3 ? ft. P. aOHWEIER, THE OON8TITUTION-THE ONION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Rdttr and VOL. LI MIFFLINTOWIS, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 13 1897 NO. 5. ' 4 I 1 niArTKU xxv. With ft feeling of relief Urtiilntry walk ed rapidly away. The last wnnls of I.eigli had stirred within him onoe nure th trouble which had innde him shirk meet ing his mother that morning. The burn ing down of Leigh's place and the destruc tion of the wonderful clock would afford a story to be told when he sot home, and he might interpose that history between the first words of meeting and the ulti mate announcement that the engagement between Dora and himself was at ar .end. When he got back home he beard, with great relief, that Mrs. and Miss Grace were at luncheon in the dining-room with Mrs. Ilanbury. The presence of tho two Tisitors and the general nature of the conversation necessary to their presence , and the meal would serve as an admirable softener of the story he had for his moth er's private ear. Some reference brought in Leigh's name, and then Ilanbury told of the fire, the destruction of the clock, his meeting that morning with the dwarf and the con viction of the latter that he would not long survive the destruction of his in comparable machine. He noticed as he went on that Miss Grace first flushed and then paled. The giri had hardly spoken up to this. She sat silent and timid. She did not seem to hear quickly or to apprehend ac curately. She had hesitated in her an swers like one afraid. The table was Email, and laid for four people. Ilanbury sat opposite his mother, Edith opposite her grandmother. The heat was intense. There was a buzzing and beating in the girl's ears. AH at once she hastily put one hand to her left side and the other to her forehead and rose, swaying softly to and fro. "I I " she whispered, but could say no more. Ilanbury caught her, or she would have fallen. The two ladies got np. "She is not well," said the old woman, excitedly. "She has eaten nothing foi days:" The girl reclined, cold and pale as mar ble, in the young man's arms. Her eyes were half closed, her lips half open. He half led -her,- half lifted Tj to a couch. Restoratives such as sto, . ft hand were applied, but she did not .aite recover. She was not exactly unconscious. This was no ordinary faint. The ladies were terrified, and Ilanbury ran off for a doctor. When he came back, tha girl had been got upstairs. She was J still in the same state, not quite con ! scious, and not quite insensible. The doc tor made a long examination, and heard all that was to be told. When he came down to the dining-room, where Ilanbury was excitedly walking up and down, he said the case was serious, but not exactly dangerous, that is, the patient's life wae in no Imminent peril. She bad simply I been overwrought and weakened by want I of food, and jarred by suppressed and con i tending emotions. There was no organic i. -disease, but the heart had been function ally affected by the vicissitudes of the f" past few days acting on an organism of ; exquisite sensibility. Quiet was the best medicine, and, after quiet, careful strengthening, and then tho drugs men--s. tiontd in his prescription. But above all, quiet. Ilanbury took up the prescription and hastened off with it. On bis way back from the druggist he reverted to the past of Leigh: "Yes, I owed the introduction to him. I freely forgive him now. He, too, was tho means of breaking off the Ash ton af fair. I must write at once. I have behaved badly in not doing so before. I'll Write the moment when I get back home; Tea, I must write when I get back, and then I'll put the affair out of my mind altogether, for good and ever." When lie had finished a letter to Dora he closed it without reading it over. "When one reads over a letter like this,' he thought, "one grows nice about phrases and tries to alter it, and finally tears it up. 1 am satisfied that if 1 tried all day long I should do no better than this. I shall post it myself when I go out. That letter is a great weight off my mind. and- now I am much less disinclined to break the matter to my mother. When that is over I shall feel that I am free." The next morning he received a mes sage requesting him to call upon Leigh, at his new lodgings. lie found the dwarf In bed. A woeful change had taken place In face and (rame. "I sent for you because I have some thing on my mind; and, as you are the only man who knows all the secret of Mystery Gold, and my deputy winder, I want you to do me a service. Will you?" were Leigh's Erst words. "Anything that an honest and honor able man may do, I will do for yon with pleasure. If I can possibly," said Han bury, shocked and subdued by the change In the clockmaker's appearance. "Are 70a going to see the Ashton's soon?" "No." Hsnbury reddened, but he was standing with ia back to the light. "The family are leaving town suddenly." "Are you going, too?" "No." Hanbury was anything brit pleased with all this, but who could be angry with a dying man, and such a dying man, too? "If 70a were going I should like to send a message. But of course you cannot be going if they are leaving town. I told yon I have some money oi my own. I hare made my will since I saw you. After my mother's death all will go, I mean the yearly interest of all will go in equal share to any hunchbacks that apply for shares. The conditions will be advertised ia the papers." -t UiinK yon could not have done bet ter with it," said Hanbury, cordially. "Yes. When you see her next, tell her I gave np all thought of mr.king Miracle Gold, because she said she wished .me to. I know it ia not fair of me to keep you -where. Ton want to go. Say good-by to r before she leaves town. Yon must rt atay here any longer. Will you say giod-by to me also? Two good-bye in one aay. One to her and one to me." Hanbury rose and held out bis hand, 'sayuw "XJooi-bz." I l keigU did not stir. "Are we not to shake hands?" I "Yes, in a moment." j Hanbury waited a while. "I am going , now. You have nothing more to say?" He had not. j He had nothing more to say. He would ! say no more to any one. He was dead. CnAPTKK XXVI. Ilanbury had, during the past few days, carefully avoided meeting friends or ac quaintances. He went near no club and kept in the house a good deal. When he j went abroad he drove. He did not wish I to be asked questions of the most ordi nary kind respecting the Asntons. That morning he had seen i:i a news paper that Mr., Mrs. and Miss Ashton Were leaving for a tour abroad. That was all the paragraph said. At the very moment Hanbury was speaking to Oscar Leigh the Aslitou tam lly were leaving the city. When Dora Ashton sat that afternoon in her own room, after writing to her lover, she knew the engagement was at an end, and realized the knowledge. But she had not said anything of it. When she got his answer all was over beyond any chance whatever. He had apologized amply for his offense and accepted her decision. His letter had a bracing effect upon her. She had been perfectly sincere in writing her letter, and she had never wavered in her resolution of breaking off the engagement, yet deep down in her nature was a formless hope, which she would not acknowledge to herself for a moment, that he might disregard her re quest and insist upon her re-consideration. But with the advent of his letter that hope vanished wholly, and she felt more firm and secure. The letter had been a tonic. If he were so easily dis missed, he had not been very much in earnest. John Hanbnry thought that now, all being over with Leigh, he was bound in common rectitude to disclose the source of the gold which Leigh had intended passing off as the result of his imaginary discovery in chemistry or alchemy. The simplest course would be to go to the police and tell all he knew. He was not bl.us to pass through streets in which be was known, and he was glad of any thing to do. How better could he em play an hour than by trying to Cud out if any such man as Timmons existed? He did not like the whole thing, but he couli not rest easy while he had the name of a man whom Leigh said dealt largely in the fruit of robberies and thefts. At all events, supposing the whole story told hira by the dwarf was fiction, no harm could come of a visit to Timmons. He jumped into a cab and was rapidly driven to the address Leigh had given him. Y'es, sure enough, there was the name and the place, "John Timmons. Marine Store Dealer." But how did one get in. supposing one wanted to get in? The place was all shut up, and he could see no door. A man was busy with one of the many up-ended carts. He had the wheel off and was leisurely greasing the axletree. "Has Mr. Timmons left this place, please?" he asked of the man. "I think so. Ay, he has." "Do you know how long?" "A few days. Since Monday, I think. Anyway, the place hasn't been open since Monday, and I hear that he is gone since Saturday night." "Have you any notion where he's gone?" 4 The man stopped greasing, the wheel nd looked up curiously. -"Are you from the police, too?" "No, I am not. Have people been here from the police?" "Ay. And if yon was in with Timmons and that crew, you'd better show a clean pair of heels. There's something wrong about a dwarf or a cripple that's missed; burned up in a fire. Timmons and a burglar was seen hanging about that place, and they do say that if they're catched they'll be hanging about some where else. So if you're in with thst lot, you'd better clear out too. They say Timmons has got out of the country. The man resumed his work upon the axle. Hanbury thanked him and turned away. He bad nothing to do here. The police had information already. CHAPTER XXVII. "Well," he said, "what is the matter? Oh, breakfast." He pnt down his pews paper. "I see," he added, "they have given this fellow Timmons five years, and served him very right." "John, yon have forgotten something.' she said, stopping him on'his way to the breakfast table and laying one of her delicate white hands on his shoulder. "Eh? Forgotten something? Have I? What? I have a lot of important things on my mind," said he, looking down on the dear, sweet, oval face, turned up to his. "Whatever Is on your mind, air, you ought not to forget the dutler of your lips. I have not had my gocd-morrow kiss, sir." "I never had anything so important 011 my mind, or on my lips, Edy, as your kiss, dear." lie took her in his arm and kissed her fondly. "Yon grow better at compliments as tho days go by." "No, dear, deeper in love." "With sdeh a commonplace kiud of thing as a wife?" "With the most nncommonplace sweetheart-wife in all the world." "John, I am already beginning to feel quite a middle-aged wife, and my ring where it touches the guard is getting worn." "That's a desperately serious thing- about the ring, I mean. Gold was too easily-worn a metal to marry yon with, Edith. It should have been a plain band of adamant, and even that would not last long enough, dear." "Are you practicing a speech to win a constituency?" "No. I am speaking out of my heart to keep what I have won." "Do yon know I envy yon only for one thing ?L' . - "And what ib that?" "All the love that yon give me?" "But we are quits there, for I give all, yon give all." "But youra seems so much richer than mine." "But I am with yon, and always shall be. You are not afraid of my leaving you?" "In the vulgar sense? Ob, no! Afraid of your going away and caring for some one else? Oh, no. That could not be." "No. indeed. No, indeed." ""For I should call you back and show rou my heart, and how could you leave me when you saw that there was nothing in all my heart but you? Your nltv would not let you do that. You might take something else away, but you could nit m5 away au mat 1 naa in my heart." "YOU dreamep rtt hnlv ilMim. have come from some blessed place, you . nave come 10 us rrom some place that ia better than this." "No," she said, aoftly, "no. There is no ueuer piace ror me. 1 am where Uod placed me in my husband's arms." They had been married a couple oi months, and it waa June once more. Not a cloud had arisen between them for these two months or during the months before. John Hanbury's mother said that Edith Grace had the same witchery in appearance as that village beauty of the olden days, and that some quality of the blood which flowed in his veins made him succumb at once to her, for otherwise how- could it be that he should almost im mediately after parting from Dora Ash ton fall helplessly in love with a girl so extraordinarily like Dora Ashton as Edith? How else could the fascination be accounted for? "I do not believe," he would say to himself, "that I was ever in love with Dora. 1 do think we should never have got on well together, and I am certain when she and Whinfield are married thert will not be a happier couple in America, excepting Edith and -me. When I heard that Dora was to be on of the party on the homeward cruise of Whinfield's yacht I knew all would be arranged before they saw Chicago again. They are most ad mirably suited to one another. "With Edith an inspired accord aros between us. She leaned upon me, and I grew strong enough to support the bur den of Atlas. I Hung myself aside, so thnt I might not be impeded in my services to her. And I was welcomed in the spirit I came. She would take what I had tc give, and all I had, and I had no care in my mind of myself or any of the gifts 01 graces which had been mine and now were hers. So I had enough time to think of her and no care to distract me from her." That was his wav of nnttlnir It tn htm. self when he was in a very abstract and figurative humor. When he was not quit so abstract or figurative he would say to himself: "It is sympathy, nothing more than sympathy. That is the Miracle Gold we should all try to make in the crucible of our hearts." THE END. Overrated. There la a widespread belief that the Ave senses of savages are extraordin arily sharp and acute; and In the mat ter of vision especially, popular opin ion would award the palm to the In dian. The popular notion Is, however clearly in the wrong. An English traveler in South Amer ica recently bad occasion to test the question. He waa greatly surprised to find that bis guides could distinguish objects which he could not make out at all. - Thus, when a tiny speck appeared on the landscape of the pampas, a native could tell by the sight and movements what manner of thing It was. He sub sequently discovered that this extra ordinary range of vision was due more to long experience than-to the actual possession of keen eyes. For when be took two of bis guides off their native heath, and gave them unfamiliar sights p.nd scenes in a city, neither could see any better than an ordinary person. As a matter of fact, the five senses of the Indian or savage are dull com pared with the five senses of civilized man. A competent authority says that a savage sees but few sights, hears but few sounds, tastes but few flavors, smells but few odors, and that bit whole life is narrow and blunt. The Lobster. The lobster's legs, all told, are ten In number, but only eight of these are largely used for walking. The front pair, or big claws, have been specialized, as In the crab and most other of the higher crustaceans, into prehenslve organs for catching and crushing the prey. Their use Is ob vious. Lobsters feed largely off mul lusks of various sorts and other hard shelled marine animals; in order to be able to break or crush the shells of these, and so get at the soft fish with in, they have acquired such large and very muscular nippers or pincers. Late Hoars and Old Age A German doctor who has been col lecting Information about the habits of long-lived persons finds that the ma jority of those who attained old age Indulged In late hours. Eight out of ten persons over 80 never went to bed till well Into the small hours and did not get np again till late in the day. Two million dollsrs ha len bequeathed to the Chnrcn of England and the bociety for he Propagation oi the Gospel by Uawsbury cotton spinner. Professor Villard, of the Paris Ecole Normsle, has at last sncceeded in combining rgou and water. It re quired a presore ot 200 atmospheres to do it Warrensburg, Mo., has a street car line, the rolling stock of which consists of one car that makes a t ip once a month, merely to preserve the fran chise. A new species of giraffe has been discovered in Atricu The growtn of the Argentine Republic fcince 1861 has been remark able. In tbatvear the population was placed at 1,350.000, while at present it is sail to he 4,000,000. While the deatb rate of the Ana nan cities averages twenty-five per thousand, the rate of thirty .three great towns in .England and Wales is only 15.8. The annual number of births i about 36,79-7.000 an average of 100, 800 a day, 4200 an hour and seventy a minute. Generally spoakiig, wa say that the curvature of the earth amounts to about eeven inches to toe statute mile; it is exactly 6.99 inobes, or 7,962 inches for a geographical mile. Labor Notes. - Paris has 70,000 sewin? girls. Gompera was born in London. North Dakota hay is f 7 a ton Nashville plumbers organized. Duluih baa a Union Label League. Uncle Sam cares for 75,000 paupers. 8priogfield is to have a co-operative bank. Charleston knitting mills employ negroes. Americans use 2,000,000 tons of sugar a year. Albany printers kick sgainst convict printers. Some New York gold beaters gel 17.50 a week. Wisconsin has an Anti-Convict La bor Association. Minneapolis now boasts an allied Printing Trade Council. Fall River weavers will ask millo to furnish filling at the looms. A New York cigarette manufacturer has voluntarily increased wage. Grand Rapids furniture workers' wages have been cut 10 to 20 per cent. Des Moines street railway must pay the city 5 per cent of its net receipts. There are over 2,003 enrolled mem bers in the new American 'Longshore men's union. Kansas City Council has ordered the eight-hour day to be introduced in city work. The International Union of Ship, Dock and River Workers has a mem bership of 150,000. The work of organisation among the railway employees of Ireland ia making rapid headway. A Swansea, Wales, firm sued i i striking employes for damages and the strikers were all fined. The National Union of Custom Tailors has adopted a button to be worn by members of that organization. A Chicago Painters' Union will bold open meetings hereafter twice' tacb month for the discussion of economic questions. The Social sts claim to have figured out that l he F. deration of Labor hn only 240,000 members, instead of the 700,000 claimed by Simuel Gompera. The Knights of Labor have given a charter to a new union of waiters at Minneapolis, despite the protest of tbf original uniou and other bodies. Conneaut, O , has perfected an or ganization whose tole purpose is to patronize union-made goods only. The organization has oeeu named "Labor' Salvation." ' The Building Trades' Council, o. Cleveland, has decide 1 to demand aa eight hour day for all trades connected with that organization, on and April 1. - If the eight-hour-a-day idea c. a a be established it would, so says the Toledo Bee,- probably help more tc solve the labor, problem than all t.i act of legislation that can be enacted. The State Legislative Committee ol the Boston Central Labor Union hai been instructed to assist all tradei having a label tu securing an enact ment by the Legislature of Massachu setts of the Minnesota law. New York bricklayers have asked Mayor Strong to make provision in the city budget for additional building in spectors, and they suggest that it would be well to have an aux liary force of inspectors taken from the union. The members of the Silver Workers Protective Association of New York are much opposed to the electrical clocks in the shops, which tell the exact time every employe enters and leaves. The Independent Shirt Ironers and Laundry Workers' Union reports hav ing secured an increase in wages ol 10 and 15 per cent, in a n urn tier ol shops in New York. A member of the Michigan Legisla ture at the coming session will intro duce a bill for the establishment of the referendum and one for siigle tax. He say manufacturers and real estate men favor the latter. The annual report of the Order oi Railway Conductors shows that over 20 percent of the death and disability claims paid were for accidents. Of tiie $2 500,000 paid by the order the past ytar, over $1,000,000 was for accident' injuries. Patent Notes. To shovel coal and sift ashes a new shovel has a series of tines, which are curved downward in the centre and meet at the ends, a shaking motion sifting the ashes through into a re ceptacle, whin the good coal can be thrown back on the tire. A new battle is blown with a solid neck, the opening being In the bottom of the bottle, through which it can be filled, but from which no liquid can be drawn, it being necessary to break the neck to remove the contents of the bottle. To prevent refrigerator pans from running over, a New Yorker a taches one end of the pan to a lever having a sliding weight, which can be set to give the alarm at any quantity ol water desired, the raising of tha lever touching off the alarm. An auxiliary bicycle seat is fastened to the rear hub by two rods long enough to raise it to the level of th other sadd'e, a flat spring being clamped to the bicycle frame near th front seat to hold it in the position de sired, the other en i of tho spring curv ing over 60 that the back caddie ca 0 be attached to it. The largest electrio power trans mission tnceessfullr in use is said to be at Fresno, CaL The distance is tmrty five miles, 'lbe power is derived from a waterfall furuishing 1,500 horse power. The salmon peek in British Colum bia for 1896 exceeds 6G0.000 cases. For ten dava after the departure of its mistress. Miss Turner, on a visit, a pet png dog in the family of A. V. Turner, of Thetford, Vt, made atiip to the railway station every day but ore. Curious Trifles. A LONG BEIPGE. A bridge 41 miles long would cer tainly be a novelty, and yet that is tb kind of a bridge they are talking oi building across Polks strait, to connect the island of Ceylon with the mainland of India. The strait is 41 miles scroti at its narrowest point, but is very shal low in some places. Surveyors have been at work and the c Bt of construc tion is estimated at some 28,000,000 rupees. The plan of the work con templates the connection of the ends of the bridge by 145 miles of railroad with Co'ombo, the great harbor of Cey lon, and by 90 miles of road with Ms dura, the nearest point of the Indian Railway syst- m. THE STRANGEST tCEL OH RECORD. Probably the most remarkable duel on record took place in France in the year 1808. As usual it was all about a lady a certain Mile. Tirevet, who was unable to decide between two lovers. She finally di cided to accept the one who could dispose of the other in a duel. Tl a lovers agreed to fight in the air. Two balloons were made exactly alike, an upon an appointed day each one soared aloft, accompanied by a second and armed with blunderbusses, the arrangement being that they were to tire, not upon each other, but upon the balloons. When they were half a mile high the signal was given. One of the duelists fired and missed. The other followed suit, with such disas trous effect that the occupants of the car were dashed to earth and killed instantly. STRANGELY PRESERVED HUMAN BODIXg. They were good eiubalmers in tbe old days. Only a few years ago tbe brains of James I., of England, were discovered enclosed in a little leaden case io a hospice in Paris. Four hun dred and sixty-three years after Edward I. died be was found to be littte, if at all changed, so far as co temporary pic tures could be trusted. The flesh of the face was a little wasted that was all. Canute died in 1017; in 1766 hie body was found to be still quite fresh looking. In the tenth century the bodies of several Roman soldiers were exhumed from an AberJeen peat bog, snd after 1,500 years were as fresh and as plump as if they had only been interred a few months. -The remains of William the Conqueror and his w'fe were found absolutely perfect ia the sixteenth century. Lady Kilsyth and her infant were emb timed in 1717, and close upon 80 years afterward were dis covered to be as perfect as at the houi in which the burial took place. Tbe bodies of Tnoma Gray, one time Marquis of Dorsetshire, and Robert Bray brook, Bishop of London in the fourteenth century, were also strangely preserved for cen 1 urles. SOME ROYAL AMERICAN'S. There aie a good many of onr cele brated Americans who can boast ol royal descent. '-Old Hickory" Jack. ( son was a descendant of King Robert Bruce, of Scotland James Buchanan could trace his lineage back to King Fargallue, of Ireland, while two ol'uei President! (the Harrisons), it is alleged, are descended fronr. King Powhattao by the marriage of Pocahontas with John Rolfe. The Lees, of Virginia, trace their ancestry to King Robert Stuart, of Scotland; Amelie Rives to ill.. James I., of Scotland, and Edwaid of England, and the Burkes, of New York, to Charlemagne and Alfred the Great. Charles Chauncey, once Presi dent of Harvard, was descended from Louis IV., of France; General Meigs from David I , of Scotland; the Mc Intosbes, of Georgia and New Jersey, from William the Conqueror, an I ths Calverts, of Baltimore, from Charles II., of England. The list might be continued almost i definitely. AS AWFUL PENALTY. There is no death penalty in Belgium, but few criminals would choose the punishment substituted for it that ie if they had a choice. The condemned man is placed in a dungeon so con structed that from the moment he en ters it he will never hear the sound of human voices nor see a human being. His food is passed in through a sliding paoel in the door of his cell. Not one prisoner has ever been known to sur vive this punishment more than three years. The authorities have striven in vain to piolong their lives by varying tin lr food as much as possible, but those who are moderately or lightly nourished gradually waste away, while those who are fed generously go mad and die raving maniacs. Journalistic Wit. Secrelary Mor'on continues to ineis that the free distribution of seeds by tbe Government is all wrong. Still, there is no reason why Brother Morton should - worry over the mat'.er. II won't have to hand out the pumpkin seed after ihe 4ih of March. Mail and Express. Ex-Qmen Liliuokalani intimates that it will be time to explain her mis sion when she reaches Wasiiiogloo. Meanwhile tho only Thurber is taxe 1 with the delicate task of finding out whether she comes bearing an olive branch or a headsman's axe Mail and Express. V takes 72,000 4ons of paper to make - the postal cards osod in the United Stites each year. The art of making paper from fib-ons matter reduce I to a pulp in water appears to have bee:i first discovered by the Chinese eighteen hundred years ago. Henry Van Nostran'f. a New York retired merchant, who died r cently, 1 was one 01 tne most nototl conchologists n th world, and leaves a collection of lhells of great value. Fourteen car loads of seal tkins passed east over tbe Ucion Pscific recent! v, which i' said to be the most valuable shipment of freight over the road in several years. Mexico pays f.12,000,000 interest a year on that portion of her debt held in foreign countries. An ostrich liv s about thirty years, and the av- rage annual yield of a bird in captivity is from two to four pounds of plumes. FARH NOTES. Coo'ked turnips are good for daces. Mix a little charooal in the soft feed. Langshans do better if permitted a large range. , Half a dozen chicks are a fair hatch from thirteen eggs. Never get your stale eggs mixed with your fresh ones. If you wish your eggs to sell well, sort them as to color. Ii is better to give the milk to lbs chickens before it sours. Light Bran mis, like all great scratchers, are a hardy fowL Spray the poultry house occasion ally with tha Bordeaux mixture. It will pay to thoroughly fit the ground before you put in the seed. Draughts are very apt to bring on attacks of roup in the poultry yard. Fowls need as careful and intelligent breeding as sheep or any other kind of stock. Give your poultry plenty of fresh air and clean, cool water during the hot weathei. It costs just as much to keep a poor animal (and sometimes more)1 than it does a good one. Do not attempt to raise chickens i a breeder unless you are going to sea to the temperature regularly. Fowls are very fond of mustard, which is one of the best and cheapest green foods thai can be grown. A person does not get rich very fast by running in debt for everything. Cents make the dimes and dimus make the dollars. If you want eggs yon must not per mit your bens to get fat, neither must yon keep them hungry. Keep to the golden mean. Ducks allowed to swim in cold water become stiff and rheumatic. Pekin ducks are considered peculiarly sensi tive to cold and dampness. The greatest loss of young turkeys is due to the large gray lice, which work on the heads and throats, but which cannot be seen except by a close examination. It is not necessary to have a palatial residence on the farm, bat it is neces sary in more ways than one to make your house and home as pleasant and attractive as you can. There is a kind of sh-ep that the move a man has of them the worse oil he is. It is a pity that a man can't buy a share of shuup sense as easily as he can buy some good sheep. If yon are so made that you have to have a dog on the farm, take pains to have the sheep so well acquainted with it that they will not be scared .at the presence of a dog in the yard. There are lots of sheepmen that are "not in it" when progressive breeds and methods are sought for. . They talk progress and look for progress in other men, but do not practice it themselves. ' There h ts been an unusual activity in importin-r Dorset sheep into this country this season. The importers are all men of high character, and their selections are exceptionally good in every respect. It is found that the finest fleeces grow in the warmest climates as often as otherwise. This is in marked con trast with the old theory that cold ia essential to the growth of fine wool. and that warm climates are unsuited to any but the coarsest fleeces. Housewives -Helps. To keep oranges an! lemons in per fectiou, hang them iu a wire net in cool and airy place. Cut-glass should be washed with hot suds and a brush to cleanse all the small divisions of the pattern. Silk nil lerwear should bo washed in topid wati'r with atnmouia, thoroughly riused and hung up to dry with per fectly cleau clofbepius. To sweep oarpet thoroughly, wet a pint of corn meal slightly with water. Sprinkle it over the carpet and sweep. It lays the dust and is a good cleanser. Crude oil is an excellent polish and cleanser for both floors an I furniture of all sorts, except 1 ' finished wood, such as mahogau. bird's-eye ninple. Windows which have broad sills can be utilized as book-shelves, places for the family work-basket or for writing materials, and in suitll rooms they prove useful spaces. For an evening entertainment the Vienna method of serving coffee is a .new departure. Tha coffee is sweet ened and croamed to taste an 1 left to cool. Before serving, a heaping table spoonful of ice-cream is put into each cup. Small glasses can be usad for tbe purpose. For a party of fifty little boys and girls there should be 100 chicken and tongue sandwiches, cake of all kinds, cut iu thin slices, and small cakes, iced and plain. About three gallons of btrawberry and vauilla ice-cream will be sufficient. There should also be eight pounds of assorted candies, a few dozen mpttoes and plenty of fruit. To make good sardine eandwichei remove the skin and all traces of bone from a sufficient number of sardines. Then cut to a paste with an equal quantity of the yolks of hard-boiled eggs. Season with saltj pepper aud lemon juice. Spread on thin slices of bread from which all crust has been cut, and fold in triangles. Wrap in buttered paper until ready to serve. Seventy two races inhabit the earth and ue 3004 different toDgU' s. There and about 1000 religions. Tr.ide competition in Chicago has become so tremendous that coffin are now offered at actnal cost. Spain an 1 Turkey were once great nations. Both are to-day on the verge of utter collapse. There is a white bearded race of savages among the forests of tbe Mar nnn in South America, supposed to be descended from desetters and stragglers from the Spanish onquerors, anu believed to be cannibals. REV. DR. TALIGE, The Eminent Dlvinr's Sunday Discourse. Subject: A Prluee's Career." Text: "Ye know Ihe trraca ot our Lord Jesus Chrifet, that, though Ha was rich, rat tor your sake Ue became poor." II Cor inth.ans viii., 9. That all the worlds which on a cold win ter's niuht make the heavens one great glit ter are without Inhabitants is an aburaity Scientists toll U9 that many of these worlds are too hot or too cold or too rarefied of at mosphere for residence. But, tf not tit for human ehodn, they may be fit tor bntnKa lifTerent fnm and supt-rior to ourselves. We ar told that the world of Jupiter ta chantiDit and becoming lit tor creature like the human race, and that Mars would do for tha human family with a little change in the structure of our respiratory organs. But that there is a great wor.d swung some where, va-it beyonJ iniax'iuatioo, aud that It is the headquarters of tbe universe and the metropolis ot immensity and has a popula tion in numbers vast beyond all statistics and appointments of splendor bevond the capacity of canvas or poem or angel to de scribe is as certain as the Bible is authentic Perhaps some of the astronomers with their big tolescopes have already caught a glimpse of it, not knowing what it 19. We spell it with six lotters and pronounced It heaven. That Is where Prince Jesus lived nineteen enturifs ago. Ha was th K'Qg's Son. It was the old bomtiil of eternity, and all Its castles were as old as Go I. Not a frost had evor chilled the air. Not a tear had ever rolled down the cheek of one of Its Inhabi tants. There had never been a headache or a side ache or a teart ach. Thers had not been a funeral in the memory of the oldest Inhabitant. There hart never in all the land been woven a black veil, for there had never been anyi hing to mourn over. The passage of millions of years had not wrinkled or erip- pieu or Deaimtnea any 01 its citizens. All the people tbera wera in a stale of eternal adolescence. What floral and pomonlc rich ness! Gardens of perpetual bloom and or chards in unending fruitage. Had soma spirit from another world entered and asked. What Js sin? What Is bereavement? What Is sorrow? Whut is deatb? the brightest ot the intelligence would have failed to give definition, though to study the question there was silence in neaven for half an hour. The Frinoe of whom I speak had honors, emoluments, acclamations such as no other prince, eelestial or terrestrial, ever enjoyed. As He passed the street the inhabitants took off from their brows garlands of white lilies and threw them in the way. He never en tered anv of the temples without all the wor shipers rising up and bowing in obeisance. In all the processions of the high days He was the one who evoked the loudest welcome, sometimes on foot, walking In loving talk with the humblest of tbe land, but at other times He took chariot, and among the 20,0 0 that th psa'mist spoke of His was the swift est and most flaming, or, as when 8t. John described Him. He took white palfrey, with what prance of foot, and arch of neck, and roll of mane, aud gleam of eye Is only dimly suggested In the Apocalypse. He was not like other princes, waiting for the Father to 1 die and then take tbe throne. When years ago an artist in Gurmauy made a picture for the royal gallery representing the Emperor William on the throne and tbe Crown Prince : as having one foot on the step of the throne, ! the Emperor William ordered the pioture 1 changed and said, "Let the princekeen his J foot off the throne till I leave It. 1 Already enihron d was the heavenly j Trinoe side by side with the Father. What a , circle of dominion! What multitudes of ad- : mirers! What unending round of glories! All the towers chimed the Prinoe's praises. 1 Of all the inhabitant?, from the center of the oity on over the hilis and clear down to the beach against which the ocean of Immensity ; rolls its billows, the Prince was the acknowl edged favorite. No wonder my text Bars that "He was rich." Hat all the diamonds of the earth In one scepter, build all the palaces of the earth in one Alhambra, gather all tbe pearls ot the sea In one dla- . dam, put all tha values of the earth in one coin, the aggregate could not express His affluence. Yes, 8t. Paul was right. Solo mon had in gold 60,0i)0,000 pounds, and in silver 1,0-29,000,377 pounds. But a greater than Solomon is here. Not the mill ionaire, but the owner of all things. To de sciibe His celestial sxrroundings the Bible uses all colors, gathering them in rainbow over thi throne, and setting them as agate in the temple window, and hoisting twelve ot them into a wall, from striped jasper at the base to transparent amethyst in the capstone, I while between are green of emerald, and snow of pearl, and blue of sapphire, and , yellow ot topaz, gray of chrysoprase, and 1 flame of jacinth. All the loveliness of laud- 1 scape in foliage and river and rill and all enchantment aquamarine, tha sea of glass mingled with Are as when the sun sinks in the Mediterranean. All the thrill of music, instrumental and vocal, harps, trumpets, doxologies. There stood the Prince, sur rounded by those who had nnder their wings the velocity of millions of miles In a second. Himself rich In love, rich in adoration, rich ' in power, rich in worship, rich in holiness, i nch in "all the fullness of the Godhead bod- : l'y." But cne day there was a big disaster in a ! department of God's universe. A raoe fallen! ' A world in ruinsl Our planet the scene of catastrophe! A globe swinging out Into darkness, with mountains and seas and is!- ands, an awful centrifugal of sin seeming to overpower the beautiful centripetal of righteousness, and from It a groan reaeked heaven. Such a sound had never been beard ' there. Tlenty of swert sounds, but never an outcry of distress or an echo of agony. At that one groan the Prime rose from all the blissful cirsumiacence and started from the outer gate and descended into the i night ol this world. Out of what a bright harbor into what a rough sea! "Stay with us," cried angel after angel and potentate after potentate. "No," said the Prince, "I cannot stay. I must be off for that wreck of a world. I must stop that groan. 1 must hnsh that distress. I must fat hom that abyss. I must redeem those Nations. Farewell, thrones and temples, hosts cherubic, se raphic, archangellc! I will come back again, carrying on my shoulder a ransomed world. Till this Is doae I choose earthlv scoff to heavenly acclamation, and a cattle pen 10 a king s palace, frigid sons of earth to atmosphere of celestial radiance. I have no time to lose, for hark ye to the groan that grows mightier while I wait I Fare well! Farewell!" "Ye know the graoe of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though Ha was ncn, yet ior your sakes tie became Door " Was there ever a contrast so overnowerlnir as that between the noonday of ChriBt's celestial departure and the midnight of His earthly arrival? Sure enough, the angels were out that night In the skv. and an especial meteor acted as escort. But all that was from other worlds, and not from this world. The earth made no demonstra tion of weloome. If one of tne great prlnses of this world steps out at a denot. sheers resound, and the bands play, and the flags wave. But tor the arrival of this mission ary Prince of the skies not a torch flared. nor a trumpet oiew, not a plume nuttered. Ail the music and the pomp were overhead. Our world opened for Him nothlnx better than a barn door. . . .j The Rajah of Cashmere sent to Queen Vio- toria a bedstead of earved gold and a oanonv that cost 1 750.000, but the world had for tha ranee 01 neaven ana earth only a litter 01 straw. The crown jewels In the Tower ot London amount to 15,000,000, but this mem ber of eternal royalty had nowhere to lay His head. To know how poor He waa ask tbs camel drivers, ask the shepherds, ask Mary, ask the three wise men of the East, who after ward came to Bethlehem. To know how poor He was examine all the records of real estate in all that oriental country and see What vineyard or what field He owned. Mot one. Of what mortgage was He the mortga gee? Of what tenement was He the landlord? Ot what lease was H the lessee? Who ever paid Him rent? Not owning the boat on which He sailed, nor the beast on which Ha rode, nor the pillow on which He slept. Hs had so Itttle estate that in order to pay His tax He had to perform a miracle, putting th? amount of the assessment In a fish's mouth and having it hauled ashore. And after His dearths world rushed In to tftk "' lory of His goods, and the entfre aggregate was the garments Ho had worn, sleeping In them by night and traveling In them by dav, bearing on them tbe dust ot the highway and the saturation of the sea. St. Paal In my text hit the mark when he said ot tha missionary Prince, "For your sakes He ba same poor." The world could have treated Him better tf it had chosen. It had all the means for making His earthly condition e mfortable. Only a few years before, when Pompey, tbe general, arrived In Brindisl, he was greeted with arches and a cosily column which celebrated the 12,000,0iO people whom hs bad killed or conquered, ami he was al lowed to wear his triumphal robe In tha senate. The world had applause for lm- Ferial butchers, bat buffeting for the rince of Peace; plenty of golden chalices for the favored to drink out of, but our Prince must put His lips to the backet of the well by the roadside after Be had begged for a drink. Poor? Born in another man's barn, and eat in? at another man's table, and cruising tbe lake in another man's fishing smack, and buried in another man's tomb. Four inspired authors wrote Bis bi ography, and innumerable lives of Christ have been published, but He composed His autobiography in a most compressed way. Ha said, "I have trodden tha wins press alone." Pour in the estimation of nearly all the Erosperous classes. Tbey called Him Sab ath breaker, wine bibber, traitor, blas phemer aud ransacked the dtotionvy of op probrium from cover to cover to express their detestation. I ean think now of only two well to do men who espoused His oanse Nicodamus and Joseph of Arimathea. His friends for the most part were people who, In that climate where ophrhulmia or infl Anima tion ot tha eyeball sweefis ever and anon as a scourge, had become blind, slok people who were anxious to get well, and troubled people In whose family there was some one dead or dying. If Ha had a purse at all, it was empty, or we would have heard what the soldiers did with the contents. Poor? The pigeon in tha dovecot, the rab bit in its burrow, the silkworm iu Its cocoon, the bea in its hlva is batter provided for, bettor off, better sheltered. Aye, the brute creation baa a home on earth, whiib Christ bad not. A Doet says: If on windy days the raven Gambol like a dancing skiff. Not the less he loves his havuu On the bosom of the cliff. If almost with eagle pinion O'er tbe Alps tbe chamois roan, Yet he has some small dominion Which no doubt ha calls his home. One of John Bunyan's great books Is en titled "Graoe Abounding." "it is all of grace that I am saved" as has been on the lips ot hundreds of dying Christians. Iha boy Sammy was right when, being exam ined for admission into church membership, he was asked, "Whose work was your salva tion?" And he answered, "Part mine and part God's." Then the examiner asked, "What part did you do. Sammy?" And the answer was, "I opposed God all I could and He did tbe rest!" Oh. tbe height of it, the depth of it. the length of It, the breadth of It, the grace of God! Mr. Fletcher hav ing written a pamphlet that pleased tha king, the king offered to com pensate him, and Fletcher answered, "There is only one thing I want, and that Is more grace." Yes, My blood bought hearers grace to live by and grac9 to die by. Grace that saved the publican; that saved Lydla; that saved the dying thief; that saved the jailer; that saved me. But the riches of that grace will not be fully under stood nntil heaven breaks In upon the Soul. An old Scotchman who had been a soldier in one of the European wars was sick and dying in one ot our American -hospitals. -His one desire was to see Scotland and his old home and once again walk the heather of the highlands and hear the bagpipes of the Scotch regiments. The night that tbe old Scotch soldier died a young man, somewhat reckless, but kind-hearted, got a company of mualolans to come and play under the old soldier's window, and among the Instruments there was a bagpige. The Instant that the mu sicians began the dying old man In delir ium said: "What's that? What's that? Why, it's the regiments ooming home. That s the tune yes, that's the tune. Thank God, I have got home onoe more!" ''Bonnie Scotland and Bonnie Donn! were tbe last words he uttered as he passed up to the highlands of the better country, and there are hundreds homesick for heav en, some because you have so many be reavements, some because you have so many temptations, some because you have so many aliments homesick, very homeslok for the fatherland of heaven, an I the musio that you want to hear now is tbe song ot free grace, and the musio that you want to hear when you die is free grace, and forever before the throne of God you will sing of the "graoe of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, though He was rich, for your sakes be came pocr." Yes, yes, for your sakes! It was not on a pleasure excursion that He came, for it was all pain. It was not on an astronomical ex ploration, for He knew this world as well before He alighted as afterward. It was not because He was compelled to come, for He volunteered. It was not because it was easy, for He knew that it would be thorn and spike and hunger and thirst and vociferation of angry mobs. "For your sakes!" To wlj.e a way your tears, to forgive your wrongdo ing, to companionship your loneliness, to soothe your sorrows, to sit with you by tha new made grave, to bind up your wounds in tbe ugly battle with the world and bring you home at last, kindling up the mists that fall on vour dying vision with the sunlight of a glorious morn. "For your sakes!" No: 1 willchanga that. Paul will not care and Christ will not rare if I change it, for i must got Into the blessedness of the text myself, and so I say, "For our sakes!" For we all have our temptations and bereavements and conflicts. For our sakes. We who deserve for our sins to be expatriated Into a world as much poorer than this, than this earth is poorer than heaven. For our sakes! But what a frightful coming down to take us gloriously up! When Artaxerxes was hunting, Tlrebazua, who was attenclng bim. showed tha king a rent in his garments. The king said, "How shall I mend it?" "By giving it to me," said Tirebazus. Thon the king gave him the robe, but commanded bim never to wear It, as it would be inappropriate. But see the startling and comforting fact while our Prince thraws off the fota Urn not only allows us to wear it, but commands us to wear It, and it will become us well, and for the poverties of our spiritual state we may put on the splendors of heavenly regale ment. For our sakes! Oh. tbe personality of this religion! Not an abstraction, not an arch under which we walk to behold elabo rate masonry, not an ice castle like that which the Empress Elizabeth of Russia,over 100 years ago, ordered to be constructed, winter with its trowel of crystals cementing the huge blocks that hid been quarried from the frozen rivers of the North, but our Father's house with the wide hearth crackling a hearty wel oome. A religion of warmth and inspiration and light and cheer, something we ean take Into our hearts and homes and buslnedS, recreations and joys and sorrows. Not an unmanageable gift, like the galley presented to Ptolemy, which required 4000 men to row, and its draft ef water was so great that It could not oome near the shore, but some thing you can run up any stream of annoy ance, however shallow. Enrichment now. enrichment forever. Tapai hns forty one cities of over 10,000 inhabitants. Will a n B. Phillips of New Madrid, Mo., is credited with a total of 1,350 squirrels in three days' hunting on Little River. K'tcs wer4 recently sent np at Bin Hill ODservatory, Sew Jersey, to the height of 9383 feet. Tbe instruments pent upr gistered a fall of t.mpera ture eqnal to t enty-eix degrees at an altitude of 8750 feet. The earliest record of cavalry is on the Assyrian monument of 1000 B. li The Lord Mayor o! London wears a badge of omoe which contains dia monds valued at $600,000. To be a lion is to have a lion's ea emies. V 1 6