B. F. SCHWEIER, THE COnSTITUTIOFI--THE UNIOfl AflD THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL Mil. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1899. NO. 28. I II I! ' jl I n ftftgerous CHAPTEB XI. "Some one has been taken ID," says Gabrielle, with the quick instinct of her sex. She prove to be right Aa the yodng couple near the vehicle a portly, pompous lonking Englishman turuir to question tlu-iii, disclosing the body of a portly, pompous-looking Englishwoman lying iq a stute of unconsciousness upon the car riage seat. The driver, knowing Angui by sight and being unable to comprehend a word of the stranger's language, had wisely summoned him to his aid. "I)o you know If I can get a doctor in this place?" demands the Englishman, curtly, and without removing his hat. "This lady, my wife, has been taken very ill, and I must get medical adrice at once for ber. "There are several doctors here, mon sieur," commences Angus, politely. "Well, well, well! I don't want several doctors: I want one. One will do if he's north his salt and can understand Eng lish. Can you give me a name and ad dress 7f" "Shall we send them to your father?" demands Angus iu French of Gabrielle. "lie is the only doctor in Bruges whs can speak English." "Yea, yes," replies the girl eagerly. "Papa will do all he can for the poor lady." "Are you going to keep me standing here all day?" says the stranger, rudely. lie is dark-haired, coarse and rather common-looking, yet there Is something in his appearance that strikes Angus witb interest. The interest seems returned, fur, as the Englishman looks at the young man again, it is with considerable earnest ness. "I'r. de Blois, Numero 10 Rue St. Ae gust in, is a very skillful practitioner, tuoiinlenr, and will do all for the lady that is possible." The stranger gives the direction to tbt driver, and, nodding carelessly in ac knowledgment of the services rendered, is about to enter the vehicle, when a thought suddenly strikes him and he turns round, witb his foot upon the car riage step. "What is your name?" he says,' ab ruptly. "Angus Moray, monsieur. The Englishman descends to earth again. "Angus Moray! Who is your father?" "My father, James Moray, has been dead 'for a long time,'but my mother lives here." "Oh, your mother lives here, does she 7" "Certainly. We have been residents in Bruges for many years past." "Exactly. I understand all about it Now look you here, Mr. Angus Moray, 1 hupM-n to have known your father, and I should like to speak with you again. I caut stay now, with my wife in this con dition, as you may suppose; but I am topping at the Hotel Belgique, and if you like to come and see me there to-morrow afternoon, you can if not, leave it alpue. ;od-day to you!" and entering the ve hicle, the portly Englishman closes the d.n.r and drives off, leaving the two youug people standing in the middle of the Place staring after bim. "What a curious sdventure!" says An gus at lost. "I wonder what the man can possibly want to see me for?" "It is unaccountable," acquiesces Ga brielle. "And he has forgotten to leave his name, tool Tiens! but that is droll: For whom will you ask?" "There will be no difficulty in finding him, Gabrielle. There cannot be twe such Englishmen staying at the Hotel Belgique." "Suppose he should turn out to be a millionaire, and wish to make you hit heir!" suggests the girt. "You would for get all that you have just said to me, then, Aut'us." "Never, my darling! But suppose yoea papu saves the lady's life, and, In grati tude for his services, the millionaire be stows all his fortune upon him. One evenl Is quite as likely to occur as the other. What would Mademoiselle Gabrielle di Blois have to say to her railway surveyor then, eh?" "The lady is not ill enough for that," replies Gabrielle, evasively. "She bai only fainted from the heat and fatigue: and how the visitors here can go through the exertions they do, standing about churches and picture galleries all day, in the height of summer, always pussies mel See, Angus, there Is another English woman in that fiacre. Ah, how droll she Is! What a comical figure! Will she strike the poor driver in the face witb thut huge umbrella?" They seem destined to encounter sur prises to-duy, for as they look toward the person Gabrielle has mentioned, thej plainly see the umbrella flourished in theii direction with the evident design of at tracting their notice. "Another millionaire! Now we shaC have one apiece!" exclaims Gnbrielle, laughing, as the vehicle halts and thej walk up to it; but this time it is iu very tolerable French that the stranger aski if they can help her to find the addresi for which she is bound. "I have just come over by the Ostenc boat to visit an old friend in Bruges, and though I bave been corresponding with her for years past, I have never been re- j quired to put the number of the street in . which she resides upon my letters; ahd this iiliot on the coach box doesn't appeal J to kuow the lady's name nor anything t about her!" "Pardon, madame!" says Angus, as j with all the eourtesv of his adopted land, he stands bareheaded before her. "Ier; haps he is a stranger to Bruges. Wit you favor me with the name of the lady you desire to fiud?" "It's not a private house. It's a lodg ing house in the Hue Allemande, kept by a Mademoiselle Steivenart." "Ah, madame, I am fortunate! I can direct you without further trouble. Ma aeinoiseiie Meivenart keeps tne nouse ai Numero 22." "Thank you very much. I'm sure I'm Infinitely obliged. This Tool would have driven me about the town all day," replies the stranger; and in another minute she has also driven out of sight "What a funny looking lady!" exclaim Gabrielle as she disappears. "She wears a bonnet of the mode of tea year back, ad. cloak: Ukt s man's coat. w4 baa ectret.. - suet a loud voice. Ton would make rwica as nice a woman as she is, Angus, If we dressed you up in my clothes." But Angus is thoughtfully ruminating over some old memory, stirred by the stranger's appearance and address. "It is strange she should be bound for Numero 22!" he says presently. "I won der who she can be going to see there. The boarders are all foreigners except my mother." "Aa4 this lady la so much what my papa would call a 'regular John Bull.' But may she not be going to see your mammk, Angus? Madame Moray told me last week she expected a friend from England." "Yon are right Gabrielle! You have hit it!" exclaims Angus. "Everything as sures me yon must be right: and this lady can be no other than my mother's old friend, Mrs. Hephzibah Horton." "Tiens! What a name!" cries Miss Ga brielle. CHAPTER XII. ' Mrs. Hephzibah Horton (for it is indeed she) is jolted rapidly over the uneven pav ing stones until she finds the vehicle stop ped before a wide porte-cochere, carved in old black oak, with fiendish and cheru bic faces, all sporting in inextricable con fusion about the figure of the martyr St Sebastian, with his gridiron ready in hit hand. Mrs. Hephzibah is not given, as a rule, to embraces and tears, but she is surpris ed to find how emotional a meeting witb Delia Moray has the power to make her feel. There is a moisture about her eyes that she cannot understand as she returns the younger woman's kisses, and her hands tremble so that she gives the driver a whole franc over his proper fare a cir cumstance which affords her a subject tat regret during the remainder of her stay in Bruges. "And now that we are alone, let ma have a good look at you," she says, when, all such preliminary ceremonies as remov ing her traveling attire and taking some refreshment being happily concluded, she finds herself seated in her friend's private room. Delia Moray stands before her, laugh ing. She was twenty-five when they part ed; she is thirty-nine now, but the four teen years' interval of rest and quiet have passed over her lightly. Not a white hair shines among ber smooth, dark tresses not a wrinkle yet appears upon her fore bead. Her cheeks are plumper and her compkyxion brighter than they were wont to be, and happiness is sparkling in her eyes and dimpling her mouth with smiles. "My dear, you look ten years younger thsn you used to. I'm much afraid you Man' aaw fhn aa m A flf mo T it tho .IV of the place that has done it or have you got a Belgian itacnci to man you wauu ful forever?" You have certainly got hold of some secret that half your sex would give their eyes to find." "It is the rest and the content dear Mrs. Horton. Ob! you cannot think what a peaceful life I lead here. I seem te have a care, no trouble. I make the IIIt. mnnow f 1-antltrA for mv OWT1 WADtl easily, and I have friends all over Bruges. and my boy is so gooa ana generous to me." "I am glad to hear that very glad in deed. He ought to be a good son to you, Delia Moray, for you gave up everything for him." "Oh, he la, and so clever besides, and getting on so well In his profession! He studied, you know, aa a civil engineer and surveyor, and Monsieur 1'Abbe Ber lin took a great Interest In him; and now, tVu. aaalatance of some of his rela- . t i tmm .fnMjt A n (tii a an eveel- liona, lie una lent appointment-me permanent, cuarge of a new line of railway Just opened be-Tt-ii(?nsi Anil no mo of the smaller m ecu ' towns in Belgium; and Angus is to receive three thousand francs a year as salary .i i. no hnndred and twenty pounds of our English money with an annua.' increase of ten pounds, mat is not a Dau income for a boy of twenty-one, who has .Li i . W t men wlta tA denend naa noimug uu -- -------on for a living Is it, Mrs. Horton? And it might be ail for me it i cnose io accepi It from him. Dear Angus r ti.. nihM'i eves are dancing with pride and pleasure, and Mrs. Hephzibah cannot but catch some spark of her lauda ble excitement ... "It is capital It Is first rate; ana i con gratulate you, Delia Moray, on the pos : : .h a aon. I didn't think he'd turn out so well I didn't Indeed. And m you call him 'Angus' now insteaa oi Willy. " - ..j tin done so for years; I think it best. It Is his second name, yo mnA the other is fraught with nn- Dleasant recollections to me. I cannot V - I . . . U . nnn X' 1 1 I Til bear the inougni oi "" "" " Moray even to this day. He who want ... .n. hnaelv to deDrive me of eu bu i-i - - my child to take my only solace from me. It was a long time before I could forget the aversion and fear with which he inspired me, and even now I metirues feel a dread lest nis maut.tr uoum jut again, and urge him to revenge him lelf upon my darling boy." "Delia Moray, I see that you haven t riven up your old habit of talking noa ? tlnr n Mirth could this msn hurt you or your boy, who is already ol lee? It is evident mm juu siser during the years we have been parted " "O I know It Is but a foolish fancy, but then Angus is so precious to nm And if anything were to come etw .... or turn away hi. Jove from me. I think that I should die. MrV Hephzibah was not destined to be Introduced to Mr. Angus Mojr1.! evening. The hour for the table d bote arrive, and passes, and he doc. not ap- !e with a bright Pleed look to rSnTU! Where have yo- lenced by my absence, sorely T "fhave, though! My Wend Mrs. Hor ton arrived thi. afternoon, been so disappointed at not beiug able to Introduce you to ber. Angus gives a aiart of recollection and surprise. "I bad forgotten ber! Isn't she a curious looking old woman in a black cloak, and a bonnet over her eyes?" "My dear! wherever did you see her?" "In a fiacre driving across the P la eel She didn't remember the number of the house, and I gave it to ber. But I didn't know, of course, that it was 'Mrs. Hor ton only after she had driven away, Gabrielle said " He throws his arms round her waist at he speaks, and leads her to the further eud of the room. "There is nothing wrong, dear Angus, is there T "On the contrary, everything Is right! Mother, you know that for a long time past I have cared for Gabrielle de Blois." "And yon have proposed to her, and she has accepted you! Oh! I am so glad!" cries Delia, with the truly feminine habit of leaping at a conclusion. "Well, you are correct so far. Ga brielle has confessed she likes me well enough to take me for a husband, if her father approves of the marriage. But there is the old doctor's consent to be ob tained." "Why didn't you speak to him at once? He Is so fond of you, he will put no diffi culties in the way, I am sure." "I don't think be will, and that is why I have been waiting about his house till an hour ago, hoping he might return. But he was called off to visit a patient at Blankenbnrg this afternoon, and has not yet come home." "Dear girl! I will try to do my duty by her, and love her dearly for my boy's sake. O! this is a very, very happy pros pect It is almost too good to be true." She rises as she speaks, and they pass lovingly together up the stairs. As she dismisses him at her own door, Angus says to her: "By the way, I bad such an adventure this afternoon aa l was walking in tne Place with Gabrielle. Some English woman had been taken ill, and the bus hand appealed to me for the address of a doctor. I gave him that of Dr. de Blois, and then he asked me to go and see him to-morrow at the Hotel Belgique." "What! the Englishman?" "Yes; wasn't It funny ? I can't tmagin why he should wish to see me again." "To thank you for your politeness, most likely or to see if he can return it Whal was his name?" "I forgot to ask." "How will you find him. then?" "Oh, I cannot mistake him. Fie is so big and fat and red In the face." Delia laughs softly at the description. "Well, go to bed now, my darling, and sleep it all up again. Happy dreams to you, my Angus. Good night" She accepts his loving farewell with a smile. She little thinks it Is the last good night that ahe will have for many a long day. (To be continued.) Notice Before Bombardment. The Father That youiyj man who osed to call on yoH and stay so late to In the navy norr, I understand? The Daughter Yea, papa; and think of It! Hla boat haa been disabled? The last time I aw bim he was being tow ed In. "Well, dont let me aee htm around here all hours of the night, or yon will see him being toed out" Yonkers Statesman. Past Fins Rose TJp Bef re Bim. Husband I dreamed tast night that 1 was single and was courting you again. Wife Did you propose In the drecun ? Husband Yea; I proposed before I knew what I was doing, and when I saw what I bad done It scared me so that I woke up In a fearful sweat New Yerk World. The Ears of Fame. Uncle Dan Weil, who Is this Billy Scrubbing that I hear you apeak so much about? lie seems to be some thing of a hero among you boys. Little Johnny Wot! Don't you know J W'y, he's de only feller In de Ter-th Ward dat kin wiggle his ears like a boss. New York World. A Thona;htlrsa Remark. "It's remarkable," commented Mr. Meekton's wife, "how many men are anxious to leave home and engage In war." "Yes," he answered, absently. "Some people never seem to know when they have enough of anything." Washing ton Star. Like the Industrious Gai Meter. Kate They"Te got Just the thing now that we've been wanting. It Is an au tomatic cyclometer. Belle You don't mean It? Kate Yes. It goes right on scoring miles while you rest. Boston Tran script His Little Scheme. Soaker I say, old chap, why In thun der did you bring me Into this Ice cream parlor to drink soda water? Bound The lady at the next taMe knows me by sight and corresponds with my wife's mother. New York Evening Journal. Uses of the Arctic Region. "Tell what you know about the Arc tic region," commanded a St Louis teacher of a pupil in one of the lower grcules. "It's north of Canada," responded the little miss; "and It's used prlneip'ly for explorations. "St Louis Democrat Useful Hints. In washing knives never allow the handles to get wet or lay in the wa ter, as they will split, the blades will become loose, and the bone or Ivory discolored. The blades should simply be wiped with a damp cloth and then cleaned. To Clean Parquet Floors. Shred two ounces beeswax into a small break fast cupful of linseed oil and gradual ly dissolve It in turpentine till it has become as thick aa cream. Apply to the floor on a piece of flannel and pol ish well with soft dusters. Plated goods that are to be put aside after use should be rubbed with spir its of ammonia and water, and then rinsed In clean water; this will keep them bright and prevent any 111 ef fects should any salt have been left jn the surface. Thomas Chadwick, of Bala, has pur chased from Bert Thompson, of Rox borough, the pacer Judge Evans, 2.28. Budd Doble will act as starting judge during the meeting of the Pacific Coast Trotting Horse' Breeders' Association. THEIR RICH FORESTS. PHILIPPINES PRODUCE MANY VALUABLE WOODS. Mahogany la to Plentiful that It Is - Use Ordinary Lssiber-HwaUls Will Be Very Profitable When the Country la Quieted. ' TJnde Sam'a new possessions, Cuba and the Philippines, are destined to cnt considerable figure Iu the lumber trade as soon as American methods of push and enterprise are adopted. Cuba pos sesses some of the best mahogany and Spanish cedar In the world, and the Philippine Islands are covered with mahogany, ebony, camphor wood and other valuable hardwood forests. J. O. Hlnkle, a member of the First Regi ment of Washington Volunteers, a practical furniture - maker, recently wrote to Charles 11. Sllgb, of Spokane, from Manila as follows: "There are half a dozen hard wood here that take a high polish. They are somewhat lighter than mahogany In appearance. I know the name of only one, camphor wood; I think the others do not grow In other places. The na tive names would not enlighten you in regard to them. Ebony Is also abun dant. It is of mahogany I wish to speak, and on this point I beg Informa tion. It Is tlje bull pine, or water elm, of this country, so to apeak. The mean est hovel, as well as the plainest par tition work. Is of mahogany. Notwith standing Its abundance, lumber Is high here. The native works almost or song, but when It comes to whips. Ing 1,000 feet of boards you can under stand why many people cant stalks' much of this song. "There Is one sawmill In tbe Inland The logs are cut up In the mountains spd hewed out square, then nosed as that they will plow through reeds, grass, etc., down the Pasig Hirer. There are great yards full of them, and with American machinery and enter prise this Industry could be made of great profit. A word as to the quality of the lumber. We are at present quar tered In an old palace, once the resi dence of the archbishop of the church. I bave been to!d by some of the oldest natives that It has been here fifty eight years. In the main floor upstairs all the ltoards are two feet wide and over, none less. They are laid with screws that ' hare heads countersunk and covered. There Is not a single sea son check or knot In the floor tbat 1 have fonnd. There are old places In the altar work of the various churches that have been built as far back a) 1743 that only changes to tbe darker color with this weight of years. I am posted on tbe different qualities of lumber, bat my Judgment leads me U think this la tbe best" . s James A. Fftsheary. of Company JV same regiment writes a. Ballard friend as follows: "They tell na that this la the greatest timber country In the world. There are four kinds of timber mahogany, ebony, camphor wood and red wood. There are some fine timber claims that run right down to the edgs of the river. Of all the timber that If nsed here there Is only one sawmill on tbe Island. That Is run by a Chinaman, and he only aaws the logs into cants, and the cants are sold, and the man that buys them has to whlpeaw them and make his lumber. Theee cants sell for $100 (Mexican) a thousand. Ma hogany logs grow nearly as large as the fir In the States. As mahogany Is the principal wood, you can see for yourself how much money a man could make If he owned a sawmill here. Be fore this trouble with the Insurgents got so bad my captain told me that there were ten officers of different reg iments forming a syndicate and were going to send to the States for barking to start a sawmill. They say tbat there will be a boom In this country as soon as the trouble Is over. If so, this will be a good place to make money. A man can start a small business and hire native labor for SO cents a day, Mexican money; that Is 23 cents In oar money." Seattle Post-Intelligencer. In northeastern Labrador A. P. Low aas found a fresh-water lake, eight hundred feet above sea 'level and one hundred miles from salt water, wfejch is inhabited by seals. He thinks the ancestors of these seals were Imprison ed In a bay when the general surface of Labrador rose after the glacial epoch. Being thus cut off from the sea. tbe water gradually became fresh, while Its Inhabitants accustomed them selves to their new conditions of life. Dr. Witt, the discoverer hist summer of a new asteroid, which Immediately became famojjs becanaa it vu fonnd to approach tike earth at times nearer than any other heavenly body except the moon, has chosen for his celestial foundling the name Eros. Recent ex amination of star photographs at the Harvard Observatory shows tbat the new asteroid was photographed, with out being recognized among the stars, as early as 1863. It also appears on plates made In 1894 and 1806. The latest Information about the tribe of pigmies discovered by Mr. Stanley, Inhabiting a forest-covered re gion in Central Africa, cornea from an English traveler. Albert B. Lloyd. He traversed tbe forest ahd saw many of the little men and women who Inhabit It He met none exceeding four feet In height They are timid, and "cannot look a stranger in the fact, their eyes constantly shifting, aa In the case of monkeys.' They are perfectly Formed and fairly Intelligent They never leave the forest and bave no settled habita tions. Their shelters at night are huts two or three feet In height Their arms are bows and snows and spears. Dr. T. J. J. Sea suggests, In tbe Aatro nomhrcbe Nacbrlchten. the somewhat startling conclusion that tbe son Is still getting better. Tbe process, however. Is too slaw to bave any bats adeBtUL Interest for the present inhabitants of the earth. Another result of Professor See's researches, which, la contrary to the generally received opinion, is tbat Jupiter and Saturn, Instead of being cooling bodies, may also be Increasing In temperature, and that eventually they may become self-luminous like the stars. But If Japlter were self-luminous, and Its Intensity of radiation were, as great per nnit of surface as that of the sun. It wenld give at night two or three hundred times as much light on the earth aa the full moon gives! Many writers upon natural history, following the observations of a French naturalist Monsieur Fabre, have dwelt with admiration upon the skill and In telligence or instinct of certain wasps, which aro represented as hav ing the habit of stinging caterpillars at their nerve centers with such uner ring precision that the caterpillar Is merely paralyzed; whereupon the wasp lays an egg within the body of the caterpillar, and the young insect on emerging ffom the egg, finds living food sufficient for Its use until it Is ready to take flight The careful re searches of Dr.. and Mrs, Peckham of Milwaukee Indicate tbat the statement Is so much exaggerated as to be virtu ally, untrue. Having seen tbe entire process several times, from beginning to end. they find that the wasp docs not sting invariably at such points as indicate a knowledge of the nerve cen ters, and that the caterpillar Is merely killed, and not paralyzed, by tbe sting. Thus one of the "marvels of nature" is proved to be non-existent BURLINGTON'S MONSTER QINE. EN- It Jm tke tarstsl "Ever Bnilt for Paapmajar Service. Railroads, East and West, are not competitive In their equipments In any sense; but the monster locomotive of the Boston and Albany Railroad, which recently took the palm from old "DUO" of the Empire State express, must re llnqalsh Its place to a Western rival. The Chicago, Burlington and Qulucy Railroad has recently put Into service the two largest passenger engines ever constructed. They will be used on tbe Denver express and the fast mall trains. These new giants, numbered 1501 and 16U2, weigh just ouc ton more than the Massachusetts wonder. One hundred and twenty-seven tons each, 2,000 pounds more than their Eastern rival. Eastern railroads were In a nine flays' wonderment over the Boston and Albany's experiment .When locomo tive No. 221 thundered out of Boston a few weeks ago at a 70-mile sweep for Springfield, the world's record in locomotives was exceeded. Without any spirit of competition and wholly within tbe scope of Its needs, the Bur tlagtan system has bad to outdo the Sew;. England Hue. Campared with the Boston and Al bany's No. 221, the Burlington's No. 1501 shows more marked characteris tics than are to be guessed from the total weight difference of one ton. The Albany's engine weighs 12C tana, and the Burlington's 127 tons; the drivers of the one are six feet twe Inches, and of the other seven feet and quarter of an Inch; No. 221 hauls a train weigh ing 310 tons and No. 1591 pulls one weighing 371 tons; the compound cyl inders of tbe one are 22x34 inches and of tbe ether 23x20 Inches; No. 221 car ries eight tons of coal and 4,500 gallons of water; No. 1501 takes twelve tons of coal and 5,000 gallons of water; both engines have tbe same steam pressure of 220 pounds to the square inch. This new mastodon of the Burling ton's Is the Atlantic type, Vauclain compound engine, with two cylinders high and low pressure on each side. Its giant drivers, two on a side, are about midway between the back ef tbe cab and the frosyof tbe pilot Just be hind them Is a trail-truck, with two wheels five feet In diameter. Bade of these are the regulation trucks sup porting the tender. Each ef the four drive-wheels weighs 3.200 pounds, and makes about 240 revolutions, to the mile. On Its first trip with the Denver flyer No, 1691 pulled a solid vestibule train of two mail cars, one composite library and emoklng car, two sleeping cars, a dining car and two reclining chair cars a load sixty-one tons In ex cess of that drawn by the Eastern en gine. The Burlington's record of ninety miles an hour with old 500 and tbe fast mall may be made to read 100 miles. Without Doabt. A bright girl In one of the New Tork public schools applied to her teacher (or leave to be absent half a day, on tbe plea that ber mother had received a telegram which stated that company was on the way. "It's my father's half-sister and ber three boys," said tbe pupil, anxiously, "and mother doesn't see bow she can do without me, those boys always act so." The teacher referred her to tbe print ed list of reasons which Justify ab sence, and asked If ber case came un der any of them. "I think It might come under this head. Miss Potter." said the girl, point ing as she spoke to the words. "Domes tic affliction." Youth's Companion. The Cenntry Where Nobody Hnrrlea. Traveler Why Is your clock always two hours late? Station Agent Bo that the trains will leave at tbe times set down on the time tablet Fllegende Blaetter. - When the small merchant listens fe the first time to the advertlsJsr man's proposition, he seems to regard It vaguely. He doesn't stop to think that he la merely a medium between the sales counters and public audience ef thousands of readers. After a while be may become Interested enough to say. "I believe In Judicious advertis ing.'' Then the advertising man knows that bis vis-a-vis never advertised In bis life, knows nothing about It and he realizes tbat be Is np against an Iceberg. He has perhaps felt when be entered tbat particular store that the atmosphere was frozen hard. He bad already sized np the merchant sitting at his desk, and from the cnt of bis JJb, thought there was nothing In him. His Impressions had not been favor able the first dash out of the box and first impressions are most always good ones. He wonders if be ean ever thaw this merchant out and somehow wish es he hadn't walked a dosen blocks ont of his way to sec this man, but bad Instead gone to the lunch be missed. Then he begins to get hot under the collar, but be won't show It, and be goes for the merchant red-handed, knowing he is offering a good thing. "You put these price tags on your goods to attract attention, don't you?" he asks of the merchant "Of course, where should I put them. In the back yard?" be answered. The advertising man thinks this reply a little rough; still it wasn't much rougher than the question, for couldn't he see that the cards were there for no other purpose? "Right where they are," he says, "that Is the proper thing to do. There are merchants who get price cards on the brain and don't stop to think that no body sees them nnless they happen to come into the store. They forget that the shopper at her home, the banker at his desk, or the worklngman at his fireside, smoking his pipe. Is reading one of the dally papers and not worry ing about price cards. They are a good advertisement, after you have attracted yonr buyer Into your store, but they are not gilt-edged magnets to get peo ple to come In. Croat ,:n8l the way to make money Is to get people to come Into yonr place. Isn't It?" "Yes," says the merchant, "but ray neighbor So-and-so on the corner, and So-and-so next door, take whole pages In the papers. They attract tbe peo ple to this street, and when they get here, they see my bargains, and I get the trade without spending money In he newspapers." Now here was a merchant who dear ly kept bis eye on the main chance. By bis awn words, be was getting bis trade at the expense of his neighbor. But was be getting It? He had started In business about the same time as either of bis neighbors and en the same scale. There was no evidence that during his ten years' career, be had added one Inch of floor or counter space. His work was be ginning to sprinkle his hair with gray threads, and he looked like a man who eked est an annual profit about equal to a 'first-class head-salesman's salary fn either of his netghlxr's stores. Clearly, he bad not accumulated a for tune. One of his neighbor's stores now occupied fonr floors and workmen wore tearing down walls alongside to take In a favorable corner to still further provide for a growing business. The other neighbor was rated Al In the commercial agencies and employed fifty clerks and salesmen. They had been persistent advertisers he hadn't. Somehow the advertising man was disgusted because this merchant wouldn't get sociable, and because be talked In that strain. He knew be had a good proposition to offer, and he knew be could help that merchant build up a fine trade, but he felt discour aged at sowing the advertising seed on such barren ground. While he would bave liked to take tbat mer chant's contract for 25,000 lines, know ing that his newspaper would be of great benefit to him, he felt t lint Ills paper coul get along without it If the merchant could. They talked and talked that Is, the advertising man did sad then he said he would have to go, that he would drop In to see him. Of course that was sarcasm. If be were to go past that store every day for a year, he wouldn't drop In to see htm, and Very likely that merchant wouldn't miss him. But some day the merchant wenld begin to see tbat the neighbors' pages of adver tising didn't attract trade anywhere but where It belonged; and that still more buildings were being demolished to make more room for bis neighbors' Increasing trade. Then he would be gin to hump himself, and the words of the advertising man would come back to bim. Then he would thaw out and strive to get into the bandwagon hard and fast along side bis prosperous neighbors, and the advertising man vonld be vindicated. Don't you think bo? Silence Is not always golden and the merchant who thinks so, and doesn't herald his goods in printers Ink Is dense. He can't be a hermit and com pete with bis neighbors. No matter v.-liut bis line of goods, be can sell more of them if he advertises. San Diego rribune. Queer Mourning Colors. Coffins In Russia are never covered with black. If the deceased Is a child, pink Is nsed; if a woman, crimson, though for a widow they use brown. Common sense Is easier than non nae. It Is common sense to believe wbaf yon know; it is nonsense to be llev A lot of unreasonable stuff that jther people tell yon. Tbe poet probably sings of the silvery noon because It comes In halves and luaiten. Soma pec-pie eem to know eyerr hing except the fact tbat they dou't enow tar swell titer don't know. HI OF I DAY. Preached by Rev. Dr. Tannage. tnbjeets Chelce ef Beliefs Retlcioua Tol , nam Advocated All Evangelical Churches Are Good and Are Becking the Same Praiseworthy End. Copyright. Lotlla Klopach. ISM. J Washihotos, D. C. In this sermon Dr. falmage discusses a toplo which will In rest domestic circles everywhere. Tbe xt Is Genesis xili., 8; "Let there be no trite, I pray tbee, between me and thee tnd between my herdmen and thy herdmen. is not the whole land before thee?" Uncle and nephew, Abram and Lot, both Jlous, both millionaires, and witb suoo arge flocks of bleating aheep and lowing sattle that their heidmen got into a light, jerhaps about the best pasture or about :he best water privilege or because tbe cow it one got hooked by tbe horns of the ithers. Not their poverty of opportunity, )Dt their wealth, was the cause of con :roTersv between these two men. To Ibram, the glorious old Mesopotnmian iheik, suoh controversy seemed absurd. It aas like two shjlps quarreling tor sea room !n the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. There was a voHt reach of country, cornltelds, rlneyards, harvests and plenty ot room In Illimitable acreage. "Now," says Abram, "let as agree to differ. Here are the moun tain districts, swept by tbe tonic sea breeze ind with wide reaching prospect, and there Is tbe plain of the Jordan, with tropical luxuriance. You may have either." Lot, who was not as rich as Abram, and might have been expected to take the second obolce, made the first selection and with a modesty that mast have made Abram smile said to him: "Ton may bave the rocks and the fine prospeot; I will take the valley of the Jordan, with all its luxuriance of corn fields and the river to water tbe flocks and tbe genlnl climate and tbe wealth im measurable." So tbe controversy was forever settled and great-souled Abram carried out the snggestion ot tbe text: "Let there be no strife, I prny thee, be tween me and thee, and between my herd men and thy herdmen. Is not the whole land before tbee?" Well, in this the last deonde of the nine teenth century and in this beautiful land, which was called America, after Amerieu! Vespucius, but should have been culled Columbia, after Its discoverer, Columbus, we have a wealth of religious privilege and opportunity tbat is positively bewildering. Churches of all sorts of creel. and of all kinds of government and all forms ol worship and all styles of architecture what opulence of ecclesiastical oppor tunity! Now, while In desolate region there may be only one church, in the opulent districts ot this country there I such a profusion that there ought to be no difficulty in making a selection. No fight about vestments, or between liturgical oi aonliturgical adherents, or as to baptismal modes, or a handful ot water as compared with a riverful. If Abrnm prefers to dwell on tbe heights, where ho can get only sprinkling from the clouds, let him consent that Lot have all the Jordan In which to Immacse himself. "Let there be no strife, I pray tbee, between mo and thee and be tween my herdsmen and thy herdsmen. If not the whole land before thee?" Especially Is it unfortunate when fami lies allow angry discussion at tbe break fast or dining or tea table as to wbioh if the beet church or denomination, one at one end of the table saying he eould nevei endure the rigid doctrines ot Presbyter! anism, one at the other end responding that she never eould stand the forms ol Episcopacy, and one at one side of the tame saying ne am not understand now anybody could bear tbe noise in the Metho dist cnurcn, ana anotner aeoianng ail tne Baptlnts blest s. There are. hundreds, ol families hopelessly split on ecclestastlciSm, ana in tne miaaie ot every discussion on such subjects there Is a kindling of indig nation, and It needs some old father Abram to come and put bis foot on the loaded fuse before the explosion takes place and say: "Lot there be no strife, I pray then, be tween me and thee and between my herd men and thy herdmen. Is not the whole land before tbee?" I undertake a subject never undertaker by any other pulpit, for it is an exceed ingly delicate subject, and if not rightly bandied might givesnrious offense, but approach it without the slightest trepida tion, for I am sure I have the divine direc tion in the matters I propose to present. It is a tremendous question, asked all ovei Christendom, often asked with tears and sobs and heart breaks and Involving the peace ot families, the eternal happiness of many souls. In matters of church attend ance should tbe wife go with tbe husband or tbe husband go with the wife? First, remember that all the evangeliooJ shurohes have enough truth in them tc save tbe soul and prepare us for bapplnert on earth and In heaven. I will go with you Into any well selected theological library, and I will show you sermons from minis ters In all denominations that set forth man as a sinner and Christ as a deliverer from sin and sorrow. That is the whole Gospel. Got that into your soul and you are fitted for the here and the hereafter. There are differences, we admit, and some denomi nations we like better than others. Bui suppose three or four of us make solemn agreement to meet each other a week from now in Chicago on Important business, and one goes by the New Tork Central Ilutl road, anotner by the Erie Railroad, anothei by the Pennsylvania Railroad, another by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. One goes this way because the mountains are grander; another takes this because the sars are more luxurious; another that be cause the speed Is greater; another takes the other because he has' long been accus tomed to tbat route, and all the employes are familiar. So far as our engagement tc meet is concerned it makes no difference 11 we only get there. Now, any one of the Innumerable evangelical denominations; if you practice Its teaoblng although some of their trains rub on a broad gauge and some on a narrow gunge will bring you out at the city of the New Jerusalem. It being evident that you will be safe in any of the evangelical denominations, 1 proceed to remark, first. Hone of the mar ried couple be a Christian and tbe other not, the one a Christian Is bound to go any where to a ehurch where the unoonverted companion Is willing to go. If be or she will go to no other. You ot the connubial partnership are a Christian. You are safe for the skies. Then it is your first duty to secure tbe eternal safety of your lifetime assoelate. Is not the everlasting welfare of your wife Impenitent, or your husband Impenitent, of more importance than youi shurch relationship? Is not the condition of your companion for the next quadrillioi of years a mightier consideration to yoc than tbe gratification of your ecclesiastica taste for forty or fifty years? A man or i woman that would stop bait a minute tc weigh preferences as to whether he oi she bad better go with the unconverted sompanlon to this or that church or de nomination, has no religion at all, anc never has bad, and I fear never will have Yon are loaded np with what yon suppos to be religion, but von are like Cnptalr Frobteber, who brought back from bis Toy age of discovery a shipload of what b supposed valuable minerals, yet. Instead o: being silver and gold, were nothing but common stones of ths field, to be hurled out as finally useless. Mighty God! In all Iby realm Is there ne mnn or woman professing religion, yet so stolid, so unfitted, so far gone ante death that there would be any hesitancy in surrendering all preferences before such an opportunity ot salvation and heavenly re union? If you, a Christian wife, are an at tendant noon any church, and your uncon verted husband does not go there because he does not like Its preacher, or its music, or Its architecture, or its uncomfortable crowding, and goes not to any bouse ol worshlD. but would so If von would acoom. Mtny him somewhere else, enaoge yout thurch relations. Take your hymnbook lome witb yon to-day. Say goodby.to your xiends in the neighboring pews, and go vlth bim to any one of a hundred churches ill his soul Is saved and he Joins yon in the naroh to heaven. More important than :hat ring on the third finger of your left land it is that yonr heavenly Father eom II and the angel ot mercy, concerning yonr lusband at his conversion, as la the para "t-ui a. ring ononis nana.-- No letter of more Importance ever came :o the reat eity of Corinth, situated on jrbnt was called the "Bridge of the Sea," ind glistening with sculpture and gated with a style of brass tbe magnificence ot which the following ages have not been ible to successfully Imitate and over ihadowed by the Aoro-Corintbus, a fortress ( rook 9000 foot high I say no letter ever nme to that great city of more Importance :ban that letter in which Paul puts the two itartling questions: "What knowest thou, 3 wife, whether thou Shalt save thy hus- )anar ur now knowest thou, u man, ! whether thou shalt save thy wife?" The 1 learast sacrifice on tbe part ot the one Is sheap if it rescue the other. Better go to I :he smallest, weakest, most insignificant shurch on earth and be copartners in Hernal bliss than pass your earthly mem sership in most gorgeously attractive ;hurch while your companion stays out ride of evangelical privilege. Better lave tbe drowning saved by a scow or a iloop than let him or her go down while foa sail by la the gilded cabins of a Ma estio or Campania. Second remark: If both of the married oup:e9 be Christians, but one is so naiur illy constructed that it is imposxililn tc tnjoy the services of a particular denomi nation, and the other is not so soi-tarian r punctilious, iot the one less particular to with tbe other who is very particular. Vs for myself, I feel as much at borne in ne denomination of evangelical Chriti'in is another, and I think I must have beeo xrn very near the Hue. I like the solemn roll of the Episcopal liturgy, and I like the ipontanelty of the Methodists and I like :he importance given to the ordinance ol baptism by the Baptists and I like the free lom'of the Congregationalism and I like :he government and the sublime doctrine jf the Presbyterians and I like many of tbe thers just as much as any I have men tioned and I could happily live and preach ind die and be buried from any of them. But others are born with a liking so ttoiit, so unbending, so inexorable for soma de nomination tbat it is a positive necessity :hey have tbe advantage of that one. What :hey were intended to be in ecclesiasticlsm was written in the sides ol their cradle, il ;he father and mother had eyes keen snough to see it. They would not stop trying until they had put in their bauds as l plaything a Westminster Catechism oi the Thirty-nine Articles. The whole cur rent of their temperament and thought ind character runs into one sect of relig ionists as naturally as the J:tines ltiveriutc the Chesapeake. It would lie a torture tc such persons to be anywhere outside ol :hat one church. Now, let the wife or husband who is not io constructed sacrillce the milder prefer ence for tbe one more Indexible and rigor jus. Let tbe grapevine follow the mgos ties and sinuosities ot the cat or hickory. Vbrara, the richer in flocks of Christian trace, should say to Lot, who Is built on a imaller scale: "Let there be no strife, 1 pray thee, between me and thenaud be iween my herdmen and thy herdmen. Is lot the whole land before thee?" As you :an be edified and happy anywhere, go with your companion to the church tc . which be or she must go or he miseiahle. Remard the third: it both the married couplo are very strong in theirsocUrinn Ism, let them attend the different churches preferred. It is not uecessnry that you attend the same church. Religion Is be tween your conscience and your iioil Like Abram and Lot, agree to dif fer. When on Hahbath morning you some out of your home together and one goes one way and the other tbe itber, heartily wish each other a good sermon and a time of prolltable devotion, ind when you meet again nt the noonday repast let it be evident, each to each, and to your children, and to the hired help, that you have both been on tbe Mount oi Transflguratiou, althougt you went up by iifferent paths, and tbat you have both Deen fed by tbe bread of life, though kneaded by different bands tn different :rays and baked tn different ovens. "But low about the cDlldren?" I am often ssked by score ot parents. Let them also make their own choice. They will grow ap with reverence for both the denomina tions represented by father and mother il you, by holy lives, commend those de nominations. If tbe father live? the bet ter life, they will have the more favorable opinion of his denomination. If tbe mother lives the better life, ttoy will have tbe more favorable opinion of her denom ination. And some day both the patents will, for at least one servlco, go to the same church. The noighbors will say, "1 wonder what is going on to-day, for I saw sur neighbor and bis wife, who always go to different churches, going arm in arm to the same sanctuary." Well, I will tell you what has brought them together, arm In arm, to the same iltar. Something very important has hap pened. Their son is to-day uniting witb the church. lie is standing in the aisle, :aking the vows ot a Christian. Ho had Men somewhat wayward, and gave fathet ind mother a good deal of anxiety, but :heir prayers have been answered In his sonverslon, and as he stands In the aisle and the minister of religion says, "Do you consecrate yourself to the God who made ind redeemed you and do you promise to terve Him all your days?" and with manly roice be answers, "I do," there is an April mower in tne pew wnere lather and notber sit and a rainbow of joy which trobes both their souls, tbat makes all dif ferences of creed infinitesimal. And the laughter who had been very worldly and fny and thoughtless, puts her life on the Itar or consecrntlon. and as the sunlight if that Kahbath streams through the jburch window and falls upon hi brow tnd cheek, she looks like their other daugh- er, whose face was illumined with the brightness ot another world on the day when the Lord took her into His heavenly Keeping years ago. I should not wonder. It, niter all. these parents pass the evening of their life In the same church, all dl (Terences of church preference overcome by the joy of being n the house of God where their children 4rere prepared for usefulness an i heaven. Bat I can give you a recipe for ruining irour children. Angrily contend in the louseuold that your church is right and he church of your companion is wrong. Bring sneer and caricature to emphasize tour opinions, and your children will nano up their minds mat rellglou is a sham, ind thoy will have none ot it. In the lortheost storm of domestic controversy :he rose of Sharon and the lily of tho valley Kil not grow. Fight about apostolic luccesston, fight -about election nud tree tgency, ngnt about baptism, light about the bishopric, fight about gown and sur plice, and the religious prospects ot your children will be left dead on the Held. You will be as unfortunate as Charles. Duke of Burgundy, who in battle lost a diamond the value of a kingdom, for in your light rou will lose the jewel ot salvation for your entire nousenold. This is nothing against the advocacy of your own religious theo ries. Use all forcible argument, bring nil telling Illustration, array all demonstrative facts, but let there be no acerbity, nosting ing retort, no mean Insinuation, no super- rillousness, as though all others were wrong and you infallibly right. Coffins In Russia are never covered with black. If the deceased Is a child. pinn is used: if a woman, crimson. though for a widow they use brown. There are 1143 women clergymen in the United States. In Boston are two large advertising agencies, the members of both firms being women and all their employes women. The tt'fWUl-RnWVPm nf Atlanta Cla 200 In number, have formed a trust! and have raisprl thp nrifa f ui -t n . stove-wood from fifteen cents to $1 per aay. i,very member of the organiza tion Is a blind man or a cripple. In tlia Mplnn if T.anhfltiol In Ilia -n m ... in- Sahara, unusual rain storms prevailed recently. Trees were uprooted and houses demolished. The natives were greatly terrified at the unaccustomed phenomenon. A writer In the Celestial Empire declare, that iha A ,uA . TCirin r.latt-i(-t In Chin. Ki J 600 criminals every year, and yet i ibuiiuasc wuuiiucb tx scourge oi me province. It la a tinnlt. t , - , run by air, but the companies are TiftAn IrMtfr 1 . wvu aicrb sui"S uy water. i '4 if i a. I fi 1 :f i I ' -':'5Bt