Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, June 24, 1896, Image 1

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    I
THE CONSTITUTION-THE UNION-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS.
B. F. BGHWEIER,
MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. J UNE 24. 1896
NO. 28
VOL. L.
Ziritf&fiSfl AssnsVS POVflCftBBSW
CnAPTEU XVIII.
All tlint day Constance kept to her
room. The duke was amazed at this, and
lata In the afternoon presented himself
In bia wife's boudoir. After all, fortune
favored hlin; Alice was there alone.
"Where is the duchess. Miss Grey,
brook?" be asked quietly.
"She is in the adjoining room," return
ed Alice, uneasily, "and I I think she is
asleep. Shall I call her?"
"No," returned the duke, "it Is to yon
I wish to speak. Yon know, Miss Grey,
brook, in what high esteem I hold you."
"Your grace, I "
"I should never have left my wife
alone," lie continued, "above all in Lon
don, if I had not found a holy person like
yourself to place by her aide, to counsel
and direct her. Miss Greybrook, yof
have never yet hidden tho truth from me.
"Never, I "
"You merit Home heavenly recom
pense," continued tho duke, watching he
Very intently. "Iet me beg you to ac
cept thin holy cross, brought by me from
ironic."
lie opened a small packet which he,
held in his band and revealed a hand,
some erneltix. With a smile half of com
mand, half of entreaty, be held this holy
gift toward the girl. She hesitated.
"For me, my lord?"
Tray take It," said the duke.
' She held forth ber baud, then with a
shudder attempted to draw it away.
"No, no; I am not worthy," she cried.
"My lord, what are you doing what do
you want?"
"I want'the truth," retnrned the duke.
who had seired her hand, and was looking
almost fiercely into her face. "Miss Grey
brook, tell me the name of the man who
met the duchess at the ball last night"
With a cry which was half a moan,
Alice shrunk away.
"If I speak," she mnrranred to herself,
"she is lost; if I lie, I lose my soul. Father
In heaven," she cried aloud, "what shall I
dor
"It was the Earl of Harrington P
The interruption was so sudden and
-w.l tiyt Jicr l"v -The
duke dropped ihe girl's hand, turned
In the direction whence the voice had
proceeded, and saw Constance. She was
Very pnle, but quite composed.
The duke's face was Mack as night.
"Then, madam," he said, "you have;
met that man again?"
"Yes," returned Constance, quietly. "I
bave met my cousin again, and you might
have learned the truth without putting
Alice to the torture."
"Whom else could I question?" said ths.
duke, sternly.
"Me!" returned Constance, proudly.
"No one knows better than yon, my lord,
my frankness and my sincerity. Listen,
my lord. I will give you a further proof
of my candor; take me away from Kng
land, for, although duty reigns suprems
in my heart, the love within it can never
die. Io not expose me to temptation; do
not compel me to pass through fire, lest
at last my spirit fails. But take me
away."
The duke drew himself up proudly. "It
is impossible!" he said.
"Remember," cried Constance, "it is for
your sake I plead. I am your wife; there
is peril here for both of us. Will yoo
takenie away?"
At that moment a servnnt entered wits
a message from Feveral.
"I will come to him," said the duke,
and with a low bow to his wife and her
friend he left the room.
"Alice," cried Constance, "you see now
that what I told you was right. ThU
Mr. Keveral, who calls himself the duke's
secretary, Is the duke's spy. I am cer
tain now it was he who told the duke of
my first meeting with Frank; ho has
SMiken again, nnd exposed me to this tor.
tare. Well, i know him now, and in fu.
ture I shall lie upon my guard."
There was a hurried knock at the door.
"Come in," cried Constance, and th
door opened admitting Feveral.
At sight of him Constance seemed to
turn to stone, but he came hurriedly and
anxiously forward.
"Madam," he said eagerly, "I musi
speak to you."
"I will not listen to you," she cried;
"leave me, sir, for I know yon; you tried
at first to corrupt me by sending me anon
ymous letters wnruing uie against the
duke. I have cheated you this time. I
myself have told the duke the truth. Now,
sir, go; and do not dare ever again to
enter my apartments."
"Madam!" cried Feveral, who bad been
Utterly taken aback by this unexpected
attack; "let me speak; as you love your
life, I conjure you to listen."
Without another word she summoned
her maid, and when-the girl appeared she
aid very quietly:
"Show Mr. Feveral down.
CnAPTEU XIX.
For several days Constance, nnder the
pretense of illness, kept to her own apart
ments, but one evening both Constance
and her friend presented themselves at
dinner. Alice, who had dreaded the meet
ing between husband and wife, was some
what relieved when she saw the duke walk
forward and courteously take his wife's
hand. "There were several guests pres
ent, nnd Constance welcomed them all.
The dinner passed off well so well. In
deed, that after the last guest bad de
parted the duke repaired to his wife's
........ ilniiik her for her share in it.
i oi rm.ro than uleased." he said. "If
you will preside equally well at the re
ception I shall be delighted."
"The reception, my lord?" asked Con-
.( . Colillv. .
-Assuredly," returned the duke. "0
Tuesday evening next you give a gruaa
reception; the cards have all been Issued,
everything is prepared, and for yourself,
I particularly wish you to look your best
bat night"
The days passed on, and the eventful
Tuesday arrived. The reception was to
commence at half-past nine o'clock, and
When the clocks were striking nine Con
stance and Alice eat alone in the duchess
boudoir. The house was brilliantly illu-
Mnated, and the great drawing room was
tiled wKb cftoice sowers. .ava. von-
stance and Alice were dressed for the oc
casion. Then Constance's maid entered the
room with a letter, which she handed to
her mistress.
Constance took the letter, opened and
fead It, then she looked up into the won
taring eyes of her friend.
"A letter from the duke; he "has gone
way I"
"Gone away P exclaimed Alice.
"Yes. Listen, dear; this Is what he
ays: 1 am summoned at once to Paris
to meet the Spanish Embassador. I am
taking Palmatos and Feveral wlrh me. I
have made Palmatos communicate with
all our guests and put off our reception of
thiir evening. What can It mean, Alice 7"
"I don't know, dear; itt that all ho says'"
"No, there is more," replied Constance,
and lifting the letter again, she continued:
'For yourself, let me beg you not to spend
the evening at home, but to go to Lady
Mortimer's ball. I hare asked Lady Sea
field to call for you. Therefore rest
quietly at home nnfil she comes.' "
"Oh, Constance; what shall you do?"
cried the girl in terror.
"Dor returned Constance, with a look
f fixed resolve. "I Khali obey the duke's
command to the letter. At last be has
honored me with bis confidence, and I
hall not betray It."
The first thing to be done was to have
the lights extinguished and stay all pre
parations for the reception. This Con
stance proceeded to do. When the ser
vants, having received their instructions,
bad retired, she sat down and looked
again at the duke's letter.
"Constance," said Alice, eagerly, "do
ron really mean to go to Lady Mortimer'
ball?"
"Certainly, my dear, since the duke
wishes it"
"But do not be angry with me should
four cousin be there?"
I'o not fear for me, Alice," said Con-
Kance, stroking the girl's brown hair.
"To-night, remember, I am the representa
tive of my husband, and I will try to do
Mm some slight service. I am going to the
kali for my husband's sake, at bis wish.
It Is strange Lady Seofield does not
tome, she added, "it Is getting so late.
lAlice, dear, will you send one of the ser-
rants to inquire for Lady Seafield? Per
haps she would rather have me call for
ier."
Alice nodded, and went at once to do
is her friend wished, while Constance
lank down into a chair In-side the win
low, and remained looking out upon the
tioonlit park. She fell Into a reverie, from
hlch she was aroused by the reappcar-
fnce of her friend. Alice looked paler
han usual, and her manner was full of
tear.
"Well, dear, have you sent to Lady
reaheld 7"
"No. I took the carriage and went my-
"Tent yourself! Why did you da
fliatr
"I was terrified lest something should
go wrong; I am glad that I went; the
countess is in deep trouble; her father
has fallen suddenly and dangerously ill!
She was never asked to come for you ; sho
has received no invitation to the ball!
Constance, everything has been done to
keep you at home to-night. I see it all now;
you would have waited and waited for the
countess and never gone forth at nil
there is danger for you here, 1 am sure
of it: I now implore you to go!
To go!" said Constance, "but who will
take me? I cannot go alone? Ah, I hare
It, Monsieur de Santa Fe! He is the
nuke's oldest and nearest relation. Send
o him, dear, at once.
"I will not send; I will take the carriage
nd go myself."
"Wry well, dear. I will remain quietly
here until you return.
But she was by no means composed.
The moment she was alone she walked
excitedly up and down the room; wonder
ing whether or not Alice's suspicions
could be correct. Could H be possible that
the duke had deceived her and if so.
for what motive?
"It will be always the same, she cried,
"suspected, watched, mistrusted. Oh,
who will deliver me from this life of mis
ery and degradation"
With a sob she threw herself down op
en the couch and covered her face with
ber hands; at that moment the door of
her boudoir opened, and the footman an
nounced
The Earl of Harrington!"
CnAPTER XX.
Trembling violently, scarcely able to be
lieve the evidence of her senses, Con
Stance rose and looked toward the door.
It was no dream, no delusion; there stood
frank, faultlessly attired in evening dress,
but looking almost as bewildered as she
Was herself.
"Frank," she said In a voice the from
Ming of which she vainly strove to con
trol, "tell me, what does this mean?"
"Why," he cried. I came to your re
ception !"
"To my reception?"
"Certainly." said Frank, who wasffrow
lng more and more a ma led; "did yon not
end me the invitation?"
"I send to -ron to come here?" she erledi
"Oh, Frank, you are mad or dreaming!"'
"Constance," he cried, -1 ten yon it is
true. I received an invitation to come
here this evening. If yon did not send it.
It came from the duke,"
He drew from the breast pocket of his
coat a card, which ha held toward her,
She took it. and saw that it was a formal
Invitation to her reception, written by
Count Palmatos. the duke's nephew.
"It was cowardly, contemptible," she
cried; then, turning her flashing eyes upon
her cousin, she continued, "I see It alL
Frank: it is a trap."
"Impossible," aald Frank; "a trap wonld
be more cunningly laid. If I accepted a
formal Invitation, where wonld my offense
be. or yours r
"I tell yon I am right; the whole thing
has been planned to entrap us. Leave
this house. Frank: I am Coins- out." M
"So soon," eaid Frank, "and, Connie, do
you send ma away nse tnia r
Ob, do not JVttC "
yon the ground Is undermined beneath us.
rank, I entreat you, she cried, growing
more and more excited. "See how late it
ettlng. Alice has gone to fetch Mon
sieur de Santa Fe to take me to a bail.
They will both be here directly, but I will
pass you through that door and no oue
will see you go.
She looked at him, but he did not an
swer her. His face was ghastly pale; he
pressed his hand against his side and
seemed about to faint.
What is the matter?" cried Constance
in alarm; "Frank, are you ill?"
Yea, I am a little faint," he gasped;
"my wound."
Your wound r
Yes; did you not know? I was stabbed
In the fray the other. night; some ruffian
had his clasp knife at the throat of a
youth. I interposed and was stabbed in
the breast that is alL Constauce, give
me some water.
The pallor of his faoe stow ghastly.
Terrified, scarcely knowing what she did,
Constance rushed from the room, return
ing with a glass of water and a bottle of
cologne. So held the water to bis Him.
then she took the scent, and gently bathed
his forehead. When he opened hU eyes
he saw that she waa crying.
Connie," he cried, "what Is the mat
ter?"
Frank," she said, "it h nearly mid
night. Do not linger now.. Since every
moment is precious, and Monsieur do
Santa Fe does not come, I shall go to the
ball alone."
"Alone?"
"Yea; I shall slip In unannounced, and
no one will know I went without an es
cort, and I shall, at least, have fulfilled
the duke's commands."
"Don't speak of that man. Constance,"
Frank cried, "unless you want to drive
me to distraction. Ahl I see, yonr love
Is dead. I am nothing to you now. Well,
perhaps It Is better so. Good-by!"
ithout another look, without a pres
sure of the hand, he turned and would
have left her. She watched him, and as
she did so her heart seemed torn In two.
Frank." aha cried, "do you wish to toll
me? Do you not ace what tortures I
suffer? Ilave you no pity?"
"Then tell mo that you still love me,"
be cried passionately. "Only once and
forever avow your love for me, and I will
go In peace."
"In peace T'
"Yes, and happy, even thnnch I ave
yon forever, your words the solace and
memory of my life."
She drew back as if be bad struck her.
Then her breast heaving with emotion.
tier eyes blind with tears, she looked th.
love she felt; but he staggered buck, and.
with a wild cry, fell upon the couch. She
rushod wildly to his side.
Frank!" she cried, "What alto yoo?
Speak to me! Ah, how pale he is! Frank,
lean you not hear me? How dreadful he
looks, and his eyes are fixed. I rankl
lie is dead, and I have murdered him!"
(To be eontipued.)
Itatngerous Kxcltementa,
Amusements of a proiier sort .ire
conducive to health. The sports ol
childhood not only toughen the mus
cles and Invigorate the system, but
prevent too much cerebral activity.
At the same tunc iney ncvciopngiuiy,
alertness, daring, and not a few ol
the qualities essential to success io
life.
It is largely the same with the
jports of youth, especially among
Itudonts and all who arc engaged in
sedentary pursuits. For some per
sons all that is feasible is simple di
version a change in the Hue ol
thought, feeling, and care; not an en
forced change, with "this for mi
health" behind it, but a natural and
pleasant one, which lor the time alter
the currents or nervous rorco.
For othors something more stirring
ind stimulating is desirable, but ai.
luch should lemembcr that there 19 a
limit beyond which excitement is not
i benefit, but a barm.
Excitements may bo injurious
physically, mentally, and morally.
There arc the morally ruinous excite
ments of tho modern bull-flfcbts and
if the ancient gladiatorial shows.
When women, made for tenderness,
tviunathv. and love, can And thcli
ilghcst enjoyment in such exhibi
tions, it Is plain that moral nature it-
iclf has become thoroughly atrophica,
'to young men particularly the ex
;itcmcnt of the theater often becomes
io controlling that it checKS all their
better intellectual tendencies, and
leads to reckless expenditure and even
to pilfering.
Competitive games, especially Inter
collegiate, in which many elements
combine to carry the excitement to
the highest degree, are dangerous,
sot only in the Upal decisive struggle,
aut lh tho long preliminary training.
rhe tendency of such excessive
xertions is to enlargement of the
Heart. Some men can endure aliqpst
anything, but many of the most am
bitious and excitable run great risKs.
The modern form of fouVball In
volves excitements of a very danger
ous kind: the players put into it the
utter recklessness of soldiers on the
Iwittle-flold. The Boston Medical
and Surgical Journal says:
During the season in which the
pame of foot-ball is played in England,
the record of accidents more or le9
serious is practically continuous.
During the food-ball season of 1891-92
there died through accidents received
on the field no fewer than eleven
players, while more than seventy
others received injuries, mostly
the shape of fractures, which would
entail on them weeks of buffering and
incariacitv for work."
While it is true that the game ol
foot-ball played In American colleges
and schools Is not nearly so harmful
and dangerous as that which is played
in England, yet the tendency to vio
lent exercise Is everywhere so great
that it ought to be checked. l outb'i
Companion.
There are 197,14(5,420 acres of
timber lands io the Honthern Hlater.
and the average yield of these forests
is 3,00i foet per aero.
A year -old baby fell on I of a fourth
tory wiutlow io Chieigo tbr other
day and sustained no seriona damage.
He lit in amnduole.
Only one person in 1000 dies f m
old re. -'
French wheelmen have a 'opted a
code of signals by whittle. The whis
tle ia mmb nsed in France in prefei
ence to the belt
According to the teachings of at
east one rabbi Eve was a Won ie.
' A new steamboat, just launched
for the Hndson River service, will one
$1,000,000 and be provided with engine)
of 80l0 horse power.
To Stop Hlcooaatfeuh
A new method of stopping hlceougha
said to have been accidentally dis
covered in a French hospital. It con
sists n thrusting the tongue out of the
mouth and holding It thus for a short
time.
A IHwor of Bait.
In the accounts of CapL Vanghan's
travels in Persia a description Is given
pf the great salt deseH in the northern
pars of that country, extending st
miles (real east to west and ISO miles
from north to south. Tho desert Is a
vast dish-shaped depression, the cen
tral portion lying from 1.000 to 2.000
feet lower than Uie margin, and near
its wee tern rim Is a salt-bed whoae
area, la 440 square miles.
The Color of Cklldkood.
Professor James Sully in his studies
f childhood compares the mental proe-
es of white children in civilised
lands .with those of full-grown sav
ages, and discovers some remarkable
resemblances. Among other tilings
h finds that the favorite colors of the
savage, red and yellow, are those
which white children first take notice
of, and of which they remain especially
fond during the period of childhood.
fib, too, the savage adutt and the white
child Had a common pleasure In all
bright, shining and glittering things.
The Htermr Kqatnoxes,
The popular belief that storms are
more frequent about the time of the
equinoxes, or when "the sun crosses
the line-," to March and September,
receives some slight degree of support
from the recent Investigations of Iro-
fesBorlleHmann concerning the weath
er of Europe. In southwestern Europe
March Is tho stormiest month, while
In the British Islands and Norway Jan
uary takes the lead In that respect; but
considering Europe as a whole. It ap
pears that storms preponderate near
the seasons of the equinoxes.
A Carloaa Boulder.
In the mysterious Ico Age, when
great glaciers advanced from the
nortii over the northern part of the
United rates, many strange rocks
were brought from the regions beyond
the St. Lawrence and the great lakes.
and left far from their place of origin.
scattered among the hills and plains of
New England and the Ohio and Missis
sippi valleys. One of these rocks, re
cently -found near Columbus, Ohio,
proves to be spaxtlcslarly Interesting
and curious. It is not more than a foot
and a half In diameter, but it Is plainly
a relic of glacial times, and nobody
can tell for certain whence it came.
There is no rock resembling It within
hundreds of miles. The supposition,
la that the ice carried It from a point
north of Ijako Huron to the place
where It was found. Its composition
shows that it was of volcanic origin.
American Amber.
The world's greatest source of amber
to the shores of the Baltic Sea. Amber
to the fossilized resin of several spe
cies of pine trees. In small quantities
it has been found In various parts of
the globe. Including the United States,
but up to the present time no Ameri
can deposit of amber extensive enough
to be of commercial value has been
discovered. Quite recently, however,
amber has been found at Cape Sable,
oq the Magothy River, In Maryland,
and this arouses the hope that it may
yet be discovered in paying quantities
in this country. The deposit at Cape
Sable has been known since 1821, but
only lately has a careful investigation
of It been made. The fossil tree
trunks In, which bits of amber are em
bedded are not, like those of toe Baltic
region, pines, but are believed by their
discoverer, Mr. Arthur Bibblns, to be
specimens of the sequoia.
a Strange People.
Dnrlnir the lht two years expedi
tions sent out by the Bureau of Ameri
can Ethnology have collected many in
teres ting .facts about the Serl Indiana,
who live in the western part of the
State of Bonora, Mexico, along the
shore of the Gulf of California, and on
the Island of Tiburon In that gulf. The
facta have recently been-summarized
by Prof. W. J. McGee, of, Washington.
From time Immemorial 'Seriland has
remained practically unexplored, part
ly because It lies behind: a desert bar
rier, and partly on account of the war
like reputation of Its fierce, and blood
thirsty lnhabttants, who profess a
passion for alien blood, always grati
fied save when they are deterred by
fear." The Serl Indians are described
as of "superb physique, able to run
dowif fleet game and capture half-wild
Mexican horses without ropes or pro
jectiles: able to run across tbe desert.
waterless and foodies, so rapidly, as
to escape pursuing horsemen; able! to
abstain from food and water for days
able habitually to pass barefoot
through cactus thickets and over jag
ged rock slopes without thought of dis
comfort." They apeaK a distinct inn
guage, and strictly practice monoga
mono marriage. Their hatred for alien
oeonles Is hereditary. The remains of
ancient ruins In SerilaAd indicate that
Its Inhabitants have always kept their
country free from foreign Invasion,
tnd that for centuries their customs
and arts, which are crude and simple,
bave remained unchanged.
Phenomenon of tbe Tide Rip.
A "tide-rip" phenomenon of the sea
was encountered In the Indian Ocean
recently by the ship Francis, which ar-j
rived at this port yesterday, Tbe tide
ran In many direction, apparently al
most at the same time, and the pig shlp
was whirled around by it like a top
pr took peculiar apd erratic sheers nntll
she. became uncontrollable and eonin
not be kent on her course. It wna
feared, at times thaj she would go to
lT!! .'".j": :r,rJr
pievcn, ivr.ww aro
ia force. For fourteen bou xW9l""
Francis waa at the mercy of this pe
culiar action of toe ocean currents, ana
con afterward a cyclone struck and
partially dismasted ber, a disaster
which has been before reported.
Two etowawaya, William H. Beatty
and Stephen Munday, who had trav
eled almost all the way around the
globe without the expenditure of a
cent, were brought on the Francis from
Fassaroean, Java. They were former
ly members of the crew of the British
steamship Bio, which arrived at Java
some time before the Franc-la left there
for Philadelphia. In some way they
were left behind by the IUo, and then
they stowed away in the coalroom of
the Frauds, where fuel Is kept for the
donkey" engine and other uses. They
were discovered several days after the
Francis left rassaroean, and there was
no alternative but to bring them along
on the long voyage, which lasted 1-1
days. '
An examination mado by the Immi
gration officials developed the fact that
one of the men, Beatty, was a native of
Florida and the other an Englishman.
They were glad to lea re Java, being
onable to earn more than 10 cents a
day In competition with the natives. -
Philadelphia Record.
PROPAGATING WILD ANIMALS
Proposal to Permit Tbena to MalUplj
on a California Preaerve.
California, which does nothing bj
halves. Is to have the greatest animal
preserve on earth. Here will be no tame
and toothless lions, no Jaguars that laj
milk from a saucer, no elephants nour
ished on popcorn and circus ginger
bread. No. This Is to be a simon-pure
Jungle of the good old days before thi
circus tent waa ever heard of. Th
Rlngllng Brothers are the movers Is
this extraordinary project and then
agent Is now negotiating for a Ifcrgt
tract of wild anil tiitcuy wooaea innq
at Long Beach, near San Pedro Bay,
Southern California.
Tbe territory will be Inclosed by
stone wall surmounted by an iron
fence. Caves will be made to afford,
hiding places, and tbe parent anlmaii
once turned loose In this wUdernexl
will be left to their own wills, sweet ot
otherwise. Two commissioners an
now journeying around the world ti
purchase animals to stock the concern
As the principal denizens of the pro
serve are of the family of caruWornj
tho animals upon which they naturallj
prey will be provided for food.
There will be tracts set apart for dell
catb and mild-mannered quadrupedi
like the camel, giraffe and zebra. J
great timber inclnaure will be bull
Inside the outer guards, to confine thi
elephants. Herbs and grasses ludl
genous to the native clime of the herb
ivora will be imiiorted and planted
within tho park for their Buslcnanca
The monkey farm will be a feature ol
the Jungle. There will, It Is expected
lie animals mouth born Into thli
strange beast gnrden to stock thj clr
cuscs of tho country for years unnum
bered.
Disappears in the Qnioksanda.
The steamship Coos Bay. which ar
rived In port to-day from the Mexican
coast, brought news of tbe loss at Alr
t.ita of tbe Danish bark Ixttle. The
L-ottle, having finished londlng a heavy
cargo of dye wool, prepared to sail foi
Hamburg. There are two separate
channels In the bay, the dividing lint
being a long and treacherous bar ol
quicksand. Captain Clausen of th
Lottie summoned to nis nia tne steam
Bchooner Altata, which is about the
only available vessel for towing servicf
there.
The bark got along well enough in
the wake of the steamer until snc
reached a narrow portion of the ;hau
nel she was traversing at a point wbcr
the bar was breaking with unusual
force. Ilere the Lottie got Into trouble.
Swinging around on the haw3r, she
struck a shallow spot and In a moieent
began to pounding upon the bar. Th
Altata could not pull tbe barK out oi
her dangerous position. Tbe captain
and crew of the Lottie knew what I!
meant to go aslrore In quicksand, aoc
they lost no time In getting out thi
boats and making for the shore.
At daylight the sea was calmer a no
Captain Clausen and some of his men
visited their vessel. AU that remained
In s'ght was her deckhouse and masts,
the hull having disappeared !n th
quicksand.
The men, although realizing mat r.
was a risky undertaking, crawled up
on the deckhouse, ana in xuai wj
managed to get Into their living quar
ters. They recovered their clothes and
valuables, and tbe captain secured hi
Instruments and charts.
Captain Jenson of the Coos Bay sayi
that when he left Altata about twelv
days ago tbe Lottie bad completely
disappeared. San Francisco Examiner
Remarkable Knives.
In connection with a manufactory a.
Sheffield Is a suite of showrooms, m
which are exhibited, besides samples ol
the class of work produced, a numbei
of Invaluable curiosities. Chief amonj
these Is tho celebrated Norfolk knlf
exhibited during the exposition of 1851,
comprising a richly carved pearl han
die and seventy-frve large blades, con-
talnlng. In addition to etchings of thi
queen and other members of the royal
family, charming views or ine royai
residences and other notable placets
Another marvel of construction Is
knife equipped with l.Kw biaaes- j
blade for every year In the Christian
. a cf ....I
era. It was conunen"
since that time one blade has beer
added each year.
The Motive.
"Why have vou pursued me all these
years?1' wearily asked the princess of
the drama.
"I don't know," answered the wily
miscreant, -unless It was to give yow
a chance to wear all your costumes.
Drawing his mantle more closely
about him. he nodded to the leaaer oi
the. orchestra. Detroit Free rresa.
The War of the Fatnre.
How many seamstresses have we l
the arrnvT" asked the generaless.
How. what do yon want to Know tnai
forT asked tbe ald-de-canrp, who had
been a hired girl and still retained ber
lack of respect for authority.
"Whv. I read somewhere that Napo
laon often won bis battles by hemming
- t mMm In.irnnL
P. i. TQL
Hie Eminent Divine's Sunda)
SeraoSs
Subject: "The Bitter Attlla."
Text: "Thore. fell a crirnt star from heaven.
tmrninir as tt were a lamb, and It fell upon
tho third part of the rivers, and upon the
fountnins of water, and tho una of the
star is oailod Wormwood. " Revelation viiL,
10,11. i
Hnnv (niSann. like Patrick and
nwth, Thomas ovott, Matthew Henry and
Albert llarnos aarree In saying that tbe stas
Wormwood, mentioned in Hevelatlon, was
Attlla. king of the Huns. He was so called
because be was brillinnt as a star. and. like
Wormwood, he embittered everything he
toucneii. we bave studied the btar ol
Bethlehem, and tbe Hornlnir Btar of the
Revelation, and the Btar of Peaoa, but my
present subject calls ns to gaze at the star
Wormwood, and mv theme micht be called
Brilliant Bitterness.
A more extraordinary character bfstorv
does not furnish than this man thus refarred
to, Attlla, tbe kins of the Huns. One day a
wonnded heifer came llmnlna alons throuirb
the Holds, and a herdsman followed its'
niondy track oa tbe grass to see where tbe
heifer was wounded, and went on back fur-'
thr and further, until be earn to a sword,
fast In the earth, the point downward, as
though is had dropped from the heavens and
atratnsi ;ne eages oi tnis swora tne neiier
bad been ent. The herdsman trailed no that
sword and presented It to Attlla. Attlla said
ine sw-ra must nave oroppea rrcm tne
heavens bora the grasp of the god Mare and
its being given to him meant that Atitla
should conquer and govern tbe whole earth.
Other mighty men have been delighted at
being called liberators, or the merciful or tbe
Rood, but Attlla sailed himself, and demand
ed that others call him tbe Scourge of God.
At the head cf 700,000 troops, mounted on
Cappadooian hoisos. he swept everything
iroin ine Adriatic to toe mack tjea. He put
his iron heel on Macedonia and Greece and
Thrace. Ho made Milan and Pavla and
Padua and Verona bog for mroy, which he
bestowed not. The Bysantlne castles, to
nieet his roinons levy, put up at auction
ma nivo silver tables and vases of solid gold.
A city captured by him, the inhabitants
were brought out nnd divided into three
classes the first clans, those who could bear
arms, who must Immediately enlist under
Attila or be butchered; the second class, the
beautiful women, who were madoeantlves to
the lluus: the third class, the aged men and!
women, who wore robbed ol everything and
let go back to thecity to pay heavy tax. !
It was a common saying that the grass'
never grew again where the hoof of Attlla's
horse had trod. His armies reddened the
wattm of the Seine, and the Mosello, and the
Ithlue with carnage and fought on the Cata-i
Ionian plains the fiercest battle since the
world stood 800.000 d ad left on the field !
On and on until those who could not oppose
him with arms lay prostrate on their faces ln
prayer, and, a cloud of dust seen In the disH
lance, a blHbop crlvd, "It is the aid of Qod!",
and all tne people took up tne cry, "It Is Ine
aid of (lod 1 As the cloud of dust was blown!
aside the banners ot re-enforcing armies
mari'hed In to help against Attila, thei
Scourge of Ood. The most unimportant oc-i
enrrences he used as a supernatural re
source, and after three months or tatlure to
capture tbw city of Aquileia. and his army
had given up the siege the flight of a storki
and ber young from the tower ol the city,
was taken bv him as a sign that ho was to
en pi ore the city, and his army, inspired byj
the same occurrence, resumed the siege audi
took the walls at a point from which tha
stork had emerged. Ho brilliant was th9
conqueror in attire that his enemies could
not took ft him, but shaded their eyes or
turned tileir heads.
Slain on the evening of his marriage by his
bride, lliliro, who was hired for the assas
sination, his followers bewailed him, not
with tears, but with blood, cutting them
selves with knives and laaoea. He was put
into three eofllns, the flmt of iron, the second
of silver and the third of gold. He was buried
by night, and Into his grave were poured.the
most valuable coin ana precious stones,
amounting to the wealth of a kingdom. Tbe
gravedlggers and all those who assisted at
the burial were massacred, so that it would
never be known where so muoh wealth was
entombed. Tbe Boman empire conquered
the world, but Attlla conquered the Human,
empire. He was right In calling himself a
scourge, but Instead of being the Scourge of
Uod ne was tne scourge oi neiu jieoause oi
his brilliance and Ititternoss the commenta
tors were right in believing him to be the
star Wormwood. As the regions he devas
tated were parts most opulent with foun
tains and streams and rivers, you see how
graphic is this reference In Kevelatlon:,
There tell a great star irom neaven. nam
ing as it were a tamp, and It fell npon the
third pnrt of tbe rivers and upon the foun
tains of waters, and tne name oi ine star is
called Wormwood."
Have you ever thought how many lmbit-
tered lives there are all about ns, misanthro-,
pie. morbid, acrid, saturnlni 7 ine Euro
pean plant from which wormwood Is ex
tracted, Artemisia absinthium, is a perennial
pi nt. nnd all the year round it is ready to
exude its oil. And in many human lives
there is a perennial distillation of acrid ex
periences, lea, mere are some wnose wnoie
work is to shed a baleful influence on others.
There are Attllas of the home, or Attllas ot
the social clrele, or Attllas of the church, or
Attilas of thn slate, nnd one-third ol the
waters nt all the world, li not tw.i-tninis tne
waters, are poisoned by the falling of the
star Wormwood. It Is not complimentary to
human nature that most men, as soon as
they get greater power, become overbearing.
The more power men bave the better if their
power be used lor good, ine leBS power
men have the better if they nse it for evil.
Birds circle round and round nnd round
before Ihey swoop upon that whieb they are
aiming for. And it my discourse so far bas
been swinging round and round this mo
ment it drops straight on your heart and
asks the question, Is your life a benediction
to others or an Inibittennent, a blessing or a
curse, a balsam or wormwood?
- Some of you I know are morning stars,
and you are making the dawning life of
vour children bright with gracious in
fluences, and vou are beaming upon all the
opening enterprises of philanthropic and
Christian endeavor, and yon are heralds ot
that day of gospeliKatioo which will yet flood
all the monnlains and valleys of our sin
-ursed earth. Hail, morning start Keep on
shining with encouragement and Christian
hope!
Some of you are evening stars, and von
are cheering the last days of old people, and
though a cloud sometimes comes oyer you
through the querulousnew or unreasonable
ness ol yonr old father ana moiner ir is omy
for a moment, and the star soon comes out
clear a&atn and is seen from all thn balco
ines of the neighborhood. The old people
will fonrive vour occasional shortcomings.
for Ihey themselves several times lost their
patience wh n yon were young and slapped
you when you aid not deserve it. Hatl,
evening alar! Hang on tbe darkening sky
vour diamond coronet!
But are any of you the star Wormwood? Do
von scold and growl from the thrones pa
ternal or maternal? Are your children ever
lastingly pecked at? Are you always crying
Hash! to tho merry voices and switt leet.
and tbeir lanirhier. which occasionally
trickles through at the wrong times nnd is
suppressed by them until they can hold it
no longer, and all the barriers bunt into un
limited guffaw and cacniunation, as in nign
weather the water has trickled through a
sliirht ooening in the milldam. but afler-
w..r.l makes wider and wider breach
until it carries all before It with
irresistible lihei? Do not be too much
offended lit the noise your children now
make. It will be still enough when one of
them is dead. Tuen you would give yonr
right band to bear one snout irom ini-irsi
Unl voice.! or one step from the still foot.
Yon will not any of yon have to wait very
ktnir befora yonr honse is stiller than VOU
want it. Alas, that I here are so many homes
not known to Society For the Prevention ot
Cruelty to Children, where children an put
n the limits and whacked and cuffed and
ear pulled and senselessly called to order
and answer sharp and surpressed until tt Is a
wonder that under snch processes they do
not all tara out Modocs and Nana
What Is rour influence noon tbe neighbor
hood, the town or the city of your residence?
I will su noose that vou are a star of wit.
jWhat kind of rays do you shoot forth? Do
yon nan tnat spionum laouiiy to trra'uaie
the world or to rankle it? I bless all the
aoostoUa eotleira of humorists. The man
that makes me laugh is my benefactor. I do
not thank anvbodv to make me ervr i can
do that without anv assistance. We all err
enough, and have enough to cry about. Hod
bless all skillful punsters, all reparteetst
all DroDonnders of Ingenious eonumdntas.
jail those who mirthfully surprise us with un
usual Juxtaposition of words. Thomas Hood
and Charles Lamb and Sidney Smith had a
divine mission, and so have their successors
la these times. Tbev stir Into the acid bev
orage of life the saccharine. They make the
Cup of earthly ezistenoe, which la sometimes
stale, effervesce and bubble. They placate
animosities. They foster longevity. They
May tollies and absurdities which all the ser-
rons ol ail tne pulpits cannot reaou.
The nave for exam Dies Eiiiah. who made
jfun of the Baalites when they called down
Sire, ana n uia not coma, wikkiniok ium
heir heathen god had gone hunting, or was
loff on a Journey, or was asleep, and nothing
but vociferation could wake him. saying.
rCrv aloud for be is a god. Either ne ia
talking or Dunning or nerad venture ha
isleepeth and mast be awaked." They havn
ian example In Christ, wbo wlta beaitntui
sarcasm showed up tho lying, hypocritical
Pharisees by suggesting that such perfect
people like thenwelyes needed no improve,
meats, saying. "The whole need not a phy
sician but thev that are sick."
I But what use are von making of your wit?
lis It besmirched with profanity and unclean-
psasr Do you employ it in amussraeni ax
rohvsleal defects for which the victims are
met responsible? Are your powers of mlm-
ecry used to put religion in ooniempir is ii
a bunch of nettlesome invective? Is It a bolt
'of nnlnst scorn? Is It fun at other's misfor
tune? Is It glee at their disappointment and
defeat? Is It bitterness put drop by drop
5nto a eupf Is It like tbe squeezing of Ar
emhna absinthium into a draught al-
y pnngant? Then yon are the star
onnwood. Yours is tbe fun ot a rattle-
trying how well It can sting. It Is the
a of a hawk trying how quickly It can
:rlke out the eye of a dove.
But! will change this and suppose you are
ar of Worldly Prosperity. Then you
ave large opportunity. You can encourage
hat artist bvbu vtna- bis ntcture. You can
improve the fields, the stables, the highway.
y Introducing higher style of fowl an l
orae and cow and sheep. Yon can bless the
orld with pomoiogtcal achievement ia inu
brohards. You can advance arboriculture
and arrest this deathfill tconoclasra of tha
American forests. You can put a piece o
sculpture Into the niche of that putiilo
academy. You can endow a college. You
can stocking a thousand bare feet from tho
winter frost. You can build a church, xou
can put a missionary of Christ on that
foreign shore. You can help ransom a world.
A rich man with his heart right can you
fell me bow much good a James Lenox or a
Georgo Penbody or a Peter Cooper or a
William E. Dodge did while living, or Is
doing now that he is dead? There is not a
city, town or neighborhood that has not
glorious specimens ot consecratod wealth.
But sUDPOse you grind the face ot the
poor. Suppose when a man's wages are due
you make him wait for them because he can-j
not help himself. Suppose that, because bis
family is sick and he has had extra expenses,
he should politely ask you to raise his wages!
for this year and yon roughly tell him it he
wants abetter place to go and get it. Sup
pose by your manner you act as though he
were nothing and you wereevorything. Sup
pose you are selfish and overbearing and ar
rogant. Your first name ought to bo Attila
and your last name Attila. because you are
the star Wormwood, and you have imbittered
one-third if not three-thirds ot the waters
that roll past your employes and operatives
and dependents and associates, and the long
lino of carriages which the undertaker orders
for your funeral, in order to make the occa
sion respectable, will be lllled with twice as
many dry, tearless eyes as mere ore persons'
occupying t hem.
There is an erroneous Idea abroad that
there are only a few geniuses. There are
millions of them that is. men and women
who have especial adaptation and quickness
for some one thing. It may be great; It may
be small. The circle may be like the circum
ference of the earth or no larger than a thim
ble. There aro thousands ot geniuses, and
In some one thing you aro a star. What
kind of a Btar are you? You will be In this
world but a few minutes. As compared with
eternity tho stay of the longest life on earth
Is not more than a minute. What are we
doing with that minute? Are we imbhterlng
the domestic or social or political fountains,
or are we like Moses, who, when the Israelites
in the wilderness coinplainei that the waters
of Lake Marah were bitter and they oould
not drink them, cut oft the branch of a cer
tain tree and threw that branch into the
water, and it became sweet and slake I the
thirst ot the suffering host? Are we with a
branch of the Tree of Life sweetening all the
brackish fountains that we enn touch?
Dear Lord, send us all out on that mission.
All around us imbittered lives Imbit
tered by prosecution, Imbittored by hyper-
criticism. Imbittered by poverty. Irn-
UHinrou muu, Kuiumvtm4 uj iiijumi
Imbittered by sin. Why not go forth and
sweeten tbem by smile, by inspiring words.
by benefactions, by hearty counsel, by prayer.
by Kospelized behavior? Let us remember
that if we are wormwood to others we are
wormwood to ourselves, and our life will be
bitter and our eternity bitterer. 1 he gospol
of Jesus Christ is the only sweetening power
that is sufneient. It sweetens the disposi
tion. It sweetens the manners. I' sweetens
life. It sweetens mysterious providences.
It sweetens amlctlons. it sweetens death
It sweetens everything. I have heard peo-
Ele asked In social company, "It you could
ave three wishes gratified what would your
throe wishes be?" If I could have three
wishes met this morning. I tell you what
hey would be: 1. More of the grae of U
2. More of the grace of Ood. 3. More of the
grace of God. in the dooryard of my
brother John, missionary In Amny, China,
there Was a tree called the emieror tree, the
two characteristics of which are that it al
ways grows higher than its surround
ings. and lis reaves take tha form of a
crown. If this emperor tree be planted
by a rosebush, ii grows a little higher
than the bash and spreotLs out above it a
crown. If It be planted by the side of an
other tree, it grows a little higher than that
ree and sprends above it a crown, would
God that this religion of Christ, a more won
derful emperor tree, mlgnt overshadow all
your livesl Are you lowly In ambition or
circumstance, putting over you lis crown?
Are vou high in talent and position, putting
over you lis crown? Oh, for more of the
saccnarlno in our lives anu lessoi ine worin-
oodl
What Is true of individuals Is true of na-
llous. uod sets them upto revolve as stars,
but they may fall wormwood.
Tvre. the atmosphere ot the desert, fra
grant with spices, coming in caravans Io her
fairs, all seas clett into loam by tne keels oi
her laden merchant men, her markets rich
with horaes and camels from Togarinnh, her
bnzanrs filled with upholstery from Dedan,
with emerald and coral and agate from
Syria, with wines from Helbon, with em
broidered work from A-hur and Chilmad
Where now the cleam. of her towers, where
the roar of her chariots, where the masts ot
her shis? Let the tlshermen who dry their
nets wn re once snn Riooa, iei ine sea inai
rushes upon the barrenm-ss where nnoe aha
challenged the admiration of all nations, lot
the barbarians who set their rude tents
where once her palaces glittered, answer
tbe question. She was a siar. but by her
own sin turned to worm woo, I nn.l has fallen.
Hundred gated Thebes, for all time to hi
thv study ol the antiquariam mid hieroly
pnist, her stunon-loud ruins sprea 1 ov- r 27
inil . her s-'nlp.nrs nrxwnilng In flgoras of
warrior nnd chariot tne yiomn wii,.
k. ln-r.nl tnn kini-S Of E'VPt ShOOk tnO
. . w.i.v. nd columns. Carnae
and Luxor, tne stupendous temples of her
Wide! Who can imagine the greatness of
Thebes in thow davs when the hippodrome
rang with her sports and foreign royalty
bowed at her shrine and ber avenues roared
with the wheels of processions in the wake
t eetnrninr eonnnerors? What dashed
Ci .k. .i, i .h.nii and temnles and
thrones? What hands pulled upon the
ui..u of !, .lnrv? What ruthlessness
jdefaeed her sculptured wall and broke obe-
itSKS ana leit ner inii"3rii.i..
Ub.lnn. nt m-,nite? What SOirit Of d-
unuHn. nnread the lair of wild beasts la
Fu.. uni.hnN and tn.nirbt tha mlser-
Eble cottsgers of to-day to bnlld huts Jn the
ourts of her temples, and sent desolation
an4 ruin skaliin behind the otieilsks, and
(Wiring among the sarcophagi, and leaning
agnlnit thn onluoins. and stooping under the
arch's, and weeping in the waters which go
mournfully by as tnon-;n tney vem carrjnnx
tam of nil a?es? L tho mummies
break their long silence and cntni up to
Wilver in the dnsolntion an l pciint to fallen
gnt--s nnd shattered statues and defaced
sculpture, responding: 'rtmhesbutil nor one
temp'e of O.vl. Thebes hatei righteousness
and loved s'n. Thelies was a star, but she
turned t wormwood and has lallen."
Babylon, with her 231 tower anl her
brazen gates nnd her embattled wnllfl, the
splendor of the earth gathered within her
ipnlaees, her hanging gard-ns built by
NbuohadneKr to please his bride, Amytls,
who had been brougnt up In a monntaiuous
country and oould not endure tne unt coun
try round Babylon these bnnalng gardens
built, terrace above terraon, mi ar ine uuikhi
of 400 feet there wore woods waving and
fountains playing, the ver lure, the foliage,
the glory looking as if a mountain were on
the wing. On the tiptop a king walking with
htxqneen. among statues snowy wnne, tout
ing up at birds brought from distant lands,
and drinking out of tankards of solid gold
or looking off over rivers and lakes noon na
tions sub Ine i and Irl.mtarv, cryinf , "Is not
this great itabvlon which I have bnllt?"-
What battering mm smoto the walls What
plowshare upturned tho gardens? What
army shattered the brazen nates? What
long, fierce blast of storm nut out this light
which tHumined tho world? What ernsh of
discord drove down the music that poured
Irom palace window and garden grove and
Irallo I tho banqueters to their rev.l in I tho
liancers Io their fet? I walk upon the
scene of desolation to fin I an answer and
Inlclc np pieces of bitumen and brink and
broken pottery, tne remains or itnnyion, ana
as in tha alienee of the nli)it I hoar thesurg-
Ing of that billow of d"soUtlon which rolls
over the scene, I hear the wild waves say
ing: "Babylon was proul. Bibylon was
Impure. Babylon was a star, but bv slu she
turned to wormwood and nas iwien.
' From lh prosecutions of the pilgrim
fathers and the Huguenots In other lands
Ood set npon these shores a nation. The
council fires of the aborigines went out in
tho greater light of a free government. The
sound of the warwhoop was fxehangod for
the thousand wheels of enterprise and prog
ress. The mild winters, the iruitmi sum
mers, the healthful skies, charmed from
other lands a race of hr.r.lv nj 'n who loved
Ood and wanted to lie free. Before the
woodman's ax forests fell an rose again in-
to shins' masts and churches' pillars. Cities
on thenar ks of lakes begin to rival cities by
thn sea. The land quakes with tho rush of
the rail ear and the waters are elmrnc.l
white with tho stoamer s wheel. Fabulous
bushelsnf western wheat m" on tho way fab
ulous tons of eastern coal. Furs from thn north
pass on tho river fruits from the south. And
trailing in the same market is Maine lumber
man and South Carolina rice inernhant and
Ohio farmer and Alaska fur dealer. And
churches and schools and asylnms scatter
light and love and morcy and salvation upon
Gfl.000,00.1 of people.
I pray that our nation may noticopy the
erimes of the nations that have perished and
our cup of blessing turn to wormwood, and
like them we go down. I am by nature and
by grace an optimist, ami I expect that this
country will continue to advance until Christ
shall como again. But bo not deceived.
Our orly safety is In righteousness toward
Ood and justice townrd man. If we forget
the goodness of the Lord to this land, and
break His Sabbaths, and Improvo not by the
dire disasters that have again and a.-aln
come to us as a nation, nnd wo learn saving
lesson neither from civil war nor raging opl
demic nor drought nor mildew nor scourge
of locust nnd grasshopper nor cyclone nor
earthquake; if the pollt ical corruption which
has poisoned tho fountnins of public virtue
and hesllmod tho hitrh pbvies of authority.
making free government nt times a nissing
and a byword in all the earth; it the drunk
enness and licentiousness that stagger and
blaspheme In the streets ot our gruat cities
as though they were reaching after
ilie fame of a Ovrlnth and a
Sodom are not repented of, wo will
yet see the smoke of our nation s
ruin: the pillars of ournatlonnl anc stato
eapitols will fall moro disastrously than
when Samson pulled down Dagon, nnd
future historians will record upon the pngo
hiwlnM with irinnroiia tonra thn Atorv that
the free nation of the west nroso In splendor
which made the world stare. It bad
magnificent possibilities. It forgot God. It
hated Justice. It hugged its crime. It
hailed on its high march. It reeled under
the blow of calamity. It fell. And as It was
going down all the despotisms ot earth from
the top of bloody thrones hngn to shout,
'Aha, so would we have it!" whilcstrnggling
and oppressed people looke 1 out from
dungeon bars with tears and groans nnd
eries of untold agony, the scorn of thoso
and the woe of these uniting In the exclama
tion: "Look yonder! There foil agrent
star from heaven, burning as It were a lamp,
and It fell upon the third fmrt ot the livers
and upon the fountains of waters, and the
nnmj. ntlliH atnr la cm1Im! Wormwood!"
Ah AMERICAN PLANT IN RUSSIA.
Locomotive Werhs to lie KutHhltshod at
Mtjnl Nnvgor.td.
The proposed establishment of an exten
sive locomotive building worts at Nijnl Nov
gorod. Bussia, by American capitalists was
annouueed a few dnyj ago. Contracts for . -the
machinery for the plaut. amounting to
500,000, have a'ready wn awardisi tne
bulk of tho orders coming to Philadelphia
Arms.
For several years tho project of establish
ing an American locomotive plant In llussla
has been under consideration by capitalists
In this country. The llrm of K lniuod P.
Smith A Co., of Philadelphia, an I Wa tor F.
IHxou, who was formerly connected wnn
Ihe llogors Locomotive Works. Ii Paterson,
N. J , became interested in the .u it tor, and
as a result ot their visit to Hussia a company
of American capitalists ha- heeu incorporat
ed under the title of the Hiissinn-Amoricnn
Manufacturing Company, -!iioti will build
the works.
The plant is to lie built in connection with
the Sormova Works, an eienive establish
ment in Nijnl Novgorod, manufaclurlngcars,
steamboats, steam boilers, etc., and employ
ing 6000 hands. Engiuoer Dixon will have
satire charge of the loeoinotive works, which
will be controlled joiutly by tho Itus-inn nnd
American companies. The locomotive plant
Will have a capacity of 200 engines a year,
tnd will employ 100!) hands. It is un ler-
tfood that the Czar s uovernment nas given
Valuable encouragement to the enterprise.
A Warning to Traveler.
European travelers are warned by United
States Consul-General Judd, nt Vienn:i, to
obey the railroad regulations excluding cer
tain articles from biggago, uuder severe
penalties. He cites tho cane of a young
American, Who was linen nia norms lor nav
Ingsome cartridges in his trunk, and says
that Servin, Bulgaria, Itoiiinania, Turkey
and Ilussia have railway regulation similar
to Austria in this ruoct.
Reports from Texas state that charbrou or
anthrax Is nitcciiig an I killing ell kinds of
domestic stock from heusi to horse.
Nothing moro effectually conquers
n ental indolence and rouses torpid
nowers Io exertion Iban Ibe necessity
of mukmg decisions, muted to the con
scientious desire of mnking rigiit
ones.
It is only the great-l.cnrtel who ran
be Irne friends; lib) mean nnd cowardly
can never know what true friendship
ma 4ns.
A dom uxl is growing no in England
for California roJwo .
The first watches weie mado in
174C.
It is eaf y lc pick out wtrk lor th
fool kill.-r.
After one puts s project on foot, he
then bas it on hand.
Tbe rwht Io cninjnil is tho fruit o
labors, Ihe price ol courage.
Tn mau ol pleasure slmnld more
properly lw Urniod the mau ot pain.
O ie can0 nt ""rJ t,lnua
.ny men are loosing mm ; ..., .
- " . . .fanluitilnf si Mi I 111
some
hug between a thought aud
thing.