SWEET IDOLATRY. JVep In a dreamy, ancient wood. Whcll once mighty temple stood la grandeur 'mid the fertile lands, A ruia centuries old nnw stnnds. IU emmblcd walls 'neath mosses green Ho tli irk ly buried scarce 'tin seen. Its ctlumns fnnen to decay; It gfandeur long since passed away. Amid this wreck, triiimpbant still O'er lime, which thus hath worl.cd its will Apon thia temple, enrved in atone, An a'lrient idol stands nlone; Sits pensive on its granite throne, With lichens thickly overgrown. On ei her side the forest dunk. With tangled brake and creepers runic. Bars miy seeking to intrude Upon the idol'a solitude. Above twines many a leafy limb To firm a covering for him. Bclort. e'en at its granite hate. A pool flinga hack the idol's face. Afwl llftm tfmpn niHa Hnnn if . 1 rue irately lotus rears its head. 1 j There, in its dream v solitude. 4 A thousand years the god hath stood. .A thoosand yenrs, rach summer through, ITbe Ictus' heart hath proven true; Hath breathed the fragrance of its lore j To please that stony face above. f """ ' While stands the image in the grove. iThat loyal flower will prove ita love, JThougn vain its efforts to beguile, tit aye will strive to win the smile. 7 V fata true love hath often known )To wa.ite its sweetness on a stone. I Arthur J. Burdick, in Los Angeles Herald. ! JONES'S LITTLE GAME? By Peirce B, Hummel. IF Oil the first time In life lie found himself in tho country. Tlio express train from which lie had lust nlltrhleri ilvt-inriloil into n. were speck on the horizon, lenv- 'ing nil j surrounded ty .1 vast Wilder 1I0S 4. I Jones wus it city man: lie worked on a. high stool In a cutititliig limine, lie had gathered r the woods from tile trees in C'entnil Turk; but no one would have ever guessed by his conversation that .Tones was not truly turnl, for he always took cure to men tion rotation of crops and new farm machinery and other topics pertaining go the gentle art. From the pages of an agricultural weekly ho stocked his jmlnd with rich stores of Informal Ion, 4ut of which his imagination construct ed alluring pictures of rural hlis. Sometimes he strolled through the ".commission markets, regaling his eyes with the sight of prize pumpkins and inhaling the fragrance from the newly opened barrels rf apples. Sometimes .jhe attended the theatre, where domes j tic dramas of farm life were presented in which the old folks gather In the front yard, and the prodigal son re ) turns from the Klondike and pays off itho mortgage to slow music end ini ;;mense nppln-use. Sometimes he slipped away to an jagrlcultural fair to catch a sight of blue-ribbon cattle and to chat with the .rustics, If occasion offered, about 1ip inewest thing in labor saving niacbln jery, of which they happeued to know nothing. All this time Jones knew nothing of the country at first Uinnd and It looked like a great waste lot energy to his friends to see blm eon "jtinuully dreaming of what might nev .'jer be his; but.they did not know what pleasant fancies of plowed fields and ; home-grown vegetables beguiled away :.the long hours at the ledger. They did ?not know the satisfaction be took in fwalklng out Into the middle of the paved street and looking up between the tall buildings at the blue sky the iunly natural object In sight. But least of all did they know that Jones, had a wife with vast social am bitions. Mrs. Frances Fleweller jJoncs, as she styled herself, longed to nout-do people of teu times their means; :thclr two daughters were figuring on a Jcouple of noblemen already. Tapa .Jones had only one way of suppressing these unnatural rind dangerous long ings, and that Was to threaten to pull riip stakes and move the entire estab lishment to the woods. J At the mere mention of farming, catalogues of cheap European tours and Invitations to swell social func tions disappeared like magic. The household resumed the even tenor of its way, and endeavored to look de wntly happy over one thousand a year. J Not that Jones was a brute; for he .was a very passive, obedient sort of twentieth century husband, acquiesc ing in everything reasonable, and per fectly willing to walk while his wife rode in au automobile if it could be 'arranged. But one Saturday afternoon Jones J came home and found tho house turned topsy-turvy. Ills wife was waiting i for him at the head of the stairs. j "Philander, dear!" She used thfs juame exclusively for raising money; I rhil was guflleient for all other occn- sions. "Philander, you'll have to rake i together enough to buy something new Jfor Evelina; she's fretted herself sick 3 over her old ball dress, and the two i young noblemen arrive to-morrow." j "If that's the case I guess I'll have J to, look at some farm property, moth 1 tr,'; Jones observed very seriously, I "Never mind the farm Just now, I Philander! we need your help; I've I almost completed arrangements for the automobile, and as for the yachts " I "I don't feel equal to it at all," said Jones, examining his empty pockets. !"You must really excuse me this time." i "Philander!" cried his wife, bringing 1 down her foot somewhat emphatically. But it wail too late; Jones was hur riedly Jamming a few things into 2 valise. f He notified his family of his future nruoreuuouis ami then struck out for the station, expecting to reach In two hours the farm he bad seen advertised In the morning paper. Heretofore Jones had always soothed their unquiet longings by merely sub- """"K lu additional farm pane Or Wl'ltlmr tn !,. o ... - o:ieiry ui agricul ture for Information relative to early gardeu truck. He was sorry hi little ruse wa played out, having doubtless Intended to go on dreaming of the un tamed Joy of couutry llviug to the end of the chapter. Now that he fiuim! i,im..ie i,. iu- t - ii iiua..i i j i iuT ltllld of bla fires me h. S whether to be disappointed of not. Tho """'" wa laden with the dried fruit of autumn, it had been smoky In the city the afternoon he left. Here till was very quiet and peaceful, with nothing to break tho stillness but an occasional chirp or Ihu souud of falling nnts. Jnnrs was not nn avi!:it r.nd Ii"1 had no eye for the picturesque. T'.i sslg zag fence and the tangled iim". brush jarred upon his nice sense of order and regularity. At the end of four miles lie was conscious of nothing except that the roads were abominably muddy, thnt the tall weeds wero wet. and that be was tired and hungry and wished he hadn't come. It was still a mile to the farm which was advertised to be sold, and he longed to turn back; but he recollected the yacht his wife wnuted to buy on time payments, and tho automobile ahq had In view, and the thought drove him forward there wan no chance to retreat. "How d'ye, parJner!" said tin fann er, who found Jones vainly i.-yiug to locate the front gate by th? dim twi light. "Is this the place that is adver tised?" naked Jones, resting against tho fence almost exhausted. "I ca'calntc It Is. Be yon fror.i tha city?" "I be," said Jones, dropping into tha dialect of the place. "Then jou'd better come t the hotme." The whole family set about making him at home. They took It for granted that be had come to stay awhile. They opened some new pre--serves, and got out the softest nnd most yielding of feather beds. After two days Jones was surfeited with fresh air. wholesome food and simple, unaffected country manners. He inwardly rebelled against brown sugar In Ills coffee, white butter, nnd feather beds, and the only institution he fully endorsed was the hard elder barrel. He was shocked at their Ig norance of steam plows and costly fertilizers. About the only satisfac tion he got was In telling the feats of famous horse trainers he hud Been. The neighbors came in to listen with open-mouthed astonishment. They put Junes down as n remarkable man. but the next day the oldest aud laziest horse on the farm ran away with him, and made him the laughing stock of the neighborhood. Jones was mad enough to go boiiu', hut that day his wife wrote a letter im ploring him to come back, explaining that the horrid man wouldn't sell l',u yacht or the automobile on time. Jones answered with nn eutliusiar lle prose poem on the delights of fum ing. Jones was a small man. and he often found some ilIsnimut:itio:i nec essary In dealing with his Glrou;,' minded wife. Every day brought Its trials. Tin farmer attempted to "learn" hint to plow, but gave it up. Junes had fre quently alluded to the rough-shod agri culturist as a clod hopper, but after bo had watched his Instructor nnd then tried a furrow or two himself, lie niadj up ills mind never to consider any body awkward again. That evening a letter from his wife announced the engagement of the eld est daughter to their well-to-do grocer of tier in ii n extraction and further stat ed that the other girl had a "steady" who was saving his money. Jones congratulated himself 01 his diplomacy. "Things couldn't have turned out better; 1 still have my old position as bookkeeper, aud I reckon I uc.iln't be afraid that the girls' beaux will look down on me. But what about buying the farm?" lie approached the owner while :iur rouuded by his numerous family. "You've got the best farm In i'.ie State," he said, "and you are very rea sonable In everything. You don't claim It's the ("ardcu of Kden, but you ought to. You've got the homestead shaded by a spreading elm ami the duck poud near by everything Is as complete as ti chronio. I'd like to buy you out, but the fact is i haven't got the money." "Why, we ain't no notion of selling mister!" said the farmer In an inj.ireJ tone. "I'm glad of It, sir; but what about your advertisement';" "Pshaw! Ave only advertised for full boarders." "I see," said Jones, with a sigh of re lief. "1 must have stumbled 0:1 tha wrong farm, but I'm blamed well rat ified. What's your bill?" "Well, beiu' as the puppy ct tip your patent leathers, we'll call It four dol lars If you're willing." "Whatever you say," said Jones, counting out the money quite e.igeriy. "I've got a hundred dollars, at least, out of the deal." Jones had a great deal to tell when he reached bis Hat that evening. The two young men, who came right regu larly now, greatly nil mi red the speci mens of mammoth fruit he bad brought home. "You seem to have entirely regained your good Iniuior, ' said his wife, pick ing the last burr off his coat tails. "The country Is the only plaeo for a change," he said with a sigh. "And what about buying tho farm?" his. wife asked nervously. "Why, the fool farmer won't sell." "Oh!" she said simply, but the ex pression on her face showed she was greatly relieved. Waverley Mugua.ua. Gonerul BulUr'a DUIIuctlna, After the buttle (.f Culeuso, say Itlchard Harding Davis, lu Every body's Alagazlue, General Buller raised a very pretty point, and aroused an in teresting discussion by promulgating tho theory, that the soldier who Initi ates deserves more credit than the one who simply obeys orders. In bis of ficial report of the battle he rucom mended for the Victoria Gross rue three otltcers who had voluntarily rid den forward to endeavor to save the guns, but withheld a like recommesf dation from one of hi own staff, who at bis command bad made exactly the same attempt. General Buller ex plained that though all four bad shown equal courage, he wa forced to "dif ferentiate" in bestowing honor be tween the three who had volunteered and the one who bad done what he bad been ordered to do. The oldest son of the Duku of Corn wall aud York and "Princess May," now uches of Yorx, wa burp on June 28, 1804, at White Lodge. Thia villa wa built by George I. on lislug g.'ouud In Itlcbiuoud Park, not far from Sheeu Gate. The baby Prince wa christened Edwurd Albert, Chris tiuu, George, Andrew, Putrlek, David, but lu tha family circle 1 kuosvu us Prluee David or "Davy." rmn amt badtta ifT??Trr WORKINGS CF THE ENGLISH CONST!. TUTION MYSTERIOUS AND VACUE. The Iti'lnllnns t'.etwren I.'lng anil Psrlln ment. King nnil Cabinet ami Cabinet nnd l'nrllament The Urltlsh govern ment Hits Tlirea FnnilMraentat ltnles. The English Constitution Is ho mys terious a thing, fearfully and -wonderfully vague, that Its operations aro rather bard to follow. The present Is a good opportunity for explaining and Illustrating the relations between the King nnd Parliament, the King and tlie Cabinet aud the Cabinet and Par liament. These relations were not es tablished In it day. or by any ore act revolutionary or legal but as the re sult of long centuries of friction, com pronilseaiHl.idJustnient. Wehnvet.i go back to the revolution of lftSS to tlnd the shifting of the centre of gravity from the King to the House of Com mons. Until that time cabinets were secret committee of the King, or Of the King's favorite advisers. The Ministers did not form a united body, nnd the sovereign could remove any one of them at will without consulting the others. The King might have a policy, and so might Parliament, but the Cabinet could have none, and each Minister -wan responsible to the King for his discharge of certain spe cial duties. In the words of Macau lay, "there was parliamentary govern ment, but. there was no ministry." The triumph of Parliament over the arbitrary monarchy In 10SS did not settle the Cabinet question on Its pres ent basis, but. It laid the foundations for 'the solution of the mighty prob lem. Tins royal power having been re duced to a mere shadow, the Cabinet had to become the executive agent of the rent governing body Parlia ment. And this Is what It has been since tlie last vain attempts to keep It In Mime sort of subordination to the crown. One of I he best English expounders of constitutional law says that this "ancient and ever-altering Constitution Is like an old man who still wears with attached fondness clothes in the fashion of his youth; what yon see of him Is still the same, what you do not see is wholly altered." How true this is will appear from a comparison be tween the letter of tho law and tho practice, which cannot be upset with out destroying the whole British sys tem. Tho English law, authorities agree, docs not know of such a body ns the Cabinet, nnd there Is no provi sion requiring the King to appoint Ministers acceptable to tlie Commons or to dismiss such as have lost the support of that body. Resignation af ter an adverse, vote Is not demanded by law. In fact, no feature of the so cn'pyd parliamentary system of gov ernment is expressly established by statute. Yet for a long time the British Gov ernment has rested upon these three fundamental principles: 1. That thi Cabluet shall be com posed of Ministers bound together by tics of party or policy to give force nnd effect to a certain political pro gram me. . That the Cablii'-t shall bold olHce no longer than they can control n ma jority of the House of Commons, but shall resign after u ik-feat on any party question. a. That the leadership of the Cab inet shall he vested In the Prime Min ister, and that, be, not the King, shall have the right to select and remove his associates. These principles were settled dur ing the reigns of the first two Georges, and it is interesting to call attention to tho last attempt nt overthrow-In;? them In favor of royal discretion. This attempt was made In 1.S33 by AVillliim IV. Dissatisfied with the Melbourne ministry the King dis missed It in a letter to the Premier, declaring that ho had no confidence in him. Peel was then asked to form a ministry, though tha House of Com mons bad u liberal majority. He re luctantly consented, and tried to carry on the Government. After four ad verse votes ho resigned nnd expressed himself thus: "According to the prac tice, tho principle and the letter of the Constitution, a Governuwut should not persist in directing tho national af fairs after a loyal uttompt contrary to the decided opinion of the House of Commons, even when U possesses the conlldence of the King aud a majority in the House of Lords." The Conservative party Itself In this way formulated the principle of par liamentary supremacy, nnd It has oecn respected ever since. It had full play under Victoria. The so-called "bedchamber episode" Is a curious Illustration of the cxtcut to which the ministry has encroached upon tho pcraoual rights of tho sover eign. In IS:;'.) Peel, iuvlted to form a ministry, informed the Queen that sho would have to dismiss the ladles of her court, Including those of the bed chamber, because they belonged to the rival parly. Quruii Victoria declined to accede to this request, characteriz ing It as "contrary to usago and re pugnant to her feelings." Peel refused to accept office on these terms, and tho Melbourne ministry wus continued in power. Two years later tho (Juoen hnd to yield, and tho mistress of tho robes was made dependent on ministerial changes, wbi'-o a few personul attend ants were allowed to continue 'in their appointments without regard to poll tics. The Cabinet ha been called a "buckle which fastens the legislature to the executive." In origin It belong to the latter, in function to the former. The Klug must take such Ministers as can control a majority of the Com mons, and this majority Implies a majority of tha voters. It 1 tha pop ular majority, therefore, which de cide which purty shall carry on the Government and whut policy shall pre vail. The King muy use personal Influ ence with the Ministers, but he can enforce, no policy contrary to the pop ular will. The Cabluet cannot serve two masters, and the ministry gov ern without Interference from tho crown. The ancient system of checks and balances has practically disap peared. Tho executlvo and legislative power are fused or united lu tho Cab inet, which takes its orders from tho piirliuuti'iu.iry majority, lu tha word of nn American writer on the British Constitution, Hannls Taylor, "the gradual nnd silent process of change has been fully worked out through which the mediaeval monarchy has been flnnlly transformed Into the her editary republic, In which, under the ancient nnd still useful forms of the throne and the regalia, the English people la Kln."-Chlcago Tlmes-Ucr-ald. CURIOUS FACTS. An oak tree of overage slzi with 700,(KH leaves lifts from the earth into the air 'ibj.it 12.1 tons ut water during the five mouths It Is in tenf. Vlcksburg. Miss., report a recent fall of 10,'JU Inches of rain lu thirty six hours. The fn!l in t wentv-four hours was 7.03 luches. which wiis the heaviest since the beginning of the Weather Burau records there, lu Sep tember, 1872. A writer lu the American Automo bile calls attention to the fact that In the archives of the city of Anvers, France, under the date 1473, it Is re corded that one Gllles do Bom was awarded the aunt of "25 lbs. d'Artols" to recompense him for his donation to the city of a carriage moving about by mechanism. In Japan the stranger wonders nt tho crowded appearance of the tombstones In cemeteries. It is the custom to bury tho dead lu a sitting posture. The coffins nre nearly square, and it Is possible to bury more of them In a given space than of the oblong cas kets. Many of the attendants at fun erals nre clothed In white. The use of hats dates from the reign of Charles II. of France, who, on entering Itouen lu 144!) wore a hat of red velvet, with a plume. The fashion was adopted not only by men, but by women, who previously had work hoods. For many years priesis were forbidden to wear them, ami were compelled to use the "chaperon," or hood of cloth. iJtirin.n the recent restoration of St. Marlin'd Church nt Vevcy, Switzer land, n primitive edifice was discovered a few feet below the floor of the build ing. In shape it somewhat resembles a church, but the style of architecture Is quite foreign to Europe and bears traces of Oriental source. The walls and foundations of the relic are In a remarkable state of preservation, and the structure Is believed by experts to be one of the earliest buildings lu which stone was employed. Not a Huccessful Type-Setter. It is often said that one difference between men nnd women Is that with men second thoughts are best, while women nre more likely to lie right when they act or speak upon the first Impulse; but there are some things which even clever women can not do perfectly without some prelim inary practice. A lady whose husband Is the editor of a very small country paper said to him one day: "Type-setting looks so easy, 1 know I could do it Just us well as anything. Let me help." Although the editor Is his own fore man aud compositor, he didn't accept this offer at once. But ids wife v.-as in tlie olllce nlone when a wedding no tice was brought In. "O!" she said, gleefully, "I'll Just set this up and slip it In the form, and won't George be surprised when he sees It in print?" It therefore appeared as follows In the next Issue of the paper: iiiaUUIED: at Hclr.st ciliicrh, on wenday Sep! 0 B0S1 Mr ! Jnbo jacknos to mi'S ku ly nnltt.u? the Cersm Gy was Scffroni by Itevv.mll Decen Inn the resence oF a large numcr of FKeldsn of the gnuoy couple & v.-as a Bellyy joyful Occasino. Mr. nnD nirsH will Be at Home to the.r frl.s nt 2x IlaPt TrueS Vycre lu hut wne reay. Tit-Bits. Malinnlson Itestored. Mnlmnlson, tho old chateau near Paris once occupied by the first Nn poleou and bia discarded wife, Joseph ine do Benuharnals, has now been com pletely restored, thanks to the munifi cence of M. Osiris. The residence was badly damaged during the Gorman In vasion nnd also during the commune of 1871. For yenrs It was In a dilapi dated condition, but tho restorers have done their work well. The grand salon, decorated long ago by Percier and Fon taine, has been successfully treated by M. Jambon, who obtained ninny valu able bints from au old water color drawing of the rooms In the possession of one of Fontaine' desceudauts. M. Osiris hits given over Malmaison to the State, which will have to provide the furniture and hangings, and to turn the palace Into a museum of Nn polcoulc relics. Paris Correspondence lxmdon Telegraph. Killed a Lively 000-Vouud Rear. A number of bears have left tracks in the vicinity of King & Wolfonl's sawmill. In Nevada County, during the past month. A large trap was set re cently, and so that tho trap could uot be taken away it was anchored to :i tree. Several nights ago one of tliu animals got hi foot caught, and in its' powerful efforts to get away mana 'ctl to loosen tha trap from tho tree aud took it away with him. Bruin was tracked iuto a deep canyon, nnd (hero they found liliu, apparently in great pain. Tho men called to Georgo Gels- endorfer, and the latter camo with n gun and soon ended the bear's suffer ings nnd also Its life. A the carcass was so heavy only the hindquarters wero taken, together with the hide. The animal was black and is estimattd to have weighed in the neighborhood of 000 pounds. Gran Valley C;i Tidings. A l'-ed Cross Tax on Tiekota. The Itussluu authorities have Im posed a stamp tax ou passenger tickets for the bcWfit of tho Society of tho Bed Cross, which care for the sick and wounded. The tax amount to about two and oue-hulf cent, and Is required on nil first aud second class tickets which cost two rubles (i.(K!) or more, and third class tickets which cost eight ruble ($4.12) or more, which latter are not more tluiti two per ccut, of the whole number of third-class tickets. No fourth class tickets pay this tax. It Is estimated that the Led Cross will fact about fl25,0t)0 a year from this tax. 1 SAILORS AND KNIVES. Norwegians Kali! to lie Most Addicted to the Use of Cold Sleet. I "I wonder why It Is," said a cot i on ampler who prides himself on his close observation, "Hint tho Italians have acquired such a sinister reputa tion as knife fighters. Tho facts don't , bear It out. I have been knocking i around the wharves for a good many yenrs and have seen plenty of fighting among sailors, roustabouts and desper ate men of nil kinds, colors nnd nation alities, and never but once did I see nn Italian use a knife. Even then the weapon was thrust Into his hands by n companion, after lie had started blithely Into the melee with n stick. "As far as my observation goes, the people most addicted to cold steel lu the settlement of their little differences are Norwegian sailors. The most for midable knife wlebler I ever met in my life belonged to that class. He was a big. yellow-hnlred, rather mel ancholy looking chap, who came here on a Liverpool tramp and invested some small savings in a lodging house not far from tho old fruit wharves, 1 got acquainted with him soon after bo set up In business and took quite a fancy to the fellow. I, ike tunny sea faring men of his nationality, he was passionately fond of music, and strange to say, be bad heard nearly oil the great singers nnd was familiar with most of the famous operas, al though he was otherwise uneducated and could barely read and write. I sized htm up as a gentle, simple-minded giant, nnd labored under thnt delu sion until It was rudely dispelled by a tragic episode of which I chanced to be an eye witness. Three drunken sea men dropped Into his place oun even ing "with the avowed intention of rais ing a row, and one of them set the ball rolling by kicking over the stove. Instantly my Norwegian friend leaped over a little counter, at the same time drawing au elgbt-lnch dirk from somewhere In the back of his neck, and went to work on the trio. The fracas occupied possibly half a min ute, at the end of which time the sailors had disappeared and every thing In the room was more or less spattered with gore. I never learned bow badly they were hurt, but there certainly was some promiscuous carv ing while the row lasted. Later on, the lodging-house keeper showed me how he carried his knife. He kept It In a sheath sewed to the Inner side of bis vest, just under the collar. It seemed an outlandish place for a weapon, but lit! could draw It, like lightning and. ns he remarked, it was apt to be overlooked in a search. He also gave nn exhibition at dirk throw ing, nt which some sailors become as tonishingly proficient. He would hold the blade open on bis right palm, the point to the left, and launch it through the air with a sudden. Indescribable swoop. At a dozen feet away he could strike n circle six Inches In diameter with unfailing accuracy, but with all Its dexterity there was something so barbarously uncouth about the performance- that It made my ldood run cold to watch hlni. He got inro several kali? fights afterward, and his fond ness for thnt diversion eventually led to bis departure between suns. If be were still here I think I would select some other Illustration for my re marks." New Orleuns Times-Democrat. The Glni lnt Kpnrli. The leading geological dlscoveiy of the nineteenth century lias been the establishment of the recent occurrence In the north temperate zone of a gla cial epoch. It Is of In liu it o Importance geologically to Ienru thnt not so long ago, us geologists reckon time, the greater part of Europe and North America was burled under lee. In short, wo have learned something about our "Ice age." There are few regions lu our own country In which the evidence of former glaciers Is not now visible. Twenty thousand years ago, there fore, geologists believe, the zona In which we live was so Bwamped with Ice that the existence of animal br vegetable lite would plainly have been Impossible, and the Implications of this are ns important as the fact itself. Thus It become plain that the rela tive climates of different sections of the globe correspond to no fixed stand ard. The arctic circle was once mild and temperate, tho present "north tem perate zone" formerly a solid cake of Inhospitable ice. Greenland, It should be noted, is nt present passing through Its "ice age." The ice period lu our own quarter of the globe, of which you may see evi dences in the "glacial striae" visible on rocky surfaces in so many sections. Is roughly computed to buvo lasted some H0.000 yeurs. This makes our vegetable nnd animal life seem of stir prslngly recent orlgiu iu compurlsou. New York World. Bllrrors and Mnruls. According to tho Indianapolis Sen tinel, it is said the recommendation of the Legislative Investigating Commit tee for an appropriation of $50 to buy small looking-glasses for the inmates of tho State Industrial .School for Girls was caused by the discovery that they have not been permitted to have any tiling of the kind. Under the rule of the superintendent girls lint! children found with a bit of broken looking-glass In their posses sion received a largo number of de merit, marks, this evidence of worldly vanity being considered Injurious to their moral welfare. Tho voluntary surrender of a bit of broken looking glass jy a girl who had accidentally found it was construed us evidence, of moral progress nnd rewarded by num erous merit marks. As a result tho girls cleansed their faces and crimped their hair by polished surfaces of tlu or wood, though the crimping of tho hair wus also punished by demerit marks. Protests by some of the mau ngers against these rules were of no avail. . As the Legislature Committee docs uot see any moral menace to the girls lu the use of a little looking-glass It is probable tho rule will bo chuuged. Klualrlc'lljr to Uirece. The steam railway which connects Athens with Piraeus, the principal Greek port, will bo converted intb i u electric Hue. Tho line I about seven miles in length and Is used only for passenger traffic. All the electric equipment required lu the reconstruc tion of thl liue will be imported. CHRISTIAN HEROISM. V.r. falinngf Sa;, Tiio.c Who Bear Scars Shall Be Recompensed. Men Are Not Ashamed ol Scars tint In Rattle for Their Conntryuod W1U Honor Them. tCopyriirht t1.1 Washikctow, D. C.-In this discourse Dr. Islmatteprsisest'hristmii heroism and tells of great rewards. The text is Gala- . ? Ti 17t bear in my body th mark of the Lord Jesus." ,W hear much about crowns, thrones, victories, but I now tell the more quiet t.ory of scars, honorable ard dishonorable, there are in all parU of the world people bearing dishonorable soars. They went into the battle of sin and were worsted, and to their driug day they will have a aacnhcation of body or niind or aoul. It eannot be hidden. There are tens of thousands of men and women now conse crated to God and living holy lives who were once corrupt, but they have been re generated, and they are no more what they once were than ruhesenee is emacia tion, than balm is vitriol, than nooday is midnight. But in their depleted physical health or mental twist or style of tempta tion they are ever and anon reminded of the obnoxious past. They hare a memory that is deplorable. In some twinge of pain or some tendency to surrender to the wrong which they must perpetually resist th'y have an unwholesome reminiscence. Ihev carry acars, deep scars, ignoble scars. Hut Paul in my text shows us a scarifi nation which is a badge of honorable and elf-aacnhcing service. He had in his weak eyes the result of too much study, and in his body, bent and worn, the signa ture of ecourgings and shipwrecks and maltreatment by mobs. In my text he shows those scars as he declares, "I bear in my body the marks of the W.l Jesus." Notice that it is not wounds, but scar, and a scar is a healed wound. Before the scar is well defined upon the flesh the in flammation must have departed, and right circulation muat have been restoied, end new tissue must have bc-n f irmed. It is a permanent indentation of the flesh it cicatrix. Paul did well to show these scars. They were positive and indisputM ble proofs that with q11 hi bodv, mind and soul he believed what he s.iid; the were his diploma, showing thnt he had graduated from the school of hardidiip for Christ; they were credentials proving his right to lead in the world's evangidixaiion. Men are not ashamed of scitra got in battle for their country. No American is embarrasfed when you ask him, "Where did you get that gash uerosa your fore hciid!' and he can answer, "That was from a sabre cut at Man Juan." When vou ask some Gerinau. "Where did you lose your right arm?" he is not ashamed to pay, "I lost it at Sedan." When you ask nn Italian, "Where did you lose your eye?" he is not annoyed when he can an swer, "I suffered Hint in the lust battle under our glorious Garibaldi." Hut I re mind you of the fact that there are scars not got in war which are just as illus trious. We had in this country years ago an eminent advocate who was called into the Presidential Cabinet as Attorney-General. In midlife he was iu a Philadelphia courtroom engaged in an important trial. The attorney on the opposite aide of the case got irritated and angry, and in most brutul manner referred to the distin guished attorney's disfigured face, a face more deeply scarred than any face I ever saw. 1'he legal hero of whom I am speak ing in his closing argument said: "Gentle men of the jury, when I was a little child I was playing with my sister iu the nurs ery, and her clothes caught tire, and I ran to her to put out the fire. I succeeded, nut I myself took fire, and before it was xtiuguished my face was awfully burned nd as black as the heart of the scoun drelly counsel on the other side of the cast who has referred to my misfortune." The eminent attorney of whom I speak carried all his life the honorable scar of bis sister's rescue. A young college student in England found all the artistic world in derisive pur suit of William Turner, the painter. The young graduate took uj his pen in some respects the most brilliant pen that was ever put to, paper and wrote those five great volumes on modern painting, the chief thought of which was his defense of the abused painter. The heroic author by some was sup posed in his old days to be cyntcul and tuult rinding, and when 1 saw him a little while before his death he was in decad ence, but I know that over his face and all over his manner were the scar of heroic defense. In the seventies of his lifetime he was suffering from the wounds and fatigues of the twenties. Long alter he had quit the battle with author's pen and paiuter's pencil ho bore the scars of literary mar tyrdom. But why do we go so far for illustration When I could take right out of the memo ries of some whom I address instances just appropriate? To rear aright for God and heaven a large family of children in that country home was a mighty under taking. Far away from the village doctor, the garret must contain the herbs for the cure of all kinds of disorders. Through all infantile complaint the children of that family went. They missed nothing in the way of childish disorders. Busy all day was that mother in every form of house work, and twenty times a night called up by the children, all down at the same time with the same contagion. Her hair is white a long while before it is time for now; tier anoulders are bent long bufore the appropriate time for stooping. Spectacles are adjusted, some for close by and some for far off, years before you would have supposed her eyes would need re-enforcement. Here and there is a short grave in her pathway, this headstone bearing the name of this child and another headstone bearing the name of another child. Hardly one bereavement lifts its shadow than another bereavement drop one. After thirty years of wifehood and motherhood the path turns toward the setting sun. She cannot walk as far as he used to. Colds caught hang on longer than formerly. Some of the children are in the heavenly world, for which they were well prepared through maternal fidelity, and others are out in this world doing honor to a Christian ancestry. vrnen ner lite closes and the neighbors gather for her obsequies, the officiating clergyman may find apnropriate words in the last chapter of Proverbs: "Her price i far above rubies. The heart of her bus band doth safely trust in her, so that he hall have no need of spoil. She will do him good, and not evil, all the dav of her life; she stretcheth out her hand to the poor; she is not afraid of the snow for her household, for all her household are clothed with scarlet. Ber husband is known in the gates when he sittoth among the elden iu the land; her children arise up and call her blessed; her hus band also, and he praiseth her. Many (laughters have done virtuously, but thou exwllest them all." Then after the Scripture lesson is read let all come up, and before the casket i closed look for the last time at the scar of her earthly endurance. She never heard the roll of a gun car riage or saw a banner hoisted upon s parr pet, bnt she has in all the features of that dear old face the marks of many a conflict scars of toil, scars of maternity, scar of self-sacrifice, scars of bereavement. Hh is a heroin whose nam has never been heard of ten miles from the old homestead, but her name i inscribed high up among the enthroned immortals. People think they must look for mar tyrs on battlefields or go through a history to find burnings at the stake and torture on rack when there are martyrs all about a. At this time in this capital sity thus are scores nt men wearing themselves out In the DubUe service. . In ten years they will not have a healthy nerve left in their borlv. In com mittee rooms, in consultations that involve the welfare of the nation. unnVr the weiitht of great reanonncbi'ities. their vi tality is blng subtracted. In a'most eery yillare of the country vou finrl ,,me bro ken down 8tate or National officii. There is a woman who lias suffered do mestic iuj'itic of wlrch the is no cog nizance. 8he ssvs nnlhinr about it. An tnnuiaitor's machine of tort"re cnu'd not wrinit from her tha storv of r!nntic woe, Kvcr since the dnv of orsnue b'oiim md lonn white vi' nh hs none her ful' t:itv and rer-ived f"r it hs-hncs anH Msme nnd ncirVct. Tho fart-inre rmv. that "-as sioro?i to be a s'en ef snmli i sfT.r tou, haji turned out ta be one link of t enain of borrihte serviturfp. A wreath of nettle and nightshade of brightest form woulrt have been a more accurate nronhe ey. There are those who find it hard n believe that there is such a place a hell, but you i could go rieht out in anv eommn rnty and find more than one hell of domes tic torment. There is no esrsne for tha woman but the grave, and that, compared with the life she now lives, will he an ar bor of jasmine nnd of the h;;' umnrr bird song poured into the ear of the honey suckle. 8rars! If there be none on the brow showing where he struck her arriv ing home from midnight carousal, never theless there are scars all up and down her injured and immortal soul which will v 1rf"1""n"'"1 n the day when there shall lean forth for her aven?ement the live thunderbolts of an incensed God. When we see veteran in anv land who has lo.t limb in battle, our sympathies are stirred: but. oh. how msnv have in the domestic realm lost their life and yet are denied a pillow of dust on which to slumber! Keller enlarge your roll of mar tyrs; better adont a new mode of count ing human sacrificationa. A broken bone is not half as bad as a broken te?rt. There are many who can in th same sense that Paul uttered it say. "I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus" that is for the sake of Christ and Hi came they carry scars which keep their indenture throuili all time and all eter nity. Do you think that Paul was accur ate when he said that? If vou have stud ied his career you have no doubt of it. In his youth he learned how to fashion the hair of the Cilician goat into canvas, m ouiet trade, and then went to college, the President of which was Gamaliel, an in stitution which scholars sav could not have been very thorough because of what ther call Paul's imperfect command of Greek syntsx. But his history became exciting on tho road to Damascus, where he was unhorsed and blinded. His conversion was a convulsion. Whether that fall from the horse may have left a mark upon him. I know not. but the mob soon took after him and flogged and imprisoned and mal treated him until he hnd senrs more than enough to assure the trulhfulnes of his utterance, "I bear in my body the mark of the Lord Jesus." All ye who bear in your bodv the mark of the Lord Jesus, have you thought what use those marks will be in the heavenly world? What source of glorious reminis cence! In thnt world you will sit to gether and talk over earthly experiences. "Where did you get thnt sciir?" saint will sny to (mint, nnd there will come back a story of hardship nnd slruirgle nnd perse cution and wound and victory through the grace ox the gospel. "Where did yo-i got time mark?" sny another snirit to lixieniug spirit, nnd the answer comes: "That is a reminder of a great bereavement, of a desolated house hold, of a deep grave, of nil the heart strings at one stroke snnpned altogether, liut you sec it is no longer a Incerntion. for the wound ii.is been healed, and my once bereft spirit is now in companion ship with the one from whom for awhile I whs separated." "Where did rou get that lon?. deep senr?" snys another iiinnortnl to listening immortal, nnd the answer comes: "That was the awful futigue of a liietime strug gle in ai-tcmpting amid adverse circum stances, to achieve a 1 velihood. For thirty years I wus tired oh. so tired! Hut you see it is a healed wound, for I have found rest nt last for body and soul, the complete rest, the everlasting rest that I heard of before 1 came here as the rest that reruaiuctb for the people of God." Some one in heaven will snv to Mnrtyr John llogcrs, "Where did you get thst -:nr on vour foot?" and the answer wilt come, "Oh. thnt wns a burn 1 suffered when the flames of martyrdom were kin dled beneath me." "lenutius. what is that mark on your check?'' "Oh, that was made by the paw of the lion to which I was thrown by tho order of Trajan." tSome one will say to Paul, "Great apos tle, that must have been a deep cut once the mnrk which I see on your neck." And Puul snys, "That was made by the sword which struck me at my beheadmcnt on the road to Ostia." Hut we all have scars of some kind, and those are some of the things we will talk over in the heav enly world while we celebrate the grace thnt made us triumphant over all antag onism. Now, what is the practical use of this subject? It is the cultivation of Christian heroics. The most ot us want to say things nnd do things for God when there is no dagger of getting hurt. We are all ready for easy work, for popular work, for compensating work, but we all greatly tiecd more courage to brave the world una brave satanic assault when there is some thing ugrressive and bold and dangerous to be undertaken for God and righteous ness. And if we hnppen to get hit what an ado we make about it! We all need more of the stuff that martyrs are made out of. We want more sanctified grit, more Christian pluck, more holy recklesa- iiess as to wtmt the worm may say and do in any crisis of our life, lie right and da right, and all earth and hell combined can not nut you down. The same little missionary who wrote my text also uttered that piled up mag nificence to be found in those words which ring like battleaxes on splitting helmets: "in all these things we are more than con querors, through Him that loved us, for I am persuaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor heiirht nor (tenth nor snv other rrt-ntnre shall be able to separate us from the love of (Sod, which is in Christ Jtius our Lord." How do Vol! like thst. von cowsrit wtii shrink back from aggressive work, end if so much as a splinter pierce your flesh cry out louder than many a one torn in auto-da-fe. Many a soldier has gone through at long war, been in twenty battles, led a regiment up a hill mounted by cannon and swept by musketry, and yet came homo without having been once hit and without mark upon turn. But it will not be so among those who pass in the grand review of heaven. They hnve all in the holy wars been wounded, and all bear scars. And what would the newly arrived in heaven do with nothing to show that he had ever been struck by heman or diabolic weap onry? How embarrassed and eccentne such a one iu such a place! Surely he would want to be excused awhile from the heavenly ranks and be permitted to de scend to earth, crying, "Give me another chance to do lomethine worthv of an im mortal! Show me some post of danger to be manned, some fortress to he nini-mrit some difficult charge to make. Like Leoni das at Thermopylae, like Miltiades at Ma rathon, like Marlborough at lilenheim, like Godfrey at Jerusalem, like Winkelried st Kempach gathering the apears of the Aus- ' ' triun knight into his bosom, giving his life for others; show me some place where I can do a brave thing for God. I cannot go back to heaven uutil somewhere I besr in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus." My hearer, mv reader, quit complaining .about your misfortunes and disappoint ment and troubles and through all tune and all eternity thank God for scats. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Mnurlcc Thompsou, the novelist, died In Crnwrordsville, lud. King Kihvard VII. pursued his law studies up to the lust of li!s prince hood. Marconi thought of the wlrc'.cKS tide graph at nineteen and hud It working ut tweuty-tive. Henry Wnttersou began buslnens af ter the Civil War ou $jO obtained by pawning his watch, General Miles has been nnnnlmously elected President of the National Cpl- , tul Automobile Club. At the cud of his present term Mr. Cockrell, of Missouri, will have becu a Senator thirty yenrp. Kdwln A. Abbey, whom .lie London Athenaeum Club has honored with membership. Is n I'liiliidelpblnii. Senator Piatt has given up bis hotel suite in New York Cily. which lie hnd occupied for tweuly-elght years. Colonel PI inner, wlw commanded a Mafcking rspcilillnii, wears a mono cle nnd mingles "1'leaac" aud "'1 bank you" with ids orders. Jerry (Simpson is to go Into tl.e live stock and cominlsxitiii biis'iu -s la Wichita, Kim. He m,vn that l c h:' quit 'Politics for i ll ti:...'.