jut, Bellefonte, Pa., August I, 1890. THE LAND OF USED-TO-BE. Beyond the purple, hazy trees Of summer’s utmost boundaries; Beyond the sands, beyond the seas, Beyond the range of eyes like these, And only in the range of the Enraptured gaze of memory, There lies a land long lost to me, The land of Used-to-be. A land enchanted, such as swung In golden seas when sirens clung Along their dripping brinks, and sung To Jason in that mystic tongue That dazed men with its melody ; Oh, such a land, with such a sea Kissing its shores eternally, Is the fair Used-to-be. A land where music ever girds The air with belts of singing birds, And sows all sounds with such sweet words, That even in the lowing herds A meaning lives #0 sweet to me, Lost laughter ripples limpidly From lips brimmed o'er with all the glee Of rare old Used-to-be. Lost langhter and the whistled tunes Of boyhood’s mouth of erescent runes, That rounded through long afternoons, To serenading plenilunes, When starlight fell so mistily That, peering up from bended knee, 1 dreamed twas bridal drapery Hung over Used to-be. Oh, land, of love and dreamy thoughts, And shining fields and shady spots, 0, coolest, greenest, grassy plots, Embossed with wild forget-me-nots, And all the blooms that cunningly Lift their sweet faces up to me Out of the past; I'kiss in thee The lips ot Used-to-be. I love ye all, and with wet eyes Turned glimmeringly on the skies, My blessings like your perfume rise, Till 0’er my soul a silence lies Sweeter than any song to me, Sweeter than any melody, Of its sweet echo, yes, all three, My dreams of Used-to-be ! i —James WhitecombRiley. Powderly’s Fourth of July Speech at Priceburg. His Text the Declaration of Indepen- dence. : ‘We make the following extract from an address delivered by Mr. Powderly to the Knights of Labor at Priceburg, Luzerne county, on the 4th of July, inst, Mr. Powderly said: On coming here this afternoon I did not know but what it might have escaped the thought of those who preceded me on this plat- form to read, or refer to, the Declara- tion of American Indepenedence. I took with me a copy of that immortal document, and, with your permission, will make it the text for my sermon of this afternoon, I will admit that be- fore I get through reading it some one may shout ‘‘chestnats,” and to many this Declaration may not sound strange or new. I hope that it is so familiar to the majority that it may appear almost as a chestnut, but I doubt it. Written over a hundred years ago, of a condi- tion which existed then, we wonder on reading it over r.ow, in the closing days ! of the nineteenth century-—a century in which the advances of civilization are more worthy of record than in all of its predecessors—how it comes that the in- dictment drawn up against the English king applies with snch startling force to the agencies we now find usurping the “divine right of kings” and making glaves of men who proudly but thoughtlessly, boast of their freedom —that freedom which they claim came down to us from revolutionary sires as a heritage to be enjoyed in the full glare of the sun of universal liberty. Are we the free people we imagine we are? Do we as fully appreciate the blessings of liberty as we think we do? Let us analyze our feelings as we pe- ruse this Declaration and not the changes that have taken place, and then let us ask ourselves whether the conditions now confronting us are the conditions that our sires intended to present to us on the threshold of the twentieth century. Not long since the Humane Society of Philadelphia went around asking for signers to a petition to the Czar of Russia craving clemency at his hands for the poor wretches who had incurred his displeasure and in punish- ment were sent to the fastnesses of Sib- eria to atone for what, to us,might appear as the highest attributes of manhood. This petition was signed by clergymen, lawyer, doctors and business men of all kinds, and it is presumed that it is now in the hands of the Czar. While that document was being circulated in the city of brotherly love the cry of deep distress was going up to high heaven from men and women equally as good as those in Russia. It went went up from the starving mouths of those who had committed no crime, unless it be a crime to feel that the independence guaran ‘eed in this document is a living truth instead of a living lie. The min- ers of Punxsutawny were out on the streets; they were starving ; they were subject, not to the Czar of Russia. four thousand miles away, but to an Amer- ican Czar, who punished them, not be- cause they asked for liberty, but for bread. Not a solitary petition went up to the owners of these mines ; tut then none of the residents of Philadelphia owned stock in the Empire of Russia; they were not partners with the Czar in gathering 1n the money wrung from the sweating frames of his subjects; and I fear that the very Heavens would rend in twain before the cry of the working- men of the Keystone State would so far operate as to bring forth a petitition asking for clemency for the starving | people of this State. Though no Czar rules here with autocratic sway, the rule of wealth iz as absolute, as heart- less, as tyrannical and as exacting as the rule of any Czar could possibly be. The chains are not known by that name but they bind as fast as those that fet- ter the limbs of the slaves of Russia, and they cut as deeply into the hearts of men of thought as can the chains that gall the limbs of Russian serfs. I de- voutly hope that they will continue to gall, to burn and pain until at last the ople of this land will assert their man- ood and rise to the full dignity of American independence and make a brilliant, blazing truth of that which is now scoffed at as a mere ideal of men who lived a hundred years ago. 1 will read the Declaration of Indpendence, or as much of it as may be necessary, and you must pardon me if I comment on it as I proceed. It begins: “When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and as- sume among the powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” Does it not seem as if that Declara- tion could be made to day? Should we not make an effort to dissolve the political bands which have connected the vital interests of the American peo- ple with the trusts, combines and mon- opolies of the present age? Are we not bound down to-day beneath the rule of a more soulless tyrant than was the English king a century since? Is it rot high time for us to cazt about fora means of separation, and should we not declare the causes which impel us to shake off the yoke of monopoly when we seek for the final separation? The bands which connect us in the Keystone State with the great corporate interests were not of our forging; they were riveted in the State Capital and were bought by money which was wrung from the wage-earners of the State; they are not of our seeking, and are all the more galling to thinking men, for they represent the rule of money and not intelligence or honesty. ¥ 0% * % #2. wu After reading that part of the Decla- ration which says “all men are created equal,” and ‘‘are entitled to life, liberty and the pursmit of happiness,” Mr. Powderly went on to say : I believe that all men are created equal, but do they continue to be equal during the race of life ? Men may be created equal, but the conditions of life and the means of gaining a living are so anequal that it appears to many that that Declarationis an untruth. I hold that itis as true to-day asa hundred years ago. While men arecreated equal they may grow up differently, and some may not possess the keen, busines-like faculties of others, and as a eonsequence, they are at the mercy of those who, sharper than themselves, are enabled by the existence ofa pernicious system to rob them of the rewards of their labor. If to every man belongs the “right to life, liberty and the pursuitofhappiness,” then there exists no power under God that can take away that right, and a “long continued train of abuses’ cannot obscure the truth or take away from the poorest of mankind the rights guaran- teed to him by that Declaration and by his Creator. I said they cannot be taken away, but they have been taken, they have been stolen, from men who walk the earth in poverty, men who are as good as we are and who have not done anything to con- demn them to lives of slavery and mis- ery. ‘To secure these rizhts govern- ments are instituted among men.” How can a government be said to se- cure these rights to men when it has { passed into the hands of the enemies of ! these men ? (Can our own government I be said to havesuch an object in view when it gives millions of acres with a lavish hand to the rich already, and, on the other hand, taxes the clothes off the backs of the men who work ? Is it se- curing the man of to-day in the right to pursue happiness to keep it just in front of him all the time, but allowing other men to place such obstacles in his path- way that life’s dreary journey will be no more before the pursuit is at an end? Is it to be understood that we are only to pursue happiness but never to overtake it ? “That to secure these rights governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” Does it exist now by the consent of the govern- ed, and do those who make and unmake laws and statutes seek the consent of the governed before acting ? Tet us see. I referred to the Czar of the Russias a moment ago. His power, as compared with that exercised by some men who govern in the United States, is absolute- ly insignificant. Russia has one auto- crat, and he rules by some shadow of right ; but the czars of this nation rule more despotically than he, and the will- ing serfs are not bound by any obliga- tion, human or divine, to obey—but they obey as surely as do the subjects of the Russian monarch. A few weeks ago the question of fixing the place where the World's Fair would be -held was under discussion. I do not care where it is held, for onespot is the same to me as another on this continent; but New York City stood a chance of get- ting the Fair and the whim of one man in the Empire State threw the people of that State into confusion. His narrow, vindictive views could not be changed, his partisan bias stood higher than love of country or pride of home, and, rather than yield, the Fair went to Chicago. Boss Platt was the autocrat there. Had the English king remained undisturbed in his jurisdiction over the colonies he could not have done that, and to admit that the intelligent people of this age will allow such a thing to be done is to say that we are not quite fit to govern ourselves yet, particularly so since we allow such dictation from party bosses. Here in our own State we have anoth- er illustration of what one man can do. For months the papers of all parties as- serted that Matthew Stanley Quay would nominate a certain man for Gov- ernor. Long before a single delegate was chosen by the people that statement was made, and notwithstanding the re- cord that is credited to that man, thers was not independence enough in the 1 party he belongs to to dispute his will. The man of his choice was nominated, and, if true as reported, he is the favor- ed son of the Standard Oil Company— one of the giant monopolies of the world. The wishes, the will and the votes of the men of this State who belong to that party were asso much chaff before the wind, and when the convention assem- i bled at Harrisburg he had everything his own way. If Delamater 1s electedhe will ‘be Governor. Will he govern by the consent of the governed or by the will and consent of Mr. Quay, or the Stand- ard Oil Company ? T 'am not talking . as a partisan, and if I am wreng, then 1 have been misled by the papers of this State, Republican as well as Demo- cratic, for they all asserted that this thing would take place. How many of those before me who are Republicans took a part in nominating Mr. Delamat- er ? If there is one man here whose con- sent to be governed by him was asked before the convention, if there is one man here who was requested to signify his consent to have that man nominated, let him come up on this platform and tell how it was done. [A pause of a moment.] No one stirs. ®t ow RR * % % x Have we a law in this State that se- cures the voter in the right to vote free from the scrutiny of an outsider? Stand at any polling-place in this State where corporate interests are at stake and there will you see the agent of the corporation on election day. The man who peddles the ticket that corporation is interested in will be under the scruti- ny of the paid agent of the corporation, and the men who toil for a living un- der that boss or that corporation must take their tickets from that ticket ped- dler, or they take their chances of con- tinuing in the service of that company any longer. It has even gone so far that some employers say that they have the right to- discharge the man who does not vote as they dictate, who dares to vote against their wishes and interests. The machinery is now work- ing to grind the faces of the poor when they attempt to vote for them- selves, and until we secure a secret ballot we cannot be said to be free men. : %* 3* * * #* * * * “All experience hath shown that man- kind are more disposed to suffer ,while evils are sufferable, than to right them- selves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.” Unfortunately that is too true, but there comes a day and a time when it ceases to be within the possibilities to effect a change, and unless L am mistaken the people of this State will have to awaken very scon, or it will be too late to abolish the forms which are becoming so op- pressive to thoughtful men. I can conceive of nothing so terrible as to be governed by the agents of trusts and monopolies, Our public servants are being sent to prison day after day for falling victims to the influence of those who have the money to buy them away from their allegiance to the masses, and a “long train of abuses and usurpa- tions,” pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce us under the absolute despotism of the moneyed men of the nation. Is it not our right to throw off such a form of government ? Is it not to our shame that it can with truth be said that the bosses of parties, and not the masses of the parties, do the nominating? Can we call ourselves anything but slaves when we submit to such a rule without even an intelligent protest ? We need “new guards for our future security,” and they will come only as we get together to talk over such mat- ters as these. We should not walk up to the polling-places as we do and take the word of any man for the deed we do at the polls. A careful and rigid investigation should be made by every voter of every charge made against every party and every candi- date before a vote is cast, and no man should vote upon the statement of any other man without a careful scrutiny into the motives of that other man as well as the statement he makes. # * * % %* * * * One hundred years ago we had one king of limited powers. He was far away, and his sway was not ab- solute. Now we have a hundred kings, uncrowned ones, it is true,but monarchs of unlimited power, for they rule through the wealth that they possess. They are not far away, but reside with- in our boundaries, and over the poor their sway is most absolute. The enchroachments of these kings are making paupers of our workmen, they are driving men of small means to the wall, and they are crowding oth- ers not so rich as they until they make terms by which the masses are robbed. We hear a great deal about anarchy, and we are apt to denounce it, but its parent is allowed to go on unmolested. A few years ago a few anarchists were strangled to death in Chicago for incitiig to riot, and those who make rioters of peaceable men and women are not called to an account. Who represents the worst form of anarchy—Albert R. Pa:sons or Matthew Stanley Quay? Parsons merely advised violence, but Quay practices it in setting aside the will of the people, and, when I refer to Quay, Idoso only as he represents a class that stands as a menace to our free institutions. General Grant’s Widow. Mrs. General Grant seems to have found the elixir of youth. Although sixty-six she 1s as agile as a woman of thirty, enjoys perfect health, and bar- ring the weakness of her eyes, which were never strong, her faculties are as keen as they ever were. The gray in her hair is hardly noticeable, her face is plump and of good color, and her inter- est in the affairs of the world covers both continents. Any day in the week she may be seen going to her carriage from her house in East Sixty-sixth strect. She has a tall, yellow-whiskered but- ler, with a back like a press-board, who opens the plate-glass vestibule doors when she passes, hops down the stone stoop and stations himself at the coupe with the door in his hand. Mrs. Grant dresses in rich black abby cloths or silk frabrics, every fold of which seems breathing forth the perfume of some oriental blossom. Her earrings are set with fiery solitaires, magnificent in col- or and size, and through the twisted silk mitts that cover her. hands the glint of pearls and the flash of diamonds may be seen.— New York. World. Enforce the Law, There is a law in Pennsylvania which makes it a misdemeanor infany one to “playfully or wantonly point or dis- charge a gun, pistol or other firearm at any other person.” Yet persons are continually violating this act with fatal results. The penalty may be a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or im- prisonment not exceeding ons year, or either or both, as the court may decide. This law is thirteen years old. but who ever heard of its being enforced ? Yet the accidents resulting from this criminal carelessness and indifference have occur- red times without number. The deadly work goes on without check. Tt is; time that the law should become better known through its rigid enforcement. A Brief History of the Tokay Wines. The vine yielding the famous Tokay wines was brought from the isiand of Cyprus (now Turkish territory) by re- turning crusaders in the 12th century, into the Tokay district, in Hungary, and the attempt was made to acclima- tize it on the foot-hills of the Carpathian range of mountains. During the first few years and even decades no pronounc- ed success was achieved with the im- ported vines, the wine rezembling the product of the common Hungarian grape and the winegrowers even maintained that the taste became harsher and more unpleasant ; after a twenty years trial, therefore, the attempt was abandoned and the foreign vines gradually extirpat- ed by the majority of growers who sup- planted it with the old home-vine known as the ‘‘Szamorodnor.” At this time, so goes the tradition, there lived a pious hermit, Hierony- mus, in total seclusion in a small hut on one of the highest of the hills, isolat- ed and hardly accessible, but noted for the grandeur of nature's beauty and rugedness, Mount Pegyalyaer. ‘When the hermit, who was greatly interested in growing gocd wines in his secluded domain, heard of the fail- ure to acclimatize the at that time world-famed Cyprus vines, he determin- ed to repeat the attempt on his moun- tain. He therefore commissioned a poor crusader who had become benighted on the hills, and whom he befriended, to take his route to the Holy land by way of the island of Cyprus, and to bring him some of the famous vines, with all the information he could gather con- cerning the building and caring for the vines in Cyprus. After years of weary wandering this crusader really returned and having faithfully fulfilled his promise and com- municated the necessary information with the vine-shoots, Hieronymous commenced his experiments. Success immediately attended the work of the holy man, and the great difference be- tween the imported and the home wines became fully apparent in the second year ; the new wine was of a rich golden-yellow color, which no Hungar- ian wine had ever assumed ; the unfer- mented wine had a pleasant, tantalizing sweetness of taste, and so fine a bouquet that the fame of the new wine, called Tokay, after the district which the mountain chain crossed, quickly spread over all Hungary, and gradually over entire Europe. The secret of the success of the hermit on the mountain, while the winegrowers of the valleys had faii- ed, was clear in that these vines flourigh- ed only on the mountain sides at high altitudes. During the middle ages it was grant- ed to but few mortals to taste ot these precious Tokay wines, as shortly after Pegyalyaer had spread the entire dis- trict was appropriated by the various sovereigns of Europe, and the prodace of the increasing vine-yards was jealous- ly guarded and found its way exclu- sively to the winecellars of the Euro- pean courts ; but even at the courts the Tokay wine was served by the royal cup-bearers only on rare and most dis- tinguished occasions. Not until the close of the 17th cen- tury was this usurpation of the districts annulled, and then many large tracts were awarded to the nobility of the country, to Counts Eszerhazy, Szcheny, Andrassy, and others whose families have continued almost to this day, and some of whom still receivea tribute, called “the tenth,” a very respectable revenue, as ground rent from the wine- growers of the distriot. In the field of medicine this Tokay wine was only appreciated and adopted in the early part of this century, as is quite natural, since the profession could not well concern themselves with an article which was so enormously ex- pensive that their patients were unable to procure it. In the early part of this century small tracts of this wine district at last passed from the hands of the Hungarian titled magnates into the con- trol of the general people, and from this period dates the actual commercial exis- tence of Tokay Wine, and ulso its adop- tion as a medicinal tonic. Competition ensuing the price was gradually reduc- ad to reasonable limits. enabling the well-to-do people at last to purchase it, and quickly giving the Tokay wine the distinction of being the most popu- lar medicinal wine. Since then promi- nent physicians everywhere have ac- knowledged the superiority of the wine weak and aged, for women and espec- ially for children during sickness. By consulting the adv. columns of the WarcamaN you will discover, where this extraordinary wine can be secured. Famous Butcher Boys. * There have been at least five butch- er’s sons in America whose names have become well known throughout the length and breadth of theland. The original John Jacob Astor was the son of a butcher in thetown of Waldorf, Germany, and served an apprenticeship at the block with his father until he reached the age of seventeen, and took tortune at its tide by emigrating to America. Phil Armour, the big Chica- go packer and railroad man, says that he is “only a butcher,” and he was so in his youth. Forepaugh, the showman, was the son of a Philadelphia butcher, and when only nine years old he became his father’s assistant the little shop that made them their living. market. They were Brooklyn boys, and the first money they put into horse- flesh amounted to only a few bundred dollars, which they paid for a partial interest in a promising colt.— New York Chatter. CENTENARY oF THE HigH Srrx HAT. —dJust one hundred years have elapsed since the inauguration in Europe of the high silk hat—yclept ‘the stovepipe’’— and the centennial anniversary thereof has been celebrated recently by the hat- ters of the old world with all the solem- nity warranted by the occasion. Aceord- ing to the traditions of the “tiling” fra- ternity, is was the Quaker hadgear of Benjumin Franklin which first gave | the Paris hatters the idea of thet stove- " pipe,” and that led to its adoptlon. the fame of the new vintage from Mount and prescribe it for convalescent, the. The two great | turfmen of the day, the Dwyers, started | in lifeas butchers, and as recently as 1876 they had a stall in Washington | Frasca RENE A Missionary’s Terrible Experience. Father Lawrence, a French mission- ary who has just gone to the mother house of the order of the Immaculate Conception in New York City, has had a awful twenty-three years’ experience among the Maoris of New Zeland. Said be : The people there exhibit soma of the worst forms of savagery. The killing of infant children was an ordi- nary occurrence. I have seen inhuman mothers take their little ones to the water's edge, plunge them in until they died from suffocation and then rend the tiny, lifeless bodies limb from limb, I myself have been subjected to shocking tortures. I have been strung for ten days by a cord attached to my hands, which were tied behind my back ; my toc-nails were torn off, and see these deep groves in my arms ; they are the scars remaining where the flesh was cut from the wrist to the shoulders in strips nearly an inch thick. “But my experience in China was even worse. 1 was one of a number of priests and nuns engaged in missionary work at Pekin. We were arrested. thrown into prison, and arrangement made for our execution. One day the nuns, thirty-four in number, were taken forth and thrown into huge coppers filled with boiling pitch. It was a horrible death, and made an impression upon my mind which time cannot eradicate. On the following day the othar priests and myself were to meet the same fate. Our only solace was in prayer. Toward evening, on the eve of our threatened execution, a great commotion was heard outside the walls of the prison. The French soldiers had come and we were saved.” Father Lawrence will resume his work in New Zeland after a vest.— Washington Star. Iced Tea. How should iced tea be made? I will tell you, and much good it may do vou. In the first place, take Congou tea, commonly called Finglish breakfast. Take the best quality. Do not use Japanese tea, for it is notdrinkable to a well-regulated palate. Oolong is good, and so is young Hyson, for those whose nerves can stane green tea ; but Congou has an espacial agreeable flavor iced. Having got your tea, the next thing is an earthen teapot—a black Betty is the best. No metal pot brews tea as well as an earthen. Put the tea in the bottom of the pot, and pour boiling hot water upon it until the pot is nearly filled. Then let it steep a minute or two, but don’t let it boil. That is a fatal error. Boiling gives even to the best of tea a disagreeable, herby taste. As soon as the steeping is done with strain the liquor out of the earthen pot into any convenient receptacle which has a tizht lid and pat into the refrigerator. In a few hours it will be ice cold, and can be used as wanted. [It should be made fresh every day. A nice way of serving tea made and cooled in this manner is in cups,with a slice of lemon floating on { top. The Russians do this with hot tea. It is equally delicious with cold tea. Unless you feel that you must from long habit, don’t flavor iced tea with milk orsugar. Tt is the bitter flavor which you need, and which tends to quench the parched feeling of the palate and throat which is produced by hot weather. After a while that bitter flavor will become a desideratum, just as is the case with beer and ale. Made and drank as I have described, iced tea is not a delusion and a snare, like the iced tea of restaurants, but a thing of beauty and a joy forever.— New York Sun. Prescription for Longevity. One of my prescriptions for longevity may startle you somewhat, says Oliver Wendell Holmes in the Atlantic Month- ly. It is this : Become the object of a mortal disease. Let half a dozen doc- tors thump you, and knead you, and test you in every possible way, and ren- der their verdict that you have an in- ternal complaint ; they don’t know ex- actly what it is, but it will certainly kill vou by and by. Then bid farewell to the world and shut yourself up for an invahd. Ifyou are threescore years old when you begin this mode of life, you may very probably last twenty years and there you are—an octogenarian. In the meantime, your friends outside have been dropping off, one after an- other, until you find yoursef alone, nursing your mortal complaint as if ‘it were your baby, hugging it and kept alive by it,—if to exist is to live. Who has not seen cases like this, a man or a woman shutting him or herself up visit- ed by a doctor or a succession of doctors (remember that once in my esrlier ex- perience, 1 was the twentj-seventh physician who had been consuled), al- ways taking medicine, until everybody was ryminded of that impatient speech of a relative of one of those invalid vam- pires who live on the bloed of'tired-out attendants, “I do wish she vould get well — or something’ 2 Persons who are shut up in that way, confined to their chambers, sometimes to their beds, have a very small amount of vital expenditure, and wearout very little of their living substante. They picked down, and will continge to burn when other lamps have use up all their oil. An insurance office might make money by taking mo risks except on the lives of persons sufferivyg from mortal disease. | | — - The Pestiferous Sparrovs. | Alexander MeComas writes thus to the Baltimore American : ‘| am not I'a farmer, though born on a farm. I i think, if the farmers would bok into | this, ‘plenty of straw but little wheat,’ | . | they would not complain of jature or | bad seasons, &ec., but find the great | i fault to be that terrible nuismce, the + English sparrows, which congregate in ' thousands on the wheat field at times, and pick out the grain of wheat when lin the milky state. TI think a lhousana | or so of these sparrows will rail a field {in a few hours, so far as a yiel{ of grain is concerned. I have seen {them in { large flocks on the wheat fiel¢s in this | vicinity. Tremember some to ago i the planters of the South bai to em- i ploy a number of men and bys with gans to drive off the rice birds § prevent the destruction of their rice ¢op, and ‘these sparrows are ten tl de- "structive than the rice bird.” | are like lamps with half their wicks |: Jellies, With currants, grapes, blackberries and all juicy fruits and berries put no water, writes Eryphide St. John Whit- ing to Good Housekeeping, but crush a small part of those prepared for use, putting this in the bottom of the ket- tle, and allow the heat of the fire to draw the juice from the others placed on the top of the crushed ones. But crab-apple, quince and apples must be boiled with more or less water before the juice can be fully extracted. In making quince jelly the skins and cores will perhaps yield most of the glutinative substance. “Never al- low the juice of acid fruits to drip into tin vessels, as the action of the acid on tin materially affects both color and flavor.” Do not squeeze the jelly bag when straining the juice ; let it drip. After fully dripping the bag can be squeezed, and the juice used for a second boiling and a sec ind--lass jelly. Squeezing affects the clearness of the jel- ly. Iam nota believer in the old-fash- ioned brass preserving kettle, but consid- er the porcelain-lined kettle by far the best, the granite-ware standing next in order. In my estimation a flannel bag is preferable for straining the juice. Those made of part woolen and part cotton flannel shrink less, and conse- quently are best. Perhaps the most de- sirable shape for the bag is pointed, with a strong gathering string in the top or a hoop of strong tin or wire. For the fruit-juice boiling, judgment must be used asto time—the reason is, to evaporate the watery part. Too much cooling of the jelly darkens it and affects the texture. In preparing the glasses for the jelly, rinse them well in extreme- ly warm water and immediately fill to their utmost, as jelly in cooling con- tracts, and you will otherwise find, after cooling, your glasses only partly filled. Beware of putting metal or glass covers on the glasses before evaporation has fully taken place, as this vapor causes mold. My method is to put a paper shaped to exactly fit the top of the jelly, wet with the white of egg or brandy— and sometimes with neither egg mor brandy—and then cover the glass with a paper so cut as to allow to be pasted over the top and edges of the glass, Label with name of jelly and date of making. Jelly does not improve with age, and is best when made in small quantities at a time. I — South Africa’s Bank Robber. An interesting account is given by the Johannesburg Star, South Africa, of the police chase after McKeon, the bank robber, whose achievements in the matter of perpetr ating robberies, escaping from jail and eluding the police entitle him to rank with the notorious Jack Sheppard, and whose regard for his clever black horse reminds one of Dick Turpin, In the hurried start af- ter McK on when he escaped from the Pretoria jail, says the newspaper in question, the mounted police forgot to take handcuffs with them. Further, McKeon had friends along the route. He was born in Basutoland, and every Basuto is his fast friend, even to Mama. Consequently, when the police inquired along the road of Basutos if they had seen two men pass on horseback, they invariably said that they had not. Me- Keon’s love for his famous black horse, now at the mounted police barracks, was extraordirary. The police had to have three remounts before they could run that horse down. Two of the mounted police sighted McKeon and Cooper far ahead of them. They spurred on af- ter them, thinking that they would bring the fugitives to halt on the steep bank of the Rhenoster River, ‘What was their surprise, however, when they saw McKeon leap his horse down the twenty-foot bank into the river, swim across, and, when he saw Cooper’s horse would not follow, come back, and reaching out, pull Cooper’s horse down by the bridle and drag him through | One of the police- men had a rifle and resolved to take a long shot. When McKeon saw the smoke of the gun rise he and his com- panion drew their horses apart and the bullet passed between them. Shortly after McKeon drew his horse up, leaped down, removed the saddle, and stood patting his horse on the head. The police approached, and he surrendered without a word, giving over his two revolvers with the remark that he was enriching the govern- ment with revolvers, for this was the sixth they had had from him. He said he gave himself up because he did not wish ‘to kill his horse. Cooper handed over his revolver, too, looking rather glum. McKeon said he knew he would receive twenty-five lashes, but he would only stay in jail eight months when he would once more say good bye to the authorities. He did not know why they had given him twenty-five years, for he had not murdered anyone or stolen a sheep or an ox. Robbing a bank of its surplus money was no crime. The police were entirely taken off their guard, and, consequently, at daybreak the next morning the birds had flown unobserved by them. Me- Keon has since been recaptured at Ladybrand. ea a Get the Best Blood. Breeder's Gazette, ‘ Fewer and better cattle will yet prove the salvation of the industry. Here is a whole sermon in a dozen words. TItisa favorite saying of the breeders of poor stock, “The feed makes the breed.” This, however, is a areat fallacy. Where is the scrub that | would make thisty-six pound 12} ounces of butter in a week, as did Mary Anne of St. Lambert ; or the 46 pounds given by Princess Second, or that would weigh at two years 1,950 pounds as did | Brant Chief; or 2,415 pounds, Munro’s weight at three years; or 1,510, the - we ght of Britisher as a yearling ? Free access to all the feed grown in Manitoba would not do it. A visit to the union stock yards in Cuicago is an excellent education. There may be seen the lank, thin fleshed one and a half cent per pound Texas being slaughtered by thousands to su ply the home trade of the United States, and here and there a bunch of fine grade shorthorns, Herefords or polled Angus worth from four to five and one half cents per pound, too good for the Americans, and which are shipped to England, where good beef is recognized and appreciated.