HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1894-02-07, Page 2Save
Her Life.
Mrs. O. J. WooLDsmoa, of Wortham,
Texas, saved the life of her child by the
use of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
"One of
ray c en End Crou
ease was attended by our physician, and was
supposed to be well under control. One
night I was startled by the chill's hard
breathing,and on going to ft found it stran-
gling. It had nearly ceased to breathe.
itemizing that the child's alarming condition
had become possible in spite of the medicines
given, I reasoned that such remedies would
be of no avail. Having part of a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house, I gave
the child three doses, at short intervals, and
anxiously waited results. From the moment
the Pectoral was given, the child's breathing
grew easter, and, in a short time, she was
glee/eine quietly and breathing naturally.
The child Is alive and well to -day, and I do
not hesitate to say that Ayer's cherry Pec-
toral saved her life."
Avis'°
RI'S
Cherry Pectoral
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mane.
,Prompttoact,suretocure
rhe Huron News -Record
51.50 a Year -$L25 in Advance
Wednesday, Feb. 7tn, 1894
(2) SrnLosa's CuirE is sold on a guaran-
tee. It cures Incipient Consumption.
It is the best Cough Cure. Only one
cent a' dose ; 25 its., 50 cts, and $1.00
per bottle. Sold by J. H. Combe.
The resignation of Abraham Hillsdon
from the clerkship of the Township of
North Oxford is an event which calls
for a passing notice. Mr. Hillsdon has
held this position continuously since
the organization of municipal govern-
ment in 1851, and had been a faithful
servant for that time—forty-three
years—and the oldest clerk in the pro-
wince of Ontario.
Fnglish Spavin Liniment removes all hard, softon
ealloneed Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood
Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, sweeney, Stifles,
Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, ate.
Save $50 by nee of one bottle. Warranted the most
wonderful Blemish Care ever known. S.,ld by
Watts & Co.,Drngglsts.
A surgical operation was ,performed
on Mr. Jos. Bawden, of Lxeter, on
Tuesday of last week by Dr. H. K.
Hynd man, and a large absess was re-
moved from his person. He is progress-
ing favorably,
(3) CAPTAIN SWEENEY, U. S. A., San
Diego, Cal., says : "Shiloh's Catarrh
Remedy is the first medicine I have
ever 'found that would do me any
good." Price 50 cents. Sold by J. H.
Combe.
An incipient fire oecured in the
Roman Catholic church, Acton, Tues-
day of last week. A wedding had been
celebrated at an early hour, and shortly
after the ceremony was over a blaze
was discovered near the altar. It was
quickly extinguished. The loss will
amount to $00 or $70.
RELIES. Is Six Bladderdises esrelevedin iii hoursabylthee"New
GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN K1mNEY CURE.." This new
remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians
yen account of its exceeding promptness in relleing
pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of
the urinary passages in male or female. It relieves
retention of watei and pain in passing it almost im-
mediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is
our remedy. Sold by Watts & Co., Druggists,
John A. McEwen, a well-known
figure in Morris township, died on
Monday morning. pf last week. De-
ceased was a native of Perthshire,
Scotland ; a Reformer in politics, and
some years ago was created a J. P. by
Sir Oliver Mowat. He leaves a grown
up family of two sons and three
daughters to mourn his loss.
Consumption Cured.
An old physician, retired from practice, having
had placed in hie hands by an East India mieeion-
ary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for
the speedy ,and–permanent cure of Consumption,
Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and
Lung Affections, also a positive and radical cure
for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints,
after having tested its wonderful curative powers
in thousands nt cases, has felt it his duty to make
it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this
motive and a desire to relieve human enifering, I
will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this
recipe, in German, French or English, with full
directions for preparing and using. Nowt by mail
byeddressing with^stamp, naming this pe� per.
W. A. NoYES, 820 Powers' Block, ltoclepter, N.Y.
550- y
This week we record the death of
Mrs. Alexander Hislop, a resident of
Walton. Deceased died on Monday,
14th inst., at the age of 81 years. She
leaves a husband and two daughters,
Mrs. A. McAllister, 2nd line of Morris,
and Mrs. Stevenson, 14th eon. of Grey,
to mourn the loss of a loving wife and
affectionate mother.
Jeer Over Pitt y Yen re.
MRs. WINSLow'SSooTunava Strum has been used by
millions of mothers for their children while teething
If disturbed
child sufferinght and andbroken
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Depend upon iht, mothers, thereIsno rmh mistake bout
it. it cures Diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and
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duces Inflammation and giros tone and energy to the
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Price twenty -ave cents a bottle. Sold by all drug
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Diia.wnlei.ow's SeoTIIINe SYRUP."
Joseph Hodgson, the hypnotist,' is
said to have cured George Erb, a Strat-
ford boy, by hypnotism. The boy had
Ms wrist broken,. After its being set
the fingers became rigid and the pro-
fessor is said to have cured him by
hypnotism.
American
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appears. The first dose greatly benefits, 75 cents
field by Waite & Co., Duggiest.
'TALMAGE ON FESTIVITY.
LUXURIOUS FEASTS PREF ABED BY
THE GREAT MEN QF THE EARTH.
Lord Lolrester and eterdinal Wohoey as
Latertainera—!tut the Grandest Enter.
tainment of All is the tOue hi Which
Our Lord the King la the Itauqueter
and the Angels cup•irearere.
BROOKLYN, N.Y., Jan, 28.—The usual
large audience assembled in the Taber -
uncle to -day and listened to a sermon of
remarkable power and interest by Rev.
Dr. Talmage, the subject being "Festi-
vity." The text selected was Luke
14:17—"Come, for all things are now
rd
ea
It 9 as one of the most exciting times
in English history when Queen Eliza-
beth visited Lord Leicester at Kenil-
worth Castle. The moment of her ar-
rival was considered so important that
all the clocks of the castle were stopped,
so that the hands might point to that
one moment us being the most signifi-
cant of all. She was greeted to the gate
with floating islands, and torches, and
the thunder of cannon, and fireworks
that set the night ablaze, and a great
burst of music that lifted the whole
scene into perfect enchantment. Then
she was introduced in a dining -hall the
luxuries of which astonished the world ;
four hundred servants waited upon the
rtlests ; the entertainment cost five
thousond,dollers each day. Lord Leices-
ter wade that greatsupper in Kenilworth
Castle.
Cardinal Wolsey entertained the
French ambassadors at Hampton Court.
The best cooks in all the land prepared
for the banquet; purveyors went out
and traveled all the kingdom over to
find spoils for the table. The time came.
The guest were kept during the day
hunting in the king's park, so that their
appetites might be keen : and then, in
the evening, to the sound of the trum-
peters, they were introduced into a hall
hung with silk and cloth of gold, and
there were tables a -glitter with imperial
plate, and laden with the rarest of
meats, and a -blush with the costliest
wines ; and when the second course of.
the feast came it was found that the
articles of food had been fashioned into
the shape of men, birds and beasts, and
groups dancing, and joustling parties
riding against each other with lances.
Lords and princes and ambassadors, out
of cups filled to the brim, drank the
health, first to the king of England and
next to the king of France. Cardinal
Wolsey pr's pared that great supper in
Hampton Court.
But I have to tell you of a grander en-
tertainment. My Lord, the King, is the
banqueter, Angels are the cup -bearers.
All the redeemed are the guests. The
halls of eternal love frescoed with light,
and paved with joy, and curtained with
unfailing beauty, are the banqueting
place. The harmonies of eternity are
the music. The chalices of Heaven are
the plates; and I am one of the servants
coming out with both hands filled with
invitations, scattering them everywhere;
arid, oh, that for yourselves you might
break the seal of the invitation and read
the words written in red ink of blood
by the tremulous hand of a dying
Christ: "Come now, for all things are
ready."
There have been grand entertainments
where was a tailing off—the wine gave
out, or the servants were rebellious, or
the light failed: but I have gone all
around about this subject and looked at
the redemption which Christ has provid-
ed, and I come here to tell you it is com-
plete, and swing open the door of the
feast, tell, you that "All things . are
now ready'"
Its the first place, I have to announce
that the Lord Jesus Christ himself is
ready. Cardinal Wolsey caine into the
feast after the first course ; he came in
booted and spurred, and the guests arose
and cheered him. But Christ comes in
at the beginning of the feast; aye, he
has been waiting eighteen hundred and
ninety-four years for his guests. He
had been standing on his mangled feet ;
he had had his sore hand • on his punc-
tured side : or he had been pressing his
lacerated temple, waiting, waiting. It
is wonderful that he had not been impa-
tient, and that lip has not said, "Shut
the door, and let the laggard stay out ;"
but he has been waiting. No banqueter
ever waited for his guest so patiently as
Christ has waited for us. To prole !tow
willing he is to receive us, I gather all
the tears that rolled down his cheeks in
sympathy for your sorrows; I gather all
the drops of blood that channeled his
brow, and his back, and his hands and
feet, in trying to purchase your redemp-
tion; I gather all the groans that he ut-
tered in midnight chill, and in mountain
hunger, and in desert loneliness, and
twist them into one cry—litter, agoniz-
ing, overwhelming. I gather sill the
pains that shot from spear, and spike,
and cross, jolting into one patig—re-
morseless, grinding, excruciating. I
take that one drop of sweat on his brow,
and under the Gospel glass that drop en-
larges until I see in it lakes of sorrow
and an ocean of agony. That Being
standing before you now, emaciated,
and gashed, and gory, coaxes for your
love with a pathos in which every
word is heart -break and every sentence
martvrdom. How can you think he
trifles I
Attasuerus prepared a feast for one
hundred and eighty days; but this feast
is for all eternity. Loreto and princes
were invited to that; you, and I, and all
our world are invited to this. Christ is
ready. You know that the banqueters
of olden time used to .wrap themselves
in robes prepared for the occasion; so,
my Lord Jesus hath wrapped Himself
in all that is beautiful. See how fair he
is t His eye, Hie brow, His cheek,
so radiant that the stars have
no gleam, and the morning no
brillaucy compared with it. His
face reflecting all the joys of the re-
deemed, His hand having the omnipo-
tent surgery with which Ile opened
blind eyes, and straightened crooked
limbs, and hoisted the pillars of heaven,
and swung the twelve gates which are
twelve pearls. There are not enough
cups in heaven to drink up this ocean of
beauty. There are not laddety enough
$c scale this height of love. There are
not enough cymbals to clap, or harps to
thrum, or trumpets to peal forth the
praises of this One altogether fair. Oh,
thou flower of eternity, thy breath is the
perfume of heaven I Ott, blissful day-
break, let all people clap their hands in
thy radiance! Chorus! Come, men, and
saints and cherubim, and seraphim and
archangel—all heights, nil tlepthw,nhl im-
mensities, Chorus I Roll Hun through
the heavens in a chariot of urfiversal ac-
claim, over bridges of hosannas, under
arches of coronation. along by the great
towers chiming [with eternal jubilee.
Chorus! "Unto Ilim who huth loved us,
and waillfed nit from our little in His o rn
blood, to Him be glory, ;World wititpui
end I"
I have a word of five lettetvi, but ns
sheet white enough on which to write
it, and no pen good enough; with whims:
to inscribe it. Give me the fairest !eat
from the heavenly records --give me file
pencil with which the angel records his
victory—and then, with my hand strung
to supernatural ecstasy, and my pen
dipped in the light of• the morning, I
will write it out in capitals of love :
"J-E•S•U•S I" It is this One, infinitely,
to whom you are invited, Christ is
waiting for you, waiting as the banquet,
er waits for the delayed guest—the
meats smoking, the beakers brimming,
the minstrels with fingers on the still
string, waiting for the clash of hoofs ut
the gateway. Waiting for you as a
mother waits for her son who went off
ten
years ago, dragging her
bleeding
heart along with him, Waiting ! 0!
give nue a comparison intense enough,
hot enough, importunate enough to ex-
press my meaning --something high as
heaven, and deep as bell, and long as
eternity. Not hoping that you cats help
me with such a comparison, I will say :
"He is walling as only the all-sympathe•
tic Christ can wait for the coming buck
of a lost soul,"
Bow the knee and kiss the Son,
Cecile and welcome, sinner; noose,
Again, the Holy Spirit is ready. Whv
is it that so many sermons drop dead—
that Christen's songs do not get their
wing under the people—that so often
prayer goes no higher than a Imuuter'e
"hullos?" It is because there is a link
wanting—the work of the Holy Spirit,
Unless that Spirit give grappling hooks
to a sermon, and lift the prayer, and
waft the song, everything is a dead
failure, That Spirit is willieg to come
at our call and lead you to eternal life;
or ready to come with the sante power
with whiem he unhorsed Saul on the
Damascus turnpike, and broke down
Lydia in her fine store, and lifted the
three thousand from midnight into mid -
noon at the Pentecost. With that power
the Spirit of God now beats at the gate
of your soul. Have you not noticed
what homely and insignificant inst-u•
mentality the Spirit of God employs for
nsan's conversion? There was a until on a
Hudson River boat to whom a tract was
offered. With iildiguatiou he tore it up
and threw it overboard. But one frag•
meat lodged on his coatsleeve; and lie
saw on it the word "eternity;" and lie
found no peace until lie was prepared
for that great future. Do you know
what passage it was that caused Martin
Luther to see the truth ? "The just
shall live by faith." Du you know there
is one—just one—passage that brought
Augustine from a life of dissipation?
"Put ye on the Lord Jesus Cutest. and
make no provision for the flesh to fulfill
the lusts thereof." It was just one pats•
sage that cony erted llediey Vicars, time
great soldier, to Christ : •The blood of
Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin," Do
you know that the Holy Spirit used nue
passage of Scripture to save Jonathan
Edwards? "Now. unto the King',
eternal, immortal, invisible, the only
wise God, our Saviour, be glory." One
year ago on Thaultsgiving day, I read
for my text, "0, give thanks unto tile
Lord, for He is good ; for Hie mercy- en-
dureth fur ever," And there is a young
man in the house to whine heart the
Holy Spirit took' that text for his eternal
redemption. I might speak of my own
case. I will tell you 1 was brought to
the peace of the Gospel through the
Syro-Peamician woman's cry to Christ :
"Even the dogs eat of time crumbs that
fall from the Master's table.
Do you know that the Hoiy Spirit al-
most always uses ineignilicaut menus
Eloquent sermons never save anybody ;
metaphysical sermons never save any-
body ; plmlosopeieal sermons sieves- save
anybody. But the minister coulee some
Sabbath to his pulpit, worn t lit with en-
gagements and the jangling of a frenzm•
ed dour bell ; he has only a text and two
or three ideas, but he says ; "0 Lord,
help sue. Here are a good many people
I may -never meet again. I have not
much to say. Speak Thou through. ray
pour lips ;" and before the service is
done there are tearful eyes and IL'soleumn-
ity like the judgment. Time great l"reucim .
orator, when the dead king lay
before him,. looked tip and cried :
"Gad only is great ;" and the triumph
of his eloquence has been told by the
historians, But I have not heard that,
one soul was saved by the ora-
torical flout ish. Worldly critics may
think that the early preaching of
Thomas Chalmers was a masterpiece.
But Thomas Chalmers says he
never began to preach until he clone out
of the sick room, white and emaciated,
and told men the simple story of Jesus.
in the great day of eternity it will be
found that the most souls have been
brought to Christ, not by the Bossuets,
anu Dtassilluus, and Bourdaloues but by
humble men who, in thestremgth of God,
and believing in the eternal Spirit, in-
vited when to Jesus, There were wise
slaves—there were excellent ointments,
I suppose. in the time of Christ, for
blind or inflamed eyes. But Jesus turn-
ed His back upon therm, a„d put the tip
of His tinges to His tongue, and thee,
with the spittle that adhered to time
finger, He anointed the eyes of the
blind man, and daylight poured limb
His blinded soul. So it was now that
time Spirit of God takes that
humble prayer -meeting talk, whica
seems to be the very saliva of Chris-
tian influence, and anoint the eyes of
the blind, anti pours the sunlight of par-
don and peace upon the soul. Oh, toy
friend, I wish[ we could ,;set it more and
suore,that if any good is done it is by we
power of God's ouuhipoteet Spirit. I do
not know what hynrii may bring you to
Jesus. I do not know what words of
the Scripture lesson I read may save
your soul. Perhaps the Spirit of God
may hurl the very next text into your
heart : '•Conte, for all things are uow
ready."
Agani, the Church is ready. Oleman,
if I could take the curtain off these
Christian Imearts, I could show you a
great many anxieties for your redemp-
tton. You think that old man is asleep,
because his head is down and his eyes
are Shut. No, the is praying for your re-
demption, and hoping that the words
spoken may strike your hearts, Do you
know the air is fnll of prayer? Do you
know that prayer is going up from Ful-
ton street prayer meeting and
from Friday evening prayer meet-
ing, and going up every hour of the
day for the redemption of the people?
And if you should start toward the door
of the Christian Church, how quickly it
would fly open. Hundreds of people
would say : "Give that man room at the
sacrament. Bring the silver bowl for
his baptienl. Give him the right hand
of Christian fellowship. Bring him into
all Christian associations." Oh, you
\wanderer on the cold mountains, come
into the warm sheepfold. I let down
time bars and bid you come. With the
Shepherd's crook point you the way.
••,,.M n.. Y..„, •„M n.
ftindrede of ••Qhr'ietiap halide 'beckon
'Tett We the Cl;;ut'oh Of Clod, A great
many people do not lie the. Church,,
vitt say it is a gnat mess of hypocrites,
but it is a glorious ()introit with all its
imperfections. Christ bought it, and
hoisted the pillars, end swung its gates,
and lifted Its archer, and curtained it
witl►-upholstery crimson with crucifixion
carnage. Come into it.
We are a garden walled around
Chosen end made welter ground :
It little spot enolosed by ewe,
Out of the world's wild wilderness.
Again, the angels of God are ready,
A great many Christians think that the
talk about angels is fanciful. You say
it is a very good subject for theological
students who have just begun to sernmou-
ize; but for older men it is improper,
There is no more proof in that Bible that
there is a God than that there lire angels.
Why, do not they swarm al out Jacob's
ladder? Are we not told that they con-
ducted'rLnzm•us upward ? that they stand
before the throne, their faces covered up
with their wing, while they cry : "Holy,
holy, is the Lord God Almighty l" Dial
not David see thousands and thousands ?
Did not one angel slay one hundred and
eighty-five thousand men in See-
nacherib's army? And shall they not be
the chief harvesters at the judgment?
There is a line of loving, holy, mighty
angels reaching to heaven. f' suppose
they reach from here to the very gate,
and when an audience is assembled for
Christian worship the air is full of Hien!.
If each one of you have a guardian
angel, how many celestials are there
here? They crowd the place, they
Lover, they flit about, they rejoice,
Look 1 that spirit has just come from the
Throne. A moment ago it stood before
Christ, and heard the doxology of the
glorified. Look ! Bright imtmortal
what news from the golden city I Speak,
spirit blest I Tile response comes melt•
iug on the air : "Come, for all things are
now ready !" Angels ready to bear the
tidings, angels ready to drug time
benediction, angels ready to kindle the
joy.'They have stood in glory—they
know all about it. They have felt the
joy that is felt where there are no tears
and no graves ; immortal health, but no
invalidism ; s. ngs, but no groans ; wed-
ding bells, but no funeral torches—eyes
that never weep—hands that never
blister—heads that never faint—hearts
that never break—friendships that never
weakened.
Ready, all of them. Ready thrones,
principalities and powers I Ready sera-
phim and cherubim ! Ready, Michael,
the archangel I
Again, your kindred its glory are all
ready for your coming. I pronounce
modern spiritualism a fraud and a sham.
If John Milton and George Whitefield
have no better business than to crawl
under a table and rattle the leaves. they
had better stay at home in glory. While
I believe that modern spiritualism is
bad, because of its mental and 'domes-
tic ravages, common sense, enlightened
by the Word of God, teaches us that
out friends in gloryt sympathize with
our redemption. This Bible says idain-
ly that there is joy in heaven among the
angels of God over one sinner that re-
penteth ; and if angels rejoice and know
of it, shall not our friends, standing
among stem. know it? Some of these
spirits in glory toiled for your rederep•
tion. When they came to die their chief
grief was that you were not a Christian.
They said: "Meet me Ju heaven; and put
their hand ont from the cover and said,
"Good-bye." Now, suppose you should
cross over from a sinful life to a holy
life. Suppose you should be born into
the kingdom. Suppose you should now
say: "Farewell, 0 deceitful world! Get
the gone, my sin? Fie upon all the fol,
lies! 0, Christ, help mile or 1 perish? I
take Thy promise. 1 believe Thy Word.
I enter Thy service." Suppose you
should say and do this? Why, the
angel sent to you would shunt upward,
"He is coming I•" and' the angel, puls•
ing higher in the air, would simout
it upward, " He is coming ;''
and it would run all up the line of light,
from wing to wing, and from trumpet to
trumpet, until it reached the gate ; and
then It would flash to "the house of
many mansions," and it would find out
y:.ur kindred there, and before your
tears of repentance had been wiped
from the cheek, and before you had
finished your first prayer, your kindred
in glory would know of it, and another
heaven would be added to their joy, and
they would cry, "My prayers are an-
swered ;. another loved one saved. Give
me a harp with which to strike the joy,
SaI' ! saved !"
"lfved I havesaved shown you that "all things
are really," that Christ is ready, that
the Holy Spirit is ready, that the
Church is ready, that the angels in glory
are ready, that your g.oritied kindred
are ready, then with all the concetitrat-
ed emphasis of my sbul, I ask you if you
are ready ? You see my subject t,m•ows
the whole responsibility upon yourself:
If you do not get into the King's ban-
quet, It is because you do not accept
time iuvitatiun. You have the most
important invitation. Two uritis
stretched down from the cross, soaked
in blood from elbow to finger-tip ; two
lips quivering in mortal amignisn ; two
eyes beaming with ii,(iiiits love, -Say-
ing, collie, fur all thiugs are now ready,"
Ty,tdail's Lust Letter.
The last letter of time late Prof Tyndall
is believed to have been one wince the
addressed to Mr. C Iles, of the Society
of Authors, of which body Prof. Tyndall
wee a vice-president, as well as one of
its eai'Iheet rind staunchest friends. It is
dated December 3, and did not reach its
destination till after Dr. Tyndall's death.
The following portion of the note is pub•
lished in The Author:
DEAR MR. CoLLES,—I have been
"shamefully entreated"—lifted on the
wings of hope arid then let fall like a
simple, raavitating mass without a pill-
ion, When I reached England from
Switzerland six weeks ago my prospects
were fair. Three days after my return
they became clouded. I was smitten
'with an attack in the chest, which drove
me to my bed, whence I am hardly yet
able to rise. Thais why I have not ac-
knowledged your friendly note inform-
ing nue of the kindness of -- in under-
taking to look over the poems of —
Will you thank him on my behalf?
Yours very faithfully, JOHN TYNDALL.
There was, we Learn, a postscript con-
taining another message of kindness and
friendship.
Suddenly Stopping a Train,
If a train moving at the speed of
twenty-five miles art hour, were midden-
II' stopped, the passengers would experi-
ence a shock equal to that of falling
from a second -floor window; at thirty
miles an hour they might as well fall
from a height of three pairs of stairs;
and an express train would, in point of
fact, make then fall from a fourth
story
A, Lay. Song.
What little .hoe is this,
With roses round his brow
That elilnbeth.0 ward for a ilia
And fain would Mays it nota?
I know bins, and vett do not know
Why he should Maxon I hold pot
I ioniettnrea seek to slip
The soft, white arias of hint—
To hide theqeeritnson of hip lip,
• But then'hlp eyes grow dim
With tears, amid I in spite say:
"Go not away, go not away!'
So still we doth abide
Through all the brightening years;
And, wandering through the world a wide,
I kiss away his tears!
Md when i weep, his lips divine
Klee all away these tears of mine!
—Frank L. Stanton.
.l.HO OGRAPB.0.
Every room in Harley Hall was occu
omnibus, piedtmbus, brougham mai lugg;u_
cart had been to and front the station s
often that Mr. Binder, the head of the
stable department, had been heard to
murmur something not very contrib.
menttry about people who went about
with "trunks as big as 'aystacks," and
who expected to find ''carriages and
'oases waiting for 'em everywhere to drag
'em up the 'ills,"
Among the latest arrivals were two
young men who were as unlike each
other in every respect as two young
men could be, Giluert Hurst waif a bar-
rister, whose faster owned a certain
number of acres of laud in the country.
Gilbert was doing fairly well at the
bar, and was a steady, rightoni ,ded
young man with a pair of ,broad s tout•
iters and a pair of honest gray eyes that
told time story of a frank and honest na-
ture. John Beasley, his companion,
was tall, fair, narrow -shout lined, well
groomed and very rich.
Mothers smiled ou John Beasley, but
Johu Beasley mostly smiled (,i lien lie
had the chance) on a certain enterpris-
ing widow at South Kensington.
As Gilbert entered the drawing room
Itis heart gave a mighty leap when lie
saw that Dorothy Lane, wnuam hip ihad
been for two year's desperately in love
with, ivas helping Lady Harley with
the distributiuh of teacups. Ile haul met
Dorothy often in London, and to make
Iter his wife was the cherished dreamt of
his life,
John saw her, too. His heart gave no
leap—it was nut of the leaping. kind ;
but he thought he had never seen her to
such advantage as now, as site stood in
the soft light of the shaded lamps, her
dark -red dress edged witu sable at the
throat and wrists, fitting her to pellet.
ten and showing every ,curve of her
graceful figure. John promptly rushed
into conversation with a Miss Green;;
who was among the guests assembled
amid who was towered by t'um'tuthe lu the
extent of 5000 a year.
The next morning he felt a glow of
satisfaction when his servant op -tied tee
shutters of his bedroom ;til I his emit
lighted on the coronet worked in red
wool on the blankets, and hme t ou;,,t t,f
the society lie was going to distinguish
himnelf iu ti'.uring the next 10 days.
lu tae half hour dev'ted to urs toilet
the bade three resolves—first, that he
would make himself agreeable to every
one ; secondly, that lie would "make
the runumug'with Miss Green, with a.
view to matrimony and the pussessm dl
of five thousand a year, at the saint, 'Mlle
•unusiiig himself with Dorothy, whose
looks pleased hint mightily: thirdly,
that lie would write to time South Kem-
siugtom widow, omitting ism his letter
any mention of tattier Dorothy or Miss
Gfeeu.
lie attired himself with great care in
shouting clothes that were a great d al
too new, and a soupcon of scent being
hung about him as he walked with a
sell-onIhslfed air into time ht•oul:;ust roost.
He cost a sharp nod critical eye uver
Giluert. hoping to tied that iv:iht of
umruus or iialat of taste Willi id h, tray -
themselves; but not a fault coni b.�
found with the shantung suit that looked
wore, but was cc ell worn, and Julie
realized, as lie looked, that there was
an indescribable suuletlliig. about the
wearer that he, John, could never arrive
at,
lie played his cards very well, lie
thought. during the days that folloiied
—days in which G-ireert had plenty of
opportunities for finding hiinself with a
bad headache, as he w'atc ed John mak-
ing secret love to the girl be cared for so
irtucb. -
1'ue omen started early .one tweeting
for an outlying covert tit tt was general-
ly supposed to produce rocketers, uu l
teat w as kept as a uunhe bouche for the
end of the week's shoot. The ladies were
to drive out to lunch, ani! Dorothy and
Miss Green, who were rival photograph-
ers, were to send their cameras out in .
ties luncheon carts.
atrocity and Mss Green cane out be-
fore lunch, to enable them to see a drive
hloivu mu time low ground. As time guns
were placed behind a high, straggling
hedgerow Joins was surely tempted to
ask Dorothy to stand by hive to tvhtln'5
hes skill and prowess, but prudence con-
quered, and Miss Green was selected as ""
lits Conipaumiuu.
'•Will you stand by me, Miss Lane ?"
asked Gilbert. ' I am afraid you will
not see ally brilliant shooting, lett I
will do my best. Let ins unroll your
waterproof and I ecu make you a
comfortable seat here in these dry
leaves and you will be sheltered front the
"•l am so afraid," said Dorothy, scan-
ning the sky that had become somewhat
overcast since morning, "that it will
be t .o dark for photography, and I
wanted so to get a group ; it is getting
late, too, and the beaters seem a long
tittle getting into line." Sue knelt down
in the leaves that carpeted the sides of
the hedge mend peered through a sulall
upenhug,
can see by tlmont now quite
plainly. Just look, they are down, the
osiers, and will soon be lore,"
Gilbert knelt by her side and held
back some brambles that intercepted
his view, his heart beating furiously
and his hands trembling as he found hums
farce so dangerously near to Dorothy's.
A sudden peal of laughter, and John
Beasley's voice calling out : "Are you
two saying your prayers?" brought Gil.
Bert to his feet and time blood to Dorothy's
face,
Angry words sprang to his imps, but lie
was silenced by an appeal from a pair of
very soft brown eyes, and turning to-
ward Dorothy he said :
"Yes, I was kneeling by your side ;
can't you guess what—"
"Look out, sir, there's a lot of duck
coming over." This from the loader,
who had been munching twigs in a
runmhnnfive n1 Miner.
Hilbert pick to up his gun, but it was
too lame an I ee knew that Beasley would
leave unut,n•r ,.nonce of saying some-
: king; mumpleasimlt about his shooting.
After that them' was no time for talk•
1•t, ; it was ht's aorht for 10 minutes and
a him; mixed ba. was the result.
J3elore leitclt was over Dorothy settled
to go hong, by a returning dog -Cart that
had come out with a fresh supply of ca)f.:
tridgt e, and atm she was leasing elle saw
Mies Green preparing tier o>amerU fQr„ c..
flop, a youtfg mall fa attendance ltus
with time tripod and the lege.
John helped her with hes wrape,�itayr
ingaehedidso;
"I ant so sorry you are going home,
Miss. Lane, I wanted you t.e ile ltt tile.
group," and then in a lower voice, "You
know very well I shall not mare to have
a cosy unless you are in it,"
"Never mind, Miss Green ' b.
there," said Dorothy, as she elal,
up into the dogcart.
John made a pretence of settling lie
rugs round her feet, and whispered ;
"Tnunk goodness she wilt be busy with
iter catner•a ; I have hard enough of Miss
Green's society for one day, and you
u. knew very well twat at a:l tunes • inc
u finitely prefer yours."
o
Seeing � p doubting look in Dor
's
face, he added : "You do not believe it,
Dorothy, but it is true. I swear I will
not go near Miss Green again today."
The cart moved off, and Dorothy had
plenty to think of during her homeward
drive, Sue knew very well that she car -
tom Giluert Hurst, and that she had
cared fur him ever since she met him on
the river two years ago ; they had often
met since and now had been for a week
together uudet' the same moot, Surely
those honest grey eyes could not lie ; yet
wily did he su often avoid her and why
did he always make way for Jobe Beas-
ley whenever lie tried to monopolize her
suciely ? Yet surely lie roust have
meant something just now—nor was lie
only amusing himself, and aid John
really care more for her than Gilbert
did ?
After dinner that evening she was
playing some dreamy German music
that seemed to have a particularly
soothing effect on Lord Harley, wee was
half buried and half asleep in a big arm.
cwtir before the tire, when Joins cattle
up and leaned over her shoulder till his
Imps almost touched her hair, and said in
a low voice :
"1 kept my word this afternoon; what
is to be any reward ?"
"Teat you shall be allowed:to turn
over the nexl two pages of music for
due," she answered. "And this, after,"
she added, nodding toward the gardenia
that sue had left with her gloved and fau
uu the piano.
()flurries jealous ears heard the an -
ewer and lie went off with rage at his
heart.
'time following day it rained in tor-
rents. Miro Green and several of the
guests were leaving, and Dorothy went
tat to the dark roue' at tile lar end of the
house to develop some negatiYes thatahe
Imo taken of a ruined castle iu the
ne ig: bor„uud,
bile tumid all in order as she had left
it, ,end suen had everything ready for
business, deveiopwg solutmou, alum,
hypo, all in their respective places, the
red lamp lighted, the snatches close at
Ruud and the candle ulowu out. She
reached up to the smelt' for the shoe, tuuk
nut tile negative, aid slipped it quickly
situ the developing tray for toe pre.
limlinary cc ash and then poured the so-
lution over its surface.
See gently rocked the tray to and fro
iu the dimred light, and saw the high
lights make their appea•auce nue by nue.
She searched in vain for the turrets of
the ruined castle, and for the high welt
of trees bp the hill beyond, and beg in to
fear she mad taken two pictures on the o
same plate. Presently odd shapes and
str;itge tigures began to appear which,
al ter a tittle fresh developer had been
poured over tient, took the fortmddf
folding -chairs and benches, and Dorothy
saw tae shooting party at lunch before
her.
Her hand groped about for time match
box, but the thought struck her that the •
the negative was Hot hers and must not
ta'nested, so it was left in the alum a
few minister; and rifer a wesm was left
in the iiy'pu hath; but her quick ey es had
seen enough to tell her that Joint Beas-
ley had lied to her, for fixe l iu tier
memory as surely as it was now being
tixeu on the plate wits the picture of teat
young man sitting by the side of Miss
Green, his head turned toward tier, his
hand4ttlmost touch lug hers.
She sat thinking for some time, and
was only roused by hearing footsteps in
the passage, followed by a knoce at the
d°4
•'Yes, who is it?”
"It is 1," answered Gilbert's voice.
"They are trying soon) new music in the
drawing roots, and Lady IIarley wants
your help. May I cone 'in ?"
"Yes ; the negative ts,iixed now, the
light will not hurt it. You can come
' Gilbert groped his way into the room
and found Dorothy seated at the devel-
oping table. "May I see the photograph
you have taken? Ilas the castle come
out w ?"
Siloell lifted the plate from under the
ru sing water tap, and held it up before
the red lamp for him to see. She turn-
ed her head, and their eyes met for a
second us the leaned over her shoulder,
but before he could say a word of sur-
prise there ms as a sudden flare, a snap,
and a gurgling sound, and with one wild
flicker the lamp went out and they were
in darkness.
"Where is the door? I know I shall
tumble over something and do some
damage. Will you lead me? You know
the room better than I do."
A small, soft hand was slipped into
his, and tihough Dorothy did know -that
room quite well they were a very long
time finding the door—but then, you
see, the room was very dark,—Froin
The World, London,
Something About Balloons,
The January number of Time Cornhill
has an article on military ballooning,
giving an explanation of how a captive
balloon is moved without drawing it
down. A man is placed at the end of
the wagon, who guides the connecting
rope so that it cannot get entangled ger
run risk of being cut, and away goes Me
wagon, sometimes at a trot across fields,
and up and down hill, until the balloon
itself is a long distance away from its
original station. When it is desired to
lower the balloon it is not necessary to
wind in the wire rope. A long, stout pole,
in the middle of which is a pulley -when
is laid across the rope, Half a d
men seized theu and
ole
prun it alongt1e
rope, and the weight soon bringthe
balloon down to the ground. It is not
necessary to lower the balloon when it is
required that messages should be ex-
changed between those below and those
above. Sometimes a wire is 'attached,
through which messages can be sent to
a telephone. Another plan is to send
communications down the wire cable,
A little wire hook is fastened around the
cable, and the letter or paper weighted
with a small sandbag, is sent fluttering
down. The human voice, it is added,
can be heard both from a considerable
height and depth, so that verbal come
munloation is not difficult if there is no
wind,