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A Blues ROMANO * By Miss Anni CHAPTER V. jc Continued. " . T "Gentlemen do not usually pay * morning visits to girls of eighteen, my *! *lear Henrietta," said Miss Theodora, .-with her little air of superiority. "Mr. ? ^Chester asked leave :o inquire for my iiealth after the fatigues of the ball? a very pretty and a very natural piece 0 of attention, too. Unless I am much mistaken, we may look to receiving a . ;visit from Mr. Chester before tbe (lay is out." i ^And Theodora was right. Just at a *the hottest hour of the afternoon, a 'Aunt Hosie and Daphne, picking cur- e nants and raspberries for the annual J jelly-making, forth rushed Margot to j?ay that a fine English dandy in a tan- ^ dem (un beau Dadais Anglais avec sen fcetail en flieche) vras inquiring before the front porch for Demoiselle Vansit- a tart. wAnd Dapnne's cheeks flushed crim- a son! She had spokjn truth, rigid and j unvarnished, as respects the ball. The y partners who held her till her breath e was gone, the ladies who smiled j, at her chasser-croisees behind their lans, the crush, the glare, the cmpti- . ?ess of the whole scene, bad disap- 1 pointed her simply as a child is dls- q appointed with actualities falling short n of impossible expectation. In this mo- a jnent sbe lost tbe child, assumed the ? avoman; a sense of power, a thrill of >? i tl jvamty, uangerousjy sweci, ij. uuij uj , virtue of their newness, sprang to life ^ jwithin her heart. j. ^*'1 don't want one bit to see Mr. ^Chester," so she told Aunt Hosie, who ^ ?tood gravely watching the changes of <olor on the girl's face. uAnd of course the vi6lt is to Aunt Theodora, uot me. JStill, after giving him so many dances _ 1.-st'night, it might look odd if I did not go in to sec him, just for form's ' ?ake." tl k t ^ IJ ,#Arid In three minutes' time, her fin- jj -gers stained with raspberry juice, and ^ 5n her garden dress and hat, she en- y jtered the parlor, where Mr. Chester a awaited her alone?Theodora, who had v not expected her visitor so early, ue- *0] tog still occupied with lappets and a Jaces, in the maiden seclusion of her g pwn chamber. tl ^This first visit did not prove a brll- ? iiant success. Mr. Chester's conver- r, ?atioa was modeled after the elliptic ^ or telegraphic fashion prevalent among s, gentlemen of his class?a form of utterance wherein nominatives exist not, C( fvonouns are supplanted by "urns," ^ "ahs," or perusals of the ceiling?and ^ which altogether gives you more the 0 idea of a message framed at so much jj per word than of an attempt made by ^ a.rational human being to communi- 0 cate .with his kind. a '"Enjoyed ball last night? Tired. Balls in hot weather deuced mistakes. 'All balls out of London deuced mis- a, takes." Long pause. "Pretty country, Jersey, for a week. See it all in j, a ,week. See everything in a week." j' A longer pause. "Know Cheltenham?" t] TThig, .when Miss Theodora's entrance Lad infused temporary vigor into the conversation. "Know Cheltenham ^ rwell.? Too well. Hunted there couple ^ of seasons. Deuced slow, set of peo- g] pie, Cheltenham people. Warwick- ^ ?hire Stamers?most intimate friends." Such was Mr. Barry Chester's style; p 5f the style be the man, such was a tolerably fair index to Mr. Barry Chester's mental powers. Fortunately, there Suing a strip of mirror above the parlor/mantelshelf, in which he could s catch distorted glimpses of his charms, r as he stood first on one foot and then on the other, pulling restlessly at his , mustache, .while Miss Theodora en?leavored to fill up the gaps in his dis- j( .lointed talk with high-flown CheltenpAminkfonrtoc nf hor nirn Fav* tunately, too, as far as Chester was . concerned, Daphne's judgment was un- j conditioned by experience. ' She had absolutely no standard, either of man- ' ner or intellect, of men or books, by which to measure him. * "A mostr presentable creature, realty,". Miss Theodora pronounced, when I1 4i?e showy hired dog-cart, high-step* ? fiiuff, broken-winded hacks, mock liv- h *ry, and all, had dashed away among " ?he vista of sand hills out of sight tl ^Aad, little as one cares for looks in F the other sex, so very unusually hand- it ^iome.', ? ^ o ? "The man has cold eyes and a hard * >mouth," said Aunt Hosie, who had ^ been present, critically taciturn, dur- D <ng the last three minutes of the visit. * **And he is not a gentleman! No, Theo- s ilora, not in spite of all the Warwick- J hire Stamers in the world. Mr. Ches- ^ 4ter is ill at ease with himself. He tries * ^iis best to forget his origin, and sue- 13 ^eds?just sufficiently well to make a jrou remember it." ' 3?or did it please heaven to soften ^ .{Aunt Hosie's opinions upon further c {acquaintance. J Before a month was over Barry Ches- * #er had contrived excuses for paying * ttwo more afternoon visits at Quer- ^ nee. his attractions each time enhanced * 3t>y the smart hired dogcart, 4-betaiI en ? ffliecll," and mock private livery. Hy 1 ihe cud of a fortnight it had grown to e an accepted thing that the young 1 man should constantly hover around E Mef-de-la-Iieine, not paying Daphne Jattentions that as yet could he called 1 *erious, but always finding some reatson that necessitated his spending long s afternoons or evenings in her neighbor- 1 jjckhi. f ' But Aunt Hosie's first verdict against 2 kim remained unmodified. i She gave him no actual discourage* 1 xnent. holding the fine old orthodox ' doctrine as regards the celcstial or 1 providential forging oi men's marriage s chains. She never strove to bias A Caphne for or against his suit. She ' simply disliked him intensely, and did ^ not see that it fell within her duties 0 as a Christian to pat a cloak upon ^ her dislike. s "Anil I believe, right down in my s heart. I feel as yon do, Aunt Hosie." 1 said the girl, in a moment of half-sad, half-jesting expansion. ".Mr. Chester 1 arfirrlliiiia llisi .? fiiiftiimHim nf (' rOCKING; E ^REALITY, e EdwardsI ourse. He is handsome, lias seen the i-orld, too! I am sve, in liis presence feel as impressed as Aunt Theodora lerself by the Warwickshire Stamers 'et, if it comes to liking?if you were o r.sk me whether I shall miss Mr, /Hester wnen ne leaves, ur wueiuw * rish I bad never known him at all, 1 ould not answer you." And eight days later she accepted im! Ran into the house one evening, 5h face, with the news that Barry :hester loved her?loved her to sucL new, trembling happiness in her girl, n extent he could not possibly face xistence unless she would become his rife. And she?how could she have the eart to say him nay? They were to tart at once and colonize in Virginia, :ou could buy an estate iu Bedford lounty, with stabling for thirty horses, nd an icehouse on it, said Daphne, or a few hundred pounds, and peaches Fere grown in orchards like our cidei pples, and?and please might she ask Ir. Chester to come in?he has only i-aited for her on the terrace?and very thing might be talked over quiet7 after tea. She was so without guile, this counry nurtured child of eighteen?her seuestered life, the fine inborn whiteess of her nature, raised her so high * ?11 +hof UUYC I Lit? IC> UJ kjl an iuiociiuvucj i<iu? ven Aunt Hosie forgave her for being azzled by Barry Chester's protestaions. Besides, stifling her personal islike and some natural jealousy at escending from the first place in )aphne's affections, what objection ould Aunt Hosie urge /' *ist Mr. hester's suit? The modesty of his worldly prospects "as laid bare by him, .without reserve, a this first evening of his engagelent. He had sold out of the army ume months before, and the money, r remainder of the money, realized by le sale of his commission constituted is actual fortune. At the same time, is expectations fron rich friends, Warwickshire Stamers and others, mounted to moral certainties. He was oung, not yet twenty-eight, and fond t an outdoor life. (Did you ever know consummately useless man of the arry Chester type who d!d not make ie same profession? The outdoor life, Tit large, signifying pigeon shooting, ace courses and general polarity, peraps, toward horsily cut coats, a jewel et whip, and gaiters.) His project was to emigrate this 5ming autumn to Virginia, the most opeful of colonies, 'twas said, for genlemen settlers, buy a farm at a cost f six or seven hundred pounds, and ve upon it. Not a brilliant outlook, e knew, and yet all that he had to ffer! This and his own great love? n expression for a moment flushing is face that made even Aunt Hosie link him handsome. Would Daphne ccept him? Daphne accepted him; three weeks iter knelt at his side before the vilige altar?caring for him?well, iu ae dreamy fashion young girls do care >r the first man whose lip-worship has lised their lives from commonplace ) drama, but sobbing in earnest terror rhen the moment neared in .which tie must loosen her arms from Aunt [oeie's neck and drive away, amidst n avalanche of old shoes and huzzas, any Chester's wife. She was in nature so rich in good s to render lier passionate allegiance ? every new phase of duty a matter f course. Whatever Mr. Chester's liortcomings, and they were many? >apline clung to him during the eight lonths in which they lived side by ide with an unswerving, blind tenderess that does not always fall to the >t of worthier men. Did she, at any loment, love him with such full measre as she had to give during these ight months? Header, she believed tie loved him, and There a button goes, 'twere an epigram 'o offer the stamp of every Guelph. They spent their honeymoon in Sark. fc rained, and oefore ten days .were ver Mr. Chester had ceased to repress is yawns or gild over his expletives i his bride's presence. After this came aeir wedding visit to the old aunts at 'ief-de-la-Reine, a visit during which : was understood that preparations f every kind should be set on foot or the coming exodus to Virginia. \reeks, however, glided away into lonths, the harvest was gathered in, he russets of late autumn came to ettle on lield and hedgerow, arad still Ir. Barry Chester's projects took 110 efinite form. Nay, he began at times o talk about a steeplechase on Querec Common in the coming spring, bout flat races in July, after a while o discuss the wisdom of starting for "irginia at all. Colonial life a deuced hance, even for a man" with capital, ust as much to be gained iu the old ountry as abroad if a fellow had paience to wait, and brains?to utilize. Vhv, here in these islands a very good hing might be done in breeding and sporting the little Normandy horses! f one could only rent pasture grouud nough somewhere in the neighborlood of Queraec, he was certain a uoderate fortune might be realized by lorse breeding, and at less risk than a any colony going. Pending this? Pending this, Mr. Barry Chester pent his days?as the winter wore on, lis evenings?more ami more away ?o:n home; wore flashier ties, wore howier jewelry, and showed his prolivities for outdoor life in general >y taking a prominent part in the mauy exercises of the island. Perilous uns in pursuit of bags of newspaper; teeplerhases where the stiffost fence vas a furze-crowned hurdle; the most >reakneek leap a two-foot-dcep tank, illed beforehand from the parish water art; trotting matches. pigeon mur!ers. and all such liliputian Held sports i." the limited area of dry laud and the haky financial condition of the Nimods themselves permitted. Who should reitson vrttli him as tc he error of his ways? Not his wife, .u< f'ovto in Ynnnir ionnvaut. 'though she was, Daphne by this tin must have entertained suspicions, yc may be sure, as to the fineness of stu in Mr. Chester's nature. But she hi these suspicions jealously, even fro: herself; believed in all things, hope all things, never by look or word r proached Chester for his neglect, < questioned liim as to the hours that 1 passed away from her side. And t her reticence unknowingly helped c his ruin! There are human temperaments i adjusted that the mere contact of vi tue seems poisonous to them. Daphne Vansittart's simple, trutl , ful character was one to have callt forth every higher quality in a lov< endowed with ordinary delicacy, o dinary manhood. Upon Barry Chesti | (who shall say through what hidde moral chemistry?) her devotion acte : as a directly evil influence. Dogs not tne same ray ui UJCWV or blacken, according to the nature < i the substance across which it travel! It was just a piece of old, miserab. ! luck, so he thoroughly and honest ! believed; possessing in a conspicuoi degree that hallmark of incapacit; j the habit of laying his failures to tl I door of others! Circumstances ha handicapped him before his birth?f< | Aunt Hosie's intuition proved correc Mr. Chester's mother was the daughti | of a gamekeeper. As a child his fatl e.* had sent him to the wrong schoo ' as a lad put him into the wrong pr ! fession; and now, juBt precisely at ! time of life when a fellow wan worldly counsel, worldly judgment, I had been fool enough to saddle hie self with a wife!?a creature with waxen baby face, a heart and tempi sweet if you will, sweet to mawkisi ness!?but about as fit she and the oi aunts together, to help or guide a ma with practical wisdom as if they La all been picked up off some desert is | and in the Tacific. ; From the comparatively innocuoi ' follies of paper hunting and pige< killing Mr. Chester sank, siep i ; step, to grosser pleasures; was heai ' of at length by the affrighted Mil Yansittarts as frequenting tavern 1 skittle alleys and the like places < unhallowed resort. He grew moro and silent (luring such hours of tl 1 twenty-four as it was his pleasure spend at home; threw the quiet hous hold into ever increasing disorder t the lateness of his hours; complaint of his meals, complained of Margot waiting! In fine, gave every sympto of the morbid discontent which, boi of idleness, shadows all the innocei environments of such men's lives wil | its blackness. And now, at length, the Miss Ta: sittarts, taking counsel together Daphne they durst not admit in their secret?resolved "to speat!" sc ernn and warning looks, parabolichints, leading remarks thrown out i the dinner table?and the small artl lery of domestic warfare had long be< employed without result. Barry Che ter's delicacy was not of sufficient ' fine texture to be wounded so long ; Fief-de-la-Reine offered a conveniei roof under which he might abide fr< of expense. He must be spoken to : perfectly plain and unmistakab ' tones, and Theodora Vansittart, of hi own free choice, undertook to 1 , spokeswoman. Aunt Hosie, to whom Chester's sii of omission and otherwise were sp cially abhorrent, was yet, at this crisi the most lenient of the three siste: toward the wrong-doer himself. .Tu as the law of her own life was effoi so was the law of her judgment up( others mcrcy. She had the charii born of strength, the insight of a pur unselfish heart into the temptatioi and backslidings'of her frailer bret! ren. Miss Theodora's imagination e ercised itself more upon the fic-titioi trials of young ladies and gentleim than upon those of flesh and blood, ar her condemnations were unehangeab as a stone-carved decalogue. Ban ' Chester idle because he ay as weak? coin, though light, need not necessari! be bad. Give him time, and under tl ' influence of Daphne's affection, thinj would yet come straight? Never! Mil 'ri<j?oi7 vi/% hcliof in mon pnmir straight -who had once sunk to taven 1 and skittle alloys. And as to his fli friends, as to his interest through tl Warwickshire Stamers?"I don't b lieve," said Theodora Vansittart, wil a kindling eye, "that Barry Chest< knows a Warwickshire Stamer I sight!" And the heinousness of h crime really swept away any lingerir scruple or pity she might yet have fe toward the culprit. To be Continued. The New Guinea Cannibals. ! "New Guinea is a new country wil ; great natural wealth, and whether tl people who wish to take advantage * 1 it go among cannibal savages or civ; : zed Christians depends on themselves said the Rev. W. R. Mounsey the othi 1 day when describing the work done I himself and his colleagues of the Brl ' ish New Guinea mission on the norl coast. This part of the world wi ' twelve years ago inhabited by a rai 1 o' dangerous cannibals. Stirring times were the lot of tl first missionaries who went out, ar ' often the bishop or one of his assistai c'crgy, landing on a louely part of ti '.each, was immediately surrounded t hundreds of chocolate colored savagi whose bared teeth gleamed no less ot inously than the huge spears whic they carried. On one occasion the bishop of Xe Guinea had his whalcboat wrecked c the coast and lost everything. He ar another clergyman laid their w clothes on the beach to dry in the su l're.sently they saw a crowd of savagi watching them, and. fearing mischie they drrssed and walked boldly towai ' the crowd, which slowly uisperseu. was afterward learned that the bo; had been watched and a great fea planned, in which the bishop and cle ' gyman were to be eaten. Cannibalism is now practically e: tinct. although several natives sti practice it in secret?London Mail, u 1 Capo to Cairo. ! The great Cape to Cairo Railway, tl : dream of Cecil Rhodes, is gradual! ' nearing completion. It has now reach( a point within sixty miles of the VI toria Falis, and the engineers hope 1 1 get to the falls by March. As soon : 1 the falls ar<> reached work will begi to harness them after the fashion < Niagara. i We all struggle for that which ts I ran f'niar lint for a brief hour* le I SOME WISE BARBAR'ANS. iU , ? I ?avases AVhn Knnu Enough t<? J'reserve Their Xativ? r.il'tf. m ! The naturalist Andiv. who recently !(| i returned from tlio Canca affluent of 1 j the* Orinoco, reports that the Yenefcuej Inn rubber collectors and their Indian ie | assistants, at ihe present. rati? of pro}y J irress, will in a few years more have. ,n completely exterminated the Bnlata rubber tree, whose product is almost ,0 *he only article of commerce in that r. region. Their invariable practice is to destroy the tree to obtain ihe rubber. ' [j. Nothing is done to repair I his waste, j id and more than two-thirds of tin; trees ! sr have been cut. j r. So many siorics are told of the dear Mruction of sources of weallh by bar-* ' >n barous and semi-civilized peonies thai id it is pleasant to hear of other folk of ' i low culture who conserve the good < :h ! things they possess. Dr. Krnst Fried- ) )f J rich has| been writing of the tribes of 1 i? Australia who consider it an offense . le of the gravest nature to destroy cer- . ly tain trrvs which bear edible fruits and 1 is who punish more severely than we do ' F, the bad boys who rob birds' nests, j io Some of these tribes also make it a se- i id rious misdemeanor to kill the young of 1 Jr animals, which, when they have their ] it. growth, supply a great dea! of meat. i & The pronuneiamenlo of the King of ; h* the Tonga Islands in 1SW, dcciaring | '*? j the volcano of .Niuaru io ik* num. i j was a well meant endeavor vo save the ' a 1 poultry of the largest island from the I ts | wrath of the fire mountain which had j ( ie | covered the island witJi volcanic dust. | Q* threatening, the existence of the fowls, i a , of whose eggs the natives were particjr ularly loud. It was Ilis Majesty's , idea that his peopie iiuil treated Niuafil i with a degree of familiarity bordering i llj on disrespecl. and he thought if he ( made the mounlain "tabu." s-? that the natives would be afraid io go near it ov have anything to do with ii. the vol- 1 18 cano would erase sifting hot ashes | )n down on the poultry. I It: would be interesting to know if ' the guano companies that made such 1 scs haste to exhaust the deep beds of rich ' ^ i fertilizer on the isiauus aiong im; tuusi ge | of Peru ever heurd of the riffhl care ' J that the Ineas look to conserve this j tQ | source of wealth. ; I* The old Peruvians knew the value of ty | this material as well as we do and J used enormous quantities of it for the , ?g enrichment of their farips. For geuer- i m ations the Ineas kept guardg on all 1 ,n these islands to prevent anv infringe- 1 ment of the law forbidding the killing ' of any bird harboring 011 rheui. Dur- ; j ing most of the year natives were per- I n. ' mitted to go to the islands for supplies ' _ . of fertilizer, but in the breeding season | { it was a crime punishable with death | ,j. | to )?e caught there. 1 al j .These vigorous measures were shaped ' ut ; by a definite policy. It was the pur- j il- J pose of tiie fnoas to prevent any dimi- i ;n liution in the supply of guano. The ?. aim was to encourage in every way j ly the breeding of these birds, so that the as annual additions to tlie store of guano j at would suffice to meet tlie needs of the ! ;e farm lands. in Nearly all that the civilized world le ! buys l'roin tropical countries is raw j sr material, and most of the natives who >e collect it have little idea of the need ] of conserving the supplies so that they , is may be a permanent source of prolit to j e* them. They recklessly destroy the eles, pliant, rubber plants, the oil palm and fs other sources of wealth . s* There are. exceptions, however, 1o , this rule. One of them is a tribe of no- | )n torious cannibal* living behind the i (Gold Coast in Africa. Their home is 1 e> in the belt where the kola tree grows, 1 18 itiid the kola nut is sent to many conn* | k* fries for medicinal purposes. i x" - Any injury done to one of these trees 13 is severely punished. The natives know that they can obtain the goed j J thin.es ilny want b> selling kola nuts. ' te and have sense enough to protect the J' trae.that boars them. ' j * ilere are two examples of half civil- i y ijced peoples who have learned the folly J of destroying sources of profit, and are beginning to repair the mischief 'they i _ have done. Gum tragacanth. used in j 1S making mucilage, was a considerable ie export from* Persia till the wild sup- | ie jdies were entirely exhausted. The i e. cultivation of the plant has recently ' ^ been started in wide areas around IsaP pahan and Tabriz, and the Government ,"y is regulating the business?and declares jg that it intends to renew the industry, ,g "Wild assafoetida was gathered ex- 1 It tensively in tlie wide region between ! . the Aral .Sea and the Persian Gulf, till it became so scarce thai it did not pay ' to collect it. .Many hundreds of na- | tives between Kabul and Ralkh are i j nt' ilSSat'OC- i I1U? 111111.15 iuv.il . ie ticla.?New York Sun. Df j 'Daughters of Revolutionary Soldier*. ?? There are no Revolutionary soldiers oj. r.ow alive, nor are there any survivors jy of the war of 1S12, the last veteran of it.' the 1S12 fracas, a resident of New tii J York Stale, having died some years 1S 1 ago. Daughters of Revolutionary sol2Q diers draw pension under a special act of Congress. Hannah Barrett, daughie ter of Private Noah Harrod of Captain id Webb's company of Colonel Sbepacd's at regiment of Massachusetts troops, was ie one of these pensioners. She lived at )j 425 Massachusetts avenue, and died ?s last December. The only other surn viving da lighter paid by the Boston ;h pension office is Rhode Thompson, j daughter of Thaddens Thompson, a w I private in Captaiu Thomas's company >n of Colonel Lamb's raiment of-New td Vork Artillery. She resides at Woodet hury. Conn. The Boston office does not n. 2ovcr all of New England, as payments are also made at Augusta. Mo., and f, Concord, N. II. There are about 2.0IK) d tvi/inu-s oi soldiers of JS12 still alive, It and of this number 100 arc paiil pen- i , it ijoiis through ibe Bo>ton urtico. l'?os- j st {on 1'eeord. I | IVIiy tlie Pope Ditln'l Have i? Tooth I'nlle'' j " s- "1 have drawn 'J.OOO.iUl ti?<;ili,*"-s:iid" i < ill I he dentist-monk of liouic recently before his death. No charge was made and the priest ivorked in the open air in the garden le >f Ids monastery and used no instru- I ly iients but his thumb and forelinger. ' 'd fx'O XIII. was one of his clients, and j c- Pope J'ius IX. said to him once: to "Dear brother, 1 should like very is iiu< h to have :i tooth pulled by you.'' ' 1 in "Oh, Holy Father!"' )f "P.uc it is impossible.-' "Oh! Why?" said the monk. "Because.'' returned the Pope rjuiet"e y. "1 have none I fit to pull."?Ilom.^ Correspondent rail Mall Garettc. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL 1 " I ' INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS S FOR OCTOBER 2. (Subject: Klislia Succeeds Kli.juli, II ! C Kings, II., 12-22?Golden Text, II Kings, II., 0?Memory Verne*, 12-14? ! Commentary on the Day's Lesson, T. The vision (v. 12). Lesson 11 of the j ^ third quarter should now be rev'eiwed. 12. j ^ "Elislia saw it." That is, tlie ascension of j i Elijah. Elisha saw this, however, not with L bin natural eyes, for it was a scene belong- j A inpr to the spiritual world, and to behold I ic it lie must, like ihe young man mentioned ^ in chapter C: 17. have hi.s inner senses un- j y reiled. This sight was a special divine fa- j j, ?? and was made by Elijah the condi- j ^ Lional sign of Elisha's obtaining a double ) 0 portion of his spirit (v. 10). "My father." f fhi.s title of affection was given bv the j rowiger prophets to an elder. Elijah had ; ? been a father to him in his care and train- . a ing, in love and legacy. These words [ p should be understood a.s an exclamation of ; j ivoftder and-amazement. Elislia sees his , j spiritual father depart, and he sees the ' ^ chariot and the celestial steeds, and he i ] jails after them all. .Some think that j t Elisha desired to convey the impression ; 0 that Elijah was more to Israel by bis coun- i ? ?els, reproofs and prayers than chariots j ? md horses. "Rent them." This was a r.onimon mode ;>1 expressing gnet. iMisna } looked upon Elijah'* departure as a per- i 'onal bereavement. He had lost the guide nf his youth; loneliness came over i ( liiin and he acted like a heartbroken j mourner. I IT. Dividing the -Jordan (vs. 13. 14). 13. j The mantle. This was the same mantle i with which he had been called by Elijah to ! the prophetic office, and by which Elijah I divided Jordan. Having the mantle was a J proof that he was invested with the au- j thority of his master. "Stood by the i bank." He was the same man and yet not | Lhe same; like many another who has | ?one to the gate of heaven with a depart- 't y ing saint. He could no more lean on Eli- ' V jab, but he found that he had received as j }; the prophet's dying legacy, 1. Elijah's : ; mantle. 2. Elijah's (jod. 3. Elijah's j * ?pirit. 4. Elijah's office. I 14. '"Smote." Elisha's first miracle was identical with Elijah's last one. He acts 1 upon the faith that he would receive from i t Sod the power which he had desired, i ] 'Where is." etc. This question docs not j y imply doubt of God's presence, but is an j entreaty for His power to show itself, and. | zive a foretaste of the spirit of Elijah i ] iv hi eh had been promised. j ;i in. Searching for Elijah (vs. 15-18) 15. ( Sons of the prophets. The fifty who had n lone to a heiglit to watch Elijah and j j Klisha as they went across the Jordan (v. j t D. and were waiting for his return. "They <j aid," etc. When they raw the miracle ] ivrotight by Elisha they were confirmed in' 1 t the belief that lie was the divinely ap- -j t minted successor of Elijah. "Bowed i c themselves." Thus showing that they at- ; V knowlcdgcd him as their head. These j t men were trained up in the schools of tlie ; a prophet?. q 1G. '"Seek thy master."' Tt cannot be. ] mpposed after what they had said before > to Elisha that the Lord would take away a !iis master on that day. that they expected to find Elisha somewhere alive. Xo doubt f Klisha had at once told them how Elijah 1 iad departed, but evidently they could J not fully believe that lie had gone bodily I to heaven. Their search to find him. how- ! C ?ver. was as fruitless and idle as the at- -i tempt of some moderns to explain away j l! the idea of a bodily ascension into heaven, i 1 'Ye shall not." Klisha was absolutely* I $ certain that the body could not be < t found. | a 17. "Ashamed.'' To iefu.se longer to J >' jrant their request. He saw that, ihev 1 c would not be satisfied until they had mado the search. The best way to solve doubts ! c in<l questionings about religion is by a j 1 personal investigation. Dr. Nelson, in his j ' book on infidelity, says that he never j A inew an inlidel who fairly investigated the j c ilaims of the gospel to remain an infidel. ? 18. "Did 1 not say?'' 'Hie search only ' confirmed the words of Elisha. Those that would find Elijah, let them aspire to . 'he heavenly paradise. Let them follow : the high steps of his sincere faithfulness, i ? trong patience, undaunted courage, firrent zeal and constant obedience.* * I J IV. Healing the waters (vs. 19-22). 19. j v "Men of the city." l'rominent citizens o? i c Pr.fliantt { liov wow? plrflpi ? fir I t the city who-thus applied to Klislia, ami 1 their action shows tiiut lie had their eonfi- t rience. As he had now attained the high- n est eminence in the prophetic office, possi- a lily they cxpected that he might he able to 'I rid the city of its plague. "Is pleasant." 1 rite situation of Jericho, near the passage ; c [>f the Jordan, was such as to attract a | n ?on>ideral)le population after it was re- j i built: and for the sake of the prosperity ; I which came to them in other ways they j 1 were content to dwell in such nil unvvhole- j soinc place. Now, however, they saw a liope of benefit and with this thought they ;ame to Elisha. Jericho was a part of that j sountry which, in Gen. 18:-10, is compared : ], 'to the garden ot (lie Lord.'' "Is naught.'' <] Ts had. harmful; tlie word '"naught" was j t formerly used in this sense. "(J round bar- j r ren." .See R. Y. "Oasteth her fruit." K. i > Vr., margin. The evil effect was clearly im j i Ronsequenee of the hurtful water, for the I t liealing of the spring is to bring a remedy J t for the other evils. It seems therefor# j v that the water was such as earned the tree* j \ to she;d their fruit prematurely. J 11 20. "A new cnise." A new cup or dish, ; j' one "never used in any common or unholy ' J service. The purity of the vessel was to J s typify the purification wrought flpon the t spring." "Salt therein." "Klislia in work- v ing this miracle would seem to'make use of means just as Jesus did when lie put spittle on the blind man's eyes" (John 9:6). The injurious property ami effect was not taken from ihe water by the salt > c poured in. for even if the salt actually j t possessed this power, a whole spring could ,| not b<? corrected by a single dish of salt, | ;i even for one day, much less for a longer j] time, or forever. i u *21. "Unto the spring." Tito fountain j < . bursts forth at the eastern foot of a high ' 'j double mound, or group of mounds, situ- | 0 atefl a mile or mote in front of the mount-i j a am ynarantaum, ana aoout imny-nvi: ;| minutes from the modern village of .Ten* j > cho. It is a large and beautiful fountain 1 j of sweet and pleasant water: not. indeed, y cold, but also uot vvariu. It is the only, i one near .Jericho, and there is every reason ! to regard it as llie scene of Elislia's mil-' aole. "Lord?healed." Xot Elisha, nor I the salt, but Ood wrought the change in j ^ the fountain. This miracle was typical of j j, the work done by tlie Lord after the as- j n cension of Christ, by means of the apostles | J( and their successors casting the salt of j Christian doctrine from the new cruse of | t( the gospel into the unhealthful waters of 0 the .fcricho of this world, and healing j them. Compare this miracle with that of the healing of the poisonous pottage (cliap. j ^ 4:38-41) and the waters of Marali (Exodj j 41 13:25). j (J l-'rcucli Wiil?r-l'ow*r Schrmr, Application lias been made to the French r.egi-.'attue for sanction to employ the ; ' water power 01' a lake one ami a half miles wide, .situated 011 a liigli point, in the 11 Department of ilje Ardtche. for the pur* , _ pose of generating electric power for light- ; ing. not only St. Ktienne. but all the prin- " i-ipal towns in the Department of the Loire. Tin's scheme is in addition to the j Electricity supply project belonging to the municipal authorities of St. Ktienne. and 1 is promoted by M. Mallet, 01 St. Ktienne. j < I. - ? --A-* .: .-..1 .?| ,uKI luiiui, iu\nW II' IM tlliunuclicu tllrt l i?v*o? I-"" - -- P will be a\ailable from the Ardeche wuiu'a. l; i Harvard Memorial in Loudon, ; j [American residents in Loudon. England, j c. Iiave obtained permission from the Bishop of Rochester to erect a stained glass win- \ a low in St. Saviour's Collegiate Church, j aj Southwai'k, to the memory of John Har- j , rard^Avho originated the great college j j, whif'^beais his name in the United States, | tt *""io was born in Southwark iu 1007. _ j ?j Reward For Hlg Fortitude, Spencer Charrington. member of the British .Parliament, eighty-two years old, ? ha9 received a silver cup from admiring i c' fellow-members because he sat through a twenty-tive-hour sessivn on July 19-20, i b ' a 'HE GREAT DESTROYER ! OME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT ! THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. | >nr Drink lilll Is ?J.I51,C33,n:9 Only ! For One Year, or SO;i For Kach Drink- | er-Larite Increase In Coimumption of ! Alcoholic Beverage*. One-fourth of all tho people in the f'ni- j ed States drink alcoholic beverages. The j ] mount of money spent in this way during j 903 was $1,451,6315,379, or an average ex ienditure for each drinker of All t his is. according to the American (Jro- j er'3 annual estimate of the nation's drinl: ; lill.-based upon official United States reiorts and carefully compiled statistic-", and j lot announced in the interests of the \V. \ T. U... or intended for anything but I old, actual information, lor the nation to j ] ace and ponder upon. . . These statistics show. also, tint every i nan in the United States who drinks at 11 drinks twice as much as his t'or.ef at lira did?or a* he himself'did'if he w.\s < Irinking twenty-thret years ago. For in 880. the- consumption of alcoholic drinks 1 >er capita was 10.50 gallons'. To-day it is 9.98 gallons. All of which jzoes to prove hat prosperity leads to an increased use < f stimulants: that as the American people row bigger and richer they drink harder. i r else, as they drink harder they grow icher. But ihw.is lejectcd by.the White libbon workers. i. i At any rate, the fact remains that iu the ast twenty years the desire for strong 1 Irink?but particularly for beer?has inreased as steadily as the years have assed, and more steadily and far more [ apidly than even tfce increase in populaion has justified. The use of spirits is now more "general han ever before and, according to the retort, if there was not a tax of $1.10 per ;allon on whisky the nation would have j teen debauched with cheap qualities of the j iquor years ago. There have been 132* ; _ llicit distilleries seized during the past j ear and 66,444 gallons of moonshine j diisky reported for seizure. While, were t f ieer as cheap as its rivals, coffee and tea. j t is further determined it would be ; ilaced at once as the king of American j leverage*. j As it is, However, coffee si ill leads il?c j m( ist. The United States drinks more of it j *? han any other nation, using approximate- i J?11 y 1.000,000,000 pounds of raw coffee everv ! .r ear, at a cost of about $160,000.01)9. which i epresents about 1,566.902,614 gallons. j ^1: Then comes beer, a strong second, with : in .449,879,95*2 gallons in 1903. or an aver- j P? ce for each father, mother and child of bout 18.04 gallons annually. Of this ! mount only 4,000,000 gallons are of the j [?e niported quality. The total expense to | J?' he nation for its beer alone last vear was ; ? 727,042,245. I There is more tea drinking, too, since j ? he duties were decreased. Tea comcs ! hird on the list as far as the quantity [ . onsumed is concerned, 90,000,000 "pounds ; j2* >eing imported in 1903. or about one-half \ he amount of coffee (450.000,000 gallons), j J .t a cost of about one-tenth. And last in i c" uantity, but with a thump, comes the fierv ! iquors and spirits that make up the insit?- j v ous cocktail and iridescent and potent , fter-dinnqr cordials. . The year's consumption here is notable ' 49 or an increase of one-tenth of one gallon j >er capita, the largest increase for one j Q.c ear since Columbus discovered America. ! ?l! Summed up, the total represents 120,- I 100,000 gallons, less than one-tentli the ! i1.1 mount of beer, but the money value is ! y nany times as much, the revenue of im* ! It( >orted spirits alone amounting to nearly j ln 126,000.000. This shows in a relative es- ; imate that the average cost of coffee, tea j " nd cocoa per capita every year is $2.01 j | F? vliile for spirits and liquors it is S15..14, i . ir about seven times as much. j The report shows further that we are j ? Irinking more imported wine and less do- j nestic than we were two years ago, the j atio being about 30,000.000 gallons to M i.OOO.OOO, while Deer is turning jusi rue slither way. the United States exporting j ta nany gallons annually. ! , / ihc I >r Stnnj; to Death. j ;u "At la?t ifc biteth like a serpent and j ? tingeth like an adder." i J? The nolice court missionary in Birniing- j ? lam, England, tells of a young married | Ionian, twenty-eight years of age, who j j? lied a shocking death from drinking. Up j jjj 0 the age of twenty-six she had been a | *u eetotaler. and did not know what the j . a?to of drink was. She was a leading j j, nember of the Gospel Temperance Mis- | f? ion. and sang the polos at the meetings. ! i? L'hen she was taken ill, the doctor ordered | randy, and it proved like the first taste j v: if blood 1o a tame tiger. She could never j gain be kept from it. and at last it killed if ler. A craving was awakened which must , lave been in I lie blood. The adder .smug j ? icr to death.?National Advocate. I Oneer Drunken Manias. | iy DT A sheriff who died some few years since Ki :cpt a 1 ecord of the curious cases of 5j( [rmikenness that came under his observaion. Several habitual ca<>es had devel- j jjr iped odd manias. One woman who had j tjj teen arrested 167 times for drunkenness ! :Ul n twenty-eight years had a mania for ireaking win.iovs when she was intonated. An dd soldier suffering from a round in the head always stole Bibles ilien he was tipsy. Another man stole lothing )>ut spades, while one woman's i amy rail to shawls and another's to shoes. " 1 man named f?mbb was :mprisoned cvmii time., tin- sffalina' tub*, although i here was nothing hi lii< line of life to | jp: iiakc tubs imrtic-ii!arJy desirable to liim. ! "8 * |pe Irish 1'oveity. ? ' TIi? fi??al problem in lrc lanJ is callable ( if very >ini|>Je demonstration. Last year , lie poptiialion of the Sister Inland had , Iwindled down to aboxit 4.413,600. yet tiie , ntoun: spent on whisky and l>eer alone ii 19IKJ ?--u'-hc-d tiie huge total or ?11.'H)0.- ! P? <K>. and tiie stun paid to tin* British JSx- hequer as excise duty exceeded i<5,000,000. on he expenditure upon intoxicating drinks mi t all kinds during the year is estimated '.?| t over ?'14,000.01)0. which would mean lti li^iiit Jt'15 for each iaiuilv oi five person*. 5io wonder that poverty stalk's through Pi1 iie land in the presence oi ?ucli a -elt-ini- j o.-eJ burden.?London Christian. t i jat A Revelation. on The editor ai tiie Xew Yorl: Voice, on eing asked ij there was noi sor.ie mistake dV( i it* statements. replied: ".No. We went nei lit." lie .savs, "our own private detectives jv, t> uuike inveaiijations, and then em- ^ loved a good lawyer to go with us. and ?,e( jgethtr we examined the records, and to vv0 ur humiliation and the disgrace o) the ?n ity, we found that some of the most in- as inious dives in the city .belong to men ha' rho occupy high positions, and to whom ths lie people look as examples of law abiding nd honorable citizens." A Oneer l'rojecl.* j* i TIio Tr-sian < .'overnnieut will pr.y jO.ODO cai iii)!ex to any one who will indkale. l?el'o:e re< u!y !. lfXIo, a method ol "doctoring" alco- f?1 ill i.t sticli a way that. v:hile n.selul lor tin inning and oilier purpose*. it will have dri ,if!i a l>ad taste that ?u on.-' could ji:i?-ii)'y ity rink it. Italian Aimv Temperate. ' Alcoholism is < xtrem?.;y rare io the I se< Laliait anuy. In ihc year 1901. ihe !ate?c l?1 ii- wlikii lii'ir.t*-- ati* available. only twen." live casSM vw:c a;it!:ii.;ed iir.o the lso<i>i- J10 i W. f01 Making It Eaoy ro Do Right. Tn Sweden i lie saloons are closed on pay } ay, and the banks are kept open from n<? lily morning until midnight. The (iov- WT rnnient is protecting the laboring man ,V1 gainst the greedy, ruinous saloon traffic. nd encouraging mom to put tneir money i bank. It would be a commendatory act our Government would take an equal in-rest in her subjects.?Arkansas Search- }u gl". frl ______ 0r( The Holland Society of Total .\Utinuce, in making some studies about llie inuenee of alcohol oil the work ot school |Qg liildren. found that among 1780 children, aaj 'venty-tive were steady users ot alcoliolic p0] everages; 1262 us-ed tliem occasionally, od 453 were t.ota,1 abstainers. i Enoch Walked With God. My God, how can I walk with Thee? O, wilt Thou not tc me confide, rhe secret of the Enoch life, In Thy communion to abide? Not for eternity alone, lo brighten hope and cancel fear; But, listening Father, for to-day, * To know the joy to feel Thee neai? [n skies and flowers and holy book At times I hear Thee speak to me, [ love to speak to Thef: in prayer, But, Father, do I walk with Thee! Can I be walking with my God, If, through some storm' of selfish grief, [ filirink, and lie with sullen gloom In some foul C2ve of unbelief? Or, if alternately within Now reigns the good and now the iU? Or, if my heart in changeful mood*. Rebels against Thy holy will? Come, Holy Spirit of the Lcosd, Before whom chaos cannot be, To harmony bring all my soul. That God may come and walk with me? Be near mp, 0 Thou, Christ diviae Wlio art the life, the truth, the way, Now let me closely follow Thee Then I shall walk with God to-day. ?J. Hunt Cooke, in Chicago Stt-ndard. i . Trust in God. ! \ We sing: "In some way or other, the >rd will provide," and still we worry out it, as if the Lord did not i?re any-* ing about us. or were unable to help us, wever much He might wish to do so. What is lacking, in a greater or leas deee, is an intelligent trust in God?a di?sition to take God at His word. To ; iny Christians it is comparatively easy trust in God for spiritual blessings, but Bicult, if not altogether impossible, ,to list Him for temporal blessings, and yec the promises of God's word there is no stinction made as to these, or if there ia y discrimination it is in favor of tera-ral blessings. '"Thou shalt dwell in the ad, and verily thou shalt be fed." "Your savenly Father knoweth that ye have ed of these things." What things? Why; od and clothing, to be sure. And all ese things shall be added unto you. There are two errors with regard to ese promises of God, into one or tha her of which we are apt to fall. The first is the disposition to spiritual* s them, until they lose all reference t? mporal thing*. "Thou shalt be fed." fcs, with spiritual food!" "Ye shall ba jthed." "Yes, with the rotes of right-, usness!" But who says this? Assurednot the Saviour when He directed the tention ol' the disciples to the birds of e air that are fed (not on spiritual food), an illustration of the way in which Goa juld provide for them! There is, in fact, it the slightest intimation that anything se is meant than the supply .of thosa mporal and material wants to which the sciples were subject while in the world, le care that our Heavenly Father bejws on the comparatively insignificant d worthless objects of His creation is ed as a convincing argument to prove is care lor those that trust Him. "Are not mucn Detter tnan mey: ? The otiier error is that of the fanatic M 10 sava: "God has promised to take care lig me, to feed and clothe me, why should H make anv effort 10 care for mvself? To B urt is eaefer than to work, therefore I B ill give myself no conoern as to the H Dthing and feeding of myself and -my . H milv, for verily the Lord will provide! Undoubtedly the Lord will provide, bat. B >w? Xot by encouraging improvidence laziness, but by putting the mean* of - B pply within the reach of those who trust BH tm that they may help themselves; just jH He does for the fowls of .the air ana all HQ e other creatures that He has made.- B iod feedeth the sparrow that scratcheth H r a living," is not exactly Scriptural lan* H lage, but it conveys a very sound Scrip- H ral truth, nevertheless. HS The same rule applies in temporal mat? M rs as in spiritual, says the Chicago Ad- 111 .nee. If one would enjoy spiritual bless- I gs he must uee the means of grace that IS sd has placed within his reach. The one bio does not will assuredly starve spirit- |j}j illy just as he who, through indifference Bj laziness, neglects his opportunity to Ifl ake a living, will starve physicallv. Sffi "Trust in the Lord and do good!" and, BS I assured, the "doing good" ifl as impor- H| nt a condition of the promise as is the Eli ustiug. But having done all. ye may safeleave the results with Him who has Bag omised. for His promise cannot fail. . There is no room for anxiety, no occa- Bj >n for worry. "Commit thy ways unto e Lord, trust also in Him. and He will ing it to pass, and He will bring forth y righteousness as the light and thy B| dgment as the noonday!" OEa A Hypocritical Excuse. 99 We must impress upon parents the great K| sponsibility which rests upon them. MB I occasionally meet with people who say: HI tVhen I was a boy my father and mother ;re very strict. They brought me up so He pdly that a reaction took place in my ind, and I have turned away from re- H| ;ion." I have sometimes said to such rsons: MB "Did thev teach vou to be honest?" 9M "Yes." WBk "To tell the truth?" "Yes." > m "Did they insist upon it?" WW "Yes." _ _ 3g| "Has any reaction taken pTace on these KB ints?" 19 There is a great deal of nonsense palmed : upon the community in relation to this ltter. Not one man of us learns the iltiplicatiou table from sheer love of HQj but 1 never knew any one to say his nd was in reaction against the multication table.?Dr. John Hall. Lofty S?.crTflcei. KflHI The only way to become capable of lofty jflg orifices is first to begin with humble Hfij es. The doing of the little duties at our n house door, the love of our neighbor, ihaps uninteresting and rather stupid, ? the first steps in the ladder of good5?, at the top of which sparkles the mar- HH :'s crown. For there are martyrs now, io live out their quiet lives, die in their is. wear everyday rlothes, enjoy homely HV >rship, yet lav tlieir lives at their heav- In ly Master's feet as full and as acceptably H| either Ignatius or Ridley. It is the bit of making sacrifices in all thing* Hffj it enables us tor lr.aking them in great. HM "* ?ptaiinn mBl ICU It in fljacu Kfl lie. X/iIUV|, M--MM The Little Love Service!. Many a trusting child is cast down be- Jftg ise the little love service, which may be HI juired. seems too small to be counted aught in the great harvest field, forgetig that the dear ]?rd a?-ks of Hi? cnil- HB en only so much as He gives them abii-^H to perform? Augustus L. Thompson. Hb You Mukt Seek Kim. BOH You need (iod in the very things that^^l fiu to separate you from Him. You HP i-t seek Him in the very places where e misery of liie feeins to be that He ii^H t. Von must question the stoniest pat'uc^^H streams of water.?Phillips Brooks., A High Speed Record. Sb?IB rn a dark room, where tie could man thing but the outline oi his machine, th a fitoD watch held on him and six^TO tnesses present, John A. Shields, of Ot-HS va, Kan., clattered off 222 words on aHI > writer in a single minute, thus break-^^g ; the world's record by ten words and MM monstrating his right to be hailed as tho^H^ rld's champion. Charles McGurrin has^^fl a number of years held the world's i at 212 words per minute. _ a Curfons Libel.'' Hal tl. Bene Dubreuil, a French autlior, h'nv-Hflj ; written a novel containing a character^BK med Bishop Volaille (fowl). Bishop Cka-HH [i (capon), of Nice, hag brought an ac*^HE . i