Just a Little Pain. Tits first touch of Rheumatism a fair wmrnitJtr of much torture to follow. Tbe little pains which dart through th bodv are not so severe at first, voasiblv a mere pang;, and cause little inconven ience, put if the warning is unheeded. in severity until they become almost unbearable. Rheumatism as a rule is much severer in winter, though many are so afflicted ith it that they are crippled all the year round. Those who felt its first touch last year, may be sure that with tbe first season of cold or disagreeable weather, the mild pain of last year will return as a severe one, and become more snd more intense until the disease has them completely in its grasp. Being a disease of the blood of the most obstinate type. Rheumatism can be cured only by e real blood remedy. No liniments or ointments can possibly reach the disease. Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) is the only cure for Rheuma tism, because it is theonly blood remedy that goes down to the very bottom of all obstinate blood troubles, snd cures cases tvbich other remedies cannot reach. Capt. 0. E. Hughes, the popular rail road man of Columbia, S. C, says: "At first I paid very little attention to the little pains, but they became so much sharper and more frequent that before long I was almost disabled. The disease attacked my muscles, which would swell to many times their natural size, and give me the most intense pain. "I was ready to doubt that Rheuma tism could be cured, when I was advised to try S. S. S. This remedy seemed to get right at the cause of the disease, and soon cured me completely. I believe that S. S. S. is the only cure for Rheu matism, for I have had no return of the disease for eight years." Tbe mercurial and potash remedies, which the doctors always prescribe for Rheumatism, only aggravate the trouble, and cause a stiffness in the joints and aching of the bones which atid so much to the distreisof the disease, besides serious ly affecting the digestive organs. S.S.S. (Swift's Specific) is the only cure for Rheumatism because it is absolutely free from potash, mercury or other minerals. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed Purely Vegetable snd never fails to cure Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, Cancer, Eczema, or any other blood disease, no matter how obstinate. Hooks mailed free. Address the Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. Justice of the Peace AND GONVIOYANGEFv M- Z. STEININGER. Kidaicburgh. Pa F.K. KOWr.lt. K. I'.. l'.ti,IMI BOWER & PAWLING, Attorneys-at-Law, unices in Mmbinilldlmr. MMMCM P8. CHAS. NASH PURVIS, Collections, Loans and Investments. Ileal i:4(ulc himI (riviiDf i!i;x:ii'r, Willimusport. Lycoming Co.. Pn Deposits iincopten, subject todrnfts or clicc!:s. roin any part of the worm. &. 1 Pottiegei, VeteriNarY sUrgeoI, SELINSGROVE. PA. All professional business entrusted to my euro will receive prompt and cnrefnl at tention. JAS. 0. CROUSE, ATTORNKY AT LAW, MlDDLKBURG, PA. All business entrusted to Ills care will receive prompt attention. Newly Established. WEST PERRY HOTEL, "nr-loui-lli mllfl Kant of UK-lillcM. Teams free for traveling men to drive to town, before or after nieiiiH. Kates 75 cents per Day. J X3. DELoss, Pro. DfiTEMTQ OBTAINED. n I Ull I V TEEMS EASY. Consult or communlcalo with tUo Editor of this paper, who will give all needed Infor mation. THEOLD established " Merchants' House?-- IUrU Htreet Above fnllonhlll, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Under New Management Kates $1.50 day,1 ' $5.00 por Week. Win. F. Miller," Prop'r. A SHORT PILGRIMAGE Dr. Talmagx. peaks convinc ingly on the ben efits sained by I onei me in ui ID isamu , , "The righteous ie: taken away from the evil to come." We all spend much time In prmpgyrlc of longevity. We consider It a great thing to live to be an octogenarian. It any one dies in youth, we say, "What a pity!" Dr. Muhlenbergh. in old age, said that the hymn written in early lite by his own band no more express ed his sentiment when it eaid: I would not live alway. If one be pleasantly circumstanced, he never wants to go. William Cullen Bryant, the great toot, at 62 years o( age, standing in my house in a festal group, reading Thanatopsts" without spectacles, was just as anxious to live as when at 18 years of age he wrote that Immortal threnody. Cato feared at SO years ot age that he would not live to learn Greek. Monaldesco, at 115 years, writing the history of his time, feared a collapse. Theoprastus, writing a book at 90 years of age, was anxious to live to complete it. Thurlow Weed, at about 9G years of age, found life as great a desirability as when he snuffed out his first politician. Albert Iiarncs, so well prepared for the next world at 70, said lie would rather stay here. So It Is all the way down. I suppose that the last time that Mntbusaleh was out of doors in a storm he wad afraid ot getting ills feet wet lest it shorten his days. Indeed I sometime ago preached a 6enuon cn the. blessings of longevity, but 1 now propose to preach to you about the blessings of au abbreviated earthly existence. If I were an agnos tic, I would sav a man is blessed In proportion to '.he i-umbvr of years he cau stay on terra firm.i, because after that he falls off the docks, and if ho Is ever picked out of the depths it is only to be set up in some morgue of the uni verse to see if anybody will claim him. If I thought God made man only to last 40 or 60 or 100 years and then ho was to go into annihilation, I would say his chief business ought to be to keep alive and even in good weather to be very cautious and carry an um brella and take overshoes and life preservers and bronze armor and wea pons of defense lest he fall off into nothingness and obliteration. But, my friends, you are not agnos tics. You believe in immortality and the eternal residence of the righteous in heaven, and therefore I first remark that an abbreviated earthly existence Is to bo desired and is a blessing be cause it makes ones life work very compact. Some men go to business at 7 o'clock in the morning and return at 7 in the evening. Others go at 8 and return at 12. Others go at 10 and return at 4. I have friends who are ten hours a day in business, others who are five hours, others who are one hour. They all do their work well. They nil do their entire work and then they return. Which position do you think the most desirable? You say, other things be ing equal, the man who Is tho shortest time detained in business and who can return home the quickest is the most blessed. Now, my friends, why not carry that good sense Into the subject of transfer ence from this world? If a person die in childhood, he gets through bis work at 9 o'clock In the morning. If he die at 4j years of ape, ho gets through his work at 12 o'clock noon. If he die at 70 years of nge, ho gets through his work at 5 o'clock in the afternoon. It ho die at 90, he has to toil all the way on up to 11 o'clock at night. Tho soon er we get through our work the better. The harvest all in barrack or barn the farmer does not sit down In tho stub blelleld; but, shouldering his scythe and taking his pitcher from under the tree, ho makes a straight line for the old homestead. All we want to be anxious about Is to get our work done and well done, and the quicker tho bet ter. Again, there is a blessing in an ah- I brevlated earthly existence in the fact that moral disaster might come upon the man if ho tarried longer. Recently a man who had been prominent In churches and who had been admired for his generosity and kindness everywhere, for forgery was senl to stnte prison for fifteen years Twenty years ago there was no more probability of that man's com mitting a commercial dishonesty than that you will commit commercial dis honesty. Tho number of men who fall into ruin between CO and 70 years oi age is simply appalling. If they had died 30 years before, it would have been better for them and better foi their families. The shorter the voyage the less chance for a cyclone. There is a wrong theory abroad that if one's youth be right ono's old ag will be right. You might as well say there is nothing wanting for a siiip't safety except to get It fully launched on the Atlantic ocean) I have some times asked those who were school mates or college mates of some greal defaulter: "What kind of a boy was he? What kind of a young man was ho?" And they have said: "Why, ht was a splendid fellow. I had no Ides he could ever go Into such an outrage.' The fact Is the great temptation ot lift sometimes comes far on in tuldrife oi in old age. The first time I crossed the Atlantic ocean it was as smooth as a mill pond and I thought the sea captains and thi voyagers had slandered the old ocean and T wrnto hnmA an ohhov for A mute- HP ulna oi "Tfca Smll ot the Sea," but I never afterward could have written that thing, for before we got home we tot a terrible shaking up. The first voyage of life may be very smooth. The last may be a euroclydon. Many who start life In great prosperity do not end it in prosperity. The great pressure of temptation comes sometimes in this direction. At about 45 years ot age a man's nervous system changes, and some one tells him he must take stimulants to keep h.'u.celf up, and he takes stimulants to Leep himself up until tbe stimulants kr;p h'm down, or a man has been go li.g about for 30 or 40 years in unsuc cessful business, and here is an open- ins where by one dishonorable action he cau lift himself and lift his family from all financial embarrassment. He rttrmp's to leap the chasm, and he f V1I3 into It. Then it is in after life that the great testation of success comes. If a man iiu.l.e a fortune before 30 years ot p.'f, he generally loses it before 40. 1"t:3 sclid and the permanent fortunes for the most part do not come to their c! : iax until in midlife or in old age. 7'.:? most of the bank presidents have v.. i to hair. Many of those who have 1 '. . i largply successful have been flung of u.rognnre or worldliness or dissipa t:: :i In old age. They may not have ! . ihelr Integrity, but they have bv t . .. eo worldly and so selfish under ; ... i'.iiluence of large success that It Is i" '.it to everybody that their success .! 5-r. n a temporal calamity and an damage. Concerning many j.le it may be said it seems as if It d have been better if they could ' . "inliarked from this life at 20 or ' -is of nge. ;' you know tho reason why the . . :: ljoriiy of people die before 30? iMii use they have not the moral i . i for that which is beyond tho ': . merciful Cod wilt not allow : Ui I i- pi: i to the font-fill strain. .-. '.v., there Is a blessing in an nb 'Mid earthly existence In tho fact f :.t o ec.icapciso m uiy l.ereaventeuta. we lie the more attach i i ml the more kindred, the more . ;. to be wounded or rasped or sun i. . !. If a man live on to 70 or 80 t . a of age, how many graves are i i : i.i his foot! In that long reach o; :ime father and mother go, brothers ;.i:d sisters go, children go, grand cIKldien go, personal friends out side the family circle whom they ' have loved with a love like that of David and Jonathan. Ilesldes ' f.iai, some men have a natural trepida ' tion about dissolution and ever and mum during 40 or 50 or 60 years, this Ik i ror of their dissolution shudders through soul and body. Now, suppose the lad goes at 16 years of age? lie es-c.- pes 50 funerals, C9 caskets, GO obse :'.es, 00 awful wrenchings of the heart It is hard enough for us to bear their departure, but is it not easier for us to bear their departure than for them to stay and bear 50 departures'? Shall we not by the grace ot God rouse ourselves Into a generosity of bereave ment which will practically say, "It is hard enough for me to go through this bereavement, but how glad I am that ho will never havo to go through it." ' So I reason with mysolf, and so you ' will find It helpful to reason with your i solves. David lost his son. Though David was king, ho lay on tho earth i mourning and Inconsolable for some time. At this distance of time, which no you really think was tho ono to bo I congratulated, tho short lived child or the long lived father? Had David died j as early a.s that child died ho would, in the first place, have escaped that par ticular bereavement, then ho would have escaped the worse bereavement oi 1 Absalom, his recreant son, and the pur- milt of the Philistines, and tho fatigues ' of his military campaign, and tho jeal , ousy of Saul, and tho perfidy of Ahlt hophol, nnd tho curse of Shimel, and tho destruction of his family at Ziklag, i und, above all, he would havo escaped tho two great calamities of his lifo, tho grotit sins of uncleanness and mur der. David lived to bo of vast use to 1 the church and the world, but bo far as ' his own happiness was concerned, does ! it not seem to you that it would have ' been better for him to have gone ear ly? Now, this, my friends, explains some things that to you have been Inexplic able. This shows you why when God takes little children from a household he Is very apt to take the brightest, the most genial, the most sympathetic, the most talented. Why? It Is because that kind of nature suffers tho most when it does suffer, and is most liable to temptation. Again, my friends, tbero is a blessing in an abbreviated earthly existence in the fact that It puts one sooner in the center of things. All astronomers, lu fldel as well ns Christian, agree in be lieving that tho universe swings around some great center. Anyone who has studied tho earth and studied the heavens knows that God's favorite figure In geometry Is a circle. When God put forth his hand to create the universe, he did not strike that hand at right angles, but lie waved it in a cir cle, and kept on waving in a circle un til systems and constellations and gal axies and all worlds took that motion, Our planet swinging around the sun, other planets swinging around other suns, but somewhere a great hub, around which tho great wheel of the universe turns. Now; the center is heaven. That Is the capital of the uni verse; that Is the great metropolis ol immensity. Does not our common sense teach ui that in matters of study it is better foi us to move out from the center toward the circumference rather than to be on the circumference, where " our world now is? What fools we all are to prefer th circumference to the center! What I dreadful thing tt would be tf we should S be suddenly ushered from this wintry world into the May time orchards heaven, and if our pauperism of sin and sorrow should be suddenly broken up by a presentation ot an emperor's castle surrounded by parks, with springing fountains and paths up and down which the angels ot God walk two and two. We are like persons standing on the cold steps ot the Na tional picture gallery in London, under umbrella In the rain, afraid to go in amid the Turners and the Titlans and the Raphaels. I come to them and say, "Why don't you go inside the gallery?" "Oh," they say, "we don't know wheth-1 er we can get In." I say, "Don't you see the door Is open?" "Yes," they Bay, "but wa hiv hpen an lone on these nut we have been so long on tnese cold steps we are so attached to them we don't like to leave." "But," I say, ; "It Is so much brighter and more beau- tiful in the gallery; you had better go . i in. "No, they say, "we Know ex actly how it Is out here, but we don't know exactly how it Is inside." So we stick to this world as though we preferred cold drizzle to warm habitation, discord to cantata, sack cloth to royal purple, as though we preferred a piano with four or five of the keys out of tune to an Instrument fully attuned, as though earth and heaven had exchanged apparel, and earth had taken on bridal array and heaven had gone Into deep mourning, all its witters stagnant, all its harps broken, all chalices cracked at the dry wells, all the lawns sloping to tho riv er plowed with graves, with dead an gels under the furrow. Oh, I want to break up my own Infatuation and I want to break up your Infatuation with this world! If the spirit of this sermon is true, wo ought not to go n round sigliln;; and groaning when unoUicr year Is going, but wo ought to go down on ono knee by the milestone and see the letters and thank God thnt we are !!6.r miles nearer homo. We ought not to go around with morbid feelings about our health or about anticipated demise. We ought to bo living not according to that old maxim which 1 used to hear in ray boyhood that you must livo as though every day were tho last; you must live ns though you were to live forever, for you will. Do not be nervous If you have to move out of a shanty into an Alhambra. One Christmas day I witnessed some thing very thrilling. Wo had Just dis tributed the family presents Christ mas morning when I heard a great cry of distress in the hallway. A child from a neighbor's house came In to say her father was dead. It was only three doors off, and I think in two minutes we were there. There lay the old Christian sea captain, his face up turned toward the window, as though he had suddenly seen the headlands and with on Illuminated countenance, as though be were Just going into hnr bor. The fact was he had already got through the Narrows. In the ad jolnlug room were tho Christmas pres cuts waiting for his distribution. 1ong ago, one night when he had narrowly escaped with his ship from being run down by u great ocean steamer, ho had made his peace with God, and a kinder neighbor or a belter man than Captain Pendleton you would not find this sido of heaven. Without a moment's warn lng the pilot of tbe heavenly harbor had met him just off tho lightabip. Ho hail often talked to mo of the goodness of God, ami especially of time when he was about to enter New- York linibor with his ship from Liver pool, ami ho was suddenly impressed that he ought to put back to sex I'n der tho protest of the crew and under their very threat ho put. back to sea fearing at. the same time ho was los Itur bis mind, for it did seem so un reasonable that, when they could gel into tho harbor that night they slioul pqt back to sea. Hut they put back to sea, and Captain Pentleton said to his mate, "You call mo tit 10 o'clock to night." At 12 o'clock at night the cap tain was aroused nnd said: "What does this mean? I thought I told you to cull nio at 10 o'clock, ami hero it Is 12." "Why," said the mate, "I did call you at 10 o'clock, and you got. up, looked around and told me to keep right on tho same course for two hours nnd then to call you at 12 o'clock." Said the captain: "Is it possible? I havo no re membrance of that." At 12 o'clock the captain wont on deck and through tho rift of a cloud the moonlight fell upon the sea and showed him a shipwreck with 100 struggling passengers. Ho helped them off. Had ho been any earlier or any later at that point of tho sea ho would have been of no service to those drowning people. On board tbe cap tain's vessel they began to band to gether as to what they should pay for the resctto and what they should pay for the provisions. "Ah," says tboi captain, "my lads, you can't pay mo anything. All I havo on board Is yours. I feel too greatly honored of; God In having saved you to take any I pay." Just like him. Ho nevur Btj ijvln for Ills glory ami ready to die fur any pay except that of his own np- Him. plaudlng conscience. HI. They c.-iiuo to Home, and Paul was Oh that tbe old soa captain's God suffered to dwell by himself with a soldier might be my God and yours! Amid I kcl,t 'J'"- V1,S '"' " hero G..d , 6 ' .... ,,. i said ho would he, and ns to bearing Wie the stormy seas of this life may a, ,0 ,m( m,iv , w.lt(. his opportunity have always some ono na tenderly to;1lJ1)l, midy to ttso it, or rather let God tako care of us as the captain took caroj usU him In it. Ho was in a metisuro free, of the drowning crew and their pas- oven as ho was In Ca-snn-a, nnd ho was In sengers. And may we come Into the! tho Lord's hand, who could easily inako harbor with as little physical pain and"'1"' lf ' '.J" 'rst' .""T . . , ..i v . ; . ., , havd tho Spirit of Him who said, "I do- with as bright a hope as he had, and tn ,r)y wlMi Q My If it should happen, to be a Christmas ; f,.rvillUli fr His pleasure, not seeing pro morning, when, the presents are being ,.', 0r circumstances, but only and always distributed and we are celebrating the birth of him who come to save our shipwrecked world, all the hotter, for what grander, brighter Christmas pres ent could we have than heaven? Firmness is what a man has himself and stuhhorness is what his wife has. THE - SUNDAY SCHOOL. UESSON VI, FOURTH QUARTER, INTER- NATIONAL SERIES, NOV. 7. Text of th Lrwon, Acta xitIII, 1-16 Mem or; Yrnra, 8-8 Goldra Text, Rom. Till, Sft Comrarntary bj th KeT. D. M. StMtrna. 1. 8. Hnvlntt Ml Rot enfuly to land, ,, by swimming and some by the help ()f hoards and broken pieces of tho l.lp. they found themselves on the Inland of Mollta, or Malta, and received murh kind ncss from the people, who kindled n lire nnd wclooincd them nnd did what they co"' ,0 "diver them from tho ruin nnd ,he coW wllluh prevailed. It must, lmve bwn (u,h ft cmso of gratltmll, t ,, tlom8,.ives mife on land that they would not think so much of tho ruin nnd cold, nnd yet tho kindness of tho natives was very refreshing. How much joy might bo nnuigiit into ninny n life u we an lived in show kindness to those in need! As we ex perience In our own hearts tho loving kindness of God, which Is liettvr than lifo (Ps. lxili, wo should surely nhmv tho kindness of God to others (II Sam. ix, but these mplo pnilialily knew nothing of tho love of Gud. How often the conduct of ono who kniiws not God puts to sliiiuie thoso who are 1 1 is! I 3 fl. l'liul was not aliove gathering sticks I with the rest to help iimkn tho tiro hum. It Is Christ like to he rcaity to every good ; work, however liiiiuMo. The luook nnd lowly scorn nut nuy service they can reii iler to another. Paul was an earthen ves , ttel for God's glory (Gal. I, ;.'!), and Gud was glorilli d in him in the storm hc'inv ! all the people on t lie ship, lie now allow i II viper to fasten on Paul's hand t luit t . fori) tlicsii mitlves tlio power of md may I e ; seen In his sh:il.ii:g ulf the viper and cx pcrienctii:! no hi, t in. This was nceordio ; j to our Lord s words in I.til.e x, I'.i, " l.c j bold, I gi vc you ii ci- to t read on sc: p'.-nn i nnd MMin.ii ::s, nr.d over till the tov.eril the eiieiuv, nod liotliin; el. all I v liny i means hurt y u." , "Paul i iilercil in nnd pr-iyi d laid his liiuiiN oil liim and healed hi-a." This was the fcther of PuMias, too chi. f , man of the Ulalitl, u ho was sir's rf a lever, j but tin1 l.onl, throti :!i Paul, Ir.Mantly lii'iil-d Ii! in. At. one ti'im ti.iil wnniglit special miracles by I In) hands of Paul, so that l v l.imiil.i rrhirl's iu-a runs whirli had touched his body the slcl; were liral -d ( Arts 1 xix, 11.1'.'). At another time Paul bud to leave 'i'rophitiius ill Milrtiiin sick. Wu cimiiot nlwavs tell whether health or sick ness nr lifo or death shall glorify God the most, so we should say as Paul snlil, "Christ shall bo nuignllled in my body whether It, bo by lifo or by death" (Phil. I, 0). II. "So when this wiih done others also which hud diseases in the Island came and were braird. " Thus the power of Christ wiih iniido widely known, ami wn cannot think of Paul obeying part of our Lord's ooiiiniiind without obeying tlui other. If ho heiiled the sick in the name of Christ, ho would certainly preach the gospel of God concerning His Sun Jesus Christ, our ljord, to which bo bad been especially called and HcptiniUtd (Hum. i, 1, II). Thus not only were bodies healed, hut many souls must havo horn saved also. III. "Who also honored us with many honors, and when wo departed they laded us wllli such things as were noonssary." When l orpin nro really blessed, It Is not mix-usury to ask them to give. Gratitude will show Itself in some nt least. Tim mis sionary motley which comes to mo from your to year III gratitude for tho blessing received lit the Jllble classes convinces ma of this inoro und more, nnd the abundance for current expenses In my own congrega tion from the grateful hearts who enjoy the ministry of the word, so that 1 never iinil to ask any one for a rent,, but merely state ihu nurd when there Is one and lool; to tlio Lord alone to supply It through His willing people, makes mo wish that all princhrrs mid teachers would so frrd tin ir people that, the gratiludi) would be more manifest, in I ho glory of t iotl. 1 1. "And after thrm months wo depart eil in a sldp of Alexandria." Paul had leiinail to wait, and whether it was two or time weeks in a storm at, sen, or three mom lis on slioro at, Malta, or two years a prisoner at ( 'a sari n, be know what it was to "rest In the Lord and wait patiently for llim" (Ps. xxxvii, "I. Our Lord waited !lu years nl Nazareth and has wailed over I.sihi years at, Hod's right, hand to havo His body gathered out of tho nutionsol tiio earth. We huvogrrnt nerd tueonslder Him, lest wo be wearied mid faint in our liiindtf (lleb. xil, III. 1-' I I. Threo days at Syracuse, a call at Khcgiuiii, seven (lays at Puteoli, thou on towuid Komt). And every day, whether on land or sea, journeying or waiting, just living to glorify GihI. Conscious of His loving kindness In storm nnd sunshine, nut beoauso wu feel it, but, liecauso wo know it In Christ; conscious of Ills con stant eiiM of and Interest in us; rejoicing that God is for us, Christ, is for us, the Spirit is for us, and tho angrls minister to us (Hum. vlii, Jtl, Ji I, LNi; Hob. 1, 14). Sure that all our works are prepared for us beforehand, and wit have only to walk In Ihetii, doing lis occasion servo us, for God is with us (Kph. II, HI; I Sam. x, 7). Done with all fretting nnd murmuring and complaining, till of which Is sinful; care ful for nothing, prayerful for everything, thankful for anything, ami rejoicing in Uu Lord always. I.'i. Hreihron from Home caimi to meet Paul and his companions us far ns Appli forum and the threo taverns, causing gratitude nnd Inspiring courage. It is heavenly to meet on earth thoso w bo aro our true blood relations. I do not mean so much our kindred as thoso who nro one with us by the blood of Christ. 1 hesn are often nearer to us than hrol In r or sister. The bond Is wunderfiil. Hh si do the tin that binds our hearts in Christian love! Paul may havo nut some of tlieso brethren In otbrr parts of tho world or not. Wo nro nut told. Hut they were one in Christ and fiod, all and In all, Oh, fill mo wltlipTliy fullness, Lord, Until niy vury heurt oVrllow In kindliiiK t)um)lit and KluwiiiR- word, Thy lovu to tell, Thy pruisii to show I Oh, uso mo, Lord, usu even mo, Jnst tw Thou wilt, ami when and wherxv, Cntil Thy blessed faco 1 seo, Thy rout, Thy Joy, Thy glory share I UIS WIFE IS A JAP. !Sir Edwin Arnold Astonishe His Friends In London. MYSTIC POET WEDS AX ORIENTALIST Th Tatntd Aulttor f Tlio I.leht ! Asia" Will I'robsblr I rt I nr- Inml anil Knlurn to III II of MjrtliWm In Tokjo. I.nNnoN. Oct. 19. Sir Kd.vm Ar nold, author of "The l.ii,tit of sia" and "Pearls of the I-'alth." ..: i.-nt ilist and mystic, whoso greatest works have dealt with lUnhlhism ami whns de nial of the ft. item, nt that he unl.ian'd the latter faith scvrral years nr." ax but a half lieartrd one. has Just been married. Ills wife Is a Japanese wo man. Great numbrrs of the t's ac quaintances have luedlrte.l tliot if he ever ni'trried again Sir Kdwin Arnold'! wife would come from Asia. Perhaps his prettiest soiiit.i iiiv tlios-r in which he lingers eoro.-slnn'y nor the women of the Island i niS . llir name has brrn linked with the Japa nese nation for many years visited It several I inns. I'll sion in- Idled aw. iv an i nt ir living, as his friends expio lb inn--e:-art ibe I it. rl -lenee of a lotus rater. That was in IV". 11- m f"t:'V i ii t In- outskirts of T.! Ill 111.' Ideal .1 i,a--e.;e st v . :. here his u'lt . i 1 y intrti '! fancy was f rt 1 1 i I by ivny -' sound in til" curious world a:"i he lived fi r irany no nibs. 1 hoi'i -The l.ulu of Hi- World. i:.'d a i. : -ii i It d h re. oi i-it.il .iad l:d 1 1 1 1 1I. ... v a.t v 'h, Arnold has al ' ays 'h 'nr. I I, lv. lid w as torn to pi, by i I i t i U"t understand it and :::: o'.... bee.lU-. .,f iis I '.in! I'll.-; : pi i 1 llo rue, ived many i ; i Jap :. .., of t'.-:i v "V:;-. rx at th- hni. ( ' ' s" Kngli -h l oi Is v lio ha- veil st iimiti :'y of tt,, i '! .-. d.'I'I'lll ,!! ! i'labi'l' V I ' t i !,. I,, tt.-i und.-i- : i I y tie tb't Ii" learned tie- lati-i: II . V ; l.lt, o i' rut SI N months. i he before tl i:ii-';'.iii that A Inc. ia Japan. u-iio)- d; i! 1.1 intend I , d lo ni- d. This v. as ib 1M' in spent part ' f his ti-ne at foot of Fujiyama, where 111. st inv stei imi:i part of he wi-o , The Light th- World." His daughtir. tin- eldest child by hih first wife, was Willi him. She tn-vi I took kindly either to the religions or thi customs of the land, nor to the jilr her father loved so much. It Is uiri that it was dm- chiolly to her inllii'MK-.! that her fathrr's marriage in th- Ja panese nation was delayed so long;. Her notions of conventionalities wore shocked by the easy manner in which the Japanese assumed the obligation of marriage, tin- contracting parties simply touching their cups of te.i und drinking together. There are few mm who have given up mote than Sir Kdwin Arnold doc when he marries the woman from :.h land of chrysanthemums, for Japat and things Japanese havo never le looked upon with favor by bis London aniiiaintanccs. He Is not a ni.in to finer his changed domestic r-lalloni upon his circle, so. It Is piubahle that next year will sn- him once more In the little hoiisr at Toklo. Arnold has iirvi-r bowed to omivn tioiialilirs. believing them only pivju dices. His unpopularity In Kngland )1 due mainly to tin- fart that he has ex- ... . , t I ..I1,... afi. I SSeil bis love '.oi- japan, ami. .in-. that, tin so called that vrr; I'llilell States. It W1PI Itltf desertion of his own i-oiiniry ry probably r.uised his b u! t lam rat'-shlp. tlle Well Klliovn I :i:i k -kti N i iiel.toii .Mull A rri -.tnl. Mass., iiel. pi l''i.ia K. AiiLjeii r. i i r U and I IJ.ee lay. ': . : i en'"'.el irpornt i aftau s a : ' th" Lilly- Ml ai ! 1 1 mm; arrest' d on a eb '!;. of lie Is a member "f the r prominent in lie social ; I rity. I'll S 1 1 in day his pns.-d largely uf I lunulas ty, was .ilt.oded in tie .'..ni'ii by t h i T.i I i"U t ; .Ml. .'o,i ,1 He lled eX l.llli IS I he sum he Is alleged to haw to his own ii.-'--. Mr. Aim;' rounellman and locmh'T of trade and I 'nnnon rial charged w ith ii i ' " .ling ! cm pi, ration. nppr 'l-i ivr is an of tbe lull II !''.". l'.vi.i 1'nst iniiHtcr A ppolntt'il. WASHINGTON, (lit. 1!. - The ap pilnltne:t: uf fourth class post iiiust'-rf yestriilay wire; New York-Sparrow-bush. 'onr,ul II. :;'. Iirlawar .Mount Cuba. Ivl'.vard K. Watson. IVuisylva tila - I legolia. Mrs. Jes.de '.ill. .pie. Mammoth, Klim-r C Hubbs: Mmir.i Al ton, lii-org-e K. I 'i aiiinont ; N'.-w liedl'or'l, Klmri- K. Shields; Hittsl,d. It. .1. Ayns; point tn-: Wilmoro, Pleasant. John I . Yih Wallace Sh' t bill". In Hut HiiimIs or ii Iti'ci'ivi r. Ti-:ui:i: Hai ti:, imi., on. m.-Thr Trirr llalltr KJrrtrie Stfeel Kalbri' company went into the hands of a r ceiver yesterday as a result of a l-vj made by the city ttrasuier I'm- delin quent taxes a tii " it lit in or t,, fr,,iinii. Th-.1 company also owes JM.naO f,.r street Improvements and has a In .ivy I m. !!) Imlrlile'lnrss. Tli" r Ivor's bond v.-. if plare.l is pl' Si II, una, of tie Puss Clllllp II It. Mum my. Ittll.e Meant lie: WIN USUI!. N. thought nt lirst ii In the tiro which but since thru the nil llgrd rotlple, 1 till mill Hunt, rupli-i . S Oct. 111.- ll mis O liVS llad bei II !o-,t wiped this lnv. ii oat. i harreil skel'-ton.'j of 'at I irk Kelly and hi;' wil'r, have brrn found, i'oiimt estimates place the Insurance a' Duo, nut more than JW per rent i entire loss. Many l pie have be, titly lulii'-il. f the n ut- ('Mini ToIkIiiI Seriously 111. PKltLI.V. on. ll.-Thr Lokal Auzrl-gel- says that Count Lyof Tolstoi, tin? Kusslua author and social reformer, is sulTei-iu from an Illness which will n ssilute the performance of a seri ous operation. Count Tolstoi In perhaps best known In this country through hie novels, "Tho Kreiizer Sonata" nnd "Aiv na Kaiitn-na." Tim l-ik'lil a 1'rolialilllty. CjCKP.F.O, Oct. la. K. C. Cnrboiirioao the manager ot tho Canudlan Athletic club. Is pushing tlio arrangements for the MoOoy-Crocdon fight and has given an order for tho printing of tho bills, which will be out Thursday.