! y ULAN Db 2$ BY WILLIAM BLACK Zw - CHAPTER I. Late one evening in April, In a prlvnte iuhir room on the first Boor of a hotel in Alherniarle street, a member of the British House of Commons was lying back in an ensy chair, having just begun to rend, in nn afternoon Journal, an ar ticle about himself. He was a man ap proaching fifty, with hair become prema turely quite silver white. This was what lie wa rending: "By his nmendment of last night, which was defeated by nn overwhelming majority, the member for Slagpool has once more called attention to the unique position which he occupies in contempo rary politics. Consistent only in his hopeless inconsistency, and only to be reckoned on for the wholly unexpected, one wonders for what particular-purpose the electors of Slagpool ever thought of fending Mr. Winterbourne to Parlia ment. A politician who is at once a furious Jingo In foreign affairs and an ultra-revolutionary at home; an upholder -of the divine rights and liberties of the multitude, who, at the same time, would, if he could, force them to close every public house in the country, alike on Sun- -"ij l.'fl L 111 t III J , in a KtJUU UVI1I I11UI K dangerous to his allies than to his ene mies, while ministering to his own in ordinate vanity." "It sounds like the writing of a young man," he was thinking. "But perhaps Jt is true. Perhaps that is what I am like. I wonder if that is how I appear to Yolnnde?" He heard a footstep outside, and Im mediately thrust away the newspnper from him. The next moment the door of the room was opened, and the frame work showed a living picture, that of a young girl of eighteen, singularly tall and strikingly fair, who stood there hesi tating, timid, half laughing. "Look," she said. "Is it your idea?" "Is it your idea?" he repeated peevish ly. "Yolande, you are getting worse and worse. Why don't you say, 'Is this what you meant?' " "Is this what you meant?" she said l'itiffltfrMTi,V' t1""t "' 1 SHE SAT ON THE HEARTHRUG BEFORE HIM. promptly, and with a slight foreign ac cent. "Come to the mirror, child, and put on your hat, and let me see the whole thing properly." She did as she was bid, stepping ovr to the fireplace, and standing before the old-fashioned mirror, as she adjusted the wlde-briniiiied Uubens hat over the ruddy Hold of her hair. For this was an ex periment costume, and it had some sug gestion of novelty. The plain gown was of a uniform cream white of some rough towel-like substance that seemed to cling naturally to the tall and graceful figure, and it wns touched here and there with black velvet. She wore no ornaments but a thick silver necklace round her thront and a plain silver belt round her waist. "Is it what you meant?" she repeated, turning to him from the mirror. "Oh, yes," said he, rather reluctantly. "I I thought it would suit you. But you see, Yolande, to drive in the park In London wouldn't it be a little con plcuous?" Her eyes were filled with astonish ment; his rather wandered away nerv ously to the table. "But, papa, I don't .understand you. Everywhere else you are always wishing me to wear the brightest and lightest of colors. I may wear what I please and that Is only to please you, that Is what 1 care about only anywhere else If we are going for a walk or a drive at Oatlunds Park, I cannot please you with enough bright colors; but here, in Lon don, everything is too conspicuous! And this time I wns so nnxioUB to please you all your own Ideas; not mine at all. But what do I care?" She tossed the Uubens hnt on to the couch that was near. "Come! What is there about a dress? It will do for some other place, not so dnrk'nnd smoky as London. Come sit down, pnpa you do not wish to go away to the House yet!" "Well, now, Miss Invelgler, Just listen to this," said he, laying hold of her by both her small ears. "Don't you think It prudent of me to Bhow up as often as I can in the House, so 'that my good friends in Slagpool mayn't begin to grum ble about my being away so frequently? And why am I away? Why do I neglect my duties? Why do I let the British Empire glide on to Its doom? Why but Pi that I may take a wretched school girl for her holidays and show her things she can't understand; and plow through mu seums and picture galleries to fill a mind that is no bettur than a sieve? Just think of it. The British Empire going headlong to the mischief all for. the sake of an empty-headed school girl!" "Do you know, papa, I am very glad to hear that?" she said, quietly, and she sat on the hearth rug before hira, "for now I think my dream will soon be com ing true." "Your dream?" "My dream. The ambition of my life," said she, seriously. "It is all 1 wish for and hope for. Nothing else nothing else In the world. It is to make myself indispensable to you. Listen now, papa. Surely it la a shame that you have wasted so much time on me, through so many years always coming to see me and take me away. I have more sense now; I have been thinking; I want to be indispensable to you; I want to be in London with you al ways; and you shall never have to run away idling, and you shall never have to think that I am wearying for you when I am always with you in London. That is it now; I wish to be yuur private sec retary." "No, no, Yolande," he said, nervous ly. "London won't do for you it it wouldn't do at all. Don't think of it even.", "Papa, what other member of Parlia ment, with so much business as you have, is without a secretary? Why should you answer all those letters yourself? For me I will learu politics very quick ly: I am sturying hard. And just to think that you have never allowed me to hear you speak in the House! When I come to London the ladies whom I see will not believe that I have never once been in the House. They know all the spenkers; they have heard all the great men; they spend the whole of the even ing there, and have many come to see them all In politics. Well, you see, papa, what a burden It would be taking off your hands. You would not always have to come home and dine with me, and waste so much of the evening in reading to me. Then all the day here, busy with your letters. Oh, I assure you I would mnke prettier compliments to your constituents than you could think of." "They seem to think there," he said, with a sardonic smile, and he glanced at the newspaper, "'that the country would be better off without me." It was too late to recall this unfortu nate speech. The moment he had spoken she reached over and took up the journal, and found her father's name staring her in the face. "Is it true, Yolande?" he said, with a laugh. "Is that what I am like?" As she read, Yolande tried at first to be grandly indifferent contemptuous. And then, in spite of herself, tears rose slowly and filled the soft gray-blue eyes though she had kept her head down, vainly trying to hide them. And then mortification at her weakness made her angry, and she crushed up the paper twice or thrice, and hurled it Into the fire; nay, she seized hold of the poker and thrust and drove the offending jour nal Into the very heart of the coals. And then she rose, proud and indignant, and with a toss of her pretty head, she said: "It is enough time to waste over such folly. Perhaps thep oor man has ' to support a family; but, he need not write such Btupidity as that Now, papa, what shall I play for you?" "I must be off to the House. There is just a chance of a division; and per haps I may be able to get In a few words somewhere, just to show the Sing pool people that I am not careering about the Continent with my school girl. No, no; I will see you safe In your own room, Yolande; and your lamp lit, and everything snug; then Good night!" "No. Not until you say, 'I love you." " "I love iu." "And I may go out to-morrow morning as early as ever I like, to buy some flow ers for the breakfast table?" "I don't like your going out by your self, Yolande," said he rather hesitating ly. "You can order flowers. You can ring and tell the waiter " "The waiter!" she exclaimed. "What am I of use for, then, if It Is a waiter who will choose flowers for your break fast table, papa?" "Take Jane with you, then. "Oh, yes." , So that was settled; and he went up stairs with her to see that her little si! ver reading lamp was properly lit, am! then bade her the real last good-night When he returned to the sitting room for bis hat and coat, there was a pleased and contented look on his face. "Poor Yolande!" he was thinking; "she Is more shut up here thnn in the country: but she will soon have the liberty of Oat lunds Park again." He had just put on his coat and hat, and was giving a last !ook round the room to see if there was anything he ought to take with him, when there was a loud, sharp crash at the window. A hundred splinters of glass fell on to the floor; a stone rolled over and over to' the fireplace. He seemed bewildered ouly for a second; and perhaps it was the startling sound that bad made his face grow suddenly of a deadly pallor; the next second noiselessly and quickly be had stolen front the room, and wis hurriedly descending the stairs to the hall of the hotel. CHAPTER II. The bead waiter was in the hall, alone, and staring out through the glass door. When he heard some one behind him, be turned quickly, and there was a vagae alurm In his face. "The the lady, sir, has been here again." Mr. Winterbourne paid no heed to him; passed him hastily, and went out. The lamplight showed a figure standing there on the pavement the figure of a tall woman, dark and pale, who bad a strange, dazed look In her eyes. "I thought I'd bring you out!" she said, tauntingly, and with a slight laugh. "What do you want?V he said, quick ly, and under his breathe "Have you no shame, woman? Cuius' away. Tell me what you want!" "You know what I want," she said sullenly. "I want no more lies." Then an angrier light blazed up in the Impas sive, emaciated face. "Who haB driven me to it, if I have to break a window? I want no more lies and hidings. I want you to keep your promise; and if I have to break every window in the House of Commons, I will let everybody know. Whose fault is it?" "What madness have you got hold of now?" he said, in the same low voice and all his anxiety seemed to be to get her away from the hotel. "Come along and tell me what you want I suppose I can guess who sent you. I suppose It was not for nothing you came to make an exhibition of yourself in the public streets. They asked you to go and get some money?" "I will take them gome money. Iff you like," she said, absently. "They are my only friends now my only friends; they have been kind to me they don't cheat me with lies and promises they don't put me off, and turn me away when I ask for them. Yes, I will take them some money." By this time they had reached the cor ner of Piccadilly, and as a four-wheeled cab happened to be pnssing, he stopped it, and himself opened the door. She made no remonstrance; she seemed ready to do anything he wished. " "Here is some money. I will pay the driver." She got into the cab quite submissive ly, and the man wns given the address, and paid. Then the vehicle wns driven off; and he wns left standing on the pave ment, still somewhat bewildered, and not conscious how his hands were trembling. He stood uncertain only for a second or so, then lie walked rapidly back to the hotel. "Has Miss Winterbourne's maid gone to bed yet?" he asked of the landlady. "Oh, no, sir! I should think not, sir," the buxom person nnswered; she did not observe that his face was pale and his eyes nervous. "Will you please tell her, then, that we shall be going down to Oatlnnds Park again to-morrow morning? She must have everything ready; but she is not to disturb Miss Winterbourne to-night." Then he went into the coffee room, and found the head waiter. "Look here," snid he, "I suppose you can get a man to put in a. pane of glnss in the window of our sitting room the first thing In the morning? There lins been some accident, I suppose. You enn have it done before Miss Winterbourne comes down." He stood for a moment apparently list ening if there was any sound upstairs; and then he opened the door again And went out Very slowly he walked away through the lamp-lit streets, seeing abso lutely nothing of the passersby, or of the rattling cabs and carriages; and although he bent his steps Westminster-ward It was certainly not the affairs of the na tion that had hold of his mind. Rather he was thinking of that beautiful fair young life that young life so carefully and tenderly cherished and guarded, and all unconscious of this terrible black shadow behind it. The Irony of It! It was this very night that Yolande had chosen to reveal to him her secret hopes and ambition; she was to be always with him; she was to be "Indispensable;" the days of her banishment were to be now left .behind; and the two, father and daughter, were to be Inseparable com panions henceforth and forever. And his reply? As he walked along the half-deserted pavements, anxiously revolving many things, ana dreaming many dreams about what the future might have In store for her, and regarding the trouble and' terrible care that haunted his own life, the final summing up of all his doubts and fears resolved Itself Into this If only Yolando were married! When he passed Into the House It wns to seek out his friend, John Shortlands, whose rough common sense and blunt counsel had before now stood hira in good stead and served to brace up his unstrung nerves. The tall, corpulent, big-headed Ironmaster, he at length found with two or three companions. Winterbourne touched his friend lightly on the shoul der. "Can you come outside for a minute?" -All right" (To be continued) SILENCE IN HEAVEN. By Her. Russell H. Con ire, D. D., Text "And when he had opened the seventh seal there was silence In heaven about the space of half an hour." Revelation vlil:l. I nm one of those who believe that this book Is not yet open; that In a grent measure it is a sealed book, and that by and by, in the development of the years, men will understand the book of Revelation. So 1 have found this verse. I do not understand its relationship; I would not undertake to give an exe gesis of It and I do not believe any nun cun. But there Is a thought In It which we can comprehend. There Is something here that Is very useful; and as a marvelous Illustration of a great gospel truth, there Is nothing finer to be found In any of the litera ture of the world. Think of the angels folding thelt wings and bowing In silence for half an hour In that eternal land above. Wonderful saying, this half an hour of silence In heaven! It says here that when the seventh seal Bhall be opened, or was opened, as John related It In a vision he saw there was silence In heaven about the space of half an hour. It calls attention to thut which Is to follow It calls the whole mind's thought to that one great purpose of living in the earth viz.: the heavenly things that are to come. It was the coming of the end. It Is the Judgment day; all mankind have reached the end of earth ly existence, and It Is a time when every man Is to be Judged according to the deeds done In the hotly. There Is half nn hour of silence a perfectly awful thought. "Yet, being here, It Is here to be meditated uihjii and studied. Oh, what voices there are In the silence! The coming of the King makes si lence. Christ is come! I recall vivid ly a great demonstration In St. Peters burg, Russia, when the Czar Alexan der wns coming with the Czarina up the river into the city. He was to be announced by the firing of a gun on one of the bridges of the city, and the streets were thronged with people the streets were black with the crowd, In their dark clothing of that north land. They surged back and forth like the restless ocean bay. They were In the windows and doorways. The roofs and cornices were covered with people. They crowded In by the tens of thousands to welcome the Emperor on that fete day. When the tiniear rived, as announced, at quarter-past two, nil were waiting for the gun. They waited and waited; and oh, the silence of that multitude of people, Immovable, scarcely breathing. There was something so solemn, so oppres sive that It seemed as though the earth must open unless they were per mitted to move ortspeak or In some way to make a demonstration. But when the gun boomed then the people moved. Then they shouted. Then they swung their Hags and their hand kerchiefs, and the military uttered their huzzas, and It broke forth Into a salvo of welcome, so great that the heavens themselves seemed to reply. But the silence that preceded It seem ed to emphasize It and those who wrt nessed It were more Impressed with the silence than with all the acclaim and all the parade and music ufter wards. ' The lesson to teach Is the Impor tance of men In every spnere stopping, and meditating for half an hour. If you are going to change your busi ness; If you are going to a new place; If yon are going to be married; if you are going to Join the church through your heart having been turned to Chrlst;lf you are undertaking any new thing, stop for half an hour and In silence meditate. If you are under taking the accomplishment of a day's work only, In the morning in silence niolltato, meditate In your bed before you rise or afterwards sit by your self and talnk a tow minutes. It will save you time through the day, and will greatly Increase your ability to do. It will give to you that day, no matter what your sphere, success, If you but stop and meditate. iniltii' "r itir.iMiiiiio.x, ktbi. k t tea rw m v ml fly Rer. W. C . Covert The conditions of life are unfavor able to the practice of religious meditation. This Is the noisiest Btago of the world's life. The world never was so filled with the loud Jar gon of men and the harsh clatter of things. Our civilization Is a shriek ing, roaring thing. A modern city Is a perfect bedlnm. Industry goes for ward with a thousand coarse, grating PILOT voices that spoil the silence and ravish our nerves. It knows no night of rest It knows no Sabbath of quiet. We are a thousand years from the silent ilfe of our forefathers of fifty years ago. But the noisier the age trie more men hunger for quiet This Is the day of all days for the practice of a sane, healthy religious meditation. Religious life will die amidst the noisy and superficial things of the day when we break our companionship with great religious thoughts. In proper religious meditation in this day there must be complete detachment from surroundings. Not because men are to despise the hard work and clamor of life, and seek to leave It, but that In a moment or an hour of detachment they may feed on food that will strengthen them for the battle and turn with renewed courage to It Let men think on lines suggested by the great problems and duties of a practical, religious life and they will escape the peril of a fruitless medita tion, and keep In helpful touch with their day. THE VISITOR FROM HEAVEN. Br Rer, Ebenezer Rees. Text: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any man hear my voice, I will oien the door, I will conio in to him, and will Blip with him, and he with me." Revelatlou ill., 20. In reading the Bible, do you ever see pictures? Sometimes to me the page glow with life. May I tell you my picture of this text? It came ouo evening long ago. I thought that I was Journeying ulong a country road on u tempestuous winter's night Tho sky wept upon a dreary world. It was ilurk and desolate and very lonely, as I Journeyed up the hills and down the valleys, with nothing but a pale, young moon to cheer the way. Presently I saw In the distance a light I watched it wonderlngly, drawing nearer and nearer to it, until at length I stood be side a cottnge. I went up to the door and knocked; a man within unbolted the door and opened. The stranger drew near to the house holder and took hold of hla hand, gripped It kindly yet firmly. Oh! the touch of that hund said much. Tho light and gladness of the one face passed over into the other. There are two kinds of welcome. There Is the skinny little welcome If you will purdon a word which Is more expressive Own classical; as when wo say, "I am so glad to see you;" while you really mean and somehow show that we shall lie gladder still when be has gone. That Is not the welcome which we must give the Savior. Thero Is another welcome. Let me try to translate It Jnto words. "Come In!" Oh! we see It In the face; we feel It at the door; the very gate as It swings on Its hinges learns the secret anil rings with it. "Conio In; I rejoice to see you. This Is my house; let It bo yours; go upstairs, downstairs sit where you like; roam where you will. This Is my home; let It be yours." That Is welcome. We go to that house again. And there Is a Hense in which the human heart Is very like a house. It has many rooms and corners, some of which have not been swept out, maybe, since the house was built Christ must have entry to those cor ners. We must Bay: "Come In, Jesus; live with me. Thou shalt know all alxiut me. Thou shalt read every Re cret In my heart. Thou shalt know my motives. Thou shalt hear the things I have not whispered to others. Thou shalt hear me praying and watch me working. Welcome, Master! Live with me. Correct me. Chastise me. Bring the rod upon me when I deserve It Only stay with me evermore." If we could but give Him such a welcome, how happy would we bel Rhort Meter Sermons. Toll disarms teniiptatlon. Persplnratlon proves Inspiration. No man can keep his sins to himself. Revenge Is sweetest when renounced. Great faith Is the secret of great facts. There may be backbone without big otry. He has no faith In God who has no hope for man. This would lie a bitter world but for our tears. Destiny Is decided not by definitions but by deeds. He knows nothing fully who knows nothing beside. No man ever bought fortune by the snle of his friends. The church with a mission never dies for lack of money. You cannot tell much about God's army by Its eburcii parade. A llfo Is to be known by its outgo rather than by Its Income. The man who boasts of never minc ing matters is likely to be chopping up somebody'! reputation pretty fln.