f - N ' THE OONtfl'lTUTlON-THE UNION-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE UWi BL F. BOHWEIEB, MIFFLINTOWN. J UM ATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 10. 189fi NO. 26 VOL. L. ' - ? - V s ciiArTEu xra. ! On receipt of a telegram, Mra. Meason, despite tbe very delicate state of her health, started at once for Spain, and one day arrived, quite unexpectedly, at the Castle when the duke and duchess were to dinner. At the sight of her grandmother Con stance was quite overcome. She cried bitterly, and passionately kissed the old lady's face and hands, greatly to the an noyance of the duke. "My dear Constance," said Mrs. Mea son, "how pale you lookl Why baa the sun of Spain brought no rosea to your cheeks?" "Your grandchild, madam. Infinitely pre fers the fogs of England," said the duke, grimly. "Well, is it not natural? It is he home; she is an English woman." The duke shrugged his shoulders. It was a great consolation to Constance, to have her grandmother with her, and daring the days which followed the old lady's arrival she seemed more contented than she had been since her marriage. The duke soon noticed this, and did not seem well pleased. He was of that mor bidly jealous disposition which grudges enjoyment even while not coveting it. " Besides all this, the duke had an Irri tating conviction that when the two wom en were alone they were always extolling the virtues of the young officer who had died. The duke's displeasure at all this was very soon made manifest. One day Mrs. Meason informed Constance of that fact that she was about to return home. Constance was amazed. "Return home, grandma?" she said. "Why should you do that? Surely my home is your home." "You are right, my child it should be so; but your husband does not wish it." Constance started angrily. "My husband!" she said, "the duke, has be dared to send yon away?" "Hush, my child; remember that ho la four husband." "Do not ask me to visit you again, Con stance," she said, in leaving. "Your hus band has said things to me which will prevent my ever again living beneath his roof." Burning with indignation, Constance went instantly in search of her husband. She found him in his library. "I wish to speak to you, she said, quickly. "Let your communication be brief, for I am busy," he said. "What is it?" "My communication is of as much im portance as your business to-day," she replied, haughtily. "You have insulted my grandmother. I wish to know the reason." "I have insulted her, you say? Pray, who is your informant?" "My grandmother is my informant. Is it your wish, monsieur, to exile me from the one person in the world who cares for me?" "By this you mean your grandmother, I presume? Well, if she cares for you he has had a most peculiar way of show ing it that is all!" "What do you mean?" asked Con stance quickly. The duke shrugged his shoulders. "If I explain," he said, "pray bear In mind that I was not the first to broach the subject. While in this house Mrs. Meason took upon herself the task of anestioning my conduct toward my wife. Now, I dislike unpleasant scenes. I therefore intimated to Mrs. Meason that as the Duchess d'Azzeglio occupies too exalted a position to be permitted to pre sent the world with food for scandal by dying of a broken heart away from her husband's roof, I must request her not to commence in my house the process whicB she had found so efficacious in the house of your father. When I first wooed yon," continued he, "I knew I had the good wishes of your guardian. I thought at the time that she was influenced by some friendly feeling toward me; yet I discov ered afterward that her sole object was to marry her,grandehild in order that, as the Duchess d'Azzeglio, she might pass by with pride the man whom, above all others, Mrs. Meason disliked. Well, her rase has not succeeded; the man is dead and so far as Mrs. Meason is concerned, your marriage has accomplished nothing." He paused, but Constance said nothing. A. vague feeling of dread was upon her; for something in her husband's tone rath er than in his words struck terror to her ti.rt "If your grandmother had been more open with me at first, instead of allowing me to discover all her secrets for myself. It might have been better for me; it cer tainly would have been better for her," .Hnned the duke. "After I had offered to marry you she determined at all haz ards to break off your engagement to your cousin. Now, as Mrs. Meason Is a lady who generally accomplishes what she h. ut herself to do, she succeeded In accomplishing this by a falsehoodl" "A falsehood?" "Precisely. The reason she gave you for breaking off your engagement was the death of your mother under the per secution of Captain Howarth's family a .rtim,irlT of his father is it not "Yes," murmured Constance; "I could not marry him; my mother's spirit stood "My dear Constance, allow me to In form you that the little story which sep arated you from your lover was a fabri cation; it was an outrage, as I took care to discover. The Earl of Harrington Captain nowarth's father-was the very eul of honor; but be had one areat fault -he disliked Mrs. Meason. They quar reled, and no one was to blame but the ttady. Her tyranny finally separated hua iband and wife, and hastened the death Of tthe latter." "Do you mean to say." said Constance, hoarsely, "that this which you hare told ne is true; inai inn " ""'" toot mother's sorrow was a fabrication r is true; that tne wnoie story m "Not at all; the story of the poor lady's sorrowful death waa trua-rJt was ajtsrea l tho telling, that was alL The blame of the whole thing was, for your benefit, laid at the door of the Harrington fam ily; whereas the sole cause of it was Mrs. Meason herself; and your mother was a gentle, loving girl, and was received by your father's family with open arms. All would have gone well but for Mrs. Mea son, who a few weeks after the marriage entered the house of the yonng married couple and put an end to anything like peace. She had always been an ambi tious woman, and she looked forward to the marriage of her daugnter as a means of gaining for herself an entrance into society. When she wu forbidden to en ter her daughter's house her plans were shattered, and she resolved to have re venge. When Captain Howarth wooed you, her time came; 'I will break his heart,' she said; I will avenge myself on the father by means of the son.' To ac complish this it was necessary to Invent a falsehood; she Invented that falsehood, and her plan succeeded. Your engage ment to your cousin was broken, and yon were married to me." Again he paused, but this time Con stance said nothing. She staggered from the library to her own room. Once there, in a wild fit of despairing pain, she fell upon her knees, calling upon the name of the man whom she had loved so ardently, but who, alas! was dead. Her first coherent thought was, hew she could best get to her grandmother and demand from her the truth or false hood of the terrible story she had heard. She made her arrangements quickly and In a manner to excite no suspicion. First of all she eat down to write to the duke. I am going to London, she wrote. "Until I have seen my grandmother and heard her version of this story, I cannot rest. CONSTANCE." She placed this letter on her dressing table In a position where it would be easily found by her husband, then she ordered her carnage. Weary with long travel, heart-sick with over-much grief, she stood in the drawing room at Portland place, gazing upon her grandmother with large, wistful eyes, two days later. Grandma, spoke the glrL with strange earnestness, "the duke has told me a ter rible story, and I have come to ask you if it is true. I could not rest until I had seen you. He says you have been cruel to me; that by means of a falsehood you separated me from Frank; but I do not believe it; It is he who has been deceiving me. You would not do so, you love me too well." The old lady did not speak. Her face was agonized. There was no need for words; Constance looked into her eyes and read the truth. "Don't touch met" she cried; "don't come near me; I cannot bear it! Oh, may heaven forgive you I" "Oh, my child, I have wronged you bitterly; I see It new, bnt H Is too late," cried the old lady. "Years ago Frank nowarth's father wonnded me deeply, and I swore that his son and one of my blood should never com together, and I kept my word, I married yon to the duke, believing that, once a wife, your childish passion for your cousin would soon fade away, bnt I was wrong. When I met you la Spain and looked In your eyes I knew that I had ruined your life, and I re pented when It was too late." "Yea," said the girl, "too late. My love is dead! He does not know what I have done; he will never know, and I can love him and mourn for him all my life. Oh, Frank, my darling, sleep peacefully; henceforth I will be true to you, and some day perhaps we may meet again." "Constance, my child, remember you are a wife!" "A wife! I am no wife, for I do not love mr husband. At your intercession I mar ried the duke; I stood before the altar with him like one in a dream a terrible dream. I realize it now; I have awakened to misery and death. CHAPTER XIV. A week after the day when Constance, standing before her grandmother, beard the story of the cruel wrong which had been done her. and In her heart thanked heaven that her lover was dead, a troop ship from the seat of war was entering Portsmouth harbor, bearing tne aisamea soldiers home. From the earliest hours of dawn tne treats had been cayly decorated witn flan, and crowds had begun to gather. When the great ship approached a cheer went np from every throat, and many eyes grew dhn. On the deck the soldiers gathered, straining their eyes shoreward, their nala faces brightened with the glow of expectation. For all knew that amidst a , - . 1 that dense crowd sxooa a wue, . uwiuh, or a sister, waiting to receive them with open arms. All? No; there was one mm standing apart from the rest who regarded the crowd with a look of blank misery. He wore his left arm in a sling, and listened to the joyful shoots like one in a dream. It was Frank Howarth. He went to his cabin, for somehow he shrank from watching the greeting be tween the soldiers and their friends; so ha sal there and thought bitterly of tha past; recalled the day when he had asked Constance to become his wife, and ahe had consented. Yet, aha bad loved him then. he felt sure of it; but how soon her ve bad changed. "She was false as perdition!" he cried, "and yet I go to London because I wish to breathe the same air with her, to be near her, although the very thought of it almost drives me mad." He waited till most of Us comrades had gone ashore, then he too landed, drove to the station, and was just in time to catch the train to London. Arriving; Frank called a hansom, and giving his servant the name of the hotel at which he meant to atop, ordered him to follow with the baggage. He dined, then ha strolled out into tte I, TTj. AmmiAMtm MM illtl., .Ill e(j. things were going on mud. in tiie same old wsy. The Strand was thronged, and people hurried along, hard ly giving a glance at the pale young fel low carrying his arm in a sling. He walked on, strolling up Regent street. Suddenly he heard a voice calling his name; he stopped, looked around and be held a face he knew. .. A neat little brougham, drawn by a handsome pair of bays, had stopped near the curbstone, and from it protruded the head of Lady Seafield. Uood heavens. Captain Howarth, ex claimed the Httle lady as Frank went up to her; "then it is really yon. When I first saw yon I thought it was your ghost! A ghost. 'Why should yon think it was my ghost. Lady Seafield 7 Why? My dear sir, everybody be- fleves yon to be dead. 4t waa reported that yon were killed in action, and tbe report was never contradicted. I have been wounded." aald Frank. glancing at his Injured arm. Ah I poor fellow r exclaimed tbe coun tess, sympathetically, "and now yon have come home to be petted and made much of. Well, the Earl of Harrington will find his friends melting to give him a glorious welcome. Have yon seen Con stance?" Frank started, bit his lip and was amaz ed to feel that his face was flashing pain ully. "I have aeen no one," he said. "Ah I the poor child will go crazy when she hear yon are alive. Ever since that report came she has been in terrible grief, wore the deepest mourning and positively refused to go anywhere; but of coarse that win be all changed now. Every one expects her to be the sensation of the sea son, and I have no doubt she will be; ahe is more beautiful than aver she was in her life." Frank said nothing, bnt aa he listened a cold sneer curled his lip. The countess saw and fancied she' had told enough. "Well, an revoir," she said, "now that yon are here and not dead, I hope yon will come and see as." Mechanically Frank raised his hat, and the brougham moved away. When It had gone a few yards the countess gave the order: "Oo to No. 104 Park lane." It was the temporary residence of the d'Azzeglio; for the duke bad speedily followed Constance to London. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon it was Constance's custom to take tea In her boudoir. In the ordinary course of things it would have been her hour for receiving her friends, bat Constance, being in the deepest mourning, would go nowhere and receive no one. That afternoon the door of her boudoir opened, and to her amazement the duke came in. "Constance, he said coldly, "to-morrow night I attend a stats concert; I wish yon to accompany me." "I cannot go," ahe said; "it is Impossl- Ma, and pointed to her black dress. "Pardon me," aald the dnke gravely; "It matters very much to me. It is now some time since yon became my wife when yon accepted that honor I flattered myself that yon would appreciate it at Its worth. I have been disappointed ; your mourning looks distress me, and make me think you are not happy." "What do you wish me to do?" "Smile, laugh, be cheerful, look your best. It is not much I ask. When one possesses a diamond and sets it as a jewel on his heart its business is to shine. My diamond is my duchess. Do you under stand?" Constance was about to reply when the door of her boudoir waa opened agatfi, and the servant quietly announced the Countess of Seafield, who chatted on un til the duke, weary with waiting for her departure, took his leave. The moment he was gone the countess rushed at Constance, and, with many kisses and tears, told her of tbe miracu lous resurrection of her cousin. That same night the duke received a message from his wife. It was to the effect that she was ready to accompany him on tbe following evening to the con cert.. (To be continued.) Lincoln. In the Five Points. Not long before Lincoln was first nominated for the Presidency he went to New York to make a political speech at the Cooper Union. While there, ac cording to a writer In the Philadelphia Press, he wandered about the city a good deal, and once went to the Five Points, then the most notorious of New York slums. There he was attracted by the sound of music, and perceiving upon a door an. Invitation to strangers to enter, he went in, and found himself in the Five Points Mission. His manner betrayed so much inter est in the children, especially in their singing, that tbe superintendent, though he did not know him, Invited him to speak. Mr. Lincoln accepted the Invitation, and as the superintendent nsed to say, talked to the children just as a loving and a wise father might have talked to his own sons and daughters, without a trace of pedantry or cant After tbe exercises the superintendent asked the stranger for his name. "My name is Lincoln," was the an swer. "I live In Illinois," And then the superintendent knew that the speaker must be the man whose address at the Cooper Union had been so much talked about for the last few days. Every American President has had from three to thirty-two towns named for him. There are thirty cities and towns named after Alexander Hamil ton, thirty Clintons, twenty-four Web- sters, nineteen Quincys, twenty-one Douglases and twenty Blalnea. Kvery mau has just as much vanity as ho wants nadrhtanding. It iloes ns no gool to admire what if roimI anl Iwnutifnl; but it does na in. llnttety more good ta love it. W grow like what we admire; but we become one wtlu wlmt we lovu. He who knows right principles in equal to bim Who loves ttielu. We would rather take onr chances a the f ther ol lies than tbe mother l go-nip. It is well to hope tor success, bnt much better to deserve it. Tiiere are times when every man realizes that he lias too nisnv friends. ! everything that means keeping in good bealtb. Tie nlvor lining is always on tbe wroug iule of the clou l. Tbe umn who is a failure seldom claims to lie a self-made man. Civilizttion is rapidly doinj away with the survival ol the attest. , Hardi ess ever of hardness is the mother A Brett many man d not got tbe right kind of neckwear. HE D.f I CArlVcD THE DUCK- I went to dine the other day With my mother-in-law-elect. And lost thereby my fiancee, So mv future hopes nva wrecked. We'. I reached the roast, when, woe la I never did have luckj The hostess asked me pleasantly If I would carve the duck. With confidence born of yoatk I hastened to Comply. And little thought that fowl forsooth Could make a fortune fly. Nor did I deem so small a bird T.ilre an coat con Id buck. But I gained some points I had not hears The day I carved the duck. I drove the fork np to the hilt Within its bo-om browned. And sought to see how it was built. But not a Joint I found. I siiwed it here ami jabbed It there. With pertinacious pluck: Oh, deep was my desire to swear The day 1 carved the duck. A cold dew pearled my forehead fair. As I chased it round tbe plate; It could not, built on wheels, I swear, Have struck a livelier gait. The table was a saddening sight. As if by lightning struck; Tou'd ne'er hav dreamed the clotn waa. white The day I carved the duck. The hostess cast a gorgon glance. Rose wore a ghastly smile. As sprinting round that bird did dance. In most satamc tyle. I pinned it down it upward soared And to my boson; stuck; There were pallid cheeks around that board The day I carved the duck. ; ' Then, seized with rage I could not still And hate I could not hold. From me I hurled that bird of ill. With fury uncontrolled. Then from that scene I lied away - Like one who runs amuck. And I've never seen my fiancee Since the day I carved the duck. -Twentieth Century. ON CHICAGO LIMHTED It is the twilight time of the busiest. gladdest, most hurried day in all the year the day before Christmas. Tbe scene is the Grand Central depot, that portal through which. In the tnornlrg, pour the countless thousands who are as the sands of the shore In the midst of tbe great city; through which at night these countless thousands dtpart, and the city kaotvs not that they have gone. Un this evening tbe crowd Is a glad and a merry one, and though there is much pushing and jostling every one Is good-natured; for. Indeed, is not this the eve of gladness that gladness which Is the touch of nature making the whole world kin? In the waiting-room of that road which leads to Chicago, on the edge of the crowd forcing Its way through the narrow gateway leading to the limited train. Is a little lady, who to a keen- eyed oliserver shows a notable lack of the holiday atmosphere. She Is fault lessly tailor-made as to garbing, she Is gloved and booted and hatted In tbe nioHt exactly correct of the smart styles; and she carries a small handbag which looks as fissured and self-contained as does the little lady herself. She waits until she can pass the gate without being crowded, then shows her ticket walks through, finds ber car, hands her little bng to the porter say lng, "Section No. 9." and is presently comfortably seated facing tbe engine. Altogether a very well regulated and systematic little lady, but evidently a little lady who either does not know It Is Christinas eve or, knowing, is for some reason trying to forget it. As the train moves out of the great depot tiud the little lady watches the lights flashing rapidly by. two great tears creep out of her beautiful eyes and gleam for a moment on the Veil that falls from the Jaunty traveling bat. Soon dinner Is announced In tbe dining car, and the little lady walks calmly through the train, eats her dinner, then as calmly returns to her place. As the porter passes she glances at the unoccupied section opposite and Inquires pleasantly: "Porter, Is No. 10 not taken ?" "Reserved for a party at Albany, Miss," Is the reply. "Then I may sit there for a while and watch the river," says the little lady, and she takes the sent by the window and looks out across the Hudson and watches the lights coming ont one by one along the Palisades. After a time she return to her own place, takes a novel from ber sachel and settles her self to Its perusal, but by and by she discovers that It Is all about a husband and wife who become estranged, and then make it all up and live happy ever more, and the little lady elgnlfies her disapproval by closing tbe book with a vicious bang and saying, after a mo ment's thought. "Never!" She then called the porter and had her section prepared for the night Ere long she bad drifted to that land where dreams take possesion of us, and whether she would or not ber dreams were all about a tall, dark man with merry eyes, which could look se vere, and with a pleasant voice which called her Edith, and all through the dream was a little dog, a slcye terrier, for which she did not seem to enre at all, bnt which seemed to have a great deal to do with everything and then a pleasant voice said briskly: "Porter, Is No. 10 ready?" And the voice somehow seemed to go with the tall, dark man In the dream, and she half awoke with a dry little sob, and murmured sleepily, "Never!" and went back to ber dreams until the sunshine of Christmas morning came through the curtains and brought her again to tbe world of real things. As she emerg ed from her seclusion to complete her toilet she discovered that the opposite section had been made up and the oc cupant bad departed to the smoking compartment A dress suit case and a traveling coat were lyiug on the seat As her eye was caught by tha Initials on the dress suit box her heart seemed to stand still, then she looked hastily at the coat and gasped, "It is Philip," then, becoming conscious of her disheveled condition, she mads a frantic rush for the end of the car. When she appeared again she was aa fresh and blooming a arosa. Hsr section assftawails UA been made up, and she settled herself comfortably and gazed out at the beautiful suow- touched country through which the train was hurrying, and lu ber eyes was a look of expec tancy. Presently she turned to find a tall. Bark man coming down tha aisle to ward her, and then she heard a voles with a wealth of love in Its tones aay, "Edith." and the voice was that of the tall, dark man In her dream. Then the pretty face hardened and the bright eyes grew cold and tbe little bead lifted haughtily as she said: "Sir, yon havs made a mistake." Tbe tall man paused a moment look tng down at the averted face, and then said, softly: "Edith, will yon not come to breakfast with me and talk it over?" "Certainly not" was the reply, to frosty tones; "I prefer to breakfast alone." and with that ebe rose and talked past him directly away from the fining car. It was humiliating to be obliged to retrace her steps and pass him again, but she did It bravely, trying not to see that he sat with bis head pressed close against the window. When after breakfast she returned to her rent ber neighbor was not to be seen. The great train rolled on, and the cat wheels whirred and sung their Christ inas carol, but to the little lady in sec tion 9 they brought no thought of "peace on earth, good will toward men." She had taken another book from her latcuel. and appeared greatly absorbed in it A very dear old lack to the sec tion back of her bad been watching all ihe proceedings, and now, glancing over the shoulder of the little lady she noted that the leaves of the book were never turned, and she said to herself, t Uh a kindly smile: "Poor children! a lovers' quarrel." Soon the book boy came through the train with his armful of books: be paused at section 0, and laid a volume of poems on the Beat be tide the little lady, as he 6ald: "The gertleman iu the smoker said I was to liand this to you. ma'am. Edith glanced at the book, then ut A the window for a moment then again at the book. She saw that a leaf waa turned down, and her hand went slowly out toward the little volume, and tbe very dear old lady Iu the next scat looked on and smiled. Edith turned to the Indicated page, and found a verse marked; it was part of a poem that the pleasant voice of the tall, dark man had many times read to her, and now it came to her ns a message, and this was the message: Alas, how easily things go wrong A word unsung in a lover's song. There conies a mist and a blinding rain, And life is never the same again. Alas, bow hardly things go right! A storm may come in a summer's night! The stars will fade in the gloom away. And the summer's night is a winter" s day. Sue rend the verse softly through, and a tender light came into her eyes; then, ns the book dropped to ber lap, she saw somwi'aig was written on the flyleaf, turning to it she rend: "Edith, from Philip; merry Christmns." written iu the strong, manly baud that bad writ ten ber so many words of love. If riiil Ip could have come to ber then all would have been well; but such Is the porversenoss of fate we do not know wl en to "come back and be forgiven," anil in the smoking compartment Phil ip sat glowering out of the window, tvv'sting bis mustache fiercely and say ing to himself: "Poor little girt she Is awfully hard with me, and nil about a beggarly dog. Confound the beast anyway. I always did bate little dogs!" And the car wheels still whirred and cn ig, and all their song was "Peace on earth;" and at every station the passen gers leaving the train, laden with their pleasant-looking parcels, were met and greeted by those who needed them to complete their Christmas circle, and the train hands were greeted by their friends In passing, and everyone was happy and full of holiday cheer save only the little lady In section 0 and the tall, dark man In the smoking compart ment riiilip made another effort at luncheon time; he came slowly down tbe aisle and said: "Editb, shall I get you some luucheon?" The little lady, see ing him approaching, had seized ber novel, and, lu response to his question, tranced coldly up from Its pages just long enough to say, with extremo frostlness: "Thank you, no." Philip noticed the book of p -ems on the seat apparently untouched, but he gained some trifling comfort from also noting that the novel in Edith's bands was upside down. He returned to the smoker, and Edith, throwing her novel pettishly down, sat gazing out of the window. Presently she had the porter bring her a cup of tea, and just as she had finished It she felt a light touch on her shoulder ns a sweet voice said: "My klear, don't you want to come and talk To a tired old lady?" After they bad chatted a while the very dear old lady said: "I have been -WHtcblng you all day, my little girl, and yuU must pardon an old lady If she asks you some questions. Is tbe tall young man your lover?" "No," said Edith, "I am sorry to say ne Is my husband." "Sorry!" said the old lady; "oh no. mv dear, not that And I am sure he Is still your lover as well as your bus band. Don't you want to tell the old lady all about It? I have had a lot of experience, and perhaps I can help you." Edith looked Into the very dear old jace and then said: "Oh, thank you so much! Yes, I will tell you. But It Is too late to help us. I can never forgive Philip." And then she told to this sympathetic listener the whole story; of her marri age six months before, of her dear little home In New York, of her happy life with Philip until and here she paused, with a slightly shamefaced expression well, until she had one day spent an cbsurd sum for a fancy terrier. Philip had objected, half laughingly, half seri study: then things commenced to go awry. The little dog carried off Phil ips sllDoers. chewed up his razor strop, knocked bis silk bat about ths floor, and td done a thousand other annoying tittle things: and every time anything tappened Philip was disagreeable, and Edith had retorted; and so ths Uttto rift in the Into widened. Than thsM earns a OaT and bars ths gysa otLtbe little Jafe MAfemUn, Philip, in a burst of tamper, bad saldt Edith, either that dog leaves this hones or I do," and Edith had to a 3ns tamper also answered: "Do as yon please. Dandy shall not go." And Philip had packed a sachel and left and aQ that waa a week ago. Edith had waited two days, becoming mors alarmed and less bad-tempered all ths time, and bad then paid a visit to a cousin to Brooklyn, where she remain ed until deciding to go, on the day be fore Christmas, to ber mother to Chi cago. What Edith could not telL because she did not know it was that Philip, after three miserable days at a hotel, had returned, penitent and loving, to the litt'': apartment to find Edith sone, the servant - gone even the wretched little cause of all tbe trouble ?one and not a word of any sort fot him. He had gone back to the hotet He spent several days arranging busi ness matters, then went to Albany to consult his married suiter, who said: "Edith has probably gone homo to Chicago; I wonld go there at once." And that was how Edith and Philip happened to be passengers on the lim ited on Christmas Eve. The very dear old tody listened with out comment until Edith had finished, then she laughed a merry little laugh as she said: "And so It was all about a little dog; what a very Inadequate cause for so much trouble! By the way, my dear, what did you do with the dog." The corners of ths pretty month twitched a little as Edith said, "I gave it to my cousin to Brooklyn." Edith and tbe very dear old lady looked at each other a moment then they laughed together, nutll the tears stood to their eyes, and Edith hasten ed to say, "You see, it wasn't the dog entirely. It was the principle I was thinking of." "Nonsense," sold the old lady, "yon thought of nothing but having your own way, and from my point of view, you will be a very lucky young person If that flne-looklng. manly Philip will take you back at any price. Think of weighing a miserable little dog In tho balance against the love of such a man! Why, my dear, I could shake you." "But" faltered Edith, "do you think a woman should give up everything to her husband?" "Certainly not" said tho old lady, "and no true man will ask her to. You give np much, of conrne, and you ought to. Sacrifice is tbe essence of true love, and it is the essence of sel fishness as welt because you are far happier iu sacrificing to one you love than you are in withholding. Now, my advice Is, make it up with your Philip as soon as ever you can. and live bnppy ever after, and always re member bow near your happiness came to going to the dogs. And now, do you realize that it Is dusk? Let uj tio to dinner together." As they were coming out of the dint tng car tbey passed a tall, dark man at one of the tables; tbe little Indy, lend ing tbe way, passed him with her eyes straight ahead, but ns the very dear old lady reached him she paused for a moment as she whispered "Do not worry, it is coming out all rlgh.' Philip looked bis thanks, then turned to bis dinner with more noperuiness than he bad felt In many days. A little later Edith and her new friend still sat side hf side talking, and the wheels were singing and hum ming In merry meter, for the train was making up time. "We shall soon be to Chicago now,' Bald the very dear old lady; "will you sneak to him before you leave the train?" Oh, I think not" said Edith, and then added, with a little return of tbe haucbtv manner: "He must come to me." The old lady looked at Edith a mo ment Indulgently, and said: "Don't wait too long." Soon they were gathering np their small traps, and the train was run ning into tbe city. Tbe wheels seemed now to have ended their song and to be saying: "Well, if you have not had merry Christmas It's not our fault: we've sung to you all day long. Just as Edith was pulling down ber veil and drawing on ber gloves Philip hurried In, threw his cont over his arm, picked up bis snebel, and without a glance at her left the car. 1-Mitb looked startled, then turned toward the old lndy. who, having made i shrewd guess as to Philip's plans, aald Welt my dear, good by and God blew you! I think you may have a merry Christmas after all; now run aloni and get your cab," and the very den. old lady watched her tenderly as she hurried out into the busy station. Jusi as Edith found a desirable looking cab she noticed Philip almost at her side, and In her agitation she got into tbe cab without giving any orders to the driver, rhlllp stepped quickly tip, handed his sachel to the man, saying, "Drive to the Auditorium IIoteL" and turned toward tbe cab. "But Philip, my trunks," gasped Edith. "You darling," said Philip, as be jumped in and slammed the door. And the cab rolled away into the night New York Commercial. Doat Peel Potatoes, It la a great mistake to peel potatoes Before cooking them. The skin, like the bark of all medicinal roots. Is the richest part of the tuber. Potatoes baked are more nutritious than pre pared to any other form, because the valuable mineral salts are neia in so ration by the pellicle of the skin. If it Is desired to remove the skin It shonlc be dons by rubbing with a rough cloUr which preserves the true skin. Invadliwr Residence mstricts. A New York dry goods firm has se cured a lodgment to upper fith avenue at the corner of 66th street to the bear of the most aristocratic quarter aw under ths shadow of the most palatis residences to the city. Others are su to follow. When a duck banter kills a goos. there is no living with him, he tell about It so much. If a woman br rich and has coarst features they are referred to as being "strongly marked," HEV. DR. Wl Tbe Eminent Divine's Sunday Sermon. . - Subject. "War." Text: "The tower of Davl 1 bnilded for an annorr. whereon there ham? s thousand bnekleK, all shields of mighty men." Solo-; oil Bong IV.. a The church Is here corn pared to an arm. ory, the walls burnt with trophies of dead; heroes. Walk all almnt this tower of D.-ivi.t and see the dented shells, and the twisted swords and the ruxtnd hem lets of terrlbln battle. So at this season, a month earlier at the south, a month later at the north, the American enurenes aro turned into armories adorned with memories of departed braves Blossom and bloom. O walla, with stores of self saerlfloe and patriotism and prowess! ay unanimous imm oi inepeopinoi inn United states of America the graves of all the northern and aonthern dead are every year deooratnd. All aenrhity and bitterness have gone out of the national solemnity, ami as the men anl women of the sonth onn month ago floraliznl the cemeteries and graveyards so yesterday we, the men and Women of the north, put upon the tombs of our dead the kiss of patriotto antetlon. Bravery always appreciates bravery, thouch it fight on the other side, and if a soldier of the Federal army had been a month ago at Savannah he would not have been ashamed to march In the floral processions to tho cemetery. And if yesterday a Confederate soldier was at Arlington he was rfad to put a sprig of heartsease on the silent heart of onr dead. In a battle during our last wnrthe Confed erates were driving back tbe Federals, who' Were In swift retreat, when a Federal oraoer dropped wounded. One ot bis men stopped at the risk of his life and put his arn around the officer to carry htm from the. field. Fifty Confederate muskets were aimed at the young man who was picking up the officer. But the Confederate captain shout ed, "Hold I Don't Orel That fellow Is too Drove to BDoot. Ana as tne reaerai oraoer, held up by his private soldior, went ltmplng slowly off the field the Confederate soldiers gave three cheers for the brave private, and just before the two disappeared behind a barn both the wounded offionr nn.1 tho brave! private lifted their caps in gratitude to tha. eball the gospel De less generous tnan tne World? We stack arms, the bayonet of our northern gun facing this way, the bayonet ot the southern gun (aoinir the other way, ana as the gray of the morning melts into tbe blue of noon, so the typical ffray and blue of old war times have blended at Inst. and they quote In the lansuu-,-e of King Jamess translation without any revision. Glory to God In the highest, and on earth peace, good will to men." Mow, what do we) mean Dy this irreat oDservancef First, we mean instruction to one wnoiq generation. Suhstract 1865, when tho war ended, from onr 1896, and you will realize what a vast numoer oi people were oorn since the war, or were so vounir as to have no vivid appreciation. Mo one under lorty-one years ot age has any adequate memory ot that prolonged horror. Do you remember M? "Well." you say. "I only remembor tht mother swooned away while she was read- tntr the newspaper, and that they Drougnt my lather home wrapped in tne nog, anq that a good many people came in the hnuso to pray, and rr.otner laaeu away alter tn.-it until again there were many people in tha hone and they told me she wnp deati. There are others who cannot rememDer the roll of a drum or the tramp of a regi ment or a sigh or a tear of that tornado of woe that swept the nation a :aln and again until there wnsonenead Inearn nouse. ow. It Is tne religious duty oi tnose wno ao re member it toted those who do not. Sly young friends, there were suah partings at rail car windows an I stnumooat wnans, and at front doors of comfortable homes as pray God you may never witness. Oh. what a time it was when fathers and mothers gave np their sons, never expecting to see them again and never ii" see inem again until they came back mutilated and crashed and dead! Four years of blood . Four years of hos tile experiences. Four years ot ghnstliness. Four years of grave llgging. Four years ot funerals, coffins, shrouds, hearses, dirges. Mourning! mourning! mourniug! It was hell let looie. What a time of waiting for ni-ws! Morning paper and evening paper scrutinized lor tutellluenoe from the boys at Ihe front. First, announcement that tha battle most oocur th next day. Then the news ot the batile s going on. on tne ioi- lowing day still going on. Then the news of 0,000 slain, and of tbe names of the great generals who bad fallen, but no news about the private soldiers. Wailing for news! Af ter many days a load of wounded going through the town or city, but no news from our boy. Then a long list of wounded anl long list of the dead, and a long list of the missing, and among the last list our boy. When missing? How mlwlngr Who saw him last? Missing, missing! Was he in the woods or by the stream? How was be hurt? Missing, missing! What burning prayers that be may yet be heard from! In that aw ful waiting for news many a life perished. The strain of anxiety was too great. That wife's brain gave way that first week altor the battle, and ever and anon she walks tho floor of the asylum or looks out ot the win-. Uow as though she expected some one to come along the path and up the steps as she soliloquizes, "Missing, missing!" What made matters worse, au tma mignt have been avoided. There was no more newt of that war than at this moment I should plunge a dagger through your heart. There were a few Christian philanthropists in those days, scoffed at both by north and south, who had the right of It. It they had be. n beard on both sides, we should have bad no war and no slavery. It was advised by t hose Christian philanthropists, "Let tbe north pay in money for the slaves as property and set them free." The north said. "We cannot afford to pay." Tbe south said, "We will not sell the slaves anyhow." Hut the north did pay In war expenses enough to purulimw tbe slaves, and the south was oompHlled to give np slavery anyhow. Might not the north better have paid the money and saved the lives of 500,000 brave men, and might not the south better have sold out slavery and saved her 500,000 brave men? I swear you by the graves of your fathers and brothers and sons to a new hatred for the ebampion eurse of the universe war! O Lord God, with the hottest bolt ot Thine omnipotent indignation strike that monster down forever and ever I Imprison it in the deepest dungeon of the eternal penitentiary. Unit it In with all the Iron ever forged in eannon or moulded into howitzers. Cleave It with all tbe sabers that ever glittered in battle and wring Its soul with all tbe pangs which it ever caused. Let it feel all the con flagrations of the homesteads it ever de stroyed. Deeper down let it iau ana in m .-Z M 1--- J Kn.n I, k.a mlh.nul uenrer uniuo , n-.--- - tnto its heart all the suffering of eternity as well as time. In the name of tbe millions of craves of its victims. I denounce it. The nations need more tbe spirit of treaty and, lew of the spirit ol war. War is more ghastly now than once, not Only because of the greater destruotiveness of its weaponry, because now it takes down the bt men. whereas once it chiefly took down the worst. Bruoe, in 1717, in his "ln aritntiens of Military Law." said of the Eu ropean armies of bis day, "If all Infamous persons and suoh as have committed capital crimes, heretics, atheists and all dastardly feminine men were weeded out of the army. it would soon be reduced to a pretty moder ate number. Flogging and mean pay mane them Mi I more Ignoble. Officers were ap pointed to see that each soldier arana nis ration of a pint ot spirits a day. There were noble men in Battle, but the moral ebaracter of the army was then ninety-five per cent, lower than the moral character ot an aruny to-day. By so much Is war now tbe more detestable because it aesuoys tne picceo ten of the nations. Again, by this national eremony wemea'i o honor courage. Many of these departe soldiers were volunteers, not eonscripts.and many of those who were drafted might bav? provided a substitute or got off on furlouti or have deserted. The fact that they lie in their graves is proof of their bravery. Brav! at the front, brave at the cannon's month, blare on lonelr picket duty.braveln cavalry charge, brava "before tbe surgeon, braV in the Uvlag message to the home circle. We vesuviay put a garland on tno lruv oi cour age. The world wants more ol it. The church of God Is in woeful nwd of men who ran stand un 'er fl-e. The lion of worldly deris-ion roars and the sheep troTM 'la In great reformatory moreienl nr. the first shot how many fall b.iaU! The creac obstacle to the church's a tvanwm-'nt is the Inanity, the vacuity, thi soft-retlines.-", the nia'nby Dahvism of professet Christians. Grmt on a parade, eowanis In battle. Afniid of getting their plumes ruffied, they carry - parasol over their helmet, iney go Hit) battle not with warrior's gauntlet, but with kid gloves, not clutching the sword hilt t to tight less the gloves split at the bar. In all our reformatory and (;hre-tin work the great want Is more backbone, mor mettle, more daring, more prowes-. We would in nil our chun-hes like to trade off a hnndm.l do nothing for ondo everything. "Quit yourselves like men; be strong. The saints in all this glorious vrnr Shall conquer, though they die. They see the triumph from afar And seize it with thitlr eye. 1 nnln muni, h tnia ni.fi.ti.nl nliw,n. akuiu, u.u..ia T ............. - - anoe to hooor self sacrifice for others. To all these departed men home and kindred were as dear aa our home nn.1 kindred aretou-. Do you know how they fell Just as you and I would feel starting out to-:norrow morn ing with nine chances out of ten against our returning alive, for the Intelligent golilter sees not only battle ahea 1, lint mnlarial sick ness and exhaustion. Hid these men cnont-u theyc-mld have spent last night In their homes and to-day nave been seated w nere you are. They chose the camp not because thev liked It better than their own house. and followed the drum nn.l fife not because they were better music than the voices of tho domestic- circle. Hontn Mouiuaiu 4111 aiur- freesboro and the swamps of Chickabominy were not playgroumls. These heroes riske l ana lost an lor omer. There is no higher sublimity than that. To keep three-quarters for ourselves and givo one-quarter to others is honora'ilo. Tq, divide even with others is generous. To keep nothing for ourselves and give all for others is magnanimity Christlike. Tut a glrdleardund your body and then m usuro the girdle and see if you are fifty or sixty inches round. And is that the circle of your sympathies? the size of yourself? Or, to measure vou around the heart, would it take a girdle largo enough to encircle tho land and encircle tne worm xou want to know what we dry theologians mean when we talk of vicarious suffering. Look at tho soldiers' graves and find out. Vicarious pangs for others, wounds for others, homo sickness for others, blood for others, sepuloher for others. Those who visited the nnlional cemeteries at Arlington Heights and at Richmond mi l Gettvsburz saw one inscription on soldiers' tombs oftener rcpoatod than any other "Un known. "When, about t weniy-ono years ao, I was called to deliver the oration at Arling ton Heights, Washington, 1 was hot so much Impressed with the minute guus that shook the earth or with the attendance of president and cabinet and loreicn ministers and gon- erals of the army and commodores of the navy as with tbe pathetic and overwhelming suggestiveness ot that epitnph on so many graves at my feet, "Unknown!" "Unknown'.'' It seems to me that the time must coma when the government ot the United States shall takeoff that epitaph. They are no more un known! We have found them out at lust. They are tbe beloved sons of the republic It foreign foe should come, we want men like those of 1812 and like those of 12 to meet them. We want them all up ami down the coast, Falaskl and Fort Sumter in tho same chorus of thuudnras Fort Lafayette and Fort Hamilton men win will not only know how to light, but how to die. When such a time comes, if it ever does come, tho generation on the stage of n -tiou will say: My country will caro for my family as they did in the poldiors' asylum for the orphans in the Civil War, and my country will honor my dust as it honored tuoso who pru-sedod me in patriotic sucrlllce, ami once a year at any rate, on Decoration lV'.y, I shnll be res urrected Into the remembrance of thoso Tjr whom I dio.L Hero I go for GoJ and my country! Huzza!" If foreign foe should come, tho old sec tional animosities would havo no power. Here go our regiments into the b itilellolil Fifteenth Ne.v York volunto rs, Tenth Ala bama eavalry. Fourteenth Pennsylvania rifle men. Tenth Maasaciiupetts artillery. 8:iveuth South Carolina shnrpshoopcrs. 1 do not know but it mny require the attack of some foreign foo to makous forget our nlraurd sec tional wrangling. I have no faith in the cry, "No north, no south, no east, no west!" Let all four sections keep thoir peculiarities and their preferences, each doing its own work and not Interfering with each other, each of the four carrying its part in the great harmony the bass, tho alto, the tonor, the soprano In the gmnd march of Union. Once more, this great national cPMnony means the beaiitillcntion of Ihe tombs. whether of those who foil in battle or acci dent, or who have expired in their beds, or in our arms, or on our laps. 1 suppose you have notieed that many of the families take this season as tbe time for the adornment ot their family plots. This national observance has secured the arboriculture and floricul ture of the cemeteries, the straighteniug up of many a slab planted 30 or 40 years Bu'o, and has swung the scythe through the long grass and has brought the stonecutter to call out the halt obliterated epitaph. This day la the benediction ot tho resting place oi father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sis ter. It is all that we can do for them now. Make their resting pin es attractive, not ab surd with costly outlay, but in quiet reirein brance. You know how. It you can iilTonl only one flower, that will do. It shows what you would do it you could, unit nios- som from ou may menu more man ino Duke of Wellington cittafalipre. Oh, wo cannot afford to forget thnm. They were so lovely to us. We miss them s- much. We will never git over it. li chs.hi iora Josus, comfort our broken he.i.-.i. From every bank of flowers brcnihns ptomlso of resurrection. In olden times the Hebrews, returning from their burial place, use l to pluck the grass from the Held three or four times, then throw It over their hea ls, suggestive ol the resurrection. We pick not the grass, but the flowers, and instead of throwing them over our heads wa pla"e them before our eyes, rU bt down over tne snenr. noan iniu once beat with warmest love toward us, or over the still feet that ran to service, or over the lips from which we took tho kiss at tho an guish of the last parting. But stool we are not iniwets. uuruonies will soon loin the bodies of our departed in the tomb and our spirits shall join their spirits In the land of the lifting sun. Wa cannot long be separated. Instead of cry ing with Jacob or Joseph, "1 will go down into the grave unto my son, mourning," let us cry with David, "I shall go to hira." On one ot tne gates oi urcenwoou is win quaint inscription, "A night s lodging on the way to the city ot New Jerusalem." Comfort one another with those words. May the hand of Him who shall wipe away all tenrs from all eyes wipe yourcheek with itssoiiesr tenderness. The Christ of Mary and Martha and Lazarus will inlold you in His arms. The white robed angel who sat at the toino of Jesiu will yet roll thusicue from theiloor of your dead in radiant resurrection. The Lord Munseil snail descend irom neiiyr-u with a shout and the voice of the archangel. So the "Dead March" in "Siui" shall be come the "Halleluiah Chorus." When a wrmen "pnts two anl two together" tho result is always more than fonr. A person nmler the firm persuasion that bo ean commaail resources virtu ally baa tliem. If yon piy a school teaciier a com plimentslie will not observe the gram matical errors. If dil not require mncta of a phil osopher to discovei that ail rich wi lows are handsome. Marriage is a failure when tbe man handles all Hie sheets and the woman all tbe liabilities. Every day we realize how comforta ble we jog along without something, that the day betore we were peua I ed we couldn't live without. Mncb. of the trouble in this country happens becanse men tak too mncb tune to make money and to J little to eLjoy it. i! i! A. 1