JjJ .J -. fxvl :L,-:7v--' 'V '" -i;-;-- -s ' : -" : w S -X v.--', ":'v.yY -' ..2,: i - - t-4, ' B, F. BOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNIONAND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. HUUtar md MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. feaNNA;, WEDNESDAY: FEBRUARY 20. 1895. YOU XLIX NO. 10. iiiiii CH.trTER Xi. . fisiimoK';e1's OCTSID window. III Lomlon. If folk tU-lnsi'tta-r arp iit. A b mi mav lie lri.t. or n ijii! Hiay l: "t!t. Wi.rlKinz-! wiiliont c:i 1: Hli.l l !:!'". o AH wanti arr .at imiifl. :uiil all wWies -ui will.' A fewdays a't T thw. in Dfl'enilcn wai ttroliWiff u; Uo::d u-oetat anearlv hour - for he was an earlier man now than he hai been wont to be - he 6aw cominp; toward him lieraldino and Miss Cornnuaon the same side of the pave ment. Wiio tho iatter miirht be he knew not: but he took off his hat. and half ( au.fd. as hojiii g that pomething-more than a were Low might be fortheotning from the liht liure nearest to him. No' huitf -a?,' The ladies passed on, and their ipearanee. op rather t.'er nUiine's. huvirg awakened .afresh a .'train of thougtit U.-i-pinins rap dly familiar. to hia i-reasl. he stood still for. a moment. ub-ent:y a. iag into a fa vorite shop. window, without, on this occasion, seeio,? what it contained. " The shop was firover'j. well known to 11 lover, of an,;.'liuaaud it was never pas.-eJ 1y t5elle;ia-ja.. without a thor ough survey o' its eoo!. fresh, sbininjy, tetuotin-; eolent-i. HUfootstep-s eased Bceoriliuijly ot themselves, and he was to all apj cai aiii-es . completely en grossenj wiiei. ,ust.as ho was turning to jToee'e'd,' Mies.l'a:npbeli" catn.e trip pintr bacl. an;l ulorte. Sliehad "dropped net companion at the Gfosvenor Gallery, and was hurry' in home iu time to make ready for tier ride. RelU-nden eould'haroUy have avoided the jrioetit. had he wished to Co f o, and us it was, he looked her full In the faee, and the looK was men a ej!d not e ignored. ' 1 or there was some: hiii;; ad. a t: or.tod, aJm(t pite ous in it. and mereiteSiS- and: who e hearted as the ymnpr gir felt, she o.ild net piers on without impropr.ety. It was the first time sue had ever seen ir.y man look at h?r like thav Oj the Sunday UeiienUen Had been jheerful and sociable and she had nc Idea that lie had. not felt as brisk as he had looked, on the' Monday she sad uot eoen him at all: ejti.epti in the distance Tho earec iBo.ement forward bad not indeed bet n lost uucif her: and it had I een delightful so coolly to frustrate it; but she hud not siippoted she had been able to cause ar.ythiusf beyond a faint twinge, ol , mortification. How foul eatisfyinjf it would be if it should now prove that she had reully the C3pacitj to do mare: - . . I was thinking of yo i just now,' said he. looking down upon her. He could still look down upon her, tall at (ihe had grown. : . . "Well. yes. I passed a minute ago,' replied Geraldine, pro.-apjlj-. "1 sup pose yo j are studjingtnjStth.xonger t window?. 15vr.v one .UQ&.ythink. I can never jiaas'.it Dy myse i-llCI have a moment to spare - wh cB.ihave. not to-, day." she wa about to add,, i hen he interrupted her. - ' " " ; ' Thev remind tee.' he said, "of the" whninr bank at Inchmarew." ' Which? The col' Or the turbot: Orthe lobsters.-'' criei Geraldine, mer rily, ".-ureiy you forjret. We had doneof these "at Inchmarew. We have only common things there; but, of :oure, vo 1 have forgotten-1 ...'I.have forgotten nothing.'' -Xo, really.' ii t 1 must run. or they will think I have forgotten what o'clock it is. I am to ntfe with my cousin, and I only just took a -moment to see my old governess off on a pk-t re hunt " 1 Was that your old go-.erness?" said - Eellenden; with still the same danger ously retrospective tone? "I I should have looked at her with much greater - interest had I known.'' - Whereat ( eraldino - alt- credit tc her-stared at him? Stared, as blank : ly and magnificently as though she had been hern and bred in Uelgravia. What crt earth dii he mean? the stare demanded.. What was he thinking oiy 1 he mun tnust Jiave gone cra'y. 'Good-bye,'-she' sa'd the next mo ment-, co further comment seeming to bo needed, r ' Gopd bye," dnd away she stepped as light. as- a feather, looking prettier and friskier than ever iaher d;tinty summer i-oe." with her little white sunshade BaWjvng overhead. As long aa bh was within' sfght, even .("iju-'o her Cai-k. was .towards him,he eutup he tniDe - and a trace, of the s.are - b .t. once: within doors fcnd within ' her" own room, the 8 enf. '.changed." ' ' , " " " . ' . " You wouid, you hyiocrite?"'"blazec . firth the. little vixeai in sudden fury, ' -'you would.' And you think to make too now "believe - you dare almost open . ly lo insinuate that you have kept up ,our interevt in -in. me through all th years?. These years during wh vh you have never vouchsafed one of us a word or thoucht? Jfou would like to begin it all' over again, would vo i not? 'ou wou'd get me alone, and ' vbis.'er your soft 'Jeasant things, and 1 rini1 me gilts, and teli me to remember you hy them. and drsrw'.nie on to be so fool stt and so hateful, that I canrot think of it.now. now, without a cringe; . within myself. No. sir -not again. Mot a second time, Sir Frederick tJel lenden. I think 1 am a match for job now. Wfcat is m re, yo J shall have to own it. I'll not avoid him: oh. dear, no ' I'll speak to him' danee with him; ride with him:- almost-all but flirt ' with him. I'll ,i0t.not flirt with' him, ijeesuse granny woiM -not like it. But if Ii ever tries--again to be senti- menta'. or to make allusions aim gic ir,tc h did itisfr-tw, let him be warer Ho . does net yt little ierry of Inqhmarew.- " . ..... The next "thing was-Jerry 9 first bah and a farao e ball-she hadorit. Of co.irse she could have had almos any partners she chose; for the fame tf her had begun to whi-pered, una the lashionab-!e woiMswas on the alert, abuut tho pretty beirets. - Every one u asking his neighbor about he -comings and goints,--tbfr. genulnenees of hr charms, and th extenfc ner i nt i-ii i w n, vnnni? alike tnougn that an introduction, even it jt we,?4 " further, could ao no harm. ' i-aav jf niond somewhat sourly "warned ner nother of the necessity ol beip; care- fu'. '- ;'.;-.. . -Feople are so outMiareQUS,'.' ahede-f elared. ' "Hoallv. one is -ashamed Ol w,..v (oiu-iu nmrarlavi TMrectlV girl with uonev appears - upoll.;tn. pcene, the men swarm after her like a hive .of bees. Ani a fine, uneneuni "bered estate like Inchmarew U no in the market every day. 'ray bo par ticular as to whoso acquaintance you jermit.'' it aid just occur to Mrs. CampbeL that her daughter might have been some at'raction for the bees save in the hue, unencumbered estate, and thatbespoke withsome acerbity when she described Geraldinn as ' a irirl j w i . ii money. it maue uer ur lu . o up, and cut Charlotte somewhat .short in I iier next remark, so that I a'dv Ray mond feared afterwards that she bad not on the whuie done Quite so well aa she had expected. She bad meant to suggest that application as to the cui-t.cter and tenets beld by the bees in uuestion should be made by her mother to her son. and that Cecil alone should furnish the password to granny s goisd graces; but she was obliged to be satisfied wi:h vaguely hinting at what h :e had intended putting into good round terms. , ' ' As for Cecil him elf, he was perfectlj t at if tied with tne situation as it stood. In thq double character of bis grand "mother's aide de camp, and Geraldjne's instructor and companion, he went a'oout with the ladies everywhere; and im the occasion of the ball in cjue-t on had the honor of presenting his cousin with her bo net of -facing her. in the carriage and of following her up the broad, red-i-aroc-ted stepd Into the 'es tive balls. --r' -r-- -.--.' The scene that here met - her eyet was as new as all the-rest- bad been to the little Highlander, but, true to her self, she now walked demurely through tr e banks of flower and shrub, and be tween the long lines of Bilvery lamps, looking neither to right no to left lest Cecil should see aught amiss in her de triment. ' They were rather late, and dancing had begun. . Truth compels ue to state that Ger faldine was cot a go d dan er. .AH the running and cUmb'ng in the world wil not teach the swing of the waltz with out tome pains bcinj; taken in its ac orap ijhiDent: and, accordingly, ul tho gh partners were rife, as we have said, they speedily discovered that the pretty heiress did not. care to be long upon the floor. and,-that they might jyfully exchange the fatiguing exer cise tor a I uiet stroll tnrougn tne gal leries or," better -still, a lounge under the awning of the balcoay. . - The latter was the moit "affected by the' lady. . " . She ha-1 never done anything of tbfc kind, and never seen anything of the kind before. lore sitting or standing o :tslde a l.ondoa ball roo n, amidst - a cro x-d'of ball-goers, in her brilliant balL-bress, on a warm, eweet-seented cummer night, while the music went tinkling on. .within the vast ea'oons, and the dancers went circling round, and soft voices and laug .ter and light patter ing feet filled the air on every side - it was like fairyland. She wondered if all the giris there were' having as good a' time as she. Some of them looked at her rat hoi' hard. ' she thought: and so, for that ma" ter,- did the men. What was it they saw? " ... With all her shrewdness and her in lorn share of native self-importacce.it, did not occur to her that they were saying 'That is Mis Campbell. That is "the greats otch heiress.' and that; thereupon, some fell a musing,' ani some to picking her to pieces. ' -My dear, you must ' positively stick a little closer. to.your grandmother, or tjiine "her AuntChariotteadmonished her somewhat sharply at last.:- "Do as your pou.-un-t do. tthel and Alicia are atwayatcoroing I ackwardsand forwards to uathey show they are 'and r our charge by staying with us when they are not dancing." - ' But 1 have been engaged for every dance." ' "Wneijc then have yoii been? You have not?Teen in the ball-room." "Outsidei- On the balcony " begat Garaldine, "but could proceed no fur-' ther. "That does not do", my dear; it doet not-do," frowned her- aunt, with a terrific whisper. '"J though you wou'd have known better.- Kthel and Alicia never go out on the balconies never. I ought to hare told yoii. Cecil ought to have told you " ' 'Why, I have just been there witl Cecil." said Jerry, opening her eyes.. "Oh0" and Lady Ttaymond wished the had held her tongue-. "Oh? Oh? Oh.J ".she 6aftf,Tiot knowing what else to Bay. -"Well, of course, my dear, of course, thatahem". makes a differ ence, to be .sure," in an entirely -al tored tone, "to be bure that ahem? . completely alters the cae. It is only my anxiety --tht-you -should, be the same as one of my own (laughters, you know, Geraldine; and. no doubt, Cei i -Cecjl, no doubt " nopnderlng on, "J dare say "he" took care aSttT whohr yoii .we're jvitB,m'concluded, tamely." ' "He introduced nearly all of them.' The next-moment, however, brought" a new introduction.- "Geraldine. my love "said her grandmother's . voice General Dacre' wishes to know-vou He was a friend -of your poor father's,' added she, Jower, "he asked of him sell to be presented;", and . there stood a fine, soldierly-looking man;- with crisp, gray bair, a -thick.' gray mous tache, an aiuiline nose, and a magnifi cent star of diamonds on his - breast. Jerry had never felt 'prouder in her life. . . - ? . . : A generai'with a star, at 'whom,, fo all ho'r-eighteen summers.- she. would only "have ventured to gaze iivhmnble admiration, bad he not himself solicited a nearerJacauaintaaee! She. did ind'eed feir honored, 'as she took his arm, and Vnoved about here, and there, lancyinir all aiound must gaze at the pair with .wonder and wi h envy. ,This fine'oll warrior, whose notice bad been felt to confer such distinc tion, and for whom she had been rack ing her brain to find topics not too 'rivolous and foolish, proved to be neither more -nor less than a nighty old fool, anxious still to play his part uiion" the dandies of the day. and in ronsecfuenre, to Le seen in attendance on any pretty girl who was the mode. That the reigning bell of the nvening chanced to bo the daughter of " an old friend dead and gone, was -a Piece ol luck n6t to be thrown away-.v but bav ins made a stepping-stone of tbe lact ho had not had her ear many - nu'a ere he had thrown it aside: He had no notion pf bein? longer looked upon in the light in which he had. first pra sented:himself, and, indeed, soon be to twaddle so foolishly and-so flip Jantly, that the poor chiltf, disgusted and ashamed, begged to-be taken a k to her cha eron, with a Teremptori oes which admitted of-no denial. - t . fche -was very, short and- reserted with her next partner, an- lesrao youth, who forthwith iegan tbe.uauai. prattle about Ascot" S.ndown.v-.Hur. Iingham, and the Ukefc to which she -nowluiBcominfc'afle.itomed. iha, wo lid make "ouick work ot him, Jerry thought: and -with the tip of her pretty nose in the air, sh all at once volun teered a piece of information which she had not U.therto been eager to im part. "I -know nothing of 'these -places,'! inesaid. "I am jusf come up. My tome is in the Highlands of Scotland." Wonder of wonders, the effect was precisely contrary to that expected. The Highlands of Scotland? The Scot tish Highlands were his Paradise, his Elysium. His whole face lighted up at the mere mention of their name, lie was a lorn Highlander himself, born and bred within the wilds of Lochaoer. Of course he had known that Miss Campbell must be Scotch, probably from Argyllshire- with a smite but he did not know, he did not tnink, be thought . girls "cared for nothing but London, and -and but did she really care for the heather, and .tne sea. and the tartan, and the pipes? He waa leacning the ..pipes himself." He 'be longed to a Highland regiment, and be was learning from his own pipe-tnaor, the finest i lpe-ma.or : in the service. The pipe-major had himself composed a "ui. kste " and a "Hornpipe," and was to play one or other of them, he was not sure which, at the ?'ecth'ern Meeting that a itumn. ..Did Miss '41140-. bell ever go -to the XartJUafBytcaliug.? No? . Well, heould.'Uut;ayrhiyyu'on for it very much himselt,"it wasettiug so awlullv big and- cocneyiied3tiU, he should go, aa their pipe-major, was to compete and so on, and soon. . 5 Never had he a more appreciative listener. .There was a true ring in the lad's school-boy., enthusiasm which de lighted and exhiliaratedGeraldine and which came like a breath-, of -fresh air after the false, artificial .vapors which befor,, -had -been --supposed to be her proper. atmosphere. ' ' v It- was not, moreover, lost upon het that she had been twii.e misled within one short half-hour; so granny was not wrong in thinking experience, was gained, to which, we may here" add, every succeeding evening, brought its luota. Bellenden was never.at the balls, lie was not a dancing mun, and. never had been: so" that having .persistently declined'- invitations, -hithertoy.he-could nit now have turned round -and accept ed them, e-Ven had he wish edvfor none were sent him.' ' ' ' Neither did he so wishrheL only dis liked to hear young. Kaymond inces santly reverting to things that -had happened- the night lefore, or the night before that, .whenever it happened-and it happeucd pretty often that he was in company with the two cousins.' He met them on -most morn ings in-the Row, -pretty often in the afternoons, too, at one place o;- another .perhaps he noted where they were going) and now and .then in Mo nt streets- Not by themselves, of course; but what was grandmother, or ei-sov-erness- or -cousin.? Oply some one standing by for propriefy's sake, some one, .top)' sure to be engrossed with the pictures, or the music or the a-t treas ures, or whatever it ws thatGeraldino had, by .the way, -gone to .see, hut vrhi'ih tietlenden ieryjnucIU-doubted., whether she ever did see. She. never looked.at them after he was there, at any rate. She did not look at him much, neither; -Her eyes, her ears, her Qucstiona and answers were forCe-cil-or so it seemed to Cecil's rival. Still Bellenden waited. There wert times solitary moments when he did not feel quite so sure about this as h might have been.'; "He had sometimes ieen himself shot "a glance; a flash of .the eve, a furtive, 6wiftiy-wlthdrawn, searching, home-thrusting loo, wnicif puzzled Wm. - . ... . pQ BE cONTlNlT:ii- The Rud of Dnahen. Mme. d'Abrantes did not seek her hero JT apoleon on his brief return from exile. -Such: a-meeting would have been trying even to her "rare mental flexibility." She was in Home during the Hundred Days, "surrounded," ac cording to the Xouvelle Uiographie Generate,.. 1'by artistic and literary friends." . Few and meagre are the particular -which can now be gleaned of her later years; there are hardly any materials for bridging the : gulf between the Parisian Queen of society and the broken-down wreck of Chorley's lurid ketch. The revolution of 1830 found her at he Abbaye-aux-Boi3, whither the total loss of her fortune compelled her to re tire. She says that on the reappear ance of the tri-coldr she was "saisie d'une de ces joies sans mesure qui reVetent le ciel," -but it in no way al-.-leviated her' melancholy . fate. ' From 1831. to 1835 her memoirs were in course -of publication. She wrote some othe'r books and many stories and -papers, some.of .whiph appeared in" The Iievue 'leFarist.. .', . ' ' " Mme. d'Abrantes, reduced to utt .destitution, died at Chaillot on June 7, 4839; two days aftcrfbeing admitted to a small hospital, havjng been reiusea shelter in one-of more pretensions with out payment in advance. "Abandoned fy ail whom she loved," (which would seem to imply that her , children' had forsaken her,) "but receiving " tue last jconsolations of religion from the hands of the. Archbishop Of Paris." TempV liar." -''. v - ' ... Mudle'a Library. Miidie's circulating library in Lon-' don has 3,5000,000 books constantly in circulation and employs 178 people. Forty years ago its cirrnUtion' rebelled 100, which paused a aenaaUun. Siberion women are raised as abject . 1 i Blaves, nntiay in uress, anu are uuauui with money or cattle. . . Brazil nu!s are more properly seeds, about sixteen of which are en closed in a large shell.' -Vooviv fi f th. nf .the hnman race die from consumption or some other form of pnlmouary disease. -Of "over '5,0ft0,000" children in ele mentary schodlslh England only 800, 000 pay for their tchoolmg. In Greece there is ,503. miles of railroad in operation, 30 under con struction, and 214 more chaxtared. . ' : .IThere ia a dock ranch m the Bliie Mountain of fennsytvania which sends 12,000 birds to tho TQarket yearly.- ' Disease of the eyes is the corse .of tne ' ' Herman people.-' - -in- - -uerman j there are at present 37,800 blind per sons.' " " -": ' ' ..-"-. r- - ". I ' 1 The trlowworm has' a brush attickod to ita tail because it ia necessary to show its light that the back be xept clean.. . :. ... '.;-:' From 1880 to 1890 .there -were .3.064 Lutheran churches built in. this conntry. This is at tha rate of six a WQoil. . .- REV- TALMAGEj a CUB BKOOKIiYH DIVIXK'S bUSi ' DAY SBBMOX. Subject. ".OpportunUy.'' ' Text: "As wo fcave therefore optvirtunl 'ly, let ns do good." Ga'ntians vi., 10. At Denver ynars na audience had a" mllel for divine worship. Tho paitor ol th church for whom I was to preach thai rJjht, in'Tefitwl in the goat in? of tho peo 1h, Htoo-1 in the pulpit looklnir from siilo to side, an i when no more pooplo rnnld ba crowded within tho walls ho turned t ma and said, with startlin emphasis, "What an opportmilty!" Immediately tha tword bepan to enlarge, and while a hymn was beinaunq at every stanr the won! "opportunity" swiftly and mightily nnfoldud, and whlleth opennjar prayer was leln made the word piled up into Alpo and Himalayas of mean ing and spread out Into other latitudes and loneitmle of piimineanee until it beeam hemispneric, and it still Rrew In altitude and ciriMimferenee until it en"in'led other word! and swept out and nn and around until it wa. as bit; as eternity. Never since have read or heard that word without being thrilled with its magnitude and momentum. Opportunity! Althonch in the text to som Itmajraeem a mil. I and quiet note, in th -Hreatjcosperiiarmony it is a Btaeeato pas-sa?-v sit is one ol the loveliest and awfulest worifs Jnrour langune of more than 100,000 worW of English vo'-ahula-y. "As we have opportunity, let us do (tofiA."-.- What is an opportunity?TheleT' :raphei would eoolly tellfou it" is a e'.njunotion ol favorable circumstanees for eeomplLhln(r a purpose. Tmi wop!.-" r.i uiot tell what it is. Take 1000 years to manufacture a definition, and you aould not sueeessfully diwrilio It. Opportunity! The measnrinff rod with which the anael the Apocalypse measured heaven eould ot measure this" pivotal word of my text Stand on tho edire of the precipice ol all time and let down tha fathoming line hand under hand and lower down and lovet dowifand for a quintillion of years let ii link, -Wild the lead will net strike bottom. Op portunity! lint while I do not attempt tc measure, or define the word I will, God help- Ing bio, tAke the responsiliility of telling yor A tomatniog aoout opportunity. First, It is very swift in its' motion. Same Mmes within one minute it starts from the throng of God, sweeps around the earth aud reaseends the throne from which it started. Within less than sixty seconds it fulfilled itf Biisahm -- In; 1-he. second place, opportunity nevei comes Vjk.' - Perhaps an opportunity very miu'h lie it may arrive, but thattme never. Naturalists tell us of insects whinn are born, fulfill their mission and expire in an- hour, but .wiany "opportunities die so soon after thr'yaw.norn that their brevity of life is In-, calenjalile. What most amazes mo is that op portunitfrs do such overshadowing, fat reaching and tremendons work in such short eaKhlv allowanne. You are a business man of" large experience. The past eighteen months lmve been hard on business inon. A yonng merchant at his wits' end came Into yonr ofilce or your house, and you said: ''Times are hard now, but better days will fomV I have sen thintrs as bad or worse, but we g.it out. and we will get out of this. The brilitcst da vs that this country ever saw are vet to come." The young man to whom yon. saf.1 that was ready for suicide or some thlng'worse namelv, a fraudulent turn tc get ant of his despairful position. Youi npewiness inspired nun lor all time, anc thirty yenrs after you are dead he will.) reaping the advantage or your optiniism. Tonr onoortimitv to do that one thing foi that yoUSS maTTWM ni"t halt as longBsthi time I have taken to re'enrse it. Ia yonder third gallery you sit. a man ol tho -world; tint you wish everybody well While the elerhs are standing round In youi store, or.the men in your factory are taking their noon spell, some one says: "Have yon neard that one ot our men nas been con verted. ' at the revival meeting in the Moth'oifist Church?" While it isbeingtalked over vou sav: 'Well, I do not believe in re vivals Those things dor not -last.- People. get excited and join the church and are no Wterthan they wore before. I wish oui men would keep away from those meetings." Do yon know, O man, what you did in thai minute of depreciation? There were two young men in that group who that night would have gone to those meetings and been saved for this world and the next, but you decided them not to go. ' They are social natures. Thev already drink more than is pood for them and are disposed to be wild.- From the time they beard you say that they accelerated their stepa on the down ward road. In ten years they will be through with their dissipations and pass Into the great beyond. That little talk of yours de cided their destiny for this world and the next. Vou had an opportunity that yon mis Improved, and how will you feel when yot confront those two immortals, in the last judgmerlt and they tell you of that unfortu nate talk of yours tht flung them over the precipioe? f man of the worid, why did yon not sav In that noon spell of conversation: "flood!-- I anrglnd that mun has got re ligion. I wish I hail it myslf. I.et us all gc to-uijf'nt Come on. I will meet you at the church door at 8 o'clock?" Tiou see, you would have taken them all to heaven, and you would have got there yourself. Oppor tunity lost! The day I left our country homo to look after myself we rode across the country, ana mv father was driving. Or course I said nothing that implied how 1 felt. But there are hundreds of men here wh.? from their own experience know how I felt. 'At such a rime a voung man must be hn'pefuKand even fcnnatientto cut Into the Iwttler of life foi himself, but to leave tho homestead -whered everything has neen done lor you.youriamei or oilier brothers taking yowr part when yon were imposed on by larger hoya, and youi mother always arcjund when you irot tha cold 4th.m.uMar"d' application's for the chest 01 herb tea'to m'ake.youweat off th fever and sweet mixtures in the cup by the bed to stop the cough, taking ; sometimes too much of ii becaue-1t wew pleasant to take, and then tc go ont,:'wita no, one .to stand between you an(t flt .world, gives-one aohoJtlng sensation nt the throstand a home sickness before you have got three miles away from the old folks. There was on the day I spoke of a silence for a long while, and then my father beran tc tell how good the Lord had been XO him in sieknTs and in. health, and when times ol hardship enme how' Providence had alwnyt provided t"io means of livelihood for the large household, and he wound up by Bay ing. "De Witt. I have alwavs found it safe tc truHt theiord." My father has. been deai! thirty years, but In all the crises of my life and there bavo' been many of them- I hav felt the mighty. Iioost of .that lesson In the farm wagon, f'Do Witt, I have always found ft safe to trust the Lord. The fact was my fathersawthat was his opportunity, and h Improved ,tfc.. ...... .... .. 'This is one reason why I am an enthusiasm tie friend of alf Ycmnr"5Iens Christian As jbciatrora. They get hold of so manyyount men 'just arriving In the city and while thej -are Very-impressionable, nnd it Is the best op- portHiutsv -Jiy, now big tne nouses loouec to us as we first entered the great city, andst many people 1 It seemed some meeting mas have' just closed to fill the streets in that way and then the big placards announcing al styles of amusements and so many of them 01 the same night and every night, after our boy hood had been spent in. regions where onlj Once or twice in a whole year there had beei an entertainment in school-house or church That is the opportunity. Start that innocen! young man in the right direction. 6ix weeki after will be too late. Tell me what such 1 young man does with bis first six weeks in tha great city, ana 1 win ten you wnai ne win w throughout his life on earth and where hi will-spend the ages -of eternity. Oppor1 tunity! . . . . Wo all recognize that commercial and liter ary and political successes depend upon tak ing, advantage- of - opportunity. Tha greal surgeons of England feared to touch thi tumor of King George IV. Sir Astley Coopa V oked at it and said to the king, "I will cut your majesty as though yoi were a plow man."-'That was Sir Astley'a opportunity. Lord dive was his father's dismay-, cWmbinij church steeples-: and. doing reakless things. His father .sent him to Madras. India..as a slerk in the service of an English oulcer. Clive watchS'l his. time; and-when war brokir out e.-ime ti be-' the' chief 'Of- rho.host thiit sv4 -Iifdia -for England., That was Lord Olive's opportunity. Tajiline Lucca, f'rn almost matchless singer, was but little reoof, .nized. Until in the absence 01 tea eoioisi st iiit I bel tdki the German choir aba took her place and gan-UlQ enohantmant ol.toe wousk-Xoat was Ijocca's oppdrfunfty. John Scott, whTJ afterward became Irrd Eldon, had stumbled his wav along in the practice of law until the case of Aekroyd versus Smithson was to ba tried, and his speech that day opened all aye-' trues of success...: Xhat was Lord "Sldon'a.or, portunitv. William H. Seward was given by his father (1000 to get a collegiate education. That money soon gone, his father said. "Now you must fight your own way," and ne did, un fl gubernatorial chair and United Statue Senatorial chair were his, with a right to tha Presidential chair if the meanness of Ameri can politics had not swindled him out of it. Hue day when his' father told him to fight his own way was William H. Seward's oppor tunity. John llonry Newman, becalmed a whole week in an orange boat In the Strait ol Bonifacio, wrote his immortal hymn. "Lead, Kindly Light." That was John Henry New man's opportunity. You know Kirk White's immortal hymn, "When Marshaled on the N)-btty Plain." He wrote it in a boat by a lantern on a stormy night as he was sailing along a rocky coast. That was Kirii White's j na importance of making tho most of op portunities as they present themsulves is ac knowledged in all other directions. Why not in the matter of use'uless? The differ ence of usefulness of good men and women is not so much the difTerexy-o in brain or so cial position or wealth, but in equipment of Christian common sense to know just tha time when to say the right word or do the right tiling. There are good people who can id ways be depended on "to say the right thing at the wrong time, A merchant selling goods over the couner to a wily customer who would like to get them at less than cost, the railroad conductor while taking up the tickets from passengers who want to work off last year's free pass or get' through at half rate a child fully grown, a housekeeper try Las to get tha talna ruauv ia time fur .aniet.-u. although the oven bos neglected to fulfill the order given him those are not opportuni ties for religious address. Do not rush no to a man in the busiest part of the day and when a half dozen people are waiting for him and ask, "How is your soul?" . .. . But there plenty of fit occasions. It it Interesting to see .the sportsman, gun In a nnd and pouch at side and accompanied by ih3 hounds yelping down the road, off on hunting expedition, but the best hunters in this world are those who hunt for oppor tunities to do good, and the game is some diing to gladden earth and heaven. . I will point out some of the! opportunities. When a soul is in bereavement is the beat time, to talk of gospel consolation and heavenly re union. When a man has lost bis property is the best time to talk to him of heavenly in heritauce that can never be levied on. When one is sick is the bt time to talk to him about the supernatural latitude In which una aaita ia an impossibility. When the Holy Spirit is moving on a community ia the best time to tell a man he ought to be saved. Bj word, by a smile, by a look, by a prayer, the work may be thoroughly done that" all eternity catuiot undo it. As the harp was Invented from hearing the twang of a bow string, as the law of gravitation was sug-igt-sled by the fall of an apple, as the order in India for the use of a greased cartridge started the mutiny of 1957, which appalled the Nations, so something insignificant may open tiie door for great results. Be on the watch. It may be a gladness, it may be a rorror, but It will be an opportunity. A city missionary in the lower parts of the city found a young woman ia wretchedness nnd sin. lid said, "Why do you not go home?" She said, ."They would not receive me at home." Hi said, "What Is your father's mime, and where does he live?" Having obtained the address and written to tho father, the citv missionary got a renlv. ton the outside of the letter the word "imme diate . underscored. It was the heartiest possible invitation for the. wanderer to oome t me That was the "city missionary's op portunity. And there are opportunities all ahout you, and on them, written by the band of the O-xl who will bless you and blest those whom you help, In capitals of light the word "Immediate." A military officer very profane in his hab its was going down into a mine at Cornwall, England, with a Christian miner, for man of those miners are Christians. The oflieei used profane language while In the cage go ing down. As they were coming up out ol the mine the profane officer said, "If it be so lar down to your work.' how much farther would it ba to the bottomless pit?" The Christian 1 liner responded, '"I do not know how far it is down to that place, but if this rope shoidd break you would be there in a minute." It wa3 the Christian miner's op portunity. Many years ago a clergyman was on a sloop on our Hudson River, and hearing a man utter a blasphemy the clergyman said, "You have spoken agatn.st my best friend, Jesus Christ. beveu years after this same. elwryman was on his way to the general as sembly of the Presbyterian Church at Phila delphia, when a young minister addressed him and asked him if he was not on a sloop on the Hudson Jtiver seven years before! Tho reply was in the affirmative. "Well,' ' Bail the young minister, "I was the mar whom you corrected for uttering that oath. It led me to think and repent, and I am try ing to atone somewhat for my early behavior I am a preacher of the gospel and a deiegati to the general assembly."- Seven years be fore on that Hudson River sloop was th clergyman's opportunity. I stand this minute in the presence of man heads of families. I wonder If they all real ize that the opportunity for Influencing the household for Christ and heaven is very briel and wi 11 soon be gone ? For awhile the house Is full of the voices and footsteps of children. iou sometime leei tnat you can naruiy stand the racket. You say: "Do be quiet! It seem! is if my head would split with all this noise." and things get broken and ruined, and it is 'Where's my bat !" "Who took my books? "Who has been busy with my playthings?" .nd it Ls a-rushing this way, and a-rushins that, until father and mother are well nigc DesMe'themsel ves. It is astonishing how much noise five or si ;hildren can make and not half try. But the pears glide swiftly away. After awhile the roices are not so many, -and' those which staj we ragj-tt sedate. . First this room gets quiet, md then that room. Death takes some, lud marrfdge take others', until after awhile :ho house is awfully still. That man yondoi would give all he is worth to have that- boj who is gone away forever rush into the room once more with the shout that was once thought too boisterous. Tiirit mother Who was onco Tried because her little girl, now gone forever, with care less scissors cut np something really valuable would, like to have the child come back, willing to put in her hands the most valu able wardrobe to cut as she pleases. Yes, yes. The house noisy now will soon be still enough, I warrant you, and as when you be gan housekeeping there were just two,of yoii, there wiil be just two again. Oh, the' alarm ing brevity of infancy and childhood I - The opportunity is glorious, but it. soon passes. Pan nts ma say at the close of life, "What a pity we did not do more for the religious ivel Tare of our children while we had them with 11s!" lint tho lamentation will be of no avail. The opportunity had wings, and it vanished. When your child gets out of the oradle, let it slimb into the outstretched arms of the beau tiful Christ. "Come thou and all thy house into the ark. But there Is one opportunity so much brighter than any other, so much more invit ing, and so superior to all others that there are innumerable fingers pointing to it, and it is haloed with a glory all its own. It is yours! It is mine! It is the present hour. It is the now. We shall never have it again. While I speak and you listen the opportunity is rest less as if to be gone. Vou cannot chain it down. You cannot imprison it. You cannot na'ce It stay. All its pulses are throbbing ith a haste that cannot be hind red or eon Tolled. It Is the opportunity of invitation in my part and acceptance on your part. The loor of the palace of God's mercy is wide )pen. Go in. Sit down and be kings and pieens unto God forever. "Well," you say, 'I am not ready." You are ready. "Art rou a sinner?" "Yes." , "Do you want to te saved now and forever?" "Yes." "Do you believe that Christ is able and will ing to do the work?" "Yes." - Then you are saved. You are inside the palace door of Ood'a mercy already. You look ohangod. You are changed. "Hallelujah, lis done!" Did you ever see anything done so Quickly? (Invitation offered and aocepted in less -than a minute oy my watcn or unit clock, sir Edward Creasy wrote a book railed "The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, From Slarathon to Waterloo." But the most de uisive battle that you will ever fight, and tha greateet viotory- you will ever gain, is this tnonf ent when you conquer first yourself and then all the hindering myrmldous of perdi tion by saying. "Lord Jesus, here I am, un ions and helpless, to be saved by Thee and Xaeo alflne." .That makes a panio la helU that makes celebration In heaven. Oppor tunity! - . . ' " On the 11th of January,' 18G6, a collier brig ran into the rocks near Walmer Beach, Eng land.' Simon -FritoharbV -standing on the beach, threw off hit coat andaaW, "Who-wlll help me save that crew?" Twenty men shouted, "I will," though only seven, were Deeded. Through the awful surf the boat dashed, and in fifteen minutes from the time Pritchard threw off his coat ail the ship wrecked crew were safe on the land. Quicker work to-day. Halt that time more than necessary to get all this assemblage into the lifeboat of the gospel and ashore, stand ing both feet on the Hook of Ages. By the two strong oars of faith and'prayer first pull for the wreck and then- pull for the shore, Opportunity! Over the city went the cry, Jesus of Nazareth passeth by! Let the world go. It has abused you incragh, and cheated you- enough, and slan dered you enough, and damaged yon enough. Even those from whom you expected better things turned ont your assailants, as when Kapoleon in his last will and testament left (000 franca to the man who shot at Welling ton in the streets of Paris. Oh, it is a mean world! Take the glorious Lord for your Km pardons hi p. I like what the good man laid to the one who had everything but re gion. The affluent man boasted of what he wned and of his splendors of surroundings, putting into lnsigmncance, as ne tnougnt, Ihe Christian's possessions. "Ah," said the Christian, ".Man, I have something you have aot." "What ls that?" said the worldling. The answer was, "Peace!" And you may all iave it peace with God, peace with the past, peace with the future, a peace that all the assaults of the world and all the bom bard men ts Satanic cannot interfere with. A Scotch shepherd was dying and had the pastor called in. The dying shepherd said to Bis wife, "Mary, please go iuto the next room, for I want to see the minister alone." ft'hen the two were alone the dying shepherd laid, "I have known the Bible all my life. ut I am going, and I a:n 'afeered to dee.' " Then the pastor quoted the psalm: "The Lord is my Hhepberd. I shall not want." ."Yea, mon, said the shepherd, "I was fa miliar with that before vou . horn, hut 1 am a-goln', and 1 am aieerea to ace." mer. tiiid tiio pastor, "You know that the psalm lays, 'Though I walk through the valley of Ihe shadow of death, I will fear no evil' " "Yes " said the dying shepherd, "I knew that before you were born, but It does not help me." Then said the pastor, "Don't you know that sometimes when you were driving the sheep down through the valleys and ravines there would be shadows all about fou. while there was plenty of sunshine on Ihe hills above? You ore In the shadows now, Jut it is sunshine higher up." Then said the . lying shepherd: "Ah! that is good. 1 never saw it that way before. All is welk Though I pass through the valley of tha lhadow of death, Thou art with mv Bhadows here, but sunshine above." So the dying shepherd got peace. Living and dy tUg, may we have the same peace 1 Opportunity 1 Under the arch of that splen lid word let this multitude of my hearen pass into the pardon and hope and triumpL Df the gospel. Go by companies of a hundred each. Go by regiments of a thousand each, the aged leaning on the staff, the middle aged throwing off their burdens as they past and the young to have their present joyt augmented by more glorious satisfactions. Forward into the kingdom I As soon as yoa pass the dividing line there will be shouting till up and down the heavens. The crownel Immortals will look down and cheer. Jesus nt the many scars will rejoice at the result bf His earthlv sacrifices. Departed saints will be gladdened that their prayers an answered. An order will be given for the ipreading ot a banquet at which yoa wi'l bo th4"Jtnored. jtuest. From the Jin--penal gardens the wreaths wiil bo twist--t;d for your brow, and from the hall ol eternal niusio the harpers will bring theii harps and the trumpeters their trumpets, and all up and down the amethystine stairways ol the castles and in all the rooms of the house of many mansions it will bo talked over with boly glee that this day, while one plain man Itood on the platform of this vast building, giving the gospel call, an asemblage made v from all parts of the earth and piled up i j these galleries ohose Christ as their portion and started for heaven as their everlasting home. Ring all the bells of heaven at thi tidings! Strike all the cymbals at the joy! Wave all the palm branches at the triumph! Victory! Victory! A New Care for Hiccoughs. , Samuel A. Hochkin, of West Haven. Co Tin. ' Was hioeoughing his life away at the home oi pis nephew, Charles E. Hochkin, Newark, N. J., until Dr. Bailey was called in. The pa tient is seventy-three years old.'On'January b he began hiccoughing violently. The usual remedies were prescribed, but lr. Hochkin grew worse. At this time Dr. C. H. "Clark, of FTainfleld, was afflicted with the malady, and the reme nies used in his ease without avail were tried. Dr. W. O. Bailey was called in. Dr. liailey saw that the aged sufferer could livelong unless the throat spasms ceased. There were Intervals of half an. hour of rest, wh'en-the hiccough returned. Mr. ' Hochkin had given up the battle for life and told his wife, who accompanied him from West Haven, jthat he proposed to settle up his - earthly af fairs. .... Late that night Dr. Bailey bethought him pf the "musk" oure, and prescribed moschus In ten grain doses to a drachm, gi ving one Hrachm every three hours. The-" ef- Eect was electrical. " Tho 'throat spasms easod, and Mr. Hochkin was pro nounced out of danger and gained strength rapidly. The remedy in this case was for warded to tne physician attending llr. Clart nt Plainfteld in the hope of saving the lot WViife. . - . . Amputated Ilia Foot Himself. - Two years ago Bobert' Galbraifh, aged eventy-four, a farmer of Tayne Township, Indiana County, Penn.. fell from a load oi my and injured his left ankle and foot. The injury has caused him. great suffering ever rince, and the family physician has long in sisted that unless the foot was amputated the armer oould never be any better. Galbraitb itubbornly refused to have the operatior performed." ' One morning recently the farmer' daugh ter went into hia room. ' "Delia,"' aaid he. "tho job's done. The foot ls Amputated." On the bed by his side lay the foot. On the other side was a razor. The old farmer pad amputated his own toot with his razor, and had done it neatly, too, at the anki (oint. , Although he is seventy-six years old.Farm er Galbraith is not even suffering from shock from his self-amputating operation, and the loctor says he could not have. taken the foo' off more neatly himself. A Tear of Fire lo Baltimore. -The aggregate damage by Are in Balti more, Sid., in 1894, as compiled by the Fire Department, was (542,18d.29. The depart ment responded to 631 alarms. - News in Brief . A white qnail was shot by a sports man nearPalatka, r'la., a few days ago. The onchi ilium, a species of shel- less snail has innumerable eyes on its back. ' Seamen nearing land can toll that fact bj the deposits of dew on the vesseL Ancient needles were all of brass, and in size approximated onr darning neediest ' There are citizens of McFall, Mo., who object to the cemetery being used as a pasture.'- v - - Louis Cyr.the Canadian Sampson, lifts 3500 pounds . with6ut harness or other apparatus. - Liinsey. woolsey was first made at the town of L-insey, in Suffolk, Eng land, abontl530. . Tusks - of a mammoth have been found of a length of nine feet, measured along the curve. . The St. Croix Rivtr, in Maiae, was named from the cross made by two rivers at its month. THE FIELD OF SEDAN GERMAN AND FRENCH eATTL'E MONUMENTS. - ioit Which Witnessed the Terrific BtrucKlO that Ended Imperialiar-i in France and Effected German Feder ation. Blatorlc Memorials. In Its results the most important bat tle fought since Waterloo was that of Sedan. By It Imperialism was brought to an end in France; the third republic. which still endures and prospers, was proclaimed; the federation of the Ger man provinces was effected, and King William of Prussia became the ruler of united German empire. The battle of Sedan, fought September 1, 1870, virtually ended the war, which the third Napoleon had foolishly declared against Prussia, and on the battle field I.'apc-leon himself surrendered hit sword to the Prussian king. Since that day 24 years ago the bat tle field of Sedan has greatly changed. Nearly every relic of the eventful strug gle has been removed. Long ago' the plow leveled the graves of many; In other cases the remains of tho dead combatants were exhumed and remov ed Into the graveyard of the local vil lages, where their resting places are un marked by any memorial. There Is one Interesting memento of the struggle remaining the weaver's cottage, near Douchery where the Emperor Napo leon and Prince Blsvnarck had an In terview on the morning after the bat tle. But the historic cottage ls now CBXPT CONTAINING BONES OP TRENCH AND GEKMAN SOLDIXBS. jninhablted and In dilapidation and soon, like other relics of the battle "ld, will pass away forever. " Monuraenta In the Field. . There are but two. memorials on tho ictnal field of battla. One was erected CQXTMENT .OK THE BATTLEFIELD OF . SEDAN. Dy France to the memory of her dead; and the ptiier ls a conventional monu ment erected- at the Joint expense of France and Germany to the memory and in a. certain Eense to the preserva tion of the Bavarian and French sol fliers who fell in the bitter and savage fighting In and about the Ill-fated tU- age of BazellleS, which: shell and thi torch laid in ashes.. The base of the latter mohnment consists of a great jrypti the center of . which Is pierced by i wide passage, on either side of which, ire- vaults with barred7 fronts,' behind r.-ttS nrft gtr-i r---TH.-" l '1 - - - MOUKDSX, TEE SACKED CITY OF MAXCIIURIA. Wfthln these walls, it Is believed, is stored the imperial treasure, the accuiaulution 0 more than 200 years, and amounting to about $2,000,000,000. What was the greatest height of ava rice ever dreamed of by man? Did ever philanthropist estimate the amount of money with which he could set right all the wrongs of the world? What ls a "princely fortune?" Or, to go further, what Is Imperial wealth? Make np your figures, grasp for an Instant at the enormity of them, and then try to con soive the vastness of the store of wealth which well-authenticated state ments give to Monkden, the capital of Manchuria, and ' sacred city of the Uancbus.- Moukden, even by the time this ap pears in print may have fallen Into the bands of the Japanese army, command ed by Connt Tamagata. And the Im perial treasure ls estimated at 1,200, 000,000 taels. The value of a tael Is about $1.50 of onr money sometimes more. This would place the Imperial hoard at nearly two billion of dollars! There can be little error in these cal culations, say thsse best versed In mat ters concerning the Chinese gorern ruent It is well known that for At least 200 years past the reigning Chi nese Einpc or haa sent an annual con signment of 6,000,000 taels to Moukden pi bo stored, HTB "WEAVER'S cottaob.' (Where Bismarck and the Emperor met th morning after Sedan. , parts of skulls. In rear of which are piled tangled heaps of mlscellaneoM bones. The remains of the enemies In life remain still separate as they slowl) moulder; the German bones are In the caves on ono side of the central passage, those on the other are tenanted by thi bones of Frenchmen. Tested Her Sincerity. The Count de Lesseps never seeme to lose sight of the education of his children, even In the smallest detail One morning at breakfast, a beautiful Dresden tea-cup was broken. "Ah!" cried the countess, "a dlsast&rl Twa more of that set will now be broken, It always happens so." "Are yon sd superstitious," asked the count, "a really to believe that two more will be; broken?" "I know It" "Then let ul, get It off our minds." And, taking twa of the cups by the handles, he dashed them together. The anger and dismay of the countess proved, conclusively that she had not seriously held to her superstition. It also loosed any hold the absurd Idea may have had on tha minds of the children. .- LEVEL OF THE GULF RISING. 't Ia Now One Foot Higher than II W'na in 1S50. According to the engineers of tha hydrographie bureau, the level of tha Gulf of Mexico ls one foot higher than It was In 1S59, and, of course, the en croachment on the surrounding coasts has been greater or less, depending on their character. In some places, where the marginal lands are composed of some high, rovky bluffs, this change of level has goae on from year to year without attracting attention. On tho other hand, many low-lying points (some that wero once inhabited by tho primitive inhabitants or bythe pioneer "liite settlers) are entirely submerged. The cause of this change of level has lot. as yet been ascertained, but It Is reasonably certain that It is the result of either a settling of the dry land or of . a general and uniform rising or up heaval in the gulf bed. On the contrary, there isn't tho least doubt but that there ls much less. However this may be, if this aqueous encroachment ls steadily maintained, Keokuk will be a deep water harbor and St Louis and tho whole of Missouri will be entirely submerged In less than 40,000 years from Jan. 1, 1S93. A Slight Mistake. A foreigner, not absolutely certain ot ill the shades of meaning In our En glish words, recently attended a recep tion at Vassar College at which tha young ladies of the Institution were ar rayed in all the lewildering beuuty of evening toilets. Said he to the Presi dent: '"I have never before seen ivj grand a sight ns thos-j young ladles lu their ninhtijowns." St Albnus Messen ger. A Pplendld Catch. The Old Lady AVould John be a good catch for Mary? ' The Old Man Splendid! He's In thu 'oot-ball business and his life ls insured for $ip,000.-4.tlanta Constitution, PiHCOuraced Tlicru. . Minister So you say that you snn .strtne' boys out 'fishing' on Sunday, Bob bio. I hope you did something to dis co iro.ge them. Kobble Oh, yes, sir, I stole their balf - M-irlnm T.tfe. doubtless much of the Chlneso Em peror's -panic over the successes of tho army marching upon Moukden Is caus ed by frantic fear that this enormous fortune will bo taken from him, and reduce him, no matter what the final outcome of the war may be, to compar ative beggary! It is reported that th treasr.ro has already been secretly re moved from the palace to a less Jmper Hied hiding place. If the treasure hat been taken outside the walls of Mouk den which Is extremely Improbable It cannot have been carried far. In the present anarchic condition of Man churia It would be as well to leave tho vast treasure for the Japanese victors as to expose It to pillage by the turbu lent Manchurlans. Should the Imperial treasure of Mouk icn fall Into the hands of tho Japanese, would it belong to the latter govern ment? Most assuredly, and tha only civilized power that would be liable to make even an attempt at a protest wouid be England. Should England Interfere to prevent this splendid loot by Connt Tamngata's nm.y, tho Jap finese, who have a passion for hlslory, would sardonically Uqulraj "YThafj Luout India r r i't . 1 1 r 1 ; lit. '--1 :r- t . i .. . t.