0 WJHWEIER, THE OON8TITUTION-THE ONION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE IAWH. KOitmr ud VOL. L. MIFFLINTOW1N. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JULY 22. 18)6 NO. 32 at ft n tl it f! - PROLOGUE. "And you are certain of the year he wu married in?" "Perfectly there is no possibility of my being mistaken. He was married on New lenr's Day, '58; I was born in May, '6. Two men, both about the same age, twenty-five, were seated in a private room, at an inn, known as the Hotel Bellevue, at Le Vocq, a dreary fishing town with a good though small harbor, a dozen miles west of Havre. Down below the cliff on which the Inn stood, the port was visible, and in the port was to be seen an English cutter, the Electra, in which the friends had run for Le Vocq when the storm, that had now been raging for twenty-four hours, broke upon thein. The first night in the inn. to which they had come up after seeing the yacht made snug and comfortable in the harbor below,; and the sailors left in charge of her also' provided for, passed easily enough. They had stood all the morning looking ut of the window disconsolately, hadi snioked pipes and cigarettes innumerable,' nd had yawned a good deal. "What are we to do to prevent our-' elves from dying of ennui, Philip?" the one asked the other. "Jerry," the other answered solemnly ,i "I know no more than you do. There is' nothing left to read, and soon very soon,; las! there will be nothing left to smoke." The one called Philip began looking about the salou that was at their dis posal, whistling plaintively, and peering Into the cupboards, of which there were two. "Hullo!" he suddenly exclaimed, "here. Is a great mcntnl treat for us a lot of old books; and precious big ones, too! I won der what they are? Ah! old registers of bygone years." "Nevertheless, let us see them," the other answered; "at any rate we shall' learn what kind of company the house1 has kept." So, obeying his behest, I'hilip brought them out, and they sat down "to begin at the beginning," us tliey said laughingly; and each took a volume and commenced to peruse it. Every now and then they told one an other of some name they had come across, the owner of which was known to then by hearsay, anil they agreed that the "Hotel Bellevue" hud, in its day, had some very good people for its guests. They found several titles English in scribed in the pages of the register, and. also many prominent names belonging to the same nationality. "Probably half these people hnve occu pied this very Kitting room at some time or other, 1'bihp said to Gervase. I only w ish some of them were here now, and that He stopiied at a sudden exclamation of- his friend, who was gazing fixedly at the page before him. "What kind of a find is it now, Jerry?" he asked. "Any one very wonderful?"- "It must be a mistake," the other said in a low voice. "And yet how could such a mistake happen? Look at this!" and he pointed with his finger to a line in the book. . "Why!" the other exclaimed, as he read, "Aout 17, 1ST4, L'Hon. Gervase Occleve and wife." Then he said, "Your father, of course, before he inherited his title?" "Of course! There never was any other Gervase Occleve in existence, ex cept Tnywlf, while lie was alive. Dut what can it mean?" "It means that your father knew this place many years ago, and came here; that is all, I should say. It is a coinci dence, but after all it is no more strange that be should know Le Vocq than that you should." "Hut you don't see the curious part of it, Philip! My father had no wife in 1854! He never hud a wife until he mar ried my mother, and then he was Lord Penlyn and no longer known as Gervase Occleve." And then followed the conversation with which this story opens. "It is a strange thing," I'hilip said, "but it must lie a mistake." After a few moments sient in thought, Gorvase turned to his friend and said, "The landlord, the man who stared so hard at me yesterday when we came in, was an elderly in-rson. He may have had the hotel in '54, might even remember this mysterious namesake of mine. I think I will ask him to come up." In a few minutes the landlord tapped t the door. When he hud received an Invitation to enter, he came into the room and bowed rcsiHt-tfully, but, as he did so. Lord Penlyn again noticed that his eyes were fixed uxn him with a wondering stare; a stare exactly the same as he hud received n the previous day when they entered the hotel. "We found these registers in your cup board, and, for want of anything else to read, we took them down and have been amusing ourselves with them. I hope we did not take a liberty," began Ger vase. "In going through this book the one of ISM I have come upon a name so familiar to me, the name of Gervase Oc cleve, that " Kut before he could finish his sentence the landlord jumtied up from his chair, and was speaking rapidly while he ges ticulated in a thorough French fashion. "Occleve of course," he cried. "That Is the face. Sir, Milor! I salute you! When you entered my house yesterday, I aid to myself, 'But where have I seen him? Or is it but the spirit of some dead one looking at me out of his eyes?' And now that you mention to me the name of Occleve, then in a moment he comes back to me and I see him once again. Ah! Milor! but when I regard you, then in verity he returns to nie, nnd I recall him as he used to sit in this very room in that very chair in which you now sit." The young men had both stared at Lira with some amazement as be spoke hur riedly and excitedly, repeating himself in his earnestness, and now as he ceased, Gervase said: "Do I understand yon to say, then, that I bear such a likeness to this man, whose name is inscribed here, as to recall him viiidly to you?" "Yes, you are his son! It must be so. There is only oue thing that I do not comprehend. Yn bear a different name." "lie b.i'autv Lord Penlyn later In life, "And so he is dead! He can scarcely have lived the full space of man's ysaxa iAnd Madame your mother? She Is well?" For moment the young man hesitated 'Then he said: "She la dead, too." ' "Pauvre dame," the landlord said, and he spoke It seemed as though he was .talking to himself. "She was bright and happy In those days so far off, bright an Ihappy once: and she, too. Is gone. And II who was older than either of thsm, as ibixtl . ufc Lord Penlyn," ha aalaVcMiV fl dresCjg nimself to bla guest, "yon look younger than your years. -It is thirty years since you used to run about those sands outside and play; I have carried yor to them often " "You carried me to those sands thirty years ago! Why, I was not " "Stop!" Philip Smerdon said to him in English, and speaking in a low tone. "Do you not see it all? Say no more." Later on, when the landlord had left the room after Insisting upon shaking the hand of "the child he had known thirty years ago," Gervase said: "So he who was so stern and self-contained, who seemed to be above the or dinary weaknesses of other men, was, after all, worse than the majority of 'them. I suppose he left this poor woman .when he married my mother, I suppose he left the boy, for whom this man takes me to starve or to become a thief prey lug on his fellow men. It is not pleasant to think that I have an elder brother who may be an outcast, perhaps a felon 1" "I should not take such a pessimist!, view of things as that," Philip said. "Fori aught you know, the lady be had with him) here may have died between 1854 and 1858, and, for the matter of that, so may the boy; or he may have made a good al lowance to both when he parted with them. For anything you know to the contrary he might have seen the boy fre quently until his death and have taken care to place him comfortably in them world." , "In auch case I must have known it I must have met him somewhere." So well did the landlord remember Mr. Occleve's face, even after all these years, that ever since Lord Penlyn had been is the house he had been puzzling bis braiui to think where he had seen him before He certainly should not, he said, havi remembered the child he had played witt so often, but that his likeness to his fathet was more than striking. To Madame, bii mother, he saw no resemblance at all. "But I did not tell him," he said to him self afterwards, as he sat in his parloi below; "I did not tell him that on th second summer a gloom had fallen over I them, and that I often saw her in tears and heard him speak harshly to her. Whj should I disturb the poor young man'r meditations on his dead father and moth er'r" On the next day the storm was over and the Electra was skimming over thi waves and leaving the dreary Frencl coast far behind it. "It hasn't been a pleasant visit," Lord Penlyn said to Philip, as they leant over the bows smoking their pipes and watch ing Le Vocq fade gradually into a speck. "1 would give something never to hav hea ni that ntorv!" "It is the story of thirty years ago. hl Wew answered. "And it is not yot who did the wrong. Why let it worry you?" "I cannot help it! And I dare say yos will think me a fool! but I cannot alse help wondering on which of my father's children upon that other nameless and unknown one, or upon me bis sins wiV be visited!" CHAPTER I. Ida Raughton sat, on a bright June day of that year. In her pretty boudoir, look ing out on the well-kept gardens of a West End square, and thinking of an im portant event in her life that was now not very far off her marriage. The wed ding day was fixed for the 1st of Septem berd. Her future husband was Gervase Oecleve, Viscount Teulyn. She was the only daughter of Sir Paul Kanghton, a wealthy Surrey baronet, and had been to him, ainee her mother's death, as the apple of his eye the only thing that to him seemed to make life worth living. That she should have made a sensation during her first season was not a thing to astonish Sir Paul, nor, indeed, any one else. Ida Raughton was as thor oughly beautiful a girl, when first she made her appearance in London society, as any who had ever taken their place in its ranks. , Tall and graceful, and possessed of an exquisitely shaped head, round which her auburn hair curled in thick locks; with bright hazel eyes, whose expression varied in accordance with their owner's thoughts and feelings, sometimes sparkling with brighter and mirth, and sometimes sad dened with tears as she listened to any tale of sorrow; with a nose the line of which was perfect, and a month, the smallness of which disguised, though it could not hide, the even, white teeth within, no one could look at Ida without acknowledging how lovely she was. Even other and rival debutantes granted her loveliness, and the woman who can ob- Itain such a concession aa this from her leisters has fairly established her right tc homage. A a atiA mmt In t.a, kAnilAl, window An 'this June day, thinking of her now defi nitely settled marriage, she was wonder ing if the life before her would be ai bright and happy as the one she was leav ing behind forever. That, with the exception of the deatk of her mother, a sorrow that time had mercifully tempered to her, had beei without alloy. Would the future be so? There was no reason to think otherwise, she reflected; nj reason to doubt it, Lord Penlyn was young, handsome and manly, the owner of an honored name and well endowed with the world's goods. Yet jthat would not have weighed with hei had she not loved him. She had asked herself if she did lova him several times before she consented, to give him the answer he desired, and then she acknowledged that he alone had won her heart. , She recalled other men's attentions to her. tswir suf words, their desire to please; bow they had haunted her foot steps at balls and at the opera, and how no other man's homage had been so sweet to her as the homage of Gervase Occleve. It was supposed by some of their circle though erroneously supposed, she told herself that another man loved her. Per fectly erroneously, because that other man had never breathed one word of love to her; and because, though he would some times be in her society continually for perhaps a week, and then be absent for a month, he never, during all the time they were thus constantly meeting, paid her more marked attention than other men were in the habit of doing. Yet, notwithstanding this. It had com to her knowledge that it had been whis kered about that Walter Oundall loved ler. This man, Walter Cnndall, this report id admirer of hers, was well known In so-, ilety, waa in a way famous, though his !ame was In the principal part due to the ilmplest purchaser of that commodity to jj, v dinsan thaAjom and wealth. Ic'.ii'-ted In getting invitations to; but It was noticed that, though his chef waa t marvel, he rarely nte anything but the loup and joint himself, and'that, while others were drinking the best wine that Burgundy, or Ay, or Rheims could pro duce, he scarcely ever quenched his thirst with anything but a tumbler of claret. But he would sit at the head of his jnble with a smile of satisfaction upon his handsome face, contented with the knowledge that his guests were happy ind enjoying themselves. This man of whom Ida was now think ing, and whose story may be told .here, had commenced life- at Westminster School, to which be had been put by his nncle, a rich owner of mines and woodi In Honduras, from which place he paid flying visits to England once a year, oi once in two years. The boy was an orphan, left by hb mother to her brother's care, and tha' brother had not failed in his trust The lad went to Westminster with th full understanding that Honduras musi be his home when school days were over: but he knew that it would be a home ol luxury and tropical splendor. There, af ter his school days, he passed some years of his life, attending to the mines, seeing to the consignments of shiploads of ma hogany and cedar, going for days in the hills with no companions but the Mestizo and the Indians, and helping his uncle to garner up more wealth that was eventual ly destined to-be his. - Once or twice in the space of ten yean he enme to Europe, generally with the ob ject of increasing their connection with London or Continental cities, and of look ing up and keeping in touch with bis old school-fellows and friends. And then, nt last, two or three years, before this story opens, and when his nncle was dead, it came to be said nliout London that Walter Cundall, the richest man from the Pncinc to the Gulf of Hon duras, had taken a bouse in Grosveuor place, and meant to make London more or less permanently his residence. Other places had been purchased .one by one, and he used all his pos sessions sharing them with bis friends lis, turn; but London was, as peo ple sni.i, his home. Occasionally he would go off to Honduras on business, or would rush by the Orient express to St. Peters burg or Vienna; but he loved England lietter than any other spot on the globe, and never left it unless he was obliged to do so. This was the man whom gossip had said was the future husband of Ida Ranghton this tall, dark, handsome man, who was, when In England, a great deal by her side. But gossip had been rather staggered when it heard that, during Mr. Cundall's last absence of six months to the tropics, she had become the affianced wife of Lord' Penlyn. It wondered what he would say when he came back, as it heard be was about to do very shortly, and It wondered why on earth she had taken Penlyn when she might have had Cundall. It talked it over in the drawing rooms and the ball rooms, at Epsom and on the lawn at Sundown, but it did not seem to arrive at any con clusion satisfactory to itself. "I suppose the fact of it is that Cnndall sever asked her," one said to another, "and she got tired of waiting." Did she think so herself, as she sat there that bright afternoon? No, that could not ie possible! Ida Raughton was a girl with too pure and honorable a heart to take one man when she loved another. (To lie continued.) Vcntriloiul.iu In China. A man who witnessed the perform-, once gives the following description of what a ventriloquist in China did: The ventriloquist was seated behind a screen, where there were only a chair, a table, a fan and a ruler. With the ruler be rapied on the table to en force silence, and when everybody bad ceased speaking there was sud denly heard the barking of a dog. Then we beard the movements of a woman. She had been waked by th dog, and was shaking her husband. We were Just expecting to hear the man and wife talking together, when a child began to cry. To pacify it the mother gave It food; we could hear II drinking and crying at the same time. The mother spoke to it soothingly and then rose to change Its clothes. Meanwhile another child bad been wakened and was beginning to make a noise. The father scolded it, while the baby continued crying. By-and-hy the whole family went back to bed and fell asleep. The patter of a mouse was heard. It climbed up some vase and upset it. We heard the clatter oJ the vane as it fell. The woman coughed In her sleep. Then cries of "Fire! fire!" were heard The mouse had upset the lamp; the husband and wife waked up, shouted and screamed, the children cried, thou sands of people came running and shouting. - Children cried, dogs barked, the walls came crashing down, squibs and crack ers exploded. The fire brigade came raring up. Water was pumped up in torrents, and hissed in the flames. The representation was so true to life that every one rose -to' his feet and was starting away, when a second Mow of the ruler on the table com manded silence. We rushed behind the screen, but there was nothing there except the ventriloquist, his table, his chair aud bis ruler. Food for-Thought. A lie that is bull a truth is ever the blackest of lies. To some men a bad refutation is lietter than none. The ture way to-miss t access is to miss he opportunity. Cowardice keeps a out as many peo ple in line as courage. Wine unlocks the door and then throws away the key. A good husband is sometimes spoiled in the making. Our failings serve tj brighten the lives of our neigh liors. Mo man is a success at everything or failure in ever j tiling. Woman's inhumanity to woman is the worst trait in her character. Most mothers secretly hope their boy will grow npa better man than bis father. Reason is not infallible, lint it comes the nearest to it of anything human. - , One way to keep yonr nose from bleeding keep it out of other people's business. Don't ask any credit for your sympa thies; only ask credit for what yoa act ually do. ntreBarthenlns; Iron. It waa formerly believed that en, (ton, when subjected to long-continued hocks and Jarring, became "crystal lized" and brittle: but Mr. A. E. Outer bridge, Jr., of Philadelphia, has re cently shown, by a series Xt expert' menta, that instead of being weakened, cast iron la really strengthened by re peated blows and concussions. A Ohoatly Cat. An Invention calculated to terrify mice and rata la described In Popular Science News. It consists of a metallic cat, which, being covered with lumin ous paint, shines in dark room with a mysterious radiance which, the Inven tor thinks, will be more effectual than traps, or even genuine cats, in ridding houses of rodent pests. Carnivorous Plants. That such plants as "Venus' fly-trap4 actually catch and squeeze to death flies and other Insects alighting on their leaves has long been known, but the discovery Is comparatively recent that the plants digest the softer parts of their prey by means of a peptic fer ment secreted by the leaves. These, then, are real Instances of plants feed, lug uion animals. Marvellon. Measurement. At the recent "conversazione" of the Royal Society In London a pendulum Instrument was exhibited, Intended to record the slightest tilts and pulsations' of the crust of the earth. It was as serted that this Instrument would ren der observable a tilt of less than one three-hundredth of a second of arc. In other words. If a plane surface were tipped up only so little that the rise would amount to a single Inch in a thousand miles, the Instrument wouW reveal the tilting! A Reach of Iron Band. On the western coast of the northert. falnnd of New Zealand Immense de posits of magnetic Iron sand are fouud. The sand Is brought down by many streams from the elopes of Mount Egmont The cliffs consist of a mix ture of ordinary silica sand and Iron land, but the waves sweeping tbo beach carry the lighter silica sand away, lenv Ing an almost pure deposit of Iron sand1 fourteen feet In depth. Furnaces have been erected by which the snnd is smelted and formed into pig iron. Killed by L.lKht. Dr. James Weir, Jr., who has studied Itrange Inhabitants of the Mammoth Cave In Kentucky, Bays that the cele brated blind fish from that cavern, when placed In Illuminated aquaria, seek out the darkest places, and he be lieves that light Is directly fatal to them, for they soon die if kept In a brightly lighted tank. The avoldnnce of light seems to be a general charac teristic of the sightless creatures dwel ling In the great cave. Doctor Weir has seen an eyeless spider trying to avoid the light, and animalcules from the waters of the cavern biding under a grain of sand on the stage of bis mi croscope. He thinks the light In these cases Is in some manner perceived through the sense of touch. An Air Tester. An Instrument for measuring the amount of Impurity in the air of a room' or shop was shown at the Zurich In dustrial Exhibition recently. It con sisted of a glass bulb containing a red liquid which turns white on contact with cnrboulc neid gas. The liquid in the bulb was kept from the air, but; nre in every 100 seconds a drop, drawn automatically from the bulb through a bent tube, fell upon the upper end of a stretched cord and began slowly to descend the cord. If the air was foul with carbonic acid the drop turned white at the upper end of the cord, and" the purer the air the farther the drop Ji-s-ended before changing color. Alongside the cord ran a scale, like that of a thermometer or barometer, indi cating the degrees of impurity of the atmosphere. Qneer Facta About Color.. According to Information given by a r.erman olllcer to the Horse Guards' Ca.ette, an experiment was recently liuide in Europe to determine what color In a soldier's uniform is the least conspicuous .to an enemy. Of ten men two were dressed in light gray uni form, two in dark gray, two in green, two in dark blue and two in scarlet All were then ordered to march off, while, a group of otiiecrs remained watching i hem. The tirst to disapjienr in the. landscape was the light gray, and next, surprising as it may seem, the scarlet!' Thou followed the (lark gray, while the dark blue and the green remained visi ble long nfter all the others had dis appeared. Experiments In firing nt blup and red targets, according to the 8a me authority, proved that blue could bo more easily seen at a distance thau red. Munwlenm In a Tree. One of the 'most curious mausoleums in the world was discovered the other day in an orchard at the village of No ebdenitz, in Snxe-Alteuburg. A gigan tic oak tree, which a storm had roblied ;f its crown, was up for public auction. Among the bidders happened to lie a in ron Von Thtunniel, scion of a fani ly of ancient lineage that has given the world of literature one charming jMiet.and the Fatherland many distiit euitdicd statesmen. The Baron, who lives on a iM-ighboring estate, hud rid den to the auction place quite acciden tally. Finally the tree was knocked d.vn to him for 200 marks. Upon b!s l nival at the castle he told nn old aer-.-nr.t of bis purchase, describing the iree nnd Its situation. The old servant aid he remembered attending the fu neral of a Bardon Thumuiel seventy ot eighty years ago, and that the body had been burled In a 1,000-year-old oak, belonging to the parsonage. In vestigation clearly proved that the or chard had once been the property of the village church, and that at one Bide of the old oak was an Iron shutter, rusty and time-worn, that the people of the town had always supposed to have been placed there by some Joker or mischievous boys. ie iron shutter proved to be the gate to the mausole um of Baron Hans Wllhelm Von Thum mel, at one time Minister of the State of Saxe-Altenburg, who died in 1824, and wished to be buried "in tha 1,000-year-old tree he loved so well." In the hollow of the tree Baron Hans caused to be built a sepulchre of solid masonry, large enough to accommodate his coffin. The coffin was placed there, as the church records show, on March 8, 1824, and the opening was closed by an Iron gate. In the course of time a wall of wood grew over the opening, which had been enlarged to admit the workmen and the coffin, and for many years it has been completely shut, thus removing tho last vestige of the odd use to which the old tree had been put. Chinese Treatment ot Children, However little liked the Chinaman may be by his white neighbors, I have at all times found that the Chinese had at least one good and praiseworthy quality the kindness shown by all of them toward their children. . The poor est parents always seem able to save enough money to array their little ones In gay garments on New Year's day or other holidays. The children in turn seem to be remarkably well-behaved and- respectful toward their elders, and rarely, if ever, receive corporal punish ment They seem very happy, and apparently enjoy their childhood more than most American children. On al most any innny day the fond and proud father may be seen at every turn iu Chinatown carrying his brightly attired youngster In his arms. Other little tots, hardly old enough to feci quite steady on their legs, toddle about with Infants strapped on their backs. They do not appear to mind this, and it does not seem to Interfere with their child ish pastimes. About the time of the Chinese New Year Chinese children are particularly favored, and the fond fathers deny them nothing. The little ones always appear to be well pro vided with pocket-money to buy toy and candles. St Nicholas. Victor Hugo's Youthful Work. Victor Hugo, the great French poet and novelist Is famous everywhere. Ho began his literary caroor at the age of 13. At 18 he drew up his first novel in two weeks! The Academy at Tou louse crowned two of bis odes that he wrote at 17. At 20 his first volume of poems was so good that he received a pension of $200 from the French Gov ernment; and you are all aware how he came to be one of the greatest an well as one of the most popular, of the French poets. II la patriotism was as great as his literary gifts. His life is one of the most interesting In the lit erary annals of France. I saw his fun eral in Paris, In May, 1SS5, when be wes followed to the grave by a concourse ef sorowful people. The procession was miles In length. Few emperors or suc cessful generals have had a more Im posing burial, nor was ever man laid to re3t who was more deeply, truly mourned than this grand and gifted Frenchman. St Nicholas. "The Woods of Shorne." Leaving the highway by a pretty lane, we are presently In a most mngniflccnt wood, a vast cathedral of nature. Its columns are tall dark trunks of elm trees, supporting leafy, intersecting arches of golden green; its nave and transepts are carpeted with the softest moss, In which a footfall is silent; its screens are of hawthorn and honey suckle; its chancel Is strewn with the growing violets; and its chapels are adorned with rhododendrons and Ivy. Through and upon it all floods the soft ened sunlight; over our beads slugs a vast choir of blrd.s; and around ns the melodious hum of the bees sounds like soft organ notes. Here and there in tho woods we come upon handsomo, russet-plumaged pheasants strutting about rabbits hopping fearlessly across the clearings, and squirrels senmpcriuy from tree to tree. St. Nicholas. Cnshing's Heroic need. In 18C1, at the very beginning of our civil war, a young lad named William Barker dishing entered the navy as a volunteer officer, ' though be had pre viously been through the Naval Acad emy at Annapolis. He was only li years old, but a braver or more reckless sailor never grasped a cutlass or stood by a gun. Never a fight but he was in the thick of L, never a battle but Cush ing's name was nientioued in orders. He dared do anything thnt man dared. One dark night, at Plymouth. N. C, lie fctok a boat's crew nnd, stealing quiet ly away, lie crept up lieside the Con federate ram "Albemarle" ajd. taking the chances of almost certain death, he sank her by a torpedo fired from his steam launch. Then he fought at Fort Fisher with great bravery, and, what i:i ever rarer, be used sound judgmeut. se curing for his command all the frultn of the victory. St. Nicholas. A XO-JEHS MATvd. Prlscilia ".So old Winter has mat ned May?"' litidd "What a curiously assortii couple!" Prunella "Xot st all. It's a perfect match. He has twenty millions aud she has twenty years. n Ne York; Herald HUSBAND AND WIPB IX ACCOKR. "Women must consider it a drea Iful fate to be aa old maid,' muiid Mr Chugwater. "They do, Josiah,' Slid Mrs. Chii!? water. " V hat terrible stick they du sometimes marry to ect,i3 it V Aud Josiah rubisi bis e'aia aal said nothing. (J.iica' Tribune. a liter aar TAsra. "Ah," he said delights Jiv, "I let you have my latest boo of poem ttitti you." "Ves," she replieJ; "I keep it here." iiideeJ?" You ece," she went on, "the co'or o' the cover harni i.i z -J so bciutifiillj witu the furnishings oi the room!' Vaih inston Star. FACING A GRIZZLY. A Boy Kill, an Angry Bear with lllo w of an A x: It was In September and the Colo ratio sun had done Its duty and mad Phii as brown of face and stout of Unit as any of us that the geology closi con Ji sting of the professor and ten pu pils, made an excursion ir.to the rang v.ith the cbct of taking a practical lesson among the limestone beds at tlv Lack of Lincoln Peak. Away we went feeling very hilari ous at the Idea of making an indepetd ent expedition, even with Blinkers foi a general scnwnbling over rocks and fallen trees, chnsing squirrels nnd chip mnnks. throwing stones at birds and rabbits, and behaving generally just i:ke what we were a parcel of school boys. Presently we emerged from the tree and came out upon another little open, park-like stretch of ground. Half-way across it our attention was suddenly at tracted by a stir among some high grass, and out jumped a little, dark-col ored, short-legged animal, which looked like a woolly pig If there be any such thing in nature. Away it scuttled, and away we all went, with a shout. In pursuit. Phil bnpiened to be some distance lielilnd nt the moment, being busily en gaged in digging a tarantula's nest out of the- ground with bis knife; but as soon as he saw what we were doing, he came racing after us, shouting, "Look out! Lookout! It's a " We did not bear what, we were mak ing so much noise ourselves. But the little animal, whatever It was. was too quick for us and disappeared into some willows, while we were still twenty yards behind. The next moment the willows waved and bent and out bounced a great she-bear a grizzly! With a yell of dismay we all turned nnd, scattering like a flock of sparrows when a cat Jumps Into the midst of them, fled for the nearest trees. Blink ers, quite forgetting that he was the general of the little expeditionary force, mnde such use of his long legs that he was safely up a tree before any of the rest of us "uad reached one. As for me, I never reached one at alL In turning to run I tripped over the ax, and though I -was up again in an In stant, the check made me the last of the fugitives. The chase was soon ovr. In six jumps. It seemed to me, the great beast caught m. and, with one blow of her paw on the middle of my back, sent me, face downward, to the ground, with every ctom of breath driven out of my body. This last clrcumstrnce was a good thing for me; I could not have moved a muscle if I had wished to. Consequent ly the bear supKsed that I was dead, and instead of tearing me up Into small pieces, ns I expected, she began sniffing me all over and turning me about with ber claws. Suddenly, however, she censed and began to growl, nnd I heard Blinkers up In his tree call out, "Go back! You can't do any good. You'll only get yourself killed, too." From which I concluded that Blinkers and the bear had one thought in common; they Iwitb supposed me to be dead. I was liejrinnlng to recover my breath a little by this time, nnd In my anxiety to see what was going forward I mnde a slight movement with one arm, aud In an Instant the bear had that arm be tween her teeth. It hurt mo so horri bly that I fainted, nnd all that hapiieu ed afterwards I gathered from the ether boys. Phil, when he saw me knocked down. Instead of climbing up a tree like the rest, ran back to where I had dropped the ax, and, picking it up. advanced to my rescue. It was a mad thing to do, there is no doubt about that; but Phil did It and without a thought of his own dnuger. It v as In vain that Blinkers called to him to 9o back; he did not seem to hear, but kept coming on slowly, witn hli eyes fixed on the bear, and the ax held in readiness to strike. The bear dropieti my aim and ad vanced a stop, standing acrosr my body, growling and turning up ber lips until all her great white teeth were exposed; but still Phil came on. At six feet dis tance be stopped. The bear took a step forward, aud then another, and then, with all the strength of his body dou bled by the intense excitement of the moment Phil struck nt her with such force- and precision that he split her j.uill clean In two. But, even in dying, the lienr succeed ed in doing some mischief. With a last convulsive effort she struck out, and, with her great claws, tore away the front of Flill's coat, vest ind shirt, nnd made three deep cuts ill across his chest from the left shoul der diagonally downward. Another inch and Phil must certainly have been killed. As it was, he stood for a mo ment swaying to and fro, and then fell forward upon the dead body of the hear. St Nicholas. A Chinaman Sees a Piano. A Chinaman, lately returned from a trip to Europe, treated his countryman 'o the following description of the piano: -. "The Europeans keep a four-legged beast which they can make sing at will. A man, or more frequently a woman, r even a feeble girl, sits down In front f the animal and steps on Its tall, at :he same time striking Its white teeth with his or her fingers, when the crea ture begins to sing. The singing, though much louder than that of a bird, is leasant to listen to. The beast does lot bite, nor does it move, though If s not tied np." ' ' English Postal Orders. More than 40,000,000 postal orders ire now Issued annually In England, ind the amount thus s-nt through ths post exceeds 16,000.000. A SDKS TKST. Jones "Yes, sir, it is mighty -hard to collect money just now; I know it." Smith "Indeed, have you tried to tollset and failed I" Jones--"Ob, no." . Smith "How then do you know that money is hard to collect I" Jones "Because several people bar Iried to collect of me." Tid-Bits. jsrery thoroughbred la able to leaks lis own salad dressing EE?. OB. T BL16L he Eminent Divine's Sunday Sermoa. - object: "lilndness for Sake." Another's Tirr: "Is f heie yet anv .halls left of tho float or 8au'. Uiat I : v show him Kind ness for Jonathan's sake? So Mep hlb. nheth dwelt in Jerusalem, for he rttd ent continually at thn kind's labia and was laino to both his feet." II Samuel lx.; 1 nod 13. Was there ever anvthini; morn romantin an.l chivalrous than the Invri of David and Jonathan? At onn timn Jonathan was op and David was down. Now David is up and Jonathan's family is down. As you have often beard of two solilen before koIdi; Into battle making a covenant thnt If ono is shot the survivor will take charee of the bod y, the watch, the momentos and perhaps of the bereft family ot the oue that dies, so David and Jonathan had made a covenant, and now that Jonathan isdead David is inquiring about Ms family, th'it he may show kind ness unto them for their father Jonathan's silks. Careful search is made, and a son of Jona than by the excendlnirly homely name of Hephlbosheth is founit. His nurse, in hisln faucy, had let him fall, and th fall had put both his ankles out of llnoe, and they had never been set This decrepit, nonr man is brouitht into the palaee of Kmir DaviiL David gazes upon him with melting tender ness, no douU soelng in his face a resom blanoe to his old friend, tha deceased Jona than. The whole beariuir of Klnr David toward him seems to say: "How glad I am to see you, Mephibosheth! How you remind me of vour father, my old friend and bene fao;or! I made a bargain with your fathers good many years airo, and I am going to keep it with you. What ean I do for vou, Mephiboshetb? I am resolved what to do I will make you a rich man. I will restore, to you the confiscated nronortv of vour irram!. faihor Saul, and you shall be ague of mine as long as you live, and you shall lie seated at mytahle among the prinoi-s." it was loo much for Mephihnheth. an i he cried out against It, calling himself a dead dog. "Un sun, bays uavi.i; "i aon't do this on your account; I do this for your father Jonathan's sake. I can never forget his kind noes. I remember when I was hounded from nlnce to plaoe how he befriended me. Can I ever forget how he stripped himself of his courtier apparel and gave it to me instead of my shepherd's coat, and how he took off ms own sword and licit and gave t':em to me Instead of my sling? Oh, I can never forget him! I feel ns if cnuMn't do enough for you, his son. I don't do it for vour sake; I do it for vour father Jonathan's sake." So Mephiboslieth dwelt in Jerusa lem, for he did eat continually nt the kinir'a talle and was lame on both bis feet." Thi re is so mu.-h gospel in this quaint In ldent that I am embarrassed to know where to begin. Whom do Mephibosheth aud David mid Jonathan mnke you think of? Mephlhosheth, in the first place, stands for ihe di.saliled human soul, iiord Bvron de scribe sin as a charming recklessm-ss, us a gnllairry, as a Don Juan; George Sand de scribes siu as triumphant in many intriento plots; Oaviirnl, with his engraver's knife, always shows sin as a great jocularity; hut the IJitile present it as a Mephibosheth, lume on both feet Sin, like the nurse in tho con text, attempted to carry u.s nnd let ns full, and we have been disabled, and in our whole moral nature we a e oecrepit. Sometimes theologians haggle about a technicality. 1'hey use the wor.ls '-totul depravity," aiid some people believe iu the doctrine, nnl some reiec-t it. What do von menu i.v tolnl depravity? I you mean that every man is as low as he run be? Then. I do uot believe it either. Put do you mean that sin has let us fall; t mt it has sear. flel and wounded nn l crippled our en tire moral nature until vo cannot wnlk straight and are lame in. both feet? I'hen I admit your proposition. There aot so much differein-e in an Africun jungle with barking, howling, hissing, tlghin- iiuadruiied anil r i.lile. .Hn l naradise. with its animals coining before Adam, when lis patted them aud stroke' I them and gavo ' them names, so that thn panther was as tame aj the cow nnd the condor as tame af Hie dove as there i bet en the hiiinaiksoul disabled and that soul as (iod oriinnnllvcon. truutel it. I do not care what the .sent i- mentalis's or the poe.s say in regard to sin. Iu the name of tlod I declare to you to-day that sin is disorgaiiiK.ition, dh-iiitegriitiou ghastly disflguraliou, hobbling deformity. Your modern theologian tells you that man is a little out of sorts; .-he sometimes thiuks wrong; he sometime arts wrong; iu iee.l, his nature needs a little moral surgery, an nulatde splint, a s it-lit oomi ress, a little rectification. Kdiglou la a good tiling to have; it might some day come Into use. Man Is partially wroug. not all wrong. He is lame in one foot. Bring the salve of divine grace and the ointment and the puin extrac tor, and we will have his one foot cured. Man is only lia'f wrong, nut altogether wrong. Ia what is man's, nature right In his will, bis affections, his judgment? No. 1'hore is an o(d book that says: "The whole head is sick nnd the whole heart faint," Mephibosheth lame in both feet. Our belief of the fact that sin hasscanflo.l and deformed nur souls increases as we go on in years. When you started life you thought that man was a little m.'trred by sin an I he was about jue tenth wrong. By the time you had gone through the early experience of your trade or occupation or profession you be lieve I that man was about half wrong. By the time you came to midlife you believed that man was three-fourths wrong. Fut vithla these past few years, since you have been so lied about andswindled and chested, you have come to the conclusion that mnn is altogether wrong, and now you can say with the prayer book and the Bible, "There is no health in us." Now you believe with the prophet, "The heart is deceitful, abovn s'l things, and desperately wicked." What ever you may have believed before, now you believe that Uephlbosheth is lame on both i'eet. AialD. Mephibosheth in the text stands for the disabled human sou: humbled aud re stored. When this invalid of my text got a command to come to King David's palace he trembled. The fact was that the grandfa her af Mephibosheth bad treated David must shockingly, aad now Mephibosheth says to himself: "What does the king want of me? Isn't it enough that I am lame? Is he going to destroy my life? Is he going to wreak ou me the vengeance which he holds toward my grandfather, Saul? It's too bad." But go to the palace Mephibosheth must, since tne king has commanded it. With staff and snitches and helped by bis friends. I we Mephibosheth going up the stairs of die palace. I hear his staff and crutches rattling on the tessellated floor of the :broneroem. No sooner have these two persons confronted -each other Mephib osheth and David, the king than Mep hibosheth throws himself flat on his face be fore the king and styles himself a dead dog. In the east when a man styles himself a dog he utters the utmost term of self-abnegation. It is not a term so strong In this country, where, if a dog has fair chance, he some times shows more nobility of character than some human specimens that we wot of, but the mangy curs of the oriental cities, as I know by my own observation, are utterly detestable. Mephibosheth gives the utmost term of self-loathing when he compares him self lo a dog. and dead at that. Consider the analogy. When the com mand is given from the palace ot heaven to the human soul to come, ihe soul begins to tremble. It says: "What is Ood going to to with me now? Is He going to destroy me? Is He going to wreck His vengeance upon me?" There is more than one Mephibosheth trembling now because Ood has summoned him to thi pt lace of divine graoe. What are you trembling about? Ood has no pleasure In the death of a sinner. He does not send for you to hurt yon. He sends for you to d you good. A Scotch preaoher had the fol lowing circumstances brought uuder his ob lervatlon: There was poor woman In tha pariah who was about to be turned oat be cause she could not pay her rent. One night she heard a load knocking at the door, and she made no answer and hid herself. The rapping continued louder, loader, loader, bat she made no answer and continued to hide hew1 "" frightened un- to death. She said, "That's the officer of the law come to throw me out of my home." A few days after a Christian philanthropist met hr In the street and said: "Mv poor woman, where were you the other night? I came round to your house to pay your rent. Why didn't you let me in? Were you nt home?" "Why," shereplied, "was that you?" "Yes, thnt was me. I came to pay your rent." "Why." she said, "if I had had anv idea it was vou I would have let you in. I thought it was an offic -r come t o cast m out of my home." O soul, that loud knocking at the gate to-dav is not the sheriff come to put you In jail; it is the best friend you ever had come to be your security. You shiver with terror because you think it is wrath. It is mercy. Why, then, tremble before the King of heaven and earth calls you to His palace? Stop trembling aud start right away. "Oh," yon snv, "I can't Ktart. I have been so lamed bv sin and so lamed by evil habit I can't start. I am lame in both feet." My friend, we come out with our prayers and sympathies to help you up to the palace. If you want to get to the palace, you may get there. Start now. Tho IIolv Spirit will help you. All you have to do is just to throw yourself on your tnn at the feet of tho King, as Mephiltoslinth did. Mephibosheth's cantnial cnmiarison seems extravagant to the world, but when a man has seen himself as he reilly is aud seen howTie has been treating the Lord, there Is no term vehement enough to express his self condemnation. The dead .log of Mephibosheth's comparison fails to describe the man's utter lotlhlng of himself. MephilMisheth's posturing dons not seem too C rostrate. When a soul is convicted, Mrst e prays upright. Then the ir.usclos of his neck rulax. and he Is uble to bow his head. After awhile, by an almost superhuman ef fort, he kneels down to pray. After awhile, when He has seen Ood and seen hlms -lf, he throws himself flat on his face at the feet ot the King, just like Mephiboslieth. The fact Is, if we could see ourselves as Ood sees us, we would perish at the spectacle. You would have no time to overhaul other peo ple. Your cry would bo. "Ood bo merciful to me, a sinner." And again, Mephibosheth In my ten Hands for the disabled hitmtn sonl saved for the sake of another. Mephibosheth would never have got into the palace on his own eoount. Why did David ransack the realm o find that poor man and then bestow noon nim a great foitune and command a farmer f the name of Ziba to culture the estate and Jive to this invalid Menhibosheth half tha proceeds every year? Why did King David nake such a mighty stir about a poor fellow arho would never be of any use to tho throne if Israel? It was for Jonathan's sake. It Kan whnt Robert Burns calls for "auld lung yne." David could not forget what Jona :hau had done for him in other days. Three rimes this chnptor has it that all this dullness on the part of David to Mnphib wheth was for hs father Jonathan's sake. The daughter of Peter Mnrtyr, through ttie vice of her hushnrd, came down to pnnurv, ind the sennte of Zurich took care of her for lor father's sake. Sometimes a person has ipplied to you for help and you have refused litn, but when you found he was the son or nrotherof some ono who ha 1 boon your bene 'aetor in former days, and by a glance you law the resemblance of your old friend la he face of the applicant, you relented, and irou said. "Oh, I will do this for your father's wke." You know by your experience what ny text means. Now, my friends, It is on hat principle that you and I are to get into lie King s palace. Before dining we must be introduced. If ,-ou are invited to a company of persons Jfhore there are distinguished people, pros mt, you are introduced: "This Is the Sena or. "This is the Governor." "This is the President." ISoforo wo sit down at the King's :abbi in heaven I think we will want to bo ntroduced. Oh, what a time that will be, when you and I, by tho grnce of Ood. get into leaven, and are introduced to the mighty tpirits there, and Aomeono will say: "This is IohIiuii." This is Paul." ThLs is Moses." 'This is John Knox." "This is John Mil :on." "This is Martin Luther." "This is George Whltetleld." Oh, shall wo hnvit any ttrength lett after such a round of coles is! introduction Yea. wn shall be -jotentates ourselves. Then we shall sit down it the King's table with the tons and daiigh :ers of Oud, nnd one will whisper m-ross the :u!le to us and sny, "Heboid what manner of ore the Father hath bestowed noon us Hint we should bo called the sons of Ood!" Aud tome one at the table will say: "How long ivlll it last? All other banquets at which I tat ended. How long will this last?" and Paul will answer, "Forever!" and Joshua will say, "Forever:" and John Knux will say Forever!" nud Oeorge Whitellcld will say. "Forever!" And the wine nt that bnnqu't will be old sine. It will be very old wine. It will be :he oldest wine of heaven. It will be the vine that was trodden out from the red dusters on the day when ,Ti-sus trodthewiue press alone. Wine already more than eight een centuries old. And no one will deride us as to what we were in this world. No one will bring up our iaiiierfections here, our sins here. All our earthly imiierfec tions completely covered up ami hid den. Mephibosheth's feet under the table. Kingly fare. Kingly vesture. King ly oomfianionshlp. We shall reign for ever nnd ever. 1 think that banquet will mean more to those who hut it hard in this world than to those who hail It easy. That luinqunt in David's palace meant more to Mephibosheth than to any one else, because he had been poor and crip pled and ii-Hpised nnd rejected. And that man who In this world is blind will better appreciate the light of heaven than we who iu this world ha I good eyesight. And that nan who lu this world was dent will lietter appreciate the music of heaven thau we who iu tbis world had good hearing. And those will have a higher appreciation of the easy locomotion of that land who iu this world Wire Mephlbosheths. O my soul, whnt a magnificent go-p.-l! It takes a man so low down and raises hiul so high! What a gospel! Coin now, who wants to lie banqueted and implaced? As when Wilberforce was trying to got the "emancipation bill" through the British par.iament and all the British isles were anxious to hear ot the passage ot that "emancipation bill," when a 7essei was com ing Into port aud I lie enptuiu of the vessel knew that the people were so anxious to get the tidings, he jtepped out on the prow of the ship and shouted to the people long before he got up to the dock, "Free!" and they cried it, aud they shouted it, aud they saug it all through the land, "Free, free! So to-day I would like to sound the news of your present and your eternal emancipation until the angels of Ood noveriug lu the air. and watchmen on the battlements, and bell men in the town cry It, shout it, slug It, ring It, "Free, free!" 1 come out now as the pjessennerof the palace to invite Mephibosh eth to come up. I am here to-day to tell you that Ood has a wealth of kiudneas to bestow Upon you for His Son's sake. The doors of tne palace are open to receive you. The nupbearers have already put the ohalices on the table, ana tne great, loving, tender, sym pathetic heart of Ood bends over ou this moment, saying, "Is there any that is yet left of the house ot Saul, that I may show him kindness for Jonathan's sake?" Abandoning Tobacco Culture. The splendid farms in Pennsylvania, neat near Marietta, belonging t ) the estate oi the late Colonel James Duffy, and contain ing over 600 acres, have been noted forth! past twenty-five years for their great yieliU of tobacco among the largest in I'euuxyl vania. This year not a tobacco plant will t raised, ihe profits from tobacco farming be Ing too small to offset the risk of a failure u the crop. Not three-fourths ot the usu acreage will be put out in tobacco In Lan caster County this season. A few years age 15.000 acres were devoted to tills crop alone Three big bald eagles attacked a grocer's clerk at Heabrook, N. H., one day last week and were mauling him badly when help arrived. The birds were beaten off aud they es caped. If the entire popnhition of the world is considered to be 1, 400,000, U)0 the brains of this number of human be ings would weigh 1,922,712 tons or as much as ninety six ironclads of the ordinary sizu. The true way to be humble is not to stoop till yon are smaller than your self, bat to stand ut your real height gainst some higher nature that shall show yoa what the real smallness of your greatest greatness is. s v..