"'.5. 1 F. lOHWEIEK THE CONSTITUTION-THE' UNION AND THE ENFOBOEMENT OF THE LAW8. VOL 1.1 II MIFFLINTOWN , JUNIATA COUNTY. PKNNA.. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 14. 1898 NO. 1 1- 1 r i t i V J By Marion V.Hollis: CHAPTER VII. (Continued.) Among the other guests who were Hint Christmas so happy at Selwyn Cas tle was Lord Balecarres. Many people wondered he should he there at all, for his lordship had not the best of reputa tion where pretty women were concerned. He was nothing worse than a flirt, but he was a flirt of the very first wacer. Christmas found my lord at Selwyn Cas tle, and the charm that kept him there was the sweet, simple, naive beauty of l-ady Violante. He gloried in paying her homage. No light on earth was so pleasant to him as to watch the rich crimson flushing hei face, to watch the beautiful blushes mantling to the very edge of the golden hair, to watch the eyes thnt would fain have Sashed indignation, but took in the end a beseeching, piteous expression. One evening, dinner wits' over, and the visitors had all assembled in the drawing room. Lady Talmis was singing, and had irawn together a charmed audictice. Some it the elders were at whist, others nt chess. Lady Violante, only too happy it see every one engaged, and to find herself it leisure, had taken up her station ly the ide of a small table. She was joined there in a few minutes by Beatrice Leigh, who wished to ar- ; " range about some dancing. Kerore tney had been talking two minutes Lord Bale carres joined them. "I hope I am not intruding," he 6:iid, "but I remained at the other end of the room until I could bear it no longer. May I ait here. Lady Selwyn':" A woman of the world would have bad her answer ready: a few bright, quick, witty words, a slight exchange of repnr e, and all would have ended. Violnnte'a face flushed. She was at a loss what to say. Then my lord drew from his pocket book a small folded envelope. "See, Lady Violante." he said; "I have copied these verses for you." She would have liked best not to notice !t, but he held up the paper, and she was compelled to take it. "They are love verses," he said, senti mentally; but Lady Violante put an end to his sentiment by tearing the envelope in two, and throwing it away. It was not perhaps very well bred, it was cer tainly not rolite, but it was the action of ao honest-hearted girl tired of silly com pliments. I-ard Balecarres looked up suddenly, with a gleam of animation on bis hand some, inane face. "That is too cruel," he said. "What have my poor little verses done, l-ady Violante? Ah! I see, I am intruding. You will be kinder to me to-morrow, per haps." He turned away, and Beatrice, with haughty, cold face and curling lips, looked down on the flushed features of the young "For Vivian s sake, iaay loianie. He tr ire said, "it would be as well to re- fm,in from such exhibitions of temper. : You expose your husband as well as your- . self to ridicule." "What is it?" asked Vivian, who had : joined them, unseen, and was looking in j amazement from one to the other. Up rose Violante and told her story. 1 Tr.l Balecarres was always either talk- ' ing nonsense or writing it, and she was tired of it. Although Vivian sympathized with his wife, he was rather scandalized at the outbreak, as Beatrice described it. With a look that rankled in his mind, one of deep pity for him. Miss I-eigb went away, leaving them together. "My dearest Violante," he said, "if you would but try a little more if you would but abandon some of your old-fashioned, old-world notions and do as others do. you would make me so happy." "I shall never allow any man to forget that I am a married lady, or to make love to me!" she cried. His face grew dark. "How can you mistake me so, Vio lante?" he said nngrlly. "If any man dared to do as you say, I would thrash him like a lashed hound. You mistake. Lord Balecarres is, in plain English, a fool.' Pray pardon the word. Women of the world know how to keep such mn in their place, without any such exhibition as this." He was vexed with her that she did not understand the difference between this merely fashionable nonsensical trifling and reality. She was angry with him, thinking that he was indifferent on a subject on which she felt strongly. She turned away, the dark tender eyes full of tears, and so the first cloud fell between them. CHAPTER VIII. The bells of Thornleigh Church pealed out merrily their sweet chime seemed to cheer and gladden the air; they rang out quant old melodies, they clashed as though in triumph, they made merry, they dropped down sweet music, they repeated over and over again ths self-same glorious harmony, and all because the heir of Sel wyn was born. It was a bright May morning, the sun shining on land and sea, the birds all singing of their love for each other, the gguers all blooming, the chestnuts bud ding, the hawthorn in full perfume; all nature smiling and bright; and to Lady Violante, holding her little son in her arius, it seemed as though the world had never been so bright before. The May sunbeams peeped into the room where she lay with the little boy in her arms, and Lord Vivian Selwyn, as he looked, thought be had never seen so fair a picture as she, with ber pale, sweet face and white hfee .draperies, presented. All the love he felt for the fair-haired young girl was as nothing to the warm, deep devotion that filled bis heart for bis wife the mother of his child. She had asked to see him, because she had something so especial to say, and Lord Vivian bad gone up into her room, the clash of the gay bells ringing In his ears. "Vivian," said a sweet, low voice, "1 want to ask you something about my baby." "What lm the favor. Violante ? h ask ed. "I am like Kiag Ahasuerus; ask for j -w . wi!lth half of my kingdom is ' yours, wnat more ao you am ; "Mr own way, in this instance. she aaid. "over baby. I should like io mucn to cafl him Horace, after my father. Hor ace Selwyn would be a beautiful name, I think. If anything could make me love my baby better it would be calling him by my father's name. Are you willing, Vivian?" Bat the tend, hik Ifirt had died from Lord t'ivian'a face, and a grcitt lot.k "i perplexity came there. The clear eyes looking into his noted it. "It would please papa so much," she said; "he would think it both a compli ment and an honor that the heir of the Selwyns should be named after hi:0." She spoke this time in pleading voice, hard to resist. "My darling," said Vivian gently, "yon know that we have certain names that belong to our family Huldibrand. Viv ian, Rupert, Hugh; we never care to in graft new DJUDM ob Um jamllx tree." "But cjr father's name there could surely be no objection to that? Horace! it sounds well, and there have been some grand men of that name in the world. Can you not promise me, Viv ian?" "The fact is, darling," he said gently, "that Beatrice and my mother have al ready talked about this matter. Bea trice declares that this wonderful boy of yours resembles one of our ancestors. Sir Rupert Selwyn. a cavalier in King Charles' time, who was famous for his loyalty and his chivalry. Our boy could resemble no better man." She was but a simple, loving child, pure and tender of heart, slow to think evil, inclined by the goodness of her nature to all that was noble; but at those woras something like a pang of jealousy came to her. "My baby is my own," she said. "It is not Miss Leigh's Promise me. Ai'hat have Mrs. Selwyn or Miss Leigh to do with my baby? what have they to do with it? Surely, Vivian, we can please ourselves. You could not lightly put aside my wish to gratify Miss Leigh." But, as many another man has done before him. Lord Vivian parried a ques tion he could not decide. He was brave by nature, kindly of heart, this hand some young master of Selwyn Castle; but he was weak and impressionable, easily led, and somewhat apt to be ruled by women of strong will, as brave men often are. So he kissed Lady Vlolante's flushed face and sweet, questioning eyes. He would not see that they were half filled with tears. He kissed the soft cheek nes- tied like a tender little bird. ! "Do not trouble, Violante," he said; "1 will see about it." So be went away, and in some vague manner all the sunshine of the May morn ing went with him. The gay bells do longer seemed full of music, the harmony bad gone from them. Lady Violante turned to the little one lying in her arms, and, bending her face over him, wept bitter tears. Lord Vivian found his mother and Miss Leigh in the picture gallery, Beatrice looking imperially beautiful in a long, sweeping dress of black velvet made af ter a picturesque fashion all her own. "I have just been to see Violante," he said, "and she wishes very much to give our young heir her father's name. What ! do you think, mother.' Horace Selwyn would not sound badly. Beatrice Leigh turned to him with Sinning eyes. "If I were you. my child should be call- ed after the herors of his race." she said. "I quite agree with Beatrice," said Mrs. Selwyn slowly. "Mr. 'leniple is a most respectable man, I am sure, but I do not think your eldest son should bear his name, Vivian." "I should like to have pleased Vio lante," he said, somewhat wistfully. CHAPTER IX. In the drawing room of Thornleigh i House, in Belgravla, London, a group of i three ladies stood, holding anxious con sultation over a magnificent diamond tiara. Mrs. Selwyn held it in her hands. Lady Violante shrank as though half illarmed at it, and Beatrice Leigh stood by with a smile on her face a cold, hard smile, in which there was nothing of friendly interest. "I think it very beautiful, Violante," said Mrs. Selwyn; "I cannot imagine why you object to it." "Lady Selwyn would probably prefer a wreath of daisies or wild flowers," said Miss Leigh. "That I should !" cried Lady Violante. "Such magnificent ornameints as that tiara frighten me!" "But," remonstrated Mrs. Selwyn, "you must dress according to your rank, and you must wear such jewels as your hus band's position entitles you to wear. Do you not understand?" "Yes," she replied wearily. "I quite understand," but the golden head drooped and the fair face grew sad. "Then," said Mrs. Selwyn. "yon had better decide upon this. I like it better than anything we have seen. Here is Vivian; let us have the benefit of his taBte." He joined the little group with a smile on his dark, handsome face. Mrs. Selwyn continued: "Stoir & Mortimer have sent the tiara you ordered, and I think it simply magnificent." "Is Violante pleased?" he asked eager ly, turning to his wife. She made no reply. Mrs. Selwyn spoke for her. "Violante thinks it too too grand, 1 suppose!" Lord Vivian laughed. "My simple darling," he said, "when will yon learn to love grandeur? It is not one whit too beautiful for you. If all the jewels on earth were strung upon one string, I should still think them unwor thy of being offered to you," and he touched the white brow with his lips. Ail this discussion arose from the fact that Lord Vivian Selwyn, with 'he ladies of his household, had come up to London to send the season there, and it had been decided that I-ady Selwyn and Miss Leigh should be presented at the drawing room to be held on the fourth of June. The morning of the day Iady Violante had dreaded so long dawned at last, bright and beautiful, with sunshine thnt reminded one of the scent of roses and mignonette warm and invigorating. The ky was clear and bine as the heaven that " sunny iia ,. Lady Violante awoke with a sigh; the day she had fear ed had dawned, and must somehow be got through. They were in the library, ready at last, and Vivian, as he looked on the two la dies before him, felt proud as he had nev er done before. Mrs. Selwyn had declin ed going, and her grace the Duchess of Roxminster was to present Lady Selwyn to Jie Qdmp. Jikr waxf dressed now. and waitieir. Lady Violante looked, in her delicate loveliness, like "the queen of the lilies;" her dress of what Lord Vivian called May sunbeams, and ber tiara of diamonda, with the white plumes, suited her to perfection. She tried to reassure herself, but the small jeweled hands trem bled and the sweet lipa half quivered as they smiled. Court dresa suited the imperial beauty of Beatrice Leigh as no ojpt did. Mrs. Selwyn had presented her with a mag nificent suite of diamonds and rubies. Her dress was of maize-colored velvet, and the rich, sweeping train was no trouble to her. One could see at a glance that she was at home and well at ease. The white waving plumes added to her patrician beauty. She was herself well satisfied when she saw Vivian's eyes rest admir ingly on ber. They stood at last in one of the ante rooms, and there her Grace of Roxuiinstei was waiting for an introduction to them. Hiss Leigh bad known the duchess for joine time. To Lady Selwyn she was a complete stranger. There had been one or two appointments made for au intro luction, but her grace's engagements had Lrveutud the keeping of them. When she. Lad Violante Selwyn, stood face to face with the Duchess of ltoxmiu ster, it was with difficulty she repressed the cry of astonishment that rose to her lips. An old woman of sixty dressed like a blushing girl of eighteen excessively de collete; a diamond necklace round a thin, withered neck; a diamond bracelet round a shrunken arm; false hair, wreathed with jewels and plumes; false teeth gleaming white through the thin lips; painted cheeks and penciled eyebrows. Lady Vio lante involuntarily wondered what wat false and what was not. Her grace was always envious of new beauties. The younger they were the less she liked tbem. To Beatrice Ieigh's ;ilerb beauty she was accustomed, there fore indifferent; the spirituelle, graceful loveliness of Lady Selwyn annoyed her. She responded most graciously to ths introduction. "You are younger than I expected, she taid to Lady Violante. "When 1 was younger, 1 took the lead among blonde beauties a place you will occupy now, 1 suppose. There are few blonde belles nowadays." "It is a place I should not care to oc cupy," said Lady Violante, with a smile. "Ah, indeed!" said her grace; "simple habits, and all that kind of thing, 1 sup pose; sorry I cannot sympathize with you. I like what is called 'life.' " She shrugged the bare, lean shoulders, lind looked at Miss Leigh for approval. I Then they passed on with the crowd, i nd Lady Violante's heart beat fast. The best remark one could make on the ubject of her presentation was, that it as not a success. In after years her !. horned to remember it: and the worst of it was, she knew thnt ber fail tat wis related to Lord Vivian with imv licinn. detail. "I could not have imagined. Lady Sel wyn, that you would have been so awk ward." said the duchess, when they stood together waiting for the carriage. "You M-euied to lose your senses altogether. Do ou know you hardly replied when her majesty made that kind rcmar to you. "I was frightened." said the young girl. "I tried to remember all that I had been mid hnt it died out of my mind. "Leaving you afraid," interrupted her grace. "I am not afraid," said Lady Violante, "Thev would see I was frightened." "Ah, yes, ma chere," interrupted the duchess again; "but women of the world L-nnw no such fear." n nlomst passionate cry rose to ner mm n igj nisi gT.g ran nrtrt umiri- taken to be that which she dreaded most of all a woman of the world. She saw by her husband'a face that he knew she had failed. It was dnrKer anu more stern than she had ever seen it be fore. He made no remark. She almost wished he would have done so; but often er than ever he wished In his henrt that Violante could be more like Beatrice Leigh. "It is my own fault," said Lady Vio lante to herself, as she walked alone through the long, dimly lighted conserva tory. "I knew that my world and his were different; that I could never be all bis wife ought to be, and I should not hr.v? married him; it is my own fault." (To be continued.) More Important rrvicc. She You're a big, able-bodied fellow. Why aren't you away fighting for your country? He Gracious goodness! I guess you don't keep very well posted. Didn't you know that I had been chosen as one of the members of the team that Is to rep resent our golf club In the match game against the Muxegos next month?" . The Difficulty. "Of course," said Mr. Corntossel, "a politician is the servant of his country." "Yea," replied his wife, "and that's where he's got us. He doesn't go knock in' around from one concern to another, so's you can stand 'lm up an' make Mm give a recommend from bis last em ployer." Washington Star. (Inly Cn.e on Kccord Through all his passionate plead In si she sat absolutely unmoved. It was the first Instance ever not(' where a woman sat thus who had cured possession of a piazza rocker. Cincinnati Enquirer. C'oroniuni is an element shown only thus far by the spectroscope, and only in the solar atmosphere. It has been found 300,000 miles from the sun's sur er than hydrogen. A cubic foot of newly-fal en snow weighs 5'A pounds, and has twelve times the bulk of an equal weight of water. The first day of January and the first day of October of any year fall on the same day of the week unless it be leap year. As late as 16S2 squirts were used for extinguishing fire In England, and their length did not exceed two oi three feet with pipes of leather. Wa tertight seamless hose was first made in Bethnal Green In 1720. Professor Zickler. of Brunn. has carried on a series of experiments In the field of wireless telegraphy. In which he has made use of a beam of ultra-violet light to transmit signals. A dredging and shoveling appara tus worked by electricity has been sup plied to a Colorado placer mine by a manufacturing company. John Hamilton, of Wilmington, Del., has a Plymouth Rock hen which catches and kills rats. The hen waits at a rathole in a stable and pounces upon an animal as it appears, usu ally seizing him by the leg. It then shakes him vigorously and picks out his eyes. The dew that is annually depos ited on the surface of England is equal to five inches of rain. A Yarmouth (England) man was smoking a pipe when a spark dropped into the tuck of his trousers and burned a bole. He made a claim for I loss under his fire Insurance policy, and the company paid the damage. THE "MAINE" AT HAVANA. aptain Sig.bee Tells of Her Recep tion in Havana Harbor. Captain Charles D. Sigsbee has writ en for the Century'a New War Series Is "Personal Narrative of the Maine." Captain Sigsbee says: In command of the Maine at Havana, ! had but one wish, which was to be Irlendly to the Spanish authorities, as required by my orders. I took pleas ire In carrying out my orders In this espect. The first Spanish officer to :oiue on board was a naval lieutenant abo represented the captain of the port. His bearing was both dignified and polite (which, by the way. Is Inva riably the rule with Spanish naval offl-x-rs), but I thought he looked embar rassed and even humiliated lu carrying ut his duty. I greatly regretted that iucb should be the case, and did all that I could to make him feel at ease. After the arrival of a second Spanish lieutenant, who seemed to take matters more philosophically, and of a German lieutenant, the uaval officer who had irrived first appeared to lose bis m liairassui nt. 1 made all the visits re in i red of me by usage, and was every where received with courtesy. It is hardly to the point whether there was ny c eat amount of actu.il friendliness tor us beneath the surface. The Span sh officials on every hand gave us ab solutely all the courtesy to which we were entitled by usage, and they gave it with all the grace of manner which is characteristic of their nation. I ac cepted It as genuine. It Is not essential to enter here Into the details of linage In connection with i.-ilutcs. It Is enough to say that con vention required the Maine to salute the Si.in!sh n:; tion.nl flag and also to dilute Admiral MantcroU. But such dilutes are given suly when It Is known thnt tliey will lie returned. I there fore deemed It prudent to determine litis poi.it. although the visit of a Span ish oil'cer to the ship would ordinarily be thought sufficiently convincing. In the course of conversation with the Spanish naval officer who was the) first to visit the Maine. I Raid: "I am about to give myself the honor of salutlni your national flag; from which battery will the salute be returned?" He re plied: "From the Cabana." With that assurance both salutes were fired and returned. The salute to the Spanish admiral was returned by bis flagship, the Alfonso XII. Shortly after the arrival of the Maine. I sent my aid. Naval Cadet J. II. Hold en, ashore to report to General Lee, and announce that I would soon follow. I promptly gao orders that no office: or men of the vessel should go ashore, unless by my express order. I desired first to test the public feeling, private and official, with reference to the Maine's visit. I made my visit to Ad miral Manterola in full dress, with cocked hat, epaulets, etc. I landed at the Machlna, the man-of-war landing, which is virtually at the Spanish ad miral's residence. There was a crowd assembled, but only of moderate size. There was no demonstration of any kind; the crowd closed In about me slightly. I thought the people stolid and sullen, so far as I could gather from an occasional glance, but I took very little notice of anybody. On my return, however, I noted carefully the beating of the various groups of Spanish sol diers that I passed. They saluted me, as a rule, but with so much expression of apathy that the salute really wtnt for nothing. They made no demonstra tion against me, however, not even by look. The same day I made my visit to General Lee. and ai ranged with him for my' visit to the acting captain and governor general, who at that time was General Parrado, Captain General Blanco being cbsent on a tour of ths Island. It is customary In the case of high officials to make the visit at an appointed time. When I made my visit, on Jan. 27, accompanied by General Lee, there seemed at first to be a proba bility of embarrassment. We calltd at tly palace of General Blanco at the ap pointed time, and apparently nobody at the palace knew anything about our ap pointment. The ever-pi cent American newspaper-man relieved the situation; he ascertained that General Parradc was In a residence across the way, where he was expecting us. We prompt ly repaired the mistake, and were re ceived by General Parrado with great courtesy. He had a table spread with refreshments for our benefit. All of my official visits were relumed prompt ly. General Parrado returned my visit In person, and was given the salute of a captain and governor general; that Is to say, of the governor of a colony seventeen guns, the same salute which Is prescribed for the governor of one of the United States. Model Husbands. I Whatever America may or may not have produced. It is certain that we owe to her the model husband. Any one who has observed marital ways In oth er lands will realize that In no country have the men effaced themselves so en tlrely as with us. The married man is expected to give all and receive little In return. If an American girl brings money to ber marriage It is expended principally on he own toilet or pleas ures. Everything Is required of the benedict: he la the family purse. He leaves the house at half-past eight in ihe morning; when he returns at five, 'if bis wife Is entertaining one or twe men at tea. It would be considered the height of Indelicacy for him to Intrude on that circle, for his arrival would cast a chill that only bis departure could re - move. When a couple dine out the hus band Is always a trial to the hostess, as no woman wants to sit next to a mar ried man If she can help It Glance around a ball-room, a dinner party or the opera If you have any doubts as to the unselfishness of our married men. How many of them are there for their own oleasure? The owner of an oivr oox so rarely retains a seat In bis ex jenslve quarters that you generally find til in Idling in the lobbies looking at bis watch or repairing to a neighboring concert halL At a ball It Is even worse. One wonders why card rooms are not provided at large balls (as Is the custom abroad), where the bored husbands might find a little solace. Instead of yawning In the coat room or making desperate signs to their wives from the dorrwa, lgnala of dlatres thai rarely produce any effect. And yet It la the rebellious husband who Is admired and courted. A curious trait of human na ture compels our admiration for what ever Is harmful and forces us In spite of our better judgment to value lightly J whatever la beneficial and of service to j mankind. So far, however, there are ( no signs of a revolt among the shorn ! lambs In this country. They patiently bend their necks to the collar the klnd est. most loving and devoted help mates that ever plodded under the mat rimonial yoke. If all the mountains In the world were leveled, the average height of the land would rise nearly 220 feet, i The moon moves through space at the rate of 3,333 feet per second. Its mean distance from the earth is 238,850 miles. The United States has a long coast line to defend. It measures 5.715 miles, embracing 2.349 miles on the Atlantic Ocean, 1,556 on the Gulf of Mexico, and 1.810 on the Pacific Ocean. For seven years the St. Lawrence River In Canada gradually decreases in depth. Then for seven years It gradual ly Increases In depth, the difference in level being about five feet. The famous thoroughfare of Berlin, Unter den Linden, is said to be the best lighted street In the world. It Is Illu minated by three lines of electric arc lamps, which are separated by two lines of trees. j Prof. Bllsltk says that over a large area In central Russia the magnetic needle does not point north and south. It la at on part deflected to the west, and at another part to the east, and at one place It points due east and west. j Herr Puluj calculates that the oscilla tions from a Leyden jar are from one hundred thousand to one million pet second, depending on Its size, but in order that the electric rays produced thereby should become visible as red light the number of oscillations woubi have to be Increased to 400,000.000.000. I The amount of powder required to propel canonn projectiles is about half the weight of the projectile. A projec tile four Inches in diameter weight thirty-three pounds, five-Inch fifty pounds, six-inch one hundred, eight inch 250, ten-In-h500, twelve-Inch 8T0, thlrteen-rLcn-',Jj A slxteen-inch 2,37 pounds. j Climate has a gr effect on the color of the complexion For example, the Caucasians are of all complexions, ac cording to the climate, but white Is the natural color. Thus a native of north ern Europe Is fair, of central loss so, of southern swarthy, a Moor more so, an Arab olive, and a Hindu nearly black.1 Such of the Hindu women as have nev er been exposed to the sun are as fait as the inhabitants of the south of Eu rope. It has been shown that, while Nan sen's observations prove that the north polar region is a great ocean cavity, nearly two miles deep, the south polar region, on the contrary. Is. apparently, a vast solid mass of land, surrounded by a belt of water about two miles in depth. The area of the south polar con-. tincnt Is estimated to b about 4,000,-1 imil antmro m Ilea 1 OOOOOO more thin i that of the United States, excluding 1 Ien, wan,ed at a11 mines in ... , Wyoming. Alaska. America has 1000 agricultural imple A correspondent of Nature, who Is as ment mills. soclated with the observatory at Ton 1 ".SSJS,6" 600'000 00 POUnd, louse, calls attention to a very singulai , colored men are being put at work phenomenon, the scientific explanntlor In the mines in Michigan. of which he seeks. Take a bar of Iron1 The Dana warp mill, at Westbrook. in the hand by one end, and plunge th.; Me,'n ?n5oNew"tr? a shav other end In the fire, heating It strongly, costs 3 cents; a hair cut 5. but not so much that the hand cannot i In Breslau glass factories "binding ; retain its hold Then plunge the heated ' lrl earn peweek. end In a pall of cold water. Immediate wn, De ,ocated at Tientsin. ly the end held by the hand becomes sc j The foundry at Chihuahua. Mex., hot that It Is Impossible to retain It It will manufacture iron rails for mines. the fingers. This phenomenon, said 1! 0 the correspondsnt to be fnniilinr tt ! Rjp0 1 workmen In Iron, Is ascribed by then; I For over a year past the Dominion I to some repellent action which theji Cotton Mills, of Canada, have been . . . ... . I running their engines of the printing suppose the sudden cold to exert upot; Chines with a hydraulic air comprcs- 1 the neat conraiuea in toe iron, n nicu 11 thus driven to the opposite extremity. Model Gate's. An idea comes from Halle, Germany which Is worthy of adoption by enter talners in every land. A limited Iiabll lty company has been formed for thi purpose of supplying guests suited t every need, at a scale of prices gradu ated according to their value and gen eral utility. The following are sonn of the charges mentioned in the pi 04 pectus: Dancing men In evening dress, two t fifty marks; dancing men, good talk ers, two to eighty marks; dancing men with monocle, three to ten marks; cotil Hon specialists, three to seventy-fiva marks; old gentlemen with decorations three to seventy-five marks; retired mi Jors for chaperons, three to seven y-flv marks; noblemen to take hostess in t supper, twenty marks. A late and most lovable Edinburgh D. D. was In his study one evenint when his wife rather excitedly callec him by name from the foot of the stair He put bis head quietly over the banis ter and Inquired what was wrong. Hli wife called out: "There's a man In the ! kitchen! There' a man in the kitch en!" The divine answered calmly "Well, well, Marg'ret, you won't let th girls ont; what can yon expect?" am silently returned to his sermon. A little girl petitioned the Lord foi fair weather, and the next morning th iin shone brlirht and clear She tnl1 of her prayer to her grandmother. wh said: "Well, now. why catft you. praj I to-night that It may be warmer to-: morrow so grandma's rheumatism will be better?" "All right, I will" was the response, and that night as she knelt she incorporated this request In her lit tle prayer: "O, God, make It hot for grandma. Preoccupied Aren't yon afraid yonjl husband will be Jealous If I talk to yoo : so long?" Mrs. Tarrlngton No. Dear- old Jack! He never thinks of me when he has on bis sou ult-Brookln Lit. Household. Apple Foam. Stew four good-sized apples, peeled and sliced rather fine. In balf a cup of sugar, more if apples are tart. Stir in one cup of tapioca previously cooked, clear and sweeten. It is very convenient to cook thus more tapioca than is desired for one meal. Beat one white of egg stiff and beat into hot mixture. Turn in sauce dish, and when cool set on ice. A simple dessert made in an emergency and found very appetising. Potato Mould. One pound cold pota toes, two tablespoonfuls of flour, two of minced onions, one ounce butter, one-quarter pint milk. Mash the po tatoes with a fork till perfectly free from lumps, stir in the milk, add ontons flour and butter; press into a buttered mould, and bake till nicely brown in a moderate oven for one-half hour. Turn out of the mould and serve. Steamed Rump of Beef. Select nice fresh piece of rump. Put generous tablespoonful of butter in bottom of iron or granite kettle and let it melt. Put in beef, with a sprinkling of salt, pepper, half-teaspoonful finely chopped onion, half-teaspoonful finely minced sage; cover tightly and place on por tion of range which is not hot enough to burn the butter. Turn it over from time to time to allow all sides to brown. By keeping it tightly covered the meat cooks in its own steam and becomes tender and Juicy. Do not put any water in the kettle. Rabbit a la Marengo. Cut the rab bits into joints, season them with pepper and salt, then brown them nicely in a little oil. with some sliced onion and ham or bacon cup up into dice. When it Is all delicately colored and partly cooked moisten it with a little stock, finish cookin" it and. when completely done, pour it all on to a hot dish, squeeze a ttle lemon juice over it all and serve garnished with fried croutons spread with anehovy or maitre d'hotel butter and delicately poached eess. These should be fried. but in that case are rather apt to be j Indigestible. I Rabbit Fritters. Prepare some cold J roast rabbit as for rabbit Filad. and after marinading It dtp it into some rather thick frying batter, and fry ' in plenty of boiling fat till of a delicate golden brown; drain well, dust with I minced parsley and coralline pepper j and serve garnished with fried pars ley and little rolls of fried bacon, ' either iced tomato cream or tartare 1 sauce being handed in a tureen. I Salmon a la Geneves. Put a table spoonful of butter into a saucepan, when it has melted add two chopped shallots and a small carrot cut In thin slices: toss over the fire until brown, v-hen adet a half a pint of beef stock. Put in a sprla of basil or thyme, little parsley, two bay leaves and one clove. Simmer slowly for twenty minutes when thicken the sauce with a des sert spoonf til of flour rubbed to a smooth consistency in a little cold water; let boll for five minutes, when strain through a fine rdevc. Return to the fire, nd 1 four tablespoonfuls of sherry, the juice of a lemon and salt and cayenne to season nicely. Pick all the bones from a can of salmon, divide into neat flakes; put into the atreerfIThaIf pint of truffles (can ned) and when the fish i. 3v-t. serve. Chicken MsyoniiHise In Shells. Pick the meat from the bones of a cold bolled or baked chicken, mince fine and cook with a little (about a spoonful to a cup of meat) thick mayonnaise. ?f "'Yt, wUn , minced chicken and smooth the sur face with a knife. Arrange the shells In a large dish, cut tomato aspic Into fancy shapes and put arotini each shell. Cover the centre with sieved yolk or hard-boiled esg and mlnceJ parsley. Serve very odd. Labor Motes. Our hay output last year yielded $402,000,000. Lynchburg, Va., is to have a J100,- 000. varn mill. sor. Collectors of skins have almost ex terminated monkeys in the African 1 gold coast. In one year the exorts amounted to 168.000 skins, valued at over $200,000. ; An industrial league has been or- ganized in Selma. Ala., to promote the J location of factories. C. M. Howard is president. A cannery and furniture ! factory is especially desired. Mitsu & Co.. of Japan, have bought about 200,000 bales of American cotton this season. It was purchased in Tex as and other States, and shipped by 1 way of San Fransclsco. A crusade against American chew- : ing gum has set in in London, health authorities issuing a warning against Its use and '"-'aring that it is more 1inrero' - lee cream sold from 1 the penny carta. cent of all the tooth- ; picks matle In the United States are , formed from white birch timber in : Franklin County. Me., and yet scarcely more than 100 persons are employed , ! in the industry in that State. England's foreign trade in 1S93-96 ! ! was worth $5,413,300,000. or more than I that of France and Germany put to- I I gether. Her .shipping in 1896-97 ag-) ereeated 13.513.202 tons, or more than that of all the rest of the world put together. One whale will furnish from one thousand to three thousand pounds of bones. The bones is split, sorted as to color, and tied In bundles. These snlit nieces are called slabs, an! are three to elent reel ions, ana weien from three to seven pounds. In Cuba, a railroad engineer, who must also be a mechanic, is paid $130 a month in gold. The fireman is pali 130 In gold, the conductor $100 and the brakeman the same as the fireman. Section men are paid $20 a month In gold and switchmen are paid $30 8 month. Ti is claimed that With cotton com- L,nn SSd iJl f,l ' Jar, whilebutW.OW to 14,000 pounds of uncompressed can be put in a car and 30,000 to 40,000 pounds of square-bale con. pressed cotton, 1 The JJetherlanders stand in the fore I most rank as coffee drinkers, using 37t ! ounces a year to each inhabitant. We arc but fourth on the coffee-drinking list, usinif 725,000,000 pounds a year, or 15i ounces a uiece. Russia, however, allxws but 3 ounces to each person. Paul Lavand, the French bicycle matchmaker, has wagered 1000 francs that Joveux will win the New York six-day race, and C. W. Miller has ac - - . . SERMONS OP THE DAY Bonrt: "The Coming Centary What th. N.w Cyrl. Will I7.h.r Ia-Xli of th. w AK Th. - fcnd - of - th. Century Wattli Night. Text: "The children of Issaohar, whloa were men that had understanding of tha times, to know what Israel ought to do." Chronicles xll.. 82. Great tribe, that tribe of Issaohar! When Joab took the census, there were 145,600 of tbem. Before the almanac was bora, through astrological study, they knew from steller conjunctions all about the smisons of the year. Before agriculture became an art they were skilled la the raising of crops. Before politics became a science they knew the temper of nations, and when ever they marched, either for pleasure ot war, they marched under a three oolored flag topaz, sardine and carbunole. But the chief characteristic of that tribe of Issacbar was tout tbey understood th times. They were not like the political and moral incompetents ot onr day, who arotryiug to guide 1898 by the theories ol 1828. Tbey looked at the divine indica tions In their own particular century. Ko we ought to understand the times, not the times when America was thirteen colonies, noddled together along the Atlantic coast, but the times when tha nation dips one hand In the ocean on one side the continent and the other hand in the ocean on tbt other side the continent; times which pat New York Narrows and the Golden Horn ol tbe Pacific within one flash of electric telegraphy; times when God is as directly, as positively, as solemnly, as tremendous! addressing us through the daily newspaper and the quick revolution ot events as H ever addressed the ancients or addresses us through the Holy Scriptures. Tbe vole of God In Providence Is as important as tbe voice of God in typology, for In onr own day we have bad our Hloais with thun ders of tbe Almighty, and Calvaries of sac rifice, and Gethsemanes that sweat great drops of blood, and Olivets of ascension, and Mount Pisgabs of farreacblng vision. The Lord wbo rounded this worid C000 years ago and sent His8on to redeem it near two years ago nas yet mncn to ao with this radiant but agonized planet. Mat God make as like the children of Issacbar, "which were men that had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do." Tbe grave of this century will soon be dug. Tbe cradle of another century will soon be rocked. Tberr Is something mov ing this way out of the eternities, some thing that thrills me, blanches me, appalls me, exhilarates me, enraptures me. It will wreathe the orange blossoms for mil lions of weddings. It will beat the diree for millions of obsequies. It will carry the glided banners of brightest mornings and tbe black flags of darkest midnights. The world will play the grand march of its heroes and sound the rogues' march of Its cowards. Other processions may halt or break down or fall back, but the procession led by that leader moves steadily on and will soon be here. It will pr- ide over coronations and dethronements I bail it. I bless it, I welcome it, tbe twentieth cen tury of the Christian era. What may we expect of It, and how shall we prepare for It, are tbe momentous ques tions I propose now to discuss. As In fami lies, human nativity Is anticipated by all sanctity and kindliness and solemnity and care and-hopefalness, so ought we prayer fully, hopeful' iniijistrioasly, confidently propure f-vr tbc-drWt-of -it-new century. -f ine nineteentn century must not treat the twentieth century on its arrival as the eighteenth century treated t be nineteenth. Our century inherited tbe wreck of revolu tions and the superstitions of ages. Around Its cradle stood tbe armed assas sins of Old World tyrannie-; the "reign of terror," bequeathing its horrors; Robes pierre, plotting his diabolism; the Jacobin olub. with Its wholesale massacre; the guillotine, chopping Its bebeadments. The ground quaking with the great guns of Marengo, Wagram and Badajos. All Eu rope in convulsion. Asia in comparative quiet, but the quietness of death. Africa In tbe dutches of tbe slave trade. Ameri can savatces In full cry, their scalping knives lifted. Tbe exhausted and poverty struck people of America sweating under the debt of t300.000,000, which the Revolu tionary War bad left tbem. Washington just gone into the long sleep at Mount Veruon, and the nation in bereavement; Aaron Burr, the champion libertine, becoming soon after tbe Vice-President. The Gov ernment of the United States only an ex periment, most ot tbe philosophers and statesmen and governments ot the earth prophesying it would be a disgraceful fall are. No poor foundling laid at night on thecold steps of a mansion, to be picked np in the morning, was j oorer off than this century at its nativity. The United States Government had taken only twelve steps on Its journey. Its Constitution having been formed In 1799, and most of the nations of the earth laughed at onr Government In its first attempts to walk alone. The birthday of our nineteenth century occurred in tbe time ot war. Onr snail United States Navy, under Captain Trux ton, commanding the frigate Constitution, was In collision with tbe French frigates La Vengeanoe and L'Inaurgente, and the first Infant cries of this century were drowned in the roar of naval battle, and political strife on this continent was the hottest, the parties rending each other with pantherine rage. The birthday pres ent of this nineteenth oentury was vitu nota tion, public unrest, threat of naHoe.i demolition, and horrors national sd Inter national. I adjure you, let not the twen tieth century be met In that awful way, but with all brightness of temporal and re ligious prospects. First, let us put upon the cradle of the new century a new map of the world. The 1 old map was black wltb too many barbar isms and red with too many slaughters and pale with too many sufferings. Let us sen to it that on that map so far as possible our country from ocean to ocean Is a Christianized continent schools, colleges, churches and good homes In long line from ocean beach to ocean beach. Ontbat map Cuba must be free. Porto Rico must be free. The archipelago of tbe Philip pines must be free. If cruel Spain expects by procrastination and Intrigue to get back wbat she has surrendered, then the warships Iowa and Indiana and Brooklyn and Texas and Vesuvius and Oregon most be sent buck to Southern waters or across to the coast of Spain tosllencethe Insolence as decidedly as last summer they silenced the Cristobal Colon and Oqnendo and Maria Teresa and Vizcaya. When we get those islands thoroughly under our pro tectorate, for the first time our missionaries In Cbioa will be safe. The atrocities im posed on those good men and women in the so-called Flowery Kingdom will never be resumed, for our guns will be too near Hong Hong to allow tbe massacre of mis sionary settlements. - On that map must be put the isthmian canal, begun if not completed. No long voyages around Cape Horn for tbe world's merchandise, but short and cheap commu nication by water instead ot expensive communication by rail train, and more millions will be added to our national wealth and tbe world's betterment than I have capacity toealoulate. On the map It must be made evident that America is to be tbe world's dvillzer and evangellzer. Free from the national re ligions of Europe on tbe one side and from the superstitions ot Asia on tbe other side. It will have facilities for tbe work that no other continent can possibly possess. As near as I can tell by tbe laying on of the hands ot the Lord Almighty, this continent has been ordained for that work. This Is tbe only eonntry In the world where all religions are on the same platform, and tbe people have free selection for tbem -selves without any detriment. When we present to tbe other continents this assort ment ot religions and give them unhin dered choice, wn have no doubt ot their selecting this religion of mercy and kind ness and good wilt and temporal and eter nal rescue. Hear HI America is to take this worid for God! On tbe map which we will put oa the cradle of the new century we mast have very soon a rail coad bridge across Bering Strait, those tbtrty-six miles of water, not deep, and they are spotted with islands capable of holding tbe piers of a great bridge. And wbat with America and Asia thus connected and Siberian railway, and a railroad bow projected for the length ot Africa, and Palestine and Persia and and Chins and Burma h Intersectei railroad traoks, all of whluii will be before the new century Is grown u way will be open to the quick cirili and evangelization of the whole wor; The work of tbis century has been ready. All tbe earth is now free t Gospel except two little spots, one 1 and one In Africa, while at the begl ot tbe century there stood the Chines and there flamnd the tires and there tered tbe swords that forbade entran many islands and largn reaches ot c ent. Boinesiau cruelties and Fiji If cann balisna have given way. and al gates of all the contineuts are swung with a clang that has been a podtivt glorious invitation for Christianity t ter. Telegraph, telephone and phono are to be consecrated to Gospel disei ' ' tlon, and instead of the voice that . the attention of a few hundred or a thousand people within the church the telegraph will thrill tbe glad ti -and the telephone will utter the:n to millions. Oh, the influite advantage . the twentieth century has over w tat nineteenth century had at tbe start I m In preparation for tbis coming cen wn have time In the intervening yeai give some decisive strokes at the seve eight ?reat evils that eursn thn world, wonld bean assault and battery upot coming century by this century If a'lowed the lull blow of present evil fall upon tbe future. We onght onn to cripple or minify come of thee ahn-n tions. Alcoholism is to-day triumph and are we to let the all devouring moii that has throttled thl century seizii the next without Or it having fillet lib cursed hide with stinging arrows mho to weaken and stagger him? Wn I wasted about twenty-live years. Ho While we have iieen waiting for the In the land to prohibit Intoxicants wn I doue little to quench the thirst of a;P' in the palate and tongun of a w!m;r . eratlon. Where am the pu'ilic and ent sinstic meetings that used to lie held t' years ago for the one pnros;-v- " Ing the voting and iuildl that strong drink is poisonv v ing? When will wn learn V"1-' t " educate pntilic opinion up to r.-,MiiMt law, or Midi a law will not he a" I o passed will not be executed? Seven or eight ve.ir.-i aif- on tiie ,-it vernry platform of thn National IV, n auee Society lu New York I deplore I fact that we had left polltic-i to do t which moral ?awioi only could do 1 said on that occasion. "If some p drunkard wandering along this street night should see the lights kindled by t brilliant assemblage and should come and finding the character of the meetl should auk for a temperance pledge, tf, he might sign it and begin a Lew curler do not believe there Is in all this hous, temperance pledge, and you would have take out a torn letter envelopn or a lo scrap of paoer for the inebriate' siift re." I found out afterward that tin sas one such tempera oce pledge in t audience, but only onn that I could he of. Do not leave to politic that wtil can be done now in 10. (KM refornnato meetings all over thn country. Oh, save tbe young man of to-lav a greet tbe coming century with a tidal w:i of national redemption! Do not put up the cradle of the twentieth ccutnrv a mou tain of demljchns aud beer barrels and ru jugs, and nut to its Infant li)9 wretehn ness. disease, murder and abandonment solution. Ave, reform that army of in hriates. "Ab," you sav, "It cannot done!" That shows that yon will bn nf 1 os. tn the work. "O ye ot little fa.it h Away back in early times Fn-Rld.-.B."1 of Princeton College, one day found a i. in utter despair because of the thrall strong drink. The president said to hit "Sir, be of good cheer. You can bn snvn Sign the pledge." "Ah," snld thn despal ing victim, "I have often signed the pl-dg but I have- hlwavs broken my pledge "But," said the president, "I will be yoi strength to keep tbe pledge, j will bn yoi friend, and with a loving arm around vc will hold you up. When your appetli burns, ami you feel that you must grutll It, come to my house, sit down with me-' the study or with thn family in thn pari, and I will be a shield to you. All that' can do for you with my bonks, my sya pathy, my experience, mv society, my lr, my money, I will do. Yon snail forget you appetite and master It." A look of hop glowed on tbe poor man's face, and he n plied, "Sir, will yon do all that?" "Sure" I will." "Then I will overcome." U signed the pledge and kept it. That pis of President Davies which saved nun insr tried on a large scale, will save a mlllioi men. Alexander the Great made an ImpeWr banquet at Babylon, and, though be been drinking the health of truest night and all next day, the second be had twenty guests, and bn dran health of each separately. Then callini for the cup of Hercules the giant, a imm iter cup, be filled and draiued it twice t show his endurance; but, as he flninhed tin last draft from tbe cup of Hercules iU. giant, be dropped in a fit, from which h, never recovered. Alexander, who had con quered Sard is and conquered Halicarnussii' and conquered Asia and conquered tin world, could not conquer himself, and thnri Is a threatening peril that this good lau,! of oars, having conquered all with wl. -It has ever gone Into battle, may yet ! overthrown by the cup of thn giant evil o: the land that Hercules of infamv, Htr ing drink. Do not let the staggering an.! bloated and euibruted host of drunkard go into the next century looking fnrinsau asylums and almsbontes and delirium tre mens aud dishonored graves. It has been a custom In all ChriUu lands for people to keep watch nl an old year goes out and a ne comes In. People assemble'in'cliuru about 10 o'clock ot that last night of the old year, and they have prayers and songs and sermons and congratulations until the hands of tbe church clock almost reach the figure 12. and then all bow in silent prayer, and tbe scene Is mightily imnres- lve until tbe clock in thn tower of the chur-b or the clock in the tower of t.ie city hall strikes 12, and then all rise and 4ing with smiling face and j 11 Oil nut voice the grand doxology, and there is a shaking of bands all around. But wbat a tremendous watch night the world Is soon to celebrate! ThU century will depart at 12 o'clock nf thn 31st of Iie- ember, of the year 1903. What a night that will be, whether starlight or moonlit or dark with tempest! It will be such a aight as you and I never saw. Those who watched tbe coming Id ot tbe nineteenth century long ago went to their pillows ot lust. May we all be living on earth to see tbe solemnities and join in thn songs and fhake hands in the congratulations of that watch night; or. it between this and that any of us should be off and away, mav we be inhabitants of that land where 'a thou sand years are as one dav," and in the presence of that angel spoken of in the Apocalypse, wbo at the end of the world will, standing with one foot on tbe sea an I the other foot on the land, "swear by Him that livetli foreverand ever, that time shall be no longer." Is China Ketrosarilng? Tbe Chinese Government bas notified al1 applicants for military service that tliet will hereafter be examined in archery and stone slinging. The place where we love to be de cides what we wish to be. Adulation Is the bridge some ,-.a.k over to reach our gooi graces. nespect yourself and people will re spect you. The true art of life is to select wise ly. In its largest meaning a sense of fitness is the supreme grace. The survival of the fattest is marked by their choice of the fittest. They all do it. It Is easier to criticise than create. Blind men can walk over gold and not know It, One fact is worth more than a thou sand Improved theories. Duties do not com like eager can vassers and solicitous. Like coy strangers thev must be called upon before we can become acquainted with the nt. It Is a detestable custom to interrupt a teller of stories Just before the point is reached. A 5.'IT-i:'7-Tii&'f ':,t-;:' -y--' -',.. ...