i X I y M FSS I AN EXCELLENT! THE Official Organ of Washington County. ADVERTISING MEDIUirJ FIEST OF ALL THE NEWS. Clrculatis extensively In the CoonCles e! Washington, Martin, Tyrrell and EisafcrL l.OO A Y32AR IN ADVANCE. ' "FOR OOP. FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." SINGLE COPY, 5 CENTS. . VOL. X. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1899. NO. 17. . , ; ; : ' i , " X ' THE TOILER'S An hour ago the wind was cold And heaven seemed far away, And alt the gloom that my heart could hold Appeared to be centred there, And I wondered If ever another day With a cheerful sky and fair, Would dawn for me, or would bring for me Such joys as the joys that had fled If the way beyond had a thing for mo Worth the cost of tolling ahead. 5 Miss Cornelia Lunt was the only - child of two good people who had not married until they reached the years which find most wedded pairs with their children . well grown up about them. They had been very happy, however, and when they died left their daughter a little income, which, by close pinching, she could manage to live upon. Cornelia was not a pretty girl old people's children never are; but thou i sands of plainer girls had married and settled while she remained a spinster. Perhaps the fact that she was by no means a good-natured person had something to do with it. Certainly Rhe quarreled with her friends and felt out with her beaux, had feuds with her relatives and was fond of saying unpleasant things to people generally, and the other half of her soul was a lucky creature in having missed her in this world. In her youth she had also com ported herself scornfully to well-disposed young men who belonged to the mechanic classes and had declared that she would only give her hand and heart to a merchant, a physician or a clergyman. Merchants were rare in Bottlehole, the only specimens of that order being two very old bach elors.still connected with a New York firm, who were always to be seen asleep on either Bide of their wide hall door in pleasant summer weather and who only awoke at the instance of their housekeeper long enough to take their meals. The two doctors were both married, and the clergymen always had large families. Miss Cor nelia's ambitious hopes were never realized, and her father's apprentice, Tim Cornell, who had admired her and had been quite a believer in her as a "very elegant and genteel person," finally pronounced her "mighty proud and haughty" and abandoned his suit. The other young mechanics married or left the village, and Miss Cornelia at last awoke to the knowledge that she was getting on in life and that if she. was not careful people would find It out Cornelia looked in the glass care fully every morning and very often through the day. She did not age rapidly, having always looked as old as it was possible to look. But for that dreaded family Bible, in which the record of her birth was written down, ehe would have felt safe in slicing oil ; ten years of her life a proceeding which she fancied would increase her value in the eyes of a certain Mr. Durasday, who had recently paid her ' a few solemn calls. He was really an old man himself, but the older the man the younger, generally, one finds his choice of a wife to be. And, really, when all one's lady friends en joy nothing so much as adding to one's age, why should not their efforts be thwarted by a reduction on one's own part of the one thing nobody ever wants more of? Poor Miss Cornelia! She did not know that one who never thinks about age at all is the slowest to get old. She eyed that well-thumbed Bible, which her companion and assistant, Cousin Betsy Baker, always would have upon a stand in the parlor, with , absolute horror. She did not dare ob- , ject to its presence. She was a church member and thought herself pious, but she did wish Cousin Betsy in Green land when she called a visitor's atten tion to the illustrations it contained. Suppose anyone should turn up the fly leaf and read there: Born December, 18, Cornelia, first daughter of Mat- . thew and Abigail Lunt. The thought was horror. She sat over her grate fire late one night thinking over the matter. Who knew her exact age? Cousin Betsy. But Cousin Betsy would not wish to quarrel with her and was too old a woman to think her anything but young. The clergymau who bap tised her. But he was superannuate! and lived with his son-in-law in another state. The family doctor was dead, and the dear old gentleman who had hnnrdftd with them from her baby hood, who had always given her a gift upon her birthday and on whom she had waited as a grandchild might, went to Europe years before and was probably dead. Good old man! She baJl liked him very much. How well she remembered him as he sat in Lis big armchair! He had white hair and ' fat hands with dimples in them and carried a thick, gold-headed cane. Good Mr. Noire! But she should never hear anything of him again. Yes, it was safe. She would do it. She did not 4 v to name the deed it seemed as biH to her as robbing a church. But ten years off one's age is a terrible RECOMPENSE. An hour ago the world was cold And heaven seemed far away, But the clouds that were leaden are tinged with gold, For my heart is light again, For one with a helpful word to say Stepped out from the ranks of men, With a hand for me and a smile for me. And praise for the work I've done, And out there many a mile, for me Is a goal that shall be won ! S. E. Riser, in Cleveland Leader. f ttmptation at least it was to Miss Cornelia. It was night half-past 12, at least the hour when "churchyards yawn and graves give up their dead." Ghosts might pop in upon her at any moment, but such a deed could only be done at such an hour. Miss Cornelia arose. She stood before the lire with her back toward.it and took the candlestick in her hand. The room was clean and orderly. The green Bhades were down. The chairs stood in a row against the walls. The little marble-top table held its wax water lily under a glass shade. Photographs of the good old parents, with more cord than frame and more frame than picture, hung in the recesses on either side of the mantel. She did not dare to glance toward them. Two gilt vases and a match safe adorned the mantel. Two feather fans stood be hind the vases. In the middle of the room were Cousin Betsy's rocking chair, a candlestand and the big Bible, a white tidy beneath it, a big, friuged bookmark hanging over its gilt edge. It was a simple, cosy little "interior" enough, but it became at this moment as awesome to Miss Cornelia as a churchyard might have been. She had "creeps" up her back. Her hair felt considerably like rising on end. Then she put her hand in her pocket aud drew forth a knife. The light from the candle fell upon her face. It was ghastly. She took one step forward and paused; another, and paused again. Anyone who had observed her would certainly have believed that she was going straight to poor Cousin Betsy's room to end that lady's life by a jab of the sharp little knife-blade, but she paused at the candlestand, set down the candlestick, knelt down, opened the family Bible at the fly-leaf and slowly, cautiously, began to scrape, scrape, scrape at the two last figures of the record of her birth. Then she crossed the room, took from a fireside cup board a pen and inkstand, wrote two other figures in the place of those she had erased, blew upon the leaf until it was dry, carefully touched up the rest of the record to match in bright ness and drew back to read the amended lines, which now plainly stated to all beholders that she had entered this world 30 years before in stead of 40. "Nobody would guess that it had been meddled with," gasped Miss Cor nelia, hysterically. "Nobody oh, gracious! 'Now I lay me' Oh, if I could only remember my prayers! I didn't do it oh!" for an awful voice at that moment uttered her name in her very ear: "Cornelia." It was repeated. It seemed to come from above. Cornelia looked up, ex pecting to see something dreadful. It was repeated: "Coruelia,ain't you coming to bed?" It was only Cousin Betsy speaking through a disused register, which had once conveyed heat from a stove in the sitting room to the chamber above. All in a cold perspiration, Cornelia managed to reply that she would come in a moment, and then closing the Bible and putting away the writing materials she crept upstairs, a world of horrible unseeu things close after her. She felt very sure a spectral clutch at her chignon, a cold palm on her arm, would not have surprised her. She had committed a crime worse than that of robbing a church, she feared. She had meddled with the bolemn record made by hands long since moldering in the grave, upon the pages of the Holy Book, and she had won ten imagiuary years by it. Very pale was Miss Cornelia Lunt next morning. Cousin Betsy predicted "fever-nager" and advised quinine. Mr. Dumsday, when he called, hoped Miss Cornelia was not ill. Aunty Pring,who took tea with them that af ternoon, suggested that she looked "sort q' skeered, as if she'd seen snthin'," and Miss Cornelia felt as though her gnilt was branded on her brow. However, she recovered her peace of mind in time and was, as a general thing, herself again, though there were times when she felt that "a judgment" might be expected at any moment. Mr. Dumsday regularly "came a courting" now. And he wa3 a rich widower, whose married daughter pro fessed herself anxious that "pa" should have some one to take cave of him. Miss Cornelia had quite made up her mind that lavender should be the color of her wedding dress a copper-colored bride-expectant always does. And the two were sitting to gether one evening talking confiden- j tially about rheumatism and its best liniment when the door bell rang, and a tall, lean gentleman in a suit oi black was ushered into the parlor. On courting evenings Betsy kept herself out of the wav, and only Mr. Dumsday was present when the gen tleman introduced himself. "Miss pornelia Lunt, I believe," he said. "Yes, sir," said Miss Cornelia. The gentleman bowed.handed her a card with "C. Dodridge, Solicitor,'' upon it and took the seat she offered. "I understand that your respected parents are no more, ma'am," said the solicitor. "They would remembei better than you do, probably, a period of 30 years ago when one Mr. Noire boarded with them." "Yes, sir," said Cornelia, growing red in the face. "I've heard them speak of him." "Ah," said the gentleman, "he was a very dear friend as well as client of mine. He died about two months ago in London, England. He wa3 very wealthy at the time of his death, and he never forgot the extreme kindness of the friends of 30 years ago, whe knew him in his days of comparative poverty. Yes, they are gone, also: but the little girl who waited on him so lovingly still lives. She was 11 years old at that time. I suppose 1 address her?" "No, sir," said Miss Lunt, redder than ever as Mr. Dumsday turned an attentive ear to this dreadful statement and feeling that one lie begot many and that having fibbled in the family Bible she must stick to it or die "No.sir. I was not born at that date.'' "I have my old friend's record," said Mr. Dodridge; "18 was the date of his arrival here. You were one mouth old then; 18 was the date oi his departure. Plainly you were 11 years of age. You attached yourself fondly to my old friend's heart, madam." "No, I didn't," said Miss Cornelia, tartly. "I ought to know. I never saw him. I was . born just after he left, I've been told. There's the Bible on the table; look at the date." She opened the volume at the fatal fly-leaf; the lawyer perused it slowly. "I see, I see," he said. "Weil, well; and who was this little girl?" Agony of agonies! Here was another lie needed. Mr. Dumsday's eyes opened widely. He listened more in tently. He looked at the lawyer; he looked at the lady. She must fib again aud very blackly this time. "That was a little adopted child, who died," said Miss Cornelia, faintly. "They didn't think they should have any family of their own." "I see," said the lawyer.rising "I see. My friend hoped she had grown to be a woman. Good day." "And I can't see why you should come here to add to a lady's age," said Miss Cornelia. "I'm sure it's very impolite." "Madam," 6aid Mr. Dodridge, hat in hand, "I have an excuse; Mr. Noire, good old man, had left all his fortune to that little girl. Had she lived she would be an immense heiress. A law yer is naturally cautious. I paved the way paved the way, that is all." Poor Miss Cornelia! She gazed at the gentleman in utter consternation, and he continued: "However, some charities will be the better for the fact; no wind but blows some one good, after all." He departed; Miss Cornelia bowed him out. After all, what did it mat ter? Fortune, in the person of Mr. Dumsday.was at her feet, and she had saved ten years of her age in his eyes. But, alas! what ailed Mr.Dumsday? He had arisen; his face looked pale, his countenance anxious. He shook his head slowly, went to the candle stand, folded the leaves of the family Bible and spoke as follows; "Comely, from what I see, you're just about 30 years of age, aren't ye?" "Yes," said Cornelia, wonderingly. "This is a trial to me, Corn ely, "said Mr. Dumsday; "I know I've been to blame if it comes to nothing, but we must part.1' "Did you think I was younger?" said Cornelia. "Is that it?" "No, Comely," said Mr. Dumsday; "but I took a little oath to my daugh ter, Jemmimy Mrs. Nutmegs, that is never to marry no second wife 'twas under 40. People generally thinks you rising 40, so I picked you out. 'Don't make a goose of yourself by marrying a girl at your age, pa,' says Jemmimy; and she made me swear on the Bible she did indeed. So you see I can't break that, and it's all up. Good bye, Comely. I hope I ain't spiled yer prospex. Some younger man will " He paused, put his handkerchief to his eyes and turned toward the door. "Oh!" cried Cornelia. "Oh, come back! I'll tell the truth. I am 40." "Becords can't lie. I seed it in the Bible," said Mr.Dumsday. "Farewell, Comely. It's a cross, but I must bear it." He kissed Cornelia and departed, and since that day Cornelia has had ample time to acknowledge to herself that she made a slight mistake in whittling down the record of her age in the family Bible aud to weigh against the disadvantages of those ten additional years the advantages of a husband and a fortune. , SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. The young leaves and roots of lams supply a considerable portion of the food in the mountain districts of Japan. A Hamburg (Germany) chemist has succeede I with the aid of oxide of aluminium in creating a heat of up to 30,000 degrees. Although the brain is perpetually active, yet the whole of it is never at wprk at one time. The two hemis pheres, or halves, do not operate sim ultaneously, but alternate in action. A turnip seed increases its own weight fifteen times in a minute. On peat ground turnips have been found to increase by growth 15,999 times the weight of their seed each day they stood upon it. Circular or elliptical halos round the sun indicate violent storms, espe cially if the halos are dark in tint or of a large diameter. Lightning and magnetic disturbances may also be ex pected from these signs. It is computed that the death rate of the world is 67 and the birth rate 70 a minute, and this seemingly light perceutage of gain is sufficient to give a net increase in population each year of almost 1,200,000 souls. The phenomenoa of the milk-white sea, much more luminous than the starry sky, is reported by a corres pondent of Nature. It was witnessed on the morning of August 21 in the Indian ocean, and continued to bo seen throughout 50 miles of the ves sel's course. The sea was calm, while a bucket of the water showed uothiug unusual. The Flying Fox. The flying fox is a very curious in habitant of the forests near Moreton Bay in East Australia. It lives in flocks and moves generally toward the dusk of the evening, and the noise produced by the heavy flapping of the so-called wings is very singular.. The flocks like quiet places, where there are large Araucariau pine trees, with an underwood of scrub and creepers. The foxes hang iu vast numbers from horizontal branches of the pine trees. When there is a clear space among the trees, an enormous number of the animals may be seen, and their noise can be heard, for directly they see anything unusual they utter a short bark, something like the souud made by young rooks. Often every branch is crowded and the flying foxes are seen either flapping their wings and holding ou with their hind feet, aud with their head downward, or snarling and fighting for places. Suddenly the whole take to flight flap their furry, wing-like sides and wheel around like heavy birds. Many fly with their young holding onto them. The creature is not a true fox and there is a fold of skiu which reaches from the fore to the hind ' legs. Thi3 is called the wing, and it enables the pteropus, as the animal is called, to flout and turn in the air. Philadel phia Press. Klevtricity and Cats. Strangely enough, I once had an impression that a cat's tendency was to travel uorth, and to face the north as a magnet does, and that this ten dency had some intimate association with the electrical strength of its fur. In brief, I looked upon a cat as a lightning conductor on a small scale, and that according to its temperament, negative or positive, did it face north or south, or just as the points of its fur were attracted by the negative or positive poles of the earth. I was led to this by some observations I had made some years previously in the London suburb. Then I noticed that the cats qf that particular district had a tendency to walk iu particular di rections ou the walls that .faced the uorth rather than to walk ou walls that rau east or west. ,Astothe idea that cats are good weather gauges, I do not credit that. I believe that the reason a cat washes itself over its ears or not is bound up with the particular method by which the particular animal cleans itself. Its main object in washing, to my mind, is just to complete an electrical circuit, for by so doing it generates heat aud, therefore, a pleasing seusation in its fur. Cassell's Magazine. TlieX-lUy Photograph in Court. The earliest reported instance ot the use of the X-ray process in evi dence seems to have been in the dis trict court of Arapahoe county, Col orado, in 1S90. More recently in Tennessee it was held that an X-ray photograph, showing the overlapping bones of one of the legs of the plain tiff, broken by an injury for which suit was brought,takeu by a physician and surgeou familiar with fractures and with the process of taking such photographs, who testified that it ac curately represented the condition of the leg, is admissible in evidence. The court said: "The pictorial repre sentation of the condition of the broken leg of the plaintiff gave to the jury a much more intelligent idea of that particular injury than it would have obtained from any verbal de scription of it by a suryeou, even if he had used for the purpose the sim plest terms of his att."4-Law Notes. DR. TALMAGFS SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: ''The Cradle of Jesus" Lessona Drawn From the Miraculous Escape of the Infant Christ From the Perils That Encompassed Him. Text: "HeroTl will seek the young child to destroy Him." Matthew 11.. 13. The cradle of the infant Jesus had no rockers, for it was not to be soothed by os cillating motion, as are the cradles of other princes. It had no embroidered pillow, for the young head was not to have such lux urious comfort. Though a meteor, ordin arily the most erratic and seemingly un governable of all skyey appearances, had been sent to designate the place where that cradle stood, and a choir had been sent from the heavenly temple to serenade its Illustrious occupant with an epic, yet the cradle was the target for all earthly and diabolical hostilities. Indeed, I give you as my opinion that it was the narrow est and most wonderful escape of the ages that the child was not slain before He had taken His first step or spoken His first word. Herod could not afford to have Him born. The Cassars couid not afford to have Him born. The gigantic oppressions and abominations of the world could not afford to have Him born. Was there ever Elanned a more systematized or appalling ombardment In all the world than the bombardment of that cradle? The Herod who led the ffttack was treach ery, vengeance and sensuality Imper sonated. As a sort of pastime he slew Hyr canus, the grandfather of his wife. Then he slew Mariamme, his wife. Then he butchered her two sons, Alexander and Aristobulus. Then he slew Antlpater, his oldest son. Then he ordered burned alive forty people who had pulled down the eagle of his authority. He ordered the nobles who had attended upon his dying bed to be slain, so that there might be universal mourning after his disease. From that same deathbed he ordered the slaughter of all the children In Bethelem under two years of age, feeling sure that If he mas sacred the entire Infantile population that would include the destruction of the child whose birthplace astronomy had pointed out with its finger of light. What were the slaughtered babes to him, and as many frenzied and bereft mothers? If he had been well enough to leave his bed, he would have enjoyed seeing the mothers wilily struggling to keep their babes and holding them, so tightly that they could notjbe separated until the sword took both lives at one stroke, and others, mother and child, hurled from roofs of houses into the street, until that village of horse shoe shape on the hillside became one great butcher shop. To have such a maD, with associates just as cruel and an army at his command, attempting the life of the Infant Jesus, does there seem any chance for His escape? Then that flight southward for so many miles, across deserts and amid bandits and wild beast3 (my friend, the late missionary and scientist Dr. Lansing, who took the same journey, said it was enough to kill both the Madonna and the Child), and poor residence in Cairo. You know how difficult it is to take an ordinary child successfully through the disorders that are sure to assail it even in comfort able homes and with all delicate ministries, and then think of the exposure of that famous babe in villages and lands where all sanitary laws were put at dellance. His first hours on earth spent in a room with out any doors, and ofttimes swept by chilled night winds, then afterward riding many days under hot tropical sun, and part of manv nights lest the avenger over take the fugitive before Ho could be hidden In another land. The sanhedrin also were affronted at the report of this mysterious arrival of a child that might upset all conventionalities and threaten the tbrone oi the nation. "Shut the door and bolt It and double bar it against Him!" cried all political and eccle siastical power. Christ on a retreat when only a few days of ago, with all the priva tions and hardships and sufferings of re treuti When the glad news camethat Herod was dead and the Madonna was packing up and taking her Child home, bad news also came that Archelaus, the eon, had taken the throne another crowned infamy. What chance for the babe's life? Will not some short grave hold tho wondrous Infant? "Put Him to death!" was the order all ud and down Palestine and all up and down the desert between Bethlehem and Cairo. The cry was: "Here comes an iconoclast of all established orderl Here comes an as pirant for the crown of Augustus! If found on the streets of Eethlemom, dash Him to death on the pavement! If found on a hill, hurl Him down the rocks! Away with Him!" But the babe got home in safety and passed up from infancy to youth, and from youth to manhood, and from carpenter shop to Messiahship, and from Kessiahship to enthronment, until the mightiest name on earth is Jesus, and there is no mightier name In heaven. What I want to call your attention to is your narrow escape and mine and the world's narrow escape. Suppose that attempt on the young child's life had been successful! Suppose that delegation of wise men, who were to report to Herod Immediately after they discovered the hard bed In the Bethlehem caravansary, had obeyed orders and reported! Suppose the beast carrying the Madonna and the Child in the flight had stumbled and flung to death its riders! Suppose Archolaus had got his hands on the babe that his father had failed to find! Suppose that among the children dashed from the Bethlehem house tops or separated by sword of the enraged constabulary Jesus had perished! Still further remarking upon the narrow escape which you aud I had and all the world had in that babe's escape, let me say that had that Herodic plot been successful the one lnstanco of absolutely perfect character would never have been unfolded. The world had enjoyed tho lives of many splendid men before Christ came. It had ad mired its Plato among philosophers, its Mithridates among heroes, its Herodotu3 among historians, its Phidias among sculptors, its Homer among poets, its JEsop among fabulists, its iEschyius among dramatists, Its Demosthenes among orators, its JEsculapius among physicians, yet among the contemporaries of those men there were two opinions, as now there are two opinions, concerning every remarkable man. There were plenty In those days who said of them, "He can not speak," or "He cannot sing," or "He cannot philosophize" or "His military achievement was a irere accident, or "His chisel, his pen, his medical prescription, never deserved the applause given." But concerning this full grown- Christ, whose life was launched three decades before that first Christmas, the moans of camels and the bleat of sheep and the low of csttle mingled with the babe's first cry, while clouds that night were resonant with music, and star pointing down whispered to star, "Look, there He is!" . That Christ, after the detectives of Herod and Pilate and sanhedrin had watched Him by day and watched Him by.night, year atter year, was reported in nocent. It was found out that when He talked to the vagrant woman in thai temple it was to tell ner to "go ana sin no, more," and that if He spoke with the peni-i tent thief it was to promise him paradis within twenty-four hours, and that as He moved about He dropped ease of pain upon.1 the invalid's pillow, or light upon the eye that lacked optic nerve, or put bread into! the hands of the hungry, or took from the? oriental hearse the dead young man and vitalized him and said to the widowed mother, "Here he is, alive and well." and she cried, "My boy, my boy!" aud he re sponded, "Mother, mother!" And the sea, tossing too roughly some of His friends, by a word easier than a nurse's word to a petulant child He made it keep still. The very judge who for other reason? allowed Him to be put to death de-l clared, "I find no fault in Him." Was there' ever a life so thoroughly ransacked and hypercriticisedthat turned out to be sc perfect a life? Now, you can imagine what! would have been the calamity to earth and heaven, what a bereavement to all history, what swindling not only of the human race, but of cherubim and seraphim and archangel, if because of Infernal incursion upon the bed of that Bethlehem babe this life of divine and glorious manhood had never been lived? The Christie parables, would never have been uttered; the ser mon on the mount, all adrip with ben- dictions, never preached; the golden rule, in picture frame of everlasting love, would never have been hung up for the universe to gaze upon and admire. - Still further remarking upon the narrows escape which you and I and the world had in the diversion of the persecutors from th place of nativity, let me say that had thatj Herodio raid upon the swaddling clothts been successful the world would never have! known the value of a righteous peao4 Much has been made of the fact that that world was at peace when Christ camej Yes. But what kind of peace was it? It; was a peace worse than war. It was the peace of a graveyard. The Roman eagles! had plucked out the world's eyesight andl plunged their beaks through the heart of dead nations. It was a peaee spoken of by; a dying Indian chieftain when a Christiana home missionary said to him, "You havaj been a warrior, and have been in many, feuds, but you must be at peace with ail! your enemies in order to die aright." Tho dying ehieftan replied: "That's easy enough. I am at peace with all my ene-i mies, fori have killed all of them." That was the style ot peace on earths when Christ came, but the spirit of ar- bitration, which is to garland the tomb; of this century and coronet the brow of Via pnmlnff flntnrtr Is .nrtRanUAnt nnnni the midnight anthem above Bethlehem,! two bars to that music, the first of di-j vine ascription and the second of earthy ly pacification. "Glory to God and! peace to men." In His manhood Christ; pronounced the same doetrine, "Blessed: are the merciful." Before the Bethle-1 hem star flashed ''its significance, the theory was: "Blessed is wholesale cut-; throatery. Blessed are those who cart kill the most antagonists. Blessed are those who can mo3t skillfully wield the; battleax. Blessed are those who coal stab the deepe3t with spear or roll a' chariot wheel over the most wounded? or put his charger's hoof on the most, dead." Tho entirely new theory of our' Christ was blessing for cursing, prayer for those who despitefully use you. foundries to turn spears into pruning': hooks, redhot furnaces to melt swordi into molds shaped like plowshares. If gigantic acerbities and worldwide tiger isms had, without any gospel opposi tion, gone on until now and been aug- I uu u waat wouiu mis wunu uavn uonu turned into? You need not remind me ot the awful wars since the opening of thai year one of our Christian era; for if the' earth has been again and again lacerated Into an Aceldama through improved weap onry of death and more rapidity of firej Prussian breechloader which in 186G startled the nations with unprecedented havooj eclipsed by contrivances that can sweeps vaster numbers to death by one volley and telegraphy adding to gunnery new facili ties for slaughter by instantly ordering armies to where they can do the most wholesale murder I say if all this woe has been wrought, how much worse would it have been if the Christly revelation had not been let down from heaven on five runged ladder of musical scale and thera had been no preaching of good will all ap and down Christendom for nineteen cen- a. i t mi i .iUi v. . . - t I 1 I J lt.( . 1 1 1. V, the most potent suggestion of peace the world has ever received. The cavalry horses cannot eat out of that manger. : I take another step forward ?n showing the narrow escape you and I had and tha world had in the secretion of Christ's blrth plaoo from the Herodio detectives, and the clubs with which they would have dashed the babe's lifa.out, when I say that without the life that began that night in Bethlehem the world would have had no illumined deathbeds. Before the time of Christ good 1. 1 1 I 1 11.1 1 ! .. - J - while depending upon the Christ to come, and there were antediluvian saints and Assyrian saints and Egyptian saints and Greci an saints and Jerusalem saint 3 long be fore tho clouds above Bethlehem became a! balcony filled with the best singers of a world where they allslng.butl cannot read that there was anything more than a quiet ing guess that came to tho3e before Christ deathbeds. Job said something bordering on the confident, but it was mixed up withi stroy his body. Abraham and Jacob had a little light on the dying pillow, but com pared with the after Christ deathbeds it was like the dim tallow candle of old be side the modern cluster of lights electrio. I know Elijah went up in memorable man ner, but it was a terrible way to go a whirlwind of fire that must have been splendid to look at by those who stood on the banks of the Jordan, but it was a style of ascent that required more nerve than you and I over had, to be a placid oc cupant of a chariot drawn by such a wild team. The triumphant deathbeds, as far as I know, were the after Christ deathbeds. What a procession ot hosan nas have marched through the dying room of the saints of the last nineteen centuriesl What cavalcade of mounted halleluiahs has calloned through the dvincr visions of tho last 2000 years save 100! Peaceful death beds in the years B.C.I Triumphant death beds, for the most part, reserved for the years A. D.! Behold the deathbeds of the Wesleys, of the Doddridges, of the Leigh Kichmonds, of the Edward Paysons; of Vara, the converted heathen chieftain crying in his last moments: "The canoe ia in the sea. The sails are spread. She is ready for the gale. I have a good Pilot to guide me. My outside man and my inside man differ. Let the one rot till the trum-, pet shall sound, but let my soul wing her way to the throne of Jesus." Of tfyins prench, though his doctors forbade him,1 and then descended to the commnntoti table, saying, "I am going to throw my self under the wings of the cherubim be fore the mercy seat," thousands of peopla a few days after following Mm to tlj grave, singing: With heavenlv weapons he has fought The battles of the Lori, Finished his course and kept the faith. And CRind tho great reward. 1