. . . . f J - V . I - ' 1 ,- , ' -if B. F. SCIIV7EIER, THE COnSTITUTIOn-TIIE UniOn-AUD THE EllFORCEtJERT OF THE UV3S. Editor and Pr-prUUr VOL. IiV. MIFFLTNTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1900 NO. 1. i I . J . - . . - t V . . -r - . ., ... ........ v. ... . . : ... Tvixt Ijfe PRHNK CHAPTER L The Lecture Hall and Literary Insti lute. Monkton a long, rectangular room, lit with six gas jets on hanging T-shaped fittings; the drab walla decorated with half a dozen maps; the coloredrepreaenta tion in sections of a very early steam engine; an ethnological chart; and othei Instructive works of art. At one end a small stage,, opening fourteen feet bf eight, flanked by red curtains, and fur Dished with si footlights and a drop scene, showing Athens, the worse foi many, falls; a grand piano below the pros cenium by way of orchestra. The body of the hall ranged in parallel lines with red-cushioned seats, on which are closely pressed the relatives and friends of pupils connected with Mrs. Vicary Shepherd's High School and Academy for the daugh ters of gentlemen. An overflow of bash ful youths line the walls right and left. Three very warm-looking gentlemen, each with a packet of programa in his hand and a white fa Tor in his buttonhole, arc endeavoring, with smiling assiduity, ta find places for a crowd of late comers. There is a general inspection of pink programs, and a buzzing is heard. Even the professors speak in hushed tones, fot the general effect of the hall, despite the stage, is thst of a Methodist chapel. A lady explains to a gentleman who seems, by some accident, to have come there without knowing why what is toward: "It's a High School, you know. Mrs. Vicary Shepherd I'm sorry to see that she's not here; she is indisposed, I'm told this entertainment bas been got up to demonstrate the advantage of the elocu tion and deportment class." "Oh. I see." "She wrote to the great tragedian what is his nsme? on the subject. Here la his reply on the back of the program. It was he who suggested what should be acted." Yoa don't say so! And what is the play he recommends?" "'She Stoops to Conquer.' My little Hilly takes the part of Diggory. She's only twelve, yon know. Mrs. Vicary Shepherd assured me that, if she bad only been a year or two older, she should have asked me to let her play old Mar low." "Ah. indeed! Then all the performers re eh young ladies?" "Oh, of course; and, naturally, Mrs. I Vicary Shepherd haa carefully revised ; the play for the use of her pupils. Ah! th.r i. xrimm Tinwion ih..n....i. mi ! tress. lVs roin to beein now." ' Misa Tinkleton plays an elaborate son ata of Schumann brilliant, but rathei long. An awkward pause in which the hurrying of feet, some giggling, and a confusion of whispering, tongues are heard coming from the other side of Ath ena. A Vwce from the same remote part ska, "Are yon ready now, young ladies?" I to which a general reply of "No, no! not yet, not yetr in accents or terror, creates titter among the audience. Misa Tinkle ton, with admirable presence of mind, at tacks another sonata; but before she geta to the foot of the page a bell rings, and the curtain rises in three spasmodic jerks. Applause from the parents and friends sf the young ladies, who are discovered In the characters of Mr. and Mrs. Hard castle, facing each other, and in doubt whether they ought to begin before Miss Tinkleton has gone through her sonata. Then Misa Tinkleton stops in the middle Of br with confusion. The play pro ceeds, the rigid Mr. Hardcastle and the rigid Mrs. Hardcastle exchanging their quid pro quoa with the regular intonation Of well-learnt lesson, and the audience already assuming an air of calm repose nd heslgnation, when a vociferous halloo beyond the red curtain, followed by the brisk entrance of Tony Lumpkin on the scene, fairly galvanizes the audience into life. The entrance is clearly unrehears ed, for Mrs. Hardcastle incontinently for gets her part. What doea that matter? Everyone is occupied with Tony, and he has the sense to turn the silence to effect. There he stands, a strapping, black eyed young fellow with a red wig, stand ing looking audaciously at the audience as he cracks his riding whip and whistles through long row of white" tenth. Sud denly, aa If recollecting an engagement, he says, "I'm off," and crosses the stage with an unseen wink to Mrs. Hardcastle, and a quickly whispered line that she is to take up. As be goes off. battling stout ly with Mrs. Hardcastle at the end of the scene, everyone in the audience consults the program. "Surely that cannot be Miss Vanessa Grahame!" is on every one's lips. But it is, though Nessa her self, who, taking advantage of Mrs. Vie arv Shepherd's absence, has determined to play the part as she conceives Gold smith Intended it to be played, and, in defiance of Mrs. Vicary Shepherd's ex press injunction that she should not dis figure herself, has painted her pretty face and especially her dainty nose with ochre and rouge, and bidden her pretty, waving, chestnut hair with a red wig sent Sown with the costumes from Bow street. What Is more, she haa got hold of an un abridged copy of the play, and ss deter mined to say every word of it The second scene is set. And here, to the terror of Miss Tinkleton at the piano, Nessa introduced the song of the "Three Jolly Pigeons," which Mrs. Vicary Shep herd had cut out, without a moment's hesitation. Moreover, she introduced a step dance in the final chorus of "Tor toddle, tonoddle. torrol," as if unable U contain the exuberance of her spirits. The act finished, and Athens is once more in view. There i commotion in the auditorium. The ladiea are surprised, they cannot understand how Mrs. Vicary Shepherd couid allow sucn a penormance o be given. Deportment and eton rere all very well in their way. and Oli rer Goldsmith was, undoubtedly, a very txceUent writer, but really such lan mage! And how Miss Grahame, a young ady who, in a few years, would have a xsltion in society with three thousand a rear, how could she so forget Little Milly's mamma ta quite aura tlM. er daughter would not hare PVd art to tbat dreadful manner, it Ja moat serious thing to have such a perm In a school where her example, though. )f course, contemned, might possibly in Suence her fellow-pupils. Meanwhile a couple of young gentle men who have been madly in love with Nessa for the past two years, and three r four others who have seen her to night for the first time and have not that xcuse, loiter outside the hall to see her and Qeath 4 BRRRBTT pass to the omnibus that is waiting take her and the rest of the boarders to & school at Westham. She comes down after the small fry, with her arm linked !n Miss Tinkleton's. The full moon is right overhead; Its Ught glistens on her white teeth and parklea in her dark eyes aa she laughs. 8he is clearly trying to make the poor governess forget her trouble, and, indeed, succeeds in raising a faint smile on her lugubrious countenance. But though she la laughing and full of fun, Nessa is not hoydenish. Those who have not seen her before to-night csn hardly believe that It was she who played Tony. They ex pected to find her a red-faced, romping, heavy-sided tomboy; they see a pale-faced young lady, dressed with striking ele zance, whose every movement is graceful But there's no mistaking thosJbig, fear less eyes, and that capital Jbt of whit' teeth. Mrs. Vicary Shepherd accepted only a limited number of pupila as boarderar )ost as many, in fact, as could be stowed sway in the six rooms on the second floor of Eagle House. Among the many duties of a meek-spirited resident governess. Miss Tinkleton bad each night to see the young ladies in bed before retiring to her own. She had visited five of the rooms and extinguished the light in them, when she came to the last in the corridor that night. That was Nessa's. Miss Tinkle ton passed it with a slight cough and went downstairs, Nessa having long ago emancipated herself from a rule that was only to be suffered by children. Five minutes later, the doors Hp the passage began to creak, and heads were cautiously thrust out; then the white robed young ladies, seeing the course clear, crept out, treading on their soft, bare toes, clasping the wraps thrown over their shoulders with crossed hands on their bosoms, and made their way noise lessly toward the end room on a visit to their heroine, Nessa. With infinite pre caution, one turned the handle, while the rest clustered together for common sup port, and did their best to keep from tit-. tering audibly. But they ceased to giggle altogether when the door was opened, for there before them was the most unex pected spectacle to be found in this world of surprises. Nessa. who had never be fore been known to cry, was seated on her bed with a handkerchief up to her eyes, and her bosom heaving with stilled sobs. Her hat and jacket lay on a chair. m nau not oegun to unaress. 1 wo were -open, and her roomT never too tidy, was littered from end to side with things taken from the open drawers and put down anywhere. "I can't help it," she said, brushing the tears away impatiently and heaving hei breast with a long, fluttering sigh; "and now it's all over, 1 wish I hadn't done it. I like Mrs. Vic and old Tinkleton. Oh, I love you all, and there's no one else in the world I care anything at all for, or anyone who cares for me. I'm glad yon hare come. I've been trying to think what each of you would like best for keepsake. Now you shall choose for your selves. I know you like that pearl set, Dolly." She rose in her qnick, impulsive way to get the trinkets, but Dolly re strained her, and clinging to her arm. made her sit down again "You're not going away, dear," she said. "Oh, no!" murmured the others, echo ing ber tone of remonstrance. "Yes. T am." said Nessa; "that'a why I'm such a goose. I can t bear to think of saying good-by, it has been such a jolly term, hasn't it?' "Do you think Mrs. Vic will be so very angry" "Of course she will. Tinkleton says I've ruined the reputation of the school. "Oh, but you can make some excuse." "I never did in my life," Nessa said, bristling up. "I will tell her I am very sorry and so I am; but that isn t mak ing an excuse." "Oh. she won't let you go away." "She cannot prevent my going, and sh won't try to. I'm not a girl now; I'm a woman, and it's time I left school. I know all the professors can tell me; 01 at any rate all I choose to learn; and I'm unmanageable. How is Mrs. ic to pun ish me when I do wrong? She can't put me in a corner, or send me to bed. And I always am doing wrong." The voices mingled in unanimous dis sent. "Mrs. Vic saya I am. She teUa me J encourage those horrid little wretches who stare at me in church and throw let- tor. Into the srarden; and those professors ! are quite as bad if she only knew it. worse, i naie mem. u u -. . m.b tnve in that cowardly way. I think all men are mean and horrid, don't you rwillv?" "Vearlv all." Dolly admitted, with re luctance. "Of course, papa is nice, and so are brothers." "And uncles," suggested another. HlnJ anm conftins. " hinted a third. "Oh. thev don't count," said Nessa. "1 cannot remember my papa, and I don't think that I have a single relative in all the world." "Not one?" "No. A stepfather is not a relative, and," she added, bending her pretty brows, "I'm glad of it, because I hats him with all my heart." CHAPTER II. ' "Oh, Nessa r eaclaimed a school gW chorus. ,. "I know he is a coward, and r behevt be ta as wicked a man as ever lived. Ah, if you only knew!" Couldn't you tell ns, dearT "Well, papa was a soldier a geacrsi. fon know, an he was killed in batt:e when I was quite a tiny little thing; and mamma was very young and very pre tty. and very rich, because papa left ber ev . . erything. Ana s, - . year. old. she "nt And when l was neueve mr. ' M " - - . u Mr. Ileamonu mj --- her fortune, and reany u.u for .11 f know sne-was uww' . k -.mo tn see me at scnoui. . t Te cried' o-vTrmr.; she heid me in her .rrns. She did not Hve two years after her marriage; my stepfather broke her heart" - " ; . wih ,i don't anow, uc. ' j , Tdo rm sure of it I bare r Redmond, ana he look, like . J! L.m w.k a woman's heart" ' "Yse, Man MY. man who would break a woman ZZri oarVaay yo- would think him handsome: bur. oh. he has those long, sleepy, treacherous eyes, and those lines down here by the mouth, don't you know, that people get who are alwaya trying to conceal a wicked thought with "Oh, I hate those people who are al ways smiling. They get a shiny look on l heir faces, don't they? Go on, dear." ' T have only seen him four or five times, but that ia often enough for me and for him, too. He knows what I think of him and hates me, and fears me, too, I'm certain. That ia why he has kept me all this time at school why, he would keep me here until he haa no longer any legal control over me. He thinks he Is safe while I am here that in this artificial life I can learn nothing about the real world. But he ia mis taken, as he shall find. Wait a mo ment." . Nessa went to one of the boxes and re turned with an imposing document tied with pink tape. , "Look at this," she said. The girls gathered closely round her, and looked at the blue foolscap in breathless awe. ibis is a copy of mamma a will. I sent to London for it If s very short. See, mamma leaves all her estate, real and personal,' to me, her only child, Vanessa Grahame; bat here," turning the page with evident satisfaction in the crackle it made, "here is the codicil. Mamma has evidently been told that she must provide a guardian for me during my minority, and make some disposition of her prop erty in case I should die before coming of age. And here she makes James Red raond my sole guardian, with power to draw eight hundred pounds a year from the invested capital, to provide for my education and personal requirements. And further, in the event of the said Vanessa Grahame dying before the age if twenty-one I in only eighteen now, you know all the property goes to that horrid stepfather, the aforesaid James iedniond. Now, what do you think of hat?" "Your poor mamma could not have lov J him, or she would have left him some noney, wouldn't she, dear?" said Dolly. "Of course she would; but how is it that leaving nothing; to him in the will, she leaves me to his tender mercies in the codicil? Can y-ui explain that, any of you? None of them could." "I can explain it," said Nessa, raising her voice in excitement; "this codicil is forgery" "Oh, Nessa r "It Is, and it's just the sort of forgery a cunning coward would make. He had not the courage to forge a will making the who'e estate his; but he had just enough to substitute his own name for one that mamma had written, and so get a nice lit tle income for ever so many years out of the money for my schooling and clothes. He could do that without raising suspi cion. What have X cost? Not two hun dred a year; that puts him in possession of six hundred pounds, besides the use of my house, Grahame Towers." She drew a letter from her pocket with impressive gravity, and, opening it, read: " My dear Nessa' what right has he to call me his dear Nessa? 'I have not nominal but an actual anthority to con- trot your movements, and while that au thority is mine I intend to keep you at Eagle House or some similar-establish ment. - Yours, etc.. James Itedmond. The letter i dated from my own house, Gra hame Towers. It came this morning, just before we were going to the rehears al You can imagine my indignation !" (To be continued.) Personals. The citizens of Victoria, B. C, have presented to Rear Admiral Beaumont ih massive eold nUKKet and a sword which was made especially for him in London. The Rear Admiral has just been promoted to the command of the Austrialian station. ! Count Von Waldersee receives J500 a month as commanding officer of the Germans in China, besides $750 a month as Field Marshal and $2500 a month for what la known as "table money." Vina Clara Barton, head of the Re Cross Society, has placed with a firm 'at Kittrell, N. C. an order for 1.000.000 strawberry plants. Thea planta will be distributed among the fruit growers of Texas, who suffered ao severely from the great September storm. The statues of Alexander Dumas, fils. and of his grandfather, the General which will be ready to unveil In a few months, ere to be placed close to the monument of Dumas, the novelist, in the Palace Malesherbes, in Parla. This locality is soon to lose Its old name, and will soon be known aa the Place dea Trols Dumas, so that the memory of the celebrated family will be well perpet uated in Paris. General W. F. Draper, of Milford, Mass., has received from the King of Italy the grand cordon of the order of Saints Maurice and Lazare aa a token of appreciation of the former Ambassa dor's services during his mission in Italy. The grand cordon Is one of tht highest decorations conferred by the Italian Court Odds and Ends. An ox can carry 200 pounds weight on a day'a Journey, a camel 400 pounds. In Australia the atreet railway sys tems of the towns are, for the most part owned by the municipalities. Klectrlc fountains have become very popular especially aa attractions for amusement parks. In England, especial ly, they have lately been Installed In large numbers. Prussian blue does not come to us from Prussia. It is a chemical product of which England makes her full share. Irish stew Is not an Irish, but an Eng lish dish and Turkish baths did not originate' in Turkey, but in Russia. A resident of Plymouth, Mass.. Dr. Isaac I Wood, has a couple of apples from an orchard at Kamloops. British Columbia, just the ordinary fruit of that region. One of them measures 15 In ches In circumference and weighs 23 ounces, and the other is nearly aa large. Dr Wood saw at the agricultural fair at 'Kamloops an apple which weighed The city of Bern, Switzerland, la mtk ,., th socialistic experiment of build in! f ree-or practically free workshops for artisans. A wideawake American has erected steam pumps on the Jordanand 1. sup ntvinK churches all over Europe with genuine Jordan water. a l.ree Dublin manufacturer baa a room entirely furnished with Irish peat The clrpeta on the floor, the curtains at .TJLe.fxJw. and paper on the wall are . me - 1,. ,ko- , made from in i nlr,' "V qOO 000 women In Spain work d oaV laborer. $60,000, worn- -- " Watered as day servants that they work for their food and lodg ing. There is no such class anywhere :1Mlcrobe light is the latest Parla in- JnttonT A French chemist Raphael nubolhaa found a way of nourishing vessels, wn. - Z. " ItaTlnten-lty U being jlre free give tt a "nUno r aa bright as. the moon. He expects to intensity, and believes that i irons neat -wiu At least In lionolull 15 auknnoblles are in usa 1 i nnrtDiu rammi? ni? nDivinu I A UUUDliD VlinMIu VI vlIMUH. B3i B was a minister of the Episco palian fold an "Anglican priest," as he would have expressed It and he believed most ardently In the wisdom and advisability of a celibate priesthood. "The church demands and should re ceive absolute singleness of devotion from her priests," was the way he stated the matter to bis friends. She was an artist, firm in the belief that a real devotion to art admitted of no other loves or devotions. One cannot serve the gods and at a family altar," was her manner ol stating the case. They' met upon the transatlantic steamer coming over, and the lnevlta bls happened. He bad been In England, studying the seml-monastlc orders of the Anglican church in that country. She had been sketching In France and Germany, closing her trip with a flying visit to London and Liverpool. He was from New York; she from Chicago. Their principles were exactly alike, only they didn't know it- But it only took them ten days to discover this fact He was attracted to her because of a certain high pureness of face and bear ing which set her far apart from the merry, charming, but decidedly flirta tious other women who sat at her table and bis. She came to the conclusion that be undoubtedly "had something In him," because of the quiet reserve of his manner. A long acquaintance with Art bad taught ber tbat It Is the face as the picture which holds something in reserve that usually proves worthy of study and cultivation. Besides, the high vest and large silver cross, which stamped blm as a ritualist among rit ualists, and, therefore, mostly likely a jisi jcrra a loss THB BOCKISO DECK. believer In celibacy, made ber feel per fectly, delightfully safe In enjoying his company. Mlrable Anneston often found It necessary to be extremely care- ful In her Intercourse with the other sex. She was a pretty girl and decided ly charming; since she did not Intend to marry or thought she did not which amounted to the same thing it be hooved her to be careful bow she raised false hopes. Rupert Hazard Father Hazard, as he preferred to be called felt corre spondingly safe In talking with Miss Anneston, because self -consciousness seemed to be so entirely lacking in her make-up. They began by talking about art, literature, and the deeper prob lems of social economics. Tbey didn't begin to talk of love, even In the ab stract until Liverpool had been left behind for seven days. The young woman who bad made and broken two engagements in that time led them In this direction unconsciously. Neither of them were gossips, but the thing seemed Incredible to people who hadn't crossed the ocean often enough to become accustomed to this sort of phenomena that they couldn't help thinking of It having been Informed of the fracture of the second engagement by their respective stateroom stew ards and several other persons. As the young woman, apparent ly well on the way toward a third deep-sea engagement, passed by the sunny corner where they were com fortably discussing the condition of the poor In London. New York and Chi cago, Mlrable spoke out suddenly. "Doesn't it seem strange that people will play and trifle with the most sacred and holy things of life?" she said, with musing tone. The Rev. Rupert Hazard came out of his reverie concerning the good work which the church was destined to ac complish among the poor of his own parish neighborhood and sighed. "It does, it does," he returned, seri ously. This was the opening wedge. From love In the abstract to the question of love of a more ordinary and personal aspect was but a little step. (It sever is.) A day later they were telling each other why love was not for them. Two days later each knew that the other had decided never to marry. Three dayt later the Accomplished Traveler, over bearing a fragment of their conversa tion, smiled sympathetically as" she promenaded on. - "Do you know," the young clergyman waa savine. "that while cellbacv has I always seemed almost necessary foi '. the nriesthood to me (It had seemed ab- solutely necessary until a few days be fore), I fail to see how an unmarried and, perhaps, lonely, existence will cause you to paint better pictures. YYhjl" ira girl s cone waa earn- ox i est as It waa astonished. "I don't sea bow you can think otherwise. Art de mands all the best of one, and no second-rate or second-hand devotion. If one is really to serve and minister to the beautiful. But It bas always seemed to me," she added, meditatively, "that an unmarried minister bas lost a fine chance, at least of getting close to the hearts of his people. I wonder which of ns Is right or neither, or both?" Then came the big storm, and after that all things looked different Mlra ble was anything but a coward, but she couldn't help feeling a little nervous as the great ship trembled and stag gered and rolled under the force of the tremendous waves. The young minis ter, whose faith was of the real and assertive kind, soothed and reassured her as' she sat trembling but silent In the music room looking' out at the angry waters; The girl was duly comforted and strengthened, and the pleasant feeling of half dependence and Intima cy, both of his thoughtful kindness, lasted even" after the sun had decided to shine again. And the young minis ter had also learned something while the storm was raging. It was with a really meek and humble heart tbat be assisted her to the upper deck, just as soon as this was possible, and stood by ber side as she took mental notes of the waves and their form ana color "Mil-able" he said presently he had learned her name some days befor have a confession to make to yon have found out the Lord bas taught me that my vlewa upon the question of celibacy have been mistaken. I now agree with you that a clergyman is bet ter with a wife, and I hope I hardly dare hope, but still I long to that you will be my wife, some day, by and by." Tbey were quite alone on the rocking deck. The weather waa still too rough for others less interested In art and one of Its exponents to venture out The rlL meditating, found thajl .she too, had cnanged ber opinions In regard to several matters. "If I tell you," she said at last, as bravely, as shyly, "that I no longer be lieve that love and marriage lessen one's chances of becoming a great art ist you must not fancy that it is be- ' cause I am ready to say yes to the ques ! tlon you may want to ask me, possibly. some time. But it has seemed to me. I lately " ' "Dear one, let me ask that question ! now," the man at her side broke In, Im 'pulslvely. "Will you, dear child and sweetheart, promise to become my wife?" Again the girl was silent .thinking, thinking. She no longer believed, as she bad said, that an unmarried exist ence was necessary for the highest art but still she thought of the picture she was longing to paint the wondrous I thing of graces, nymphs, perhaps, even bacchanals and wondered how It would do for a minister's wife to paint and exhibit this thing. And yet with love in the balance Sbe turned to blm, smiling. "I will not promise now," sbe said. quietly; 'It is far too early and we know far too little of each other for me to make any such promise, for one thing, and, besides, I have a picture I must paint first It will take me until well on Into next summer. (All this happened last autumn.) And you must not write to me, nor ask me to write to you, until the end of June anyway. Then, If you want to risk the trip on such slight encouragement you may come to Chicago, and If you care to ask me that question again I may pos sibly think about it" The next day be came, and soon ber studio will be In New York Instead of Chicago, and there will be a new name upon the door. Chicago Tribune. . Not Her Station. It is -characteristic of the perversity sf human Intelligence to find the most amusing things In the midst of the most serious circumstance such as railway accidents, for Instance. It is related that a solemn-faced woman was once riding on the train from Brookfleld to Stamford. Some where between the two stations an ac cident occurred, and the train rolled d vwn an embankment The solemn-faced lady crawled from beneath the wreckage, and asked of a broken-legged man who waa near: "la this Stamford T' - "No, ma'am," the man gasped. "This is a catastrophe!" "Oh, dear!" she answered. "Then I hadn't oughter get off here, bad I?" London Spare Momenta. A Beggar's Plea. "Could you spare a few cents for a sick child, ma'am?" said a woman to a young lady who waa about to get on a street car In Bellefield. Being of a sympathetic nature, the young lady looked In ber purse and found she could spare a A-ceat piece. The coin waa handed to the beggar, who took it and said: ' "Thank you, lady. If 11 be a blessing to the child. ItH buy him a pint a pint of milk," she added as an after thought The car came Just then, and aa the young lady mounted the steps aha said: "O, don't get milk for the cbsid; get him the pint" The ' woman scowled and the caa rolled on. Pittsburg ' Chronicle-Telegraph. - A foosUh woman nsrar appears ts worn advantage than she otoes la a rx-ooods Margaret Armstrong has made a dec orative cover for Myrtle Reed's Later Love Letters of a Musician, which succeeds Love Letters of a Musician from the press of G. P. Putnam's Sons. Miss Sally Pratt McLean Greene's Vesty of the Basins Is an elaborately Illustrated edition by Harper eV Broth ers. The pictures are reproauctiona or photographs taken by Clifton Johnson, Who, following the directions of th utbor, went over the scenes of the ovel In Maine. Apart from Its Intrinsic merits. The Ueloon Farm bas a pathetic interest fa being one of the last pieces of work lone by the late Maria Louise PooL ft Is, moreover, very characteristic of the author. It seems odd -that Miss Tool should have begun her career as i novelist comparatively late in life. for she bad to a high degree the story telling faculty. Master Christian, Marie Corelll's new novel, was published through Dodd, Mead & Co. The advance orders for the book. It Is said, have been very neavy, while news comes from Eng land that, as far as this author Is con cerned, the advance orders there have been unprecedented. The first editions t the book, English and American, will together comprise 150,000 copies. From Longmans, Green & Company comes Jane Austen, an Essay In Criti cism, by Waltej Herrtes Pollock. Mr. Pollock's criticism Is pure praise, but lovers of Miss Austen may feel that this Is Inevitable In dealing with ber books. Of course, he can find little to tell us about her life that Is new, though by dint of much browsing he bas collected one or two facts hitherto unpublished. Nothing concerning her Is too small to Interest blm. He even levotes himself to puzzling out the meaning of some "family gibberish" with which, it appears. Miss Austen and her sisters were wont to amuse themselves when corresponding with one another. Mr. Pollock touches also upon the novels of Miss Austen's con- temporaries Miss Edgeworth, Miss Burney and Miss Ferrler to whom al lusion Is made In a sub-title of his book. The Bookman. DEATH LURKS IN CACTUS. rut Pluto of Arizona Produce Llqaor That la Maddening. Distinctive among all the curious flora of Arizona, where the vegetable oroductlena of the tropics, the temper? fate and Thw-frtgra'iBes. aroVaSde by side, la the Cereus giganteua, called by the Indiana and Mexicans the sa- buaro. Scattered over the waterless plains and rocky, gravelly mesas In every part of the territory, these largest spec imens of the cactus family point their eandelabrallke arms straight toward the cloudless skies, not. Infrequently attaining a height of fifty feet The body of the sahuaro is composed f thin pieces of wood arranged In the form of a Corinthian column, covered and held together by the outside fiber. Thla fiber la a pale green. At some distance from the ground large branches put out, while the whole sur face la covered with sharp, prickly thorns. A large purple blossom springs from Its apex In May, which ripens In to a pear-shaped fruit by the last of June. This fruit, which tastes a great deal like a fig. Is highly prized by both In diana and Mexicans, who bring It to the ground by the aid of a long booked pole. Part of the fruit Is eaten while ripe, the rest is dried in the sun boiled down to a Jam. Until the advent of the missionaries to the PImas and Papagoes, some twen ty years ago, the gathering of the sa huaro was the signal for the most bloody orgy of the year. All of the tribe 'contributed material for the sat urnalia, each bringing bis quota of fruit to the medicine men. This was mixed with water and allowed to fer ment then boiled a highly Intoxicat ing beverage being the result. When all was ready, the women, dressed In their best congregated on top of the wickiups, ten or twenty huddling to gether for safety from the bucks, who deliberately proceeded to drink them selves Into a state of frenzied intoxica tlon. Joining hands, they began a glo rious war dance, the dancing being mostly of side Jumps, which made the earth tremble like an earthquake. Dur ing these bibulous feasts a number of the braves were frequently killed. The sahuaro Is short-lived, usually beginning to decay at Its base before attaining Its growth. Nearly all the trees are perforated with boles made by the birds in their quest for water. The Girl and Her Vocation. "The future wage-earning girl should have In her mind during the latter part of her school life the selection of ber profession," writes Margaret E. Sang ster In the Ladles' Home Journal. "I think It well for her, too, very frequent ly, but with intention, to cast about among her friends for suggestions, to ask the kind offices of one and another, and to make known her need of Im mediate employment so soon as sbe leaves school. Many good positions are lost because of Indecision, or false pride, or unwise reticence on the part of those who seek them. The mental attitude of the girl in search of employ ment should be neither indifferent nor patronizing; she should set in motion every legitimate means, and let those who may be able to assist her know something of her situation. They can help, and she can seek with much great er hope of success if the goal In view be something definite." Bacillus to Destroy Rodents. In view of the presence In Europe of the plague, and the prominent part played by rats tn spreading it the Pas teur Institute In Paris has cultivated a AA a11)ti whfMi ifoarrvvv. mfp fl-hd IvT1Mv-wvMv " rata by wholesale. I There Is usually a woman connected with ail great undertaking. SERMON T Ret. Br. Calmago Sohjaet: Lack of Fattens-Faith. Hope ana Vharlty Bloom In Many Mean, worn the Oram of Patience Is Wanting Fltj TtathT Than Condemn, the Erring. CprrlahtMal Washington, D. C This discourse of Dr. Tahnage ia a full length portrait of a virtue which all admire, and the lessons taoght are very helpful; text, Hebrews x, JbvJ'Ye have need of patience." Yes, we are in awful need of it. Some of ns have a little of it, and some of us have none at all. There is less of this grace in the world than of almost any other. Faith, hope and charity are all abloom in hundreds of souls where you find one specimen of patience. Paul, the author of the text, on a conspicuous occa sion lost his patience with a coworker, and from the way he urges this virtue upon the Hebrews, upon the Corinthians, upon the Thessalonians, upon the Ro mans, upon the Colossians, upon the young theological student, Timothy, I conclude he was speaking out of his own need of more of this excellence. And 1 only wonder that Paul had any nerves left. Imprisonment, flagellation, Mediterranean cyclone, arrest for treason and conspir acy, the wear and tear of preaching to angry mobs, those at the door of a thea tre and those on the rocks of Mars hill, left him emaciated and invalid and with a broken voice and sore eyes and nerves a jangle. He gives us a snap shot of him self when he describes his appearance and his sermonic delivery by saying, "In bodily presence weak and in speech contempti ble," and refers to his inflamed eyelids when, speaking of the ardent friendship of the Calatiana. he savs. "If it had been possible, ye would have plucked out your own eves and have siven them to me." We all admire moat that which we have least of. Those of us with unimpressive visage most admire beauty; those of us with discordant voice most extol musical cadence; those of us with stammering speech most wonder at eloquence; those of us who get provoKea ac irines ana are naturally irascible appreciate in others the equopoise and the calm endurance of pa tience. So Paul, with hands tremulous with the agitations of ajifetime, writes of the "God of patience" and of "ministers of God in much patience" and of "patience of hope" and tells tbem to "toiiow alter patience, ana wants tnem to run witn patience," and speaks of those "strength ened with all might to all patience," and looks us all full in the face as he makes the startling charge, "Ye have need of patience." The recording annel. makimc a pen out of some plume of a bird of paradise, is not getting ready to write opposite your uui anything applaudatory. All your sublime equilibrium of temperament is the result of worldly success. But suppose things mightily change with you, as they some time, do chance, xou Demn to o uuwu hill, and it is amazing how many there are to help you down when you begin to go in that direction. A great investment fails. The Colorado ailver mine ceases to yield. You get land poor; your mills, that yield ed marvels of ' wealth, are eclipsed by nilta with ncwltf invimted machinerv: you eee under the feet the bears of Wall sorter.- KoVlhe first time-"hi yovJcJife-yaai-a! heed to botrow money, aad no one ur will ing to lend. Under the harrowing worri ment you get a distressful feeling at the base of your brain, insomnia and nervous dyspepsia lay hold of you. Your health enea down with Tour fortune; your circle of acquaintances narrows, and where once you were oppressed by the fact that you had not time enough to return one-half of the social calls made upon you now the card basket in your hallway is empty, and your chief callers are your creditors and the fnmilv nhvaician. who comes to learn the effect of "the last prescription. Now you understand how people can become pessimistic and cynical ana aespairiui. Yon have reached that stage yourself. Now vou need something that you have not. But I know of a re-enforcement that vou can have if you will accept it. ion der comes up the road or the sidewalk messenger of God. Her attire is unpre tending. She has no wings, for she is not an angel, but there is something in her countenance that implies rescue and deliv erance. She comes up the steps that once were populous with the affluent and into the hallway where the tapestry is getting faded and frayed, the place now all empty of worldly admirers. I will tell you her name if you would like to know it. Paul baptized her and gave her the right name. She is not brilliant, but strong. There it a deep quiethood in her manner and a firmness in her tread, and in her hand is a scroll revealing her mission. She comes from heaven. She was born in the throne room of the King. This is Patience. "Y have need of patience." First, patience with the faults of others. No one keeps the Ten Commandments equally well. One's temperament decides which commandments he shall come near est to keeping. If we break some of the commandments ourselves, why be so hard on those who break others of the ten? Ii you and I run against one verse of the twentieth chapter of Exodus, why should we so severely excoriate those who run against another verse of the same chap ter? Until we are perfect ourselves we ought to be lenient with our neighbor' imperfections. Yet it is often the case that the man most vulnerable is the most hypercritical. Perhaps he is profane and yet haa no tolerance for theft, when pro fanity is worse than theft, for, while the latter is robbery of a man, the former i latter is robbery of a man, tne tormer u robbery of God. Perhaps he is given to . . ' , . i i r i defamation and detraction and yet feele himself better than some one who is guilty of manslaughter; not realizing that the assassination of character is the worst kind of assassination. The laver for wash ing in the ancient tabernacle was at its side burnished like a looking glass, so that those that approached that laver might see their need of washing, and if by the gospel looking glass we discovered our own need of moral cleansing we would be more economic of denunciation. The most oi those who go wrong are the victims of cur curastances, and if you and I had been rocked in the same iniquitous cradle, and been all our lives surrounded by the same baleful influences we would probably have done just as badly, perhaps worse. We also have need of patience with slow results of Christian work. We want to see our attempts to do good immediately successful. The world is improving, but improving at so deliberate a rate; why not more rapidity and momentum? Othei wheels turn so swiftly; why not the gos pel chariot take electric speed? I do noi know. I only know that it ia God's way. We whose cradle and grave are so near to gether have to hurry up, but God. whe manages this world and the universe, ii from everlasting to everlasting. He takei SOU years to do that which He could do in five minutes. His clock strikes once in s thousand years. While God took only ( week to fit up the world for human resi dence, geogolgy reveals that the founda tions of the world were eons in being laid, and God watched the glaciers, and the fire, and the earthquakes, and the volcanoes ai through centuries and millenniums the) were shaping the world before that las! week that put on the arborescence. ' A few days ago my friend was talking with geologist. As they stood near a pile o) rocks my friend said to the scientist, "1 suppose these rocks were hundreds oi thousands of years in construction?" And IU geologist replied, "Yes, and you might say millions of years, for no one knows but the Lord, and He won't tell." If it took so long to make this world at the start, be not surprised if it takes a long while to make it over again now mac it ha. been ruined. The Architect has promised to recon struct it and the olan. are .11 nd at just the right time tt will be so com plete that it will be fit for heaven to move in, if, according to the belief of some of my friends, this world is to be made the eternal abode of the righteous. The wall of that temple is going up. and my only anxiety is to have the one brick that I am trying to-tnake for that wall turn out to be the right shape and smooth on all sides, so that the Master Mason will not reject it or have much work with the trowel to get it into place. I am respon sible for only that one brick, though you may be responsible for a panel of the door or a carved pillar or a glittering dome. So we are God's workmen, and all we have to do is to manage our own hammer or ax or trowel until the night comes in which no man can work, and when the work is all completed we will have a right to say rejoicingly: "Thank God, I was privileged to help in the rearing of that temple! I had a part in the work of the world's redemption." Again, we have need of patience under wrong inflicted, and who. escapes it i some form? It comes to all people in pro fessional life in the shape of being misun derstood. Because of this, ho many peo ple fly to newspapers for an explanation. You see their card signed by their own name declaring they did not say this ot did not do that. They fluster and worry, not realizing that every man comes to b taken for what he is worth, and you can not, by any newspaper puff, be taken fot more than you are worth nor by any news paper depreciation be put down, lhers is a spirit of fairness abroad in the world, and if you are a public man you are classi fied among the friends or foes of society. If you are a friend of society, you will find plenty of adherents, and if you are the foe of society you cannot escape reprehen sion. Paul, you were right when you said, not more to the Hebrews than to us, Ye have need of patience." I adopted a rule years ago which has been of great service to me, and it may be of some service to your Cheerfully consent to be misunder stood. God knows whether we are right or wrong, whether we are trying to serve Him or damage Mis cause, wnen you can cheerfully consent to be misunderstood. many of the annoyances ana vexations m life will quit your heart, and you will come into calmer seas than you have ever sailed on. The most misunderstood being that ever trod the earth was the glorious Christ. The world misunderstood His cradle and concluded that one so poorly born could never be of much importance. They charged Him with inebriety and called Him a winebibber. The sanhedrin misun derstood Him, and when it was put to the vote whether He was guilty or not of treason He got but one vote, while all the others votea Aye, aye. iney misun derstood His cross, and concluded that if He bad divine power tie would ettect nia rescue. They misunderstood His . . . .... , 1 1 s grave, ana declared mat rus Douy nan been stolen by infamous resurrectionists. He so fully consented to be misunder stood that, harried and slapped and sub merged with scorn, lie answered not a word. You cannot come up to that, but you can imitate in some suiall degree the patience of Christ. There are enough present woes in the world without the perpetual commemora tion of past miseries. If you sing in your home or your church, do not always choose tunes in long meter. Far better to have your patience augmented by the considera tion that the misfortunes of this Ufa must soon terminate. This last summer I 'stood on Sparrow nui, lill, four miles fro Moscow. It-was -. ' ;'; nntza the city iudh he ws.i auouk uasp- .-! ture. His "army had been in long marches . add awful fights and fearful exhaustionav- -and when they came to Sparrow hill the . shout went up from tens of thousands of voices, "Moscow, Moscow I" I do not wonder at the transport. A ridge of hills sweeps round the city. A river semicir cles it with brilliance. It ia a spectacle that you place in your memory as one of ' three or four most beautiful scenes in aO the earth. Napoleon's army marched OS it in four divisions, four overwhelming tor rents of valor and pomp, down 8parrow hill and through the beautiful valley and across the bridges and into the palaesav which surrendered without one shot el resistance because the avalanche of troops was irresistible. There is the room aa which Napoleon slept, and his piDow, which must have been very uneasy, fee, oh, how short his stay! Fires kindtsd fcs all parts of the city simultaneously drove out that army into the snowstorms under which 93,000 men perished. How soon did triumphal march turn into horrible duiaa litionf To-day while I speak we come on a high hill, a glorious hill of Christian anticipa tion. These hosts of God have had a long march and fearful battles and defeats have again and again mingled with the victor ies, but to-day we come in sight of the great city, the capital of the universe, the residence of the King and the home of those who are to reign with Him for ever and ever. Look at the towers and hear them ring with eternal jubilee. Look at the house of many mansions, where many of our loved ones are. Be hold the streets of burnished gold and hear the rumble of the chariots of those who are more than conquerors. So far from being driven back, all the twelve gates are wide open for our entrance. We at e marching on and marching on, and our every step brings us nearer to the city. At what h we shall enter we have no power to foretell, but once enlisted amid the blood washed host our entrance is cer tain. It may be in the bright noonday or the dark midnight. It may be when the air is laden with springtime fragrance or chilled with falling snows. But enter we must and enter we will through the graoe offered us as the chief of sinners. Higher hills than any I have spoken of will guard , tnat city. More radiant waters tnan I j saw in the Russian valley will pour through I 1 1 . i m. . i: x : a - that city. More radiant waters than I that great metropolis. No raging confla gration shall drive us forth, for the only fires kindled in that city will be the fires of a splendor that shall ever hoist and never die. Reaching that shining gate, there will be a parting, but no tears at the parting. There will be an eternal farewell, but no sadness in the utterance. Then and there we will part with one of the best friends we ever had. No place for her in heaven, for she needs no heaven. While love and joy and other graces enter heaven, she will stay out. Patience, beau tiful Patience, long-suffering Patience, will at that gate say: Good bye. 1 helped you in the battle of life, but now that you have fained the triumph you need me no more, bound up your wounds, but now they are all healed. I soothed your bereave ments, but von nass now into tha reun ions of heaven. I can do no more for you. and there is nothing lor me to do in a city where there are no burdens to carry. Good-bye. I go back into the wor. 1 from which you came up to resume my tour among the hospitals and sick rooms and bereft households and almshouses. The cry of the world's sorrow reaches my ears. and 1 must descend. Up and down that poor suffering world I will go to aasuass and comfort and sustain until the world itself expires and on all its mountains and in all its valleys and on all its plains there is not one soul left tbat has need of pa tience." A man can carry his mind with him as he carries his watch; but like the watch, to keep it going, be must keep it wound up. There are too many Christians who are only leavened in spots. Defer no time, delays have danger ous ends. When a young man has made up bis mind to go to the devil, he seldom fails X to do it , A - ' There is no cure for laziness except,' death, and it takes a good deal of thatv There is no doubt that the troubles sent by Providence are always bene; cial If taken in a proper spirit, but troubles brought on by our own or i others ill-doing are not necessay salutary at alL f f ' i ! I r l tsr i i V' l ss 2 - - - - iii , - v .,; i , - -, ,