THE OONtfl'lT U TIOW-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWB. F. BOHWEIER, MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. FK13KUAEY 10.1897. VOL. LI NO. ). I I r-i t it- r 5l 7 A- Ueanwfcile BteTTa, witflushed cheek tad rapidly beating heart, waa making aer way at a very quick pac op the hilly road toward the point which ah wished to reach. But she had forgotten aU about her destination. 8h waa conscious of nothing but the insult which, as she con ceived it, John Hannlngton had put opon her, and of the desperate upheaval of pTide and bitter anger that had taken place within her heart. How dared he to bow to her? Did he thick that abe bad taken his rennlse so lightly that it was easy and possible for them now to meet aa old acquaintances? Ue must uuna tittle of her. Indeed I But anger and vindictivenes were aol natural to her. Before long her stepi slackened, her color fell, her eye began to fill with tears. She turned aside from the road and scrambled a little way down the hUlslde along which it ran. "Oh, John. John! and I loved yon so!" she whispered to herself. "If only I could forget yon for you are not worthy even f my lore but I never, never halL" Absorbed in her reflections, she had not card the sound of footsteps on the road above the bank on which aha eat. There bad first been merry voice and steps not far from her; then these died away. Nexl came a tall man of handsome face and stately bearing. He looked round him with a frown upon hi brow; he paused in hi walk several time, and when h aw Stella half way down the hillside, hi made a step sideways, as if to turn In hei direction and address her. But a second glance caused him to change hi mind. Her slender figure, In Its doeely-flttini bLlk ..2 "V :CThsjta about It; ae the ?V-"V which the sunbeams leeouw to be Im- prisoned beneath her black hat, cif not attract hi attention Tery much, bat as bs looked it became clear to him frota the movement of her shoulders that te girl, whoever she was. waa sobbing ancon trollably; that the crouching attituje waa that of grief, and that the coCr who atood beside her was wagging hi ail and trying te lick ber face, in that sjmpathy with sorrow which Intelligent animals sften show toward their masters and their friends. The gentleman turned hastily away, thankful that be had not intruded n ber solitude. When he had gone some little distance, some feeling of remorse took possession of bhn. Ought he to hav asked her If she wanted assisTwce of any kind? if she were ill or in pain? "Pooh!" be thought to himself, aa he strode on again, "my wits must be wan dering to make me think of such a thing. A woman's tears! xney come easily enough, and mean little enough, heaven knows! She haa bad a quarrel with ber lover, perhaps. She wears a black dress; Bother or father dead, perhaps. A sad lot for the young!" and be heaved a sigh, aa if there were some personal reference la the words. "She has hair like that girl on board the Britannia last summer curiously brilliant, without a touch of red In it. A commonplace young person, probably, seeing how she waa letting thai camp Hannlngton make love te her. But. of course, this girl is not the same, I wonder where those children have got to by this time? It is natural, I suppose, that as I am an old fogy, they should give me the slip. Hark! what waa that?" It was a shriek clear, piercing, and Intense. On the still autumn air, soundi were carried to considerable distances. This cry came from the vicinity of the water of that the gentleman waa sure. It waa followed by an answering shout. meant to be reassuring, but dying away In a quaver of alarm. And there came another scream, unmistakably In a girl' voice. "Molljl" cried the gentleman in the road. "Not In the water, I trust! God help us, if she is!" He rushed down the hillside, tearing nil way with considerable rapidity through clumps of gone and bracken, and between the young stems of tb un dergrowths, toward the place from which he had beard the cry. The roaring of the water sounded louder and louder in his ear aa he drew closer to the bank. It waa a difficult thing to get quickly to the water'a edge, for the hillside was teep and slippery. He waa below the falls, which poured over the rock with the vehemence of a stream in spate, its yellow foam scattering drop far and wide, ita volume increased threefold by the recent storms. Ha shuddered aa he brushed aside the branchea and atood by the water' edge. What did he see ? CHAPTER VIII. A girl of fifteen years old his own daughter Molly, aa he was very well ware bad rashly made ber way from bowlder to bowlder until ahe stood close to the deep pool which waa well known to bo the most dangerous spot in the swiftly rushing little river. Evidently her nerve had given way at this Tery point She could not go forward; she was afraid to go back. Her body was half poised over the stream ; it swayed a little, as if she were diszy, and another frightened cream came from her white lips. Mean while a youth, somewhat older than her U. was hurrying across th bridge tron the other side, and calling to her to be careful not to move until he came to her help not to lot her head. It was very plain that aha had lost it already. Bat help which Molly father had not looked far was at hand. A slender figure in black, which ha had seen already, waa standing on th atone and holding eat a parasol to th frightened girL. Stella had advanced aa far aa ah could. Molly ctutchod the parasol handl e violently that Stella almost loot her own balance. 3m over; it is not ' far. TEirel You are on firmer ground now. Pass me and get to the bank." She held Molly's band until the girl bad passed her, but the unlooked-for appari tion of her father gave Molly another fright. She started violently, and drag ged Stella forward in rather a dangerous way. "Take care! Take care! What are yon doing?" said the father. lie handed her hastily to the stones near the bank, hold ing out the other hand at the same time to steii It was fortunate that be did so. For Molly's nasty tnnrement naa caus ed Stella to slip, and although she did not quite fall, one of ber feet and part of her dress went into the water. She clung desperately to the strong hand that clasp ed her own, and waa carried rather than led to the safe path-way. "Are you better? Ion have not hurt yourself?" said the gentleman, still sup porting Stella with his arm. ' "Thank you, I am all right; I was not (.hurt," she answered. Then she looked at him and he looked at ber, and both gave the very slightest possible start. He recognized her a the girl with golden hair on board the Britannia, and ahe re membered that John Hannlngton had named him to ber as Alan Moncrief of Torreamuir. The remembrance did more than anything toward bringing the color back to her lips. She was very white when he landed her, for her fright had been severe. Mr. Moncrleff raised his hat. "I can not express my gratitude to you, mad- ame," be said, in stiff, courteous accents. through which hi. real emotion had some .Jifflcultr In manifesting itself. "But for .... .. ,ij i ., .1 i . . your presence of mind and timely help, my daughter would scarcely, I fear, have been rescued from her perilous position." "I waa very glad that I happened to be so near," said Stella. "I had really little to do." She Inclined her bead slightly and was abont to move away, when Moncrleff hastily interposed. "Excuse me," he said, "but I see that you are exceedingly wet. May I ask if you have far to go?" "To St. Anselm's." "St. Anselm's? You must not go that distance in your present state; I cannot possibly allow It" "You'U come home with us, won't you?" Interposed Molly, breathlessly, drying her tear, and favoring Stella with a gaae of wide-eyed adoration. "We live vsry near, and " "I was about to propose that yon should avaQ yourself of the fact that my bouse- , Torreamuir la tolerably near," Interrupt ed Mr. Moncrleff. "My housekeeper will see that your your things are dry before you go home. I must beg leave to in troduce myself," with a smile thai-made his face singularly pleasant "My name Is Alan Moncrleff Moncrief of Torrea muir and tbia ia my madcap daughter Molly, who deserves a good scolding for the freight she baa given us. My son Bertie," he added, indicating the boy, who was standing at Molly's side. "And my name Is Itaeburn," said Stella, frankly. "I am staying with my aunt at Mrs. Sinclair's, at St Anselm's, the bouse on the hill." "You come from Dundee?" said Mon crleff, Inadvertently, and then waa angry with himself for saying it "Yea," she said, rather sadly, "I come 1 from Dundee." "What an idiot I am!" said Alan Mon crleff to himself. "I ought not to have mentioned Dundee to her. Ah, that was why ahe waa crying when I aaw her on the hillside; poor girl, she baa had enough to cry for. Her eyelid are reddened yet" The boy and girl had slunk together, aa If glad to be oat of their father' hear ing, and h took the oportunlty of say ing quletlyt "Let m tell you. Mis Baebum, that I know your nam, and that my father waa well acquainted with your father In day gone by. Every one who knew Bar. Raebnrn esteemed him most highly. I hav never heard a man spoken of more warmly, and I have always had the great est respect for him." The manner la which the words were ottered simple, unaffected, sincere waa more nattering to Stella's love for her father than even the worda themselves. She tried to thank him, but could only raise her eyes, swimming in tears, for a moment to hi face by way of answer. Torreamiur was large, fantastically grand, and of picturesquely different heights. The gardens were laid out in terraces, for the ground was too uneven for any large level space to be available for lawn or flower bed. A graveled ter race before the door, bordered with aa ornamental wall, afforded one of the loveliest distant 'Views that Stella had ever seen. She could not resist stopping to look at It In spite of ber wet clothes. Stella had no reason to complain of her treatment She was taken to a lux urious bedroom, where a fire, hot water, warm towel, and varioua articles of clothing awaited her, and Mrs. Gregg was eager in offers of assistance. Stella put on a skirt of Molly's it was quite long enough for her and Mrs. Greg promised to send her own back to St. Anselm's aa soon aa it was dried. And when she waa ready to depart as she thought Molly conducted her, almost by fore, to the drawing-room, where tea had been prepared, and where Mr. Mon crleff and his son awaited her. They all made much of Stella. They waited upon her as if ahe had been a princess; it seemed as if they could not do enough for her. In fact ber sweet face) and golden hair bad quite fascinated the young people; an3 the fascination ex tended itself to Alan Moncrleff as well. He thought that be had never seen a love lier face than that of poor Matthew Kae burn'a daughter. "I think I must really go now." said Stella, at last "It will be nearly dark when I reach home; so I must make baste." "The carriage la waiting, if you insist on leaving ns so soon." said Mr. Mon crleff,' courteously. "Bertie, ran dow'a and tell Macgregor to drive round." ' Th carriage, drawn by two magnifi cent bay horses, waa at the door, and Moncrleff put her in with is statelieet air. and a few words of heartfelt thanks, which she felt redeemed the atateliueaa. The driv did not seem long to Stella. She had much to think of, but ber thought were by no means so melancholy aa they bad been that afternoon. The timely help that ahe had given to Molly, the . deferential courtesy shown by Mr. Moncricff, the sight of the quaint beauti ful old house, which she had acarcely had time to look at and admire these things occupied ber thoughts. It waa quite a shock to meet once more the riding party that ahe had encountered in the after noon, because it brought her thoughts back to a domain which, for the time be ing, they had left; but the shock was not very terrible. She turned away and caressed Laddie, who sat on the rug beside her, and hoped that in the gather ing twilight they had not recognised ber face. Bat they had. "Wonder will never cease," aald Lady Val, looking back. "That's the Moncrieff carriage. Moncrieff of Torreamuir, ths proudest man yon ever knew, sending the little Dundee girl horn in his barouche! What does that mean, I wonder?" "You can aak him to-night He is go ing to th Maxwells' to dinner," said Hannlngton, rather iU-temperedly. He knew that Lady Val was going, too. "I will," aald the lady, briskly. And she waa aa good as her word. "Oh. Mr. Moncrieff," she said, later In the evening, looking with secret admira tion at the face of the grave, stately man who was standing near her, "do tell me don't you know a Ml Raeburn who ia staying in the neighborhood?" She had not the faintest idea where Stella waa staying; ahe drew her bow at a venture. "She saved my little girl's life this afternoon," aald Moncrieff; and then he told ber th story of Molly's escapade. "What a monkey your Molly is! Full of life and spirit!" "To much so, Tm afraid. I. must eith er send her to school or find a governess for her." "I hav aa inspiration," cried Lady Val. "Why don't yon get Mis Raeburn herself to tarn poor Molly's wild spirit?" "Mia Raeburn herself? But wssJd sh. " "9ho hasn't a penny, and I heard that she was looking oat for a situation some time ago," said Lady VaL with her usual carelessness abont facta. "I believe that yon would b doing her a servlc, Mr. Moncrieff. I really do. I was In th postoffice to-day and I saw a written no tice, setting forth that a young lady Is Liuouw Halted to gie Masons in French, German, music and all the etcet eras.. Perhaps that to Miss Baebum. Yon might follow it np and lad eut The hxltia) grrssi wers u.Mj-Vm' that" (T be continued-) FARH NOTES. Silage is distinctively a cattle feed, but the Kansas Statiou finds it not goo J for breeding bulls. The farmer who makes the dairy his main business rather than an adjunct is the one who will turn oat the best product and procure the most profit an 1 eatisf action. .Samuel Reynolds, of Lawrence, Kan., has (he largest Yandeveer pippin apple tree known. It is 40 years old and measures 12 feel in circumference at tbe trunk. Its boughs spread over circle 100 feet ia diameter. Rosea should be covered quite late and no earth should be placed on the canes or come in contact with them. Hard coal ashes make a very saliefac tory covering. There ia no black grape to-day su perior to the Concord for general pur poses. It is the universal market grape. It may b? a lng while before a super ior variety comes to the front. It is just as necessary to cultivate the intelligence of the domestic animals b it is to train the mind of the boy O ie thing is certain, they can never be made to unlearn habits which are once acquired. First impressions are most lasting in man and in beast. A Pennsylvanian has a simple plan of feeding bees. As ce has never lost a colony that bad a queen and enough bees to keep it warm, tbe plan is worth testing. He makes candy cf granu lated sugar nd pours this into shttlow pans. When cool he lays it on top of the frames right over a cluster of bee; Acting on the notion that as pruning waa good for fruit trees it would beDe lit potato vines, Jerry Luckish, of Portland. Ore., clipped off the vines in a patch close to the ground as soon al they were well up, and some of the potatoes -g-own there were, it is said, among the largest and finest iound. If it baa not been done before, this is a good time to destroy the black knot on plum trees. Each specimen should be cut out, removing the limb to which it is attached, if a small one. Kep the knife wet with carbolic acid diluted while making the cuts, and apply tbe same to the cut surface. In this way the danger of propagating the spores by use of the knife in prun ing will be prevented. Tenant farmers have the tax of rent to meet whether crops are ex I or poor. They are consequently more interested (or should be) as a class in improved methods than land-owners. Every tenant should endeavor to own bis farm, but be cannot do so until b is successful ou the one which he reDts. Be careful not t I'Se seed potatoes the coming spring that are scabby. Do not plaot potatoes on tbe same land that was used for tbe crop last year, as there may have been no traces of disease discovered, yet it may have existed if even but slightly, and if to, it will spread over the who'e field this year. Every bushel of seed potatoes should be carefully examined and every precaution taken to avoid di ease, as once the soil is contaminated it may require years of bard work to get rid of tbe difficulty. Labor .Notes. NE?S INu HAPPEN fNG3 OP SPECIAL in. TERU8TS IS THE VARIOUS TRADE. There's a coffin trust. Colorado coal is S3 a ton. )ak field, N. Y., hasn't a dentist Japan haa one leather shoe mill. - Panama Canal employs 8000 men. London's street lamps number 75, 003; Hew York, 28,000. In Africa and India 85,000 elephants were killed last year, yieldiog over tfOO ton of ivory. A mile a minute baa been made by an ice boat on Lake Minnehaha, near Cheyenne. Wyo. Washington, D. C, street cars may now be propelled at the rate of twelve miles per hour, the Commissonera hav ing issued an order to that effect. The t wn of Guingamp, France, which has about 10,000 inhabitants, has not a trace of tbe cotton cloth tnanufictory which gave ita nana to the fabric once tbe staple product. After being in steady service for a quarter ot a century, 200 looms at the Esgle and Phoenix Mills, Columbus, Ga., have just been destroyed. They were old English looms, which will be replaced by the modern Crompton machine. Toe old looms, ponderous affairs, were (nought across the blue water from England at a time when machinery was high, and when a big duty bad to be paid upon such impor tations. Coal mining is one of the great in dustiies of Washington. During 18 that State produced over 1,150,000 tons of coal, of which about 7o0,000 tona were mined in the first district aud 413,000 tons in the a coad district Washington coal is used on the Washington & Columbia Kiver Rail road, in the southeastern pirt of the State, by the Oregan Railway and Navigation Company, and Uuion Pa cific in Washington and Oregon, as well as by tbe Great Northern, Seattle and International, and other roads in the State. It mav interest our readers to learn of the wonderful success which ia at tending our efforts to introduce Japan ese hemp into California, especially as I firmly believe hemp, prepared as we are preparing it is destined to supplant cotton in the manufacture of various fabrics at present produced from tbe latter fibre and also from flax. For instance, by decorticating this Japanese uemD. ana steam renins: n ior longer period than usual, then bleach ing it, we obtain a fibre short stapled like cotton, which can be worked up into use ful material by cotton machinery, and a suitable for sugar sacks, etc. 6 New Inventions. ".-A aeitttasbis la& lot 7arof traveling bags ia arranged to that it can be fastened to either side of tbe bag by riveting a pair of brackets into which the end of the handle lock to each side of the bag, thus allowing the bag to be carried either flat or edgewise, aa desired. Pneumatic car fenders have recently been patented, consisting of a number of elastic tubes set in metal frames shaped like ordinary fenders. A new folding table has a drawer set in the under portion of the table top in such a manner that it cannot be re moved when the legs are folded up, tbe lees covering the front of the drawer. A recent improvement in monkey wrenches consuls of a lever lying par allel with tbe handle to tighten the grip of tbe jaws. To operate it the lever ia raised and tbe iws screwed as tight as possible by mean of the usual thumbscrews, when tbe lever is forced downward, thus closing the jawr more tightly together. To remove coats and hats out tbe wv and yet place them where they can be reached easily when wanted, a new device consists of a bracket or rack to hold a number of coats and hats, attached to a rod running up to the ceiling of the room in such a man ner that it can be raised or lowered to the desired height and fastened either by a thumbscrew or spring catch. A recently-patented coin separator and distributor has a long, flat metal feed chute into which tbe coins are dropped at one end, the ether end being lower, so that the coins will roil down to the coin holders, each holder having an opening into tbe chute through which tbe coin drops, tbe size of the coin determining which tube i v belongs in. . A bandy little coin package is made of metal and is ti i ted with a slidiug section around the barrel p irtion, jrhich can beclo ed and fastened with a loop ahen the package is full. A new mechanical top haa a shaft set in a handle, two or more win being attached to the shaft in such a manner that when they are rapidly re volved by unwinding a string from tbe shaft tbe toy will rise in tbe air until the blades or wing stop revolving. The uee of a flat coiled spring in spring locking chairs has recently been pateutrd, the outer end of the epritig being fastened to the upper portion ot the chair and the inner end pi iced in socket in the base of the rocker. 1 It has been estimated by a crmi r tent authority that at the commence ment of this season there were in the Maine wood-i 145.000 deer, 12,500 morse, 9,500 caribou and 10,l00 bear. According t tha Rev. Dr. 1 larder n, traces of the lurtli of pantomime are found 3.000 (-ars liefore the birth of rhriat, not only u the Fgyptian race, but also anions Eastern nations. The fossil remains of a hog are aid to have been discovered in the Bad Lands of North Dakota. There is a project on foot for supplying .Lyons, France, with elec tricity by damming tbe Rhone at Jonage. Oecasional instances have been found of perfectly pare native iron in meteorites. Fally one tbird of tbe lend in Great Britain i owned by members ol tbe House of Lord. HOUSEHOLD 3I1TTES9. SCHOOL c Ceat together until foamy the ?o: of one egg, one enpful of vh'.ta sugar. a piece of butter the size of ma t-i. Aua one cupiui oi sweet icu, oji pint of flour into which has been sifted two teaspoonfnls of baking pojrner, and the beaten white of the earrr. Fla vor with lemon or vanilla. Butter a piece of white paper and pnt it :n the bottom of tbe cake pan. Bak in hot oven. St. Louis Republic THAT GBLATTNC To dissolve gelatine is not so easy a natter as some cooks nuppose. If th gelatine is covered with water and placed on tn hearth or on the back of the stove it will melt in fifteen or twenty minutes; but in nine case out of ten it will be strong flavored and will spoil whatever it ia added to. This ia the reason that gelatine ia not fully appreciated by many housekeep ers. If the gelatine be soaked in cold water for two or more hoars, and then have boiling water or milk poured on it, it will dissolve immediately, and rarely will have taste or odor. Hers ia a good rule to follow : Put a box of gelatine in a bowl, and pour over it half a pint of cold water. Cover it and let it stand for two hours or more. When ready to use it, add half a pint of boiling water or th same quantity of boiling milk. Stit for a few minutes, and the gelatine will be dissolved. New York World, JELLIED APFLXa. Jellied apples maVe a very good weet dish, when other sweets fail. Select a dozen sound, well-flavored yellow pippins. Pare them ; take out the corea and lay in cold water ths minute you get through with them to prevent their turning dark. Take tbe cores and parings and half a dozen mora applea sliced rather thin ; put them in a saucepan and cover with one quart of cold water. Simmer thirty minutes, stir, and then drain through a jelly bag. To every pint of liquid that you get add a pound of loaf augar, set over the fire, and as soon as the sugar is dissolved add ths quartered apples. Cover, and cook slowly nntil the applea are tender. Do not let them get so soft that they lose their shape, or th diab, in look at least, will be a failure. Take out tha pieces on a skimmer, one at a time, and lay them on a plate. Boil tbe syrup twenty minutes, and when a lit tle of it cooled jellies, take it from the fire. Pnt the apples in bowls or wide mouthed jars, and turn th jelly over them. When cold tie up aa yon do any preserve or jelly. New York Post. HorjsxHoLD sums. . Batter pnt into clean pot and well isrMaM-'TilaiwW.rr1 lisp fUUU IUf Wm B1WU1BIL In baking bread or roll pnt a saucepan of boiling - water into the oven. The steam will keep the crust smooth and tender. Much of the heavy cake and bread is th result of the oven door being banged when closed. Close the door as gently aa possible. Nearly every on opens it gently enough. For frying always pat a pound or two of fat in the pan. There is no waste, as the same fat can be used over and over by pouring it thoragh a strainer into crock kept for the purpose. To remove claret stains from a table cloth put salt on immediately and thickly over the spot. Rinse in old water before washing. If not entirely removed apply lemon juice and dry in the son. A little kerosene oil in the watei with which you clean your windows makes them take a much higher polish and makes much easier work of that bane of a housekeeper' life, window oleaning. Never bay stale fish. It will look flabby and dark and will have an un pleasant odor. Fresh fish is firm, the eyas are full and rather bright, and the odor, while it is always fishy, will not be disagreeable. Those in search of novel luncheon dainties should try the peannt sand' wich, which had its origin in Boston. Be sure the peanuts are freshly roast ed Chop fine and spread between ilices of buttered bread cut very thin. To make garlic vinegar pure and slice a dozen cloves of garlic, put them in a preserving jar with one pint of Tinegar, cover and set away for two weeks, then strain into a bottle. One tablespoonful of this vinegar added to a potato salad give it a delicate fla vor of garlic Laos pillows and spreads can be dried to advantage after washing by putting down a sheet on the floor and pinning each scallop firmly and se curely to the sheet so that all aides are seoured. Leave it over night, and when dry take up car a fully and fold ready for use. To cure a sty take the white of an egg in a saucer and rub into it a email pinch of powdered alum. It will be come a curd. Put it between two fine piecea of muslin and bind it over the eye before retiring for the night. In the morning the sty will be gone, or much better. One more application will be sufficient, and no moie stiei will come. One of the things commonly done Ktuug is tha mixing of flour and a liquid when a thin batter of paste is desired. Here is a rule that, if fol lowed, will alwaye make tha mixture smooth and free of lumps. Measure tbe flour and add to it an equal measure of liquid. Stir together until.amooth, hen gradually add a part of the liquid until the mixture is thin enough. In making a thickening for soups or sauce: there nuouid be four or five tunes as much liauid as there ia flour. The California Board of Health finds that in San June the average duration of life ia abont forty three years, which ia longer than teat of any other eity in the United States. The asparagss served at the Elvsee banquet in honor ot the czar cost three francs a ataJit, or 90 cent a bundle, and there were 200 guests. The Krnpp Worxs nare 1500 arnace. REV. DR. miUAht Tbe Eminent Divine's Discourse. Sunday Subject: "A Farmer's Counsel. Tbxt- "Seek Him that mateta tha sevan stars and Orion." Amos v., 8. A oountry farmer wrote this text, Ansos of Tekos. He plowmt the earth and threshed the erain by a new threshina; machine just Invented, ai tot-marly the cattle trod out the grain. Me Katherefl the frbit of the syoa roore tree aud acarirlni it with an iron ftifflb Just before it waa getting ripe, as tt w.is nao Bary and cuttomary In tuat way to talca from it the bitterness. He was the son of a poor shepherd and stuttered, nut before tha ttammeriDRrustic tbe Philistines and Svriaos and PhBnicians and Moabires and Ammon ites and Edomiiea and Israelite tremble . Moses wat a law Kiver, Daniel was a prince, Isaiah a counter and David a kino;, but Amos, the author of my lext, wasa penn ant, sad, as might be suppose!, ne.trly all bis parallelisms are pastoral, bis propnet-y f nil of th odor of new mown bay, and the rattle of locusts, and tha ru nble of carts With sheaves, and the roar of wil I beasts de vouring the flock while the shepherd cam out in I heir deft-nee. He watched tha herds by day, and ty night Inhabited a booth made out of oushes, so that through these branches he oould see tha stats all night long, and was mora familiar wt h than than we who have tight roofs to our houses and hardly ever see the stars except among tbe tali brick chimneys of the great towns. But at seasons of tna year when tbe herds were in apeeial danger he would stay oat in tbe open field all through the darkness, his only shelter the curtain of tha night heaven, with the stellar embroideries and silvered tassalf of lunar light. What a life of solitude, all alone with his herds! Poor Amos! And at 13 o'clock at night bark to the wolfs bark, and tb lion's roar, and the bear's growl, and the owl's te wbtt, te-who, aud the serpent's hiss as hs unwittingly steps too near while moving through tbe thickets! So Amos, like other herdsmen, got the habit of studying the map of tha heavens because it was so much ot the time spread nut before htm. He noticed some stars a Ivaaoing and others receding. He associated their dawn an t setting with certain seasonsof the year. He had a poetlo nature, and he r ad night by night, and month by mouth, and year by year, the poem of the constellations, divinity rhythmic But two rosettes of stars espeoially attracted his attemlnn while seated on the ground or lying on his back under tha open scroll ot the mid-night heavens the Pleiades, or seven stars, and Orion. Tde former group this rustic prophet associated with spring, as tt rises about the 1st of May. The latter be associated with the winter, as it comes to the meridian in January. Tha Pleiades, or seven stars, connected with all sweetneu and joy; Orion, the herald of tbe tempest. The ancients wre ths more apt to study ths Khysiognomy and juxtaposition ot the eavenly bodies because they thought they bad a special influence upon the eattb, and perhaps they were right If the moon every tew hours lifts and lets down tha tides of the Atlantic ocean and tha electric storms in the snu. by all sc entitle admission, affect tne earth, why not the stars bave propor tionate effects And there are some things whioh make me think that it may not bave been all super stltution wbich connected tb movements and appearance of the heavenly bodies witb great moral events on earth. Did aot a meteor run on evangelistie errand on the Brat Christmas night and designate th rough cradle of our Lord? Did aot the stars in their course nght against Sisera? Waa It saeawly coincidental that be Tors tha lsstmo "ofVt j4aa-te as s f-HetWo- Iwelve consecutive l"wl U . ssarstyj Happen so mat a new star appnarea ia oon steliation Cassiopeia, and then disappeared just before Charles IX of France, who was responsible for the St. Bu-tholonsew mas sacre died? Was it without signifloano that in the days of the Roman Emperor Justinian war and famine wera preceded by the dimness of the sun, which for nearly a year gave no more light than ths moon, al though there were no clouds to obscure it? Astrology, after all, may have been some thing more than a brilliant heathenism. No wonder that Amos of the text, having teard these two anthems of the stars, DUt down the st out, rough si afif of the herdsman and took iclo his brown hand and cut and knotted lingers tbe pen of a prophet anl ad vised the recreaut people r( his time to re turn to God. saying. "Seek bimtbat ma Wet b tbe seven stars aa t Orion." This command, which Amos gave 7S5 years B. C, ia just as appropriate for us, 1H.7 A. D. In the Brit place Amos saw, as we must see, t hot the Qod who mado tbe P;eiades aud Orion must be the Ood of order. It was not so much a star here aud a star there that Im pressed the in-pi red herdsmau, but seven ia one group and seven in snolber group. He saw that night after night and season after season, and decade after decade, they bad kept step of light, e:tch one in its own place, a sisterhood never clashing and never contest ing prectHiencc. From the time Hasiod called tbe Pleiades the ''seven daughters of Atlas," and Tirgil wrote In bis ".Eueid" of "stormy Orion." until now, they hav- observed th order established for their coming and go ing; order written, not in manuscript that they may bs pigeon-holed, but with tne band of the Almighty on the dome of the sky, so that ail Nations may read it order, persist ant order, sublime order, omnipotent order. What a sedative to you and me, to whom communities and Nations sometimes seem going pellmell, and the world ruled by some Henri at haphazard, and in ail directions mal administration! The Ood who keeps seven worlds In right circuit for 6000 years oan certainly keep all the affairs of individuals ani Nations and continents in adjustment. We had not better fret much, for the peas ant's arnumei.t of t he text waa right, if God oan take care of the seven worlds of the Pleiades and the four chief worlds of Orloa. He can probably take care of tha one world we inhabit. So I feel very much as my father felt on day when we were going to the oountry mill to get a grist ground, and I, a boy of seven years, sat in the back part ot tbe wagon, and our yoke ot oxen ran away with ns, and along a labyrinthine road through th Woods, so that I thought every moment we would be dashed to pieces, and I made terrible outcry of fright, and my father turned to me with a faun perfectly calm and said: "De Witt, what are ou crying abont? I guess we can ride as fast as tb oxen can run." And, my bearers, why should wa be affrighted and lose otir equilibrium ia th swift movement of worldly events, specially when we are assure 1 thst it la not a yoke of unbroken steers thst ara drawing us on, bnt tbat order and wise government are ia the yoke? In your occupation, your mission, your sphere, do the best you can and then trust to Qod, and it things are all mixed and dis quieting and your brain is hot and your heart sick get some one to go out with you into the starlight and point out to you the Pleiades, or, better than that, get into some observatory, and through tbe telescope see farther than Amos wltb-the uake I eye could namely, 200 stars In tbe Pleiades, and tbat In what is called the sword of Orion there is a nebula computed to be two trillion two hundred tbousiind billion of times larger than the sun. Oh, be at pea?e witb the Ood who made that and controls all tbat, the Wheel ot the ronstellatlons turning in tbe wheel of galaxies for thousands of years wltbout the breakingof a cog.or the slipping of a band, or the snap of nn axle. For your Jlactdity and comlort through the Lord esus Christ I charge you, "Seek Him that maketh tbe seven stars and Orion." Again, Amos saw. as we must aer, that the Ood who made these two groups of the text Was the Ood of Light. Autos saw that OoJ was not satisfied with ranking one star or two or three stars, bnt He makes seven, and, having finished ti.at group of worlds, makes another group sroup after group. To tbe Pleiades He ad Ja Orion. It seems that Ood jlke light so wwlltbat He keeps making tt. Only one being in the universe knows the statistics of solar, lunar, stellar, meteoric creations, and tbat is thi Creator Himself. And tbey have all been lovingly christened, each one a name as distinct as tha names ol your children. "He telleth tha number ot the stars. He calleth them all by their names." The seven Pleiades bad names gven to them, and they are Alcyone, Merops, dssno, Electra, aterope, Tayget and Mala. gr....iv -.. will, sjid fi'ilons ot daughters of starry Tight that Ood calls by name as they sweep by Him with beaming brow and lustrous robe! So fou i is Ood of light natural iighr, moral light, spiritual light! Again and again la light harnessed for symbolizition Christ, the bright and morning s'nr; ev.ingelieation, tbe daybreak; the relenp ion of Nations, sun of righteous ness rising with healing In His wings. Ob. men and women, with so many sorrows and sins an l perplexities, if you want light of comfort, light of pardon, light of goodness, In earnest prayer through Christ. ".Seek Him tbat maketh the seven stars and Orion." Again, Amos saw, as we must see, that the Qod who made these two archipelagoes of stars must bo an unchanging Qod. There ha I been no change in the stellar appearance in this her Isman's lifetime, and bis father, a shepherd, reported to him tbat thore had been no ehange in his lifetime. And these two elusters hang over tha celestial arbor now jnat as they wi-re the Ant night that they shone on the E lenio bo were; the same as when the Egyptians bnilt the pyramids from the top of which to watch taem; the same as when the Chaldeans calculated tbe eclipses; the ame as when Elihu, according to the book of Job. went out to study the aarora borea'if; the same under Ptolemaic system and Cupernican system; tbe same from Cilisthenns to Pythagoras and from Pythagoras to H-rscbel. Surely a ehauire asa God must bave fashioned the Pleiades and Orion! Oh, what an anodyne amid the npsand downs of life and the flux anil reflux of the tides of prosperity to know that we have a changeless Ood, "the same yesterday, to-day and forever!" Xerxes garlanded and knighted the steers man of bis bj.it in the morning and hanged him in tbe evening of the same day. Fifty thousand people stool around tha columns of the National Capitol shouting themselves hoarse at the Presidential inaugural, and in four months so great were the antipathies that ruffian's pistol in a Washington depot expressed the sentiment ot many a disap pointed offloe seeker. The world sits in its chariot and drives tandnm, and the horse ahead is Huzza, and tbe horse behind is Ana thema. Lor 1 Oobliam, in King James's time, was applauded and had 435,000 a year, but was afterward execrated and lived on scraps stolen from tbe royai kitchen. Alexander the Great after death remained unburied fot thirty days b cause no one would do the I honor of shoveling him under. The Duke ot Wellington refused to bave his iron fence ! mended because it ha 1 been broken by an in- I furiated populace in some hour of political excitement, and he left it in ruins that men might learn what a fickle thing Is human favor. "But tbe meioyof tha Lord Is from everlasting to everlasting to them that feat I Him, and His righteousness nnto tha chll- I dreu s children of snoh a? keep His coven ant, and to those who remember His com mandments to do them." This moment "seek Him that maketh tbe seven stars and Orion." Again, Amos stw, as wo ranst see, that the Qod who made these two beacons of the ori ental night sky must be a Ood of lovo and kindly warning. Tbe Pleiades rising in mid sky said to all tha herdsmen and shepherds ! and husbandmen. "Come ozt and enjoy the i mild weal her and cultivate your gardens and fields." Orion, coming in winter, warned I them to prepare for tempest. All navigation I was regulated by these two constellations. Th one said to shipmaster and crew, "Hoist sail for the sea and gather meschnn diss from other lands." But Orion was the I storm stgnnl and said, "Reef sail, make , things snug or put Into harbor, for the hm ri-1 enes are gettlna their wings out." Aa the P.eiadee werettiesweetevangelsof the spring, j Orion was the warning prophet of the winter, i Ob, now 1 j t tba best view of God 1 ever bad! There are two sermons I never want j to preicn the one that presents uod so kind, so indulgent, so lenient, so imbecile that men may do what they will against Him, and fracture His every law, and put the pry ot their Impertinence and rebellion under His throne, and while they are spitting in His face ao. I stabbing at His noart He takes thssT rD is) ilis Tina red ktauJr-tnitin-T ataj mow aud cnees.ssyiawt'ui sncn istbo I kingdom of heaven." The other kind of sermon i nev.-r want to preaon is tne one tbat represents Qod as all Are and torture and thundercloud, and with redhot pitchfork tossing the human race into paroxysms of Inn nits agony. The sermon that I am now preaoHng believes in a Qod ot loving, kindly warning, the God of spring and winter, the 3od of the rieindes and Orion, Tou must rememb.-r that the winter is just as Important as tbe spring. Let one inter pass without frost to kill veotntiou tn 1 ice to bin I the rivers and snow to enrich ur fields, and then yon will have to enlarge rour hoipitals and your cemeieries. "A 1 trven Christmas mates a fat graveyard," was the old proverb. Storms to pnrify the air. Thermometer at three degrees below cero to tone up the system. December and January jus: as important as May and June. I tell you we n 1 tbe storms ot life as much ss we do the sunshine. There are more men ruined by prosperity than by adversity. II we bad our own way in life, before this we woul i have been impersonations of selfish ness and worMliiies and disgusting sin and Doffed up cntilwe vrou'd bave been lie Julius OsBsor, who was mo te by sycophants to be lieve that be was olivine, and the freckles on his face were said to be as the stars of the firmament. One of the swiftest transatlantic voyages made one summer by tb Etruria was be cause she had a stormy wind abaft, chasing her from New York to Liverpool. But to those going in the opposite direction the storm was a buffering and a hindrance. It Is a cat thing to bave a storm a heir I. push ing us back, but if we be God's children ami aiming toward heaven ths storms of life will only chase us the sooner Into tbe harbor. I am so glad to believe that tbe monjoons, typhoons and mistrals and siroccos of the land and sea are not unchained man'acs let loose upon the earth, bnt are under Divine supervision! I am so glad tbat tbe God oi the seven stars is also the Qod of Orion! It was out of Dante's suffering came tha sub-; lime "Divma Commedia," an 1 out of John i Milion's blinine?s came "Para dise Lost." ! aoi out of miserable infidel attack came the Urtdgewaier Treatise" in favor of Christi anity, and out of Davla's exile came the songs cf consolation, and out of the sufferings of ' Christ came the possibility ot the world's re- '. demption, and out of your bereavement, your persecution, yonr pofarties. your mis fortunes, may vet come an eternal beaven. Ob. what a mercy tt is tbat In tbe text and all up and down th Bible Qod Induces ua to look out toward other worlds! Bible as tronomy In Geousis, in Joshua, in Job, in tbe Psalms, In the prophrts. major and ovnor; In ix. John's Apocalypse, practically saying: "Worlds! Worlds! Worlds! Get ready for them'" We bave a nice little world her that we stick to, as though losing ! Ibat w lose all. Wa are afraid of talltog : off this little taft of a world. Wa are afraid tbat soma meteoric iconoclast will some night smash it, and we want everything to revolve around It aud are disappointed when ' wa nna mat n revolves aroumi the sun In- I Head of tba sun revolving around it. What' s fuss we make about this little bit of a world, Its existence only a short time be- i iween two spasms, the psroxysm !y which it was buried from chods Into order and the paroxysm of its demolition. And I am gind tn a so many texts call us o look off to other worlds, mauv of them : larger an 1 gr&ader aud more resplendent. "Look there," savs Job. "at Muzamth and i A ret ur us and his Mns!" "Look there," suvs nt. Jobu, "at tbe moon under Christ's feet1' "Loi there," says Joshua, "at Ibe suu standing still aliove ; Q.bfon!" "Look there," says Mw, "at ' tbe sparkling nrmamentl" "Look there," ' says Amos, the herdsman, "at the seven ! stars and Orion!" Do not let ns be so sad ibont those who shove off froai this world ' ander Chrlstly pilotage. Do not let ns be s. agitated abont our owu going off this llttlt ; barge or sloop or ennui bout of a world tc ' get on some Qreat Eastern of tbe heavens Do not let ns persist In wanting to stay Id this barn, this shed, this outhouse of a world, when all tbe King's palaces already occupied by many of our heit friends are swinging wide open their gate to let us in. When I read, "In My Father's house are many mansions," I do not know but tbat , each world is a room, and as many rooms as j there are worMs, stellar stairs, stellar gal-1 lertas, stellar hallways, stellar windows, stellar domsa. How our departed friends I must pity us shut up In these cramped apart- j meats tired if we walk fifteen miles, when tbey some morning, by one stroke of wing, ean mats circuit of the whole stellar system and be back In time for matins! Perhaps yonder twinkling constellation is the resi dence of tbe martyrs; that group of twelve luminaries may be tbe celestial home ot the apostles. Perhaps that steep ot light is the dwelling place of angles ehernbte, seraphio, arahaaaslle, A mansion with as many rooms as worlds, and all their windows illuminated tor festivity! Oh, how this widens anl lifts anl stimu lates our expectation! How little it makes the present, and how stupendous it makes the future! How it console us about our s pious dead, tbat, instead of being boxed up and under the ground, bave the range ot as many rooms as there are worlds and wel come everywhere, for it is the Father's house, in wbich there are many mansions! 0 Lord Ood of the seven stars and Orion, how can I endure the transport, the ecstasy, of suoh a vision? I must obey my text and seek Him. I will seek Him. I seek Him now, for I call to mind that it is not the ma terial universe that is most valuable, but the spiritual, and that each of us has a soul worth more than all the worlds which the inspired herdsman saw from his booth on the hills of Tekoa. I had studied it before, but the cathedral of Cologne, Germany, never Impressed me as it did one summer. It is admittedly the grandest Gothic structure in the world. Its foundation laid In 124s, only a few ye.irs ago completed. Mors than C'JO ve.'trs iu build ing! Ali Europe taxed for its construction. Its chapel of tbe Magi, with Dreolous stones enough to purchase a kiugdum. Its chapel of tit. Agnes, with tnatBrpiecen ot painting. Its spire springing Sit feet Into the heavens. Its stains 1 glasi the chorus of all rich colors. Statut-s encircling the pil ars and encircling all. Statues above statues, until sculpture can do no more, but faints and lulls back ngaltist carved stalls and down on pavemnuts over which the kings nn 1 querns of the earth have walked to confessional. Nave and aisles aud transept and portals combining ths splendors of sunrise nnd sunset. Interlaced, interfoliated, inlet-columned grandeur. As 1 stood outside, looking at the double range of fiylug buttresses und I he forest of pinnacles, higher aud higher aud higher, until 1 almost reeled from dir.z nrs, I exclaimed: "Great doxoloiry in stone! Frozen prayer of many Nations!" But while standingthere I atr a poor man enter and put down hi. pack and knee, be sido bis burden on the bard fl.ior of that cathedral. Aod tears of deep emotion came into my eyes aa I said to myself, "There is a soul worth mora thau all the material aur rouudings. Tbat man will live after the last pinnacle has falleu. and not one stone of all that cathedral glorv shall remain un urumbled. He is now n Lazarus In rags and poverty aud weatltieoM, but Immortal, aud a sou of the Lord God Almighty. Au I the prayer ho now otters, though, amid many superstitious, I telieve God will bear, and among the apostlea ivhose sculptured forma stun. I in the stirroiiudlng niches he will at last ba lilted and lull) the preseuce of thut Christ whose surleriiigs ere represented by the crucifix hefor which li. bows aud bs railed in due time nut of all Ills poverties Into the glorious home built for hlrn and built for us by 'Him who muketh ihe seven Blurs aud Ori.iu.' " Items of Interest. iMore than (50,000 Kurotieans com mit suicide annually. Nativei of the Island of Bourbon consider bats the finest eating. A pure while squirrel was rereuily rangbt near Higham, Mass. About 40,000 sparrows are said to bave been destroyed in Gratriol county, Mich. Policemen in Vienna must be able to rwim, row a boat, And understand telegraphy. All the "civilized" nations 'are at present unusually active in building Uf their navies. -i An Entrlisb. m&di ) vmrnal savV. thWCab. and other - phosphoric fof do not improve the brain. While drunkenness is regarded with greater seventy in England and France it is still uncondemned in Germany. Great beds of fossilized fish have been found in Northwestern Colorado at an elevation of 8,000 feel above sen level. For the new railway from Cape Col ony to tiuluwayo at $500,000 order for locomotives has been pineal in Eng land. The grave of Robiu Hood is in a for est not far from 11 udder field, York shire. It is eurrounded by a modern iron railing. By popular subscripti n Italians will build a meteorological station on the top of Mount K ise, at an elevation of 14,000 feet. Two Richmond, Vt., farmers tapped their maple trees January 10 aud gath ered considerable Sap, be a tine; all pre vious records. Freshets in the Seine have driven hordes of rata into the houses and streets. In outlying districts thjy scour the streets in bodies. It is said that posts planted in the earth upper etid down will last longer thau those which are set in the natural position in which the tree grew. The first whaleback built on the Pa li tic coast, ia now in its tenth year, be ing remodeled into a steamer of tbe regular pattern al Oakland, Cal. A glasi headstone has beeu put iir the grave of George E. Evans, aniasou, al Kugeue, Ore. It waa Pent on inert? by his father from Gibson, Neb. The Chinese skin cats before cooking them, but Jogs are simply soused in boiling watfr to remove the hair, a little hair be'a left on the end of the tail to show the a, lor. James Murphy and Philip JuJkins, who three week I ago were ordinary miners in Cripple Creek, have just shipped two carloads of ore which turni d out 100,000 in gold. The native police in the foreign set tlement at Yokohama having mastered the English language, ate now studying the Russian, Chinese aod Korean, tongues as part of their polka duty. The Kansas City Slur says tbat Kau saa City will soon be Ihegreatertt mute market in the world, it already ships thousands annually to all portions of the I 'Lilted ; tales, Central America and Mexico. Tbe famous London waxwork exhibi tion pojinarly known as Madame Tuaaaod's has beeu ostal. liahed over 100 years, and ia now the largest el ail. ition in the world, numbering as it Joes more than 000 figures. 1 The firm railway in Corea is to l bnilt by an American, .1. it. Morae. It jrill fori nee t the port of Cbemnlpo with the capital, .teool, woioh is only 2S miles distant. The cost is eat'mated at $l,H50r,00. The ioUifnt distance to which a pro ctile lias been thrown, wti at Slioeliiirvnesi, I England, cm April 15, lHtiH, w'heu a LcDeridge wire-bonn gun thrpw a shot 21.S5H yard., or 12 miles '263 yards. There ara alnminnm dock boats. A Germrn has beon granted a patu'it on a Re win ueej'e made with tbe center and eye end rial the rest of the needle ling round. Sunlight does not peuetrate'deatidr than I, C00 feet. Very sensitive pno tographio plates exposed for teu minutes at 400 fathoms deep shows j no development of light. t - 3 I 9 J. L