THE OONBTITUTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. B. F. BOHWEIER, f f f Ttp aUMl VOL. LI MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 27. 1897. NO. 7. -t 1 CHAPTER III. flteila suuk back on tbe soft cushions f the carriage, with the feeling that sue was in a new and exciting world. Mr. Raeburn presently began to ask her short, dry questions about her journey and her lite abroad, and this sort of conversation lasted until the carriage swept round te' the door of Mr. Raeb urn's new residence1 Thornbank. She was hardly prepared for the solid magnificence of the mansion into which her father now conducted ber; tbe broad stone steps, the spacious hall lined with warble figures and exotic plants, the big pictures and flaming chandeliers of the room in which her aunt met her, struck her with astonishment, but not altogether with admiration. She had seen too much of really good art and fine architecture in her travels to be anything but critical; and. in spite of her wish to like everything In ber father's house, she felt oppressed by tbe blaze of light and the glaring colors of the furniture. It seemed Incon gruous, too, to see her aunt's old-fashioned little figure hurrying toward her between velvet hangings and onnulu stands and all this strange new para phernalia of wealth. Only when Miss Jacky had taken the slim young figure in her arms, and was kissing the girl s fresh cheek with a sort of rapturous delight, did Stella feel that she was really at home, in spite of the cold and bewilder ing splendor of the house. "Eh, my bonny woman!" cried Misa Jacquetta, with a little shriek of delight, "and it's you that are back again after all this weary while. And me and your papa have just been wearying for a sight of you!" Stella's vague dissatisfaction with the state of affairs in the new home, which she had scarcely yet learned to call her own, did not survive a glimpse of the sun light which greeted her next morning In her lovely little room. After breakfast her father went to his place of buainess, leaving Stella to make explorations of her new home in company with her aunt. Her heart began to beat a little more quickly as the afternoon advanced. Would Mr. Hannington come, or would be not? She had gently to combat her aunt's proposition that they should go into the town together, do some shopping, and pay some calls. Mr. Hannington mad. his appearance. In his leisurely London way, a little be fore the stroke of five, but the call was short and rather formal. It ended in an Invitation to dinner two days later, which Miss Jacky was as proud to be sMe to give as Mr. Hannington was pleased to accent. She had been exceedingly pleased when Mrs. Lyndsay had called, for the .Lyndsays were great people In the com mercial world; and she could not help letting out her pleasure with a certain arraiigement in which Stella had been concerned. "So kind ef them, you know, Mr. Han nington," she said, simply, while Stella blushed hotly and wished that she could lay her ringer over ber aunt'a mouth. "For I'm sure I ..uid to myself, what's yon" yon meant Stella, in this case "but a poor, wee lassie that'a just come home from school, and must wait awhile before she makes friends with her nee bora! Wait awhile? Not she! She hadn't been home a day before Mrs. L-yndsay and ber two girlies came to call for her." "To go out with them?" said Hanning ton, who did not quite understand. "Not to-day," she said; "they just call ed for ber to-day out of pure friendliness, so to speak; but to-morrow she is to go out with them for the. afternoon if It is a fine day, because Stella nays that she has never sen Balmerino, Mr. Hanning ton; and they are to make a party and drive her over; because, you know, Bal merino is a place that ought to be seen." Hannington smiled. "Did the girl tell her anut to let me know?" he said to himself. "Women do these things onetimes. She is not very skillful at setting traps as yet, poor little thing. 1 won't fail ber, however; I will be at Bal anerino to-morrow, tool" The resolution showed how little he un derstood the motives that actuated Stella Baeburn. CHAPTER IV. Mr. Raeburn came home tu his six 'clock dinner with tbe loveliest little watch that Stella had ever beheld. He did not produce it until dessert was on the table, and then he brought it out in Its dainty Morocco case with great form and ceremony, and handed it to Stella on a dish, as if It had been something good to eat. "There, young lady!" he said. "There's a watch that is worth looking at. Don't let me see that trumpery silver affair any more. It annoyd me that you should wear a shoddy thing like that when I can afford you as good a one as any lady Id the land." "Dear papa, you are so kind." cried Stella. She could not resist the impulse to fly to his side and kiss him, although he noticed that he seemed a little taken back by her effusive display of affection. "I shall always wear this one, but I shall keep the other, too. and I shall be ju 1 fond of it 1". my own heart, because yon gave it to me." . "That must have cost a great deal, Matthew," said Misa Jacky, after a rath er awkward pause. "And what If It did? Don't you sup pose I can afford it?" said Mr. Raeburn, frowning at her angrily. "1 can buy up any Dundee merchant twice over, I tell you; I'm a millionaire billionaire, if you likeand trade's golnjt n. I mean jrtqha BakdkM tt at jays. '1 here's no limit no limit to which I cannot aspire and attain." He laughed harshly and rose from tb. table, regardless of the fact feat the la dies had not mnJe a move. Miss Jacky watched him darkly as he left the room. She could not understand the change, of Lis m.ods. He behaved as if h. had been drinking. And yet she had not noticed that'he took a larger quantity of ' wine than, usual at dinner. There was I something about him that made her very I anxious now and then. T'e neit day was cloudlessly One. Mrs. I.rndsay auJ her girls, Katie and Isabel two rosy, merry lasses, who had a boundless admiratiun for their old friend Stella, with whom they used to go to school before she left Dundee for Brus selscalled at Thornbank at half-past one, and drove with her to the steamer, in which tbe whole party horses and carriages included would be transported from Dundee to the Kingdom of Fife. At Newport they would get Into the carriage j again and be driven westward to the fine old abbey ruin at Balmerino. I Newport Pier was reached at length, I and the drive to Balmerino began. It was a very pleasant drive, but Stella J found afterward that she did not remem ber much about it. She was hardly con scious of what she said or did, until her feet were firmly planted on the green slopes on which the ruined abbey walls are set, and found herself suddenly face to face with Mr. John Hannington and a friend. And then she felt illogtcally ashamed of herself fur having expected to meet him there. Stella performed her part of introducing him to tbe I.yndsays with a quiet, shy grace which Hannington heartily approv ed. He in his turn asked permission to introduce Mr. Donald Vereker, and as that young man was one of Lord Esqo hart'9 sons, his welcome by Mrs. Lyndsay was assured. Katie was charmed to find that this fair-haired, blue-eyd young fel low was what she called "very jolly," and while she aad her mother monopolized him. Isa, who was of a sentimental turn, devoted herself to securing a few min utes undisturbed to her friend Stella and Stella's lover. For of course ie was Stella's lover; she wits sure of that by the look In Stella's pretty eyes. So she led them away from Mrs. Lyndsay and Mr. Vereker, and when they had entered the half-lighted cavera which had once done duty for a refec tory er kitchen, she slipped quietly away, and Hannington was at liberty to aay what he chose. He had already glvea Stella ats hand. because the floor was very nneven. and be knew by its tremor that he cenld go a little further still. "Come this way and look at the window in the wall," he aaid, leading her deeper into the darkness of the ruined building. "You are not angry with me for coming here to-day? Yon are not sorry to see me, Stella?" Hi. arm was round her waist. "Oh, please " Stella began, but she was not allowed to proceed. "I could not keep away. I love yon, Stella do you not know that? Do you not love me a little in return? Stella, will you not tell me that you love me?" "It is so soon," she murmured; but her head was on hit shoulder, and be knew that he might have his way. "Not a bit of it. The moment I set eyes upon you in the Britannia I said t myself that is tbe woman I should like to' have for a wife. That is how all true love begins. One kiss, my darling." Has nington whispered. "You have set kissed me yet." StelJa lifted her face in the darkness and pressed her soft lips to his cheek. It was a very sober little kiss; bnt she felt it to be a tow of everlasting fidelity. To the man who won that kiss she gave her heart and life. "Now, then, we will go," aaid Haaniag ton. "Stella, dearest, you love me, do you not?" "Yes." "Say Tee. John.' " "Yes, John," she answers J. n sweet. ly. "Then, darling, don't say anything about this to anyone until I have seen you again. I want to consult you first, before I speak to your father. He will grudge yen to me, I asa sure, my beauti ful one." "As you like, John," she said submis sively. "I'm awfully bowled over," said Don ald Vereker that evening, with an ex pression of the deepest self-commiseration. "'I feel that I have received my death-blow. 'Carry me out to die, some body. 'I am slain by a fair, cruel maid.' " "Who la the lady?" asked one of his ' !. laughing. There was a large par ry la the billiard-room at Esquhart Tew irs. and Donald's confession was evbtssnV y made for the public benefit. "Her father is something In Jute. I be ieve," said the Hon. Don, as bis Meade ften called him. "Her name la Stella star of my existence! Don't look so black, Hannington. I'm not going to poach. You should have seen Jaok ador ing her to-day at Balmerino; it would teach you a lesson." "We don't need a lesson," said Lady Grace. "We ail know Mr. Hanningtea." There was perhaps just a little malice la aer tone. "Miss Stella Raeburn Is about the pret tiest girl I ever saw," Donald went era, "She has got perfect features, goldea hair, blue eyes, a rose-leaf complexion, and I assure you, on my fcoaor -ne Scottish accent. She has been abroad for some years that's why. She'll have a pot ef money, fer her father's a regu lar minioaijre .way, a' amid be tbe 1 Ad lnterrnption here occarred. Mr. 1 j Vereker was summoned to the door of : ' tbe billiard-room, and asked to apeak t i tbe agent who had just arrived Irons ; Dundee on business. He did not coma . back for several minutes; but when he returned hi. face was a little (rave and pale, and his manner had frown sub ! dued. "1 have just heard of a shocking thing. came and looked at him in surprise. "You ' To Pwvs the color of gingham and know that 1 was speaking of that beauti- i prints, wash them in water thickens I ful girl whom we met to-day? Well, with flour starch. Flour is very cleans this very afternoon for aught I know, ! ing and will do the work of soap in one while we were amusing ourselves in tbe 1 or two washings .in the starch water, ruins at Balmerino ber father. Matthew j rtjs, with rinsing, will be sufficient, ..mi u,u.-,i i ui. owu oaice blew out his brains with a revolver, in. , it is supposed, a tit of madness, and was found there dead when his clerk looked in at six o'clock this evening. Mclntyre has just brought tbe news." I "Oh. that poor girl!" cried Lady VaU and looked to Hannington fur sympathy. But be did not reply. ' CHAPTEK V. John Hannington felt puzzled as to the course that he should pursue. Ought he to rail at the bouse of mourning? Ought be (o write? Should be wait nntil Stella made some sigu. If he had been deeply , iu love with her, these difficulties would probably have wived themselves. He : would have flown to her side, and tried to make himself a comfort and a support to her. But then he was not particular- ; ly In love with Stella only wi'h her pret- : ty face and her fortune. The pretty j face would now, he reflected, be dinfig- . tired with tears: be had better stop away. I The fortune thank heaven! was all the , more secure because of Matthew Rae- ' burn', death. No father would now be i there to interfere, and Stella would not object to his using ber money In his own way. Hannington built a good many brUliant castles in the air at this time. i. i . .w.. 1.1. i...u - - w .im iu.i ui, Jul. was auoui ; te change. He wrote a little note to her and put It In the post-bag at th. last moment with his own hand, so that no other eyes should rest upon the address. It was a skillful- IT worded llttl Tint.- ahnrt ImJu mm. " . ,. T ' , 7. " He was not surprised te receive an an swer in less than twenty-four hours. Stella must have written within a very short time of receiving his letter. It was clear that she was longing to be com forted; that she thoroughly believed In his protestations, and that she had no Idea of holding anything from, the man she lovad. At th. same time, he thought ber a little cold. "Dear Mr. Hannington," she wrote, "your kind letter has juat reached me I can quite uderstand why you aid not write before. We are in great trouble I cannot tell you everything in a letteri but If you will come to see me after i Friday we can talk together. Yon will tell me what to do I trust you with all my heart. I have not known you long. but I feel aa if yeara had passed since we came to Dundee together en board tbe Britannia. You will forgive me if I havt said too much. STELLA." (To be continued.) RsmUs "Collo" Stones. Travelers who have penetrated into the eastern portion of Southern Russia find that the, people have many strange beliefs la the power of charms. The charm moat generally worn by tbe people In that part of the Czar's vast domain to a round, flat bone, which la found la the head of a certain specie, of northorn flab. They are called "colic tones," and tne superstitious wearer of ouch charm believe that they have the power to prevent colic, and a host of other diseases among tne minor all menu to which human tleah Is heir. Tbto queer superstition la not con fined to the Ignorant, poorer classes, but appears to exist In all kinds of so ciety. The wealthy have colic stones mounted In gold, and In this ebsjas they are worn on the necklace nexvto the ever-present cross. There are 52 penitentiaries and ove. 17,000 jails in the United State. They cost $500,0(X,000 to build tbem. Over 900,000 persons were incarcerated in the year 1892. The criminal expense to the country is not less than $100, 000, (HMD annually. The German Minister of War has issued a general order to the effect that military honors are no longer to be rendered at the funerals of officers who have committed suicide, whose names are likewise to be made public instead of being kept secret. After a service of 25 years as inspec tor of a water pipe line of ihe Yahoo! a Hydraulic Company, of Georgia, George Hnateinger has quit work. He walked 24 miles daily, along tbe pipe line, ana during bis long service ! walked 219,000 miles. i News of New Things. A pulpit or rostrum, which can be raise 1 and lowered to suit the speaker, has just been patented. It is built in telescopic sections, held in position by springs. A new harness attachment doer away with the hold-backs, a curv-d metal band'attached to tbe thills tak ing their place. This can be length' ened or shortened to fit the horse. Two New Zealand men have de signed a power bread-working and dough-moulding machine, intended to turn out the dough in any sized loaves desire J ready for the oven." Foot lanterns are among the latest novelties". There is a strap to go around tbe foot, and a stirrup fastened t the upper side of the shoe, on which a small lantern is placed. A new electric gas-lighter is operated by tha motion of turning on the gas in an ordinary burner, the device being adapted to fit over the burner and con nected to the cut-off by a lever. Lamp chimneys are now made with sheet metal tos and bottoms, - the cen tre portion being a circular sheet cf isinglass, held in position by ro.ts con necting the top and bottom of the chimney. i Arizona convicts havi been lens id for 10 years at 70 cents p.r head a Uhv. Their labor is to bi meJ in couth t. ing an irnaatinecatinl to reel urn 1UJ, 000 acres of arid land. An authority on deaf mutes says that the ratio of deaf mates to hearing is one of each 1600, according to which there are about 40,000 such persons in the United States and about 1.000,. 000 in the world's entire popilatioo. Housewives Helps. There is nothing so sensitive as but ter, and yet you may see it at any time placed near to meat and vegetables. It should be kept covered tight when put in the ice cbf st, so that it will not absorb the odor of any food lying near. Keep butter as far removed as possible from onions and cabbage. . ,n(i the goods will look fresner tban H ; ..v,i ,i.h..l ; ,h nrHin.rv way. According to Thurdicum. the ereat English authority, not many genera tions have passed since the tint warn rabbits were considered vermin, and their chase beneath the dignity of a sportsman. This gentleman gives a number of recipes interesting in preparation and good to eat. It-nist rabbit is not a popular dish in England in fact, the Eug!ieh culinary works take notice of it. It is, he says, however, a ready method of preparing a dish quickly, as a rabbit can le roaste i in from 30 to 43 mi utile. To prevent the rabbit from getting dry, cover it with yolk and crumb, and baste it with butter. In broiling chicken wipe dry bef ire seasoning. -The breast should tie cut from the bone or flattened by pound ing, cutter tne gridiron before pac ing the chicken on it. While broiling dip tbe meat occasionally in melted butter and water.' Broil from hal to . . i v ....- ' . JVJ, . ' ' ,, any but a young fowl. A good wav to utilize cold-boiled rice is to make it into fritters. The ingredients are one teacupful of col. I boiled rice, two well beaten eggs, two teacupfuls of sweet milk, a little salt. nour to make a Datter, etui as lor grid- b-pi- tea:poonfu.o, flour to make a baiter, stiff as for griJ- Serve with butter and sugar rubb-d together and seasoned with a little nutmeg. With a little experience macaroni may be prepared in a variety of ways, in fact, an Italian cook says its possi bilities are unlimited. A few spices will change tbe taste. If garlic is ob jectionable, an onion chopped and friid brown m y bo added. The prin cipal ingredients, when cooked in the Italian way, are leau beef, I'arma cheese and condensed tomatoes To avoid carpet moths we arc advioed to use the ounce of prevention. In other words, after your carpat has been laid, spo'ge thoroughly in a strong so lution of salt' and water. - Above all, keep your rooms sufficiently light. To avoid roaches and ants use another ounce of prevention. Sprinkle a mix- I t tire of powdered borax and pulverized j alum under the paper of your pantry shelves. . Fifty yeara ago, we learn from an old writer, the art of carving was re garded by the most polishe I society in this country as the indispensable ac complishment of every lady who had to preside at the head of ber table. It was a reflection upon her fitness for that post to say that she managed the carving knife with little skill, or was ignorant of the choice parts of each dish. In eating fruits there are only two restrictions. They should not be eaten later than dinner time; they should be eaten while fresh, ripe, perfect and in their natural raw state, without milk, cream, sugar, epic s, water or j any other liquid within an hour after- j ward. Fruits are known to be coolinx i and healthful; the reason is, their I acidity. We are advised to eat the j berries, the apples, the plums not only of these, but of all others, a ' freely and as often as we ran get them. I Through either the ignorance i r the in difference of parents, most of children do not know how to eat fruit as it should be eaten. They are s-1 loin told or taught that the skins of fruit should not be eaten, and that under no circumstance should the seeds of oranges, apples, pears, cherries or grapes be swallowed. Tbe seeds of the grape, we are informed, is exictly the gight size and shape for clogging np a small duct, thecloiing of which results in appendicitis that dreadful dUeaie which arouses an element of fear even ,in the ordinary mortal who attempts tu pronounce it correctly. Facts from History. i Servian kings were formerly all callt d eleazars or lazars. For over 400 years every Tartbian king bore the name of Arsaces in adJi tion to his own. The ancient monarch's of Indi i were called Palibotbri, from tbe name of their capital city. Kenneth became sole king of Scot land in 831. From this lime t ihe accession of James VI Scotland bad forty-four kings. . The Bohemians were originally th Boii, who, 283 B. C, attempted a c in quest of North Italy, bu. were driven bsck by the Romans and settled, in Bohemia. The Spaniards were originally coiled Hibj.antons. There is a tradition among the Spaniards that they are tit lescendants of Tu al, liftti son o; lapbet. The Romans conquered the souatry iu 2C6 B. C. A bicycle tire wh eh is not injure I by punctures consists of a Soild rut.l er core wou id with a spring wire, wturti is Ihen formed into a spiral i ml i im placed wituiu the ta unt;, Urns in ikiu a very resilient lire wittiuui the ti e o( ait to keep it iullatod. Harber, tbe great authority on fish, says that every square mile of the sea is inhabited by 120,000,000 finny creatures. An analysis of tbe .California oliveoil made at the experiment station at Berkeley proves it to contain as much nutriment as roast beef, pound for pound. Be just to your enemies, generous to your friends, and independent of both. FARfl NOTES. Suhsoiled land washes Irsi than an ubsoiled, as it holds water better. Potatoes boiled, mashed and mixec with wheat bran make excellent feet for ducks. Li), hi tobaccos were found to contain tbe lowest percentage of nicotine, and dark tobaccos the highest. The North Carolina Station advises treating stored grain with bisulphite of carbon to kill weevil, rats, mice, etc. Shredded corn fodder makes gooc feed, good bedding and good manure. Shred when perfectly dry and etort under a rain proof roof, in not too great balk, and it will keep all right. Lime water is considered very good for sc3urs in lambs. Where it is to be fed to all the sheep, a quart of slacked lime is put in a trough and 50 gallons of water put in. When thorougly settled the sheep will drink it without hesitation. . The soft unripened nubbins of corn will fatten a pig more quickly tban the ripe ears will. So to boil tbe small potatoes with corn ears, and feed tbe thick iniisli thus resulting, when it is nearly culd, will fatten pigs quickly and cheaply, fork may l made for two cents a pound iu this way. after the pigs have run on a clover field. Every farmer who burns wood even partially for heating and cooking should as early in the winter as possi ble cut and pile ?nough wood to last a wbole year. This will save many com plaints during tbe summer, and be much easier done now than in warm weather. Besides, dry wood burns without the waste of tbe heat, always lost in turning its sap into steam. When using green wood, chips and mall limbs will dry out more quickly than will tbe body of the tree, especially if the small limbs are split. If care is taken to select only good milk cows, and breed them to a sire whose ancestry show a good record in the dairy, you rsn depend upon the cows that come fron such breeding being good dairy animals. There is less risk of fai ure in this than in almost any otber line of breeding. Proper care in selection will almost invariably give satisfactory results. In older to keep up the vitality of the plant and to obtain a delicious and healthful product, the rhubarb root should be replanted occasionally. If tbe stool remains undiMurbtd for a number of years it begins to decay in the centre, and soon the wbole plant become? diseased. As the plant is propagated by division it can be kept in the healthiest condition by dividing tbe stool, and replanting tbe different portions. Soft corn is mora often wastefully fed to hogs than put to the best uses it is capable of. It is moist, and when eaten easily ferments in tbe stomach of animals tkat do not ruminate, and especially of the hog which gets as a rule no coarse food to distend its stomach and aid digestion. A few nubbins twice a day to cows giving milk will be digested nearly as well as Kill the grain when ground. The soft corn on the ear is with the cob brought up in the cud and is their most thoroughly chewed, while if coin meal is fed alone it oes direct to the third stomach, and is there very poorly digested. . 1 Labor Notes. France taxes bicycles. Printers bave 325 unions. There are 10,900 locomotives. Switzerland grants uo patents. Australia has a Chinese paper. China employs 2,000,000 teachers, 'r'nsco has Chinese cigarmakers. English Jet mines are giving out. Germany leads in beer production. United States has 60,000 barbers. Milwaukee newsboys have a dub. Oreat Britain baa 1,250,000 union ists. In Japan 1,162 mills have machin ery. Cleveland is to have a labor Umpls. Ohio is to- have a Stats Label League. A Fall River textile mill shares, prof its. 8an Diego carpenters want eigh hours. Oreat Britain has 80.000 textile un ionists. Brooklyn has 117 union cigar fac tories. Fast freight line agents at Duluth organized. A Washington brewery has just been unionized. International Typographical Union has $36,000 in treasury. New York 'longshoremen get from 1 5 to 40 cents an hour. Proposals bave been made to con struct a new railway between Liverpool and Manchester, so as to meet the competition offered by tbe ship canal. No man who is intoxicated, or whose breath is even tainted with strong drink, is allowed to take his post on a train on the Grand Trunk Railway. The silk product of all countries in 1887, the last year for which complete statistics are available, was 52,000,000 pounds, valued at $490,000,000. There appears to be every prob ability that a woolen and worst td spinning and weaving department will be added to the cotton department of the Lowell Textile School. Five years ago there were two direct etetm?hip lines from Southern ports to Europe; new there are eleven c.tiei sach ot which have on or mon linei across tbe Atlantic. -Some regard for decency is die played by the proprietor of a restau rant in Asburn, Ore. A sign on the wall reads thus: "Gentlemen are re quested not to swear when ladies are present." Berlin, by the 1895 census, had 1,615,517 inhabitants. Employed in the army or civil service were 72,848 persons. Germany and France are both scolding England for agreeing to arbi tration in the Venezuelan affair. REV, DR. TALMAGE. Tbe Eminent Divine's .Sunday Discourse. Snbjeel: "Slormln- the Heights." Tktt: "Who art thou, O ereat mountain? Belore2Hriibhabelthousut:t hjeonL.a Dlatn." Zaohariaii iv 7 Zrobbabel! Who owns I that diffloult name in wbicn three times tbe letter 'b" oc curs, lispoinr mut peopl- to stammer in tbe pronunciation? riih(abel was Ihe splendid man ealietl to rebuild the destroyed temple ot Jru-wlir. stone for Ihe builrllne had been quarried, andthe trowel had rung at tn myini- nr m cornerstone, ana a'l want well, when the Cuil.ie ins oflere.1 to helo in the work. Thev wera a bad lot o? people. and Zirn'ibe declined their help, and then Iba tronhtu outran. The t'ntba?u preju diced the KBcmrarv nf Ihn trvanrv uMine . "... Zerubbnbel. so that the wages of the carpen ters and miwous could not be pail, and the heavy eed.-,r timbers which bad been dragged from Mount Lebanon to the Mediterranean and floated iu rafts from Beirut to Joppa and were to b drawn by or team from Jot pa to Jerusalem had halted, and as a rasult of the work of those jealous Cuthaafi for sixteen y are the buil.iiugol tliw term. la wns stopped. But after sixteen yean Zarubbnbel. the ! mighty son), got a new rali from God to go ahead with the touipla building, and the angel of the Lord In siih-tanen said: "Thev have piled up obstacles In the way of Zerub babel until they have Iwcome as a mountain, he ght rIkivh height, crag above crag, but It shall ull be. thun ierel down and mate Mat and smooth as Ihe floor of a house. "Who art thou. O groat mountain? Bfore Zerub babel thou shuit become n plain.'" Well, the Online-, are not all dead yet. They are busv in every neighborhood a'jd every city und every Nation of every age, heaping obstacles in the way of theeanseof God. They have piled np hindrances above hindrances until they have become a bill, and the bill has become a mountain, andthe mountain has become an Alp, and there It stands, right in I hi way of nil movements for the world's salvation. Home people are so discouraged about tbe height and breadth have done nothing for sixteen ye-irs, and many of those who are at work trying to do something toward removing tbe mountain toll in such a wav that I can see thev bave not much faith that the mouutain of hin drances will ever be removed. They feel they must do their duty, feut t hay feel all the time I can hear ft in their prayers and ex hortationsthat tbey are striking their pickaxes and shovels into the sides of the Rocky Mountains. If the good Lord will help me while 1 preach, I will give you the names of some of tha hign mouotnins which are really in the way and then show you that those mountains are to be prostrued, torn down, ground up, leveled, put out of sight forever. "Who art thou, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel thou sba.t become a plain." First, there is the mountain of prejudice, as lone as n r.-inge of tbe Pyreneas. Preju dice ag.iinst the bible as a dull book, tin ln-consist-nt book, a cruel book, an unclean book, and in every war an unlit book. The most of them hnveuever rend it. Tbeytblnk thestrata of the rocks contr.vllet tbe account In Oaness. The poor souls do not know thnt the Mosaic account agrees exactly with the geological account. No viotln or flute ever was in batter accord. By crowbar and pickax and shovel and blasting powder the geologist goes down in the earth and says: The l!rst tiling created in the ftirnishlug of the earth was the plants." Moses says: "Aye, I told you that in tbe bookof()one sis, 'The earth Drought forth grase and herb. yielding seed after his kiud and the tree yielding fruit.' ' The geologist goes on digging in the earth and says: "Tbe next thing in the furnishing of the earth was the making nf the creatures of the sea." Moses savs: "Are, I told you that was next la the book of Genesis. Ood said. Let the waters brlngforth abundantly the moving creatures that have life, and God created great whales.' " The geologist goes on digging and says, "The next thing iu the furnishing ot tbe earth was the creation of the cattle, and tha rep tiles and the beasts of the field." "Aye," says Moses. I told you that was next iu the first chapter of Genesis, 'And God said. Let tbe earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cuttle and creeping things, and beasts ot the earth after his kind.'" The geologist goes on digging in the earth and says, "The next creature was the human family." "Aye," says Moses. "I told you that was next in the book of Genesis, 'Ao God created man in His own image, In the Image of God created He him; male and fe male, created He them.'" Those prejudiced agai nst t he Bl hie do not know t bat t he explor ations lo Egypt and Palestine an 1 Syria are continuing tin Scriptures the same faots written on monuments and on the walls of exhumed cities as written in tbe Bible. Tbe city of i'lthom has beau unburie t, and its bricks are found to have been made without straw, exactly corresponding with the Bible story of the persecuted Hebrews. On terra eotta cylinder, recently brought up from thousands of veers of burial, the capture of Babylon by Oyi us is told. On a Bibvlonlan gem recently found are tha figures of a tree, a man, a woman and a serpent, and the hands of the man and woman are stretched up toward the tree as to pluck tbe fruit. Thus the Bible story of the fall is confirmed. In a museum at Constantinople yon see a piece of the wall that one i In the anolent temple of Jerusalem separated the court of the Gentiles and tbe court of tbe Israelites, to which l'aul refers when he s:i)S of Christ, "He is our peace. Who hath brokun down tne middle wall of partition between us." On tablets recently discovered have been found the names ot'promimnt men of the Bible, spelled a little different, according to tbe demands of am-ient language. "Adamu" for Adam, "Abramn" for Abraham, "Ablu" tor Abel, and so on. Twenty-two ici uu-ier-ground lias been found a seal Inscribed wilt tbe words, "Haggat, son of Hhebuniah," thousands of years ago cur, showing that tbe Prophet Haggal, who wrote a part of the Bible, was not a myth. The royal engineers have found, eighty feet below the surface of the ground at Jerusalem, 1'hoenieian pottery and hewn stones with inscriptions showing that they Were furnished by Hiram, King of Tyre, just as tbe Bible says tbey were. Th--great names of Bible history, that many suppose are names of Imaginary beings, are found out Into imperishable ston-s which have within a few years teen rolled up from their entombment of ag'-e, snob as Sennacberlb and Tiglatli-Pib-ser. On tbe edge ot a bronzed step and on burned brick has been found the name of Nebuchaouezzar. Henry Rawlinron and Oppett and Hicks and Pales tineexploration eocieties and Assyriologists and Egyptolog sis have rolled another Bible np from the depths of the earth, and lo! it corresponds exactly witb our Bible, the rock Bible just like the printed Bible, inscrip tions on cylinders and brickwork cut MOO years before Christ testifying to the truth of what we read 1897 years after Christ. The story ot the tower of Babel bus been confirmed by the fact that recently at Babel an oblong pl!e of brick 110 feet high evidences the remains of a fallen tower, in tbe inspired book of Ezra we read of the great and noblo Asoappar, a name that meant nothing especial until recently i in pried up Egyptian sculpture we nave the story there toid of bim as a great hunter as well as a great warrior. What I say now Is news to those prejudiced against tbe Bible. They are so far behind the times that they know not thnt the old book Is being proved true by the prying eve oi the antiqtia.ian and the ringing hammer of tbe arohaologist and tbe plunging hammer of the geologist. No more Is infidelity Characterized by Its blasphemy than oy its ignorance, but, oh! what a high mountain of prejudice against the Bible, against Christianity, against churches, against all evangelizing enter prisesa mountain that casts its long black shadows over this eontinent and over all continents! Geographers tell us that Mount Everest is the nlghesl mountain In the world. Ob, not Tbe mountain of prejudice against Cbristianltv is bighertban tbe highest crags that dare the lightnings of heaven. B-'ore Zerubbabel, can it ever become a plain? Another mountain of hindrance is that of positive and outspoken Immorala. There Is the mountain of inebriacy. It Is plied with kegs and demijohns snd decanters arwt hogs heads, on which sit the victims ot that traf n whose ens bosioess is te rob earth ea heaven of the most cunerous and large henrte-1 and splendH of the human race. If their busing-, was to take only tbe mean and stlniry and contemptible and useless, we wonid not say math against the work, for there are tein of thousands of men and wo men who are a nuisance to the world, and thair obliteration from human societv would bean a irsnta; to ail that is Kooi. 'There moval of those moral deficits wonld not arou-io in us much of n protest. But inso briety taces ta best. The mountain of inebnacy ManJs in the way of the kingdom of God, nnl buuiire.ls of thousands of men but for that hindrance would step right Into ma rdnis 01 rne iioni nost nntl march ! !i!.vt1"rJ,i:?";!h 00.'ak.inf One takinir r reorimnnt with bim. The mountain of inebriaov is not an ordinary mountain, but It H armed. It is i line ot fortresses continually blazing away its destru?t.ve forces upon all our neitblorhod:i. towns and eitim. thnir vol ley ir death potirel down upon the homes a'ii churches. Under lb nosver more than ', t "'m ' men "n 1 wom!" ar In this country ! JLTrIr ""P?1", army of 600 - i iw hi iiiikn r,iie nirnrwr nneira rna navth with their staggering tread. It causes in this country 300 murders and 400 suicides a year. This mountain of inebrincy has not only assaulted ths land, but bombarded the shipping of the sei, and some of the most appalling shipwrecks on Atlantic and Paeiflo coasts have twen the result. What sank the steam -r Rrthsav Otstle. on the wav from i.iverpool to Dublin, deal roving 10 1 human liva.? A drunken sea eaptuin. What blew ui ib' B in Sherrol on tha Mississippi and s- nt 150 t horrible d atb? A drunken crew. A'hat drovrt on th breakers a stcamsr making Its wxy rromNew Yorlcto Charleston and amt whole families ou the wv home from sit-nmer w.tterin; p!a.'s to th mere! leas depths of the sea? A drunken sea cap- tain. Gather up from tbe ileuths ot the rivers nn-t lakas and o:an" the bmiw of t josh shipwrej'iad by Int ic ite 1 captains and cinws, aud you could build out or them a temDle of horrors, all the mll.ars nn.t nltnr I an 1 floors a id callings fashione i of human i skull. Is it possible that such a mountain of inebriaoy cat ever ba made a plniu? ! Yonder also Is the mountain of crime, with us strata ot fraud am malpractice and mal feasance and blackmail an I burglary and piracy and e:nbaz!tlemeut an I libertinism and theft, all its heights manned with tbe despsmdoas, the cutthroats, the pickpockets, the thimble riggeis, the corsairs, the wreck ers, tbe bandits, the tricksters, tua forgers, tbe thugs, tbe garroters, the fire fiends, tha j "V"'""8". shop'lftera. the kleptom' I ao' tb? ly-'?'n'f . he dipsoman a.-s t nt- the I s'jiuggiere, mo KMiittpers, inn jhcx tsnap- paras, tne nooer; naoatres and tha M icbctUs of villalnv. The crimes ot the world! Am I not right In aniline them, wiien piled up together, a mountain? But wa cannot bring ourselves to appreciate groat heights ex . -ept by comparison. You think of Mount Wash ington as high, nspecially those of you who as cend! as of ol I. on mule hack, or more re cently by rail traiu, to the Tip Top House. Oh, no! that is not high. For it Is only about CiOOO feet, whereas rislug on this West tern Hemisphere are Ohimbori. ), 21.000 feet high, and Mount 8 ihama, 2),(tOo faet high, and Mount Sarato. 2I.H00 teat high. But that is not tbe highest mountain on the Western Hemisphere. The nighast moun tain Is the mountain of crime, an i is it pos sible that this mountain, bafore our Z-rul-babel, sen ever be made a plain? There is also Ihe mountain of war. the most volcanic of all mountains the Ve-u-vius whl h. not content, like the Vesuvius of Italy, with overwhelming two cities, Hercu laneum and Pompeii, has covered with its fiery scoria thousands ot cities, and would like to whelm all the cities of both hemls- I nh res. Give this mountain full utterance. ana n wouia cov.t np wasninsron JM sew , iT , u I . .1 -. , , "".'"- er. with his shovel at 10 o'clock at night. banks a grate tire with asHes. This moun tain is a pile of fortresses, barricades and armories, the world's artillery heaped, wheels above wheels, Columbia is above columbiads, seventy-four pounders above seventy-four pounders, wrecked Nations above wrecked Nations. m This mountain of war is not only loaded to cannonade the earth, but it is also a ceme tery, holding the corpses of 3 1.000,00 slain In the wars ot Alexander and Cyrus, 60.000.- 000 slain In R im iu wars, 181.000,000 slain in war with Turks and Siraceas aud holding! ooui ,uuu,uuv,imi corpses, noi minion, ouc billion, which was tbeestimate made by Ed mund Burke more tban 100 years ago of those who bad been destroyed jy war, so that you would have to add more millions now. Twenty years ago a careful author estimated that about fourteen times the then popu lation of tbe world had gone down In battle or In hospital ufter battle. Ah, this moun- j tain of war Is not like an ordinary mountain! It Is like Kilnaea, one of the Sandwich Isl ands, which holds the greatest volc.ino In all the earth, and concerning which I wrote ! from tbe Sandwich Islands a few years ago: 1 - "What a hissing, bellowlng.tumbiing.soar- ! Ing foroe Is Kilaaeal Lake of unquenohuble ' Are; convolutions and paroxysms of flame; i elements of nature in torture; torrldity and lurldlty; congregation ot dreads; molten ' horrors; sulphurous abysms; swirling mys- i tary of all time; infinite turbulence: chimney of perdition; wallowing terrors-, fifteen aores ; of threats; glooms insufferable and D int- ' esqae: caldron stirred by the champion witch ' of pandemonium; camp tire of the armies of Diabolus: wrath of the mountains in full i bloom; shimmering : Incandescence; pyrotech- t nlcs of tbe planet; furnace blast of the a;es; i Kilauea!" But. my friends, mightier, high- i er, vaster.hotter, more raging, Is the volcnnlc ; Se of Tears aUlf until, until but I dure not hnz irj a nroph ecv. C iu it be that Its flres will ever be put oat? Can It be that Its roar will ever be si lenced? Can it be that before our Z-rub'ia-bel that blazing mountain will everbcoiie a p ain? There is also the long range of mountains, longer than Appalachian range, longer than Caucasian range, longer than Sierra Neva Ju rang t e pile I up opposition of ba i liter i-tur-, bad hom s, bad institutions, bad amuse ments, bad centuries, bad religions Pagan ism, Hio tooism. Buddhism, Mohammedan ism and buttressed nnd enthroned go lless ness, devoted to ambition an 1 lust an 1 hydn beaded, argus eye 1 abomination, a? it stands with il't el flst anlmooking lips, challenging Job jvah nvon the throne of the universe to strike if He dare. Oh, it II mountain, as my tex declares. There is no ue iu deny ing it. Tbe most authentic st ttistics declare It. The signs of tbe times prove it. Ail Christian workers realize ir. It is a moun tain. "The mountain can never be brought down," says worldly speculation. "Tbe mountain can never be made a pjain," says a small faith lo the churches. Wei!, lot us see. Let us look about for the implements we can lay our bands oo. Let us count the number on our side who are willing to dig with a shovel or bore a tunnol or blast a oek. Let us see if there is any foreign help that will come In to re-enforce us. I do not Want to make myself ab?urd by attempt ing an Impossibility. It it is only one spade at the foot of Mount Blanc, if it is only one arm, capable of lifting but a few pounds, against a mountain that weighs 100.0 41,000 tons, let us quit before we make ourselves the travesty and caricature of the universe. If we are to undertake this job, first ol all we must have a competent engi neer, one who knows all about excavations, about embankments, about tunuels, about mountains. I know engineers who have carved np mountains, cut down mountains, removed mountains. I will do nothing un less I know who is to be onr engineer. Zerubbabel led at the rebuilding of the an cient temple, and Matthew Henry, the great est ot commentators, declares that our Zerubbabel Is the Lord Jesus Christ. The Zmbbabel of my text was only a type of tbt Morions and omnipotent J-sus. nnd ns 1 ook up Into tbe face of this divine engineer I ana se It glow witn an the splendors of the uoanead, nnd see that in ills nrtn is tbe al mightine&s thai Hang out all the worlds that glitter in the midnight heavens, and thnt to lift the Himalayas would cost Him no more effort tban for me to lift an ounce, my cour age begins to rally, an l my fatth begins to mount, and my enthusiasm is all aflame, and the words of my text this moment just lit my lips aud express the triumph of my soul, and I cry out: "Who art thou, O great mountain? Before Z-'rnbbabel thou shall become a plain?" I tell you the mountain is coming Down. It Is coming down rapidly. It will all come down. There are those who bear or read these words who will gaze upon its com plete prostration, for what Is theuse of my keeping back any longer the full statement of the fact, which I have somewhat delayed through lawful sermonte strategy, the fact that the Lord God Almighty, in the full play of His omnipotence, will aouompltsh (his supernal work. If Qii enn build a mountain I gu?ss Ha can re nnvi a moun tain. After Gol has given I. pi opportunity for the shovels He will conn in with His thunderbolts. We have simplified the idna of the Lnat) of God. I tell yoa no ot ih Hon. Here ij a thought that I liavo never seen projected, and yot It U tha mo-t elioer ing of nil considerations and plainly Scrip tural. Ihe thought that as at tlie oonuing or the gospel dispensation In the Curistiy and Johanian and Pauline days the machinery ot the natural world was brought luto service, tbe phndow of eclipses and tha ngi'tutiou of earthquakes, tempests put to sloep uudJr t'n voice of divina lullaby, irou bolls of prisons shoved hack by Invisible muscle, kindling of flame on heads of worshipnrs, by ius:an taneous pharmacy blastet vision giv.-a full eyesight, and the deal returned fr.rai lha eternal world, mingling amid earthly scenes, so it will be again. As I read my Bible, these supernatnrnis areto return. Again the eclipses, as at tha destruction of Jerusalem, will put re t wing under the moon and black wing undar tha sun. and the mountain will shake with agua or excitement and hospital cots be emntiad as their patients bound Into sudden health and the gospel of mercy emphsslz d by most tremendous speotacies. "And I bohald whan he had opened the sixth seal. aud. lo thera was a great earthquake, and the sun bec.nmo black as sackcloth ot hair, and the moon be came as blood and every mountain and Island were moved out of thair nlnees'" I There you have It. The shovels now digging ; away at the mountains to be re-enforced by j thunderbolts. The gospel is only partially ! successful because wn preach It n;nid all I plaoiditia?, the hearers hxving hesr 1 the in vitation a thousand times b (ore an 1 nxp ct I hear it a thousand timas mora, but in coining time; to be preached amid pulver. Izei rocks and stellar panics nu I shattered masonry of cemeteries, from which tha pal lid dead will spring into rostsnte life. I say then the gospel will be universally accepted. There is the programme. First the showls, then tbe thunderbolts. Ours tha shovel.-, Ood's the thnndurbotts. Tne text, wnich before we uttered w.th something of trepida tion, now we utter iu laugh of triumph. "Who art tbon, O greit mountain? Before Znrnbbabel thou shall become a plain.'' Sometimes a general begins a battle baTnra lie is ready, because the enemy forces It ou bim. The general says: "The enemy are pushing us. an) so I open battle. We are not sufficient to copt with them, but I hope tne reserve forces will com? up in time." The brittle rages, and the general looki through his fleldglasi at the troops, but ever and anon be sweeps his fleldlass l ack ward and upward toward tbe htil to see If the re serve forces are coming. "Hard pushed are we," says the general. "I do wish thoss re enforcements would come up." After awhile tbe plumes of the advancing osvalrv are seen tossing on the ridge of the bill, and then the flash of swords aud then the long Una of mounted troops, their horsas in full galiop and tue general says: 1" well. Hold out, my men. a little longer. Let the ser geants ride along the lines and cheer tbe meu and tell them re-enforcements are com ing." And now tne rumbling of the batteries and gun carriages is distiuctly beard, and soon they are in line, and at the first roar of the newly-arrived artillery the enemy, a lit tle while before so jubilant, fall back In wild retreat, their way strewn with canteens and knapsacks and ammunition, that tbe defeated may be unhindered In their flight. That Is just the way now. In this great battle against sin and crime and moral death the enemy seem too muoh for us. More grogshops than churches. More bad men thau good men, and tbey come up with bra vado and the force of great nuajbura. Thev bave opened battle upon us bsfore we are In , our strength ready to meet them, and great are the discouragements. lint sti scouragements. But stead V there! Hold on! B'3-enforcements are comine! Through the glass of inspiration I look and see the flash of the sword or -'Him who hath on His vesture and on His thlirh a name written, King of Kings and Lord of Lords." All heaven is on oursldeand Is coming., the rescue. I hear the rambling of the Ring's artillery, louder tban nny thunder that ever shook the earth, and wiih every roll of the ponderous wheels oar courage augments, and when these re-enforcements from heaven get into line with the forces of God already on earth all the armies of uprigbteousnes-i nil) !, their hmif nt d,, h,.m. and will waver and fall back nnd take flight and nothing be left of them save here and there, strewn by the wayside, nu agnostic's pen, or a broken decanter, or a torn playbill ot a debasing amusement, or a blasphemous paragraph, or a leper's scale, or a dragon's tooth, to show they ever existed. Let there be cheering all along the lines of Christian wotkers over the fact that what the shovels fail to do will be accomplished by the thun derbolts. "Who art thou, Ogre-it mountain? Before Ztrubbabel tbou shalt beoome a plain." The mountains look ou Jl irathou, And Mnrathou looiis on the sea Shrine of the mightv. Win It l e That this is ull remains of thee News in Brief. A street railroad operated ly ga engines is being experimented with y . or u,i,u- Three copies of the Bible, written ' " Brilish museum. Hamburg has a house of paper, j Helium, b:mg more permanent -than hydrogen, is a new thernionielric ' substance for very low temperatures. I A Moating island in the Sabine j river, f-0 acres in extent, and covered with water hyacinths, floated (or a I week up and down the stream, sea j Orange, Tex. ! Mrxiio is discussing a ropoiition j to make military duty compulsory. ' There is a cierk in Marne, France, j who has made seventeen unsuccessful i attempts to commif suicide. Specimens of fire daiT.? have been recently collected from many vSUrws. . all containing nitrogen, with appar ently, about the same proportion of argon as is obtainable from the nitrogen of the air. Many physicians in Russia only charge fifteen cents for a consultation, and although their number is small, suicides are frequent among them, the cause being inability to inak a living. At a recent meeting of one of Ilia large Knglisti insurance companies it was shown that S600.000 had been paid out for deaths due to influenza. There are some vegetables tbatcan scarcely be distinguished from ani mals, and some animals tbat seem to have all the characteristics of vege tables. Two mischievous boys in Me., touched a match to a Haskell, squirrels tail to see if it would burn. The animal ran under a house, and the blazing tail get it on tire. You should cultivate not only tbe habit of telling the truth, but the for bearance to bear it. The man who broods oyer imaginary wrongs is upt to hatch some not imaginary. A. pure heart with little or no income a far better than a broken heart with big bank dividends. We would talk less about others, if wo would first do more thinking abont onrselves, Dju't brag. Your life may have been blameless, but have you no eons, daughters, or kin who may yet disgrace you. iiixjS I a 7 1i (imm (