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THE HERALDa EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, oc o At ewbrry, S. C. InvariabY hn A:dvince. Theppr ts atthe expimo of teme forrwhioSvieeis fa A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, 1istellann% s !Agriculture,.Markets, &c. Te . Y WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 11, 1880. NO. 3R. Teon bte colofum advberis t t criflU.. n above. swEisceulane"s a Purest and Best Medicine ever a A'~anI~ ~ l cbs t andzot t1ve'prvjRrtIeg of all other Witers makes the gmet est Blood Purifie,Lver evulator,=ndL12 and Health Reatring Agent on earth. wher -110 trsii Vo= nerfec, are theiroperatious. - .h So&ft aLmY. bfWd*4h25b. To all whobe u :.nts Ie rregularity of the bwels ourury rNgav.or w-ho reqLure snAp - ntzeraan iters are No matter Wbat your 11 oa- ornptons are, whtattrhatr upe Hop Uittvrs. aaoe.It may save y he P. noY t sure use and urge to 00Atp .a. rlemember, op BmtersA I duk en nost t hePurest c1ne ever e: "and HOP COo I s the e ,8afest an d best Ask Children. One Hop PiD for Stomach. Lier and Ridneys So superior toal others. AkDruggists. D. L C. Is an absoluie ad restable cure for Drunkenness, use of opiuta.tobac.co and narco-de, Iodby&V=W0 N .r-4. ,N.Y. BIJRIAL CASIEO LU UIAW1N& SON Rospeetfilly announe. hat they hage on hand the largest and best variety of BU RIAL CASES ever brought to Newberry, consisting of Fisk's Metalic Cases, Embalming Cases, Rosewood Cases. Together with COFFINS of their own Make, Which are the best and cheapest :n the place. Having a FINE HEARSE they are pre pared to furnish Funerals in town or coun try in the most approved manner. Particular attention given to the walling up of graves when desired. Give us a call and ask our prices. R. C. CHAPMAN & SON. May7, 1879. - 19--T. A CARD. P..O TOG RAPH.) Clarks' Superior Photos. Know everybody, by these presents Greeting. That we are prepared to do all kinds of portrait ind landscape work in the finest style known to the art. Ferro types, photographs, from card to 8x10 inches in size, large and small, old and young, finished ip India ink, erayon, water or oil. color,, at- eioes never before ap proached in this country. The season of landscape or out-door pic tures being uipon' 'u, we are prepared to take views of residences, Qr any kind of out-door picture, .sergeoscopic or single large views, lfa..~fcien& -encouragemnent is off'ered we will view up Newberry. If you wish pictures of your homes now is the time.. Everybody -should have a picture of their home. Visit the gallery and jeave your order. The mnore that will take pictures the cheaper will they come. CL ARK BROS. Apr.21'; i-af - - Greenville & Golumbia Rs R. REDUCED RATES. On and after February 20, 1880, the fol lowing Tickets will be placed on sale arall Ticket offices on line af this Road, viz: ROUND TRIP TICKETS fromn a.y Sta& tion to any Station at the rate of FOUR CENTS PER MILE. counding distance both ways...GOOD) FOR TEN DfAYS, includiig day of-iale. The iSOUND TRIP TICKETS good for TRREE DAYS AT THREE CENTS PER MILE will be kept on sale as heretofore. The rate for Children- between the age of six and twelve years will be half of the above lates.-. General Superintendent. . JansEonros, Ja., General Ticket Agt.. Feb. 25, 9 AtLf NEWBILRRY HOTEL, -BY A..W._T..SIMMONS. This elegant new Hotel is now open for the reception of gaests, and the proprietor will spare no efotto giesatIsfaction to the travelliDg pblic. Godairy rooms, com fortable ed, the best oftfare, attentive, ac commodatiog servants,and moderate charges will be-the rule.. June 9, 2A-tf. Preserve Your Old Books ! - E. R. STOKES, BIainlok. anufactuw (IEBIL BOOKBINDRs Haa-moyed eggesit the City HaM. where he 1prepaed, with firs.elaw work men, to do all kinds of work in his line. BLANK4 BOOKS RULED to anry pattern and bound in anay styie desired. My &cilities and long acquaintance with the beeDn6 einable mse to guarsntee satisac tion on rNdjrs.Ig 3isk Books, Ralrad Books, and Books for the use of Clerks of (oar SbUend FnqbatB Judges. Masters ir Eauly~ 1s~ County.Ofiteials. ?,unhles, ~mIes,Music, Newspapes and Prwla, 1Ikns0ofpabito1ns bOOr. ,, the most 'reasonable terms and ii the best manner. All orders promptly attended to. E. R.STOKES, wain Street. opposite New City Hall, Oct. 8, 41-tr'. Columbia, S. C Dry. Goods and XWotions. -AT 1X7C11310 IAIS! -BY C. F. JACKSOA -OF COLUMBIA, S. C. This well known and-popular Dry Goods House, to keep in the strict line of duty, offers Inducements to the Public in all lines of goods, which will be sold for the rest Qf the season IT 8ENSATION PRIHS! Regardless of Cost or Consequences. ,A proof of the pudding is chewing the bag, so come and see me or send an order. Satisfaction guaranteed. C. F. JACKSON. July 14, 29-tf. .isenaneous. -~ . IRON BITERS, bli for ALl A Great ToWi&, and e .t 0t IRON BITTERS, 9-M, W -. A Sure Appetizer. S n Le of: -NEnerm BIItS. I, :en r rIches th ebWooe, the A cmou. sangsh"ff. ads and' Chu ation thsvlae IRONB%&ERb, luai ed?ia hihl reeommended. A valuble ediCine. .ea arham-e IRON BTTERS a.sp e eeAa.au con the dietve on. A teap:= t b(r maswill remove all, IRONBErE fStspeptc sumptoma. Not SoM u a RevaeM TRY IT. - Sold by all Druggists. [RON BIIERS,9 e m For Delicate Feas-x BALTI MORIE, Md. Wholesale by DOWIE & MOISE, Wholesale Druggists, Charleston, S. C. 15-ly. DR. S. F. FANT, Wholesale and Ketail DRUIG GIST, NEWBERRY, S. C., Offers Imported and Indigenous Drugs. Staple and Rare Chemicals. -- Foreign and Domestic Medical Prepara * Fie Essential Oils and Select Powders. New Pharmaceutical Remedies. Special attention is called to the follow ing Standard PreparaI,ions: FANTLie:egulator. FANT'S Elixir of Calisay a with Pyrophos phate- of Iron. PNT'I' Compod.Fluid Extract of Buchu. FANT'S Compound Extract of Queen's De light and Sarsaparilla; with Iodide of Potassium. FANT'S Soothing Syrup. FANT'S Essence of Jamaica Ginger. FANT'S Ague Cure-well known to every one in -the County, having been thoroughly tested in fever and ague. FANT'S Cologne. Curatine and Iron Bitters-the great Blood Purifier. Sole Agent for Swift's Syphilitic Specific, the Great Eliminator of all Impurities of the Blood. The cure for Scrofula, Rheuma tism, Neuralgia and all Nervous Affections. Buckeye Pite Ointmerrt, a specific for Ilso offer the largest assortment ci Lamps, Soaps, Perfumery, Hair Brushes, Tooth Brushes, and Toilet Articles,. of ev. ery description, at the very lowest prics. Call and examine for yourselves. Prescriptions carefully oompounded at al' hours of the day and night. Mar. 31, 14-tf. BLEASE HOTEL FAR THE BEST. Large, airy rooms. Table unsurpassed and that ExcEL.ENT SPRING WATER niakt it equal to a seaside or mountain home. Meals, 25 Cents Each. Regular~ boarders Ten Dollars per month UENRY H. BLEASE, Manager, .ai BI.EASE HoTEI., ManStrecet, Newberry, 8. C. July 7, 1880. 28-1y WILLIANSTONI, S. C. Fall Session Opens Aug. 2, 188e I will come up from Branchville and pas Newberry on Saturday,.July 31, to esco' pupils to the College. Send for a new illustrated Catalogue. j Jne (~,2~ S. LANDER, Pres't AN AUTUMN DAY. Like - jewel golden-rimmed; Like a chalice nectar brimmed; Like a strain of music low Lost in some sweet long ago; Like a fairy story old By the lips of children told; Like a rune of ancient bard; Like a missal glory-starred Comes upon her winsome way This.enchanting autamn day. O'er the hills the sunlight sleeps; - Through the vale the shadow creepi On the river's stately tides Rich the silent splendor glides; Where the flowery orehars be, Perfumed breezes wander free; Where the purple clusters shine Through the net-work of the vine, Trgrant odors fill the aIr; Beauty shineth everywhere. While upon her joyous way I C6mes the lovely autumn day. ~iseeauetus. YOU MUST BE TRRSHE We Iave All t Go Through the Same ce%s, and Can' Vvade It. The Great xen Who Have Stood the Fir the sma Wits. ftme of the Scenes of Ieaven-Mother Teling of the Aro=a of Eden. SERMON BY DR. TALMAC Sub ect: "Threshed Out." TEXT: Isa. xxviii., 27-28-"For fitches are not threshed with threshing instrument, neither i cart wheel turned about upon cummin" but the fitches are bea out with a7staff, and the cum7 with a rod. Bread-corn is bri ed; because he will not ever threshing it," The. heat has been almost sufferable; in the furnace, mi human life has been consumi many fatnilies have been brok4 misfortunes of various kinds h come upon various people; and suppose, standing in any cong gation to-day in this country, jreat need of ninety-nine out c hundred is solace. Look then this ufrequented allegory of text. There .are three kinds seed mentioned: fitches, cumr and corn. Of the last we know.' 3ut it may be well to st that the fitches and the cau were small seeds like the away or the chick-pea. Wi these grains or herbs were to threshed they were thrown on floor, and the workmen we come around with staff, or rod flail, and beat them until the s would be separated ; but wi the corn was to be threshed, t was thrown on the floor, and men would fasten horses or o: to a cart with iron. dented whe that cart would. be drawn aroi the threshing floor, and so work would be sccomplished.] ferent kinds of threshing for ferent produets. The fitches not t,hreshed with a threshing strument, neither is a cart wl turned about upon the cumnr but the fitches are beaten out v a staff and. the cuimmin with a i Bread corn is bruised ; because will not ever be threshing it. The great thought that the t presses-upon our souls is, that all go through some kind of thri ing process. The fact that may be devoting your live's bonorable a'nd noble purposes not win you any escape. Wil force, the Christian emancipa -was, in his day, derisively ca "Doctor Cant well." Thomas ] bington Macaulay, the advocat all that was good long before became the conspicuous histo: of his day, was caricatured in of the Quarterly Reviews as "BABBLETONGUE MACAULAY. Norman McLeod, the great fri of the Scotch poor, was indo onely mtaligned in all quarters L,hough on the day w ben be carried out to his' burial, a w man stood and looked at the neral procession, and said : he had done nothing for anyt more than he has done for me should shine as,the stars for and ever." All the small wi London had their fling at J1 Wesley, the father of Method If such men could not escapt maligning of the world, nei can enn ernect to get rid of sharp, keen stroke of the tri bulum. All who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer per secution. Besides that, there arc the sicknesses and the bankrupt-I cies and the irritations and the disappointments which are ever putting a cup of aloes to your lips. Those wrinkles on your face are hieroglyph'es -which if' decipher ed, would make out a thrilling story of trouble. The Footstep of. the rabbit is seen the next morn ing on the snow, and on the w-hite hairs of the aged are the foot prints showing where swift trouble alighted. Even amid. thejoys and bilarities of . life, troubles will sometimes break in. As when the people were assembled in the Charlestown theatre, during the Revolutionary war, and ,wbile they were witnessing a farce, and Iwhile the audience was in great gratulation, the guns of an advane ing army were heard, and the an D dience broke up in wild panic and ran for their lives. So ofttimes when you are seated amid the joys and festivities of this world, you hear'the cannonade of some great disaster. All the fitches and the eummin and the corn must come fee down on the threshing-floor and be. pounded. E. My subject, in the first place, teaches us that it is no compli ment to us if we escape groat trial. the The fitches and tie cummin on a one threshing-floor might look s a over to the corn on another thresh the ing-floor, and say: "Look at that ten poor, miserable, bruised corn. We in have only been alittle pouInded, is- but that has been almost destroy be ed." Well, the corn, if it had lips: would answer and say: Do you in- know the reason you have not. ch been as much pounded as I have? d; It is because yot are not of so m ; mueh worth as'I am; if you'were, ve you would be as severely run' i dver." Yet there are men who re. suppose they are the Lord's fa he vorites simply because their barns f a are full, and their bank account to is flush, and there are no funerals .n in the house. It may be because of they are fitches and cummin, in while down at the end-of the lane all tfie poor widow may ti the Lord's ate corn. You are but little pounded in because you are but little worth, ar- and she bruised and gound be Ien cause she is the best part of the be harvest. The heft of the thresh he ing machine is according to the ld value of the grain. If you have or NOT BEEN MUCH THaESHED. ~ed in life perhaps the're is not much en to thresh. if you have not been at much shaken of troubles, perhaps he it is because there is going to be en a very -small yield, When the ls; are plenty of black-berries the nd gatherers go out with large bas he kets, but when the drouth bas al )if- most consumed the fruit then. a if- quart measure will do as well. - It are took thd venomous snake on Paul's in- hand, and the pounding of him eel with stones until he was taken up in ; for dead, and the jamming against rith him of prison gates, and the Ephe od- sian vociferation, and the skinned he sakles of the painfal stocks, and the foundering of the Alexandrian ext corn ship, and the- beheading we stroke of the Roman sheriff to sh- bring .Paui:to his proper develop rou)f ment. It was not because -Robert to Moffat and Lady Rachel Russell ill and Frederick Oberlin were worse er- than other people.that they had t>r, to suffer; it was because they were led better, and God wanted, to make ~a- them best. By the carefulness-of of the threshing you may always he conclude the value of the grain. -ian N~ext, my text teaches us that one God proportions our trials to what we can bear. The staff for the fitches; the rod for the cummin; nd the iron wheel for the corn. ~tri. Sometimes people in great trou al. ble say: "Ohlcean't bearit !' Blut, was you did bear it. God would not rk- bave sent it- upon- you if be bad fa- not known that you could bear it. "If You trembled and you swooned, ody but you got .Lbrough. God will , he not take from your eye one tear too ver many, nor from your lungs one a of sigh too deep, ner from your tem ohn pies one throb too sharp. The sm. perplexities of your earthly busi the ness have not in them one tangle her too intricate. You sometimes feel the a if our world were full of blud geons, flying hap-hazard. h,. they are threshing instrumen that God just suits to your eat There is not a dollar of bad det on your ledger, or a disappoi nient about goods that you expei ed to g6 up -but that have go down, or a..swindle of your bu ness partner, or a trick on t part of those who are in the saE kind of.Msiness that you are; b God intended to overrule for yo immortal help. "Oh" you ea ao need talkig Lb 4 me-I don't like to "ted and -outraged." Neith does the cQi' like- the corn thres er; but after it has been thresh and winnowed, it has a great de bett& -opinion of winnowingmi and corn threshers. "Well," y say, "if _I epuld chose my trout I wou6i tie'willing to be troiibled Ah my brother, then it wotld n be trouble. You would chose som thing that would not hurt, an unless it hurts, it. does not g sanctified. Your trial, perbaj may be childlessness. You a fond of children. You say, "WI does God send children to th other household, where they a unwelcome, and are BEATEN AND BANGED ABOUT, when I would have takon them the arms of my affection?" You say: "Any. other trial b this." Your trial may be a d figured countenance, or a face tb is easily caricatured, and you sa: "Oh I could endure anything only I was good looking." - Ai your trial, perhaps, is a viole temper . and' you lhave to drive like six unbroken horses amid t gunpowder explosions of a gre holiday, and ever and anon runs away. with you. Your tr is the asthma. You say: "Oh, if were rheumatism or neuralgia erysipelas, but it is this astbn and it is such an exhausting thi to'- breathe."- Your-troftbe-is husband, short, sharp, snappy a cross about the house, and raisii a small riot because a button is o How could. you know the butt is off? Your trial is a wife ev in contest with the servants, a she is a sloven. Though she m very careful about her ap'pearan in your presence once, now she careless because she says her f tune is made! Your trial is hard school-lessoni you cant learn, and you have bitten yc finger-nails until they are a sig to behold. Every body has soi vexation or annoyance or tii and he o'r she thinks it is the a least adapted. "Any thing t this," all say,"Any thing but thi O my hearers, are yo)u not asha ed to be complaining all this til against God? Who manages t affairs of this world, any ho Is it an infinite Modoc? or a E ting Bull savagel' or an omnil tent Nana Sahib? No; it ist most merciful and glorion's a wise Being in all the univer You cannot teach Omnipoter anything.. You have fretted and worri almost enough. Do you not thi so? Some of you are maki yourselves ridiculous in the sig of Lhe angels. Here is a na' architect and.he draws out. t plan of a ship of many thousa ons. Many workmen are enga ed on it for a long while. 1 ship is done, and some day, w the flags up and the air g .geous w iLh bunting, that vessel launched for Southampton. that time a lad six years-of a comes running dowvn the dock w a toy boat, which -he has me with his own jack knife, and says: "Here, my boat is bet than yours; just look at this boom and these weather cross ja braces, and he drops his little bl beside the great ship, and th ia roar of laughter on the doc Oh my friends, that great shij your life as God planned it-va million-ton ned, ocean -destin eternity bound. That little b is your li fe as you are trying hew it out and fashion it launch it. Ah! do not try to a rival of the great Jehovah. ( is always right, and in nine ca out of ten y"u are wrong. sends justs' the hardships, just bankruptcies, just the cross t it is best for you to have. o; knows what kind of grain yca are s, and He sends the right kind oi ie. threshing-machine; it will be rod ts orstaff, or iron wheel-just accord it- ing as you are fitebes, or cammin, t- -or corn. ie Again, my 'subject teaches that ii- God' keeps trial on us until we let le go. le THE FARMER SHOUTS "WHOA!" at to his .horses as soon as the grain ir is dropped from the stalk. The F; farmer comes with his fork and t tosses up the straw,-and be sees 0 that the straw has Not go the grain, er and t-hegrain'is thoroughly thiesh h ed. So God. Smiting rod and ,d turning wheel, but cease as soon al as we let go. We bold on to this Is world with.its pleassigs, and rich > es, and emoluments, and our le knuckles are so firmly set that it seems as if we could hold on for. At ever. God comes along with some e- threshing trouble and beats us d, loose. We started under the de et lusion that this was a great world. isi We learned out of our geography re that it was so mahy thousand TY miles in diameter, and so many at thousand mi4es ineiretrmference, re and w6' said:. "Oh my; what a world!" Trouble came iii after-life, and this trouble sliced oft one part in of the world, and that trouble slic ed off another'part of the world, and it has got to be a smaller - world, and in some estimations a at very insignificant world; and it ie : depreciating all the time as a spir. itual property. Tei per cent. off, d fifty per cent. off, and there are those who would not give ten it cents for this world-the entire e world-"as a soul possession. We at -thought that friendship was a it grand thing. In school we used al to write compositions about friend. i ship, and perhaps.. we made ouz or. graduating speech on Commence a, ment Day on frieindship. Oh, it was a cbarmdd thing; but does ii a mean to you. as much as it used d to ? You have gone on in life, and one friend has betrayed you, and another friend has misiaterpreted n you, and another friend has neg er lected you, and friendship comet nd now sometimes to mean to yot as merely another axe to grind! S( ce with money. We thought if.g is man had a competency he wa yr- safe for all the future; but we hav< a learned that a mortgage may b defeated by an unknown previou ur incumbrance; that signing you ht name on the back of.a pote may nbe your business death-warrant at, that a new tariff may change th ncurrent of trade; that a man ma~ be rich to-day and poor to-morrow SAnd God, by all these misfortunes mis trying to loosen our grip; bu ne still we bold on. God smites ni l;e with a staff ; but we hold on. And w?He strikes us with a rod ; but wi .- hold on. And He sends over ni >the iron wheel of misfortune ; bu he we hold on. There are men wh< nd keep their grip on this world un etil the last moment, who sugges dto me the condition and conduel .of the poor Indian in the -boat ii ed the Niagara rapids, coming on to nk ward the falls. Seeing that h~ could not escape, a moment or tw< nbefore he got to the verge of the aplunge he lifted a wine-bottle an< hdrank it off, and then tossed th< bottle into the air. So there ar< nd men who clutch the world,and thea hgo. down through the rapids a th temptation and sin and they holi on to the very last moment of life Sdrinking to their eternal damna ttion as they go over and g down. Oh, let -go! Let go ge 'bhe best fortunes are in hea th von. Tbere are no abscondin bo cashiers from that bank ; no fail eing.in promises to pay. Set you jib affections on things above, not oi cb things on the earth. Let go .ak Depend upon it tbat God will keo: yat upon you the staff or the rod, o is UNTIL YOU DO LET GO. at, Another thing my text teache ed, us is, that Christian sorrow is ge at ing to have a sure terminus. M: to text says: "Bread corn is.bruisec nd because He willnot be ever threat be ing it." Blessed be God for thai od Pound away. 0 flail I Turn or se 0 wheel! Your work will soon b~ He done. "He will not be ever thres! me ing it." Now the Christian ha bat almost as munch use in the orga He for t.he st.op tremulant as he ha fbr the trumpet ; but after a while he will put the last dirge into the portfolio for. ever. So much of us as is wheat will be separated from somuch as is chaff, and there will be no more need of pounding. They never cry i- heaven, be. cause .they have nothing tocry about. There are no !tears of be reavement, for yousball have yoar friends all around about you. There am no tears of poverty, be cause -each one sits.at the King's table, and has his own ehariot of salvation, and free access to the wardrobe where prines get their array.. No teari: of sickness,for there are no pneumonia -on the air and no alatiat exhilations from the rolling' riveriof life,'and nocrutch for the lame limb, and no splint for ,he broken arm; .but the pulses throbbing with the health of the eternal God, in a climate like our 'June before the blossoms fall, or our gorgeous Oc tober before the leaves-scatter. In that land the souls will talk over the different modes of threshing. Oh, the story of the staff that struck th.e fitches, and the rod that beat the cummin, and the iron wheel that went over^'the corn. Daniel will describe the lions, and Jonah leviathan, and Paul the elm wood whips with which he -was scourged, and Eve will tell how aromatic Eden was the day she left it, and John Rogers will tell of the smart of the flame, and.Elijah of the fiery team that wheeled him up the- sky-steeps, and Christ of the numbness and the' paroxysm, and the Yiemor rhages of the awful cracifixion. There they are before the throne of God; On one elevation, all those who were struck of the staff. On a higher elevation all those :Wo' were struckof the rod. .q a highest elevation, and amid the highest altitudes of heaven, all those who were under the wheel. He will not ever be threshing1i. 0, y hearers, is .there not enough saLve in this text to make a plaster- large enough to heal all your wounds? wen a child is hurt the-nother is' very, apt to bay to it: "Now-; it will soon feel better." - And that is what God -says when'He embosoins all the 'tiouble in the hush of this great promise: "weeping may en dure for a night, but joy cometh -in the morninig." You may leave your pocket handkerchief sopping wet with tears on your death pil low, but you will go up absolutely sorrowless. They 'will wear black. you will wear*it6.-Cypress for them;- patms' for you. 'You will saf "Is it.possible that.I am here? Is this heaven ? Am I so pure now 1 will never do any thing ,wrong? Am I so well that I will never again be sick ? Are.these comnpanionships so firm that they will never again be broken ?71s that -Mary ? 18 that John? Is that my loved o?tmI-put away in the darkness?' Can it be that these are the fa,ces of those who lay so -wan and emaciated 'in the back room that awful. night, dying? Oh, how radiant t.hey are? Look at them! How radiant they are ! Why, how unlike this place is from what I thought. when I left the world below. Ministers drew pictures of this land, but how Stame compared with the reality I They told me on earth that death was snnset. No, no ; - IT Is SUNEISE!I Glorious ann else i I see the light now purpling the hills, and the clouds flame with the comn Sing day." Then the gates of hea -von will be opened, and the en rtranced~ soul, with the acuteness Sand power of celestial wisdom, Iwill look ten? thousand of miles Sdown upon the bannei-ed proces r sion-a river ,of shi mmering splen dor-and will cry out: "Who are they ?" And the angel of s God, standing close by, will say: -"Don't you know a ho they are?" S"No," says the entaanced soul, "I ,can not guess who they are." The -angel will say : "I will tell ybu, ,. then, who they are. These are , they who came out of great triba e lation or threshing, and lhad their - robes made white in the blood 8 of the Lamb." Oh that I Could ni administer some of these drops of a celestial annodyne to these nerv ons an'd excited soulsf If yo R would take enuugh of. it woula cure all your pangs,.the thought that, you are going to get through with this after awhile-all this sortow and all this 'rouble. We shall have a rgat many grand. days in heavin, but I will tell you which Will b.e the grandest day of all the million ages of heaven. "'o s4y: "Are you sure you can tell me.? Yes, I can. It w4ll be the day: we get .there. Some say baveb is 0row ing more aridus. I sp' ose. t is ; butIdo not care mu fiwdt that. Heaven:now is: god enough fer. me., History -no more gratolatory scene -thin-%U break ing-'in of the Edilish armiy upon Lucknow,j4dia. kfew .eeks'be fore a massacre bad occurred at Cawrpore, and two hundred and sixty *omnen and children had been put in a 'roo m. Then five profession'al butchers went in and slew them. Then the bodioe'eftke ilain were taken. out- ad thrown into a well. -As the Englishlfarmy came into Cawnpore"'hey went into the room; . and oh, what a horrid scene1 swordstrokes on the wall near the floor, showing thit the poor things bad croidhed when they di'ed; and thbeysa* als6 that the floor was ankle deep in.blood. The soldiers.walked on their heels across it, lest their shdes' be'sub merged of the carnage.- And on that floor of .blood there were flowing locks of hair and frag ments of dresses. Out in Luck now THEY HAD HEARD OF THE MAS SACRE, and the women were waitibg for the same -awful diath-i-aWitog -anid anguish untold, *'aiting in pain an.starvation but wit ing beroically-wen one day Havelock, and Obtram, and Nor. Win, and Sir Dai& -Baird, and Peel, the. heroes "of ihe English army--hurrah for 't3em, 7.-broke in on that horrid scene,&nd;w.hi1e Yet the guns were souhdig, and while cheers were issuing.fHm the starving, dying peoie'or the one side and from the travel-worn and powder-blackened'soldieson the other-right there, in :front of the King's palice, there 'was such a scene of bandshaking ar d embracing and boisterousja aa would utterly confound the.pen of the poet 'and the pencil of the painter. And no wdnde'r,, hen these emaciated, women, who had suffered so heroically for Qli:ist's sake, marched out froqp sthieir in. carcerations. One "wounded .En glish soldie'r got up in hii'f'atigue and woundh, od' lea" gi ainst the wall and threw up his esp and shouted: "Three cheers, mpboys, for- bMe brave n omen I" Oh, 'that was an exciting dee'tt agfad der and -more triuinphanitnee will it be when you some up into heaven from .the oenflicts and in caroerations of this wvorld, stream ing with ti' wounds of battfe''sd wan with hyn.ger; and, while.phe hosts of G%l are cheering.their great hosanna, you will strike bands 'of congratuiation and eter nal deliierance in thepr~esece of the throne. On 'that night there will be bondres on every hill of' heaven, and -there -witte be illirmi nation in every palade, and there wifl be a candle in=every window -ah, no, I forget, I forgef,-they will have no need of.the candle or of the sun, for the Lord God giveth them light, and they shal reign forever and ever. Hail! bail! sons and daughters of the Lord God Almighty ! Find earth where grows no weed, and you may find a heart where no err:ors grow. The bible has suffered more in the hands of honest bunglers than it has from skeptics. Never be afraid of being in the minorities, so that minorities-are based upon principle. *Education begins the gentle man, but reading, good company, and reflection must finish him. One who is eontetetd with what be has done will never be ome famous for what he will do.