r jj. F. BOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XLVII. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. MAY 24. 1S93 NO. 23. liKV. DM TADIAGR THE ElIOOiaYX OIVIXE'S SD. DAY M-.UMOX. Subject : "Mnytinie Tliou;af-,." -T - r, firing rr Vl-. fc.-l-!l:.-U s s,,,:... S.er.s 'f til-' !'. iT' to 1 the i";' "f t'n' warn m r.n." w. snd r-nr.-l .! nnsjrom JslaHon." IV., I."). :-t L-.irl.-ns or olden tinny, i at tii foot of Mount Lo. a u V l.an.l winter whnVnod niom.tii.u. Then when the irlv r ,-.i:m the snows melted v ll t'le si,l of the mount.!,. sni t in- iii.Miri.-ini'e 10 tile ifaniens at the (.. r. ii ! y .ii see now the allusion of my tert w:,. n it sj.e-iks of the fountain of hhJ. "leu- an 1 tr.'.::i. from Lebanon. AkMin hi 1 n.-.-rn t!ie .hurih is represented if n s.-.r ! n up. and .lown the word of Uod and it is .1 Mi.ur.- sj.-.-i.-iliy sueuestive at this i as. ii-f t:ie y-nr. when the porks and the VI' !mr !- are a'-.. it to put forth their blossoir 1 1 :!; .i.r is M'i-i mi tiird voices. A II, :.-r v I to impress her child win the 1. 111 i so in file nnnct;.,u after the LT'.-'iTi M'-il h.v-n j. repaired in tiie Kir l. ii. - :- t. ,i him i'-.il of Uower see.bj ui-1 -att-re.1 tli.-s s.-sii in siinpeof letters ;U.-r-.-.t:.e!..'.,.ft,e.A,r.en. Weeks na.-l Iv. iiu 1 ttie r,-i n- .-in. I the sunshine had don their w-.-rK. an I ..:ie .!:iy the ehil.l eame in -Mii-1. "Mutii -rvi.e .piicklv to the e-ir-il.-n o:i..- n."v." The rr-oth-r fol'owe.i the child to the wir :-n. and the l.ule child said "Look here, mother. S -e ! It is spelled all ov.r tne trround in tlo-v.-rs. 'God is love'" oh. n v ir.-n-V. if we only had faith eii.m.-h ' "ii i 1 1 s.-o (.nsj-ei lessons ail tn.uul mi l :i' ..m i.s -lesM.ns in shell. nn the ..-.. . !.s-i.:.. in sparkl.-s on the wave, "' 1,1 ,lt;,r- "" th- skv. le-sous in flowers ii ovHrtv.e .-..tni!. Well ,y fri. ii-:--. you know v.rv well that there have .,., n s im beautiful irnrdens created. Th-re , :is the pnrd.-n of harle. DHi-'iie bii I y.i re..:.n,!r that this kin? ordered :-iir 1. ns l:,;,l out all tbrousth the real.:, and de.-i.ied by de-ree of tovernru-nt ati.-tt km I..: tl.ov.-rs should lie planted in h...) tai i.-i,s. Henry IV. at Montpellir tie,-re.. 1 that there -h,,Id be flowers planted thr..ii-l ..ut his r- i!;ii and t-ardens laid out " -! ''' -feed that there should be Alpine , raii.i and French plants. Shen. it..ne. the p. t. was more celebrated for his ranl-in than f. r lus poetry. His poetry has fad--1 tr.-rr. th- HL.-.-S for the most part, tut In i-nr l-M h iiiiinortal. To all the U-ailty of ,.- ,:,, -,- he added perfection of rt. rahsai- and ar.-h and arhor and fountain and r.wtio temple had their nuKt wotid-rml s; Imetis. and the oak n,l the li,fe. ti.c richest woods of the forest w.-re piante I m that warden. H- had pemus. an i he nil in iustry. and all his ren ins ant a:i hn Milusirv he aj,p ie,! to the beautirl -at:. n o( that ir.ir-!.-n. ile jrave for It rl"K)0. and . it t lust for S6,uoO. or what was ,., inal to that iiuinl.er of dollars. It was an . M ;,-.y i-ard-n. laid out with gr-t e,ah ir iliun. And yet I haveto tell vou now of ii L-ard-u of va-ii. r expanse the iiar d. u i..i..i of in my t .t a fountain of ifar- A. L With the str.-mes frorp T.euo:u w""- - " the preat fimliit.on of hS D.e to t mi l A-. . ts'ord and lav out eitens.ve gar i. n- r uin 1 -il.out it. It broke his heart that he .-on:. I n.it complete the work ns he iesirel it. At ,:s last paynent of X100.0UO, ifter layin out these irardens and huildin that ( l i e of Al.tiots.'or 1. at that time Ins heart broke, li s health failed, and he died UHinSt Ml I'll: lie. A f. w y-irs a-o. wtira I walked throusth Ih - -ar l.-tn and 1 thought at what vast ex Oense they lia I i .-a laid out at the expense f that -a an - hfe-.t s no 1 1 could see in the or:-: m -r, t!l blood of the old Dian s t r.'Ki n Ii.- ii ... Iii;t I have to toll you now of a uar b-n ,.si. ,,ut at vaster expense. Who, -an caictll.lte t'l.at vast eTO.nseV Teil me, ye women who wat -hed Hun hmir ; tell rue, ye ex, -. lit..,,,, rs woo lilted an I let Him iuwu . tell thou sun that di.ist hide and re rocks that did fali. what the laying out of this garden est. This niornin--;, amid the iroma and brn.-litr.ess of the sprimrtiuie, it is ippropriateth.it 1 show you how the churoli f rlirist is a u'aroen. I reiuarn tlrst it is a garden becnusn of the rare plants m it. That would be a strange jur ien in which there were no tlowers. If you cannot timi them anywhere else, vou will find them aloiiir the path's, and you w"id llnd Uiem at the Ktl.-w;iy. If tliere be no .-special taste and no es peoialmeaiis.yi.il will lind tliere tne holly hock, and tii" .laModil. and thx dahiia. "if there bo no c; ial t.i.j and no espeoial means, you will tlnd tiie Mexican cactus, and the biiii,e, n. the ar'it's, pr-d te 3i rs of oleand-rs. Flowers theremust be in every mrden, and I have to teil you that in the garden of the church are the rar-st plants. Sometimes you will lind tiie violet, inconspicuous, but weet as heaven Christian souis with no pre tense, but of vast usefulness, comparatively tinknown on earth, but to be elorious in celestial spher,s. Violets and violets all the time. You cannot t-11 where tnese Christians have been save by the briirhteninv face of the Invalid, or the steaming tureen of the stand near the sn-k pillow, or the new curtain that keeps out the tlare of the sun from the poor man a cot. Such characters are perhaps iiet ter typiiled by the ranunculus whii-n jrot-s creeping Ujtween the tiiorna an ltue briers of this lile, fivm? a kiss lor it stini;, and many a man baa thought that life be lore him was a black rock of trouble and found it covered ail over with delightsome jasmine of Chris tian, sympathy. In this garden of the Lord I And the Mexl ean oactiis, lovelin.-ns within, thorns with out, men with irrent sharpness of behavVn and manner, but within tnem the peace oi God, tho love of (Jod, the ree of Ood. They are hard men to handle, uirly men U touch, very nit to strike back when yoo strike them, yet within thein all lovelinesi and attra.-tion, while outside so eompletelj unfortunate. Mexican ca -tus all the tune. riatd a pladil elder to a Christian minister, "Doctor, you would do better to control yoot temper.' "Ah," said the minister to the p.eid pMc, i coi joi more U-uipor ,e minuti-s than you do in five yenrs." These people, pifted men. who have preat exaspera tion of manner and seem to be very different from what they should be, really have In their souls that which commends thein to the Lord. Mexican eai-tus all the time. So a man said to tne years &so : "Do you thintc I ouirht to become a memler of the church? I have such a violent temper. "Yesterdny I was crossing Jersey City tarry. It was very early in the morninir. and I saw a milkman pitttini; a lar?e quantity of water Into his can. and I said : 'That la enough, sir,' and he pot off the cart and in sulted mo, and I knoeke.l hi n down. Well." said he. "do yon think I couid ever beeo-ue a Christian?" ThRt man find in his soul the trace of the Lord Jesus, but outside he was lull of thorns, and fu!l of brambles, and full of exasperations, but he could not hear the story of a Saviour s mercy told witho.jt hav ing the tears roll down his cheek. There was loveliness within, but rousrbness outside, mlexican cactus all the time. But I remember in boyhood that we had in our father's tiardi-n what we called the Giant of Battle, a peculiar rose, very red nnd very fiery. Suirgeetive flower. It was called ths Olant of KattlA. And so In the irarden of th. Lord we find that kind of flower the Pauls and Martin I.ut hers, the Wyelifs, the John Kniijud jri.-ints of Kittle. What in other men Is a spark, in thm is a conflagration. When they pray, their prayers take Are ; when they suffer, they sweat trreat drops of blood : when they preach, it is a pcutc.-ost ; when they flifht, it is Thermopylas ; when they die, ft ts martyrdom (riants of battle. You say, "Why have we not more of them in the church Of Christ at this time?" I answer your ques tion by askin? another. "Way have we not ttoreCrora wells and Humboldts in the world?" God wants only a few (riants of battle. They 4o their work, and thev do it well. But I find also In the church of God a plant that I shall call the snowdrop, very beautiful, but cold. It is very pure pure us the snowdrop, i-eautiful as the snowdrop and as cold as the snowdrop. No special sympathy. Tiiat kind of man never loses his patience ; he never weeps, he never Sashes with tauter ; he never otters a rash Word. Always cold, always precise, always passive beautiful snowdrop, bnt t don't llks nim. I would rather have one Giant of Bat tle than 5000 snowdrops. Gtve me a man who may mnke some mis takes in his ardor for the Lord's scrvioa tat her than that kind of nature which spends fcs whole life In doing bat on thing, and that Is keeping equilibrium. There are snow drops in all the churches men without any sympathy. Very (rood ; they are in the garden of the Lord ; therefore I know they ought ts be there, Srif ahvuvs snowdrops. You have seen In some places perhaps a antury plant I do not suppose thero is snea in this aouss who has srsr aoon doi than one oentnn, ni.-t . .. . . when you see th. wntu d tions are sttrreZ You Sof t.ul ' - lor a whole century, and tt will T 7 r 'another h "ej 7elr." W1? have to tell you that lnthl. 5 1 church, spoken otto my Uxt UreV' It' tury plant. ' Wan oen- J ,(tRth.or6d "Pto bloom from n th. Cnnst, a crimson flower blnnH . T.W and blood on the leSSftb. Z&ion flow?f 0wi1; ithtCeUiSr7 plaut of eternity oml .I?'1 f!om tbe nortn- ai wtods from thi outh and winds from th. Lid this flower throoh all KacKu. " " ' s!.W.Vr," ""Nioons knew. S-ar. the wool, earth would lor. Bm toa Thou, the Christ of all the a,res, hast rar ments stnellm of myrrh and aloe, sia out of the ivory paiaoes. eaa" I KO further and say the ohureh of Christ ta appropriately compared to a irarden be ca.. of ,t thorouB-h irrigation. There cat be no luxuriant garden IM,U plen.ruf water. 1 saw a garden In th. midst of the desert a:wd th. Kocky mountains. I said. How is it possible you have so man? flowers, so muoh rich fruit, in a desert for miles around?" I suppose soma of you hav. soen those gardens. Well, they told me they had aqueducts and pipes reaching up to th. hiils, and the snows melted on tha Sierra Nevada na l the Kooky mountains and then poured down in water to those aqueducts "f " .kept the fields In Kreat luxuriance d "ft or Chr-'-M1 i?,mJ''"-how the t. , , , ?' ! AU "round it Mi. barrenneii of sin and the barrenness of th. woTS Tout our eyes are nnto the hilta. from whenS oometh our help. There i.' a river ?h. streams whereof shall make glad the cttr of frnm ?'-ilh" fUn,,n-n of Pn,an,irreami from Lebanon. Water to slake the thirst ZTV?rlt''y thB ",lntin'f' ""ter ,o wUh " lMn' w'" t toss up in fountain, under the sun of rurht-.ansnes, ,lntil vou can e. ...c re..i',ow around the throne " . "''"j'r"11 in,a 'nr,1"n ' Brazilian cashew nut. and 1 saw the luxuriance of those Kar dens was helpel by the abundant supply of water. I came to it on a day whn strangers were not n ltnitted, but by a strani:. coinci dence, at the moment I got in, the king's chariot passed, nnd the gardener went up on the hill and turned on the water, and it cam. Hashing down the broad stairs of stone until suuli-ht and wave in gleesome wrestle tum bled at my f-ot. And so it is with this garden of Christ Even-thing comes from above pardon from above, peace from above, com fort from above, sau.-tiilcnUon from above Streams from Lebanon. Oh, the consolation in this thought ! Would God that the garden ers turned on the fountain of salvation until the place where we sit and stand might become F.lini with twelve wells of water and threescore and ten palm trees. But I hear His sound at the garden gate. I hear the lifting or the latch of the gate, Who comes there? It is the Gardener, who passes in through the garden gate. He comes through tlis path of the garden, and He coni.-s to tiie aged tnau, and He savs "Old man, I come f) help thee ; I come to strengthen thee. Down to hoary hairs I will , shelter thee ; I will give thee strength at the time of old a-.'e. I will not leave; I will never fors il-e thee, peace, broken hearted old man ; I will be thy consolation forever." And then Christ, tiie Gardener, comes up another path of the garden, and He sees a soul in great trouble, and He says, "Hush, troubled spirit ; the sun shall not smite thee 1 by .lay. nor tne moon by night ; tha Lord ! snail preserve thee from all evil ; the Lord j shall preserve thy soul." And then the Gar I den"r cornea up another path of the garden, i nnd He comes where there are some beautiful I buds, and I say, "Stop, () Gardener ; do not I break tl.em o f." But He breaks them off, ; the be.nitilul bu Is, and I see a great flutter ; among the leaves, and I wonder what lie is doing, and He says "I do not c.me to destroy thi-sc flowers. I am only going to . plant them in a h'gher terrace and , in the garden around My pal j ace. I have come into My garden to gather lilies. I must take back a whole cluster of 1 rosebuds. Peace, troubled soul ; all shall be j well. Suffer the little children to come unto Me and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." Oh, glorious Gardener : of the church ! Christ comes to it now, and , He has a right to come. We look into tbe face of the Gardener as He breaks off the bud, and we say : "Thou art worthy to have them. : Thy will lie done." The hardest prayer a ; bereaved father or mother ever uttered "Thy will be done." Put you have noticed that around ever I king s garden there is a high wall. You may , have stood nt tho wall of a king's court anl ! thought. "How I would like to see that gar i den !" and while you were watching the gardener opened the gate, and the royal I equipage swept through It, and you caught .' a glimpse of the garden, but only a glimpse, ; tor then the gates closed. I bless God that this garden of Christ hai pates on all sides ; that they are opened by 1 day. opened by night, and whosoever will j may come in. Oh, how many there are who die in the desert when they might revel In the garden ! How many there are who i are seeking in the garden of this world that satisfaction which they can never tlnd ! i It was so with Theodore Hook, who made ' all nations laugh while he was living. And yet Theodore on a certain day, when in the i midst of his revelry he caught a glimpse of his own face and his own apparel in the mirror, said : "That is true. I look just as 1 a:n lost, no'iy, minii, soui ami estate, iosi : Ami so it was with Shenstone a! -out his gar den, of which I spoke in the beginning of my sermon. He sat down amid all its beauty and wrung his hands and said, "I have lost my way to happiness ; 1 am irantic ; I hat. everything ; I hate myself as a mad man ought to. Alns. so many in the gardens of this world are loosing ior that tlow6r they never can find except in the garden of Christ i babvlAutial comlort will not grow in nature', barren .oil. All we r.n boaai till Canst we know Is vanity and ton. How many have tried all the fountains ef this world s pleasure, but never tasted of th. stream from Lebanon ! How many hav. re veled in other gardn toheirsoul apiin, hut never p-'icl i-' -ie flower trom the garden of our God ! I swing open all the gates of th. garden and invite you in, whatever your his tory, whatever your sins, whatever your temp tations, whateer your trouole. lhe invita tion comes no more to one than to all," 'Whosoever will, lot hnn come." Tne flowers of earthly gardens soon taoe hnr blessed be God. there nre garlands that I ne-ver wither, and through tne grace of Christ ' Jesus we may enter into the joy9 which are proviuea ior us at uiw nui ---., come into the garden. And remember, as tne closing thought, that God not only brings us into a garden here, but it is a gar den all the wav with those who trust and love and serve Him, a garden all through th. struggle of this Uie. a garden all up the slope of heaven. 1nireeverlas-.ini sprlni asi-tsa And never witherinz nowars. Diath, like s narrow stream. oiv'OS 'mat heaveniy Imil fro" utt'- I have no f ar of what is called for h tin- insviict of mankind. I Tlere is no better excels in the world than xc-f s of gratitude. . .... Growling at the times will not nil the nuTtre on your tarm. tSticct-s." Is on the hilltop, you cannot eet thfie without cl-nibiujf. Tim 1 rettiest blossoms do not always iitil 1 tbe swe -test honey. A furce"9f ul hypocrite is never a suc cess at enyttiing el.-e. If it rained porridge the tl rirtless wnulil have no spoon. IS very thin jr ese of um melts Into eternity without nsisance or com- i plaint. Why does not munr ytuiy because he Is sinful and ducorJact. Archiinedfs sits iu histoiy crowned ! f. rever with that (f ilden crown oT '. Hiero by means of which he discovered ! t.b law of tiuecific gravities. Ill fares the party to hastening ins a prey, when tinsses grow lnsoleut and principles decay. imh. hand of an incxoerlenced per- ' son a pen w more dangerous than a gun. j There's crape on the door of the ' whole world. i Do Ihey call a white He because the ! dirt shows on it so easily. i ne who deserves nothing baa so right to complain of anything. Mat OK GOOD CHEEK. Thcmgt itorm, may come to gloom the xl " we song bird's happy lay. rudely bow th, lovely flower, "t were erstwhile so fair and gay. Be of good cheer, ' The sun is near And soon shall shin, again, my dear. Tben shall the ,ky once more be blu-. And gemmed with - .us,, .weeny sing one more. sparlin drops of rain. ""we" look lovelier than bjfura. Be of goo J caeer, The sun is near, en in the darkest hours, my dear. Though many sorrows crowd your path As through this che useful world you go. Though hope seems dead within your bread And love and friendship cor less grow. Be of good cneer. The sun is near, Gld just behind the clou is. my deaf. x And sometime, when your eyes are fuU Of tears, behold! a rainbow bright, In all the rarest hues e'er worn By gem or flower, shall meet your tight, Be of good cheer, The sun is near, Kich in the gold of heaven, my dear. mu iaoettbritr, ,i Detroit Fret Press. AVERT PECULIAR CASE. At the time it happeuoJ thirty Tears ago I was a bachelor, living in a draw ing room communication by foldiu doors with tho bediootn behind it, not a i undreJ miles from the Regent Circus ione ol the furniture was my own save one or two easy chairs, a writing table and a rather shabby, dilapidated old bu- eau or escritoire a relic of my grand fathers, I believe, and preserved by me as representing pretty nearly all the property I ever inherited. It stood in the darkest corner of the sitting room, though near one of the two long Freur-.i windows, I seldom went to it, using- its numerous drawers, pigeon-holes, eto., only as receptacles for old receipt--, bills, papers end a few odd accumulations ol no value, which, for some reas-ins, 1 did not wish to destroy. The key to its circular top I had, with reprehensible carelessness in such matters, mislaid for weeks. This gave me no concern. could look for it when I wanted it that was enough. Other lodgers were in the house, which was kept by a retired butler and his wife, who, with thre crvante, attended on the inmates. A young man's life in London, with out his being the least ut.i.eady, fre quently involves him in late hours when ue has a large circle of acquaintauces. It was so with me, especially during one particular season. Operas, theaters, uppers and dances crowded so thick and fast upon each other that, for nights to gether, I never had more than turej or (our hours in bed always having to be up early. Then, by degrees, w hen I sould turn in in reasonable time, I could not sleep, and on this account even the thought of a long biclit in bed gradually became a terror to uie. The fact is, my nervous st stein was becoming thoroughly uastrung, though at that time I did not know what that meant. Certainly I never thought of it ns an illness, and equally certain wou'd have scouted -any dea of seeking advice about it. In addi'.ion, another thing was worry ing rae greatly. For the past monta or more I felt convinced X was being robbed. I did not possess much jewelry, but I whs constantly niissmg certain little trinkets and small articles. Anion:; others a silver match box, a lnrgc croco dile leather, gold-mounted cigir case, a pair of gold sleeve links, a small locket, containing soma of my mother's and father's hair, a set of studs, a pearl breastpin, and the like. Also a pocket letter or card case, which I well knew contained two 1 Scotch bank notes unusual money, not easily forgottou. I felt sure that with every allowance for careless habits these and many another similar object had vanished in the most uuaccountable way. Search high and low as I would they were not to be found wywhere in my rooms. I had lived there nearly two years when this vexation beban, and I knew not whom to suspect. It was horribly awkward and most unpleasant The landlord and his wife bore unimpeach able characters, and I could never have looked either of them iu the face again bad I breathed the faintest suspiciou of their honesty. Three other men, two of whom I knew slightly, were lodging iu the house, as I have said, but as to sus pecting them of this petty larceny the Idea was out of the question. Xo, it must be one of the servants. But which? One of tho three was a ltd of sixteen. Ht was a newcomer, truly. The two women ere in tho house when I took up my quarters there respectable, "elderly parties."' I did not know what to do for the I T.. 1 i. .. - . . ' , r 1 sible, ana even to uo tne same witu all ' my drawers, writing ta'.ilc, war-Jrohe, etc., now, after never having previously turned a key on auythiug, would be at once to cast a slur on the establishment. Besides, I never could teil exactly when I missed this or that article, because, ss I repeat, my careless ways had often led me to imagine that I had lost a thing when I merely mislaid it. Premitly the idea occurred tome that I would set a trap. I left a small sov ereign purse in a corner drawer of the dressing-table, whence I could dec'are many trinkets and valuables had been purloined, but thero it remained. I 1 ab if led it. rartiallv covered it with other . . t as if by accident, or as if it had j bce forKotteD. yet it was always forth- cooing whenever I looked. I put a solitary I sovereign on a corner of the mantlcpiec; I the housemaid twice drew my attention to the fact that the coin was still lying there. No, nothing that 1 ever placed as a bait disappeared. The depredations were confined to such objects as I hadn't been thinking about until I wanted them. The month was August, the nights hot and sultry and less thnn ever conducive: to sleep. I had nothing to do that even ing, and, although I turae I in early, it vj with tha usual result. The clock Ml just struck one, and I had been It bed sinoe elevon without closing in ryes. It wss tho old ttory; I was ac lustomed to it. Suddenly, amid the host Df perplexing and even awe-inspirina thoughts whirling through one's brain under these conditions, I remembered that pocket letter-case containing the two 1 Scotch bank notes. Where wai it I I had not seen it for weeks. Afre restlessly striving to drive away the da ' lia t0 up ,ad it ma,tercd me, ,D4 0ut 0f fce4 i ,praag. For fully aa hour I carriad oatho auast, tut . all la r .Tery conceivable corner, drawer and pocket was ransacked. The key of the escroitoire had been mislaid, so I could not examine that; but I knew it contained little else but papers. At length, entirely exhausted, irritated ad fevered, and with the chamber cau dle expiring with a splutter, I flung my self on a couch in the drawing-room. Dawn had not yet broken, but in a few minutes, as I lay there coiled up in waf dressing-gown, I unnpectedly fell asleep arestlea.', dreaming sleep, full of fantastic, weirdlike indescribable shapes. When I awoke it was daylight, though the room was still shadowy and obscure, save in one spot close to the Ion z win dow, where tbe Venetian blind was par- ' :..it j . . , . . . . ' nauy raiseu tne wmaow nearest mat dark corner occupied b-y the old escri toite. The bead of the couch wai to ward the mantelpiece, but almost facing the d'ior from the lauding on the further side of the wall. At the moment I opened my eyes with a feeling of relief at having just escaped some visionary peril, to my amazement I saw that door slowly open and the figure 1 of a man stealthily entering it. It did not make tbe faintest sound on its ! hiuges, nor did he with his footstep j not so much as the creaking; of a plank. I The light in that part of the room was j lar too dim to allow of my seems; what) he was like. His face was slightly averted, also, and except that the gen ' eral looks of the man seemed to be not altogetlu-r unfamiliar, I could not in the least tell who he was. The first impulse. of cuur-e, was to sit up and call out, but for some inexplicable reason I restrained it peraaps because the thought instantly crowed my mind that here was the thief, anil upon that I suppose I rapidly con cluded to watch him, and pretenned to bu still sleeping. However this may be, I did not move as I observed him creep noiselessly across the loom to the end of the mantelpiece farthest from that where I was lying. He appeared not to notice me, and after feeling for a moment between the edge of tho looking glass and the wall by the mantel shelf, ho took something away, and instantly crossed back to the win dow by the escritoire. He passed the little gap of light so quickly into the da.k corner that I still tailed to recog nize him. Then I could dimly make out that he was apparently unlocking the lumbcrin r piee-s of old furniture, though Hill without making the slightest sound. 'Ho' hot'' thought I, '-my fine fel low, noiv I've caught you, have If You have found tho key, and are going to exercise your calling in that direction, eht Well, there's not much that is worth your attention there; you won't find that a profitable hunting ground I" i I was not long, you may depend, in coming to a determination. While he was still fumbling at the escritoire I rose, and, stealing softly up behind him, suddenly seized him by the back of his collar. He en leavorcd to writhe out of my grasp, but I turned him round so quickly that we both staggered and fell ou the floor in a huddle 1 heap together he undermost. In tiie fall I struck I my forehead severely against something, probably a projecting chair. For the moment the blow seeir.el to blind me; but as we had rolled over into the gap of light from the window I caught sight of his fs:e, turned up as it was toward mine, and I saw whose facs think you? Wny; no other than my own ye?, my very onn, as I well knew it in the looking-glass. i That oae instant of amazement and consternation in which, as by a flash, I : made this recognition, was follo.vel by a total oblivion of all surroadingt. Tho face and figure seetne 1 to fade away be neath me and to vanish with my con sciousness. ; How long I lay prostrate, face down ward on the floor, I know not; but in that position I found myself when my bewildered senses slowly returned. For a.vhile, f course, I could lemsm'icr nothing how I camo there or what had brought me to such a pass. Oaly very ' slowly did the circumstances recall themselves. What on earth did they ; mesu? My forehead was unmis takably cut and still bleeding; indeed, thee was a patch of congealed blood oa the carpet plainly visible in the broad flood of early sunlight now streaming in beneath the half-raised blind. Had I been dreaming? More likely I had had a tit; anyhow, I was so utterly bewildered that it was some time before my thoughts became coherent. Then alarmed and fully conscious for the first time in my : life that I must be seriously ill or labor ing under some mysterious mental aber ration, I rose from the floor and sat down in an adjtceut chair. j As my eyes wandered vacantly around they fell upon tho circular top of tha old ' escritoire. It was practically open. Some one had been at it, then; that was ' ! clear. That was no dream, no fancy scarcely due to a fit, oco would think at least, not of the sort I had tremblingly thought of. Yes, aad there was the 1 missing key in the lock. When these I facts had been fully broken in upon my i cob-webbed brain, they led to but one j I ides. Acting upou it, I pushed the lid j ' full open, nnd with the rapidity ol thought pullc 1 out one drawer after aa , other, aud there, in most of the n, were j deposited a lot of the artieles and o'j- jects I had so long missed there, in this neglected, usless piece of old fur , niturc? I turned them all out in a con- , fusion worse confounde 1 than m) thoughts. But there they were almost every one; cigar case, silver match box, trinkets, locket and pocketbook contain ing the Scotch bank note. j Then how on earth had they come U bo in this place? A thief would hardly have stolen thein to conceal them thus in my ov.-u apartments, unless unless ' and then, very reluctantly, slowly, and . at first but vaguely, did I arrive at the conclusion unless tbe thief was myself! Verily, this was an alar.uing suoposi- i tion, and confirmed my worst dread. I must be su.Tering under some frightful, inexplicable brain disease, for that I had j done this thing I was wholly and totally UUUIUKIUU1. j For days and days, however, I toak no action. I hesitated to breathe a word j of the extraordinary affair to a soul. Who would believe it? Everybody would say I had gone out of ray mind I thought so myself. I doubted if any doctor would accept as veracious this wild ac count of my dread awakening to the truth. Yet, as I knew it to be the truth, I set this record of it down while it was all fresh in my memory, and eventually, being unable any longer to bear the hor rible suspense and perplexity ia which the strange experience had left me, I put it before a medical friend. ..Jo say Baipaakahit Mtoauhmant. ha believed every word of it. Then, after answering his endless, searching ques tion., and when he ba 1 listened to suc'a verbal additions to the narrative as I eould give him, he did not d.ubt oni single point. "Tea," ha said, "among other m pUcstiama, tb praJiy have bsea walk iny i ywnr sleep aad yourself secreting the varioBS articles front ti.ne to tira;. The key, to wit, of th. escritoire, waicii yea imagine to hav. beea th. objeH takea froa behind the loociag-gi&ss, by the fig-are yoa fancy yoa saw, hsd bean placed there by yoar own hand. Your raia retained soma dim perception of ywur having done so, and the disorderel condition of your nervous system ac counts for that perception assuming the stupe of a figure resembling yourself, and ia a state of partial unconsciousness yoa dashed upon your imaginary bur rlar your own ghost, in fact fell and fully restored your senses to their equi libnum by that rap on your head. How ever, it is enough for you if I teil you that your nervous system is wholly broken down, and that if yon don't takn a long holiday, go into the country, and for the next three or four months lead a perfectly regular, quiet life, I won't an swer for the conse iuencas. Ko, I shall give you very little medicine. Fresh air, quiet, and regularity are the only drug! vou stand in need of." His advice was folio we 1 to the lettet, for I was thoroughly frightened. Thirty years hive passed ; I have long been mar ried, and I havo never missed a single piece of property, largo or small, since that extraordinary August night. A.IU Vu- Ytar-Rjund. Kinjs la the Aies. The first historical mention of rings is in the book of Genesis, and then a ring was not a mark of serf,! ui, nor a mare orna ment, but badge of authority. Wa read how when Paaraoh confided the charge of all Egypt to Joseph ha too' his ring from his linger and gave it to the youth as a token of the authority ha bestotved upon him. From pre-historic times signet ring of silver, gold and broaia wera part of tho apparel of tha wealthier E gyptiau, and even tha lower orders wore riugs of ivory and blue porcelain. Kings are not mentioned in Homer, aad do not appear to have been introduced into Oreeca un til a later age, says toe Illustrated Amer icin. Herodotus tells us all the Baby lonians used to wear rings, and the fash ion soon spread from tha Ent into Ea ropo. Ia tho time of Solon every free man in Greece wore a signet ring, either of gold, silver or bronze. To prevent counterfeits, a law was passed forbidding any seal engraver to keep the imprdssiou of any seal ring that ha hai cut for a customer. Rings soon became fashionable, how ever, as ornaments, precious stones wera engrave! in them, aud daadios wore two or three at the same timo. Their usa gradually cxtendo I to women, who wora them of a-noer an J ivory. The Spartaa rings were of iron, as consorted with tha stern simplicity they allude I. Tbe use of talismtuic rings appears tt have been general amjng the ancients,as charms against disease, personal danger, witchcraft, etc. Medicated rings wera also believed to cure divers complaints and to counteract the ejects of poisons, -to. One-Horse Power. When men first bejin to baenim fa miliar with the methods of measuring mechanical power, they often speculate oa where tha breei of horses is to ba found that can keep at wor! raising 33, 0,)J pounds ona foot per minute, or tha equivalent, which is mora familiar to soma mechanics, of raising 333 pounds 100 feat per minute. Since 33,000 pounds raised ona foot per minute is called one-horse power, it is natural that people should think the engineers who established that uuit of measurement based it oa what horses could really do. r t the horse that can do this work does not exist. The horse-power unit was es tablished by James Watt about a century ago, and the figures were fixed in a curi cus way. Watt found that the average horse of his district could raiso 22,00 pounds one foot per minute. At that time Watt was employed in the manu facture of engines, and customers were so hard to find that all kinds of artificial inducements were necessary to induce power users to buy steam engines. As a method of encouraging them Watt offered to sell engines reckoning 33,000 foot pounds to a horse-power. And thus he was the means of giving a false unit to one of the most important measurements in the world. Rider and Drittr. Tall lliiil lin,-s. Tall building are not of moJern ori gin. In Edinburgh, where houses stand ing on a declivity were higher on one sida than the other, one is said to have been fifteen stories altogether in height. All, however, wera burned down in a great fire which happened in 1700, after which building of twelve stories in height were substituted. Sew York JWif. A Iry-Land Fis'i. C. F. IlolJer tells of how, some rears ago. a detachment of troops doing duty in Africa came upon a live! stretch of country, perfectly dry and devoid of the least suspicion of moisture, yet while they were digging holes for the poats of their tents one of the number unearthed a fih, dry as a chip a long, eel-like member of the finny tribe, coiled in a ba!l,seeming!y encased in a mud cocoon. The fish was supposed to be mummified and was taken as a curiosity. Finally, after the lapse of several weeks, it fell into the hands of a naturalist, who placed it in water. The mud of the cocoon slowly dissolved; the fish gave a gasp and was soon swimming about at a lively rate. Here was a singular example of a fish living out of water. It belonged to a group known as "lung fishes," the member) of which have the peculiar faculty of migrating overland and of being able to exist not merely for dt7S but for months out of the water. At certain seasons the small lakes and ponds of the "Dark Continent" dry up, and, were it not for some provision which enables these fishes to live through this dry season it is evident that they would have long since become extinct. Ia this case, as in ail others where nature is interested, provisions have been mads by which this curious fish either creeps overland to other streams or lives in a semi-desiccated state until the return of the wet season. St. Louis Bspublie. Cotton waa first exported In 1785. "WAITING FOR THE ANGELS. BT MABQARET E. 8tXOSTBn, Waiting through days of fever Waiting through aights of paia, Fi,r tha waft of wingv at the portal. For Me sonnd of songs immortal. And tha breaking of life's long chain. The tai-ks that so often taxed her, The children she held so dear, 1 he strain of the coming and going-, The stress of the niendiug and sew ing. The burden cf many a year. trouble her now no longer. She is past the fret and care. Ou her brow is the angel a token, Tbe look of a peace unbroken. She was never before so fair, l'on set, she is waiting tbe angels. and we we are standing apart. For ns there are loss and sorrow; For her is the endless morrow, and the reaping time of tbe heart. FOLLOW. BT CT.ARA THWAITES. Follow the pong-bird's flight Into the far-off bine. Caroling up the height in its ecstasy, but who May follow tbe spirit upon the road Which leads to tha realms of joy and God? follow the river's flow Unto tbe wide, wide sea; There the white sails come and go. And the winds blow fresh and free. But who may follow the souls that move Into the ocean of God's dear love? Whither tbe rivers come, Thither the rivers turn. And the spirit ior its home In the heart of God doth yearn; For tbe children of God can only rest. In fulness of joy, upon His breast. 3GIXG TO THE GREAT FAIR. Of conrpe every one who can visit .he rreat Fair will do so. And in or ler that all onr readers may have ex traordinary lacilities we have made ex raordlnnry arrangements which may ie fouud apon an other patre. But hot is Lot what we wish to talk about nst now. Neither are we at present x nrerni'd aliout the routes we shall 'she; rather are we interested in the tmount and kind of Daggage which we .ill carry. There are, first of all, two points to e settled: Wbat we can do without, tnd wLat we mnst have. Very obviously we can do without Inery of every description. Jn all the uuUitiides that will tbroiig the great t hitr Citt, there will not be one jier ton who will care, or, probably, know inything that any visitor may choose to rear. There will be so many "ont at dish" costumes from all nations be neath tbe sun that none of them will ittrart a glauce save as they may he sonsidered objects of curious interest, ike the other exhibits. Therefore ivtry thing that we carry should be nurely for service. All jewelry save that which is plainly useful should be eft at home. A wutoh is now so in lispeueable that it no longer ranks as in article of luxury; neither dj sleeve inttons, collar buttons, a plain, strong aroocb, a wedding ring, or a single watch guard. But ntckluces, rinrrs, oractdets, or ear-rings, aro all o nioch iniierfluons bother. The police ar rangement at Chicago may be ever so sxcelleut, bnt there will be theivea nongh to outwit them if people are nil v enough to provide the bait. Chicago is said to be a very hot City n summer time, therefore we shall seed thin under-clo'.bing, though sl it ays of wool. It is also liable to very Hidden changes of weather and to high winds, therefore we shall need some sxtra clothing. To carry the things really essential we shall need either a rery large valise, or a small trunk. The latter is best Ix-canf e that we shall save to give to the btipgage express, ud we might be tempted to carry the ralise, notaithstanding that every un necessary fatigue must be carefully (voided. A woman who spent a week at the Centennial F.X csition in Philadelphia in 1.H7G is ftoinr to Chicago in Jcne, snd tells us her plans based on ex perience. " I shall take," she says, " a steam r trunk, such as passengers to Europe ase in their staterooms. It is small enough to be light and portable, and to slip nnder the lied in case of my being i'b e to get only a small room. In this trunk I shall pnt a change of night wear and of light woolen under clothing, together with a chamois-skin nnder-waist, and a knitted-wool divid-ed-skirt, as extras for unseasonably sold weather. I shall take as many pairs of stockings as I intend to stay jays, and each shall be of beat make, without seams or darns to vex the feet. 1 shall wear soft, I'ght, flexible shoes, and take an extra peir in the trunk, wearing one pair to day, and the other to-morrow alter nately. A pair of shoes that lias rested over a day ia easier for the feet. These shoes must not be old enough to be shabby, of course, but woe to the poor wretch who attempts to wear new ones! A i air of the softest and th lu cent rnbber shoes goes also into the trunk. An uml rella that may answer for either sun cr rain I mutt take in my hand. "I have bonglit a water-proof cloak of fine English crevelette, and ehall wear it as a duster or rain cloak as may be necessary. A cloth water-proof has many advantages over one of rnbber. Besides this I shall bav a light-weight dark-bine cloth jacket, or cape. "I have two dresses, one of a light weight cloth in a shepherd's plsid; the other a black surah silk, made with two waists: both thin, but one Hack and tbe other white, or of some light color. If the weather bo very hot they will prove Tery useful. Of course no neat woman will go without a good supply of linen collars and cuffs. All rnchings wilt into a dingy melancholy in an honr or two on most Leeks in warm weather, and no smonrit of vari form trimmings will atone for the want of something white about the neck and wrisls. "1 he hat or bonnet shall be as small, ss light of weight, and as inconspicn ons as possible, not only for my own sake but for that of my neighbors, all intent upon s elng something more in teresting than my head-gear. For sim ilar reasons my skirts shall be short and take np as little spact as possible. "As kid gloves are an affliction in bot weather I shall w.-ar silk, taking half a dozen pairs so that I may be always freshly gloved: a little point of dainti ness which I Always claim as my privi lege. The supply of plain, large-sized handkerchiefs should be abundant. Their nses are manifold. All these things are perhaps no more than every one will think of and not nearlv so manv aa the inexpertnoed traveller wonld deem neeeaaarr bnt X ball add to them several things that only an 'old oampuigner" would re nitmlxr. "Of course we must take tire usual toilet articles and to their number shall add a rubber hot-water-bag; an alcohol lamp aith alcohol enough, to fill it twice; a small saucepan; a bottle of malted milk, a bottle of Bovonme. or tome other favorite extract of beef; a toaf-poon and a teacup. When ona is "tired to death" there is nothing so refreshing as a cup of bot beef-tea, or milk, and to get such things at the times when you most need them, even in an ordinary hotel in an ordinary time, Is not easy. In the midst of the prefigure of such days as these Chicago days will be sure to be, will he nearly impossible. With these restoratives, and the means to prepare and serve them ready iu your trunk, much dis comfort may be spared and perhaps an illness prevented. A tiny French coffee-pot ard a pound or so of finely ground coffee, or a few ounces of tea, iu an air-tight jar, would provide an excellent restorative for coffee or tea lovers. A half a dozen towels may be founC useful In illness, also a yard or two oi flannel; while a heavy blanket shawl may be serviceable in several ways. In addition e shall also take a few simple remedies, such as camphor, essence ol peiiperniint, paregorio and quinine. Others will doubtless prefer other thiugs; bnt all will do well to carry a small sa, ply of such remedies as they are accustomed to rely upon for suoli emergencies as a sodden chill, an at tack of sick headache, or one of aonte indigestion, or a sudden cold. Ihese ailicouts being those to which over fatigue, rapid changes of temperature, or irregularities of food, render peo ple most liable. How to prevent illness we shall con sider in another paper. Helen Evertso Smith. PERSONAL. Mps. A. D. T. Whitney, the novelist is a sifter of George Francis Train.aud that one letter in her superfluity of ini tials stands for her maiden name. Lrcr Laroom, who has just died in Boston, began her literary career while a mill girl in Lowell, and this is said to have 1-een the inspiration of tbe most familiar of ail her poems, "Hannah Binding Shoes." She was a warm per sonal friend of Phillips Brooks and Whit tier. It ia said B shop Brooks had a letter from I er while on his death bed, and said "he wished he could go and comfort her." Mrs. Thomas A. Scott, widow of th. late I'resident of the Pennsylvania liailroad, with two of her children and a party of friends, will sail from Phila delphia in a few days for a three years' tonr around the world in a private yacht. Lady Henry Somfrset and Mtsa Will a rd have accepted invitations to speak at the World's Congress of Relig ion at the Chicago Exposition, Sept. 11 snd Lady Henry's subject ia "The Christian Oemo.Tacy," and Miss Willard's, "Christianity snd Woman,' also "Religion and Purity.'' Mrs. Olive Titornb Miller, the well-known writer on birds, did not know one bird from another till she was past middle age. She receive 1 a visit trom a friend who was on enthnsi aslio ornithologist. To entertain this lady, Mrs. Miller took her through Central Park, New York, and Prospect Park, Brooklyn, and made with her various excursions to the suburbs. It was while trying to prove a sympa thetic companion to her bird-loving friend that her own intere t was awak ened. Her ardor and knowledge grew constantly, aud tn-dav she is an ao cep ed authority on all matter concern ing tne feathered species. Mrs. Miller starts this spring on a trip to Utah, California and Yellowstone Park in pursuit of her favorite study. Pit, Frances C. Van Gaskkn has been appointed Assistant Medical In 8ector to the Bureai of Health in t'hiladelphia, after having passed the two civil service examinations with dis tinction. Mr. Hakrison is the only surviving ex-President of the United states; Mr. Morton is the only l.vmg person who has occupied the ofCoe of Vice Presi dent. Mrs. Maroaret Bottoms, president of the International Order of Ring's Daughters and Sons, is a descendant of John Wesley. She is the Wife of a Methodist minister aud has two sons who are Episcopalians, which perhaps aocounts in part for the breadth of her views. Mks. Bradley-Martin is the owner of the crown once belonging to Marie Antoinette. This is a velvet cap with the insignia of royalty enblazoned upon it in precious stones. One of Charlotte Bronte's most inti mate friends. Miss Marv Taylor the Rose Yorkeof "Shirley " and the "M." of Mrs. G.isk ill's "Life" has just died at the age of seventy-six. The first scientific medical journal ever issued by women wiil be published in Ohio. All the work will be done by Women. A mono the notable gatherings tha. will assemble at Chicago this yesr will be a meeting of the Wsman's Dental Association oi the United Mates. This association was organized a year ago by tho women dentists of Puiladelpbia, aud now iucluaes members in all the larger cities of tbe country. THE RED-HOT POKER PLAN'i. One of tbe showiest flowers for mas sing on bill-sides or other situations to be teen from a long distsncs is the Red-hot poker plant, or Tritoma, thus detcriled by James Vick iu the Jour nal of the Poruological Society. "The J'rifoma vcaria is a stately, vigorous plant, sending up its strong flower stems four or five feet in height, snrmounted by a spike of curious red and orange flowers a foot in length, very striking, and by its supposed re semblance to that domestic implement generally known as tbe red-hot poker. Tbe tritcma flowers late in tbe sum mer, nsrj illy commencing iu August in this latitude, and continuing until win ter, an 1 is admirably adapted for form ing large beds or g.oups, the numer ons flame-colored racemes fo ming stately object. The tritoma was snpa pesed to be tender, and for some years we removed plants to tbe greenhouse or pit in the antumn, but lately we have allowed nearly our whole stock to remain in tbe open ground during the winter, and without the loss of a plant." Man must have more tnaa the world before he caa get any real good out ol BUDGET OF FUIL TJ3IOROrS SHUT-CUES FROM VAKIOL'at SOUKCk. Knocked nim Oat Striking; fo iiorter Honrs His Xot a Sajs posable Cass Fatal Valor, Ktc Etc Ct hat slain th. furious hon In Abytsin.ajj dsMrts, Bad faced th. royal Ben jal in the junfUs of tne aast. II ad cut the tnrat of polar baarsla "Qraaq land's icv mountains." . And dmuroe.1 a nuizry grizxly ia tha middle of his leim C bad fought tus pica Jermatous rbiaoo roa ui Africa, Had toyed witn boa constrictors la tha wilds of :4ene;ai. Bail .ncount. e i ta. tarantula, tha rattla tne,p. aD i cougar. But ne said our blaruwi mosquitoes eoul4 giva pointer to them all. -Vrw i or If BtraltL KOT A SUFPOSABLK CASE. "No. Gubbins, you will never be a brain worker." "Why not J" 'Haven't got the tools. STRtCTNO FOR SHORTER BOTTRS. Harry Stayer "Have you heard the latest. Miss Flimsy?" Miss Flimsy "Yes, I heard tha clock; strike twelve." iiunsey't Weekly. He "I am resolved to live no longer If you reject me. You you are my 'ifei Speak 1" She "Well, I don't cara if you take "our life, then. FATAL VALORS "A tough tired at a policemSU vet tew lay with a heavy calibre revolver."' "And what did tha policeman do Did he arrest the tought" "No. Ha arrested tha bullet.'1. fun. . FEARFCX. "Daw'iins looks very pale and anxious o-day." "He is worried. He is to have a ver oaioful operation performed to-night.'" "What's thati"' "He is to have a porous plaster re moved from his back." Epoch. "STTFFICIKNT FOR THE DAT, ETC. Cynical Old Bachelor" What makes Vou grin like an idiot?" Young Happicuss "Oh, I'm the hap piet of mortals I To-morrow I get mar--ied." Cynical "Yes, I suppose you are tha happiest man in town to-day." Tutat Siftinjs. JtrvENtbE PRECAUTION. Anxious Mother "What in the worha did you do during that terrible thunder storui?" Little Dick "I got under a tree." ' "Horrorsl Don't you know a tree ia l most dangerous place in a thunder storm ?" "Oh, I jumped out every time ir thundered." Good Xetci. CITEKRINO HINT CP. "I nevah get an invitation to any Oi the Flashers' parties," said Chappie. 'Well, don't be discourage!, old fel low," said Cyuicus, "you'll g-;t ona osia he-e days." 'You aw think sol" 'Yes. They're going to give a don key part next week and it is almost cer tain that they will invite you.'V a sccca-is. 'Yes,"' said Mr. Henpecked1, "woman Is undoubtedly the masterpieca of crea tion." 'H"m!" said Mrs. n., "then you do think there i- s ue goo I in woman!" "Yes; whf n :ntn was created he wa lonely and niedii some one to talc to him, and woman was created for that purpose, and she's a success." A LBVEr. HttADti) PARENT. A Tale College stil l ant, being hanS up, wrote to his father in New York: "Send me a hundred dollars by retur mail. Ha who gives quickly gives double." The old gentleman repliea by the next, mail, inclosing -$3J, wita the rein irlc that as he had responds! promptly, the $50 inclosed were equivalent to the deir4 $100. Texas Siftingt. JOBNNt'a BBqCEST. "Johnny," said the humorous gentle roan, "give me your little brother. You don't want him any longer, and I'll make a man of him." "Can you do that, mister!" "Indeei I can." "Well, let's see you make one out of me, quicK, before ma comes; then I'll fool her, for she's gone after a stout switch, and '11 be back in a minute. " St. Louis Republic. SAVED I "Well, but Maul" The ateent. minded youth was interrupted by tha horror-stricken girl. "Maud? My name is not Maud 1"' The situation was desperate, yet for. tune did not desert him. "But, my darling Louise, what am . coming around here for it it is not U eventually chaage your name!" She thought, of course, he had pre arranged tne joka and ha thus war saved. riiiia-ielphia Times. MNB TN OERMAN, KOT ONE IN BTNOLrSBI Although she was German she - spoki English, almost perfectly, but uadoi emotion she naturally fell into tue usa of her mother tongue. "Will you give me a kits, "he pleaded gently bending over her. She raised a startled and indignant face to his. "Nine 1" she exclaimed in wrathy nega tive. "Xine I" repeated he, stepping back and s-azing at her in mock surprise "Xinet I'd think myself lucky tf could get one I" Xeis Tork Press. IIow to Wipe the Face. Thousands of people, when drying their faces after washing, wipe then downward that is, from forehead to chin. This is a mistake. Always aa. upward from the chin to tha forehead and outward toward tha ear motions. Never wipe any part of the face downward. PAUadelta Ssctri. aagi. n-wnivam .. in '.nijaa.r-aasjitX'S'J'aT- j