. -v'.: 'J. J, , TUB CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. F. BOHWEIEB, MIFFLINTOW1N, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 9. 1896. NO. 52. VOL. L. ii CHAPTER XV. It was after 11 o'clock, and John Tim fnons bad not ret emerged from his cellar. All tbe while he had been below a strong pungent smell of burning, the dry, su phnrous smell of burning coke, had as tended from below, with now and thei Boise of a hand-bellows blowing a fire, tut no steam or sound or savor of cook ing. Now and again there was the noiM of stirring a fire, and now and again th noise of tongs gripping and loosing and lipping on what a listener might take tc be pieces of coke. If no one was listening to the stokes some one was watching the exterior of th marine store. A short time before li o'clock a man dressed In seedy black cloth, with short iron-gray whiskers and beard, and long iron-gray hair and wear og bine spectacles, turned Into the street, and sat down in a crouching position on tbe axle-tree of a cart. When it was about a quarter pas 11 TlmmoDs emerged from the cellar, carry ing in one hand a dark lantern, with tb slide closed. He went caHtiously to tht wicket, and with a trowed began digginii op the earth of the floor, which was her dark and dry. It was old sand from foundry, and could be moved and replaced without showing the least trace of dis turbance. After digging down about a foot h came upon a small, old bag, which hi lifted out, and which contained some thing heavy. The bag had been all rubbed over with grease and to the grease the dark sand stuck thickly. Out of this baa he took a small, heavy, cylindrical bun die of chamois leather. Then he restored the bag to the hole, shoveled back thf annd nnri smoothed the floor. Timmons walked softly over his noise- I less floor until he got behind the old boiler of a donkey engine. Here he slid back the slide of the lantern and unrolled the leather. The latter proved to be a belt about a palm deep, and consistinj of little bags or pockets of chamois leath cr, clumsily sewn to a band. There were a dozen of those little pock ets in all; six of them contained some heavy substance. Each one closed with a piece of string tied at the mouth. Tim in ons nndid one and rolled out on his hau l a thick lump of yellow metal about the ize of the Inrge buttons worn as orna ments on the coats of coachmen. He smiled a well-satisfied smile at the gold ingot, and weighed it affectionately in his grimy palm, gave the ingot a lovins polish with his sleeve, dropped it back into its bag, and retied the string. Then out of each of his trousers' pockets be took a similar ingot or button, weighed each, and looked at each with affectionate approval, and secured each In one of the half-dozen vacant leather bags. "Two pounds two ounces all together," he whispered. "I have never been able to get more than four dollars an ounce foi it, taking it all round at fifteen carats. His offer is ns good as ten dollars an ounce, which leaves a margin for a man to get a living out of it, if the dwarf ii safe. If I had had only one deal with him, I'd feel he's safe, but he has done Jttle but talk grandly and vaguely up to this. Well, after this deal to-night he can't draw back or betray me. That's certain, anyhow." He unbuttoned his waistcoat, strapped the belt ronnd his lank, hollow waist, blew out the lantern and stepped into the deserted street. Before he disappeared, the elderly man with grizzled hair and whiskers, dressed in seedy black cloth, emerged from the shadow of the cart and kept stealthily in the rear of the marine " store dealer. Timmona was on his way to keep his appointment with Leigh in Chetwynd .street, and the low-sized man with bine spectacles wa following, shad owing Timmons. Oscar Leigh sat In the dark on the last step but one of the stairs of his house, awaiting the arrival of Timmons. It was close to the appointed hour. He had one of his knees drawn up close to his body, his elbow rested on his knee, his long bearded chin in the palm of his hand. It was pitch dark. Nothing could be seen, absolutely nothing. "My mother cannot live forever," whis pered the dwarf, "and then all will be blank, all will be dark as this ptaee round me. Where shall I turn then? Whom shall I speak my heart to? I designed my clock to be a companion, a friend, a confidant, a' solace, a triumph; it is be coming a tyrant and a scourge. A man must have something to think of besides himself;-a deformed dwarf must never think of himself at all, unless be thinks crest thincs of himself. Here's Tim mons." j Leigh rose, and sliding his left foot and supporting his body on the stick, went to the door and opened it. Twelve to the minute," said Tim mons. "Let us go for a walk," said Leigh. "But I have the stuff with me," said Timmons, in a tone of annoyance and protest. "Let us go for a walk, I say," cried Leigh, Imperiously, striking his thick twisted stick fiercely on the flags as he spoke. The two men turned to the left, and went on a few paces In silence. "I have been in telegraphic communica tion with Milwaukee since I saw yon," taid Leigh. "I had not only a message, but several messages." "Ay," aid Timmons,' scornfully, with in impatient serpentine movement ma ting up his body and almost shaking his head off its long, stork-like neck. "Well, Is the fool off the job?" asked he coarse ly, savagely. In slang, with a view to showing how cheap he held sch unprin cipled circumlocution. The dwarf stopped and looked up with blank amazement on his face and an qffly flush In his fVMl. "Is what foci off SSS job Mr. Timmons? Am I to understand that you are tired of these delays?" -JmV hero, Mr. Leich. I've come on business. What have you to say to me? I have twenty-six ounces that will aver age fifteen carats. Are yon going to act - square and stump up?" "Hah! I see," said Leigh, smiling bUndiy. "I own I m relieved. The fact, my dear sir, is, that on leading "you I telegraphed to my correspondent in Milwaukee for- " "What are yon, going, to do? That's what I want to know." said the other fiercely. "Precisely. Well, sir, I shall tell yon my position in two words. I snspect my correspondent of not having much money. "And yon think this villain might cheat, might swindle ns after all our trouble?" "I think this villain capable of trying to get the best of us. In the way of not paying promptly or the full price agreed upon, or perhaps not being able to pay at all." "Mr. Leigh, I hope, sir, you'll forgive my hot words of a while ago. I know I have a bad temper. I humbly ask your pardon." Timmons was qu'tj humble now. "Certainly, freely. We are to work, as yon suggested, on the co-operative prin ciple. If through my haste or inefficiency the money had been lost, we shunld all be the poorer. Now yon understand why I did not ask you into my place and take the alloy. We must wait a little yet We must wait until I can light upon an hon est man to work np tbe result of our great chemical discovery. I hope by this day week to be able to give yon good and final news. In the meantime the ore l safe with you." "I'm sure I'm truly grateful to yon, sir." "Give me a week. This day week at the same honr and at the same place." "Very good. I shall be there." CHAPTER XVL When Edith Grace came into the little sitting room in Grimsby street the morn ing after her flight from Eltham House she found her grandmother bad not yet appeared. She went to Mrs. Grace's door and asked if she might bring the old wom an her breakfast. To her question she re ceived a blithe answer that Mrs. Grace would be ready In a minute. The girl came back to the room where the break fast was laid and sat down to wait. She was standing at the window absorbed in thought, when Mrs. Grace came into the room and took the girl in her arms before Edith was aware of her presence. "Thank heaven, you are here once more, my darling. To see you makes even this place look like home. Oh, what a miserable time it was to me while my child was away. It seemed an age. Short as it was, it seemed an age, darling. Of one thing, Edy, I am quite certain, that no matter what is to become of us, we shall never be separated again, never, darling, never. That is, K yon are not too proud or too nice to be satisfied with what will satisfy your old grandmother." The girl sobbed her long-pent torrent of chaotic feeling away, the old woman stroking softly the dark glossy hair with one hand and pressing the head to her bosom with the other. In a little while Edith recovered her composure, and stealing out of her grand mother's arms, turned towards the win dow to conceal her red and tear-stained face. The old woman went and busied herself at the table. "Edy," she said, "here is a letter. I have not my glasses with me. Will yon read It to me, dear?" The girl turned round, took the letter and went back to the window for a bet ter light. "It is signed Bernard Coutch," said the girl in a low voice. "Well, go on, child. Let us hear what this Mr. Ooutch has to say. Breakfast must wait. Nothing grows cold in such lovely weather. I hope this Mr. Coutch has good news." "Dear Madam Mr. James. Burrows, solicitor, of Lincoln's Inn, wrote me a few days ago, with a view to ascertaining tome facts regarding the Graces of Grace dieu " "Walt a minute, Edith." The old wom an rose excitedly and came to tbe win dow. "I must tell you, dear, that when first Mr. Burrows wrote me to say the bank hod failed, and that your money and mine were gone, I went to him, as you know, and got no hope of ever saving anything out of the bank. But I did not tell you then, for I was ashamed of being so weak as to mention the matter to Mr. Burrows, that I told bim all I knew of the history of the Graces of Gracedieu, and of tbe old story of mysterious money going to the runaway Kate Grace fifty years ago. I asked him to make what inquiry he could, and let me know any news he might pick up. I was foolish enough to imagine, dear, that something might come to you out 01 ue property or the rich Graces if we only knew where they are, if there are any. Now go on. dear." Edith recommenced the letter: "Dear Madam Mr. James Burrows, solicitor, of Lincoln's Inn, wrote me a few weeks ago, with a view to ascertaining some facts regarding tbe Graces of Gracfdleu, near this place. "I regret to say that I have not been able to find oat much. Gracedieu is a small residence about a couple of miles from this. Early in the century the Graces lived in this town. The family were in com fortaDie cu-cumstances, and jne of the daughters, a lady of great beauty, disappeared and was, so the story goes, never afterwards heard of here. It was rumored she married a very hand some and rich young foreign nobleman who had been on a visit in the neighbor hood. - ' "Some years after the disappearance of the young lady, Mr. Grace seemed to come suddenly into a large amount of money; bought a few acres of land, built a house and called his place Gracedieu. From the name of the house it was as sumed the gentleman the young Miss Grace had married was a French noble man. Later the Graces left Absolutely . : ..I I. lrnjiwa, Af thom In this I Doming, rw neighborhood, and even this much would not be remembered only for the romantic disappearance of Miss Kate Grace, the rumor she wss married, and the sudden influx of wealth upon the family. "Tours faithfully, "BERNARD COUTCH." The girLturnM nWAW the window. Jnppc-3 - letter to tbe floor, and said n a listless voice, looking, wltn eyes mat lid not see external things, at the old woman. "Mother, yon ought to be glad rou are not one of the family ( Grace.'" "Why, ehild, why?" "We are an accursed race."' "My child! iy child, what 'oily yon talk. There Is no disgrace in marriage, no disgrace in this. There was no shame in this, and who knows but the mysteri ous man who ran away with the beauti ful Kate long ago, and married her, may now be a great man in France? He was a nobleman then and honors are tilings thst grow, dear. If we could only find out the title he had. I suppose we could if we tried." (To be continued.) ADVERTISES HIS INJURY. A Kansas Faraser Botmd to "Get Haak" with the Bailroad. Farmer Jake Stoddard, of Doniphan County, believes) In telling the world of hla grievance. He has been wronged and he la determined that all who whirl by hla boose on the Burlington road shall know all about It Uncle Jake's troubles) are told by a sign board which stands near bis bouse by the side of the' railroad tracks. Tbe passenger on the Burlington, if be is a lover of tbe ro mantic scenery which abounds In north western Kansas, may observe from the car window as the train from Atchison approaches Fanning station a large sign covering a board one by five feet nailed to a pole twelve feet high, wblcb reads: THIS MAN HAS BEEN WRONGED: : ' BY THE RAILROADS. : .... ... .. ........ ...... ......... When the road was built It suited the convenience of the company, accord ing to a local correspondent, to lay the track within ten feet of the corner of Farmer Stoddard's house. The con struction gang plowed through his barnyard, removed bis ben bouse and cut a wide swatb through a fine young orchard which was the pride of Farm er Stoddard's heart. The agriculturist fixed bis damages at a high figure; so high. In fact that tbe company com pelled him to go Into court and take what be regarded a ridiculous sum. It was not long until the trains were running. When the first excursion steamed out of Atchison the passen gers, when the train reached Farmer Stoddard's place, observed the sign In bold, black letters, with a background as white as snow. Stoddard had paint ed the sign himself, and, while It was not executed In the highest style of the art It could be distinctly read. Farmer Stoddard has raised a large family of boys and be has taught them to hate corporations. Not less than a half dozen dogs of doubtful breed can always be found on the Stoddard place. The dogaa-too, are taught to hate the railroad, and when a train passes tbe entire pack runs out and barks at It The old farmer feels that he Is In a measure getting even. Brakemen on freight trains have great sport throw ing pieces of coal at the dogs as tbe train passes. Stoddard figures that be gathers up almost enough coal around his premises to keep one stove running through the winter months. Hard Luck. "I was going along a mountain road In West Virginia," said a timber buyer to a Star reporter. "I had been In the same section a year previous and bad stopped at tbe cabin of a man named Turner, where I had been well treated. I concluded to trespass upon his hos pitality again and reached the place about sundown. He was sitting on the step playing a violin. " 'Hello, Turner,' I called. " 'Howdy.' " 'Can I stay all nightr " Reckon not this time. I'm lone.' " 'Where are tbe folks T " 'Waal, sence yo' war hyar I played In ha'dest luck yo' ever seed. Went ter dig a well an' went through Inter a cave. I wanted a cellar anyhow, so I jess got down an' eplored that air cave. It opened down by the crick, an' I seed b'ar tracks. I wanted th' cellar wuss than I did th' b'ar, so I went ter town an' got pizen. Then I baited tbe ceve an' went buntln. While I war gone my boy seed th b'ar lyln' down an shot 'lm, not knowln' he war plzened. Folks ate 'lm an when I got back with ten turkeys an' a heap o' squirrels thar wa'n't no one; folks war jess star-tin' with th' funerals, not knowln' when ter look fer me.' " 'I am very sorry to bear of your trouble,' I said. "Yaas, It set me back right smart, but ef yo come by this way next week I'll be all right agin an' yo' kin stop. I'm gwlne ter marry th' Widder Logan an' her three children termorrer. I'm gwlne ter see th' squar" ternight, else I'd let yo' stop now.' " Fashion Notes. Renaissance lace of a fine quality is often used to border dinner cloths of fine, heavy, plain .table linen. The borders are of varying widths, from six to twelve inches, and an insertion of tbe same lace borders that part of he c'oth that rests on tbe table top. Russian lace in edges and insertions is also used to enrich handsome dinner cloths. It is somewhat expensive, but launders beautifully, and 'as such cloths are only for occasional use and carefully looked afte-, it may be. said to wear forever. Lace jabots will be a feature of dressy autumn gowns, so if you are the happy possessor of a length of point d'Alen con or Brussels lace, send it to tbe cleaner's and have it ready to utilize on your smartest bodice. Collets of black ostrich feathers, with a deep Stuart collar of tiny curled tips, making a very smart finish ' to a dressy toilette. Black neck ruchings are extremely modish for autumn wear, giving just the degree of warmth necessary. Quite a new idea in dress trimmings comes in ingenious designs which look charming. Tbe girl up to date will wear her jacket with military accessories this winter. It is rather long on tbe hips, fits snogiy and has the front adorned with graded frogs of black silk cord. 3 The Bicycle. An Enelisb writer has been making astonishing remarks about the wheel "There are," b ssys, "tea million bicycles in use in various parti of tba world." Helbengoei on to suppose that on a fine day ball of these will be in use and each rider will cover twenty miles. He then calculates that the total distance traversed by bicycles iu one day will be 100,000,000 miles, or more than 4,000 times round tbe world. S I', is clsimed by the English lone- distance rider, J. W. Stokes, that dur ing 1897 forty miles within tbe bour will be ridden with the aid of wind shields. All the New England railroads have agreed to abolish the release hereto fore required froni passengers shipping bicycles as baggage under the reduced schedule of pr CcS adopted October 10. Huret, the French professional, when asked to join a racing team to visit this country, is said to have de manded $1,000 a week and bis ex penses. Tom Cooper, the Western rider, ex pects to start for tbe Pacific cu next February to prepare for tbe spring races. 1 Music and Drama. issssBssssB-- 1 Mrs. Lawrence Barrett has decided to make her home in England. Katherine Grey, who has been ser iouly ill, is now rapidly recovering her health. Julia Arthur will play Queen Anne in Sir Henry Irving's revival of "Ri cbaid III" at tbe London Lyceum. The part of Dot Bradbury, in "A M dnight Bell," was the first notable role in which Maud Adams appeared. O.'ga Nethersile's ambition to be a manager of London theatre will pre vent her coming to America next season. Joseph Haworth has recieved an offet from Eugene Robinson to star rex I teasou in an elaborate revival of "Paul Kauvar," Mr. Haworth has not yet come to a conclusion in tbe matter. - Dunoan B. Harrison, Digby Bell's manager, has" secured "The Pacific Mail" from W. H. Crane, and will use it in furtherance of his plan to intro duce Mr. Bell as regular comedian. Lillian Russell's great ambition is to appear in "Csrmjn." Miss Kussell has recovered from her recent illness and appeared at tbe Great Northern Theatre in Chicago in "An American Beauty." R. N. Stephens, who was reported to be seriously ill in Cleveland, O.. has recovered and returned to New York, where he is at work upon the first of three plays he is required by contract to provide before next summer. Tommy Russell, who was famous all aver the country a few ya ago the title part of Little Lonl Fauntleroy, is now winning honors quite different as quater-back of tbe foot-ball team ol tbe Uuiversi'y of New York. 1 Housewives Helps. Eggs will cook much more evenly if the fiying pan is covered. If you find your icing is apt to run sprinkle tbe cake lightly with flour. Salt fish are most quickly and best freshened by toaking in sour milk. If you heat your knife slightly you can cut hot bread as smoothly as cold. Soda is an excellent article for clean ing tinware. Apply damp with a cloth; then rub dry. A lump of gum camphor placed id your clothes press will keep steel orna ments from tarnishing. A little borax in baby's bath will prevent tbe skin from chaffing, and he is less liable to have rash. Use clear, black coffee, diluted with water and containing a little ammonia. This will cleanse and restore black clothes. If your hall is narrow place a mirrot opposite the parlor door. This helps out by reflection the very narrow space usually given to this part of the bouse. A scorch mark, if not too heavy.may be removed by moistening with water and laying in the sun. Repeat the moistening two or three times and the mark will disappear. In escaping from a fire creep ot crawl along the floor of the room, with your face as near the floor as possible As smoke ascends there is always a freeh current of air in which you can breathe with greater ea9a near the floor.- 3 Health Hints. That it is the height of imprudence lo make a change in the undercloth ing with every change in tbe weather. Lighten tbe outside garments if neces sary when the weather is warm; but don't take off the flannels. That change of air frequently affects most astonishing cures, especially in cases of ague, intermittent fevers and low fevers of all kinds, where th? pa tient's condition is such as to admit of removal. That a thin vestment of chamois leather is about the best substitute for flannel if the latter cannot be endured; but flannel can be endured if one has the patience and perseverance and good common tense that leads to its appre ciation. Worth Tryine. Try keeping lamp burners bright by rubbing them with Bristol brick or dry ashes every time the lamps are cleaned. Try making a crumb cloth of a long piece of canvas; it is more easily bandied than the usual rug, and it will save much sweeping. - Try hanging up the rolling-pin in a bag, and it will not only be convenient for use, but will be kept smooth and clean. Try drawing the edge of a sharp knife - half-way ronnd the potatoes lengthwise when they are to be steamed or boiled, bat they should never be cat for baring. 2 Personal Notes. t Miss Crabtree, better known as T.rttii " rovarda itiA stare of to-day s distinctly inferior to tbe stage of Jrenty years ago. - - - It is regarded as entirely appropriate Vt at the most successful horse dealer Nodaway County. Mo.. is a man reamed Goodpasture. Dr. Temple, the new Archbishop ot tnterbury, as headmaster of Bukby, as regarded as one of the greatest lhoolmasteri of the century. fVEniilie Olivier, Napoleon -Ill's lsst yinibter, is about to publish a novel sjanea "Aiarie juaaeiine, wuicn w re lieved to be autobiographical, t Tbe French Minister of the Interior, It. Barthou, is receiving much praise Tor having refused to light a duel with a man who had atrociously slandered him. 3 K-'Wben Verdi went to Milan as a boy ut IS years to continue his musical studies in the conservatory he was re jected. Miss Victonne Thomas Ariz, of Chi cago, has made a gift of $10,000 to the Boston public library as a Longfellow memorial. Tbe portrait of Alexander Dumas the elder, painted by Meiasooier in 1877, is to find a place in the gallery of the Louvre. Mrs. May Sparling, the daughter of the late William Morris, is engaged in the manfacture of tapestry, which she carries on profitably and successfully near London. -4 An unusual amount of ecclesiastical patronage has fallen to Lord Salisbury. Stanley received almost $250,000 for "Through Larkeet Africa." President Cleveland will be 60 years old two weeks after the expiration of. bis present te m of office. The early British custom of erecting cairns, or heaps of stones, to commem orate events is one greatly in favor with the Queen, "Gat Better Acquainted with the Cow" is the subject of a new lecture which Secretary Cobiirn, of the State Board of Agriculture, is delivering, q Miss Juliet Corson, who has been cnlied "The Mother of Cookery," is ill in New York from an incurable ail ment, and is without means. 'She may live, in pain, for some years. Tbe Connecticut Humane Society has awarded a medal to Eugene Wal ker, of Hartford, a lad 17 years old, who. at the risk of his own life, saved a man from drowning last September. A bronze monument has been erect ed in Paris to the memory of Jean Le claire, the man who fifty-four years ago introduced among the workmen of his factory the system of profit sharing. Sir Henry Irving, in laying tht foundation stone of the new Passmore Kdwanjs Dulwioh Publie Library re- vrnxiy, ejr.vfce tjrterij of tue lncatcnTa- ble value of free libraries as a medium of good. Chang Chin Tuntr, the Viceroy ot liupeh, China, who has hitherto ob structed the work on tbe Hankow Railroad, is one of the pioneers of the new manufacturing industry, in China. He owns and operates an immense cotton mill in Wuchang. 1 General Eli II. Murray, who died in San Diego, Cal., recently, though a Southerner by birth, was the youngest general officer in the Lnion array. Count 'von Wa'dersee, who rumoi persists in declaring is to succeed Prince Hohenlohe as the Imperial Chancellor of Germany, has an Ameri can wifo. Rear Admiral Peurose-Fitzgerald, of the British navy, is now engaged on a biography of the late Vice-Admiral Sir George. Iryon, whose life was a very eventful one. Miss C. H. Lippincott, of Minne apoHs,has the largest exclusively flower seed business in the United States. She is the pioneer woman in tbe busi ness, which she entered ten years ago. 2 Labor Notes. The Carnegie Steel Company decided to go ahead with improvements they had under consideration that will cost 1750,000. Work on the completion of No. 2 blast furnanco, at Durjuesne, will be resumed. Additions to the Home stead works will involve the expendi ture of $500,000. New open hearth and basic furnaces will be erected, which will largely increase the output of the mills. In anticipation of a world's maritime Btrike next year a huge combination is rw in ; perfected by the ship owners of France, Germany, Holland, Bel gium and Norway to resist the demands of their employe. A federation will also be entered into- with the British owners. The 3000 employes of the Westing house Electric Company, at Brinton, have been notified that they will be compelled to put all- departments of the plant in operation. Tbe mills will run full time, which they have not done for a year or more. A new central labor body was formed in Chicago, III., recently, under the auspices of the American Federation of Labor. It will contain representatives of 50.000 trTrleunionists, and will probably be called the Chicago Federa tion of Labor. It is reported that the Iron Mould ers' Union of North America has in creased its membership by 7000 since July, 1893. That is, since it has adopted the system of higlicr dues and the ptyment of general benefits to its memberi. It is reported that both James O'Connell and V. C. Pomeroy will competo with Samuel Gompers for tbe Presidency of the American Federa tion of Labor, which will soon convene in Cincinnati. 'Massachusetts Supreme (Xurt de cided that strikers have no right to patrol the neighborhood where a strike occurred and intimidate non-union men or distribute boycott circulars. Hereafter SL Louis school authori ties will employ only "union labor in construction work and will also recog nize the printers' union label. 1 REV. DR. TALMAGE Tba Eminent Divine's Sunday Diacoursa. Scwect : "The Dying Century" Text: "Thus salts, the Lor.l, Sat thine hoasti in order, for thonshslt die sad not live." II Kings xx., L No alarm bell do I ring in tha ottaraaoe ot this text, for In the healthy glow of your countenances I flad cause only for cheerful prophecy, but I sball apply the text as spoken In the ear of Hezekiab, down with a bai carbuncle, to the nineteenth century, now closing. It will take only four more long breaths, each year a breath, and the century will expire. My theme is "The Dy Ing Ceoiorv." 1 disease it at an'bour when our National Legislature is about to assemble, some of the members now here present and othets soon to arrive from the North, South, East and West. All the publio conveyance eomlng this way will bring Important addt. ttoos of public men, so that when on Decem ber 7. at high noon, the gavels of Senate and House of Bepreaentatives shall lift and fall the destinies ot this Nation, and through ti the destinies of all Nations straggling to be free, will be put on solemn and tremendoui trial. Amid such intensifying circumstance I stand by the venerable century and address It in tba woriis of my text. Taus salth tha Lord, Set thine house in order, tor thoa sfaalt die and not live." Eternity is too big a subject for ns to understand. Some one has said it Is a great clock that sars "Tick" in one cen tury and Tack" In another. But we can batter understand old time, who has many children and they are the centuries and many grandchildren and they are tha years. With tha dying nineteenth century we shall this morning have a plain talk, telling him some of the good things lie has done, and then telling him some ot the things ha ought to adjust before ha quits this sphere and passes out to join tha eternities. We generally watt until people are dead before we ay much in praise of them. Funeral eulogium is generally very pathetio and eloquent with things that ouht to have been said years before. Ws put on cold tombstones what we ought to nave put in the warm ears of tbe living. We curse Charles Sumner while he la liv ing and cudsrel him into spinal meningitis and wait nntil, in the rooms where I have been living the last year, ha puts his hand on his heart and cries "On. and is gone, and then we make long procession in his honor. Dr. Sunderland, chaplain of tha American Senate, accompanying! stopping long enough to allow tbe dead Senator to Ue in slate in Independence Hall, Philadelphia, and halting at Boston Statebouse, where not long before damnatory resolutions had been passed in regard to him, and then move on, amid the tolling bells and the boom of min ute guns, until we bury him at Mount Au burn and cover him with Dowers five feet deep. What a pity he could not have been awake at his own funeral to hear tha grati tude of the Nation! What a pity that one green loaf could not have been taken from each one of tbe mortuary garlands and put upon his table while be was vet alive at the Arlington! What a pity that out of tbe great choirs who chanted at his obsequies one lit tle girl dressed In white might not nave sung to his living ear a complimentary solol The postmorten expression contradicted the ante mortem. The Nation couid not have spoken the truth both limes about Charles Sumner. Was it before or after his decease it lied? No such injustice shall be inflicted upon tbis venerable nineteenth century. Before he goos we recite in bis hearing some of the good things he has accomplished. Want an aldiiion to tbe world's intelligence be has midel Look at the old schoolhouse, with the snow sifting thrpuel the roof and the filthy tin cup nanging over the watur pall in the corner, and tbe little victims on the long benches without backs, and tha illiterate schoolmaster with his hickory gad, and then look at our modern palaces of free schools under men and women cul tured and refined to the highest excellence, so that whereas in our childhood wa had to be whipped t" go to school, children now cry when they cannot go. Thank you, venerable century; while at the same time we thnnk Ood! What an addition to tha worlds inventions within our century the cotton gin, the agricultural machines for planting, reaping and thrashing; the tele graph; the phonograph, capable of pre serving a human voice from generation to generation; the typewriter, that rescues tha world from worse and worse penmanship, and stenography, capturing from the lips of the swiftest speaker more than 210 words a minute! Never was I so amazed at the facilities of our time as when a few days ago I telegraphed from Washington to New York a long and elaborate manuscript, and a few minutes after, to show its accuracy, it was read to me through tne long-distance tele phone, and it was exact down to the last semicolon and comma. Whnt hath Ood wrought! Ob. I am so glad I was not born sooner. For the tallow candle the electric lighr. For tbe writhings of the surgeon's table God given anesthetics, and the whole physical organism explored by sharpest instrument, and giving not so much pain as the taking ot a splinter from under a child's noger nail. For the lumber ing stagecoach the limited express train. And there is the spectroscope of Fraunhofer, by which our modern scientist feels the pulse of other worlds throbbing with light, Jen ner's arrest by inoculation ot one ot tha world's wont plagues. Di. Keeley's emanci pation for inebriety. Intimation that the virus of maddened canine and cancer and consumption are yet to be balked by magni ficent medical treatment. The eyesight ot the doctor sharpened till he can look through thick flesh and And the biding place ot tha bullet. What advancement in geology, or the catechism ot the mountains; chemistry, or tbe catechism of tbe elements; astronomy, or the catechism of the stars; electrology, or the catechism of the lightnings. What ad vancement in music. At the beginning of this eentury, confining itself, so far as tha great masses of the people were con cerned, to a few airs drawn out on accordion or massacred on church baas viol, now encbanticgly dropping from thousands of Angers in Handel's "Concerto In B Fiat," or Ouilmant's "Sonata In- D Minor." Thanks to you, O century, before you die, for the asylums of merey that yon have founded the blind seeing with their lingers, tbe deaf hearing by tbe motion of Jrour lips, tbe born imbecile by skillful object esson lifted to tolerable intelligence. Tbanks to this eentury for the improved con dition of most Nations. The reason that Na- foleon mails such a successful sweep across urope at the beginning ot the century was that most of the thrones of Europe were oc cupied either by imbeciles or profligates. But most of the thrones of Europe are to-day occupied by kings and queens competent. France a republic, Switzerland a republic, and about flftv free constitutions. I am told. In Europe. Twenty million serfs ot Bussia manumitted. On this Western continent I ean call tha roll of manv republics Mexico. Gautemala, San Salvador, Costa Rica, Para guay, urnguav, flonaur&s, new ureaaaa, Venezuela, Fern. Ecuador, Bolivia, 'Chile, Arm-ntfne Benublic. Brazil. The one strag gling village of Washington to which tba United States Government moved, its entire baggage and equipment packed up In seven boxes, which got lost in the woods near this place, now the architectural glory of the oomineniana aaniiroiiuu ui mo nuim. Tha- money power, so much denounced and often justly criticised, hai covered this continent with universities and free librar ies and asylum of mercy. The newspaper nre.fl. wbich at the beginning of tbe cen tury was an ink roller, by hand moved over one sheet of paper at a time, has b come tha miraculous manufacturer of four or nve or six hundred thousand sheets for ona daily newspajier's issue. Within your memory, O dving century, has been tbe genesis of nearly all Ihe great institutions evangel istic. At London taveru, March 7, 1H02, British and Foreign Bible eociety was born. In M? American Bible society was born. In 1324 American 8unday-school onion wai born. In 1810 American board of commissioners for foreign missions, which has nnr its saving hand on every Nation ot the round earth, was born at a haystack ia Massachusetts. Tha National Temperance society, the Woman's Temperanoa society, and all tha other temperanoa movements were born In this eentury. Africa, hidden to other centuries, by exploration in this ees tury has beaat-intt at tna fast of etvUlaatloB iu ue ocoupied by oommreoe and Christian ity. Tha Chinass wall, onoa an impassable barrier, now is a useless pile of stone and brick. Our American Nation at tha opening of this eentury only a slice of land along the Atlantic coast, now tha whole continent in possession dT our schools and churches and missionary stations. Sermons and re ligious intelligence which In other times. If noticed at all by tha newspaper press, were allowed only a paragraph of three or four lines, now And tna columns ot the secular press In all tha cities thrown wide open, and every week for twenty-six years, without tha omission of a single week, I have been permitted to preach one entire gospel sermon through the news paper press. I thank Ood for this great opportunity. Glorious old eentury! You shall not be entombed until wa have, face to face, extolled you. Too were rocked ia a rough cradle, and tha inheritance yon re eel red was, for tha most part, poverty and struggle and hardship, ant poorly covered graves of heroes and heroines of whom tha world bad not been worthy, ant atheism and military despotism, and tha wreck of Ihe French revolution. Ton inherited tha influ ences tnst resulted in Aaron Burr's treason, and another war with England, and battle of Lake Erie, and Indian savagery, and IiUndvs Lana, and Dartmoor massacre, and dlssentlon, hitler and wild beyond measure ment, and Afrloan slavery, whlnh was yet to cost a National hemorrhage of four awful yean and a million precious lives. Tea, dear old esntury, yon had an awful start, and you hare dons more than well, considering your parentage an1 your early environment. - It is a wonder you did not turn out to be tbe vagabond eentury of all time. Ton baa a bad mother and a bad grandmother. Some of the preceding cen turies ware not fl. to live in their morals were so bad, their fashions were so outrage ous, their Ignorance was so dense, their in humanityso terrific Ob, dying nineteenth century, before yon go we take this oppor tunity of telling you thst you are the best and the mightiest of all the centuries of the Christian era except the first, which gave us the Christ, and you rival that eentury in the fact that you more than all the other centur ies put together are giving the Christ to all the world. One hundred and twelve thousand dollars, at one meeting a few days ago con tributed for the world's evangelization. Look at what you have done, O thou abused and depreciated century. All tha Pacific isles, barred and bolted against the gospel when yon began to reign, now all open, and some of them more Christianized than America. No more, as once written over tha ehurob doors in Cape Colony, "Dogs and Hottentots not ad mitted." The late Mr. Darwin contributing 1 25 to the Southern Missionary Society. Cnn nibaltsm driven off thefaoeof the earth. The gates of all Nations wide open for the gospel entrance when the church shall give up its intellectual dandyism, and quit fooling with higher oritioism, and plunge into tha work, as at a life saving station tbe orew pull out with the lifeboat to take tha sailors off a ship going to places In the Skerries. I thank you, old and dying century. All heaven thanks you, and surely all the Nations of tbe earth ought to thank you. I put before your eyes, soon to be dim for tha last sleep, tbe facts tremendous. I take your wrinkled old hand and shake it In congratulation. I bathe your fevered brow and freshen your parched lips from the fountains of eternal victory. But my text suggests that there are some things that this century ought to do before he leaves us. "Thus salth the Lord, "Set thine house in order, for thou sbalt die and not live." We ought not to let this century go before two orthreethlngsaresot in order For one thing tbis quarrel between la'ior and capital. Tbe nineteenth century inherited it from the eighteenth century, but do not let th's nineteenth century bequeath it to the twentieth. "What we want, says labor, "to set us right Is more strikes and more vig orous work with torch and dynamite." "What we want." says capital, "Is a tighter grip on the working classes and compulsion to take what wagee wo choose to pay, w.th- J vut raierence to their needs. Barn wrong sin. - Both defiant. Until the day of judg ment no settlement of the qnarrelif you leave It to British. Russian or American politics. The religion of Jesus Christ ought to come In within the next tour years ana take the hand of capital and employe and say: "You hare tried every t nlng else and failed. Now I try the gospel of kindness." No more op pression and no more strikes. Tbe gospel ot Jesus Christ will sweeten this acer bity, or It will go on to the end of time, and the Ares that burn the world up will crackle in the ears ot wrathful prosperity and Indignant toil while their hands are still olutehing at each other's throats. Before this eentury sighs its last breath I would that swarthy labor and easy opulence would ocme up and let the Carpen ter of Nazareth join their hands inpledge of everlasting kindness and peaae. When men and women are dying they are apt to divide among their cniiaren mementos, ana one is given a watch, and another a vase, and another a picture, and anothor a rope. Let this veteran century before it dies hand over to tha human raoe, with an Impressiveness that shall last forever, that old family keep, sake, the golden keepsake which nearly 19 JO years ago was handed down from tbe black rook of the mount ot beatitudes, "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you. do ye even so to them, for lor this is the law and tne propnets. Another thing toat neeas to De set in order before the veteran century quits us Is a more thorough and all embracing plan for the world's gardenization. We bave bean trying to save the world from the top, and it cannot be done that way. It has got to be saved from the bottom. The church ought to be only a West Point to drill soldiers for outside battle. What It a militiary academy should keep Its students from age to age ia tba messroom and the barracks? No, no! They are wanted at Montezuma and Chapuliepee and South Mountain and Missionary Kldt-e, and the church is no place for a Christian to stny very long. He is wanted at the front. He Is needed in tbe desperate charge of taking the psrapets. Tha last great battle lor Ood is not to be fought on the campus of a college or the lawn ot a church. It is to be fongbt at Missionary Bidge. Before this century quits us let us establish the babit of giving the forenoon of the Sab bath to the churches and the afternoon an 1 the evening of the Sabbath to gospel work In the halls and theaters and streets an I flelds and slums, and wildernesses of sin and sorrow. Why do Christians who have stuffed themselves with "tbe strong meat of Ihe word" and all gospel viands on Sabbath foreuoons want to come up to a second ser vice and stuff themselves again? These old gormandizers at the gospel feast need to get into outdoor work with the outdoor gospel that was preached on the banks of the Jor dan, and on the Ashing smaoksot Lake Gali lee, and in the bleak air ot Assyrian moun tains. I am told that throughout all our Am srican cities the second Sabbath service in tbe majority ot churob.es is sparsely, yea, disgracelully attended, and Is the distress of the consecrated and eloquent pastors who bring their learning and piety before pews ghastly for their Inoocupancy. What Is the providential meaning? The greatest ot all evangelists since Bible times recently sug gested that tha evening services in all tho churches bs turned into tha most popular style of evangelistlo meetings for outsiders. Surely that Is an experiment worth making, if that does not succeed, then it does seem to me all the churches whloh cannot secure sufficient evening audiences ought to shut up their buildings at night and go where tho people are and invite them to come to the gospel banquet. Let the Christian souls bountifully fl In the morning, go forth in tbe afternoon nuj evening to feed the multitudes of outsiders starving for the bread of which if a man eat he shall never again hunger. Amongthose clear down the gospel would make more ranid eonnuest than among those who know so much and have so much that Ood can not teach or help them. In those lower depths are splendid fellows in the rough, like the shoeblack a reporter saw near New York City HalL He asked a boy to black his boots. The boy came up to his work provokinsly slow and bad just begun when a large boy shoved him aside an 1 began the work, and the reporter reprove! him as be ing a bully, and the boy replied: "Ob, that's all right. I am going to do it for 'im. You see he's been sick in tha hospital more'n a month, so us boys turn In and give 'im a lift." "Do all tha boys help him?" asked tbe reporter. "Yes. sir. When they ain't got no job themselves and Jim gets one they turn In and help 'im, lor ho ain't strong yet, you see." "How much percentage does he give you?" said the reporter. Tba boy re plied "I don't keep aoae of It 1 ain't no such sneak as that. All the boys give u what they git on his job. I'd like to catch any teller sneaking on a sick boy, I would " Tba reporter gave him a twenty-five cent piece and said, "You keep ten eents for yourself and give the rest to Jim." "Can't do It, sir. It's his customer. Here, Jim." Such big souls as that strew all tbe lower depths of tba cities, and, get them converted to Ood, this would be the last full oentury ot the world's sin ami but little work of evangelisation would be left for the next century. Before this century expires let there be a combined effort to save the great cities of America ani Great Britain and of all Christendom. What an awful thing it would be for you! O dying eentury, to bequeath to the com Ing oentury, as yet Innocent and unscarred wltn a single sin or Duniene i wltn a single sorrow, tha blasphemy, tbe lawlessness, tbe atheism, tha proflignoy and the woe of irreat cities still unevangellmd. What we ought to see, O dying eentury. Is a revival of religion that would wrap the continent! in conflagra tions of religious awakening, and that would make legislation and meruhau-.li9e and all styles of worldly business wait awhile at the telegraph offices and the telephone offl because they are occupied with telli-.g the story ot cities and Nations born In a day. Nearly an the centuries closed witu some thing tremendous. Why mHynot-thiscrnlury close in tbe salvation of Amerie.i? I do not know whether our th--ological frien I.', who have studied the subject more than I have, are right or wrong when thev say Christ will come In person to setup His kingdom in this world; but though we would t- over whelmed with ourunwortbiness I would like to see Christ descend from heaven in one ol tha clouds of this morning, and planting His feet on this earth, which He c ime cen?urie ago to cave, declare His reign of love and mercy and salvation on e:irt ti begun. And what more appropriate place I sttv it rev erentially tor such a divine lnn iing than the capital ot a continent never cursed by the tyrannies and sup jrs.itions of the Old World? What has this dying nineteenth eentury to tell us before he gaea'f We nil love to bear septuagenarians. octogennxiau, nonagenar ians ana centenarians iniK. we gainer around the armchair and listen till It is far on into the night and never weary ot bear ing their experiences. But Lord Lyn lliurst. at eighty-eight years ot age, pouring into Ihe ears of the House of Lords in a four hours' address tha experiences of a lifetime, aud Apollonius, at 100 years of age, recounting his travels to thrilled listeners, and Charles Macklln, at 107 years of age, absorbing the attention of his hearers, aud Ua ph F .iiih un of our country, at 107 years, telling tbe Prince ot Wales tbe story of Bunker Hill, can create no such interest as this dyiog ceuteu arlan If he will only speak. leu us, u nineteenth century, bIor you go in a score of sentences, some of tne things you bave heard an i soeo. Tbe veteran turns upon us and says: "I saw Thomas Jefferson riding in unattended from Monticello, only a few steps from where you stand, dismount from his horse and hitoh tbe bridle to a Dost, and on vnn- "dor hill take the oath of the presidential omae. x saw yonaer capital ablaze witn war's Incendiarism. I saw tho puff ot the first steam engine in America. I heard tbe thunders of Waterloo, of Sepastopol and Sedan and Gettysburg. I was pres-nt at all the coronations of the kings and queens and emperors and empresses now iu tbe world's palaces. I have seen two billows roll across this continent and lrom ocean to ocean a billow of revival joy in 1857 and a billow of blood In 161. I have seen f sur generations of the human r.ice march across this world and disanoear. I saw their cradles rocked and their gruvesdug, i nave nenra tne wearing bells an 1 tbe death knells of near a hunlre l years. I have olapptd my bands for millions of Joys and wrung them in millions of agonies. I raw Maoready and Edwin Forrest act and Edward Payson pray. I heard the first chime of Longfellow's rhythms, and before anyone else saw then I read the first line of asrasvir-v History ana tne ursi vrse oi Bryant's "Thanatopsis" ani the flrst word of Victor Hugo's almost supernatural rcmanoe. I beard tbe musio of all the grand marohes and the lament of all the requiems That for nigh tea decades made the cathedral win dows shake. I have seen more mcrnl and spiritual victories than all of my pietleces sora put together. For all you who hear or read this valedictory I bave kindled all the domestio firesides by wbich you ever sat and roused all the ha'loos and roundelays and merriments you have ever beard and un rolled all the pictured sunsets and starry banners of tbe midnight heavens that you have ever gazed nt. But ere I go take Ibis admonition and benediction of a dying cen tury. The longest life, like mine, must olose. Opportunities gone never come back. ns a vuuiu prove irum niKu a nuunrea years of observation. Tbe eternity that will soon take me will soon take you. The wicked live not out halt thoir days, as I bave seen In 10,000 instances. Tue only influence for milking the world happy Is an influence that I, the nineteenth century. Inherited from the flrst century of tbe Christian era the Christ of all the cen turies. Be not deceived by the fuet that I have lived so lonir, for a century is a large wheel bat turns 100 smaller wheels, which are the years, and each one of those years turns 365 smaller wheels, which are the days. ana eacn one ol the Sbsuuys turns 21 smaller wheels, whloh are tbe hours, each one of hose 24 hours turns 60 smaller wheels, which are the minutes, and those 69 minutes turn still smaller wheels, which are the seconds. And all of this vast machinery lain perpetual motion and pushes us on and on toward the great eternity whose doorswiit, at 12 o olock of the winter night between the year 1900 and the year 1901 open before me, the dying century. 1 quote from the three Inscriptions over thiee doors of theoathedral of Milan. Over one door, amid a wreath of sculpture I roses, I read, "All mat WLlcn pleases us is but for a moment. Ovsr another door, around a sculptured cross, I read. "AH that which troubles us Is but for a mo ueui." Hut over the central door, I read, "That only la Important whioh U eternal." O eternity, eternity, eternity! My hearers, as the nineteenth century was born while the face of this Nation was yet wet with tears because of the fntal horseback ride that Washington took out here at Mount Vernon through a December snowstorm, 1 wish the next eentury might be born nt a time when the faco of tbis Nation shall bo wet with the tears ot the literal or spiritunl arrival of tho Ore&t Deliverer of Nations, of whom St. John wrote with apocalyptic pen, "And I saw, and behold a white horse! And He tbnt sat on Him bad n bow, and a crown was given unto Him, aud Ho went forth conquering and to conquer." Some electricians carry a small compass in their pockets, and before they touch tbe wire holJ the compass near it. If tbe needl ia not deflected, ihey know there is no current in it, and that is safe to ban lie it It is said that a large nnmberof tb smaller towns in Switzerland, wbeie water power is so abundant, are being supplied with the electric carroct for lighting and power pui poses which is generated by water power. A flowering plant i- si id to abstract from the soil two hundred times its own weight in water, The production of rubber bicycle tires in tbis country is about 1,000,000 sets per year. We are all likely to bave sympathy with the under dog, but keep our hands in our pockets so they won't be bitten. The longest distance to which a projectile has been thrown, ws at Shoebnrynes, England, on April 15, 1888, when a Longridge wiro bound goo thrown Bliot 21,358 yards, or VI miles ?38 yards. An institution has been started in Brsseli, Belgium, for the teaching of African languages and dialects to stu dents who intend to settle in the dark continent. A telephone exchange has been es tablished in Kioto Japao, and is said to bave proved a great saecesp.lt is under Government control. afrS".: 'Vfeer-1 fray. I. lav '- ." v"1 -'-- ? -i". "' k; r ;-- i v.. v r