.1". f B. F. SCHWEIER, Editor and Proprietor. THE COnSTITUTIOnTHE UMOn AI1D THE EHFORCEKIEUT OF THE LAWS. VOL. L.IV. NO. 49. MIFFL.INTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1900 gaptafo grabafoi? BY B. 7VY. CROKER .yilitafy.omaDce.of.gocj.fpiea CHAPTER XXI. It is unnecessary to state that Earn lost uo time iu hurrying upstaira with tha letter in ber baud. She did not go atraighl to her own room and sat down In a big, jje window seat in the landing, whers there was plenty of light, and where nd one was likely to disturb her; and with, tbrolliug heart aud trembling fingers aha drew the following note from ita envel ope, unfolded it, held it close to the little, diamond panes, and read: "lvar Mrs. Hrabaxon Your letter re-) ceiteJ. 1 have debated with myself for tuiuf time, aud have come to the conclu r.ou (bat yuur views on the subject of the engagement between Esme and nie are u.uite right, aud that there must be iu eud to everything between us. 1 am, , you say, miserably poor. 1 hare no lro;ieets. aud I am the last man in the wurid to ask any sacrifice from a girl 1 cared for. I shall not write to her, nor seek to renew the ties, as you call them, iu au.v n ay. Some richer and tome luck ier fellow w ill no doubt take my place be fore vu. I remain, youra truly, "MILES BBABAZON." Esuie read this through twice, the first time very quickly, the second time very siowiy, before she could realize what it meaut. aud then, leaniug her head against tbe window paue, she closed her eyes and tried to understand that Miles, of bis own! aceord. aud of his own free will, had re nounced her; that some other luckier and richer fellow than himself wag welcome to take bis place! Miies, that she had believed in; Miles, that was Teddy's friend; that had pre tended to have loved her with all his heart and soul; Miles without a word of regret, iu half a dozen cold lines, written in a steady, unfaltering hand, and -taiuiug no message for her of either friendship or concern had calmly twoken off her engagement and renounced her! The blow was so unexpected, the revul sion of feeling so hideous and so over whelming, that she felt quite stunned; b. r one dim ray of hope was extinguish ed, ber golden dreams turned in an in stant into thick, dark despair. What had the left to live for now? Nothing but a dreary, blank life stretched out before her. Teddy was gone, and Miles was gone! Aud she had been building vast castles iu the air, all based on his return. Now whin he did return, his reti'-n would no longer concern her; he was nothing to her. nor she to him! llow Mrs. Br a ba il. a would jeer! How Uussie would tri umph! The thought was maddening; but al! the tboughta that came crowding to ber brain were almost equally agonising. The idea that Miles had been acting a part, had only cared for tbe money and not her, was the most stinging and pain ful of all. Once he bad led her to think very differently; but whatever he said tbeu, there waa no doubt of his senti oiriits now. After dinner, when they were alone in tbe large, empty drawing room, with its siieut shadowy corners, seated near the tire, one at either side, each with a book, aud each with a lamp, Mrs. Brabazou could restrain .herself no longer. She glanced over at the bent brown head across the hearth-rug, cleared her throat, laid a new novel upside down on her lap and said one word, a word that meant a good deal; it was a kind of conversational rocket, the prelude to action, the word "Well?" a "well" that was at once in terrogative, triumphant and authorita tive. Ksme raised her eyes and met her step mother's derisive, malevolent smile, s suiile that she felt like a stinging lash; her stepmother's face slight with triumph and a thirst for information. She did not speak, but she looked across the hearth without lowering her lashes, or a change of color, v - - "Well?" repeated Mrs. Brabaxon, reit erating the word in a still louder, more aggressive key. . Oh, how Esme dreaded the coming dis cussion! "What is it that you wish to know, Mrs. Brabazon Y" "I wish to know your opinion of Miles Brabazon now," she returned, promptly. "His letter was to the point, was it not " watching her companion closely. "Very much so," replied Esme,- quietly. "My opinion of him " "Your opinion of him?" eagerly. "I shall keep to myself. We are never likely to meet again. All is over between ix ..vs. and if it is quite the same to you we will never recur to the sub ject. 1 was mistaken we are all liable r. make mistaken that was all!" As Es me said this her face was ashen white, tears stood in her eyes, and her voice, Ai, . uho would, trembled with emotion. "You see you might just as well have accepted Craven Hepburn, alter au, w served Mrs. Brabazon, impressively. "I do not see that it makes any dif ference. I do not care for Mr. Hepburn, ' returned Esme, firmly, "excepting as a friend, and nothing would ever make me marry him. I shall never marry anyone now." Her voice, as she spoke, was j nick aud low. Mrs Krahazon immediately draped her self, as it were, in a garment of obtrusive Incredulity, smiled, poked me nre, cuu ed. turned up tbe lamp, and then remark ed oracularly: ., Krprtr a-irl who has had a disappoint meut says the same thing: but, if I aui not irreatlv mistaken. they generally change their minds within six weeks oi .,, un.i marrv making very often a fai better match, just to show the young man that they think Tery little about him." , Having thrown out this suggestion tc Iiiip nfinnaita nait?tl hof. M 1"S. picked up her book, and was soon lost tc ber immediate surroundings in tne per.. - 1 .nmantip love Story. oi au eaciuug . . Th nt risv Esme walked down to th village and registered and posted a stuai for South Africa; witn n she dropped it into the hands me letter dox. h wo - - tmmm M.xton corresDondenoe b.d such - rah" two diamond eaxrw. - " ivuiiwiuuu " . " " .... i , .it th. first water, nud all bought with tbe price of Burmese race ponies. Esme had never worn them since .v.. r.t.t day last Sep- a mem 8.uc w.. - - out ln,li.r- hut .he had Often IBaeii i - - of their cases and looked at w tionately. . fa Esme made a successful fJ keep up appearances and to show a brave front. She never flinched, never relin QuUhed tbe strong hold oa Jr stdf-com- mand. and assumed a certain amount of unconsciousness sud gayety that ba tiled Mrs. Brabazon aud deluded Miss Jane. She waa a modern Spartan girl, aud yet. outwardly busy in the village, active iu the house, smiling and cheerful, inwardly wearing her heart out with aching recol lections, a bitter sense of humiliation aud unavailing regrets. Tride came to her assistance, and enabled her to bear up .nobly in public, to present a cool, nut- nral, self-possessed appearance to the iu quiring optics of Mrs. Brabazon. and tLr kindly but curious and puzzled ones of Jiis jane, who one day suddenly made up ner mind that she would "speak to Esme quite seriously," and opportunity, for once, trod upon the heels of resolve, for at that very momeut her niece walked Into her sitting room, charged with a message from a sick pensioner. "me, my dear! you are the very per son I want; I have just been thinking of you. ' said ber and Miles." auut. "Thinking of you Esme colored vividly, and sat down with her back to the light, and then said, indifferently: "What is it. Aunt Jane 1 supiose you know?" "Know? 1 know uothing. my dear: and I waut to kuow everything." she re turned, emphatically. "You have not beard, then, v. hat he has written?" said her niece, iu a bard, strange voice, as if she were reH-jtinK a well-learned but d.tncult lesson. "Aud it is sll entirely at an eud between u. there is no engagement now." "Bless my heart! Tut, tut, tut. Esme. I thought better of you. Come, now now 1 really thought better of you nay. I think better of you! You are not goiug to punish him alwwys for his unlucky mistake. Come over here and sit beside me, my dear, and tell me all about it." "The truth is, then. Aunt Jane, aud I suppose you ought to know." gulping down a huge lump in ber throat as i-b.-spoke, "that it was not 1 who broke oil the engagement; it was Miles." "What? What do you say?" said Mis Jane, in a low and horrified tone of voice. "It is impossible." "It is quite true. Aunt Jane, aud if yo.i wish you may see his letter; uothiug can be plainer." "His letter breaking it off! I can't be lieve it! He must be mad. Most ex traordinary most unaccountable! What ioes he mean? Miles is a man of honor. You have done something, Esme? What?" "He says he says," bringing out the words reluctantly,' "that be is poor, and has no prospects; in short, he would have no money, and and he hopes some rich er and luckier fellow will take his place,' she concluded, her lips quivering; she was looking at her aunt through a mist of un shed tears. "But this is monstrous!" exclaimed the sld lady, suddenly pausing in her walk and surveying her niece fiercely, "aud rou you are taking it so coolly so so unnaturally. Oh, you young people of tbe present day have no feeling, but 1 cau tell you that it'a a dreadful blow to me. a dreadful blow. I would not have be (ieved it of Miles. Aud, as to the mouey. If I had only known," recommencing her walk, and dropping short, incoherent sen tences about "No use to me. now Teddy's gone. The two I liked, llich, old. cUild less woman. Too late now!" Esme gazed at her aunt Jjelplesslr. as she took up her dropped stitches auduk ou dered much that she bad taken her news so very much to heart. "I am very greatly upset, fcsme. t don't know when 1 ve neara auyming that has put me out so much." "Then pleose don t talk ot it any more. Aunt Jane." said Esme, rising and speak ing with strange composure. "Come out im the warden aud show me your new .w.,ior have none out yet. I'll fetch your bonnet and shawl from the lobby; it will do you good to take a turn." It was a curious sight to see these two Ihe bent and now infirm old lady, aud the tall, slight, upright girl slowly pacing the gravel walks, arm in arm, in silence. They represented the rising aud waning generations, with more than forty year. between them; ana yci out.- moiu .i .lit,, in both their hearts, one identi .i fillet their minds Iove. Aud i.i....,h in th rase of tbe elder lady, it ... Imt'the old. faded, forgotten story "seen pale and faint through the mooulight of memory, and in the case of the other n . . dreadful, daring, recent reality ... toured itself in her unhappy mind a fellow-feeling united the aunt and niece in a manner that each was sensible ol Z her inmost soul. Miss Jane now began .ml hr niece, and to put auotb er interpretation on her studied placid mien She was not reany coiu . u. as she seemed. She felt Miles de fection, just ss she would have felt sucl .i.: ' k.if sensitively, yet secretly, .nd tbe good lady'a anger burned hot within her. as she reflected on her ne phew's conduct: and as she stood on h doorsteps, spectacles on nose, and grave f, witched her favorite niece outthrougb he little white gate, she muttered thru-. "V'. lldv Louisa. "Most unae countable, most unaccountable, most n accountable!" CHAPTER XXIL families are like 1 . . -itl.nnt being exactly stag P.' nothing' -r. - raffle .he surf.rc. of tne w. e. o: following mauue. . . ln time He arrived, quite "pec he for dinner one day. Je' k onth of ror the bleak montn ot ravorea to bim. half piay- Much, and Esmei MM iu h,. , ,. - m maeDivu vm - jco3t: W"'MWdJ Wht i honor oi ' has bronght you 7" mlaans has ne to bed, he reiu ,B , gone ... mh.ii K0 np ana w - .rM wc -'..-..f. after sne amOKius J" .. .. I w"l V.Vean it be?" staring at ' W,hy- wn."1 -eon enough, my fol "You'U hear soon rxprevely. nodding W. MgiT, patir So after Mrs. tSrabacon had cone to reat the young people took possession of two armchairs in front of a fine fire is the drawing room. Can't you cuesa It?" he asked, starinc at her fixedly, and with a conscious, com placent annie. "You are going to be married." she re plied, after a panse. "Itight you are. Clever girl! I am going to marry Hatty Clipperton!" "Hatty Clipperton?" with a little start. "Yes. An awfuUy jolly, nice little girl! Some money! Heaps of go in her! Juat my style down to the around! 1 have not btoUl C.a, yet, nor. of course Mrs. B. I want you to break the newa to her gent ly. Esme." "I!" aghast. "My dear Flo. I would not I could not I dare not not for a thousand pounds!" "Oh. come, that'a nonsense; you are the only one all these years who dared brave her, and yon muat do It for me; it's the last time " "Why not speak to her yourself, Flo? you and she have always been friends; It would come best from yon." "No, Ba; when yon have anything to do you don't like, alwaya get someone else to do It for yon, that's my idea. We are to be married in three weeks. Yes, Indeed, yon may well open your mouth; but I'm telling you the truth. We have been engaged thia two months, and I'm my own master, you know; and 111 ere waa no one to consult. I used to say I'd never let myself'go under 3,000 a year; but I'm knocked down a dead bargain after all. Hatty likes you and Uussie superbly, but she bates Mrs. B. like old boots, and swears she shall never spend a night under her roof." "Meaning thif roof?" said Esme. with raised brows. "Yes; and as old Clippenvn wants to g off abroad, he has rather run me in to get the wedding over; do you see? and we are thinking of coming here for the honey moon; and, of course, you and Mrs. B. will have to clear out. and let the house be done np a bit; don't you understand?' Thia ia very short notice, Flo. How long can you give us?" "Well, say a week! xou see, there s nothing to move but yourselves and your clothes," he drawled, unconcernedly. "I am not so sure of that, shaking her head. "I fancy from what Mrs. B. said one day that she claims a lot of orna ments, silver plate and pictures and linen." She be blessed! She had better not let me see her lay a finger on anything here, or I'll set my lawyers at her... She has been playing a very deep game, by all ac counts, and she feathered her nest right well." Oh, Flo, you shouldn't!" expostulated his hearer. Oh. Flo. but I should! I'm not at all friends with her. I can tell you; and the way in which she has treated you two girls has been simply abominable, and so everybody says. I shall give her a piece of my mind about it. one of these days. I'm not afraid of her, valiantly. "Not Esme sat over the slowly dying fire for more than an hour after ber brother had retired; strange thoughts, and some very sad ones, chasing each other through her brain. So the old home, such as it was, was to be broken up at last; and in one week, well, as the wrench had come, there was no use in prolonging the agony the sooner it was over the better. She could not bear to think of Hatty Clipper ton, of all people, reigning among their household gods; Hatty, with her loud l.n.h. her alanirv ways, ber contempt for sld-fashioned things and people. She . . nA is.rirr atr .ro r no i ninnAnrifl a furniture, the ancestors, and the china, and inaugurate blazing cretonnes and brilliant chromo-Ilthograpbs instead. "And how am I to tell Mrs. Brabazon?" she said aloud, brushing away the tears, and rousing herself with an effort. "It is quite too fearful to think of. I know I shall never sleep a wink to-night." (To be continued.) Field and Farm. While grass may at times be grown ln an orchard, yet a permanent soa will be an injury. It Is better to plow the sod under occasionally ana grow hoed crops, sowing to grass again. In this manner the ground Is made richer and the trees will be benefited by both crops. Steers are preferred In this country for beef, but ln England the butchers pay one cent per pound more for heif ers as they give less bone and more choice cuts. A well-bred heifer, how ever. Is worth more for the dairy than for beef. No heifers should be kept when calves unless from parents that are known to possess merit. The waste from the hay mow makes excellent litter for chickens. The seeds of all kinds of grass when dry are rel ished by fowls, and when the waste from the mow Is thrown on the floor of the poultry house the fowls will in dustriously work in the litter and find much to consume. Farmers who keep common sheep and depend upon wool do not know how specimens of some breeds may be made to reach great weights. A 2-year-old grade Lincoln wether in England was slaugnterea, i -434 pounds. The carcass weighed 304 pounds, the loose fat S4 pounds, the skin, blood and entrails 90 pounds and the waste pounds. Sheep weighing 300 pounds live weight are numerous In this country. Gooseberries are hardy and largely In demand when in season. They are usually propagated by cuttings, though some prefer layers. They desire rich lT!.nd require careful cultivation. The rruit grow, on two-year-old wood and on spuis and buds of older growth. As a rule gooseberries should be closely pruned, the new growth being well cut back. There la no single food that is perfect or wWch contains all the desirable ele ,.nta necessary for production, for whteJ reborn as an exclusive diet will not give aattsfactory results. There 7m but Utile lime ln wheat or corn, and as Hme U ntlal In the production of bone It Is evident that young animals will make but little growth when the larger portion of their food consists of or rnroeal. If clover, either green tr cu?ed?o?Twm milk is fed with corn more benefit will be derived from the cTmtlnation of food, than from gram only. , The seeds of wheat are not destroyed "mf.dredTh- &7 wfll EHSK "hrha."n d SSSudlff subjecting certain seeds ? aemperlture as low as 10 degrees Mow ro for four days by the use of P10 "f. The were then carefully plants. -- tUteTalor that will con onrah in a bad one. ;DQnQQQQQQQDDQQBODODQ - - A REFLECTION. 8 Tf KELT like Cortes upon a memor- II able occasion when the Jeweler's glass door swung behind me. and. marching op to the counter, I asked (or a ring. "A ring, sir?" said the attendant. "What sort of a ring?" "An engagement ring," said I, valor ously. "What else, sir?" demanded the man, docketing me mentally. "Five and a naif." I replied, thinking of the glove. "That's rather an unsual slxe," he re marked, robbing one eyebrow, "unless It's a bangle the lady wants." "I'm not sure that she wants It at all." I murmured, producing tbe little sandalwood-scented bit of allk; "but that la the size. I think." "O It's the size of the lady's band." be observed, with mild toleration, un rolling it. "Well, sir, ladles' fingers vary ln girth, and It's more usual to fit them with a piece of cardboard; but we'll do our best." "Now, sir. what do you think of this?" he asked, patronizingly, as he displayed an opal, changeful as the ahlftlng sun on a misty seaJ."It's exact ly the lady's size, making allowances, for of course she won't want to wear It over 'er glove." "Are not opals unlucay?" said I. en deavoring to decipher the price. "O, we don't hold with such supersti tion." replied the Jeweler loftily, "but they do say one will keep you from being poisoned." "Then I shall leave It for the next rich widow," I answered. "But what Is tbe cost of this?" I aHuded to an emerald set amid pearls which I already saw glittering on the loveliest hand ln the world. He extracted It with a silent respect he borrowed from my eagerness, and made a measurement, while I watched him, my heart beating madly. The size was exactly the same; the price but that Is a detail. I decided upon It. The shopman thanked me perfunctorily, and I leaned against the counter, feel ing like one who bad received a great favor. But when I fumbled In my pocket for the notes, and beard their crisp crackle, my confidence returned, and then, as I watched the splendid thing flashing in Its violet bed I be lieved I must after all be a rich man, unknown to myself, so great was the suggestion of unlimited wealth thus conveyed, "I should like a piece of glass on the Inside of the case lid." I observed, care- lessly. "Is it usual r "That's looking-glass?" queried the lapidary, glancing up from a surreptl- Uous examination of the notes. I nodded. I knew I must be getting red. "Well." be remarked, tolerantly, "it's not exactly usual, but It's a pretty Idea Ms-htena the attraction of the irem. makes the lady see the present from two points of view." -"Hardly an advantage sometimes,' observed; "but can you do It?" "Well, yes, I should think so," he re plied, condescendingly. "Then get It done, and I'll stand the racket." I answered, magnificently. When I left the shop I beaded straight for Bloomsbury Square, but remember ing that she might be Just then occu pied by domestic duties decided to call later ln the day. Even the ring ln my pocket gave me no additional courage, and presently I began to think it was not quite royal enough. Edging my way to Regent's Park, I bunted out a quiet spot and sat down to examine it at leisure. It was glorious still, but somehow not so glorious as I could have wished, and I was actually ques tioning tbe wisdom of my choice when an approaching footfall made me close the case. It was light, though firm, aud the everlasting flint would have worn well beneath It- Something, more of the intellect than of the sense, made me look up, and I saw her. Tbe sensation of being shot through the beart has not, I believe, received adequate literary expression, those who experience It being usually preoccupied at the exact moment with other mat ters; but I think I know what it means. "I'm so glad to see you," I cried, "be cause I want to restore something you forgot ln the restaurant yester a few weeks ago." "How kind of you." she said, coming near. "O, not at all," I replied; "but I hope you were not inconvenienced. I should have sent It, but I I didn't." I put my hand in my breast pocket hurriedly, and extracted my handker chief, which, in turn, brought to light a sheaf of letters and memoranda I shook out at ber feet like a skillful con jurer. Then I tried tbe other pocket, but va'ly. "It's a glove," I said, weak ly, gathering up my belongings; "one of yours, don't you know." "I recollect I missed It," she said, coldly. "But the cab went so quickly," I pleaded: "ah, do sit down until I find It" She did so. I was ln a gentle pers piration. "Pray, do not take so much trouble." she murmured, plaintively. "I have it!" I cried, and extracted the wisp of silk from my watch pocket, where I bad thrust It on leaving tbe shop. "So kind of yon " .he observed, tak ing It. "Would you allow me to keep It?" "Why?" she answered, quietly, but the voice was low. "To remind me of that nappy day," I replied, shying. "Indeed? I am glad that you think of it as a pleasant one." she said, gra ciously. "Mr. Turnbull was declaiming all the way back ln the cab. He seemed prejudiced against you." "He may be described as a man who means well," I observed, severely. "I hope he said something actionable." "O. hardly that!" she answered. laughingly; "but he seems to have changed his opinion lately." (That la the luncueaa UUL thought U "Tour 111 name happened to com op ln convsr- satlon to-day. and he said She paused; a sudden flame leaped Into her cheeks. "What did be say?" I demanded, try ing to look away. "He said you were an honorable man." she replied, the point of ber par asol tracing triangles ln the dust; "but "Ah. there Is much virtue ln that, but,' '' I observed, bitterly. "That yon ought to settle down," she continued, tossing her head and rising. "So I shall." I cried, "but It depends upon my lady. I have her portrait here in this case. She Is tbe only girl I shall ever care for In that way." I added, be cause a little qualification does do harm at even the most exalted mo ments. "By the way, she Is an acquaint ance of yours, too." And pressing tbe spring, I handed the casket to ber as the lid flew back. She glanced at me curiously, pale now. I, weak about the knees, watched a child trundle a hoop past us. She utered a little cry, that sank Into a sobbing laugh. Then she sat down beside me and put one of tbe hands I hope to hold when Death beckons me down the last dim turning of Life's road Into mine. "I trust she will make you a good wife," she said, gravely, and anybody can guess the rest. Black and White. Too Crude for Her. "No, Harry, said young Mrs. Murchl son, "you must not support this man. I have always said that I believed women should not meddle In political iff a Irs, but really this Is a case In which I reel that 1 would not be doing uij duty If I failed to remonstrate against your proposal to work and vote for him, No man who uses such language as h does can be fit to have a band In the shaping of public affairs." "My dear, you must be laboring under a misapprehension, Mr. March Ison insisted. "No one has ever taken rxception to tbe gentleman's language before-. What has be said that you di aot approve of?" "What has he said?" she exclaimed. "Why, Harry! How can you ask? look at this account of his speech, re ported by a paper that Is supporting uini, too, so It must be true, only I'm surprised that the editor .didn't gloss It over. Here It Is: 'The leven Is work ing!' Any person who Is responsible for guch an ungrammatlcal sentence as that must be unfit to hold public office. But what eleven does he refer to ' jear?" Quite IMBtereut. "Anlncrcaseof salary !" exclaimed th ', pompous manager of a small omnibus company to a clerk who had Just made ' that request. "I am afraid, sir, that ! vou are too extravagant!" He toyed ' with his heavy watch chain and looked severely at the young man. who re- I turned his stare boldly. It was tbe j et phrase on such occasions, and the applicant had beard It all before. He meant to have that rise or go some where else. "Excuse me, sir," he replied respect fully. "I haven't any chance to be ex travagant on what I earn." "Young man," continued the pomp ous gentleman, "I have risen from tbe ranks. How? By being careful. When I was young I made money by saving bus fares." "Ah, that was ln the old days," said tbe young map, with a knowing wink. "But with tbe bell punches and the present system of Inspection, yon would find you couldn't save six-pence without being collared, however care ful you were." The manager nearly fainted, and the young man had to seek other employment StlootinK Into a Hailstorm. To break up a hailstorm It Is neces sary to destroy tbe revolving or whirl ing current of air. This can only be Jone by an opposing current of air, lieuce tbe philosophy of shooting can non balls at tbe ball clouds Is plain. The cannon balls passing through the air create a temporary vacuum, which Is quickly filled by the air rushing in behind the ball and toward the clouds. When this current of air becomes stronger than the whirling current ot strong enough to Interfere with It the whirling current Is overcome and tlw hailstorm Is destroyed. - Pound by Grave-Dlggcrs. The grave-diggers who were employ ed to dig Mr. Gladstone's grave Id Westminster Abbey came upon a lead en coffin of some unknown person They also found remains of other per sons of whose burial there Is no rec ord, among them a skull very much worn away, but seemingly that of a young man; shoulder bones and small bones of tbe arm In excellent preserva tion, but completely browned through age. And at a greater depth skulls were found, which, like the others, were only kept free from disappearance into mold by he dryness of the soil. Dixou Biffklns seems to be enjoying the fortune his aunt left him. Hlxon Why, I understand he lost It all in a wheat deal six months ago. Dixon So he did; but It has supplied him with a never-failing topic of con versation ever since. How He Managed It. AL Wright My wife and I used to quarrel nearly all tbe time, but now we hare the most peaceful home you ever saw. Henry Peck Indeed! How do you manage it? Al. Wright I simply make my wlf t l mad ah refuse tn anoiilr tn n x Mm exui riaarug oa lb He Yes, I really feel as If I onght to do something for my country. She Oh. well. I think you hay dona something for It TT- W J I. 1 1 . 8lH-Why.yTOwar.WtaBuro all laaa anMM raaan'r mm Notes of Inventions. A device which artvea the man in the railroad signal tower absolute control over the throttle In every train within the limits ef his block has been In vented by Joseph N. King-, of Syra cuse. N. T.. formerly a conductor on the Delaware. Lackawanna western Road. R. F. Lockwood. of Lyons. N. T.. has secured a patent on a burial vault.the parts of which are made of eilay wltn Interlocking ends, and after they are fitted together a costing or cement makes the whole practically une piece, forming an air-tight and water-proof tomb. According to the Electrician, an In ventor named M. A. Durfour has dis covered a method of melting quarts, thereby making It available for many purposes for which glass is at present used. It Is toped to use It as a sub stitute for glass In the manufacture of Incandescent lamps. Charles H. Sawyer, the master me chanic on one of the big Weoterr. roads, has devised a serpentine boat which he says Is a combination of the principles of boat and locomotive construction. and he is building a small boat to carry 18 or 20 persons which he will use on the great Lakes to demonstrate the value of his idea. Zalmon O. Sholes. the lnventer of the Remlngton-Sholes typewriting ma chine, and Alfred C. Oilmour. an em ploye of the Remington Company, are associated In the manufacture of a very remarkable machine, which is the com bination of the telegraph and the type writer. By Its use a message In trans mitted over the wire by the Morse sys tem, but it la delivered on a sheet direct from the typewriter without any tran scription whatever. This machine does away with the use of skilled telegraph ers, for anyone acquainted with the keyboard of a typewriter can send a message Just as well and ?a rapidly as the best operator usig ihe telegraph ky. Ocas and Ends. TTnrtor rational treatment the average yield of a bee hive ln Palestine is 100 pounds. Private roor garaens are sucu ress In New York that the large board ing houses find It necessary to adopt them as a regular summer feature. The natives of Hawaii, be they ever so poor, never steal or beg. These of fences are confined almost exclusively to the Portuguese residents of the is land. One of the new thine 1n the 1pwelr line this season Is the Introduction of delicately carved ivory Into the bits of filigree work, with which wou.cn uc llBht to adorn their costumes. At a street fair in Wichita this fall one of the chief features will be an arch 40 feet high, constructed entirely of apples. During the present century 400 hu man Uvea, tl25.000.000 and 200 ships rha-ve been lost ln fruitless efforts to find the Xarth Pole. .An Egyptian contemporary says: "Our whole Isr&hd is now girdled with golf courses. All the world Is no longer a stage, but a golf links." Rural mall delivery la progressing In a way to satisfy both the people and the department. In Carroll county. Maryland, every farm house now has a daily free mail delivery. There Is considerable money In the lakes In the shape of meat. In the Lake Erie fisheries S728 men are em ployed and $2,719,654 capital. Last year's eaten was vaiuea ai i.io.o". The population of the Berlin suburb rharlottenburg Is In a curiously un stable condition. Last year 44.718 of the population of 174.550 left the city and 53,744 from elsewhere took their flacea. Personals. . - Introduce the American Cabinet sys - tem Into his government. In addition to the European system of responsible Ministries, and Is determined to have a privy council which shall be answer able to him alone. In order not to vio late the Italian Constitution, which makes the Ministry the sovereign's sole official adviser. King Victor will make his new council a sort of "kitch en Cabinet." The Emperor of Austria has ordered a full length portrait of himself to be painted in oils, and will present the same to Sir Horace Rumbold. the re tiring British Ambassador. Prince Tlloka, the 15-year-old son of the King of Siam. who has been study ing at the Charterhouse School, ln Lon don, has been recalled to Siam. It Is said that he will regret to return to his native country, as he has grown to be very fond of England and the English people. The friends of the late William L. Wilson and the alumni of Washington and Lee University (of which Institu tion Mr. Wilson was president have planned to raise by subscriptions fund of at least $100,000 for the purpose ot maintaining a new professorship ln the university. The fund Is to be known as the Wilson endowment. Useful Hints. Sandwiches that are la be served at aa afternoon tea should not be spread with butter or the filling mixture quite to th e ge of the bread. This little precau tion will prevent their soiling the glovet of those who bold them. Salt is good to scour marble wash stands or basins with, to sweep carpeU with (if it be thoroughly brushed out) and tA aet colors In wash goods. Where soot has fallen on the carpet, sprinkle salt on It and the tot will come off without leaving a black mark. Spots of iron rust can be removed by wettlnf with a strong solution of lemon-Juic. and salt and holding over a vessel ot boiling water, when they will Immedi ately disappear. Bleeding at the Nose. Spirits of tur pentine in a hot -saucer will give off fumes which snuffed up the nose often have a good effect in tfcia bleeding. Ty ing a string or bandage around the thigh or the arm close to the shoulder, is of service. An excellent remedy. Is to have the patient take a hot fOJt bath. This Is one of the best possible measures from its simplicity, and It rarely fails In all ordinary cases to atop the bleeding: an other method Is to supply a large mus tard leaf or mustard plaster to sk.n over the right side the body In the situa tion ot the liver. Babyhood. Industrial. The American Tube and Iron Com pany, the Toungatown. Ohio, plant of the National Tube Company, resumed operations In full after a shut-down of many months. The works employ 400 bands. terna,t0n j Union In the factories ln the I vw w r.. rnmn.vt mwiA imisllM I T ym. .v nrnther. at Timnt went on , strike owing to aiaagreemenc oeiween this union and the Spanish union. I called Beslstencia. About wo people I practice complete relaxation of brain. I I t.l.. TTaa An.k.lf (ha 111 "ill SERMON T Dr. Calmagf Snbjeet: Everyday RllionIt la UoM ta BuaiBSM awl Polltlet Th. KxampM of Daalel. Who Was Kever Too Jtn.y to Worship Ood -Advice to Christian. rrto-rUh worn VjiiifiTOV D. C This discourse of Dr. Talmage is appropriate for all seasons, but especially in these times ot preat agi tation. The text is Daniel vi, 16. "Thon the king commanded, and they brought Daniel and cast him into the den of lions. Darius ws. kins; of Babylon, and the yonnjr man Daniel was so much a favorite with him that he made him nrime minis ter, or secretary of state. But no man could gain such a hish position without excitine the envy and jealousy of the peo ple. There were demagogues in lalylon who were so appreciative of their own abilities that they were affronted at the elevation of thia young man. Old Babv lon was afraid of young Babylon. The tall er the cedar the more apt it is to lie riven of the lightning. These demaeooues asked the king to make a decree that anybody that made a petition to any one except the king during a period of thirty days should be put to death. King Darius, not suspecting any foul plav, makes that de cree. The demagogues have accomplished all they want, because they know that no one can keen Daniel from sending petitions before God for thirty days. So far from being afraid. Daniel goes on with supplications three times a day and is found on his house top making prayer. He is caueht in the aot. He is condemned to be devoured by the linns. Rontrh executioners of the law seize him and hasten him to the cavern. I hear the nrowl of t! e wild beasts, and I see them pawing the dust, and as they put their months to the ground the solid earth ciuakes with their bellowing. 1 see their eves roll and I almost hear the fiery eye balls snap in the darkness. These mons ters approach Daniel. They have an appe tite keen with hunger. With one strokn of their paw or one snatch of their teethj they may leave him dead at the bottom o( the cavern. But what a strange welcome Daniel receives from these hunfrrv mons ter. Thev fawn around him. thev lick his hand, thev bnrv his feet in their lont manes. That night he has calm sleep with his head pillowed on -the warm necks of the tamed lions. But not so well does Darius, the king. sleeD. He has an attack of terrific insnin nia. He loves Daniel, and hates this strategera bv which he has been con demned. All night long the king walks the floo-. He cannot sleep. At the least sound he starts and his flesh creens with horror, i e is impatient for the dawning of the mominir. At the first streak of the d.iylight Darius hastens forth to see the fate of Daniel. The heavy palace doors open and clang shut long before 1 he people of the city waken. Harms goes to the den of the lioni: he looks in. All is silent. His heart stops. He feels that the very worst lias happened, but gathering all his strength, he shouts throueh the rifts of the rock. "Oh, Daniel, is thy Cod whom thou servest continually able to deliver thee?" There comes rolling up from the deep darkness a voice which says: "Oh. king, live forever. Mv God lias sent His .ilia. J1C I1IH i i . .lit v i mi nan - ...r, angel to shut the lions' mouths that theyl h.v not h..rt m." Tl.on Daniel ; I brought out from the den. The dema-, gogues are hurled into it, and no sooner have they struck the bottom of the den than their flesh was rent, and their bones cracked and their blood spurted through , tea: 8ucn w UeoI ' - the rifts of the rock. and. as the lions chusetts; such , was Theodore rrelinghuy make the rocks tremble with their roar. I n; of fw Jeiy-men faithful to the thev announce to all ages that while God j 4 the. Mme t'1" faithful to God will defend His people, the way of the, V" ab8ur1 expect that men hohave nngodly shall perish Jf?". mmP.ree.d ' Politics wickedness for Learn first from this subject that the' thirty or "rty T 8hn fme to refor' greatest cri that vou commit in the' tion. and our hope ir , the young men eyes of manv U the crime of success. What ;ho are com,n UDA.thJ. thev Vy '"" had Daniel done that he should be flung' "t,c Principle and Chnstian prmc.ple side to the lions? He had become prime min- 8,d ?om? to ,th? ister. They could not forgive him for; box and cast their first vote and that they that, and behold in that a touch of un- "'l- T,nt of rrofheTo'ridlong aTu" "ni&ut 'werha'un! mnehed n'rTeriv. onI sf vou are mean .ess to them than Calvary. I' ,i , i . i n'j j SxnSrerVengbasTo fend'haH. work to eHneare vm.r children there are 1 ' ..Pr ' n . m people who will sav. 1'oor man. 1 am , ' t , , i i ' sorrv for him: he ought to succeed, poor, n.,. -V, -Ti.:i. ,l. ..' man. But after awhile the tide turns - ., f ti.. .i;..,i.t , in your favor, lhat was a profitable in- vestment vou made. You bought just at tha right time. Fortune become; gjod hu- mored and smiles upon you. Xow vou vourtcrerchrsorennBeUCThose men' your success chills some one. Those men who used to sympathize with you stand along me street, ana i in V acowi at vou c " i .!. -i L-.- i- iruin uuuer wvs rim oi mifir nais. i iu have more money or more influence than thev have, and you ought to be scowled at from under the rim of their hats. You catch a word or two as you pass by them Muck up, says one. Got it irislionest ly," says another. "Will burst soon," says a third. Every stone in your new house is laid on their hearts. Your horse's hoofs went over their nerves. Every item of your success has been to them an item of discomfiture and despair. Just as soon as in any respect you rise above your fel- lows, if you are more virtuous, if you are more wise, if you are more influential, you cast a shadow on the prospect of oth- erg j The road to honor and success is with- in reach of the enemy's guns. Jealousy says. "Stay down or 1 11 knock vou down." "I do not like you," says the snowflake to the snow-bird. "Whv don't you like me?" said the snowbird. "Oh," said the anowflake "vou are .oina nn and I am coming down.1 Young merchants, young lawyers, young doctors, young mechanics, young artists. young farmers, at certain times there arc those to sympathize with you, but now that you are becoming a master of your particular occupation or profession, how is it now. young lawyers, young doctors. young artists, vo-.ing farmers-how is it now? The greatest crime that you can commit is the crime of success. Again, my s-.ibject impresses me with the value of decision of chaiarter in any department. Daniel knew that if he con- tinued his adherence to the religion of the Lord he would be hurled to the lions. but. having set his compass well, he sailed right on. For the lack of that clement of decision of character, so eminent in Daniel, many men are mined for this world, and ruined for the world to come.' ?orm 8 sepulcher and who puU-his paw A great manv at forty years of age ,dow.n aul,d thousands ot millions of the are not settled in any respect, because (l w1' cau"ot affright you. When iu old thev have not been able to make un their tn t!m.e8 a. man was to get the honors of minds. Perhaps they will go west: per- 11 go east; perhaps they nil) they will go north; perhaps south; perhaps ih-v will naps tney win not; perhaps not; perhaps they may make that invest- would con!e forth. and a"d the sound of ment in real estate or in railroads; per -. cornet and great parade he would get rhe haps thev will not. They are like a steam- - honors of knighthood. And so it will be r that should go out of New York liar- Wlth tl,e Christian in the night before bor, starting for Glasgow, and the naxt ; ,ef ven ?8 uUX with spear and day should change for Havre de Grace, ; helmet of salvation he will wait and watch and the next for Charleston and the next through the darkness until the morning for Boston and the next for Liverpool. dawn8 aud then he will take the honors These men on the sea of life everlasting-' heaven amid that great throng with ly tacking ship and nuking no headway. 8'?wy robes streaming over seas of sap Or they are like a man who starts to . Pu,re build a house in the lorinthian style and changes it to Doric, and then completes; A more glorious victory cannot be it in the Ionic,- the curse of all styles of j gained than this; that when the Injury architecture. Young man, start right and j begins on bis part, the kindness should keep on. Have decision of character. 1 begin on ours. Character : i like the goldtincli of Tonquin; j From a mere 8ense of consistency, a it is magnificent while standing farm, but . persecutor is bound to show that the loses all its beauty in flight, llow much 'ilen man ls a villain; otherwise he. th imiMuu ui vim.iki in viun inn, fcntrm; young men may be Christians! Their old associates make sarcastic flings at them. They go on excursions and they do n-t i invite them. T w iiruiMitrsv mat. ic wui 1 At... L v tl " j' it l give out. Thev wonder '( he is not JUng W,nF- a' wJEnd v The Oh. Cvoung maT'h.v.hedecisn teVoWlTon iOUbeCt.VhIedrd.!.,, $5 ter oi reiigiou w yon care lor i o,en under Ihoi feet, and gnm n,.sen nrn push them into it. and eternity comes down I) ir.l upon ineir apim, science stings, and hopeless mm lifts them np to hurl them down, will they laugh 'hen? . . .... I learn also from my snbjeet that men mav take religion into their worldly busi ness. This ia a most appropriate thought at this season of the year, when so many men are starting out in new enterprises. Daniel had enough work to do to occupy six men. All the affairs of state were in hi. hands questions of finance, questions of war. of peace: all international ques tions were for his settlement or adjust ment. He must have had a eorresnond ence vast bevond all computation. There was not a mn in all the earth who had more to do than Daniel, the woretarT of state, and yet we find him three times a dav bowing before God in prayer. But to have religion go right along by them all through life, to have religion looking over their shoulder when they are making a bargain, to have religion take up a bag of dishonest gold and shake it and say. ."Where did you get . that?' irv think that is an impertinent re lirnTi. ,. . . Thov would like to hare a religion to help th"n when thev are sick and when the shadow of death comes over them, thry wouM like to have religion as a snrt of night kev with which to open the door of heaven, but religion under other circumstances they take to be imperti nence. Now, mv friends, religion never robbed a man of a dollar. Other things being equal, a mason will build a better wall, a cabinet maker will make a lietter chair, a plumber will make a better pipe, a lawyer will make a lietter plea, a merchant will sell a better bill of goods. I say. other things being equal. Of course when re ligion gives a man a new heart, it does not propose to give him a new head or to intelleetualize him or to change a man s condition when hi. ordinary state is an overthrow of the philosonhical theory that a total vacuum is impossible, but the more letters you have to write, the more bur dens you have to carry, the more mile, vou have to travel, the more burdens you have to lift, the more engagements vou have to meet, the more disputes you ha-e to settle, the more opportunity you have of being a Christian. If you have a thousand irons in the fire, you have a thousand more opportunities of serving God than if von onlv had one iron in the fire. Who so busy as Christ? And yet who a iiillionth part as holv? The busi est men the best men. All the persons converted in Scripture busy at the time of their being converted. Mtthew at tending to his custom house duties, the prodigal son feeding swine, l.ydia sell ing mirple. Simon Peter hauling in the net from the sea. Saul spurring his horse toward Damascus, going down on his law bn.iness. Busy, busy Daniel with all the affairs of state weighing down upon his soul and yet three times a day worship ing the God of heaven. Again, I learn from this subject that a man mav take religion into his politics. Daniel had all the affairs of state on hand, yet a sen-ant of God. He could not have kept his elevated position un less he had been a thorough politician, and vet all the thrusts of officials and aTl the danger of disgrace did not make him yield one iota of his high toned religious principle. He stood before that age, he stands before all ages, a specimen of a godlv politician. So there have been in our day and in the days of our fathers - . . . . , j men as eminent in the service of God as they have been eminent in the service of '"f Such was Benjamin . Butler time of your fathers; such was .John flic- Lean, of the supreme court of the United na Islington mean less to tnem tnan titZi tBhUea1forxtenoarson men . the ballot box is no reason ,. rru. i. ,. ,. ,i. the arena. 1 he last time you ought to . . i .i t f . . , .. , giw up your child or forsake your child f , ' , , , is when it is surrounded bv a company . , , . , . , . -. .'... VAfwt,,"d w i'a8,L" "-f Z ""L biaI'lb t A hJ I Za f,undl J wT,"kHnL. d'8none9ty nd st'oodtnmost unpopular plat- fnrm . , fi . . ' . ;by Christian men should retreat from gogues of the day hissed at him and tried : , i i to overthrow bim. e must carry our i , i;,- ' h?.V " V "111 But ere re a great many men who "T. " faYr f m ,L",t;.nai'on"i of taking it into' city politics, as though a man were intelligent about the welfare of his neighborhood and had no concern about his own home. Aly subject also impresses me with the IUIIllVO IIW 11 W V I 11". IIUJ'WI lllll. fact that lions cannot hurt a good man. -N man ever 8ot nto wor9e con,'ua"y tl,an ''";' "" " ." i the den- What a rare morsel that fair yuK m-". would have been for the bun- frv monsters! If they had plunged at him, he could not have climbed into a nche beyond the reach of their paw or the 8mitch of the,r. iooh- 11,e,y csn,e P''1 around about him, as hunters lounds at the well known whistle come bounding to his feet. ou need not go to Numidia to get many lions. You all have you tne lion OI Iinanciai distress, the lion of sickness, the lion f persecution. You saw that lion of inancial panic putting his mouth down o the earth, and he roared until ail the tanks and all the insurance companies iiiaked. With his nostril he scattered the hshes on the domestic heartii. You have had trial after trial, misfortune after m"une, on aner non, ana yet lliey have never hurt you if you put your trust i od'. and , they never will hurt you. bey md not hurt Daniel, and they caiiiiot yu- lne Persians used to think that spring rain falling into seasliells I "ould urn 'nto Pe"'8; d I have to tell - ou that the tears sorrow turn into P"!""8 ffln8 when they drop into God a bottle. Vou need be afraid of nothing lu"g your trust in God. Even death. that monster lion whose den ia the aown it ad, Ln tin knight Knighthood, he was compelled to go lul- Jv armed the night bctore among the I101""" ol,', dead car.rying a sort of 8Pea,rj and then when the day broke he persecutor, is a wretch himself. He who never ventures will nevr cross the sea. Keep your fire under the pot of life . . j - or literature. smuKe iuiu prejuuicc fl . lrnprove any diet except to a dbu 1 eased taste, while your wisdom and wit Proved In the chafing dish of pub- " S2Sy thls-that there ., a prof.or dlenity and proportion to be observed .,.,, r ... ant r.r aa iuc s awa muwv vs. j - 1 I I 1 fi 5 i V r 7