t '; ALLEN AND CUBA, THE GREAT POPULIST LEADER ALWAYS CUBA'S FRIEND. STEADFAST FOR FREEDOM. THE SENATOR'S PAST PRESENT POLICY. AND A Great Honrt Touohod by Brutal Wrong Would Help a Orowlng Pooplo Revolution an Upward Stop In Life Cuba will Bo Froo. Washington. D. C., April 19. On Marcn 31, the sonnto having under con sideration tho following resolution re ported from the committee on foreign relations: " Resolved, That the president be re Quested. If not Incompatible with the public Interest, to transmit to the sen ate all of the consular correspondence relating to the conduct of the war In the Island of Cuba, tim pmuiittn . people, and other matters relating thereto Mr. Allen said: Mr. President My r.eal for Cuban Independence Is not new born, nor the growth of a mere nlKht. 1 Mpokc for the liberation of the Cuban people when It was by no means a popular thing to do, and 1 recall very distinctly at this time that several years ago the then senior senator from Florida (Mr. Call) and I were appar ently the only persistent and outspo ken friends of the Cuban people In this chamber. We were Indefatlgablo In our udvocacy of Independence und Intervention. We were so persistent that wo incurred the displeasure of many senators, some of whom I am now glad to know have become the sin cere and fearless advocates of Inde pendence. That I may prove the cor rectness of my Btntement, I will refer briefly to the record. ALLEN'S CUUAN RECORD. December 4. 1893, 1 Introduced a res- Hi,'.0"' f wh,c" lh,s ls u Paragraph: That tho government of the United States of America should promptly rec ognize tho revolutionists of Culm, wim are now honestly struggling to secure their Independence of the Spanish gov ernment, as composing an Independent nation and possessing the rights there of according to the law of nations." And In Bpeuklng In Its support at that time, 1 said, among other things: 'I am of the number who believe that this government should promptly recog nize the revolutionists of Cuba and oh Blst them In all lawful ways to secure their Independence of tho Spnnlsh gov ernment and enable them to establish an Independent republic. 1 would not have this government plunge headlong Into a needless quarrel with the Span ish government, but I would lend every assslstance that could be lawfully and properly given to the aspirations of the people of Cuba for a republican form of government, DOCTRINE OP OUH COUNTRY. "I believe It to be the true policy nnd the true doctrine of our country that Whenever a people show themselves de sirous of establishing a republican form of government upon any territory ad jacent to us they should receive our en couragement and support. If our form of government ls the correct one and of that I have no doubt then Its rec ognition or establishment In other lands should be encouraged und, when an opportunity shall present Itself to us to lend this encourngement it should be promptly and effectually given." Speaking to the same resolution Do- cemoer n, is5, I urged Its adoption. February W, 1897, 1 said: "What Is there to prohibit this gov ernment, by proper act of congress, whether it be in the form of a Joint or concurrent resolution, from declaring the acknowledgment of tho existence of the Cuban republic: and would not that be a recognition of the Independ ency of that republic, although as a matter of fact It may not yet have succeeded In repelling the power that assails it?" WOULD RECOGNIZE CUBA. February 28 I introduced this resolu tion: "Resolved, That the president of tho United StateB be, and he Is hereby, au thorized and requested to Issue a proc lamation recognizing the republic of Cuba as It exists under tho constitu tion and form of government proclaim ed at Jimaguaya, under President Cls neros, In the month of May, A. D. 1895, as a free and Independent nation, and according the envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of said re public all the rights and privileges ac corded to the envoy extraordinary and minuter plenipotentiary of the govern ment of Spain." And In Its support said: "The Cubans havo an established re public. It may be feeble, It Is true, but certainly these people are in possession of three-fourths of that Island and Its life ls maintained by their valor. "When we declare that the republic of Cuba Is an independent and sovereign nation, it becomes such In the meaning of International law, so far as we are cocerned, although Its complete Inde pendence of Spain may not have been accomplished. If the conclusion reach ed by the senator from Delaware and the senator from California Is to be ac cepted as final, there are no circum stances under which a struggling peo ple can be recognized as Independent until, unaided and alone, they are able to maintain a government Independent of those against whom they are In re volt. This ls not the Independent gov ernment spoken of and recognized by International law." A HELPING HAND. And again: "Mr resident. I would go farther In tle Interest of humanity than these resolutions propose to go. I would not only recognize the belligerent rights of Cuba, but I would establish her as one of the republics of the earth. If need be, I would muster every man In tho United Stater and every war vessel nec essary to the accomplishment of the task, nnd I would erect on the ashes and ruins of Spain's control of that Island a republic modeled after the In stitutions of our own. Sir, I would not only Uo that, but. If I had It in my power, I would admit the minister of the republic of Cuba, feeble as It may be, unimportant In the eyes of the world as It -nay be, to the diplomatic circles at this capital upon terms of equality with the minister from Spain " The same day, the senate having un der consideration a concurrent resolu tion reported from the committee on foreign relations, declaring: "That the United States of America should maintain a strict neutrality be tween the contending powers, accord lng to each all the rights of belliger- UntedSes""8 terrUry f the And i.Ti.'i1 tht fr,.e.ndy offices of the Unit to States should be offered by the pres- Went to tho Spanish government for the recognition of the Independence of Cuba." TUB VOTE THAT KILLS. I offered as a substitute the resolu tion I havo Just quoted. A motion was made by Mr. Shermnn of Ohio, to lay my amendment on the table, and In support of It a yea-and-nay vote was taken, and the amendment wns defeat ed yeafl f2, nays 17. Morch 19, 1S9C, In discussing the con stitutional power nnd the duty of the government to recognize Cuban Inde pendence, I Bald, In reply to the senator from Louisiana (Mr. Coffery): "Tho senator from Loulslnnn. ns I Bald, Is talking upon a very Important question. Lot It be conceded that au thority may bo found In lnternntlonnl law applicable to the case of a kingdom or an empire, where the power of the executive Is undoubted; but bus the penator any authority applicable to a government like ours, where the gov erning power rests In three co-ordlnato departments, which would lead him to believe that this high power Is exclu sive In the executive department?" Agnln, March 20, 1890, In combating the contention of the senator from Lou isiana that the supreme court had Jur isdiction to determine a question of bel ligerency, I declared: "That the power to recognize the bel ligerency or polltlcnl Independence of a people Is a purely political question with which the supreme court has no concern." THE RIGHT TO DO. And I held, as I now hold, that It be longs to congress, or, possibly In some Instances, to congress und the executive together. Yet, again, March 23, 1890, In discuss ing the Cuban question somewhat at length, I said: "Certainly a Mate of war exists In the Island of Cubn. Whnt Is war? Mr. President, It Is simply an nrmed con flict between nations or between pnrts of nations. It must be something that rises above a riot; It must be a rebel lion; and ho far oh Cuba ls concerned It Is a rebellion, with a regular military organization upon the part of the Insur gents. If that Is not a state of war In fact, then I am entirely mistaken In my conception of what constitutes pub lic war." And further olong: "My understanding Is that about two thirds of tho Island of Cuba, possibly three-fourths, Is under the dominion of the Insurgents under the command of Gomez and Maceo and their followers. There ls a distinct portion of that ter ritory that has on Its face as well equipped armies as could be expected under tno circumstances, where the re public of Cuba has absolute control and dominion over life und property. That Is a portion of the territory through which the Spanish forces do not march nnd over which they do not exercise any control. There are well equipped and drilled armies In the field under martial law. 1 have the number of troops here, to which I am going to refer In a moment. If that does not con stitute a state or war, according to the definitions of the books If war Is to be fought according to books then I am mistaken In my understanding of whnt tho books dellue to be necessary to constitute war." And again: "Are we to stand here until the Span lards cut tho throats of the Cubans, and until the bloody events puss Into the permanent history of the country, before we take any notice of what ls transpiring there? We know that a state of war exists there, and the only question, in my Judgment, Is whether we have the patriotism to say that those people In Cuba who are strug gling for their liberty shall be recog nized ns belligerents nnd have equal opportunities with the people of Spain In this country and In the ports of this country." And again: THB RIGHT KIND OF RECOGNI TION. "If the struggling patriots of Cuba are entitled to any recognition what ever at our hands, why not give them that kind of recognition which will be of benefit to them? Why say to tho people of Cuba who are waging this war for the preservation of their polit ical rights, for the preservation of their homes, for the preservation of their wives and children, 'We sympathize with you, but we can not extend to you aid under these circumstances?' "Mr. President, It occurs to me that It would bo no more cruel to place water within the Hlght of a dying man upon a desert and say to him, 'We sym. pathlze with you, but we can not glvo you the water.' If we stand here and Buffer Spain to apply the knife to tho throats of the Cubans, we will be Justly chargeable In the eyes of the civilized world with lmpotency and with cow ardice. Why not put these resolutions In the form of a Joint resolution? Why not send them to the president of the United States and sny to him, 'Sign these resolutions, make them a part of the law of the country, or take the responsibility of Inviting the ndverse criticism of your countrymen?" "A few days ago senators in this chamber, to use a phrase which ls not altogether parliamentary, were falling over one another to vote for the reso lution. There was a wonderful burst of patriotism and patriotic sentiment here, among democrats and republicans alike and poppllsts were Inspired a little, too In order to demonstrate to the world by our votes that we not only sympathized with Cuba, but that we were willing, If need be, to afford her substantial aid under the distress ing circumstances. "Yet our patriotism has been sifting out from that moment to this, until it Is very doubtful whether the resolutions can pass today. First came the senior Benator from Maine (Mr. Hale), antag onizing the resolutions, then the hon orable senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Hoar), and finally the chairman of the committee on foreign relations, I guess, has concluded that It ls about time for him to retreat, and we are offered the resolution now before the senate to re commit the Cuban resolutions for fur ther consideration. I suppose that Is the end of It." February 24, 1S97, I Introduced the following resolution: "Resolved, That It Is the sense of the senate that the president should speed ily nnd effectually protect the lives and liberties of peaceable American citizens residing or sojourning In Cuba, and that he should promptly Insist that Spain In her war against the colonists In the Island of Cuba, should conduct the snme on principles of civilized war fare, eliminating all unusual and un necessary cruelty und barbarity; und for the enforcement of these reasonable and Just requirements United States battleships should be sent without de lay to Cuban waters." DEBAUCHING CUBAN GIRLS. And on the following day, In discuss. Ing and urging Its passage, remarked: "It seems to bo conclusively estab lished that the Spanish mllltnry au thorities In Cuba are gathering up the little girls of that Island and selling them Into a species of slavery, the worst conceivable In the human mind, selling them to live of shame. Above that and beyond that. It seems to be conclusively established that Spanish loldlers have In one or more Instances taken little Infants by the heels, held them up, and hacked them to pieces with the deadly machete In the prcs enco of the mothers and the fathers, and then have destroyed the mothers and fathers themselves. "But It seems to be absolutely hu initiating that a government of 72,000, 000 people, claiming to be the most powerful government on the face of the earth, with all tho means In Its hands to settle this question, will Bit Idly nnd supinely hero and make no effort to protect these people, these Innocent lit tle girls and children, who are being treated with this extreme barbarity from day to day. Here ls this decaying monarchy of Spain, a blot upon the map of the world, a disgrace, Mr. Pres ident, to tho present civilization of Eu rope, a disgrace to the civilization of the western hemisphere; and here ls congress, with this conduct going on almost within 100 miles of our shores, and not a substantial effort Is put forth to check It. Mr. President, the time will come, and come speedily, unless we take nromnt action in thin mniiar when a man will have to hang his head in siiume ror being an American citi zen," Again, February 2f, 1897, I Bald: "For the purpose of testing the ques tion whether we shall have war or peace, and whether there Is uny sin cerity In these resolutions, I move that me inuinn appropriation bill be tem porarily laid aside and that the Joint resolution with reference to Julio San gullly bo taken up for consideration." .May ll, 1897, the senator from Ala bama (Mr. Morgan), having Introduced a resolution declaring that a condition of public war existed In Cuba, and thut neutrality should be tnalntulned, I ob served : ADMINISTRATION A STUMBLING BLOCK. "The world knows thnt Spain has been guilty of atrocities that no civil ized nation can sustain cither directly or Indirectly. The cruelties have been without a precedent In the last hun dred years of the world's cxlstonpi. This government has sent special ugent nfter special agent to Cuba to ascer tain the truth, and yet when we want information from the state department we have to seek it as supplicants, not us senators charged with a public duty and capable of discharging that duty. We have to appeal to the state depart ment or to the executive branch of the government ror Information. Repeat edly the senator from Alabama (Mr. Morgan) has told us what the facts are, and he 1b a member of the committee on foreign relations; and yet constantly we havo this delay. "Is It possible that the United States by this Indirection Is willing to com mit Itself to the Spanish policy of atrocity and cruelty? "It Is possible thut the president of the United States, or those who may represent him In this chamber, are will ing that these cruelties shall go on and thnt the senate shall not voice Its conviction of Spanish cruelty In Cuba? If that is the policy, Mr. President, I feel confident that the people of the United States will condemn it. If that Is the policy it Is a cowardly policy for any administration to adopt. The Joint resolution ought to be adopted unanimously, without a dissenting voice." December 8, 1897, I Introduced this resolution: "Resolved, That It Is the sense of the senate that congress should, with all due and convenient speed, acknowl edge by appropriate act the political Independence of the Republic of Cuba," And, In support of It, said: FULL POLITICAL LIBERTY. "Notwithstanding the president has urged the contrary in his message, I would not be content or satisfied with a simple acknowledgment of the bel ligerent rights of the people of that Island, but I would demand absolute and unconditional political liberty and a recognition or the government they themselves hnve formed and to whose sovereignty they owe allegiance. "The American people believe In po litical and religious liberty, and they are anxious to accord to nvers what they themselves believe th rthrlght of all, and I am confident they will not be content with the course advised by this, as they were not with that pursued by the preceding, administra tion In withholding from Cuba that priceless blessing." And farther along: "We have declared our unchangeable devotion to the doctrine that this con tinent shall be free soil and be trodden alone by freemen, und yet we sus tain the hold of a tottering and cruel monarchy, the institutions or which are passing Into decay and which is satis fled only when Inflicting on a civilized people, struggling tor their political In dependence, the most cruel torture. In his own good time, God wHl call us to account for such rank hypocrisy and Buch a flagrant neglect of public duty." February 8, 1898, In Bpeaklng on the subject of Cuba, I remarked: HORRIBLE DEATH RATE. "My attention hus been called to the fact that since the opening of hostilities between the republic of Cuba and the Spanish forces in that island, 300,000 paclflcos have died by starvation and disease generated nnd directly trace able to the lack of food and sanitary conditions. I had a conversation a rew days ago with a gentleman who Is very familiar with the island and the condi tions existing there, whose word can not be doubted, In which he Informed me that It was the custom of the Span. Ish government to herd hundreds of families together In sheds and exposed positions, without any sanitary condi tions whatever, starving them until disease, as a result of their starvation. Intervenes, and that over 300.000 of them had died In consequence of that treatment." ALLEN'S FAITH IN CUBA. Mr. President, I have quoted freely from my resolutions nnd remnrks, not to exalt myself In the eyes of any one, but to show that In the years that have gone by I have steadfastly advocated the political independence embraced in the present discussion. I have never wavered In the belter nor lost faith In the fact that ultimately Cuba, by force of the public sentiment of this country nnd of the civilized world, and by the gallantry of her soldiers, would win her frop rn itui u(( hr name to the re publics of this continent. I have at u. . -o bti-it mm i in. on that sooner or later 'she would stnnd rorth, per haps weak at first, but ultimately Btrong, a Bplendld young republic udJ ed to the grand galaxy of republics of the earth. In the hour of her deepest political night, when there did not Beem a ray of hope or a gleam of light, I felt confident that In the providence of God she would wrest her liberty from Spain and proudly take her station In the ranks of self-governed peoples. ONE OF THE GREATEST HEROES. Gomez, advanced In years, rrall of body, but stout of heart and resolute of purpose, can Justly be ranked among the great commanders and revolution ists of the century. Almost any other man at his time of life would have Bought repose rather than war, but he chose the field of glory whereon liberty ts to be won or lost forever for his coun. trymen. He spurned bribes and offers of position at the hands of a cowardly Spanish dynasty. He Is the firm and MfHiusst tnend of his people, and has smitten tho rock that will cause polit ical freedom to gush forth and save a famishing nation. AMERICA CAN FIGHT IF NEED BE. I rejoice to know thnt the American people have become aroused to the ex tent that they will no longer listen to Spanish lying or glv enr to Spanish threats. We are not a nntlun i.r in-mr. carts; we do not seek war with Spain or with any other country. We will resort to arms only when our cause Is Just and when the enlightened Judg ment of the American people nnd of the world will approve our conduct. But, Blr, because we are peace loving, It must not be thought we are unmindful of the duties Imposed upon us, or that our people nre lucking In spirit. We at all times Beek pence rather than war, but not that kind of pence that ls to bo purchased at any price, nor peace with Cuba In chains. In the language of the jngusn uauau We don't want to fight, but, by Jingo, ii we uo. We've got the Bhlps, we've got the men, we've got the money, too." SPAIN MUST FREE CUBA. If Spain will hunt down and execute tho deadly assussln who, under cover of darkness, sunk the battleship Maine and sent, without warning, 2GC souls into me presence of their Maker; If she will relinquish her occupancy of Cuba, take down her flag from this continent a flag whose only claim to public at tention Is that It Is stained with twenty centuries of Innocent blood, cruelty nnd crime and leave American soil for ever, we will be content. We have no greed ror Spanish territory nor for Spanish gold. Our policy Is that of a contented, domestic people. We do not want Cuba. We do not even desire to be her guardian. But wo nre deter mined she shall be free and that for all time we shnll be rid of the close prox. Imlty of a nation whose chief occupa tion Is the shedding of innocent blood. WHAT ALLEN WOULD LIKE TO DO. Sir, If I could have my own wnv. I would promptly recall our minister irom .muuhu and give Spain's minister at Washington his passport. I would close forever the political, financial and commercial relations of the two na tions, nnd not again permit an armed Spaniard to Bet foot on American soil. Mr. President. It Is well known that 1 am thoroughly and unalterably opposed to the president In most of his policies. It would be Impossible for us to bo brought tegether unless he should cease to be a republican and become a popu list, a thing he probably will not do. I have no faith that our country can ever become permanently prosperous by an application of the domestic policies he would enforce. ALLEN'S CONSCIENCE HIS GUIDE. Sir, In all 1 have said In behair' of Cuban Independence In the years gone by, from the time the subject llrst came to the notice of congress to this mo ment, my conscience has been my sole guide. It has been "A lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path." t havo said for the Cubans what I would say for uny other nation under like circumstances, and what I would want them to say for my country If positions were changed. Mr. President, 1 believe Cuba Is free. I believe but a few more days and we will witness the flag of the new repub lic, consecrated by thousands of human lives, by so much blood, by the tears and groans of her people, the walling of her womanhood and the sacrifice of her childhood, waving In triumph from Plnar del Rio to Santiago de Cuba. Then we will be able to cxclulm, as did one of old: "The spirit of the Lord Is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted, to preach deliverance to the cuptives, and recov ering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised, to preach the acceptable year of the Lord," Afraid to Show Their Patriotism. "Stand up! Stand up! If you don't stand up I'll punch your nose." This Is how an Englishman, and he hadn't been naturalized, either, taught us patriotism the other day. It was at the last concert of the Third regiment band that this young scion of Briton gave us u lesson In patriotism. The concert had met with unusual ap probation and both uudlence and band was feeling well pleased with them selves, when, at the end of the pro gram, Dr. Iiienr, the director of the band, raised his baton a moment, and as it descended the strains of "The Star Spangled Banner" burst forth. That It reached the soul of every American in the audience and sent the blood throbbing like fire through his veins, was attested by the Hushed cheeks and eyes kindling with the fire that pictured in dim distance, the smoke of the bat tlefield, tho sputtering fire of a thou sand muskets and the heavy roar of artillery. But this negative display of patriot ism did not meet the idea of the young Englishman. True, he wns only a re porter on a local newspaper, but In dear old England, when the national air, "God Sove the Queen," was sung, he was wont to rise to his feet and sing with the fiery enthusiasm that marks the Englishman the world over. To him the "Star Spangled Banner" was the national air of the. union, and when Americans sat coldly through It with out an outward sign or appreciation his blood boiled. He had risen to his reet at the first note, and now his voice rose In u mighty roar that reached the uttermost corner of the opera house. "Stand upl Stand up!! If you don't stand up I'll punch your nose!" Wonderlngly the young. man In front of him arose, and then he yelled to the people yet further away: "Why don't you stand up; don't you know enough?" The patriotism that blazed In his eye and oozed from every pore of his flush ed face .seemed to then nttack the au dience, and as one man they rose up, and with the Englishman beating time ror them, they sang the second verse or "The Star Spangled Banner" with a rrenzled enthusiasm that made the walls tremble. At the conclusion or this grand old air, many a kindly glunce was thrown at the young Engllshmnn who had giv en Americans n lesson In patriotism. Not that Americans are not patriotic, but they Beem to possess n childish fear of giving vent to their love for the dear old stars and stripes. The lesson may bear Its fruit. John Hancock used to wear a red velvet cap, within which was one of fine linen, turned up two or three inches over the edge of the velvet. He also wore a blue damask gown lined with velvet, a white stock, a white satin embroidered waistcoat, black satin small-clothes, white silk stockings and red morocco slippers, yet he was not thought at all bizarre. Mickey (defiantly) Any time ye want tei light me dis is where I live (Indl satlng himself). Right here's where I live, remember dot. Swlpsey (scornfully) Well, I can't lay dat I t'ink much of yer residence. TALMAGE'S SERMON, Architecture Is one of the moBt fnscl. natlng arts, and the study of Egyptian, Grecian, Etruscan, Roman, Byzantine, Moorish, Renaissance styles of build ing, has been to many a man a sublime lire-work. Lincoln and York cathe. amis, St. Paul's and St. Peter's, and jvivn oi xuus, anu Theunn temple an Alnhambra nnd Parthenon are toe monuments to the genius of those who built them. But more wonderful thnn any arch they lifted, or any transept window they ever Illumined, or any Corinthian column they ever a owned, or any Gothic cloister they ever elab orated, is the human ear. Among the most skillful and assid uous physiologists of our time hnve been those who have given their time to the examination of the ear and the study of its arches, Its walls, its floor, Its canals, Its uqueducts. Its gullerles. Its Intricacies, Its convolutions, Its di vine machinery, and yet, It will take another 1,000 years before the world comes to any adequate appreciation of wnui uoa uiu wneti lie planned and ex ecuted the Infinite and overmastering architecture of the human ear. The most of It is Invisible and the micro scope breaks down Irr the attempt at uAjiDraiion. me cartilage which we cull the ear ls only the storm door of the great temple clear down out of Bight, next door to the Immortal soul. Such scientists ns; Helmholtz and Conte and De Blalmille und Rank and Buck have nttempteel to walk the Ap plnn way of the hjTmon ear. but the mysterious pathway has never been fully trodden but by two feet the foot of Bound and the foot of God. Three ears on each side of the head the ex ternal ear, the middle ear. the internal eur, but all connected by most wonder ful telegraphy. The externul ear In all nges adorned by precious stones or precious metuls. The temple of Jerusalem partly built by the contribution of earrings, und Homer In the Iliad speuks of Hera, "the three blight drops, her glittering gems suspended from the ear;" und many of the adornments of modern times were only copies of her ear Jewels found in Pompellan museum und Etruscan vase. But while the outer ear tuny be adorned by human nrt, the middle and the Internal ear are udorned nnd gar nished only by the hand of the Lord Almighty. The stroke of a key of yonder organ sets the air vibrating, and the external ear catches the undulating sound and passes It on through the bonelets of the middle ear to the Internal eur, and the three thousand fibres of the human brain take up the vibration und roll the sound on Into the soul. The hidden machinery of the ear by physiologists called by the names of things familiar to us, like the hammer, something to Btrike the anvil something to be smitten like the Btlrrup of the saddle with which we mount the steed like the drum, beaten in the march like the' harpstrlngs, to be swept with music. Colled like a "snail shell," by which one of the Innermost passages of the ear Is actually called like a stairway, the sound to ascend like a bent tube of a heating apparatus, taking that which enters round nnd round like a labyrinth with wonderful passages Into which the thought enters only to be lost In bewilderment. The ear, so strange a contrivance that by the estimate of one scientist, It can catch the sound of 73,700 vibra tions In a second. The outer enr taking In all kinds of sound, whether the crash of an avalanche, or the hum of a bee. The sound passing to the Inner door of the outside ear halts until an other mechanism, divine mechanism, passes It on by the bonelets of the mid dle ear, and coming to the Inner door of that second ear, the sound has no power to come further until another di vine mechanism passes it on through into the inner ear, and then the sound comes to the rail track or the brain branchlet, and rolls on and on until it comes to sensation, and there the cur tain drops, and a bundled gates shut, and the voice of God seems to say to till human Inspection: "Thus far and no farther." In this vestibule of the palace of the soul, how many kings of thought, of medicine, of physiology, have done pen ance of lifelong study and got no fur ther than the vestibule. Mysterious home of reverberation nnd echo. Grand Central Depot or sound. Headquarters to which there come quick dispatches, part the way by cartilages, part the way by air, part the way by bone, part the way by nerve the slowest dispatch plunged Into the ear at the speed of 1,900 leet a second. Small Instrument of music on which ls played all the music you ever heard, trom the gran deurs or an August thunderstorm to the soft breathings of a flute. Small Instrument of music, only a quarter of an Inch of sur face and the thinness of l-250th part of an Inch, and that thinness divided Into three layers. In that ear musical staff, lines, spaces, bar and rest. A bridge leading from the outside natural world to the Inside spiritual world; we seeing the abutment at this end the bridge, but the fog of nn unllft ed mystery hiding the abutment on the other end the bridge. Whispering gal lery of the soul. The human voice la God's eulogy the ear. That voice ca pable of producing 17,592,186.044,415 sounds, and all that variety mnde, not for the regalement of beast or bird, but for the human ear. For the conquest of the ear Haydn struggled on up from the garret where he had neither lire nor food, on and on until under the too great nervous strain of hearing his own oratorio of the "Creation" performed, he was carried out to die, but leaving ns his legacy to the world 118 symphonies, 103 pieces for the baritone, fifteen mnsses, five ora torios, forty-two German and Italian songs, thirty-nine canons, 3Gf English and Scotch songs with accompaniment, and 1,536 pnges of libretti. All that to capture the gate of the body that swings In from the tympanum to the ocean or the Immortal soul. To conquer the ear, Handel struggled on rrom the time when his rather would not let him go to school lest he learn the gamut and become a musician, and rrom the time when he wns allowed In the orgnn loft Just to piny after the audience had left, to the time when he left to all nations his unparalleled ora torios of "Esther." "Deborah." "Samp son," "Jepntnan, "Jtidus .Maccabeus," "Israel In Egypt," and the "Messiah," the soul of the great German compose! still weeping in the Dead March of oui great obsequies and triumphing In the raptures of every Easter morn. To conquer the ear and take this gate of the Immortal soul, Schubert com posed his great "Serenade," writing the staves of the music on the bill of fare In a restaurant, and went on until he could leave as a legacy to the world over 1,000 magnificent compositions In music. To conquer the ear and take this gate of the soul's castle Mozart strug gled on through poverty until he came to a pauper's grave, and one chilly, wet afternoon the body of him who gave to the world the "Requiem" and the "G-mlnor Symphony" was crushed In on top of two other pnupers Into a grave which Is today epltaphless. How Burpusslngly sacred the human ear. You had beter be careful how you let the sound of blasphemy or unclean ness Btep Into that holy of holies. The bible says that in the ancient temple the priest was set apart by the putting of the blood of a mm on the tip of the enr, the right ear of the priest. But, my friends, we need all of us to have the sacred touch of ordination on the hnnglng lobe of both ears, and on the arches of the ears, on the Eustach. Ian tube of the ear, on the mnstold cells of the ear, on the tympanic cavity of the ear, and on everything from th'j outside rim of the outside enr clear In to the point where sound steps off the auditory nerve and rolls on down Into the unfathomable depths or the Im mortal soul. The bible speaks of "dull ears, anu or "unclrcumclted ears," and of "Itching euts," and of "rebel lious enn," und of "open ears," and or those who have all the organs or hear ing and yet who seem.Ube deaf, for It cries to them. "He that hath ears to henr, let him hour." To show hjiw much Christ thought of the humnn.rar, he one day met a man who was deor. came up to him, nnd put a finger of the right hand Into the ori fice of the left enr of the patient, nnd put a finger of the lert hand Into the orifice of the right enr of the patient, and agitated the tympanum, and stnrtled the bonelets, and with a voice that rang clear through Into the man's soul, cried: "Kphphntha!" and the polyphold growths gave way, and the Inflamed auricle cooled off, and that man who hud not heard a sound for ninny years, that night heard the wash of the waves of Galilee aguinst the limestone shelving. To show how much Christ thought of the human enr. when the apostle Peter got mad and with one slash of his sword dropped the enr of Malchus into the duM, Christ created a new externul ear for Malchus corresnomllnir with tin. i middle enr and Internal ear that no sword could clip nwav. And to show what God thinks of the enr we nre Informed of the fact that In the millennial June which shall roseate ull the earth, the ears of the deaf will be unstopped, all the vascular growths gone all deformation of the listening orgnn cured, corrected, changed. Every being on earth will have a hearing ap paratus as perfect as God knows how to make it, and all the ears will be ready for thut great symphony In which nil the muslcul Instruments of the enrth shall plu the uccompanl ment, nations of earth and empires of heaven mingling tlieir voices, together with the deep bass of the sea and the alto of the woods nnd the tenor of winds, and the baritone of the thunder: "Allelulnhl" descending. Oh, yes, my friends, we have been looking for God too far away Instead of looking for him close by and In our own organism. We go up into the ob servntory and look through the tele scope and Bee God In Jupiter, and God in Saturn, and God in Mars; but we couiu see more or him through the microscope or nn aurlst. No king ls satisfied with only one residence, and In France it has been St. Cloud nnd Versnllles nnd the Tullerles, and In Great Britain It has been Windsor and Balmoral and Osborne. A ruler does not always prerer the larger. The king of earth and heaven may havo larger castles and greater palaces, but I do not think there is an one more curi ously wrought than the hurnnn ear. The heaven of heavens cannot contain him, nnd yet he snys he finds room to dwell in a contrite heart, and I think In a Christian ear. We have been looking for God In the Infinite let us look for him In the In finitesimal. God walking the corridor of the ear, God sitting In the gallery of the humun enr, God speaking along the auditory nerve of the ear, God dwell ing in the ear to hear that which comes from the outside, nnd so near the brain und the soul he cun hear all that transpires there. The Lord of hosts encamping under the curtains of mem brane. Palace of the Almighty In the human ear. The rider on the white horse of the Apocalypse thrusting his root Into the loop or bone which the physiologist has been pleased to call the stirrup of the ear. Are you ready now for the question of my text? Have you the endurance to bear Its overwhelming suggestlve ness? Will you take hold of some pillar and balance yourself under the semi-omnipotent stroke? "He that planted the ear, shall he not hear?" Shall the God who gives us the ap paratus with which we hear the sounds of the world, himself not be able to catch up song and organ and blasphemy and worship? Does he give us a faculty which he has not him self? Drs. Wild and Gruber and Toyn bee Invented the acoumeter and other Instruments by which to measure and examine the ear, nnd do these Instru ments know more than the doctors who made them? "He that planted the ear, shall he not hear?" Jupiter of Crede was always represented In stat uary' and palntln;-: ns without ears, suggesting the Idea that he did not want to be bothered with the affairs of the world. But our God has ears. "His ears are open to their cry." The bible intimates that two work men on Saturday night do not get their wages. Their complaint Instantly strikes the ear of God: "The cry of those that reaped hath entered the ears o.f the Lord of Sabbaoth." Did God hear that poor girl last night as she threw herself on the prison bunk In the city dungeon and cried in the midnight: "God have mercy?" Do you really think God could hear her? Yes, Just as easily as when fifteen years ago she was sick with scurlet fever, and her mother henid her when at midnight she asked for a drink of water. "He that planted the ear, shall he not hear?" When a soul prays, God does not sit bolt upright until the prayer travels Immensity and climbs to his ear. The bible says he .bends clear over. In more than one place Isaiah said he bowed down his ear. In more than one place the psalmist said he Inclined his ear, by which I come to believe that God puts his ear so closely down to your lips that he can henr your faint est whisper. It Is not God away off up yonder; It Is God away clown here, close up, so close up thnt when you pray to him, It ls not more a whisper than a kiss. Ah! yes, he heats the captive's sigh and the plash of the orphan's tear, and the dying syllables of the shipwrecked sailor driven on the Skerries, and the Infant's "Now I lay me down to sleep," ns distinctly as he hears the fortissimo of brazen bnnds in the Dusseldorf fes tival, as easily ph he bnr the salvo of artillery when the thirteen squares of English troops open an then ja.niim nt once at Waterloo. He thut planted the ear can henr. Just as sometimes an entrancing strain of music will linger In your ears for dnys after you have heaid It, and Just as a shurp y tr pain I once heard while passing thmugh Bellevue hos. pltnl clung to my eur for weeks, and Just us n horrid blasphemy In the street sometimes haunts one's eurs for duys, so God not only hears, but holds the songs, the prayers, the groans, the worship, the blasphemy. How we have ull wondered at the phonograph, which holds not only the words you utter, but the very tones of your voice, so that 100 years from now, that Instrument turned, the very words you now utter and the very tone of your voice will be leproduced. Amazing phonograph! But more wonderful Is God's power to hold, to retain. Ah! what delightful encouragement for our prayers. What an awful fright for our hard speeches. What assurance of warm-hearted sympathy for all our griefs. "He that planned the ear. shall be sot hear?" A.. V