Demonic Wald Bellefonte, Pa., July i8, #890. JOSEPH'’S BONES. BY H. M.S. And Moses took the bones of JIeseph with him; for he had straitly sworn the chil- dren of Israel, saying, God will surely visit you; and ye shall carry my bones away hence with you.—Ex. xiii., 19; Josh. xxvi,, 31. Alone in solemn grandeur, beneath the.eastern skies, : Where the fiery pillar gleameth, the precious casket lies; , For God’s owu servant, Moses, Is faithful to his trust, And in the wild reposes The patriarchal dust. And like a mighty sentinel it seemeth ward to ee O’erdhe ally host of Israel, calm in their midnight sleep, With the stars so mildly beaming From the deep blue vault above, And the heavenly fire streaming Q’er the people of God’s love. With reverence it is lifted by that brave le brew band ; ; With Ro care they bear it far from Egyptian an ’ While in the sunlight glances, And in the evening gloam, That caravan advances Towards the promised home. No Pharaoh in his glory, with triumpet, bow | and spear, Could boast such gorgeous escort as Joseph on his hier, With the anthems loudly ringing Throughout that land so fair, And the priests ot Levi flinging Their incense on the air. With the cloud it moveth onward until the march is o'er, : Whilst those that walk beside it are dropping score by score ; On desert plains some sleeping, Some'neath the mountain’s mist, Where beasts of prey are keeping In Moab's vale their tryst. The weary journey ended, they have laid it in the grave : On the western side of Jordon, where the palms of Shechen wave. Now, Israel, furl your banners, Your voiee in gladness raise— Shout, shoutthe loud Hosanna In great Jehovah's praise ! Observer. OLD UNCLE BILL. Any one who should visit Mr. Norris at his fine place on the Hudson would be sure to notice, after a while, an old man who wandered about the place dressed all summer in awhite shirt and linen vest and trousers and a fisher- man’s hat, and all winter in a woolen dressing gown. He was a meek, tall, bald old man, and people at first took him for a superannuated old servant; but finally, his nice linen, his neat hands, and a certain well bred tone of voice, if by chance, they heard him speak, made them ask ; : “Who is that 2" If they inquired of Miss Belle, the eldest unmarried daughter, she would answer: “An old connection of poor mam- ma's. I can’t see why pa has him here—horrid thing !” It they asked Mr. Norris’ maidensic ter, she would reply : “One of the blessings my late sister- in-law brought with her into the fami. ily. A miserable ne’er-do weel of a relation.” If the question were propounded to pompous Mr. Norris, as hie sat in his armchair on his piazza, or drove about his property in one of his handsome vehicles, he would answer : “Well, that's a sort of a relation of my wife's, a ne’er-do-weel. The black sheep of the flock, you know. Always is one in every family. For her sake —she was a very benevolent woman— we let him stay about. He prefers eat- ing by himself. He's very stupid,very ; bat she wanted him here, aud she had her way, poor soul. I grudged her nothing. Yes, that’s poor Bill.” But if it was Miss Phemie of whom the question was asked, she always an- swered : “Why that is Uncle Bill. He's a little eccentric, but the dearest old soul. I'm very found of him, aad he of me. Dear old Uncle Bill I” Certainly Phemie was the old man’s only friend in that pompous household. She it was who went up to his little room with his meals and sat with him while he ate them ; who saw that he had the newspaper and his pipe; who had fixed that little out of the way place with a pretty carpet,book shelves, a student’s lamp, lots of pretty orna- ments in worsted and painted silk ; who never received her monthly allowance without buying something for him. His pretty, snow white shirts were her gift, and she saw that they were “done up” properly. The flannel dressing gown he wore in winter was of her contrivance. In fact, up in that dormer roofed room there were hours that were more home-like than any spent in the great parlors, or the big dining-room, where Miss Belle was only affectionate to ‘pa’ when she wanted him to give her more money to spend ; and Miss Norris,the eldest sister of the master of the house, made bitter speeches in the pauses of the needle work in which she was perpetually en- gaged, sometimes directed at her brother, sometimes at Belle, sometimes at Phemie, but all worded so circam- spectly and clothed in such a guise of piety that no one dared resent them, “What a comfort you are, Uncle * Bill,” Phemie would say, as she poured out the old man’s coffee. “And what a comfort you are, Phe- mie,” old Uncle Bill would say. “If I was a rich uncle, just home from In- dia, jlilce those in plays and novels,jyou couldn’t make more of me,” “I shouldn’t make so much, uncle,” Phemie would answer, “ for you'd be a victim of liver complaint, and that would make you ill natured, and you'd scold me and say naughty words. They all do, you know. Now you haven't any money or stocks to worry about, like poor pa; and you're not irritable, and I like to be with you. You're like mamma, too, You have her eyes.” “You are sister Susan's image,” the old man would say. ‘Do you remem- ber the day that you came to the hos- pital with her ?” “Yes,” said Phemie. “1 was just 12 years old and mamma was crying over the telegram. “My only brother, Phe- mie,’ sne said, ‘so sick that he may: die, and so poor that he's in a hospital. Then we came and I saw you in bed, and after a while we brought you home and ma nursed you well again.” “And died herself, just as I got about,” said Unele Bill. “And your father and the west did not like a shabby oid man around the house. Well, T was lucky to geta home,I sup- pose, and luckier still to find such dis- interested love 2s yours. You're like Susan. Shc was the dearest girl that ever lived. Yes, you're like Susan.” But they did not always talk thus. They were very busy often, over books; over Phemie’s embrodiery, for which he designed patterms; teaching her lit- tle dog a thousand tricks ; feeding the blind kitten Phemie saved from drown- ing ; making a little well, from which the canary drew buckets of water. And Phemie and the old man would wander off to the river side, where he would fish, seldom catching anything, and she would read or knit. None of the family knew of these in- stances. Belle, older than Phemie by six years, preferred chat she should considered herself a chid until Miss Norris was married. And Aunt Marcia detested her for her resemblance to the sister-in-law who “had never been con- genial.” No one in the house knew, but some one not of the household did, and shar- { ed at times in them. Sometimes, when the old man’s rod dangled over the water, a younger ang- ler would take his place near him—a handsome young fellow with black hair and the brightest eyes in the world ; and then the hours went by like hours in a dream, and Phemie felt hapoy as she had felt when a child by her mother's side. And Uncle Bill laughed and told fisherman’s stores. As for the young man, silent or talka- tive, he was always charming. So thought Phemie. She was 17; she had never had a lover. She was well read in romantic lore. What happen- ed was only to be expected. In a little while two lovers sat beside old Uncle Bill on the banks of the pretty stream, and walked together as far as the little gate in the hedge that nobody else used and did not hide from the old man that they parted with a kiss. Fred Howard was not a fashionable man, only the ec of a poor widow who had made a bockkeeper of her boy. What holidays he had he spent at home. This was his midsummer va- cation ; he was bright, and good, and handsome, but Mr. Norris surely would have had other views for his youngest daughter. And so, one day, as the two, having met accidentally on the road, were talk- ing together, with an expression on either face that made an old country lady who drove past remark to her hus- band: “Hiram, take my word for it, them’s beaus,” Mr. Norris marched up behind the pair, and appeared like a very florid ghost between them, with an: “I was not aware, Mr. Howard, that you had ever been introduced to my daughter!” The young man blushed, but answer- ed: “But I have, sir—by my friend, her uncle.” “Oh!” replied Mr. Norris, lowering his tone a little. “Then you know my brother, Mr. Whipple Norris, in the city? He is a relative I am proud of —worth half a million if he is worth a cent.” “T often heard of Mr. Whipple Nor- ris,” replied the young man frankly, “but I owe my introduction to Miss Phemie Norris to ber Uncle William— ah—ah.” The young man suddenly remembered that he did not know Un- cle Bill's last name. “Her Uncle William !”” repeated Mr. Norris. “Euphemia,does young How- ard allude to your poor mother’s unfor- tunate brother Bill 2” Phemic bowed her head. “Young Howard I" repeated Mur. Norris. “That person has no author ity to introduce my daughter. Consider vourself a stranger to her henceforth.” Phemie looked at Fred. Fred look- "ed at Phemie. “Tt is too late, sir,” the latter said. “I love your daughter, and have won her heart. She has promised to be my wife.” Mr. Norris stared at him, lifted his eyebrows; stared again through his double eyeglass, and spoke sternly : “I have one daughter who is a credit to me. Lord McTab paid great aiten- tion to her last winter. He has writ ten to ask my consent to their nuptials, which I shall give, and he will return in the fall to be married to her. An English nobleman would hardly like a brother-in-law who makes, perhaps, twenty dollars a week. My eldest daughter, Mrs. Timpkins Trotter, has married a gentleman who is esteemed the wealthiest man in Mineville. My son is with my brother in New York— amen [am proud of. Now I shall never make a fuss about Phemie. I only tell you this: If she marries you I disown her. You can take her if she chooses. I shall never give her a pen- ny. She may have her clothes and trinkets and go. If she obeys me she aball be, married or single, well provi- ded for. She is plain and unprepos- sessing; but I know a young clergy- man who will attain eminence who on- ly: needs my permission to propose. She might do very well with a proper portion for him. She has a thick waist, a large mouth and ordinary features,” continued Mr. Norris, turning his eye- glass on his daughter, “but a clergy- man should not look for beauty.” “She is the prettiest girl [ know, and if I may earn her bread and butter I can do it,” said Fred Howard. “You give her to me, sir?” “No,” replied Mr. Norris. “She may give herself to you if she chooses to be a beggar.” : Then he walked-away. As Phemie and Fred stood looking at each o'her old Uncle Bill's head arose above the shrubbery. “I give my permission,” he said, ! with more than usual dignity ; “and I am her mother’s brother. I think you will make her happy, young Fred Howard.” The maiden aunt and the sister, who was to be the bride of an Englishman, led Phemie a sad life of it for a while; Jbut one morning she walked out of her home in the simple church going cos- tume, and was married in the little chapel of St. Jonh. Old Uncle Bill, in his old fashioned broadcloth suit, went with them, and gave the bride away. Mrs. Howard was there, and a school friend of Phemie’s and a fellow clerk of Fred's. None of the Norris family. And after the wedding they were to go upon a little trip. Phemie’s trunks had been sent to Fred's mother’s little house. The bride was not as happy as she might have been under other cir- cumstances, but at home no one had ever loved or considered her since her mother's death ; and Fred loved her, and she loved him. Her only trouble was that she must leave old Uncle Bill. “That is hard,” the old man said, “very hard, Phemie.”” And then Fred held ont his hand. “Uncle Bill,” he said, “we shall live in a very plain way, but if you will live with us we will do our best to make you happy and shall be happy ourselves.” “Will you be so, boy ?”’ cried Uncle Bill. “A poor old man like me—eh! really 2” “Really!” cried Phemie, dancing with joy. “Really and truly, heaven knows!” And Fred grasped his hand and shook it. “You brought us together, Uncle Bill,” he said. “It’s lucky,” answered Uncle Bill, “for Brother-in-law Norris has turned me out of his house for aiding and abetting you—told me that I might be town poor if [ liked. I didn’t, but I just said : ‘Very well ; I'll go.” “T’ll get your things and take them to mother’s” said Fred. “You'll be company for her while we're gone; after that, one home for all of us.” Then the old man looked at them with a smile ; looked at Mrs. Howard with another, and laughed his sweet, good natured laugh. “You're two good, honest, generous children,” he said. “And you're Fred's mother, ma'am. But I've an explana- tion to make. Five years ago my sister Susan heard that I was sick and at a hospital and took me to her house. She nursed me back to tolerable health, and was very good to me. Then,sweet angle she died. She thought that being in a hospital meant poverty. I was paying fifty dollars a week there. I have a fortune that even Mr. Norris would respect, but seeing what he was, 1 I took a fancy that I'd find out what his children were. I have. I've lived about the place as old Uncle Bill, a poor relation. I wasn’t wanted, even at table. I was despised by all but Phemie. She, dear little soul, has been a daughter to me. I told Sister Susan the truth on her death bed, and promised to do my best by this sweet girl ; and my money has been growing under good care for five years. Why, had I been the beggar they thought me, I'd have gone to an almshouse rather than eat Norris’ bread all these years. As it was, I enjoyed the joke. To think how he would have respected me (if he had known the truth. How he scorned me for being poor, when 1 was a wealthy man ; but let all that pass; we are happy together and what need we care?’ There was great excitement at the Norris mansion when the news reach- ed its inhabitants, and Mr. Norris sent a formal forgiveness to his dauchter. She was a good girl and felt glad that this was so, but she only began to know what real happiness was in the home where she and those who truly loved her lived contentedly together for many long and pleasant years. Catching a Wild Turkey, The wild turkey is a famous runner, and relies more upon his legs than upon his wings when pursued. When the birds are found upon the open prairie, therefore, the chase, for a man on horse- back, becomes really exciting. Colonel Dodge says that in Texas, many years ago,he used occasionally to kill them with a stick from horseback. A flock being discovered on a prairie two or three miles across, a detour was made, and the horseman, coming up from the wood, rushed with a yell at the birds, frichten- ing them so badly that some would fly to the open prairie. The first flight was from four hundred to six hundred yards, depending on the weight and fatness of the bird. At the end of his first flight he would probably be two or three hundred yards ahead of the horseman, but this distancejwas soon lessened after he alighted. On the near approach of his pursuer he would essay another flight, this time scarcely one hundred or two hundred yards. A third flight generally finished all wing business, and his further efforts at escape were confined to running and dodging. A stick four feet long and as large as one’s finger ‘was AR. by the hunter, and as the turkey turned to avoid the horse, a smart blow on the head finished its life and the race. In this way I one day killed two turkeys, and a brother officer three, from one flock. Some days after, another officer from the same post went out riding with his wife. Comingupon a flock of turkeys in a favorable position, he proposed that they should catch one. : After an exciting chase, a fine large bird was run down so that he could scarcely move, and confined himself solely to avoiding the feet of the horses. The officer had no stick to kill with, and in his excitement, thinking he could easily catch a bird so exhausted, be sprang from his horse, and took after the turkey on foot. He ran his best, but the bird ran fast enough to avoid his clutch, and finally, when utterly blown and exhausted he gave up the chase, he turned to see his horse dis- appearing in the distance, and his wife on her horse in full pursuit of the run- away. He had to walk about eight miles to the post, and for some months it was not quite safe to say ‘turkey’ to him. Rich Without Money. Many a man is rich without money. Thousands of men with nothing in their pockets, and thousands without even a pocket, are rich. A man born with a good, sound constitution, a good sto- mach, a good heart and good limbs and prety ‘good gheadpiece is rich. nes are better than gold; tough muscles than silver; and nerves that flash fire and carry energy to every function are better than houses snd land. It is better than a landed estate to have the right kind of a father and mother. Education may do much to check evil tendencies or to develop good ones; but itis a great thing to inherit the right proportion of faculties to start with. The man is rich who has a good disposition, who is naturally kind, patient, cheerful, hopeful, and who has a flavor of wit and fun in his com- positiou. The hardest thing to get on with in this life is a man’s own self. A cross selfish fellow, a desponding and com- plaining fellow, a timid and care-burd- ened man—these are all born deformed an the inside. They do not limp, but their thoughts some times do.—Clay Manufacturer's Engineer. The Starving Caravan. Stanley Describes a Terrible March Through the African Forest. Ah, it was a sad sight, unutterably sad, to see so many men struggling on blindly through that endless forest, fol- lowing one white man, who was bound whither none knew, whom most believed did not know himself! They were in a veritable hell of hunger already ! What nameless horrors awaited them further on none could conjecture. But what mat- ter, death comes to every man soon or late! Therefore we pushed on and on, broke through the bush, trampled down the plants, wound along the crest of spurs zigzagging from northeast to northwest, and ascending to a bowl like valley by a clear stream, lunched on our corn and berries. During our midday halt, one Umari having seen some magnificent and ripe fenssie at thetop of a tree sixty feet high, essayed to climb it; but on gain- ing that height, a branch or his strength yielded, and he tumbled headlong upon the head of two other men who were waiting to seize the fruit. Strange to say, none of them were very seriously injured. Umari was a little lame in the hip, and one ot those upon whom he fell complained of a pain in the chest. At 3.30, after a terrible struggle through a suffocating wilderness of arums, amoma, and bush, we came to a dark amphitheatral glen, and at the bot- tom found a camp just deserted by the natives, and in such hot haste that they thought it best not to burden themselves with their treasures. Surely some divin- ity provided for us always in the most distressful hours | Two bushels of Indian curn and a bushel of beans awaited us in this camp. ; My poor donkey from Zanzibar show- ed symptoms of surrender. Arums and amoma every day since June 28th, were no fit food for a dainty Zanzibar ass, therefore to end his misery I shot him. The meat was as carefully shared as though it were the finest venision, for a wild and tamished mob threatened to defy discipline. When the meat was fairly served a free fight took place over the skin, the bones were taken up and crushed, the hoofs were ‘boiled for hours, there was nothing left of my faithful an- _imal but the spilled blood and hair ; a pack of hyenas could not have made a more thorough disposal of it.— Henry M. Stanley, in Scribner. A Great Festival. It is a curious illustration of the sensi- tiveness of certain portions of the ani- mal kingdom that the Chinese always expect the hatching of the silk worms to come immediately upon the first thunder of the spring. Every year at that season there is a great parade and ceremonial, which shows how large a portion of the national wealth the silk cultivation has come to be considered by them, a parade that takes the form of an act of worship to Loui Tsen, the wife and queen of the Emperor Hoang Ti, in the remote of eld, the person who first bred silk-worms for the sake of their cocoons. Now the Empres China goes every year at the time of this early thunder to the mulberry fields, and there she and all her retinue of pomp and pride offer sacrifice to Loui. The sacrifice made, she proceeds with the women of her court, and with a crowd of the peasant women engaged in silk culture, to cook over a fire, with her own hands, some mulberry leaves, and to lay them in a basket with some of the young cocoons, To complete the business she then winds a cocoon herself, all in the way of teaching the women that it is work that even an empress cannot afford to despise. And the festi- val ends by a presentation of gifts or prizes to those women whose names are given by the authorities intrusted with their inspection as the most faithful in attention to the silkworm.— Bazar. A Chance to Redeem Pennsylvania. From the New York Commercial Advertiser (Ind. Dem.) The Democrats of Pennsylvania have shown whas contrasts in politics are. The Scranton Convention has nominat- ed a ticke: composed of men of the highest character, and has placed them upon a platform of principles which is clear, straightforward and unequivocal ; and has done it without the interven- tion of any boss or anything more than such management as is necessary to command the best results. It would be difficult to present a political contrast more strongly than that between the action of Republican Convention last week in nominating a candidate slated two) years before, and that of the Democrats this week in choosing as a candidate a man who six weeks ago had not been thought of for the place. This jwas done in spite of the fact that Mr. Pattison did not en- ter the field until nearly half the dele- gates to the Convention had been chosen "without referer.ce to him, and really with the idea that Mr. Wallace was about the only candidate who would present himself for nomination. But the conditions changed so quick. of | ly as to make it apparent that an abso- lutely unexceptionable candidate was necessary, not only to the Democratic party of that State and to its friends throughout the country, but to satisfy the independent sentiment so strongly developed among the Republicans. No other candidate who could be nomi- nated, or who could accept a nomi- nation, filled all these requirements so well as did Mr. Pattison. He had been tried and not found wanting. Daring his four years service as Gov- ernor he gave the State an honest, dignified and independent administra- tion—scmething it had not had for nearly a generation. Young as he was, inexperienced in the larger politics as he could but be, he nevertheless gave so much to his State that its people have since looked upon him as a model Ex- cutive ; and itis not surprising that they take the first opportunity to signify their approval of his policy by nominating him. ‘While it is unsafe to make predictions | | lecture : ine politics, especially in the face ofa majority of from 60,000 to 80,000, there is every reason to hope that the people of Pennsylvanir will show that they are not bound to political taskmas- ters. But there ought to be no doubt whatever of the election of Pattison and Black to the positions they held from 1883 to 1837, and if the Independ- ent Republicans of the State have that aversion to boss methods which they profess, and the attachment to their State they ought to have, these men will serve Pennsylvania from 1891 to 1895 with the same honesty and fidel- ity that they did during a similar period eight years before. A Worthless Vindication. The New York Independent refuses to consider the resolution of Senator Quay’s Convention indorsing Senator Quay as a vindication. It says: 7It is known to everybody in the United States who belongs to the read- ing public that the gravest charges have been publicly made and strongly sup- ported against Senator Quay. These charges involve the commission of a crime. It is alleged that when he was State Treasurer, on two different occa- sions, he took large amounts of money from the State Treasury and invested it foa his own purposes. On one of these occasions the investment was successful, and the money was returned. On the other occasion the investment was no successful, and certain wealthy men, it is said, were appealed to to help him out of the difficulty. To save a party scandal they advanced him the money, and it was restored to the State Treas- ury . "These are, in substance, the charges, and they are given with such particu- larity of details, with names, dates, places and circumstances, that if they were not true it would have been an easy matter to expose their falsehood. They have not been specifically denied. Toward them Senator Quay has observ- ed the policy of utter silence. The fact that the alleged crime was committed vears ago does not make it less shameful or shocking, nor less indefensible that such a man, unpurged, should continue to be recognized as a party leader.” The Independent insists that such specific charges cannot be met by reso- lution, and adds: ‘The only possible vindication is that which shall come as a verdict of a committee or Court, after a full examination of the whole sub- ject.” The action of the Republican Con- vension in indorsing Quay, instead of spreading slave on a sore spot, has made it more conspicuous. Explanations should be at once forthcoming from Mr. Quay and Mr. Delamater. They both stand in the pillory, charged by respectable and responsille persons with caiminal actions which, is proven, should debar them from honorable positon in the public service. Pattison’s Chance of Election, Last Saturday Hon. Wm. L. Scott was interviewed in New York on the subject of Ex-Governor Pattison’s nom- ination. To the question, “Can he be elected,” he replied : “What a question to ask me; Of course we think he can be elected. He won once before. He has a fair chance to win again. But let me first say to you that a nomination such as Pattison as received is no small endorsement. Pennsylvania has more Democratiz voters than any State in the Union ex- cept New York, We have more than Ohio. The normal Republican major- ity, when every vote is out, is not over 85,000 to 40,000, and that is what Pat- tison will have to overcome, because there will be a full vote this year. If the Republican revolt does not amount to that many votes, then there are few- er independent and honest Republicans than we count on. The Democrats of Pennsylvania, numbering 400,000 to 450,000, have stood by their colors un- der exceptional circumstances. We have fought year after year on the hot- bed of Republican villainy in this coun- try—a forlorn hope. We have had neither patronage nor favor. The grear manufacturers, the big corporations, the railroads and the Standard Oil Company have ail been against us, and have al- lowed the fat to be fried out of them to carry on the war against us. It is be- cause the task has seemed hopeless that Democrats have failed to come out to the poll and allowed Republicans to re- gister 80,000 and 9),000 majority. We shall get out our full vote this year, be- cause we have a good fighting chance. An indorsement by the Democrats of Pennsylvania means something more, you can see, than a noa ination in a rot- tén borough like Nevada, Colorado or Idzho, with a handful of votes, declared into n State.” “Is Pattison’s nomination a Cleve- land victory ?”’ “It is not anybody's victory but the people’s, 1892 until we get to it. The decent Republicans are in open revolt in Penn- sylvania, and have promised their sup- port to Pattison. They gave it to him once before and we elected him, and now we naturally hope to repeat the operation.” —— “What's that on your collar, Jack ? Been calling ?”’ ¢Ya-as. You see, my girl hasn't got onto this new smokeless powder yet.” i salt to taste. We are not looking after | Made by reserving three whites and A Parrot that Doesn’t Like Chestnuts. A friend tells this story about a par- rot and vouches for its truth. It must have been a worderful bird that, but belonged to one of those fellows who are always in hard luck. One day he found himself reduced to hard pan in the way of finances and left his greenhued exile from Afric’s coral strand at his uncle’s.” Every day af- ter that when he passed the shop the parrot would be hanging over the door and would cry out in beseeching tones : “Pete, Pete, when are you going to take me out ?”’ Another peculiarity of his was that whenever any one said ‘hulle’ to him he would reply : “Hullo, but for God’s sake don’t ask me if IT want any crackers.”’— Provi- dence Telegram. The Corporal’s Promise. Corporal Tanner related this in his One day as he lay tossing feverishly about in the army hospital a lady of uncertain ace entered the warl with a basket and a bundle. Old soldiers will understand with what avidity the wounded men eyed that basket, and, as she stopped at the bed- side of Tanner, his mouth watered in anticipation of a delicious treat. “Young man,’ said the woman solemn- ly, “are you ready for the great change awaiting you?’ He hoped he was. ‘Well, young man,” continued she in that same sepulchral tone, ‘take this; and when you get well, if you ever do, it may do you good.” And she took from the bundle a track,—and laid it tenderly on the bed. ‘Thank you, madam, thank you,” said Tanner, with sudden vigor, as he noticed the title, “On the Evilsjof Danc- ing,” and calling back the old maid, he swore a solemn oath never to dance as long as he lived. The Corporal had just had both legs amputated.—Cincin- nati Times-Star. Desecration of the Sabbath. ‘We had better be a little careful in our eulogies of Christian America, be- cause the facts don’t allow usto go far in that direction. For example, in St. Louis on a recent Sunday, 40,000 peo- ple are said to have witnessed a cow- boy exhibition, 20,000 were out to see the boys in knee breeches and colored bose bat the balls, while another 20,- 000, more considerate than the rest, spent the day in the beer gardens. The total church attendance on the same day aggregated but 10,000. Careful esti- mates from other cities make no bet- ter showing, and some even worse. It is evident that something must be done to popularize church services or ministers and meeting houses will be things of the past. This is a very seri- ous picture for thoughtful minds to contemplate. If Sabbath desecration is allowable forone purpose, it is allowable for all purposes. If it is not incompatible with the enlightened Christian senti- ment of the age to play base ball, fre- quent beer gardens or attend cowboy exhibition: on the Sabbath, it certainly cannot be wrong to engage in useful manual labor on that day, and when we recognize that principle the Sabbath is gone, and with it will go almost everything of value. Death in the Desert. The Horrible Experience of a Party of Invading Chinese. It has just come to light that a party of Chinese, who attempted to smuggle themselves into the United States from Lower California, got lost on the desert and had a terrible experience, one of the party dying of thirst and exposure. They found the frontier so closely guarded that they stole a march toward the eastward and got into the desert. Here they got lost and wandered aim- lessly around for several days, suffering unutterable agonies. ; One of the Mongolians was a youth of gome fourteen years. He gave out un- der the terrible suffering’ and became crazy. In his raving he imagined the blistering sands were limpid water and eagerly filled his parched mouth with the burning particles. This only added to his horrors, and pretty soon he lay down to die, his companions being in too pitiful a condition to render him any as- sistance. Here they heaped a pile of sand upon him and left him alone to sleep his last long slumber, while they with swollen tongue, aching limbs and heavy hearts continued their aimless wanderings-—lost in a trackless desert. It is asserted that they at last reached the railroad and. soon reached Los Angeles—minus every thing they had attémpted to bring into the country except the clothes upon their backs. They had thrown away the bundles ¢on- taining the many things the Chinese hold dear, including a large quantity of opium, all of which merked their track upon the waste of sands. As the almond-eyed ones have a sys- tem of spreading information among themselves, it is quite likely this terri- ble experience will serve to prevent any more of them attempting to invade the United States via the desert route.— San Diego (Cal.) Union. Ham OMELET.—Six eggs, one tablea spoonful of flour made smooth in a little milk, two-thirds of a cupful of very finely chopped fried ham, all lean. Beat the yelks thoroughly, add the flour and milk and the ham, and, lastly, the whites beaten to a stiff froth. Beatall together and pour into a hot and well-buttered ran Shake gently wh:l: the omelet is cooking a rich golden brown on the bottom.” When nearly done set the spider in a hot oven until the omelet has begun to brown on top. Double over carefully and serve immediately on a hot piatter. If preferred without Lam use: A very pretty omelet is placing them, beaten stiff, on one half the omelet when partly cooked, and then doubling the other half over hen. fii mr m————— ——An Ohio man who was travel- ing in Spain happened to remark that. the United States would probably buy Cuba some day, and he received three challenges from hot-headed Spaniards within an hour. He got out of it by saying he meant the Sandwich Islands. instead of Cuba.