-V, v -4-. r B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTIOn TflE UfllOri AflD THE EnFORCEUERT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL.. LIU. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1899. NO. 40. 4-; T 7$ a in at Wwi flOi m i s ki ' j - jlv j . -a a cnArTEn it. At a quarter after ten Robert Campbell left the express office with if small cauvns has under one arm containing twelve thousand five hundred dolla's in cold, and made bis way towards the residence of the banker, which was an imposing struc ture standing on the corner of Market ind Sixth streets. "Smooth sailing at Inst," he thought, as he passed hurriedly down Front street to Market. "I shall leave the residence of my Hattie a free man, with my note in my possession, and I trnst with Mr. De Kosette's consent to make my sweetheart my bride. Now, this money I could use for the balance of the five years; but why pay eight hundred a year if it can be avoided? True, there is a way that I miKht retain it and I think run little risk, but I must be cautious I have not nerve enough to try it. When I get back from Baltimore I will have time to think the matter over. There will be other oppor tunities, and perhaps lietter ones." Thus soliloquizing, the young man hast eni'd on up Market street, and at exactly half after ten the sounding of the door In-1 1 announced to the banker his arrival. Mr. Dellosette was seated in the library rending a uoveL "The bedroom door stood wide open, and so did the door leading from that to the bathroom beyond. The two windows of the library, as well as those of the chamler, opening oot on the lawn on the east side of the house, were raised to admit the slight breeze that was borne westward from the ocean, seven miles away, and yet, so warm was it that the banker bad discarded his coat and sat in his shirt sleeves. "Aunt Hannah, the door!" he suddenly exclaimed, as he heard the signal": but no ticiag that there was no response from the 6able Hannah, he muttered: "Dosing, probably," and passed through the parlors out into the hall and opened the door him self. "Come in! Come in, Robert. I am all alone. I think the servants, even, have gone to bed. as none responded to the bell. I presume Hattie would have remained below if I had informed her I was looking for yon, but you know late hours for young people cause dull eyes the next morning, and then I thought that perhaps yon would not desire her to be present. Herman entered the house not ten min utes ago. I presume he would have been In the library yet but for the fact that 1 told him yon were coming to take op youi note, and that there was a private matter " about which we were to confer, lie look ed much annoyed nay; excited. Do yon know, he had the audacity to ask my daughter's hand to-day T" By this time the two men bad reached the library. "I am not surprised,' said Robert. "I had surmised that he would, and imag ined what your answer would be. - I know Miss llnttie has no affection for him." "Ah. ha, all bestowed on you. I sup pose!" The young man's face flushed. "I think, sir," he said, "that if I am so fortunate as to gain your consent, I possess a suffi cient quantity of her regard to be able to induce her to become my wife." "I have not been blind, Robert. I have seen the trend of matters for some time, and I shall be quite content to trust my daughter's happiness to you. I am satis fied that you love each other. You have proved your ability to take care of a wife, ". -though adversity frown on you. I give you my consent freely, my boy." "Oh. thank you, sir. I shall leave for Baltimore with a light heart, and now for the other matter. I must not keep you up later." "Oh. as for that, it is not yet eleven; but on your own account, if yon must lenve at four. You will do be gone long. I trust?" "I shall be home Saturday evening, four days only: and now for the note. This bag contains the coin, twelve thousand five hundred dollars. You can see the ex press seal is still intact. Give me credit for such sum as remains above the amount of the note and interest." "Certainly, my boy. with pleasure, since you ask it; but yon might as well have kept it. Hattie, as you know, is an only child, and the prospect is that between you you will handle all of Alvin DeRo sett'e's coin one of these days; that is. all but a small legacy that will go to Her man Craven, to whom a larger one, I ' think, would prove a curse, and remem jbrsnees to servants." "God grant that the years before you are Called away, Mr. DeBosette. may be many " said the young man, with deep ...;.. "Wilmington could ill afford to lose you, and notwithstanding my love for dear Hattie, tnere woum uc iu. could never be filled." . -Well, well, we must all go, my boy; but i .m tn mid remain with you awhile .... .i when I die yon must take the h-lm at the bank. I founded that insti .nil I desire it to live after me. 1 lere the banker pulled open a drawer of his desk, withdrew therefrom the note, and after writing across words- "Satisfaction received in full, this eighteenth day of August, eighteen hun dred and fifty-seven." to which he affixed .;..t..re. handed it to Robert with Uin rt these words: "Keep It as a memento of what yoo ae- ihul In two years. "I will give it to Jennie, to paste In her scrap iKKik," was the reply. i ... " nid the banker, 'that will i ...rnni.n him it red dollars to be placed to your credit. I might give you a receipt for that." n no! . It is needless!", exclaimed RolKTt. "Merely pass it to my credit to .. ... a w I will bid you : He wis interrupted by a jingling of the fiiinriMll "Why. who can this be at this time of night," said the banker. "Robert," he continued, "yon are yonnger than I am. Will you see confound tne Sleepy n TniitRf' The young man hastened to the Iron! door; sprang back the eaten, ana open ed it, . - Darkness alone confronted him. "Who is here?" he asked. niif.fit fitit ilaiim "It is very strange. I surely heard the bell. Let me investigate," thought the roung man, and leaving the door ajar he Itemed nut nn tho tiroftd piazza. H hastily passed from one end of the tnip to the other, but encountered no one. "I cannot understand it." he exclaimed is he descended the steps to the graveled ivaik. "v hat could have been the object? some one bent on mischief, perhaps." liooert stood for a moment with one foot on the lower step and the other on the walk, listening. . Suddenly he heard a sound aa of mothered groan behind him. He hurried y rnn up the steps, pushed open the door, lid in a moment's time stood in the li brary. A cry of horror broke from his Hps. Still seated In his chair was the form f the banker; but his head had dropped iver to hie left shoulder. His glaring eyes .re fixea on jcancy, and a look of hor or was on his livid countenance. He had sunk lower in the chair. A rivu- let of blood was tracing its way down his h'rt front, dyeing it red. and the handle jf a sheath knife stood there, the keen Blade buried In his bosom. "Help! help! There has been'murder lone! Help! help!" In an instant he bad seized with his right hand the bloody haft of the knife, ivhile with his left be endeavored to re strain the body from sinking to the floor. "Help! help!" He drew the weapon forth, the red blood dyeing his sleeve as le did so. "Uncle Alvin! Uncle Alvin! Oh. tell lie! Tell me!" There was a groan, a twitching of the imbs, a contortion of the features, and a lead man slid from the chair to the blool uiaked carpet of the library. "Oh, God, what fiend has done this leed?" cried Robert, as he bent over the itill form on the carpet. A piercing cry answered him, and Hat :ie, who had been roused by the cries and bastily descended the stairs, sunk on her nees by the side of her murdered father. At the same instant Herman Craven rushed into the room. A cry of horror broke from his white Ins as his eyes fell on the scene before jini. "Merciful God! My uncle murdered Von, Robert Campbell, yon standing oyer i s lifeless remains, and with that reeking aenpon in your hand? Fiend! Assassin! ( see it aU! Maddened by his refusal to ive you his loved danghter's hand in mar -iace. yon have taken ' his life. Stand liack from my loved cousin's side, or. red handed as yon are, I will attack you. Oh. iiy loved uncle! It was your death cry Jiat roused me from my slumbers!" "Herman Craven!" eried Robert, as he straightened to his full height, "has this terrible scene crazed yon? Yon cannot Relieve the words you have uttered to be rue; but rouse the servants and send for hclD. The assassin must not escape. Nor shall be. Robert Uampoeii. xou ire the murderer nerej uuue uia t , t . . i a lream what my uncle s cries foretold! "Mars Alvin! Mars Alvin! Murdered! Murdered! And by yon. Mars Robert!" Old Uncle Duke, who had entered the room, walKea io ine siue ui ms juuu mi tress, who was caressing the dead form of her father. It was I. Herman Craven, who an wered the summons of the door bell. 1 bad been here for a half hour; was here uy appointment, as you know, to take up nly note. I brought with me a bag of tun and receiveu n ntuuriLv mc uwi bell rang. 1 "Where is this bag of coln7 "Why, there upon your uncle's desk, where I placed It. "There is no bag of coin there: main, nlotted wellT ' . . . . 1 TV.l U-- 0 bag OI coin mere iwuucij una kn Wn added to murder. Yoar mis- Hannah, your mistress!" Aunt Hannah stood in the door leading rrnm the library to tne bankers cnam ber. Her mulatto face was of an ashen Sne and she was shaking as with palsy. "Dead! Dead! My own aarnng papa: Murdered, murdered! The cries of poor Hattie were frantical- v resounding through the house. "Poor darling," said Robert, and as he Uooncd, the bloody weapon fell from his land and struck at her side. What wouder that she fainted. n.itvert was stooping, with a wiew to -nisiniz her to a sofa that the room con- nined. I In nils off my cousin, murderer!" cried rT..rmnn. 15ut already uooen nau ner n his strong arms, and in a seconu s time or white form, clad only in a wrapper ,h hnd hastily donned over her long night robe, had placed her on the sofa, where he quaking Hannah and ner daugnter Millie, who had joined tnem, were soon itriving to revive her. tTnfle Duke had roused Adam, the car- rlnire driver, whom he had sent for Dr. viOTitn. two blocks away, and he now rowitend the room. "Had we not best lay the body of your nn the bed in his chamDcr, tier- mnn V asked Robert. "Mnrderer. leave him where he fell be neath your blow until those arrive who will take you in charge, jjo uoi aiicui. ni..ht von nre too well known. Watch him. Uncle Duke, and you, Hannah and Millie; he is your master's murderer." "Impossible!" exclaimed Uncle Duke, while Hannah dropped the bowl of water from which she was sprinkling her young mistress' face, and in very terror ran screaming from the room. "Infamous wretch!" cried Robert. "You know your words are false. For aught 1 snow yours may have been the hand that wielded this knife." - Here he stooped and raised the weapon from the floor.. . "Help! Help!" cried Herman. "You would assasinate me as you did my uncle." He dashed through the door, and in an instant his slippered feet were descend mg the piazza steps. , "Help! Helpt Murder! Munlec!" r tounded his voice as he sped away in the larkness. - CHAPTER III. Hardly had the outer door closed oehlnfl rlennan Craven when Hattie- regained jonsciousness. and with a long drawn sigh jer eyes opened.- , "My poor darling," exclaimed Robert, is he placed one hand upon her hrow. Seemingly to very terror -he recoUed ind the cry escaped her lips: "Oh Ood Murdered! My dear father murdered 1 and-and by the man I lo"l- "Oh, Hattie. my darling!" exclaimed Robert. "You cannot believe me guilty of this terrible crime?", v The poor girl threw, ber fcaads befI jker eyes aa If to shnt out some horrid isaton aa ine sonoea: -xou were nuuuii ever him. Robert, with the bloody weapon to your hand, when I. followed by Her man, entered the room. How how could ron have murdered my father, who loved rou well? No, no. I will not believe it and yet Herman accused you." 'Hattie, dearest, a suspicion of the on who loves you is unworthy of yon. Not Ive minutes before I found that fatal Made driven to his heart he had consented willingly to our marriage. I loved your tather. Ask yourself if I could have mnr lered him.' "No, no, I wiU not believe it. Forgive ne, dear Robert. But the knife? ' How sunt it in yonr hand and blood blood on rour hand and sleeve?" I had just withdrawn it from yonr father's bosom, dear. I called on him at Jie bank to-day and made an appointment to eee him here to-night after ten o'clock. ( brought with me a bag of coin, and had !aid a note he held. I have it cancelled in my pocket. Just as I was about to take my leave the door bell rang. Your fath ?r, remarking that it was a late honr for Tallera, requested me to see who was there. I opened the door. Darkness con fronted me and nothing more. 1 walked the length of the piazza and called out. Who is here?" hat received no response. ( descended the steps, wondering at the it range occurrence; for a moment stood with one foot on the lower step, the other n the walk. Suddenly I heard a stifled rroan emanating from the honse. I ran ip the steps, hastily entered the library, and my heart stood still at the terrible light that confronted me. I cried out Help! Murder! and withdrew the sheath SDlfe from your father's bosom. On rasp, and he slid from the chair to the car peted floor, a corpse." "Oh, my father, my father! Then it was not his voice I heard." "You did not hear the pealing of the ioor bell, dearest?" "JJo. Robert- I I r 'Fly. Mars itobert! Fly! You got no ime to tarry here. You'll hang. Mars ttobort, hang, jus' lik' you'd killed ole master. A nigger can save you. uo, Mars Robert go! I I " It was Aunt Hannah who had re-enter- d the room, who had spoken. Are yon crazy. Hannah? The mur- Jerer of yonr master must be brought to justice." 'Ain't yon see. Mars Robert T l ae evi dence of Mara Herman will condemn yon. rhe young mlssie saw yon with the bloody knife in your band. Mars Herman will iwear that your cries were the cries of my poor ole master. Fly, Mars Robert, while you have time. I know you is not the murderer of ole master; but fly!" "Yes. yes. Robert." said Hattie, quick ly. "I feel that you never dreamed ot this terrible crime; but Itannan nas loiu the truth. Oh, my darling, and now now that I have only yon," and the fair girl twined her arms about him. "Poor dear." saiu Kobert, "730 are -agi tated, and little wonder. Robert Camp bell shall be found by yonr side, even though he stand in danger of the gal lows, and the murderer, the assassin, of your father shall meet death on the gal lows. Herman Craven may not be guilty of this murder, but on my soul I believe Qe is. He has doubtless gone in search jf an officer with iaa .totenuoau.ot fle nouncing me." "No, mo," sobbed Hattie. "My cousin inrely would not murder one who has " .. .. i . . , been so xino io mm. ue couia not ui committed the crime. Immediately after 1 heard the voice, which I supposed was my fatheVa, crying 'Help, murder! Her man knocked on my door and exclaimed: 'Your father. Miss Hattie; your father! ii.. t.,ii nnt just left his room. I bad thrown my wrapper on, and together we descended the stairs," "The murder bad already Tieen commit ted, dear, when you heard those cries; but, ah, I have It." Hastening to the desk ot the dead banker, who lay beside It, his n-nn face upturned, he seized a pencil and hastily on a slip of paper wrote these words: "I.ang Sellars, Detective. "Please come to the residence of Bank er De Rosette at once. His dead face is now before me. He has been cruelly mur dered. Robert Campbell." (To be continued.) Empty Praise. To little men and women of the liter ary profession, the ioe tasters and wit lings, there ought to be something in structive In this word from Thackeray, quoted by his daughter, Mrs. Ritchie. After reading such an estimate of no toriety by a man truly great, the mln uows may well consider whether they are not swimming too pretentiously. "There's no use denying the matter, or blinking at It, now I am become a sort of great man. In my way all but at the top of the tree, indeed there, if the truth were known, and having a great fight up there with Dickens, "I get such a deal of praise wherever I go that it is rather wearisome to hear. I don't think my bead Is a bit turned, please God, for I have always got my own opinion; and when men and news papers say: 'Our sheet Is the finest,' and so forth, I know a deal better, and don't disguise the truth, either. "This London world is full of good-natured tom-fools, and directly one be gins to cry Oh! all the rest say, 'Pro digious! "Youth's Companion. ' United States Forest Reservations. The thirty forest reservations of the United States embrace an area of 40, 000,000 acres in thirteen States and Territories. Seven are In the State of California, the largest of which, the Sierra forest reserve, Includes 4,000, 000 acres. Within the past thirty-five years it is estimated that 11.000.000.000 fi!et, board measure, of timber on pub lic land has been destroyed by forest Urea. A New Brunswick (N. J.) burglar being unable to secure any money In a house he broke into the other night, accepted a small check In lieu thereof from the owner of the premises. Forty-flve thousand goats have been placed on a ranch at Lowney Junction, N. M. It is the largest goat ranch in the world. The Intention is to produce goat skins for the tanneries In Boston and Philadelphia. t Some .of the companions of James Queereon. of Huntingdon. N. Y., dared him to hold a big Are cracker in his hand until It exploded. He held it. and the explosion shattered the second and third finger of his right hand. P.lue eyes are generally considered effeminate, but' this is a mistake, for blue eyes are found only among Cau casian nations, and the white races rule the world. Perhaps the most extraordinary family in the world is one now living at Arkansas City. The mother has been married five times, and for each husband she has had a child. The five children are living with her and each bears the name of Its father. NDIANS OT SOOTOH D80IMT. la CkarkM TtlH, OTaerekea mm well by their atab jonmsss. their shrewdness and ttatr lor mt controversy. Aa Indiana they had. tfceae traits to begin with, AM the molt of a stress infusion of Scotch blood they added to the strength i the characteristics. It la Scotch history that after Oi hattie. of CuUoden many Bcvtcam left their native land rather than ac cept English sovereignty. It Is Chero kee history that numbers of tbeaa sturdy Scots found homes and wires with the Cberoka nation oerora uw enforced migration of the tribe notn Georgia to the Indian Territory, jonn Ross was one of these Scotch exiles who accepted Cherokee citizenship. Ha became a chief and was given the name at "Coo-la-coo-ee." When the nattoa moved to the territory one of th dis tricts into which tho reeerranoni was iivlded for government purposes was lamed "Co4s-eoo-ee." Rosa founded t family which became powerful In wlierokee councils. He and hi son were frequent visitors to Washington and had much to do with the trteaty making which gave to the nation the strong legal position It hold In Ith re lation with the United State. A de scendant of Ross, the Scotch exile, la one of the officers of the nation toMay. Th. Adaira are another influential Cherokee clan established by a Scotch man who came over after the battle of CuUoden, As the descendant of ; Ad Mr by his Cherokee wife grew uphey nrA -nt to American colleges and given the beat of opportunities for education. McNalr Is another of the familiar Scotch name Introduced Into the Cherokee nation toy is bcotco. taston. Tho McNalr who came .over after Culledan was a Highlander. iOne f M. descendants Uvea on a magnlj- eent estate of UXO acres In the beau ihii wwr of the Grand River. Dun- m.Ii another Scotch name found mans- the Cherokee. The head and front ef Cherokee opposition to Amer ican cttlsenabtp is a Duncan, whose ,i.im tn Cherokee citizenship would not be guessed by any physical charac teristics. He is Bcotcn in ioob .ji Scotch In his love of a controversy. fit. touis Globe-Democrat. ' Sensible Feat. Since fashion has many time de Teed that some good old custom should H. nn more, it is only fair that noxt and again, by way of compensation,, she should sweep out of existence a foolish nroludice. v set herself to do. and has succeeded. It least In New xorx, accoraing w u verdict of a dally paper of that city. The old Idea that It la a disgrace for Ae daughter of fortune to know bw to tarn her living 1 now -obsolete. jrThe KiMt fad of th rich girl Is to ustr soTgetrade. 'Ww &-ur&' slalm originality In this respect. They have adopted the Idea from the Princ ess of Wales, and otner royai laaies, who are adepts at several useful em ployment - - Millinery and aressmagrng are vigor jusly taken up by New York young la lles under the guidance of professors, Cooking classes are also well attended by girls who have no idea of going out to service. One New York girl of the "upper clr le" boasts that she has seven different sccomnllsbments, by any one of which she could. In case of necessity, earn her living. They range all the way from a practical and extensive knowl edge of housekeeping to an acquaint ance with French so thorough that It enables her to tutor boys for college examinations. Leather work, book binding, hair dressing, nursing, law business, ana irt In Its various branches, are among the subjects that now engage the at tention of the young ladles or New York. Under the loss of fortune sev eral such ladles have actually turned their accomplishments to account. Youth's Companion. Pet Explosive or Many Nations. Every great power has its own spe cial high-power explosive with -which Its shells are filled, says Answers. The French pin their faith to melinite, which has been very thoroughly tested. Shells filled with this composition have been fired through ten inches of armor without exploding. The shells In this Instance left the gun's muzzle with the great velocity K 2,000 feet per second. The British Government la aounwui if the safety of melinite, and uses a com position called lyddite. It gets its name from Lvdde. in Wales, where It is man ufactured. The lyddite shells have been successfully fired through five inches of armor. Ecraslte Is used by Austria. Its com position is a secret known only to the two inventors, who are Austrians. Phi explosive has been found to have ipeclal destructive power when used igalnst earthworks. Sweden has decided to use In Its irniy an explosive called belllte, the invention of a Swede. While it has not is much explosive force as many of -.he other compositions, yet it is claimed io be more stable. Its powers of pres ervation are also much greater. The United States has been- making ex hauatlve trials of a kind of guncotton known as emmentte, a most powerful ixpVoslve. Foe of She Trained N A German Journal Is authority for the statement that two-thirds of the trained nurses actively engaged ac quire and die of tuberculosis. tVMto Fenntalns Well Patronised. One of Boston's municipal officials, who Is especially Interested in the es tablishment of free Ice water fountains in that city, hired a man to watch one at the drinking places the other day from 6 a. m. to 10 p. dl, for the pur pose of ascertaining whether or not It was well patronised. Between the sours named exactly 0,335 persons rank at tho city's expense. The foun tain has four faucets. When a family can afford to hire. a Aaa. of aU wark, half of hi time Is taken np in carrying things bac t the dry goods stores. :. . KNOWS-ALL THAT'S GOING ON. fPr Id t Kraarer mt the Transvaal I Perfect Spy rysteaa. No one ever denied thnt-Oom Paul, president of the Sooth African. Repub lic, was an astute old statesman. Time and again be has beaten our .British cousin in diplomacy and has proved hi worth as a diplomatist. At the time of the Jameson raid It eaused Dr. Jameson and(h' associates considerable surprise that their plans were known to the Boers almost as soon as they were - conceived. The British were met, fought and defeated by an ambushed body of men almost at the very beginning of their attack. and it was believed at the time that one of their number bad turned traitor and given th plans to the Boers, but bow the secret Is known. The old warrior enlisted the services of the barmaids at Johannesburg In the political. secret service. Through them he learned that new men were being enlisted in the Cape police and that new guns were being shipped, week after week, from .England. Through the same source he was Informed of the attempts that were being made by English politicians to force the hands Af ttiA nATarnmnnl nf th Orflnffe Free State In case war should be declared 1 by the British Government against his country. The Englishmen babbled all this over their cups and the barmaids' winning smiles and bright eyes never gave them the susp'clon that they were telling secrets of vital Importance. No sooner had the pretty barmaids enticed from the sturdy colonists their Important secrets than Oom Paul was Informed. . The old statemnan knew how to parry blow -with blaw. To the amazement of the British, no sooner hnd they Increased their force of avail able fighters by means of secret etflist nient than they were luformed that Oom Paul bad eullstej a still larger number of mex No sooner had their guns arrived from England than they found out that the Eocrs also had ob tained, from a firm in Germany, a larger number of weapons of still bet ter manufacture. By means of always being forewarned Krr.ger warded off war. New York Herald. LAW AS INTERPRETED. The owner of an unfinished bnlldin? Is held In Foley vs. Manufacturers it B. F. Insurance Company (N. Y-), 4:1 L. R. A. CL to hive an Insurable In terest to the extent of Its value, at though under the buildiug contract the loss, If there were no Insurance, would 'all on tho builder. The contract of a member of a urn- ;nal bettpfifc association Is held in Leh man tl Clark 1111-). -13 t. R. A. 648, to bo a purely unilateral one which en title htm at any time' to diacontlnte his pay menu without subjecting him to any liability for unpaid) assessments. but only to the forfeiture orPimier-, cr-,i-i yyra si, h A suit for the cancellation and sur render of a receipt renewing a lapsed life Insurance policy on the ground that It was obtained by fraud. Is held in John Hancock Mutual Loan Insur ance Company vs. Dick (Mich.), 43 L. R. L. 6CG, to be maintainable In equity, although the fraud might be a defense to a pending action at law on the pot cy. State taxation of the average numbei of refrigerator cars used by railroads within the state, but owned by a for eign corporation which has no office or place of business in the State, is upheld In American Refrigerator Tran sit Company vs. Hall, U. S. Advance sheets ti3U. although the cars are cm ployed as vehicles of transportation In the Interchange of Interstate com merce. An Insurance policy containing no stipulation as to suicide, taken out In good faith by the Insured, is held In Seller vs. Economic Life Association (Iowa). 43 L. R. A. 637. distinguishing Rltter vs. Mutual Loan Insurance Company, 1C0 U. S. 39, 42 L. ed. 093, not to be avoided as against the bene ficiary named therein by the fact that the assured deliberately committed sul side while sane. A statute changing the time for elec tion of township trustees, whereby those holding over until the next elec tion will hold for a period longer than the constitutional limit of teuure. Is sustained In State, ex rel. Harrison vs. Menaugh (Ind.) 45 L. It. A. 408, on the ground that the statute does not extend the term of office, but that the extension of the term Is made by re quiring officers to hold over until their successors qualify. SEARCHLIGHT. the TTSree Faateat Heata of the Tea. Rooked to Hla Credit. The highest authorities on trotters and pacers consider Searchlight the, most remarkable pacing horse the have evor seen. Searchlight has a rec ord ot 2:0314. and recently won the 2:04 pace at Cleveland and Columbus. A match between Searchlight and John R, Gentry would be a grand sight and might result In two minutes being beaten in a race. In declaring Search light to be the greatest pacer they say they do not bar the great Star Pointer. The Anutcor Hunter. -Amateur Sportsman What did 1 bring down, Pat? . Pat Yer dog, sur; blew bis" haaail off. Amateur Sportsman Where's the bird? Pat Picking at the dog, sur. Har lem Life. la) the Fnture. Gendarme (to the victim who ha 'as 'been run' over'by an automobile car riage) None of your Impudence. Shot me your license to walkl Le Hire. I SKARCUl.IIIHT. I SERMON BY Rep. Br. tannage Sahjaet: Mails hi Warahla DUtlMtlom Between Jfa.le as nn Art aat Manic as M Aid to Devotion- Natloaal Airs of th Klaeta 9t Havea. CprriKht, Loaia Klopaca. !., W ..HHIKOTOK, D. 0. Dr. Taltnage, tn this sermon, "dlscnssos a most attractive depart ment roll Kit on worship the service) of song. His Idea will be re3ive.l witii in terest by all who love to lift thnlr voices Io praise in the Lord's honse. The text is NehemKh vil., 67, "And they bad two hun dred forty and live singing men and sing ing women." The best muslo has been rendered under trouble. The first duet that I know any thing of was given by Pnul and 811ns when they sang praises to Ood and the prisoners heard them. Tlas Scotch Covenanters, bounded by the dog of persecution, rang the pralms of David with more spirit than they have ever since been rendered. The captives la the text had musie lott in them, sod I declare that if they eoald And amid all their trials two hundred and forty and five sinking men and singing women then In this day ot gospel sunlight and free from II persecution tnere ought to be a great moltltade ol man ann women willing" to sing the praises of Ood. All onr ahurches need arousal on this subjnot. Those who ean sin t must throw their souls Into the exercise, and those who cannot sing mast learn how, and It shall be heart to heart, voice to voloe, hymn to hymn, anthem to antnem, and toe mnslo snail swell jabllant with thanksgiving and tremulous with Dnrdon. Have you ever noticed the eonatraotion it the human throat as indicative of what 3od means ns to do with it? In only an rdlnary throat and long there are four teen direct muscles and' thirty Indirect nusoles that ean produce a very great rariety of sounds. What does that mean? It means that vou should singl Do you rappoafl that Ood, who gives ns such a musical Instrument as that. Intends as to keep it shut? 8appo.se some great tyrant thould get possession of the mnsioal in itrnments ot the world and should lock np :he organ of Westminster abbey, and the Organ of Lucerne, and the organ at Haar lem, and the organ at Freiba g, and all the other great musical Instruments ot the world. You would call suoh a man as that a monster, and yet yoo are more wicked It, with the human voloe, a musical instru ment of more wonderful adaptation than all the musical instruments that man ever created, you shut It ngalast "the praise of God. - Let those refuse to si ng Who never knew onr Ood, ' But children ot the heavenly King Should speak their joys abroad. Hosio seems to have been bora In the Soul ot the natural world. The omnipo tent voice with which Ood commanded the world Into being seems to linger yet with Its majesty and sweetness, and vou bear it in the gralnlleld, in the swoop ot the wind amid the mounta n fastnesses, in the canary's warble and the thunder shock, in the brook's tinkle and the ocean's paean. There are soft cadences in nature, and load notes, some ot which we cannot hear at all, and others that are so terrific that we cannot appreciate tliem. ' -The anlmnlcnuB have their music, and the spicala ot hay and the globule ot water are as certainly resonant with the voice of G.lasthe highes' heavens In which the armies of the redeemed celebrate their Victories. When the breath ot the flower strikes the' air and the ioi fly YwnloVleem'Srsn:'mi tT.erii hetwlaw. 4 as when yon stand in the midst of a great orchestra and the sound almost rends your ear because you are too near to catch the blending ot the music. So, my friends, we stand too near the desolating storm and the frightful whirlwind to natch the blend ing ot the music; but when that mnslo rises to where Ood is, and the Invisible being who float above as, tbea I suppose the harmony is as sweet us it Is tremen dous. In the judguiaut day, that day ot tumult and terror there will be no dissonance to those who can appreciate the music. It w.ll be as when some times a great 'organist, in executing some great piece, breaks down the in strument upon which lie is playing thd music. So when the great march of the Judgment day is played under the hand ot earthquake and storm and conflagration the world Itself will break down with the music that Is played on it. The fact is, we are al deaf, or we should understand that the whole universe is but one harmony the stars of the night only the ivory keys ot a great Instrument on which God's fin gers play the mnsio of the spheres. Music seems dependent on the law of acoustics and mathematics, and yet where these laws are understood at all the art Is practiced. There are to-day 500 musical journals in China. Two thousand years be fore Christ the Egyptians practiced the art. Pythagoras learned it Losas of Hurmolne wrote essays 00 it. Plato and Aristotle in troduced It Into their schools. But I have not much Interest in that. My chief inter est Is In the mnslo of the Bible. The Bible, like a great harp with Innu merable strings, swept by the flngsrs of in spiration, trembles with It. 80 far back as the fourth chapter of Genesis yoa una tne first organist and harper Jubal. So far hack as the thirty-first chapter ot Genesis you find the first choir. All np and down the Bible you find sacred music at wed dings, at Inaugurations, at the treading of the wine press. The Hebrews understood now to make musical signs aoove tne mus leal text. When the Jews came from their distant homes to the great festivals at Jerusalem, tbey brought harp and timbrel and trumpet and poureu along tne great Jadaean highways a river ot harmony un til In and around the temple the wealth of a nation's song and gladness had accumu lated. In our day we have a divisioj of labor in music, and we have one man to make the hymn, another man to make the tune, another man to play it on the piano and another mnn to sing it. "ot so in Bible times. Miriam, the si ter of Moses, after the passage of the Bed Sea, composed a doxology, set it to music, clapped it on a eymbal and at the same time sang It. David, the psalmist, was at the same time poet, musical composer, harpist and singer, and the majority of his rhythm goes vi blrating through all the ages. There were in Bible times stringed In strumentsa harp of three strings played by fret and bow; a- harp of ten strings, responding only to the lingers of the per former. Then there was the crooked trum pet, fashioned out of the boru of the ox or the ram. Then there were thesistrain and the cymbals, clapped in the dance or beaten in the mar h. There were 4000 Levltes. the best men of the country, whose only business it was to look after the mnslc of the temple. These 4900 Levites were divided into two Classes ami omci ated on different days. Can you Imagine the harmony when these white robed Le vites, before the symbols of Ood's pres ence, and by the smoking altars, and the candlesticks that' sprang upward and branched out like trees of gold, and under the wings of the cherubim, chanted the One Hundred and Thirty-sixth l'salm of David? Do yon know bow it done. One part of that great ehoir stood np end chanted, "Oh, give thanks unto the LorJ, for He is goodl" Then the other part of the choir, standing In some other part 01 tne temple, woaia come in with the response, "For His mercy endureth forever." Then the llrst part would take up the song again and say. Dnto Him who onlv doctu great ion- ders." The other part of the choir would eome in with overwhelming response, "Foe His mercy endureth forever, . until In the latter part of the song, the music floating backward and forward.-barm.ny grappling with bsrmony, everv trumpet sounung, every -bosom heaving, one port of this great white rolled choir would lift the anthem. "Oh. irive thanks unto the Ood of heaven," and the other part of the Levlte ehoir won Id eome in with the response, "For His mercy endureth forever." Bat I am glad to know that all through the ages there has been great attention tn sacred music Ambrosias, Angga. tlce, Orea-ory the Great, Charlemagne gave It their mighty Influence, and In onr dav the best musical genius Is throwing Itself nn the altars ot God I Handel and Mozart and Baoh and Durante and Wolf nnd cores ot other men and women have given the beat part of their renins to ehn-eh music A trnth In words Is net halt so mlgbtv as a truth In song. Luther's ser mons have been forgotten, but the "Jo la ment Hymn" he composed Is resounding yet through all Christendom. I congratulate tne world ana the eharch on the advancement made In this art the Edinburgh societies for the Impmvnmnnt of muslo, the Swiss singing societitr, the Exeter ball concerts, the triennial ronsloal convocation at Dnsseldorf, Germany, and Birmingham, Englnnd, the conservatories of mnslo at Munich and Lelpsle, the Handel and I'aydn and Harmonic and Mozart societies of this country, the academies of music in New York, Brooklyn, Boston, Charleston, New Orleans, Chicago and every eitv whioh hs anv enterprise. Now, my friends, how are we to decide what Is appropriate, especially for ehurcli i.msi'. r i r.-i.-e mcy ne a great many dlrrer ences ot opinion. In some of the churches they prefer a trained choir; In others, the old style precentor. In some places they prefer the melodeon, the harp, the cornet, the organ. In other places they think these things are the Invention of the devil. Some would have a musical Instrument played so load you ennnot stand It, and others would nave tt piayea so son you cannot hear Ir. Some think a musical instrument bnght to be played only In the interstices oi worsuip ana men wnn inaescrionDie softness, while others are not satisfied un less there be startling contrasts and stac cato passages that make the audience jump, with great eyes and hair on end, as from a vision of the witch ot Endor. But. . while there may be great varieties of opinion in reirard to mnslc, it seems to me that the general spirit of the Word of Ood indicates what ought to be the great characteristics ot ehnrch music. And 'I remark, In the flrs. place, a prominent characteristic oaht to be adaptlveness to devotion. Music that may be appropriate for a eononrt hall, or the opera house, or the drawing room, may be innpproprinte In church. Olees, madrigals, ballads may be as Innocent as psalms In their places. But church music has only one design, and tha. is devotion, and that which comes with the toss, the swing and he display of an -opera house is a hin drance to the worship. From saoh per formances we go away saying- "What splenJld execution! Did yon ever hear sunli a soprano? Which of those solos did you like the better?" When, If we had been rlghtlv wrought upon, we would have gone away saying: "Oh, how my soul was lifted np in the presence ot Ood while they were singing that first hymn! I never i ad such rapturous views ot Jesus' Christ as my Savionr as when they were singing thnt lost doxologr." . I remark also that correctness ought to be a cliarait-ristic ot church music. While we nil oug'it t take part in this service. with perhaps a few exceptions, we ought nt the same-time to cultivate ourselves In this sacred art. Ood loves harmony, and we on ght to love it. There Is no devot Ion in a howl or a yalp. In this day, when there nre so many opportunities of high culture in this art, I declare that those parents nre guilty of neglect who let their sons and daughters - grow np knowing nothing about music. In some of the Eu ropean cathedrals the choir assemble every morning and afternoon of evry day the whole year to perfect themselves in this art, and shall we begrudge the half hour we spend Friday nights In the re hearsal of sacred song for the Sabbath? - Another characteristic must be spirit and life. Muslo ought to rush from the audience like the water from a rock clear, bright, sparkling. If all tLe other part ot the cbnroli service Ik da, do 'not have the music dull. With s, many thrilling thlngr-1--- J .a drawMaa; look off"oaTU 'nadlence with bhr threa-foarths closed and their lips almost Slio , mn-nbliug the praises of Ood. Dar ing one of mv journeys I preached to ax andlence of 3000 or 3000 people, and all tb mmio they made together did not equal one sdtylarkl People do not sleep at a cor onation, do not let us sleep when we come o a Saviour's crowning. Again, I remark church muslo must be congregational This opportunity must be brought down within the range of the whole audience. A song that the wor shipers cannot sing is Mno more use to the-n than a sermon In Choctaw. What an easy kind of chnroh it must be where the tainister does all the prenohlng, and the eldors all the praying, and the oioir all the singing! There are hut very few churches where there are "two hundred scd forty and five singing men and singing vomen." In some churches tt Is almost considered a disturbance if a man let out his voles to full compass, and the people get up on tip toe and look over between the spring bats and wonder what that man is making all that noise about. In Syracuse In a Presby terian church there was one member who came to me when I was the pastor of an other church in that city, and told me ills troub'e how that as he persisted in sing ing on tbejiabbath day a committee, made up of the session and the choir, had come to ask him If he would not just pb ase to keep still! Ton hnve no right to sing. Jonathan Edwards use I to set apart whole days for singing. Let us wake up to thi? duly. I want to rouse you to a unanimity la Christian song that has never yet been ex hibited. Come, now; clear yoar throats and get ready tor this daty or yon will never hear the end of this. I never shall forget hearing a Frenchman sing the "Marseillaise" on the Champs klvsees, Paris, Just before the battle of Sedan In 1S70. I never saw such enthusiasm before or since. As he sang thnt national air, oh, bow the Frenchman sboutedl Have you ever In an English assemblage heard a band play "Ood Save the Queen?" If you have, you kuow something about the enthusiasm of a national air. Now, I tell you that these songs we sing Sabbath y Sabbath are tho 1 aiional airs of the kingdom ot heaven, and if yoa do not learn to sing them here, how do you ever e pert to sing the song of Moses and the Lamb? I should not be surprised at all if some of the best anthems of heaven were made op of some of the best songs of earth. May Ood increase our reverence for Christian psalmody aud keep us from disgracing it by oar Indiffer wee and frivolity. When Cromwell's army went into buttle, he stood at the head 6f It one day and gave out the long meter doxology to the tana ot the "Old Hundredth," aod that great host, company by company, regiment by regi ment, division by division, joined la the doxology: Praise Go, from whom all blessings flow; Praise Him all ereaturos here bnlow; Praise Him abers, ye hnavo.il host; praise Father, S n and Holy Ghost. And while tbey sang they marched, and While they maru'ued they fought, and while tbey fought they got the victory. Oh, mnn and women of Jesus Cirlst, let us gi Into all oar conflicts' singing the praises of Ood and then. Instead of falling back, as orten we do, from defeat to defeat, we will be marching on irom viotory to victory. "Gloria in Exoolsis" is written over many organs. Woul 1 that by our appreclatloa of the goodue s ot God, and the mercy of Christ, and the grandeur of heaven, we could have "Gloria in Excelsis" written over all our soul". "Glory to the Father, and to the Hon, and to the Holy Ohost, as it was lu the beiuniug. is now and ever shall be. world without end. Amenl" A baby, carriage with a fan attach ed is the latest novelty. The wheeling of the carriage operates the fan Just above the child's face. A Fall River (Mass.) lover has se cured a writ from court to compel the parents of his sweetheart to permit the latter to wed him. The Bank of England destroys about 350,000 of Its notes every week to replace them with freshly printed ones. One evening in each week is set apart for the making of this expen sive bonfire. Kansaa is becoming a great min eral state, the value of minerals last year being $27,000,000, of which coal was over $4,000,000 and sine and lead almost as much. Industrial. Edinburgh (Scotland), glaslers now get 17 cents oer hour. Port Townsend. Wash., Is shipping pig iron to Ban Francisco. The German army includes more than 10.000 military musicians. In Italy bread and sugar cost about thrice what they do In England. Wages. of unskilled labor In Califor nia have advanced 25 per cent, in the past 90 days. At St- Thomas. Michigan, Central trackmen now earn 11.20 a day. a vol untary Increase of 10 cents. A Milwaukee firm has contracts for machinery worth about $2,000,000, to be p'.aced In Great Britain. - At Cleveland on first-class boats en gineers get $110. on second-class $95 and on third-class from $65 to $80. In the course of the last decade the manufacture of cotton goods has be come a firmly established industry in Brazil. The warehouse men employed at the St. Paul & Duluth docks in Duluth struck for $2 a day and 25 cents an hour for overtime. Belgium has the ltrgest amount of railroad in comparison with its total area, the amount being 32.2 miles to each square iriile of area. At Fairibault, Minn,, ail laborers are asking an Increase of wages. The Chi cago Great Western is paying $1.75 for day laborers and $3 for teams. ' The herring fishing, on the results of which so many families on the east coast of Scotland depend for a liveli hood, promises to be a disastrous fail ure . this year. All the employers In Kllbernle, Scot land, have now conceded the men's de mands for a minimum wage of $7 a week and the reduction of working hours to 55. The National Consumers' League will Issue a label to be granted for use to all employers who recognize the 10-hour role In their shops and do not employ -children below the age of 16 years. The sawmills of Portland last year cut 130.000.000 feet of lumber, at $3 per 1000. worth $104,000,000. The cut of the State brings the total value of Ore gon's lumber production to $1,398,585.43. Large numbers of laborers are daily quitting work on the cut-offs west of Laramie. Wyo.. and many teams' are idle. In order to hold the men the company has Increased their wages 15 cents a day and the wages of teams $5 a month. At Ottawa, although higher wages are being offered to , shantymen than for years past, there is a searcHv of men. Men are h s year be ng pnld f.om tlS to $24 per month in the woods. whereas last year the average would scarcely reach $13. Every manufactory of wood mater la's In Western Ontario Is running with a full force of men, both night and day, to keep up with their orders, and many orders have been cancelled only to be replaced again in a few days, so great is the demand in that line. In Russia a sentence not exceeding one month's arrest or payment up to 100 roubles will be Imposed on those who sell, prepare or store flax for commer cial purposes which may contain for eign matters, and a fine not exceeding 100 roubles will be Imposed on such as contravene the other rules and regu lations. 1 Farm Notes. jo. p . n an n in sprtLsVi wOrT rt- section oata are will-perhaps be found that certain va rieties may be used here for fall sowing as well as elsewhere. Farmers should lest a small plot, and if successful a great advantage will be gained by sow ing in the fall. The hay crop of this country Is more important to farmers than wheat, as hay may be baled and sent to market or be used on the farm: but one reuson why hay should not be sold Is because it contains more of the mineral ele ments than does grain.' More profit is tnnile from hay than from any other staple crop, as It is. the main reliance for winter feeding, and the manure from hay contains plant food that is more evenly balanced than that from any other source. To derive the most benefit from hay, however. Is to feed it in connection with less valuable bulky food, using bran or linseed meal to make the ration better and more acceptable, and especially should this course be Dursued when there has been 1 short hay crop. This Is the best time to procure pure bred rams. Get rid of all the inferior sheep and grade up the llock. The dif ference In weight of Iambs next spring wtll more than pay the cost of the lm orovement ' The habit of seeding down the or chard to some kind of sod grass is one that is not conducive to the thrift of :he trees. Clover Is suitable, as it does ot remain on the land after the sec nd year, and when plowed under Is beneficial. No orchard land should ie forced to produce a crop of grain 1 an abundant yield of fruit is expect ed. The best time to plow an orchard Is n the fall, as a heavy application ui itable manure can be applied on tne land and left as a mulch to remain luring the winter. The frosts will dls- ntegrate the manure and the soluble natter will be carried down to tne -oots by the time spring opens. If pre- erred. -the manure may De narrowea n and rye sowed which may be turned jnder In the spring and the land then imed as a partial protection against lisease and insects, and also to neu- rallze the effects of an excess of acid generated by the decomposition of the reen material. About four times as much material jan be secured by cutting hay on the meadows as by pasturing stock on the and. yet experiments demonstrate that more profit Is derived by pas turing the meadow plot than by using it from which to secure a cron of hay iwlng to the great saving of labor in the care required when cattle are given the use of the pasture, while the great er digestibility and dietary effects of the green food secured on the pasture ire such as to promote thrift of the inimals and increase the flow of milk. as well as add to the weight of the young stock. -The value of human life Is not very high in Connecticut. A jury in i-"" state awarded ten dollars 10 tives of a man who had been killed on a railroad. A self-acting electric switch for trolley roads, which is operated by the motorman simply touching a small lever on his car, has been invented by a rhiladelphian. A Waldoboro (Me.) bachelor, while watching beside the couch of his sick father this winter, has made three as fine quilts as were ever produced at an old-fashioned quilting bee. . An Indian elephant can carry from 800 to 1000 pounds, march eight to ten hours a day, and do with five or six hours' sleep. He needs GOO pounds of green feed dally, besides grain. The Queen of Madagascar has her best dresses made in Paris, and some of them cost several hundred dollars each; yet she always goes barefooted. Fashionable society In Paris has discarded envelopes, and now folds its letters in the old stvle, sealing them ' with wax or wafers. It -