mOmi liiitfi iilfew THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. Kditer ud B, P. SOHWEIER, MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17. 1894. NO. 44 VOL. XLVIII. Ml DR. TALMAGM BBOWKL.YN DIVINE'S 8U DAY Sibjwt : "The tjuick Feet." TriT : "When Hro-Vs birthday ww Mi tho.lirtU-'bterof Heroillns dnncei hpforotheni an 1 pleased Heroi." Matthew xlv., 6. It is tho anniversary of HtoI's birthday. Tho pnlnce is lighted. The highways lead az thereto are nil ablaze with the pompol invitP'l ku.'Ms. T.oril. captains, merchant pnn , the mihty men of the land, ar coming So mine! in th festivities. The ta'.ie is sr.rea.l with all the luxuries that roval purveyors can jjiuber. The ;uesr. w;ii:e robed and anointed and perfum-!. come in and sit at the t.il'ie. Masie! The jest evoke rran of l.niehtr. Riddles arepropoun.lo . Bep'irte is indulged. Toasts nra drank. Th l.r.iin is befo(rie.1. The wit rolls on into nproar and blasphemy. They are not satisfied yet. Turn on more light. Poor out more wine. Mul. Hound all the trumpet, near the floor for a dnnie! Bring in Salome, the beatuiiul and accomplished prineess. The door opens, and in hounds the dancer. The lords art) ench.mted. ritnnd back and make room for the brill iant gyrations I Tliese men never saw "ub "poetry of motion." Their soul whirls in the reel nnd lioun Is with the bounding feet. Herod forirets crown and throne and every, thine but the fascinations of Salome. AUthe mnirniflcnce ot his realm is as nothing now compared with the splendor that whirls on tiptoe before him. His boly sways from side to side, corresponding with the motions ot the enchantress. Hit sou! is thrilled with the pulsations of the feet and bewitched with the taking postures and attitudes more and more amazing. At ter awhile he sits in enchanted silence look ing at the fl.ishinir, leaping, bounding be'ia ty, and as the dance c:os-s and the tinklin? cymbals cease to clap and the thunders of applause that shoo the palace begin to abate the enchanted monarch swears to the princely performer, "Whatsoever thou shalt ask of me I will give it thee, to the half of my kingdom." Now, there was in prison at that time a minister of the gos pel of the name of John the Iiaptist, and be had been making a (Treat deal of trouble by preaching some very plain and honest ser mons. He bad denounced the sins of the king and bronght down upon him the wrath of the female, of the royal household. At the instigation of her mother Salome take a'iv:inta?e of the extravagant promise of the kinir and says, "Brinir me the bead of John the Baptist on a dinner plate." Hark to the sound of feet outside the door And the clatter of swords ! The execution ers are returning from tneir awful errau i. Open the door 1 They enter, and they pre sent the platter to Salome. What is on thie plotter? A new glass of wine to continue the uproarious merriment? No. Somethine redder and costlier the ghastly, bleedin bead of John the Biptist, the death Clare still In the eye, the locks dabbled with the gore, the features still distressed with the last agony. This woman, who had whirled so trrace fnlly In the daac", bends over the awful bur den without a shudder. She floats overt ie blood, and with as much indiff-rence as a waiting maid mlgut take a tray of empty jrlassware out of the room after an enter tainment Salome cnrrles the dissevered head of John the Bantlst, while all the banqueters shout with laughter and think It a goo 1 joke that in so easy and quick a way they hav. cot rid of an earn est and outspoken minister of the gospel. l'on will all admit, whatever yon think of that style of amusement and exercise, that from rbqt circles it has crowded out all in telligent conversation. You will also admit that it has made the con lition of those who do not dance, either because they do not know how or because they have not the health to endure it, or bee mse through con scientious scruples they must decline the ex ercise, very uncomfortable. You will also ndmit, all of you, that It has passed in many cases from an amusement to a dissipation, and you are easily able to un ierstand the bewilderment of the educated Chinaman, who, standing In the bnl iant circle wher there w;is dancing going on four or five hours and the guests seeiue i exnrtusted, tnrne I to the proprietor of the house ant sal 1, " uy don't you allow your servants to do this for yon?" You are a!so willin? to admit, wnntever h yonr idea in regard tothe amusement that I am speaking of. and wnatever be your idea of the old 'astnoned square dance, and o many of the irocssioual romps in which I can see no evil, the round dance is adminis trative of evil and ought to be driven out o all respectable circles. I am by natural tem perament and religions theory oppose 1 to the position taken by all those who are hor rified at playfulness on the part of the young, and who think that all questions are decided questions of decency and morals by the position of the feet, while, on tn. other hand, I can see nothing but ruin, tem poral and eternal, for those who go into the dissipations of social life -'Sssipation" which have already despoiled thousands of yonnc men and voung women of all that Is no de in character and useful in liie. Dancing is the graceinl motion of the boly adjusted by art to the sound and measure of nius.cal instrument or of the human voice. All nations have dance 1. The ancieuts thought that Castor nn Pollnx tau.'lit the art to the LaeeJffl.no ninns. But whoever started it all clime have adonted it. In .ncienr time. bad the lea. at I'an-e, tiie military dance, the mei.-rorl-il i am-c, the bac chan lian dan. v. an I que -ns nn 1 h.rls ewayei to an I ?ro in t :e g ir tens, and tiie rough backwoo Is;n in wiiii this ex'-reis-awakened the eerio of tee for-sr. There is something in the soun I ot lively mus e to evoke the movement of the hnn Hnd foor, whether cultured or un cultured. Passing down tue street w unconsciously keep step to the 9uiin I of the r-r.-.ss band, woile the Chris-inn in chure-i w-lh his foot beats tinie wraile his soul rises upon wim ereat barmony. W'aile this is so m civilized lands, the red men of the forest have their scalp dances, their green corn dances, their war dances. In ancient times tne exercise was so utterly and completely deprave 1 that the oliurch anthematizsd it. Tne old Christian fathers expressed them ires most vehem-nily aguinst it. St. Chrysostum says: The feet were not given for dancing, but to walk mo lestly ; not t" leap impudently, like camels." One of the dogma's of the ancient church reads: "A drnoe ig the devil's possession, and he that entereth into a rtance enter th into bis possession. As many pices as a man makes in dancing, so many pases do -s he make to ti.ii," E.sewherethe old dogmas declare i thist "The woman that singeth in the d ince in the princess of the devil, and those tiiat answer are her clerks, and the beholders lire bis friend, and the music is his bellows, i.nd the fiddlers are the ministers of the devii. For, as when hogs are strayed, if the hogstierd call one, all assemble together, so when the devil eulleth one woman losing In the dance, or to play on some musical in struments, presently all the dnneers gather logaiuer." This indiscriminate and univur ) denunciation of the exercise came from Ui 1,1 et that it was utterly and completely depraviad. Social dissipation is the abettor of pride. It is the instigator of jealousy. It is the sac rificial altar of health. It is tne defiler of the froul. It is the avenue of lust, and it is the i-urse of every town on both sides of the sea. pooial dissipation ! It may be bard to draw the line and gay that this is right on the one tide and that is wrong on the other side. It U not necessary that we do that, for God has put a throne in every man's soul, and I ap peal to that throne to-day. When a man does wrong, he knows he does wrong, and when be .:oes right be knows he does right, and to that throne, which Almighty God lifted in U.u heart of every man and woman. I anoeal Astottie physical ruin wrought Ij the dissipations of social life there can mm doubt. What may we expect of pefP,e.,In. work all day and dance all awhile they will be thrown on socfeTT ner vous, exhausted imbeciles. These people who indulge In the suppers and the raV,1";;;" revels and then go home In th cold 1 on wrapped ot limbs will after awhile be lonM to have been written down in God s orna' records as iuioldes as much suicides as " they nad taken their lila with iktl kftUewatrjotalno. : How many people have s'epned from the ballroom into the graveyard? Consumptions snd swift neuralgias are closjon theirtraefc. Amid many of the glittering scenes of social life diseases stand right and left and balance nd chain. The breath of the sepulcher Boats up through the perfume, and the iro:a of DearVs Hps bnbblesjwp in the ehnaipagn. I am told that In some of the cities there ara parents who have actually given no house keeping and gon" to hoarding that they may glvetbelr time inimitably to social dissipa tions. I have known such eases. I bavr known family alter family blaste 1 in that way in one of the other cities wiera I preached. Father and mother turn ng their Lacks upon all qn!et culture and all the amenities of home, leading forth tne!r entire fam'ly in the wron? direc tion. Annihilated worse than annihilate 1, for there are some thing's worse than anni hilation. I give you tbe history of more than one family when I say they went on in the dissipations ot social life until the father dropped into a lower styie of dissipation, and after awhile the son was tossed out into society a nonentity, and after awhile tU daughter eloped with a French dammT ra "8 ter, and after awhile the mother, getting oa further and further in years, trlts to Ml" the wrinkles, hut falls in the attempt, trying all the arts of tbn belle an old flirt, a poor, miserable butterfly without anv wings. If there Is anything on earth beantl'nl to me, it is an aged wc man. her white loV-c flowing back over the wrinklel brow locks not white with Irost, as the po'ts,suy, but white with the blossoms of the tree of life. In her voice tbe tenderness of graelou memorles, her face a benediction. As grand mothor passes through the room the gran 1 ehiidren pull nt her dress, anJ she almost falls in her weakness, bat she bis nothin; but candy or cake or a kind wor I for th" little darlings. When she gets out ot the wagon in front of the house, tho whol family rush out and ory, "Grandma's somer And when aha goes aw.iv Iron n aever to return, tnere is a sirslow on tne table, and a shadow on the hearth, and a shadow on tbe heart. There is no mor. touching scene on earth than when grandmother sleeps the last slum ber and the litttle child is lilted up to tho oasket to give the last kiss, and she says, "Goodby, grandma !' Oh, ther3 is beauty in old age. God says so. "The hoary hea t is a crown of glory.' Why should people (recline to get old? The best tiling, the greatest things, I know of are aged of. mountains, old seas,-old stars and old eterni ty. But if there is anything distressful it is to see an old woman ashamed of tbe fact that she is old. What with all the artificial appliances she is too mu:b for my gravity. I laugh even in church when I see her com ing. The worst looking bird on earth is a peacock when it has lost its feathers. I would not giveone lock of my old mother s gray hair for 50,000 such caricatures of hu mauiiy. Anl if the liie of a worldling, if the life of a disciple giv.n to the warl l, 1s ad thecloseotsuch a life is simply a tragedy. Let metell you that the dissipationsof social life are despoiling the usefulness of a vast multitude of people. What do those people care out the fact that ther are whole na tions in sorrow and suffering and agony when they have for consideration the more important question about the size of a glovo or the tie of a cravate? Which one of them ever bound up the wounds of the hospital? Which one of them ever went out to care for the poor? Whiob of tnem do you fin 1 In the baunts of sin distributing tracts? Tuey live on themselves, and it is very poor pasture. Syharis was a great city, and it once sent out S00 horsemen in battle. They bad a minstrel who had taught the horses ot the army a great trick, and when the old min strel played a certain tune the horses would rear and with their front feet seemed to beat time to tbe music. Well, the old minstrel was offended with his country, and he went over to the enemy, and be s aid to the enemy, You give me the mastership of the army, and I will destroy their troops wuen those horsemen come from Sybaris. So they gave the old ministrelthe manage, menr, and be taught all the other uinstrels a certain tune. Then when the cavalry troop came up the old minstrel and all the other minstrels played a certain tun-, and at the most critical moment in the battle, when the horsemen wanted to rush to the conflict, the horses reared and beat time to the music with their fore feet, nnl in dis grace and rout the enemy fled. A'l, my friends, I have seen it again and again the nrnstrtls of pleasure, the minstrels of dissi pation, the minstrels cf godless association have defeated p-ople In the hard est fight of life! Frivolity has lost tbe battle for 10,000 folk. Ob, wh it a belittling process to the human miud this everlasting question a'lout dress, this discussion of fas.iionablo innnitesima's, this group, looking askance at the glas, wondering with an Infinity of earnestness bow that last geranium leaf doos look, this shriveling of man's moral dignity until It is not observable to tho naked oye, this Span ish inquisition of a tight shoe, this binding up of an immortal soul in a ruffle, this pitch ing off of an immortal nature over the rocks When God created it for great and everlast ing uplifting! With many life Is a masquerade ball, nnl as at such entertainments gentlemen and ladles put on the garb of kings and queens or mountebanks or clowns, and at th'i close put off the difiguis, so a great many p iss their whole life in a mask, taking off the mask at Heath. While tbe masquera le ball of life gois on they trip merrily ovor tbs floor, gemmel hand is stretched to the gemmed hand, an I g!eaming brow ben Is to gleaming brow. On with thedauco! Flush and rustle anl laughter of immeasurable merrymaking I But after awhile the languor of death comes on tbe limbs and blurs the eyesight. Lights lower. Floor hollow with sepulcbral echo. Musie s i idened into a wail. Lights lower. Now the maskers are only seen In the dim light. Now tie tragrance of th flowers is like the sickening o lor that comes from garlands that have la'n long in tne vaults of cemeteries. Lights lower. SI sts gather in the room. Glasses shake as thou -n quaked by sullen thunder. Sigh caught in tne curtain. Scarf drops from the shouid-ir of beauty asuroud! Liguts lower. Over the slippery boar.ls in dance of death glides Jealousies, envies, revenges, lust, despair and di nth. Stench the lamp wicks almost extinguished Torn garments will not hall cover the ulcerated feet. Choking damps. Chilliness. Feet still. Hands closed. Voices hushed. Eyes shut. Lights out. Oh. how many olyou have floated far away from God through social dissipations, and it is time you turnel, tor I remembi r that there weretwo vessels on the sea in a storm. It was very, very dark, and the two vessels were going strai rbt for each other, and the captains knew it not. But after awhile tbe man on tbe lookout saw the approaching ship, and be shouted, "Hard a-lar joard !' and irom theotiier ves-sel the cry went n p. Hard a-larlio ird 1 ' and they turned just enough to glance by and passed in safety to their hartsors. Some of you are in the storm of temptation, and you are driving on an i coming toward feariul collisions unless you change your course. Hard a-larbourd I Turn ye, turn ye, for "way will ye die, O nous -ot IsnelV" News in Brief. Th. ftti o of touch is .Inliest on tbt? !, ,'. Fatitiin m ils were invented in Cliitni. Iu.Tiijim esflw3 tie ei lb point to wuid the liu nilii. - Jiive lvi' r.ton wit c.;n.se liigb exil- fcives to go fff- Tl e limit o. uniimls w'licli have been M. ! to ti at li kee,. th h. st. -j u,.re is c ti ta it'.v iu all Jiilnn an average of to earthquake (shock iluiry. Wais rat,k next to tho Li,'!ier class, s of ante in point of i" "1 iut The lights'. ptV.c f th It v Moiin, t, it s is Jl. nut Biowu, Hi tis.li America l-V-WC' '- The first book to bnye it- haves uun.l.. r..l was "EsopV. Fuble-s pnn'ed ly (Vs'iu iu 1481. HoIIju t's soap dut ingsO, 000. TI e roHr of Niagara has beenpbon otiapiied and may le beard iu any part of America for a small fee. CAMPHOR CULTURE IN JAPAN. lbs Trees It Comes from and How It la Manufactured. Many of the seerfi of the smphor iree have been sent to the Depart ment of State from Japan in the hope of affording to the United States a chance to add this valuable substance to its vegetable products. The tree is a species of laurel, and it grows io extensive forests in the mountainous regions of the south of Japan far from the sea. Large groves are owned by the Japanese Government, the wood being very desirable for shipbuilding. Many of the trees at tain an enormous size, often measur ing twelve feet in diameter and some times attaining twenty feet. The seeds or berries grow in clusters, re sembling black currants in size and appearance. The fine grain of the wood renders It particularly valuable lor cabinet work. The camphor is a resinous gum. To get it the tree is necessarily de stroyed, but by a stringent law of the land, another is planted in IV stead. Tbe simple method of "manufacture employed by the natives is as follows: The tree is felled to the earth and cut into chips. A big metal pot is partly filled with water and placed over a slow Are. Then a wooden tub is fitted to the top of the pot and the chips of camphor wool are placed in this. The bottom of the tub is per forated, so as to permit the stcatn to pass up'nmong the chips. A steam-tight cover is fitted on the tub, from this tub a bamboo pipe leads to another tub, through which the inclosed steam, the generated camphor, and oil flow. The second tub is connected in like manner with the third. Tbe third tub is divided, Into two compartments, one above the other, the dividing floor being perforated with small holes to allow the water and oil to paf to the lower compartment. The upper compart ment is supplied with a laverof straw, which catches and holds the camphor in rystals. The Camphor is then sepa rated from the straw, packed in wooden tubs of 133 pounds each, and is ready for market. J After each boiling the water runs oil through a faucet, leaving the oil,! which is utilized by the natives for illuminating and other purposes.' Adulteration of camphor gum is, practiced mostly by adding water just as far as the buyer will tolerate it.' Soirctimes the purchaser will find that twenty pounds of water have run out of a tub in twelve hours. The unadulterated article, known as "old" dry," can sometimes be bought, but not often. In a letter on the subject newly received by the Department of State, Consul Smithers writes from ( saka, Japan, that it would be very desirable to send a competent agent from this country to Japan, who should visit the camphor-producing districts and study the processes of manufacture, packing, etc. Wash igton Star. EMPRESS OF JAPAN. aa Interesting1 Little Persons g-e the Only Wife o th. Mikado. An interesting little personage is the Empress of Japan, who 1 the unly wife of the Mikado, though many imagine he has a dozen or more. Tne Em press is 41 years of aje, one year younger than her husband. She Is not so tall as Amer ican women, is slen der and vary stra'gbt. For the last sixteen years she has worn .Euro pean dress. She is very fair, with rosy cheeks, large eyes, KMi-BEHs or jafax and a finely shaped mouth. Kven without ber Imperial rank she would be tbe universally acknowledged belle of Japan. She is Immensely interested In the educa tion of the gentler sex and in char itable works of all kinds, i-he Is a tine scholar of both polite literature and music, and plays the piano well. Her poems have been set to music and used as imperial songs. She is tbe founder of the Bed Cross Socl.ty ; In Japan, frequently visits the hos- ' pltals, and gives to each patient as much consolatt n and care as if she were a simple white capped nurse of ! be Bed Cross. Girls as Help to Men. Almost, fverv man has his TiriVtttt ippnuntd which romiirA rnnctiint, re cording, and which in many cases are transferred to a cleric in nis on ce 10 attend to, writes Edward W. Fok in an article showing "How a Girl May Help fie rFather Financially" in the Ladies' Home Journal. Here a daughter could be of invaluable as- sistance. A man's household bills are often to him a matter of annoy- unra in fhoir npi'P4!irv aiiriitinir. and It would be a relief to the mother, as well as to the father, to know inai , the accounting was in the bands of a ' daughter who would bring a persoual , interest to the work. The lawyer, I also, has at times certain briefs an 1 j aftiJavits which cannot always be. written at the otlice, and be, too, j would be glad to have bis daughter's n.:ui..t;ini- in fact everr man has certain things in life which be would gladly turn into tne nanas 01 a daughter if he felt that It would please her to be able to relieve him. Few daughters either realize this or even imagine it I have often felt that If girls could enter more jcto tbe lives of their fathers, and take from them seme or tne nine our dens, they would be the tetter for It. Not only would such help be a relief to the father, but It would be an ed ucative training for the girl which would stand her in good stead in her later years. Helping ner ratner 10 remember his daily engagements,sce inrt tViQt. hia anrannt.! are nronerlv balanced, following his personal mat- .. .. . a 1 1 : . M ters all these enter inn me me 01 9 irirl hAn shn becomes a wife. And if she b.gins with her fathers inter ests she will have a neiter iaea 01 the things which constitute a man's life when she becomes a wife. Daugh ters should come much closer to their fathers than they da And It must ha MniPm hereil that thev are not lV iviuv." aloof because of any unwillingness 00 Uie part ol l&e latner. ' LARGEST FLOWER IN THE WORLO Over Tas4 la Diameter aad Holds Lots nt ' Water. I Tbe wonderful flower abown In the eat Is that of tbe raffiesla amoldl, a plant discovered by Ir. Arnold In tbe Island of Sumatra some e gbtj years ago. Tbe various species now known are all parasitic, n it, bow. ever, to the branches of other plants, but to tbe roots. Entirely destitute of leaves and green in color, these BlnKular vegetables are provided with scales or bracts, which conceal and envelop the flower previous to opening-. UIGIIT rXOWXH IS TBI WrRLD. A swelling bencatb the bark cf some huge, surface appearing root ot a large tree announces the coming of a fower. Soon tbe bark splits, and tbe bud, resembling the head of a young cabbage, bursjs, showing five great lobts, which open and roll back slightly on the edges. Then a circu lar ring appears, surrounding a deep cup, In tbe center of which Is tbe ovary. Below the edges Is a kind of, gallery, wherein are numerous stam. ens In which Is located the pollen. The remarkable feature of the flower M its colossal size, the largest species being thirty-nine Inches In diameter. Tbe central cup holds six quarts of liquid, and tbe total weight of th Rower Is over fifteen pounds. Sowing; Flower seeds. vhen the flower bed is made tn soil should be dry, so that it will crumble as turned from the spade. In this condition it can be raked very fine, as it should be to receive the little seeds. A quarter of an inch may be named as about the proper depth for sowing most seeds, but some, such as petunia, amaranthus, nicotiaua, and others that are very line need the lightest covering pos sible. If the soil of the seed bed is not as light as desirable it is a good plan to cover the seeds after sowing them in the drill with fine sand. This will enable the little plants to push their way easily to the light and air. After sowing each row it should be pressed down or firmed, which may be done by laying a piece of lath over the row and pressing it well down, or by means of a small solid block of wood the soil can be patted or gently beaten; this operation brings the soil in close contact with the seeds and prevents It from drying out quickly when exposed to sun and wind. After sowing the seeds water the bed amply with a flne-rosed pot. Chickens are frequently trouble some, if not one's own, then a neigh bor's, and to prevent their scratching in tho mellow soil, a practice they greatly delight in, theseed bed should be well protected with brush laid over it. If it should appear that there ii danger of frost alter the plants are up one should be ready to protect them by covering them with cloths. When the plants have attained some strength and are an inch or two in height, according to varieties, they can be transplanted either into an other rich bed, giving them more room and growing them on to a larger size preparatory to a final removal, or thiy can be set where they are to re main to bloom- Collates for Ship Armor. Not only in our own country, but In France, Germany, Buss I a, and others nations, the use of cellulose) for ship armor has been introduced, and, as an illustration of its effective ness one of the Danish warships was' equipped recently with a belt of the material and a shot fired at it tore a hole away through the whole vessel, the action of water on the cellulose, however, closing the hole up very soon, letting in but a few gallons of water. In ordinary manufacture tor realizing this result the article is the ground fiber of the cocoanut which has been treated for the removal of the glutinous associations. It has the appearance of a brownish meal, and its lacunar value is that, upon contact with water, its tendency is to swell quickly, rendering an orifice or hole made by the pouring in of water as tight as need be in a short time. In an uncompressed state it burns slowly, but when compressed it is al most totally incombustible. Its' specific gravity is very low, a cubic foot of the ordinary article weighing1 but 7.5 pounds, while a briquette of a cubic foot weighs a little more than eight pounds. When packed in com partments, it Is preserved from direct contact with the metal of the ship by a thick coating of paint applied to the latter as if dampened from leaks or otherwise the portion in contact with the metal will deteriorate. Drying Damp Shoes. One of tbe most fertile resources ol colds and serious incidental ailments Is the wearing of damp shoes. Whep shoes have been saturated with water the attempt to dry them by exposing rheni before a stove or fire is obviously jlamaging to the leather, while it does (lot insure the expulsion of moisture from the inside. For accomplishing this a new invention has been brought out, consisting of a hollow stoneware last, which can be filled with hot water like a bottle and which is made in a variety of shapes and sizes to cor respond to the inside of ordiniir.v shoes. The hole at the top of the lr is corked as soon as the hot water lv been poured in. The last is ke:t I . position until the inside of the nh-:e thoronghly dry, and the hot .water cf be renewed if necessary. Chicago BecorJ HE LOST THE BET. to Coventor Seward Yarlfled Doubts Ol fits Own Veracity. The other afternoon when the lhadows were growing longer in the itrcets and the day was taking on a toinber hue, a group of politicians sat In the City Hall regaling each other with ye stories of ye olden tlme. Among those reeled off was the fol lowing regarding an experience of William II. Seward, who was then Governor of the Empire State. It ieems that while traveling around through tbe rural districts and mak ing sure that his political fences had do very bad breaks in them he came we evening to the humble abode of a 'tanner. It was too far from the 6ivn where he was stopping to go back that night, and so he asked per ' mission to stop there. This was jheerf ully granted, and after partak ing of an old-fashioned country sup per the old farmer invited his un known guest to take a ride across the untry with him, he having an er rand to do in a neighboring village. With all the suavity for which Mr. Seward was justly famed, he accepted the invitation and as they drove ilong in the gathering twilight he 'entertained the old farmer with all 'manner of campaign experiences and itorics. I The old farmer's native shrewdness :auscd him to wonder why the stranger should show him so much ittentlon, and at last he blurted out: "Say, be you a book agent?" ".Not thtt I know of," was the Governor's smiling rejoinder. "Perhaps you're a lightning-rod ian. eh?" ."Xo, sir; you are wrong again." "Then you're a sewing-machine nan." "No, sir." "Well then, by gosh, you must be politician." Mr. Seward at once acknowledged the soft impeachment and then in formed the inquisitive old fellow that he was the Governor of the State of New York. This quieted the old fellow for a while, but at last he :tiuld hold in no longer, and be luiet'.y informed Mr. Seward that tie thought he was a liar. Mr. Seward, however, insisted on the truth of his jtory, and the dispute finally resulted In a wager of $20. The money was placed in an old lantern that was juried in the wagon to lie used in :ase of emergency, and it was agreed that the first person they met should lecide as to the ownership of the money. Should he tail to recognize 1 Mr. Seward as Governor the former was to win, and vice versa. The test soon came. Driving by the shop of a wayside blacksmith shop, the proprietor himself stood In the lonrway. The farmer stopped bis tvagon and Mr. Seward said: t "My friend, my veracitv has been questioned by the gentleman with me and 7. should be pleased to have aim convinced as to who I am. Will fou be kind enough to tell him?" The man of brawn and muscle peered at Mr. Seward long and earn tstly. Then turning to the farmer ae said in awe-struck tones: "He's all right. Bill! I know him! lie's Thurlow Weed, by goshl" I The farmer took the $20 and Mr. ?cward was poorer by that amount than when he started out Chicago Mail. At the Donna. The 'Donna," railed familiarly by fts patrons the "Sisters' pudden 'board," sells daily, throughout tbe tvinter. hot nourishing food, at half :ost, ti unemployed London laborers. The men and women who seek its trect-stand to buy a basin of soup or i roll of pudding a'e as unfortunate as cold and hunger can make them, but they are never uncivil, and al- wajs grateiui. One lady who serves at the Donna counter gives, in Longman's Maga- eine, the following touching instance j .f tniA i,nllliiH. An Ka ..t n ' Lr true gratitude on the part of a man wbo, almost penniless, yet wished to make some return for the kindness of those who had enriched bim by sympathetic speech and act: "One cold, windy day, I saw among j the men a poor fellow whose misera-! b!e appearance made bim noticeable evea among so many sad-looking creatures. The way in which be , ihuffled up to the counter, laid down ) 1 half-penny and asked for a slice of judden' showed that be was utterly jut of heart I gave him what he lsked for, and an extra slice as well, saying: 'I'm sure you could eat this, too.' "He looked up thoroughly surprised. I fancy it must have been a long time since any one bad spoken a kind word to him. Then, with mumbled thanks, he went away to eat bis din ner. Presently, while still busy cut ting up puddlDg, I saw my poor friend hastily approaching. II jvat f la need at me, and hurriedly laid a pair of boot-lacings oa the counter at my side.' " 'That's for you, lady, he said, j ind walked off without another word. "I am by no means a sentimental person, but I really think 1-must Keep those shoe-lacings always, as the most touching gift I ever re ceived." Good Fences. These are a necessity, not only for the protection of crops, but to avoid the effect upon animals. As the Farmer's Home Weekly puts, it, "have low fences if you want to teach the stock to jump; weak fences if you want to make them breachy." It is very noticeable how quickly an an imal that bas once found a weak place in a fence, and, by rubbing or otherwise, broken it down so as to render the task of getting out easy, will again seek that spot and try by some means to effect a breach; a few successful attempts in that line will jU oo.u. .t, . - erectly embolden to more exertion, and unless fences are strong and re sist all efforts, an animal will soon become uncontrolable In that direc tion. Tbe same rules applies to jumping; if escape from one enclos ure is effected by a small jump, a greater one will be made next time, and soon there can .hardly be any re straint These are important rea son's whv every farmer should have ecure fences, and should never tempt an unruly animal to lead others into tbe bad practice of being unruly or breachy, which is -one of tbe most serious of farm annoyances. a hukQno episode. It Is not Always Wlso to Calculate oa A ppearauces. "Speaking of hunting." said a pun ter, "reminds me of a little fun 1 bad some four or five years ago. "Three of us, more or less sports men and all jolly fellows, were stop ping at a small place on the eastern shore of Lake St. Clair. It was in November and the ducks were pretty thici We did some great shooting that season, I can tell you. "One day the landlord announced that a nephew of his, a young man lust over from England, was coming up for a few weeks' sport, aud he guessed we'd And bim pretty near 9 landy on the shoot. "Well, pretty soon tho young fel low arrived, and our first glimpse of him decided everything. The boys' said they didn't believe he had ever seen a wild duck, much less shot :me. "no was one of your swell hunters, ill togged out in corduroy jacket and high top boots, with one of those patent-reversible fore and aft caps and a pair of eye-glasses astride his nose. He showed us bis gun, a double-barreled pistol grip thing, and blowed a pile on its One qualities and of the wonderful execution he could do with it. 'It came from England, ye know, "Would he go after ducks with ut In the morning? 0, yaas, he fahncied' he would, though it wouldn't be much sport; be was accustomed to shooting woodcock, and ducks flew so beastly slow. "Well, we fixed up things among ourselves that night. We picked out some of our oldest decoys and anchor d them out in a bayou a short distance from shore, then turned in for the night. "Our friend was up bright anJ early next morning and was anxious to show his skill We made some excuses about not being quite ready, but told bim that if he would go over to yonder bayou he might get a shot before breakfast. He put off with much splashing of paddles and great show of caution and was soon out of Bight in the reeds. Allowing him time to reach our decoys, we followed and soon beard the sharp bang! bang! cf his gun. Before we could reach him we heard another report. Ex ploding with laughter at the success of our scheme we hastened to the spot " "Did he till the decoys'with lead?" "No! Say, he had bagged four as pretty canvass-backs as you ever saw." The Sense or Hineii. What a marvellously delicate ma chinery is set in motion when we smell the fragrance of a rose! Sim ' pie as that pleasurable sensation I seems to us, it involves the activity of agencies and forces that the Imag ination can scarcely grasp. It has been shown that the minute cells at the ends of the olfactory nerves in the nose t ear the most dcTicate little hairs, and it is believed that these hairs are the active agents in pro ducing the sense of smell. Yet when we come to inquire into the manner of operation of these eel's and hairs we find that it U even more wonderful than the deli cacy of the mechanism.itself. It has been suggested that at least one special cell and the nerve fibre connecting it with the brain may be affected by each different smell pro ducing substance. But, as Professor Butberford remarked at the meeting - the nrjtiSh Association last Au- gust. "It would be a somewhat seri iius stretch of imagination to suppose that for each new smell of a sub stance yet to emerge from the retort of the chemist there is in waiting a special nerve terminal in the nose." He thinks It is more resonable to sunnose that all the hairs of the ol- fact0rv cells are affected bv every smell-producing substance, and that tne different qualities of smell result -. . . . from difference in the frequency and form of tbe vibrations transmitted through those cells to the brain. According to this view there li something in musk, something in tbe rnsft enmethinu in th vin!et. and t.ha liinf Enmethinir in pvapv cnhctun.-o whic'b produces a smell either agrce- aDle or offensive, that is able to so affect the hair9 and cells ot the 0ifac. niachiney of the nose as to set tneir connecting nerves in vi oration, and the rate of this vibration varies for every different substance! We are reminded that the differ, ences of both sounds and colors also result from variations in tbe rate of vibration, although sounds are pro duced by that mysterious medium called the luminiferous ether. If smells also result from varying vibra tions, what a surprising glimpse of tbe inner unity of nature that fact Ttives us! Youth's companion. first Praetletl V of the tiulllotlne. Dr. Guillotine, when a member ol th -, the French constituent assembly in 89, proposed that all executions should be by machine. That system, he said, would be swifter and more painless than the old system of de capitation by means of the sword or ax. He was proceeding to describe a contrivance of his own when he was, interrupted by shouts of laughter. In less than two years, however, his ideas were adopted and incorporated In the penal code. Dr. Antoino Louis, Secretary to the Academy of Surgeons, was requested to prepare a memorandum on the subject of de-( decapitation and in bis report he re commended the adoption of an in strument almost identical in design; to that suggested by Dr. Guillotine.". His report was accepted, and the con tract for constructing one of these machines for each of the French de partments was given to a German named Schmidt It was tested re peaieaiy upon aeaa ooaies iu a noo- pTtal and was found to work satisfac: peatedly upon dead bodies in a hos torily. On the 25th of April, 1792, it was used upon a. criminal for tba first time, Pellctier, a notorious, high wayman, being the victim. At first the machine was known as tba "Loulsette" or "La Petite Louison," but it was not long before Guillotine was given tbe unenviable honor of having bis name applied to it Tb4 old story that be suffered death by means of the instrument he himself invented has been shown to be false. He survived tbe Revolution and diel a natural death in 1814. LAST NIOHT. 0 OOttrades, let the song go round And laughter be our guest, 01 all the blessings life has found A woman's love is best. X drink not ; when the cup is crowned X wish you all that's bright i My vintage Ilea In beauty's eyes, I kissed my love last night. The jaamtte perfumes rose and strayed Like elfhi waifs unseen ; The summer moonbeams stole and played Her lattice bars between ; She shyly stood, all white arrayed, With youth and grace bedighc ; She was so fair, TJow could I dare I kissed my love last night. A sudden glory filled the earth It had not known before ; A hnppy gleam too sweet for mirth Tho quivering moonbeams were, To think that 1 of little worth Had won the pear' of licht No song or speech My bliss can reach 1 kissed my love hist night. I sought my lonely couch to dream 5 S7JPt w lfturcs thronged my brain Blue ryps and lily l.u.ls a-gleam, An i roses wet with rain. With morning's opalescent beam The glamorie took flight. Yet waking brought A dearer thought I kiss 'cl my .love ltst night. 0 Moon, '.au,'h down your silver rays, S-nile up, O dimpling Sea, O Fountain, toss your tinkling sprays, 0 st-irs rejoice with mo! T. .th tw:n':lin shoon ye tricksy Fays Co ne uide my 9-n$ aright, And tip with dew En?h measure true 1 k's?-: 1 my love iast night. b. mail M. Teii, in Atlanti Constitutic. THE TALE OF A COMET. EI BOIIAN L ZIT.O?. ft IT t xx, j:ixuuiu : in'iiiiuia. Coma out quirk; it't on! look e.t it, papa; isn't it beautiful?" mi l in t'ie exuberance of excitement Millv Jfc&'?? l'nitrrsoti ei.fzed gSSfr. John's i.nu tightly Js?? bil t-ho leaned n.'.aiiii-t him and looked eagerly into tue sky. Old man Patterson, who htoo.l near the young people, nls. lind his fiiee turned upward ; but th.-re was no in dication of glee in his voice when, af ter gazing for a few minutes, he re marked : "And to think that them things, with such beautiful tails, could do us any harm !" There wes no respor.r.e to this re mark, save a loud sigh from Mrs. Put terson, who turned round abruptly and walked into the house, where Jlr. Pat terson soon followed her. Milly and John were uttfl Rtanding r.nd gazing at the henvens. They had not said a word to each other; they were happy in the consciousness of their proximity. "I dou't believe a word of it do you?" asked Itfilly some minutes after wards. "What?" "Oh, what Schoolmaster Marten cays about this er comet that's going to break up the earth and kill nil the people on it un.l annihilate everything. I don't believe it do yon?" "Bosh!" remarked John emphatic ally. "I think Marten is a slick fraud, that's what he is!" he added, holding his arm tightly round Milly 's waist. "It's awful !" said Milly concernedly. "He's been coming here every day for the last couple of weeks talking about that comet, and he's dinned into papa and mamma's beads that the whole world is comin' to an end, and that we re nigh the day of judgment !" ".Rubbish !" commented John. "And he's been talking at me, too, the hypocrite, telling me to mend my ways and not to be so giddy. As if I am ever giddy, John !" she added in an injured tone. John did not reply for a second or two. He seemed to be thinking. "'Pears to me," he said, after a while, "that your father ought to know by this time what kind of a customer he's got to deal with. Has Marten paid him back the fifty dollars be borrowed last Christmas?" "Xo, not he." "Why don't you tell your father not to take any stock in Marten ?" "It's no nse, John. He's wheedled them round completely to his hide. It's perfectly awful how he's talked them into things about this comet. They've been glnm and mopin', and paokin' away things; and motner's been buryin' a lot of silver in the garden " "What 1" interrupted John. "The old folks haven't been hidin' things in the ground and let Marten know of it?" "Yes. He's shown them the very place where he says the comet won't j strike, and mother's put a lot of silver ' spoons in it. " "The fox! JHe's been Btealin' them I" exclaimed John. I Millie sprang to her feet and ran into the garden, John following her. She stopped near a slight mound of fresh clay in which two sticks were, firmly stuck and which she began to probe gently. , "Thank gooduess, it's not touched H she said with a sigh of relief, evidently satisfied with her examination. "Yon nearly took my breath away with fright, John. Mamma would go crazy if she were so fooled." "I tell you what I'll do, Milly, " he said. "Yon keep a sharp watch on this place, and if Marten turns np to morrow keep him till 1 get throngn , i- j Zt&i lOv. ' in truth if was terrible as Milly ex pesmd it, if half the things were go- tig to happen which Marten predicted.! Cle whole village of Stookborough watt terribly excited over the event. Every -j tody recollected that wars, peatiJ ence, famine, and other calamities i tollowed the previous appearance f a comet like thi with ilmost tbe identical tail. ' Schoolmaster klarten . talked about such " uncanny "tiMtbJIsteUT cnrttfeLtiM mi a . . tcTsmTo Taw," and so 651 T)n tiie day n which Milly and John had conspired lo rout him. Marten was at the Patter ion farm holding forth as usual. He aad brought a newspaper with bim, and read out from it impressively the an nouncement that on the coming Thurs day, precisely at 5:34 p, m., thera, would be an entire eclipse of the sun, and the inference he left to bo gathered from it was that the general break-up was to begin at that very second. The old people sat listening and blink foff solemnly. Milly was somewhat twed herself, and she was mighty glad when John came into the room looking rady for action. John contented himself at first rr, s'mply denying the arguments. Bui Marten's superior loquaciousness wai rapidly getting the best of him and In was gradually drawn into the meshes ol reason. That was all the schoolmastet wanted. He could reason a bull into a frog any day, if the animal only fol lowed the process of logical deductions so by and by John found himBelf lis tening with his hands folded, his rea son silenced, and more than half con vinced of the probability of the whol' Ithing. "And ye say it'll all take place on Thursday nt 5:34 p. m. ?" asked the old man. Marten had not eaiJ it, bul he answered -. "Precisely. The unerring calcula tion of science." "Maybe it'll only strike one cornel of the earth and leave out Stockbor ough and the farm?" he asked timidlv again. . "That is difficult to say," replied Marten, thoughtfully. "Our whol planet is sure to sustain a terrible ihoek, and it w ill be felt all the worl.l over. There is a chance a small chance that we might escape with oui lives here; but everything else ii doomed." That night John nnd Milly wert locked in a long embrace before thiy look leave of each other. They weru both heavily oppressed, and though John entertained a sneaking scepticism of the whole thing, ho really believed that before the end of tho week the i-urth might be a broken waste, with uobody and nothing alive on it. "You will come over on Thursday, John, won't you?" asked Milly in 11 trembling voice. "We can die to gether, if we can't live together, can't we, John?" "I'll be here, Milly, by 4 o'clock, and God may prove him yet a liar ron see if Ho don't!" said John us ho went oil'. About a quarter past five on t'.ie fol lowing Thursday they nil left the old Patterson farmhouse. They were go-, ing to give up their souls to heaven,; and they walked on in solemn silence. It was preternatural!- quiet all nroun.J them. The gloaming was rapidly full-) inp, and it see:ned to the old folks I if it were the precursor of eternul dark-i t uess. The group halted near a cluster trees. Marten held out his watch j there was ten minutes more left them. The old people stood there glum an ( motionless. Johnand Milly had locked hands nnd looked pale. Marten told them to lie down flat on their stomachs and hide their faces iu the ground till the thing was over. Tremblingly, fearfully, they obeyed,, r.nd lay flat on the gronad, dreading to stir, awaiting the sounds of the aw. ful crash. Marten retired t. anothen spot, whence ho said he would signal them to rise if they were destined to survive. Ten minutes passed; a quarter of nt, hour followed, and still they lay there. It was growing darker ; they wero get ting chilled to tho bones; their tt-oth iiegan to chatter, nnd still jio signal (rom the schoolmaster, no sound of the crashing doom. Half nn hour passed, and then fearfully, cautiously, old man Patterson began to move hi head. Gradually he raised it nnd looked round. Everything was still, deathly still. It was dark, but ho ! could see the farmhouse clearly. Then ho suddenly thought that he alone had survived the general destruction ho Bed tho farmhouse. A terror crept over him that he would have to end bis days alone and in darkness. "Wish I had died with 'em!" ha groaned aloud. But he looked round and saw his wife's head rising, and suddenly her terrified face looked at him. The next moment he saw in her eye a glance of recognition. So they were both alive! "Milly ! Milly !" called tho old man timidly. "STes, father?" came a trembling re ply- "Are ye living?" ho asked again. "lam", father. Is John alive?" "Yes, Milly," came the emphatic re ply from John, who sat up on tho ground. They were all sitting up now. "The farmhouse is there, too," said Mrs. Patterson in a wondering voice, "and I hear the short-horn blowing ip the yard." 'Guess we'd better get np," re marked the old man, rising and assist ing his wife. Inside the house, when they got a light, they uil burst out laughing, thej felt ho foolish ; and the more thev laughed the more foolish they felt. Milly laughed until the tears streamed down her cirvks, and John, im tryin j to restrain h r, feit his sides fair),, ctie. The ol I couple rocked them lelves in the.'r chairs with laughter, ind amid those peals the old man would pisp out : "And I thought I's the only ne alive ho ho ho!" They found the silver where they buried it. The old man disco rered very thing h'i had sequestered but a bundle and a couple of gold rings ; au ld brooch, twenty-six dollars in money, and the schoolmaster's own note for fifty dollars were missing. So was the schoolmaster himself. On the following day John came in and an Donnced that the schoolmaster had kipped "Hung on to the tail of tho romet, they say!" Jfew York Storiettes. ' . The Folnc. Bronson Your calling n e an ass, llr, doesn't make me one. Craik Of course not It merely indicates the accuracy of my observation. Truth. A Pretty Compliment. She What colored eyes do you ad mrre brown or blue? He I can't jee well enough in this light Bur. alo Express. - ' L!