I. SIiIaM. - ENTRY OF THE CZAR m1 . ' I AS DESCRIBED BY SIR EDV/ARD 11 / ARNOLD. t , , ' t ! A Grand and Gorgeous Show - Harh.irlr ! / . Splendor of tho Oriental KeproKnnta- ; ; tlvcn - The Monarch and the Czarina 1 Describod-Moscow's Illumination Dloncy Spent Without Mrantire. t Sever : Anything Like It. I LONDON , May W. - Sir Edwin Ar- nold , who went to Moscow on behalf i of the Daily Telegraph , in his dis- patch to that paper , describing the scene at the Kremlin and the entry of t the czar into Moscow , says : " "Why cannot one write in colors There t } was never anything seen on any stage like the wino kaleidoscope of fanciful - ful attire of fantastic hues and em bellishments visible around me , particularly - ticularly : in the Oriental clement , and all the far Eastern nations. The officials - I coals from Khiva wore magenta col- ( ored velvet robes , gold embroidered and sugar-loaf hats. Now China contributed a dazzling group with 0 ' flowered satin frocks and vermillion buttoned hats. Now a bevy of E 1'L ' magnates from Laloj Baikal astound the eye with fur trimmed brocade and long red boots. Now 1 recognize the gray hurtout and amber capstrings of ' the Coreans and try one of them with a greeting ' Japanese. He politely murmurs. Some of the Khirgi/ Tar- . , tars then appear in yellow silk and f 1 scarlet shawls , outdoing all , and at a V window of the Gotinnoy Dvor there q is a beautiful vision of a Circassian lady in black and orange brocades , glistening with pearls and turquoises. I I abandon in despair the polychro matic aspects of the pageant "The Cossack guard was glorious , uniformed in scarlet and irold , riding + 1 little , weedy , Roman nosed Ukraine nags , with only a snaflle and bridle and with gold and black bandoliers , 9 looking quite lit to pace in front of the czar. Alter these came upon the scene almost the chief interest for me . personally , since 1 saw gravely rid ing along as the vassal ; friends of the great white khan all the chiefs of the Central Asian king doms and provinces , over which his eagles cast the shadow of their wings. They passed demurely upon tIL noble ! Arab stallions , the very least among them mounted upon animals covered from crest to haunch with the _ costliest trappings of silver and gold cloth. But these and other parts of the pageant paled before the grand master of ceremonies , borne haughtily onward in such a golden chariot as I thought existed only in heaven or in classical pictures , holding a wand of gold topped with an emerald as big as a wahr.it. "Jut ! here at last comes the august object of this unparalleled manifestation - tion , the successor and heir of Ivan the Terrible. His handsome and manly young countenance is pale with thc prodigious sensation- which , t such a : scene must naturally excite. m and holds his gloved right hand almost perpetually to his regimental t , cap. lie bends his head gently to this side and that to acknowledge the boundless welcome. Every man is . bareheaded and every woman is way- ' ing a handkerchief or shawl or vio- , i lently ; ; crossing her loyal bosom in a' / prayer for 'the little father. ' "The czarina also sat alone , dressed wholly in white even the jewels , . \ \ pearls and diamonds seeming to mar by their color the effect of this pure ; apparel , which caused her to resemble a marble saint within a gulden shrine. Most unmistakable were the affection I and loyalty of the crowd and I saw more than one poor peasant woman's I eyes till with tears of sheer joy to be - - hold this i : fair lady. One honest Je-I fell upon his knees to say his prayers as though he had seen something di vine , till a Cossack bundled him di-I inU the crowd. " It would be impossible to overdraw the splendid picture presented by the I procession and by the illuminations. I No money has been spared to make ! the coronation festivities memorable I in Russian : history and up to the pres- I ent all efforts have been crowned I with success. The Russian govern ment is said to have spent over § 20- ! 000,000 on the fetes up to the present j and the city of Moscow : : is understood i to have expended nearly as much ! money ; and more expenses have to be I met. met.The illuminations will last three I evenings in succession snd will cost several million dollars , to the govern I I I ment alone , without counting what i ; the city will contribute toward this j . . j portion of the expenses. Beside i the expenses of the Russian i y 'I government and the city of Moscow i i the expenses which grand dukes and ! grand duchesses , foreign princes and : ambassadors , etc. . have been put to. is I really enormous , one authority going I so far as to estimate that there was . about S 00,000,000 worth of jewelry " alone in the proco < ' cmnn of yesterday. lilll Fililmstvrius WASHINGTON : : ' J.-The , May - chap- lain's prayer hardly closed to-day when Mr. Butler renewed his motion to take up his bond bill. After some sparring Mr. Hill interposed the objection - jection that this was too important a question to be considered "without a quorum. " This was the first evi- lence of a renewal of obstruction , but , a quorum being found very quickly , the motion was adopted-yeas , 34 ; nays , : 0. . Mr. Mills : : of Texas gave notice that lie would object to any businsss until the pending bend bill should be dis posed of , and after Mr. : : Pettigrew presented a partial conference report on the Indian bill ! , which was admitted - mitted and agreed to , Mr. Dill began his speech in opposition. Quay Wants to He Chairman Again. l WASHINGTON , May : : :3.-1t is current t gossip here that Senator Quay pro- , poses soon to visit William McKinley : : , not to discuss the financial question , but to try to secure that leader's influence - fluence for his return to his old posi tion of chairman of the Republican national commit " _ A . .oriel's Irish Convention Called. LONDON , May 23. - The , convention of the Irish throughout the world , "I \ which , it was decided yesterday at the meeting of the anti-Parnellites to call , has ' been fixed for September 1 at Dublin. - - - - - --T - - - T- - - _ - - . - - - ---c. - - - - - - . - . . ! I ' . . . . - - . . . . - - AID FOR TEXAS SUFFERERS. Gor. Holcoiub Urges Citizen of Nebraska to 1IfJl , . LINCOLN , Neb. , May 24.-Governor Culberson of Texas replied to the tele- graphic offer of assistance sent him by Governor Holcomb. The message of the Texas governor was as follows : Ai'STi.v , Tex. , May : 22. : ! - Governor Silas A. Holcomb , Lincoln , Neb. : The I storm snffcrers will gratefully accept anything your people ! may send them. Communicate with C. 11. Smith , chair man of the relief committee. Sherman , Tex. Accept my personal appreciation of your kindness. C. A. CULHKKSON. . Governor. In accordance with the foregoing Gox' Holcomb has issued the following - I lowing : "Recognizing the existence of a very worthy desire on the part of many Nebraska : - braska citizens.to show their appreciation - tion of the hitherto expressed generos- ity of the people of Texas , and realiz- ing the suffering which must have been left along the track \ of the tornado which recently devastated property and destroyed life at Sherman , Texas , and vicinity , I would suggest the pro- I priety of those of our citizens who are able and benevolently disposed con I tributing such articles as would be most r likely to relieve the distressed condi- tion of our unfortunate southern neigh- bora Major : T. S. Clarkson } of Omaha , chairman of the executive committee I of the Nebraska club , will receive and I recept . " or any contributions for this I worthy cause and will see that they are I placed in the hands of the proper . local authorities at Sherman. ' . . . . . . I trust that at least one car load of provisions may be forwarded to these distressed people within a few days. " HOT UNDER THE COLLAR. 11111 and Allen I Exchii Left Handed Compliments. WASIII.NT.TOX , May 23.-The Senate had an hour of much excitement with a resort to obstructive tactics and several heated personal controversies at a late hour yesterdav. The early portion of the session had been given to the routine of agreeing on confer- ence reports on appropriation bills. Ate o'clock Mr. IJutler , Populist , of North Carolina moved to take up his bill prohibiting further issue of interest-bearing . Mr. Hill immediately - mediately moved an adjournment , securing - curing an aye and nay vote in order to gain time. The motion to adjourn was defeated , whereupon Mr. Chandler followed with a motion for an execu- tive se3 ion. Mr. Pettigrew asked leave to offer a supplementary conference report on the Indian bill. The consent . ' iven 11Hill sent being given , : immediately demanded the full reading of the re port. This was an unexpected move for delay , as the report was volumin- ous. The presiding officer , Mr. Faulkner - ner of West Virginia , ruled that Mr. Hill's demand was egular , and directed - ed the clerk to proceed with the reading of the report. Senators Butler , Stewart and Allen interposed a chorus of protests. Mr. Allen said he hoped , the senate would not violate every decency and propriety by these obstructive . ; tactics. "What right have you to the floor ? " asked : \11' . Hill , sharply , addressing Mr. Allen personally. Then , addressing - ing the chair , Mr. : : Hill added , "He has no right to the iloor. " " 1 have , too , " declared Mr. Allen. "I have the right to speak and I pro pose to do so. " "Others have rights as well as you , " repouded . Hill. The tone of the Senator showed feeling. Mr. Allen proceeded and said that the obstruction was manifestly aimed at a Populistic measure. "I am glad it is admitted to be a " Mr. Popnlistic measure. interjected Hill. Hill.At At this point a heated colloquy occurred - curred between Mr. Hill and Mr. Allen. The latter had continued to hold the floor. lIe spoke with much feeling saying he had never known the spirit of unanimous agreement of the Senate to be violated and the Senator who committed such a viola- tion would regret it. "I would like to know if the Senator refers to me ? " said Mr. Hill , rising quickly. There was a momentary silence , owing to the suggestive tone of Mr. Hill's inquiry. "What does the Senator want to know for ? " asked Mr. Allen , with equal significance. " 1 want to know if reference is made to me , " replied Mr. Hill. " 1 referred to the Senator , " said Mr : : Allen. "Then I desire to say here " answered - sweivd Mr. ! Hill , savagely , "that the statement is false absolutely false. I have violated no agreement , and my course was .sustained by the chair. " "The Senator will never be able to convince me , " said Mr. l Allen , in some- what Mibdued tones , "that he . was honest in having that report read. " " 1 care nothing about convincing you ; I stand on my rights here , " said Mr. Hill , contemptuously. The vote was about to be taken when a snarl of parliamentary obstruction - struction was interposed. For an hour roll calls and calls of the Senate obstructed : business , a quorum disap- pearing on most votes. Mr. I Stewart moved that the ser- be directed to geant-at-arms request the presence of senators. The motion prevailed and the business of the Sen- ate was suspended while the serjreant- at-arms looked up absent senators. At C:35 , no quorum ha"ingap - peared. Mr. Butler moved to adjourn , saying he would continue the contest to-day. Spnatp then adi + mrned. General Lucius Fairchild ! Very Sick. MADISON , Wis. , May 23.-The friends of General Lucius Fairchild are much worried over his condition and grave doubts of his recovery are entertained. QUAY CALLS ON M'KINLEY. The Ex-Governor Meets the Senator With HU Family Carriage. CANTON , Ohio , May 23. - United States Senator M. S. Quay of Penn- sylvania accompanied by J. Hay Brown of Lancaster , Pa. , arrived here this morning and was met by ex-Gov- ernor McKinley : : with his family car- riage. Senator Quay declined to talk as to the object of his mission , saying merely that he was paying : Mr. Mc Kinley a friendly * - ; sit. The coliseum of Rome was built ! to accommodate I commodate 100,000 spectators. . - - . - - . TWENTY-FIVE ARE DEAD. I The Northeast Kansns Death LIsl I Increasing. SENECA , Kan. , May 20. - Fifteen per- sons were killed and fully fifty injured - jured in this ( Nemaha ) Bounty by the tornado of Sunday night , while six perished in and about Reserve , in Brown county , and four met death I across the State line in Nebraska. This is the death list so far as known definitely present. Some portions of the route of the tornado have not been thoroughly gone over as yet ; and the total number of the dead may be increased. ; Of the dead in this county five are here , six at Oneida and four at or near Sabetha. The losses from the tornado along its deadly path are placed now at fully $1,000,000 and this may be in- creased. In this county conservative estimates put the total loss at S"00- ' 000 , while at Frankfort it is 8100,000 more and at Reserve 5150,000. At other points a low estimate makes the looses over 30,000. : The injured are doing well as a rule at all points , but it is almost beyond question that several of them will suc- cumb in a few days. The tornado struck the fairgrounds here first and demolished every build- ing. Then it swept through the best part of the town , wrecking the hand- some court house and either destroy- ing or damaging greatly over 200 buildings , many of them the best in this place. The citizens have organ- ized and are doing all possible for the homeless , whose losses are placed at 8100,000 , while those who are aiding them have themselves lost $300,000 more. At Sabetha , Ellen Carey , the child injured by the storm , died yesterday. About forty families are homeless and destitute and about there twenty more families in want The mayor of that pla < : e has issued an appeal for aid. aid.In In all of the country clear across the county the tornado left a well- defined path of ruin , but fortunately in nearly every instance so far as is now known the occupants of farm ] houses saw the approach of the storm in time to get into places of safetv. THEIR CORPSES FOR SALE. A Despondent Missouri ! Couple Try to Contract With n 2\Icdcal College. ST. JOSIPH , Mo. , May : : 20.-Allan Wilson and his wife , to whom he had been married but a few days , went to the Central Medical College this morn- ing and offered to sell his body and that of his wife for a small sum. lie was well dressed , and his wife , who is 19 ! years old , is very pretty. He insisted - sisted on the college officials agreeing to take the bodies , saying that they would deliver them in a short time. . Dr. Thomas E. Potter tried to dis- suade the two from committing suicide - cide and told them that the college had no use for the bodies at this time. The two came here from Harrison en iinty. The Losses in Nebraska. PP.KSTON , Neb. , May : : 20. - The storm here Sunday night did more or less damage to every building in town. The Bethany Brethren church , four miles southwest , C. Stuhl's house , eight miles southwest , the Pony Creek German Baptist church , the United Brethren church and Jacob Lichty's residence , southwest of ( here are total wrecks. : At Falls City about fifty freight cars were overturned and the Bur ington freight house and depot wrecked. The mill was destroyed and the build- ings at Hinton park : demolished. Near there the son of J. M. bucks , -iamuel Saylor and wife , Mrs. Shrock and John Smith were killed and William Bran- non and wife , J. M. Houcks and wife , Isaac E. Rhoades and two children , William Hinton and wife and daughter - ter , William Smick and a tramp were injured. The farm houses of H. E. Lemmon , J. R. Rhoades , W. R. Kent. Samuel Saylor , Jacob Lichty , Thomas Eakin anf William brugmiiler were destroyed. Mr. and Mrs. : : Saylor , Mrs. Schrock and John Smith were in the cellar of the Saylor house when the walls caved in on them , killing them. I'rlson manufacturers Involved. COLUMBUS , Ohio , May : : 20.-W. E. Jo seph , chief clerk in the headquarters office here of the Patton Manufactur ing Company of the State prison at New Albany , Ind. , and of the plant at Muncie : : , Jnu. , has been appointed receiver - ceiver of the company in both places. His bond is .10,000. : ( ) ( The assets are not known. Discrimination . against prison goods labeled by compulsion of law is said to be the cause of the assignment - signment A Kiss ! Thrower Fined. WICHITA , Kan. . May : : 20. - On the trial of Mrs. Ashl raft and daughter , Etta , for throwing kisses at , J. F. Fawcett , tailor , the police judge dis- missed the case against the widow , fined the daughter S-l ; and rebuked the tailor for bringing such a ease intt. COl1l't.Iiss Ashkraft pleaded that she had kissed her hand to Fawcett in a spirit of fun and her fine was ' re - mitted during good behavior. The President's SamjjerlVst Promise. PiTTsnur.G , Pa. , May { 20. President Cleveland has written to the executive committee of the twenty-eighth national - tional saengerfest , which begins in Pittsburg June 8 , that he will be un- able to attend but will open the saengerfest by the touch of an elec- tric button at the White house. A flag of red , white and blue glass , at a given signal by the President , will be illuminated. Stone Opens 'the Kentucky Campaign. SiiET.r.TVir.LE. Ky. , May 20. - Gov - ernor William J. Stone of Missouri opened the free coinage campaign here yesterday : , and made the ri rst of his four speeches to be delivered in Kentucky. The court house was filled with representative citizens of Anderson , Spencer , Henry and Shelby counties. A PrnsUan Financier at Reit. BERT.ISIay 20. - Herro Ott Camp- hausen , formery : Prussian minister of finance , is dead. . . . r TALMAGE'S \ SERMON. : THE "DRAMA OF LIFE. " LAST SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. . . Golden Text : "Men Shall Clap Their IIiuicI at Him and Shall II ! " < Him Out of His 1'laco" - ScIINhitius ' the Great Failure of the Human ICace. - , s + + i tt . HIS allusion seems , to be drama t ic. The Bible more than once makes 5 u c hall u sions. Paul says : "Wo are made ; a theater or spectacle to an- gels and to men. " It is evident from the text that some - of the habits of theater-goers were known in Job's time , because he describes an actor hissed off the stage. The imper- sonator come on the boards and , either through lack of study of the part he is to take or inaptness or other incapacity , the audience is offended , and expresses its disapprobation and disgust by hissing. "M < 3l shall clap their hands at him and shall hiss : him out of his place. " My text suggests that each one of us is i : put on the stage of this world to take some part. What hardship and suffering and discipline great actors have undergone year after year that they might be perfected in their parts , you have often read. But we , put on the stage of this life to represent charity and faith and humility and helpfulness-what little preparation we have made , although we have three galleries of spectators , earth , heaven and hell ! Have we not been more attentive - tontive to the part taken by others than to the part taken by ourselves and , while we needed to be looking at home and concentring on our own duty , we have been criticising the other performers , and saying , "that was too high , " or "too low , " or "too feeble , " or "too extravagant , " or "too tame , " or "too demonstrative , " while we our- selves were mak'ng ! a deal ' ! failure and preparing to be ignomiiiiously hissed off the stage ? Each one is assigned a place ; no supernumeraries hanging around the drama of life to take this or that or the other part , as they may be called upon. No one can take our place. We can take no other place. Neither can we put off our character ; no change of apparel can make us anyone else than that which we eternally are. Many make a failure of their part in the drama of life through dissipation. They have enough intellectual equip- ment and good address and geniality unbounded. But they have a wine- closet that contains all the forces for their social and business and moral overthrow. So far back as the year : 959 ! , King Edgar of England made a law that the drinking cups should have pins fastened at a certain point in the side , so that the indulger might be reminded to stop before he got to the bottom. But there are no pins projecting from the sides of the mod- ern wine cup or beer mug , and the first point at which millions stop is at the gravelly bottom of their own grave. Dr. Sax , of France , has discovered something which all drinkers ought to know. He has found out that alcohol , in every shape , whether of wine or brandy or beer , contains parastitic life called bacillus potumaniac. By a powerful microscppe : these living things are discovered , and when you take strong drink you take them into the stomach and then into your blood , and , getting into the crimson canals of life , they go into every tissue of your body , and your entire organism is taken pos- session of by these noxious infin- itesimals. When in delirium tremens a man sees every form of reptilian life , it seems it is only these parasites of the brain in exaggerated size. It is not a hallucination that the victim is suffering from. He only sees in the room what is actually crawling and rioting in his own brain. Every time you take strong drink you swallow i throe maggots , and every time the im- j bibor of alcohol in any shape feels ver- ! tigo ; or rheumatism or nansei it is ; only j ' 'I the jubilee : of these maggots. Efforts I t arc being ; made for the discovery of ' some germicide that can kill the para- . sites of alcoholism , but th' only thing j that will ever extirpate them is abi i i sf.ner.ce : : from alcohol an-I 1 teetotal ! abstinence - I stinonce , to which I would before God j . swear all these young m " n and old. i America is a fruitful country : and we raise : large crops of wheat and corn and : oats , but the largest crop we raise in this : country is the : crop cr drunkards. . Y-"itli sickle mad out of the sharp , edges of the broken gloss of bottle and' ' demijohn they are cm down : , and there ! . are whole swathes of theirs , whole win- : rows of them and it takes all the hos- pitals and penitentiaries and graveyards - | yards and cemeteries to h i r 1'1 this har- vest of hell. Same of you are going : . down under this evil anti : the never- ' : dying worm of alcoholism ! has wound around you one of its oo'is : , and by ; . next New Year's Day it 7/511 have an- other coil around you , and it will after ; a while put a coil around your tongue . and a coil around your brain and a , coil around your lung : and a coil around j I ! your : foot and a coil around your heart , : : and some day : this never-dying worm ; . will with one spring tighten all the J . coils at once , and in the last twist of : I i that awful convulsion you will cry out , i "Oh , my God ! " and be gone. The greatI I : est of dramatists in the tragedy of "The I . Tempest" sends staggering across the I stage Stephano , the drunken butler ; I but across the stage of human life : strong drink sends kingly and queenly and princely natures staggering for- ward the footlights of con- ward. against . - - . - . . . . - - . . 4 - . - spicuHy : and then staggering back Into failure till the world is impatient for their disappearance , and human and diabolic voices ! join in hissing them off the stage. Many also make a failure in the drama of life through indolence. They are always making calculations how lIt- tle they can do for the compensation they get. There are more lazy min- isters , lawyers , doctors , merchants , artists and farmers than have ever . been counted upon. The community is full of laggards and shirkers. I can tell it from the way they crawl along the street , from their tardiness in meet- ing engagements , from the lethargies that seem to hang to the foot when they lift it , to the hand when they put it out , to the words when they speak. Two young men in a store. In the morning one goes to his post the last minute or one minute behind. The other is ten minutes before the time and has his hat and coat hung up and is at his post waiting for duty. The one is ever and anon , in the afternoon looking at his : watch to see if it is not most time to shut up. The other stays half an hour after he might go , and when asked why , says he wanted to look over some entries he had made to be sure he was right , or to put up some goods that had been left out of place. The one is very touchy about doing work not exactly belonging to him. The other is glad to help the other clerks in their work. The first will be a prolonged nothing , and he will be poorer at sixty years of age than at twenty. The other will be a merchant prince. Indolence is the cause of more failures in all occupa- tions than you ; have ever suspected. People are too lazy to do what they can do , and want to un.lortake . that which they cannot do. In the drama of life ] they don't want to be a common soldier carrying a halberd : across the stage , or a falconer or a mere attend- ant , and so they lounge about the scenes till they shall be called to be something great. After : t while , by some accident of prosperity or circum stances , they get into the place for which they have no qualification. And very soon , if the man be a merchant , he Is going around asking his creditors to compromise for ten cents on the dollar. Or if a clergy- man , he is making tirades against the ingratitude of churches. Or , if an attorney - torney , by : unskilled management he loses a case by which wilnws and orphans - phans are robbed of their portion. Or , if a physician , he by malpractice gives his patient rapid transit from this world to the next. Our incompetent friend would have made a passable horse doctor , but he wanted to be pro- fessor of anatomy in a university. lIe could have sold enough confectionery to have supported his family , but he wanted to have a sugar refinery like the Havomeyers. He could have mended shoes , but he wanted to amend the Constitution of the United States. Towards the end of life these people are out of patience , out of money , out of friends , out of everything. ! They go to the poor-house , or keep l out of it by running in debt to all the grocery I and dry goods stores ; that will trust them. People begin to wonder when the curtain will drop on the scene. After a while , leaving nothing but their compliments to pay doctor , under- taker ! , and Gabriel Grubb , the grave- digger , they disappear. Exeunt ! ' Hiss- ed off the stage. Others fail in the drama ! of life ' through demonstrated selfishness. They I make all the rivers empty into their sea , all the roads of emolument end at I their door and they gather all the plumes of honor for their brow. They I help no one , encourage no one , rescue no one. "How big a pile of mon y can I get ? " and "How much of the world can I absorb ? " are the chief ques- tions. They feel about the common people as the Turks felt towards the Asaphi , or common soldiers considering - sidering them of no use excr-pt to fill up the ditches with their d " ad bodies . while the other troops walked . over I. them to take the fort. After a while this : prince of worldly : s : . : : : : < V33 is sick. I The only interest society has in his illnc- s is the effect that his possible - sible- decease may have on the P0.5-1 markets' : After awhile IIP : dies. Great newspaper capitals announce how he I started with nothing and ended with : cveryhing. Although ! for sake ! of ap- ; : pt'a } : . < 1IJce 30:110 . people put handkerchiefs - ; , chiefs to the eye , there is nor one genu- I in ° tear shed. The heirs ; sit up all i night : when he lies ! in state discuss- 't ing what the old fellow ! sums : probably i done with : h : , money. It takes all the , iivery stables within two miles to ! ' furnish -funeral equipage , and all the ! mourning stores are kept h ' isy in sell- dug weeds of grief. The stone-cutters ! send in proposals for a monument. . The minister at th ob.ierjiied ; : reads Ot . the resurrection , which makes the ! hearers fear that if the unscrupulous ! financier : dors come up in tile general : ' rising ; : , he will try to ge a "corner" on item j i tombstones : and grave-yard fences. All ' good men are glad that the moral ; nuisance has been reillo'/ d. The Wall ' street , speculators ! are glad because j there is more room for themselves. The heirs are glad because ; they get ! i possession of the long-delayed inherit- : ance. Dropping every feather of his ! i plumes , every certificate of all his , ' stock every bond of all his investments - ! ' ! ments , every dollar ! of all his fortune he departs , and all the . oiling of Dead ' March : in Saul and all the pageantry i of his interment and all the exquisiteness - : ness of sarcophagus and all the extravagance - j , I travagance of epitaphology : cannot hide j the fact that my text has come again j I to tremendous fulfilment : ' 'Men Shall i , clap their hands at him and shall hiss' ! ' ; him out of his place. " I You see the clapping comes before the . hiss. The world cheers before it .1 damns. _ _ So it . is : said the deadly asp , . - . ' . - 'y ' - " . . . - . - - - - - - _ .C _ ' I tickles before It stings. Going up. is he ? Hurrah ! Stand back and let Ills I galloping horses dash by , a whirlwind II j I of plated harness and tinkling head- I j gear and arched neck. Drink deep or i j his Madeira and cognac. Boast of how i well you knew him. All hats off as he I passes. Bask for days and years in the sunlight of his prosperity. Going down Is he ? Pretend to be near sighted so that you cannot see him as he walks past. When men ask you It you knew him , halt and hesitate as though you were trying to call up a dim memory and say : "Well , y-e-e-s , yes ; I belive I once did know him , but have not seen him for a long while. " Cross a different ferry from the one where you used to meet him lest he ask for financial help. When you started lIra he spoke a good word for you at the bank. Talk down his credit now that his fortunes are collapsing. lIe put his name on two of your notes ; tell him that you have changed your mind about such things and that you never Indorse. After awhile his matters como to a 'lead halt , and an assignment or suspension or sheriff's sale takes place. You say : "lie ought to have stopped sooner. J > ist as I expected. lie made too big a splash in the world. Glad the balloon has burst. Ha-ha ! " Applause when ho went up , sibilant derision when he came down. "Men shall clap their hands at him and hiss him out of his place. " So , high up amid the crags the eagle flutters dust into the eyes of the roe- buck , which then with eyes blinded , goes tumbling over the precipice , the great antlers crashing on the rocks. Now , compare some of these goings out of life with the departure of men and women , who , in the drama of life take the part that God assigned them and then went away honored of men and applauded ] ( of the Lord Almighty. It is about fifty years ago that in a com paratively ! small apartment of the city a newly mal'ril'lllmir set up a home. The first guest invited to that residence wan the Lord .Jesus Christ , and I the Bible given the bride on the day of her espousal was the guide of that hotse- : hold. Days of sunshine were followed by days of shadow. Did you ever know a home that for fifty years had no vicissitude ? The young woman who left her father's house for her young husband's home started : out with a parental benediction and good advice she will never forget. Her I mother said to her the day before the marriage : "Now my child , you are going away from us. Of course , as long as your father and I live you can feel that you can come to us at any time But ' your home will be elsewhere. From long experience I find it best to serve Go.l. It is very bright for you now.my child.and you may think you can get along with- out religion , but the day : will come when you will want God , and my advice is. establish a family altar , and. if need ! be . conduct the worship yourself. " The counsel was taken , and the young wife consecrated every room in the house : to God. . a * V 3 * * Years passed on and there were in that home hilarities , but they were good and healthful ; and sorrows , but they were comforted. Marriages as bright as orange-blossoms could make them : and burials in which all hearts v/cro riven. They have a family lot in the cemetery : , but all the place is illumi nated with stories of resurrection : and reunion. The children of the house hold that lived have grown up and . they are all Christians , and father and mother leading the way and the chil- dren following. What care the mother took ! of wardrobe and education , char acter and manners ! How hard she sometimes worked ! When the head ( of the household was unfortunate in busi ness she sewed until her fingers were numb and bleeding at the tips. And what close calculation of economies and what ingenuity in refitting the gar- ments of the elder children for the younger , and only God kept account of that mother's sideaches and headaches and heartaches and the tremulous prayers : by the side of the sick child's ! cradle and by the couch of this one fully grown. "SCRAPS. " The span of Padsrev.-ski's ; : hand takes in eleven keys. Jerusalem is 5,495 mil s east of our national capital. Doctors ; aIirj ! ! that spirits harden tha tone of the voice. China was the first country to manu facture harmoniums. In Italy thirty : : persons G' : . 10,000 die by the as3assn'.s knife. The railroad journey from New York to Denver cover ; 1.9"0 : : mil' : * . The . 'lin schools ! of London cy.-ling : ) ' : are so crowded that the prices of lessons ! huvo increased. Down to the sixteenth century every physician in Europe wore a ring as a badge of his profession. # The silk moth emerges from its ; cocoon - coon in : from fifteen to . -dt i Pen days according - cording to the temperature. Th ? Turkish ; government has strictly - ly forbidden the cutting : of timber in ! the forests near Jerusalem. The robin and the wren are the only birds that sing ; all the year. All the other birds have periodical : : fits of si- Icnc : .The big rattlesnake at Greenwood garden. Peak's Island. Me. , has just completed an unbroken fast which lasted a year. Paris : has seventy-five foreigners to the one thousand , London has twenty- two St. Petersburg twentyfour.'itla twenty-two and Berlin eleven. Fi bicycles were impounded ( on one day in Paris recently because they had no plates bearing the owner's name and residence soldered to them as the new law requires. Magistrate ( severely , to prisoner Last time you were here I let you off with a caution. Prisoner ( coolly ) - Yus . that's why : ! I'm 'ere ag' a ; it sort of encouraged - couraged me ! - Fun.