seif id Jilfc ail SIS mvM p. BOHWEIER, THE OON8TITDTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor &nd Ioprtotor. VOlT XLV. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. SEl'TEMBER 2. 1891. NO. 37. THE COOb OLD WAY. From the Brooklyn Kaele. ... m nice young fellow t.,j5 .i nu-e w;uii lady, Hi mt s good .n he; Pl 1 'i r cwmvd ..no day to mef K 'of o-urf.0. tlio lell hi We lMi-odolJ-ay- o,firi l" should not got her, . EX .ho was In conniption fits r J fear h d M,,t- ,,K,i ,f, wh th!.. ti. nble did noi last. I VinrfaUIS'l s-'v: IM "ki married Brm and fast, lhe gooJ 'd Thf0 were to.1 watching. V ttil"t P-ri 'eo, inJMf. CniM.iy .lolling, .hat wa-sconiln; next: K.ieWklrtJ,,,""'"lJ' Jy. , Xtfj rnd ten children, yea, they did. The? li'd ho! I"1'! each other, Mtlioyi'isree.t before s . . ,l v. i;.l l.levli.g came to the in basket and lu store i them. Ther knew eno.ich to save a com lilt for a r.i:ny dav: tij n;icolul!v through life they lie go.4 o'.d way. went. ine? Mvod lnnu. uoful Christian lives, In'ail "d h..net prirto, Tilo d Time Kinged thorn with hla scythe. And thon, ofco.ir e. they died : They hid ijreat, splendid funerals. I I.e best worrls folks could say ; Tr.m side by s de we burled them. ine good old ' XhH is nnE ftnf! s.'rmon too, tnd true nieinoital rhyne; Ami folks who live sout and true re b-ed. a'l 'he time : A Tplcud'd loving, useful life, -u.-b :vw.vs find It pay, H'howlk like these., n.y kith and kin, 'Ihe good oul way. Their grave" are green, they may be seen, Ttielr monimviits 1 s,-e: And memory kivos ttiem back again. For ll tlflr iove to me; Lute rules the m.rid with power and might, L,.ve i$uules us home to stay. And heaven shines liright to kindly light T;. g-H'd old way. THE BINI'LE OF LETTH11S. FBoM THE HfNHAIilAjr OK MOniTZ JOKAU One of the celebrated medical prac titioners if I'esth. lr. K , was one BorumK, at on early hour, obliged to receive a very pressing visitor. The ma, who was waiting in the ante-room tent in word by the footman that all delay woul 1 be dangerous to him; he bad, theref. re, to be received immedi ately. The doctor hastily wrapped a dress ing gown nb. .nt him, and directed the patient to be admitted to him. Be found himself in the presence of I man who was a complete stranger to hini, 'jut who appeared to belong to the best society, judging from his manners. On his pule face could be discerned traces ot (.rent moral suffering. He carried his right hand in a sling, and, thongh he tried to restrain himself, he now and then could not prevent a itifled sigh escaping from his lips. "Yon are Dr. K ?'' he asked in a low uJ feeble tone of voice. "Thiit is my name, sir." "Liviug in the conntjy, I have not the honor of knowing yon, except by reptitut .m. Hut I cannot say that I am delighted to make your acquain tance, because my visit to yon is not a very agreeable one." beeing that the sufferer's legs were hardly able to sustain him, the doctor invite J him to be seated. "I am fatigued. It is a week since I had anv sleep. Something is the mat ter with my right hand; I don't know what it is whether it is a carbnnole or cancer. At first the pain was slight, bat now it is a continuons horrible horning, increasing from day to day. 1 could bear it no longer, so threw my elf info my carriage and came to yon, to leg yon to cut ont the affected spot, for an hour more of this tortnre will drive tne mad." The doctor tried to reassure him, by living that he might be able to enre the pain with dissolvents and oint ment, without resorting to the nse of the history. 'No, no, sir!' cried the patient; "no plasters or ointments can give me- any relief. L must have the knife. 1 have come to you to cut out the place which cans s me no much sufferiuir." The doctor asked to see the hand, which the patient held ont to him, grinding his teeth, so insutlerable ap peared to be the pain he was enduring, nd with all imaginable precaution be nnwound the baudages in which it was enVelc iped. "Above all, doctor, I beg of yon not to hesitate ou account of anything you may pee. My disorder is so strange, that you will be surprised; but do not let that weijh with you." Doctor K reassured the stranger. As a doctor in practice he was UBed to sec everything, and there was nothing that could surprise him. Whut he taw when the hand was freed from its bandages'stupefied him nevertheless. Nothing abnormal was to be seen in it neither wonnd nor graze; it was a hand like any other. Bewildered, he let it fall from his own. A cry of pain escaped from the trarger, who raised the afflicted mem ber with his left hand, showing .the doctor that he had not come with the intention of mystifying him, and that he was really suffering. "Where is the sensitive spot?" "Hero, sir," said the stranger, indi cutinc; on the back of his hand a point 'here two large veins crossed, his whole frame trembling when the doctor lightly touched it with the tip of his finger. ''It is here that the burning pain makos itself felt?" "Ahominal ilv!" "Lo yon feel the pressure when I Place n.y finptr on it' The man mmle no replv, but his eyes tilled with tears, so acute was his suf fering. "It IS Mi m r ' SI M ' T gnn arm ,sitl.rp t that place." -or can I; yet what I feel there is terrible that nt timea 1 nm almost driv n to dash wall." j Ihe doctor examined the spot with a ""Knifyuistia., t,en 8i,ook nia ueaj. Ihe skiu is fun 0f life; the blood 'ithia it reulutes regularly; there is neither inflammation nor cancer nnder "I It IS as l.oltl.n ., t .1...4 . I here. ,. "vet I think it there." is a little redder "Where?" r.J-he.8.tranger t ,ok a Pencil from his Jin. ; ok aud traced on bis band a nd Mid-01 the Blzeof sixpenny-piece, lt is there." w if doctor lof'ked in his face; he J!f .Zoning to believe that his pa Bt s mind was unhinged. few here'" he "and in a "ydaysrUoure you." w.uuoi WI"t. Don't think that 1 a madman, a maniac; it is not m r' way that von m f tor IV, whlch 1 h ked with J J tdYt causa me internal torture. J f F1 come to yon to cut it away? That I cannot do." sai.i tia ,it. "Why?" "Because your hand exhibits no pathological disorder. I see at the spot you have indioated nothing more bujids unu vu my own nana. "You .really seem to think that I have gone out of mv HenK. nr o.s i have como here to mock you," s.id the Birauger, iaain irom his pocket-book a bank-note for a thousand florins, and layug it on the table. "Now sir. yon see that I am not playing off any child- ana that the eervloe I seek vi you is as urgent as it is important. I beg you to remove this part of my hand." "I repeat, sir, that for all the treas ures in the world you cannot make me regard as unsound a member that is perfectly sound, and still less induce me to out It with my instruments." "And why not?" "Becante such an act would cast a aoubt upon my medical knowledge and compromise my reputation. Every body would say that you were mad; that I was dishonest in taking advnn tage of your condition, or ignorant in not perceiving it" "Very we'l. I will only ask a small service of yon, then. I am myself capable of making the incision. I shall do it rather clumsily with my left hand; but that does not matter. Be good enough only to bind up the wound after the operation." It was with astonishment that the doctor saw that this strange man was speaking seriously. He stripped off his ooat, turned up the wristbands of his shir, and took a bistory in his left hand. A second later, and the steel had made a deep incision in the skin. "Stayl" cried the doctor, who feared that his patient might through his awkwardness, sever some important organ. "Sinco you have detei mined on the operation, let me perform it." He took the bistory, and placing iu his left hand the riht Laud of the patient, begged him to turn awny his face, the sight of blood being insup portable to many persous." "Quite needless. On the contrary, it is I who must direct you where to cut." In fact be watched the operation to the end with the greatest coolness, in.li cat ng the limits of the incisions. The orjen hand did not even quiver in that of the doctor, and when the circular piece was removed, be sighed pro foundly, like a man experiencing an enormons relief. "Nothing burns yon now?" "All has ceased," paid the stranger, smiling. "The pain has completely disappeared, ks if it had been carried away with the part excised. The little discomfort which the flowing of blood causes me, compared with the other pain, is like a fresh breeze after a blast from the infernal regions. It does me a real good to see my blood pouring forth: let it flow, it does me extreme good.'' The stranger watched with an ex pression of delight the blood pouring from the wound, and the doctor was ob liged to insist on binding up the hand. During the bandaging the aspect of his face completely changed. It no longer bore a dolorous expression, but a look full of good humor was turned upon the doctor. No more contrac tion of the features, no more despair. A. taste for life had returned; the brow was once again calmed; the color found its way back to the cheeks. The en tire man exhibited a complete trans formation. As soon as his baud was laid iu the sling he warmly wrung the doctor's hand with with the one that remained free, and said cordially: "Accept my sincere thanks. You have positively cured me. The trifling remuneration I offer you is not at all proportioned to the service you have rendered me: for the rest of my life I shall search for the means of repaying my debt to yon. The doctor would not listen to any thing of the kind, and refused to ac cept the thousand florins placed on the table. On his side the stranger re fused to take them back, and, observ ing that the doctor was losing his temper, begged him to make a present of the money to some hospital, and took his departure. K remained for several days at his town bouse until the wound in his natient s hand s! onld be cicatrized, which it did without the least accident. During this time the doctor was able to satisfy himself that he had to do with a man of extensive knowledge, re flective, and having very positive opin ions in regard to the affairs of life. Besides being rich, he occupied an im portant official position. Since the taking away of his invisible pain, no trace of moral or physical malady was discoverable in him. The cure completed, the man re turned tranquilly to his residence in the country. Abont three weeks had passed when, one morning, at an hour as unduly as before, the servant again announced the strange patient The stranger, whom K hastened to receive, entered the room with his right hand in a sling, his features con vulsed and hardly recognizable from suffering. Without waiting to be invited to sit down, he sank into a chair, and, being unable to master the torture he was enduring, groaned, and without uttering a word, held out his hand to the doctor. "What has happened?" asked K , stupefied. "We have not cut deep enough," re plied the stranger, sadly, and in a fainting voice. -lt burns me more cruelly than before. I am worn out by it; my arm is stiffened by it. I did not wish to trouble you a second time, and have borne it, hoping that by degrees the invisible in fbimniation would either mount to my head or descend to my heart, and put an end to my miserable existence; but it has not done so. The pain never goes beyond the spot, but it is indescribable! Look at my face, and you will be able to imagine w hat it must be!" The color of the man's skin was that of wax, and a cold perspiration beaded his forehead. The doctor unbound the bandaged hand. 'Ihe point operated on was well healed; a new skin had formed, and nothing extraordinary was to be seen. The sufferer's pulse beat qnickly, without feverishness, while yet he trembled in every limb. "This really smacks of the marvel lous!" exclaimed the doctor, more and more astonished. "I have neve before seen such a case." "It is a prodigy, a horrible prodigy, doctor. Do not try to find a cause for it but deliver me from this torment Take your knife and cut deeper and wider: only that oan relieve me." The doctor was obliged to give in to the prayers of his patient fle per formed the operation once again, cut ting into the flesh more deeply; and, onoe more, he saw in the sufferer's face the expression of astonishing relief, the curiosity at seeing the blood flow from the wound, which he had observed on the first occasion. When the hand was dressed, the dead ly pallor passed from the face, the color returned to the cheeks; but the patient no more smiled. This time he thanked th doctor sadly. "1 thank you, doctor," he said. "The pain has once more left mo. In a few days the wound will heal. Do not be astonished, however, to see me return before a month has passed." "Oh! my dear sir, drive this idea from ycur mind." The doctor mentioned this strange case to several of his colleagnes, who each held a different opinion in regard to it, wi hont any of them being able to furnish a plausible explanation of its nature. As the end of the month approached, K awaited with anxiety the reap pearance of this emgmatio personage. But the mow h paused and he did not reappear. Several weeks more went 1 y. At length the doctor received a letter from the sufferer's residence. It was very closely written, and by the signature he saw that it had been penned by his patient's own hand; from whioh he concluded that the pain had not re turned, for otherwise it would have been very diffloult for him to have held a pen. These are the contents of the let ter : "Dear doctor, I cannot leave either you or med cal science in doubt in re gard to the mystery of the strange malady which will shortly carry me to the grave. "1 will here tell you the origin of this terrible nialadv. For the past week it has returned the third time, and I will no longer struggle with it At this moment I am only able to write up pmuiug upon ine sensitive spot a piece of burninr tinder in the form of a poultice. While the tinder is burn ing I do not feel the other pain; and what distress it causes me is a mere trifle by comparison. "Six mont hs ago I was still a happy man I lived on my income without a care. I was on good terms with every body, and enjoyed all that is of interest to a man of rive-aud thirty. I had married a year before married for love a young lady, handsome, with a cultivated miiid, and a heart as good as any heart could be, who had been a governess iu the house of a countess, a neighbor of mine. She was fortune less, and atta?hed herself to me, not only from gratitude, but still more from real childish affection. Six mouths passed, during which every day ap peared to be happier than the one which had gone lefore. If, at times, I was obliged to go to 1'esth and quit my own land for a day, my wife had not a moment's rest She would come two leagues on the way to meet me. If I was detained late, she passed a sleep less night waiting for me; and if by prayers I succeeded in inducing her to go and visit her former mistress, who had not ceased to be extremely fond of her, no power could keep her away from her home for more than half a day; and by her regrets for my ab sence, she invariably spoiled the good humor of others. Her tenderness for me went so far as to make her renounce dancing, so as not to be obliged to give her hand to strangers, and nothing more displeased her than gallantries addressed to her. In a word, I had for my wife an innocent girl, who thought of nothing but me, and who confessed to me her dreams as enormous crimes, if they were not of me. "I know not what demon one day whispered in my ear: Suppose that all this were dissimulation? Men are mad enongh to seek torments in the midst of their greatest happiness. "My wife had a work-table, the drawer of which she carefully locked. 1 had noticed this several times. She never forgot the key, and never left the drawer open. "that question haunted my mind. What could she be hiding there? I had become mad. I no longer believed either in the innocence of her face or the purity of her looks, nor in her caresses, nor in her kisses. What if all that were hypocrisy? "One morning the countess came anew to invite her to her house, and. after much pre slug, succeeded in in ducing her to go and spend the day with her. Our estates were some leagues from each other.and I promised to join my wife in the course of a few hours. "As soon as the carriage had quitted the courtyard, 1 collected all the keys in the house and tried them on the lock of the little drawer. One of them opened it. I felt like a man commit ting his first crime. I was a thief about to surprise the secrets of my poor wife. My hands trembled as I carefully pull ed out the drawer, and, one by one, turned over the objects within it, so that no derangement of them might be tray the fact of a ttrange hind having disturbed them. My bosom was op pressed; I was almost stifled. Suddenly nnder some lace I put my hand up on a packet of letters. It was as if a ll sh of lightning had passed through me from my head to my heart Oh! they were Ihe sort of letters one recog nizes a a glance love letters! "The packet was tied with a rose colored ribbon, edged with sil er. "As I touched that ribbon this thought came into my mind: Is it con ceivable? is this the work of an honest man? To steal the secrets of his wife! secrets belonging to the time when she was a young girl. Have I any right to exact from her a reckoning for thoughts she may have had before she belonged to me? Have I any right to be jealous of a time when I was unknown to her? Who could 6iispoct ber of a fault? Who? I am guilty for having suspected her. The demon agaia whispered in my cars: 'But what if these letters date from a time when you already had a right to know all her thoughts, when you miyht already be jealous of her dreams, when she was already yours? 1 unfastened the ribbon. Nobody saw me. There was not even a mirror to make me blush for myself. 1 opened one letter, then another, and I read them to the end. "Oh, it was a terrrible hour for me! "What was there in these letters? The vilest treason of which a man has ever been the victim. The writer of these letters was one of my intimate friends! And the tone in which they were written! what passion, what love, certain of being returned! How he spoke of 'keeping the secret!' And all these letters dated at a time when I was married and so happy I How can I tell you what I felt? Imagine the intoxi cation caused by a mortal poison. 1 read all those letters every one. Then I put them up again in a packet retied them with the ribbon, and, replacing them nnder the lace, relocked the drawer. "I knew that if she did not see me by noon she would return In the eve ning from her visit to the countess aa She descended from the! riedly, to rush toward me caleche hurriedlv. , as i stood awaiting her on the steps. She kis ed me with excessive tender ness, and appeared extremely happy to be once again with me. 1 allowed nothing of what was passing within me to appear in my face. We conversed, we supped together, and each retired to our bed-rooms. 1 did not close an ; eye. Broad awake, I counted all the hours. W ben the clock struck the first quarter after midnight, 1 rose and en tered her room. The beautiful far head was there pressed into the white pillows as angels are painted in the midst of snowy clouds. What a fright ful lie of nature's is vice under an as pect so innocent' I was resolved, wiih the headlong wilfulness of a madman, haunted by a fixed idea. The poison had completely oorroded my souL J resolved to kill her as she lay. "I pass over the details of the crime. She died without offering the least re sistance, as tranquilly as one goes to sleep. She was never irritated against me even when I killed her. One s.ngle drop of blood fell on my hand you know where. I did not perceive it until the next day, when it was dry. "We buried her without anybody suspecting the truth. I lived in soli tude. Who could have controlled my actions? She had neither parent nor guardian who could have addressed to me any questions on the subjeot and I designedly put off sending the custom ary invitations to the funeral, so that my friends could not arrive in time. "On returning from the vault I felt not the least weight upon my con science. I had been cruel but she had deserved it I would not hate her I would forget her. I scarcely thought other. Never did a man commit an assassination with less remorse than I. "The countess, so often mentioned. was at the chateau when I returned there. My measures had been so well taken that she also had arrived too late for the interment On seeing me she appeared greatly agitate.L Terror, sympathy, sorrow, or, I know not what, had put so much into her words that I could not understand what she was saying to console me. "Was 1 even listening to her? Had I any need of consolation? I was not sad. At last she took me familiarly by the hand, and, dropping her voice, said that she was obliged to confide a secret to me, and that she relied on my honor as a gentleman not to abase it She had given my wife a packet of letters to mind, not having been able tj keep then in her own house; and these let ters she now requested me to return to her. While she was speaking, I several times felt a shudder run through my frame. With seeming coolness, how ever, I questioned her as to the con tents of the letters. At this interroga tion the lady started, and replied angri- " 'Sir, your wife has been more gen erous than you! When she took charge of my letters, she did not demand to know what they contained. She eveu gave me her promise that she would never set her eyes on them, and 1 am convinced that she never read a line of any one of them. She had a noble heart, and would have been ashamed to forfeit the pledge she had given.' " 'Very well,' I replied 'How shall I recognize this packet?' " 'It was tied wit1 a rose-colored ribbon edged with silver.' I will go and search for it "I took my wife's keys, knowing per fectly well where I should find the packet; but I pretended to find it with much difficulty. " 'Is this it?' I asked the couuteis. hauding it to her. " Yes, yea that is it! See! the knot I myself made has never been touched." "I dared not raise my eyes to hers; I feared lest she should read in them that I had untied the knot of that packet and something more. "I took leave of her abruptly ; she sprang ihto her carriage and drove off. "The drop of blood had disappeared, the pain was not manifested by any ex ternal symptom; and yet the spot marked by the drop burned me as if it had been bitten by a corrosive poison. This pain grows from hour to hour. I sleep sometimes, but 1 never cease to be conscious of my suffering. I do not complain to auybody: nobody, indeed, would believe my story. You have seen the violence of my torment, and you know how much the two operations have relieved me; but concurrently with the healing of the wound, the pain returns. It has now attacked me for the third time, and I have no longer strength to resist it. In an hour I shall be dead. One thought consoles me; it is that she avenged herself here below. She will perhaps forgive me above. 1 thank yon for all you have done for me. May heaven reward you." A few days later one might have read in the newspapers that S , one of the richest landowners, had blown out his brains. Some attributed his sui cide to sorrow caused by the death ol his wife; others better informe I, to an in curable wound. Those who best knew him said that he had been attacked by monomania, that his incurable wound existed only in his imagination. The man who does all his praying on his knees, prays very, little. If thou dost love thy friend well enough to forego his friendship for sake of his larger perfecting, make known to him his faults. This Lapps have the Bible in their own tongue, and few stories are more interesting than the acconnt of its translation. Over thirty years ago a series of religions riots took place in a number of villages in Lapland, and among the rioters was one Lars Haetta. During the riots several homicides oc curred and Lars and some other of his companions were committed to prison on a charge of murder. They were found guilty and several were hanged, bnt in consideration of his youth Haetta was condemned to life-long imprisonment Commiserating his con dition, his keepers and the prison chaj lain extended to him such favors as could safely be granted to a life-long prisoner, and finding them rewarded by good conduct took especial pains to teach him to read and write. Lars became interested in the Bible, grew day by day more fond of reading it, and finally formed the bold project of translating it into his native tongue. Through many weary years the labor went on, for Lars was no great scholar, and the Lapp language, as may be readily sup posed, is not fluent literary medium of thought Bnt finally the work was done, the Bible translated and printed in the language of Lapland and the remainder of Haetta's sentence was commuted. He was living aa late as 1870, and though aa old man, was still active, and often served parties of trav-' she did. A (V f A Ti AffWAPPTT " MUiNAKLil. K1XU OTTO'S MELANCHOLY LIKE OK 1XSAX1TY Eaqatreg a Sew Suit of Clothes Every Day One of the saddest spectacles which it is possible to conceive is that pre sented by the prisoner of Furstenried, the umd King of Bavaria. Tall aud iliuost as gigantic in stature as his brother, the late King Ludwig, his ap pearance is sufficient to startle any one who sees him for the first time. His hair is long and unkempt, and his bushy brown beard reaches down be low his waist. There is a kind of areird, wild look iu his eyes, the gaze )f which remains steadfastly fixed itraight ahead into empty space. The nly person who can succeed in bring ing a gleam of intelligence to his face s the iixty-year-old Madame Marie, ho was his nurse when a child and a ho has now become one of the prin :ipal members of his household. She is the only one who is permitted x speak to him, everybody else being mder strict orders not to address a tingle word to him or to take the (lightest notice of him when he walks ibout the park. He is invariably lresscd in b.a.k broadcloth, and re pjires c uew suit almost everyday, for owing to his strange objection to he use of either pocket handkerchiefs r table' napkins, his coat-sleeves and :oat-tail8 have to do service for both. For hours he will stand, gesticulate .vildly and talk to the imaginary per lonage created by his fantasy, aud :hen again for several days together le will Remain in such a state of ethai-gjt and lifelessncss that his phy dcianslecome afraid that he will pass vay .without eveu their becoming iwareoflt. All day long, except when overcome by one of his bi-week-iy or tri-weekly tits of apathy, he will puff away at cigarettes, of w hich he iuiokes almost a hundred a day. His :ousuuiption of matches is still greater, for whenever he lights a fresh cigar ette he delights iu burning up the en ure box of lucifers and iu seeing the whole bundle blaze up at once. Two physicians, Drs. Suell aud rtaiike, spend. In turn, a week at the Palace; They have supreme control of Ihe entire establishment, and not a thingj. done either by the aidea-de-:amp, the orderlies or the servants without the sanction of the physician for the week. Every Sunday the Royal patiei.t is visited by Dr. Grashey, he director of the principal insane isvluui of the Kingdom, who confers tvith both the physicians and takes .-artful note of their reports. At diuner King Otto when he con sents to appear at table takes his seat it one end of the table. A round the )ther end are seated the doctor, the lides-de-cainp aud the chaiubeilains ill the little court, in fact. King Otto, ' however, never takes the smallest no :ice of their presence, but preserves a sullen silence, which he only breaks from time to tiuie to shout for cham pagne, of which, as also of beer, he Absorbs large quantities. He uses his knife and fork in a per fectly normal manner, and sometimes ippears to be able to appreciate and iiijoy what he is eating. The apart ments which he inhabits are all situ ated on the ground floor, and are magnificently furnished, and the strict est orders prevail to the effect that al' doors should be left wide open throughout the day. If King Otto happens by any chance to come across a closed door he imme diately fulls into a kind of epileptic and maniac fury, and seeks to dash it down with his still powerful fists. It is, moreover, impossible to induce him to permit himself to be bathed, and he displays almost a hydrophobic antipa thy for water. He likewise absolutely refuses to enter any carriage, and dis plays signs of terror whenever any ef forts are made to induce him to enter one for the purpose of taking a drive. It is impossible to predict how much longer he may live, lie may drag on his present miserable existence for years; while on the other hand, it is likely that the failure of the natural functions of the body may bring on a malady which will carry him off in a few days. As his madness is of an alto gether incurable nature, bis death can jnly be regarded in the light of a happy release. From a Tnlpit to a amhling House. "Speaking of the mysterious disap pearances," said Captain Nelson, the racing man, ut the Girard House last night, "a case of that kind tore up Savannah society a few years ago. Due of the most popular clergymen n the city kissed his wife and chil lren after supper one evening and eft his house to go to a sen-ice at his :hurch. He never appeared at the :hurch, and was never seen in Savan luh again. Detectives were employed o search for him and a large amount if money was expended on the iuves igation but all to no avail, and with n six months the conclusion was eached that he had either committed uiciji; or hud been ' murdered ear or so later a young physician 1 'rout Savanuuh who had been an at- j euduntupon this clergyman's ministra j ion, was iu Paris and was making tha rounds of the city with some friends. They went into one of the swell gam bling houses, and had not been there Jiany minutes before a man entered nhoiu the Savannah doctor iinmedi itely recognized as the fugitive preacher. The physician accosted him jy name, whereupon the ex-clergy-uaii drew him into a corner and legged him to be silent and discreet. 'I am," he said, "one of the proprie :ors of this house, and I am making money here. The profession of the ministry grew utterly abhorrent to me. ( could do nothing but abscond from he town iu which you knew me. I rely upon you not to expose me."' "The facts," continued Capt. Nel lon, "were told me by a physician, who is now one of the most eminent tnd successful members of his piofes tion in Savannah." LEUAL DOVTS ABOUT WILLS. Don't leave anything uncertain in I will. Don't uieution people by their nick names. Don't try to devise real property t an alien. Don't let a person interested in it tx a witness. Don't make a will without two wit uesses; better three. Don't neglect to declare it to be youi last will and testament. Don't make a new will unless yoc revoke or destroy the old one. Don't make a will that does not pro vide for children that may be born. Don't try to force a wife to accep certain property instead of a dower. Don't fail to specify which one if meant when two bear the same name. Ikm't neglect to make your witness es write their full name and addresses Don't add a codicil unless you exe cute it in the same way as the original will. Don't forget that if a woman youi marriage will invalidate a will alread) made. Don't make a new will without specifically revoking the prior one anc physically destroying it. Don't allow a minor to will awa personal property, unless eighteen il male, and sixteen if female. Don't imagine that the coutents of t lost will may not be proved by gooc evidence. Lawyer Lock wood. Using; Shakespeare's Dust as aa "Ad." The Vicar of Stratford recently an nounced from his pulpit that he "doet not object to his church being com monly called Shakespeare's Church nor to receive gifts for it iu honor ol his immortal memory." Apparently not. I should say, from ihe following fly-leaf recently distributed auiong hit congregation, that, so far from "oh jecting" to the use of Shakespeare' name, Mr. Arbuthuot regards the poe as a veritable gold mine: SI KATFOKD-OX-A VOX CHURCH. I'LEASE HEAD THIS IN' THE CHURCH. The chancel contains the ctust of the great est poet of the Anglo-Saxon race. We art anxious to make it more worthy the wonni ot Uod aud of its Ulualrtou dead. What wi ii.teud to do : To repair thoroughly the stall (estimated cost, 2'H) ; to replace the ancient oak back' to the heiifbt of the iiidow silla (estimate.' cost, 3of ; to repave the chancel, substitut inp, if possible, marble for stone (estimate.! cost, U2s0 ; to cleanse and repair tbe walla etc-, (estimated cost, oo I ; to erect a new Teredos,- Including sculptured figures (eati muted cost, 1,771) ; to alter and improve tn. altar rail aud (fas tlttlngs (estimated cost i.11'3); to readjust the warming apparatu estimated cost, 1!) ; to repair the parapet outside, and replace tbe old pinnacle (estl mated cost, 217). The estimates have been approved b Messrs. Boil lev & Garner, who are the arch! tects for the work, and amount in all t. 3.535. I shall be thankful to hear from anv body who will undertake any part of thh scheme, or w ill give substantial help. Jf yoc cannot do this, will you at least give sixpenct or a shilling towards its completion by plac ing it in one of the church boxes r O. Arbcthxot, Vicar. Puzzles the Scientists. It is remarked on the Vienna-Leipsic telephone line that, while the speakei at Vienna is heard with remarkable clearness aud accuracy at Leipsic and at all points along the route, as at 1 rifue and Dresden, a speaker at either of these points is heard with much more ditlicultv at ienna. The electricians of the company are as yet unable to furnish a satisfactory ex planation of this phenomenon. Why sounds travelling from east to west should be clear and distinct, while those travelling in the other direction arc more or less blurred, is a puzzle. Through the Mountain. M. Wautweller, a Swiss engineer, las applied for a concession for an un lerground railway up the Jungfrau Mountain. He proposes to reach the lummit of the mountain by means of i tubular tunnel. The Eiffel tower as i curiosity w ill have to take a second lace should the scheme be successfully :arried out. Liked Toe For Supper. An Indian boy was wading iu the Feather River, iu California, near the liolJen Gate Mine, when a large fish :arried off the great toe on his left foot. The little boy wants to die, just because lis companions will call him "Nine :oed Jimmy." A log r .ft compcaed of sixteen cribs, each sU y feet long, forty feet wide and wlneteeu itnet deep, Is presently to be uwaiu iroiuoi. ionn, .ewDlUDllci, to Brooklyn. Theciibs are to be eich- ty fret apart, making tu tow about u i eel long. 1:L;0D0R KAMEXSKY. LOKIUVS KVKKOLADKS TUB llOJlE OK A lCl SSIAN AKTIST. "The First Step" His Greatest and Most Celebrated Work. For a number of years and until re cently there lived in comparative ob scurity at Clear Water Harbor, Fla., a sculptor, whose name- Feodor Kainen sky is well-known in European art circles, where a score of years ago ho was a prominent figure, writes a cor respondent of the Chicago Tribune. The story of Kamensky's life reads like a page of romance. He was born in 1836, near St. Petersburg, Russia, and is descended from the Russian no bility. -At the age of thirteen young Feodor entered the Academy of. Fine Arts at St. Petersburg, where he re mained as a student until 1859. In a competitive exhibition of work done by the 6tudents he won tbe "grand prize," which gave him the privilege of six years of travel and study at th expense of the Government. His first original design was the "Little Sculptor," which was highly com mended by art critics as strong and realistic. It represents a rustic lad iu the simple garb of the peasantry, absorbed and self-forgetful, while working intently on his first model. Alexander II ordered it reproduced in marble. His next iuiportont production was oy him entitled "The Widow." It was suggested by the sad scenes w hich attended the suppression of the in surrection in Poland in 1863. This subject has been erroneously styled "A Mother Nursing Her Child." The widowed mother holding her infant child and mournfully contemplating it presents a perfect picture of sorrow, blended with the most tender love for her innocent cTiild. The model was sold to the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts at St.Petersburg. But Kamensky's greatest work is en titled "The First Step." It is grand both in design and execution. The story, written iu marble, is a simple one. A mother, manifesting all the joy ot one supreme moment, guides, then watches her child as, with an ex pression of exultation and half-matured self-confi.lence it ventures to take its first step alone. The emotions of mother and child are delineated iu a manner that is s.uiply inimitable. The original of the "First Step" Tvas bought by Alexander II, and is now in the art gallery of the Czar'? Winter Palace. Referring to an article which ap peared some mouths ago iu Harper's Magazine entitled "Russiau Bronzes," Kamensky said iu a recent interview that outside of Russia people iu general are not well informed iu regard to what has beeu accomplished by Russian artists. "Over forty years ago," said he, 'Baron Klodt, who was born in Si beria iu 1805, became famous by cre ating groups iu bronze and particularly by his life-like representation of horses. The four colossal bronze horses which every observing traveler sees at the bridge of SnietchkotT in St. Petersburg were modelled by him and reproduced for the King of 'sVssia, to whom they were presented by Nich ihis I." The story of Kamensky's life in the diked States is briefly told. He came to this country in 1870 or a liitir later. His best model that he brought with him was broken in ship ping it. Knowing but little of our language or customs he failed to ob tain the recognition here which to merited. For a number of years he lived on the frontier in Kansas, and the beautiful designs in clay that he made there were the wonder of his rus tic neighbors. Being in straightened circumstances he could give but little time, however, to his favorite pursuit. After strug gling for years to secure a home he re solved to seek a more genial clime. From Kansas he removed toCleurwater Harbor, Fla., and with the discerning eye of an artist selected one of the most picturesque places in the Statu for his home. Kamensky has recently been called from his humble home in Florida to resume his work as a sculptor in con nection with the "American School of Art" in New York Citv. Do Something; Well. I would say to all young girls, whether rich or poor, educated or un educated, make some one good thing a particular point: In your life. If you will be a cook or housekeeper, be thoroughly good. Have a general knowledge of all matters of interest and importance; but have one particu lar branch perfect so that, if the time comes when you must face the world and carve your own fortune, you will be able to do that something well. No matter how homely the duty, its value is enchanced tenfold by being well done. It is as creditable to be a thor ough housewife as to be a good te.icher or accountant Oood Housekeeping. Domestic economy consists in doing without things. It was first practised by Adam and Eve. Xwtha's Vim yard Herald. It takes two to gossip. News is historical fact. Time Is tbe rider that bri aks youth. A fool's money is Ilka hla bra'ns, verj uneasy. NEWS IN BRIEF. Russia talks of running the drug stores. Uncle Sam has 1,000,000 French Canadian?. A machine gums 20,000 envelopes iu an hour. Illinois now pays two cents a head for English sparrows. Hencefotth Mexico will give no cash subsidies to railroads. The popu'atlon of Chicago Is, In round numbers. 1,'2ihi.0c0. Tbe coinmifai -ner of taxes in Phila delphia receives $:0o0 a year. The beet stiji.ir industry promises to become prosperous iu California. It costs the American people about $1,000,000 a year to stop their teeth. Illinois still leads the list of pensions granted, with Indiana a close second. In New Vork the register receives $12,0C0. He has a staff of 77 persons. A tomato weighing twenty-seven pounds has been raised at Bayou Sara, La. The gimlet-pointed ecrew hat pro duced more wealth than most silver mines. Philadelphia claims the largest cold storage warehouse in the United States. A part of No-Man's-Land has be come part of the territory of New Mexi co. The San Francisco Board of Health refuses to admit Chinamen to the city hospital. Slnre 18.13 there have beeu 610 sui cides in France, Germany and Austria combined. The very tiuMt brand of Havana cigars fetches l.0J a thousand in Paris. The profits of the Monte Carlo gambling tables are estimated at $6,000, 000 a year. Harvest reports in Russia are to (he effect that there will Le no grain for export this season. The total annual bullion production jf the United States is, In round fig ures, $luO,O00,l'O0. In New York the county clerk, who is also clerk of the supreme court, re ceives SI 5, 03 a year. A fur buyer of Lewiston snys that on au average five hundred bears are killed yearly in Maine. For sixty years Dresden in Germany nas manufactured the gas. used for Its public aud private lighting A leer has beeu discovered among tbe paupers at I.isburn, a flourishing town lu the North of Ireland. Cheops, the largest pyramid, re quired 100,0oo men twenty years to build, costing $2o0,oo.,0o0. The oldest surgeon iu the world la said to be M. W. Salmon of Cambridge, Eng. He was born lu March, 1790. Cincinnati claims to have tha tallest policeman in America in tbe person ot a mau whose height is 6 feet Of inches. Henry Tschudi, aged 17 years, It the first blind person to pa.-s the exam ination of the American College of Musicians. Superstitious Europeans, alarmed ny floods iu Germany and earthquakes lu It .ly, say that the end of the world is coming. A man named Smith, of Greenville, Me., cut bis hand while strapping a razor, and died two weeks later in par oxysms. The annual product of salt through out the world is estimated at 7,300,000 tons, the larger share coming from English works. The library of the British Museum lias thiity-two miles of shelves filled with books, and Is visited annually by 900,000 readers. Between GO.uOo.OOO.CoO and 103, 0 0, 01 0,000 eo.liis.li are taken from the sea around the shore of Newfound laud every year. New YTork paid over $3,000,000 for the 800 acres of land where Central Park has since been created, at an ex pense of many millions more. The winter rve yield in Prussia la estimated to be 70 per cent, of the av erage, and ot winter wheat 83 percent, while the potato crop Is uncertain. Philadelphia lias one coroner, who irets 0v0 a year, and has the assistance of a deputy at $-'oO0, two physicians at $1250, two clerks and two messengers. The hay reservation at Fort Mc Derroit, New, comprising six townships a good part of which is fine, natural meadow land, has been thrown open for settlement. A schooner at Provincetown, Mass., has just returned from a twenty months' mackerel fishing cruise in African wat eis. She sent home 1000 barrels, and brlcgs fifty barrels more. Montana is larger than the Empire of Turkev. Texas is larger than the whole Austrian Empire by 30,00.) square miles, and New Mexico Is larger than Great Britain and Ireland togeth er. It has just coma to light that of tha two coins issued by the Confederacy dt ring the war one, a penny, was made in Phil- delphla, and it is believed no samples of it were got south of Mason and Dixon's line. Since 18GG Eve lepers are recorded by the Bureau of Vital Statistics as having died from that disease In New York city. The first occurred in 1S73; the others one r:ich in the years 1873, 1879, lfcSl aud 1S-U. Alexander Rankin, the Scotchman who succeeded dohn Prown ashighlanl servant to the (viie-n of En eland has ob tained almost as marked an influence lu the royal household as Hrown p Blessed. He is the personal Httendaut of the Queen on every journey. Switzerland owes a great deal to the tourists who visit that land. Last year the Swiss hotels and boarding houses d's;osed of t'.'i.OOO beds that were used by 5.724 f 00 tourist?, who paid oi'er 71 Coo.OOO francs for their accommodations. It is said that chocolate is ud in the Interior of South America for a curren cy, as are cocoanuts and eggs. Norway even now uses corn for coin. In India cakes of tea pass as currency, and la China pieces of silk. A man named Hutch, living In Fan cy Bofom, near Weston, Mo., stole a wagon load of corn from Mrs. Mary Bland, a widow, and starUd to town with it, but got Muck in the mu1 before he was a mile away, and bad to al-an-d- n the corn and wagon, both of which, are now In the possession of the wldo