SHOPLIFTERS. Why Dry-Gooda Stores Employ Private Detectire. thMMadi of Delia Ie Kaeh Imt fcy Larse KstaMtohsaeaU-hopUlfers. as a- Kale, Are Vmi-H They Operate. HE professional shoplifter s season is approaching," aid the superin- tendentof a store on West Twenty third street tome the other day. The holidays and theepnng and fall openings are the limn srhen rnur t;j $5r professional reaps i'?JP tn0 richest har vests. AS a store which does a year ly business of sov eral Billion dollars one of the members of the firm said they -would gladly pay tea thousand dollars an nually to be insured against the pilferings of shoplifters, professional and otherwise. The Sixth avenue shops are more troubled with thieves than those in other parts of -town. At one store tho superintendent as sured me tout shoplifters were never al lowed to enter, tho detectives employed by them being very successful ia "spotting" shoplifters at the first glance. At an other store near by they do not employ a regular detective, but pay some of their cx--periened salesmen a liberal salary foi watching the people that come and go, and to keep constant watch on suspicious char acters. One of the floor-walkers said: 'If we have reason to suspect any person who comes in here wer follow her up closely, and do not lor one Instant lose sight of her. The most -skillful shoplifters invariably travel in pairs, or, in detective parlance, one 'stalls' Xor the other. Thai is, one 01 me inieve; will undertake to engage the attention o the clerk, while the other deftly abstracts a piece of silk, a package of gloves, ora card of lace from the counter. It is frequently the case that the confederates will notentcr a store together or exchange any percept i "blo signs of recognition while plying theii vocation. A well-dressed woman, of re spectable appearance, will step up to the lace counter, for instance, and ask to be bownsomo fine lace embroideries. The clerk, mentally noting atr well-to-do ap pearance, thinks he sees a chance of making a good sale and is, consequently, very obliging. He finds his customer hard to suit and places box upon box of choice goods before her. Soon a second woman comes tip, and calmly ignoring tho first customer women have a way of doing she de- HE FINDS BIS CUSTOMER HARD TO SUIT. mauds to see a peculiar kind cf goods sxhich belongs to that particular depart ment. The clerk pulls down something for her. It :;irns out to be the wrong article, and li-avhig the first customer to contemplate she extensive assortment of embroideries l.efore her, he endeavors to please the twsnd customer. Immediately he finds ?::mself tho victim of two exacting and un reasonable females, and, after showing lliera a iarge share of the goods in his de partment, he is mortified to see them walk away, each one in a different direction, -without having bougttra dime's worth, and lie is subscqueptly mortified to find that two or three cards of tho most costly lace have been stolen. ''Substituting an empty pocket-book for a woil-lilled one is another dodge. A lady lays her pocket-book on the counter while she looks at some goods that have been taken down for her inspection. In the twinkling of an eye an empty purse has been substituted for tho plethoric one, and the shoplifter betakes herself to another store to repeat the operation." "Arc the women who ply this trade well dressed J" 4Xoootasarulc; if you would like to get an 'idea of their general appearance you ought to go to a police station and see the 'Koues' Gallery.' " . Bather glad of a pretext for seeing -tHis interesting collection of celebrities, I went to one of the police stations and had tho pleasure of seeing 1,675 rogues, all in a now not such a bad lookiug lot, either, as I 'had expected to see. The shoplifters, who were pointed out to me, were mostly wom en; as a rulo they affect shawls or looso sacks and jaunty hats. Some of the wom en were not over twenty or thereabouts, but the majority were middle-aged, and, from their appearance, had grown hard ened in crime. Some of the men had been decidedly averse to having their photo graphs taken, and in some cases drawn their faces into all sorts of contortions. Where a man had absolutely refused to look the camera squarely ia the face a po liceman had obligingly held up his head lor him; but with the women it was differ ent. Their pride in having their photo graphs took as well as possible had over ruled their desire for disguising their coun tenances. Iaone or two eases, however, -the less hardenedof the wretches held their beads bent over as far as they could, and -their eyes were closed. This was possibly '-the first time they had been asked to con tribute mementoes of themselves to the ZRogncs Gallery." "They have very little sense of shame, however," remarked aa officer, "aad they seldom reform. A shoplifter once, a shop lifter always. Now, this woman here, No. ," he continued; "she has beea brought -p here three or four times, and there is ao -telling how many times she has appeared da other police courts." The record accompanying each picture is concise and to the point: Name, aliases, crime, nationality, age, color of eyes, read, writs. A young girl about twelve years old was arrested in one of the stores yesterday and brought here. When searched it wss found -chat she aad innumerable pockets in her skirts, which she had filled with a variety of articles, gloves and handkerchiefs pre dominating. There is a regular system of education in jrojcu amscg shoplifters. There are an- w - 7r - f jnlWlffl!''''lr'''ll''"''''J' hJ St fcfcfcvfca S..,J iiflv-. ll sTS'l'Vl W I PMfVtw aiMV I I mm merous instances where young girls and boys have been caught in company with well-known professional shoplifters, and some of these juvoniles have confessed that they have been taught bow to steal To become successful ia the business, it is necessary not only to acquire dexterity in taking articles out of boxes or from counters, but also to learn to pass the goods quickly and secretly to a confederate. The first lesson taught beginners is how to re ceive stolen goods from the hands of the more experienced thieves. Then, step by step, the young shoplifters are advanced in; tho art until they are permitted to do the fine work of stealing laces, silks or jewelry directly under the noses of the salesmen. If a young and inexperienced thief is caught she is usually terrified, while an old hand at the business makes very little outcry, and takes it all as a matter of course. A woman was arrested not long ago in one of the dry-goods stores and taken up stairs to the superintendent's desk; alt the time she was talking some one at the op posite sido of the store noticed that she was taking goods out of her pockets and as fast as she did so she dropped them on the floor, and then tried to kick them nnder the desk. Whenever a shoplifter is caught she tries to drop the goods on the floor, so that when searched nothing can be round, and con sequently no arrest made. If a thief is one of a gang, she has no diffi culty m obtaining bail; in some cases the person arrested and bailed out has paid the DBOPPIXO GOODS OS THE TLOOK. sum, perhaps five hundred dollars, rathci than appear in court. Two thousand dol lars was the bail fixed for a woman whe recently stole several rolls of silk. Nothing is too valuable, naturally, for these people to steal, and at the same time nothing is too small or trifling. ' Whenever their homes have been searched, articles of every conceivable description have been found. All is fish that comes to their nets. The organized gangs have their head quarters at some place down town. They go out by the dozens every day, and then report at night. Some of them when they start out on their day's expedition go down to the ferries or to the Grand Central do pot and station themselves there until they spy a victim some lady possibly with a well-filled pocket-book, who is bound on a shopping expedition. This person is fol lowed from store to store until the pro fessional has either possessed herself of the pocket-book or found out that sho has met some one who is too clever for her wiles. As a rule these people are not well dressed, for whatever money they may mako in this way they spend in drink and carousals. If they steal a .dollar article and pawn it they .seldom get over ten or fifteen cents for it. At the holidays all stores double their force of detectives, or if they are not accustomed to employ one at any other season of the year they usually engage one or two then. Fully nineteen-twentieihs of the shop lifters are women. It is seldom that a male shoplifter attempts to "work" a retail storo alone, and the instances where women arc assisted by men are not frequent. Hale shoplifters opcrato mostly in .wholesale stores. They eo in couples aud generally drop into a store soon after the porter has opened the doors, and while one of them c ngages the attention of the porter the othei makes off with a package of goods. Tho usual pretext given by this class of thieves is that they have ''just come to town and thought they would stop on their way to their hotel." One of tho men carries a hand-sachel, into which the stolen property, of course, finds its way. Professional shoplifters were formerly in the habit of affecting the "kleptomania dodge" when detected, but since the store keepers have become so exacting in their demands for proofs of good character in such cases the thieves have abaudoned that subterfuge and now depend apon their skill snd luck to eseapo detection. . S . The increasing experience el the store-r keepers and the improved facilities fofj thici-catcning nave driven the bunglers out of this branch of the rogue's profession, and it is now an even match- betweer sharp and experienced "detectives and smart and ingenious thieves. There aro plenty of evidences that "the smart and ingenious" thieves are numerous and that they operate in all the large retail stores with a fai. average of success. Klep'-omania is an evil familiar to all, and it is regarded variously by different shop keepers. Those who profess to have con fidence in medical science, or whe possess charitable natures, frankly avow their be lief in the theory that kleptomania is a dis ease of the mind which its victims can not resist or throw off. To such kindly disposed merchants kleptomaniacs are objects of pity and tender consideration; but to another class of merchants they are simply provoca tive of wrath. It is generally conceded that kleptomania is a standing compl .int, which is constantly manifesting itself in a moder ate degree. It does not appear to increase or decrease, but remains about the same from year to year. "There is a lady who often comes in here," they said to me at one store, "whom we know to be a kleptomaniac. She is well known by all our clerks, and the bill of the goods she takes is sent to her family, who pay it without a question." 8ome of the people afflicted -with this dis ease are women, but occasionally men who are able to show that they move in respect able society are caught stealing. Instances are narrated where men of wealth and high social prominence have been detected con cealing about their persons articles for which they coakThave ao possible use. Not long ago a maa was caught ia a bungling attempt to steal a couple of cheap cotton handkerchiefs in a Broadway store. His gentlemanly appearance and unfeigned agi tation when accused of the theft prompted the managers of the store to invite him into a private room and ask foraaexplana tion. He acknowledged with much chagrin that he was periodically seized with aa tin controllable impulse to steal something. He insisted that while subject to the mania he had no realization of where he was, or what he was stealing. He easily established his identity as a prosperous business man, and displayed a well-filled pocket-book. Incon sequence he was allowed to depart, and no publicity was given to his case. N. Y. Mail and Express. THE HEAVENLY HOME. Tho Joy of the Redeemed Pictured By Dr. Talmage. The Kteraal Maasloa I" Which There Is ibm For All The Hpleadors of the Great Homestead Where the Re deemed Will Meet. In a recent sermon Rev. T. DelVitt Tal magH took for hs subject. "Our House on the Hills " Hi text was from John xiv. 2: "In rav Father' house are many room." H- said: Here in a butt e of medicine that is a cure-all. The disciples were sad and Christ offere 1 Heaven as an alternative, a stimulant and a tonic. He shows them that their sorrows are only a dark hack pround of a bright p c ure of coining feli city. He lets them know that though now tbey live on the lowland they shall yet have a heme on the uplands. Nearly all ol the Bible descriptions 01 Heaven may be figurative. I am not positive tbatia all Heaven there is a literal crown or harp or pearly gate or throne or chariot. They may bo only used to illustrate the glories of the place, but how well tbey do it ! The favorite symbol by which the Bible pre sents celt stial happiness is ahouse. Paul, who never owned a bouse, although he hired one for two years ia Italy, speaks of Heaven as "a bouse not made with hands," and Christ ia oar text,- the trans-'1 lation of which is a little changed so as to give the more accurate meaning, say: "In my Father's h use are many rooms." This divinely authorized comparison of Heaven to a great homestead of large ac commodations I propose to cjrry out. In some hsalthy neighborhood a man builds a very commodious habitation. He must have room for all his children. The rooms must corns to be called after different members of the family. That is mother's room. That is Ueorgb's room, a bat is Henry's room That is Flora's room. That is Mary's room. And the house is all occupied. But time goes by and the sons go out into the world and lu:Id their own homes and the daughters are married or have ta'ents enough to go out and do good work in the world. Alter awhiU the father and mother are almoit alcne in the big house, and seated by the evening stand they say: "Well, our family is a larger now than when we started together fortv years ago." Bit time ges siill fur:h9r by and somof the rh idren are unfortunate aad return to the old home stead to live, and the grandcnildren, and perhaps ib.3 great-g.and .hildren, and again ths house is full. Many millenia airo God built on the hills of Heaven a great homestead for a family innumerable yet to be. At first He lived alone in that great hiue, but after a while it was occupied by a very large family, cherubic, seraphic, angelic. The eternities passed oa and many of the in habitants became wayward and left never to return. And many of the apartments were vacated. I refer to the fallen angels. Now tbess apartments are filling up again. There are arrivals at the old homestead of God's children every dav, and the day will come when there will be no unoccupied room in all the house. As you and I expect to enter it and make there eternal residence, I thought you would like to get some more particulars about that many roomed homejtead. "In my Father's housa are many rooms." Ton see the place is to be apportioned off into apartments. We shall love all who are in Heaven, but there are some very good people whom we would not want to live with in the same room. They may be better than we are, but tbey are of a divergent temperament We would J like to meet tbem on the golden streets and worship with them in the temple and walk with them on the river banks, but I am glad tosay that we shall live in differ ent apartments. "In my Father's house are many rooms." Tou see Heaven will be so largo that it one wants an entire room to himself or herself it can be af forded. An ingenicui statistician, taking the statement made in Revelat on. twenty first chapter, that the heavenly Jerusalem was measured and found to be 12,000 fur longs and that the length and height and breadth of it are equal, says that woul 1 make Heaven insize948extillion5SSquin lillion cubic feet, and then, reserving a certain portion for the Court of Heaven and the streets, and estimating that the world may last 100.0 X) years, be ciphers out that there nreover five trillion rooms, each room 17 feet long. 18 feet wide, 15 feet high. But I have no faith in the ac curacy of that calculation. He makes the rooms too small. From all I can real, the rooms will be palatial, and those who have not had enough room in this world will have plenty or room at the last. ' The fact is tl at people in this world are crowded, aad, though cut on a vast prai rie or in a mountain distr ct, people may have jnore room than they want, in most cases it is bouse built close to house, aad the streets are crowded and the cradle is crowded by other cradles, and the graves crowded in the cemetery by other graves, and one of the richest luxuries of many people in getting out of this world will be the gaining of unhindered and uncramped room. And I should not wonder if in stead of the room that the statistician ciphered out as only seventeen feet by sixteen, it sbon'd be larger than any of the imperial rooms at Berlin, St James or Winter palace. "In my Fathei's house are many rcoms." Carrying oat still further the symbolism of the text let us j in hsnds and go up to this majestic homestead and see for our selves. As we ascend the golden steps aa invisible guardsman swings opeu the front door and we are ushered to the right into the reception room of the old home stead. That is the place where we first meet the welcome of Heaven. There mast be a place where the departed spirit enters and a place ia which it conlronts the in habitants celestial. The reception room rf the newly arrived from this world what scenes it must have witnessed since the first guest arrived, the victim of the first. fratricide, pious AteL In that room Christ loving'y greeted all new comers. He redeemed them and He has the right to the first embrace oa their ar rival. What a minute when the ascended spirit first sees the L rd. Better than, all we ever read about Him or talked about Him or sane about Him in all the churches and through all our ea'rthly Jif 'time, will! it be. just for one second to see Him. The most raptun n idea we ever had of Him oa sacramental days or at the height of some great revival or under the uplifted batm of aa oratorioa bankruptcy of thoughts compared with the first flash of Hts ap pearance in that reception room. At that moment when you confroot each other. Christ looking upon you and yculooking upon Christ; there will bean ecstatic thrill and surging of emotion that beggar all description. Look! They need no intro daclion. Long ago Christ chase that re pealant sinner, and that repentant sinner cboee Christ. Mightiest moment of an im mortal history the first kiss of Heaveul Jesas and the souL The soul and Je-a. Bat now into that reception room pour the glorious kinsfolk. Enough of earthly retention to let you know them, but with out their wounds or their sickness or their troubles. See what Heaven has done for them. So radiant so gbeful, so trans portingiy lovely. Tbey call yoa by name. They greet you with an ardor prog or tioned to the anguish of your parting and the lencth of your separation. Father! Mother! There is your child. 8ister! Brothers! Friends! 1 wish you joy. For years apart together agnin in the recep tion room of the old homestead. Tou see they will know y u are oming. Th?r are so many immortals HI ing all the spaces te:ween here and Heaven that news like that flies like l'g'Jtniiic. They will be there in an instaui; though tbey were in some other world on errand from God a signal would be thrown that would fetch them. Though you mieht at first feel dazed and overawed at their super natural spleudor, ell that feeling will be gone at their first touch of heavenly salutation and you will say: "O. rav lost boy,?' 40, my lost companion." 0, my lost friend, are we here together?" What scenes have been witnessed in that reception room of the old homestead ! There met Joseph and Jacob, finding it a brighter room than any thing tbey saw in Pharoatrs palace; Divid and the little child for whom he once fasted and wept; Mary and Lazarus after the heartbreak of Bethany ; Timothy, and GrandmothtrLojs; Isabe la Graha"m"and her sailor son, Al fred and George Coukman.. the mystery of. the sea at last made maairestLutaer and Magdalena. the' daughter Jie bemoaned: John Howard and the prisoners whom he gospelized; and multitu les withoatnum ber who, once so weary and' sad. parted oa earth, 'but gloriou.-.y met in Heaven. Among all the rooms of that bouse there is no one that more enraptures my snal than that reception room. "In my Fa ther's houe there are many rooms." Another room in cur Father's house is the throne room. We lelong to tb royal family. The blood of King Je us fi w ia oar veins, so we have a right to enter the turone room. It is no easy thing on earth to get through even the utside door of a king's residence. During the Franco-German war one eventide in the summer of 1870, 1 stood studying the exqu site sculpt-" uringof the gat of the Tuiieries. Pari. Lost in admiration of the wonderful art of that gate I knew aot that I was txcitins suspicion. Lowering my eyes to the crowds of people I found myself being closely inspected by governmental offl-c.al-, who from my complexion judged me to be a German, and that from some bel ligerent purpose I might be examining the gates of the pat ace. My explanation in very poor French did not sati f y tbem and they followed me long distances and were not satisfied until my landlord told them that I was only an inoffensivo Amer ican. The gates of earthly palaces are closely guarded, and. if so, how much more severely the throne room. A dazz'ing place it is for mir rors and all costly art No one who ever saw the throne room of the first and the only Napolean will ever forget the letter N embroidered in purple and gold upon the upholstery of chair and window, the letter N gilded on the wall, the letter N chased on the chtl.ee', the letter N flaming from the ceiling. What a cor.fl igration of brilliance the throne room of Charles Im manual, of Sardinia; of Ferdinand, o; Spain; of Elizabeth, of Erg and; of Boni face, of Italy. But the throne room of our Father's house hath a glory eclipsing ell the throne rooms that ever saw scepter wave or crown glitter, or foreign ambas sador bjw, for our Father' throne is a throne of grace, a throne of holiness, a throne of justice, a throne of uuiversal dominion. We need not stand shivering and cowering bef-ire it for cur Father says we may yet one day come up and ait on it beside Him. 'To bim that overcometh will I Rraut to sit with me in my throne." 1 on see we are princes and princesses. Perhaps now we move about incognito, as Peter the Great in the garb of a ship car penter at Amsterdam, or as Queen 'lirzah ta the dress of a peaant woman seeking the prophet for her ch Id's cure; but it will be found out after awhile who we are when we got into the lk one room. Aye! we need not wait until then. We may by prayer and song and spiritual up lift ng this moment entar the throne room. O King, live forever! We touch the for eiviag scepter and prostrate ourselves at Toy feet! The crowns of the royal fami lies of this world are tossed about from generation to gea-ration and from family to family. There are ch-Idren' four years old in Berlin who bave sesn the. crown on three Emperors. But whenever the coro nets of this world rise or fall, tbey are destined to meet in one place. And I loo'.; and see them coming from north and south and east and west, the Spanish crowa. the Italian crown, the English crown, the Turkish crown, the Russian crowa, the Persian crown, aye, all the crowns from nnder the great arcbivolt of Heaven; and while I watch and wonder they are all flung in rain of diamonds around the pierced feet Jesas shall reign where'er th sun Docs his successive journey run. His kingdom stretch from shore to shore Till sun shall rise and set no more. O that throne room of Christ! -'In my Father's bouse are many room." Another room in our Father's hoae is the musio room. St John and other Bible writers talk so much about the music of Heaven that there must be music there, perhaps not uch as was on earth thrummed from trembling string or evoked by touch of ivory key, but if not that then something better. There are so many Christian harpists and Christian composers and Christ iaa oigaaists and Christian cfaoiristers and Christian hymn ologists that have gone op from earth there must be for them some place of es pecial delectation. Shall we have mnsic in this world of discords aad no music in the land of complete harmony? Icaanot give you the notes of the first bs of the new song that is sang in Heaven, I caa not imagine either the solo or the dox o'ogy. But Heaven means mnsic, aad caa mean nothing else. Occasionally that music has escaped the gate. Dr. Faller dying at Beaufcrt S. C, said: "Do you hear?" "Hear what !" exclaimed the by tender. "The mnsic! Lift rae up! Open the window !" In that mnsic room of our Father's house yoa will some day meet the old Christian masters, Mczart and Handel and 'Mendelssohn and Beethoven and Doldridge. whose sacred poetry was as remarkable as his sacred prose, and James Montgomery aad William Cowper, at last got rid of his spiritaal melancholy, and Bishop Haber, who same of "Greealand's ley Mountains and India's CoralStrand;" nnd Dr. Kffl, who wrote of "High in Tonder Realms of Light," and Isaac Watts, who went to visit Sir Thomas Ab ney and wife for a week but proved him self so agreeable a guest that they made him stay thirty-six years; and side by side, Augustus Toplady. who has got eveff his dislike for Methodists, and Charles Wesley freed from his dislike for Calvia ist; and George W. Be'huae, as sweet as a stag m kir as he was great as a preacher, aad taaaataorof "The Village Hymas;" aad many who wrote ia verse or song, in church or by eveatide candle, and many who were passionately foad et music but coald make none themselves. The poorest singer there more than any earthlr nriraa. donna, and the poorest players there more than any earthly Gott- j scbalk. O that music room, the head- -quarters of cadence and rbythm.sympbony 1 ami chant psalm and aatiphon! May w ' be there seme hour when Haydn aits at one of his own oratorios and David, the ( psalmist fingers the haip, and Myriuatel the Red sea banks claps the cymbals, and . Gabriel puts his lips to the trumpet and I the four-aml-twenty elders chant and Li nd and Parepa reader matchless duet in j 1 be music room of the old heavenly borne- stead. "In my Faih.-r's house are maay rooms." Another room in car Father's house will be the family room. It may correspond somewhat with the family room oa earth. At morning and evening, yoa know, that is the place we now meet Though every member of the household have a serarate room, in the family room they all gather, and joys aad sorrows aad experiences of all stj les are there reh ared. Sacred room in all our dwellags! Whether it be luxurious with ottomans aad d vans and looks in iussia lids steading inmabrg any cue, or 'there be only a few plain tchairsaadacradaA80v,the fsmijy rooa oa nign win tie tne place wnere tne kins folk assemble and tsik over tho-faasily experiences of .eartbtha. wed-sfeg the bir hs, the lari41s7: the .festal eViys of Cb'istmas aad Tbanjksf ivtograanioau Will the cfrfdtndramdremain chil dren there? O, ao; erery tbi-ig is perfect there. The cuild will go ahead to glorified maturity and the aged will go back to glorified maturity. Ihe risi- g sun of one will rise to meridian and the descending sun ef-lhe oiherwilt.'rehtrra tom-ridia-j However ranra'we leva oar children here on earth we woald -consider it a domestic disaster if they stayed childrea, aad sews rejoice nt tbeifgrowth here. And when we meet in the family room of our Father's house, we will be gad tLat they bave grandly and gloriously matured; wide our parents who were agel and infirm here, we shall be glad to And restored to the most ag le and vigorous immortality there. If lorty or forty-five or fifty be the apex of physical and mental life on earth, then the heavenly childhood will advance to that and the heavenly old age will retieat to that When we join them in that family room we sball want to know of them right away such things as these: Did yoa see as ia this or that or the other struggle. Did you know when we lost our property and sympathized wi'h us? Did you know we aad that awful sickness? Were you hovering anywhere around when we p a-iged into that memorable accident? Did yon know of our back lidinc.? Did you know of that moral victory? Were you pleased when we started for Heaven? Did you cslebrate the hour of our conver sion? And then, whe. her tbey know it or aot we will tell them all. But they will have more to tell ns than we to tell tbem. Ten years on earth may be eventful, but what must be a biography of ten years in Heaven? They will have to tell us the story of coronations, story of news from a:l immensity, story of conquerors and hierarchs, story of wrecked or ransomed planets, story of an2elic victory over diabolic revolts, of extinguished suns of obliterated constef-' lations. of new pa axies kindled and swung, of stranded comets, of worlds oa lire, and story of Jebovab's majestic reign. If in that family room of our Father's house we have so much to tell them of w hat we have passed through since we parted how much more thrilling and arousing that which they bave to tell us of what they have passed through since we parted. Surety that family rora will be one of tb.9 most fnvoied rooms ia all our Father's house. What long linger ing there, for we sball never again be in a hurry. "Let me open a window," said an hnna ble Christian servant to Lady Raffles, who because of the death of ber child, bad shut herself up in a dark room an I re fused to es any one: "you have been many days in this daik room. Are you not ashamed to grieve in this manner when you ousht to b thanking God for having given you the most beautfuj:hild that eVer was sesn, aad instead of leaving him iu lb s world till be si o.ild be worn, with tronbie. has not God taken him to Haaven in all his- beauty?.- Leave . Off weeping-anbV'et aw open window." -So to-day I am trying to open upon the dark ness .of earthly separation the windows and doors and rooms of the heavenly home stead. "In my Father's house are many room." ,. How woald it do fcf my- ser mon to leave you in that family room to day. I am sure there, is no room, ia waich you would rather stay than ia the enrapt ured circle of your ascended and glorified kinsfolk. We might visit other room ia our Father's house. There may be picture galleries penciled not with earthly art; but by some proce-s unknown ia this world, preserving for the next world the brightest and most stupendous tcsnes of human history. And there may be lines and forms of earthly beauty preserved for heavenly inspection in something whiter and chaster aad richer than Venetisa sculpture ever wrought Rooms beside rooms. Rooms over rooms. Large rooms majestic rooms, opalescent room, ame thystine reome. In my Father's house are many rooms." I ho- e none of as will be disappointed about getting there. There is a room for as if we will go aad take it bat ia order to reach it it is absolutely necessary that we take the r'ght way, and we must eater at the right door, and Carist is the right door; and we mast start in lima, aad the only hour you are sure of, is the hoar the clock now strikes aad the only secoad the one your atch is bow ticking. I hold ia my hand a ro.l of letters iBvitiag you all to make that your home forever. The New Testament is only a roll of letters ia viting you, as the spirit of them practically say: "My dying yet immortal child ia earthly neighborhood. I have bail t for yoa a great residence. Itis full of rooms. Ihave famished them as ao palace was ever fur aished. Pearls are nothing, emeralds are nothing, chrysophrasas is nothing, illuminated panels of sunrise aad sanset nothing, the aarora of the northern heav ens nothing compared with the splendor with which I bave garnitured them. But you must be clean before yoa can eater there, aud so I have opened a foantaia where you may wash all your sins away. Come bow ! Put yoar weaiy but cleaased feet oa the upward pathway. Do yoa aot ten amid the thick foliage oa the heavenly hill tops the old family homestead?" "In ay Father's hoase are many rooms." A recent fire ia the Commercial doeks, t.onaoB. causeu a loss 01 Wfvw. j ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN. It la Excellent. Hat ThoM Who Need IS Will Probably Net Take Ir. Don't mistake notoriety for fame. Do not let others spend the money you earn. Don't do work unworthy of you if you can avoid it Don't say "I am a gentleman;" it is never neceassary. Be loyal to death to thoso who have befriended you. n hon you iwaist tho noctty aoa t ao it ostentatious-. Silence is thu he.st weapon to uso against a vulvar and .Htiiteful tongue. In ninety-nine case in :. hundred tho man vou wish dead outlives you. Don't introduca a lady's naino when you would nt introduce the lady. Don't count much 011 friendships formed in cafes. They never turn out welL Remember impertinence isn't wit. any more than insolence is brilliancy. If younjj men will not believe in themselves, no man or woman can be lieve in them. Don't indulge in tho luxury of stronjr opinions in tho presence of your elders and betters. If you haven't the moral courage to lnugh at sneerers. then vou are another 'of nature's mistakes. ""' " " Don't talk about what you aro jroiag" .to. do; thouif you fail to accomplise it. Jioeocly wtll'kaJw. k f It-you learn that people say spiteful, wicked things about you. and untruth ful things at that, be silent It isn't a very nice thing for a young man. or any one for that matter, to sm'le in a superior way at ignorance. Do, not be afraid to go near your enemy. The nearer you get to a kick- ing horse the less damage will result to your person. Never let a day pass without think ing seriously, if only for a moment, of death. It will rob it of more than half its terrors. Treat nil men and women consider ately and you will be surprised at the dividends that will come to you daily and yearly. The man who does a generous aet and lets the world into the secret shows the world a peach after rubbing the bloom from it. Cultivate a cheerful frame of mind and the mind will mold the face and the tongue and the voice Into some thing irresistible. You never want to listen compla cently to injudicious or extravagant praise, nor to "funny" stories at the expense of women. If you do a good piece of work iu finance, journalism, politics, art, musie or literature, do not spoil it by volun tarily speaking of it complacently; and. on the other hand, do not speak of it disparagingly. Once a Week. USES OF MIRRORS. xieehlBa; Ucht Into urk Nooks by Meaae of, Leoklaa; lilaaaesw The use of a mirror for reflecting tho sun seems to run from the extremes of boyish roguishness in flashing the sun's rays upon the eyes of some companion or even older persons, if the distance be sufficient and then reaches to tho other extreme of using it to flash tho ' sun's rays for heliotrope signals ih tho coast survey or army service, or to measure the deflection of a galvanom eter needle. But thero is a vast middle space of practical usage of mirrors, apart from that of individual vanity, which is rarely thought of. A gentleman in Boston, calling at an office in tho upper part of a building, stated his intention of calling upon a man in a distant part of the city, and was told that his party had recently opened aa office on the other side of the same street, and in the upper part of a building of the same height. On lookingacross to the opposite win dow, that geatleman was seen hard at work and too busy to look up. How ever, a large mirror was unhung fn the toilette room, and the sun's rays flashed upon his face in a manner that startled r him and dazzled his eyes, first causing him to jump and blinding him. At first he was indigaant at tho lm- H proper liberty taken with s visual organs, and looked out of the window as fierce as a forty-pounder, threaten ing and breathing out slaughter upon the youngster should ho be in sight. A few gesticulations, however, soon made the party across the street under stand that ha was to be called upon. In the boyhood days of the writer he remembers looking into a new pump which bad been thoroughly spiked the night before it was to be placed in the well, by means of some rocks which were pushed in about midway and vedged against each other. Various plans for their removal had been suggested, the most practicable of which was to saw the pump in two and join it together again somehow. The writer suggested that a mirror be brought, and the sunlight flashed in to reveal the position of the stones. A bar of wrought-iron was bent to a hook, suitable to the condition of af fairs, and extricated the stones one by one, the mirrow showing the openings of light so that the person could work efficiently and intelligently. Objects lost in wells have been dis closed by means of the sun's rays thrown down upon them by mirrors Davit basements in cities are lighted by means of mirror surface of total re flecting prisms, made out of decidedly cheap glass, and held in proper posi tion in racks placed in alleyways, under1 gratings forming a part ef the walk.- Electrical Review. feideon I rease. of East Wilton. Me., who was a sergoAnt in the Black Hawk war, is thought to be the onl living- United Stales soldier of thai 4 wx. 1 Y