i 1 eiiiirai B. F. SOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. Editor ud Proprietor. VOL. XLVII. MIFFLINTOWJN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 1C. 1893. NO. 35. 1 1 I M HtV. 1)11 TALHM, The Urooklyn Divine's Sinislay Sermon. Su'.joa "Children's Rights.' if .".e,, nprnr.l ft, ' ciTnril'tnrj (;' ouf of thy muulh.' J : ' :.:; w.is a fro!.oot.r. K'irlv turnec-r-.t :- ' '. a l!-u where. h outfit to hav M .-:ir--I s r. in. .nvrW with rough mei n:i i v.. r-'i t - r-.ini his living ns twr h cm:! i. In t'.M-.. times it was oonsi.lerod n-'r f. i -i !!.! ti to out on Independent !i:i:r..-y .. hi i. m. .Tephtlmh wan a pood jran a-.-r-lniu' to tho Utfit of his dark an lKi- f.vijinn l.Tii? nnd predator? lift h.. ! a-... r--Kl-' ni-l pr-vjitnt. " Th cr. '. :.'t 'atis.". a nrnVs heart, but ij. v t r v r lix r.utnr-il te-npernment Nnii want-1 the Ammonite i!r,v- '. f t'ie:r i-nimtrr, so thpy gent E M-.? 11 ' '!'! tha!.. askln him to bw -' '..r-in-rhiof of ail the forces It- n v t said. "You drove me out : v " 1 1 '"1 f'"- me, an l now von iv tr roi, want mo l.a.-k." but he'did n -..-:. lie take command of the nr-v. - n-.--..n-.'-r'!to the Ammonite to t -!ir ' va-'at- th.i country, and p.-ttinc; ' " '-! "- marshals his troom I: r ' out to the war Jephthah tri'..:i v-ry ..!ijm vow that if t'i. Lord w!l l-.v.' hi:u t'-.e vi-tory thi-n on his return v, :! -it-i-v-r l'r-t comes out of his iloor wiv he will otT.-r in s.ieritli.v as a re.ir.it of f. r.r..-. Tii-l.a'.tl- op-ns. It was no skir rr on the e.'.-.-s of danger, no unlim- t-r.i!-..' hatt.Tl.- two mi!.-s awar, but the fc'iri.ni; "! men on the points of sw-ords and f-w the L-rnun l could no mope drink fie 1!.,.. 1 :,n 1 the horse roared to leap over t!ir of l o lies of the slain. In those rM ti-ii.-s opp.-sins forces would flffht until V.v'.r -w.T U were broken, and then eaebone u ,:r 1 r! r.'ttle his man until thev both full, t--t to te. Th. '-rip to trrip. death stare to il.-.ith -:,ir . until the plain was one tumbled tin.-- .d eorps -s from whioh the last traco of ir.'in'iood ha 1 been dashed out. .! l i.thah wins the day. Twelve cities lay eaptur-d at lu's feet. Sound the victory all thr ai-h the mountains of Gilead. Let the tni-rp-t-rs call up the survivors. Hoine wur 1 to vour wiv. s nnd children. Home war! with your slitterintc treasures. Home. war 1 to have the applause of an admiring Nation, l.uild triumphal arches. Pwinirout r.nv-s :iil .--v-r Mizpeh. Open nil yonr doors t r--!v tiie capture 1 treasures. Through v-ryhail spread the banquet. Tile up the ..a. F::l hii the tankard. The Nation t- r-l.-emed, the inva ders are routed, and the 'ati.-a:il :.i:or is vindicated. Il'is'.i It J, i l.thah, tho conqueror ! Jeph thah. s -a(ed on a franelnc steed, advances un.id a -.-laimin multitudes, but his eye is r.ot on the cieited populace, hememberlng that he had mn lo a solemn vow that, return inn from victorious battle, whatsoever first came out of the doorway of his home, that houM he saeriilco as a burnt offcrinir, he 1ms his anxious look upon the door. I won der wh;.t spotl.jss lamb, what brace of doves, wi'.l t " thr. wn upon the fires of the burnt ".i-r:!..-. i horrors ! Taleness of death hl.i!i ii. s his cheek. Despair ezc his h. -..rt. lfis ilau.-l.ter, his only child, rushes .i:t tho iloorway to tiirow hers -if in her fi:t'i-r's anr.s nnd siiower upon him more ii--3 than there were wounds on his breast .r dents on his shield. All the triumphal ;leridor vanishes. Ifoldinir back his child fr. :u his heavinir breast and pushing the 1" 'Us ba.-k from tho fair brow aud looking ln'o tii.i eyes of in-xilniruishahle affection. .th choke 1 utt'-ranee he says "Would i. ' l I iy stark on the bloody plain. My l.'i'i.-I.ter, :nv only child, joy of mv home, life ,,f my life, thou art tho saTinee'!" 'I lie whole matter was explained to her. This was no whlninir, hollow henrted (rlrl Into wnose ,-yes tiie father looked. Ail the elery of sxord nnd shield vanislmd in the re.-euci; of the valor of that Kill- There may have been a tremor of tho lip as a rose leaf trembles Inthe souh of tho south wind, there may have been the startinif of a tear like a raindrop shook from tho unther of a water lily, but with a self sacrifice that man may not reach and only woman's heart ran compass she surrenders herself to tire nnd to death. She cries out in the words of my text, "My father, if thou hivst opened thy mouth unto the Lord, do unto rue whatso ever hath proceeded from thv moutQ." She bows to the knife, and the blood which so often at the father voice had rushed to the crimson cheek smokes in the tires of the burnt offering. No one can tell us her name. There is no need that we know her name. The airlands that Mizpeh twisted for Jcphthah, the warrior, had cone into the dust, tiut all aes are twistinj; the jrirl's chaplet. It is well that her name came not to us, for no one enn wear it. They mav take the name of Deborah or Abigail or Miriam, but no one in all the acres can have the title of this daughter of sacri.'lee. Of course this offerin ' was not pleasing to the Lord :but before you hurl your denuncia tions at Jephthah's cruelty, remember thnt in olden times, when vows were made, men thought they must execute them, perform them, whether they were wlcke 1 or pood. There were two wronif things about Jeph thah's vow. First, he ousrht never to have made it. Next, havint- made it. it were belter broken than kept. Hut do not take on pre tentious airs and say, "I couldnot have done as Jcphthah di'L" If to-dayyou were stand ing on the banks of the Gansre and you had been born In India, you mi?ht have been throwing your children to the crocodiles. It is not becauso we are naturally any tetter, but becnuse we have more pospel llk'ht. Now, I make very practical use of this nuestlon when I tell "you that the sacrifice of Jephthah's daughter was n type of the physi cal, mental an. I spiritual s.ioriiioj oi w. nju children in this dav. I here an parents all unwittingly brin rin to bear upon their chil dren a class of inlluenecs which will as cer tainly ruin thorn as knife nn l torch destroyed Jephthah's daughter. Whilo I speak, the whole Nation without emotion au l without Bhame looks upon tho ;tupendous saerillce. In tho first piaee. I remark that much of tho system of education in our day is a sys tem of p.-. 'ri.lco. When children spend six or 6eve:: i ours a day in school, and then must spend two or three hours in prepara tion for s -hool the n-xt day, will you teil mo how much time they will have for sunshine and fresh air and tho obtainins of that exu berance which is necessary for tho duties of cominc; life? No one ran feel more thankful than I do for tho advancement of common school edu cation. Tho printing of books appropriate for schools, tno multiplication of philosoph ical apparatus, the establishment of normal schools, which providefor ourehlldren teach ers of larcest caliber, are themes on which every philanthropist ouirht to bo congratulat ed. 1'ut this herding of great multitudes of children in ill ventilated school-rooms and !oorly equipped halls of instruction is mnk mr many of tho places' of knowledge in this country hu?o holocausts. "Politics in many of the cities cets Into ed ucational affairs, and while the two political '.parties are scrabbling for tho honors Jeph tnnh'sduachter perishes. It is so much so hat there aro many schools in tho country to day which are preparing tens of thousands of invalid men and women for the future, so that in mauv places by tho tiie time tho child's oducntion Is finished the child is fln lahed! In many places, in many cities of tho country, there are laro appropriations for everything else nnd cheerful appropriations, but as soon as the appropriation is to be made for the educational or moral interest of the cdty wo are struck throueh with an econ omy that is well nich the death of us. Iii connection with this I mention what I might cail the cramming system of the com mon schools and many of the academies children of delicate brain compelled to tasks that might appall a mature intellect, chil dren (?oin down to school with a strap of books half as high as themselves. The fact 1. In some of the cities parentsjJo not allot their children to rradnate for the slmpli reason, they sav, "We cannot nft'ord to allo our children's 'health to be destroyed Ii order that they may gather the houors of ar Institution." Tens of thousands of children educr.toi Into imbecility, so connected with many sucl literary establishments there ought to N asylums for the wrecked. It is push r.nc crowd and cram and stuff and jam nntil th child's Intellect Is bewildered, and th taomgrxis wxockod- and the hwltbls goaft -hooiswho oni wer SlV' ,T?m ttM laughter and h7 "helk, fL mPln n,i health, who are now tural JPE?!!1 T1" noon pale face l irw J.tl ,n tha ft,r fore their "me uV ' Hth,nnii"-, M be- Latin French and German lessons 1 ! All t h. vivacity of their nature beateTout oi hm by the heavy beetle of a Greek lexicon i And you doctor them for this, an? you rive wmi " H."la m1t" r t "at, and you will tell you what is th matter with them they are finishing their eduetionT ' Inmyparishinrhilaielphia a e'dl l waa 80 pushed at school that she was !.roWQ Tmo fever and In her dylaS d-ir. i:, ad niih? tion tab e. friwy v'.o l I remomber that knew'm th"ro w who knew more tinn all of ns put together Tr n,8 W.V?f'lat ln horricated us. hen we stood up for the spUin JclesV he was almost always the head of the class' wi .01r3C2r,B.thi9 Uhr' hous. and Z Ims l.08t W In as a pro Igv! At 18 years of age he wu an idiot. Ife lived S5hf hand from 1,19 le". or day from ttn Idle. Parent3 nd tha temad 'J,0." my 1'ntte'- yonr pride by forcing yonr tD! k"W more than aQV other ehiU BMnifVSf ar7,ft.kin' crifleoof tha SMld if by the additions to its intoll!gene rnrVtn-S?. " .r,ubtra,tlon fron tts fu m . -.lJ W1" RO away ,rom 8affn mal treatment with no exuberance to tight the battle of life, . 6uah ohildren mn, oil. very wall wnile you taTteeare of tiiem, but rhen you are old and dead, alas ! for them If through the wrong system of education which you adopted, they h ive no swarthi ooss or force of character to tako care of themselves. Ee careful how you make tho u.iu o umu ucuts or us neart nutter. I hear a great deal about black men's rights md Chinamen's rights and Indians' rights nd women's rights. Would God that some ody would rise to plead for children's right ! rhe Carthaginians used to sacrifice their Jhlldren by putting them into thearms of au idol which thrust forth its hand. The child WWi put into the arms of the Idol, and no looner touched the arms than It dropped Into Ihe tire. But it was the art of the mothers keep the children smiling and laughing intil the moment they died. There may be t fascination and a hilarity about the stvles f eduentlon of which I am speaking, but it only laughter at the moment of sacrifice. Would God there were only one Jephthath'e laughter. Again, there are many parents who are menacing their children with wrong sys- miua ui uiscipiin. ioo great rigor or too rreat leniency. There are children in fam lles who rule the household. They come to fie authority. The high chair in which tho nrant sits is the throne, an t the rattle Is the icepter, and the other childen make up the larliameut where father and mother have no rote' Such children come up to be lais lreants. There is no chance ln this world for a child hat has nover learned to min i. Such peo )le become the botheration of the church of Jod and the pest of the worbL. Children hat do not learn to obey human authority ire unwilling to learn to ohey Divine author ty. Children will not respect parents whose luthority they do not respect. Who arc those roung men that swagger through the stre t, ivith their thumbs in their vest, talkin; ibout their father as "the old man," the governor," "the squire," "tiie ld chap," or their mother a3 "the ld woman?" They are those who ln youth, n childhood, never learned to respect au ihority. Ell, having heard that his sonn ha 1 lied in their wickedness, fell over backwnrd ind broke his nock and died. Well ho m'ght. tVhat is life to a father whose sons are de Jauched' Tho dust of the valley is pleasaut lo his taste, and the driving rains that trip through the roof of the sepulcherure iweeter than tho wines of Helbon. There must be harmony between tho 'other's government and the mother's gov ernment. The father will be tempted to too rreat vigor. The mother will bo tempted to ;oo grout leniency. Her tenderness will vercome her. Her voice is n little softer ; ler hand seems better fit to pull out a thorn ind soothe a pang. Children wanting any thing from the mother cry for It. They hope 0 dissolve her will with tears. But the mot i r must not interfere, must not coax off, nust not bg for tiie child when the iour comes for the assertion of parental mpremacy and the subju ; ition of a shild's temprr. There comes in the history f every child an hour when it Is tested whether the parents shall rule or tho child ihall rule. That is the crucial hour. If the mild triumphs In that hour, then ho will tome day make you crouch. It is a horrible icenn. I have witnessed It a mother come :o old age, shivering with terror in the pres ence of a son who cursed her gray hairs and nocked her wrinkled face and begrudged her me cruat she munched with her toothless ruins 1 IToir nharper thin a prpent'i tooth It U To have . thankled chli Jt Eut, on the other hand, too groat rigor Dust be avoided. It is a sad tiling when do nestle government becomes coid military lespottstn. Trappers on the prairie fight Hr. S'ith fire, but you cannot successfully tight ,-our child's bad temper with your own had :emper. We must not be too minute in our jispection. We cannot expect our children :o bo perfect. We must not see everything. Hince we have two or throe faults of ourown, we ought not to he too rough when we dis over that our children have as many. If irnditlon lie true, when wo were children wo were not all little Samuels, and our parents were not fearful lest they could not raise us Oecnuse of our premature goodness. Yon cannot scold or pound your children into nobility of character. Tho bloom of a -hlld's heart can never be seen under a cold drizzle. Above all, avoid fretting and scolding In the household. Better than 10 years of fretting at your children is one good, round, old fashioned application of he slipper ' That minister of the Gosnel o! whom we read in the newspapers that he whipped his child to death bewiuse be would not say his prayers will never come to oan ontzation. Tho arithmetics cannot cal culate how many thousaads of children l.ave been ruined forever either through too great rigor or too great leniency. The heav ens and the earth are filled with the groan of the sacrificed. In this Important matter seek divine direction, O father, O mother. Some one asked the mother of Lord Chief Justice Mansfield If she was not prou 1 to have three such eminent sons and all of them so good. "No," she said, "It is nothing to be proud of, but something for which to be very grateful.' Again, there ore many who are sacrificing their children to s spirit of worldliness. Some one asked a mother whose children had turned out very well what was the secret by which she prepared them for usefulness and for the Christian life, and she it 1 : "This was the secret. When in the mornmg 1 washed my chlhlren, I prayed that they might be washed ln the fountain of a Saviour s mercy. nraipuii ments, I prnyed thnt they might be arrayed In the robe of a Saviour's righteousness. When I gave them food, I prayed that they might be fed with manna from heaven. When I started them on the road to school, I prayed that their path might be as the shin ing light, brighter and brighter to the per; feet day. When I put them to sleep, I prayed that they might be enfolded in the Saviour s arm " "Oh." yon r. "that was very oM fashioned." It was quite old fashioned. But do vou suppose that a child under such nurture as that ever turned out bad? In our dny most boys start out with no Idea higher than the all encompassing dol lar Thev start In an age which boasts it can scratch the Lord's Prayer on a 10 cent piece, and tho Ten Commandments on a 10 cent niece. Children are taught to rwlucemonUs and rolision, time and eternity, to vulgar fractions. It seems to be their chief attain ment that 10 cents make adime.and 10 dimes make a dollar. How to get money is only equaled by the other art. how to keep it. Tell me, ye who know, what ehanee . there i is for thosSwho start out in life with such perverted sentiments? The money market Founds again and again with the downfall - . t- Tf t a Hmn of blood on awiUL irUKW"7 TSSeboand, and ten, of thou sands of the daughters of America are sacri ficed to wordiineas. They are. taught to be in svmpathy with all ths artlfleUUitiea of society. iri . " m?,uiv1 toto all the hollownes. of what Js called fashionable life. They are ,2"Te that htetor7 u dr. but that 60-oent stories of adventurous love are dell ciona. With capacity that might have rivaled aFlorenoe Mghtlngalo ln heavenly minis tries, or made tha father's house glad with nual nnd sisterly demeanor, their life is a waste their boauty a curse, their eternity demolition. ? he siege of Charleston, during the civil War, a lieutenant of the army stood on the floor beside the daughter of the ex-Governor of the State of South Carolina. They were taking the vows of marriage. A bomb shell struck the roof, dropped into the group and nine were wounded and slain : among the wounded to death, the bride. While the bridegroom knelt on the carpet trying to stanch the wounds the bride demanded that the ceremony be completed, that she might take the vows before her de parture, and when the minister said, "Wilt thon be faithful unto deth?" with har dying lips she said, "I will," and ln two hours she bad departed. That was tho accidental slaughter and the saorifice of the body, but at thousands of marriage altars there are daughters slain for time and slain for etern ity. It Is not a marriage ; It Is a massacre. Affianced to some one who is only waiting until his father dies so he can get the prop erty. Then a little while they swing around In the circles, brilliant circles. Then the property Is gone, and having no power to earn a livelihood the twain sink Into some corner of society the husband an idler and s sot, the wife a drudge, a slave and a sacri fice. Ah, spare your denunciations from Jephthah's head and expend them all on this wholesale modern martyrdom I lift up my voice to-day against the sacri fice of children. I look out of my window on Sabbath and I see a group of children un washed, uncombed. un-Chrlstlanized. Who sares for thorn? Who prays for them? Who utters to them one kind word? When the city missionary passing along the park ln New York saw a ragged hid and tiearl him swearing, he said to him . "My ion. etoo swearing I Vou ought to ito to the aouse or tioa to-oay. Ton ougnt to be good. !fou ought to be a Christian." The lad looked Ji his faoe and said, "Ah, it Is easy for you N) talk, well clothed as you are and well fed, 5ut we chaps hain't got no ohance 1" Who Jits thorn to the altar for baptism? Who jxs forth to snatch them up from crime md death and woe? Who to-dny will go forth and bring them Into schools aud shurches? No. Heap them up, great piles f rags and wretchedness ami filth. 1'ut indernenth them the fires of sacrifice, stir ip the blaze, put on more fagots, and while we sit ln the churches with folded arms and ndifferent crime and disease and death will ;o on with the agonizing saerillce. During the early French Revolution at Bourges there was a company of boys who asod to train every day as young soldiers, ind they carried a flag, and they had on tha lag this Inscription : "Tremble, tyrants, rrernble! We are growing up." Mightily luggestive! This generation is passing off, ml a mightier geueratlon is coming on. Will they be the foes of tyranny, the foes of tin, una the foes of death, or will they be tha (o.otGol? They are coming up ! I congratulate all parents who are doing thoir best to keep their children away from the altar of sacrklc. Your prayers ire elng to be answered. Your ohil Iren may wander away from God, but :hey will eome back again. A voice comes Iroin the throne to-day encouraging rou, "I will be a God to thee, and to ;hy seed after thee." And though when rou lay your head in death there may be tome wanderer of the family far away from Sod, and you uiay be 20 years in heaven bo- shall come to his heart, he ha kingdom "id be fore the throne of aod you will rejoice that pou ware faithful. Come at last, although o long postponed his Coming. Come at lust ! I congratulate all those who are tolling for Ihe outcast and wandering. Your work will loon be over, but the influence you are setting n motion will never stop. Long after you Save been garnered for tne skies your pray srs, your teachings and your Chrlstain Influ ence will go on and help to people heaven with bright Inhabitants. Which would you rather soe which scene would you rather mingle in in the lost great lay being able to say, "I added bouse to aouse and land to land and manufactory to manufactory ; I owned half the city what--Ivor my eyes saw I had, whatever I wanted t got," or on that day to have Christ look fou full ln the face and say, "I was hungry, ind ye fed Me ; I was naked, and ye clothed He ; I was sick and in prison, and ye visited He ; lnasaiu"h as ye ui.l it to the least of ily r:thren, ye did it to Jle?" Ttc Hermit of the Bowery. Fonr or five years ago the people of S'ew York talked for a day about the ttory of Hermit Coe ol tho Bowery and then forgot it. A dozn years before Leonard Coe, that being the name ha was known by, had taken up his resi dence in a Bowery lodging house. Ed tfeemed very poor, but paid his rent promptly, and spent a few cents each lay for food. lie was morose and taciturn, could seldom be drawn into conversation, and rarely left his room. When he did he always carried with him a browu paper package. Finally ho fell sick and was taken to a hospital. When told that he could not recover, ho sent for John Haller, a former fel low lodger, anil informed him that his real name was Baer, and that he had datives living in Lancaster, Fenn. Ho also made a will, naming Haller as his executor, and intrusted to his keeping the brown paper package he had so long guarded with jealous care. Tha dny following his death Haller opened the package and found to his astonish ment thnt it contained over $24,000 in greenbacks. An examination of tho hermit's papers showed that he was a graduate of Yale College and had stud ied both law and medicine. Later ho had engaged in tho publishing busi ness with his brother, but had in time retired with a competence, and had finally drifted to New York. There, for some unknown reason, he had sunk his identity under the name of Coo and adopted the squalid life of a her mit of the Blums New York li' oorder. The total number of colored troops In the United States army during the Civil "War was 186,017. FOOD iok Tiioccnr. He who forseea never act?. The youth of tl.e soul is everlasting A verse may find him whom a sermon n:en. A fool and a fast horse are soon pai ted. One Ban by day, by night ten thou sand shine. Talk little and well and you will Le taken for somebody. It is but a base, ignoble mind tha. mounts no higher than a biid can soar The less a man thinks or knows about his virtues the better we like Li in They who provide much wealth for their children, but neglect to improve them In virtu re, do like those who feed their horses high, but never train them to character and success. A word or a nod from the gocd lis more weight than the eloquent speeches of other'. Napoleon had been the first man "of the world if his ends had been purely public These two things, contradictory as they may seem, must go together manly independence and manly Inde pendence, manly reliance and manly self-reliance. f.Tl 1AT AND T.PPVTOE. All day long they come and go Jtttypat and Tippy toe; if. footprints up and down the hall, Playthings scattered on the floor. Finsermarks along the wall. Tell-tale streaks upon the door Cy these presents you shall knof Pittypatand Tippytoe. How they riot at their play I And, a dozen times a day, ln they troop, demanding bread Only buttered bread will do. And that butter must be spread Inches thick with su;ar, tool Tfever yet have I ftaif : "Not Pittypat and Tippytoe." Sometimes there are griefs to soothe hometimes ruffled brows to smooth For I much regret to say Tippytoe and Plttypat Bomteime interrupt their play With an Internecine fp.it; Fie! oh, fie I to quarrel so, Pittypatand Tippytoe 1 Ob, the thousand worrying things Every day recurrent brings! iland to scrub and hair to brush, Search for plaything! gone amhrv Many a murmuring to hush. Many m little bump to kiss! T.ife'a indeed a fleeting ihow, l'ittypat and Tippytoe I And, when day is at an end. There are little duds to men !; Little frocks are strangely torn. Little shoes great holes reveal. Little hose but one day worn. Kudely yawn at toe or h i ! Who but you could w suca woe, Pittypatand Tippytoe! But when coaies this thought to me; "Some there are tht childlcsa be ' Stealing to their tittle beds. With a love I cannot sp;sfr. Tenderly I stroke their bead. Fondly kisseach velvet cheek. Ooi help those who do not know A Pittypat or Tippytoe! On tha floor, along the hall, l'.uJeiy traced upon ths wal', Tb,-rd ard proofs in every kiud Of the havoc they have wrought. And upon my heart you'd find Just such trademarks, if you sought. Oh, how glad I am 'tis so, Pittypat and Tippytoe! Eugene Field, in Chieajo Kew A GIRL'S WAY. .1 HELEN FOIIUKST CRAVES. ? .WON'T!" dc- ft -1 l T..t.- Iff!!!- VI i-ioicii jjiuiLj .uue. 'S-rnl T'yy Martha, hush 1" Si-:-':;"'A'f teoroted lira. Mills, hold ing up a ?Jfp yellow forefinger u-iA.Kt.zr oi cuium-'. '-a &figJ.$&Si that the way to PV'tV aieak to mothcrS'' Remember the fifth your cotn- luandoient, llartha!" Well, I can't help it!" sputtcd Hatty. We are cramped and cornered sad hsrdworked enough already, aren't we, without taking boarders for conven tion weekt And it is bad enough to hr pieced carpet and monded cur tains and be oken-edged crockery without other people finding it out. No, I won't I "Martha, hush!" reiterated Mra.Mills. We don't get a chance to earn money every day. Four gentlemen, at three dollars a week apiece, makes twelve dollars. And twelve dollars is twelve dollars. It's just as I tell jou, Martha. You most give up yonr room " "liy room isn't fit for a squirrel to s'cp in." "And go to Aunt Betsy Billiogses to sleep while Mr. Belforils here." Matty tossed a pretty head, all a-glit-ter with short-cut auburn curls. "I won't 1" she repeated. "I won't! I won t!" I expect," composedly went on Mrs. Mills, "they'll be hero to-morrow morn ing. Doctor Pounce and Mr. Losellc will hsvo the parlor, Mr. Cushing will occupy the big bedroom and Mr. Bel ford will have your room. They'll probably arrive before breakfast. I want you to catch half a dozen broilers tnd shut 'em up in the three cornered coop, so they'll be handy to kill first thing in the morning. I'll mix up some biscuit, and there's tho blackberry jam. I'm told the city folks like jam with their breakfast." "But, mother," cried Matty, "there's Jim! We're expecting Jim every day and what's is poor Jim to do?" "Jim can make out 'most any way," (aid Mra. Mills, indifferently. "My only brother 1" pleaded Matty. "Aod the only son you've got I And he's been out West a year !" "I'll risk Jim," observed Mrs. Stills. "P'r'aps ho won't come. And if he does, he'll manage somehow. I don't feel as if I'd oujhter lose this chance of making a little money." "Mother" Now, Maitha, you hush, an do jest's I tell you. My mind's mado up, an' I don't calculate to change it!" Matty Mills aent down to a certain .'nvorite nook of hers behind the barn, a-he re the little brook gurgled away un der U e branches of a superb old butler nut tree, and indulged herself in a hear ty cry. "As if," she sobbeJ, "it wasn't bad enough to be poor, without exposing our poverty to all the old ministers Id the country I I wish thero wasn't any con vention I I wish it mot some we where else I I wish I had succeeded in getting Orsythorn School to teach I I wish mother hadn't put all her money in the Grazier's Bank the week before it broke! I wish I was a man like Jim, and could go out to seek my fortune, instead of staying at home and econo mizing coppers and washing dishes and puttiug patches on old garments I One thing I'm determined on I won't go near the house all the time those board ers are there. If mother will take 'em, she must wait co 'em herself. And neither will I consent to use a cent of the wretched money they pay. And as for eoing to sleep at Aunt Betsy's, simply won't!" When the moon rose, orange-gold and glittering through the branches of the outternut tree, Matty was still sitting there, her elbws resting on her knees, aud two bright tears on her cheeks. Poor girl! She fancied herself the most miserable being in the world. "Mr. Bel.'ord, eh I" Mrs. Mills bad come to the door in n bewildered way. "Proud to make your acquaintance, sir, I'm sure: but I didn't noways look for you before to-morrow morning. Rid over a-horseback, did you I Oh, no, I tint so Inconvenienca tniJJlotit least I I'll get i .u a biie o' tupp?r dreckly, if you'll just lead your hone down to the barn at the foot of the lane. We don't keep no boy, but you'll fiud hay .and oats handy. Martha! Martha! Where is the child! I do b'lieve she's gone to Aunt Betsy Billingses a're.vly. Just like Martha. She never was no calculator i" Matty Mills, however, was not so far distant as her perturbed mother imag ined. She had slipped in at the back doot of the barn, patted the red co .v who stood ruminating in her stall, made her self a cosy little nest in the fragrant hay up stair?, aud, lighting tho old lantern, eat down to read. Suddenly there camc'a hesitating foot step on the threshold outside. The douC ?9ened. Matty started from her book. She leaued over tus big bea n. all fringed with hay, which mi lo the partition of her impromptu divan. "Who' there?" she called. "Jim ioh, Jim ! Don't be frightened, it's me .Matty. I'm hiding from mother. We've 'Imd a difference of opinion. M tlieri)H t iken four horrid, slupi I minister to jboard for a week it's s. si kind of (convention, Jim and Oa, dj wait a jminute!" She swung herself lightly over the beam and alighted, like a fluttering, briht-crestud bird, on the floor of t.ie barn. "Oh, Jim, if you only kne.v " "I beg your pardon," spoke a quiet, composed voice, in the deep, well -modulated tones that bespeak much prActic, "but I think there must be eo.no mis take. Mrs. Mills sent me here to put u; my horse. I'm afraid I am our of the 'four horrid ministers.' But I assure Ju " Matty caught up the barn lantern ana held it on a level with his face. "Why," she exclitmeJ, "it's Mr. Beresrordl" "That is my name. And you are Matty Mills," said a stranger, a suiden lirht of recognition illuminated his face. 'But, if it is an allowable question ho on earth came you here I" "In the most natural way in thr world. I live here. And jou!" "I am here to attend the convention." "Mr. Beresford!" "Miss Matty!" "Are you a minister?" "I hive that honor. Miss Mitty." "It cu't bu possible!" "Why shouldn't it ba possible? Al though you, perh:i), were not a.vare of it, I was a theological student whet I met you in Massachusetts. Yes, Miss Matty," with a mischievous nod of the bead, "it's an incontrovertible facr. I am oue of the four horrid ministers." Matty lowered her lantern. 'May I ask your cirand at the barn?' slid she, in an altered voice. "Though per'.ieps my mother sent yo l to find me?" "Xo. She told mo to conic hero to put up my hoise; ho is waiting cut side." "Oh, pror fellow, ho must bo verj tired 1" said Matty, hurriedly, hauling tho lantern on u hook. 'Otea the big door. Lead him into one of the empty stalU. Xot tint side, ltassie is fiere the cow and tho isu't used to horse.'- With quick, deft bands, the girl thtJ down an armful of hay into the maug-r and showed Mr. Beresford where to hud the painted pail wherewith to bring water from the well, and then leaving the lantern as a guide, she vanished. Mr. Beresford smiled quietly as he made his horse comfortable, and then re turned to the house, where Mrs. Mills had prepared an appetizing repast. But when he went to bed at ten o'clock there was no sign of Matty's return. Mrs. Mills herself hurried over to Aunt Betsy's house in the morning. Where's Martha?" said she. "I want her." "Marthj?" echoed Aunt Betsy, put ting one hand behiud her ear after the fashion of deaf people. "What about Marthj? She ain't been here." 'Then where is she?" cried Mrs. Mills. "ilow shoul l I know?" counter-questioned Aunt Betsy, Irritably. "She was always as full of kinks as a clothesline on a wet day!" sighed .Mrs. Mills. "I guess I'll jest have to do the best I cart without her. She was dread ful opposed to my board in' the four rev erends; but I g' leiS my will's as strong as hcr'n. I'll get along somehow, and Martha shan't have a cent of the money I earn no, not a cent! But ain't it funny, Betsy? Mr. Beresford tells me by the fvay, bis name's Beresford, not Belfjrd, as I s'posed it was that he used to visit up to MansQeld, where Martha taught one term a spell ago." "I want to know?" said Aunt Betsy. 'Ho seen her dowa to the barn last night," added Mrs. Mills. "She showed him where to put up his horse, an' that was the last of her. 1 wish I knew where she was I" The convention had been in session several days, when", during Mr. Beres ford's sermon in the crowded village church, his eyes fell on Matty Mills's facu, half hidden in the ihadow of one of the quaint wooden pillars. He paused a moment in mid -sentence; then he collected himself, and went on ai brilliantly as ever. But when he had finished, he did cot stay to hear the Reverend Raymond Cush ing's "remarks," which came next, but slipped out into the fresh air and star light. So that when unconscious Matty emorged, like a slim shadow, be quietly put out his hand and stopped her. She started violently. "Stop a minute," said he. "Why are you crying?." "I I didn't want to cry!" said she, sobbing and defiant. -'But you made me you preached that sermon right at me I" 'I wasn't thinking of you, Miss Matty," said he, quietly, "until my eye fell on your face. All the same, if the cap fits you, by all means put U on." 'I won't be so willful lor the future," murmured Matty. "I'll give up my own way. I'll come back this very night and help mother in her own fashion. After all she is older than I am, and wiser." She spoke partly as if she were think ing aloud, as she added: "I had meant to go up north again and teach, but it mother wants me to stay here---" And nobody but Mattie herself and possibly Mr. Beresford, in a lesser degree knew what it cost the girl to relinquish her ambitious dreams and take up the humble, homely burden of every -day life again. But she did it bravely. "Martha ain't the same gal she was," complacently spoke Mrs. Mills. "I al ways .knowed if I talked to herrlong btgpgVI'tailld'pako her bear resoa And o'.d Doctor Pounce 1.0 gave her n lot o' real good advice convention week." In the gray, soft days of November, Mr. Beresford came back to fulfill a promise he hod mado to preach once more for the village pastor. lie walked across tho meadows to the Mills cottage to shake hands with his hostess of the preceding summer. "Well, I declare?" said Mrs. Mills, in dustriously polishing her spectacle glosses with the corner of her checkered apron. "I'm proper glad to see you, Mr. 'JeresfordI I'm orful sorry Martht ain't to home! I do hope you're well My son James, he's here with his wife. Tucy'vo concluded to settle East and live in thjs house with me, so I shan't need Martha anyway, and she'll hev hct heart's desire of going back to Massa chusetts to teach. Sho goes to Mans field next week." "No, she doesn't" said Mr. Beresford, smiling. "She will remain hero until she is married on Christmas Day 1" "What!" ejaculated Mrs. Mills. "I g'.ieis you've hoard some of the neigh b.irs' gossip. Alonzo Whitcomb did wk her to marry him, but she refused." "Nevertheless, she is going to be mar ried. To me, Mrs. Mills. I met her ai I came across the fields from the parson a'jc, and we settled tho matter." 15 but," stammarcd Mrs. Mills, ".Martha always vowed and declare! sho never would be a minister's wife?" Mr. Beresfori smi'cd his rare, sweet sm le. I think," said ho, "that she has changed her ruiud." Saturday Night Life-Saving Soap. A cake of soup is said to have saved the lives of five men and a boy off th( coast of New Guinea. The story, as told in tho smoking room of a steamer going to Br'.s'ia.ie by an old man, the owner oi several t es-cls engaged in pearl fishing, is reported in Mr. Xisbett's "Colonia Tramp." "It all happened in a moment," said the old hiati. ' Tie ship struck the ice! and went down like a thunderbolt, and we hud only time to jump overboard anc swim ashore. "Wj were at the mouth of Cloudj Bay, v. iiic'i meant slow roasting alive ai soon a; the natives got a peek at us. W were wet, hungry and miserable, wit! nothing to stay the pangs of hunger. "As daylight dawned I saw a casi h'.owly drifting ushore. In a moment wi were wading nnd swimming to securi the treasure. We had it on shore iu n time, aud prying it open with ou fingers fcuad it filled with soap. Wi bemoaned our hard luck in etnphatii Ian u.ige. " 'Close around the case, boyr, they'rt cominv;!' I shouted, 03 I saw fifty mop heade 1 stvages, armed with spears, bowi and i.rrows, rushing toward us. Ai fifteen yards distauco. they paused, and their chief cajie out to talk with us. 1 graobed up an armful of the soap tubleb aud advauccd to meet him. His eye.' lighted as he saw the amber-like cake: on which the sun was shining. Novel, ties, when they take, mean success. Going straight up to the man-eater I crTcicd him a cake. lie took it, sinel it :i i 1 ta-itei it. Evidently ho did no li'.tj its taste, for he scowled at me. B; 14113 I shjweJ him how to use it. Tin I'apmi'i Is fond of washing himself, anc my pantomime took his fancy. Seeing 1 stream of fresh water I led the chief to it J K.rst washing my own hands I gave him the tablet. Ho did as I had done anc was delightod. "Then for the next ten minutes then was scrubbing among these copper skins. Their weapons were thrown down anc they lathered one another and then threw water over their bodies. "Wo were saved, and made on th. spot medicine men of the tribe. Th pictorial advertisement of the soa; makers were used to decorate tho ido house. Two weeks afterward we wc rescued by an English wur sluop." Salaries of Navy Surgcous. An assistant surgesa iu the Caitel Slates Navy relieves as annual salary of $101)1) oa leave or waiting orders; 1403 on shore duty and $1700 at sea. After sorvin ilvi years these amounts are in creased to 1200, $1G )0 and 1900 re spectively. When at sja he is allowed in addition one ration at thirty cent? a day. After attaining the rank of passed assistant surgeon, tho yearly pav is in creased to 1500, S1SU0 and 2000, ac cording to the duty performed during the first live years in that rank, after which he receives . 1700, J000 and 2100. The next higher grade is sur geon with a salary ranging from a mini mum of 2800 at sea to 1200 after twenty yoars' service, tho letter sum in uch instances being paid no matter where assigned. After passing to the rank of medical director, medical inspec tor, or fleet surgeon, be is assured a sal ary of 1100 at sea, on shore, on leave, or waiting orders until tha time arrives for his retirement at the age of sixty two, unless this occurs because of acci dent or other cause prior to attaining that u;;c. When placed on the retired list the rate of p .y subsequently drawn is seventy-fivo per cent, of the total sal ary held by the medical man at the timf ol his retirement. Detroit Free Press. Slaving by Machinery. Shaving a man in twenty-five seconds is a feat deserving of tho highest praise and retard by all such as value their time. The feat has been rendered easy! of performance by the construction of a shaving machine of wood, reported to, have been male by one Mclchior Farkas,' s convict in the penitentiary of the "city; of Siogcdin, in Hungary. Farkas was put to labor in the cabinet-making shop of the prison, and, taking to bis work with a will, he soon displayed great in-i ventive ingenuity. With his machine he is mid to have shaved all the inmates of the prison, nearly one hundred and fifty1 in number, within less than an hour's time. The report fails to state, how-i ever, to what extent the shaving by machinery did or did not succeed in giving comfort to the sufferer in the chair. Chicago Herald. Remarkable Sale of Old Silver. One ol the most remarkable sales o. old silver ever held was at Edinburgh lately. It included pieces belonging to the late Earl of Dunmore, and the ser vice of St. Martin's Abbey in Pertshire, Several pieces were bought 00 com-t mission from xsew lork. Tne nigh est price ever obtained for old silver, $80 an ounce, was given for an early Italian double-handle cup and cover, $420 be. J rig the' price. The highest price tre, ofoto bad been $50 n ounce r OLLO.MARGARINE POPULAR. Twenty-four Thousand Tons Annually Ure4 by the People of This Country. Hidden away in a dark and coh webby corner beneath the roof of thi Treasury at Washington Is a room, filled with a mysterious assemblagf of queer looking apparatus which hat, the aspect of an alchemist's labor atory. Yet the work done there bai i to do not with gold or a vital j elixir, but with the analysis of fooij, and drink. It Is the chemical dl Tislon of the internal revenue bureau,! and one of the matters it has in I cbarg 3 la the detection of fraud iq the sale of oleomargarine for butter. The Kansas City Journal expressci surprise on learning that the con sumption of oleomargarie in thit country has doubled in the last flv years. The people of the Cnited States eat 4,000.000 pounds of iteverj month, or 24,000 tons annually. Kcarly all of it it Is put up by tht great meat packers of Chicago, Cin cinnati, New York, Providence, and Kansas City. The manufacture of it is lawful, but it Is not permitted tc masquerade as butter in the market. Suspected samples are pounced upon by revenue agents and submitted U !hemical testa. Three-fourths of tho hotels ana nearly all of the restaurants and boarding-houses in tho United States use oleomargarine. For their pur poses this artificial product is excel lently adapted. Whereas buttei quickly spoils, oleomargarine always looka nice and remains fresh indefi nitely. Some of It which has teen kept at the Treasury for three years is as good as ever to-day. It Is bet ter in flavor than any except first rate butter. People who buy rancid butter for cooking would do much better to purchase oleomargarine. The best of tho latter Is not cheap, costing as much as 25 cents a pound, thus approaching ordinary grades ot butter in price. The peculiar flavor of butter is due to the presence of 45 per cent of fatty acid. These acids aro volatile and rapidly decom pose, hence the rapidity with which the substance spoils. Oleomargarine contans very little of such destructU blc material . It Is made from beet fat, which is removed from the ani mal ln tho process of slaughtering, washed and placed in a cold water bath. Next the fat is cut into small pieces bv machine and cooked until the liquid portion lias separated from the tissues. The liquid fat Is settled until perfectly clear. Then it la pressed to extract the stearlne, leav ing a pure "oleo oil," wnich, churned together with milk and butter, be comes oleomargarine. The fat being almost tasteless, butter is put in to give the requisite flavor, the best oleomargarine having 20 per cent o the llnest butter. Leaning Towers, "ine Spanish city of Saragossa nail until recently a leaning tower, knowD as the Torre Nueva or new tower a sufficiently appropriate title In 1004, when it was eiected, but scarcely ap plicable after the lapse of nearly four hundred years It was 230 feet high and 42 feet wide at the base, dimin ishing to 30 feet at tho ton. The walls of the lower portion were origi nally 12 feet thick, but when the set tling of the south side of tower, which had been long in progress, had thrown it dangerously out of the per pendicular, the wall on that side was strengthened to 13 feet in thickness This was done some thirty years ago, but tho remedy proved Ineffectual, and at length the apparent peril became so great that the tearing down of the venerable structure was ordered, and the work of demolition was lately bcirun. Tho more celebrated Lean ing Tower of Pisa is less lofty, being ISO feet high, but its inclination Is over thirteen feet. Its proper name is the Campanile of tho Cathedral, and its age 700 years, or nearly double that of its rival at Saragossa. More over, though It leans so much as to severely try the nerves of tourists who look down from the lower verge of its summit, It stands solidly on its base, and has done so for many cent uriesso long, In fact, that it cannot now be determined whether its lean ing is accidental, or whether its builders intentionally constructed it ln that position, perpetrating a huge architectural joke for the entertain ment of posterity. Why Wolves Have Become Scarce. Says a recent writer: Notwith standing the fact that ever since the settlement of America the wolf has been pursued with guns, traps, and poison, It Is certain that no blow was ever dealt this race so severe a the extinction of the buffalo. Their natural prey gone, the wolves turned their attention to the herds of the stockmen, and for years now their depredations have resulted in very serious losses to raisers of horses and cattle on the northern plains. They do not attack the herds when tlicy are alarmed and closely bunched to gether, but prowl about their out skirts, trying to cut off the young Stock, which they can easily pull dowa Sometimes a small band of woives clll round-up a little bunch of cattle,' wnicn stand in a close circla, their heads outward, prepared for the at-, tack. After circling about them for' a short time, two or three of the' wolves will dash at the bunch, aud if they can scatter the animals it Is the work of an Instant only to pull down a yearling steer with no greater ap parent effort than a setter dog would use in killing a cat. Stopping Vessels. An Invention designed to facilitatt tne immediate stopping of vessels mov ing Id dangerous waters, or In danger of colliding with another vessel, has been patented by a Peruvian. A vertically sliding frame on a post at tne bow of the vessel hiM on its sides pivoted wlogs adapted to expand transversely to offer resistance to tho forward motion of the vessel in the water when the frame is in its lower Most position. The conucil of hygiene in Paris, it t said, is about to take steps to sop press the nse of old magazines and newspapers for . wrapping np food. fha Anntrian rove rn ment baa nrohiblt- ed the nse of such papers and aleo of COlOreu puptB labium hauiicd iu tended to be eatn. HEWS IN BE1EP, JTswfoundlanJ, like Ireland, nas no snakes. Florida will protect alligators from Bxtiuction by law. There Is no sc.oh thing at the right use of a wronr tiling. Foreich tourists spend about $!00. 003,000 a year iu Italy, It la a scientific fact that Chinamen are iomarkably long lived. The oldest exIstlDg bank is the Car eelona Bank founded In 1401. The death rate from apoplexy I hlahest at Turin. Italy C10 in 10.OU0. More suicides take place on Tues 3ay and Thursday tban on ether week lays. Nelson says that for every death luring the year two persons are con itactly sick. There Is a new rose, an exquisite blendlcg of pink and wnite, called Cupi.t. Cathedral dining room chairs are the kind that compel one to sit up itraignt. A Farmer In Estelle, Kv.t owns i young chicken which has four lees ind live wings. Sunstroke is more common in the cities of America than iu those of Eu rops and Asia. Each clay some ten thousand strang rs'emer .London, which is infest d b? 120.COO paupers. The white of an egg. quickly swal lowed by a choking person, often gives Immediate relief. There are more deaths annually from hydrophobia In Sweden than lo iny other country. A heliotrope hedge 200 feet long Is to be seen on the pre mlses of a Ven tura Cal. florist. During the Franco German war ihe Germans lost 2G3 men from small pox the French 23,417. A recent invention Is a triple pec which rules the three lir.es f a cash eclumm at one stroke. It Is said that the "thirteen" super stition extenc's away back to the time of King Arthur, 51G A. J). A Tottstown (Penn.) farmer keeps a larne numder of snakes on his place foi the purpose of killing rats. The German Emperor recently is sued an order against officers of hi; army using single eyeglasses. Many of the mediaeval churchct were originally constructed t j serve a!so, when occasion required, as foi tresses. It is now proposed to make thi tio ley do the wotk that mules havt been accustomed to do for canal bout. Thirteen-year-old Mrs. Henry ol Headquarters, Ky., has piesented liei ?eventeen-year-old husband with trip le 8. John Kaufman, a middle-aged Amisli preacher, residing near Elkhart, Ohio, preaches while asleep or iu a trance. The English Importers of Austra lian frozen meat advise that the at.i l.'.I lieat should be allowed te escape I efor they begin to be frozen. Greek paintings were executad in llstemper with glue, milk or white of eggs and on wood, clay, plaster, stone, parchment and canvas. It is said that dew will not form on some colors. While a yeliowboard will be covered with dew, a red or a black one beside it will be perfectlj tlry. The kudzu vine is probably the most rapid growing plant in the world. It be'otgs to the bean family, and wii: easily grow sixty feet tall in tbret months. A new glass forthermometeri is un affected by a heat of 1000 def r s, th ordinary glass being unreliable above o0uegio?s on account of it tendency to soften. Lyonet, who spent his whole life In watching a single species of caterpillar, discovered in It 4000 eyes. The com mon fly has 8000 eyes, and certain but terflies 5,000. Edison is working on a magnetic ore separator. The only obstake in tiie way of its success at present Is the necess'ty of crushing the ore to a very powder before the seiarating process. The smokes of Paris have been mapped by M. Foubert, The princi pal factory chimneys have been set down, with circles of various sizes and tints to represent the emission of smoke from each. A strail cannon, which was cap tured by Andrew Jackson at New Or leans iu 112, was presented to tht Johnstcwn, Pa., Grand Army post Memonal day. Thlreen tco-operatlve quarries, es tablished In .New England by reason of the granite cutters' strike last year, are sai l to have tame I out ?110,0)) worth of work in about Ave mouths. The moisture In the climate or Eng land nffcCts everything 89 greatly that the very rocks crow softened and with ordinary penknives 1 eople can rut their initials in all the old bri-Jges and churches. "The Girl 1 Irt Behind Nfe" has be?n played and sui.g in KnglanJ since 1700. Its original name was "Urlfibton Camp." it is an Irish air but who composed either tiie words of music is now unknown. The largest gold nugg. t evir found in Colorado weighed thirteen p minis; the largest in the UniUtd Stales weighed 151 pounds; largest in tin: world, 223 iounds and four ounces. An engaged couple of IJlueflt-U. W Va., recently ran a foot race. T.e wo man wod, and then iefused to marry her lover, on the ground tliat thi did not wish to wed n Inferior. "Right at the foot of a great ghicit-i in New Zealand there is a tr .pica growth of plant life arid a hot spring, with water IssulDg forth at a t--inpen.-ture of over one hundred degree?. A chimney piece carved from wood over six thousand years eld, has re cently been erected in a house in I..I inburg. The wood, an oak tree, was found in a sand pit thirteen feet below the surface. It was in a lino stato of preservation, doe to the sand, and was easily workable. A suit in the English Chancery Court begun 152 years ago was con cluded the other day. 1 ho govei u ment duties and legal lees eoverc.l nearly the entire sum fought for. 'I tiope I give you satisfaction ' as the pistol said to the wuuu.i.l duelist ii ! .1 f t f i V! ft 1 i