Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, March 25, 1896, Image 1

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    S jf HP HI ISCtlL
. F. 8GHWEIER,
THE OONBTITUTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWH.
Ketitanr ud
VOL. I
MIFFLINTOW1N. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENN A.. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 25. 1896.
NO. 15.
i
I
ft
CHArXEIt xu
Colonel Or-y 'a unit had hitherto cer
tainly not met with .the sueeess It de
terred. Kveu he, utolid and iiuprejjnablt
to rebuffs as lie had seemed, wua begin
ning to fear that hid perseverance wa
misapplied.
"Colonel Grey has leen here, lie bat
done you the honor of asking your hand,
IMana," Mr. Ktudlya said to his daugh
ter, earnestly, oi:e day.
"An honor whieh 1 respectfully beg to
decline, though of course alive to the tre
mendous advantages of such a marriage,"
he returned, v. itti a sweeping courtesy-
"Don't talk nonsense, Di. Whom do
you intend to marry V"
"Why. really naim " the began; but
be stopped her-uhurplf a"d went on:
"You are twenty-tive "
"Twenty-six and a bit," she admitted.
eamtiUly, interrupting him in ner iurn. (
"The more real.,,. ?ou should be think-
lug of settling iluwu. I can tell you that
In this country men begin to fight shy
of a girl who at your aj:e is stingle still.
Diana was speechless with haughtiest
turprise. Was her father going to be the
first to turn renegade from the creed that
be had taught her?
"You would rather I msde a mesal
liance than not marry at all?" she ques
tioned, blankly.
"Tut, tut! There is no question of a
mesalliance in this case. I should never
l.e ashamed of Colonel Grey if he were
my son-in-law."
"Would you be proud?" she asked, look
ing tearchingly into his face. "And
should I be proud of acknowledging a
parish i! . t.irua my father-in-law V I 'a pa,
ou can't lie contemplating such a match
iu eari.est!"
"His sister is I.auy St. Maur. His
cousin is the celebrated t . C and Le has
interest at the Horse Guards."
"If he were very rich 1 could under
stand it," went on Diana, thoughtfully.
"He is not so good a nialeh in point of
money as Mr. Graeme, of course; buf
still "
His daughter confronted him pale uuJ
trembling.
"Do you mean, papa, that you could
ever forg t his connection with trade,
that you would ailow me to marry Mr.
Graeme even even
if I wished it, and
and he wished it. too?"
"My dear, I should be only too pleased,"
replied the Commissioner, fumbling
among his paiwrs, as though politely to
Imply that just then he could better boar
her absenco than her presence. Hut so
long a silence ensued that be fixed bis
glasses on bis nose, nnd looked thro lgli
them at his daughter.
She was blushing like a rose, nt tha
thoughts that were passing through hr
mlnrtt but Mr. Knollys fancied it was
wounded pride thnt had sent the color t.
her cheek, and basteneu to make
his
meaning clear.
I don't deny, Diana, that 1 was very j
athlrlAn. for vou at first.
t. At tweuiy
When I went home on furlough, beforo
your poor mother died, you remember!
wan were ine loveneai nm
u.n nn nosllion seeuie-i iu
higher than you had a right to fill the
divine right or ueauty, uiy Mem. u
aro handsome still, but not as you tve.-e
Six years ago. You are older now, of
course; and somehow you have never
been a great favorite with men. Forgive
tny plain speaking, I1."
I dare say you are only cruel to be
kind," she answered, quickly, too proud
tn let him tee how hurt sne was. i
won?t keep you from your work, papa."
Bhl dni not put into word, the thought
,at crent into her mind with insidious ,
aweetness, yet with a little sadness, that
If her father hud ceased to expect great
things for her, sne neca noi certainty
Immolate herself on the shrine of ambi
tion. Ever since she had firat discovered
what she then considered her mad love
for the ton of the Scotch brewer, the had.
striven hard to stamp it out, or at least
to live it down. She had never allowed
herself to dwell on the happiness such a
love might have been. If he returned It.
Scarcely had she asked herself whether
he could ever care for her or not; she had;
.lways striven to throw him and Jane
Knox together whenever It was possible,
But now now?
She went to Mrs. Dene's that same
morning, and found Val Graeme there as
he eenerally was. Jane waa there, too,
looking pale and tired, but she went to
meet Diana with a welcoming smile.
"It is three whole days since you have
been here," the said, reproachfully
Come round the garden for a chat."
She nodded somewhat cavalierly to the
oung fellow, who was on his knees
mending her tennis bst, aa she left th.
room.
"Mrs. Dene will be here in a few mln
Otes," she called out cheerfully over her
shoulder.
Diana, who scarcely looked tip when
Mr Graeme greeted her, only inclnding
him In a genial "how do," felt angry
With Jane, then inconsequently pleased.
Perhaps it was only so, by her indiffer
ence, that he might look elsewhere for np
preciation. ...
It was a humiliating admission, never
theless. she waa obliged to confess to her
aelf, that she would have no chance
o-ninst the Quartermaster's daughter
were any rivalry to be between them.
It was strange what a fascination that
girl had for such widely different na
tures and she pleased without effort,
even against her will. She had thwarted
Diana's attempt to make a mercenary
marriage with the two eligibles in the
station, the Hon. Barry Larron and Ste
phen Prinsep was she to spoil her love,
too? It was with a jealous inflection it
her tones that she said presently:
"I am afraid I interrupted your tete-a-
"A tete-a-tete that bade fair to last all
with a rebellioua pout. "He cams
. jn orraaradt, and then Mrs. Dene was
Tory busy, so left me to entertain him. J
.was very glad Indeed you came."
"fe that truo?"
"Tea, of course. Why, you don't
think " Jane stopped short, meetiuj
the other's searching glance. She knew
she was being cross-questioned, but for
one moment did not quite see for what
object.
"Jane," asked Diana, solemnly, "dc
yon mean to marry Mr. Graeme?"
"I? No. What an ideal" with tht
f ltfsj eta anile.
"Thou" desperately "why don't yon
.how him m plainly and and let other
le."
"Diana," said Jane, demurely, at they
were still beyond ear-shot, "I don't think
I shall have much to explain after alL
There was certainly nothing of flirtation,
nothing even personal in our long conver
sation to-day. It bad Just struck me that
Mr. Graeme was talking nearly all the
timo about you."
There was no pallor nor pride in Miss
Knollys' face now, the waa blushing lib
any school-girl at they reached Mrs.
Dene's side, and the could scarcely stam
mer out a suitable remark. An odd mix
ture of shame and triumph made her
quite unlike herself. She waa afraid to
meet Jane'a eyet lest the should guest
what keen hope her words had awakened.
Directly she could she took her leave,
only too glad to be alone to think.
And now Jane had something to con
sider. Her thoughts lately had been con
centrated on her own affairs, and the wat
weary of trying to solve the vexed prob
lem of how best to unravel the tangled
Bkein of difficulties that beset her. It wat
a relief to turn her attention to aome-
, . . . . -- - -
" time. She
knew Valentine Graeme had admired
been near loving her, in fact, before her
engagement to Colonel Prinsep wat an
nounced, and that again of late hit inter
est in her had seemed to be reviving; but
she had known too much of really pas
i sionate love, the love associated, alas,
; with sin and sorrow, to believe that his
j affection was very deeply seated.
An opportunity to talk with Valentine
alone occurred, later in the day. He had
atayed to luncheon, and afterward all
three were gathered round the fire, ho
( chatting to Mrs. Dene, and Jane deep in
' thought at to how the could best bring
about an explanation. Then some house
hold duty called Mrs. Dene away, and
the two were left alone.
"How nice this idle time lit" observed
Valentine, deamlly; then, with one of
his flashes of fun, he added, comically,
"Don't siwil it by trying to amnte me."
j She laughed. It was an old joke against
' her that the took the verb "to entertain"
too literally. It must have been in some
measure due to her Scotch blood, or that
unconsciously some memory of the old,
more practical life in barracks remained
j with her; at any rate the never allowed
the mind of any viaitor to ttay long un
I occupied, and when Valentine spent the
day with them at now, there waa no
chance of hit finding any leisure time to
niknnnl.
Mrs. Dene had noticed first how Jane
provided all her guests with albums and
books of views, then sat near primly ex
plaining or descanting on their merits.
Since then it had become a universal
joke.
Now, however, the wanted only to talk,
and said so.
"I am afraid," tald Val, thoughtfully,
j "I have exhausted my originality. I don't
believe I have another remark to make.
Yon could hardly expect it after a whole
day's uninterrupted conversation."
"That's just It. Why do you come no
often?" blurted out Jane.
He pushed his chair back from the fire.
ana sprung- 10 ui. .
7"" "
am unwelcome
that I come too often?" he exclaimed.
blankly.
"Suppose," she said, with a faint smile
hovering on her lips, "that all this time,
while you have been fancying so differ
ently, you have been In reality steadily
bat unconsciously failing in love with
some one ever so much prettier and nicer
than I" an obstinate shake of the head
from VaL which ahe Ignored. "Suppose
too, that ahe is beginning to care for you
in return. And suppose you should he
fortunate enough to win such a beautiful
bride, and there ahould be a wedding-
pnd I should be thert to glad, oh, so
Wd to ee two such good friends happy!"
Yfj"? fjfj- d
heart waa beating quickly. Was It possi
ble that what she tald waa true that he
really did love Diana beat? he thought te
himself.
"And you, Jenny? how is It to be with
yon? asked Valentine.
"With me? Oh, never mind me!" she
replied, with her face still turned away.
"But I do mind you very much. Tell
me," he aald, deliberately for he had
weighed the matter in his mind, and con
cluded that he waa not so deeply in love
with Diana, but that be had a very reas
onable chance of happiness with Jane If
she decided to accept him; ahe had the
first claim upon his affections, and It
would not be such a terrible sacrifice
after all "tell me, would you not be
happier if you married me7 Ton know
me better than nearly any one else and
I would take good care of you, be sure.
Don't you think you could be content
with me?"
She turned quickly and placed her hands
In hit. She understood him at once, and
taw more clearly than he saw himself
that he waa offering to give np bis own
happiness for hers.
"How good you are how good yon
are!" ahe murmured. "Indeed, I am very
grateful; but what yon suggest could
never be. Never, believe me," ahe re
peated firmly, as he made a movement
to speak.
Both remained silent for a moment,
then she spoke again.
"I must go and find Mrs. Dene now.
Thank you to much for everything you
have said; and gooa-by."
At Valentine wended his way home to
the mess, he too had something to con
sider. CHAPTER XIX
It could not naturally remain long a se
cret to Mrs. Dene that something had
bappened to keep Valentin, from the
house; and when she questioned Jane,
the anawer was given frankly enough.
. "Mr. Graeme waa halting between two
opinions, whether he liked Diana or me
the better, to I helped him to decide. He
actually did not know that he was in lovo
with Diana till I told him."
"And so lost him for yourself," said
Mrs. Dene, with a suspicious remoar
trance In her tone.
Jane lifted her eyebrows slightlyt
"I did not want hlm. I never intend
to marry at all."
Mrs. Dene waa tllent. It occurred to
ber that It might really end so. First
the Colonel, and then the Sergeant, the
lover of former days, had been dismissed,
and afterward the little A. D. O. and
Barry Larron. Now the Adjutant wat
tent away. She was losing all her lovers.
But after a few days ahe found occa
sion to alter her opinion. Colonel Prin
sep had been three times to the bungalow
oa. thne sjimsibJt mnrnlnrs, True, he
hed ttayed only a short time on each
occasion, and be alwaya came with a
declared object; yet tome tubtle chauge
in hit manner octroyed that he no longer
even wished to believe himself indifferent
to Jane. And Jane, what were her feel
ings on the subject ? sue uetermineu 10
find out.
"Jenny," the tald that tame evening,
at they tat together after their quiet
dinner, "1 wonder why Colonel l'rinscp
has been here to often lately?"
Jenny'a head waa bent low over' her
work at she answered :
"You and he were always good
friends."
"And are ttilL But If his coming were
disagreeable to you it it disagreeable
to you, Jenny 7"
She raited her eyet. Mrs. Dene sat op
posite to her, her knitting needles flash
ing In and out of her fleecy work, the tire
light glancing upon her short curls and
down-turned face. It atruck Jane how
young and winning the looked. A sharp
fear assailed her that in this might be
the secret of Stephen Printep't visits
lately. Her hatband had been dead s
year now.
Jane, like many others, had never
thought there had been any deep affec-
tion between Captain Dene and bit wife;
therefore it wat the more likely she would
marry again, and what, so probable as
that the old friendship that had always
been between her and the Colonel should
develop into something sweeter?
"Is ity repeated Nora Dene, softly.
"No; why should it be?" was the reply
given In clear, metallic tones. "We have
both forgotten everything everything
that might make it uncomfortable for us
to meet."
A slight Incredulous glance, but nothing
more.- They should have their own way,
Mrs. Dene decided, and come together if
to Inclined, without any Interference
from her.
The following morning Colonel Prinsep
went to the bnngalo again. Jane was
outside, but fled in-doors when she saw
! him in the distance. As he passed where
I ahe had been, he glanced to see what she
had been doing. A large flower-pot of
cnttlnn waa standing there with several
j smaller ones ranged beside it, and on the
ground lay a large tilver ring that the
had taken off before she bad begun her
work, and In her rapid flight bad forgot
ten. It was the ring she always wore on
iz.tLZaL:"x:::,'.zrvnz
tue uuiu uu.c. ;- ---
which Colonel Prinsep had once thought
1 might be a sign of her betrothal to Jacob
I Lynn. Now he lifted and examined it
1 curiously. It wat evidently of Indian
! workmanship, quaintly embossed, and so
! made that It seemed like three rings
joined. As he fingered It, tin center sec
tion moved beneath his touch. It turned
completely, and he saw that below lay
perdu a wedding-ring. It could only be
the one that he had thrown down in
anger the day they were to have bees
married.
Under his fair mustache his lips quiv
ered in half-amused emotion, his eyes
grew wondrously soft in their expres
sion; he felt tempted to forego his wait
ing game, and following Jane, confront
her with this proof of her love for him.
Yet he knew he should only be courting
another refusal. He waited a moment to
harden himself a little to the part he had
to play, and then slipping back the tiny,
shifting panel, took out the plain gold
hoop, and let the outside case, still open,
drop upon the ground. It rolled close to
a small stream that ran through the com
pound, so near that the inner ring might
well be supposed to have fallen Into the
water Instead of reposing safely as it did
In Colonel Prinsep's waistcoat-pocket.
Then he went through the open door into
the drawing-room, where he found Mrs.
Dene alone. He had come ostensibly to
tell the ladles of some regimental sports,
which were to take place that afternoon,
and ask permission to escort them there.
Mrs. Dene readily consented, "if," she
supplemented, "Jane would go."
"Then I had better wait till she comes,"
btarved Colonel Prinsep.
(To be continued.)
liove and Labor.
Love Uvea to labor; It lives to give
ftself away. There la no such thing as
Indolent love. Look In your heart and
see If this Is not true. If you love any
one truly and deeply, the cry of your
heart la to spend and be spent In the
loved one's service.
Love would die If It could not benefit.
Its keenest suffering Is met when it
finds Itself unable to assist.
What man could see the woman he
loves lack anything, and be unable to
give It to her, and not suffer?
"Why love makes one a slave! It tolls
night and day, refusing all wages and
all reward save the smile of the one
onto whom It Is bound. In whose ser
wlce It finds Its delight, at whose feet
tt alone discovers Its heaven.
There Is no danger that language can
be too strong or too fervently used to
portray the services of love.
By cradle and conch, by sick bed and
coffin. In hut and palace, the ministries the flesh Is invisible In the phetatrntA
of lore are being wrought. The eyes oJ He has also made photographs of ob
eli behold them; the hearts of all are jecta concealed behind screens ef weed
moved by the spectacle. and other substances, and seme ef
A Dirigible Balloon. I
Like the sea serpent, the luventor ot
the dirigible balloon travels eastward,
hoi He Is now In Canton, China. An
extra smart mandarin, Tl Lien Fou,
lately Invented a really dirigible bal
loon, and that has been seen traveling
through the air at various heights and
In every direction, "even during ter
rific storms." It is constructed wholly
of steel. Tie Lien Fou, It is said, will
shortly come eastward, bo! to see Edi
son at Menlo Park In regard to further
"Improvement" of this aero3erpentiue
wonder.
Itutem Pasha, the Turkish em
bassador to Englauri, who lied recent
ly, was neither a Turk nor a Moham
medan, lie was au Italian and a
Catholic.
-About 500 namog are included in
the "Kew bulletin's" list of the new
garden plants of 1304. The list em
braces hybrids as well as &ieciea aud
botanical varieties.
Through tiie Lick telesce and
other powerful instruments about fifty
million stars a re visible.
After atiout a year's experimen
wh an aluminum torpedo txmt, the
French naval authorities have decided
that aluminum is unfit for t hipbuild
iae. unless gome non-corropivo allay
or anl'corrosive paint can be discov
ered silk thread may be gilded by tbe
electro-pi1'11!? process, retaining al
most its full flexibility and softness.
Eight persons have committed
suicide in an old Brooklyn building
since 1856. The house baa recently
been torn down.
Professor A. C. Totten, of New
Haven, Conn., has issued a calendar
good for 67,713,250 years. It is said
to bave a very simple key, sua
is evolved on a cycle of 1,600,000
years.
Can California Balee Coffee t
An attempt Is to be mad te cultivate
Joaquin Valley, In California. The
result cannot be known. It Is said.
within leas than six years. The chief
aaiip(efi auucuuy arwca icvw ii
lack of a proper quantity and dlatribu-
Uon of rain.
Plctared Books.
On the base of a cliff of granite and
marble, running for about two miles
i along the shore of Lake Maasanog, la
. Canada, and r using In places to a
height of three hundred feet, an In-
w.wuia vmtwm v. MM , ........
eeatly been discovered. These picture-! J"10 the bu8lneM Incidentally he
writings extend at Intervals alone the Sparta seme useful information con
tntlr. length of the wall of cliffs, bnt rnlng the domestication of the big
IN nowhere more than six feet above ime ,n tte January number of Recre
the water of tha lake. The orobablf . ttloa- a" '""ows: -Game being plenty
represent highly Interesting events la
the career of the people whose artla
historians placed them there.
Kaamete Pat to Werfc.
This seems to be emphatically the:
Age of work. Elephants have been
et to pulling stumps and rolling logs, concluded to try capturing and propa
and now electro-magnets Jbave been I gating some of these grand anlmalsj
pressed Into service In England for : t rustled up the necessary dogs, sleds
the lifting of heavy masses of iron and and harness for a trip and went after
steeL The magnets are attached to moose. I put In three weeks and caught)
cranes, and are operated by a current ' nTe( i-angiag from 8 months to 4 yearr
, from an electric power circuit. When
the current Is on they grip their load I
with a lifting strength equal to two
when tn, current is tunied'ir-, r:, -a; - vTy :;
i i ...... ... . , .
f CJ "' K,UKh feed, but prefer browse. They
of the application of such a magnet fcre easily tamed, and soon become af
U cited where work which formerly fectlonate to their keepers. I have one
occupied six men for ain.ty minutes oW that w,f9 M and
. , J , -u
magnet In fifteen minutes.
Baraina Gas froaa Ice.
A correspondent of Science describe
an Interesting scene recently witnessed
on a skating lake near Baltimore.
White spots resembling air-babbles
were noticed In the Ice, and one of
the skaters bored a hole Into such a
bubble and applied a match to it,
whereupon a flame burst oat at the
surface. Further experiments showed
that when a small hole was bored down
to tbe bbbl. a long, thin jet of flame
could be obtained which wouU last
for a considerable time The babbles
were due to accumulations of marsh
gas, formed by th decompoalUen ot
vegetable matter at the bottom of the
lake. The correspondent suggests thai
such supplies of marsh gas might be
Utilised for the Illumination of skat
ing ponds at night
TJeefnl Mechanical Prladala.
Trial has recently been made in
building operations of a mechanical
device known aa Pease's tubular con
struction. It lg
based upon the
simple fact that
three tubes, each
having an epen tilt
along ene side,
may be Interlocked
In the man net
shown in the accompanying cut f
course the number of tabes that can
thus be connected is Indefinite. By add
lag a sui&olent numbtr em tven aids
of the three, tor Instance, a Cat ex
panse like a roof weald be formed. In
fact, this construction has bee used
for the roofs, walls and timings ef
buildings. In plaee of corrugated Itosl
go dm times to obtain, greatsr sllasty
the tubes, after being Utarlsthsj. axe
fined with concrete. Nt bests er rr
eta are needed. By making the ru'see
f different diameters, and to ethet
ways, a great variety la latredaoed la
the application of tha prlaelple.
PaotacrawfclaaT HldAem Tklmare.
Professor Roentgen, ef tk-t Dsdvae
Hty of Wuertsbarg, Bavaria, baa re-
aentiy succeeded tn photographing the
! bones of the hand ef a living lattia
' through their covering of flea while
his experiments have been repeated.
both In this country and Elegit ad, In
experimenting with a "Croekes toha,"
which Is a glass tube, er bulb, from
which the air has been as fag as pas
sible exhausted, and through which
an electric current Is passed, Prefeseor
Roentgen found, unexpectedly, that
the rays Issuing from the tabs were
not only able to penetrate eertain
opaque substances a faot preTieoaty
known but also to Impress upoa phe
tographic plate Images of objects sit
uated between the concealed tube and
the plate. Whan the hand, for In
stance, was thus placed, with the elec
tricity excited Crookes tube en ene
side and the photographic plate on the
other, the rays from the tube passed
through the flesh, but not through the
pones and the outlines of the bone
tvere photographed upon the plate. Ex
traordinary suggestions have been
fnade as to the possibility of so perfect
ing this discovery aa to enable physi
cians to photograph bullets, calcareous
eposits and other extraneous and Inju
rious substances, or formations. In the
human body. Too much should not be
expected, however, until more facts
Ire known. It may be remarked that
the rays which act so mysteriously are
lot light rays, snd perhaps not electrio
rays; Just what they are remains to be
letermlned.
I If this weather lasts two days long
it, the first birds of spring will appeal
Bearing shirt walsta. -
Victim ef batleea Sli
k:tss Klttlth Well, Stella had to give
p her elaborate church wedding -ftef
!
Miss Gaskett-Whyl
miss Kitusn-xney meaeoiwa t
jhurch doors and found they werexti
wide enough to let har lu Wttn nt.
golng-away gown eV-P Xatf
ORIGINAL SCHEME,
Doinratlcitinn and Propaa-sl4.il
Big Gam. la the WeaU
In the heart of the Rocky Mountaiaa
tt Henry's Lake, six miles from the)
continental divide, la a ranch owned;
by It. W. Rock, devoted to the domestic
cation and propogatlon ef big game,
says the Sun Francisco Chronicle. It
la stocked with elk, moose, buffalo,
deer and mountain sheep, and the own-
fr has so far made a good profit oat of
he business, having sold over 800
bead of the elk, besides other domes
ticated game aultunls, for public and
private parks.
, The original stock lias been captured
by him daring the dead of winter, and
many of the animals thus captured
'have been hauled, strapped on dog
sleighs, to the ranch, a distance vary-
. iiwui uu iu hub uuuunni uiucs,
over the snow, and through a country
over which no other animal bat a dog
and a human being on anowahoes could
travel.
Mr. Reek's system of domestication
Is thorough, and his wife drives a do-
mesUcated moose. Ills ranch was lo
rated seven years ago, and he tells the
Story of the manner in which he went
ful at that time, I made a stand-off
With life by hunting and trapping
them. Time passed rapidly, and with
It the game. In two years I saw the
herds were getting smaller, and that It
would be only a few years until some
! of the species would be extinct, so I
aid
The young ones did welL but the old-
It ones would not live in captivity.
- " --
handles with perfect safety.
Elk thrive In captivity caught at
any age. I have caught about 800. If
caught when calves they will breed atj
B years of age.
Old ones have to be
breeding. Deer caught after eight
months old will not live. They breed,
at 2 years. Antelope do not do wellj
They live ?rom two to four years lnl
confinement. Rocky lire" tq In sheep!
are hardy and do well, having one and
two lambs each year."
j Mrs. Hetty Green'. Can a.,,
Hetty Gretn, tha wealthiest woman
! n the world, op at a Washington
.t. . , ,, Sh M, ,
Kgtater and tue clork3 had orders to
conceal the fact of her presence. An
amusing Incident occurred during the
millionairess' visit to Washington. She
brought with ber a canary. The old
lady was passionately fond of the bird,
and when it escaped from fte room one
day she waa grief atrlcien. In her sor
row and excitement she made a wild
offer of S5 to the bellboy who would
find her pet. The neighborhood was
scoured by the buttoned gentry, and,
their search being unsuccessful, they
tried several "ringers" on the old lady.
But she knew her bird and refused to
be duped. The canary was finally found
by a email freckle-faced newsboy. He
carried It np to Mrs. Green, who went
Into an ecstasy of joy. Tbe boy had
placed the bird In a email weeden cage,
which he clutched firmly in very dirty
hand.
"Olve me the cage, my little man,
aid Mrs. Green.
"Gimme de dough," retertad tbe un
abashed bey.
Mrs. Green told him she would will
ingly give the dollar ahe had prom
ised. "Say." replied the gamin, "yea takes'
me for a good f Ing. I ain't Vou'ea
promised five; and five I gits, or III
wring the stiff's choker,' and the bay,
made a villainous mere toward the
bird, which chirruped feebly. This
was too much for Mrs. Green. She
hastily pulled out a bill with Gen.
Grant's vignette en It and exclaimed:
"Ton little scoundrel, now will you
hand me that cage?"
"Gimme one hand on dat bill," sn)
lenly said the boy.
"And yoa give me one band on Jiat
sage," hissed Mrs. Green. This strange
ly asserted pair advanced cautiously
toward each other, and In that fashion
exchanged cage and bill. The boy
gave a whoop of joy as he slid down
the banisters. Washington News.
Wilson and tbe Expert,
A good gold-dust story Is told on
George Wilson, who owned the famous
Paris mine In Park County", Mont WU
aon was visited by some Englishmen
one day, among whom was an expert
of the English pattern one who knew
all about mines and a great deal about
everything else, In his own opinion. ;
They wanted to see some of Wilson's
gold, and he panned out some very fine
colors for their edification. I
"But that Isn't gold," pronounced the '
youthful expert after a critical exam
ination. "Me deah fellah, I am a grad-
j u&te of tte KnKUah 8choo, of Mlne8i
and I know gold when I see It, yov
know. That la Iron."
Wilson didn't say much. He Just.
Jeaned over and took the alleged expert
confidingly by the shoulder: "Mebbe It
Isn't," he said, "but don't go and glvej
It away to those fellows down at the:
'Denver mint, for I bave been selling1
,thls stuff to them for gold all along."
Butte Mountain.
Dr. A. Graham Bell describes tn the
lurrent Issue of Progress of the World
a device by which he transmits sounds
and ordinary conversation along a sun
beam, In the same way that one now
a telephone wire.
Babatancea Magaetizesl.
All substances . are subject to the
magnetic farce, as Faraday cUacovered,
though not all In the same manner or
to the same extent Iron ia the xost
Busoepttbla of metals, tungsten the
leufc Otttnetothe most
asea,aad some as ens
tMmotnv
Bd to a axpestMMlta, tot tat
joined ,-iu ef that faot to U M
on? hd mm.
liLI. till. inLJvlU
The Eminent Divine's Si,rIa:
Sermon.
Subject: "Warming the World."
Tbxt: "Who can stand before His ooldT
-Psalm cxlvli 17.
Tha almanae says that winter Is endetf
and spring hat come, bat the winds, sni th
frosts, and ths thermometer, la tome placet
down to sero. deny It. The psalmist lived it
a mora genial ellmats than this, and yet lit
must sometime, have ban out by the sharf
Winter. In this cbnpter be speaks of ths
snow like wool, the frost Ilka ashes, the halfa
stone. Ilk. marbles, and desorlbee the oon
galment of lowest temperature. We bitv
all studied the power of tb. heat. How fee
of at have studied the power of the front!
."Who ean vtand before His cold?" Thii
challenge of tha text has many timet beer
teeepted.
October 19, 1813, Napoleon's great arm
began Its retreat from Moscow. One hun
dred and fllty thousand men, 50,000 horses,
600 pieces of cannon. 40,000 stragglers. H
was bright weather when they started fron
Moscow, but soon something wrathler thai
than the Cossacks swooped upontheir Oanka
An army of nrotlo blasts, with icicles foi
bayonets and hailstones for shot, and oom
manded by voice of tempest, marched aftei
them, the flying artillery of the heavens la
pursuit. The troops at nightfall woulj
gather into circlet and huddl. themselves to
gether for warmth, bat when the dty brokt
they rose not, for th.y were dead, and thi
ravens came for their morning meal o
eorptes. The way was strewn with the rial
Stuffs of the east, brought as bootv from th'
Busslaa capital. An invisible power asisac
100,010 men and hurled thsm dead into tb
snowdrifts, and on the hard surfaces of th
chill rivers, and into the mawi of tn. dogs
that had followed them from Moscow. Tht
freezing horror which has annul lad hlotnrt
wns proof to all ages that it Is a vain thins '
lor any eartbly power vto accept the chal
lenge of my text, "Who oould stand befon
His cold?"
In the middle of December, 1777, at Valle
Forge. It,' 00 troop .were, wlrh frosted ean
and frosted hands and frosted feet, without
shoes, without blankets, lying on the whitt
pillow of the snow bank. As daring oai
Civil War the cry was, "On to Rlohmondl"
when the troops were not ready to march, to
in the Revolutionary War there was a de
TTl anil fnr lmrV MmMLn nnfll Vuhlnna i
lost his equilibrium and wrote emphatically! itays, "You must get on my aaddle, and
"1 asHure those gentlomen It Is easy enough! 1 wiU WHik- Tno Samaritan helps and ten
sealed by a good fireside and in comfortable ' arly steadies this wounded man until ht
homes to draw out campaigns tor the Amerll ! 8,:s hlm on toward the tavern, the wounded
can Army, but I tell them it is not so easy td . man holding on with the little strength ht
lie on a bleak hillside, without blankets and j nas ,Brt- eTer ud anon Poking down at tht
without shoes. - on. the frigid norrors that
gathered around the American Army In th.
winter of 17771 Valley Forge waa on. of the
tragedies of the oentury. Benumbed, sense
less. dal! -Who can stand before His oold?"
"Not we," says the frozen lips of Sir John
Franklin and bis men, dying in Arotlo ex
ploration. "Not we." answer Schwatka and
his crew, falling back from the fortresses of
ice which they had tried in vain to capture.
"Not we," say the abandoned and crushed
decks of the Intrepid, the Beeistanc
and the Jeaunette. "Not we," sayt
tut, prcceswion of American martyn
returned home for American sepulture. Da
Long and bis men. The highest pillars of
the earth are pillars of Ice Vont Blanc,
Jungfrau, the Matterborn. The largest gal.
lories of the world are galleries of ion. Some
of the michiy rivers much of the year are in
captivity of ice. Tbe greatest sculptors ot
the age are thi- glaciers, with arm and band
and clilsei and hummer of ice. The cold is
imperial and has a crown of glittering crys
tal and is sealed on a throne of ioe. with
with footstool a scepter of ice. Who
ran tell lh oil fT.-rinira nf t ha ulntw nt 1 AS
the winter of 1658 in England, when tha
stapes rolled on tne iuam-s ami temporary
houses of merchandise were built on tne ice
or the winter of 1821 in America, when New
York harbor was f iozn over and the heavi
est teams crossed on the ice to Staten Island
Then come down to our own winters when
there have been so many wrapping them,
selves in furs or gathering themselves around
fires or thrashing their arms abaut them te
revive circulation the millions of the tem
perate and tbe aretio aones who are com
peiled to confess, "none of us con stand be
fore His cold.'1
One-naif ot the industries of oar day an
employed in battling inclemency of tha
weather. The furs of the North, the oottoa
of the South, the flax ot our own fields, tba
wool of our own flocks, the coal from out
own mines, the wood from our own forests,
all employed In battling these inolemenoies.
and still every winter, with blue lips and
chattering teeth, answers, "None of as can
stand before this cold." Now, this being
Much a nnlii world, (imi fteml-i nut InfltuuMM
to warm it. I am glad that the Ood of tht
irost is me uou oi tne neat; mat tne uoo ol
the snow is the God of the white blot soma:
.i . .i r - t i .1 -i , 1
frost is the God of the beat: that the God ol
The queslion as to bow w. warm this world
np is a questioa ot immediate and all encom
passing practicality. In this none and
weather there are so many tireless hearths,
so many broken window panes, so many de
fective roofs that sift tbe snow. Coal and
wood and flannels and thlok eoat ar. bettei
for warming up suoh a place than tracti
and Bibles and creeds. Kindlethat flrewhert
it has gone out. Wrap something around
those shivering limbs. Shoe those nar. feet.
Hat that bare head. Coat that bare baok.
Sleeve that bare arm. Nearly all the piotorta
of Martha Washington represent her Is
courtly dress aa bowed to by foreign ambas
sadors, but Mrs. Eirkland, In her interesting
book, gives a more inspiring portrait ol
luartna Waentngton. Sne eomes fortn Iron)
her husband's but In tbe encampment, tha
hut sixteen feet long by fourteen feet wide-
ahe nnM f nri h fmm th.f hnt nnra ah.
Bick, to sew the patched garments, to eon-' n demands of elegant taste, bat yoa
sole the soldiers dying of th. cold. That it e"aW uot persuade that soldier dying 1000
a better picture of Martha Washington, miles from home that it was anyt hing b ut an
Hundreds of garments, hundreds of tons ol nK' th,at looked Mai in the Oh, with
eoal, hundreds of glaziers at broken window theery look, with helpful word, with kind
sashes, hundreds ot whole souied men and .wttoa. try to make th. world warml
women are necessary to warm the wintry ' ... .
weather. What are we doing to alleviate tht I T W low dttoendlng
condition of those not to fortunate as wef . ,h. k.. -
Know ve not, my friends, there are hundreds. ViewJ" y hand no generous action
of thousands of people who eannot stand be-1 aone.
fore this cold? It is useless to preach to It was His strong sympathy that brought
bare feet, and to empty stomach, and to Christ from a warm heaven to a oold world,
gaunt visages. Christ gave tbe world a let-, the lan I where H. dwelt had a serene sky,
ton in common sense when, before preach- balsa nolo atmosphere, tropical laxurlanoe.
Ing the gospel to the multitude la tha No storm blasts in heaven. Ho chill foun
wdderness. He gave them a good dinner. I tains. On a cold December night Christ
When I was a lad I remember seeing twt I ttepped out of a warm heaven into tha
rough woodcuts, but they made more lm- j world's frigidity. The thermometer in
pression upon me than any plot ares I have 'Palestine never drops below aero, bat De
nver seen. They were on opposite pages. , eember is a cheeriest month, and the pastur
The one woodcut represented the eominir ot age is very poor on tne hilltops. Chris)
tbe snow In winter and a lad looking out at ttepned out of a warm heaven into the cold
the door of a great mansion, and he was all world that cold December night Tha
wrapped In furs, and his cheeks were ruddy, world's re-option was oold. The surf of be.
and with glowing countenance he ahoutedi ' stormed Galilee waa cold. Joseph's sepal
"It snows, it snows!" On the next page ; cher was cold. Christ eame. the greal
there was a miserable tenement, and the door ' warmer, to warm the earth, and all Christen
was open and a child, wan and sick and dom to-day feels the glow. He will keep oi
ragged and wretched, was looking out, and warming tne earth until the tropic willdrivt
he said. "Oh, my God, it snows!" The win- away the .iretlo and the antarctic He gavi
ter of gladness or of grief, according to out an intimation ot what He was going to d
circumstances. But, my friends, there id when He broke up the funeral at the gate o
more than one way of warming op this oold) Nain and turned it into a reunion festival
world, for It is a cold world in more re and when w.th His wirm lips He melted tb
spects than one. and I am here to consult Galilean hurricane and stood on the dee)
with you as to the beet way of warming ut 1 stamped His foot, crying "Silencer and
the world, I want to bave a great heater in- h wi nr.inched and th. temneata folded
troduced into all yonrcharohes and all you
homes throughout the world. It is a heatei
I of divine natent. It has manv f tinea wltt
which to conduct heat, and it has
door in which to throw tht fuel
Once get this heater Introduced and it
will tarn the arctic zone into the temperate
and the temperate into the tropics. It il
the powerful heater.it is the glorious fur
nace of Christian sympathy. The questioi
ought to be, Instead of how much heat cat
we absorb, how much heat can we throt
out? There are men who go through thi
world floating icebergs. They freeze every
thing with their forbidding look. The hand
trtth which they shake yours Uaa sold as tht
paw of a polar bear. If they float into a
religious meeting, ths temperature drool
rrorn eighty above to t.n degrees below sero.
There are icicles banging from thatrere-
brows. They float Into a religions jaestfng
SadLdgffgiS
l&C7g!SEZ&&
fSVSSTLZSTS'Z
thxoaetjt
taaxftw"
morning. Warm greeting, warm prayers. usnets oawtiei oa fhs poia'fnigM bflh
warm smiles, warm Christian influence. Nations. And if Chri Is the great warratr
There are snob persons. We bless Ood foi then the church Is the great hothouse, with
them. We rejoloe In their companionship. Its plants and trees and fruits of rlgh'teoiuv-
A General in th. English army, the army BBat. Do yoa know, my friends, that ths
baving halted tor the night, having lost nil huroh Is the institution that proposes
beggage, lay down tired and slok wltbont warmth? I have been for twenty-seven years
in.blaket An offlo"r eame up and said: Bodying how to make the oharch warmer.
why, you have no blanket. I'll go and Warmer architecture, warmer hymnology
get yoa a blanket." He departed for a few warmer Christian salutation. All outside
momenta and then came back and covered Siberian winter, w. mast hsv. tt a prince's
the General up with a very warm blanket, hothouse. Th. only institution oa earth to
rn. General saidi "Whose blanket is this?" that proposes to make the world warmer,
rhe officer replied: "I got that from a prl- Dnlversltiti and observatorlM, they all h iva
vote solder ta the Sootoh regiment, Balpb their work. They propoM to make the
MacDonald." "Now." tald tha Oeatral, wold, light, bat they do not propose to make
"yoa take thlt blanket rlirht hut tn th.t the world warm, uuinn ... k
joldier. He ean no more do without tt than
I ean do without It. Never brlna to me the
blanket of a private soldier." Bow many
man like that General would it take to
warm the world up? The vast majority ol tomblnatloataad how inferior affinity may
as are anxious to nt more blankets, whether o. ov.reom.bv saparlor affinity: bat It on
tnybody .Is. Is blanketed or not. Lnsk aot tell how all thinna work i.h
at the fellow foaling displayed in tat
yxT defile between Jerusalem and
'erieno la Sariptur. tlaua. Baa is a maa
wao fits been Set upoa by the bandits, aad wsrmtn and nope warmth for the expeota
lathe straggle to keao his nroBsttrae htj Hons, warmth for the sympathies. Oh I I
tot woundM and ftTimeB kaY sTABa. and
h. Ilea there half dead. A priest ridat along.
Be tees him and aaysi "Why, what's tht
matter with that man? Why, he must be
hart, lying oa tht flat of his baok. Isn't it
rt range that he should tie there! Bat I can't
top. I am on my way to temple serrioaa,
(Jo along, yoa beast. Carry mt up to my
temple duties." A ft era while a Levi te oomat
ap, H. looks over and says. "Why, thai
au must d. very macn nan. ussnea on
la. foiwhead. What a Dlty. Stabbed under
his arm. Wnataplty. Tat. tatt What a
pityl Why. they have taken his olothat
nearly away from him. Bat I haven't tltnt
lo stop. I lsad the choir up la the tempi
ervioe. Go along, you beast. Carry me np
to my temple dutiaa."
After awhile a Samaritan eomes alone
ana who yoa might suppose thsoagn a Na
tional gradge might have rejtotwt this poor
wounded Israelite. - Comina aloojr he sees
this man and taysi "Why. that man mast
tw terribly t.nxt. I te by bit features ha ll !
an IsraeUta. bat ha la a man and ha la a
ks.K.. arvA.i t a ta a 1
' H , -W. UIWI
uavrauwm. wv nun. mmjm nw rati in mat tia. euatj i
b. gets down oft tht beast and oomas up to
this wounded man. oats down on one knee. I
thlt wounded man, gets down on one knee,
listens to see whether the heart of the un
fortunate man Is still beating, makes up his
mind there it a chance for resuscitation,
goes to work at him, takes out of his sack a
bottle of oil and a bottle of wine, cleanses
the wound with some wine, then pourt
tome ot the restorative la the wounded
man's lips, then takes some oil and with
It sooths the wound. After awhile he
takes off a part of his garment fot
a bandage. Now the slok and wounded
man sits op, pale and exhausted, but
very tbHnklul.
Now the good Samaritan i
i f"4 ""r " J
kind. I bad no riirht to expe-t this tblnir ol
a Samaritan when I am an Israelite. Yoa
ire very kind to walk and let me ride."
Now they have oome up to tbe tavern. Tha
Samaritan, with the help ot the landlord,
assists the slek and wounded man to dis
mount and puts him to bed. The Bible says
the Hamnritan staid all night. In tha
nornlnur. I suppose, the Samaritan went in
:o look how his patient was and ask him
low he passed the nii;ht. Then he comes out
the Samaritan comes out and says to th
landlonl: "Here i money to p:iy thai
nan s board, and tt bis convalescenct
Is not as rapid as I hope for, charge tha
whole thimr to me. Good-morniug, all." 11a
rets ou the beast and save: "Qo along, you
K-ast, Dut no slowly, for those bandits sweep
jig through the land may have left some
body else wounded and half dead." Sym-
patnyl Christian sympstnyl Uow many
luch men as that would it take to warm tha
cold world up? Famine In Zarepthath.
Everything dried up. There is a widow with
a son and no food except a handful of meaL
The IS tat lienng StICKfl tO Kindle B
Kindle a lire to
took the handful of meaL Then she is go
' lnR to wral her arms "round her boy and
die. Hero comes Elijah. His two blaok
errants, the ravens, nave got tired waiting
n mm. He asks mat woman tor tooa. Mow,
that handful of meal is to be divided into
three parts. Before, it was to be divided
Into two parts. Now, she says to Elijahi
"Come in and sit down at this solemn table
lud take a third of tbe last morsel." How
nany women like that would it take to warm
the cold world up?
Recently an engineer in the Southwest, on
ft locomotive, saw a train coming with which
Be must collide. He resolved to stand at hia
post and slow up the train until the last min
ute, for there were passengers behind. Tha
engineer said to the fireman: "Jump! Ona
man is enouirh on this engine! Jump!" Tba
0 reman jumped and was saved. Tbe crash
same. The engineei died at his post. How
nany men like that engineer would it taka
!o warm this cold world up? A vessel struck
n a rocky island. The passengers and tha
irew were without food, and a sailor bad a
ihellflsh under his coat. He was saving II
! lor hl9'a3t moiseU
He heard a Uttle child
WJ " niomor;
, - u.w.u. . -uv.u-n, ou
nnry! ,gye something to eat. I am so
I Bnnfrrv! The sailor took th. shAllRah fmm
oder his eoat and taidi "Herel Take that."
Bow many men like that sailor would tt taka
o warm the oold world up? Xerxes,
seeing from bis enemy, got on board t
oat. A great many Persians leaped Into
he tame boat and tbe boat waa sinking,
fome one said, "Are yon not willing to raaka
sacrifice for your king?" and the majority
f those who were In the boat leaped over.
oard and Irowned to save their king. How
aany men like that would it takotowarm
ip this cold world? Elisabeth Fry went into
:he horrors of Newgate prison, and sha
turned tbe Imprecation and the obtcenitj
sad the filth into prayer and repentance and
t reformed life. The sitters of ebarity, In
1863. on Northern and Boat hern battlefields.
same to bovs In blue and gray while they
were bleeding to death. The blaok bonnet
with th. sides pinned bank and tbe whita
1 bandage on the brow may not have answered
their wings.
Oh, it was this Christ who warmed tht
.hilled disciples when they had no food by
riving them plenty to eat, and who in tb
tomb of Lazarus shattered the shackles un
til the broken link ot the ohaln of death
rattled into tht darkest crypt of the
naosoleum. Ia His genial presence the girl
who had fallen into the Are and the water It
healed of the catalepsy, and the withered
arm takes muscular, healthy action, and the
tar that could not hear an avalanche eatohes
a leafs rustle, and the tongue that could not
articulate trills a quatrain, and the blind
ey. was relumed, and Christ, instead ot
Mfijlg three days and three nights in tha
iepaleher, as waa supposed, aa toon a. the
worldly eartain of obterradoa was dropptd
the exploration ot all tht under-
pound passages of earth and sea, wbtravtr
Christians graoemay after awhl. b., and
'oT
Jtt i, taxanoff aXh. la-mausoi.um
-Al lets seated iisl tat aaa ol tight-
13 "told as tht rook It hammers. The tele-
toopeauows whars the other worlds are but
n astronomer Is chilled whii. looking
through It. Ohemlstrrt.il n. nr
- Worldly philosophy has a great
iplendor.bttt kit the splendor of moonlight
n an leeberg. Th. ahareh of God Dronosea
T'" fir".1" ir" altar fire. h.v.
aindiea. Com. tn mil nl ih.
Dome In, and have your wounds salved.
Pome, and have yoar sins pardoned. Come
by the great gospel Qreplaoe.
Notwithstanding all the modern lnven
dOM for heating, ! tell you there is nothing
o full of geniality and sociality as the old
iT are-p Hoe. The nelgh-
' wmter evening
f soclaUtr. In tha mtddlnnf h .fi-.n..
n the best room of the house, some one
kroaght In a great backlog with graat strain
4 pat it down oa ths baok of th. hearth,
re-n th. Ilghttr wood was put on, armful
'"r armful, lhan a shovel of soils was
taken from another room and put nnder th.
try pile, and tn. kindling began, and the
traokltng, and tt rote until It beoame a roar
ktg flame, whieh filled all tke room with
ttalaUty and waa redacted from the family
rittartt on the walla Then th. neighbors
ame ta two by two. They sat down, their
I . . . " . . " I
?TT.,0JSf wnnux aver and anoa wm
T1?? wttn ioaf Jatad on tha
inalrons. ana thara wm annh (im..
...j., . i . v.
ila Wr??a ad ttoTr "U"g end mirth
Ult.bJatk Jtovt.aad ths blind register
sever d rearmed of. Meanwhile tne table was
telng spread, and so fair was the cloth and
lo oTean was th. cutlsry, they gllgtea and
listen in oar mind to-day. And then the
test laxury of orchard and farmyard waa
roasted and prepared for the table, to meet
ippetites sharpened by the cold ride.
O. my friends, the oburch of Jesos Christ
a the world's fireplace, and the woods are
Vom the ce lars of Lebanon, and ths fires are
Ires of love, and with the silver tongs of the
iltar we stir the flimn. and tha liirht is rn.
fleoted from all the family pictures on tha
wan pictures of those who were here and
tre gone now.
U, noma up olose to the nre-
placet Have your faces transflirured in th.
light Put your oold feet, weary of the Jour
ney, close up to the blessed conflagration.
Chilled through with trouble and disappoint
ment, oome olose up until you can get warm
slear through. Exchange experience, talk
ver the harvests gathered, tell all tha gos
pel news. Meanwhile the table it being
pread. On it, bread of life. On it, grapea
f Eshool, On It, new wine from the klng
lom. On it, a thousand luxuries celestial.
Hark! as a wounded hand raps on the table
ind a tender voice comes through saying:
-Come, for all things are now ready. Eat,
3 friends! drink, yea, drink abundantly, O
aeloved!"
My friends, that Is the way ths cold world
Is going to be warmed up, by the great gos
pel fireplace. All Nations will oome in and
lit down at that banquet. While I was mus
ing tbe Are burned. "Oome in out of tht .
old, ccmo in oat oi the oold."
STONE ACE RELICS.
Important Archaeological Discovery Made
Wear Worms.
' An Important arohaeologioal discovery was
nade a few days ago at Worms, Qrirmany, by
Dr. KoehL It is a burial ground of the later
tone age.
About seventy graves have been examined,
uvl the number of vessels found, most of
mem tastefully ornamented, exceed.') a
usheL
Not the slightest trace of met a! has beet,
llsoovered. Arm-rings of blue aud gray
late were taken from tbe women. Three
arm-rings made ot slate were removed from
the upper arm of one ekelntpn, four from an
ther, and six from tbe lower arm. There
was on the neck of one skeleton a sma'.l,
fontcal. polished ornament of syenite, not
perforated, but provided with a groove for a
arlu,f.
Other ornaments consist of pearls, mussel
hells made in tbe form of trinkets, perfor
med boar's tusks and small fossil mussels.
These ornaments were worn by men and wo
nen alike. Buddie and ochre fragments
vera used, and tatoolng, and coloring the
ikln were also frequent.
In hardly a single ease was there missing
Tom the woman's graves the primitive corn
Dill, consisting ot two stones, a irrlnding-
rtone and a grain erusher. Tbe men's graves
Kmiain weapons. The implements are all
tone, with whetstones and bones for sbarp
inlng purposes. They oonsist of perforated
lammers, sharpened baronets and chisels, aa
tell as knives and scrapers of flint.
That there was no want of food Is showu
iy tha many vessels, often six or eight in one
crave, and rt-nalna of food ware found near
xiem, the latter being bones of various tai
sals. Several photographs have been taken
If the skeletons at they de in the graves,
Ibetr appearance being perfect, after a repot.
t thousands of yetra.
Batpended by Her long Hair.
Miss Theresa Lachet, a girl employed by
he Racine (Wis.) Wagon and Carr.a, Com
pany, was standing near a maublna in opera
tise when the belt caught her btr aud In aa
uutant she was pulled Ave feet into the air
and held suspended against a pulley. Twenty
tlrls witnessed th. accident and many
tainted, while others ran aortamlng from tbe
vunujng. ine macntne was stopped ana
the girl removed. A portion of her hair waa
torn oat and her head and scalp lauerated,
tat physloians believe that, she will raoove
Th. G. A. R. Koeaoipment.
Th. errand annual encanmment of th.
Srand Army ot the Bepabllo will be held In
It. Paul, Ulan., tbe first week in September,
rhe proposed "Biue and Gray" grand pa
rade la Mew fork on tbe Fourth ot July will
aot be held, owing to opposition on the part
of Grand Army of the Republic posts.
Japsnaaa Student Gats His Throat.
Joktthl TJchida. a Jananese student at Cor
nell (Iowa) College, a ward of tbe Methodist
Church and a well-known lecturer, commit
ted suicide while la a despondent mood hr
cutting his throat.
Aa evil nteatiua perverts thu best
notions and irake tliemnijH.
If vou lend Fume people money
they
will be indebted to you forever
Ik requires more work tn clean a
boil so once a month than it does to
keop it clean all the timo.
Why is it, that wuec a boy is well
behaved, people always tay he is a
credit to bis mother?
II there is any prent difference be
'ween the bachelor gul and tbo old
maid, we havo failed to uotioe it.
As soon an oris fool lmrui a little
sense a doz in ones step forward to
take his place.
Every night before a roan has pat
his head upon bis pillow be has learned
some new way ol making a fol of
himself.
Lack of money wreoks more mar
ried people than lack of love.
Even tbe invention of the looking
glass ha? not eradioited humai van-
II l lie conceit was ifinen out oi some
people there wouldot be enough of
them left to haug clothes on.
There is no library like a onltivated
mind.
Aa h that lives longest lives bat a
little while, every man msy be certain
that be has no time to watte.
4