a U. P. BOHWEIEB, THE OONHT1T U TION-THE UNION AMD THE ENFORCEMENT OF" THE LAWH. VOL L. MIFFLINTOW1N, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 1. 1896. NO. 16. as ?5 'A WtXM lis CHAPTER XLI-(Contlnned.) He had seen her pasa swiftly in tha direction from which be had Just then come, and presently heard her voic call ins to the garden coolies, and Interroga ting them in tnrn. Then ah. cam and stood on the threshold of th. open door. "Oh. Nora, hare you Been my ring?" ah. asked plteously, in her exdtementv nly giving the curtest possible nod t Colonel Prinsep. "No, dear. Hare yon lost ltt Whert did yon bare it last?" "I took it off while I waa transplanting thoae cartings, and laid it down beside me. Then when I went back for it, it waa gone" with a distressed accent, and a tragic movement of her handa so ezj pressive of loss that Mrs. Dene felt halt Inclined to smile. Not so Colonel Prin Sep, who looked such a picture of guilt that If Jane had not been too preoccupied to notice, she most hare found him oat.1 "It may have rolled away," be sug gested, awkwardly. "Let me go and help you." "Oh. no, thank yon! I can find It best! myself," answered Jane quickly, and ran ff. Bat, in spite of her prohibition, he fol lowed. When he cam op ahe waa stand ing staring blankly at the rifled ring which ahe held in the palm of her out stretched band. "Ah, you have found ltr ha remarked, with an overdone air of cheerfulness. "Found ltr she repeated, tearfully. "Oh, yes, I have found it! But but " Then with a sudden gleam of hope: Per haps it haa fallen into the water. There la a piece still missing it might have rolled into the water, might It not?" aha asked, eagerly. "Certainly it might, If it it was a round piece." "It was round." She looked at the water wistfully, but did not attempt to search for it. Be un derstood why. "You prize the ring very much 7" he questioned, searchingly. The eloquence of her eyes told him how much rather than her words, which were) commonplace enough. "It waa a present, perhaps?" b. went , ejo. Inquiringly., "-'-I i "No, no, I nou-M It myself." Of eoifrse ' - ,t know it was only silver, but? " She stopped abruptly, no longer able to conceal her impatience to be alone. "Will you go in and tell Mrs. Den that I am coming?" she asked. Imploringly. He turned and went at once, but as he entered the drawing-room he could not help seeing her as she knelt upon the ground, and with her own hands dug among the mud in her vain endeavor to recover what she bad lost. He almost re pented then of what he had done, and he felt still more penitent when a little later Jane came in, looking so desolate and de spairing that Mrs. Dene involuntarily ex claimed: , "Why, child, whatever ia the matter? I understood from the Colonel that you had found your ring." , . "Not all of it a piece is missing. "It can be replaced" with a little gen tle surprise at the other's exaggerated grief. "It can never be replaced." "Then it must be found. I will offer a reward for it, and that will make the ser vants more eager in their search. You must describe what it is like." "I can't do that." "Then, my dear, how can we help your" "Not at all; I must look for it myself. Don't be offended, Nora I am very grate, ful to you all the same." She had blushed so vividly that Mrs. Dene hastened to change a aubject evi dently embarrassing. "Colonel Trinsep came O ask us jr w would go to the sports this afternoon. Should you care about it, Jenny r "I will go, of course, if you wish It. "But do you care about it?" "I hate sports," declared Jane, vicious, ly, mindful of the gymkhana at which she bad first met and lost her heart te . Stephen Prinsep. "Then, my dear, don't go. Life Is too rf,ort to be bored," smiled Mr Dene "But you must not stay in always with me: you ought to go out. Would yon Ilk to4dh No?may I? I have not ridde. Mm since we' were at Stater criedJan. excitedly, almost forgetting her trouble. "I did not know you wer so fond of riding." said Colonel Prinsep. -And you don't know Selim. He Is not like any other horse that ever was. I can trust him." . . "All the same. I shall not let you go alone. You are Bound tototh. gym khana, I suppose, Colonel "VJ -So. If Miss Knox will allow me to accompany her I .ball be delighted." And for some reason or other, perhaps to prove how utter was her Indifference, Miss Knox made no objection. They started early In the afternoon. Jane looking shyly bewitching in her neat ly fitting habit and broad Teral bat. Col onel Prtnaep sitting erect in hi. ..ridle, -earcely glancing in his companion's di rection, as he discoursed upon every sub. EetTlikely to interest her. yet avoided wS, intention anything personal Jan felt as though she must bo in a dream Stenfng to bis voice, the same, yet m Sanged to her. Knowing nothing of th Memories that were surging through his brain, rendering him often unconscious of w?a?n had said, and oblivious of he MDliesTsb thought that it was only an. SSriJi that be bad ceased to car fof Jerf and made an effort to appear ut isn'ot of a nativ. hut shouting wUdlV and firing "t'.i'T.SS 2.toii The sensitive Arab wnlca, Jre first beared and plunged wild JJhen started off at a i fnriou. i gallop. Lionel Prinsep followed as quickly at Soared, fearing to frighten th. animal went to near. At present WiS rWgtu7nend between Ms ifLvHwo or three violent buck toS sucked in dislodging- Jan. V-dtien. a. she slipped flown. -- ,-. aouw. - -- m. neck, he stool - flBJBUISlfBi BS - a .. S3 When her Mcort cam. op, be found bet flushed and trembling, still holding th. reins, her hair falling about her in mag nificent masses, and glinting in tn sun Ilk autumn leaves, a hundred subtle shade of brown and gold. He placed his hand upon Sellm's shin. log neck. "Th horse you trusted," he remarked, with what he tried to make a cynical smile, yet felt convinced was only fool ishly tender. "I shall never trust anything again,'' declared Jane, with decision. "Ah, yon must not say that! Selim was only rash, not vicious. It would not b fair to cendemn any on for a fault." Sh gave a swift glance Into his face, wondering If he were pleading for himsalf or only Selim. To avoid her scrutiny ha turned and took his bora, from th na tive who was holding it. Then mount tng. he rode along quietly by her aid. The winter sun that shone coldly seem ed to have reserved a special radiane for th. girl's bright locks as they waved softly behind her; ther was, too, a gleam In her hazel eyes that had not been ther before. Everything looked bright and beautiful that afternoon, thought Stephen Prinsep. but nothing so bright, so beautiful as his whilom sweetheart. After a time their relations grew less strained, yet also less full of tremulous delight. They were talking as ordinary acquaintances might have talked, when at last they reached the bungalow gates. Then Colonel Prinsep said, earnestly, and without connection to what they had been saying before: "Jenny, will you do what I am going to ask? Will you ask Mrs. Knox to tell you th whole story about Jacob Lynn's let ters?" A little nervously ahe promised; and then put her hand in his to say "good by." He relinquished it even sooner than courtesy might have dictated, but stood looking at her with gentle gravity. An almost leafless tree with graceful golden pods waved above her; behind a group of banana tree. two large, milk-eyed bul locks were working a well, and the dron ing whir-r-r of the wheel waa the only sound that broke the stillness. A woman with her face almost hidden by a silk embroidered scarf stood watching them from a little distance. The scene waa in tensely Indian, yet Stephen Prinsep found his thoughts insensibly reverting to his English home, with its trim flower beds and well-kept walks. In fancy he could almost imagin that even now be was walking under th avaa. of- east 4 nuts with his bride, pointing out to her each familiar spot they passed. "You won't come in?" asked Jane, tim idly. "No, J won't come in, thank you. Good, by." CHAPTER XLIL When Jane went in she found a note from her mother containing rather start ling news. The quartermaster had been so unwell that Mrs. Knox had called in a doctor, who pronounced it to be an utter breaking-op of health, consequent on his long residence In the country, and that the only remedy he could suggest was a year's leave to England. "This, of course," wrote Mrs. Knox, "will be a serious pecuniary loss; but we must grudge nothing that will restore to us your father as he used to be." "Ah, that he can never be again V sighed Jane, as she put down the letter. She scarcely knew whether to be glad or sorry at the decision thus announced; whether It would be a relief to go or great grief. "How could ahe." she asked herself, "leave India, not knowing wheth er she might ever see her lover's face again?" Sh thought of going horn at once. much as she dreaded the meeting with her father; then glancing again at th. letter sh saw that Mrs. Knox expressly desired she would not shorten her visit. which in any case would be at an end ia a few daya. Those last days, how Jane enjoyed them I Stephen Prinsep, wbo came every day, scarcely recognised her in this new mood. Waa It frivolity or heartleeanesa, or the excitement engendered by despair? May be th last conjecture was nearer the truth than ah herself knew. They never saw each other alone, so ft waa th easier for the Colonel to keep to his resolution. He did not startle her again. An outsider would have thought them merely friends. Jane herself was often reminded of the time when her en gagement to Jacob Lynn was a secret still, and all unconsciously she waa learn ing to love one whom it had seemed fated ahe should never marry. One day Mrs. Dene asked her to re main with her during the year her par ents would be away; but she put thi temptation from her bravely. "You are aa good aa you have always been," she answered, gratefully; "but it la my duty to go with them to help my mother." "Certainly the great reformer must have been your ancestor," commented the Colonel, when he heard of th offer and Its refusal. "Indeed, I don't think even John Knox took so much delight In denying him self," complained Mrs. Dene. "I expect John Knox was good ah round," observed Jane, quaintly, "and did not need to distinguish himself in any particular direction. Besides," she add ed, gravely, after a pause, "it is my pleasure, of course, as well aa my duty. to go with my father and mother. She was sitting a little distance off, ana Colonel Prinsep crossed the room and stood near her looking down. "Would nothing Induce you to stay be lind?" he asked. In a vole so low that lira. Dece cor Id not have heard it, even if she had not at that moment been busy counting a cross-stitch pattern. She shook her hefjd, not daring to trust herself to speak. "You might marry," he hazarded. "Never, never!" "Why?" he asked her boldly, his eyes still fastened on her fac.' Her lips quivered In such evident dis tress that he could not press th que. ion. "All girls say that." he remarked in stead, with a touch of Incredibility. "Not, I hope, with such good reason," he replied, with a dignity so full of no. row that he was silenced. Even with th hop of consoling her gt last, he had no right to pain bar so. This was th last day. Mrs. Dene's stay at AHpore had doa az aarfgahtad better and brighter than she had looked for a long time, aince her husband's death. In fact- People thought that she waa already comforted for his loss, and began to wonder if the would marry again, and if so, whom. Some such spec ulation was expressed in the hearing of Barry Larron, and the thought entered Into his mind that, perhaps, it might be for his advantage if she married him. Feeling terribly soro after his rejection by the quartermaster's daughter, and un able to carry out his revengeful threat with any hope of success, he fancied h might hurt her by so suddenly transfer ring his attentions that she would be fain to doubt whether they bad ever seriously been offered to herself. To do this he must manage an exchange to Hattiabad, where the detachment waa, and where h would have every opportunity of matur ing his plans. This for two reasons first, because even he would lack the as surance necessary to make love to one woman under th very eyes of that other he had so lately wooed and secondly, because Mrs. Dn herself was going so noon. But he waa too cautious to take this aadsiv. mov. until he had satisfied him self that he would receive a warm wel come. Mot that he doubted it, only It was bis nature to calculate, as well as t scheme. 8 It happened that, when Jane and Mrs. Den arrived at the station, the first pon they saw walking down the plat, form waa Major Larron. Jan draw back at once. 1 "I will go and get your ticket, and see after your luggage. Perhaps he will have gone by then," she suggested, nervously. Mrs. Dene assented, and walked on alone. Major Larron advanced to meet her. in Irreproachable morning costume, with a rosebud In button-hole. The widow, h. thought, might be mora critical than th girt. "I heard you were going to-day, and did not wish you to leave without saying good-by," he began. "I don't think, however. It will be long before w. meet again." "No?" queried Mrs. Dene, so quietly that, had he not been certain ahe must car for him still, now there waa no bar rier between them, he might have read Indifference in her tone. He was thinking to himself that report had spoken truly; sh was looking very well, nearly as pretty as when she waa a girl, and far more interesting. "I am coming to Hattiabad; to stay for some time, I fancy." She looked up languidly, surprised. "You will find it very dull, I am afraid." "I do not think so. I alwaya like Hat tiabad. Do you remember when w. met there first." "I remember distinctly everything con. nected with our acquaintance, Majof Larron." She waa looking into hia face still, with such utter coldness and dislike, as she guessed at his intentions, that he was al most -convinced of his mistake. But h would not admit It yet. "1 am afraid you have not forgiven me," he said, reproachfully. Her eyes were all ablaze as she an swered scornfully: "Forgiven you? Why, I am grateful ta you, more grateful than I can express, for . saving . m from a marriage that would hara made ma wrstahad, and giv ing me instead the noblest, kindest bus. band that ever woman had. Thanks to you I have known what perfect happi ness is, and though I possessed it for so short a time, it is enough to sweeten the remainder of a life that would otherwise be sad enough, heaven knows." The Hon. Barry Larron twirled hi J ark mustache, and tried to look unmoved. "I don't think you have ever under stood me, quite," he aaid, a little awk wardly. Mrs. Dene shrugged her shoulders, not attempting to conceal her contempt. Though ahe had said as much herself to Jane, she began to doubt it now. A man who had acted with so little sincerity and delicacy of feeling might be capable of anything, she thought. Well. I must not keep you longci now," observed Larron. "We shall soon meet at Hattiabad." But in his own mind that scheme wai already abandoned. (To be continued.) Prayer In War Time Editor F. W. Woolard, of the Carmi (I1L) Times, was one of a group who were swapping stories at the Alhambra. The drift of the conversation was upon Incidents which had Impressed the nar rators while here during and after the war. "I once', beard a remarkable prayer from an old negro," said Editor Woolard. "It was at the time Sher man bad pushed through Georgia, and everybody was 'cussing him constant ly. The old man bad unconsciously ab sorbed the language of his master, al though his sympathies were all the other way. He was In the midst of what the Irreverent sometimes style a trash mover,' a most earnest prayer at a blg meetln',' when he lifted his eyes to heaven and exclaimed as a grand finale, 'And now, Lawd, bless dem what dun freed de po' nigger bless de domn Yankees.' He was In dead earn est, and saw nothing ludicrous In his words. It was what be always heard them called." Atlanta Journal. Hunting Wild Oats. Wild cats abound In Pleasant Valley woods, a few miles east of Wlnsted, Conn, and recently became so bold that they attacked human beings, almost sending to death one of the farmers of the neighborhood. The other day a party was organized to bunt the feline and five of the latter, one of them weighing forty pounds and looking ex actly like a tiger, were killed. A fontil rse;on fly 27 inobes Ion?, armed with big jaws and toetb, 1um been found in the coal meat-urea of Allier, France. In Egypt the natives believe that crocodiles cry and cow like men in distress, in order to attract and make a prey of the unwary. bilk thread may lie gilded by the electro -plat ins; process, retaining i al most its full flexibility and softuess. The death rate among- the colored people in Cuicago last year was 96.67 per 1000 against 15.05 for the whiten. The small waist' of French women are believe 1 bysonie ecieniisvs to be tne result oi heredity. Ages of tight lactDi.', tttey say, ha'e produced physical peculiarity ia tbe Niton. A German Antarctic expedition baa 1een decided upon and $240,000 al loted to It. It will consist of two vea seb, will last three years, and will start south from Kerguelan Island. Tbe Indiana Gas Inspector say that tbe pressure bas diminished throughout the gas fields about one third and tbt tbe exhaustion of the supply is a matter of no very long tine. A FK AO M E NT OF THE UNIVERSE. Oao of tba Wosider. K.vealed tT a Powerful kticroacope. With a refracting telescope, baring a forty-Inch object glass, fixed stars to the twenty-first magnitude will be ren dered visible showing not less than 165,000,000,000 of suns, many of them vas'Jy larger than our sun. Arc- turns, for Instance, la 650,000 times larger than the sun, and. W moving athwart the solar system a million and a half miles an hour,and la moving to ward us at the rate of 75,000 miles an hour. There la little reason to doubt that every one of these suns has from a dozen to hundreds of planets revolv lng about It, the number depending upon Its magnitude, and many of these planets may be the abodes of Intelligent beings. To the astronomer this earth Is only a point from whlcn to make ob servations; Its diameter of 8,000 miles ia of too little consequence to be taken Into consideration in determining celes tial distances, and the diameter of the earth's orbit 1S5.000.000 of miles. Is far too short to constitute the base of a triangle by means of which to deter mine the distances of more than half a dozen of the nearest fixed stars. If sucfa an orb as A returns should strike fh sua It would transform the center of our system Into gases and vapors In an Instant, and blot out the solar sys tem as you would snuff out a taper. The dlsapnearaoc of this earth from the heavens would have no more effect PPn Ttalbl portion of the universe of which we are speaking than would the falling of a single needle from a single pine have upon the general ap pearance of the forests of North Amer- ROTirXB VCLOABIS. Magnified 6,000 times. ! d yet we little mortals upon - ibis atom of stellar dust regard our i penny-whistle activities as of some con- sequence. A tnousana minions or years have been occupied by the world in its growth to Its present condition. What will have become of It and Its micro scopic parasites a thousand millions of years hence? The thought crushes us with humility, while it gives us a les son upon the Infinitely great, and the microscope tells of almost equally Im pressive facts In the domain of the Infinitely little. The following tabular statement ex hibits the number of fixed stars or 'suns to the twenty-first magnitude, Inclusive,, which can be rendered visible by a telescope with a forty-Inch object glass. This calculation assumes that the ratio of Increase is the same for magnitudes below tbe ninth as It Is known to be for magnitudes from the first to the) ninth, which have been carefully esti mated by astronomers. The error. If any, one way or the other. In our calcu lations can only be a few hundred mill ions of suns: NUMBER OF FIXED STARS OR SDNS. Magnitude. 1 2 3. Number. ' ta : iho 425 1,100 8,200 13.000 40.000 142,000 440.200 1,364.200 4.230,300 13,133.900 40.653.000 126.024.300 890,676,300 4 6.. 7..... & 0..... 10..... 11 12..... 13 15..... !..... 17..... 1.211,093,400 18. .! 8.754.389,500 19. J. 11,638,607.000 21). 4 86,079,683,500 SI . 111,847,018,850 Total.. 165,107,514,000, Out from under the Infinite and star-! bespangled azure, in the glow and beatitudes of healthful life, out from' the pure wintry air Into a quiet study.' on whose four walla stand rows of treasured books, the silent spirits of the great of earth, tbe loved companions of a life of solitude. Is only a step. Amid these sacred surroundings we spend an boar examining through a microscope an. animal which Is only one one-thousandth of an Inch long. A dozen of 'them could only stretch their bodies ; lengthwise across the black line, mak ing tn widest part or tn lines com posing one of these printed letters, a. being which. It la needless to say. Is wholly Invisible to the unaided eyej Haying around this Rotifer Vulgaris tbe animal's name) are .hundreds of ther forms of life, many of which are) less than one on-hundred thousandth f an Inch in length, and all thla life has unple room for Its activities In a drop f water no larger than a pin bead, and th drop la from Laav Oabnset Xheao JlRfJMaaUt aMaV tft i 4 particulars, and while we are observ ing their antics two of them "pitch In to" the side of a larger form of another species and gnaw off a good supper from his onter flesh, much to hia ap px "ent horrorf and disgust A curious feature of the Rotifer which we are ob serving Is his sbility to withdraw all the sections of the lower part of his body Into the upper section, as tbe siqaU sections of a band telescope are pushed into the large section. Tbe realization of tbe fact that this animal has eyes, a digestive apparatus, and probably a nervous system, and that It begets and cares for Its young, and that It Is a veritable whale compared with the many forms of life around It, Impresses the observer profoundly and Illustrates the infinitely little In organic life, and exhibits a world of marvelous creations, which can only be revealed to us by powerful Instruments. We present two pictures of the Rotifer, one of them exhibiting the animal's tail extended and the other the tall largely withdrawn Into Its body, and the cilia about Its bead sweeping food Into Its mouth. Each eye of this small animal, too. Is equipped with an Independent set of muscles enabling It to look up ward with one eye, while looking down ward at tbe same time with the otben Pullman Journal. ADDITIONS TO THE ALPHABET. Two tVatter of Which Our Fore father Were la Total Ignorance. It Is a fact, not so well known but that It may be said to be curious, that the letters and w are modern addi tions to our alphabet. The letter J only came Into general use during the commonwealth, say, between 1649 and 1658. From 1630 to 1646 Its us is ex ceedingly rare and I have never yet seen a book printed prior to 1663 In which it appeared. In tbe century InW mediately preceding th seventeenth It became the fashion to tall the last 1 when Roman numerals were used, aa In this example: vlij. for 8 or xij. In place of 12. This fashion still lingers, but only In physicians p inscriptions, I be lieve. Where the French use It has the power of s aa we use It In the word "vision." What nation was th first to use It as a letter la an Interesting but perhaps an unanswerable query. In a like manner the printers and language makers of the latter part of the sixteenth century began to recog nize the fact that there was a sound in spoken English which was without a representative In the shape of an al phabetical sign or character, aa th first sound In the word "wet" Prior to that time It had always been spelled as "vet," the v having the long sound of u or two u's together. In or der to convey an Idea of the new sound they began to spell such words as "wet," "weather," "web," etc, with two nu'a, and as the n of that date was a typical v the three words above look ed like this: "Vvet," "weather,", "web." After a while the type found ers recognized the fact that the double u bad come to stay, so they Joined the two u's together and made the charac ter now so well known as the w. I have one book In which three forms of the w are given. The first Is an old double v (w). the next one In which the last stroke of the first v crosses tbe first stroke of the second and the third Is the common w we use to-day.- New York Mercury. Richard Was Had. Richard Harding Davis, according to Vanity, Is not an ardent admirer of Henry Irving and Miss Terry. W hen one recalls bis quarrel with Edward W. Townsend over the "Major Max" article, It la not surprising that he should not like Miss Terry, for on meeting him she told him Low glad, she was to know htm, how much she bad enjoyed his work In tbe past, and how much 6he bad anticipated reading his last book. "Ghimmie Fadden." which was so weUrspokon of. Mr. Irving also made a sad mistake when Davis, at a dinner given to Mr. Irving, waa honored by Bitting next to him. Davis had arrayed himself with rows or orders and medala presented to hlui by tbe Sultan and th President of Bolivia and various other dignitaries. These orders Mr. Davis would no more travel without than be would without his tooth-brush. It was with the great est satisfaction, therefore, tbat he saw they attracted tbe attention of Mr. Irving, and all the guests noticed thnf the actor raised his eye-glass and scan ned them closely, and, alas, for Mr. Davis! all the guests heard Mr. Irving remark: "How lnteresttug. I always like to see college badges!" Mystery of Shoe 8 tor. A Boston man tells of a servant girl tn his family who recently purchased a pair of rubbers at a bid departmeni store, and. having taken them home waa astonished to find In the toe a pa) envelope containing 87. The name wai traced to an East Boston corporation but they said the man had not worked for them for eight years. How did tbt money get Into the rubbers? My friend had an Ingenious theory that the wifl of the laborer purchased the pair oj rubbers and tucked the envelope Int the toe for safekeeping. Afterward, she must hare concluded that the rub bers did not fit, and forgetting all about the pay envelope returned then to the store, where by soma chance ot other they remained unsold for eight years. This Is certainly a clever ex planatlon and for want of a better 1 will accept It The laborer, by thr way, cannot be found. j ' Leap ta a Sack. Some years ago a porter named Ful-; ler, employed at Billingsgate Market, London, made a bet that be would Jump from London bridge tied In a sack, his only stipulation being that he should be provided with a knife which be was not to open tin he touch ed tbe water with which to rip open the sack. He succeeded In accomplish ing the feat, and when picked up by some friends In a boat waa none the worse for his dive. He waa proposing to the Boston girl, and in the fervor if bis plan he leaned over her anxiously. "Pardon me," ah aid, "are yon not getting a trlfl to parsimonious?" "Paralzaonlous?" a gasped. "Yes," aha said; ""or, aa th vulgar wonld nut It. ,sWsaV-Paila- HE!. DBJflLPGL The Eminent Divine's Sunday Sermon. Subject: "Newspapers and Their In fluence." Varrs: "And the wheels were'f all of ey w -Esekiel x. , 12. For all the Athenians an J BtrangRrs which wr. thm. spent their tint, tn nothing else but either to tnll or to hear some new thing." Acts xvii., U. What Is a preacher to do when he finds two texta equally good and suggestive? In that perplexity 1 take both. Wheels full of eyes? What but the wheels of a newspaper print ing prets? Otnei wheels are blind. They roll on, pulling or erusning. Tie manutao turer'a wheel how it grints the operator with fatigues and rol is over nerve and mus cle anl bone and heart, not knowing what It does. The sewing machine wheel sees not tbe aches and pains fastened to it tighter than the band that move, it, sharper than the needle wbieh it plies. Every moment of very hoar ot every day oi every montn ot .very year there are hundreds of thousands of wheels of mechanism, wheels of enterprise, wheels of hard work, in motion, but they an eyeless. Sot so th. wheels ot the printing press. Tneir entire business Is to look and report. They are full of optln nerves, from axle tq periphery. They are like those spoken of by Szekiel as full of eyes. Sharp eras, neat sighted, far sighted. They look up. They look down. They look lar away. They take in th. next street and the next hemisphere. Eyes of critid-m, eyes ot Investigation, eyes that twinkle with mirth, .yes glowering with Indignation, eyes tender with love, eyes of suspicion, eyes of hope, blue eyes, black .yes, green eyes, holy eyes, evil eyes, sore ayes, political eyes, literary eyes, historical eyes, religious eyes, eyes that see every thing. "And the wheels were full of eyes." Bat in my second text is the world's cry for tbe newspaper. Paul describes a class ot people tn Athens who spent their time either in gathering the news or telling it. Why especially In Athene? Because, the more in telligent people become, the more inquisi tive they are not about small things, but great things. Tbe question then most frequently Is tht question now most frequently asked, What is the news? To answer that cry la tbe text for the newspaper the cent arte, have put their wits to work. China first suooeeded and has at Pekin a newspaper that has bees printed every week for 1000 years, printed on silk. Borne succeeded by publishing The Acta Diurna, In the same column putting Ores, murders, marrlnges and tempests, yrauoe succeeded bv a nhvsician writing out the news of the day for his patients. Eng land succeeded under Quean Elizabeth in first publishing th. news ot tb. Spanish armada, and going on until she bad enough enterprise, when the battle of Waterloo was fought, deciding the destiny of Europe, t. give it one-third of a column in the London Horning Chronicle, about as much as th newspapers of our day gives of a small Are. America succeeded by Benjamin Harris's Aral weekly paper called Public Occurrences, pub. llshed tn Boston In 1690, and by the first daily, Tbe American Advertiser, puDiisuec In Philadelphia in 1781. The newspaper did not suddenly spring upon the world, but came gradually. The genealogical line ot the newspaper is this: The Adam ot the race was a circular or nswi letter, treated by di-ine Impulse In humae nature, and tbe circular begat tbe pamphlet and the pamphlet begat the quarterly, and the quarterly begat the weekly, and th weekly begat the semi-weekly, and the semi, weekly begat the daily. But alas, by what a struggle it came to its present development! No sooner bad its power been demonstrated than tyranny and superstition shackled it. There is nothing that despotism so fears and hates as a printing press. It has too many eyes in Its wheel. A great writer declared that the king of Naples made it unsafe for him to write of anything but natural his tory. Austria could not endure Kossuth's journalistic pen pleading for the redemp tion of Hungary. Napoleon L, trying to keep his Iron heel on tbe neck of Nations, said, "Editors are the regents of sovereigns and the tutors of Nations and are only Ot for prison." But the battle for the freedom of the press was fought in the court rooms of England and America and decided betore this century began by Hamilton's eloquent plea for I. Peter Zenger'a Gazette in America, and Erskinn'a advocacy ot the freedom of publication In England. These were tbe Marathon and Ther mopylae In which & freedom of the press was established in the United States and Great Britain, and all the powers of earth and hell will never again be able to put on the handcuffs and hopples of literary and political despotism. It Is notable that Thomas Jefferson, who wrote the Declaration of Independence, wrote also: "It I had to ehoose between a government without news papers or newspapers without a government, I should prefer tbe latter." Stung by somt base fabrication coming to us In print, w come to writ, or apeak ot th. unbridled printing press; or. our new book ground up by an unjust oritio. we come to writ, oi speak ot the unfairness of th. printing press; or, perhaps, through our own indistinctness of utterance, we are reported as saying Just the opposite ot what we did say, and there it a small riot of semicolons, hyphens and commas, and we com. to speak r writ, ol the blundering printing press; or, seeing paper filled with divorce eases or social scandal, we speak and write of the filth priming press; or, seeing a journal, throngs bribery, wheel round from one political sida to the other in one night, we speak of th corrupt printing press, and many talk about tke lampoonry, and the empiricism, and th sens oulottUm of tbe printing press. But I discourse now on a subject you have never heard the immeasurable and everlast ing blessing of a good newspaper. Thank God for tbe wheel full of eyes. Thank God that we do not have, like th. Athenians, to go about to gather up and relate the tiding of the day, since the omnivorous newspaper does both for us. Tbe grandest temporal blessing that God has given to the nineteenth century is the newspaper. We would have better appreciation of this blessing It we knew the money, tbe brain, th. losses, tbe exasperations, the anxieties, the wear and tear of heartstrings, involved In the produc tion of a good newspaper. Under the Im pression that almost anybody ean make a newspaper, scores of inexperienoed capital ists every year enter the lists, and conse quently during the last few years a news paper has died almost every day. The dis ease is epidemic The larger papers swallow tbe smaller ones, th. whale taking down fifty minnows at on. swallow. With more than 7000 dailies and weeklies in the United States and Canada, there are but thirty-six a half century old. Newspapers do not average more than five years existence. Tb. most ot them die of oholera Infantum. It Is high time that the people fonnd out that the most Sueeessful way to sink money and keep it sunk la to start a newspaper. Tnere comes a time when almost every one is smitten with the newspaper mania and starts one. or have Stock In one he must or die. The course of procedure is about this. A literary man has an agricultural or scientific or political or religious idea which he want tn ventilate. He has no money of his own- t literary men seldom have. But h. talks of his Ideas among confidential friends until they become inflamed with the idea, and forthwith tney buy type and press and rent composing room and gather a eorps of edi tors, and with a prospectus that proposes to cure everything the first copy is flung on the attention of aa admiring world. After awhile one of the plain stockholders finds that no great revolution haa been effected by this daily or weekly publication; that neither sua nor moon stands still; that the world goes on lying and cheating and stealing just as It did before th. first Issue. The aforesaid matter of tact stockholder wants to sell out his stock, but nobody wants to buy. and other stockholders get Infected and atek of oewspaperdom, and aa enormous bill at the papas factory rolls Into an avalanche, aaa the printers refuse to work until back wtcgas are paid up, and th. compositor bows to tn. r "("(f editor, and the managing edltoe bows to th. .ditor-ln-ohlef, and th. edltor-In-amief bows to th. dlrsetors, and th. dlres tors bow to the world at large, and allth. ambaeatpacs woader why taatr aapss doasat aewspapwr is ss much or aa institution sa th. Bank ot England or Tale College and ia not aa enterprise. If you have th. afore said agricultural or scientific or religious or politloal idea to ventilate, you bad better charge upon tbe world through the columns already established. It is folly for any ono who cannot succeed at anything else to try newspaperdom. If you cannot elimb the bill bark of your house, it is folly to try th. sides ot the Matterhorn To publish a newspaper requires the skill, the precision, th. boldness, the vigil anoe, the strategy ol a eommander-ln-ohlef. To edit a newspaper requires that one be a statesman, an essayist, a geographer, a statistician, and in acquisition encyolopediac. To man, to govern, to propel a newspaper until It shall be fixed institution, a Na tional fact, demand more qualities than any business on earth. If vou feel like starting any newspaper, secular or religious, under stand that you are being threatened with softening of tbe brain or lunacy, and, throw ing your pocket book into your wife's lap. start for some insane asylum before you do something desperate. Meanwhile, as th. dead newspapers, week by week, are carried out to the burial, all th. living newspapers give respectful obituary, telling when they were born and when they died. The beat printers' ink should give at least one stick ful of epitaph. If it was a good paper, say, "Peace to the ashes." If it was a bad paper, I suggest the epitaph written for Viands Chartreuse: "Here eontinueth to rot th. body of Franeia Chartreuse, who. with aa Inflexible constancy and uniformity ot Ufa, persisted in the practioe ot every human vice, excepting prodigality ana nyposnay. His insatiable avarioe exempted him from tbe first, bis matchless tmprud.no. from th. second." I say this because I want you to know that a good, healthy, long lived, enter taining newspaper la not an easy blessing, bat on. that comes to us through the fire. First of all, newspapers make knowledge democratic and for th. multitude. Tbe pub lic library is a haymow so high up that few ran reach It, while the newspaper throws down the forage to our feet. Public libraries are the reservoirs where tbe great floods are stored high up and away off. The newspa per Is the tunnel that brings them down to the pitchers of all tbe peop e. Th. chief use of great libraries Is to make newspapers out of. Great libraries make a few men and wo men very wise. Newspapers lift whole Na tions into the sunlight. Better have 50J, 000,000 people moderately intelligent than 100.000 solons. A false Impression Is abroad that newspa per knowledge is ephemeral because periodi cals are thrown aside, and not one out of ten thousand people files them for future refer ence. Such knowledge, so far from being ephemeral, goes into the very structure of the world's heart and brain and decides the destiny of churches and Nations. Knowl edge on tbe shelf is of little worth. It is knowledge afoot, knowledge harnessed, knowledge tn revolution, knowledge winged, knowledge projected, knowledge thunderbolted. So far from being ephemer al, nearly all the best minds and hearts have their hands on the printing press to-day and have had since it got emanci pates. Adams and Hanoook and Otis used to go to the Boston Gazette and compose ar ticles on the rights of tbe people. Benjamin Franklin, De Witt Clinton, Hamilton, Jeffer son, Quincy, were strong in newspaperdom. Many of tbe Immortal things that have been puhlished in book form first appeared la what you may call the ephemeral periodi cal. All Macaulay's essays first appeared in a review. All Carlyle's, all Buskin's, all Mcintosh's, all Sydney Smith's, all Hnzlitt's, all Thaekerary's, all tbe ele vated works of fiction In our day are re prints from periodicals in which they ap peared as serials. Teunyson's poems. Burus's poems, Longfellow's poems, Emerson's po ems, Lovelrs poems, Whittier's poems, were once fugitive pieces. You cannot find ten literuy men in Christendom, with strong minds and great hearts. 'j: are or have been somebow ooosectai with the newspaper printing press. While tbe book will always nave its place, the newspaper is more potent. Because the latter is multitudinous do not conclude it Is necessarily superficial. If a man should from childhood to old age see only his Bible, Webster's lMotionary and his newspaper, he could be prepared for all tb duties of this life and all the happiness of the next. Again, a good newspaper Is a useful mir ror of life as it is. It is sometimes com plained that newspapers report the evil when they ought only to report the good. They must report the evil a well as the good, or how shall we know what is to be reformed, what guarded agani.t, what fought down? A new.spaper that pictures only the bonesty and virtue of society is a misrepresentation. That family is best prepared for theduties of life whioh, knowing the evil, is taught to select the good. Keep children under the impression that alt is fair and riirht in the world, and when they go out into it they will be as poorly prepared to struggle with it as a child who Is thrown into the middle of tbe Atlantlo and told to learn how to swim. Our only complaint is when sin is made attractive and morality dull, when vice is painted with great headings and good deeds are put in obscure corners, iniquity set up in great primer and righteousness in nonpariel. Sin is loathsome; make It loath some. Virtue is beautiful; make It beauti ful. It would work a vast improvement if all our papers religious, political, literary should for the most part drop tbelr imper sonality. This would do better justice to newspaper writers. Many of the strongest and best writers of the country live and die unknown and are denied tbeir just fame. The vast public never learns wbo they are. Most of tbera are on comparative! small Income, ana alter awniie tneir nana lorgets it cun ning, snd they are without resources, left to die. Why not, at least, har. his Initial at tached to his mot Important work? It al ways gave additional tore, to an article when you occasionally saw added to some significant article in the old New York Courier an 1 Enquirer J. W. W.. or in Tbe Tribune H. G.. or In To. Herald J. G. B.. or In The Times H. J. B.. or in The Evening Post W.C. B., or in The Evening Express E. B. While this arrangement would be a fair nd just thing for newspeper writers, it would be a defense for tbe publle. It Is sometimes true that things damaging to private charac ter are said. Who Is responsible? It Is the we" of the editorial or reportorial columns. Every man in every profession or occupation ought to be responsible for what he does. No honorable man will ever write that whleh he would be afraid to sign. But thousands of persons have suffered from tbe imperson ality of newspapers. What oan one private etllaen wronged tn bis reputation do m a contest with misrepresentation multiplied into twenty or fifty thousand copies? An injustice done in priot Is inimitably worse than an injustice done in private life. Dur ing loss oi temper a man may nay mat lor which he will be sorry in ten minutes, but a newspaper Injustice bas first to be written, set up in type, then the proof taker, off and read and corrected, and tben for six or ten hours the presses are bnsy running off the issue. P.enty of time to correct. Plenty of time to cool off. Plenty of time to repent. But all that Is hlddea in tbe impersonality of a neWHpapsr. It will be a long step for ward when all is ehanged, and newspaper writers get oretllt for tbe good and are held responsible for tbeevil. SjAnotner step forward for newiaper.lin will be when in our colleges and univer sities we ooen opportunities for preparing candidates fur tbe editorial chair. We have In such institutions medical departments, law departments. Wby not e litori il depart ments? Do the legal and bea'ing professions demand more culture anl careful training than tbe editorial or reportorial profusion.-? I know men may tumble by what seems ac cident into a newspaper office as thev ma- tumble into other amnpatlons, but It would be an incalculable advantage if those pro posing a newspaper life bad an Institution to which thev might go to learn the qnallti- eations, the responsibilities, the trials, tbe temotatlons. tbe dangers, the magnificent opportunities of newspaper life. Let there be a lectureship in which there shall appear .tne leading editors ot tne unitea ciaiea I telling the story ot their struggles, their ( victories, tbeir mistakes, how they worked and what they found out to be the best I way of working. There will be strong men who will climb uo without auch aid Into editorial power and efficiency. So do men elimb up to success In other bran :hes bv sheer grit. But if we want learned Instl- ' tutlons to make lawyers and artists and doc tors and ministers, we much more need I nuuni lunuuiiviu iv tun v ..0, " . oeeupy a position of influence a hundredfold greater. I do not put th. truth too strongly whan I say th most potent influence for good on earth Is a good editor and the most potsat tnfli e toe evil Is a bad one, To 5S i bestway to re-enforceandifnprove the news papers is to endow editorial profe"ontts. When will Princeton or Harvard or Yale oi Rochester lead the way? Another blessing of the sewsnaner is the foundation It lays for aecnra'e history of th time in which we live. We for the most part blindly guess about the ages that antedate the news)iaper and are dependent upon the prejudices of this or that historian. But after a hundred or two years what a splen did opportunity the historian will have to teach the people the lesson of tbis day. Our Bancrofts got from the early nwspanrs of this country, from tbe Boston News-Letter, the New Tork Gazette, and The Amencai Bag Bag, and Boyal Gazetteer an 1 Indepen dent Chronicle, and Massachusetts Soy, and the Philadelphia Aurora, aoo.wntg of Perry's ' victory, and Hamilton's duel, and Wash ington's death, ant Boston maasa-ire, and the oppressive foreign tax on luxuries which turned Boston harbor into a teapot, and Paul Revere' midnight ride, and Rhode Island rebellion, and South Carolina nulli fication. But what a field for tbe ctironlo.er of tbe gnat future when be opens the flies ol a hundred standard American newspapers, giving tb. mlnutia of all things occurring un der the social, political, ecclesiastical, in ternational headings! Five hundred year from now. If th. world lasts so long, the student looking for stirring, decisive history . . will pass by the misty corridors of other cen turies and say to the libraries: "Find ma th. vo Lames that give the century In which the American Presidents were assassinated, th. Civil War enacted and the cotton gin, the steam loeomotlve and telegraph and electric pen and telephone and cylinder presses were Invented." One. more I remark that a good news paper la a blessing as an evangelistiu in fluence. Ton know there is a great change in our day taking place. All the secular newspapers of the day for I am not speak ing now of the religious newspapers all the secular newspapers of the dav discuss all the questions of God, eternltyand the dei I, and all the questions of the past, present and future. There Is not a single doctrine of theology but has been discussed in tbe last ten years by the secular newspapers of ths eountry. They gather up all the news of all tne earth bearing on religious subjects, anl tben they scatter tbe news abroad again. The Christian newspaper will be the right wing of tbe apocalyptic angel. Tbe oylinderof . the Christianised printing press will be the front wheel ot tbe Lord's chariot. I take th. music of this day, and I do not mark it diminuendo I mark It crescendo. A pas tor on a Sabbath preaches to a few hundred, or a few thousand people, and on Monday, or during the week, the printing press will take the same sermon and preach it to mill tons of people. God speed the printing press! God save the printing press! God Christianise tbe printing press! When I see tbe printing press standing with the electric telegraph on the one side gathering the material, and tbe lightning express train on tbe other side waiting for the tons of folded sheets of newspaper, 1 pro nounce It the mightiest force In our civiliza tion. 80 I command you to pray for all those who manage the newspapers of the land, for all typesetters, for all reporters, for all editors, for all publishers, that, sitting or standing In positions of such great influ ence, they may give all that influence for God and the Betterment of the human race. An aged woman making her living by knitting, unwound the yarn from the ball until she found In the centre of the ball there was an old pie;e of newspaper. She opened It and read an advertisement which announced that she bad become heiress to a lurge property, and that frag ment of a newspaper lifted her from pau perism to affluence. And I do not know but as tbe thread of time unrolls and unwinds a little further through the silent yet speaking newspaper may be fonnd the vast inheri tance of the world's redemption. Jesus shall reign where'er the sun Dods his uc3efo-;--a Jovrcevc roup His kingdom stretch from shore to Shore Till suns shall rise and set no more. MUST PICK BY HAND. A Iaw That Huckleberries Must Not Br Picked Mechanically. The House of Assembly of the New Jersey Legislature, in session at Treutou, bas just passed a bill which prohibits the use of ma chinery in tbe harvesting of tbe luscious whortleberry, known more popularly as tbe huokleberry. The bog men have within late years greatly cheapened the price of the berry, which in Philadelphia Is esteemed al most as great a luxury as "scrapple," by using a sort ot scoop In stripping the bushes. The same apparatus is also used in the gathering of cranberries, a considerable in dustry in the State. The berries suffer great ly by this process, and the bogmen are all anxious to return to the old system of hand picking, but each fears tbe violation by an other of any hand-picking agreement that may be entered into; hence the appeal to tb. Legislature by the associated bogmen. Tb law deolars it a misdemeanor, punishable by fine and imprisonment, to pursue tbe huck leberry, or tbe cranberry in Its native bog by tbe aid of any mechantoal device whatso ever. IN HONOR OF FRANKLIN. emorlal Tablet Unveiled tn France to the Author of "roar ftlenaxd." Several hundred persons from Paris at tended the unveiling of a memorial tablet that bas been erect oi on the site of th. villa at Paasy. Vranoe, oooupied by Benjamin Franklin from 1777 to 1785. It was at this villa that Franklin eraoted his first lightning oonuuotor. The dramatist. M. Manuel. President of the Paasy Historical Society, presented th. tablet. H. Fayey. a member of the Frenoh Academy, spoke of Franklin's seientlflo re- renes. The Hon. 3. B. Eustis, the American Am uaador. acknowledged the tablet. M. Boubtey. director of tbe Society of Fine Arts; Moocure Conway, Henry Bacon, th. artist; Meredith Bead and many ladies were present at the ceremony. Th. 8alrrel Feat. A pries of S2S0 for. method of Inoculatlna squirrels with some eontagiou) fatal disease is offered by the Commercial Association of Pendleton, Oregon, and It la believed the eounty authorities and various farmers' organisations will add to the sum offered. The farmers of that region are at their wits' and as to how to mitigate th. plague of squir rels. Tons of strychnine have been used la th. .Sort to exterminate the squirrels by poisoning them, but little relief is had from this or any other method heretofore used. Th. Cooopah volcanoes, seventy-five miles southwest of Yuma, Arizona, were In violent eruption a week or so since. The larger ones were emitting great volumes of smoke and some flames, and the smaller ones were throwing out quantities of water, stones and muu. ineroar of tbe eruptions oould be heard twenty miles or more. Man is never too old to love or commit nonseise. Rome things, after all, otne to the poortUit can't get in at the iloors f tbe rich, whose money somehow blocks np the entrance way. ''Do ye nnto others as ye touI that 1 bey should do to yon" was th original ancestor of the Monroe doo trine. The two powtrs which in my opinion constitute a wiss msn, are those of bearing and forbeariDg. Luck evens itself no ia the lou -an. Tbe right kin.l of a man plways earna sometbtug worth knowing from mita ke. Man is the oaly animal that lies standing np. People in love believe everybody else can't see. liove and musk soon Iwtray them selves. When the enrions man fi nis out a thincr he don't value it. 1. cause the ! cariosity is all taken out of it A great many men who haven't a second suit of clothes have a financial ' theory. V.