1- -,:-.a.-- ---i-W r---i THE OON8TITUTION-THE UNI ON-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. K. 8CHWEIEH, MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. FENN A.. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 189R. NO. 47. VOL. L. CT-IAirrillt It. ttJontlnne-o. - Edith Grace beard the sound of Sin Leigh's Invalid chair moving towards the dining room door, the door open and the thalr pass down the ball and into Mrs. Iigh's bedroom; and then the dragging, lame footsteps of the hunchback on the tiles of the bark ball. Sudden! j- she beard a sound that made ber heart stand still, her breath cease to come. She grew rigid with terror. She heard a something soft sliding over the outside of her door. A hand! It touched j and rattled tue handle, A he cancue torn td, and with a low, dull sound the door opened! Leigh entered the room with slow, de liberate, limping step. She could bear the footfall of his left foot and the slight, brushing touch of b!s right foot aa he drew It after the left. "Hah!" he muttered, "how cool and re freshing the rain is. What is It I came Into tills room for? Star- Let me think. Oh, yes! my mother asked me to put the window down before I went upstairs. I will. There!" He let the window down without any regard to the noise. It smote harshly upon the sill. Edith did not move, Aid not make a sound. Leigh turned awny from the window, and began slowly re tracing his sti-ps to tho door, mattering: "Yp9. he has run away; ran away from this house a few honrs after enter ing it. Hun away, frightened, terrified by my Dullness. We shall see, Edith (race. We shall see. I did not tell my mother the name of the girl I mean to marry. She shall know It soon enough, and not all the wiles or force of man shall keep me f.otn my purpose, keep Edith Urace from me!" Oscar Leigh turneJ, fumbled for the 4oor handle, and, having found it, went aut of the room, closing and latching tb door qnietly after him. Then she heard him toilfuliy, ponderously, going upstairs. Presently a dour above was closed, and complete silt-tire fell npon the honse. The pell lifted from the girl, and she sank back In the chair with a tremulous, heavy algh of relief. CHAPTER III. Edith did not know how long she sat with her face covered with her bands. When she took them from before her face and looked at the window it was light. Oscar Leigh had lowered the win dow. She cangbt the sash and raised It very gently. In a mlnnte she was ontsidu the gate Oil tbe r.pen road. She closed the gate noiselessly behind her, and hastened away. In five minutes she located the village, and in an hour she was at the railroad depot. Tbe city-bound train was wait ing. She bought a ticket and went into the rear coach. No one else was yet aboard, and entering the last seat, she sat far back In Its dim corner. Now the full effect of ber long walk,, the reaction from the excitement of the night and want of sleep fell npon her with leaden weight of drowsiness. Other passengers began to arrive, but she did not even open her eyes to observe them. One of the newcomers paused as he saw her, stared vaguely, end qnietly sat down in the eat opposite across tbe aisle. In less than a mlnnte the train steamed ont of the station. The girl slept on with a mile of relief and deliverance around her fresh yoong month. Tbe traveler was a short, deformed man, and carried a heavy, crooked walk ing stick. Fot a few minutes after the train began to move he remained with out moving. The girl slept bavlly, sway ing slightly from side to side with the mo tion of tbe train; ber two gloved hands lay placidly on her lap. Between the thumb and forefinger of her right hand was the ticket she had bought, represent ing all the money she had had. When the trala had been live minutes on its way and bad gained its full speed the man leaned toward the sleeping girl, and, with infinite gentleness and care, drew the ticket out of her band, keeping his eyes on ber eyelids the whole time. Without taking bis eyes off her face he raised his right hand, tbrnst it, holding the ticket between his thumb and finger, out of the carriage window, and dropped the ticket into the rushing air. Then he sat back In his corner opposite Edith, and sighed and smiled. CHAPTER IV. - It was early in the afternoon the same day. The rain of the night before had been general. It had fallen heavily in the city and washed and freshened the dusty, parched streets. Even Ohetwynd street, a third-rate thoroughfare, looked - gay In comparison with its usual squalor, for it had been scoured clean and sweet ined by the waters of heaven. The two most prosperous shopkeepers In the place were Mr. Williams, landlord .of the public bouse, and Mr. Forbes, baker, at the opposite corner. Mr. Wil liams' house was all glitter and bright ness on the ground floor, it had two large plate glass windows, divided only by a green and gilt iron pillar. Mr. Torbes was not so lavish of glass or gas light as his neighbor. His only window on the shop floor was composed of panes of moderate si2. Beyond the shop door, was another door belonging to him; the door to the staircase and dwelling part of the house above the shop For the second floor he had a most re spectable tenant, who paid his rent with punctuality, and gave no trouble at all. There were three rooms on the second or top floor. A sitting room, a bed room and a K ork shop. Tbe tennnt of the top floor of the bakery was Mr. Oscar Leigh. The room over the hall wjis bis bedroom; to- room aver the store was nis sirring room; roe loom looking into the street was his a-ork shop. That Thursday afternoon he walked ilowly along Chetwynd street, nodding pleasantly to those he knew slightly, and exchanging cheerfnl greetings with those he knew better. When he came to the public house be entered. "Good afternoon, Mr. Williams,". said the newcomer, wriggling up on a high, sane-seated stooL ,. "Good afternoon. Mr. Leigh," e'd the landlord In a gracious and pleasant voice. "Very hot walking out of doors." "Very. Wil' yon have a brandy" "It's almost too hot. But 1 will, as rou are kind enough to ask me." The landlord busied himself getting the drinks, and then set them on the counter. The hunchback drained his glass at one draught, the landlord sipped him. j "I wanted that badly," said Leigh, j "What's the matter, Mr. Leigh? Any ' thing wrong down in. the country?" "No, no. 1 feel better already. Give me another. I'm tired. I've had such s morning. t'p to this point of the conversation it had been obvious the two men were not ipeaking freely. Now suddenly. Leigh leaned over the counter and spoke In a whisper: "Did you watch?" he asked, keenly and anxiously. "I did." "At between twelve and one?" "Ves." "And did yon see anything?" tremu lously. "I did," stolidly. "What?" "You told me a man was to come and wind up yonr clock, as near to twelve as could be, and you asked me to watch him and see that he was sharp to his hour and that he wound up the machinery by the left-hand lever close to the window." "Quite right. I wanted to find out If the fellow would be punctual and do my work for me while 1 was away in tbe country." "I saw a man sitting In your place, and in a few seconds be began to wind up tho machinery." "I am most desirous to know all facta, nil you saw. Yon know how well I have guarded the eorets of my great clock. I am most anxious that no one but this man who wound the clock for me last night should learn anything about It." "And can't he tell everybody if he cores to betray you?" "Not very well. He cannot. He is deaf and dumb, and can't write," with a tri umphant smile. "We were shut a minute before half pnst twelve by my own watch. 1 kept my eyes on him until half-past twelve. He mait have turned out the light before he got up. fur the gus went out at bait past twelve. Just as he stopped working tiae lever." "Well, rou have dune me a good turn in keeping your eye on that fellow for me, and you're going to do me another good turn by saying nothing about it. Hare you ever heard auything of Al berttis Magnus?" "No." "Albortus Magnus was a man who studied niagio, one if tbe greatest of tbe magicians of eld. He attributed wonder ful powers to the powdered aspbaltum oi mummies, the old pitch which tbe ancient Egyptians poured hot over the dead. It was used by the Egyptians to prevent the ravages of time upon the faces of th dead. Now, 1 am going to paint the dials of my clock with mummy pitch te prevent time ravaging the faces of my clock." "I always said, Mr. Leigh, that you were a wonderful, a most wonderful man." "And to-day I bought a mummy, the mummy of a- great Egyptian prince, fot I mast have good mummy aspbaltum to preserve the faces of my clock from the influence of time. ' CHAPTER V. - When Oscar Leigh emerged from the door of the public house he moved rap idly along tbe front of Forbes' bakery until be reached the private entrance tc that bouse. Then be 'opened the dooi with a latch key ana entered. He as cended the stairs, found himself oppo site the door of his flat, opened that door with another latch key, and went In. The little man slammed the door behlsd him, came to the sitting room, passed through it, then through tbe sleeping chamber beyond and thence Into the workshop or clock room. The latter door he unlocked with a small patent key. He pushed tbe door open very cautiously. Some small object placed on the Inside against theaiocr, fell with a slight noise. It was caused by the overturning of a small metal egg-cup on the floor. It had been so placed that the door could not be pushed open from the passage without upsetting it: "Here is conclusive proof thst my sanc tuary has been inviolate wbile I hav been from home," be muttered. "Pool Williams! A useful man in bis way. very. A worthy soul 1 have succeeded in my first great experiment. I wondet bow it goes with my dnmb deputy ul last night? Ha-ha-ha!" He turned away from tbe door and confronted a thicket of shafts and rodi and struts and girders and pipes aut pulleys and wheels and drums and chaini and levers and cranks and weights anc springs and ennes and cubes and bnmnier and cords and bands and bells and hel lows and gongs and reeds, through all oi which moved a strange weird tremulous ness and plaintive perpetual low sounds and little whispers of air aid motion, at though some being, feltherto uncreated, were about to take visible life out of in ertia, and movv in the form of a vast har monious entity in which ail this distract ing detail of movement would emerge Into homogeneous life. The framework of tbe clock consisted of four upright polished steel pillars, which touched the celling of the room about nine feet from the floor. One side of the parallelogram measured twelve feet the other ten. The sole window In the room was in the middle of one of the larger sides of the parallelogram, and could be approached only through tbe body of the clock Itself. The body of the clock close by the window was not fully filled op with mechanism, and this free space, combined with tbe embrasure of the window, made a small Interior cham ber, in which were a stout bigh-b.icked easy chair, and an oak watchmaker's bench. The framework of the clock was secured to the floor by screws. After a long and searching look through the metallic network of the machine. Oscar Leigh sat down on the chair, and gar kteMif ip to theaght. . .. "Ay," be said, crossing one of his short legs over the other. - "I have succeeded so far in my labors here. 1 began my rlork as an excuse, aa a cloak to cover any other matter that might come my way. It has grown on me from day to day, from week to week, from mouth to month, from year to year, until it has welled in size and effiescy altogether be yond my original designs or desires.- I wished to have a slave that might be used as an excuse for solitariness and eccen tricity in dealing quietly in precious met als and precious stones, and now I Und myself face to face with a master. Whith er will this master lead me? I do not know. I do nol care. 1 first intended this room as a chamber of mystery; it has be come a cave of magic. My heart ought to be drank with Joy. My heart would be drunk with Joy only for " He paused and waved his band before his eyes as if to clear tbe air before him. . "Only for that girl. This mere girl, this mere Edith Urace, this mere Edith Grace whom I have seen. What noise Is that in the street? Something out of the common." He canght bold of one of tbe polished steel pillars that formed the framework of the breathing machine and dropped his chin on his misshapen chest. "With care I could now become rich no matter how. A fortnight ago I brought all my arrangements to perfection. 1 have hit upon a plan for transcending the won ders of mystery gold with its tin and platinum and copper Imposture. I have hit npon a plan of making miracle gold) A fortnight ago 1 had made up my mind to go on with its manufacture. I am but a weak, fickle creature. 1 who had been so firm and strong, and whole hearted! I advertise for a companion for my pool old mother and I see this girl, this Edits Grace, with her airs and graces and high notions. And now she will not hare me, she will not r;st under the roof to whlcb I am free, she flies from me as from vllt contagion, and I am driven back upon this miracle gald. Timmona will be her with some of it to-night. That is the first step on the way down. Ah, there's that noise again below. Let me see what It Is." ; (To be continued.) BETRAYED HIMSELF. The Merchant's Bluff Indicated Bis Traa Standing- to Hi. Creditors. " 'Tls truo as the book," says a Mains lawyer, "that more crimes are discov ered through the efforts made to pre vent discovery than In any other way. Tbe mind of the wrongdoer is not sat lsfled with simply keeping still. It li nneasy and overcautious, and leads Its owner pretty surely to do some act h would not hare done if Innocent In Just the same way shrewd business men read the minds of their debtors, Let an apparently prosperous man be come seriously Involved, and very often he will try to screen his real situ ation by doing things that Imply a solvent condition, all for the purposs i of deceiving bis creditors. "A quarter of a century ago I was j practicing in a western Maine village, and among my Intimate frlenda was t young merchant who had apparently been doing a very successful businesi for several years. His credit was a good as almost anybody's In the town. To my great surprise one evening there came to me the principals of two largs Portland firms, to whom my friend was Indebted, and they requested an Imme diate attachment of his stock of goods I protested that such a course was un just and unnecessary. Then one ot the merchants explained that a day or two previous he had received a let tcr from their debtor in whlcb be ca sually mentioned some proposed actios of his which would involve a consider able outlay of money. He didn't be lieve tbe man really Intended any such outlay, and be asked himself. 'Why hat he mentioned this?' Conferring with his neighbor, he found the young man bad at the tame time written bim an exactly similar letter.. That was enough, and they decided to sue. Feel ing almost sure they were wrong,, I bad the attachment made, so aecretl) that none knew of It except those im mediately concerned. The young mer chant was Immensely surprised, and. at once got friends to become his se curity on the Portland debts. . But the developments of the next few months showed conclusively that the merchants bad rightly read the meaning of tha unusual letter and that their debtor's affairs were at that time rotten to tbe core. Only their prompt action saved their claims which together amounted to something more than a thousand dol lars." Lewlston Journal. The formation of good hablt9 early II life becomes the imperative duty of every person. The business man real izes Its priceless value In business hab its; the educationalist recognizes Its' essentials Jo. good scholars ii'.p. Out" proper life depends more jupon common sense habits than anything e!sv In-all departments of life 'audirctivlty man. Is a creature of habit. The rmtverte-is timed to good habits. '. The law of habit makes all things asy. IJabtf' makes good deeds easy.and baj'oiie difficult. Key. Rcnen Thomas.' We should manage our fortuue like our constitution; eujoy it when good, have patience when bad, aod never ap ply violent remedies- but in cases of necessity. Tbe i-eats in one of the city perks of Memphis, Tend., are upholstered, sou th vagabonds of the city .find them Ojmfm table lounging places. A man has no more right to say an uncivil thing than to act one: fio more right to say a rude thing to another than to knock him down. The man who hesitates-' before lie makes a promise ia tbe one who is most apt to keep it. We want no time, but diligence, far great performances. A flowering plant ia said -to abstract from the soil two hundred .times its own weight in water. . history is a mighty drama, enacted upon tbe theatre of Time, with suns for lamps and Eternity for a back ground. It ia very rare that a man at sixty begins any new habits, or gets ..rid of any old ones. A moment is room wide enough for loyal and mean desire, for the oatlaah of a murderous thought and the sbarp backward stroke of repentance Many a man owes the success be ha achieved in this life, not only in having lived correctly, but in having died in good season. NIGHT IN A RAILWAY COACH. Wecoattorta of Os Who Deeea't Take) a Sleeper. Not many days ago I had occasion to go from New York to Chicago. I slipped Into an ordinary coach and sat down, placing my satchel and over coat beside me. Across the aisle two hulking fellows sattogetberand swapped lies In strident tones about some brummagem festivity they bad recently trended. Behind SPlTTISO TOBACCO JTICB. me another fellow o the same class sat alone and c-ewed tobacco with a degree of Industry worthy a better cause. Ia front, a quiet, modest-looking little woman sat with a restless child ef perhaps, 2 years of age. Her garment were ef good material and rather stylish pattern, but I was close enough to sea that they showed long wear, aad scrupulous care could not hide the darns. The wearer bad seen better days, without doubt Her face looked tired already, and she glanced about now and then la a deprecatory way, aa if she would much prefer te be elsewhere. She was painfully con scious of the fact Three er four ap parently commercial travelers were sccattered about; half a dozen farmer-like men occupied, each of them, a doable seat, far the most part stack ed full ef hand baggage of the most heterogeneous description, ar Utter which often overflowed onto the floor and sometimes) half blockaded the aisle. The others for the coach was more than half Oiled were of the type so often sees In ordinary coaches. The afteraooa wore away, with the usual tramping back and forth through the aisle by the restless passengers, who can never be content to sit still. While tho twilight was yet strong the brakemaa lighted the lamps, there wait a rustling of paper tn various parts of the car, and then the air was perme ated with a mast aggressive odor ot bread aad cold meat, much of It In an advanced stage of stateness. The de bris of tbstse feasts attracted and sUm slated into activity a swarm.. of .$es with a habit of late hours highly rep rehensible in flies. As darkness set tled outside, some of the men removed their shoes aad some pulled down strarskjaxo vie) saoax. their windows, with the effect of start ing ' a trala of wondering thought beginning la my nose aa to how Ions It would take to smother aa average man la each aa atmosphere.and wheth er tbe odor would actually hasten as phyxiation. -. By aad by the windows were all closed except mine. The baby slept quietly, and the mother dozed, the struggling lamplight emphasizing tb Hoes. of care Jn ber prematnrelv o)d Pace. The man behind doubled him self In his seat, and now and then tmitted a snort like that of a surprised pig. The two bulking fellows across the way lapsed Into silence, nodded till they bumped each other's head, and then twisted about and; resumed nod Sing. Overcome by 'the drowsy ex ample, ' I laid my overcoat smoothly ver my satchel In the aisle end of the seat, and, doubling myself us, as was' easy In my youth, I lay down ildewlse, aad calmly went to sleep. THE CITY OF ZANZIBAR, SHOWING THE SULTAN'S PALACE. The city of Zanzibar, which- Is tbe rapital of the territory also called by that name, aits behind a rather pretty 1 arbor on the roast of the Island near est the mainland. It has a population of about 100,000 and greatly resembles), other cities of tbe Orient, which the ' Arabs rule in architecture and general ' rppearance. Ia this towo of Zansiba live some 10,000 Arabs, the masters of the people, 7.000 Hindus and East In-' dians, fifty English, fifty Germans and c few Americans, Greeks, Armenians, : Frenchmen. Italians and Roumanians. ' Tbe remaining city population la made up of negroes, most ot them slaves. aje) lew aad teaa-MlDe la a How long I slept I don't know. Prob ably about an hour. ' vaen I dreamed that a hideous monster was trying to extract a rib from my aids) with a gi gantic corkscrew, while a leering imp was smothering me with an old horse blanket dipped la a aewer by way of anaesthetic I woke with a groan at tbe : njeuretic pang I suffered, and awore with disgust at finding tbe dirty socks incasing dirtier feet, If smell la any indication of the man behind me, hanging over the back of my seat, within six Inches of my nose. The feet went back to their ewa side of the fence suddenly, bat their owner evidently did not understand what pro pelled them. All night tbe noise of tho train was insafflclent to drown the chorus of ca rtons sounds made by the sleepers, or those trying to sleep. The osaa be hind me. at about every fifth breath, Jerked oat tbe curioas, surprised pig snort. Another would begin quietly with something like ft moaa, which would grow lender aad deeper with eaJ. breath, till further continuance without asphyxiation waa impossible, aad then It would explode in a tumul tuous volley of splutter, and then da capo ad Infinitum. If, among fairly sober people, there Is to be found any assemblage mora Ump, forlorn, bod- mmmmA mnA twtnAlMA-tnnlrtR tAlB S) ' MMiU. A fwiAnl wan h.v vual peat a night la this way, I do not know where It Is. to be found. Ex change. . Sorry Ho Spoke. Think before you speak, aad ovoa then dcu't be too sure. This common place, old-fashioned advice, kept al ways in mind, would aave us many a mortification. Here, for example, ia a story related la tha Magaalae of Art: Almost the last work that Sir Edwin Landseer waa engaged on waa a life sized picture of Neil Owya passing through an archway on a wblte pair frey. This picture, in which tbe horse alone was finished, was brought by one of tho Rothschild family, aad giv en to Sir John MUlale to complete. One morning a celebrated art crttla called, and was much Impressed by this work. "Ah. to rm sure." he said, eoinr on eose -end ' examining a deer ho nod. which almost - bfeatbed, in the fore grnnd of the picture, "bow easily on can recognize Lands ear's dogar Won derful, lent ltr "Yes, It Is wonderful." remarked Sit. John, lighting another pipe. "I finish ed painting that dog yesterday morn ing, and have done the whole ef II myself.- Depeade. " Mrs. Cook They say a man caa live for a long time on nothing but bread and wat'erl Mr. Cook It depends a good deal ex srho makes the bread. Yonkera State nan. - "Here," said the. clerk, "1 a novej that .would be .-.very! suitable " "What I'm looking for," said the New Woman, blandly, la something- un suitable!" Puck. 'Stranded. ' - "I wonder," said the aonbrette, "If we will be able to fly I "We are able to .fly right now," aald the pessimistic manager, "but the ques tion la whether we caa take our bag gage along." Cincinnati Enquirer. - - The THffioaltjr. , "He la very gifted,' said' Mies Gush lngton. "Why, he can alt down and write poetry by the yard." .' "Yes," replied the envious rival "The only difficulty Is that the public read it by the inch." Washington Star. .' fame Effect. Mother of the Only Boy on Earth Aren't you going to kiss him. George? Brother of the Mother, etc. Why not stick a pin In him? He'll howl Just as loud" for that as -be would for me klae tng him. Indianapolis Journal. rearanee. The ' streets are narrow, crooked, ill-emelllng and filthy. Zanzi bar is anything but European. Here, in this capital, dwelt the Sultanaa of the land, and it waa here that tbe late Pultan was killed, as is now believed, by the usurper. Said Kballd, whose re sistance to the English protectorate waa at the bottom of the bombard ment. The palace I shown In the ac companying Illustration. It la the large, square building to the right ef the tower at the left of the picrura, Tnls talace was blown to atoms by the shot aad shell of the British war ship, aad almost all the people who were guard. tng It, soldiers, slaves aad attendant (wen hfflsdV rata xaji with i-cooAan. l SENATOR JOHN P. HALE Ftaar ia Aswflcsa Fabllc Life. When Hale took his seat la the Sen ate he waa the only member of that body who defied the discipline of both tbe old parties, and dared assert hit absolute political Independence. H stood alone until 1840, when he was Joined by Chase and Seward, who wen re-enforced la 18C1 by Sumner. Then was something dramatic la bis solltarj appearance la the Senate as aa avowed sntl-slavery man. That body then con talned more able aad eminent met tha a It had had for more than a genera tea, aad It was completely under th domination of tbe slave interest. That interest dictated the policy of the Gov eminent at home aad abroad, as it had Aeae from its beginning, aad made anr unmade politicians. Hale knew thai his single-handed warfare against H would invito ridicule, sneers, Insulti and threats. He knew that be must face the acera aad contempt of th South aad tho chilling neglect ef thf North. BuS he bravely stood In tlx breach. He took ao counsel of hM fears, aad weald not be bullied Intc silence. When be waa dented a place ra Senatorial committees oa the pre text that he "did not belong to a healthy political organisation" he ridiculed th proceeding aad made It tell la bis favor One ef the finest exhibitions of bit courage was given soon after be took his. seat la the Senate, when he cast the only vote against a raaolutloc tkaaklng Generals Scott aad Taylor foi their victories la Mexico. This vott was sure te be misunderstood aad mis represented, aad all parties regarded 11 as suicidal; bat It was sufficient fot him te know that ao ether honest aad consistent coarse was possible for tboss who had condemned the Mexican wai la all its stage. He would aot bells bis convictions to avoid any personal consequences of his act; and when hi pleaded the high authority ef Chatham. Burke and Fox. who refused to vot thanks te the commanders of the Brit ish army for their services In Americs la eur revolutionary struggle a strict ly aaalagoua case ao Senator success lully answered him. . Mr. Hale'a humanity waa equal U his courage. While a member of tht House he moved an amendment to tht naval appropriation bill, abolishing thi spirit ration and prohibiting flogging a the nary. The amendment prevailed, but failed ia the Senate. This motion waa renewed la the Senate la 1849, and In 1830, after an Impassioned appeal by Mr. Hale, flogging waa abolished, but the spirit ration continued until 1S62. He was Justly proud of thest achievements, and they are appropr! Blely commemorated on the pedestal it the sutue recently erected in the Ptate house yard at Concord. Aa aa anti-slavery leader. Hale fol lowed his own methods of warfare. While Seward, Sumner and Chase were i urging their anti-slavery thunderbolts, and .firing them at the enemy at long range through tbe press of the North cm States, Mr. Hale was using his l'gbter artillery on the skirmish line, end In well-executed flank movements In 1850 he was prompted by the pres ence ef a pro-slavery mob In Washing ton to Introduce a resolution for the re imbursement of persons whose prop erty should be destroyed by riotous as semblage. Foot of Mississippi de ueoaced this resolution as intended to protect "aegro-stealing." Addressing Mr. Hale, he ealdr "I Invite aim to visit tne good Stat, of Mississippi, la whlcb 1 have the honor to reside, and will tell him beforehand la all honesty that h could aot te ten miles into the lnteiioi before he would grace one ot the tallest trass ef the forest with a rope around kia neck, with the approbation of every virtuous and patriotic dttsea; and that, if necessary, I should myself assist la the operation. " , Ui. Hale answered: "The Senator in vite me to visit the State of Miaale-a'-ppl. aad kindly laforma me that he would be eae of those who would ad the aseaasln and put an end to my career. Well. In return for bis hospitable Invitation, I can only ex press the desire that he should pea a at Into one of the dark corners of New Hampshire; aad If he do, I am much mistaken If he would not find ths leopl in that 'benighted region' would be very happy to listen to his argu ments and engage In an intellectual conflict with him. In which the trots might be elicited." The popular Instinct at once labeled the Mississippi Senatoi aa "Hangman Foote," and the epithel is still Instantly recalled by the men rlon of his name. Century.- Eaailr Explained. 'Sam, bow is it that here we have two legs, presumably off tbe same chicken and yet oae la about 100 per cent tougher than the other?' Sam-Sal waye the case with chicken; one leg has 100 per cent more work te do dan de Oder and de miscles conse quently git tougher. "Why, I never heard of that. Which oae Is itr Sam De one de chicken aleeps on, sab. Harper's Magazina. Savage Warfare. "My voice," said the one in whost heart the fires of patriotism burned, "my voice Is for war." "And I suppose that m case of actual hostilities It would be your voice yon would send," said the desiccated cynic. "No. In such a contingency I would end the voice of my wife." The other was also married to a mu sical woman, and his sympathy, though not outspoken, was expressed by an elo quent glance. Indianapolis Journal. Interested. "My family," said Miss Antique, "came over with the Pilgrims on tb Mayflower." "Did they, really?" explained Hicks. "How very interest! kg! And were yov seasick?" Harper's Bazar. , r - Woman la Politic. "Laura never seemed to me particu larly strong-minded. I wonder why she baa become such a suffragist?" She waa converted last fall. Her ft-a ran for the Legislature and was oaf aa ted, aad bow Laura Is sure that woman is needed la politics." New gerk World. Wnoeer his mj habit has a mag REV. DR. : IE Tbe Eminent Divine's SanJay ... Discourse. ub(ect: "Gospel Farming." Tsxt: -'My Father is the husbandman, r John xv... 1. . , . , This last summer, having (tone In dtfferen', directions over bot ween u ve and six thousand miles of harvest fields, I ean harJIy opan my Bible witbont smbinir tan broath of new mown nav and seeing the gohien light of the wheat field. And when I open my Bible to talc- my text, tha Seripiura leaf rustles like the tassels of the oorn. We wero neariv all of u born In the ooan ar. We drouDOd cora In the hill, and went on Saturday to the Jnlll. tyina- the grist in the centre of the sack so that tbe oootents on either side the hors balanced each other; and drove the cattle afield, our bare feet wet with the dew, and rod tb horsea with the halter to the b.-ook until we fell off, and hunted the mow lor nests until the feathered oocapants went cacklio? away. Wo were nearly all of us born in the coautry, ani all Would have stayed there had not some mi venturous lad on his vaenfion come back with better clothes an1 softer hands and set tbe whole village oa Are with ambition lot city life. Ho we all understand rustic allus ions. The Bible is full of thena. In Christ's Sermon on the Mount you could sea tbe full blown lilies anlthaglcwy hack of the crow's wlnua aa it flies over Mount Oil vet. David and John, Paul and Isaiah find tn country life a source of frequent Illustration, while . Christ in tbe text takes the responsibility of . ealtlnfcGod a farmer, declaring: -'ily Father Is tne husbandman. Nosh was the first farmer. We say nothin? about Cain, the tiller of the soil. A lam was a gardener on a large scale, bat to Voah whs. given all the acres ot the earth. Elisha was an agriculturist, not cultivating a ten-acre lot, for we find htm plowing with twelve yoke of oxen. In Bible times the laud was so plenty and the inhabitants so few that Noah was right when be gave to every In habitant a certain portion of land, that land if cultivated ever after to be his own posses sion. They ware not small orops raised in those times, for though tbe arts were rule, tbe plow turned up v--ry rich soil, an 1 barley and cotton and flax and all kinds of grain oa-ne up at the eali of the harvesters. Pliny tells of one gtulk of grain that had on it be tween three and four hundred ears. Tha riven and tbe brooks, through artificial channels, were brought down to the roots ot the com. and to this babit ot turning a river wherever it was wanted, Solomon ref-ra whan he says: "Tbe king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, and He turneth it as the rivers ot water are turned, whithersoever H will." The wil t beasts-were caught, ani then a nook was put into their nose, and then thay were led over the field, and to that God re fers when He says to wicked Sennacherib! 'l will put a hook in thy nose and I will Dring thee back by the way wbioh thou earnest " And God has a hook In every bad man's nose, whether it be Nebuchadnezzar or Ahab or Herod. Ha may think himseif v--ry lndepenrtenr, but some time m his life, or la the hour of his death, be will And that tne Lor I Almighty has a book in his nose. This was the rule in regard to the ealturs of the irrnnnd: "I'hoU shalt not Dlow With an ox and an ass together," illustrating tha folly of ever putting intelligent and useful and pliable men in association with- tbe stubborn and unmanageable. Tbe vast ma jority of troubles in the churches and in re formatory Institution? aomt-s from tbediare gard ot this command of the Lord, Thou Shalt not plow with an ox and aa ass to gether." Tbc.-e were large amounts of property In rested in cattle. Tha Moabltea pal l 100,000 oheep aa ira anneal tax. Job aad TU00 sheep, 3000 camels, 500 yoke of oxen. The time of vintage was ushered In with mirth and music, roe clusters of the vine were put into the wine press, and then five men would get Into the prees and tr.imple out the juioe from the grape until Iheir garments wers saturated with the wine and bad become the emblems of slaughter. Christ Himself, wounded until covered with the blood oi crucifixion, making nse of this allusion when the question was asked: "Wherefore art Tboa r d ia Thine apparel and Thy garments like one who treadeth the wine vatr" He re sponded: "I have trodlen tbe wine press alone." In all ages there has been great honor paf& to agriculture. Seven-eights of the people In every country are disciples of the plow A government is strong In proportion as it is supported by an athletic and industrious yeomanry. So long ago as before the fall of Carthage, Strnbo wrote twenty-eignt books on agriculture-: Hesiod wrote a poem on t he same subject"! he Weeks and Pays." Cato wai prouder of his work on husbandry than of all bis military conquests. Bat I must not be tempted into a disoussion of agricul tural conquests. Standings mid tbe harvests and orchards and vineyards of the Bible, and standing amid the harvests and orchards and vineyards of oar own country larger har vests than have ever before been gathered I want to ran out the analogy between the production of crops and thegrowth of grace In the soul all these saored writers making, tue of that analogy. In the first place, I remark, in grace as In the fields, there must be a plow. That whicn theologians call conviction is only the plow share turning up tbe sins that have been tooted end matted In the soul. A farmer said to Ms- indolent son: -'There are a hundred dollars buried deep In that field." The son went to work and flowed the field irom fence to fence, and he plowed It very deep, and then complained that be had not found the money: but when the crop had been gatdered and sold for a hundred dollars more than any previous rear, then the young man took the bint as to what his father meant when be said there were a hundred dollars buried down in that field. Deep plowing for a crop. Deep plowing for a son). He who makes light of sin will never amount to anything in the church or In tbe world. If a man speaks of sin as though It were an inaccuracy or a mistake, instead of the loathsome, abominable, consuming and damning thing that God hates, that man Will never yield a harvest of usefulness. Wnen I was a boy I plowed a field witt a team of spirited horses. I plowed it very quickly. Once in a while I passed over some of the sod -without turning it, but I did not ierk back the plow with its rattling de- vlcea. I thought it made no difference, . After awhile my father came along and sald, "Why, this will never do; this isn't plowed deep enough; there you have missel this and you have missed that." Ana he plowed It over again. The difficulty with a great many people is that they are only scratched with conviction when the subsoil plow of God's truth ought to be put in up to tbe Beam. ily word is to all Sabbath-school teachers, to all parents, to all Christian workers Plow deepl Plowdeep! But what means all this crooked plowing, these crooked furrows, the repentance that amounts to nothing? Men groan over their sins but get no better. They weep, but their tears are not counted. They get convicted, but not c inverted. Wbat ia the reason? 1 remember that on the lannweset a stand ard with a red flag at the other end of the Held. We kept our eye on that. We aimed at tha'. Ws plowed qp to that. Losing sight-of that we made a crooked farrow. Keeping our eye en that we made a straight furrow. Now In this matter ot conviction we must have some standard to guide u. It Is a red standard that God has set at the other end. of the field. It is tbe Cross. Keeping your eye on that 'you will make a straight furrow. Lo-img sight of If you will make a crooked furrow. Plow up to the Crow. Aim not at either end of the horizontal piece of the Crpss, but at the up right piece, at the centre of itrthe heart of the Son of God who bore your sios and made satisfaction. Crying and weeping will not bring you through. . "Him hath God exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance." Ob, plow up to the Cross! Again, I remark, In grace as In the field, there must be a sowing, Ia the autumnal weather tou-find the farmer going across the field at' a stride of about twenty-three Inches, and at everv stride he puts his han I into the saokot grain and be aprinklesthe seed-oorn over the field. It looks silly to a man who does aot know what be Is doing, Ke is doing very Important jroirfc H.U scattering the winter gram, and inoucu 'no snow may oome. tha next year there will be a great crop. Now. that ia what we are do ing when we nre preaohiotr the GogDel we are scatt-n-ltig the seed. It is the toonsnnesa of prvachlne, but It I the w nter grain; and though tbe snows of worl illness tnnv roue down upon It, it will yield n'teratvhile glori ous harvest. Let us be sare we saw the right kind of seed. Sotv mtill-n stalk and mul en stalk will come up. 8 w Canada thistles and Can la thirties will co ne no. Sow wheat and wheat will come up. Let us distinguish between trutU ant erroe. Let us know the d.ff ra;e btitwesa waeat and he lehore, oat aud henbane. Again, I remark, in grace as In the farm there must he a barroin. I rifer no v not to a harrow that goes over the flat I in order to prepare the ground for the need, but a har row which goes over after the see 1 Is sown, lest the birds pick ud the semi, siokini; it ilowu into the earth so th it It can tnke root, Vou know a harrow. It is mile of bars of woo l nalle I across each other, aad the un derside of each bar Is furnished with sharp teeth, and the horses are hltohe 1 lo it. It goes tearing ani ie ipm across t in ItnM, driving the seed dotru into the ear.h until It springs up in the harvest. B rwiveraent. sorrow, persecution are the Lord's harrows to sink the Gospel truth ia your heart. These were truths that yon heard thirty years agoj they have not alteole t you until roontly. 8in gre it trouble came over you, and the truth was harrows! in. and it has come up. What did God moan In tiiisooon try in 1H57? Fora century tbre was the Gos pel preached, but a great deal of It produced no result. lhea God harnessei a wild panic to a harrow of commercial disaster, and that harrow went down Wail strest, and uo Wall street, down Third street, an I up Third street, .town -tate street, and up State street,-down Pennsylvania avenu", and up Pennsylvania avenue,- untd the whole land was torn to u'etteg as it h I never been be fore. What followed the harrow? A great awakening in which there wer- 60,000 sou s brought into tbe Klsglom oi our Lord. No barrow, no crop. Again, I remark, in -rtxzs as In the farm there must be a waning. Many Christian speak of religion as though it wre a mutter of economies or Insurance. Thoy expect to reap In the next world. Oil no! Now is the time to reap. Gather up the Joy ot the Christian religion this nwrutng, this after noon, this night. If you have not as muoh grace as you would like to have, thank God for what you have, and pra- lor more. You are no worse ent aved t ban Jos ph, no worsa troubled thaa was David, no worse scourged than was Paul. Yet, amid the rattling of fetters and amid this gloom of daa'reons, and amid the horror of shlpjrreclc, they triumphed in the grac-of Gai. The weakest man in tbe bouse to-rtny has fiOO acres of spiritual joy all ripe. Why do you not go and reap it? You have bnea grOHning over your Infirmities for thirty years. N w give one toza 1 shout over vour emancipxtion. You say yon have It so hard; ynu might have It wors. You won er why this great cold trouble keeps revolving through your soul, turning and turning with a blaelr naud on the man';. Ah, that trouble ia the grind stuns on which vou are to sharpen your sickle. To the fields'. Wake uol Tate oit your green spectacles, your blae spectacles, your black S!eatac:s. Pull op tbe corners of yonr mouth as far as you pull tnatn down. To the fields! B-apl reap! Again, I remark, to grace as lu farming, there ts a time fortbreshlug, I tell you bluutly that Is death. Jast as the farmer with a Ball beats the wheat out Of the straw, so death beats the soul out of tha body. Every sickness is a stoke of th - Bull, an 1 the sick-bed la the threebing floor. Wbat, say you, Is death to a good men only taking tbe Wheat out of the strati? Ibat is all. An aged man has fallen asiaep. Only yesterday you saw bim lu the sunny pocuU playing With bis grandchildren. Calmly he received the mess axe to leave this world. He bade a pleasant guod-bye to his old frieu . The telegraph carries the tidtuga, an 1 on Sffifc rail trains the kin iraj cjme. wanting once more to look on tha face of d-ar old grand father. Brunh back the gray hairs (com bis brow) it will never ache att'n. Pot tutu away In tbe slumber of the tomb. He will not be afraid of that night. Grandfather was never afraid Of anything. He will rise in tbe morning Of tbe resurrection. Grandfath er was always the first to rise.' His voice has already mingled in the doxology of Heaven. Grandfather always did siu in church. Anything ghastly in that? Ko. The thron ing ot tbe wheat OQt ol the -straw. That fs all. - - Tbe Saviour folds a lamb ia His bosom. Tbe little child tilled all the sous with her music, and ber toys are scattered ail up ani down the stairs just as she left them. What if the hand that plucked four-o'clocks out of the meadow is stilly It will wave in the eternal triumph. What if the voice that made musio lnthe home isstf'IV It wiUsing the eternal bosnnmii Put a wtiite ro?e In one band, a red ro?e in tbe ot ant band, and a wreath ot orange blos3ums on the brow; the white flower for the vlntory, the red Cower for the Saviour s sacrifice, the oranjte blos soms for her marriage day. Anything goast ly about that i1 Ob, no! The sua went down and the flower shut. The wheat threshed out of the straw. "Dear Lord, give me sleep," said a dying boy, the sou ot one ot my e ders, "dear Lord, give me sleep." And he closed his eyes and awoke in glory. Henry W. Longfellow, writing a letter Of condolence to those. parents, said, "Those last words were beautifully poe.to." And Mr. Lonjffellow knew wbat ts poetic. "Dear Lord, give me sleep." Twaa not in cruelty, not in wrath That the reaper came that day; 'Twits au angel that visited the. earth And took the flower away. So it may be with us when our work is all done. "Dear Lord, give ma sleep." ' 1 have one more thought to present. I have spoken of' the plowing of the sowing, of the harrowing, of the reaping, of tbe threshing. I must now speak a mom 'it of t ie garnering. Wnere is lbs garner? Nee I I fell your 0b, no. . So many have gone om fr j a your own circles yea, from your owa family, that you have ha 1 your eyes on that garaer for many a year. ' What a hard time some ot them had! Ia Getbsem&aes ot suffering, they sweat greit drops of B!ood. They took tbe "cup of trembling" and they put It to their hot lips and they cred, "II it be possible, let this cup pass from me." With tongues of burning agony they cried, "O Lord, deliver my soul!" lot they got over It. They all got over it. Garnered! Their tears wiped away; their battles all endea, thelr burdens lilted. Garnered! The Lord of the harvest will not allow tnosesbav to perish in tbe equinox. Garnered! Some of us remember, on tbe farm, that tbe sheaves were put on tbe top of the rack wbicb surmounted the wa;on, and these sheaves were piled higher and higaer, and after a while the hors-5 started lor the barn; and these sheaves swayed to and fro in the wind, and the old waon cranked, and the horses made a strug.-le. and palled so bard tbe harness came up in loops of leather oa oa their baots, and when tho front wheel struck the elevated door of the barn it seemed as if the load would go no faither, until the workmen gave a great ahout, and then with one last tremendous attain, the horses pulled in the load; they were unhar nessed, and forkful after forkful of grain fell into the mow. Ob, my friends, our get ting to heaven may be a pull, a hard pall, a very hard pull; but these sheaves nre bound to go In, The Lord of the harvest has prom ise! it. I see i ho loa 1 at last coming to the door of the heavenly garner. The ueaves of the Christian soul sway to and fro in the wind of death, and tbe old body creaks under the load, and as the load strlk-s tbe floor of Ike ce'.ustiitl garner, it seems as If It can go no further. It is the last straggle, until the voices of angeis and the voices of our departed kindred aiid the welcoming voice uf God shall s-nd the harvest rolling intothe eternal triumph, while all up ana down the sky th cry Is heard: "Harvest home! harvest home!" Hope awaktus cuurage. lie who can implaut courage in the human a jul is tbe best physician. " Great souls attract sorrows as moun tains do storms. But the thunder clouds break upon Iheui, and tbe thus form a fc belter for the plains around. - . Ine highest idealhaa sfrtinsfsj, at traction and icfluencej J; .ni any are content with secondary idea's of mind or tu a Iter. ... J:' 1 i' s'.';v', V' i .4.'W. -O 1et i