sk ''iSiiEE'11! cLifi B. F. BOHWEIER, THE OONSTITUTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor amd r j: VOL. XLIX MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 5. 1895. NO. 25. CHAPTEIt V. (Continued.) "1 am glad I am not your maid, to have the caro of such precious gems, said Nora smiling. "My dear Miss L'Estrange! What an idea! When you marry and hare Jewels of your own, you will know how to taks core of them. ltring tea, Virgiuie; brinf It quickly." And Mrs. Uuthven npiIil herself t put the papers and letters lying on th table together with considerable method. "Vhnt a charming view!" said Nora, strolling to the window. "Io you know I never was in these rooms before. They were Mrs. Marsdon's. and used not to bs opened, at least, when I was here as I Child." Mrs. Ruthven looked down thoughtful fy. "These rooms are over tho library, are they not?" she asked, "on the same side as the conservatory? I would rath', er look out in any other direction. I shall not soon get over the impression of last night's terror." Here Virginia brought in the tea, ano; Airs. Uuthven, settling herself in a large arm chair, asked Nora to pour it out. "None of them will tell me any par ticulars about how I whs found, or what happened," resumed Mrs. Ruthven. "I fancy that gruff old doctor ordered me to be kept from speaking of it. But yon will not be so unkind! Itesides, I am not to be kept from thinking of my misad venture by his dictum. Tell me, dear Miss L'Kst range, were you there when Mr. Marsden first found me?" "Yes! I was In tho breakfast-room when he was trying to break away from an old gentleman who would keep talking to him, and I heard him say ho wanted to take yu an ice." "And then?" "Oh! then Mr. Winton proposed wa should go and look at the tent; but when we enme to the conservatory, the door was shut and locked. Mr. Marsden was looking angry and bewildered. Then ha suddenly remembered the way by the corridor, and we saw him go past and return imediately to call for help. Ho Helen, Mrs. L'Kstrangc and I went In. She raised your arm, you were lying lika a deail creature, nnd bi gau to fan you." "And who lifted mo from tho divan ?" looking hard at Nora. "No one; at least, not while I was there." "Not Mr. Marsden?" "Oh. no! He looked so white, so dread fully distressed. He stood behind Helen, and kept begging her to see if yon wero hurt. Then the doctor came and sent every one away except the Squire and I.ady Dorrington." "Yes! Hers was the first face I reeog nixed, and then I.ady Dorrington and tho doctor helped me upstairs? It is strange, I cannot quite account for it." "For what. Mrs. Uuthven?" "Oh, nothing: only a curious Impres jion that some one had lifted me up some effect of returning consciousness, I suppose !" Phe fell into n fit of musing. From this she roused to ask a good many questions alwut Winton nnd his old friendship with Mrs. IEstrange, giving Nora a sensation of being gently but thoroughly sifted. Moreover, one or two significant looks and words conveyed tho alarming idea that the clear-sighted wid ow suspected Winton of admiring Nora, or Nora of admiring Winton, which made that saucy young lady vexed and un tnsy. "Well, I suppose I must let her go,' said Mrs. Uuthven, as Nora rose to es cape further cross-examination. "It is so good of you to come and Bit with me. In truth, I wns glad to get rid even of dear I.ady Dorrington, as no one would talk naturally, or let me speak of what is uppermost in my mind." "I shall come and say good-by to yot to-morrow," returned Nora. "I earnestly hope you will soon shake off your nervous ness, though you are wonderfully brave and comiosed." Mrs. Ruthven went with her to tht door, and then again sunk into the fau teuil, where she remained for some timo In deepest thought. Nora L'Estrange attracted her curiosl ty, her evident admiration and liking soothed the little lady's inordinate vani ty, while it overpassed her comprehen sion; she was too keen an observer to be. Her. It was altogether put on, still sha occasionally doubted her sincerity, so contrary was a woman's honest apprecia tion of onother woman, to all her prc Tions experience. Nora's pleasant, Tarying voice and frank looks had a certain charm for her, even while she feared their effect on Marsden. They gave the hard, selfish, fiery, material creature glimpses of possi ble sweetness that would never cloy, of restful affection free from all dross of passion or self-interest. But, perhaps, the strangest sensation excited by Nora, was resentful envy, not of the girl's fresh, youthful good looks, but of her free, un trammeled spirit; every word, every atti tude, was unstudied, spontaneous; she wanted so little, her simple, poverty stricken life, ns Mrs. Ruthven considered it, s-med bo joyous and satisfying, she appeared to haTe no craving for rank 01 riches or jewels. Life, pure, healthy existence, was enough; she had nothing to strive after, or scheme for, or want from others, at least, so she seemed ay, seemed but who could tell what lurked under the seeming? She must have ber cravings, her hidden pnssions, which she dared not show the world. What was she? What difference was there between her human flesh and that of other women! No, she was as yet but half developed, nd how often childish simplicity was but the outer garb of cunning? There was something In Nora IEstrange that puzzled and disturbed Mrs. Uuthven. If she could have found her guilty of any vicious folly, she might have liked her better than she ever liked auything except a lover. As It whs. the balance trembled between lik ing and hatred. "She does not care for Marsden," thought Mrs. Ruthven, her supple form crouched together, her chin resting in one palm, her elbow on her knee, "she ha some unaeountnble fancy for that cold, acornful. Insolent Winton. But Mars nen himself? I am not so eure knout Mm. He has not often encountered la- difference. It may be attractive. How ever, if she cares for Winton ah! my difficulties are growing complicated. I must think. If the faint, vile suspicions that have come to me prove correct, how shall I act? Oh, I will punish, punish bitterly! But I will secure my object vr Then she sprung up and rang for hel maid. "Tate awaj tH tea things. Alk-U Captain Shirley is In the house; i so, tsk him to come to me." "Captain Shirley has not returned, madume. Mr. Marsden bad just asked to see yon, but Miss L'Estrange was going out and he went out with her." "Mr. Marsden asked for me?" "Yes, madume; he said he would bt tack directly." "Take away those things, then," re turned her mistress in a sharp voice. "And I will dress; I shall go down to din ner. It does me no good to bo shut up iere." Half an hour after the lamps in thr boudoir were lighted, and Mrs. Ruthven, in black silk and jet, wrapped in a soft Indian mantle of blue and gold, beneath which she shivered occasionally, was sit ting by the fire. She had scarce taken her j.lace when Virgiuie ushered iu Captain Shirley. "Excuse my dusty boots," he said com ing quickly to her. "Hearing you wished to see me I came at once. I am glad to see you are looking better than I ex pected." "Yes; I am nearly myself," she re turned, smiling graciously, and motioning him to si t down. "When do you return to town?" "By an early train to-morrow. "And I, in the afternoon. Shall I see yon on my arrival?" "If you need my services, yes; but 1 had intended miming over to Ostend to see my sister, who has been seriously III, 1 ought to have gone before." "To Ostend?" repeated Mrs. Ruthven, as If to herself. "But if I can be of any use " "Yes, yon can," she interruptd abrupt ly. "Do you remember a wonderful de tective who was employed by Lady Dart rey to obtain evidence against her hus band In that famous case?" "I do, at least I recollect hearing ol liim." Shirley rose ns he spoke, and rest d his arm on the mantel piece, his face deep in shadow, as the lamp was behind him. "If you will get me this man's address, 1 should be glad." ' "I have not the faintest Idea where to Snd him." "Lady Dartrey's solicitors would tel' you. lie is a private detective, yov know, and I do not want any creature to know that I am employing one on my own account. You must undertake this for me, Shirley." "I will, if you are so anxious for It But I must warn yon that he will be a rostly machine, and, unfortunately, you have not the faintest clew to guide him; ivait until " "Until all chance of discovery has passed by? No, Captain Shirley, I have too much common sense. Find me this xnn, or I shall do it myself." "I will look for him and bring him to yon, Mrs. Ruthven." "I shall be quite content with his ad dress.' "Yon will hear what the police de tective Marsden has sent for has to say?" "I shall follow my own line. No mat ter! But hush, I will speak to you later." The door opened to admit Lady Dorring ton and her brother. "I have sent for one of the best detec tives in their employment to Scotland Yard," said Marsden to Mrs. Ruthven, after they bad exchanged a few words. "And I must beg yon not to leave until you hnve given him your own version of the story and show him the position in which the thief surprised you. The tent remains as It Is nntil he comes! we will keep his coming dark, as the thief, or thieves, will be less on their guard, if they think the local Dogberries only are concerned. "Bat, Mr. Marsden, I really do no think I could bear to enter that horrible tent again! Y'ou do not know "I can well Imagine your condition of mind, let, my dear Mrs. Ruthven, you must not shrink from anything which may tend to discover the scoundrel who not only robbed you, but endangered your life. Let me entreat yon to stay a couple of days longer. I expect the detective officer to-night. I ought to tell you, that in the road outside the Oldbridge gate you know it?" to Lady Dorrington "there was a slight mark, as if a two wheeled conveyance had turned sharply round; but on such a night when vehicles of all kinds were coming and going, it proves nothing." "Y'ou really must not go, Mrs. Ruth ven!" said Lady Dorrington, impres sively. "I will not oppose you, then," said the fair widow, "though I begin to fear It U but lost labor, the search for my jewels." "No, no. I do not give up hope yet," cried Shirley. "Detectives do wonderfu' things." "There goes the gong. I must rah away and dress. You will join ns at din ner, will yon not, Mrs. Ruthven?" "Thank yon, I will." Lady Dorrington and Shirley went oft to their respective rooms, and Marsden, pushing a low ottoman close to Mrs. Uuthven, sat down, almost at her feet. "Y'ou are a shade less pallid than yon were," he said, taking her hand. "Let me see if your pulse is steadier," and he proceeded deliberately to manipulate ber wrist. "I cannot say how awfully cut np I am about this frightful business! If I were a millionaire, and could replace the gems you have lost!" "Even if yon were, yon could not," in terrupted Mrs. Rnthven, leaving her hand in his. "There are associations! " she paused. "I know," aald Marsden "t-oor uiiar-lie-" "Charlie!" she repeated, In ft peculiar tone. "At any rate you will not leave until 1 can accompany you." he continued. "I must stay and see this detective myself." "Very well," and she tried to withdraw her hnnd; Marsden kissed it and let it go. "Did you see Miss L'Estrange safely home?" she asked. "Nora? No. Fortunately Winten turned op, and I gave her over to him It was too dark to lot her go alone." There was a pause, then Mrs. Uuthven tsked, dreamily, as If speaking out of hoc thoughts: "What did the Jeweler In Tarls saj .hat man who was collecting rubles fori a Russian prince was willing to give for mine?" "I don't remember," said Maraden. 'When? When yon were last In Paris?" "Yes. Don't you remember the clasp sf the necklace did not seem secure, and I gave It to the Jeweler that Connt Henri de Meudon recommended Or, was It before yon met me there in Jane?" "Before, I think. I should not hav forgotten, had I heard, though my mind was full of different matter." An ex pressive glance gave point to his words. Mrs. Ruthven looked down with a thoughtful smile. "Well, believe this agent, or jewel merchant, offered something like 1,500,- u" a "umI 'uvvo" 11 "I have always been told so. It Is too uuch to loseH' "It certainly is! I must bestir myself, and find some good investment for that money of yours, which la lying fallow in the Three Ter Cents." "I shall not invest in jewels, at aU vents! The sense of insecurity will nev er leave me." And she shivered. "You ought never to be alone agnIn,K said Marsden, in a low voice. "Weil, you will endure this ill-omened house till Monday, at least, then I will escort yon to town. Is that understood?" "So be it," she returned. "And you will come down to dinner! Vou must not allow yourself to despair! These detectives do wonders, some times." "No doubt But I see the difficulty oi .-ecovering my rubles Is enormous. Once out of their setting (and Mr. Winton says thieves always take them out), how can I swear to them ? How can I Identify them?" "Let ns hopo for the best. Now, 1 anve barely left myself ten minutes to dress. I shall find you In the drawing room, shall I not?" He took and pressed her hand onct more before he went hastily away. Mrs. Ruthven looked after him witl tnxious eyes, then she clasped her bands together and walked once to and fro. Finally she went down to her toilet table and tonched her lower eyelids with Khol, delicately, artistically; took up a shell containing rose-colored powder; but laid it aside again, divided the thick, curly fringe on her forehead to ahow her fine eyebrows, and fastening a bouquet of deep red geraniums among the black lace of her corsage, wrapped her cloak closer round her, and descended to the drawing-room. Tho well-known astute London detec .ive, however, had no more success than the less experienced rural police. He made a careful search through tht rooms. Insisted on Mrs. Rnthven's repro ducing her position in the tent and minutely describing the circumstances of the robbery, and Inquired the length of time Marsden was absent. Finally he hinted darkly that he had an Idea as to the guilty party. "I don't say It's more than a suspl .-Ion," he said to Mrs. Ruthven and Mars den; "but it seems to me it's not Impos sible that some trained hand might have got in among the confectioner's men, and watched his opportunity. You see, if he had the pluck to go straight back to his post, with the jewels in his pocket, and just kept at his work, he'd be as safe as a chnrch. There is no tracing the cloak nnd hat to any one. I have spoken with the men who were here, and they seem all right; but two have gone away. I'll find out all about them when I go back to town. If one or other Is a stranger nken on a job, I'll have to track him." "It seems impossible that any mat would have the daring to do such a deed and then return to his duties in the supper-room!" cried Mrs. Ruthven. "You can have no notion, ma'am, whaf i high-class swell mobsman would dare snd do. It's possible the jewels have gone that way. We must hunt up the thief in London, and especially In the big Dutch towns. There are a lot of Jew precious stone merchants abroad, as would give a long price for such gems and no questions asked. Of course, if they had a clear idea the goods were stolen, they would give notice fast enough, but they would not be too keen to act even on a shrewd suspicion." "You will give notice to all the prin fipal Jewelers at home and abroad, and In the colonies, in case the lost gems are offered for sale?" cried Marsden. "Yes, of course; but there comes In tht difficulty of Identification. Any way, I'll do my best for my own character's sake, nnd the lady's sake; but we'll say noth ing of tha handsome reward yon men tioned, sir; that Is against my princTplcs; but if, when I have done my Mooty' yon like to make me a compliment, that's an other pair of shoes." "Yon may trust me," said Marsden. "And me, too," added Mrs. Ruthrctk, with a sweet smile, whereupon, after en joining the strictest secrecy on his hearers regarding his suggestions aa to the possi ble thief, the highly Intelligent officer de parted. (To be continued.) Bow Turk Pray for the Infidel. The following Is an exact translation from the Arabic of the official prayer of Islam, which la used throughout Turkey and dally repeated In the Cairo "Azhar" University by 10,000 Moham nedan students from all lands: "I seek refuge with Allah from Satav the accursed. Jjl the name of Allah the Compassionate, the Merciful I O Lord of all Creatures! O Allah! De stroy the Infidels and polythelsts, thine enemies and the enemies of the relig ion! O Allah! Make their children or phans, and defile their abodes, and cause their feet to slip, and give them. and their families, and tielr house holds, and their women, and their chil dren, and their relatives by marriage, and their brothers, and their friends, and their possessions, and their race, and their wealth, and their lands, as booty to the Moslems, O Lord of all Creatures!" In all the other religions of even thv eml-clvlllzed nations of the globe there can be no prayer found to paral lei this cruel appeal of Islam to the spirit of Inhumanity. Bulgaria, Da mascus, Lebanon and Armenia may or may not be hotbeds of anti-Turkish In trigue; with such a national prayer Turkey stands self-condemned before the world. Philadelphia Record. 7 f wa V m.r nn, ivinai-lAnnfl .11 riffhfc. am a tlnatph fol AtlvthiniT On eStth. and equal to anything in heaven. People seldom criticise a man s bad handwriting when it comes to them at the bottom of a good-6ized check. If . ali men were absolutely equal, hypocrisy would be crushed out and superseded by candor. Know what thou canst best work at, and work at it like a Hercules. That will be thy better plan. One man prowls about the hard timef, and another works to make times better. That is about the way it goes Young man, don't work for nothing; vou can't make money, nor even any reputation by it. X-luluIIJg Burnt -'O w .-... hath procised, and ye by faith and prayer are fit to receive. We must not let go manifest truths because we cannot answer all questions about them. There never was any heart trniy great and generous that was net also tender aad compassionate. Great mischiefs happen more often from folly, meanness and vanity than from the greater sins of avarice and ambition. TOETUKEI) BY TUfiKS, " I - k MISSIONARY DESCRIBES AR MENIAN SUFFERINGS. Awful Atrocities Committed by Kurd, and Soldier of the Bnltaa-PrleaU MassacredChildren Are Cut In Iw ad Their Jaw. Torn Apart. A Tale of Horror. There does not seem to be much doubt J that the sufferings endured by the wretcnea Armenians are aomeuiins more dreadful than can be conceived VTUBDEBED IX THEIB BEDS. Unprotected and left to the mercy of a pitiless enemy to their physical tor turcs Is added the hopelessness of de spair; the government allows their foei to work their cruel will on women an ;hlldren as well as men. A returned American missionary, Frederick Davis Greene, has written s book that has just been published by the Philo-Armenian Association and scattered broadcast over this country, Jn which a terrible picture Is given ol Armenian sufferings. To show how ob stinately the Turkish Government up holds Its own side of the case and how loth it Is to acknowledge Its own wrong doing, H Is only necessary to consldei that It has had a book printed In New York as an offset to Mr. Greene's work. In this Armenian affairs are barely touched on and the kindness of the Sul tan and his eagerness for his people's ITABHIXO AN ARMEX1AK CHIEF TO PIECES welfare Is treated of In glowing colors. Many of the atrocities described Id Mr. Greene's book are too horrible fot publication. Here are some extracts from a description of the great massa ere at Sassoun, near Moosh: "The government had suspected that the Talvoveeg villages were harboring agitators, and had sent orders to certain Kurdish chiefs to attack the district, as suming the responsibility for all they should kill and promising the Kurds all he spoil. "At first the Kurds were set on and the troops kept out of sight. The vil lagers, put to the fight, and thinking they had on'y the Kurds to deal with, repulsed them on several occasions. Borne of the troops assumed Kurdish dress aud helped them In the fight with more success. Small companies ol Iroops entered several villages, saying Ihey had come to protect them as loytl subjects, and were quartered among DROPPIXO A PRIEST OX BAYONETS. the houses. In the night they arosi and slew the sleeping villagers, mat voman, and child. "By this time those In the other vl' tages were beginning to feel that e termination was the object of the gov irnment, and desperately determine! o sell their lives as dearly as possible "No distinctions were made betweei jersons or villages as to whether the; were loyal and had paid their taxes a not. The orders were to make a cleai iweep. A priest and some leading mei from one village went out to meet ai Officer, taking In their hands their taj receipts, declaring their loyalty ani begging for mercy; but the village wa iurronnded and all human beings pu to the bayonet A large and stronj man, the chief of one village, was cap A TURKISH SOLDIER'S PASTIMX. V tured by the Kurds, who tied htm threw him on the ground and, squatting around him, stabbed him to pieces. "At Galogotan many young men wer i tied band and foot, laid In a row, cov-j ered with brushwood and burned alive. , Others were seized and hacked to deatt piecemeal. I "At another village a priest and sev eral leading men were captured and I promised release If they would tel ' where others had fled, but after telllnf ' all but the priest were killed. A chair Jwas put around the priest's neck anc I pulled from opposite sides till he wat several times choked and revived, aftei which several bayonets were plantec upright and he was raised In the all and let fall upon tnem. I "The men of one village, when fleeing! jqoX the women and children, somi 300 In number, and placed them In a sort of grotto In a ravine. After sev eral days the soldiers found them and butchered those who had not died of hnnger. "Children were frequently held np b (he hair and cut In two or had thell Jaws torn apart. The last stand took place on Mount Andoke, south of Moosh, where some thousand persons had sought refuge. The Kurds were sent hi relays to attack them, and after the besieged had been without food for several days and their ammunition was exhausted the troops succeeded In reaching the summit without any loss, md let scarcely a man escape. "Now all turned their attention U ;hose who had been driven Into the Talvoveeg district Three or four thou sand of the besieged were left In this small plain. When they saw them selves thickly surrounded on all sides by Turks and Kurds, they raised their hands to heaven with an agonizing moan for deliverance. They wers thinned out by rifle shots and the re mainder were slaughtered with bayo nets and swords till a veritable river of blood flowed from the heaps of the slain. Forty villages were totally de stroyed, and it is probable that 10, 000 at least were killed. The lowest estjmate Is 10,000, and many put It much higher." Painless Falls. "It wasn't the fall I moladed," salt ?at, describing has sensation In falling from a scaffold. "Begorra, I'd of gone on travelln' that way forever; it wns the stop at the lnd that Inconvanlenced me." This seems to have been the ex perience Of many who have been pre cipitated from a height; while falling they were conscious of no pain, no ter ror, though perfectly aware of what was transpiring. Mr. Whymper, who has porbaps had more bad falls than any living man, says that he once fell and rebounded from rock to rock In the Alps, and felt absolutely no pain, though he heard himself strike. The mind acts so rapidly that the experi ence of a fall of a few moments will sometimes take an hour to describe af terward. As In drowning, the whole previous life seems to flash with dream like rapidity through the mind, and this gives place by delightful stages to dreamless unconsciousness. Among the ancient Norsemen, an old warrior, who had had the misfortune not to full In battle, usually threw himself from the top of a cliff to gain admittance to Valhalla. The pleasant experiences of those who had fallen and escaped alive may have had something to do with th practice and belief. An Old Roman Bath. The following Is called a "mock mflk ath," and wouldn't be a bad thing to try if It was not named at all: Moke up a dozen cheese cloth bags about a foot square. Fill them with oatmeal and pure white castile soap shaved fine two-thirds oatmeal and one-third soap. Put In the bag a teaspoon ful of borax and some orris root or lavender flow ers, or anything of that kind that you like as a perfume. Have about twelve gallons of water for your bath and make It pretty warm. Use the bag for a wash rag, and you will come out of each bath feeling as though you had the skin of a baby. Of course, one bag will only do for one bath, and the con tents will then have to be thrown away, but the cheese cloth can b washed and used till it breaks In hole Bow Do the Turkeys Know. Says an old Pennsylvania farmer: " Always know when there Is to be a windstorm by watching the turkeys and chickens go to roost each night In calm weather the fowls always roost on their poles with their heads alter nating each way; that Is, one faces east, the next west and so on. But when there Is going to be a high wind they always roost with their heads toward the direction from which It Is coming. There are reasons for these different ways of roosting, I take It When there Is no wind to guard against they can see other danger more readily if they are headed in both directions, but when wind Is to arise they face It be cause they can bold their positions bet ter. But the part I can't understand," he concluded, "is how the critters know that the wind Is going to rise when w mortals lack all Intimation of It" What remarkable places some fear iorue souls choose for the hiding of their money! A New York woman con cealed a thousand dollars worth of diamonds In one of her old shoes lately for fear the burglars would get them. Her hired girl took the shoe to the cob bler's to get it mended, and now that lady mourns her diamonds. A Michi gan woman who bad no faith In banks recently hid her money (one thousand dollars), in her house, whether undet the carpet, or In a cracked teapot, or in an old tomato can, under the kitchen sink is not stated. At any rate, mask ed men got In, bound and gagged hei and took all her money, leaving bet more dead than alive. It would have been more satisfactory to lose the mon ey In a broken bank than to lose It lv that violent way. Made by a Cannon Ball. A man near Doniphan, Ma, chopped down a tree to get at a coon. Then hi found the hole he was watching was made, sot by the coon, but by a can non ball, fired during the civil war. Boiled Sewing Machine. This does not make a very palatable dish, but It gives very satisfactory re sults. A sewmg machine that seems to get out of order without cause Is prob ably dirty, and will fall to give satis faction until thoroughly cleaned, if the works are set carefully into a boil er of boiling hot soap suds they may he quickly cleaned with little trouble. Add a teaspoonful of ammonia to a pall of the suds, and let the machine works stand In this until the dirt Is removed. Then lift out and dry thoroughly with a woolen cloth, and set It In a warm place until every particle of dampness Is removed. Now set It on the stand, oil every part, adjust the belt and the machine will run like a new one. Old clocks that have seemed to outlive their usefulness may be treated in this man ner, and a thorough boiling will oftei cleanse the works and give them a new lease of usefulness. P. DR. T0LP6E. The Brooklyn Divine's Sunday Sermon. Subject : Wing and IIand.M Text: "The likeness of the hands of I, man was under their wings." Ezekiel X., 21 While tossed on the sea between Australia snd Ceylon I first particularly noticed thii text, of which then and there I made memo randum. This chapter Is all aflutter wits cherubim. W ho are the cherubim? An or der of angels radiant, mighty, all knowing, adoring, worshipful. When painter or sculp tor tried in temple at Jerusalem or In mar ble of Egypt to represent the cherubim h mad. them part lion or part oz or part eagle. But much ot that is aa unintended burlesque of tha cherubim whose majesty and speed and splendor we will never know nntil lifted into their presence we behold them for ourselves, as I pray by the pardon ing grace of God we all may. But all the ac counts Biblical and all tho suppositions hu man represent the cherubim with wings, each wing about seven feet long, vaster, more imposing than any plumage that eve floated In earthly atmosphere. Condor in flight fcbovo Colmborazo, ot Rocky Mountain eagle aiming for the noon day sun, or albatross in play with ocean tempests, presents no such glory. We can get an imperfect idea oi the wing of cheru bim by the only wing we see the bird's pinion which is the arm of the bird, but in some respects more wondrous than the hu man arm; with power ot making itself mora light or more heavy, of expansion and con tract ion; defying all altitudes and all abysms) the bird looking down with pity upon boast ing man as he t Mis up the sides ot the Adi rondack, while the wing with a few strokes puts the highest crags far beneath claw and beak. But the bird's wing is only a feeble suggestion of cherubim's wing. The great ness ot that, the rapidity of that, the radiance of that, the Bible again and agair lets forth. My attention is not more attracted by those wings than by what they reveal when lifted. In two places in Ezekiel we are told there were hands under the wings human hands, hands like ours. "The likeness of the hands of a man was under the wings." We have all noticed the wing of the cherubim, but no one seems yet to have noticed the human hand under the wing. There are whole ser mons, wboleanthems,wholedoxologiestwhol millenniums In that combination of hand and wing. If this world Is ever brought to God, it will be by appreciation ot the fact that supernatural and human agencies are to go together that which soars and that which practically works, that which ascends the heavens and that which reaohes forth to earth, the joining of the terrestrial and th oelestrial, the hand and the wing. We see this union In the construction ol the Bible. The wing of inspiration is in every chapter. What realms of the ran-1 oomed earth did Isaiah fly over! Over what battlefields for righteousness, what corona tions, what dominions ofgladness, what rain bows around the throne did St. John hoverl But in every book of the Bible you just at certainly see the human hand that wrote it, Moses, the lawyer, showing his hand in tin Ten Commandments, the foundation of all good legislation; Amos, the herdsman, show ing his hand In similes drawn from flcMi and flocks: the fishermen apostles showing their hand when writing about Oospel nets Luke, the physician; showing his hand by fivlng especial attention to diseases oared) 'aul showing his scholarly hand by quoting from heathen poets, and making arguments about the resurrection that stand as firmly as on the day he planted them, and BU John shows his hand by taking his imagery from the appearance ot tha bright waters spread around the Island of Patmos at hoar of sunset, when he speaks ot the sea of glass mingled with Are; scores ot bands writing the parables, tho miracles, the promises, the hosannas, the raptures, t'-.e consalations, tha woes of ages. Oh, taa Bible is so human, so full of heartbeats, so sympathetic, so wet with tears, so trium phant with palm branches, that it takes hold Of the human race as nothing else ever oan take hold of it. each writer In his own styla Job, the scientific; Solomon, the royal blooded; Jeremiah, the despondent; Daniel, the abstemious ana heroic why, we know their style so well that we need not look to the top ot the page to see who is the author. No more conspicuous tha uplifting wing ol Inspiration than the hand, the warm hand, the flexible hand, the skillful hand of hu man instrumentality. "The likeness of tht hands of a man was under the wings." Again, behold this combination of my text In ail successful Christian work. We stand or kneel In our pulpits and social meetingi and reformatory associations offering prayer. Now, if anything has wings, it Is prayer. It can fly farther and faster than anything can now think of. In one second of time from where you sit it can fly to the throne ol God aud alight in England. In one second of ttms-frjm where ou sit it can fly to th throne ot God and alight in India. It can girdle the earth in ashorter time than you can seal a letter, or clasp a belt, or hook an eye. Wings, whether that prayer starts from an Infant s tongue or the trembling lip of a cen tenarirji, rising from the heart of a farmer's wife standing at the dashing churn, or be fore the hot breath ot a country oven, they soar away and pick oat of all the shipping of the earth on all the sea; the craft on which ber sailor boy is voyaging. lea. prayer can fly clear down into thj future. When the father of Queen Vlctori i was dying, he asked that the infant Victoriu might be brought while he sat up ia bed, and the babe was brought, and the father prayed, If this child should live to become Queen of England, may she rule is the fear of God!" Having ended his prayer, he said, "Take the child away, Bui atf wiio know the history of Eng land for the last fifty years know thai the prayer for that infant more than seventy years it:o has been answered, and with what emphasis and affection millions of the Queen's subjects have this day In chapels aud cathedrals, and sea, supplicated, "God Save the Queen!" Prayer tiles not only acress continents, but across centuries. If prayer had only feet, it might run here and there and do wonders. But it has wings, and they are aa radiant ol plume aad as swift to rise or swoop or dart or cirolo as theTcherubim's wings which swept through Ezekiel's vision. But, oh, my friends, the prayer must have the hand un der the wing, or it may amount to nothing. The mother's hand, or the father's hand, must write to the wayward boy as soon as you can hear how to address him. Christian souls must contribute to the evangelism of that far off land for which they have been praying. Stop singing "Fly abroad, thou mighty Gospel," unless you are willing to give something of your own means to make It fly. Have you been praying for the salva tion of a young man's soul? 1 bat is right, but also extend the hand of invitation tc some to a religious meeting. It always excites our sympathy to see a man with his hand In sling. We ask hlmi "What is the n after? Hope it is not a felon;" or, "Have your fingers been crushed?" But nine out of ten of all Chris tians are going their lite long with theit hand in a sling. They have been hurt by in. oiaerenca ;or wrong laeas ofwnat is best, or it is injured of conventionalties. and the) never put fdrth that hand to lift or help ot rescue any one. They pray, and their prayet has wings, but there is no hand under th wings. From the very structure of the hand we might make np our mind as to some ol the things it was made for to hold fast, to lift, to push, to pull, to help and to rescue. Ana endowed with two hands, we might talcs the broad bint that for others as well as fot ourselves we were to hold fast, to lift to push, topull, to help, to rescue. Wondrous hand! You know something of the "Bridge water Treatises." When Bev. Francis Henry Bridgewater in his will left tW,000 for es. says on "The Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God, as Manifested in the Creation," and Davis Gilbert, the President of the Society, chose eight persons to write eight books, sii Charles Bell, the scientist, chewe as the snf ject of bis great book, "The Hand: Its M Ihanlsm and Vital Endowments as Evinoing Design." Oh, the handl Its machinery be ginning at the shoulder, and working through shafts of bone, upper arm and fore arm, down to the eight bones of the wrist, and the live bones of the palm, and the foar. teea bones of the fingers and thumb, tad edmposed 6Ta'laTyfinth-bf muscle ahd'nerva snd artery and flesh, which no one but AU mighty God could have planned or executed, But how suggestive when it reached down to ns from under the wings of the cherubim! The likeness of the hands of a man was un fertile wings." This idea Is combined In Christ When H rose from Mount Olivet, Ha took wing. All dp and down His life you see the uplifting 4i vinty. It flashed in His eyes. Irs cadences Were heard In His voice. But He was also very human. It was the hand under ths wing that touched the woes of the world Rnd took hold of the sympathies of tho on irics. Watch His hand" beore it was spiked. There was a dead girl in a governor's house, lnd Christ comes into the room and takes ber pale, cold hand in His warm grasp, and he opens her eyes on the weeping house hold and saysf "Father, what are you crying ibout? Mother, what are you crying about?1 Che book saj-s, "Hs took btr by the hand, lnd the maid arose." A follower, angered St aa insult offered Christ, drew the sword (rom sheath (nd struck at a man with tha harp edge, aiming, I think, at his fore head. But tha weapon glancad aside and took oft the right ear at its roots. Christ with His hand reconstructed that wonderful Organ of sound, that whispering gallery ot the soul, that collector of vibrations, that arched way to the auditory nerve, that tun ttel without which all the musi-nl instruments of earth would be of no avail. Thebooksays, HHe touched his ear and healed him." Meets Ing a full grown man who had never seen a sunrise, or a sanset, or a flower, or the face Df his own father or mother, Christ aselsteni the dust from His own tongue and 4rrs the Bust Into an eye salve, aud with Ifls own bands applies the strange medicatotnt, and luadeniy all tne colors ot earth una ssy rusn tn upon the newly created optic nerve and, tne instantaneous noon drove out the ions -light. When He sees the eHn of Msry snd Mar lha He sits do wn and cries with them. Boms say it is the shortest verse in the Bible, but to me it seems, because of its far reaching lym path ins, about tha largest "Jesui wept!" So very human. He could not stand the sight of dropsy or epilepsy or paralysis or hunger or dementia, but Ufa stretches out His sympathetic haud toward it. Bo very, very human. Omnipotent and majestic and glorious, this angel of the new covenant, with wings capable of encircling a universe, and yet hands of gentleness, hand ot help. fulnessf ''The hands of a man under ths wings.' There is a kind of religion in on; day that my text rebukes. There are men and women spending their time In delecta tion overtheir saved state goinr about from prayer meeting to prayer meeting, and from ehureh to church, telling how happy they are. But show them a subscription paper, or ask them to go and vijit the sick, or tell them to reclaim a wanderer, or speak out for some unpopular Christian enterprise, and they have bronchitis or stitch in thesidf or sudden attack ot grip. Their religion li all wing and no hand. They can ft J heavenward, but they cannot reach ou larthward. While Thomas Chalmers occupied th shair of moral philosophy in St, Andrew'i University he had at tho same time a Sabbatb school cla.43 ot poor boys down in the slumi of Edinburgh. While Lord Fitzgerald wiu traveling in Canada he saw a poor Indiat Squaw carrying a crushing load, and he took the burden on his own Bhoulders. That was Christlike. That was "a band under the wing." Tha highest type of religion says little about itself, but is busy lor God and ir helping to the heavenly shore the crew anc passengers of this shipwrecked planet. Such people are busy now up the dark lanes ol' this city, and all through the mountain glens, and down in tho quarries where ths sunlight has never visited, and amid the rigging, helping to taka in anothoi reef before the Caribbean whirlwind. A friend was telling me of an exqulsits thing about Seattle, then of Washing ton Territory, now of Washington State. The people of Seattle had raised a generous sum of money tor the Johnstown sufferers from the flooil. A few days after Seattle was destroyed by Are. I saw it while ths whole city was living in tents. In a publla meeting some one proposed that the monej raised for Johnstown be used for the reliel of their own city, and the cry was Xol Nol Sol Send the money to Johnstown, nnd by acclamation tha money was so sent. N oth ing more beautiful or sublime than that. Under the wing of Are that smota Seartls the sympathetic hand, the helping band, the mighty hnnd of Christian relief for peopls thousands of miles away. Why, there are 100.000 men and womet, whose one business is to help others. Help, Ing hands, inspiring hands, lifting hands, emancipating hands, saving hands. Surs enough, those people had wines of faith and wings ol prayer and wings of consolation, but "the likeness oi the hands of a man was under the wines." There was much sense in that which the robust boatman said when three were In a boat off the coast in a sud den storm that threatened to sink tho boat, and one suggested that they all kneel down In the boat to pray, and the robust man took hold of the oar and began to pull, saving. "Let you, the strong, stout fellow, lay" hold the other oar, and let tho weak one who can not pull give himself up to prayer." I'ray by all means, but at the same time pull with all your might for the world's resoue, an arctic traveler bunting beaver while ths Ice was breaking up, and supposing that there was no human being within 100 miles, beard the ice crackle, and lot a lost man, in sane with hunger and cold, was wading in the Ice water. The explorer took the man Into his canoe nnd made for land, and tha teople gathered on the shore. All the island ers had been looking forth a lost man, and finding him, according to prearrangenient all the bells rang and all the guns fired. Oh, you can make a gladder time among ths towers and hilltops of heaven If you car 'etch home a wanderer! 'In our time it is the hab't to denounce th jities and to spoak of them as the perdition of all wickedness. Is it not time for somj one to tell the other side of tho story and ffi lay that the city Is the heaven of practical helpfulness? Look at theembowered and fountained parks, where the Invalids may some and be refreshed; the Bowery mission, through which annually over 100,000 corns to get broad for this lite nnd bread for ths life to come all the pillows of that Institu tion under the blessing of Him who had nol Where to Hia bead: the free schools. where the most impoverished are educatedi the hospitals for broken bones; the hom for the restoration of intellects astrayj the Orphan House, father ami mother to all Who come nnder its benediction; the mid. Bight missions, which pour midnoon upon tha darkened; the Prison Beform Assocla don; the houses of mercy; the lnflrmariosi the sheltering arms; the aid societies; the Industrial schools; the Sailor's Snug Harbort the foundling asylums; the free dlspensariesi where greatest scientific skill feels the pulse Of wan pauper: the ambulance, the startling Stroke of its bell clearing the way to the place of casualty, nnd good souls like tht mother who came to the Howard Mission, with its crowd of friendless boys picked U6 from the streets, and saying, "if you have a erippled boy, give him to me; my dear boy died with the spinal complaint," and such a one she found and took him home and nursed him till ho was well. It would taks a sermon three weeks long to do justice to the mlghtythincs which our cities are dolns for the unfortunate and the lost. Do not say that Christianity in our cities is all show and talk and genuflexion and sacred noise, Sou have been so long looking at the hand of cruelty, and the band of theft, and ths hand ot fraud, and tha band of outrage that you have not sufficiently appreciated the hand of help stretched forth from the doors and windows of churches and from merciful ins; tntions, the Christlike hand, the cherubiu hand, "the hand under ths Wing.- ." There Is also In my subject the suggestion If rewarded work for God and righteousness. When the wing went the hand went. When the wing ascended the hand ascended; and lor every useful and Christian hand there Irill be elevation celestial and eternal. Ex Sect no h'linan gratitude, for it will not lome. Tnat was a wise thing Fenelon wrote phis friend: "I am very glad, my dear, rood fellow, that you are pleased with one jf my lettorswhlch has been shown to you. fou are righTin saying and believing that I tsk little of men in general. I try to do trach for them and to expect nothing in re- Ern. I And a decided advantage in these rms. On these terms I defy them to dis Ippolnt ma." But, my hearers, the day torn eth when your work, which perhaps no ne has notioed or rewarded or honored, jrili rise to heavenly recognition. While I lava been telling you that the hand was un Egrt'ia wlPT Ot tU9 ehextiblm I waolxouto Fiaiiza that ths wing "was over The tianTT. erhaps reward may not come to you right sway. Washington lost more battles than ho iron, but he triumphed at the last. Walter loott. in boyhood, was called "the Greek lockhead," but what height of renown did le not afterward tread? And I promise you victory farther ynt and Jigher up, If not in this world then in the next. Oh, tha heavenly rest when your lifted handshallbe gloved with what honors, Its Anger enringed with what Jewel', Its wrists clasped with what splendorsl Coma Dp and take it you Christian woman who served at the washtubl Come np and taka It, you Christian shoemaker, who pounded the shoe last! Coma up and take it, you professional nurse, whose compensation never fully paid- for broken nights and the whims and struggles of delirious sickrooms! Come up and take it, you firemen, besweated, tar down amid the greasy machinery of ocean iteamers, and ya conductors and engineers n railroads, that knew no Sunday, and srhose ringing bells and loud whistle never tarned off your own anxietiesl Come up and tnka it, you mothers, who ocked and lullabled the family brood until Jhey took wing for other nests and never ap preciated what you had done and suffered lor them. Your hand was well favored when you were young, and It was a beauti ful hand, so well rounded, so graceful that many admired and eulogized it, but hard work calloused it and twisted it, and self sacrificing toil for others paled it, and many household griefs thinned it, and tha ring which went on only with a push at tho mar riage auar now is too large and falls ofr. and again and again you have lost it. Poor hand! Weary handl Wornout hand! But God will reconstruct It, reanimate it, rea lorn it. and all heaven will know the story of that hand. What fallen ones it lifted npl What tears It wiped awav! What wounds It bandaged! What lighthouses it kimlledl What storm tossed ships it brought Snto the pearl beached haroorl Oh, I am so glad that in tha vision of my text Ezekiel saw tho wing above the hand. Roll on that everlast ing rest for all the tolling and misunderstood and sufTering and weary children of God, and know right well that to join your hand, at last emancipated from the struggle, will be the soft hand, the gentle hnd. the trium phant hand, of Him who wipnth away all leas from, all faces. That.wlll.be the palae of trra King or wlU'-to the poet sung In souit what Scotch dialect : It's a bonnle, bonnle warl that we're livu in tha noo, in sunny is ths lan wa aftea traivel thro', put ia vain we loon tor something to which oor hearts can cling, for Its beanty Is as nacthing to the palace o' the King. JTs see oor frien's await us ower yonder r His gate. Ihen lot us a' ba ready, for, ya ken, it's get tin late. iiet oor lamps be briohtly burnin; lot's raise oor voice and sing. Joon we'll meet, to part nao malr, 1' the pal ace of the King. An Astonished stranger. The admittance of a ierson who ia not a member, to the lloor ot the hnglish House of Commons during a sessimi is an unpardonable ollence in a serjeant-at-arms and generally cause, his instant dismissal. He must know the members, and is pun ished If he makes a mistake. Amus ing stories are told to illustrate the speechless horror with which some members have 1 een struck when an Intruder has, by his own ignoranccor by some inadvertence, been admitted within the svrcd precincts. Many years ago, before Mr. Glad st ne was so well known as he is now, that eminent statesman was si cak ing one day on a not very Interesting sub ect. The late Sir Walter Uart telot was in his usual place at the end of a bench, when a gentleman. leaning across the pa-sage, inquired: "Sir, will, you permit uie to ask you who is the elderly person now addressing the House'" Sir Walter gazed at the man with horror and amazement, and said with scant courte-y, What do you say?" 'I beg your pardon, sir, but 1 do not know the old gentleman.'' At this the Sussex b'ood of the Carttelots was roused. "Sir, are you a member of this House?" "Oh no, sir." "Then what on earth are you doing here?" "Well, I was under the gallery and could not hear very well, so l stepped over." Sir Walter Earttelot's face assumed an expression of judicial severity, but he mixed kindness with judgment. He said to the wretched man, "Hon't move; listen attentively to what 1 am going to say. "You have incured fearful pen alties by doing as you have done, and If the Speaker had happened to re ceive a number of petitions while you wero here, you would have to pay 500 pounds for every time lie said, 'Is it your pleasure that this petition ao lie on the table?' " Tho sfanger turned rjala "JS'ow," said Sir Walter, "attend tome. Cet up quietly the moment I have done speaking to you; walk behind me, and go out at the little door that you see not far from my left shoulder; go down to the division lobby to the door of the JIou-c, and don't stop for a moment till you get to your abode, and never, under any circumstances, divulge the horrible offense which you have committed." The man feebly thanked him, with tremulous knees rose to his feet, and vanished. Having given the stranger ample time to escape, Sir Walter re lated the incident Vj his friends with much humor and relisk Associato with men of gooU quality , if you esteem your own reputation; it is better to bo alone than in bad com pany. Eat to please tbjself, but dress to please others. Xo abilities, however splendid, can command success without labor and persevering application. Sorrow is a kind of rust of soul which every new idea contributes in its passage to scour away. Wo o'ten say things because we can say them well, rather than because they are sound or reasonable. Better one bite at forty of truth's bitter rind than the hot wine that gushed from the vintage at twenty. It is beht to endure what yon can not mend. He is a bad i-olilicr who follows his captain complaining. More helpfnl than all wisdom or counsel is one draught of simplo hnman pity that will not forsake us. Help somebody worse off than your self, nnd you will hDd that you are better off than you fancied. It goes against nn old man's grain to rind his son sowing wild oats, drinking rye and getting corned. The wheel of fortune tnrns round in cessantly, and who can say to himself "1 shall" to-day be uppermost." Prejudice is never easy nnless it cau pass itself oil for reason. A man must stand erect, not be kept erect bj others. I i ijij&rt''. -i-' "'- - i. ,