* P ; VOLIME II. Sister Tmllimiter's Heart. (Krom lhi> (,Vntur> .Mit^axiiKV) Thero was an unusual cxcitoinent in Sweet wator. The now preacher, a voting man of lino parts, accompanied by his wife, had arrived a few days before, delivered a most effective sermon, and had boon called t^>on with the promptness common to t country communities where isolation 1 1 I 1 ll r ronuers ioeai curiosuy uunearame iii tor twenty-four hours. Tho lady of the parsonage, whoso husband was l>ut lately a theological student and now oniraood for tho first time upon regular pastorial labors, came from the eity dressed in a manner that was bound to win her the admiration or the hatred of half the village. Already that orand, interchnnircablo * I jury common to all communities was sitting upon her ease. The term is u;Vd in a figurative sense, for the inquest was conducted from yard to yard, window to window, and even across the one street alon<* which Sweetwater was congregated. Wherever two or three were gathered together and two of the three happened to l>e of the cradle-roekingr order of society, Parson Pilev's wife was tho theme. The climax was reached in tho case when Parson Pilev's wife sent out modest little notes inviting about twenty matrons to take tea with her the next y unanimous eonsont established at the head of Sweetwater, anil could afford to tako the company in to see her lace curtains, baby and baby dresses, and all the little bric-a brae that had been showered upon her as a brido, without awakening a single jealous feeling. Ibit a storm was brewing, and its first mutterings were hoard when Mrs. Culpepper thoughtlessly mentioned "Sister I'odhunter." "Sister Todhunter?" said Parson ltiiey's wife, looking from one to the other, a puzzled expression shadowing her pretty faco; "have 1 met Sister Todhunter? Dear me, can I have made a mistake after all?" She had k t f iii 44 BE TKUI tried so hard to please everybody, and hero was trouble at the first move. "No, mv dear," said Mrs. Culpopper promptly; "it was 1 who made the mistake." lint poor Mrs. Riley noted the ominous look upon the faces of several and the glances they exchanged. UI am sure," she said earnestly. "I would Imvo l?oon glad to liavo had Sister Todhunter if I had known in time. Does she live in the village?" "No, dear," said Mrs. Colonel I .edbetter; "sho is a disagreeable old thing who lives out on her farm about a mile from hero. You haven't lost anything l>y not knowing her." Mrs. I,edbetter was a power in the land, and her iron-gray curls shook in a dangerous and threatening manner as she declared herself. "She is sometimes pleasant, to be sure, but if it wasn't for her husband, poor man, who married her out of pity, although she was only a 'cracker' and he a man of education and standing, O ' she wouldn't be noticed." "1 think," said poor faded little Mrs. Brown meekly, "that Sister Todhunter has a good heart, and I'm r"> 7 sure she always treated me kindly." "And who wouldn't?" interposed Mrs. Culpepper laughing. "You see some good in everybody, Sallie, and everybody sees some in you. But as for Sister Todhunter, she is better at long range." Presently there was a movement among the ladies, and soon Parson Kiley's wife, the recipient, of twenty i : *. i ? 1 i i i l\ISVM-7* it I M 1 il> 11 I I I I \ Willlll Mill) ? IM 1.1 KC>, was loft alone with her empty cups and the memory of Sister Todhunter. II. When Parson Piley heard the description of his wife's tea-party from her lips, told with many a smile and an occasional sigh, his lirst resolution was to call upon t'olomd TodImntcr and his wife. So it was that early next morning he saddled his patient mare and amldcd out to the Todhunter farm. As Parson Piley approached the iittle cottage, he saw siltin.r on the steps a man with his chin in his hands. The first thing that impressed him was the air of extreme dejection about tin; individual, an air that had become more marked after he had dismounted and advanced toward the house. Pbusing himself from his reveries, the individual rose slowly and fixed a pair of tired, wateryblue eyes upon the parson. The clothes ho wore were broadcloth, but they woro faded now, and stained down the front with tobacco juice; and they shone with a polish evidently acquired, like good manners, throned! Ion if wear. O # "This is Colonel Todhuntcr, I believe," said the visitor, holding out his hand. "1 am the Rev. Mr. Riley." The gentleman in the polished suit, held the proffered hand as he replied, in a singularly low and sweet voico: "You're the now parson, I reckon. You will have to speak louder; I am a little deef." "Yes," said the parson, elevating his voico. "How is your family?" "What did you say?" inquired the low, musical voice, while the blue eyes brightened a little. "How is vour family?" "Oh, very well, I believe. Come ill and sot down." Ho led the way slowly, with a slight limp, toward the littlo porch. As thoy ascended tho stops 1'arson Riley caught sight of the figure of an enormous woman in a calico dross and a white apron, ! that loomed up in the doorway. She carried in her hand a broom; and a I hi oftd, square, almost fierce face with | small black eves was turned upon i him. "Mainly," said the colonel gently, I "this hunter is the new parson." ! "The now parson" stepped forward quickly and extended his hand. "My dear madam, I am glad to meet you," he said, a smile kindling on his handsome face. She looked at him suspiciously, gave him her left hand, and said: "I lowdie'" "I hope you are well, madam?" "Toler'ble," she replied. And then she turned her back and moved off with an elephantine amble. "So this is Sistsr Todhuntor," thought Parson Riley. "Well, I shall have trouble here." The men sat down, and tlio conversation boim n. ('olonel Tmlluni. n ' ter proved to bo courtly, almost womanly, in his manners, Imt his few opinions were ventured with a dillidenco most painful, and tin? pirson was glad when the time came to say good-day. lie was ahout to mount his mare again when the colonel, who had followed him out, touched his arm. "I want to spoak to you on a private matter," he said softly. "Suppose wo waik a little." So arm and arm they moved off. "I want to speak about Mrs. Todhuntor," said the gentle voico again. "To tell you the truth, Parson I am leading a life hero that is almost unbearable, and 1 think you can help inc. ".Mrs. Todhuntor is a violent woman, Parson,? 1 use the term ad* vicedly; she is a violent woman, and unless I can bring about a marked change in her character, I do not ? - 3 TO TotTE -WO:R:D CONWAY, ; 1 know what I shall do. Shu uses langua.ro towar.l ino that is altogether j unchristian-like and unbecoming. I And worse; when she gets one of hor spells upon her, she assaults me with anything nearest at hand* ( hdy this morning 1 received several Mows i from her broom that have nearly lamed me. Parson,"?-they had reached the friendly shelter of the ; barn by this time, and the colonel 1 straightened up a little, while his I eyes actually flittered, "I am tired' | of this dog's life, and I want your as- | I " ' l * y * | sistanee. I think if Mrs. Todlmnter i is formally reported to tIn* church, ami humiliated, it will brine about a | change." Parson Kiloy's face show-! j ed his surprise, and the colonel ad| (led at once, ul have had this in mind ia lotijr time, and once 1 broueht the 1 t \ , matter to the mind of Parson I honip- j ! son, who preceded vou, a worthy man, hut timid. lie would not move in the matter. Now, will yonV" Par-i son Kilev was vouno and comhalivc. "1 will," he said promptly. "What?" The deaf man placed ; his hand to his ear. 441 will," shouted the parson. Sis- j | tor Todlmnter shall he disciplined." The colonel looked pleased. ii 1 4,1 was a church-member myself once," he said softly, "but this eternal ouarrol drove we out. I could , ; not hreak bread feelino as I do to. j ward Mrs. Todlmnter." llis chin J trembled. lie filled his cheeks with , wind and blew it out ui der the pres sure of his emotion. 4>Vou cannot inne-ine to what an evtent 111i- ihmm'. Icution has ^joiio. Why, sir tlu>ro 1 have been times when I conshleroil ' ! my life in danger. I am not a di.->si- i I jiated man," he continued, resting! his blue-veined hand upon the par- ) j son's shoulder and turnino the blue eyes earnestly ujion him, "but ? f! ! course I take a j dep now and then, ?you understand; habits of an oldtime (ieoroia o'entlemau and some. h h i times I have taken too much. I admit that Mrs. Todhunter has had some provocation in that direction, but not enouo-h, I'arson, to justify : her m reoardino" me as a don-.' 11is n n o breast heaved convulsively. "A woman," said the voun?j man ! firm 1 y, touched by the pathos and j emotion of his dionitied companion, "has no rioht to strike her husband j except, in the defense < f her life.'' "I ley ?" ('olonel 'Todhunter cupped his left ear deftly with the trans- | parent hand. "I say a woman has no i*in tt v sort or parson von air, ain't vor, hanoin'roun' decent womon's houses list'nin' torlios an' slanders. ()h, I know what ho wants; he wants tor <^it me up 'fore Mould Zion Church. 1 lo tried hit on olo Thompson, hut he daresn't move or po?r. I tele him,, an' I tell you, if they have mo up Ion* .Moun7 /ion, hit'll ho or had day fur Moun' /inn." Sin* shook horj clinched f'ftt at him. Parson Riley was half Irish, a little \\ elsh. and the rest American. Resides, he was yoiai^ and inexperienced. uYour ease will he up next.Sunday inorniner. You can come or not, as you please." lie said this with a somewhat unelerieal hut very natural emphasis, and turning on his heels, left the spot The last words ho hoard were, 441 ain't 'feared o' you j uer all the Moun' /ions in the world." ; As Parson Riley mounted his j mare, I 'olonel Todhunter crawled through the hed?re a few yards off, n t D * # 7 looked eautiouslx around, secured his pipe from the porch, and went hack silently the way he came. A smile forced itself upon the lips of tin* | younjr preacher, and a little farther down the road ho laughed outriirht. ^ ICjiK's l-'roni 10 very State. *>|<]ir?^s hejrin to come from the | south in .lauuary," said a I )ey street dealer, 44and they run up just like shad and strawherries. A few eoino from Texas. There is hie1 money in the business there if it is developed. Rut it isn't worked up yet. North Carolina starts in first. In ahout four weeks afterward wo out some from Washington, which come from tlm Shenandoah Valley. Then come j the oastorn shorn ejrirs." "Which 00x1?" "Pennsylvania, and then canto | Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. < )hio usually droits in a month after North ( 'arolina, hut tliis year she was even with her.,, "Which are next in the procession V" "The far west and southwest, by way of Kansas and St. Louis. Then ! Iowa and Illinois. After them came! northern Indianna, Minnesota, Dako-I ta, northern Iowa and Michigan. We oet some not many front l)akota.: "I low about New York?" "This state has so ntrrty laroe towns that most of her coos arc con- j stinted in the interior markets. After thev oel throuoh jticklino, however, New York dealers send us j some fresh e^os in the summer. Can nda comes next to the far west. Por- j eiou ejrjrs have been barred out this season because prices have boon bet-1 ter in Knolami. They took very 1 well where they could be sold fori enonoh loss to make it an object fori people to use them." "Whv are southern eoirs so much smaller?" "That, is because they adhere so | inuoli to the game fowl down there. The difference is not only in size, hut , in the quality of tliu meat. Tho Cochins, IMytnoutli Hocks or any I northern breeds afford altogether morn nutriment in their en-os than r> r~> tin* southern fowl. The host way to ship is in free cases, with patent dividing pasteboard, unless the shipper is a very skillful packer, when the best way is to send them in barrels parked in cut straw." "Is much pickling done?" "There are firms in New York State that pickle from 100 to 1,000 barrels, SI() to a barrel. Iowa has single picklors that put away from 500 to 5,000 barrels, and so has Minnesota. Chicago has refrigerators that can hold 50,000 cases. In this city the refrigerators are only used in lenses of emergency. Hut talk about r) J pickling ?i?gs> < ?<-riii;t!iv takes the lend. There aro some vats in this j country that hold 25,000 hut I 0110 (iorman pick lor has a vat that ' holds 500 hrrrols, or 120,000 eggs. lie pickles yearly from 75,000 to J 100,000 barrels of eggs, <>r from 08,* 000,000 to 81,000,000 eggs." A>/>* York ^ sixtieth year. Since ISol has been a practical aeronaut, making his lirst ascension in tin* siinnnar of that year from the old zoological pardon in l''airmount I'ark. Sinee then ho has maile 2SIJ aerial voyajje^ and a oreat many lessor asconsions. His wife, who is a (juiet, modest little woman, has made a number of ascensions j with him, and regards ballooning a much safer mode of traveling than carriage-riding. She is afraid of j horses, but doesn't mind taking a jaunt through the air a mile or so, above the earth. In one of her trips she once had a narrow escape. It ! was two years aca at Indianapolis. \fter a remarkably pleasant ascension the balloon in descending suddetdy swayed when near the earth] and eaundit i:i a dead tree. The I sharp branch ripped the balloon onen, j causing it to collapse, and landing the basket in which she and her Ims- ! band sat in a fork of a tree, sixty feet from the earth. As ipiiek as I thought I'rof. Kino- braced the basket j with a rope until he had cut the bal- I loon away, then, dropping another rope to some farm hands, he loosen- ] ed the basket and was lowered over j a limb to the earth. Neither ho nor j I.is wife received a scratch. 1 ?fO only tune I?o was ever hurt was in an ascension from Au J I lions. ( )n t )etober 11,1 878, 1 ie went up | from Scranton, wot cauwlit in a wind- ! storm, and came down at Oak Station, Montgomery county, I 10 miles I from the starting point. The whole trip consuming hut two hours. ( >n j Oetober lo, 1881, he made his memorable ascension from ('hicnifo, with! n 7 I lashaocn, of the Siwnal Service I'u- ! ^ 7 rt reau. lie was up nineteen hours and descended in the Wisconsin Wilderness, where he and his companion j lost their way and suffered terribly i before they a wain came in contact wit h civilization. < hie iiiwht lie was suspended between sky and earth for thirteen i 11..? \r..: i i ' i.. II* Mil 7* IM Ul IIIU .Villi I 117 ?1IM1 V < I Mill 111 wilderness. 11 is experience that niirht was tlinllinir and remarkable. 'I'lio ascension was made at I I'. M. at I'lymoutli, X. II., Iiis companion lining Lu'.her K. llolden, of the Boston ./ottrmd. !'or six hours they huntf over a mile above the wilderness, the halloon not losintr a foot of eas or the car an ounce of hallst. When they came down next moriiinir they landed at the head of a now railroad which was beino constructed 200 miles below (Quebec, near the (lulf of St. Lawrence, over which thev had spent a portion of the niirht. The road was 200 milos away from any other aoad or civilization. They rode, to (Quebec on a buck-hoard, driven by a Kreuch-Canadian. Mr. lloidcu always attributed their lucky descent to an interposition of divine providence. In an ascension lie made in Autr ust, 1875, from Burlington, Iowa, he was caught in a thunder-storm, and camo near being1 struck by lightning. Tim expansion of the air acted on the balloon and drove the gas from the ' nock into his bead and through the ! : open valve with terrilic velocity, lie { had a thrilling descent through I ho j i clouds, and on reaching the earth wont crashing through trees, landing twelve miles from where he ascended, having been driven back by the storm. The whole trip consumed three-quarters of an hour. On the 1th of .Inly the same year I ! he took a party of seven, including two bridal couples, over Lake Krie from Cleveland. The balloon sailed i over tho lake to BulTaM, where it struck a back current and returned, passing Cleveland, gradually approaching tins ('anada shore, which it struck at Point au Pole. It then crossed a strip of Canada and thirtylive miles of Lake St. Clair, landing I eleven miles from Port Huron at midnitfht, having made 180 miles in I . ^ I thirteen hours. On another Pourth of July he took live newspaper men from Buffalo to Quinton, X. .1. lie crossed the Alleghenies and followed the Susquell.'IIUI !i>i fill" iw I luPVIl ito (tnnn a sharp turn, and sailed duo cast across Delaware into Now Jersey, tho whole trip taking thirteen hours. I'rof. Charles Wise is tho son of tho late Prof. John Wise, Sr., who was los^'- hilo tot. aerial voyI aire, ilo made his IJic. ascension thirty-seven years agt\,,l"' ;p ?>nt thirteen years of ago, at Sfmnnandale I Springs, \Vr. Va. 11(5 wont up two ! and one-half miles and staid up three hours, landing sixty-five miles from the starting point, to which place he returned in an ox-cart. Four years later ho made an ascension from Newburyport, Mass., on the occasion ? .Vet Report. MU ? 7MTK"Y-." of a civil celebration. Tho wind was J blowing toward tho ocean, and tho i committee offered to pay the price of the ascension rather than take any j risks, but after consulting with his I father ho decided to make the ascon- ( sion. After tfoiujr uj> eighteen thousand feet very rapidly and descending still more rapidly he struck Plum Island bar. As there were no inhabitants and noplace to grapple,' the only alternative was to jump out i of the car. Th's ho did, laiulinif safely in the saml. The buloon, 1 ijjritt??( 1 of its load, J sliol into tho air and lilow out to sea. i Tlio noxt morning it was picked up J I?y ii winder (MX) miles away and Wrought into Provincotown. The whole ascent and descent occupied one half hour. The sailors on tho whaler, when they saw the halloon (loathe in the water, thought it was r* " o an immense blubber and harpooned it. It immediately collapsed and was taken on board, the Nowburyport papers of tho previous day being found in the car. The Professor has been ever since actively engaged J n n as an aeronaut, and at various times has taken up every member of his family, having in thirty-live years made over three hundred ascensions. His son, John, Jr., made his first ascension at the age of eight years with is grandfather. One itf the most notable ascensions that has ever been made was made by him, under the direction of his hither, at \\ aynesburg, (trocn county, when he was only fourteen years old. After working half a day at inflating the balloon the supply of gas gave out when the balloon was only half full. 'I'lio balloon refused t.. " i 11 . i i I i . 11 > IIDUI'IIII Willi nil' l)OV, WIRMI MIS father decided to do :i 111 in?_C that lias never hoforo or since boon attempted. No cut tho lower half of tho balloon olT. Whilo ho was doino this soino ollii'ioiis spectator out tho valvo-ropo two foot beyond tho boy's reach, and in tho midst of a rain-storm tho fourteen-year-old aeronaut went sailing into spaco and beyond tho clouds, hatloss and coat loss and without a valvo-cord. Ilo was directed by his father not to over two miles, but beinir unable to roach tho valve-cord, he j^ot cuuidit in a heavy snow-storm and was driven forty miles in forty minutes. Landinef whore thorn wore no means of communication, lie was not heard from in two days. The excitement of the citizens was so intense that they organized a commit- I tee to search for and and t(ivo him a reception when found. When lie was found the citizens tilled his hat ...:ii 11 1-. f I >v11ii mijiii/j . iiij wns nearly iro/.eu to death during the voyage, ami 1 when ho doseondod ho was covered . with icicles. Since thou ) 10 lias made 250 ascensions withouf accident. Wan tod to See Sawyer. Senator Sawyer, of Wisconsin, prides himself on his strength of arm, and while home last fall lie put on a h 1 u(3 blouse and worked in one of his sawmills. lie thinks he can handle a saw log with as much grace and dispatch as over he could. He tells a pretty good story on himself. One day while he was at work in this a wealthy and enterprising young business man came up to Oshkosh to sou him. At the ollico ho was told that Mr. Sawyer was in the mill. Thy young ('hitfagoan, dressed in height style, tiptoed his way into the mill and finally found a jolly little old fat man in a blue blouse down in a saw pit filing a big circular saw. I lis bald head was bare, his hands were grimy with oil and saw filings and his Santa Clans face wot with prespiration. Going up to him ho asked: "Can you tell mo where I'll find Mr. Sawyer?" "Wight here," said the jolly fat man. "I'm Sawyer." "()h ?all excuse mo," faltered the Chieagoan. "I didn't know you were mu ll !i or mtlif.r iiluun I .luln'l suppose you looked that is, I hardly expected to find you so bald, Mr. Sawyer," and the young follow, turning wlnto and red with every word he uttered, began to perspire and wish he had studied up beforehand the art of talking to a plain Yankeo Yankee quarto millionaire who could wear li blue blouse and could tile saws baidhoadod. "Do you know the difference in j yourself and amnio?" asked Mrs. I Crimsonboak of her husband, the j other evening, when they wen? giving i conundrums around the family hearthI stone. "No, I realy don't," roplied the gonial husband, ofF his guard. "Neither do I," was the wife,s laughing reply, which Im.d a tendency to mnko Mr. Orimsonbeak mad and break up tlio conundrum business for I months to o?mo. "Doctor," said a Philedelpbia patient, "I'm troubled with insomnia, j and I want you to do something for me.11 "Do you ho awake most of the i night? asked th?? physician. "No, I'm all right at nigi.?, hut I can't get any sleep during the day/' ' I ILLINS ACADEMY. \ 1 MiiIIius. S. I'. \ j ' \ NUMBER fay It is very distressing t?? bo rich. Some folks may not boliovo this; but Mr. .Jav Gould insists that it is so, atul Mr. (iould is supposed to know a thing or two about being rich. Mr. Gould sat on a sofa in tho Windsor Hotel and tried to make a newspaper roportor con touted. If Mr. (iould didn't succeed that was merely because the reporter happened to narrow-minded, no that Mr. Gould's philosophy was weak-kneed. "The poor man ought to bo the happiest mail,'' wont on the millionaire. ''Wealth brings cares withn out compensation. A man gets rich and then he's a slave. Very mistaken ideas exist on this subject." With so much promised Mr. Gonld proceeded to toll in a genial way of the joys that onco he himself know and now was too rich to know any more. "Ah," ho said, "I often recur to the days when I was a boy up in I)elawaro county I was a prettv happy lad. There wasn't much wear and tear in life then. How good it would feel iust to ito out and drive tho cattle home front tlio pasturo onco more! Ami how delicious it would bo to stoop down hy tho old now a out in tho busier world, and he may make more money elsewhere and in other ways, but he'll never bo a jot happier anywhere or anyhow not a jot; it isn't, in human possibility to bo happier. ( )f course, thouoli, nobody is over bontented. I remember how it was with myself. < hie of my boy friends was Sam l)immick, who lives up at KiHuston-on-tho-1 ludson. Ilis father, (V?l. Itimmick, was one of tho well-to-do-men men np in 1 >olawaro county in those times, and 1 remember that I used to wish and wish and wish shat soinethinjr would happen tluit would enable me to get as rich as ho was. lie seemed like a ('ro-sus to mo. And I left the farm." u( loing to church," lie explained, "contributed this one bit of sadness. \Vo used to starr from homo early every Sunday morning," he said, "and ride over to the little yellow meetino house where the country round worshiped. At It) o'clock the proceedings began. They wore real proceedings, too; I can see the tall old oldor yet as he loomed up in the Imlpit and wont to his sermon ilovon o'clock came and the elder was just getting unddrwap; 12 o'clock arrived and he was only becoming warmed up, At 12.ol) we adjourned. All over? (>h, no. We were otdy on a half-hour's furlough. The sermon stopped in the middle t