Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 32, Number 39, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 June 1890 — Page 6
OUR CASH BOX.
lri wHi, Khewlag the Ceaditiea ef the MitlwHHl FfHAHffM-lreM Ih the 1'abfc 1W fr Mv. ,M1,S71-Keeel ad KipoHttlliirfw IHtrtea; thm Mm fVrlod, 1h)m IaymetiW, Kte. Washinsto.v, .Tune St. The Monthly public debt statement issued by the Treasury Department yesterday shows a decrease in the debt amount! Ui 1.S71 during the past month of Nay, and for the eleven months of the earrent Jiseal year, SdT.'ST.T, The total debt, 1 cash in the Treasury, on the 1st of Juno, was $1.W.SS.rS. The net cash or surplus in the Treasury on the 1st Inst. w $CW,W1,71 against $S5,KM,i a month ago, National bank depositories yesterday held J81,,S of Government funds, or about half a million leg than a month ago. Tne gold-fund balance has increased -about Ave millions during the past month, and now amounts to $190,344,--Ssl, and the silver-fund balanceexelusive of six millions trade-dollar bullion has increased a little more than one million, and now amounts to SIS,The fund of standard silver dollars "keeps steadily increasing, ami the Treasury now 'holds S30,9S6,W of this -coin. Government receipts during the month, from all sources, aggregate 535,143,351, and receipts for the eleven months of the current fiscal year, ending May 31, aggregated WI.5M,SS. The recoipts for the present month will probably reach S35.OW.000, and thus .swell the. Government receipts for the current fiscal year very close to $406,89,9, or fifteen millions more than Secretary Windora's estimate made early last fall. On the other hand expenditures during the eleven months last passed, aggregated . $.M3,l24.iM9, or -about fourteen millions more than for Abe corresponding eleven months of the past fiscal year. Pension payments so far this year have amounted to $103,177, 727, or fully thirteen millions more than during the corresponding eleven months of the previous year. Coinage at the mints during May aggregated la value Stf,5S,900. or 574,500 in gold coin, and 92,P$O,0K in standard silver dollars, and the remainder ir minor coins. THE PATENT LAWS. i A ,rrepeI Subttitutf for the Item Bill to AtHfHil thr I'atent CHtilHtHa Saw I'racltrjl J'rovinioH fer Simplify Ihr the Cumluct of Affjlm of the I'atent O flier. Washington-, June 3. The House -committee on patents, through Mr. SiImoads, of Connecticut, yesterday reported to the House a substituto bill recently agreed upon by the committee in place of a bill to amend tho Patent laws. One scetton of the sulwtitute bill proTides that an improvement to an invention that has been described for two years in any journal ahall not be patented, and In reference to this the reports says: '"The purpose of this section is to bar an application for a patent upon an improvement after that improvement has been described for -more than two years in a prior patent or -printed publication. Under the existing statute, two years' public use of an immovement in this country is a bar to aa application for patent thereon. This provision of existing law has proved salutery in operation; the principle underlying this provision of existing law requires that two years of description of an improvement in a patent or .printed publication shall also be made ttoihar an application for patent thereon, for the reason that a larger degree of publicity is generally given to aa improvement by two years of description in a patent or printed publication than by an ordinary two years publlo use, which use is almost always local and unknown outside the particular lo- . .cality in -.vhich it circulates." Another section provides for taxing -patents, and in regard to it the report i says: "This proposed amendment is 'founded upon the idea that if, at the end of five years after the grant of a patent, it is of such little value to the owner that he does not care jto pay a tax of f 1 thereon, the patent shall expire; and that if, at the end of ten years, the patent is of such little value as not to warrant a tax of 925, it shall then expire. The purpose is to weed out undeveloped and useless patents, to the end that they shall not block the way of subsequent inventions. KecemmpHiIatlHH of the International Amrrlran CHjcrr. "SVasiiixoto.v, June X The President .-sent to the Senate yesterday a letter Inviting the attention of the Senate and House to the following recommendations of the International American Conference: A uniform system of customs regulations for tho classification and valuation of imported merchandise; a uniform nomenclature for the description of articles of merchandise imported and exported; and tho establishment at Washington of an International bureau of information. The Congress also, at its final session, decided to establish in the city of Washington, as a fitting memorial of .its meeting, a Latin-American library, to be formed by contributions from the uvcral nations of historical, geographical and literary works, maps, manuscripts and official document relating to the history and civilization of America, and expressed a desire that the Government of the United States taheuld provide a suitable building for he shelter of such library, to be nolemnly dedicated upon the -twth anniversary of the discovery of America. The Djrnnmtte CruUrr VmhyIim. PitiAPHt.fiiu, June 3. At the league Island Navy Yard yesterday the 'United Slattss Government took formal possession of the dynamite cruiser Vesuvies and that vevnl was placed in commission as a man-of-war. The Vesuvius vras transferred from the possession of the Cramps the owners of the ship-yard in which she was built and launched by Charles H. Cramp, and accepted on a ena tor tne uovernment by Captain H. u. beelay, commandant of thn l.curua '
is and naval station. The Vesuvine domestic utensils, tools and workmen will remain at League Island for a few to display the ordinary tndctf and ec-.-data and then arc- to her stalk, j enpatlone tn Japan.
NOTHING SURPRISING.
MiHhVa French Mar It Being KCht t l'N4r Treetjr ftttpalMtleM "vl Mutter. Nkw Vouk. June S.-A Herald special from Halifax, says: The Hritiaa North Amori)an suuadroa. under command of Yiee-Adniiral Watson, eonstating of the ships Itellerophon, Canada, Com us, Partridge and Ituuard, arrived here to-day (Monday) from Itormuda. Tne officers of the ships say they ri in no way su prised al. the action of the French war ship at ltay St. George. It is a thing that has boon going on for the past thirty years or more, and they have a perfect right to compel the Newfoundland fishermen to remove their nets or traps on that part of the eoast The Admiral, however, has ordered two of the ships to hold themselves to proceed to Newfoundland should the oeoasion require it. The French eorvette ltison, now here, will proceed thence to the French shore ol Newfoundland direct The gunboat Thrush, in command of Uis lioyal Highness, I'rlneo George of Wales, which is now on its way from England to" this port, may not Iks here until July, the naval authorities say, as she will likely call at the Aaores and lterniudas on the way out. A special to the Times from Halifax, says that Sir John Ilos. commander of the troops in Hritish North America, denies the report that a battery of royal artillery and an infantry regiment had been ordered to proceed to Newfound land from England. i THE WOMAN DID IT. Accertllar to a Huvuntt Kepertrr llrattit. the rrrncli Mttrderrr. whhM Shift the KijMntlUlty for CieuWr'n Death I'pou GMbrlelle Itomp.trtl. Nkw York. June 3. The Courier Des Ktats Unis has a letter from Havana which give an alleged interview between Eyraud, the murderer, and a reporter of a Havana paper. According to this story Eyraud admitted that he is a rogue who has lived by sharp prac-t tices of all sorts and associated with the worst characters in Paris. One morning be says ho told Gabrlelle Itompard he was going to Germany to try to do a little swindling, as he was out of money. Gabrlelle told- him to watt awhile, and made an appointment with him to meet her In her rooms in the afternoon. When he went there he heard loud lauftoter and the popping of champagne corks. Gabrielle came to hirn with Goutle's keys, and sent hiui to Gouffo's bouse for some papers. Ho went to the house and ransacked GoufTe's papers, but did not find what he was sent for. Then he returned to Gabrielle and found Gouffo hanging. He asked Gabrielle who did it, and she said she would tell him later. Then they put the body in a sack and took it to a station near Lyons. BROKE UP THE PICNIC. The IMrefal KtiHlta that Flawed from j Hidden Ke f Beer at aa Alnli.im rienlr. ItiKMi.VGHAM, Ala., June 8. A Sunday-school picnic at MeAdory Springs, thirty miles west of this city, on Sunday, ended in a fight One' man was killed outright and several badly wounded. A crowd of young men who attended the picnic had a keg of beer hidden in the woods, and all of them became intoxicated. A free fight was the result, and George ltoebuck's bead was split open with a hatchet It is not known who struck the fatal blow. Al Simpson and David Hendricks received wounds which may prove fatal. The fight broke up the ptenic, and women and children ran screaming into the woods. A Number of children were lost for several hours. A RACE FOR A WIFE. A RMMwar Marriage that wa Cnmpleted .lnt In tho Nick of Time An Arram. t modtttla: Squire Hud mr Angry- rather j No meaning. , Cixcixxati, June s. Harry Goodwin and Cora Skinner, of Lawrenceburg, Ind., ran away yesterday to get roar ried. Thy found Squire Sterling was at Elizabethtown, O., just '-MM) yards over the State line. As they reached the squire thegirl's father could lie seen in the distance pursuing on horseback. Sterling, grasping the situation, told the lovers to grasp hands and run lor i Indiana as tho license was not good In Ohio. The three scrambled over fences. Crossing the line tho squire stumbled and fefl, hut had just sufficient breath to pronounce the words as tho angry father galloped up. too late. A large Crowd witnessed the race and cheered the bridal couple. The father left without bestowing his blessing. MINNIE AND MAUD. Mam) f!ordon' Trepanned SkHtl CohI1 Not Withstand Minnie IMtim' Virletta Kleka-Attempted Suicide of the Hay- ' ton WemaH In Her Cell. 1 CiitCAoo, June 8. Maud Gordon and Minnie Dayton became Involved in a quarrel early this morning at Polk and Clark streets. The Gordon woman, who I the possessor of a trepanned skull, was no match for the Dayton woman, who knocked her down and kicked her so badly about the head that the silver plate In her skull was pushed into the brain. She was taken to the County Hospital, where her injuries were pronounced fatal. Minnie Dayton wax , arrested and locked up at the Harrison Street station. About 1;80 o'clock this morning she attempted to commit suicide by nanging to the bars of her cell. ! i j A Inpan KxhIMt for the World'a Fair. ' Wa.hhi.vhto.v. June 3, (lustavlu.i Goward. formerly wcretary ot the L'nlwd States Legation ntTokio, Japan, left Washington yesterday with credentials from the fetatu Department on a Singular mission. Mr. Go ward has Wen designated as a special commissioner to proceed to Japan and arran for a Japanew exhibit at the Chicago Fair. ! He i Instructed to fcrranire for the ex- , hlbition of a complete Japanese vlllago imdndtov t,uM r.nttitc. nti ...w... .........
M'KINuCV'S PLATFORM.
TUm MH rd the MM Mag Cea The McKinley bill to reduce the revenue by increasing taxation is drawn to relieve the discontent of the capitalists, but the inevitable result is to broaden, deepen and embitter the discontent of the people. This discontent finds only an occasional expression in the House of Representatives. The Democrats have for all practical purposes been excluded from debate. No adequate discussion of the monstrous measure of taxation has been possible in the face of Reed's ruling and McKinley's demands. Now and then some Republican "frees his mind," as Butterworth did, as MdKenna did and as Henderson did, but these outbreaks, instead of warning McKinley of danger ahead, determine him to go on regardlees of the hereafter. But the debate of the bill continues in the public press, and before the people. The working-men and the farmers are manifesting a new interest in the subject, and they will make themselves heard in the next House. The Chicago Tribune is the leading Republican newspaper of the Northwest. During the campaign of 1888 it declared that the Republican platform meant a revision and a reduction of the tariff. It insisted that the words used by McKinley in the platform were to be taken only In a Pickwickian sense, and that the interests of the producing elasses would be entirely safe in the hands of the Republican party. "Things hev! changed" since Mr. McKinley, who wrote the platform, has interpreted it by his tariff bill. It is useless for the Tribune to squirm; the bill means exactly what the platform meant, except that it does not abolish the whisky and tobacco taxes. Otherwise McKinley's bill consists beautifully. line by line, with McKinley's platform; it is as "big as life and twice as natural." In every line there is a robbery, and the two combined, the platform and the bill, are an open defiance of public opinion and a denial of the ordinary rights of property. Our Chicago contemporary is alarmed at the results of its own work. It brought Illinois. Iowa and Wisconsin to the support of the McKinley platform, but it denounces in the roost bitter terms the McKinley bill The Tribune declares that the new tariff schedule will advance.ten per cent, the price of such necessaries of life as clothing, leather, tinware, carpets, cutlery, hardware and tools. This advance in price results in taxing the consumer ?-:r.7,250,0O0, as against a reduction in sugar of $70,000,000. The Tribune shoud see that from this sugar reduction we must deduct a bounty of $7,500,000, to be paid to the sugar planter, and $12,500,000 bonus paid to the sugar refiner, or 20,000,000 in all. We have, therefore, these figures: Hfsnec k!c:. , " tZKJtWm Su0-arUrties rOitUMtie ' Total.,, ..,..,, ,. .t,,$&7.3('0,039 This is the actual amount of increased taxation imposed by the bill. Contemplating these figures the Tribune exclaims indignantly: "And there are Republican 'Western men bers, overawed sad terrorised by a v Intent, prwdy. npaeious Minority, who are thinking of rot in for this bill, under tae eaucus la, which Y-ltl transfer tea of milMeas from tae pockets of tbeir constituents to those of Kantera iMHBQffeturers who already save all the protection' tar aed or more. How will them) Western member utlfy their letryal of W:tera Interests when they get home among constituents whom they have helped to rob? They wottld do wUely to think of that before they vote. 4 "If they have lost all sewe of right and wrong have they al-o loot alt political sea-te? Can mt they e that by pam'ng thin bill they are playtog directly into the hands of the Dosvoerats; that the oppoiUoe of the latter to the aboaii. fiahte Mil Is formal and that they long to have It pas la order that this fall they may go before the consumer and exultantly explaia to . them the tariff revision and reduction' of their I poll ileal opponent; These Weetera Kepubi lleaas eWted as protectionists should hesitate I long before thay abandon their party creed aad become tariff nrohlbltiofttati." Had the Tribune been as fair and frank in 1SSS, when discussing the MeKinley platform as it is now in dis cussing the MeKinley bill, the betrayal of Western Interest wottld not have been possible. The bill simply fulfills the promise of the platform. One was adream; the other is an actual condition; together they are "the riot of the tipsy Itacchanals." Louisville Courier-Journal. The Man Fit the Plaee. The suggestion that Senator Quay may be asked to resign from the Republican National Committee indicates a gross mbconccption of the views and purposes which actuate tho managers of the party machine. The charges which have been made against .Senator Quay, and which by his silence he admits, do not disqualify him for serving tho machine. On the contrary, they commend him to the managers as eminently the kind of man they want. They Indicate his possession of just the kind of talent the machine needs. If .Mr, Quay were accused of having conducted a public office with scrupulous regard for the public interest, of accounting scrupulously for every dollar ol the money committed to his charge. In a word, of honesty and fidelity, the managers of the machine might well distrust him. Jtut to distrust him because he is only charged with emliezalemcnt would bo to fly in the face of all party precedents and to establish an entirely new qualification for high place in the party councils. It wojluliellkc Fagjn refusing to take the Artful Dodger as a pupil in his thieves' academy because he was aecused of stealing. Detroit Free Press Cowed by the Tarty HoMr. The Kopabllcar. Congressman is a docile and long-MiiTering animal, and the amount of whiuplng-ln he will stand is truly wonderful. He bellowed and was surly at having the MeKinley bill piled upon the load be had to carry, and one unacquainted with him would have thought rebellion Imminent, Hut no, the waster gev- up when all la ready and the whipplng-in process begins The cowed Cor.vrsesman, erstwhile an armed conspirator ready to thruet his knife in tho party's vitals, smiles meekly, bows his head, and docile and fawning goes about hi taftka If ha liked It and had said to all the time ChkRO MiL
KING CAUOUI TRIUMPH!.
K4pMImiii TwrW.kfrmera AnW f YU Thtdr Moot KeMtimMtM. During the debate on the McKinley bill Mr. HrnjamlH JUtterworth (Hep.) of Cincinnati said: 1 mrrvt that tan memVors of Ot way and Wtu cuatttilUce hav taxea up all the limited Im iJ thA IliMlttt With HMWttUmtMtlN U UM W fltulo r that fro- ouufrreao xrhk w j nary. We hari net had Uaw te secure a eon- j mmm of epnthut eve oa tal aide of the Hoe f ti enable uk to wgtMaie ieieiiwaiu- iw Ituod of the country, 1 regret that m important a atcMwre bould I seemingly tn the eoatrot ef a minority of a majority, for I do not believe that th ark of the Kupubllcan convcuant wai by any bigh demand of the Kepublicau party plaeit in the keeping of a few. This is true. It is a oaae where a minority, active, energetic and unscruoulous. under the control of the Katern manufacturers, has coerced and dragooned a dUunited, Inert majority, j each of whose members wanted the bill to fall and each of whom was afraid to vote against it. A disciplined minority, I claiming to bo the sole authoriaed ex- i poumler of the party eroed on the tariff j question, a minority which has behind it, pushing It on and keeping it up to its work, the shnrkish plutocrats of the Kant, who are greedy for larger profits, ' and who do not care what becomes of ' the consumer or tho Republican jutrty so that they get the plunder such a minority, so Inspired by the free use of the words "treason" and "traitors,'' by the vague terrors of the caucus and the lash of the party whip, has forced a faint-hearted majority, which had not the courage of its convictions, to betray ' the interests of its own constituent and f do the will of the bull-doaers. ' A majority of tho Republican mem- j Iters of the House know that tho MoKin- j ley bill is wrong as a whole and In most ; of Its parts. They know that its passage will bo unwelcome to their con- i stitucnts and will work them grievous harai, and yet they voted for it They ' did so in the hope that the Senate will j either shelve it or so amend it as to take the wickedness out of it. They hoped furtiter that if those tactics which succeed j ed in the House sucoeed in the Senate and the bill passes there the President will brain the abortion with his veto. J How much better it would be for the country and for themselves If these WvMorn members had less hope and more courage. Had they the manhood ' to vote what they believed the Nation ' would not have seen for tho first time in its history the spectacle in a time of profound peace, with no impend ing hostilities, with no heavy war debt j pressing down on the revenues, with a I great surplus in the treasury, with an overflowing revenue and no need for additional money, of Congress passing a bill so increasing the tariff duties as to make them almost prohibitory and to j add hundreds of millions a year te the burdens of American consumers when they had for years been clamoring for ; relief and declaring that the duties al ready imposed on. them were too griev ,' ous to be borne. ' i This is what comes of a protection majority allowing itself to bo bulldoaed and overawed by a tariff prohibition minority which is seeking te impose on the party a ereed which it has never adopted. Chicago Tribune (Rep.). DRIFT OF OPINION. The St Louis Globe-Democrat (Rep.) continues to speak of the "mistakes" in the MeKinley tariff bill whioh "will have to be corrected.' Chairman Quay's committee meeting has been postponed again. It looks a little as if be didn't care to face the music. New Haven Register. If the sugar trust does not make Mr. MeKinley a handsome present it will show itself to be a most ungrateful combination. Louisville Courier-Journal. Speaker Reed is openly pulling for the Presidency. If Speaker Reed presides ovor the National Republican convention he will nominate himself. Augusta (Gu.) Chronicle. General James A. Hall, a well known campaigner of Maine, says ot Hutterworth's speech: "I am half Inclined to the opinion that Hen was about right I fear we are as a party carrying this tariff matter too far." When Professional Politician Clarkson says that "government is a political, not a business, machine," he means that ho has done his best te make It a partisan machine modeled on tho blocks-of-live plan. He has succeeded pretty well so far. St Loals Republic. A Kansas farmer sold a large meteor which ,1011 in his pasture for f 1,000 anil with the money raised the mortgage on his farm. Still tne Kansas farmer as a rule Is more likely to raise his mortgage by voting off his taxes than by waiting for $1,000 meteors. Chicago Herald. As to President Harrison, we have it on tho authority of Wharton Barker and Henry C. Lea that he was fully Informed of Quay's tainted record before ho handed over tho naming ot a Cabinet officer (Wanamakcr) and the control of Pennsylvania patronage to the corrupt and dishonest bos. Tho President sinned against knowledge, nnd this fact, so well attested, probably accounts for his desire to recover lost ground by unloading Quay. Pittsburgh Post Successive attacks from Republicans In the House do not prevent the passage there of the MeKinley bill, but they are significant of the fate In store for Republican McKlnleylam in the Congressional campaign. The tariff question has lecn studied in the last two years as never before in the history of tho country An intelligent under standing of the whole subject-matter means repudiation of the sophisms of tho protective tariff. Chicago Times. It Is a beautiful spectacle that is presented by the party in power just now; Tariff legislation Is dictated by Its "bononclariei" as Mr. Hatterworth pointed out; silver legislation is, so far as the matter has gone, in the hands of .he mine owners, nnd pension legislation apparently depends, wot on the rights of tho people or oven the demands of tho vcterant, btiton manipulation by the pension claim agents, oJ whom Dudley and Tanner are the most conspicuous leaders at tut present mo wtb-N Y, Time
FASHION LITTER.
rliTr'e J Nrl IHNrHrt JeW4 Jt(Re4pfft (apodal Xew York CenwMiambjMW.l Amoag all the triumph ef the ate dlnie'H art this season, the moat remarkable are noticeable among the evening toilets, where the mmt boaMllfut of materials and the most novel and unique combinations of solar, together with the most ornate of garni, tures, are freely indulged in. The materials for dancing toilets are essen tially of, light ami delicate texture, and, though perfect in their way, are simple in t'onsiruction, with no subtleties be yond artUtlc draping knd most etfeetlvc
snmimng. e w j
urn's are mads of tho lovely laces sent over tills year In Vandyke, roe point, Tour-Kinol, Spanish guipure and Venetian designs. They are oddly but charmingly disposed on kirt and bediee, forming jacket .front, leg-o'-mut-toii kloeves, blouse vests with bishop under sleeves to match, tichus, berthas, and, prettiest ot a 1 1, they are made into dainty little church capos for country wear exactly after the style1 of the double Carriek and single Dlreetolro capes of summer cloth. These are elegant looking over drspiii or aecordoon uUlted skirts of China silk with delicate ribbon trimmings ol lilac, oid rose, or pale willow-green in silk or velvet White cloth capw trimmed with Mac gold mse men trie ar likewise popular and stylish. The majority of the summer wrap take the form of a wide cape or flounce set on very full to the edge of a rounding yoke or one that is deeply pointed. Hodices laced up tho back are in high favor even in demi-dress. ami prince.! gowns are likewise fastened. The fronts are intricately trimmed or draped, the plain waKt beneath Wing clly fitted. Very pretty striped silk blouse waists are worn in neglige dres, under open jackets of camel's hair, silk srge, or Henrietta cloth. Masculine effects in dres are multiplying daily, and tail-coats otita w a y , .starclxd fehlrts ami piqu vents, four-ln-hi.nd scarfs, studs and blazers iantirnoraWe, appear on ev'ry band. Hands o me new jacket of English cloth In pale heliotrope shade, have ltau Itrum ael waistcoats ot . chamois-eel o red oloth overlaid with silk passemeterlea ! ta atiade of the . jacket Km suite, ! 7?5? r shoes and ,'V am mat. rmwr tne waistcoat in shade. 1 In richer dress, long ample Louis Qua t terse Vests of costly Pompadour brocade are worn beneath open red in go te robes of lustrous corded silk In fawn color, migntmette green, vleux roe, black or heliotrope. Theso vests aro a feature of the very latest gowns from Paris. The neck has no collar, lut is finished with a fal!ig frill of fine old lace, with a plaiting ef the same down the front and at the wrists of the long sleeves that are fall en the shoulder? ' and tight fitting free the elbow down. These make elegant reception dreses, Very charming toilets for lK-idrrr.aids are formed of soft rwpped seeilienne silk, in English rose, lime leaf green. or pale honeysuckle yellow draped with lace or crepe lbvte of tbo same shade, either figured with small flowers in faintest shadowy tlntings or beantifully bordered. These dresses have round waists and high short sleeves arranged in full airy puffs n tho shoulders. The skirts arc full and round. There is a great demand for tho reslly beautiful and luxurieus-hwk-ing French challi goods, which tabs year occupy a high nlace among the
MS
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elegant fancies in dress. They are found In nearly every class of toilet, forming garden party models, boudoir , ruin's, hammock dresses, breakfast toilets ami a host of natty styles fot : t.entiH archery and the beach. j Tho fancy for low shoes Is oven greatet than it was a year ago. The low Dieppe shoe of undressed blaok kid with patent leather vamp, and the tan colored Rich- , ilicu shoo in Swedish kid, are two leadIng Styles. Tho now black lace, net and fancy gn-nudlne toilets are models of refined elegance. Flower bonnets, French toques and picturesque round hats of Ininienw sine, are the models in , millinery that, will rule all summer. cur. I
A family In Dover, N. J., who hare long l)cen attain;? valuables, were amaxed a day or two age to find them in the secret nest of a pot goose. Among tho articles whleh the bird had appropriated were two gohl thimbles, a twrtolso-shcll comb, scarf-pins spools ot sowing silk, silver lace ami a watch. Tho goose had a trick of knocking at the door in qnest of edible da lath, and, on being admitted awl petted, would seek a sunny eornor of Urn room and dcae. When loft alone, it began Its purloining: operations. It was hiding the stolen timo-pieee with lift ka jreaaarcs when tHworared.
TUB BIS-MJ aa.,..
latwnattwaal Musday-xi 7 Jane la, ixM itoeetally arrantcd M g a ( M.MOK TntT-Lah J Cummin Tkxt- Take wi ' ewcttswiieti; fnr a maa'tt )if roaLZ UMtahuadaecv d ta thtau-a Ta2, CattTKAt, Tat?TM-It bi follyu i,. ymm m earth at the rut Heatron. TlMK Xoreaiber and ltoh,.. meaiateb' feitowlag the lat Zr J l-t-WElHftea. beyoatl Jardaa Jma About Udrtr thnvrran u . last katraey rrtaa Udik- to JHaJZ UmawrMMV Jew- ha I inZ. , taabee (I I IT aad ouKwuriK , (2 taete. Coatittn ot at the mw7h. foL andUtMteNasH4tia)( Him. m thcaT addws lib diartpbM la tho i vttn? rrod, when he was iaterrut'trd hr tw. (erred to at the Wxuiautg .( th k i.r Oven Mahu l't-ica.ixti y: wf thtt rro nt adikchtl g. mV r('fr: he ttMUffht that mt who m itaat ala weaM Vm th WA wretij. M. Hae mm nm h j ;ri), fwited Iwcaast tt wae al )lh ImMatk terfftn wlJi petxwal sm but Ui . iwt pt UMHplca; tweaiHv Hi u . ual kJagdow, end te dwldt- it- (juaml havii madw avitber party bctVr. Mt t theat to htuw tt la brotherly lore t great train; C bwaeM h? tho tt hta, is, VHafOHtmt.: preed ef bmt t get uwire a the npeaw of ut t-r, t, have mr(. A muCt t frt L the wm, afttUM!, vtdaa K life, ,W :'. what a man to. mH ?rht he Itac him hapt-y and uwfui. Vk J rn In Tu he mmtaA tu have acta tMcwmtly rl"h. m . from the fruJtfulmw ot hU lsil, to beaesl richer may u.- a caise. t. ally holes In tht ground, walled up, wpenlrs at the Un. M!rrjru.ii . n it) b stmld at m: tho firt Klemv rteh fool sally. Tn m, ml a4 vermin, and Jcry, m k; aMj fiirtns, hrgla their work wits Me and bny nnireM ua hjium-j y IS. Thou A .? $0:44 lm!4 up tm er; he counted m a lone Uf, tin? element In his folly. W may right) ( bet in all our forecast lnjr ho)i!it eoam umvrutoty ot life asone ot Ut roatln to te ittiitsl suA allow! for In m.t ThU man wa such a fool that ho 1M b know that h must ilie. Jt thin' ta ttrink etui t mrrv: he thOQht to oat. sauj llh irranarif.1 and their ronts tiitri ehmicnt tn his foiijr. lie raprdo lfy that whic'ii h immortal with morl.ti that which wa vamS in the lMvit.e Ima. tho fotxl c-f ttoatts. THCATTK-tCnVRCHAaArrRMSTICS r M.VK-tli Korniw th!."!-, be km wealth rro WW 5wvr in found .lniu aar wild tiraOo ajalat rich, 0a the It lsuxlt:i!g to be rich; irrrai nn eaa lv at taitwd by stiver and ioiL t ) ftuetv.ssru! in buiae; that abewed w t:viifecrc of bi hirdtw and ladut Farthvr;i-, ihH a pnttleat mi show hinl!f ia ifce neordtfl H',tloqtiy N'inrf thtmhttal eoawrnlna the fattire. far w ktw, be wan lict and f hi b4iil.4. Tnr.tV.MH.ITK l.tll.l"RK-. IM ff n0 him: thU lis ctmtrate4 with what 1 M to hlmarlf. SAoh jo'? 1IU . ew1e. entbinkieg one, fry aiW-v. what the .brrwd man ihoe-;ht he t man v-hca all tbtt wvrW irai s a if t jMatiiMis U often tho r.e wlicw "fowl V' tbcntaa whom all the worWcs: r ptvinu4 U the e wbotaGdai. : Mtrirkcn lt?r. 3:17.) SI. a foots mSwalrie failure; one wiformed th iwtsible rkbes ot Ikswa " rf ire. Lttt mp twur Jr Mm fl im rhjk far bitnatlf, laring up XremmK '. self, h by no much robbing hiaAal h Ma Ufe In and toward Ocd, tt 1 1 rmir la uvrtag wp stem for, prwridipt' ,r Vt bat tae Moirlt, that which (MM kwkcth seareastla. la strtaweil ef al A UmrnfmH tmmtrt OodfrMi la waMi GkMt Hsros. a4 Oed rieh ia love, ta thai aihae. la fsea la deeda of kladaeea. la lab mi aai gttta aalvatioa of men; rich ia set ttast au gtorr ot Goil aad the bite ot Heaven. Com.mkxts The rich man's w full of blessings from God. Ilia g had brought forth plentifully, this was possible only because blessing' of I'?m who sends th and who ou'.s the sun to shin only had lie been bleseed harvest, but it is fair to infer t had been favored with abundant of body to superintend his farm Doubtless he also was gifted i clear mind, which was able tc large plans and to carry them ot oesfifully. Ilia was a hold sptr never stopped at trifles. A mev be made in an onward direct!" will make no timid plans. "I wil down my barns and build grcate: the parable we evidently have a i decision of character, clearness of ntent, and abundance ot resourceingman in his community. All thi to him because of (Jod's blessing.) far as the man was concerned, no recognition at all of any th himself. The man's present, looked a Clod's hl, was full of opportunit. hard work of lite' lay behind hi through Cod's blessing he was n position of opulence ami leisure, past had been mlsp-nt spiritual! was th golden shance for reeo past deficiencies. No harassing no ovorslrained energies cou pleaded now. He h ad time and for grand service in God's cauw alas! as the pasi had liecn abw tho prenent was misused.. lie ha the seed of Ingratitude; hi) want reap the harvest of selfishness.. 1 of saying: ".Soul, thou hast nittd laid up for many years, and th canst devoto thyself to God's se he only said:, "Take thine ea drink, and bo merry." The man's future Hero we take hia own estimate of it first, years of life," that was what h oned on. Was. bo not wcU and h Could ho not command the ver. medical skill in of need? 1 not thu means ot supplying : wants? Why. then should he no many years of life? And, in there was no. reason why ho inif have many years more in which U his possessions. No reason, that one: Ood said "To-night." Th; the reason. Health, wealth, phy climate, all wcro nothing, whe said "To-night. "-Rev. A. P. I'KACTI CAL srOOBSTlO.VS. t. There is danger to the sl from things right In themselves. it. Christ as the friend of all V he thu champion ef a ektss. 5. The chief sources of hapt oM;n to poor and rich alike. 4. Tho groat question ot life what w have, wit what wo r R. (Wd haa given tts lstyfl f1 whleh to stew our abs wlance t the Knfforinf , the heathen. 6. Treasure in Heaven are. Ih perfect and lasting riches. 7, CoTetetisnn turns uCs into a curte-
