i r- . it-. li I if iV B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTIONTHE UMOn- AHD THE EHFORCEUEIIT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. LIII. MIFFLINTOWX, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1899. NO. 38. 9 4 V enArTER xxx. "Mrs. Manners," continues Le Mesurier, "when you were looking over the vestry books of Cloverfield parish last week 70a came upon the entry of a marriage be tween John Le Mesurier and Adela Coombcs. which took place fifteen yean igo In that very church, and which I beg ped you to keep a secret for my sake. That entry referred to the union of this lady and myself." "She is your wife!" exclaims Delia, "I was," says the Sister, sadly. "You are you ever mast be, at least in my opinion," replies Mr. Le Mesurier. "Fifteen years ago, then, I was staying at Southampton reading for holy orders, when I met Adela Coombes, who was a teacher at a school. She had had th misfortune to have a very unhappy home, and " Here the Sister, who had been strtig fliti? between a desire to atone for the past by a humble confession and the nat ural feeling of shame which forbids het making it in the presence of a stranger, takes the words oat of Mr. Le Mesurier' 1 mouth. "John John! let me tell the story. There is no disgrace too great for such a woman as I have been. Madam," she continues, turning toward Delia, "I told yuu l.ut just now that the blight of my life had been effected by an unpardona ble deceit. The deceit Involved an unpar donable imprudence. As a young girl I bud. it must be confessed, a most unhappy home, and to escape Its discomforts, I eloped from it, at the age of sixteen, with the mate of a merchant vessel a man I had only seen some half a dozen times. I was married, and lived with him at Southampton for a while until he went to ca Benin, when his ship was wrecked and all hands reported lost. I did not grieve for him he had been too little to me; and when I met Mr. Ie Mesurier and learned that he loved me, I was too elated to care for anything else. I was support ing myself then as a teacher In a school; I had entered there under my maiden name, and I never undeceived John In the matter, but kept the fact of my first mar riage a secret from him. After we had been acquainted a few months be pro posed to me that we should be married privately. He was bis own master, but he did not wish his family to hear the news all at once. So we were married at -the little village of Cloverfield, and for awhile we were happy Quite quite hap- -py." " - "I was, heaven knows!" Interpolates Le Mesurier, in a voice of deep feeling. "Then came my awful temptation and falL The news reached me in a round about way that my first husband had been saved from the wreck, and waa do ing his best to trace me. I suffered the tortures of hell, but I never tdd John. I knew that as soon as he heard it, we should be forced to separate." "My poor Adela!" "But I betrayed the truth, spite of my self. John was interested in mesmerism at that time. He studied the science deeply, and I was the patient on whom he made his chief experiments. I did not know the extent of the power he held over me, and he thought his wife could liavt no secrets worthy of the name from him. So one day when I was under the Influ ence, he commanded me to apeak what was in my mind. I obeyed hint and be learned everything! Then there came a horrible awakening and all was over be tween ns." "Yon went back to your first husband?" says Delia, who is intensely interested in the story of her poor friend's life. "No!" with a shudder; "thank heaven, that was never required of me. But he found me out, or rather his friends did, and I nursed him he had been fearfully Injured and crippled in the course of the hardships he had. undergone until hr went to his rest." "Is he dead?" exclaims Le Mesurier, In an excited manner. Adela glances at him reproachfully. "Yes; years and years ago. And when that duty was over, I entered upon my resent career, and found the peace I sever knew before." "He Is dead, and you never let me know," says Le Mesurier; "and while I have been spending my life in vain regrets for what I thought to be an irremediable grief. How could yon be so cruel f "What would have been the use of dis turbing your mind afresh, when I hoped it had turned to better things for comfort? I was not your wife I never had been I never could be, after the shameful de ception I had practiced upon yon, and the In in which I had knowingly permitted yon to live." "I do not attempt to say yon were right, Adela; but your fault, however great, arose from love for me. But I, too, had injured you, though innocently, and it was not fair to debar me the option of remedying the wrong I did you." "We were so very, very happy togeth er!" she says, through her tears. "And so yon will be again. Mr. Lb Mesurier, I heartily congratulate yon on your good fortune. And you so fully de serve it. If It had not been for your gen erous friendship for me, and sympathy In xlj trials, you would not have been he-e to-day to bnd your long-lost treasure again. Adela. if you love him still, make him happy! His life has been a wasted one for want of you." "Oh, John, can you forgive me? Is It possible you can love me still?" says Adela. She is answered by the stealing of an arm about her waist. Delia rises hastily and walks to the window. She is rejoic ing with the most unselfish joy over the new-born happiness of her friend, and she will not be witness to the sacred kisa that heralds it. At this juncture a knock sounds upon the door, and Adela lias hardly had time to disengage herself from Le Mesurier's encircling arm, when the doctor, who has been called in to attend old Strother, ea ters the room. "I beg your psirdon, Sinter, but if yon re at leisure I should like to speak to yon for a moment." "You can speak to mc with the greatest confidence here, doctor. This lady and gentleman are my friends and interested lnthe fate of your poor patient." "He has not recovered. I regret to say that he is dead!" .Pead! The. wordfala with.chjljinf et- Tect upon ali present. Death is an awfu. thing even when it is presented to us in the person of an imbecile and worn-out pauper. "I should Ilka to Identify the body," aan Ifo I Mfjroiitr. They follow the doctor silently and rev erently to the chamber where poor old Strother waa conveyed; and there, on a bed, they find the body of the Chilton clerk, dressed as they discovered him. with his arms fondly extended over the precious package that caused his death. La Mesurier shoulders the mysteriou parcel and carries it into the next room. CHAPTER XXXI. Meanwhile, Mr. and Mrs. Bond having finished their business In London return home, only to find that Delia haa disap peared, and that Mr. Le Mesurier has fol lowed suit Mrs. Hephzibah immediately cents, .an elopjuenU . As Mr. and Mrs. Bond are sitting over their coffee and their simple desert to gether, Ellen enters with the Intelligence that two strange gentlemen are in the drawing room, waiting to speak to hei mistress. "Oh, they fing me some bad news of Delia r cries M:-s. Bond, as she stumbles to her feet and rushes precipitately to the drawing room, where, to her utter amaze ment, she is confronted by Angus Moray and the Baron Gustave Saxe. It is ditli cult to say which of the three is most astonished. "Do you bring me tidings of your moth er?" exclaims Mrs. Hephzibah. "My mother!" echoes Angus Moray. "Why, merciful heavens! It is Mrs. nor ton! Madame," he continues rapidly, "where is my mother? Is she not with you? Do you know of her address? 1 have been trying in vain to find both you and her since coming to England." "Who told yon I lived here?" demands Mrs. Hephzibah. in her turn. "Wo did not know it. This is a com plete surprise to both the baron and my self. But, madame, in mercy, tell me, is my dear mother here?" "She is not here, Mr. Moray." "Ton cannot give me her address?" "I cannot." Both the men look grave. Angus once more breaks the silence. "My good friend here, who has been as a brother in all my troubles, left Bruges with me for the express purpose of search ing for my poor mother." . "Ton are not married,' then, to Made moiselle de BloUr "No; nor never shall be, until my moth er's pure tame Is righted," replies the young man proudly. "And now yon can not tell me one word of her! What awful mystery has she wrapped about herself? Where. In heaven's name, can she be hid den?" "If you had asked me that question yes terday, Angus Moray, I could have an swered you under this roof!" "Here, In this very house! Baron, this la indeed joyful Intelligence. But you can surely tell me, then, where she has gone?" "I cannot I wish I could." At this moment voices loud and chen fnl voices make themselves distinctly heard upon the step of the open hall door. "Home at last! Won't you come in? O yes I yon must No; I won't give up my precious burden for anything. You may take the two others, if you choose, but I hall keep this one. I couldn't sleep with out it Indeed I couldn't; I should dream It was gone again, and wake np to believe my dream waa true. I'll kill you if yon try to touch it" continues the merry voice with a burst of Innocent, gleeful laughter. "Have your own way, then, you willful creature I" "It la my mother's voice," cries Angus. "Yes! and with Mr. Le Mesurier," re plies Mrs. Bond, grimly. At this moment Mr. Bond, who has re mained In hiding In the dining room dur ing the strangers' visit appears in the ball and confronts Delia. "Are yon homer' she exclaims, with surprise. "OI what will Mrs. Hephzibah think of my running away in this fash ion? Where to she?" "I am here." replied Mrs. Bond, froni the precincts of the drawing room, "and ready to receive you, ueiw. "Ol my dear friend," she says, coming forward with a huge parcel In her arms; "how can I excuse myself to you 7 but Mr. Le Mesurier will help to tell my story. A most wonderful thing has hap pened. I have found " But here the mother, having crossed tht threshold, first perceives there are strang ers in the drawing room; next regards them for a moment, curiously; and then, with a loud cry In which there is no sound hut that of unalloyed happiness, drops her parcel on the ground, and, rushing to the outstretched arms of her son, throws her self Into them and weeps unrestraintedly. "OI my boy! my boy! My precious, pre cious boy! My hope, my treasure, my child! Do I hold you in my arms again? O, my Angus! my darling! where have you come from? How did you know your mother was here? Is it my tears that have drawn you to me? I have never lain down in my bed, Angus, without weeping the bitterest tears for you, and a thousand times I have resolved to break my oath sooner than endure the bell I nave suf fered apart from you. But It waa for your sake, darling, for your dear sake! And now you are come we are together once more, and I have the most wonder ful news to tell yon. I " "I guess It dearest mother!" he says, sadly. "Do not give yourself the pals ei (piling It" "But !t Is not pain it Is great treat Joy. My dear friend, Mr. Le Mesurier "Hush, hush! The baron Is here." "Baron Saxe," cries Delia, becoming Instantly covered with blushes, as she raises herself to look at mm. "Yes, madam," says the baron, now compelled to speak, though huskily, and o one will rejoice more In your happiness than I shall r v "But yon do not know It yet I I nave found the certificate I" "What?" exclaim the whole company simultaneously. Then she repeal the whole story the reader already knows It "We discovered the old maa In a dying state." she jaacluoea, wegt the parcel and found It contained my certifi cate, and Mr. Le Mesurier has It In that book, and I I am the happiest woman on the face of the earth," says Delia, as she bursts Into a flood of tears, and hides her face once more on the arms of her son. "And 70a are not married to him, theaT demands Mrs. Hephzibah. "Married! Married to whom?" , "To the parson there." "Good gracious! my dear friend! What ever made such an idea enter your head? He Is a married man already." Then Mr. Le Mesurier relates how he became reunited to his wife. "Well, every one seems to be m Inek to day," says Mrs. Bond; "myself as much as any," she adds, with a squeeze of the little lawyer's hand. "Am I to be the only unlucky one left oat madam?" says the baron In a low voice, as he takes a seat on the other aide of Dells. "I hope not baron, I trust your future win be as bright as that of any of us." "It Is In your power to make It so, De lia." "What! have yon not yet forgotten the old folly?" she says with a happy smile. Angus gets hold of his mother's hand. and places It in that of his friend. "Will it make you happy If I leave i thejre. my precious. boy?" . "Very happy, dearest mother." "Then It shall be just as Gustave wishes." "Gustave will never give it np again.' the baron answers, as he raises her hand to his Hps. "O, mg merciful Father!" sighs Delia reverently, as she aits between her future husband and her son, "I thank Thee, Who hast accepted an atonement for my He.' (The end.) THE BABIES DID IT. That Waa What the Conductor Told the Besralar Passenger. "Well, well; look here; how's this?" said the regular passenger to the surly cable car conductor. "I'm sure I saw yon give that pretty girl a squeeze a you helped her out of the car "It might be, sir," Interrupted the surly conductor, with a face beaming with smiles," you see she's my w- "Why, you dog, you and you ac knowledge It do you?" went on the regular passenger. "You're the man that wouldn't 'have a woman tfn your car If you could help It; hated the whole lot of 'em, did you? Thought they were only put Into the world to make trou ble" "But you see, air." the conductor was still beaming. "Always gave you pennies; they could n't get la or out of the car alone; never knew where they were going; if they did get off alone they got off wrong and tumbled; crowded Into seats that were full; you never knew It to fall. That's what you said, and here I find you- "Yes, sir, you're right sir step live ly, madam but you see " "Squeezing a pretty girl, and a very pretty girl at that " "My wife, sir transfer, madam i- "Aad your wife into- the bargain's And you hated the whole of 'em. Said It pretty near ruined a man to have 'em on the car; didn't know what would happen if you bad one belonging to you. And now you're married! Bless met Dear, dear! Never saw you smile at one of 'em unless It was a very lit tle one. You were sweet on the babies: yea, I must say you were that" "Yea, sir, you're right sir. Perhapr It was that that did It You see, this Is a family line, sir. Lots of nice babies on this line, sir. It made a man think he might like to have a little home of his own, sir. Then you see their "Yes, I see, I see; the pretty girl. Well, well, I declare! And you look like another man. Any babies of your own?" "No, sir; but Just over the honey moon, yet sir " "Well, well; You don't say! Well, you Just ring that bell, young man, and let me off, and there's a dollar as a nest egg for the first baby. Well, well, I do declare! What's this world cominy to, anyway?" New York Times. Transmitting Sound by Tabes. An Interesting series of experiments In transmitting sound through tubing Is reported from Germany. The pip ing conveying compressed air Into the workings of a coal mine was employ ed. The greatest length to which a sound could be conveyed In a straight pipe without branches was found tc be 1,500 to 1,700 feet. For distances up to 2,000 feet the best kind of pipe was that with a diameter of about twenty Inches; beyond that distance larger pipes were more effective. Id distances up te 100 feet a diameter o' .tight inches is needed. Mexico's Copyright Law. The new copyright law of Mexico makes no distinction between the rights of native and foreign authors. All that Is necessary is that the work be published In Mexico. It will cost a foreign author $50 to copyright his book In that republic. A copyright holds fo en years. Cheap Tea. Tea Is very cheap In China. In one province of the empire tea la sold at Vfa cents a pound. Russia Is going to abolish the diffi culties of navigation of the month of the Volga by cutting a canal directly from the river to the Caspian sea. A lady at Green Haven, N. Y.. se cured a separation from her husband on the ground of extreme cruelty. Among other brutal acts he was In the habit of sleeping; with a hammer under his pillow, and with this he frequently threatened, during the night to pound ier into insensibility. The highest active volcano In the world is that of the smoking moun tain, Popocatepetl, in Mexico. It is 17.784 feet above the sea. Its crater is three miles In circumference, and It is 1000 feet deeD. Radiation takes place more rapidly from the surface of plants than from the air about them, so that on very still nights the plants are sometimes several degrees colder than the sur rounding air. Twenty-five years ago the United States supplied 15 per cent of the world's coal consumption; now they supply 30 per cent Farm hands in Yucatan wear lin en garments of spotless white. When they become even slightly soiled they hasten to change them. Work is plen tiful there, farm laborers are well paid, and they can afford to be tidy. DISTRIBUTES GREAT WEALTH. Jacob H. rchlir. Who Ha Hi-ram gtsOO, OOO to Harvard. The charities of Jacob H. Bchlff. of New York,who haa given 4 00,000 tc Harvard, are very large. Hit firs' large gift waa made about twent) years ago. when be gave $25,000 for s building for the Hebrew Free Schook Association. He established a -nurses settlement on the East Side, a sen- sectarian charity. The Initiatory cost 130.000, and It costs $7,800 to maintain It A handsome stone fountain In Rut gers Square, bearing the simple Inscrip tion, "Presented to the City of New York 1885," was for a time an anony mous girt from Mr.- Bchlff. which cost S10.000. In 1882-83. when the Russia r Hebrews were flocking to New York City, he gave $10,000 to erect temporary shelters for them. Two years ago b presented to the Young Men's Hebrew Association a $30,000 house. He prom Ised them a larger, handsomer build Ing aa soon as the membership shouk grow large enough to support such home. He has Just redeemed his prom is by giving the association a plot of ground at Ninety-second street an Lexington avenue, and Instructing hit architects to erect a building thereon, the ground and bouse to cost $100,000. He originated the plan which led ti the birth of the Montefiore home. Ht gave a few years ago $25,000 for country sanitarium In connection with the home at Bedford Station, on Har lem Hall road. He has also given $5, 000 as the nucleus of a fund In mem ory of the late Michael Hetlbron, $10, 000 to the Hebrew Loan Society, and a large sum to Barnard College. The of fer of his gifts to Harvard for the Sem itic Department was made June 27. The next day President Eliot said In effect the university would accept the conditions imposed. These were thai about seventy other persons who have contributed to the fund for a Semitic ball and museum release their contri butions for that purpose to a fund foi the purchase of material for the muse um. In addition, Mr. Schlff founds a number of Semitic scholarships In th nnlveralty, his total 1 proposed '' gtf ti footing up, as stated, to $400,000. Th time when the gifts become available Is uncertain until the corporation bat acted upon them. Chicago Times-Herald. Holmes' comet which was discov ered In 1802, and which aroused great Interest because of an unexplained outburst of light that It exhibited while retreating Into space, was rediscov ered coming sunward once more, by Mr. Perrlne, of the Lick Observatory, on June 11. Its period of revolution Is bout seven years. The new satellite of Saturn, recently discovered by Prof. W. C Pickering, with the aid of photography, has been named Phoebe. Owing to Its small size, probably not exceeding 200 miles In diameter, and Its great distance from the planet about 7,787,000 miles, Phoebe bears no resemblance to such a satellite as our moon. Seen from Sat urn, it would appear only as a star, and 1 faint star at that, probably Just no ticeable to the naked eye. Wide currency having been given to the statement that liquid air promises to do the work of coal at next to no cost because an experimenter claims to have produced "ten gallons of liquid air by the use of three gallons In an engine," President Henry Morton, ol the Stevens Institute, has pointed out the' fallacy of the claim. He show that it really takes twelve times as much power to make a gallon of liquid tlr as that gallon could develop In an ideally perfect engine. The waves of the Indian Ocean In a strong west wind are three hundred to four hundred feet long and sixty feel high and have a speed of thirty-three miles an hour. Such a wave weighs (04 tons to the foot If a ship six hun Ired feet long lies In the trough of the lea a wave sixty feet high hurti igainst It 218,400 tons, more than nine seen times its own weight. This weight does not fall upon the ship at lea, because Its buoyancy enables It to rise, but if It drifts upon the lee shore the power of a succession of 218,400 ton blows will tear to pieces any ship man has the cunning or the power to build. Mr. Darwin once wrote a book, which nany readers pronounce as Interesting s a novel, on earthworms and tht wonderful way In which they plow up turn over and Invigorate the soli. Id recent address. Dr. L. O. Howard, of Washington, showed thst many species of insects are also Important agents in soil making. "They are found be neath the ground," he says, "In Incred ible numbers, and they penetrate to a surprising depth. The minute Insects of the family Pudorldae which ara wingless have been found swarmini literally by the million at a depth 01 six to eight feet In a stiff clay aubaofl. Among the means of protecting, fruit trees against frost, practiced In Cali fornia, is the productlen of tog by ( generator In the form of a wagon, la vented by George F. Dltxler. TIm wagon carries a sheet-Iron tank, tki VHru part stf wUoa la Ded with wet JACOB II. SCHIST. straw, or slutlar material, kept molw by the automatic Injection of watei from a cask, while near the bottom li a grate upon which tar la burned. 1 blast operated by a revolving fan serving to maintain the combustion All the heat la compelled to pa si through the wet straw before reachlnf the air. and In consequence the wagoi Is burled In a dense fog. and as It pa? es between the rows of low trees 1' envelops them In a mist so thick tha the driver Is frequently compelled tl lead the horses. QUEER WEDDINGS IN JAPAN. Odd Ceremony In the Land of Flowar and t snihlae, A woman who lived many years u Japan has an article In a late numbet of the London Graphic on Japanese so cial customs. Of courtship and mar riage among the "little brown people" she says that both are very curious ceremonies and that they still savoi somewhat of barbarism. These rare monies are described In an Interesting manner In her communication. "When a young man," she informs ns. "has fixed his affections upon a maiden ot suitable standing he declares his love by fastening a branch of a certain shrub to the house of the damsel's parents. If the branch he neglected the suit Is rejected; If It be accepted so Is the suitor. At the time of the marriage the bridegroom sends pres ents to his bride as costly as his means will allow, which she Immediately of fers to her parents In acknowledgment of their kindness In Infancy and of the pains bestowed upon her education. The wedding takes place In the even ing. The bride Is dressed In a Kma white silk kimono and white veil anil she and bar future husband sit fnclng each other on the floor. Two tuWes are placed close by; on the one is a kettle with two spouts, a bottle of Kike and caps; on the other tnble n minia ture flr tree signifying the strength of the bridegroom; a plum tree, signi fying the beauty of the bride, and, lastly, a stork standing on a tortoise. representing long life and happiness, desired by them both. At the marrluge feast each guest In turn drinks three cups of the sake and the two-spoutet' kettle, also containing sake, is put te the mouths of the bride and bridegr o:t alternately by two attendants, signify ing that they are to share together Joys and sorrows. The bride keeps her veil all bcr life and after death It Is burled with her as her shroud. The chief duty of a Japanese woman nil her life Is obedience whilst uniunr ried. to her parents; when married, t. her nusband 'and -h!a -parents; whet widowed, to her son." - H a Text In "RoMisoa Crusoe." A humorous Incident happened In Cleveland several years ago. A certain paator, widely known and greatly be toved. was not aa careful as be might have been In the preparation of his sermon. He was hampered but little by bla manuscripts, and bad a way of wandering far from the written screed. However, he had the good sense to sub mit his texts, and usually bis manu script sermons, to his highly Intelli gent wife. He usually did this Satur lay night but on one occasion the lady lappened to be away from home all :he evening. - So on Snnday morning the asked him for the chosen text He gave It very glbly. "Book, chapter and verse?" she luerled. The pastor hung his head. "The fact is, my dear, 1 was In such 1 hurry that I couldn't quite turn to It out I've built up a most Interesting sermon around It" "And you couldn't find It?" "No, my dear." "Well. It Isn't very much to be won lered at" salf his helpmeet dryly. 'Thnt text of yours is from 'Robinson Crusoe.' " "NoP' gasped Ine shocked pastor. What will I dot" "Give me the P'ble," said the wife. And it wasn't but a few moments be fore she had picked out a text that Stted the sermon almost as well as the Crusoe quotation. Amertoan Finder's rHsocesa. Miss Louise Homer, the new Ameri can soprano, who has proved such an acquisition to the Covent Garden com pany, baa already scored successes as Lola In "Cavalleria," as Amneris it "Alda" and other parts. She Is a charm ing singer, with a clear, full voice, and Is slight and pretty In person. Miss Homer Is a native of Pittsburg, Pa., and since her marrlsge has lived In Boston, where her husband Is well known ss a musician and composer. Three years sgo they went to Paris that she might pursue her vocal stud ies under Mmes. Jullanl and Koenlg. She also studied dramatic diction uy der Panl Lherie. Her debut was made at Vichy In 1808, and, after singing at Alx-les-Balns, she was engaged for the chief contralto parts at Angers, an Important operatic center, where she created quite a furore as the Queen In "Hamlet," as Leonora In "La Favor It a," and aa Amneris. Among her other favorite roles are Dallla, Ortrud and Herodlas. Next winter Miss Homei Is engaged for the Theatre de la Mon nale In Brussels for several princlpa' roles. Sacred Name Freely Used. Two youngsters, respectively 8 and 7, went to Sunday school recently and heard their new teacher relate the (light Into Egypt for the first time. The story made a profound Impression on their Infant minds, and the next day the pair were "playing" it in the nur sery, with an overturned chair for the 8. "Come along, Mary!" cried the 8-year-old to bis small sister. "Hurry up; the asa Is all ready." "I can't yet; Jesus Isn't ready. Tell Joseph to wait till I find Jesus' hat" Then mamma sailed In and suggested the children should amuse themselves by playing something leas realistic and more aec uku. The average man spends a lot of tlnu searching for what be hopes he won't The good may die young, but the bao aearls always oosttvo their uaafutesaa Every Haae a doctor collects a fee he t Ma ma4tta satna. EARLY DAY OAMP MEETINGS. . Areas Keeaeat Utorwt - Lad hr Hlaitotara. Clifford Howard. In the Ladles' Soma Journal, writes that the first camp meeting In America waa held on the banks of the Muddy river. In Ken tucky. In August 1700, and waa con Sucted by the McGee brothers, two elo quent evangelists. "It lasted for little nore than a week," be states, "and the aovetty of It and the success which at tended It were so marked that there rose aa Immediate demand for a con tinuance of this form of worship. Ac cordingly, the meeting waa speedily followed by a large number of camp meetings throughout the West So great was the Interest they excitod that in some Instances a single meeting waa attended by 2,000 or 8.000 persons, re sulting In the complete desertion of the neighboring towns and settlements for the time being. This first camp meeting marked the beginning of a re vival of religion which assumed such proportions and wrought such wide spread good that it has passed Into his tory aa the 'Great Revival.' It was the reaction following the period of doubt and unbelief, and swept through the country In a glorious wave of tri umph. The earlier -camp meetings were not held under the auspices of iny particular denomination. People f all churches, and all phases of belief tttended them and took an interest in their management Baptist Presby terian, Methodist and other ministers conducted the services. Denomina tional differences were cast aside. All ;hurchea were merged into one In the tide of revivalism. But after the first excitement roused by the 'Great Re vival' died away, this particular form if worship became a Methodist Insti tution. Other denominations gradu illy abandoned it and left It to the ! Methodists, who have maintained It to this day, and continue to lind in it a source of good and a no less worthy ncans of salvation than on the oeia ilon of its establishment 100 years g0." BAD THING IN BUGS. this Insect Has a Fondness for the Throats of Ilia Victims, He tfl the latest importation, and has tome all the way from Africa to strike terror to his victims. The neck is the chosen spot and those who have felt the Insect's claws called him the strangling bug from the sensation they experienced. In appearance he resem bles the electric light bug, so common In the West but he is much larger nd quite ferocious. The bug Is quite three Inches In length and over an Inch wide. The bugs come from Africa In the bold of a sailing vessel unloading in Philadelphia. Now thousands of these terrors are swarming along the shores jf New Jersey, and where they strike every claw draws blood to the skin, ind leaves It congested, In what ap pears to be red bruises an Inch long. Phis strangling bug is a much more langerous Insect than the kissing bug ind la much more to be feared. Hot Water Wells. The wells In parts of Arizona have ecently become producers of hot sater, and apprehension Is felt by nany of the residents of the -regions iffected that they are about to become artlcipantfl in a grand volcanic drama. !n some of the wells the temperature rater of the well rose twenty degrees n a single night It a few the phe lomenon disappeared soon after its ippearance. In a majority of the maps, however, the wells fairly steam !roi their newly acquired heat The lneV known of this curious state of iffars wss a report that the wells st Maricopa, on the Southern Pacific rail mad, thirty miles south of Phoenix, had luddenly become hot says the Omaha "tee. It was four days thereafter that the phenomenon first was noticed a dozen miles west of that city. A test at one well showed a temperature of nearly ne hundred degrees. No difference is noted In wells In the immediate vlcln Ity of Phoenix. The line of subterranean heat wave follows the general direction of the Sierra Estrella mountains, a volcanic ;haln lying immedint-ly south of the Gila River. Thence it appears to con tinue on In the direction of the Harqua Bala mountains, near which are a num ber of large and modern volcanic cones ind hills of drifted volcanic ash. Fur iter to the east the lava flows are fto ecologically modern as to have over-a-helroed In a number of places the -lift dwellings of the ancients. Many Bella Used by Farmer. The farmers really use more bells than any other class- of people or any trade or Industry. A single foundry In New Jersey casts annually 28.000 bells for the farmers and about 4,000 tor schools, churches, engine-houses, etc It Is estimated by a foundryman that at least 50,000 are sold every year In the country to tillers of the soil anr breeders Coal la Sooth Africa. - Coal mining Is making great strides In South Africa. Last year the output ha the Witwatersrand district amount ed to 1,536,000 tons. There Is consider able coal development going on in other eaatern districts of Cape Colony and in NataL Philadelphia Record. The tjueem's DoaM. The Queen's double Is an elder! woman who acts as pew-opener at 1 church In North London, and so exac. Is the resemblance that It makes a! new members of the congregation ex claim. Strangely she Is the exact ag of the Queen, and became a widow It the same year that the Prince Conaor died. - A story aa a married man lent reaii. Interesting unless his wtte caucht hlr TRS BTBAMOLIBO BUS. at K. -SERMON BY Ret). Dr. tannage Subject: Advice For the Taeatloa Take the ftlbte Alone Plauan Seekers Ad monished Mot to Leave Kella-loa Be hind Temptation ot Watering Places. CopjTiRht. IxMda'KJopsch. 1899.1 Wasiiihotos. D. C At this season ol the year, when all who can get a vacation ara taking it, tins discourse ot Dr. Titl mage Is suggestive and appropriate. The tett Is John v., 2, 3: "A pool, which is causa in me nenrew tongao isetnesda, bav.ng five porches. In these lav a ereat multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt. I withered, waiting tor the moving of the wnier. Outside the city of Jerusalem there was a sanative wntnnng place, the popular re sort for Invalids. To this dav there Is a dry basin of rock which shows that there may nave Deen a pool there 360 feet long, 130 leet wltle and seventy-Ova teet deep, This pool was surrounded by Ave plaszas, or porches, or hathlng bouses, where the patients tarried nntil the time when they were to step into the water. Ho far as re Invlgoratlon was concerned It must have been a Saratoga and a Ixmg Branc h on a small scale, a Leamington and a Brighton combined medical and therapeutic. Tra dition says that at a certain season of the year there was an officer of the govern ment who would go down to that water and pour In it some healing quality, and after that the people would come and get the meaioation, one 1 prerer tne plain state ment of Scripture that at a certain season an angol came down and stirred np or tronmea tne water, ana tnen tne people came ana got tne neaung. mat angel oi God that stirred np the Jodaean watering Elace had his counterpart In the angel of eating who In our day steps into the min eral waters o( congress, or utaron, or Hul pbur Springs, or Into the salt sea at Cune Hay and Naliant, where multitudes who are worn out with commercial and profes sional anxieties, as well as those who are afflicted with rhenmatlo, neuralgic and splenetic diseases, go and are cured by the thousands. These blessed Bethesdas ara scattered all np and down onr country. We are at a season of the year when rail, trains are laden with passengers and bag-i gage on their way to the mountains and the lakes and the seashore. Multitudes of our, oitlEens are away for a restorative ab sence. The city heats are pursuing the, people with torch and fear ot sunstroke. The long, silent balls of sumptuous hotels are all abuzs with excited arrivals. The antlers of Adirondack deer rattle ander the shot of city sportsmen. The trout make fatal snap at the hook of adroit sport imou, who toss their spotted brilliance luto the gamo bosket. The baton of the orchestral leader taps the music stand on the hotel green, and American life has put on festal array, and the rambling of the ten-pin alley, and the crack of the ivory balls on the green baized billiard tables, and the lotting of the barroom goblets, and the ex', plosive uncorking of the champagne bot tles, and the whirl nnd the rustle of the ballroom dance, and the clattering hoofs, of the race course and other signs of social dissipation attest that the season for the great American watering place Is In lull play. Musicl Flute and drum and cornoty a-plston and slapping cymbls wake the echoes of the mountains. Qlad am I that fagged ont American life for the most part has an opportunity to rest and that nerves racked and destroyed will And a Bothesda. I believe in watering places. They recope-ate for active service many who wejw we BhDwtth trouble or overwork. -5 ' IS -TiiTTfBb. -"tives. Let not -SrSnluver the ioavirTSnlfnjfrMo patient the physician, or the church its pastor, a season of inoconpation. Lather used to sport with bis children; Edmund Burke used to caress his favorite horse; Thomas Chalmers, In the dark hoar of the church's disruption, played kit for re creation so I was told by bis own daugh ter and the busy Christ said to the busy apostles, "Come ye apart awhile Into the desert and rest yourselves." And i have observed that they who do not know how to rest do not know bow to work. But I have to declare this truth to-day that some of our fashionable wntering places are the temporal nnd eternal destruction of "a multitude that no man can number," and amid the roogratulations of this season nd tbo prospect of the departure of many of you for the country I mast utter a warn ing, plain, earnest and unmistakable. The tlrst temptation that Is apt to hover In this direction Is to leave your ploty ut home. You will send the dog and eat and canary bird to be well cured for somewhere else; bnt the temptntlon will be to leave your religion in the room with the Idlnds down and the door bolted, and then you will come back in the autumn to And that it is starved and sudoont-d, lying stretched on the rug stark dead. There Is no sur plus of piety at the wntering places. I never knew any one to grow very rapidly n grace at the Cutskill Monn nin House, r Sharon Springs, or the Falls of Mont noroncy. It is generally the case that the Sabbath Is more of a carousal than any' jther day, and there are Sunday walks and Sunday rides and Sunday excursions. Elders and deacons and ministers ot relig ion who are entirely consistent at home, sometimes when the Sabbath dawns on them at Niagara Falls or the White Moun tains, takes day to themselves. If they go to the church, it Is apt to be a sacred pa-' rade, and the discourse, Instead of being a plain talk about the soul. Is apt to be what is called a orack sermon that Is, some discourse picked out of the effusions of the year as the one most adapted to ex cite admiration, and In those churches, from the way the ladies hold their fans, you know thnt they are not to much Im pressed with the heat as with the pic turesqueness of half disclosed fentures. Pour puny souls stand In the organ loft and squall a tune that nobody knows, and worshipers with 2000 worth of diamonds on the right hand drop a cent into the poor box, and then the benediction Is pro nounced, and the farce Is ended. The toughest thing I ever tried to do was to be good at a watering place. The air is be witched with the "world, the flesh nnd the devil." There are Christians who In three or four weeks In such a place have had such terrible rents made In their Chris tian robe that they bad to keep darning it antll Christmas to get it mended. The healtn of a great many people makes an annual visit to some mineral spring an absolute necessity, but take your Ulhle along with yon and tHke an hour for secrot prayer everv day, though you be snrrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Keep holy the Sabbath, though they deride you as a bigoted Puritan. Stand oil from gambling hells and those other institu tions which propose to Imitate on this s de the water the iniquities ot lladen Baden. Let your moral anil your Immortal health keep pace with your physical recuperation and remember that all the sulphur and abalyboate springs cannot do you to much good as the healing, perenulal flood that breaks forth from ton "Hock of Ages." This may be your last summer. It so, iimke it a Ht vestibule of heaven. Another tompta'lon hovering around nearly all our wntering places Is t'.io b. r-ic racing business. We nil admire the Iior e, but we do not think thnt Its beauty or speed ought to be cultured at the exp nse of hu man degradation The horse race Is not Of such Importance as the huinrin rac-. The Bible Intimates that a man is betier than n sheep, and I supio-e he Is h-lter than a horse, though, like Job's s'nlHrm, his neck be clothed with thunder. Horse races In olden times were under the ban o! Christian people, and In our day the snme Institution has come op under llctltiouc names. And It is called a "summer meet ing," almost suggestive of positive rellgloiu exercises. And It Is called an "agricul tural fair," suggestive of everything thnt Is Improving in the art of farming. Cul ander these deceptive titles are tne same ;heatlng,.and the same betting, and the tame drunkenness, and the same vaga bondage, and the same abomination that were to be found under the old horse rais ing system. Long ago the English government got through looking to the tori forthe dragoon and the light cavalry horse. They found ....... - j depreciates thejBt,ock, and It Is worse yet for men. Thomas Hushes, the membor of parliament and the authot known all the world over, hearing that new turf enterprise was being started le this country, wrote a letter In which he ld, "Heaven help you. then, for of all tht Bankers ot our old civilization there It nothing In this country approaching In un blushing meanness, in rascality holding ft head high, to this belauded Institution oi the British turf." Another fnmons sports man writes, "How many fine domains hav( been shared among these hosts of rapa 3lons sharks dnrlng the lost 200 years, and. unless the system be altered, how mnn) more are doomed to fall Into the sam gulf?" With the bullfights of Spain anc the bear baitings of the pit may the Lore God annihilate the Infamous and accursed horse racing of England and America! Another temptation hovering around the watering place Is the formation of hasty Sna lifelong alliances. The wntering BTflces are responsible for more of the domestic Infelicities ot this eonntry thnn near y all other things combined. Society Is so urtlllel.il there that no sure judgment of character eon be formed. They who form companionships amid such, circum stances go into a lottery where there are twenty blanks to one prize. In the severe tug of life you want more than glitter and splash. Life is not a ballroom, where the music decides the step nnd bow and prance and graceful swing of long train can make np for strong common sense. Yon might as well go among the gnyly painted yachts ol summer regatta to Hod war vessels as to go among the light spray of the snmmor watering place to find cbnracter that can stand the tost of the great strug gle ot human lite. In the battle of life vou want a stronger wenpon thnn a lace tan or a croquet mallet. The load of life Is so heavy that in order to draw it you want a team stronger than that made np of a masculine grasshopper and a feralnlno butterfly. If there is any nun in the com munity who excites my contempt and who flight to excite tho contempt of evory man ind woman It is the t,oft handed, soft 'leaded dude, who, perfumed until the air is actually sick, spends his summer in Uriklng killing attitudes and waving senti mental ndieux and talking infinitesimal nothings and finding his heaven in the set it a lavender kid glove. Boots as tight as in inquisition. Two hours of consummate ikill exhibited in the tie of a flashing era fat. His conversation made up of "Ahsl" ind "Ohs!" and "He besl" There Is only one eonDterpnrt to snch a man as that, and that is the frothy young woman at the watering place; her conver i.ition made up of French moonshine; what ilio has In her head only equaled by what the had on hnr hack; useless ever since she .vas horn and to be useless until she is dead in less she becomes an Intelligent Chris Ian. Wo may admire music and fair faces ind graceful step, but amid the heartle-s-less and the Inflation and the fantastic influences ot our modern wntering plnces jeware how you make lifelong covenants. Another temptation that hovers over the vatering place Is that of baneful II tor a ure. Almost every one starting off for lie summer takes ome roading matter. There Is more pestiferous trash real among he Intelligent clnsses in July and August ban In all the other lea months of the 'ear. Men and women who at home would tot be satisfied with a book that was not eally sensible I find sitting on hotel piazza r under the trees reading books the index f which would make them blush if they :uew that you knew what the book was. 'Oh;" they say, "you must have Intel ectual recreatlonl" Yes. There Is no need hat you take along to a watering place 'Hamilton's Metaphysics" orsome pondcr ius discourse on the etornnl decrees or 'Faraday's Philosophy." There are many lasy books that are good. You might as veil say, "I propose now to give a llt le rest to my digestive organs, and In tend ot eating heavy meat and vegetables will for a little while take lighter food, a 'Tfttestryoh .VfVjvV i,lfwgralns of rats mne." SMutjtiTJi-iSa t' Aug Kit le M ad as literary poison in December. Mark bat. Do not let the frogs of a corrupt irlntlng press jump into your Saratoga rupk or White Mountain -valise. Are there tot good books that are easy" to read looks of entertaining travel, books of con ;enial history, books of pure fun, books of oetry, ringing with merry canto: books ot Ine engravings, books that will rest the nind as well as purify the heart and ele ate the wholo life? There will not be an lour between this and your death when ou can afford to read a book lacking in nornl principle. Another temptation hovering all around mr waerlng places is Intoxicating bovor iges. I am told that it is becoming more md more fashlounble for women to drink. '. care not how well a woman may dress, if he has taken enough ot the wine to flush ier cheek and put a glussiness on ber eye th Is drank. She may he handed into a ?2500 carriage and have diamonds enough :o astound the Tlffanys' 9ho Is drunk, ilio mnv be a graduate of the best young adies' seminary nnd the daughter of some nan In danger of being nominated for the jresidency she Is drunk. You may have I larger vocabulary than I have, and you nay say In regard to hor that 9he Is "con vivial," or she is 'Jiacrry," or she Is "fes :i'e," or she Is "exhilarated," hut you sannot with all your garlands of verbiage over up the plain tact that it is an old lashloned case ot drunk. Whether you tarry at home which will )o quite as safo and perhaps quite as com 'ortable or go Into the country, arm your- lelf against tempt tion. The grace of God s the only safo shelter, wheth r in town r eonntry. There are watering places iccessible to all of us. You cannot open I book of the Bible without finding out lome such watering place. Fountains pen for sin nnd uncleanness. Wells of nl atlon. Streams from Lebanon. A lood struck out of the rock by Moses, fountains in the wilderness discovered y Hagnr. Water to drink and water :o bathe In. Tho river of Ood, shlch is full of wntor. Water of which it a mnn drink be shall never thirst. Wells of wnter in the valley of Baca. Liv ing fountains ot water. A pure river ol water as clear as crystal from under the hroneotuod. These ore wntering rdaees accessible to all of us. We do not have s laborious packing up before we start only :he throwing nwny of our transgressions. So exponslve hotel bills to pay. It Is 'Witnout money nna witnout price." No ong and dusty travel before we get there. It is only one step awny. in California In live minutes I walked iround nnd saw ten fountnlns all bubbling ip, ana they were nil dilierent, anil In live ninutes I can go through this Bible par- erre nna nna you miy Drignt, sparkling ountnlns bubbling up into eternal life healing and therapeutic. A chemist will go :o one ot tbeso summer wnterlUL' places ind take the water, and analyze it, nnd tell you It contains so much of Iron, nnd so much ot soda, and so much ot Unto, and so much of magnesia. I como to this gospel well, this living fonntnln, and nnalyze the water, and I find that Its Ingredients are peace, par ion, forgiveness.hope.conr.fort, life, heaven. ho, evory one that thlrsteth, come ye" to this watering placet Crowd around this Bethesda. Oh, you sick, yon lame, you troubled, yon dying, crowd around this Bethesda! Step in it, oh, step in itl The angel of the covenant to-day stirs the water. Why do you not step in it? Some ot you are too weak to take a step In thnt direction. Then we take you up In Un arms of praverand pluntte yuu clear undei the wave, hoping that the cure mav be as sudden and ns radical as 'with Captain Naaman, who, blotched and carhnneled. stepped Intothe Jordan, and after the sev enth dive came up, his skin roseate com Xdexioned ns the lleh of a little ehlld. Portland, Oregon, claims to have the fastest stern wheel steamboat in the world. The Hassalo, recently completed for the Columbia river trade has made spurts of 26 2-3 miles an hour. In 1850 It was estimated that the consumption of Dure alcohol In France equaled 1 liters per head of the popu lation. In 1896 it had increased to 4.19 liters, apart from the use of wines beers and cider. The coarsest human hair Is the red, and blonde hair is the finest. The thickness of human hair varies from the 250th to the 600th part of an Inch. Irish railways have been moving towards consolidation. .13 .3 . f ! '1 t ' 1- r I i 4 ' ,. r