v y. -y v - - - ,:.v.-i--r 7 B, F. IOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW8. VOL. LII. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 22. 1898 NO. 28 Ippilfafi A r CIIAi'TKK XVIII. (Continued.) A uioniout'8 silence followed, broken lij the sound of Tom's hearty laugh, witli Agnes' somewhat shrill trelile tulngled Lfldy Xevil's thoughts were abruptly changed. Now she wanted to be on shore to interrupt that tete-a-tete. She hated nothing so much as to see Tom and Agnes together; it was a certainty that her cousin was infusing some poisonous drop into her husband's mind. "Ivet us lnnd," she said to Dnllas; but he had no desire to leave his charming hostess just as they were discussing such Interesting subjects. "Oh, not jet," he implored; "don't go In yet. Do you really want to?" And June, who always felt It difllcult to op pose any one who asked anything urgent ly of her, forced a smile, and said: "I will stay here if you like. It la very pleasant here." Two or three minutes later her mind was immensely relieved by hearing Madge's voi-e join Tom's, and presently she saw that young lady banging on Tom's arm, while Mr, Carslake and Agnes walked at some distauce behind. The change of companionship had been brought about in this way: When Dai Ion and June betook themselves to the boa!, Madge and Mr. Carslake had made their way to the avenue the place par excellence at the Hall for lovers and love making, the place to which In former days Torn had alwaya tried to Inveigle June as beiug prfvate and cut off from the rest of the company. Madge had talked away in her usual bright fashion, and her companion bad listened to her with that sense of pleased amusement which he always felt at her quips and pranks. His own disposition was grave, though the reverse of morbid,: but he had a strong sense of humor nm a keen sympathy with bright and happy young people- H'8 greatest drawback to the enjoyment of their society was his extreme diffidence in himself, his fear lest he should be a kill-joy and spoil their fun. On Madge, however, he pro duced anything but this effect; his gravity, leavened as it was with an evi dent appreciation of her sallies and high spirits, rather stimulated than soberej her love of fun. They had begun by laughing, and were Inclining to a more sentimental mood un der the influence of moonlight, and the charm of the evening, when Mr. Cars-1 lake, with the very best Intentions, madrf a singularly unfortunate remark: "What a very sweet woman that sister of yours is!" It acted on Madge like a douche of Iced water. The moment before she had been full of gayety, slightly tempered by ji most agreeable sentimentality, for she was undeniably in love with her com panion; now she was froissee, piqued, an noyed, she felt angry indeed with her friend for not having more discernment. She stopped short; the color came to her face, and she said, with extreme de cision: "She is not at all a sweet woman, and I should not have thought you were the sort of man to be so easily taken In." Mr. Carolake was astonished: he was rather shocked, too, and he looked it. "Oh. yes," exclaimed Madge, "you are horrified, I see. You think the mere fact of a person being one's sister ought to make one adore her; but I assure yon the theory won't hold water. You are much more apt to dislike people who be long to you than any one else, because you are obliged to see so much of them and they have such immense opportuni ties of aggravating you." The pair were standing face to face, Madge talking herself angry, Mr. Cars hike preserving his scandalized expres sion. "I'ray. why do you think she is a sweet woman?" asked the young lady, slightly raising her voice and looking at him with rather an aggressive thush in her eyes. Mr. Carslake's face relaxed into a mile. "Well, really," he remarked, "she seemed to me very sweet and kind anJ anxious to please every one. I caught some of her remarks to our host during dinner, and I confess they gave me the idea that she was a very charitable, good person; and then I thought she behaved so nicely in offering to remain with biiu afterward and to go and we the child up stairs." "That shows, then," retorted Madge, "how little any one not behind the s-enes Is able to judge. She only stopped with Tom and tnlked about going up to see little Tom to aggravate June." "Kcolly?" with evident incredulity. "I thought Lady Nevil seemed quite dis posed for a tete-a-tete with Broke, anil your sister good-naturedly offered to stay and amuse Sir Thomas." "Oh!" exclaimed Madge, growing still angrier, "that is just the delightful way Agnes has of giving people wrong im pressions. Do you suppose," with some vehemence, "that June cares two straws about Dallas? She is simply wrapped up in Tom and the child." "I am sorry I have offended you by saying what I thought would naturally please a sister," remarked Mr. Carslake, gravely. "You have offended me very much," re torted Madge, with unwonted petulance. "I thought you had more discernmeut. All our lives June and I have suffered from Agnes' sweetness which had the delight ful knack of making us look in the wrong. No doubt," a little quiver coming into her voice, "when you have seen a little more Df her sweetness, you will come to the conclusion that I am Dot at all a nice jxtsoii." "That I shall aoV he answered, auj made as though be would take Madge'l hand, but she eluded hiin. CHAPTER XIX. Madge, who meant to atone for her ml conduct by behaving very prettily to hiin, was much disconcerted at not being giTei the opportunity. She felt rather crest fallen, but worked herself Into a fit ol anger before she finally went to sleep, and resolved to punish him for beini vexed, although she had done her utmos' to provoke him. A nlM.U 1.- mrT fnr the fol lowing day; it waa to be held in the aam j spot aa the one recorded much earliei in this story the picnic whih, MfiTlj MRS. fORREcfTM June was concerned, had been auch dismal failure. Two girls from the neigh torhood and two soldiers were to swell the Hall party. Tom could not possibly leave his harvesting operations, and Ag nes had declined to join them a circum stance for which June would have been dsv-VT thankful but for the uncom fortable suspicion that her cousin would find her way np to the Hall in quest ot Tom senior under pretense of a visit t hia son. However, she did not allow th thought to trouble her seriously. It was as lovely a day as that former one, and the party was very cheery, to all appearance. Before starting Lady . Nevil had taken Madge aside and said tc ' her; "My dear child, do not carry Wis any i further. I am sure it is not wise. Ieavc j Dallas alone and keep with Mr. Carslake. : He is not a man to be trlded with, I fee! convinced." But Madge tossed her bead willwully saying: "I mean to punish him. What busines had he to go off last night without wish ing me good-night?" "You would be very sorry If you losi him." "1 don't mean to lose him," answered Madge. "Now, Juny darling, you let mt manage my lover my own way; you know I am rather successful In these little af fairs," with an arch glance. "One may sometimes be a trifle too clover," answered June. "I dare say your system might answer with some men, bu' I doubt its success in the present case." "We shall see," smiled Madge. "Be sides, darling, I am not going to let any one think that Dullas is making up to you." "Yon are very kind," returned June. "But I fancy I can take care of myself." "1 don't know," returned Madge. "La-di-da is very seductive. I can't help rath er feeling the influence of hia fascinations "myself." Here their conversation waa interrupt ed .and five minutes later they were en route. Madge, having arranged her plan ol battle, proceeded to carry it out Nothing , would please her but that Dallas should lie her squire, and she would not allow him to leave her side or to speak to any one else. Though It was against Mr. Broke! principles ever to repel the advances of a , pretty woman, he yet, being actuated by j gentlemanlike feelings, thought it not the j proper thing to interfere with a friend in I a genuine love affair, and, though he did ; not at all object to the fact of being made a cat's-paw of by a lady who was willing to divert and be agreeable to him, he thought It very hard linos on Carslake to l punished for an apparently imaginary ffeuse. Madge, while she flirted ostentatiously with the Guardsman, gave an occasional sidelong glance at the real object of her affections, and was exhilarated by observ ing that she was making him unhappy. Luncheon over, Madge Insisted on a troll in the woods, which only meant that she took Dallas a little away from the rest of the party and sat with him under a big tree while he smoked cigarettes, in which, for the sake of bravado and with a wicked hope that Mr. Carslake might see her, she joined him. She was not al together very happy, so she talked volubly and feigned higher spirits than usual. "Here you are!" cried Lady Nevil's voice gayly. as she appeared close at hand with Mr. Carslake. "Come with us for a stroll." Her ladyship tried to maneuver to leave Madge and her lover together, and Dal las was fain to second ber, but Madge was willful and linked her arm in June's, and Mr. Carslake made no effort to over come her perversity. Before the picnic party started for home Madge had partially come to her senses, and if Mr. Carslake had made the smallest overture to her would have kind ly consented to forgive and restore him to favor. But he made no such overture, and again the young lady's ire was kin dled. They had to pass the rectory on the way back, and Madge insisted on wishing them good-by and going home. June, being exceedingly vexed with her, did not press her very eagerly to return to the Hall. Mr. Carslake uttered not a word. Dal las was the ouly one who made any ef fort to shake her resolve. The willful yuiin lady passed a very unpleasant evening and night with her own reflection.. She had overacted her part had vexed and hurt the kindest, dearest, best ninn that ever lived; she would like to throw herself at his feet and beg his forgiveness; she began to despise her own cleverness, and felt quite spiteful against Dallas for having lent himself to be her tool. Never mind! all should be changed on the morrow. She would make the handsomest of amendes, and would never, never behave so ludly igain. The next morning her eyes unclosed on tear-stained laudscane: the rain ws roming down in torreata. She Intended lo have gone np to the Hall the instant rfter breakfast, but the weather made it impossible. At 12 o'cloek there was a slight cessation of the downpour and she made a vuliant start. Down came the raia ngnin, but nothing daunted, she pursued l.er way and arrived dripping with wet nt her destination. June met her in the hall and beckoned her into Tom's room. "Now," said her ladyship, with quite unaccustomed severity, "I hope you are happy." "I'm not at all happy," answered Madge, rather flippantly. "I feel like a droK ned rat." "Mr. Carslake," proceeded June, too much displeased to offer, with her usual hospitality, to assist her cousin in her un comfortable plight "Mr. Carslake left twenty minutes ago. And it is quite cer tain that you will never see any more of him." Madge turned ghastly white. "Gone!" she stammered. "Yes, gone. He made some bald pre text about a letter he had received, but I have since ascertained that no letter came for him this morning." Madge flung herself into chair and sobbed as if her heart would break. Her case was hopeless. He had not asked her to marry him, though she had felt certain he meant to; there 4JbeaV quarrel between them that would admit of her writing to explain or to ask for explanations. She felt that she had been too clever and had outwitted herself and broken her own heart. CnAPTEIt XX. The year was waning, Christmas not great way off. Sir Thomas and Lady Nevil had spent two months at their northern place In en tertaining a succession of shooting par ties. June had enjoyed this immensely; she had, no doubt, a great love of pleas ure and excitement. Madge had been a guest the greater part of the time. She was not the same willful, mirthful, mischievous creature that we have hitherto known her. No need to check the exuberance of her spir its now. She laughs and talks; outwardly she does not give any particular impres sion of wearing the willow; but, as a matter of fact, she Is desperately unhap py. Three weeks before Christmas, Sir Thomas and Lady Nevil, with their heir and suite, left the north and returned to the Hall. Tom was rejoiced to get back to his beloved home. June was almost equally pleased, and only one thonght crept in to dampen her enthusiasm. That was the thought of Agues. Several times during the homeward journey June bad hoped, she would be spared seeing Agnes on their arrival; it was with a feeling of uufeigned vexation that, as they drove up to the Hall door, she saw her cousin on the step to meet them, arrayed In her sweetest smiles. Tom greeted her with amazing heartiness, and, to behold her reception of his son and heir, one might have imagined her a mother parted from her long-lost child. Tom insisted on her remaining to dinner, and she accepted this invitation without the smallest demur or any reference to June. Her ladyship's home-coming was completely spoiled; the shadow which had disappeared entirely from between her nod her husband loomed ominously over them once more; she felt angry and im patient with him. At dinner Tom was in the highest spir its. Agnes evinced considerably more than her wonted chastened gayety, and it was only June who felt vexed, discon tented, out of sorts. She could not be pleasant to her cousin, and she was an grily conscious that Agnes Infinitely pre ferred her displeasure to seeing her In her usual mood. At ten o'clock her ladyship hoped, with some coldness, that her cousin would ex cuse her, aud Agnes jumped up, exclaim ing, with an air of regret: "Is it really ten o'clock How the even ing has flown! I did not think It could be more than nine. Did you, Tom?" "No," answered Sir Thomas, heartily, only too anxious to make np for her lady ship's risible coldness. "Time flies, yon know, Aggie, when It's spent pleasantly." "It does indeed," responded Agnes. "I must go home. Of course, Tom, yon are tired after your journey, and I must not be selfish enough to take yon out to night." Itut Tom swore he was as fresh as a daisy, and that be should like nothing better than to stretch hia legs a bit. Then Agnes deposited a bird-like kiss on June's cheek, which made that fair lady grind her teeth with disgust and repugnance, and the pair set off gayly to gether. (To be continued.) Not an Interpreter. In a disput between the Indians and the cannery men, according to the Seat tle Pottt-Intclligencer, a Mr. March waa called as a witness, and the way In which he gave his testimony proved puzzling to the lawyers. "How long have you been in this part of the country, Mr. March?" "Forty, forty-five, fifty, fifty-five years." "Fifty-five years," said the lawyer, and then, as If he were addressing Christopher Columbus, he asked: "And wliait did you discover, Mr. March?" "A dark-visaged savage." "Dark-visaged savage, eh Yes, and what did you say to him?" "I said It was a fine day." "Fine day? Yes, and what did he say to you?" Mr. March rattled off a whole yarn In Chinook, and kept on, to the mirth of the whole court room, until peremptori ly cut off by the gavel of the jud;;e. "I asked you what reply the savage niarie to you, Mr. March. Flense an swer the question," said the Irate cross examiner. "I was answering." Toll ue what the savage said." "That waa what he said." Then tell it to us In English." "Not unless I am commissioned by the court to act as an interpreter and paid the customary fee." The lawyer thought a moment, looked at the judge, who could not resist a smile, and said, severely: "Mr. March, you may stand down." A municipal council in France lias ordered its proceedings to U- ivportt! by phonograph. About 2T.nn lliinkards from Virginia, Indiana, Ohio and Illinois have removed to North Dakota. A municipal council in Trance has ordered its proceedings to Ih; rcMrted by phonograph. A partridge, with white wings has liecii eluding the best Knglisli sportsmen aiHiut Inibury. tiilliiigham, England, had a grave dig ger who died lately .god seventy-live. In thirty-seven years he had buried over 12, ooo orsons. The peach was originally a poisoned almond. Transplantation ami cultivation have not only removed its Hiisonous quali ties, but turned it i..to the delicious fruit we now enjoy. The French women have patented a scrubbing brush which is to lie attached to the shoe by strap and a heel plate, thus making it possible to clean floors while standing upright. Some of the oldest trees in the world are to be found intSreat llritain, The tree called William the Conqueror's oak, in indsor park, is suppiun-d to Ik 121.0 years old. The famous iteiiliey and Wind fartliing oaks are at least twj centuries older. Tho Khind manuscript now in tlio British Museum is the oldest intelligible mathematical work extant liiat lui ver been deciphered. The Peruvian Central Kailroad coven a distance of ten miles at an elevation only about 2lsHt feet lower than the sum mit of tho highest mountain in Switzer land. Artifical limits have been constructed in Germany in such a way that those who are obliged to use them can ride bicy cles. In Manchuria dogs are raised for their skins. A fairly prosierous Man churiau dog farmer will own 1000 or more dogs. Opium eating has become a habit with the Kaffirs in South Africa. The Chinese are the chief purveyors of the drug. TREE 10,000 YEARS OLD. Slant of Prehistoric Tlmea Unearthed In Kngland, An extraordinary discovery, and one which is Just now exciting consider able interest In antiquarian circles in Lancashire and Cheshire, has been made at Stockport During the exca vations in the construction of sewage works for the town some workmen "'ie across what has s!n.-e proved to U a massive oak tree, with two im mense branches. Prof. Boyd Dawklns. the well-known antiquary. Is of opinion that the tree is one of the giants of pre historic times, and he says that the tree Is certainly 10,000 years old. The cor poration of Stockport are at a loss what to do with the gigantic fossil, whlcb is supposed to weigh about forty tons, and as It is necessary that It should be removed a proposal has been made to blow It up with dynamite. This baa aroused the Indignation of a large section of the public, who pre sented the following petition to the cor poration: "That there Is a valuable tree of old oak at present lying upon and exposed In the gravel on and within their prop erty; that the quality in color, grain and solidity Is hotter than any that can lie bought in the open market; that for artistic work alone it is greatly to be treasured, for nothing in this country is at present grown which can come up to its dimensions; that it contains with in Itself sufficient material to make the furniture for any public building or town hall which may be erected for the public benefit within our borough; that It only requires lifting from Its bed, which In the opinion of competent geol ogists may lie roughly estimated as 15, tHH) years of occupation; that private effort has failed to achieve its removal; that Its destruction would be a publlo loss and an artistic calamity; that your representatives in council be and are hereby requested to conserve for tha borough this grant of nature to ber sous and daughters, whose signatures are hereby affixed." The corporation hnve reserved their decision, aud in the meantime efforts are being made by local antiquarians and others to bring pressure to bear upon the council to preserve the tree for the benefit of the town and the country. It Is believed that no discov ery of such Importance has hitherto been made In this country, and this be ing so K Is hoped that those Interested will lend assistance toward preserving in such matters throughout the country the tree. London News. AMAZONS OF ITALIAN FIELDS. A Land Where the Woman Ta Not the Gentler r?ez. A great deal has been said and felt about the women of the lower classes working in the fields, and of the hard manual labor they are called to per form. In the light of the ideas that women should be delicate and refined physically, doubtless the broad backs, hard muscles, and heavy, kuotted frames of peasants we see appear dis cordant and unseemly. Fisherwomcn at Dieppe or Whitby, we know, and alongshore everywhere hold their own against town councils when they dic tate the policy of town governments. In moments of danger, when the signal-gun summons the populace to scenes of danger, then these women, the wives and mothers of the fisher men, man the lifeboats and breast the waves, going to the rescue of their rel atives In distress. Yet these fierce, strong women scarcely fill the modern idea of what womanhood should be. Now, however, very recently, when It Is the fad that women should !e ath letic, broad-shouldered, and deep-lunged, to say nothing of the wider educa tion of our blgh-bred and healthy mod ern girls, the question arises among the observant, 4 why working In fields or carrying burdens Is, after all, such a hardship and degradation to the pens ant woman more than to the peasant man. Too much lalior and great toll doubtless break down and age both Kxes. But Disraeli spoke of women aa of the gentler. If not the weaker, sex; and when, in Monte Sacro, I saw women swinging the scythe with broad swaths, or cutting the sweet hay on the mountain sides with their sickles, and then filling up tall, paunlor like straw baskets, which they bore away on their shoulders filled with fragrant grass for the cattle, I asked myself If, after all, in their present civilization, these women of Varallo-Sesla, at least, could be better or more healthfully em ployed. They sang as they worked, and bright and bronzed cheeks spoke of healthful toll. ScrJbner's. Her Crinoline Killed Kim. Among the historical Incidents con nected with the Rathhaus Is one re lating to an old judge who laughed himself to death. One sultry day, reads the record, during a recess of the council, the members were leaning from the windows of the Rathhaus, In the hope to catch any stray wind. It was the period of hoops and volumin ous skirts, and maid shared with mis tress the mania for distended attire. On this pulseless summer day a pretty servant girl In a wide hooped skirt and a gray bodice made her way hrough the loitering groups up to the ountaln. She filled her tub and lifted it to her head, but In this movement, lo, the wonderful skirt was wrested from Its fastenings, and It dropped to the ground. The Judge had seen the maid approach the fountain like a ship under full sail, and when he now be held her, collapsed and abashed, he was filled with such humor that upon the spot he laughed himself to death. Harper's Magazine. Prehistoric Dentistry. George Byron Gordon, the explorer, contributes an article on The Mys terious City of Honduras" to the Cen tury. The article gives an account or recent discoveries at Co pat. Mr. Gor don says: "No regular burying place has yei oeen found at Copan, but a number of isolated tombs have been explored. The location of these was strange and unexpected beneath the pavements of courtyards and under the chambers of houses. They consist of small chambers of very excellent masonry, roofed some times by meana of the hprlsjataj arch. and sometimes by meads of slabs or stone resting on top of the vertical walls. In those tombs one, and some times two. Interments had been made The bodies had been laid at full length upon the floor. The cerements had lone since molded away, and the skeletons themselves were in a crumbling condl tion, and give little knowledge of the physical characteristics of the people: but one fact of surpassing Interest came to light concerning their private lives, namely, the custom of adorning the front teeth with gems Inlaid in the enamel, and by filling. Although no! all of the sets of teeth found had been treated In this way, there are enough to show that the practice was general, at least among the upper classes, for all the tombs opened, from their asso ciations with prominent houses, seeiii to have belonged to people of rank and fortune. The stone used In the Inlaying was a bright green jadeite. A circular cavity about one-sixteenth of an Inch In diameter was drilled in the enamel of each of the two front teeth of the upper row, and Inlaid with a little disk of Jadeite, cut to a perfect fit, and se cured by means of a bright red cement." No parental care ever falls to the lot 3t a single member of the Insect tribe. In general, the eggs of an Insect are destined to be hatched long after the parents are dead, so that most Insects are born orphans. A magnetic survey is to be made ot Prussia, on whose coast regions mag netic measurements have boeu carried out by the Imperial naval authorities. The stations will be twenty-four uiilt- apart and the cost $12,500. In some of the latest flat or npai t ment houses the occupants are spared the trouble of handling or looking after Ice. A refrlgrentlng plant is provided for the entire building and run by the engineer, and pipes are then laid to each refrigerator. Electrlc-llght baths are becoming so popular at a Vienna institute that hun dreds of patients have to be declined for lack of accommodations. They are said to be good for the cure of rheuma tism, asthma, anaemia, nervousness corpulence and gout, A Boston man, who refuses to accept the modern process of photography as an Improvement, is still taking daguer reotypes, as he has been doing for fifty years, saying that they remain the most correct likenesses yet produced, and that he does business of sufficient volume to warrant his sticking to his hobby. The consensus of opinion regarding the origin of the migration of birds is that It began during the glacial period. The earth being then covered at either end with a cap of Ice, all life was con fined to a belt in the center; but the Ice receded a little at certain seasons, leav ing an uninhabited space that afforded he quiet and seclusion that all the tilgher animals seek during the breed ing period. The birds went there ac cordingly to roar their young, and. as the Ice receded further and further, they migrated further and further. The Academy of Science at Moutpe ller, France, recently employed an In genious device to test the alleged pow er of a young woman to tell the con tents of unopened boxes. The commit tee, appointed by the academy to make the test, took a photographic plate, and exposed It in a camera as If for an or dinary picture. Then the plate was cut in two, and one-half of It, carefully pro tected from ths light, was .enclosed with Other 6bjccts In a sealed-, box Af ter the young woman had described the contents of the box the committee devloped the two halves of the plute. That which was In the box was "fog ged," showing that It had been exposed to light, while the other half developed a perfectly clear picture. There Is in the constellation of the Great Bear a famous little star which has been called a "runaway," liecause of the extraordinary speed with which It Is moving. But it is so far away that the effect of its motion can only be noted by careful astronomical observa tions. Prof. Simon Newcoiub has said of this star, which bears the name "1830 Grooiubrldge," that the united attractions of the entire known uni verse could not have set it going with such velocity, and would be unable to arrest It. Now Professor Kapteyn an nounces the discovery of a telescopic star In the southern hemisphere. In the constellation Tlctor, which appears to me moving considerably faster yet. Yhat Its real velocity Is, however, can only be told when its distance is known. Romance of the Holly. The romance of the holly ls very old. Pliny tells us bow a bough of holly planted near a dwelling-house keeps off lightning, or cast into water makes it become Ice, or thrown at any lieust causes it to return to the spot where It s required to be. Modern Ixmgevlty. In the seventeenth century the aver age duration of life was only thirteen rears; In the eighteenth, twenty; In the present century It Is thirty-six. This ?reat Increase In the average length jf human life ls not, however, an In llcatlon of an Increase In the vigor ;ind vitality of the race, but it Is rath :r due to the fact that cholera, the black plague and other devastating scourges which formerly overspread whole countries at frequent Intervals, sometimes several times during a cen tury, have been brought more and more under control by Improved pub lic sanitation and quarantine. The real test of the vitality of the race is not the average length of human life, but the proportion of centenarians The proportion of persons who hart attained great age is without doubt at ihe present time much less than eve: !efore In the history of ihe world. i f there are any Spaniards In heaven . e don't want to cs SERMONS OFTHE DAY Subjmrt: "The Gallows For Haman" From the Life and Death of Thlt Persian Courtier Living learai ol Warning and Instruction Are Drawn. Text: "rio they hanged Haman on the gallows that ho had prepared for Morde " Esther vil., 16. Here Is an Oriential courtier, about the most offensive man In Hebrew history, Haman by name. Ho plottod for the. de struction ot the Israelitlsh nation, and I wonder not that in some of the Hebrew synagogues to this day when Haman's name is mentioned, the congregation clench their lists and stamp their feet and cry, "Let his name be blotted out!" Ha man was r rime Minister in tho magnificent; court of Persia. Thoroughly appreciative of the honor conferred, he expects every- body that he passes to be obsequious. Coming la one day at the gate of the pal ace, the servants drop their bnads in honor! of his ofttee; but a Hebrew, named Morde-f eai, gazes upon the passing dignitary without bending bis head or taking off his! hat. He was a good man, and would nor have been negligent In the ordinary court esies of life, but he felt no respect either for Human or the nation from which hq hail come. So he could not bo hypocriti-) cnl; and wide others made Oriental; oiklaam. gnttinir clear down before this! Prime Minister when he passed, Monleeaij t lie Hebrew, relaxed not a muscle ot hi uecb, and kept his chin clear up. Bocnusj ot that affront Hainan gets a decree from Aliasuerus, the dastardly king, lor th3 iua.siicre ot all the Israelites, aud that, of course, will include Mordecai To make a long story short, through Queen Esther this whole plot was reveule.j to her husband, Aliasuerus. One night Mia-uerus. who was afflicted with in-j omnla. In his sleepless hours calls for hM secretary to read him a few passages oj Persian history, and so while away th-t oight. lu the hook read that night to the king an account was given of a conspi racy, from whh-h Mordecai, the Hebrew, had saved the king's life and for which; kindness Mordecai had never received any reward. Haman, who hnd been llxiug up, s iilee gallows to hang Mordncat on, was walking outside the door of the king's i sleeping apartment and was called In. Thn King lol.l hiin that he bad just had read to him the account of some one who hail aved his, the king's life, and he asked what reward ought to tie given to such a mo. Helf-concelteil Haman, supposing thai he himself was to get the honor, and not) imagining for a moment that the deliv-'. rer of the king's life was Mordecai, saysi "Why, your majesty ought to make a tri umph for hiin, aid put a crown on him nd set hiin on a splendid horse, high-stepping and full-blooded, and then have one nt your princes lead the horse through tho streets, crying, 'Bow tho knee, here ?omes a mnu who has saved tho king's life!' " Then said Ahasuerus in severe tones to Haman: "I know all about yourscoun-! irelism. Now you go out and make a triumph for Mordeoai, the Hebrew, whom; you hate. Put the best saddle on tha Hnest horse, and you, the prince, hold the itirrup while Mordecai gets ou, and there lead his horse through the street. Make iiaste!" What a spectaeie! A comedy and tragedy, it one and the same time. There they go!; Mordecai, who had been despised, now! iarredand robed, in thn stirrups. Hamun :b chancellor, afoot, holding tho pranc ing, rearing, cha nping stallion. Mordecai bemls his neck at lost, but it Ls to look iown at the degraded Prime Minister iralking beneath him. Hnxza for Mor iecai! Alas for Haman! But whnt a pity to have the gallows, recently built, en tirely wasted! It is fifty cubits high, and Duilt with care. And Haman had erected t for Mordecai, by whose stirrups he now R-allis as groom. Stranger and more start ing than any romance, there go up tho itcps of tha scaffolding, side by side, the tiangman and Haman the ex-chuncellor. 'So tbey hanged Hamnn on the gallows; (hat he had prepared for Mordecai." Although so many years have passed 3ince cowardly Ahasuerus reigued, and the beautiful Esther answered to his wliims, and Persia perished, yet from the life ami death ot Haman we may draw living les sons of warning and instruction. And first, we come to the practical suggestion that, when the heart ls wrong, things very insignilicaiit will destroy our comfort; Who would have thought that a great; Prime Minister, admired and applauded by millions of Persians, would have been so nettled aud harassed by anything trivial'4 What more could the great dignitary havq wanted than his chariots and attendants, and palaces and banquets? If affluence oi circumstances can make a man contented and happy, surely Hainan should have! been contented and happy. No; Mordoi cni's refusal of a bow takes tho glitter front the gold, and the richness from the pur pie, and the speed from the chariots. Witli a, heart puffed up with every inflation of vanity aud revenge, it was impossible for him to be happy. The silence of Mordecai at the gate was louder than the braying o trumpets In the palace. Thus shall it al ways be if the heart is not right. Clrcuui-r stances the most trivial will disturb tho spirit. It is not the great calamities of life that create the mot worrlment. I have seea men, felled by repealed blows of misfor. tune, arising from the dust, never despond-i lug. But the most of the disquiet which men suffer is from insigniflcaut causes; a4 lion attacked bv some least of prey turni easily around and slays him, yet runs roar ing throng, the forests at the alighting on bis brawn - neck of a few insects. You meet sonit rreat loss In business with com parative co.nposure; but you can think oj petty trickeries iuflieted upon you, which arouse all your capacity for wrath, and rej main in your heart an unbearable annoy, ante. If you look hack upon your llfej you will find that the most of the vexations and disturbances or spirit, wnicn you felt. were produced by circumstances that were; not worthy ot notice. 11 you want to icj happy, you must not enre for trilles. Do! not lie too minute in your inspection of the treatment wu receive from others. Who, cares whether Mordecai bows when youj pass, or stands erect and stiff as a cedar?j That woodman would not make much; clearing in the forest who should stop toj bind up every little bruise and scratch he' received In 'he thicket; nor will that mau accomplish uuch for the world or the church who Is too watchful and apprecia tive of petty annoyances. There are mul titudes ot people In the world constantly harrowed liecause they pass their lives not in searching out those things which are at tractive and deserving, but In spying out with all their powers of vision to see whether they cannot llnd a Mordecai. Again: I learn from the life of the man under our notice that worldly vanity and sin are very anxious to have piety bow be fore them. Haman was a fair emblem of entire worldllncss, and Mordecai the repre sentative of unflinching godliness. Such were the usuages of society in ancient times that, had this Israelite bowed to the Prime Minister, It would have been an ac knowledgment of respect for his character and nation. Mordecai would, therefore, have sinned against bis religion had he made any obeisance or dropped his chin balf an Inch before Haman. When, there fore, proud Haman attempted to compel an homage which was not felt, he only did what the world ever since has tried to do, when it would force our holy religion In any wav to yield to its dictates. Daniel, if he bud been a man of religious com promises, would never hnve been thrown into the den of lions. He might have made some arrangement with King Darius whereby he could have retained part of his form of religion without making himself so completely obnoxious to the idolaters, raul might have retained the favor ot bu iruiers and escaped martyrdom If he bat only been willing to mix up his Christiai faith with t few errors. His unbending Christian - character was taken as an in sult. Fagot and rack and halter in all ages have been only the different ways in which the world has demanded obeisance. It was once, away up on the top of the Temple, that Satan commanded the Holy One of Naza reth to kneel before him. But it is nol now so much on the top of churches a down In the aisle and the pew and the pul ott that Satan tempts the esDouaers of .th Cliristltn faith to kneel before mm. Why was it that the Platonic philosophers ol -ui,jr uuit3s, m wmi as iuwdu, opiuura nnu . jxiungoroae or later aays, were so ronaiy opposed to Christianity? Certainly not be cause it favored Immoralities, or arrested civilization, or dwarfed the Intellect. The genuine reason, whether admitted or not, was because the religion ot Christ paid no respect to their intellectual vanities. Blount and Boyle, and the hosts of Intldols hatched out by the vile reign of Charles the Second, as.reptlles crawl out of a marsh of slime, could not keep their patience, be cause, as tbey passed along, there were sit ting In the gate of the church such men as Matthew, and Mark, and Luke, and John who would not bend an inch In respect to their philosophies. Satan told onr first parents that they would become as gods if they would only reach up and take a taste of the fruit. Tbey tried it and failed, but their descend ants are not yet satisfied with the experi-l ment. We have now many desiring to b. as gods, reaching up after yet another apple. Reason, scornful of God's Word; may foam and strut with the proud wratlt of a Haman, and attempt to oompei tho homage of the good, but in the presence of men and angels It shall be confounded. God shall smite thee, thou whlted wall. When science began to make its brilliant discoveries there were great facts brought to light that seemed to overthrow tho truth of the Bible. The archaeologist with, his crowbar, and tho geologist with bis hammer, and the chemist with his hat-, teries, charged upon the Bible. Moses's account of the creation seemed douio-l by the very structure of tho earth. Tim astronomer wheelod around his telescope. ' until the heavenly bodies seemed to mar-, shal themselves against the Bible as the, stars in their courses fought against Sls.-rii. Observatories and universities rejoiced at what they considered the extinction of: Christianity. They gathered new courage: at what thev considered past victory, ami, pressed on their conquest Into the kingdom of nature until, alas tor thorn! they dis covered too much. God's Word had only been lying in ambush that, in some un-! guarded moment, with a sudden bound, it might tear Infidelity to pieces. It was as when Joshiin attacked thn citv otAl. He selected thirty thousand men,. ! a long while snowed uinler. We must have and concealed most of them; then with a! ' a good many hard falls before we learn to few men he assailed the city, which poured, , wain straight. It Is In the black anvil ol out Its numbers and strength unou ' trouble that men hammer out their for Joshua's little band. According to pnvl-j ' tunes. Sorrows take up men ou their ous plan, they fell back in seeming defeat. 1 shoulders nud enthrone them. Tonics are but, after all the proud inhabitants ot tint city had been brought out of their homes, and had joined In the pursuit of Josliu.-i, suddenly that brave man halted In lilsi llight, and with his spear pointing towur.l the city, thirty thousand men bounded from the thickets as panthers spring to their prey, and tho pursuers were dnshedi to pieces, while the hosts of Joshu.-i presse.lj up to the city, ami with their lighted torches tossed it Into flame. Thus It warf that the discoveries of science seemed to give temporary victory against Oo.l ami the Bible, and for a while the church acted as if she were on a retreat; but when nil the opposers of God and truth had joined in the pursuit, and were sure of the Held, Christ gave the signal to His church, ami; turning, they drove hack their foes fit shame. There was foun 1 to be no anl tagontsm between nature and revelation The universe and the Bible were found to be the work of the same band, two strokes of the same pen, their authorship the same God. Again: Learn the lesson thnt pride goeth before a fail. Was any man over so far up is Haman, who tumbled so far down? Yes, on a smaller scale, every day the world sees the same thing. Against their very ad vantages men trip Into destruction. When God humbles proud men.it ls usually at the moment of their greatest arroguncy. If there be a man In your community greatly! puffed up with worldly success, you have but to stand a little while and you will see Him come down. You say, I wonder that God allows that man to go on riding over others' heads and making great assump tions of power. There is no wonder about It. Haman has not yet got to the top Pride is a commander, well plumed un.li caparisoned, but it leads forth a dark anil frowning host. We have the best of authors ity for saying that "Pride goeth before de struction and a haughty spirit before a fall." The arrows from the Almighty's; quiver are apt to strike a man when on t hoi wing. Goliath shakes his great spear in, defiance, but the small stones from thei brook Elah made him stagger ami fall like an ox under the butcher's bludgeon. He who is down cannot fall. Vessels scud ding under bare poles do not feel the force of the storm, but those with all sails set capsize at the sudden descent ot the temp est. Again: this Oriental tale reminds us of the fact that wrongs we prepare for others return upon ourselves. The gallows that Haman built for Mordecai became the, Prime Minister's strangulation. Kotie-j spierre, whosent so many to the guillo-! tine, had his own bead chopped off by the; horrid Instrument. The evil you practice on others will recoil upon your own pate.' Slanders come home. Oppressions come borne. Cruelties come home. You will yet be a lackey walking beside the very charger on which you expected to ride others down. When Charles the First, who had destroyed Strafford, was about to be beheaded, he said, "I basely ratified an unjust sentence, and the similar injustice I am now to undergo is a sensible retrlhut tion for the punishment I initiated on an; Innocent man." Lord Jeffries, after In carcerating many innocent and good peo ple in London Tower, was himself Impris oned In the same place, where the shade of those whom he had maltreated seemed to haunt him, so thnt he kept crying to his attendants: "Keep them off, gentlemen, for God's sake, keep them off!" The chick ens had come home to roost. The bodv of Bradshaw, the English judge, who had been ruthless and cruel In his decisions, was taken from his splendid tomb in West minster Abbey, and at Tyburn hung on a gallows from morning until night In the presence of jeering multitudes. Haman's! gallows came a little late, but It came.; Opportunities fly in a straight line, and just touch us as they pass from eternity to eternity, but the wrongs we do others fly, In a circle, and however the circle may widen out, they are sure to come back tog he point from which they started. Therei -are guns that klckl Furthermore, let the story ot Hainan, teach us how quickly turns the wheel of, fortune. One day, excepting the king,' Haman was the mightiest man In Persia; hut the next day, a lackey. So we go up,, land so we come down. You seldom And, Buy man twenty years In the same circum-! tdances. ur tnose wuo, in political me lt went y years ago were most prominent. how tew remain In conspicuity. rouiicai parties make certain men do their hnrd work, and then, after using them as hacks, turn them out on the commons to die. Every four years there Is a complete revo lution, and about Ave thousand men who ought certainly to be the next President are shamefully disappointed; while some, who this day are obscure and poverty stricken, will ride upon the shoulders of the people, and take their turn nt admira tion aud the spoils ot office. Oh, how quickly the wheels turn! Ballot-boxes are the steps on which men come down quite as often as they go u p. Of those who were long ago successful In the accumulation of property, how few have not met with re verses! while many of those who then were straitened in circumstances now bold the bonds and bank keys of the nation. Of all tickle things in the world, fortune Is the most Ackle. Again: this Hitman's history shows us that outward possessions and circum stances cannot make a man happy. While yet fully vested in authority and the chief adviser of the Persian monarch, and every thing that equipage and pomp and splen dor of residence could do were his, he is an object lesson of wretchedness. There are to-day more aching sorrows under crowns of royalty than under the ragged caps ot the houseless. Much of the world's affluence and gaiety is only misery in colors. Many a woman seated in the street at her apple-stand is happier than the great bank ers. The mountains of worldly honor are covered with perpetual snow. Tamerlane conquered half the world, bat eould not subdue his own fears. Ahab goes to bed, sick, because Nabota will not sell him his vineyard. Herod is In agony because a lit tle child Is born down in Bethlehem. Great Felix trembles because a poor minister will fireach righteousness, temperance and udgment to come. From the time of Louts the Twelfth to Louts the Eighteenth was there straw-bottomed chair in Frauoa that did not sit moresolldly than the great throne on which the Frenoh kings reigned? were I oallea to ssetca misery 10 sketch misery lo its worst form. I would not go up the dark alley of the poor, but up the highway over which prancing Buoephali strike the sparks with their hoofs and between statu ary and parks of stalking deer. Wretch edness Is more bitter when swallowed from gemmed goblets than from earthen pitcher or pewter mug. If there are young peo ple here who are looking for this posi tion and that circumstance, thinking that worldly success will bring peace to the soul, let them shatter the delusion. It ls not what we get. It is what we are. Dan iel among the Hons is happier than King Darius on his throne. And when life ls closing, brilliancy of worldly surroundings will be no solace. Death is blind, and sees no difference between a king and his clown, between the Nazarene and the Athonlan, between a bookless hut and a national library. In olden time the man who was to re ceive the honors of knighthood was re quired to spend the previous night fully armed, and with shield and lance to walk up and down among the tombs of the H .. n .1 Thmitivh All thn li nil ra nt thnt nght his steady step was heard, and, when morning dawned, amid grand parade and the sound of cornets the honors of knighthood were bestowed. Thus It shall be with the good man's soul in the night before heaven. Fully armed with shield and sword and helmet, he shall watch and wait until the darkness fly and the morn ing break, and amid the sound of celestial barplngs the soul shall take the honors of hitflvon nmbl thn Innli mcrnhlo throni? with robes snowy white streaming over seas ot sannblm Mordecai will only have to wait for bis day of triumph. It took all tho preceding trials to make a proper background for his after successes. Tho scaffold built for him ' makes all the moro Imposing nud pictur esque the horse Into whoso long white , mane he twisted his Angers at tho mount ing. Yon want at least two misfortunes, I hard as flint, to strike fire. Heavy and . long continued snows in the winter are signs of good crops next summer. So, many have yielded wonderful harvests of benevolence, ana energy because tney were nearly always bitter. Men, like fruit trees, are barren unless trimmed with sharp knives. They are like wheat all the bet ter for the flailing. It required the prison darkness and chill to make John Bunyan dream. It took Delaware ice and cold feet at Valley Forge, and the whizz of bul lets, tomakea Washington. Paul, when he climbed up on the beach at Mellta, shiver ing in his wet clothes, was more of a Chris tian thnn when the ship struck the break ers. Trescott, tho historian, saw better without his eyes than he could ever have with them. Mordecai, despised at the gate, is only predecessor of Mordecai, grandly mount 3d. Household. RECIPF.9. Grilled Almonds. Make ready a cup of blanched and dried almonds. To one cup of sugar add half a cup of water and boil for about ten minutes, then drop in the almonds and continue the boiling till the nuts turn a faint yellow; next remove quickly from the fire, and stir until the syrup reaches the sugary stage, clinging to the nuts. They are then spread to cold on a plate over which a piece of waxed paper has been laid. Serve the samo at salted almonds. Delicious Sponge Cake. One pound of granulated sugar, one-half pound of sifted flour, ten eggs tho grated peel and half the juice of a hu-go lemon. Beat the yolks of the eggs and sugar together until very light, add the lemon peel and juice, then the beaten whites of the eggs, and beat all well together. Now carefully fold in the flour, not beating or stirring. Hake a moderate oven, lining and covering the pan with thick paper. Chocolate Custard Pudding. Ono quart of milk, five eggs, six ounces of caster sugar, two ounces of grated chocolate ami -a teaspoonful of vanilla essence. Scald the milk, reserving a little with which to mix the chocolate to a smooth paste; stir into the milk and cook for a few min ntes. Beat the yolks of the five eggs with the whites of two and tho sugar, l'our the hot mixture very gradually upon them. Add the vanilla and turn into a buttered pudding dish. Stand this in a tin half filled with boiling water, anil bake for about half an hour, or until ttic middle is firm. When done sprea.l with a meringue, made with the remaining white of eggs and three tablespoonfuls of castei sugar, and brown the top. if preferred the custard may be baked in small cups Another way is to line a shallow roum! pie dish with puff paste, and fill with th custard mixture Bait Fish Hash. Take a thick piece o salt cod, suflioient to make ono cupfu when shredded. Soak in cold water fo several hours, then drain, cover wit) fresh water and place at the siuo oi im fire where it will only steam for tw hours. Drain and when cold remove th. skin and bones and chop fine- Add ou ' pint of cold boiled potatoes, chopped fine one-half of a cupful of milk, one -quarte of a teaspoonful of pepper and, if needec a little salt. Try out slowly four slic of salt pork; when the fat is well drnw out cook more rapidly until thn pork--pale brown. Lift it from the pun, put tw" spoonfuls of tho fat over the ha-h an turn it into the pan with the remainder) the fat. Cover and set the pan where ; will cook slowly for half aa hour, thr. draw forward until a brown crust fomed on tho bottom; turn out on i heated platter and serve. Track and Turt. The gray mare Brunhiide, 2.15 1-4, Viking, that has not raised a foal siu.t sho took her record in l.05, lias been se 1 to James Golden, and will be raced a'ai I Directly, 2.07 1.4, is getting plenty slow work at the Whealon track, and h done no fast moves as yet. lie has clian ed very little since he was a 2-year old. Charley Brossman, who is training tl now sensational black mare Imp, is one the foremost horse handlers of the Wei ern turf. The black mare Imp is to Come Fast fl the Suburban Handicap, anil stable roil has been engaged for her at SheepsheadJ Tom Kyan has a string of good ones c looted at Chicago, and he has sign I Sktsets ' Martin to ride them. The South Cleveland Driving Park sociation has decided to hold a meeting June 29 to July 1. Espionage, a smart filly bv Insnecf B. , is proving a winner at Chicago. S is owned by Louis K.cll. A number of Tennessee Rreedt figuring on selling their yearlings i cago this summer. , Bracelet, dam of Bangle, has for".l bay filly by Imp. Quicklime, and U bred back to llimyar. Many Improvements are being made ITawthorne, which track will open up good shape. George Fuller has bronu-lit his trot to CtEaberland Park, Nashville, from farm. Twenty-six of 28 nominators made g the third payment in Charter Ou $10,000 purse. Handspring has been pot in chargiJ C. T. Patterson to be prepared for fall racing. Mascot, 2.04, is going very smooth and may be a winner on the half-rr tracks. The long tai s of the Shah of Pers horses are dyed crimson for six im hei their tips a jealously guarded pi'ivil of the ruler and his sons. Five is the sacred numWr oftiie C nese, who have liv planets, live cardl points, live virtues, five tastes, live m -cal tones, five ranks of nobility and J colors. (-1 I -v AM