! 'k ' j V - CHAPTER I. "Order the pony trap at once, Jenifer, and drive in to Extter as fast as you can. It is really providential that I got that card from Tammy last night, telling me about the teal and widgeon: teal is what yonr brother prefem, I know, but if the teal are all gone " "If there" a doubt about any being left, don't you think I may aa well give myself the benefit of the doubt, mother, aad stay for tennis this afternoon?" "My dear Jenifer, what are you think ing about? With all I have on my head between now and to-night, ia it likely that I shall overweight myself with the 'last straw' which tennis would be?" Mrs. Bay asked, with a manner that, had it been silk, might be descriled aa amuse ment shot with vexation. "Your brother your eldest brother is bringing home his bride, and I have only six hours wherein to prepare a fitting reception for ler." "1 don't think my eldest brother de serves to hare so much consideration shown to him, as we never knew that he had a bride, or thought of having one, till his telegram came half an hour ago," Jen ifer said, coldly. "Ah, my dear, perhaps not; but If you had a son you would moot likely lie as lenient to his lapses toward yon as I am to Hubert's toward me. I am his mother, and if the thought of his wife has put me out of h.s mind for a time, why, all I can do is to love her the more for having won so much from my son, for to have won o much she uiust have given largely." "And if I could ever forget a moment (which I can't) that you are the sweetest and wisest mother in the world, I'd say yon were talkin ; stuff and nonsense now," Jenifer said heartily. "As it is I'll only tell you that the teal shall be offered up to Hubert to-nisht, if any are to be got in Exeter." "I shall put the dinner off till eight, Jenifer. Tnat will give you time to do all the (lowers after you come back. What will your father say when he hears of it? I wish he would come before any of these possible tennis people arrive. It would be s.i awkward telling hitu before them all." "Father will oe furious for five min utes, and then he will make us feel that we are not half fervid enough in our ex pression! of delight at the prospect of re ceiving Hubert's bride. Don't trouble yourself more than you can help, mother dear, while I'm away." Her heart was heavy and ber head ached, bnt she did not let Nettle, the pony, lag on his way. As she drove him from shop to shop in Exeter, there were many who noticed that Miss Kay looked very thoughtful. Indeed, so absorbed was she in the contemplation of the subject of her brother's marriage, that she passed sev eral acquaintances without recognizing them. At last, one bolder than the rest, tnraed. after lifting his hat, when he heard her pull up at the game shop. And as she sprang out of the trap be contrived to be passing. "You here. Miss Kay. and a tennis party going on at Moor Royal V What does this portend?" "You here, Captain Edgecumb, when we all thought you safe on leave for the next mouth? You would have had an in vitation for tennis to-day, only father told i you were away." "1 came back unexpectedly got sick of London, and sic for one of the environs f Exeter. May I come in and help you to choose some of Tammy's wild fowl?" "No: but yon may hold Nettle; or, better till, yon go in and get what I want and I'll get into the trap again." When he came out again, she stooped forward and said: "You generally see Hubert when yoa go to town. Did you call on him this time?" "I tried to look him tip," be said, engag ing himself in rearranging her parcels m the bottom of the trap, "bnt he was out when I called." "He Is coming borne to-night He Is slurried, and his wife and be are coming borne to-night.' He lifted bis eyes to hers quickly enough now, and she was sure there was something of surprise and something of anger In their expression. "Married, i be?" he Mid coldly. "Rath er sodden, Isn't it? Home fellows like Msg tarprise tricks. I'm a quiet fellow. Mi dos't go In for sensation myself." Ho sfeJ kin hat nod stood aloof as be poke, and Jenifer drove off with the last osareMton that bad flitted across hla banilsnmi face photographed on her ment- "How sympathetic bo la! II looked Mito tarry for me. A ad yet I never aald word to make bin think I didn't like CWt' marriage." Op;:it t'!veK'j refBt.ed kia stiol! through the High street, musing on what he had just heard. "It clears my path toward the other one; but I didn't think you would have stolen such a march as this on me. Miss Elhe; but, no matter! , I only hojie, for Jenifer's sake, you won't ruin Hubert Kay." As Jenifer more than half feared and expected, she found all the possible guests assembled on the tennis ground when she got home. Kut though the moving spirit of Moor Koyal was abselit, the mistress of the house had done well for them. That is to say, she had jiermitted those who came to flirt to do so without interrup tion, and she had given plenty of tea, cof fee, cakes, delicately rolled bread and butter and era pea to those who think ten nis a snare and a delusion without these accompaniments. And all of these guests were full of curi osity respecting the great event; for Mrs. Kay had deemed it better not to make a mystery about what must be so soon wide ly known. So she told them that her son was mar ried, and that he and hi bride would be home that night, and that was 11 she bad to tell. Time went on, the tennis party broke up and dispersed, and each individual member of it carried away a different version of tne story of Hubert Kay's se cret marriage, for circulation in bis or ber own set. It grew dusk in these October days at six o'clock, and at seven Hubert and his wife would arrive. And still the head of the house, the master of the family, was absent and in ignorance of his eldest sou's marriage. Mrs. Kay grew strangely nerv ous. Her husband was wont to be out late frequently, for he was an ardent sports man, and with his duck gun and punt be would pass many a winter night on the marshes about Extnouth. At seven o'clock Jenifer came down, dressed for dinner, into the drawing .room, aud found her mother then; uloue. "Is Jack in, mother dear?" she said. "Yes, Jenny; Jack came in ten minute ago. I thought be might have been with ymr father, but Jack has seen nothing of him all day." Jenifer went Aff in search of her young est brother, with a sense of oppression and uncertainty about ber such as had never afflicted her before. J:ick was still whistling when his sis ter knocked ut his door, and she felt that she could have rebuked him hotly for such evidence of callousness, when her soul was being wrong by doubts aud fears for Hubert ".Make liastt down, and do be a little grave for once, Jack," she said, as a hand some hid, the very counterpart of herself, opened the door. "Why am I to !e grave? I was prepar ing to be especially festive! I thought it was the right thing to be when a bride was hurled into the midst of a family." . "What do you think about it, really, Jack?" "I haven't thought much alout it, only I shouldn't like to think that you would marry a fellow, and bear down uixm his people without having been duly adver tised. What do you think of it yourself, Jenifer?" "I'm afraid to think. I'm afraid I shall never like her, and shall never for get that she lias Is'en the cause of mak ing Hubert do the first mean thing he ever Cid in his life." Jack's room was in a side wing, and his window looked out on the stable yard at the east end of the window. But even at this distance from the front entrance, sounds reached them now, as of an ar rival and confusion. "They've come," Jenifer said, quick changes of color fleeting over her face. "Jack, come down with me. I dread " She paused abruptly. More sound, more Confusion. The trampling now of many feet, and then a long, sharp cry. At the sound of that cry the young sis ter mid brother sped along the corridor and down the stair on flying feet. Ther in the ball, held back hustled back it al most seemed by distracted, weeping ser vants stood their mother, qniet now, but with such a look of horror on her face as made them pray that she might cry, scream, do anything to relieve that terri ble tension of agony. And there on a hurdle, covered op with n.gs, "something" wa lying in sncb awfnl stillness that they knew at once it wa death. And farther knew that death and their father bad met. CHAPTER II. A doaen voices were raiaed la explana tion, consolation, suggestion, sympathy; bnt the sorely smitten family never heed ed one of them. The children pressed forward to their mother, and with all tle'.r fcn bore her away io her own room, where the silence, and the thought that he would never share it itil her again fell upon her mercifully like a blow, aud rendered her unconscious. "Better so," Jenifer said to Jack. -who wa unversed in the duct ripe Jf the "blessed balm" of uu-ousci.juni,.: "she'll I come out of this fainting tit exkiaast- ed that she must sloep. aud'Uea fbe awakes she'll be stronger to bear every thing. Oh, Jack! and an hour ago we thought Hubert's marriage a trouble!" With his fai-e swollen with crying. Jack went down presently, to have bis father's corpse moved out of the way of his brother' bride; anil, as he stood there in the hall giving broken directions amidst his sol, the carriage drew up at the door with ihe newly married pair. Hubert leapt into the house at once, ardent, exiectant, half ashamed of him self, and yet full of pride in the wife who was calmly awaiting her reception in the carriage outside. "What! no father and mother, and no Jenifer to welcome us?" he cried in sur prise; and then he saw Jack's face, and kuew in an instant that some tragedy had just been enacted. In a few words the younger brother put the elder one in possession of so many of the facts as he was acquainted with him self, and while they were still shaking in disjointed sentences and broken tone. Mrs. Hubert Kay sprang out of the car riage into the hall, and stood before them, looking strangely bright and indifferent in that bouse of horror. "What is it, Hugh?" she asked In a ringing, high-pitched voice; "have we come to the wrong house, or haven't your people got the telegram? I detest " Then her husband checked her. telling her, gently and gradually, aud with far more consideration than was needful, that his father was dead. "How awkward I mean how dread ful!" she said quickly, and then she drew her long sealskin cloak more closely round her, and turned to warm her feet at the wood fire which was burning cheerfully through all the misery at the euj of the ball. Looking at her a she stood there, one tiny foot stretched out to catch the full force of the bright blase, the figure sllght ?y thrown back to maintain Its equilib rium, and the face averted to save it from getting scorched. Jack and the others who beheld her for the first time saw a most attractive young lady. Slim to a point of slimness that might almost be called attenuation, not tall, but giving the impression of good height by reason of ber extraordinarily erect and graceful carriage; fair, with a white fair ness that would always render hers a re markable face in a country in which the rose predominates over the lily; with no feature worth mentioning for it good ness, save the eye. Hut these most dis tinctly were worth mentioning. ' Hlue, cold, and bright as steel, they had a fixity of purpose in their steady, unflinching gaze that rarely failed to find out what ever she wanted to have retreated. Huliert went for and came back with his sister hanging on his arm, and Mrs. Huliert withdrew ber foot from the fire, stood a trifle more erect, and, with un ruffled mien, waited for the introduction that was imminent "You two are sister now, and must love one another like sisters," Huliert said, with a faint assumption of hoie that such might be the case. Whereat his wife sniUed politely, gave her hand to Jenifer an instant, and then resumed ber occupa tion of warming her feet. "They get so cold traveling," she said, apologetically; "so cold that often when I come in I won't speak to any one." "Mother can't see you yet" Jenifer said, shivering. "Will you take her love and good wishes from me?" "Oh, yes." Mrs. Hubert said, affably. "Will you tell her from tne that I feel it to be very distressing and awkward that I should have come just at this time, but you see I couldn't know what was going to happen, could I?" "Oh, no one could know! Oh. my fath er my father!" Jenifer wept out ill a fresh burst of anguish, "Dinner is when did yon say?" Mrs. Huliert asked, as Mrs. Kny's own maid apieared with lighted candle to conduct the bride to her room. Mrs. Huliert addressed Jenifer, but Jenifer hud endured to the utmost, and this was the lust straw. "Whenever you please to order it for yourself. We Kay have not much appe tite for dinner." "Oh, I'm a Kay too, for that matter," Mrs. Hubert said lightly, as her sister-in-law swept past her and out of the hall in a torrent of tears ami wrath. "I supose 1 needn't dress?" Mr. Hu liert said to Chalmers, the maid, when she reached the state bedroom which hail been prepared for her with care, under Mrs. Kay's loving nierintendence. "I suppose you will do as you please, ma'am," Chalmers replied with hardly sustained self-control. Her hands were trembling as she un fastened Mrs. Hubert' traveling trunks; but full as her heart was of woe for the calamity that had come uion the house, she would not let a tear fall before this well-tcmered bit of steel who had come to be the young mistress at Moor Royal. The young lady wa arraying herself in a while cashmere dressing gown, trim med richly with white lace, which fell around her in soft, snowy fold a she spoke. All her moremeut were soft, un dulating and graceful, and It must have bceu i fastidious eye iudeed that did not rest on her wito pleasure. Nevertheless Chalmers recoiled from her, called her "a white cat" privately, and went off to seek Mr. Hubert, with the firm conviction in her mind that be had done an 111 deed in marrying and bringing home this fash ionable looking white witch. Meantime, Hubert and Jenifer had been having that trying thing a first inter view after the first breach of trust "There is no thought of it being other than an accident, is there?" he niked, anxiously, si nking of his father's death. "Oh, Hubert, no! don't even ask that of our father; hi foot must hare caught in the bramble on the top of tb badge, and in the fall be must hart struggled and the gun went off a ho fall. Jack says, for it wa not lu his hand when he was found." "It's awful to me to think that my father should never hav seen my wife." "He never even knew that you bad one; he wa out all day, and nJ mother and I had to )ear it all alone." "Yon mean the news of my marriage?" Jenifer nodded. "I was afraid -ou'd be ataggered by the telegram; but. Flora she' Kffie'a sister Is a great hand for doing thlnga off sharp ly, Khe'a a charming woman; you'll like her Immensely if he only take to you, and ahe'a sure to do that, Jenny, for you're the sweetest and prettiest creature in the world; but she's Impalsivs to a do- free, and somehow or other, when one's with her, one' hurried on to do every thing she suggest. If it hadn't been for her I should never have bad the pluck to propose a suJ leu secret marriage to Elbe, for Efhe was engaged to tome one else, you know; but Flora Mrs. Jarvoise told me in confidence that if I didu't marry EHie straight off the reel without givi- ber time to think, that I should lose ber altogether. Say something. Jenny dear; it' not like you to withhold sympathy from me. Say something about her; she's one of those charming girl who get so worshijw-d tuat they seem a little spoilt sometime, but in reality (be i capable of sacrificing herself to auy extent for those she loves; ee how be ha sacrificed herself for me." "I can only I mean, I boie she will make you happy," Jenifer aid piteously. "Don't ask me to say more to-night, Hu bert. My beau and heart are both burn ing. This is our first trouble, aud you are not sharing It with us as you would have done. Oh, Hubert, forgive me! Everything is too hard to-night." "Never mind, dear," he said forgiving ly, wiping bis own eye, and moving bis sister to deeper remorse by the ght of his emotion; "never mind, dear. It' a little uard on r Etiie that through this dreadful misery she should be made to feel herself hi the way; but she's not one to make a fuss alwut things." "If you please, sir," Chalmers said, coming up at this juncture, "Mrs. Ha liert's love to yoii. and her head is aching horribly, and she's as uncomfortable as she can be, and will you go to her at once?" "I'oor Elfii !" her husband exclaimed despairingly, a he hurried from the room to see after his bride's well being. In a minute more Jenifer wa In her mother's room. The blessed stage of un consciousness was long past, and the be reaved woman, with every sense keenly on tlie alert, was sitting by the fire, not so much for the sake of the warmth as lie cause in its fiery caverns she seemed ?o pictures of her past happy life. The picture the flames painted most vividly was the one of her home-coming as a bride. How joyful and bright all had been at Moor Royal that dny! And now he who ha I brought her home and mad.; all the joyfulness and brightness wns lying dead, aud their eldest sou bad brought home his bride, and gained noth ing but a cold welcome for her. Her thoughts were dwelling on this as Jenifer came in, and in un instant the daughter saw that there was some men tal stimulant at work in her mother. "I was stunned just now, Jenifer, and hardly understood that I was refusing to see my new daughter. Iet Hubert bring her to me now. We can learn to love one another as well in sorrow as in joy," she said as Jenifer came and knelt before her. "You arc sure you can stand it, mother darling? Yon are sure you won't put yourself to more pttin by the exertion?" The willow shook her head. "It will plea' Hubert, and what have I to live for but to please my children?" "That's no new thing; you have done that all our lives," Jenifer said, rising up and kissing her lumber's hands In a paroxysm of love and pity. Then she steadied and collected her self, and, half fearing how ber mission would be met, went in search of her brother and his wife. (To be continued.) Strange but True. A well-known naturalist aud sports man was shooting quail one day near the Pyramid. Sighting on owl. he raiaed hi gun, ami was about to pull the trigger when, Judge of hla surprise, the bird suddenly twisted In It flight a If shot, and came Uutterluf to his feet. On examination he discovered that the bird, although !n midair, bad broken It wing through the mere ex ertion of its flight. When shoot lug on the moors In York shire an unlucky sportsman had his one solitary chance during the beat spoiled by an extrordlnary accident Just a he was shooting at a grouse Hying about forty yards away, an other bird, which had evidently lost It presence of mind, fluttered In front of h!a gun. receiving: the whole of the charge in Its body. It wa literally blown to piece. Booth, the well-known collector of Brighton, once did the very same thing. He was firing at a small flock of com mon oclinrd when the charge hung fire, lu consequence of which a rare specimen hail time to fly Into the line of shot It Is now In the Brighton Museum. Apropos, a strange freak of part ridge may be mentioned. Upon cer tain occasions they will fly fur out to sea anil settle ou the top of the wave with a much unconcern a If they were ou a turnip fluid, al though It means certain death to every one of the covey. Pearson' Weekly. An Ingenious King, Before Mgr. Massala was elevated to the cardlnalate be passed much time In Abyssinia and was the prime favorite of King Menelek. One day the king asked the future prince ol the church to secure him a Hewing machine, of which he had heard. The much I tie wa shipped to Abyssinia In parts, and no one at the court or In the following of Mgr. Massala could put them together. At last the king, dcspalrltig of outside help, took the machine to hla room, worked nt It all night, and the next morning sent for the monslgnor and the queen to show them his handiwork. He had succeeded In putting the parts to gether perfectly. Varnishes. Turpentine varnishes are prepared by dissolving the softer resins, such as common roln, mastic, etc., In the best commercial oil of turpentlns. They are mostly lighter In color than oll-varnihe; tlioy dry quickly, bnt the surface of dry v.nnlh produced la less dorabio thau thnt obtained w!tb oil varnish. It appears the led brick It not coo sldered sufficiently artistic, and In I place we are furnished with the.bric of lighter hue pink, buff, yellow, and. In fact, of nearly every shade. A brick can be made that ' as mottled as a seagull's egg, or one that will show tbe varying tint of an anhitnn leaf. Tnmbllne; Mustard. It to said that the tumbling mustard, a weed introduced from Europe a 1 wilt twenty years ago, ha lieeome very troublesome In Manitoba aud other part of Northwestern Canada. Prof. Fletcher, of Ottawa, estimates that a single plant bear no less tlmu 1,.KJ0,W Reeds! "I'urk Lluht." Monsieur I-e Boll, a French experi menter, report that he has obtained outline photographs ou a dry plate through a sheet of iron, simply with the aid of an ordinary kerosene lamp. lie get the liest effects by barking the iron with a sheet of lead, but the rays do not, like the X-rays, penetrate black paper. He cnlU the radiation which produce the photograph "(lark light" The Cradle of .Mankind. The recent discovery lu Somallland by Mr. Setoti-Karr la regarded a bu Important contribution to the evidence by mean of which men of science hnie, eventually, to Ik able to locate the cra dle of the human race. The implements referred to are Identical In form with those found lu Northwestern Europe and lu India, and thut fact is thought to bean Indication thit lu the remote pre historic times called the Palaeolithic age the Inhabitants of Asia, Africa anil Europe belonged to a single race. Klterininutingr liutterflic. Collector of butterflies In England are aomewluit alarmed at the prospect of the extinction of several localized specie, mainly through the effect of overeollectlou. It a pears that three spe cies of butterflies have already been exterminated, at least from their known luiutito, aud that three other species are In imminent danger of ex tinction, and the Entomological Society ha been requested to take some action for the protection of the Insect. Some of the much-hunted species, it is Raid, will prolmlily take filial refuge lu the irreclaimable fen of Norfolk. Valuable Fox-Skin. The most expensive and beautiful of all fox fur, according to Knowledge, 1 tliat of the American sliver fox. The color Is usually almost entirely black, except the tip of the tall, and certain gray-white marking ou the hack, thighs and head. Occasionally a com pletely black specimen 1 found, and there are also some which are com pletely gray. The animal was once comparatively abundant but I now scarce, and about a year ago a single fine skin wa sold In I-ntiibm for the surprllng sum of $N75. In 1K4 many skins were Hold for more than $r0() apiece, The cheapest skin are the pale-colored one, Home of which do not command more than $l'."i. A Wilkin Kish. A queer UmIi. called the "walking goby," or the "hupping fish," I found In the Iudlan Ocean a well a along the shores of West Africa. Crowd of these curious creatures, resembling tad poles In their outlines, bask lu the sun on a muddy shore and scamper off ill being disturbed. Many of them keep the end of their long tall dipped in the water, while they He on the hum heated mud, or sit on mangrove room, and Prof. Hnddon ha Hiiggestftl that there may be an org.in of respiration in the end of the tall, additional to the olmllar organ In the gills. A more re cent Investigator, Dr. Forbes, of Liver pool, think the fish are able to store a sulllciciit quantity of water In ilielr gill to maintain aquatic respiration during their prolonged absences on the hhore. Great Tide Waves. Those who ee the rle and fall of tli.j tide In our Atlantic linrltor seldom think of the wonderful career of the moon-raised oceau-wave which cause the tidal flux and reflux. Such billow not only cross the sea, but flow from ocean Into ocean, and In thl way com plicated movemcnt ore set going. Thus, a Mr. Vaiighnn Cornish ha re cently reminded English readers, onco in every twelve hour the moon raise a tide billow In the Southern Indian Ocean. When this billow Mises the CaM of Oood Hope, nt noon, It snc eesMor I already born, and by the time the hrt billow ha reached the Azores Island, at midnight, the second U rounding the Cape, and a third has come into existence lu the southern ocean. By 4 o'clock In the morning fol lowing It pange of the Cape the tide billow reaches the English Channel aud there the shallow water delays It so much that It does not arrive at the Straits of Dover until 10 a. in. Here the narrowing Channel causes (he tide to rise very high and almost puts an end to the wave. In the meantime an other branch of the billow runs around the western side of tbe British Islands, rounds the north point of Scotland, and moves slowly down the eastern coast of England, until It Anally flows up the Thames, and laps tbe wharves of Ion don. Troo-KlBBO. On May 28 mention was made In this column of a curious theory concerning the history of a very old fir-tree from North America, a section of tbe lower part of whose trunk Is preserved lu En gland. Tbe growth rings In tbe trunk bow that the tree lived for several hundred year, aud tliat when It wa atxiut a century old something hap pened which Interfered with and de layed It growth. The effect wa to pro-dm-e a eri. of rin.p very narrow and close together, followed by rings of the usual width. Indicating that the tree had suddeuly regained It vigor. Ac cording to the theory mentioned the Influence that retarded the growth of the tree was a scries of atnmsjlieric dis turbances lu the Middle Ag which caused w Idespread epidemic In Europe aud Asia, and presumably In North Amerh-a also. Mr. H. E. Fcruow, of Washington, write to Nature that ha thinks thl theory I hardly tenable, one of narrow ring, he say, are common In nil of our tree, and he sug gest thi explana'.lon: I-ct a tree, Ilka the fir in question, grow up uuaer ra vorable conditions for a hundred years, aud then let a hurricane break off a large jiart of Its crown. Suddenly, at least within a year, the ring of growth will lR-come narrow. Within about thirty years the crown recuperate, but still the food-material descending from the leave la scanty for the lower xr tion of the trunk and narrow rings con tinue to form there, 11 gher up the tree, however, the ring will be found widen ing. Finally, and rather suddenly, the supply become normal lower down and the ring resume their regular width. Thus various accident occur ring to a tree record their effect In Its ring of grow tli. England's Food Supply. Strong o the English war fleet Is, It i very far from being strong enough to (ueeessfully engage a possible combina tion of fleet and at the same time pro tect our sea Imrne food supply, say the Nineteenth Century. If the I'ui'ed States aud Russia declared war with England there would practically be no food supply left to protect. They would keep the Immense supplies we now get from them at home, and the fear of capture or destruction would effectually prevent Argentina oud other neutrals from sending food to us lu auy sutllcleut quantity. Wliat 1 wanted Is thnt. Instead of only a precarious week's supply, we should have stored up In this country enough com to Inst for at least twelve months. Experts In the corn trade agree that there would lie no Insupera ble difficulty in gradually accumulat ing thl store of corn. It would be for expert to advise a to the best meth od nud places of storage. Perhaji the best plan would lie to dis tribute It over the country In magazines at the military depot, giving the mili tary authorities charge of It, but If It was In the country and safe It would not ho much matter where It was. Al though most of our corn 1 made into flour at the great ports. It would not lie wise, seeing that most of them are so defenseless, to store It there. The entire control aud maiiagemeut of this great national store of corn Hhould be under some permanent gov ernment deiartment Although Its ex istence could not fall to have a steady ing effect on the corn niarket, It should be outside all speculative Influences, the price at which it would be sold, when necessary to sell It, lielng fixed by law. It would be lio sacrifice, In the long run, for the country to provide such a reserve of food, a It would al way Ik? worth 1th cost. Other nations accumulate gold for use In war time. We should have a war chest of corn. If we have It, what will It do? It will give our navy time to devote Itself to the crushing of the navy or navies opposed to us. It will give tt time, with out great resources, to aug ment our fighting fleet to almost any extent, and It will give our fanner time to grow three or four time a much com and breed a much larger quantity of cattle and sheep than they now do. Napoleon's Irregular Dealings. The Embargo Act, passed In isn7 by the American Congress, had been en tirely to Nopoleon'w liking, as I proved by the Ha yon m decree of l.NOK, which ordered the seizure and sale In French liartiors of all American ships trans gressing It; but the Non-intercourse Act of March 1, IStilt. enabled a viwscl hold ing both n French mid a British license, It provided likewise with "simulated" paper of any neutral stutc, to trade In British good almoftt without restric tion. This Naoleoi chose to consldei :is open hostility, and under the Hum boulllet decree of March 23, 1S10, Amef lean vessels, with their cnrgoin, worth together over $K,rtS,0S). were seized. Ills dealings with the I'nlted Statci were very Irregular; Ix'tween 1N02 and 1X11, on one pretext or another, 558 ships flying their flag were seized In French linrlsirs; and the number seized In those of Holland, Spain, Denmark and Naples was also very large; but during the same period (ireat Britain seized 10", and there is no proof that Nn'Hilcou Intended anything more than forcing the transatlantic republic Into hostility with England. Century. Protection Against Hnorers. Now a New Jersey Justice has passed Judgment ou a man who was charged with disturbing the neighborhood with lils snoring, which tbe prosecution likened unto the noise from a boiler factory In full operation. The Justice advised the man with the wonderful snoring power to move or readjust his breathing apparatus. It was claimed by the neighbor that be could lie beard snoring a square or more nwny. An Individual with such lungs would doubtless make a good cornet player. Over In Jersey they do not want to give a man a chance to even sleep without disturbing blm. Harrlsburg Patriot . Yon have probably remarked bow soon yon get over being In lore. Well, people who are In lore with yon art just aa bad.