i THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, rORTLAXD, DECEMBER 1908. WOMi ggy Jewell Ford. 11 i rT a yi n if : - J l w . r- I :ser A yyTJ ?) VA IT 1 ft V Professor S&orfar M-Ci6e efts of OH! What about Sadie Sullivan? Why, didn't you hear about her belli- on the other elder Sure! Six or eigne months, and she's been movln' In the king row. too. Me? Ah, say! any one wOHld think I'd been burnln' my ledgers, the way you're workln' the Ivlns pump act on me! I've been run nln' the studio, and I ain't been useln" any ocher pup fund, either. But I'm wise to what you're drlvin at .and I expect you might's well have the whole of that Sir Bertie business. Fast It. I wan't lookln' for anything else. When you spring a real candy girl like Sadie on that foreign bunch, and let It get noised around that she has a wad big enough to stuff a mat tress with, there's bound to be some excitement among the noble poor. She hadn't been there a moufh be fore we begins to get all kind's of re ports. First it was Lord Alfn'alf, then It's Baron Hochhelmer. and next It's Duke Snldeovlu-h. with a few counts and princes on the side; until I wouldn't have been much surprised to hear she was coinln' home wearln' a double-decked crown and bringin' a throne chair as excess baggage. What was I thlnkln all this time? Say. when It comes to plannin' out what Sadle'll do. I don't tackle the Job. "If she's made up her mind to put her stencil on somethln' of that kind," says I, "why. It's hers, that's all. And If she don't want "em. they'll hear about it." ' ! Along at the lac of It. though, I'd kind of lost track of her. and. it be gun to look as if she'd settled down over there for good: when one day lMnckney shows me her name on the passenger list, and says: "I suppose you will be down bright and early to see the steamer come In; eh. Shorty?" "Huh!" says I. "Me waltin' at the dock! For why?" "But you're anxious to see Sadie again, aren't you?" says he. "What gave yon that idea?" says I. Vh, ho!" says he, and them snappy Mack eyes of his open wide like he'd dug up something new. "Ah. lose It!" says I. "You and your 'oh. ho's'! Huh!" But say. Just between us, that was only a steer. I'll own up I was some int'rested. Anyway. I takes pains to be posted on when the boat's sighted off Sandy Hook, when she's due at the pier and about the time Sadie would be apt to be tripptn' down the gangplank. "Chee!" says Swlfty Joe, after I'd phoned for the fourth time, "you must he expeetln' some one special on that boat, or is It a bluff T' "One of them guesses is right. Swlfty," says I. But I takes It all out In usln" the wire, stlckln close to the shop all day and lettln' on to myself that I didn't care where she was or how she looks. Then comes that stuff In the evenln' papers tellln" about this Sir Bertie Ent wlstle, who's come over In the same ship. Seems he was a good deal of a whale. Sir Eertle was. Not that he's ever done anything special for himself; but he's had the right kind of grandfathers, and has always been mixed up with the swell push, it belli Walesy and Eddie with him, whenever the doors was shut and the wrapper yanked olt a fresh deck. And all that goes to make him the one best bet, so far as the dinner party push goes. The paper says he was met at Quarantine with a bushel basket of invites, and they figure out that if he takes 'em all on. one after the other, he could get free board oil Fifth-are. for a year. They'd tried to stand Sir. Bertie up for a talk and get him to give his WITH SUNDRY TWTiSTJ NOT COMPLIMENTARY TO TH IJ LAND i ELI I see Divine Right has been getting another brutal shove In the epiglottis," said the Hotel Clerk. "Where 'bouts did the latest out rage take place?" asked the House Ietective. "This time It's China." said the Hotel Clerk. The new emperor don't want to keep his Job and his devoted peo ple don't want him to keep1 it either. He sits there in the Forbidden City, living on hard-boiled eggs, and break ing the shells himself Just to dis courage any near relatives who might be moved to slip a little crushed glass or roach powder Into his breakfast food, with nothing to do but let his fingernails grow and worship his an cestors. He can throw a lot of soul Into the ancestor part too, because he's liable any day to be one. And on the outside Is the populace uttering growl ing sounds off-stage like a Dave Be lasco mob and threatening to come right In without stopping to ring or wipe their feet or anything, and wreck the works because nobody asked their advice about filling the vacancy that occurred owing to the Dowager Em press, a lady called Tidy Ann for short, and the other Emperor, whose name sounded like the finish of a college yell, having partaken heartily of pie that hadn't been properly analyzed by the court chemist before serving. And Just the week or tfo back it was Kaiser Wllbelm that was taken with severe cramps and sinking sen sations in "he neighborhood of his Divine Rights. As long as he -had been satisfied to ride around on a horse, dressed up In a reteran fire man's helmet, and a waahboiler over his chest, with his mustaches all coiled ready to strike, and his eyes flashing fire, the Kaiser was a grand piece of work and hla loyal subjects were views on New York as It looked from the saloon deck opopsite Fort Wads worth; but Bertie has ducked, so they fills out the column describin' the two stunnln' American beauts that was helpin' him hold up the rail. And say. the minute I reads about the one with the copper red hair and the Irish blue eyes. I don't need to see any halftone to know It was Sadie. "The other may be a peach, too. thinks I: "but I'll bet she don t stand one-two-alx it Sadie Sullivan's got her line out." Which don't mean that I'm feelln gay about it. I'd been hopin' she'd left all that truck on the far side of the water. This brlngln' one over with her. though, kind of put frost on the dahlias, and I guess I wa'n't none too cheerful. It was when I was right in the middle of my grouch that I'm rung up by Mrs. Purdy Pell. Now I want to mark It up that she means well most ot the time. Mrs. Purdy Pell does; and the way she puts It to me about my bein' down on the.list for a little wel come home dinner she was glvin' that night was on the level. "Of course." says she. "you are one of Sadie's old friends, and I wouldn't think qf leaving you out: but "Sure!" savs I. "I'm much obliged too. And It's too bad. ain't rt, that me havln' a date with my Sunday school class may make me hand In the re grets?" "So sorry," says she. "Sir Bertie Entwlstie Is to be with us. you know. But Tou'll conie If vou can?" 'Don't let the soup get cold waitin" for me, though, says I. And with that I rubs the whole pro eeedln' oft the slate. Sadie and me had been good friends for quite some time, and we'd thought more or less well of each other, even after she got to travelin' high; but I didn't have to figure long to see that If she'd entered herself for the Sir Bertie sweepstakes there wa'n't any use in me hangln" over the fence. It was me for the background, lookln' as pleasant as I knew how. You couldn't blame Sadie, could you? I didn't. Never could find much fault with her programme, any way. Just by way of keepln my courage up. though. I plans out a little solitaire celebration of mv own. I goes the limit, too. lneludin' evenln' clothes. callin' a cab, and ordorin dinner at the swellest Joint on Broadway. That's where I was. under the pink candle shade, guessin at which fork came next, and havln an expensive and lonesome time of it, when I looks up and sees Pinckney makln' for me In tow of the head waiter. I could ac count for how he'd happened to locate me, as I'd left word at home; but why he wa'n't at the Purdy Pells with the rest of the bunch was a puzzler. He don't give me a chance to ask. cither. "Well, yaiue a nice one. Shorty: says he. "There's times when I almost believe It myself." says I. "and then again " "Why aren't you at Mrs. Purdy Pell s dinner?" says he. . "Maybe my reason's as good as yours." says I. "Nonsense! says he. "Tell me This, though: you were asked, weren't you?" "How. foolish: says I. Sure: "And you knew it was for Sadie?" he goes on. "She mentioned that, too, says I I guess I Bint bein much missed, though." Well," says he. "you have guessed wrong, and by acting the chump you've stirred up all kinds of a row. Sadie thinks you were left out, and Insists that If you had been Invited you would be thire; and Mrs. Purdy Pell wants to know If her word Is doubted and " "Hold on." says I. "Let's get this straight. Has Sadie sent out a call for me?" "I'm the messenger," says Pinckney. "Then you win,- says I. "Hey.gar soon. l'addish-on the check the bill of damages and shake It up, or your dollar tlp'll look like a lead quarter. Come on, Pinckney!" I had sawed off the food list Just before the woodcock, and I finds Pinckney has quit at the roast; but neither of us was klckln' on that ac- ' strong for him. They even let him paint oil portraits and write German operas, which Is a very serious under , taking, and sail war vessels because business was going along about as usual and his Imperial majesty sup plied a touch of color around the premises that was equal to a totem pole. But one morning the Kaiser found the First Lord of the Bed Cham ber had laid out a frock boat Instead of a uniform for him and as soon as he put it on he decided to embark In the state craft line. So he called up an English journalist who put on his spats and his high hat and hurried over to Potsdam and the Emperor pro ceeded to tell him in detail what bis Intentions regarding destiny and providence would be during the com ing Winter and ensuing Spring. But I guess maybe the Kaiser's breakfast didn't agree with him that morning. Anyway he passed out a line of con versation that began to coagulate as soon as it struck the open air. "And when the Emperor got back a few days later from a hunting trip In the Tyrols. after the wild daschund. the sav age roll-mop, the ferocious Swltzer Kase and other denizens of the wild, he found the doctrine of Divine Rights draped over the back fence, while a lot of husky chaps were standing around shaking the dust of ages out of it the same as If they'd been beating a carpet- The Kaiser naturally started to voice his royal In dignation, but when he'd talked only a few minutes and was some distance from the verb, the crowd closed in on him and tho Chancellor took his Imperial Majesty by his imperial goozie and turned off the flow. "It was an awful shock to the Kaiser. You might Imagine , a v lot of strange things a canary bird being sassy to a cat. or Nat Goodwin without another wife, or Jake Riis speaking sharply of count It was havin' the hansom Jammed in a cross-town block that gets us wrathy. It puts our schedule on the SADIE fritz: so when we fln'lly does show up at Mrs. Purdy Pell's it's all over but the coffee, and that's bein' passed around In the front rooms, where the 4 men can hit up the pantelas and cork tips. the habits and customs of President Roosevelt, but you couldn't Imagine any thing like the feelings that came over the Kaiser. Nothing like it had ever happened in tho Kaiserlne business be fore. It was an altogether-agalnst-prece-dent. He couldn't understand it, so, in their gentle German way they took a maul and drove the information Into him that, while he might still be the regular official German Emperor when there was an army review or a parade of the Knights of Pythias, or a brewery unveil ing, or something of that ort on, yet when It came to running the real show lie whs merely an Innocent bystander named William . J. Hohenzollem, with a seat In the royal box and the lid on the box and the hasp over the staple and the bung hole completely bunged by one of the best .bungsters In the business, the name being Von BuloW. "It certainly was a hard blow for Dl vlna Rights. With the exception of Rus sia and our own beloved Tilted States, I don't know of any civilized country where Divine Rights can feel at home any more, now that Germany has handed out the grand slam." "Did you say the United States? said the House Detective, puzzled. "Sure," said the Hotel Clerk. "We've mighty near got the Divine Rights market cornered In this coun try. Over on the other side only one family at a time has been entitled to hold the Divine Rights concession; but here, among us, just look bow many there are that enjoy It- Let's see there's policemen and hired girls and streetcar conductors and Southern gentlemen who don't like what some editor wrote abouc them in the paper, and criminal lawyers who are cross examining scared witnesses, large cor porations and captains of industry, and head waiters and others too numerous to mention. "Now in England they have Divine CLELMOi B fiis nusid&s i Now all the way up I'd been gettin" chesty over the way things has turned I out, and when Flnckney leaves me THROWS 18 THE KNOWI' WIN K AS SHE while he goes to make his report, I braces myself to stand the shock of havln' some one fall on my neck right there in public. It looked like some- ""j- thing of the kind was due, didn't it? I was in demaTid, wa'n't I? Hadn't Sadie Rights, but they've kept It In a safe in the British museum. 1 Anybody that's suffering from a fret-edge grouch against the King and the gov ernment can go to Hyde Park of a Sunday afternoon and climb up on a box which has contained Yarmouth bloaters or other staple articles of diet and call his revered sovereign names until he's so exhausted that he's hardly strength enough left to stagger home for his crumpets and dish of tea. But you go out into the middle of any important street In this town where the copper is conducting the course of traffic in the kind, fore bearing, patient way common to cops, and you address a few words of per sonal nature to him and then be sure to get the ambulance surgeon to stop here on the way back with you so as to let you whisper through the tem porary bandages and tell me what happened to you and how long you think you'll be in the hospital. "On the other side you call your servant girl by her last name, such as Meadows or Fleming or Brlggs, and In return she stoops and gives you a curtsey. Call a North American hired girl by her last name in a peremptory tone' ,'of voice, and will she stoop down? She will that. But she won't come up with courtesy. She'll come up with a flat Iron or a rolling pin or something handy like that, and before she gets through working on you, there'll be so many new symbols and outward marks of the theory of Divine Rights Imprinted on your dome of thought that your head will look like a peck of Winter turnlps. "W'hy, Larry, when you come to take a complete census. Divine Rights appears to be mighty near the commonest thing e've got. There s one set of Divine Rights that entitles the man at the In formation bureau in a large railroad sta A.--- u .r. ..... ... x-w I w mm j. cam iit foc&iing i raised a row because she nought I d been handed a blue ticket? Well, well! I backs up into a corner, under a date J GOES BY. palm growln' out of a thousand-dollar Jap vase, and tries to look unsus pectin'. And sure enough. Inside of a couple of minutes, here comes Sadie herself, plkln' straight at me, with her flnser held up and her lips pouted out like she was goin' to say, "Naughty, naughty!" Gee! but she was lookln' like a winner, too! She's wearln' one of them tomato bisque tinted Paquin dreams, such as the Custom House sleuths look for in trunk bottoms, and she's had the latest archlteeturln' done to that copper hair: and you could see by her arms she'd taken on 10 or 12 pounds Just enough to balance ripht while she's been gone -but she's the old Sadie, Just the same. "Now, aren't you ashamed of your self. Shorty McCabe?" says she, reachln' out both hands and gettin' a grip on mine. "I'm worse'n that. Sadie," says I. as we strikes the London-bridge-is-fallin'-down pose. "Well," says she, "what's the an swer?" , "You'll never get It from me." says I; "for now I've had a look at you. It don't seem any more sensible than a bad dream. Gee! but you're all right. Sadie!" "Blarney!" says she, tearin' off one of them laughs of hers and givin' me the finger squeeze, until if seems all the chandeliers has been turned on at once. Well, we was right in the midst of a two-sided game of Jolly, when out from the other side of the palm strps a big. good-figured, rich-tinted girl, with a red rose in her black hair. ' She's all got up in white silk, quiet and modest appearin", one of the kind that looks good enough to eat. She wa'n't lookln' happy, though. It was easy to guess she wa'n't bltin' her upper lip because she thought It tasted good, and she has her chin down like she was bein' sent home from school. "Why Peggy Hubbard!" says Sadie, grabbin' her. "Where have you been hiding ever since dinner?" "Right there," says Peggy, polntin to a seat behind the vase, "Just where I was left stranded." "What!" says Sadie. "You don't mean that he" "Perhaps he forgot." says Peggy. "He went straight off with a Mrs. Brltton Bailey and " "Oh. her!" says Sadie, the curve straightenin' out of her mouth, and red spots fiushin' up under her eyes. Then tion not to know anything but insulting Temarks. and another that permits a criminal lawyer, whose only office ad dress Is the number on his hat, to back THB first ministers who came to New England were all scholarly men, some of them men of fine mental acquirements. And in. later years tiie standard of education was high among the men who preached in Puritan pUlpits. Yet their sermons do not show great or iginality of thought or power or literary charm. I have looked over scores of them, writes Alice Morse. Earle in the Sunday School Times, and ever with a sense of disappointment. In one interesting and important detail, however, great originality was shown in the choice of texts. The preacher did not hesitate td place parts of sentences and even of words into a text to suit any oc casion or event. . And most unexpected and unusual things were referred to in these texts. Not only did the minister openly give out a text dealing with his own wedding or some other of prominence in the par ish, and a mourning widower revealed his grief by his text to his congregation, but a bereft parson, overcome by his loneli ness, would display through his choice of text his evident intent to wed again. In one such case the eyes and thoughts of the whole congregation were turned to the deacon's daughter, who by a text con taining her name was directly placed be fore the church as a possible candidate. "Barkis is willing" was expressed In bib lieal terms as a tentative approach. Local events In the tow:n were referred to and matters of public interest. .The purchase of a new house, the gathering of a good crop of wheat, a poor harvest, a desire for replenishing of clerical purse and larder, a hope of a gift of books, a sneer at an inferior public teacher, a dis orderly disturbance of the puolic peace, a dread of an epidemic of disease all these THE OLD NEW ENGLAND PREACHER she takes a quick look around the room. "Peggy. I want you to know Mr. McCabe. Wait here until I " "But I I want to go home," says Peggy. "Silly!" says Sadie. "I sha'n't let you, that's all! Shorty, you see that she doesn't. I'll bo back soon." Then siie's off. Well, I looks at Miss Hubbard and she looks at me. Miss Peggy don't act like she was real tuned up for conversation Just then: but she manages to say that she and Sadie got chummy comin' over on the steamer, that she don't know hard ly any one In New York, and that she wishes) she had stayed right in her hotel with mommer. instead of coming out among a lot of stiff strangers. "Live in Chicago, eh : ' says I. "Chicago!" says she. "Certainly not!" "Whew!" says T. "I might have known it was Denver. Hut this only brings her chin up a little more, so I declares the class in geography adjourned. What I wanted to do was to soothe her down and make her feel comfortable; for it was as clear as day she was some outsider that Sadie had rung In on this swell dinner party, and that she'd been up against the cold. . glassy gaze., You know how them folks can do it. Even if she hadn't been a friend of Sadie's I'd been sorry for her: for there was no Uenyin' that in the brunette class she was a star, and a nice, well-be-, liaved girl at that. Somehow, though, I didn't make any great headway. After my second or third crack she gives me the three quarters view of her right shoulder and goes on bitin' her lip. We must have looked about as Joyous and cheery as a pair of plaster Images on the mantel. Once Pinckney floats by with some lady friend on his arm, and wants to know if everything is all right. "Oil. lovely!" says I. "I couldn't be enjoyin' myself more If I was tongue tied." I takes it as a kind of a Joke for the first iive or ten minutes: but after we've stood there like dummies for half an hour, with tho whole push gassin' and laughin' and carryin' on sociable all around us. now and then throwin' us a look as if we was curios in a case, it wa'n't quite so funny. I was gettin' to feel like a plain clothes man guawlin the weddin' presents. It would have been some better if I could have talked matters over with Miss Hubbard and found out what we was on the siding for; but all she does is get glummer by the minute. Course, I knew Sadie wa'n't one to put up a job on us like that, and that she must have something or other on hand that has to he attended to. Just where this Mrs. Bailey comes in I can't figure out. You know tho kind of a tnp-notcher Mrs. Britton Bailey Is? She's it, or nothing, and when she can't have her swing there's apt to be all sorts of a rumpus. Maybe you've heard of her run-in with Mrs. Astor over that Prince? Well, Just as I was lookln' around and wonderin" what was keepin Sadie, who should show up but the two of' 'em, one on either side of a long-geared, lantern jawed freak that looked about as much awake as if he'd been walkin' In his sleep. He has on a pair of shell rimmed eyeglasses rims about half an inch thick, and big. round panes that gives him the look of a sick owl. But this Mrs. Brltton Bailey .'was wide enough awake. She was pumpin' hot air at the freak like she was a blast furnace, while Sadie don't seem to be doin' much but drag down his el bow. I notice the other folks starin' at 'em. and all of a sudden I guesses who he is. "Say." says T. nudgin Peggy, "Is the lengthy party this Sir Bertie I've heard so much about?" She says he is, and as the three of 'em was circlin' our way I stands ready to be relieved of guard duty. But hanged If they don t sail past within three feet of us, without so much as a look. "Well, wouldn't that molt the bird on Nellie's hat!" says I. "Are we-per-manent decorations here, or what?" If Peggy had any views on the sub ject thev must have been too strong for publication. All she c"oei is get a new hold on her lip and watch 'em E 1 a timid citizen into the deadly clutches of a witness chair and shake his finger in his face and tell him he's nine differ ent kinds of a liar while a learned Judge sits by Just waiting for the victim to talk back so he can send him to jail for contempt of court; and another that gives a large wealthy corporation the power to do things that an individual couldn't do without being sent to the electric chair for it, and another that al lows a car conductor to step - on your feet and hand you a Canadian dime and a zinc tobacco tag as change for a quar ts and then throw fou off on your futile head if you kick, and another that allows have I found preached at by the parson's text. The profound knowledge of the Bi ble, which was the dower both of clergy and laity, made this choice of unusual texts far easier than might at first ap pear. The universal enstom of exresslve rum drinking is. I think, the sadda5t fact in the history of New England and of all the Colonies. Though the horrible effects were visible on every side, there was but occasional and slight protest from the pulpit. I have seen in Cotton Mather's own handwriting an earnest .protest against the "Incentives to excessive drinking," but even this far-seeing re former made slight attempt at reform. While the New England minister had no thought of any impropriety in the use of rum, he had great unhappiness over to bacco smoking. One diary I read was pa thetic indeed in its records that the cler ical writer "abounded In tobacco," and he sought the Scriptures for advice and help and found there what he deemed an abso lute command to abandon its use. In general the ministers dressed and bore themselves with great decorum and regard for clerical dignity: but occasion ally some blunt or heedless minister would shock his parishioners. For it mattered not how plain was the congregation, it demanded dignity in Its minister. One minister lost his parish after years of use fulness by going Into the pulpit on a hot July Sabbath clad in a calico loose gown or banyan a garment worn by merchants in their counting houses and even by gentlemen visiting ladies, but unbearable in a pulpit Another was so careless of hi ap pearance tand. worse still, his wife was so careless of ills appearance) that Sunday after Sunday he walked Into his pulpit with vast holes in his hose. float along. I was gettin' a little sore myself, for it seems my first frame-up of the situation was nearer tho mark than the last. It looked like Sir Ber tie was right bower and joker, and I was a trey in the discard. And then Sadie does a quick turn with her head, throwin' us the knnwin' wink. A minute more and the proces sion has swung back our way, and the next thing we know they're lined up before us. Sadie seems to have dis covered Peggy all at once. "Why, there you are, aren't you?" says she. "Sir Bertie's been lookln' everywhere. Oh Mrs. Brltton Bailey, Miss Hubbard. Now, Sir - Bertie, t suppose we mustn't plan a thing for you until you and Peggy liavo settled about that houso party. Well, get to gether and be good." ' Say, I'd known Sadie long enough to have an inside view of her little plan of campaign without havln' any one explain the map. First she does some fine feint and footwork, until sho gets the Bailey person with her guard wide open, and then she lands with both mitts. And it was plain ttiis Miss Jeggy proposition was a new one 1o Mrs. Britton Bailey. Sfie's some jarred; but bein' an old hand at thu game, she recovers quick. "I'm sure Miss Hubbard Is not going to claim Sir Bertie for next week'.'" says she. Has Peggy been gettin' her mad up for an hour for nothing? Well, hard ly. "Only from Saturday on." snys she. "You'll promise to lie there by Saturday, won't you. Sir Bertie?" "Oh, charmed!" says lie, blinkln' through the round panes. "Ton honor. I'll run out for Saturday, Miss Peggy." I thinks it's somewhere in the or anges, or maybe out to White Plains, that he's scheduled for, Mrs. Bailey must have had the same thoucrht. "And where is it that Miss Hubbard lives, Sir Bertie?" she cooes. "Why aw er " Say, Kertlo was up against it. He looks as blank as if she'd asked him what time the sun was due to rise in the niornin'. But Peggy is there with the information. "My homo 13 in Spokane, Washinc ton," says she. lookin' her square be tween the eyes. "What! Spokano! Well, of all the Impudence!" Say, 1 never see any one get up a turkey red color quite so quick as Mrs, Brltton Bailey does then. For a second or so she looks all kinds of cut lery at tho State of Washington girl, and then she turns one of the same kind on Sadie. "Humph!" says sli'. "Spokane! Sir Bertie, 1 wish you joy ot your trip to tho backwoods. Yon had better have your trunks packed tonight." With that sho does the heel pivot, tosses her head nnd marches off. "My word!" says Sir Bertie, catoliin' his breath. He's no quitter, though, ami when he finds he's billed for a live days' railroad trip he never so much asi squeals. I guess ho was some inter ested, all right; for when we leaves him and Peggy was makin" up for lost time; and by the way lie whs beatoin' on her you'd thought he suspected sho was good to look at. As for me and Sadie, we hunts out a quiet corner and lias a reunion all on our own hook. She tells me how tho Hubbards own half the state out there, and what a real nice girl Peg.?y is, and how Sir Bertie came all the way urrn-s just to walk the deck with her. Also she shows how the Bailey party, who's always lookin" for a new exhibit, cmuo near spoilin' it all. "But I do hope." says Sadie, "that she will let them alone now." "You sure fixed that." says I. "You've got her climbln the pole." She grins and lets It go at tlial. wantln' to know all about everybody and what's happened to 'em since she's been gone. But still I has something on my mind that won't let me rest easy until I've worked it off. And tho lirst thing I know I've let it out. "Say, Sadie." says I. "do you know what was my first; guess about this Sir Bertie?" "I do." says she, glvin' mo one of them straight, level looks that I never knows what to make of, "and it was the silliest tiling I ever knew you to think." Now, was that a josh? Tf It wa'n't, how did sho come to get next? a feeble-minded old lady to leave her es tate to a Home for Indigent Poll Parrols when she had several hundred hungry relatives only about one jump ahead of the Overseer of the Toor, and another that " "Aw, chop out that stuff." said tho House Deetctive. "Tills is a free country, ain't it?" "The freest I ever saw." said the Hotel Clerk, "and some of us are getting freer with the rest of us every day." "Do you sure enough think there's any body that's entitled to claim a Divino Risiit?" asked the House Detective. "Yes." said the Hotel Clerk. "Baltllrg Nelson. And in addition to a divine risiit. Bat's alfco got a magnificent left." fully displayed, of course, by the kne breeches which were the custom or the day. This, too, cost him his parish. Another would seat himself during tho singing of the psalm (a groat scandal) and twice fell asleep and had to bo awakened by a scandalized deacon. Another so annoyed his church folk by "preaching at" .individuals that lie could not be endured. Many showed unchristian anger and uncleiical spill over the introduction of organs, of stoves, of new hymn books, of Sunday schools but let us forgive them, for these were faults of overzeal, not of lukewarinncss. Curiously e n o u g li . though I find records of sermons three hours long and prayers one hour long, the only reference I ever have found in church records or letters as to tlp length of church services was in the. form of-grave doubts as to the true Christian spirit, which would shorten the time in church. A short prayer or sermon was distasteful to all church goers was held to be disrespectful. When the bas relief of Jonathan Ed wards was made eight years ago for the Northampton Church, great anxiety was felt as to tho propriety of rtrc senting the great preacher in clerical robe and bands. But fortunately a portrait of him thus attired is in existence, and he could be depicted In that dress. Great discussion has been held us to whether the Congrega tional ministers in New England preached in con volitional clerical gown or surplice or In everyday attire. The first preachers wore the German gown, but I am sure that soon it was dis continued in many churches; and yet little direct evidence exists to show when it was abolished and why, and when robes were again assumed. i 1