4 5 ROBERT of VEN A DREAM AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. BY REV. CHARLES M. SHELDON, Author of “In His Steps,” **The Crucifizion of Philip Strong.” “Malcom Kirk,” Etc. ET + CEES © {Copyrighs, 1900, by Advance Publishing Co.) HARDY'5 DAYo. Tues. | Wed. Mon. Thurs. Fri. Sat. 1 2 3 4 0 92808882830833838ss CONTINUED FROM LAST WEdK. “Ax nearly as I could find out,” con- tinued Mrs. Hardy. without replying tao | ber husband’s remarks, “cook’s sister is married to one of the men who were hurt this afternoon. She talks so bro kenly in our language that 1 could not make out exactlyg how it is, and she was much excited. Suppose it was Sco- ville, couldn’t you do something fo: them then, Robert?” “I might,” replied Mr. Hardy briefly. “But I can tell you 1 have more calls | for my money now than I can meet. ; Take the church expenses, for example. | Why, we are called upon to give tc some cause or other every week, be- sides our regular pledges for current expenses. It’s a constant drain. I shall have to cut down on my pledge. We can’t be giving to everything all the time and have anything ourselves.” Mr. Hardy spoke with a touch of in- dignation, and his wife glanced around the almost palatial room and smiled. Then her face grew a little stern and almost forbidding as she remembered that only last week her husband had spent $150 for a new electrical appa- | ratus to experiment with in his labora- | tory. And now he was talking hard | times and grudging the small sums he gave to religious objects in connection with his church and thinking he could not afford to help the family of a man who had once saved his life! Again she turned to the piano and played awhile, but she could not be rested by the music as sometimes she had been. When she finally rose and walked over by the table near the end of the lounge, Mr. Hardy was asleep. and she sat down by the table, gazing into the open fire drearily, a look of sorrow and unrest on the face still beautiful. but worn by years of disap- pointment and the loss of that respect and admiration she once held for the man who had vowed at the altar to make her happy. She had not lost her love for him wholly, but she was fast losing the best part of it, the love which has its daily source in an inborn respect. When respect is gone, love is not long in following after. She sat thus for half an hour and was at last aroused by the two girls, Clara and Bess, coming in. They were laughing and talking together and had evidently parted with some one at the door. Mrs. Hardy went out into the hallway. “Hush, girls, your father is asleep! You know how he feels to be awakenea suddenly by noise. But he has been waiting up for you.” “Then 1 guess we'll go up staiis without bidding him good night,” said Clara abruptly. *1 don’t want to be lectured about going over to the Cax- tons’.” **No; I want to see you both and have a little talk with you. Come in here.” Mrs. Hardy drew the two girls into the front room and pulled the curtains to- gether over the arch opening into the room where Mr. Hardy lay. “Now tell me, girls, why did your father forbid your going over to the Caxtons’? 1 did not know until tonight. Has it some- thing to do with James?” Neither of the girls said anything fcr a minute. Then Bess, who was the younger of the two and famous for startling the family with very sensa tional remarks. replied, “James and Clara are engaged, and they are going to be married tomorrow.” Mrs. Hardy looked at Clara, and the girl grew very red in the face, and then, to the surprise of her mother and Bess. she burst out into a violent fit of crying. Mrs. Hardy gathered her into her arms as in the olden times when she was a little child and soothed her into quietness. “Tell me all about it, dear. know you cared for James in way.” “But I do,” sobbe ther guessed someth 1 did not that “And {a 12 and forbade us | Clara. going there any 1 But | didn’t think he would mind it if Bess and ! went just this one ni I couldu’t | help it anyway for people to love eac yroper .isp’t It rigk at n Sunda could bet burst out w ren “RT, Ve think Jan 0 mont ior And, then, he isn’t particu handsome.” cried Clara. ‘He is, too “And he’s | good and biave and eplendid, and I'd rather have him than a thousand such | | men as Lancey Cummings. Mother, 1 don’t want money. It hasn't made you happy.” “Hush, dear!” a blow had smitten She was silent then. 4 Mrs. Hardy felt as if her in the face. i day nights!” i under her hea ra | pillow y | tence for you. Clara put her arms around her moth er and whispered: “Forgive me, moth- er! 1 didn’t mean to hurt you. But 1 am so uchappy!” Unhappy! And yet the girl was just beginning to blossom out toward the face of God under the influence of that most divine and tender and true feel- ing that ever comes to a girl who knows a true. brave man loves her with all his soul. And some people would have us leave this subject to the flippant novelist instead of treating it as Christ did when he said. “For this cause” —that is. for love—*‘shall a man leave his father and mother and cleave unto his wife.” Mrs. Hardy was on the point of say ing something when the sound of pe. ruliar steps on the stairs was heard, und shortly after Alice pushed the cur tains aside and came in. Alice was the oldest girl in the family. She was a cripple. the result of an accident when a child. and she carried a crutch. using it with much skill and even grace. The minute she entered the room she saw something was happen: ing. but she simply said: “Mother, isn't it a little strange fa ther sweens go soundly? T went n= wo hin: and spoke to him just now, think- ing he was just lying there, and he didn't answer, and then I saw he was asleep. But I never knew him to sleep so Sunday night. He usually reads up in the study.” “Perhaps he is sick. see.” Mrs. Hardy rose and went into the other room, and just then the younger boy, Will, came down stairs. He said something to his mother as he passed through the room and then came in where the girls were carryving one «ff his books in his hard. “Say, Alice, ‘raanslate this passage for me, will you? Confcund the old Ro- mans anyway! What do I care about the way they fought their old battles and built their old one horse bridges: What makes me angry is the way Cesar has of telling a thing. Why can’t he drive right straight ahead in- stead of beating about the bush so? If I couldn’t get up a better language than those old duffers used to write their books in I'd lie down and die. 1 I will go and “Say, Bess, I want some money again.” can’t find the old verb to that sentence anyway. Maybe it’s around on the oth er page somewhere, or maybe Cesar left it out just on purpose to plague us boys.” And Will shied the tock over to Al ice, who good naturediy beguu to read. while that much suffering youth sat down by Bess and began to tease ber and Clara. “What are you and Clara dsing at this time of day? Time you youngsters were going up stairs. Play us a little tune, Bessie, will you? What you been g foi ra Vere de Vere?” 7 “7 1 should think you would be asham ed of yourself, Will, studying on Sun- id little Bess reproving- | ly and with dignity. “No worse than g Sunday al * retorted the incorrigible Will. “I baven’t been,” replied Bess, indig nt “I've been with Clara” 't need any help. inquired Will innocently. 3 Over face hid in the Will tried to p with 11 the piliow gut from “Let me well,” ne, Will... I feel muflied voice the don’t said a from “Pshaw! you're fooling!” “No. I'm not. Let me alone. “Come here, or 1 won't read your sen- ” called Alice. And Wil} reluctantly withdrew, for he Knew from experience that Alice would keep Ler word. “All right. Now, go ahead; not too fast. Here! Wait a minute! Let me write her down. 1 don’t intend to miss tomorrow if 1 can help it. And old Romulus will call me up on this very passage, 1 know. Be just like him, though, to strike me on the review.” At that minute the door opened, and i does | And, | in came George, the elder boy and the oldest of the group of children. He hung up bat and coat and strolled into the room. ‘“Where’s mother?” *She’s in the other room,” answered Bess. “Father’s been asleep. and moth- er was afraid ke was going to have a fever.” “That's ome of your stories.” said George, who seemed in a good natured mood. He sat down and drew his little sister toward him and whispered to her: “Say, again.” “Awfully ?” whispered Bess. “Yes; for a special reason. Do you think you could let me have a little?" “Why. of course. You can have all my month’s allowance. But why don't you ask father?” “No; | have asked him too much late- ly. He refused point blank last time. I didn’t like it the way he spoke.” “Well. you can have all mine.” said Bess. whispering. George and she were great friends, and there was not a thing that Bessie would not have done for her big broth- er, who was her hero. What he want- ed with so much money she néver asked. They were still whispering together, and Clara had just risen to go up stairs, and Alice and Will had finished the translation, and Will was just on the point of seeing how near he could come to throwing the “Commentaries of Caesar” into an ornamental Japanese jar across the room, when Mrs. Hardy parted the curtains at the arch and beckoned her children to come into the next room. Her face was exceedingly pale, and she was trembling as if with some great terror. Bess, 1 want some money CHAPTER II. The children all cried out in surprise and hurried into the next room. But before relating what happened there we will follow Mr. Hardy into the ex- perience he had just after falling asleep upon the lounge by the open fire. It seemed to him that he stepped at once from the room where he lay into a place such as he had never seen be- fore, where the one great idea that filled his entire thought was the ides of the present moment. Spread out before him, as if reproduced by a pho nograph and a magic lantern com bined, was the moving panorama of the entire world. He thought he saw into every home, every public place of business, every saloon and place of amusement, every shop and every farm, every place of industry, amuse- ment and vice upon the face of the globe. And he thought he could hear the world’s conversation, catch its sobs of suffering—nay, even catch the mean ing of unspoken thoughts of the heart. With that absurd rapidity peculiar to certain dreams he fancied that over every city on the globe was placed a glass cover through which he could look and through which the sounds of the city’s industry came to him. But he thought that he ascertained that by lifting off one of these covers he could hear with greater distinctness the thoughts of the inhabitants and see all they were doing and suffering with the most minute exactness. He looked for the place of his own town. Barton. There it lay in its geographical spot on the globe, and he thought that. moved by an impulse he could not resist, he lifted off the cover and bent down to see and hear. The first thing he saw was his min: ister’s home. It was just after the Sunday evening service, the one which Mr. Hardy had thought so dull. Mr. Jones was talking over the evening with his wife. “My dear,” he said, “I feel about dis- couraged. Of what use is all our pray- ing and longing for the Holy Spirit when our own church members are so cold and unspiritual that all his influ- ence is destroyed? And. you know, | made a special plea to all the members to come out tonight. and only a hand ful there! 1 feel like giving up the struggle. You know 1 could make a better living in literary work. and the children could be better cared for then.” “But. John, it was a bad night to get out. You must remember that.” “But only 50 out of a church mem bership of 400, most of them livipg near by! It doesn’t seem just right to me.” “Mr. Hardy was there! him?” “Yes: after service 1 went and spoke to him. and he treated me very coldly And yet he is the most wealthy and in some ways the most gifted church member we have. [He could do great things for t': : this community Did you see if — Suddenly Mr. Hardy thought the minister changed into the Sunday school superintendent, and be was walking down the street thinking abou his classes in the school, and Mr. 1} dy thought he could hear the superin tendent’s th as if his ear at a phonograph “It’s too ns, bad! That class ot Hardy to take il because no one could to teach And now Bob Wilson has got into trouble and been arresied for petty thieving. blow to his poor mother. left the +1 1001 wem that men like Mr Hardy cannot be | made to see the importance of work in the Sunday school? With his knowl edge of cin have reached that class of boys and in vited them to his home, up into his lab oratory and exercised an influence over | *[t is the hest medicine I ever used for a cold | them they would never outgrow. on! | 31 bad case of lung trouble. I always it's a st ¢ thing to me that men of | keep a bottle on hand.” Don’t suffer with such possibilities do not realize their | Coughs, Colds, or any Throat, Chest ox power!” Lung trouble when you can be cured So The superintendent passed along | £2811. Only 50c. and $1.00. Trial hoteles | shaking his head sorrowfully, and Mr Hardy, who seemed guided by some power he could not resist and com pelled to listen whether he liked it or not. next found himself looking into one of the railroad shop tenements, where the man Scoville was lying. wore | boys |! be fouud | it will be a terrible | Oh, why is it | vistry and geology he could | awaiting amputation of both feet after the terrible accident. Scoville’s wife lay upon a ragged lounge, while Mrs Hardy’s cook kneeled by her side and in her native Swedish tongue tried to comfort the poor woman. No it was true that these two were sisters. The man was still conscious and suffering unspeakably. The railroad surgeon had been sent for. but had not arrived. Three or four men and their wives had come in to do what they could. Mr Burns, the foreman, was among them One of the men spoke in a whisper to him: “Have you been to see Mr. Hardy?" “Yes, but f 2 was at church. | left word about the accident.” “At church! So even the devil sowe- times goes to church. What for, | won der? Will he be here, think?” “Don’t know.” replied Mr. curtly. “Do you mind when he” —pointing to Scoville—*saved Mr. Hardy's life?” “Remember it well enough: standing close by.” “What'll be done with the children when Scoville goes, eh ?”’ “Don’t know.” Just then the surgeon came in. and preparations were rapidly made for the operation. The last that Mr. Hardy heard was the shriek of the poor wife as she struggled to her feet and fell in a fit across the floor where two of the youngest children clung terrified to her dress. and the father cried out. tears of agony and despair running down his face, “My God. what a hell this world is!” The next scene was a room where everything appeared confused at first, but finally grew more distinct and ter- rible in its significance, and the first person Mr. Hardy recognized was his oldest boy, George, in company with a group of young men engaged in—what! He rubbed his eyes and stared painful- ly. Yes: they were gambling. So here was where George spent all his money and Bessie’s too! Nothing that the miserable father had seen so far cut him to the quick quite so sharply as this. ' He had prided himself on his own freedom from vices and had an honest horror of them, for Mr. Hardy Burns was was not a monster of iniquity, only an intensely selfish man. Gambling, drink- ing. impurity—all the physical vices— were to Mr. Hardy the lowest degrada- 1.on. The thought that his own son had fallen into this pit was terrible to him. But he was compelled to look and lis- ten. All the young men were smoking, and beer and wine stood on a buffet at one side of the room and were plenti- fully partaken of. “1 say, George,” said a very flashily dressed youth who was smoking that invention of the devil, a cigarette, “your old man would rub his eyes to see you here, eh 7° “Well, 1 should remark he would,” replied George as he shufifled the cards and then helped himself to a drink. “I say, George,” said the first speak- er, ‘your sister Bess is getting to be a beauty. Introduce me, will you?” “No, 1 won't,” said George shortly. He had been losing all the evening, and he felt nervous and irritable. “Ah! We are too bad, eh?” George made some fierce reply, and the other fellow struck him. Instantly George sprang to his feet, and a fight took place. Mr. Hardy could not bear it any longer. He thought he broke away from the scene by the exercise of a great determination and next found himself looking into his own home. It seemed to him it was an even- ing when he and all the children had gone out, and Mrs. Hardy sat alone, looking into the fire as she had been looking before he fell asleep. She was thinking, and her thoughts were like burning coals as they fell into Mr. Hardy’s heart and scorched him as not any scene, not even the last, had done. “My husband!” Mrs. Hardy was say- ing to herself. “How long it is since he gave me a caress, kissed me when he went to his work or laid his hand lovingly on my cheek as he used to do! How brave and handsome and good 1 used to think him in the old Vermont days when we were struggling for our little home and his best thought was of the home and of the wife! But the vears have changed him! Oh, yes; they have changed him bitterly! I wonder if he realizes my hunger for his affection! Of what value to me are all these baubles wealth brings com- pared with a loving look, a tender smile, an affectionate caress? CONTINUED NEXT WEEK. ’ The Deacon’s Dream. ‘May vou take this lesson home with i you to-night, dear friends,” concluded the | preacher at the end of a very long and wearisome sermon. ‘And may its spiritual truths sink deep into your hearts and lives to the end that your souls may experience salvation. We will now how onr heads in prayer. Deacon White, will you. lead 2’ There was no response. {Deacon White,”’ this time in a loud {| vOl1ge Deacon White, will vou lead 2? Still no response. It was evident that ( heiing, The preacher | trd abpe nd raised his voice to that succeeded vak the mn w The deacon rubbed his eyes and them wonderingly. it my lead? No—I just dealt.” BANKER R son, cashier of the be horny i had been robbed of health by a serious lu trouble until he tried Dr. Kings New Dis | covery for Consumption. | free at Green's drug store. Pumnectual at Last, | when she lay prepared in her coffin for her | funeral, it was the first time in her career that she was ready on time.—Afchinson | Globe. | the shoulde ville, O., | Then he wrote : | It is said of an up-town woman that | MY FIRE. It starts; A sinuous eyelash from the sun, A golden, leaf shaped, dancing thing, Bending fernlike in a magic breeze, And grows And saps the virgin forest’s strength With writhing, biting arms, And with its red jaws through the gloom Casts elfin shadows round the room, And, waxing still, It lashes round the knotted wood With soft but cruel sting, Till, gorged with strength, it fades away Beneath a coverlet of gray, And now, Like molten sunset from the west, Pulsates as with living breath Till, dying midst the bones its greed has made, Its heart is still and ashes mark the grave. —A. R. Allan in Morningside. Ink as a Witness. In a case in the supreme court it was alleged that interlineations had been made in the papers after they were filed, and the papers were submitted to expert chemists to decide whether the interlinea- tions had been made after the papers were filed or at the time the paper was drawn. The process followed by the chemists was simple, though tedious. Hypochloride of soda was the only chemical used by the expert, but the re- sult was the same as that arrived at by the other experts. Tests were made on each line of the document. The soda bleached the ink, and, as the writing in some parts was done many years ago, the first drop of soda was placed on a line which was not in controversy. The writ- ing slowly faded, and it was 51 seconds before it was bleached. A drop on another interlineation faded the writing in 49 seconds, on another in 51 seconds, and the interlineations made when the paper was first written faded in about 50 seconds on an average. Sud- denly the ink of one of the interlineations faded in 15 seconds, and the conclusion was at once reached that it was fresher ink than the others, as the ink had not had time to thoroughly permeate the fiber of the paper. Several interlineations were found to fade in from 13 to 16 seconds. and these were marked as having been made at a more recent date. After all interlineations had been so marked, the next step was to ascertain as nearly as possible at what date the in- terlineations were made, and for this pur- pose many manuscripts in which similar ink was used on the same kind of paper were taken. The exact date of the writ- ing of each manuscript was known, and soda was dropped on each, beginning with the date of writing of the manu- seript in controversy. The time necessary to fade the ink gradually decreased from 52 and 50 seconds as the soda was drop- ped on the manuscripts of more recent years. When the fading took place in 20 sec- onds, manuscripts but a month apart in writing were used, and the fading in 14 and 15 seconds was thus fixed in a cer- tain month. The examining chemists knew nothing of the points in the contro- versy, and the report was made that cer- tain interlineations were probably made in the specified month. The attorneys in the case were amazed, as the month named was that in which they believed the more recent writing had been done.— Indianapolis Press. Uses For Bicycles. There are many uses to which @n old cycle can be put. It is said that a thea- ter manager has made rather an excellent chandelier out of his old wheel. He also uses an old tricycle for producing the ef- fect of wind, hail and railway trains. A navvy is said to have made a clock al- most all out of parts of an old machine. The bell strikes the hours. and a length of solid rubber tire holds the pendulum, which is a bicycle fork. At one small place a man has turned a discarded wheel into a kind of pump. and the tires do duty for the pipe hose. Another has made a treadle sewing machine out of his wheel. A grocer has turned part of a cycle into a coffee grinding machine, and a’ bell ringer, being rather feeble in the arm, has an old eycle which he has raised and fixed in one position, and so by a pulley arrangement he can when gently pedaling ring the bell vigorously. Many folks use their old wheels for flower stands, and there is a man who is making quite a de- cent living by turning old bicycles into conveyances on which washerwomen can take home the weekly load.—London Globe. The Crusades and Embroidery, The crusades had a marked effect on the demand for embroidery, as besides the decoration of their cloaks and pouch- es the kings and their followers wanted gorgeously worked hangings for their tents and heraldie blazons for their ban- ners. The last were ditlicult of execu- tion, and new stitches were invented, and applique work was introduced about this time. The Spaniards are said to have learned the use of spangles and other metal and head ornaments as applied to stuffs from the Saracens. Later precious stones and pearls were used, and in 1414 Charles of Orleans spent about £40 for 960 pearls which were to be used in orna- menting a great coat on the sleeves of which were embroidered the verses of a song beginning with “Madam, I am all joyous.” The musical accompaniment of the words was also embroidered. —Specta- tor. Worth Se«ing. to treat h and, enter x the pit by the back of the » happened to see die stand. The Deacon’s Mistake. The Annapolis valley, or the famous “Land of Evangeline,” gives more oppor- tunity for the study of human nature, perhaps, than any other locality along the entire Atlantic seaboard. The scen- ery of this region is beautiful beyond de- scription, and tourists soon become well enough acquainted with its people “to go altogether to the kirk and altogether pray.” One Sunday the parson in a village church delivered with special emphasis an able sermon on putting off the “old man’ and getting on the “new.” This signal feat, he stated, was accomplished by simply going down into the waters of baptism and burying the “old man” and coming out of the waters a new creature. After the service a wealthy deacon in- quired of a certain wayward individual who occasionally presented himself to the gracious influence of the church how the sermon impressed him. He said it was the only sermon that ever touched his heart. The deacon, putting on a smile of gratification, gave him a hearty hand- shake. For quite awhile he had been try- ing to persuade him to submit to baptism. In this he had an ax to grind. Almost a year previous the prospective convert stole a maul out of the deacon’s sawmill and more than once flatly re- fused to return it. The deacon finally de- cided that an ecclesiastical course of bam- boozle would have more influence over him than harsh words. If he could make him a Christian, he felt sure the maul would be forthcoming. So that Sunday morning he solemnly entreated this way- ward individual, whose heart was already softened, and won his consent to submit to baptism. When he arose out of the water, the deacon greeted him as “brother” and cor- dially congratulated him in that he had buried the “old man” and put on the “new.” The deacon, now feeling that the long lost maul was as good as returned, went on his way rejoicing. Next day the “new man” sallied into the deacon’s gro- cery store. As usual the place was crowd- ed with brethren, discussing the merits of Sunday’s sermon. When they had all congratulated him upon his baptismal regeneration, the deacon, believing the golden opportunity had come, addressed him with the utmost confidence: “Well, my brother, now I am sure you will return the maul you took cut of the mill last summer.” The reclaimed wanderer hesitated and then meekly replied: “I am sorry, deacon. but you’ve got the wrong man. The ‘old man’ who stole the maul went down into the water yesterday and was buried.”— Pittsburg Press. His Idea of Humor. A janitress living on Washington square had an adventure one day which she will not soon forget. It seems that the building which she has under her care was at one time used by a trust company, and afterward it was turned into an apartment house. When this was done, the vaults were left intact, and they were very seldom opened. The jan- itress was showing a party of gentlemen through the building and pointed out the desirability of the vaults as refrigerators. When she opened the vault and stepped in, one of the party, who has a rare idea of humor, shut the door suddenly and im- prisoned the janitress. That was all right so far as it went, but the lock was a spring affair, and the janitress had the keys on the inside. The room hunters were throroughly frightened, and one of them ran for a locksmith in haste. Luck- ily a neighbor, who is an expert lock- smith, came into the place and in a few minutes succeeded in releasing the wo- man, who was in anything but a pleasant frame of mind. The room hunters made themselves very scarce before the en- raged janitress came forth.—Philadelphia Record. In the Same Pen. “One of the boys at the hotel put me on to a little poker game,” said the dry goods drummer, “and I went around to see what it was like. There were about 30 respectable looking people in the room, and one of them was trying to teach me the value of the cards, when the police broke in and made a clean sweep of ev- erybody. Next morning, when arraigned at the police court, I wanted a lawyer, and there was a general laugh in court as his honor replied: “‘l don’t know where you'll get one. There are nine in town, but all are in the pen with you! “It was so,” continued the drummer. “and things might have gone hard with us had it not been for the fact that the judge was there, too, but had just step- ped out as the raid was made. Nothing was said about it, of course, but he let us off with a fine of $2 each and a lot of fatherly advice.””—New York Sun. He Was Very Thoughtful, A north country miller noted for his keenness in financial matters was once in a boat trying his best to get across the stream which drove his mill. The stream was flooded, and he was | taken past the point at which he wanted to land, while farther on misfortune again overtook him to the extent that the boat was upset. His wife, realizing the danger he was | that flour's » laborer recently resolved | ht at the theater, | the double | {asked ! of the | on the | | orchest ed with | amaze: and an i they would soon b { “YW Y. wes hi | eitedly. “neo a k | that fic Fun. iad Knough Patient h a thing to i die of consi Doctor—Perhaps von would like to | have me call in other physicians in con- | sultation? | Patient—No, 1 don’t know that a com- | | would be any better Journal. plication of disens to die of.—Doet {A b-year-old boy fell out of a third | story window in Paris, and his life was ved by his falling on 2 man wearing a 30 ilk hat. | HE RR ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. in, ran frantically along the side of the stream, crying for help in a pitiful voice, when, to her sheer amazement, she was suddenly brot t to a standstill by her husband yelli *1f.1’'m dro d, Molly, dunnot fo up 2 =hillin a sa get London Tel Not All Tafly, e, Can you tell me who Ananias man of the propri ving nme al n calls me yuse fell on him! streets in large. top of men's he as long as a | pones, no of Ww for the morning ven. Congratulations, “Y am proud to say that 1 did not spend a dollar to secure my election.” “l congrotulate you,” answered Sena- But — Washington tor Sorghum. you took a Star. “You got off cheap. terrible risk.” I'ISK. ~—=—8uheribe for the WATCHMAN