enoffugh to maike more read his e ede . rgo around witl ul otmn M ESUNDAY 80R 00L• but ardy lng eoug tolet er epyOr, Why muet I wear these plain clothes toat. To brilng ematte et br elia old while others have to push hard to gret te I. T brng attrste aCliIRE111911114tþeir wardrobes closed, so crowded are not a»lt im et ail. ' they with brilliant attire? Or. Why INTERESTING AND INSTRUCTIVE a a o speak.oknowndBay§e. yosjuge haouild 1have to) work so hard while oth- LESSON. .bum e itwreiltoAndtelyhati wud . • ers have 36W holidays every year, They ratherf b eriteouthan wiuth any1 other are all practically one question. 1 an- woan r in wthenorl, youwoa ud bel swetr them iby saying It is 1because the Reiectione Of au Elevating Character w a ' tewd, owulbeii Lord hia.shi. favorites, and hie Put- extra -Wholesome Food fer Theught- He stoops over hier. and taking hier band, down atteepi, or a Berkshire plg than Of a discipline upon you and extra trial b- Studing the scriptural v.e-- aI- prsss f onl, in(-iu]Y Anse manl? They never foad any trouble, or the canise heihs for you extra glory, extra presses i fondlyiingeringy. newertrouble was neveir sanctified. Who are enthronement ndi extra felicities. tlietyadPotby e., asJyei o tn.I a those men who listen with moist eye as That is no0 gues9 Of minle, but a divine netorurrd u br hâ bi wrdsar ayou tell thema of suffering, and who have gays to:"W m the Lord loveth be chaz- Lssnfor nceýmber Il. nusot eutiert an.a ar as, ho a pathos in their voice, and a kindlness in teineth.Wl." says some one, "1 would Gomlen Text.-"T'Ihe word of our God li lT"lir pesetelir erai.A soft their manniler, and an excuse or anu alle- rathe-r have a little less in heaven and a %hall stand fo'rever."--Ia. 40:8S. hlov lues reeltler ertin. viation for those gonle astray? They are bltle more he-re. Discouint muy heavenlly This lessn,, f ound in Jer. 36: 20-32, la bnrat h bs h destats h yothe men who have graduanted att the IRoyal ¡robe 1iw ir Cent and let ime nOW Put it On entitled "Try ing to, Destroy God's Word.» ntaleet hout to bie happy, fil].slher Academy of Trouble, and they have the' a fur-linedovreat put nie in a less gor- A vast amiounit or interesting and impor- ait aenven s. ogidr t. Do popde al- diploma written in wrinkles on their own l geous room o (f the homse of many man- tant hiistory intervenes between last wih urou oneme t u.countenances. Miy! my! Whatt heart- 1 sions and let meé- have a house here in a week's lesson and this, After the finding eways feel go strange, mo surpris-le uno aches they hadi!MWhat tears they have tætter ne-ighb)orhio<l." No,. no; God is not of the law-book in the temple, Joiah in- sure, when love come.' Bau îkwept! What injustice thley have suffer- going to) rob) heaven, which ts to bieyouir stituted sweeping reformis, re-established "Yiin eryoudd dou preu, says*d no- . d! The mightiest influience for purifica- residence for nine hutndred qluadrillion of the full worship of Jehovah, and eeed givnghe had lst resue, n t&al tion and salvation is trouble. No diamond years, to fix op your earthly abode, which likely to bie the nation's saviour. But tis inestling back amonhohise u ht and con- fit for a crown Ountil it in cut. No wheat youi will occupoy at most for lesms than a brief resopite, which Prof. Kent cals Ja- Lthe air of a Man w asnd uhisrad .n* fit for bread tIil tgi ground. There are century, and where Youn Iay perhaps stay dah's "Indian summner " was soon past, , quered andhas recelved b l ewasa ~' only three things that can break off a oniy tenl years longer, or only one year, or and the beginning of the end was at hand. "l-Wel, don t let un t row au n uAs ave N this discourue Dr. Talmage takes choain--a hammer, a file or a fire-and perhaps a month more. Now, you hadt bet- lustearl of the Assyriansý. Who had so long umemory Jntotil happy bod d Ay, i rce. au optimistic view of many things trouble Inaial three of them. The greastest ter cheerfully Jet God have his way, for, been the terror of the East, the cofuig .aid," taking up ber fatand " 1I thi thaE t are usually acc-ounted as inex pli- writers, orators and reformera get much you seelhe has been taking cPare of folk% world-p-ower was Babylon. In 6008. . O -r fully, waevig t t and fro, atetoie ai cable in human experiene and shows us of their force from trouble. What gave for niear I,000 years and knows how to do Nechg. the l'haranoh of Egypt, marehed r letrmilfthe arg ht itonesweeld be" that @vent trouble and afHiction may not %Washington Irving that exquisite tendrer- it and can see what is best for you better through Pal-stine on his way to conqur latHenthe hlnaenwhroehe yst the bie wholly without thecir brighter nid(, ness and pat"o which will makte his than you cain yourself. the rapidly weke ingino of Au- ,os He i milein thye-t e gyest, text, Psalm xlix., 4, -"I wili open my dark books favorites white the English lan- God gwill nieeIt aillright with you, and syria. Josiah tried to stop ime.met his j- most cend mil in tenJor .t himself saying upon the harp." gouage continues to be written and spoken? there la one song that you will sing every army in ý,attle (on the plain of Megiddo -mBenucerk. needmao is eying t The world is full of the inexplicable. the An early heartbreak fthat he never once hour )your irst tenl years in heaven, and ami wanqshslin. 0 mesely. Tolyo a m n a etemeam ien 'Impssable the unfathomlable, the lneur- mentioned, and when, thirty years after the refrain of that song will bie. "I am no TeCeaeiso eelah oI to be-ietouplyuanture as Jye@ stknne, mountable We cannot go three stePs in the death of MatildaIHoffman, who was glad God did not let me have it my own Thceoe e rate uyo n eesso. te ,- as hoeneit, s urhat the gir t isgati- any direction without comting 1up)agaRinst to have beene his bride, her fathler picked way!" Your case will be aill ixed up in Jremnah hi m ea etacheshould de - oel keendelig t. uKY i8aistled ho a hard wall or mystery, riddlem, paradoxes, uip a piece of embroidery and salod, "That heaven, and there will be suchi a rerersal ail that i ossible t 1 bring out the char- kà tned asnealy.nervouy thessat kin eprofunditie, labyrinths, problemns that we Is a piece of poor Mtlasworktnan- of condtions that we cani hardly findtPaeaach ter f thisg test of Het ew heta. - a ea seaiyastoghiewo nscannot sobre, hieroglyph'ics that we cananotship," Washington Iming sank from bilar- other for somne timre. SomoC f Us who 'lbie e re irant hatr plroplà in of her soul lay before him In broad type. deiphier, anagramns we cannot sPel' out, ity into silence and walked away. OUt, Of have iived in first-rate housmes hiere and ir. onthis i rnptant n t oflu nterestig ablndeto e aassage th hlf-dee hi iB. sphinxes that will not speak. For that that lifetime ogrief the tgrent author dipped first-rate neighbéorhoods will be ionnd, lhe- on t hatnay .It n or mportan h1 etig o e rs is na tak ha sit . tesson David in my text proposed to takie his pen's mighttest re-enforcement. Cal- -eause of our lukewarmnness of earthly ser- t at maylépnd the timedrawing es»»n ns atak tenaOure " " hi, ur p some of these enomber and (darkt things vin's; "Institutes Of Iteligion," than which vice, living on one of the back streets of fr th pe itdeyforthe ind tu geted *1. " Bo ilent youae sysueyad try to set them to swe-et music. "I1 a more wonderful book was never written the celesntial City, and (clea down at the o h ee tet esn e enly wenheha lt uie lngpasewill open my dark saying On a hiarp." SO by human hand, was begun by the author end of it at No. 808l or 909 or15, white ,,, etaisso net <ed. he pont Is, that -, OCcur. I k' I look off upon society and ind people in at 25 years of lige because of the Per* so"me who hadt unattraCtive earthly nn afhu etahrwoatmt I a tr , nhpp cnjncion of circumstances, ention by IFrancis, King of France. Far- abodes, and a cramped one at that, will in to give a claseVven a sketch Of Jeremsia's f "O.il n they do not know what il mens, and aday toiledl for all time on a satlary of £80 the helaveily City be in a houge fronting c 1b nbet le "o" •"dt they have a right to askl: Why is this? a yanr and] candle. As every brick of the the royal plaga, right by the imuperial dwarerannu ncidrent. The thin to bee 'y "-of what, then . lie ha, found a as y s tatAd1 think 1Ivwillbe doing wall of Babylon was stamped with the frountain or <onlthe heights overlooking the onhanyzed nci . ost feu glected. et a rue there il, nothing a womnan likes bet- a d ork ytryindng to exidlain Bomle Of letter N. standing for Nebuchadnezzar, s) ie flf h hroso avto hl-epaiebcuems fe e s~~~~~~~~~ 1e hnt eakdt eiehr w el h srnetig n makLe you more every part of the t en le of Christian ing at tour door while those v'igit you I h oemorfltheroisme-oof Jeremia a caree Ing-s. oy ow aev, Wppit1hi, content with your lot, and I shall only be achievement in stampe with the betfer 'T, who are more than conquerors, and those hit aone fth ee tie-honored uners o -Lo "itting pyslate, in asupposSe. ljianswering questions that have often been standing for trouble. Who are kings und] qtuensunio God for-. sre t ermia wasa ebe "It o kgere" says heat Joyce so fullj asked me dEthit 'hny kdou - - Art en Mr M19eW . " wvrr7 .Cas and nuhm eyfimay ,- rAde tày of earetemoon tha1 Jioyce s a t elvswieItyt stteemsei When In Engla nd a man in honored with You, myil brother, and you, My sister, pathos and mildmelancholy.T e poitc y- e ghtg a intet muic and open my dark- saymgs On a knighthood, hie is struck with the Mat of who have it so hard heore, will have It so composition known au the " mn in a ~ ~ u yor _e n >je èth wod But thonsewho hav% eon»e 04 Wr rgdtofgs fJereith" may be responsible for thU uilýetu.You are trying to believe Why kh e the Us.eful Taklen? knighthoo>d in the kingdom of Godwré know yourself and will file impos t But a 'eareful saady of the prophet's col ne what yot know is not true. Tell mi-.. Itrrogaio the tiret: Why doea God nirst struck, not with the flot of the swvord, dispute your own identity, and the lirst lected writings and the story of his lifée d honestly, mind--are you not forCing youir- takle out of thim world those who are us e- but with the keen edge of the scimeter. timre 1 see you there 1 will cry out, "Didn't brings ont his true mnlines, his patient seffti regard me as a monster of insin- fui and whomn we cannot spare and leave To build his magnificence of character, 1 tell you ao wh4n you mat down thecre in endurance, his uinseligh patriotism, is l, ert! alive and in good health so many who are l'aul could-not have spared one lash, one the pew and looked incredulous becoause purity of heurt and devotion to God. He - gerity b" ,hIow]Y "I1only a nuisance to the world ? I1 thought 1 prison, one stoning, onle anathema, one you thonghit ftoo good to be truc?" And was universally hated and reviledi by his to I ou rcn elfon the eontraryo be would begin with the very toughest of all poistlons viper from the hand, one shipé-youi will answrer. "You WerC ih;tecneroaisadhsbe iudr ,- am fe O e yselattonf ; the seeming itiscrutable. Many of the wreck. What is true of Individuelsain true half was not told mer'" So I open your stood by careless readers ever oince. is m yu yy o n i . most usefui men and women die at 30 or of nations. The horrors of the American darkt saying of despondency and complaint political course was nearly always the op. in ,.And you fii-htdifci«* 40 years of age, white you often find Use- Ilevolution gave this country this aide of on my gospel harp and givetouJjustOne posite of the popular desireeshis oppoi- on ~legs people alive at 60 and 70 and 80. John the Mississippi river to independence, and ber of musi, for 1 do notepretend to bie tien to an Egyptian alliance and apparent 1 To lbecontinued.i Careless wrote to Bradford, who was soon the conflict between England and France much of a player. "The Lamb which le subimissivenesis towards Babylon was a ll toie put to death, saying, -Why doth Odi gave the most of this country west of the in the midst of the throne shaillIeadt them More unpopular policy than that of thoe Ire WHY HE WAS FULL OF GRIT, snffer me and such othber caterpillars to Mississippi to the United States. France to living fouintains of water, and G;od Americans who opposed the Spanish war. -II live that can do nothing bult consume the owned it, but Napoleon, fearing that Eng- shiall ipte away all tears from their eyes." But hi, advice was correct, au subsequent to Tenderfoot Fitm by White a stick Of abms of the church and take away so land would takie it, practically made a But, I muet confess, 1 am a little perplex- events proved. Jeremiah's later life was a Dynamsite 111r11-. manly worthy workmen in the Lord's vine- present to the United' 8tates, for hie re- ed howsome of you good Christian@ are sad one. He was taken au a captive te anU --in the winter of '79," be said, 'i was yard?' Bimilar questions are often asked. ceived only $15,000,000 for Louisiana, going to gret throuigh the gate, because Egypt and somne of Ielater prophecies in Letndville, Col., and t.he camp was Here are twlo men. The one la a noble Milssouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, there will be so many there to greet you, were delivered there. His entire life wiB es Ilterally swrarming with frontier character and a Christian man. He Iowa, Minnesota, Colorado, IDakota, Mon- and they will all want to shakle hande at epayrcareful study. Owing to the chaudie If to1ug'hs, who took delig'ht in making chooses for a lifetime compamion one Who tana, Wyomning and the Indian Territory. once and will all want the first king. arrangement of the prenent book of Jer- ýou ilg inter y:in for a 'tenderfoot.' has been tenderly reared, and eeil wor- Out of the fire of the Amnerican Revolu- They will have heard that you are com- kaih somte care in necessary to rearrange trI- hnsuee hm o odo thy of him and hie is worthy of hier. As tien cme this country st of the Mis- ing, and they wl alliiiress aroundito wel- the chapte-rs no as to glet their true chron- ndl One night a few orthmgot h t merchant or farmer or professional man gissippi, out of the Euçropean war came come you and will tuant you to say wheth- ological order. a osonddean scrtdh oaor mechanic or artist hie toile to educate that west of the Missingdppi river. The ;or you know them after being so long EsDeeoy ,nbig geneml s4tom that Was a popular and rear hie childiren. Hie is suicceeding. British empire rose tolits present overtow-| parted. Da to. an rendezvous for a gang of pract.AIa but hie has not yet established for hie foin- ering; grandeur through gunpowder plot, AdJourned to Eternity. Begin with Jeor. 36: 1 and get the whole ea jokers. The dtude turned out tobe aL ily a full competency. lie seems indfispen- and G;,y Fawkes' conspiracy. and North- Amid the tuutile and romp of reonion IToer of rs therowic ases6t «ed pretty good ésort of a fellow, and final- sable to that housethold, but one day, b- ampton insurrection, and Walter Ria- tell you whose band of welcome you hadl the prsphti vesthor vaabl emat e gay )y the proprietor gont his ear and wa-rn- fore hie has patid off the mnortgaige on his leigh's beheading, and Baco's bribery, better tiret clasp and whose cheek la en- thd ee prophemethoJremimh i eems un- bdJl i th t the boys were going to get house, hie in coming home through a and Cromwell's dissolution of parliamient, tItled to the tiret king. It in the hand and thad eenropheutyigfrl m twenty- 4 ces eda nle a s fnalein which strong northes id n acilsrksand the batles of Edge fBill, and the vi- the cheek of ire without whom youn tree yarsbud idlcurasesrmhant set ha ~ ~ ~ ~ I ,pafk gta hogþhm n ordy fpeumonia cissitudes of centuries. So the earth it- would nerver have gtlthee at aillthe be lcdi apraetrerd. T" bat one of them would pretend to throw a end hik earthly career, and the wife and self, before it could become ant appropri-' Lord Jesus, the darling of the skies, as hie work of arsuchin ri ftngusateremh' ,On- stick of dynamité ln the stove" childiren go into a struggle for ahelter and Rte and beautiful residenice for the hu- cries out, "i haire loved thlee, with au ever- itto umryo h usac w il - "'Just toit quiet, sonny,' he said, 'and rood. His next door neighbor ls a man man family. hadt, according to geology, to' lasting love, and the tires culnt burnthedioreswsimarothtf they will reapect your nerve. 'who, though strong and Well, Jets his wife bie washed byi universal delnge and scorch- it, and the flood, could not drown it." manyo thesitnstotepoht ",The dude thianked him and snid hie support him. He in around at the grocery ed and made Incandescent by universal hen you, my dear people, having no mor who robably afded their manaters"# would. Presently the row began. and store or some general loafing place mn the fires, and pounded by oledge hammer of use for my pour harp) on whleh 1 used to friends In the arduous work of committing adt- in leas timie thtan It takes to tell It evenings, while his wife sew. His boys icebergan wrchdbertqke open your dark sayings, and whose chorde The i wo rseiwreing. eexcdt the lan érnridPéswer crakin laailare limitating his example and Inouneand fthat split econtinents, and shaken by vol- smetimes snapped, despoilla gthe ym fthe lsninth esemgies la the exatdatW directions. The dude simply gri jei in that house is to rave becatuse the cof- through the catastrophes of thousands of from the willows that gros by the ete a of Jeholokim, probably 6Sà B. O tly i r ooue out a cigarette. At that One freei coldi when hie comes to a late break- yeu. before Paradisée became possible, water courses and play together thonece-e. wa hrtlyiaferw the all of Ni ea-, a bx ad, ellng ha hewasgolg t wie' lokswhe heturshs nthig bnnesand the first garden pour its car- are entitled "The King In His Beauty", queror, Nebuchadnessar, was pregeingfa nrt the opten stove. It so happened 14a-t he Coutld happen to that fumey would be that Iliddeket. Trouble a good thing for the the tast dark curtain of mysterylis'for- reason for holding a fait. rin went to the wrong box and got hold of man'$ funeral, but he deefinles to die. He rocks, a good thing for nations as Weil as evter lifted It will be as though &allter. Thradnofheol rto the ers- an actul sure-enoug'h Piec of dyna- luves on andl on and on. Bo twe have all a good thing for Individuals. So when toruioltatrwere eiver heard hadt been roll- ple (verse 10) then to the prinese (IIMa hl a mite instead of tine dummy whic-hhadl noticed that many of the useful are early you push against me with a sharp interro- ed into one, end "Israel In Egypt," and 15) seems to show thaet jeremiah'osvousa- re- . m rpe in advance. This was ui fwieteprstshv ra gation point, Why do the good suffer? I "-Jephthah's Daughter," and Beethoven's fingl aeltnwfre when ea$ i s ainnpreare n a . ti vital tenlacitv., open the dark saying on a harp and, "-Overture PnCoadthte'sfosr"ineti wayPehptrewn othifn erka nticed almost immediately and the 1 take up this dJark saying on my harp though 1 cain neither play an Organ lnor at InnD ir" and ter*Crtonan tained in the roll that the people Wagits the jokers scattered ilke scared ratits, and give thtree or four thrumis on the a cornet noir hautboy nor bugle nor clrio- the "Mesiah" hadl been blown fromn the heard many times bufor, hut tfe mm"t leavIng the dude in possession. A41 string In the way of surmising and hope net, I1have.taken nome ]essons In the eon- lips of one trumpet or been Invoked by ircumstances and the pertineeroftthe usully happens, the dynamite mlerely ful guess. ehasthle useful man 'was pet harp, and if you would like to hear me the sweep of one bow or had dropped from message made It oseemninw. burned lke so much wax. The gang taken Out Of the worldi becauise hie and I will play you tthere: "All things work the vibrating chorde of one harp. The king's *winter house' was iàpi noi- finally returne-d and found the dude his famnily wvere to constructed that they together for gooto those who love God." But here 1 must slow op lent In trying the lower and more protected partoft b ipon smoking his Cigarette, buit when Iýe could not havé- endured momte great prou-|"Now no chastening for the present sem- to sobre mysteries 1 add to the mystery palace as distinguished from the mese agh, realized that he had really been sit- perfty thant might have been just aherad, eth, to bie joyous, but grievous nevertheless that we have already wondered at--nam- airy roomus Daed la Wara weather; andl ýi tingon he dgeof voca. bcntirlyand they all together might have gone afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit ly Why preachers should keep on &fter al the 'hearth oft the old version wu A Iby tn nteeg of a ocn enal own in the vortex of wobrldiiness which . of righteousness unto them which are ex- *'errsaetrd.S ahe pit brasier" (revised version) or aletai a ingbi fa ie.an gae wayth setato vyea wallows up 1 d0000houise-' rCised thereby." "Weeping may endure one great armful all the whys and hIl otiig hrolfrhetn upss very hsnre tews ewudhv od.Ads ewn hl ewshm for a night, but joy tn the moùrning." and wherefores of your lige and mine =nta f"eve"w a ed e ,nty Passed intoiehistory as the gamtentnanble and (nertd n hywr b oqeigEi.wihwehv o a ieo h bility umns." The roll was written Inn aumo , oi edil.-hcg hoil. tesvrte flf etcoet h i Interrogation third: Why did the good to answer and writeton them the wrs perpendicular Puolumns wh" ich lee mei eet. is - -_ile and titd o hueunesshe ee ndtgh(od let sin or trouble Cominto ut the world "Adjouirned to Etiernity." esively revealed as the manuscrpt Wu Beirne Santiago' last before the thronie they will acknowl- wh en hie pight have kept t emn out?. My CopyrI to M nol for shaerpeingThe redwuith wnuifa geKt Aleueatwh wa amn the edge that, though the furnace was hot, it , rply is, lie haed a good reasont. He had -_....:..: . :=::::::::::=:==::. the writing was done wonedbfoeontaotusd-purified them and prepared them for anhiresons h h eie oev gino ore sina SHORT SERMONS. , This reckless act of the king shaiply ý kept scribes the sensation of being a target eternal cajreer of glory and reward for uunetadnor iesaethnhe --:.w=:::::::=.:1- shows his bitter deflance of divine warw . me. for a rapid-fire gun: "We were going whichi no other kind of tire could have fit- usather startin ouritensme gtnd --tghehersto telesn asi fowr ne satrn ietfot luthiem. on thotheo 6r an, te uselesselaborate enterprise, could makle the 2- Human Nature.-Hluman nature le enough. It in vain to attempt to detMe i .'I'm the front, and all at Once, Offattemnledoto5or6or0yasb- year-old child ln its armied chair crompe- not badt. It ts always strivIng to do the word of God oy indeed the WOUd, of nmI ia t a apd-firing un opened on us. u alteesehevrcnaehehend it. one was to demonstrate what better, but there aepwr o vli ol e.Oei eiddo the dingt rigTht, aal o g ge m w oudtmI uhve imthis world, and you ought gadu fcaat mlbcaheeenmnal isec 'd. but these are al- remark of the English martyr, Latimer, r f hee asnosmke s w culn' .nt thiere>fore begrudge himn hi% earthly gadu fcaatrmy a ee nmnhrl upci, eas lhe was ab-ut tobee burned at thesutaet ne locate the battery exactly, but we could longevity. in all the axes there has Unota earth by condiuering evil. Had tere been wnyo kept la cheek, the Son of man 'MatrRdewhaeigedt-y it-- See the bullets playing over the long single louter ever entered heaven., no evil to conquer ni no trouble to COn- controlling the forces of hliuman nature. Muchtarcandley.inuengvla sigtrut- frgrass like spray from a hose. They Troubles or the Good. sk-tBn es ou ne a er. Dr. MocConnell, EplaCOPallan, Gsu gaealnvr be put ot., tuire dId't have the range at first, and the Interrogation the second: Why do good Joshua, or an Esekiel, or a Pou, or a Brooklyn, N. Y. Teaching alinte, abel shower of bllets4 went swinging back peoplle have so much trouble, slekiess' Christ, or à Washington, or a John Mil- Man as a Bullder-Every man has The best lesson to getsfrom tisnempe=nf ven-i and forth, elipping off the tops of the bankruptcy. persecution, the thrse black ton, or a John Howard, and 1,000,00 vie- his master. Every mind 18 under theanitcoexishenmtkbe mn g figrass and coming nearer us with every utrssmtmsptigte rferce tories which have been gained by the con- control of some one opinion or convie-ofmrlhrimaderesdetont y aswep. oucant iagie he ens. beks ntoon se ofjanle neves Iseersted spirite of aillmages would never tion. Though he be the architect of hie duty au shown in Jeremiah's whoitle carner, il ytions it gave us to watch that death- tH ns wfa on d a ri in anail l.ave ben gain Ha Ud there benté o wn01-fortune, the arbiter of is own des' hr so orea xeletyp -er spray, driven by somne Invisible, relent. elder in the e arch. and as polished a Nine.-tenths of the antheme of heaven tiny, every man builds according ton tunity, if timie is available, to, adapt the )r 1 legssoe, ereeping on and on. reaching Christian gentleman as ever walked would never have been sung. HePavren somes plan, some law of life which 1s lesson to modern times by showing how " out, and feeling for us. There was Broadway. First his general health gave could never have been a thousandth part absolute master.-Rev. Dr. Brietol, various people have tried to destroy the ably somethinig unnatural about It, and we out, and hie hobébled around on a canle, an Of the heaven that it is. 1 will nt say Miethiodist, Washington, D. C. Bible and have failed. Beides the de- ver wtchd s hough tue were fascinated old man at 40. After awhile paralysie that I am glad that vin and sorrow did AGoHer.-h god ere tructive crities whom ever teacher wil ,Y his by it. 1 didn't fesel as If men had any,@truck himi. Having by pour health beenc enter, but 1 dl Bay thant I am gladthalit will get somle good out of the poorst at tto etr nthoretBibe bip w have thing to do with It. It was an 1-ptm mpr. ha t sddenly te qad.usiness, lhe after(od ha, ien al] laereasonts to noarepncher. Only hear hima arightnot nelecting it, putting it on the sheelf, ou fan soadal nm htIcud't besatiful daughiter died; thenaà son b e than if sin and sorrow had nevrer enter. as a lecturer, anetranr ebater, preptending to believe it Withoout attemPl hix ightan couldn'thespe. hereantcm oeesydmetd nte oed, and fthat the tunfallen celestials will lbe but as amnWo rmtegon figt ieb t hc ls smr lerk' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ... a yn nm ihnsgt tls'slnId of mind andilcommaing of otAe-n il udw heitrupeshi. own faith and his sense of human dangerous: the critics who spend their watching every expression ln her mobile race. She colora and looks down at hima, confused, lovely. "Dojin't!" say@ Dysart, not loudly, not mrtly, yet lnnso strange and decided a ay that ut renders her silent. "You mustm't mind me,"* says he, a second later. ln is usual calin tone. "I know you and Beauelerk are wonderful players. You can give me s'gaine later on.'* "A capital arrangement," says Beau- eerk, comfortably, sinking into a chair beside her, with alu the lady manner of a man at peace with himself and his world, especially as 1 shall have to go in pres- ntly te write some letters for the even- ing post." He bes a»gain, and looks boldly Into Mis» Kavanagh's eyea, She blushes hotly, and, dropping her fan, makien a little at- tempt to pick it up again. Mr. Besuelerk makes another uite attempt, and so man- ages that his hand meets her. There in a slight, an aimost benevolent pressure. Had they looked at Dysart as they botb resumed their places, they could have "e hat hlis face was white as death. MIi%% Kavanagh, too, look. a little pâle. a little uncertaib, but, as a whole, nervously hup. py "I've been down at the old place of mine," soes (in Mr. Beauelerk. 'Terrible disre-pair-- take thousands to put it in any sort of order. And where'u one to ge them? That's the une question that ham met Doa awdr.EIyserd "*Th"eeinan answer, howeiver, sgayi 1- saft, cufly-<, okigat.him. - Ah, Weil, I suppose do. But I haven' '40hty#.I thln1r you bave," says Dy sarTt, quite polifela but gily, neverth ..I)Pear fellow, how? whepfe? tnless on discovpem a mine or au African dIamnoni field'" -or aun cress, sayâs ysart, inci dental Ilish' Ineky dog, that ,ome% home t yo." ysBe cle],rk, iving him a play fui pot oyshi@s boulder and stooping frou his chair to du it, as Dysart stilait@ upo th gras .. "N? ouwill be mode-st ? Well, Wei But, talking of that old place, 1 assur you, Mime Kavanagh, it worries im" dope, indeed. I t sounds like one's duty t rtore it, and still--" resThere are better things than even s Old place.'" saya IDy.art, 'o,ý! lu haven't one, you se." crie Bleauelerk. with the utmost geniality. ** you had-Il really think if you had yo would understand that it requiire a snec fiee to sire it up to moths and rant an ruin. "I said there wereahetter things tha bisdiraes.on. And if the-re are, make sa rLucky fellows like you--ga oaldier lad.- with hearts as lighât as %n sheme f- ely preach; but sacrinic am ,ocanoeas p mde.The- stit a.rd notrd. ui! And a e mu orri wo think i Come on, Mis. Kai anom ett us et Our scalpe. Dysart, w nag .: ht it out with us Y' y" thanks." " fraid"' gally "fyou no " xsmiling; the smueleais mirably done. and wuld be takien ans genuine article anjyw ere.,, Fo bif instant, and evident ga ntabis wish, Dysart's eyes met tho e "eThe next gamne id ours, Mr. Dysart, T ememiber "" sy.Ssh. glancing at Dy0s over her shoulder, a touc-h of anxiety her eyes ".. always re-memuber," says he, with ra ther ambiguoius étmile. What insbhe1 membering now? Joyee's mouth takes grave turn an ahe follows Beaucle d nthmrbesteps that lead to t tennis ground below. IV wu mi Be ca CHAPTER V. re henp a corner near the rhododendrons be concealed them fromn view, Dysart m from hie ment and goes deHiberately " to where Lady Bwansdown in sitting. en lsan old friend of hin, and he has in fre no qualmns about being à little ne with her wheore occasion demandasM 1a aVe à gome?'"saY. h. His suggem- te O la full of playfulmns; hi& tone, how- m is mlastern. a "D1Cear Felix. whiy?' mayaseshe, smiling op a bleu beautifully. The»re ins ven a sue- cinof amusement in her nmile. r "A change"mayaslhe. IHis Word@ this th Ptme might men something, his tone any- K moi. Bhe cain rend either au sho pieuses. n "Trwel" soys selaughing. 'There la p lng lke change. You have awakened to a delightful fact, Lord Bailimore, $" g languidly to her companion, who d Nosbeen a little distrait mince his wife and K 'tspassied by him. "What do you may to t " fyou will ' Nay% Baltimore, still a lit- le Vagtuely. lHe gets up, howéýer, aud r s.tllehes hls arme iudolently abovefrig ý-uthe rmenibranwh ofinanu u casant T"he non ere ins inole-rale, saoy.Lady:Ë abnsidown, rising. too. ,ý,Mlorethon one en Jendure. Thanks, denr Fole, for your d Saggesion. 1I should never have thought f e «tbe glade if yo.u hadn't askied Lue to play *t gamne.". I Obe miles à little mialic-iously at Dy- iand, accompanied by Lord Blaltimore, y '-e away fromnthe assýembIed groupesf ',P the la wn to the dim rece.nses of theI glyadate. t Bol19dr'l"lay Mr. Browne to Dysart. It ailways Impossible for Dickey to hold longue. "But you needn't look so ut 1 aout It. 'Tisn't good enough, My dear, Ï. I1kno 'em both by heurt. Bal- ,,sFlaauslmuch in Joie yith her as he r with big Irish tenant., but his imagine- gables strong point, and it pleasee hima thinkb benha onaet la»t for the twen- timme a goisce for aillhis woes in the 1 trfed Joie of somebod,1 .it resly , matters who.",• «Therein more in it than you thinik, D argloonily. Not a fraction!" airily. An ahr? Lady Swansadown?" Of her! Her eart has been in such Mat unefor.years that by this tme Emqstu be in luttera, Give aup thinking Ilttt Ah! here in my beloved gir Re makien an elaborate gesture oft kt auslhe ees Joyce advancing in his ,drcin. "Dear Joyce!" beaming on her. he so hall May there is nothing in animal ,ýgnetism.n Here I have been just talking alloat you to Dymart, and telling him what Slust souli1 feel when you're away, aned staatly, es if in answer to, my keets de- :re, you appear before mie" W y arent you playig ennise' de. Mdis Kavanagh, with à cruel disre ird of this Boweryspeech. "Becuse I was waiting for you.., «Well, I'l beut you," sayoselhe. "I al. ays de." Botter and hotter grows the son; the evening comes on space; a few people üM neighboring housesbave dropped in' Monkton &mong otherâ, with Tommy tuer. The latter, who in supposed to rtai a trong affection for Lady Bal- a«OW little -son, no soooner, however' Dmie cky Browne than he gipes himself to is keeping. What the attraetion isa Aut Mr. Brow-nehbas for children has "]PU stay with IDicky," saye Tommy, 1gig himself broadcast on Mr. own's reluctant chest, that gives forth ý iMpulsory *"Wouigh!" aushe duoesno. ni'l tell me a story." Do't be unhappy, Mir. Monkton,', the latter, when he has recovered a fiil romn the shock; Tommy is a wel - o hvw: oy with a sufficient amounet of adi pM atter about hima to make his descent "I'l'Tl promise to be careful. Nothing teneh, 1 assure you. Nothing that could the young mind or teach it how to t lunfthe wrong direction. My tales always strictly moral.", -Weil, 1ommy, be good!' says Mrs kton, with a last imploring glance at lien, who has already forgotten her ce, being blost in a wild wrestin iwith his new friend. With dee ogis his mother leaves him and upon her way. Passing Joyce, shl la a low whisper: an eyle on Tommy." eMil look after him. Asd o perhaps elhe might have done hai aligitt tep sounding Juthbeh udther 'okoudto fcaet all but what avry aristocratic looking man ,with large limbe, and big indeed lu pa. Hise yes are lighit, his tlloe Roman, hie forehead massive M noit grand in the distictly jie] waby, still a line forehead and im- ie byands are of ag ody aie, the skin almost delicate. He l Mhebis uister, Lady Baltimore, and diferent from her in every way tha nlee that la there torment it t g Rd o .se F. nd tm CHAPTER VI. "W & fter all, lire bhalits compen tions " says Mr. Beauclerk, sinking ui the matin lounge beside Miss Kavana ad gvn way to a rapturous sigh, TIt aa eek anter. and the ball given Iord and Lady Baltimore is in full swi Beaucierk in looking very big and y hiandsomne. His close-cropped, eminer aristocratic head in thrown a bltle back give full play to the ecatatic smile hg directing at Joyce. I thought I should never be able ton å,hen one in the belle of the eve n grows digicult. But you mighit have L a fith or sixth for a poor outsider like An old friend, too" "Old friends do't count. at a dance. straid," says she with a mile as ge as his own, "though for the matter that you couid have had the first; nuo o bard gis it may be to make you believe atasked the belle of the evenng "Oh! that first!" say@ he. with a gesi of iniatience. ' *"I shan't forgive Is in a hurry about that: she ruined my e ing-up to this. Hoüwever," throwing as It were, unpleasant mnemories b shake of hie head, "don't Jet me %poil ne good time by dwel ing upontsa one- Here 1 am now at ai event;o1 ls comfort, here is peace. Telast havetbeehthaveen yours consider earlier,' says \Mi." Kavanagh, with noteworthy deliberation, humored by lover-like glances, which, after all. 1 more truth in them than mostthfhhre tlarations. She sits, playing with er and with a face Immoyable a a&T "Do you know, ,sa ysth. e one .gently, " think you arte on sa tcharacter In the world." There is a à ramotint of belief in hi@ tone; perhaps of It le honest. "I never met anyone you. Women, es a rule, are willin tear "eh other in pieces, but you- conâdonail faults, that la why 1I 1 e eeloquent; hies d la toneath ýt begun. T the girl beside him, hows aIgnorant of subterfuge, unkno1wing o1 hwviles that run In and out of society e à thread, his words sound swreert a tweeter for the very besitation tha Mer. rf" @&y@ Joyee. It la the mont fool. lamtion. and mens nothiAg but $s bernelf a little taken off her «J dida't know you were here!" a half risen, Ëwr did I-how d'ye do, Dynart?- atan hour aga. Wo't you shake nus out hie own hand to er ashe ý asnoth g tao end but a mee that he finds amusement in et that the girl has been 0o inach Mod by his unexpected appearance a asven forgotten the small acte "e s eguw - - -- --,- tsywith which we greet Our enmpanies them. - hIe had, indeed, been dead tg "Ij am not un perfect as you think 1 Hgbut hie coming, say@ she,.a little sadif-her voce a 1 »eme- falters abce, stammering faint, aM she notes her mistake. "That Ns true," -says he, quickly Smidday train; I gave mysef tho«%gteompâLbed against hie will to k» to snatch a mandwich, say a fault*lth her, "Awhile agoyou we brtwo toa a"ter, whom 1 found gry-with me because 1 was driven to i *MMAd then came on ber* to loirtiff Me it9p0l*9 ege antéPl"y thW net gaine With Me." Thmt wu unfair, if you like." He»t 90n so rr, bàt I have premised her swa nmeesstiens back at her là - ý 11 -Xdanced with thIs4 ofher na" g o bt e "