THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. . . i ., i . i, .... ii i MIFFLiINTOTVN", JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1900. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. LIV. NO. 5. F. SCHWEIER, . , JV w i CHAr;E3 VI. T; ::it .;roke of eight dies out from ,i. . ; . k in tin- hall as Seaton Dysart .. . h.- -lrawing room. The extreme ,: ; . and gloom of that melancholy :ir sinks into hiin as he moves r' ! -oute-ntedly, but with a man'l , : , iti!iuct, toward the hearth-rug. - :m; aii gloom, however, as he pres huts, in this dreary place. Some -.1 languidly from a low chair a .. :..vi !y girl, as he instantly admit ilv:ni.s about the eighth part Ol ; :;ar foot toward him. i . . nri- wonderfully alike, the father ,. ; - ;iinl y how wonderfully un it si-t-ms impossible that with ex P . -. :!- so utterly at variance so strong ;1 iaiiniv ran exist, yet it i there, i : . sir, the old face, mean, cringing, s ions, wicked; the other, cold, honor . .. earnest and be-autiful. The girl, .i ;; n-i him with distrust in her eyes, r :. iu:!y ackiiowle-dged this last fact. "I'm extremely sorry if I've kept you n-iivng for dinner," he says, advancing ::: a .juieker pace, onee he sees the pretty ! in uliitc, nud holding out his hand. -K it the faet is I was dreadfully tired v. ::. :i 1 arrived, and I'm rather afraid I :.-.! a-ir.-p." "The day is warm," says she, coldly. The l ioness to his father seems clearer to h. r as he speaks, and kills for her all the ehanu of his face. "Very; but I don't fancy my absurd fit of ;as;iiess arose from that. Rather from the faet that I haven't had a wink of sint for the last two nights." Two nights!" says she with a faint a.-.-, ssion of interest. "Toothache? Sick fnel.dr i ill. no. Ball cords," returns he, con- Ciseiy. - "Ah:" suys she, this time rather short ly. Von are Griselda, I suppose?" says he. pleasantly. "Why should yon suppose it?" asks she, with a faint smile. "True. Why should I?" returns he, laughing. "I'erhaps because," with a steady look at her, "I have been told that n.y cousin Griselda is a person possessed of a considerable amount of of charac ter." "By that you mean that you have heard Griselda is self-willed," says she, calmly. "And as it is evident you think I look the part also, I am afraid you must prepare yourself to meet two self-willed cousins I am not Griselda." - -- If she had fancied that this announce ment would have put him out, she is un deceived in a moment. "No?" says he, looking distinctly amus ed. "There is comfort in the thought that I cannot again fall into error, because you must be Vera." "Yes, I am Vera," slowly. "I fear you will find it very dull down here." "Your father has been very good to us; more than kind," interrupts she, gently, but with decision. "He has given ns a home." "I should think he would be very glad to get you here," says he. At this mo ment Griselda enters the room. A charm ing Griselda, in white, like her sister, and with a flower in her sunny hair. She trips up to Seaton and gives him her hand and a frank smile, that has just the cor rect amount of coquettish shyness in It. A man. to Griselda, no matter out ol what obnoxious tribe he may hav sprung, is always a creature to be gently treated, smiled upon and encouraged. "So you're come at last to this Castle of Despair," says she, saucily. "I must say, you took time to look us up. But 1 don't blame you; life down her is too live ly lor most. It has quite done up Vera and me." The dismal sound of a cracked old din ner gong breaks in at this instant on Grim-Ida's speech. They all rise and cross the hull to the dining room, but just in side it a momentary hesitation takes place. Dysart going to the foot of the table. Vera stops short, as if in some surprise, to look at him, question in her eyes. "You will take the head of the table, I hoH-," says he, in a low tone, divining her perplexity. "Hut " quickly, and then a pause. "If you wish it, of course," she says, with a swift uplifting of the brows and an al most imperceptible shrug. Her manner somehow irritates him. "I wish it, certainly," says he, coldly "Hut I wish still more to see you do only that which you like." "I have few likes and dislikes," replies she. still iu that utterly emotionless tone i ml sweeping past him, she seats hersel: a: the head of the table. As for Griselda, the little jar in the so cial atmosphere around her goes by uu n itii ed, so overcome is she by the un v.. mted magnificence of the sight before ii'T, a decent dinner table at Greycourt. Site looks round her and loses herself a in the touch of fairyland the room eiits. It is, as it were, an echo from tii past, a glimpse into the old life when h-r father still lived, that she hardly 1 was dear to her until she had los: it. The glitter of the silver, the glass, '.!: intense perfume of the glowing flow er . the rich tint of the fruits, all seem p of a dream; a sweet one, too. !; Dysart is wondering why both girls fj-.iiil have taken so instantaneous a dis ! ... to him. As a rule, women were civil ' -.jh: yet here were two to whom he :is an utter stranger, and aggressive v. :i the only word he could apply to their and words, though both were stu : .".i!y wilite. " I'o you stay long?" asks Griselda pres et:' :y. looking at her cousin. "I don't know how you may view it I ictiirn to town the day after to-mor-r. a- -very early on that day. Whether I : i-t ;r must not work for my living - a "hing that does not concern me. 1 ';:--you will hardly believe it in thit j a.c age hut I actually seek after U ue. I should like to get on in my pro-fis-ion; to be more than a mere trifler." "You are charming." says Griselda. ' ''. "Vou iaix like a book a lilne '" Hut you have not told me why ' -r father will not let us see anyone, ::y hla!" saru Miss Dvsart a little :arp:y. She rises as she sneaks, and ' opens the door for her. A? la passes him he says, easily: annot tell you everything at once. "I F"i "t, out i aare say there will De time me. As for my father, he is ec- entne. and, I fonr, hnrJ to Uve with But if ever I can help you. call on me." , j," u" giTe9 nim smile for this, follows her sister into the drawing room. After all. he isn't half bad." she says, with a little nod. "I was right, however. Did yon ever ee a father and son so like?" asks Vera, -oldly. CHAPTER VII. Well. I'm off." says Griselda, pokinc fter pretty head into the summer house, where era aits reading. It is next day. and a very lovely day. too." "For your ramble," says Vera, laying down her book. "So you won't take my advice? Very good. Go on. and you'll see that you won't prosper." Her tone la half gay, half serious. "And don't be long." entreats Vera, with a sudden rush of anxiety. "Don't, now. Yes, I'm in deadly earnest. There is that man all "er the dace. let loose, as it were, for my discomfiture, and if he turns up in this part of the world I suppose I shall have to talk to him." "What a calamitv!" eavs Gribia with a little feigned drooping of her mouth. "In this barren wilderness even manna may be regarded with rapture even Sea ton! Better any man than no man, say I." "So say not I, then," with great spirit. She has leaned forward npon her elbow, and her eyes are brilliant with a little suspicion of anger. "Give me a desert Island rather than the society of a man whom I know it will require only time to teach me to detest. And how you can call him so familiarly 'Seaton,' passes my " A pause! An awful pause. Who is it that has turned the corner of the summer house, and is looking in at them with a curious expression round his niouth Gri selda is the first to recover. "Isn't it absurd?" she says, smiling rather lamely. "But I assure you, Sea ton, your sudden appearance quite took away my breath. Vou should stamp when you come to a house like this. The grass ill round is so thick." "Too thick!" says Dysart, with a swift glance at Vera, who has lost all her color. "For the future I shall try to remember. I am very sorry I startled you." He has addressed himself entirely to Griselda. unless that one lightning glance of con temptuous reproach cast at Vera could be counted. "But I was on my way to one of the farms, and this is the lowest, the nearest path to it. I shall never cense to regret" here he stops dead short, and turns his eyes unreservedly on Vera "that I did not take the upper one." He makes both girls a slight bow, and walks swiftly onward on the unlucky path he had chosen. "On, era, do something!" cries Orisel ia, in a small agony of consternation, .-lasping her hands. Vera, thus admon ished, springs to her feet, and, driven half by honest shame and half by im pulse, rushes out of the summer house and runs after Dysart as he is fast dis appearing through the shrubs. Reaching him, panting and pale with agitation, she lays her hand timidly upon his arm. "I am so grieved," she says, her charm ing face very pained, her lips white "There are moments when one hardly knows what one says, and " "There are such moments, certainly,' says he, interrupting her remorselessly. "But "".hey can hardly be classed witt those in which the calm confidences ol one sister are exchanged with the other And why should you apologize? I assure you, you need not. I do not seek for oi desire anything of the kind." It almost seems to her that he has shaken her hand from his arm. Draw ing back, she sees him proceed upon hi; way, and then returns to Griselda. "I really think I hate him," sayB Vera, vehemently. The recollection of his con temptuous glance, the way in which he had disdained her apology above all. that slight he had offered her when h bad displaced ber band from his arm a I. rankle in h:r breast, and a hot flow ot shame renders her usually pale face bril liaut. "There, never mind him," she says, with a little frown. "He is not staying long, fortunately, and this episode wil bear good fruit of one sort at least. Ht will not trouble me with his society while you are away. Now hurry, Griselda, do." Griselda, with a light laugh, drawn ir resistibly by the gorgeous loveliness ot the lights and shadows of the land belc .v runs down the pathway and is soon los: to view. When she returns over an hour latei she discovers to her amazement, thai Vera is still in it. "You are miserable about that wretch ed affair of the morning," cries Griselda. Never mind it. If you will come to din ner I promise you to do all the talking, and as it has to be endured I do entreat you to keep np your spirits." "Oh, yes. There isn't a decent chance ot escape," says Vera, wearily. " 'Sh!" cries Griselda, softly, putting up her hand; the sound of coming foot steps, slow, deliberate footsteps purpose ly made heavier, smites upon their ears. "oGod heavens! Here he is," says Griselda, and indeed they have barely time to put on a carefully unconscious lemeanor, when Seaton Dysart darkens the door of the summe r house, and looks ?oldly down on them. "They told me I should find you here, le says, speaking to Vera. "I have come to say good-by." "But surely you are not going so soon not before dinner, not to-night!" cries Griselda, thunderstruck by this solution tf their difficulty, and a little sow. too. "I am going now. Good-by," holding Diit his hand to her with a determination :. ,t to be changed. Griselda takes t and .hakes it ge nially, nay, warmly. His hu- . r is decidedly hostile, and if be ac- i.its the old father of their incivility " vtl-.iug to propitiate him, she tells her- will be the correct thing, and she 1 1 'v s positive friendly toward him, :, beams upon him with gentle entreaty u her eye. . If you must go, do us one service ir,t," she says. "Do you see that roseT -a rather rmkempt and straggling spec of its kind that trails in n?"11 lisorder just outside the door. It M" Unlrfed me many a time, but you are tall. ,h. taller than most; will you lift these ..vkward tendrils, and press them back "shesmiling divinely at him, a smile that Tom Teyton would have given sev eral years of his life to possess; but Dy sait is disgracefully unmoved by it. and. refusing to return it, steps outside, and. witn a decidedly unwilling air. proceeds to lift the drooping tendrils and reduce them to order. Griselda, naturally a girl of great re- ource. seizes the opportunity she has herself provided. Catching Vera's arm, ihe draws her back oat of sight. Now s your time!" she says. "Say something. Do something. It doesn't matter what, but for heaven's sake smooth him down one way or another! If you don't you'll have the old man down upon us like " "I can't," gasps Vera, fearfully. "You must," insists Griselda, sternly. "It's impossible to know what sort of man he is. If revengeful, he can play Did Harry with us!" Without waiting to explain what par ticular game this may mean, or the full -iguiScance thereof, she steps lightly out--ide and gazes with undisguised rapture ipou Dysart's work. Dysart returns to the summer house with all the manner of one in mad haste to be gone. It is merely a part of an un nleasant whole, ha tells himself, that he must first say a chillingly courteous word 3r two of farewell to the girl who has penly declared toward him such an un lying animosity. "I am afraid," says Vera, speaking with cold precision, as one delivering her eelf of an unloved lesson, "that you are roing away thus abruptly because of what you heard me say this morning." "You are right. That is why I am go ing," replies Dysart, calmly. "Yes?" in a chilling tone, and with faintly lifted brows. "I regret exceed ingly that I should have so unfortunately iff end yu, but to go for that it all sounds a little trivial, don't you think?" "Not by going, I think. I don't see bow I can do otherwise. Why should 1 make yon uncomfortable? But you may call it trivial if you like, to talk of detesting a man you have only seen for an hour sr two, and who in those hours " He pauses. "Did I make myself so specially objectionable?" demands he, abruptly, turning to her with something that is surely anger, but as surely entreaty, in his eyes. "As I told you before," indifferently, "one says foolish things now and then." "Would you have me believe you did not really mean what you said?" "I would not have you believe any thing," returns she, haughtily. "I only think it a pity that you should curtail your visit to your father because a L-hance remark of mine that cannot pos sibly affect you in any way." "Is that how you look at it?" "Is there any other way? Why should you care whether, or not I detest you I, whom you saw for the first time yester Jay?" "Why, indeed!" He regards her ab sently, as if trying to work out in bit lira mind the answer to this question, and then, suddenly: "Nevertheless, I do care," he says, with a touch of vehemence. "It is the injustice of it to which I object. You bad evidently determined beforehand to show me no grace. I defy you to deny it! Come, can you?" Miss Dysart is silent. The very im petuosity of his accusation has deadened her power to reply, and besides, is ther not truth in it? Had she not prejudged! "By the bye," he says, "I am afraid you will have to put up with me for a few hours every week. I shall promise ' to make them as short as I possibly can. But my father likes to see me every sev ?n days or so, and I like to see him. Do you think," a slight smile crossing his fa-e, "you will be able to live through it?" "I haTe lived through a good many :hings," says Vera, her dark eyes aflame. "That gives you a chance here; prac tice makes perfect. I am sorry to be obliged to inconvenience you so far, but if I stayed away, I am afraid my father might want to know why. He might even be so absurd as to miss me." "Why should you take it for granted ihat I desire your abse-uee?" cries Vera, tier voice vibrating with anger. "Come, cumin, or stay away loierer what Is U :o nse?" And it was thus that thi-y parted. (To be continued.) Dwarfs Famous In History. Marcus Anton lus possessed a dwarf, Sisyphus, not quite two feet tall, and yet the possessor of a remarkable wit. King Charles II. bad In court a pig my, Richard Gibson. This mite niar rie?d Anne Shepherd, the Qaeea's dwarf, each being forty-six inches In height. Gibson was a skilled artist, and his miniatures and portraits are much valued. The favorite of Queen Henrietta Ma ria, Sir Jeffery Hudson, was presented to ber majesty in a pie, rompletely armed as a knight. He proved a gal lant, fiery little fellow, and of consider able service to the royal family. He became a captain of horse In the civil wars and followed his mistress to France. The page of honor to Mary Tudor, John Jervls by name, was one of the tiniest dwarfs of his day. Julia, the niece of the famous Augus tus, had In her service two pigmies Canopus, twenty-nine Inches high, and Andromeda, her freed maid, who meas ured Just the same height Poland In the fourteenth century had a pigmy king, Ladlslas the Short, who Is said to bavn won more victories than any other monarch of his time, and who left a great name as a jurist, states man and ruler. Christian II., of Denmark, had a wee dwarf to attend him, who was faithful to his master even in adversity. He root to prison with the king, planned, and almost effected the royal escape. Albert H. Golley, of Rome, N. Y.. while bird hunting with W. P. Baylow near Glenmore, was accidentally shot in the eyes by his companion, and will lose his sight. The wife of Mr. Golley Is also blind, both of her eyes having been removed some months ago by Dr. Wilbut H. Booth. It is a good plan to occasionally clean the tires and fill up the cracks and small holes with rubber solution. This prevents moisture from working thrcugh to the inner fabric. Fishing Is the favorite Dastime of a Rock Rapids (Ia) dog. It swims out into the water and catches the fish in its mouth. A novelty is the cold storage of hops. This is done In several places in England. Some naturalists believe that hares never drink, but get enough liquid for their needs in the dew on the grass they eat. According to a chemical analysis 15 parts of the flesh of fish have about the same nutritive value as 12 parts of boneless beef. prompted from BN the "third floor back" of a dismal-looking lodging-house in a street near Waterloo bridge, s man was standing, singing. In a dilapidated armchair by the window, hla audience one wee, pretty lassies was curled up, wrapped about with an overcoat for it was the afternoon of Christmas Day, and there was no fire in the cheerless grate. "Shall I light the lamp, daddy?" she asked, as he ceased to sing and began to execute a grotesque dance, still whistling the refrain of his song. "It has grown so dark that I can't see to give you your cues," and she held up some tattered manuscript as she spoke. "No, Babsie; that wlU do for to-night Don't try your eyes. Shall we have our usual chat In the dark, pef? There la no rehearsal to-night Ugh how cold It Is, Have we no coal or wood, dearie?" "No. dad; but It Isn't very much cold er without Are, because the silly smoke won't go up the chimney, somehow, so ft A DILAPIDATED ARMCHAIR OITK WIZ PUETTT LASSIE WAS CTTBLED TJP. I have to keep the window open when we do have a fire." "My poor little frozen baby," he said sadly, taking her In his arms. "We will find lodgings where the smoke does exit the proper way after boxing night" "Dad." she said, as she nestled close up to him in the armchair, "shall we have a Christmas pudding some day?" "ShaU I sing to you, Babsie r he in terrupted hastily. And, gently strok ing her soft curls, he broke Into all vej iy nius'.c hall ditty. Babsie was soon fast asleep. He lifted her np and placed her on the bed. ""-"Heaven help her!" be murmured sadly, as he gazed upon the sweet white face. "If I had -only been a laborer you would not have gone hungry on Christ mas Day, my pet I wonder how many poor mummers are waiting eagerly for Boxing night? I have looked for work without ceasing. I wonder If the noble army of bogus managers with whom I've been so closely acquainted of late are dining well to-night while she is starving. I'll spend every penny I earn this pantomime upon her comfort Oh, If I can only make a hit, now my chance has come! Oh, my Babsie, my brave lit tle Babsie!" "Daddy, It's the glorious Boxing day at last!" cried Babsie, dancing round him m her excitement as he was pre paring to go to the theater. "Everything wasn't qnlte smooth at dress rehearsal," he had explained to her; "so I shall be at the theater all day." The latter part of this statement was not true; but he saw that there was barely food for one in the cupboard, and his pocket was quite empty. As he ran down tbe stairs a little hoe came clattering after him, and a saucy, smiling face peeped over the bal usters. "That's for luck, dad," she called out He noticed tbe little shoe had a hole right through tbe sole, and he sighed. When he reached the theater he found only a few shivering nobodies assembled on the stage. Tbey all waited for about two hours for the stars, who bad never intended to appear, and then the stage manager dismissed them. Halliday met his manager as he turned out of the stage door with the intention of strolling about the streets until even ing. "Hallo!" said that Individual, genial ly. "Hope all the plum pudding you had yesterday won't affect your top notes. I think your song will fetch 'em up stairs. There's money In It " Halliday uttered an exclamation, and, stooping down, picked up a quarter. "There, what did I tell your' laughed the manager, as he slapped blm on the back and went on his way. Halliday hugged tbe little coin In his palm. It meant so very much. It meant a little Christmas for Babsie. and it bad entirely changed his plans for the day. He hurried homeward with a lighter heart than be bad carried for months, only stopping at a coster's barrow on his way to Invest some of his treasure In rosy-cheeked apples. He sprang lightly up the stairs to his borne, calling "Babsie!" as be ran. so anxious was he to see ber astonishment and delight But no answer came; no patter of little feet Tbe dreary room was empty. He sat down chilled and uneasy, and the apples rolled unheeded to the floor. But one hour two hours three hours passed, and still no Babsie. Tbe fog was growing denser and denser. The anxious father paced up and down the little room. At every footfall on the stairs he rushed out and called her name. The callboy at the Regal Theater was railing out "Overture and beginners' as he made his way along tbe passages when a man rushed past him and disap peared Into one of the dressing-rooms. It was Nigel Halliday, white and trem bling, andwlth huge beads of perspira tion on his brow. "He'll never be on!" said the perform ers In chorus. Bnt he was at tbe side dressed and made up, fully five mlnutei before his first entrance. The othei performers were looking at blm curl- tbe G&llery. ously, for his face was twitching ano he spoke to no one. "Nervousness oi drunkenness," they all agreed. There was a ripple of laughter as h made his first entrance. It acted like an electric shock upon him. He knew what was expected of him, and he worked desperately. "He'll do," said the anxious manager, sagely, as he watched his grotesque exit and listened to the applause that followed It .'As soon as Halliday was off the stage after the fourth scene he caught the as sistant manager by the arm. "I'm not on until the palace scene," he said, eagerly. "How long Is mj waltr "Oh, about an hour to-night" was the reply. Halliday rushed down the passage to bis dressing room, removing his kingly robes as he ran. "What the deuce are you doing?" cried one of the men. as be watched hln? struggling Into his overcoat "Are yor. drunk to-night or what?" "Don't stop me!" panted Halliday. "Hands off, I say! It's my long wait I'll be back in time. My child is lost missing since morning. I'm crazy with anxiety; she's my only one." Through the streets be ran, threading In and out the traffic, heedless of the shouts of drivers. The fog had cleared away, and the night was starry. "Babsie! Babsie!" he panted, as be fore along. "Babsie! Babsie!" as he vaulted up the dark staircase to bis home. All was silent In the desolate room. He stood there one moment and threw up his bands In voiceless prayer, and then he hastened back to the thea ter. Just before his entrance In the palace scene the doorkeeper made bis way through the crowd and said something In a low tone to the stage manager. He saw them glance toward him, and In a moment he was beside them. "In heaven's name, tell me, Grahame! Is It news for me? Don't He; I know it Is!" "When you come off, Halliday after your song. There's your music playing now. Go on. old man." "Tell me first," Halliday replied hoarsely, "and I give you my word I'll go on!" "A little girl run over taken to Faith Hospital. Don't know who she bel9ns3-to,P!e4. nncomxlous, "Gra- bame replied hastily. "Thank you," was all the wretched man said as he staggered past them onto the stage. A child In the gallery laughed glee fully at his grotesque entrance. It soundekl just like Babsle's laugh. Bab sie now, perhaps, lying a little mangled corpse in tbe Faith Hospital. Why was WAS BKINO CLABPBn Tit HER FATHER 8 ARMS. he there, he asked himself. If his dar ling lay dead? What did he care for money now? But Babsie had been so fond of his "drinking song." She had looked for ward to hearing him sing it He would sing It for ber sake. Then his voice began to falter he swayed slightly. "He's breaking down," was the terrified whisper. "Won't some one step In to fill the gap?" And some one did. Right from the very back of the gallery It came a child's voice that caught up the refrain Just as tbe wretched singer was about to rush from the stage, and tbe aston ished artists, looking up to the "gods," beheld the singer, a little girl, perched upon the shoulders of a stalwart coster. It was Babsie Babsie alive and well. By the time the little girl bad got through the chorus and the gallery had shown their appreciation by applause and whistling, Halliday bad regained bis self-possession, and be sang the re mainder of his ditty with such joyous vigor that he carried his audience along, and the Infection of gayety from all the smiling faces on the stage made Itself felt all over the house. "That kid in the gallery is an old music-hall dodge," said one petite to another. "Tee, but this was jolly well worked. I thought the chap had really broken down." replied his friend. Behind the scenes the "kid In tbe gal lery" was being clasped In ber father's arms amid a group of sympathetic peo ple in motley attire. Babsle's story was soon told. She had been offered a quarter by a neigh bor to mind her babies while she went out The temptation to see ber "dad" perform bad been too strong, and the little girl, with her precious coin in her band, bad patiently waited outside the gallery door for many hours. As she had not expected her father home all day she bad not been In the least un easy. Then Manager Vaugban and Stage Manager Grahame claimed her atten- tlon, and the former slipped a brand- new dollar bill Into her hand. I "It's what I owe you for that unre - hearsed effect" be said, laughing.- Forget-Me-Not SAMUEL GOMPERSk loos Characteristics of the raaaoBs American Lbor Ieaelav Samuel Gompers, the American laboi eader, Is as conservative as the EngUst eader. Burns, Is radical. Where the attar says strike, Gompers says arbi trate. "I cannot," he once said, "much as I bate oppression, endure the algh' f hunger." The nation owes a bigger debt of grat Itude to 8omuerf Gompers, president, ol me American. Federation of Labor, thai nost people imagine. Had it not bees tor the rock-like firmness with which, for nearly a fortnight this man stood igatnst a continent-wide strike of sym pathy with the Pullman men. thera might have been an uprising of organ ised labor, compared with which the ttrlkes and riots that really did occui would have been mere child's play. Mr. Gompers' diplomacy was not less itriklng than his wisdom. He at no time said that he would not advise a strike. He simply, by delaying action, rave his followers time to think. When they bad thought they saw the master fulness of his course. Mr. Gompers proved himself to be a general worthy of leading so great an organisation af the Federation. Samuel Gompers is an American bj adoption. He is of German descent, a his name Indicates, though of English birth. Thirty-eight years ago he was apprenticed to a shoemaker In London. Then he was a lad of 10, with no bright er prospects, no greater advantages than those of ten thousand other ap prentice boys of the world's metropolis To-day he Is the executive bead of the most extensive combination of laboi unions in the world. In this capacttj be wields a coastanf power by th . Of which that of other labor leaden nothing. I The lad did not like the shoemak trade, and, his release being eecut he learned to make cigars, becomlna proficient by the time he was 13. Then ; with his father's family, be came t America. Down to the time he begat to work in the shoe shops, he attendee day school regularly. After that be continued his studies at a night school where he applied himself so eagerly at to excite the especial attention of hl teachers. Upon his arrival In America he jolnei a New York cigarmakers' union, and his gift of common sense and his powet to express his thoughts logically ane) clearly quickly made him a prominent member. Later he was repeatedly seni as delegate to the International union. When David B. Hill was Governoi be wished to make Mr. Gompers a mem ber of the State Board of Arbitration at a salary of $3,000. Tbe tender wa' courteously declined. I "If I should accept a political ap ! polntment" said Mr. Gompers, "mj usefulness in labor organizations would be entirely and permanentlydestroyed.' In 1SS2 Mr. Gompers was made presi dent of the American Federation of La bor, and now holds that office. His sal ary Is but $1,000 a year, less than he could earn at his trade In good times and a far smaller sum than could be commanded by a tnan of his unusua! natural abilities and self-won acquire uents In the business world. A Matrimonial Lottery. Every three months In the province of Smolensk, Russia, husbands and wives are chosen by the chance draw ing of a lottery ticket Tbe tickets cost 1 ruble (00 cents) each. There is only one prize to be drawn, and It consists of tbe entire sum yielded by the sale of the tickets, amounting to 5,000 ru bles ($3,000), together with a woman described as being of noble blood. The tickets are sold only to n..n. and the lucky winner of the prize will have to marry the damsel if be takes the 5,000 rubles. If, however, he be already married he is at liberty to turn over the money and the woman to any friend whom be may wish to put in for such a good thing. If the winner shouldbe willing to marry, but Is not found to be to the damsel's taste, then they are to be excused from matrimony ant per nitted to divide tbe rubles. Society ror 8ock-D rning In a neighboring Long Island village the young men have a new privilege On paying ten cents a week they can have their socks darned by the belles of the village, who have organized themselves into the "Giddy Girls' Darn lng Club." One of tbe young ladles no ticed a hole In the hose of a young man who was paying her a so?lal visit tbe other night and. on comparing notes. It was found that many of the other girls of the village bad been Impressed by the fact tbat the beaux of tbe plao' needed help in keeping their socks In order. The young man who was ad mitted to the privileges of the club must -not be in tbe liabit of smoking. drinking, playing cards, or doing any thing real naughty. All he ha to do then Is to pay ten cents a wei'k and wear bis socks Into as many b li s as pleases him. New York Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch. ine nrst tning tne memDers oi women's club do. after electing a new member. Is to appoint a club meetlni ' l tne new member's bouse, in the hop f gating something elaborate in the way of refreshmenta. SAMUEL GOMPERS. SERMON BY Rco. Br. Calms Snbject: Hw Tsstr TheaahU f Bhomld Mmka th Moat of Oar Hriaf Livm Infidelity th Moarc of Mach Woe Christ's Matchless Stories. t Copyright, Louis BJopech. 1MM WiSHiBOTOir, D. 0. In this discourse Dr. Talmage takes the opportunity of offering some very practical and useful suggestions; text, Psalms xo., 9, "We spend oar years as a tale that Is told." The Israelites' were forty years In the wilderness, and during thirty-eight years ot the forty nothing la recorded of them, and. I suppose, no other emigrants bad s duller or more uninteresting time than they bad. So they got to telling stories stories eoneernlng themselves or concern ing others; stories about the brink kilns of Egypt, where they had tolled In slavery; stories about how the waters ot the Red Sea piled up Into palisades at their cross ing; story of the lantern bnng In the heav ens to guide them by night; story of Ibises destroying the reptiles of the wilderness; stories of personal encounter. It must have been an awful thing to have bad noth ing to do for thirty-eight years except to get lost every time they tried to escape from the wilderness. So they whiled away the time In story telling. Indeed, there were persons whose one business was to narrate stories, and they were paid by sueh trifles as they could pick up from the surrounding listeners. To suoh Instauces our text refers when It says, "We spend onr years as a tale that Is told." At this tremendous passage from the year 1899 to the year 1900 It will do us all good to consider that our whole life Is a story told a good story or a bad story, a traglo story or a mirthful story, a wise story or a foolish story, a olean story or a filthy story, a story of success or a story of failure. "We spend our years as a tale mat is toia. In the first plaoe, I remark that every 8 ergon's life Is a very Interesting story, y text does not depreciate "a tale that Is told." We have all of us been entertained by the story teller when snow bonnd in the rail train, or In the group a winter's night In the farmhouse, or gathered around a biasing hearth with some hunters at the mountain inn. Indeed, it Is a praiseworthy art to impersonate a good story well. If you doubt the practical and healthful and inspiring use of such a story, take down from the library Washington Irvlng's "Tales oi a Traveler" or Nathaniel Haw thorne's "Twloe Told Tales." But as In teresting as any of these would be the story of many an obscure life It the tale were as well told. Why do we all like biographies and autobiographies? Be cause they are stories of eminent human lives. But the story of the Ufa of a back woodsman, of a man who looks stupid, of one about whom vou never heard a word. must be just as thrilling on a small scale as on a laree scale is a life of a Cyrus, or a Cassar, or a Plzarro, or a Mark Antony, or at PKarlo m anna olal" .nan just comV I UUI Ot wUi no one but nimSe, tenng pulses. '" . Oh, yes. while "we spend out tale that Is told," it is an Interest It Is the story of an Immortal, makes It Interesting. He Is launr ocean ot eternal years, In a vc will never terminate. He l8-fttri. ur keynote of an anthem or a dirge tbat will never oome to its last bar. That Is what makes tbe devotional meetings of modnrn times so much more Interesting than they used to be. Tbey are filled not with dis courses Dy laymen on the subject of justi fication and sanctifloation, which lay dis courses administer more to the facetious than to the edifying, but with stories ol what God has done for the soul how every thing suddenly changed; how tbe promises became balsamic In times of laceration; how be was personally helped out and helped up and helped on. Nothing can stand before suoh a story of personal res cue, personal transformation, personal Illumination. Tbe mightiest and most skillful argument against Christianity col lapses under the ungrammatlcal but sin cere statement. The atbelstlo professor ot natural philosophy goes down under the story of tbat backwoodsman's conversion. All tbat elaborate persuasion of the old folks of the folly of giving np active life too soon meins nothing as compared with the simple incident you may relate to them ot tbe faot tbat Benjamin Franklin was Governor of Pennsylvania at eighty two years of age and that Dandolo, of Ven loe, at ninety years of age, although his eyesight had been destroyed through be ing compelled by his enemies to look Into a polished metal basin under the full.blaze of the sun until totally blind, yet this sight less nonagenarian leading an army to the successful beslegemeut of Constantinople! When an old man bears of suoh Incidents, be puts aside hla staff and ear trumpet and atarts anew. Tbe New Testament suggests the powe. ot the "tale tbat Is told." Christ was the most effective story teller of all the ages. Tbe parables are only tales well told. Matchless stories: Tbat ot the traveler cut up by the thieves and the Samaritan pay ing bis board bill at the tavern; that of tbe big dinner, to which the Invited guests sent in fictitious regrets; that of the shep herd answering tbe bleat of tbe lost sheep . and all the rural neighbors that night help ing blm celeoratetne ract tuat it was sate in the barnyard; tbat of tbe bad boy, reduced to tbe swlnes' trough, greeted borne with such banqueting and jewelry that It Muffed tbe older son with jealousy and disgruntle ment; that of the Pharisee full of bragga docio and the publican smiting his breast with a stroke that brought down the heav ens in commiseration; stories about lep rosy, about paralysis, about catalepsy, about dropsy, about ophthalmia stories that He so well told that tbey have rolled down to the present and will roll down through the entire future. I hoard Daniel Baker, the wonderful evangelist of bis time, preach what I sup posed was a great sermon, but I remem ber nothing ot It except a story that he told, and that. I judge from tbe seeming effect, may tbat afternoon have brought hundreds Into the kingdom of God. I heard Truman Osborne preach several ser mons, bnt I remember notblng of what he sale in publlo or private except a story tbat be told, and that was, among other things, tbe means of my salvation. Tbe lifelong work of John B. Gough, the great est temperanoe reformer of all time, was tbe victory ot anecdote, and who can ever forget bis story of Joel Straton touching him on the shoulder or ot Deacon Moses Grant at Hopkinson, or of tbe outcast woman nicknamed "Hell Fire," but re deemed by tbe thought that she "was one of as?" D wight L. Moody, tbe evangelist of worldwide fame and usefulness, wbc re cently passed to his great reward on blgb, during bis valuable labors In tbe pulpit wielded tbe anecdote for God and heaven until all nations have been moved by it. If you have had experiences of pardon and comfort and disentbrallment, tell of It. Tell it In tbe most pointed and dra matic wit vou can manage. Tell It soon. or you may never tell it at all. Ob, tbe power of "the tale tbat is toldl" An hour's discourse about tbe faet that blasphemous behavior is sometime punished In this world would not Impress us as much as the simple story tbat In a town ot Sew York state at tbe close ot tbe last century tnirty dx profane men formed themselves Into a lub. calling themselves "Society ot the Druids." Tbey met regularly to deride tnd damage Christianity. One night la ;helr awful meetting they burned a Bible tnd administered the sacrament to a dog. Two of them died tbat night. Within three lays three were drowned. In five years all he thirty-six earns to a bad end. Before iustloss of the peace It was sworn that two were starved to death, seven were drowned, sight were shot, five committed suicide, leven died on the gallows, one was frozen to death and three died accidentally. Inci dents like that, sworn to, would balk any proposed irreverent and blasphemous be havior. In what way could the faet that Infidel ity will not help any one die well be so powerfully presented as by the Incident eoneernlng a man falling ill in Paris jut iter tbe death of Voltaire, when a profes sional nurse was called in, and she a-ked, "Is tbe gentleman a Christian?" "Why do fou ask that?" said the messenger. Tbe aarse replied, "I am the nurse who attend ed Voltaire In his last illness, and for all tbe wealth of Europe I would never see i.n Dther Infidel die." What discourse In its moral and spiritual effect could equal a tale like that? You might argue upon the fact that those fallen are our brothers and sister, but sould we Impress any one wit li such a truth io well as bv tbe scene near Victoria Park, London, where men were digging a deep Iraln. and tbe shoring gave way an I a treat pile of earth fell upon the workmen. A man stood there with his bauds In Ills pockets, looking at those who were trying to shovel away the earth from those whe were burled, but when some one said to the spectator, "Bill, your brother Is down there," then the spectator threw off hie 3oat and went to work with an agony ol earnestness to fetch up his brother. What sourse or argument couia so wen as mai incident set forth that when we toll for the wlvation of a soul it is a brother whom we ire trying to save? A second reading ot my text reminds me hat life Is not only a story told, but thai It is a brief story. A long narrative stretched out Indefinitely loses its Interest It Is generally tbe story that takes only I minute or bait a minute to renearse tnai arrests tbe attention. And that gives ad ditional interest to the story of our life. Il Is a short story. Subtract from our life al the hours of necessary sleep, all the hnur' of Incapacity through fatigue or Illness, at the hours ot childhood and youth before we get fairly to work, and you have abbre viated the story ot life so much that yon can appreciate the psalmist's remark when be says, "Thou bast made my d'tys as hand's breadth," and can appreMate tin apostle James' expression when be com pares me to "a vapor mat appearem ror t little season and then vanishes away." It does not take long to tell all the vi cissitudes ot lite the gladness uiul the griefs, the arrivals and the departures tbe successes and the failures, tbe victor ies and the defeats, the nps and the downs. The longer we live the shorter tbe years We hardly get over the bewildering fatigue of selecting gifts for children and friendt and see that tbe presents get off In time to arrive on tbe appropriate day than we see another advancing grout of holidays. Autumnal fruit so sharp ly chases the summer harvest, and t lie snow of the white blossoms of spriu time come too soon after tbe snows o winter. It Is a remark so often madi that It falls to make any Impression an tbe platitude tbat calls forth no reply "How rapidly time eoeg." Every centu which mak' breaks do Jt prlraFe , t -. ..-.j ...cT Tuestorj a jur life, however Insignificant It ma seem to be, will win tbe applause or ul Of a great multitude tbat no man can num ber. As a "tale that Is told" among ad mirers or antagonists, celestials or paude moniacs, tbe universe Is full ot listening ears as well as of gleaming eyes. II we say or do tbe right thing, that Is known If we say ordothe wrong thing, that It known. I suppose the population of the Intelligences In the air Is more numeroue than the population of intelligences on tbe earth. Oh, tbat the story of our life mlgbl be fit for such an audience In such an au ditorium! God grant tbat wisdom one fidelity and earnestness and truth knaj characterize tbe "tale that Is told." Through medical soienoe the world's longevity may be greatly Improved in the future, as It has been In the past, but It would not be well forthe people to live toe long. Some of them would, through theli skill at acquisitiveness, gather too much. ana some multimillionaires would Decome billionaires and trilllonaires, and some would after awblle pocket a hemisphere. No. Death is useful In its financial limita tions, and then all have enough sorrow? and annoyances and sufferings by tbe time tbey become nonagenarians or centenar ians to make It desirable to quit. Bestdee that, It would not be fair so long to keepsc many good old people out of heaven. 8 It is well arranged that those who stand bj the deathbed of the nineteenth centurj will not be called to stand by the deathbec of the twentieth century. Oh, crowd this last year with prayers, with hosannas, with kind words, with help fulness. Make tbe peroration ot the cen tury the climax of Christlike deeds. Close up the ranks of God, and during this re maining twelve months charge mightily against the host of Abaddon. Have no reserve corps. Let swiftest gosr el cavalry gallop, and heaviest moral artillery roll, and mightiest evangelistic batteries thun der on the scene. Let ministers ot tbe gospel quit ail controversy with each other and in solid phalanx march out for the world's disentbrallment. Let printing presses, secular and religious, make combined movement to Instruct and emancipate the world. On all the hills let there be Elijahs praying for "a great rain," and on every contested field Joshuas to see that final victory Is gained before the sun goes down, and every mountain be come a transfiguration, and every Galilee a walking place of Him who can bush a tempest. Let us be jealous of every inontb, of every week, of every day tbat passes without something significant and glorious wrought for God and this sin cursed world. Let our churches be thronged with devout assemblages. Let the chorals be more like grand marches than requiems. Let tbe coming year see tbe last wound ot Transvaal and Philippine conflict, and the earth quake with the grounding arms of the last regiment ever to be marshaled, oud the furnaces ot tbe foundries blaze with the fires that shall turn tbe last swords Into plowshares. And may all those whose lives shall go out In this last year of a century, as many Will, meet in the heavenly world those who In the morning and noonday of this hun dred years tolled and suffered for tl-e world's salvation to tell them bow much ' baa been accomplished for tbe glory ot Him whose march through all the coming centuries tbe Scriptures describe ns going forth "conquering and to conquer." Oh, tbe contrast between tbat uplifted spec tacle of eternal triumph in the presence ol God and the Lamb and these eiirthl) scenes, wbere "we spend our years as a talc that Is told." Give neither counsel nor salt until you are asked for it Economical wives make fond and indulgent husbands. . All evils are easily managed if they are nipped in the bud. The development of the best within us is oftener due to our failures than to our successes. To bear disappointment bravely Is to disconcert the fates. W mini lnv ae a hl1 nihcn ha I should sit a giant on his clouds, the great disturbing spirit of the world. It Is not generally known that Rud yard Kipling's fuii name is Joseph Rudyard Kipling. V 1 . ' .Tf.-.--.'sJl'' ?- ' WftgaM-r t a- ."l '""fcwxe. 5 j