) 4 B. F. BOHWEIER, TUB CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW8. Rslltsscr aad aYcrarterrf. VO L. LI I MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 9.1898. NO. li. t f to CHATTER XXV. "n ur journey back to England we pent niiU'h time in speculating as to where Sir Laurence would so, and in what place we should srek him with the , greatest likelihood of Boding him. ltoth well's sanguine view of things alone kept me frmn feeling most miserable and frightened. On our arrival in town we went at once to Mr. tlrace. While we were there a telegraphic message wai brought to the solicitor. It was from the agent or steward at Estmere: "Sir L. has returned. lie is at the Dower House; ve:y ill and queer." The next train carried aa north. We had miles to drive from the nearest sta tion to the Dower House. It was day break before we reached our destinat:on. I'eople were astir in the house and we were soon received by the agent. He knew Lord Kothwell of old, and rpon hearing who I was, expressed his p'eas ure that I had at last come to the tome of my race. Mrs. Payne made her appearance. In a few words she tolu us what had hap pened. Sir Laurence had made .lis ap pearance at Estmere Court. Although so many years had elapsed since she had seen bim, Mrs. I'ayne recognized him at once. He said nothing to explain his sud den and unexpected visit. He wall'ed. in a dreamy kind of way, Bhe said, into the house, went straight to his wife's bed room, and finding it with the furniture all covered up, turned to thp house keeper, who had ventured to follow him, and asked if I-ady Estmers was at the Court. Mrs. Payne was almost too fright ened to reply, but managed to stammer out that her ladyship was from home "Ah, at the Dower House," said Sir Laurence. "I will go and join her. Tell them to saddle my horse." The good woman was at her wits' end. She stood staring at her master, tind be gan to wonder if he was an apparation. She hurried out and consulted her hus band. Both were much frightened and anxious to do their best to obey their master. It happened that a farmer who lived at a distance had that (lav ridden in to see some friends in the village, and being a careful man, who liked to save a shilling when he conld do so, had, by Payne's permission, stabled his Dorse in one of the outhouses about the Court. So John I'ayne decided to make free with his friend's horse. He saddled it, and brought it to the door. Sir L.iv.rence : prang to the saddle and dashed away at a beadlong pace. The Paynes started off at once, and tnade the agent afare of what stranj . things had happened. Ie lived in a hoUB 1 tftruriaw, of tbe Lnitemr3 letter or telegram had ifcntent- - few minutes his horse was harness in company with Mrs. Payee and servants, "he was away the Dower House to do the best he could. Sir Laurence was there, and frightened the old caretakers out of their lives. He had lcoked around and simply ordered .he house to be got ready, as if a staff of servants were at beck and call. It was evident that Sir Laurence meant to stay the night: a bedroom must be got ready, and to get a bedroom ready after a house had been shut up for more than twenty years is no easy task. Several times they beard Sir Laurence leave the room, and watched him go 10 the front door and look up the drive; he even went to the g:iies and gazed as if expecting some one who was to come by road. The night wore on. Sir Laurence made no further sign, and Mrs. Payne crept to the floor of the room, and listening, she fancied she heard him talking to himself. She opened the door, and saw at a glnnce that the P')..r dinner had not been touched, and moreover, she saw Sir Inurenee, looking wild and frenzied, stretching out his arms with passionate gestures and begging and calling on his wife to return to him. This is an extended version of Mrs. Payne's account of Sir Laurence Kst-n-ere's return to his home. It made both i,..r li..n.rs feel very anxious, and as I ,..,nln,i bis nresent condition with his sstrange behavior at Monaco, I feared that the strain of the last few days had un hinged my father's mind. I wished to go to him at once, but Rothwell decided it would be better to see the doctor first. He was in the house, having by Mr. P.lack's request undertaken to stay the night. Sir Laurence was very ill, he said-ue was feverish, but the fever was not se vere enough to account for his delirious and strange state. The doctor was grieved to be a prophet of evil, but he feared there was some mental injury; whether its effects would be temporary or permanent he could not at present Bay. One thing he was certain of as yet his patient was in no danger; we could see him. it might perhaps ease his mind to find his friends were about him. The doctor led us to my father's room. He lay with his eyes wide open; they looked dark, lustrous and eager. He tinned them on us as we entered the door, I tit I fancied their gaze passed over me and rested on Lord Kothwell; as his old friend approached him he raised himself in the bed and stretched out his hands. "Frank! Frank!" he cried; "is she here? Has she come with you?" "Not yet; she will soon come," answer ed Kothwell. "Father," I said, "do you know me?" "Yes, I know you you are my eldest son, but you have been with me all thronch the bitter black time. Now 1 want no son. I want my wife, my love! Cruel! Why have they kept her from uieV Dearest, the days have been long :so lone. Come!" lie was beginning to show signs of great excitement, but Roth well calmed him by repeating hla promise, "tjo at once, Laurence," he said, turn- inir to me. I pressed my father's hand and kissed his forehead; then I left the room. Koth well followed me very shortly, "Go to bed and sleep," he said; "drive over in the morning and catch the first train. I shall not see you before you go; I must stay with your father. When the time for my departure came I was rejoiced to hear he seemed no So loue as Kothwell was with bim he kept comparatively calm: so. hop ing for the best, I went to mane Known what had occurred to Lady Estmere, my mother. She was in Dorsetshire, staying with an old friend. I knew the name of the place and the name of the friend, but I had some trouble in finding out the best route. As it was, I made a mistake, or was misdirected, and found myself at 10 .clock at night more than twelve miles from my destination. Wltn some aiuitiu ty I obtained a conveyance, but tbe hors was tired, the road was hilly, so it wM yearly midnight when I stood before tM floor of the house at wnich my u.u.uer was a visitor. She cam to see me hastily. "Philip!" she said; "at this hour! What has hap pened? Tell me! Valentine that shoot ing " "v alentlne Is quite well. I have not seen him, but I heard of him a few days ago. "Dear Lady Estmere." I said, "how shall I tell you what has happened? 1 come from some one you loved one some one who has wronged yon and would atone, I an tbe bearer of a mes sage; ;ju bear it? A message oc pen-e.:i She laughed a strange little laugh. She drew her hand from mine so quickly that I could not intercept the movement. She stood up aid looked at me. "At last," she said, with bitterness in her voice. "It comes at last; after half a lifetime of scorn he condescends to send me a message a message. Perhaps 1 shall hear you add, a message of forgive ness, Mr. Norris?" "Far, far from it! Believe me, all is made clear to him. He knows how he wronged you by his suspicions knows he was the dupe of a crafty rogue." "He knows all this?" "All." "And he sends yon to me! This If the greatest wrong of all! If I have dreamed that one day he would know the truth, I dreamed also that on that day he would tome to me that his iips would be the torst to tell me. I thank you. Mr. Norris, for your good intentions; but your zeal was misplaced. Whatever you found 1 suppose might have been found by Sir Laurence had hn cared to look for it. We will discuss the matter no more. 1 will now say good-night a bed shall be pre pared for you." She was actually sweeping from the room. I went after her and caught her hand. "I have other news even stranger news." My voice must have betrayed my emo tion. She turned and looked at me in wonder. "I have seen your eldest son,' I said "I.aurence Estmere." She trembled and leaned her hand on the tub'i?. "Valentine is my son," she said. "1 have no other. "Yes," I cried passionately, "yoa have. One who will love you even as Valentine loves you; one who has never known a mother's love has never known his moth er lived nntil m few days ago. One who rrom bis cbildfljod has passed nnde a false name. Ob, cannot yon eearv " I fatner were bidding talr to become such I friends. As to the change 'n my own circumstances "That matters little." she said. "I loved Philip Norris I shall love Laurence Estmere." For which assertion I thanked her la the only possible way. I stayed at Cheltenham for a week; during which Claudine and I settled the month, if not the day, when we were to be married. Then I went back to Derby shire. I saw very little of my father and mother. - While I was absent they had settled upon going abroad for two or three months. They were to go alone. Even Valentine was not to accompany them, but when they came back they were to come back to Estmere Court. I told them what I had arranged with Clandine. My father assented to my wishes as though tbe matter had been foreseen all along. He only stipulated that Estmere Court should be our home. If I should have preferred commencing housekeeping on my own account, I dared not hint at uch a thing in my case, my mother's appealing eyes would have turned the scale. So they left us. My mother. In spite of her snow-white hair, looking as fair as a bride bound on her honeymoon. I told her so, and she blushed aa vividly as a young girl might blush. Valentine and I were commissioned to see that everything at Estmere Court was in readiness for their return. We spent many delightful days in our future home. We reveled in the long-hidden treasures which were brought to light, and carefully checked off on a bulky Inventory brought down by one of Mr. Grace's young men. Cabinets of the rarest porcelain, chests of exquisite old plate, hundreds and hundreds of price less treasures accumulated by a long line of men of taste. To watch all these brought out of their hiding-places, and, at the command and pleasure of a gen tleman sent from London for the pur pose, arranged in their proper stations in cabinets, was indeed a labor of love to Valentine and to me. Claudine and I were married very quiet ly at Cheltenham, and then went off for a long, rambling, delightful honeymoon. moving from place to place at our own sweet will, and with no purpose except to enjoy ourselves. When we thought we bad neglected our friends at home aa long as we dared, we turned our faces to our new home, Estniere Court. Kothwell made one more journey, wrote one more book; then retired on his laur els. He has done up, and in a fashion refurnished, Mirfield, but, after all, he spends more time at Estmere Court than at home. He is essentially the friend of the family always welcomed when he arrives, regretted when he de parts. There is no Lady Kothwell; and, to the best of my belief, there will be none. His title will die with him, and he will leave his broad lands to Valentine but may that day be far distant. I will not forget to add that I kept my promise to the dying woman, Mrs. Mer ton. Although I did not care to see them again, and although I kept tbe source of their supplltw a secret, the boy and -'- Wirt' Jookefl after fcnti? the latter 1 't? housekeeper. ' m. "rT00 w" " rbuildi ttfh ion. -Jrimd F e5SS"e6Vf-ri VWmA. The! defendant rie jng. VL! iiii : -1 rs- ... ,miilia though YyfrTvulU I' t "'1' -T.f .H 1.1.1 A.ii jtant. tmmn one-or ".. . . . ,, . l ;-r, " --- Why do I come from Sir Laarence Estmere!" I cried. "Because sir Lau rence Estmere and my father are one because I am your son! Oh, mother, my sweet mother! think even in my earliest childhood I can remember no mother's kiss or love! Kiss me, my mother; love me and bless me! Mother," I whispered, "sweet mother, you will come with me, yon will come to my father." "I cannot I cannot, he must come to me." "You will come, my mother. Shall I tell.jou how I left him? He is at the house from which he drove yoa forth. He is delirious he is calling night and day for you you only. Come and save him." It was enough; no argument, no appeal was needed. Rothwell had predicted truly: the picture I drew swept all wrong and suffering from her heart. Had it been possible, she would have started at once for her husband's bedside; as it was, it was arranged that we should com mence our journey the first thing in tbe morning, On the way to the Dower House we had inquired as to the health of ray fath er and learned that his condition was cer tainly no worse. So our fears on that score were allayed. Lord Rothwell was at the door to welcome us. My mother drew her arm from mine and held out her hand to him. He took it and pressed it to his lips. "Old friend, she said, "your propnecy has at last been fulfilled.' He stooped, and, as a brother might have done, kissed her forehead, whisper ing some words I could not catch, fche divested herself of her mantle ana Don net. she smoothed her beautiful thick white hair, and, womanlike, glanced at the mirror. "Take me to my husband, she said I followed. The door opened. They nnssed through; she left Lord Rothwell s side and glided to the bed. My father lav there, sleeping calmly. Sne clasped t-or hAnds and gazed at him. then she turned to Rothwell, with an Inquiring, enirer look. He nodded. She bent over the sleeper, and her lips touched his fore head. His eyes opened. He raised his head, and with a rapturous cry of joy threw his arms around her. He drew her face to his and covered it with -erce kisses. "Mcrcaret! mv sweet my wife! So many years dark and dreary! Cruel Cruel T' Kothwell took my arm. The tears were streaming from his eyes and his voice was broken by emotion. "It is enough" he said; "let us leave them so." We crept fom the room and closed the door behind us. Such a meeting as this was too sacred for even a son to wit ness; but I felt that until life were ended nothing would again part Sir Laurence Estmere and his wife. CHAPTER XXVI, Whether mv father's malady waa men' tal or Bodily, his recovery, so far as we could see. was a rapid one. lie was able to Ion r. his room and take out-of-door exercise. Indeed, I was able to assure! my mother that of recent years 1 naa never seen him look better. I was not present at the first interview he had with Valentine. My brother told me he called him to his side, and, holding his hand, expressed his delight at finding his son snch a credit to his race. He spoke most affectionately, and expressed bitter regret that a cruel misfortune should have compelled them to remain strangers for so long. The future should make up for the pnst. His words were sweet and kind, but yet were invested with a certain dignity which forbade hla youngest son to pass, judgment on what had occurred. Valentine left his pres ence pleased. Claudine cried for joy when she heard of her aunt's reconciliation to her nus band; so toll, so complete. She was da lighted to hear that Valentine and his mn.t sneak of them together. Tt is Im possible - now to disassociate them. Claudine cites his tenderness and devo tion to my mother whenever sne is pleased to accuse me of neglecting any thing due to her as my wife. If the ftermath can atone for tne ruinea Har vest, my mother will call her life a happy one. tie seems una me io uear :irr ou- sence for an hour. It is only when she s with him that his smile is a perfectly nppy one. Her every wish is fore stalled, her every thought anticipated. Everything must be done for her com fort and delight He will not enter pub ic life, because its duties would take him from her side. In the struggle for i such fame I am to be his delegate. Ches- ham's name he has never breathed, lie does not know that Kothwell and I wit nessed that fearful act of justice. 1 ver ily believe that during the time he was akiug his revenge he knew notning: inai he acted as a somnambulist might nave acted, that the tragedy faded from his memory, or that it had never been fully impressed on it. Kothwell and I talked it over, and came to the conclusion that only two people in the world knew the particu lars of Chesham s fate, hir Laurence Estmere, though accountable for it, knew nothing of what his hand had done. We live a quiet life at Estmere Court. My father and mother feel that the friends of their youth have drifted out of sight, and they have now arrived at that rge when new friendships sre rarely made. My father's position in the county compels him to mix to a certain extent in society. The obligations of courtesy are amply fulfilled, and there the matter ends. There are times when I watch him anxiously when I feel that if the past is obliterated, or forced aside, its traces are still left. Even now he is scarcely past the prime of life, yet in many things he is an old man. 1 notme a cnange every time I return to Estmere Court after an interval of absence, and my heart feels sad, as something tells me that many years will not elaspse before my father and mother must bid each other adieu forever when the treasure saved at last from the wreck of their former happi ness must, be assigned; when 1 shall see that sweet, grave face smile no more; when those eyes which have always looked on me with love shall be closed forever. Heaven grant that I deceive myself! The day which makes me Sir Laurence Estniere will be the darkest and bitters; day my life has known. IThe end.) A now Invention for preventing vee- els from sinking after being damaged by collision waa recently exhibited. An Iron model of a cargo ship was placed In water, after having been loaded with bricks. Then a hole, immense in size compared with the miniature Tea sel, was opened at the aide. When the water bad risen to a torel with the deck, a number of gutta-percha bags. fixed under the deck, were Inflated with carbonic acid gas, and tbe vessel niiuost immediately began to rise. The name Ceramic has been given by a French inventor to a new building stone obtained by hint from broken glass. The glass broken bottles, win dow panes, etc. Is reduced to powder. different kinds are mixed If variegated color is desired, and the pulverized ma terial is devltriflexl by passing succes sively through two furnaces, the sec ond being one of high temperature. The pasty mass la then passed under a press, which give It shape and consistence. The use of electrically nested Irons In laundries, shirt factories and other places where a considerable amount of ironing is done Is said to be general ly appreciated as a great Unprorazoeut on the old system of gas heating. Two Irons are used aa a rule, no tlnve being lost in work, other than pi uMlnaj. and In summer, with the gas, the atmos phere of a pressing room become al most ln&uffercble. The only remedy for this overheating seems to be alec trie Irons, and It la a remedy that is being wisely considered. One of tbe latest applications of the pelf-mowing motor is to the lawn mow er. The new machine, aa described In tbe Scientific American, reu on three rollers, which serve both for car rying the engine, the cotters and the driver, and for smoothing and leveling the surface of the lawn. A four-horsepower gasoline engine la employed, and all the movements of tbe machine are controlled by means of two hand- wheels placed In front of the driver's seat. Some persons find difficulty in under standing bow, since the imagea of ob ject looked at are Inverted In tbe eyes, we nevertheless see the object right Id tip. Recent experiment yw.Xr. rrt5e fndlcate , that w pass .a an - I -AJ Jiesn. BalthasAh LiAirvEit, which rTred everything wltfiin I v reach of hi vyas, so that, for Mm, the ground was above and ths sky below, while thing on tbe right were seen on the left, and thing on the left ap peared on the right. Continuously for eight daya he ware the glasses, and within that time all his bodily move ments became adjusted to the new or der, so that he could walk th streets without much difficulty. Much interest baa been awakened in England by tbe discovery of a prehis toric lake Tillage near Glastonbury. The dwelling were placed on mound of clay raised above the level of '.he water. The framework of a primitive loom wa found nnder one-mound, and tbe number of broken bone needles and bone splinters discovered In another mound led the explorers to think that It may have been the site of an ancient nAdle factory. Very fw human bones have been discovered, but unions the Interesting finds I a blue gloss bead, with a waving dark Hue running around It. One of the mounds contains three hundred tons of clay, all of wL'.ch must have been dug from the surrounding hlH and carried to tbe vpot In boats. to enjoy hrgely. A broken leg ror as ostrich means a death sentence. Pari Figaro. HISTORY Of- HORSESHOEINO. aattqaitr of ths Craft and the In portance of Its Followers. Ths recent strike of horseshoe rs in London, which - was happily of short duration, may serve to call to memory some facts and tradition that go t prove the high antiquity of ths craft and Its Immense Influence on the prog res of civilization, as far as tbe ser vices of ths horses are concerned In ad vancing the Interests of mankind. Though the horseshoer Is very often if not generally, designated, f arrler,H yet this term is misleading nowadays, If It ever was correct I J Indicating hit special function. The faber ferrarius, from which tin term "farrier" Is doubtless derived, was a worker In Iron of any kind oi fashion, and though In the earliest periods of his history he shod horses and forged various weapons and othei articles, yet the designation of "smith" was usually applied to him In this coun try, and when be began to be called t farrier his vocation was more that of a shoer of horses, and later thcil physician and surgeon in addition. The antiquity of the horseshoer Is, states Gsorjs Fleming, writing In tin London Live Stock Journal, coeval with theorlglnof the art, which is lost in tht mist of 2,000 year. In Western Eu rope it was probably known to th Celtic trile8 at a very remote time, and It may be that the Druid priests wer the teachers of horseshoeing in thosa days, as they were the men who wer best acquaint wrth the primitive arti and science, a knowledge of whlcj they contrlred to surround with a veil of mystery that clnng to these for cen- tarle. The horsoshoer was, in ths early centuries of our era, evidently oonaMersd a mysterious kind of work man, who punned his calling In a welrd-llke manner in a place where n one was allowed to enter until tbe steed was shod. It la certain that for hundreds ol year the shoer was an Important per sonage, as he held a high social posi tion and enjoyed certain special priv. Ileges In this country long before tin Norman Invasion. This is shown lu the Welsh triad of laws, which wen revised by Howell the Good in A. I). 911, but which were doubtless in fore long before that date. In these lawi and regulations the court smith, whili In tbe palaca, was allotted a seat at th end of the bench, near tbe priest of tli; household, and he was protected from the time he began work in the morn ing until he left at night. He was tf be presented with clothe for what hi did for the officer of the palace; he wai entitled to the first liquor that cam 1st the tiall, and be was to hare food for himself and servant from the palj 7vf tae r.eaos and feet of n I I THE LITTLE PICKANINNY. Fn Tatars Knew How It Waa and Sa laaaad Jake. There was an unusual scene In the Recorder's court the other day. A ne gro man was before its bar on a churgo of drunkenness. Judge Calhoun, who has a wonderful memory In such mat ters, recognised an old offender In tho darkey. "Jake," said he, "this Is the third time you're been here this year." The negro scratched his head and shifted his bat from one hand to tho other. "Yasser, dat's so;, it sh' is. But derc ar yutber times Is done gone by, and dish yere time well, suit, dish yere time is bran' new." "Well, you were drank each tlm." remarked the Judge, frowning. "Yasser, I sho' wuz. I speck I had da same ol' wabble, but de' caslon wuj bran' new." "It's always some excuse," said the judge, "but I want you to understand that I'm tired of seeing you here on u charge of drunkeness." "Well, suh " "No. I don't want to hear yonr ex cuses. It' drunk, drunk, drunk, untj even the stockade is tired of you." "But, Jedge," protested the negro, looking around uneasily and lowerin,; his voice, "de 'scuse what I got now ain't so mighty big. but it look liku ter me dat it's a mighty good one." "Well, out with It." "Hit's des a baby, Jedge." "A what?" "Des a little baby, suh." "Well, what has that got to do wtf.Ti It?" asked the Judge, his manner show tag iv little curiosity. j "Hit's at my house, suh. Yesserl hit's dnr right now, an' I bet you ef 'taint sleep It's a-hollerin." Uncertain as his position was, the negro chuckled. Tbe Judge regarded the darkey with a relenting eye, playing with a slip of paper on bis desk. "Well, what of it?" His Judicial In dignation had disappeared. "Well, suh, hit was dls away: Ds las' time I went out er disb yer place, I say ter myself I ain't gwlne tetch no more dram, 'kase I done foun' out dat 'taln't uio'n a half hour frum de mouf er de bottle ter de rock pile. I ERMOMS OF THE DAY The f.lfTtnth or the New York Ilerald'l Competitive Sermons is on "The Sin of IeapiMlng Others" Dr. Talinac I'reacues on " Traps For the Unwary." "He thatdespiseth hlsnelghborsinneth.' Jrov. xiv., 21. There is a great doal of sin in the world which the ordinary conscience neither recognizes nor condemns. With most ot us tbe standard of ri;ht and wronjr is purely conventional. If we do not break tho letter of tins '1'en Commandments; it we keep clear of acts which public opinion forbids; if we maintain a character upon which society sots no brand, tuen we feel at peace within ourselves and make sure that we are Uod's elect. W'e do not see what subtle and far-reaching things Rood and evil are bow they in terweave themselves into all our sets, our words and motives, and secret thoughts even; and how they depend, not upon the lasuion of tho hour or the place, but upon eternal and unchangeable principles. An enlightened and sensitive conscience would see sin in a thousand things which pass with the majority as indiilerent, if not actually praiseworthy. It is not lu nice points of religious olwervance that places our moral character above suspicion half so much as in those weightier mutters of justice and mercy and truth which are in voLved in all the business and intercourse of daily life. Thousands who would trem ble to participate in any of the so-called amusements of society, and who aro as strict and osteutatious Pharisees in regard to and other duties, are yet living in such an) atmosphere of uncharitiibleness and wrong that they are actually further from tho kingdom of heaven than the very puhli cans and harlots. In a terse, direct and emphatic way a Xonn of guilt is pointed out by Solomon which we seldom think of, yet which we are all very prone to full into, and which is one of the peculiarly heset-i tings sins of that large class of men who are disposed to he religious without heiug godly. The ouief characteristic, of theso people is to trust in themselves that thev are righteous, and to treat others in a way I which unmistakably declares. "Stand ulooli j for we are holier than you," and they are ! iiveu to into.vi'-a j so far from thinking such spiritual haiight- I tn" devastating ! iuess sinful that they regard it us uu actuu( ' proof of their divino soushio. Such con. duct never fails to insure moral resentment and to elicit the rebuke, "lie that despis-i etu his neighbor siuneth." The parable of tbe tiood Samaritan sup-, plies a most beautiful explanation of thd word "neighbor." It teaches that every! man with whom we come in contact or re lation is to be regarded and treated as our "neighbor." The fact that 1 know of a man s existence, and that I can in any way teach aud inlluenue hhn, isenotigh to bring me under resnousibilitv in regard to hinr. been sl.lf.i. Ir my text .lo:tatl.nn ; his awful mistake: "f ili.l I j honey with the end of t he r i'i i my hund, and lo, I nr-i.i .!;."' multitudes of people in all j damaged by forbiMen (i,.:, -v. ' v mean temptation, le!i.-io.j ;':i ! hut damaging and ile.'.rti ..-. Corrupt literature. Fa', " i, ' fill, comes in this call gm-y. good, honest. Iiealthntt l, -o ; , there is a huudre-l mao- un ji i trash consumed v.-i't.!i avMhy. Corrupt literature i- ,!oi ;- r: , for the disruption of tin u.rl.."e other cause. Ki"j,-'!:,-:iN. trigues, sly coin--: '., names given nt pos, ot.:,-,- w i-i-f, destine meetings in p.ri-. . i,'t gates, and in hotel i-ar.-.r-. a , 1 perjuries are among tne rn; , i When a woman, voitng or t ' i. a y I-!-- bead thoroughly Mn.re. ' novel she is in app-uli-i g p. n wealth of good ):.-- c-i-i.i our publishing lion - i.mt , fortho choice of that. v,-:i; -!i to body, mind an-l oi:l. ligent man or woman an-' books that will I"- stre'ig! mental and moral 4hort and votir time i, r ; abbreviated that you ,.. up with husks, an 1 -i-:-! w- j Stimulating Imii:-.- a , j sategory of temptat i ii I ful. You say, ""I eauno' ! : intoxicating liquor, nt. I ; like it is to me a j then, It is no ere,! it toy,,: : ! take it. Ilo not l-rag a .' ! stinence, because it is rt-.i : I pie that you reject a: : reason that v..ii r : -t as tho ! ioou you stn.j iy .1 , n t praver ! them, lint inn It it 'i -i--s ., aiurui ioinme-s I-r a:: cants. They lil:e it , them smack their lips i i i are dyspeptic ami they i;:;, tion; or they arc a'. y. i ind they take it to nr . 1 i re troubled, and t them oblivious: or t;r-v they must celebrate i:.e,r begin with mint juiep straws ill the Long Ji'ra la the ditch, takivg fr half keronennd hair v.- Out H-.nil'l supj-.-i- t' warning from sou.e ,i t r: .4.. Hnt T .l t lite brO.'lll At lllltli- muv l-ll Kutnru.,n umuc u o uij ujiu uu uai, au l uvil it , . ' ' -" " " , nuuict-yLuuemsami uurnmg aeseris anil deadly swamps may separate us: but if dar 'twd las' night. Well, suh, when I got home fum work, dey wu a nls- ger 'onion dnr, bustlln' 'rijund. 'Hello, here! what kinder doln's is dls? I nin't no mo'n got de words out'n my mouf fo' I hear sunp'n blatln' un' dt kivver like a teeny nanny goat. An' de nigger 'oman she up an' 'low, you got a baby, if you but know'd It.' "Well, sab, dey sorter tu'n down de counterpln", an' dar be wuz, des ei natch ul es you please. He wunk at me a tisoe er two, an' d ' he 'gun ter blate. I start ter pic' fo(im " up, suh. ha wis de fust, "klest. Ihovfl In the Gwentlan code of these laws It is stated that the smith was to sit in a chair near the Judge beside a col umn, and this column was to be strucii by the sllentiary on the side farther I from the king when commanding si lence. Among the Anglo-Saxons thi shoer was also held In high esteem, anj would appear to have received certain possessions in land through his craft, Such was the case with Ganielhere. ol Welbeck, Nottinghamshire, at the No; man Invasion, as he held certain lend on condition that he shod the kiug'-i horses whenever the latter visited iht Manor of Mansfield. To Simon St. Llx, a Norman nobl man who accompanied him In bis in vasion, WUliam the Conqueror gavj the town of Northampton and tlx whole hundred of Falkloy, to provius shoes for his horses, while anothet follower, Henry de Ferrers, or Fan arils, had bestowed on him the honoi of Tutbury, In the country of Stafford. because he was Intrusted with the shoe ing; of the king's horses, or perhaps th control of the shoer. me Toiiili; an' say I bet? say business." Here the Judge took off his glasses and rubbed them carefully, leaned his elbow on the code, and rested his head on bis hand. There was almost a smllo on his face as he asked: "And what did you do then, Jake?" The negro scratched his head and laughed sheepishly. "Well, suh, d:ir I wuz, a grown man wid a baby and can't put his ban's on It. I had mighty quare feelin's. I want to go in dar. an' der I skeered her. I know'd I wanted ter do sunipln but I duimcr know what. I feel so good, I say I'll des take one dram In comtnenbnuce er dfc baby. Well, suh, I tuck It, an' ft you don't know de res", ae pieecem in lar kin tell you. cleared his throat, anl tried to frown, but tne rrown was a ; failure. . Jake," he said, "you can go mis time. Your excuse is not a goou one. but I think I know how you relt. I have a boy at my house a fine one." "I boun' 'tis, suhr exclaimed Jace. "The finest boy on my side of town) It la admitted by everybody. I know what your temptations were. I resist ed and you didn't. Go and behav yourself. Call the next case!"-At. lanta Constitution. Ioe Sailln r on Skates. Sailing on skates is very popular in rotue localities. The skater crosses two sticks, binds them and covers them with canvas, making the whole aboul six feet by one or two in extent. H places this sail against his back and runs his arms through the sticks so as to hold it. With a good wind he can go twenty miles an hour over smooth Ice, and h? can tack and beat agalust the' wind, just as in sailing a boat. It is very exciting, but It requires som daring to start in, as the rapidity of the skater Is apt to terrify the man who has never tried it. -In skating with the wind one's eyes water, but one t an see quite well enough to avoid holes. There would be little chance of being saved if you did blow In. However, It is an easy thing to blow across a three foot hole In going at a high rate ol spet-d. It is very evcitlng (.port, and verv little practice Is required though It demands comparatively smooth Ice for eood skating. If an obstruction Is met your fall is pretty hard. Winter. Merry, though the moon shines pale And the wind-tossed branches wail; Purest crystals float and fall; There they sparkle. Here they darkle. On the pine and lonely walL K-Tn mar uoticeil, lor instance, t taurants are cnlie I i 3t the fact that it ;.nt- : in the shade, and Pis ,., ind his prosje rily in i, wife and children i:i t : mortal destiny in t!:-- -on some of the ii'pior the words '-Old ( ro v, .' ot the carcass ami t -r jwoops upon it. M' n ; Qumber slain of ruin, this evil is peeking mi lud pecking nt th'-ir i pecking nt tln ir d womanhood, thru-Mag :he mortal remains susly alive, but n-nv n Crow!" Hut alas' iimr , :ng. .Remember ...: 1 there is any channel of communication be tween us any electric current, so to speak, by which svmi.athv mav be created hih! love may act that mun is as trolv mv ! 2H honey in tl neighbor as if we met in the same market' Furthermore,!! or lived iu the same street. ! must be put in tli Notice what it is to despise ourneighbor. ! hctous but il".-:ri:-' To entertain mean and contemptuous ' trossed the ocean n: , thoughts of our neighbor is obviously to ! l,at always oneoi th despise him. We should ahvavs remember I morning until late at mui mere is vasny more in common than there is of difference between the highest and more cultured and the lowest and most ignorant. Frequently, however, we forget i rooioy to get their bagga this, and from mere diversity of outward or railroad station, circumstances we look unon each nthr i State Legislatures iiav with feelings of haughty superiority and sanctioned the mig! vuuioiu i, ajj a conseuueE ti" ipn and iu u"ru?c ui rm: to gambling iraeti, who went on boa M European excursion iv 1 1 : w : : mat 7 1 1 ml-.. . mnu by the name of Paul was re cently executed in a Western city, and at latest accounts sixteen of the county papers had spoken of the affair "hanging like a Paul" over the comma nlty. Boston Courier. The Bant for ttnhappini Tis folly to be wise Where ignorance is bliss. But suspicious women who Search their husband's pockets throngk Never thing, nlns, of thisl Hardly Synonymous. Smith Say, old man, can yoa let m have $10 for a day? Jones No; but I can let yon have $1 for ten days. Same thing, you know. Judging from the experience we have as we grow older. Providence seems to have saved ua from some awfully queer reasons. Close your ear to slander. I your lips to praise. Opei Keops His Vow. Once-a year the residents of San Leandro, Col., witness spectacle which Is strange for these days, al though such things may have been common enough several hundred years ago when people performed all sorts of queer acts as peas nee. Seventeen years ago Mrs. Louisa imams nuc ha nd was stricken blind, and she vow ed that if his sight were restored she would walk on her bare knees from her home to the church once a year to give thanks for his relief. Her hus band regained his sight, and the wom an ha kept her row ever since, and Is to be seen once a twelvemonth travers ing a quarter of mile of atony road on her knees. South Africa's Curse. Tbe South Africa colonists have got rid of their lions and elephants, but tbey have not yet been able to get the better of the baboons, a oaooon, al though somewhat like a dog, has all the mlscblevousness of a man. It Is the ugliest animal In all creation The Boers call him Adonis and never des ignate him under the official name that has been given to him by science. Now, this creature Is the curs of the Caps Colony. He commits depredations for the lovs of the thing. Any Impudent tomcat that venture too far away from home Is sure to be captured and strangled for fun by a baboon. Near- Iv all the Angoras, the choicest and most costly animals Imported by tne rolonlsts, have been destroyed by these huge monkeys. Even the dogs share the same fate. The bravest and most pugnacious of the English canlnj breeds are unable to cope with adver saries armed with Just as powerful laws and with the Immense advantage of having four hands Instead of four jaws. With a dexterity that consplc ously exhibit It surgical aptitude, the baboon bleed his enemy In the throat and In less than a minute the duel ends In the death of the dog. One of the principal amusements of these big monkeys la to gambol around the wire fences that protect the tame ostriches Just to terrify them. The panic among them Is so great that they often break their legs in their wild rushes. This Is a oastlm which ths monkey seems Midwinter In the Northwest. Through all the dreary days the cold raint pour, Aad winter's chilling gnats make aullei moan; Their outstretched arms the tall pinei raise and lower, As if to silence that deep monoton. N clear bird-voices thrill the solemt wood. And save tbe wailing wind there is ni sound; Where once the lilies In white beautj stood The rotting leaves now rebe the soddei ground. Tba slim, dead cedars standing on thi height Seem bony fingers pointing to tbe sky; The maDle-treea ah, what a woefu sight! Mere skeletons that ever strive to die. We look in vain for glowing sun at morn At evening watch the dark blot ont thi day. And greet, mayhap, tbe old moon, pah and worn A groping ghost half seen through fold of gray. Woman's Home Companion. Cost of Woman's Grrb. While the New York papers bav, been discussing why men do not marry a society woman of that city says thiv. no woman can be really wU dresset on less than $25,000 a year. Aa Ambltnona Term. Tommy Paw, teacher wants us t give a definition of a patriot. Mr. Flgg WelL a patriot Is a mas who does something for his country, oi does his country for something. I are not Just sure which. Indianapolis Journal. The Happy Man. It Is said, to console a man who h loses his money, that he is now In posi tion to find out who are his friends That is no consolation; a man Is happi est when be doesn't have to know who his friends are. Atchison (Kan.) Globe " t sometimes under- - . r J0jine men havtjlost all fi'.-r . I.1 mi.niimffirt .1. I i . 71 -J-- sJ '-,,! 1 tne low., J-.'- vaiueanamsu , vrl l.ir. :;:.r T j great, and ascribe all their importance I ffa,-- -eiu.i- ... oi mid inrr ,,,!-,, is y i It must be V. o. Stock ;uitr::j , r ... , solely to their wealth and rank. 8urely, In sou Is. cnaea tl.ia is desr.isinir their neighbor .atoCK-gammin , ..;.' ,i.i i ..i. ki I Hogue forgetting their common humanity, their common dignity and their common origin. To treat your neighbor with IndifTereuce, ; as if there were no ties binding you to gether, and no sympathy due from one to the other, is to "despise him. The affini ties of human nature are such thnt it Is treason to place ourselves In proud isola tion from the race to which we naturally belong, and gaze upon the sufferings and helplessness of our kind with stoi.-al in difference. Such conduct is not only rep rehensible, it is actually sinful. It is sin ful because it is a great wrong done to bumuiiitv. It rouses within man bitter, bad. resentful feelings, which sets class against class. Its tendency is to destroy self-respect, and let n man once lose thnt an l there is no telling what he may be come. Again, to despise one's neighbor is an cftenee ae.viitst social unity. Th social organis e caa only be held" together by a true uud proper recognition of the useful ness and necessity of each individual to the whole. Society is one body. Its mem. hers are manifold, but they are all knit to get her iu the closest bonds. There is no such thing as real independ ence. And hence for any man to despise, his neiuhhor is Just as wrong and foolisu as it would be for the head to say to the feet. "I have no need of you; for his in iluence, as far as it goes, operates to the disorganization of society to the break ing up of that unity aud sympathy upon which the general hapiuess nnd well being depend. Despising your neighbor is to sin ngainst your own soul. By such con duct the great forces ever operating for the formation of your own character and into the small sum of mot ing out a fortnne. Mnay houest and safe l iisii: s ket, and you are an . not know that it is j n-; a in stocks ns it is to .1. ,, or flour. i!ut ne ir,v . go there on a '' all. The old s . pecting tties. 1 t hand on his hip-, stance: "I have r. : hundred ami I'f'.y :l..n. home is to-dav eni:,! matter? St' ei-gamo;; gambling, whether stuffs, or dice, or Exhilaration at t!i brain, and a shatter, a saerilieed property it the last. Young tickets, purchase no on no base-ball g i io have no faith iu lu !:.:;:. circulars, proposing gr investments, drive a-v:i hover around our !i. ' strangers. Go oat a living. Have io l on candidate for ln-av "i. I paths of sin are ba-;:;o I start, nnd there are to fetch the gay ehnrg hold the stirrup whi! further on the horse i a slough incxtric-iMo. The best honey Jonathnu took on tn brought to his li; -. i 'O 'he -,,ie cnt ,o i:'; -;.T i: g to go 1. lie .'--U :!lg r. -'.i,i,-' '-;' : k- ' a r- : a ii . : : r at " - r. v, . .it i, his Wis It is not difficult for a man to be a woman' ideal If he lives lu anothei State. There are usually a few flies on tb honeyed phrases of lovers. It was originally Intended to ha neat music sung by the choir. . . . , - .1 ..... nw.a ,. ! puis ou me pan V' """'.VA which we are ail This offence is also a sin against God. Humanity Is His child the outcast nnd the sinful as well as the poor. If you des- Lise his child, He says: "Inasmuch as ye ave done it unto one of the least of these, ye have done It unto Me." YV. II. Kf.ksiiaw, Tastor First Congregational Church, Park Kidge, X. J. TRAPS FOR THE UNWARY. Various 1' ilfnll" Br. by the Rev. man may sit at the will he go down the sti the refuse and lor.es 'Sweeter than honey -i. says David, is tne i 5tonev out oi the r i -k e. thee," says t;.. 1 i Is honey gathered ;r. trees of life, and wii Ihe wood of the ( r your souls. laoFical Ter " ing t. Merry, though the stream is sti':! 'Neath the cold and trackless hill; There the realms of Hesper glow; Tw ilight lingers. Shining fingers Gild the sleeping fields of snow. -Woman's Home Companion. Tea Names Have Meaning;. "Pekoe," in the Canton dialect, means -white hair," and for this kind of tea the very youngest leaves of all are gathered, so young that the whHe down of babyhood Is still upon thorn whence their name. "Congo" means "labor;" considerable trouble and pains are taken In Its preparation at Amoy, and these are perpetuated In It name. "Bo hca" Is named after a range of hills In I o-Kien; "Souchong" expresses no sen timent, but a bold fact, being Canton- ese for "the small kind;" "Hyson" sig nifies "II parish! ng soring." Kx posed Talinnge. Text: "I did but taste a little honey with the end of the rod that was In my hand, and, lo, I must die." 1 Samuel xiv., 43. The honey bee is a most ingenious archi tect, a Christopher Wren among insects; geometer drawing hexagons and penta gons, a freebooter robbing the fields of pol len nnd aroma, wondrous creature of God whose biographv, written by Huber and Swamrrerdam, is an enchantment for any lover of nature. Do you know that the swarming of the bees is divinely directed? The mother bee, starts for a new home, and because of this the other bees of the hive get into an ex citement which raises the heat of the hive some four degrees, and they must die un less they leave their heated apartments, and they follow the mother bee and alight on the branch of a tree, and cling to each other and hold on until a committeeof two or three bees have explored the region and found the hollow of a tree or rock not far off from a stream of water, and they here set up a new colony, and ply their aromatiq industries, and give themselves to the manufacture of the saccharine edible, but who can tell the chemistry of that mixture of sweetness, part of it the very life of the bee. and part of it the life of the fields? rienty of this luscious product was bang ing in the woods of Bethaven during the time of Saul and Jonathan. Their army -. in roii-snit of an enemy that by Gods command must be exterminated. The soldiery were positively forbidden to stop to eat until the work was done. If they dJsobsyed they were accursed. Coming through the woods they found a plaes where the bees had been busy a great honey manufactory. Honey gathered ig the hollow of the trees until it had over, flowed upon the ground in great profusion of sweetness. All the army obeyed orders and touched it not save Jonathan.and he not knowing the military order about abstin ence dipped the end of a stick he had in his hand into the candied liquid, and as yellow and tempting It glowed on the end of the stiok he put it to his mouth and ats the honey. Judgment fell upon him, and but for special intervention he would have The Agile Vt The moment tli.-a tt J breaks its shell it is to purposes as active :i It during its life. It o ol for the water, even if it h find a good distance ff. a ill g T-a,.i-i'e ll'etKS illlll is at aii.v t ini" bitiko strai.-ht otir or" iigiit 1 it will pur sue Its prey with eagerness nnd agility duriug the Orst hour of its free ex.is.t-enee. Cuit lire nl' r a n t y Just a blossom or : .-, .. screen leu vis. vlILi: It: oa ii.i 'Serfully. Teach t In- '.;!-!r.-i In clover lil.a.th.s ,i .! ; I .. the stra-'eful see I leads. ;:' m oner flowers, it wui . beauty in small things the most of tlielr aitrton tngton Star. 1 mi !i: il 1 in-ill ami to lings. MiJijt e U nil llflllg . with ti-it to see ma lie Wash. r He Thc.n.:hl It I"! o "Don't use poor s. a;,." i Patettie from the pa per iv "poke-out" had been iio, had been -writin' that," he "I think I would hae loft out word 'pore.'" Cinciuu.it! Kn'p.it er. It I i'e-l. I!ig Pr ! I'.-:- a !;.. v.-i-r. A New York li -r : I p.iol sjm.im'ii for the sole rights to the .Michigan carna tion known as "Mur 11a." It is a very large flowefof a deep reij color. Tommy Sny. Molllo". I w ish I bad 10 eent3 to got Rome eau.iy with. .Mollle--Go and ask fa I her who Socrates was nnd what Is meant by the differential calculus. He's got company, and I shouldn't wonder if he gave you a quar ter. Boston Transcript. J 1 isFical as4 I ---is- ' ( X: J -vs. ,7 (V