fcF0R GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH.". W. FLKfCHER ACST303, EDlTi'K. C, V. W. AUSBON, BUSINESS MA3AG1CR. JL IV. PLYMOUTH, N. 0., FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1892. NO. 1. lishcd by, Roanoke Publishing Co. SUNLIGHT OF SPRINO. . ' anllght of spring, whuthavs you seen i 1 't jcu smile so? ' , ;"' vi'owdsof hepaticas, .. . i r (h. from their napv ' '! owing down coverlets, t . ' : .. "'ing off caps, , r ttttiQx Ibgethpr, . ' ' 'Ge ne are bad weather :, CL i .and mishaps. ' v ' i ijn'ihtof spnn what have you seen T" -,ty u smile so " .. t "T '! " ings ' , ;t- i','v ii'jfurled," 1 . Lifted on high," ' - r Di .fted and whirled" " i- -Freighted with son'-' . , Fh-ating (onflV' . V j3fpy world r"'; ' ( Thatou smile so? -y "Mak with their lovers, J , Chilctj at play, ,. j. Hopes of 'April, Joyas-f.May; . White begotten, . : N'ght forgotten, " '.. In thia Tiirht dav." ' Alice t. Bailey, in Harper's BaVar. ,.;The Gsat Lane Freshdt, BY JARRT HOWARD. V TJVTT'-O "DAT TlTtrTTV Josiah Glint han beeu good friends am;a neigb- bors from tttcir boy. hooddays. fTheygrew lip togoth'k married sisters, a jid settled on uljoi'iing faring. There thoy lived monotonous A4d uneveutful lives for iBftre than twentvVears. Tcn came a season of estrangement. Josiah lived on a fiac farm in the angle formed by the junction ;f Salt Creelt and Lane River. Aoner's farm was just above Jpsiah'son the bank of the riven ' Both' farms were for the. most part what --.is called llbot , torn land." and subject to pverflow ' during protracted rainy weather. Besides being.sometimes flooded by tho river, Josiah's farm was occasionally in . undated by Salt Creek, the turbulent lit tle stream which flowed along hissouth- ern boundary line. Salt Creek seldom rose very high, but when, it did so its nipw . current .wrougnt mucn greater dahtiRe than the rises of the larger but , mere siufrnh Lane. ' This rr weuldJjaiJsea&l more des tructive had it not been in sonie decree' controlled by a great levee on the"' farm next abore Abner's. This, levee acted in such a way that the water from the Lane, when it did cover the lands of Abner and Josiah, spread over a wide expanse and moved with very little current. ''-'But even a 6light current will carry wooden, things a long distance.' Abner's rail fences, together with brush, logs, and debris from his woodland, were some-, times lifted by the water of the Lane River and set down on various part3 of JoBiah's farm. Then Abner would haul his rails back and rebuild his fences, while Josiah would burn the debns. But one unlucky spring, when Josiah's corn had just appeared above the ground, the Lane came over its banks and wrought 'unusual harm. Not only were Josiah's fences rempved and Abner's brought into their places, but, Josiah's cornfield was thickly strewn with treetops from the great quantity of timber that Abner had cut on his farm during the winter.' ' ! After the water had subsided, Josiah was looking 'about his cornfield one morning. . Tree tops, logs, big chips, long sections of bark, fence rails, all coyered with slime and mud, were re posing on - his newly sprouted corn. Many days of hard , labor would be needed to cut and pile up all 'this drift wood, which would not burn for weeks. Much of "his corn, which had been the 1 firicst in the neighborhood, would be ruined. And by the removal of Abner's fences much of Josiah'a corn would be trampled into the ground. No wonder Josiah was out of sorts. . If he had been left to himself all fit might have been well, and I should have bad no story to write. ; But - as Josiah was gloomily viewing his flooded prop erty, Abner came across the tield. , '"'Mornin Si." ; , Si grunted..," : 'Things looks kind o bad, don't ' they, Si?" Si said nothing. - V'How soon kin I come an' get my rails?" VvW' "Don't know as ye'll get 'em at all," said Josiah. : ,I thought them was mioo over yan der." Abner pointed to a mass of rails and cornstalks which were undeniably :: his.. '' -: ' , 'Ain't them yourn, too, then,' aa' them, au them?" Josiah pointed , eloquently to the mud-coated logs and .treetops, ' m ' 'B'leeve they air,, Si, most of 'era." J' Wal, when ye tak.Q the last 5' of 'cm oil o' my corn we'H. talk aboiit .leb- . l. ti i' you tak f-fV Abner wf ' "I don't x i ,i t.Vn ilium mi lo nn " ' f as astoinsnea. . mind helpin' ye clear off that ', Si, et ye asK it. uut ia line to - in to-mcrrer or nex' day an' git lerbid ye ,Bcttin' fopt oil my land j" f.houted Josiah. - "If ll've get ter r ' yiT log-ro!lin' fer ye, i ii' do in my 'nrnlield to loot, l'il keep te al'Tig 'th tbr; rrH-.h." "Sue an' be hanged! I'll sue ye fer damage fer lettia' yer trash in here, an' fer ruinin' my corn, if ye come in after yer rails." Abner did not ' brio;? suit as ho had threatened, for he saw that the expense would outweigh the , profits. He- made new rails and rebuilt his fences.' . ; ,i Josiah rebuilt his own fences from the rails brought down from Abner's farm, together with those which remained of his own. : For weeks his cornfield was in , a fog of smoke from the slimy log heaps, and in the autumn his crop was far below the average.; ' . During all this time Josiah and Abner shunted each other. Their wives and children were not allowed to exchange visits, .. " . '. . One night of the following spring Salt Creek rose to a height many feet above any point it had ever "reached in the his tory of the ' valley. There had been a week of rainy weather, bo that the tur bulent stream was much swollen, and on this "particular night there was a tre-i mendous rainstorm. As the Lane River was swollen greatly, there was no adequate outlet for the turbid flood which swirled and 'rushed down the Salt Creek valley. Conse quently, the current of the Lane was not only stopped, but turned back,' so that for some hours the river actually flowed on stream. , V v. .w-', ' Then the brawling little stream, like a person -of . passionate impulses, calmed down almost as quickly as it had risen. The light of morning reveavel a strange state of affairs to Jo3iah.V Ex cept the very small area of high ground about the house, . his entire farm had been flooded. ' Everything "that would float was carried away and stranded on Abner's farm-- Here was retribution m deed! ". . . ' ' -' . Who could have dreamed that - the current would set up stream and carry back to Abner that which it had once taken from him? " But there it was. ", Josiah walked along to the upper edge of his farm and saw thousands of .his rwh-v-those he had made as well as those, he had taken from Abner piled up on the low knolls of Abner's farm. x Josiah also saw Abner , looking over his unexpected acquisitions.,; . Among them was Josiah's own stalk-rake. Ab Ber was contemplating it with smiles of welcome. - - '. .-. - ' v,--. '' Then, for the first time in almost a year, Josiah set foot on his neighbor's land, and walked over to where Abner stood grinning. "I'll come and git that rake after a whlie," said Josiah, shamefacedly. ' "Don't think ye will," answered Ab ner. . ' . "An' why don't ye think I will?': ( " 'Cause I ferbid ye to Bet foot on my land." V , "Ain't that myrake?" , ."Wasn't them my rails ye jist the same as stole las' spring?" ' "Didn't I put in a hull month clearin' yer logs outo' my cornfield?" "What d'ye call them, then, an whose air the,y?" Abner pointed to his oatSeld, thickly studded with logs and drift which had undeniably come ; from Josiah's wood land, f .( : ':' "I 'low we're about even, Ab, so lemmejiave my rake and we won't say nothin about the rails,'? said Josiah. I guess ' we're : nigher even as we stand, so ye kin let the rake stay right" whar it is." ,1 . ' . ; .. . Josiah walked home without a word in reply. Abner stood chuckling over the discomfiture of his brother-in-law.' Late in the afternoon the Lane, fed fuller by countless creeks farther up, crept over its banks and came gliding gently into the little depressions of the adjacent fields. , " - ' ' w No sooner was it dark than Abner. Baldwin, armed with a shotgun, took his stand ' behind a tree near the pile of drift where the rake lay. No sooner was it dark than Josiah Qlint, telling his hired man to follow him with a wagon and team as soon as the moon was up, started for the scene of his late encounter with his neighbor. Josiah intended to clear away the rub bish from his rake and .have it ready to load into the wagon when it arrived. " Abner had divined Josiah's intention,and was prepared to keep him away,even by using the shotgun. Meantime the river was . creeping, through the fields and across the wood lands. Josiah had : no little' trouble in making bis way " in the darkness. , At last, when there was but one ; little de pression between him and the, rake, he found that hollow filled - with water, and sat down to await the coming of the wagon. Long he waited therein the. darkness, no sound audible save the roar of the river at a distance, and the ; lapping of the water a it rose higher and higher. The moon was just casting her first faint beams across the land, when, above the sounds of the rushing current and of the nearer water which had risen almost to his feet, Josiah heard something of a stilt more alarming natarc. A contin uous crashing as of splintering timbers came from a point up the - Lane River. Btent with this was a loud roaring, which grew momentarily louder and came on. ; What could it be? "Josiah rose from the ground and peered anxiously a the direction of the sounds. Louder and' "ider, nearer -and nearer, and more Awompreheusiblo! Surely that was a falling trf.e he heard. Aroti r an-1 'hrr.fel!, f ach nearer tr-n '.-t! J-". ll.'n t' jvioii n ' line of white foam racing madly toward him across Abner's oat field. . ., . Then the truth was plain. Deming'sj great levee had broken, the Lane was i coming down like a low wall moving at speed, and Josiah was caught in the flood. He stood for a few moments without power to fly or even to take his eyes from that wide crest of water charging down upon him. Next instant he was whirled away by the torrent, scarcely able to keep his head above the;water. Soon he man aged to grasp a solid timber and steady himself enough to look around.. Josiah had already drifted considerably behind the crest of the wave, and was now being carried rapidly across his own farm, in company with brush, logs, corn stalks, and his rails and Abner's. ! , But to what was Josiah - clinging for support? : He could hardly belie7e it, but it was his stalk-rake, the very thing he had gone to bring away. V Still more astonishing, there was a man clinging to the other end of the rake, and e looked wonderfully like Abner Bald wia. Josiah had begun to think it was only some ter rible nightmare after all, when la voice hailed him: ; "That you, Si!" "Yes. That you, Ab?" "Yes, but I don't b'leeve I kii hold on much longer." " ."I'll help ye ; jisthang on a bit longer." Josiah. edged his way along tb the place where Abner was clinging, placed an arm around him, and grasped a rake tooth firmly with each hand. "I don't deserve it, Si," said Abner. , "I was goin' to keep this here rake." No,ye wasn't,, Ab. ' I was goin to steal it this very night." "No, ye wasn't Si. I was goin' to fill ye full o' bird shot." i ' "Wal,: it seems to be a sort of a pardnership affair jist now,' as we've both got consider'ble interest in it," said Josiah, grimly. ,: ' . ."' .: Rapidly they drifted over Josiah's farm until they came to Salt Creek, whose swift cross-current bore them out into the main channel of the Lane. Both men were nearly exhausted when they were drifted into an eddy, whence they managed to climb on a great log, and from there into a scrubby tree. - Abner had been . struck by a piece or timber when the flood caught him, and now Buffer ed great pain. : Josiah held him in the tree. , All night long the flood roared past them, bearing uprooted trees, . buildings and various wreckage. But the two men were happy in their reconciliation; for though neither said a word on the subject, each understood that they were firmer friends than ever before. , Next, day their neighbors rescued them, badly '"chilled,' and thoroughly worn out with the long night's watch ing, o -. - The story of the terrible havoc wrought by the Great Lane Freshet is told in the history of the valley, and does not be long to this narrative, v.- But neither of ; the two men who drifted down on the stalk-rake ever regretted his experience on that night. : The Baldwin and Glint children now play together every day; their mothers', are happy in the reconciliation, and nowhere can be found two firmer friends ; than Abner and Josiah. Youth's Com panion. . , , , - Care of Snake Bites. ; ' It seems likely that by the time all the venomous snakes have been killed off the face of the earth-, science will have dis covered a means oi neutralizing the effect of their poison. 'Bur, in the mean time, , every remedy that d6es this even' partially , means a saving of human life. A child who was bitten in Queensland by a "death adder" has just been saved from death by the administration of strychnia. The child on being bitten was taken to the nearest house, the end of the finger in which the fangs of the snake had been fastened was removed, the stump being sucked and drenched with ammonia, and ligatures being applied to the arm; ' la three hours the child was almost, coma-, tose, the body and the extremities cold, pupils dilated and insensitive to ' light , and the pulse rapid and irregular. The child was then wrapped in hot flannels, heat was applied to the limbs, while four minims of .liquor strychnia were admin istered hypordermlcally and a strong faradaic current applied to the nape of ; the neck and along the spine. Fifteen minutes, later another four minims of liquor ' strychnia . were injected, and : almost immediately a change began to manifest itself in all the symptoms. - . In a short time the child . recovered consciousness and improved so rapidly that the next day she was, appareutly well, ' and none ; the .worse for her dangerous experience except the loss of her linger. It is stated that hypodermic . injection of strychnia has been adopted in many similar cases, with almost unvarying success, and it is now regarded by the medical profession as a most valuable remedy for the deadly poison ot snakes. Courier Journal. , Don't Whip a Friffhtepcd Morse. Never whip your 'horse f-r becoming frightened at any object by the roadside, for if he sees a stump, a log or a heap of tan-bark in the road, and while he is eye ing it carefully and about to pass it, you Rtrike bim with the' whip, it is the log, or stomp, or the tanbar k that is hurtiag him, in his way o reasoning, and the next time he wiiljfbe more 1 frightened. Give him time to ell all these objects nnd use the brid: l, j- assist you ia briog- ; BEY. ,DB. TALMAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Son. day SermoiL Subject: " The Dumb Spirit." Tkxt: "Thou dumb and dtaf spirit, I charge thee, come out of him." Mark ix., 25. ; Here was a case of (Treat domestic an guish. The son of the household was pos sessed of an evil spirit whicd, amonz other things, paralyzed his tongue and made him speechless. Whsa the influence was on the patient he could not sav a word articula tion was impossible. The spirit that cap tured this member of tha household was a dumb spirit so called by Christ a spirit . abroad to-day and as lively and potent as in New Testament times. Yet in all of tha realms of sermonology I can not find a dis- . course concerning this dumb devil which Christ , charged upon my text, saying, Come out of bim." ; There has ben much destructive supersti tion abroad in the ; world concerning posses sion by evil spirits. Under the form of belief in witc icraft : this delusion ; swept tbe continents. Persons were supposed to be possessed with some evil spirit which made them able to destroy others. In the six teenth century In Geneva 1500 persons were burned to death as witches. Under one judge in Lorraine 900 persons were burned to death as witches. In one neighborhood of France 1000 persons were burned. In two centuries 2 00, COO persons were slain as witches. So mighty was the delusion that it included among its victims some of the , greatest intellects of all time, such as Chief justice Matuew Hale and bir .Edward Coke, and.such renowned ministers of religion as Cotton Mather, one of whose books, Benjamin Franklin said, shaped his life and. Richard 'Baxter and Archbishop Cranmeand Mar-, tin Luther, and1 among writers rjad philoso phers, Lord Bacon. vJi hat belief, which has become the laughing stock at all sensible people, counted its disciples exnong the wisest and best people of (Sweden, Germany, Eng land, France, Spain and New England. Bug while we reject witchcraft any man who be lieves the Bible must believe that there are diabolical agencies abroad: in to-world. While there are ministering spirits to bless there are infernal spirits to hinder, to poison and destroy. Christ was speaking to a spir- itu.il existence when, standing before the afflicted one of the text, He said, "Thou dumb and deaf spirit, come out of him."- Against this dumb devil of the text, I put you on your guard. Do not think that thia agent of evil has put his blight on those who, by ommission of the vocal organs, have had the golden gates of speech bolted and barred. Among those who have never spoken a word are the most gracious and lovely and tal ented souls that were ever incarnated. The chaplains of the asylums for the dumb can' tell you enchantiug stories of those, who never called the name of father or "mother or child, and many of the most devout and prayerful souls will never in thia world speak the name of God or Christ. ; .Many a dent mute have I seen with the angel of in telligence seated at the window of the eye, who never came forth from the door of the xnoutb. .J.-i----:- -. ,' A , -i What a miracle of loveliness and knowU edge was Laura Bridgman, of New Hamp shire r Not only without faculty of speech, but without hearing and without sight, all these faculties removed by sickness when two years of age, yet becoming a wonder at needlework, at the piano, at the sewing ma chine, and an intelligent student of the Scriptures, and confounding philosophers, . who came from all parts of the world to study the phenomenon. Thanks to Christi anity for what it has done for the amelior ation of the condition of the deaf and the dumb. Back in the ages they were . put to death as having no right, with such paucity of equipment, to live, and f or centuries they were classed among tbe idiotic and unsafe. But in the Sixteenth century came Pedro Ponce,, the Spanish monk, and in the Seven teenth century came Juan Pablo : Bonet, anothor Spanish monk, with dactylology or the finger alphabet, and in our own century we have had John Braid wood and Drs. Mitchell and AckerJy and Feet and Gallau det, who have given uncounted thousands of those whose tonrnies were forever silent the power to dpell out on the air by a manual, alphabet their thoughts about this world and their hopes for th9 next. We rejoice in the, brilliant inventions in behalf of those who were born dumb. U : One of the most impressive audiences I ' ever addressed was in the far west two or three years ago an audience of about 600 persons who had never heard a eouad or spoken a word, an interpreter standing: beside me while I addressed them. I Congratulated that audience on two advantages they had and over tbe most of us the one that they escaped hearing a great many disagreeable thing?, and on the other fact that they es caped saying things they were sorry for af terward. Yet after all the alleviations a shackled tongue is an appalling limitation. But we are not this morning speaking of congenital mutes. We mean those who are born with all the faculties ot - vocalization and yet have been struck by the evil one mentioned in the text the dumb devil to, whom Christ called when He said, "Thou dumb and deaf spirit, I charge thee, come out of him. . ; v,' i- ; There has been apotheosization of silence. Borne one has said that silenca is golden, and sometimes the greatest triumph is to keep your mouth shut. But sometimes silence is a crime and the direct result of ttfe baleful influence of the dumb devil v of our text. There is hardly a man or woman in this house tflpday who has not been present on sVm6 occasion wlietf the Christian religion became atarget fur raillery. Perhaps it was over in the store some day when there was not much going on and the clerks were in a group, or it was in the factory at the noon spell,or it was out on the farm under tbe.trees while you were resting, or it was in the clubroom, or it was in a social circle, or it was in the street on the way home from bu sines?, or it was on some occasion which you remember without me describing it. Home one got the laugh on the Bible and caricatured the profession , of re ligion as hypocrisy, or made a pun out of something that Christ said. The laugh started and you joined in, and not one word of protest did you utter. What kept you silent? ' Modesty? '- No. Incapacity to answer? No. Lack of opportunity? No. It was a blow 6ji both you hps by the wing of the dumb deil. It sonue one should ma lign your fatheror mother or wife or hus band or child ; oil would flush up quick, and either with an indignant word or doubled up nst make response.' And yet nere is our Christian religion khich has done so mnoa for you and so muf tor the world that it will take all eterti when it was attac as say r "J. diffeif hear you say tnatf thia." ,; -. . You Christian f as these to go weapons, but wit J You ought -to hi with wir.cli yon I: v. to attacks Cb o celebrate it, and yet you did not so much vject, I im sorry to ght In such times ot with earthly d of the Spirit, , or ; nye questions toimi any rna A nisi rsnity "i few ,; ago friend said to the' skeptic, "Did you ever read the history of Joseph in the Bible1 "Yes," said the man, ,it is a fine story, and as interesting a eiory as I ever read." "Well, now," said my old friend, "sup- fose that account of Joseph stopped alf way?" "Oh," said tbe man, "then it would not be entertaining.' "Well, now,", aald my friend, "we have in this world only half of everything, and do you . not think that when we hear the last half things may be consistent, and that then we may find that God was right? ' ' Ob, friends, better load up with a few in terrogation points. You cannot afford to be silent when God and the Bible and tbe things of eternity are assailed. Your silence gives consent to the bombardment of your Father's house. You allow a slur to be cast on your mother's dyintr pillow. In behalt of the Christ, who for youwent through the agonies of assassination on the rocky bluff back of Jerusalem, you dared not face a sickly joke. Better load np with a few questions so that next time you will ,be ready. ' - . . ' . i, Say to the scoffer: "M7 dear sir, will you tell me what mikes the difference between the condition of woman in 'China and the United States? 1 What do you think of ths sermon on the mount? How do you like the golden rule laid down in the Scriptures? Are you In favor of the ten commandments? In your large and extensive reading have you fome across a lovelier character than -Jesus Christ?. Will you please to name the triu-n-phant deathbeds of infidels and atheists? ' How do you account for the fact that among the out and out believers In Christianity were, such .persons as Bejjamin Franfclhv John RuskinTTdmas'CaflyTe; "Babiogton Macaulay. William Penn, Walter Scott, Charles Kingsley, Horace Bushnell, James A. Garfield. Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jack son, . Admiral: Foote, Admiral . Farragut, Ulysses S. Grant, John Milton, William Shakespeare, Chief Justice Marshall, John. Adam?, Daniel Webster, George Washing ton How do you account for their fondness fer the Christian religion?. Among tha in numerable colleges and universities of .the earth will you name me . three started by Infidels y and now supported by infidels? , Down in your heart are you really happy in the position you occupy antagonistic ito the Christian religion? When do you have the most rapturous views of the next world? i Go at him with a few such questions and he will get so red in the face as to GUggest apoplexy, and he will look at his watch and say he has an engagement and .mustgo. You will puffiunlh a sweat that wuTbeaX a Turkish , bath. . You will put him pn a rout compared with which our trewtjat Bull Run made no time at ali's 9Arm yourself, not with argu ments bufinter rogation points, and I promise you victory. Shall such -a man as you, shall Buch a woman as you surrender to one of tha meanest spirits that ever smoked up irofb tbe pit the dumb devil spoken-or In the text?, .. - But then there are occasions when this par- ticular spirit that Christ exercised when Ha said, "I charge thee to coma out of him," takes people by the -wholesale. In the most responsive relisious audienca hava you no ticed how many people never sing at all? They have a book, and they have a voice, and they know how to read. They know many of the tunes, and yet are silent while the great raptures of music pass by . Among those who sing not one out of a hundred sings loud enough to bear his own voice. They hum it ..They give a sort of religious gruut. They make the lips go, but it is in audible. ; With a voice strong enough to stop a street ear one block away, all they can af ford in ,t&e praise- of God is about half a whisper With enough sopranos," enough alto ertkragh bassos to make a small heaven between the four walls, they let the oppor tunity go by unimproved. The volume of voice that ascends from the largest audience that ever assembled ought to be multiplied about two thousand fold. But the minister rises and gives, out the hymn; the organ begins; the choir or pre-; centor leads; tbe audience are standing so that the lungs may have full expansion, and a mighty harmony is about to ascend, when tbe evil spirit spoken of in my text the dumb devil spreads his two wings, one over the hps of one-half the audience and tha other wing over the lips of tha other half 7f the audience, and the voices roll back into tbe throats from which they started, and only here-and there anything is' heard, and nine-tenths of the holy power is destroyed; and the dumb devil, as he flies away, says; "I could not keep Isaac Watts from writing that hymn, and I could not keep Lowell Mason from composing the tune to which it is set, but I smote into silence or half silence the lips from which it wonld have spread abroad to bless neighborhoods and cities, and then mount the wide open heav ens." Give the long meter doxology the lull support of Christendom, and those four lines would take the whole earth for God. During the cotton famine in Lancashire, ' England, when the suffering was something terrific, as the first wagon load of cotton rolled in, the starving people, unbooked the horses and drew tbe Toad themselves, sing- . In, until all Lancashire joined in with tri umphant voices, their cheeks sopping with tearF, "Praise God from whom all blessings flow." When Commodore Perry, with his warship, the Mississippi, layoff tbe coast of Japan, he bombarded the shores with "Old Hundred," played by the marine band.. Glorious "Old Hundred," composed by Will iam Franc, of Germany. In a war prison, at ten o'clock at night, the poor fellows far from home and wounded ana sick and dy- Ing, one prisoner started the "Old Hundred Doxology," and then a score of voices joined, then all the prisoners on the floors took np the acclaim until tha building, from founda tion to topstone, fairly quaked with the melodious ascription. A British man-of-war, lying off a foreign ; coast, heard a voice singing tbat doxology, r and immediately guessed, and guessed aright," that there was an Englishman ' in captivity to tbe Mohammedans; and in the small boats the sailors rowed to shore and burst into gaurd-house and set the captive , free. I don't know what tune the trumpets of resurrection shall play, but it may be the ' doxology which is now sounding across Christendom. How much more hearty we would be in our songs, and how easily we could drive back the dumb devil from ail our worshiping assemblages, if we could realize tbat nearly ad our hymns have a stirring his tory. v ' That glorious hymn, 'Stand Up for Jesus," was suggested by the last words of Dudley Tyng, wno was dyinr from having his right arm torn off in a thrashing ma chine. That hymn, Wbat a Friend We Have in Jesus," heard through a telephone, converted an obdurate soul. .. "Shall We Gather at the River?' was a hymn first sung In our Brooklyn Prospect Park, at't.he chil dren's May anoiversarry, and then started to encircle the world. "Where la Mj Ai-fl-i- .1. T ..i,.V,tr o a , ama that fc4 laved hundreds of dissipated young mf l 1 T010, the drummer boy in the armyl foun-t crying, and an oflLr asked himl was tiM matter 1 "Oh," he said, "I hkV i dream last night. My sistr died tan yvH $o, and my mother never was herself agany ana shedied soon after. Last night I dreamf I was killed hi battle, and that mother a sister came down to meet me." At the next battle- was orer, soma one cross 4f th tiel'i herd a voice that he reooniz-! t the vok Tom, tho JruuiUer boy. sinia-f ; . Lover ot"-Mr fu," But tit tm feeble, and at the end of th sicon J "vers iu -stopped, and they went.up and found Tom,, the drurK"2sr boy, leaning against a: slump and dead. ! . That hymn,. "Ob, for a Thousand Tohjum to Slug," was suggested to Charles Wwley by Peter Bonier, who, after his converiou. said, "I had better keep si Unit about it." "Wo," said Wesley, "if you had teu thousand tongues you had better use thorn lor Clinst," And then that angel of hymnolosy panned the words; . - Oh. for a thousand tontrae to sin? , jjy dear Ketteemer' prm, .,.. The glories ot my God Bad King, . -. The triumphs ol His grams. ... Jexns, the name tbat calms onr fears, Tbat bids our sorrowi cease: 1 Tig mtialc In the iinm.r's ears, ' Tta life and health and peace. . While much of the modern music is a' religious doggereI a consecrate! nonsense, a sacred tomfoolery, I would like to see some great musician of our time lutthe baton and marshal Luther' Judgment Hymn, Yar mouth, Dundee, Ariel, Brattle Street, Ux bridge, Pleyel's Hymn,, Harwell. 1 Antiocb, Mount Pisgah and Coronation, with a few regiments of mighty tunes made in oar time, and storm Asia. Africa and America for tbe kingdom of God. But the first thing to do is to drive out the dumb devil of the text from all our churches. 1 Do not, however, let us lose ourselves in ; generalities. Not one of us but has had our lives sometimes touched by the evil spirit of the text this awful dumb devil. We had just one opportunity of saying a Christian word that might have led a man or woman into a Christian life. The opportunity was fairly put before us. The 'word of invita- tion or consolation or warning came to thra inside gate of the mouth, but there it baltad. ' Some hindering power locked the jaws to gether so that they did not open. Th tonsrue lay flat and still in the bottom ot tho' - mouth as though struck with paralysis. We were mute. Though Go 1 had given us the. j fihysiological apparatus for speech, an f h ungs were filled with air which, 1 f command ot our will, could have in 1 h laryngeal muscles move and tf "-,-oeaf organs vibrate, we were wic ,ly anv s -fatally silent. For all time and j Vrnity we; i missed our chance. 1 I j Or it was a- prayer meeting, ?d th sr- i vice was thrown open for pnJr aud re-A marss, ana mere was a o-j iiait every thing silent as a gravjp? . midniahtJ Indeed it was a gravjff and midnight. V An embarassing pansfutt place that put a 1 wet blanket on all th$ meeting. Men. bold; ' enough on businessAuhansa or in worldly .uwra, duu. gjgg Bs fcfKUlgO IDcj WffFtJ crayiniLin BjJenca but they were not pray ing at aaT They "Were busy booing som b' else would do his duty. Tbe women, d under th awful pause and mai. fJir ' fans more rapidly flutter., botnfti brother with no cold "joughed, by thut sound' tryinz to ,fill up the time, and thv: "tstin was slain. But what killei it? tbt - 'T.o devu. v ' . This is the way I account for tha fach' i the- stupidest v places on earth are svf,j. prayer meetings. 1 do not see now a keeps any gracetif Jie reula.-'v tf-3nA them . ; ; They areXspiritual 1-. 1 ar tote Religion keDt on ice. How nufav of as hare lost occasions of us&f ulness? In a eulptor's studio.stood a figure of the god Optort;umty. The sculptor had made the hair fall down over the face of the statue so as tacpmplete- ly cover it, and there were wings w the feet. ' When asked why he so represeut ftd ; Opoor tunity, the sculptor answere.V -The face of the statue is thus covered up because we do not recognize.Ciortunity when it comes, and the wings to the feet show tbatj Cppov tunity i swiftly gone." But do not let tOe world deride the charch. because of all this, for the dumb devil is just as conspicuous in the world. . The two greau political parties will soon assemble to bust i plattorms for the president U candUatas t stand on. Acommittaa 01 eaca party wiu be aDDointei. to make the i.Iatform. After proper deliberation tbe committees will coma in with a ringing report; " vVheres" and "Whereas" and Whereas Pronuuciii I mentoes all shaped with the one idea of get ting the most votes. All expression ia re- gartetnegreatrnToraI evils of the country ignored. No expression about the liquor wamc, j;or caat would lose the rum vols. . Iso expression in regard to the universal at tempt at the demolition of the Lord' dKv No recognition of God in tha history bT this nation for that would lose the votf.' of athe- -ists. But u Whereas" and "Whereas' and ' "Whereas." Nine cheers will begivenfor the platform. - The dumb devil ct the text will put one wing over the Republican plat form and the other .wing over (the Demo cratic platform. Thera is nothinb involved in the next election except ofiiceaTThe great conventions will be opened with prayer r-v their chaplains. If they avoid platitivl. . and tell the honest truth. In their prayei s they will say: "0 Lord, we want to be fo;,t masters and consuls and foreign ministers and United States district attorneys. For that we are here, and for that we wrr strriv) jttll the election next November, (iiva tm office or we die, for ever and ever. Amen." .' The world, to say the least, is no better than tbe church on this subject of silence ut the wrong time, in other words, ia it notv time for Christianity to become pronouns 1 and aggressive as never before? Vake shIim for God and sobriety and righteousheV "If the Lord be God, follow Him; if Baal. tL- follow him." Have you opportunity of r-w baking a sin? Rebuke it. Have you a , chance to cheer a disheartened soul? Cher it. Have you a useful word to jspeaL? Speak it. ' Be out and out, up and down for riht ousness. If your ship is afloat on the Pa cific Ocean of God's mercy, hang out your , colors from masthead. Show your pa--port if you have one. Do not smuggle your so .1 Into the harbor of heaven. Speak out tor Godf This morning close up the chapter rt lost opportunities, and pitch it into the .Ea.-s River and open a new chapter . , Befor y u get to the door on your way out tM morning shake ; hands with some o; -. and ask him to join you on the ro v 1 - , heaven. Do not drive up to hea.vt.-n in a t.-., ... wheeled "sulky" with room only for or- , and that yourself, but get the biggest Gosri wagon you can find and pila it fuil of J i , and neighbors, and shout till thy he sr y,.n all up and down the skies, 'Corna . !i , and w will do yoo good, for the L.?r,t i. promised good concerning Iffl-aeL" The opportunity for good whieti y a s . consider insigniflcmnt may -be from.. . for results, as wiiea on sea Captain H . -swore at the ship's trew with an -i'n 1 wished them all in porditioo, av..l a : ' sailor touched h cap, an t ; ; God hears prayer, aud wa woui i to if you're wish-Mero answered." i' Holdane waiv -convicted by tlio i remark and converted, '' and beenmn means ot; the.atyatioa; of "his brct: r Itobert, who biiyv;n an ioH Ic"!, aal t) Robert becaiii aJataister at tb t.opn. (mX . andT his minisajrthe godless - -"1 world renownifd nisi ion-sry ! 1 t.hor.:.-V hi