Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 14, 1896. WHO PLANTS A TREE. He who plants a tree Plants a hope. Rootlets up through fibers blindly grope : Leaves unfold into horizons free. So man’s life must climb From the c¢lods of time Unto heavens sublime. Canst thou prophesy, thou little tree, -What the glory of thy boughs shall be. He who plants a tree Plants a joy ; Plants a comfort that will never cloy. Every day a fresh reality, Beautiful and strong, To whose shelter throng Creatures blithe with song. If thou couldst but know, thou happy tree, Of the bliss that shall inhabit thee ! He who plants a tree, He plants peace ; Under its green curtains jargons cease, Iseaf and zephyr murmar soothingly ; Shadows soft with sleep . Down tired eyelids creep, Balm of slumber deep. Never hast thou dreamed, thou blessed tree, Of the benediction thou shalt be. x * * * He who plants a tree, He plants love ; * Tents of coolness spreading out ahove Wayfarers he may not live to see. Gifts that grow are best : Hands that bless are blest. Plant—life does the rest. Heaven and earth help him who plants a tree, And his work it: own reward shall be. —ZLuey Larcom. SANDY'S PLUCK. Sandy MacFabin’s parents, with a num- ber of their companions, were murdered in the year 1766 by the Indians. The unforu- nate settlers were on their way from Con- necticut to a new settlement in the Hamp- shire grants, where they had already pur- chased lands. : Only four of the party escaped—a Mr. Murkland and his wife, their infant daugh- ter, Affie, and Sandy. whom Mr. Murk- land found lying under a log, badly wound- ed and hugging tight in his arms his fath- er’s last gift, his puppy, Boone. Though their stock was driven off, their goods were untouched, and a large sum of money belonging to Sandy’s father was found undisturbed, leaving Sandy very rich—for those times. Sandy, who was a boy of uncommon in- telligence and bravery, lived with Mr. Murkland until 1771. He was then 15 years old, large, strong and well disposed, in spite of the fact that he had his time much as he pleased. Money then, as now, made a difference in the treatment of boys who had it. He roamed the woods all day with Boone and his gun, returning at night to pet and caress the little Affie, on whom he seemed to have bestowed the entire af- fection of his orphaned heart. It became known that Sandy’s money was kept in Mr. Murkland’s cabin, and one night the cabin was broken into and an attempt was made to steal the gold. The worry that this gave Mr. Murkland de- termined Sandy to take care of his property himself, and though Mr. Murkland had al- ready allowed the boy to take up his fath- er’s land and had helped to build his cab- in he objected to his taking the money, the new cabin being at a considerable distance from the older settlement. “You needn’t worry about it,”’ was Sandy’s sturdy reply. “I’m not going to keep my money in the cabin. I have got a place for it that no living man can find.” This ended Mr. Murkland’s objections, and Sandy was moved with all his belong- ings to his own cabin. About the time of the breaking in of Mr. Murkland’s cabin there came to the place one Hub Hanson, who immediately at- tached himself to Sandy, hunting and trap- ping constantly with him. He had do fami- ly, but he had a numerous following of both English and Indians, which drew great: prejudice upon him. People grew suspicious of him and ex- pressed their suspicions to Sandy, but all that the boy said was, ‘‘If Hanson is after that money, he’ll have to hunt for it.” Contrary to Mr. Murkland’s hopes, San- dy made little progress in clearing up his land. Most of his time was spent in hunt- ing and trapping ; yet he had some notion of improvements, for during the winter he had busied himself evenings in scooping out a cellar underneath his cabin floor. While thus occupied he discovered by the falling in of some loose stones and dirt a small natural cave. Taking a torch, he followed its zigzag course for what seemed to him a long dis- tance, coming suddenly out, much to his astonishment, between two immense bould- ers. “My, but this is a queer find !”’ he ejac- ulated, hastily backing in to conceal his torch, for bubbling from between the rocks not more than two feet from where he had come out was the very spring into whose friendly mud he had consigned the box con- taining his money. ‘Faith !”” muttered the boy as he hur- ried back to remove all traces of his work, “I'll take precious, care that Hanson don’t find out that I've been digging a cel- lar.” As spring opened rumors of Indian depredations reached the settlement, and the blockhouse in the middle of it became the scene of many an anxious discussion among the inhabitants for their mutual safety. It was whispered that renegade Englishmen usually led these attacks, and Sandy, though he said nothing to his mates about it, took it upon himself to watch Hub Hanson. In spite of the watching, however, he and all his followers suddenly disappeared. This happened about the middle of June The next day after their mysterious flight Sandy returned from a long tramp over the common hunting and trapping ground. His usually impassive face was clothed and anxious, for not a trace of the man’s where- abouts could be found. After finishing his supper and raking up his fire he said, taking down his gun, ‘Boone, we’ve got to go over to the settle- ment, for Hanson has gone off for no goed, and the folks must be told.”” As he closed the door after him he murmured, ‘‘there ought to be scouts out, and I'll offer my- self to go as one to hunt the wretches away from here.”’ Sandy had gone no more than 50 rods in the now rapidly darkening woods when he was suddenly surrounded by the very wretches of whom he had heen speaking. “They’re bound for the settlement !” flashed immediately throngh his mind. The next instant the half circle of men and | boys in front of him was knocked into con- | fusion by a powerful blow from the butt of his gun, and he had bounded far in front of them. ‘Stop him!” shouted one, and added immediately after. all in good English. But scores of arrows chipped among the trees as Sandy fled for his cabin, intent on leading the chase away from the settle- ment, It was a race, swift and noiseless, but one befeathered wretch bounded into the cabin side by side with Sandy, saying in broken English as he shut and’ bolted the door after them. *‘Y ou—my—prisoner ?’’ “Ho! Am I, Hub Hanson?’ was San- dy’s quick retort. “Waugh ! Waugh !” Sandy’s blood was up. His long famil- iarity with Hub Hanson had bred contempt for him, and now that he had caught him in a false position his anger and contempt blazed above his fear. ‘You may ‘waugh waugh’ and paint yourself as much as you’re a mind to you sneaking tory,” he cried, ‘‘but you’ll never be half as decent as a redskin !”’ Angered at the scathing denunciation, Hanson threw off all attempt at disguise. “Well, then, as you know me so well,”’ he said coolly ‘‘perhaps you can tell what I want of you?” “You want the money you failed to get when you broke into Mr. Murkland’s house, more than a year and a half ago!” ‘Sho, .now ! Then light up’’—advanc- ing and kicking open the smouldering coals—‘‘and get it. You’d better be spry if you want te eep your skin whole, for I can’t keep those dandies out there waiting very long.”’ “My skin isn’t whole now,’’ retorted Sandy, possessing himself of his towel and winding it around his hand to stanch the flow of blood there, ‘for an arrow nas gone through my hand.” ‘‘Hae? That’s bad. Then tell me where your pitch knots are, and I’Il light one.” That was just what Sandy wanted, and while Hanson was rummaging for the knots he glided to the trapdoor. Leaping into the cavity he closed the trap softly after him, and the next moment he was feeling his way rapidly through his ‘“‘queer find.” “There,” he muttered as he emerged in- to the open air, ‘‘you may hunt now, and I'll get to the settlement without your help.” When he reached Mr. Murkland’s cabin he was surprised to find it filled with women and children, and amid sobs, ejacu- lations of pity and incoherent explanations ble finish to the desperate condition of af- fairs— Affie was lost. She had strayed from the other children while they were up in the ‘‘stump piece’ strawberrying, and the men had gone up the mountain with torches looking for her. There w=3 not a moment to be lost. The boy told them that the Indians were coming, adding, raising his voice above the cries of alarm : ‘‘Get to the block-house ! Give the alarm to everybody, and then get in as fast as you can !”’ For a moment, as the last figure disap- peared in the darkness, the poor boy stood as if stunned listening to the sobs of Mrs. Murkland, still crouched upon the floor too overcome by her loss to heed aught else. A sudden swish was heard outside, and the next instant Boone leaped through the open door to his master’s shoulder. A thankful cry that his dog was not killed, as he feared, a passionate kiss on the big, ugly face upturned to his, and Sandy had recovered from his boyish panic. ‘ Turning to Mrs. Murkland, he said, shak- ing her sharply by the shoulder. ‘Get up and get me something to write with !”’ The 1 gr women arose with a dazed, scared look on her face at the unusual tone of command in the boy’s voice, butin a moment she brought him what he wanted. ‘Now get me Mr. Murkland’s red silk handkerchief and a shoe of Affie’s.” She obeyed, the energy in his tone com- pelling her, without question, and Sandy knelt before the fire, resting the coarse pa- per on the towel bandage of his wounded left hand and making with a goosequill pen the tortured pothooks that had cost Mrs. Murkland so much teaching : Indians! Put on your torches! All in the blockhouse. Give Boone Affie’s shoe. Come to the trench trapdoor. Saxby. Giving the handkerchief a rub across Boone's nose, Sandy proceeded to secure the note and shoe in its folds, talking to the intelligent old fellow the while, and at the word ““Go !”’ he bounded out into the darkness. : The blockhouse was built by the first settlers who came to the place, and their cabins were clustered around it. Sandy was relieved to find that Mrs. Murkland and himself were the last to enter it. Even those living farthest had come in. Everything was in the most pitiable con- fusion. No one—though every gun in the place was brought in—had thougnt of mak- ing any defense, : “This won’t do!’ thought the brave boy who was trying to save the settlement, and his voice presently rang out over the din, ‘‘Every man and boy that can bear a gun, come to the roof with me !’ As he reached the roof he saw a light which he knew was that of his burning cabin, and though he at first intended to consult with the few old men, that sight put everything out of his mind, except the protection of the women and children and the immediate steps'to be taken. By tacit consent, though he was one of the youngest there, Sandy took command. He assigned every man, gun and boy to a special place until every loophole was manned. Then, leaving the old men on the roof, Sandy appealed to the women for help. : “‘There,”’ said heas he ranged them on the wide, flat stone covering the mouth of the trench, which, as in most of the block- houses of that period, led undergound to a secret opening within the settlement out- side. “You must keep a sharp lookout that none but our friends get in, for the Indians will surely find the trench.’ The boy realizing the great necessity for silence, muttered Br to himself as he made his way to the loophole in a large plank door, ‘Now, the poor things can’t cry for listening.”’ There followed half an hour of the most horrible waiting. This was the first time since the alarm that Sandy had had to think. All of the ablebodied men were gone. They and his dear little Affie were proba- bly murdered ere now. The cold ‘sweat broke over his trembling body as he thought of the responsibility resting upon him, and smothering in the bandage of his wounded hand his mortal cry for help, he sank upon the stone floor, where he prayed as one prays seldom in a life time. Sandy arose, calmed and strengthened, and it was well that he was so, for almost immediately the man on the roof an- nounced in a hoarse, shaking whisper as he leaned over the opening, “Indians among the cabins !” The only way by which their presence could be detected was by the alternate shin- ing and darkening though the open doors and windows of the hearth fires of the “Don’t shoot him !"” he learned to his dismay what put a terri- suddenly abandoned cabins as the Indians moved about rummaging for spoils. Though some of the cabins were within easy range of the loopholes, Sandy com- manded ‘‘No firing I’ for fear of bringing on the attack. It was better to watch and wait, for he well appreciated how fearfully inadequate his few old men, women and children were to cope with their cruel foe. Sandy judged rightly that the door would be the principal point of attack, and when the fires were put out in the cabins, and silence reigned, he knew that the enemy were coming. A sudden shuffling of stealthy feet was heard outside, and the boy fired. There was a stnmble, a fall, and Sandy saw the white end of a log roll over in the path. “The idiots don’t know that I can see the white end of their log,”” muttered he, as he dodged back to reload. The spatter of bullets and arrows for a few minutes was fearful, and when he next dared to look out, the white edge of the huge bhat- tering ram was perilously near the door, he- ing borne with a rush for the blow. Sandy’s next shot, aimed just above the white end, told with fearful effect. There was a shriek in mingled voices, and the log swayed and fell, followed by the sound of retreating feet and dragging bodies, as the wounded were horne away. The attack had now become general, the bullets and arrows flying through every loophole, till no man dared take aim, but Sandy, by poising his gun through the leophole at about the angle of his last aim, managed, for the whole hour of rapid firing to prevent another attempt to break in the door. The withdrawal—after the manner of In- dian warfare, to take counsel and arrange for a more effective attack—Ileft the occu- pants of the blockhouse in a dazed silence by its very suddenness, but Sandy, who was the first to recover, had commenced to call the names to find if any were killed or wounded, when he was interrupted by a sharp whisper of alarm from the women at the trapdoor, ‘Sandy, there’s somebody in the trench :”’ Sandy hurried to the place, and placing his mouth close to the edge of the stone asked in a clear, ringing tone, ‘‘Who's there 2”? ‘‘Murkland, Sandy,’’ came back. Then the shrill voice of a child cried un- mistakably : ‘Mother ! Mother, let me in! | but we did, and then we started, single file | Affie’s comed back !”’ | Instantly the heavy flat stone was re- | moved, and the next moment Affie was sob- bing out her fright and grief in her mother’s | arms. : Each man answered to his name as Sandy helped him clamber up, and thank | heaven, they were all there ! | The last to come up was Boone, the good dog, who bounded in with an ugly growl that meant mischief. ‘Indians, Boone?” asked Sandy in- stinctively reaching out his hand to the | dog’s bristling back. ‘Quick, men! Put back the stone !”’ A savage yell from the baffled Indians beneath told how narrow had been their escape as the stone slid to its place. Without a moment’s hesitation the stone was filled to its very edges by the women and older girls, for they knew that the at- tack was renewed and that the men must be left free to use the guns. There was no time to change leaders, even had any wished it, nor to inquire for the wounded—though it was known that none were yet killed—for the roof sentinel was already descending the ladder, shouting, ‘‘They’re on the roof !”’ ; ‘Pull down the ladder !’’ rang out San- dy’s voice, ‘‘and stand where you are !”’ Calling rapidly by name a number of the returned men, he bade them form a circle around the opening, and in like manner an outer circle was formed with the remainder, himself among the latter. “Fire at the first sound,’’ he said, ‘‘then jump back to load, and we’ll take your places.” The opening, not more than eight feet from the ground, was large enough to ad- mit six or eight bodies, and the Indians’ probable intention was to make a rush, but the rush was met by a concentrated fire from beneath with terrible effect. Following the terrible death screams which told of the awful work of the guns | as the bodies fell, gasping their last on the | stone floor, there came a deafening report | from the roof, and a score of bullets bat- tered and glanced upon the stones. The | men, recognizing the danger from the | glancing bullets, bounded into a wider cir- cle, but returned with their deadly fire at every attempt of the infuriated Indians to make an entrance. Though the conflict carried on there in the dark was short, it was fearful. Many of the men were wounded and were rapidly weakening from. the loss of blood. But even after the re-: treat was sounded from the roof, they were left with the horrors of the conflict, in the heap of dead . and dying Indians. No one had the heart to fire into the groaning mass to dispatch_the sufferers. Nothing could | be done with them but to watch and see that they did not crawl away, and this they did, the men taking turns in going to the women to have ‘their wounds bandaged with strips torn from their gowns and | aprons. | They had not long, however, to work in | the dark, for a light suddenly streaked up. | ships have been busy all summer hauling | $85,000,000, and since June 1st, 1895, no All firing had ceased, for the Indians, feeling sure of their victims, had with- drawn toa convenient distance to enjoy the torture they were inflicting. But what was that! Sandy raised his head, and an unmistakable spatter of rain struck his face. “Will it come?” he gasped as his eyes caught the distant flash of lightning. Ah, here it comes ! The dark rainclouds, pierced by swords of vivid lightning, emptied their welcome contents down upon the devoted little band. They were saved. Aye, and better than they knew, for when the rain had passed they found that the superstitious savages had fled from the terrific storm, *fearing they had offended the Great Spirit. : The settlers found their way to Bradford in the morning, where they obtained help to bury the dead and care for the wounded and got much needed provisions. The next year found their cabins re- built—the older boys taking the places of their slain fathers—and Sandy with his money establishing a trading post—the first store in the township. None ever tired telling of the part Boone took in saving them, and Mr. Murkland, though seriously wounded, lived to tell it many times ,always assisted by Affie, who bad the most unbounded love for the old fellow. “You see,”” he would say, we went right up through those woods to the back stump piece thinking she had got bewildered with the woods all around her, and that in her first fright when she found herself alone she would just as quick goto the mountain. We'd been calling her name and waving our torches for an hour. I should think, and had got back down into the hollow be- » The Vatican. Marion Crawford Describes the Great Papal Palace —The Visitor Comes Out of It with a Sense of Hav- ing Been Walking in a Labyrinth—The Atmosphere of the Place To the average stranger ‘‘the Vatican’ suggests only the museum of sculpture, the picture-galleries, the Loggie. He re- members besides the objects of art which he has seen, the fact of hat¥g walked a great distance through straight corridors, up and down short flights of marble steps, and through irregularly shaped halls. If he had any idea of the points of the com- pass when he entered, he is completely con- fused in five minutes, and comes out at last with the sensation of having been walking in a labyrinth. He will find it hard to give any one an impression of the sort of building in which he has heen, and certainly he cannot have any knowledge of the topographical relations of its parts. Yet in his passage through the museums and galleries he has seen but a very small part of the ‘whole, and, excepting when in the Loggie, he probably could not once have stood still and pointed in the di- rection of the main part of the palace. In order to speak even superfically of it all, it is indispensable to classify its parts in some way. Vast and irregular it is at two ends, toward the colonnade and toward the bastions of the city, but the interven- ing stretch consists of two perfectly parall- el buildings, each over 350 yards long, about R80 yards apart, and yoked in the middle by the Braccio Nuovo of the muse- um and a part of the library, so as to inclose two vast courts, the one known as the Bel- vedere,—not to be confused with the Bel- vedere in the museum,—and the other call- tween the mountain and strawberry hill when Boone hounded in among us. “Iknew the handkerchief, and I tell you | it wa'n’t many seconds before the torches were out and the shoe thrust into Boone’s mouth. Boone bounded off, leav- ing us standing there like men of stone. ; But that trace of stunned misery saved | us a deal of anxious worry, for we heard | Boone bark and the next minute Affie’s | scream. { ‘I haven’t any idea how we got to them | —though it wasn’t more than forty rods— | for the blockhouse. I had Affie in my | arms, and I tell you it was awful, stumb- | | ling along there in the dark. Boone kept | in front, and by dint of whining and brush- | ing against the leading man’s legs he kept | us going straight. But the progress was slow, and we all got many a tumble, until | once, when the leader went down, accident- | ally he caught hold of Boone's tail. | “The old fellow made no attempt to get away—and each man taking hold of his | neighbor we were led silently and swiftly | to the trench. i “Yes,,” he would finish, ‘‘when the struggle for freedom came, Sandy went into | the continental army, and it was there that he saw Hub Hanson suffer his just doom at the end of a rope for having led | the Indians on our settlement in ’71. | —Emile Egan in Romance. A Lesson from Statistics. Figures which Show a Loss of $500,000,000 to the American Farmer within four years.—Who Has that | Money ? | The total value of all cereals, tobacco and cotton grown in the United states in 1891 was $2,539,434,676. The total value of these same products | grown in 1895 was $1,810,712,527. ! This shows a shrinkage in values of farm crops in 1895 under those of 1891 of $728 - 721,949. (Crop values and farm values have been steadily shrinking since 1873.) The cost of labor, taxes insurance, intei- est, repairs, etc., were nearly as great. in 1895 as in 1891, so there must be a loss of at least $500,000,000 to the American far- | mer in the year 1895. Now, we want to know who has that money ? By a careful study of statistics, native and foreign, we learn that nearly all the governments, and national and private banks of Europe, have been increasing their stock of gold, in the aggregate a sum not less than $250,000,000; that the English exchequer is full and running over, that the profits of Great Britian alone from her foreign trade was $250,000,000 greater last year than in previous years, that she is spending $109,000,000 of this sum in battle | ships and naval armaments, and that steam- gold out of the United States. 000 in eleven months. . Much complaint comes to us from all parts of this country of a great scarcity of money ; crops are abundant but prices very low : many of the exchanges of the people are being carried on by barter, by trading eggs and butter for sugar and cof- fee, fruits and «vegetables for boots and cal- icoes ; and it is a well-known fact that there was withdrawn from circulation dur- ing the first six months of the present year ($74,000,- less a sum than $154.,000.000. Therefore, in behalf of the farmers of the United States, who are great suffers of the above conditions, we demand to know WHO HAS THAT MONEY ? We want those $500,000,000 accounted for, and we want Our Folks to help us find way, as that of St. ed the Garden of the Pigna, from the bronze pine cone which stands at one end of it. Across these parallel buildings, and to- | | ward the city, a huge pile is erected, about two hundred yards long, very irregular, and containing the papal residence and the apartments of several cardinals, the Sistine Chapel, the Pauline Chapel, the Borgia Tower, the Stanze and Loggie of Raphael, and the courts of St Damascus. At the other end of the paralellogram are grouped the equally irregular but more beautiful buildings of the old museum, of which the windows look out over the walls of the city, and which originally received the name of Belvedere on account of the lovely view. This is said to have been a sort of summer- | house of the Borgia, not then connected | with the palace by the long galleries. It would be a hopeless and a weary task to attempt to, trace the history of the build- ings. The Pope’s private apartments oc- cupy the eastern wing of the part built round the court of St. Damascus ; that is to say, they are at the extreme .end of the Vatican, nearest the city, and over the col- onade, and the windows of the Pope’s rooms are visible from the square. which rises above the columus to the right of St. Peter's is only a small part of the whole palace, but is not the most modern by any means. It contains, for iustance, the Sistine Chapel, which is considerably older than the present church, having been built by Sistus IV, whose beautiful bronze monument is in the Chapel of the Sacra- ment. Itcontains, too, Raphael’s Stanze, or halls, and Bramante’s famous Loggie, the beautiful architecture of which is a frame for some of Raphael’s hest work. But any good guide-book will furnish all such information, which it would be fruit- less to give in such a paper as this. In the pages of Murray the traveler will find, set down in order and accurately, the ages, the dimensions, and the exact positions of all the part of the building, with the names of the famous artists who decorated each. He will not find set down there, however, what one may call the atmosphere of the place which is something as peculiar and unforgetable, though in a different Peter’s. development of churchmen’s adininistration to an ultimate limit in the high centre of churchmanism. No doubt there was much of that sort of thing in various parts of Eu- rope long ago, and in England before Hen- The vast mass | It is quite unlike anything else, for it is a part of the FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. a | | Many women believe that the fine com- | plexions which Irish girls are noted for are | due to the potato and milk diet on which | they thrive in the Emerald Isle. A recent | bride lived for some months before the | wedding day on milk and potatoes alone. | This she did to ensure a dazzling red and | white complexion for the momentous | church ceremony. The end was accom- | plished ; she was really radiant in her white satin and lace veil. For women desiring to get a gown on their return from their summer's stay they will find they have made no mistake in | getting tweed, cheviot, shepherd’s plaid or | a silk and wool mixture. New skirts for autumn wear have their fullness flowing farther to the back and sides and the front less flaring. J Platonic friendship can never exist where the woman is anxious for the admiration of the man. Lawns and hatistes are almost a dog day madness. They are considered elegant | enough for any wear. At the same time it | may be observed that their part is rather | that of a transparency through which the | color of a taffeta is intended to shimmer and cool. | | “ | For the summer girl who elects for sim- i ple styles, the open tailor-made jacket, i double-breasted pique vest, and five-yard untrimmed skirt are selected as being close | to the regulation masculine severity of | style. The inevitably plainly handed ! sailor hat is then en suite. | An invalid’s room should be neat and nicely appointed, but for obvious reasons it | ought not to be clustered up with a super- fluity of trifles. The collection of vases rand small objects which need constant | dusting is not appropriate in a room where fuss and fidget must be avoided. Vials and | bottles, glasses, cups and spoons and the | imposing paraphernalia of illness should ‘equally be kept out of sight in the invalid’s apartment. A few flowers, a book or two, ‘an easy chair and the atmosphere of use, of comfort and of tranquility should pervade the chamber where pain indeed must be borne, but where patience often reigns, and whigh is to be regarded, not as the prison cell of illness, but as a way station on the highroad to health. Many of the most fashionable sleeves are now tight from the wrist to at least a cou- | ple of inches above the elbow. Above this point the arrangement of drapery seems to be optional. | Eighteen new young women law students |of New York have been admitted to the (bar. Of these Mrs. Julia A. Wilson and | Miss Ruth N. White have very promising | careers. — A dentist, who was doing some work | upon a woman's teeth the other day, was | complained to by her about the peculiar | sensitiveness she felt in them of late. ‘‘It {is always so,”’ he replied, ‘‘during the | Summer months, when one is eating more i acids in fruits and salads. The teeth are continually ‘on edge’ as it were. It 1s a good thing to clean them frequently with | powdered chalk, and to rinse out the mouth | with lime water. I know of no better way | of counteracting the action of the acids upon the lime of the teeth. And unless you do i something of this sort you will find that (the teeth will be very perceptibly eaten into.” | | Undoubtedly the pompadour is the fash- | ionable mode of dressing the hairat pres- { ent, and this style, being simple, and pull- I'ed back from the face, is certainly as com- | fortable looking as itis pretty. To pro- : perly dress the hair a la pompadour make ry VIII, and it is to be found in a small | & part from behind the tip of the ear up degree in Vienna to thisday, where the tra- | Over the head, about a span from the fore- ditions of the Holy Roman Empire are not | head at the top to the tip of the other ear, quite dead. It is hard to define it, but it | and all this hair—nearly half the head—is isin everything ; in the uniforms of the | the pompadour. This is washed at least attendants, in their old-fashioned faces, in | tWice a week, though the rest need only be the spotless cleanliness of all the Vatican— | Washed once a month. It is all combed though no one is ever seen handling a | down over the face in manipulating ; broom—in the noiselessly methodical man- | every morning it is soaked with colagne, ner of doing everything that is to be done, | bay rum or any perfume that is not sticky in the scholarly rather than scientific ar-: When drying ; it is fluffed with the comb rangement of the objects in the museum | till dry, and then fluffed more. The fluff- and galleries—above all, in the visitor’s | iDg is done in the sunshine if possible ; own sensations. | if not, by fire heat. The back knot is No one talks loudly among the statutes | Made, then the pompadour is combed of the Vaticon, and there is a feeling of be- down over the face and turned back. ing in church, so that one is disagreeably | This makes a soft loose roll ; the comb shocked when a guide conducting a party | adjusts it so the forward combing of the of tourists, occasionally raises his voice in | under part does not show ; part of the order tobe heard. Itisall very hard to | central lock is allowed to fall loosely on define, while it is quite impossible to escape | the forehead in its turn back, or this one feeling it, and it must ultimately be due | lock may be cut. : to the dominating influence of the | The result is becoming tothe oldest and churchmen, who arrange the whole place | the youngest face, emphasizing the eyes as though it were a church. An American | and bringing the forehead line in har- lady, on hearing that the Vatican contains | mony. Thisstyle of hair best suits a. cer- eleven thousand rooms, threw up her hands | tain simplicity of gowning, and positively and laughingly exclaimed, ‘Think of the must take high collaring of the throat. housemaids !” But there are no housemaids | The entire oval of the face should be out- in the Vatican, and perhaps the total ab- | lined, the collar line completing in front which was immediately followed by the | Out what has become of them and how they cry, ‘‘They’re firing the cabins !”? “My God !” cried Sandy, snatching the | half wound bandage from his now badly wounded right arm, ‘‘they’re going to burn us!” Through the commotion that followed his alarmed cry he saw his error in thus raising a panic, and like the brave heart that he was he commanded kindly but firmly, ‘‘Each keep his place.’ ‘We'll have to go to the roof, men,’’ he added, “all but those at the loopholes.” ‘‘Probably. said Sandy, as they reached the roof and were crouching behind . the low breastwork, ‘‘while we were fighting the wretches on the roof others were piling brush around the blockhouse, and we must prevent their setting it afire.”’ It was an awful thing to do, plainly visi- ble to the Indians as they would be from the lights of the burning cabins, but the dread alternative braced each man to his duty. For it was found to he as Sandy had said, and worse, since the trenches had been filled with straw, from the beds. ‘Going to smoke us out!’ muttered Sandy as he made this discovery. The men fought with the madness of de- spair. Many fell mortally wounded, and yet those who still stood rallied again and again to repel the attempts from different directions to set fire to the brush. But all was to no purpose against so many foes. Presently the brush was burn- ing in a dozen places. To add if possible to the horror of the situation, the women and children at the first sight of the flames cane screaming to the roof. The scene was awful. Screams of an- guish rose incessantly as one after another discovered father, son or brother dead, wounded or dying. Then a voice rose in prayer, and they all sank down, subduing their sobs and cries and bowing to the very roof —to pray and to wait. . Down goes the Carpenter, | may be recovered. Possibly the Corner in Gold has some- thing to do with it! If the farmer’s crops, when they came to be sold were measured by the gold London Shylock owns, might this not be the reason the price is so low ? The dollar now seems to be able to buy two bushels of wheat instead of one ; soon it will buy three bushels. As Shylock tigh- tens his grip on gold, which measures prop- erty, down goes the price of crops, and Down goes the Farm. Down goes the Farmer, Down goes the Merchant, Down goes the Manufacturer, Down goes the Laborer, Down goes the Doctor, Down goes the Blacksmith, Down goes the poor Debtor, Down goes Independence, Down goes Liberty, Down goes the Flag, Down goes everybody else and every- thing else but the Dollar and—London | Shylock. ; Once more, we demand to Know WHO HAS THAT MONEY ?—From the Philadelphia Farm Journal. | A Dissenter. “The voice of the people,’’ said the man ' who was aching to talk ahout the coming election, ‘‘the voice of the people is the voice of God.”’ ‘Beg pardon ?”’ ‘Rats, I said ; r-a-t-s, rats. home player out at third a few times and | then you will know how much ice the voice of the people cuts. Yes.” . EE ——Jerusalem has 60,000 Jows. sence of even the humblest feminine influ- ence has something to do with the austere impression which everything produces.— “The Vatican,” by F. Marion Crawford, in the August Century. —1It is interesting to observe the sym- pathy of Wall street for the workingman. Wall street is awfully afraid the restoration of silver will greatly benefit the monyed | | view the outlining the hair makes to the ‘ears, and some modifications of the stock and fall of lace at the neck is the most ‘suitable. A properly cared for pompadour , should need no curling or crimping, should | be silky, gleaming and soft, and show all | the best points of the hair for color and | texture. | —— | Is the American woman getting taller? people by cutting down the wages of labor, This question, always interesting, is being and Wall street is so considerate of the | Put again upon the carpet at seaside places, poor workingman who under the gold | where fair Summer girls are vieing with standard is loaded down with the gold he | each other to be considered athletic—that receives in payment of his high wages, that | attribute upon which their grandmothers it is doing its level best to keep him. from | looked with undisguised horror in ‘her rushing off with the ‘silver craze,” Wall | Young days. street's heart bleeds when it looks and sees | Everything tends to show that the eal- the working people sacrificing themselves | ly up-to-date girl is mightily interested in to the money power—in advocating a doub- her fine physique. Witness the myriads of le standard even after heing warned by machines of all makes and descriptions to | Wall street that silver is not for the interest | be found where the ocean wave rolls in, all | of which propose to tell the American girl - me | how tall she stands in her stockings i bow gai {much to a fraction she weighs before —= good deal has Toon said abent ithe | breakfast, before lunch and before dinner ; abject condition of Mexico under the silver | haw nnoh che Tos gained and lost to the os ann relly equal in 3, protective | minutest part of an inch when she donned tariff against English importations of 100 her natty bathing suit and entered the per cent ; how about Egypt? Egypt is | brine: of the poor but of the rich. under the single gold standard, and if the | logic is correct, Egypt ought to be a pros- | | perous country in which the working peo- | ple go about loaded down with the gold they get for wages. But do they ? ‘Rats !”” said the man he had cornered. ——Thomas Jefferson was denounced as | the most notorious anarchist of his time, Just wait | and Andrew Jackson was hated by the until you have been compelled to decide a | money power ——XNow see that your blood is pure. Good health follows the use of Hood’s Sar- | saparilla which is the one great blood puri- fier. ‘Whether women are growing taller or not,”” ‘‘is of minor importance. The real | question is, Are they growing stronger ? Do they hold themselves hetter than they did in the good old times ?”’ * Luckily for the American girl this ques- tion can easily be answered in the affirma- tive. The great impetus given to the study of physical training for girls has really opened the way fora deep reform, and actually set hosts of young women in | search for the perfect heauty of develop- ment which is more pleasing to the eye than any amount of mere charm of face.