5" .? TfcJ. m f i y 18 ycu belong shall be lifted from them. The divine King will make a new law granting them much freedom and many privileges, and all that we promise them shall be. writ ten down and -witnessed on oar part and on yours, as a new covenant binding on onr children and onr children's children. Sow when this shall have been done, with an honest purpose toabideby it loreveronour part, and when your people shall have agreed to accept it, will you then consent u be one of us once more?" "Take upon yourselt the offiee of media tor.' the Queen here broke in, in a low voice, and her sad eyes were fixed beseech ingly on the Hebrew's face. "I quail be fore Mesa's wrath, and all that maybe done shall be done to win back his former friend ship. Speak to him in my name, and re mind him of the days when I, Isisnefert, would learn of him the names of the plants I carried to him, and he taught me and my sister their uses or their poisonous powers when he came to see the Queen, his second mother, in the women's quarters. The wounds he has inflicted on our hearts shall be forgiven and forgotten. Be onr embas ' sador, Joshua; do not refuse our prayer ! " "Such words from such gracious lips are a command," implied the warrior, "and are sweet to the heart. I will be mediator." At this the old high priest codded ap proval and said: "Then I hope that the fruit of this short hour may be a long period of peace. But mark me. "Where medicine may avail, we avoid the knife and cautery; where there is a bridge over the river a man does not rashly try to swim through the whirlpool." "Yes, verily, we will avoid the whirl pool," said the King, and the Queen re peated his words; then she again fixed her eyes on the flowers in her lap. Then a lormal council was held. Three private scribes sat down on the ground, close to the high priest, to enable them to hear his low tones, and the inter preters and conncilors, in their places, took out their writing things, and, holding the papyrus in their left hands, wrote with reeds or brushes, for nothing might remain unrecorded which was discussed and de cided in Pharaoh's presence. Hardly a whisper was to be heard in the hall while this went on, the guards and courtiers re mained motionless in their places, and the royal couple sat rigid and speechless, gazing into vacancy, as if in a dream. 2s either Jnaraon nor his wile could possi bly have caught a word of the murmured colloquy of the speakers, but the Egyptians sever ended a sentence without glancing up at the King, as if to make sure of his ap proval. Joshua, who was accustomed to the scene, followed their example, speaking like the others in a subdued voice, and when presently the voice ot the second prophet, or of the chief interpreter, sounded rather louder Pharaoh raised his head and repeated the high priest's last saying. "Where there is a bridge over the river a man does not try to swim the whirlpool," for this ex actly expressed his wishes and the Queen's. No fighting! Peace with the Hebrews, and not force the wrath of their terrible leader and of his god, without losing the thousand diligent hands of the Ingitive tribes. Thus matters proceeded, and when the muttering of the speakers and the scratching of the pens had gone on for fully an hour, the Queen was still sitting in the same atti tude; bat Pharaoh began to stir and raise his voice, for he knew that the second prophet hated the man whose blessing he received and whose hostility filled him with Each dread, and he feared but he should be requiring some impossible conditions of the envoy. Still all he said was again a repetition of the counsel as to the bridge; but his inquir ing glance at the chief interpreter moved that official to assure him that all was pro ceeding favorably. Joshua had merely de manded that the overseers, who kept guard over the men at work, should not, for the future, be watchmen of Libyan race, but Hebrews themselves, to be chosen by the elders of their people under the sanction of the Egyptian government. At this Pharaoh cast his look of anxious entreaty at Baie and the other conncilors. Tne second prophet only bhrugged his shoul ders regretfully, and, feigning to defer his own opinion to the divine wisdom of Pha raoh, conceded this point to Joshua. The god enthroned on earth acknowledged this submission with a gratelul bow, for Baie's will had often crossed his; and then, when the herald or rehearser had read aloud all the clauses of the treaty, Joshua was re quired to take a solemn oath that he wonld in any case come back to Tanis and report how his people had received the King's ad vances. But the cautious warrior, who was well aware of all the snares and traps with which the State was only too ready, took his oath most unwillingly and only when he had ob tained a written pledge that whatever the issue, his freedom should be in no way in terfered with as soon as he could give them his word that he had done his part to in duce the leader of his people to accept these terms. At last Pharaoh held out his hand for the captain to kiss, and when he had also pressed to his lips the hem of the Queen's robe Buie signed to the monarch, who understood that the moment was come when he should with draw. And he did so with good will and a sense of encouragement, for he believed that he had acted for tne best for his own welfare and that of his people. A bright radiance lighted up his hand some, languid features, and when the Queen rose and saw him smile, content, she did the came. At the door the King drew a breath of relief, and turning to his wife said: "If Joshua does his errand well we shall get across the bridge." "And not swim the whirlpool," replied the Queen in the same tone. "And if the Hebrew captain can pacify Mesu," Pharaoh went on, "and he per suades his people to remain in the land " "Then you must adopt this Joshua into the royal family. He is well favored and of a lordly mien," his wife broke in. But at this Pharaoh suddenly abandoned his stooping and indifferent attitude. "Impossible!" he eagerly exclaimed. "A Hebrew! If we raise him to be one of the 'friends,' or a fanbearer, that is the highest he can hope for. In such matters it is very difficult to avoid doing too much or too lit tle!" As the royal couple went forward toward the private apartments the wailing ot the mourners fell more loudly on the ear. Tears started afresh to the Queen's eyes, while Pharaoh continued to deliberate precisely what position in the court Joshua might be allowed to fill if he succeeded in his em bassy. CHAPTER X. Joshua had now to hasten if he was to overtake the Hebrews in time, for the fur ther they had got on their way the more difficult it might be to persuade Moses and the heads of the tribes to return and accept the terms offered them. The events of this morning were to him so marvelous that he regarded the issue as a dispensation of the God he had found once more; also he remembered the name of Joshua, that is to say, "holpen of the Lord," which had been laid upon him by Miriam's message, whereas he had hitherto been called Hosea. He was willing to bear it, although he felt it hard to deny the sovereign who had raised him to honor. Many of his tellow warriors had assumed similar names, and his had proved itself nobly true. IT ever had the help of God been more clearly with him than it had been this day. He 'had gone into Pharaoh's palace in the expectation of losing his lreedom or being handed over to the executioner as soon as he declared his wish to follow his people; and how easily had the ties been severed which bound him to Egypt. And he had been charged with a task in his eves so great and noble that he could not forbear believing that the God of his lathers had called him to lulbll it. He loved Egypt. It was a glorious land. Where could his people find a fairer dwell ing place? The conditions only under which they had dwelt there had been intolerable. Better days were now before them. The Hebrews were to be permitted to return to Goshen or to settle in the lake land weit of the Nile, a district whose fertility was well known to him. No one henceforth might compel them to serfdom, and if ther laid t r L their hands to labor for the State Hebrews only were to be their taskmasters, and not : naro. ana cruel stranger, 'mat his peo ple must remain subject to Pharaoh was a matter of course. Joseph, Ephraim and his sons, Joshua's forefathers, had called them selves so, and had been well content to be called Egyptians. If his embassy came to a good end the elders of the tribes were to be allowed to rule the domestic affairs of the people. Mosesmustbe thechief ruler in the new settlement, in spite of the second pro phet's objections, and he himself would be captain of the united force which should de fend its frontiers and form fresh legions of those Hebrew mercenaries, who bad already proved their valor in many wars. Before be left the palace the second prophet had given him several mysterious hints which had re mained unsolved, but from which he in ferred that Baie was big with portentous schemes, and purposed to give him some important charge as soon as the dbnduct of the State should fall from the hands of old Buie into his own; perhaps the chief cap taincy ot the whole army of mercenaries, a post at present held by a Syrian named Aarsec This disturbed rather than gratified him; but on the other hand it was a great satisfaction to him to have made it a condi tion that the eastern frontier should, every third year, be thrown open to the Hebrews, that they might go forth to the desert to offer sacrifices to their god. On this Moses had insisted most strongly, and as the law now stood ho one was permitted to cross the eastern limit line, which was fortified at all points, without the expressed consent of the authorities. This concession to their great leader's desires might perhaps gain jiis as sent to a treaty so favorable to his people. All through these transactions Joshua had felt keenly how far he had been cnt off from his tribe; he could not even say what was the aim of this worship in the desert. He had frankly confessed before Pharaoh's council that he knew nothing of the com plaints or demands of the Hebrews, and he did so advisedly, reserving their right to alter and amplify the proposals of which he was the bearer. Bnt what could the people or their chief hope lor better? The future lay belore him full of hope for his nation and himself. If the covenant should be concluded the time would become for him to found a family, and the image of Miriam rose before him in all its lofty beauty. The thought of winning this noble woman was an intoxicating one, and he asked himself whether be were indeed worthy of her, and if it were not too bold to sue for the possession of this superb inspired maiden and prophetess. He knew life well, and understood how little trust could be placed in the promises of the irresolute man for whose weak hand the scepter was too heavy. But he had taken precautions, and if the elders of the people could only be pacified the covenant, clause by clause, would be graven on metal tablets, like every other compact between Egypt and a foreign nation, and "hung up in the national temple at Thebes, signed by Pharaoh and by the representatives of his people. Such a document as he had learnt from the treaty of peace concluded with the Kheta secured and prolonged the brief "forever" of international compacts. He had omitted nothing that might protect the Hebrews against treason and faithlessness. Never had Joshua felt stronger, more con fident, more glad of life than when he once more stepped into Pharaoh's chariot to take leave of his subalterns. Even Baie's mys terious hints and confessions did not disturb him, for he was wont to leave the cares of the future to the future day; but in the camp a trouble awaited him which darkened the present hour, for he there heard to his sur prise, wrath and distress that Ephraim had quitted the tent and stolen away, telling no man whither. His hasty questions elicited the fact that the lad had taken the road to Tanis, so Joshua charged his faithful shield- bearer to seek the boy out in the town, and if he found him to bid him follow his uncle to Succoth. Then, as soon as the Captain had taken leave of his men, he set forth, followed by his old 'squire. It was a pleasure to bim to see that the Adones and other inferior officers who had served with him, hard warriors with whom he had shared all he possessed in war and peace, in peril and privation, so frankly showed their grief at parting. The tears rolled down the brown cheeks of many a man grown gray in battle as he shook hands with him for the last time. Many a beard ed lip was pressed to tbe hem of his gar ment, or "his feet, and the shining coat of the Libyan chargerwhich bore him through the ranks with arched neck and eager prancing, though firmly held in by his rider. His own eyes were moist for the first time since his mother's death as shout of honest regret and farewell wishes broke from the manly hearts of his troops and echoed along the lines. Never had he felt so deeply as this moment. How closely bis heart was Knit to these men, and how precious to him was his noble calling. But the duty which lay before him was high and coble, too, and the God who had released him from his oath and made his wav plain to obey his father's behest, and yet be true and faithful, would perhaps lead him back to his crusaders in arms, whose farewell he could fancy still rang in his ears when he was long since out of hearing. Still, the full glory of the work intrusted to him, the exalted frame of mind of a man who goes forth with a high moral purpose to fulfill a difficult task; the perfect bliss of a lover who flies with well-grounded hopes to crown the purest and dearest wish of his heart, did not wholly possess him till he had left the town behind him and was hastening at a brisk trot across the level plain dotted with palm groves and pools that lay to the southeast. So long as he had kept his horse at a moderate pace along the streets of the town and about the harbor.his mind was so full of the immediate past and of anxiety for the missing youth that he had paid small heed to the scene around him; the numerous ves sels lying at anchor, the motley throng of ships captains, merchants, sailors and por ters of the most diverse races ot Africa and Western Asia, who here (.ought their for tunes, or the officials, soldiers and suppli cants who had followed the court from Thebes to Tanis. And he had also failed to observe two men of .higher rank, though one of them, Hornecht, the captain of the bow men, had saluted him as he passed. They were standing back under tbe gateway of tbe temple of Set, for shelterfrom a cloud of dust blown along the road by the wind from the desert. And as the archer vainly en deavored to attract the rider's attention, Baie, bis companion, said to him: "It mat ters not; he will learn soon enough where his nephew has found refuge." "By your command," replied the soldier. Then he went on eagerly with what he had been baying: "The lad looked lice a lump of clay in the potter's shed when he was brought in." "And no wonder." interrupted the priest. "He had been lying quite long enough in the typhon's dust. But what did your steward want among the soldiers?" u'My Adon, whom Ihad sent out last even ing, brought word that the poor lad was in a high fever, so Kasana packed up some wine and her nurse's balsam and the old woman went with them to the camp." "To the boy or to the captain?" asked the prophet, with a cunning smile. "To the sick lad," replied the soldier, de cisively, with an ominous frown. But he checked himself and wenton, apologetically: "Her heart is as soft as wax, and the Hebrew boy you saw him yesterday " "'A handsome fellow quite after a woman's heart," laughed the priest. "And stroking the nephew down cannot hurt the uncle." "She can hardly have had that in her mind, said Hornecht sharply. "And the unembodied God of the Hebrews, it would seem, is no less mindful of his own than the immortals you serve, for when he led Hote poo to the spot the boy was very nigh unto death. And the old mac would have ridden past him, for the dust had already " "As you said, turned him into a lump of potter's clay. But what then?" "Then the old man saw something golden gleam in the gray .mass." "And for gold the stiffest back will bend." "Very true! So did my o)d man. The broad gold bracelet, glittering in the sun, saved the boy's life once more." "And the best of it is that we hare got him alive." 'Answering to our adjutant. THE "Yes. I, too, was glad to see him open his eyes again. He quickly got better and better, and the leech says ie is like a young cat and nothing will kill him. But he is in a high fever, and talks all sorts of non sense in bis ravings, which even mv daugh ter's old nurse, a woman from Ascalon, does cot understand. But she believes she can distinguish Kasana's name." "A woman once more at the bottom of the mischief." "Cease jesting, reverend father," replied the warrior, and be bit his lips. "A decent widow, and this downy-cheeked boy!" "At his tender years," the .priest went on, in the same tone, "full-blown roses tempt young beetles more than buds do, and in tms case, he aoaeo, more gravely, "nothing could be more fortunate. We have Joshua's nephew in our net, and now it is vour part not to let him escape the toils."" "You mean," cried the soldier, "that we are to keep him a prisoner?" "As you say." "But you esteem his uncle highly ?" "Certainly, but higher still the State." "But this lad " "He is a most welcome hostage. Joshua's sword was an invaluable weapon, but if the hand that wields it is guided by the man whose power over greater men than he we know too well " "You mean Mesu, the Hebrew." "Joshua will wound us as deeply as here tofore our enemies." "But I heard you yourself say that he was incapable of treachery." "And I say so still; and he has proved my words this very day. It was simply to procure his release from tbe oath of fealty that he this day put his head into the croco dile's jaws. But if Joshua is a lion, in Mesu he will find his tamer. That man is Egypt's arch foe, and my gall rises only to think of him." "The cries of woe within the gates are enough to keep our hatred alive." "And yet the feeble creature who fills the throne postpones revenge, and sends forth a pacificator." u "With your consent, I believe." "Quite true," replied the priest, with a sardonic smiie. "We have sent'him forth to build a bridge! Abridge, forsooth! The dried-up wisdom of an ancient sage recom mends it, and the notion is quite after the heart of that contemptible son of a great father, who, for his part, never shrunk from swimming the widest whirlpool, especially when revenge was in view. Well, Joshua may try to ouiid it it the bridge over tne torrent only brings him back to us, I will give him a warm and sincere welcome. But we, who alone have any spirit in Egypt, must make it our business to see that as soon as this one man has recrossed to our shore tbe piers shall give way under the tread ot the leader of his nation." "Yes, yes. ButI fear that we should lose the captain if his people met the fate they deserve." "It may seem so." "You are wiser than 1." "But, still, in this case you think X am mistaken." "How could I make so bold?" "As a member of the Council of War it is your duty to express your own opinion, and a regaru n now as my pari to snow you whither the road leads along which you have come so far with bandaged eyes. Listen, then, and be guided by what I tell you when it is your turn to speak in the assembly. Buie, the high priest, is very old." "And you already exercise half his pre rogatives." "Would that he might soon lay down the rest of the burden! Not for my own sake. I love a contest, but for the sake of our coun try. It has become a deep-rooted habit to ac cept all that age decides and rules as the language of wisdom; thus there are few among the councilors who do not adhere to the old man, and yet his statecraft, like him self, goes only on crutches. All that is good gets lost in a fog under his weak and halt hearted guidance." "On this point you may count on my sup port," cried the warrior. "I will lend both hands to overthrow the dreamer on the throne and his senseless counselor." At this the prophet laid his finger to his lip in warning, went close cp to his com panion and said in low, rapid accents- "I am now expected at the palace, so hearken only to this much: IC Joshua effects a recon ciliation, his people, the guilty with the in nocent, will all return, and tne guilty will be punished. Among the innocent we may reckon the whole of the captain's tribe, the tribe of Ephraim, from old Nun, the father, down to the boy in our house." "They may De spared; but as Mesu is a Hebrew, whatever is done to him " "It will not be done in the open street; and there is never any difficulty about sow ing the seeds of discord between two men who have an equal right to rule in their own circle. I will take care that Joshua shall wink at the death of the other, and then Pharaoh, whether his name be Menephtah or" (and here his voice tell to a murmur) "or Siptah, shall raise him to such a giddy height for he deserves it that his bewil dered eye will never see anything we choose to hide from him. There is a dish of which no man can cease to eat who has' once tasted it, and that meat we shall serve him with al." "A dish meat ?" "Power, Hornecht. Immense power. As governor of a province, or captain-general over all the mercenary troops in Aarsee's place, he will beware of quarreling with us. I know him. If we can but make him be lieve that Mesu has done him a wrong and ttat overbearing man will of a certainty give us some ground and if he can but be convinced that the law prescribes such pun ishment as we may inflict on the magician and the most of his followers, he will not merely consent, but approve." "But if the embassy should fail?" "Still be will come back to us; for he never would break an oath. But in the event of his being forcibly detained by Mesu, who is capable of anything, the boy will prove useful; for Joshua loves him, his people set great store by his life, and he is the son of one of the noblest families. Pharaoh shall at any rate threaten the lad; we, on our part, will protect him, and that will bind us more closely than ever to his uncle, and join him to those who are wroth with the King. Admirable !" "And we shall yet more certainly gain our end if we can bind him by yet another tie, and now I beseech you to be calm, for you are too hery lor your years. In short, our brother in arms, the man who saved my life, tne best warrior in all the army, and who consequently must rise to thy highest honors, must be your daughter's husband. Kasana loves the Hebrew that I know from my wife." The frown once more knit the archer's brow and he struggled painfully to be calm. He felt that he must subdue his aversion to calling this man his son-in-law; for indeed he liked and esteemed hfm, though he was averse to his nationality. He could not, indeed, refrain from muttering a curse, but his reply to the priest was calmer and more reasonable than Baie had expected. If Kasana was so possessed by demons as to be drawn to this stranger, then she should have her way. But Joshua as yet had not wooed her, "and," he added furiously, "by he red god Set and his 70 fellows! neither you nor any other man shall ever move me to force my cbild, who has suitors by the score, on a man who, though he calls him self our friend, has never yet found leisure to greet us in our own house! Taking charge of the lad is another matter, and I will see that he does not escape." Verygood, myfriend," replied the priest, laying hjs hand on his companion's shoul der. "You know how highly I value Joshua, and if he should become your son-in-law he will be the most important and in dispensable of all our colleagues, and then I fancy his nephew may grow up to be a valiant officer in our army." CHAPTER XL The midnight sky, sown with innumer able stars, spread deeply and purely blue over tbe broad level of the eastern delta and the town of Succoth, which the Egyptians called, from its presiding deity, Pittrom, or the city ot Toom. The March night was drawing to its close. White mists floated above the canal, a work of the Hebrew bondsmen, which intersected the plain and watered the pasture land and meadows which lay on a)l sides as far as tbe eye could PTTSBUEG - 'DISPATCH, reach. To the east and north the horizon was shrouded by the thick haze which rose from the broad lakes by the isthmus. The hot, sandy desert wind which yesterday had blown over the thirsty grass, the desert border land to the east and the houses and tents of Snccoth, had died away during the night, and the chill hour which in March precedes sunrise, even in Egypt, was very perceptible. Anyone who had in former days arrived between midnight and dawn at the humble frontier town with its squalid hovels ot Nile mud and modest farms and dwellings, could not have recognized it now. Even its one important building, besides the splendid temple of the god Toom, the spacious and fortified storehouse, presented a strange spectacle. The long, white, lime-washed walls gleamed as usual through the dusk; but it no, longer towered in deathlike silence over the sleeping town; all abont it was stir and bustle. It did doty as a fortress against the plundering tribes of Shasoos who had made their way ronnd the outworks on the isthmus, and an Egyptian garrison dwelt within its indestruotible walls, which could easily be held against very superior num bers. This morning it might have been supposed that the sons of the desert had taken it by storm, but the men and women who were so busy round the walls and on the broad marble parapet of the huge building were not Shasoos, but Hebrews. With shouts and demonstrations of joy they were taking possession of the thousands of measures of wheat and barley, rye and doorab, lentils, dates and onions, which they had found in those vast lofts, and had set to work before sunrise to empty the storehouse and pack the contents into sacks and pitchers and skins, into kneading troughs, jars and sheets, let down from tbe root by cords or carried up and down on ladders. The chiefs of tbe tribes, indeed, took no part in the work, but in spite of the early hour children of all ages might be seen, as busy as the rest, carrying as much as they couia mi in pois ami uowis tueir mowers cooking vessels. Above, close to the opened trapdoors of the lofts, into which the stars shown down, and round the foot of the ladders below, women held lanterns or torches to light the others at their work. Flaring pitch brands were burning in front ot the ponderous closed doors and armed shepherds were pacing up and down in the light of the blaze? When, now and again, there was a sound withiu as of a stone thrown, or a kink against the brass-bound door, and threatening words in the Egyptian tongue, the Hebrews outside were ready enough with words of mockery and scorn. On the day of the harvest festival, at the hour of the first evening watch, certain swift runners had come to Succoth, and had announced to the sons of Israel who dwelt there, and whose numbers were twentyfold as great as those of the Egyptians, that they had started from Tanis early that morning, that their people were to depart thence that night, and that their kindred ot Succoth were to make ready to fly with them. At this there had been great rejoic ing among the Hebrews. They, like their fellow Israelites of Tanis, had assembled to gether that night of the new moon after the spring equinox, when the harvest festival began, to a solemn feast, and the heads of their households had declared to them that the day of freedom was now at hand, and that the Lord was about to lead them forth to the promised land. Here, as at Tanis, many had been faint hearted and rebellious, and others had at tempted to separate their lot from that of the rest and so remain behind: but here, ton they had been carried away by the multi--; tude. And as Aaron and Nun had ad dressed the people at Tanis, so here Eleazar the son of Aaron, and Nahshon and Heu, the heads of the tribe of Judab, had done tbe same. And Miriam, the maiden sister ot Moses, had gone from house to house, and with her glowing words had lighted and fanned the flames of enthusiasm in the hearts of the men and persuaded the women that, with the morning's sun, a day of glad ness, plenty and freedom would dawn on them and on their children. i Few had turned a deaf ear to the proph etess, and there was something majestic and commanding in the presence of this maiden, whose large, black eyes, overarched by thick, dark eyebrows which met in the middle, seemed to read the hearts of those tney gazed on, and to awe tne refractory with their grave gleam. When the feast was over each household had retired to rest with hopeful and uplifted hearts. But the next day and the following night and dawn bad changed everything. It was as though the desert wind had buried all courage and confidence in the sand it swept before it. The dread of wandering through the unknown had crept again into every soul, and many a one who had brand ished his staff with the high spirit of enter Srise now clang obstinately to the house of is fathers, to his well-tended garden plot, and to the harvest in the fields, of which not more man nan was yet garnered. The Egyptian garrison in the fortified stone house had not, indeed, failed to observe that some unusual excitement prevailed among the Hebrews, but they had ascribed it to the harvest feast. The commander of the fort had heard that Moses desired to lead his people forth into the desert, there to sacrifice to their God, and he had asked for reinforcements. But he Knew nothing more, for till, the morning when the hot wind had arisen no Hebrew had betrayed his brethren's purpose. On that day, however, as the heat oppressed them more and more the greater grew the dread of the terrified people of marching ever onward through the scorching, sandy and waterless waste. This fearful day was out a lorewsie oi waai lay oeiore tneni, and when toward midday the dust cloud was vet dense and the air more suffocating, a He brew dealer, from whom the Egyptian soldiers would purchasesmall wares, stole into the storehouse and instigated the cap tain to hinder his fellow Hebrews from rushing to destrnction. Even among the better sort the voice of discontent had been loud; Tzehar and Michael and their sons, who disliked the power of Moses and Aaron, had gone from one to another and tried to incite them to call tbe elders together again before they set forth and ask them whether it would not be wiser to make terms with the Egyptians. While there malcontents had succeeded in assembling many followers, and the traitor had gone to tbe captain of the Egyptian garrison, two more runners had come in with a message to say that the multitude of the Hebrew fugitives would arrive at Succoth between midnight and dawn. Breathless and speechless, bathed in sweat and bleeding at the mouth, the elder ot the two messengers dropped on the threshold of the house of Amiuadab, where Miriam just now was dwelling. The exhausted men had to be revived with wine and food before even the less weary one could speak coherently; and then in a husky voice, but overflowing with thankfulness and enthusiasm, he had told all that happened at their departing and how that tbe God of their fathers had filled all hearts with His spirit, and infnsed fresh confidence into the most fainthearted. Miriam bad listened with flashing eyes to this inspiring tale, and then, flinging her veil about her head, she bade the servants of the house, who had collected about the runners, to gather all the people together under the sycamore, whose broad boughs growth of a thousand years, sheltered a wide space from the scorching sun. 'Bedouins, whose nomad hordes swarmed In the desert adjoining Egypt on tbe east, now re garded as belonging to Asia. To be Continued Next Sunday. At W'ork by the Day. Yankee Blade.; She Ob, see that scarecrow out there in the field ! He That isn't a scarecrow. "It must be; see how motionless it is." "That's tbe hired man at work." Males Ibe Best of Wive. Chicago, Globe. "Your son has married and settled down, I understand?" "Yei, and to the best and most submissive little lady in the world." "How came he to be so fortunate?" "Oh, he married a typewriter, one who was used to being dictated to." SUNDAY, ' NOVEMBER AHABD-WOBKEDMAfl One Phase of Railway Life in the Enral Districts as Seen By TflF COUNTRY STATION AGENT. Acting as Telegrapher, Baggage Man and General Factotum, PLEASANT FEATURES OF THE POSITION fwniTTiar ron ins dispatch.! "I should think it would make you crazy. "So it would, if I was one of the crazy kind." The station agent seated himself on a trunk, removed his hat and wiped his per spiring brow with a rather dingy looking pocket handkerchief. A cloud of dust in tbe distance, patches of brown smoke float ing in the sky, a low rumbling sound, and puffs that grew fainter and more rapid until they seemed to beat a gentle tattoo, told that a train had just departed. In front of the platform were the shining tracks of steel, be hind was the shabby "depot," and down the street was visible the rear end of an irregu lar procession oi men, women and children, making their way to the village. "You can rest a while now," was sug gested. "Just long enough to take breath," re plied the station agent, taking a bunch of keys from his pocket and jingling them. He was a man ot few words. There was decision in his face, quickness in his glance and intelligence in his eyes. It was notice able that even in moments of repose his mind seemed to be at work, and that a cer tain look of attentiveness never entirely left his countenance. His shoulders were broad, and, when standing erect in his suit of blue, there was something of the look of a com mander about him. His name was plain John Smith, and he had sole charge of the station at Pikeville, a village of about 400 population. It was on the P. & Q. Railroad, one of the largest cor porations in the country. Pikeville is not a place of any considerable importance, but it is a link in the great system, and 20 trains a day pass tne station. Passengers get on and off, freight is loaded and unloaded, express matter is received and dispatched, trunks are checked to points hundreds of miles away, dozens of telegrams are received and sent every 24 hours, the arrival and depart ure of trains are registered and wired to the dispatcher's office, tickets are sold, questions answered, way bills made out, books bal anced, considerable sums of money handled and a host of other things attended to. SMITH'S DAILT ROUTINE. Pikeville is not a large enough station to warrant the division of its labor into depart ments and the employment of three or four men. John Smith does it all. He must, there fore, as will be inferred, be a man capable of rapid thought and action, with an eye for details, wits that never get lost, nerves that are not easily shaken and fidelity that is ab solutely unquestionable. Twenty-four hours of John Smith's life at the Pikeville station will afford an excellent example of what it is to be a busy man. If be gets out of bed early enough in the morn ing he swallows a hasty breakfast; if not, he rushes off to the station with an empty stomach. The first train is due at 6 o'clock. John Smith's first plunge is at the telegraph in strument, where he makes his presence known by a few ticks. In a moment the answering signal comes, notifying him that "JNo. 14 has passed iliddleport on time. Then he makes sure that the switches are all right. Next the window of the ticket office is thrown open, and he begins selling the magic bits ot pasteboard, which are pass ports to near and distant points. He must remember the exact amount of fare in every case, make change raoidly and accurately, and be able to detect instantly a punched coin or a counterfeit banknote. He keeps one eye on the work before him, and the other on the clock. One ear attends to the calls of customers; the other listens to ticks from the telegraph instrument at his right hand. At any instant a message may come which must be taken with unerring accuracy and delivered to the conductor of the incoming train. Any failure in this duty might endanger the lives of hundreds of "passengers, for at any time there is the possibility of orders coming to hold a tram for ten minutes or half an hour on account of a wreck, a be lated freight, a washout or a "wildcat.; Meantime there is the bum of busy con versation outside, and a fusilade of ques tions through the window. John Smith must answer promptly and courteously a myriad ot queries regarding time-tables, connections, stopping places, etc., and man ifest a fatherly interest in the affairs of the various seekers lor information. SMITH AS A BAGGAGE SMASHER, Waiting until the last minute betore the train is expected perhaps until the long warning whistle reaches his ears h leaves the ticket office and rushes to a little cabi net screwed against the wall of the waiting room, aua auenas to tne duty ot checking baggage. This may not be completed until tbe train stands oetore the station. Then out come five or six trunks from the bag gage car, and in go half a dozen belonging to embarking travelers. If any of the trunks are particularly heavy, somefriendly bystander is generally at hand to render as sistance in lifting them; and it is a pecul iarity oi numan nature that services of this kind are often regarded as a distinction on him who performs them. The stalwart young man who is thus honored is wont to gaze at the departing train as if he owned it, and afterward make a great show of being on terms of good fellowship with the station agent. The first ordeal of the day is past, and the station is strangely quiet after the five min utes ot bustle. John Smith if Tip Ji lurl no breakfast, hastens home to satisfy his hunger. The next train is due at 8:10, and there is plenty to do, for it carries express matter, and the number of outgoing and in coming passengers will be larger. John Smith is at the station again by 7:30. There are people waiting for him with express packages to be billed, and in many cases he is expected to address them, for he has great skill with the pen and the marking brush. There will be numerous disputes about charges, in all of which the sta tion agent must maintain bis posi tion with mingled firmness and urban ity, and an occasional judicious expression of sympathy for the victim of rates wnicn ae acknowledges to be oppres sive, but which he has no power to amend. While arguing with one man he may be re ceiving money from another, and at the same time filling in way-bills at available moments. Suddenly he may be compelled to leave all and make a dive for the tele graph instrument. For be it remembered that the express, freight, telegraph and iicKct uiuucs are an under the root of a -single small building, where the eye and ear can command the whole 'situation; and the sharply sounding ticks must be interpreted rightly, or woe be the consequences. BUT TIME IS FLYING. The 8:10 troin is due in ten minutes. John Smith must now dispose of the business be fore hirn without waste of words. He can not avoid offending somebody, but abusive words go in at one ear and out at the other. Life is too short for the station agent to in dulge in small bickerings and petty resent ments. Into the ticket office he darts, and the proceedings of the early morning are re peated on a larger scale and with some ad ditions. The bustle is soon over, but there is no rest. A freight train is due in 20 min utes, and it must be side-tracked to make way for the "Limited Express," which does not stop at Pikeville. Then comes a produce dealer who is clamoring for a freight car in which to send off a load of wheat or potatoes. Another demands to know why a cargo of coal wnicn ne nas ordered is late in ar riving. There are barrels or beer, stoves, plows, household goods and live stock to receive and despatch. Every cuftomtr of 10; 1889;- "r the road wishes to know the responsi bilities and risks assumed by each of the contracting parties, and frequently ex planations must be given at considerable length and with patient courtesy. John Smith must have a fund of information at hand ready to dispense to all inquirers. He must be a good accountant and a legible penman. He must not spare his strength when heavy articles of freight are to be handled. He must treat women and children with kindness and respect, and be able to throw a drunken loafer out of the door. He must, in short, center within himself a combination of qualities useful in many and varying emergencies. The programme that has been sketched re fers to the ordinary schedule routine, when everything moves in regular order. If there is an accident or- other untoward oc currence, there are new duties, and in creased vigilance is- demanded. But John Smith is expected to show himself equal to the emergency, and he usually succeeds in doing so. It may be said that the station agent has an astonishing capacity for work and en durance. This is undoubtedly true; but it is also true that the nature of his duties tends t to develop such capacity. Brain work is constantly demanded, and there is always the possibility of something unfore seen occurring. Hence the station agent is under a certain stimulus that cannot exist when only the physical energies are brought into requisition. His life is not without its Sieasant features; the probabilities are that e enjoys a large business and social ac quaintance and has plenty of friends. His opinions are much sought, and he answers more questions in a day than anybody in tbe village, except thepostmaster and school teacher. Good luck to the station aeentl He is part of a system that links States together and annihilates distances. If ambitious, there may be a future before him. The cor poration that employs him may not have a soul, but it has a sharp eye for its own in terests; hence the day may come when Pike ville will know John Smith no more. He will be wanted elsewhere, if he is a good railroad man. Willis Kenton. T0BACC0 AS A MEDICINE. An Octogenarian Who Dislikes the Weed, bnt Chews to Keep Alive. Chicago News. Peter Coulter, of Bussiaville, Ind., de clares that he has been kept alive for 70 years by the constant use of tobacco. He is now 84 years of age, S3ys a Globe-Democrat correspondent, and commenced smoking and chewing when a boy of 14, although then, as now, he detested both the taste and smell of it. He wonld gladly quit using the noxious weed, but tears that he would probably not long sur vive its discontinuance. When a boy, about the age above mentioned, he was sud denly taken ill with fever, and the disease left a very dangerous sore on his left side, that grew quite large and annoyed him with constant add increasing pains. His physician informed him that there was hat one remedy, "use tobacco," or he must die. To this he at first objected, but finally began smoking. For four years the smoking made him sick, and did not seem to decrease the size of the sore, though the pain was much lessened. The doctor then recom mended him to-' chew tobacco instead of smoking. He did so and the sore at once began to show an improvement and the pain ceased altogether. But whenever he ceases chewing for any considerable length of time the sore returns and increases in size. and he states that to desist from chewing for a month would be at the risk of his life. He iB one of the most aged pioneers of this vicinity And his ancestors were noted for having lived to a wonderful age, his grandmother on his father's side attaining the almost unprecedented longevity of 133 years, while his two grandfathers and the other grandmother lived to be more than 100 each. His mother's age was also very remarkable. She died at Ames station, la., two years ago, at 119, retaining all her senses up to the last moment. At the age of 117 she visited her son Peter at his home with the expectation of making her home with him the remainder of her life. But she soon became discontented and returned to Iowa, where sne died, reter nas lived in this ficinity since 1842, and claims to have hauled from Cincinnati the first steam boiler and engine that were brought into the State of Indiana, the machinery being delivered in Wayne county. He can neither read nor write, but his eyesight is still excellent, and he is tall and straight. His first vote was cast for John Q. Adams, and one of his trite sayings is peculiar. "I never put more on my heels than I can-kick off." He was born "in Delaware in 1805 and came to the State of Indiana in 1828. THE INDIANS ABE INCEEA8ING. A Bint to Orators nnd Novelists to Look Tip ibe Facts. Boston Advertiser.! The novelists, reporters and others who write Indian speeches, beginning with the words "I am the last of my race, the red man is vanishing before the white man as the leaves," etc., had better look up the facts. It now seems that any statement to the effect that the number of Indian popu lation is slowly decreasing is not in accord with tne truth, xae Indian is not dying off and vanishing from the earth any more than the Cau casian is. They have, for the most part, adopted semi-civilized habits and live auiet lives. They are increasing rather than decreasing. In the quiet, orderly commu nities of the Indian Territory, in the reser vations of Dakota, and in the pueblos ot New Mexico and Arizona, the Indian is encamped peacefully, and his children are being educated. He is fairly prosperous, provided the Indian Agent and the con tractor do not try to starve him, and he is raising his family and increasing in the' land. THE CLOCK WAS GOING. A Street Car Register Mistaken by Passen gers for a Timepiece. Detroit Free Fress.l "Is that clock going?" inquired a man of the conductor of a Cass avenue car. The clock was going. It went tickety-click all over the car and the hour flew around like a revolving shaft. The man who asked the question struck the hand just as it wobbled to the hour of 10. "I've got an engagement at 9-20, but I guess I've missed it this time," and he stepped off the car, and began to runup Congress street. There was an old lady in the corner, who glanced up just in time to see the hand re volve to 12. "La, say," she exclaimed, "how time do fly, conductor! Is that aire teown time or stranded?" The conductor said he thought it was standard, and just then tbe hour hand flew round to 6, and tbe impression grew on the passengers that the car clock was unreliable. Tbi Evening Jasmine. Thrill me. All me with delight, Sweet evangel oi the night; Chains of heaviness bad bound me. Sorrow's deepest sorrows crowned me, Wben from ont the darkness came One glad spark of rosy flame. Filled me. Thrilled me With such ecstacy of bliss. Life were worth the living for this. Whence the subtle incense drawn. From love's darkness or its dawn, I knew not nor cared it proved Like tbo breath of one beloved, To my homesick soul appealing With a welcome touch of healing. Holds me. Folds me. Giving to eachqnlckened sense Love's own perfect recompense. 'Tis tbe evenlngjasmiae's bloom, Fair and faint it nils my room. Bloom, dear flower of midnight still, All my senses steep and thrill. Press me, Bless me With invisible arms caress. Souls have lost themselves for less. Hrt. M. L. Haynt in Detroit Frte Frm. LOYE IS A COTTAGE: A Pretty Picture of a Loving Couple in the Evening of Life RESTING AFTER THE DAI'S TOIL The Troubles of the Wealthy Who LItb In Mansions. HW TO BUILD A GOOD HOUSE FOB $500 rwsrrxxx tos the dispjitch.1 A correlative of the petition "give me neither poverty nor riches," might read give me not a large mansion but a small cottage in which to dwell. The mansion costs a great sum, so great indeed that a good man may well be disturbed sometimes while viewing his superfluous luxuries by the reflection that there are thousands of his fellow creatures who are not provided with the barest neces- r& JPertpective Vino. sities of life; tbe cottage is of low cost, leav ing the conscience clear and the heart merry. The mansion involves the wearisome labor of superintending servants; the cottage im poses the easy tasks of simple housework. The mansion requires workmen to make re pairs; the cottage maybe easily watched and promptly repaired "a stitch in time" by the owner. The owner of a mansion must have a large income; the owner of a cottage and a fertile acre oi two is practically inde pendent, the labor of his hands providing fruit, vegetables, poultry, etc., sufficient for his needs. A FKETTY. PICTTJBE. A touching picture is seen, suggestive of nobility of character, when an elderly couple resume the simple cottage life of their early wedded years. Their lives have been too unselfish to permit the acquisition of wealth. They educated their children and started them in prosperous careers, and now they have planned to be self-supporting to tne enu. j.ne sons anu daughters, how ever honored and prosperous, who do not kiss the labor-browned hands of such parents are not worthy oi the name they bear. Following will be found a b'rief descrip tion of the design illustrating this article: Size of structure: Width, 23 feet: depth. 36 feet 6 inches. ' Materials for exterior Foundations, posts or piers; side walls and roof, shingles. Height of story, 10 feet. Interior finish Smoothed and chamfered Btudding and ceiling joists to be left ex posed. Walls between studding and ceiling joists to be papered. Flooring and all trim of windows and doors to be of white pine or other soft wood. All doors and sashes of manufactured stock sizes. The windows that command fine views should be glazed with plate class; all other windows with double thick glass. All interior wood work to be varnished, showing natural col ors. Exterior colors All side shingling.creamr all trim, moldings and veranda rails, dark red; veranda posts and balusters, cream; JFirsl Btory. outside blinds and doors, roof and chimneys, dark red; underside of roof overhang, cream; porch floor and ceiling oiled, snowing nat ural color of wood. ACCOMMODATJOIfS. All of tbe rooms are shown by the floor plan. The attic is floored and is reached by a step-ladder. Ko cellar is provided as this cottage, built as described, is intended for summer occupancy only. To fit it for winter use a cellar under the whole house should be built at an additional cost of about $200: and the interior walls of the cottage should be plastered at an additional cost ot $75. Special features-The large bays may be said to give character to the exterior of this design as well as to provide attractive feat ures witbiu. With cushions provided for the bay window seats the sitting room is indeed a comfortable place. The overhang ing roof gives an appearance of lan?e size. The chimneys (one over tbe kitchen and one over the sitting room) are simple and inexpensive but substantial, built of terra cotta resting on the ceiling joists. Cost In all localities where the prices for labor and materials are abont the same as those of New York City, J50C. Copyright by B. "W. Shoppell. PAJHPJiBING HEE iPPETITE. A Kansas Man's Notions Abont the Proper Diet for His Sick Wife. Time. "Could I git a little snack o' something to eat for my wife? She ain't very strong, an' she's bin right puny of late an' sich vittles as we've got in the wagon don't seem to sat isfy her," said a mover out in Santas, stop ping at a farm house to make tbe above re quest. "Certainly," replied the kind-hearted mistress, "what would she like?" "Well, she's real-finicky an'delikitinher appytite, aa' she's been fnssin' for two days ler a little biled cabbage an' Fait pork, an' hot sody biskits, .an some apple dumplin's, an a cup o' right strong coffee. If you've anything o that sort, I'd like some. These sick folks hez to be pampered in their appy tites, ye know-" Jen Llebe Me. The night comes down with qalet feet, . with dnsay garments trailing. And o'er tne fields of golden wheat The southern breeze is wailing. Tbe starry radiance of the skies Falls o'er tbe dew-wet lea. And gazing in thy tender eyes I say. -Ich Iiebe sie." There fs no charm can bind my heart Away from tby beguiling. For Cupid pierced me with his dart, And viewed my struggles smiling; Tben rest upon mi heart, dear love, Tby troth-plight pledge to me. For while tbe beavensamlle above. My own, "Ich llebe sie." Tbe summer flower may fade sad Mt, The tespest darkly hover; But at thy feet shall ever He The tree hesjrt of thy lover. Then lift thy tender eyas to Bales, And let their answer ba. As eefee at the words Ht1h, "My !. 'lei Iiebe sJer," -Ci9rJhttri9eBUQrttnir0tmH xo'pZAioze o Room safeee" L : V. j of "y. J HUi. ,' SUNDAY THOiWHTSF -ON- MORALSMAIERS BY A. CLERGYMAN. " twjurrxx fob thx distatcs.1- - ' The secret of successful work to-day is 6 ganization. Look at business. See how it is organized down to the minutest .detail. Look at politics. See how the great parties study to perfect their organization and make it include the loneliest house of the remotest school district That man succeeds best in business who saves the most. That party carries the day which gets out all its voters. Here is a lesson for the church the local church. It ought to organize the parish, and have a function for all, and see to it that each fulfills his function. This would insure success. The power of the littles is the greatest power. The Mississippi river the ocean itself, is composed of drops. Guizot said "he did not believe in the" .. sovereign power of machinery." Trno l enough. But if the machinery is driven by intelligence and will what can itnotaoi " complish? Mere organisation is a delusion, and a snare. But if it is operated by consecraJ tlon It may work miracles. Good Intentions alone are not enough. They must be stereo typed into good acts. Profession put ft into practice. J. Once on a time a rustle swain and damsel lived near each other. He became smitten? with her charms, but had not courage to teU 363 hlslove. At length, flndlne she was beemnin -M an oMeet nt attmcMnn ...t. - t -.fc- n.tv ..,uu.uB B1 losing ner, ne was in duced to Invite her to walk with hhn to a spot where lovers are fond of rambling up a shadv ?n. i.a w - I .I- . . .-...- ---- "; iu,uui aa lips were closed; be could not brine his courage to tho popping point: while she. poor thing, cast down her eyes, and was perfectly mute, though sha understood for what purposa ha had brought her to that lonely spot. At length a bird bezaa to sing on John's side of the road, and a luckv thought struck him. "Bessy." said he, with a gentle squeeze ot the arm, -Most hear yon bird!" Ay, lad." she answered. ' What does it seem to tbea to slner'ha asKed. 'I cannot tell," she said. "What does ft sees' totbeer" vi'hitt Roc- j.,.1 v-.iu. Xitr: , :Wh - - - -- .. wv wbuci uniiiiu. anni cui . .7. "" ' v."1 ""' """Haw msio j. Sing. 'I love thee! Tlno th,r i's They walked on In silence, until a bird begaaV. to sing on the damsel's sldef of tba road. As.' taJSihSSwwt "."wliit doesit seem to 'Icannot tell," he said. "Wblt AH thr MM .lnl" .v. ..v.j J(?I'zarbizaTfae-"ba Midwith another sfSvrJPSetfSt iIoT eel I lova theer " Showltr- Pl aT blrd t Snow,ttl A Startling Arrnr of Figures. In the November number of tha Jbruinap. pears a startling expose fn which tha owners of tha United States are indicated. We have been In the habit of saying with sneer that England, for example was only a pocket borough that a eoupla of hundred thousand owned tha kingdom, and illustrated tha cynical remark of Carlyle that "the popu lation of England consists of 80,000,000 persons mostly fools." Well, according to the keen, hard lawyer who gathered the statistics for the forum, and from whom it wonld be as impostihle to extract sentiment as to extract sunbeams from a cu cumber, in tha phrase of Dean Swift, we re publicans ara worse oft than those "effete" monarchists. A form of government and a pattern- of social and religions order which, were relied on to distribute privileges andre pnblicaniie wealth, have played Benedict Ar nold and betrayed usinstead haveirimstered to tha very evils they were warranted to avert In a succession of surprising tables, tha magazine displays British incomes and Ameri can incomes side by side, showing the enor mous preponderance of the latter. Next, it flashes on tbe screen a table showing tha ii- tribntion of wealth in this country: from which'' f it appears that the disproportion between tha neuMo tne poor is greater nera than In En gland, and Is increasing hern while diminish ing there. Finally, tbe amazing conclusion as" - - - . -w wu.tBu omics vl America' are practically owned by leas than, asaoo&ipar-1 sons, constituting less than 2 In 60 ot ltsadultj man? popiuauon, ana xaas wraun M years tba. United States of America will be subtUnQaHyl owned oyiess than sofioo persons, constiintlne I ess tnan 1 in 500 of the adult male population." I The Church and. tbe State have some hnga problems to solve. The future requires both faith and courage. The trend of, wealth, and the resultant concentration of privileges. Is unrepubliean and nnchristizn. TTn tv. whom, shall tha Niagara rapids be aamme'dand- An Ago of Competition. This is an age of competition. Life fs a hip. jiwuuun, , o us auung wiia another, aaal tTcn wiia ourauTes- anereiora it is not strange that this should invade tha house oil God. 'J How far is it to bo given play? What are taw limits we mean in the church? cf Clearly, tha service ought not tobahnm arum. it tne singing bo lively, and have! plenty of it. Let the building be farritingand: . ... t ..J "" uw sextons nate iretBI air?). Let the preacher study to brirfiten hiss discourse with the charms nf iinr.n. .. 53 dotes,patlllusrration and warm appeal. There 3 -........,... r.u.au. niu is not to oaf ?ken ! ""Li1?? "Evswas taken oat of , rr""' """ "m sieep. it Is impos sible to make a cnuxch too attractive In Its pul pit, its chair and its environment All this is well within the limits of the legitimate. Bat when it comes to the deliberate adoption of a sensational plan, -then the boundaries ot tbe permissible ara overleaped. Ministers ara set to preach the costwl of Jesos Christ not , tbe gospel of self display. What must hoi thought of topics Ilka these r "The Uclr ffns.4 band 'Tha Gaddinir Wlfa." ! iSr-vS Neighbor's Umbrella." -Pull on Your Own' Boot btrap r' These are announcements actual--lymade of sermons actually preached. Theyt may raise the curiosity' of grown-np children they disgust men and women. Theyrenel in the end the very class tbey are meant to at tract For the church fs not a circus rinsr nor is a Christian pastor ot right a down, it is noticeable that tbese sensation moneers soon play to empty benches. For awhile they mar draw a congregation, of "religions tramps-" In the end. the last state of such a church is worst than the first A strong and useful church can ' only be built up and maintained by preachlnsr. and practicing the gospel. " u; , , The Social Problem. Ominous voices archeard In England as well as on the continent respecting sooallstio ten dencies. Call not those who utter them fanatl- cai; it is more procaine that they ara animated by the spirit of tha prophets than by that of fanatics. If only they could arouse the chnrrhf ev. atner Jiarry m tne Nineteenth Centum fnr Anfrntr. JtAVft? 4rtierA ltava Ium fm.-..-?! - - q; it 4 - --v. .w vM Wiuca VUCUt iub jianuwriuug ou uio waii was nard to read, i But such is not tha time in which we lire. 4 It U an age of confusion. The Social : organism aa wo utd rcceireais zrom onr rath ers is aeepij aecayea ana its spirit gone. W man Is there Dot confesses In private that gz and unknown chances are hanirinir nrnr - - - auo proem suito oi society is doomed by its inherent contradictions to pais away. IS am convinced that society most underzot&l transformation or perish. And it u on this ae-i count that every thoughtful observer most a . m. m..uuu... ." 1 "I --B ran reuiuu uiuu wuko uu we lar-reachlng nroblem Of the distribution of wealth. s. relation of physical science to the prosperity i .rtli. R.4CHM- th ril-ht unii mi.w r rfl erty: tbe claims of tbe individual to be trine lor nis place la mo aau recompensed byai rnrAoldaee for tbe toils of his veara ar itfMM in short tba whole question of national ciTillsaJS uos. on la uuuau uuiiuaiuiiae, -icannot lav ton nmtihatlcallv that it terms to ma thi ,ii has not been done, it isyec without a pUcqIh our books of theology, to speak of, and requires doing In all manner of ways. Toflndasofatlo win tasjfcmo buvij .uuumkd BOTero aemandv on the cood will of our best teachers; nor wfH tbey find It at all useless, while keeping oaa eye on ueir pooks, uj Keep we oiner.on wings aS SUej MO UUU1UQ WIO WVAA. X OS Mil sciences are now fast resolvlnr themselves it one tbe social science. And all the problc are resolving themselves even faster Into om tbe social problem." , One-MInate Sermons. ASiAXmay be religious and not be : Dr. Bodge. Lt there Is one fact or doctrine, or cos or promise in the Bible which has produced a practical effect on your tamper, or heartTc conduct, be. assured you do not truly beUev . x-oyion. Sxx there be bo sermon without two R's 1 lt: Bapsatance Blghuoosnts, Smrttm4 Th world proposes to rest by rwertoft harden. The Redeemer elves rest by sM m tha Sftrit and power to bear tha tratis'a.- jr. it. Jnoocruon. '- lx.aasasiaaaef law or of fet r esasi vSSWOSjBwSo wlw Qyfesvvv,- n ? ''isa w