Wam " ' WENS T HE CAMPAIGN. H BV' VIC2 PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE Hf Rfl , VATS ON SPEAKS. H Mfvi * ° D clnrc tlmt the Populist * arc Going Hff'jRet to Vote for ISryun Whether Howell . Is Hm "Withdrawn or Not IIo's Going : to M | . ML TSIannRO Ills Own Cnmpaicu In a Way O HH "thut is Going to Insure tlio l'onullst H 4HlHrt , Vote for Sir. Bryan. | A • HV Er' Tom "Watson Speaks. HP K Atlanta , Ga. , Aug. 8. Thomas E. K < [ flH | "Watson opened lib vice presidential HPHfJicampaign last night with an address K nPiltv wo k ° urs in length , delivered before "Tar an au ienco of 3,000 people in the WBil'r ° ugh shed used for the Moody re- HwBRft vival meetings several months ago. HpjflH 11 r. Watson appealed at the outset for K JHk ' u non-partisan hearing , declaring DK > that he spoke with bitterness to none B Be/ . -and in behalf of the men who held HnuHp } the plow , who used the hoe , who H v Pfl "wielded the hammer. If God gave Ksi&sjiir , Jiim strength , he declared , he would IMbP Jj. * plead the cause of these people KrmSt * through pens of reporters present be- Lvra "fore G5O00Oi'O people in the morning. KHQft. • He entered into an enumeration of HflEgtt , the reform demands of the Populists , Kdp .indicting the government for hisrh H K -crimes and misdemeanors in the grant- H R\ ing of the governmental power of P 9pf making money to a special class ; in rJm 'the unfair levying of taxes which laid ntfJyflHL' i > e heavy hand of tribute upon those HRk .least able to sustain it ; in closing the Br * "jblr mints to the free and unlimited coin- mBJkSBi ! * bc of silver ; in leaving the great KllHt public highways of the country in u9rf the control of grasping corporations , BMRj ! who levied tribute upon the people Hi4PwP who were compelled to use them , and " KfjhJw ) : in the corruption of the ballot. IvflPfc Air. Watson explained at length his ' j K't course in leaving the Democratic K J H l party after having been elected to vl w Congress as a Democrat and by the Hi K ( machiner3r of the Democratic party. B' * J Bfts He said that his opponent had run as B nFvK 'a straight platform Democrat , while B' . 'jfWJ ; 2 he had made his race on the Alliance " 'fe t \ platform and was pledged to stand by B01 that platform though the heavens Kipi ( ! ia.ll. furthermore , the national Alli- mMWm -ance convention had instructed those H , K , " " Congressmen elected on the Alliance kI 'platform not to go into the caucuses of kl Bft > ,3tvV either of the two great parties Not Bfedgij | [ . only hac he felt bound to stand HvaL principles rather than party , HPw" ? ut nc natl1 seen then as he saw now HPj mv that the only chance for Jeffersonian P > / ' \ . 'ljr' Democracy was to unite the farmers He'ViBi ' ° L'le ' South with the farmers of the BflR B * Wct > t. To do that required a new BwBrV jparty. The Southern Democrat could B v R -not be induced to go into the Repub- BWjB lican party , nor could the Western BalvB' llcpubiican be induced to enter the BwIW' Democratic party. A common rally- P Nyl ing point was absolutely necessary. ! jMi When Gongress met "in 1S92 eleven HKr \ Western Congressmen stepped out of BB B I * DC Republican party. BlpB/ "Of the thirty Southern Congresses 4Rf men elected on the Alliance platform , es ? K1 * how many stepped out of the Demo- BSy -cratic party ? " exclaimed Mr. Watson. i P fjjaR "Only one , and thank God I can say fcfJB'i it , 1 was that one. " RgfE ? He explained further that he had % 3v allowed himself to be run for speaker MB ' I simply to emphasize the Sonth's desire BfV'j h to meet the West half way in the com- Hsi&l/ / mon battle against the East. llwi\ ! \ In conclusion Mr. Watson mart e this VMTmh significant statement : "We are not | HeSh [ poing' to pat up any candidate against Mfffip Bryan. We are going to vote for ixflK , Bryan , whether Sewall is withdrawn HEiSPi "or DOtm * S ° ' mS to manage this fPI' ] ' -campaign s0 lnat V- * * • lJl'3"aa # ets Ifpa4 * , everv vote we've got. I see the dread ffe evils of McKinleyism threatening us SfflBjgv , and I fear that if we are defeated in jtw * ' * this fight McKinleyism will be en- jgftJE | "throned forever and the battle for i l V -freedom had just as well be given up. fjgyl I shall tell my people to stand by J fj' the cont-ract made at St. Louis. ( P I'Ct Bryan have every vote you US' " ' -can muster. Let Jones say what he likes. Let him insult you if he will. Make no answer. Pray for .your country. Work for her interests. Do your dutj' . Here's what we ' re go ing to do in our state convention : 'We're going to put out a fnll electoral ticket for Br van and Watson. We can't vote for Sewall. Then we'll empower our committee to take off a part of our electors and put ou a part -of yours whenever the Democratic • committee retires Mr. Sewali. The Democratic managers may have made up their miuds to put Tom Watson down and keep him down , but 1 thanlc 1 God the people of the South have en tered him into no such contract. Let it be known , henceforth that the South and West will never again sit at the footstool of the North. ' * FUSION DEAL CLOSED. Democrat * Imlor-c tljo PoputUt Nomin ations a Pant as iMatle. * IlirrciiixsoN , Kan. . Aug 7. The Democrats of Kansas , in State con tention here , adopted the report of Uie conference committee which was tent , to abilcne to meet , with the 1'opu- hrM - 'isti. and every Populist nomination IEft .jyas indorsed as fast as made. Mf\ Kussell Mt Q an Octoenari.in. Bnl Nfiw York , Aug. S. Wednesday HBnT { was Russell Sage 's SOth birthday an- BBf ) > aiive rsary. He was besieged by con- BRit * .gratulatory friends an hour before B $ * the stock market opened. He has Bn "thrown away his glasses , bears him- vv sejf erectly and looks as vigorous as H | ? -most men at 50. He attributes his B health to methodical habits and early Bfj 3-isiivr. He has not had a vacation B' the last decade because , so he says , he Bl -has been too busy. B/ flro at Swift's Kansas Citj Packing H Hy [ Eloiise Loss S30.000. Hr | Kansas Citt , Mo. , Aug. 6. A fire Bp- / t the Swift packing plant in Armour- ® s ) / -dale last night burned out one of the Hcl/ / smoke houses. The total loss was B.b ut S 0,00i ) , fully covered by insur- S v 4ince. Joseph Hoblawetz , the night K3 watchman at the smoke house , was > & m § ftPy " burned to death and buried in the B'lWi xuins , and eight other men were m W # seriously injured. The eight men K gis had narrow escapes from death and it ftiE * was only because there was scarcely HtH reath of wind blowing that the fire " ' not sPreaci to other buildings of HB | < * &he plant. R COLD DEMOCRATS MEET. A National Convention Rare and a Third Ticket Likely. Inwanai'Olis , Ind. , Aug. 6. The provisional national committee of the gold standard Democrats who posi tively refuse to accept the Chicago platform and ticket , began its initial meeting here this afternoon , first con sidering the question of calling an other national Democratic conven tion. tion.That That a convention will bo called there is almost no reason to doubt , but whether another ticket will be called for is still an open question , for several of those present are strongly in favor of ex-Congressman Bourke Uockran's plan of adopting an old line Democratic platform and in directly indorsing McKinley by not naming/.another ticket. The members of the executive committee , General Bragg of Wisconsin , ox-Minister Broadhead of St. Louts , Editor Halde- man of Kentucky , Mr. llobbins of Illinois and ex-Congressman Bynura of Indiana , are all opposed to any thing but the most decisive action , though it will present letters from several men of national note in the East and South in favor of only a national sound money platform. While over two-thirds of the States have representatives here as members of the provisional national committee , there are more advisory visitors than committeemen , for the occasion is more in the nature of a general con ference of the gold standard Demo crats than that of a committee meet ing.The The executive committee has re ceived the following credentials : Alabama. J. M. JCalkner of Montgom ery ; California. E. B. Pond of San Francisco ; Connecticut , David Wells of Norwich ; Florida. J. L. Gaskins of Jacksonville ; Illinois , John M. Palmer of Springfield ; Indiana , John R. Wil son of Indianapolis ; Iowa , L. M. Mar tin of Marshalltown ; Kansas , Eugene Hagau of Topeka ; Kentucky , K. T. Tyler of Hickman ; Massachusetts , Nathan Matthews , jr. , of Boston ; Michigan , Thomas A. Wilson of Jacksonville ; Minnesota , F. W. Mc- Cutcheon. There is talk of Senator Palmer , Secretary Carlisle and General Bragg for the nominee for President , and General Buckner of Kentucky , ex- Governor Francis of Missouri and ex- Congressman Bynum of Indiana for second place. KANSAS POPULISTS. A. Straight Ticket Nominated After an Ail Night Session. Abilene , Kan. , Aug. 8. Yesterday afternoon the Populists in state con vention , after a bitter attack had been made on Cliggitt the Democratic nominee for presidential electorin the first district , because of charges that he had carried a gun against the striking miners of Cherokee couuty in 1893. adopted the fusion agreement offered by the Democrats with the understanding- that if the Cliggitt charge should be proved true his name would be dropped. Following is the ticket complete : For Governor John W. Leedy of Ccffey county. For Chief Justice Frank Doster of Marion county. For ongressman-at-Large Eev. Jerry Botkin of Wilson county. Lieutenant Governor A. M. Fpr Darvey of Shawnee county. For Attorney General L. C , Boyle of Bourbon county. For Secretary of State William E. Bush of Jewell county. For State Treasurer D. H. Hefile- bower of Miami county. For State Auditor W. H. Morris of Crawford county. For Superintendent of Public In struction W. D. Stryker of Barton countv. , . . . The State central committee was named as follows : First district , G. W Herrin"-lon and J. L- . Simpson ; Second , Chris Ititter and II. S. Clark ; Third J. M. Allen and M. L. Walters ; and William Fourth , Taylor Riddle Tipton : Fifth , P. H. Dolan and D. E. Ballard ; Sixth , F. E. Jo "soa and u- M. Ross ; Seventh , E. J. Westgate and Rufe Cone. WISCONSIN REPUBLICANS , A Candidate for Governor Named on the Sixth Ballot Thnrstoa's Prediction. Milwaukee , Wis. , Aug. S. The Re publican State convention nominated Major Edward Schofield , of Oconto , for Governor on the sixth ballot. The remit is a victorv for the Philetus oawyer iacnon or tne party and a cor responding defeat for ex-Governor Heard and his followers. United States Senator Thurston ad dressed the convention , saying , among other things : "I received word to day from a trusted friend in my state confirminsr what I already knew , that William J. Bryan , great as he may appear to other parts of the country , on election day in November next , will be defeated in his ward , in his city , in his county , in his congres sional district and in the state where he lives. " NO ADVICE BY CLEVELAND. The Presdent Denies Having Expressed Any Gold Ticket Opinion. New York , Aug. 8. In answer to an inquiry as to the truth of a report published in this city yesterday that President Cleveland had made known his disapproval of the proposed gold standard ticket project , the President telegraphs as follows to the Evening Post : "Buzzard's Bay , Mass. , Aug. 6. It is abolutcly untrue that I have given any advice touching the course of the Indianapolis conference. "Grover Ceeveland. " Discouraged and Committed Snicide. Kansas CiTr , Mo. , Aug. 8. Dis couraged because of his poverty , un able to secure employment and phys ically almost a wreck , T. P. Wltten , formerly a clerk in the city treasur er 's office , committed suicide at the boardine house kept by Mrs. Nichols at i > 3l Cherry street this afternoon. 10G at Little Rock. Little Rock , Ark. , Aug. S. The heat hereabouts was almost unbeara ble to-day , thethermometer , reaching 106 degrees , ttKjb highest recorded since 1872. IK j HOW CAN BRYAN ACCEPT ? i So Asks Senator Jones as to the Popu list Nomination. Washington , Aug.4. Senator Jones , of Arkansas , chairman of the Demo cratic national committee , has re turned to Washington. When asked : "Will Mr. Bryan accept the nomina tion offered him by the Populists ? " ho answered slowly and deliberately : "How can he ? Ho was nominated with Mr. Sewall on the Democratic platform , and he will do nothing that will reflect upon him as a gentleman or as a Democratic candidate. "I see that some of the Populists are declaring that unless Mr. Bryan accepts their nomination by August 5 the central committee will withdraw his name and nominate some one else in his place. Well , let them do so. Mr. Bryan having been the nominee of the Democrats , and of the silver party , common decency would at least suggest the propriety of his accepting those nominations first But suppose the Populists do nominate another candidate for the Presidency , what would be the situation ? Mr. Bryan received a thousand votes in their convention , and th"n this central com mittee , composed of a few men , comes along and nominates a new man. It will simply mean the disruption and disorganization of the Populist party. " "We all know that we are going to have either Bryan and Sewall or Mc Kinley and Hobart. The best men and the most intelligent of the Popu list party " will vote for Bryan and Sewall. " In conclusion Senator Jones com plimented the Populists of the North and West as broad-minded and patri otic men. On the other hand , he said the Populists of the South were out for "nothing but spoil. " Mr. Jones said he did not propose to allow Mr. Watson to "bluff" him into - withdrawing drawing Sewall. He said he was will ing to make fair and proper arrange ments with the Populists in the mat ter of electoral tickets , but he did not propose to consent to any improper arrangements. 1WUKK1SON FUR BRYAN- The Noted lllinoisnn Does Not Fear a ranic if Silver Should Win. Chicago , Aug 4. Congressman W. R. Morrison , member of the interstate commerce commission , in an inter view in the Journal , is quoted as say ing that he will vote for Bryan and free silver. He added : "I did not favor the adoption of a free silver platform , it is true , and 1 do not believe that the success of free silver would in any way realize the expectations of those who are urging it. But I do not be lieve that the adoption of free coin age at the ratio of 1G to 1 and the election of Bryan would necessari ly precipitate a panic. It would if the men who control the money mar ket chose to have a panic , but not otherwise. If these men should in that event do as they are doing now , and' do their best to strengthen the credit of the government , things would run along without a financial jar during the four year of Bryan's administration. Of course , if a presi dent and Congress were elected who were bent on smashing things right and left , they could undoubtedly do it. FILIBUSTERS SHOT. Spaniards Deal Summarily With Ameri cans of the Three Friends Expedition. Havana , Aug. 4. A pacifico , who lives near Jaruco , arrived here yester day with the report that a number of Americans of the Three Friends expe dition which landed upon the island recently were captured by General Ochoa , tied in liues along a roadside and shot to death. One body was left unburied. It had been mutilated with machetes almost beyond recognition , but was supposed to be that of Perry Atkinson. The belongings of the vic tims were sold in Jaruco. Consul General Lee has been urged to de mand an investigation. It is said the naturalized American insurgent leader , Capero , whose re lease was ordered by Campos and countermanded by Weyler , has been sentenced to pass the rest of his life in chains in a Spanish dungeon in Africa. Other tales of injustice and cruelty are coming in constantly. Crazed by the Silver Issue. Columbia , Mo. , Aug. 4. Thomas Wilhite , a negro living in Rocheport has become violently insane after reading "Coin's Financial School. " He says that he is Bryan and is going to be President. He was captured Friday on the banks of the Missouri river , with a copy of Coin's book in his hand and speaking on the financial question to the bluffs. He will be taken to the asylum. Shot and Almost Beheaded In Church. Thomasville , Ga. , Aug. 4. Colonel James F. Tilley was shot down in the Baptist church at Metcalt , ten miles from here , yesterday afternoon by John T. Ruslrn , who then , taking a razor from his coat pocket , almost severed the prostrate man's head from his body. Ruskin then attempted to commit suicide by taking laudanum , but failed. Gorman to Lend His Aid. Washington. Aug. 5. Senator Gor man has decided to aid Chairman Jones in the conduct of the Democrat ic campaign. He has stipulated , how ever , that he shall be a silent partner , giving his advice and the benefit of his experience as a political gen eral , but not being known publicly as a member of the executive or any other committee. Sngar Bounties Paid. Washington , Aug. 4. The war rants for the payment of the sugar bounties earned in 1S94 except maple sugar the ' payment of which were provided for in the appropriation ol 85,000,000 in the last deficiency act , were issued to-day. The proved claims were pro rated , each claimant receiving 84 per cent of his claim. The number and amount of the beet sugai payments are insignificant. In all 49S warrants were issued for $4,9SS,036. Three warrants amounting to 511,94 were withheld. TALMAGE'S SEEMON. j "ANOTHER CHANCE" WAS LAST SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. "Toxt : " If the Tree Tall Toward the ' South , Or the North , in the l'laco "Whoro the Tree Falloth , There It Shall bo Eccl. 11 : 3. HERE 19 a hover ing hope in the minds of a vast multitude of people that there will bean an opportunity in the next world of correcting the mis takes of this ; that however complete a shipwreck we v&r' may make or our earthly life , it will be on a beach up which we may walk to a palace ; that as the defendant may lose his case in a Circuit Court and appeal it and have it go up to the Supreme Court or Court of Chancery and all the costs thrown over on the other party , so a man may lose his case in this world , but in the higher jurisdiction of eternity have the decision of the earthly case set aside , all the costs remitted and the defendant be triumphant forever. The object of my sermon is to show you that common sense declares with the text that such an expectation is chimerical. "If the tree fall toward the south , or toward the north , in the place where the tree falleth , there shall it be. " There are those who say that if the impenitent and unfortunate man enters the next world and sees the dis aster , as a result of that disaster he will turn , the distress the cause of his reformation ; but we have tan thousand Instances all around about us of people who have done wrong and disaster sud denly came upon them did the disaster heal them ? No , they went on. There is a man flung of dissipations. The doctor says to him : "Now , my friend , if you don't stop drinking and don't stop this fast life you are living , you will die. " The patient thanks the phy sician for his warning and gets better ; he begins to sit up , begins to walk around the room , begins to go to busi ness and takes the same round of grog shops where he got his morning dram and his evening dram and the drams between. Down again. Same doctor. Same physical anguish. Same medical warning. But now the sickness is more protracted , the liver more obstinate , the stomach more irritable , the digestive organs more rebellious. But still , un der medical skill , he gets better , goes forth , commits the same sacrilege against his physical health. Some times he wakes up to see what he is doing , and he realizes he is destroying his family and that his life is a per petual perjury against his marriage vows , and that that broken-hearted woman is so different from the roseate wife M married that her old school mates do not recognize her on the street , and that his sons are going out in life under the taunt of a father'6 drunkenness , and that his daughters are going out in life under the scarifica tion of a disreputable ancestry. His nerves are all a jangle. From crov/n of head to sole of foot he is one aching rasping , crucifying , damning torture. Where is he ? He is in hell on earth. Does it stop him ? Ah , no. After awhile delirium tremens pours out upon hie pillow a whole jungle of hissing reptiles. His screams horrify the neighbors as he dashes out of bed cry ing : "Take these things off me ! " He is drinking down the comfort of the family , the education of his children , their prospects for this life and per haps their prospects for the life to come. Pale and convalescent he sits up. Physicians say to him : "Now , my good fellow , I am going to have a plain talk with you. If you ever have an at tack of this kind again you will die. I can't save you , and all the doctors in creation can't save you. " The patient gets up , starts out , goes the same round of dissipation and is down again ; but this time medicines do not touch his race. Consultations of physicians says there is no hope. Death ends the scene. That process of inebriation and physi cal suffering and medical warning and dissolution is taking place within a stone's throw of where you sit and in every neighborhood of Christendom. Pain does not reform. Suffering does not cure. What is true in regard to one sin is true in regard to all sins , and yet men are expecting in the next life there will be opportunity for purga torial regeneration. Take up the printed reports of the prisons of the United States and find that the vast majority of the criminals were there before , some for two times , three times , four times , six times. Punished again and again , but they go righi on. Mil lions of incidents and instances work ing the other way , and yet men think that in the next world punishment will work out for them salvable effects. Why you and I cannot imagine any worse torture from another world than we have seen men in in this world , and without any salutary consequence. Furthermore , the prosDsct of reformation mation in anotner worm is more im probable than here. Do you not realize the fact that a man starts in this world with the innocence of infancy ? In the ether case , starting in the other world , he starts with the accumulated bad habits of a life time. Is it not to be expected that you could build a better chip out of new timber than out of an c' .d hulk that has been ground up on t > breakers ? If starting with com- 7 ° rative innocency the man does not become godly , is it possible that start- .ng with sin a seraph can be evoiuted' Ij there not more prospect that a sculp tor will make a finer statue out of a j Llosk of pure , white Parian marble > than out of a black rock that has been cracked and twisted and split and scarred with the storms of a half cen tury ? Could you not write a last will and testament , or write a deed , or write an important document on a pure white sheet of paper easier than you could write it upon a sheet scribbled all over with infamy and blotted and torn from top to bottom ? And yet there are those who are so uncommon-senslcal as to believe that though a man starts in this world with infancy and its inno cence and turns out badly , in the next world he can start with a dead failure and turn out well. "But , " say some people , "we ought to have another chance in the next world because our life here is so very brief ; we scarcely have room to turn around between the cradle and the grave , the wood of the one almost striking against the marble of the other. We ought to have another chance because of the brevity of this life. " My friends , do you know what made the ancient deluge a necessity ? It was the longevity of the antedi luvians. They were worse in the second end century than in the first , and worse when they got three hundred years old , and woree at four hundred , and worse at five hundred , and worse at six hun dred , and worse at eight hundred ; until the world had to be washed and scoured and scrubbed and soaked and sunk and anchored a whole month un der water before It was fit for decent people to live in. I have seen many pictures of old Time with his scythe to cut , but I never saw any picture of Time with a chest of medicines to heal. Seneca said that in the first few years of his puhlic life Nero was set up as an example of clemency and kindness , but he got worse and worse , the path de scending , until at sixty-eight years of age he was the suicide. If eight hun dred years of lifetime could not cure the antediluvians of their iniquity , I undertake to say that all the ages of eternity would be only prolongation of depravity. "But , " says some one , "in the next life the ' evil surroundings will be withdrawn and good influences will be substituted , and hence , expurgation , sublimity , glorification. " But you must remember that the righteous , all their Gins forgiven , pass right up into a beat ific state , and then having passed up into the beatific state , not need ing any other chance , that will leave all those who have never been forgiven , and who were impeni tent , alone alone ! and where are the salvable influences to come from ? Can it be expected that Dr. Duff , who spent his whole life in pointing the Hindoos to heaven , and Dr. Abeel , who spent his life in evangelizing China , and that Judson , who spent his life in preach ing the Gospel to Burmah can it be expected that they will be sent down from some celestial Missionary Society to educate and to save those who wasted their earthly existence ? No. We are told distinctly that all mission ary and evangelistic influences will be ended forever and the good having passed up to their beatific state , all the morally bankrupt will be together , and where are the salvable influences to come from ? Will a specked or bad apple put in a barrel of diseased apples make the other apples good ? Will one who is down be able to lift others up ? Will these who have miserably failed in the business of this life be able to pay the debts of other spiritual insol vents ? Will a million wrongs make one right ? Poneropolis was the city where King Rufus of Thracia , put all bad people of his kingdom , and when ever there were iniquitous people found in any part of the land they were all sent to Poneropolis. It was the great capital of wickedness. Suppose a man or a woman had opened a primary school in Poneropolis , would the par ents of other cities have sent their chil dren there to be educated and re formed * * * Again , I wish you further to notice that another chance in another world means the ruin of this. Now , sup pose a wicked man Is assured that after a lifetime of wickedness , he can fix it all right up in the future. That would be the demorali zation of soeiety , that would be the demolition of the human race. There arc men who are now kept on the limits of sin by their fear. The fear that if we are bad and unforgiven here it will not be well with us in the next exist ence , is the chief influence that keeps civilization from rushing back into semi-barbarism , and keeps semi-bar barism from rushing back into mid night savagery , and keeps midnight savagery from rushing back into ex- limits of sin. But this idea coming faito his soul , this idea of another chance , he says , "Go to , now ; I'll get out of this world all there is in It. " Come glut tony and revenge and uncleanness and all sensualities , and wait upon me. It may abbreviate my earthly life by dis soluteness , but that will only give me heavenly indulgence on a larger scale in a shorter length of time. I will over take the righteous before long. I will only come in heaven a little late , and I will be a little more fortunate than those who have behaved themselves on earth and went straight to the bosom of God , because I will see more and have wider excursion , and I will come into heaven via Gehenna , via Sheol ! " Hear ers ! Readers ! Another chance in the next world means free license and the demolition of this. Suppose you had a case in court , and all the judges and all the attorneys agreed in telling you the first trial of it it would be tried twice the first trial would not be of very much importance , but the second trial would decide everything. On which trial would you put the most expenditure ? on which trial would you employ the abkst counsel ? on which frial would you be most anxious to lave the attendance of all the wit- .eoscs ? "Oh , " you would say , "if there ire to be two trials , and the first trial wmmmmmHmmmmmmmmmmmmuMiimuuirmBBKam doea not amount to much , the 3ecoui trial being everything , everything de pending upon that. I must have th moat eloquent attorney , and I niuol have nil my witnesses present , and I will expend my money on that. " It these men who are Impenitent and who are wicked felt there wrre two trials , and the first was of no very great im portance , and the second trial waa the one of vast and infinite importance , all the preparations for eternity would he post-mortem , post-fuucrnl , post- sepuichral , and this world would bo jerked off into impenitency and god- lessnes3. Another chance In another world means the domilition of this world. * * A dream. I am in the burnished judgment hall on the last day. The great white throne is lifted , but the Judge has not yet taken it. While wo are waiting for his arrival I hear the immortals in conversation. "What are you waiting for ? " says a soul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that went up from America. The latter responds : "I was in America forty year3 ago , and I heard the Gospel preachc 1. and I had plenty of Bibles in my house , and from the time that I knelt at my moth er's knee in prayer until my last hour. I had great opportunities ; but I did not improve them , and I am here to day waiting % for another chance. " "Strange , strange , " says the soul just come up from Madagascar. "Strange ; why I never heard the Gospel call but once in all my life , and I accepted It , and I don't want another chance. " "What are you waiting for ? " says ono " who on earth had very feeble Intellect to one who had great brain and whose voice was silvery , and who had scep tres of power. The latter replies : "I had great power on earth , I must admit , and I mastered languages and I mas tered libraries , and colleges conferred upon me learned titles , and my name was a synonym for eloquence and power ; but somehow I neglected the matters of my soul , and I must con fess to you I am here to-day waiting for another chance. " Now , the ground trembles with the advancing chariot. The great folding doors of the bur nished hall of judgment are thrown open. "Stand back , " cry the U3hers , "and let the Judge of quick and dead pass through. " He takes the throne. He looks off upon the throngs of na tions come to the last judgment , come to the only judgment , and one flash from the throne reveals each man's history to himself , and reveals it to all the others. And then the Judge says , "Divide ! " and the burnished walls echo It , "Divide ! " and the guides angelic an swer , "Divide ! " and the immortals are rushing this way and that , until there is an aisle between them , a great aisl- and then a vacuum , widening , and widening and widening , until the Judge looks to one side of that vacuum , and addresses the throng , and says : "Let him that is righteous be righteous still , and let him that is holy be holy still. " And then , turning to the throng on the other side of the vacuum , he says "Let him that is unjust be unjust still , and let him that is filthy be filthy still. " And then he stretches out both hand" ? one toward the throng on each side ai the vacuum , and says : "If the tree fall toward the south , or toward the nor'i in the place where the tree falleth there it shall be ! " And then I hear something jar with a great sound ; it is the closing of the Book of Judgment The Judge ascends the stairs behnd he throne. The Hall of the last Assizp is cleared and shut. The High Court ol Eternity adjourned forever. The Church in Politics. The time is coming when the church will demand that all the chief places in the city government shall be filled with men whose personal character dc = command high respect. It is high timr to cease tolerating the presence of anv man as a city official who is hims ll hand and glove with that which i ? most degrading. The democratic Chris tian church has a right to make demands mands and enforce them. Rev. E. M Fairchild , Unitarian. Troy , N. Y. SOME STRANGE TREES. There is an oak tree in the state of Georgia that is twenty-seven feet in diameter. A blue gum tree in Ne"v South Wales , 482 feet high , is thought to be the tallest tree in the world. At Oroville , Cal. , there is a cherry tree only IS years old , which is six fict through the trunk. The magnolia tree was named aft r a French professor , Magnol , a natural ist , who died in 1715. One variety of the Indian rubber tree has bright green leaves that ar- edged . ; th flaming rod. The sacred bo-tree of Ceylon is said to have sprung from a slip of the tre ? under which Buddha was born. The estimated age of a dragon trep at Orotava is 5,000 years , but it is not authentic , like the record of the Lcra- bardy cypress. Two large white gum trees in Guate mala have grown in such a mannf-r that the foundations of a church have been shifted seven inches. The empress of Russia recently chose a white veil with a fine v b-like ground and a black border , consisting of a single row of black chenille spots. The combination of black and white is to be much worn this summer. It has the advantage of looking cool and being stunning as well. Some of the pretty veils selected by European royalties soon to be married are crescent-shaped and drawn up tc fit the hat. They are of brown with white spots , white with black spots and pure white. There is no truth in the rumor that black stockings are no longer to be worn. Though brevn are often worn for cycling , the biauk are just as fash ionable as ever , and open-work espfr. I cially so. _ i I Ii Ii i t \ V VI I t I itK i r M tf J