PRESS, VOLUME XX. FRANKLIN. N. CL WEDNESDAY. MAY 24, 1905. MJMIJEK 21 TKS FRANKLIN THE OLD WAY. By Mathew London, June 23. The brig Clio, from Zanzibar, brings intelligence whicflif true, will be of deep Import to the members ot the Geographical society. The news concerns Arthur Marquand, who went out to Africa with the Jarvis Hook expedition ten years ago, was lost in the jungle and has never been heard from Blnce. The Clio's captain declares that Marquand has been held in captivity by a tribe of Somalia and succeeded not long since in escaping. Capt Davidson's in formation comes through several hands, but as near as can be made out Marquand, If it was he, made his way to the coast and constructed a rude craft, on which he fearlessly embarked amid the breakers and was picked up by some vessel, name and destination unknown. Of course a report of this sort is very vague, and the only rea son for supposing the man to be Mar quand is that this person was a white man and came from a point somewhere near the scene of Marquand's disap pearance. The arrival of ships from Southeast Africa at both English and American ports will be attended with Onustial interest during the next few Weeks. Arthur Marquand was a native of Massachusetts and was the youngest Oiember of the Jarvis Hook expedition, being only twenty-three when he sailed with It. it will be remembered that the expedition returned four years later with some important data for the Geographical society and with the loss of five men out of the original sixteen, four of thein by fever and one this Marquand by disappearance. The foregoing item, printed among the foreign dispatches in a Boston pa per, was read with varying degrees of intorest by those under whose notice it cams. But as it was not tucked away at the bottom of the column, seemingly in the capacity of a "filler," it did not make a very deep lmpre33lon on the general public. But there was one home where it was read with ejes that seemed to devour the words as a famished man devours bread. This homo was a Btately man sion in a Massachusetts town ; the reader was a woman past her youth, but still beautiful. Around her were all the accessories of comfort and lux ury that wealth could supply; but her gown was somlxT and on her face, faintly perceptible even through Its lines of beauty, were traces of suffer ing. . She was sitting at a dainty breakfast table. She had nicked ud the naper languidly as if impelled to glance custom rather than doirrreT It Pure3tctaethiK.8he had the item already quoted. , When she had read it through with bosom heaving and fingers that had suddenly become so nervous that the sheet slipped from them and fell with a rattling of paper to the floor, her lips partod and she gave one cry: "Arthur!" Her companion at the table "was a woman several years younger than her self. While waiting for the hostess to give the signal to rise she had been idly toying with her coffee spoon and watching two coquetting robins through the window. Now she rose hastily and ran around to kneel beside her friend and peer with terror-stricken eyes Into the face that had grown suddenly pale. to ltT What has happened?" The other opened her eyes, stretched out her arms, and as the younger wom an allowed herself to be folded into their embrace for an instant, the first exclaimed: "Oh," Arthur is alive. I know it is he. I always knew that he was not dead, that he would come back!" Rose Marquand leaned over and picked up the newspaper. Her hands were trembling. She could not find the place. Then she gave it up and folding Owendolin in her arms once more pro ceeded to laugh and cry In the fashion most women have when their emotions are deeply roused. For Rose was Arthur Marquand's wife, true to him during all these years iOf separation and silence, a silence that perchance some women would have construed as synonymous with death. ', But Gwendoline eyes were not blind ed by lovellght. Rose was her oldest friend; they had been schoolgirls to gether, and Bhe had recently come to make a long visit to the lonely woman who had refused to be wholly com forted for her loss. Now, when Gwen dolln had read the Item and knew the very slender basis on which the hope of Arthur's return rested, she felt that In some way she must contrive to pre vent the wire from building too lofty a superstructure on this frail foundation. But she might as well have attempt ed to extinguish the source of the sun shine that was pouring in at the win dow. Rose was already excitedly turn ing the paper this way and that In search of the marine news. "Look, look here, Gwen!" she tried after a moment, pointing triumphantly to a single line In diminutive type, It was under the beading "Port ot New York" and read simply: - "Bark Juno (Ba.), Stevens, Zanzi bar, April 11, with Ivory to C F. Grote; teasel to master." "Don't, you see, Owen!"" cried the happy woman. "He may have come on the Juno. I may gel a telegram any minute. He may be here this very day. Quick, Gwen, And a time table; In the library or up In my room, any ' where, somewhere, I must see what Is the first train he could take to bring him here." By this time Owendolin herself be gan to be .Infected with hope. Oh, If It could only be true, she thought! Rose's life had seemed so incomplete; and her womanhood had budded with promise of such perfect happiness and Joy.' For if ever a love match was made It was that between Rose Gray son and Arthur Marquand. Rose lived with her parents in this very home, the most Imposing In the townr where Arthur bad come as a. college boy and White, Jr. whence he had gone away, at the end of four years, on his wedding journey. Gwen recalled now-as she hurried from room to room In search of that time table, how stern his father had been with him for his haste, a stern ness that, more than anything else, had fired Arthur with the determl tlon and show the world that it was not all of life to do simply the bidding of the woman be loved. For Rose had bitterly opposed his going. And this fact had added poignancy to her grief the memory that she may have part ed with him without , giving him a heartfelt "Godspeed" tor his journey. His disappearance she liad come to lool: upon as her punishment At last the time table was found, and the afternoon was spent by the two in poring over it and driving back and forth to the station to see if any tele gram bad come. But even the absenco of messages inspired Rose with re newed hope. She was possessed with a strange, unaccountable premonition that she would see her husband that day. "He wants to surprise me," she told Gwen. ' "He will be here on that last train tonight. The ship may have been detained at Quarantine, you know. Oh, my dear, my dear, I am so happy!" Owendolin trembled for her. What conseauences might not disannolnt- ment bring? They had already sefftT dispatches to "Captain Stevens" and "C. F. Grote," asking If Arthur Mar quand had come on the Juno. But there was still no reply to either. And yet this .diminished not one whit Rose's confidence. "There is flo answer," she said, "be cause we bad nothing but the names to which to send messages. Arthur will come on the nine-twenty tonight" Owendolin went with her to the sta tion in the carriage to meet the train, they waited for fifteen minutes beyond the time, then the the station agent came out and told them a freight wreck on the road would delay the express probably till past midnight I sJiaJl slt--up-tll!.bj-comcsosetlrrlTfeTher as sherBfltod-tat it was announced, when they had reached home again. "Then let me stay with you," ploaded Gwendolln "at least till you hear him coming." "Well, you may stay a little while, Gwen. Then I shall send you to bed, and let the servants go, too. It It will be like the old days to meet him here In this room where we used to sUand talk uefpre we knew It was love tftTtTTIrew usnrtach. other. I suppose, though, he will be, greatly changed outwardly. Think of that captivity among savages! Oh, Arthur, my husband, what you must have suf fered! But it will all be made up to you now. Hark, what Is that, Gwen?" "Nothing, Rose, but rain. Didn't you notice the clouds as we drove home?" "Thon I must havo John go back wita the carriage, and I can go with him." "No, no, dear," entreated Gwendolln. "It's only a shower. See, the moon is out, again;" and she went to the win dow and flung open the shutters. "Beautiful!" murmured Rose, as she came over to stand beside her. "Go to bed now, Gwen. This Is just the sort of night it was when Arthur told me he loved me. There, I will turn out the lamp and have the moonlight for company. Let them all go to bed. I will wait for Arth-ir here." With many misgivings Gwendolln obeyed. Rose had reached a state where she dared nqt cross her. But what would the morning see? "If Arthur had come on that Bhlp Rose would surely have heard of It by this time," Gwendolln told herself; and when she reached her room she did not prepare for bed, but took up a book, wbich she did not open, and sat down to think and listen and plan. When Qwendolin had gone Rose walked back to the window, and lean ing her head against one of the heavy curtains, looked out over the smooth lawn towards the gateway. AH was still, save for i a faint drip of water from the piazza roof. The odor of roses was borne In from the bush just outside; the moonlight, stealing in with it, seemed to revel in the luxuriousness of the apartment It had found. Ten strokes from the tall clock In the cor ner caused the figure In the window to start suddenly and then to give a little sigh, as another searching glance over lawn and graveled driveway failed to reveal the longed for apparition, She left the window and walked slowly back to a large easy chair near the center table. (She sank into this, and with her eyes on the clock lUtened and waited. The big clock ticked the minutes away, otherwise there Is naught to dis turb the brooding quiet of the night Suddenly the stillness Is shattered by the whistle of a locomotive. The woman who has so patiently waited starts up with a tremor running through her nerves. "He will be here In a few minutes now," Bhe tells herself,- and wonders that she has the calmness to frame a connected thought She forces herself to sit still for five minutes longer, then rises and hurries out' Into the hall to open the front door. But just as she reaches It she hears a sound in the room she haa left. Turning quickly she sees a figure framed by the library window. The shutters are still standing open to let the moonlight In. "It .Is Arthur," Is her instant thought. "He has corns In the old way to sun prise me." " A few quick steps take her back into the library. A low, glad cry of "Ar thur!" escapes her lips. She Is about to fling herself into his arms, when he makes a dash forward and seizes her wrist in a grip of Iron. , ' "One whimper and " The cold barrel of a revolver against her fore head finishes the sentence. The voice tails on the woman's heart like the knell of doom not for the threat which the words convey, but for the hopes deceived which It emphasizes. It is not Arthur! In an Instant the whole fabric ot her fond imagining falls In ruins "at her feet Her husband Is not coming back to her; he does not live; it is all a de lusion for which this rude awakening Is but a fitting climax! , ' She opens her lips to cry out, not for aid, but in very agony of disap pointment But before a sound can come forth a hand Is placed. over her mouth, the grasp in which Is held tightens and the same brutal voice bids her be silent or die. But Rose Is not afraid ot death. In deed, what has she to live for now? How can she steel herself once more to endure existence without him who was its end and aim to her? If this hateful hand were only once removed she would scream out In very defiance of Its owner. Then he would kill her, and then there would be no more dis appointment for her All these thoughts flashed through Rose Marquand's brain in a second ot time. Then she began to struggle with all the strength of one made des perate.' One hand was necessary to keep her mute, the man was hampered In his ability to hold her, and In an in stant later she-writhed away from the palm across her lips. One piercing shout she sent up, but the robber's other was still about her, the arm that held the pistol. She saw this presented now at her forehead, as she fell crouching on the floor; saw in the moonlight the look of demoniacal determination with which the man placed his finger on the trigger. But she thought of Arthur and felt no fear." Then there was a report, a flashing of something that was not smoke nor fire, before her eyes, a rush of people into the room, lights, and Arthur bending over her, really Arthur this time, look not so very unlike his old self. "And is this heaven, dear?" she whispered, from the shelter of his arms. "No, Rose, not with such as that so near at hand," he replied, with a glance at the form of the burglar lying on the floor, with the coachman and gardener binding him to helplessness. "Then you did come on the Jujo," Rose went on. "You wanted to sur prise me, and if" She shuddered and would have burled her face in her hands, but Ar thur took it tenderly between both of his, and a sweeter happiness than ever her husband who had come old way," after all, Just In knock the villain's pistol up her life, thus making it his reservedly even than of yore, QUAINT AND CURIO It Is said that over $1,000,01 of diamonds are stolen from mond mines in South Afrl year. A parade was nila, and among the civic bodies 'that marched were the official rat catchers. They all carried their rat traps In their hands. There Is a belief among the South Sea islanders that no man can enter paradise who has lost a limb. For this reason It sometimes happens that a man will choose to die rather than submit to amputation. The Krupp company at Essen, Ger many, Is making field guns of paper now, and it is said that they are about half the weight of the steel guns, and are nearly as powerful, and have nearly the same length of life.' After many years of trials the Intro duction ot rubber In a commercial sense has been established in Hawaii. Six years ago a rubber plantation was started at Nahlku, but little had been heard of the venture until recently. Now the trees have been found In a condition to produce rubber, and the work of gathering sap probably will soon begin. A now vegetable has been introduced into France by M. Labergerie, and M. G. Bonnier has reported on It to the Academy of Science. It is a species of wild potato which grows where there is plenty ot moisture, while the ordi nary potato does better in dry soil. The plant is a native of Uruguay, and the species which M. Labergerie Is cul tivating is known as the Solanum Oommetanl, and will yield more than ninety thousand pounds an acre on ground which suits it Richard Strutt a son ot Lord Ray leigh, has invented a clock that will run for two thousand years. The mo tive power is a small piece of gold leaf, which Is electrified by means of a very small quantity of radium salt' The gold leaf bends away from the metal substance and keeps moving under this Influence until It touches the side of the containing vessel. At the mo ment of contact it loses Its electrical charge and then Springs back and 1s again electrified, and the process is re peated. It Is thought that a thorough ly reliable clock could be made with the use of radium salt for $1000. Tyranny Comes High, i All told, Russia has 06 grand dukes, counting the members of the imperial family; the czar's uncles and brothers receive an annual pension of 4,000,0v rubles each. " From the day of his birth a grand duke's ctrild becomes entitled to an annual pension 1,000,000 rubles If a boy, 600,000 rubles lfagtrl. The rev enue ot the existing grand dukes ex empt from all taxation amounts to a grand total of fourteen millions. To nationalize the country would mean the wiping out of the , entire debt of Russia and relieve the country of all taxation for a year, without dim inishing the normal expenditures. When the Czar Nicholas married, the danseuse Kozccslnskala, who was charged with amusing his leisure mo ments, .received, as a present 4,000, 000 rubles and a palaco. Le Crle de Paris. A. harpsichord maker, Crtstoforl, in the employ of thd Duke of Tuscany, In 1711, made the first successful plana Two pianos ot his workmanship art still In existence. 1U IUQ tune to aniJye mo VJ f f 1 1 . - " " tfuTofth 1 1. I . .1 . 1 II I l 1 1- INDIANS AND THE BOW. WONDERFUL 8TORIE3 OF THEIR SKILL AS MARK8MEN. they Frequently Sent Their Arrows , Completely Through the Bodies of Animals at Which They Shot Wounded Spaniards Through Their 'Armor. A correspondent who signs himself "Early Settler" recently came out in an eastern Kansas newspaper with a communication which purported to be a narrative ot personal pioneer expert enccs and observations, but which was, for the most part, if not wholly, an ef fusion ot fanciful Ideas. For Instance, among other equally misleading state ments, was the following: "The prevailing Idea regarding the effectiveness of the Indian with bis bow and arrow is extremely erroneous. In the early days In Kansas I have seen a band of Indians armed with bows and arrows surround a buffalo and literally fill his hide with arrows, indeed to the extent that he presented the appearance of a mammoth porcu pine. But none ot these arrows seemed to penetrate to a sufficient depth to kill the beast or even disable him to any perceptible degree, and be was not con quered until he was actually overcome from exhaustion of the chase." I shall not accuse this "Early Set tler" or being an anonymous Ananias, for it may be that he has a very vivid Imagination, or else a defective mem ory; nor could It have been that the particular tribe ot Indiana to which he refers was so exceedingly deficient in the art of archery. This art was the one above all others that was thoroughly mastered by the American Indian as a race. .The youthful mind was, from the start imbued with the importance and necessity of this par ticular accomplishment and to "teach the young Idea how to shoot" with the bow and arrow was the elementary principle of the aboriginal education. "So great," says Dorsey, "was their skill in archery that they frequently sent their arrows completely through the bodies of animals at which they shot."- Major John Dougherty heard that in some Instances the arrows were gent with such force that they not only passed entirely through the bodies of the buffaloes, but even went flying through the air or fell to the ground beyond the animals. Another author ity -says: "From his horse at full gallop tho Indian will shoot 15 or 20 arrows a minute at flying bufTaloes, all with sure aim and deadly effect" Wash- n Irving says that frequently a lo cow was killed on the spot by le arrow; and Capt Bonneville, nstance, saw an Indian shoot mpletely through the body that It struck in the During the famous ne Alexis, ot Rus- ala, on the westernftlalns, Twu-fcailce, an Indian chief, seiK"L-tfrfow clear through a bison, the DTKe retaining It as a souvenir ot his hunt Francis Park man carried home a similar souve nir from the plains. In his "California and Oregon Trail" be describes a big buffalo hunt In which the Indians took part He telle about seeing an Indian alighting from his horse by the side of a buffalo cow he had killed. "Rid ing up to him," says Parkman, "I found him In the act of drawing out an arrow which, with the exception of the notch at the end, had entirely dis appeared In the animal. I asked him to give it to me, and I still retain it as a proof, though by no means the most striking one that could be offered, of the force and dexterity with which the Indians discharge their arrows." Charles Augustus Murray, while travel ling in the west In the early '30s, saw the Indians on the plains send their arrows into the buffaloes to the feath ers, and in some instances even bury ing a portion of the feathers in the flesh. : ' A Capt. Williams, of Missouri, In his journal of an expedition on the plains in 1807, published by David H. Coyner in Cincinnati, in 1847, describes a buf falo hunt by the Kansas Indians, in which he says: "A single arrow In sev eral Instances would despatch a large bull, and when the carcass was opened by the Indians to get the arrows they were found to have passed from the flank obliquely through the body and lodged against some of the bones on the other side. It Is common for an arrow to pass completely through the body when not striking a bone." The Rev. Samuel Allls, a missionary among the western Indians, who often ac companied them on their buffalo hunts, says: They often make a charge on a herd ot 1000 or 1200, killing 400 or 500 at one surround'. An Indian knows when he shoots a buffalo In the heart; be often does It at the first shot" Buell'a "History ot the Plains" says: "The bow Is the natural weapon ot the wild tribes of the west At short distances It Is a terribly effective arm, and the Indian expert can seize five to ten arrows In his left hand and de spatch them with such rapidity that the last one will be on Its flight before the first one touches the ground. In close (quarters' tbey prefer to rely on It to depending on the rifle1, as It can be ot deadly force at from 30 to 40 yards, and creating a bad wound at a much greater distance. '. In buffalo bunting, where the horseman can approach near, It is invaluable and economic, and Is often burled to the feathers." . In the chronicles of the Coronado ex pedition we find it stated of the plains Indians that in war and the chase they used the bow and arrow with great skill. On one occasion an Indian was seen to shoot a ' buffalo bull right through both shoulders with an ar row, "which," the narrator added "would be a good shot for a musket" Cabeca de Vaca, the early Spanish ex plorer, - in his narratives printed in 1642, says of the Indiana whom he en countered in this country : "They are all archers. The bows they use are as thick as the arm and of 11 or 12 palms in length, which they discharge at 200 paces with so great exactness that they never miss." .-1 ' a In one conflict some of De Vaca's men were wounded. ."We found them," he declares, "traversed from side to side by arrows, and although some had on good armor, It did not afford sufficient protection against the nice and pow erful archery of which I have sooken." Some of his men that day swore that they had seen two oaks, each as thick as the lower part of the leg, pierced through from side to side by arrows, and De Vaca himself saw "an arrow that had entered the foot of an elm the depth of a palm." "The buffalo or bear could not withstand the fatal ef fect of these well-directed shafts," he concludes. Kansas City Journal, THE HE-8AID 01 RL. sometimes Nature Makes a Fins Wo man of Her, But Rarely. Did you ever notice a group of lit tle girls between the ages ot 14 and 18 chatting away in a corner? The next time you sit near such a group listen and "hear if about every tenth word Is about what "he said." If it is, you have found some more of the "he-said" girls, and they are not the nicest lit tle girls in Ote world. The "he-sald" girls are likely to loiter down town after school too late to help their mothers with the afternoon work. They are likely to wear a little bet ter clothes than their fathers can af ford, so that the. neighbors wonder what their mothers can be thinking about. The "he-said" girls also too often think more of the boys than ot their books, and frequently fail to get through school. They are In for a good time, and have nothing in their heads but hairpins and two-steps. Sometimes nature takes a girl out of the "he-said" family and makes a fine woman of her, but generally she gets to going out to parties and t de veloped before her time, and either marries and fades at 20, or hangs on after all the other girls are married off and takes generation after genera tion of young boys to raise by hand, and becomes known as "grandma" in the crowd. There is nothing so sweet as a sim ple, frank, open-hearted girl. But the boy-struck girl is an abomination. The whole matter rests with the girl's mother. She can either bring up one of the "he-sald" girls or she can have a daughter to be proud of. Emporia Gazette. ' 8eeklng Information. A Kansas City newspaper man, re cently married, drifted into one of the big hotels and asked for the chef. The clerk told him that worthy would be down in a few minutes, and asked htm If there was anything special that he wanted. "Oh, no," waB the answer. "I just wanted to ask him how to cook beef steak with mushroom sauce. My wife don't know how to do it, and I thought I'd find Out something about it my self If I could." The clerk expressed an opinion that the chef's advice would be useful In that case, and asked the newly mar ried man If his wife could prepare eclairs au confltur or goose livers -bTOCtleWbonreloW It made benedict admitted that he dldnt think she knew anything about these, or several more dishes which the clerk enumerated, and even ex pressed some doubt as to her ability to make coffee demi tasse. The chef still delayed his-. coming, and the seeker after culinary wisdom finally decided that the remedying of the defects in his knowledge along that line would take more time than he had to spare and that he would come around and get a few recipes some time when he had half a day off. Kansas City Journal. Michigan Fish Story. Among the many members of the Ananias club-" proficient In telling fish stories It would seem that the palm should go to a Three Rlvors resident though he claims that this story Is no fabrication of the imagination, but an actual occurrence. The mystery had Its origin In one of the fishing shan ties on the Emery mill pond, from which a veteran fisherman was seen to emerge with an Immense string ot fish, when his companions" in aport had been unsuccessful tor many days with spear and line. The- old vet was a little mulelsh about giving his secret up. It was simply anise oil, the same old anise that has boen used from time Immemorial to put crying babies to sleep. The bait was satur ated with the oil and the line fast ened to a stick across a hole In the ice. A large fish bit and becoming saturated with the oil, hung on, and the seductive bait attracted other fish that caught on to its tall, followed by silly others, each catching on the last one's tall. The line also became sat urated with the oil and Is still attract ing and putting, to sleep specimens of the finny tribe, and all the old man has to da now - is to go out to his shanty and pull up his line when he wants a mess of fish. Detroit News. A Poet's Declining Years. , Swinburne, the poet spends his de clining years In tranquil pursuit of the simple life, although it Is doubtful whether the book or the fad has ever disturbed his peaceful retreat . A friend says of him that he lives In possession of his needs. "Bounded on all sides by the best books, enjoy ing the close companionship : ot the truest friend ever given to a man ot genius, and finding in a long walk at postman's pace a full satisfaction for tbe-body's craving after exercise, he lives through the twilight ot his days In' a greater security and under the spell of a deeper peace than1 he knew In the boisterous dawn of his llfo. Chicago Journal. Profitable Inventions. No one class of Inventions has been so profitable both to the manufacturer and the Inventor as musical Instru ments and appliances for same. Num erous improvements to the piano have been a source of large fortunes, and various devices are at present being continuously applied. - Radically new instruments possessing real merit are the Inventions needed In this Hue,' The public Is always ready to adopt al most anything new In both wind and stringed Instruments. -Inventor". A woman named Kaanaanamokauea halkulkawalmookahl Keamokuhalep hohai hag sent a petition to Governor Carter, Hawaii, on the subject ot the disposition of the crown lands. THE tPUUPIT. i, SCHC. RLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. DR. JOHN LOVE, JR. oiMti The Kyitle Stone. , Asliury Park, N. J.-The Rev. Dr. John Love, Jr preached on "The Mys tic Stone and the Broken Image" In the First Baptist Church here. He took as his text David 11:34: "A stone cut out .without bands which smote the Im age." Dr. Love said: In the poem called "Giles Corey" the great author has said: "Do you believe in dreams? Why, yes and no. When they come true, then I believe In tbem, when they come false I don't believe in them." This is doubtless a fair ex. pression of our own feelings concern, lng these mysterious visitors in our un conscious hours. Whatever harmony there may be between tbem and events which thereafter transpire we can never be sure at the time that they are prophetic. In the Old Testament economy, how ever, dreams were a recognized method) of divine communication with man kind. Not only were Ablmelocb, and Jacob, Joseph and Solomon thus ad dressed from heaven, but the prophets received revelations in and. through, tliem, designed for the warning, the comfort and the Instruction of the race. Few dreams narrated in sacred writ are of such profound Interest as ths one of which our text makes mention. In the second year of his reign "Nebu chadnezzar, the king of Babylon, dreamed dreams wherewith his spirit was troubled irnd his sleep brake from him." So profound was the Impression made upon htm, so agitated his mind on awakening, that he commanded the presence of magicians, astrologers and sorcerers, who vrere supposed to pos. 8 ess the powers of Interpretation. The dream of tho king had, however, so fai gone from blm when the wise men en tered into his presence that he could give tbem no hlut ot its nature. Not even the bare outline remained, only tile sense of terror and the fear of im pending III. With the cruelty peculiar to himself he demanded that they should at once reproduce the dream by their mystic arts and give the correct Interpretation. Protest was in vain, and in the heat of bis passion he voiced the decree of death on all the Wise men ot the kingdom. Daniel, the prophet, captive at the time in Babylon, learning of the mani festo of the king, petitioned for an ex tension ot time and promised the sought for interpretation. It was au awful crisis, but from the quartet of Daniel and his three companions went up a cry that reached the very heart of God and wou the secret that nullified an infamous decree. Within the ap poluted time the prophet is ready for the presence chamber of the klug. An ambassador from heaven, be brings in clear outline, by his vivid description, the mystical image which had dis turbed the slumbers of Nebuchadnez zar, and then Interprets its significance as may be traced in the second chanter or tne uook or Daniel, verses 3: uy rue "neaa ot gold' jwrTfepresented me Kuiguum or iMoylon, the domain ot KffbuchPdflezzar for forty-five years. Jn! e "breast and arms of sliver" signi fied the kingdom In which the Medes and Persians held sway, and was known as the Medo-Perslan reign, in augurated by Darius, the Mede, and Cyrus, the Persian, between whom an alliance had been formed. The third kingdom represented by the "belly and thighs of brass" was the Grecian, founded by Alexander the Great on his victory over the lost of the Persian em perors. The joy of his conquest, how ever, was mingled with sadness, for, boasting that be had conquered the world, he sat down and wept because "there was not .another world to con luer." The fourth kingdom symbolized, in the image, by "the legs and feet of Iron," is commonly believed to be the Roman kingdom. Toward its close it became weak and disintegrated, branch ing out Into ten kingdoms, represented by the ten toes of the iuinge. It could hardly be shown by an nppeol to his tory how exactly all the events and tho succession of events symbolized in the spectral Imago came to pass, but we concentrate our attention on the sig nificance of the "mystic stone," which by some unseen ageucy and in some unaccountable manner wns seen to be detached from the mouutaln near by and to smite the Image upon the feet, breaking Into pieces the iron and the clay of which they were composed. Nor was this all, for the stone which had smitten the image seemed to be come a vast mouutniu which tilled the whole earth. That the reference Is to the kingdom of the Messiah and a vivid prophecy ot its power and growth there can be no doubt, and yet the vision and Its interpretation date back to 000 B. C. There is to be noticed, first, the assuranto of the establish ment of a divine kingdom In the world. Not only have we tbe symbolism of the mystic stone, but the definite language of prophecy, for in his memorable In terview with the king, Daniel declared "In the days ot these kings shall the Ood ot Heaven set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed." Similar and confirmative prophecies might easily be culled from the sacred record. Many tmpires In the world have owed (heir origin, or at least their eminence, to successes In war. . Britain owes its prestige to Waterloo, Germany to Sedan, the United States to Gettysburg, Japan to Mukden. Power has been purchased st the point of tbe sword and sustained often throngh tyranny and cruelty. The strength of the pow ers of nations has been guaged by tbe roster of their armies and navies. Ar senals, fleets and military stores have been their pride and boast. Not so with the kingdom whose design, code and symbols date from all eternity. It is spiritual and not martial. It hath weapons before which strongholds crumble, but they are not carnal. It wins triumphs, but on silent, bloodless battlo fields. Not In the catalogue ot nations does this kingdom claim a place. Alone if stands, without peer or counterpart It bears the name and owns the sway of tbe Omnipotent. It .was not to enter Into conflict with ex isting government. It was to be de votional, not political. The cross was to be Its sacred symbol, not a crown. Its laws were to be transcribed not in ponderous statute books, not In legisla tive enactments, but in that precious book whose very name even has be come an Inspiration and a benediction the Bible. Throughout ths Scriptures Is set forth In terms unmistakable the divine character of the new kingdom and when at length the Messiah had entered upon His holy mission He dis appointed the common expectation in His announcement, "My kingdom it not of this world." Again and again might He have assumed the symbols of royalty and won an enthusiastic follow lnt;. Indoed, He was compelled to re sist tbe passionate ardor ot the people nt times, who longed for a crowned head and aflellverer. I'erslstr-nt was His emphasis upon , spiritual truth. Ite demanded a piety !vt Interpreted by Jiig jirnyers and longer robes, but by surrender and loy alty to God. "No religion but that of Christ has disclosed the Innermost na ture of God, none but this bas laid bare in Its peculiar centre point tho moral nature 'of man." Man fallen and dishonored-was driven from "Para dise Lost." The grand design of the Kingdom ot Christ Is to bring blm into such fellowship with God as that he may be an heir of "Paradise Regained." At Athens were two temples, "a temple ot Virtue and a temple of Honor." Only through the former could tbe lat ter be entered. Only through the Invisible Kingdom of .God on earth tbe "Kingdom of Grace" can we hope for admission at length, into tbe "Kingdom of the Re deemed" the "Temple of Glory." The subjects of this empire must be in harmony with and breathe the spirit of the King. We are reminded sec ondly ot the smnll beginnings of tho Kingdom of the Messiah. The "stone cut out of the mountain without bands" was diminutive at first as compared with its subsequent ap pearance. This Is Indeed tbe law of nature. The trees which fill our for ests were 0n,ce but tender saplings the men of the next generation are to-day but weakly children. Christianity was Indeed complete at the beginning. From Its very nature it must have been. An imperfect system would have been a witness against ltsolf. In all these nineteen centuries not a single principle of truth has been added. It was Christ's gift to the world. A mine to be worked a very bonanza. A sys tem to be studied a very thesaurus of truth. Christ in His uoctrlno wns its teacher. In His matchless character Its grand exponent. Euch Christian is a matriculate In the preparatory school and when the term time of lite shall end will receive a certificate into the University of lleavcu. Laws arc being constantly changed in order that they may be adapted to the varying condi tions of mankind. Amendments to tho Constitution have been added one by one. Statutes are subject to frequent revision. Provisions that have proved Injudicious have lieon struck out. Nec essary modifications und ndditlons havo often been made. Can anything be nihled to tho system of religion which Jesus introduced into the world? Has tho "Sermon on tho Mount" ever been improved? Can it be? As well at tempt to add to the radiance of the midday sun or the nmlcsty of the heav ing ocean. The necessity of change would Imply weakness, cruclencss. Im perfect knowledge. "I am the Lord, I change not," and Christianity is the creed of Jehovah the system of Him who said, "I am the truth." Who shall say that ChristlaUty can ever need modification? To what age of the world, to what nation, to what government, to what human conditions lias It not been adapted? Still, in Its beginning, lt seemed of smnll and weak proportions. rrotn a uuninn standpoint, what could appear more uncompromising? It seemed like a Lillipiit arraying itself against a host of giants. We are so constituted that we look for causes which shall seem adequate to given effects. Who In the first century could conceived ns ever possible the scenes w'hicTHJljnescuitter inys greet our eyes and the facYsMthWi thrust themselves upon our attention? Vhelst Himself was a poor and obscure Naza rone peasant, without prestige or im mediate pedigree of note. His disciples Were, with few exceptions, lacking in culture and of but limited influence. Tho new religion lind in it nothing to win tbe opulent or the Influential. It ministered not to the caprices of men, but combattcd their strongest preju dices. It brought not "peace, but a sword." Judged by ordinary stand ards, it seemed doomed to failure. We need not turn to the grand treatises ot tbe Butlers, the Taleys, the Dwlghts, resistless as their arguments seem; the sublime history of Christianity during these nineteen centuries offers a might ier and more eloquent plea for Its di vine origin and character, a perfect Gibraltar, against which all the shafts of infidelity seem but paper pellets. But as we turn again to the inspired nurrative of tbo dream of the Baby lonian king, we rend that after the imago was smitten and the iron, the clay, the brass, the sliver and tbo gold were broken in pieces, becoming like the chaff of the summer threshing floor, the stone wbich destroyed tbe image became a great mouutaln and filled tLj whole earth. Thus In mystic symbolism was tbe truth revealed that tho kingdom, which at length Jehovah should set up, was destined to universal prevalence. Nor are ws limited in this view to the lan guage of symbols. "Ask of Me and 1 will give thee the heathen for thine In heritance and tbe uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession." "The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sen." Thus David and Isaiah, peering through the perspective of coming years, beheld the wondrous ascendency of the kingdom of Immanuel. Wnut appeared to these prophets ot the olden tiici in vision appears to us translated into history, glorious with tbe grand achievements Christianity bas wrought. Magnificent victories have followed its banners. Territory after territory has been added to its dominions. Despite the opposition which its representa tives have met, tbe fiery persecutions, not limited to the period of its Intro duction, but blighting the records ol ten centuries, and, ludeed, times long after the "dark ages," Its growth hai been phenomenal; aye, more than that divine. Palestine has become", th moral centre of the world. Tbe prayei which Jesus has taught, "Thy kingdom come," Is being graciously answered Judging from the history of Christian Ity and reasoning from analogy, bad wi not the promises of the Sacred Word we should be compelled to antlcipnt tbe ultimate triumphs ot "The Re deemer's cause." -iit.w-iaag!art";'iZTritgtaciS8 Flno Stirs Curio Hunters. The unique, first quarto edition of "Titus Andronlcus," the title page. The first quarto ot Shakespeare's THE s. -tftiTSf .. L'A. . L!.! : UlUiraulC 1VU1114UIV. XTngtAic of Tira Andronkws JUkwsifIixKbytbeK.sltlo I 1 lONOOH. FnWbylehnDanter.snJsrs., "lliMlilti'i"1-" I1t (if"." - "Titus Andronlcus," of which no copy was believed to be extant, was recent ly discovered in a Swedish farmhouse. It Is In Very fair condition. A FRIENDLY WARNING. ftttie Maid of Tokio, TM as truly: -Is it so? , Docs the verb "to clvlll" , Brine a sparkle to your ttynl lo you share vour brother's s" Do you like ambition feel? WhUe the World, from nin to tun. Talks ot what Japan bas done. Are you your part glad to play? Would you,- It you had your wayf Think what civilisation means, Kre M subtly Intervenes "l'wlit your peace of mind and you. If. my dear, you only knew, You would let the whole thing go. Little Maid ot Toklo. Little Maid of Toklo, Pinioned fast In fanhlon's throe Would you be. If civilised. Robes your Knstern taste devised. Cut and pattern, plan and all, Into quick disuse would fall. Though they etilted-fci-st your style, Each would lose Its place, the while 'ou to be the slave would grow Of Tarls modes and Western show; Ruff and tuck and frill and tin re And Ohl they'd make you chance your hslr! "Hlth vaiip vim. m n., But leave your fashions as they an. Rquelch tbe dress reforming foe, Little Maid of Toklo. JUST FOR FUN Nettle Martha says she has her hair done up by a maid. Edith That is, she docs it up herself. She's an old maid, you know. Now Missionary Can you toll me what has become of my predecessor? you toll me j predecessor? a e a trip into ; to do with V Cannibal Chief Ho made the interior. Washingttta "What are you going your new magazine? Get a corner on all the anti-trust literature." "And then what?" "Shove up the price of the magazine." Washington Star. Bacon The end men In the min strels get the most money, I believe. Egbert Is that so? Well, In all oth- er kinds of business the middlemen J get all the jsMTonkers States- Mrs. Hicks John, I'm sure tSereL a hurirlar down in the dining room. 1 Mr. Hicks (sleepily) Good! If we keep quiet maybe ho'll take away that chafing dish of yours. Philadelphia Dumley Morris said I had no moreiC sense than a yellow dog. I consider that an Insult. Wlckle 8o . it is.t There's no reason to suppose a yel low dog has less senso than any oth er colored dog. Passenger Seems to me it takes you a long while to run six miles on this rallrorvl. Conductor Yes, that's tho beauty of It. It gives the passen gers plenty of time to read their morning paper. "Ma," said Mrs. Malaprop's little boy, "what is 'antimony'?" "8h, that's not nice to talk about," replied Mrs. Malaprop. "It's what a lady gets when sbA's divorced from her hus band." Philadelphia' "EedgeT ..... Bosh Is Blank on tiro stage? Josh No. Bosh Why, yes he 1b! He told me that he made his first appear ance two years ago. Josh Umhuhl He made his last appearance on the same night. Detroit Free Press. Mrs. Snubblns I wouldn't trust my husband to pick out the help. I don't" want a better looking girl In the kitchen than I am. Mrs. Wlcklow And Mr. Snubblns does? Well, you can't blame him, can you, now Irish Attendant (examining sick ostrich) Faith, I believe he's swal lowed a monkey! I can see it down his throat. The Ostrich Oh, get out! I swallowed a piece of looking glass. That's your reflection. Puck. "Teachers," said the educational cynic, "are divided Into two classes: Those who quit because they don't know enouKh to teachr-and thoeeMl&o keen on because they don't kno enough to quit. Baltimore American. "Yes, he proposed to her in a rath er gruesome way." "Why, I understood he merely asked her to share his fort une?" "No, he asked her to share his lot. They were walking In the ceme tery at the time." Philadelphia Led ger. Miss Hoamley I think of taking up automoblllng.. Miss Pepprey Good Ideal It certainly would be becoming to you. Miss Hoamloy Becoming? Miss Pepprey Tos, dear, you can wear a mask In an auto. Philadelphia Press. Helen How is Jack Newly wed get ting along with that rich girl he loped with? Ethel Dreadfully I She Is suing him for non-support, , and won't let him even have . money enough to pay his lawyer's fees. 1 Judge. " ' I "I didn't know your father was a sea- ' faring man." "He Isn't," "But he ; said he worked on a revenue cutter." "And so he does. But he means that he operates a sausage machine for the beet' trust" Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. - 1 Montt NowJnHoJJajid-llhave seen washing gbTn)lfln the street That 1s something you don't m America. La Moyne-Oh, yes, you do. La Montt What street did you ever I see washing It? La Moyne Wall Street. Chicago Dally News. . Scrybblor It's the moast remawk able thing, doan't ye knaow, that when I'm feeling the worst I write me vewy clevahest things. Grouch To Judge by your writings, then, you must have a mighty good run o' gen eral health. Baltimore American. Uncle George But dont y6u think It wrong to flb about your age? Nan cy On the contrary, I hold it to be a duty. : If you lell the truth, every ' body will dd two or three yea to your statement; so it is oniy justice to one's self to knock off a tow years. . ' ' ' Baiter Married life isn't what It used to be. Slsson You're right there. Since the kitchen Btove has been supplanted by a gas tango there's no such thing as lying In bed In the morning, soothed by the sweet thought that your wlfw: lis at work building' tbe firo. Lost and Found. Little Bo Peep bad lost her sheep, and didn't know whore to find them "Did yon think of looking In t butcher's under the name of nyi ; lamb?" was naked. Accepting tho clue, she Joyful'y started out to unoover the alias, st '