SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN, W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VIII. 1 (" IT SEEMS BUT YESTERDAY. < It seems hut yesterday that May Tripped lightly past, nor paused to stay A moment longer than 'twould take To set her signet near and far. In field anil lane—the daisies' star; To set the grasses all ashake; To kiss the world into a blush Of brier-roses, pink and flush, For summer's sake. It seems but yesterday that June Came piping sweet a medley tune, Whereto the robin and the thrush Lent each his thrilling throat, the while The loeust there beside the stile, Beep-hid in tangled weed and brush, Spun out the season's skein of heat, With now a "whirr" of shuttle fleet And now a hush. It seems but yesterday, and yet To-day I found my garden set In silver, and the roisterer wind Made bold to pluck me by the gown, What time I wandered up and down The path, to see if left behind Was one last rose that I might press Against my withered cheek, and less Feel time unkind. —Julie SI. Lippmann, in Atlantic Monthly. "N. C. J. MARABON." BY THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH. "N. C. J. Marabon," his name stood on the class roll. The rules of the col lege required that the name of each stu dent should appear in full, and mine was there as Gabriel Pierce Belfort. His was the sole exception, and why it was so, as in the case of Lord Dundreary's puzzle, "no fellow could lind out." When N. C. .T. came he declined to com ply with the rule and desired to give his reasons, confidentially, to the faculty. That august body, being as curious as their juniors, met in secret conclave to consider the case and listeued to the peti tioner. His excuses were sufficient and they accorded the exemption. But when' he emerged triumphantly from the faculty chamber, just as the door closed, there was a terrible burst of laughter ill his rear. This piqued our curiosity still more. The secret seemed to he impene trable. N. 0. J. himself was as mute as an oyster in the matter, and we dared not pump the professors, though we al ways pronounced them to be old pumps. However, N. C. J. turned out to be no end of a good fellow. He was as strong as a bull and as agile as a cat, and after lie had thrashed a half dozen who had undertaken to haze him and proved him self to be the best batter in the ball field he became popular. He used to tell a great many stories of life in North Caro lina, from whence he came, and always, no matter how funny they were, with a grave face. So we nicknamed him North Carolina Joker Marrowbone, and it stuck, or part of it, and we addressed him in dillereutly as North Car'liua, or Joker, or Marrowbone, as the whim struck us, and he took either in good part. Marabon and I became quite intimate. We were£chums, passed through our four years of college life together and were graduated at the same time. Then he went back to North Carolina and I took up the study of law and iu three years' j time was called to the bar. AVe kept up j a correspondence, though we did not meet. About two years after we had taken our degree he came to New York and our letters continued. He was quite rich and liked New York and club life. I was not quite so well oil, and lived in Brantford our county town, rarely going away, even for a vacation. 1 was quite surprised then when one uay, a short while after I began practice, he walked into my office. Of course I was glad to | sec him, seated him in my clients' chair | and produced a box of cigars frome one j of the drawers. We each lit a cigar I when we leaned forward. "Bel," he said—he always called me so for short—"l'm in a mess of trouble and I must have some advice. I thought of you and as I know you are not so great a fool as you look Iran up here by the ten o'clock train to consult you." "Well," said 1, not much fiattered by part of his speech, and determined to re turn him a Roland for his Oliver, "the conference of two fools is not likely to amount to much, but what is it?" "It involves a seeret," he said,"which you must consider professional. By the way, what kind of a cigar is this?" "Key West," I replied laconically. "I thought so. Why don't you smoke Havana?" "Can't afford it." "Can't, eh? Well, partly as a fee and partly out of regard for yours truly, 1 shall send you a hundred of the right sort as soon as 1 get to town again." "All right, I'll accept them; but am I to wait for your story until thecigari get ■here?" ■*No. You«ee I've been expecting to marry. The lady has confessed she re ciprocates and all was sailing along smoothly when up pops an obstacle." "Whois the lady, Marrowbone?" "Miss Edith Keteltas. You hare heard of her?" "I should think I had. Daughter of old Keteltas who made his money in—no matter how he made it—he did make it. The lady is a belle, a beauty, his sole heiress and every one speaks well of her. Permit me to congratulate you. But what is the obstacle?" "Take notice that all this under the rose. The obstacle is this; I shall have to give my full name wheu I get married. In fact, she wants to know it now. What shall I do?" "Do! Why give it, of course. Why not?" "But how can I ever do it? Youdon't know yet, but when you do you will see that it is quite impossible. I should never hear the last of it. The newspapers re porters would get it. The little boys would shout it on the streets. It would be in the comic papers. They'd sing songs about it at the minstrel shows. It is too dreadful to think of." ,I What on earth can you mean? You seem excited. Take another cigar." "Thank you, I will. Are you sure there is no one in hearing?" "Not a soul." "Well—N stands for Napoleon." "A good enough name. What is there dreadful in that?" "And C stands for Cffisar." "The two together are odd, but not so very." "And J—well, J is for Jehosophat. Now every one nearly mis-pronounces my name any how, and I put it to you, as a friend, if I can go through life as Napoleon Cesar Jehosophat Marrow bone." I had to laugh—l couldn't help it— not so much at the name as at the in tense misery and despair in the counte nance of Marabon. Wheu I recovered myself I asked: "llow in the name of goodness did you come by such a queer collection of names?" "I'll tell you a bit of family history. You see, we Marabous are of an old North Carolina family of Huguenot de scent, and pretty well off. My father's Christian name was Algernon. He used to say it should have been Issaehar— that he was an ass stooping between two burden. o , his wife and his mother-in-law —he was given to bitter speeches. When 1 was born there was some discussion about a proper name for me. It was a regular family council. There were Grandfather and Grandmother Marabon, Grandmother Jenifer, father and mother. Grandmother Jenifer was a rather im portant personage. She was richer than the Marabous, a widow, and could leave her property to whom she pleased. My mother's younger sister, Felicia, had married with Sam Martin against her consent, and she declared none of the Martins should be the better of her money. There was no one else for her to leave it to but mother or me. So her views in the matter had to receive re spect." "She was one of your father's 'bur dens,' I said when he paused. "Exactly; but he didn't tell lier so. Well, they met. My grandfather voted for Peter. 'Let us have one good, sensi ble, substantial name. 1 let my son be ehristened Algernon, to please his mother, but one fool name is quite enough in a family.' Grandmother Marabon thought he ought to be named after his father. Mother timidly suggested—John! "Then Grandmother Jenifer llared up, 'Peter is bad enough, she said, and Al gernon worse; but John! Why, every one will call him Jack!' " 'Suppose they do,' said mother, plucking up spirit. 'John is always called Jack by those who like him. It shows he is a good fellow.' "'Or Johnny!' sneered Grandmother Jenifer. " 'I didn't think of that,' said mother, appalled at the possibility. 'What would you call him, mamma?' " 'lf I am to have any say in the mat ter,' said Grandmother Jenifer, 'I should suggest a name of a quite different kind. The boy bids fair to grow up to be a fine man with a great head on his shoulders; that comes from the Jenifer side of the house, at least from the Setons, for he has my father's head to a mold: and I shouldn't be surprised if he became a great soldier or lawyer, or something. He S should have a name with a ring in it, a something that will stimulate him to do something to deserve it, a name to rouse his ambition and strengthen his purpose Call him Nanoleon Ctesar.' LAPOKTE, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1889. "Mother agreed to this, she always gave into her mother at last, but the others demurred. There was a tie vote, for father seemed to be barred out. "They wrangled over the thing for two days, when Grandfather Marabon proposed a compromise. 'Let's leave it to the minister,'he said. 'Dr. Curran is a sensible as well as a good man. Let every one write down the name he or she prefers on the same sheet of paper. Al gernon can hand it to Dr. Curran and tell him he is to select the one he thinks best.' This was finally agreed to. Grand father and Grandmother Marabon both wrote what is called fine hands, and Grandmother Jenifer a bold hand. This time she enlarged it until it rose to what the boys at school called a 'big hand,' and the Napoleon Ctesar went two-thirds of the way across the page. Father took the paper. He did not care a straw whether I was called Peter of Algernon, but he revolted at Napoleon Ciesar. So, before he handed the paper to the minis ter, he wrote Jehosophat! in quite as big letters as Grandmother Jenifer's, right after hers. This was to call Dr. Curran'a attention to the absurdity of the name just before. Now you see how the thing is shaping?" "I can't say that I do, as yet." "Ah! But you must know that my father was a soft spoken man, and when he said in a lov voice, 'You will find the name on this paper, Dr. Curran, you are to choose which.' The minister only caught the fint part of his remarks, lie looked at the paper.' He was a little short-sighted; but he caught Grand mother Jenifer's big letters anil my father's after them and quite overlooked the others. lie thought the name queer, but not exactly open to canonical objec tion, and it fixed itself in his mind. So when the moment came I hail the name of Napoleon Caesar Jehosophat fixed on me as tightly as the church could do it." "Then your Grandmother Jenifer must have been pleased?" "But ahe wasn't, though. She de clared that father had done it on purpose to make fun of her. She left our house and took up with Sam Martin, and when she died she left to Felicia and her chil dren everything she had." "That was bad." "It wasn't bad for the Martins, and 1 have enough. But how am Ito break the matter to Edith?" "It is the easiest thing in the world, my dear Joker. 'Napoleon Marabon" sounds very well." "But the Ceesar and that abominable Jehosophat?" "Give them the go by. Follow the example of men of rank abroad. There isn'l a king, nor a royal prince, nor the head of a noble house that hasn't from three to thirty names given him at his baptism, but he never uses but one. There is no law here that forces you to use more than one of yours. Drop the Ciesar and Jehosophat, at least the Je hosophat, and with the bravery inherent to the name itself, march to matrimony as Napoleon Marabon." N. C. J., as N. C. J. no more, took comfort and my advice. 1 was the groom's best man when Miss Edith Keteltas became Mrs. Napoleon Marabou, and the gratitude of my friend seems to know no bounds. He not only gave his willingness, but he never rested till Ire moved to New York, where he promoted my fortune iu various ways. lam al ways an honored guest at bis table, and a very young gentleman in New York ! bears the name of Gabriel Belfort Mara | bou. But a secret will leak out. lam sure I never breathed it to any one; I am ! equally sure that Napoleon never did, un j less it might have been muttered in ) sleep; but Mrs. Marabon knows all about jit. Yesterday they had a good-natured dispute, to which I was an amused lis tener. Marabon's logic was too much for his wife, who took refuge in a retort. Looking quizzically she raised her fore j linger, and to her husband's great aston i isnment, said: "Now, you Jehosophat!" ! —JVVje York Mtrmrv. An Unwritten Law Among Bee Hunters. There is a common law among them, or there used to be among the bee hunt ers of the North and West, that the mau who first finds a bee tree is entitled to the honey. The owner of the land where the tree grows is not brought into the question. The first duty of a man who finds such a tree is to put hi* mark upon it . After this if any one else cuts the tree down and takes the honey the of fense, in the estiinatir.i of mountaineers, is mortal. Washington. Star. Several thousand Japanese have gone to th# Sandwich Islands. A HUNGER STRIKE. A KEVOI/F OF RUSSIAN EXILES IN SIBERIA. The Tlirraienetl Flogging—A Des perate Protest Against Cruel ty —Starving to Death—The Prisoners Victorious. Int><is line." Some of the prettiest specimens of me chanical clocks are to be met with in New York. Many stores attract goodly custom by exhibiting these curiosities. Thought He Would Wait. A well known Scotch bishop never married. While he held a certain see he was of course a subject of considerable interest to the celibate ladies of the neighborhood. One day he received a visit from one of them who had reached the aye of desperation. Her manner was solemn, yet somewhat embarrassed; it was evident from the first that there was something very particular upon her mind. The good bishop spoke with his usual kindness, and encouraged her to bo com municative. By and by he drew from her that she had a very strange dream, or, I rather, as she thought, a revelation from heaven. On further questioning she con fessed that it had been intimated to her that sin was to be united in mar riage to the bishop. One may imagine what a start this nave to the quiet scholar, who had long before married his books and never thought of any other bride. He recovered, however, ami addressing her very gently, said that doubtless these intimations were not to be despised. As vet, however, the designs of heaven were hut imperfectly explained, as they had been revealed to only one of the parties. He would wait to see if any similar com munication should be inside to himself, i:ii'l when it should happen lie would be sure to let her know.— Host on Traveler