Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, August 04, 1897, Image 1

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B. SOHWEIER,
THE OONBTITUTION-THE ONION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWH.
1
1 A
VOL. U.
MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 4, 187.
NO. 34.
A
I
T-
t
J
CHAPTER II Continued.) lm. bnt anook her bead and twrrgeti him
A few seconds later Annathwnite wnltt- to tHke off h, own overcoat, which wu
i slowly down the hill, watching the rovered with snow.
lib'lits in the- shops and houses, lie pro- I "1 a afraid you mart think m. inna
ceipl on in a pleasant eonne of mingled . tic for carrying you off la tola onceremonl
exritpment nnd security, until he suddenly j way," ahe aaid kindly, but with a
Ixranie aware that the ground was rising. I irreat deal of dignity. I believe some of
A few paces further the ascent becnina ' tht villagera declare that thia house wai
quite steep, and he could no longer doubt once a lunatic asylum, and I am aura,
that. In spite of the lookout he was keen- i after the way In which yon bare been
k. u- nau uoni wuat ne una neen warn en
not to do. nnd taken the hleher road.
There was nothing for it but to go for
ward very carefully, and to be specially
cautious when the road began to dip again.
Whil still on the ascent, he passed vari
ous dwellings which, though' he could sea
nothing of the building, themselves but
an occasional light in the windows, he
judged from the gates and the tall snow
laden evergreens which formed a screen
parallel with the road, to be villas and
ornamental cottages.
Just as. after a few Tarda of narticn-
larly steep ascent, the road took a pretty
aharp turn to the left, a long, low-built
bouse, standing back only a few feet from
the road, but on ground so mnch higher
as to give it an imposing appearance of
uigiuiy, sprang quite suddenly Intt
lie walked past, giving a backward
view.
Innee
at the dreary house, which Interested him
and filled him with curiosity to koowVhat
people lived there. The descent now be
came rcry steep, and Armathwaite Aro
ceoded with the greatest caution, peerfW
forward luto the darkness, watching ear-
eny tor tne Junction with the coach ma
he snow was how falling In larger flake.'
than ever, and just as he got on to more
level ground he slipped and fell Into a
deep drift by the side of the road. Arma
thwaite soon extricated himself, but the
tumble had made him lose his bearings,
and it was only by the direction of the
Wind that he was able to fix with any cer
tainty the course he waa keeping. It
ecuicd to be growing darker. Then a
crackling on each side of him roused his
Attention to the fact that he was among
parnely scattered trees, and at the same
time the uneven ocrb of the ground told
fhim that he waa off the road. lie stopped
a momen, nnd proceeded a little way
ahead to-'reronnoifer. The ground was
Crowing morn broken and more steep, but
tie now perceived in front of him a clump
of a now-covered bushes and behind that
oroethirrjr which be toot for a high black
- vall;-he ir-.n.?c.BraigM-f.r thia wall with
rapid steps, and had reached the bushes,
when a fignre moved quickly out from be
hind them, raided a lantern high in the
air. and cried: "Stop!"
Armathwaite. with a sharply drawn
breath, reeled backwards, horror-struck
and bewildered. For, by th elight of the
lantern, he saw that what he hod taken
for a wall was the dark water of the lake.
Into which a moment later he would have
tumbled.
eiiAPTF.rt in.
It was some momenta before Frank
Armathwaite recovered enough sclf-pos-aessinn
to try to thank the unknown lady
whose well-timed appearance had sarei'
him from 'drowning in the lake.
"Yon are on foot ?" she said. Her voi.e
was pleasant enough, but entirely human
and colloquial, tlie voice of a young, welt
ered woman.
"I have come from Mercside, madam,
but a minute ago 1 lost my wax. I can't
thank you enough for "
She interrupted him, lowering the l.m
. tern she held.juid with a glance directing
him to fmm bark and walk with her.
"Yes. It was fortunate for yon I was
there, certainly."
She said this in a low voice, as if talk
ing to herself, nnd Frank noticed that stir
smiled at- some thought which passed
through her own mind. Armwthwnite
could only walk by her side in silence,
lie scarcity dared to put questions to this
strange woman with weird, sad eyea, who,
after saving his life, seemed to have tak
en possession of him body and aonl, and
to deem It unnecessary to enlighten him
aa to the disposal she meant to make of
either. They left the trees and the un
even ground behind them and, the wind
being now at their Lacks and the snow
therefore less blinding, Armathwaite could
distinguish without much difficulty the
point at which they reached the level
road.
"Thia," aaid the lady, Indicating the
way from left to right, "la the high road
from Mereside to P.rankaouie."
She- crossed It without further com
ment than her companlou'a polite if rather
futile "Oh," Indeed." and they began to
re-ascend the steep road on which he had
come to-grVef. One thing the young man
knew without asking: this mysterious lady
who had apparently been on the lookout
for human flotsam aud Jets-ui on thia bois
terous night, came from the gloomy bouse
which bad aroused hia attention half uu
hour before. . -
Aa he had expected, the lady, who seem
ed to think further conversation eupertlu
oua. Btopiw-d before the heavy Iron gates
and pulled the handle of a long rusty
chain which hung beside them. This im
mediately set Jangling a bell, the funereal
tonea of which struck aa great a chill into
Armathwaite as if it had been the passing
bell for his own soul. The appearam-e
t the door of a young maid servant w ho
aeemed struck with amaaement at the
spectacle before her, roused the lady from
her alMtract! 'C. while an old mastiff ran
rn the steps and licked her hand. She
- turned to the airanger and aaid very gra
ciously! '
"Are yon anxious to get to Pranksome
to-night 7 You would hardly be able to see
tr. 1'eele Ik? fore morning, and we ehoiild
be very happy to give his friend sheltel
for the night."
Armattvwstte felt so certain that he had
not mentioned Vr. I'cvle's name, and
therefore so utterly amazed at the Indj's
knowingbht destination, Ihnt he sliiin
nered aud answered in a low, shy lone
with great confusion. She entered the
bouse with a grave gesture of invitntiou
ss hlra to- follow. J list as the girl uas
bout to Jnro away, she asked lu a Imrdo
voice: "I. y"V master in?"
"Not vet, ma'am," answered she. an
- she w.-nt out. closing the door behind her.
Armathwaite waa too mnch absorb!
by hia Interest in the lady herself to sir
amine very minutely the ball In which he
He perceived that It was
Ion. wMe and lofty, that one wall was
well lined with whips and guna and h
aug tackle, and that there was hst-and-rost
stand ovred with masculine gar
nirols. He pfferrd ta hel bis hostess sa
f.hm dl-wncntnlMwl herself of her outer
c.nneai.w rJa h proved to be anmlatakahly
a French cavalry .deaf. Ihe tbanktd
t-niiru, jug wm uoi iuii to aRrea wuu
them. Did yon not take me for a mad
woman?' ahe asked In a suddenly aerloua
tone, looking steadily, almost anxiously,
b for his anewisr,
"No, madam, certainly I did not," said
Armathwaite heartily.
The lady seemed relieved, and a touch
of her old earnest and pensive manner
. came back npon her aa. Instead of Im
mediately speaking again, ahe fixed in
genuously searching eyea npon the strang-
er's face, and after gazing at him intent
ly for some momenta, withdrew them.
leaving Armathwaite, mnch to his own
surprise, la the peaceful conviction that
ahe waa deeply interested In and satisfied
with her own impressions.
"Come Into the drawing room." she
I aaid when her inspection waa over. I
1 will introduce yon to Mr. Crosmont. My
name is Alma Crosmont. Tours la Dr "
She paused and looked down, knitting
her brows aa if she had forgotten. More
astonished than ever, the young York
shireman supplied the Information in a
low voire.
"Armathwaite Frank Armathwaite.
She repeated It after him slowly, how
ever, aa if the name was new to her. Just
in here the hall narrowed suddenly to half
Xts first width there was a door on the
leVit which the lady opened, and Armt
thwaite followed her into a large room.
Inan armchair by the fire, with big back
to rJie door, sat a middle-aged man, who
wasVeading by the light of a candle fixed
to hi chair. Aa the door opened, he aaid
In a
ind voice, "Well, little one, and
are you been up to now?" and he
. what
held out his hand without turning round
or pntthg down his book. Armathwaite
waa mucyi struck by thia circumstance.
There waa a warm, loving sympathy In
voice, acti.Vn and manner, which charged
the whole yrtmosphere of the old room
with the fragrance of home.
rye nrowent a gentleman to see yoa.
da
put down at once, with a
rise. The newcomer came
foi eSTd, and the lady said, sli.'yt
"Dr. Armathwaite Mr. Crosmont."
"Not her husband, surely," thought
Frnnk.
Mr. Crosmont rose, taking off his read-
! ing spectacles hastily, and held out his
hand. He was a mnn of middle height.
with a beard and a fringe of reddish hair
. . . : . .1 II i . i ii e
turning rapidly gray, undistinguished fea
tures, and mild, dreamy blue eyes.
"I daresay yon know Dr. Armathwaite,
that a stranger in this part of the world,
at this time of the year, is worth a king's
ransom," said he. with evident pleasure
at the meeting, which was, i,wns also
easy to see, quite unexpected on" his side.
"Hut If you once let the world know
how they tnny expect to be treated here,
yon will be overrun with them," said
Arriinthwalte, gratefully.
Mr. Crosmont glanced inquiringly at the
ady, who seemed for the moment rather
disconcerted; at least, she answered with
her eyea cast down.
"I was at the corner of the road by
the lnke, when I aaw some one making
straight for the water; In another mo
ment he would have been lu, would you
not?" she ended, turning appeallngly to
the young doctor.
"Indeed I should," aaid Armatbwnite,
earnestly. "I had lost my way altogeth
er. You saved my life."
"F.ut what were you doing out there by
the lake on a night like this?" asked Mr.
Crosinont, not at all satisfied.
"Oh, never mind, daddy; it waa only
one of my pranks; these high winds al
ways get into my head, you know, aud
blow all the brains away."
"Were you waiting for Edwin?" he then
asked, in a very gentle and sympathetic
tone.
She hesitated like a school girl, then
raised her head with what aeemed to be
an Impulse of straightforward, almost de
fiant, honesty.
"No."
"I I'm, I thought not," muttered Mr.
Crosmont, and then he turned again to the
visitor. "Do you know the lake country
well?" he asked. "It Is rather a risky
thing to travel about here at night if you
do not."
"It la my first visit, and I can't hope to
ee much of it, for to-morrow afternoon I
must be in Glasgow."
The end of the long, wide dining table
nearest to the fire was laid for dinner for
one person. Waa there some third mem
ber of the household whose presence waa
a discord?
"I'p here in the wilda one must make
frienda with the beasts, or be solitary.
It's a dnll life, I can tell yoa," spoke the
old gentleman, aa the lady left the room.
"I hardly think I should find It ao un
der the same circumstance For a bach
elor living by himself It would be dreary
enough. Hut with a charming wife
and "
"Did yon think the little one waa my
wife?" asked Mr. Crosmont, with evident
pleasure. "I wish she were; though au
tumn and spring don't go well together,
t am I'ncle Hugh. She la my niece, my
aiece by marriage, and my child by affec
tion. I would walk into the bike for bet
iiv day. Some day I shall walk her hus
band Into the lake. If be doeant look
ml," he added in a gruff comment to him-.-lf,
which wa. a little embarrassing to
his hearer. There waa a pause of a few
(eeoiida, during which Mr. Croamnnt re
membered that he waa speaking in ra
blca. aad explained briefly. In bia usual
abrupt manner: "My nephew is !rd Kil
donan's agent; he'a a good b.y enough,
but he gets his bead a little turned, up
at The Craga, between my lord'e conn-leni-i-s
on the one hand, and my lady'a on
the other. la fact, the big house takea
the odor out of the little oue, you aee.
I suppose It'a natural enough, but It's a
pity; and one can't aay a word to him,
because, of ennne. If one doc It Is all
teal for his employer's Interests; and they
really hare been very kind to blm. Still
It's a pity."
Armathwaite thought ao, loo, ana ie
tilled with compassion for the euft eyed
n ife. f.hliard. In the smith ef her beauty
nd charm, to fall bach Hn the cum-1
paiiioushlp of a middle-aged relation of
her hueUnd ka abe absald bavs been
may. .
f-VarTl..
enjoying me devotion of the husband him-,
self, lie waa trying to evolve a remark
which should show enough, but not too
much, of the sympathy he felt, when
sounds of a man'a angry voice and a man's
heavy tread were heard in the hull.
"That la my nephew," said Mr. Cros
mont, shortly.
Armathwaite rose to his feet, feeling
very uncomfortable. For he recognized
the voice as that of the man who had been
driving Lady Kildonan's sleigh when ahe
dropped her handkerchief, and whom,
from the livery he wore, he had taken for
the groom. Little aa he knew of the du
ties of an agent to a country gentleman,
Armathwaite felt certain that the wear
ing of the latter', livery must be leas than
optional, and he hud an awkward con
viction that he had been an nndeslred wit
ness of the fact that the pranks of Mlsa
Dighton and Master Ned had not ceased
when the former became Lady Kildonan
aud the Utter "agent to my lord."
CHAPTER IV.
The door was thrown open ronghly. ana
Mr. F.dwln Crosmont, stalking In with the
amiable expression of an enraged bulldog,
stopped short on finding himself In th.
presence of a stranger, and gave Arma
thwaite an opportunity of noting well ev
ery detail of hia peraonal appearance. He
waa a man of about five feet nine inches
in height, so well built and erect that ha
would have passed aa handsome. In spits
of an ill-featured face, to which promi
nent gray eyes, a abort nose, and protrud
ing lips gave a canine cast, which waa
rendered more unprepossessing by an ex
pression which, on thia particular occa
sion, waa alternately morose and savage.
"Who's this?" he asked shortly, and la
the voice of a person who had been pre
pared for an unwelcome encounter and
meant to make himself aa disagreeable aa
he could over it. "And where'. Alma
And what'a thia I hear about her going
out by herself at this time of night? It's
not proier; it's most improper, and I
won't have it, and so she must under
stand."
Armathwaite, who waa watching him
steadily, making up hia mind thnt thia
was quite the most offensive brute he had
ever seen, saw, from a look which passed
uddenly over young Mr. Crosmont's face,
that the latter bad recognized him, and
that the recognition bad the effect of
frightening him and calming him down.
He fore the irate gentleman had had time
to do more than make a half turn to
wards the door, Armathwaite hnd reach
ed it in two long strides, and looking down
with the expression of superb contempt
which his superior inches enabled him to
assume with particular effect, be said
coldly:
"You have forgotten to hear my name)
it la Francis Armathwaite. 1 am sorry
you should think my presence an intru
sion. Mr. Crosmont and Mrs. Crosmont
were kind enough to take pity upon a
traveler and a stranger. I deeply regret
that their generous hospitnlity should
seem to yoa ill timed, but 1 beg you to
receive my thanks for the kindness shown
to me by your wife and by thia gen tip
man."
He bowed and opened the door quickly,
but started on seeing Mrs. Crosmont, who
en.t-jei very quietly, ylaucliig from hira
to her husband as if she apprehended the
situation. Armathwaite, eagerly mi the
alert to notice the demeanor towards each
other of this apparently ill-mated pair.
aw that the lady fixed npon her hus
band a look so eloquent with dignity.
' pleading and wifely submission, that
1 l.il.... t I . I . .l t .
it
aeemed a revelation of noble depths in the
womnn'a character, and filled him, th.
onlooker, with admiration and reverence.
"Yes, yes; I beg your pardon," stam
mered Crosmont. "You must excuse my
hastiness. I am very glad if they have
been of any aervice to you. People who
come here hove to take the rough that's
me with the smooth that's my wife and
uncle. Pray stay and dine with me; I
shall be heartily glad of your company."
(To be continued.)
What We Should Drink.
We should drink from one-third to
two-fifths as many ounces ns wo welpth
In pounds, mys Prufussor Allen in the
Journal of Hygienes. Therefore, for a
man weighing 158 pounds would be re
quired from fiftyilx to sixty-four
ounces dally, or from one and one-half
to four pints. This we regard as a very
Indefinite answer. The amount of
water required depends on the season
of the year, the nniouut of work done,
and the kind of food eaten. In hot
weather we require more than In cold,
because of the greater loss through the
skin, though this is In part umde up by
the lesser amount passed away through
the kidneys. If a man hibors very hard
he requires more than If his labor Is
light; a man working in a foundry
where the temperature Is high and the
perspiration profuse not Infrequently
drinks three or four gallons daily.
If the food is stimulating and snlty,
more water Is required than If It is not.
Vegetarians nnd those who use much
fruit require less water than those who
eat salted fish and pork, and often get
along with none except what is lu their
food.
In most cases our Instincts tell na
how much water to drliik far better
than any hard or fixed rule. For ages
Uicy have I "eon acquiring a knowledge
of how much to drink and transmitting
that knowledge to descendants, and If
we follow them we shall not go far out
of the way. It is of more use to ns to
know that pure water is etwential and
that Impure water la one of the most
dangerous of drinks, tlmn to know Low
much of it Is require,! (Tally.'
If one lives In n reglou where the
water Is had, it should lie boiled and
put away In bottles, well corkel, In an
Ice-chest, and. In addition, one should
cat all the fruit he can. If fruit agrees.
Fruits contain not only pure water,
but stilts which are needed to carrying
an healthfully the functions of Ufa
Photography.
A simple method tins lecn Avicd of
photographing a Mrson In five different
attltildcH all at once, so thut the same
picture gives five views of him. A back
ground is inndc of I wo plane mirrors,
forming between tbetn nn angle of 41
degrees, aud placing the (ersoii at the
Junction. Such "nil round" portraits
will Im useful In crlinonology and an
broMilogy, na well as In ordinary life.
lac I'roblem Ki plained.
"I wonder." aaid the young man who.
Is aide but exceedingly .Mii:nioii4,
"why Is It that a genius U not nppre
"Utcd until after be U dend."
"Perhaps," waa the cold bl.Mi.lisl an
swer. "It's because In an many i-sh.-s he
Insists an Wing hl frieiKU up ti the
time of that ovurrfuc."-Washington.
Mar.
I lift7' r I U-AE?rJ
lis.-i ill ,..f'iSf
Woiwt- tone,
Trom n mixture of ninornesin nnd
Kiwiluat. subjected to a high tcmpern
trre nnd g.vut pressure, Ir. Otto I'h-i-it?
h-.'.n pr.-ulr.ced a sulmtanco which he
riilN "xyolitu." or "wood-stone." It
i tin bp rut with ton;, but, It la Raid.
iVcs not burn, nnd does not nbsnrlt
i inlRturo. The inventor think It ahould
1 i'ove useful na a lmil liug material.
rwift-Klyinur Clonda.
Mr. Clayton, of the Nine Hill Otaserv
niorjr, near Boston, reports thnt obser
vations made there show that the aver
ape speed with which clouds, between
h.OttO aud 0,000 feet high, move la sixty
miles an hour In midsummer, and one
hundred und ten miles an hour In mid
vlwter. The swiftest flight of a cloud
yet measured wns liO miles an hour.
A Pleeon Race.
In France pigeons ore regarded as
valuable messcngera In cane of war,
rod recently the French Minister of
Yar offered n prize for the winner ot
a pigeon race from I'erlgueux to Parla,
ico miles. No less than 2,74 birda were
entered in the contest. The winner
made the distance in seven hours thir
ty four minutes, an average of over
Uiirty-four tu'les an hour.
Ice-Wre.blixr Fhlpa.
Vice Admiral Muknrow, of tho Hua
.sinn navy, lias been studying tho con
st ruction and use of powerful Ice
breuking ships. At a recent meeting of
the Imitcriui Geographlcul Society at
St. Petersburg, he expressed h3 belief
that with. Wo such ship's, each of ten
tliousajiol horse-power, acting together,
a line ot free water coffimunicatlon
r-ould be hept open iu winter to the port
oC St. Petersburg, nnd he Sidded that
they courd even force their way
through thia glacial ocean If J(he thick
ness of th Ice did not exceed twelve
feet x
X
The iniht of the Pan. '
Astronomers know that the sun, ae-
rompauled by the earth and thev other
r-laotlsujovlng toward a pofiit in
'lii' northern heavens v ith great seed.
Just what the velocity Is, however, can
pot yet lie told with certainty. Prof.
Simon Newcoinb. in a recent lecture,
f-a il that It was probably between five
ii. ilea and nine miles per second. Tho
bright star Alpha I.yrao lies not far
from the point toward) which the sun
Is moving. Every moment we are get
t:ng nearer to the place whore that star
now Is. "When shall wo get there?
Probably In less than a million years'
perhaps In half a million."
A Short-Lived Island.
In 1R(7 a new shoal wnsvilBcovered
I -i the group of the Tonga, or Friendly
Islands. In 1877 smoke was seen over
the shoal. In lSSo the shoal bad be
come a volennlc Island, more than two
miles long nnd 240 feet high, and n
fu rce eruption was taking place within
it. In 18K(i the island hnd begun to
shrink In dimensions, although the
next year Its highest point was 825 feet
iv"7e sea level. In 1SS9 Its height had
diminished one-half, and the ocean
rlose around It was tnoro than a mile
'eop. In 1802 the Island rose only
Miout twenty -six feet above sea level.
According to the latest Information, Its
complete disappearance, under the ac
tion of the waves, will not be long do
Lived. Illj-h-Prlcrit Bumblebees.
Many years ngo the fanners of Ans
tialia Imported bumblebees from Eng
land and set them free In their clover
I. elds, rtefore the arrival of the bees
clover did not flourish In Australia, but
rfter their coining the farmers bad no
More difficulty on thnt score. Mr. Dar
nln hnd shown that bumblebees were
the only iusecta fond of clover nctar
which possessed a proboscis sufficient
ly long to reach tho Uittom of the long,
lulie-like flowers, and. at the same
t.me, a hody heavy enough to bend
down the clover-bead ao that the pollen
would fall on the Insect's back, and
thus be carried off to fertilize other
Powers of th same species. According
to a writer In Popular Science News,
the bumbleties sent to Australia cost
the farmers there about half a dollar
piece, but they proved to be worth the
I rice.
A Sparrow Prlaaa ItannaT
Mor.KlcUr Mingaud, a naturalist of
Mutes, France, gives, In I .a Revue Scl-
i i'.titbiie, an Interesting account of tho
musical accomplishments of a sparrow
in bis collection of living birds. lie
captured the sparrow soon after It hail
Is-cn hatched, aud fed It by hand until
it could care for Itself. Then he placed
It In a cage containing a chaffinch, a
geld finch and two canaries. After a
time the sparrow learned to warble
like the finches and to trill like the
canaries, the Imitations being so per
fect as to deceivo the ear. In spring
Monsieur Miugnud Is accustomed to
keep a box of crickets near his blrd
Ci.gos. Two days after tho crickets
bad been placed near the cage contain
ing the sparrow the latter Ix-gan to imi
tate their cry, Intermingling It with its
r.ougs. Even after the crickets bud
loiig been dead tho sparrow remenibcr
nl its lesson, and continued to repeat
their cry. None of tho other birds at
tempted to Imitate the crickets. Singu
la ily enough, the epnrrow never utters
the tecullar squalling cry of Its own
specie .having been removed from Ira
i: m ton early, apparently, to have
1. n rtied It.
If a baby Is good at all ether times.
It la bound to howl when Pa mother
and father Invite their unmarried
"-tend in to auTx them.
sSAS TWISTtHS.
A. Few Little Anecdote. To J 4
by
Trmtkful WitneM.
"I've heard so ui.my incredible stor
fra about the cyclooe and its eccen
tricities," said the bole-tun looking man
lo n party of touriuU ha had joined iu
tlie keeping car, "that l'v bceu to
Kaji.-.js making some porsu;uil ui
vestig:itions in the Interest of science.
"I liud that mauy reports from that
section liava boen grossly exaggerated.
Nothing occurs there thut Is not la
nx-coid with our understanding of
ttiev terrific outbursts of nature. For
Instance, the totnado, often mistaken
for the cyclone, has a rotary motion.
I have know i It to dip luw enough
to bore a well and then bound once
more to the region of the cloud.4.
This wonderful phenomenon was an
accomplished fact hi far less Uiu
than It takea me to tell of It.
"Au extensive farmer here beard the
roar of an approaching storm and Just
had time to got h! tenia from hts
reaper to a place of safety. The wind
caught the reap-er and sent it round
and round and 1 round the Immense
tract, till the grain waa all cut."
"F.ut didn't It blow away?"
"Not at alL Tluit would have de
stroyed our theory; The circular whirl
of the 1rvikstlbla power swept the
grain to tho center of the field and
luto .-mi Immense stack such as human
hands could not have piled
"One of the strangest and beat au
thenticated tuctdenta I .earned of oc
curred where a cyclone struck the base
of a niouutaln and went burrow-lug
throvgh it. A few feet In the twister
cncor.nttred a solid granl'e formation.
It was two weeks later when the tun
nel waa completed and the terrific
wind resumed Its der'Astatlng way on
the other side. The turVnel was prompt
ly apftropruUMl by railroad com
pany." "I had rather an unpleasant exper
fence In that section," said one ot the
tourist. "I bought a lltW farm tliore,
Just to be a landholder. Everythtaig
In three counties was plastered thick
with mortgages. A cyclone wound
them all up Into one great package and
pasted thorn down on mW little place.
We drIUed and blasted to I get them off,
but U was no go. My fuuS- fe- uTort
Saced. f4",tX!0.0C0 deep."
i ne solemn man or science never
turned a hair, but took notes. Detroit
Free Prees.
Cause and KflVcC
"Never tell your dreams" Is an oft
repeated bit of nil vice, yet It Is proba
ble that few persons do things In their
d reams that are more foolish titan
some things they do whon they or
wide-awake.
"I had a very singular dream last
night," said a boarder, as be came
down to breakfast one morning. "I
dreamed I was a spectator at one of
those peculiar institutions known ns
'cake-walks.' I was the only white mnn
prese-rjt, and was enjoying the novel
sensation of watching for the first time
a procession of gorgeously arrayed
coup.-la making the circuit of a large
room in the most stately nnd Impos
ing style Imaginable, when suddenly
tho master of ceremonies snw me, took
me by the arm, led mo to tle center of
tlio hall, called a halt, and tlie entire
n.sseinlJy gathered nlout me, and be
gan to Jabber In an unknown lan
guage.
"All at once I began to grow tall. I
felt myself rapidly expanding In an
upward direction. Tlie crowd at my
feet seemed to dwindle. My head
pushed its way up through the celling,
then through the roof, ami probably It
would have bumped against the uiorai
in another minute If I luuln't wnktvl
up. It was a narrow escape."
"And you snw and did ail tins at .
cake-walk, did you?" asked oue of the
regular boarders.
"Yes, that's what I said."
"H'mphI What hnvo you eaten for
supt'or'"
"Nothing but a pUite of buckwheat
cakes."
"That explains It What yon saw In
your dream was a buckwlioot cake
walk."
A Stroke of Diplomacy.
Applicant I have called to ask you,
madam, to w-e your influence in my be
half. I am an applicant for a posi
tion In your husband's private office,
but I have oue dangerous rival. He
seeme to prefer
Madame (interrupting) I'm sorry,
sir, but I never interfere with my hus
band's business.
Applicant If I were as pretty as she
Is I might
Madame She?
Applicant Yes, madam; my compet
itor la a most bewitching girl..
Madame Just call to-morrow, sir,
and I may have the position for you.
Washington limes.
A Justification.
Mother (coming swiftly) -Why, Wil
lie! Striking your little obiter?
Willie (toggedlyH-Aunt Frstfac
made juol . -
Aunt Fmstfaee Why, Willie! I said
if you did strike her I would never
kiaa you again.
Willie (still dogged) Well, I couldn't
let no chance like dnt slip. Judge.
Worried.
Wimbledon What's on your mind,
old man? Is your wife or uny of your
children sick?
Hnnklns Heavens, It's a n.oie seri
ous matter than that! I'm afraid we're
not going to have a bnse-hnll team here
this season. Cleveland Leader.
Salary of Senators.
There is a ouvuion Impression in thi
country that the salaries of the I 'id ted
States Senators are larger than tlione
of fhc Representatives. As a matter
of fnit the two classes are paid exact
ly the same $,,fs.) a year each, with
ullownnee for stationery and mileage.
There was formerly a difference In the
salaries, the Senators In-lng paid a pet
diem for attendance, the amount being
somewhat gnutcr than that of the
Representatives, but many yenrs ngo
this difference was aUdlshed. Cabinet I
Ministers receive fx.isio a year iach,
nnd this fact is prot-nl.ly tvoponslhh
ft r the popular Iduinl.-r, many person?
s.ipnoring thnt a Scuitor Is paid a
much as a inemU-r of the Cabinet.
We wouldii't be a prodigal sou
the little veal there l lu It.
fot
QUEEN ELIZABETH.
Christmas Bevels Pefore Her Majesty
in Greeawich House.
In St. Nicholas there is an accoum
cf CbriAtmaa revels before Queen
ttlizibeth, the description occurring tn
John Bonnet's eerlaL "Master Sky
lark " The following Is the passage:
The palace corridors were lined with
guards. Gentlemen pensioners under
r.rin: went flashing to and fro. Now
aud then through the inner throng
some hau'lsome page with wind-blown
hair and rainbow -colored cloak, pushed
to the great door calling: "Way, sirs,
way for my Lord! way for my Lady
of Vlders toner and one by oue, or la
blltt.o groups, the courtiersL clad In
silks and satins, ve'vets, Jewels, and
lace of gold, come .up through the lofty
fald'iig-doors to their place In the hall.
There, where the Usher of the Black
Rod atone1, and the gentlemen of the
cham'uer came -and went with golden
chains about fielr necks, waa bowing
and scraping without stint, and -reverent
civility; for men that were wise,
and nolde were pnss'ng by, men that
were handsome and brave; and ladies
sweet as a summer day. and as fair to
see as spring, laughed by their sides
and chatted behind tbeir fans, or
daintily nibbled coinlts, lacking any
thing to say.
The window were all curtained In,
makHig a nlght-tlma In midday; and
from the walls and galleries flaring
links and great bouquets of candles
thro jt aa eddying flood of yeltow light
across the aUrrlng scene. From clump
to dump of banner-staves and burn
ished arms, soikcd abpe the waist
coat, garlands of red-berried holly,
spruce, and mistletoe were twined
iLCTtMC the tapestry, till all the room
was bound about with a chain of living
Rreeu.
There were sweet odors floating
through the air, and hazy threads of
fragrant smoke from perfumes burn
ing in rich braziers; and under foot
was the crisp, clean rue tie of new
ruslv.s.
Master Gyles went to and fro, twist
ing the manuscript of the Revel in hts
handi, or pouslng kindly to pat some
u.it;'iu3 .m. uvwi -
OolLy were PrJailfc by turne through
n-uony la" the screen at the throng In
the audience-chamber.
They could see a confusion of fans.
Jewels, and faces, an! now and again
could hesr a burst of subdued laughter
over the steadily Increasing buzz of
voices. Then from the gallery above,
nil a once there cam- a murmur of In
struments tuning together; a voice In
the corridor wns heard calling, "Way
here way here!" la masterful tonea;
the tall folding doors nt the side of the
bail swung wide, aad eight dapper
pages in white and gold came In with
the Masters of Revels. After them
came fifty ladles and noblemen clad In
white and gold, and a guard of gentle
men pensioners with glittering hal
berds." There was a sharp rootle. Every
head In the audience-chamber louted
low. Nick's hmrt s ve a great Jump
for tne Queen waa there!
She, came with an air that was at
once serious and royal, Iicaring herself
haugutlly, yet whth a certain grace and
spiiKntllnoss tnat b-cauie her Tery
well She was quit? tall and well
made, anil her quickly changing face
was long ami fair, though wrinkled
ami oo longer young. Her complexion
was vicar ami of an olive hue; her nose
was a little hooked; her firm lips were
thin; and her small b'.ack eyes, though
keen and bright, were pleasant and
meiny w'thal Her hair was a cop
pery, tawny red, and false, moreover.
In her ears bung two great pearLs; and
there was a line snii:'l crown studded
with diamonds upon her head, besides
a necklace of exceeding fine gold and
Jewe's about her neck. She was at
tired In a white si Ik gown liordered
with pearls the size of beans; and over
it wo'e a m.intl of black silk, cunning
ly slot wlih silver threads. Her ruff
wns vast, her farthingale vaster; and
ber train, which was very long, waa
bornr: by a marchioness who made
more ado about It thin Elizabeth did
of ruling her realm.
Make Yonr Own Cook Book. .
A most valuable cook book, which no
printed volume can ever supersede, la
the Individual work of its owner. It la
composed of recipes, tested and true,
collected from various places, and con
taining directions which the owner un
derstands and rules that suit her Indi
vidual taste. This cook book may be
written on tinted and glazed writing
paper, leaving wide margins at the
sides. It is a good plan to arrange it
In sections, allowing one section for
soups, one for fish and crustncea, one
for meats and fowln, one for game and
one for salads and desserts. A section
might also be added for preserve,
candles and valuable miscellaneous re
cipes, and the whole should be indexed
In another final section. It will be
found most conyenJeut4 Jiff re each of
Uiess gectiohB In Individual covers, at
one can then be need without wear up
on the others. These covers may ht
mnde of white oilcloth, celluloid 01
some glazed material, and may be dec
orated if the owner pleases.
Kverjthlna tClac
Bacon I hear your friend has been
rery unfortunate.
Kgbert Yes; he failed In business.
"What was the cause?"
"Expensive wife."
"And did he lose everything?"
"Everything but the wife." Yon kert
Statesman.
Teeth that May Take Root.
A Russinndontlst bos at length solved
tilie problem,of supplying us with false
teeth which will grow Into the gunif
as firmly as iniMuuI ones. The tceUi
are made of gutta porchn, porcelain 01
metal, a the case may be. At the root
of the tooth holes are mnde, and a 1st
in the Jaw. Tlie tooth Is tlien placed iz
the cavity, and In a short time a soft
granulated growth finds its way front
Uiu Jaw Into the holes of the tooth
This growth gradually hardens, an
holds the tooth m position. It does not
matter In the "enst. according to tliii
enterprising Russian dentiHt, whethei
tlie cavity In wlrlch the tooth in pfae I
1 r - . k 1 I
.a .rr " - iw
recently been drawn, or whether I
haa been lies lod for .months or ere
Fua.lMiit.n riMn
ISEV. 1)1!. MMAliii
The Eminent Divine's Sunday
Discourse.
A r-ie. r or Clieerralness Thm TrencrT
tions For tti I uro of KuslncM le
prejMiou: Cheerful ConverMliiiu .111
liehavior, lrier ChrlMtlan lnv-t.
lnent,.nd . ft rent Spiritual Awakening
Tsxt: "Wherefore doth a living raai
eouipluin?" Laineiitutloiis iil.. 8a.
A cheerful interrogatory in tlie most mel
aucboly nook of the tiihlel Jeremiah wroti
so iimiiy tad-tliim; that w hitvo n wori
named after hiiu. und wuen anything ii
ltur.-lmri-ed with grief and complaint w
call it a jeremiad. Jtut in my textJeru
iniuh, as by a xinldeu jolt, wakaus us to a
thankful spirit. Our MeaniuKB are ho much
moru numerous than our deserts that ho ii
surprised that anybody should ever tin
iuuit. tlavlug life aud with it a thoiu
Saud IlieMMillKB it ollirbt to bunll into i.i-ri.-l.
uul silence everytliiioc like criticism of th i
ueauugs 01 uo.i. w nereforo doth 1 living
uiiui couipmiur
While evurythinir in ournational finances,
is unguieuiug, lor me last few years tie
laud has been net to the tune of '-Naomi.'
There has been here ami there a elieertn
soloist, but the frraad chorus bos beeu one
01 lauieuittllou, aei-oiupauied by dirges over
prostrated com meree, silent manufactories;
unemployed mechanism, aud ail those dis
orders desurllied by the two short words '
"hard times." Tho fact Is that we have
been paying for the bloody luxury of war
more than thirty years ago. There were
great national ili lien-noes, and wo had not.
enough Christian character to settle theuJ
by arbitration aud treaty, and so we wend
luto battle, expending life and treasure aui
well ulgh swamping the natioual finances,
aad north und south, east and west, have
ever since been paying for those four years
Indulgence in burliarism.
but the time bus come when this depres-,
slon ought to end yea, when it will end ill
the people are williug to do two or three
things by way of financial medicament, for
the people as well as Congress must Join In
the work of recuperation. The best politi
cal economists tell us that there is no good
reason for continued prostration. Plenty
of money awaiting investment. The na
tioual health with never so strong an arm.
or so ciear a nrain. ei we go on groaning,
groaning, croaiiinir. as though ;o
put this nation upon gruei aud allowed us!
put one accent breakfast In six months
1 he fact s, the habit of complaining has
become chronic in this country ami afier'
all these years of whimoer and waillnir ,,.,,11
oujurgauon we are under inn 11 ilium
of snivel that we cap'
There arejHrrrTV,. .. , . , .
I " " u 11 our umivHiuai and national
finances may le cured of their present 1.-,
presslon. The lirst is cheerful conversa-i
nou huu oenavior. 1 nave noticed that tun
people who are most vociferous against tin;
uay 10 wne-n we live are those who nr.j In
comfortable circumstances. I have made,
iuuuiry of those oersous who are vi,,l. i ii
iiieir jeremia-ls against these times, and 1
nave asked them, "Now. after all. are von
not making a livim-?" After some hesita
tion auduoughing and clearing their throat
inree or lour limes they suv stmnm.-rini-l v
i-e-. Hotliat with a irreat mtiltitii.te of
people it Is uot a iiuestiou of getting a
IIVUIIUOOU. nut tnevure dlssatisllml I...111..
raey ean t make as much money ns they
noun iiku 10 mane. i iev nave ni.lv
AUK) iu the hank, whero thev nun I.I hl-
to have 401)0. They can clear in a v.-iir
only T5WIU, when they would like to cl.-ar
viu.wiu, or tilings come out just even. Or
11 iic-ir trade ttiey get (3a day when they
wish they could make ft or in. "Oh,"
says some one, "are you uot aware of tlie
fact that there Is a great population out of
employment, and there are hundreds op
me g.xid families of this country who are,
at their wits' eu.f, not knowing which way
to turn?" Yes, I know It better than . an v
man in private life can know that sad fact,
for It comes constantly to my eye mid ear,
but who is responsible for tins state of
things?
Much of that responsibility I put upon
men in comfortable circumstances who by
an'everiastibg growling keep public eonll
dence depressed aud new enterprises from'
starting out and new houses from being
built. You know very well that one de
spondent innu oan talk fifty men into dc
spoudeucy, while one cheerful physb-iani
can wake up iuto exhilaration a whole asyj
lum of hypochondriacs. It Is no kindness,
to the poor or tho unemployed for you to
join iu this dcplorattou. If you have not'
the wit aud the common sense to think of,
something cheerful to say, then kecpsilcnt.
Now 1 will uiuUc u contract. If the peo
ple of the United States for one week will'
tulk cheerfully, I will open all tho manu
factories, I will give employment to ail the
uuoccupted men and women. I will make a,
lively market for your real estate that is
eating you up with taxes. I will stop tlni
long processions on the way to the poor-,
house and the penitentiary and I will spread
a plentiful table from Maine to California
aud from Oregon to .Sandy Hook, ami the
whole laud shall enrol aud thunder with
natioual jubilee, itut says some one, "I1
will take that contract, but wo can t afn-cti
the whole nation." Aly hearers and read-!
era, representing as you do all professions,,
all trades ami ail occupations, if
you should resolve never agaiu to utter
a dolorous word about the money
markets, but by manner and by voice
and by wit and caricature aud, above
all, by faith in !od to try to scatter this,
national gloom, do you not believe tho In-
nueuce would m- instantaneous aud wide
spread? The elTit-t would be felt around
the world. For Ood'ssake and for the sake
of the poor and for the sake ot the cm
ployed quit growling. Depeud upon it, if,
you men iu comfortable circumstances do
not stop complaining, Ood will blast your
harvests aud see how you will get along
without a corn crop, and He will sweep you
with floods, aud He will devour you with
grasshoppers, aud He will burn your city.
If you men in comfortable circumstances
keep ou complaining, God will give you
something to eomplaiu about. Mark that!
Tlie secoud prescription for the allevia
tion of linaucial distress Is proper Chris
tian investment, (iod demauds of every
individual state ami nation a certain pro
portion of tbeir income. We are parsimo
nious. We keep back from (iod that which
belongs to him. aud when we kcen.bacL -anything
from Ood. ht -takes -what we keep
back, end- he" takes more. He takes it by
storm, by sickness, by bankruptcy, by any
oua of the 10,000 ways which he cun em-
doy. The reason many of you are cramped
n business is because you have never
learned the lesson of Christian generosity.
You employ au agent. You give him a
reasonable salary, ami, lo, you find out
thut he is appropriating your funds, be
sides the salary. What do you do? lis
fdiarge hlra. Well, we are (bid's agents.
He puts in our hunds certain mou
eys. .'art is to be ours, part is to be
His. Suppose we take all, what then?
He will discharge us. He will turn us over
to financial disasters and take the trust
away from us. The reason that great multi
tudes are not prospered In business is sim
ply because they have been withholding
from (rod that which belongs to lliin.
The rule Is, give and you will receive, ad
minister liberally and you shall have more
to administer. I am in full sympathy with
the man who was to be baptized by immer
sion, and some one said, "You had lM-tt-r
leave your pockethook out; it will get wet."
"No," said he, "I want to go down under
the wave with everything. I want to con
secrate my property ami all to (lod." Aad
so he was lpti.--d. What we want in this
country Is more baptized pocketbooka.
The ouly safe investment that a man
can make In this world Is In the cause of
Christ. If a man give from a sucruhiiii
dauce, Ood may or he may not respond
with a blessing, but if a mnn give until he
feels it, if a man give until It fetches! hi
blood. If a mail give uutil his selllshnras
cringes and twists and cower under it, ho
riti get not only spiritual profit, out ha
will get paid back iu bard cash or iu cult
.vertlble securities. We often see men who
inre tight-fisted who seem to get along IM
their investments very prolltably, noit li
st audlng all their parsimony. (n$ wlt.
punuemj in ruin man a uistory every-
thlug goes wrong.
Ills health fails,
del hrofced . or a
r - """so" is
domestic! curse smites
night shadow of some
blm, baoW md
klipi ..'i V UM.a
his soul and upon his I
tne matter? UoU Is nil
small heartedncs. untried 10 enent rod,
and God worsted him. Ho that one of the re
eies for theciireof indivldu il and national
II nances Is more generosity. Vhro you
liestowed Si on the cause of C'irist give's.
Ood loves to bo trusted, and he is v-i-ry apt
to trust back again. He says: "That man
knows how to handle money. Ib-sliill have
more money to handle." And very s-.on
the property thnt was on tun marlr.-t f.,r u
great while gets a purchaser, ami t!ieb,id
that was not worth more than liily cents
on n dollar goes to pur, and I lie o,.-iiiin; ,,f
a new street doubles the value of his I e,
or In any way of n million Ood hie (s.-s him.'
Once the mail liinpi out I hat secret an, I
he goc on to fortune. There ure men
whom I hav" known who for I'-n ywir- ,,ne
been trying to pay God - num. - I e-v h:i
never Is able to get it I, f.,r ,i ; :,s
they were taklngout from onc,id t,f il.,r
pockelbook a bill mysteriously so;,ieli..T.'il.
some otner fedd of their pocket I k I h.-r.i
came a larger bill. You tell me that .Chris-.
tiau generosity pays iu the world to come.
I tell you it pays now, pays hi hard cash,
pays in Government securities. You do
not believe It? Ah, that Is what keeps you
back. 1 knew you did not believe it. The
whole world nnd Christendom is to be re- '
constructed on this subject, and a-1 yu are
a part of Christendom l- t the work bc;:in ,
ill your own soul. -.ut." says seme one
"I don't believe that tl ry. he.-.u.se i
have been generous and I have been losing
liloney for ten years." Then God pr p:uil
you, that is all.
People rjuoM us a jolce, what isa divine
promise, '-Cast thy bread upon the waters,
and it will return to tle-e afler many days."
What did (bid tii":iii by thai? There is an
all usion there. In I ". 1 r v 1 t when they sow
tin? corn it is at a lime when the Nilols
overflowing lis banks, ami they s,w the
seed corn 011 the waters, andasthc Nile be
gins to recede this s 1 corn strikes in the
earth and comes up a hai-vc-d. and that is
the allusion. It seems as if th. y are 1 Urow
ing the corn away on Ihe waters. (llt. art--r
awhile they gather It up lu a harvest. Now
says (iod in Ills word, "Cast thv bread
upon th: waters, and it shall coine
hack to theo nfter many day-.." It in
seem to you that you are thr wing it aw
on charitb-s, but it will yiet i a harvi-st
green ami gold -n harvest on ear: Ii au t
harvest in heaven. If men could npfesaKi&w
eiate that and net on that, we wul, navo
ko more trouble about individual or na
tional finances.
Prescription the third, for the cure of nil
our individual and national llnauci.il dis-
sscs, a great spiritual iiivakcniiic;. It is
110 mere theory. Tho merchants of this
country were positively demented with the
monetary excitement in 1S57. There never
before nor since h,-is Im-cii such a state of
liuancial I'.-p.cssion ns th-'ro was at that
lime. A revival camo, and 500. (-no pe,eio
, fl.,
rin after tlit rfviva.'i'
ttnauclitl iiroiM'rity w hfiv
this country. Tho tlnt'st U
laritt fortum'p la th lTnit.t
lfn mn..) plm IV7. "W
"wlint Ikh Ri'lHtun. , iT-r
viv:il to 1I0 with mont't.irv I 'ii r v-mi
ami revival?" Much to .lo. Tli. n-liir
tt Jesus Christ Iwia n lir'"t t ml-viey
make m-'n holiest nnl !?'r ;tn-l trtiMi t-l
tutr. nii'l iin not hon.-sty an-l Hitiri"ty ati
truth t-'llini? nnxiliarl- M of mtrl:il r.
hrity?
If w oouM have nn nw.i!;niu in t'
on nt ry iiri in tho (lays .f .1. m tt ii.tn 1"
U'unls of Northampton, n in th-' ilavs
lr. Klnloy of lta-;klui; Ki li: ', n in
JayHnf lr. (irillln of Iio-tou. the v
ntv wul'l r-uso to a higher m-M-il
iul witlittrit moral ton" ttm lion.
ih'SS (Miterjiriso of the country w u'
up. Von say a-Rrt iiwak.'in.
inlluence upon the future wrM.
ft Iiiih ft flirc.'t in'luencf upon th j
walfaro of this worhf.
rhrint is no fo- to MicirssfV
It is its hect friernl. Anl il j
come a K'at nwakiiiim
try. anl nil tho tiunkn
1'itlihM
;tor.s ;lf
up f"'
coin panics nml nt
ihops ihoul.; ciopo up
tlo nothing hut rrff
Hhip of Almiu'htv Coi..
raiTition the lan.i
Hnrincinl prosperity
ilrcjimcf! of. I'oiiiiii''
lif. tti.it :m7 iH:i' ivi
to come. lint, nTl
llllll'II fill lllrt fl 1
let your eternal au i
have nothing to ?
inor money yn
lumestly anl A:
lack of it Pickups
an empty hroml trfj j
for clotlies aiel lir
n gainst noney, a-l
oai une, when I
inak'fi me think "
woiihl ho an e
there iH a unwYU
mil t'at we ;a
cannot natisfy th"
for our ferriair'ar
that it cannot ttuloV
r our immortal smife
Vet there an tn fc
pack of homls an (
trale1 off for a maul J
though pohl were.
latnl where it is so
i
pavemenrs our oi ii.
is tho only salvation.
are the only incorruptii
you ever ciphered out I ! t .
gain, "What nhall it p
Hain the whole worhl nit ,
Vou may wear fine :ipmvi
witels of death will''
All the mine "f A!
strung inone carcaia".
you as much as the ,
You reniemher, I hii,
the shipwreck of th
storm came n that
trainjied the deck aie
thft hatches, aiel
iuritlrel voicn deatf; 1
ou the jaw of tie w.H'J
the steamer, as im
.my
mountain. The
The lonu coutrh
Klar
.f th.
hiss ofsfcnhirue
hi ir of Um1 on the
ctupentlous spectaele. t
not fo .lown without x
funr;erH stood iii lou hi ,
nit, aiel men unu ( l
their hands were hliter-
ere straincii. Alter aw
tfllt. A fcW p!WSMlXa
it RVttt-(towu. The nfr
iet W'LS wX. I
So there an men wh-1
flue voyage thy are maki
Is well till some euro'dv
fff Uicy ure iiwiKir
111 sine euro'-lv
comes Upon tlieri
fhc iM.tt.'Mi of iIh
disaster
down. The
Is strwu wit !i th shatt"
Weauso your prow-rtv : -?o?
th. no. Then i-t eo,
stupendous shipwreek after a
worl 1 -4 iod lauie tied it MMMi v
II is sailing tu. hut iin' day it
it the cry of "Ure! ini-t f
itho riH-ks will hum. and t
ilatue like masts, and the
iu the judt'fiietit hurrjenne
many off the .-k. n
d
(th hcrths, where they ar- no.
J-suh. How many sull io d--
will know until it Is aim nin.---1
.oil! tlay: fliip Ank of a w-ri
mlllloiiM savedl Somaii uiilliiiv
Irt'i'HUrw you r f 'ft u ies ifo.
hoiis joh, h'i'ihim' all your care
shuts Jfo, do i.t let Voiirsoul l!
l,ord Aimiu'tity. thr .Mirt) the M
fL-vcrlatiiig covenant , s-ivc your
hat
d -si l IIV s'li l. m-i
pr'Mr-i
I I -- " I ' r Will lt . 'i
Idleness ll I plide I will!
Ii Hid 1h:ni k in and pill 1 1 u. i til -1
V ou m; Kiuie-r, rc-dlei
will ! 4-t n-.(.
wliat'Vr Vmi i;e d ihoit- I
Coin d led ldiide with lli
h alwus taUcti lie- I lou'h kIi.i i
'I ll hil tci'esl liit'dii in
Iniv if he Ihinks hi-
wauls it.
He who tsavs u li.il he Iik v
what lit: iMi not lik.
OpinioitK are inoi l:c iht vi
iimiii our lilM'i ty.
lie u ho Ii.ik a lhou-iiid Ito-i,
uii friend ! sp;ii f.
The dH-oi fl-it n.tie to l
Ihun lh dix-tiM.
Tie man h ran I II ail he
riliio , knoun vciy luilo.
1l u I a t. . . . I. '
IU1 liu aim
huull learn teji
1
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