pp .:,-,V;..: .jj llll; n- oil Ml MP THE OONOTITDTION-TH E UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWL MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PEN N A.. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 17.1897. NO. 10. T VI Is s fl 11 7 J VOL. 1.1 i'T 1 1 ffW jIt'' CHAPTER IX. l-ady Val bad been right. It waa Stella Indeed who waa advertising ber quantita tions as a teacher; and Mr. Moncrieff on the following afternoon walked down to the postofHce in order to make Inquiries, la answer to bia questions he waa fur bished with the address of the lady who wanted pupils. As be expected It waa Miss Uaeburn. He made his way op the hillside by the grassy road which led from the highway past the gates of St. Anselm's and over the hill. Before he reached the gate, be congratulated himself on bia good for tune. There was Miss Uaeburn herself walking slowly along the road, with a book in her hand. Aa she neared hiw, be could not help remarking that she was sweeter-looking than ever. He shook bands with her, and told ber that he in tended calling upon Mrs. Sinclair and Miss Jaequetta Raebnrn, but evinced no special disappointment when told that these laides were out driving with Mr. Sinclair. "Will you come in. Mr. Monerieff?" Stella asked. "Mrs. Sinclair ia sure to be borne almost immediately, and she will be so grieved if 1 have not offered you cup of tea." "Thank you, but I am afraid I must act wait. Miss Raeburn excuse me ia it true that you want pupils? My ques tion souuils abrupt; but our time may be limited, and 1 heard tbut you were anxious to teach if you could bud schol ars." "Yes, but I do not think that I shah And them here." said Stella. "Tbey teli uie that I must go to tilasgow or Edin burgh, or even Ioudon!" and ahe sighed at the prospect, aud looked at the purple bills with eyes that seemed ready to till wilb tear. "We miKtit perhaps find you a pupil or two nearer home." saiJ Mr. Moacrieff. ".Miss Uaeburn, will you consent to giTe my little girl, Molly, some lessons and tea. h her as you yourself have been taught ':" "Your daughter, Mr. Moncrieff? But she is mil eh too old for me I wanted to tearh Utile children only," aaid Stella, coloriug up to the eyes in much confu sion. "She could not have a better teacher," Mr. Moiii-rieff said, calmly. "She has bad many disadvantages, and I should be glad to fee her in wiser bauds than tuice." The two had a plain, sensible, business like little chut, in which Mr. Moncrieff respect for Stella's capacities waa in creased tenfold. He left her at laBt with the understanding that she would talk over the matter with her Aunt Jacky and that if her Aunt Jacky did not ob ject the new arrangement should begin s soon as the Sinelairs left Dnnkeld. Mr. Moncrieff quitted her at last, and rftroJe away down the lane toward the high road once more. Here, as be trod the shady path, his attention waa arrest ed by the appearance of a man who loi tered alone the road before him. This man was rather undersized, lean, and of a pallid complexion; as Moncrieff neared him. a handsome, sallow face, with Jew ish features and a great black mustache, was suddenly turned upon him. "Why, Ralph," said the Laird of T..r tesmuir, stepping short, and looking in unfeigned surprise at his late wife's step brothera man who for many yeara bad made Torresmuir his home "I did not know that you often came thla way." 'I don't," said Ralph Kingacott, with o easy laugh. "But I happened to turn in this direction to-day. I don't know why. It is a pleasant walk." He did not mention that he had been tracking Alan's steps all the afternoon, or that he was in a state of concealed rage at the bare thought that any mat ter of importance had been transacted without bia help. "I've been at St. Anselm's," said Mon crieff, after a little pause; "and I have engaged Mlaa Raebnrn to teach Molly very day from ten to four." "The dence you have," exclaimed Mr Kingacott, In hia heart. Bnt be di.l n r ay the words aloud. CHAPTER X. . When Stella arrived at Torreso... . . days later, Molly's greeting of ber ue. governeas was rapturous. She rushed at Stella and embraced ber frantically, then danced round her with such evident de light tfcat Stella waa amused and sur prised. "Ton dear, delicious thing!" cried Molly. "How awfully good It ia of yon to teach me I I never thought that any thing half bo good could ever happen." "I ahall be strict, I forewarn joxk." aid Stella, smiling. "Yon couldn't!" aaid Molly, positively. "With that lovely golden hair and those sweet, blue eyea of youra yon couldn't know how." Stella waa led off by the chattering Molly, and found it rather difficult to in duce the young lady to settle down to her books that forenoon. At twelve o'clock the two were to have gone for walk, bnt a dash of heavy rain against the win dows pat walking ont of the question Bo Molly proposed to show her new friend over the house, some parts of which were very well worth seeing, and Stella, willingly agreed to anything that ber pupil suggested. Torresmuir was partly an old and part ly a new building. The older portion waa built of thick and solid atone: the tower at one end was of masonry, which seemed M If it would defy the flight of time for centuries, so cunningly had the great tones been welded together. This tower waa little used except by Mr. Ralph Kingacott, who, as Molly informed Miss Raeburn, occupied tw rooms, one above Mother, in skis part of the bujldipg. "It is a great shame," said Molly, in in aggrieved tone, "because the tower would make such a nice little retreat for Bertie and me. One tau t l...ir a single sound from these rooms in the new part of the house. But Uncle Ralph keep us out." "He has grown fond of his rooms, 1 dare say." said Stella. "1 don't think he is very fond of any thing," Molly answered, with a cuiious touch of cynicism in her fresh young voice, "but it is convenient for him, 1 dure say, to be able to go in and out just as he likes. There is a little door from his sitting-room into the garden, and papa never knows whether he is out after midnight or not." Stella thought this sort of con versa lion undesirable, and changed it by ask ing the names of certain curiosities which were ranged in glass cases on some side tables in the octagon room. "Pretty, aren't they?" said Molly, enre lessly, as she ran over the names with the air of one who bad often rehearsed them previously; "but this is the most cu rious thing. Do you see that empty case?" Stella looked, and observed that a large morocco case lined with velvet stood empty under a glass shade. "There's a story about it," said Mollj "I remember when it used to bold a stone a beautiful crystal, I believe, sparkling with all the colors of the rainbow. 1 1 was in the days before mamma died." and a sudden shadow came over her mer ry face. "Was it stolen?" Stella asked, to break the pause that followed. "That's the odd part of it Of coursi it was, but there was no way of buding out how or why. Just before mamma died it disappeared. Aud you have no idea what a fuss the old servants in the house, and even papa himself, made about it. It was very ridiculous." "Was it valuable?" "Not a bit, I believe. Only do you remember a piece of poetry called 'The Luck of Edenhall'?" "Yes; Longfellow translated it from the German." "Well, there was just such another oli story about this stoue and our family. It was said to have been brought from the East by one of our ancestors; and aa long as it was in our possession we were to be lucky in every way, and when it went the luck was to go too. And now it has gone!" "And the luck remains," said Stella, smiling at the girl's half tragic tone. "I suppose so. But I don't know. Noth ing has gone right since nothing." Of course, it has nothing to do with the stone; I Jim not so stupidly supersitious as poor old Jean, our nurse, used to be; but still ever since we have been un happy I don't know why." The tears were filling Molly's beautiful hazel eyes. Stella looked sympathizingly at her, and took her band, meaning to give the child gome gentle advice respect ing ber own share in producing the happi ness of her home, when an interruption occurred. The inner door of the octagon room, leading to the staircase, flew open, and Mr. Kingscott made his appearance. He paused, as if in surprise, at the sight of the two girls. Molly pouted, frowned, threw back her mop of ruddy golden hair, and did not seem inclined to apeak. "I must introduce myself, aa my niece does not seem inclined to perform the office for me," said Ralph Kingscott. bowing his white teeth in a smile which Uella found singularly unpleasant. "My iame is Kingscott, Miss Raebnrn I liiuk I have the pleaaure of apeaking to Miss Raebnrn? and I have the honor to be Miss Molly's uncle, as well as the tutor of my nephew, Bertie. Our office should bring us together. We must have something in common, must we not?" Stella only bowed; the man's manner did not attract ber, and she felt it impos sible to do anything but look serious and dignilied. "So yon have been looking at our poor little curiosities?" said Mr. Kingscott. easily. "And has Molly been explaining to you the losa of the luck of the house?" "It can't be explained," said Molly, al most rudely. "Nobody knowa." "And nobody ever will know," said her uncle, in a mocking tone.. "Nobody will ever know unless the luck of the house comes back again, and that will not be in your time or mine. 'Gone la the luck of Edennnll," aa the poem says." "I believe you've got it!" cried Molly, in savawely that Stella stood aghast "that on stole It and hid It away on purport to vex papa!" She bit ber lip and tha tears again dimmed her flashing eyes. "You would not mind you know yon don't care whether things are right or wrong I've heard you say so if only they are pleasant." Ralph Kingscott gave a short laugh and turned on his heel. Hut tbe mo mentary whitening of bia lips, tbe keen, steel-like glance that he shot at Molly from out his narrow dark eyes, showed that her shaft had, in some way or an other, gone straight home. Mr. Moncrieff stayed for some days in Edinburgh, and Stella had thus no oppor tunity of consulting him, as she bad wish ed to do, about the plan of study which Molly was to pursue. After the first day or two, ahe found the girl tolerably easy to manage. Thus the fall and winter passed away and was succeeded by a bleak and biting spring. In March Mr. Moncrieff went to London. His absence made little differ ence to tbe household. Stella fancied, however, that Bertie was degenerating in mind and feeling, and she made up her mind that she ought to speak to Mr. Mon crieff about him as soon as be returned. And yet she was terribly afraid that he would think sack speech presumptuous. Ska cjid not find an ppojttjai for aomr time, however. Mr. Moncrieff paid living viitit to bia home iu June, aud then it was chiefly in order to arrauge that Miss Jacky and Stella should take Mull; to the seaside for a little change of air during the uiouth of July. He persuaded Mnw Jatky to agree to his plan, and com missioned her to liud suitable lodgings at St. Andrews at his expense; and then he vanished as suddeuly as be had come, taking Bertie away with him, and leav ing .Mr. Kingscott free to follow hi own devices. So it chanced that on one lovely day In July, Stella waa seated in a shady nook of the castle at St. Andrews, with a book in her hand, while Miss Jacky and Molly had gone to the bathing place. Her eyes had strayed from it to the great expanse of blue water, flashing and glittering in the sunlight, breaking with long mur murous rolls over the rocks below, a never-ending source of beauty aud mys tery, of sorrow and Joy. As Stella watch ed it, ahe was conscious of the awe, sol emn and yet tender, which the sight of nature in its grandest forms often pro duces in us; a feeling of the limitations aud narrowness and weakness of human life in presence of the Eternal. Her own sorrows seemed to die away in the con sciousness of a greater life enveloping her own. And in this mood she was found by Alan Moncrieff. She did not notice his approach until be was close to ber, and then she started and half rose. He lifted his hat. "Is Molly a good girl?" be asked, a smile curving his lip' beneath his dark turn tacbe. "Very good, indeed." How handsome he wast she thought as he stood there, his face a little tanned after hia Swiss tour, with a new light in his brown eyes, and strength and energy in every limb. No youth, certainly; but a vigorous man, full of manliness and purpose. She had never seen a man in whom she had found more to admire. John Hannington? Ah! the name had almost lost its power to wound; John Hannington was commonplace beside Alan Moncrieff. "How is Bertie?" she said, forcing her self to speak. "Better, thank you. And I hope 1 trust that he ia losing his fear of me." She was surprised to hear him speak so plainly. "It is unreasonable of him to feel fear of you, ahe exclaimed. Mr. Moncrieff smiled as if well pleased. "You would not feel it, would you?" he said, and then caught himself up and went on in a different tone. "He tells me that you have lectured bun on the sub ject. Perhaps it is not fair to repeat all that he haa aaid. But, at any rate, he has made me sure of one thing: that I need an interpreter to stand between me and my children. They have no mother; and the-eed the gentle guidance of a woman'-, uand. Therefore, after long consid erationfor I do not wish you to sup pose that I am speaking rashly or on the impulse of the moment I have come with one purpose one only in my mind; and that is, to ask you a question, or rather make a request. Will you some day honor me so far as to become my wife?" (To be continued ! Learn to Laugh. There ought to be societies formed for tbe encouragement of laughter. A real laugh is not common, for It must' be remembered that a anicker la not a laugh. Tbe Puritans were Inclined to frown upon laughter as frivolous, and there fore wicked. Life was a very grave affair to them, an almost constant struggle for existence, and they had no time to make merry. The first two centuries of their national life were busy years. Privations were many, and the Indians were almost continu ally on the warpath. It Is small won der, perhaps, that they rarely enjoyed hearty laugh. Philosophers and cynics sneer at laughter. Goldsmith (who waa always laughing) telle ua of "the loud laugh that spoke the vacant mind," and the scornful Bryon says, "And if I laugh at any mortal thing, tis that I may not weep." many people are afraid to laugh be cause they think It common, so they re press their merriment with a smile. They do wrong. Nature evidently intended us to laugh, or children would not know bow. Laughter Is healthy and provocative of good morals as well aa of good health. Hamlet says that "one may smile, and smile, and be a villain,'' and so one might; but no one could laugh, and laugh, and be a villain. To smirk, grin, guffaw, or smile Is not to laugh. A good, whole-souled, hearty laugh Is a panacea for many Ills, nnd worth a doctor's prescription. Gnl-ler Days. To Wah lushes Properly. To the woman with whom tbe love of cleanliness and daintiness is Inherent Vie manner in which the ordinary ser vant washes dishes is maddening. Glass, silver, china, are all crowded, helter-skelter, Into a dlshpan full of warm water, a cake of soap is next add ed, and while thla swims in the tepid suds, a greasy dishcloth Is used to "swab" off each article before it is re moved from the pan and placed on tbe table to drain. Dishes to be cleansed properly should be washed, as it were, in courses. Into a perfectly clean pan of scalding water, to u-hich have been added a few drops of ammonia, go first the glasses, each one of which must be dried rapidly with a soft linen cloth. Now the wash lug powder or the soap, inclosed In a shaker, or, lacking this, in a deap cup, goes in tbe pan, and the silver is washed each piece being rubbed to a polish while still hot Last comes the ehlna, from which the grease must already have been rinsed. As many plates, etc., cool the suds, boiling water must be poured In as often as needed. The secret of bright and polished table ware is never to allow a dish to drain. Each bit of crockery or metal must be wiped tbe moment it is drawn from the hot suds. Not one servant in a hun dred will follow thla rule, unless con stantly reminded by tbe mistress that She must do -so. The price of well washed dishes is, like all other dainty housework, the mistress' eternal vigi lance. Harper's Bazar. He that things himself tbe happiest man really is so; bnt be that thinks himself tbe wisest is generally the greatest fool. It is easier to get into the kingdom of 'Heaven tban it is to got into the nigbtoned circles of this world. Labor Notes. tttW-t AND HAfPENINOrl OF SfKCIAL I TEKtSM IS TUB VAKIOI S TKAI'Es. Goo I household servants are paid (ruin f 1 to tS a mouth. American apples are retailed (or SI Jox-su in Mexico. Iu France when a railway train it more tban ten minute late lhe com pany is fined. It is ssid that a great m iny Aniari jan flags are male by sweatshop lab r in New York. In Mexico turkeys are driveo to market through the main street of the shies just like sheep. The largest buaines houses in Mex .co are closed for an hour and a half id the middle of the day. The Rockefeller steamer Robert Ful joa, 440 feet over all, is the largest steamer on the Groat Likes. There are 550 man employed at the Bath (Me.) Iron Work aud live con tracts for vessels on band. lhe Federal telegraph of Mexico las recently inaugurated a night ser vice, and 10 words can ba sent for 10 cents. New industrial companies, capital .sed at $50,500,000, were advertised in one day's issue of the London dailies recently. There is a project on foot to build a big smelter oj the linn of tbe Atchi son, near Cerillos, N. M , in order to get tbe benefit of cheap fuel. Tbe prosecuting attorney of Alle gan, Mich., is advocating a bill order ing that tbe names of all purchasers of iquor at tbe drug stores shall be pub ished. Statistics just made public show tha. n Massachusetts, in spite of tbe advent of tbe trolley car and the popu'arity oi the bicycle, the number of horses ia greater by 308 j than in tbe year pre ceding. Alaska and Fuget Sound merchants tnd the steamship companies are pre paring for an inllux of 10,000 to 15, DJ0 miners into Alaska this spriug Last year about 5000 men went North in search of wealth. Tbe soda evaporation enterprise, tht lawmill building, the erection of ex tensive sheep-snearing pens and the development of the rich tributary gold placers are all potent factors of Green Uiver, Ore., 18'J7 prosperity. The revival of trade in America, says .ho Indian Daily Acm', is already makiug its influence felt in Calcutta, several of the leading firm tli -re h iv-in-r received inquiries and larg-i orders for jute, both raw and manufactured. In Paris tbey first utility rats to clc-nr 'he flesh from the bones of carcass -s, hen kill the rats, use up the fur tr trimmings, their skins for gloves, their thigh boues for toothpicks, and their tendons and bone for gelatine wrap ieri. There are more breweries in Cali fornia than there are in Illinois; mire distilleries in Massachusetts than tti -re itre in Kentucky, and more cigarette manufactured in New York state th in iu all tbe other states of tha country combined. One of tbe provisions of the Greater f New York charter, a provision existing in the present law, is that the walk and ceilings of every tenement house house shall be whitewashed at least once a year. The definition of tene ment bouse is so framed that it includes the most beautiful and expansive apart ment bouses in the city. In German cities -before a druggist if ranted a license to opan a store care lul investigation is made to determine whether tbe needs of that particular neighborhood require it. Recently a voting druggist in Altona, whose pros pective marriage depended on bis sue cess ia securing a license, waa over whelmed by the rejection of his peti tion. As a last resort be took the cass to the Minister of bMucation, the high eat authority, and, on being refaset' agaia, committed suicide. Fashion Nt;s. Plaids are also sean, but tbey are likely to do better in the more subdue 1 nd smaller combinations than in tbe larger and louder patterns. 'The tight skirt is in vogue for win ter gowns; it is only wide enough to permit walking; the heaviest fabrics, furs, etc., are used only, and' a skirt of tbis kind requires harJly more fabric than a large pleated ma till) does; it is in great favor, as !t fits well, is not weighty on the shoulders, and, then, it permits the wearing of tbe jacket. A combination of velvet will be worn until midsummer, and even through that time we shall see velvet belts and boleros for cool days and many knots of velvet ribbon will ornament tbm gowus. A judicious use of braiding will en liven not only woolen, but heavy cot ton gowns, as duck, canvas and piq le. Sepirate waists of bright plaid papliu are trimmed with em til gilt bjttons ia clusters and interlaced with gold corJ. A lace j ibot ornaments the front. White evening waists trimmed with deep pink have a bunch of yellow roses on tbe left shoulder. Many bridesmaids' gowns (.re now of white organdie trimmed with fine tuexs. Valenciennes lace anJ ribbon and made over a glace silk lining. Heliotrope cloth is edged with Alaska sable, corselet of velvet and a white cloth vest braided in heliotrope and black. Mauy white vests are worn with jabota or appliques of lace, but th most stylisii show hand braiding. If there ia a grace that we are all stingy with, it is ttiat of giving praise, and yet it is one with whiet we ought to be lavish. When a man bas an engagement to have a tooth palled he is always polite enough to give his place t another mac Bow is it that the chump whe al ways leaven tbe door open in winter insists on closing tbe door during the existence of the hot wave? New Inventions. AhnnJy device torus') in connee'ion with da fountain couaiata of a reser voir atiacbeJ to the faucet and hv g a plunger running through an opxuiug in the faucet for discharging a quan tity of s ills into the water as ii Hjwh through the fancet, Ihus mixing the drink as it enters the glass. A newly-devised umbrella case hat a cloth strip attached to one side uf the umbrella top in such a manner that when the umbrella is c osed tbe edges of the strip overlap ei'h other around the umbrella, lacing hooks beinj fastened along the e lgs of the strip to be laced togoihsr by a .cord. To assist car oilers in their work at night a new patent consists of a torch designed to be attached to the suld of the nil can, and baviig a long wick tube running nearly to the end of the oil can nozzle, tbe reseivoir containing the ail being fastened to tbs aide of the lubrica jog oil chamber. Wheelmen with inner tube tires, will appreciate a new inner tube just pat ented. It consists in vulcanizing the tube so that when it is not iu lined it will fold over on itself lengthwise, th is making it smaller aud mure easily en tered into tbe outer tube, when it cm be inflated and made to unfold into the usual shape. A novel hairpin just patented con-si- is of a round button, to the ua lor si le of which is secure! a piece of steel wire, tbe ends of which are coiled around the edge of the button, with the points projecting far enough to engage the hair, when the button is twisted around so that the wires enter the hair and bold it fast. One of the simplest non-refillable oo tiles recently pttented has the neck curve! beyond the length of the or dinary neck. The cork haa a metal top, and can be pus jed down into po sition in the straight portion of the neck, but cannot be removed without breaking the neck of tbe bottle, on account of the areb in the neck. A new carpet stretcher consists of round casing to be placed in tbe centre of the room and having four arms projecting from it to the four sides of the room, with teeth in cross pieces attached to the arms to eugage the edge of the carpet, and a spreader placed iu the centre casing to force tbe four arms outward. 1 Items of Interest. There are about 250 religious sects in E'igland. There are 54 temperance newspapers published in tbe United Kingdom. The census of Atlanta, Ga., just completed, gives it a population of i3,000. The prison population of England nas fallen off of late years. Oat of 113 prisons 57 nave been altogether Hosed. It is said by scientific men that the jiiir from the tail of the horse is the strongest single animal thread knowa. The costliest building of molern times is the State Capitol of Albany, N. Y. Over $20,000,000 bas been ex pended on it. The late President of the Ryal Academy, Sir John Millais, received an average of 95,000 tor each of the 300 pictures he painted. Reports from the coffae distric s f Mexicj show that the crops will be very heavy, and planters are going to have a most prosperous year. Tha biggest price ever paid for a norse in America was $125,000, given by J. Malcolm Forbes of Boston, for Leland Stanford's Arion, a trotter. Jacob C Hollis, near Ferryman, Md., recently killed a large hawk. Around one of its legs was a bog rinp, which had been there so long that it had woru the flesh away to the bone. Tbe bird was quite old. Egyptian cotton importations have increased from 10,470 bales in 1S90 to CO. 220 bales in 1896, and tbe Sea Island cotton growers want a duty on the imported article. The price baa declined from 28 cents to 13 cents. A new floaiiog dock is about to be constructed in tbe harbor of Havana, with a capacity of 10,000 tons. The contract for tbe building of tbe struc ture baa been awarded to a British firm. Spades and shovels, together with scoop?, are found depicted on the walls of Egyptian catacombs, and all Hire are frequently mentioned by Roman aud Greek agricultural writers. There are only two scarlet flowers native of England tbe popy and tbe scaret pimpernal and both these Hour is i best on d y and sunny spots. Nearly all other scarlet flowers are im ported. The University Medical College, ot New Orleans, bas determined to estab lish a training school for negro w f men as nurses. The object" is to sup ply trained nurses who will s rve for nodorate pay. A benevolent man at Charles City, Ia., his established a home for tramps where they may rest and eat. uch a home will please them. Tbey have no wood t chop, no stock to feed ao i no one to support The peop'e of Paris are hippophagus to a remarkable df gree, consuming on an average over 20,000 horses and Jon- keys annually. List year, accord n a; to the returns, the Parisians ate 23,39d horses, 439 donkeys and 8tf mules. Tnis horse, donkey and mule fieah dretsed ready for the butcher's block weighed 5 S79 tons, and was sold al prices varying from 3 sous to one franc per pound, the latter being the price p:iid for lhe best horse steaks 1 ntndy rather to fill yonr minds Iban your coffort ; knowing that gold and silver were originally mingled with dirt nntil avarice or aibition parted them. T-ere is a vast diffjrenee in one's re spect for tbe man who bas made him self, and the man who bas only made bis money. Half the misery of human life might be extingnished by mutual offices of com passion, benevolence and bnmanity. REV. DR. TALMAGE TawEalMS DtvtsMTs alwbjeeti "Harbor ot Home.1 Till: "do horns to thy fries la and tell them how great things tna Lord, hath don tor tbea." Mark v., 1. There are a a;ret many people loosrtna tot soma arand sphere la which to serve UoX They a tmire Luther at th diet ot Wot ma, and only wish that tbey had some suoh araat opportunity in whloh to display their Chris tian proweaa. They a lmlra Paul mtktair Felix tremble, and thy only wish that thsv bad some such grand occasion in whloh to preaoh righteousness, temperaaoe and judg ment to eome. All they want ia an oppor tunity to exhibit their Christian heroism. Now the apostle oomas to ua, and hs prac tically says, "I will show you a plaoa wh-tr you can exhibit all that is grand and beauti ful and glorious la Christian character, and that ia tha domestic circle." If one ia not faithful la aa insignificant sphere, be will not be faithful in a resound ing sphere. If Peter will not help the erip- le at the gate of the temple, he will never sable to preaoh S000 souls Into the king dom at the Pentecost. If Paul did not take pains to Instruct in the way ot aalvation the sheriff of the Philipplan dnngeon, be will never make Felix tremble. Ha who la not faithful In a skirmish would not be falthf al In an Armageddon. The tact la, we are all placed ia Just the position in whloh we can most grandly verve Ood, and we ought not to be chiefly thouzhtful about some sphere of usefulness whioh we may after awhile gain, bnt the all obsorblng question with yon and with me ought to be, "Lord, what wilt thou have me (now and here) to do?" There Is ono woru In my text around frhioh tbe most ot our thoughts will to-day revolve. That word is home. Ask tea dif ferent men the meaning of that word and they will give you ten diftdrent definition. To one it means love at the hearth, It meana plenty at the table. Industry at the worki stand, intelligence at the books, devotion at the altar. To him it means a greeting at the doorand a smile at the chair. Peace ho ver Ing like winz-t. Joy clapping Its bands with laughter. Life a tranquil lake. Pillowed on the ripples sleep the shadows. Ask another man what home Is and he will, .ell you It is want looking out of a cheerless fire grate and kneading hunger In aa empty bread tray. Tne damp air shivering with curoes. No Biblo on the shelf. Children, robbers and murderers In embryo. Vile songs their lullaby. Evry face a picture of ruin. Want in tbe background and ain staring from the front. No Sabbath wave rolling over tbt doorsiil. Vestibule ot the pit. Shu low of Infernal walls. Furnace for forg ing overlasting chains. Fargots for an un ending funeral pile. Awful word! It Is spelled with curse?, it weeps with rain, it choices with woe. It sweats with the death atrony of despair. Tbe word home Iu the one ease means (nvrything bright. The word homo in the other case means everything ternflc. I shail speak to von ot home as a test ot !hn racier, home aa a refuge, home as a poli tical safeguard, home as a school and hsmo as a ivpe of heaven. And in tbe first place I remark that homo s a powerful test of charaoter. The disposi tion in publio may be In gay ooatume, while lu private it is ia dishabille. As play actors nny appear in one way on the stage and may appear in another way behind the scents, so private character may be very different from public character. Private character ts often publio character turned wrong side out. A mun may receive you Into his parlor as iuotii;h be were a distillation of smili-s, and . yet bis heart may be a swamp of nettles, there am business men who all day long are mild and courteous and genial and good na' u red in commercial life, keeping biok their irritability, and their petulance, and thuir discontent, but at nightfall tbe dam breaks and scolding pours forth in floods nn I freshets. Reputation is only the shadow of charac ter, and a very email boose sometimes wilt -ast a very loDg shadow. Tbe Hps may seem to drop myrrh and cassia, and the disposi tion to be as bright and warm as a sheaf of t-unbeams, and yet they may only ba a mag nificent show window to a wretched stock of good. There is many a man who is affable in public life and amid commercial spheres who, in a cowardly way, takes his aa.-er and his petulance home and drops tbem la the domestic circle. Tbe reason men do not display their bad temper in publio Is because they do not want to e knocked down. There are men who hide their petulance and their Irritability )ust for tbe same reaion that they do not iet their notes go to protest it does not piy. Or for the same reason that tbey do not want a man in their stock company to a -11 his stock at less than the right price, lest it de preciate thn value. As at sunst the wind rises, so after a sunshiny day there may be a tempestuous nli;hr. There are people who In public act tha philanthropist who at home act the Nero with respect to their slippers and their gowns. Audubon, the great ornithologist, with, gun and pencil want through the forests ot America to bring down aud to sic rtel the b autiful bird-, and after years of toil and exposure coor oWe i his manuscript and put it in a trunk In Philade phia for a few days of recreation and rest and came bajk and found that the rats had utterly destroyed the manuscript, but without any dlsoom- Eosureand without anyfr-t or bad temper, e again picked up his gun and pencil aa i visitei again all the gr?at forests of America an i reproduced bis immortal work. And vet there are people with the ten -thousandth part or 1 n 1 1 io-s vno are utterly irrvwii cilable, who. at the loss of a pencil or an article of raiment, will blow aa long and sharp as a northeast storm. Now, that man who is affable in public aud who l. irritable In private is making a fraudulent overissue of stock, and he Is as bad as a bank that might hav 400.000 or (500,000 of bills in circulation witbno specie in the vau it. Let us learn "to show piety at home." If we have it not there we have it not anywhere. If we have not genuine gra-e in the family circle, nil our outward and public plausibility merely spring from a fear of the world or from the slimy, putrid pool of our own selfishness. I tell you tbe home is a mighty test of character. What you are at home you are everywhere, wheth er you demonstrate ft or not. Again, I remark that borne is a refuge. Life is the Unite! States army on the na tional road to Mexico, a long march, with ever and anon a skirmish and a battle. At eventidx we pitoh our tent and taok our arm. We bang uptbe war eap and lay our hea l on the knapsack. We sleep until the morning bug.e calls us to marching and ac tion. How pleasant is it to rehearse the vic tories and the surprises and the attacks of the day. s'a'e I hy the still camp Bra of tbe home circle! Yea, life is a stormy sea. With shivered miisl; and torn s ills and bulk aleak, wa put into the h irbor of borne. Bl-9sed harbor: There we go for repairs in tbe drydock ot quiet life. Tbe can lie in thw window Is to tue tolling man tbe lighthouse guiding him into port. Children go forth to meet their fathers as pilots at the Narrows takethe hand of ships. Tha doorsill of tbe borne is the wntirr where heavy life is unladen. There is the place where we may talk o. what we have done without being charged with self adulation. There is tbe plaoe when we may lounge without being thought nil gracelul. There 1st be p'ace where we may ex press affection without being thought silly. There is tbe place where we may forget out anuovanees and ex isperatlons and troubles. Forlorn earth pl'.griml No homer Then die. That is better. The grave Is brighter an I grander and more glor.ous than this world, with no tent from marchings, with no barboi ftvm the storm, with no place to rest front tbis scene of greed and gouge aud loss anc gan. Ood pity the man or woman who ha no home1 Further, I remark that home is a politic, safeguard Tbe safeguard ot the state mas' m ewm on tne est y of tha borne. Tht Ghrfeiian hearthstone Is the only corner none for arepnolic. The virtues cultured in the family circle are an absoln e necasalt) for tbe state. If there be not enough moral principle to make the family adhere, then will not be enough political principle te make the state adhere. "No home" meant tbe Goths and Vandals, moana the nomads oi Asia, means tha Nnmidians ot Ariea, naatiac r!u p t r-v- i vni;i- ! tSwrnatar lH-nxlrluuvt. Cufjj.al all tsow Kk at iar)iuiy wh.,-N I nnH'l -t t! aoo! ra -; "oraa tost aot thahip ia 1m to tx-x- . Ily sails wot sint th triata ot t4 ja:iiii. ttoa, J.ld aad pdaitiMUianaa ulvrw sad navies an ao4 oar banc da-'eaea. The door of th horn is to banc forrrs. H u-e-hoM ntaaails ant th be-tt artillery, an t the ; chimneys ot our dwwlun home ar the ! grandest moaamvnta ot safety a ii triaapii. I No horn. No republic 1 Farther, I mm irk that horn it a school. Old ground must be turned up with suaoil plow, and it ruut ba harrowed and rw-0 ar rowed, and then th crop wilt not be as iarg) as that of the new ground with leas culture. Now, Youth and entldhood are new ground, and all th Influence thrown over their heart sad life will ootna apinafterlit luxuriantly, very time yon have given a smile ot appro bation all tbe good cheer ot your lite will some up agatu iu the geaiallty ot your cuil drun. Aud every ebulitioa ot anger nttl very nuoontroilabln display of indignation will be fuel to their disposition twenty or thirty or forty years iroin now fuel for a ba 1 Are a quarter ot a century from this.' l'ou praise thelntelligeaoeot your ohild too murh sometimes wheu you think be is not aware ot It, and you will see the result of it bafure ten years of age in bis anuoyin affections. You praise hia beauty, supposing he U not lare enough to un i-jrstaud what you siv, an I yon will fin I him standing on a high chair before a mirror. WorJs and deeds and ex ample are the teed of character, and children are vary apt to be the second edition of tuelr parents. Abraham begat Isaac, so virtue Is apt to go down in the anoestral line, but Herod begat Arcbelaus, so iniquity is trans mitted. What vast responsibilty oomes up on parents in views of this subject! Oh, make your home the brightest place on earth If you would oharm your children to the high path of virtue and rectitude au I religion! Do not always turn the bliuds ihn wrong way. Let the light which puts ko on the gentian and spots the pansy pour into roar dwellings. Do not expect the latin test to keep step to a dead march. Do not Bover np your walls with such pictures as West's "Death on a Pale Horse" or Tiuto ratto'a ''afaasaore of the Innocents." Rntner over them. If yon have pictures, with The Hawking Party," and "The Mill by tha Mountain Stream," and '-The Fox Hunt," and "The Children Amid Flower." nnd 'The Harvest Scene." and "The Saturday Might Marketing." Get you no hint ot cheerfulness from grass hopper's leap and lamb's frisk, and quail's whistle, and garrulous streamlet, which, from tbe rock at the mountain top clear down to the meadow ferns under the shadow ot the steep comes looking for the steepest filace to leap off at and talking just to hear tself talk? If all the skies hurtled with tempest and everlasting storm wandered over the sea, and every mountain stream went raving mad, frothing at the mouth with mad foam, and there were nothing but simooms blowing among the hills, and there were neither lark's carol norhnmming bird's thrill, nor waterfall's dash, but ouly bear's bark and panther's scream and wolf's howl, then you might well gather Into your home only the shadows. But when God has nrewnthe earth and the heavens with beauy and with gladness, let us take Into our horn t slroles all Innocent hilarity, all brightne-s ind all good cheer. A dark home makes bad oya and bad girls in preparation for bai men and bad women. Above all, ray friends, take into your lomes Christian principle. Can It bi thac in any of the comfortable homes of my cna-rr-gnrton the voice of prayer is never nft jd? What! No supplication at night for roteotlou? What! No thanksgiving in tin norninif for care? How, my brother, my ister, will you answer God lu tne day of udgment with reference to your cbllun a; t ts a plain question, and therefore its: t. In the teuth ohapter of Jeremiah God ays he will pour out bis fury upon tha amilies that call not upon bia name. Oil. i.treaN, when you are ileal and gone an 1 he moss is covering the inscription of tu ombs one, will your ohildren lok back md ihiuk of father and motbnr at fa'nily irayt-r? Will tbey take the old family Bi de an 1 open it and see the mark of tear: mi contrition and tears ot oousoliug p:o n wept by eyes long before gone on: into 1'irinesv Oil, If you do' not inculcate .'bristlan principle In the hearts of your iiil Iren, and you do not warn them against vii, and you do not invite them to holing-, in I to God, nnd they wander off tuto di-at-ftt Ion aud into infidelity, and at last male- aipwreck of their Immortal souls, on their ieathbed and in the day of judgment they fill curee yon! Heated by tbe register or the tove. what if on the wall should come out tie history of your children? What a liistorv the mortal nnd immortal life of your loved n-!! Every parent la writing tne history f his child. He Is writing It, composing it nto a song or tuning It Into a groan. My mind runs back to one ot the best if early homes. Prayer, like a roofoverir. cNsace, like an atmosphere In it. Parents. uersoniBcations of faith in trial and comfort n ilarkntMH. The two pillars ot that earthly to ne long ago crumbled to dmr. But shall t ever forget that earthly home? Ye, when he flower forgets the sun that warms ;t. Yes. wben the mariner forgets the star that jnides him. les, when love bas gone out jn the heart's altar and memory has emptied .ts urn Into forgetfulneas. Then, borne of ny caildhood, I will forget thee :he family altar ot a father's lmpor :nnity and a mother's tenderness, tlM roicesof affection, the funerals of our dead. Father and mother, with interlocked arm, like Intertwining branches of trees, making i perpetual arbor of love and peace an 1 kindness, thn I will forget tl.ee; then, and only than. Sou know, my brother, that 100 limes yon have been kept out of sin by the memory of such a scene as I have been de scribing. You have often had raging tempi a lions, but you know what has held vcu with supernatural grasp. I tell you a man who has had such a good home as that never gets over it, and a man who bas had a ba I early home never gets over that. A?ain, I remark that home is a type oi heaven. To bring us to that home Christ eft his home. Far up and far back in the history of heaven there came a period wben its more illus rioits citizen was about to ab sent himselt. He was net goinr to sail from beach to beach. We have often done that. Hi was not going to put out from one hemi sphere to another hemisphere. Many of u; have done that. But he was to sail frorr. world to wor d, the spaces unexplored and immensitiea nntravelei. No world ha I ever hailed heaven, ani heaven had nuvei hailed any other world. I think thai the windows and the balconies war thronged ani that the pearly beach wsi crowded with those who had come to set Him sail out of the harbor of light into tht oceans beyond. Out and out and out, hoc uu and on and on, and down and dowu anc down He sped, until one night, with ouly oni to greet Him, be arrival. His disembarka tion so unpretending, so quiet, that it wa: not known on earth uutil the excitement it tha cloud gave Intimation that somuthini grand and glorious bid happeue.l. Wtu comes there? From what port did He sail' Why was tbis the place of Hi: destination? I question the shop ber .a. I question the camel driver.'. J question tne angel'. I have found nut He was an exile. But tbe world his hm plenty of exiles. Aorautin, an erde froix Ur of tbe Cnaldees; John, an i xilefron Kphesus; Kosciusko, an exile from Poland Mazzilil, an fettle from Rome; Emm t, an ex ile from Ireland; Victor Hugo, an extlo from France; Kossuth, an exile from Hungary But this One of whom 1 speak to-day hat suoh resoun ling farewell and came intr niieh chilling reception for not evea a hos tler went out with his lantern to help Him In that Ht is more 10 be celebrated tlmu any other expatriated ons of earth or heaven At our best estate we areouly tltftini land strangers here. "Heaven is our hone." Death will never knock at the door ot that mansion, ami in all that country thorn Is not a single grave. Hew glad parents are la holiday time to gather tbeir children home again. But I havenotlced that almost always there is a son or a daughter absent absent from borne, perhaps absent from the country, perhaps absent from the world. Ob, how glad our heavenly Father will be when He gets all His ohildren home with Him In heaven! And how delightful It will be for brothers and sisters to meet after long operation! Onoe they part el at tbe door of Immortality. Once they saw only "through a glass darkly;" now It Is "face to face," Borruptlon, Incorrnptloni mortality, im mortality. Where ari now all their sins and sorrows and troubles? Overwhelmed In tbe Bed Sea of death while tbey passed through Irv shod. Gates of pearl, capstones of amethyst, coronas of dominion do not stir my soul so l-lMt'.tVijvt ,, . i'i-r. Hrtrh:jraiii li .:.-- t r..U lit-, H-! L.iir-i- r: ti pin" whr. Hb: r i w: i .: i a ectna-juate ntc;! i I ' r-ur-- 1 .-i n,.t r-ar-.wft v.f ida- td dr- .i.v r tt Let errta.uc r l! ia irr .-i leswee-p. H m! Narr., n- v-,aj. Mlntrv iLJiit, bar ho-v. v-: h lorn, beautiful htvne, v.fiatin; nu-. loms with each other, horn vtth an-i-. aora with A M. On night, lying oa my loan; w-ia vrv Hrwi. my ehil trMi ait arenni ab-iur in ia 'ad romp an 1 hilar tv and laug-iter o to .onusr", halt awake aad half a- !-. I Ireamed this dream: I w.ts in a f r .-o uvrrv. tt was not Persia, although mr t laa r;ental luxuriance crowned th eiti-s It waa not h tropica, although more than Topical fruitfulaese fill I th- uar.t'-o. tt was not Italy, although ram thta Italian softness Bilad th air. An I I w in lured round looking for tiiiru- an I n -t-les, but I found that aoni t thorn rrew there, ani I saw the sui rL-e., and I watcho-J to see it set, but ir mux not. And I saw th people lu holiday attire, and 1 said, "When will they put orr thl and put on workmen's garb and again delve in the mine or swelter at the forger" But they never put off tbe holiday attire. And I wandered in the suburb ot the nty to find tha plaoe where the dead sleep, r. I I looked all along the line ot the beautiful Sills, the plaoe where tha dead might iiiwt blissfully sleep, and I sawtownrs and .wattes, but not a mausoleum or a mouum srit or a white slab oould I see. Aud I went iuto the shapel of the great town, and I ssid. Where lo the poor worship, and where are the har I Mnches on which they sit?" And tne au iwer was male me, "We have no poor iu this sountry." And tbn I wan Jeret out to find Che hovels of the destitute, aud I foun t man sions ot amber and ivory an 1 gol I, hut not a tear could I see, not a tdgli could I hear, and I was bewildered, and I sat down an W the branches of a great tree aud said: "WheM am 1? And wheuce come all this icene?" And then out from among tha lavas and up the flowery paths and across the. bright steams there came a beautiful group, thronging all about me, and as I saw them some I thought I knew their step, and as thev shouted I thought I knew their voices, but then they were so glorlousloy arraye 1 In apparel, suoh as I had never before wit nessed, that I bowed as stranger to strangor. But wben Hgain they clapped their hand and shouted. "Welcome, welcome!" the mystery all vanished.and I found that time had gone and sternity had come, and w were all toirther main In our new home in heaven. An 1 I looknl around, and I said: "Arc w.) all hero?" nnd the voices of many irenerations responded, "All here!" And wh!l tears of jiaduess were raining down our chocks, and the branches of the Lebanon cedars were flapping their hands, and the towers of the irreat ciiy wero chiming their walcoine, w.i til together began to leap and shout an I ling, "Home, home, home!" A Xew Word and Ita Derivation. The next revised edition of Murray will contain tbe word "larrikin." Its significance Is peculiar and its deriva tion amusing. A "larrikin" is an Aus tralian tough hoy or gnmiu. lie Is of the peculiar strain of depravity sure to be found In a land like Australia, tha logical offspring of the convict outcast and the women tlint follow in their train. lie Is said to have peculiarities not to be found in any other tough boy. and physical characteristics which would Identify him wherever found hy a student of the human race. For ex ample, the sbape of bis head Is unmis takable. He is plentiful in AuHtaitln. He is depraved, lacking alike lu men tal aud in moral health. He was until lately without any indi vidual cognomen, but not long ago one of the class was in court lu Melbourne, nnd the Irish otlicer who had liini In charge, being asked by the Judge what his offense was, replied: "He was u larrklng, yer 'onor," with such a roll ing of the r that the Judge misunder stood for the moment aud thought the word was a term applied to the boy. Ever since in Melbourne the street gamin has been spoken of as a "larri kin," and the word lias passed Into the vernacular of Australia. Melbourne Correspondent. Peninsular Medals. Cowling to the great European wars of the revolutionary period, we might expect a great crop of medals for our brave soldiers. But no; there are gold medals for superior officers, but for the die-hards of the peninsular war, who often, by sheer hard fighting, re deemed the blunders of their coin manders, absolutely nothing. As for the Generals, 'WeHingrou complained that they were too thickly liuug with medals. There Is a splendid gold med al for Muiila, the very finest of all our military medals, of which ouly seventeen were Issued. Talavera was acknowledged lu goiii medals to commanding officers. And Wellington suggests that only ono medal should be Issued to an otlicer. and that future actions should be en graved upon it. When four actions had been scored, the medal should li replaced by a cross to be worn :u th buttonhole; decorations woru aiound the neck tre "awkward to ride lu," says the matter-of-fact commander. Frederick of i'ork carried out the sug gestion with a characteristic differ ence. The gold cross Maltese.wilh lion statu nt in the ceo tor, and suspend ed by a gold laurel wreath waa Issued to be worn by general officers around the neck; others at the buttonhole. All tbe Year Round. Printing on Knvelopes. Postmaster Sahm, of Indianapolis, has received a construction from the department at Washington that he re gards as. novel. Tbe American Collect ing and Reporting Association asked to hava stamped envelopes mailed on which the words "collecting und re porting" appeared. Cm the smail en velope the type was proportionately smaller than ou a large one. The de partment holds that the largest envel ope is objectionable and unmallubie, because the words are too conspicuous. Tbe smaller oue Is mailable, the de. yftrtuieut says. ! How many futliem and inotliflrs make religion such a cruel ibiug that their ohildren hate it. There are said to be pelicans with a wing spread as f.tr as fifteen foet. History is a mighty drama, enacted upon tlio theatre of Time, with sons for lam, a and Kternity tor a back ground. The. ninn wlm nt7i- u l i a . " lHJIUtlCI n, conduct a binti.ess of bis owu is the one who can always tell why the other UIBU lUIK'll. Tho cjvetous erson lives as if the world were made altogether for him, and not he lor tha world. ' A man has no more right to eav an nncivii thing tban lo act oue; no more right to Kay a rnde thing lo another than to knock him down. I ir TT 7