LAW AND C liberty, thou child of I,nw, Ood'i leal la on thy brow I O Law, her Mother ilrst and liist, tJod's ry self art thou! Two flowers, alike, yet not alike, On the tame stem that grow, Two friends who cannot live apart. Yet seems each other's foe. UNCLE TOM BARKER. Ml IIIIIM rf 11 1 T IT Uncle Torn Barker was much of a man. He bad been wild and reckless, and feared not God nor regarded niun, but one day at a camp meeting, while Bishop Oaston was shaking up the sinners and scorching them over the Infapnal ntt TVitn Irfit alnrmPfl Rlltl WAT.UU " " " " O" " ' before the meeting was over he pro fessed religion and became a zealous, outspoken convert, and . declared his Intention of going forth Into the world and preaching the gospel. He was terribly In earnest, for he said be had lost a power of time and must i. i. ,ln . Tom was a rough talker, but he was a good one, and knew right smart of "Bcripter," and a good many of the old-fashioned hymns by heart. The conference thought he was a pretty good fellow to send out into the bor der country among the settlers, and so Tom straddled his old flea-bitten gray and in due time was circuit rid ing in North Mississippi. I In course of time Tom a.'q'.ilred no toriety, and from his strocj; language and stronger gestures, ami his mus.u lar eloquence, they called htm old "Sledge Hammer," and after awhile, old "Sledge," for short. Away down In one corner of his territory there was a blacksmith shop and a wagon shop ' and a whiskey shop and a posioffice at Bill Jones's crossroads; and Bill kept all of them, and was known fur and wide as "Devil Bill Jones," so ai to distinguish him from 'Squire EM the magistrate. Devil Bill had Bworn that no preach er should ever toot a horn or sing a hymn In the settlement, and if any of the cussed hypocrites ever dared to top at the crossroads he'd make him dance a hornpipe and sing a hymn, and whip him besides. And Bill Jones meant Just what be eaid, for he had a mortal hate for the men of God. It was reasonably sup posed that Bill could and would .do What he said, for his trade at the an- body knew that be had is much brute courage as was necessary. And so TTnnlA Trim w n n n .1 t I r. .1 a roundance and never tackle the cross roads. He accepted this for a time, and left the people to the bad Influ ence of Devil Bill'; but it seemed to him he was not doing the Lord's will, and whenever he thought of the wom en and children living in darkness and growing up in Infidelity, he would 25 ulght he prayed over It wltl. great earnestness, and vcwejj to do the Lord's will if the Lord would jive him light, and It seemed to him ts !ic rose from his knees that there was no longer any doubt he must go. I'n cle Tom never dallied about anything when bis mind was mide up. He went right at It like killing snakes; and so next morning as a "nabor" passed on his way to Bill's shop Un cle Tom said: "My friend, will you please carry a message to Bill Jones for me? Do you tell him that If the Lord Is willin' I will be at the crossroads to prea:h next . Sunday at 11 o'clock, and I am ahore the Lord Is willin. Tell him to please 'norate' It In the settle ment about, and ax the women and children to come. Tell Bill Jones I will stay at his house, God willin", and I am shore he's willin', and I'll preach Sunday, too, If things get along har monious." When Bill Jones hot the mersage be was amazed, astounded and his in dignation knew no bounds. He raved aad cursed at the "onsult," as he called It the "onsuttlng message of X)ld Sledge'" and he swore that he. would hunt him up, end whip him, for be knowed that he wouldn't dare to come to the crossroads. But the "nabors" whispered It around that "old Sledge" would come, lor he was never known to make an appointment and break it; and there was n old horse thief who used to run with Murrel's gang who said he used to know Tom Barker when he was a sinner and bad seen htm fight, and. ho was mnch of a man. So it spread like wild fire that "old Sledge" was coming, and Devil Bill was "gwlne" to whip him and make, btm dance end sing a "hlme," and treat to a gallon of peach brandy be ' Bides. Devil BUI had his enemies, of course, for he was a hard man, and one way or another had gobbled up all of the surplus of the "naborhood" and bad given nothing in exchange bat whiskey, and these enemies had long hoped for somebody to come and turn btm down. They, too, circulated the astounding sews, and, without committing themselves to either par ty, said that h 11 would break loose da Saturday at the crossroads, and that "Old Sledge" or the devil would stave to go under. On Friday the settlers began to drop Into the crossroads under pre- tance ec business, but really to gat the bottom facta of the rumors that were float Devil BUI knew full well what they -fauna for and bs talked and coned LIBERTY. One, the smooth river's mirrored flow Which decks the world with priecn; And one, the bank of sturdy rock Which hems the river In. O Daughter of the timeless Past, O Hope the 1'rojihets saw, Voa give us iw in i.ioeriy And Liberty In Law I E. J. Cutler. T T T1 Ulllitl more furiously than usual, and swore that anybody who would come ex pecting to see "Old Sledge" tomorrow was an lnfern'nl fool, for he wasn't a comlng. He laid bare his strong arms and shook his long hair and said he wished the lying, deceiving hypocrite would come, for It had been nigh on to 14 years since he had made a preacher dance. Saturday morning by 9 o'eloek the settlers began to gather. They came on foot and on horseback, and In carts men, women and children, and be fore 11 o'clock there were more peo ple at the crossroads than had ever been there before. Bill Jones was mad at their credulity, but he had an eye to business, and kept behind his counter and sold more whiskey In an hour than he had sold In a month. As the appointed hour drew near the set tlers began to look (.'own the lng, straight read that "Old Sledge" would come, If he came at all, and every man whose head came In sight just over the rise of the distant hill was close ly scrutinized. More than once they said, "Yonder he comes that's him, shore." But no, it wasn't him. Some half a dozen hnd old bull's eye silver watches, and they compared time, and just at 10.55 o'clock the old horse thief exclaimed: "I see Tom Barker a risln' of the hill. I hain't seed him for 11 years, but, glntlemeu, that ar's him, or I'm a liar." And It was him. As he got nearer and nearer, a voico seemed to be coming with him, and some said, "He's talkln' to himself," another said, "He's a-talkln' to God Almighty," and another said, "I'll be durned if he ain't n-prayin," " but very soon it waa decldded tiiat he was "singin of a hlme." Bill Jones was soon advised of all this, and, coming up to the front, Bild, "Darned if he ain't singing before I axed him, but I'll make him sing an other tune till he Is tired. I'll pay him for his onsulting message. I'm not. a-gwine to kill him, boys. I'll leave life In his rotten old carcass, but that's all. If any of you'n want tb hear Old Gledge preach, you'll have to go ten miles from the roads to do It" Slowly and solemnly the preacher came. As be drew near he narrowed down his tune and looked kindly upon the crowd. He was a massive man In frame, and had a heavy suit of hark b.own hair, but his face waa clean shaven, and showed a nose and lips rr ' of flrmnes3 and great deter fn. nation. "Look at him, boys, and mind your eyes," said the horss thief. "Where will I find my friend, Bill Jones?" Inquired "Old Sledge." All round they pointed him to the man. Riding up close he said: "My friend and brother, the good Lord has sent me to you. and I ask your hospitality for myself and my beast," and he slow- dismounted and faced his foe as though expecting a kind reply. Tue crisis hau come and Bill Jones met it. "You infernal old hypocrite; you cussed old shaven-faced scoundrel; didn't you know that I had swored an dath that I would make you sing and dance, and whip you besides if you ever dared to plzen these crossroads with your shoe tracks? Now sing, d n ycu, sing and dance as you sing," and he emphasized his command with a ringing slap with his open hand up on the parson's face. "Old Sledge" recoiled with pain and surprise. Recovering in a moment, he said: "Well,. Brother Jones, I did not ex pect so warm a welcome, but If this be your crossroads manners I suppose I must sing," and as Devil Bill gave him another slap on his other jaw he began with: My soul, be on thy guard. And with his long arm suddenly and swiftly gave Devil Bill an open hander that nearly knocked him oft his feet, while the parson continued to sing in a splendid tenor voice. Ten 'thousand foes arise. Never was a lion more Rroused to frenzy than was Bill Jones. With his powerful arm he made at Old Sledge as (f to annihilate him with one blow, and many horrid oaths, but the par son fended off the stroke as easily as a practiced boxer, and with his left hand dealt Bill a settler on his peep ers as he continued to sing: Oh, watetr, and fight, and pray, The battle ne'er give o'er. But Jones waa plucky to despera tion, and the settlers were watching with bated breath. The crisis was at hand, and be squared himself, and his clenched flats flew thick and fast upon the parson's frame and for a while disturbed bla equilibrium and his song. But he rallied quickly and began the offensive as be sang: Ne'er think the victory won, Nor lay thine armor down He backed his adversary squarely to the wall of his shop, end seized him by the throat and mauled him as he sang: Fight on, my souL till death- Well, the long and short of it was that "Old Sledge" whipped him and humbled him to the ground and thee lifted him up nnd helped to restore lilm, and begged a thousand pardons. When Devil Bill bad retired to bla house and was being cared for by his wife, "Old Sledge" mounted a box in front of the grocery and preached righteousness and temperance and Judgment to come to that people. He closed his solemn discourse with a brief history of his own sinful life before his conversion and his hum ble work for the Lord ever Blnce, and think "Stop, poor sinner, stop and think," he cried In alarming tones. There were a few men and many women In that crowd whose eyes, long unused to the melting mood, dropped tears of repentance at the preacher's kind and tender exhortation. Bill Jones's wife, foor woman, had crept humbly Into the outskirts of the crowd, for she had long treasured the mem ories of her childhood, when Bhe, too, had gone with her good mother to hear, preaching. In secret , she had pined and 'lamented her huBband'B ha tred for religion and for preachers. After she had washed the blood from his swollen face and dressed his wounds she asked him if she might go down and hear the preacher. For a minute he was silent and seemed to be .dumb with amazement. He had never been whipped before and had suddenly lost confidence in himself and his infidel ity. "Go 'long, Sally," he answered, "If he ran talk like he can fight and sing, maybe the Lord did send him. It's all mighty strange to me," he groaned in anguish. His animosity seemed to have changed into an anxious won dering curiosity, and after Rally had gone he lott his bed and drew near to the window where he could hear. 'Old Sledge" made an earnest, soul- rearhlng prayer, and his pleading with the Lord for Bill Jones's salvation and that of his wife and children reached the window where Bill wns sitting and he heard It. His wife returned In tears nnd took a seat beside him, and sobbed her heart's distress, but said nothing. Bill bore It for a while In thoughtful silence, and then putting hlB bruised and trembling hand In hers, said: "Sally, if the Lord sent 'Old Sledge' here, and may be he did I reckon you had better look after his horse." And sure enough "Old Sledge" stayed there that night and held family prayer, and the next day he preached from the piazza to a great multitude and sang his favorite hymn: Am I a soldier of the Cross? And when he got to the third verse his untutored but musical voice seemed to be lifted a little higher as he sing: Sure I must fight if I would reign, Increase my courage, Lord. Devil Bill was converted and be came a changed man. He joined the church and closed his grocery and helped to build a meeting house, and It was always said and believed that "Old Sledge" mauled the grace Into his unbelieving soul, and It never would have got In any other way. Bill Arp In Atlanta Constitution. QUAINT AND CURIOS. A sure cure for hiccough, says a Western physician, is a pinch of snuff. One of the British railways provides chess and checker outfits for its pas sengers. William E. Tuttle, of Stratford, Conn, had a gold crown placed on the tooth of his pet bear. Marmalade, then made only of quinces, was known In Henry VIII. 'a reign. The word is derived from "mer melo," a quince. German, which Is spoken by upward of 75,000,000 people ranks third in number among the four leading lang uages of Europe proper. At a football game at the Crystal Palace, eleven miles from central Lon don, the attendance, according to the official figures, was 84,584. There are 100,000 ostriches, in tho Oudtshoorz district, Cape Colony, the average annual value of the feathers yielded by each bird being $35. Seven old spoons have recently been found in the earth. They were cleaned and are of silver and gilt They aro dated 1529, and valued at 250 each. E. C. Whithec, of Surrey, Me., has a sea chest which his great-great-grandfather carried with him in the flagship of Paul Jones, under whom he fought The new customs tariff of Japan, which went into force on October 1st, has stimulated the promotion of home companies for the manufacture of flour. Leonce Rabillon, the French consul at Baltimore, is making a French ver sion of "Rip Van Winkle." which Thos. Jefferson expects' to present in Franca shortly. . : 1 The Rev. Thomas Lord, aa English Congregational minister, still conducts divine service, though on April 22 he was 100 years old. He has been preach ing for seventy-five years.' Edward Arthur Robinson, son of the late Peter Robinson, the London dry goods man. Is 24 years old and bank rupt having managed to get rid of 12,100,000 since be came of age. The English government ' profits about f 116,000 per year by the duty on playing carda New York City. Present ntvlp render a generous supply of gulmpes absolutely essential to every girl's wardrobe. Here Is a model thnt can be utilized for lace, for embroidery, for net or for lingerie material and which allows of a number of varia tions. In the illustration embroid ered net la made with short sleeves that are held by bands of ribbons above and below the elbows. But long sleeves can be substituted if bet ter liked, and the gulmpe can be either faced as Illustrated or made of one material throughout. All sorts of pretty lares and embroidered nets are In vogue, while lingerie materials In themselves afford almost endless variety. ' The gulmpe Is made with the front and plain backs. It can be faced with lace or other material to the cross or between vertical lines of per forations or can be made of the ma terial throughout as liked. The ?1 bow sleeves are gathered to form pretty puffs and terminate In becom ing frills, while the long ones are Joined to the deep cuffs. If lingerie material Is used it can be tucked or trimmed in any way that may be liked before cutting, but lace, net and the like are usually preferred plain. The quantity of material required for the sixteen-year size Is one and a quarter yards of material thirty-six inches wide with two and three eighth yards eighteen inches wide for the sleeve and facing to cross line, two and a halt yards with facings between vertical lines of perfora tions; or, three and three-quarter yards eighteen, two and three-quar ter yards twenty-seven or one and five-eighth yards forty-four inches wide if one material Is used. China Silk Ties. The newest ties for line collars are made of finely striped China silk. Green, mauve, gray, brown and blue are to be seen in this conceit, pleated Into bunchy rosettes, or double but terfly bows. No end cbic is this neck dressing with the fashionable turn overs. Banding For Rajah. Oriental banding seems quite a proper finish for a frock or Rajah. When Trying on a Hat. In buying a hat It should alwaya be tried on before a mirror that shows he whole figure, so that the general effect may be seen. This rule would spoil many a sale at the mil liner's, and save the feeling of bitter disappointment so often experienced when the creation that seemed so fascinating In the shop Is tried on at home. , Suii-Ronnrts In Two Stylos. Sun-bonneti are always quaint and picturesque In effect and just now are being greatly worn for golf, for gardening and for every outdoor oc cupation. Indeed women of all ages, from the little tots to their grand mothers, are' guarding their complex ions a bit carefully just now and these attractive and quaint head cov erings make the best possible aid to such results. Lawn, batiste, linen, duck, dotted Swiss muslin and all similar materials are used. Both white and colored materials are In vogue, and some very charming ef fects are obtained by the use of Dresden dimities and similar simple figured stuffs. Two styles are shown In the Illustration, one with and one without the cape at the back of the neck. In addition to serving for all the uses mentioned the bonnets will be found admirable for motoring, when they protect the head from wind as well as the face from the sun. Each bonnet Is made with a wide brim and a soft full crown, which is attached thereto, the one crown be ing extended across the back, the other being made in one with the cape. The quantity of material required for the medium or misses' aize is seven-eighth yard twenty-seven or five-eighth yard thirty-six Inches wide tor either style, with one and three-eighth yards of edging for the bonnet without the cape, two and three-quarter yards with tb.6 cape. Straggling Patterns. Quite straggling patterns In motifs of chrysanthemums, carnations or five-pointed, starltke, floral figures are favorites, and thread designs are especially good just now. Bolero Shaped Yoke. The house gown that is cut with a bolero-shaped yoke, to which the body of the gown is gathered, Is es pecially suited to the woman with slender figure. A $15,000,000 BRIDE. Marls Bonaparte Ones In Hands of Matrimonial Agency. Less than a year ago Henry La bouchere's revelations in London "Truth" on the subject of the use of the house of commons as a matrimon ial agency by certain of the well con nected clerks of the national legisla ture, In connection with the Lord Townshend case, Incidentally brought to light ' the fact that the chief bar gain which the agency in question had for dlnposal was a princess of the House of Bonaparte, with a fortune of 115,000,000. A titled husband was then sought by the matrimonial agents for this princess, their terms being a com mission of $200,000, payable to them on the day of the solemnization of tho marriage. The princess in question was Marie, daughter of Roland Bona parte by bis marriage with Marie Blanc, one of the daughters and heir esses of that old Blanc who founded the great gambling establishment at Monte Carlo. It Is from that source that the great fortune of Roland's daughter Is derived. - , Under the circumstances, the report from Paris of the engagement of Marie Bonaparte to the Count de Tredern and of their impending marriage nat urally suggests the reflection that it is a matrimonial alliance based upon finance rather than upon pure affec tion, and that the terms of the con tract have been negotiated by some matrimonial agency which will re ceive a handsome commission for its share in the matter. Count de Tredern ls a son of that Vicom'esse de Tredern who played so conspicuous a role In the General Bou langer episode, and whose name Is fa miliar on this side of the Atlantic by the number of lawsuits which she in stituted in a vain effort to prevent her only brother's American widow anii sons from inheriting his property by disputing the validity of his marriage. She is the daughter of the great sugar refiner Say, and married In the closing days of the Second Empire the son of the late Due de Brlssac. Owing to her birth she was cold shouldcieU by the old aristocracy of the Faubourg St Germain. One day while serving tea to Borne of her husband's friends a few drops fell upon her dress. As she touched them with a handkerchief the Due de Choiseul Praslin remarked, with a certain touch of sarcasm, "Be care ful, madam; sugar stains!" "Less than blood, monsieur!" re plied the Marquise do Brissac, with great coolness, looking at him and the duke colored and turned away, for his father Is officially declared to have died in prison while awaiting trial by the French House of Peers for the shock ing murder of his duchess, whom he bad slashed to pieces with a sabre. The Marquis de Brlssac died during the war of 1871, from wounds and ex posure sustained on the battlefield, leaving a son, who is now the present and eleventh Duke de Brissac, married to the sister of the Due d'Uzes, and a daughter, Diane de Brissac, married to Prince Ernest de Ligne. After a few years of widowhood the Marquise do Brlssac contracted a second marriage, with the Vlcomte de Tredern, one of the most popular members of the Jockey Club, but the union was not a happy one, and In 1888 they were di vorced. Marie Bonaparte's fiance is a ion of this marriage. New York Tri bune. Gold Production In 1906. The world's production of gold for 1906 was 81,000,000. In 1905 the figures stood at 75,427,000. Tho production of gold has been rising year by year since 1900. Before that there was a brief intermission in tue expansion, which began after 1888, namely, during the period of the South African war, which checUe"! th product of the Transvaal. In 1899 the yield was 01.345,000. Tho next year it fell to 50,915,000; and then, in 1901, it rose again, but only to 62,198,000. So far the London Statist The figures of the director of th mint show that the highest annual average production after the discov ery of gold in California was $134. D83.000 during the period in 1856 18C0. Thereafter the yield fell off until the lowest annual average was reached In 1881-1885, registering $99,116,000. The leap upward since then is astonishing. In the period from 189G to 1900 the annual aver age Is $257,301,000, and in the period from 1901 to and including 1905 it is $322,061,000. A few years ago it was figured as a marvel that the world should bring into sight $1,000.. 000 of new gold for every day In the year. Information While Thsy Waited. The president of the faculty of a medical college once addressed a grad uating class with reference to the nec essity of cultivating the quality of pa tience in their professional as well as In their domestic relations. The professor said: "Gentlemen, you are about to plunge into the sphere of action.' No doubt you will, in some degree, follow the example of those who have preceded you. Amen? other things, you will doubtless marry. Let me entreat you to be kind to your wives.' Be patient with them. Endeavor not to fret yourselves under petty domestic trials. If you are go ing to the theatre, do not permit your self to become excited if your wife Is not down-stairs in time. Have a treatise on your specialty always with you. Read it while you are waiting. "And, I assure you, gentlemen," the professor concluded, with delicate Irony, "you'll be astonished at the vast fund of information you'll ac cumulate in this way." Success.