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The Londonderry Bifter. "When yellow mmnOm vr sift! from blwf the grUtring bWowB give a golden how." V01 V. NO. 18. SO. LONDONDERRY. YT.. THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1888. PRICE THREE CENTS. THE LOHDERBY SIFTER. Iee4 Kverr Thsursdar Brantn nu IFTKS OfflM. Bo. Xjondondarrv, "Vt. To tohsoribers in Windham County an4 elsewhere where bandies are tent, only 01 Dollas a you. Ootsids of Windham County, Advertlalnc Hates famished on application. Births, Marrlajet end Oeathi published fret. Obituary nodosa eardi of thank., ate., oanta a line. Addrau SIFTER OFFICE, South London derry, Vt TALMAGE'S SERMON. The Week'.y Discourse of the Booklyn Preacher. Subject i Sertltlcates of stocks, gets a multitude ot country people to put their small earnings into an enterprise for carrying on some un- .aUurl nn,l,.nn Via Anna nr.. iVmihI 11 lallfcl V Great take their money, he only borrows. When a young man with easy access to ms employer money drawer, or the confidential clerk by elose propinquity to tlie account books, takes a tew dollars for a Wail street excursion, be "Tli Ace of Swim expects to nut it back: he will put it all I Km .1. k. win 11 1 1 hdnb vmv mn. He only borrows. What is needed is some mau die KJrEntered at the Poet-offlo as Condonderry, aa eceond-elau matter. South A black or blue pencil tusik oppo site this paragraph Indicates that youi subscription has expired, whllo a red mark shows that your subscription or renewal has been received. BUSINESS CARDS. A. E. CUDWORTH, LAWYER. Office nearly oppos to Poabody lions. BO. LOHUONDttRItT' VT. W. R. WOODWARD. Eoleetlo Physician and Surgeon, OFFICE AT REPiriKNCl, LONDONDERRY, "VT, JOSEPH G. MARTIN, lltornej & Connselor-at-Law.Solicitor and Master in Chancery. FACTORY POINT. VERMONT, " H.T5. TYLER. " Home, Carriage, 8ign and Ornamental Painter. All work warranted to give aatialactwn. SO. liONnONDISUIIT, VT. P. S. BROWN, Painter and Pa tier-Hanger, SO. X.03DOR DIEBBt, VT. William A. Shattuck, teale; In Flow, Meal, Feed. Orate. Buckwheat Plain. SO. LOXDONDEIiBT, VT. Melendy Brothers, UNDERTAKERS, South Londonderry. "Vt. E. S. GARFIELD, Manufacturer, Dealer, and Repairer of PlsfllS, HARROWS & CULTIYATORS, LONDONDERRY, VT. F. We W.LLIAEVtS, M A O H I NI8T And Manufuctuier of Jrpn Pinners, Lover and Power Punches, Tire Upselta, liolt Clippeis, T.io-cnulk sharpening toot vi?e, Saw Arbors and general Jobbing. J.ONIJOWlEllItY. VT. Text: " Whose trust shall bt spfdar'a tieo." Jobviii, 14. The two most skill ful architects In all the world are the bee and the spider. The one puts up a sugar manufactory and the other builds a slaughter house far flies. On bright summer morning, when the siin comes out arid shines upon the spidor's web, be decked with dew, the gossamer structure seems bright enough for a suspension bridge xor supornationai Deings to cross on. jsus alas for the poor fly, which, in the latter part 01 mat very any, ventures on it, ana is caught and dungeoned and destroyed. The fly was informer that it was a free bridge, and would cost nothing, but at the other end of the bri !ge the toll paid was its own life. The next day there cornea a strong wind, and away goes the web, and the marauding spider and the victimized fly. Bo delicate are the silken threads of the spider's web that many thousands of them are put to gether lefore they become visible to the human eye, and it takes 4,000,000 of them to make a thread as large as the human halt. Most cruel as we 1 as most ingenious is tne spider. A prisoner in the Bastile, France, had one so trained that at the sound of a violin it every day came for its meal of flies. Job, the author of my text, and the leading scient st of his day, had no doubt Watched the voracious process of this one Insect with another, and saw spider and fly swept down with the sumo broom, or scattered by the same wind. A las, that the world has so many designing spiders and victimized flies. 1 here lias not loon a time When tile utter and black irresponsibility of many men hav ing the financial interests of others In charge has heen more evident than in these lost few yenrs. The unroofing of banks and disappearance of administrators with the funds of large estates, anl the disorder amid postoffice accounts and deficits amid United States oflicials, have made a pestilence of crime that solemnizes every thoughtful man and woman, and leads every philanthropist and Christian to ask: What shall be done to stay the plague! There is a monsoon abroad, a typhoon, a Birocco. I sometimes ask myself if it would not 1 o better for men making wills to bsqueath the property directly to the executors and ofticeis of the court, and appoint the widows and orphans a commit tee to see that the former got all that did not belong to them. The simple fact is that there are a large number of men sailing yachts and driving fat hor.-:es, and mem bers of expensive club houses and controlling country seats who m e not worth a dollar lr tney return to others tneir just rights. Under some sudden reverso they fad. and with alliicted air seem to retire from the world, and seem almost ready for monastic life, when in two or three years mey uiossom out again, naving compromises: with their creditors, that is. paid them noth ing but regrets, and the only difference be tween the second chapter of prosperity and tho first is that their mctures are Murillos in stead of Kensetts, and their horses go a mile in twentv seconds less than their predeces sors, and instead of one country seat they have three. 1 have watcbed ana nave no ticed that nine out of ten of those who fail in what is called hierh life, have more means after than before the failure, and In many of the roses failure is only a strategem to es- cane the payment of honest debts and put the wor.o. on me trac-K wane tney practice a large swindle. There is something woefully wrong in the fact that these things are pos sible. First of all. I charge the blame on careless. Indiil'erent bank directors and boards having in charge great financial institutions. It outrht not to bo possible for a president or cashier or prominent olncer or a hanking in stitution to swindle it year after year with. out detect on. I will undertake to say that if these frauds ore carried on for two or three years without detection, either the directors are par ners in the infamy and pocketed part ot the thett, or tney are guuty of a culpable neeloit of duty, for which God will hoid them as responsible as he Molds the acknowledged defrauders. What tight have prominent business men to allow their names to be published as directors in a financial institution, so that unsophisticated people are thereby induced to deposit their money in or buy the scrip thereof, when they, the published directors, are doing nothing for the safety of the institution. It is a case of de ception most reprehensible. Many people with a surplus of monoy, not needed for immediate use. although it may he a little lurtner on indispensable, are without friends competent to advise them, and they are guided solely by the character of the men who83 n imes are associated with the in-titution. When the crash came, and with the overthrow of the banks went the small earnings and limited fortunes of widows and orphans, and the bonclesslv aired, the directors stood with Idiotic store, and to the inquiry of the frenzied depositors and stockholders who had lost their ail. and to the arraignment of an indignant public had nothing to say except: " We thought it was all right. We did not know there v.a3 anything wrong go- inr on." It was their duty to know. Thev stood in a position which de luded the people with the idea that they were carefully observant. Calling themselves directors," they did not direct Thev had oooortuuitv of auditing accounts and inspecting the books No time to do sol Then thev had no husiness to accent the Dosi- tion. It seems to be the pride of some moneyed men to be directors in a great many institu tions, and all they know is whether or cot they get their div i.ltrii Is regularly, and their names are usea as decoy ducks to bringothera near enough to be made game of. What, first or all, is needed is that live thousand bank di rectors and insurance company directors re sign or attend to their business as directors. The business world will be full of fraud just as long as fraud is so easy. When you arrest the president and secretary of a bank for an embezzlement carried on for many years, nave plenty oi snerirrs out tne same aay to arrest all the directors. They are guilty oither of neglect or complicity. We mast esne -iallv deulore the misfortune of banks in various parts of this country in that they damage the banking institution, which is the great convenience of the cen turies, and indisiiensable to commerce and the advance of nations. With one hand it blesses the lender, and with the other it blesses the borrower. The bank was born of the world's necessities, and is venerable with the marks of thous in Is of years. We also deulore abuse of trust funds, be cause they fly in the face of that divine good ness which seems determined to bless this land. We are having the eighth year of un exampled national harvest. The wheat gamblers get hoi i of the wheat, and tho corn gamblers get hold of the corn. The full tide of God's mer. y toward this land is put back bv those great dykes of dishonest resistance. When God provides enough food and clothing; to feed and apparel thii whole nation like Princes, the scrambh of dishonest men to get more than their sli ire. and get it at all haz ar Is, keeps everything shaking with un certainty and evcr-ybo ly asking: " What nextf Every week makes new revels, tions. How many - more bank Presi dents and bank cashiers have been snecn acing with other people's money, and how many more bank directors are in imbecile silence letting the perfidy go on, the great and patient God only knows! My opinion is that we have irot near thn Ivitt-nm The wind has been pricked from the great bubble of American speculation. The men who thought that the judgment day was at least 5,MW years off. found it in 18SW. 1RS7 and 18-0; and this nation has been tanirht that men must keep their hands out or other peo ple's pockets Great businesses built on bor rowed capital nave been obliterated, and men l. U 1 r U .. 1 l . 1 1 . i , . . a a Lane Ilhutrattd 1 1 Lilemr and Family helium wit are atarfc-ri on ft hihr E. u , , -, A id rm- i .. .. ... . . . , : . 1 T 1 . , , i prosperity man wis jona nas ever seen. if. hrae f Interesting and ls&u-tt-UTg reading ' 'lyjy j i i nere is nn wuru .iiav dih aeiuaea mors people into uanxrupcr ana Slate orison ani Who Is Mr Friend! Who is my friendl My little song shall say, For that I do not find him every day; Though if by that vexed name alone I guessed, A motley multitude might pass the teat, Nor, to my ear, their speech its gulls be wray. FRANK PIERCE, jLtt.orney at JLav, Salt I.olce City, Utnli. Special attention given to Investing money in Mines, Cat lo and lianohes. HENRY Rf.. SHANKS, Carriage & Sleigh Maker So. Londonderry, Vt. Repairing a Ppecially. D. B. GODDARD, So. Londonderry, Vt., Tb&vklliho Salesman roa ' PIANOS AND ORGANS The Es'ey Organ a Specialty. AH Communication Promptly Attended To. JONAS HILL, OEAIUH IS FLOUR, MEAL, PORK, LARD, SALT, FISH, Eta Bondviile, Vt. S. M. H0LDEN, REAL ESTATE BROKER. South Londonderry, - - Vermont Alee Sealer 1st Harass aae Cattle. ITarma for aale, at all timea, en easy terms. L. N. SPRAGTJE, JAMAICA, - "VERMONT, General Agent fat Windham Co. for the MONUMENTAL BBOM CO, Bridgeport, Coma. "WHITE BRONZK" monuments and ate- pass are the best in the world. Tbay hold their solar and will not erack or beeome mesa crown, like alone. Host beautiful in color. eVign and inish. CHSAPRR and ttNbuRffia Ann sssitto sc twite. THE .0 of gigantio limbs to take his place at the curbstone in rront ot Trinity uourcn, aim when that word borrow comes bounding along, kick it clean through to Wall street ferry boat, end if, striking on that, it bounds clear over tut it striKes ci ooKiyn neignveor Brooklyn hid, it will be well for the City of Churches. ' Why, when you are going to ao wrong, pronounce so long a word us oorrow, a word of six letters, When you can get a shorter word more descriptivo of the reality, a word of only five letters, the word steall tmiA are times waen we ait wirruwi cmiu borrow leffltimatcly. and borrow with the riivinA hlfsflinir. far Christ in His sermon on the mount enjoins: "From him that would oorrow ot thee turn not thou away." A vnunir man riebtlv borrows money to get his education. Purchasing a house and not able to pay all down in cosh, the purchaser riirhtlv borrows it on morttrneo. Crises come in business when it would be wrong for a man not to borrow. But 1 roll this : 1 . 1 . .1.1 nnnw , 111! wciriuu' tiiruugii an lUCm aiaioa, u .o. backs of all thes? pews, never borrow to speculate; not a dollar, not a cent, not a lartuing. loung men, young men, x wain you by your worldly prospects and the value of your immortal souls, do not do it. ff I hmi onlv n worldlv wearjon to use on this subject 1 would give you the fact fresh from tne highest auinoruy, mat wi per couu. of those who go into speculation in Wall streot lose all, but I have abetter warning than a wordly warning. From the plac where men have perishe 1 body, mind and .mil stnnil nf Ktindof! Abstract DUlnit discussion must aside on this Question. Faith andrepentetice are absolutely necessary, but faith and renentance are no more doctrines of the Bible than commercial integrity. Ren der to all their dues. Uwe no man anything. And whilM I mean to nreach faith and ro- pentence, more nnd more to preach them, I do not mean to spena any time in ijuasiumu Hittites and Jebusites anauirgasnesoi mine times, when there are so many evils right around us destroying men and women for time and tor eternity, lue greatest evangelistic S readier the world ever saw, a man who ied for his evangelism peerless Paul wrote to the Romans: "Provide things hon est in the sight of all men;" wrote to the Corinthians: "Do that which is honest;" wrote to the Pbilippinns: "Whatsoever things are honest;" wrote to the Hebrews: "Willing in all things to live nonestiy.- ine Bible says that faith without works is dead, which being liberally translated, moans that if your business life does not correspond with your profession, your religion is a humbug. (Jur ralierlon ouirht to mean lust as much on Saturday nnd Monday as on the day be tween, and not osa mere periphrasis of sanc tity, uur religion uuglll, to umu awmvui hearts, and then it ought, to clean our lives. Religion is not, as some seem to think, a sort ot cnurcn delectation, a Kino, oi comecuou ery, a sort of spiritual caramel or holy gum drop, or sanctified peppermint, or theologi cal ancestlutic. It is an omnipotent princi ple, all controlling, all conquering. You may get along with something less than thnt and vou may deceive yours i you cannot deceive God, a;. t deceive the world. The kee.i v.: -f will put on his spectacles, a I.2X " clear through to the back et yourv whether j:our religion a v N fact And you cannot hide j"r r. -i ; '. i sugar, or rice, or tea, or conee lli u, tu false; you cannot hide thtm under the cloth of a communion table. All your prayers go for nothing so long as you misrepresent your banking institution, and m tne amount oi tne resources you put down more specie, and more fractional eurrency, and more clearing house certificate!, und more legal tender notes, and more loans, and more discounts than they really are, and when you give an account of vour liabilities you c.o not men tion all the unpaid divuiencis, and tne unnea States bank notes outstanding, and tho in dividual deposits, and the obi gations to other bauKs and nanners. An autnonty more scrutinizing than that of any bank examiner will go through and through and through your business. Let me say in the most emphatic manner to all young men, dishonesty will never pay. An aDDOt wonteu to vuy a p.ece oi nivuuu, and the owner would not sell it, but the owner finally consented to let it to him until he could raise one crop, and the abbot sowed acorns, a crop of fcOJ years! And I tell you, young man, that the "dishonesties which you plant in your heart and life will seem to be very insignificant, but they will grow up un til they will overshadow you with horrible darkness, overshadow all time nnd all eter nity. It will not be a crop for 200 years, but a crop for everlasting ages. . I have also a word of comfort for all who suHer from the malfeasance of others, and every honest man, woman and child does suffer from what goes on in financial scamp dom. Society is so bound together that all the misfortunes which good people suffer in business matters come from tho misdeeds of others. Bear up uni'er distress, strong in God. Ho will see you through, though your misfortune should! bs centupled. Philoso phers tell us that a column of air forty-five miles in height rests on every man's head and shoulders, iiut that is nothing compared with the pressure that business life has put upon many of you. God mode up his mind litnir fl-m hnw mnnv nr how few dollars It would be best for you to have. Trust to his appointment. The door will soon open to let you out and let you up. What shock of delight for men who for thirty years have tinpn in business anxietv when thev shall sud denly awake in everlasting holiday. On the maps of the Arctic regions there are two places whose names are renmrKauie, given, j. .,tv,a hv snnin Polar exnedition: "Cape Farewell" and "Thank God Harbor." At this last the Polaris wintered in 1871, and the Tigress in 1813. Some ships have passed the cape, yet never reached the harbor. But from what I know of many of you, I have concluded thnt, though your voyage or life may be very rough, run into by icebergs on fchia Ma anii iceherirs on that, vou will in due time reach Cape Farewell and there bid good-bye to all annoyances, and soon after drop anchor in the calm and imperturbable, waters of Thank God Harbor. "There the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." I mar not guage true friendship in thatway ; The false like pure gold shines in Fortune's ray: In Its eclipse and shade I may know best Who is my friend. Since glittering ores oft fail the fire's assay, And mocking Jewels, in tne glooms, grow gray. Give me no changeful bosom for my rest- Save that it warmer throbs when I'm sore pressed And such sweet faith shall prove beyond gainsay, Wno is my friend. (Youth's Companion. WILLFUL MADGE. BY IRElsE FRESTOH. "They'll not treat me as if I were a grown-up child. They'll not select I husband for me, I detest Mark Thorn- Ion. I'll run sway if thoy don't stop pestering me about him." Mad go had rushed from the presence of her elders, vith rather disrespactful haste, had ordered Brownio, and was arranging herself hastily in her riding habit. Her eyes wero flashing, and two red snots were burning in her dark clioeks. Bho descended tho stairs, holding her head like a young princess, not deign ing to look riht or loft, and passed out into tho sunshine. ' Tom held Brownio besidothe block; Madge sprang into the saddlo and galloped off down the road in the direction of Saxonville, small railway and post-office station a few miles distant. MUs Mary and Miss Martha watched the angry cloud of dust sottlo away, and then looked at each other helplessly. They meant well, they were painfully conscientious, alter their light, but somehow they lacked tho tact and wis dom to govern this girl, whom their brother had found in the south, shortly after tho close of the war, a homeless, friendloss child, and had brought her .home and ndnr.f-3 hor. l -strung and willful," M 6he glanced over tho letter again. He had given her his Boston address, and, good gracious t tomorrow was the 16th. Ho would be there tomorrow. Acting on a sudden impulse, she turned Brownie's head again towards the station, walked into the telegraph office and deliberately wrote this message: "I shall leave for Boston oa tne ii.su train.' Meet me at the depot." ' There! It was done and not to be repented of. She galloped home and took her. place at the dinner table with a silent, subdued air. . . She spent the rest of the day in her room making a few preparations, mus ing upon 'her grievances and picturing the mooting on the morrow alternately. She was allowed to remain unmo lested by the sisters, who were used to her moods. ' There was a da?h of Spanish gypsy blood in her veins, as she herself sus pected. She had a daring disregard for conventionalities which was now, under high pressure, overflowing its boundaries. Yet she wa3 high-principled and warm-heartod at bottom, and would be easily governed by one wno understood her complex nature with its seeming contradictions. When Miss Mary and Miss Martha saw her gallop off the next day thoy little guessed that sho wore a traveling suit under her riding habit, nor that she had stolen out tho evening boforo and secreted a well-filled valise among tho brushwood under tho trees by tho road, hall a mile distant. Making sure that no one was in sight, she secured tho valise and rode on again until she camo to a strip of wood land not far from tho little dopot. Sho removed her riding habit, then, after securing Brownie and lavishing parting caresses nnd a few tears upon him. sho walked around the "bond" to tho station, and was soon steaming over tne road to Boston. Excitement kept her up until, as the train ncared Boston, she began to grow nervous. Suppose Alfred should not meet her? Suppose the telegram should have miscarried? Was sha not doing a reck less thing? She banished reflection. She strug gled against a homesick feeling as sho walked up the long platform of the depot and found her way to tho Indies What am I to do? How am I to go home and answer their questions?" Madge asked, looking to him in her ex tremity as a strong towor of protection. "Will you leave it tome? Will you trust me to make it all right?" he asked. "I will do anything you say," she answored, humbly, "if you will forgive my rudeness to you a few minute) ago," "And I will retract my statement and ask you to go home with me," he said, with a smile. "The train leaves in half an hour. I will account for your ab sence." It shall never.be known. that you met any one." How Madge's grievances diminished on that homeward ride I What a haven of rest her quiet room would seem if she once reached it, and how gentle and deferential Mark's manner was toward her! " - Miss Mary and Miss Martha, who had been half frantic, were greatly relieved to see Madge under tho protection of Mark Thornton, who pursuod a high handed courso of explanation. "Miss Madge and I havj had an adven turo today," he said, airily. "Will you ask no questions for tho prosent and let Madge go at once to hor room? Somo day later I will explain. I am only sorry for your uneasiness." The good women accepted the situa tion without a word. Mark was a sort of paragon with them. Madge was safe and thero had been no alarm raised in tho neighborhood. They could not be sufficiently thankf u'. Madpro learned her own heart tha' day. She now enjoys full freedom as the wife, friend and companion of Mark Thornton. A SEAL HUNT. Description of an Expedition in Quest oi Sealskin. The Animals are Surprised and Killed With Clubs. r a ; Ti!nMC'J ?' marter. To : nAfc. th following Cf u : (2 For Twcist7-;: Ota.. fHaaipa vr Poatal Kate, W we will frtud lb. ECPtJ- r t, Tfcrco fc-cMho. u. te i m r we vrt.l E8IJ eCKPAi-ICI (or aacaaiiu eTCTv.umcnu M. . . . free ai4 pceamid, CS TJ mepMt Suite) koe VlalUog Clvda. tn a .lyl b Car Ucie. with feat j ... in !t-irt urf fa Btrle wmiu fcr Sella' OeM JU wt- l -U1 alao as, CBhrer Canttla. tUy mien-. 1; 1( g t tfj let Free Cottar Duften It of 0 Collar Duften kf of aatsewve m uompanToh oa el tae wlauea aca pabUaaes 3, samee oi taa 4At;tM el nee. PaUUkar Bowaj 1 aseaJBta. ivmjt He a?' perdition than any other word in com mercial life, and that is the word bor row; that one word 'is responsible for all the defalcations, and embezzle ments, and financial consternations of tho last twenty years. When executors conclude to speculate with the funds of an estate com mitted tn their charge, they do not purloin. thev aay they only borrow; wnen a hanker makes an overdraught upon his institution, be does not commit theft, he only borrows. rv nen uwomcerof a company, by naming ad- i vartiaemeot in some religious papers, and sail NEWSY GLEANINGS. Germany, has 163 "is iv"ould come homo," i Martha. "Everything he went away. rooVa. She sat down near tho 400M Surclv ho would come soon. She had a lonely, unprotected feoling. Men pass - I. ., 1 1... 1..1J Ho has a knack of smoothing things mg wo aoor gave uer ooiu, .uUO, nvr The mora wo trv to smooth the tioning glances sue imngineu. more we ruflb her, and she's never beon At longlh, with a cry ot relict in ner the same anyway since she came home heart, sho caugnt a glimpse 01 A..rCua from thnt visit in tho west." Bkhlis University, African students. Thb floral decorations at the White House for February cost $1000. Twelve native women are students in the Medical College at Bombay, India. A BERiorjs unrisim? is feared among the inmans 01 Manitoba, wno are starving. Kentucky will have 1500 horses on the race-tracks of the country next summer. The Anti Treatine Club, of Chicazo. num- Ders ju persons, everyone annas atone. There is now a postoffice for every 1010 men, women and children in the United btates. Extensive floods have occurred in Austria- Hungary. Nume rous cases of drowning are reported. each claiming to be the properly constituted authority. A silver mine that was once worked by the Indians has been discovered in Fannin County, Ga. The Ohio Legislature has passed a bill re quiring the teaching of temperance in the public schools. The Governor of Saratoff, Russia, reports terrible destitution among the peasants in that province. Mns. Martik McCa.be, of North Creek, Warren County, N. C, has just died at the age of 112 years. The late Charles G. Havens' will leaving n.000.000 to charity is objected to by bis heirs from Marathon, N. Y. Bart Kiwo Alfonso XIII, of Spain, is suffering from epilepsy, an hereditary dis ease in his mother s family, the Hapsburga. The State Senate of Massachusetts, by tie vote, rejected a proposal to give woman the right to vote upon the license question. Colonel E. B. C Cash, the sur'ivor of the last fatal duel in South Carolina, died recently at his home in Chesterfield County. Miss Martha would havo been still more unhappy had sho known the exact foundation for the fact of her last as sertion. Madgo had formed tho ac quaintance of Alfred Winsliip during that vi-it. Sho had kept up a secret correspondence with him ever since, which was easily mannered, sinco sho always rodo to the Ilieo for the mail, and was to-day expecting a letter. - "I am old enough to bo my own mis tress," sho thought, all tho petty re straints that had chafed her wilful, inv pcrious spirit from childhood coming uppermost. "I will not submit any loDgcr. I would like now to irallop on and on away into freedom. : I am an alien any way. I feel like a caged bird all the time. Thore is wild blood in my veins, I believe. Whatever my rjarcntaiio I never came of such hum drum stock as theso people noverl" Hur thoughts touched upon Mark Thornton. Ho was owner of the estate adjoining that of Mr. Bishop, no was ten years older than sho, and had mado no secret of his preference for her. Sho liked him fairly well until sho found that M.3S Mary and Miss Martha wished her to marry him, when the began to treat him with freezing civility, "Tame and commonp'aco, always reading and studying. What do I want of him?" she questioned spitefully, giv ing Brownie an extra touch with tho whip. I want vim and dash of spirit. How Alfred Winship- . She had reached the station. Sho rode up to tho window, through which the postoffice clerk handed her mail as usual. Sho Tcpaid him with a dazzling smile as sho caught sight of Alfred's handwriting, lifting him into the seventh heivcn, for she was beautiful, and in her gracious moods irresistible She let hor reins fall upon Brownie's neck while she read Alfred's letter. Her heart gave a great bound. He was com' ins east, would be in Boston on the 16th. "How delightful it would be," he wrote, "if you could get out of your cage for a week and meet me there. I suppose the dragons would as soon give yon permission to visit the moon without an escort; ana yet we face at tho door of tho waitiDg room, Ho stood looking around uncer tainly for a few moments, then, with rather unsteady steps, he crossed to where sho sat, held out both hands and said familiarly, "Ah, here you arc, beauty. I've been looking for you this half hour." Madge was on her foot in a moment warding'off his touch. Hii handsome faco was flushed and tho quality of his glance and smile was insultiug. The odor of tho potations he had imbibed sickonoi hor. She could have sunk through tho floor with shame and dread of him. Ho had undergone a motamor- nhosis. Sho had never seen him thus when she met him at Ilia home of hur friend. Something like disgust sho folt, which was quickly succeeded by a flash of anger as ho laid liis hand upon her shoulder and said rather unsteadily, "Como and have something to eat. You must bo hungry. You you are under my protection, you know," ho fiuished with a meaning lautjh. The effect upon Madgo was madden- 3 , ,1 1 1 t lng. DUO SCOrneu uim uuu uerau.i iur her folly. He quailed a little under the firo ia her eyes, as tho shook off his hand and stepped backward, with an imperious air, that had its effect upon him. "I am not under your protection," she retorted, with a certain desperation in her voice and manner. At that instant she saw Mark Thorn ton coming towards her across tne marblo floor. Her first sonsation was one of dismay that Mark had found her in such a com promising situation. The next moment she had rallied her forces. They have sent you after me," she said recklessly, after this quiet saluta tion. "If I return it will not be with yu . ..... r "1 came on tno train wnn you, uut x was not sent,'1 ho returned, "and I have not the slightest intention of asking you to return with me. I thought you seemed in trouble, and I merely came to ask if I could bo of service to you." Madgo looked up at him. He seemed so grand and grave and masterful in contrast with Alfred that a sudden sense of his superiority camo to Madgo like a revelation, while a fear that sho The Old Oaken Bucket. Science goes for things dear to us without morcy. Everybody who has J lived in the country and who knows the old well loves the "old oaken duckci. We all love it because wo havo read what tho poet says about it, and in our schooldays wo choio" tho poem as our "niece" and snoko it. We have aucnehed our thirst from tho old oaken tucket with its contents aftei carefully looking into its dubious depths for "wigglcrs" or worms. Wo have bal anced the rusty, dripping inconvenience on tho curb and submerged our noses in the "nectar" we gulped. Wo have spilled the "crystal" on our shirt front . , , 11. it nnrt nrolanelv crowicd as we ieit it Tlffikle' down inside odr collar. We havo seen tho leaking drizzle, from holo in the bucket, spoil our five-cont shine. We havo longed under thaso circumstances for a cheap glass tumbler or a common tin dipper, but ia all our tribulations wo nevor thought the old oaken bucket an iron-bound death dealer, but it scorns that it is, for scientist tolls us that it is "a compound, condensed masi of nitrogenous and phosphatio filthiness, tho homo of tho microbe, and tho all-prevailing bacte ria." Martha's Vineyard nerald. Cure for Biliousness, First, on getting up and going to bed drink plenty or cold water. Eat for breakfast, until the bilious attack passes, a littlo stale bread, say ono slice, and a piece half as large as your hand of boiled lean beef or mutton. If tho weather is warm, take instead a littlo crackod wheat or oatmeal por ridge. For dinner take about tho same. Go without your supper. Exercise freely in the open air, pro ducing perspiration, onco or twico a day. Ia a few days your biliousness is all gone. This result will como even though the biliousness is ono of the spring sort, and one with which you have, from year to yoar, been much af flicted. Herb drinks, bittor drink, lager beer, ale, whiskey, and a dozen other eprinst, medicines are simply barbarous. Dr. Dio Lewis. could have a delicious time if you could had compromised herself forever in his eyes came over her as Alfred saia sneer- ingly: "I thought your engagement was ith mn hut it seems I am one too many." With that he walked off. Madge's defiant mood broke down utterly. She wss wretched, humiliated. Mark stood regarding her gravely. "You will despise me," she said. "I screed ta me-t that man hero. 1 made his acqtiaiutanoa in the west last winter. Th'V thev ara- driving me mad at home," she finished with tears of vexa tion in her eyes. "I understand," Mark said slowly. In those few mi lutes ho had found the keynote to the actions of this sweet, loving, willful, imperious creature, whom he loved so tenderly. join me." Had some evil clairvoyance conveyed to Alfred Winship tho present state of Madge's mind? In her unreasoning reck less mood, with her "balance whoel,' George Bishop, away, she was open to any suggestion that had a spice of free dom io it. "Why not break loqse from this re straint at once and forever? Why not meet Alfred Winship as he suggested? She knew he was desperately in love with her. and she had never seen a happy moment sicca she parted from him. ''If I had any privileges like other girls," she thought bitterly, "I could invite him out to see me, but Miss Mary and Miss Martha would be scandalized at the mention of such a thing." Snnshlne Kemedy for Obesity. But here is a secret for women troubled with obesity, which wo anticipate will carry somo weight, namely, that bodies exposed constantly to the sua "gain such- activity of the blood forces as to prevent any excessive forming of adi pose matter." It must not, however, be supposed that, oa the other hand, 1 1 , 1. .1 .. .... n Inan. plenty 01 sunsiiiuu i uuuuutim 1 ness. Not so, for the really healthful condition is neither fat nor lean, but shapely and plump, and the sun's rays quicken the nutrient functions, pro ducing a beautiful and elastic roundness of form; Indeed, tho constant action of the sun upon a human body is like the effect upon a plant, vitalizing ana strengthening to every part Press. The Age of Fishes. Crows are commonly said to live for a hundred years and turtles are said to have even longer life; but if Professor Baird be right the greatest animal lon gevity is possessed by fishes. Professor Baird says that a fish has no maturity, there is nothing to prevent it from living indefinitely and growing continually. He cites in proof a pike, living in Rus sia, whose ago dates back to the fif teenth century. Ia tho royal aquarium at St Petersburg there are fish that have been there 140 years. Tho Twin Cross. A Leap Tear Explanation. Griggs "See here, S.imley, a word with vou before vou go. You've been calling on my sister for three months, and I think it's about time to ask your intentions." Slimley "Perfectly honorable, Tom. She proposed to ms to-night, and we'll be married soon." Siltioas. Seals once having taken to a place will never dosort it unless frequently alarmed. Here they periodically return to breed, and thence the old onos nevor wander far. Throo expeditions, of two nights on each occasion at most, are made yearly, and as only one attack is possiblo each time, great caution and ex perience are necessary to ensure a good bag. The oars have to be mufibd, and tho island approached accorJinj to the wind; for seals are not tho sleepy crea tures ono associates with the 209, but post videttes in commanding positions, and on the slightest alarm there Is a rush and a splash, and good-byo to your prospects for that night. Having dis embarked in silence, the men, armed with heavy clubs somewhat resembling though longor than a policeman's staff, are posted at intervals of two or thrco yards on tho glacis by which the seals invariably como and go. When all is ready every one bczins to shout, and then comes a rush like a thousand sheep, and thwack, thwack, right and left, as hard as you like, and the more the better, followed by a splash, and every one makes for tho boats and shoves off. For the old bul's, often six foet and seven feet long, are very dangerous and will ofton follow a boat knajving at the trunwales. For purposes of commerce the old onos aro absolutely worthless. and attention is only paid to tho small est and youngest. Wo started at one m., the writer continues, for tho seal island. A glorious moon mado every object as clear as day, and about half an hour we found ourselves aloncsido about as difficult a landing place as can well bo conceived. Imagin then, a Tathcr steep glacis, as slippery as a slide and extending without one friendly foothold for about twenty yards. But our nimblo companions lost time in the ascent, and in less time than it takes to writo it, wo found our selves seized by sturdy arms and ia po tition at the top of the glacis, "noo. hool" intermingled with shouts such as nono but Afrikander lungs could possi- bly emit, then rent tho air, and then roar such as I can only describe as that of a hundred oxen, followed by scampering of what seemed a thousand feet and a literal avalanche of seals camo tumbling past us and dashed furiously into tho water. Personally, I was too excite I to do justice to my club; I struck about, re gardless of all instructions, indiscrimi nately at old nnd young that came within reach, and was delighted to find when the counting began that I was tho proud exterminator of four. Tb.3 ex perts had, of course, dono better, and our night's work for thirty-two clubs was represented by 310 seals. To make for the boats and shovo off was tho work of an instant; and, having laid-to for a short time in case of attack, wo again landed, collected our victims and re turned to the guano island. Tho night's work, however, was by no means over; and alter a hearty sup per. U19 skiuninp; process began and continued till well into the afternoon Tho preliminary proparing (or braying as it is called) of tho skins is somewhat peculiar; and as tho fur known as seal skin is an undergrowth, all tho bristles havo to bo removed, i. e. : pulled backwards from tho inside. In the very young animals those bristlos havo not appeared; hence, tho value of the seal the younger ho is, and the absoluto worthlcssncss of the old bulls. On the following night tho seals were to bo left in peace; but on the Thursday we re peated the attack, with much the samo experience and an addition of 207 to our bag, making a grand total of 523. London Field. Tilt Virtues of the Ylolln. In power, volume and varioty of t sound, the organ is justly entitU d to bo called the king of musical instruments. But in two important points it ylclds.to the violin and to the othor members ot tho violin tribo the viola, the violon cello and tho double, bass. When somo one asked Mozart to state what was req uisite to constitute a good pianoforte player, he touched his fingers, his fore head and his breast, thcroby indicating that the pianoforte-player needs btaio, feeling and dexterity of hand. Now, given the feeUng, the piano is naturally cold an instrument that even the most skillful performers on it find a difficulty in throwing all the feei ng of which thoy are conscious into their playing. The violin, on tho other hand, ii a warm and sympathetic in strument, and readily responds to the mood of the performer. Ia other words, the connection betwoon the performer and the instrument is more intimate in the case of the violin and its congeners than in that of aay othor instrumont Next, all othor instruments lack the power of "singing." In this respect, tho piano, tho harp, tho guitar, and its first cousin, tho banjo, aro notably deficient; since, rightly considered, they aro mere ly instruments of percussion, and cannot ovon sustain the notes which they emit The flute, the organ, and all other wind instruments, on the other hand, do pos sess this sostenento capacity. Bat they cannot, like tha human voice, fill in, so to speak, the gaps in the gamut. But are thero any gaps in the gamut ? Most no. doubtedly thero aro enormous gaps. The octave at prcsaut ia use among all civilized nations comprises but thirtosa distinct sounds, all told. But in tho scalo constructed by scientists Hclmholtz and othors and hence called the Philosophical Scalo or Gamut, the number of distinct sounds is seven teen; and oven this gives but a very faint idea of the almost innumerable degree of tone, distinguishable by an acute car, between, say middle C and its octave. Now, tho knm voice can render all theso shades of souad, an l so also can the violia tribe. Tho music produced on theso instruments may, therefore, most aptly be termod "linked sweetness long drawn out" CassolL Mental Telegraphing. It is said th it tb.3 Indians on the plains have always practised a system of mental telegraphing nunng them selves, by means of which they commu nicate with each other almost instanta neously, and without messengers or sig nals. This mental telegraphing is by no moans peculiar to the Indians on the plains of the United States. The same thing has been done by many people on the plaias, and among tho mountains, both of America and other countries, and is today, and always has been, one method of manifesting knowledge known to and practised by many per sona The manner in which such communi cations aro made seems to be, and is, a great mystery. Miay theories about it have teen suggested, all of which fall short of satisfying tho minds of people as to how it is done. The fact that such communications are sent and received, and that they are often genuine and true, and that such is one mode of man ifesting knowledge, is now almost uni vcrsally conceded. St Louis Repub lican. Past Mending. Bjoncs That fellow Ga'ey trijJ to borrow five hundred dollars of mo this morning. Smythe Fiv cracked I Bjones No, he's not cracked, broke. (Life. Effect of Glare upon Eyesight It appears that Professor Plateau, ot the University of Ghent, whilo trying to observe tho effects of the irritation ot the retina gazad steadily at the sua for twenty seconds, the result being that chronic irldo-choroiditis developed, ending eventually in total blindness. A number of casos aro known in which choroiditis and retinitis occurrod in persons who had observed an eclipse of tho sun. The single flash of a sun-reflector has been known to cause retinitis, and other temporary visual disturbance of a functional charactor have been fre quently notod. M. Reich has described a curious epidemic of snow blindness, which occurrod among a body of la borers engaged in clearing a way through the masses of snow which obstructed the road between Pas sanaur and Mteti in the Caucasus; the rays of the sun reflected from tho vast stretches of snow on overy side, pro duced an intense glare of light, which the unaccustomed eye could not support without the protection of dark glasses. A fow of tho sturdiest among the labor ers wore able to work with impunity, but tho majority suffered so much that among seventy strongly marked cases thirty were so scvero that the men wero absolutely unablo to continue work or to find their way home and lay prone on their faces, striving to liida their faces from the light and crying out from pain. Recovery was gradual but complete. A Pet Ostrich's Mishap. When, as sometimes happens, a soli tary chick is reared at the farmhouse, it becomes absurdly and often incon veniently tamo. Ono called Jackij was tho terror of all tho little Africans about the place; for, as they sat on the ground with plates of rice and pumpkin in their laps Jackio would bear down upon them, requisitioning from one plato after another. Occasionally he acted in such a menacing manner that tho young sters dropped their plates end ran away crying. Jackio would then squat on his heels among tho dobris and rogalo lis enormous appetite at leisure. But jno day retribution camo. Having i buhdred. He must be Ho' spotted the pot in tho kitchen out of which tbo pumpkin an l rice always came, he thou ;ht he would attack tho fountain head, so plumping his head into tho pot, he greedily scoopod up, and, with tha lightning-like rapidity of ostriches, tossed down his throat a large mouth ful of boiling rice. Poor fellow I the next moment he was dancing round the kitchen, writhing in agony, shaking his head nearly off, and twisting his neck as if bent on tying i' into a knot Finally he da hod wildly from the house; and the la-t that was seen of him was a littlo clou! of whito dust vanish ingon the horizon. St. James Gazette. A Well Endowed County. Randolph County, ia West Virginia, has many things to be prou 1 of. Its area is nearly as great as that of Rhodo Island. It has the highest mountain in the state Mouut B lyard. Tho Wilson vi in of coal is the richest in the world. The Scott family, oa Roaring Creek, will outweigh any family in the United States, and Winchester Park, in the county, is tho largest gamo preserve east of the Rockies. New York World.