Daughter : * ft * ftft A Story of Patriarchal Times. * Wr ' ' . By JULIA MAGRUDER. . . / * < # COPTniGOTED 1600 , 189J AND 1830 BT KOBEttT BONNEtt'S I ( CHAPTER XI ( Continued. ) r And when Namarah and her maidens - | ens reached the house of Jephthah , be- hold.-it was hung with mourning , and though the 'doors were wide , there was neither friend nor servant to be seen. So Namarali entered silently , and took her way toward the apartment of her father Jephthah ; and as she came unto his door , she turned and spake unto Hie maidens , bidding them stay with out in the hall while she went in alone. And as she thrust open the door and came into the presence of her father ll Jephthah , behold he to was dressed in If mourning garments , and he leaned upon the breast of the young man Adina , who was also clad in sackcloth ; and the faces of both men were white as be the faces of the dead ; and Adina had grown gaunt and hollow-cheeked and lost his ruddy color , while her father Jephthah was as one grown I old before his time. And Namarali spake no word , but \ t shutting close the door behind her , she went and put her arms about the neck [ i * of her father , but her eyes she gave unto her lover. Her hood had fallen backward , and her white face rose from out its sol emn mourning draperies as a fair llower springing out of earth ; and her eyes , made large and luminous through fastings and vigils , seemed as the very windows of her spirit ; and in their depth Adina read a love unspeakable , runquenchable and not to be surpassed. He understood her tender thought in clasping first her father before her touch sought his , for it was'by reason of her father that this blow was come upon them , and she felt he had great need of comfort and the assurance of her deep , unchanged affection ; but in that long , deep look into her lover's eyes , she gave him her whole self. For a moment they rested in that look , quiet and calm as the deeps of ocean , and then the maiden spake : "I pray thee leave me now , Adina , " she saith , softly , as the voice of Jeph thah her father brake into great sobs while she smoothed his snow-white hair , and stilled him as a mother might her babe. "I would be with him alone , that my courage fail not ; for he hath more need of comfort than either thou. or I. Return to me an hour after moonrise - . , rise in the garden/ ' < 2r * Anci ! A'dTna bowed his" heaH and \verit. " with never so much as _ a _ touch of her " " " " * * to feedTtfiemighty""fimiger" J ° .yj . .h ° .wl-it that _ _ lopk in hereyes . xviiicbj'rested on him. still , Aeven as he ; # efti er presence.was ; ' , 'asC.a'- draught . , % iivine wherewith the thirst of his soul might be quenched. . CHAPTER XII. V/Even before the coming of the time Appointed , just as the moon was com- "Hng up behind the distant horizon , ! ! Adina made his silent , way into jhe ; garden of Jephthah's house , and'stood ' nd waited. The hour of moonrise was 'Just what it had been two months- - - "re , on the night of their parting here , in his ears were the same sounds babbling brook and of the dgves house near by. 'Up"an"d d'own" ' ' jjt'u'ej young man paced , Jus thumbs , .j. . thrust into the belt wherewith his Awhile tunic was held in place , anH his % $ iole body tense and strained with the mightiness of his hardlymastered ex- ' , . of Jephthah ; and on'this he kept ; , until presently it became in a , _ _ . , . softly shaded , as if to scfreen % $ & eyes , of one who slept. Namarah , indeed , had soothed her "father * into a gentle slumber , and when itVas known unto her that he slept she stepped forth into the garden. v She had even refreshed her from her journey and clothed herself in snow- white garments , perfumed with myrrh and frankincense , in which she moved softly down the garden walks to meet him whom her soul did love. The grasses of summer bent beneath the : soft pressure of her feet , and the vines divided themselves-at the light touches of her hands. The trees above her were as the wall of her temple of love , and the ino'oh pierced through to light it. Adina stood and waited in the spot made sacred to them by the early dawnings , as well as by the fruition of their love ; and as the maiden , fair and white as if made of the rays of the moonlight , moved softly toward him , he stretched out his. two arms. She came to them with full gladness and assurance , as one of her white doves , after long wandering , cometh home. And Adina spake no word ; only he drew lier to him , as though he would never lose her again. As she rested ) so , feeling against her heart the full throb of his , -while that his close clasp tightened and his breath came quick , it \s seemed to her a moment of such rap ture that the thought of her heart came c : ; forth in words , as she said , on the p breatlrof a low-drawn sigh : n "I would that I could die even now ! " And Adina answered : "And I with thee , that our souls together might return to God who gave them. " c : "It is most sure , " said Namarah. ° earnestly. "It may not be such as we would choose or look for ; but He hath heard that prayer of mine and thine each time'our hearts have breathed it , and the answer doth somewhere await us. " She spake these words in solemn whisperings , more tender than the coo ing of doves , more murmurous than the rippling of the brook. No eye saw the parting , when at last Adina wrenched his heart away from hers. They two were alone in the si lence with God. Even the dove came not near them tonight , but remained apart and alone , as if it had knowledge of all and forbore to come between the beating of their hearts and the com munion of their souls. At th& rising of the sun next morn ing , the altar was made ready in the heart of a deep wood , and by it stood a priest resplendent in the robes of his office. The wood was in readiness , and the fire prepared , nor was the offering for the sacrifice wanting. She stood , a pure virgin , clad in stainless white , and on her left , the young man Adina. And the face of the maiden Namarah was calm and peaceful , and her eyes trust ful and quiet as be the eyes of children when they know their parents are close by. And her face , for all its paleness , was more beauteous to look upon than ever it had been before , for the light that shone upon it was not wholly that cast by the rising sun , but , as it were , a light from within her soul. And Adina's face was radiant , too , so that it seemed as if one light illumined them from within , even as the same sun from without. And Namarah's voice , as she spake , was tranquil and assured. "Make ready thy fire , 0 priest of God , " Naraarah said , "for all is ready. " And she turned and kissed her father Jephthah full tenderly. Then , speak ing once more unto the priest , she said : "I pray thee , while that the fire is kindling 1 , suffer us to kneel and say one , prayer I and the young man Adina. " And they knelt together , both in vir gin white , their hands clasped close and their faces raised to heaven , and the prayer of their hearts , even as the fire blazed and crackled , and the knife gleajned sharp and threatening near by , was "that" the God in whom tliey , trusted would'deliver them in His own , time and -wayr - fj "And jhey--knelt : so , long in'-silence . that the priest , who wished not to in , terrupttheirprayers , was .fain .at .last , to speak to them , lest the sacred fires should , burn top low : , But there came no , answer tq _ his words , and yhen he turheSranaiooked 'into their 'faces , that wondrous light was gone from them ; for their spirits had fled together , and the glare of sunshine upon them re vealed that they were even the faces of the dead. And it was even so that God deliv ered them. This was His time and place , and He had chosen His own way. And that the vow which Jephthah had vowed might be accomplished , the body of the maiden Namarah was laid upon the altar and with it the body of the young man Adina , a burnt offering unto the Lord. And as the flres upon the altar be gan to sink , an object that seemed to fall straight from out the sky dropped down and fell into the flames ; and lo ! it was the body of a snow-white dove , which had been even dead before it touched the fire upon the altar. ( The End. ) MASCULINE CHARACTERISTICS. to Shot ? Themselves at an Early Age. The masculine characteristics , as well as the feminine , begin to show themselves at an early age. There are a small boy and girl in the city who , in conversation the other day , showed this very notably , says the New York Times. They are particularly bright children , a little son and daughter of clever parents , who talk to the child ren very much as they would to older people. So when in talking together the other day something was men tioned which they did not understand , the children immediately began to discuss the pros and cons. The little girl is seven and the boy a couple of years younger. The former has a habit while she is dressing of talking to herself. "Arm , go in , " she will say , as she puts on one garment , and "Foot go in , " as she puts on another. The small boy had noticed this , and spoke to her about it. "Why do you say , 'Foot , go in , ' and 'Arm , go in' ? " he inquired. Why don't you say , 'Me go in' ? " "Why , it isn't 'me' that goes in , " replied the small girl , "it is just my arm or my foot. What is 'me , ' anyway ? " The small boy thought earnestly for a moment. "Why , 'me , ' is your head and stomach , " he finally answered. "No , " said the small girl , "I think 'me' is your head and heart. " Which proves posith'ely that even in early years the ego of the man is his stomach and that of the woman her heart. His tetter to the Judjic. "Will you please , sun , lemme know , " wrote a colored prisoner to the judge , "des w'en my case'll come up fer con- wiction ? I been in jail , suh , 'bout eight months ez de crow fly , en I hez a sorter restless feelin' er wantln' ter know des w'en my conwiction'll come off. * ! writes disrsuh , kaze I jfeels it inffiy - j'ints dat * de spring season is comin' on.jm hj ome"ter mgdat you might go ffishinr en ferglt de timQ fer my'conw.iction. .Do , ef'-ypu please , suh , * e'eiPmein min7"en do ' 'by mf ez you spects ter. , be did by."r Atlanta Con stitution. . " Polite CWnamen5 consider itja'breach of etiquette" wear specfocles in com- panyT * . * - * . , . i i. , . . . . . . . , A tl % - * - \ 4 _ _ \ * _ x < ws , -s t-J' * 9 . 4 * u * < w * * J li > liili i i .iJii : 7 { > xjx : x > * x. * i < - . K i f m > ' V H v / 7 V TV ' B * * ON THE -vi i 'i'ir-i - ] eg WM I IILV ULrV i s c j if / " / - ' -7-r ZX- * = * " i ' " " " * * * ' _ . . - A r if A f * "W * 't j v * * A couth African xtx In the kitchen of a Boer farm at * Sarrismith two brothers , Paul ; and .iendrick Hoopstad , sat in earnest con versation. "Will you come , Hendfick ? " - . . . "I cannot leave , Paul ; there is-'Eng- . ish iff our veins , and , besides ; to join .he commando - against the JBritish vculd be taking nip arms against the voman I love. " / iA ' "The woman we love , Hendrick , for 5od knows tfiat T think of her every ninute of my life. You and I have ) een all in all to each other ever since ve were born ; but this mutual love for > Jancy Martin seems likely to divide is. Even supposing we put our chances o the test , if I win her you will hate ne , and if you were successful my noughts would turn to you in anger , et us then take our rifles , join the ornmando , and for the time forget her , ind perhaps when the war is over one ) f us may gain by death what the ither could not give in life. " "I will not fight against the Eng- ish , Paul. " "Think well , Hendrick. Nancy Marin - in has been in England for the last our years is it not possible that she nay have an English lover ? " "We are being enticed and threaten- id into a foolhardy war by those who lave their own ends to serve. I will ake my rifle and fight , but it will be vith the English. " "Then , Hendrick , we must part , hough we part in all affection. God less you , my brother , and the woman ve love. " "Farewell , Paul , and God grant that ve may not meet on the battlefield. " Paul turned his horse toward New- astle , while Hendrick rode in the op- osite direction , with the intention of naking his way to John Martin's farm , diich lay on the banks of the Caladon iver , between Basutol and Natal. Hendrick Hoopstad's love for Nan- y , the only daughter of John Martin , if the Caladon farm , was the one bought that engrossed his mind. He oved her , and was willing to lay down its life for her without thought of re- ward : . It § night f > e as John had sug gested , that Nancy hadan English lover ; well , ' time1 would show , and whateverJ-happened he" would always strive to be worffoy. of her , and be will- o serve , hePm any way in his pq.wer. - . In about threes-hours "Tie had sighted Johin Martin's farm. JDbwn the hill Hemlrick'7ret ; th'ereins' drop on his horse.'s neck and/Tiroceefled at a walk ing pace.It wasva calm , still even ing , and the horse's hoofs made no sound on the soft sand. Reaching the orchard the sound of voices fell upon his ear , and almost mechanically he stopped his horse and listened. It was the voice of Nancy he heard. And standing in his stir rups he looked over the brush growth. Yes. Paul was right ; she was stand ing beneath the shade of a spreading tree , a tall man , dressed in the British kharki uniform , held her in his arms , her head upon his shoulder and her lips upturned to his. "The time was so long , Dick , I thought you would never come. " "Did you , darling ? Well , I have come at last , though I could wish a more peaceful time for visiting my beautiful sweetheart. But when this war is over I will make you my wife. " "My love for you , Dick , can never ! change. . Since I left you it has lived on the memory of those sweet hours of delirious happiness when we used to sit together in the sunshine and plan the joyful future when we two shall be always together. " The man on the horse heard the words that pierced his heart like the stab of a dagger. For some moments he sat like a statue , his face grim and set , and his eyes staring into blank- ness. The steed moved forward of its own accord and wandered on for up wards of an hour , while its rider sat cl wrestling with himself. Then , with a cltl clp sigh and a sob that almost choked him tl tlo he gathered up the reins and once of more turned towards John Martin's II farm. IIG IIg ( To be continued. ) G S TALMAGE'S SERMON. THE RESURRECTION. THE SUB JECT LAST SUNDAY. The Blooming of Flowers Fittingly Cel ebrates tlio Uurntliig of Chrln's Tomb Easter tl > o Snuon of Ho- Jolclng- . [ Copyright. 1900 , by Louis Klopsch. ] Text : John xlx. 41 , "In the garden a new sepulcher. " Looking around the churches this morniug.seeing flowers in wreaths and flowers in stars and flowers in crosses and flowers In crowns , billows of beauty , conflagration of beauty , you feel as if you stood in a small heaven. You say these flowers will fade. Yes , but perhaps you may see them again. They may be immortal. The fra grance of the flower may be the spirit of the flower ; the body of the flower dying on earth , its spirit may appear in better worlds. I do not say it will be so. I say it may be so. The an cestors of those tuberoses and camel lias and japonicas and jasmines and heliotropes wera born in paradise. These apostles of beauty came down in the regular line of apostolic suc cession. Their ancestors during the flood , underground , afterward ap peared. The world started with Eden ; it will end with Eden. Heaven is called a paradise of God. Paradise means flow ers. While theological geniuses in this day are trying to blot out everything material from their idea of heaven , and , so far as I can tell , their future state is to be a-floating around some where between the Great Bear and Cassiopeia , I should not be surprised if at last I can pick up a daisy on the everlasting hills and hear it say : "I am one of the glorified flowers of earth. Don't you remember me ? I worshiped with you on Easter morn ing in 1900 ? " My text introduces us into a garden. It is a manor in the suburbs of Jeru salem owned by a wealthy gentleman by the name of Joseph. He belonged to the court of seventy , who had con demned Christ , but he had voted in the negative , or , being a timid man , had absented himself when the vote was to be taken. At great expense he laid out the garden. It being a hot cli mate , I suppose there were trees broad branched , and there were paths winding under these trees , and here and there were waters dripping down over the rocks into the ponds.and there were vines and flowers blooming from the wall , and all around the beauties of kiosk and aboricultufe. After the fatigues of the Jerusalem -courtroom , how refreshing to come into this su burban retreat , , botanical arid"promo- = logical ! - . . . . - Most Celebrated of Tombs. Wandering in the garden , I behold Eome rocks which have on them the mark 'of the sculptor's chisel. I come nearer , and I find there" Is a subterranean - nean recess. I come down the marble steps , and I come to a portico , over which there is an architrave , by the chisel cut into representatives of fruits and flowers. I enter the porE tico. On either side there are rooms -two or four or six rooms of roclc , the walls of these rooms having niches , every niche large enough to .hold a dead body. Here is one room that is especially wealthy of sculp ture. ture.The The fact is that Joseph realizes he cannot always walk this garden , and he has provided this place for his last slumber. Oh. what a beautiful spot in which to wait for the coming of the resurrection ! Mark well this tomb , for it is to be the most celebrated tomb in all the ages. Catacombs of Egypt , tomb of Napoleon , Mahal Taj of India , nothing compared-with it. Christ has just-been murdered-"and" his Tio'dy"will be thrown to the dogs and the ravens , like other crucified bodies , unless there be prompt and .efficient hindrance. Joseph , the owner of this mausoleum in the rocks , begs for the body of Christ. He washes the poor , mutilated frame from the dust and blood.shrouds it and perfumes it. I think that regular embalmment was omitted. When in olden time a body was to be embalmed , the priest , with some pretension of medical skill , would point out the place between the ribs where the incision must be made ; and then the operator , having made the incision , ran lest he be slain for a violation of the dead. Then the other priests would come with salt of niter n and cassia and wine of palm tree and complete the embalmment. But I think this embalmment of the body of Christ was omitted. It would have raised another contention and another riot. riot.The The funeral hastens on. Present , I . think , Joseph , the owner of the mauso- u eum ; Nicodemus , the wealthy man who had brought the spices , and the two Marys. No organ dirge , no plumes , no catafalque. Heavy bur den for two men as they carry Christ's : body down the marble stairs and into the portico and lift the dead weight to ; the level of the niche in the rock an'l push the body of Christ into the only pleasant resting place it ever had. Coming forth from the portico , they close the door of rock against the re cess. F cess.The The government , afraid that the dis SE ciples may steal the body of Christ and tc ; tcal play resurrection , order the seal of alvi the sanhedrin to be put upon the door vi the tomb , the violation of that seal , tl ; like the violation of the seal of the is itT government of the United States or T Breat Britain , to be followed with Bt great punishment. A company of sol- et dicrs from the tower of Antonia la detailed to stand guard. Shuttered Heyoml Kepalr. At the door of the mausoleum a fight takes places which decides the question for all graveyards and ceme teries. Sword of lightning against sword of steel. Angel against mili tary. No seal of letter was ever more easily broken than that seal of the sanhedrin on the door of the tomb. The dead body in the niche in the rock begins to move in its shroud of fine linen , slides down upon the pave ment , moves out of the portico , ap pears in the doorway , advances into the open air , comes up the marble steps. Having left his mortuary at tire behind him , he comes forth In workman's garb , as I take It , from the fact that the women mistook him for the gardener. That day the grave received such shattering it can never be rebuilt. All the trowels of earthly masonry can never mend it. Forever and forever it is a broken tomb. Death , taking side with the military in that fight , received a terrible cut from the an gel's spear of flame , so that he him self shall go down after awhile under it. The king of terrors retiring be fore the king of grace ! The Lord is risen ! Let earth and heaven keep Easter today ! Hosanna ! Some things strike my observation while standing in this garden with a new sepulcher. And , first , post mor tem honors in contract with ante-mor- tem ignominies. If they could have afforded Christ such a costly sepul cher , why could not they have given him an earthly residence ? Will they give this piece of marble to a dead Christ instead of a soft pillow for the living Jesus ? If they had expended half the value of that tomb to make Christ comfortable , it would not have been so sad a story. He asked bread ; they gave him a stone. Christ , like most of the world's benefactors , was appreciated better after he was dead. Westminster abbey - bey and monumental Greenwood are the world's attempt to atone by honors - ors to the dead \for wrongs to the liv- ing. Poets' corner in Westminster abbey attempts to pay for the sufferings - ings of Grub street. Go through that poets' corner in Westminster abbey. There is Hant del , the great musician , from whose music you hear today ; but while I look at his statue I cannot help but think of the discords with which his fellow-musicians tried to destroy him. There is the tomb of John Dryden , a beautiful monument ; but I can not help but think at 70 years of age he ] wrote of his being oppressed in fortune - tune and of the contract that he had just made for a thousand verses at six pence a.line. . . And there , too , you find the- monument of Samuel Butler , the author of Hudibras ; " but while I j. look i athis monument in poets' corner I cannot but ask myself where he died. In a garret" There I see the costly tablet in the poets' corner the costly tablet to one of whom the celebrated Waller \ wrote : "The old blind schoolmaster c master , John Milton , has just issued ° a tedious poem on the fall of man. If the length of it be no virtue , it has 7 none. " There is a beautiful monument ment to Sheridan. Poor Sheridan ! If * he could have only discounted that monument for a mutton chop ! aP Make the Uvlnsr Happy. Oh , you unfilial children , do not give your parents so much tombstone , but 3" few more blankets less funeral and more bedroom ! If 5 per cent of the money jyenojY.sueudou Burns' banquets - - n quets could have been expended in making the living Scotch poet comfort able , he wouldinot have been harried with the drudgery of an exciseman. Horace Greeley , outrageously abused while living , when dead is followed , , toward Greenwood by the president the United States and the leading med fl of the army and navy. Massachusetts tries toatone ! at the grave of Charles Sumner for the ignominious resolu tions with which her legislature de nounced the living senator. Do you gi think that the tomb at Springfield can tldi : pay for Booth's bullet ? di Oh , do justice to the living ! All the tcai : justice you do them you must do this aiol side the gates of the Necropolis. They olw cannot wake up to count the number w of carriages at the obsequies or to no- re Lice the polish of the Aberdeen granite reh or to read epitaphal commemoration. h Gentleman's mausoleum In the suburbs gld of Jerusalem cannot pay for Bethle d hem's manger and Calcarean cross and - Pilate's ruffian judiciary. Post mor m tem honors cannot atone for ante- tnortem ignominies. tt Again , standing in this garden of the ca : sepulcher , I am impressed with the it fact that floral and arborescent decor- tl itions are appropriate for the place of tlhi Lhe dead. We are glad that among hi lowers and sculptural adornments , Christ spent the short time of his in- I cannot understand what I some ; times see in the newspapers where the jbsequiss are announced and the iriends say in connection with it"Sonj io flowers. " Rather , if the means al ow I say if the means allow strew he casket with flowers , the hearse if flowers , the grave with flowers. ip Put them on the brow it will suggest . coronation ; in their hand it will > iiean victory. Christ was buried In a garden , flowers mean resurrection. Death is iad enough anyhow. Let conserva- G. ory and arboretum contribute to Its seta illeviation. The harebell will ring ths som ictory ; the passion flower will express ta he sympathy ; the daffodil will kindle fix lamp and illumine the darkness , gr ; rhe cluster of asters will be the con in stellation. Your little child loved flow- inK : rs when she waa living. Put them in nor .an , no. that - , „ ol X * * still heart. and put It over the Plant riowors. glory than has no grander Brooklyn than "a Mount , ts Greenwood Auburn , , nor nor Philadelphia Boston than r- than Its its Laurel Hill , nor Cincinnat Francisco than Spring Grove , nor San shall we what its Lone Mountain. But with graveyards say to those country slab the and the vines broken .down caved in and aslant and the mound for the .ground the grass a pasture . sexton's cattle ? Indeed , were your worth father and mother of so little take care of that you cannot afford to their ashes ? Some day turn out all slab and the hands and straighten and cut away the bank up the mound and uow- the shrubs weeds , and plant ers. Some day you will want to lie down to your last slumber. You can not expect bones if yon pect any respect for your have no deference for the bones of your ancestry. Do you think these relics ? You will importance ics are of no see of how much importance they are in the day when the archangel takes out his trumpet. Turn all your ceme teries into gardens. Again , standing in this garden of the new sepulcher , I am impressed with the dignity of private and unpretend ing obsequies. / - Joseph was mourner , sexton , livery man had entire charge of everything. Only four people at the burial of th King of the Universe ! Oh , let this bo consolatory < to those" who through lack , of < means or through lack of large ac quaintance have but little demonstra tion ] of grief at the graves of their loved ] ones. Long line of glittering equipage < , two rows of silver handles , casket of richest wood , pallbearers gloved j and scarfed , are not necessary. If ] there be six at the grave , Christ looks ] down from heaven and remem bers j that is two more than were at his obsequies. Not recognizing this idea , how many small properties are scattered and wid owhood and orphanage go forth into cold charity ! The departed left a small property , which would have been enough to keep the family together un til they could take care of themselves , but the funeral expenses absorbed ev erything. That went for crape which ought to have gone for bread. A man of moderate means can hardly afford to die in any of our great cities. By all means , do honor to departed , but do not consider funeral pageant as neces sary. No one was ever more loving ly and tenderly put away to sepulchar than Christ our Lord , but there were only four people in the procession. Wako Up to Gladness. Again , standing In this garden with a new sepulcEeFTi amTmpressed with . the fact that you cannot keep the dead , down. r Seal of sanhedrin , company of sol diers from the tower of Antonia , floor of rock , roof of rock , walls of rock , door of ro _ ck , cannoETceiep Christ in the cryp'ts. Come but and come up he must. Come out and come up he did. Prefiguration. ! First fruits of them that slept. Just as certainly as we come . down into the dust , just so cer tainly we will come up again. Though all the granite of the mountains were piled on us we will rise. Though buried amid the corals of the deepest cayernsottheAtlanticocean. _ we will come to the surface. With these eyes we may not look into the.Jaceof the.noonday sun , but welshall-have strbnger vision , because the tamest thing in the land to which we gojTvill be , brighter than the sun. We shall have bodies with the speed afthe 'lightning. . Our bodies : improv- 2dr energizedrswiftened ; "clarified . the -grave taken off its hinges and flung flat into-the dust. Oh , my brethren , death and the sraye are not so _ much as they used io be ; Jpr. while-wandering In this garden with the new sepulcher I find hat the vines'and flowers of the'gar- len have completely covered up the omb. Instead of one garden there ire four gardens , opening into each Jther garden of Eden , garden of the vorld's sepulcher.garden of the earth's > egeneration , garden of heaven. Four * ' jardens. Bloom , 0 earth ! Bloom , O leaven < ! Oh , my friends , wake up to jladness on this Easter morning ! This lay , if I interpret it right , means joy -it means peace with heaven , and it neans peace with all the world. Oh , bring more flowers ! Wreathe .hem around the brazen throat of the annon ; plant them In the desert that may blossom like the rose ; braid hem into the mane of the returned var charger. No more red dahlias of uiman blood. Give us white lilies of jeace. All around the earth strew faster flowers. And soon the rough oyage of the church militant will be nded , and she will sail up the heay- inly harbor , scarred with many a louflict , but the flag of triumph float- ng from her topgallants. All heaven vill come out to greet her into port , ind with a long reverberating shout welcome will say : "There she cornea the bay , the glorious old ship Zion. i.fter tempestuous voyage she drops f nchor within the veil. " > 'e\v Story of Kitchener. A new story of Kitchener is said by W. E. Russell to be "probably not very far astray. " Cecil Rhodes nade more or less trouble for the mlli- ary authorities in Kemberley and Inally Col. Kekewich one day hello raphed Lord Kitchener that Rhodes" Qterference was getting unbearable kitchener's prompt answer waaYOU" Lad better put him in chains ! "