Bellefonte, Pa, April 17, 1891. FAME WEALTH, LIFE, DEATH, BY WALTER W. SKEAT. What is fame ? ’T'is the sun-gleam on the mountain Spreading ‘brightly ere it flies, *Tis the bubble on the fountain, Rising lightly ere it dies 3 Or, if here and there a hero Be remembered through the years, Yet to him the gain is zero; Death hath stilled his Sopes and fears. Yet what danger men will dare If but only in the air ay be heard some eager mention of their name; : Though they hear it not themselves, ’tis much the same. What is wealth ? "Tis:a rainbow, still receding As the panting fool pursues, Or a toy that youth, unheeding, Seeks the readiest way to lose ; But the wise man Resp due measure, Neither out of breath nor base; He but holds in trust his treasure For the welfare of the race. Yet what crimes some men will dare Butito gain their slender share In some profit, though with loss of name or health, . What is life ? ’Tis the earthly hour of trial For a life that’s but begun ; When the prize of self-denial May be quickly lost or won : *Tis the hour when love may bourgeon To an everlasting flower ; Or when lusts their vistims urge on To defy immortal power. Yet how lightly men ignore All the future holds in store, ‘Spending brief but golden moments all in strife; : Or in sunicidal madness grasp the knife. What is death ? Past its dark, mysterious portal Human eye may never roam 3 Yet the hope still springs immortal Thatit leads the wanderer home. Oh, the bliss that lies before us When the secret shall be known, Andithe vast angelic chorus Sounds the hymn before the throne! What is.fame, or wealtn, or life ? Past are praises, fortune, strife i All but love, that lives forever, cast beneath, good and faithful servant takes the When the wreath. — London Academy. I —————————" JARED HARPWICK'S TASK. well the character of this father and son. Since Joe had been old enough to assert himself there had been antag- cniem between them. The father was arbitrary in his ideas of right, the son obstinate and inclined to waywardness. Jared's relation to the family was almost that of a son. He was 10 have married Sallie, the daughter, five years before, but she had been taken ill three weeks before the appointed day, and died ten days later, Her last request to Jared had been to watch over Joe as an older brother, and to help to keep him from evil ways, “Father is growing old,” she had said, “and if ever you have a chance to bring him and Joe to a good nnder- standing do your best. I know you will do your best, Jared—even to sac- rifice yourself a little, for my sake.” The final estrangement came when Joe declared that he intended to leave home. He had invented a ‘machine for compressing sawdust into orna- ments, and was wild over his prospects of wealth. Through the mother's influence, tude would touch the boy's heart, the farm was mortgaged. - “Here are a thousand dollars,” the father had said on the morning Joe wentiaway. “You want to leave us; so go! This is all the help you can ‘ex- pect from me. If you lose it, you must shift for yourself. If you succeed, I shall look for you to pay it back. I wish you success, but Idon’t expect it.” No sympathy was in the words or tone, and Joe went away, feeling that there was no love for him in his fath- -er’s heart. Jared knew that Joe had been lack- ing in his duty to his parents. He had written enthusiastically of hie pros perity, but had not offered to pay back & dollar; so there was at least a reason for the father’s refusal to help. But something must be done. This trouble and his father’s refusal would be likely to drive Joe into recklessness and rain. As he sat upon his little | porch, he almost fancied he heard Sal- | lie telling him that here was the op- The task was brought upon Jared Harpwick by a letter which came to portunity she had hoped for. But be did not know what to do. He had little knowledge of business. His aided by Jared, who hoped that grati- | him one September afternoon as he sat reading on his vine shaded porch. | He rose promptly, lifted his straw hat | from the fleor and put it on, and walk- ed through the front gate to the pike. Through the long village street and a half mile along the dusty pike he trudged; then, turning aside into a narrow byroad that branched off at the foot of & steep hill, he came to a rude suwmiil. A stalwart man sat up- on a large moving log, from which a perpendicular caw was rasping a board. “Good afternoon, neighber Gray,” said Jared. Gray eyed him keenly from ander his shaggy brows; then rising, he walked to a lever, pulled it aside and stopped the saw, “Sit down on the log, Jared,” he said. “We can't hear each other when the saw’s going. [see by your face that something unusual has hap- early life had been spent in farm toil, and subsequently a lucky rise in land values had brought him resources suf- ficient for a quiet, humble life. He saw that help from the father would certainly touch the boy’s heart now ; but without jt he felt that a hard task was before him. request, however, was strong upon him, and he decided to go to Philadel- phia next morning. Saliie’s He arrived in the evening, and sought Joe's room. Ashe tapped he heard Joe’s voice : “Come in, fellows!” Jared entered, and Joe, who had ‘come half way to the door, stopped in surprise and then turned, confused, to- ward a table. It was too late to hide what lay up- on it—cards, box of cigars and two or three unopened bottles. “I wasn't expecting you. Jared,” pened.” “I've got a letter from Joe. He's in trouble.” “Just as.I supposed. Bankrupt, I'll warrant ?”’ “That's about it.” “And he has written to me to help him?” “That's true; but, John, don’t be angry. This matter must be consider- -ed with our coolest judgment.” “I'll not consider it with cool judg- ment nor any other kind. no help from me, Jared.” “Very well, John, very well; but you'll hear what the trouble is, won't you?” “Oh, T suppose I can listen,” replied the father, taking .a piece of bacon from a shelf and proceeding to grease the saw. “Well, .Gray, it's a bad embarrass ‘ment. A customer bought a thousand dollars’ werth of Joe's patent machines, promising to order twice as many more soon. Joe supposed he ‘was perfectly .good for 1t, and on the strength of this -ordered two thousand .dollars’ worth ifrom the man that manufactures them. Well, the customer turned out bad ; he didn’t pay the thousand dollars, nor -order wore, Joe lost the machines, and owes the manufacturer two thous. and dollars, which he is unable to pay. “Joe writes that -and burned up this two theusand dol- lars’ worth of machines.” He glanced up quickly, and caught -a shade of sympathy upon the sawyer's face. “The manufacturer 1s unluckily in a tight fix himself,.and he is pushing the boy. Jae writes that this will ruin thiw, and just when his business was most promising. [I tell you, hard on your boy.” “Well, T don’t pity him a bit—not a bit. He was determined to go to the city; now let him dig for himself. I gave him a thousand dollars to start his crazy business, mortgaging our lit- tle place here, and that’s enough, Mother has pinched herself and work. ed her fingers.almost to the bone, and I have slaved early and late to pay it off, and now that it’s paid, do you think I'm going right back into that struggle again? “No, Jared, not for a bey who for- gets his old mother as Joe has done. Why, he hasn't written a line—not a line to mother or me for a year, and now, when he wants help, he writes to you, Jared. “Does he deserve help? Just an- swer me that; does he deserve it? I don’t want to hurry you away, but I'm going to start the saw.” He turned decisively, and pulling the lever set the saw rasping again, “Very well, John,” said Jared, eom: ing nearer. “If that's your decision I've nothing more to say. I shall have to write to Joe that you refuse, It does seem a pity to leave him in his trouble. He's not a bad boy, but dear knows where this will drive him, Good afternoon, John.” At home he sat down upon the porch again to think it out. He knew you to get He'll get he might have Stood this it asfire hadn't broken out Gray, it's Joe stammered. “I thought it was the feliows knocking.” Jared walked forward, and clasping his hand warmly said: “I see you weren't expecting me, Joe. But I'm welcome, ain’t 1?" “Yes, yes—certainly. Sit down. Here, take this rocking chair, and give me your hat.” Joe was handsome, and in stature, attire and bearing a_ striking contrast to plain little Jared Harpwick. “I'see that I've come at a wrong time, Joe,” he said, pleasantly. “Just when you're expecting company.” “Yes, you did—but don't” worry about that, Jared.” “Joe, my boy, what kind of com- pany were you expecting ?” “It wasn’t good company,” said Joe, recklessty. “I've just fifty dollars left of what was a prosperous business, and I don’t know where more is to come from. Tn sheer desperation, I invited two dissipated younng men here mn the hope of winning more from them at cards.” : “And suppose you had lost the mon- ey—what then?" “I don’t know, and I don’t care.” “Why didn’t you wait till you heard from me, Joe?’ “Well, I didn’t expect any help. I knew just how father would act when you went to him—hardly listen to you, and maybe go on sawing. He never has treated me right; but, Jared, I haven't done right either. I know that now better than Tever did. I was never a good €on at home, and I've been worse away.” His yoice had sunk from harshness to softer tones, and as Jared, looking his sympathy, let him go on, he pro- ceeded in words that showed that now was the time to touch his heart. “I have thought, Jared, that if fath- er would help me a little, now when I don’v deserve it, I could feel better to- ward him, and we could be as a father and sou should be. I should know that he thought something of me. But I can’t expeet it, and 1'm not going to ask you what he said, for fear he has been hard on me, and to save you the trouble of telling me.” “I've come with help Jared, “and I''—— A loud, confident knock iuterrupted. Joe opened the door and stepped into the hall. Jared heard him explain that he “could not have the game.” There were angry expostulations in un- steady voices, By and by Joe returned, and he and Jared talked long into the night, Joe telling the circumstances of his failure. “I've come to try to help you,” said Jared, “and to-morrow I'll “call upon your creditor and see what arrange- ment ean be made.” “I would go with youn,” said Jae, “but we had a quarrel “the other day, and I guess I used pretty hard lan- guage. He says he'll not see me again and is pushing me now harder than be- fore.” “I'll go alone, then, Joe.” Joe,” said “If you succeed, Jared, T promise you I'll try to be better to father, to compensate him for this |”? A shade passed over Harpwick’s face and he did not reply. ° : Next morning he went to see the manufacturer, and Joe met him anx. iously on his return. “I've arranged for the payment of your debt,” said Jared, quietly, “and the manufacturer agrees to farnish you fifty machines, on time, to start again with. You are on your feet once more,” t “God bless father!” cried Joe.” “I'll write him a letter thanking him for his goodness.” { “No, Joe,” said Jared, knitting his eyebrows a little, “I wouldn’t if I were you. Let me report it to him.” “Very well, Jared; but I'll 20 home in two weeks for a visit, and I hope we can meet then as father and son should meet,” Jared went home, and next day he again trudged out to the sawmill, Gray was rolling a log into place. “John,” Jared began,” Joe is on his feet again.” “He dido’t deserve it, Jared,” he re- plied glumly, picking a cluster of lich- en from the log. “And heis coming home to see you in two weeks.” He saw the old man crush down his pleasure and his effort in making the incredulous response, “We'll see him when he comes.” He showed no curiosity to know how the matter had been adjusted, and Jared left him, The two weeks brought the evening of Joe's arrival. Jared met him at the little station and walked with him to- ward home. They heard the rasping of the saw from a distance, and as they went nearer Joe's eagerness to clasp his father’s hand and enter upon a clos- er relation impelled him to start ahead. Jared quickly caught him by the arm and said: “Joe, I wouldn’t—say anything to him about money. A word might ruin my hopes. Just act as if there had been no trouble.” The father sat upon a log, and they came quite near before he heard them. He hastily arose. Joe sprang forward, extended his hand and said: “Father, I've come back to be a son to you.” It had been two yeaissince they met, and Jared, anxiously watching Gray now, saw the old hardness come to his face. But asthe father looked upon his boy he saw a manlier look than he had seen before, and a look of ragret and hope as well. . The hardness was driven from Gray's face, and clasping his son’s hand in his he said, with tears starting, “Joe, Joe, you're welcome home, and I’m your father |” Gray turned quickly and stopped thesaw, Then, hurrying to the end of the mill, he called loudly, “Mother! mother!” His wife soon appeared, hurrying as if she feared an accident had taken place. but the old father caught him by the arm and asked joyfully : “Mother, whois this?" “Joel” she cried ; “my son!” “And mine, mother; and all forgiv- en and forgotten.’ They walked toward their little home, but Jared said goodby very strangely, the three thought, and turn- ed away. He stopped after taking a few steps and called Joe to him : “I wouldn't say anything until to- morrow, my boy,” he said in low tones. “It might spoil it all. It's glorious that this has been brought about.” He turned away, aud the three, watching him, thought he had never looked so sad and lonely since he ‘lost Sallie, J Next day Joe and his father went to town to see Jared. Their rap at his cottage brought a stranger to the door. “Jared Harpwick?" he replied “Why, don’t you know that he has sold his place here and left this morning on the early train? I thought every one knew it here. But you are John Gray? Harpwick left a note that he wanted me to give you.” He brought it, and the old man read : Dear JoNN—I have lost all my money, except a very little, and am go- ing far into the west to begin life again. God bless you and Joe. Always be kind to him. Heis a good boy at heart. Goodby. JARED. Father and son turned to each other, knowing then how Jared had perform- ed his task.—H. M. Hoke in Youth's Companion. er ——— Mirrors Waren His Warrers.— The proprietor of a large cafe and res- taurant down town thinks he has soly- ed the problem of how to keep an eye on two or three score of employees at the same time. His place 1s a verita- ble behive for two or three hours in the middle of the day, and in order to keep the employees well up to their duties it became recessary to make them feel that the watch ful eye of the employer was on them all the time, To effect this an ingenions arrange- ment of mirrors was devised. A doz- en of them were built in the wains- cotin in such a way that they not only formed a rich ornamencation to the place, but they enabled a man at the cashier's desk to view every nook and corner of the room without turning his head.— New York Times. ——— —— Mrs. Douglas Gordon, Mrs. Hen- ry Winter Davis and Miss Mary rett, who were mainly instrumental in securing the sum of money which is to open the Medical School of John Hop- kins University at Baltimore to women, are now laboring to raise the half mil- lion endowment fund which is necessary to the practical success of the new scheme. ——Sir Richard Burton, the famous traveller, writer and archwmologist, who died lately at Trieste, was master of twenty-seven languages, Bayard Tay- lor could command nearly as many, and "Theodore. Parker read twenty-eight, * though he spoke only English with ease and fluency. Joe was hiding behind Jared,, Gar- | The Peasant’s Reply. A gentleman who had recently re- turned from Russia relates an incident which, although trifling in itself, is yet most pathetically suggestive of the con- dition of the poor in Russia, and of the state of things which has bred so deep and so wide spread discontent among the people, = 3 Being about to leave some: station at which he had been staying for a few days,the gentleman in question called in a moozhik — to adopt the spelling of George Kennan—-to strap his trunks. The man was of enormous build, with every appearance of great strength, while the traveler is not above medium height, and while of compact mold is by no means of muscular appearance. The trunk was rather overfull, and the task of bringing the buckle on the strap into its place was by no means a light one. The Russian tried again and again, becoming short of breath and red in the face with his efforts, while the American looked on at first in impatient silence and then with contemptuous re- proaches. At length, losing patience, the traveler pushed the moozhik aside, and with a single quick effort brought the strap down and buckled it. “There,” he said, “are you not ashamed, you great big fellow, to be all this time buhoding over a thing that I can do in a minute, and I’m only up to your shoulders 7” There was no trace of anger in the re- ly : p Lan, little father, but you have had meat to eat all your life.” SE ————— The Oyster Supply Dwindling. When the first settlers came to the present site of New York they had 350 square miles of rich oyster beds around them. Where are they now? At one time oysters were found in abundance from Cape Cod to the St. Lawrence. They are all gone. The Delaware Bay and Delaware River were famous for their oysters. They are now prac- tically barren. In the Chesapeake Bay and its rivers were the finest oys- ter grounds in the world. They ag- gregated the enormous total of 1,600,- 000 acres, and yeilded from 15,000,000 to 20,000,000 bushels: a year, besides supplying seed oysters to Long Island Sound. Of the 25,000,000 bushels of oysters eaten 1n this country in 1880, the Chesapeake Bay supplied 17,000,- 000. This season its total product has been less than 5,000,000, and next year it will not reach 3,000,000 bushels. Oysters that brought 40 cents a bushel ten years ago would be worth a dollar a bushel to-day. The advance in price within a year has been over twenty- five or fifty per cent. more. New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island are doing good work with their oyster-planting laws, but at best they will produce only about 2,000,000 bashels annually for the next few years, and in the twelve other States which raise oysters there are no methods of recuperation, and the dwindling of the general supply is sure to continue. An Old Time Editor. A legal friend reminds me of an old Colonel Rogers, who published the Bos- ton Journal before the war. He was terribly conservative, and his paper was delivered almost entirely to annual sab. scribers, although a few copies were on sale at the book stores. One day when the Colonel came down town he was horrified to see a boy with some Journals under his arm shouting out, “Journals, 4 cents; Journals I’ Dazed for a minute, he called the boy into a doorway and asked, “How many Journals have you there ?”” Told, he took out his purse and paid for them all, and ordered the boy to run home and never to buy any Journals again. He was so scandalized by the occurrence that he said he felt almost ashamed to meet his business sc- quaintances for weeks. Times changed when the war broke out, and the Jour. nal went on the street like other papers. i —————— Correcting the Teacher. In one of the Springfield grammar schools the teacher was explaining an example in arithmetic on the black- board, and had finished it with the ex- ception of the last two figures of the an- swer, which was in dollars and cents, when she was called out of the room. On returning one of the pupils raised her hand and said, “There are some cents to the answer in the book, but there is’nt any on the board.” “Why, Nellie, what do you mean by speaking to me like that 7” the teacher exclaimed in anger. After the school bad been in a roar of laughter for fully a minute it dawned on the teacher’s mind that it was ‘‘cents’’ instead of “sense” that the girl was talking about. Be — Not a Bad Idea. “Remember, boys,” said the teacher, who being still new at the business, knew not what else to say to make an impression, “that in the bright lexicon of youth there’sno such word as fail.” After a few moments a boy from Boston raised his hand. “Well, what is it, Socrates 2’ asked the teacher. “I was merely going to suggest,’ re- plied the youngster as he cleaned his spectacles with his handkerchie:, ‘that if such is the case, it would be advisable to write to the publishers of that lexicon and call their attention to the omission.’ res mame —The new reading clerk of the Colorado State Senate is Miss Anna 'W. Kelly, a young and very pretty woman. She reads rapidly, clearly and with eor- | rectness of accent and pronunciation. She is the first woman to hold such a position, ——Miss Edith Brown is one of the most successful of the young artists in Boston. She is a designer of stained glass, and has taken prizes in competi- tion with some of the famous workers of this department. She is only twenty- one years of age. r——— AN OBJECT OF SYMPATHY.—“On what grounds did Henshaw get his sion? T never heard that he did any fighting during the war” “He didn’t, but he claims his sym- pathies were enlisted.” ‘we sniff—draw the air into the u pen- | Hard, Common Sense. You hear and read a great deal about the tyranny of parents who refuse to sanction marriages, but that which is cailed tyranny is in many cases hard, honest common sense and "good judg- ment, based on experience and observa- tion. No father, who has reared his girl at great care and expense, giving her the best education his means will afford, de- veloping her into an attractive thing of beauty and culture, with chances for the highest happiness and good in life, wants her thrown away on some brain- less, unprincipled fop, who hangs around saloons and smokes the = vilest kind of cigars, or cigarettes, day or night,softening what little brains he or- iginally possessed. A girl who will go back on the wise, loving, disinterested counsels and advice of her parents and wrecks her bricht prospects of life in a union with such a worthless scamp, who is principally at- tracted to her by the shekels of his prospective daddy-in-law, deserves to be miserable all her days and break her heart, as she surely “will, by such a thoughtless, inconsiderate course of con- duct, and also those of herloving, dot- ing parents. It is the nataral duty of parents stern- ly to protect their unexperienced child against marriages with such adventur- ers, who have not enough mind and vim to earn a living for themselves alone, much less a wife and family, which are the inevitable outcome of marriages. Look around you! See the social and personal wrecks of life caused by impro- per marriages. They fill the world with misery and woe. : It is the loving, sensible, considerate girl who will, without question, take the advice of her older and experienced mother and father on so important a matter as marriage. It is safer, unhesi- tatingly, for her to take their advice,and she will yet live to thank them on her bended knees for their advice and ac- tion. : : Girls stand by your parents! Trust them and do just what tf ey say ! The Sense of Smell. The eye is only used for se¢ing, and the ear for hearing, but the nose is one of the organs that serve a double pur- pose. Itis not only the seat of the sense of smell, but was intended to be the principal organ through which man should breathe. Its circuitous passages, warm and moist, protect the lungs by taking the chill from the inspired air and arresting irritating dust. The whole nose is not concerned in the act of smelling. The olfactory nerves, which alone take cognizance of odors, are situated in the upper third of the nasal chambers, out of the line of ordinary inhalation. For tLis reason | we do not usually notice odors unless they are somewhat strong ; but when pper part of the nostrils and hold it there for a few moments-— we become aware of the faintest scent. rr — France's Executive. The President of France is chosen by a majority vote of both branches of par- liament sitting together as a joint as- sembly, and his term is seven years. Usually, bowever, he is compelled to step down from office by pressare from parliament before his term ends. The constitution gives him the authority to select a ministry, which must comprise members of parliament; to conclude treaties with foreign nations, to appoint t> the chief military and civil posts, to pardon offenders, and in concurrence with the senate to dissolve the chamber of deputies and bring about a new elec- tion. These are the chief powers of the president. The present executive—Car- not—- was elected on Dec. 3, 1887. ——The following are some of the large salaries paid in New York : Chauncy M. Depew, President of the New York Central, $75,000; R. A. McCurdy, President of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, $60,000; H. B. Hyde, President of the Equitable, $60,000 ; W. H. Beers, President of the New York Life, $60,000 ; Frederic P. Olcott, President of the Central Trust Company, $60,000; John A. Stewart, President of the United States Trust Company, $50,000 ; J. W. Alexander, Vice- President of the Equitable, $45,- 000, Be — ——The death of Miss Alice Bronte, whieh took place in Treland, removes one of the last members of that remarka- ble family. It takes the memory a long way when we realize that she be- longed to an earlier generation than Charlotte Bronte. She was the sister of the Rev. Patrick Bronte, and there- fore aunt to Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell. en mm ———— HARD To CHOoOSE.-—Mrs. Bargain— What are you worryin about this morn- ing 7” Mr. Bargain — I need some new clothes and a new watch, and I can’t make up my mind whether to get the clothes at a shop where they give away watches, or to buy the watch at a shop Where they give away clothes. ——Among the special students at Bryn Mawr College is Miss Urne Teu- da, a Japanese woman, who is a teacher of English in the Peeresses’ School at Tokio. Miss Tsuda was on of the five little girls sent in 1871 by the Japanese government to be educated in this coun- try, she and one companion remaining here for ten vears. rc —— —It has been stated that over boys under fourteen or fifteen, a woman can more easily exercise a good influence than a man, and at Scottish education- al conference held this year a move was made to employ women as. teach- ers tor boys and mixed classes. REASON T0 BE AFRAID. —Borer —I was up in your neighborhood the other day, and I thought of dropping in. Wornout-—Yes ? Borer--Yes, but. I got lost. Saw a | street running the other way-— Wornout—-Street must have seen you coming. i —————— Snakes That Fat Eggs. ‘‘The funniest snake I know anything about is one found in Africa, which lives upon eggs,” said Ostenlowist Lucas w a Washington reporter “It has a curious projection downward from its backbone, just bekind the head, which is like a tooth, the extremity | eing actu- ally tipped with enamel. “This toothlike appendage has a most important function with relation to the creature’s method of, getting a, living, and it would be difficult to find a more astonishing illustration in naturs of the adaption of structure to necessity. “ “When the snake swallows an egg the latter is passed down through the gullet until it encounters the sharp tooth I have spoken of, which breaks the shell. “Thus not only is the food rendered easy for immediate digestion, but no portion of the fluid contentsis lost as would ' be the case if the snake were obliged to bite into the egg with its mouth fangs. “It seems surprising how many snakes are able to swallow animals bigger than themselves until it is considered how particularly well nature has adapted to the purpose the structure of their jaws. “The lower jawbone, instead of being in a single piece, is merely connected in front by an elastic ligament, so that the two halves are capable of great exten- sion. Again, the halves of the lower jawbone are attached to the skull very far back, so that the animal can ma ke an enormous gap.” nt — The National Plant, There bave been laudable efforts Iate- ly to elect a national flower by voting; but however dear, and rightfully dear, to the American heart is universal suf. frage, it cannot decide this question, th e answer to which should be by acclama- tion. "And how could a fair vote be ob. tained without ‘an’ organization almost such as ‘is found necessary for choosing a President for the great Republic—- which in this case is clearly impossible? Of all the plants selected by this Re- publican caucus, the one that is alread national has been strangely neglected. . The stately sunflower, the fragrant arou™ tus, the gay golden rod, the beautiful mountain laurel, the grand magnolia, the gorgeous cardinal flower, have each and all had their adherents and been vot- ed for ; but when a few out of what should have been many millions of votes have been recorded, the thing comes to a dead stop. The American Garden may speak of ‘our national flower the golden rod 37 but when nothing has been the choice of the whole people, or a representative part of the people, nothing can come of it. But the maiz2, the Indian corn, has a strong though unacknowledged posi- tion as our national plant. : Mysterious Tricks of Steam. Notwithstanding the many years the steam boiler has been under observation thers are conditions of steam making which play strange tricks, as indicated by the steam gauve, tbe pressure, with- out any discoverahle cause, at times in. creasing forty or fifty degrees in as many seconds, and not infrequently leading to disaster In a big electric light station in Philadelphia there has recently oc- curred a series of mishaps to the boilers extending cver a period of twelve or fourteen months, the strongest bolts be- ing inadequate to keep the bands and headers intact. Expert. have examined and studied, but without being able to agree upon the cause, and though a coroner’s jury, made up of boiler makers and engineers, cailed to inquire into the cause of an explosion which killed one man and frightfully scalded two others, brought in a verdict against the electri- cal company, it was unable to explain wherein there had been want of precau- tion or point out the safeguards required to prevent a similar occurrence. —— While a huge pine log was be- ing sawed into timber at a saw mill on a small creek some two miles from Athens, Ga., as the workmen were turning it over preparatory to ‘'squar- ring it,” what was their ‘astonishment to see the head of a huge frog bob out, where he was imbedded and barely es- caped being cut by the saw. How in the world his frogship got there is a mystery, as he was completely incased without any possible means of ingress or egress. As the log was the fourth or fitth from the butt of the tree, the frog must have had bis apartment some fifty or sixty feet from the ground. The tree was perfectly sound with the ex- ception of a decayed spot some inches below the hermetically sealed prison of the frog. The animal was very fat and was unable to move when pulled out of his den. ; EA ————— ——1In Berlin, the other day, a driver who ran down two pedestrians had a narrow escape for his life. In Mexico the law of the streets is the reverse, the citizen who gets run over being arrested and fined for his stupidity, In New York, sententiously comments the New York Press, we adopt a middle course. The passage of Broadway is a sort of rough and tumble go-as-you please, in in which the laugh if not the law, is on the man who gets hurt. n—— —— What the police eall an “etherized drunkard” was locked up ina Boston police station one night recently. His name is Marshal C. Crane, and his home is Canton. Or bis person was found a large bottle ot ether and two towels, and he produces intoxication by saturating the towels with the liquid and inbaling it. He has served tine in the Concord Reformatory as an habitual drunkard. When placed in the tombs he pleaded and cried for the return of his ether. rc ————— Boru Broveur Ur WELL —Popin- injay—There goes a man who was brought up with a slver spoon in his mouth. Ponsonby-~-I know a man who was brought up with a dozen silver spoons in his pocket. : EI mar TERRIBLY IN EARNEST. —1 would kneel forever at your shrine.” said he. “Would you ?" she questioned sweet- ly. oN he answered wildly, “bring on yourshrine and I'll prove it.”