lilitfet 1 I - THE OONBTITUTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW8 B. P. BOHWEIER. K4ltr J Proparteter. VOL. XLVIJI. MIFFLINTOW1N. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 0. 1894. NO. 43 REV. DR. TALMAGli THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S 8Vtf DAY SBHMON. Subject: "The Tax Collectors version." Con- Titt: "This day ts salvation came to this honse." Lake xix., 9. Z-tcc'iens was a politician ant a faxsath erer. TT had an honest calling, but tht opportunity 'or "stealing" was so Innre the temptation was too mti'-h tor him. The T!IMenv ho "ma a sinner" that i. intho ru'lie sense, now manr fln men have been m'ne.l by official position ! Tt Is an awful thinir foranv man to seek office under rov- rnnient unless his principles of Integrity nrn rteeplv flxd. M iiny a man upright In an Insignificant position has made shipwreck In a irrent one. A far as T can tell, in the city o' Jericho this Zaccheus helonged to what rniirht be called the "ring." They had things theirown way. fiiccessfully avoiding expo Mire, if hy no other way perhaps by hiring Fomebodr to break in and steal the Toneb er. Notwithstanding his bail reputation there were streaks of good abont him, as there are aotit almost every mnn. Gold Is fonni in nnirtz, and sometimes In a small Iienvntaire. Jesus was coming to town. The people tnrne 1 out en masse to see Him. Here He comes, the Lord of glory, on foot, dnst cov ered and travel weary, limping along the r, enrrving the griefs and woes of the world. He looks to be sixty years of age, when He is only about thirty. Zaccbens was a short man and could not sea over the peo ple's heads while standing on the ground, o he o? up into a syenrr.-e tre that swan; 'ts nrm clear over the road. Jesns advanced nml'l th; Tild excitement of the. surging crow'. The most honoralilo and popular men ff the citv are looking on and trying to pain His attention. Jesus. Instead of re cur iimr them, looks no at the littte man In tt.o free and siys : "Zaecheus. come down. I am pofng home with you." Everybody wns disgust a 1 to think that Christ would go home with so dishonorable a man. I see Christ entering the front door of the rnne of Zuccheus. The King of heaven tin 1 earth its down, and as He looks around on the pine sn i the family He pronounces the tx ne.lli't'on of the text. "This day is ssl v:'fon come to this house. .icrrieii na'i monnien i ne sreamore tree it of mTo inon sitivenes. He wanted to on se how tbis stranger looker the color of Hiaevcs. the length of His hair, the contour or His eitnre. the height of nis stature. Aii-i tii.iuv i-'OT'ie in mis iiny get up in-toihe:re-et curiosity or speculation to see Christ. T'lev ask a "thousand qu-er ques tions aliout His divinity, about God's sov ereignty and the eternal decrees. They speculate and eriticis nnd hang onto the ontside limb of a great sycamore, but they must come down from that if they want to l saved. We cannot be saved as philoso phers, but as little children. You cannot go to heaven by way of Athens, but byw.iyol II tnlepem. Wiiv be perplexed about the way sin cams Into the world when the great question Is bow we shall get sin driven out of our hearts. How many spend theirtime in criticism and religions speculation ! They take the rose of Sharon or the lillv of the valley, pull ont the anther, scntfer the corolla and say. "Is that the beautiful flower of religion that you are talking at ontV" No flower is beautiful after you have torn it nil to pieces. The path to heaven is so plain that a fool need not make nny mistake about If. and yet mea stop an I cavil. Suppose that, going toward the Pacific slope, 1 had resolved that I would stop until I could kill all the grizzly beara and the panthera on either side of the way. I would never have got to the Pacific; coast. When I went out to hunt tho grizzly bear, the grizzly bear would have come out to hnnt me. Here is a plain road to heaven. Men ssy thev will not take a step on It until they can make game of all the theories that bark nnd growl at them from the thickets. They torget the fact that, as they go Jont to hunt the theory, the theory comes oat to hnnt them, ami so they perish. lr. Ludlow, my professor in the theo logical seminary, taught me a lesson I shall never forget. While putting a variety of questions to him that were perplexing ha turned upon me, somewhat in sternness, but more in love, and said, "Jlr. Talmage, vou will have to let God know some things t hat you don't." We tear our bands on the spines of the cactus instead of feasting our eye on its tropical bloom. A great com pany of pople now sit swinging them- Bf!ive UU (U9B)Ui:ilira lien ui uinu uuur, and I cry to you : Zaecheus come down ! Come down out of your pride, out of your inquisltiveness, out of your speculation. You cannot ride Into the gate of heaven with coach and four, postilion ahead and lackey behind. 'Except ye become as little children, ye cannot enter the kingdom of God. God has chesen the weak things of the world to confoundthemlglity. Zioctieus, come down, come down !" I notice that this taxgatharer accompanied his surrender to Christ with the restoration of property that did not belong to him. Ho says. "If I have taken anything by falsa ac cusation, I restore fourfold" that Is, If I have taxed any man for 1 10,000 when he had only f 3000 worth of property and put in my own pocket the tax for the last $3000, I will restore to him fourfold. If I took from him tlO, I will give him 4n. If I took from him tto. I will give him 1K0. Hundreds ot thousands of dollars have been sent to Washington during the past few rears as conscience monev. ' I innnoM that money was sent by nvn who wanted to be Christians, but found they could notuntil they made restitution. There Is no need of our trying to come to Christ as long ns we keep iraudulently a dollar or a farthing la our possession that belongs to another, tiup po you have not money enough to pay yo:.r debts and for the sake of defrauding your creditors you put your property in your wim's name. You might cry until the It. - -d judgment for pardon, hut you would r -t - ;t it. without first making restitution. In times of pro-perity it is r'giit, ngaiust a r-unv day, to assign prop-rty to your wife, I ut if, in time of perplexity and tor the sake of defrauding your creditors, you makesaab esML'nmcut you become a culprit before Go.l, an 1 you may ns well stop praying un til you have made restitution. Or suppose one man loans another money on bon i or Hiortgnge, with the understanding that the mortuage can lie quiet for several years, but as soon as the mortgage is given commences foreclosure the sheriff mounts the auction block, and tho property is struck down at half price, and tho mortgagee buy it in. The mortgagee started to get the property at half price and is a thief and a robber. Until he makes restitution there is no mercy lor him. You say : "I cannot make restitution. The partus whom I swindled are gone." Then I s iy, '-Take the money up to the American liiblo Society and consecrate it to Go 1." Zuccheus was wisa when he disgorge 1 his unrighteous gains, and it was hisilrst step in the rignt direction. The way being plain, Christ walked Into the house of Zaecheus. He becomes a differ ent man ; his wife a different woman ; the children aredifferent. Oh, It makes agreat chani in any house when Christ comes into it ! How many beautiful ho nes are repre sented among you? There are pictures on the wall, there is music in the drawing-room, and luxuries in the wardrobe, and a full sup ply in the pantry. Even if you were half asleep, there is one word with which I could wake you and thrill you through an; through, and that word is "borne V There are also houses of suffering represented In which there are neither pictures nor ward rore nor adornment only oae room, anl a plaincot, or a bunk In acorner. Yet it is the place where your loved ones dwell, and your whole nature tingles with satisfaction wb' n yon think of it and call it home. Though the world may scoff at n and pnr te u. and all the day we be tossed about, "t eventide we sail into the harbor or home. Thcnch there be no rest for us In the busy world, nnd we go trudging about, bearing burdens that well nigh crush ns. there Is a refuge, and it hath an easy chair in wbtcn we mny sit. and a lounge where we may lie, and a serenity of peace In which we may re ros. and that refuge is home. The English soldiers, sitting on the walls around Bevas. topol, one night heard company or mu- "icians playing "tiome, dwwji Home, and it 1 mm ht the whole iriiT broke oat Into sobs and wailing, to great was their home- s'cl-re-s. Cod pity the poor, miserable wretch who has no home ! Now. uppos Christ should come Into your honse. First the wife and the mother would feel His nresence. Religion almost flwnys begins there. Tt easier for women to become Chr'ss;.".r.s tl-an Vr tis men. They .'o not fight so against God. If womnn fcn-pd man orlcinally away from holiness, row she tempts him back. Bhe may not ke sny fnss abont If. but Fomehow every body In the honse knows that there Is a c"inn-e In the wife and -lother. She chide; the children trore r"-itiy. Her face some time lights up v'.ih an nnearth'v glow. 8he goes Into some unoccupied room for a little while, an 1 the husband goes not after hr. nor nb hr se t- there. Heknowt w'thcut sskfpg that has been praying. The husband nofrs that herfacels brighter than on th"iv when, years aito. thev stool ett'.o vrri-ige a'lar. and he knows lhat J-tn. has been rmttin? upon her "brow a n-r-Mh sweeter than the orange blossoms. K'-c pnts the children to 1ed. not satisfied with the formal prayer that they once offered, but rhe lingers now and tells them of Jesus wr.o Messed little eMMren end o' the goo I place where thev all hope to b" a! l ist. An 1 . then she k'ssrs ' -i rood nlt'ht w'th some, thing that th" child feels to be a he-iven'v benediction something that shall hn'd onto the bov a'fer he has I ecome a man fortv of fl t v years of ecr". for there Is soretblng fu a coo i. lov'ni-. Christinn toother's kiss that fl'tv rears cannot wipe off the cheeif. Now the bnehnnl Is ditress l ar l an noyed and almost vsft. If sh- wonl 1 on'v speak to hi-n he wo:tM "'.loir her un." H does not liko to sav anvt'.iin? aSout it. but he knows that she has a hop thst he his not ant a ptc" tint he has no. H knows that, dyin? as he now Is. he emnot goto the j same place. He cannot .tand it anv longer, j Rome Sunday n'ght. asthersit inthe church j Md by side, th floods o" bi. con1 brvilc forth. He wants to iriv. 1 ut 'n--s tof kno:r how. He hides his face lest oue of his j worldly friends see him, but Ool's s-'r t arouses him, melts him. overwhelm' h'm. And they go home, hns'nn 1 an I wife, in silence, until they get to their roo n, w en , he cries out, "Oh, pray for m !'" Am! th-y kncel down. They cannot pe:iV. T'i 1 word will not come. But Go 1 dors not wnt ! any words. He looks down an 1 answers oh and groan anil outrunning tend-rnes. That night they do not sleep nny for tnlkin-j of all the years waste 1 au 1 of that Sivonrwiio ceased not to call. Before morning th" have lnld their plans for a new life. Morn ing comes. Father and mother drscend from the bedroom. The children do not know what Is the matter. They never saw father with a Bible in his han I before. He says. "Come children ; I want yo j all to s't down while we read nnl pr.iv." The chil dren look at ench other and an almo-t rii-- t posed to lau'-a, put tn-y s o tn:r p ir.-n'a . are in deep earnest. It is a short e.ianrer that the father reads. He is a good re t at other time, but now he does not get oi tnuob. He sees so much to linger on. His voice tremble". Everything is so strangely Dew to him. They kneel that is, the father nnd mother do. but tho children come down one by one. They do not know that thev must. It is some time before they ail get down. The sentences are broken. Tho phrases are a little ungrammatical. The prayer begins nbruptly and ends ab ruptly ; but, ns far as I can an Jerstnnd what they mean. It Is about this : "O Saviour, helpns We do not know how to pray. Teach a '. Wo cannot live any longer in the way we have been living. We start to-day for heaven, nelp us to take these children along with us. Forgive us for all the past. Strengthen us for all the future, and when the journey is over take us where Jesus is nnd where the little babe is that we lost. Amen !" It ended very abruptly, but the angels came out nnd leaned so far over to listen they would have fallen off the battle Blent bnt for a stroke of their wings and Vied : "Hark, hark ! Bjhold, he prays P That night there is c rap at the bedroom door. '"Who is there?" cries the father. It Is the ol 'est child. "What U the matter? Are you sick?" "Xo ; I want to be saved." Only a little while, and all the children are brought Into the kingdom of God. And there is great Joy in the house. Years pass op. The telegraph goes click, click I What is the news flying over the country? Coma home. Father is dying!" The children all gather. Some come in the last train. Some, too late for the train, take a carriage across the country. They stand around the dying bedofflhe father. The oldest son upholds the mother and says : "Don't cry. mother. I will take care of you. The parting bless ing is given. Xo long admonition, for be has, through years, been saying to nU chil dren all he bad to say to them. It Is a plain "good-by !" an 1 the remark, "Iknowjou will ail be kind to your mother." and all Is over. Life's duty dn-. as sinks the rlar. Llfrht rrorn lt load, the spirit rites. While heaven and earth combine to car How Lle'd the 1 1 .hteous wbea he diss. A whole family saved lorever! If the de luge come, they are all in tho ark father, mother, sons, daughters. Together on earth, together In heaven. What makes it so? Ex plain it. Ziccheu oneday took Jesus home with him. That Is all. Salvation came to that bous. What sound is it I hear to-night? It I: Jesus knocking at the door of your bouse. Behold a stranrer at th door! He gbtlr Kneckfl has kno-kel tKfore. If you gazel out of voar window and satf me going up your front steps, you would not wait, but go yourself to open tho door. Will yon keep Jesus standing on I In outside, His locks wet with the dews of the night? This dav is salvation come to thy house. The great want of your house is not anew carpet or costlier picture! or richer furniture. It is r Jesus Up to forty years men work for them selves, after that for their children. Now, what do you propose to leave them. Nothing but dollars? Alas, what an inheritance! it Is more likuly to be a cura-j than a bl sing. Your own common sense and observation tell you that money, without the divine blessing. Is a cur:". You must soon leave your children. Your s:ioulJer3 are not so strong as they were, and yon know that they will soon have to carry their own burdens. Your eyesignt is not so clear as once. They will soon have to pick out their own way. Your arm is not so mighty as once. They will soon have to tight their own battles. Oh, let it not be told on judgment day that you let your family start without the only safeguard the religion ot Christ. Give yourself no rest until your children are the sons and daught-rs ot the Lord Almighty. Your son does just ns you do. He tries to walk like you and to talk like you. The daughter imitates the mother. Alas, if father ami mother miss heaven, the children will ! Oh, let Jesus come into your house. Do not bolt the hail door, or the parlor door, or the kitchen door, or the bejroom door ag linst Him. Above all, do not bolt your heart. Build your altar to-night. Take the family Bt lo lying on the parlor table. Call together ns many of your family as may be awake. Bead a chapter, nnd then, if vou can think of nothing else besides the Lord's Prayer, sav that. T.ia- will do. Heaven will hav ut, a y,i..r ...-U-". You enu put your lr ku uur pillow, lejiiug that, wnether yoj Wake up in this world or the next, all u well. In that great, ponderous book of the judgment, where are recorded all the im portant events of the earth, yon will read at last the statement that this was the day when salvation came into your boose. On. Zaecheus, come down, come down I Jesu is passing by 1 The natives of MahooS in the interior of Jndin, dvo their noses bin ! jnst before entering ba'tle. The Kepnb'ic of Mexi o eontaics twenty seven StaU-p, trvo terri oms und one t'ederil district. Ducks fattened on celerpossess an exquisite flavor stmilnr lo that of the famous canvjsbnck of the epicure. Minneapolis miKssawover 3o0,0ilf),. OCO feet -of lnmbr every yesr. ocd turn out 7 nnO.Ono barrels of flour. 1 be moon is lelieved to he the only member of the planetary ytem wl ic'i is without an atmosphere. The State of Oldo spent S20,00D in military protection d ir;ng tho r cent strike of coal miners. The protective pover of co wpox inoculation against smillpox via discovered lv Edwrd Jenner, of t.i g land, ia 1749. Five men can easily hold down a lion, tut Bine are required to hold a t tiger. IF MOTHER WOULD LISTEN1. If mother would listen to me, dean, Bad would freshen tn9 faded gown. She would sometimes take an hour's rest, And sometimes - ir.p to town. tVnd it shouldn't to all for the chlldrea Tlio fun .ml tliu cheer an! the play j With tlio patient droop on the tired mouth Au 1 the "Jlother has had her day ! True, mother has had her day, dean. When you won ba'ies three, led she stepped about the farm and the house As busy as eTer a bee. TF hen she rocked you all to sleep, dean, And sent you all to school, and wore hersalf out and did wither. . And lived by the Golden Rule. And so your turn has come, dears. Her hair is growing white, &nd her eyes are gaining the far-nv , '.V: That peers beyond the night. One ot these days In the mornn - Mother will not be here ; ghe will fade away into silence. Tie mother so true and dear. Then what will you do In the da j " . And what In the gloaming dim ; Ind father, tired, lonesome, then. Fray, what will you do for him? (f you want to keep your mother, You must make her rest to-day , Must give her a share in the frolic, And draw her into the play. 4nd, if mother would listen to me, de : She'd buy her a gown of silk, With buttons of royal velvet. And ruffles as white as milk. And she'd let you do the trotting. While she sat still in her chai-; That mother should have it bard all through, It strikes me isn't fair. Mnrguret E. Sangster, in the Interior. TO THE RESCUE. BZ RICHARD IMVTUXa. XTILi my dyln hour I will re member my first Sunday in Lon don. In the middle ot the week I bad gone np on busi ness which kept me closely occu pied till Saturday night. I was unacquainted with the city beyond the Strand, Chancery Lane and Arundel street, in the last of which I lived at Weldon'a, small private hotel. On Sunday morning came one of the thickest fogs of the year. Misled by the darkness of the midwinter morning 1 was late for breakfast. When I got down to the dining-room I found only one person, a young man of about my own age, at the table. He had arrived very late the night before, and was quite unknown to me. His appearance nnd manner attracted my attention at once. He was tall, dark, good-looking, courteous. Several times during the meal, at which he only drank a cup of coffee, he seemed on the point of speaking to me about something. He was restless and overwrought. I felt strangely drawn toward him, and ex perienced a feeling of relief when at last he said . ' 'My name is Victor Grame. The landlord here knows me. Are you going to church this morning? The rest of the people have set off already." w were alone. "My name," I said, "is Marcus Fall. I had intended going to Newington, but I could no more find my way there than through the centre of the earth to New Zealand." "There is," said he, "a part of Lon don to which if - do not find my way in a couple of hours I shall be a dead man before night. " He groaned and dropped his head into his hands. Xo one could mistake his words, tone, manner. "In that case," said I, "cf course, the fog will not hinder you.'' "Xo, no," said he, raising his face from his hands. "The fog will not hinder me. I could find my way if I were blind. It is the place where the girl I am engaged to lives. " He turned his pale face to the window and stared t it with eyes that did not see. "She is not very ill. I hone?" said L "Xo ; not ill ; and yet she may be at the point of death. If you have fin- ' ished vour breakfast, and can spare a few minutes will yon walk outside? This place suffocates me." J hen we reached the street tho log was so thick we could not see the house opposite. "lamina terrible position!" said young Grame. "I do not know a man in London bnt Weldon, our landlord ; and he is too old for help. My girl's life is in danger in danger from vio lence." "Good Heavens!" cried L "Ir.t aren't there the police?" "The police!" he whispered, with n swift trlance round and then a look of horror in his face, of the police would 'The mere rumor - be fatal! fatal! . Her life hangs on a thread." He leant against an area railing and wrung his hands. In a while he roused himself, drew his hat low over his brows, caught my nrm, and turning toward the Ktrand, said : "Mr. Fall, under ordinary circum stances it would be inexcusable to trouble you, a stranger, with my af fairs. Bnt the circumstances are not. ordinory : they are extraordinary be yond belief, beyond endurance. You r.re young yourself. You can sympa-j thize with me. If you permit me, I; will tell you how I am situated. " "l'ou may tell me with full assurance of my sympathy and assistance, " I said. "For twelve months," he began, "I have been engaged to Miss Folgate, who is now twenty years of age, and r.:i only child. Her father, a solicitor. i i dead. Her mother was glad to take tho position of housekeeper at Sir Ar thur Fennyfather's town house in Dlt'ov Square. Miss Folgate lives with per mother, and now ana then 1 come up to Durham to see her. Mrs. Fol pate i only nineteen years older than ier daughter. She is a woman of rc tcarkably youthful appearance and great personal attractions, romantic tad painfully anxious to marry again. "For some time, a very 6tylish and fascinating foreigner a count, he sayi has been leading Mrs. Folgate tc think he wants to make her his wife. Sir Arthur and Ids family are in tha Biviera. The Derby Squaro house has been nsed by this foreigner ts. a postal address. There have beea Electing ol foreigner! in It meetings; of men eon- faected with some fllegalscheme. Yes terday I got this from Miss Folgate. As he spoke he handed me a ragged piece ot paper covered with faint pen cil lines, crossed and recrossed. "You can't make it out easily and there isn't time to puzzle over it. Tho substance is this : Miss Folgate has in voluntarily overheard what passed ot one of those meetings. The conspirator's discovered her, and she is a prisoner in Derby Square. If she makes any disturbance,' they will kill her. If they are betrayed they will kill her mother, who is no longer in the house. To day between 1 and 3 o'clock there will lui no one in the house but my dis tracted girL I am going to try to snatch her from the knives of '...--- murderous ruffians." "And I will go with you, if I may.'' He seized my hand and for a moment could not speak. "If you will help me to-day you may count on my devotion for life," he saiil at length. "Will you go armed?" ! "Armed? No. If it comes to weap ons we are lost we are dead men ; and she but I will not think of her. It would paralyzed me, and the time for action is almost at hand." "How do you intend getting into the house?" "I must break in. You now know how doubly dangerous in the enter r-so. It is not too late for you to dr.. v. back." "I am with you heart rh.I soul," said I, taking his arm. He set a rapid pace west. "My poor girl," he said, "in locked in an upper room, no doubt. I intend getting in through the fanlight. I can stand on your shoulders. Once hi, I will open the front door. This fog is all in our favor." It was a long walk, during which he never could see across the street. He seemed to find his way by instinct. He never paused or. hesitated. At last he drew up. ' "We are in Derby Square," he whispered. "Tho house is on the south side, Xo. 37. We will cross the roadway and stand with our backs against the railing of the en closure. We have twenty minutes to wait" "Now," whispered he, when he drew up, "we are directly opposite the house. I know the spot by this drooping ash tree." He took off his hat nnd wiped his forehead. j Those were the longest twenty min utes I ever endured. To hi.a they must have been hours. During tlio whole time he never said a word. He leaned motionless against the railing, watch in hand, his eyes fixed upon t ho dial. We could not see even the mid dle of the roadway. At five minutes to one I heard a door open and shut softly, then cautious footsteps stealing away. I looked at Grame. He didn't look at nic. He did not move. He kept his eyes fixed on the dial like one hypnotized. I gazed at the watch myself ; I found I eotild sot now take my eyes off it. I saw the hand pass the hour ; I saw it creep one, two, three minutes beyond the hour. Had he forgotten, or was ho really hypnotized by too intent thought nnd gaze? When the hand touched the fourth minute, he pnt the watch in his poc ket, and catching me by the shoulder moved across the roadway and up to the door of 37. ( "How will you break the glass? Will there not be a great noise?" I whiHperd. I "No; the fanlight is stained glass in lead. Give me a back. " i . In an instant he was up, standing on tDy shoulders and working at the fan light. I could not see, but he must have wrenched out the pieces with amazing celerity and care, for in a few miutes he whispered . "I am going to hang on by my elbows. Take hold of my feet and push me up, I I seized his feet and pushed them up t with all my might. In another minute 1 he had scrambled through and dropped into the halL ' He opened the door. "Come inside. Close the door and wait for me. 1 any of these men are Iwre and I fall, fly. All will then be lost. Save your own life." I He darted past me. For a few mo ments all was silent. Then I heard a crash, as though of a door burst This was followed by the soft, joyf k l cry of a woman, and presently two fig-, area ran down the stairs. I opened the door, and the three of us darted out. I closed tho door softly behind. Grame led ns across the road and we set off at a quick pace through the fog in un broken silence. When we were clear of the square Grame stopped, took the girl in his arms, and crying, "Thank Godt my Aggie 1" burst into tears. The instinct which had guided Grame infallibly earlier in the day now failed him, and we lost our way hopelessly ; but we did not care. It was 5 o'clock when the three of us got to Weldon 's. The lovers spent that evening in the urawing room, and I saw little of them. The peril of Mrs. Folgate's position made absolute secrecy still imperative. Next morning I met Grame at break fast. He said there was no use. of try' ing to thank me for himself or Miss Folgate, whom Mrs. . Weldon had for-, bidden to leave her room, as she was suffering from nervous prostration, but that he owed me a debt he could never pay. I was leaving by an early train for the West, and he promised to write to me no soon as news had been heard of Mrs. Folgate. Four days later I got a tester saying that Mrs. Folgate had been released unharmed, and that there would be some reference to tho affair in the London papers that day or the day after. Next morning the newspapers had an account of the clever frustra tion by the "Vienna police of a daring and gigantic attempt to swindle the banks of that city by a man calling himself Count Wolinski who, with a half dozen accomplices, was arrested just as they had brought their nefarions scheme to perfection and were about to pnt it in operation. "The plot," said the Vienna dis patch, "was one of the most daring ever designed, and among other of the means used by the swindlers to mislead was the fact that letters for their basi of operation, London, were addressed lo tho mansion of a well-known rich baronet, whose town house is in one of the ciost select West End squares. " A few months after I received cords and wedding coke, which assured me tiuxt rll had gone well with the young pi'Gi lc; let from that day to this I na.it not sceu Urarne. or Mrs. Grame, . who was Miss Folgate the first Sunday I spent in London. New York Advertiser.. Flesh-Eating Plants. i A familiar example of the carnivor ons plants or flesh eaters is the little drosera, so common in various por tions of the country. The plant is "small and inconspicuous. The fizst one I ever saw caught my eye by a sudden flash of fiery red light, end kneeling on the damp grass I fairly caught the little carnivore in the act which has rendered it so famous. There wero several tender, delicete Ftalks m the center. and round about it near the ground foe? or five singnlar round, pad-like objects, about the size meroe, in this city, "on its last legs." of small buttons. With the extinction of whaling will These were leaves and their upper end one of the most glorious periods surface was covered with reddish ten- of American sea life, for more true l.icles thKt stood boldly up, each bear- heroism and romance havo clustered jng a deli?i( drop of the dew that about the hardy mariners who havo gleamed and glistened in the sunlight sailed out of Nantucket and New Bed like a veritable garuct. Across the top ford harbors three hundred years and of the leaves a long legged fragile in more to engage in tha perils and hard sect lay, caught but a second before and ships of whaling voyages than Sir Wal dying a most terrible death. ter Scott ever dreamed of investing his Five or six of the hair-like tentu.f heroes with. But, like the feudal were thrown across its legs and wingi--, holding it down and pressing its body nearer and nearer to the leaf, while other rich blood red stalks wera in all positions, bending over to encompass the viciim. The sight was a horror in a miniature and reminded me of the B(.ions of an octopus, or devil-fish, ns the little cephalopod is common" v called. It ha3 eight sucker line. I arms radiating from a small, ba. shaped body, and each arm has all the sinuosity, all the possibility of motion ui' a snake, ever undulating, quivo riu- us if with Burpresscd emotion, while over tho enti.-e moss waves and varied shades of co!or seem to ebb and flow. California Magazine. Miners Killed by Hundreds. A frightful lit of finalities is em bodied in t)ii report of the fc-ecretary of Internal Affairs, which is made up from tho reports of the Mine In spectors of Pennsylvania. This re port has just been issued, and the sta tistics contained in it and quoted by the Philadelphia Eecord are valuable, for they show that apparently little has been accomplished in the effort to doorcase the number of deaths in the mines. The anthracite region of the State is divided inio tight districts and over each district n Mine Inspector has charge. Ho is appointed after a competitive examination by the Gov ernor. . The bituminous coal region is also divided into eight districts, each under the super vision of o:ie Inspector. The total amount of anthracite coal mined in Pennsylvania in 1892 was 45,833,54a tons, and the total amount of bitumin ous coal mined was 46,018,277 tons. Whilo the output of the two great fields ,was almost equal, the cumber ol fatalities lii the 'acthlueite collieries was a! lout three times as great as tho number iu the soft coal mines. Of the eight anthracite districts, fatalities were reported from seven. The total deaths in the mines in these seven dis tricts was 311 ditfing 1892. The In spector of tho third sent no tignres, but ths fatalities there added to the other seven would tiring the total up to at least 370. This many men and boys were killed outright, and several times as many more were injured. Figures were given by six of the eight bituminous Mine Inspectors. In six districts 103 people were killed and probably thirty moro were killed in tho two districts not reported. That would make a total of 133, as against 370 in the anthracite fields. Several inspectors report that the greater tho proportton of foreign miners, th? greater the number of fatalities. A Uailway's System of Oiling, The system of oiling the engines ol tho East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Bailway is to allow so nricli oil to so many miles for passenger, freight, switch and work locomo tives, making a distinction between the different classes. From thirty to thirty-tivo miles to a pint o- lubricat ing oil, ana trim 1UU to ju miles to a American vessels, by tho way, vrith pint of cylinder oil is considered good S0n3One 1 and salted Down East sksp sorviee for large passenger engines oi per3 in command, reached the splendid heavy trains. For consolidation totai o 3,445,200 pounds, which freight engines twenty-five miles to a was rth an average of forty cents a pint of lubricating oil aud seventy-iivj ,)0un;i. Notwithstanding improved to 100 miles to a pint of cylinder oil U anj moro destructive, methods of fish considered good service, and foz la?t usa cf staam vessels which switch engines forty-five to fifty miles ,ollij f0n0w tha whole in young ice, to pint of lubricating oil and 125 to inj the invention of the terrible boom 150 to a pint of cvlimler oil. lb figures represent good average prac tice, but they are frequently exceeilt:i with light trains, there being a record of a light passenger locomotive iui: cicg 200 miles with but a pint oi cylinder oil. New York Newij. Ready of Tongue. The death of Edmund Yalcs, the clever journalist who built up the fortunes of the London World, br'ng about a revival of ane dote concern ing him and his associates. Douglas Jerrold was one of h's. familiar friends, and lutes u;ed i tell the story of escorting him homo one night, when they met two or three drunken roisterers. The ui'.n stumbled up against thctu. and one of them apologized, and asked the way to "Judge and Jury," a popular entertainment of the day.. "Straight on, young man." sa t Jerrold, bending forward to address tho speaker. "Continue in the path you are now pursuing, and you can t fail to come to them." A week before Jerrold died Yates met him at a dionc. where also w;: Albert Smith, whose engagement tu be married was much talked about, The host asked Smith to rioir the bell for dinner, and Jerrold said; "Yes, Albert, why don't you ring th it belle?" Of his godfather, Edmund Byng, x ates had one capital anecdote. Uyng once asked a guest at his owa able: "How did you like that dish?" "It was very toed." Good, sir! Of course it was good, Everything is good that comes tc this table. I didn't ask you if it wai good; 1 asked you how you liked it:'' ; "he's aui right." "Does Digby feel encouraged abouf his matrimonial prospects?" "Yes. He's second choice of tw girls and third choice of four more.1 Judg - " -- . - ' WHALEBONE SUBSTITUTES lATTSES THAT ABE KHXIHCI QEEAT MARITIME INDUSTRY. 17i Product of the Leviathan of the Seas Being Driven Out of the Mar ket hy Cheap Devices. "I T OR the last ten years there haa 1 has been a widespread feeling I among the coast towns of New J England as well as among Jealers in sperm oil and whalebone in all the large American seaports that the American whaling industry in, to use the language of one of the largest deal- ers in baleen, the whalebone of corn- times of the Middle Ages, with their barons and knights and mail-clad war riors, the whaling epoch of American seafaring life, it seems, mast disap pear. Already its sun is far down toward tho ocean rim, though stout craft and stouter hearts are still fitted out in New Bedford to chase the sperm whale through tho "rolling forties" of the Atlantic, or to follow the "bow head" in tho frozen seas of the Arctic' Devices to supply the place of whale-l bone have been multiplying with fear-i fnl rapidity of reseiit years, until now he Down East winding masters are JreauiriT, as stated above, that tho tctual extinction of the whaling indus ;ry is oniy a question of a few years. 1 dozen ye::vs ago the thin, flat strips of whalebone were considered as es sential in tha make-up of a woman's ;orset as the laces that drew it snugly to the form of the owner, while now, according to the statement of a leading manufacturer of corsets, it is the ex ception and not the rule that whale bone is found in a corset. The factory aiaile corset is libbed with such sub Mitutes for whalebone as "feather bone, " hornbone, flat strips of steel, wire, rattan, roed aud coralline, and even a vegetable fibre that grows on the Spanish dagger plant of the Far West is brought into play, sewed down r.nd passed off on the public because it is cheap, and much of it palmed off as genuine whalebone. Nor are corsets the only things into .he manufacture of which whalebone enters largely that is being cheapened and the business being revolutionized by substitutes for the whalebone. These substitutes are gradually driving whalebone out of the factories where whip handles are made, and from the milliners' establishments where whale bone has been used largely in the fash ioning ( f hats and the shaping of waists of dresses, especially the latter. Steadily, but surely the cheap substi tutes are forcing out the genuine ar ticle in dozens of other directioi where it long held a monopoly, su i as the stiffening of shoes for persoi i with weak ankles, etc. The flooding of the markets with substitutes for whalebone began e dozen years ago, but the practice re ceived an immense impetus in 1883, partly through natural causes and partly through the folly of n few owu ers of whalebone in trying to put an outrageous price on the stock of bono held by them, practically all the bone in the market at that time. In the summer of 1891 a sale of whalebone was made in this city, 500 pounds for EG. 70 a pound, waicn was the tiptop price ever paid for whalebone in this or any other country. At that time practically the only whalebone held in the world was tho stosk of 50.00J pounds owned by the Pacific Steam Wlnlmg Company of San Francisco. This hhort supply was due to several successive seasons of poor luck and disaster for tho whaling fleet in the Arctic. The records of whale fishery show that in 1351 the bone brought to American ports by vessels engaged in the pursuit of right whales, nearly all lance or harpoon, and its accompany ing destroyer, tho shoulder gun the industry in 1882 yielded only 271,999 pounds of bone, which, however, sold it an average of $1.71 a pound. The rar 18S3 was ono of miserable luck in ;he Arctic. The catch amounted to ;uiy 231,037 pounds before the fleet sras blown out of the whaling grounds. The price, because of tho shortage, began to rise, and it rose steadily, though wi h fluctuation as the news came, good or bad, from the North to the excessive figures reached in 1S91 mentioned above. As ths price soared the milliners and mwrnfarturer. of Europe and America gan to appear rapiuly. Ahe .racinc Steam Whaling. Company realized that they ware killing the goose that ha.l been laying the golden egg for a cen tury. It is related that Mann Isaa?, Berlin, one of tho heaviest users of irhalcbono in the world, when the price jrot ti S3, gave out notice that he oahl not buy a pouad. He kept his oid. . Whitaerjie.usqd.sabstit'at.'s or wl",t he "' nonc of the Anr.tticnc irhalebone dealers seem to know. Last cimmer, however, when iho price had recoiled 1 1 a somewhat lower figure. nir. Isan3 placed an order in America ror 30,009 pounds. What he did on a Urge scale nearly every body cIst t"i5 bnsinsss did in a letr ;.- enormously. The chvap -aivice to fill the place of the genuine bone mnlti- plied and flourished rankly, like tha .icked. They struck their roots 'Into tho business world so deeply that whalemen see the future as through a glase, darkly, and expect nothing short of total extinction of their business. And this, with the North Sea full of whales ! Fuller, in fact, than ever be- j-or if the assertion of some New Bedford owners of whales are to bo believed. But it must be said that the views of these New Bedford whalers as to the number of whales left are not shared in by the body of people who, while they inay have no special kaowl- ( edge of the subject, are firm in tho laith that one ot the greas causes ol reduced output of whalebone is tho extinction of the w'uIci. Xew Yurie Tribune. 4. PHILOSOPHER. Au Old Fisherman Tells What lie Tblnkr of City Lire. The following incident, which is an actual fact, has in it a sharp sugges t on to every one of us. lioa.e wealthy young men jn New York who had tccn fishing and shoot ing last summer at a lonely sea island 0.1 the Southern coast, brought homo their guide for a few days visit, prompted partly by . kindness, and partly by a nrschieveous desire to surprise the ignorant old saage hy the luxury and splendor of tlicit home. Joe, h wever, walked quietly about In his clean homespun su t, manifest ing little surprise and less admira tion. "Now, Joe," said one of the boys, nettled somewhat by his calmness, "tell me canJidly what you think ol New York? Isn't it grand?" "It 'pears too shut in for to call it that," the old fisherman said, re luctantly, unwilling to be ungrateful or uncivil. "My cabin has all out doors behind it, an' thersca in frvne. Thet's what I call grand." 'Uh, certainly. Hut wouldn't you like to give up your drudge y and live as New Yorkers do?" "No," said Joe. thoughtfully. " Taint as easy livin' here. Your uncle sets in his bank all tiler day, an' your father in court, an' 1 set in my boat. They fish for men. an' 1 Ush for mackerel. They hcv to i-tudy an' fret to catch their tlsh. I don't,." "Well," said the boy, discomfited, "wouldn't you like your wife to live In a bouse like this?" glancing around the stately rooms filled with costly draperies and bric-a-brac. "No!" said Joe. laughing. ".lane scrubs our two roo:i.s an'cleans them up, an' then she sets an' rests, or lias some fun. f-he nevcr'd linisli l.cp u' this house tidv." "Oh, my mother has plenty of serv nts to do that" "Yes. An' she told me a onbcarable weight an' a her. " "But wo see people," they wa; worry on ursjed the lad, "anc. have musi-, and and many things to see?" gaiety. We have company, too; we ain't buried! Ther neighbors come an, set round evenin's au' tell stones an' sing. I reckon we enjoy ourselves ne much as you do at jour big dinners." There was a sin rt silence "We've got friends, like you," Joe went on gravely, "an' our famblies. It's the same thing in ther lon run. Your preacher in that cilt pulnit sa d pretty much the sa:uc words as old 1 'arson Ma:tin doe.-i. An' when we d!c we rest jest as quiet under the crass as under them thousand do lat monymints you showed me. "I'm glad I've seen it all," he ad ded, smiling, ".in' it was kind in you to show men. But It don't seem to make such a difl'rence between vou an' me as I thought it would. In side we're pretty much al.ke." "That's a good sermon you've preached to me," the lad said laugh Ing. 'I wasn't awecr I was preachln1," "oe said anxiously. How Did Io Morny Die? In the March of 18;i"), while the young Russian l'rincess Troubct'.koi (whom he had married eoiiic years before, and, though tar more than double he age. had fascinated as he lascinaled every one) was preparing, all unconscious of the impending doom, a mid-Lent ball de Morny died. He had been ill for some time, ill with a mysteAous illness about which the physicians seemed reti cent, but which be bore with a stole calm. The pillule story of Daudet must be taken with a vast proportion ot grains of salt, and great allowance made for the Imagination ot the pro fessed romance writer. Undoubtedly de Morny was in the habit of taking a certain prescription daily, and an overdose, taken subse quently to 'his doctor's death, may have resulted in much harm to him; in fact, after the autopsy his heart: was found to be simply metallic, ia very appropriate condition, by the way, for the heart of de Morny,) but the real cause of death has never yc been given. I will give it now. The doctor's call de Moray's com plaint internal disease caused by the passage of a sword through the inte rior a most pitiful complaint, ikj doubt. Morny avait fait une bonne fourtunc de trop, and the husband, an old General, after a severe alter-; cation, called him out, says one story. They fought a duel immedi ately afterward in the garden at the back of tbb "Statesman's bouse, and the result was as mentioned above. Hut this Is not true either. What really took place was mor: tragic than that The old General, in a lit ot fury at the interview men tioned, stabled Morny, where well where iledda Gahler's lover shot himself. This, the true version ol de Moray's death, has, of course, never even been hinted at ia print, but I am quite certain as to my facts, though as the lady who caused the tragedy Is still living I prefer ta give no names. The heroic stoicism of de Morny's death is splendidly de scribed by Daudet, though, of course, the part played by the Dr. Ollifle, who really predeceased his patient, and whose son orrfy died the other day, is imaginary, except as regards his manner, appearance, a- d Irish birth, which are alike excellently de- : scribed. The Fortnightly Keview I He salilwno was so lovely that If she -went to the Fair, No oneTvould loot at other thing While She was staying there. Whereon upon his flattery The maiden straightway feat. And said if he went out there to- They'd rent him for a Flat. . Harper's liasc;. sEaiors. Tom "I called on a vonn ag worn a: lfi.i t Tant. m" n-li f mm.'...! : i. a Dick "How? Bun ucross her I father?" Ton "Yes." - 4 What did he do? Fira yon?" Tom "No. He said he was ;;lr. I f see me and asked me to come nai. and often." Detroit Free Press.' l-LECTmiCITY. KKPOHTS OX ITS KMPLOYMEX7 IX AGRICULTURE. fts Use in the Propulsion of Farrr Machinery and in Plant Pro pagationVery Little Progress So Far. A.CJ Ol a yen of the Unit 4 V countries (, the Depart V BOUT a year ago the Consult United States iu foreigr were directed bj rtment of State si Washington to collect and send hom all obtainable information in regard tc the employment of electricity in ogri culture. This direction was given ir accordance with a resolution of th United States Senate. A large numbt-i of reports on the subject of the iuiptiri have been received, and have just beer, published by the Bureau of Statistic! of the State Department, i Most of the reports show that clet tricity is not employed in ogrieultur. at all in the consular districts to whiei they relate. There are a few excep tions, however. The inquiry of the State Depart men was twofold ; first, as to use of elec tricity as a power in the propulsion ol fiirin machinery and implements; and, Kccoidly, as to its use in the propaga tion of plants. Electricity does not seem to be employed as a motive powei in agricultural operations in any for eign countries except Belgium ami England. In Belgium Mr. A. Dumont has a large place at Chassart, where h carries on scientific farming upon t very extensive scale. Hero he runs t thrashing machine by means of an elec tric current, whieh exerts a force equal to twelve horse power, and is carried over a distance of 2600 feet. In Eng land, all the machinery at the Blyth wood Electric Dairy, belonging to Mr. James Blyth, of Stanstead in Essex, ii worked by electricity. The Consul General at London writes that thil is the only example of the une of elec tricity in connection with agriculture that lias come under his notice. Its this dairy there are said to b nearly two hundred of the finest butter-producing Jersey cows in the world, and tho separators nnd churns ore worked wholly by electricity, which also fur nishes light for the establishment. In reference to iho influence of elec tricity in the propagation of plants, vii'v full reports have been received from Mr. Albert II. Washburn, United States Commercial Agent at Magde burg in Germany, and from Mr. V M. Burton, United States Vice-Consul nt Birmingham, England. Mr. Wash burn reviews the various experimentt which have been made by scientific men in Germany since 1833, on the in fluence of the electric current and the electric light on plant life. As to the question whether artificially induced electric currents passing through thf ground are benciicial or injurious to vegetation, he declares that it has not practically been solved up to the pres ent time in Germany, adding that, "while it is true that some few isolated experiments have been highly favora ble to electricity, those conducted on the most extensive scale have resulted iu very iudiffcreiit success." As to the influence of electric light Mr. Wash burn mentions the experiments of Mr. V. V. Siemens in 1880, indicating thai the effects of the nuked electric light seeiiied to be injurious to plants, ami the experiments of Mr. T. P. Deherain iu 1881, who nLso found that the direct rays of the eleetrle light were harmful. Mr. Burton writes that with the exception of u few experiment-: by Mr. Chamberlain, there has been nothing done at Birmingham in the application of electricity to the growth of plunts, but ho sends to the j-'tii',.' Department a copy of a pupei lead liefoic the Society of TelegrapL Engim ers in 1880 by Sir William Sie mens, wln-re the author describes ex periments which lie says go to prove "that electric li'lit is efficacious in promoting the formation of fruit rich in bloom nnd aroma, and, if these re sults should be confirmed, the horti culturist will be able to make himsell I r tctically independent of solar light for producing u high quality of fruit ut all seasons of tin-year." It is i bo noted, however, thot al though thirteen years have elapsed siiu-o this opinion was expressed, very ittle progress has been made in utiliz ing the electric liglit for horticultural purposes. The results of the inquiry instituted by tho State Department, by the di rection of the Senate, show that up tc the present time electricity in pgricnl lure is for the most part a plaything rather than a practical agent. Xew 1'ork Sun. Teeth Pulling Willi Fingers. It may sound incredible, but it is th ruth that one of the bci-t known den ;ists in this city with a very u lect and remunerative patronage, has never nulled a tooth in his life. Ho tells jhis himself. He sends his patients Who want teeth pulled to n practitioner aoted for his skill in t lint ::; '. ii'iil;:r iirection, and reserves hiiurelf u r ikilful operations and otln r i muiien -live work. He tells ni., that lie i'.mU It much better to do this 1 ban to m: lertako to pall teeth, ns one, i.i be proficient ia this werk must hav.? a ipecial twist of. the wrist, acquired inly by continued experience. This recalls the statement f recently aw printed that in Japan ite deutM sulls one's tooth by the use of h: angers. He reaches in, feels for the sooth, seizes it, gives it a sharp twist, nd the offending member is out. The srriter tells how children are trained Tom youth up to become experts in ;eeth pulling by being obliged to pull join boards little wooden pegs which ire driven in by tho instructor, who, is the pupil becomes proficient, drives die pegs in farther and more firmly.- ew York Mail and Express. AS UNKIND ADDITION. Mrs. Van Gabler "Beticence V; mj favorite quality." Mr. Van Gabler "In others, I pre' ume. " Truth. IU3 HOPES. May "Don't you thinK your land ady's little boy is an angel?" j Frank ".Not yet; but 1 OAv j toaesl" Life. J