Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1881, Page 18

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PAGES. : ‘ 18 : THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1881—TW. ‘ 9S pected to get out of that letter some of the most [ ‘Yes, si ‘ soe ona it that boy hus Hed again, pur ETE CHE RUELES 5 ; 2 It : cay vheart, just the same. T | never looked uneasy, but went rigbr along. | cuep fare inakoue, opi to see Bimvbrighion | was a coal-fire and sev. bullty he writing bal | Teo appeared Secct ee waten, and drew from ‘ fov, you will tind the correct Ibi for us, or— PRESBYTERIAN, 3 upand bexin to be cheery and gay; but no, the | gone ov * nee $ Pts IDs & 2 hello! where is that boy?” THE REV. J. i WALKER WILL pre, ‘ e cheery * his pocketa piece of twine string xbout a foot And have been acting undor distinct orders Goce beouth ae 1 And, what -la”more. | momar aod’ evening in Gest ted REACH day's went by, and there was no change. He as- BUT 1 GOT IT OUT; * | tong, with three uots tied init. and hetd it up. from outside?” - . athe ren, " A Curiou jl ine. th See era ee ee tace waa aiways | there it ist it ain't hardiy scorched, you see.” “(got it out of a. yun on the water-frunt,” | = Yes. 81 wre fadled Xo flu y tego Of bier. Mara Was AM | Geno’ wroninnsunisce oa Diet come urlous Experience During the | minded, always thin! ing, bis nee Ain alway Tilanced at the paper and took ina sentence } suid he. “1 took tho tomplons out of all tho “ Willingis?"* ; awkward pred icament. 7 ursed ny tupidity wie “Admige = sul, One morning Raybura usked leave to |, tem t en | dismissed tho Sergeant and told | guns and exumined close; this stringswas tne | “Yes, sir.” : | iu noc tying him to one of the mens but it eos | rie REV. Ib. MILLEL WiLw PREACH: py” Late Unpleasantness. ie to me prizately. | Said he is, | him to'send Webb to mo. ere is the paper in | only. thing in any sun. “ Gladly, perhaps?” : of ino use to-hother about. that now. WRAL ine sixtn Church, corner of Vincennemar sea tne # Jhope J don't, offend, sir, but the truth is, |. Bim ; So this bit of string was Wicklow's “sign” to | _ * Yes, sir; it would do no good to deny it. The | should Ldo in tho presont circumstances ?— | ty-sixth-st.. moreinz and evening. Morning Sub. : : it seems us if-} full: a . —Colonel: 1 was | signify that the “Master's” commands had not | South is my country; that was the question. ‘That girl miyht be B. 2A Brocluus Gem.” Bree pews in the evening How the Wicklow Boy Fooled thé FE QuT TGDSNULA tbe Si cue thres gust | miscarried. Lordered that every sentinel who Niees Sohanaas Batter all, 1 did uot believe tt, but stil it ra eralaly invited t Goth Services i ' mistiken:as 10° theca re : a d serve I t twenty- MY. HEAT? ITHERN, :| Would not answer to tuke unbelief for proof. LOK. 1L M. SCOT THE OF DALHOUSIE (¢ * “Military Authorities cklow voy, sir. ‘The musicians gnded my list with. ‘They ure IS pounders; wll | Wis Pere pene Hun gan URINE SHO DORERWEMIS | | 5) 52 4 naa ne chien *} So 1 ftnaliy put jay men in a vacant room | texe, Nos, Scotia, sid, “kulnbare’ Unirersite Cok oo y ae ARE DOWN ON SIM kitlio: reat OF the: APMMTE PEE AS 8 Ot eveapt thar Pin Le CON MEERE AT ONCE “Then the tale you told me of your wrongs | seross tho ball, from 165, and told them to | vrcaei in the mor athe Jerferson Park Churaie rc garrisolt remainens Derore repo. St CONFINESIEY NCE; and the persecution of your famijy was made up-} eapture anybody and Gverybody that, -ap- REV. LD COLLISSON | PIUACHES proached the girl's room, and to keep the land- | momine und cxening in the Fullerton Avena to an extent you can't imagine. the two Hight infantry companies that were to | and separately, and not alowed to communiente | for the cecasion? : Well, goon, go on, What has he been do- | yodctnebed for service at the front are to stay | Sith nny one withour my privity and consent, “ They—they told me to say it, Si lord with thet, and “ubder strict wate, Unt | Te ae ee WIITRED. WILL. Patacs REY. S STEAM le PREACIE | An Ingenions Youth with. a Lively | 3° r t at ‘ € : gt here for tho present—ean't find out for bow | 4 relewram now came from the Secretury of | « And you soutien hose who | further orders. ‘Then I burried back to the fort E 4 i A Dime-Novel Linagination. iRrayin, Jong, just now, but will soon. We ‘are sutistled | war. It read aa follows: ¥ tien oud add gee See eae tro nas ieulkeraciene tiers poe morning and evening in the Ett, sfurel, corse tae “ Praying nik - | that, all things considered, matters had better “Suspend habeas corpus. Put town under Eee buse you are, you poor, misgusded thing?” Yes, all was right. And ail remained right. 1 Indwelling.” Evening Servi iublecs: Yes, sir: the rausiclaus haven't any peace OF | ye postponed un— 5 martini law. Make necessary arrests. Act with | fe replied with sobs only.” staid up all night to make sure of that, Nothing | ebildren’s meetin. their lite for that boy’s prayin’ First hing in There it Uroke off—there is where Rayburn | yisorand promptess. Keep the department in- ** Well, let that pass.. ‘lo business. Who isthe-| happened. 1 unspenkably glud to see the HE REV. WILL PREACR Ty | The Latest Humorous Sketch by } the morning he’s at it: noons hes at its and | conned: and interrupted the writer, All my | farmed." : “Colonel” and where is ho?”” dawn come auain,.and be able to telegraph the | the morning und th Orgel "in the evening nights—well. nights ho just into “em like | atreetion for the boy. all my -respeet for bim | “Wve were now in shape to go to work. I sent He began to ery hard, and tried to beg off | department that the Stars aud Stripes fonted Tenria Mts. Sformin subjects ih oSpincnagtsen ron I arki-nts. 3 ibject: “Spiritual Astan’, parencs ang Mark Twain. all. po: a? “Sleep? Bless you. they can’t | ang charity for his- forlorn condition, withered | our and had the laine eeatieminn quis ent a af e nt ys Up or m condition, Wi u 5 E quietly arrest: | from answering. ite he would be killed if | over Fort Trumbull. ee ee ae eens Guopteatoncmill | Htimement uader the blight of this revelation | oq and as quietiy brought into the fort: Tpleed | he relde | Sheet Cee) ea ee ee oe eee sure was lifted ‘from my CIS REV. ILERRICK JOTLNSON. p then when be ones gets bis: supplicunon mill | of cold-blocded baseness. j- | Piut under gaurd, and Torbade speceh to him or | cell and lock him up if he did not come outwith | breast. Still {did not relax vigilance, of course, | githtye ay: euch ine teas eM REACHES Century fur November. He ae Stare in GE abe hundemaster and | ,,@e2e mever mind about that. Here was busic | from him. “He was inclined to bimster at first, | the iuformution, “At the same time tpromised | hos cifort eithers the case 'wdG sed orrace for | MUR and evening fa series OF sO eg EeeBe ‘This Is the story which the Major told me, as | eine ee ee ethos ihe head | Bess—business that reyuired profound and im- | pur he soon dropped that. to protect kim from all harm ff he made actean | thut. Jhadup my prisoners, onc by one, and | men. Sub} Soung nearly as 1 ean recall it: taglere and: he prays for: Hime next the bass | Mediate attention, too Webb and I turned the | Next came word that Wicklow bad been seen | bronste For all auswer ho. closed bis ‘mouth | uetied thom by: the Hour tring to eet theo to | tie wEeT AMMILT -SWAZEY. Dp. p, wiih De tin and “he ccbose him -ius and sy ons right | SWWJecr over and over, and examined 1 all | i give something to u couple of our new re- | fens: and put onestabborn’ air wbien Leould | contess, batt wasn fallaee: Tees ony gnached | vet aR SES, SI AZEY, moraing and 2 drum, and he scoops it "ing an deen rin around, Webb said: ; f crults; and thutt, as suon as bis back was turned, | not bring him outof. At lust [started with him: | their teeth and tore their hair, and revealed | evening - Jn the. winter of 1Sc?-’65 I was commandant | straight throuzh the band, ¢ yt tocoat anit | ceo” What a pity be was interrupted! Something these-hnd been éelzed and coniined. Upon each { but a single “hace into the dark cell converted | nothing. TUE REY. A. 6. KITTREDGE wi, of Fort Trumbull at New London, Conn, May- | ei take yor think he thought be | 18, #0INE to Ue postponed wnti—whens And | was found a sinall bit of paper, bearing these | him. lle broke into pasion of weeping and | “CAboGt noon eame Fee etree apaey caine In the ‘Third Church, core ake y 5 what is the sdmething? Vossibly words and signs in pencil: supplicating, and declared z TIDINGS OF MY MISSING BOY, last Sabbath wt be distrlvuted at the eins) of ake be our life there was not so brisk as life at“ the | Virart but a little while for this world, and be- i . P é ibis an entioned it. Saienpeeatte fk enough, in its way— | jeved he coulan't be happy in Heaven’ without | 7°? \ HE WOULD TELL EV! Ate had been sven on the rond, tramping“ weat- | evening service. THE REV. J. M. WORALL 0.D, PREACHES ne’s brains didn't cake together there for lack | he nad a brass bang along, and wanted to pick THE PIOUS LITTLE < ward, some eight miles out, at 6 in the morning. ; i 3 f Sf eometbing to keep them stirring. For one | ‘em oul fer tumneelt so be’ cowid depend oem | 4Yos," I said, we have missed a trick. And ts “Colonel and described Bim partieulariye Said | Fstucted acuvaley Lieutenant and uprivace ou | morming aud evening In the bicnch Church, wore thing. all the Northorn atwospuere at that time | do up the national tunes in a style suitin’ to | who ise.’ m ino letter? 13 it conspirators In- y . WAgiage Timmy etacie, he would’be found at the principal botel inthe | bis track at once. ‘They eame in sight of bim | VUE REV. WILLIAM CURRIE. 0. DOF LEED 2 > es ace. Well, sir, ide rt Or outside?’ he fou 0 . He ene hue yILLLAM CURRIE, 0. D., was thick with mysterious rnmors—rumors to Weecise MOTs AY. HE “DON'T WAVE Xo | Utkin ree wae uncomfortably sugxestive, REMEMUER ¥XXXx. Ce Rae A an EO ore en en ee ee te ea ed ecg ieee Elvneh Church commer, Mlchiguneng’ ouoe 1B ine etting rexdy to blow up our North- | 51.5 gare : j 4 ct rau Non is strect, New York, pussing under ie i e 2 7 . where, and getting rendy to P it’s dark in there; and, besides be don't pray | Hrotrical “In the irst places: we decided to No. 15 fiona, street. New York, ouasing under} the clue Of a village, They rode turoust lt Goxesbaariow. 1 description to the Chivf of Police of the | house trom tho opposit side; then dismounted | Wit REY. EF WILLIAMS With pr ri aceohiaaae aA ons, stetewrarnfa | metropolis, und asked that Gaylord be urrested | and skurried Into the Kitehen. Nobody there. | morning and eveeing in the South Uieggt Gace ance with instrietions, J telegraph | wetropolig, and asked that Gayle Thay” slipped “into tho” Met rao, whieh | ee eepnesy whe a ig und evening In the Plsimouth Charen Mace id L, “it seems tbat: there are sev- | Wis also unoccupied; the door’ from iguh-av,, between Twenty-Ifth and Treniy-sizihgey down behind the b yy Gut kin i suble es and keep tho strictest pussi- itdon'tmake no diference if the rain | uble the senteles and Keep the Birictest piss lot give x dern—warbles right ektow in and making bim divulge’ every- me usit it was applause. They sing} ining: but that did not seem wisest until otber | to the Department, In cipher, | the progress | Ande. “Give us arrest!’ *Shoothim! | methods should fail. We must have some more | made, and also deseribed the above ticket. We . es A o A : spirators ‘outside '=presumably | that room into oral of the conapira r F was open. They were about to ern forts. burn our hotels, send infected cloth- | yin, an ing into our towns, and all that sort of thing. You remember it: All this had a tendency to keep us awake, and knock the tradi- the front or sitting-room | morn tonal dullness .out of xarrison life. Be- walk? and all sorts of such things. rritings: so We began to plan to that | seemed to be ins ¢ enough position now o & ” sides, ours was a reertiting station—which cor it? it don't phize bin, Me don't | oid °and near we bad an iden: Wielslow never | foc venture tots oa ee ase bastion nove TaN ew Londo, Natug and vesceibe fens | Sep turotn it When toay beard alow yuloee it EV, FA, NOBLE PREACHES IN UNO isthe same as saying we hadn't any time to waste Atter a pause: © Kind of a good little | went io the post-ollice—pernaps tho deserted. | Wicklow: oneall stopping. at the principal hotel. Tene | Wis somebody paying. So they baited rever- | Par Church, corncr Ashtand-av. and Washingige in dozing, or dreaming, or fooling strouud. Why. Stouts back, aud gots fem outs und | Sisble was bis post-ollice, We sent for my cou- 80 [SENT For MIM. out quietly, and bad thom and the “Colonel” ur- | ently, and the Eedenant pac os head in and THLE IY. GEORGE F. CIUPPERFTEL with all our watehfuiness, 30 per cent of a day’s | fers cach mnan's pair woere they belong.” And | Wéential cleri<a youny German mumed Sterne: | 7 acy sent for and received back tho totter | rate auc conned Inthe forte Suw un old man and an old woman kneeling 10 | preach In tne morning and the Mee. Charles oe tecrults would leak out of our hands and give | they've been throwed at him so inuch now thut |. hii qltabout the case, and Ordered him to go to | Written in sympathetic Ink, the surgeon accom- | Next, L_ want to know all about your th donner of that sitting room. It was the old man | tar in the ergulug in the Tabernacie Cacreh, onmet fous that a ret ine) | Out with his eyes shut.’ * Wicklow was writing again. Shortly afterward G resisted! his tests, vel s vette’ — de nd stepped in. Both of th td ih E. 2. GOODWIN PREACHES Ly so prodigious that a recralt could pay 2 sentinel tte: aUse—W orbore =| we . " a i others he could apply when 1 should be ready | thought: Wut I produced the mysterious bits of | door and stepped in. Both of those old people | THE, E a . EACHES IN THE -.- BW) or $400 tolet him escape, amd sul have | geprupts or MaNsomwBeh F forbore to ine) word camy that he wad asked leuve. to go out | Poe cats PDs * | naper whieh iad been found inon two of them. | sprang at bimandsmothered bim with embraces, | Fist Churet, cOrner Washinston sod Annsias snoush of his bounty-money left to constitute a | But the roughest thing about itis that when | reantime Sterne hurried off and couccaled | _ Presently Wicklow entered. Tehad a some- | and this hada salutary eifect upon him. Laid | Re auig-dasthiet, »Gbd.'He raison. [/emete.ceride adams ae Leena TEE fortune fora poor man. Yes, as 1 said before, | he's done prayin’—when be ever does cet done— | Himself in the stable. By and by hesaw Wick- | WHat Worn and ansfous took, but he was com- | we bad possession of woof the men, and he | ur boy! our darling! God be pralsed. | evasina rie HTS Ge he OFS REE. he pipes up aid uerins to stig. Well, you know | fove saunter in, look about him, then hide some- | Posed and ensy, and if he suspected anything it | must point out the third. -‘this frightened him | The lost i THE REV. ARTHUM LIME PREACHES 14 our life wa: Ye ae cr kind of A voles hers gos when ne. Seer ' co | did uot appear in his fuce or nitnger. Lallowed | badly, and be cried out: in! ie ‘ew England Church, on Deurborn-av. . hont v he’s i thing under some rebbish inn corner, und take fe Well, sir, what do you thin! That youns im, ne - Well, one day Iwas in my quartersalone, doing | raiks: you Know how it would persuude a enst- leisurely leave again. Sterne * him to stand there a moment or two, and then 1 | **O please don’t make ne—he Would = pert saeo you sages nabie ine | Cee REV. F. J. .BROUST WILE PREACH zome Writing, when iron doy to. come down off of a doorstep and lick ¥ si a * aiid, pleasantly: KILL ME ON THE svor!? Mee sco NYS Mies ee romestcad, und Had | morutne snd Ccening ut the Clinton street Cue A PALE AND HAUGED LAD i Now, if you'll take my rod tog it, POUNCED UPON THE HIDE Amica Tas Hors why do you goto that old stable so Tsaid that that was all nonsense; I would have tite Till che, fortnight beforé be Toafed iato. my sores Mipouse Bisa Gieaviit PRR : pS Hear es Ean said; | Sit it ain’t a circumstance to his singin’! Flute —and brought it tous. It had no super- | much?” E - nie: : ot bin eside: 2 . DHE REV. J. EL Te MORN- Of M or 36 entered, made a neat bow, and said: | intisre ts hatch to that boys siuuio’. “Od, be Just { Lespuon aad. no signature, ICrepeated what { He ansivered, with simple demeanor and with- | Somebody ear by to protect bits, and, besides, | quacters and wulled ine with that maudlin yard | 2B REN. J IL CLARK WILT PREACTE Mos 5S vip! 1 gna Ds the men should De ussembled without arms. 1 tt eas Gospel. Thut old awndal rel, “7 believe recruits are received here ¢" guryles it out so soft, and swect, and low, there | we had already read, and then went on to say: out emburrasstnent: hen isscrabled of hist’ ive as true as Gospel. That old man | Jawndale a ea ‘ “Yes.” in the dark, that it ‘ ‘4 “We thinkit best to postpone ull the tivo | _ "Well, L hardly know, sir; there tsn't any par- | ordered ull the raw recruits to be mustered, and | was his father—x learned old retired clergyman; | TE MEY. 8. B. LEAVITT WILL PREACR "+s Wht you please enlist me, sir?" MAKES YOU THINK YOU ARE IN HEAVEN.” | companies are gone, Tinean the four, inside | teular reason, pace pu att 2 tke" 16 be- alone, Nee ee er tlonie dota iie lish Gene ek, a | ne ee a tay ares bis mother, Turner or Sophicaud Mohawe-earco™ Park Chareh, : Se ager a ae 3 have © communicated with the | and f amuse myself there.” indilrerey ygsible. Fi y-he spoke u singh i ® “ no! re too young, my poy, “What is there ‘rough’ about tha’ think 0; have not con tout : ay obese rou? indifferent us possible. Finalty he spoke u single | Let me throw ima word or two of explanation PRR eer ae aah te oe area Pe ent Ara heey Petr i pihors. afraid Of yattemcting atten say oe en eae BS tec ae ene aeely Bid ord to one of tho men. and Verore be had one | concerning that Boy and his performances. It REFORMED EPiscopat. —- + : . ; zs : A 5 st tL s = they is cone oe , ve steps the min was tinder arrest. turned out that he was ERLV. DK. MEADE WILL Pes SEMs , A disappointed look came into bis face, and dust 23 I am—poor, wrerehed, blind— entisted und got inside when they were shipped | simply as before. ja ‘Assoon 5 Wicklow Was with us again, I bad Sana ua ener aaa! Sn pers SOUR REY DU MEADE SLE PRE ACh Ix RM: 7 quickly deepened into an expression of de- | just you hear him sing that once, und sce if you | off to the front. It will be absolutely necessury: | ‘1s that all you do there? A ce | those three men brouht in. I made one of them | * RAVENOUS DEVOURER OF .DIME NOVELS | Ty" tS. ae sponde! He turned slowly away. as if to go: | ont melt allup and the: water come into your | to bave two in their places, ‘The two that went | |“ Yes, sir.” he said, looking up with child-iike | t#os¢ three went browsht and | sensution-story papers—therefore, dark | vii MEY. RH. BOSWORTH Wn. PREACH spondency. He turt add ae spits eyes: T don't cure what he sigs, it goes plum | were the brothers trom ‘Thirty-mile Point. [ | wouderment iu his big, soft cyes. “Now, Wicklow, mind, not a shade's diver- | mysteries and gaudy heroisms were just in his | in the Presbyterian Church at ingiewavd.at asia Restate, tea faced ee again, and snid, in a | straight ais fo sou es deep gna 8 ve somiathre of the. erie: hararoncy ig ri ved are aire x genee from the exnet truth. Who is this man, ides Then be had read BewApapar cepprts.of BISHOP FALLOWS WLLL PREACH MORNING. tone which went to my beat: é where you lire—and@’ it fetehes you every time! al, DUE MUSE NOx Trust it to. method of Yes, sir, : at ced whatdoyvon demo; aliout ities the steulthy gomgs and comings of ebel.spies | ana evening in St. Paul's Church, cocner or Woo, “Ihave no home, and uot a friend in the | Just you hear him sing: mimiinieation; will try the other.” Atter'a pause, Lsaid: = eins “in forat,” he exst consequeuces aside, | it our- midst, and of their lurid purposes and on and Curpenter-sts, Bvening tublects *pie 7 T have oes eee ues Child of sin end sorrow, filled with dismay. The litte scoundrel!" said Webb: “who Wicklow, why do you write so much? Tae le eee Tee rae cuuserlUCR Gas ASIC... hale two or tureo, startling nonlerem seer c cdl sities of Queration and Ditferences of Adminis: world. f'sou cauid only enlist me? 2 + ve 4 3 re ae! 2 TWO OL perth mn site” ‘asien ey ; y ne , irutiun.” "A l'are conialty invited - ; Wai it tomorrow. Vicldghee toda could have supposed. he was a spr? However, a not write much, sir. er .withou itution—to the follow- { his tmaginution was ail atlumne on that subject. “i chapels 7 : Wait not t orcow. vleldghee tody y “ straight along without hesitution—to the follow MOL TLE A MCBACI aie i Bator courte the bing was out of the ques. Grieve not wast love hever mind about. that—let us aid up our pare You don't? : ran ribet His constant comrade for some months bid been | BISHOP CHENEY WILL PREACT LY cHRigr Hon, and Isaid sons gentiy.as 1 could, Then 1 “Which, trum allove— Ueulars, such us they are und sce how the ease | “Ne. sir. Ob, Mf you mean seribbling,t do} EHC ea name is George Bristow. Te is | # Yankee youth of much tongue and lively | COSTS ie ciojects e chtiatan eres oe sold him to sit down by thestove and warm him- t makes 2 bocy feel liké the wicked- | Stands to date. First, ye sot a Rebel spy in | scribble some, from New Orleans: was Second Mate of the | fancy, who had served fora couvle of years xs vening subject: ‘he Valles. of Decision.” All 4 and so.on. k our midst, whom we ‘know? Secondly. we've got : mud clerk” (that is, subordinate purser) on St fine, q If, and ndded: est. ungrarefulest Urate that walks, And when | To emnore ia uur midst whom we Gone knee FOR AMU: cangt. Puckee Caples te + TaN MOT oiB. fi cotain: Of sue DackOte Moate Grin te “NIE KEY. &W, ADAMS PREACES 1x su. Y ~ i 7 o Sing: songs E ome, és tows Tw yyy ve vith y art es?"” desperate character, as Serv vo tern x x iz be- B REY. , ADAMS PREAC IN st. Of inant Shall have something to eat presents. | Ty oe and childboed:and “olde menjores, and | Wrdly, these spies have been introduced | What do you do with your soriublings? for muneliughter—ouo for killing a deek-hana | tween New Orleans and. points two or three | Masthews Churcy comes of None lee ata Cee You are hungry ¥ i ‘hat’s Vanished. und old friends dead and { 20Ng' Us through” the simple and ~ cusy Novena id ms Unde named Hyde with a capstan-bur, ana one for | hundred miles up the Mississippi—hence pis | tre-sts. e Hedid notanswer: he did not‘ need to; the | Pine it fetches cremains before your dace | process of cullsting. us ‘soldiers. in the | ‘Never s¢ud them to anybody Kili a. roustabout for refusiuz'to heave the | easy facility in handling the mes and other | , "THLE REV. J. D. WILSOX WILL PREACH MO aii, x 2 en. | audit's just beautiful, i's just divine tu listen | He BOE eee “Colonel,” He started suuchtly. sdiately.| ness. He Isa spy. and was sent nere by tho | 8 bs 10 stove, s —we . cry—vvery: 2 sis 3 side 7 = e pubinl ie eS ERESH Mate @ Sts Nicholus when she blew up in a e casi y 3 ‘ mss: en e B writing. Occasionally 1 took a furtive mance | fue binbbers: aia don't tee te bite eae | is. Wicklow bus Very. importine. matter over his eneck: send this plece of serib- | the nelettorhood of Memphis, in sand cane | Dox, whereas a born Louisiana would probis | JTWTE, REV. BF FLEETWOOD WiLL cox. is & sl guid first vou know. 2 ts been | be is afraid to communicate by the * pr low exne you to send this plece of serib- | the clog lyneked for robbing the dead and | bly have caucht him tripping before he hud | duct the services und udminister the Holy Come ff a atbim. I noticed thut his clothes aad. sboes, | and first you know, that v gang that’s been method will * try the other.” ‘That is the case, bite, then? near beings, iy ane Sabie Hy te Shore ia: talked lifteen minutes, De yournow the reason Bunton a clu Pm.at x Rarthulomer's ‘Mise 7 t that boy wilt skip out of their hey-never meant any bar, sir, SroUnded Wulle thes mg he sald he would rather dic than. explain certain | for Wayne a Rekular imormung service ace. i ¥ z ip air weeollur Wieklow and e e . ty wond-boat:r? yleand material. This fact was sugzestive.-| bunks alt of 4 sudden, and rush over in the dark ENN # Or shall we catch the per- | “Never meant any harm! You betéay tho | wmempty wond-boat.” - 5. sirens Eaten ly thine )aln cert Tom Tadded tho facts tht nis voicewaslow and | 284 BYE Bip: yen tna doen Son who remove the Igiters trom the stable and Armament nd condition of ‘tho post, and niean, biowaphy fa tal | When be bad Hnishod Peak cuulintt canlatte them Ee thay ‘tnd a teeaniae THE REY, HL. 8, ENSWORTI WILL OFFICIATE - ‘musical: his eyes deep and melincholy: lis car- SLOBBEI ALE OVEL MIM, make kim tell? Or shail we SU ie iond wna saucil i 3 7s boo thon he had fired them out of his imagination with: }' mornin and evening in St. Andrew's Church, comer ey, ede and call him pet names, and beg him to forgive KEEP STILL AND ‘FIND oUT MORE 9? He hunp bis head und was sitent. Q ‘Wht have you, to say to this? i out forethought or afterthought; and so, npon | of Kebey und Washingtonests, ene riage and address gentlemanly; evidently hem. And just at tha: time, if 4 reximent was Come, speak up, and stop lying. Whom was v : sudden eall, he wasn’t able to invent an expla. | ‘TUE REV COURTNEY WILL OFFICIATE : eae na PB ee Ava RE oe Meg Nend, toyed | ,. We devided uport the lass course. We judged | thisictter lutended for” ~ Barring your presence, sir, itis ation of them, for instance. he couldiee se | worming und deening inst. James’ Chures Cass and * THE POOR CHAP WAS IN TROUBLI i is nation of them, For instance, he cauldit res |. orming and evening in st. James s 1 offer to burt a bair of wbut eub's head, they'd te e ; 4 that we did not need to proceed to suinmury He showed signs of distress’ now; but quickly | THE: INFERNALEST LIN THAT EVER WAS i anny rae we | Uinron-sis. veul what was hidden in the * sympathetic ink THE REV, Te AC HOLLAND Wha: PREACH Qs it now stands. ats free. although soiled and damaged, were of good | slammin” boots Asa result, I was interested. go for that regiment, if it was a whole ariny | fioycures now, since it was evident: Wat the pete c y SPOKE!" ie ah oasuires * collected himself, and replied, ina tone of deep SPORE!” on, fe i vas" However. I became absorbed in my work by conspirators were likely to Wait till those two | earnestn n F : anon letter, for the ample reason that there wasn't in Trinity Church Michteau-a7. Isent him back into continement, and called } Bey thing bidden in ity MORHISON JK, FUBACHES and by, and forgot aliabcut tho boy. 1 don't hi-iutantry companies were out of the ow: **] will tell you the truth, sir~the whole truth. S ae We fortitied Sterne with pretty, awple powers, | The letter was never Intended tor. kaybody nt enw how lon thie lesteyly: ur, at lenurte han 4 and told him to use bis best endeavors to tind | all. Iwrote it ouly to auuse myself. iseetie | boy zave a detailed history of eaeb, without | pe padnt putanything futo a gun, and had pened tolook up. The boy's hack was toward “Well, dear me, what is the complaint? What out Wicklow's “other method" of commumica- | error and foolishness of it now—but it is the nesitating fora word oy a fact; but all L never intended to—for. his letters were all me, but bis face was turned in such 2 way that I | do they want done? ‘ See tion, We meant to play a bold game; and to | only otlense, sir, upon my honor. could set out of elles risen wis Lie. Judienant written to imaginary persons,- and when be could see one of his cheeks—and down that EOE WHS sir, they Want you | tnis'end we proposed to keep the spies in an une Ab, Tam glad of that. It is dangerous tobe | #ssertion that ft was all a hey would con: } nid one in the stable he ulways removed the et iadlesdonrenas to stop him frou siiptiv uspecting state us long as possible. “So we or- | writing such letters. 1 hove you ure sure this Is | fess nowbing. returned them to captivity. and | Ghe he had put tore the dase before: co he ‘Cheeks rill ob poldelesy ten rs was Hoste * What tn idea! You said bis music. was di- | dered Sterne to return to tho stable timediate- | the only uue Fou wrote? brought out tho rest of my prisoners. one by | Yas not acy tad st eee Stele Picts a etree reste Be a again Weato dk iy, and. if he found the coast clear, to conceal { ' Yes sin; perteetly sure,” one," Wicklow told ait about them-—wbat towns | $85 Bot te g. i ~ That's just it. s too divine. got the poor rat was Mortat Wieklow's letter whi 3 before, and’ teav is Tatu pat elie in the South they were from, and every detail of 4 ‘ leet dt ae Bp ortal man | Wickiow’s letter w ore, and feave | His hardthoou was stupefying, Than caleba itn Te cone showed It to huts but a5 soon as f had Jet nim | des hy in the Church of the Epiphany on Throop-st, neae Monree, morning and event TRIE, PREACNES IN THE the others forward in turn. Same result. The TP WAS BLANK PAPEL ONIC 4 A hingten und Peoriaests.. the Kt.- uiuted with that kuotted string, | W. t. Mclaren, 5. T. D. Bisbop, ‘The Kev. seeing it fur the first time when i | Kiowwies, priest in eharse.- Choral morning prayer ration of the holy cummunion, 10:9. | Sun wad_childcen’s service, 3 p.m. Choral amends for my brutality by eaying to him: | can't stand it, It stirs body up soz it turns a | it there for the cork tt irs c ith the = find out where it came f * Come along, my lad: you shall dine with mez 1 | body inswle out; it racks his fcelinz's all to rags; | ‘The h 7 man rode aan Ee Bur they ultdenied bis fuets, and not one of | adupted it, in bis rom: fashion, and got nb prayer. wiene ae LS r hit Teel trid and wicked, and wot it for | It wus cold. and dark, and slecty, with a raw } With as sinccre a countenance as any creature | them confessed a thing. The ‘men raved, the | Soule tine’ eltects out of ie, Heumecheet Ae a am alone todas. any place but perdition. It keeps a bodyin suet | wind blowing: still 1 turned out ‘of my warm | ver More, | I waited i moment to soorbe down | women eried. According to. their Stories. they | --Gaylord”: there wusn't any 15 Bond street ] He wave me another of those grateful looks, | un everisstin’ state of repentin’. that notain’ | ben several tines during the wight ang went the | My rising temper, und then sai Asore, AL tance ne poles from, “ours estiand | just theu—it had been pulled down three months- Ev. ARTUUI RITCHIE OFFICLATESIN Lope ed is ‘a Mto cate: | Before. He invented the “Colonel”: be in- | ie church of the Ascensim, coruer La calle abd Wieklow, Jog Your memory now, and see if | toved the U you can belp tue with two or three little matters | locked the in person; to see that all was right, and alert. T uns up, iu disgust, and fell to cate- | vented the glib histories of those unfortunttes Elm-sts., morning und evening. and a happy light broke in his face. At the | don’t taste zood and there ain't. no comfort in SRnieHE nletuens air-vack | life. Aud then the cryin’, vou see—every morn- | that every. sentry W ‘ D ti eked the ae MRO eae ape emer asbsmed to lddk one another in the.| fouud then wide awake and watebful; evident- | Which { wish to Inquire about, chising Wicklow once more. jes whom I cuptured and confronted with bim; he antil Twas seated, then seated himself. 1 tool iy whispers of taysterious dangers bad been Hill do iny-very be Re spe") 2, Where is No. 16, and who is B. B.? invented “B.B.": be even invented No. ‘16d, BAPTIST, ~Then, to begin with—who is ‘the Master*? ut there be was determined to ‘draw tho ine. | One mage says foe beedNes know there tee sues | um yey. 3. oP EE SEey. on wew on singular com- | tloatuig about. and the doubling of tho guards. ‘opped?" | had been a kind o£ indorsement of those rumors. Well, this is an odd ease, and a ap my knife and fork and—well, 1 simply hetd them, and kept still; forthe boy had inclined rting a started glance | Neither coaxin nor threats had any effect upon | SYN incor in the ntil ni Eulo Hotel It betrayed bim into d rvs neesssary to iN | there, ‘Ie stood ready to Inv at our fuces—but that was all, He was serene | him. Time was flyin Je Ut | leans, wil preach in the Fourth Chhret morning an nt unybody or | evening. Sunday-schoul at pew. > ‘o they reilly want the sings. was saying a silent yrace, A] “Yes, sir. that isthe ides. They don't wish to | Once, toward morning, 1 encountered Webb | at our! but thi : ase b a aa Teed Lolo ed mr onges of eect Zk | ask too meh, they would Uke powerful well to | breaceinge Ms way mest: the bitter winds aad axain in « moment, end tranquilly answered: | stitute sharp meusures. So L anythiag whenever it was wanted. If L culled | Tus HEY. ae, Fe BUURS. OF LYNN, Mass. sand is ymemori 2 mY | have the prayin’ shut down on, or lenst! learned then thatthe also bad been the rounds Ido not know TIED HIM UP A-TIPTOE RY THE THUMBS. | for “outside” spies, be ‘promptly deseribed | will preach morning and evening in the First Churel childhood poured in upon me, and I sighed to | trimmed off around the ‘edges: DUL th several times to see that all Was going right. erected’ ft wrunr strangers whom be had seen at the hotel, and | corner of South Park-av. and Toirty-trst-st. a fs u co As the pain increased it wrung screams from | stranz e + i think how fur 1 bad drifted from relizion and | thing's the singin’. If they can only ‘Next day's events Eee eat anaes him whieh” were almost more than L could | whose names be bad happened to bear. Ab, he | THE REV. A. K. PARKER PILEACHES IN CEN. its balm for hurt aninds, its comfort and solace GET THE SINGIN? CHOK OFF, JICRRIED THINGS UP SOMEWHAT. x1ue ¥ p bis*eves on mine: bat | bear. hur T held my ground, and pretty svon lived in a gorgeous, mysterious romuntle world t hutch. corner of Lincoln und Jackson-s and support. they think they cnn stand the prayin’, rough as | Wicklow wrote another letter; Sterne preceded | the strain was too great; bis chin sunk slowly | De Shrieked out: ‘i fe ur fg thuse: tow hat ne esovotien WHE REV, C. PERRIN WILD PREACH IN THE agen ghe mest pro iesicd J olierced that-yauny |p fs to bebullyragsred so much that way. hint to the stable and. saw itn deposit its eapt- | toward hisbreast and ie was silent: he stond. | [, Qby beast Let me down, and Twill tell! eee ye tine he enjoyed ieelear | wien arenue Choreti a Wa and i pm. Svickion — Hotere Wicklow was. Bis nner told the Sergent uid take the matter | ured it us soon as Wicklow was out of tho way, | thore nervously fumbiiig with a button, anob- |“ No—yon before Lalu . ; mile : = tg a THE REV. JOSEPIC ROWLEY EE : Knew phot to do writh his napkin; aud—well- in | under considerutlo nicht 1 crept into | then slipped out ana followed the’ little | ject to command one's jaty, in spite of his base | Every instant was agony to him now, so out it | But be made trouble epoued for usTand just | wnornins and eveninz in the North Star Chureb. cor breeding: neve SEMAN tHe MeiNtiee en Lees the mrusiclans’ (uurters ans fistened: | The spy at a ane. with a, fletective in 18, jreseutiy 1 broke the sullness with the | CAMS ji Engle tfotet!”—nammg a wretched | him we had fifteen or twenty people under ar- neat Div lon and SeRen eR sea oa 4 Seana i eh Da? | Sergeant nid not overstated the case. eard | plain clothes at his own. heels, for we | question: - ee Se Ge re 31 ce ene: vith sent v SV. J.T, BURMTOK 2 in simple trankness. too, which won upon me. We | the praying voice pleading inthe dark; 1 beard | thought it judicious to have the Inw’s | "Who are the ‘Moly Alliance'?" tavern down by the water, 2 resort of common rea Sac] conlaeinons i the fre yyich sential, iIngund evening in University-Vlace Church, cornet talked inainly about himself, and 1 bad no ditli- | the exeeruaons of the burussed men; 1 heard { assistaice handy in case of need, Wicklow went | tis bode atcok visibly, and be made a clight | borers, ‘longshoremen, and less reputable tuik. | before their doors. | 2 fe CapLives were | of Duuglas-place und Ithodes-av. Besbokd of bic basing been ot OF Ba. When | the rain of boots whiz znrough the air, and tang | to the railway suation, and waited ‘around till | random gesture with his bands, which to ineens | S01 released hima, and then dewanded to kuow | soldiersand sueb, and to them I didn't bave to | “ru Kev, Wail, LARGER WILL PREACE: be spoke of bis having been : t ie dvum. 1 ruin froin Nuw York came hei ik ke Not at des Bt foreure object of the conspiracy, apologize; but the rest were first-clnss citizens, | morning sind evening in the;Coventry Street Chi 4 DORN ASD HEARED IN. LOVE Touched me, ous ie amuced ines goon Teed was | the train tyoln, Nuw York came in. then stood | like the appeal uf zueswulring dreture for com, | ee Hw tne Tost unlenis” snid ne; doggedly, | from all over, the counts, and no mmouue of | Serer ar ase ee nt Hiooeeeday ee BO NP ORE, YIN LOUISIANA touched ine, Dut it amused ine. too. By and by. | seanuing the faces of the crowd as they poured sion, ut he made no sound. He continued I * . 3 was suttici 5 a THE 2 2 BAPTISTE WILL PREA 1 warmed to him deeidedis. for 1 had spent some | #lter an impressive silence, caine the sitiing, | out of the curs. Vresently an aged gentieman, | lostand with bis tice bent towird tho wruund, | Sd sobvInE. aro | Nbolowles was sullicientto satisfy thar sapatag tay ataatie ta outer Chinen Rees time down there. I knew all tho “coast” Lord, the pathos of ft the enekanunent of it! | with green orccles und o> eRe Iinplng AS we sat -gazing at hin, waiting for him to See L aoe all tho bere of ee conspieney i THEY USh Fusrars ND AGED: near -Luylorest ree region of tho Mississippi, and loved it, and bud | Nothing in the world was ever so sweet, so stopped mm Wieklow’s neizhborhood, and |-speak, we saw the big tears begin to roll down Xo. % aud made uo end of trouble? Aud those two tu- | THE REV. Ep. TAYLOR WILL PREACH IN. £ Den teon lois enOURe Gitar Teo ete thy m- | Etueious, so tender, so holy, so moving. I niade |-bewan to look about him -expeetantiy. Inan | his cheeks. Dut he remained silent. After a | mect.at 166.” nee " dies—one was an Obio Congressman’s wife, the | the morningin Central Church, 2 Orchard-st. terest in itto.begin to pale. The very names } mY stay were Uriel: a was beginning to oe iustunt Wicklow darted forward, ales § said: 3 - és ey pan lces Remember XXXX" mean?’ ‘otnena’ Ke stera Bishop's sistar—well, the scorn. 2 ts that fell from bis hps sounded xood tome—so | perience emotions of a sort not proper to the UST AN ENVELOPE INTO HIS HAND, “You must answer me, my boy--and you m a i ce o oP aud ridicule, and angry tears they poured out CrrrsttaNn. a § good that Isteered the talk in directions that | Commandant of a fortress. dich: ued away and Wisp oy in tho throge, | telline the truth, Who are the Holy Al st bag is the hassword to Now las? ou me made up a Keepsake that was ‘likely | one aEy.piG. Heraes Will PREACH TH ts would bring them out. Raton Rouge, Piagu Next day I issued orders which stopped the | thenutided a as Pid a tae i He wept on ta silence. Presently 1 said, some- 1 FEDS a a - — | to muke me remember tnem fora considerable | morning in the Second Church, Onkley-av. und Jacke mine. Sis m ray d singing. Then followed th ‘The next stant Sterne liad snatehed the letter ‘ on What do those bunches of letters mean: ‘ By zeal rm mine. Donuldsonville, sixty-mile Point. Bonnet- | Praying and singing, Then followed three or | The next instant Sterne tad snatched the letters | whut sharply: ' CEFPEEY and SSE? Answer! or yous | Hine—and I shall. ‘unt old tame gentle- | Sous. é : Sore, ts ete eu tae Carrollton: thes TEBE) exciomeNte enLimintinns Tat E Rover ce oti the vie sauce ait sion y tose “sight oe ie aici Seen end dibs voieo: and | catch It asain” i: Twill die fise.. Sewao. President. trom Philedelsniay who Bnd wens: | wears CA Weiboan aie tear tan hioanaee Urleans, ‘Yehoupitoulas strect. the Esplanade, ; (ought of my drummer-boy. Lut now comes | ivi’ Then Sterne skurried our with the crowd, | then. looking up uppeulingly, foreed the words eT never tel agawere. sL yill. dig ainsts. 20) up to attend bis nephew's funeral. He | morning und evening. the Rie des Bons Eniants, the St. Chartes Hotet,, | Sergeant Rayburn, one morning, und says: a came: ay cose: dvors and inate sted the | Ott between his sobs: Peer sous rine esaying, Wicklow. Is it | §#d_never scen youn Wicklow before, of tH REY. 0. A, BURGESS WILL PREACH the Tivoli Circle. the Shell Houd. Take Ponteuar: “That new boy Sirs caraunlealie ts alae no interruption ne i “Ob, have pity on me, sir.’ cannot suswer ra hink whut you arc saying, i course. avai ne Hot only. rmlssod_ the funeral, morning and evening in the First Chureh, Indians” train: and it was particularly delightful to ie10 ACTS MIGHTY STRANGE, Sut”? First we opencd otter ¢; ree ith ary +s AFG 2 and got jailed a3 a Rebel spy, but Wicklow bad Wee esesae, Soe - benr once more of the H.E. Lee, the Natchez, iBowe” 2 First we opened the letter captured at the sta FOR I no Nor KNOW.” ‘Ale answered steadily, and without a quiver in | 3005 ip there in iny quarters and coldly de- TRE REV, JW. ALLEN | HL PREACH IN THR the Eclipse. the Gen. Quitman, the Duncan F: Lea ble: lt read 6 follows; his voice: vemy wronged | scribed hint as 2 counterfeiter, nigeer-trader, | MoFting In the South side Chureb earner of Fralties Ir ts tinal. As sure as T love my wronged | horse-thief, and fire-bug from tie most notori: | 2%,,ind. Thirdeu = a ° “Well, sir, he’s all the time writing.” 3 Found, in the usual gun, fir, 1 gun felling tho truth, 1 never, | country and bate everrthing this Northern sun | Borse-thief) aud fire-buz from the most notori- ace Kenner, and other old familiar steamboats. It | .Weiting? What dows beetle eters?” was almost as sood as being back there, these |] don'e know. sits but wheaecer’ he" ¥ } left there Inst nignt, ee be 4 a 4 A Z eae “a8 Be speek, . SEES 's of | which se e structions etufore re. | have beard of the Hoty Allin till this mo-"| shines on, 1 will-die before 1 will reveal those i . K ease ings they stood fur. Hrietly, this oy al byt diner le —Bteae it 1 thing there’ 2 | in the gun the usual indication that the com- . Gro heay east Look pe this seed etter of l triced him up by the thumbs again. When Segind thes War ‘Department! But, my soul, let's Stith FIRST, BUGLE x. MEN IN FALRRASE ai aera uc ole or a corier init he hasn't veen into—an ‘reached the i ” ere, do you see those words, *ilolyAl- | the agony was fUil upon bim it was heart--| ,-\" igiavi matt at 2 Par iedareer ong tte Casta teat yt ., TATTLE WICKLOW’S HISTO: va | SUG tile white he ours with neucil and paper-| ™Webulurerrupiaes feet the voy under | funee’ 7 What do you say now?" Dreiinie ta pe draw the curtuin over that part! Meo Chr eV Reon: eran sisters’, 2a, aii tied hie Ties roe me Hae vhs aay Eme RSE RApea oat sensation. 1 | COpsuny survelliuce now?” Artone anew Whom Sree Wiel ius Deon | 70 WEAR TIER Poor THING'S SITEKS— Norr.—I showed my manuseript tothe Major, } bY sirituf Vresident dames A.Gartield, “a ‘ te 53 Li sensation. I said yes: he bad been under strict sur- it cs but we got nothing else out of bim.. ‘Te and he ‘said: Your unfamiliarity with milic | , BIBLE 1s TEL PRERATIONS. THROUGI SE etehinand, Houge, on a grext and rich plantation which bad { wanted to scoff at it, but it was noa time to | yieete soon oe : . wrought, then suid, feelingly: it ' jaentee ever since the capturing of his former | “OTHE is some erucl Joke, sits and. how could | question: he screamed the same rept tary matters bas betrased you into some little | Waelnurss, wet Altare invited. been in the family for titty years. The father | scolf at anrthing that had tho least suspicious 01 3 4 r+ 7. a Si was a Union man. He was persecuted inalt | tinge about. it. Things were happens all | Mer 5 oe they play it ubon me, who have tried all L could | die, and I will die; but £ will never tell mistakes. Sul, they are” pleturesques ones— | Wavurat. i WILL SPEAK att sorts of ways, but clunz to his principles.’ At | around us, in the North; then, that warsed ns 10. Then how could he put anything intoa kun, | 1 do right, and have never done harm to auy- Well, we bad to wive it up. We were con- | let them go; military men will smile at them, | Union Pars Hall, ‘n-st., morning and fast, jong nizbi, masked men burned his man- | be always on the alert,'and alwars suspecting, | O WEG austhing out of it, and nut Ket caught?” | nody? Some one has counterfeited my hand: £ | vineed that he certainly would die rather than | the rest won't detect thom. You bave got the | buion Lars Hau-cle w Hy | Am a Splritals s sp ycliy, t sald,“ Ldon't like the look of that | never wrote a line of this; Lhave never seen | confess. So we took him down and imprisoned | muin facts of the history rizht. and have set | fuer Semmes jcnsuf the Times.” 3, sion down, and the family baa to ty for their | I reculled to mind the Suggestive fact that tbis as ae s ¢ : a A Jives, They were bunted trom place to place, | boy was from the Nouthete ‘extreme South, | Very well a. 5 ix, i . | this letter before!” him, under strict guard. them down just about 2s they occurred.’ dium’s meenins: Se toiSaaee and learned all there was to know.about pover- | Louisiana—and the thought was not of a re. idon't: elther,” sald Webb. “It simply | “on, you unspeakable liar! Mere, what do | ‘Then, for some hours, we busied ourselves 7M. T. E WiLL BE A as) SRETISG A ty, hunger, and distress. The Invalid aunt | assuring nature, under the cireumstances. | Mei#us that there are you say to this?""—nnd T snatened the sympa- | with sending telegrams to the War Department, t Bud Opera-ton West Stausunaes found relief at last: misery aud exposure killed | Nevertheless, it cost. me a pang to give the or SPIRATORS AMONG THE VERY SENTINELS. | thetie-ink letter from my pocket and thrust it | and with making preparations for a descent TO THE MOON, ee hers she died in an open tield like « trunip, the | ders which I now gave to Rayburn. “Lfelt like a | Without their connivance in some way or other | before bis eyes. upon No. 166. a - 9a, 0 fe Hlis face turned white!~as white as a dead | “It wits stirrme times, that black and bitter For The Chicago Tribune. . n Reconstruction of Spirkcale if Aistucy aud Selence."” Musle D7 hers. s rain beating upon her, aod the thunder boom- | father who plots to expose his own child to | the thing couldn't have been donee” ing overhead. Not long efterward, the futher | shume and injury. 1 told Rayburn to keep |" Tsent ier kayburneaud ordered him to ex- was captured by an armed band: and while the | quiet, bide bis time, and zet me some of those | amine the batteries and sce whut be could find. gon beeged and pleaded the victim was | writligs whenever ‘be could manage it without | The reading of the letter was then resumed: person's, sie wavered slightly in his tricks, and | night. ‘Things ‘had leaked out, and the whole | 3 put his band asuinst the wallto steady himself, | garrisem wus on the alert. The ntinels were | Do a After a moment he asked, in so faint a. voiee | treble’, and nobody could move, outside or in, | See howe Lémg brought to a stand with a musket Your Mrung up before bis tace. (At this point | the boy's finding itout. And I charged him not { The new commands are peremptory, and re- | that itwas hardly audible: n J _ a baleful light shone in the youth's eyes, and he | to do inythhiur which might let the boy discover | yuiru that the AMT Sanh de SERB ares | Uettave pouecreud it edat his head. However, Webb and t were Kindly EVANGELIST, WILL sald, with the manner of one who taiks to him- | that be was being watched, [also ordered that nck Lomerrow inerning. Two hundred will Our fuces must have answered the truth be- | less concerned now thin we bad previously: Face luok ning in Chierzo Avenue Self: “It I cannot be enlisted; no mutter—I | he allow the lad his usual’ liberties, but that be ve, in small parvidg, by train and otherwise, | fore my lips could get out the false “Yes,” for { | been. Wecause of the fuct that the conspiracy Down on met . Usemy.” Suns shall find a way i sball tind a way."] As svon | be followed ata distance when he went out into | trom various direcutas, and will, be ae ap- | distinctly saw the courage come. into that {must necessarily be ina pretty crippled condi- Soft your beam % ecm ee : as the father was pronounced dead the son was | the town. ‘ pointed place at right time. 1 will distribute | boy's eyes. 1 waited for him to say something, ee So Many Of its principals were in our Lights yonder stream, ALAR WWE ACH Ai” THE PEO told that if he was not out of that region within | During the ncxt two days, Rayburn reported | the siz” today. Success is apparentiy, sure, | buthe kept silent. So nt last 1 salds Sane Like ‘a dainty silver boat pleeiuareiet ae tts i Iwenty-four hours it would eu hard with him, | to me several times. No success. thoush something must have got vut, for the Well, what haye you to say as to the revela- Ldetermined to be at No. 366 in good season, tar-gemined lake atloat. PROF. D. ¢ AT WAM IN That ‘night he crept to tne riverside and hid THE BOY WAS STILL WRITING, sentries have been doubled, and the chiefs went: | tions in this letter?” . capture gud gag 1... and be ou band for the my loved one chance tese€ | Central Musi * a Aimself near x plantation laaging. Hy and by but he alway cketed bis paper with a ¢ sg | the rounds last night several times. W. W. Ile answered with perfect composure: rest when they arrived. At about a quarter Your face tonight, and ——e the Duncan F. Kenner stopped there, the he | BY ial ee Lore Dis bance witht a careless | woines from southerly today ‘and’ will recely “ Nothing, except thut they are entirelyharm- | past Lin tho morning, { crept out of the fortress Dream of me? Y se peeves f swam out and concvuled bimeelf in-the yaw! | if Whenever Hayburn appeared in bis vicinity. | Cover orders-by tha ‘other tethod. “ahen { less and Innocents with hall a dozen stalwart and samy United | ReurnicANe IAtt, Oct. 23, ISL Avis‘ Gray. .. EW, TEnveatest.. cat Sst wee deageing sft her stern. | Reforeduplight | 1h tae wernainod. eimtie Paes all six of you, must be in 163. at MEY CAN HURT Nonopy.? States rezulars at my heels—and the. boy Wick- a y PTR AP Ere ala aa a ee sharp 2 a mo You wilt ind fou, with Bis hands tied Habit aim L toll Hin | a eetie'ts good ford clay pines” andes cents: | Cee Et ae cosas a PREACH the bout reached the Stock-Landing, end he slipped ashore. He walked tho three miles Be eres Twas in something of a corner now, as I | we were going to No, 166, and that if I found he you detailed instructions: | gl); out again. One could not pooh-pooh these things | 54% —they had an evil look. [ was oblized to con- Pp Balt’s Cou ch Syria In the mo; aime atthe Lincoln Pars Chapel, B for n botrie of Di i 7 fename DWARD ¢. “BOSTOOK | Wibh will give y t disprove hi: sertion. Idid not know | nad lied again aud was inisleading us, he would w y between that pol @ house ne nsineediine ea Ba tncle of bis te Goad cei and the bouse of | rose to myselt: that I was getting weet T Pits bie tact anid fast sy llgtie Mee eoaeae | exuetly bow to proceed. However, an idea came | PA, led Men aud was, misleading us, be would Orleans. and then his troubles were over for the | Went into my private quarters and sent for my | Hest syllable {ast and fast syllable tirst. Temes | [ony relief, and] oii: 3 ences E TIE, CIEURCILES. THR REV le He being. tue his uncle was a Cnion man, | Second in command—an otticer of intellizence | PEENANN- Do wot forget, Be of wood hearts | "°Yortura sure vou Auow nothing abou tho | CORSCIWEHCES, | seen stoalthity and ree | can TE, CHCICCIERS. | prac iy Ge mucin ae he Union Bank TeBPs too, and before very lony he concluded that be * ane Judement: un of Geni nataes sKatson Webts, Spe Cale Will te pe arte rents te oeine ee Master and the Holy Alllance, and did not write | connoitered. A Might was burning in the small ELIGIOUS SERVICES WILL) BE] comeret West Washingron-st. an x HAO RETIRED LEALE tits Sau. He was surprised un q troubled. (We bud a lowe | aided a deatbloss pice te uistoRs. AINE the le eter which Sou say Is at forgery barroom, tho rest of the house was dark. [ { Y% held today in the Chicaxo churches by the tol- Freres ate, So he and young Wicklow slipped out of the | that it would be worth while to instituien Eee ea Ee Loe te see | J slowly drew cut tho knotted twine string and | {ied the front door: {t yielded. ana we softly | Wwwinkeleryien: | INTE REV. W, AL SCILARKEER WILL PREACH _ gountey oa board a sailing vessel, and in aue | search. I determined to take chargoot that my- | Ste xettiins fut mighty hot quarters.’as 1 look | yea ieug wighous cea kie TO davet eee ANd | eutered, closing the door Lenind us. Riis WEEIOTINS coe ee Wink at Wicker back Nhe sara on, and 1 HOME me reached New York. They pur’ up at the | self. So { hadmsself called atz in the morning: | BYE Sich Bees ditferently, then looked at ine Inquiringly. My THEN WE REMOVED OUR STIOES, inthe Viner Caray comer of Cats and Wackiogione | eunlty Cuureh. beiw-at, and iiearboriar a Se eine any Miicklow had a good tine | and, pretty soon after, Lwas ia the musicians’ | {Sid there was no question but that things | pitteace wus corely tied. llowevere T kepe | and ted the way. to tho barroom, Tao Gere } Atte, {st Chtureh comer of Clark x snbjeet, “Gods | PM Sandas-scluut ab 22) p.m. : of it fora while, strolling up and down Broad- | quarters, crawling along the tlodr on iy stoi sfaning my temper down, and sald in, my usual voice: nutn landlord sat there, asleep in his chair. [| Plan to Shatin Mis Chureh," evening anbjees, . Way, and observing the strange Northern sights; | ich among the snorers. I reached my slum= WEAL A MUST SERIOUS ASPECT. * Wicklow, do you see this?” woke hin gently, and told bimto tuke off his | “Te Pecuntury Needs of the Chureh, JEwreH. scOURSR id 1: boots and precede us; warning him at the same | THE REY. JOSEPIE CUMMING, D.D.; PRESI- "TIER REY. DR. TERSCI2 WILE DISC . of the Monotheism Agen foul, Vwwomtyedest-at. 80 * Yos, si ie. Develowi but in the end a clanze came—and not for the | Vere waif's bunk atdast, without disturbing | S: time to utter no sound. fe obeyed. without a { dent Noriiwestern University, will preach’ worning | an” <A desperate enterprise is-on foot. that is |“ Whatiei better. The uncle bud been cheerful at first, anybody, captured - bis clothes and kit. .and "- ¥ 4 oy " . ai but now he bexan to look troubled and despond: | crawied ‘stexithily baek again. When I got to | plain enough, ‘Tonignt is the time set for it— | .« tesceme to bea picee of string.” murmur, Dut evidently be was badly friebtened | Sy cyentns im Centenary Church, Stonroe-si. ner } the tlebrews” in Sin, ent; moreover he became moody and irritable: | sny own quarters, J foun’ Webb there, wetting | that, xiso, is plain. ‘The exact nuture of the en- Seems? It tsa plece of string. “Do you reeog- | 1 ordered him to lend the way to 163. We | iti any. M. E.CADY Wind. P react cy | ERMAN. = qalked of money siving out, and no way to xet | and caer to know the result. We made search | terprise—I mewn the manner of it—1s bidden | nizeet ascended two or three tights of. stairs as softly | ine una eventint in the Wehbe Aueie Chaae ae MIscELLANEOUS. * rrived near | rwe Thirty-second and 'Mhirty-third-xts. me tondoor | yt REV. WILLIAM FAWCETT WILL PREACTL AT BURR MISSION, CORNER OF | <7 Phoint~ | away under those blind bunches of Ms and Fs— | No, sir," he replied as calmly as the words | as tile of cats; and then, havin: nty-third-st. and Wentwacth-av. ats p- Hl, €08-~ and | could be uttered. the farther end of a long ball, we more—* not enouga left for one, let alone two.” | immediately. Tho clothes were nd ing—Wid not | ment. In the pockets we found blank paper | but the eud and ain, | judge, is the Surpris ‘Then, one morning. he was Ini gome to breakfast “The boy inquired at the of- Janda pencils nothing else, except a Jucicknite | capture of the post.” We must must movequick | Ce Oo a : : 5 truce © s ¢ u ganda pencil z else, nite E s eoolness was perfectly" wonderful! - [| throuzh the glized transom ‘of which we could | incre Chante comes Le Slice ed Le set by tie eh cf ec.and was told that the uncle had paid his | “and sue! queer odds and ends and useless trifles | und sharp muw. J think nothing eat paused now for several seconds inorder that { discern the ‘low of adit Ihsht trom witht, | Hie eee cn eee, at Salle eee aU MBL ALERT We ILUEENOEIS I. SPROBRIDGE WILL PREACH elot the Wushits nt Home 282 pe 12- the silunée might add impressiveness to whut [ | The 1andlord felt for me in the dark and whis- THE REY, T tried the door—it | mourning und evening in the Park Avenne Church. ‘ WIth bill the night. before and gane awa: E PREACHES IN'TRINITY | evening in the Advent Ct the clerk believea, but was not cei ‘The tad was alone and friendless. Me did not | xornixG THERE RUT A —to Boston, | 2 boys hoard and value. We turned to the kit | by continuing our clandestine police: in. hopefully. Wicklow, ae an ae ue as eee ‘US possi- was about tosay; then | rose and laid my hand pered me POaUiint sis A I 1 Sou themsts a id RE For us!— 00, where * is ed, so that we enn | on his shoutder and said, gravely: _ was locked on tho inside. Iwhispered an order -| “THE REV. It, 8. PO! Chupel, Yt Sod popu to lo, but concluded be lind botter try alittle Riblé with this written on thet hr muke descent upon the gang there at? a.in.; |“ It will do-you no poo poor bay; none indie: toancot my Dinyest soldiors; werset ovr ample | Chureh. on, Indisnu-ay.,- near “wenty-fourt-st. | Green-st. Atl are welen: seas ana”: tofollow and find bis uncle. Hewentdownto the | 3 other's | Hd; doubiless, the quickest way to get that in- | world, ‘This sign to tho ‘Master, this knotted | shoulders to the door and with one heave we | worn kad evening MUS. BEN HOGAN WILT LEAD TILE GOSPEL 5 ing: Jeurne it “Strange ind t y boy, is sear H sy 3 7 Coy jell Vee stenm-boat landing; Icurned that the trifle of rapger, be kind to my boy, for bis mother's | yormuation will lve ko forec it out of” that boy. | string, found in one of the Runs on the water- | burst it from its binges, caught a balt-xiimpse | EY. Sie MANS Waite SEBACTE IN Ite temperance meedig, corner uf Cottaze Groveate a s . aArtesian-av., tls | und “thiriy-nratest., at ty I. CH MORNING. ANC money he had would not carry him to Boston: | Ske.’ = But tirst of all, and before we make .any . rou caer Cave a L looked at Wer TO} yes; ‘stor ill, und before we make any impor- | front——' of a tigure In bed—siw its head dart toward the e v4 SANDIS Re nSok pacaee foe Tete Ne onion: £6 | hyo ie me) Seopa ee mag cress be | tant nove, i must lay tho Tuets berore tye War Found in the gun! Ob, no, no, not donot | candle: out went the Ibeht, and we were in pitch | Met iat oe MePTED PREACHES TODAY | {POALB ROSSER SAT SANDEE Mae 10 Providence to furnish bim’ means. t vel | 1, put the book reverenuly back in Its place, | Dghartwent. and usk for pleniry powers." fay fu the gun, but ma crack in the tompion!— | darkness. | With one biz bound Ilit on that bed | ang eveniny in the Rangley Avenie Okerch: none | the Gospel roo, corner of Fulton und North, 20 the rest of the way. Hie had now been wander: | Presently Webb got up and went away. withone | o{L8eiispateh was prepared in cipher to go | it must have been in the crack?” apd down bo | and’ pintied tte Occupant dete te ae eno ee Ghirtgcatnenest: ny Venue Clive near |. ons, Subjects; “Aerlunine Moesuii Isnt Sat credo: “ gag about the strevis of New London thive daga | remark. After a little I nerved myself Morty | Over the Wires; Tread it, approved it, and Sent | went on. bis knees and clasped hishande and My prisoner struzgled tercely, but Tot nerip | rin REY. FRANK Brusron Peeactes’ | ROH GR ERAT ype mectues 5 ‘ Fe ag Sere ee ton Taree dys ear alatabie Jol med nea ee TMNSeIE up 20} Salons. ; : lifted up a face that was pitiful to see, so ushy | un bis thront with my left hand, and that was | morning und’ evening in the Wabash Avenue | CONDUCTOR WERE LEAM. TLAGEDDS, WILG There for charity's sake, ‘Dur be mag OSTe,2hd | towhere it belied, crawlioe Gn oe eee | We presently finished discussing the letter | ir was dad cowinn site wea good assistance to iny knees in bolaing bim | Church, corner Fuurteenth-st. Jead the meeting in ‘the luaitway Men's Readings af Inet; courage and hope Were Doth oe Tee | as before. Lk seemed the pecullerly pop ee { Which was under considerauion, und then opened { = N9, iewas fe the cones down. Then straigntway f snatched out my re- | THE REV. WARNER THATCHER WILL | Roun, corner ot Canal and ningiesis, Railway Qed Sa oni ies Pe mere oth gant fhe attitude for. the business 1 was in. . pa brite | the one which bad been snatched from the lune “ Ob, something has sone wrong! volver, cocked it, and Inid the cold barrel warn- | preach morning and evening In Emmanuet Chureb, } with thelr families and friends are Invited. ae “ee Se could not her pasa cata, be more thanktats.j¢-) Aeneas for jie business | was in, Was most wontloman, “It contained noting out a couple OA UdD ASE ingly azainst his cheek, turner of Harrison and autiniests, Wit, BE A GENEMAL | REESIGN 6 * bes te 7 4, | of perfectly blank sheets of note-paper! MY GOD, LAM Lost! = Now > stl cbt!” ary , meeting it Liberty Hall, No. 205 West Sf 4 GOEL STEN HES neN ER eee Giant noga nest day Htayourn came, asusuat | Yaga chilly chels to ane Lor earned oe gnd te sprang-up and darted this way and that, | gocnimanfer ee ne Sad LTV ‘Unrrertan, 3p, Mi, Letters wt "enenaragement ware, DSSS Ab, be ould work so bard to please, and would | "Ler this nonsente We dropped. We are make | Pectiney. We felt a Uiahieas the paper, for a |-dodRing the ie eee arere, PUE ONE to catch |“ irwas done. ‘The tlame of the mutch burst | THE REV. P. 1. JONES WiLL PREACH In | fecelted from tne Hon. (bavid’ Davis, be g0 gratetut : ing a bugaboo out of a poor litte eub who nas | Moment, and twice as foolish. Bur it was fora I. ig bis best to escape. from up. flooked at my cuptive, and, by George, the ‘Third Church, comer of Monroe und Lailin-sis, | RA ether, SPE REORGA Well, there's the history of Wicks Leen aboos- = | Moment’ only; ror. ot course, we Jumediately | Pltce.. Nut ot course escape wus’ impossible. sin J BL 10:45 9. . THE KEY. TW 2. OF THE REORGS Jngt as be toldit to me. beerme deunis. Ysaids | Tue gees earn in him than Bhs san bool afterward thousnt of ely | ‘yhen he tung bimseif on bis knees again, erye IT WAS A YOUNG Woman! WIS REV, BRUOKR HERFORD WiLL PReacit | Ped Church of Christ will preven ut Nu Me “My boy, you're amon Trends: nowedere | eae eoant lusked surprised, and suid: as easy * Say ing with ail bis might. and clasped me around | _T let go and got off tho bed. feeling pretty | in the Church of the. Messiah this morning on othe | GAke-st, tourningund cyenime, 2 am, Subjects yout te troubled anymore.” How his eves | Cee ger sone oe ee ONE ofleTs, sity and | SY MPATINETIC INK. the les: and so he clung to me and begged and | shcopish. Everybody. stared stupidly ne his | Serv jenee: BUnETtearene Hoe nee ee, eae seem groubled any ma } “And whut does It amount to? How did you | for the charactors topes ee aes peatchod | pended, saying: “Ob, bave pity on me! Ob, be | neigabor.. Novous bad any wit or sense left, so.| THe AUK, GHORGE C. subs viteacues iw | oo DISCLPLES OF CHRIST WILL MEET ATE he was from Hartford: Ives in Hartford. y getite” 2 rs T Done ba ere Ut under the intlu- | merciful to me! Do hot betray me; they would | sudden and overwhelming had been thesurprise. } the mornms in Unity Charchy corner Dearborb- U West Kandotptest at dv. m. ay nce of bent; but nothing .zppeared but sume | not spare my life a moment! Protect me, sive | The young woman begun to ery, and covered ( 2¥- and Walton-pluce. DISCIPLES OF JESUS THE CHitet MEET an ut Ste jewwOutl, at D. The 4 ¢ with the sheet. The landlord said, UNIVERSALIST. THE may be sou knew him—and said: *Kayburn, | “I peepéd through the key-hole, and see him iuint tracinys, which we could make nothing of. | ine. I will confess everything!” her Soenvoll pines Make the musictons. Tam going | writing. So wher f Judged he was ‘about done T | We ten called inthe surgeon mide | ees gaat us sume time to quiet him down and | meekly: WOMAN'S | CIULISTLA R RENT, OF WASTI- } Union holds dally Gospel meetia 20 enrol! him a8 a drummer-boy, and | want you |. made a sort of little congh, and J see bim erum- | with ord y every 10 enroll bim aé a drumiuer: ad ad . and I 5 : willy orders to wpply every ‘test he was ac- | modify his frighteana get bin nto something | "Mg daughter, sue has been doing something |, T Y role im hat he is well 2 Mound tosce fr amrbede ee core, and look all | quainted with tile wat’ the right one, and re- | like a rational trime of mind, ‘Then foeean se | That fe MOE coke Seek aoe OP the Redseinen! Wastington and Sammamenea eee | eds in. Lower, Farwell Halt = ancue oF the oe eraourse hetween the com-.| settled back as comfortable and careiess as ans | He brought. them to the merece te yee | question blu. be answering humbly, with downe |“ Your dangbter? Is she sour daughter?" HE AG AL REVELL PREACH AN | Slo ld neot rey Monday, Daioh Dat spanduint of the postand the drumamer-bos came | thing. ‘Ten | cones ny and passes ths Uirat | Pastrouget, them fo the surface. ‘This chevke | Gust eyes, und from time to time swabbing away | _“Obsyesshe is ios dangbien, Sey just to- | j THE BEY. We TL, RY Alexander Rent o¢wasiy | unis racsiay aim Ben florgay “Weenesdag, SPs posi s in, asses tne time of | was a confounded annoyance, and we naturally | bis constantly-lowing tears, night come home from Cineinnatl a tittle bit | ington. Dc. In the tyening in St Pauls Chutes: hursday, Mrs, y, Hogerse Ee : sy Saturday, Sirs. Ben Lost 19 4a cud, now; but the poor little friendless | duy pleasantly, and sends bim'on an errand. Ie | chated under tho eigen hee aes fully ex- | “So you are at hextt n Rebel?” sick.”* on Michizan“av., near Eighteenth-at. .

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