wit Bellefonte, Pa.,. June 4, 1897. EE—— THE DUEL. The gingham dog and the calico cat Side by side on the table sat ; > *Twas half past twelve, and what do you think? Neither of them had slept a wink! And the old Dutch clock and Chinese plate Seemed to’know as sure as fate There was going to be an awful spat. (I wasn't there—I simply state What was told to me by the Chinese plate.) The gingham dog went ‘“‘bow-wow-wow !” And the calico cet replied ‘“‘me-ow !? And the air was streaked for an hour or so HH fragments of gingham and calico. While the old Dutch clock in the chimney place Up with its hands before its face, For it always dreaded a family row! (Now, mind, I'm simply telling you What the old Dutch clock declares is true.) The Chinese plate looked very blue And wailed : “Oh, dear! What shall we do ?” But the gingham dog and the calico cat Wallowed this way and tumbled that And utilized every tooth and claw In the awfulest way you ever saw— And, oh! how the gingham and calico flew ! Don’t think that I exaggerate— I got my news from the Chinese plate.) Next morning where the two had sat They found no trace of the dog or cat! And some folks think unto this day That burglars stole that pair away ; But the truth about that cat and pup Is that they ate each other up— Now, what do you really think of that? (The old Dutch clock, it told me so, And that is how I came to know.) —Eugene Field. The section foreman’s boy, red of hair and freckled of face, offered to show him the way to the church, but he declined the proffered courtesy, preferring to walk up the railroad track until he should get tired of the jaunt, when he would stop at a cat- tle guard and rest, and then return in time for dinner. Church going had been an un- known quantity with him in the city, where there were great cathedrals in half a dozen different paits of the town, and he hardly saw the occasion for departing from custom simply because his exilein the lit- tle country town was so uninterestingly eventless. He started with a swinging, athletic club stride up the line of gravel, therefore, and the section foreman's boy, palpably starchy and awkward in his Sun= day clothes, went hurrying down the street from the station, his red hair crimsonly signaling his approach to the little frame church while he was yet agreat distance away. Kennedy was.th> new telegraph operator. He was an aspiring fellow and an intelli- gent one, and some day he hoped to-bea trick dispatcher, and possibly, after a reas- onable lapse of time, the superintendent of telegraph. He spent the long and lone- some nights in reading on social economies, and he knew more about the history of strange and peculiar things associated with government than almost anybody whose name or fame is now suggested to mind. He was the chief telegrapher of his division of the telegraphers’ labor union, which met in the city 30 miles away, and he was the man who made the best speeches on Tuesday nights, when lodge proceedings had got as far along as the ‘‘good of the< order.”” The others of the division thought highly of him, and usually they sent him as their lodge delegate to the sessions of the international convention. He could argue splendidly and he said he was an agnostic. ; \ As he walked up the track this Sunday morning the Sabbath feeling seemed to rise up as though to offend against his rea- soning and reasonable agnosticism. Across the fields came the mellowness of a church bell, and seeming far, far, far away, its sound was the sweeter for the distance. Over to the right a farmer’s wagon was creeping along the section line road as the sleek brown horses dragged the family to- ward the place of worship in the town. Around the curve ahead of him there rose a quiet rumbling, and, looking to see what unexpected train was bearing down upon him, he received the hail of Michael Doolan, foreman of Section 43, several miles up the parallel line of rails, who, with his men and their women and children, was whir- ring along in the direction of the little parish church toward which the red-head- ‘ed boy had sped several minutes before. The men were on a hand car, to which a little flat had heen attached, and this flat accommodated the women and children. “I suppose it’s all right for them,” Kennedy murmured, as the twin cars dis- appeared nd the other bend of the curve, ‘‘but that isn’t for me. Religion is a good enough thing—an indispensable thing, indeed, but it hasn’t got around to me yet, and it never will. It's a good, handy thing to have for” the purpose of swearing people in courts and impressing ignorant persons whose characters requige some sort of ballast of mysticism, not only for their own comfort, but for the safety of the public. Such people, without a weight or anchorage of some kind, would rattle arcund annoyingly and even harmfully to others.” I wish I could believe as they do. Doubtless it is a comforting thing to be as they are, ‘but—"’ And he closed his statement of opinion by picking up a stone and throwing if-atg, rabbit. ~He -walked to the cattle-guard, and, resting, returned, and found he had vastly miscalculated distance and time, and that it was still very early in the day. He looked -about and saw the hand car on a siding, and it suggested something to him. Kennedy prided himself on being a liberal sort of person, and the thought came to him that it would be a fair and reasonable thing for him to drop into the little church, just to show that he had really no feeling against religion. He found the white- painted structure with the cross over its queer little cupola, and, entering, took the rearmost seat. The services were nearly closing. He looked forward, over the heads of half a hundred devout worshipers, at the priest in vestments, which—although Kennedy did not know it—he had brought at great labor from the city, for the parish was too poor to support a resident pastor. He noted that the worshipers seemed to consider every movement of the bezowned man as to some especial import, and genu- flected and crossed themselves and mur- mured unintelligible utterances, which he took for prayers. It was very interesting, and in his heart he wished that reason might show him how to be as happily sati-- fied with the priest’s teachings as were these. ) “If a miracle could. be enacted in those old days, why should not one he performed now ?”? he inquired inwardly. ‘‘Oh,- no. It is all opposed to sense and science. Faith ?2—for he had arrived in time to hear enough of the sermon to know that | the priest had "discoursed on faith—*‘yes, by a miracle I could have faith, but—’" His seli-communion was interrupted by the sound of a silvery voice coming from the gallery above his head. “O salutaris I’ the hail rose pure and sweet—such a voice as the agnostic had never before heard. ‘‘O salutaris !”’ and the church was filled with the wonder of a music which csused him to think that an angel sung, quite ignoring the fact that ac- cording to his philosophy no such thing as an angel could exist. He listened as one entranced, and he left the church with his very soul brimming with the joy of that heavenly soprano. The next Sunday he walked up the track again, but only a little way. The section foreman’s boy had invited him as before to accompany him, but Kennedy hesitated, and, hesitating, was not lost. Now. however, as he again looked up at the cheery hail of the happy passengers of the hgnd car, he hesitated again, and.this hesitafypn sent him churchward. He took his forfer seat in the rear, under the odd little choir loft, and to-day a new priest talked, and, strangely enough, of the ‘Miracle of Faith.”” As though answering a question of Kennedy’s the clergyman said : = “Who are the believers? The greatest of all the great in learning, state- craft and material advancement. Presi- dents, prime ministers, men of mighty mind accept the divinity of Christ—and if these men, wise enough to be great, and great enough to be honest, accept by faith, why should you or I cry out for a miracle to be enacted for our special behoof. There are many millions of people in the world—"’ Kennedy could have told him how many. *‘—and what right has one man to ask God to miraculously perform for him so that he might be badgered and forced re- luctantly into accepting what worthier, more learned men and men of infinitely greater responsibility and vaster tempta- tion gladly and gratefully take as a boon ?”’ “This,”” thought Kennedy, ‘‘sounds reasonable, but I cannot blindly accept their belief on unsupported, unwitnessed sentiment.” And as he thought upon it the voice of the soprano rose in glprification. It was what he had waited for.” It filled him with great happiness. The undeserved miracle was beginning of performance. Every Sunday after this he came in after the others and took his back seat. Her voice had sung him almost into the ac- ceptance toward which the reasoning of the priest was powerless to persuade. He seemed to partake of the feeling of the singer. He exulted with her in the Latin praise of the Redeemer. He learned the | words, and they rose almost to his lips as shesung. Whata woman she must be ! What a heart of purity to well up in such witness of the might of Christian love and Christian mercy ! He had never scen her, for he was an agnostic, and he could not yield the stubborness of his unbelief to ask about her or to even wait in the church to watch her. He came into church late and he left early» He was an agnostic, and she— . But was he? One day after the services were conclud- ed he advauced past the half hundred hum- ble worshipers, and greeting the priest, said : ‘Father, I want to come into the church.” His heart leaped with that ac- knowledgment, and the little edifice seem- ed filled with the glory of the Shepherd of the lost sheep. Suddenly, from the organ loft, which now for the first time was visi- ble to his eyes, came the swelling sound of that heaven!y voice in some song of praise. He looked for the singer. It was the section foreman’s boy. And this was his miracle.—Chicago Record. : Engaged Him. Stranger—* ‘Don’t you want to take on a man ?”’ Coal Dealer—‘ ‘Well, I want a weigher. Have you any references ?”’ Stranger—* ‘Sorry to say I haven’t ; but it is not easy fora man who has been in my business to obtain references.’’ Coal Dealer—'‘What business have you been in ?’’ Stranger—*‘I’l1 be honest with you. I've been a pugilist, but I retired from the busi- ness. I was champion of the light weights.’? Coal Dealer—‘‘Champion of the light- weights! You're the very man I want. Come in.”’ Use For Fruit Stones. In France the various kind of fruit stones, cherry, peach, plumb, apricot, Ect., are collected, washed, boiled, sun-dried and put into chintz or printed linen bags. Thoroughly heated in the oven, they are admirable applications for toothache or earache, rheumatic pains or cold feet, as the stones retain the heat for a long time, besides giving an agreeable scent. Edict Against Sunday Labor. « It is announced that John D. Rocke- feller has issued an edict against Sun- day labor by the men employed on his ore docks on the upper and lower lakes. While the men are expected to respond to calls to load or unload ves- sels at any hour of the day or night, they will not be asked to work bewteen mid- night Saturday and midnight Sunday. ——The Huntingdon News says of a local celebrity : John Noble, the veteran pump- maker, of Cassville, this county, is now past 70% ears of age, and still hearty and able to work at his trade. Since 1848 he has put in 1207 pumps and bored 320 jobs of pipe. One of his pipe jobs was 4000 feet long. The most of his work has been done in Huntingdon, Blair, Bedford and Fulton counties. Since 1847 Mr. Noble has kept a diary in which he daily records his doings. ——He was seven years old and was sit- ting on the porch when the census-taker came around. It was ‘‘Jack’s” first ex- perience in this line, and he willingly gave the names of the several members of the household, winding up with that of Bridg- McCarthy. ‘‘Bridget McCarthy,’ repeated the census taker; ‘is she a domestic ?”’ It was a new word for Jack, but he was equal to the occasion. ‘‘No, sir,’’ he said, ‘she’s from. Ireland—Irish, and not do- mestic.—7imes.”’ : ——The Punxsutawney Spirit makes the following allusion : There are a number of young men about this town who seem to have no other object in life than to put on good clothes and stand around, ride bicy- cles and eat. Go to work boys. Spade garden. Do something. Anything is a thousand times more respectable than useless indolence. Whatever you do, don’t loaf around the streets and smoke cigar- etts. This is abominable in the sight of man and beast. STARVATION IN CURA. — The policy which is now in force, of driv- ing the peaceable Cubans of the four west- ern provinces of Pinar del Rio, Havana, ‘Matanzas, and Santa Clara into certain specified stations of concentration, was con- ceived by General Weyler early last fall. Permission having been duly obtained from the home authorities of Madrid in October last, he published the dando, or proclama- tion, under which the various commanders of military districts were instructed to give the guajaros a period of eight days in which to leave their. homes and to take them- selves to the stations designated. The soldiers then burnt down their homes, con- fiscated their horses and cattle, and took all that belonged to them that was worth the taking. They then escorted these trembling herds of pacificos, or non-com- batants, and their families to the low-lying, swampy, and malarial stations which had been selected as suitable places for them to dwell in. These stations are one and all well within the. Spanish lines, and sur- rounded by little forts. When you re- member that execution of this simply bar- barous proclamation was intrusted almost exclusively to those convict gangs who are known as guerillas, or irregular troops, you can form a fair estimate of how often these military evictions and the plunder of private property gave rise to bloodshed and cold-blooded murder. Indeed, mur- der and bloodshed were of frequent occur- rence in every district of these four pro- vineces, and not a few, fearing the end of a policy which began in this way, preferred to incur the risk of endeavoring to escape and of disobeying the proclamation, and are now living in caves and concealed hovels. These refugees, should they be discovered by the Spanish columns, would be and often are shot down in cold blood. General Weyler’s proclamation of October 21st, 1896, authorizes such a course, and disobedience would be punishable by death. It was with the purpose of starv- ing out these people, as well as the armed insurgents, that the orders were given at the Palace to the commanders of the re- spective military‘ districts to burn and ravage the country, to cut down every green thing that grows, and to dig up every root that might help to sustain human life. With the exception of the few towns and villages which are held and occupied by the Spanish troops and are within: the military lines which they still maintain, there has not heen left standing a single home, however modest and lowly, from the Jucaro-Moron Trocha to Cape San Antonia. By the 1st of December last, 400,000 of these non-combatants and peace- loving peasants, including their aged and infirm parents, their wives, and their chil- dren, were ‘‘concentrated’’ in these sta- tions, which, whether they were chosen with this object in view or not, have proven admirably adapted to the realization of the policy of extermination. Military cordons were thrown about these stations at that time, and from that day to this not a single one of these pacificos has been allowed to cross the lines of the station where he is penned up, except on exceedingly rare oc- casions, when one has now and again been granted a military pass as a special and often a very dearly bought favor, and the permission given was, of course, for only a very few hours. Another exception to this general statement should be made in speak- ing of Matanzas and Artemisa, where, on many occasions, such of: the starving peasants as seemed able to do any work at all were told off to dig in the trenches, or for any other work which the Spanish soldier disliked, and to which the un- armed Cubans were driven at the point of the machete, and to which they were held at the muzzle of the rifle. Since the month of January. when, the scant supply of provisions which the e able to bring with them secretly from their homes was exhausted, as well as their still more scanty supply of money, these 400,- 000. people have been existing in abject misery and want, and face to face with a struggle for existence, which, however bravely and courageously they may deport themselves, is doomed from the very be- ginning to be a hopeless and unsuccessful one. In Pinar del Rio, the most westerly province of the island, these stations of starvation are situated for the most part along the 180 kilometres of the western railway, which extends from Havana to the town of Pinar del Rio. In the stations of Guanajay, Mariel, Candelaria, Conso- lacion, San Cristoval, and Artemisa alone these starving and homeless multitudes numbering 60,000 souls. and the number of those who have been delivered by death from their captivity is estimated by the most conservative observers of this colossal massacre hy decree at 10,000 since the be- ginning of this year. I have visited each and every one of these stations, and believe that the mortality has been much greater than this, but I give the lowest figure that has ever heen stated by any one at all con- versant with the conditions of life in which these wretched people are existing, or, rather, being put to death by a process of slow, cold-blooded torture. These deaths have resulted from starvation and. from smallpox, as well as a score of other dis- eases which easily attack and easily over- come those who are penned up in un- healthy, malarial places, without food of any kind, without work, and without medical assistance. On the line of the railway through Havana and Matanzas provinces to the city of Matanzas there is another series of starvation stations, of which Jaruco and Matanzas are the most populous and have suffered the largest mortality, and from Matanzas to Villa Clara and Cienfuegos this panorama of human destitution and suffering extends uninterruptedly, and with a monotonous repetition at every station of heart-rending scenes of want and of abject and hopeless misery. In these lest mentioned stations there are to be found to-day at least 200,- 000 starving people, without the barest necessities of life, and with no hope or prospect of obtaining them, or of any es- cape from their deplorable and wellnigh incredible situation, except for thoke who prefer a quicker death and attempt to es- cape from their peus, knowing that the chances are more than ninety-five out of a hundred that in endeavoring to cross the lines they will fall into the hands of a bloody thirsty and brutalized soldiery. In addition to the stations already men- tioned the Cabans of the peasant and small farmer class ‘are ‘‘concentrated’’ on the northern coast, principally in the towns of Cardenas, of Sagua la Grande, and of Caibarien, and upon the southern zoast in Cienfuegos, Trinidad, and in Jucaro. In the instances mentioned, where the places designated as stations of concentration have been situated outside the towns of some importance and population, the starving peasants have been unable to get work in the few instancos that they have been al- lowed to seek it, from the fact that in these towns, before the country people were driven there, was already a large popula- tion absolutely without occupation or wark of any kind, and in a condition only g a degree less deplorable than that of the starving -country pcople themselves, be- cause in these towns, as well as every- whereglse in Cuba, all trade and industry has been paralyzed if not completely de- stroyed by the war. 7 There remain ahout twenty or thirty sugar plantations in these four devastated provinces where attempts are or were being made a month ago to grind the cane and to make the sugar crop. The permits to do so were only obtained by bribing the officials of/the Palaces in Havana and by supporting the troops, who are guarding the small centraleas, and paying the blackmail which the officers of these troops exact with cynical frankness. These planters principally Spaniards, Americans and foreigners, have endeavored to recoup themselves for the heavy expenditures outlined above hy re- ducing the monthly wage of their laborers from thirty or forty dollars a month to from six to ten dollars a month.. These la~ borers have had no alternative but to ac- cept ‘these starvation figures, and in the very few instances that they have refused to work, a bribe administered to the Span- ish commandant of the station has always been successful in having the laborers forcéd to work at the point of the machete. So the condition of these five or six thou- sand men, who are permitted and in some instances compelled to work under these peculiar circumstances, is hardly more de- sirable than that of those who are penned up in the starvation stations and doomed to die without any prospect of relief. Indeed, their condition is a degree worse, as their starvation is no less sure and a lit- tle slower. ? Of one thing I am quite certain, no as- sistance can be expected for these people from the Spaniards. - Even if in this our day a miracle were wrought and they could he endued with the spirit of the good Samaritan, they would not have the means to alleviate the sufferings which they have so wantonly occasioned. It has been pro- posed that the sentries who surround the starving thousands and shoot down all who reckless of the danger and maddened by the sight of their “starving women and children, attempt to pass the cordon should, be withdrawn, and the concentrados of penned-up peasantry be allowed to go out and seek for food in the campo, or country districts. I do not believe that even if the Spaniards could be induced to take such a step-it would afford very effective relief, for this most rich and fertile country, the *‘most rich and beautiful that ever human eye beheld,”” as Columbus wrote back to Spain after his discovery, is now a smok- ing ruin, a heap of ashes and of graves, a grim, gaunt panorama of what savage man is capable of in the way of destruction. It is to-day a land where spring-time has brought not a single blossom or a promise of harvest. I am referring now exclusive- ly to the four western provinces where Spanish influence is paramount, and not to free Cuba beyond the Trocha, where, fortu- nately. the spectacle is amore pleasing one. If all the Spaniards, from Weyler to the last corporal of the convict and jail-bird guerrilla, were suddenly to be invested and animated by the spirit of the good Samari- tan, even then the situation would be but little changed, and the outlook only a shade less sombre. The Spanish army in Cuba is absolutely destitute. There never was an army so wanting in everything which soldiers of a temperate country re- quire when campaigning in the tropics as are these wretched conscripts of Spain. They are without those things which. aie the common necessities of life to the Digger ‘ Indian or to the most primitive and seM- sufficient cave-dweller. Leaving out of consideration the guerrilas, those conviet- trained bands who steal right and left, who lay hands upon all they see and covet, and who will be the last to starve (it is to be hoped that they are reserved for hanging, although that is almost too good for them), and confining our attention to the regular army alone, we wiil find that of all the 250,000 men of that great Armada, the greatest in point of numbers that ever crossed the Western seas, there are not left to-day 5000 men capable of marching from the Battery to Central Park with campaign equipment. Some military critics have ex- pressed their wonderment as to how Wey- ler could get a quarter of a million men upon the little island. He did accomplish it, but it is only fair to say he might have failed for want of room had he not put so many of them underground and not in the barracks. There are no reliable figures as to the mortality in the Spanish army of oc- cupation during the last two years. We can only judge of the ravages which the climate has wrought as we see the skeleton regiments and the shrunken battalions limp by. I‘ortunate indeed have been those who have fallen by the Cuban bul- lets. Fortunate indeed those who have es- caped the Cavalry that awaits the wounded or the sick Spanish soldier on his way from the colors to the hospital and to the grave. A Spanish soldier with sturdy constitution may survive the swamp fevers and the ut- ter want of wholesome rations and proper clothing in the field. But once, however slight his wound or his sicknesss—once despatched to the hospital, his ease is hope- less indeed ; and his comrades do not scru- ple to divide up among them his poor be- longings, knowing full well that while some may have returned from the dead and the grave, no. man ever come back from San Ambrosio or similar hospitals. The army surgeons have little or no quinine, and in the few places where antiseptics | have heen provided they are doled out so carefully as to defeat their purpose ; for it is announced that when the present supply is exhausted there will be no more forth- coming from Spain, and this is probably true. I have found it impossible either to grasp myself or to present to others on a large scale the spectacle of human misery and of woe which Cuba reveals to the traveler to- day. But we may perhaps draw aside at least one corner of the heavy pall that the last days of Spanish rule have thrown about the land of sunshine and flowers and look, if we have the heart, at one scene at least of the ghastly blood-curdling pano- rama. The Mariel-Majana Trocha, which was devised to cut.off the Cuban forces in Pinar del Rio from all assistance of the Cu- ban armies in the east until the Spanish columns in the fields have worn them down and compelled surrender, will serve as an illustration of the useless labor upon which the Spanish troops have been engaged, and how deadly to soldiers the perfectly silly and useless task has proved. The Trocha, or military trench, across Pinar del Rio was dug out and an embank- ment thrown. up, with little forts built here and there, hy the Spanish government. In many places the trenches ran through swamps, and the long covered up and de- caying vegetable matter that was now ex- posed to the hot rays of the tropical sun bred a malarial pestilence which, from No- vember 1 last to March of this year, in- valided 12,000 men, only counting those who were working upon the trench and the detachments. that were stationed there to guard it These figures, though from Spanish sources, are reliable, though the figures that the same doctors of the Span- a ish army from whom I gathered the fore- going send home to Madrid are not. reason of this singular system of ‘‘double entry’”’ book-keeping is somewhat as fol- lows: Itis not worth while lying about the number of the sick. In fact, it is just as well to havea good round number of them as a pretext and excuse to draw the medical supplies, which never reach the hospitals. But it would not do to an- nounce anything like the real number of deaths, because, among other reasons, the names of the dead soldiers would then he taken off the pay-rolls, and that would never do ; for the officers, who are drawing the pay of these dead men, need these little perquisites so much. : I have often thought, as I rode along the Trocha, which, even in its palmy days, im- mediately after its construction, seemed to me the most useless and ineffectual of mediwxeval devices, what a senseless and sin- fol waste of human energy and life there has been here. For the banks are lined throughout its length with at léast ten thousand graves. The Suez Canal, that will live through all the ages as one of the crowning achievements of our century, hardly cost humanity as many victims, and the monument they builded to themselves will survive imperishable for all time. But the ditch which the poor conscript of Spain built has gone to rack and ruin, and the rains of the last month have well nigh washed away alike all traces of their use- less labor and their shallow graves, and they are no more remembered save in the darkened homes in the tawny Peninsula, where Rachel is weeping for her children and will not be comforted. It is only the mothers of Spain who realize the terrible discrepancy of numbers between the list of soldiers that is sent home to the Treasury Department in Madrid and that sadly shorter list which is furnished to the com- manding officers—a list of 1eally effective men, which is sent up to Havana when every now and then it.is proposed by Wey- ler to undertake active operations in Cuba. The situation in Cuba to-day is perfectly clear and simple. In the western pro- vinces we find between three and four hun- dred thousand people penned up in starva- tion stations, and a prey to all kinds of epidemic disease. They are without means and without food, and with only the shel- ter that the dried palm leaves of their hastily erected bohios afford, and in the rainy season that is now upon them that is no shelter at all. They have less clothing than the Patagonian savages, and, half naked, they sleep apon the ground, expos- ed to the noxious vapors which these low lying swamp lands emit. They have no prospect before them but to die, or, what is more cruel, ‘to see those of their own flesh and blood dying about them, and to be powerless to succor and to save. About these starvation stations the savage sentries pace up and down with ready rifle and bar- ed machete, to shoot down and cut up any one who dares to cross the line. And yet, who are these men who are shot down in the night like midnight marauders? And why is it they seek, with all the desperate courage of despair, to cross that line where death is always awaiting their coming, and almost invariably overtakes them? They are attempting nothing that history will preserve upon its imperishable tablets, or even. this passing generation remember. No, they are simply attempting to get be- yond the starvation lines to dig there po- tatoes and yams to bring home again to the hovel in which their families are housed with death and hunger all about them. And they do their simple duty, not blinded as to the danger or without warning as to their probable fate, for hardly an hour of their interminable day passes without their hearing the sharp click of the trigger and the hoarse cry of the sentry which precede the murderous volley ; and every morning, throngh the narrow filthy lanes upon which their huts have been erected, the guerillas drive along the pack-mules bear- ing the mutilated bodies of those who have been punished cruelly for the crime of seek- ing food to keep their children from starv- ing. This colossal crime, with all the re- finement of slow torture, is so barbarous, so bloodthirsty, and yet so exquisite, that the human mind refuses to believe it, and revolts at the suggestion that it was con- ceived, planned, and plotted by a man. And yet this crime, this murder of thous- ands of innocent men, women, and child- ren, is being daily committed in Cuba, at our very doors, and wellnigh in sight of our shores, and we are paying very little heed to the spectacle. Ontraged bumanity in Spain itself has protested, and that noble paper thelmpar- cial of Madrid has told the Spanish people of all the horrors and the cruelties that are being perpetrated in Cuba in their name. The whole infamy of Weyler’s scheme of pacification has been exposed in eloquent and adequate language in the columns of this and other Spanish papers, which have refused to allow themselves to be blinded by the bull-baiting fury that is prevalent in Madrid to-day. They know, then, what they do and what is being done in- their name by the viceroy. No help to the starving or a word of rebuke for the slangh- ter can be expected from the far away pow- ers of Europe. We alone have the mo- nopoly of long distance philanthropy, which is practised only too often in the an- tipodes, and not at our doors, where it is most needed. In these leaking huts, where the dead and thedying lie huddled together, un- ceasing prayers are being offered up to Our Lady of Pity, whose shrine in the far-off Cobre mountains they have all visited and in happier days decked out bright with flowers. And I believe these prayers will be heard in these United States. If we look away and turn a deaf ear to these cries of our brothers, if we send out succor only to the starving Hindoos and our arms only to the Greeks, we shall stand revealed and disgraced before the Christian world as not “doers of the World, but hearers only”’— STEPHEN BONSAL in Harper's Weekly. Nobody in Pennsylvania wants to be taxed any more than at present, in consequence of which the financiers of the Legislature are in sore-straits. The scheme to tax beer has been knocked on the head ; ditto the scheme to increase the tax on cor- porations : the farmers agree with the oleo men@n opposing a tax on their product ; the plan to take money from the cities to replenish the State treasury died at birth, and so of all the schemes to increase the State’s revenues. There is a very simple way of solving the revenue problem by pruning the ap- propriations to fit the present revenues. This plan doesn’t seem to have occurred to the Legislature yet, and until it does the Legislature is\going to be in trouble. The search for somebody willing to pay more taxes is likely to be about as fruitless as the search for the North Pole.—Philadel- phia Times. : ——American firms own 4235 square miles of timber lands in. the province of Ontario alone, and their exports of logs to the United States reach the large total of nearly 250,000,000 feet yearly. The | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. When a new ice box is purchased, and to buy one at second-hand is an economy al- ways repented in dust and ashes, be sure to have its ice chamber filled as full as it will‘hold, and with just.one or two large pieces of ice. Many and small pieces melt away rapidly. When so filled let the re- frigerator stand, all its food chambers-emp- ty, for twelve hours, and at the end of that time the interior will give forth an arctic chill. By this time dishes of food may be put on shelves, the ice compartment re- plenished, and in future but a small piece: of ice every twenty-four hours in the warm- est weather, will keep the compartment as full as it can hold. : In order to save in ice and keep the in- terior of the box very dry and cold, never put any dishes: or bottles in with the ice itself. Never wrap up the ice in wool or’ paper, and in chipping off pieces don’t leave any small bits lying about the com- partment.- Then, above all, never puta dish of hot substance into the food com- | partment. Put a dish of hot onions, kid- - neys, cabbage, etc., onto the shelves, and in ten minutes every other dish will as- sume ‘their unpleasant odor and flavor, and the shelves will begin to grow damp. Put any one of the above mentioned foods into the chest cold and the most delicate jelly will come out fresh and untainted. The chief effort of the housekeeper must be to have the interior of her refrigerator perfectly dry, and to see how well she is succeeding a sponge can be left on a shelf and felt every day to see whether it is moist or not. In order to prevent an accumula- tion of stale odors in the food compartment -it should once in ten days be washed out. That is, all dishes removed and a cloth, wrung out in warm soap suds, passed over the walls and shelves. Wherever the cloth goes a towel should follow, to rub every inch of the interior perfectly dry. Gowns with ruffled skirts are not a nov- elty by any means, but when the rufiles start from the side seams, leaving a plain panel in front there is something very Parisian in the effect. No matter what shape your throat is— skinny or plump, there is a remedy in the new collars. For shirt waists, even the strict collar with its narrow tie has given way to the small turnover that allows the broad, bright colored ribbon to wind about it twice, before being tied in a flaring, four-in-hand in front. Every one knows that bows in the back are out, but the bows in front have grown more elaborate than ever. - Bright plaid ribbon makes the pret- tiest &nd can be worn with any gown. As if in very defiance of the elaborate collar- ing that can be worn, some of the most modish shirt waists of silk and ribbons. have plain white linen collars. Collars of ribbon are very fashionable. They are wound about the neck twice and tied ina four-in-hand in front. The edges are ruffl- ed with lace and the ends: are allowed to fall to the waist. = & The traveling gown par excellence this year will be the tailor made one of cheviot, with fly front or Eton jacket and skirt ac- companied by a shirt waist, either of wash material or silk. Many prefer the former, because they can carry an extra one in their grip, while fully as many claim that the latter does not soil so easily. If a silk one is chosen, a linen collar and bow tie should be worn with it. To match the jubilee vear we are having a Victorian revival in dress, and the styles of the beginning of her reign are much in vogue. Sloping shoul- ders are promised, and fichus are to be very much worn, crossed in front and tied be- hind at the waist line. Nearly all the hats are trimmed very high on the left side. here seems to be no distinctive shape ; all kinds and all sorts are seen. Very smart ones have somewhere a touch of scarlet, while the most desirable ones are made from satin straw braid. and are miniature flower gardens, so posey bestrewn are they. Spring wraps, which . will be used again next fall, are in two distinct sorts—the fly- front jacket for younger women, and the cape for elderly ones. Awfully swagger ones, for wear with heavy white pique skirts, in the mountains or at the seashore, are in dark blue or red, with plain stitch- ing, white lining, white pearl buttons, loose fronts and smart pocket flaps in un- expected places. Accompanied by white English walking hat, white gloves, and plain white parasol, the ensemble is better imagined than described. : No tuckings to come within the require- ments of fashion should be more than one eighth of an inch in width : furthermore, they must be gathered and congregated to- gether to a depth of four or five inches. They are thus employed for yokes, to in- sert on the arm below the shoulder puff and round the skirt from the waist. Hun- dreds of workwomen devote themselves to nothing else but the production of these tucking, and a skilled tucker makes a good living. Dressmakers are complaining loudly of the lack of employes, which is hard, seeing that we have not for years had so much work in the dresses. When women wear jackets as persistent- ly as our women do, they should know a lot about vests to make the changes fre- quent and clever. To go always with a conventional cotton or silk shirt waist under a jacket, argues a lack of inventive genius. A woman who can wear many fancy fronts with different colored girdles and stocks, is a woman who will be the envy of her friends. I know a woman who can do this thing, and do it well. She has a steel blue suit of face cloth, made with a short*jacket. Here are some of her varia- tions. A front of fine Swiss, daintily tuck- ed with lace insertion, the whole made made over a piece of blue silk. A girdle of blue taffeta and a stock: collar of the the same with a narrow linen collar above. One of dark blue mousseline oh which she had appliqued cut lace, to imitate Honiton; this over green taffeta, with green girdle and ribbons to wind ahout the throat under a narrow ruching of white. A front of pale yellow muslin, finely tucked-and divided by bands of butter cup lace, made np over pale blue or white, and blue or white. girdle, and collar to match. You see how many changes this makes? To say noth- ing of the opportunities it gives a woffian to match the flowers in her hat. The woman who has-a black or gray suit, can wear almost any color she wishes in these fronts. She should certainly have a gera- nium colored one. Make it of red muslin with an applique of yellow lace, and make the girdle of black satin, very narrow with a double knot in front; if she wears a geranium colored tie, have it of silk ‘rib- bon or taffeta. The odor of onions may be removed by | eating a sprig of parsley. A -——=Subscribe for the WATCHMAN.