r i B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNIONAND THE EH FORCED EOT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. LIV. MIFFLINTOWX. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1900 NO. 25. A. --. ' CHAPTER III. (CIntlnned.) It is gratifying to be able to state that during the whole of this evening the con duct of Miss Rosslyn was quite beyond reproach. Young Duncombe was in rath er an eager and talkative mood perhaps from the consciousness that he was en tertaining those people; and she paid him the most scrupulous and courteous atten tion. Whether he was in jest or in earn est, she listened; and he had adopted kind of . don't-you-think-so attitude to ward her. and often her eyes smiled as sent and -approval even when she did not peak. One could see that Queen Xita occasionally threw a glance toward the girl that seemed to savor of sarcasm; but women are like that, and are not to be heeded. ' . , Now, when we left this snug hostelry to return to our "Nameless Barge," the two women led the way, and they had their arms interlinked and were engaged In conversation.- What that conversa tion was we were not permitted to over hear; but on reaching the boat which waa all lighted up, by the way, and in the darkness looked something like one of those illumined toy churches, with col ored windows, that Italians need to sell in the streets it was found that Miss Peggy was pretending to be very much annoyed with her friend. She wore an injured air. When Murdoch had got ont the gangboard and we were all in the sa loon again, Mrs. Threepenny-bit went and took down the banjo. "Come, now, Peggy, don't be vexed. When I talk to you. it'a for your good. Come along, now, and we'll have 'Carry me DacK to old v lrgmny as a kind of general good-night." "Oh, no," says Miss Peggy, "I'm afraid Mr. Duncombe would think it stupid, for no one knows the words." Miss Peggy reaches over and takes the instrument that is handed to her. "No," she says, "but I'M try an English ballad I heard a little while ago I don't know whether I can manage it with this thing." She struck the strings, and almost di rectly we recognized the prelude of one of the quaintest and prettiest of the old ballad airs. And then Miss Peggy sang: "Early one morning, just as the sun was rising, I heard a maid sing in the valley be low: Op don't deceive me! Oh, never leave How could you use a poor maiden soT ' And therewithal she looked across the table at Queen Tita, with eyes that spoke , of injury and reproach, as clearly as the mischief in them would allow. j CHAPTEK IV, All this world of young summer foliage -. was thirsting for rain; you could have Imagined that the pendulous leaves of the lime-trees, hardly moving in the light air of the morning, were whispering among themselves) and listening for the first soft patterings of the longed-for shower. They fforo IiItaIv mt it. tnn The frwiftjt and swallows were flying low over the river, the sky was a uniform pale white, without any definite trace of cloud; there was a feeling of moisture in the faint stirring wind. It was when we were passing Holme Park that it began a few touches on hand or cheek, almost imper ceptible, then heavier drops striking on the glassy surface of the stream, each with its little bell of air and widening circle around it. The four of us were now together In the stern Murdoch be ing engaged in the pantry. On this occa sion Jack Duncombe was entertaining ns with a lively account of certain gaye ties and festivities that had taken place just before he left town. Incidentally, he mentioned the banjo . craze, and made tnerry over the number of people, among pis own acquaintance, who, with a light Jbeart, had set about learning to play, and who had suddenly been brought up thort, through want of ear or some other cause. ' "I had a try myself," he said, modest ly; "but I soon got to the end of my tether." "But yon play a little?" said Miss (Peggy. "Oh, yes, a little In a mechanical sort of way. It isn't everybody has the extra ordinary lightness of touch 'that you have." "I am not a player at all," she said, "I am only a stru turner. Anyhow, my banjo wants a thorough tuning some time or other, and I should be so much obliged to you if yon would help me; if you would screw up the pegs while I tune the strings; It is much easier so." "Not in the rain." he protested; for a much less ready-witted young man than he could not have failed to perceive the chance before him. "No; we will go into the saloon, and have a thorough over hauling of the strings. It will be a cap ital way of passing the time, for I don't see much prospect of the weather clear ing at present " She was quite obedient. She rose, and hook the rain drops from her sleeve and skirts, and passed through the door that he had courteously opened for her, he immediately following. When they had thus disappeared, Queen Tita wa left alone with the steersman. "That young man -had better take care." bhe remarked, significantly. "Why. what have yon to say against her row? Did you ever see anybody be have better more simply and frankly and straightforwardly T" "If you only knew, it was when Peggy 1. best behaved that she is Most danger ous," was the dark answer. "She doesn t take all that trouble for nothing, yon may "Tou are always inventing spiteful things about women." "Perhaps yon can tell me how long it takes to tnne np a banjor . They certainly were an nnconsclonable time about it. The rain had almost ceas ed; different lights were appearing in th -v,warm grays that had a cheer fS& .Ton? .hem: resumed their singing, filling all the afc with a harmonious music. We crossea S, Tmouth of the River Rennet, thus be- gLaing the long PWth'fVh.emTlv complete by means of the Thames. ev - i. Avon and Kennet, with the intei-StolTSi-. nntil we should return to tWNeS"p-rler. the towpath twice ."ven and now Jack Dun- WILUAM J) LACK. combe appears at the bow. and gets hold of the long pole, while Miss Koss'.yn comes along and joins her friends aft. I had no idea it had left off raining." he observes, innocently. "I hope you got the banjo . properly tuned 7" one. of ns says to her. "Oh, yes; .It U much better now," she answers pleasantly, and with an artless air. "But Mr. Duncombe was too mod est He can play very fairly Indeed. He played two or three things just to try the banjo, and I was quite surprised." "Oh. yon can give him some lessons. Peggy." her friend says; but the young lady won't look her way; and the sar casmif any was intended is lost. We moored at Wallingford that nilit: and by the time that dinner was ready it was dusk enongh to have the lamps and candlesjighted. And perhaps, as we sat in this little room and observed onr young dramatist's feeble efforts to guess at what dishes were the handiwork of the amateur cooks the place' looked all the more snug that the pattering of the rain on the roof was continually audible. Dinner over, the two women-folk retir ed to the upper end of the saloon, next to the big window: and Mrs. Threepenny-bit took down the banjo and, without a word, handed it to Mies Peggy. "Ah, I know what will fetch yon," the girl said, with a not unkindly smile. She struck a few low notes of Introduc tion, and then began: "Once In the dear dead days beyond recall." It was an air that suited her contralto voice admirably, and when she came to the refrain "Just a song at twilight, when the lights are low" she sang that with a very pretty pathos indeed; insomuch that when she had ended Queen Tita did not thank her with any speech, but she put her hund within the girl's arm instead and let it remain there. With her disengaged arm Miss Peggy held out the banjo. Yon now, she said to Mr. Duncombe. in her frank way. He took the banjo from her, of course. "Oh. I can't sing." he said; "but I'll cry to give yon some Idea of a rather quaint little ballad that most people know of. though very few have heard the whole of it. I imagine." Then he sang, with good expression. If with no great voice: ' "It's I was a-walking one morning in May To hear the birds singing and see lamb kins play, I espied a young damsel, so sweetly sung she, Down by the Green Bushea where she chanced to meet me." "Remember," said he, "the words were written down from memory, and I may have got them all wrong." Then he went on: ' Oh, why are you loitering here, pretty maid?' 'I'm waiting for my true love,' softly she aid; 'Shall I be your true love, and will you agree To leave the Green Bushea and follow with me? " 'I'll buy you the beavers and fine silken gowns, I'll give you smart petticoats flounced to the ground, I'll buy you fine jewels, and live but for thee. If you'll leave your own true love and follow with me.' " "The flounced petticoats make me think the ballad mast be old," said the trouba dour; and he continued: " 'Oh, I want not your beavers, nor your silks, nor your hose, For I'm not so poor as to marry for clothes; But If you'll prove constant and . true nnto me. Why, I'll leave the Green Bushes and follow with thee. " 'Come, let ns be going, kind sir, if yon please. Oh, let us be going from nndcr these trees, For yonder is coming my true love, I see, Down by the Green Bushes where be was to meet me.' "And it's when be came there and found she was gone. He was nigh heart-broken, and cried out forlorn: 'She has gone with another and for , saken me, -Ad left the Green Bushes where she nsed to meet me.' " "Well, now, I call that Just delightful!" Miss Peggy cried, at once. "Why. I haven't heard anything so quaint and pretty for many a day! J out delightful. I call it. Mr. Duncombe, it is alwayr a shame to steal people's songs, and espe cially this one, that is in a kind of way your own property; but. really, I should like to take it back home with me. Would you mind singing it over to me some other time? I think I could remember it." "But I will copy it ont for yon." he said, instantly. "It would be too much trouble," she rather faint-heartedly suggested. "It would give me a great deal of pleas ure to copy it out for you." said he. guilt earnestly, and she thanked him with her yes cast down. We had some further playing and sing mg (but no "Virginny;" oh, no; she was too well behaved; the time was not yet). And by-and-by the hour arrived for our retiring to our several bunks. CHAPTER V. f miiunI th next moraine, but the afternoon was clearing, though there was still an April loon aoout me oanKcu-up clouds, with their breadths of bronze ot saffron-hned I'ghts here and there. V iad had some thoughts of pushing " rt,. .TMilnv! tint as rain be?aa to fall again, and as we wished Miss Peggy s first impressions or tne ramous . : nm.-n in K favorable, we re- solved upon passing the night at Abing don. Indeed, we were " o i get in out of the wet; and when water proofs had been removed, and candles lighted, the blinds drawn, and Murdoch's ministrations placed on the table. It did not much matter to ns what part of England happened to- be lying alongside our gunwale. thla evening, for ev- V UMU ery one waa busy in getting his or her things ready for going annore . i AJti.' fur oar fond le owing . .7 . sire that Miss Peggy should approach Oxford nnder favorable Influences of weather. All that night it rained hard; in the morning'lt waa raining hard; when we left. Abingdon it waa pouring in tor- Well, we may get a -better day before we leave Oxford. We are not likely to encounter a worse. The rain keeps peg ging away, in a steady, unmistakable, business-like fashion, as we draw nearer to those half-hidden spires among the trees. The river is quite deserted; there Is not a single boat ont on the swollen and rushing stream. And so we get oa o Salter rafts, and secure onr moorings there; while Jack Duncombe good-naturedly volunteers to remain behind and Fettle np with I'alinurua, and see onr luggage forwarded to the hotel. In a few minutes three of ns are in a cab, and driving through the wan. cold, drip ping black-gray thoroughfares. And It la little that the grave and learned seniors of those halls and colleges suspect that a certain Miss Peggy has arrived in Ox ford town. Now, whether It waa that the gay morning that had raised Miss Peggy's Kpirits, and thereby in a measure soften ed her heart, or whether it was that she was bent on a little willful mischief af ter having played Miss Propriety during these past few days, she was .now show ing herself a good deal kinder to Jack Duncombe, and he was proportionately grateful, an he went with the women from shop to shop and carried their par cels for them. , We went to the Canal Company's of fice to get onr permit, and then walked along to the first lock a little toy box kind of basin it looked; and there we loitered abaci for awhile in expectation of the "Nameless Barge" making its ap pearance. Time passed,' and there was no sign. Of course it waa all very well for those young people to be placidly con tent with this delay, and to heed nothing so long as tbey could stroll np and down in the sunlight and the blowing winds her eyea from time to time showing that he was doing his best to amuse her; but more serious people, who had been read ing tne morning papers of the hurricanes and Inundations that had recently pre vailed over the whole country, and whose last glimpse of the Isis was a yellow colored stream rushing like a mill race, began to be anxious. Accordingly it was proposed, and unanimously agreed, that we should make our way back along the river bank, to gain some tidings. When, at length we came In sight of our gallant craft and her composite crew, we found that Captain Columbus was making preparations for getting her nn der a bridge, and also that about half the population of Oxford had come out to see the performance. When we looked at the low arch, and at the headstrong current. It was with no feelings of satis faction; nevertheless we all embarked, to see what was about to happen, and Murdoch took the tiller, while the Vw rope was passed to the Horse-Marine. Now, we should have run no serious risk but for this circumstance; half of the bridge had recently fallen down, and the authorities. Instead of rebuilding It, had contented themselves with blocking up the roadway. Accordingly, when, as we had almost expected, the "Nameless Barge" got caught nnder the arch, we found the masonry just above onr heada displaying a series of very alarming cracks; and the question was as to which of those big blocks, loosened by the fric tion of the boat, wonld come crushing dawn upon ns. However, the wont that befell ns waa that we got onr eyes filled with dust and onr hands half flayed with the gritty stone, and eventually we were dragged through, and towed to a place ot seclusion. And that waa bnt the beginning of onr new experiences; for when Columbus and the Horse-Marine having reappeared we went on to the first lock of the canal, we fonnd the toy basin so narrow that we had to detach our fenders before we could enter. Then came another bridge that had almost barred onr way by reason of the lowness of the arch. And that again was as nothing to the succeed ing bridges we encountered as we got into the open country. Nevertheless, we managed to get on somehow, and these recurrent delays and difficulties only served to give variety and incident to onr patient progress. (To be continued.) Field and Farm. Grass lands are supposed to recuper te, and a heavy sod is desirable, but nrhen such lands are grazed or mowed :here Is a :oss of plant food and the loll will become poorer unless manure r fertilizer Is applied. When grass ippears to die out it Is an Indication hat the plant food is becoming exhaust Hi. The best plan to pursue is to keep stock off the field and apply fertilizer, following with a heavy application of manure In the fall. If the grass does lot show satisfactory effects fiom such rreatment plow the field and plant to :orn the following spring. . When breeding for better cows It la not expected . that the herd will be changed hurriedly. About one-half of :he calves will be males, and some loss nay occur, but the. dairyman who will itick to the work of Improvement will n a few years have a herd of cows that will produce twice as much milk and jutter as he now receives. He will thus rain space In the barn for more cat lie of the same kind, as one good cow will be doing the work of two inferior ines. - Those Interested In flower beds should understand that when the ground Is prepared it must be very fine, not a lump or clod to be allowed. As the seeds of some kinds of flowers are very small the only covering they should have when planted Is to shift a little fine dirt over them. Use only fine com post, as coarse or unrotton manure will sometimes prove Injurious to both seeds and plants. Phosphates are excellent for turnips, as the crop seems to thrive better where phosphates are applied, on some soils, than when potash or nitrates are used; but a fertilizer is more complete, and gives better results, when all the plant "oods are used, the preference In quan tity being given to phosphates. It requires more plant food and mois ture to produce cornstalks and straw than for the grain. Barnyard manure will usually supply potash and phos phoric acid abundantly. If applied lib erally, but nitrogen is usually lacking. Corn and wheat will always be benefit, ed when nitrate of soda Is applied. Toung animals may be nsed for breed ing purposes occasionally, but the rule should be to breed only from the fe males that are fully matured. If im provement Is desired. Toung mares are often unable to supply sufficient milk, and the same happens with young sows. The strongest and most vigorous young stock come from fully matured pa rents. Spectroscopic and other observa tions show the fixed stars to be self luminous bodies suns to the other sys tems of planets. An analysis of their light Indicates the presence of the same hcmlnl elements that exist In our I own sun .and earth, together with oth I era unknown In our solar system. There are 46 states and 6 terrlto ! rles in the Union, not including our new ! possessions. Utah was the last state I to be admitted Into the Union, the-date I of admission being; January 4, 189C USES OF VARIOUS PROJECTILES. The f the Mfforeat KlswUef hell Oaaa ta War. The nature and manufacture of the projectile used by artillery in South Africa Is naturally a subject of consid erable Interest at the present time. The larger part of the ammunition of the British force la being manufactured at the Woolwich arsenal. The picture shown the character of the shell turned ont. With the introduction of rifling to large ordnance, the projectile, hitherto round, became, of necessity, elongated, with the addition of studs fixed upon it to "take" the rifling. This system waa found so wasteful, as regards the wear of the gun, besides leading to loss of power from windage, that the Intro duction of the copper driving-band or gas-check followed as an Inventive matter of course. Under the regime of the muzxle-load-Ing gun, this was Impossible, bnt the advent of the breech-loader permitted the use of a projectile larger In parts than the bore of the gun. To put it tersely, the breech chamber can be made larger than the remainder of the barrel, thus admitting the shot, pro vided with a gas-check. This latter con sists of a flat band of copper, forced by tremendous hydraulic pressure on to a groove In the base of the projectile. When the explosion occurs the shot la forced Into the bore, which It accurate ly fits, while the slightly larger copper band Is molded under the stress of the exploding cordite to the shape of the rifling. The mass of metal is forced by this method to revolve as It leaves the barrel, which It continues to do throughout Its course in mid-air. The greater number of projectiles are of cast steel, and the process of casting Is one of great Interest- Maases of molten metal are poured from huge re ceivers into molds from which emerge, when cool, rough castings Tery differ ent from the smooth shell with which every one is familiar. These are turned In a lathe until tbey are sufficiently smooth for painting, when they hare the copper band applied. The projectiles vary considerable in size, from that required by the tin.; seven-pounder to that necessary for the service of the monster 16.25 gun, the 110-tonner. This mass of metal weigh.' three-quarters of a ton, stands 4 feet 8 Inches high, and Is propelled by a charge of 800 pounds of powder, cor dite not being used for these guns. Roughly speaking, shot of all kinds fall Into four groups, via., armor-piercing, common shell, shrapnel, and case. The first named is made of cast steel, with an exceedingly hard point. Its ob ject, as Its name Implies, Is to penetrate the armor-plate of an Ironclad and then to burst; hence It can always be recognized In pictures by Its having a sharp point instead of a flattened nose. The bursting charge is comparatively small, and these shot are provided with a fuse In the base. Common shell are merely traveling mines, fired from a gun and made to contain as large a bursting charge as possible consistent with sufficient strength to avoid breaking up In the bore of the gun after firing. They are therefore merely hollow skins of cast it eel filled with either cordite, powder 9r lyddite. They are flat-nosed, and have two varleltes of fuses, either time or percussion; that Is. a shell, cfcn be timed to explode practically when de sired, the velocity being known, or it may be made to explode against shelter trenches, etc, by Impact. ShrapneL Invented by Gen. Shrapnel, and first used at the battle of Vlmlero, consists of a thin Iron case filled with bullets set In resin. The bursting charge Is contained in a tin at the base, to gether with the fuse, while the bead and nose of the projectile are strength ened to make It capable of being rough ly handled. It Is especially a man kill ing missile, the case flying off at a range of 4,000 yards, while the bullets search out an area of about 120 yards at that range. With the exception of a few common shell and fewer cases, all European horse and field artilleiy corps are mainly provided with shrap nel. Modern tactics lay down as an axiom that sooner or later troops must advance In the open, and hence a pro jectile like shrapnel la most useful. Against shelter trenches It Is. however, of little use, and artillery firing It are outranged by an enemy firing common shell, for the reason that It breaks up tt 4,000 yards, while common shell doe not. To sum up, against an enemy who "plays the game," shrapnel is "facile prince ps," but against one who does oot It la distinctly at a disadvantage Case shot are simply flat-beaded cyl inders of thin Iron, filled with bullets, and this missile Is never used save In the direct emergencies. The horses of the battery are all down, and the per sonnel, with orders to delay the enemy tt all costs, see that they must die where they stand. Tbey load with case, and at a few hundred yards' range dis charge their stream of bullets Into the midst of the advancing savages. (The word savage Is used avlsedly, as against modern troops armed with the small-bore even tnia resort is not prac ticable as witness the artillery loss at the Tugeia battle. In heaps of shell it will be noticed that their bases have ropes twisted round them. This Is for the purpose of protecting the safe copper gas-check from any risk of Injury during transit, and la removed whan the shells arrlvi at the magazine. Filling shell, although anparaatly a dsboass evaratloa, to j KLU 1I1DT TOB CBE. reason of the precaution taken, a sar one; for the Interior of the projectile hi lacquered to prevent friction, while In the larger ones the charge Is inserted In bags. It is Impossible for the British Gov ernment to turn out sufficient shell foi all purposes; hence the trade Is largely laid under contribution. No less than 8,000 shell of all sizes reach Woo'.wlcb every week from these sources in peace time alone, and every one of these hai to be examined, weighed, gauged, aik carefully scrutinized from within bj electric lamps before It Is passed. The United States Department need dynamite for filling shell with, and, al though it might be thought liable tc explode In the bore of the gun, this l not so. One point must be steadily borne In mind when art:l'ery fir Is being discussed, and that Is that its effect Is far more a moral than a phy sical one. The noise, and the sudden collapse of twenty, or even more, men cause more disturbance of the soldler't mind than double the loss by rifle fire Wounds from shells form a very smal tctal In modern warfare, but. none the less, the presence or absence of ac overwhelming strength In guns decide the fortune of battle to-day. MRS. PIET JOUBERT. On of th Moot Popular and Rcsolate Women in the Transvaal. We are told almost by all writers on South African affairs that the women of the Transvaal are as resolute in the prosecution of the war against the Brit ish as are their husbands and sons Women have taken part In some of the fighting and , In the more wjngenial work of nursing the sick and wounded they are acting a noble and a promin ent part. In their courage and devotion to thatr country they are but following th cat ample of Mrs. Ptet Joubert, wife of the recently deceased commander-in-chief of the Boer forces. She is a type of woman that is looked up to In the South African repnblic. During the campaign of 1881, w-hen ber husband Inflicted th defeat at Majuba Hill upon Sir George Colley, she was by his side and It la claimed that It wss by ber advice that the Boers scaled the mountain height and won the victory which gave them Independence. In the numerous Kaffir wars she was present In camp with her MRS. PIET JOUBERT. husband, sharing all the dangers and privations of active campaigning ami soothing with her tender care the wounded and the sick. Her advice is mid to have been on many occasions a llstlnct advantage to the Boers. With the present campaign, up to the time of her husband's death, she was prom inently connected. Mrs. Joubert is a resolute woman and devoutly religious. Next to Mrs. Kruger she Is the most popular and respected woman In the Transvaal. Marvelous Marksmanship. The accompanying illustration la a scene which goes to show Just what an expert sharpshooter the average Boet still Is. This scene represents the Boe. method of killing cattle for food. Th Boer does not poleax bis beet, but ha 1 BOKnS BLACOHTKBIXO BBKVES. It driven up by the herdsmen. He then casually selects the animal he want and puts a bullet through its brain with the utmost nicety. When he goes out after game he even more skillful In bringing down food for his larder. He can pick off with the utmost unconcern a deer at a thousand yards and while going foil gallop on horseback. Although the younger generation of Boers are not perhaps, such expert marksmen as their fathers, the present war In South Africa has shown that their shooting Is by no means to be despised. We have noticed In time of peril that the man who believes bis soul la saved gets aa scared as one whose soul isn't. Animals Which Like PerTasaes An Investigator of the effect of per fnmes on animals In the London Zoo logical Gardens discovered that mos of the lions and leopards were ver; fond of lavender. They took a plect of cotton saturated with It and held 1; between their pawa with great delight The Oldest Poaslostov. John McGowan, of Clay County Florida, asserts that he is the oldest pensioner In this country. According to papers now on file in Washington, he h 121 years old. Ho waa born In Ireland on March IS, 17T9, and came to this country la 1804. He enlisted In the Sev enteenth Connecticut in 1863, when be waa 84 years old. The pension officials are Inclined to believe his statement New York Commercial Advertiser. TfeasljB to but antfls OJas, J tt Household Recipes. .RECIPES. Simple Padding. One pound each of raisins, sultanas, currants, . bread crumbs, flour, sugar, finely chopped auet and mixed candled peeL The grated rind of two lemons, a pinch of salt and one-half teaspoonful of spice. Mix with milk and water, stir thoroughly and boil for at least eight hours. This will make three or four puddings. - Stuffed Bacon. Mak forcemeat by mixing a larg tablespoonful of bread crumbs with a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, half the quantity of finely minced onion and a tablespoonful ot chicken and tongue (mixed) which has been passed through a mincing ma chine; season with pepper and salt and molaten the ingredients with some well beaten eggs. Cut some thin slices ol bacon, smooth them out with a knife and spread them evenly with a layer ot the forcemeat; then roll them up and tie them with fine white string and fry un til the bacon la cooked ; serve on pieces ot fried toaet, which should be just a little larger than the rolls of bacon. Clams with Green Peppers. Cook to gether for five minutes without brown ing one tablespoonful of butter, two tablespoonfula of finely chopped onion and four tablespoonfula of finely chopped green pepper; add one-half of a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper and one dozen finely chopped clams. Simmer for five minutes, pour over buttered toast and serve hot. Orange Salad. Lay firm oranges on the Ice until very cold. Peel and divide into lobes, then, with a sharp knife, cut each lobe In half. Arrange on crisp let tuce leaves, and Dour mavonnolse dress ing over all. Orange and Walnut Salad. Blanch shelled English walnuts by throwing them Into boiling water and removing the akins. When cold, prepare oranges as in the former recipe; arrange them with the blanched walnuts among let tuce leaves, and mask with mayonnaise dressing. Cream of Rice with Prunes. f!ook one-fourth of a cupful of rice In a cup rul and a half of milk. Make a boiled mustard with three yolks of em half cupful of sugar and half a cupful of milk. Add half a package of gelatin loftened In cold water and strain over ne rice. Let cool. Fold In a nlnt nf whipped cream, twelre sifted prunes ana . lemon Juice. Serve surrounded vith cooked prunes. Sour Cream Wafers. Stir two ta lespoonfuls of cold water Into one hlrd of a cup of cornstarch; then add tne cup of thick sour cream, the beaten oiks of four eggs, one-fourth of a tea- ipoonful each of salt and mace, and igntiy roiu In the whites of four eggs eaten to a stiff froth. Bake as five arge griddle cakes, sprinkle with cln inmon and sugar, roll up like a Jelly tU and serve very hot Puree of Pens. Drain a can of peas, et stand In boiling water five minutes, hen drain again and pass through a iteve; add half a teaspoonful of salt, i dash of pepper and drop through a astir bag (as for making potato roses) t Is easier to serve the peas plain with he fish. In which case cook the peas ike any canned peas, season aa direct -d. bring to a boll and pour around he fish. - Orange and English Walnut Salad. Ilice four peeled oranges lengthwise, trees with three or four tablespoonfula f olive oil and one tablespoonful of emon Juice. Arrange slices In a nound upon a layer of lettuce leaves. Tress one cUDful of sliced nut meats vith one tablespoonful of oil, a dash f salt and half a tablespoonful of lem n Juice and dispose upon the centre of he mound. Tos together before serv ng. Useful Hints. In buying white linen for "drawn work the round-thread linen is prefera ble to that having flat threads, as the round threads are more easily drawn. One of the best uses to which one can put the crochet laces of linen and cot ton thread that many o-nen are so fond of making Is to edge a linen bed spread. The linen Imported for these spreads Is two yards wide and very close and firm. The spreads are either embroidered In an all over pattern, powdered with some design, or decor ated with a wide border done in colored linen threads. To warm over gems and rolls dip them In cold water for an Instant. Drop them Into a paper bag. twist the top together to exclude the air. put them into a hot oven for five or ten minutes. Do not put a carpet on a dining-roim floor. It holds dust and grease, and is Impossible to keep clean and sweet. A bare floor with a rug under the table Ir the most sensible and fashionable cus torn. General Sports. Jack Jeffries, brother to the cham pion, has decided to enter the ring. Billy Brady haa arranged a 25-round bout for him with Bob Armstrong. Jack Is a big, strong fellow, and under the tuition of Tommy Ryan and his broth er he haa developed Into quite a light er. The match will be decided at Coney Inland within three weeks. Matty Matthews, who knocked out Mysterious Billy Smith at 140 pounds, says he can easily train to 135. and wants to fight Frank Erne at that weight for the light-weight champion ship. In the 100-mlle fly of the Delaware County District of American Homing Pigeons from Landover Md., first price wan taken bv Hearna A Mooney and second prise bv William M. Bowen. E. W. Minster, of Bristol. Pa., has been elected president of the Bristol Driving Park Association. W. A. Brady, says Jeffries will fight Corbett on a week's notice and bet $10,000 to tSOOO on the result. The match between Kid McCoy and Tommy Ryan, slated to take place In Chicago May 23, haa been postponed to May 29 owing to Ryan's having a bad cold. Jockey Clawson la under contract to ride for E. F. Simms during this season. The retaining fee is said to be 1500 a month, and should Clawson secure a better offer, he can leave by giving a ten days' notice. John ("Spotty") Clifford, the five-mile professional sprinter and boxer, will sail for England to try his luck on the cinder path. Thomas Thompson and James Sut ton have been matched to play on the Kensington Quoit Club grounds. Han cock street and Indiana avenue, on Decoration day. In a five-yard brassie game, 1 points out, for a purse of $30. If all the dressmakers known to ex ist In America worked 24 hours of each day for a whole year without stopping for sleep or meals, they would still be able to make only one dress apiece for less than seven-eighths of the women in America. - -The news from Lick observatory tbat the North Jtar, 255,000.000 miles wav 7mm nas oeen xouna 10 ne -n- tar but three ewineing around In great orbits like the moon, I Do not be too ready to cut down wages, earth and sun. is another remarkable I as far as possible, pay ail, and pay prompt result of the application of photo-spec- j ly. There is a great deal of Bible teaching troscopy to the telescopic tudy of the n this subject. Maiaolii. "I will be a swift heavens. SERMON it uBJsett Labor Strikes A Qaestlo oB I'mhii Import TiMlrd In a Way Aimed to Bring About n R attar reeling Between Employer nnd Kmploye. ' Copyright 1WM. Washihotom, D. C At a time when In, Various districts labor troubles are exist ing or Impending the efforts Dr. Talmaga makes In this discourse to bring about a better feeling between both sides of this ' difficult question Is well timed; texts, Gala- tiuus, v., is, ' But li ye Dite ana devour one another, take bead that ye be not con sumed one of another," and Phllipplaos II., 4, "Look not every man on his own thlugs, but every man also on the things of others." About every six months there Is a great labor agitation. There are violent ques tions now In discussion between employers and employes. The oresent "strikes" will go Into the past. Of course the damage done cannot immediately be repaired. Wages will not be so high as tbey were. Spasmodically tbey may be higher, but they will drop lower. Strikes, whether right or wrong, always Injure laborers aa well as capitalist. You will see this In the starvation of next winter Boycotting sad violence and murder never pay. Tbey are different stages ot anarchy. Ood never blessed murder. The worst use yon can put a man to Is to kill him. The worst enemies of the working classes In the United Htates and Ireland are their demented coadjutors. Tears ago assas sination the assassination of Lord Fred erick Cavendish and Mr. Burke In Pboeuix Park, Dublin, In the attempt to avongethe wrongs of Ireland, only turned away from tbat afflicted people millions ot sympathiz ers. The attempts to blow np the bonsn of common, In London, bad only this effect to ttrow ont of employment tens ot tbonsands of innocent Irish people In England. In tbU country the torch pat to the factories tbat have discharged hands for good or bad reason, obstructions on the rail tracks in front of mldnlgut express trains because the offenders do not like tbe president of the company, strikes on shipboard the hour they were going to sail, or In printing offices the hour the paper was to go to press, or In tbe mines the day the con) was to be delivered, or on bouse scaffoldlnirs so tbe builder falls In keeping bis contract all these are only a hard blow on the head of American labor and cripple Its arms and lame Its feet and. pierce its heart. Traps sprung suddenly npon employers and violence never tooti me knot ont ot the kanolcles ot toll or put a farthing of wattes into a callous palm, j Frederick the Orear admired some land near bis palace at Potsdam, and be re-: solved to get it. It was owned by a niillerJ He offered tbe miller three times the value at the property. Tbe miller would not! take It because It was It was tbe old homestead at as Naboth felt about bis and h folt aboo vineyard when Abab wanted It. Frederick) the Q rent was a rough and terrible manj and be ordered the miller Into his pres-4 anee, and the king, with a stick In bis hand) a stick with which he sometimes struck' :he officers of state said to tbe miller, -'Mow, I baye ottered "you three times the value of that property, and It you won't tell It I'll take It anyhow." The miller said, "Your majesty, yon won't." "yes," said tbe king; "I will take it." "Then," said tbe miller, "It your majesty does take It I will so yoa Is tbe ebancery court." At thai threat Frederick tbe Great yielded Ills Infamous demand. And the most Imperi ous outrage against the working elasses will yet cower before tbe law. Violence and defiance ot tbe law will never accomplish inythlng, but righteousness and submis sion to the law will accomplish it. But gradually tbe damages done tbe laborer by the strikes will be repaired, and some Important things ought now to be said. Tbe whole tendency of our time?, us you have noticed, is to make tbe chasm between employer and employe wider and wider, in olden time the bead man ot the faotory, the master builder, the capitalist, the bead man ot tbe firm, worked side liy side with their employes, working some times at the same bench, dining at the same table, and there are those here who can remember the time when the clerks of large commercial establishments were ac customed to board with the bead men of tbe firm. All that Is changed, and the tendency Is to make the distance between employer and employe wider and wider. The len iency is to make the employe feel tbat he Is wronged by tbe t access ot tbe capitalist ind to make tbe capitalist feel: "Now, my laborers are only beasts of burden. I must live so much money for so much drudgery; nst so many pieces of silver for so many beads ot sweat." In other words, the Drldge ot sympathy Is broken down at both snds. Tbat feeling was well - described by Fbomas Carlyle when he said: "Plugson if St. Dolly Undershot, buccaneerlike, says to bis men: 'Noble spinners, this Is :he hundredth thousand we have gained, wherein I mean to dwell and plant my vineyards. The hundred thousand pound is mine; the dally wago was yours. Allien, ooble splnnersl DrlnL my health with this groat each, which I give you over and above.' Now what we want Is to rebuild tbat bridge of sympathy, and I put the trowel to one ot the abutments to-day, and 1 preach more especially to employers as such, although what I have to say will be appropriate to both employers and em ployes. The behavior of a multitude ot laborers toward their employers during tbe last three months may have induced some em ployers to neglect tbe real Christian duties that tbey owe to tbose whom tbey employ. Therefore I want to say to yon whom 1 confront face to face and those to whom these words may come that all shipowners, all capitalists, all commercial firms, all master builders, all housewives, are bound to be interested In the entire welfare of tbelr subordinates. Years ago some one gave three prescrip tions for becoming a millionaire: "First, spend your life in getting and keeping tne earnings of other people; secondly, have no anxiety about the worrlments, the losses, tbe disappointments ot others; thirdly, do not mind tbe fact that your vast wealth implies tbe poverty ot a great many people." Now, there Is not a man here who won hi consent to go into life with tbose three principles to earn a fortuue. It Is your de sire to do your whole duty to the men and women In your service. . First of all, then, pay as large wages at are reasonnble and as your business will afford; not necessarily what others pay, certainly not what your hired help say you mast pay, for tbat is tyranny on the part of labor unbearable. Tbe right of a laborer to tell bis employei what be must pay Implies the right of an employer to compel a man into a service whether be will or not, and either of tbose Ideas Is despicable. When any employer allows a laborer tc say what be must do or have bis business rained, and the employer submits to It, he does every business man in the United States a wrong and yields to tbe principle which, carried out, would dissolve society. Look over your affairs and put your selves in imagination in your laborer'! place and then pay him what iefore Ood and your own conscience you think you ought to pay him. "Ood ble-a yousl" are well In theit place, but tbey do not bny coal nor pay bouse rent nor get shoes for tbe children. At the same time you, tbe employer, ought to remember through what straits ami strains von got tbe fortune by wbicb you built your store or run tbe faotory. You are to remember tbat yon take all the risks and the employe takes none ot scarcely any. Ton are to remember thai there may he reverses In fortune and that some new style of machinery may make your machinery valueless or some new style of tariff set yonr business back hope lessly ana forever, xoa mast lane an mat Into consideration and then pay what Is i reasonable. witness against all sorcerers and against 111 adulterers and against those who op pose tbe hlrelicg In bis wages." Leviticus, "Thou shalt not keep the wages of the hire ling all night nnto the morning." Colos llans, "Hasten, give unto your servants tbat which Is just and equal, knowing that ye also have a Master in heaven." Ho you see It is not a question between you and your employe so much as It is a question between you and Ood. Do not say to your employes, "Now, If fou don't like this place, get another," when you know they oannot get another. As tor as possttle, ojee a year visit at theit homes your clerks and your workmen. That is the only way you oan become ac quainted with their wants. You will by suoh process And out that there Is a blind parent or a sick sister be ing supported. You will And some of your young men in rooms without any fire in winter and In summer sweltering in III ventilated apartments. You will And mucb iepends on the wages you pay or with hold. Moreover, It Is your duty as employer, as 'ar as posslbls, to mold the welfare of the (in ploy e. You ought to advise him about investments, about life Insurance, abont savings banks. Yoa ought to give him the Benefit of your experience. There are hundreds and thousands of S.nployers, I amffflnd to say, who are pet lliug In the very best possible way the des tiny of their employes. Such men as Mar shall of LeejH, Lister ot BradforJ, Akroyd f Halifax and men so near at home It might offend their modesty it I mentioned tbelr names these men have built reading rooms, libraries, concert halls, afforded sroquet lawns, cricket grouuJs, gymna siums, choral societies for their employes, and tbey hare not merely paid tbe wages on Saturday night, but through the con tentment and tbe thrift and tbe good morals of their employes they are paying wages from generation to generation for ever. Again, I counsel ail emplo yers to look well after tbe physical health ot their sub mil nates. Do not put on them any un necessary fatigue, I never could undor itand why the drivers on our city cars nust stand all day when they might just is well sit down and drive. It seems to me most unrighteous tbat so nany ot the female clerks in our stores ihould be eompelled to stand all day and Jirougb those hours when there are but 'ew or no customers. These people have iches and annoyances and weariness inough without putting upon them addi loual fatigue. Unless these feinule clorks nust go np and down on the business ol ;be store, let them sit down. But above all I charge you, O employers, :hat you look after the moral and spiritual welfare of your employes. First, know where they spend their evenings. Tbat lecliles everything. You do not want iround your money drawer a young man who went last night to see "Jack Shep pardl" A man that comes into tbe store n the morning ghastly with midnight rev slry is not tbe man for your store. The fourig man who spends bis evening in the society of refined women or in munlcal ot irtistio circles or In literary improvement Is the young man for your store. Do not say of these young men, "II they do their work In tbe business hours, tbat Is all I have to ask." Qod bos made you that man's guardian. I want you to inderstand that many ot these young men ire orphans or worse than orphans, flung rat Into society to struggle for them leives. Employers, urge upon your employes, iboTe all, a religions life. So far from :bat, how Is it, yonng menf Instead of Ming cheered on the road to heaven some f you are caricatured, and It is a hard ' :lilng for yon to keep yonr .Christian Integ rity la that store or faotory where there tre so many hostils to religion. Zietben, grave general nnder Frederick the reat, was a Christian. Frederick the 3rnat was a skeptic. One day Zietben, ;he venerable, white hatred general, rvfked ;o be excused from military duty tbat lie might attend tbe holy saorament. He was excused. A few days after Ziethen was dining with the king and with many notables of Prussia, when Frederick the Great in a jocose way said, "Well, Ziethen, bow did that sacra ment of last Friday digest?" The venera ble old warrior arose and said: "For vour majesty I have risked my life many a time an the battlefield, and for yonr majesty I would be willing any time to die; but you Jo wrong when you Insult the Christian religion. You will forgive me if I, your old military servant, cannot bear In silence auy insult to my' Lord and my Saviour." Frederick the Great leaped to his feet, and he pnt cut his band, and he said: "Happj Zietbenl Forgive me, forgive met" Ob, tbere are many being scoffed at for their religion, and 1 thank Ood there are many men as brave as Zietbenl Go to heaven yourself, O employer! Take all your people with you. Soon you will be through buying and selling, nnd through with manufacturing and buildtog, and Ood will ask you: "Where are all those people over whom you bad so great in fluence? Are they here? Will they be here?" O shipowners, into what harbor will your crew sail? Oh, you merchant grocers, are tbose young men that nuder yonr care are providing food for the bodies and families ot men to go starved forever? Oh, you manufac turers, with so many wheels flying and so many bands pulling and so many new patterns turned out and so many goods shipped, are the spinners, are tbe carmen, are the draymen, are the salesmen, are the watchers of your estahllsliments working out everything but their own salvation? Can It be that, having those people under your care five, ten, twenty years, you nave made no everlasting Impression for good on their Immortal souls? God turn us all back from such selfishness and teach us to live for others and not for ourselves. Christ sets us tbe example ot sacrifice, and so do ninny ot His disciples. One summer in California a gectleman who bad jtit removed from tbe Sandwicb Islands told me this Incident: You know that oneof theSandwich Islands is devoted to lepers. People getting sick ot the lep rosy on the other Islands are sent to the Isle ot lepers. They never come off. They are In different stages of disease, but all who die on that Island die of leprosy. On one ot the Islands ttere was a phy sician wbo always wore his hand gloved and it was often disenssed why he always bad a glove on that baud under all circum stances. Oue day be came to tbe authori ties, and be withdrew his glove, and be said to tbe officers of the law: "You see on that hand a spot of the leprosy and that I am doomed to die. I might bide this for a little while and keep away from the Isle of lepers, bnt I am a phvsiciao, and I can go on that island and ndmluhUer to the sufferings of those wbo are further gone in tbe disease, and I should like to go now. It would be selfish In me to stay amid these luxurious surroundings when 1 might be ot so much help to the retcned. end me to tne isle ot tne lepers." Tney. seeing the spot of loprosv. of coarse took the man Into custody. He bade farewell to bis family and bis friends. It was an agonizing farewell. He could never see them again, He was taken to tbe isle of tbe lepers and tbere wrought among tbe sick until prostrated by bis own death, which at at came. Ob, that was magnttlceot self denial, magnifi cent sacrtnoe, only surpassed by that ot Him wbo exile I Himself from the health of heaven to this leprous Island ot a world that He might physician our wounds and weep our grlets and die our deaths, turn ing the Isle of a leprous world into a great blooming, glorious garden. Whether em ployer or employe, let us catch that spirit, The meteorological department of the government of India now has four first-class observatories, 174 general stations, and 2280 rainfall stations, from which regular monthly statements are received. Metal never rusts In the waters of Lake Titacaca. A chain or an anchor can be left In It two weeks and It will be aa clean and bright aa when it came from the foundry, which Is probably owing to action ot some of the chemical salts in the water. The hottest mines in the world are the Comstock. On the lower levels the heat Is so great that the men cannot work over ten or fifteen minutes at a time. Every known means of mitigat ing the heat has been tried in vain, ice melts before it reaches the bottom of the shafts. H:3 -iv ..V- 'A