lui ; i ri B. F. SCHWEIER, THE COHSTITUTIOn - THE UiHOn-AHD THE EflFORCEUEklT OF THE LAWS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. L.III. MIFFL.INTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1899. NO. 33. Florence W&-ynr. ; CIIArTER XX. j It Is much easier to hide from the world titan anyone imagines wno obi not triea It. We lire too apt to think ourselves of far grcxtiT importance than we are, and If we put it to the test we ehall generally 5nd that, except to a small and strictly private circle of admiring friends, It la not of the slightest consequence what we do, nor where we go. Delia Moray finds out the truth of thli to her advantage. She had a thousand scruples about accepting Mrs. Hephzi bah's offer of the temporary use of her apartments in London, fearing lest ah should Ie immediately recognized, and the news of her discovery be communi cated to her son. For the sake of Delia, Mrs. Flephzibafc makes short work of settling up accounts with her London employers, and in an other week the friends are on their way to Cloverfield. Tine ti her principles of self-help, Mrs. Bond for the lawyer tad Induced the luJy to marry him wish ed to journey to Hampshire alone, leav ing her husband to follow at his own con venience. But the "little old man" out-' witted her. He packed np all his belong ing at Hampstead with marvelous ce lerity, and was down at Cloverfield mak ir.s all things ready for her reception be fore she knew he had left town. Cloverfield, being still a mere village, has not many resident gentry beside the clergyman and doctor, and one or two solitary old maids and widows; bet it is surrounded by gentlemen's seats, the own ers of which, after awhile, commence to ca!l upon Mr. and Mrs. Bond. At Delia's earnest request she is not asked to be present In the drawing room during these visits of ceremony. She has several rea toiis for not wishing to make any new ai'ijiutintancea, foremost among wnicn is the dread of recognition; and though Mrs. Hephzibah will not admit the justice of the fear, she agrees to indulge it. Delia is therefore rather surprised one afternoon, when she has retired to her own room with a novel, to hear the parlor maid at her door with a request from her mistress that she will go down to the drawing room to see a gentleman who hat Just arrived. "Who is it, Sarah T cries Delia, her tru ant thoughts flying at once to the only gentleman she would have cared to see. "Mr. Le Mesurier, ma'am. I think he'f s parson at least, he wears a long coat." "Very goed! I will be down directly." When she enters the room, flushed from the haste with which she has arranged ber dress, she finds the servant's surmise la correct. "Let me Introduce to you my friend, Mrs. Manners," says Mrs. Hephzibah: and then she continues to Delia: "I hope have not disturbed you, my dear, but 1 thought it only right you should make the acquaintance of our clergyman. Sir. Le Mesurier tells me that he has just re turned from his annual holiday, and that the gentleman we have hitherto heard on Sundays has only been taking his duty during his absence." "I am very glad," says Delia. "Clad of what, Mrs. Manners 7' asks the newcomer, with an accent that be trays his Irish nationality. "That I have r.-turned. or that Mr. Saunders only took my duty?" "( )f both, perhaps," she replies, smiling: "anyway, I hope it is not great treason to say that Mr. Saunders has sent me to ileeo every time I tried to listen to him." "Let us be charitable and lay it on the weather. Mrs. Manners, which has been too hot to keep awake In under any cir cumstances. Do try and think it was the weather: Else, If you fall asleep again next Sunday, I shall have no loophole by which to flatter myself that my discourse has not had a similar effect upon yon to that of Mr. Saunders.' lie is a distinguished looking man, tall ami well made, with an intellectual coun tenance, and wearing a tight cassock that hows off his fine figure to advantage. Hia blue eyes and dark hair are strongly Irish, o is his winning tongue. In a word, be Impresses both his hearers favorably. "I will defer judgment, then, until after neit Sunday," replies Delia, laughing; "and especially since. If I am not mis taken. Mr. Le Mesurier, you are a coun tryman of mine, and should claim every Indulgence at my hands, The moment the words have left hei lips she regrets them, but it is too late. The warm partisanship of the natives of Ireland is well known, and Mr. Le Mesu rier embraces the idea of the connection between them. "I guessed as much from your appear ance. Pray, Mrs. Manners, allow me to shake hands with you over again in token of our good-fellowship. It is a real de light to meet any one from the 'ould coun thry' down in these wilds. May I ask if it is long since you left It?" Then Delia sees still more plainly the traji he has laid for herself, and the com pilations to which it may lead. But there U no help for it at present. "Very long! I have not seen it since I as a little child." "Have you been long settled In Clover r.cld, and are you a married man?" de mr.Tids Mra. Hephzibah, trying to lure him away from a dangerous topic. "I have been settled here ever since my ordination, ten years ago, and I have no Rife to share the vicarage," he answers, with a sudden gravity of manner. "I hope you are not one of those par- tons who consider ceiiDacy a ouij. Yes. I do, decidedly. A duty to my- self." he answers, lightly. "What would become of my visits to Switzerland, if I hud a wife and family to carry about with He sits with them for half the after noon on that occasion, talking in the most fluent manner on every topic that is start ed, discussing the country and the town, literature and mUBic, the Tyrol, the Vat ican, the Alhambra and the Louvre; and proving himself not only to be a well-read man, but an excellent linguist and a clever traveler, who has made good use of b eyes and his wits as he Journeyed through the world. The ladies are delighted with his conversation and charm of delivery. The hours pass rapidly in his company, and before he takes his leave Mrs. Heph zibah haa made him promise to dine with them on the following day. "He Is the very man I want to avoid, cries Delia when he is gone. "Tbare la something j, him I gaaaot teJl IW that seems ac if he would draw the whole of my tec ret from me at hia will. Oh. Mrs. Hephslbahl keep me from Mr. Le Mesurier. I lmnlora yen." CHAPTEB XXL On the following day the parson Is de sidedly the moat vexed of the three at De lia's absence, although he is too polite to show it except by hia anxious and some what wandering air. The little dinner Is skillfully chosen and served, and his host and hostess are cordiality Itst'.f ; still Mr. Le Mesurier's eyes keep roving each time the door is opened, and hia ears are strain ed to catch the least sound from without. At last he ventures to hint at the subject that la disturbing him. "May I ask after the health of your charming friend, Mrs. Bond? I trust she Is weu." "She is quite well, Mr Le Mesurier that la, she' is the same as usual, but her health does not permit her to take late dinners." "Then I trust the pleasure Is only de ferred, and that we shall see her in the evening." Mrs. Hephzibah does not reply. She be lieves that Delia has no intention of ap pearing at all. Her visitor continues: "I cannot explain to you what delight It was to me to meet a country woman in her. Her features remind me strongly ot the Fergusson family. Was that her maid en name T' "No! nor do I think there Is any con nection between them." Delia Is afraid to meet the stranger again. She aits at her open window and listens to the balads that, after the little party has come In from the garden, Mr. Le Mesurier trolls out In his rich baritone voice, accompanying himself on the cot tage piano the while. Delia la very fond of music. She is not a great proficient, bnt she is a great lovet of the art, and singa ber own little songs with a verve that bss more power to charm than the finest execution In the world. She longs to be down in the draw ing room, taking her share In the enter tainment now, for an enthusiast has as much pleasure in performing herself as in listening to the performance of others; but false shame restrains her, and she keeps upstairs until she hears the final good-nights exchanged and watches Mr. Le Mesurier's tall figure walk down the gravel drive and turn with a parting look at the cottage, in the direction of his own house. But the next day Mr. Le Mesurier I not backward In availing himself of the general invitation which Mrs. Hephzibah stops her pony chaise in order to extend to him, Delia is seated by her side, and Mr. Le Mesurier glances to see if she seconds the offer of her friend. But she is looking away from him over the surrounding country the while, and does not perceive the action. He accepts the invitation with alacrity, and takes advantage of it on the very next day, and several days following that; but though he enjoys many inter esting conversations with Mrs. Bond, he finds it more difficult to get hold of her companion, who always manages to slip away just before or after he makes his appearance. One day, however, Delia is fairly caught. The Bonds have gone out driving together, and she is superintend lng the stripping of some fruit trees for them, and cannot with honor leave the field of action; when Mr. Le Mesurier, with the familiarity which la becoming habitual to him, walks through the open French windows of the cottage drawing room and oat upon the lawn. "How glad I am that I hare found you at last, and that yon cannot run away from me," he commences, as he perceives her occupation. xou nave been so perti nacious in avoiding my society lately that I had really begun to think that I had offended you." "Oh, no? replies Delia, with the old feeling of discomfort she cannot tell why. mt the first elance of bis searcning eyes "how could you possibly have done that? But you must not forget that I am only Mrs. Bond's housekeeper, and have a hun dred little domestic duties to perform that n,it mv constant attendance In the drawimr room." "I suppose, if yon tell me so, Mrs. Man ners, I am bound to believe it; but I pro test against the 'only. A woman of your talents and education may accept such a nnaition from choice, but need never do mr f mm necessity." "Anvwar." says Delia, witn me tesrs in her eyes, "Mrs. Bond has been my best .nd dearest friend tnrongn lire, ana would rather be her housekeeper than the Intimate companion ef the greatest lady in tho lnndj "Ah! now we approach a different phase of the subject, and I can well believe in ho .inceritv and Justice of your choice, i a .h. mmti Tonr affection in full " " - measure." "I know she does." TinlT with myself, she would be better pleased to see yon try and live down the troubles of the past, than nurse them in nlltnda and silence. "Has she been speaking to you about me, then?" demands bis companion quica- b. UT'ortalnlv not!" "How do yon know, then, that I have had trouble r says Delia, with anxious lyes. u. Ammr Mra. Manners! How do mm than half the world has trouble? A physical doctor can tell by the V" ' A. t whether he suffers oi , took of his P'J', fe.. klU- "" fol? Believe me, I have not oeen a cow student of human nature for twenty years without learning something of the human heart. And since it is my privilege ami my province to help to heal such as are wounded, I have no hesitation in offering my services whenever they may be re Quired." "You cannot help me, Mr. Le Men der " "Is your hurt beyond all assistance then?" "Yea," They have sauntered away together un Ser the lime and acacia trees during the latter part of the conversation. "Oh. Mr. Le Mesurier!" she exclaims, u m t .-it .nn I heneve. "rem are a iwu man. ' . - , know what trouble la. I will ten you an. I wUl see if yon can help me tf yon c1 advise what to r And thereupon she leads him into th drawing room, and confides the story, 1 which wo all know, to his sympathetic ears. Mr. Le Meaurler listens In silence. The tale 1 all the sadder, because the woman before him has brought the misfortune on her own head, yet he does not seem tc think the case so hopeless as she does. "Surely, surely," he says, aa she look up Into his face for comfort, "this separa tion cannot last forever. Tour son him self will see the Injustice of it, and seek you out again. Do you suppose that the love of twenty-one years can be forgotten in a moment? Ton wrong yourself and him by such a supposition! He may find consolation at first In the society of hit bride, but as years paks on, and trouble come upon him, his heart and memory will turn back to his mother, and he wiO not be satisfied until he has met hei again." He saunters out upon the lawn again where Delia, having dried her eyes, feel! bound after awhile to join him "Mrs. Manners, I have a favor to ask ot you, be commences, aa soon as the opior tunlty offers. "What is It. Mr. Le Mesurier?" "Will you help me In my parish work have often longed for a woman to co operate with me and take some of tht more delicate cases off my bands, but no one would undertake the duty; and. in deed, I must say it Is not to everyone that would confide it." "Do you mean to visit the poor for your T dot Not only to visit, but to sympa thize and pray with them." If Mrs. Bond can spare me, I shall b Very glad to helo you, Mr. Le Mesurier. Poor souhvi it would give me pleasure tc comfort them, and I feel that I could speak more freely with them, perhaps than with the rich." "That is what everyone says who hai once tried it. It is one of those cases ir. which it is truly more blessed to give than to receive. And as for dear, good Mrs Bond, trust me for gaining her permis sion for anything that is likely to do yot good. Come! I like to see that smile. It is the thought of my poor that has call ed It there. It is heaven's first pledge ol the reward which charity never fails tr bestow on those who practice it." (To be continued.) Why We Have It, Foreigner And why ees eet eat you Americans, have what you call xe Thanksgiving? What ees re ah sig- uifeeennee? Native It marks the end of the foot ball season. Jnst for Do a ale's Sake. Mr. Henniker Marie, why do you keep that $75 fur rug out here In the living room? Don't you see that It is getting ruined? Mrs. Henniker I know It ought to bt in the parlor, Horace, but my dear little doggie does so love to play that he fighting the tiger and whipping it. Walttna. The Colonel Say, what have you got against our Congressman, anyway? know be doesn't belong to your party. but really he doesn't deserve all the harsh things you aay of him In your paper. I wonder If there will ever conic a time when you will be pleased to come out and say that be has done the right thing when you will have a word of praise for him? Editor of the Weekly Hidebound Oh yes. I ve got an article in. type now, in which I praise him very highly; In which I say that he never did a dis honest thing In his life and ought to be numbered among our greatest men. He'll die some day and then I'll print It." Victory. now did young Harduppe ever suc ceed in winning old Rockingham's con sent to marry his daughter? The crusty old kermudgeon has driven away a dozen better fellows." "I hear that Harduppe took the old man's wheel apart, cleaned it and stored It away for the winter." Saaie Thins. "I understand that she had an uncle who committed suicide." "Well, yes, you might call It that. He stole a horse out In Arizona." - A Great Dead Lady. "She died of expiating gas," said tht colored woman, proudly, "an a house was built in memorandum of her." New York Commercial-Advertiser. Beckleaa, "That orator has a wonderful gift oi language," remarked the Impression able young man. "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne. "He is always throwing language around as If It didn't cost anything." Washing ton Star. Hia Falling. Her Mother I am surprised a. Charles squandering so much money on a phonograph. The Wife I am not He always din like to bear himself talk. Harlem Life. Useful Hints. To nrenare Spanish eggs In the chafinK dish cook two slices of onion until liirht vellow in scant tablespoon ful of olive oil, then add one cupful of mushrooms, one of tomato, two table spoonfuls of tongue minced fine, three raw eggs unbeaten , a sanspoumui w salt and a quarter of a saltspoonful jf cayenne. As soon as the eggs are set the mixture Is ready to serve. When feeding babies It is quite as necessary to sterilize the bottles as the milk. Wash in cold water, then In soap and water. A little rice snaKen with the soapsuds In the bottle will be found helpful in cleaning It. Then place the bottle In cold water and bring to the boiling point. "Plenty ot salad." says Mrs. Rorer, "for the nervous woman. Fat around the nerves," she declares, smoothes them out very quickly. Cereals should be avoided and fruit partaken of spar ingly and never in the latter part of the day. Lean roast beef, broiled steak or chops may be eaten to advantage three times a day. Sweets of desserts should be banished from the nervous woman's bill of fare and coffee and tea sparingly indulged In.". At Prescott. Ind.. a couple were ! recently married by Justice John R. McDonald. Tne Dnaegroom, wno is 34 years old. Is the smallest man In the state, weighing only 85 pounds; the bride. 30 years old, tips the scales at 384 pounds. There ia no relation so bard to fill as to be a mother-in-law. PARTIAL TO EAJNUTS AMERICANS HAVE A WEAKNESS FOR THEM. faalr Popularity Bacaaao General After the Civil War Largely Ia creaaad Aworaat Grown of Lata Tears-Norfolk Is the Peannt Crater. "The American people are evidently Very partial to peanuts," remarked a large peanut planter in Virginia to the writer recently, "for there axe nearly 4,000,000 bushels of them consumed la the United States annually. Before the civil war the peanut was only a holiday luxury to the majority ot the people liv ing In the North, the day when the cir cus was in town, during the country fair and the great and glorious Fourth of July being the principal occasion that the popular yearning for the nut was in any measure satisfied, tm product then amounted to barely 500,000 bushels a year. At the close of the war when the soldiers returned north thousands of them bad cultivated such a liking for the nut, which they had often pulled from the ground and roasted at their campflres while In Virginia, Tennessee and North Carolina, that the crop then raised in these States didn't begin to supply the demand. Wideawake farm ers saw the point and small garden patches where peanuts had been grown for generations were soon abandoned for broad fields, and to-day Virginia and North Carolina are growing 4,000, 000 bushels of peanuts a year a result due almost entirely to the civil wax and the habit the Federal troops con tracted of eating large quantities of the nuts. Naturally, the returned sol diers' demand for peanuts placed them within reach of the rural population In the North, ana the nut soon ceased to be a holiday luxury. "When the war broke out moat of the peanuts consumed In this country were raised In North Carolina. A great many were also imported from Africa. They were of Inferior quality. In fact the best antebellum peanuts were poor compared with the nuts grown to-day. But the demand for the nuts In recent years has not had the effect of Improv ing the North Carolina product or in creasing its yield to any great extent Virginia and Tennessee, however, woke right up under the increased demand, and Improved cultivation has produced a nut especially In Virginia, that la as near perfect as It can be. "I don't suppose there are many peo ple who know that the peanut came to this country with the first cargo ot laves that were landed on in- shores. It Is a native of Africa, and In its orig inal stats as full of grease almost as a bit of pork. Cultivation and change of soil hare greatly reduced the oleag inous quality of the nut although tht North Carolina variety haaeiwughJ- grease yet to nna a reaay aaie m France, where It Joins Its African an cestor and cottonseed In supplying not a little of the olive oil we find In the restaurants and family groceries. Nor folk, Va la the greatest peanut center In the world, and handles annually 200,000 bags, or 8,000,000 bushels. "It Is a pretty sight to see a peanut plantation when the vines are In blos som. The blossoms are a bright yel low and the vines are a vivid green. As soon aa the blossom appears a fine branch forms on the vino and shoots Sown Into the ground. The peas, as the nuts are called on the plantation. form on the shoot beneath the ground. like potatoes. When the crop Is gath ered In October the vine Is ploughed op, and the nuts bang to the roots, Vines and all are piled In cocks In the field, and In twenty days the nuts are ready to be pulled off, placed In bags ind taken to the factories. There they are cleansed of dirt, assorted, polished in revolving cylinders and put Into bags ready for the market" ' The latest estimate of the quantity if warm water flowing northward through the Atlantic In the form of the Qulf Stream makes it many times at great as all the water discharged Into the oceans by all the streams and riv ers of the earth. Several varieties of bacteria have been discovered in freshly fallen hail stones. Two of them appear to be new, according to their discoverer, Mr. F. C. Harrison, of Guelph, Ontario, while others are manifestly of terrestrial origin, and must have been carried up Into the clouds by winds or ascending air-currents. Phrenologists say that the higher In tellectual processes are performed in the front part of the brain, but recent tudies have led some physiologists to sonclude that the posterior lobes of the cerebrum are the real seat of mental power. These lobes are more develop ed In man than in other animals, and are most conspicuous In the highest races of men. In German varnish factories an easy way to extinguish a burning pan of oil has been found in the use of a flne mesbed wire net. As soon as this covers the burning surface the iron wires con duct off the heat so rapidly that the gases can no longer flame. It is the principle of the Davy safety lamp, and night be employed In various ways to Extinguish burning gases. In Philadelphia an experiment wa recently made to determine the waste f water In the city. A test was made en the houses In two streets, wblcb In ducted neariy uu lnnamtants. it was found that 170 gallons of water per Inhabitant was expended It cannot be said used. This Is about fouf bar rels for each person manifestly a great waste. Of the 178 gallons only twenty-four gallons was utilised. The astronomical Journals call atten don to the fact that 1898 was a "rec ord year" for comets. Ten of those trance tvanderera la paw .were de- tected during the year, seven new ones tnd three which had been seen before, Encke's. Wlnnecke's and Wolfs. It It probable that the seven strangers an also subjects of the ana, whose occa sional visits to the center of his em pire had not previously been noted. One of the divisions of the United States Fish Commission has Invests rated a number of problems connected with oysters and their culture, and hai reported on the origin of the color ol green oysters. This variety Is duo tc vegetable matter used by the oysters tor food, and In no way Injures the edi ble qualities of the bivalve. Red oys ters have been occasionally noted, but there has been as yet no opportunity for their examination. The application of electrically tram mltted power to ore-crushing mills, sit uated at the mines. Is regarded at working almost a revolution la somt mining operations. At the Sheba gold mines In Africa water-power Is trans mitted by wire for a distance of fiv miles, and an enormous saving In the cost of milling the ore has thus been effected. In a mountainous country no other means of conveying power l comparable with a flexible copper wire, which crosses hills and vulleys, and winds one way or another with equaj tase. An Atlantic Steamship's Larder. One tidy little refrigerator about six feet wide and twice that depth is the butterman's stall In this market undei the sea. Little rubs of butter are ar ranged on shelves to the amount ol 5,000 pounds, and In company with these are 20,000 eggs. Twenty-five hundred quarts of milk and cream are stored In a separate room, all having been sterilised. This market has a room especially tor salt meats, and bora are hams, bacon and tongues to the amount of 4,000 pounds. There are some articles of food without whh-li the epicure would be unhappy, and which must bo alive whe"u cooked. Chief among these are oysters, of Which 16,000 are carried to meet the Wants of the passengers. Clams are only provided to the number of 1.R00. Lobsters are not abundantly supplied; 700 pounds Is all the store-room shel ter. This market In the bottom of the I ship contains, besides the things fncn- tloned, fruit green vegetables and nn ' enormous stock of groceries. The Lat ter la only limited by space, for gro ceries are not perishable goods and will ,keop from one voyage to another until .'used. Tea and coffee are used In large 'amounts abont thirty-three pounds ot .tea a day and fifty pounds of coffee. 'Perishable supplies are taken on board In proportion to the number of pas 'sengers booked, and anything of this jklnd which is left over when the ship 'reaches port Is eaten by the crew. Ladles' Homo Journal. Cariooa Christian Hasan, antambar haa ring Mho oHow4ng j story from the late Canon Bardaley, author of "English Names and Sur names." There waa once a woman "a little 'cracky.' I think," said the canon, by way of parenthesis who had a son whom she had christened "What" Her idea seems to have been that when In after days he was asked his name, and kept saying "What" amusing scenes would follow, which was likely enough, especially If the boy waa careful to pronounce the aspirate. Such a scene did, I believe, occur once when he went to school, and was told, as a newcomer, to stand np and furnish certain particulars. "What Is your name?" asked the teach I er. "What blurted out tne boy. amid the laughter of the class. "Whnt Is j your name?" askeu the master again. i with more emphasis. "What" replied j the boy. . "Your name, sir!" roared , out the infuriated pedagogue. "What What!" roared back the terrified urch in. The sequel I forget but I believe It was one of those cases In which the follies of the parents are visited on the children of the first generation. Notes and Queries. Am Aznns nic Experience. To secure a picture of your voice. It is only necessary to tie a sheet of thtn. strong paper over the flnring end of an old tin born. Hold the born with the sheet of paper upward. Take a little pinch of fine sand and place It In the center of the paper. Then hold the horn vejaiteally above your face and sing a note Into the lower end of the instrument. Now lower the horn care fully and look at the sand. You will find that the vibrations of your voice have scattered the pinch of sand Into a beautiful sound picture. Every note In the musical scale will produce great variety of them. Some of these pictures look like pansles, roses and other flowers; some like snakes, and others like flying birds; In fact, there Is no limit to the variation. The pic tures of the notes of musical Instru ments are made by holding the horn is near as possible to them. Brlckmaklng In Russia. In August last the foundations wen laid near Lysva, Russia, of tbe first firebrick works erected in the Ural. Ten kilns have been built, with a ca pacity of 3,000,000 bricks annually. Hitherto all tbe firebricks used In tbe Ural have been obtained from Eng and. Roller Yaohttaa Save during the rainy season Lake Lefroy, In Western Australia, Is quite dry. Rut as the water evaporates aa the hot weather approaches a smooth, glassy floor of crystalline salt Is de posited. Those living on the shores have found a means of utilizing this. All boats whicbssall on tbe lake when possible are, during the dry season, Btted with four wheels, and thus are nabled to continue their travels. As Lake Lefroy baa an c:-ea of over 100 miles, and the surrounding country is extremely rough, this means a great laving In expense, labor and time. The peed attained by these wheeled yachts m very considerable, though not quite equal to tbe pace of tbe Ice yacbta s popular In Canada. When a luncheon or party is said ti be Informal, It means that tbe hostess will offer no other apology f or Ue f freahnienU. NEW DEWEY STORY. rha Fassoaa Admiral Nearly Started Aaotber War witn Mexico. "In May, 1875, Admiral Dewey was ommander of too old Narragansett," laid Lieutenant Wlnslow, "and be was lata lied to surveying the Gulf of Cali fornia and the shores of the coast of the peninsula. It was not long after the Vlrglnlus affair at Santiago, and the reeling toward the Mexicans and Cubans was none too cordial. Tbs Narragansett reached La Pas. near the southern end of the peninsula, and we bo sooner got ashore than we beard that an American mining engineer and some Englishmen who owned the mine were prisoners in their mining shan ties, forty miles back of La Fas, In the mountains. The American bad re lented an Insult a quarrel followed, tnd the American killed two Mexicans. The friends of the latter swore they'd kill the Yankee and the Englishmen, too, and the latter were soon obliged to barricade themselves. This siege had been on for several days when we Dropped anchor. "As soon as Commander Dewey a card of It he was very much Inter ested. The next day be sent a mes senger to the Mexican colonel In La Pas, who had a garrison of 000 sol diers there, asking him what he was going to do to give the American a trial before be was shot " Oh, he got Into the trouble let him get out' said the Mexican. "Commander Dewey didn't like thit .-ply, and the more be thought about It the angrier be got The next fore noon be sent a note to the Mexican cojonel telling blm that an American citizen's life was In danger, and that the man was entitled to a fair trlnL He told the colonel that he would al low him Just twenty-four hours to res cue the American and protect the En glishmen. If at the end of that time relief waa cot on Its way to the little mining party he would bombard La Pas and burn it "When we heard what Dewey had done we were all frightened. 'Does be mean it?" we asked on another. "As for myself, I was soon satisfied that be meant every word of It. I was In command of the guns. We bad only two old howitzers on the Narragansett the larger guns having been left tem porarily at the Mare Island navy yard. "Get those howitzers ready for to morrow morning and Inspect all the mall arms and ammunition,' said Dewey to me. Then be called the men to Quarters and estimated that of the crew of about 120 we could land ninety able, armed men as a storming force. We drilled the men all that afternoon ind far Into the night That night on Commander Dewey's order, we steam ed to a point commanding the princi pal streets of La Pas and trained the howitzers on the town. By next morn ing we were all ready to begin a sec- .. a .. .. - I. - u..Im V tod war against Mexico. - V I 4t daurbreak a MeaJfcM-4JreeK came on board with a message from bis colonel saying that the Narragan sett commander's request would be complied with. Early that morning watched 800 armed Mexican sol diers start for the mining camp, and we kept the old howitzers trained on La Pas till the soldiers returned with the American engineer. When Dewey reported to Washington on the matter tie minimized the Importance of It end !t was passed over as a mere Incident Lleutenanta narris and Wright were on. the Narragansett then, and Harris, tt least was with the fleet at Manila. It Is somewhat singular that at that time, when we were expecting a dec laration of war against Spain on ac count of the Vlrglnlus affair. Com mander Dewey had his plans all made to sail tbo Narragansett to Manila." Sew York Tribune, Calvo aa m Gardener. Mile. Emma Calve Is probably the only great prima donna who combines farming with her brilliant operatic achievements. ' She has a large farm at Cevennes, and rusticates there each lumuier. Last summer tbe famous singer went nto her kitchen garden and cared for ber own vegetables. Xo one waa al lowed to touch them, and the results were far better than when her gar dener cared for tbe things. Mile. Calve wore a short skirt of the blue Jeans, sabots and a linen shirt waist She spaded and hoed and watered ber vege tables day after day, and proudly sent gifts of the finest fruits of her labors to friends in Paris. The prima donna was very 111 ana nervous when she went to Cevennes, but this free, open-air life and tbe vig orous exercise soon restored ber to the most robust health, and when friends tsk ber the secret of her cure she an swers: "Spades and potatoes." Mile. Calve's chickens also come In for some of her attention, but the gar den is ber chief delight Philadelphia Post Panniag on Famous Man. The poet Campbell, the author of tht. far-famed war poem "Uohenlinden," In wblcb occurs tbe reference to "Iser rolling rapidly," attended an evening party on one occasion, and when tbe gentlemen were securing their bats tnd coats previous to departure sud denly the lights went . out. In the con fusion which followed some one push ed vigorously against Campbell, knock ing him downstairs. The offending gen tleman at once said: "Beg pardon. who's there?" and a voice replied from the depths below, "It is I, sir, rolling rapidly."' Snaoklaa; and Inflaensa. Tobacco smokers have been more ex impt from Influensa during the recent tpldemlcs than those persons who Cj Dot smoke. Tbo LoaTloai of Honor. To be knight of the Legion of Hon r Is not quite a barren title. Tb ross of the lowest grade, that o "Chevalier," carries with It a penslo: tor life of $50 annually. An "Officer,' tie grade above, receives $100 annua' sr, a "Oommandeur," $200, a "Gran.. Dffleer," $400, and a "Grand Croix." fooo. VmnnU w4m have no sense of humor act very funny at times. SERMON Rev. Dr. Calmagc SabjMt: Aa Aarlaat Eplcrata--Aa Old Raylas; Vsed la Illastrata the Ladleroai Bahavlor ol Thoaa Who Macalfy Small Mas aad Igaara Great Ones. Oopjrricht. Loaia Klopach, 1-1 Washikotok. 1. C In this discourse. founded on an anolent epigram repented by Christ, Dr. Talmage lllustratos the foil) of being very particular about Inslgnlftonnt things, while neglectful of vast eonnnrns. The text Is Matthew xxlil., 24: "Ye blind guides, whloh strain at a gnat and swallow a eamel." A proverb Is compact wisdom, knowledge in obanks, a library in a santenee, the elea tricity of many clouds discharged in one Dolt, a river put tnrongQ a mill race, wnen Christ quotes the proverb of the text. He means to set forth the ladlerons behavlot of those who make a great bluster about small sins and have no appreciation ol great ones. In my text a small tnseot an! a large quadruped are brought Into com parison a gnat and a oamei. x on nave in museum or on the desert seen the latter, a great awkward, sprawling creature, with Baok two stories blah tnd stotnnoh having a collection ol reservoirs for desert travel. an animal forbidden to tbs Jews as food and In many literatures entitled "the ship of the desert." The gnat spoken of In the text Is In the grab form. It Is born in pool or pond, after a tew weeks becomes a chrysalis and then after a few days be comes the gnat as we rncognize it. Beit the Insect spoken of In the test Is In tts very smallest shape, and It yet Inliahlts i be water, tor my text Is a misprint and ought to read "strain out a gnat.' My text shows you the prince of Incon sistencies. A man after long observation has formed the suspicion that in a enp ol water he Is about to drink there Is a grab or the grandparent ot a gnat. Ha goes and gets a sieve or strainer. H takes the water and poors it through the sleva in tlie broad light. He says, "I wonl-1 rather do anything almost than drink this water nn tll Vil- larva be extirpated." TliU w.itei la brought under Inquisition. The experi ment Is successful. The water rushe? through the sieve and leaves against tin Side of tbe sieve the grub or gnat. Then the man carefully removes the inmwt nml drinks the water In placidity. Hut goina out one day and hungry, he devours "ship Of the desert," tbe eamel, whlcli tht lews were fonddden to eat. The gnstron. omer has no compunctions of conscience. Be suffers from no Indigestion. He putf the lower jaw under the eamel'j forefoot and his upper jaw over the hump ot the camel's back and gives onn swallow, and dromedary disappears forever. He strained out a gnat; ha swallowed a camel. While Christ's audience was yet sreiiini; at tbe oppositeness and wit of His illustra tion for smile they did, unless they wert too stupid to understand the hyperbole- Christ praeticall said to them, "That Is you." Punctilious about small I M til's reckless aDout anairs oi tirai maKiuiini. No subject ever winced nnder a surgeon' knife more bitterly than did the Pharisees under Christ's scalpel of truth. A an an atomist will take a human bodv to pleeof and pot the pieces nnder a mlernscope foi examination, so Christ finds Ills way tc the heart of the dead rharisee and euts it out and puts it under the Kins of inspec tion for all generations to examine. Thost Pharisees thought that Christ would flattei them and compliment them, and bow thej mnst have writhed nnder the redbot word as He said. "Ye fools, ye waited sepuloliers ye blind guides, which strain out a gnat ann swallow There are in our day "any gnat I trail- . -r - -J lUr ir,-J, V lowed.'and It to theobjecf-ot tfitt sermoaTao few pei to sketch a few persons who arc extensive ly engaged in that business. First, I remark, that all those ministers of the gospel who nre very scrupulou about tbe conventionalities of religion, but put no particular stress upon matters ol vast importance, are photographed In the text. Church services ought to be grave and solemn. There Is no room for frivolity in religious convocation. But there are Il lustrations, and there are hyperboles like that of Christ in the taxi, that will Irradi ate with smiles any Intelligent audience. There are men like those blind guides ol tbe text who advocate only those things in religious servioe which draw the corners of the month down and denonnce all those things which have a te dency to draw the corners of the mouth up, nml these men will go to installations and to presbyteries and to conferences and to associations, their pockets full ot line sieves to s'ram out tbo gnats, while in their own churches at borne every Hundav there are fifty people sound asleep. They make their churches a gre it dormitory. nd their somniferous sermons are a cradle and the drawled out hymns a lullaby, whilesome wakeful soul In a pew with hei fan keeps the files off unconscious persons approximate. Now, I say it is worse tc sleep In church than to smile in chureli. for the latter Implies at least attention, while the former Implies the Indifference of tbe hearers and the stupidity of the speaker. In old age or from physical Infirmity oi from long watching with the sick drowsi ness will sometimes overpower one, but when a minister of the gospel looks oft upon an audience and finds healthy and intelligent people struggling with drowsi ness It Is time for him to give out the doxology or pronounce the benediction. The great fault of church services to-day Is not too much vivacity, but too much somnolence. Tbs ene Is an Irritating gnat that may be easily strained out; tbe other is a great, sprawling and sleepy eyed eamel of the dry desert. I take down from my library the biogra phies of ministers and writers ot tbe past ages, Inspired and uninspired, who have done the most to bring son's to Jesus Christ, and I find that without a single ex ception tbey consecrated their wit and their humor to Christ. Elijah used It when he advised tbe Baalltes, as tbey could not make tbelr god respond, to call louder, aa their god might be sound asleep or gone a-huntiug. Job used It when he said to his self-conceited comforters, "Wisdom will die wt h you." Christ not only used It In tbe text, but when Tie Ironically com plimented tbe corrupt Pharisees, saying, "The whole need not a physician," and when by one word He described the cun ning of Herod, saying, "Go ye and tell that fox." Matthew renry's commenterles from the first page to tbe last corrnsoated with humor, as summer clouds with heat light ning. Again, my subject photographs all those who are abhorrent of small sin , while they ire reckless In regard to maguiQoent thefts. JTou will find mnny a merchant who, while he Is so careful that be wonld not take a yard of cloth or a spool of cotton from the sonnter without paying for It, and wbo. If a bank cashier should make a mistake and tend In a roll ot bills 95 too much, would dispatch a messenger In hot baste to re turn tbe surplus, yet wbo will go Into a Mock company, tn wnicn auer awnue nn gets control of the stock and then waters :he Mock and maces eioo ,uuw appear nae 1300,000. He only stole 100,000 by the perntlon. Many of the men of fortune Bade their wealth In that way. One of these men engaged In suc'i un righteous sets that evening, the evenlne of :he very day when he watered the stock, will find a wharf rat stealing a daily paper Irom the basement doorway and will go jut and catch the urchin by tbe eollar and :wtst the collar so tightly tbe poor fellow las no power to say that It was thirst for knowledge that led him to tbe dishonest act, but grip tbe eollar tighter and tighter, laving: 'I have been looking for you a '.ong while. You stole my paper four it five times, haven't you, you mis erable wretch?" And then the old stock gambler, with a voice they MB near three mocks, will cry mt. "Police. policel" That same nan the evening of the day In which ha watered the stock will kuaal with hia family in prayers and thank nod for the nrosoeritv ot the day. then kiss hi I shlldrea good night with an air which I seems to say, "I bop to be aa good as y torsi - ' hope you will all grow up a vonr father!" Prisons torsi - ' rUeaa ) rimes dromndarian. so mere? for sins animalcule In proportion, but great len iency for mastodon Iniquity. A poor boy tlyly takes from the basket of a market woman a choke pear, saving some one else from the cholera, and you smother him In :he horrible atmosphere of Raymond Street Jail or New York Tomiis, while his sousin, who has been skillful enough to teal 1 50,000 from the city, you make a sandldate for tbe State Legislature. There Is a good deal of uneasiness and nervousness now among some people In 5ur time who have got unrighteous for tunes, a great deal of uneasiness about lynamlte. I tell them that God will put onder their unrighteous fortunes some thing more explosive than dynamite, the sarthquake of His omnipotent Indig aation. It Is time that we learn in Amerloa that sin Is not excuahlo in proportion as It declares lsrge dividends and has out riders In equipage. Many a man Is riding to perlltlon postilion ahead and lackey behind. To steal one copy ot a newspaper Is a gnat; to steal many thousands of dol lars la a camel. There Is many a fruit Jealerwho would not content to rteai a ttasket ot peaches from a neighbor's stall, jnt who M . wrupi" o -nre- fruit market, and as long as I can re nember we have heard every summer the peach crop of Maryland Is a failure, and y the time the crop comes In the mis representation makes a dilTerenca of mil lions of dollars. A man who would not iteal one basket ot peache steals 50,003 asaeta ot peaches. On down into the public library, in the reading room, and see the newspaper re sorts ot the crops from all parts ot tie jountry, and their phraseology is very much tho same, and the same men wrote them, methodically and infamously carry ing out the huge lying about the grain srop from year to year and for a score of years. After awhile there will be a "cor ner" In the wheat market, and men who had a contempt for petty theft will h nrff larlze the wheat bin of a nation and com mit larceny n on the American corn crib, and some of the men will sit in cburjbos and In reformatory Institutions trying to strain out the small gnats ot scoundrel ism, while In their grain elevators and In their storehouses they are fattening huge camels which thev expect after awhile to swallow. Society has to he enttre'y re constructed on th s subject. W.) ar; to find that a sin Is inexcusable In pro portion as It Is great. I know in out time the tendency is to charee reli gions frauds upon good men. They say, "Oh what a host of frauds you have In the Chur-'h of God in this day!" And when an elder of a church, or a deacon, or a minis ter of the gospel, or a surerlntendent or a 3abhath-s!liool turns out a defaulter, what display heads there are in mnny of the newspapers. Great primer type. Five line pica. "Another Saint Absconded," Clerical Sooundrellsm, ' "Relielon at a Discount," "Shame on the Churches, while there are a thousand scoundrels out side the church to one inside the church, and tbe misbehavior of those who never eo the inside of a church Is so grent that It ts enough to tempt a man to become a Christian to get out of their company. But In all circles, religions and irreligious, the tendency ts to excuse sin in propoi tlon as It is mammoth, Even John Milton in M "Pnradlse Lost," while he condemns satnn give such a grand description of him you have hard work to withhold your ad-nira-tion. Oh, this straining out of small slnf like gnats and this gulping down great ini quities like camels. The subject does not clvo the picture ol one or two persons, but Is a gallery in which thousands of people mnv see tlieit likenesses. For Instance, nil those people Who, while thoy would not rob their neigh bors of a farthing, appropriate the money and the treasure of the public. A man hat a house to sell, and he tells his enntomer II Is worth 120,000. Next day tho OHse9soi comes around, and the owner says it If worth f 15,000. The Government of tli United 8tats took oft the tax from per lor O mi. rKZJ xl-'h'WMlS. many a man with an ttreome of hundred " of dollars a day made statements which seemed to Imply ha was about to be handed over to the overseer of the poor. Careful to pay their passage from Liverpool to New York, yet smuggling in their Saratoga trunk ten silk dresses from Paris and s half dor.en watches from Gene fa, telllna the custom house officer on the wharf "There is nothing in that trunk but wear ing apparel," and putting a t5 gold piece In his hand to punctuate the statemer:'. Such persons are also described In the text who are very much alarmed about the small faults of others and have no alarm about tbelr own grent transgretsions. There are in every community and in every church wntch-dog who feel called upon to keep their eyes on others and growl. They are full of suspicions. They wonder if this man is not dishonest, if that man Is not unclean, If there Is not some thing wrong about the other man. They are always the first to hear of anything wrong. Vultures are always the first to smell carrion. They are self-appointed detectives. I lay this down as a rule with, out any exception that those people who have the most faults themselves are most merclles In their watching of others. From scalp of head to sole of foot thoy nre full of jealousies and hypercrltlclsms. But lest too many might think they es cape the scrutiny of the text I have to tell you that we all come under the divine sat !r when we make the questions of time more prominent than the questions ol eternity. Come, now, let us all go into fie confessional. Are not nil tempted to make the question, Where shall f live now'r grenter than the question. Where shall I live forever? How shall I get more dollars here? greater 'nan the question. How shall I lay np treneures In heaven? the question. How shall I pay my debts to ma-? greatet than the question, Howshall I meet obliga tions to Vrt? the question. How shall I train tlia world? greater than the question. What if I lose my soul? the question, Wiw did tto l let sin co ne into the w rl I? greater than the question. How shall I c-'t it extlrpnted from my nature? tho que, tlon. What shnll I do with the twentv or forty or seventy years of my sublunar ex istence? greater than the question. What shall I do with the millions of cycles of my post terrestrlnl existence? Tune, how small It lsl Eternity, bow vast It Is? The former more Insignificant in comparison with the latter than a gnnt Is In-dtrnincant when compared with a camel. We dodged the text. We said, "Tiint docs not mean me, and that does not mean me," nml Willi a ruinous benevolence, we are giving the whole sermon awav. Hut let us all surrender to the charge. What an ado about things here. Wuat poor preparation fora great eternity. As thou-'i t m nnow were larger than a heneinoth, as though n swallow took wider circuit than an albatross, ns though a nettle were taller than a Lebanon cedar, a though a gnat were greater than n camel, as though a nlnuta were loniror than a century, ns hough time were hltrher, deeper, broa-ler hnn eternity. Ho the text which ltnshe.1 with lightning of wit as Christ uttered It is followed by the crashing thunder- ol awful catastrophe to those who make the questions ol time gren'er thnn the qii-. ions of the future, 1 he oitco-nin, ovr- iltndowing future. Oil, eternity, eternity, ateruiiy! In 1S9S the single colony of New South Wales imported hooks and sta tionery to the value of t2,9jr..Oi0. Oelatoid. a mixture of gelatine with formaldehyde, is being used for un breakable goggles to protect the eyes of workmen exposed to flying particles of stone, metal or wood. A circus elephant, needing surgical treatment, was recently chloroformed in Peru, Ind. The anaesthetic was given through the trunk by means ot a trouner leg slipped around it and packed with cotton. Professor Ghoost says that if we reckon the average depth of the ocean at three miles there would be a layer of Bait 200 feet thick in their basins should the Water of all suddenly evapo rate. The mummies of King Thothmes ' I. and three others in four rich eollins have been discovered in Kgypt. Thoth mes I. reigned about 1700 years It. C. conquered Mesopotamia and whipped the Syrians. I An experiment made in Boston I shows that the heating power of coal Is little affected by weather exposure. 1: it. M: 1 1 ! t I- i !,i