bbbbbbB r l bbbbbbB h' - bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbK P- . I INTERNATIONAL PFESS ASSOCIATION. | A PART II. B Told by Richard Fenton , of Frcncbay , fl Gloucestershire , Esquire. H J t * „ * * tV - 7i S my old friend bbbbbbbbL yy 3l ) aBlre < l mc to do BL SK/y 0l3 aXths' , I suppose I bbbbbbbs\ \ ffe © \ must Brand is a H ( C S4)ll ) rIsht g00d fellow LbbbbbbW Vm 2 ! * # 'al and a clever bellow , B Jffir > ! ' J but has plenty of crotchets of his 4 fl " * " TV3rv"S own. The worst I k G - < w know of him is that W he insists upon B Slaving his own -way with people. With fl those who differ from him he is as ob- m stinate as a mule. Anyhow , he has K alwajs had his own -way with me. V This cuGtom , so far as I am concerned , m commenced years ago , when we were m bojs at school together , and I have Bv never been able to shake off the hail BF v habit of giving it to him. He hasP P\ promised to see that my Queen's Eng- i lish is presentable ; for , to tell the B. truth. I am more at home across coun- BA try than across foolscap , and my fin- Tf BPi's know the feel of the reins or the 1 trigger better than that of the pen. Kjr AH the came , I hope he won 't take Pf. too many liberties with my style , ba'1 H though it may be ; for old Brand at H times is apt to get well , -a bit pros } ' . B ! To hear him on the subject of hard B work , and the sanctity thereof , ap- K preaches the sublime ! K What freak took me to the little God- H forsaken village of Midcombe in the V depth of winter , is entirely between f myself and my conscience. The cause , k having no bearing upon the matters 1 m am asked to tell you about , is no one's B business but mine. I will only say that P > now I would not stay in such a place , B at such a time of the year , for the sake H of the prettiest girl in the world , let alone the bare chance of meeting her M once or twice. But one's ideas change. g I am now a good bit older , ride some L two stone heavier , and have been mar- B ried ever so many years. Perhaps , B after all , as I look back , I can find r some excuse for being such an ass ae B to endure , for more than a fortnight , B all the discomforts heaped upon me B in that little village inn. B A man who sojourns in such a hole B as Midcombe must give some reason BE for doing so. My ostensible reason was m l hunting. I had a horse with me , and B a second-rate subscription pack of slow- B going mongrels did meet somewhere in B the neighborhood , so no one could gain- B say m yexplanaiton. But , if hunting r was my object , I got precious little ol B it. A few days after my arrival , a bitter - , ter , biting frost set in a frost as black Bs as your hat and as hard as nails. Yet BF' still I stayed on. m From private information received B no matter how , when , or where ] B knew that some people in the ncigh- Bk borhocd had organized a party to gc M skating on a certain day at Lilyrnere B a fine sheet of water seme distance B from Midcombe. I guessed that some- B one whom I particularly desired tc H meet would be there , and as the skat- bbbbbbV H ' ing was free to anyone who chose tc By * take the trouble of getting to such at B out of the way place , I hired a hors ? H ( and an apology for a dog-cart , and a ; B' ten in the morning started to drive ih- B'v twelve miles to the pond. I took nc B one with me. I had been to Lilymen BO once before , in the bright snmme : B weather , so fancied I knew the wa ; B well enough. B * The cky when I started was cloudy B7 the wind was chopping around in a waj B j which made the effete rustic old liostle ] Bbi predict a change of weather. He wa : B right. Before I had driven two mile : B\ \ light snow began to fall , and by th ; Bt. time I reached a wretched little way- B / side inn , about a mile from the Mere B ( a film of white covered the whole coun BK ' try. I stabled my horse as well as : Brf could , then , taking my skates with me Bwalked down to the pond. Bf { Now , whether I had mistaken thi B ( > dajor whether the threatening fall oi BL } snow had made certain people chaag ( BfeV/ their minds , I don't know ; but , to m } B annoyance and vexation , no skater : Bf j were to be seen , and , moreover , the Bu J uncut , white surface told me that none B3 f had been on the pond that morning B\\ Still , hoping they might come in spite BO of the weather , I put on my skates and w ( V went outside-edging and gi-aps-vinins B. | \ all over the place. But as there was nc B& J person in particular in fact , no one a ! WftrS all to note my powers. I soon goi m\ \ tired. It was , indeed , dreary , drear } B\ \ work. But I waited and hoped untL K\ \ \ the snow came down so fast and iur- B i \ * iously. xhat I felt sure that waitins B'- was in vain , and that I had driven tc H Lilymere for nothing. B\ Back I went to the little inn , utterl } BFdlsgtisted with things in general , ami Bm" * feeling that to break someone's heati B j Avould be a relief to me in my present [ r state of mind. Of course , a sensible V\ ' man would at once have got his horse . ] ) etween the shafts and driven home. I \ But , whatever I may be now , in those m't days I was not a sensible man Branti • will , I know , cordially endorse this remark - I mark the accommodation of the inn k t -i was not such as to induce one to linge : BL , ' { % within its precincts ; but the fire was jl y * . a r ht good one , and a drink , which ] ry r * skillfully manufactured out of some * / 2iot beer , not to be despised , and proved / J warming to the body and soothing tc I j the ruffled temper. So I lingered over I Hie big fire until I began to feel hungry , and upon the landlady assuring me that she could cook a rasher , decided it would be .wiser to stay where I was . g.-j until the violence of the snow-stprm was over ; for coming down it was now , and no mistake ! And It kept on coming down. About half-past three , when I sorrowfully de cided I was bound to make a move , it was snowing faster than ever. I harnessed my horse , and laughing at the old woman's dismal prophecy that I should never get to Midcombe in such weather , gathered up the reins , and away I went along the white road. I thought I knew the way well enough. In fact , I had always prided myself upon remembering any road once driven over -by me ; but does any one who has not tried it really know how a heavy fall of snow changes the aspect of the country , and makes land marks snares and delusions ? I learnt all about it then , once and for all. 1 found , also , that the snow lay much deeper than I thought could possibly be in so short a time , and it still lell in a manner almost unding. Yet I wen on bravely and merrily for some miles. Then came a bit of uncertainty II. s ? HICH of those two )1 ) ? i [ / / roads was the right /J ? = A\/ \JI one ? This one , of mp l t / course no , the oth- v A 3y / er- There was no | ? ) $5A | ft i > house near ; no one g % S S § § > passing in such ' ' ( S cV'jff ) weather , so I was cp % f 'eft ' to exercise my ( jigfe free , u n b i a se , d * t choice , a privilege T would willingly have dispensed with. However , I made the best selection I could , and fololwed it for some two miles. Then I began to grow doubtful , and soon persuading myself that I was on the wrong track , retraced my steps. I was by this time something like a huge white plaster-of-paris figure , and the snow which had accumulated on the old dog-cart made it run heavier byhalfaton , more or less. By the time I came to that unlucky junction of roads at which my misfortune be gan , it was almost dark ; the sky as black as tarpaulin , yet sending down the white feather } ' flakes thicker and faster than ever. I felt inclined to curse my folly in attempting such a drive , at any "rate I blamed myself for not having started two or three hours earlier. I'll warrant that steady-going old Brand never had to accuse himself of such foolishness as mine. Well , I took the other road : went on some way ; came to a turning which I seemed to remember ; and , not with out misgivings , followed it. My mis givings increased when , after a little while , I found the road grew full of ruts , which the snow and the darkness quite concealed from me until the wheels got into them. Evidently I was wrong again. I was just thinking of making the best of my way out of this rough and unfrequented road , when there , I den't know how it hap pened , and such things seldom occur to me a stumble , a fall on the part ot my tired horse sent mc flying over the dashboard , with the only consoling thought that the reins were still iv. my hand. Luckily the snow had made the fall ing pretty soft. I picked myself up and set about estimating damages. With some difficulty I got the horse out of the harness and then felt free to inspect the dog-cart. Alas ! after the manner of the two-wheel kind when ever a horse th'nlrs Ct to fall , one sh.f : had snapped oft like a carrot ; so here was L five males apparently from any where , in the thick of : i blinding snow storm , left standing helpless beside-a jaded horse and a broken cart I should like to know what Brand would have done under the circumstances. As for me , I reflected for some min utes reflection in a snowstorm is weary work. I reasoned , I believe , logically , and at last came to this de cision : I would follow the road. If , as I suspected , It was but a cart track , it would probably soon lead to a habi tation of some kind. Anyway , I had better try a bit farther. I took hold of the wearied horse and with snew un der my feet , snowflakes whirling round me , and a wind blowing right into my teeth , struggled on. It was a journey ! I think I must have been three-quarters of an hour going about a quarter of a mile. I was just beginning to despair , when I saw a welcome gleam of light. I steered toward it , fondly hoping that my trou bles were at an end. I found the light stole through the ill-fitting window shutters of what seemed , so far as I could make out in the darkness , ; o be a small farm-house. Tying to a gate the knotted reins "by which I had been leading the horse , I staggered up to i the door nd knocked loudly. Upon j my honor , until I leant against that doorpost I had no idea bow tired I was until that moment I never suspected that the finding/ speedy shelter meant absolutely saving my life. Cov ered from head to foot with snow , my hat crushed in , I must have been a piti able object. No answer came to my first sum mons. It was only after a second and more imperative application of my heel that the door deigned to give way a few inches. Through the aperture a wo man's voice asked who was there ? "Let me in , " I said. "I have missed my way to Midconrbe. My horse has fallen. You must give me shelter for the night. Open the door , and let me in. "Shelter ! You can't got-shelter here , - imw i F" ' "m ! ! " " " ' "f ! f in SyeLi lT- mister , " said a man's gruff voice. "This ain't an Inn , so you'd best be off , and go elsewhere. " "But I must come in , " I said , as tounded at such inhospitality , "I can't go a step farther. Open the door si once ! " "You be hanged , " said the man. ' "Ti3 my house , not yours. " "But , you fool , I mean to pay you well for your trouble. Don't you know It means death wandering about on such a night as this ? Let me In ! " "You won't come In here , " was the • brutal and boorish reply. The door closed. That I was enraged at such incivility may be easily imagined ; but if I said I was thoroughly frightened I believe no one would be surprised. As getting in to that house meant simply life or death to me , into that house I deter mined to get , by door or window , by fair means or by foul. So , as the door closed , I hurled myself against it with all the might I could muster. Al though I ride much heavier now than I did then , all my weight at that time was bone and muscle. The violence of my attack tore from the lintel the staple which held the chain ; the door went back with a bang , and I fell for ward into the house , fully resolved to stay there whether welcome or unwel come. CHAPTER III. ir j * j HE door through g " \ 10F" | which I had burst ' $ ' * e a battering vi' i ' $ ram opened \ m- W ra& \ \ straight into a sort JJA ° kitchen , so al- | | | f7b } | r tthough , I entered in § | | | | § j Isgj _ a most undignified S T way , in fact on my " ' 3 L . hands and knees , I " ' was well- estab lished in the center of the room before the man and woman emerged from behind the door , where my successful assault had thrown them , I stood up and faced them. They were a couple of ordinary , respectably at tired country people. The man , a sturdy , strong-built , bull-necked ras cal , stood scowling at me , and , I con cluded , making up his mind as to what course to pursue. "My good people , " I said , "you are behaving in the most unheard of man ner. Can't you understand that I mean to pay you well for any trouble I give you ? But whether you like it or not , here I stay to-night. To turn me out would he sheer murder. " So saying I pulled off my overcoat , and began shaking the snow out of my whiskers. I dare say my determined attitude , my respectable , as well as my muscu lar appearance , impressed my unwill ing hosts. Any way , they gave in without any more ado. Whilst the woman shut the door through which the snowflakes were whirling , the man said suddenly : "Well , you'irhave to spend the night on a chair. We've no beds here for strangers. Specially those as ain't wanted. " "Very well , my friend. Having set tled the matter you may as well make yourself pleasant. Go out and put my horse under cover , and give him a feed of some sort make a mash if you can. " After giving the woman a quick glance as of warning , my scowling host lit a horn lantern , and went on the errand I suggested. I gladly sunk into a chair , and warmed myself before a cheerful fire. The prospect of spending the night amid such discomfort wan not alluring , but I had , at least , a roof over my head. IT ) KS COSTISCED. Amcriia's Deepest Lake. Crater Lake , in Oregon , is the deep est body of fresh water in America. Only one lake in the world is deeper namely , Baikal , in Siberia , which ex ceeds it in depth by 400 feet. Until re cently it was asserted that Crater Lake was bottomless , but soundings have proved that its greatest depth is 2,000 feet. It is five miles in diameter , nearly circular and occupies the crater of an extinct volcano. No fish have ever been known to exist in Crater j Lake. Not long ago a request that it be stocked with trout was sent to Washington by the Mazamas , who are a club of mountain climbers , having headquarters at Portland. Mazama is the Iudian name for mountain goat. The climbers are anxious to angle in the extinct crater , and the government experts are going to find out whether such a thing is practicable. It is easy enough to put trout into the water , but that would be of no use unless there is food for them there. Trials will be made by an expedition for the pur pose of ascertaining how muck food there is and whether or not it is of a kind suitable for "speckled beauties" tc feed upon. This will be accomplished by rawint : small nets of gauze along the surface of the water. The water will flow through the gauze , which will catch all the animalculae that some in its way. The quantity of the latter secured in a given number of minutes or hours will be an accurate measure of the amount of fish food present Tfcjey will be bottled and preserved for subsequent examination by a spe cialist , who will determine the species represented. Useful Information. Fly Farragut "Lady , cud yer give a poor man work ? " Lady "I could. ' Fly Farragut "T'anks , lady. De nex' poor man I meet dat needs it I'll send * " ter yer. " ( Finishes his pie. ) Judge. What He Was. He "You are a veritable queen of the roses , Daisy , but I what am I ? " She "Give it up , dear boy , altogether , unless you are an evergreen. " Stand ard. , IM ' ' " ' ' " ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' * 1 * i i m i iik ; ' i | ii jmmwtn IJJl' IBBBBBHR HHHnHH HHH > HiMI H H DANNERS HOISTED FOR GOD , SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. Trom the Following Text ; "In the > atno of < ; od We Will Set Up the ltaniior of Truth and Righteousness and -Not of Avarice and Ttlchcs" realms 30:5. \H . JjU boyhood we may SWftj Cr 1 have read the biog- gSiij [ (2/&I ( raphy of Alexander ffijs v&J or of some revom * & * ? $ $ tionary hero until MwW ( f $ fe ST raK our young heart f- f r i' \ beat nish and we " ijorn ° ver a iiun" /jn I dred years ago , just for the glory o ! striking down a Hessian. For rusty the rafters and bullets swords hung up on lets cut out of log houses in which they were lodged during the great strife we had unbounded admiration , or on some public ( by , clothed in our grandfather's we felt as soldierly accoutrements , . We grave as Garibaldi or Miltiades. are wiser now , for we make a vast dis tinction between the poetry and the prose oi war. The roll of drums and the call of bugles , and the champing ol steeds foaming and pawing for the bat tle ; a hundred thousand muskets glit tering among the dancing plumes ; "God Save the King" waving up from clarionets and trumpets and rung back from deep defiles or the arches of a prostrate city : distant capitals of king doms illuminated at the tidings : gen erals returning home under flaming arches and showering amaranths and the shout of empires : that is poetry. Chilled and half-blanketed , lying on the wet earth : feet sore with the march and bleeding at the slightest touch : hunger pulling on every fiber of flesh or attempting to satisfy itself with a scanty and spoiled ration : thirst lick ing up the dew or drinking out of filthy and trampled pool : thoughts of home and kindred far away while just on the eve of a deadly strife , where death may leap on . .him from any one of a hundred bayonets : the closing in of two armies , now changed to a hundred thousand maniacs : the ground slippery with blood and shattered flesh : fallen ones writhing under the hoofs of un bridled chargers maddened with pain : the dreadfulness of night that comes down when the strife is over : the struggle of the wounded ones crawling out over the corpses : the long , fever ish agony of the crowded barrack and hospital , from whose mattresses the fragments of men send up their groans , the only music of carnage and butch ery : desolate homes from which fathers and husbands and brothers and sons went off : without giving any dying messaga or sending a kiss to the dear ones at home , tumbled into the soldiers' grave trench , and houses in which * a few weeks before unbroken family circles rejoiced , now plunged in the great sorrows of widowhood and orphanage : that is prose. But there is now on the earth a king dom which has set itself up for conflicts without number. In its march it tram ples no grain fields , it sacks no cities , it impoverishes no treasuries , it fills no hospitals , it bereaves no families. The courage and victory of Solferino and Magentc without carnage. The kingdom of Christ against the kingdom of Satan. That is the strife now raging. We will offer no armistices : we will make no treaty. Until all the revolted nations of the earth shall submit again to King Emanuel , "In the name of Gcd we will set up our banners. " Every army hes its ensigns. Long before the tine when David wrote the text they were in use. The hosts of Israel displayed them. The tribe of Benjamin carried a flag with the in scription of a wolf. The tribe of Dan a representation of cherubim. Judah a lion wrought into the groundwork of white , purple , crimson , and blue. Such flags from their folds shook fire into the hrts of such numbers as were in the field when Abijah fought against Jehoram , and there were twelve hun dred thousand soldiers , and more than five hundred thousand were left deaden on the field. These ensigns gave hero ism to such numbers as were assem bled when Asa fought against Zerah , and there were one million five hun dred and eighty thousand troops in the battle. The Athenians carried an in scription of the owl , which was their emblem of wisdom. The flags of mod ern nations are familiar to you all , and many of them so inappropriate for the character of the nations they represent it would be impolitic to enumerate the"m. These ensigns are streamers borne on the point of a lance and on the top of wooden shafts. They are car ried in the front and rear of armies. They unroll from the maln-top-gallant- mast-head ot an Admiral's flagship to distinguish it among other ships of the same squadron. They are the objects of national pride. The loss of them on the field is ignominious. The three banners of the Lord's hosts are the banner of proclamation , the banner of recruit , and the banner of victory. When a nation feels its rights infrin&ed or its honor insulted , when its citizens have in foreign climes been oppressed and no indemnity has been offered to the inhabitants of the repub lic or kingdom , a proclamation of war is uttered. On the top of batteries pnd arsenals and custom houses and rev enue offices flags are immediately swung out. All who look upon them realize the fact that uncompromising war is declared. Thus it is that the Church of Jesus Christ , jealous for the honor of its Sovereign , and determined to get back those who have been car ried off captive into the bondage of Satan , and intent upon the destruction j of those mighty wrongs which have so long crushed the earth , and bent upon the extension of the Saviour's reign of mercy , in the name of God sets up its banner of proclamation. i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmaamammmmmmmi The church makes no asaault upon the world. I do not believe that God ever made a better world than this. It Is magnificent in its ruins. Let us stop talking so much against the world. God pronoun-ed it very good at the be ginning. Though a wandering child of God , I see In it yet the Great Father's HneamentB. Though tosBed and driven by the storms of six thousand years ! she sails bravely yet , and as at he ; launching in the beginning the morn- i Ing stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy , so at last , when ccming into the calm harbor of God's mercy , she shall be greeted by the huzzaB of glorified kingdoms. It is not | the world against which we contend. | but its transgressions. Whatever Is ! obstinate in the will , degrading in passion , harmful in custom , false in friendship , hypocritical in profession against all this Christ makes onset. j From false profession he would tear the 1 mask. From oppression he would j snatch the rod. From pride he would rend off the plumes. From revenge he would eiorcise the deviL While Christ loved the world so much he died to save it , he hates sin so well that to eradicate the last trace of its pollution he will | utterly consume the continents and the oceans. At the gate of Eden the declar ation of perpetual enmity was made against the serpent. The tumult roun- about Mount Sinai was only the roar and flash of God's artillery of wrath against sin. Sodom on fire was only one of God's flamig bulletins announcing hostility. Nineveh and Tyre and Jeru salem in awful ruin mark the track of Jehovah's advancement. They show that God was terribly in earnest when he announced himself abhorrent of all iniquity. They make us believe that chough nations belligerent and revenge ful mav .ign articles of peace and come to an amicable adjustment , there shall be no cessation of hostilities between the forces of light and the forces of darkness until the kingdoms of this world have became the kingdoms of our Lord. Affrighted by no opposition , dis couraged by no temporary defeats , shrinking from no exposure every man to his position , while from the top of our schools and churches and semi naries and asylums. "In the name of God we will set up our banners. " Again , it was the custom in ancient times , for the purpose of gathering armies , to lift an ensign on the top of some high hill , so that all who saw it would feel impelled to rally around it. In more modern times the same plan has been employed for the gathering of an army. Thus it is that the Church of Christ lifts its flag for recruits. The Cross of Jesus is oar standard , planted on the hill of Calvary. Other armies demand that persons desiring to enter the lists of war shall be between such and such an age , lest the folly of ex treme youth or the infirmity of ad vanced age be a clog rather than an advantage. But none are too young for Christ's regiment : none can be too old. The hand that is strong enough to bound a bail or trundle a hoop is skilled enough to fight for Christ , while many a hand trembling with old age has grasped the arrow of truth , and with a dim eye close to it , taking aim , has sent Its sharp point right through the heart of the King's enemies. Many of you Lave long ago had your name3 written on the roll of celestial troops , and you like the service well , although you now bear the scars of multitudi nous conflicts and can recount many a long march , and tell of siege-guns opened on you that you thought never would be spiked. Eut there may be some who ha.v not yet enlisted. Your being here implies that you are seri ously thinking about it , and year at tention makes me hope you are only looking for the sta"l2Ti U U ; > Will you not , a Isurird 1 , , -hz all tin , u.wUSSo enthusiasm of ycur na ture , ccme bounding into the ranks , while "In th- > name of God we set up our banners ? " Through nat ral modesty do you hold back and say , "I will be of no advant age to Christ ; I am too awkward to learn the step of the host , or to be of any sen ice " ' n the shock of battle ? " To yon I make the reply , Try it. One hour under Ccrist's drill , ' and you would so well understand his rules that the first step of your march heaven ward would make the gates of hell tremble on their hinges. We may not be as polished and trim as many Chris tians we have known , and we may not as well understand sharp-shooting , but there is rough work which we can all accomplish. We may be axe-men. and hew a pathway through the forests. We may be spadesmenand dig the trenches or throw up the fortifications. We do not care where , we do not care what if we c.n only help in the cause of our King and shout as loudly as any of them at the completion of the con quest. There are non-profe = sors who have a very correct idea of what Christians ought to be. You have seen members of the church who were as proud as Ahab and lied as badly as Ananias , and who were as foul hypocrites as Judas. You alhor all that. You say followers of Christ ought to be honorable , hum ble , and self-denying , and charitable , and patient , and forgiving. Amen ! So they ought. Come into the kingdom of Christ , my hearer , and be just that glorious Christian that you have de scribed. Every church has enough stingy men in it to arrest its charities , and enough proud men in it to grieve away the Holy Ghost , and enough lazy men in it to hang on behind till its wheels , like Pharaoh's chariots , drag ' heavily , and enough worldly men to' ' exhaust the patience of the very elect and" enough snarly men to make ap propriate the Bible warning , "Beware of dogs. " If any of you men on the outside of the kingdom expect to make such Christians as that , we do not want you to come , for the church has already a million members too many of just that kind. We do not want our ranks crowded with serfs when we can have them * filled with zouaves. There are men now , as in Christ's . . , , . , _ _ refeyargrTiw. S rti = i r < jr- - .M L _ f If time , possessed of seven devils. In corns j If Instances It seema as though at convef- ! • ; m slan only six of those evil spirits wert | \ M cast out , while there remains still ona ! js in the heart , the devil of avarice , the 1 M dovll of lust , or the devil of pride. Men \ . m of the world , if you would be tram- f js formed and elevated by the power ol w the gospel , now Is tne time to come. ; S It is no mean ensign I lift this hour. It r M Is a tlrre-honored flag. It has been in. I , M terrific battle. Draggled In the dust oC ff a Saviour's humiliation from Bethlehem f | to Calvary. Rent by hell's onset , the * | dpears ot a maddened soldiery , and the * | [ hands of the men who Bald , "Let him H be crucified. " With tills ensign In his ; > bleeding hand the Saviour sealed the * ' heights of our sin. With this he mount ed the walls of perdition , and amid its very smoke , and flame , and blasphemy i he waved his triumph , while demons howled with defeat , and heaven Thronged his chariot wheels And bore him to his throne ; , t Then swept their golden harps and sung , The glorious work is done. ' We go not alone to the Held. We have invincible allies in the dumb ele- , ' meats of nature. As Job said , we are in league with the very stones ot the field. The sun by day and the moon by night , directly or indirectly , shall favor Christianity. The stars in their courses are marshaled for us , as they fought I against Sisera. The winds of heaven I are now as certainly acting in favor ot I Christ as in reformation times the invincible - vincible Armada , in its pride , approached - I preached the coast of England. As that pxcud navy directed their guns against the friends of Christ and re- Hgious liberty , God said unto his winds. "Seize hold of them , " and to the sea. H "Swallow them. " The Lord , with hl3 fl tempests , dashed their hulks together B and splintered them on the rocks until fl the flower of Spanish pride and valor v , J lay crushed among the waves of the H sea beach. AH are ours. Aye ! God M the Father , God the Son , and God tha M Holy Ghost are our allies. M The Mohammedans. In their struggla H to subjugate the world , had passages H from the Koran inscribed on the blades H of their scimiters , and we have nothing H to fear if , approaching the infidelity J H and malice that oppose the kingdom of. ' H Christ , we shall have glittering on our * H swords the words of David to the giant. B "I come to thee in the name of the Lord j j B of Hosts , the God of the armies of Is- I B rael. whom thou has defied. " ( H Now the Church goes forth bearing | precious seed , but after awhile it will J be the sheaf-binding , and reaper angels H shall shout the harvest home. Now it H is tents and marching and exposure. B but then in the ranks of prostrate iniquity - H iquity and on the very walls qf heaven. B "In the name of God we will set up our B banners. j H You know in ancient times elephants | were trained to fight , and that on ona | occasion , instead of attacking the enemy - | my , they turned upon their owners and H thousands were crushed under the- H stroke of their trunks and the mountain H weight of their step. These mighty opportunities - H portunities of work for Christ may ac- H complish' great things in overthrowing H the sin of the world and beating to H pieces its errors , but if we do not wield H them aright these very advantages will. H in unguarded moments , turn terribly B upon us and under their heels of ven- j H geance grind us to powder. Rejected / B blessings are seven-fold curses. We J cannot compromise this matter. We J cannot stand aside and look on. Christ j B has declared it. "All who are not with B me are against me. " Lord J ys. wa J surr' * * * ' ' > ' • * " " - 1 bbbbbbbbbB BmBBBBBBBBBml J. tie piupuecies intimate that there H shall before the destruction of the j B world be enc great battle between truth H and unrighteousness. We shall not H probably see it on earth. God grant | that we may see it , bending from the 1 battlements of heaven. On the side H of sin slu' 11 be arrayed all forms of oppression - B pression and cruelty , led on by in- bbbbbbbbbbbbbI famous kings and generals. The votaries - H ries of Pagan'sm. led on by their | priests. The subjects of Mohammed- | ism. following the command of their B sbieks. And gluttony and intemper- Hj H ance and iniquity of every phase shall H be largely represented on the field. All bbbbbbbbbbbbbb ! the wealth and splendor and power and H b glory ot wickedness shall be concen- bbbbbbbbbbbbbbI tered on that one decisive spot , and | H maddened by ten thousand previous bbbbbbbbbbbbbbI defeats , shall gather themselves up for | B | one last , terr.ble assault. With hatred bbbbbbbbbbbbbI to God for their cause and blasphemy bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI for the battle-cry , they spread out over bbbbbbbbbbbbB the earth in square beyond square , and H legion beyond legion , while in some j B overhanging cloud of blackness foul | spirits of hell watch this last struggle K of sin and darkness for dominion. | Scattered by the blasts of Jenovah's Ibbbbbbbbbbb ! nostrils , plunder , and sin , and Satanic bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI force shall quit the field. As the roar I H of the conflict sounds through the uniflfl verse all worlds shall listen. The air ! bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb shall be full of wings cf heavenly co- ! horts. The work is done , and in ths bbbbbbbbbbbbB presence of a world reclaimed for the BBB crown of Jesus , and amid the crumbling H of tyrannies and the defeat of Satanic bb bbbI force , and amid the sound of heavenly m HbbbbbI acclamations , the church shall rise up bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb in the image of our Lord , and with P | the crown of victory on her head and 1 tup scepter of dominion in her hand. I IbbbbbbbbI in the name of God shall set up her ! bbbbb banners. Then Himalaya , shall become bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ! Mount Zion. and the Pyrenees Moriah. bbbbbbB and the oceans the walking place of sbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbB him who trod the wave crests of Gali- bbbbbbbbbbbBbbbB lee. and the great heavens become a H sounding-board which shall strike back | the sound cf exultation to the earth till 1 it rebound again to the throne cf the Bb ! bbbbbbbbbbb Almighty. Angel of the Apocalypse. bbbbbbbbbBbbbbbbB fly ! fl } ! for who will stand in the way bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ! of thy migh * . or resist the sweep of thy B | H tB It is reported that , beginning next j H f October , Explorer Nansen will deliver B | in this country a series of fifty IUus H f BmBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBml _ _ _ . BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBai * _ I HmbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI