ft! D P. OOHWEICB, THE OON8TITUTION-THE UNIO-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE UW8. VOL. jU MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1S96. NO. 46 r"a ! ivw. ni rA n ii CHAPTER X. "The 8:43 for Chicago? Jutt gen. If -the last train this evening. FirM tn the moraine at 6:15, mlu." "Uone!" cried the girl In despair. She reached out her hand and caught on of the wooden pillar supporting the toot ot the little atatlon at Millway. It was almost dark. Nine o'clock had . struck. The straight warm rain was falling through the dusky, windless air. It was an evening towards the end ot Jane the las' Wednesday of that month. There was not sound but the dull muf fing beat of the rain upon the roof. Not soul visible but the girl and station agent. She took her band a way from the wood en pillar, and gathered her cloak round her, In preparation for going. "Can I do anything for you, miss? Have you far to wa!k?" asked the man. She did not answer bis ajuestlon; she asked Instead: "Do you think the rain will stop soon?" He glanced at the thin line ot dull, dark leaden sky. "No, miss, I don't think it will. It looks as if 'twould rain all lght. She sighed, moved her shoulders under the cloak to settle it, and saying "Thank you," In a listless way, moved with droop ing head slowly out of the atatlon, raised her umbrella and walked nnder the bug. beeches of a broad, deserted road leading southward. Although her pare bad not been quick, she felt ber breath come short. The mild, moist, scent-laden air seemed too rich for freshening life and cooling the blood. She was tired, and would have liked to sit down and rest, but neither time nor place allowed of pause. She must get on she must get back as quickly as possible, or she might be iqo late, too late to regain Kltbani House aud steal uuperceived to ber room there. To that hateful Eltham House, under which to night rested that odious Oscar Leigh. Oscar Leigh, the grinning, bold, audacious man. Owing to the loss of the little money left ber by ber father, Edith Grace had been obliged to try and get something to do, as she could not consent to encroach n the slender income of her grandmoth er, Mrs. Urace, the only relative she had In the world. As she had been so long with Mrs. Grace, she thought the thing to suit her best would be a companion ship to an elderly or invalid lady. She advertised In the daily papers, and the most promising looking reply came from Mr. Oscar Leigh, of Eltham Honse, Mill way, who wanted a companion for his in firm mother. Mr. Ieigh could not give mnch salary, but if advertiser took the situation, she would have a thoroughly comfortable and highly respectable home. Mr. Leigh could make an appointment for meeting in Chicago. The meeting took place at Mrs. Grace's lodgings, and although Miss Grace shrank from the appearance and manners of Mr. Leigh, sbe accepted the situation. Mr. Oscar Leigh was very short, and had ahoulders of nuequol height, and a light hunch on his back. His face was long and hollow cheeked. The eyes small nd black, and piercingly bright. His ex pression was saturnine, sinister, cruel. His teeth were fang-like and yellow. His voice hollow when he spoke low, and harsh when be raised It. His breath came in short gasps now and then. He drooped towards the right side, and carried a abort and unusually thick stick, with huge rugged and battered crook. Miss 4Jrace would have pitied him only for bis impudent glances. Sbe would have loath--ed him only she could not forget that his .deformities were deserving of pity. Tbe bargain was there and then completed, and It bad been arranged that she shonld go to Eltham House that day week. This night that was now upon her and round ber, this doll, dark, hearr-perfnm-ed, rain-drowned midsummer night, was the night of that day week. Only one week lay between the visit of this hunch back and this day. This morning she had left Chicago and seen Mlllway for the first time in ber life. She had got there at noon and driven straight to El tham House. The hire of the cab bad made considerable inroad on tbe money la her pocket Tbe sum waa now reduced to only a few cents more than ber mere train fare to Chicago. When she got there she would have to walk home. Oh! walking home through the familiar streets thronged with everyday folk, woald be so delightful compared with this bleak, solitary Eltham Honse. this hideous, in solent, monstrous, deformed dwarf. Jt waa impossible for her to stay at El tham House, utterly Impossible. This sun Leigh had told her he shonld see lit tle or nothing of her at the place, and yet when she reached the house his was tbe first face and figure ahe laid eyes on. He had opened the door for her and wel comed her to Eltham House, and on tbe very threshold he had attempted to kiss her! Great heavens! it waa Incredibly horrible, but it was true! Tbe first man who had ever dared to try to kiss her was this odious beast, this misshapen fiend, this scented monster! And yet she was on her way back to Eltham House! There was no alterna tive. She bad nowhere else to go. For lack of courage and money ahe could not venture upon an hotel Sbe had never been from home alone before, and she felt as if she were in new planet. She was not desperate, bat she was awkward, timid, afraid. Wet and lonely as tbe night was: -he would have preferred walking about till morning rather than return to that house, jsjl the time she was in the house Leigh fcad forced his odious. Insolent attentions opoe ber. lis had Inin in wait for ber with expostulation for her prudery In not Bowing him to welcome ner in parriar thal fashion to bis bouse! Patriarchal fashion, indeed! He had himself said he gnew he wss not an Adonis, bat that fat was not a -Methuselah either, and his rr, simple, paralysed mother told hei was thirty-live years old. She would ot take all the money Is the world to Stay in honse to which he waa free. At tight o'clock that evening she had plead ed fatigue and retired to her own room for the night. When she found herself aloe with thy door locked, be th.jght ever the events of the day and ber posU tion, and in tbe end made np ber mind to escape and return to town at once. Sbs wrote a line to the effect that she was going, and placed it on the dressing table by tbe window. Her room, was on the ground floor, and the window wide open. She could crasf In and change ber wet boots and clothe ind sit np in the easy chatr till morning. Tben sbe could stesl away again, walk t the railway station and take the first train for the city. From the time tbe girl cleared th straggling outskirts of tbe tows until sbe gained the high hedge and gateway f her destination ahe did not meet ot overtake a soul. With serious trepida tion, she pushed the gate open and enter rd the grounds. She emerged from ths cover of the trees and hastened across the open drive. Thank heaven, the win Jow was open! After a severe struggle sbe found herself in tbe room. With great caution she searched where she knew Ler trunk lay open, found ths garments she needed, aud replaced bet tret clothing with dry. She resolved ta sit still. It was eleven o'clock. It would be bright daylight In a few hours. As soon as the sun rose she should, if ths rain had ceaied, leave the bouse and wander about in the bright open daylight until time to ak tbe first train for Chi men Mhe sat with her back to the nartV lion between ber and the dining room. She bad not dared to move the heavy chair for fear of making noise. "Have you done, Oscar f" "Yes, mother. I have finished for tb night." Edith Grace sat up in her chair and gasped with terror. The words seemed spoken at ber ear. The voices were those of Oscar 1-elgh, tbe hunchback dwarf, and his mother, Mrs. I.eigh. the paralyzed old woman! "Yes." the v..lce ot the man said, "1 J have made the drawings and calculations. It lias taken me time a great deal ol time, mother. Hut I am right. 1 have triumphed, i generally am right, moth er. 1 generally do triumph, mother." Hi spoke in a tone of elation. "But you art tired. It baa been a long day for you." "No, Oscar. I am feellug quite well nd lively and strong to-night. For an old woman, who has lost tbe use of ber limbs, I keep very well. When you are with me, I do not seem so old, my son." "Old! Old!" be cried, with harsh, em phatic gayety. "You are not old, mother! You are a young woman. You are a girl, compared with the old women I know. l" to sixty-five a woman ages faster than s man, but once over sixty-fire, womei grow young again. Mother, I mean to as tonish you soon. I mean to marry a very handsome wife. 1 have one in my ey already. You know I never make up my mind to do anything that In the end docs not come off. But before 1 marry I must finish my great work. When I have put the last touches to It I shall sell It for S large sum, and retire from business, sod live here with you, mother, at my ease." "And when, my dear, do you think thi great clock will be finished? It is ths only thing in tha world I am jealous ot Have you added any new wonders to It?" Tbe fright bad by this time died out ol Edith's heart She now understood wht the owners of tbe voices were, why ths speakers seemed so near. Oscar Leigh was talking to his mother In the dining room. They both believed she waa la deep sleep and could not hear, or they for got the thinness of ths substance separat ing them. Between the dining room and where ahe sat was oniy the slight pans! of a folding door. CHAPTER II. "Soon, soon, mother. It shall be finish ed soon. I cannot tell exactly when, but not very far off. 1 see the end of my la bors, tbe reward of all my study, the troll of all my life," aald the voice of th hunchbacked dwarf. "About the clock," said Mrs. Leigh. "You were going to tell me what new wonders you have added to it, and when, the crowning wonder of all was to bt fixed." "Oh, ay, the clock. Ot course. Moth er, when I sell my unrivaled clock, IT give up living in the city and come dowt here to you and become a private gentle man." "But why can't you come down ana stop bers always, my Oscar? Surely your clock could be brought to Mlllway." "Dear, dear mother, I cannot move tb clock. You forget how large it Is. I bav told you over and over again it would half fill this room. Besides, I have othei business in the city I cannot leave Jus: now. I will come as soon as ever I cam Yon may take my word for that I wai going to explain to you about my marvel ons clock. Let me see. What have ! already told you?" "Oh, it was too wonderfdl to remember. Tell me over again." "Very welL To begin with, it will, ol course, measure time first of all. Tha is the principal and easiest thing to con trive. It will show the year, the month tbe day of the month, the day ot thi week, tbe boor or tbe day. the in!ni;te ot tbe hour, the second of the minite tbt tenth ot the second. AO these win bo shown oa on dial" . "That much alone pussies and aston ishes me. It will bo- tha most useful clock In ths world." "So far that Is all easy, and would not make It even a very remarkable clock, mother. It will take account ot leap years, and be constructed to ran till the year tea thousand of the Christian era." "When once wound np?" "Oh, no, you simple mother. It will have to bo wound up ovary week." "But will not the machinery wear out?" "Yes, the metal and the atones will wear out and rust out before eight thou sand years. But the principle will have eight thousand years of vitality In It Steel and brass and rubles yield to fric tion and time, but a principle Uvea for ever if it la a true principle "And a good principle," interrupted the voice of the eld woman piously. "Good or bad. If it Is trua It win last" said the Tttleo of the hunchback harshly. TieweesUnWemtiattv.B tones: "On another lace it wi'.l uii Ij.i tlme of high water in fifty great mari time cities. There will be four thousand figures of time, figures of all the great men of the past, each bearing a aymlml of his greatest work, or thought, or achieve ment, and each appearing on tbe anni versary of his death; thus there will be from eight to twenty figures visible e.-tcu day, and that 'lay will be the. anniversary of the one on which each of tbe men died years ago." "Four thousand fignres! Why, it will cost a fortune!" "Four thousand historic figures caeh presented on tbe snnivetsnry of death! I am at work on the figures of those who died on the 22d pf August Just now. Thi-r are very interesting to me, nnd one ot them is the most interesting of a'.l the four thousand figures. Richard I'lanta genet of Gloucester, commonly called Richard the Third of England, and nick named the Hunchback Tyrant," mali ciously. "Oscar!" In a tone of protest and mis ery. "Yes. Hump and all, I am now making the figure ot ths most famous hunchback In history. 1 take delight In moilelhis the flgore of my Hunchback Tyrant. In body and soul I can sympathize with him." Hs spoke furiously, and there u a sound In tbe room as if he rose. "Oh, you break my heart, my boy, my boy, my son! Don't, dou't. Yon cut on to the soul! You frighten me when you look In that way." She spoke in terror and anguish. "Break your heart, mother!" went on Leigh, in a tone of excitement. "What hurt can words do? Look at me! Mcl If I were to say my heart was broken, no one would wonder. I am not reproach ing you. Heaven knows, if I turned upon you, I should have no friend left in n!l the world. Not one who would care for me care whether I lived or died, whether I prospered or wns banged by the common hangman on a gibbet!" "Oh, Oscar! What has soured you so? You never talked in this way until now. What has changed you?" The woman was weeping through ber words. "A girl's face. A girl's face lias chang ed me. I, who bad a heart to the core of adamant befitting the crooked carenn in which It la penned and warped. Hut there! I have been vaporing, mother. Ix-t my words pass. I am myself again. I know your advice is good. I mean to follow it. I will marry a wife. I will uiurry a pretty, shapely wife. You shall have grandchildren at your knee, mother, be fore long, before yon go." "Who la she? Do 1 know her? Do I know even her name?" "All that Is my secret, mother. 1 will not say any more of bur Imt that I am accustomed to succeed, and I will succeed here. I will keep the secret of her inline In my heart to goad me on. I am accus tomed to succeed. Rest assured I will succeed in this. We will say no more of It. Let it be s forbidden subject between us until I speak of it again: until, per haps, 1 bring her to you. Ah! that ntorm has cleared the air. I was excited. I have reason to be excited to-dny. At this moment It Is now just twelve o'clock at this moment I am either succeeding or falling In one of my most importnut alms." "Just now, Oscar. Do you mean here?" "No, not here. In Chicago. You iln not believe in magic, mother V" "Surely not. What do you mean?" "Or In clairvoyance or specters?" "No, my child. Nor you, I hope." "And yet not everything not Imlf ev erythingis understood even now." "Will you not tell me of this, either?" "Not to-night, mother. You kuow 1 had a week ago no intention of eot.iins here to-day. 1 did not come to welcome Miss Grace. I had another reason for coming. I am trying an experiment to night At this moment 1 am putting the result of many anxious hours to the touch. If my experiment turns out well I shall Come Into a strange power. And now, mother. It la very late for you. We must go to bed. That patent couch still en ables you to do without aid in dressing." (To be continued.) Quickly Over. An amusing little story Is told of the summary way In which President Hop kins of Wmiamstown once disposed of the case of a student at tbe college. The young man had been married a short time previous to entering tbe col lege, and was led to fear that this fact might debar him from enjoying some of the privileges of the Institution, Ac cordingly, In a great state of perturba tion, he called to see President Hop kins, Who received him with much cor diality. , After some conversation, during which the young man suffered agonies of suspense, knowing what be must say, he at last managed to stammer, with a crimson face, apropos of some thing entirely irrelevant: "I I am a married man!" "Ah," aald President Hopkins, smil ing at him with great benignity, "sc am I." And there the student's trouble and perplexity ended. Save that the presl dent sometimes Inquired for his wife, his much dreaded statement had no con sequences whatever. All tkaV Reetralaed Him. "Do yes know that you're hindering fifty people that want to get down town to their business?" yelled the motor ban c a Wantwerth avenue car tbe aMr ntenlng ts the driver of a coal wagvn Just abseil. TOastfe all right," cheerfully respond ed the drirr. There's a lot of people walUa' tor this coal." "YenTl got there Just as quick If yon turn eut. "I cant turn out" -That's a tier Tea wouldn't tell me that if I was whan I eeoM reach yon." Tea can rsaah ma any time you want to, and yoa know ft, yon dirty faeed Algerine! You're a monopolist and a hoc aad I can a mash the mouth est ywu the heat day yon ever saw!" "If it want tor leaving my horses Nt yea wouldn't, you smutty faced whelp I" shouted the motorman. Teatf a mean, low, gum-dasted weak! Tea havent get ths decency of a newer rati Tatfre a gol-dlnged, lnslg atteaat, pnaUhutaeua, ragged, alrty, cheap skate of a tenth assistant barn yard Oeroral " "Say," latarfeaed a passenger on the ear, "thef horrible language you're ragag. For the cake ot ordinary pro priety let up, will your At tMa sasaaaat the driver of the eoal turned Maurely dewa a side aad the angry T aave talked a darned eight woree that s aim If ft badat been that Tribune. CLEVER CATS fc.- Fl.y ost tk. Pisuse aad Pcrfbrsn Msar Aaim.i.K Trick. Their names are Chuff y and SvengalU They are members of tbe cat family, and both are gentlemen. In addition they are two of the prettiest and best educated cats that ever aspired to his trionic fame. With this brief tntro luctlon as to their names and character. It Is not meet that the tale should end. The marked ability displayed by these feline gentlemen la such that none can fall to be interested. "Chuff" and "Sven." as they are familiarly called, are the pride and especial pets of Mrs. L. D. Adam, wife of a San Francises editor. Though Mrs. Adam la not de sirous of posing as an animal trainer, sbe has succeeded In teaching her two beautiful black cats to do a few tricks that are perfectly wonderful. To begin with, Chuffy. the larger, his mistress will call blm to ber and say: "Now, Chuff, r vepare for your dinner." Chuffy will immediately rear upon bis haunches, lick bla paws clean and smooth down his glossy fur. A cbalr Is then placed with Its back to the table and a plate of meat cut tn small pieces placed near It After tying a napkin around his neck, Chuffy Is ordered to take his place at the table and eat hi meaL Standing upon his haunches In tbe chair, the Intelligent animal will lean over the back of the chair, take a piece of meat In hlc paw and convey It to bk mouth. This Is continued until the meat has disappeared. Next Svengall Is given a chance to display his talent A stick about three feet In length Is held vertically, with one end resting on the floor. At the command to show bis claws "Sven" will stand on his hind feet and, dis tending his claws as far as be can, reach up and get a firm clutch on the tick. Then he will slowly lift his hind feet off tbe floor and bang at arm's length from the stick. When It comes to an Instrumental solo Chuffy Is an expert He will climb upon the stool and hammer tbe keys of tbe plsno until tbe whole room re sounds with the strains of what, from Its lack of melody, approaches very nearly to some conception of opera. "Sven" cannot be Induced to play the piano alone, but after a deal of coaxing and a bit of meat will climb upon the tool beside Chuffy and assist In a duet GEN PALMER'S BIRTHPLACE. It la Los; Cabin Pttll Standing tn Old Kentucky. Tbe old log cabin tn which John M. Palmer was born is still standing. It Is situated twelve miles north of Georgetown, Ky., about 400 yards to the right of the Lexington and Cov ington pike. The original bouse was a story and a half high, and was a square log pen. Many years ago tbe wing, which U lower than the original structure, was added, and an "L" ex tends back about thirty feet Tbe bouse waa built more than 100 years ago by a man named Slaughter, who old It about tbe beginning of this century to William Palmer, father of the Presidential candidate. On Sept 13, 1817, John M. Palmer first saw tbe light of day in thla store-and-a-balf log bouse. He lived here until about 14 years old. CORSETS IN STYLE FOR MEN. Bla Portllneaa tha Prince of Wales Said to Have Sat the Fashion. Late news from London Indicates that men of tbe smart set there are going In for corsets on a scale not even approached by tbe dandles of 1S35. The haberdashers patronized by tbe swells carry an extensive stock of men's corsets, and. while the sale of them Is limited to a comparatively email number the dfmand Is steadily Increasing, and the Indications are that a large proportion of the men in swelldom will soon be wearing them. People who make a business of study ing the motives of change in tbe fash Ions say that the wearing of corsets by men. Is the natural consequence of the edict which went forth a couple of months ago, to the effect that wom en's waists were to be larger by sever al Inches. A sudden jump from twenty-three Inches waist measurement to the more mellow figure of twenty eight inches on the feminine aide of fashion required a complete change In the apparel of the other sex. It only requires a glance at old fash Ion plates to note the fact that the styles of men and of women have al ways gone In opposite directions. Thirty-five years ago, when women wore Immensely large hoop skirts and an endless variety of bulging frills and furbelows, the attire of men waa sleek and dose-fitting. At an earlier pe riod, when masculine fashion required very wide trousers, gaudy waistcoats and loose coats, the mode for women was excessively plain. So, It women are to glory In the freedom and health fulness of large aad ample welsta the curious laws of taehlea eaaad (hat CATS WHO PI. AT TBS PI A SO. JOHY lf. PAtXnn'S BIBTHPLACB.' I , WBKX COBSBTa BECOME STTtTSB. men must gird on the burdensome yoke of the corset and endure the new agony of pinching In their waists to the minimum figure. . The fashion has not yet progressed sufficiently for any standard to be set regarding the proper waist measure ment for men. And It Is not very prob- able that such a thing will happen, fot the reason that some people attribute , . . JT . . ttt.i. the new style to the Prince of Wales and his growing corpulency. If the nraiol maant-A nf tha nrlnCA WSrS . . . . taken as the correct thing most men could face the fanblon with an easy ships of the invader. As when Plzarroovdr grace, as the girth of his royal high- came Peru. Ah whea Philip the Second ness ,s said to b. forty tWo crtU There Is little doubt that the prince , 9parUns sacrificed themselves at Thermo has taken up the corset habit not fot ; pylae. As when the Canhagenians took As the purpose of setting a new style, rhrentum A when Alexander headed the . ... " . it. .- Macedonian phalanx. As when Hannibal in- but as a matter of necessity. He , v.. Ita.T Battle of Hastings! Battle of very vain of his appearance, and with- j Valmy! Battle of Arbela! Battle of Tours! In the last year bis rapid tendency to Bottle of Borodino! Battle of Luoknow! Bat Increased wcleht has s;l ven him a world " of 8olferino! Battle ot Fontenoy where increaea weignt nas given mm a worm 100000 WWj) s,ain! g,,, of Chalons where of trouble. 300.000 were massacred! Battle of Herat THE HISTORY OF ONE GIRL, True Btory of a One-Tim. BcrTtal at a Cnmsner Reeort, Great lessons of life lie hid In the homely Incidents which occur In ahops and kitchens, as well In the loftiest . I,. .1. kink poems. Here is a true Uttle story trhlch may be a word In season to some of our readers: 4 nmoni? tha waiters A tew years ajo, among tne waiters at a summer hotel In New Jersey was a girl whom we shall call Jane. Sbs was strong, neat and quick-witted, but the had spent all of her life In a kitchen, acrubblng aud waahlng dishes, and waa impatient to do different and as aha thought better, work In the world. She could barely read and write, and oh was poor. When the hotel closed, and tbe lonely coast vas deserted by tbe summer boarders, there was no way by which she could earn a dollar. She did her work In tbe hotel thor oughly, and was quick and attentive, but her discontent showed In her face and manner. There were tlmee when she hated the ldle.richly dressed women whom sbe served, and sbe took no trou ble to hide her dislike. There was one young girl whose eyes often rested thoughtfully on her face. Jane resented her "curiosity," as eb called It and one day left ber unserv ed. When she waa mildly reproved, sbe answered Insolently, and left th room trembling with rage. "I will have her discharged," aald the young girl's father, angrily. "No, father, no. Leave her to me," his daughter entreated. Tbe next morning Jane was standing by her chair when Miss B. appeared. She waa very pale, but her voice waa steady. "I -wish to beg your pardon before these ladies. I Insulted you be- fore them yesterday. . You might have reported me, but you aid not I will leave the hotel. I am not fit to be here." "Go on with your work, Jane," aald Hiss B., gently, "and favor me by com ing to my room fnls afternoon." When she eaw her alone, she said. "There Is good stuff In you, or you could not have conquered yourself as you did to-day. Ton are fit for higher work than that you are doing. I have watched you for some time. Ton are Intelligent neat, and have warm sym pathies. You would, I think, succeed as a trained nurse." "I have thought of that!" cried the girt. "But I have no education. How can I get the training?' Miss B. used ber Influence to give ber a year's schooling, and then procured her admittance to the New York train-1 ments inndei. woa gave out one revelation n iuu.i j to the human race, and these men have been JL . . . . ! trying to destroy it. Many of the books, This woman is now tbe head or a pri- j magazines and newspapers, through ner vate hospital In New York, to Which I petual scoff at Christianity, nnil soma of th. surgeon, send patients who require un- j VtT0, usual care and Skill In treatment She herself told this story, How few apparently among the many unhappy, poor girls give such faithful work aa to attract notice! How few also among the many happy, rich girls give notice or help to those who serve them! The Agile xonng Crocodile. The moment that a young crocodile breaks Its shell It Is to all Intents and purposes as active as It la at any time during Its life. It will make straight for the water, even if it be out of eight and a good distance off, and It will pur sue its prey with eagerness and agility during tbe first hour of Its free exist ence. How He "Made Himself Solid. Here Is a story of the English lord chief Justice: When be was still known as Sir Charles Russell be went to Scot land to help the Liberals In a certain campaign. He purposely began his speech with some very badly pro nounced Scotch. After the confusion caused by hla apparent blunder had subsided Sir Charles said: "Gentlemen, I de not speak Scotch, but I vote Scotch." Tremendous applause followed. Eight Hundred Barrels of Sliver. The cellar of tbe Bank of France re sembles a large warehouse. Silver coin la stored there In 800 large bar rels. Heroines wltb Fair Hair. Many of the most lovable heroines of history have been represented with fair hair. a old man never knows how spright ly he can be until his hat blows uS his head, aad skips off la the direction ef BBS REV. DB, TALMAGE. Tbe Eminent Divine's Sunday Discourse. SnrJeet: "Armageddon. Text: "And h gathered them together Is s place calld in tha Hebrew tongue, Arma ge idon." Uev. xvi.. 16. MegMdoia the oawi of a mountain tha looks down upon Esdnelon, tbe greatest hatth-fielii that the world bas ever seen. There Barak fouirht tbe Cuaanitee; then JjZULean foneht the Mi linnitea; there Josiab ougni me in vnaing taypnaiis. i a. wnon region stands for battle, and ths Armaged don ot my text borrows i'.s name from U, aad is her. used, not geographically, but figuratively, while setting forth the Ider that there Is to be a world's closing battle, the greatest of alt battles, compared with which tbe oooflicts of this oentury and all other centuries were lasignlncent, becauat ot tbe greater number ot combatants en gaged, tbe greater victory and the greater defeat. The exact date of that battle we do not know, an 1 the exact locality is uncer tain. I mar be in Ala, Europe, Africa, ot America; but the fact that such a battle will take place is as certain as Ood's eternal truth. When I use the superlative degree is regard tothat coming conflict, I do not forget that there have tx-eo wars all alons; on e nTe Tenrfxt S I stupendous scale. As when at Marathon Mil- ; linai bromrht on his men. not In ordinary mnrob, but In full run, upon the horse men of Persia aud tbe black ambers ol I Ethiopia, and scattered them, and crying, B . , B , . ... ' tnJ 'RHiio-Aral RtHni, flrrtl mtvt Intn flam. th. where Genghis Khan destroyed 1,600,000 lives! Battle of Nnishar where 1.747,000 went down to death! 1,816,000 slain at Troyl And American battles, too near us now to allow us to appreciate their awful grandeur and significance, except you who were there. ! facing the North or faoing the South! But ' ill the battles I have named put together j will not equal in numbers enlisted, or flerce- ! new, or grandeur, or triumph, or rout, the TOm;nsAtll)llBedl0Il whether It shall be fought with printers' type or keen steel, whether by brain or muscle, whether "y v " "" J . h d not know, and you may take what 1 say as figurative or literal, but take as certain what St. John, in his vision on the rocks of tbe Grecian archipelago, is pleased to call "Ar tnagedaon. My sermon will first mention the regiment that will be engHged in the conflict; tben will say something ot tbe commanders on both sides: and then speak of tbe battle itself an t the tremendous issues. Begin ning with those who will ng'-t oa the wrong I first mention the Regiment Dia bolic. In tula very chapter from which my IKXt is taken we are told that ths spirits ot devils will be there. How many millions ot them no one can tell, for tht statistics ot the aataolo dominions bsve never been re ported and the mil of that host has never on i-ar'.h been called: but v from the direful, and continental, and planetary work they have already doue, aad the fact that every man and woman ind child on earth bas a leuiptor. there must be at least sixteen bun drej millions of evil spirits familiar with our world. Perhaps as many more are en gaged on especial enterprises of abomina tion among the Nations and empires of tbe earth. Beside that there must be an incon ceivable ii a in ber of Inhabitants in realms paudemoniao, staying there to keep the (treat capitals ot sin going from age to age, Many of them once lived in heaven, but engaging in conspiracy to put Satan on th. throne, they were hurled out ami down, ana Ibey are now among th. worst thugs of the uui verse. Having been in three worlds, Heaven, earth and hell, tbey have all th. advantages of great experience. Their power, their speed, their cunning, their hostility wonderful beyond all statementl In the Ar mageddon they will, I doubt not, bo present In foil array. They will have no reserve soxps, but all will be at the front. There will not only be soldiers in that battle who can be seen and aimed at, but trocns Intangible without corporeity, and weapons may itrikeclarthrough them without giving them hurt. With what shout of deflanoe will they ollmb up th. ladders Of Are and leap from tn. battlements of asbestos into ths last cam paign ot bell! Paul, the bravest of all men, was impressed with their might for evil when he said, "We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities,and against power?, and against the rulers of tbe dark ness In this world, against spiritual wicked ness iu bigh places." Ob, wnat an agitating moment, when the ranks diabolic move up and take their p'aces for conflicts In the Ar mageddon! Other regiments who will march into the fight will be the Regiment Alcoholic. They will be made of tbe brewers' companies, dis tillery owners and liquor dealers' aasocia- ; Hods, and th. hundreds of millions of their t natrons. inese minions oi victims ot aioo- : hoi joined by tne millions of th. victims ot arrack, tn. spirituous liquor oi unina ana ."f'f Arnbi"' Hna Egypt' "nd C"rloD' Other regiments who will march Into the flght on the wrong side will be the Begi- j of n those regiments. Voltaire, who closed his life of assault upon Christianity by writ ing: "Happiness is a dream, and only pain Is real. I have thought so lor eighty-tour years, and 1 know no better p'.an than to re sign myself to the inevitable and to reflect that flies ate boru to be devoured by spider and man to be consumed by care. I wish I had never been born." Oh. tb. Qod-foi saken regiments of infidels, who, after hav ing spent their life antagonizing the only in fluence that could make tbe earth better, gather with their low wit and their vile sneet and tbeir learned idiocy and their horrible blasphemy to take part against uoa ana righteousness in the great Armnged-lont Other regiments who will maroh in oa the tbe wrong side in tb. battle will b. tb. Kegl ments Mohammedan. At tha present tlin. there are about one hundred and seventy live mill.on Moslems. Tbeir plain mission Is to kill Christians, demean womanhood, and take possession of the earth in tb inter ml ot ienorance. suDerstition. and moral flltb. The massacre of fifty thousand Ar menians in tbe last two or three years is only one chapter In their effort to devastate tha earth ot everything but themselves. Bo determined are tbev in tbeir bad work that nil the Nations of the earth put together dare not say to tbero, ".Stop or we will make you jtop." My hope is that long before that last battle of which I speak, th. Turkish Government, and with it Mohammedanism, may be wioed out of existence. The TurkUh power of tbe last four hunlred years baa been tbe tnirhtiest hindrance on earth to re ligious liberty and moral improvement. Het extermination is nroDheied in th. Book ol Bevelation in tb. Sgure ot the drying up ol the Blver Euphrates, and she is going rapid- ly, thank Godl But if the Bibl. prophecy concerning th. drying up ot th. Euphrates is not fulfilled before tbe battle mentioned in my text, Mohammedanism will march is with sword, and poison, and torch to tak her part in tbe great Armageddon. l'ea! to show tbe magnitude of tbs forest on th. wrong side, I have to tall yoa what if left of heathenism at that time will maroi into tbe conflict Then sr. on hundred and fifty million fetish Idolaters, two hnn dred and twenty million Brahmins, fom hundred million Buddhists. Through thi rubitmest movement ot this century, thi missionary movement, ail th tlm gather tog in momentum, I believe all, or nearlj ail. of thM savsn hundred and swvanty mill ions of heathendom will be converted to God. But tost which u not oonvjrtsjj ry edtne Into thi AjmagMdon on tn. wrong Jde. o- . Other regiments on that wrong aid. will b mad. np ot offenders of all sorts th. d franders, the libert nes, the dynamiters, tht Anarchists, th. oppressors and the foes ol sooiety, th. criminals ot all Nations, bj whatever nam. they are now called, oi shall then be called. They mav not before that hav. openly taken aides, but tben they will M compelled to take sides. Wltn wnat venom, with what violence, with what des peration they will fall into line at the great Armageddon) I it not appalling, these naeonnted regiments ot the earth, to be Joined by th. uncounted regiments from per Jltlon? Can any power oope with them? Especially when I tell you who their com mander U, for so mnch in all wars depends upon the ohieftaln. Their leader will not be a political aomdoat or a military "hap pen so." By talent, and adroitness and courage, and unceasing Industry he has some to th bad eminence. He disputed the throne ot heaven with th. Almighty, but no one has ever disputed the throne of eter nal night with this monarch who will In the last battle take the field In person. Miitoa nails him Lucifer, Goethe calls him Mephls topb.les, tbe Hebrew call) blm Abaddon, th Greek calls him Apollyon. He 1 the imper sonation of all malevolence, of all oppres sion, of all cruelly. The summing up of all falsehood. In his makeup nothing bad was left out aad nothing good was pat In, and b. is to be th. General, the Commander-in-Chief of all the forces on the wrong side ot th great Armageddon. He has bean in more battles than you have ever read about, and h. has gained more victories than have ever been celebrated In thU world. But I guess this old warrior of Pandemonium will not have an undisputed field. I guess there will be an army to dispute with his forces. I hav. mentioned the supremacy ot this world. I guess our troops will not have to run when, on tha day mentloued in my text, all tb. Infernal batteries shall be unlimbered. We bav. been reviewing the troops diabolic. W. have been measuring the calibre of tbeir guns. We bav. been ex amining tbeir ammunition wagons. Kov let us look at th forces to be marshalled In the Armageddon on the right side. First of all. I mention tbe Regiments Angelic Alas! that th. subject of demon ology seems better understood than th. subject ot angelology. But the glorious spirits around the throne and all the bright immortals that UU the galleries and levels of the universe are to take part in that last great flght, and the Resri ments Angelio are tbe only regiments capable of meeting th. Beglments Plutonic To show you some thing ot an angel's power, I ask you to consider that just one ot them slew one hundred and eighty-five thousand of Sen nacherib's hosts in a night, and it is not a tough arithmetical question to solve, if one angel can slay on hundred and eigbty-flv. thousand troops in a night, how many can Ave hundred millions of them slay' The old Book says that "They excel in strength." It is not a celestial mob, but a discipted host, and tbey know their rank. Onerabim, seraphim, thrones, principali ties and powers! And tne leader of those regiments In Michael tha Archangel. David aw just on. group of angels sweep past, and tbey war. twenty thousand charioted, Paul, who in th. Oamaliun college bad bis faculties so wonderfully developed, con fesses bis incapacity to count tnom by say ing, "Ye ar. come to Mount Zion and. an Innumerable company ot angels." It each out on earth has a guardian angel, then there must be sixteen hundred million angels oa earth to-day. Beside that, heaven must be full of angels, those who Nay there; not only the twelve angt-ls who, we are told, guard the twelve gates, but those angels who help in tbe worship, aud go on mission from mansion to mansion, and help to build th hosannas and enthrone the hallelujahs and roll the doxologlesof tha twice that never ends. But they all, if re quired, will be In the last tight between holiness and sin. rleavtn could afford to adjourn, just on. day, and empty all its temples, and mansions, and palaces, and boulevards into that one battle. Tbe next regiments that I see marching Into the flght will be the Regiments Ecclesi astic According to the last accounts, and practically only la the beginning- of the gos pel movoment which proposes to take the whole e&rtnioruoa, there are lour million six hundred thousand Methodists, three million seven nunored ana twenty-nve thou sand Baptists, one million two hundred and eighty thousand three hundred and thirty three Presbyterians, one million two hundred and thirty thousand Lutherans, and six hundred ana forty thousand fcpihcopallans. But the present statistics of churches will be utterly swamped when, after all the great denominations have done their best work, the slowest ol au tn. sects win nave more numbers than lb present enrollment of all denominations throughout Christendom. I i them moving Into th. ranks, carrying a Standard striped and starred; striped as sug gesting Him by whose stripes we are hea e 1. and starred as with the promise that those who turn many to righteousness shall shine as tb. stars, forever and ever. Into that battle oa our side will roll those mighty engines ot Kwar, tne printing presses ot unnstendom. to that battle will also mov. th. mightest telasoopes. that shall bring th stars in their courses to fight for our God. Again, th. Kegiments Elemental will rami Into that battle on the right side. Tha winds! God showed what He oould do wii n them when the splintered timbers of ths ships of the Spanish Armada were strewn on tbe rocks of Scotland, Norway and the Hebrides. Tbe waters! He showed what He oould do with them when He put the whole earth under them, leaving it subaqueous one hundred and flrty days. The earthquakes! He showed what He coil id do with them when He let Caracas drop into the open mouth of horror and the islands of tbe sea went into entombment The lightnings! He showed what He oould d- with them when He wrapped Mount Sinai in flame, and we hav. all seen their flashing lanterns moving with tbe chariots ot tbe midnight hurricane. All th. BsgimentsElemental will come in our side in th. great Armageddon. Come and let as mount and ride along the line, and review the troops of Emanuel, and find that the Begiments Terrestrial and Celestial that coins into that battle oa th. right side are, as com parad with those on the wrong si te, two to one, a hundred to one, a thousand to one. But Wh9 is the Command.r-in-Chirif on this side? Splendid arm es have been ruined, caught in traps, flung over precinices. and annihilated through tb. inoompeteno. or treachery of tbeir general. Who com mands on our side' Jebov ih-Jlrh' so called in one placa. "Captain of Salvation," so-called In another place King ot king. Lord of lords. Conqueror of conquerors. His eye omniscient His arm omnipotent. He will taks the lead. Ha will draw tbe sword. He will give the comman 1. And when He plants His foot for the combat, th. foundations ot th. earth will quake, and When He shall give tbe battle shout, all tha gates of bell will tremble. Bat do not let ns shout until after w have seen the two armies clash In th. last strug gle. Ob, my soul! Th. battle of all time and all eternity opens. "Forward!" For ward!" Is tbe command on both sides given. Th. long lines of Doth armies waver, r. d swing to and fro. Swords of truth ogalu-i engines Infernal. Black horse cavalry ot per dition against white horse cavalry oi heaven. Tbe redemption of this world and the honor of tbe throu. of God to vindicate, h w tre mendous is th. battle! The army of rigbt ousneM seems giving away; but nn It is only a part of th. maootuvra of I be infinite fight. It (s a dep.oy of the host c--lctial. What a meeting In tbls n-l-l ot ap'endor and wrath, ot the aug-ls, un i of the Siabolic, of hosanna and blasphemy, of song and cone, of thediviu and the samnii-. Tbe thunderbolts ot the Almigiily bur t and blaze upon the foe. Boom! Boi-id' By the torches of lightning Ibat illuminated tha soens I see that the crisis ot tha Arma geddon has com. It Is the turning point j Ol fniB Jfisc Dattie. X un ukjlv jji-jjm--ui mil deci-te nil. Ave! th. 1on of Apollyon ar breaking ranks. See' 8ae! Tliey fly! Some on foot, some on wing; they fly. Back over the battlements of perdition tbi-y go down with Infinite crash, all tha Regi ments Diabolic! Back to th mountain: and caves the armed hosts ot earth, crying as ihey retreat to the rocks and mountains, "Fall on us and hide as from the face of Him that sittetb upon th throne, and from tb wrath of th Lamb, for tbe great day of His wrath ha com, and who shall be able to stand." And while Apollyon. the prisoner of war, I being dragged in chains to his dungeon, and oar Conqueror Is r moaottng His throne, I look off upon th battlefield, end among the slain I aad th of Mohammedanism, and Par-an- lsm, and Atheism, and inndeuiy. and i-Hs-sipatioo, aud Fraud, and muliitn-linous Wrong, screwing the plnin, aud I hear the angel that standeth in the sun crviug iu the words ot Bevelation, to all the fowl that fly In the midst of heaven the eagles, and the vultures, and the hawks, and the a-ba-trosses "Come and gather yourselves to gether unto the supper ot the preitt God. that ye mav eat the flesh of kiu4, au-1 the flesh ot captains, and the flesh ot mighty men, and tbe fleah ot horses, an 1 ol them that sit on thorn." The prophesiet Armaceddon of the text has been fougnt, aud Christ and His follow ers have won tbe day. The kingJons of this world have become tht kingdoms ol our Lord and His Christ. All the Christian workers of our time, yoa, my bearers, an t you. my readers, and all the C'hr-stian work ers of all tbe ages, have helped ou the magnificent result, and the victory is ours -as much as theirs. This moment inviting all outsiders, through the ransomed blood of tho everlasting Covenant, to get into the ranks of tb. conquerors, aud undur the ban ner ot our Leader, I shall not close the ervloa with prayer, as we usually lo, but immediately give out the Moravian Hymn, by James Montgomery, approprnl wliuu written in 1819, but more appropriate in 1896, and ask you, with full voices, as wel' as with grateful hearts, to chaul It. Bee Jehovah's banner furl'd, Sheathed Hissword; lie speaks 'tis dons And tbe kingdoms of this world Ar th kingdoms of His Son. HUNTING GIANT FOSSILS. Remains of Prehistoric Quadruped. from the Kocklea. Prof. Henry Fairfield Osborn, curator f Vertebrate Paleontology In the American Museum of Natural Ulster, contributes a paper on "Prehistoric (Quadrupeds of the Rockies" to the Cen tury. The article is Illustrated by drawings by Charles Knight, giving careful reconstructions of these strange beasts. Prof. Osborn says: Before de scribing the animals themselves, w may stop to note what our present' knowledge of them has cost In human skill and endurance. Every one of these pictures la drawn from a com plete skeleton hewn out of tbe solid rock, and each of these skeletons repre sents years and years of arduous ex ploration in which Wortman, Hatcher, Peterson and others sent out by tha American Museum, by Princeton, or by Yale, have become famous. Our party found tho Tltanothcre In a broiling alkali canyon of South Dakota. Its head was protruding from a hard Hand tone cliff, and the chest, limbs ana trunk were chiseled out by the men under a rude shelter which lowered tho noon temperature to 108 degrees. They were encouraged to think that tho whole beast had been mired In a stand ing position. This was probably the cass originally, but suddenly they came across a fault; It appeared that the bin 1 limbs had been swept away; nod It re quired two years' more searching be fore bones of an animal of u corre sponding size were secured. Every other skeleton has Its own story of de termination, disappointment and sur prise. The old lake basins, once on sea level, and enriched by the moist, balmy winds of the Pacific, are now elevated from four to live thousand feet. The. only redeeming feature of their present as pect of absolute barrenness is that the absence of vegetation leaves the old graves and burying grounds bare. Fos sil bones and skeletons are not plentiful far from It; but a train h! eye sees it (Teat distance alon; tbe bare gullies, cliffs and canyons, and yonr dally scramble of fifteen to twenty miles en ables yon to prospect over a vast stretch. You are off in tbe morning, stiffened by a frosty night. You know by sad experience that the ice In the. basin does not promise a conl day. Yonr backbone is still freezing while the aun begins to broil and blister your skin, and you are the living embodi ment of the famous dessert sc-rved by the Japanese a hot crust without, an Ice within. Yonr trail begins on tbe upland, which may be the actual level ot the old lake bottom; and as If walk ing1 through a graveyard, you never look for bones until tbe land breaks away by erosion. When you reach the edge of this up land, you look off Into a sea of rock, sometimes wild beyond description, and you plunge down tbe slope to a certain level. Then you follow this level round and round and In and out. Here you are on a seam which bears fossils. Above and below It are other similar fosslliferous seams, and between llieui are barren seams where you wi'l not find a bone If you search till doomsday. This level, perhapa, reiireseiita the delta of a great mountain river which swept the animals out with coarse sand, pebbles and debris. Sometimes you walk miles and miles, up and down, day after day, and see nothlDg-hut com mon turtle bones, which are so decep tive and tempting at a distance that the fossil hunter profanely kicks them aside. Turtles are found everywhere because they swam out, basked In tha sunshine in the mldlakes, and occasion ally eank to tbe bottom, while the car casses of land animals were buried in th deltas or nearer shore. In such a fossil-barren land the heut seems twice as torrid, ou the buttes your muscles and back ache doubly, your tongue Ilea parched from the last gulp of alkali water, your soul abhors a fossil, and longs for the green shnd'j of the East, and the watermelon, when, all of a sudden, a little projecting bonu strikes your wearied eye. You fall on your knees, and breathe gently on the loose sand; a little scraping, and you tee the signs of a skull perhaps of some missing link. The thrill of discov ery spreads like an elixir through your frame, and two or three 'boors later, after carefully cutting out' the prize, you walk vigorously back to-camp, ev ery Inch a man. Thus fossil hunting Is a life of vicissi tudes and emotions. Tbe fossil hunter is predestined to his work, like the sportsman. He returns East lu the au tumn, vowing he will never go back to the Bad Lands; but as the favorable months of spring come around be be comes more and more restless until bo Is off. The country that Is as hot as Hades, watered by stagnant alkali pools. Is almost Invariably tbe richest tn fossils. Here, In fact, as you fin I the greatest variety and number of bones, yon enjoy tbe most delightful . flights of the scientific Imagination; when parched and burned, you conjure before you the glories of these ancient lake.