Bellefonte, Pa., Sept., 25, I89l. pmm— ———— NOW I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP. | The fire upon the hearth is low And there is stillness everywhere; Like troubled spirits, here and there, The firelight shadows fluttering go, And as the shadows round me creep, A childish treble breaks the gloom, And softly from the farther room Comes: “Now I lay me down to sleep.” And, somehow, with that little prayer, And thatsweet treble in my ears, My thoughts go back to distant years And linger with a dear one there: And as I hear the child’s amen My mother’s faith comes back to me, .. Orouched at her side I seemed to be, ‘And hold my mother’s hands again. Oh; for an hour in that dear place! Oh, for the peace of that dear time! Oh, for that childish trust sublime! Ob, for a glimpse of my mother’s face? Yet, as the shadows round me creep, 1 do nat seem to be alone— Sweet magic of that treble tone— And “Now I lay me down to sleep.” —Eugene Field in Chicago News. ECA ERT TTA A SHODDY SONG. If a body meet a body, Clothing all awry— What ean you expect of shoddy— Need a body cry? If a body meet a body With a purse that’s full, There can be no need of shoddy— Rich men can wear wool. If a tax laid on by tariff Keep out wool we need, . Why should a taxpayer swear if Clothing makers heed— Heed and then import more shoddy Only good for show. And make clothes to hidea body ?— How should poor folks know ? If the clothing turned to shoddy, Tainted Jong age, Should breed harm for anybody, If when cold winds blow ; Death should pierce the coat of shoddy, And the victim could Reason down beneath the sod, he Might prefer what's good ! —New York World. TT ETT WHAT PRETTY LITTLE SIMPLETQGN. BY VIRGIE F. HAZRIS. What a silly little thing she was, but how pretty! All smiles and dim- Hes rosy cheeks and fluffy brown air, shading laughing blue eyes! I thought, as I sat opposite her that day in the street car, and heard her girlish prattle, that I had never seen such a combination of silliness and prettiness. Her silly chatter provoked me des per- ately, for I was intensely interested 1n an article in the last Medical Journal, which had direct bearing ona compli- cated case I was going that morning to treat. An accident that morning to one of my horses and a stupid blunder of my coachman had forced me to take the car, and I felt as cross as a bear, and looked so, I know, for when I caught her eye she tossed her silly lit- tle head and turned away with a pout. I heard enough about papa, ballg, the opera etc., to guess that she was an idolized, only child and something of a a belle. AsI wastoo old to ignore the vacuum in her pretty head, for the sake of the pretty face, I was much re- lieved when Dora Copperfield—as I mentally styled her—and her friend left the car. It was strange, but after the first chance meeting, I was con- stantly meeting Dora. 1 caught glimpses of her nestling down in the cushions,as ber carriage dashed with a flash and a glitter by my office. Atthe opera the fates threw wie in her neigh- borhood. She was a with fat, pomp- ous-looking middle-aged man, whom I took to be “papa.” I mentally dabb- ed him “old money-bags,” and hated him as heartily as I did his daughter— he looked so complacent and listened with such evident relish to her cease- less, silly prattle. One day I was summoned in great haste to the bedside of a patient whom I had attended a few time before. She and her daughter lived in a gquar- ter of the city which my practice sel- dom called me, and among people I only served for sweet charity's sake. Though these two were as poor as many I attended free I could not dare refuse the fee they promptly tendered after each visit. Of them I knew no- thing further than that they were Jadies. There was a proud, independ- .ence, a dignified reticence that com- .manded my respect, I was much at- tracted by them both; the mother was refined and gentle, and bore with forti- tude her sufferings ; the daughter ‘was beautiful, proud, dignified, and brave- ly independent. I was anxious to help them, but the opportunity for do- ing so delicately and without the risk of offending had never yet «presented itseif, and not for my right hand would I have offended their brave, proud re: ticent poverty. Buton this visit the evidences of poverty were even greater. The room was very bare; evidently they had been forced to pawn many neceseary articles. The danghter was very pale and thin, and something like despair shone ‘in the beautiful dark eyes. I found Mrs. Trevor very weak aad low. After] had prescribed for her I sat like “Micawber,” hoping “gomething would warn up’—that there would be some opening in the conversation where I might safely offer aid. I could not leave them in such destitution. I mnst help them— this was not their place and sphere,and they must be lifted out by some means. The mother was too weak to talk, and Miss was too much absorbed in her own sad thoughts for conversation, so I must take the dilemma by the horns. “Have you been taking wine as I prescribed, Mrs. Trevor? You are much weaker than when I saw you last, and I had hoped the wine would have built up your strength.” Miss Trevor seemed to struggle with herself. A burning blush suffused her face and neck. At last she raised her bead proudly, and with a defiant air looked me full and steadily in the eye as she said in a low voice without a quiver : “No, Dr, Heathcote, We were not able to follow your preseription fully. The wine you sent mother was of great benefit to her, and I was able to sup: ple it, also, until last week, when she was taken much worse, requiring my unremitting attention, which forced me to stop sewing, my only means of support. But I had just finished some work for a young lady, and as she owed me $20, I trusted to that to tide me over, until I could resume work. But I have been unable to collect the money, and we are penniless.” ' Bravely said, my beautif ul Spartan ! I thought, as I looked at the fine, pale face with its troubled eyes. The Spar- tan youth, with the wolf gnawing at his vitals, suffered less than you did in making this confession. Behind that marble calinness, my beautiful Galatea what “a Vesuvius must be throbbing and seething in your heart and brain! Injuries and Injustice that you can’t forget — neglect and coldness from those who should have befriended ! “Yes, doctor,” said Mrs. Trevor, “Helen kept her troubles from me as long as she could, and has allowed me to want for nothing, but failing to col- lect the money due her has been a great hardship. ‘The poor child has not tasted food since yesterday.” She covered her face with her hands and the tears trickled down through the thin fingers. I turned like one shot and stared at that beautiful girl, standing so quiet and composed. Starving! starving! She, fit to be a queen, and suffering for bread! I stalked like a caged lion up and down the narrow room. “Qh, the heartless rich! The cold, heartless rich !” “More thoughtless than heartless, I think, Dr. Heathcote.” I stopped short as the cool, even tone tell on my ear, and marching up to her took both her hands in mine, I was old enough to be her father. “Helen, why didn’t you come to me? Why didn’t you come to me ?” The tears came to her eyes—the first I had seen there. “We are such strangers to you. I would not have presumed “Strangers be hanged! Excuse me, Helen. But, my child ycu are too proud! There comes a. time in the life of most, when we must accept help —when pride must be laid aside and we must stoop! Independence is a very fine thing, my dear, but the proud- ly independent man is not the happy man. He who can find pleasure in re- ceiving as well as giving is the one who gets the most good out of life, because closer drawn to his fellow man. Now, my dear, I'm going to get wine for your mother and nourish- ing food for you.” She put out her hand protestingly, and again that blush of hambled pride mounted her face. “Your mother’s life depends upon timely aid. Youand I can have our reckoning by and by. I will look in again this afternoon.” Soor I had sent up wine, fruits and well prepared food to Helen and her mother. I could pot dismiss them from my mind for a moment during my round of visits. I could understand the agony of humiliation that poor girl was suffering—as well as the fear and sorrow hanging over her from her mother’s illness. Poverty had not been long with them ; it was apparent that their better days had been recent. Then as I thought how that rich girl's thoughtless, heartless indifference and neglect to pay her had aggravated Helen's shame and grief, my indigna- tion knew no bounds, and when I reached Mrs. Trevor's humble room that afternoon I had worked myself in- to a furor of anger against that un- known transgressor, Helen's late em- ployer. I was boiling over with rage, which increased if possible, when I found Mrs. Trevor worse and noted Helen's troubled, anxious face. After doing all I could for my patient, who goon fell into a doze, I called Helen out into the hall, “Helen, give me the name and ad- dress of the person that owes you.” She looked at me inquiringly as I took out my note book and pencil, but said : “Miss 2010. L avenue.” I wrote it down hurriedly and with- out another word was on my way to find this girl. Thad but one thought —to bring her to see the sorrow she bad caused. It might teach her a les- son and cause her to feel a little of the shame and mortifieation Helen had to endure. When I drew up before 2010 L avenue a carriage stood before the door and a party of four stood ready to enter. A sleader middle-aged lady, a fine-looking young man, “old money bags” and Dora Copperfield! Ribbons Floy Garrison, flying, curls blowing, draperies fiutter- ing and merry laughter. So Miss empty head was the culprit. I was not surpriced at all. If I had been a knight of the middle ages I would bave snatched her in my arms and rushed away with her, and after showing her the trouble and sorrow she had caused, immured her in a dun- geon deep and dark, but as it was the practical nineteenth eentury J must ob- serve the conventionalities. . So, while thirsting for revenge, I had to smirk and bow and introduce myself. Yes “old mouey-bags’” knew Dr. Heathcote quite well by reputation. Glad to meet him. “This” pointing to the middle-aged lady, “was his wife; the young lady was his daughter Floy, and this his nephews, Mr. Philip Ever- ett, from the South.” 1 then politely requested Miss Garri- son to accompany mea tosee a patient who was very low, who knew her, and in whom she would be interested. Floy looked inquiringly at papa, who said: “Yes, go." Not a word was spoken during the drive, but when we stood in Helen's room 1 pointed to Mrs. Trevor's wast- ed form and said : “Behold your work.” “Oh, what do you mean ?"! | The blue eyes were round and fright. | ened and the roses had faded from her | cheeks, I turned sternly upon her and said : “] mean that a girl as young and beautiful as yourself, as: well born and | i as well-bred, has been reduced to a dreadful poverty—a poverty such as you have never seen, but have cried over in novels; she has been strug- gling bravely to keep back want and trouble from an invalid mother, while you are going to parties and balls; but out of your plenty you couldn’t spare the pitiful $20 she had earned by hard work. It would. have been a small fortune to her and saved her heartaches and humiliation terrible to. her proud nature!” “Forgive me, oh, forgive me, Miss Trevor, for my cruel, thoughtless, care- lessness !”’ She was crying and clinging to el en, who stood away. “I have been so wickedly thought- Jess! I did not know there was so much want and suffering in the world ! Can you ever forgve me ?”’ But before Helen could speak, there was a loud knock at the ‘door, and when I opened it, Col. Garrison and Mr. Philip Everett stood before me. Col. Garrison explained that after I had left them with Floy he grew un. easy, thinking he had been too precipi- tate in giving his consent for her to ac- company me, fearing my patient might be suffering from some contagious dis- ease. Here Floy threw wide open the door, and coming into the hall, threw herself the whole sad story. But what was the matter with Hel- en? Was she about to faint? She steadied herself with one hand against :a chair, while the other was presszd to her heart; her face was deadly pale, and her wide stretched eyes were rivet- ed upon Mr. Everett, who when he of “Helen!” His manly handsome face was radiant with happiness, and I heard him say: “Found at last! I have searched every where for you, Helen!” “Can you still “Do I still love you? how can you ask!” Oh, Helen, his arms and wept out her sorrows and griefs upon his heart. 1 closed the door, and Col. Garrison, Floy and I discreetly withdrew farther into the hall. After a few moments Mr. Everett and Helen came out. At last my beautiful Galatea was endowed with life. had never seen there before shown in the dark eyes: Then Mr, Everett, in a manly straightforward way, told their story. He and Miss Trevor had been children together in a far distant South- ern city, and become engaged soon af- ter both had left school, but after the death of Helen's father, nearly a year before, an unfortunate misunderstand- ing arose, which separated them, and Helen and her mother quietly left the city leaving no trace behind them, and all these months he had been search- for them. Then that little simpleton, Floy, proved her head not quite empty by saying : “Papa, Mrs, Trevor and Helen must go home with us, where we may re- pair if possible, the wrong I did them.”’ And it was done just as Miss Rattle brain proposed, and she proved herself the most faithful, untiring, and devot- ed of nurses—the most unselfish and loving of friends and cousins; and be- fore the wedding day came around, she and Helen were as devoted as sis- ters, and when that day did come old Money-bags was the most generous of uncles. And when Helen kissed me good bye that day, she said with hap- py tears in her pretty dark eyes: : “Dr. Heathcote, I. will never cease to love and bless you! The brightest day of my life except this, is that on which you rushed Floy in upon her avenging Nemesis!” Betore Philip left with hie wife he told me, at Helen's request, what he told no one else—the story of their poverty and separation. Helen's fath- er had been Philip's guardian, and af- ter his death it was found that he had appropriated and squandered the whole of Philip's fine fortune. Philip tried to keep this from Helen, but in some way she learned it, and her grief, mortifica- tion and despair were terrible to see. She thought that Philip would scorn to marry the daughter of a dishonest man. So after she and her mother had settled their small fortune upon Philip—for both felt keenly the disgrace, and wished to make what re paration'they could—they quietly left the city, giving Philip no hint of their destination. “I knew she was a heroine?” I said, as I slapped Philip on the back. Mrs. Trevor remained with the Gar- risons until Philip returned from their brief trip, then she went with them to their cozy home that Col. Garrison gave Philip on his wedding day. My gift to my beautiful girl was a complete silver service and a horse and pbaeton; so I gee the bright, happy face every day or 80 as she drives by and nods and smiles al me. Well, it is always the unexpected that happens. When that boy of mine Walter Heathcote, came back irom college, ready for a partnership with his old father, what should he do but fall in love with that pretty little sim- pleton, Floy Garrison, and make her Mrs. Heathcote before I counid say Jack Robinson! Lost CoNFIDENCE.—*' No,” says Mrs. Sharp to her husband, ‘‘you cannot fool mie; it was 1 o'clock this morning when you came home.’’ “Now, Mary, it was surely not later than 12 o'clock.” “1 say no; for I was awake when youn came and looked at my watch and it was just 1 o'clock.” “Well, all right, Mary, if you believe your old nickel plated 95 cent watch more than you do me I have nothing further to say.” ——I was troubled with catarrh for seven years previous to commencing the use of Ely’s Cream Balm. It has done | for me what other so called cures have failed to do—cured me. The effect of the Balm seemed magical. Clarence L. Huff, Biddeford, Me. into her father's arms and sobbed out | caught sight of her through the open | door stepped forward with a glad cry | And unmindful of us all she feli into | A look of happiness such as I Knowle s Reminiscences. ; ! | It Was He Who Lashed Farragut io ; the Rigging at Mobile. From the New York Times. | Among the group of sailors stationed . at the United States naval academy for the inspection of the cadets in splicing, ! knotting, and the various forms of mar- | lin-spike seamanship, is a weather-beat- | en, ‘bronzed-faced old fellow with a i record. His name is Richard Knowles, | or, as he is better known tothe fledgling | officers, plain Dick. | Dick holds the rate of signal quarter- { master in the navy, and this rate he got | while serving with no less a personage than the great Farragut himself. When | the battle of Mobile bay opened on i that bright August’ morning in 1864 | Dick was serving aboard the flagship Hartford, and to him fell the honor of | lashing the great admiral in the rigging. {| Dick was a smart man-of-war’s man | in those days. At least such cf the old | tars who are now living say so, for they have been heard to declare that Dick | Knowles was one of the ‘liveliest chaps | aloft,” they ever “clapped eyes on.” To use the old sailor's mode of putting it, (“Dick Knowles could start from sheer | pole and reach the main r’yal before the best of the lubbers were over the rim of | the top.” | Onthe day of the famous battle Far- | ragut’s flagship, the Hartford, steamed linto the ight with the Metocomet lash- | ed on her port side. Tn order to see bet- i ter the admiral climbed up on the port | main rail in order to have a view of the | Metocomet’s deck as well as his own. At the cutseta fresh breeze accompanied the ships into the fight, which soon changed, however, as is usual on the occasion of heavy firing, to a dead calm. Farragu* found the smoke of the guns unconsciously climbed, little by little, one ratline after another, up the main rigging until he was observed by his staff to be close under the futlock shroud. Captain Drayton, the captain of the Hartford, and Farragut’s chief of staff, becoming fearful that some shot might carry away a shroud and hurl the ad- miral to the deck, turned to Knowles, who was then acting as signal quarter- master, and ordered him to take a piece of small stuff” and “jump up there and lash the admiral.” Knowles picked up a piece of ratline line lying under his feet, and in the twinkle of an eye had skipped up the main rigging and was tying the old admiral hard, and fast when Farragut grufily demanded what he meant. “Making you fast sir,” said Dick. “And who told you to do so,” said Farragut. “The captain, sir,” Dick replied, “Oh, all right,” said Farragut. “And with that,” said Dick, *‘the old man took a hitch with the ratline stuff himself, while I made fast abaft him.” During the whole of the fight, Dick says, the admiral talked with the pilot who was stationed in the main top. Every once in a while, though, he would shout something down to Captain Drayton, who was always close under- neath. “Dick” is an old man now, and if it were any other man than ¢Dick’’ Knowles he would have been railroaded long ago to the sailors’ home. But “Dick’ prefers to be on active duty, as be considers it, and what, with teaching the middies how to splice and growling at all the new fangled things of to-day, “Dick’’ does do considerable work. The old fellow is a thorough representative of that class of splendid seamen now so rapidly passing away. In build he is small of stature, and his face is covered with a great bushy brown beard, which leaves little else to show than a pair of small, twinkling blue eyes. Helis nayer so happy us when spinning a yarn to some middy, but the old chap can never be gotten to talk unless engaged in some work at the same time. Get him settled down in a snug corner, and engaged say in ‘‘strop- ping a block,” and he is in a fair way to be wound up. The middies know this, and they have little trouble in getting the old fellow started on a twister. Dick has been a man-of-war’s man all his life, and says that he asks for no- thing better when he dies than to be wrapped up in the Union Jack and be buried with his rating badges and med- als rightly in place. To “Dick,” as to hundreds of the old men-of-war’s men, Farragut was little short of an idol. Old ‘as he is, Dick still scowls if any one ever mentions to him the name of Commodore Foote, He will tell you, even now, how the tars on the old Hartford and all the rest of the ships nearly mutinied ‘when Foote’s regulations came stopping the grog rations to the men. “Dick” claims that Farragut was as mad at the new regulation as were the bluejackets, and he would give one the impression that the men felt that Farra- gut and the seamen were being ill-treat- ed, instead of the seamen alone. Apropos of the Mobile battle, Lieu- tenant Watson, who was on Farragut’s staff, quotes the admiral as saying : “How curious some trifling incident catches | the popular fancy. My being in the main rigging was a mere accident owing to the fact that I was driven aloft by the smoke. The lashing was the result of your own fears, (Captain Drayton’s) for my safety.” aes Ne At the close of the war Farragut yi:ld- ed to the solicitations of Mr. Page to stand for a historical portrait in the pos- ition in which he was first lashed. _ Tomato Fics.——Allow one pound of sugar to two pounds of tomatoes, which must be the small round or egg-shaped tomato,either dark red'or yellow. Secald them and remave the skins, being care- ful not to break thems Pat thew in a preserving kettle, and sprinkle the su- gar (having reserved oue-third of it) between the layers. @tew them slowly until transparent, lift them out very carefully, one by one, and spread on | large dishes in the sun to. dry, sprink: ling them with the reserved sugar and turning several times while drying. It may take several days for them to dry; and you will have to be very careful not to leave them out in the dew, or when it is cloudy, as the dampness will injure them. When they are per- fectly dry pack them away in boxes or jars, with a layer of sugar between each layer of tomatoes.— Table Talk. obscuring his view of Fort Morzan, and’ | furiously. RR - x rm He Walked on the Grass. How Austria’s Emperor Was Arvested by a Park Guard. : . Emperor Franeis Joseph of Austria was arrested at Munich recently, for the first time in bis life; while visiting his daughter. - His Majesty, who was not in uniform, happened to stray absent-mind- edly across the grass when strolling through the “English Gurdén’’ to the Regent’s Palace. "a Suddenly he heard a voice behind him shouting in gruff’ and angry tone: : “Are you going to get off there or not 7” The Emperor, without dreaming for a moment that this remarkably courteous remark was addressed to himself, quiet- ly proceeded on his way. But before he had gone many steps he was roughly seized by the arm by an old one-armed park guard. “Am I to speak twice ?”’ he inquired “Will you get off the grass, or am I to arrest you ? “Does be know who I am ?”7 asked | the sovereign somewhat angrily, and us- ing the contempuons third person in-, stead of the second. “What !”” shouted the old soldier, per- fectly frantic with rage. “You dare to speak to me in the third person! I'll teach you a lesson! You're arrested. Come right along, now, to the guard house. I'll show you there who I am and who you are.” With that he clutched hold of the monarch’s arm and commenced walking him off to the guard house. The Emperor, who had by this time recovered his good temper, accompanied his captor submissively. As they passed along many of the promenaders, recog- nizing Francis Joseph, ranged them- selves on one side of the path and re- spectfully uncovered their heads, after- ward gazing with open-mhuthed aston- ishment at the extraordinary spectacle. But ths old park guard was far too an- gry to notice this. The sentries, too; presented arms, which merely caused him to look around to see if there was any officer in the vicinity. It was not, indeed, until they met Baron Malsen, one of the principal . dignitaries of the Bavarian Court, that the stubborn and obtuse old park guard obtained any ink- ling as to the identity of his prisoner. The Baron on seeing the Emperor being thus marched along, was literally dumbfounded with amazement, and could only manage to stammer : “But, your Majesty n “Well, you see, Baron, Tam under arrest,” laughingly replied the Em- peror. On hearing the word ‘majesty’ pro- nounced the guard had dropped the arm of his captive as if it had been red-hot iron, and began to tremble from head to foot as though afilicted with ague. “Holy Mother and St. Joseph,” he exclaimed, “wbat have I done ?”’ “That's all right, my friend,” remark- ed the Emperor ; “but now you have got to take me right along to the guard house in order that we may have an op- portunity of becoming mutually ac- quainted.” The poor eld fellow walked along as ifon his way tothe scaffold, with a look of absolute terror on his wrinkled face. On reaching the guard house the Emperor entered the room of the officer in charge ordering his captor to wait for him outside. Ten minutes later the old man was summoned to appear before the monarch, and in answer to an inquiry as to what he had to himself only suc- ceeded in murmuring, brokenly. «T haveserved forty years as a soldier and have been wounded in three cam- paigns !”’ “I am afraid you have lost yonr post as park guard, my friend,” interrupted the Emperor, with a smile on his kindly features, but if you will present your- self to my daughter's master of the household at 7 o'clock to-night T will see that you receive a more comfortable berth as oneof thedoorkeepers of the palace. You certainly will prove a good and incorruptible Cerberus.” The old fellow’s eyes filled with tears of gratitude as be saluted and withdrew, softly muttering to himself : i “Thanks to the Holy Virgin for such a ‘prisoner.—New York Recorder. He Likes a Hermit Life. A few miles from York, Pa., butin a very secluded mountain glen, lives and has lived for twenty-one years, one Joel Strong. Hes sixty-two years old, heal- thy and remarkably active, and all the rocky and wooded tract which he calls ‘Streng’s Park” bears curious evidence of his handiwork. The stonesare’piled in curious cairns, the rocks dressed in fanciful but picturesque masonry, and the trees are trimmed to a wild, roman- tic taste. a 3 4d He is a hermit but does not hate his kind. Indeed be is rather pleasant to the few who visit him, and is fond of showing his remarkable agility in climb- ing. In winter he occupies a rude hut, in summer he lives entirely out of doors. He sleeps on a bare board laid on top of a bench, which in turn is laid on others, till his couch is raised to a perilous dis- tance from the ground His only drink is’ water, his food is principally of his garden. Once a week he takes a thor- ough bath in‘a‘mountain stream, and is far from being » disagreeable object, as are many hermits Manyiyears ago he loved and married. His wife died, ahd he abandoned society to liveialone in the woods. ‘He bought fifteen acres of this wild land for a trifle, and in time become so weaned from social life that for Lwenty years he has not known of any occurrence in the great world, but of late visitors have be- gun to intrudeon him and try to inter- est him in the rest of mankind. Salt Rheum with ifs inledse itching, dry, hot skin, often broken into painful cracks, and the little watery pimples, often eauses indescribable suff ering. Hood's Sarsaparilla has won- derful power over this disease. It puri- fies the blood and expels the humor, and the skin heals without a scar. Send for book containing many statements of cures, to C. I. Hood & Co., Apothe- caries, Lowell, mass. ——You lost your knife yesterday ? Well, Tommy, I have found 2 knives," said the Sunday scheol teacher, ‘Now tell me which of them is yours.” “Please, mum,” replied the honest boy, “which of them has got the most | blades 7? TTT erg frat Bustling Salem. ns Its Phenomenal Industrial Development, Its Healthfulness, Public Spirit, and Its Future. : Richmond (Va.) Dispatch. The present year is more than falfill- ing the prophecies of 1890 as far us Sa- lem is concerned, and I would not be surprised to see the town, since she is putting on so many frillsin the way of new and modern homes and sich an in- dustrial fartbingale, patronizing Ler younger sister, Roanoke, if it did not seem that the two are destined to meet somewhere on the six miles that. inter- vene between them and embrace and share the crown of prosperity. Salem is college-bred, Roanoke College, a flourishing educational institution is her Alma Mater. She is religious, having the advantage of the best of church fac- ilities, westhetic,owing to picturesque sur- roundings, and extremely healthy. Pure air keeps a constant bloom on her cheek. PRACTICAL AND RICH. But Salem is praciical, and being practical is rich, and growing richer every day. Her assets are in the very best and most substantial of securities, | pay big dividends, and are managed by responsible and sagacious agents. The riparian rights of Sulem are represented by Roanoke river with its abundant wa- ter-power, her railroad interests by the great Norfolk and Western system with its own spurs and divisions, such as the Cripple-Creek. and New River exten- sions, and the Shenandoah Valley and its connections north, south, east and west, and the Roanoke and Southern, the dummy line to Roanoke, and the projected Salem and Southwestern road and probable extension of the Balti- more and Ohio from Lexington, and other Interest of this character. The agriculturai tributes are from lands im- mediately adjacent, which have no su- serior for fertility. MINERAL RESOURCES. Limestone for fluxing can be had al- most for the picking up, and the unex- celled coal and coke of the Pocahontas Flat Top region can be delivered at Sa- lem’s industries for $1.25 per ton less than fuel costs at Chattanooga and in the iron districts of North Alabama. Owing to this fact and the proximity of raw materials, the highest grades of foundry iron, basic pig mill iron, &c., can be manufactured by the Salem plants at the minimum cost and far be- low the expense of putting out such pro- ducts in Pennsylvania. The ores about Salem are red hematites, brown hema- tites, oxides of manganese, and ferro- manganese, Sand stones, plastic clays, &c., also abound. The A mountains round about Salem and also large tracts in the valleys are timbered with a variety of woods suitable for wagon-making, ag- ricultural implements, furniture, &c. THE FUTURE. If the future of Salem as a great in- dustrial centre is not assured, then hun- dreds of men of sagacity and capital are blind. These men have not said we will tell you what to do, but have set an example, and the money that has been put into industries here is only an earn- est of what is to come. Money, brains, enterprise, and public spirit are here. The climate cannot be excelled. The railroad facilities are all that could be desired. There 13 a prodigality of raw material at the doors of the town await- ing the ingenuity of man to turn it in- to manufactured products. If that does not mean continued progress there is no such thing as the logic of development. Further it means a continued advance in values. “The companies are pushing tor- ward every interest so persistently that oneis at a loss to select the feature of greatest moment. Here are groups of neat, modern cottages for workmen, there is a costly residence of some cap- italist ; there a $25,000 spacious, solid bank pbuilding of brick ; there a $75,000 brick hotel of modern, picturesque ar- chitecture ; there an iron furnace ; there the site of a steel plant ; there and there iron bridges spanning the river ; there a factory with its busy buzz, there a railroad depot ; there a summer retreat in shaded seclusion, and there a hand- some public-school building just com- pleted. All around from any hill one may see a town forming, and though he cannot see it grow from hour to hour,it is no exaggeration to say that marked and steady advances may be observed from day to day.” To see Salem is to be satisfied that nothing that has been said regarding its’ present or predicted touching its future is exaggerated. ‘ ) Diminutiveness of Palestine. I never justly realized the geographi- cal diminutiveness of Palestine until 1 read*“Mark Twain's innocents Abroad.” I had previously read a dozen books of travel in Palestine ; I had studied the map of the Holy Land when a Sun- day.school boy. But somehow it never ocenrred to me that from Dan to Beer: sheba was a shorter distance than from Atlanta to Augusta, and that the aver. age breadth of the country was less than forty miles. And yet this small territory, less in area by ‘lwo-thirds than Sonth' Carolina, has beeu the thea- ter of the most stupendous transactions that ever moved in “‘sceptered majesty’ across the stage of human history. 1t was over these once fertile plains and beautifully terraced Judean hills that patriarchs and prophets trod with unsandled feet in the morning twilight of Israel's marvellous history, Here also at a later period Christ and the twelve went forth teaching and healing, now in Judea, then in Samaria and again in Galilee, thus consecrating the soil by their blessed footprints. From this “pent-up Utica’ beginning at Jer- usalem, spread the law of the Lord and Gospel of the only begotten Son, Veri- ly the lives of these have gone unto all the earth and their sound unto the ends of the world. Nor is there “any language or speech where their voice is not heard.”— Atlanta Constitution. Ir Varigs.—*Is a point the end of & line?’ “Not always. Sometimes it's the end of a pin.” ;