Pll IS -if -IlOttt F. BOHWEIBB, THE OONBTITUTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. VOL. LI. MIFFLINTOWIS, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 28.' 1897. NO. 20, A t I til- l J - . CHAPTER VIII. I The cloud which had fallen on the ex- pression of Miles O tiara s face as b watched his sister and Eric Llewellyn passing the window hastily and in silence, with averted faces, deepens perceptibly as be scans the looks of both as they enter tbe room. "Had a nice walk7 he inquires, short ly, of no one in particular, as they are seated, and he commences to carve th cold roast mutton. "Yes, a capital walk." Eric says, pleas antly, noticing Master Sylvester's sly eyes stealthily upraised. I hope you will not think I have been too precipitate. Miles," he says, easily, knowing Miles' mind so well. "But to day I asked your sister to be my wife, and she did not say, 'no.' " "I didn't say yes either," Muriel ut ters Indistinctly, burning crimson to the tips at her little shell-like ears, and blind ed with tears, whilst she feels an over whelming desire to burst luto laughter. "But you w ill say it now," Eric says, coolly advancing towards her; and sn Muriel instantly retreats, with a terrified Instinct that the scene under tbe fir trees la going to be repeated, and Miles has started forward from his chair, she is caught and prisoned between the two. "All right, Mnrriet What la the mat ter, old girl?" Miles says, langbing ex citedly, as Muriel clings to him desper ately. "So Eric has asked you to be his wife, and you 'didn't say no' quick work, npon my word! A case of love at first sight. I suppose, eh, Marrie?" And be laughs again, and Muriel can feel him trembling from bead to foot, and feels that his thin, damp hands are burning like coals of fire anj Li heart beating loudly. ' "But I am waiting for Muriel to say ye,' " objects Eric, rather frigidly. "All right, old fellow." Miles laughs again, grasping one of Eric's hands tight ly, whilst he tries to lift Muriel away with the other. "She'll say 'yes' pres ently, never fear." "You are very ready to give me away. Miles," she says, in coldest tones of bit terest reproach. "To avoid your displeas ure, therefore, I will give Major Llewellyn soy promise to become his wife. Dues that please him and you?" There is tragedy In every tone and ges ture of the quivering young form the pale face, with the great dark eyes ablaze with pride deeply shadowed with pain, ad she is drawing haughtily away to wards the door, when Eric hastily inter poses himself with a look of entreaty to ward Muriel, and a look of stormy re proach toward poor Miles. "Bless my soul, girl!" he says, his hag gard face flaming. "What are you afraid of that you can't speak out at once and say whether you like Eric and whether 700 are willing to marry him or whether you're not! You can do as you please, I suppose. There's no one going to force or to urge you. We're only waiting to hear what you wish to say!" His sister lifts her head and looks at him steadfastly, with an anguish of sor row and rebuke in the white, sad, young face, and he winces perceptibly beneath her gaze. "Then, Miles, I wish to say that I am Suite capable of doing as I please with out your assistance," she says. In a low, tense voice of suppressed emotion; and, with a slight inclination of her head to Eric Llewellyn, she walks quietly out of the room like a young queen in her anger and dignity. Miles stares after her in wrath and amazement for an instant, and then, as he meets Kric Llewellyn's eyes, he bursts into a nervous laugh. "Upon my honor, I've caught it this time and no mistake, and it serves uie right," he says. "It does," Erie says dryly. "Upon my honor it does!" repeats Miles, with excited fervor. "The little one is as hauphty as a princess, and 1 ought to have been more cautious how I spoke to her on such a topic." . "You ought," Eric says grimly, "and you ought excuse me if I presume on friendship to say so to have taken lees claret and whisky at luncheon." "Do you weuu to say you think tbe couple of glasses I had have excited me?" Miles demands angrily. "I don't think, I know," Eric says, tersely, "so excited at all events, you must allow, that you could not discuss a deli cate topic witb your sister without hurt ing and offending her deeply!" "I haven't hurt or offended her deeply!" Miles retorts shortly. One would almost fancy, one who did not know you, that, s I remarked before, you had forgotten your role in the performance." "What is my role, then, pray?" Erie asks, coldly, but with his eyes on the dim pattern of the faded carpet. . "Not Muriel's lover at all events." Miles .ay., shortly, "though her husband I bope you will be." "Some people say a good husband must be a lover," Eric says briefly, pacing up and down the room in a restless sort of fashion, as if bis thoughts will not suffer him to rest. "According to you, I shall make a bad husband to Muriel." "Muriel must take the chance of that," Miles says, abruptly, the hoarseness that - emotion always brings in his weak voice making his words scarcely audible, "you will be very kind to her, and careful of ' her, I know, and I hope you will be pa tient with her; she is proud and high spirited, poor little Muriel." -Kind and careful and patient? Yes, 1 hope so, certainly," Eric says, slowly, "but !o you think that will make her happy, or make me happy?" "You must take your chance of that," Miles retorts, with a quick, deep sigh, and there la a silence of a few minutes. CHAPTER IX. "By-the-by, Miles," Eric begins, some what irrelevantly, "at what time does the second post go out?" "It's gone," Miles says, laconically. That' a nuisance," Eric says, curtly. In his turn. "I meant to write home to tell them to expect me on Saturday." "To expect you?" interrupts Miles, taring and indignant. "Ye. must run over for a few days, to explain things and announce tilings, and so forth," Eric says, a little confusedly: "and to make the mater's mind happy by telling her I really am going to marry and settle myself; and to tell Uettie, of course." "And Miss Cameron?" questions Miles, with a curious change coming over his flushed, worn face. "No, Indeed," Eric says, Idly; "I shall not trouble myself or trouble Lord Up pingham's bride to give her any informa tion respecting my private affaire. But Bay cousin Hettie will be glad; she will be pleased and concerned with anything that please, and concerns ma," ha con cludes cordialla. . t.- , "She very much concerns herself with what concerns you," Milea says, briefly "unusually so for a cousin." "Well, never mind all that nonsense," Eric says. Impatiently. "1 shall follow my letter on Saturday, or Friday night, rather, from Kingstown, be absent for a week, then return her for ten days or so, and then. Miles, you won't object if I ask Muriel to fix the time for another fortnight, or three weeks later, will you?" "To to take her away? To marry her?" Miles asks, with a gasp, and his features twitch convulsively. "So soon? I didn't quite realize that she was going to leave me," he says. In a low, hoarse voice. "Well, I have nothing to say against it, Eric, If she consents. Poor little sister!" And he hurries out of the room, unable to trust himself to speak another word. "I find Muriel is gone for her music lesson to Derrylossary," Milea says when he returns, "so if you want to see her you must wait an hour, Eric" "I will go and meet her," he says, de cisively, and in two minutes more Miles can see the tall, straight, muscular figure swinging along the quiet road between the bramble grown hedges that. leads to the village. Eric Llewellyn, after a patient search for "the house where the organist lives," Is rewarded by the appearance of Muriel herself, looking almost fresher and love lier than she had looked in the morning. "She is an exquisite little wild rose." Major Llewellyn whispers to himself. "After a couple of years in good society, and well dressed, she will be as pretty a woman and as charming as can be found In the United Kingdom." He is more satisfied than ever when he sees the sudden carmine blush and the startled, fawn-like shyness in her lovely, large, dark gray eyes, as she catches sight of the tall, handsome figure advancing toward her. a The glimpse Llewellyn obtains of the gifted organist of Derrylossary reveals to him a most extraordinary figure, which would be slatternly if it were not slightly crazy-looking, and at the same time so audaciously unique in style as to impel him to the belief that there is a decided method in the madness of Mrs. McUrath. "Your music teacher Is eccentric, I fan cy!" Eric remarks, in a slightly sarcastic tone, as they walk off together. "Yes." answers Muriel, quickly and de cidedly; "but she is a kind, good creature, and I am very fond of her!" "You are warm in your likes and dis likes, Muriel?" he says, smiling inquiring ly. "I am. Major Le welly n," Muriel ssys tersely, walking on very fast, when M ior Llewellyn, hnda it pleasant tq loiter. ""Am I no nearer than 'Major Llewel lyn' yet, Muriel?" he says reproachfully. "And could you not share your thoughts with me, dear?" "No, indeed, I could not," Muriel snys, almost sharply. "Why did you come af ter me this evening? Was it Miles sug gestion that you should pay me some 'at tention?' " Her face is as pale as death now, her eyes glowing like lamps as she stands and confronts Eric Llewellyn. "Answer me!" she says, and the fresh, sweet voice is shrill with wrathful excite ment. "I will know! It Is cruel shame ful! How can my brother treat me so! to almost thrust me on your acceptance this morning! I will Sever forgive Miles!' she says, wildly. "He told me that you loved him so well that you would forgive him any wrung," Eric answers. "Does he think so? Does he think so?" she says, panting with tierce excitement; "then I will tell him, as I tell you, that my pride is as strong as my love any day, and I will suffer no outrage to my feel ings, and to what Is due to me as a mod est girl, since my brother cruelly prefers other advantages before that; and I will not be won before I am wooed, by you or any other man, not if I died for it; not if Miles died for it!" "Muriel," Eric Llewellyn says, sternly, "what do you mean by being 'won and wooed?' It is a school girl phrase. I thought," he says, flushing at the remem brance, "that I wooed you for my wife this morning. I thought," he says, fal teriugly, "that your heart responded to mine and that we were one in spirit, as 1 hopeil we should become one in flesh." And in this speech he knows there is a suggestion of falsehood, and dreads lest she knows it. too. "You thought wrongly," the girl ssys, steadily, though her eyes droop before the pleading of his. "You did not 'woo' me, you said a few soft words to me, and you kissed me; I am ashamed and sorry to remember," and her hand goes up in voluntarily to a burning patch on her cheek. "Ashamed and sorry!" Eric Llewellyn exclaims, now almost as excited as her self. "1 spoke words of love to you be cause I wanted you for my wife, and and I kissed you when I thought I had the consent of your heart, and considered myself then, and every moment since, as bound to you, in tbe sight of heaven, as your betrothed husband." "Consider yourself as such no longer, then!" Muriel interrupts, trembling with a terrified passion of wounded feeling. "I would sooner die than marry you!" CHAPTER X. "Thank you for your candor," Major Llewellyn says, with a cool smile, looking at the white, agitated young face, her great, deep eyes glowing like half-hidden tires, her lips crimson and quivering pain fully. "It would be a pity indeed if one so young and lovely as you should die for o unworthy a cause. That calamity can be averted, so far as I am concerned. an? I trust It win not trouble your thought again. I have wandered blindly into the fool's paradise. Miss O'Hara, and you have brought me out with rather need less hast, and severity, may I say?" He is smiling quite brightly and easily by this time, with no trace of dismay or displeasure in his tone or manner, only a little gentle reproacbfulness, whilst Mu riel is trembling with excitement, feeling ashamed and frightened and very miser able. "I beg your pardon," ahe says faintly, in a half-choked voice. "I need not have been rude." "You need not have been unkind," he says quietly. "I was foolish enough to fancy there was some feeling of real friendly liking for me, real friendly trust in me in your thoughts, apart from any thing else." "I beg your pardon," Muriel repeats, with difficulty keeping a sob out of her voice. She is so horribly ashamed of her self, so sorry, so angry, so miserable! "It is granted frsely," Major UeweUyn rejoins calmly. T do not exactly see," bt adds, with a placid sarcasm that makes Muriel wince, "what I have done to pro voke your enmity toward me, beyond the fact that I offered yon the highest trib ute of regard and admiration which it was in my power to offer you. But let that pass. You are very young, Muriel," he aaya, with a smile, "and 1 am too old to play tie ideal lover of nfneteen. That is about it, I dare say." "No, indeed I No, indeed!" she says, with impulsive eagerness to atone a little for her fault toward him. "1 do not think so at all!" this with a fervor and enthu siastic Irishism that makes him smile again, but secretly, as he looks at the kindling light in her eyes and tbe shy, fervent admiration of him that is visible there. "I 1 like you very well that Is I should wish to be friends for Miles' sake." They are standing on the soft, mossy sward, dappled with the yellow birch leaves, when they pause, Muriel with some shame and amazement, Eric witb hidden satisfaction. "Dear me!" she says, witb a shy, girlish langh, MoBhing vividly, and looking, as she always does look, with that "celes tial rosy red" tint glowing through ber clear, fair whiteness, most temptingly sweet and lovable, "I never minded, I did not notice when we came to the cross roads! We must go home by the ruins of the old church now." "1 have something to say to you, Mu riel, before we go home," Major Llewel lyn says, not alluding to the mistake in their path, which indeed has been quite voluntary on his side. "I had a good deal to aay to you when I followed you this evening," be goes on, with a slight, rather reproachful smile, "a great deal I want ed to tell you, and to consult you about; but you have simplified it all for me, and left me with nothing to say now except this. Do you wish me to make your brother understand at once, and as plain ly as you have made me understand it, that all promises and agreements made this morning are null, void, and as utter ly at an end as if they never were tbnught of? Or do yon not think you could let him down easy?" he says, smiling kindly an J persuasively. "Let him find out by de grees that we have changed our minds, and not disappoint and vex him in the very same day that we bad given him such pleasant hopes." "I cannot deceive Miles," Muriel snys, firmly, though ber face pales at the thought of his storm of anger and re proaches. "I had not the slightest intention of deceiving Miles," Eric retorts, "beyond the keeping silence for a few days, as I leave Ireland to-morrow evening." "Leave Ireland?" Muriel ejaculates. 1 and a swift dismsy shadows all the fair young face upturned to gaze on his in the soft evening light, and her eyes are glimmering through thick-coming tears. It is as much as he can do to restrain himself from snatching her to his heart, and closing the sweet, dewy, wistful eyes with a score of kisses. But he does re strain himself, and answers her as grave ly as ever. "Yes, and that Is why I made the re quest for Miles' sake," he says, quietly. "I should write to Miles at tbe end of a week or ten days, explaining everything. However," he says, watching the agitat ed young face closely, "I bow to your decision to tell Miles this evening." "No, no; not this evening!" Muriel says, hurriedly and unsteadily, in a half whis per. "To-morrow, when you are gone, I will tell him myself." (To be continued.) Better than "About Itlght." Thomas Starr King, the famous preacher and lecturer, was settled In California at the outbreak of the Civil War, and to his Influence is ascribed the change of public opinion In that State from lukewarmness toward the Northern cause to devoted loyalty. The Overland Monthly haa lately publish ed an article on this famous man from which we take an anecdote told about Mr. King by James T. Fields. Mr. King, with a friend, was making a trip through the White Mountains. They were traveling by that most de lightful of conveyances a country wagon. When they stopped a few min utes at the door of a New Hampshire tavern, Mr. King's companion went In to replenish their provision-basket, and he remained In the vehicle. One of the tall, lank, slab-sided Yan kees that are always hanging round a New England Inn door slouched up to tbe team and began altering the har ness, slackening a strap here and light ening a buckle there, all unasked, un til Mr. King got Impatient at the length of the operation, and said, rather sharp ly: "You needn't trouble yourself any more. I think that harness Is about right." The Yankee finished his woik and drawled out: "Guess right's better'D abeaout right" There was no reply to this. Mr. King's friend returned, and he drove off, confessing to a lesson which he needed to learn, less than most of his countrymen: "Right" la better than "about right " Ha Had Wheels. "My head has been bothering me for some time. I guess I had better go see a doctor." "A doctor for your head? Why not tee a machinist?" New York Journal. Massachusetts annually imports from beyond her borders egg? to tbe value of 5,000,000. Some men so dislike the dust Licked up by the generation they belong to, that, being unable to pass, they iait behind it. The people who never make any mistakes nor blunders have all the necessaries of life, but miss the luxuries. Some can think better for others than they can for themselves. Don't imagine that wall flowers at a dance have no amusement; they make fun of tbe dancers. The man who worries is Dot a bit wiser than the one who burns down bis house. The rod, judiciously applied, is the best tonic for man or beast. There are those men who never knew the luxury of being homesick. If tbe gossip would think more, her tongue would get more rest. There is no such thing as commit ting one sin and stopping there. The poorest man may give as much as the richest, if be will give all be can. Wuack! bam! whack. wnacK. wnaca-., echoed through tne country stillness oi a South Carolina afternoon a. the- man, reaching upward from where he stood on tiptoe on tbe rlcketty step of a corn house hammered tbe big nails steady and-square and drove them home. Hav ing fastened one end of a narrow board t. the upper side of the wall he drew It down diagonally across tbe dwarf door and nailed It hard and fast, effect ually preventing entrance. This done, he picked up half a dozen fowls, which laid tied together on tbe ground and went to the open door of the cabin, brushing ruthlessly against the blooms of a red japonica bush In his baste. All was dark inside. Tbe wood In thi fireplace was only smoldering, not burning." The daylight of tbe gray afternoon that stole In through tbe heavy shuttered window showed that a woman sat in one corner. "Here, you there!" called the man-, ."you understand that if you rip off that board and use any corn out of that house yeu go to jail you aud your old aoaa both! You understand 7' "I know, but you atn't doing us , right," answered tbe woman. "We's paid out for tbe things, not 'ecuin (ex- . cepting) tbe picture what you fetched J last. Here's tbe papers what tbe mens give us, every time they been here." ' -"I never authorized anybody to col lect payment, and you owe me clear $15, not to say Interest, since April. I'll J send back in a week for that corn and If you've laid a finger on It you'll be sorry. Where's your husband? "I dunno; out gittln' wood, I reckon. Since you'se tooken the feather bed and tbe pick of tbe quilts we'll have to keep up a steady fire to warm by." "Well, you make 'Riah understand what I say; you bear!" "Mr. Beckwlth ain't goln to touch nothin',' said the woman In a de pressed voice. "But you'se mighty hard on us old people- - You ain't leave us veu a pallet to raise from," eying , wistfully the feathered bunch hanging j limp and resigned by their yellow legs. "You couldn't 'low me dat speckled hen? She's a sure layer and an awful good mother. I'd save you a couple of tbe first chickens she'd hatch If you'd gree to It." Tbe speaker came forward and re garded ber creditor pleadingly, a re pressed eagerness In her manner as though she half expected be would comply. She was tall, with a smooth, shining, bronze-brown skin and good features, showing little trace of the thick lips, flat nose and receding fore- I head of the typical negro. "Speckled hen, Indeed!" said the man, waving her off. "I've got her now; the J chickens she mitht raise I might never : see. I'm up to your tricks! Get sorue ' ef your neighbors to raise on shares with you. Don't meddle with the corn-1 house, now," he called as he drove off j In bis rattling road cart "Tbe law drove them nails and It will be the worse for you if you draw any of them ant." Heartsle Beckwith stepped outside after he was gone and looked at tha cornhouse door with the tell-tale board across Its face, then she looked pathet ically at the open trap door of the little fowlbouse opposite. "It won't be no use to shut l to night," she muttered. "We's ruinated, plumb ruinated, and there ain't nobody and not bin' to turn to." Half uncoiisclouly she looked hi the direction of the long avecue of oaks that stretched across the big flat field In front of the ca bin. As she stood thus an elderly negro In a tattered coat, with his bead tied up In a motley collec tion of scarfs and strings, came up be hind ber. "Is dat debll gone?" he asked In a thin, high voice. ! "Yes. Mr. Beckwlth. He's gone, and everything gone with him, 'acusin' the corn and that little handful of jea J vines in the corn house, what we ain't to lay hands on. Everybody goln' to know now that we's been shut up and disgraced." "la you show him tbe papers what the mens give you In 'sideration of the taters and cotton and things what we pay out on de clock debt?" "Yes. But that make no direr. lie tell It as bow we give the things to the wrong men. rapscallion men "-hat he ain't send to fetch 'em. He wouldn't leave me so siuch as that sperkled hen what's such s regular layer. It's wick-' ed for troybody to eat a hen like that, what pays for herself over and over every year." j "Come In out of tbe damp, baby," was all that Mr. Beckwlth said, and as they entered tbe cabin, where a light-wood knot In the chimney place blazed up abruptly In welcome, a brnzen-tongued clock on a shelf struck thirteen In hur ried, uneven tones. Mr. Becklwth's 1 face brightened. "It's got us In a lot of trouble, but It's mighty good company." he said, looking up at tbe tall clock In Its gaudy frame. Peck! peck! as of a sharp bill striking oa bare boards came from the Inner reorn. Mr. Beckwlth looked at his wife Inquiringly. j "The rumplns pullet!" ahe explained, j "While the btickra and the dog was ' runuiu down the other fowls It fly in there and squat down nnder the bed, so I Just shut tbe door aud ain't say nothin". Seemed like the Lord aimed for we to keep it." Her companion chuckled. "There. near 'oout rour bushel of corn down yonder in the fence corner," he said, ' "but it ain't gone there Itself. I took It ! out while he was gone to the sto' for nails. He ain't goln' to miss it out of the main batch." The rumplus pullet, released from confinement, stepped out near Ha mis tress, pecking at the oven, against tha rim of which a few crumbs from the last cwks4 bread sttjekjast, The pullet's red feathers stood tap mutinously; It was not propose oesl ay. In appearance, but Heartsle took It up and stroked it gently. "It's one of the four that was band raised," ahe said. "That what make It come la bare te bide. That white hen what died on the nest was Its mother." A boy of about 10 years came In with his arms full of wood. He put his bur den down, then drew near one corner of tbe fireplace and stood silent, look ing into the flames. "Is you hungry, bud?" asked his grandmother. "There's a piece of corn take in the cupboard. Where'a Bel lum?" "I left blm In the branch. He had jump a rabbit." replied the child. "That dog got sense." pronounced Mr. Beckwith. "He know when there sint nothin' fresh In tbe house. If that dock man bad knowed he'd a' cagried Bot lum off long wld the other things. You see! If he don't fetch In a rabbit to night he'll get one by sunup. He's sut tlngly a knowln' dog." Humpy was asleep and BoHutn, the yellow spotted cur, dozed fitfully be fore the Are that night, but the excite ment of the afternoon had banished slumber from tlfe eyes of Heartele and her spouse. They discussed and rediav cussed every phase of the situation. "Is you think to mention them things to him, baby?" the old man ask9d. "Them things is rightly worth a heap more than $15." "I ain't crack my teeth on Mm about em," said his wife. "I just was all timersMEi like for fear he would re s'archln' c-bout and stumble on 'em. It never 'crrred to him though to look la that old trunk with the cover all teared loose and rags stick! n' out. He'd'a took 'em soon as his eyes light on 'em, but it wouldn't have been for no pay be would have took. He'd 'a' said as w stealed them things and had us op be fore the trial Justice you as a "specta ble uiQuiber In good etandln' and me what is always been held to be a right eous Hvln' woman. He'd a tooken that ground stt" "I believe your ejaculated 'Riah, looking admiringly at bis quicker-wit-ted partner. "I never thought of that!" "Mr. Beckwlth," said Heartsle at length In an Impressive undertone. "I's got a notion that them things Is a car ry in' us t tbe devil. I'a ponders ted on it now a long time, when you atn't had no notion I was ponders tin', and accordtn' to my stakln' off we won't have no let up tb!3 goln' down hill we're dotn' Oil we gets rid of them things for good and all. Ain't we work hard this year every day the Lord send?" she went on. "Dat's what we done," affirmed her spouse. "Well! Ain't we try our best las' year?" "Dat we did." "And de-$ear before that? Ain't we always been bard workln', and ain't everything gone against us? The chol era Iclllln' off us hogs and fowl and t'lng.i a ad sklppln' other people's? Our cow erackin' of her oeck "in tbe ditch and Black Sally just naturally gittln' poorer and more perish-away lookln', tbe more feed we give her? Till the boss say we can't keep her no longer? Ain't all this what I tellln' you precisely so?" Mr. Beckwlth nodded. His pipe had long sjnee gone out and be did not know It. "Well! Mark my words!" emphasis ing them with uplifted finger. "Just se long as that candlestick and that breastpin and that piece of watch chain stay there in that trunk where they la the olJ boy's goln' to follow us." Mr. Beckwlth groaned with excess of Interest and belief. "Well! what kin' we do?" he asked, helplessly. "Fling 'em away? Bury 'em, what? If we was to try to sell "em we'd git took up.". "Fling 'em away! Bury 'em!" re peated his wife. "What good would that do? Uriah Beckwlth, there's no such a thing as 'tonement, 'tenement for wrongdoln'! If we could hit on a plan to have them things go back to tha fambly they b'longs to the old boy would quit nottcin' of us so close and particular. We's In a worse fix than w,e ever been In yet to-night, and If wa don't watch out plagues worse than the white preacher tell about la 'goln' to 'stroy us finally." "But the fambly all la dead or else more off, even the house burn down and the land sell or goln' to be sell," said Mr. Beckwlth. T know. Uriah, what was It the old boss used to think more of than any thing else 'sides good eatln' and drink In' and he wife and children?" "A good horse," ventured Uriah. His wife looked disdainful. "His hounds, fishlnT" Heartsle shook her head. "I dunno, less 'en you mean his nig- pers. Since you talk 'bout glvln' of the things back, supposln' we dig deep In his grave and bury 'em there. He'll have 'em then for aura, nobody else. His grave right there by the church without no headstone." Heartsle still looked Inscrutable. "They ain't doin' nobody no good In the trunk and they wouldn't be doin' no good bury In the ground," she said. "Since you ain't 'member nothin' I mind you bow the marster think a heap of he church, how he never miss a Sunday 'tendln there and was a high sitting member that's Just the same as saying he give money regIar and a heap of It. Now, If we give them things to the church In he name It would be a 'tonement Just like It tell 'bout In the book." Mr. Beckwlth waa strongly stirred. He gazed at bis partner aa though he thought her Inspired. "If. we could give them things to the earns church," went oa Heartsle, "my poor Begins, would rest more content eder In her grave and we'd have better luck to pervlde for ber orphan chile," glancing at the corner where Humpy, rolled up head and ears, slumbered peacefully. "I'a wished many times I had had the apunk to own that my gal took them things snd give them back as waa right and proper. When 'Qlfla was little and used to lift things out of ladles' rooms and out of the pantry closet I used to steal 'em back In place and scold and whip ber, but, after ahe got grow'd and was such a likely gal as could speak np so smart, I hated to own aa ahe was a common nigger thief." "How yon am to give these things back, baby?" asked the old man. "The church la ahut np these days. There never la anybody atlrrln' 'bout there." "I hear Em-Ilne say yisterday that there's goln' to be preachin' there this Sunday. People la comln' over here from the city and they geln' to dredl cate It over again. 8he say if s a 'ver sary and that If s the oldest church In the whole country. There's to be a' excursion." "But how we kin manage?" "I plan It ont like this," aaidHeartsIe. "When they lifts the collection (dey calls It the loftory In the white folks' church) yen could tote up the things and band 'em In and 'splaln where they come from and how It hi a 'tonement we made wld 'em." "Before all the people?" "Yea. 'Course the book say about ac knowledge' before men. I would aay It myself, but It ain't respectful for women to speak In church, and If I patch you up proper seeming and do you up a shirt with rice starch you'd look better than me." The rededlcatlon of St Jude's took place the next Sunday. The excur sionists were there in numbers. Many saw the old negro, with his gray wool combed Into order and his shabby ault brushed slick and span, walking up the aisle at a respectful distance behind the acting vestrymen. Only those nearest could hear what he said, aa, having deposited his burden, be bent low be fore the church officers and made hur ried obeisance to the minister. Before they had recovered from the surprise sufficiently to question him he was al ready half way to tbe door, mopping bis brow that waa moist with tbs stress of exertion. "Luck will turn now, see If it don't," said Heartsle, as she Joined him. New York Evening Post. May Be a Prehlatorlo Boat. Maj. O. A. Vandegrtft, of the Board ef Administration, who was eighteen years la the lighthouse service on the Ohio River, tells ef an Interesting relic of prehistoric ages that lies embedded in tbe river embankment a little below low water mark. The spot Is a short distance from Barton's Landing on the Illinois side of the river, nearly 600 miles below Cincinnati. There at the rare Intervals in which the river stage la at a very low point la seen protrud ing from the bank and Inclined at a slightly upward angle a portion of a fiatboat built of oak. The Umbers, as far as can be seen, are rough and ap pear to have been hewn with an un evenly edged tool, probably of flint, and are held together with wooden pegs. The protruding portion Is small, but there is enough to indicate consid erable skill in the fashioning of the boat. Maj. Vandegrift and several other officers have seen It only a few times in the many years they were employed on the river, and once they examined It closely. The wood Is now as bard as Iron, and In a splendid state of pres ervation, on account of having been under the water for such a lengthened period. From the formations of the bank and the surroundings, which have not changed In the slightest within the memory of man. the Major thinks the subsidence that burled the boat under the embankment must have taken place ages ago. When telling of It he said he has often regretted that be did not make an effort to have it removed and placed In a museum. Such action may yet be taken when tbe fact of the boat's existence and location becomes more generally known. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Killed by Tta m. A remarkable cause of death from fright was the case of the famous pointer Poutxnan. He was at work In his studio, where there were a number of death's heads and skeletons, when he happened to fall asleep. During his sleep there was a slight shock of earth quake, and when he woke up suddenly he saw the skeletons and skulls dancing round In the greatest confusion. He at once became panic-stricken, and rushed across the room and threw himself out of the window on to the pavement be low. He died In a few days after, not from Injuries received In the fall, but from the nervous shock given by the dancing skeletons, though the cause of the festivity was explained to him. ' "Repeating." Few persona appreciate the vast harm that may be done by repeating to one person a derogatory remark made about her to another. To rehearse a kind or complimentary comment can seldom have an unfortunate effect In deed, It may do good. But If a speech oontalns even the suggestion of fault finding or disapproval It should never be told. It Is a little matter that kin dles many fires of angry feeling. It irks one unspeakably to know that his actions have been adversely comment ed upon by a third person, and behind his back, when he cannot defend him self. None of us has the gift to see our selves as others see us, and we like to deceive ourselves Into the notion that all our friends approve of what we do. Moreover, a comparatively innocent remark assumes gigantic proportions to our disordered imaginations when we receive It second-hand. One good man resolved long ago never to repeat ts an acquaintance anything that had been said of him unless It would have the tendency to make him feel better satisfied with himself and with ths person who spoke it Harper's Baxar A dozen times a day something oo eura to remind a man that he would be In a position to laugh more, If be had REV. DR, TALMAGE. : Eminent Divine's Sunday Discourse. Subeet: 'An Kveryday Christ." Text: "-;he. supposing Him to be the Ran dener." Juhu xx.. 15 Here lire Mary Magdalen ajd Christ, just after His resurrection. For 40 0 vears a grim and cMstlv tyrant had Iwn killing people unci dragging them into his cold pal ace. H- had a pas on for human skulls. For lory wntiirii-s Hm hs l ben unhindered in his work. It- hit I tHkn down kiniM ami queens aud -noit"rors an I tho without lame. thnt oil nla- there were Fholvesof sknH no I pIIIhim of skulls anil HltHnof skull ho I even th chalices at the tab h were in uie of bleithe I skulls. To the skeleton of AUel lie ha I a t led the skeletons of nil the ni?es. unit no one hn-t disputed hi" riifht until one Oood Friday, about 1H67 years aito. as near as I can .-alculule. It, a M irhty Htraneer i-ime to th door of that awful pltiee. rolled back the door, and went in, and seising the tyrant, threw htm to the ptvemeut nn i put upon the tyrant's neok the heel of triumph. Then the Miirhtv Stranger, explorinitall the ehti-llv f until nre oi th place and walk ins In roust It the li'.yrinlhs. and ooenla? thn dark cellars of mystery and tarrying under a rojf tbe rihs of w tioh wern raidn of hu'nati hones tarrying for two ul'hts ami dnv, the nights very dark snd the day very dis mal. He wir. -d the two chief pillars of that awful pnlncn an I rocked them until It began lo tall, nn I th jn. laying hoi I of thn ponder ous front gate, hoistod it from tts hinges am) marehel forth crying, am the resurrec tion." That ev -lit we eelehrate this Eastei morn, Haudeli in and Beethnvean miracles of sun I ad led to this floral Uecor-itloa which has set the place abloom. There are thro or four thing which the worl t an t the church have not noticej in re card to the resurrection of Christ. First, our Lord in gardeo-r's ultire. Mary Mag dalene, grief struck, slan ts by the rifled sar cophagus of Christ an 1 tunn nround, hun iu she can flod thetraeksof the sacrilegious resurrectionist who has despoiled the grave, and she fin ts some one in working apparel come forth as ir io water the flowers or up root the weeds from the garden or set to re climbiug the falling vine some one in working apparel. His garments, perhaps, having the sign of the dust and the dirt ol the occupation. Mary SittgdHieu", on her faco the rain of a frwh shower of weeping, turns to this work man and charges him with the desecr.ition of the tomh, when, lo! the stranger responds, flinging His whole soul Into one word which tremnlee with all the sweetest rhythm of erth and h 'aven. saying, "Mary!" In that peculiarity of accentuation all the incognito fell off, and fhe found that instead of talking with an humble gardener of Asia Minor, she was talking with Him wbo'ownsalltbnhang nit gardens of henveu. Constellations the clusters o' forgetmenots, the sunflower the chief of all. the morning sky and midnight aurora, flaring terraces of beauty, blading likea summer Willi with coronation roses and glanls of l-attle. Blessed and glorious mistake o! M iry Magdalene! "rihe, suppos ing Him to In the gardener." What does that mean? It mentis that we havean every day Christ for everyday work in everyday apparel. Not on Habbath morning in our most seemly apparel are we more attractive to Chrint I dnti we are in our everyday work dress, inanjgin our merchandise, smiting our anvi', plowing our Held, tending the fly ing shuttles, meinlintr the garments for our household, providing food for our families or tolling with weary pen or weary pencil or weary chis-t. A working day Christ in work ing tlay apparel for us in our everyday toll. Put it Into the highest strain of tuis Easter uithem. "Supposing Himto be the gardener." If Christ had appeared at daybreak with a crown npon His head, that would have seemed to surliest especial sympathy for munarhs. It rhrist had appeared in chain of gol t and with robe diamonds I, that would hav seenie t to he i special sympathy for the affluent. If Christ bad appeared with sol dier's sash hii I sword dangling at His side, Ih'it would luiv.i seemed to Imply especial sympathy for warriors. But when I And Christ in ganlener's habit, with perhaps the flakes of the earth and of the up urued soil upon His garments, then I spell it out that HO as hearty and pathetic understanding with everyday work and overyday auxiety nd everyday fatigue. Roll it dowu in comfort all through these aisles. A working d ly Christ in working day apparel. Tell it in the darkest corridor of the mountain to tbe poor miner. Tell it lo the factory maid iu most unventilated sta lishmem at Lowtll or Lancaster. Tell It to the clearer of roughest new ground in western wilderness. Tell ft to the sewing wo an, a stitch in the side for every stitch In tbe trartm-nt, some of their cruet em ployers having no right to think that they will get through the door of heaven any more than they could through the eye of u broken nee tie which has Just dropped on the bare floor from the pricked and bleeding Angers of the consumptive s iwlng girl. Away with your ta:k about hypostatic uuion nod soterlology of tbe council of Trent and the metnphvs.es of religion which would freeze practical Christianity out of the world, but pass along this gardener's coat to all nations that thev may touch the hem of it and feel the thrill of the Christ iy brother hood. Not supposing the man to be Cresar. not supposing Him to he Socrates, but "sup posing Him to ie the gardener." on, tnat is what helped Joseph Wedgwood. toiling ami I the beat and the dust of tbe potteries, until be could make for Oneen Charlotte the nrst royal table service of Eng' lish manufacture. That was what heiped ' James Watt, scoffed at and caricatured until he could put on wheels the thunderbolt of power which roars by day and by night in every furnace of the locomotive engine of Amer ck. That is what helped Hugh Miller, toiling amid ibe quarries of Cromarty, uutii every rock, became to him a volume of tbe world s biography, and he round tl:e foot step of th Cre nor in the old ie.l sandstone. O'. the world wants a Christ for tbe office, a Christ torthe kitchen, a Christ for the shop, a Christ for the bankiug house, a Christ tor Ibe Kiirdeu. w.dle spiding and irrigating the territory! On, of course we waut to see Christ at last lu royal robe and bediamonded, a celestial equ ntriau mounting the white hors. but from this Easter of 1897 to our last Easter on earth we inot need to see Christ as Mary ila;dalene saw Him nt the daybreak, "supposing Him to be tho gar dener." Auo her thing which the church and the world have not noticed In regard to the ros urrectiou of Christ is thnt Ho made His first post mortem appearance to oue wno had been tbe teven deviled Mary Magdalene, Oue wonld have supposed He would have made His llrst posthumous appearance ton woman who had always been illustrious for good-a-s. There are saintly women who have always been saintly saintly in girlhood, saintly io infancy, always saintly. Jn nearly all our families there have been saintly aunts. In my family circle it was talutly annt Phebei in yours saintly aunt Martha or saintly aunt Ruth. Oue always sainily. But not no was the one spoken of in the text. While you are not to confound her with the repentant courtesan who boil made her long locks do the work of towel at Christ's foot washing, you are not to forget that she was exorcised of seven devils. What a capi tal of demonology she must have beeu! What a chorus of all diabolism! Seven devils two for the eyi s and two for the bauds and two for the feet and one for the tongue. Sev. n dev'.lf : yet nil theso nre extirpated, and now she is ns good ns once she was bad, ant Christ honors her with tbe first posthu mous appearance. What does that mean? hy, it means for worst sinner greatest grace; it means those lowest down shall come, perhnjis, highest np; it means thnt tbe c ock mat strikes 12 at midnight may strike 12 at triidiKniD-. it means that the trace ; God Is ven Junes stronger than sin. Mar) alagoalcne the seven deviled becam Slur OTagdnlene 'inj srvsn angeled, ft mean that when tbe Lord meets us at Inst He will not throw np to' us what we have been. All He said to her was, -'Mary!' Many people having met her under such circumstance! would have said: "Let me see, how mam devils did you have? One, two, three, four, five, six. seveu. What a terrible niece you were when I first met yon !" Tbe moat of the Christian women in our day would hav nothing to do with Mary Mag'laleue even ntterber conversion, lest somehow they le compromised. The only thing I have to sat against women ts that they have not enough mercy for Mary Magdalene. Christ put ail pa'hos and ail rminiscenc an 1 all anticipa tion and all p-irdon an 1 all comfort and all heaven into one word of four letters, "Mary!" Mark you. Christ did not appear to some Bible E izabeth or Bible H innahot Kible Either or Bible Dehor n or Bible Vash ti. hut to Mary; not to Marv against whom nothing was said: uot to Mary the mother of Jesus; not to Marv the mother of James: not to Mary the sister of Laz irus, but to seven devi nd Marv. There Is a man sovan dev led tevil of av irioe. devil of priji. devil of hate, devil of indolence, devil of falsehood, devil of strong drink, devil of Imitritv. Got can take them nil away, seven or seventv. I rode over the new cantilever bridge th it spans Niagara a bridge 910 feet long. 8V) feet of chasm from bluff to bluff. I p issed over tt without any anxiety. Why? Because twenty-two locomotives and twenty-two ear laden with gravel h id teste t the bridge, thousands of people standing on the Can stian side, thousands staudingonthe Ameri can side to app'au I the achievement. And however long the train of our immortal In terests may be. we are to remember that God's bridge of mercy sp inning the chasm of sin has been f-illv teste I by th awlul ton nage of all tho pardons 1 sin of all tbe ages, church militant standing on one bank, church triumphant standing on the other hank. Oh, It wm to the seven d-viled M iry that Christ ma te His first post mortem a v penrance. There is another thing that the world and the church have not o'.nerv- 1 in regard to this resurrection, an 1 that is, it w.is the morning twilight. If the chronometer ha I hwn invented and Mary had as good a wiiteb ns some o' the Marys of our time have, she would have found It was about half past 5 o'clock a. ni. Matthew says it was iu the ilawn; Mark says It was very early in the morning; John s ivs It was while it was yet dark. In other words, it was twilieht. That was the o'clo k at which Mary Magdalene pustook Christ for the gar leni-r. What does thut in 'any It means there are pha lows over the grave liu lifte.l shadows of mystery that are hover lug. Mary stiiof e I down and tried to look to the other end of the crypt. She gave hys teric outcry. She could not .e to the other rn t of the crypt. Neither ran you -see to the other end of the grave of your dead. Neither can we see lothe other end of ourown grave. Oh, if there were shadows -er the family plot belonging to Joseph oT Arimatuen, Is it strange that there shou hi be pome shadows over our family lot? Easter dawn, not Easter noon. Shadow of unanswere 1 question' Why were they taken away from us? Why were they ever given to us if they were to be takcu so soon? Why were thev taken s suddenly? Wtty could they not have uttere 1 some fare well words? Why? A short question, but n whole cruciflxiou of agony in it. Why? Shadow on the graves of good men and women who seemed to die before their work was don. Shadow on till the graves of children because we ask ourselves why so beautirul a craft was launched at all if it was to be wrecked one mile outside of tho harbor? But what did Mary Magdalene have to do iu or ler to get more light on that grave? She hud ou'.y to wait. After awhile the Easter aun rolled up, and the whole place was ftoode 1 witti light. What have you and I to do in order to get more light on our own graves and light upon the grnvuj of our di ar loved ones? Only to wait. Charles V. of Spain, with Ids servants'and torch-s. went down into the vault of tbe necropolis where his ancestors were buried, and went deeper, farther on until he came to across nround which were arranged the caskets of his ancestors. He also found a casket contnfning the body of one of his own family. He had that casket opeued, and thore by emi almerart he found that lb body was as perfect as eighteen ycirs before when It was emtombed. But under tbe explora tion bis body snd mind perished. Oh, my friends, do not let ns morbidly utruggle- with the shadows of the sepul cher. What are we to do? Wa t. It is not the evening twilight that gets darker and darker. It is the morning twilight that gets brighter and brighter Into the perfect day. I preach it to-day. Sunrise over I'e're le Chaise, sunrise over Greyfriars ehurhyard, sunrise over Gro-nwood, over Woodlawn, over Laurel Hill, over Mount Auburn, ovur Congressional burying ground, tunrlse over ev-ry country graveyard, sun rise over the catacomb, sunrise over the sarcophagi where the ships I io buried. Half past 6 o'clock among the tonils now, but soon to be the noonday of explanation and beatitude. It was in tiie morning twilight that Mary Magdalene mistook Christ for a gardener. Another thing the world and the church have not observed that i, Christ's pnthetto credential. How do you know it was not a gardener? li s garments said He was a gardener. The flakes of the upturned earth scattered upon His garments Fiiid He was a gardener. How do you know He was not a gardener? Ah! Before E ister had gone by He gave to some of Hts disci pies His three credentials. Heshowedthem Hishandsand His side. Three paragrapiis written iu rigid or depressed letters. A s-'ar in the right I aim, a soar In the left pulm, a pear amid the ribs scars, scars. That is the way they knew Him. That is tho way you and 1 will know Him. After Christ's interment every cellular tissue broke down, and nerve and artery and brain were a physiological wreck", and yet He comes up swarthy, rubicund and well. When I see alter such mortuary silence such radiant appearance, thnt settles it that whateverahouht he-ome of the bodies of our Christian dead, they are guing to come up, the nerves resirung, tho optic nerve reil Inmined. the ear dmm a-vibrate. the whole body lifte I up, without its weaknesses and worl lly uses lor which there ts no re., hit tion. Come, ts it not almost time lor us to go out to meet our reanimate 1 deao? i'ii you not h at the lifting ol ihe rusted latcn? Oil, the glorious thought, the glori ous consolation of this subject when 1 ltnd Christ coming up without any or the lacera tions for you must leme.nber He was lac erated and wonti ted fear. ully iu the cruci fixion coming up without one! What does that make me think? That the grave will get nothing of us except our wounds aud Imperfections. Christ weut into the grave exhausted and bloodless. All the current of His lile had poured nut from His wounds. He bad lived a life ol trouble, sorrow and privation, and theu He di si a lingering death. His entire bo 'y bung on four spikes. No invalid of twenty years suffer ing ever weut into the grave so whlto and ghastly and broken dowu as Christ, and yet here He comes up ho ruhieuu I an 1 robust she supposed Him to be the gardeuer. Ah, all the Bnleaches, ami the headaches, and tbe backaches, and the leg aches, and the heart aches we will leave where Christ left His! The ear will come up without its heaviness, tbe eye will come up without its dimness, the luugs will come up without op pressed respiration. Oti, what races we will ruu when we become immortal athletes! Oh, what circuits we will take when, all earthly Tiieife-tions HUb-tr.i.-te 1 and alt celestial velocities add d, we shall set np our resi dence in that city which, though asterthnn ill the cities of this world, shall never have sue obsequy! Standing this morning round the shattered maoury of our Lord's tomb, I point yon to a world without hearse, without iiiufflw.1 drum, without tumulus, without catatalquo and without a tear. Amid nil the cathedrals of the blessed no longer the "Dead March in Saul," but whole l.brettl of "Halleluiah. Chorus." Oh. put trtitni et to Hp and linger to key and loving forehead ugnint the bosom of a risen Chr.st! ilulloluiuh, amuul Haileluiah amen' Too many people are singing, "Scat ter sunshine," and waiting for some-' body else to do it. A blind man's opinion of the sua is based on what he has learned from the eanh with his cane. Many a man can buy a mansion who cannot tupport the back piazza. Tnere isn't enough gold in the world to make a discontent d man rich. Whenever a boy says he is not hun gry it is a sign he is polite. What we know r.bout ouraclvea we do not want others to tell us.