eilie F. HOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWH. VOL. LII. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JULY 20. 1S98 NO. 32 S Mill 1 CHAPTER XXTV. Lady Nevil had been in London three weeks; the season was in full swing. She had presented Madge to her sovereign, nd Madge was in high spirits and enjoy ing her gayeties immensely. June had been home once, and Sir Thomas had pent two nights in Ixmdon, on the occa sion of his wife's giving a dinner party at which it was thought desirable he shonld preside as host. The season advanced, and rumors be gan to fly about of an expedition to Egypt In which the Guards were to take part. At first the idea was ridiculed, but grad ually it came to be entertained more se riously, and then to be recognized as a fact. Dallas' battalion was for service, and as soon as this was known to the ladies in Grosvenor street It had a most ! dampening effect upon their spirits. Madge, it is true, affected to share the enthusiasm of 1 Dallas, and talked gayly of the distinctions be would earn the pos sibility of medals and Victoria crosses. Mrs. Ellesmere was seriously depressed at the thought of the hardship and dan ger her favorite nephew might Incur, and as for June, each time she realized It, a knot rose in her throat and a mist came before her eyes, and she felt as if life had suddenly become blank. She would look furtively at him as he was laughing and talking in the gayest of spirits, and then her vivid imagination would see him lying dead, with livid, upturned face, on a bat tlefield, or worn and wasted by fever in some retched hospital. Late one July afternoon June and Mrs. Ellesmere left the carriage at the top of the Itnw and took chairs under the trees. Dallas was to joiu them there. Madge ! was spending the afternoon with a friend. Mr. Carslake passed, then stopped, turn- ; rd and asked permission to sit down by Ialy Nevil. Presently a friend of Mrs. Ellesmere joined her, and the first pair were left to each other. Naturally enough, the conversation turned on the coming campaign, and June, who was al- j ways trying to get comfort on the sub- ; Ject, asked Mr. Carslake his opinion of j tne cuances or nguung. June tried to draw consolation from i Mr. d be I Carslake. lie did not think it would very serious affair; he was not impress ed with a belief in the fighting qualities of the Egyptians; a change of "masters would make very little difference to them; they would still be oppressed under any rule. The climate .was Jtha worst part of it, though the Bedouins and the Nile might seriously impede our operations. Then Mr. Carslake, not looking at Lady Nevil, but trying to make his voice in different, said: "I suppose Miss Ellesmere feels Broke, going very much?" In a moment his meaning dawned on June, and she saw that a golden oppor tunity was before her. "I do not think so," she answered. "Not nearly so much as my auut and I. She only thinks of the brilliant side of war, and not of of the danger." "She will feel it more when he is gone, bo doubt," said Mr. Carslake, traeffig"' a pattern in the gravel with his stick. "I do not know," replied June. "Peo ple never think anything is likely to hap pen to their friends unless it is a matter of vitally absorbing interest to them." "But I thought such was the case." "Certainly not," exclaimed Lady Nevil, with great animation. "There is nothing of any sort or kind between Madge and Mr. Broke, except the most ordinary friendship." "Oh:" and Mr. Carslake looked up at her. "I was told that if not actually en gaged they were next door to it." June felt that her opportunity had come. "What do not people say " she remark ed. "Do you believe every report you hearr "Only when It is borne out by appear ances." "You are Quite mistaken," said Lady Nevil. "Madge has never been in love Lnt nnr.a in hr life ii nd then s6 seriously that I think it will quite prevent hei ver caring much for anyone else." "Tell me frankly," said Mr. Carslake, "are you speakiiig of me? I should not venture to ask, unless " "Yes, I am," replied June, with equal frankness. "And and do you really believe she is not indifferent to me?" "I am quite sure that you are the only man for whom she has ever cared seri ously." Tn f f rnrlnke's infinite chagrin. Dal las came up at this moment. But June felt that enough had been said, and that xr.Hu'n future at all events, was safe. Dallas saw June aud Madge off by the train next day; he took coraiai leave 01 v, i n T.rt cli wished him a eay fare well, and' bade him bring her back the scalps of numerous Egyptians ana return "I shall see you again," he said to June as the train was starting, keeping a long hold of her hand ana tor oure uoi mr,ti tn r.wvpnt his eves from betray ing to her all he felt. As for June, she was deathly pale; her lips were quiver ing; there was a look almost of agony in haw asA Tim a- histlp sounded, the train moved off, their eyes were fixed In one i . oi then thev were Darted. June leaned back in the carriage and closed her eyes. Madge made some gay i. v.... ,.. .nnilii did not answer. rruiain, uufc " ' - - and Madge took the hint and left her alone. Her own pleasant tnougnis were .,,.., b tnr her: the misunder- standing between her and Mr. Carslake was at an end, and be had asked her to marry him. The time was drawing on, inn """" hid not yet found courage to tell her hus band of her intended visit to London: he felt instinctively that he would not fx pleased. And, whatever happened, she could not, no she could not, give up that cherished idea. She must see Dallas once more. One morning, four days before the an nounced departure of the Guards, she said to Tom, as he was about to leave the breakfast room: "I am going up on Saturday to stay two nights with Mrs. Trevanion." "Oh!" he uttered, and stopped short. "IIave you not had enough of London yet?" There was something unusual in his voice; it had a ring of distinct displeas creond dissatisfaction. 1'here was no miolnke about his dis pleasure, lie scarcely spoke to his wife during the days that preceded her Jour ney to London. He half hoped she would understand that he did not wish her to go and would give up the idea. But, though June was most acutely conscious of his displeasure, she felt that, unless he for Wde her in so many words, go she mnst. And now the evening, to which June had been looking feverishly forward, had arrived. She was sitting opposite Dallas, who appeared to be in the highest spirits, and thinking every time she looked at hie handsome, cheery face that it was for the last time. Her heart was like lead within her breast; she knew she should never see him again. She tried to smile and talk, but when she opened her lips n choking sensation rose in her throat and made her feel as if she must burst into tears. There was a wistful look in Dal las' eyes, as though he were asking her if he was really sorry he was going if she would miss him. Mrs. Trevanion made superhuman ef forts to talk brightly; she would not allow lierself to dwell on facts, but insisted on putting the most cheerful face on the cx jjiedition and on making the very best of everything. It was quite likely the whole thing would be over before they got out, she said; but Dallas indignantly protested against the idea of their being made fools of for nothing. What should he bring them back from Egypt? he hardly knew what the specialties of the country were. But Mrs. Trevanion bade him bring him self back safely, and they would be quite satisfied. His sword belt had arrived just as he was starting for dinner, so he had brought it with him to try on. And, with the help of his hostess, he proceeded to equip himself in it, while June, Icy cold, with burning cheeks, sat looking on. Dal las, however, seemed pleasurably excited. He drew his sword from the scabbard, and, flourishing it iu the air, wondered laughingly how many Egyptians he should slay with it. Then June shut her eyes, and a horrid picturecame across her imagination. She saw him, still grasping his sword, but falling, staggering under his death wound, his now smiling face convulsed with agony. Oh, it was noth- ng short of murder to send out a boy like that! And in what a cause! Overwhelm ed with agony, a great sob rose in her throat a sob that would not be stifled; and then, struck with sudden horror at 1 Jg UmS-ktt&yy" herself, an. row and lied from the ro'm Dallas stopped short, as if paralysed; the color left cheeks, and he stood staring at Mrs. 1 revanion, who affected not to notice wTt had happened, and went on arranging the belt. But Hallas (nit one nana on her arm and said, in a voice stammering with emo tion: "Do you really think she cares about my going?" Do we not all carer returned Mrs. Trevanion, evasively. "Yes, but I wish I had known before!" uttered Dallas, leaning against the chim ney piece and putting one hand over bis eyes. "Why do yon wish yon had known be fore?" said Mrs. Trevanion, reproachfully. "Would yon like to go away nursing a dishonorable passion m your heart? Do you think it would be any comfort to you, supposing," and ber voice faltered "sup posing you had to look death in the face, to remember that you had brought nnhap piness and doubt Into the home of an hon est man a man whose peace of mind you have every right to respect? And, be sides, yon are wrong in attaching any im portance to Lady Nevil's agitation. She is very sensitive; she has seen a great deal of you lately; even if she had only the most cousinly liking for you, she might well feel upset to-night. Do you sup pose," the tears standing In her eyes, that I do not feel bad about your go ing?" "Heaven bless yoa, my dear, I know you do. But but," opening his blue eyes rather widely at her, "you you don't think I sha'n't come back?" "No, no," cried his friend. "I am quite nre vou will. But I should like to think you went out with a free heart and a clear conscience. Then there was a long pause, broken at last by Dallas. "Do you think," he ottered very wlst fnllv with an imploring glance, "that I might see her for one moment alone be fore I go, just to wish her good-by?" "No, no, no! answered Airs, trevan ion, with the utmost resolution. "Not for anything In the world; not for both your sakes. Y'ou know there is nothing I would not do for you. But not that." When the wheels had rolled away, the two ladies sat down and wept greviously. And"theirs were not the ouly hearts that ached that night. CHAPTER XXV. ived his wife with extreme coldness on her return, sooke during dinner, and. He scarcely when it was over, went aw n his own room. He did not mention Dallas' name, or ma any inquiry about his departure. June was perfectly conscious of these signs of displeasure, but a sort of apathy had stolen over her; it seemed as if nothing mattered very much. In a few days, per haps, she would feel differently, and then she would set to work to propitiate her husband. , In reality Tom felt himself deeply ag grieved. It took a loug time to get an idea into his head, but once it was there, .;n i.,.rr time was needed to dislodge it. Why should June have wanted to go i , London to bid Dallas goou-u, r . 1,1.1 d.IIri good-by again, Ion to bid Dallas gooo ' he took a much greater ,tePA than she had any right to i a I! II less ill 11 1111 UlOU . . for him, of course, he had been at hi infernal tricks again; ana i. teeth. Oh, how mistaken, how mistaken he had been in June. Well, he must put np with it now he supposed; anyhow, the boy was , left to him. and they two would be all in .11 to each other, please God! There would be no one to come between them for the next twenty years or so, at all events, bay followed day, and still that apathy in j,,,'. veins. She who was wont active sat listless and Idle and to tie so . . Mm took scant Interest in n?mne tl 1 ai mf-1 nre . . , 1 rim ! of the Guard, at AJxjnr that, June looscu yw - - i news. She was not, as a rule, given to reading the papers, but now, the moment ihey came, she seized upon them eagerly. This also Tom remarked with displeasure. Kit husband's altered demeanor was by no means lost on June; she began to feel that their estrangement was a serious tiling. Agnes, who came occasionally to the Hall, had every opportunity of seeing the estrangement between husband and wife; indeed. Juue took special occasion to be -iiptious aud frigid to Tom iu the presence of ll.at sainted creature. Win 11 Madge returned from a visit she hud iiaid to Mr. Carslake's sister she ex erienccd a oense of consternation at see ius the state of affairs. "Juny, darling," she exclaimed, "what on earth is the matter with you and Tom? This sort of thing will never do. You are more like two strange cats than the two devoted people you used to be." "Oh," returned June, bitterly, "that is the way with married people. You and your Mr. Carslake will be just the same in a few years time." "Never!" cried Madge, with Immense emphasis. "He will tire of you," said June. "I don't believe men have any affection. At all events, it does not last." "Juny," uttered Madge, wistfully, "do you know, I don't think it can be all Tom's fault? I think you must have done something to change him." "What have I done?" flashed ont June. "Yon will be angry, I'm afraid, if I tell you what I think," said Madge, slightly embarrassed. June looked at her expectantly. "I think," faltered Madge, "I know it is absurd, but I do think Tom is jealous of Dallas." Then Lady Nevil fulfilled Madge's pre diction by evincing great anger at such an utterly ridiculous and unwarrantable assertion, and Madge was compelled to eat her words and express the sincerest con trition for having suggested anything so impossibly and wickedly absurd. Madge was so extremely happy herself about this time that she had little or no leisure in which to occupy herself with her cousin's concerns. Mr. Carslake was at the rec tory, and was to spend a week at the Hall later. The marriage was fixed for the middle of September. Sir Thomas and Lady Nevil were to go to their place In the North the second week in October. .-There had been no visitors at the Hall this sum mer. June had felt scant inclination to play the part of hostess, and Tom was never very keen about having guests in the house. Mrs. Ellesmere was at Horn burg, aud had been there ever since they gave up the house In Grosvenor street. Mrs. Trevanion was the only person who had been bidden. She, however, had oth er engagements, but promised to come for Madge's wedding and to stay a fortnight after it. To this visit June looked for ward amazingly. Meantime, things went on much in tht same way. Agnes, Indeed, took advan-' tage of June's apparent indifference to come more frequently to the Hall, and. in one way or another, managed to see a good deal of Tom aud to manifets a great deal of sympathy for him. He did not actually complain of his wife, but it was easy to see he was a disappointed man, and Agnes was able to aay a great many words in season. Madge was far too much occupied" with her own affairs to continue her system of espionage over her sister, and June had grown not to care only to feel a sort of contemptuous indifference. "If it amuses them to be together and to abuse me, let them! What does it matter?" Her soul was harassed by what she read in the papers the hardships the troops were enduring, the privations, the beat. (To be continued.) Bicycle The wheel weighing the lea? 01 neeessarilv the lightest running; a weil hni it wheel, amolv strong enough to carry the rider, with saddle and handle bars at tne proper neigui, win irijuin less iower. The four-lap track at Indianapolis is completed. Only the work on the grand jtumU is to be finished, and then the Newby Oval will be equal to any in the country. A match of one hundred kilometers be tween M. Cordang, the holder of the iwf ni v-four hours' world's record, and hi oront rival. Huret. the previous hoi der, was decided June 12 at the Tare des Princes. Paris, when Canlang easily an fontwl lii 4 fiononent bv nine lalis. The fifty-kilometer prize of Munch race at Munich on June 12 was won in 1.35 2-5 by ilouhours. l.esna finishing stconfl. When Bald defeated Cooicr from scratch in the handicap race at Glens Falls, N. Y., ho defeated his great rival for the first time on the. National Circuit this season. Ifalil anil Cooper have now i in finals on the circuit eight tunes and Coulter has won seven of the eiirht nifPlim's. Itald defeated Coolter in thi mutch race at Walt ham, so that their ru'i.nl is eiirht for Coolter and two for ltald in ten meetings. 1-ust season at ihif lima th exact reverse was true in the record of the men. Coolter was suffering from boils and has a few to remind hiiu at at the ureseitt time. Applications for bicycle patents at tl.c natont no,. Washington, reouire the at tention of one exanfiner, nine assistant amminnni iinrl five clerks. When starting on a ride, a moment spent in testing nuts and bolts may save great annoyance. Loose nuts have been known to result in wholesale wreckage. Many riders who are habitually careful to keep oil away from tires still allow it to collect one the frame adjacent to the head and crank hanger bearings, uiinund f.,l of the fact that it will permanently destroy the lustre of the enamel. Useful Hints. If the wiry effect is desired when laun dering black Swiss muslin gowns, souk laundresses dissolve a quantity of gum trabic of the size of u walnut in twt juarts of cooked and blued starch. The gown is turned wrong side out and dipped in starch, then wrung out, and shaken hard iiefore ironing. It is also best to nor it on the wrong side. When it is necessary to keep a meal hoi for a belated comer, do not set tho plate holding tho food in a hot oven, thus difr ....i..rinir the china as well M drying the food; instead, place the plate upon lite hre over a pan of lw,'nKJk:?ft' the edge of the plate. The food wi II keep the eUge 01 tne piaie. hkh"i , , there wm Im, ,-nuugh steam f r. ur ?heioiling water in the lowr pau to keej . mitf, ami prevent the content becoming dried. To splice out a chafing-dish service of creamed fish, some left-over asparagus will be found particularly useful. A cream dressing is made for the fish, and the cold asparagus cut in two-inch lengths and added with the cold fish. The two can be heated through, and served on vblongs of toast. Variegated plants of almost any soo cies m.y.be pr.Hl..ce,l in tl. the belief of a c upon that i lierman uuiam"", -,"17 ; species a nearly allied form hawng col - oreu n n y.-b Tir-ICS-- SURGEON GENERAL STERNBERG tie Will Carefully Look After Our Sick an4 Wounded Foldiera. The medical service of Uncle Sam's irmy Is brought prominently Into pub lic notice now that our soldiers are In the field. This s the branch that must took after the sick and wounded and It Is of prime Importance that the head of the department should be well fitted (or the enerous duties that, fall upon hla boulders. Surgeon General George M. Sternberg Is CO years old, but doea not look his age. He served during the civil war as a surgeon and won great distinction. Since then he has been continuously serving with the army, both in Indian campaigns and yellow fever epidemics. He has studied the best methods for preventing yellow fe ver In different countries where !t has been prevalent, has represented this country at International sanitary con ferences and Is a member of leading medical organizations here and abroad. He has published many works princi pally on the cause and cure of disease from climatic Influences. In accordance with Gen. Sternberg's plan for the caring of sick and wound ed during the occupation of Cuba, every army division will be provided with leu's for a field hospital for the dlvi- BCIIOFOV GENERAL STKRirBBMk gton; also with nn ambulance corps, consisting of enlisted men of the hos pital corps of the United States army, whose duty It will le to remove the wounded from the battlefield as promptly as possible. The hospital ship relief will go to any port which may be occupied by our troops, to serve as a floating hospital and also as an am bulance ship to bring the sick and wounded to the nearest port In the I'nlted States where hospital accommo dations are available. A large general hospital has been fit ted up at Key West, as this will be the most convenient point of landing the sick and wounded of an army In Cuba. A hospital train consisting of tourist sleepers and a dining cur, with medical officers and attendants And nurses, will be held in readiness to transport the sick and wounded from Tampa or any other convenient point In Florida, to the general hospitals located farther north: " The "first "of ' thee""l at Fort McPherson, (Ja.. where accommodn- t:ona have been provided for 500 sick. :iid upon short notice these hospital no-; ommodatlons can lie considerably ex- , t-uded. The barracks at Fort Thomas, Ky., have also been converted Into a general hospital," and (iOO or more men , . . . .... can be provided for at this point. The: j barracks at Fort Mycr, Va., have also J been taken for hospital purposes. Ad- , ditional hospitals will be established ! as soon as the necessity for them arises. Hen. terunerg nas uuu nowu regu Sternberg has laid down rcgu- lations for the soldiers to follow while In Cuba. They will receive the best of enlightened medical treatment and If fevers break out among them It will not be for want of vigilance on the part of the medical corps. THE WHEEL tN WAR. How Bicycles May He of Service to the Ambulance Corps. The bicycle as an aid in war is a much discussed subject. Here it Is shown as used by the British soldier In carrying the wounded off the field. Every year a royal military tournament is held In London, and at the one held the Dorm.E AMnrri.AxcE. recently this ambulance was a feature. Four bicycles are used to each litter, one at each corner, but only two riders are required. Whether or not this idea would be of any use In Cuba with Its sandy soil Is a question. Died a Pauper. Samuel Tetlow, who died a pauper recently in San Francisco, was one of the earlier settlers on the Pacific coast, and in the good old days of Frisco's babyhood was known as "Prince Prodigal," because of the facility with which he won and lost fortunes over the green baize, lie built the old Bella Union Theater, having as a partner In Its management William Skaneantle bvrry, whom he shot to death during a quarrel. Tetlow was sentenced to death, but "social" Influence brought about his acquittal at a former trial. At one time he owned the property now known as Sutro Heights, which he sold to ex Mayor Sutro for 130,000. Wnat Comtltato Good Btehrn. I Simplicity and efficiency are the main requirements of the modern beehive. The hive produces no honey, but It Is an Indispensable instrument In bee cul ture. The best Implement is often a failure In Inefficient hands, while an ef ficient operator can make a partial suc cess even with poor tools, but for a nrst-class jod we look for a good raa chanlc with the best tools. In the pro duction sif honey, like the production of anything else, at this time, competi tion Is very strong, and If we would make a profit on the goods produced we mnst cheapen the production. We must produce the very finest goods at the lowest possible figure. This we can accomplish only by baring the beat bees, the best hlvea and topUwneirt, i4 faMuUt imiwtoak&t, Tfr I - .. 1 : - ... " --'r i .,.- i vf;-i -ytj-c ,.-.PV , -. "? v man who rides "hoWbtes and runs as ter "fads" In bee culture will have a lean bank account, American Garde 1ns, RAPID-FIRE QUN9L What IHtlasrtth Tkesa frosa the Blows Ire Camaeau Rapid lire cubs are J oat now much talked about, but meat people have onlj a vague Idea of what they am. Prob ably the general Idea Is baaed on the Gatllng gun. People who take the Gat. ling gun as a type of "rapid fire" sup pose that all guns called by that nam are merely machines for showering rlfl balls. But this is a complete mistake. There are rapid fire guns with a diam eter o six laches that throw sheila weighing 100 pounds. The Engineer ing News explains the matter as fob lows: The essential difference la In th method of loading. Instead of opening the breech and Inserting the project!! nd the powder separately, the lattei Is In a bunting bag, ammunition foi rapid fire guns Is now prepared as fox email arms, the ball, powder and firing primer are united, the powder In a me tallic case atached to the shot, and the primer in the center of the base of this case. There are a number of types of rapid fire guns, differing In the way this fixed ammunition Is fed to the gun and fired. The slx-pounder (2.24-lncb caliber) rapid fire guns of the Hotch klss, Drigga-Schroeder, Maxim, Nord enfeldt and Sponsel types can discharge 100 shots in 4 minutes 26 seconds. J minutes 85 seconds, 4 minutes 41 sec onds and 4 minute CG seconds, re spectively, or twenty to tweuy-live shots per mlanta, with accuracy of aim. Without attempt at accuracy of aim the rata can be Increased to thirty to thirty-five shots per minute. With five-inch rapid Are guns, or fifty-pounders, thlrty-adi shots have been tired 1; five minutes. Feeaadlty or t:ie Sparrow. Sparrows are the rabbits of the feath ered world In point of multiplication, frequently producing more than twent j young ones In a season, three or four broods of six or seven being not unus ual. In six years the progeny of ona single pair of sparrows will amount to millions, ns evidence the nlnrmlng rapidity with which the United States, New Zealand aud Australia are now Infested, the number originally taken over by emigrants being very small. Complaints from American, Australian and New Zealand agriculturists of the ravages committed by the bird are even more bitter than those of English farm ers. The total numbers of sparrows nre out of all proportion to those of other species of birds. Siberian J lot sen Manes and Taila. Three hundred bales of horses' manes and tails, to be used for upholstering furniture, have been landed here by tho British steamships Maine mid Michigan, from opdo.nv . Th-y ,coni! from far-away Siberia, and are tak?n from horses used by the Cossacks after the animals have outlived their useful ness. Horses are cheap in Kiissia, and ! after having seen better days their manes and tails are the only things left t "t a ftAminikriilnl raltio Vurr nffin " ' these hirsute nppendnnges are taken from sound animals, and the beasts left to their fate. Here the upholster ers use the hair for stuffing chair-backs and other articles of furniture, anil the j .ThV, 1" ' - - ." - - r. and consequently the best- Philadel phia Record. The MUiini Heart. Jack Totts I might have won t couple of hundred from old Chlpps last night in a little game of poker, but I didn't hare the heart to take his money. Will Betts Conscience wouldn't per mit It, eh? - Jack Potts 5o; merely a case of heart failure. . Will Betts Why, how's that? Jack Totts Well, you see I needed Just oue more little heart to make a flush. From Bad to Worse. Dixon I'd give anything I possess it I could only get rid of this gout. Hlxon Oh, that's an easy matter. Just move around to our boarding house and I'll wager that liver com plaint will soon take the place of th gout Dixon Liver complaint! Why, how'i that? Hlxon Well, the landlady feeds liver every other day and the boarders are all complaining. Dickens Not Goo 1 Enough. Of the remaking and unmaking 01 books there Is apparently as little end as of their making. We have already seen the expurgator at work on "Oliver Twist," and now It Is the harmless looking "Sketches by Boa" which Is to be torn to pieces. The authorities at Darlinghurst jail, in Sydney, Australia, declare that thirty pages of this book are unfit for prisoners to read and have accordingly cut them out of the copy In the Jail library. A Blight Mleunderatendinsr. Mr. Guyer I suppose you ride s wheel. Miss Antlquate? Miss Antlquate Tea, Indeed: I com pleted my first century yesterday. Mr. Guyer Really? You don't loo It, I'm sure. ' N. B. Friends they were, but stran gers now. Irving' Spectacles. Sir Henry Irving has one peculiarity that only those brought Into Intimate contact with him recognise. This Is In ! regard to the number of spectacles and glasses of various sorts that he always has In hand, both at the Lyceum Thea ter and at home. At the Lyceum he has quite two dozen pairs of one kind and another, and no employe about the pltfce ever dreams of removing them, for when Sir Henry Is busy with some production be Is perpetually losing his rpectacles, and. as he la tar more do pendent on these than moat people r" v e . IZ I . know, he flies to the nearest point where he Is sure he may find a pair. He Is constantly buying new pairs of lasses, and when he Is good naruredly rallied about this he pleads guilty ) laving quite sixty pain either she beater or at heme QUEEN OF HANOVER. fhe Is 80 Year of Ace and the Second Oldest overetjcn in Kur.ipe. The Queen of Hanover, who cele brated her eightlsth birthday not Ions since. Is the second oldest sovereign iu Europe, the Queen of Denmark bein :he elder by nine months. The Quen i' Hanover, who Is the Princess Marie f Saxe-Altenburg, was married on Feb. IS, 1S13, and became a widow on lime 12, 1878. The great Interest at- 1 TH8QCEKX OF HANOVER. aching to her Majesty Is the clrcnm-t-r.ee that her husband. King Ce uge V. of Hanover (who l!s biirled :it Windsor), was the l;:st of tl.e Enl:.-!i sovereigns of that realm, which he lht In lSiifl by taking the side of Anstrhu The Omen of Iinuover has two dauh- leis, the Prlnc'ss Frcderica and the I'rincPKS Mary, both of whom are Prin cesses of Great P.ritain and Ireland, end one son. the Duke of Cumberland. The nccomuanyins rort,alt, which U her Majesty's latest, shows the Queen wearing the famous '-Cumbirlaud" pearls. PUNCTUAL DUXE S CLOCK. Cont-trnctei Ko that at th- Hour of 1 It strikes Thirteen 'limes. The clock is fixed In a tower at Wors ley, in Kngland. The originator of the famous Uritlgewater canal Francis, first Duke of Bridge-water was In the habit of constantly visiting his yards and workshops and overseeing his workpeople. He was Invariably the first to reappear after the dinner hour was over, which was Just after '1 IT STIIIKKS THIRTEEN. o'clock, and noticed that many of the workers were most uupuurtuul, return ing often considerably after the 2 polnted time. Cpon remonstrating with them, however, ho was told by thu men that they could not hear the clock strike 1 the signal for their return. Thereupon, to rob them of this excuse, the Duke ordered n clock to le con structed which should, at the hour of 1, strike thirteen times, and from tiie time of Its fixture this excuse was nev er given ns a reason of unpunctuality. . - - thorlock in Si ring- Gr.iln. If there appear yellow flowers o:it ered here and there through Holds of oata or barley, when these cereals have grown a few Inches high, It Is a sign that the field needs attention and wevd lne. This yellow flower belongs to the mustard family, and Is an Intoler able pest in spring grain. It only grows oa ground disturbed In spring. Each plant bears hundreds to thousands of seeds, and as these will lie In the ground for years, and only grow when the ground Is spring plowed, they soon make the growing of spring grain Im possible. Wherever this pest abounds seeding should be done with 'winter wheat or rye, and no spring cultiva tion of these grains can be allowed, as this will start the weed to growing, just as It would in spring grain. His Master Was as Yorksh r man. A tourist, stopping at a tunail country hotel In England, seeing the hostler ex pert and tractable. Inquired how loug he had lived there and what country man he was. "I'se Yorkshire," said the fellow, "and ha' lived sixteen years here." "I wonder." replied the gentle man, "that In so long a period so clevet a fellow as you seem to be have not come to be master of the hotel your self." "Aye," answered the hostler, "but malster's Yorkshire, too." Couldn't Spit in Church. A bishop of a church conference Is Georgia told those delegates who used tobacco not to expectorate on the floor or on the handsome new carpet, which had recently been put down. He told them that If they must chew tobacco to go outside and they would find a nice new curbstone and plenty of fresh sand to expectorate upon, or they could bring their cuspldorea, and In case of an emergency they could use their hats. Dose that Never Bark. There are three varieties of the do that never bark the Australian do:,-, the Egyptian shepherd dog and Vn "Uonheaded" dog of Thibet Dexterity of Clgarettc-Mak rs- So great 1? the dexterity of the em ployes In cigarette manufactories, ac quired by long continued practice, that ome workers make between 2,000 ar.d J,000 cigarettes dally and being paid i b7 Piecework tl so much ptr 1,0(KJ eatu fO weekly. I The First Cbar:ereJ City, The first city incorporated in th!s country with a charter and privileges ras New York, which was granted its H9n la 1604. 3 SERMONS OFTHE DAY Sul.j.Tl: "Wiiiiim Wriiiiffir'-LHKom Drawn Kr m rlin Ctmiluct of Vtitl, the Vnilu.i file filory of Thou Who Sta-im-li tV lli'lli Wounds. As Floieuro NllitillHl0 !i(l. Text: "Rritiir V.ishtl, tho queen, before th kiug wit ii 1 1 1 crown royal, to show the people and thn princes her huauty: for she was fair to Ion's upon, but thn Queen Viishti refuse.! to come." Kstber I., 11, 12. We stand timid Uih palaces of Shushan. The pinnacles nro iillmmi with the morning light. Tlie columns rise festooned and wroathed; the wealth of empires flashing from the grov. s; the veilings adorned with linages of bird and betiRt, and scenes of prowess and cniHii.-st. The wails are bung with shields, and emblazoned until It to-ms that tlitt whole round of splnndors Is rxliHURted. Mncli arch is a mighty leaf of architectural achievement. Golden stars shining dona on glowing arabesque. Hangiugs of embroidered work in which mingle the Muciiess of the sky, the greenness of the grass and the whiteness of tho sea-foam. Tapestries hung on silver rings, wedding together the pillars of inarlilo. r.ivlllnns reaching ont in every direction. These for repose, filled with luxuriant couches, in which weary limhs sink until nil fatigue Is suh merge.l. Those for carousal where kings drink down a kingdom at one swallow. Amazing spectacle! Light of silver drlp I'lng down over stairs of ivory on shields of gold. Floors of stained marble, sunset red ami iiii'lit black, and inlaid with g eamin-; pearl. In connection with this palace there. Is a garden, where tho mighty men of foreign lands are seated at a ban quet. Under the spread of oak and linden aiil acacia the tables are nrrange-i. Tiie breath of honeysuckle and frankincense (Ills thn air. Fountains leap up into the light, fie sprav struck through with rain bows falling into crystalline baptism upon fl-wering shrubs then rolling down tiirough channels of marble, and widening out here and there into pools swirling with thn II nny tribes of foreign aqua riums, bordered with scarlet auemones, Hypericums, and many-colored ranunculi. Meats of rarest bird and beast smoking u; amid wreaths ofuromatics. The vases filled with apricots and almonds. Tbe baskets piled up with apricots and figs and oranges aud pomegranates. Melons tnste fully tvrinnd with leaves of acacia. The bright waters of Eula-us filling the urn? and dropping outslibi the rim in flashing heads amid thn traceries. Wine from thn royal vats of Ispahan and Khira2, in bottles ol tinged shell, and lily-Minped cups of silver, and flagons and tankards of solid gold. The music rises higher and the revelrj breaks out iuto wilder transport, and the winn has flushed tbe cheek and touched the brain, and louder tliau all other voices are the hiccough of the Inebriates, the gab ble of fools. and t!iesong of thn drunkards. In another part of ttm palace. Queen Vashti is entertaining the Princess of Persia at a banquet. Drunken AJinsuerus says to his servants: "You go nml fetch Vashti from that banquet with the women, anil bring her to this banquet with the men, and let nin .lisplay her beauty." T'io servants immediately start to obey tho king's com mand; but there was a rule in Oriental society that no woman might appear in public without having her face veiled, Yet here was a mniiilatn that no one dar dispute, demanding that Vashti come in unveiled betorn thn multitude. However thern was in Vnshti's soul a principle mor regal than Ahasue rus, more brilliant than the gold of Shushan, of more wealth than the realm of Persia, which commanded hei to obey this order of the king; and so all the righteousness and holiness and modesty of her nature rise up into one sublime re fusal. Hue says: "I will not go into the. banquet unveiled." Ahasuerus was in furiate; and Vashti, robbed of her position and her estate, is driven forth In poverty and ruin to suffer the scorn of a nation, nud yet to receive the applause of artet generations, who shall rise up to admir this martyr to kingly Insolence. Well, the last vestige of that feast Is gone; the last garland has faded; the last arch has fallen: the last tankard has been destroyed; and Shushan is in ruin; but as long as the world stands there will be multitudes ol men nud women, familiar with the Bible, who will comn into this picture gallery ol Ood and admire the divine portrait ol Vashti the queen, Vashti the veiled, Vashti the sucriliee. Vashti the silent. In the lirst place, I want you to look u;ion Vashti tho queeu. A blue ribbon, rayed with white, drawn around her fore head, indicated her queenly position. II was no small honor to be queen in such 8 realm astiiat. Hark to therustleof hei robes! See the blaze of her jewels! And yet it is not necessary to have place and regal robe in order to he queenly. Whet I see a woman with stout faith In God putting her foot upon till meanness and selfishness ami godless display, goinil right forwara to servo ('luist and tho rac by a grand and glorious service, I say " flint woman is a queen," and the rank! of Heaven look over the battlements npoi I ho coronation; and whether she comes uf from the shanty on the commons or tht mansion of the fashionable square, I greet her with the shout, "All hall, Queer 1 Vashti!" i What glory was there on the brow ol Mary of Hcotland, or Elizabeth of Eng land, or Margaret of France, or Catherint of Russia, compared with the worth ol some of our Christian mothers, many ol : them gone into glory? or of that woman mentioned In the Scriptures, who put hei all into the Lord's treasury? or of Jeph thah's daughter, who made a demonstra- I tion of unseltlsh patriotism? or of Abigail. wno rescueu me nerua ana hocks oi nei husband? or of Kutb, who toiled undei a tropical sun for poor, old, homeless Naomi? or of Florence Nightingale, who went at midnight to staunch thn battle wounds of the Crimea? or Mrs. Adouirait .Tudson, who kindled the lights of salva tion amid the darkness of Tturtnah? or Mrs. Heinans, who poured out her holy sou) in words which will forever be associated with hunter's born, and captive's chain, and bridal hour, and lute's throb, and I curfew's knell at the dying day? andseoref I and hundreds of women, unknown on j earth, who have given water to the thirsty, ' and bread to the hungry, and medicine tc j the sick, and smtles to the discouraged j their footsteps heard along dark lane and , in government hospital, and in almshouse . corridor, and by prison gate? There may j be no royal robe there may be no palatial - surroundings. She does not need them: : for all charitable men will unite with the crackling lips of fever-struck hospitals and plague-blotched lazaretto in greeting her as she passes: "Hail! Hail! Queen Vashti!" Again. I want you to consider Vashti the veiled. Had she appeared before Ahasue rus and his court on that day with her face uncovered she would have shocked ail the delicacies of Oriental society, and the very men who in their intoxication demanded . that she come, in their sober moments ! would have despised her. Assoms flowers seem to thrive best In the dark lane and In J the shadow, and where the sun does not ! seem to reach them, so God appoints to aiost womanly natures a retiring and un . obtrusive spirit. God once in a while does ' call an Isabella to a thronn, a Miriam to strike the timbrel at the front of a host, or ! a Marie Antoinette to quell a French mob, or a Deborah to stand at the front of an I armed battalion, crying out, "Up! Up! ! This is tbe day iu which the Lord will de liver iSisera iuto thy bands." And when the women are called to such outdoor work . ind to such heroic positions, God prepares th cm lor it; and tney Save iron in tneir soul, and lightnings in their eye, and whirlwinds in their breath, and the bor rowed strength of the Lord Omnipotent in :heir right arm. They walk through fur naces as though they were hedges of wild Bowers, and cross seas as though they were shimmering sapphire; and all the harpies f hell down to their dungeon at the stamp 9f womanly indignation. But these are the exceptions. Generally, Doroas would rather make a garment for the poor boy; Rebecca would rather fill the trough of thecamels; Hannah would rather make a eoat for Samuel; the Hebrew maid would rather give a prescription for Maa man's leprosy; tbe woman ot Sarepta would rather gather a few sticks to coo a meal for famished Elijah; Phebe would rather carry a letter for the inspired apostle; Mother Lois would rather educate Timothy In the Scriptures. When I see a woman going about her dally duty, with cheerful dignity presiding at the table, with kind and gentle but firm discipline presiding la the nursery, going ont into the world with out any blast of trumpets, following in tbe footsteps of Him who went about doing good I say: "This is Vashti with a veil on." But when I see a woman of unblushing boldness, loud voiced, with a tongue of In finite clitter-clatter, with nrrogant look, passing through the streets with the step of a walking-beam, gayly arrayed in a very hurricane of millinery, I cry out: "Vashti has lost her Tell!" When I see a woman struggling for political preferment trying to force her way on upto consplcuity, amid the masculine demagogues, who stand with swollen fists and bloodshot eyes and pestiferous breath, to guard the polls wanting to go through the loaferisin and defilement of popular sovereigns, who crawl up from th saloons greasy and foul and vermin-covered, to decide questions of justice and order and civilization when I see a woman, I say, who wants to press through all that horrible scum to get to ' public place and power, I say: "Ah, what a pity! Vashti has lost her veil!" When I see a woman of comely features, and of adroitness of intellect, and endowed with all the schools can do for her, and of high social position, yet moving In society witn superciliousness and hauteur, as though she would have people know their place, and with an undnllned combination of giggle and strut and rhodomontade, en dowed with allopathic quantities of talk, but only homoaopathio Infinitesimals of sense, the terror of dry-goods clerks and railroad conductors, discoverers of signifi cant meanings in plain conversation, prod igies of badinage and innuendo I say: "Vashti has lost her veil." - Again, I want you this morning to con sider Vashti the sacrifice. Who is this that 1 see coming out of that imlaee gute- of Shushan? It seem9 to me that I have seen her before. She comes homeless, house lass, friendless, trudging along with a broken heart. Who is she? It is Vashti the sacrifice. Obi what a change it was from regal position to a wayfarer's crust! A little while ago, approved and sought for; now, none so poor as to acknowledge her acquaintanceship. Vashti the sacrifice! Ah! you and I have seen it many a time. Here is a home empalaced with beauty. All that refinement and books aud wealth can do for that home has bena doue; but Ahasuerus, the husband and the father. Is taking hold on paths of sin. Ho is gradu ally going down. After awhile he will flounder and struggle like a wild beast In the hunter's net further away from God, further away from tho right. Soon the bright apparel of the children will turn to rags; soon the household song will become the sobbing of a broken heart. The old story over again. Brutal Centaurs break ing up the marriage feast of Lapithn?. The house full of outrage and cruelty and abom ination, while trudging forth from the palace gate are Vashti and her children. There are homes In all parts of this land that are In danger of such breaking up. Oh, Ahasuerus! that you should stand in a home, by a dissipated life destroying the Ceace and comfort of that home. God for id that your children should ever have to wring their bands, and havn peopln point their finger at them as they pass down the street, and say, "There goes a drunkard's child." God forbid that the little feet should ever have to trudge the path of poverty and wretchedness! God forbid thai any evil spirit born of the wine-cup or the brandy-gloss should come forth and uproot that garden, and with a lasting, blistering, all-consuming curse, shut for ever the palace gate against Vashti and tbiBcbildren. One night during our Civil War I went to Hagerstown to look at tho army, and I stood ou a bill-top and looked down upon them.- I saw the camp-time all tlirc-jgh tbe valleys and all over the hills. It was a weird spectacle, those camp-fires, and I stood and watched them; aud the soldiers who were gathered around them were, no doubt, talking of their homes, and of tbe long march they had taken, nud of the bat tles they were to fight; but after awhile I saw these camp-llrcs begin to lower aud they continued to lower, uuiil they were all gone out, nud the irmy slept. It was Im posing when I saw the camp-Hres; It was imposing in the darkness when I thought of the great host asleep. Well, God looks down from Heaven, and H sees the lire sides of Christendom and the loved ones gathered around these llresi-les. There are tlin camp-fires where we warm ourselves at tlio close of (lay, and talk over thn battles ot life we have fought and the battles that are yet to come. God grant that when at last these tiros begin to go out, and con tinue to lower until finally they nre ex tinguished, and the ashes of consumed hope strew the hearth of t ho old hoaie stead, it may be because we have Gone to sleep that last M ;ep. From which none ever wuko to weep. Now we are an army on the march of life. Then we shall be an army bivouacked in the tent of the grave. Once more: I want you to look at Vashti the silent. You do not hear any outcry from this woman as sue goes forth from the palace gate. From the very dignity of ber nature, you know there will be no vo ciferation. Sometimes III life it Is noces sary to make a retort; sometimes iu life it is necessary to resist; but there are crises when the most Important thing to do is to keep silence. The philosopher, coiilbtent in his newly discovered principle, waitiug for tiie coming of more intelligent genera tions, willing that men should iaugli at the lightning rod and cotton-gin and steam boat aud telegraph-waiting for long years through the scoflliig of philosophical s.-hool. in grand and maguillcent sileuce. Galileo, condemned by mathematicians, mid monks, and cardinals, caricatured everywhere, yet waiting and watching with his telescope to see the coming up of stellar reinforcements, when the stars in their courses would light for the Copernl ean system; then sitting down in complete blindness nud deafness to wait for the coming on of the generations who would build his monument and bow at his grave. The reformer, execrated by his couiempo raries, fasteued in a pillory, the slow fires of public contempt burning under him, ground under tho cylinders of the printing press, yet calmly waiting for tiie day when purity of soul nml heroism of character will get the sanction of earth and t lie plaudits of Heaven. Affliction enduring w.thout any complaint the sharpness ot the pang, and the violence of the storm, and the heft of the chain, and the darkness of the night waiting until a divine hand lmll be put forth to soo he the pang, and hush the storm, and release tlte catitive. A wife abused, persecuted, and a p'-rjiefnal -.vile from every earthly comfort waiting, waiting, until the Lord shall gather up His dear children in a Heavenly home, and no poor Vushtl will ever be thrust out from thn palace gate. Jesus, In silence in-1 answering not a word, drinking thn ?all. and bearing the Cross, in prospect of :he rapturous consummation when in gels thronged His chariot wheel, Aud bore Him to His throne; Then swept their golden burps and sung, "The glorious work is done!" Surveying by photography is paining ground. Ivor fsi.Onn square miles have lieen photographically platted and surveyed by the Surveyor General of Cm.iula. A curious fact has born noted by Arc tic travelers snow when at a very low temperature absorbs moisture and dries garments. A recent landslide in China revealed a pile of money equaling in value r.h'"b iloo eopji- rs. The coins were made about the middle of tho eleventh century. It is a grout ::ei-rmplis nn lit to know J-w to make the lsittof life its il ei.nies. The Government of WucrtMiilieip. has ji.st authorized the n otion of a hy gienic lultoratory i.i connci-tiou iith the medical depaitiiK nt of the Uiiivetny of Stuttgart. The biggrst rope ever use 1 for h -til ing purHis. s has yit Is en made f..r a dis trict subway in Glasiw. Seoilaid, it being seven miles long, four anil om-hnlf inches in dii'.mctcr end n iji'is marly The highest waterfall In the world is Cholock cascade, at Yoseniiti'. Cal , which is 2635 feet high, or just half a mile I '.