T- i SJt 18 stand each other than the Pharisee and Sad ducee, or the living and the dead. Mary was sitting just as her sister and Ariella had found and left her, when Martha unexpectedly returned. She hur ried into the room excitedly and said: "The Master calleth for thee. Hurry, Mary, and do not be mopine there any longer. I am ashamed of thee." Mary arose, slowly. Martha's voice jarred on her but she was used to that. She Teiled herself, and followed her sister con fusedly. She was unconscious ot any de tails on that sad, strange walk into the outer world her first since she had followed her brother to his crave. She did not lift her eyes from the ground. She saw the gravel, and blades of crass, and little pebbles and glittering sana, and Martha's robe flutter ing before her. She could not tell where she was, nor how far she had cone, when a voice quite near her murmured: "Mary." Oh, this was not the voice of any common mourner, and paltry, petty comforter! "What neighbor, what friend or kin was there, whose sorrow sank into her soul like sacred dew! All Mary's nature lifted itself like a dying flower to his lace. "When she saw how broken it was she fell at his feet and passionately, piteouslv cried: "Oh, if thou hadst been here he had not died!" Cut into the side of the limestone cliff under the hamlet of Bethany, and with a glance toward the heights of Olivet, well shielded by olive trees, and close upon the highway, thesepulchre of Lazarus responded drearilv to the gaze of the mourners who had thronged it. The tomb was new, hewn by the family upon private land, and carved with all the mortuary art of the times. It had not been constructed above a year or two. Lazarus himself had erected it, ex pending much thought upon it, that it might be a spot of beauty and of dignity worthy of the lamily eminence. Its stone lip hid gaped now, and shut upon him; one might fancy that it was with a certain in sensate pride that they received their de signer aud creator for their first victim. It was a. fair day, suuny and warm. The soul of the coming spring was already in the air. Budding trees and blossoms trembled delicately in the low and pleasant wind. The sky throbbed with the deep color whicli it wears when the creation of life is at its fullest and richest. It was 3 day when it seems impossible to die incredible to be dead. Before the tomb of Lazarus there had col lected a large and serious crowd. The dis ciples of the Kazarene had made every effort to prevent the knowledge ot his return from spreading widely. But this was a thing im possible. The eminence of the dead, the suddenness and mystery of the death, wild rumors as to some cause for it more interest ing to public curiositv than the fact itself these had swelled the crowd of formal mourners who came to gather about the be reaved household. The return of the Ifaza reue, with his close personal connection with the case, had called from Jerusalem a mixed mass of people who gathered from every motive under the sun, about the tomb. Among these could be easily recognized many persons familiar to our story. Mal- schi, the Pharisee, stood pompouslv in a prominent position, with his thick under lip preyed up in the intensest satisfaction. Mulachi was not a murderous man, but he took solid satisfaction in the death of Laz arus. "What could so benevolently have in terfered to verity his own position in regard to the Kazarene? He surveyed the crowd with the secret elation of a man who says: I told you so. Hagaar, his wi"e, stood at konie distance from him, ceremoniously veiled, more so than a married woman needed. She acted as if she were a little ashamed of her husband. Her loud tongue was still. Her roving eyes were lowered. But for the fact that it savored of immoral ity, Hagaar would have been quite willing that day to be taken for the wife ot some other man. Say, of that sweet-lipped, de vout young man yonder, the favorite disci ple of Jesus, he who, it was said, kept so closely to his Master, as if not knowing whether he most loved or feared for him, whether he were there to caress or protect him. But John loved his Master. There was no room le t in his soul for any woman. John was absorbed in Jesus as the fuel is in the fire. Peter, the fisherman, whispered something to him restlessly; but John had the maunerot one who heard no man. ltachel, the neighbor of Lazarus, was among the people, and beside her leaned Ariella and Baruch, hand clasped in hand. Amos of Gethsemane-stood behind these three, saying uothin?, as was the habit of Amos. Some of the workmen of Lazarus were in the group, and with them the young man who made mourning lor Lazarus and thought of Mary. The old Sheliach from Jerusalem could be noticed observing the scene, without commenting upon it. Stand ing apart by himself, the slave Abraham wept bitterly. Mary and Martha were not yet come to the tomb, and it was said by the disciples of the Kazarene that he lingered with tne sisters of the dead to comfort them. 'Comfort is a useful thing before that!" sneered MaKchi, pointing to the closed sep ulchre. M.ilachi had fcarcely spoken these words when a murmur ran along the crowd that the Kazarene and the sisters of the dead were to be seen approaching the tomb. The people fell back with a motion of involun tary respect. The lightest lip ceased its gos sip and the shallowest heart felt something like a throb of reverence. "He boweth his head," whispered Bachel. "He hath the aspect of a mourner closely of kin." "Kin is of the heart," murmured Ariella to her husband. "Would that I could see his countenance," said a bystander, "but the motion ot the man bideth it." At this moment a stir among the people indicated a diversion ot interest to another quarter. Enoch the lad. nrowliug about, as is the manner of boys, had peered above the sepulchre, treading down the bushes that crew there, and searching after who knows what, whether the body or the soul ot the dead. He had made a discovery which caused him to run back, as fast as his legs could carry him, to his former master, Baruch, with the announcement that he had seen a ghost. "It was not Lazarus" he said, "for she was a woman; but you couid see for yourself that it was not like other people " Baruch and Ariella, hushing the hoy, with all speed made their way, trying to attract as littie attention as they could, to the thicket whence the lad had emerged. There, prostrate on the ground, with her rich clothing torn by thorns, her hair disheveled, and her facs hidden on her arms, lav a woman who seemed to be half dead with grief. Her teeth bit into her delicate flesh; her beautiful iorm shook with deep, dv Eobs. She had thrust one hand through the bushes till it reached the top ot the sepulchre, and lay there clenched. Once she was seen to pat the cold stone with a passionate tenderness enough to break one's heart to see. "Oh! a woman!" murmured Ariella. "Let me go first, dear Baruch." At the sound of voice the prostrate woman gathered herself like a lioness, and bounded by one great lithe spring to her feet. Her veil had fallen, and the light of day fell full upon her wjn and beautiful face. It was Zahara, daughter and princess oi the House of Annas, the High Priest. CHAPTER XXIII. LAZARUS, LAZARUS, COME FOBTH ! Before the tomb of Lazarus the people fell back. They made way lor the Kazarene, who advanced silently. His head was still bowed. He walked like a man oppressed with grief. The sobbing women followed h:. A few paces before the door of the tomb, they stopped. A breathless hush fell upon the crowd; that within the sepulchre whs scarcely deeper. In the silence, a bird npon an olive branch above the tomb began to sing shrilly; it sang on lor some moments uninterrupted, so intense was the quiet; it was a merry little gay bird, with bright plumage, and sang as if it had been sum moned to a festival; Abraham, the slave, being a dull, affectionate fellow, was sorely displeased with this untimely mirth and lifted hit band to stone the bird; but a slight movement in the bushes above the tomb de terred him. A woman a strangar was descending the rocky steep to join the mourners. She was accompanied by Baruch and Ariella, who had drawn back a little behind her; Ariella seemed to be guarding her and pro tecting her with tender hands lest the lady'.s steps should miss their hold upon the rough way. The three added themselves to the group below, and stood silently. Zahara's position was now one of startling prominence, but she seemed unconscious of it. Her dress, hastily rearranged, was folded closely about her womanly figure; her veil was torn and fell loosely over hair and shoulders, revealing bcr beautiful and haggard face. Despair had settled on it. Her lips were drawn in; her dark eyes stared straight before her; they were dry and bright; her hands were clutched across her breast; her body swayed Irom exhaus tion which her soul scornfully repudiated; she seemed to have planted herself where she was, like n growing thing that was try ing to take root; she rejected the help of Ariella, and stood quite alone. Her eyes were fixed upon one object. There might have been a couple of hundred people about and before the tomb. She saw but one. For the first time in her life, Zahara beheld the Kazarene. Jesus was now standing within a dozen paces of the tomb. His head was yet bowed. As Zahara turned her eyes upon him, it dropped into his hands. His body trembled shook; a convulsion of grief swept over that sensitive form; snddenly a sob, power fully repressed, broke upon the air. In credulous, bewildered, melted at heart, Zahara perceived that the man wasweeping. The expression of her face changed as iron changes to fire. She advanced a step or two, moving like a woman in a dream; her eyes open; her clenched fingers un closed: she regarded Jesus piercingly, then gently; something like a dumb outcry seemed to dart over the woman, and to ap peal from her to him. The daughter of the High Priest, aristocrat, skeptic, Sadducee, had never been educated to believe in the ex istence of life beyond the apparent end of death. To her despairing view, Lazarus was buried, and there was the end ol it. Lazarus was in that limestone rock. There was no more Lazarus. She had not a hope nor a laith beyond the rolling of that ghastly stone upon the mouth of the sepulchre. Her imagination was destitute of images which could offer her so much as the appa rition of comfort in an hour like this. She looked upon the friend of her lover. He could weep then he suffered; he loved. Betrayed by his own pretensions, helpless in the presence of actual death, mortified, defeated, humiliated, he stood shaken. Za hara could have pitied the plebeian, the charlatan, the ignorant Babbi, this man of the people, this carpenter, this baffled agi tator could have pitied? Kay, she could not A power incomprehensible to Zahara withstood her. She bad met with faith in immortality; she had come face to face with Him who reoresented immortality, who held out eternal life as if it were a gift in his hand to the hopes and despairs of men. Kow, as she stood where she was, piteously staring upon him, Jesus raised his head.aud lilted up his eyes and looted upon Zihara. She saw a man of lofty stature, drawn to its full height. He had a commanding air. His garments were the garments of the peo ple, but his mien was the mien of a king. His sandals were dusty and travel-worn. He had the hand of an artisan. His head was royal and raised itself upon strong shoulders. He had beautiful hair, of the fin est texture, curling and fair; his unshaven beard fell to his breast; the expression of his concealed lips was delicate as no word can tell it; his mouth quivered as Zahara turned her pale face hither, and a little higher, to ward him, with the uncontrollable impulse ot dawning respect. It seemed as if he were touched by the sight of the poor girl's mis ery. As the two stood conlronting each other they were to the eye like human love con fronting the divine human angnish ap pealing to divine pity the helplessness of earth questioning the power ot Heaven. Zihara raised her eyes and looked into the Kaztrene's. What a gaze fell upon her ! She felt scorched. That supreme look burned into her soul like holy fire. Those eves what color had they? "What form? No man knew, or knoweth unto this day. Tears afterward Zahara used to say that they were to her vision as the sun in mid heaven, and cf them she could tell no more. She shriveled under them and sank before them. The majesty and beautvofthat face, past power of speech to say it, or form ot dream to dream it. blazed above her for a moment. Then Zahara slowly drooped through all her haughty body, and sank upon her knees. "Lord." she murmured. "Lord ! He loved .thee, aud I restrained him. Blame him not there in the tomb be is dead. Dead men cannot tell the truth. Jesus of Kazareth ! it was all my fault. "We loved each other, and I knew thee not." But Jesus made no answer to Zahara. He had suddenly retreated a step or two, and fixed his eyes upon the tomb. Then, lilting them to the hoi bright sky he stretched his hands out in the attitude of supplication, and so stood, rapt and mute, among the people, and no one stirred or spoke in all the throng. Solemnly, in an undertone, and witnessed only by those who stood nearest him, he slowly and distinctly said: "Behold, I am the Resurrection. I am the Life. He that believeth on me, though he were dead, he shall live." "Lord!" wailed a woman's voice, "He did believe on thee!" It was Z.ihara weep ing at his feet weeping now, like any woman, the ice of anguish thawed. Kow in the first thrill of her tears she was aware that an incredible, nay, a ghastly thing had happened. The Kazarene had ordered the stone which guarded the sepulchre to be re moved. Protests from the lamily whispers from the crowd a moment of intense and terrible excitement swept giddily over Zahara's senses. Speak she could not. John the Disciple spraug with the alacrity ol love and trust, to obey his Master's com mand. Amos of Gethseinane and Baruch of Bethany followed. The three men executed the command in silence, and fell back. But Jesus rapt in prayer stood with eyes lifted to heaven, and so standing seemed to have grown unaware of any who pressed about him. Mary came near timidly, and sinking by the side of Zahara, drew the hem of his dusty garment to her lips and kissed it. An inexplicable awe hud fallen upon the hearts ol the throng. The silence became profound. The bird upon the tomb had ceased singing. Suddenly a loud and ringing voice struck the still air. "Lazarus! Lazarus!" Who addressed the dead man. as one ad- drcsseth a friend who is expected to reply? The people stared at each other and shud dered. "Lazarus! Come forth!" The cry was commanding and awful. It penetrated the souls of the living, as light ning penetrates the earth. If any voice could have reached the spirit ot the" dead Great God of our people! Look yonder! What has befallen us? What thine; 'is this? "Whom have we in our midst? What is this blinding sight? The stone lips of the sepulchre mutter; the black throat yawns; there is motion within, and sound. Steps stir there is a flickering of light and a shifting of shadow a shape moves and rises before our eyes. It is the living! Was it the dead? Clad in his shroud, as the tomb had taken him, Lazarus, for four days a dead man, stoops irom the sepulchre, stands uprightly, and walking steadily into the bright air, moves down the scattering ranks of his mourners, and solemnly regards them. Of love and joy wrenched from death and despair, what is there to say? The woes that remain are few. They can only tell us how Zahara fled forever from the palace of the High Priest, and loyally sheltered by Ariella, went in due time to the home of Lazarus and was wedded unto him by the sacred lips of the Great Kabbi, thus protecting herself from the authority of her father, and becoming the subject of her husband according to the Jewish law; how with her own im petuosity and intensity she flung off her old life and came forth from her old faith, even as the dead had come forth from the THE tomb, and joined herself with the faith ot her husband with a cordial soul; how these two, with the sister of Lazarus and Be becc.i, the slave, journeyed together, escap ing the dangerous prominence of their start ling history, into what they called another country. For strangers will mock her when neigh bors mock, and in the province where they make their new home these elected ones taught the faith of Him who had given His own life for truth's sake and for God's the faith of humanity aud purity, of mercy and peace, the faith that respected the poor, and comforts the unhappy, and is gentle with the sick, and restores the mistaken and the willful and the wrong, and gives life unto the dead. g But it is doubtful if Zahara herself even fully understood her own connection or that of her husband with the tragedy which one month from the burial oi Lazarus ot Beth any shook the world. Upon tha secret influence and spoken word of Annas, the High Priest, the fate of the Kazarene hung balanced for so much of a space as might have saved and did con demn the grandest and the most piteous of lives. How could Lazarus tell Zahara this? She became so acenstomed to the thought which her husband did not share with her, that perhaps she wondered less, or worried less about the fact, which she reserved, than might otherwise have been the case. These must be subjects upon whicli the lips of Lazarus were sealed those of the grave no closer. Time did not loosen them. He be came a tender husband, a busy citizen, a de vout man; but he remained a silent one. The friendship experienced by Jesus for Lazarus, maintained to the end with a sell obliteration and tenderness upon which it is heartbreaking to think, went with other re corded and unrecorded sacrifices to count the cost of a price, upon which we dare not dwell and from whose preciousness wc avert an awed and humbled face. Whence had he come? Where had he been? What selemn marvels had he seen? What awful secrets did he know? What blessed story could he tell? Passionately beloved to the end, and assiduously cher ished, his own wife never knew. She might as well she would as soon have asked the sepulchre from which he had emerged. the end. SLAUGHTERED AS WOliYES AKE. A Round-Up of Antelope la it Rnrbed WIro Enclosure in Wyoming. Hew York Sun. 1 An interesting story of an antelope hunt in Wyoming was told in a down-town gun store the other day. But, though interest ing, it was by no means cheering to the sportsmen who dread the utter destruction of all game by useless slaughter. It appears that a large ranch in Wyoming was man aged by an Englishman and owned chiefly by Englishmen, although there was some American capital invested. The ranch in cluded 18 sections of land, and was laid out three miles wide by six long. The whole was enclosed by a five-wire buckthorn fence of the most substantial character. Large breadths had been sown to wheat, and so last spring, after warm weather came, the antelopes gathered from great distances to eat the young grain. To the mind o' the English manager of the estate this called for a violent remedy. The antelopes must be exterminated. He therefore sent for his friends around about, and a party was gathered as if for a uolf hunt. Mounting their horses, they formed a line across one end of the plantation, and then rode slowly toward the opposite end, intending to corner the came and then shoot it down comfortably, just as the natives in Alrica drive game into a V shaped corral and butcher it. The men in line were armed with repeating rifles. Before more than hajf the ground was covered, two or three of the party became so excited oyer the appearance of the game that they opened fire. Antelopes that were Irom 1.200 to 1,500 yards away were shot at with the effect ot alarming them and causing many ol them to stampede back through the line before it had closed in sufficiently to make the slaughter com plete. In all 11 antelopes were killed in the round-up, and it is supposed a dozen more were wounded, but escaped. That was bad enough, though not so bad as other round ups which were probably held afterward were likely to be. It seems particularly un fortunate that au animal like the antelope should be slaughtered in such merciless fashion, when it is remembered that save in "Western Texas and in two or three districts in the northern part ot the country the species is extinct. THE JUNKET'S M1RK0R. He TJaea it Like a Bnd Boy to Annoy HI. Hrlzubom In the Zoo. Washington Sunday Herald. There is a very interesting case of animal intelligence, combined with original cussed ness, to be seen over at our infant "Zoo" in the Smithsonian grounds. The hero of this tale is a monkey. His keeper has suspended a little round mirror in his cage, into which his monkeyship often looks quite admiringly at his own beauties. The other day he made a discovery. He happened to look at tl e glass just as a beam of sunlight touched ii, and saw that the light was reflected back into the eyes of a cockatoo, across the way in a cage. The angered bir I gave a screech and the monkey immediately put this and that together, while a cunning expression shone on his face, just as it used to on "Peck's Bad Boy" when he was up to mi -chief. That monkey kept shifting that glass as the sunlight moved along, with delibeiat'on and maliee, to make it flash every few moments into the cockatoo's eyes. Then the latter would break forth into screeches again, which so pleased the monkey that he would jump about in an ecstacy of de light and perforin all the acrobatic feats that he knew. Then he would return to the sport oT slii ting tne glass so as to put the cockatoo into a fresh rage. This perform ance was kept up uutil both keeper and visitors who witnessed tjie scene came to the conclusion that there was no need to hunt for the "missing link" longer. That monkey displayed intelligence enough to entitle him to the honor, and to forever settle the truth of the doctrine of original sin. This primeval sinner did not even need an Eye tocorrnpt himl BOTH HAD TRAITS. Idioiyncrncles ol Clinrnctcr That Cropped Out Unexpectedly. New York Sun.1 "I have a Iriend here whom I want to in troduce you to," he said after they had met and chatted a moment in the Erie depot across the river. "Oh, certainly." "I beg to state in advance, however, that he has one curious trait of character which you may expect to see developed." "All right. My friends contend that I also have one." The two were introduced, shook hands, passed the usual talk, and after four or five minutes number three suddenly queried: "By the way, have you a pocket knife?" "Yes." "If you please." He pared his nails and talked for three or four minutes longer, and then put the knife in his pocket aud excused himself on the grounds that he must look after his bag sage. "That s his trait," whispered the man who had introduced him "he's taken yonr knife away with him. Curious, isn't it?" "Not halt so curious as my trait 1" ex claimed the other, and, striding after the man, be seized him by the shoulder, whirled him around in a savage manner, and said : "Either return that knife or-I'll lick you out of your boots right here and now 1" "Ah 1 Beg pardon I" and the knife was handed out so quickly that it seemed to be red hot. The wonder of the age Salvation Oil, for twenty-fire cents a bottle. It kills all pain. PITTSBURG DISPATCH, NOT ALWAYS SEDATE. The Pnrilans Have Iieen Sadly, Mis represented in History. JOKERS AS PLENTY THEN AS NOW. Picture of a Colonist's Kitchen on a Winter Sunday Evening. CREED AND LAW NOT ALL OP LIFE fWRITTEN FOB TnB DISPATCH. I HE Puritan moth er was just as se vere as the Puri tan father. Over the doorway and the great mai te " creed, creed, creed," was writ ten, and beauty as well as "claptrap" was ban ished. "This earth is a vale of tears and I but a worm of the dust,"" was the song and Burnishing Up the Rifle. declaration of the average Puritan, male 1 A irif y- V-f r h 'SQUIRE JOHN BLACKSTON'S nOKNED STEED. and female. The sight of a clergyman or "godly minister" would almost make a Pur itan cross himself, despite the fact that Bomish ideas were scoffed at and denounced; and yet, gentle reader, did you really know that these Puritans were only human beings after all? Were you aware of the fact that there was a good deal of hilarity and almost deviltry going on all the time? It is impossible to squeeze out all of the evil that is in the human family. Some there are that "won't be squoze," as Deacon Caldicut once said in "Tuu Meetin'." No one can deny that there was many a sly wink and titter among the comely matrons and prim maids as old 'Squire John Black ston, gravely striding his horned steed, with his grjat coat tails flapping in the wind, went to church through the irregular and undulating roads. Then there was the lovely aud good-natured Dame Preston, than whom the Lord never made a better, when sitting or presidrag one night at table with her company, was startled by a crash at her back. Things were tumbling, splitting, breaking and smashing; the dear soul was paralyzed for a second, and then, shouting with all her might, said: "Smash, darn, devil, I've broke my kittle!" which was in deed the case, the S hook upon which it was hanging having parted. Did the Puritan assembly rise and leave the wicked woman? Oh, no! They laughed till the tears came, and later on Dame Preston laughed, and still later on the "cyder" and a bit of grog (rum) helped to appease the religious senti ments and sorrows. There can be no doubt that if you or I were wiliing to eavesdrop just a little, we might creep around the Turning the Dumb Betty. raspberry, tansy and lilac bushes which bonier the tan-based old house, and peek through the wooden inside blinds, and find a jolly group of men and women playing that lorbidden ganfe, shuffleboard (cards), or crosspile. These Puritan folk hadl their Monday mornings and Saturday nizhts just the same as we do. The mother of a lamily of nine girls did not go a-visiting on washing day; no, she got the girls into line, and that too before daylight, and made them scrub, scrub, scrub, and the boys had to take a hand also, for they could turn the Dumb Betty a sort of washing machine at least a half hour before the horn blew for school. Now it is not at all probable, and no modern mother will admit that their great, great grandmammas went about the house with sanctified looks and mumbled over prayers when that wash ing was on. They joked, talked ot the Pequot war, the landing of the new migra tors, the importation and raising of tobacco at Marblehead, the poor quality of choco late, "the grand wake," for their funerals were nothing else; pretty colors and furbe lows and no end of local affairs; they laughed right out loud when they discovered that their washing was out before their neigh bors'. Oh, they were a merry people when roused, a sad set, no doubt, when the church and Indians claimed their attention. They courted, told white .lies, scrambled in the SUNDAY, MARCH wet forest leaves skated, husked, drank rum, ale, and beer, went gunning, got mar ried, sang, and did exactly as we do, but un questionably not with that freedom and lib erty of action. Ko, they restrained them selves, but "it was in 'em'," as Mother Endi- cntt remarks in her quaint recitations of "ye olden days." ' Sunday was, among the Puritans, a day in which they tried to put up the natural shutters of their existence. All actions were ordered and measured off for the Lord; it was Hii day; one only of the seven was completely given to the Creator, which the Creator must have been thankful to them .or. But let its step into some of the good colonists' kitchens along about 5 o'clock in the evening of a winter's Sunday. In one we find n group of farm hands seated ahout the open fireplace quietly converging and as quietly smoking their corncobs. Occasion ally some one of the party will squirt a mouthful of tobacco juice onto the roaring back loc, and pretty soon another red-laced chap will crawl Ue'ore the hot blaze with his hand in front of his face and reach for a long heating iron, which, when found, he would withdraw and immerse into a huge mug con taining cider. Others follow his example, and in an honr or so the group become ani mated enough. By 8 o'clock the farmer comes in and squats down on the great high back settle. All is attention. He talks about the scanty loam of last season, pro poses to make a stone fence around the rear of the farm, suggests the removal of a number of trees which can be hauled on the snow to the barn, and thinks it wise to keep the road open toward the Plymouth people. By 9 o'clock all levity and business ceases and everyone of the household gathers in the great sitting room and listens devoutly to the evening prayers, aft which they all" hustle off lively to their cold beds, where they mentally curse the frost and;chills of winter and thus meditating they soon shiver off to sleep. So the Sabbath day has passed, the church going is through with until lecture night, and no great sins have been com mitted except, maybe, that the farmer has thought it over in his mind, that he would clean off a lot of Indian wig! warns that had recently been set nn ,? The Colonial Fireplace.' his estate. Then, too, there may have been a few muskets scoured up and some bullets cast, or perhaps the ambitious vouug colon ist may have nailed a wolfs" head to his door, thus publishing the fact that he was entitled to a bounty; at any rate there; was not that awe and grave solemnity lurkinz everywhere which the historians would allow us to suppose. No, the Puritan, elder or workingman, maiden or matron, was not a bit different from the people of to-day, in fact there were no more "cranks" then than now. The provincial New Englander of 1650 and 1890 is one and the same parcel and ever will be. Creed is just as rampant in the old country parishes now as it was two or more centuries ago, and so is nonsense; so is the loud laugh, the joke, the keen wit, and love for innocent amusement; all the talk which we read about thesobemesss and holv sanctiuumiousiicss of the Puritan is only the conclusion of a writer who has read' the clergyman's history of the colonial days. Depend upon it that a more complete idea can be obtained of the lives and enstoms ol the early settlers by reading the town records than by accepting the theories of the learned writers of to-day. Doubtless religion was more important than civil law, but to pre sume that there was "no fun" in those davs is a mistake; the joker never dies. S. D. L. HIS TEMPER RDINED. A Onco Good-Xntnred Statesman's Story of Ills Troubles. "Look out for me to-day," said one of the best-natured looking men in the House of Representatives to a Washington Sunday Herald reporter the other aliernnon. "I'm very ill-temDered and liable to bite my best friend, or pull a newspaper man's ear, or do anything else that's desperate." "Oh, you've got a Mr. Hyde side to your character, have you?" said the reporter. "I'm glad I found it out. "What sort of a dose do you take to develep it?" "Well, I've had to take dose enough in the last two weeks to make a Hyde out of the angel Gabriel, it seems to me," the statesman continued. "These confounded officeseekers give a man no rest, night or day. Those who have the least claim on you are the most bothersome. They won't take no for an answer. If you manage to escape them here at the Capitol, they follow you to your bouse. If you don't see them there they hang around aud waylay you on the street. One conlounded fellow has fol lowed me like a sbadow for the last two weeks. In that time'he has called by actual count at my house just 15 times, at all hours of the day aud night. I used to be one ot the best natured men in the world, but I've been in a chronic ill-temperof late, and these infernal bores are to blame for it. Goodby," and the member dove thiough the swinging doors and (disappeared within the realm where Mr. Keed reigns supreme. Casting a Few Bullets. 1890. FORMS OF DELIRIUM. Remarkable Figments of a Tempo rarily Disordered Brain OBSERVED AT A CITY HOSPITAL. Chains of Imaginary Events With All the Vividness of Ecality. rjIPXOTISJI IN HYSTERIA AND MANIA. rWBITTES TOB Till DISPATCn.l Without circumlocution or preface, I want to relate some really remarkable manifesta tions of delirium which recently came un der my observation in a city hospital. They were remarkable (or the vividness of the scenes to the patient, while he talked and acted rationally enough in other ways dur ing the existence of these fancies, quickly realized they were delusions, and yet in sisted that nothing in real life was ever more deeply engraved upon his memory. While lying in bed in his private room in the hospital reading one evening, he sud denly heard the voice of a well-known friend. "Why, what in the world ever brought him here?" was the first puzzled thought of the patient. The next questions were, "Where is he? and to whom is he talking?" There was close listening for a few moments and the astonished patient found that the friend was in the office of the hospital, and talking with the Superin tendent, and about himself (the patient). ME FRIEND'S MIND WRONG. Then there ensued perhaps a half-hour a conversation, perfectly rational and plaus ible at the beginning, upon a subject not necessary to relate, but which presently further astonished the patient because it in dicated that something was wrong with his friend's mind. This became more and more evident as the talk of the friend was pro longed, insomuch as the Superintendent finally remarked to the friend, "Don't you think'it would be a wise thing to have some one look after you?" This made the friend angry, but he kept on talking until his speech became simply the reiteration over and over again of the same statement. It was so evident that he had become suddenly and violently insane that he was seized and taken to a padded cell in the basement of the hospital, where, for an hour or more, he kept yelling at the top of his voice a variation of one theme. The patient was deeply moved for the suf fering of his friend and wondered why no one was notified of the man's misfortunes. Presently, after the friend, through sheer physical exhaustion, ceased the noise in his cell, the patient heard another well-known voice talking to the Superintendent about the astounding and sudden insanity of his friend and upbraiding the Superintendent for not having given notice at once of the case, EVEN TO DETAILS. It was agreed that it was better to leave him in the cell that night and take steps in the morning for his removal. Then quickly afterward another friend called to learn the particulars of the Superintendent concern ing the case. These were told, with great precision of detail, by an attendant in the office, to each caller. Long after midnight the patient heard his insane friend once more. He had awakened and seemed to berestored in a de gree to sanity, as in a natural voice he be gan to ask himself where he was, and won dered how it was he happened to be locked up and what was the cause. Then, suddenly, his mania returned and he was restless and noisy for some time, finally quieting down until after daylight, when he again awakened once more talking rationally. He began to go through the old letters in his pocket to see what they were, reading them aloud. Several he read calmly and tore up. but finally he found one that aroused his ire, and he began blaspheming the writer of it and the subject. This was continued un til about 9 o'clock in the morning, when a carriage was brought and he was removed to some other place, where the patient vainly tried to ascertain from the hospital nurses and attendants. It was not more than an hour later that the patient began to doubt if there was any truth whatever in all the exciting incidents to which he had been an unwilling listener. A pointed question put to a nurse convinced him that it had been a delusion, notwith standing all its vividness and apparent co herency. A PECULIAR HALLUCINATION. In the afternoon of the same day when the patient was again reading, preferring to read rather than attempt to talk with a very dull attendant, he was annoyed by the conversations going on in the surgical ward, on the floor above him. One man seemed inclined to monopolize attention and con tiiiuilly made oracular remarks about what others were saying, to which the other pa tients in the ward did not take kindly. Finally some chance remark about book keeping gave this Sir Oracle an opportunity to become more oracular than ever. "I think I know more about that sub ject," he said,"tbau any person in the room; yes, or in tne city, eitner. l nave oeen a bookkeeper for 41 years. There are book keepers and bookkeepers, but not one in a hundred deserves the title. Do you know how many books it takes to keep books properly? Why, it requires eight." All other persons stopped talking to listen to him except one boy who had been brought in with a broken leg who would swear and yell with pain every few minutes despite the efforts of the nurses. . "And why does it require eight books?" the old man went on. Because each is a check against the other, and if an error is made it can be found; it is impossible not to find it." There was a pause for a few minutes while the talker evidently gathered strength and the closer attention of his auditors. "I will give you an illustration," he said. He then spoke briefly, but iu a surprisingly intelli gent manner, of the ramifications of a cer tain class of business with which the patient was thoroughly familiar. THE OLD BOOKKEEPER'S STORY. "The head of one department of this busi ness," he continued, "is allowed, a certain amount of money to run that department. At the end of the year he found a discrep ancy in his accounts of S13.000, according to his own books. I was well acquainted with this manager, and he consulted me. He told me that while his own books did not foot up right, both the cashier aud the gen eral bookkeeper insisted that his accounts were all right, even though his books were wrong. I looked at his books books? Why, he only had a day-book, a mere memorandum. The cashier and the sreneral bookkeeper both kept regular sets of books " 'My dear lellow,' I said to him, 'you don't suppose you have kept books, do you? Do you think you can tell anything about your transactions by re erring to such mem oranda as these? The bookkeeper is right and you are wrong. The bookkeeper is right and you are wrong. The bookkeeper is right and you are wrong. The bookkeep er is right and you are wrong.'" "Oh bother the bookkeeper being right. What's the use of saying it so many times?" interrupted a gruff voice. "Why do I say it so often?" replied the old man. "I said it eight times because the general bookkeeper had eight checks against my friend and had eight chances nay, certainties of being right, where my friend had no check whatever against the bookkeeper, nor even against himself. Do you see why I repeated it so frequently?" ERRORS IN TIIE BOOKS. There was another pause, after which the old bookkeeper resumed: "Now, I want to tell you further why the bookkeeper was right and my friend was wrong. I told you the bookkeeper bad a cheek against my friend. He also has checks against himself. Suppose the bookkeeper discovers bis ac counts will not balance; there is an error some place, but it can be found and it must be found. He must never stop until he finds that error. He goes over all his books very careally and fails to find it. He goes over them aznin and still does not discover it. And again and again he goes over them until that error is found. And again, and again, and again, until that error is found." The old man kept on lepeatingthc "again again and again until that error is found," until first one and then another of his listen ers, in language more emphatic than polite, insisted that If he didn't shut up they would pitch him out of the window. He ignored tho interruptions very calmly, and finally said: "Now you are wondering why I said that so oficn. But I wanted to impress upon your minds the fact that eat ing, sleeping, "rest, must all be laid aside by the bookkeeper, and he must patiently and persistently seek until he finds his error, be cause there is" one there, and he knows it. And perhaps after days and nights of weary search he finds it in the very last place he would have ever thought of looking for it not in any of the ledgers, but in the day book, the blotter. TRIED NOT TO LISTEN. Now, that was certainly a coherent talc, with au apparently proper premise and a logical sequence. The patient tried not to hear it; he even argued with himself that it was only another delusion; in fact, he felt sure it was a delusion, yet it required actual information as to the location of the male surgical ward to satisfy himself that the old bookkeeper and all his statements were only figments of a disordered brain. But not yet was the work of delirium ended. On the evening of that same day commenced probably the most remarkable of all the mental phantasms which grew into an apparently logi cal story and made a deeper impression than all others upon the patient. It can only be outlined briefly, because it occupied over 1G hours in its full develop ment. One of the lady nurses was a mar ried woman, who bad her son in the hospi tal. She met that son just outside the pa tient's door, and asked him to do an errand for her and bring her four articles. He couldn't understand, and yet the request was a very simple one. Astonished at the wonderful dullness of the child (as the pa tient supposed it was), she took him in the room adjoining that of the patient, and there endeavored to make him understand. There she patiently examined him lor along time, the patient hearing every word that was said, and when the mother finally real ized that her son, who was not a child, had become insane over his mathematical studies, her grief was profound and all the more terrible because she repressed its evi dences as much as possible. There were other developments and a continuous growth ofthts story until long after day light the next morning. During the day the patient learned there was no married woman, no son, no grief; nothing at all but a singularly life-like chimera. POSSIBILITIES IN HYPNOTISM. In the foregoing there is nothing but a simple statement of facts. Now as to an other reason for their publication beside that of their own novelty. Mr. Pierre Janet, Professorof Philosophy in the Lycee of Havre, France, has devoted much atten tion to the cure of hysteria by the use of hypnotism, xn the March Scribher's Maga zine William James has an interesting article on a work written by M. Janet, en titled "De l'Antomatisme Psychologique." In this work of over 400 pages M. Janet recites the results of his experiments', inves tigations and cures. Some of these are cer tainly wonderful; indeed, almost incredible in what they reveal of "the bidden self." But it is not of them that I wish particu larly to speak. M. Binet, a noted mem ber of the Saitpetrie school, has also written a paper on the same subject. M. Binet say3 that hysteria is a "contraction of the field of consciousness." M. Janet says persons afflicted with hys teria are capable ol realizing only halt what a normal person can. Both writers say that the second self has no subsequent recollec tion of the act committed. They allege that hysteria is a splitting up of the conscious ness, a defect of unifying power, which may result from abnormal weakness. M. Janet says he succeeded in getting the same phenomena from persons in alcoholic delirium as he did from hvsteric patients. If this be the case, then the proper defini tion of hysteria is not so much what M. Binet srives a "contraction of the field of consciousness, but rather what both savants say, "a splitting up of the consciousness." THREE DISTINCT SELVES. It would take too long to describe even briefly the cases of two women, called in his work Luie and Leonle, treated by M. Janet, but it is sufficient to say that they developed three distinct selves, and only in the third, when deepest under the influence of hypna tism did they know the other two. In their first, or normal, selves, they knew nothing of the actions of their two other selves. The three phantasmagorias, the result of delirium, which are related in this article occurred to the patient at a time when he was capable of fully realizing all his sur roundings, and when he could read and un derstand what he read. There was no for getlulness of them nor of what actually took place while they seemed to be taking place. That must then have been a splitting up of the consciousness. The hidden self was act ing at the same time as, if not in unison with, the normal self. Now, the final question is this: If hys teria can be cured by hypnotism, and if, as M. Janet says, alcoholic delirium is akin to hysteria, of which there is little doubt, why cannot hypnotism be brought into use to cure delirium? It would be interesting to ascertain what would be the result it a person in delirium was thrown entirely into the hypnotic state. Being controllable by the operator the result should be beneficial to the patient. M. Janet does not state what efforts were made to relieve one delirium victim. All that Mr. James reports is that the man was made to walk, crawl, lie down andjtalk, while the patient was under the impression throughout it all that he was standing beside his bed. This gives no further information than that a person in delirium is still amenable to hypnotic in fluences. CHARLES JACKSON. TnE MAN OP F.MJ01) AND IRON. Bismarck tho Ilero of Thirty Duels and Two Attempted Astasslnailons. New York Herald. I Bismarck is suspected of having fought oyer 30 duels, and that he foucht four is certain. One of them withian Englishman; but not one was discovered by the authori ties. In the official list of punishment his name figures four times, but only twice for serious offenses. The first is a sentence of ten days' imprisonment for officiating as second in a duel. Assassins have twice paid Bismarck the compliment of attempting to "remove him." The first attempt occurred in 1866, when Julius Cohen, better known as Blind, an adopted sonjot Karl Blind, shotat him in Ber lin. Bismarck clutched his aggressor by the arm and held him till the police ar rested him. Blind, or Cohen, committed suicide in prison. The second attempt took place in 1874 at Kissingen, where a young mechanic named ICullmaun, who professed to have been im pelled by hatred of the Chancellor's eccle siastical policy.slightly wounded him in the arm with a pistol shot. AN EN0R1I0DS SNAKE SKIN. Thirteen Feet Long and Nearly Fifteen Tiicbea In Circumference. Seattle rosi-Intelllgcnccr. The skin shed by a rattlesnake which was found on the bank of the Illinois river, and is now preserved at the Boys' Seminary at Tahlequafa, in the Indian Territory, meas sured 13 feet long, is 14J inches iu circum ference, and has 15 buttons. The person who has examined, measured, and reported upon it, says that it is a very dry skin, and therefore assumes that it probably shrunk considerably in drying, but this is not so, as the skin of a snake is thoroughly dry when shed, and consequently represents the tall size of the snake. At any rate, this one is big enough without claiming any such al lowance, and represents a poisoning power which it would take at least a barrel of old Bourbon to counteract. THE FIRESIDE SPH11I k Collection of EnipiaM Its for Horns CraoMng. Address communications for this department to E. R. Chadbourn. LeioUlon, Maine. 978 ILLUSTRATED NUMERICAL. 11-29.1-22 21-10-7 is represented by A. 2-31-18-2S. bvH. 17-6-26-14-24 23, by C. 8-&13.bvD. S0-1Z-4-32-SM&-27. by E. 2(W3-3-13-5. by F. 15, by Q. The total is a well-knowu old saying: R. E. A. DlNO. 1)79 SYNCOPATION. If I were a stroner partlzan. (Thank heaven. I'm not that kind ot man). And if in an election fray My candidate should win the day. No doubt I'd whole with rapturous glee, So very happy I would be. But if some sudden threatened harm Should fill my soul with dire alarm. Then, when I saw great danger nearv 'Tls likely I would last with fear. Perhaps this puzzle is so blind That few can the solntion find; I'll give to solvers, then, a clew; For whole a certain bird may do; Of last It may be truly said It Is a well-known quadruped. NELSONLUt 980 CURTAILMENT. Wealth is an object of desire. To lay it up we strive. And in our efforts never ceasa While all alive. The ways are many to increase Tho stores ror wbich we sigh: But some are failures, oven though. Our best we try. If our advice Is worth the Ink Of lifelong toil the fruits. Would prime gain lucre, friend engage In Iucre-tive pursuits. ASPIROV 981 DIAMOND. L A letter. 2. A constellation. 3. Scalps, i. Rendered courteous (Otis.). 5. Situated on a calvx. 6. A prophet. 7. Mineral resins'. 8. Legis lative bodies. 0. Ends (rare). 10. An island near Africa. 11. A letter. R. O. Chester, 982 DECAPITATION. The man of whole is one ol nerve. Who pushes on and does not swerve Or fail in his endeavor: He has an end In view, and ha Fursnes it wilh such energy As brings him nearer ever. He does not wait for chance to bring Some future day the wished-for thing. But keeps right on pursuing: Always acting, always working. Never lagging, never shirking. Always up and doing. The foolish man who trust3 to last. Lets all the golden hours slip past While he's no effort making: He' always standing in a pause And nangbt accomplishes because Be makes no undertaking. While he is in the poor man's niche, He sees his neighbor getting rich Bv efforts never slacking; He says that he does not succeed. But tails behind and comes to need Because in last he's lacking. NzLSONIAN, 983 RIDDLE. A part of a goblet, or ship, pipe, or tree; An irregular chaotic tantrle: A ring: and just matter: Hovr what cin I bs . That compose such a curious iangle? Go search in tho Arctic when hunting'ls good. And I will peep at you from under my hood. Uael Gret. 984 nALF-SQUARE. L Danish sculntor. b 1S15. 2. German musi cian. 1630-1685. 3. French reformer, d 15U. 1 A black mineral. 5. Thread wound into a ball. 6. Of him. 7. The indefinite article. 8. ii half-square. II. c. Buboes. 985 ANAGRAM. The alr-heat-wind notices. Ob, wonderful sciences! r Nevr-lancled appliances! What won't those scientists dot The world is progressing. And men are egressing From darkness to light that is new. Till now for a penny In newspapers any The weather predicted we view; And the beat thing about ic Although you may doubt it. One time out of ten tuey come true. FlLORnC 9G CHARADE. "A child is spoiled when he is young. A flsh when he is old" An adage that, though never sung, In prose is often toliL Thus people. It they'd last on well. Will not all this, nnwise. JPrime ttsb when spoiled will never sell. Nor children eyer rise. AsriRO. 987 SQUARE. L One who maintains that generals, or tha terms used to denote the genera and species of things represent real existences. Z. Town of Los Angeles county. Cal. 3. Certain sand stones. A. Lingera. 5. Interior. (J. Harsher. 7. A token used on the continent of Europe. (Nanus.) Delphine. 988 NUMERICAL. -While 2. 3, 1 is something fair, A 3. 2. 1 1 cannot bear; Although this last I do not dread To see upon a lady's head. Deflcienry in weight is given As meaning of the four to seven; But in a parable we find A meaning of a different kind, Whienshowstnat to the ancient granger Four to 7 wa not a traneer. An article of frequent use Ko donbt the 3 aud U produce. For 1 to 9 we have no relHh, Because we And 'tis something hellish. ' J. McK. ANSWERS. 960 HANDLES C A R D b MAT G HOE CROPS R U N N E R S 070 A puzzle. 971 Hurse-man-ship. D72- V C I T O A R K D O R C I N E S CAUODEJtON VI R I DOMARU8 TENEMENTS D E M A N D S SORTS N U 3 S 973 L Avis. SIvi. 2. Alexis; six, ela. 3. Nu lei. gem. tun. 974 Hearth, earth, heart. 975 SPECTRE Walnuts Impious Nervine D u d o e o N L u N A T i c E p i c u r E 976 Bramble. 977 Sham-rock. HEATING BY ELECTRICITY. A Minneapolis Mill Man Soemf to Huts Solved the Difflcnlt Problem. The electrician in charge of the lightning plant of a flour mill at Minneapolis says the Hew York Sun, has devised te'veral forms, of electric heater for use in the mill. Among them are an electric oven to test the baking qualities or the flour a heater for the glne pot used by the belt men in cementing belts, and a device for warm ing a large tank ol water in which the mill' men warm their coffee for the midday lunch. -f. -A V&tSMl