. , ' ' .1 . J ' ". . ' ' l - ft- - 3 fgiifes gtliirl i iepifcw, - ' . F. SOHWEIER. THE OON8TITUTION THE UNION-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. ior Propria. VOL. XLV. MIFFLINTOWIS, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 71S9L NO. 3. i i , . . If - -.-1 i ' h I 1 1 it' 9 .5 I Awewspaper paragraph says: A fate census of France embraced 20, 000,000 women." Happy censusl Thb people of rank in England who have fallen into poverty are to be pea sloned made strong again, as it were. A Ka-T.amazoo merchant gives awny a copy of Sf.inley'i Travels" with each pound of cheese purchased at his store. Tuns are in order. It has been discovered that some O. the largest manufacturers of Bologna sausages have boon mixing poor horsc flesh with worse pork in making their sausage. Thero are two Geraldine" poems: ne, a romance in verse, by Will M. Caneton; the other, a souvenir of the St Lawereme. by Alonzo Hopkins. The latter was published anonymously. L Germany the law provides that a critic may cot enter a theater to un justly criticise a play, "even if he has purchased a ticket." There is a del. lcate flavor of humor in the Idea of a critic ever buying a ticket. The English go-. ernmcnt Is trans, porting v.wng trees by the wholesale from Scotland to the Isle of Man, where (iieoba Mountain Is being thick ly planted with l!. cm as an experiment witli practical forestry on a largo scale. ISex. UrTi.F.KV drooping eyelid will ao longer f.irnUli a subject for tho car toonists. Dr. O. G. Ciliey, of Boston, performed a surgical operation upon it removing an elliptical section of the eyelid, and restorii g it to almost nor mal ii.'.e. If the young Engl'shman who is re ported u be preparing a key to the works of Kobert lirowning could Bee the piles of unsold Baconian keys in Shakespeare's works, which were pre pare J by Ignatius Douelly, ho wouli hesitate at the threshold of his literary venture. Not many things in the earth, the w. ter and the air are out of the reach of photography. A flash of lightning has frequently ben photographed. Not long ago a scientist with a camera and an electric battery got a good pic ture of the i.o'tom of the Medtterran sea. The same year i:i which Lincoln was born gave birth to cx-Speaker Robert C. Wiuthrop. ex-Congressman and ex-Diplomate Kobert C. Schenck, ex-Vice president Hannibal Hamlin. Oli-er w.n.l.lMymw, W ffml tone and Alfred Tennyson, while Senators Morrill and Payne were boro Id the year following. As old lady of Lebanon. Ind., has been shot by some one unknown, and her son-in-law has been arrested lor the crime on no stronger evidence than mere suspicion. This outrage is un doubtedly due to the ancient friend of the malicious paragrapher.the mother-in-law joke, and it reveals the fertile elements for evil that exist In the aged and hoary chestnut Thit joke should be arrested wherever met The experiment of constructing a large building of paper has bojn suc cessfully made at Hamburg, where an immense hotel with its facade and other important parts composed of that material has been erected. It is claimed that the building is absolutely fireproof and also impervious to tho action of the elements which ren ier orick. stone or wood unsightly or un safe under prolonged exposure. Is large cities. Dearly all of which Are in the north, no economy is pract iced in conducting public schools. The school houses are often palaces that are furnished with ltttle regard to ex pense. They are In charge of engin eers and Janitors who draw large sal aries. The course of instruction em braces almost everything in the pres ent and past, on the earth, in the heavens above and the waters beneath. A CoNfio native who has been taught -to read and write,has just sent a letter, his first, to the archbishop of Canter bury. It is as follows: Great and Good Chief of the Tribe of Christ, greet ing: The humblest of your servants kisses the hen of your garment, and begs you to send to bis fellow servants more gospel and less rum. In the bonds of Christ, L'galla." It seems to . us thai the letter hits the nail pretty effectually on the head. It is believed that the - use of 5 smokeless powder by armies will re- . j jfi U" in mall'n military operations i . ,nuch more difficult than they are now. ! Thf he absence of smoke and the reduc- , V . . , v. uvijn Vi t,UT3 UCbUUaLIUIIB Will .J"r scarcely allow of marching by the I. ? j sound of cannon. In order to get an ' II idea Of thn situntinn r.n a V,ottl tiM It will be necessary to examine it direct ly irom some elevated point. A gentleman who claims to have een tho original manuscript from which was drafted Franklin Pierce's greateit presidential massage. de clares it was in tho handwriting of eieutcen different prominent publio men of this country including cabinet ollicers and heads of departments, but the most pointed suggestions in it werj in the fine, peculiar chiro,'rap&y 3f Wall Minot, who is still living in c -rd. Mtx of good-will everywhere may ead with pleasure that excellent Rowing presented in the year's record . the Yo,,n? Men's Christain Associa tion. 'I his excellent organization h s cored in 189 a well-deserved success. ' , proven its usefulness in every Jhannel in which good work .ouiu Ion, and it, balance-sheet goes to show how much ma, be accomplished or civilization, by vigorous, intelli fai. enterprising, Christian effort. MODEL COOKING SCHOOL PRACTICAL WAY OP IMPROVING BRITISH COOKING. "Example la Better Than Precept" Over 40,000 Pupils Sinoe 1874. A correspondent thus -writes of a visit to a London cooking school: In the largo vestibule of the school, Into which we pass, is a broad counter en closing a corner, aud here, on a "fair white cloth," are arranged all manner of ornamental dishes, entrees, galan tines, jellies, creams, etc., which are daily made by the teachers in the demonstration classes, and are here set out for sale. No doubt many a clever housewife avails herself of this method of procuring admirably made dishes at a trifling cost which could not be turned out at home wituout a $300 chef. Turning the corner of the counter we find ourselves in a wide passage, which divides the various kitchens. The first kitchen is emptv, but Mrs. Clarke tells me it is to be used for children's classes, the demonstra tor's ga -stove being placed iu the mid dle between three large tables, outside which the pupils stand and imbibe in struction. The next kitchen is very big, and indeed it needs to be, for there are about twenty girls and women in it, pupils and teachers, and yet Mrs. Clarke says that it is unusually empty, owing to the inroads of influenza on both staff and pupils. This is the practice-kitchen for plain cookery. A group of girls are gathered round one table, making apple-dumplings under the supervision and example of the teacher, who is making tome too; far ther on is another broad table into which gas-ranges are let at intervals, at one of which stands quite a young girl, garbed in the regulation apron and hslf-sleeves,but of an age to wear her hair in school-girl fashi.n down her back. She is ev dently a novi e in the culinary art. and is stir.ing a saucepauf ul of apple jelly in embryo, whicu is simmering over the gas, in a, tentative way, as if she were not quite, sure what was going to happen next.! In beyond this kitclun -Is the practice-; scullery, where the pupi's are taucht' the proper methods of washing up, the. best way to clean pots and pans, the management of ovens and fireplaces, i open and close ranges, and sundrvj other matters of practical detail of; which the ordinary British cook is con-' spieuously ignoraLt. Passing once again through the big airy kitchen, where the central group of pupils is busily rolling out the pas-J try for the dumplings, we cross the) passage ui'u uiiuiiirr hiiciit'ii iiuany as) l-i op ."I'-'-S is the practirf-l.-it.h.T fnri high-class cookery. ' In here the pu pilsaie somewhat older, as becomes those who would pene.rato the arcana, of soups, entries, purees, savouries, -wcets, 01 namental pastry, and fancy cakes. It has evidently been a day of! cakes, for all so ts of choux a la eremc; cones, cakes. Sec, are being neatly ar- ranged in huge sieves as they are taken out of the various ovens. The lesson of (he dav has been on lish en trees, and the dainty lingers of tha teacher are engaged on soles a la Rou- tnnaise when we enter. I watch thoj whole process from beginning to endrj the neaiiies, the methodical precision' which economizes so much time and makes flurry impossible and nnneces-, fary; the extremely simple and lucid explanations how, why, and when to mix each ingredient, and the exquisitej cleanliness and avoidance of all hand-i ting; and I come to the conclusion! that such teaching, founded on the old) 'rovorb, "Example is better than pre-l ;ept." is not only invalvable, but ab- surdly cheap nt the prite of eighteen-; pence for a lesson of two hours, or ten-and-six pence for a course of twen-' 'y weeks' lessons of five days a week.. Sich teaching is worth all the cook-;ry-books in the world, for the written; recipes can never give a defm te idea of what a dish ought to look like in color; md general appearance when served;, ind appearance is quite half the battle; n good cookery. Nothing could be Tiore appetising in appearance than the iish that the teacher sets before us, the allots of sole smothered in the thick jreamy sauce, whose whiteness is re-' I'eved bv the pattern in pounded coral' which recalls the lobster stuffing under- leath. My uncanny mind immediately sees a likeness between the "Denion-j tration ' room, with its tiers of raised teats overlooking a huge table, and he dissecting-room at a hospital; but ! keep the idea to myself, and do not, seek to give qualms to my companion jy suggesting it. The seats are occu- oied bv a number of women mostly, oks, I should say who, armed with aotebooks and pencils, jot down tins -emarks of the teacher, a neat fingered, laintv little figure, iu her snowy white ap, apron and sleeves. The audience anuses me: it is so pasy to distinguish those who have come there of their own accord, and paid the fee themselves out of their own pockets, with the earnest desire to tcquire as much kn wledge as possible,; rrom those who have been sent there; !y their respective "missises," and, who eye the teacher superciliously,) inrdlv condescending from time to, ;ime to make a note in their books for form's sake. The fact that since the pening of the School in 1874 no less, ;tinn forty thousand five hundred pupils have p issed through the various ilasses down to the present time, is a jroof that it has not been created in fain. A Phonograph Orchestra. Tho iwnnrlir was ushered into the . , . 0 llAnftf i naiutsoine am ng-room ui Bishop, where the instrument (an Edi son phonograph) and all its appliances n-ere stationed. Mr. Bishop, with the skil. of a person who had handled a. phonograph for years, adjusted the instrument and turned on the battery. The various choice melodies which poured forth from the cone-shaped transmitter sounded very natural. Anion"- the many selections were sev ;ral pieces played by the 7th Regiment band, of New York, about four years igo ; a banjo solo by a son of the mayor of Jfewburyport, Mass., played ibout a year ago ; a cornet solo ; sev eral selections by a male quartet, and many other musical gems, most of which were played t Edison'a labora tory over a year ago i . Mr. Bishop has ho arranged his pho .lograph by the appliance of the cone- shaped transmitter that whenever h starts it going the found can be dis-1 tinctly heard throughout the whole house. Mr. Bishop has also recorded' a few remarks of several prominent men of this city who have talked into the instrument. It is very amusing to listen with what accuracy they have been taken and are reproduced. Ho intends to have the Concordia Singing Society and Jerome May's Banjo Quar tet give several selections at his home for the purpose of recording them. Mr. Bishop, it is understood, is tne DOSSCSSOr of the onlv nhnnnirratih rt j this kind in the city. "Why," said he, "with this little machine I can tit down to my breakfast and listen to the concert of tho 7th Regiment band, played several years ago, and enjoy it as much as if I had actually heard the j band itself." He is undoubtedly right. j The working of this machine is some thing wonderful. Bridgeport (Conn.) News. Jfewspaper Gossip In 181S. As for the publication of social gos nip, this can do no harm provided that ; it be not either offensive or injurious ' to those with whom it deals. This is not "new journalism," but "old jour I jialism." Here is an extract from a hook of Mr. Rush, Minister of tho jUnited States iu England in 1818, en titled "Residence at the Court of Lon Uon:" ) Everything goes into tho news papers. In other countries, matter of i public nature may be seen in them; iiere, in addition, you see perpetually even the concerns of ind viduals. f)oes a private gentleman c me to own? you hear it in the newspapers; does he build a house, or buy an et 1 tate? they give the information; does ' he entertain his friends? you have all their nams next day in type; is the drapery of a ladies' drawing-room (L-hanged from red i amask and gold to white satin and silver? the fact is pub licly annou-ieed. So of a thousand other things. The first burst of it all upon Mad ame de Stael led her to remark that the 'English had realized the fable of living with a window on their bosoms. It may be thought that this is confined to a class, who, surrounded by the allure ments of wealth, seek emblasonment. 1 f it were only so, that class is im mense. But i's influence affects other classes, giving each in their way the. habit of allowing their personal inclin ations and objects to be dealt with in print; so that altogether these are . thrown upon the public in England to ! an extent without parallel in any coun try, ancient or modern. "When thei ' drama at Athens took cognizance of ' privati life, what was said became t knvJi first la m. few lieteuera. then tot a sLt town; but in three days a Lon 1 don newspaper reach?s every part of the kingdom, and in three months every part of the globe. Unhealthy Habits in Towns. The British Medical Journal raises Its admonitory voice against the un healthy habits of people who dwell in cities. The fact, says the Journal, that the prevailing ep idemic of influenza prevails in towns serves to remind us of the insanitary influences of town life. The prevalence of germs, bad odors and other self-evident sources of grave ' disease in cities is well known. It is rat ler the less constantly recognized ' unhealthy habits of townsfolk that are mostly at fault when the fairly-fed and well-to-do are smitten with colds and I influenza. Diet is abundant but taken ! irregularly. The townsman, as a rule, j is not a good breakfast-eater, and he I dines too late and too heavily. He is much addicted to taking alcoho', tea or coffee between meals. He is a late riser and goes to bed late, so that a large fraction of his "day" is spent at night in artificial light, j He seldom takes enough exercise, for the "constitutional" is 'ntolerable to men of a certain temerament, and Dtliers have no lime for that form of physical exertion. A hurri d race to catch a train or omnibus is not hy gienic. He is gregarious, and his natural flocking instinct makes him ove. look, both in his pleasures as well as his duties, the fact that he works or plays with his fellow-man in ill-ventilated or over-crowded rooms. Above all, he is out of training, as he finds out during the first days of a holiday. Many explorers and fight ng men have noted that they catch cold readily in towns af'tr Waring cold and damp with impunity in the country. A Shabbily I)res;oI Millionaire. Mrs. Hettv Green has enjoyed the j cputation for a long time of being the most shabbily tiresseii millionaire who wanders within the precincts ofWull street. Russell Sage wears inexpensive clo hea, but they are not only neat but ' usually have the appearance of being recently purchased. The only million aire rival Mrs. Green has iu point, of shabbiness is old Joe Robinson, who was oii3 of the contractors engaged in' tne construction of the Union raciflo Railroad, and is said to be worth four million dollars. He does not wear any overcoat, because it represents an ex penditure of money he is not willing to make. His whole outfit, including hat and boots, would not command two dollars and a half at any well-reg ulated pawnsnop. He is one of the few stingy million-, aires who are perfectly good-natured, in their stinginess. He is not cross or crabbo , but greets everybody he knows with the utmost geniality. He and Sidney Dillon are very good friends, but neither the arguments of At union nor of anv one else can ' spur him on to invest money in a ward- rOOC 1UC BLU1 J AO lASllt v. .B friend on the street not long ago, in ' conversation with a gentleman whom he did not know, lie went up to mo two men and was about to speak, when the man who was a stranger to him turned and said he was very sorry but he had no small change. The friend explained the situation, although he was somewhat embarrassed, and the stranger extended profuse apologies to the millionaire. -Tne underground electric railway at BudaJLesth, Hun?ary,ia Ave miles long, passing nnder many of the principal streets, and Is reported to have proven both an engineering and a commercial success, i MUL AXD ALLIU1T0B. Tou Can't Catch a 'Gagator with a Scared Heast. When Captain Royce, late of Ohio, made his home in Florida he found a fine alligator preserve in one corner of his plantation, and realized almost as much from the sale of hides as from his oranges. In crossing a small bayou one day he saw a huge alligator snugly ensconced under a hanging bank, with little else than his cose on exhibition. A colored man was sent to the bouse for a log chain and piece of pork, and the offered bait was taken safely in at one gulp. But when the attempt was made to land the prey the two men discovered that their muscle was as nothing against the steady brace of th reptile's two powerful forelegs. "Bring the litll?dun mule," said the Captain, but when tho animal came within scenting distance of tho alliga tor it showed a desire to drift raxidiy in the direction of home. But diplomacy finally attached him to the shore end of the chain, and when he was given tho word "go" he mado one jump that was accompanied by unforeseen consequences. The alliga tor had let go for a new hold just as the dun mule made his initial bound. With a wild circular sweep aud an echoing "swish" he left the muddy bed of the stream and went sailing through the air. lie struck close to the off side of the mule, and lay for a moment waiting for further develop ments. They eamo when the mule caught sight of his mortal foe that had so suddenly joined him company. With as wild a snort as ever echoed through the evergreen glades of Forida, he made one wild plunge, broke loose from the colored man, and went off thiough the woods as fast as his shor legs would carry him. The chain held, and tho alligator went along, over logs and stumps, against trees, across pools and mire holes a genuine stampede, gotton up by as badly a scared mule as ever set foot in Florida. Captain Royce and his man followed the procession, and, after running a palf mile, found the mule in a tangle of bush, half dead from fright, and the altogether dead alligator beside him. "Golly, boss," said the colored man, "tlat hide ain't worth shucks," and the condition of tho saurian showed that his diagnosis was correct. One of Mr. Carnegl :'s Benefactions. In 1886, Mr. Carnegie wished to build a library for i'ittsburgh to cost $500,000, but the Common Council, under the charter then in force, could not accept the conditions he prescribed. This was Allegheny's cliance the Allegheny Common Council passed a resolution offering Mr. Carnegie a 6ite on Third Ward Diamond square, wich he pcc?-pUd cn May ?, ISSSr A commission of eight, four represent ing Mr. Carnegie nnd four the city, was appointed to take charge of the construction. Ground was broken in September, 1887, and tho contract called for the completion in eighteen mouths. Under the deed of gift Mr. Carnegie was to erf ct a libr.-iry build ing at a cost of $250,000," but he exceeded this by about $50,000 in making improvements which the com mission suggested. On its part the city agreed to maintain the library for all all time. Strangely enough there is not a book in sight save the catalogue. The 125,000 volumes are ranged upon ;2t00 shelves in an apa tinent called tho ' book magazine." This is lighted by electricity and contains no woodwork save the shelves. In the large mu-dc hall which fronts on Ohio street is a $15,000 organ, stretching across the back of tho stage for a distance of forty feet and thirty-five feet high. Those who have heard it, speak highly of its beautiful tone. It has thirty etoj s, which give the performer the command of a dozen orchestras. The building includes an art gallery, in which are already many valuable pic-tu-cs. The New. Methodist Book Concern. The new publishing and mission house of the Book Concern and Mis sionary Society of the M. E. Church, New York, is situated at Fifth avenue and Twentieth street. It covers 105 feet on Fifih avenue and 170 feet in Twentieth street. The first two stories are of granite, the next four of brick, and the seventh and eighth of granite and brick. The cost of the building will exceed $1,000,000. The basement contains the engine room and storage rooms. Several elevators, both for freight and passengers, run iu various parts of tho building. The ground floor, with the exception of a part rented to a piano linn, is used by the B'-ok Concern. The second floor is devoted to the wholesalo department, and to offices for the numerous book keepers and the agents of tho Concern. On the third floor are tho bishop's offices, library and chapel. The fourth floor contnins, aside from the publish ing department, towhichspace is given on five floors, the offices of the Chris tian Advocate, the Quarterly Review and the boa d of education. A large part of the fifih and sixth floors is de voted to tho bindery, while on the seventh floor are the presses. The com positors and stcrcotypcrs occupy the top floor. The M issionary Society has its offices on the fifth and sixth floors. A Liberal German Prince. The rrinco then proceeded to utter a protest against an article of a semi-t ffl cial paper, giving out as the watch word for tho coming elections the sup pression of social democrats and their partisans. He de- lare 1 that he would vote sgainst the bill. Although he was a most determined opponent of social democracy, tho government must leave the pcoplo a ccitain free clioico of means for arriving at a com mon end. There was iu social democ racy a good deal of idealism, but that quality had gradually become rare in Germany, having giving way to place 'hunting. This closing remark of the Prlnct evoked a burst of cheers front some section of the House. The speaker re ceived the warm congratulations of tho ;left and centre, while the members of ;his own party vehemently reproached Jhim, and compelled him to declare that he had not spoken in the name of his party. . What oxygen is to the air cheerful ness is to the home. BO LITTLE MADE SIB GLAD. 6o tittle msde me gld, for I was voung, Flower, a iunw t, books, friend or two, Gray skies with scanty sunshine piercing through. How little made me glad when I was young. So little makes me happy now I'm old ; Tour hand In mine, dear heart, here by the tire: The children grown unto onr heart's de. sire flow little keeps us happy when we're old ! And yet between the little then and now, W bat word of life, of thought and feeling keenl What spiritual depths and heights ua seen Ah me, between the little then and now ! For little things seem mighty when we're young; Then we rush onward through tbe chang ing years. Testing tbe g.imut of all smiles and tears, Till mighty things seem I!tle. We are old. CNE VALENTINE'S DAY. BY KEZIAII SIIELTOH .The early days of February camn tiinny and smiling; the birds tbat had passed their northern winter in tho warm b anches of the fir and spruce trees of tho woods, were hopping lightly from the silvery blossomed pussy willows to the fringed and tas-st-led hazel and alder shrubs, now and tnea trilling forth from their tiny tlyoats purest spring-like songs of joy. Adown the hazel-bordered country road came two rsy girls clad in navy bine walking suits, with here and there in their costumes a dash of red;, their bright faces and wind-tossed hair; crowned with jaunty crimson yarns! with dark blue tassels. Their iteps were clastic with health and youth's undoubting hopefulness;; they gave tho finishing touch of life that made tho fcenj a perfect one o two young men who were sitting un observed by them in a sunny corner where two walls met, sketching the stretch of grey roadway with its shrub bt-iringed edges and fluttering birds. "Be quick and sketch them,Jack,it is the one thing needed to make the; theme perfect. There, they have paus-' cd, and how unconsciously graceful they are pausing! ot of ten do you get such an accidental touch as this, and the picture will be the envy at the Annual Exhibition." Rapidly the sketching went on, and together the girls resumed their steady tramp, keeping perfect step, and pass ing the two young men who looked as innocent as only the guilty can! If they had not sketched the girls, they naturally would have shown some con sciousness of their approach. Now, it was the girls who gave a! .ytVtstart of surprise as thev.9n- den 1 -ui aco-vcred the artist and his friend. "What handsome, stylish young men t Did you not'ee the moustache of the dark-haired one? What a natural wave it had, not that horrid waxy curl at the ends that makes you feel that it must have just come fresh from Ihe barber's tongs," said Mabel Tink hain, who was something of an artist in her taste as regarded masculine beauty. Being herself a rich hue-l blonde, it was but natural that she should havo been attracted by the dark style of Roland Holland. "No, I did not notice the dark one as being other than a common-looking man, but the brown-bearded man what a figuro he hud I And a perfect face!" and Mary Peck, with a graceful movement of her arm, put up her hand to her hair, to assure herseif that tho, wind had not blown it "every which way." "Really, are we blown quite, into frights, Mabel? I wonder who those fellows are, and where they catno from. One was sketching and the other leaning on the wall and look ing; or do you suppose he was posing? Wouldn't he make a splendid portrait? "He? No, he couldn't hold a candle to the dark one. I wish we could know them, but what is the use in talk-; ing such nonsense; you and I shall, never know such as he out in this wil-, derness! I wonder if pa will ever get his business straightened out, so thatj we can once more have a comfortable home in the city! For one, I am heartily tired of living out he c in the country, shut out from all society. I don't see why men who know enough to do business on change don't know enough not to get 'fleeced,' as pa calls! it- Oh, dear, what mado him ail allj at once, and send us out here to grand-' father's?" "I don't know, I am sure; bnyingj long and selling short and buying short; aud selling long, and being rich a few years, and then suddenly 'as poor as! Job's turkey' is a conundrum I cannot understand. But I began to feel that; when pa and his clique was rich, then' somebody was fleeced and made poor; we didn't know who it was, that was all, and we just enjoyed it. "Now pa talks about our being fleeced, and I suppose somebody is flourishing on the fleecing just as we did ; and never dreaming that out here in the woods we, the fleeced, are drag ging aloi g miserably, shut out from all the tin -gs we used to have. How long have we worn these suits? Mine is actually sprouting a fringe around tho bottom, sort of growing its spring foliage as one might say. I wonder if we can have some new ones thii spring?" "I don't know. We have actually trorn them three years; they were the last we had before we came here two years ago the fourteenth of this month. Don't you remember we were planning such fun for the novel valentine party Lucy Hoyt had sent out invitations for? Then pa failed, and we arrived here at grandpa's the evening of the party. I thought I should die as we Hit that night in the kitchen and watched grandpa popping corn and grandma cracking walnuts, and actu ally feeling that they were making a real good time for us!" "Never fear, I remember it all ; it was just horrid. And grandma says now she don't see what all our 'oppor tunities' have amounted to when we can't do half as much to help ourselves, as girls who never had half oar chance!" "How provoked ste is because we don't want to teach; and she is right, we couldn't do it if we did wish to. She told me this morning, if I wanted a new dress 1 ought to find some way, to earn it; that it was a shame that pa had spent thousands of dollars on our school bills piano lessons and French teachers, aud after all we couldn't teach even the school in this district! And there's Nancy Farnum, who's never had a dollar spent on her school ing, and has earned ten dollars a week for forty weeks a year, for the list five years; has hel pod her ma for her board' fore and after school, has dressed well, furnished her ma's parlor up, aud put money in the savings' bank; and you two girls can't even give the neighbor's children lessons on a mela deonl Ob, I am sick of hearing it all; and the worst of the whole is it is true; and, as much as we hate that old farmhouse and the way grand pi and grandma live, w havo nowhere eUe to be!" Well, what can't bo helped, can't; i so what is tbe use of talking? We may just as well make the best of it and come r'ght down and take what .fun there is going; so let's walk on to Betty Plummer's and tell her we will accept her invitation for to-morrow ! night, and go right in for a good time with the neighborhood young I folks. I said at first I never would do it, bht then I did not expect to stay here forever; now I begin to think we may. But, let's draw the lino at mar rying, we will flirt with the boys and have a good time. 'Twill be some thing to take up our time. Grandpa iai.d grandma will like all but the llirt ,'ing; they will begin to have hopes of ius a.id think we are at last growing 'Sensible, and we can keep dark about tour real opinions of folks and things, jl hope, though, they will not play kissing games. Just think of having grandpa's hired man kiss us! Of 'yourse, he is invited." Betty Pluinmcr was quite overcome iby the sudden cordiality of Mabel ITinkham and her adopted sister, Mary tPeck, and for the rest of the day was Jin quite a flutter of excitemeut over the event. Roland Holland and his friend, Jack Staples, had chanced upon the l'luui- f' ncr farm for their halting place in his neighborhood while sketching. When they returned to a late dinner the voluble, gay-hearted Betty chattcr ged of her morning callers, and with icouutry freedom soon had given tho young men a full history of neighbor jTinkbam's oldest son who had " years ago left tho farm and gone to New York as a clerk, and lately becamo what the country people called a stock Jgambler; had been roiling in money a tfew years, and married a city girl; 'Jater had lived in Europe a few years, nd then, just as all gamblers do sud denly he began to lose, and all at once ifound himself at tho bottom of the heap and glad enough to send his two girls to his old home, which had never ;been good enough for them to visit when they had lots o' money." . She told the young man that the girls W'cre real nice, but couldn't do a thing: to earn a dollar, aud seemed actual y proud of it! .' Then she talked of her valentine party, and the young men having identified1 Mabel Tinkham and Mary Peck as the two stylish young ladies of tho rnorn 5ng episode, entered into Betty;s plans, and soon had given the quick-witted country girl some hints about valcnfincj tricks. Betty was always ready for a good-natured joke and readily agreed ,to their suggestions. In response to one of thest! she went) over to grandpa Tinkham's on the) .evening of the thirteenth and told the girls of these tricks. One was for the girls to take an early morning walk on ;the fourteenth and the first man they met would surely be their future hus 'band! Others were to be tried nt the, house. One of these was lo go out into tho dark, and standing on the1 doorstep unwind a ball of twine for a few yards and holding the end of thc twine in one hand, with the others throw the ball as far out into the dark ness as possible, then begin to wind up the end in their hand, repeating these lines: "I wind this long line so very fine, Hoping to fiini at the othi r em). The love f would call my valentine. Tbe man I'd choose for lover and friend." Then, unless one was a predestined old maid, at the end of the line would stand before the maiden her future i huband who would yield the line to, ' her, clasp her in his arms and take his first kiss and disappear in the dark-i ness, and when the gates wero propi-. tious she would meet this very man,! perhaps be introduced to him in the1 most prosaic and orthodox manner;, and surely some day he would come; to claim the hand of the maiden he had kissed in the datk I "I shall go for a walk before to-; morrow morning, Mary; will you go: too?" cried Mabel, gleefully. "Indeed I will not. You'll be sure to meet somebody's hired man driving the cows to the spring for water," re-' plied Mary, scornfully. Then she continued, "I will confrol tnv tmnatipnpA tn soft mv horn until I evening. I shall throw the ball of I twine from our back door-step, and let) it roll down the slope into the garden J i and then gently draw mv hero up tol give me that sweet betrothal kiss, and, as it is hardly proper to accept any-) thing from a stranger, I will return iU at once," and Mary joined in the gen eral laugh. Betty went home and reported. Early the next morning Ma!el went out for a walk and for half a mile met no one, not even a hired man drivingj cows to water, nor a milkman going' toward the village. Suddenly, as she turned a corner, she! came face to face with the dark, mons-j .tacbed stranger sue had seen a lewj ; mo-nings ago posing so graceiuny oe- ide the stone wall as be lifted his hati and passed around the corner. Mabel was not more romantic than he ordinary girl, yet her heart throbbed more rap'dly, and tho rich icolor swayed back and forth in herj hapely cheeks, as she wondered if; there could be anything in such hap-i 'penings,and queried mentally over and' over again, "who could he be, where from, and with whom was he staying in that neighborhood, and would shei mavbe sometime really meet and spetk with him?" But it was time to return for break fast, and, lo! he was returning, and .politely lifted his hat once more from the close-cut, da: k, curling locks. Evening came, and Mabel and Mary, were much entertained by the society) into which they were for the first time, introduced. Hitherto they had held themselves aloof from the joung people about them. The remembrance of their New York circle, their winters at Washing ton, the years spent in London, Paris, Mentone and In ice had been too fresh in their memories to admit of their ac knowledging that they could associate even temporarily wi'h those so far re moved from their set. But the innate love of some sort of sociality had conquered their delu siveness at last, or rather the hopeless ness of ever resuming their old place had forced them to yield. The hours ran on in more or less stupid games until ten o'clock, wheq one by one the betrothed maidens slipped away from the party to try some trick. Unobserved they were not, and it was easy to guess who hoped to be the favored one, as, after each girl passed out, some admiring swain was sure soon to follow. None of the country youth dared follow stately Mary Peck, and the en vious tongues whispered, "She'll not meet anvone ; she holds her head too high." Ou the back door step Mary stood, half shivering with the cold night air, half with a superstitious thrill. Slowly she wound the ball after throwing it, softly repeating the rhymes as told by Betty. For awhile the line was slack as if lying along the ground, then it became a bit more taut, and soon she was sure there was some unknown attachment at the othei end of the line. When she saw a figure actually com ing toward her in the darkness, she nearly lost her "clf-possession ; but her pride came to he aid ; she would not scream and make h-'self an object of ridicule before those youths; she felt so much superior to them, that it would have been the last thing she could have endured. The light from a window suddenly flashed upon the advancing 3gure. It was the brown-bearded t ranger, who at that moment clasped her in his arms, kissed her lips raptur ously, released her gently and disap peared like a dream in the darkness! It was some moments ere she had re covered sufficiently to re-enter the house with a calm, undisturbed face, except for a rich, deep flush not at all an ordinary color with her. Here she had need of all the celf possession years in society had given (her, for in her absence two guests had arrived. Mabel was already chatting (freely with Roland Holland aud Jack Staples! , AV'hy prolong the story? The end was the usual one : the new acquaint iance soon ripened into an old; the ac quaintances became friends and in time .lovers. Then came the quiet wedding 'at grandpa's; the short bridal tour, and ithe prosaic settling down as house keepers in two small flats in New York, where in domestic contentment rey dwelt ever after, in as great a de- ;- -yl of ccnt7.iuous harmony as falls to ,tue average iamines. Grandma made this domestic peace jpos-ible, by persistentlv insisting tl at 4xth girls should take daily practical lessons in her kitchen; that the period :of courtship should commence in learn- ling the art of household economies jThe girls sometimes rebelled, fancying that things would manage to go on (omchow without all that troub.e. But grandma had her wav, knowing that a young man with a moderate in come has double need of a competent borne keeper. "Pa" never made a second fortune, but drifted from Mabel's to Mary's, and haunted Wall street with othet ghosts of "better days." The Visit of Count de Paris to America. Several well-defined reasons are given to account for the decision of ! the Count do Paris not to return to England for some time, but to visit Cuba, where hi wife's family, as co heirs of the late Queen Christina, have family interests. In Cuba, it is stated, he will escapo east winds, be able to judge of the state of tilings in the is land and tho prospects of the Seces sionist party, and will then go to Wash ington, whence he will make a tour through the United States. He can do nothing just now in French politics, I but he must not let himself be forgot ten I lie Americans, as a friend of his remarked a day or two ago, are sure to make a g cat doal of him be cause he is a Prince, the father-in-law of the King of Portugal, a Pretender to the Crown of France, and the his torian of their Civil War. His great personal friends, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Morton, on account of their official position, social experience, and wealth, occupy a place at Washington in some resjK-cts superior to that o Mr. and Mrs. Harrison. They arq sure to lionise the Count de Paris, and tho American journals are equally sum to help them. Of course a triumphal tour in the United States would havi a great effect in France. The excite mcnt going on now in Portugal has had no eflect in leading the Count de Paris not to return at once to England. I lis feeling in regard to the Anglo Portuguese quarrel will be shown in other ways. The Count de Taris will be accom panied by the Countess and their chil dren and the Duke de Chartres. He will return to Sheen House in May if tho Anglo-Portuguese question is settled by then. Paris Paper. A German 'Yankee." A full fledged German, bearing the odd name of August H. Yankee, ob tained his last naturalization papers from the Clerk of the United States District Court, Boston, the other day, and is now an American citizen. Mr. Yankee's occupation is that of a farm er, and he lives in Dover, Mass. lie was born in Wotechihous, Germany, in 1863, being now 27 years of age. He offered no explanation as to the origin of his name. The word Yankee, as almost every body knows, is said to have originated with the Indians, who used to call the English settler the Yengeese, or Yan geese, as they could not master the correct pronunciation of the word. Whether some of the ancestors of this young man came over to America with ihe Hessian troops in the time of the Revolution and on their return adopted the name Yankee is not known. It is thought, however, that this may have been very possible by more than one of the officers of the court. There is talk aTout one or two English gun vessels being adapted for tue use of captive balloons at sea. UEWS IN BRIEF. A n lMt.ita folr.vclp. tn rnn nnm sk wire. Is one of the newest wheeling la ventions. Dr. Sequard claims that his elixir has cured intermitten fever neuralgia, rheumatism, insomnia jmd leprosy. According to Dr. Alfred Carpenter, of 721,000 children born In Engtend In 18S8. 130,000 died before the close of the year. Trees do not suffer from electric lights, as has been supposed. Dr. Siemens is said to have proved that the electric light really aids vegetation. The Kentucky Constitutional Con vention has decided in favor of per mitting ministers to become Guberna torial candidates. Professor A. I. Garner of Roanoke, Va., declares that monkeys have a language with a fully developed gram mar and he is studying it. The Emperor and Em press of Rus sia will celebrate In 1831 their silver wedding at St. Petersburg. There are to be festivities on a scale of extraordi nary magnificence. Observations at the Berlin postofflce show that underground wires are much less liable than overhead lines to dis turbance on account of magnetio storms. It. is said that the hop vine is tbe best substitute for rags in the manu facture of paper. The vine pulp pov teases great length, strength, flexibility, and delicacy. It has been calculated that it would be possible to take from a section of the River Negro lakes, occupying about nine square leagues, upward of two mil lions of torjs ot salt. An Inventor is trying to prevent railway collisions by constructing an apparatus that will give warning ot locomotive engineers when their trains get too near one to the other. The new M Asonlc Temple In Chicago , III., will be In eSect a monument three hundred feet high and 170x140 feet at base summit. Brazil is larger than the United States but In the whole twenty States, which make up the Republic, there are not as many people as we have In New York and Peunsylvania. Recently published statistics show that of the 1911,473 nou-commlssloned officers and men in British army, 137, 973 belong to the church of England and 37.278 to the Catholic church. The mathematician of the Cincin nati Commercial Gazette says that the consumption of Malaga grapes has In creased 100 per cent, in this country in ten years. As a matter of fact, insists the Detroit Free Press, it has increased 400 per cent, as custom house figures prove. The wholesale price of whalebone is now $10,000 a ton. A project is on foot to organize whaling expeditions from Australia to the Antarti seas, where it is believed plenty ot wha'ies are to m found. Itj an almost untouched whal ing ground. Superintendent Byrnes, of the New York police force estimates that 1000 men mysteriously disappear from publio view every year, but upon investigation being made it is found that 995 of them have either gotten into trouble with a woman or are short in their accounts. The latest style of horse shoe for cav alry horses on the Contient is made from layers of paper, glued together, and sub jected to hydraulic pressure Tnis is at tached securely to tbe hoof by gntta percba, and. being very elastic, permits tbe expansion of the hoof. A new operating table for veterin ary Burgeons is so made that the top of it can be moved by a powerful crank, and be made to stand on edge on the floot at the side of the table. Tbe animal Is led alongside, and, while standing on Its feet, is firmly lashed to tbe top, which Is then tilted into place again. "Sundown Doctors' Is the appella tion said to be applied In the city of Wash ington to a class of practitioners who are clerks in the Government offices, and who have taKen a medical de gree with a view to practicing after the hours of their official work are over. Machine guns, having the electrical attachment lor firing, require one less man to handle them, while the gunner can tram and operate the gun at will by simply touching an electric button. In Sydney, Australia, an assistant of the geological commission has dis covered bow to photograph objects at a great distance. He has gotten an impression of landscapes at a distance of sixteen miles, and made a clear pic ture. In photographing projectiles in mo tion no results of any importance are obtained till the velocity of tbe shot ex reeds that of sound. But at higher speeds a wave of compression is found preceding the bullet In its flight. Tbe shape of this wave is a hyperbolold of revolution, with the apex some dis tance in front of the shot. Behind the projectile there is a conical wave formed, the angle of which Is less the greater the vi locity. One of the po'nts especially noted by military observers during tbe re rent manoeuvres abroad, where smoke less powder was used, was that in a clear atmosphere, unobserved by the smoke ot battle, all bright accoutre. uients were seen at a great distance, thus showing tbe positions of tbe various bodies of troops. -Relief from the buzzing and inter ruptions which try the patience of per sons nsing telephones Is promised by a system now being tested at Providence, it. 1, xwo wires are used, one or cop per, the other of Iron, and it Is claimed that tbe liability of induction is removed entirely. There is not in the world so toilsome a trade as the pursuit of fame; life con cludes before you have so much as sketched your work. A Great Gamoier. Philippe Ricord, the great French surgeon and specialist, was a sad rake, and one of the most inveterate and terrible gamblers to be found even in Paris. He made in the course of his professional career four or five large fortunes, but every penny of his mo ney, or very nearly every penny of It, went to tbe green baize. He would receive at night, and nearly after the last visitor had left him the old man, instead of going to bed, would rake together his earning, jump into his carriage, and drive off to the gam to play till the sunlight streamed throng the windows, and then go home, have a nap, and go to the hospital, attend his patients, or lecture. He must have had a constitution of iron to have stood such a lifau -