fonts Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 7, 1891. —— THE PREACHER’S VACATION. The old man went to meetin’, for the day was bright and fair, : : Though is limbs were very totterin’ and twas hard to travel there; ! But he hungered for the gospel, so he trudged the weary way : On the road so rough and dusty, ’neath the summers’s burning ray. By and by he reached the building, to his soul a holy place; Then he paused and wiped the sweat drops off his thin and wrinkled face. But he lnoked around bewildered, for ‘the old beil did not tol; All the doors were shut and bolted, and he did not see a soul. ! Bo he leaned upon his crutches and he says “what does it mean ?” And he looked this way and that, till it almost seemed a dream; He had walked the dusty highway and breath- ed a hearty sigh Just to‘ come once more to meeting ere the summons came to die. But he saw a little notice tacked upon the, meetin’ door, : So he limped along to read it, and read it o'er and o'er; Then he wiped his dusty glasses, and he read it o’er again * . Lu Till his limbs began to tremble and his eyes began to pain. As the old man read the motice how it made his spirit burn; : “Pastor absent on vacation, church closed till his return.” Then he staggered slowly backward, and he sat him down to think. : For his soul was stirred within him, till he thought his heart would sink. So he mused aloud and wondered, to himself soliloquized— “T have lived toalmost eighty, and was never so surprised. As I read the oddest notice, stickin’ on the meetin’ door— : $Pastor off on a vacation’—never heard the like E before. “Why, when I first jined the meetin very many ears ago, Pras traveled onthe circuit, in the heat and through the snow ; If they got their clothes and wittals (‘twas but little cash they got), . They said nothing "bout vacation, but were happy in their lot. “Would the farmer leave his cattle, or the shepherd leave his sheep ? Who would give them care and shelter, or pro- vide them food to eat ? So it strikes me very singular that a man of holy hands Thinks he needs {o have vacation,and forsakes his tender lambs. “Did St. Paul get su¢hanotion? Dida Wesley ora Knox? Did they in the heat of summer turn away their needy floeks ? Did they shut their meetin’ houses, just to go and lounge about ? : Why, they knew that if they did,Satan certain- ly would shout. ¥“Do the taverns close their doors, just to take a little rest ? Why, *twould be the height of nonsense, for their trade would be distressed. Did you ever know it happen, or hear anyone te Satan takin’ a vacation, shuttin’ up the doors of heli? “And shall preachers of the gospel pack their trunks and go away, Leavin’ saints and sinners git along as best they may ? Are the souls of saints and sinners valued less than selling beer ? Or do preachers tire out quicker than the rest of mortals here ? “Why it is I cannotanswer, but my feelin’s they are stirred ; Here I've dragged my totterin’ footsteps for to hear Gospel word. But the preacher is a travelin’, and the meet- in’ house is closed ; I confess it's very tryin’, hard indeed to keep composed. *‘Tell me, when I tread the valley and go up the shinin’ height, Will I hear no angels singing—will I see no leamin’ light ? Will the golden harps be silent ? will I meet no welcome there? Why, the thought is most distractin’, 'twould be more than I could bear. “Tell me, when Ireach the city, over on the other shore, Will I find a little notice tacked upon the golden door, Tellin’ me, 'mid dreadful silence,writ in words that cut and btirn— ‘Jesus absent on vacation, Heaven closed till His return 7” I — CHLOE. There was a great noize! Shouts— hoarse, shrill, sweet, harsh! The deep bass of young men; the feeble quaver- ing of old ones; the silvery tones of women ; the high falsetto of chiidren ; all mingling in delight and exultation, and without a shadow of pity for the miserable wretches whose lives were passing slowly ouc of their mangled bodies through a score of wounds. The date afternoon sun beat down hotly on’ ‘thousands of heads, save where on one side friendly walls afforded a shelter from its rays. In the great open arena ~the sky 1ts only canopy—a haze of dust, with the heavy vapors always at- tendant upon a vast concourse of peo- ple; made the atmosphere so hard to reathe that the multitude gasped with the effort between its shouts. Fans waved in a thousand bejeweled hands, but the artificial current of air thus created was hardly perceptible. It was hot—streamily hot, and any-' thing but a Mexican audience, which had just witnessed the slaughter of one of the fiercest and gamest bulls that ever put a matador in deadly peril, would long ago have left the building. “That matador is a brave fellow. How neatly he found the heart with one plunge below th shoulder, He handies ins sword fikea master, eh, senor ?”’ said a dark visaged, powerful- ly built Mexican, as he fanned himself with his large sombrero, and looked in the face of a quiet looking, well dressed -man his side. “Yes. Heisa skillfel swordsman, undoubtedly,” was the reply of the well dressed man. in unmistakable northern accents, And then the earcassssof the wretch- | ed horses killed under the picadors, to- | t out to be baited, and teased him into a rage, with the assistance of the ban- derillos, who deftly planted their sharp goads, ornamented with rosettes, in the bull, until he was covered with flutter- ing ribbons. The shulos, with their gaudy cloaks, did their part in attract ing the bull’ attention when the sport waxed dangerously, warm for its tor- mentors, Then, at last, the dignified matador, red cloak on arm and’ long, | cruel rapier ready for action, appeared, gave the foaming, wearied bull his coup de grace, received the plaudits of the audience gracefully and retired as the building slowly emptied itself. The well dressed man, with the northern aecent, had sat through the performance quietly and with the air of one who had nothing particular to do or he would not have been there. Sunday bullfights evidently interested him but slightly. His eyes were turn; ed toward the arena, because from his seat it was easier to look in that direc- tionthan in any other, but any one could have seen that his thoughts were far. away. ! “Edward Payson,” he was saying to himeelf, as a scornful smile passed over his handsome features, “what are you doing here with that letter in your pocket, showing you how foolish you are in putting off your happiness? Be- cause you have been an exile for ten years, is it necessary for you to stay away from home another ten years, when the one girl you ever loved be- seeches you to return? If she did tell you then that what you hoped could never be, can you not believe that she was mistaken in her own heart, and that long absence has taught her that she does care for you? What other construction is to be put on the words in her letter?” Edward Payson drew a letter from his pocket and looked at it earnestly, just ag the bull in the ring transfixed a horse with one of its long horns, and buried the other in the arm of the un- lucky picador on his back. Through all the hubbub of shouting that follow- ed this incident,Edward Payson seemed to witness a scene very different from that spread before him. The letter, with the supercription in a refined, ladylike band, had awakened a flood of memories that swept everything pre- sent away. He saw a large, well kept lawn, ! fringed by sycamore, maple and oak, | ’ straight through from the front door to with the bright red of the sumach and the delicate white of the syringa re- lieving their somber shadows. He saw the mansion, half hidden by the Virginia creepers and ivy which clung lovingly to its rugged walls. of a noble Virginia tamily, with the simplicity of a republic enriched by the lavish taste of a race still authorized by the college of heraldry to display a shield with esixieen quarterings. He saw in the distance the colored labor- ers working in the fertile fields. He saw the whole picture in a golden frame of still summer weather, and he could almost feel on his cheek the gen- tle breeze from the Rappahannock as it rolled slowly past on its way to the sea. The bull had broken away now and was dashing wildly around on the blood stained sawdust, with its hot eyes fixed on a picador waiting for the atiack, while the multitude howled with ex- citement. But Edward Payson paid no heed, He saw coming out of the front door of the mansion and surveying him with a saucy smile, as she stood on the ver- anda, a young girl in her teens, with a wealth of chestnut brown hair glinting in the morning sun. Her garden hat wag swung carelessly by the ribbons from her band, and the brown hair, just stirred by the breeze, seemed to ripple in harmony with the impulsive good nature expressed in her sweet face. The clear cut features, softened by an utterly unselfish disposition, were those of a natural aristocrat—the aristocracy which holds itself above paltry action and supercilious assumption, because it cannot help it. He saw the girl run laughingly down the steps and accept his. invita- tion for a stroll through the trees and shrubbery beyond the flowers beds and lawn, and then—he saw her face as she told him that sisterly’ regard was pall that she could ever feel for him,but that Chloe Payson would never cease to pray for his welfare as long as she lived. “I was a fool,” he muttered impa- tietiently, as the noise accompanying the slaughter of the bull in the arena awoke him from his reverie. “If in- stead of weakly despairing and leaving everybody and everything in old Vir- ginia to come here among a strange people, I had staid and faced my fate like a man, who knows ?' ‘He moved ont of the great, hot am- phitheater with the letter still in his hand. The streets were at their gay- est, with ali the action and bright col- or characteristic of a Mexican city on Sunday afternoon. Richly dressed ladies, with the lace mantilla thrown over their dark hair; gentlemen in American cut frock coats and broad sombreros; female beggars and flower sellers, each with the inevitable baby fastened to her back by a gay hued ro- bozo; policemen, ‘workmen, dogs, horses, carriages and the great mass of idle population crowded the main ave- nues and rendered locomotion necessa- rily deliberate, idward Payson made his way to his room in a quiet street, and for the wentieth time read the letter hie had gether with that of the bull which had i received the day before. furnished most of the entertainment, | having been dragged out of sight and fi the sawdust raked over and smoothed h down, the picadors, banderillos, chulos i and matador, ready for another fray, filed into the open s trappings, and, with cloaks, darts, | spears and other acconterments dis- | played, bowed to the spectators, took i up their respective positions and pre- pared for the onslaught of the last bull to be killed that day. The sport went on, on their old, broken d cled around the miserable b § 1 ull brought { GREENFIELD, Va., June—-188- My Dear—Why do you not come back? Why do yon stay away so long from the old home? It is ten years : ¢ | that you have been away, and I only pace in their gaudy | found ont last week where you were. What made you go away so suddenly withont saying good by to anybody ? I ought not to forgive you, but I do. You should have thought that perhaps | the trouble which'made you go might - . not have been ‘so bad after all, and The wicadors,! that people may mot have ‘meant all own horses, cir-{t hey said. Noone knows that I am writing you this letter, and perhaps I massive architecture of a stone | He saw the home ought not to do it, but I am longing to | see my boy again and I do not care what folks may say. ‘Do not wait to write, but.come. © CHLOE PAxsoN.: A week later Edward, Payson stood inthe grove of ‘sycamores, oaks and maples, looking at the stone mansion of which he had been thinking so sad- ly amid the heat, dust and noise of the Mexican amphitheater. It was just such a morning of which he had dream- ed. The sun was shining brightly,and the low hum of insects mingled with the shiver of the leaves over his head, as if trying to soothe him and quiet the fierce beating of his heart. “How natural the old house looks. What a little change has been made here in ten years. It looks the same agit. did yesterday. I wonder what my uncle will say to me. I wish Chloe had said something about him. We had a rather serious quarrel, I remem- ber; the day before I left him. Per- haps he will tell me to go back again and resume the vagrant life that I know be thinks I haye been leading. No, he would hardly say that to the son of his only brother, after his sacred promise to that brother to be as a father to me as long as we both lived. ‘Besides he was always hot beaded, and no doubt forgave me almost before I was out of the room. Ah, well, I shall soon know, and what do I care, go that Chloe has a welcome for me? It was near this spot that she spoke to me so kindly, and yet, oh, so coldly, when she told me that we—cousins— could never be lovers. Ah! There she is surely.” His breath came short as he caught sight of of a white dress at one of the open windows under the veranda roof. He could not see the face of the wearer because a tangled mass of creepers hung in the way, but he knew it could be no one else save the girl, as he loved still to think her whom he had come thou- sands of miles to see. The white dress moved away, and he walked slowly across th lawn, nothing on every hand familiar objects that brought back his youth in a flood of fragrance. How weak he felt as he ascended the steps to the veranda. Where was Chloe? Weuld she come tothe door? He pulled the bell handle and heard the clang that he remembered so well resounding through the house. He could see it in his mind’s eye swinging near the rear of the long hall that ran that opening on the yard at the back, where the old cook’s cabbages and to- matoes were carefully tended, and where it was as much as one of the | kitchen girls’ life would have been worth to trespass. He remembered how the old bell had, to his youthful imagination, possessed ghostly attri- butes, and how he used to fancy it moved of itself in the dusk of the even- ing, shaking its head in mockery and threatening to swallow him up into its rusty throat. Listen! There is a step in the hall. Somebody is coming. The door open- ed a hittle way, and the flutter of a white dress caught kis eye. Impatient- ly he pushed the door wide open and put out his hand to take that of Chloe. “Why, Mas'r Ed’ard! Ef I didn’t tink ycu'd come back to yo poo ol aun- tie,” and two black hands, in white sleeves, were placed on Edward Pay- son’s shoulder, as a pair of horarim- men spectacles fell with a crash to the floor. “Yes, auntie. I got a letter, aud I came right back to the old place. How are you, and how is my uncle, and how is—ig” His voice faltered, but the old wo- man did not appear to notice it as she answered : “Dey is all well, honey. Dere have been few changes roun here. Come in and let me give you something to eat. I've got some hot co’n cakes, like yer useter git when yo was a boy. Come along. Yo uncle's done gone away for all day.” “Oh, Auntie, IT want you to’ —said a child’s voice, and a little girl with sun- ny golden hair came running along the the hall just as Edward Payson used to run some thirty years before. She stopped when she saw him and clang close to the flustered old woman while she looked inquiringly at him. “Yo know, Ed’ard, I did not know where yo had gone, but a colored man what works for Mr. Sherwood, the butcher, he was here and he tol me he heard as ye was in Mexico. And I thought yo'd had a little quarrel with yo uncle, and p'raps you'd be too proud to come back it he wrote to you, and so I got young Miss Mable, over to Raleigh's place, who is just as good as a angel to col’ed folks and who writes splendid, to write to you, and”’— “And was the letter from you?” gasp- ed Edward Payson, as he looked down at the golden haired little girl, while a terrible thought ran through his brain. “Course it was, houey. Wa'n't it signed Chloe Payson, and ain't dat my name?” “And—and—who is this little child?’ “That? Why, Miss Chloe's of cou’se. She was married five years ago to young Mr, Willard, wha, dey say, will be a jedge next year. He is away to-day with yo'r uncle. But come up stairs and see Miss Chloe. What a tool I is 10 keep yo here with my chatterin, and you been away from her for ten years.” But Edward Payson, with some ex- cuse—he never knew what—managed to get away from the house and into the sycamore and maple grove, where, with the stones of the old house just visible between the trees, and the fra- grance of the syringa hovering like a half forgotten melody around his bowed head, he threw himself on the ground and nerved himself to bear such a heart wringing as fortunately cowes to but a portion of poor humanity, When, an hour later, he took her hand he felt sure she understood . and pitied him, though not a word on the subject of his hopeless love has ever passed her lips—or his.—George C. Jenks in Pittsburg Bulletin. S———————————————————— ——The peculiar enervating ‘effect of summer weather is driven off by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which “makes the weak strong.” | piece of A Romantic Journalistic Career. The London Star is authority for the statement that the career of Mr. John | Lovell, the editor-in-chief of the Liver- pool Mercury is one of the most roman- tic in the history of English journalism. His father, a man of solid sense and im- movable honesty, was a wii .g shoe- maker a¢ Guildford, and John, the eld- est of seven children, never had more than six months’ schooling, and went out to work at the age of ten. He tried his hand, as a bog, atthe grocery, bak- ing, and drapery business, but felt easy in none of them. ; But when he was about fifteen his employer purchased a lot of waste paper from the establish- ment of & London publisher, and John, in rummaging about, was delighted to discover fragments of Oliver Twist and David Copperfield. Reading how David learnt shorthand, young Lovell determined to acquire the art himself. One of his uncles being a stationer in Guildford, John obtained from bim Putman’s six-pennv book. By-and-by he made an effort to connect himself with the press, and just when he wus giving up all hope, he received a letier from the editor of the Surrey Standard offering him the post of dis- trict reporter at the magnificent stipend of five shillings a week, which he eager- ly accepted. At this time he was ad- vised to read Addison’s Spectator, and acting on the advice, he .copied out in shorthand eyery paper in the eight vol- umes, afterward transeribing them into long hand, with punctuation. At twenty-three he married and became connected with the Sheffield Zimes. Before his first year in Sheffield had ex- pired the paper was boycotted by the trade unions of the town, and the busi- ness burst up in a fortnight. In this dilemma he existed for a time on the pro- ceeds of sermon writing, but ultimately obiained the post of third reporter on the Birmingham rst, from which posi- tion he rapidly rose to be assistant edi- tor. During this time he had educated himself up to a point which would have entitled him to a university degree, and had ambitions in literatare. This led him in 1868 to accept the editorship of Cassell’s Magazine, which he left short- ly after to take the management of the Press Association, which is truly Mr. Lovell’s own child. The establishment of this association was a tremendous work, and ran into mountains of figures and details. In 1880 Mr. Lovell was offered the chair of the Liv- erpool Mercury, one of the plums of provincial joncnalism. Mr. Lovell is a { man with a lion heart and a big brain. He is a taithful and generous friend, a great collector of book, and an immense smoker. In social life he is a brilliant talker. His influence in Liverpool has been very great. He is just fifiy-four. People Who Can't Get a Pass. An interesting monthly publication which can’t be bought at any price, but which makes mighty interesiing reading for a good many foiks, has just reached its fortieth number. It is issued “for the exclusive use of those persons to whom itis sent,” and lest anybody else should get hold of a copy and begin a libel suit the publisher has omitted to subscribe his name and address. This publication is called the ‘Confidential Memorandum,” and itis issued by the railroads for their ¢wn use. It contains the names of persons blacklisted for miss using pass privileges. Nineteen of its pages are devoied to blacklisted indi- viduals and sevengpages to the cames of papers which have violated good faith in the matter of passes. The papers on the list are all weeklies, and include many trace papers and one or {wo of religious compiexion. The ‘Confidential Memorandum?” does not mince words. It describesa certain theatrical agent as a “d. b. first water,” and boldly calls a citizen of ‘Houston “a fraud.” There are numer- ons clergymen on this black hist. There is one from St. Francis, Minn., who got there because he altered and loaned the half fare permits given bim by a railroad. Another clergyman, this one from Santa Fe, is charged with aitering his permit so as to include his wife, and a former member of congress got on the listifor loaning his pass, a fate shared by a member of the Ohio legislature for asimilar reason. A Missouri clergy- man transferred his pass to another, and a business man of Wichita, Kan., is on the liss charged with trying to person- ale a passholder. None of these gentle- men will ever get more favors from any railroad in the country. Pitying an Official, When M. Thiers, once president of the French repablie, revisited his native town he found one or two old men who had been the companions of his boy- hood some sixty years ago, and whom he hhd not seen since, . He asked one of them what he had been doing, to which the old man re- plied, with evident satisfaction, that he had been driving a flourishing trade in the boot and shoe line. “And what have you been about?” he in his turn asked of M. Thiers. The latter explained that he was the ex-president of the republic. : “What,” ejaculated his companion. “Are you that Thiers? My poor friend, how I pity you! Edwin Booth Dying, 9 Buzzarp's Bay, Mass, July 28.— There is a well authenticated rumor here that IXdwin Booth is dying from the effects of too much smoking. Though he is aware that it is killing him, he cannot shake off the habit. Xx- President and Mrs. Cleveland and Joseph Jefferson have striven to reform Mr. Booth in this respect and for awhile they partinlly succeeded, but the habit had too strong a hold on him and his in- dulgence became more unrestrained than ever. It is because of this relapse and because he knows he cannot recover his health that he left here suddenly on Saturday and went to Narragansett. Success IN Lire,—“My son.” said the venerable man, as he sent his boy forth to do battle with the world, “select your calling, stick to that one thing alone, and you will succeed.” The boy selected the ealling of village lawyer, struck to it faithfully, and now he is known for miles around as the best checker player in Pike County. Oh, The Precioug Babies. Although Their Mothers Are Very Fond They Are Sometimes Careless. Oh, the precious babies! What isa home without one ? Yet, notwithstand- ping they are so dear to the human heart their fond mothers are at times very ‘careless of their dimpled little treasures. This is shown every day in the week, Sunday excepted, at some of the big re- tail dry goods stores. Perhaps mamma wishes to do some shopping, and the servant has been giv- en ‘an afternoon GI.” It is too fine a day to remain indoors, down town to plunge herself into the sea of bargains. Of couse she cannot take baby, cart and all into the store. left outside, and there he liesin his p rambulator, sometimes contentedly, sometimes not. Usually, however, ba- by is asleep when mamma enters the store and leaves her cherub in the big arched rotundalike doorway. Mamma seldom seems to imagine that there are kidnapers stalking through the land and that her darling may be stolen. The other day a young mother entered a large store in Fulton street, Brooklyn, leaving her sleeping infant outside in its carriage. She had not been gone more than twenty minutes when baby awoke. Scores of strange faces were around him and he was frightened by the hum of many voices. Up went his under lip and the sensitive ltile fellow began to sob. Soon his sob became a cry, which quickly developed into an ear rasping squawl. Men got ont of the range of sound with alacrity, while women only paused long enough to say, “Poor little thing 1” and then passed on. Finally a sympathetic, matronly looking woman stopp=d in front of the wee but noisy boy. For a moment she regarded him in silence and then tender- ly lifted him in her arms and nestled his plump form close to her bosom. “Oo is somebody’s ’itile tolsey wotsey, 0o poor ’ittle fing, oo is,’ she said sooth- ingly. “Dere, der~, deary, don’t oo ky anymore. Mamma will come back.’ Instantly the crying ceased, but it was for an instant only.” Baby unscrewed his eyelids, which before had been tightly closed and gazed in speechless wonder at the strange woman with an untranslaiable vocabulary. One glance was enough for him, The next moment he was making more noise than before. With the most modern and highly approved baby lingo the unfor- tunate woman tried to comfort him, but her every effort was 11 vain. Still the baby squawled. The situation was be- coming desperate, when suddenly the | child’s mother hastened to the spot and l took the shrieking youngster from the woman’s grasp. “Ruben, Ruben, my own sweet love, what is the matter, matter, matter ? Tell your mamma, mamma dear. There, there, there, t-h-e-r-e’’—— And the baby stopped crying, put his thunib in his mouth, opened wide his deep blue eyes, gazed with infinite satis- faction and complacency at the crowd, and calmly submitied to being returned to his nest in the carriage. That child knew his mother and did not understand fo.eign baby talk.— New York Herald. Self Possession Is a Strong Trait. There is nothing like self possession in all emergencies. Not long ago.a clev- er woman was dining at a handsome board in an interior city. She had nev- er, as it happened, seen lime juice offer- ed in the course of a meal. When the bottle was handed around, some salad had just been served to her, and without giving the matter any thought she as- sumed the liquid to be a sauce piquante for the salad and dashed a few drops on her lettuce hearts. In an instant she became aware, by that sort of intuition which is in the air at such times, that she had done so ne- thing wrong, and when she saw her neighbor adding some of the contents of the bottle to his glass of water, she di- vined at once what her blunder had been. The meal progressad and she finished her salad with apparant relish. Her hostess pressed more upon her, and she accepted a second serving. Then, with a little air of not having everything quite to her liking, she looked up and down the table and signaled the waitress “The lime juice, please,” she said non- chalantly, as if salad without lime juice were an‘uneatable dish. This bit of adroitness at one set her in a niche among the eompany as an epicare of oc- cult and unquestioned knowledge. a —————————— A Woman With Sporting Blood. There is a woman on the west side whose husband wishes the races had been run in Hindoostan instead of Buffalo. She has become an inveterate gambler. Yesterday he came home to find his wife discussing the price with a tramp who wanted to bring in a cord of wood. It seems that the price had been fixed at thirty cents. The husband unseen lis- tened to the conversation. “Now,” said | it shall be thirty cents or fifty cents.” The tramp wow “Now,” said he, growing in the confi- dence that he had struck a snap, “lets flip again to see whether it shall bea dollar or a dollar and a half.” “Done,” sald the woman, too deeply wrapt in the gambling spirit to notice that it was a case of “heads I win. tails yon lose,” Again the tramp won. At this moment the hushand, who was beginning to see a morigage sus- pended over his house, interposed an objection, to the great displeasure of the tramp. PE —— —— The story is told that while the young German Kaiser was watching a sham battle between some Russian cavalry he asked the Czar for permission to take charge of one side. It was granted, and the Kaiser proposed to show the Russians what a real soldier, who was not a shopkeeper nor a tailor, could do. While he was following tule 33 in his book on tactics the Rus- gians surrounded his supposed army, and he was captured. It is said he went to his tent and would not e~me out for the : rest of the day. so mamma puts her darling into its | wickerwork carriage and trundles it Mrs. Custer. I occasionally meet onjthe street Mrs. Custer, wife of that great cavalry lead- er, who was often been called the *Mar- ion” of the civil war. She spends most of her time in New York, earning her living by writing for the newspapers. Mrs, Custer is almost as much admired as her illustrious husband was. After she married the general she was nearly always by his side. Fortwo years she virtually satin Washington with her valise in hand, waiting to go to tue front. She was always the'first woman in camp after a battle, and would have delighted to have followed her gallant husband in his impetuons onsets upou the enemy. She never seemed to know what fear was, and many times put her- self in great peril. She was in Rich- Baby must be | his wife, “let's flip a coin to see whether | {mond two days before her husband | reached there, and almost before the | sounds of the guns had ceased to rever- | berate about the confederate capital. Just after the surrrender, when her !husbahd came up from Nottaway | Court House to take up his headquar- ters, he remarked “that 1t looked pretty | bad for a general to be beaten into Richmond by his wife, after he had been trying for four years to get there first.” Of course, Custer, like all other sol- diers, died poor, and his wile and fami- ly are practically without resources, except the piuiful pension of $50 a month that the goverument has granted. Mrs. Custer has a great many relics of the war, left her by her husband and given to her by different officers ot the army. Besides possessing the first flag of truce the confederates brought into our line, at the beginning of Lee’s sur- render, she has the flag of truce carried by her husband into the confederate lines. She also has much valueble data about the cavalry arm of our service that has never yet been given to the public. It is really a pity thata fair history of this branch of the service has not yet been written, or even seriously contemplated. I was pleased to learn that she is getling a good income from her books and other writings.—New York Star. A ——————————————t—— Heathen Rites. The corner of Jackson and Dupont streets witnessed as heathenish a scene recently as any four corners of China- town ever presented. It was about 10.830 o'clock in the forenoon, and the narrow thoroughfares were crowded, but the crowd made no diffence to the Mongols who who gath- ercd there to perform their heathenish rites. First a bonfire was built in the middle of the street, then a big wooden idol fully three feet tall was carried out and placed in the center of the flames. Twenty-four bowls of rice were laid out in a circle about the fire ; six bowls of fat came next, and then four roasted chickens. A crowd of Chinese gathered with un- covered heads. First one salaamed to the idol, then anoiher, then all together. A tomtom was sounded until those in the distance thought a boiler factory had started up near by. The big idol grinned and grinned and grinned, and did nothing but grin, al- beit the flames were fast consuming his godly person. And as the idol grinned the heathen worshipers grinned, until | it became a grinning match all around: “Him bad luckee,” said Tin Chum, who was asked to explain the queer per- formances. It seems that the family of Bod Ding Lee were consuming an old patron 1dol of the family because he brought ill forivne on the house. Last week Bod Chee was locked up as a va- grant, and on Wednesday Bod Ding fell ill and died. So on Friday the patron idol was burned.--San Fran- cisco Chronicle, He Finally Reached School. An amusing story is told of a pretty little Stockton scholboy who makes it the rule toget to school rather late in the morning. The kind teacher, who had too much regacd forthe little fellow to punish him harshly, reorted to sharp lectures for his tardiness, byt the whole- some advice did no good, so she wrote a note of the little scholar’s ugpther, tell ing to his shortcomings, and :sking the parent if he could not be madeto come to school early, as he was alway tardy. The next day the mother had Yer son up bright and early and started hm to school early enough for him to maki the round trip before school time. When the luncheon ‘hour came the little chp arrived home happy and very hungry, But the first question put to him by his fond mother was: ¢“My son, did you get to sch ol in time this morning ?”’ “Oh, yes, ma,” said he, “I got to school early to-day—I got there in time for recess !”—QCor. San Francisco Bulletin. How to Wear Gray. Every woman wears gray because it is fashicnable, and so it behooves the wo- man who is a sallow blonde to know that her grav dress ought to have a rich cardinal of crimson plastron or a big, soft fichue of red chiffon. The reddish need not read this article, She can wear gray pure and simple without wudification. The brunette should take heed that her gray dress should nave a touch of pink or old rose near her face, or, if it becomes her better, of yellow. | No girl who is dark should ever put | blue with gray. No girl who hasn’t a rose leaf com- I plexion should wear cream and gray. | Never wear a gray hat unless you face it with the tint that is most becom- ing. If you heed these hints you , will probably confess them wise, What's the use of feeling languid. Mopy, dull and blue ? al Cleanse the blcod and give it vigor : Make the old man new. How? I'll tell you. To the drug store Go this very’ day— Buy a medicine to banish All your ills away— . And that medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the very best blood-purifier on earth. It builds up and strengthens the system because it cleanses the blodd and that’s what the system must have to be strong and healthy. There’s noth- ing that equals it. Absolutely sold on trial! Your money back, if it doesn’t benefit or cure you.