FRANKLIN . PRESS. VOLUME XIX. FRANKLIN. N. C. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 10, 1904. aNUMBISK 32 nn ttt HI tttiHtt Louis XIV. and the Gypsies '.'...'; , i -, if Strange Story if th Aaattit tar Hit Swrntping Edict Against them. H 1 1 1 1 HHMHttn I Gypsies, or Bohemians, as they werei tailed In early dayB, made their first appearance In France In 1427. During the reign of Louis XIV. the criminal acts of these Itinerants assumed such intolerable proportions that the King issued an edlif commanding that all male members of their bands be arrest V ed and sent to the galleys and the wo men and children consigned to the poorhouses. The execution of the or der was committed to the famous La : Reynle, the first lieutenant-general of police. It was the custom In France at that period, when men and women of noble birth were Involved In criminal acts outside of affairs of state, to indicate them In police reports only by the first initial of their surnames. Those in terested In learning the Identity of the Count de B , one of the princi pal actors of the incident about to be related, may discover it by referring to "La Correspondance de Mme. la Duch- esse d'Orloans (Charlotte of Bavaria)." His name frequently occurs In her let ters in connection with that of her husband. This Count de B was a high fav orite at court, but was violent, unscrupulous and quarrelsome, and of a reputation so bad that he was sus pected of having had a hand In the poisoning of a dearly loved Princess, Henrietta of England, sister of Charles II. and Srst wife of the Duke of Or leans. A rich relative, M. do Salntalne, who lived in a country house buried In the woods of Berri, had promised to make the Count his heir should he die un married. As the Income from his es tate was 100,000 francs and his per sonal property amounted to 1,200,000 francs, tho cupidity nf the Count. wbb aroused and he proceeded to put ma chinery In motion for the early assimi . lation of his relative's assets. M. de Saintaine was a bachelor at his fiftieth year and the chances of his marrying Beemed small. He was pious to excess, was greatly esteemed in his neighborhood. He maintained his es tablishment lavishly; had dogs anil horses and hunted closely his vast es tate, but he persisted in managing his own financial affairs, and according ly attended neighboring fairs, where he disposed In person of the products of his various farm3. One of these fairs was held annually at Chatre, a nearby town. There M. de Salntalne appeared as usual in charge of a large herd of cattle and a great store of wheat, from the sale of which he real ized 20,000 francs. This money he put in a portmanteau strapped to his sad . die bags and late In the day started r for-irirtoma; a journey of live leagues, which could only be accomplished be fore night by rapid travel. When he had gone to the fair at Chatre he was followed by a priest of his neighborhood, a man reputed to be associated with a band of robbers, and by two companion rogues. On his Way home M. tie Saintaine was joined by the priest, who urged him to sup and pass the night at his parsonage, but the other politely refused and on , ly urged his horses to a more rapid trot. When, however, two of the horses fell dead and both thighs of a servant riding one of them were brok en, nothing remained for him but to accept the hospitality of tho priest. The parsonage was a very ancient building, part of a seigniorial castle, constructed at the time of the Crusad ers. One wing only had been rebuilt, but It communicated with the remains of the original structure by subterran ean passages. TBc chapel of the castle had become the parish church and was connected with some of the rooms of the parsonage. An abutting cemetery occupied the space of the former gar den of the castle. What was formerly a ditch protecting its approach had . been filled with water. A wooden bridge crossing this led to the entrance to the parsonage. On the other side was a great forest which in former times constituted the baronial park. Opposite the church and cemetery was the priest's garden. The house was in charge of a ulece of the priest, a girl of modest demean or and very beautiful. Julienne by name. At 'tho sight of a stranger she became confused, her face changed from white to red, and her eyes filled with tears at the brutal command of her uncle to entertain bis guest. A servant entered and made a sig nal to the priest, which De Saintaine saw reflected in a mirror. The priest arose and excused himself, saying that - he was called to the bedside of a sick man. "But, uncle, who is ill?" asked the niece. "Big Peter." "I have Just seed him pass by." "You are mistaken," replied the uncle sharply." "John has fust told me, and he Is better Inform ed than you." Tho tone of the priest's vofcewas so harsh and It was so clear bs was lying that De Salntalne ro , gretted he had accepted the hospital ity of such a man. 1 The moon was rising. De Saintaine i walked to a window to look at the landscape. To his astonishment be saw the priest walking to and fro In front of the house engagod In animated s talk with two other men. Suddenly , onto of them took from his pocket three . knives, giving one to the priest, the other to his companion, and putting ' the third in the breast of his coat. After the departure of the uncle, Ju lienne had not removed her eyes from , the embroidery on which she"! was ' working, although she appeared -an-. noyed at the surveillance she was sub jected to by the servant. When the mild at last fell Into a dozeDe Salnt alne took advantage of this to converse with the niece. At his approach ahe lifted her bead and indicated rapidly that he was In perlC and that she was ' determined to save him, but to acom ..." pllsh it he must obey ,ber implicitly. When the priest returned he remark , ed casually that one Jacome, a bour geois of Bcwrges, who was at the fair at la Chatre, would be, with the per ' mission of De Salntalne, a guest at Hipper. This second visitor proved to be 1 1 1 1 1 1 i4i M t lilt ! f t Combons, the man whd distributed the Knives. His appearance in trie house confirmed De. Salntalne In the opinion that he had been caught in a trap. When De Saintaine was shown to his room in anticipation of the supper hour, Julienne managed to whisper to him to bolt the door and expect fur ther news from her. About twenty minutes after he heard a slight noise above his head, a little trap opened in the celling, a white band appeared and a paper was dropped therefrom, con taining these word: They are determined to kill and rob you. At supper they will offer you drugged wine. This will throw you into a deep sleep, when you will be killed. John, the groom, and I will save you and myself at the same time. Show no fear to your companions; they will not kill you. until you are asleep. When you rettjj to your room wait patiently our aival and above all do not be alarmed if we enter the room In an unusual way. Burn this note and pull back the bolt on the door. . - The supper was uncommonly good and general gayety prevailed. A sign from John and Julienne Indicated to De Salntalne the drugged bottle. He made a pretence of drinking the wine. During a pause In the conversation De Saintaine pretended to bo sleepy and asked permission of his host to retire at about 11 o'clock. To assure himself against surprise, he tried to push the bolts of the door; but they were not In place, having evidently been removed while he was at supper. All he could do was to close the door and barricado It with a heavy bureau. This was barely done when a light noise attracted hlB at tention In a part of the room near the bed. He walked there, taking the pre caution to arm himself with his sword and pistols. They were useless, for while at supper the charge in each had been drawn. Near the bed In a panel in the wall, masked by a por trait, was pushed back. In the open ing stood John and Julienne, each holding a dark lantern. They signalled him to approach. As he joined them the sound of a key be ing turned In the lock of the barri caded door attracted his attention. An attempt to open it was prevented, by the furniture placed against It. There was no time to lose; the en emy was at hand. John took De Saln talne by the hand, with the valuable portmanteau in the grip of the other, and led him Into the mysterious pas sage by which they had reached the panel, which consisted of a large sheet of Iron. They hurried their flight through a number of subterranean lanes, from which they emerged into the open country at least a mile from the parsonage and on the opposite side of the canal. There two horses were tethered; John mounted the one and De Saintaine the other; with Ju lienne on a pillion behind him. As they rode on through the forest, the moon, lighting the side of a hill visi ble through a clearing disclosed a body of men, members, no doubt of the band of brigands of which the priest was the chief. At daybreak they reached De Salntalne's house. Later in the morn ing they set out for Bourges, where Julienne was placed In temporary charge of the sisters of a religious re treat The priest, furious at the escape of his guest and the loss of his expected booty, hastened to anticipate an ac cusation against him by lodging a com plaint against De Sa'ntalne for the ab duction of a minor and the ruin of her reputation so that marriage for her had become Impossible. The priest, however, counted without his host De Saintaine had fallen In love with the girl, and although tremb ling at tbe wrath of the, terrible Count de B , he married her. When six months after the news of this event reached the Count there came with It a suggestion of the pos sibility of an heir to inherit the great fortune of De Saintaine. The Count's rage exceeded, all bounds, and because of his threats and persecutions De Saintaine died shortly after the birth of a son,' leaving the widow and boy In possession of all of his property. Three years had passed. The young Louis brought up by his mother as be fitted tbe inheritor of such great wealth, was living with her in a house near one of the gates of the city of Bourges, when a band of Gypsies who had been encamped between St. Ger main and Versailles established them selves In the Immediate neighborhood. The nine men and women who made up this band one day engaged In what appeared to be a violent quarrel in the presence of a considerable group of spectators, and a man and woman of the tribe, active participants in the dispute, after the ceremonies custom ary with tbeso people under similar circumstances, were driven out of the camp, together with their little daugh ter. The same evening young Louis de Saintaine disappeared from his home and all trace of him was lost His In consolable mother expended great sums of money and employed an army of agents in search of him, but with no sueeess, though it was the general op inion that the Gypsies were concerned In the kidnapping. Those of the band remaining in the neighborhood of Bourges denied participation in the crime, and asserted that the man and woman whom they had expelled were the culprits. . After a month the re mainder left the neighborhood. : '; Four years later a priest of Bcurge returning from Rome, reported that he had met with this same community of Gypsies encamped in the neighborhood of SIcnne,' that he had learned that the couple driven from the tribe when at Bourges were ia reality what were called, the king and queen that their apparent expulsion, was a ruse to di-: vert suspicion from the other members of the band, and that the couple ex pelled were, In reality, the abductors of young De Salntalne. 'At thla juncture Mme. de Salntalne died; ten days later the Count de B demanded letters of administra tion upon the estate 6f the inisband and wife, the Count agreeing to card for thei property, while enjoying the Income, until the fate of young De Saintaine should be definitely festal llshed. Other relatives opposed this application, but the influence bi the? Count do B at court was sd for midable that he was placed in possetU slon of the great wealtH. The affair slumbered for several years, when one day in 1081 Mme. de Malntenon, who was caring in secret for the children of Mme. de Montes pon, was surprised to see tbe Duke du Maine, the latter's eldest son, enter her room leading by the band a band some lad of about his own age, clothed in rags. Following them was a young Gypsy woman 18 or 20 years old, who explained that the Count de B had bribed her father and mother to kidnap the lad. Both of her parents had died at Venire, but before dying they had made deposition before the Venetian authorities, to that effect. Moreover, she had with her two letters written by. the Count de B to her father, arranging with him that their tribe should make way with young De Sain taine. Nothing could give Mme. de Maln tenon more pleasure than these reve lations. It enabled her to annoy the Duchess of Orleans, a bitter enemy, and the special protectress of the Count de B . She made this affair her own; she spoke to the king in re lation to It and Inquiries were Imme diately Instituted to disentangle the plot. The Identity of young De Saln talne was established without trouble, and tho Count de B was forced to relinquish the riches he had come to regard as bis beyond possibility of alienation. All that, saved him from the gallows was the powerful protec tion of the Duke of Orleans. On account of the part this band of Gypsies had taken in the abduction of young De Salntalne, In July, 1682, Louis XIV. Issued the severe edict which he made applicable to evory one of the race as If all were concerned In tho particular crime. New York Sun. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Korean widows are not allowed to remarry. There are only alout ninety dally papers In Russia. The Sandwich islander's alphabet has only twelve letters. Alaska is more than five hundred and fifty times the area of Rhode Island. The City cf Glasgow makes J7600 a year profit out of waste paper collected In the streets. The cost of the English navy amounts to $22 a year for every fam ily In Great Britain. Iowa is about to enact a law making It Is a misdemeanor for an able-bodied man who is able to work to refuse a job. The children of Spanish resldonts- in Mexico are less energetic than their parents, and the change becomes more noticeable with every generation. Manchester, England, sacrifices from 12,000 to 16,000 every year by de clining to have advertisements on its cars, which are operated by the city. Of this year's graduating class at Yale, numbering 313, 112 will go Into business, 85 into law, 24 into medicine, 25 Into teaching, 9 Into the ministry, and 26 will do Bpecial work. Spruce gum is. becoming scarce and harder to get In the Maine woods, and school girls who chew that sort will have to pay mere for It hereafter. The gum now costs tl .35 a pound. Abyssinia produces the finest ostrich feathers, the price there being $1.44 to $2.31 per doien for the best white, 96 cents to $1.93 a dozen for black, and half as much for gray feathers. An Arabian woman who is in mourn ing for a near relative abstains from drinking milk 'for eight dayB, on the theory that tbe color of the liquid does not harmonize with her mental form. In Dresden, Germany, there has been established a school for locomotive ap prentices who will be given an appor tnnlty for special study on three even ings In the week and on Sunday morn ings. Canoeing Vacations. To Mie uninitiated- the canoe Is a dangerous craft, to be spoken of with bated breath; and yet for ordinary wa ter but little experience la needed, cou pled, of course, with care and an or dinary amount of common sense. When rapids are to be encountered It is a dif ferent, story, and only after consid erable experience should a loaded ca noe be taken throush heavy water, A 16-foot boat will carry three per sons and a fairly large outfit. Most people carry so many unnecessary things that their trip Is ruined by the slowness of their progress and tbe loads that must be carried, to say nothing of the everlasting packing and unpacking which, unless propei ly man aged, Is, even with light loads, the bugaboo of camping. Country Life lx America. . i . Rare Fruit of 8ulu. In the island of Sulu grews the du rian, which la about the 'Site of a muskmelon. Its - exterior presents somewhat the appearance of a chest nut burr, being- prickly and tough; within the fruit is white and cheese like, and owing to this peculiarity th American soldiers dubbed it "vegef table lln.burger," The mangosteen ia another Of the rare fruits of the Island. It la. the size of an average orange, chocolate colored, and has a very brit tle skin. Inside four white sections contain a colorless liquid. This Is the rarest fruit known, and the only one. go it Is claimed, that Queen Victoria ever tasted, there being no way of pre serving the fruit for a sufficient period after plucking to permit of shipping It to any distance. A SERMON FOR SUNDA1 Strong discourse eNtitlfo, 4 cod's Love for Man. tho Revi hr; fcobtrt llogeH Deliver a ' fchonzlitrnl stad fconvinMtat; AddrttM Win Vi to' Ahjdre' SelSshtl.it Muf Anlinallsrti-Ciirlsi tile idutii , , Brooklts, N, ir-e-Sunda morning thi Rev. Dr. Robert Roger, rector bf the Church of the Good Shepherd; preached t thoughtful and convincing termori oil "God's Love For Mm." The texts wertj front John iii:10: "God so loved the world that He gars Hit only begotten Son, that whoso be.ievrth on Him, might not perish, but have iverlaeting life," and Mark ix:24: "Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbe lief." Dr. Rogers uid among other things: I begin our thought this morning with the great declaration of the beloved A pot tle John who, better than any other of Christ's disciples, understood .the vital meaning underlying the Mutters life. Jeaut was to John a distinct personality with whom he was acquainted, a man among men, but He was more than thit, He was also at the tame time the lore of God in carnate in thit Man's nature, to that He represented the nature of tiod, and Hit feeling and desires tnd purposes toward mankind. God loved the world. Now, af ter beginning with thit thought, I have taken another terse from Scripture, to in dicate man'a attitude of mind toward Johns declaration, "Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief." John's statement is a condensed but very complete outline of what the" Cbrie tian religion aims to teach men. It it tin message of the Christian Church that Jeaut Christ is the personal demonstration of Uod't love for man, The life and worde of Jrsua art the illustrations of how God loves and liovv He nets toward man, and nls3 what (iod dr.. i res that man shall think tnd do toward God and toward hit fellow man. Now this kind of thinking tends ut into the acknowledgment of the supernatural. n orings ut to tne admission that our Di vine Father loves man, and teaches him, and guides him by laws and standards which He revealt to man according to hit needs. lu other words, the Christian re ligion stands for the presence of God in this life w are now living, and that He has help to give to man, and demands to make nf man. There are countless men and women who believe implicitly in this statement of God's presence ruling over life, and who live in their belief, offering up themselvet to divine guidance, regretting their sina and imploring pardon in perfect faith that it will be granted. There are, on the other hand, some perhaps, who any they have no belief in the divine and spiritual, and who would place themselvet outside of the declarations of the Christian religion, but I believe this number to be few and grow ing smaller every day, as the fuller vision of th$ world and its rich spiritual meaning dawns upon their intelligence. But there it another large class with whom I am apecially concerned, who believe and yet do not believe. They would not deny the Christian faith, neither are they readv to give their full allegiance to it. There'it a multitude of such people among our men and women, and may we not ask seriously why is this the rase? Is it because Christ a teaching and His life ore to hard to be un derstood thot spiritual things can make no derstood, Are some kinds so constituted naturally that spiritual things can make no effective appeol to them? If we rere for a moment to admit this it would destroy the greatest power which we believe inherent in Christ'c religion, namely, that to every man, bond or free, black or yellow, barbarian or Scythian, Jew or Gentile, learned or unlearned, rich or poor, it has the power of entering into his heart and transforming his life. There is no respect of persons with God. I grant you that Christ found that there were cer tain place where even He could not pre sent His message with conviction, but tin cause of His failure was the hardness of men't heartt and not the difficulty of comprehending His gospel, and this tame reason will be found to hold good in these days. Atheism is no longer supposed to be a necessary adjunct of the scientist; but on the contrary, the men who are opening the widest visions of new truth to the world in these dayt and teaching the profoundest lessons to mankind are men who are sin cere believers in the message of God't pretence at revealed by Jesut Christ, or at least are able to say with earnestness, 'Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief." hen we come to consider our own lives and those of the ordinary men and women around about whom we can understand, what is it that prevents the message of Jesus Christ from having the effect upon us all that it ought to have? ,' There hat been for the past few yeara a warning sounded that men are not attend ing our Christian churches, and the rea sons are being given in various wayt. Cler-gyre- are uninteresting; churches are cold, uninspiring placet; doctrines are anti qutted and illiberal and meaningless to man in the itniggle for life. Perhaps ..litre is iriuu m ah inese statements; it It not difficult for even a ttupid man to find a plautible excuse for -anything he cares to do, or to leave undone. Parents who are bringing up children, teachers who are educating them, understand the readiness of plautible excuses. . twi Time excuses, -rrnmcver given, are met the real reasons why tome men dn not attend church. Let me tav, fiitt, that 1 believe it it open to demonstration that a larger number of men are interested in the work of the church and attending ita services and obeying ita inspirations than at any other time in history. And what u more important, they are attending churchet willingly without the compulsion Of ancient timet when heaven and hell were regarded at in the tola power of the church, and men were afraid to absent themselves. Our Y. M. 0. A.'s were never to prosperous The religions nature of our Jpllege ttudents waa never more genuine than in our own dayt, Bat to apeak of 'those who are not at tending our churches, ia it not because they have never had a true vision pf the Vital reality and practicability of Christ's mettaget? The great majority of men in this country, at leaat, are nominal Chris tian!. They send their children to Sunday school, they like to have their wives and sitter in anion- with th church, sad if asked whether they themselvet believe in the teachings of Christ and His Church, would either evade the question or else tay they could follow Christian precepts with out attending chnrcb, ' It not the fault of lack of attendance on Christian worship due rather to the manner of life we are living than to a definite unbelief -in the virtu of tbe Christian religion? They are so much absorbed in the struggle for Sioney that they have neither time nor etir to set anything els. Every one ia banting for it, the business man,th pol wtMt sim fuiettionw man. tn oroorer, th coachman, the waiter, tn conductor, th porter, th barber, the messenger, th clergyman who it paid for burialt and bap tism, the corporation. This one eras setma to lesv no part of American so ciety intact, rich, and poor, high and low, f?ikt, an infected with thit disease, which is sapping all th spiritual and moral en ergy of th generation. . v ?'he church is1 not th only place from ich such men and women absent them selves. Our lecture on history and travel, and science and art are giving up their business became th try hat gon forth that men will not attend lecture. Th literature that appeals to people it not that which lift th mind and heart to high thoughts, but th type et flimsy novel that simply entertain. - ' ' Tn Church of Christ it no longer a com fortable place in which the unrepentant tinner can tit. Religion has become much mere of s reality to every man. It fills a mora sacred plac. It it not regarded in these day simply a combination of rites and ceremonies, performed in a special building, but religion ia known by all men to be oo-orslinat and eo-extentiv with lift and the man who willingly lives tintullv and in disregard of Christ's atandsrd will not add to hia degradation by playing th hypocrite and impostor. Thit meant that in the minds of irreligious men there it a growing respect for religkia? 4d a sound regard for th church 'even" among those who do not attend. I say that it it the life which th age it calling on men to live (iiat It freakening the: religious life and faith of men, ilea CamiOt serve (lad and , inammori it true forever. Cart thit (vil btf Overcome and how? I believe that it can, and the way td overcoats It it to satisfy I men ttiit w are living in Moral and tpir' itual orld irt Which God is present and I in which He makes His demands, Profes- 1 tor James, of Harvard, speaks of the uni versality of religious experience opening t up a new wuriu vi nica science lias uuneno scoffed at,- but which must be recognised i if we know by bur own experience that I there it t realm of (houghtj flf love, of I conscience; 6f t-ightediisnessi toward Which thing our heartt yearn. . We know MoiS than ever the laws of tliis department tit life, how; under Godj beneficctice . and growth and power are tdded td life by ' their obedience, and how injury and weak- nest and suffering are the resultants ol disobedience to tlie individual and to the nation and the race. Men believe in these things, because they tee them. If they do not believe in their power at you and I, dear Christian frienue do, it it because they have been hindered by other things fromjooking at them seriously enough. If they can be turned from the erase uf the a-c, which is selfishness, they will be able to see and appreciate the workings of this real kincdom of love and Christ in our midst, if the church it to help men it must open its doors and heart to such men. It must not refuse their admission or re tard them by insulting them when they come. If a man it looking for righteous ness and anxious to eovern his life accord ing to that inspiration, the church ought to be ready to give to such no honest man all e is ready and wiIudi to receive. Let us. not be aftnid ol Mir sacraments being desecrated. Aim . nit come to them unlvss they really wk-iI Ih-iu and believe in ihctn. We ai.; too much of men about what tiny lieiieve or do not believe. The working and living Church of Christ is not that which shall only have it place and a welcome for those who are fully equipped witti faith in all its sacred dootrinei, but a church which, like Christ, shall draw all men unto it and gradually, by its spiritual low and care, nourish men into its highest privilege and possessions. Ir men can believe Hoim.liliig of Christ's revelation of Cod, if they can say, "Lord, 1 believe," it becomes then the part of every Christian as an individual and of all Christians as an organisation to help their Unbelief until men can enter into the ful ness of Hit message and take for their in spiration in life, "God so loved tile world tatt He gave Hit only begotten Son, that whijso bcTieveth on Him might not perish, but have everlasting life. Thit it the Christian'i message of Gad's presence among us, God loving men, inspiring and guiding them toward His own ideal of per lectness. This it the opening of the gates of salvation to men, from selfishness and aninialisin, into the happiness and encour agement of knowing that we are the sons of God, for God hath not called us to un cle&nness, but to holiness. When the churches of Christ take this attitude to ward men and men shall learn that the ministration of the church is toward help ing them out of their sins and mistakes, rather than in s constant condemnation of their faults, I believe they will be found within its walls, ready to be helped and led toward a larger knowledge of God aud Hi love. Doing Ose'i Besl. We should not only seek to do our hey but also to do the but that can lie done. No man can tell when he has done his best. The best should always be the high est reach possible. The striving f ir exrel lence ut not alone for the nulic of the life it makes possible. No work should ever be regarded as "good enough" if it could be made better. It was said of Lord llroughsin that such was his love of excel lence that, "if bis station in life had been only that of a bootblai-k, he would never have rested satisfied until he had become the best bootblack in Kngland." It is no wonder, remarks the Baptist Union, that lie was one of the best men in the empire. In seeking to do his best, ever aiming at excellence, he was gradually making him self one of the best men. And after all, tho great purpose of life is only achieved when one not only does his best, but is bit bett. . Kellglout Thought. You cannot begin anything you nevei did. Organization, genesis, is God. Camp bell Morgan. When a man thinks he it the whole church he is apt to ignore the Head of the Church. Kam t Horn. Contentment is sunlight, discontentment it starlight, malconteiitment it night. United l'retbyterian. A man does not have to go to heaven by freight simply because he cannot express himself in meeting. Kam's Horn. When the Christian nt.es above such tmall details as telling the truth and deal ing honestly God is going to let him drop hard. Kami Horn. No one need go down to eternal death who it able to turn around and go tlie other way, for the other way leads to eter nal life. United Presbyterian. Christian Submission. A Missionary in India-, Rev. W. P. Byers, tells thit story, which illustrntes that the gospel carries its comfort in dis tress to the convert in India as it doc in thit country. "One of our older Bengali boys, whom we were counting on to help us in the fu ture, was carried off in a few hours by a violent fever. Hit poor father had strug gled to give hit boy every chance to learn, hoping he would become a Christian work er. But the Master taw fit to take him for higher service in the kingdom above. When this father was told that hia ton had passed away he bowed hit head in sub mission worthy of any Christian in any country, at he eaid: 'The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord." Ram't Horn. Slamhood. Manhood hat two or three qualities. First, telf-aisertion, and a good many men never get beyond that they bccopie bul lies or egotists. They always get their way, ride rough ehod over every man. I do not tay -self-assertion it to be de ttroyed, it is to be directed, and that is the second quality, self direction. That 1 power belongs to every man. God Him self does not invade or destroy it. lit powers of self-assertion and self-direction reach their climax in self surrender to the higheet.-B.ev. W. T. McDowell, New York City. . , . ;.,, A With lo be free from narrowness; To respond to the nearest need. To help all: To magnify the good in the meaneat, Xo minimii with love apparent faults It oinert; To oive God His oDnortunitv in me- (To further Hit plan for the world He lovt; Let this be my with. -W. P. Lenders. Out of Pockjt But (lot Even. I ' A 'Squire not a great t tstance from taws, canteens and what are appar here wat visited by a client, 1 who pro-' ently bound books, but used to contain tested that a liveryman had "shaved" whiskey, betray the masculine, aim dreadfully, and he wanted to 1 The prayers of tome fair penitent come up to him. :$.;':; : ; ; v I were possibly hindered for want of the 'I asked him," explained the client, "tlw charge for a team to Bo to Ded- ham. He replied 11. I ordered the team, and on my return offered In payment II; he Insisted on another dollar for coming back, tad made me . the deftness with which it It possible pay it."'; a V--..V.,. -;. 'i-1- for "Uncle Sam" to handle the fra - The 'Squire gave htm legal advice, gtle. A fine parasol pictures "my which follow ; Going to tte livery. lady" ' setting out for m promen man, he asked: "How much will you de, while a tangle of umbrellas may charge for a team to Salem T" ', 1 stand for quickened consciences strlv- "Five dollars,? replied tho stable Ing , to rtturn those they have bor owner. , - ' . --,:. ( I rowed or taken. - . ; "Harness Mm up!" The client went There are musical Instruments of to Salem and returned by railroad, I ; iort Ma varieties, and one went to tbe stabler, laying: "Hero't ' cuerles whose angers may have drawn your $5." I the wheeiy "botes from th accordion, "Where's my team?" asked the liv- w perchance with the guitar sighed eryman, in surprise, , his soul out beneath the window of "At Salem," answered the-client. nls ,ov- " , . , "I only hired tbe team to go to Sa lem." Philadelphia, I'ubllii Let!ir. , DEAD LETTER OFFICE; THIBTY THOUSAND MISSIVES A YEAR FAIL TO ARRIVE. A Department of thjs Postoffice at Washington WheriTher Is a Blending ,of Joy and borrow Some Curious Articles Found in tlie Mails. How rarely a letter miscarries when its writer has ordinary Intelligence and U familiar with the conventions which pertain to postal transmission In the United tates! If tbe person to Whom the letter is sent has moved, with little delay his letter pursues him. If carelessness by the sender confounds numbers, .streets, counties, towns, even States, with what Infinite paing are themlstali8 corrected by the postal clerks! Yet, with nil this care more than 30,000 unclaimed letters and parcels daily find their way to the Dead Letter office at Washington. Visiting the fine new postoffire structure in Washington, one leaves the ground floor by nn elevator for the Dead Letter office. Left below are hopes that are fat being carried to fruition; approaching are those which have fa,e(1 of unot yet hopciessiy failed, for passing down the corridor of the Dead Letter office, watching the more than a hundred clerks as they rai'.dly tear the wrapper from letter, from paper, from parcel, one feels that, though sacred privacy bo invad ed, an ultimate Joy may possibly suc ceed It. And not alvayB la this pri vacy Invaded, for, while more than 8, 300,000 letters and parcels were opened during the year Just passed, 1,000,000 were delivered unopened to the own ers, 800,000 of them to foreign coun tries. No longer, as formerly. Is thero a distinctive dead letter rmi3eum. lint some of the curious articles of Intcre.u found In the mallH are Included In th? general postal museum, on tho ground floor of the building. The first thing which tho visitor en counters Is the pathetic case of sol diers' photographs. As ho turns leaf by loaf of It he fancies the weary wait ing at the home fireside for the face of the soldier boy who never rame; alas, many times the lad himself found sep ulchre on the battlefield or died in the hospital, and this priceless me mento would so have comforted the mourning hearts who perchance wait ed long and hopelessly his coming. The faces are faded, the paper yellow with age, of a style and fashion long passed away, strange In feature to those who look on them now. yet there was a time when the lovenght frmij,each pic tured eye was mirrored In some other. From the corridor, Illustrative of mall transportation from the earliest days when it was undertaken, and its methods in the most remote and Inac cessible parts do duty for the "express mall," one enters a room consecrated mostly to the unique and curious col lection selected from the Dead Letter office. In the glass cases which contain the ehiblt the pathetic and tho ridiculous touch other, and one may at the same moment be moved to smiles or tears, while a shiver of horror creeps over him at the sight of an "Infernal ma chine" fortunately unclaimed or a dy namite bomb not less infernal. Balls, bullets and various mementos of war are numerous, and Borne of the stilettos and other side arms of beau tiful workmanship. Near by there is a pair of handcuffs, which perchance might tell a story. The reptile world, among other yarl eties, Is represented by a rattlesnake, a horned toad, a tarantula and numer ous crocodiles, mostly alive when sent. There are a Jawbone, possibly of an ass, with all its teeth firm set, and sev eral sets of false teeth, for which the corresponding' gums have perchance worn themselves out with waiting; a skull, white and grinning, while its fellow members are dust; an Indian's head, Indian moccaslons, and many pairs of baby shoes, shaped by the lit tle feet which have worn them, and which, alas, failed to tell their little tender-story to an absent father. . A complete layette suggests the lov ing thought which sent a welcome to some expected baby guest, with dolls of all races and varieties, from Chi nese to walnut, together with toys of many descriptions. Here are the wedding cake which some bride had to -do without, a large box of raisins which might have en abled some other bride to make her own cake, and boxes of candy "sweets" which never reached "the sweet." There are' fine Ivory carvings anil wooden ones, running the gamut from a circle comb to the "Lion of Lu cerne." There are South African gems of various settings; watches, lockets, teals, chains, rings, charms and hair Jewelry. Faces have here for years looked from quaint old Ivory miniatures, with hope of a recognition which has never come one of a Chinese girl, so far from home that she could scarcely ex pect It Daguerreotypes, fadeless on their silver plates, have teen them selves superseded by newer and more popular methods of the sun's printing perhaps the face itself yas long ago superseded by a fairer. , Toilet . sets, hairpins, thimbles, needles, shears and a wire bustle are feminine In quality, while razors, rotary which never reached Ita des tlnation. A tea kettle, a aet of teaspoons and .china cups suggest afternoon tea," an unbroken lamp chimney testifies to in tne lower pari oi one oi me cases It a promiscuous Jumble of everything from a wooden sabot to a finely cured ham, soldier equipments predominat ing. Of curious letters there are many, brith In contents and superscriptions, but strangest of all is a love missive written on a board one by three feet In dimensions. "Dick," the writer, waa Inspired to this eccentricity while attending a "board" meeting, and wrote to "Hattlo," reproaching her for her silence. In duo course of time "Hattie" was discovered and notified by the Dead Letter official that such a billet dou awaited her, with 95 cents, due In extra postage. This she de clined to pay, saying that she bad no use for "lumber" nor for "Dick." So some of the romances and the trage dies of life leave in this little room their record, Interesting In the "touch of nature which makes the whole world kin:" for who at some hour of his life has not been swayed by tho different emotions which through these relics of a bygone day have striven for expression? What mysteries in the unopened let ter, how potential for joy, for sorrow; how freighted with happiness or mis ery, and how far reaching lu Its re sults! The spoken word may be for gotten by him who titters It. and fade from the memory of him who hears: written, It is freighted with a power before which cvon judge and Jury bow. "What might have been" but for these mischances of the Dead Letter office no one can say; if by them joy has been frustrated, tragedy has been averted, and so the sum of human hap piness may not have been diminished as much as would appear. New York Tribune. HASHEESH IN EGYPT. Many Ways in Which the Potent Drug Is Smuggled. Tho Ksyptian is satisfying his pas sion for the dream giving hasheesh seeks to baffle the Knglish customs of ficers In manv odd wars. At Alexan dria there is a veritablo museum, whore are stored pianos, plcturo frames, biscuit boxes, table legs, books, demijohns and refrigerators. In all these articles smugglers had stored hasheesh. Despite the vigilance of the English officials, it is estimated that not more than one-tenth of the baneful drug imporied into Egypt is discov ered. An Egyptian smoker of hasheesh is even a more helpless slavo than the Chinese opium fiend. He knows that In the end he will become a madman, yet he rushes toward the awful goal with unrelaxed speed. With the strange exaltation which first comes to tho smoker, he feels himself float ing from cloud to cloud, or alighting ifr-te gardens of palaces, all his own; or swtmmlng with mermaids through the opalescBot depths of the sea. And when the braTit-firows sluggish he be lieves that be can woo back his fond- est dreams with a lTttte-TlWW-flerent" dose. Most of the hasheesh which Egypt consumes conies from Greece. From the husks of hemp seeds and the ten der tops of the hemp plant the Greeks manufacture a greenish powder, whose fumes bring the ecstasy Its victims desire. The profits of those who suc cessfully smuggle the drug Into the an cient land of the Pharaohs are tre mendous. Outside of Egypt hasheesh sells for 50 cents a pound. In the country adjoining the Nile it costs as much as $5. Not long ago a great number i' table legs were unloaded on a wharf at Alexandria, consigned to an Interior point. In unloading the legs into a Nile skiff, a stevedore chanced to break one In two. Before long be was dancing about, stretching his arms over his head, lifting his feet as high as his waist wlla every step, and mut tering: '"Let me have hell, too. I am ruler of heaven; why should not my domain Include hell also?" On examination it was found that about half of the table legs were hol low, and were filled with the green dust of hasheesh, and the stevedore had helped himself liberally from the storehouse he had discovered. There is hardly an article of com merce on which the hasheesh smug gler does not levy In trying to "run" the customs office. The backs of pi anos have been stripped oft to reveal packages of. hasheesh tucked away in various parts of the case so carefully that one might play a Beethoven sym phony without the slightest hint (bat the Instrument was drugged. Jugs formerly proved a favorite" purveyor of the' smuggler's hasheesh. They were made with double tides so that they were In reality narrow bot tles inclosed within wide flanged earth en) sides. The neck of the bottle was the neck of the jug, so that on pulling out the cork one might pour out true liquor yet, on cracking the Jug, one could And the packages of the hash eesh stowed away between the outer and inner walls. Japanese Foods. Rice and dried fish are the uniform food of the Japanese army in cam paigning times. This It the way in' which the rice Is cooked: It It boiled until quite black and glutinous Next It it placed on a ceramic slab, rolled out, and cut Into squares. The squares are then placed In the tun to dry and often turned When hard aa sea biscuit and greatly reduced In weight, they can be stored. A certain number are allowed each day to the soldier. All he has to do ia to break up a square in boiling water and to add the dried Ash. In a few minutes he hat what seema to him a -delicious thick toup. If he cannot procure boil ing water he simply eats hit rice cake dry. In the fruit season he substitutes fruit, when he can obtain It, for the fish. The Japanese soldier, according to M. Plclion, hat muscles like whip cord. It a sure thot, hat an eye. for landmarks and a memory for locality. He can do with three hours' sleep out of the twfnty-four, It cleanly, attends to sanitary Instructions and Is ardent ly patriotic. He costs the state about t cents a day,, and thinks himself well Off.",..: f 'V'.-' ,-;' r-'--- ". Until the last years of the last cen tury Lyons was Europe's chief ailk market. Milan gradually ousted It' from the position, and lu 1902 Us re ceipts werje 87 1-J percent larger than those of Lyons. ICE MADE WITH ICE. Process Which Has Been Under E perlment in Chicago. An experimental plant to attempt to prove the feasibility of what is , termed the "Cook process" of produc ing Ice in easily separable layers la an Ice house was erected at Forty fifth street and tho Lake Shore Rail road tracks, Chicago, last winter, says Ice and Refrigeration. A frame struc ture, 25x56 feet in size and some 32 feet high, was erected, with a floor of boards laid upon a bed of cinders, Riid walls made of pine boards nallud. not very closely, to the Inside sur faces of the 6x8 uprights. The build ing was not completed till the lat ter part of January, and hence It was February before the freezing be gan, and only some four or five layers, tho size of the house, or, say, 150 tons r-f Ice were secured before the thaw ing weather set In the latter part of , that month. In the Cook process small blocks of wood or Ice, say four Inches cube, are set at convenient distances, 22x44 inch centres, for instance, to serve at "sup ports" for the layer of Ice to be made above. Water is then turned on un til these blocks are just covered, and as soon as thfs water has frozen suffi ciently to form a substantial crust of Ice all around, the remaining water Is drawn off. The uppercrust Is thorr flooded with, Hay, ten inches of water and left to freeze. Of course, as soon as a substantial crust of lee has form ed over the top of this body of water in the house another series of blocks is placed on top, flooded with water, allowed to freeze in and the interior water drawn off. thus forming uuc cessive layers of ice, one above the other. The process it a very interest- . ing one. but its success was not en tirely demonstrated. Reading as a Cure for Sickness. One could wish that the Doctor of Medicine occasionally called in tho Doctor of Let I era to cases of mental distress. There Is a tonic quality In , books, properly chosen, which is as beneficent to the mind as change of scene or doses of fiat water. People do not realize that the shortest way ' from the quagmire of the modern unrest is a total forget fulness of self, and few know that the healthiest i nepenthe is to be found in reading. The word disease signifies the nega tion of ease, and most forms of neu rotic sickness are a deliberate effort . on the part of the invalid to make himself uneasy. If doctors were to prescribe a course of Cervantes, or Moliere, or Balzac, or Sterne, or Dickens, or even Shakespeare, and as strictly enjoin thoroughness in thla course, as they would if the treat- ; ment were a matter of diet or medl- ; cine, many of their patients would begin to mend from the first moment hojthese magMnmd given them a forffelTiilu!S8 of seliTTr" TSJjtss""" that Poe declares In the "Raven," "vainly I had sought to borrow from my books surcease of sorrow," but the opinion of the world is ' over- whelmingly against him. Good read- , Ing Is a forgetfulness of cares, and, by the samo token, it is an education -in all those qualities which make life sweet and greatly to be desired. It is tho valetudinarian who most con stantly tolls one, petulantly enough, that he never reads books. London Globe. Fortune Found in a Statuette, - Many old-fashioned French people ' are given to stowing away their pe cuniary possessions in odd nooks and corners, often to the bewilderment of their heirs. A characteristic atory comes from the environs of Paris, , the heroine of the adventure being an old lady wbo expired a few months ago. She had put by a certain amount of money, which she be- queathed to two nephews. One of them waived his rights In favor of his brother, merely asking to be al- lowed to keep a little statuette as a souvenir of their departed relative.' One day the servant of this self-denying Individual happened to break -the statuette, and to the amazement of its owner a lock of hair, a medal lion, and last, not least, a number of one thousand franc bank - notes v dropped out from among the frag ments. He retained these articles as some compensation for the smash ed statuette without mentlonlnigMlm , affair to his brother, but having baT-. occasion shortly afterward to dismiss his servant, she betook herself In hot . ' haste to that gentleman, and related the whole Incident. The owner of the statuette has -been requested to hand over half the sum to his brother, -and has been threatened with a law suit in the event of refusal. London Telegraph. -.-:v To Exploit Victoria Falls. A company has been formed to ex ploit Vivtoria Falls, In the Zambesi, and will build a hydro-electric generat ing station, with the expectation of supplying power to the Waukie coal fields, Buluwayo, the Kwelo, Sebakive and Hartley gold fields, all of which are within 300 miles. The falls are over 400 feet high, and; while the total, amount of energy running to waste at Niagara It 7,000,000 horsepower, tbe corresponding figure for the Vic toria Falls in the wet season Is 35, 000,000. The railway bas now been completed to within 70 miles of tho falls, and wilt reach them before the -nd of March. It "H" Obsolete.. A -well known English essayist re cently declared that the letter "r" la bsolete In England, but Rev. Mark 3tay Parse,"the EngllBh Methodic, who hat been traveling' in the United States, is of a different opinion. Soon fter his arrival In Denver a depuiy sheriff arrested him. He asked t tee the warrant, which proved to 1 for Mark Pease. The landlord ti s tilled to the "r." and Incidentally to hit gnosf's standing, and the iun. difficulty was cleared up. ' .:! Only Partly True. A Parisian modiste says that T'o makes the gowns, but the women America furnish the- flctire. In (' country it Is generally believed t the American papa or husband ! ttlRhea the figure for those f-ot -l'lilladelrMa North Amerinin.