- i B. F. SCHWEIER, ill'! THE COnSTITUTIOn-THE UIIIOII AHO THE ERFORCEE3EL1T OF THE UWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. LIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1899. NO. 31. . ;V i . ., r - - ?'FT?y33f airfi. ana Kisses ner. -wnai . . , :, I ' HrdH Xtn.OQIVEa. ISf1 lvy'a-jMIl iVjj:rg:gffi IS t:ol I was to doubt von for a moment! I Tmmhmtm aa.- ra f. pmg I El': K rwSty ' T ' ' HlltM 1"'" -rir Tnnr rrrtlflritt of marriage. " Tf!.VTJV -- " - - caret. CHAPTER XV. The memory of them comes back upon Annus- heart like a serpent sting. "Jo ii. monsieur." be says la low roi. ... trembling th passion. V.iur father held a respectable posi tion in Clusguw as clerk in one of the uir(.-..t mercantile houses there, when he met your mother. She was an actresa at tome smnll theater in Scotland." "Mr mother an actress! Never! Too are altogether mistaken! This affair it becoming a farce." "I hope yon may find it a farce, young man. Your mother, I repeat, was . an actress, known by the name of Delia Morton." "And her name is Delia!" mnrmnrt poor Angus. "And a very low h actress, too!" chimes In Mrs. Moray; "who hacted hin the most indecent dresses, hand " "My dear," interposes her hnsband "will you permit me to tell his story to the vouug man myself?" "Have it your bown way, TVillyum. I honly hinterfered for hall yonr good," ah returns with offended dignity. "My poor brother James met her, and as I thought married her; at all events he managed to deceive me on the subject; be quarreled with his Glasgow employers, however, uml brought you and your moth er to I.ninluii, where I met him again) Jn!ns was then in a very bad state of to'itlth fast dying, in fact and I, having a large fortune and no family to which to leave it, proposed rather rashly to make roil my heir, and adopt you on youi father's denlh as such.". "I- your heir!" stammers Angus Moray in incredulous amazement. 'Certainly and you would have been )ne of the richest men in London. How ewr, your mother chose to interfere and prevent it!" "A merciful hinterfereuce!" murmurs his wife. "How could she do so?" "By asserting her sole claim to you, 3ii the score of your illegitimacy!" ": monsieur! it is impossible! It can never have been!" cries the young man, distressed beyond measure, as he hides bis face in his clasped hands. "It is true as I stand here! Yonr fath tr died and I produced the will he had left in my possession, appointing me your sole guardian. I was about to put it into fun e, when your-mother declared before witnesses she was not a married woman, tnd therefore had the sole claim to you." "I" cannot believe it," says Angus -de-pairingly. "Ask your mother, then. She had ne hesitation in confessing it at the time, and her friend, Mrs. Horton. and a so licitor of the name, I believe, of Bond, heunl her make the declaration." "Mrs. Horton! Why, she is in Bruges at the present moment, staying with my mother my mother, who is bo loved and respected throughout the town of whom I have been so proud. O, monsieur, I would rather have heard any news than this. You have given me my death blow!" "If Mrs. Horton is here you can satisfy four curiosity upon the subject at once. Your mother is more likely to deny the truth now that it will militate against her feigned respectability! I trust you will not usurp my family name any longer, or rou will place me under the unpleasant necessity of publicly proclaiming that you have no right to it. Y'our name is Mer ton. He good enough to remember thai for the future." This last sting is the worst of alL "Your friend the doctor could hardly trust his own ears when I told him the !tory," continues Mr. Moray, maliciously, "lie was uuite taken aback by your au daeity'." Aivus stops short, wheels round, and retraces his steps to the center of the room. "So it is you that have poisoned the mil.'! of my best friend against me that haw made him forget the affection and the trust cf years that have helped to mnr the brightest hopes that ever a man held! I see it all now. It is your cursed ti.nli.-e that has lost me Gabrielle and I ill be revenged upon you for it; as there is a judgment seat in store for both of us, I will le revenged!" He rushes from their presence aa he sp' iiks, hut be cannot rush from the deso atiou they have created for bim. He tears through the vestibule into the open where the sunshine blinds him and the ordinary traffic sounds like the roar 3f thunder in his ears without being !! t.i stitle those three awful words that ring in his heart like a knell of death' 'Ant your mother!" CHAPTER XVI. Mi-nnwhile. Mrs. Hephzibah Horton, if.ii. g at luncheon with her friend Delia Moray, has a letter delivered to her, on the r. . eipt of which she becomes much iiKtiir'.cl. "!'. :;y!- idiocy ! dotage!" she exclaims it iMcrvals, like so many successive pis tol s!,i.!s, as she peruses the missive in lUesti.,11. ".'! I hope nothing is going to interfere with oir holidays," says Delia, anxiously, observing the ominous expression of Mrs. Hi l.ii.uh's countenance. "That is not l ush ss letter, is it, Mrs. Horton? Not re. .1:1 to London, or anything disagree te f that sort?" "N-1 a bit of it. my dear; only that man B ui. I I, :ls actually followed me over to Bniu-es;" "l ..!l,,ued you here, Mrs. Horton Whltt t..r'" "What for, indeed? You may well ask was ""Mi ior. nen he nrst near a i Mniing t0 ,.e you for a few weeks, he sSfereil to accompany me. I said 'Ho;' leei.U-dly and flatly, 'Nor What did he "I 'I 'Os.. I wanted a little idiot of a man ike himself tncked behind me for? He uli kinds of lies to persuade me to field to Lis wishes; said I oughtn't to trav.-l alone; I. Hephzibah Horton, aged who hnve supported myself ever since ' was 30! Faugh! Why. I should hava "ad to look after biin into the bargain V "Hut it was a kind thought, dear Mrs. "urton, nevertheless. You have alwayt keen very good friends, Mrs. Horton, have you not?" " "Well, I've helped him with his boys, nd he's girsn me the advantage of such legal knowledge as he possesses." "And you wouldn't let the poor little man come to Bruges with you?" "Sol I wpuMn'fr-and whal j!fl Jtf -d In consequence? Here's a letter written yesterday, not twelve hours after my de parture, to say that he Is Just about to start on the same Journey by a different route, and expects to be her this morn ing." iTien he n ust be actually at Bruget this moment!" "That's Just K! Against all my orders, the man Is actually in the place." "And ha has crossed for the express purpose of being near you and of nse to you in traveling. It is a very kind and friendly act, Mrs. Horton. Ton must Tery good to him in return " "Cood to him in return! What. for' snail be no such thing. I have a great mind to write to the Hotel Bclgique, wnere ne says ne shall stay, and tell him that unless he leaves Bruges at once. I snail start for Antwerp to-morrow. "Oh! that would be too cruel! Be sides, you surely would not. punish me for his offense.V Think how. feng it is since we met each other. Why cannot we make a pact with poor Mr. Bond, and let him join us when we go sight-seeing! tie will enjoy all the places we visit two fold If seen in your company." Mrs. Hephzibah does not appear unwill ing to be molhtied. She sits there twist ing the little lawyer's note undecidedly round and round in her fingers, but the thougnt dees strike the womanly part of her. that now that he has been foolish enough to make the jonrney on her ac count, it would be rather hard to shut him out in the cold. But if she yields to Delia's request, it must be for Delia's sake and not for her own. "Well, my dear, if you wish It, of course, I am not the one to raise objec tions. I am your guest! I do not forget that fact, and you are at liberty io ask anyone to join onr party that you like." "For old acquaintance sake. Mrs. Ilor- I ton. If you really want to show him a kindness it would be a great one to call at the Hotel Belgique as we go out this afternoon and take him with us." Delia thinks that the little solicitor looks like anything but a sbriveled-up nut, as, on receiving her card at the hotel, he descends with alacrity to the vestibule to greet Mrs. Horton and herself. He la a fresh-colored, pleasant, benevolent look ing old gentleman, very neat and prim in his appearance, and carrying his 64 years bravely. His mild blue eyes seemed trou bled also, as if his impending loneliness grieved him more than lie cared to con fess; and the eagerness with which he turns to grasp Mrs. Hephzibah' s ' hand proves where he looks for sympathy and depends upon finding it. I "If you mean to walk," says Mrs. Heph- ziuau, you uuu oeuer come a I once, ior the afternoon is getting on, and we want to get on too."- Mr. Bond expresses his gratitude and promptitude to obey at one and the same moment by running upstairs to fetch his hat and stick, and the ladies step out upon the pavement in front of the hotel to wait for him. It is a bright, beautiful afternoon, and the street is crowded with pedestrians. Delia, letting her eyes wander at will, j raises inem 10 tne notei winaows, out suddenly withdraws them with a sort of frightened gasp. "What have yon seen now, Delia?" "Look the other way, Mrs. Horton. Ol how foolish I ami I know it is only some sickly fancy, but I saw a face at one of the hotel windows, and Just for the mo ment it looked to me so like the face of William Moray.' Mrs. Horton laughs aloud. "What win you get Into that silly little head of yours next? William Moray, in deed! I wonder what he would feel like set down in the middle of Bruges. Why, I don't suppose he knows that such a place exists! Put him out of your thoughts, my dear. He's safe enough in Cheapside, sorting his samples of wool. Take my word for it." Mrs. Hephzibah and her little solicitor ijny their walk exceedingly, and are full of regret when they find it is time to re trace their steps. But Delia hopes to see her boy, and the distance between the cemetery and the Rue AUemande seems twice as long as usual in consequence. Bnt another disappointment awaits hei at home. Instead of Angus' happy face for greeting, she receives a note from him, hurriedly written, and inexplicably mys terious. "I cannot attend the theater to-night," it says. "You and your friend must go without me. You will nnd the tickets on the mantelpiece in my bedroom." When she returns from the theater, and having bid good-night to both her frieuds, enters her own room an explanation awaits her there. Seated by her table is Angus haggard, pale and disordered in appearance; but as the door opens, be starts up from his chair and waits ber approach. She is about to fly into bit arms with an exclamation of pity and affection, when he waves her from him. "Mother," he says hoarsely, "1 wat obliged to wait for you here. I couldn't meet you before those people downstairs.' "You couldn't meet me, Angus! Oh, what is the meaning of this?" "No! Not until I had received an an swer from you to a question that is eating Into my very soul. Mother, I have heard that to-day which seems to have taken aU the light and life out of my existence. I cannot believe It but you are the only person who can thoroutttly satisfy me up on the subject." -Anraa. what is it?" she says, trem- 1 bling; "tell me at once. There have never 'seen any secrets between us yet. Ther. ever sll&il be . s My tongue seems to cleave to the Tool , my mouth when I try to form the words, but they must be said. Forgive s mother, if I wound you by theques tlon, but think what I have suffered un ier the doubt presented to me. Were you married to my father, or were you notr CHAPTER XVII. For a moment ber relief at finding- that lis uncertainty does not arise from any fear ?th failure of his suit with Ga briene? make, her forget everything but Sat shcan answer hi. question w,th truth in the affirmative. . 'My darting child! ye.! of course I wast Who has been so wicked a. to try and make you think otherwise r "I knew it I was sure of Itr the yoom, mas JoyfuUy. M ber in M ana. and kisses her. "What a frol I was to doubt you for a moment 1 Uive me your certificate of marriage, mother, and I will flourish it in the face of that liar to-morrow, and tear his false tongue out by the roots afterward." Something of the danger flashes on her mind. "My good name I Angus, for the love of heaven, tell me what is all this about! Who has dared to asperse me to you, or to cast a doubt upon my respectability?" "My uncle. William Moray." "Your nnclef' she almost screams. "Where have you met him? Not here? Not in Bruges?" "Yes here! in Bruges." "What does he say V she whispers it. a voice of fear. "He says that when my father died he left me to his guardianship, to be brought op as his heir, bnt that when the time came for asserting his authority, you set It aside on the plea that I was illegitimate, and no one but my mother had any claim apon me. And that, but for your declara tion to that effect before witnesses, 1 hould have been one of the richest men In London at the present moment. Is it true?". "f trgive ma. Angus!" she cries, ss she throws herself upon her knees before him. I did It for your sake. Ah! oil is mint know you never shall know the misera ble lire I endured before I was tempted to tell so foul a lie. You were all I had. my darling! For you I had worked and labored through pain and wretchedness and discomfort, such as never woman en dured before for you I had suffered vio lence and insult and contempt And then, when it was over when at last heaven mercifully delivered me from an unholy bondage, and I was looking forwsrd to devoting the remainder of my life to you they told me that your father had made a will by which you would be torn from my ras never to be mine again in the sweet compan!oushlp of mother and child and I could not bear It. The burden was too heavy for me, and I escaped from it by the only means I could. I destroyed the certmcate of marriage which I possessed, and denied there had ever been one." "You blasted my whole life, in fact, by falsely branding me with illegitimacy." "Angus! Angus! do not speak to me in that tone of voice. I did it for yonr sake." "To gratify your own wishes, you mean. Don't say you thought of me in the trans action. My welfare was the last consid eration you mnst have bad." I.oJ nol Indeed It was not! What should I have done without you? You were my all my whole earthly posses sion, i loved you as my own lifer1 And a nice way you took to Drove It. by taking from me the only thing which I possessed my father's name. Do von know what that man said to me to-day? xnat my proper name was not Moray, and that if I used it for the future, be would puDiicly denounce me as an impostor. J he wicked, cruel man! He knows you are his own brother's child and ex cept in that one matter I have never harmed him why should he rise up now to destroy all my peace of mind 7" .Because you pnt it in his power to do so. By this lie which you told him te se cure a temporary pleasure for yourself, at the price of an everlasting shame' for me, you placed a weapon in bis hand with which he can stab us both to his life's end. Uo you know the .mischief he has done already with it? He has related the whole base story to Dr. de Blois, who has per emptorily refused. In consequence, to give me oabnelle in marriage. Ah, no, no, Angus! it cannot be. You uiusi ne misiaxen. xnina now long we have lived and been respected In Bruges what honored friends we have gained here. Dr. de Blois will never take the word of a stranger against the proof of his own eyes. He did not tell you so. surely t "To all my entreaties that he would ex. plain himself more satisfactorily, with re ipect to refusing my offer, he had but one reply: 'Ask your mother she ought to know.' " "And would you rather, then, that I had let you go to your uncle, Angus?" he cries in an agony of pain. "Would you have given up my love and tender ness for all these many years for the sake of that man s riches f I would have given them up for the take of an honest name," he answers quickly; and then, seeing how he has wounded her, he adds: "Don't think I nn- Ijervalue your love, mother: but you might have found a better way of showing it for me than you did. And this is the end! This is the fruit of all those weary, tearful years that cheerfully borne labor, and those cheer fully expended earnings, that her boy might have everything of the best that she could give him Angus tells her that be would have resigned it all to regain that which her own hand wrested from bim! "To think," he exclaims, as he rises and paces the room, "that for a single lie, my life and my affections are blighted for ever; that I have lost my Gabrielle and my good name at one and the same mo ment; that here in thia city, where I have been reared to hold my head np with any man, I mnst slink through the streets with downcast eyes. I will settle up my accounts at the office as soon ss ever it is possible, and turn my back upon the place forever !" "Angus Angus! where will you go?" wbs bis mother. "Heaven knows and I don't care. Any whereso it be to a country where the disgrace you have cruelly tacked to me is not known, and I can begin life afresh under the only name you have left me the right to bear. Life afresh! What a farce it seems to me to seak so! Why. you have destroyed my life, with all that was worth having in it. I shall have no life henceforward, as 1 shall have no name. Ob, mother! mother! you may have called it love, but you are the bitterest enemy I have ever had." (To be continued.) Austria la tne only country In the wmid which never places a woman iu prison, no matter what crime she com mits. Instead of being- locked np, the fe male malefactor Is sent to one of a num ber of convents, devoted to the pur pose, and is kept there during the time for which she is sentenced. The court yard stands open all day, the only bar to egress being a nun, who acts as door keeper, just the same as In the ortiin iry convent. - JMffereat Fointa of View. "Aa old bachelor," said the sweet girl, "U a man who confesses) that be not think he is. A wit is a kind of urchin, that everv man will set his dog at but won't touch nimsen ior iear or pricking his fingers. No man can be provident of his tlm who ie not prudent in the choice of his company. Money will buy a dog. but it won't buy the wag of his tail. Might dont make 'right but right makes might. skat TmI U At tfc first calsJwatHM 1b Pbilads. tlrta of oar national bottday, July 4 ITTT, tba mob at night smashed th prlndowa of tba Quakers. "Toe town Olumlnated, and a great number of windows broken on ya Anniversary of independence and Fseedom," write Quakeress of that day m ber diary. ; The Quakers had with difficulty, dur ing the rumblings and heaving of the ipproacbjng revolution, stood by their peace prtnerplea, and the mob had re lented their attitude. But there wet Friends who revolted gainst maintain ing' a passive part, and Insisted that it sas the doty of every man to defend Ma country against oppression. . . These were called "Apostates" by their non-restottes brethren; bnt they named themselves "Free Quakers," and the "world's people" called them "Fighting- Quakers." Lydla Darraga, who brought to Washington's camp aews of the English army's intended attack, and Elisabeth Rosa, who mad the first flag carried by the American army, were both Free Quakers. Agnes Keppller. In her "Philadelphia," tells a Itory illustrative of the feelings caused !y the division of sentiment. A wealthy Friend, meeting one of the apostates girt with a sword, said to. bim. "Why. what is this with which thou hast bedecked thyself? Surely, not a rapier!" "Yes," was the stanch reply, "for Liberty or Death! is now the watch irord of every one who means to defend 1 almself and bis property." "Ah!" exclaimed the serene Friend. 1 bad not expected such high feelings n thee. Thy mind has become as fierce f as thy sword. Aa to property, I thought thee bad none, and aa to thy liberty, I thought thee already enjoyed it through the kindness of thy creditors." The Friend alluded to the man's In ability to pay his debts, for which he was liable to be cast Into ;alL Nearly a century afterward the old combative Instinct again brought the Fighting Quakers to the front. Hun Ireds of Free Quakers marched against the foes who strove to break up the Union. One of them, a descendant of a Fighting Quaker of the revolution, be ing too old for active service, equipped i company of soldiers at his own ex pense and presented them te the State. On a tablet Inserted In the wall of the new meeting house built by the Free Quakers, to which Washington and Franklin gave liberal aid, are cut these four lines: By General Subscription For the Free Quakers. Erected A. D. 1783. Of the Empire a The word "Empire" has pnasied good republicans. A member of the first con gregation, being aaked why It was used, I ar aH it. a. - tald, "I tell thee. Friend. It la because or country la sVetlaed-toTW the great mplre over all the world." Present vents recall attention to that cut word "Empire" and to the Quaker's senti ment. Spanish Women. Spanish women have very little out- Sooi amusement The bicycle is Just beginning to be admitted, but under protest The young women love their gueen next to pretty frocks and glitter ing fans and ribbons. They flock to the cruel shows In the bull-rings and laugh and cheer at the horrible spectacles. The favorite resort for tbe grande tenoras Is San Sebastian, and the lives the careless Spanish women of fashion lead there during the summer Is said to be a scandal over all Europe. There la scarcely a pretense at propriety or even ordinary conventionality. As in France, a majority of tbe young girls In the best families are educated In the convents. Their greatest accom plishment Is embroidery, afld they sit and sit at their knitting until some man from an ancient and bankrupt bouse or a bull-raising plantation comes along and marries them. Club life is unknown. Marriages are cele brated very early in life, and but lew people who get weary of these early alliances ever go to the trouble and for mality of getting a divorce. The un happy couples simply divide up the household things and live tbe balancr of their Uvea the best they can. Indian Wisdom. Some curiously illuminative examples if Asiatic subtlety and superstition are let down In the "Diary," kept chiefly in southern India, which the Right Hon, Sir M. E. Grant-Duff has recently pub lished. One follows the appeal of a Christianised native against a fine im posed by an English Judge: "Your honor may be right said the native, "I may be wrong; I may be right honor wrong. Let honor give me back the fine, and then at day of rae arrectlon, when all hearts will be open. If I am wrong I will most gladly, air, return your honor the money." It Is perhaps needless to state that bis honor did not agree to this exten sion of mercy. From the same source comes an iilus- tratlon of the peculiar blaa of Justice la the Asiatic states. A native Judge, in the district of Gan- am, used, when the time to give his judgment came, to count the files on the punka. It the number was even, tie gave It for U)e plaintiff; if odd, for the defendant Hereditary Strength of tbe Ox. The strength of an ox In pulling a load is remarkable. How did It team to pull so marvelously? Without doubt this quality Is traceable to the habit found among all wild cattle of waging war with their horns. At Cbllllngham Park, In Northumberland, England, where there is still a herd of half-wild cattle, it is found that the bulls engage In desperate tussles for the leadership of the herd. Plainly any ambitious beast which has not sufficient strength of neck to thrust his enemy backward would be beaten In the struggle, and would hare but few descendants. From age to age the strong-necked bulls have been victorious, and now the quality naa become a proverb. Ssalpe In Gerasausy. Snipe are scarce la Germany. They cost fl12 apiece In the masket, and 12S apiece to amateur hunters. At any rate It is known that 100 amateur hunt- tra spent $200 . ktat year, near Man- altogether tweafr bMU.'kt." Balls Aloasj Hi ad tnagaalnes tor the nraetnre and atoraae of hlan ex plosives are soon to be trallt by the Navy Department Tba plans call for an expenditure of more than $1.000400, which has been appropriated by Ooa- gresa. Dnrthg the war the need of a magaslne at a convenient distributing point was felt severely: that at Ft Lafayette waa overtaxed, and at best only capable of supplying 1,000 rounds a day, moat of which waa for the gun of the secondary batteries. The largest of the new tnagaalnes will be bnttt on tne Palisades near Edge water and almost opposite Grant tomb. It will have a frontage of sev eral hundred feet on the river and will be built to the edge of the cliff. The site selected la away from factories with tall chimneys, which are consid ered dangerous. Several large build ings are to be erected. They will be need for storing ammunition and aa a laboratory for testing materials for guns and torpedoes. There will also be a building used solely for experi mental work, and a large plant for the manufacture of 'all kinds of powder. Most of the buildings will be of solid construction. Iron, steel and stone being the material need. The smaller build ings will be made of corrugated Iron. Several nlera extending Into the water about 800 feet will be buUt The river Is to be dredged to a depth sufficient to permit the largest battleships to be moored to the piers, where ammunition can be taken direct from the store houses and placed In the magazines of the vessel. This will do away with the delay of handling the charged shells and the explosives many times and the danger, surrounding reshipment When the plant ta completed It will have. It is planned, a capacity sufficient to supply high explosives to the entire navy, and great enough to assemble nearly all the fixed ammunition and charged shells needed. It will cost. It Is expected, about $600,000; and work may be begun within a few months. Another plant may be erected near tbe naval proving grounds at Indian Head. Neither will be dangerous to the prop erty of the neighborhood. New York Evening Post. . , President Pairs, How uneasy may lie tbe head that wears even a presidential crown Is in dicated by two true stories told of the late President Faure of the French re public Last autumn the president was one of a hunting party, and during the progress of the sport killed a pheasant ."It Is rather early, Mr. President ne of the officers In the company re- marked, tte shoot pheasanta. Ia I month or two they will be better.' f"iarm wenUror twT mU ne dent sadly. "Who knows where I shall be thenJ" Shortly before his death President Faure went to open a certain annual exhibition. He exchanged a few cour teous words with members of tbe com mittee which had the ceremony In charge, and then asked for an absent member. Monsieur Jolllvet a Journal ist He waa told that Monsieur Jolll vet was unable to be present "I am sorry," said the present "for I had something which I wished to say to him." A member offered to carry has mes sage to Monsieur Jolllvet "It was only this," said tbe president "In a recent article about me In his paper he said that I am a 'happy man.' Please tell him that I am much obliged for the thought but that It Is a mistake I am not a happy man," Caes of Salt. for stains on the hands nothing Is better than a little salt with enough lemon Juice to moisten It rubbed on the spots, and then washed off in clear water. Strong brine may be used to ad vantage in washing bedsteads. Hot alum" water Is also good for this pur nose. In a basin of water, salt of course, fails to the bottom; so never soak salt fish with- the skin down, as the salt will fall to the skin and remain there. If a chimney or flue catch fire, dose all the windows and doors first then hang a blanket In front of the grate to exclude tbe air, throw coarse salt dowr the flue. For weeds In pavements or gravel walks, make a strong brine of coarse salt and boiling water; but the brine In a sprinkling can and water tbe weeds thoroughly, being careful not to let any of the brine get on tbe grass. A Penny Saved. The Individual who saves a dollar la one direction and Immediately pro ceeds to spend two in another, as a sort of reward of virtue. Is a familiar character, "I've stopped economising," said the girl with the violets, aa she stirred ber chocolate. "I can't afford It I trimmed this bat I'm wearing last month, and saved ever so much. I saved so much that I Jelt able to buy a new gown, and it will cost three times what I saved before it's finished. It's always, tbe way. If I save a car ticket by walking down town, I spend a dollar for violets before I get home. I'm going to stop trying to save, and I've painted- a proverb to go on my mantel to remind me of It: penny saved la a dollar wasted.' " A Cigarette Horror. Leeches, when applied to persistent cigarette smokers, drop off dead, dis tinct traces of tbe dangerous oil given off of tobacco being found In them, Strangely enough, the same experiment tried upon excessive pipe-smoker, re sulted in no apparent Injury to the leeches. Makina Bad War. "Men are so Illogical," "What do you mean 7 "Why, those four men disputed over a doctor's bUL They banged each oth er all up, and that made more work for the doctors." Profs Isnnl Jealosny. "My borae baa reasoning powers, X sell you." "In what respect partieulariyT "WeH, instead of shying at that auto mobile cab he edged up to it and kicked BENJAMIN FRANKLIN KEITH. KEITH'S TENTH YEAR. Over 1,000,000 People Entertained in the Past Nine Years. The annals of American amusements will probably contain no record of more successful managerial career than that of B. F. Keith. His model theatres in Philadelphia, Boston, New York and Providence eniov clienteles cua!le4 by no other p aybouses In those cities, and the censored entertainments combine agreeably diversions of all sorts, each bill being so varied as to please the most exacting theatre-go er. The floating population Is dally in evidence and many visitors from near. by cities spend an hour or two at Keith's. -It is claimed that over 1,000,000 people have been entertained at this house during the past nine years. The bills have included Maurice Barrymore. Fe lix Morris. Robert Mantel!, John T. Sullivan. Tim Murphy. Robert Down Ing. Rose Coghlan. Rose Eytlnge, Cora Tanner, Robert Hilliard, Barton Hill, Violinist Remenyl, Celloist Van Biene, Isabelle Urquhart. Pauline Hall. Henry E. Dixey. Del Puente. the 16-act pro grammes enlisting the services of the stars or grand opera, comic opera. farce, comedy, drama and circus. The Bear and the Wheelmen. Right in the middle of the track was a black bear, about four feet high and six feet long. We had never seen Bruin before outside of the Zoo or in the cage of a perambulating menagerie. So we were Interested, and the Interest took tbe shape of a tightness across the cheat and a quickness of breathing sucn as you reel when easy and happy-go-lucky in your mind. The bear was Interested In us, and evidently glad to see us. He gave a grunt slowly wagged bis bead, and began to advance. At Irst we thought of amusing him by rem iniscences of stole buns given to his ipeclea when we were younger and less callous of heart Yet we cocked our revolvers In case there should be any disputing the fact, though we knew a bullet from a six-shooter would have as much effect upon the hide of a bear aa a peashooter would have In wound ing: an elephant . . NowdOnTnre until -ne'e within arm's reach; then drive into bis eyes or open mouth." That waa the arrange ment We baited ready for action. So did onr friend the enemy, and we saw be waa scanning us with scornful eyes. He moved to get a side view. "He's funking it; he's frightened," we said. with lowered voice. By way of an swer the bear came on four strides at a trot and up went the revolvers. "Don't shoot, don't shoot, till he's nearer." Bruin beskated. He was consider ing. He was something of a philoso pher, and evidently thought "They are Duly a couple of lanky, fleshloss cy sllsts; what would be tbe good of kill ing them?" On which sage reflection he turned about and sauntered up the mountain side. Travel. The Era of Peace. Great Britain is now building eighty nine war vessels; France is a close sec ond, with eighty-three; Russia is now working on thirty-nine peacemakers, Italy on thirteen and Germany on nine teen, but the late large appropriation for the German navy will greatly en large the Kaiser's operations. Explo sive bullets have been long excluded from civilised warfare as bariiarous, but sensitive Britain Is chuckling over a new missile designed to convert heathen Afridls and Africans from the error of their ways, which simply means murder, expanding from a clean, round hole at the point of entrance to a ragged chasm three or four inches In diameter. Perfumery from Flowers, Heretofore perfumery has been de tacbed from flowers by soaking them In lard. A Parisian named Passy has now found a way of gathering the fragrance by simply soaking the flow ers in water, a process which can be repeated several times without de stroying the flowers. Kaally Explained. "Why Is H7" asked tbe inquisitive man, "that coroners do not hold an In quest over the body of every person Who dlesT" "It Is only necessary," replied his observant friend, "when a person is accidentally killed, or dies suddenly without medical advice. When a per son dies after being attended by a phy sician, then everybody knows why he died, and there is no need of an In quest." The Voice on the Cylinder. Diggs The phonograph must be an ancient Invention. Biggs Ifs considered quite modern Why do you think it ancient? Dlggs Why, the Bible speaks of men lifting up their voices, and I nat urally supposed they were on a phono graph cylinder. Benson Bnona-h.. "What made you quit the club, Bil ly r "Reason enough. I can tell you. 1 worked live years to be elected treas urer, and then they Insisted on punting In a cash register." Boston Traveler. No Improvement. Humorist It Is impossible for me to think and operate tbe typewritei'at the same time. Editor Then you are no- better oft than, when you used a pen. The druggist would rather . sell a pound ot cure than an ounce of pre vention. . i ..:....... SII or I DAY. Preached by Rev. Dr. Talmage. tnbject: The Saered Nnnibrr SlgnlOcmnee of Seven Important Truth of the Bible Illnalrmted bv the Use of Thai Numeral Favored bj the Divine Mind. (Copyright. I-onla Klopach, 1899. Waskikotok, D. C Many of the ir.ort important doctrines of the Bible are by Dr. Talmage presented In this sermon in a very unusual way. Genesis II., S, "God blessed the seventh day." The mathematics of tbe Bible is notice able; the geometry and the arithmetic; the aqunre in Ezekiel; the circle spoken of In salab; the curve alluded to In Job; the rale of fractions mentioned in Daniel: the role of loss and gain in Mirk, where Christ asks the people to cipher out by tbut role what it wonid "profit a man if be gain the whole world and lose his soul." But there I. one mathematical figure that is crowned above all others In the Bible; it is the numeral seven, which the Arabians got from India, and ail 'ollowlng ages huve taken from tbe Arabians. It stands be tween tbe figure six and tbe figure eight. In tbe Bible all the other numerals bow to It. Over 300 times it is mentioned in tbe Scriptures, either alone or compounded with other words. In Genesis the week ia rounded into seven days, and I nse my text because there this numeral is for tbe first time introduced in a journey which baits not until In the close of the book of Revela tion its monument Is bnilt into tbe wall of heaven in chrvsollte. which. In the strata of precious stones, is the seventh. In tbe Bible we find that Jacob had to serve seven years to get Rachel, but she was well worth it, and, foretelliug the years of prosperity and famine in Pharaoh's time, the seven fat oxen were eaten np of the seven lean oxen, and wisdom is said to be bnilt on seven pillars, and tbe ark was left with the Philistines seven years, and Naa man, for the care of his leprosy, plunged in the Jordan seven times; tbe dead child, when Elisba breathed into its month, signaled its arrival back into con sciousness by sneealng seven times; to tbe house that Ezekiel saw in vision there were seven steps; tbe walls of Jericho, be fore they fell down, were compassed seven days; Zecharlah describes a stone with eyes; to cleanse a leprous bouse the door must De sprinkled with pigeons' blood seven times; In Canaan were overthrown seven nations; on one occasion Christ cast out seven devils; on a mountain He fed a multitude ot people with seven loaves, the fragments left filling seven baskets, and the closing passages of the Bible are mag nificent and overwhelming with the im agery made np of seven churches, seven stars, seven candiestlsks, seven seals, seven angels and seven beads and seven crowns and seven horns and seven spirits nnd seven vials and seven plagnes and seven thunders. Tea. the numeral seven seems a favorite with the divine mind outside as well as in side the Bible, for are there not seven pris matic colors? And when God with the rainbow wrote tbe comforting thought that the world would never have another deluge He wrote it on the scroll ot tbe Fky in Ink of seven colors. He grouped into' the Pleiades seven stars. Borne, tbe capi tal of the world, sat on seven bills. When God would make tbe most intelligent thing on earth, the human countenance, Ue fashioned it with seven features tbe two ears, the two eyes, the two nostrils and the month. Tea, our body lasts only seven vears.and ws gradually sbed it for another body after another seven years, and so on. tor we are, as to our bodies, septennial an nua is- bo cue numeral seven ranges througn nature and though revelation. It is the number of perfection, and so I nse it while I speak of tbe seven candlesticks, tbe seven stars, the seven seals and the seven thun ders. The seven golden candlesticks were anil are tbe churches. Mark you, the churches never were, and never can be, candles. They are only candlesticks. Thev are not the light, bnt they are to bold tbe light. A room in tbe night might have in It 500 can dlesticks, and yet you could not see your band before your face. The only nse of a candlestick and tbe only use of a church is to hold np the light. You see it is a dark world, the night of sin. tbe nhzht of trouble. the night of superstition, the night of per secution, tbe night of poverty, the night nf sickness, the niuhtof death. Ave. about fifty nights have interlocked their shad ows. Tbe whole race goes stumbling over prostrated hopes, and fallen fortunes, and empty flour barrels, and desolated cradles and deathbeds. How much we have use tor all the seven candlesticks, with licbts blazing from tbe top of each one of them! Light of pardon for all sin! Light of com fort for all trouble! Light of encourage ment for all despondency! Light of eter nal riches for all poverty! Light ot rescue for all persecution! Light of ru- aaiea for all tbe bereft! Light of heaven for all the dying! And that light is Christ, who the light that shall yet Irradiate the hemispheres. But, mark you, when I say churches nre not candles, but candlesticks, I cast no slur on candlesticks. I believe ia beauti ful candlesticks. T'-e candlesticks that God ordered for tbe ancient tabernacle were something exquisite. Tbev were a dream of beauty carved out ot loveliness. Tbey were made of hammered gold, stood iu a foot of gold and had six branches of gold blooming all along in six lilies ot gold each and lips of gold, from which the can dles lifted their holy fire. And the best houses In any elty ought to be the churches the best built, the best ventilated, tbe best swept, the best windowed and the best ehandeliered. Log cabins may do in neighborhoods where most of the people live in log cabins, but let there be palatial enurcnes for regions wnere many of the people live in palaces. Do not have a bet- :er place lor yourself than for your Lord and King. Do not live in a parlor and put four Christ in a kitchen. These seven sandleetlcks of which I speak were not made of pewter or iron; tbey were gold en candlesticks, and gold Is not only s valuable but a bright metal. Have every thing abont ytur cbureh bright your ashen with smiling faces, your music jubi lant, your handshaking cordial, your en tire service attractive. Many people feel that in church tbey must look dull, in or der to look- teverential. and many whose faces in other kinds of assemblage show all the different phases ot emotion have in church no more expression than the back wheel of a hearse. Brighten op and be re sponsive. If yon feel like weeping, weep. If vou feel like smiling, smile. If you feel Indignant at some wrong assailed from tbe pulpit, frown. Do not leave your natural ness and resiliency borne because it is Sun day morning. It as officers of a church you meet people at the church door with a black look, and have tbe music black, and the minister in black preach a black ser mon, and from invocation to benediction nave tbe impression black, few will come, and those who do come will wish they had not come at all. Golden candlesticks! Scour up the six lilies on each branch, and know that tbe more lovely and bright they are the more Bt they are to bold the light. But a Christ less light Is a damage to the world rather than a good. Cromwell stabled bis cavalry horses in St. Paol's Cathedral. and many now nse the church in which t stable vanities and worldliness. A worldly oburch is a candlestick without the candle, and it had Its prototype In St. Sophia's in Constantinople, built to tbe glory of God by Constantino, but transformed to base uses by Mohammed tbe Second. Built out of colored marble; a eupola with twenty four windows soaring to a height of 180 feet; the celling one great bewilderment of mosaic: galleries supported bv eleht columns of porphyry and sixty-seven col umns ot green jasper; nine bronze doors with alto-relievo work, fascinating to tbe are ot any artist: vases ana vestment, la erasted with all manner of precions stones Four walls on fire with lndecribabl Splendor. Though labor was cheap, thi Duildlni.; cost fl.buu.uou. ecclesiastics structure, almost supernatural in pom and majesty. But Mohammedanism ton down from the walls of that buildiDgall th saintly and Cbristly images, and high nf In the dome tbe figure ot the cross wot rubbed out that the crescent of tbe bar barous Turk might . be substituted. A great church, but no Christl gorgeous candlestick, bnt no candlel Ten thousand poch ohurckes would not give tba world of much light as one home-made tallow can dle by which last night some grandmother In the eighties pat on ber ectiol4 and read the Psalms of David in larger type. Up with the churches, bv all meanil Hun dreds of them, thousands of them, and th more the better. But let each one l s blaze of heavenly light, making the world brighter and brighter, till tbe last shadow has disappeared, and the last of the suf fering Children Of God shall hare twaehnil I he land where tbey have no need of can dlestick or "of candle, neither light of the nn, for the Lord God glveta them light, and they .ball reign forever and ever." Turn now in your Bible to the seven I'.ars. We are distinctly told that th'y are :hc minl-ters of roligion. Some are large ttars, some of them small stars, some of :bem sweep a wide circuit and some of :bem a small circuit, but so far as they are f.m u Ine they got their light from the greot ;entral sua around which they make revo ution. Let each one keep in his own phere. The solar system would be soon wrecked If the stnrs. instead of keeping :helr own orbits, should go to linnum; iown other stars. Ministers of rt-liiriou should never clash. 'But in all the cen turies of the Christian church some of -hese stars have been bunting aa Edward Irving or a Horace lSushnll or nil Alliert Bnrues. And the stars that were in pur- Mlit of the other stars lost tlielrotvn orldt. and some ot them could never again find ,t. Alas for tho heresy hunters! The lmt way to destroy error is to preach the :rutb. The best way to scatter darkness s to strike a light. There is in immeusity room enough for all tbe ministers. Tbe ninisters who give up righteousness and :he truth will get punishment enough any- low, for they are "the wandering stars for whom is reserved tbe bl :ekoess of dark less forever." I should like, as a minister, when I am lying, to be able truthfully to say what a japtaiu of the English army, fallen at the aead of bis column and dying on the Egyp tian battlefield, said to General Wolseley, vbo came to condole with bim: "1 led hem straight. Didn't I lead thm itralght, general?" God has put us ininis ers as captains In this battle'leld of truth igainst error. Great at last will be our ibagrin it we fall leading the people the vroug way; but great win be our gladness f, when the battle is over, we ran hand lur sword back to our great C.inunamlHr, laying: "Lord Jesus! We led the peoplx itralght! Didn't we lead thera straight?" The ministers are not all PecksnllT and mating hypocrites, ns some would have fou think! Forgive me. If having nl other imes glorified the medical profession, and :be legal profession, and the literary p o ession I glorify my own. I have seen hem In their homes nnd henni them In beir pulpits, and a grander array of men lever breathed, and the Bible figure is not il rained when it culls them stars; and vbole constellations ot glorious ministers lave already taken their places on hiirh, where they sbfne even brighter than they ihone on earth; Edward N. Kirk, of the Congregational Church; Stephen H. Tyog, f the Episcopal Church; Matthi-w Sitnp lony of the Methodist Cburcli; John flowi ng, of the Baptist Church; Siimnul K. Tal nago, of tbe Presbyterian Church; Thdinas Je Witt, of the Reformed Chinch; John Chambers, of the Independent Church.aad here I stop, for It so happens that I have nentioned the seven stars of tbe seven hurches. I pass on to another mighty Bioie seven and they are the seven seals. - Kt. John iu rision saw a scroll with seven seals, aud lie leard an angel cry. "Who Is worthy to .oose the seals thereof?" Take eight or :en sheets ot foolscap paper, paste them together and roll them into a scroll, and lave tbe scroll at seven different places waled with sealing wax. ..i'ou unroll the Jcroll till you come to-one of thos.-ia, -and then you can go no farther until yon- oreac mat seal; tnen unroll again until vou come to another seal, and you can go 10 farther until you break that seal; then rou go on until all the seven seals are iroken. and the contents of the eutire .croll revealed. Now, that scroll with leven seals held by the angel was the iropliecy of what was to come on the ;artb; it meant that tbe knowledge of the uture was with God, and no mau and no -ingel was worthy to open it; bat the Bible lavs Christ opened it and brokenll tbasev-' a seals. He broke the first seal and un rolled tbe scroll, nnd there was a picture of I white horse, and that meant prosperity ind triumph for tbe Roman empire, ami so, t really came to pass that for ninety years rirtuous emperors succeeded each other jS Merva, Trajan and Antoninus. Christ in :bn vision broke tbe second seal and un rolled aualn, nnd there was a picture ot a red horse, and that moant bloodshed, and o it really came to pass, and the next linetv years were red with assassinations ind wars. ThenChrist broke the third seal ind unrolled it, and there was a picture of I black horse, which in all literature means amino, oppression and taxation; and so it -eally came to pass. Cbrist went on an il He broke ail the seven seals and ipennd ail the scroll. Well, tbe future ot ill of us is a sealed scroll, and I am glad bnt no one but Cbrist can open it. Do not et us join that class of Christians in our lay, who are trying to break the seven seals t the future. Tbey are trying to peep into hings tbey have no business wit j. Do not go to some necromancer orsplrlt lalist or soothsayer or fortune teller to Ind out what is going to happen to your lelf or your family or your friends. Watt ill Christ breaks the seal to find out vhether in your own personnl Ufa or the ife of tbe nation or the life ot the world it s going to be the white horse ot prosperity r the red horse of war or tbe block horse f famine. You will soon enough see him saw and bear him neigh. Take care of the present, and the future will take care of .tself. It a man live seventy years, his 3iograptiy Is In a scroll having at least even seals, and let bim not during tbe Irst ten vears of bis life try to look into the tweatles, nor the twenties Into the thirties, nor the thirties into the forties, nor the forties Into the fifties, nor :be fifties into the sixties, nor the sixties into tbe seventies. From the way tbe years have got tbe habit of racing along, I rness you will not have to wait a great while before all the seals of the future are Droken. I would not give two cents to (now bow long I am going to live, or In what day of what year the world is going :o be demolished. I would rather give 11000 not to know. Suppose some one jould break tbe next seal in the scroll of four personal history and sho ild tell you .hat on tne next 4th of July, 1901, you were to die, the summer after next, low much would you be good for between this and that? It would from now until then be a prolonged funeral. You would le counting tbe months and the days, and your lamily and friends would be :ounting them, and next 4th ot July you would rub your hands together and whine: "One year from to-day I am to go. Dear met 1 wish no one bad told me so long be fore. I wish that necromancer bad not broken the seal of the future." And meet ing some undertaker, you would say: "I hope you will keep yourself frue for an en gagement tbe 4th of July, 1901. That day you will be needed at my house. To save time, you might as well take my aieosure now,. live feet eleven Inches." I am glad that Christ dropped a thick veil over the hour ot our demise and of the bour of the world's destruction when He said, "Of that day nnd hour knowetb no man; no, not the angels, hut my Father only." Keep your bauds off tbe soveu seals. Kncourairinz. "Do you think you hnve nny ehnnce with her, R.-ggyr "Of course I do. She snys herself that I'm one of her c-liunt-e acquaint ances." Detroit Free Tresa. Prudence. "What made you challenge that American to a duel?" asked a I'nrishui Journalist's friend. "It was in self-defense. I thought that if I could get him to tight with weapons we could make It the usual harmless affair. Otherwise he'd lx likely to Insist on trying to whip uie with bis fists, and probably hurt me." Washington Star, hi 1 V i f ! ! 1 1 j i 7 ft 1 ii n i : : I i i ! i . t t i V'- ! m