2' S 8tA A a. ' ti'r . a . 4tCMFA ° M * I NTEfhJtiTIONAL PRESSASSOCIATION. © Y PERMISSION OF RANG. H WALLY & CO. . ( CHAPTER IL-CONTINUED ) . She hesitated a moment ; her glance fell upon the corner of a letter projecting - ing from the pocket of his torn and dusty uniform , , that might give her his address ; she leaned forward and took it gently out. The address was , "Will- i ! am Cavendish , Esquire , The Admiralty - , ty , wlliteliau ; " the seal was unbroken. The truth broke in on her Instantly ; she called to the coachman and the carriage - riage stopped. "Home' " she cried , imperatively ; the horses were wheeled round. "Drive fast ! " she added , and they quickened their pace. In a few minutes they stopped in front of No. 23 Bedford square. Dick opened his eyes. ' "Are you there ? " he asked ; "I have a letter- " "Yes , " she said , ; gently , "r know ; it shall be delivered at once ; but now you must come in with me , " He obeyed , moving slowly and with pain ; she did.not offer him help from i herself or her servants , for which tie was dimly grateful. In the hall stood the colonel , bland as ever , and looking as if he saw nothing unusual in Dick's appearance or costume. Camilla hastily - tily explained the case , Dick standing by silently the while , giving his whole attention to controlling any expression of the pain in his head , which was becoming - coming more and more severe. I "Perhaps , " said the colonel , "Capt. Estcourt will do me the honor of making - ing use of my room in which to rest from the fatigue of his gallant struggle against superior numbers ? " Dick followed him upstairs , but stopped short at the top of the first t flight. "I have a letter to deliver , " lie repeated - peated in a tone of helpless obstinacy ; "It will be too late. " I "If you will intrust it to me , " replied the colonel , "I will send it directly ; the carriage is still at the door. " They reached a room upon the floor above , where M. de Montaut left his r , guest in charge of a valet and returned I downstairs with the letter in his hand. At the drawing-room door be found Camilla - milla waiting for him. "You would be doing me a favor , " she said , "by taking that letter yourselr to its address. " He looked at her as if he were about to ask a question , but apparently changed his mind , and bowed instead. "Your wish is in itself a reason more than sufficient , " he said , as though half In answer to his own thought ; and he went on down to the front door , and stepped into the carriage with something - thing like a crafty smile upon his handsome - some face. . A quarter of an hour after his departure - parture Dick made his appearance ! 11 the drawing-room , where he found Camilla - milla alone. At first she was surprised and pleased to see him looking so little - tle the worse for his injuries ; but she soon perceived by the nervous excitement - ment of his manner and the brightness of his eyes that he was by no means out of the wood yet. He expressed his gratitude - itude for her timely rescue , and his ad- miratlon of the skill and courage with which she had brought under control so excited and disorderly a crowd. She laughed , and put the matter lightly on one side. "It is my brother-in-law come back , " she said , in a tone of perfectly counterfeited - feited unconcern. Dick looked fixedly at her ! In his eyes were dumb reproach and the sadness of an unspoken farewell ; about his mouth gathered the lines of resolution , and , for a moment , the curve of bitterness. ! She flushed , and all her mannez changed instantly. "Don't misunderstand - stand me , " she cried impulsively. "I know what-you have done , and loyalty can never fail of sympathy from me ! " The colonel's step was heard ascending - ing the stairs ; she heard Dick stiffen himself to bear the news of his unwelcome - come fortune , and felt , with a quick . sense of surprise at her own weakness , that she was too much interested to stay and see him face the ordeal. She made some incoherentexcuse and as the door opened she passed the colonel hurriedly - riedly and ran toward her own room breathless and confused. But she was stayed in mid-course by a cry from M. de Montaut and the sound of a Bell ringing violently downstairs. She turned half round ; the colonel came out on to the stairs. "I regret to say , " he began , with exasperating - ' asperating politeness and deliberation , "that disappointment at the news of which I was the unwilling bearer has prostrated our gallant friend with an attack of fever. What professional en- thuslasm ! " he continued , with a half smile. "One may doubt whether my lords have this time favored the better man. " She looked as if two might doubt that , but answered nothing , and the colonel returned to his patient. CHAPTER III. rt : . 1 v _ _ , s , HE SURGEON who was called in , without delay , to attend to Dick's injuries - juries pronounced them to be slight in themselves ; but for the feverish condition - tion to which they had given rise lie prescribed immediate - mediate rest and quiet. He looked a tittle doubtfully at each of his listeners - ers in turn as he said this : "You mean , " inquired Camilla , that i 'he must not be moved for the present ? " ' .Well- was the reply , "of course it BYfENRVJV WBOi.7 might be managed , but it is a risk , and if you could , without too much inconvenience - venience , keep him for a couple of nights at any rate- " "Oh ! " cried the colonel , interrupting , "do not think twice about it ; convenience - ience is nothing in a case of urgency , and Capt. Estcourt is a valued friend of ours. " The surgeon looked relieved , and went away promising to return the same evening. Camilla for herself approved the arrangement - rangement made by her brother-in-law , but she was at the same time surprised at it. IIe had not only spoken of Dick , with whom he was in' no way intimate , as "a valued friend"-that was , perhaps - haps , only a piece of his habitual po- liteness-but lie had also readily entered - tered into a plan which did in fact involve - volve a considerable inconvenience , and this was by no means so usual a thing for him. At least , he always had a personal motive for such acts , and she was at a loss to see an adequate on here ; for the difficulty , which he had thus brought upon himself was no slight one. The patient had been taken from the drawing-room into a , spare-room adjoining it on the same floor , and separated from it only by a partition wall of slight construction , through which the sound of conversation was by no means inaudible. Now , it happened by ill fortune that on this very evening matters were to be spoken of In that drawing-room which must not be overheard - heard by any living ear. The meeting was one which could not be postponed , and no other room in the house was suitable for it , for it was to be in appearance - pearance a merely social gathering. And all this the colonel knew as well as she did. As they sat at dinner she alluded to the question while the servants were absent from the room. "Yes , " replied I1f. de Montaut , "it is unfortunate , but. it would be inhuman to move our poor friend ; his safety may , depend on his remaining quiet. " "On his remaining quiet ! " said Ca- milla. "Our safety will certainly depend on that , if he does overhear us. "Eh bien , then we will remain quiet. "It will be his duty to inform against us , ' 'she replied. "As an officer , true , " said her companion - ion , cooly ; "but on this occasion the gallant captain will not fulfill that duty , for he has another more imperative. " She looked at him in doubt. "The duty , I mean , of a loyal cheva- lier" "I know him better ! " was the exclamation - ation on her lips , but she checked it , and hesitated for an answer. "In reality , " he said , "we need fear no such complication. I have just recollected - lected that the doctor said he intended to give his patient a composing draught at an early hour this evening , so he will hear no treason after all. " "You are sure ? " she asked ; "sure , I mean , that he will give It , and that it will be effectual ? " "I will see to it myself , if you wish , " he replied ; "but I am surprised to find you so apprehensive for our security. You used to think no risk too great to run for the good cause. " "In that , " she said , hotly , "I shall never change ; it is not that I am lukewarm - warm , as you will see tonight ! " He bowed , and rose from the table to open the door for her. Before they had been In the half-an drawing-room - hour the surgeon returned. He brought with him the sleeping draught. "That is a good idea of yours , " said Camilla , as he produced it. "To Colonel de Montaut belongs the credit of suggesting it , " was the reply. "Really ? " she said ; "I should not have suspected that. " The colonel looked a little confused. Within five minutes of the doctor's departure the bell rang twice in rapid succession , and.three gentlemen were ushered into the drawing-room , where Madame de Montaut was waiting to receive - ceive them. A conversation on the most general subjects at once began , but there was an air' ' of expectation in the manner of all , and when the colonel entered every one turned to him as though with an unspoken inquiry. He greeted the two newcomers , and turned to Madame de Montaut. "I think we may begin now , " he said. She looked at him and raised her eyebrows interrogatively. He nodded to signify that Dick has fast asleep , and sat down at a small table , laying a bundle of papers upon it. "My friends , " he said , "I have summoned - moned you to-night to propose a fresh attempt. " He looked at the faces around him and observed that Camilla was similarly - ly occupied. His hearers showed by their looks that they perfectly understood - stood his meaning , but were either reserved - served or unenthusiastic in the matter. "ir. Carnac ; he continued , with grave politeness , bowing to the elderly gentleman who sat nearest to him , "it is from you that we have learned to expect - pect a critical judgment. Are you not of opinion that the time has come for renewed activity ? " "It has come again and again , " replied - plied the person addressed , "but always - ways without result. " "No doubt , " said the colonel ; "but that has been solely due to a want of forethought and energy , which must not occur again. " "Yes , indeed ! " exclaimed a short gentleman - tleman , with a beard , who was evidently - dently an Englishman ; "there have been good enough plans laid , but no one fit to be trusted with their execu- tion. " The third of the visitors turned upon the speaker. "You will pardon me , " he said , with some acrimony , "if I differ entirely ; It is , in my opinion , the stay-at-homes who are to blame , in devising impossible - ble methods of which they take the credit and others the danger ! " "Gentlemen , " said the colonel , in a soothing tone , "you are both right , but you both speak only according to your own experience. You , Mr. Holmes , deserved - served success , but your subordinates failed you. You ; M. le Comte , followed . instructions with a courage aid loyalty which would have secured a triumph if your directors had not made a cruel mistake in their calculations. These two fatal forms of error must be avoided. We must think and act with equal certainty , and all will be well. " Mr. Holmes shook his head in sulky silence. The Comte de Rabodanges exclaimed - claimed , fiercely , "It is too much to.ex- pect ; the cat does not offer her paw a second time ! " During this altercation 'Camilla had sat sljent , but with growing impatience ; her eyes flashed and her cheeks were fiery-red. The colonel , always ready to turn the force of others to account for his own purpose , hastened to give the final impulse to her pent-up Indigna- tion. He looked at her , and raised his shoulders and eyebrows in a gesture of resignation. "You ! " she cried ; "you too despair at the eleventh hour ? What do these doubts and recriminations mean ? D [ none of you any more remember the greatness of the cause you serve ? Have you begun to forget the emperor - or ? " As the lightning of this word flashed upon them her hearers starti'd violent- ly. "Ali ! " she went on , with quickening breath , "there , is magic in the name' It is perhaps because you whisper it so seldom that it has ceased of late to stir you ; let us be bolder in speech and braver in action ! " "Madame , " replied Ai. Carnac , deprecatingly - catingly , and with a bow of genuine admiration - miration , "your enthusiasm is heroic , but it is not prudent ; the boldness that you preach is likely to bring discomfiture - ture upon us all. " "Discomfiture ! " she cried with ringing scorn. "What , then , does the timidity you practice bring upon the emperor ? Are we to preserve our own freedom at the price of his captivity , and amid the luxury of a great capital to shut our eyes to the misery of his exile on a lonely - ly rock unfit for human habitation ? " There was an awkward silence. After a moment's pause she went on again in a more pleading tone. "Let us for an instant look back , she said earnestly , "upon the splendor of his past career , and then consider to what the rancor of his enemies has brought him. The man of action , for whose deeds Europe was not wide enough , confined within a circuit of a dozen miles ! The man of genius refused - fused even the companionship' his best-loved books ! The commander of armies with but a pair of lackeys at his call ; the maker and dethroner of kings denied his royal title ! Do you not know , she cried , and her voice rang deep again with anger , "do you not know that his house is but a moldering jail , and his allowance a prisoner's pittance - tance ? Himself the most magnificently generous of men , he has been driven by sordid necessity to melt his plate ; lie suffers in health , he is in danger. He- just heaven-from ! the inspiration of whose life we drew the spirit that animates - mates our own ! " "Well , spoken ! " cried the colonel , skillfully following up the advantage she had gained for him ; "well spoken ! And all that we then had shall soon be ours again ; is it not worth one more effort my friends ? " "It is , indeed , " murmured M. Carnac , with a sigh. The Comte de Rabodanges grumbled , "If only it were the last. " Mr. Holmes settled himself in his chair. "Well , " he said , bluntly , "let's hear your plan , if you've got one. " The colonel untied his bundle of papers and spread them out upon the table in front of him. ( To US CONTINUf.D. ) ACCIDENTALLY HANGED. A Philadelphia Child Meets with a Curious Mishap-Str.tngled by tier . Hanging' from a hole in the wicker coach in which she had been sleeping , Mrs. Jeremiah J. Buck yesterday evening - ing found her 16-month-old daughter , Jessie , dead , but with the warmth of life still lingering in her tiny body , says the Philadelphia Record. Mrs. Buck lives with her husband at No. 2664 Tioga street , and it was when her husband had returned from his work that the mother went to awaken the child and discovered the accident. Her screams quickly brought assistance , and an investigation - vestigation disclosed the fact that the baby's death was the result of one of the most peculiar accidents on record. The little one had been placed in the old coach during the afternoon to take a nap. The coach was in the second story front room , and for some time had been the baby's sleeping place. It was about six o'clock when Mr. Buck returned - turned home from his work and asked for Jessie. Mrs. Buck completed her preparations for supper and went upstairs - stairs to waken the child. To her surprise - prise the coach seemed empty , and she called Jessie , thinking she had gone to hide , as she had done before. Receiving no reply she looked closer , and in the dim light saw what seemed to be a bundle - dle protruding from a hole in the wickerwork - erwork at one end of the coach. The now frightened mother hastily procured a light and to her terror found that what she supposed was a bundle was the naked body of her baby girl , hanging - ing by her arm pits. Her clothing , bundled - dled up about her head , had evidently smothered her , while preventing the entire - tire body from slipping through the hole. The child had probably been restless - less in her sleep and had gradually worked her body through , the broken wickerwork until stopped by the cloth- ing. The little one's arms were stretched above her head and she had evidently been prevented from making an outcry that could be heard. Snatching the still warm body in her arms Mrs. Buck ran screaming down stairs. Neighbors sent for Dr. Schwartz , and the little one's body was bathed in mustard water. Artificial respiration was also tried , but all efforts were useless. The child was dead. Jessie was a very pretty , golden- haired girl , the pet of the neighborhood , and her tragic death created quite a sensation. It Was "Elevator Inca" A woman who made her initial attempt - tempt recently to ride a wheel was discouraged - couraged to find that her knees seemed stiff and very quickly tired of the effort to work the pedals. Speaking to her physician about it , he told her she was undoubtedly affected with what is known as "elevator ] : nee. " This was a hitherto unknown malady to her , but it has been referred to before in public prints , and is a recognized affection not uncommon with those whose life in a 'lift apartment house almost does away with the use of those knee muscles exercised in going up and down stairs. TA LMAGE S ER 0. "FIVE PICTURES"THE SUBJECT OF A THRILLING DISCOURSE. "Behold I See the heavens Opened"- Acte vU 150.00-Delivered at Academy of Mualcuw York , Sunday , Sept. . 15 , 1895. t 1 TEPHEN HAD been preaching a rousing s e r m o n , hand the people could not stand It. They resolved to do as men sometimes would like to do in this day , if they dared , with some plain preacher of rghteousness- ! him. The only way to silence this man was to knock the breath out of him. So they rushed Stephen out of the gates of the city , and with curse , and whoop , and bellow , they brought him to the cliff , as was the custom when they wanted to take away life by stoning , Having brought him to the edge of the cliff , they pushed him off. After he had fallen they came and looked down , and seeing that he was not yet dead , they began to drop stones upon him , stone after stone. Amid this horrible rain of missiles , Stephen clambers up on his knees and folds his hands , .while the blood drips from his temples ; and then , looking up , he makes two prayers-one for himself .and one for his murders. "Lord Jesus , receive my spirit ; " that was for himself. "Lord , lay not this sin to their charge ; " that was for his murderers , Then , from pain and loss of blood , he swooned away and fell asleep. I want to show you to-day five pict- ures. Stephen gazing into heaven. Stephen looking at Christ. Stephen stoned. Stephen - phen in his dying prayer. Stephen asleep. First , look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to' know where you are going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to what point the ladder reaches. And it was right that Stephen , within a few moments of , heaven , should be gazing into it. We would all do well to be found in the same posture. There is enough in heaven to keep us gazing. A man of large wealth may have statuary in the hall , and paintings in the sitting-room , and works of art in all parts ofothe house , but he has the chief pictures in the art gallery , and there hour after hour you walk with catalogue and glass and ever-increas- ing admiration. Well , heaven is the gallery where God has gathered the chief treasures of his realm. The whole universe is his palace. In this ) owe ? room where we stop there are many adornments ; tessellated floor of amethyst , and on the winding cloud- stairs are stretched out canvas on which commingle azure , and purple , and saffron , and gold. But heaven is the gallery in which the chief glories are gathered. There are the brightest robes. There are the richest crowns. There are the highest exhilarations. St. John says of it : "The kings of the earth shall bring their honor and glory into it" And I see the procession forming , and in the line come all empires , and the stars spring up into an arch for the hosts to march under. They keep step to the sound of earthquake and the pitch of the avalanche from the mountains - tains , and the flag they bear is the flame of a consuming world , and all heaven turns out with harps and trumpets - pets and myriad-voiced acclamation of angelic dominions to welcome them in , and so the kings of the earth bring their honor and glory into it. Do you wonder that good people often stand , like Stephen - phen , looking into heaven ? We have many friends their. There is not a man here so isolated in life but there is some one in heaven with whom he once shook hands. As a man gets older , the number of his celestial acquaintances very rapidly multiplies. We have not had one glimpse of them since the night we kissed them good-bye , and they went away ; but still we stand gazing at heaven. As when some of our friends go across the sea , we stand on the dock , or on the steam-tug , and watch them , and after awhile the hulk of the vessel disappears , and then there is only a patch of sail on the sky , and soon that is gone , and they are all out of sight , and yet we stand looking in the same direction ; so when our friends go away from us into the future world we keep looking down through the Narrows , and gazing and gazing as though we expected - pected that they would come out and stand on some cloud , and give us one glimpse of their blissful and transfigured - figured faces. While you long to join their companionship - panionship , and the years and the days go with such tedium that they break your heart , and the vipers of pain , and sorrow , and bereavement keep gnawing at your vitals , you will stand , like Stephen - phen , gazing into heaven. You wonder if they have changed since you saw them last. You wonder if they would recognize your face now , so changed has it been with trouble. You wonder if , amid the myriad delights they have , they care as much for you as they used to when they gave you a helping hand and put their shoulder under your bur- dens. You wonder if they look any elder ; and sometimes in the evening - tide , when the house is all quiet , you wonder if you should call them by their first name if they would not answer ; and perhaps sometimes you do make the experiment , and when no one but God and yourself are there you distinctly - ly call their names , and listen , and sit gazing into heaven. Pass on now , and see Stephen looking - ing upon Christ. My text says he saw the Son of Man at the right hand of God. Just how Christ looked in this J 1 world , just how he looks in heaven , we cannot say. The painters of the different - ent ages have tried to imagine the features of Christ , and put them upon canvas ; but we will have to wait instil with our own eyes we see him and with our own ears we can hear him. And . yet there is a way of seeing him and hearing him now. I have to tell you that unless 3'ou see and hear Christ on earth , you will never see and hear him in heaven. Look ! There he is ! Behold the Lamb of God ! Can you not see him ? Then pray to God to take the scales off your eyes. Look that way-try to look that way. His voice comes down to you this day-comes down to the blindest , to the deafest couI , saying , "Look unto me , all ye ends of the earth , and be ye saved , for I am God , and there is none else. " Proclamation of universal emancipation - cipation for all slaves. Tell me , ye who know most of the world's history , what other king ever asked the abandoned - doned , and the forlorn , and the wretched - ed , and the outcast to come and sit beside - side him ? Oh , wonderful invitation ! You can take it to-clay , and stand at the head of the darkest alley in all this city , and say , "Come ! Clothes for your rags , salve for your sores , a throne for your eternal reigning. " A Christ that talks like that and acts like that , and pardons like that-do you wonder that Stephen stood looking at him ? I hope to spend eternity doing the same thing. I must see him ; I must look upon that face once clouded with my sin , but now radiant with my pardon. I want to touch that hand that knocked off my shackles. I want to hear the voice that pronounced my deliverance. Behold him , little children ; for if you live to three-score years and ten , you will see none so fair. Behold him , ye aged ones ; for he only can shine through 'the dimness of your failing eyesight. Behold him , earth. Behold him , heaven. What a moment when all the nations of the saved shall gather around Christ ! All faces that way. All thrones that way , gazing on Jesus. His worth if all the nations knew Sure the whole earth would love him , too. , I pass on now , and look at Stephen stoned. The world has always wanted to get rid of good men. Their very life is an assault upon wickedness. Out with Stephen through the gates of the city. Down with him over the preci- pices. Let every man come up and drop a stone upon his head. But 'these men did not so much kill Stephen as they killed themselves. Every stone rebounded - bounded upon them. While these murderers - derers were transfixed by the scorn of all good men , Stephen lives in the admiration - miration of all Christendom. Stephen stoned , but Stephen alive. So all good men must be pelted. "All who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer' per- secution. " It is no eulogy of a man to say that everybody likes him. Show me any one vrho is doing all his duty testate state or church , and I will show you scores of men who utterly abhor him. If all men speak well of you , it is because - cause you are either a laggard or a dolt. If a steamer makes rapid progress through the waves , the water will boil and foam all around it. Brave soldiers of Jesus Christ will hear the carbines click. When I see a man with voice , and money , and influence all on the right side , and some caricature him , and some sneer at him , and some denounce - nounce him , and men who pretend to be actuated by right motives conspire to cripple him , to cast him out , to destroy him , I say "Stephen stoned. " When I see a man in some great moral ' or religious reform battling against grog shops , exposing wickedness - ness in high places , by active means trying to purify the church and better the world's estate , and I find that the newspapers anathematize him , and men , even good men , oppose him and denounce him , because , though he does good , he does not do it in their way , I say , "Stephen stoned. " But you notice , my friends , that while they assaulted Stephen they did not succeed really in killing him. You may assault a good man but you can not kill him. On the day of his death , Stephen spoke before a few people in the Sanhedrim ; this Sabbath morning he addresses all Christendom. Paul the Apostle stood on Mars' hill addressing a handful of philosophers who knew not so much about science as a modern schoolgirl. To-day he talks to all the millions of Christendom about the wonders of justification and the glories of resur- rection. John Wesley was howled down by the mob to whom he preached , and they threw bricks at him , and they denounced him , and they jostled him , and they spat upon 'bim , and yet today - day , in all lands , he is admitted to be the great father of Methodism. Booth's ' bullet vacated the presidential chair : but from that spot of coagulated blood on the floor in the box of Ford's theater there sprang up the new life of a na- tion. Stephen stoned , but Stephen alive. Pass on now , and see Stephen in his dying prayer. Hfs first thought was not how the stones hurt his head , nor what would become of his body. His first thought was about his spirit. "Lcrd Jesus , receive my spirit. " The murderer standing on the trap-door , the black cap being drawn over his head before execution , may grimace about the future ; but you and I have no shame in confessing some anxiety ' about where we are going to come out. You are not all body. There is within 1 you a soul. I see it gleam from your eyes to-day , and I see it irradiating your countenance. Sometimes I am abashed before an audience , not because I come under your physical eye-sight , but because - cause I realize the truth that I stand before so many Immortal spirits. The probability is that your body will at least find a sepulchre in some of tha cemeteries that surround this city. There is no doubt but that your obsequies - sequies will be decent and respectful , and you will be able to pillow your head , , - - - - - - p ' q % . , , , rf I ender the mape , or the Norway spruce , ) blossoming fit' , or the cypress , or the , f but this spirit about which Stephen prayed , what direction will that take ? , What gttide will escort it. What gate will open to receive It ? What cloud . will be cleft for its pathway ? After the light of our sun , t it has got beyond . will there be torches lighted for it the i . , rest of the way ? travel through . r , . to Will the soul have long deserts before it reaches the good s land. If we should lose our pathway , will there be a castle at whose gate we may ash the way to the city ? Oh , , this mysterious spirit within us ! It f , , . . . has two wings , but it ! s in a cage now : ' , i It is locked fast to keep it ; but let the l door of this cage open the least , and " , , . i that gael is off. Eagles wing could ; not catch it. The lightnings are not I swift enough to come up with it. When the soul leaves the body It takes fifty ! ' worlds at a bound. And have I no anxiety - iety about it ? Have you no anxiety , I about it ? I I do not care what you do with my ! . ,1 body when my soul is gone , or whether i r you believe in cremation or inhumation. , , I shall sleep just as well in a wrapping , of sackcloth as in satin lined with ( 1 eagle's down. But my soul-before I , close this discourse I will find out where 1 it will land. Thank God for the intImation - ' ! mation of my text , that when we die Jesus takes us. That answers all , ! ! questions for me. What though they I were massive bars between here and the city of light , Jesus could remove I / them. What though there were great I Saharas of darkness , Jesus could 11- lume them : What though I get weary r on the way , Christ could lift me on his i I ! omnipotent shoulder. What though there were chasms to cross , his hand ! J t could transport me. Then let Stephen's I prayer be my dying litany : "Lord R ( i , f Jesus , receive my spirit" It may be f in that hour we will ho too feeble to , say a long prayer. It may be in that ! , hour we will not be able to say the "Lord's Prayer , for it has seven petI- , tions. PerhaP we may be too feeble i' ' even to say the infant prayer our mothers - . ; ers taught us , which John Quincy . ' ' { Adams , 70 years of age , said every ( ? I l night when he put his head upon his d pillow : I Now I lay me down to sleep , I pray the Lord mY soul to keep. 1 , I f We may be too feeble to employ , i either of these familiar forms ; but this ! prayer of Stephen is so short , is so con- I , else , is so earnest , is so comprehensive , ! we surely will be able to say that : 1 J 1 Lord Jesus , receive m } ' spirit. " Oh , ' i r is answered how if that prayer sweet it will be to die ! This world is clever enough to us. Perhaps it has treated ! , us a great deal better than we deserve I' ' ! ( to be treated ; but if on the dying pillow there shall break the light of that better - . I ter world , we shall have not more re- 1 l gret than about leaving a small , dark , damp house for one large , beautiful , and capacious. That dying minister fn i Philadelphia , some years ago , beautifully - it when in the last I fully depicted , mo- i meet , he threw up his hands and cried j , out : "I move into the light ! " Pass on now , and I will show you , one more picture , and that is Stephen f , 1 i , asleep. With a pathos and simplicity . l . peculiar to the Scriptures , the text , ! says of Stephen : He fell asleep. " , "Oh , " you say , "what a place that was i ' to sleep ! A hard rock under him , ! o stones falling down upon him , the p blood streaming , the mob 'howling. ' I What a place it was to sleep ! " And yet my text takes that symbol of slumber - , N ber to describe his departure , so sweet vi-as it , so contented was It so Peaci' ful 5 , ' ' , was ft. Stephen had lived a very laborious - borious life. His chief 'work had been to care for the poor. How many loaves } n of bread he had distributed , how many bare feet he had sandalled , how man Y cots of sickness and distress he had blessed with ministries of kindness and love I do not know : yet from the way , he lived , and the way he preached , and i the way he died , I know he was a laborious - , borious Christian. But that is all over ' ' now. He has pressed the cup to the lass fainting lip. He has taken the last I insult from his enemies. The last l stone to whose crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled. Stephen , ' , is dead ! The disciples come ! They take him up ! They wash away the ; blood from the wounds. They 1 straighten out the bruised limbs. They brush back the tangled hair from the ' brow , and then they pass around to 1 look upon the calm countenance of him who had lived for the poor and died for the truth. Stephen asleep ! I have seen the sea driven with the 1 hurricane until the tangled foam caught in the riggI , and wave rising a , above wave seemed as if about to storm 1 the heavens , and then I have seen the tempest drop and the ' , waves crouch , t and everything become smooth and ' burnished as though a camping place ! for the glories of heaven. So I have ( 1 seen a man , whose life has been tossed and driven , coming down at last to an ) infinite calm , in which there was a hush of heaven's lullaby. Stephen i asleep ! I , I say ; such an one. He fought all his i days against poverty and against abuse. They traduced his name. They rattled . I at the door-knob while he was dying , . [ 1 with duns for debts he could not pay ; yet the peace of God brooded over his pillow , and while the world faded , I 1 heaven dawned ; and the deepening twilight - light of earth's night was only the open- [ 1 ing twilight of heaven's A morn. Not a ' sigh. Not a tear. Not a struggle , , i I Hush ! Stephen asleep. r SHARP POINTS. ; So many people are actuated by pure . . , cussedness. h What we learn with pleasure we. r never forget. " Some people do nothing but talk en- couraging1y. 1 Patience Is the road to advancement ! t , In all lines of life. . ' 1 : - - ; -------.I ' ' ' - - f