary severity,- bKs zard on the heels of blizzard, 'Jft was ttft mildest winter I ever 'remember to" cave TnM TnrlMetL thlaainttla iaod'i'tMel uassed. Indeed; thJaafatBB awT-'ttel spring almost .shoved, winter ou ' t procession. Keal'troubWhave no hera'da raBBingahea4o- tbromber chariots ladaaose hasa-fjautfcootj;ofiJjB3 to announce their coming. Lod vcurU op with helpful words and detT: 'Ifne hymaanc'sunjtia;-chiphes is unfit to bi'sanV tot? it sirs: We should snspf-et some danger Iwhlwsm-iser. rable all the tim.V7Tel ontfa-.nr.eKH the pianos n quarter of a ceatury a20 was right: "Kn-i words1 net er die.' Seen aaTwben they are hatched tmt and, take ing they circle roan a nrn gnraTnat gm ia wesc lower saies o: ear IB tbev tysaiisajimii,riaa hlsjamallml of Heave tu.t.a containing the fft"fi i" .' Wb- asm a rromeBiSeiea ftrrned, gav bnckto m tWvtrr-"wisrWf had wttered-tika'aaV-Dn iore, aaa wua tae same tntoaatiossau Scold into th phonograph ,aad!it mill ata-fef-fpev --swab-IC s-Jii!rB-ttee Bitiapasa- Society , aad, -thao--asrt7 graphs. Give them acerbitv aad witajh I traatase-sft amaV. aarlUy 'said -3- -!!- JWJ-?" ti?$jii&m" T -SB-,- K-TZ. TU. J - -h' 1li4.il . A. m. wod-wa'-,iea,r lRl.twarwilr'-M!s-utT them rracMcat fr"endlins and they will siv l" csrpruc ici! friendliness. A father asked hi tittle diughier: -Mary, why ia it that every bod- love yen?" Sh aa swered: "1 don't know, unless it is be cause 1 love e very bod v." "A maa that hath frieals mast -how himself friendly." What is tin manwarJ is tru God ward W mast b th friends of God if w want Him to be cur friend. We cm not treat Cbti-t badly alt our lives aad expsct Hiss to treat ss lovingly. I was reading of a ea fight in which Lord Nel-on captured a French officer, aid when the Frenca offieer offered Lord NeNon h s band. Nelsoa re plied: ''First give me your sword, anal th-n give me yoar hand." Surrend-r o our resistance to Go-1 must prec-d God's proffer of pardon to us. Repentance be fore forgiveness. You mast give up yjr rebel ions sword before you can get a grap of the div n hand. O. what a glorious state of things to have the friendship of Go I! Why. we could afford to hav all the world against as and all other worlds agaiust us if w bad God for us. He could in a minute blot out this universe and in another minute make another universe. I hav bo idea that God tried hard when He mad all thin:s. The most brilliant thing known to us is light, and for the creation of that he enly used a word of command. As cut of a flint th frontiersman strikes a spark, so out of ens word God struck the noonday sun. For ths making of th present universe I do not read that God lifted so much as a finger. The B bit fre quently speaks of God's band, and God's arm, and God's shoulder, and God's foot; then suppose He should pat hand and arm and shoulder and foot to th utmost ten sh$i what could He not make? That God, of such demonstrated and undemonstratid strength yoa may have for your present and everlasting friend. Not stately and reticent friend. hard to get at, but as approachable as a ccuntry mansion on a summer day whea all the doors aad windows are wide open. Christ said:", "I am th door." Aad He is a wide da, a high door, a palaew door, an always open door. , My four-year-old child got hurt and did not cry unt 1 hours after, when -aer mother cams home, and then she burst into weeping, and some of the domestics, not under standing human nature, said to her: "Why did yoa no: cry before?" Sh an swered: "There was no one to cry to.' Now I have to tell you that .Va hamaa sympathy may be absent, divine sym pathy is always accessible. Give God yoar love and get His love: your service and secure His help; your repentance tad have His pardon. God a friend I Why. that means all your wounds medicated, all your sorrows soothed, and if some sud den catastrophe shoull burl you out of earth it wou'd only hurl yon into Heaves. If God is your friend, you can not go out of the world too quickly or suddenly, so far as your own happiness is concerned. There were two Christians last Tuesday who entered Heaven; the one was stand ing at a window in perfect health watch ing a shower, and the lightning instantly s ew him; but the lightning did not-flash down the ky as swiftly as his spirit flashed onward. The Christian man who died on the same day next door bad bsea for a year or two failing in health, and for the last three months had suffered from a disease that made the nights steep less and the days an anguish. Do yoa not really think that the case of th on who went instantly was more desirable than th one who entered the shining gat throuzh a long lane of insomnia aad con gestion? In the one case it was like yoar standing wearily at a door, knocking aad waiting and wondering if it would ever open, and knocking and waiting, agaia, while in the other cae it was a swinging open of the door at the first touch of yoar knuckle. Give your friendship to God. and have Gcd's friendship for you, aad even the wcrt accident will be a victory. How refreshing is human friendship, and true friends, what priceless treasures I Whn sickness comes, and trouble comes, and death comes we send for our friends first of alL and their arpearance in our doorway at any crisis is reinforcement, and when they have entered we say: "Now it is all right!" O. what would wa. do without friends, personal friends, bus iness friend', family friends? But W want something mightier than human friendship in the great exigencies. When Jonatlian Edwards in bis final hour- aad given the last goodbye to all his earthly friends he turned on his pillow- as-d closed his eyes confidently, saying: ""Now where is Jesus of Nazareth, my tru aad never failing friend?" Yes, I admirehpmaa friendship as seen in the case of ""David and Jonathan, of Paul and One-sih(rasi of Herder and Goethe, of Goldsmith.and Ravnolds, of Beaumont and FIetcher.'fof Cowley and Harvey, of ErasaNsma Thomas More.of Lesswzand.Mendelsaohta o' Lady Churchill and Princess Anne, pf Orestes and Py'adee each requesting' that himself might take the point of the dagger so that the other might be spared, of Epaminondas and Pe'opdas. who loaasel their swords in battle de ter mined 'ds' together; but the grandest, the mightiest, tha-teaderest friendship in aRthen-Svers id.tbe. friendship between Jasns Csrtn4 a believing ouL Yet after all I have said IT-' feel" I have only doae what 'Jam Mars-nail, the miaer, did ia IcV- California, before its go-d mines were known. He rea hed in and pat n-porx thw labia of bU'esnployer, Cap'aia Sates-tr thimbleful of gold dust. 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