-s - r O. F. BGHWEIBB, THE OON8TITUTION-THE UN I ON-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. VOL. XLVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 22. 1894 NO." 36 AN AVERAGE KAN. 1 realist's story Without any gush or Rlor?, W itn no hd tlmentai llmetlghs And no Ar.work display, t itt pour old ignoramus Who was never rich nor famous. And who eoul.ln't ignite the river, Ax.d ho worked out b tuedar. A wry common feller Ya this fcbeneyer Weller, A'itb the osual share of virtues And with vices two or three ; JJe 'd no fatal gift of beamy, IJJut an average sense of nuty, v'sitlir very good nor evil J oat about like you and we. And he wed an axrrne woman. Vary BJea and Tt ry human, Jsst about Uke Eoeneier. rieitbar very good nor bad ; Oft in riarmonv they'd warble. Often thry would scold and squabble, Bat they lovei ach other dearly. And they couldn't continue maid, Wirror had enough on Monday Je supply the bouse till bnnday, Ji'vvmt made enough in April To support theuiselvea in May ; If they worked hard in November, 7bev inn at work hard in Deeember, Ar.J the eoaxae bread of to-morrow Wu the hard work of to-day. They worried on, crew gray and grayer. Yet they never made him mayor. And ahe plucked no social honors. And his wage, still were amall; Then the load of year craw weighty And thry died when tney were eighty. And they put tbem in the graveyard. And they left them there. That's ai A realistic story, W it bout any gush or glory. Yet this fellow Kbenezer Represents the human clan ; His the average share of pleasure. Bis the average lack of leisure. His the average joy and sorrow Of the common average man. WATER l'UKISSIMA BELLS Captain Sinion Matthews did some am. s quote the Bible, but always in a slighting, colloquial phrase and merely to suit his private purposes. For instance, '"that there apple ;.u-iness" was thrown at Josefa, nig granddaughter, as an unanswerable reason why she should not be given the liberty of his orchard. To irrigate, to spray, to annoint, to fumigate his few trees was the anx ious delight of his life. lie accounted fur his enthusiasm over some fine persimmons in words that might ta?ily have had a human application. I've watched that there fruit," ae'd say, "pit-kin' its way along from a bud." Josefa, too, or "Chepa," as she was nicknamed, had been "picking her way along" under his eyes. She had pretty, caressing tricks, would lay her soft, round cheek down upon her grandfather's arm. But children do not choose convenient times. Old Matthews' attention was absorbed by a thousand trifles. If he was busy, the arm Chepa pressed remained as irresponsive as a bone under its flapping gingham sleeve. Chepa had a feeling that her grand ,'ather locked her out of bis heart with the same key clicking sharply in the padlock of his orchard gate. Indoors there was always her Aunt Porflrlo, a representative of the Mexi can element of Pueblo Viejo, where Matthews had been settled these thirty years. The scnora secretly called the Cap uin '-that robber." Had he not been ready to snap up a bit of property whenever her improvident country men were forced to sell? With a man's dullness the Captain fiad never discovered this domestic enemy, or how Chcpa's life was em bittered by her. She hated Chepa as the heiress ol calf the Pueblo. When Chepa's last and dearest playmate, Tablo MciNamara, left the dead town to seek a livelihood else where the girl would have run away from home; but, profoundly ignorant as she was, a vague terror always ac companied her speculations upon such a course. At 16 she had touches of beauty iLout her Ut to dream upon; a rich culpture of the lips, a dewy fire deep in her dark eres, a glint of ravishing color where her somber hair ridged itself to the sun. But she pondered too deeply about he-se!f. There was much in her lonely habits to draw her to forsaken places. Such a place was one of the piany ruins in Pueblo Vieja "Mer cedes' house" it was called, after a bride killed there by the falling of a tila through a weak place in tho thatch. The dwelling, with all it contained, had been superstitiously abandoned. Such rooms as were open had beea robbed by Indians, but the death chamber at one end of the row, her metically sealed by the weight of the sinking roof, remained untouched. A footpath leading from the placita to the little Catholic Chapel on tho m;t-kirts of the town would have 1 1. n shortened by going past Mer-;ed.-' house, but curved off widely in stead. A thicket of castor-bean and wilA. tobacco grew rankly around it. Chepa couid be sure of solitude there. One afternoon she fled to Mercedes' house in bitter revolt, fe'aegave vent to her feelings with childish abandon by tearing at the braids of her hair, into which black strings had been tightly woven a hideous Mexican fashion. She flung the string on the floor. Her two braids divided into six deeply waving strinds; she attacked each strand, whipping it about. Iler thoughts went even faster than her fingers. "My grandfather will do what h pleases with his own," she declared, addressing her aunt. Luise Porflrio, in imagination. "You cannot 6top him." IVr loose locks spread gradualli into a rich mass. She flung them around until her head swam and an electric lire awoke in each airy Ala in en t. The sunshine pouringdown through the broken roof of the room where she eat took this magnificent mist of hair to itself, setting it allre. Chepa was diverted from one cause of o.ngcr to another. "Is ibis Indian hair?" she asked, Id a transport of scorn and delight. For the Senora Porflrio had not icept from her the ugly old rumor that he; grano father's tlrst wife, her verit able grandmother had leen, not a Mexican woman, but an Indiao squaw. Little birds, accustomed to make free with Mercedes' house, could not wait ' for the disappearance of that glorified appartition. Sitting silent on a rubbish-heap lillca iu from the roof. Chena Xelt MrtJ Crop lightly down beside her. ' She welcomed her visitor with a half hiss, half whistle, a charm she had learned from a Cahuilla Indian girl. With a hop the bird took tho edge , tile-shard nearer to that rays terious summons, no twisted his head with insatiable curiosity. As the hissing whistle went on in quisitive twitterings fell from ragged rringesof thatch overhead, excited shadows winked across the sunshine; bird after bird slipped down the gold, en chute and alighted. In the midst of this growing flock Chja was cautiously gathering up the hem of her gown so as to make a leep bag. Whistle, whistle. A knot of snaki pass, stirred by Heaven knows what, ror nothing else was stirring, rustled with sound of life trailing by; but t, bird took fright. Whistle, whistle. A wild tobacco tree, whose top, dripping slenderly over the wall, dipped deep into the sunstrcam, sprang up suddenly, riding some flaw, and sprinkled Chepa and her en hanced observers with sundrops. Whistle, whistle. Swiftly Chepa's free hand darted out to catch a bird, and returning, whisk it into her improv ised bag. The other birds flew wildly away. but Chena k nPW YlrtW irk lit pa fhnm i v ,v juiv VUI.UI back until her game pouch was as full as she cared to have it. What did she mean to do? With. ut doubt the Cahuilla girl had kept aer captives for the spit. Chepa stood up, gathering the klit of her gown closer and closer, jhe talked to her prisoners aloud: "You will never, never fly again: no:" An ever-recurring 'no" from the Spanish tongue was shaded to infinite meanings on Chepa's lips; was defer intial, gracious, wistful, from mood omood. "Only your feathers will fly when t pick them. One by one they will ay away to the top of the trees; .way high up to the sun." The imprisoned birds chirped Iran Sically. Chepa was thrilled by the feel of their tiny feet kicking and cratching. "But you will be dead, dead, dead." With this dire repetition she gav the tumbling, palpitating mass an jeatatic squeeze and let her gowo rail. The birds rolled downward as one, Dut only far enough to catch then wings, and whirr! They were slant ing madly up the sunbeam up, up, is if not to stop short of the sky. I'hepa's very heart rose with them. She stretched up her arms as if tc ihare in their glorious liberation. Her rebellious mood had given way so an ecstasy of hope. This hope had some foundation. A orporation of medical specialists were bargaining for a thousand acres f her grandfather's land. They were to build a sanitarium for con mmptives, to plant gardens and or :bards in which patients might work tut their own cure. The Captain thought it a magnsfl :cnt scheme. He had gone into it leart and soul, raising his price en thusiastically from day to day. He talked to Chepa incessantly, with lashes of youth in his weak, old eyes, f what he would do with changing, pet always fabulous sums of money. The birds were gone. Chepa sat lown once more on the rubbish heap :n the midst of her red-gold bush of lair. A dream of the future glittered uid spun like the sunshine, adorably pure, laden with balm and ozone which men were coming to buy wltr aer grandfather's land. Out of this dream of the future, advancing to meet the self she war to be, came her lost playmate, Pablo 'tfdXamara. He turned adoring eyes upon her. "You are beautiful," he seemed tc lay, '"and I love you." A sound not human broke upon her jars with startling nearness. Just ne thrilling note, and at an omin us interval another. The bells of the Mater Purissima a ad begun to toll. Ineffably clear and ind yet those tones toundof remoteness. hAt-rtrtait.Inn nrryi llfPli right at hand, had a 6lngulai Kb material in- this effect. It oca a a. anlrttual nualitv. an aloofness. In touch with the dead pueblo, with Its summer-burned hills and the teeping away of life. Those vibrations as they widened ut toward infinity took Chepa's soul with them. Her dream of the future passed Into them as a breath passes Into a wide-winged wind and Is lost. She rose quickly and went to look through the great blossom brushes of the castor-bean with an instinctive sffort to lay hold upon some object that would bring back the present to aer senses, bring back her hopes for the future. Beyond the thicket, across a sun baked open space, stood the little :hapcl. As through a mist she saw its side door standing open, its dark Interior showing as a niche of shadow. Rude figures which the sunshine jould not enliven were crowding out f this shadow. One of them bore 1 tiny box decorated with gay tatter9 Df cloth and paper. "It is only an Indian baby," Chepa said, in a daze. Behind the charpel rose up austere ly the bare posts and cross-beams where the bells hung, or, as now, rolled languidly against the blue ol the deep sky. Seen through these posts as in t. frame, immeasurably perpectives of wild land merged in the sapphire up lift of False Bay. Upon this vacant water the after noon was passing in flights of gofaen arrows. Would those bells never cease! Tht priest who, only, had the right to ring them was tying back their con secrated tongues. But whenever Chepa awoke that night their vibrations seemed to be c m .i.ionini, mit.ward from her brain. Chepa's heart was full of delirious expectations. The hours that sepa rated her from a new life of travel and luxury, such as her grandfather had garrulously pictured, were on their way. At noon sharp, that very day. the great land deal was to be consummated. At 10 o'clock, giving up an attempt to spend ths.mprnjag, as ujiua4Jnb13 orchard, the Captain had dressed himself with distinct reference to his dignity as a man of means. The taiki of his gingham shirty wont to flow free, were tucked in. His hair, ordinarily left to draggle in gray wisps over his shoulders, was drawn up and spread painstakingly thin to conceal an extensive baldness. A strong musty odor exaled from a brand new silk handkerchief knotted about his throat Chepa, on tiptoe with exultation, Announced to him constantly how many more teams and horses were Pitching in the piacita. He remarked with an air of pride: They've heered of this big 'buy ill over the country." The Senor rorfirio, who had tatter, the Captain's side against Luise Por flrio and other mossback opponents of the sale, dawdled uneasily back and forth between bis open door and the Captain's. "You might spring an advance of Jve thousand on them," he advised at the last minute. "They would not let their scheme fall through for live housand." "Think ye? Think ye?-' demanded the Captain, grouping and regroup ing his wrinkles to the expression of rarylng shades of cupidity. With the suddenness that surprises us in things long waited for, the great interview was actually taking place. Chepa bad fled to an adjoining room to listen. Her head and heart throbbed together with joy theD terror. Was. that her grandfather's voict orcaking out furiously? "Who's made ye a better offer' Porflrio? He hasn't an acre in his wn right. Forty dollars an acre? Take him up, then, and when your improvements are in see if there ain't a right o' dower or trust deed, some d n Mexican trickery, trumped up to drag ye into litigation?" If Senor Porflrio had spoiled Cap ;aln Matthews' sale the Captain looked to a prompt return of the at tention. Those eminent specialists went else--here, leaving Pueblo Viejo to its old ways. After such a terrible disappoint ment Chepa found the deadly monot ony of things indoors unendurable. A golden perch swimming in circles oounded by a glass bottle startled so stupidly at nothing. The round wooden clock on a bare wooden shelf was perpetually rolling over on its bead and ticking placidly upside down. When Chepa was half mad with drawing threads from endless strips of perfllada, her aunt's favorite species of Spanish lace, she ran des perately to her grandfather. She found him talking aloud tc himself as he stooped over a pepper vine. She laid her cheek, pale with thoughts, upon the arm he needed to have free. "What's the matter of ye anyhow?" ne shouted. v She had startled him when he was deeply pre-occupied. "Let go, there? Eh, eh?" Chepa had said something in a low tone which he could not hear. He jerked his face up at her ana instantly, in the intensity of a peev ish inquiry, drew his toothless lips apart. What has an old man of 80 to dc vith storms of feeling? In the Captain's agitation he pulled off a green pepper and stood up fum bling at it and blinking his weak old ?yes at Chepa. "What's on ye, Chepa?" She tried to speak, but could onlj draw her breath hard. The Captain's discomfort pusher! him to seek relief in a general accusa tion. "Weemen are al'ays hankerin fcr lomethin'." "Grandfather," said Chepa with z. deep, still gaze upon him, and a child ish quiver of her lip, "could not a girl like me be a religious, a nun? Is it not good, no?" How had the Captain's life pre pared him to answer such a query? "Who's been a-talkln' to ye?" "Xobody sure, no. I think of it myself." "I've got along all my life and 1 ain't goin' to begin givin' in to such notions. You're your grandmother all over." With the green pepper still in hU nand he had disemboweled it and ate the carcass with a furious churning of I the jaws. His eyes were redder than usual from the burning. "But when she got ane o' her spelH a' hankerin' on I jest upped and off fer a week's huntin'. When I got back she was pcrtty generally ready to take things as they come." Grandfather," taid Chepa, looking at him as never before, with eyes that summoned htm before the judgment bar of a soul, "I have often thomrh to myself I would ask vou, Is that tory true that I hear? Wa9 my rand mother an Indian?" Her lip quivered, not childishly aow, as she waited. "Is it true, grandfather?" He answered sharply, "You're a ool"' and turned his back on her. i As Chepa was going vaguely out of i the garden she saw Pablo McKamara whirling away from the town in a ' jaunty dog-cart. j Dead grasses flickered ghost-like in the placita. The sunshine absorbed I there by dark walls lay dimly as in an . eclipse. j At a curbless well, covered by a lid 1 let into the street like a trap-door, a ' superannuated horse was waiting for some one to give him a drink. He blew his nostrils at Chepa and pawed at the wooden lid. j She drew water and gave him to drink. i The chapel door was standing open apon the eternal shadow of its in terior. A Driest praying alone before the altar did not look up while Chepa 1 stood about. i Behind the chapel those bells jcemcd to be forever waiting for youth ' to be dead and borne to its burial. A second time that strange seizure! Staring up soberly at tho bells Chepa found the present with its despair trembling outward from her soul to possess that vacant landscape, the world, eternity itself, in ripples .of solemn sound. v S . " : AstjajureejenJihaiIQulcieBcd rueblo Yiejo Into gal van Ic'sembTance f life. Chepa Matthews' sudden disappear ince was associated with Pablo Mc Kamara's equally sudden departure from that section cf the country. ButCapt. Matthews charged furi ously upon all gossips with another theory. His "little Chepy" had lcen "inveigled away" from him by priests who wanted his-land. An Indian boy stoning birds near Mercedes' house heard a strange sound in there. The house had a', ways been haunted, ft was long before men were led to ttarch it. A heap of stones and tiles rudely tinmlating a flight of steps led from the earthen floor up to the roof ol Mercedes' death chamber. Looking throii ;!i the ruinous hatch into tliL- cdl-like glto;u below a sight ,o chill the Mood was seen. Kooteil amid dust and cobwebs, hei wild hair in a sunless mist, stood what had been Chepa Matthews. Her arms hung rigidly down in front ot her; the hands, locked together, made one fist. At odd moments, far apart, moved oy some blind mechanism, her arms lifted toward her breast, the list sinote there, and a voice, not hers, but hollow and vibrant, answered the stroke as a bell its clapper. One lamentable great tone, and : t ouiinouf intervals another and another: oh-h: oti-h: oa-h:" Then marble silenco again. De .out Catholics saw how this affliction had come about. Had not that robber of a captain ,ust "floated a claim"' over the land an which the chapel stood? To punish this heretic, those blessed jells had "gone to Chepa Matthews' brain." Solemn groups stand for hurs at iafe distances from Mercedes' house to hear and shudder at those lament able great tones. "Oh-h! Oh-h! Oh-h:' Thus ringing her own knell dies Chepa Matthews, aged 10. No other knell is rung for her Tho pif.-stly guardian of the bells will ihTu untie their austere sweet tongues. i:i1iralmH Sin. L'ncle Silas was a very ho:iest. and pious old colored man who preached op. Sundays,and had a great influence for good upon the others in thi set tlement During one of his revival seasons, among a dozen or so at tho mourners bench, was a black boy called Eph. about 20 years old, and for a long time unregenerate. Uncle Silas was greatly rejoiced to see him come forward, and at once went to him. Kph was crying. "Hain't no use in mv comin' up,' he sobbed. "I'se sinned away deday ob grace. " "No, vou ain't, brudder," protested Uncle Silas. "You am de kiu' what de Lawd wants to save . All you got to do is to gib up sin." "I'se dun done dat. Uncle SKas," sobbed Kph, "but dey ain't no salva tion fer me." "Yes dey is, too, honey. I ley ain't no sin so black dat hit ain't washed white as snow." "I clone "stole fo chickens las' week," confessed the penitent. "Dat's all fuggib, Eph'm." "An' two de week befo', Uncli Silas." "Dat's fuggib, too, Eph'm." "An' two de week befor'dat. Undo Silas." "Uat's all right, too, Eph'm. "But dem two was you'n, Uncle Silas. Dem fat pullets you low'd so much sto' bv. Uncle Silas." "Wha dat?" exclaimed Uncle Silas, suddenly. "Item las' two wuz yo' pullets, Uncle Silas," sobbed Eph. Uncle Silas became solemn and 6tern. "I reron, Eph'm," he said, slowly, "You' case needs advisement wid pra'r. I ain' sho dat we wanter lie clutterin' up de Kingdom of Ilebbcn wid chicken thieves, an' you better stay right on de nio'ners' bench till dc mectin' am done, an' we kin dezamine yo' state ob sin for per ticklers." Free Press. Capt. Cable. Crew of Slave.. The death of Capt. George W. Cable, one of the earliest of Missouri River stcaniboatmen, cuts the list of old-timers notably. He was 84 years Did when he died. He had been master, mate, engineer, owner, and pilot, nc was 23 when he began his zarecr. In rive years he was a licensed engineer. Three years later be was coui missioned as a pilot from New Orleans to the llocky Mountains and on the Upper Mississippi to St Faul. As those were the days of mag nificent salaries in the steamboating busltcss, Capt. Cable made a great deal of money by carefully invest ing the liberal pay that he received. It was not long until he became a steamboat owner in his own name. Of the famous boats of the forties and fifties that he owned the Edward Walsh. George Collier, Mary Mc Donald, and Luther Kcnnett were the largest and fastest Later ho was master and part owner of the John Anil, probably the fastest boat that ever cut the muddy waters of the Missouri Kiver. The crew of the Aull were negro slaves, the property of the boat man agement. When Capt. Cable was roo;i prosperous he used to while away the evenings on the hurricane deck, throwing handfuls of silver half-dollars into the air, letting them fa!:n the forecastle, where he could watch the crew scramble for them. Misfortune overtook hiiu with the joinings of the railroads. His boats and other property were swept away, leaving him in his old age poor in money and health, with only a memory of the brighter days to cheer him. The sooner a man becomes convinced of the things ha can't do the quicker lir wi'l succeed in life. Measured by our time standard, there are forty years of constant day light, followed by forty years of un broken night, around the poles ol Uranus. And the sun rises in the wee and sets in the east there. If thou thy part do well, the prize ii sure; all shall inheret bliss who to th' end endure. " " Ibev. dr. mm. THE BROOKLYN DITINE S SUN DAY SJSRMON. Subject: TIi Tragedy of Dress." Tet "Whoso adorning let it not ho that outward aflornias of plniting the hair and tha wearing ot gold or of putting on ot ap pare), bat let It b ths hidden man of tha heart." I Peter ill., 3, 4. That we should all be clad Is proved by ths opening of thetirnt wardrobe in paradfcw, with Its apparel ot dark: gnea. That we shook! aU, aa far as our mniuis allow ui, fee I'eautlfnlly and graoefully appareled la proved by the tart that God never made a wave tot He gilded it with golden sunbeams, or a tree but He garlanded it with blossoms, or a sky but He studded tt with stars, or al lowed even the smote of a furnaoe toasoend but He columned an l turreted and domed and scrolled it into outlines ot indeserilable gracefulnpos. Wtieu I see the apple or chards of the spring nud the pnrmntry ot the autumnal forcets, I come to the conclu sion that, if nature does ever Join the nhurub, while she may be a Quaker in the silence of her worship, she never will be a Quaker in the Kyle ot her dreeo. Why the notches of a frn leaf or the Mitmcn of a water lily? Whv, when the day departs, doos it let the folding doors of heaven stay open SO long when it might go in so quickly? One summer morning I saw an army ot a million spenrs, euch one adorned with a diamond ot the first water I mean the grass, with the dew on it. When the prodigal came home, his father not only put a cont on his bock, but jewelry on hut hand. Christ woro a beard. Paul, the bachelor apostle, not nffllcted with any sentimentality, admired the arrangement of a woman's hair when he said in his epistle, "If a womnn have long hair, it is a glory unto nor. There will be a fashion in heaven as on earth, but it will be a different kind of fashion. It will decide the color of the dreus, and the population ot that country, by a reantiful law, will wur white. I say thueo things as a background to mr sermon to show you that I have no prim, precise, prudish or vat iron theories on the subjoet of human apparel. Uut the goddess of fashion has set up her throne in this world, and at thoHoun 1 of tlie timbruls we are all expeeted to tail down and worship. The Old and New Testament of her litole are j the fashion plates. Her altars smoke with I II U I L1L l ..111 W,,,T30, 1UUIUO U'. 1'u 1. 1. of 10.000 victims. Jn her temple foir people stand in the organ loft, and from thm there oomee down a cold driz-Ele of muc, frerzing on the eurs of her worshipers. This goddeea of fashion has become a rival of the Lord of heaven nnd earth, and it is biirti time that wo un!itubrd our batteries BU.tiust this idolatry Wb'n I come to count the victltrs of fanhlon. I And aa many maeuline as feminine. Men make an eaxy tirade against woman, as though she were the chief worshiper at this Idolatrous brine, and no doutit some men in the more conspicuous part of the pew have already east glances at the more retired part of the pew, their look a prophecy of generous dis tribution. My sermon shall be as appropriate for one end of the pew as fort he otner Men ore as much the idaiators of fashion as women, but they snenHee on a di:Tt-r.-nt port of the altar, With men the fashion goee to cicars and c'.ubrooms and yachting parties and wine suppers. In the Uuit-l States the men chew up and smoke tlOO, 000.000 worth of tobacco every year. That is their fashion. In London not long atro a man died who started in life with t750,OL0, bat he ate it all up iu gluttonies, sen-ting hk agents to all pans of tne earth for some rare delicacy for the plat sometimes one plate of food costing him ;)00 or 9400. He ate up hU whole fortune and had only a guinea left. With that he bought a woodcock and bad it dressed in the vory bust style, ate It, gave two hours for diunition, then walked out on Westminster bridgeond threwhimself into the Thames and died, doing on a large Male what you and I have often seen done on a small scale. Hut men do not ahetain from milUnery and elaboration of skirt through any superiority ot humility. It is only because such app'-niages would bo a blockade to business. What would snU'-s and trains three and a halt yards long do in a stock market? And yet men are the dls eipln of fanhion just ns much as women. Home of them wenr boots so tight they can hardly walk in the paths of righteousness. And then are men who buy expensive fcults ot elothe and never pay tor thm. and who go through the streets in great stripes ol color like animated checkerboards. I say these things because I want to show you that I am lmtartlal in my discourse, nsl that both sexes, in the language of the snrro gale'a office, shall "share and shore alike. As God may help me, I snail show you what are the de-i. roving and deatuful influences of inordinate fashion. The lir-t baleful Influence I notice is In fraud, illimitable and ghastly. Do you know that Arnold of the revolution proposed to sell his country in esvier to gat mosey to support bis wife's wardrarai? I tootars hers before God and this people that the ?Trt to keep np expensive establishments ml this country is Bending more business men to temporal perdition than all other causes combined. What was it that sent Oilman to the penitentiary and Philadelphia Morton to the watering of tock, and the life insurance presidents to perjured statements n ho tit their assets, and ha completely upset our Aaerican finances? What was it that over threw the United Slates secretary at Wash tntrtoa. tha crash of whose fall shook the continent t Uut why shouM t go to these fa mous defaultlngs to show what men will d in order to keep up great home style and ex pensive wardrobe when you snd I know scores of men who are put to their wits' eu i and are iaebed from .Tnnuarr to bwiculjt in the attempt? Our politician may theor ies until the expiration of their terms of of fice as to the best way of improving our monetary condition in this country It will be of no use. and things will be no oettor until we can learn to put on our heads and backs and feet and hands no more than we oan pay for. There are clerks in stores nnd banks on limited salaries who. in the vain attempt to keep the wardrobe of their family as snowy as other folks' wardrobes, are dying of muffs and diamonds nnd shawls and high hats, and they have nothing left except wimt they give to cigars nnd wine suppers, and they die be fore their time, nndthey will exp-?ct us min isters to preach about t item as thougti they were the victims of early piety, and afti-r a high class funeral, with silver handles at the side of the Icoffln of extraordinary bright ness, It will be found out that the under taker is cheated out of his legitimate ex penses. Do not send to me to preach tin funeral sermon of a man who dies like that I will blurt out the whole trut and tell that he was strangled to death by his wife's rib bons. Our countries are dr--eed to death. Ton are not surprised to find that tho put ting up one public building in New York cost millions ot dollars more than tt ought to have cost when you find that tue man who gave out the contracts paid more than 5000 for his daughter wedding dress. (fl"J"TH of S thpil" 'Jl l 'Wl--' '- - not rare on Broadway. It Is estimated teat there are 10,000 women In these two cities who hare expended on their personal array t000 a year. What are men to do In ordr to keep np suoh home wardrobes? Steal? That is the only reepeotabie thing they can do ' During the last fifteen yean there have been in numerable One businesses shipwrecked on the wardrobe. The temptation comes in this way A man thinks more of his family thaa of all the world ontstde, and if they Spend the evening in describing to him t'5 superior wardrobe of the family across tb street that theycannot bear the siffht of te man Is thrown on his gallantry and on his pride of family, and without translating hi9 feelings into plain language be goes into ex- tortlon and issuing false stock ami skillful penmanship in writing someboly else's name at the foot of a promissory note, and they all go down together the husband to the prison, the wife to the s -wing machiruaVtribnlation, are entering into the kingdom ot tne cauitren to oe taken care ot oy tnose wns were called poor relations. OV for some new ihe children to be taken care of by those wNswrGod. Christ announced who would make 1 1 I .!... 1 - SI. t- ! 1 I 3 11 , I. U ..n Uaa.ll Shakespeare to arise an J writj the tragedy of human elothes 1 Will yow forgive me if I say In tersest ihaps possible that some ot the men have to forge and to perjure and to swindle to pay for their wives' dressus. I will say it whether Fa foMire me ox not ' Again. inordinate fashion la the foe of all Christian almsgiving. Men nnd women put so rnu -h in personnl display that they otten iiavn nothing for Cod and the ciuse of suf fer hu:n:inity. A Christian m ui crackin g h i'.ilais Hoyal glove across the back by shutting up hu ImjU to 111 lethe cent he puts into the poortiox. A Christian womoji, at the story or the Hottentots, crying colons tears into a t'la handkerchief and then civ- . ing a two ueut piece to the collection, thrift- inu' " "-it biiid so people wul not know but it was a f 10 goidpiece. One hundred dol lars i or inoanse to fashion; two cents tor (tod. Ood gives us ninoty cents out of every dollar. The other ten eents by command ot His Bible belong to Him. la not God liberal according to Hist tithing system laid down In the Old Testament? Is not Ood liberal in riving us ninety cents out of a dollar when He takes but ti? We do not like that. Ws want to have ninety -nine evnta for ourselves nd one for God. Now, I would a great deal rather steal tea ynta from yon than from Qo.I I think one reason why a great many people do not get U'- ; in werMly accumulation foster Is be ause they do not observe this divine rule. i 3od says, 'Well, if that man is not satisded with ninety cents of a dollar, then I will :ake the whole dollar, and I will give it to :ho man or woman who is honest with Me." Th Krealeet obstacle to charity in the Chris .ian oburch to-day is the fact thnt men ex Bend so much money on their table, and wo nen so niuoh on their drees, they have got lothlng left for the work of God and the world's betterment. In my first settlement it Belleville, N. J.. the rjiwi o" missions was being presented one S ihbath, and a plea 'or the cn.inty of the people was being made, when an old Christian man in the audience to his balance ani said right out in the xiidat of the sermon, "Mr. Talinage, how are we to give liberally to those grand and glorl u causes when our families dress as they lot" I iid not answer that question. It was the onU- ti no iu u;y life w.ien I ha 1 nothing to si v. Aeain, inor.hnve fa-iaion Is riUtraelloa to pn'ille worship. You know very well there are a good many people who come to church Jnt as they sro to the races to se who will come out first. What a flatter it makes in ' church when so-ne vmin with extraordi nary display of f iahlo i eo nes In ! ''What a love of a l oiinM ' cays one. "What a per fect fnsht 1" aiys 50). Tor tho most merci less critics in the world are fashion critics. Men and women with souls to be save 1 pass ing the hour in won li-riug wluro that man got his cravat or wh.-.t storo that woman patron: s. In many of our chnrclnie the preliminary exerc-s are taken up with the discussion of warlrobes. It is piti ible. Is it not won derlul that the Lord does not strike the meeting houses with lightninK? Wh.it dls-i traetlou of puMIc worshipl Dying men and, and women, whose bodies we soon to be turned into dost, yet bsfore three worlds strutting like peacocks, the awful question of the soui's destiny submerge I by the ques tion of navy blue vtlvet and long fau train skirt, long enong to drag no the church aisle, the haaand's ntop'. offl.re. shop, fac tory, fortune an i the a-lmiration or half the people in the building! M-n anl women come late to ohnrch to show their clothes. People sitting down in a pew or taking up a bymnbook, ait absorbed at the s ime time iu personal array, toslng : R'e, mv oal, and stretch thy wing; Tny b-W-r portion trace. Rise from transttorr thtnws Toivftr 1 h&Ten, 1117 native place. 1 adopt the Kn's-opillm prayer an t sir, "Good Lord, deliver m " Insatiate fashion also bl!ttles the intel lect. Our minds are enlarged or they dwin dle just in proportion to the import'ta -a of the subject on which we constantly dwell. Can you imagine anything more dwarfing to the human intellect than the study of fash lonf I see men on the street who, judging from their elaboration, must hive taken two hours to arrange their apparel. After a few yesirs of that kind of absorption, which on ) of McAllister's magnifying glass will be powerful enough to make the man's caanw ter visible? They all land In idiocy. I have seen men at the summer watering places, through fashion, the mro wreck of what they once were. Sallow of chee -. Meagre of limb. Hollow at the chest. Sho -ing no animation save in ruhimr aero 1 room to pick up a lady's fan. Simpering alongthu corridors the same eomplim-nt-4 they Htmpared twenty years ago A Xew York lawyer at UiiltM Stat" Hut d. S tr.i toa, within our ceariuir. rashel n-ross a room to say to a sensible woman, "1'oa ai 1 as sweet as pea-h The foils o faahlo 1 are myriad. Fashion not ouly destroys the boly, but It makes idiotic the intelleot, Yet. my friends, I have giv-n vou only tho milder phase of this evil. It shu sa great multitude out of heaven. Tum first peiil thunder that shook ijinai demanHl. "l'TVi Shalt have no other Go 1 before Me," and you will have to choos h-tween the go Mvs ot fashion and the Chritian Go I. There are a irreat many seats in hoarsu, and they are all easy seats, tun not one sent lor the devotee of fashion. Heaven is for raeek anl quiet spirits. Heaven Is forthoe who think more of their souls thnn of thoir ho lies. Heaven is for those who have more joy iu Christian charity than In dry goo is religion. Why. if you. with your idolatry of fashion, sheu! i somehow git into heaven, you would be fur putting a French roof on the "homo of many mansions." Give up this idolatry of fas!iion or give up heaven. What would you do standing beside the Countess of Huntiuirton. whose joy It was to build chapels for the poor, or with that Christian woman ot Boston who fe I 100J children of the street at Fanemil Hall on New Year's day, giving out as a sort of doxology at the end of the meeting n pair of shoes to eaeii one of them, or those Dorcases of mo lorn soe'etv who have consecrated their nee lien to the" Lord, and who will get eternal rewir I for every stitch they take? Oil. men and women, give up the idolatrj of fashion! The rivalries nu.i the competi tions of such a life are a stupendous wretch edness. You will always hud some one witb brighter array and with more palatial resi aenee, and wttsi mvnder kid gloves that make a tighter fit. And if vou buy this thing and wnr It vou will wish you had bought something els and vceaw tr. And the frets ofsneha life will bring the crow's teet to yonr temples Vpfore they are due, and when yon come to die you will have a miserable tim. I have w'n men and women of fash ion die, and I never saw one of them die well. The trappings off, there they lay on the tumbled pillow, and there were just two thingsthat bothered them a waste I life and a coming eternity. I could not paeiTy thorn, for their body, mind and soul had been ex hausted iu the worship of fashion, snd they eonl I not anpreidnte the gospel. When I knelt by their bedsido, they were mumbling out their regr.its an t saying. '"0 do 1 1 O God1" Their garments hung up in the wardrobe, never again to lie seen by them. Without any exception, so far as my mem ory serves me, they die I without hopo and went into eternity unprepared. The most ghastly deathbeds on earth nro tbeone where aman dies of delirium tremens and the other where a woman diesafter hav ing sacrificed all h;tr faculties of body, mind and soul in the worship of fashion. My friemis, we must appear in judgment to an swer for what we have worn on our bodies as well as for what repentences we have exer cised with our souls. On that day I see coming in Bean Bru-n-mel of the last century, without his cloak, like which all F.ni-land got a clonk, nnd with out his cane, like which nil England got a cane, without bis snuiTnox. like wiilcii all England cot a snuffiiox ne, the fop of the age-, particular about everything but his morals, nnd Aaron Burr without tno lett -rs that down to old nire b showed iu pri :e to prove his early wicked gallantries, an 1 Ab salom without his hair, and Marchioness Pompadour w thont her titles, nnl Mrs. Arnold, the belle of Wall street, when that was the center of fashion, without her frip peries of vesture. And in great hagg tr lnes they shall go away into eternal expatriation, while am ing the qneens of heavenly society will ba found Tasuti, who wore the inodst veil before the palatial bacchanalians, an 1 Han-lab, who annually ma le a little coat for Samuel at the temple, aufl Grandmother Lois, the ances tress of Timothy, who .imitaled her virtue, and Mary, who gave Jesus C!iriSt to the world, and many of you, the w.vjs and mot beta and sisters and daug iters of the present Christian church, who, through great Whosoever doeth the will of God, the Sams Is My brother. My sister, Mv mother." Tbo angriest enr will fawn at tho feet of a begger if Le has a bone to throw him. WITH HIS WHIP. I ''"-llid.oJ the Kevolver From tho Sap ! Itoliher's I! m.l. j 'lThcra is quits a difference be-v iftcen stuging iu the early days of th ' State and now," said William' j Miller, th : owner of the stae line running from Cazaaero to Lkiah. "When I ramn here from Boston in 1854, I drifted about a bit, and dually went into the service of, Charles McLaughlin, the man who was afterward killed by Jerome Cox. He was the owner of the longest stage line in California at that time. It ran with relays from San Joie to Los Angeles. 'I reuiemher once, in a Jonely coast range canyon, through Thich the road wound, we had a little ex perience that was thrilling for the moment, It was about 10 o'clock and a moonlight night. I was just put ting: the horses through. The staue was full of passengers, and t ere was a heavy treasure box. "Ju t as I got around a bend in the roa 1 1 saw a figure of a man on hor-ebacit st inding by the side of the road. He yelled to stop, and I saw a Klin barrel gleam in the moonlight. The horses were going at a speed that might be callefl breakneck, and 1 ust made up my mind to taki the c ancc of t'cttinvr through. 1 saw the gnu raised to the lellow's shoul der as we approached. 1 haa my Iong whip in my hand, and with a iesperatiun born of peril of the mo iiient 1 made a vicious swipe at him. "1 don't knowiow itoccurred, but the lash wound itself around thrf j;un, and as we dashed by the whip was drawn taut, and I knew it had caught, s-o held fast. I was nearly pulled out of my seat, but the gun was dragged from the robber's hand and fell to the ground, at the same time it was discharged by the shock. It rattled along the road for o,uite a distance before the whiplash un wound itself. 1 don't know what the highwayman thought, but I'll bet he was surprised." San Francvsco ( all. I.iglitin"; from Storage. Lighting cars electrically by stor fijre Latteries has now been practiced on the Chesapeake and Ohio road for s-imc months and at present ciuht coaches, eiht combination, eight ex j ress, live dining and four postal cars are provided with the necessary ap paratus. A comparative statement jl the cost of working: and mainten ance, lndluding interest charges of these thirty-three ca s, twenty-one cars lighted by l'intsch gas and 137 tars lighted with kerosene oil hat re rcntly been tent to the General Man t.' ier ot the road. The report states i hat the cost of the electric lighting is about 13 per cent less than that of lighting by l'intsch gas and 70 per cent, more than with kerosene lamp- The st'iraue batteries are l.o.'d in oblong boxes weighing com plete about t:0J pounds, forty boxes be'ug enough to light an ordinary ttiac-h from .New York to Cincinnati ;u l return, althorgh most of the cars tarry six boxes. In the run between, these cities tho apparatus rerjuires no attention vhatcer, the trainmen turning the lijht on and oil as re quired. The cells are charged ati Covington, Ky., where there are two dynamos driven by a seventy horse power engine running steadily ten hours a day. The battery is built up of lead plate3 laid horizontally,' the positive and negative plater be ing separated by a special packing. The negative plates wear out very slowly, say in e'ght or nine years, but the life of the positive plates is; only about eighteen months. Al though the plates a:e kept in rub ber ce le and are handled carefully at the i barging stations, tho constantj jarring of the cars is found to hasten, their destructi hi, ju-t as does the 'arring of street railway cars. Mahan on liati le iSliips. j Capt. Mahan was asked some ques-. ' tions the other day by an English- man about thp battle ship of the fu-: t ;ro, ana this was his answer: "Mil- itary superiority in warfare depends; upon heavy blows struck at the enemy's organized fighting force, uch blows must be struck by massed forces, the units of which should bo individually powerful for offense and defense, because so only can they be brought under t he unity of command essential to success. The same agi I gregatc of force in two or throe dlf- ferent, ves.;o!i wl I rarelff bp nminl tr that concentrated in (die. because of" the diiliculty of insuring mutual sup port. This means heavy vessels or. battle ships. Of course, like all other statements, this means limita-! tion. The sie of vessels is condi tioned not only by construction con-, sulerations, but by the fact that you need to scatter at times as well as' concentrate. This involves the ne cessity of diviaing your force into several vessels, because a ship onco built cannot be divided. Uetween the two horns of the dilemma you must strike a mean; but always a battle ship. Condiments. To those who preach simplicity of iict, condiments seem not only un necessary but injurious. Why, they ask, should one take apiece of cheese the '-higher" the better, of course after a full mea", or why is it that we i'avor our viands with sauce this or sa'.ce that? Science has an answer ready: Itecause tho condiments, pickles and cheese are all so many substances which tends to I'avor a flow of the digestive secretions. They stimulate digestion, in other words, because thev cause an in creased s cretion of the saliva and of gastric juice wherewith ourfoods are part indigested. Again, they are agreeable to the palate, and the men tal influence which is thus shed on the assimilation of food is of no mean value in determining that good digestion should "wait on appetite." The first known European library originated in the present to the family of lirgulus by tho Iloman Senate of all the books seized at the capture of Curtti-igo. Only two people attend a real pic nlc. 3So womax can lace herself so tight 4s a man can drink himself. . There are 13,009 varieties of postage itaaiM in the worliA I A GOOD BREAD CRUSADE. .' An Englishman Will Try to Accomplish Much Needed Reform. Of all the crusades recently started for the refor.n, improvement, or pro. pagotion of this, that, or tho other, the very latest is one looking to tha ne Iter ment of physical mankind through the correction ot dietetic er. rors of various sorts into which civil ized people have fallen. An English man named Herbert William Hart ij the high priest and moving spirit ol this crusade, and although 55 yean of age, he is said to be a most c m. vlnclng example of the excellence of bis ideas as applied. Mr. Hart and such followers as he has alreadt gained . hold to the belief that the nervousness, lack of reserve force, and general want ot robustness among moderns, especially the clas-ea living in cities and engaged in seden tary occupations, are due almost en tirely to lack of proper nourishment. Even the present labor and business troubles, theyaver, are due to mental depression and excitement superin duced by want of wholesome and di- I crest.lblft food. "With the meat we eat and tho veg etables even, the crusaders have no particular quarrel. It is the bread that a majority of the clvilied pco. pie of to-day put into their stoma In which Mr. Hart and his disciples severely condemn as being innulrit ious, provocative of fermentation and consequent dyspepsia and other dis orders, and altogether harmful in various ways. Our bread, made o; bolted and reboltcd wheat Hour, pay they, contains little else but starch, and starch docs not supply neaily ail the requirements of the human sys tem. Wheat, as taken from straw, contains a number of elements elim inated in the modern milling pro. cesses which are absolutely necessary to the restoration of tissue and the formation of blood an i bona Conse quently bread should be made from whole wheat flour i. e. Tour suanu ' factured by the si mole process of crushing the wheat g.ains. It was upon such flour, says .Mr. liart, that the apostles built up the constitu tions which enabled t hem to perform their great work ot evangcliat ion a work requiring wounderful physical energy and endurance as well as great mental power, it was upon whole wheat f.ou ', they sav, that tha Greeks became the most learned, the most artistic, and the handsomest people the world has known, and upon It the Konians nourished the warriors and statesmen which made their capital the mistress of h8 whole known world. Shakspearc,' most industrious and lertilc-bralned of all poets and writers, was wont to take his own selected grain to Lucy's mill and have it made into meal from which no element was eliminated,' and the American and African abo rigines, whose splendid health and sinewy frames have caused the white man envy, never ate breadstuff of anv other kind than that containing Mic whole grain until brought into con tact with civilization. Lime, iron, and sllex are the prop erties of wheat climated in modern bread making, and they are all vi tally uecessary to the bumau consti tution. When Mr. Hart and his fol lowers have succeeded in bringing the world to a realization of this fact, and consequent rational milling and mau- ! ufacturc ot breadstuffs. it is safe to say that the general health will be vastly improved, even if all men do not become marvels ofstrength and intellect, all women paragons o:' beauty and grace, and all doctors and dentists unnecessary and suierlluou. adjuncts of society. Mispronunciation of WiirdH. Many mispronunciations mav be nc rounted for on the ground of laziness inherent in man. It is a yreat deal easier to pronounce the vtwel sounds than the consonant sounds; and, by the way, it i:i a curi ous fact that man is a consonant sounding animal; animals use vowels; it is the province of man to shape these vowels into words with the use jf consonants. Hence, Homer de llties) man as "speech-dividing." It is a great deal easier to say sah, mistah, and wall, than to say sir, mister, and war. It is easier to say mornin', cvenin', than morning, evening. IUit on the other hand, thera are cases when thedestroyerof English seems to take considerable trouble to accomplish his purpose. Is is easier to say Ixirrer than borrow, or garding than garden sauce.-' It is easier to say 'oss than horse; but why go to the gratuitous labor of prefixing an It in a great many cases where it does not belong? Almost anybody could say asparagus, but it seems to require some little etymological erudition to say sparrow-grass. A country friend of the writer invariably called succo tash suecothash, being apparently under the impression that it is an in genious compound of the vegetable and the animal, coming under the ' general name of hash. Another ac j luaintance, who speaks very delihcr- ately, and with an e xasperating-- "I ' know-I-am right" expression of coun tenance, laboriously adds a "g" to all words ending with "n" as capting, Hosting, and so on. His mispro nunciation seems to proceed from a de sire to be unusually exact and finished in speech, and it would require some courage to call him to account for his errors. stealing electricity. The progress of science has ca'.lcd A new crime into existence. A case recently came before a certain law rourt in which a man, with some Knowledge of electricity, caused the ineter which registered the amount which he used for illuminating pur poses to record less than he had con turned. The lawyer who defended him ingeniously argued that as elec tricity was an intangible something of which no one could really state the exacPnature. and that at law it was actually unknown, his client could not be convicted of stealing it. Hut the lawyer met his match on the other side in one who showed that gas was also unknown at common law, but was recognized as a thing that could be stolen. In the sequel the judge took advantage of a certain statute which makes fraud committed with a view to theft, a felony, and the man who stole the electricity is therefore likely to meet with the re. ward of his misdeed- - V I . '. 1 i v.- T7ZT1,