- Vv ' r" - ' ' " - ' ' ' . . - ' 1 1 - fx x ' B. F. SCKWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEHENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. LTV. t. MIFFLIXTOWST. JUIOATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1900 NO. 3G r IT Captainjrabaoi? BV B. 7Wt. CROKBR iliU.omapeeof.goatlz.Jfriea CHArTEB II Continued.) Ilere Esme laughed hysterically, ana t once brought the whole storm upon her unlucky head, and acted as a kind of lightning-conductor to Mrs. Brabazon's wrath. You laugh! Ton dare to laugh, mUs! But it is only -what I could expect from you. I believe you were in his confidence, and knew all abont it. I'm sure you en couraged him in his abominable conduct. You and he have always been a heavy trial to me. You had a letter this morn ing: be so good as to hand it over." "I cannot, Mrs. Brabazon," replied Esme. tremulously; "it it is private," glancing appealingly at her stepmother. "And full of abuse of me, no doubt Well, you may keep it," making virtue of necessity, "and make much of it, for it is the last you will receive 1 Every other I find in the post bag I shall burn. Mark my wordsl into the fire it goes." "Florian and Gussie," said Esme, tim idly, glancing from her brother to her sister, "are neither of you going to say anything? Won't you speak for Teddy T' she as?d, piteously, "or is it to be left to me? Mrs. Brabazon, surely yon can not forget that Teddy is our brother, and will always be so as long as he lives, lie is not dead to us at least, he is not dead to me and I hope he will be spared for the next fifty years. I think it only right and honorable to tell you that I wili nev- er give him up, that I shall write to him and receive his letters, and meet him and speak to him whenever I get the chance! Ilia being a soldier makes no difference whatever; he is my brother all the same. It was not his fault he could not pass; he did try, and he wanted so much to be a soldier." "What do you say to this tirade, Au gusta?" demanded Mrs. Brabazon, turn ing on Gussie with a portentous frown. "I think it is all very dreadful about Ted, of course," she stammered; "but he is my brother," looking hard at Esme, as though endeavoring to borrow some of her spirit. "And yeu, Florian?" demanded Mrs. Brabazon, in an awful, hollow voice. "Oh, if you want my opinion," returned that gentleman, carefully stirring his tea, "I think Ted is a confounded ass,' and has made a regular fool of himself, and all that sort of thing, and it's no end of a bore. I would pass him now if I met him in the street," pulling up his collar as he spoke, and feeling that he waa a very important, dignified, illustrious young man. "Oh, Flo!" exclaimed bis youngest sis ter, reproachfully. "Now, you have your brother's opinion, Esme, the opinion of the head of the house, I hope yon are satisfied," said Kirs. Brabazon, with malicious' triumph. "You see he is, as usual, quite of my way of thinking! If Teddy had behaved re spectfully, I know that Florian would have done something for him, and used his interest with his influential friends; he has always been such a good, generous brother." Thus Teddy fell into disgrace with his people; his name was erased from the family roll, and written down instead in nearly everyone's black book. Two years passed by, and during these two years there have been some little changes even at Baronsford. Esme was now nineteen, prettier than ever, but stiff and shy in general society. Gussie, on the contrary, seemed born for the social circle, was always the center of a little knot of swains on these occasions, and had played havoc with the affections of several susceptible young men. Mrs. Brabazon still frequented stately nouses and stately dinner tables, and had saved a sum of money that would have made Miss Jane exclaim "most unaccountable," had she seen her banker's book. Time has not stood still with Teddy. Hers is his last letter. It lies on the school room table beside Esme: "From Troop Sergeant Brown, York, to Miss E. Brabazon: "My Dear Esme Always the culprit I you need not tell me that. I've written to you at least ten times in imagination long letters, too, but I suppose that does not count. I have news for yo, good news. You know that for a long time I was instructor in the riding school, and now I am promoted to be troop sergeant, which, by the way. I suppose is Greek to you, old lady: but I dare say yout mind can grasp the word 'promotion.' I am getting up the ladder at last. The colonel hinted to me the other day that if I went on as I had commenced he would be happy to recommend me for a commission; so we begin to see daylight. I hope to see you early in the autumn, before we embark for foreign service; we are nxt on the roster I .hll ooni down and ue peraue ii """"" - I- it would never do for you to be ? .k in nublic with a ser parading about in public with a sergeant Sf lancers. It will be a case of 'meet me by moonlight alone.' but that will be better than nothing. Only fancy, Esme, rVe not spoken to a lady for two years. Give my lore to Gussie and Aunt Jane. Do you know that she sent me 3 lately in a very crabbed little letter? Nevei mind, she shall be proud of me yet. "Your affectionate bt0DDY B CHAPTER HI. "She hasn't been here, has she? pant ed Gussie. trusting I aside the school room door. No. witn nf relief. "1 see sne cs:;.hPr whole person in now mi.."-. -- . h , walking costume; waiKins ": ,7. ' ,h sparest chair, and luoaiua w est chi she supsioeu y -- f tne 2.1 ran' putting her h.nd to her tVS wnord.SGussie." said her -is-at her with calm, dispassion 'Se? onjwant a personal at i . few straws in your hair. tenaauw ,tie - "Your news, come v m ' tr- i.o tvle so well! Ta-DK" .Kfc" trf new bonnet, and a 1 xo new Donnei. --- tQ lnform me I t 1 k Its renter, lou are 0r-or-! I aShat Lady Hmf mp Vaahon has again touio-; sp. that Mr. d uj made. you offer "You are getting quite hot, I declare! luite hot!" cried Gussie. rubbing her bands ecstatically. "It's a wedding in the family, bnt I am not to be the vic tim." "No?" 1b an accent of surprise; the It most be Floy "No, no, no," each no louder than its predecessor. "You don't mean to say that Mrs. Bra bazon " with a gesture of horror. "Not Mrs. Brabazon," laughing and still rubbing her hands, "though I would not mind if it were! I would 'give her away' with pleasure. Try again." "Then there's no one left but Aunt Jane," said Esme, looking at her sister iublously. "And pray, what do you call yourself, my dear?" impressively; "it is you you, who are going to be married. Now. then." folding her arms, putting out her under up, ana snaking her fringe with a ges ture of decision. II" pausing and surveying her sist with bewildered eyes, her mouth slightly parted. After a silence of a clear sixty seconds she found speech. "Only that 1 know that you are almost a teetotaller, your whole appearance and conversation would warrant the suspicion that you had been visiting the Barley Mow!" . "Barley Mow or not. you are going to J be married. Miss Esme Brabazon!1 J "Well, if I am, it is certainly the first 1 1 have beard of it." Ironically, "which is I mrinm ,gt ... .......... i a a who is to be the happy bridegroom? Have I the pleasure of knowing him, even by ugut" No, you have not," exultantly. "Yes, yes! hurriedly, in answer to the expres- ion of her companion's face. "I'm quite sane and perfectly serious, although it sounds quite too unaccountable, as-Aunt lane would aay; but," clearing her throat, "you are aware that Uncle George is dead T' "Well, considering that I've known that fact for quite three weeks, and that I am at present making our mourning, your news is something astonishing," sarcas tically. "Uncle George is dead; I'm go ing to be married! Do try and think of something else, or is it a new game?' "Be quiet, Esme; you are just as bad as Teddy. The will has been found, after a long search, in a coat pocket of all places! and particulars have come by the afternoon post. Mr. BeU has been over to Byford and brought our letter: "But to the point, my good girl, if there is one!" "The point is that he has left two bun dred a year to Sopp and the parrot, twen ty pounds to each of us for a mourning ring "And this has turned your head," broke in her sister. "How I wish he bad left us the money instead!" "Do let me finish," cried Gussie, with an angry little stamp. "I want to be the first to tell you! I ve kept the last as a kind of plum; listen," gesticulating ex citedly. "All bis money . in the funds, forty thousand pounds, goes to you and Miles Brabazon; and here is the cream of the whole thing, provided you marry each other within six months of his de cease. Now, is not that news for you? What do yon call that but a wedding in the family?" ahe demanded triumphantly of her sister, who stood staring at her with pale, wide-eyed astonishment. "It is not true. I don't believe It. It's a Joke,1' ah said at last. In a faint voice. gazing at Gussie with a look of horrified Incredulity. "It's quite, quite true; beautifully, de lightfully truer returned the yeong lady. "Come and let ns have a dance of Jubi lee," bumming a waits, and seizing her stupefied sister around her waist, and beginning to whirl her about the room. "Stop, stop, stop, Gussie!" she cried, breathlessly; "are you in yonr right senses?" holding her fast, and gazing in to her flushed face and sparkling eyes. "Are yon serious? Just let me look at you !" drawing her toward the window. "Perfectly serious." she panted, "and nearly ont of my mind with joy. You will have a nice little house in town, a victoria for the park, lots of dances and dinners, at which your elder sister, charming Miss Brabazon, will be the piece de resistance." "Poor old gentleman! I always though) he was odd; very queer, indeed," re turned her sister, slowly. "Miles is in Burmaii. I believe," said Gussie. "I wonder what be will thiuk of this legacy!" "7 Think what every one must think," returned Esme, decidedly, "that Uncle George was mad!" "Not a bit of it, my dear. I grant you he was odd, eccentric. Mrs. B. once wanted Aunt Jane and Flo to have htm looked after and locked up, but it would have been utter nonsense. Because a man wears queer clothes and devours hd: curries and Arabian and Persian lore tales, it does not naturally follow that he is a lunatic. He was perfectly well able to manage his affairs, and was very sharp about money." "Well, it's no business of mine," said Esme, shrugging her shoulders; "only I'm sorry he made such a foolish will." "Foolish will!" cried Gussie. "What do you mean? It's a beautiful will. Don't tell me that you are not going to marrj Miles Brabazon not going to jump at him and the legacy." "I certainly am not. What a way yon talk. Jump, Indeed!" getting rather red, and stooping to pick up her scattered work. "I would not marry him on any account, nor he me; we are not crazy. We have not, as the French say, 'Spiders in onr garrets,' like poor old Uncle George." "He will marry you fast enough, once he sees you," observed Gussie, decisively. I don't know anyone as pretty any where, though you are my own sister, and I say it, as shouldn't. Jveryooay minus you are the prettiest girl in Thornshire." boastfully. "The prettiest girl in Thornshire" took not the least notice of this brilliant com pliment, but began to shake out, fold up and Dut away her unfortunate work, evi dently incapacitated for any further in dustry that afternoon. uuAfln.it iv. Let us now adjourn to British Burmah, and pay a visit to the other legatee. Cap- Brabason. A single flight of CHAPTER IV. ; imagination will land us in Rangoon, without undergoing forty days' torture on the high seas. "I only wish I had your luck, that's all I But I always knew you were born wiUi a silver spoon in your mouth, and that Dame Fortune bad her eye on you." The speaker, a young man in polo cos tume, long boots and dangerous looking spurs, was sitting on a teak-wood table in an easy, degage attitude, with his cap set on the side of his close-cropped sandy head, a polo stick in one hand. The gentleman upon whom Dame For tune was supposed to "have her eye" also in polo garb was sunk in the depths of a Bombay chair, an expression of growing dissatisfaction upon his naturally gay and good-looking countenance. He held a large blue letter in his hand, and the ground around him was littered with papers and envelopes; evidently the Eu ropean mail had just come in. The young man with the boots and spurs is Mr. Gee, the other Captain Brabazon, both officers in the Royal Marchers, at present luxuriating in the climate of British Barman. They are friends, and partners in the straggling wooden bungalow in which we find them. "Luck, indeed," growled Captain Bra bazon, angrily, crumpling up the letter and thrusting if into his breast pocket, "1 see no luck in it; quite the other way!" "Will ye listen to him!" cried Mr. Gee. "Have you not always had enough for your modest wants?" "That's because they were modest," re turned the other, promptly. "Have you not had the best of health, even in this beastly climate? rwhich is enough to undermine the constitution of a rhinoceros! Have you not had speedy promotion? Haven't you youth?" paua-. ing a second for breath. "Go on; don't shirk it! Why not say beauty at once?" suggested his compan ion, encouragingly. "Well. I'll even go as far as that, generously, "though that was not what I was going to remark; but everyone knows, yourself included, that you've good-looking fellow, and quite one of our show men. And you have actually the cheek to sit there calmly aud tell me to my face that you arc not a lucky fellow, when bank on the top of all this comes a thumping legacy of forty thousand pounds. I only wish 1 bad half your com plaint, that's all!" I wish to goodness you bad, return ed the other, sulkily. "You seem to for get, my clever and very sanguine friend, that I've only a half share in the booty, a half share and a better half. Sounds like a pun, eh? You have overlooked one little detail, matrimony, and that if I don't marry this girl within six months all the coin goes to a college in Calcutta. Did you ever know such an old hunks?" Now standing up, walking to the doorway and leaning against one of the posts. "Why the mischief could .he not divide the money and leave us each half?" he demanded, angrily, of his friend. "Ay, why, indeed?" rejoined Mr. Gee. "It all came of my tipping him a ten- pound note. "Your grandmother!" ejacufated Mr. Gee, with a laugh of the rudest incred dulity. ' "Great-grandmother, if you like, but it's a fact! When the old chap came home from India, with pots of money, he was awfully afraid of being set upon by hordes of needy relations. A bright idea struck him. He hastily retired to a shady suburb in Loi. ?u and set up as a pauper. In other words, sent round a begging let ter for a little help, to keep him from want in his old age. Rather grim kind of joke, eh?" "Rather," returned Mr. Gee, admiring ly; "and not a bad idea." "Any old fellow who was capable of that would be capable of anything, this will Inclusive," exclaimed his nephew, emphatically. "However, to go on with my story. Mrs. Adrian Brabazon, my fu ture stepmother-in-law, pleaded poverty; Aunt Jane made no excuse of any kind, doubtless she smelled a rat; and I, being just then rather flush of coin, sent him a tenner, with a promise to do what 1 could; for, after all, he was my father's brother, and I could not let the old beg gar starve," apologetically. (To be continued.) A strong recommendation: "But, sir, what has your candidate ever done to deserve the support of the" people?" "Well, for one thing, this is the first time be has ever run for office." Chi cago Journal. Teacher For what else was Julius Caesar noted? Tommy Tucker (who had studied the lesson somewhat hast ily) His great strength, ma'am. He threw a bridge across the Rhine. Chi cago Tribune. "The codfish," said the professor, "lays considerably more than a million eggs." . "It is exceedingly lucny ror tne codfish that she doesn't have to cackle over every egg," said the student who came from the country. Tit-Bits. Softleigb I aw am weally getting to be aw quite a poet, doncher kuow. Miss Cutting Indeed! Softleigb Yaws; I have a little book In which I law write down me thoughts in wbyme evahwy night before wetiring. Miss Cutting It will be a volume of blank verse when finished, I suppose. "I hope you are one of the people who can keep cool in the presence of danger." "I am," answered the inau who wanted a place as a private watch man.' "Have you ever demonstrated it?" "I have; I once came near being drowned in a skating pond," Wash ington Star. "What is the woman's offense?" "She threw a brick at a neighbor woman, your Honor, and bit a man standing behind her." "The man Is guilty of con tributory negligence. If be hadn't been an Idiot he would have stood in front of her. Case Is dismissed." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "I'll bet a thousand," shouted the ex cited politician, "that the editor bad no proofs of those damaging stories lie published against the boss." "I ll go you." "retorted the little man with a high forehead and two pairs of glass es. "He bad the proofs and went through them, word for word, and O. K.'d the revise." "Who in thunder are your' "I'm the proof-reader." Detroit Free Press. Distressing Mistakes. "A man can't be too careful whom be snubs." "What do you mean 7 "Why, every once In awhile I've snubbed some plain people who after ward came into a lot of money." The average silk hat riz TH.eighs five ounces; the average stiff derby hat of the same size welghp four and one half ounces; the average straw hat of the same size weighs two and one iuar ter ounces. . "SHE WAS A BEAUTEOUS LADY." (3 OSTT- velvety carpets; rich drap Ss erles; rare old paintings In deep gold frames; quaint cabinets, rlch Sy carved, filled with treasures from many lands. The air was heavy with the fragrance of hothouse flowers; the iistant murmur of a fountain made a low. dreamy melody. A woman reclined In a wide easy :balr. She was in perfect harmony with the beauty of her surroundings. Her exquisite face, outlined against the dark background, looked like a rare .ameo. Jewels gleamed at the snowy throat and in the golden bair, dressed high and looking, in the dim light, like a queen's coronet. The portieres parted and a little girl came dancing into the room; a little girl with such blue eyes, such golden curls, and such tiny, satin-shod feet, that she looked nioie like a fairy than a human child. As she rested ber dlm (k'd elbows ou the woman's lap and looked with cuildUli eyes Into the face so like ber owu, one knew at once that they were mother aud daughter. "Mamma, hasn't Annette made me look pretty?" "Yes, dear." "Won't papa and the company come soon?" "Presently." "And, mamma, may I have all the creams I want? Oh, dear! It's so stupid. I wish they would come. Mamma" fretfully, as the lady did not speak "what are you thinking about? I'm so lonesome. Annette said we would have a lovely time; but " The blue eyes were full of tears. "Don't cry, dearie; they will come soon. Shall I tell you a story?" "Please do, mamma." "Well, sit here so. Once rjpon a time," began the lady. In a low, musical voice, "there lived a little lrl who had blue eyes and yellow curls, like yours, dear, but she didn't have such pretty gowns. No;- she wore little gingham aprons and sunbonnets, and ran all day with her little feet bare " "Oh, mamma," Interrupted the child petulantly, "I don't want to hear about poor little girls." "Ah, child, she was not poor, but rich oh, so rich." "Bnt she had bare feet!" "True. But ahe was rich, for she pos sessed earth's rarest jewels youth and Innocence and love. There was a boy a dear, noble little boy who always played with this little girl. He always knew where the first spring flowers grew.- The violets came first. In the back pasture, where an old, mossy log sheltered them from the wind. And the buttercups! How they grew around the spring " 'Mamma, what did the little girl dor Interrupted the child. 'Ah, MIgnonne, mother forgets. Well, the little girl loved the little boy. He had such a great, good heart And the brownest eyes oh, such beautiful eyes!" "Were they like Mr. Barnett's, mam iar The lady started, and a soft pink flush crept Into ber cheeks. She glanced quickly at the child; It was only a child's thoughtless question. "Yea, they were like and yet so un like!" 'Did the little boy love the little girl. mamma?" "Oh, so much. MIgnonne! But the lit tle girl grew np, and every one told her that she was beautiful. And and ctllld, when she looked at other girls. aUd then at her own reflection In the mirror, she saw how much more beau tiful she was than they. Well, one day aa prince came, and he told tbe girl tat she was too lovely to stay on the frm with the brown-eyed boy. He liked her to go with him, and promised tnat she should have every pleasure the world held; gowns and laces and jew els, and operas and balls everything that her foolish heart longed for. And so, MIgnonne, she married the prince and went away with him, far away from the boy, and " "Did the prince give her the nice things, mamma?" 'Oh, child, they were not nice! The pure gold was In tbe buttercups by the old spring; the real diamonds were the dewdrops that grew along the lane; tbe sweetest music was the singing of the little brook over tbe pebbles; the only happiness was by his side." "Whose? The prince's?" "No; there was nothing there but mis ery, baby, misery! She saw always the boy's brown eyes; she listened always for his voice. Oh, child! To think that he Is famous now; ani she " "Wasn't the princess happy, mam ma?" "No! Oh. no! Her heart was always aching. She would laugh and dance, and dress in costly laces and jewels: but she never could forget the ache, be cause " "Why?" "Because her heart was broken." . "Oh, mamma! Here they come!" ex claimed the child, forgetting all about tbe story, as a murmur of voices brake the silence. Again the portiere parted, aud a lady entered, followed by two men In evening dress; one was a thick set man, witn cold, gray eyes and Iron gray whiskers the master of this pa latlal home; the other a tall, dlstln gulshed-looking man, with dark, curl Ing balr and deep brown eyes.' The lady arose as they entered ani advanced to greet them. She was love ly before; she looked radiant now. The blue eyes shone, and the fair face glowed with pleasure-or perhaps ex citement for her bands irrembled. The tall gentleman took a sest and began talkin- to the child. "What have you been doing to amuse yourself, fairy?" be asked, smiling' down at her. "Mamma has been telling dm a story. Do you like stories?" 1 "Sometimes. Was this a good story ? -Not very," said the child, frankly' "mamma almost cried abont It, but I didn't think it was sad. No one died In it." "What was It about, MIgnonne?" "Well. It was about a poor little girl with bare feet" glancing at ber own dainty slippers "only mamma said she was rlcli." "Indeed! Why?" "Well, 'cause she had love and flow ers by a spring, and had a farm. Did you ever see a farm, Mr. Barnett?" "Yes; but the little girl?" "Well, she loved a little boy." "Ah!" "Yes, 'cause he knew all about flow ers, and had brown eyes. Mamma said they were about like yours. He loved the little girl, too, aud be bad an awful great heart." "What became of the girl?" "A prince came along she was grow ed up then and told her that she could have everything she wanted diamonds and laces and things " "Did she marry the prince?" "Yes; and mamma said bis gold wasn't real gold at alL' ' "What was It?" "Just misery." "Did did yon say the princess loved the little boy?" "Oh, more'n anything." "And wasn't she happy with thtj prince?" "Oh," said the child, looking up with eyes that were strangely like those which bad looked Into his from beneath the hood of a checked sunbonnet In tbe springtime of a long past youth; "no. her heart was always aching for the boy; and I guess heartache .must be awful bad, 'cause mamma just about cried when she. told me." "What did ahe say?" " "She said," began the child, toying Idly with her bit of a lace handkerchief, and looking rather longingly at the group at tbe other end of the room, for she was tired of tbe story "she said the git I s heart was broken." "Come, MIgnonne, you will tire Mr. P.arnett with your chatter," called the sweet voice of the lady. "I think I hear a carriage. Tbe others will soon be here." "MIgnonne has been telling me a story." Mr. Barnett said to the lady; then, reaching out h'.s hand t detain the ch'ld, as her mother moved away, "listen, dear; I will tell you the rest .if the story. I know It" "Do you? Mamma hadn't finished when you came," replied the child, with returning interest thinking that perhaps the story would yet prove in teresting. "Tell your mamma that the rest of the story Is " He paused and glanced at the beautiful lady. "What?" questioned the child impa tiently. Stooping down and whispering softly In tbe child's pink ear, he said: "That the boy's heart Is dead." Munsey's Magazine. New Words in English Iiangnsgr Every week seems to witness the ad dition of some new word to the Eng lish language. If we go on developing at tbe present rate and In the present manner, a reading book for upper stand ardssay standard X. In the next century will present such a lesson as tbe following: "It was no use boycotting her; she was not to be burked. Where we went her trilbies eagerly followed. She scorned no hypocrisy; she would be tray us as readily as smile at us; nay, she would dreyfus us tbe while she professed the fondest friendship. "No mafeklng on festival holiday, but ber scowling face krugered upon us. She was slim, and we knew It but we could not home the fact; she deweyed before us as a hero, but In private she moblled. She steadied ber speech with sentiment but her actions were Incom prehensibly brownlnged, and, as re gards their definite purpose, ruthlessly kltchenered." Liverpool (England) Post RAILWAYS OK CHINA. They Are Few in Number and Mosttj Controlled by Foreigner. China has few railways, the policy ol foreigu exclusion so long in vogue hav ing prevented titeir construction. Most of the lines in existence are in til region which is now the scene of mili tary operations and of the depredationi of the "Boxers." A railway, eighty iulles long, belonging to an EngllsL company, extends from the port ot Tien-Tsin north to Pekin. At FengtaL live miles south of Pekin on this line, begins tbe Belgian "Lu Han" railway, which extends southwest : seventy eight miles to Paotingfu, where the "Boxers" have been particularly ac tive. Both the English and tbe Bel gian lines have been largely destroyed by tbe rioters. From Tlen-Tsln a rail way extends 287 miles eastward to Cbencbou, and there are branches ag gregating fifty miles. Altogether the English system has 407 miles and the Belgian eighty-eight It Is the former that Is to be ultimately connected with ! Moukden. in the Russian sphere, where I It will connect with tbe Siberian rail-' way. About sixty miles of the Ainerl- j can Hankan-Pekln line has been grad-1 ed. but work Is now stopped. A VOLCANIC TEAGEDY OVERCOME BY DEADLY FUMES FROM MOUNT VESUVIUS, The Fasaily of Sich Win Maker at Boaco Km 1 Foand aa Ter Wan When In SnppoaaMy Bate Bcfns in the Tear A. D. "7ft, Curious as are soma of tba scenes un earthed t Pompeii, still mon so tn some recent finds at Boaco Reale, near Naples. Recently there was laid bare the home of a well-to-do ancient who was engaged in the wine and oil bus! nees. His bouse was strictly self-contained, having the dwelling-rooms and the winemaklng-rooms on two adjacent sides of a small court Tbe bouse was not remarkable, except for tbe singular modernity of its water supply. It de pended on the rainfall, which was care fully stored In a lead cistern. Thence a portion passed to the ordinary domestic taps. A portion passed to a large boil er, from which by an elaborate system of cocks the master's private bath and basin could be supplied at pleasure with hot cold or tepid water. In the early autumn of 79 A. D. the threaten ing state of Vesuvius alarmed the household. Tbe vintage was approach ing, and the room which contained the wiue presses had been cleaned and made ready for the new grapes. In particular a reservoir to which the new wine flowed from the presses was clean and empty. The room was well pro tected with-a thick walL Here, there fore, when flight waa still thought to be unnecessary, or perhaps when it had already become impossible, a couch and a table and smaller articles were brought from the living rooms of the house. Some man, perhaps the master, hastily gathered in a cloth bis precious collection of silver plate and bis hoard of a thousand gold pieces varying in date from the well worn coins of the early emperors to the brand new mint age of Vespasian. The lady of tbe house, marked by ber jeweled earrings; two other men and a favorite dog also came to the chosen refuge. But the foul gases were quick In their action. The master sought safety In the under ground reservoir, but shared the fate of his companions. His store of silver plate lay with him till the other day. It now adorns the Louvre, to which It was presented by the liberality of a mem ber of tbe house of Rothschild. One fragment alone, which In his haste he bad dropped near his strong cupboard, and which was therefore found separ ately, la now at the British Museum. While this was passing indoors there was also a moment of brief agony out side. The dog by the porter's recess was straining his chain when he was overcame. One of the three horses bad broken loose from the stable. Tbe fowls had huddled together in one corner of the yard and the pigs In another. Still another interesting find was In the grounds of a villa called Vona at Bosco Reale, belonging to the De Prlsco family. A huge peristyle and four large chambers have been discovered, on the wails of which are some twenty frescoes of large dimensions, rich col oring, and of a design hitherto un equaled by any brought to light Most of the figures are full sized and more carefully executed than any hith erto known. One is probably a portrait of Epicurus, another represents two young female figures reclining on large cushions at a banquet A third fresco represents a woman, richly clad, play ing a lyre, while a fourth is an exquis itely designed representation of a glad iator seated by tbe side of a female fig ure. Rich mural decorations, fresh in color and perfect In drawing, cover the parts of tbe walls not occupied by tbe main frescoes. Unfortunately for students of art. It Is feared that exposure to the air and i the light will cause these magnificent paintings to fade as quickly as those at Poi'npell and in the Naples museum. Every effort Is being made to preserve ' them as long as possible. Sabterranean Lake. To London, as to almost every large city, the question of a water supply has ben a serious problem. Londoners now see a way to solve It The En gineer of the County Council has in formed that body that underneath London Is an Immense lake, In a chalk basin 2,500 square miles in extent The annual rainfall that sinks to this . lake, 100 feet below the surface of tbe I ground, amounts to 280,000,000,000 gal lons, which would give a daily yield of 767,000,000 gallons. An artesian i well has already tapped tbe lake at I Clapbam, and it is pointed out that all ! that Is necessary to insure a water sup- , ply is to sink a sufficient number of wells. Tbe wonder Is that London should have existed for more than 2,000 years and never discovered that the great lake was beneath It Qneen of Italy Leads Fashion. Tbe Queen of Italy, although very charitable and exceedingly solicitous for tbe welfare of her people. Is tbe most extravagant woman in the king dom in tbe matte; of dress. The king thinks she is setting a bad example, but she says that ber doings have no influence, as tbe Italian ladies are naturally fond of the play, and she is but keeping up ber position as the bead of the nation. World's Biggest Honse. The Sultan of Turkey has built at Mecca the biggest bouse In the world. It is intended for the accommodation of pilgrims, and Is capable of shelter ing 6,000 persons. Tbe next biggest house In the world Is In a suburb of Vienna. It accommodates 2,112 tenants- Tbe Oi fleet Steam Eatlne. Tbe oldest steam engine In tbe world has recently gone off duty after work ing more than 120 years. It was built in 1777. It Is a beam engine, the beam being of wood; the cylinder 32 inches la diameter, with an 8 ft stroke. This veteran engine has been In the service of the Birmingham Canal Navigation Con pan.. .-..., JXfci -?tti ,..$-.. SIB Of I OAY Preached by Rev. Dr. Talmage Sabee Tba Kind af Bella-la- That t ie World meeds Only That Which Cop-m Straight Don From Heaven Can &- of Benefit la Humanity. ICopyiisht lvwu.1 Washtkoton, D. C. from Nonrar, where Dr. Talmage is now staying, he sends the following discourse, in which he shows that the world can never be bene fited by a religion of human manufacture, which easily yields to one's surroundings, but must have a religion let down from heaven; text, Amos vu, 8: "And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? And I said, A plumb line." The solid masonry of the world has for me a fascination. Walk about some of the triumphal arches and the cathedrals, 400 or 600 years old, and see them stand as erect as when they were builded, walls of great height, for centuries iot bending a quarter of an inch this way or tiiat. So greatly honored were the masons who builded these walls that they were free from taxation i.nd called "free" masons. The trowel gets most of tlie credit for these buildings, and its clear ringing on stone and brick has sounded aeriss the ages. But then is another implement of just as much importance as the trowel, and my text recognizes it. Uricklayrs and stonemasons and carpenters in the building ot walls use an instrument made of a cord, at the end of which a lump of lead is fastened. They drop it over the side of the wall, and, as the plummet nat urally seeks the centre of gravity in the earth, the workman discovers where the wall recedes and where it bulges out and just what is the perpendicular. Our text represents God as standine on the wall of character, which the Israelites had built, and in that way testing it. "Ami the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seed thou? And I said. A plumb line. What the world wants is straight up and down religion. Much of the so-called piety of the day bends this way ami that to suit the times. It is oblique, with a low state of sentiment and morals. W e have all been building a wall of character, and it is glarinrlv imperfect and needs re construction. How shall it be brought into perpendicular? Only by the divine meas urement. "And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? And 1 said, A plumb line." The whole tendency of the times is to make us act by the standard of what oth ers do. We throw over the wall of our character the tangled plumb line of other lives and reject the infallible test which Amos saw. The question for me nhotold not be what you think is right, but what God thinks is right. This perpetual refer ence to the behavior of other, as though it decided anything but human fallibility, is a mistake as wide as the world. There are 10,000 plumb lines in use, but only one ia true ana exact, and that is the line of God's eternal right. There is a mighty at tempt being made to reconstruct and rix up tne Ten Commandments. To many they seem too rigid. The tower of i'isa leans over about thirteen feet from the perpen dicular; and people go thousands of miles to see its graceful inclination and to leant how, by extra braces and various architec tural contrivances, it is kept leaning from Sentury to century. Why not have the ten rranite blocks of Sinai set a little ailant? Why not have the pillar of truth a lean ing tower? Why is not an ellipse as good as a square? Vhy is not an oblique as rood as straight up and down? My friends, we Dust have a standard. Shall it be God's or man's? The divine plumb line needs to be thrown sver all merchandise. Thousands of years ago Solomon discovered the tendency ot buyers to depreciate goods, lie saw a man beating down an article lower and lower, and saying it was not worth the price asked, and when he had purchased at the lowest point he told everybody what a sharp bargain he had Htruek, and how he had outwitted the merchant, "it is naught, saith the buyer, but when he h gone his way, then he boasteth" (Prov erbs xx, 14). Society is so utterly askew in this matter that you seldom lin'd a sell er asking (he price that be expects to get. He puts on a higher value than he expects to receive, knowing that he will have to drop. And when he wants fifty lie savs seventy-five, and is he wants 2000 he asks 2500. "It.18 naught," saith the buyer. "The fabric is defective, the style of goods is poor. 1 Can get elsewhere a better ari ticle at a smaller price, it is out of fasli-i ion, it .a damaged, it will fade, it will not wear well." After awhile the merchant, from overpersuasion or from desire to dis pose of that particular stock of go. wis, say-., "Well, take it at your own price," and the purchaser goes home with light step ami calls into his private office his confidential friends and chuckles w.iile he tells how for naif price he got the goods. In other words, he lied and was proud of it. Nothing would make times so good and the earning of a livelihood so easy as the universal adoDtion of the law of right. Suspicion strikes through all bargain mak ing. Men who sell know not whether they will ever get the money. Purchasers know not whether the goods shipped will lie ac cording to the sample. And what, with the large number of clerks who are mak ing false entries and then absconding .nd the explosion of firms that fail for mill ions of dollars, honest men are at their wits' ends to make a living. He who stands up amid all the pressure and does rujut is accomplishing something toward the establishment of a high commercial prosperity. The pressure to do wrong is Btro"er from the fact that in our day the 1. .ge business houses are swallowing up the smaller, the whales dining on blue' and minnows. The large houses undersell the small ones because they buy in greater quantities and at lower figures from the producer. They can afford to make noth ing or actually lose on some styles of goods, assured they can make it up on oth ers. So a great dry goods house goes out side of its regular line and sells books at cost or less than cost, and that swamps the bookseller, or the dry goods house sells bnc-abrac at lowest figures, and that swamps the small dealer in bric-a brae. Anil the same thing goes on in other styles of merchandise, and the consequence is that all along the business streets of all our cities there are merchants of small capital who are in terriric struggle h keep their heads above water. The ocean liners run down the Newfoundland tishing smacks. This is nothing against the man who has the big store, for every man has as large. a store and as great a business as he can manage. To feel right and do right under all this pressure requires martyr grace, requires Livine support, requires celestial re-enforcement. Yet there are tens of thou sands of such men getting splcndily through. They see others going up and themselves going down, but lliey keep their patience and courage and their Chris tian consistency, and after awhile their success will come. There is generally re tribution in some form for greediness. The owners of the big business will die, and their boys will get possession of the busi ness, and thi cigar in their mouths and full to the chins with the best liquor and behind a pair of spanking bays tney will pass everything on the turnpike road tq temporal and eternal perdition. Then thq business will break up, and the smaller dealers will have fair opportunity, or the spirit of contentment and right feeling will take possession of the large firm, as re cently with a famous business house, and the firm will say: "We have enough money for all our needs and the needs of our children. Now let ns dissolve business and make way for other men in the same line." Instead of being startled at a soli tary instance of magnimity it will become a common thing I know of scores ol great business houses that have had their opportunity of vast accumulation and who aught to quit. But perhaps for all the days of this generation the struggle of small hmigt to keep alive under the overshadow ing pressure of great houses will continue. Therefore, taking things as they are, vou will be wise to preserve your equilibtiura and your honesty and your faith and throw ever all the counters and shelves, and casks .1". vi- .lu mra-Minng line of divine right. "'Anil ..ie Lord said unto me. Amos, what seest thou? And I said. A plumb line." In the same way we need to rectify our theologies. All sorts of religions are put ting forth their pretension. Some have a spiritualistic religion, and their chief work is with ghosts, and others a religiou of political economy, proposing to put an end to human misery by a new style of taxa tion, and there is a humanitarian religion that looks after the bodies of men and lets the soul look after itself, and there is a legislative religion that proposes to rec tify all wronirs by enactment of Iwtler laws, and there is an aesthetic religion that by rules of exquisite taste would lift the heart out of its deformities, and reli gions of all sorts, religions by the peck, re ligions by the square foot and religions la the ton, all of them devices of the devil that would take the heart away from thn only religion that will ever effect anything for i lie i .man race, and that is the straight up ind down religion written in the book which begins with Cenesis and ends with Revelation, the religion of tli skies, the old religion, the tiod given reli gion, the everlasting religion, winch says, 'Love Ggd above all. and vonr neighbor's yourself." All religions but one negm ac the wiong end and in the wrong place. The Bible religion demands that we lirst get right with God. It begins at the top and measures down, while the other reli gions begin at the bottom and try to measure up. I want you to notice this fact, tlint when a man gives up the straight up and down religion of the liible for any new fangled religion it is generally to suit his sins. You first hear of his change of reli- frion. and then you hear of some swindle ie has practiced in a special mining stock, telling some one if he will put in $10,000 he can take out $100,000, or he has sacri ficed his integrity or plunged into irremed iable worldliuess. His sins are so broad he has to broaden his religion, and he be comes as broad as temptation, ns broad as the soul's darkness, as broad as hell. They want a religion that will allow them to keep their sins and then at death say to them, "Well done, good and faithful ser vant." and that tells them. "All is well. tor there i'; no hell." What a glorious heaven they hold before us! Come, let us go in and see it. There are llerod and all the babes he massacred. There are Charles Guiteau and liobespierre. the feeder of the Krench guillotine, au.l all the liars, thieves, house burners, garroters. pickpockets and libertines of all the centu ries. They have all got - crowns ami thrones anil harps and scepters, and when tney chant they simr, "Thanksgiving ajnl ..onor and glory and power to the liroad religion that lets us all into heaven with out rejientance and without faith in ftiose humiliating dogmas of ecclesiastical- old fogvism." My text gives me a grand opportunity of saying a useful word to all young men who are now forming habits for a lifetime. Of what U3e to a stonemason or a brick layer is a plumb line? Why not build the wall by the unaided eye and hand? lie cause they are insuHicient. bi-oause if there be a deflection in the wall it cannot fur ther on be corrected, llecause, by the law of gravitation, a wall must lie straight in order to be symmetrical and safe. A young man is in danger of getting a defect in his wall of character that may never be corrected. Hear it, men and Imivs, women and girls, aH the fun is on the side of ritrlit. Sin may seem attractive, but it is deathful, and like the mancliineel, a tree whoe dews are poisonous. The only genuine happiness is in a Christian life. There they go, two brothers. The one was converted a vear ago in church one Sunday morning during prayer or sermon or hvmn. No one knew it at the time. The persons on either side of him sus pected notning. but in that young man's soul this process went on:"lord, here I am. a young man amid the tempta tions of city life, and 1 am afraid to risk them alone. Come and be mv pardon and my help. Save me t'rum making the mis take some of my comrades are making, and ave me now." And quicker than a flash (.tod rolled heaven into his soul, lie is just as jolly as he used to be, is just as brilliar.L as he used to be. lie can strike a ball or catch one as easily as before he was converted. With gun or tishing roil in this summer vacation lie is just is skillful as before. 'I he world is briuliter to him than ever. He appreciates pictures, music, innocent hilarity, social life, good jokes and has plenty of fun, glorious fun. i'.ut his brother is going down hill. In the morning his head aches from the cham pagne debauch. Kverybody sees he is in rapid descent. What cares he for riirht or decency or the honor of his family name? 'turned out of employment, de pleted in health, cast down in spirits, the typhoid fever strikes him in the smallest room on the fourth story of a fifth-rate boarding house, cursing God and calling for his mother and righting back demons from his dying pillow, which is liesweated and torn to rags. He plunges out of this world, with the shriek of a destroyed spirit. (tod is now throwing that plumb line over this republic, anil it is a solemn time with this nation, and whether we keep His Sabbaths or dishonor them, whether righteousness or iniquity dominate, whether we are Christian or infidel, whether we fulfill our mission or refuse, whether we are for God or against Him, will decide whether we shall as a nation go cm in higher and higher career or go down in the same grave where Habylon and Nineveh and Thebes are sepulcliered. "But," say you. "if there be nothing but a plumb line, what can any of us do, for there is an old proverb which truthfully declares, 'if the best man's faults were written on his forehead, it -would make him pull his hat over his eyes.' What -shall we do when, according to Isaiah. 'God shall lay judgment to the line and right eousness the plummet?' " Ah, here is where the gospel conies in with a Saviour's righteousness to make up for our deficits. And while I see hanging on the wall a plumb line, 1 see also hang ing there a cross. And while the one con demns us. the other saves us, if onlv we will hold to it. And here and now you may lie set free with a more glorious liberty than Hamp den or Sidney or Kosciusko ever fought for. Not out yonder or down there or in. here, but just where vou are you may get it. The invalid proprietress of a wealthy estate in Scotland visited the continent ol Kurope to get rid of her maladies, and she went to iladen-llailen. and tried those waters, and went to Carlsbad and tried those waters, and went to Homburg and tried those waters, and instead of getting better, she got worse, and in despair she said to a physician, "What shall I do?" His reply was: "Medicine -a:i do nothing for you. You have onlv one chance, and that is the waters of I'it Keathly, Scot land." "Is it possible?" she replied. "Why, those waters are on my own es tate." She returned anil drank of the fountain at her own gate, and in two months completely recovered. Oh, sick and diseased and sinning and dying, why go trudging all the world over and seek' im hei ; and there relief for your discour aged soirit when close by and at your very feet and at the door of your heart, aye, within the very estate of your own con sciousness, the healing waters of eternal life may lie had and had this very hour, this very minute? Blessed be God that ie.r against the plumb line that Aunts saw is the cross, through the emancipating now live ower ot wliicn you and 1 may live and foreverl A Woman tjueel ion. "I see," be remarked as he looked up from his paper, "that the l'.iiiisli have recovered that battery of guns." "What was it covered with tlie lirst time, dear?" she sweetly asked. Cleveland Plain Dealer. C-nlii?l A":n. KoftlMgli You dvell in me aw Jilnd all the aw time, doncher know. Miss Cutting Well, you'll bare to hange your mind or I'll move. I nev r did fancy living In a flat.