' - ;'v , -. ,--. ...-.- .- -v v-v-f' ,-:V.;-:- ' , rgrr-r - " " ' ' " y , Ty - - - ILUJL- iimriTr-irirvJ.;!w-'r'' 1 'I T -l"'-'";";rw - 1- I ' .1 l I ' - I .its i Edit1 B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. VOL. L.IV MIFFL.INTOWX, JUNIATA COUNTY, TEXX., WEDNESDAY, JANUAKY 3, 1900. CHAPTER III. (Continued.) j muling upon a mound Dear ber, ah j s her hands to her pretty mouth, J : with a simple eloquence that cannot inn highly commended, criea "Hi!" to ' in. ut the top of her fresh young voice. Whether the breeze has played traitor. whether the bending figure is of so whether the bending figure la of so s material as to be deaf to thia bril- 5 in appeal, wno can say. At an events, stirs or lifts himself from his whatever it may be. Nothinf unted. ; risolda returns to the attack. IL!" cries she again, with a sharper, i-r intonation. And still nothing comes it. Tli.' bending figure refuses to -ra:hteu his back, and things remain ai 1. It is really too bad. Getting : un from her mound she clambers up on ' higher bank, and once more sends out her voice upon the world: "Hi. my good man!" This does it. A if . ..miH-ileil to acknowledge this tribute ! his virtues, "my good man" uprears himseif. looks vacantly round him at ev- ry pniut but the right one first, and at : ist M'i'j ("riselda. The effect produced ii v mily instantaneous but marvelous. I . a goes bis rod, his cast, his choicest I I y au admirable orange grouse and h Miiic steaming toward her at abott twerty knots an hour. w II eyes, ever since they first lighted i:pi"U Griselda, have seemed to grow ts h. t, and now, as he draws nearer, ah '.o sei"S and recognizes him. The knowl ..!. thus gained so surprises her that ':ie very nearly falls off her high bank, ii. I then grows very charmingly rosy, ii nd as charmingly confused. It i nou other than the young man who had helped to restore the carriage to its legitimate .option. CHAPTER IV. "It is really you?" criea h, with unaf f-.-ted delight, coloring warmly. "It is you, too," replies she, reflectively, and as though it is a little unfair tc ;ir..w all the personalities at her. 'So it is," says he, smiling gayly. "You wanted me? I hope you had not to call ,.f!en?" "Very often," smiling, too, and jumping louo off her pedestal. I tnougnt I should never make you hear. Do you l.unw the road to Greycourt? I don't." 'I do. It Is a tedious way, and com plicated. Hut if you will permit me to gl with you and show it to you. Miss JJy- l!t?-' "Oh, no. No, indeed. It ia giving yot quite too much trouble, and how do yot U. ,my name?" asks she, with a shy clau, at him from under her long lashes 1 askeJ somebody ; in Af w. re Mr. JJysart s niece, xou aon t mine i (0 you?" ' No. I. too. heard of you," she says, ; ,...t ih-n I d;dn't take for granted every thinir that was told me." "What did you hear of me?" "That you were a young man 'dowx from I.unnon town, an' as full o' tricks as eir;: s run o mate. repu.es nr, ue- mtirely, evidently quoting somebody, and : with a glance so "full o' tricks" on het ; .iu u aoeount that he laughs in spite oi himself. Will," says he, "I'm not from 'Lnn ii. .ii town,' certainly, and I hope I'm not a greater wretch than my fellows. As tc my 4i ricks.' I don't believe I've one." "If not from London, from where?" Kaiher close to you. My sister live ju-t ..ver the border of this county, I in.i: .. of twenty miles or so; and I spend in st nf my time with her." "1: as ii very good thing for my sistei n:i that you came fishing," says Gri ...;,!!; -Vr I suppose we should both bt i, ,v either ad or dying." Here shf ks mumi .' -r. "Have we very much . ::!!. r to go?" I....U a milp." "I wis', it was less," nervously. "I an :'r . 1 Vera will be frightened at my long : :i,e. ami and that my uncle will bf : V." I'-rluips he won't hear of it," says Mr .-:). h.'pefolly. Griselda shakes hei ' ', I. !1 looks just like a person who wouh? : everything," she says. I've heard a good deal about him ofi ; on. People will talk, you know, and ' eccentric, isn't he?" if you mean weak in mind you wer . r further out in your life," says Gri ! ,. i lrtifully. "He is all mind, it , ; -inioii. There isn't a weak spot in l'.y the by, have you ever been t , . . ...irtV , I've often thought I should liki . on some Wednesday or other." S in - Wednesday! What Wednesday" t n h Wednesday? Griselda is dis - puzzled, but hardly likes to ask I - .-.i on the subject. a quaint old house," she says : -lit be lovely, I think, if the trees it away and some sunlight let inti i: a little furniture. It's empty ,.-! empty." . you forget the galleries?" say; Is :i indeed possible that you do .v that those pictures of your nu . nr.- absolutely priceless? Pur ! Knellers. Gainsboroughs ui -. Why, those galleries at Grey . I've of-en heard my father say, ar he finest iu England. Your uncli - nough to open them to the pub tirst Wednesday in the monti cry trilling charge of half I VV. !" cries Griselda, flushing so hoi - that the tears grow within hi I . . Hh. you can't mean that." '"AY... why not?'' Rays the young man. .' !:. . preparing with a stout courage .-tend a vile cause. "It is to improve t:.ves of the multitude that he does t curse. And if he chooses to repay . for the wear and tear of his car- . w ho shall say he has not common - -e ..ii his side?" :h. moment the chimneys of Grey sh .ne through, the interstices of the ! her lert, and, with the kuowl that she had gained her h ne, - '... loo. the sound of running water. ho -t-.-ht that all thiougTi her re ihroii.h the leafy woods that .i .1 rushed us a chorus to hoi 1 : now- I know!" cries she, stopping ;'. and looking full "at her com- ii. who grows somewhat guilty in ;" tnce. "That noise of running wat- h is the river that flows beneath rt. If I had only followed it I 1 not have gjreu joo all this, trouble." -It-is no-,ronb.e, says he, plainly, She holds out. to him her hand. "Uojd- by. he says, gently. "Oh. not good-by. I hope," returns he, anxiously, taking the slim little hand and as he dares, per h?iw more closely Ihnn he is quite aware. shal vee you again':" -Oh no n indeod ' softly. "You must not think that. Uncle Gregory does not permit us to know our neighbors lie lifts his hat and Griselda. giving him a rather solemn little salute, turns away from him. A second later, however, she finds him again beside her. 'It - here is all the appearance of coin- it; iiiin in the sky," be says, gravely. "ioti't you think so? I fear we shall have a perfect atorm before long. I thought I'd tell you, go that you might pet as much .good out of these woods ns possible before the deluge. This week, now, might be fine, but I should no! an swer for the next; and, indeed, tf you will permit me to advise you, I should recom mead you to take a walk to-morrow. Who shall say that rain might not fall the day after?" Who, indeed? It seems the soundest reasoning. So Griselda, having shown herself impressed by it, inclines her head to him once more, and, a turn in the path hiding him at last from view, takes to her heeia, and hard ly draws breath until, having found the small iron gate that admits to the gar den at Hs lowest end. she enters by it and feels herself at last at home. On the haD doorsteps, as if lying in wait for her, stands Mrs. Grunch, the housekeeper, "Dear me, miss, and so you have re turned," says she. ' "Dear! but master will be main glad to hear of it. He was that upset by your absence that we daren't so much asiipproach him." Gri- selda's blood grows cold. "But now he'll be sure to tell you himself how glad he ia to see you back safe and sound CHAPTER V. Mrs. Grunch, as Griselda left her, turn ed aside, and with darkened brow made for the library, Mr. Dysart s usual abid tag place. Not finding him here, she hurries onward dpwn the hall, until she comes to a heavy curtain, once handsome, now moth-eaten and dingy, and pushing it aside, reveals a long flagged passage, with a high, narrow door at the extreme end. Stooping aa she comes to it, she peer; through the keyhole, and finding it emp ty, tries, with a cautious, quiet grasp, the handle of the door to find the latter 'o-ked. Sjill verr cautiously she rf;M,' hand im un tnn.-s.ei, urawsfwoT a Key. weu on, ana lusenuig wi m uw aeynoie, softly opens the door. A grim smile orc.ipreada her face as she looks toward the further end of the room. There, on his knees beside a cab inet, kneels Mr. Dysart. It is open, and Mr. Dysart, in his worn and shabby old cuat, is kneeling before the secret open- uu:. gloating openly upon its contents Pils upon piles of yellow sovereigns are so built one on the top of the other that they reach from one narrow resting place to the other above, and so on. Dull, heavy gold that scarcely glitters, save in the ?yes of the wretched miser bending over Ihem. Yet it is not so much on the money as on a paper be holds in his hand that his attention is concentrated. He is so bent on the perusal of it that he hears neither the turn of the key in the lock nor the woman's entrance. And now, as a mali cious chuckle breaks from her, it so star tles him that he springs to his feet as if shot, and a sharp, horrid cry, that Is almost a shriek, escapes him. His face has grown deadly whits, great drops of sweat stand out upon his brow. "Comforting yourself with a look at it," says she, with a malignant leer. As she speaks she points not at the gold, but at the paper he has tightly clutched in his hand. "How did you come here, woman?" de mands he, Ln a shrill tone. He is trem bliug, and with nervous fingers presses the paper into the secret recess in the cab inet. and shuts to the oaken woodwork. "Why, through the door," retorts she. sullenly. "How else? Y'ou should remem ber to lock it when engaged on work like this." "I could have sworn 1 locked it," says be, still shaking. "See! here is the key in my pocket. I tell you," with increas ing agitation, "I did lock It. Are you a fiend that you can follow me through bolted doors?" "Hush! Don't give way to foolish fan cies. And after all, why need my com ing fluster you? Surely," with a mock ing air, "your occupation was an inno cent oae; you were but refreshing your self with a glimpse of " "Be silent, woman! Are you mad?" cries he, lifting his arms like one in mor tal fear. "You're but a poor sort after all," she says, contemptuously. "Too poor for faith or trust of any sort. What! can yon not even believe in me, who has served you and yours long and faithful for forty years? Is it likely I'd betray you now for his children?" "Ay, he served you falsely once," says Gregory Dysart, a savor of pleasure in his tone. "He took my best my life, my soul the heart of everything." saya she. slow lv beating one withered hand upon the other. "Though years have rolled by I have not forgotten; I shall not forget at .,11 When first I saw them I felt as though, if power were given me. I could have blasted as they stood those insolent hnasiea UDStaira." Something out of the goodly past, some rugae touch of decency belonging to the davs hen he was young and happy, and , .. i .. .. utill a w ueu uoo.o - ttt, !) his might, renders tnis ...,i,h..t s aimlied to the pretty or- ' ......itted to his care, insupport- 'Yo.i hardly remember, perhsps. that you are speaking of my nieces. i u-n he says wun au buk'J . jt. H..itv toity! None of your airs with me." savs she, sternly. She advances ' " i.. Remember. Dysart, step nearer 10 mm. 7 . :.,.,.. mb or mar you. I. tnai i ran ui -- ""I would" I were sure of that," say. he. moodfly. "But- Have you forgotten. Souieyr " . M ., , what -pish! He 's i-.t a - a one you are to worrit! Twenty ye ad more, and no siga of him. and 1 s sh! lie a aeao, you was ne tne one to remain quiet, ii i saw a way to forcing a sovereign oat oi you?" lrue, true, says Dysart, eagerly catching at this suggestion. "And yet I would give much to know that he was in the grave." Ay, and I in mine! I know you." says she, with an evil look. "You fear me." t fear nothing," says he, coldly. "What," says she, slowly, regarding him closely; "not even that your soa should know?" She pauses, pleased with her work. All at once, as it were, on hearing this ques tion, the old man quails before her like a beaten hound. The life goes out of him, he seems to shrink into himself, and puts out his hands aa though to ward off some fatal blow. "Not that Anything but that." he mutters, feebly. "Well, don't drive me to it," says she, sulkily. "Remember, it was for him I did it," cries he, sharply. "After all my love, my care, my secrecy, to have it now laid bare to him! I tell you his fingers working convulsively "rather than, that he should know. It seems to me that it would be a sweet and simple thing to murder him who would betray me." "I'm not going to betray you," says she. "And aa for saying 'twas for him you did it, why " "For him. For his sake only." "Partly, I think." says ahe, dryly. "Entirely; altogether. What other crea ture bad I to love me to love? His mother, as you know, hated me; and when she died I was glad," says be, crushing his fingers together. "Yet the deed was scsrcely necessary if done for him," says Grunch, holding her ground. "That old aunt of his tie mother's sister put want out of the ques tion for him. "I knew nothing of her desire to make him her heir then." You know it now, anyway," says she, with a nasty sneer. "And it is never too late to mend to find by accident that paper you have just locked up." "I have thought of it," says he, with lowered brow and eyes bent upon the ground, "dreamed of it; and all my dreaming has but convinced me that things had better stay as they now are. Into what better hands could they have fallen? Who would have husbanded it all like me? You know the rare, the trouble, the sleepless days and nights I have devoted to the management of of it. Y'ou know whether it has ever been a joy to me rather a grief, a wearying of the flesh, a curse!" The word comes from between his lips with a little hissing sound. "But it is all for him. for him," he says, in a dying tone. With restless, feeble steps he begins to pace the room. "He believes in me. He trusts me; be alone now! But if ever he were to learn the truth he would spurn me from him. 1 swear to you" he turns and fixes his burning eyes on hers "I'd strangle you with these hands," holding them out be fore her, trembling with passion, yet strong and lithe, "before the words could pass your lips." "I'm not going to play traitor. I'v told you that." says she, frowning. "I'vn had a chance before this if I wished to do It: and I'm not going to help his children. whatever happens." Her brow, grows' black and bereyea UEten4,Ma;Tcii'e ' '011'1 - Aim IrlMiPorqi the" gates of death!1 "Amen," says Dysart, carelessly. Then, in a different tone: "Seaton is coming home to-morrow." "Y'ou have a design," says she, fixing her sharp eyes on him with a searching regard. "True; and I think well of mentioning it to you," says Dysart, slowly. "After long and careful thought I have decided on abandoning more ambitious schemes and wedding him to my elder niece. Vera." (To be continued.) Household. RECIPES. Rice Cream. Put in a stewpan four ounces of ground rice, two ounces of sugar, a few drops of the essence of al monds, with two ounces of fresh butter; add a auart of milk. Boil for twenty minutes, till it forms a smooth sub stance, though not too thick; then pour in a mould previously oiled or washed out with cold water; serve when cold. It will turn out like jelly. A very nice dish is made by putting a layer of any preserve in a glass dish and pouring some of this hot cream over. When cole! the top may be ornamented with almonds blanched and split. Sauash Pie One teacupful of steamed squash rubbed smooth, four tablespoon- fuls of sugar, one egg. one-nan im spoonful of allspice, pinch of salt. Add sufficient rich milk to fill crust, as for custard pie. Cream Pie Stir to a cream one table ipoon of butter and one-half cup of sugar, add two beaten eggs, one table spoon of flour, one cup of milk, bake with an under crust only and grate nutmeg over the top. Sauce for Pudding One cup of sugni, two tablespoons of butter, two cups of water, one tablespoonful of flour (stir in sugar). Cook till smooth and thick ened. Flavor with wine glass of brandy or any flavoring desired. Roast Duck. Singe, draw and truss fowl; if an old one, parboil it: best stuffing for goose is sage and onions If a strong flavor of onion is liked, rlmp them raw; if not, they should be boiled, then cut in small Dieces and a little grated nutmeg added before add ing them to a light cracker stuffing, ar.d seasoned with sage, salt and pep per. Fill the bird with this, sew up with coarse thread. Baste frequently while cooking with butter and dredge with flour. Serve with a little brown gravy poured round, not over it, and serve a little gravy from a tureen. Apple Tarts. A variety of apple tan that is sure to be liked is made by fill ing a deep baking dish with apples that have been pared and cored, adding a teaspoonf ul of lemon juice, a cup of su gar, a tiny bit of grated lemon peel and enough water to cover. Stew gently till the apples are tender, then fill the core spaces with peach marma lade, and put spoonfuls of the same sweetmeat between the apples. Lay a thin light crust over the top and b?ke. Serve warm, not hot, with whip ped cream. Luncheon Dish. An excellent lunch son dish 's made by chopping and then mashing to a pulp some cold chicken, seasoning well, and mixing with a cup of cream the yolks of two eggs and sufficient dissolved gelatine to set it firmly. Then press into a mould and put into the refrigerator till needed. Turn out on a platter and send whole to the table to be served in slices. Cole" veal or even lamb may be used In the same way. but either will need more seasoning than the chicken. t . ,. .hi nf veraee size about $4000 to pass through the ninety-two miles of the Suez Canal. REAL DAVID HARUM. HE WAS "DAVE" HANNUM OF HOMER, N. Y. Orlarlnal of 'Weatcott'a Hero Was 1 tanker and Ilorae Trader Like Hi Prototype, and Died as Poor aa When He Bes;an Business, Edward Noyes Westcott has done for Homer, a little Tillage or Central New York, what others have done for ew England, Kentucky and the South. Within the narrow confines of its rural surroundings be found one of the most characteristic types, from childhood to old age, in American Action. Mr. Weav cott embellished this type with a blas ter hand, but when Homer first read "David Harum" It recognized under neath the literary paint with' which the ! original of the hero bal been retouched the rugged, wide-awake, nomeiy coun tenance of David Hannom, who had been a character in a town of quaint, long-headed, dryly humorous charac ters up to a few years ago. It was Homer's first literary sensation, and it was no nine days' wonder In the little town. The good people are wondering even yet that one of their number should get Into print. "I don't see why this here Westcott picked ont Dave H annum to put In a book," said one old resident to me the other day. "This town had a heap sight bigger men than ever Dave Han num wus. We sent men to Congress, and there's lots of fellers who has gone West and made their fortins. and wuz a darn sight more distinguished than Dave. Now, If I wuz writln' a book I'd have picked out some fellers as those. Dave wuz an ordinary kind of amusln cuss, bnt he never done anythln much, and he died poorer 'an a church mouse." Nevertheless, Homer Is full of stories of "Dave" Hannum, banker and horse dealer, droll, shrewd, sharp, yet ten dera character they love to talk about. He always had a supply of "hosa-swapping" stories, and would rather trade horses and make $200 than make $2,000 In a business operation. He began without a cent in the world, made a fortune and died with no more morfly than he began w 1th. Next to being a horse trader. "Dave" perhaps would rather have been " a showman. He had all the instincts of Bantam. In 1853 New York gave a grand exhibition at the famous Crystal Palace tn Bryant Park. "Dave" found a horse whose mane was so thick that it gave him somewhat the appearance of a buffalo. Hannum bought the ani ma. at once and took him to New York, trim ned its mane so as to heighten the illusion, and exhibited hlm-as the "buf falo horse." New "Yorkers flocked to see the curiosity and added many dol lars to "Dave's" stock.. Then came the famous Cardiff giant When "Stub" 'n.n An nn thn Rfrfttice Image mn . y v JL --isinT- V- the thousands to si what they consid ered to be the remains of some prehls- tortc man. David Hannum was among the first. TIe saw the money-making ' possibilities ln the thing, and set out at once to secure an interest. He succeed ed, as he usually did, and for a time reaped a harvest Then be sold his share to Dr. Westcott, the father of Edward, but took it back after Dr. Westcott s death, and was probably the sole owner of the famous humbug at 1 the time of his death. Among his pos sessions when he died was found the ! key to the vault ln which the giant lay. The writer called to see David Han ' num's sister, Mrs. Gibson, while at ' Homer. "No," she said, "I have never ' read Westcott's book and never will, so there, now. He put words and spell ing into David's mouth such as anyone In Homer will tell you he never used." He was certainly a notable charac ! ter. His charity was of the slyest and most wholesale kind. No one will ever know how mucb he gave to the poor, because It Is probable that he didn't ' know himself. He saw to it at Christ ' mas and Thanksgiving that no poor I family went without their turkey, even j though he was compelled to borrow I the money to pay for It. His was a wonderfully large heart, and there was ! nothing mean or petty about bis moral or mental make-up. "People live and die here in Homer every day," exclaimed a citizen, "but 1 there never was but one 'Dave' Han num. and he was the llvln.' breathin' , 'David Harum.' " nome Magazine. HOW R-ISINS ARE SEEDED. Novel Contrivance Which Enhanced California's Kaisin Culture. Unlike the eastern imitation, the Call oruia seeded raisin, says the Vineyard ist. Is subjected to a dry temperature of 140 degree Fahrenheit from three to five hours, immediately after which the fruit Is submitted to a chilling process, and while in this reduced condition of temperature is passed through cleaning or "brushing" machines, which remove every particle of dust and the capstems. It is then taken automatically by elevators to a room wdiere, spread upon wire trays. It is exposed to a tempera ture of 130 degrees Fahrenheit, which brings the fruit back to Its normal condition, and in this "processing" the. berry is converted into pectin, that delicious Jelly which gives to fruits their best flavor. The raisins having been prepared through this alternate heating and cliil ling to keep indefinitely and resist climatic influence are passed through seeding machines, each of which has a capacity of from ten to twelve tons daily. The raisins are pressed between rubber or similar surfaced rollers. which at first flatten the berry and press the seeds to the surfacerwben an Impaling roller catches the seeds be tween its needles, or teeth, affixed to its periphery, deftly removing them from the fruit, while the latter passes on, minus Its seeds, but possessing every particle of its flesh. The seeds are re moved from the roller by a "flicking" or whisking device, and are sent along to the seed receptacle, finally ending their tourney ln the engine-room, where they ire burned as fuel. Four hundred and fifty car loads of ten tons each, or 9,000.000 pounds of ' seoea raisins, were suippcu Fresno sUstrict last year, and a rery much larger tonnage will be turned oot this year. , Some estimate can be formed of the possibilities of the Fresno see led raisin plants when It is stated that their ng gretate capacity for this season wlil approximate from 1,700 to 2.000 car loads, while It is probable that t.4O0 cars will be the output. Each seeding plant has from five to twelve machine of ten tons dally capacity per niacbiae. Some of the packing-houses cover a ground space 150 by 225 feet and are three stories high. World's Big Boat. The English marine publication, thi Syren, says: "We British pride our selves that the aggregate tonnage ol British ships approximates to the total merchant tonnage owned by the r maining maritime countries of tht world, but there Is another phase of tht matter where a comparison with othei nations places us ln a position othei than first. It appears we have only eleven vessels of over 10.000 gross tons headed by the Oceanic, with her 17. 000 tons. But Germany has twenty three vessels in that category. Tin United States is the only other nntict with vessels above 10,000 tons, and slu has four. The biggest ship owned bj France Is 8,893 tons, while Norway! greatest ship is of 3,277 tons gross. Ir speed Great Britain is right ahead ot her competitors, having thirty-one ves sels with a speed of twenty knots o; more; Belgium has six, the Unltec States four, Germany and Hollanc three each, France two and Russia one Thus in speed the British flag excels tha world, while the disparity hetweer Germany and this country, so far nt size Is concerned, will soon be lessened as several big vessels are Bearing con pletion In British yards." From 1893 to the present year the number of steam boilers In the Trans vaal has Increased from 1.071 to li.HSU, three of the gold fields alone employ ing no fewer than 280 dynamos. su( plytng 1.400 motors and 33,000 lamps. The Kashmir railway isto be con structed over 180 miles In the most mountainous part of India. It will be operated by electricity, water powet being used. This permits of a much lighter motor for drawing the same load and also permits of grades which a steam engine could not climb wlthou. recourse to the rack system. Recent studies of the Kaders, a race of short, dark-skinned, curly haired natives living in the Anamalal hills ol southern India, show that they pos sess a remarkable custom not else where known in India, viz., the sharp- I eiflne 'b. inMjnr tijeth. This thejr f accbm'ptisu uy chrpping" i"? ceiu point, giving them the form of cones. The deep sea is in total darkness, and plant life, according to Sir John Mur ray, is quite absent over 93 per cent of j the ocean bottom. Fishes and Inver tebrates, however, are scattered over the floor of the ocean at all depths. The majority of these deep sea animals live by eating the mud, clay or ooze, or by catching the particles of organic matter falling from the surface. It is probable that three-fourths of the de posits now covering the floor of the ocean have passed through the alimen tary canals of marine animals. A surprising history Is presented In Bulletin No. 57 of the Department ef Agriculture, of one of America's great est contributions to the food supply of the world, Indian corn. Under the ef fects of cultivation, the recognized va rieties have increased from the few known by the early explorers to more than five hundred. The variations in size are interesting, especially as re gards the height of the stalk. This runs from a foot and a half for some kinds of popcorn to twenty-two feet fot a Tennessee variety, and thirty feet or more for varieties grown ln the WeM Indies. Trof. Mansfield Merriman, studying loc'cnited States census reports sine 1850. has discovered a marked and steady increase in the length of human life in our country during the lust hull century. His statistics, which were presented at the recent meeting of tin American Association for the Advance ment of Science, show that in 1S50 the median age of the entire population was 18.3 years, while in 18!H) it had risen to 21.4 years. In 1000, he antici pates. It will be 22.4 years. By "me dian age" Is meant that which divide; the population equally, one-half being above and the other half below the me dian. The records of the hydrographlc bu reau at Washington show that the ter ribls hurrieane which wrought whole sale destruction ln Porto Rico in Au gust last was longer lived than any storm hitherto reported to the bureau. It lasted from Aug. 3 until Aug. 21. within which time It traveled between 4,000 and 5,000 miles. It also began Its career farther east than any tropica storm yet on record. It was tirst no ticed on Aug. 3, about half way be tween the coasts of Africa and South America, a little below north latitudt 12 degrees. On the 8th its center rav aged Porto Rico, then It turned U. the coast of the United States, and was last noticed, fast dying out. aiiout XO miles directly east of New York. Americanism Abroad. In the poet's cornor of Westminster Abbey a bust of Lowell has found its place, and American enthusiasm rises ! high at the sight and feels that it must ! leave a record. Calling cards of all sorts and conditions are Consequent"' posted about the bust of the American poet. New York Evening Sun. "Visitor I wonder that you allow yout servant girl to kindle the fire with kero sene. Aren't you afraid she'll be burned to death some day? Mr. Howson Lott There's no danger; she's too green to burn. Harper's Bazar. it !s possible to make a great reputa tion with a very little sense; a man with a Bttle sense la really quite aenlua. SERMON BY Rev. Dr. Can Babject: Pillar ut Smoke Trial orT!h Kxitrmseil With a rtiblical Symbol The Sum-ring of the chorea of - Co3Uia?- Lord,- let us band together in one Powerfully Set Forth.. .. ' j Copyright, Loots Klonsch. 18M.1 Washington. D. C The trials through which tbe trot h has straggled are by Dr. Talmage here set forth under a Bible sym bol of great suggestiveness and power; text, Solomon's Bong, Hi.. 6, "WHO is this thnt cometti out ot the wilderness like pillars or smoke?" The architecture ot the smoke Is won drous, whether God with His finger curves it into a cloud, or rounds it into a dome, or points it ln a spire; or spreads it in a wing, or, as in the text, hoists it In a pillar. Watch it -winding up from the country farmhouse ia the early morning, showiug that the pas toral industries have begun, or see it ascend I nir from the chimneys of to. city, telling of the homes fed, tne fae-j tnrles tnrninir out va! vaiuame launus, lut oriutine presses preparing hook and newspaper nud all the 10,000 wheels ot work in motion. On a clear day tliii vapor spoken of mounts with such buoy ancy, and spreads such a delicate veil across the sky, and truces such graceful lines of circle and semicircle, and waves and tosses ami sinks andsoars aud scatters with sutli affluence of shape and color and suggestiveness that, if you have never no ticed it, you are like a man who has all his life lived in Paris and yet never seen tbe Luxembourg, or all bis life in Home and never seen the Vatican, or all ins iue at Lockport and never seen Nlagnra. Forty four times tbe Bible speaks of the smoke, and It Is about time that somebody preached a sermon reco ;nlzlng this strange, weird, beautiful, elastic, charm ing, terrific and fascinating vapor. Across tbe Bible sky floats tbe smote of Sinai, the smoke of So.lo:n, tbe smoke of Ai, the smoke of the pit, the smoke of the volcanic hills when God touches them, and Id my text the glorious church of God coming up out of the wilderness like pillars or smoke In the first place, these pillar ot smoke In my text indicate tbe suffering tbe church of God has endured. What do 1 mean by the church? I mean not a build ing, not a sect, but those wh In all age and all lands aud of all beliefs love GoJ and are trying to do right. For many cen turies the heavens buve been black with tbe smoke of martvrdom. If set side by side, you could girdle the earth with the fires of persecution RiwIa'fH Tavlor burned nt Hadlelgh. Latimer burned nt Oxford, John Rogers burned at Smlthfleld, John Hooper burned at Gloucester, John Huss borned at Constance, Lawrence Kaunders burned at Coventry, Joan of Aro burned nt Itoueo. Trolestants have represented Catholic as having a monopoly of persecutors, but both Protestant and Catholic have prac ticed infamous cruelties. The Catholics durlDg the reign ot Hunnerio were by Pro testants put to tbe worst tortures, stripped of their clothing, hoisted iu the air -by pulleys with weights suspended from their feet, then let down, and ears and eyes, nose and tongue were amputated, and re 1 hot plates ot iron were put against tbe teu derest part of their bodies. George Bancroft, tbe historian, says ol the State ot Maryland: "In the land which Catholics had opened to Protestants m-iss might not be said publicly, no Cathcli-j nriest or bist?o Tf'.'-'it utter his faith iu a voice ot persuasion, no Catholic micbt teanh the voune. If a way a ianist would become aa apostate, tbe law wrested for him from his parents share of tl" -rt " -"- the methods ad rn ""Catholicism, as wel( a5 ' rrotUantisin" has had its martyrs. It does seem as it when any one sect got complete domiuuncy In any land the devil of persecution and cruelty took possession of tint sect. Then see tbe Catholics after the Hiiguen Jts. See tbe gentiles after tbe Jews In Touniine, where a great pit was dug and lire lighted at tbe bottom of tbe pit. aud 160 Jewish vic tims wereconsumed. Seethe Preshyteriun parliament of England, more tyrauulcal in their treatment of opponents than had been the criminal courts. Persecution against the Baptists by Pa-do-Ifaptists. per secution of the Established Church against the Methodist Church, persecution against the Quakers, persecution against tne Pres byterians. Under Emperor Diocletian 144,000 Christians were massacred, and 700,000 more of them died from bnuishineut and exposure. Witness the sufferings of the Waldenses, of the Albigenses, of the Xestorians. Wit ness St. Bartholomew's massacre. Witness the Duke of Alva driving out of life 18.0J0 Christians. Witness Herod nni Nero and Docins and nildebrand and Torqueinadu and Earl of Mont fort and Lord Claver bouse, who, when told that he must give account for his cruelties, said, "I have no need to neeount to man, and as for God 1 will tuko Him ln my own bauds." A red line runs through tho churcli history of 1900 years, a line of blood. Xot bv the hundreds of thousands, but by the millions, must we count those slain for Christ's sake. No wonder John Milton put tbe groans ol the martyrs to an immortal tune, writing: Avenge, O Lord, Thy slaughtered snints whose bones Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold. The smoke of martyrs homes and martyrs' bodies if rolling up all at once would have eclipsed the noonday sun and turned the brightest day the world ever saw Into a midnight. "Wbo is this tbat Cometh up out of the wilderness like pil lars of smoke?" Has persecution ceased? Askthat young man who Is trying to be a Christian In a store or factory, whore from morning to night be is the butt of nil the mean wit ticisms of unbelieving employes. Ask that wife whose husband mnkes her fondness for the house of God and even he kneel ing prayer by the bedside a derision and Is no more lit for her holy companiouship than a filthy crow would be lit companion for a robin or a golden oriole. Compro mise with the world and surrender to its conventionalities and it may let you alone, but all who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution. lie a theatre going, card playing, winedrinking, round dancing Christian aud you may escape criticism and social pressure. But bo au up an. I down, out and out follower of Christ, and worldling will wink to worldling as he speaks your name, and you will be put iu many a doggerel and snuleie l by those not worthy to blacken your oldest shoes. When tbe bridge at Ashtabula broke an I let down the most of the carload of pas sengers to Instant de.itb, Mr. 1". I, liiis was seated on one side of the uisle of the car writing down a Christiau song whic'i he was composing, and on the other side a group of men were playing cards. Whose landing place in eternity would you prefer that of 1. I". Bliss, tbe gospel sing er, or of tho card players? A great complaint comes from the thei cres about the ladies' high bats because tbey obstruct tbe view of the stage, nud a lady reporter asked me what I thought about It, and I told berthat if the indecent pictures of actresses In the show win lows were accurate pictures of what goes on in many of the theatres night by night, then It would be well If the Indies' hats were a mile high, sons to completely obstruct the vision. If professed Christians go to sue!i places during the week, no one will ever persecute tbem for their religion, for they have none, and they are thejv.eof hell. But let them live a consecrated and Cori--tlan life and they will soou ruu aguiut sneering opposition. For a compromise Christian charncter an easy time now, but for consecrated be havior, grimace and caricature. For I he bodv. thanks to the God of free Ameri-':i mere are now no sworas or nery stakes, but for the souls of thousands of the good la a figurative sense, rack and gibbet and Torquemada. The symbol of the domestic and social and private and public suffering of a great multitude of God's dear chil dren, pillars of smoke. What an exciting scene in India when, during the sepoy re- hninn rBoiment nf h eh landers cameun J and found the dead body of one of General. I Wheeler's daughters, who had been insult ed and mauled ana, slsin by the sepoys. So great was the wrath against these murderers that the Beotoh regiment sat down, and, cutting off tbe hair of tbis dead daughter of General Wheeler, tbey divided It among them, and eac-vooa counted the number of hairs given Mm. i V'iriiivsih took an oath, which was execo- . I ted, tlaf XoetMch hair ot the reordered ' .. - ' TOafightar they wonld dash out the life of a 'bestvjl sepoy. But as wa look over the tl&a ot those who In all ages have suffered. tk.-fhe truth, while we leave vengeance to aNemn vow, one tremendous oath, after havlngvounted the host of the martyrs, that for eaoh one ot those glorious men and women who died tor the troth an im mortal Bball live, live with God and !iv forever. .- ' -.- . But, as I' already hinted in the first sentence of this sermon, nothing can be more beautiful than tbe figures ot smote on a clear sky. Yon can see wbat yon will In tbe contour of this volatile vapor, now enchanted castles, now -troops of horse men, now bannered procession, now winged couriers, now aVblack angel ol wrath nnder a spear ol the sunshine turned to an angel ot light, and now from horizon to horizon the air Is a picture eallerv filled with masterpieces of which God is the artist, burning clouds of smoke born In tbe sunrise and evening clouds . Btnoke Mi m tho burnished sepulohers T.t he .onset othe sunset The beauty ot the transSgnred smoke Is a divine symbol of the beauty of the cburab. The fairest of ajrthe fair is she. Do not fall those persecu1Sn of whom I spoke the churoh. They aretae parasites of the churoh, not tbe church itself. Her mission is to cover the earth witkra superna tural gladness, to open all tbe prison doors, to balsam all the wouuds. to mqss all the graves, to burn cp Ustpjtgllt in the fireplace of a great mornlm'f RT change Iron hand cuffs into diamonded wristlets, to turntbe whole race around and whereas it faced death, commanding It, - "Blaw about face for heaven!" According tslte number of tbe spires of the cuurches"ia all our cities, towns and neighborhoods are the good homes, the worldly prosperities and the pure morals and the happy souls. Meet me at any depot the world over, and with my eyes elosed take me by tbe linn I and lead me so tbat my feet will not stum ble, and without my once looking down or looking on tbe level take me to some high root or tower and let me see the tops ot the churches, and I will tell you the pro portion ol suicides, of arsons, of murders, of thefts. According as the churches are numerous are the crimes few. According, as the ohurche" are few the crimes are nu merous. Theraost beautiful organization the world eveJMaw or ever will see Is the much malignVhuroh, tbe friend ot all good, the foe ot all evil, "fair as tbe moon and clear as the sun." Beautiful In In r Author, beautiful in ber mis Ion, the hero ine ot tbe, centuries, tbe bride of Christ, .be queen of the national Men may desecrate it, as Cromwell, when he stabled bis cavalry horses ia St. Caul's Cathedral; or break off the image ot Christ, as did tbe Iconoclasts tn York min ster; or hurl against It august literary an tipathies, as did Gibbon; or plot its over thrntv as An noma In everv oommutiitv whose pride and bate and debau-'hery are reproved ny cue len ommauumeius which it thunders and the sermon on tbe mount wliioU Its breathes. But It will stand as long as the earth stands, the same unique and wonder working and beatific and miraculous thing for which -God decreed it. Small wits tax their brain to say things tbat will put her at '. disadvantage, but many of them will send far its condolence when dy ing, and their children will be fathered up under Its -benedictlons'afler the parental curse bus peen removen. xurougu per gates will. march all tbe influences for good Cnt,,Uo 'V'..VatrtaU ever reach ourworld. Take !,,r rward chill of orphin-as - Speaking ot the i apostate, tb '"'XilpA. Jtbev are tho ackoowleu. vliMlnHn n I 1 noblest, g . -t. - sltrwi' birr" has kept the hnman race ironi puireni. tion insufferable either to human or angelic olfactories. You lying and hypocritical world, shut up those slanders about tbe church ol Christ, nu Institution which, far from being what it ought to be and never pretending to be perfect, Is 500 times better than any other Institution that tbe world ever saw or ever dreamed of. The highest honor I ever had and the highest honor I shall ever receive and the highest honor I ever want is to have ray name on her records as a member. At ber altars I repente l. At her sacrameuts I believed. In her ser vice let me die. From ber doors let me be buried. O church of God! Thou home of the righteous1 Thou harbor from tempesil Thou refuge for the weary! Thou light house of many nations! Tiiou tyi e of heaven! I could kiss thy ve y dust witb ecstasy of affection. For her my tears shall fall, For her my prayers ascend, To her my toils and cares be given Till toils and oares shall end. Ob, come Into the church through Christ the door, a door more glorious than that f tbe temple ot Hercules, which had two pillars, and one was gold and the other emerald! Come in to-day! The world you leave behind is a poor world, and it will burn and pass off like pillars oi smoke. Whether the final conflagration will start iu tbe coal mines of Pennsyl vania, which in some pluces have for many years been burning and eating into ttie heart of tbe mountains, or whether it shall begin near the California geysers, or whether from out the furnaces of Cotopaxi and Vesuvius and Stroinboll It shall burst forth npon the astonished nations I make no prophecy, but all geologists tell us that we stand on tbe lid of a world, the heart ol which is a raging, roaring, aw ful . line, and some day God will let tho red monsters out of their Imprisonment ot centuries, and New York on tire in 1835, and Charleston on fire Iu 1865, and Chicago on lire ln 1872, and Bejton on Are In 1873 were only like one rpark from a black smith's forge as compared with that Inst universal blaze which will be seen in other worlU. But gradually tiie Humes will lessen, and the world will become a great living coal, and that will take on ashen hue, uud then ourruiued planet will begin to smoke, and the mount a ins will smoke, and the valleys will smoke, and the islands will smoke, and the seas will smoke, and tbe cities will smoke, and the live continents will be live pillars of smoke. But the black vapors will begiu to lessen in height nnd density, and then will become hardly visible to those who look upon it from the sky galleries, and after awhile from just one point there will curl up a thin, solitary vapor, nnd then even tbat will vanish, and there will be nothing left except the charred ruins of a burneil out world, the corpse of a dead star, the ashes of unextinguished planet, a fallen pillar of smoke. But that will not Interfere with your In vestments if you have taken Clulst ns your Saviour. Secure heaven as your eternal home, and you can look down 11(1011 11 dis mantled, dlsm pted nnd demoll.-lied earth without any perturbation. When wrapped ln Are the reulms of ethe glow. And heaven's last thunders shake the earth below. Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruins smile And light thy torch at Nature's funeral pile. It is considered politeness In Para guay for a gentleman, on being intro duced to a lady, to kiss her. If she does not happen to have nice teeth, it is comical to behold how he strives u, accidpntally salute her near the ear. The conversion of the flintiest, roughest limestone into soft, white wool is one of the wonders of the cen tury which will shortly appear ln a practical way to the manufacturer. The folding fan was invented ln the seventh century by an ingenious Jap anese artist, wbo conceived tbe idea by observing a bat closing its wings. a raiiroaa tanK is projected by a firm of fish dealers in Mobile. Ala. It is their intention to transport Southern fishM ailfh " if hlnafioh minion l -. ....:.c pompano, etc., alive to Northern cities. It is lawful in China for any one discovering a person plundering a grave to kill him on the spot. . Lawn ; by the ready for us give good resu aCapted to the chu, grass that Is suita. may not be the be tions. An. excsll'- tucky blue gra3 fescue, rVe grastv, white clover. On . crested dog's t?U an' ;rasa make an excellent. Plow the grourril tn January. .. ble. flse wood ashes liberally aTfid so the seed early fn theytspring. It was once the custom in some por- Hons of tlfe West to barn corn for tuel, out in the East the practice was also to do so, but in another form. To feed jorn to the stock . without providing idequate shelter, or to afford protec tion against severe cold, is to burn corn to create warmth that should be pro vided ln a cheaper mannerCorn is sim Jly fuel, and the bodv of the animal is the stove. The greater the protec tion asrainst cold the less fuel will be -necessa-v nd the lowC:-the cost of rodu- During MdM weather the spread .ng Sf- ma jfar on the garden and the working It ell into the soil Is an ad vantage. It the location Is plowed there, will-be a great many insects exposed to tbe surface. If the manure is left an the surface it will serve as a pro tection to the insects, but if incorpora ted with,. the soihjwith the aid of a harrow or culti'cfllor, the insects will be reached by -tho frost. Should any of them escape and the land is plowed and worked. "over again early in the spring the destruction will be complete of some kinds. .. - " - Duck raising calls for close atten- . tion to all details. . The Pekih duck is used mostly because It will thrive with out ponds, but A tiex k of them will be- . ccme "stampeded" by a slight noise Or from the presence of any intruder. They then run to and fro, and will keep ln motion until quieted, but it happens mostly at night. A lighted lantern will quiet thei i, but it ia not pleasant to be compelled to go- out sew eral times during a cold night for suclr. purposes. If not quieted they will korp UP perpetual noise until daylight and will lose several ounces of tls,ti each "from the exercise. .v. Dairying is not a side business. Cows are regarded as' animals that assist in making the farm pay. but to be suc cessful "with, dairying the entire farm ' shoujd be devoted to the cows. The production of milk on a farm Is the creation of a superior article f ronj taw materials, the animals being the agents for the conversion of ne arti cle "into another, and If the farm-r be made to supply a large amount of raw material It will enable the farp or dairyman to increase the ni-.-""1 of his animals and do a larger JusiripS8 than to depend upon a limit' umber., Some weeds are rnor -iy killed by acids than bv ci- -tion. Burdock. horse radish, f .ielion. thistles and other persfV i kinds will stand coa siderai.le douse and euttins off before tliov ra h exterminated, but if any : km' of weed is cut off. and a smaii . Uuantity of sulphuric acid ten m roured on It the result will bo.nestru.c- UnV The remedy will also .cost but, , . t , f . . . .1 1 1 . f .lerived. ...iKtnjr paves m . , : una straw. Hut few fauiieis . .heir hay, preferring to put it aa' in the mow, but straw is usually left out side. There is some skill required in sleeking- straw, so as to protect it. and It is more valuable if bright and clean, t'attle will pick over the straw V?v:n when well suppled with hay, and they will eat a large proportion of clean straw when they will not touch that v hic-h has become wet and mouidy. train nnd vegetable foods are nour ishing, and contain more of the ele ments to supply wants of humans thn,n dots animal food. The mineral matter, protein, fat, sugar, and starch can be found in all vegetable substances, while meat is sometimes deficient in both the fat, starch and mineral substances. Horses perform heavy labor on corn, oats, hay and grass, and even the meats are produced from vegetable substances. Industrial. A miner's lamp, using acetylene gns. has been introduced into the Selbeek mines of Germany. In Wyoming the railroads have raised wages to $1.75 per day and cut the bua-d down to $3.50 per week. C. S. Montgomery, formerly at Peters burg, 111., is putting up a big mattres3 factory at Springfield, 111. Out of 1,100,000 in Massachusetts en gaged in gainful occupations, only 37, JOO are employed on Sundays. While three cents is the lowest price at which one can get shaved In New York the lowest price for a hair-cut is five cents. At Danielson, Conn., the Uncus Knit ting Company has orders that will hist until July next. The capacity of the plant has been enlarged three-fold. The Dominion Cotton Mills Company is expending $180,000 for improvements at its mills in Kingston, Ont. About 150 more people will be employed. At Johannesburg the telephone sys tem is operated by the Dutch, and one has to pay a year's subscription in ad vance about $75 a month and no ser vice is furnished after 5 P. M. Oil has been tried for sprinkling roads in Dallas, Tex., recently, with the same success which has attended its use else where, but tbe complaint is made that the oil injures the tires. The wageworker who suppot '.ed his family on $1000 last year must this year pay nearly $1200 for the same goods a raise of nearly 20 per cent, in the cost of living, besides higher rent. The scale adopted by the Cripple Creek (Col.) Union, and which went in to effect last week, ranges from $10 a week and three meals a day for a com mon restaurant waiter to $.'." a week and meals for the cook In a first-class restaurant. Des Moines, Council Bluffs, Dubuiue. Davenport and OU.umwa are to have 40-cent fuel gas within three months and probably 50-cent illuminating gas. according to the promises of the Iowa By-Product Coke Company, capita ized at $3,000,000. In North Carolina the average daily rate of wages in the cotton mills: Male, $1.11 for skilled and 66 cents for un skilled; female adults, 67',i cents for skilled and 46 for unskilled: children, UVt cents. The average laboring day consists of 1114 hours. Two thousand men can secure posi tions by applying to the employment agents of Denver, so one of those en gaged in that business said the other day. There Is a great shortage of men in all lines of industry, and the em ployment agents almost fight over those looking for work. Minneapolis bakers now work but 1 pi en r Hours npr nav nn u-niraa ,.n from $12 to $15 per week, and $14 for 1 ... , . . . .... , nignt worn. i ne union forbids its members from living or boarding with 1 their employers. The best of sanitary conditions exist. Child labor has also become a- thing of the past. .- ;' 2.1 I i ' ' VS 1 i I - I. t " l4.' i A. r.--'-:'t''''-'--'--