Mil THE OON8TITUTION-TH E ONION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. F. StiHWEIER, VOL. LI. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 11. 1897. NO. 35; 19 a Vlcr.. Mra. lit JUr. an in; t .oca" ict .si u' V " CHAPTER IV (Continued.) Thsuk you Tiry much," salt Arma thwaite, sneaking still rather stiffly. "I dined at Mereside Mine time ago, and I tuust get to Brnnksome to-night. If Mra. Crosmont will allow me He turned to the lady, and stopped hurt. Her eyes, which begun to fasci nate him by an eloquence which seenied to him preternatural, looked straight iuta his ami commanded him to stay. "Come, Ir. Armatliwaite," .aid bet ancle, "u won't waut ua all to go down on our knees to induce you to stay, I'm sure. We have a reputation for hospital ity to keep up, and we should have each to do private penunce if we let you go be fore morning. Come now, say you're per uaded." He passed bis arm through that of th young man, and as his nephew had now recovered from his ill-temer enough to echo the hospitable words with a moder ately good grace, Armathwaite allowed himself to yield without much dilticulty ud without betraying bis secret eagerneSt for a better acquaintance with the inter esting household. Afterwards Mr. Crosmont, humming an Ir as he crossed the room to his cigat cabinet, asked bis visitor in a genial voice If he would smoke. Armathwaite ex cused himself, feeliug that to puff tobacco moke into the air which surrounded Mrs. Crosmont would be like profaning a temple of a goddess. That lady Heeuied to guess the reason of bis refusul, and, looking at hiiu with a gracious smile, said lie did not mind smoke in the least. Drawing a chair to the fire between his uncle and Armathwaite. Mr. Crosmont observed that they would not go into the drawing room; it was such a moldy old place. I f he were suerstitiou8 he should think it was haunted. "They do say in the village that this house is haunted." observed bis uucle. "Not one of those silly se-vnnts would come down stairs between the hours of ten at night 1 six in the morning, if you were to offer her a new bonnet." Apparently this fact was already known to young Mr. Crosmont, for he betrayed no surprise. "Old Nanny Is ready to awear by her coral necklace and everything else in th world she holds sacred, that she has heard unearthly moans and groans iu the IHillj Varden room." "Don't, uucle; you , will make me so ...... il,.i 1 ihani n able to !?." roughlyt"" "I never yVP?heard of a -' ble woman believing n ghosts." "I don't believe in ghosts, Edwin," aba aid very humbly. "But yoo know that when I get very much excited and it is ao easy to'excite me I fancy I aee all sorts of things; it is ijuite as dreadful aa reality." She spoke dreamily and absently. In a low, awe-struck voice, with her eyea fixed before her, as if the remembrance of some of her faucie of the night were fill ing her with vivid horror. "Of course, if you will read traahy nov els and till your head with Imaginary crimes aud mysteries just before you go to bed, it's no wonder you can't sleep; 1 couldn't myself under the same circum stuli. es. As for the Dolly Varden room, the draught comes in at the window, aud that's the worst you con say for it." "Siuce you have done ma the kindness to offer me a shelter for the night, may ask a favor if 1 may sleep iu that room 7" asked Armathwaite. "I have no super atitions on the Biibject of supernatural appearances, 1 am a light sleeper aud have extraordinarily quick ears; so that If anybody cuu find out the cause of the prejudice aguinst the room and set Mra Crosmonfs fears at rest, I ought to ba that persoii." "Done!" cried Mr. Croamout And we'll compare notes at breakfast time aa to our experience in the room." Shortly afterward Mra. Croamont re tired for the evening, and after the men had spent some time In desultory conver sation Uncle Hugh showed the visitor to the room he was to occupy for the night. He weut away, shutting the door after him, and Armathwaite gave a glance n.nn.l the ai.nrt incut. It was a rather mall room, plainly furnished with a high Iron bedstead and a mahogany suite. No well-regulated phantom can be conceived s haunting a room iu which there is not a four-poster with dark green or dark blue hangings, and as beside, the young doc tor' thoughts were still too fully occu pied with the living for him to trouble himself about the spirits of the dead, he undressed, blew out the candlea and got Into bed without even the passing tribute of a smile at the reputed mysterious at tributes of the room. Infatuated husband, fascinating and seglected wife, dangerous beauty, were all, however, powerless against the ef fects of his long journey. Worn out by fatigue and excitement, in two minutes he was fast asleep. CHAPTER V. Instead of enjoying the dreamless slum ber to which his day's work fully entitled him, Armathwaite had not been asleep more than a quarter of an hour when he was half-awakened by certain dull aoouda In bis ears which he heard at first drows ily, as if they had been part of a disturb ing dream. Hut the sounds continued nutil his dulled faculties apprehended that be was listening to a woman's sighs. This became gradually clearer to him until, convinced that he was awake, he sat up and held his breath, on the alert for the least sound. "Ghosts wind in treesr he murmured to himself; and as the sound coutinued at intervals It would speedily have lulled him to sleep if the sighs had not given place to words vrhich seemed to be whis pered straight into his ears. "Who is it V he heard distinctly. Then, after pause: "Come in." He was half aeleep now, he vat aure; and the weak but clear little whisper that buxzed on Into hia stupid ears was one of those odd dreams of purtiul consciousness which a touch of fever, consequent upon over fatigue aud excitement, sometimes brings. The tiny whisier went on; be heard it quite clearly, though it bore him at first no great meaning. "What is it? Why have you come? Xou frightened me!" Then a different voice, thin, attenuated, but louder, aaid, "Frightened you, did IT Weil, ou asy be aura 1 shan't stop opg. '9 --f JWT, i au to -now wliat you were telling that doctor fellow while I waa out of thai room thia evening, aud what you meant by bringing bun here, and where you got UtJI frank" All 0.1.1 .Iream. this; Armathwaite turn ed his head on the pillow, but still the soft buzzing voices weut on, the weaker one peaking now. "I told him only what everybody can ee that 1 am growing stupid, nervous, IIL" "111 I Well, it la your wn fault If you are. You won't go out. Only the other lay yon were iavited to The Crags, and Tha Or! Ma. It weuM WJ gM..I to no I here, luet me g away. v...i v,..i i, i i'o flttnv! 1 am no comfort to you, only a burden to you. Try us 1 may, 1 am nothing to you. Xou will not treat ine us a wife, or even aa a sister. Oh, I huve been trying for daya and weeks to. get courage to Bpeak to you, to call back my old spirit, to insist on be ing treated fairly; but my mind and my will seem to in ebbing away. I cannot tell what has huppvued to me, but 1 think I am dying!"' The I.I.mmI rushed suddenly t Anna thwaite's brain as these worJs, weak and faint, but clear aa a bell, came to his ears, lie was not dreaming; h- was listening to the plaintive outcry of t wife wbo felt, rightly or uot. that she hud' been cruelly wronged. The words told him that it was the man's voice he beard next. "Dying! Stuff and iBense! Don't for goodness sake try to make yourself out a martyr to my i.lty. What on earth have you to complaiu oT' The answer came very slowly, as if the words were dropped out one by one under the oppression of despair. "What have I to complain of?" "Well, well, I don't pretend that you did not expect a different sort of life from the one we lead. But circum stances " "Circumstances! What circumstances ran justify a man for treating a girl aa you have done me? I must speak I must speak; 1 will be quiet enough to-morrow, but to-night I am excited, my head feela strange and light you must hear me now. I have something to ask you." "Well, what is it?" i "Let me go and see Dr. Feele." "Dr. Peele! What do you want to go and see him for? There la nothing -the matter with you; if you think there ' Is, you can consul. tbi ,"Oj! feDjw- ,o)aj- M- waJWveSrfuuiae, rgr; uiriuw sort of doctor you vrs?t, like all women; a good-looking fellow to feel your pulse, and look into your eyea, and tow your Is the most Interesting case he has ever comai across. 1 11 siieak to ntm to-morrow. "And I will go to-morrow and see Dr. Peele." "But why? Why? Look here! be hon est, and tell me what you want to see hun for?" "Can yon pretend to be surprised that I want to see the man who has been my guardian and friend ever since I can re member? It la nearly three months now since I have seen him. I have not bad a talk with him since the winter began." "What do you want to have a talk with him alone for? It can be only for one thing that you want it to grumble at the life you lead, or. at me, or at something." "Ned, you might trust me that it isn't for that. Why, if I wanted to complain, shouldn't I have begun before? Do you ever think what a strain upon me my life has been ever since the day I married you? The moment I saw Lord and Lady Klldonun In the church that morning, and noticed the change in your face and the coldness of your hand aa it touched mine, I knew that I had made a dreadful mis take, aa clearly as I know it now." "Nonsense all nonsense! I waa nerv ous, naturally enough. I hadn't known they were in London, and I knew their coming meant that 1 must give my mind to some dry business or other. Instead of to the pleasure a man naturally looks for ward to ou bis wedding day. It was not my fault that I was sent off to Moscow that very day ou Lord Kildunao'e busi ness, ifo you tnina i suuuiu nave mar ried you at all if I had expected to huve to go off like that at a moment's notice?" "I remember quite well bow they car ried you away with them, and I had the sense and spirit to bate Lady Kildouan for it." "But you were hard and cold to me. You said bitter things. You would not even give me a wife's good-bye. If you had been kinder then, I should have hur ried back to you, and everything would have been different." "No, no, no! How could I be tender and sweet to you when I saw that every light word this lady said moved you more than my tears? It was not In human na ture to bear that and on one'a wedding day! All the time you were away I was full of remorse that I had been hard, but I knew even then that you never thought about it. If you had, would you have stayed in Paris three weeka after your business in Kussia was done, with a bride waitiug for you in England? Of couras not." "But I was in Paris on business, you kuow that, with Lord Kildonan." "And Lady Kildonan. I frankly own that all the love I had felt for you when you were kind to nie in London and seem ed so passionately, feverishly anxious to marry me, died away out of my heart and left me only bitterly hurt and disgusted. But I was too proud to show It. You re member how I received your shame-faced, apologetic attempt at an explanation that first evening, when poor Unci. Hugh. Iliinking he iiuiNt he an-fully in the way left u in the drawing room together." "By Jove, I do! If you hadn't trcate me as if I had been a dog, if you had mailt one appeal to me us a wife to her hus band. 1 should have taken ."ou to my arms lie once and told you, what 1 swear to you solemnly uow, that there has never beeu between lidy Kildouan and me the " Armathwaite could imagine the dignity with which she interrupted him: "There are some explanation to which a wife of years' standiug may listen. ; which ought never to be needed to a bride. "Well, you were old enough to know that you must take a man as you find him." "How can you complain? I listened to you; I made you the only promise which i it n at that moment you cared to usk that 1 would not let Dr. Peek know the circiiir.stu-ces of our honeymoon, I have kept my promise, and your pluce iu hi will is quite safe." "What rubbish are you talking? The doctor's will is nothing to me; he'a got bis owu wife aud daughter to provide for, and I'm quite independent of him or any body. 1 . uly don't want to hurt the old man by letting him kuow we have made a failure' of it." "I think the fault must lie in your own conscience ami uot iu my eyes, Ned. For if you would look at them, you would see as iiijcb sorrow for you as for myself. You are uot happy. For weeks past you have looked harassed and worried. It is only my eyes you avoid, but Uncle Hugh's, Dr. IVele's, everybody's. ltut we can't s'o ou like this; I think my very presence exasiM-rated you now. Let me go away for my health: since 1 have grown so nervous aud depressed it will be easy to say that. When you waut me, not us a shadow to hauut the house, but as a (tvoman to comfort or nurse you, if not as a wife to love you, I will come back iu tstitutly. ltut I cannot bear the strain of this .life any louger. 1 must "Wo, no, you sball not, you must not." These words came so rapidly that Arma thwaite could scarcely distinguish them. "Wait, wait a little while, uud it will all coiue right. I will be kinder to you, you hall see Dr. I'eele, you shull do any thing you like; but you must not, shull not go away." There was a pause. Then came the answer to this outburst in a very weak voice. "Ned! Ned! What do you mean? You dou't care for me you almost hute me. Why do you want me to atay ?" "Why do you want to make a acandal? For you kuow it would be a scandal, whatever reason we might e'ne- What would people what would Lord Kildouun say V" "Oh. Ned! For heaven's sake dou't let me think you only want to keep me here for -that!' "Dou't make a cene, for goodness sake, nd till the bouse with wails and grouu iu the middle of the night! 1 only want to keep you here because it's right aud projier and better fur a wife to remain in the same Douse witn ner nusnnnu, wuui ever their mutual relations may be. I want you to stay here; it is because 1 am harassed and overworked and driven, aud if I am left to myself here, I do not know what will become of me. For mercy's sake. Alma, stay till the spring, aud I will be a better husband to you. I swear it. Promise, Alma, promise." There was a long pause, and another of those quivering sighs which had first roused Armathwaite from his sleep. Then a sound like a falut, heart-broken luugh came to the young doctor'a ears. "If I stay till the spring I shall get my change for nothing, Ned. I promise." "There's a good girl. Now I kuow you must be dyiug to get to bed. You look awfully tired. Good night." "Good night." There waa the sound of a brief, per- fnnctory kiss, and hi a few minutes man's steps came stealthily -.long .-thai corridor past Armathwait-om. Again 1 the young doctor herth fenVPrtrJ I .i.ha of th JODB.T TO T Jaw LMl t 4M SyTaa that communication bad been es tattfiahed between the Kvo rooms to en able the late proprietor of the house to keep constant unseen watch over any one of his patients wnose case rendered sucu B precaution desirable, he cut the com munication off dj Tsssrcrriug me puiuws to the- foot of the bed, where te passed the remainder of the night without fur ther disturbance. But be bad little more rest. The astonishing nature of the reve lations he had just heard, aa well as of the accident by which they had reached him; the emotions roused in him by the pitiful story, and the startling problems to which It gave rise, kept him wakeful un til long after the lute-rising sun of a win ter morning had filled his room with a dim and murky light. (To be continued.) Naming the Baby. A Burmese buby, when a fortnight old, la named. On the auspicious day, which the astrologer baa selected, there Is a feast to which relatives and friends have been Invited. The baby's head Is washed for the first time, and his name Is chosen. An English lady, resldlug In Burma, describes the process of se lecting the name: The limits of the choice are deter mined by the day of the week upon which be waa born. Burmese custom divides the letters of the alphabet among the days of the week, and a child born on Monday must receive a name Initialed by one of the letters be longing to that day. Ka, kha, ga, gha, nga, TaninK Sa, baa, xa, zha, nya, Ainga. Ta, tha, da, dha, na, Ssnay, Is the beginning of a Jingle which every Burmese child learns, as you aud I learned "Thirty days hath September. April, June nnd November." A child boru ou Taultila (Monday) must bave a name begtuuiug with k, g or u. And wbeu he is old enough to go to the pagodas, the uature of the offering be carries, or rather Its sIik, Is determined by the day of his blind. Each day of the week Is under the protection, or subject to the fury, of some animal. The tiger rules Monday, and a Burman born on Monday will offer to Gautama a caudle shaped like a tiger, and fashioned of scarlet or of yellow wax. Tuesday lielongs to the king of beasts, Weduesday is the funk ed elephant's, Thursday is sacred to tha rat, aud Friday to the guinea-pig. The dragon dominates Saturday, am' Sunday Is dedicated to another fahu loua creature, half bird, half beast. The creal siiiiiifl-iiie(;iiii; centre is Wricnles, to-iinauy, where some es-tabli.'-hiiiciits i i lari' hall a million skins rinmi:' II"" Aspai'apus is the oldest known plant used for food. Tea is fathered from the plant four tiiiie: a year. Most young collectors, and, in fact, older iersotis of etericnce, are olten surprised to hear that garnets come in other colors than red. Residents of Jefferson street, Topeka, Kan., have liecn Aiclinis of a trained or lercrted doc which stole their iiews .u is and took them to its master. Mischievous boys distributed lighted cigarettes among the monkeys at the I'm is h the other il.iy, and the animals pulled away until the keeer inlerxencd. An Auburn (N. V. man has had his jmiii made with a square luuxle which he claims will shoot with greater accuracy and penetratiou than the regulation louud pattern. Tlie postmaster General ol Great I'.i-it-ain lias issued a notice to the effect that henceforth mourning ostul cards bor dered with black, front and back, will be admissible. 'I lie Itauk of Lngland employs aUuit IIimi men, and has a salary list, inclmliug pensions, of about $hi,hhi k t annum. About 2,iMi Ficcies of insects, on an averace, have beeu disrovered during each year of the present century. The Lara-eat link In the World. Two young trcea, raised from Ith icorna, have recently been planted ueiir the famous old oak at Cowthorpe, England. The ancient tree, which is more than fifty feet In Blrjn, and is be lieved to be the largest oak In exlut euce, lg so decayed that it is feared it cannot stand much longer. Flna-nlnr KfTert. of CoM. A bar of lend cooled to a point about BOO degrees Fahrenheit below eero. ac cording to the experin161"8 of Monaleur PictW, gives opt, when struck, a pure musical tone. Solidified mercury, at the same temperature, is also resonant, while a coll of magnesium wire vi brates like, a steel spring. Camlenaad FoeU One difficulty in the way of ntillrfng the great peat-beds of Germany for beating punxises has been the great biilkltvess of the material. But now a process has Iveen suggested by which thirty tons of pent can lie reduced to one ton of carbide without losing any of the stored-up energy of heat. fnbi'a Great Fore.ta. According to a recent consular re port, Cuba, although Its entire area ia only about equal to that of the State) of Pennsylvania, coutalns 18,000,000 acres of primeval forests, "where th woodman's ax has never been heard." Iu these forests, which cover nearly half the entire surface of the Island, are found among other timber, nialioit any, cedar, redwood, logwood, ebony, Ilgnnm-vltne. nnd a tree with extreme, ly durable wood called cnigunran. Scientific Cuttlnr. Men of science sometimes make ex traordinary demands upon the skill of instrument-makers. An Interesting Il lustration Is rurnlshed by the Instru ment called the "microtome," the pur pose of which Is to cut excessively thin slices, or sections, of various sub stances, such as animal or vegetable tissues, for microscopic examination. Microtomes have recently been invent ed, which. It is claimed, can cut suc cessive sections each only one twelve- .thousandth" n an incbjLhlckl The edge t vjTIi j uftl. . ,r we i-efcts. Tit suca cuw ink f-w such" cuts rcy ...re. of aa OloTBfm-Bottom. During a recent trip to' Peru, Mr. 8. F, Emmons observed near Lomas a plain from ten to fifteen miles broad .; caching between the mountains and iKSf'flshore. nnd elevated 500 or tMIO feet above tide-water," which, pot verv long ago, na time is reckoned by geol ogists, was a part of tho sea-bottom. It still retains Interesting relics of the days when it was the liome, or haunt, of ocean monsters. Scattered among its sands and pebbles the Inhab itants frequently find the teeth of sharks, and occasionally they turn up the Jaw-bones of a whale. With the latter they construct crucifixes, whose white forms are conspicuously placed on headlands. Liquid Air In Commerce. New methods of liquifying air at a reduced cost have been Invented in Germany, and Mr. de Kay, United States consul at Berlin, mentions In his official report some of the uses to which liquid air may be put. One of these Is for illuminating purposes. An llluminant can be formed from liquid air by 'mixing It with ordinary air. In certain proportions, while It la passing back to its normal condition. Liquid air may also serve as an explosive agent for various purposes. As a porta ble liquid, lien In oxygen, it Is suggest ed that It should serve many purposes iu manufactures. The price In Ger many has heretofore been $2.25 for five cubic meters (about 176V& cubic feet) of air reduced to the liquid condition, but Prof. Llnde, of Munich, has invent ed a process whereby the cost has been brought down to about 2)4 cents per 4.ve cubic meters. M.n'a F perch to Brutes. The story of the farmer In the "Ani bian Nights" who could" understand the language of the animals aud fowls In his barn-yard probably had its ori gin In the ancient myth which asserted that In primitive times men and beasts were able to converse together. Iu truth, as everybody knows, there are pertain sounds, or words, which horses, dogs and other animals can be taught to understand; and. on the other hand, some of the sounds uttered by domes tic animals have a meaning which man can understand. Of course all this is quite a different thing from language, and yet It has a certain scientific In terest. Recently Dr. H. C. Bolton has discussed "the language used In talk ing to domestic animals." He shows how we unconsciously attempt to low er our language by abbreviations, etc, to the comprehension of brutes, very much as when we talk to young chil dren. A curious fact Is thnt the pecu liar "click" and "chirp" used to start i and to hasten the movements of horses are employed in very widely separated parts of the world, but sometimes in a reversed sense. In India, for In stance, those sounds are used to stop Instead of to start horses. Joke in Fqnash Grove. The home of the practical joker la the country town, where any addition to the common fund of conversational material Is as welcome as a rain after a dry spell. In some towns It Is deem ed a merry jest to steal another man's bicycle, "put It up" for $2 or $3 with some one who is in the joke, and Invite the victim to i.elp spend the money. The amusement derived from this pro ceeding lnsrs undiminished for several weeks. Squash Grove's general store laid in a supply of straw bats. An attractive "Una" on them was Placed in the wln- dow. and the better to catch Hub eta colic eye they were adorned wit'a a large sign: These Hats are going for a song. .... Lon Jones, arch wag of Squash Grove, happened to pass that way shortly afterward. He saw the slgu, and his pace quickened. Five minutes later ha returned wit!, half a dozen followers. Without an explanatory word they rushed up iu front of the desk where the proprietor was musing over bis accounts. With out waitiug for greetings, they began, allegro and fortissimo, that venerable relic of 'he primitive vaudeville stage He never came back. He never came back. His dear form they saw nevermore! But how happy they'll be When his dear form they see. When they meet on that beautiful ahore. No dialogue followed the completion of the chorus. The marauders rushed to the window, seized a bat apiece, and rushed into the street. The cause of the atrocity was remov ed from the window at once, but when Squash Grove ceases to talk about that simple Joke the present generation wiV have passed away from the earth. THE CANADIAN THISTLES. Mean. Recomra nded for the Dro'rac tloa of TheBB I of Farsarra- The Canadian thkttle is one of th. most troublesome of farmers foes. Its -worst feature is that ordinary cultiva tion tntitcad of destroying It, only uiakca It multiiUy the faster and it Is propagated both from tlie root ami by seeds. The plant Vs usually In bloom from Juno to September. Mowing at tills ttana ks a check, but not ua eradlcator; care should be taken, how ever, to burn the plants mown, clse they will ripen on the ground. Tho Oregon station recommends frequent deep plowing, which will nearly al ways destroy tlie thistle In sliallow, dry aolla, but In light, rich, moist soil tliis usually falls. Wherever a deaite sod can be forme seeding will be found the easiest means of destruction, though not so rapid aa plowing, hoeing, salting or burning, where these means are avallaltle. On rich bottom lands or in land filled with stunqis, a grass sod will bo found the beat deatroyer. If the land is not rich enough to form a good sod manure It. Tho application of kerosoiie or strong hrlne to tlie roots, after cutting off the tois three or four inches below tin) crown with a spade, ks effective and practicable In small patches. In stony ground the scythe, salt, and slieep will be found good destroying agents. If the thistles are In the fence ntwa. move the fence and ttkrw. One. iJ'oy germinate and be destroyed at once and not lie dormant In the ground, coming up a few at a time to resocd the field. Plowing and stirring the soil when Infested with Canada tliisth-a, unless thoroughly done, only multiplies them, so do not permit any leaves or underground atoms to remain, but burn the plants lmnioimiejy after cutting tn-:n The cultivation need not be deep. If all the tbholce are kept cut oft three Inches below the surface, the underground portions wUl soon die of exhaustion.- Farm New a Victim of Sctono. "We have so many in the family that there's really no privacy for a girl who la just engaged." "What do you do?" "Well, we've been going tip on the roof and Bitting together on a little set tee with our back to the big chimney. But we can't ait there any more." "Why not?" "Well, a man came to George yester day aud offered him a photograph. George looked at It and almost fell off hut chair. It waa a picture of ua on tha roof. George had hie arm around me, and I bad my arm around George. 'How much?' said George. .Ten dol lars,' said the man. The only one, man? said George. "Only one,' said the man. George paid the ten. 'Now,' he said, 'Just tell me bow In the world you managed to get that photograph? What do you think the wretch said?" "Well, what?" "He aaid he waa the man who sent up balloona with cameras attached!"- Cleveland Plarndealer. "The Unspeakable Tar a." The word "Moslem," which has come Into common use to designate a fol lower of Mohammed, la a contraction of Mussulman, which. In turn. Is said by competent authorities to have origi nally signified "men resigned to God.' Ottoman, or Othman, was a favorite name with the early Mohammedan caliphs, and subsequently applied to their followers. The phrase "unspeak nlfte Turk" was used by Mr. Cariyle In a letter read at a meeting held in St. James Hall, London, 1870, in which he said: "The unspeakable Turk should be Immediately struck out of the ques tion and the country be left to honest European guidance." Profit in Strawberries. AKontueky strawberrygrowerreports a clear profit this season of $720.00 on seven acres of ground. Numbers of women and children who would have earned money in no other way made $1 or $2 a day picking berries. Another grower of strawberries reports his profit to have beeu f 357.50 on two acres of ground. Charles Kean Capped It. When Charles Kean was playing the part of Richard III., his fearful grimaces in character paralyzed all the other actors with fright, much to bis amusement. On one occasion a new man had to take the part of the sentinel who awoke Richard. When asked, "Who la there?" he had to say, "'Tis I, my lord; the village cock hath twice pro claimed the hour of morn.' But as Kean was making auch fear ful grimaces and scowling at hiin, the poor fellow forgot his part, and could only stammer. " 'Tls I, my lord, the the village cock!" By this time there was a decided tit ter all over the house, and Kean said, Then why the mischief don't you crow?" which, needless to say, brought dowa th house, Tid-Blta. A NEW REPUBLIC foatb American t-titea Have Fi a Federation. Quietly and unostentatioas! tb greater republic of Central America has become an accomplished fact. Tha rat step was taken a year or more go, when Salvador, Hcndurns, and Nicaragua cnitcd in a confederation for mutual defense. Now Costa Itica and Guatemala bave Joined and the new republic ia complete. It would bave been still better hnd the confed eration been established half a century go and thereby developed the re sources of the five countries aa they thould have been and also prevented a score of miserable civil wars and revolutions brought about by ambi tious and corrupt military adventur ers. They naturally should be under one authority so far as their national policy is concerned, and now that thia baa been accomplished there la little doubt it will tend toward conditions of peace and order In domestic affairs. The new republic will possess con t'derable strength.- Its population will be a little over three millions, of which Guatemala has nearly one-half. The area will be 1W..SL5 square miles, di vided as follows: Guatemala, 03,400; Costa Itlca, 2S.ADQ; Salvador, 7,226; Honduras, 43,000; and Nicaragua, 40, poo. As compared with South Ameri can State Chile has 203,470 square miles of area, Peru 413,747, and the Argentine Ilepubllc 1,778,11)5, though the population of the latter Is only about 917,000 larger than that of the new republic. Comped with Illi nois, Its area is about three times aa large, while Its population Is about a million and a half lees. The Central American population Is largely made up of native Indians and mixed races, but the KuropeauB and those of Euro pean descent are steadily Increasing. The arrangement of the new federa tion is both wise and sensible. The In dividual States retain complete auton omy and nlwolute control of their do mestic affairs. Outside relations, trea ties, commercial nnd industrial rela tions with other nations are managed by a sort of congress which meets in the various capitals at stated times and which Is regularly elected. Repre sentation to foreign governments also proceeds from the authority of thia body. In a word, the relations of the greater republic to the outside world are practically managed as ours are, and the rights of the Slates to control their own affairs remain untouched. Undoubtedly one of the Impelling mo tives to this union was the fact or the fear that Mexico had its covetous eyea on those States adjoining her own southern boundary, which has had tho effect to expedite this fusion of .the Ajj vg .fllaJbvUJa mlrar wtif gfve the tefuariiu uu ai hij ui bwui liu,uuv men, regulars and militia, which will be sufficient for all ordinary purposes of defense. As to the commercial and Industrial resources of the new re public, they should be greatly devel oped under the new management. If It bave no other result than to put an end to the Interminable revolutions and civil wars in that section it will be a blessing. A Forgotten Author. Tho oldest American man of letters b Theodore S. Fay, now living abroad It Berlin, at the ae of 00. He Is most ly forgotten, and bis books are all out of print. Yet he waa a man of some Dote In the literature of bis day. His novels, "Norman Leslie" aud 'ilobo ken," were In every circulating library, and were widely rend, fifty years and more ago. He was a contemporary of Irving, Willis. Brynut. Hallk. I'erc! ral and others of thai period. He had a position In the diplomatic service, being given the pla-e of Minister to Switzerland by President V'.tn Buren, who waa very kind toward literary men. Irving waa appointed Minister to Japan by him, Hawthorue had hia position In the Boston custom house during hia administration. Bancroft waa made collector of the port of Bos ton, and James K. Spauldlug, who had written at least one novel, was a mem ber of hia Cabinet. It was noted aa a curious fact at thnt time that the liter ary men of the country were generally Democrats. Mr. Fay has never resided at home since he lost his foreign mis sion. The charms of (European life were too much for hitr. Boatoa Hea W. Life Should lie Longer. It was the naturalist BufTou who as serted thnt human beings uhould Uve to 140 years Instead of merely 70. Buf fon argued that all creatures of the animal kind live at least six tr seven times aa long as It requires them to ob tain full development. Thus the horse la full grown at 3 years and lives to IS aud 20. The ox ta fully developed t 4 years and the dog nt Z The former lives to 24 and 2,r and tile latter to 12 and 14. There Is no doubt that In these respcts Buffon was rieht. and if his theory were borne out In the case of humankind the period of life should be t least 120 to 140 Instead of 70. New I'ses Tor Glass. Attention was recently culled to the proiosed use of glass brick In building. It Is now snid that the Government of Switzerland has approved the use of gliuts for making weights to be em ployed with balance-scab's. A peculiar ly tough kind of tflass Is to lie sclevted for this purise. From Enghuwl comes the suggestion that glass would be a better nnd more lasting material than stone for making monuments which are excised to the wearing actktn of the weather. Swallows M dais to KITevt Cure. The Churchman reports that tho daughter of the iiriiu-iiwU notary of Placinza. Italy, was found to have in her stomach on accumulation of medals of a Mailoiuin locally celebrated for powers of cure In cani-er. She had swallowed a medal each day for a veck, on advice of her eonfiosor. FatiHfactory Fxplanntlnn, "They say that Batch hasn't a dollni to his name." never been able to get any woman to acccj it i t." Cincinnati Kuq til rer. This Is the season of the year whoa we" 'ould rather bave the moth eat up all tlie woolen goods In tlie house, than iro down towtt 111 tbe sun for cajnpby BEY, DR, T, ALMAGE "ic Eminent Divine's Sunday Discourse. Sa Eloquent Dissertation on the Mi oi Gambling- An Insidious Vice M'hlcr Numbers Its Victims by tha Thou sand May be S.red by Grace of God Text: "Woe unto them that sin, as it wen with a cart rope." Isaiah v., 18. There are some iniquities that only nibble at the heart. After a lifetime of their work the man still stands upriicht, respected anl honored. These vermin have not strengtt enough to gnaw through a man's character But there are other transgressions that lift themselves up to gigantic proportions anil seize hold of a man and bind him wltt thongs forever. There are some fninuitlef that have such great emphasis of evil that he who commits them may be said to sin as with a cart rope. I suppose you know bow they make a great rope. The stuff out of which it is fashioned Is nothing but tow which you pull apart without any exertion of your fingers. This ts spun into threads any of which you could easily snap, but f great many of these threads are Inter wound then you have a roiie strons enough to hind an ox. or hold a ship iu t tempest. I speak to you of tlie sin of gambliiu;. A cart rope in strength ts thnt sin, and yet 1 wish more esM.etally to draw your atten tion to the small threads of tnftiiHune. ou of which that mighty Iniquity is twlstod. This crime is on the advance, so that it it well not ouly that fathers and brot hers nut? sons tie interested In such a discussion, but that wives and mothers and sisters and daughters look out lest their present home be sacrificed or their iutendod home he blasted. No man, no woman, can stand aloof from such a subject as this and, say, "It has no practical hearing upon my life,' for there may lm in a short time in your history an experience in which you will And that the discussion involved three worlds earth, heaven, hell. . There are gamhliuK establishments by the thousands. There are about 5.rilX) professional gamb lers. Out of nil tlie gambling establish ments how many of them do you suppose profess to lie honest? Ten these ten pro fessing to be houest tteeRuse they are merely the antechiimtier to those that are acknowl edged fraudulent. There are first-class es tablishment. You step a little way out of Ifroadway, New York. Y'ou go up the mar ble stairs. You rini; the bell. The liveried servant introduces you. Tlie walls are lav ender tinted. Tlie mantels are of Vermont marble. The pictures are 'Metthtlrnh's Daughter" and 1 lore's 4Iaute" aud Virgil's Frozen Keion of Hell," a most appro priate selection, this last, for tho place. There is the roulette table, the finest, cost liest, most exquisite piece of furniture In the United Stales. There ts the banquet ing room, where, freo of charge to the guests, you may find the plate and viands and wines and cigars sumptuous beyond parallel. Then you come to the second class gambling establishment. To It you are Introduced by a card through some 'Toiler in." Having entered, you must either , mble or flight. Handed curds, dice loaded with quicksilver, poor drinks mixed with more poor drinks will soon help you to get rid of ail your money to a tune in short meter with staccato passages. Y'ou wanted to see. You saw. The low villains of that place watch you as you come in. Does not the panther, squ.at In the-graas, knowa caTT when she sees it? Wrangle not for your rights in that place, or your body will be thrown bloody into the street or dead into the river. You go along a little further and find the policy establishment. In that place you bet on numlters. liettlng on two numlers Is called a "saddle;" Netting on three num bers is called a "git;;" betting on four numbers ts called n "horse," and there nro thousands of our young men leaping into that "saddle" nnd moiiuting that "gig" aud behind that "horse" riding to perdi tion. Thercis nlways one kind of sign on the door, "Exchange." a most appropriate title for the door, for there in that room a nan exchange's health, pence nnd heaven for loss of health, loss of home, loss of fam ily, loss of immortal soul. Exchange sure roouirh and inlliiite enough. Now you acknowledge that is a can rope oi evil, but you want to know whut are the small threads out of which it is made. There is in many a disposition to hazard. They feel a delight iu walking near a prec. because of the sense of danger. There nre people who go upon Juugfrau-not forthe largeness of the pros pect, but Kir the feeling that they have of thinking, "What would happen if I should fall off?" There are persons who have their blood filliped and accelerated by skating very near an airhole. There are men who And a positive delight In driving within two inches of the edge of a bridge. It is this disposition to hazard that finds development in gaming practices Here are v5o0. I may stake them. If I stake them, I may lose them, but I may win 5000. Whichever wnv it turns I have the excitement. Shuffle the cads. Lost! Heart thumps. Head dizzy. At It again just to gratify this desire for hazard. Then there are others who go into this ln through sheer desire for gain. It Is es pecially so with professional gamblers, riiey always keep cool. They never drink enough to unbalance their judgment. They do not see the dice so much as they see the dollar beyond the dice, and for that they watch as the spider in the weti, looking es If dead until the fly passes. Thousands of young meu in the hope of gain go into these practices. They say: "Well, my sal ary is not enough to allow this luxury. I don't get enough from my store, office or shop. I ought to have finer apartments. I ought to have better wines. I ought to have more richly flavored cigars. I ought to be able to entertain my friends more ex- rensively. I won't stand this any longer, can with one brilliant stroke make a for tune. Now, here goes, principle or no principle, heaven or hell. Who cares?" When a young man makes up his mind to live lieyomt his income, satan has bought him out and out, and it is ouly a question of time when the goods are to lie delivered. The thing is done. You may plant in the way all the batteries of truth and right eousness; but man is hnuud togoou. When a man makes iloOO a year aud spends 1200. when a young man makes $1500 aud spends 1700, all tlie harpies of darkness cry out, "Ha! ha! we have hlnit" Aud they have. How to get the extra 500 or tlie extra 'J(NKI is the question. He says: "Here is my friend who started out the other day with but little money, and in one night, so grent was his luck, he rolled up huudreds ami thousands of dollars. If he got it, why not 1? it Is such dull work, this adding up of long lines of tlgures in the counting house, this pulling down of u hundred yards of goods ami selling a rem nant, this always waiting upon somebody else when I con id put iVHI on the ace and pick up timm." This slu works very Insidiously. Othei ins sound the drum, and Hauut the Hag, and gather their recruits with wild huzza, but this marches its procession of vale vic tims In dead of night, in sileuee, aud when they drop Into the grave there is not so much sound as the click of dice. Oh, how many have gone down under it! Look at those meu who were once highly pros pered. Now their forehead Is licked by a tongue of flame that will never go out. In their souls are plunged the beaks which will never he lifted, swing open the door of thnt man's heart and you see a coll of ad ders wriggling their Indescribable horror until vou turn awav and hide your face and ask God to help vou to forget it. The most of this evil is unadve.rtised. Tin community does not hear of it. Men de frauded in gambling establishments are not fools enough to tell of it Once In awhile, however, there ,s an "xeosure. as when in lloston tlie ioli swooped upon a gaming establishment and 'ound iu It the repre-entativesof all classes r.' citizens, from the nrst merchants on State street to the low Ann street gambler; as when Uuliock. the cashier of the Central Hatlroad of Georgia, was found to have stolen 103.000 for the purpose of carrying on gambling practices, as when a young man in one of the savings banks of Brook wnu round to tmvA Ivn inunv veers ago stolen e40,0no t iiarry on gaming practices; .nneoted .liln Wall street as when a man con ir.".? stolen 108,000 t5 carry on hia gaming prao i... K la avoutilional Generally the mouey leaks silently irom the mere'--' -it's till Into tho gamester's wal let. I be ve that one of the main pipes leading to this sewer of iniquity Is the ex citement of business life. Is It not a sig nificant fact that the majority of the day tumbling houses in New York are In prox imity to Wall street? Men go into the ex citement of stock gambling, and from that they plunge Into the gambling houses, as, when men are intoxicated, they go Into a liquor saloon to get more drink. The agi tation that is witnessed in the stock market when the chair aunounced the word "Northwestern." or "Fort Wayne." or "ltock Island," or "New York Central." and the rat, tat. tat. of the auctioneer's hammer, and tho excitement of making "comers," and getting up "pools." and "carrying stock," and a"lirea'j" from eighty to seventy, and the excitement of rushing around in curbstone brokerage, and the sudden cri of "Buvcr three!" buyer ten!" Take "em!" "How many?" and the making or losing of 10,000 by one opera tion, unfits a man to go home, and so he goes up the flight of stairs, amid business offices, to the darkly curtained, wooden shuttered room, gayly furnished Inside, and takes his place at the roulette or the faro table. Hut I cannot tell all the pro cess by which men get into this evil. A man went to New York. He was a Western merchant. He weut into a gaming house on I'nrk place. Before morning he had lost all his money save rl , aud he moved around about with that dollar In his hand, and after awhile, caught still more powerfully under the Infernal Infatuation, he came up and put down the dollarand cried out until they heard him through the saloon, line thousand miles from home, ami my last dollar on the gaming table." Many years ago for sormouic purposes ami in company with tlie chief of police of New York I visited one of the most brilliant gambling houses In that city. It woe night, and as we came up In front all seemed dark. The blinds were down, the door was guarded, but after a whbqierlug of tho officer with the guard at the door we were admitted Into the hall, and thence into the parlors, around one table tin. ling eight or ten men In midlife, well dressed all the work going on In silence, save the noise of the rattling "chips" on the gaming table in one parlor and the revolving twill of the roulette table In the other parlor. Nome of thse men, we were told, hail served terms In prison, some were shipwrecked baukers and brokers and money dealers, and some were going their first rounds of vice but all intent ui on the table, as large or small fortunes moved up and dowu before them. Oh, there was something awfully solemn Iu the silence-the intense gaze, the sup pressed emotions of the players. No one looked up. They all hnd money In the rapids, and I have no doubt some saw, as they sat there, horses ud car riages, and houses and lands, mid home ami family rushiug down into the vortex. A man's life would not have been worth a farthing in that pres ence had he not been accompanied by the police if he had lieen supposed te fie on a Christian errand of observation. Home ol these men went by private key. -loine went in by careful Introduction. ine were taken in by the patrons of the establish ment. The oftleer of the law told me, "None gets in here except by police man date or by some letter of a patn n." Whtle Wb wero there a voung man ca lie In, put his money down on tiie roulette table and lost; put more money down on the roulette table nnd lost; put more money down on the roulette table and lost; thei feeling in his pockets for more money, lUdiug none, In severe silence he turned his back upon the sene and passed out. While we stood there men lost their proierty and lost their souls. Oh, merciless plane! (NotouceJn ill the history of that guininjr- house "uji5-" ;here been one word of sympathy uttered forthe losers at the game. Sometimes these gift enter rises are car--ied ou ill the name of charity, and some of foil remember at the close of our civil war low many gift enterprises were on foot, ;he proceeds to go to the orphans and jridows of the soldiers and sailors. What lid the men who had charge of those gift mterprises care for tho orphans and .vidows? Why, they would have allowed .hem to freeze to death upon their steps. : have no faith in a charity which for the inke of relieving present suffering opens a taping jaw that has swallowed down so nucli of the virtue and good principle of .he community. Young man, have nothing :o do with these things. They only sharpen four nppetitefor games of chance. Ho one f two things he homst or die. I have accomplished my object If I put ftuju tho lookout. It Is a greit deal -asier to fnii tiutu it is to get up again. The trouble is that when men begin to go ist ray from tho path of duty they are apt :o say: "There's no use of mv trying to get nnck. I've sacrificed my respectability, I nu't return." And they go on until they ire utterly destroyed. I tell you, my friends, that God this moment, by His Holy Spirit, can change your entire nature io that you will be a different man In a minute. Y'our great want what Is it? More salary? Higher social position? No, no. I will tell you the great want of every man if he has not already obtained It. it is the grace of God. Are there any who have fallen victims to the sin that I have been reprehending? You nre In a prison. You rush ngainst the wall of this prison and try to get out nnd you fall, aud you turn around and dash against the other wall until then" is blood on the grates and lood on your soul. You will never get out in this wnv. There Is only one way of tting out. Then' Is lm that can un lock that prison house. It Is the key of the house of David. It is tho key that Christ wears at His girdle. If you will sllow hi in to put that key to the lock, tho holt will shoot back, and the door will 4wing open, and you will lie a frte man ii Christ Jesus. Oh, prodigal, what a buri aess this is for you, feeding swine, when your fnther stands In the front door, strain- ng tils eyesight to catch the urst glimpse if your return, and the calf is as fat as ft will be, and the harps of heaven are all itrung, aud the feet free. Then are converted gamblers in heaven rhe light of eternity flashed upon tlie green tinize of their billiard saloou. In the laver f God's forgiveness they wushed oil all their sins. They quit trying for earthly stakes. They tried for heaven and won It. There stretches a hand from heaven toward the head of the worst offender. It Is a hand, not clinched as if to smite, but outspread as If to drop a benediction. Other seas have a shore and may be fathomed, but the sea of God's love teruity has no plummet to strike the bottom, and immensity no iroiitHiiiud more to confine it. Its tides are lirtou by the heart of infinite compulsion. Its waves are the hosamias of the redeemed. The argosi-s that sail ou it drop anchor it last amid the thundering salvo of i.ter- iiul victory. But alas for thnt muu who -itsdowh to the Dual game of life and puts his immortal soul on the see, while the nugelsofGod keep tie tally hoard, and af- kings and queens, and knaves, and spades are "shuttled" and "cut," aud the game is ended, hovering and Impending riils discovcrthut he has lost It, the faro bank of eternal darkness clutching down iutoits wutlet all ttie blood stained wagers. Among all the virtues, humility, the lowest, is preeminent, it is the safest. iecaue it is always an anchor; und thai man may Is- truly said to live the most out. n iu his calling who strives to live lthin the compass of it. People exaggerate so much that an ex- au'L'ciatiou is finally accepted us truth. The thouund-lccc d bug, which frightens so many iieople, hau'i to exceed lifty Icrs. 1 find the great thing in this world is, not so much where, we stand, as in what direction we are moving. I l.uli any wronged thee, lie bravely re velled. Slight it, and the work's licgun; forgive it, and 'tis finished, lie is lielow himself that is not above an injury. Men of tie- noblest il isMisit ions think IIm-iilscI ves happiest v In'n others share Iheir h tppinesi wiih lhni. When a girl liecomes engaged and wishes to keep it a secret, she always re fuses to slay all nielli with her "U-st friend," knowing the seeiet will be out sleep. Great souls attract sorrows as moun- I tains do storms. But the thunder clouds L break uoi them, and they thus form a I shelter for the plains around -Altogether thee arc I.OuO.fsjO mum- 1 iities in iyi't- i 4 'taSSaEKaUeUr-' xaatsasi