I HIS WORD OF HONOR. A Tale of the Blue and the Gray WERNER. Copyright. IBM , by Robert Bonner's Sons. CHAPTER X. ( Continued. ) "I hope , sir , that you are not ven turing upon a jest with me , the jus tice of the peace ! How does it hap pen that you have anything to do with such matters ? Who is this Roland , and what does Mr. Harrison say to the affair ? " "Nothing at all , because for the moment he is in a very uncomforta ble situation , which prevents any pro test. But , as to my authority , allow mo to show it to you. " The barrel of a revolver was sud denly presented to the old gentleman , who , with a cry of terror , fled to the recess of the window , leaving both dignity and dinner in the lurch. The clerk , on the contrary , who had lis tened with mouth wide open , sat as if paralyzed with terror. "Help ! Murder ! Robbers ! " shouted Mr. Thompson ; but terror so stifled him that the cry sounded a piteous whimper. "Don't Scream , sir , " said Maxwell , quietly. "We can come to a friendly agreement. As 1 said , the point in question is merely a wedding. The bridegroom is my friend , Lieutenant William Roland. I have the pleasure of presenting myself to you as Doc tor John Maxwell , both of the Union army , which will arrive here in a few hours. " "The whole Union army ? " exclaim ed Thompson , with a fresh outburst of horror. "No ; not the whole army there would scarcely bo room for it on the plantation but our regiment. I told you.during our drive that the troops were marching in this direction. But wo desire , for certain reasons , to have the ceremony performed first. The bride and groom are ready , and I hope you will be , too. I place myself at your disposal as a witness , your cleric will be the second witness , and I sup pose you brought the marriage con tract with you. We can use it at once. " "Unprecedented ! Impossible ! " groaned the justice , who now came forward again. His clerk had recov ered from his stupor so far as to fly from the range of the revolver. He , she must be ready to be married at once. He had at last entered with the ut most zeal Into Maxwell's bold plan , which had at first seemed out of the question. It was really the only way to secure his bride and prevent any later intrigues of Edward. He ha"d an inviolate right to claim his wife. Happen what might in Springfield , she belonged to him alone. The brief de lay which would be caused by the cere mony was really not so dangerous as it seemed.Captain Wilson could hard ly have reached the city , and the escort cert would not arrive before evening. The doctors were not expected for several hours ; and as for the servants , Maxwell's judgment of them proved correct. CHAPTER XI. From the moment they discovered the identity of the two strangers all hostility was at an end. They be longed to the ranks of the "libera tors. " Besides , they loved their young mistress as much as they feared tfi Edward the stern master. The last few months , during which he had had the reins of government , had shown the whole household what was to be expected from the new master. Now he had mysteriously vanished. Per haps he might even be dead. But not a hand stirred to seek or aid him. Besides , practical John , who never lost sight of any possibility , had tak en care to prevent danger from the few white men who were acting as overseers in the fields. He had sum moned the whole establishment , and briefly stated that the Union army was marching' in that direction ; that one regiment would arrive that evening and hold every human being in Springfield to a strict account , if a hair of his head or Lieutenant Ro land's was harmed. The composure with which he related this fairy tale made a strong impression , and the rapidity of all these incidents bewil dered them. No one ventured to raise an objection when Maxwell ordered the fastest horses to be harnessed and the carriage brought round ; but all hastened to obey , while the doctor LEAVING BOTH DIGNITY AND DINNER. too , took refuge in the window recess , where he vied with his employer in trembling. "May I request you to let me see the document ? " asked Maxwell. "But it contains the name of Edward - ward Harrison , " said the magistrate , desperately. "We'll erase it and put William Ro land in its place. " "But that won't do. " "It must do ! I most courteously beg you for it. " A movement of the revolver gave this courtesy the necessary emphasis : Mr. Thompson tried to hide behind his clerk , and the latter , with a trembling hand , drew out a paper which he held like a shield toward the oppressor. "Space for the names has been left , " ha stammered. "They were to be fill ed in at Springfield. " "Excellent ! Then there is nothing to be erased. Calm yourself , Mr. Thompson. I assure you that I have the highest regard for you , and have told my friend so much about you that he , too , holds you in great esteem. Permit me again to apologize for dis turbing you , but there is nothing to prevent your continuing your meal as soon as the ceremony is over. So , if you please " The gentlemen did not look as if they were inclined to follow. They left the window with evident reluc tance , but they did leave it and , un der Maxwell's escort , went to the drawing-room. Here they found William with Flor ence , the latter half-bewildered by the rapidity with which events had fol lowed each other. While waiting in terrible anxiety for news , her imag ination conjuring up the most terri ble possibilities , Roland suddenly stood before her , free and unharmed , and in hurried words told her that proceeded to exchange the courtesies already mentioned with his esteemed friend , Mr. Thompson. Florence was sitting on a sofa , with William standing beside her both in the greatest agitation and excitement when the gentlemen entered. Doc tor Maxwell , however , was calmness itself , when he made the necessary in troductions. "Lieutenant Roland the bridegroom you already know the bride , Miss Harrison. William , I have the pleas1 ure of presenting to you the justice < of the peace , Mr. Thompson , who , with the utmost readiness to oblige , instantly - 1 stantly consented to gratify your 1 wish. " William looked at the magistrate , whose pale face and shaking knees distinctly showed how he had been induced to show this vaunted oblig ingness. The affair , which afforded j his friend a malicious satisfaction , was ] extremely painful to him. "Calm yourself , sir , " he said , approaching preaching him. "You are perfectly safe. Neither you nor your compan ion needs fear. I deeply regret that we were forced to put the request in such a form , but the circumstances < compelled it. As soon as the wedding : is over , you can return to the city. " 1 The old gentleman again breathed 1 freely. He had imagined the lieuten ant a far more terrible personage than the doctor , and now he proved to be the more humane of the two. But Mr. Thompson preferred to place himself * close to Miss Harrison as quickly as ] possible. If he stood close by her ' side , no one could fire at him. Meanwhile , Maxwell had given * the marriage contract , which had been handed to him , a brief , yet thorough scrutiny , and now again laid it on the table. "Everything is correct ! " he said. "The names are still missing. Please insert them. Mr. William Roland Miss Florence Harrison ! There , now we can begin. " The magistrate had so far recovered that he could commence the cere mony , which was performed very quickly , but in strict legal form. The usual questions were asked and an swered , " the signatures were affixed , and In less than ten minutes the wed ding was over. William , deeply mov ed , clasped his young wife to his heart. Maxwell glanced toward the door , where Ralph had appeared during the last moment , but remained standing motionless in order not to interrupt the ceremony. The doctor exchanged a few words with him in a low tone , then turned to the young couple. "Mrs. Roland , please go to your father. William , you can accompany your wife. There is no fear that your presence will disturb the sick man don't leave her alone now ! " A significant glance emphasized the words. William understood that the last moments of Mr. Harrison's life were at hand , and putting his arm around his wife he led her to her dying father. ( To be Continued. ) How a llocr Signs Ilia Name. From the London Mail : The Boer may be fairly good at handling a rifle , but he is sadly deficient , in his ability to handle a pen. When the average Boer has to attach his name to a docu ment an air of importance pervades his dwelling for several hours. The chil dren are constantly chided , the patient "vrouw" has a preoccupied look and the husband himself puffs even more vigorously than usual at his pipe. Eventually a corner of the table is cleared and carefully wiped. The fam ily Bible is-placed in position and the sheet of paper requiring the signature placed upon it. An expectant silence fails upon the company. "Stilte ! " cries the wife. "Stilte , kindetjes , papa gaat sein naam teken. " ( "Hush , chil dren , father is about to sign his name. " ) The family stands round openmouthed - mouthed , and all eyes gaze expectant ly upon the paper. With arms bared for the fray , and with pen carefully poised , the Boer bends to his task. The pen is gripped firmly between his horny fingers. In thick , ungainly scratches , and with slow and painful motion , the pen begins to work , and at the end of , it may be four minutes , the deed is accomplished. Half-TPay House of Biff Birds. Near St. Charles , Mo. , is a great sandbar , called Pelican bend , which projects into the Missouri river , and for some unknown reason it is a favor ite stopping place for the numerous flocks of pelicans that migrate north and south every year. It has been no ticed that regularly each fall on Sept. 4 they begin to arrive. They remain till cold weather and then pass on south. In the spring they return to the bend , remain a short time , and then proceed north. It may be that in the shallows around this sandbar are quantities of fish of which the awk ward birds are fond , for they live al most entirely on fish. A pelican loves nothing better than to wade in shal low water , where schools of minnows and small fish are gathered , and to scoop them up in its great elastic pouch that hangs under its lower bill. These big-bodied and short-legged birds are clumsy enough on laud , but they have enormous webbed feet , and widespreading wings. So in water or air they move rapidly , and they seem never to tire of swimming or flying. EartU a Pyramid In Shape. Since the earth was first formed many theories have been advanced as to its shape and the process of Its formation , but no one until our day ever maintained that its form was that of a huge pyramid. Centuries ago Py thagoras and Aristotle declared that it was spherical , Anaximander that it was shaped like a column , Democritus that it was a concave disc and very much resembled a huge porringer , Em- pedocles and Anaximenes that it was a plane disk , and Zenofanes that it had roots 1 like a tree , which spread in all directions far into the infinite. Now comes J. Greene , an English scientist , and a government official in the Sand wich islands , with the bold announce ment that all these ancient theories.as well as the modern ones , are utterly baseless , since , according to him , the earth has the form of a triangular py ramid , or , in other words , of a regular tetrahedron , with the apex at the south pole and the base at the north. Obeyed the Qrtlcrs. New York Evening Sun : The story of the green servant girl who boiled a watermelon is more than rivaled by the story of the experienced girl , who boiled the plum pudding. She was the sort of young person who more than anticipated any directions with the as surance of her knowledge on the sub ject , so that the woman of the house hold gave her but one important hint about the Christmas pudding. "Be careful not to let it boil down , " she said ; "put plenty of water in the ket tle , and keep putting more in as it boils out. " "Yes'm , " was the response. There was no doubt but that she obeyed that injunction to the very let ter. She'- had put in plenty of water and she had added more from time to time. But another little item she had neglected she had not put the pud ding into a bag. His Favorite Barber. Grymes "Why do you always go to that particular barber ? " Ukerdek "He is bald as an egg. " Grymes "What of that ? " Ukerdek "He cannot ad vise me to use a hair restorer. " One of Mr. Lincoln's characteristics was his ineffable tenderness towarc others , says the Springfield Repub lican. He wrote Injuries in the sand benefits on marble. The broad man tle of his enduring charity covered a multitude of sins in a soldier. He loved justice with undying and solicit ous affection , but he hated every de serter from the great army of human ity. He was dowered with the love or love. love.He He was always equal to the occa sion , whether saving a sleeping sen tinel by one stroke of the pen from a dishonored grave or writing that bold and steady signature to the proclama- "I'D GIVE THEM JESSE , tion of emancipation which made the black race give him a crown of im mortelles. As the negro preacher in Vicksburg said of him : "Massa Lin- kum , he eberywhere ; he know ebery- t'ing ; he walk de earf like de Lord. " His Keen Irony. Abraham Lincoln could say true things when just resentment required censure. He released some prisoners on the other side of the "divide" in 1863. The wife of one of these insisted "that her husband was a religious man , even if he was a rebel. " Mr. Lincoln wrote the release slowly , as if in doubt , and , without smiling , handed it to the now happy wife , but said , with keen irony : "You say your husband is a relig ious man. Tell him when you meet him that I say I am not much of a judge of religion , but in my opinion the religion that sets men to rebel and fight against their government because , as they think , that government does not sufficiently help some men to eat their bread in the sweat of other men's faces is not the sort of i-eliglon upon which people can get to heaven. " Dick Gowcr'd Appointment. Mr. Lincoln once told Horace Dem- ing , a Connecticut congressman , when he had been importuned to join a church , that "when any church will Inscribe over its altar as its sole quali fication the Savior's condensed state ment of the substance of law and gos pel , 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy soul , and thy neighbor as thyself that church will I join with all my heart. " His great good sense was shown in his making Dick Gower a lieutenant in the regular army. Dick had shown his bravery and his capacity among the western Indians , but was rejected by the board of military martinets at Washington because he "did not know what an abatis , or echelon , or hollow square was. " "Well , " sharply said tLo dilettante officer with a single eye glass , "what would you do with your command if the cavalry should charge on you ? " "I'd give them Jesse , that's what I would do ; and I'd make a hollow square in every mother's son of them. " Lincoln signed his commission and Dick made a famous soldier. Bead the Letter. McClellan then requested his chief of staff to find a copy of the letter. It was speedily produced , and Gen. Mc Clellan proceeded to crush Mr. Lincoln by reading his vituperative attack on Stanton , with reflections on Lincoln's conduct of the war. Lincoln's peace ful smile vanished. When the letter ended he rose quickly , looking neither to the right nor left not waiting for any farewell to Gen. McClellan. He seemed oppressed with the con sciousness of the dangers of the mili tary as well as the political situation of things. He drove slowly with Gen. Blair over to the boat , which was to convey them from Harrison's landing back to Washington. When the vessel had started , Mr. Lincoln , for the first time since leaving McClellan's tent , broke the silence and said to Gen. Blair : "Frank , I now understand this man. That letter is Gen. McClellan's bid for the presidency. I will stop that game , tfow is the time to issue the proclama tion emancipating the slaves. " He forthwith Issued the proclama tion of emancipation. Within a week after the world was startled by a new charter of freedom for the slave. Gen. McCIolIan's Mistake. Congressman Vaux of Philadelphia , In his late years changed his views nbout President Lincoln. He told an , nteresting story about the proclama tion of emancipation. The classic and scholarly Vaux had been making speeches in Connecticut. 3rd came home with Frank P. Blair of Missouri , who was very close to the many-sided patriot president while the war lasted. Gen. Blair told Richard Vaux this story : "Mr. Lincoln had become Impatient at Gen. McClellan's delay on the penin sula , and asked Frank Blair to go with him to see the commanding general. The distinguished visitors arrived on a hot day , and went straight to McClel lan's headquarters. They were re ceived with scant courtesy , and the commanding general did not ask the president to eat or drink. Lincoln sat in his white linen duster , uncomforta bly silent , with his long and sinewy limbs doubled up like a jackknlfe , till finally Gen. McClellan broke the dense silence by saying : "Mr. President , have you received the letter I mailed you yesterday ? " "No , " courteously replied Lincoln ; "I must have passed it on the way. " WASHINGTON AND LINCOLN. The greatest names in American his tory are Washington and Lincoln. One is forever associated with the inde pendence of the states and the forma tion of the federal union , the other with the universal and the preserva tion of that union. Washington en forced the declaration of independence as against England , Lincoln proclaimed its fulfillment , not only to a down trodden race in America , but to all people , for all those who may seek the protection of our flag. These illus trious men achieved grander results for mankind within a single century from 1775 to 18G5 than any men ever ac complished in all the years since first the flight of time began. Washington engaged in no ordinary revolution. With him it was not who should rule , but what should rule. He drew his sword , not for a change of rulers upon an established throne , but to establish a new government which should ac knowledge no throne but the tribune of the people. Lincoln accepted war to save the union , the safeguard of our LINCOLN ROSE QUICKLY , liberties , and re-established it upon "indestructible foundations" as forever "one and indivisible. " To quote his own grapd vords : "Now we are all contending that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom , and that the govern ment of the people , by the people , for the people , shall not perish from the earth. " * * * LINCOLN AND THE WIDOW. The 12th of February.- Abraham Lin coln's birthday , brings to our thoughts ol stronger than over reminiscences this noble man's Hfo , says n. writer in Harper's Round Table. Hundreds ot books have recorded nndwlll perpetuate his good deeds for centuries to come , but It is a pleasure to road now and then of some little act of kindness that will stand alone illustrating the man's sympathies and breadth of this the nobility of his character. During all that dreadful period when the civil war was ravaging the country Lincoln held the reins of the government , and although worn out with the unceasing toll , ho never neglected an opportunity to help those who suffered. One day a poor woman , whoso tears had worn furrows down -her cheeks , gained an audience with Lincoln , and in a few words related the sad tale of her husband , who had fought in the Union army , only to lose his life , and of her three boys who were then fight ing. She requested the discharge of s. LINCOLN WROTE THE ORDER. her eldest boy , that she might have some one to support her. Lincoln's heart responded to the appeal , and he replied : "Certainly , if you have given us all , and your prop has been taken away , you are justly entitled to one ot your boys. " The poor woman went away light of heart , only to return later , tearfully begging the release of her second son. The discharge of the first son had como too late. He was killed before it reached him. Sadly Lincoln sat down and wrote the requisite order for the release of the second son , and rising , handed the paper to the afflicted wom an , saying : "Now you have one and I have one of the two boys left ; that Is no more than right. " Weeping with joy ; the poor mother blessed Lincoln and hurried out to send her precious order. ' % ' ' Hobart and Newspaper Men. The late Vice-President Garret A. Hobart delighted in informal chats about people and things bordering on Bohemia. The ways of newspaper men strangely interested him. He said once that he envied them because of their roving freedom and the ease with which they seemed to write. He con sidered writing a greater art than speaking. "I find no trouble In talk ing to an audience , " he said , "but when it comes to putting my thoughts on paper I find It a great task. Read ers are more critical than hearers. The art of writing is the greater. " New Fodder for Cavalry Naps. Molasses for cavalry horses will In future be one of the items of expense for the maintenance of the army In the Philippines. LINCOLN'S HUMBLE HOMES. .J-iNCqcN , ! ' -V * Here are three homes of our great martyred president , as unpretentious * . as he was himself. His birthplace was a cabin in Hardin county Kentucky " * " 'Taln't much of a place to be born in , " said young Abe , revisiting the" scene in his youth. The years from 7 to 10 the lad spent In the Indiana home , near Farmington , Coles county. The picture also shows the modest house In Springfield , where Lincoln lived when events began to push "aim n toward the top of the ladder.