Demarralic aidan Bellefonte, Pa., March 3I, 1899. THE ROUND HOUSE. You start at the door by the office and circle around to the right, Past the engines run in from their labors, at home and in bed for the night. The first is a monster, “hog,” mogul, just back- ing itself for a climb Up the mountains, with ninety full loaded, to Renovo and Erie, on time; Here “17-20 stands puffing, its steam grimy smoke hissing through; It's in from a run up the valley: Eighty miles in an hour it flew; And “5-0 9,” further ’round here, stands wheez- : ing and shakey and gray, With flanges and bumpers well battered, fast falling apart from decay. “Old 2-61," 7” Why, bless you! round house at ajl; It belonged here since back in the 60's, but went to the scrap pile last fall. And =o through the building you cirele and pass out the door you came in, Back again into life’s greater round house-—the ‘world with its sorrow and sin— Where you are an engine awaiting the of your duty to do, To run on the road of the Master and pull his great business on through; To “do unto others” in meekness, so long as life’s signals shall burn, Then on to nature's old serap—I mean to your place on the hill in your turn. —G. W. Furey. It's mot in the eall Sunbury, March 21st, 1899. MISS ANN’S VICTORY. In the spring of 62 George Osborne was brought to Knobhill, the house of his grandmother, wounded. He was there for two months, and when he returned to the army the town agreed that he was engaged to Ann Miller. Lame as he had been, people had seen him go to the Miller’s more than once, and when the time came to say good-bye, Ann Miller walked with him down the path between the rows of Easter lilies to the gate and watehed him ride away. Perhaps it was the walking side by side down the long straight path that made the observers think of the church aisle; maybe it was the white glory of the Easter lilies that made them think of a wedding; be that as it may, the town pronounced them engaged. In the spring of ’63 Jane Simmons went from Knobhill to pay her father a visit in camp, and then and there she was married to George Osborne. Of eourse the town talked; but those were busy days, when, all the men having gone to the front, the women had to manage not only their houses and children, but the plantations as well, so that the talk died very soon; if Ann Miller was stricken, she made no sign. 7 Osborne lived through the war, lived to be Governor of his State, lived to raceive a foreign appointment; but al- though the little town was bursting with pride because of his achievements, and longing to welcome him and to do honor, he somehow never came back to Knob- hill. When she became a widow, Mrs. Jane Simmons Osborne returned, and opened once more the old Osborne house. It was in the spring that she came, and looking from the stage, she saw Ann Miller's lilies blooming just as they had bloomed on that day long ago when Ann Miller walked down to the gate with George Osborne. Ann Miller was still Ann Miller, she found, living alone in the big old house that once had been so full. For the rest, she dressed in gray now instead of in white, and her brown hair had come to match her gowns and her eyes. She came at once fo see Mrs. Osborne, stepping light- ly down the path between the lilies, cut- ting them here and there, and bringing them with her. Knobhill had shrunk, Mrs. Osborne complained—which was more than could he said for Mrs. Osborne—and so many whom she had known were missing, and all who were left seemed so poor. ‘‘But, in spite of everything,”’ she fin- ished, looking critically at the flowers Miss Ann had brought, “you still keep up your fad for lilies.”’ ‘Yes,’ Miss Ann answered: ‘‘my mother loved them dearly, and we have always had them.” 5 It was a cool afternoon—cool enough for a little fire; and when Miss Ann had gone, Mrs. Osborne cast the flowers behind the backlog, and held them there until they were consumed. Bat, in spite of her dissatisfaction, Mrs. Osborne had come to stay; and to Knob- hill, grown so poor, she seemed a very rich person. Nobody knew what her financial resources were, nor what sacrifices she made, if any, to keep her only child away at expensive schools and colleges; but as time went on, one or two clear-sighted people observed that were Mrs. Osborne had begun with four servants she gradual- ly came down to one, and instead of going to spend every summer holiday with her boy, she went once in two years, then once in three years, then staid at home. Was she getting poorer? Had she ever been rich? Had she inherited everything, or on- ly a life interest? And while these clear- sighted ones watched and wondered the years swept by, and one springlike Febru- ary Knobhill waked up to find itself facing two excitements; young Oshorne, having - graduated, had for the first time in his life come to Knobhill, and Miss Miller's niece had been selected to fill the position of school mistress. It was a serene bright afternoon, and the Knobhill social circle, which always met at Osborne’s, had gathered and was thread- ing its first needles, when little Miss Wil- son said, softly: ‘‘Ann Miller is waiting at home for her niece. How nice it will be for Ann to have some one with her, after all these years of loneliness!”’ ‘I, for one, would look on it as a great trial,” Mrs. Oshorne answered, coldly. “This girl has grown up in a city, which means that she is worldly; she is young, which means that she is scatter-brained and will make a bad disciplinarian. 1 op- posed her election; I wanted an older wo- man; but Ann Miller overpersuaded the trustees. I don’t expect the girl to succed, and I should not thank Providence for sending me any such company.”’ ‘Ab, dear Mrs. Osborne,” said a third voice, ‘with such a son, you can never have realized what loneliness means, even though alone; and you have no need of company.”” And Mrs. Snider, the young widow who had spoken, was smiling— smiling very much indeed. ‘My son,” Mrs. Oshorne answered, curt- ly, ‘‘has seen the world—I took good care of that; I doubt if he will stay here long enough to be company for any one—not even for his poor old mother.’ There was an ominous pause, for the cir- cle felt that Mrs. Osborne had attacked Knobhill. Several of the ladies cleared their throats, and one had her lips open to speak, when little Miss Wilson, the most timid of women, made a spasmodic remark that diverted the conversation and preserved the peace. Miss Wilson was always doing this kind of thing. Terrified at the sound of her own voice, she seemed to become still more terrified at the warlike silences that so frequently occurred in the circle; and with a noble bravery worthy of a better cause, she would throw herself recklessly into these breaches. And now she felt al- most as anxious as Miss Miller did about the girl and the experiment of making her a school teacher. For in this matter Miss Wilson had followed up the trustees with a hesitating yet quiet persistence that had more effect perhaps than open persuasion; and many evenings, after candle-light she had slipped over to give her sympathy and encouragement to Miss Ann. All this has had done because she loved her friend, and in her heart thought fitness for the position was a small matter compared with Miss Ann’s happiness. But now that the girl was actually arriving, and Mrs. Osborne was predicting dire failure, Miss Wilson was terrified beyond expression. The stage meanwhile was lumbering along the Knobhill pike, most unusually cumbered with baggage. A great lot it seemed for the one lonely passenger within who from time to time sighed deeply and impatiently. It was Miss Miller’s niece, Sylvia Williard, and she was rapidly losing heart. At the first sight of the old vehicle her courage had cooled, for a stage meant remoteness, and with every long jogging mile through the bare country, most of it cleared and divided into fields, she became more and more depressed. For many reasons she had been glad to agree to her aunt’s proposal as to Knobhill, and had come with all sorts of happy resolutions and expectations. But this bare wintry landscape, this long white road winding in and out and up and down the rolling country, this farawayness of Knobhill, made" her almost unhappy. Where was the town, and what kind of place could it be? How many people consented to live so far from everywhere, and could such people be sane? Her aunt had written of the society that it was very select, that Sylvia’s mother had loved the place, and she hoped that in time Sylvia would love it also. The letters had been so gentle and so kindly that an enthusiasm had sprung up in the girl’s heart for the writer, and she had deter- mined to like eyerything; but now she be- gan to wonder. Of course, in this last little spot in creation, the society must be ‘‘select,”” because there could not be many to select from. And would Mrs. Osborne and Miss Snider and Miss Wilson, the names made familiar to her in the letters— would they know anything but Knobhill? How awful! ‘Hullo!’ came from the roadside. “Hullo!” the driver answered, and the stage came to a standstill. Sylvia looked out eagerly. A young man in a golf suit was standing by a dis- abled wheel. “I’ve broken my wheel, he called. ‘‘Can you give me a lift back to Knobhill?”’ A well-dressed young man and a wheel! Sylvia’s opinion of Knobhill rose. ‘“Yes,” the driver answered; ‘‘there’s plenty of room.”’ Sylvia heard the wheel being hoisted on top the stage; then the young man came to the door. He took off his hat and stepped in. There was silence, until a lurch of the stage dislodged, for about the twentieth time, Sylvia’s traveling-bag, which the young man caught. ‘Thank you,’’ she said. ‘‘No trouble,” he answered, and each liked the other’s voice. At last Sylvia asked, ‘‘How far is it to Knobhill?"’ ‘‘Really,’” the young man answered, *‘I can’t say. I have been there just one week, and I don’t know the landmarks yet.” ‘Oh,’ cried the girl ‘‘then you must be Mrs. Oshorne’s son! My aunt wrote me that you were to come.’ ‘‘And you must be Miss Miller's niece,’ Osborne returned. ‘My mother told me you were to come.’’ Then they laughed together and became friends. The ride seemed shorter after this, and great was Miss Miller’s astonish- ment when young Osborne helped Sylvia out of the stage, and, loaded down with all her traps walked her up to the door. The ladies who were dispersing from the social circle saw the same sight, and were as much astonished as Miss Miller—more, indeed, for they were not favored with any explanation. Miss Miller was immensely pleased, first with the tall niece who seemed so glad to see her, then with young Osborne, the present hero of Knobhill, who came in so pleasantly, quite like an old friend, as in a way he was, and who consented so willing- ly to stop for a cup of tea. Then again with Sylvia who at once fell in love with the few pieces of old silver and old china remaining to Miss Miller, with the big old house, and the big old furniture and fire- places, calling it all *‘jolly’’ and “‘quaint,”’ and Cecil Oshorne agreed with her. And when the girl ended by putting her arm around her aunt and saying, “But I’m aw- fully glad you’re not as big as the furni- ture, aunt Ann,’’ finishing with a squeeze, Miss Miller was completely vanquished. Nevertheless, she blushed, and looked deprecatingly at young Osborne. This was not the way in which she had been taught to behave before strangers, and especially not before gentlemen. But Cecil watched them, smiling, and when he reached home he told his mother that Miss Miller made him think of a spray of lavender. “Ann Miller?”’ Mrs. Osborne repeated; then raising her eyebrows and smiling, as if to herself, she said, slowly; ‘‘She has been told that she looked like a lily, poor soul. and now a spray of lavender! Humph!”’ *‘She doesn’t look a bit of a poor soul,’ the young man retorted. ‘‘And what about the niece?’’ his mother went on. “Thoroughly nice, and—well, she’s tall and rather striking. I’m sure you’ll like her, mother--like her immensely.”’ The very next afternoon, when Mis. Snider and Miss Wilson called at Miss Miller’s, they were greeted with sounds of uncontrollable mirth, mingled with the tones of a violin and a piano. Miss Miller let them in herself. ‘Sylvia and Mr. Osborne,’’ ‘‘she said, “are trying to make music on my dreadful old piano.’ Mrs. Snider raised her eyebrows. ‘‘How very nice!’’ she said. “Just the thing!” Miss Wilson exclaim- ed, under her breath, and squeezed Miss Ann’s hand. Sylvia put down her violin and came forward slowly, Cecil Osborne following her. She was taller than either one of the ladies, and so seemed to have them at a disadvantage. At least, Mrs. Snider said later that Miss Willard had a very con- descending air, and that she treated young Osborne as if she owned him. ‘And it does seem queer,’’ she went on “‘that Miss Ann should have sent for her niece just at this time. Of course this talk reached Mrs. Osborne, and Miss Ann also, and while Miss Ann smiled and seemed not to hear, Mrs. Os- borne began to cast about for reasons why her son should leave Knobhill. As the day approached on which Sylvia was to meet the trustees and be installed in the school, Miss Miller became seriously nervous, but the girl tried to laugh away all fears. “I’ll put on my best frock,’ she said blithely, ‘‘and the most becoming hat and smile, and you’]l see how nice everybody will be. To look well is a woman’s best card.” ‘Sylvia, Sylvia,’” Miss Ann cried, ‘‘how can you talk so?’ “It’s quite true, dear,”’ the girl went on, laughing. ‘‘I shall eat a hearty breakfast to keep me strong, look my best, and be quiet and dignified and sweet—oh, so sweet!—and you will see that all will be as you wish.”’ But Miss Miller was not comforted. Two ministers, two farmers, and a law- yer constituted the board, and before a half hour was over Miss Ann saw that they were not only satisfied, but delighted, and they then did the unprecedented thing of going in a body to the school house to in- troduce the girl to herscholars. After this things went very smoothly, for the chil- dren were willing victims to Sylvia’s youth and brightness, and that evening after tea the girl retailed it all to Cecil Osborne, and they went off into fits of amiable laughter over the quick capitulation. Young Osborne did not feel impelled, however, to tell his mother of Sylvia’s suc- cess; but the next day, when she made re- marks to the effect that Sylvia was too young for the position, that old men were fools over a pretty face, and that new brooms swept clean, her son answered briskly that Miss Willard was much too fine a broom for the job, and that the only really good feature in the whole arrange- ment was that Sylvia lightened life for that ‘‘dear Miss Ann. And now that you speak of it, mother,”’ he went on, *‘Miss Ann must have looked like a lily when she was young, she is still so fair and fresh.” And again Mrs. Osborne said: ‘‘Ann Miller? Poor soul!”” And the young man began to wonder about his mother’s atti- tude toward Miss Ann. As the spring drew on, Sylvia developed an enthusiam for work among the flowers, and after school each afternoon she would potter about after Miss Ann, digging where she should have raked, and raking where she should have dug. And as Cecil Os- borne assisted her vigorously, Miss Ann declared that unless she gave them a plot to themselves she would not have a flower left. On the instant Miss Wilson offered her garden as a sacrifice rather than the young people should be balked of their pleasure. ‘They are flowers enough in themselves,’’ she added, romantically; then looked over her shoulder ina terrified way, fearing that her neighbor, Mrs. Snider, might have heard her. But instead, Miss Ann gave Sylvia a bed which she could plant and replant and overwater to her heart’s content, stipulating only that she should not cross the line into the long border where the Easter lilies grew. These were quite tall now, shooting up day by day, making ready to bloom; and Miss Ann’s stipulation drawing attention to them, Cecil Osborne said: ‘‘How beautiful they will be, Miss Ann, and how many you have! You are very fond of them!”’ “Very,” Miss Ann answered. ‘‘We have always had these borders filled with them.” ‘‘Have you a lavender hed?’’ the young man went on. ‘‘You should have one. May I make it? Will you give me a plot too?”’ And Mrs. Snider from the opposite side of the street, and Mrs. Oshorne further down, could watch it all, and by the time the lavender bed was planted Mrs.Osborne’s patience was exhausted. “I have heard from Mr. Lenox,’’ she said to her son one day,”’ and he thinks, if you want a position, you’d better come on at once and watch for an opening.” ‘Why, mother!’ and the young fellow looked up in astonishment. ‘Can’ I play a little while? Are we s0 poor that I must go to work at once?”’ ‘The shrinkage has been very great,’ Mrs. Osborne answered, looking out of the window, ‘‘and your education has been very expensive; and what may be play to you, Cecil,”" she went on, ‘‘may be deadly earnest to others.” She might have meant herself; she might have meant Sylvia. Cecil thought the lat- ter, and rose to his feet. ‘I would to Heaven it were as earnest with her as it is with me!”’ he said. For a day or two nothing happened; then Cecil asked to know about the proper- ty, aud, being well over age, he could not be denied. It was nota pleasant investi- gation. But he said nothing tbat he would regret, nor did he reveal anything with regard to his plans. He wrote pri- vately to his father’s friend, Mr. Lenox, then mentioned to Miss Ann that soon he would have to go away to work. “I'll give you the primary department in the school,” Sylvia said, laughing. and Miss Ann said that work was good for everyone. They were in the garden, looking at the first lily that had opened, and Cecil went on in a depressed way. ‘If my father had lived it would have been different,’’ he said; ‘‘and these lilies,’ he continued hurriedly, as he stooped to smell the half-opened flower-—*‘‘these lilies always bring him back to me. For in his last illness—’twas in the spring-time—he sent me day after day to buy them for him. They took him home, he said. I put some in his coffin.” A faint color was rising in Miss Ann’s cheeks, and her eyes were fixed on the young man. ‘‘And at home,’’ he went on, ‘‘there are no lilies. Could he have remembered these, Miss Ann?" Miss Ann shook her head. The house you live in was your great-grandfather’s house,” she said. ‘‘Your father came to Knobhill very rarely after he was grown, and once—when he was wounded.”’ “And were these lilies blooming?’ the young man persisted. ‘‘Yes,’’ she answered, ‘‘they were bloom- ing.”” Then went away to the house. Before the lilies had opened to their full glory young Osborne left Knobhill; but be- fore he went he had a long, long talk with Miss Ann, and afterwards he kept up a steady correspondence with both ladies, but Miss Ann's letters were the thickest and most frequent. Things seemed to move rather heavily after this, and Sylvia wilted a little, as the flowers did, with the sum- mer heat. The circle, however, met re- lentlessly every week, and she and Miss Ann felt bound to be regular attendants. One afternoon in September Mrs. Osborne had on a most triumphant expression. She had heard that very day, she said, that her son had been appointed to a sub-professor- ship in a college. Congratulations poured in, and Miss Ann smiled, and did not say that the news had reached her the day he- fore. She had not told Sylvia even, and now the girl remembering the recent letter, looked at her questioningly. Why had not her aunt told her, she wondered. *‘I doubt if he ever comes here again,” Mrs. Osborne went on, ‘‘unless to take me away to keep house for him,” She smiled meaningly. Mrs. Snider smiled to, but Miss Wilson cried, quickly: ‘Oh yes, he will! He told me he would —he is devoted to Knobhill.” ‘Really, Eliza,”” Mrs. Osborne answered, ‘‘one would think that I did not know my own child!”’ Miss Wilson's face was very red, and her breath came quickly. “Well,” she gasped, ‘‘perhaps you don’t Jane,—not just —well, not in this particular.” The circle stood aghast, and there was a dead silence, until Miss Ann asked, quiet- ly, “Have you had any instruction about the next mission box, Jane?’’ then the com- pany once more breathed freely. Sylvia did not question her aunt as to her silence—a silence which had seemed strange when there had heen such impor- tant news to communicate; it must mean something; and if it must have been an agreeable something, Miss Ann would sure- ly have told her. So she only said how nice the appointment was, and laughed a little bit over Miss Wilson’s daring. ‘‘She fights when it comes to Knobhill,” Sylvia said. “‘Yes,”” Miss Ann answered, “she is de- voted to Knobhill.”” And both knew that the fight had heen partly on Sylvia’s ac- count. A few days later Sylvia received a very thick letter, and though some of the thick- ness was due to ap enclosure for Miss Ann, she carried it in her pocket all day, saying nothing about it until in the evening after tea, when, turning very red, she approach- ed her aunt. ‘Mr. Osherne sent you this, Aunt Ann,” she said. Miss Ann looked up. you,” she said, quietly. consent, dear.”’ After this Sylvia took her violin, and played softly until just before bedtime, when she came and stood beside Miss Ann’s chair. “I shall tell him not to come at Christ- mas,’”’ she said, abruptly, ‘‘and shall charge him not to tell any one until he comes at Easter.”’ ‘‘Not even his own mother?”’ Miss Ann remonstrated. ‘Not even his own mother,” Sylvia re- peated. ‘I will not submit to persecu- tion.” ‘“You cannot tell him that.” ‘‘He will understand without telling.” Then, laughing a little: ‘““He writes in the most confident manner, Aunt Ann; it is almost impertinent. What have you been telling him?’’ “Nothing detrimental, my dear. you agree to his plans for Easter?’’ Sylvia turned to put up her violin. ‘‘I “I shall not allude to that part of his let- ter,”” she said: ‘‘that is really too pre- sumptuous.’” After this the thickest letters came to Sylvia, and a great many of them, and the postmistress being a younger sister of Miss Wilson’s, no word of the correspondence was whispered even to the birds. Just before Christmas Mrs. Osborne an- nounced to the ever attentive circle that her son would not come to Knobhill for his holidays, and she looked at Miss Wil- son meaningly. ‘Of course,’”” chimed in Miss Snider, ‘“Knobhill cannot have any attractions for a young and handsome man.’ But this was the only response, for Miss Wilson was trying in vain to find her needle. She eked out her living with sew- ing, and sometime before this she had moved her machine over to Miss Miller's, explaining that Sylvia Willard was com- ing out of mourning, and that as she was teaching all day long, she had no time for sewing. So now Miss Wilson did not an- answer Mrs. Osborne’s challenge nor Mrs. Snider’s slur; instead, she hent lower over her work, smiling a little to herself. It was an early spring that year, and an exquisite one. Everything seemed to he rejoicing, and everyone at Knobhill seemed to be contented, as usual, when one day, about a week before Easter, a notice was sent round by Mrs. Osborne to say that there would be no meeting of the circle that week. Knobhill was astounded. It was the very first stoppage since the organization of the society, and no one could under- stand it. Mrs. Snider rushed over to see if ‘‘dear Mrs. Osborne’’ was ill, and other ladies followed suit. Miss Wilson, how- ever, ran over to Miss Ann’s—actually ran —and she was chuckling audibly. Miss Ann met her in the hall, and the ladies clasped hands. ‘‘Ob, Ann, she knows!’ Miss Wilson cried. Miss Ann nodded. ‘‘And I’m sure she’s nearly dead,’’ Miss Wilson went on. Miss Ann nodded again, and this time her eyes were flashing. ‘I should like to sing the Nunc Dimittis, Ann,” and the tears came to Miss Wilson’s eyes. ‘‘It’s all right now; Jane cannot sway this boy. He is quite as capable of coming here and fighting for Sylvia as she was of going to camp and capturing George Oshorne by maligning you. Poor George!” “Eliza,” and Miss Aun’s voice was very low, ‘‘when George was dying his room was filled with Easter lilies, and they were buried with him in his coffin.” The tears were rolling down Miss Wil- son’s cheeks now. Oh, Ann,”’ she almost sobbed, ‘how glad I am! How it must have enraged Jane Simmons! Oh, Ann, how sweet— how sweet! Poor George!” The wedding just after Easter was a very simple affair; so was the reception at Miss Miller’s. Mrs. Osborne, however, went straight home from the church, saying that she was too much overcome, and the peo- ple must forgive her, as it was her only child. But from behind her parlor curtains she caught a distant view of her son and Syl- via as they walked down between the rows of stately lilies and drove away. Once be- fore she had watched two people come down that path between the swaying flow- ers. Then her heart had been filled with anger; now her eyes were filled with tears; and Miss Ann, coming in with some wed- ding cake, found her so. ‘‘Jane,”” she said gently, ‘‘try to love the girl.” Then Mrs. Osborne broke down and cast her arms ahout Miss Ann. ‘Oh, Ann,” she sobed, ‘I never knew till now what desolation meant! Forgive me Ann, forgive me!”’ ‘‘Of course,”” Miss Ann answered, and wiped the poor thing’s tears away.—By Sarah Barnwell Elliot in Harper's Bazar. ‘So he has told ‘‘He has my full And California Elects No Senator. The California legislature adjourned sine die at 11:45 o’clock Sunday morning with- out electing a United States senator to suc- ceed Stephen M. White, term expired. —~—Subsecribe for the WATCHMAN. Panay and Iloilo. Just at present the American people will be interested in the information concerning the city of Iloilo and the island of Panay, upon which it is situated, and of which it is the capital. Panay, according to some authorities, is the third largest of the Phil- ippines, being exceeded in area only hy the great island of Luzon to the north and the second largest island of Mindanao to the south. Between these two great islands lie a'group of smaller ones known as the Visayas. Several of these are of considera- ble size, including Negros, Cebu, Samar, Leyte and Mindoro, some of them by some authorities being credited with being slightly larger than Panay. The island of Palawan, which lies west of the Visayas, is also about as large as Panay. But the lat- ter, however its precedence in the matter of size may be disputed over those named as its competitors, exceeds them all and al- so Mindanao in population, ranking after Luzon in this respect. Panay, according to some authorities, contains 4,540 square miles, while others give it 4,633 square miles. Its population is estimated at from 800,000 to 1,000,000. Iloilo is next to Manila, the principal seaport of the Philip- pines, and its reduction and that of the isl- and of Panay to American control, coupled with the occupation of Luzon, must be fol- lowed by the surrender of the whole of the islands to the authority of the United States. RE Panay is triangular in form. Its north- ern coast is about 75 miles long, the west- ern one about 100 miles, and the third side of the island, the southeastern, about 125 miles in length. Iloilo is situated along the last mentioned coast near its center. The island is divided into three provinces —Antique, which lies along the west coast; Capiz, in the north, and Iloiloin the south- east. In general the island is wild with very high coasts, except in the northeast- ern part, where the coasts are somewhat marshy. A mountain chain crosses the isl- and, from Point Juaraojurao on the south, as far as Point Potol on the north, follow- ing a direction almost parallel with the west coast. Large groups of sierras branch out to the right and left of the central chain; on the eastern slepe begins another chain running northeast to the extreme northeasterly point of the island. Owing to its cragginess the island has a great num- ber of streams running in different direc- tions, the valleys of which are very fertile. The mountains are also covered with luxuriant vegetation. There are gold and copper mines and much tobacco, sugar, rice and abaca is raised. There is good pasturage for cattle and horses, and large herds are raised. The largest population and principal industries are in the province of Iloilo, in which the operations of the American troops are now being conducted. In that province. about 30,000 looms are employed manufacturing fabrics of sina- may, pina, jusi, ete. wr NX As to the city of Iloilo itself, there are very conflicting accounts concerning its population, the figures ranging from 10,000 to 30,000. It is 335 miles from Manila, on alow, sandy flat on the right bank of a small river, which is navigable to the city’s wharves by the vessels drawing not over 15 feet. At the end of the flat on which the city is situated is a spit on which there isa fort, close to which there is a deep water. It isa town of great commercial importance and a brisk coasting trade is carried on from it. The better class of houses are built on strong wooden posts, | two or three feet in diameter, that reach to the roof; stone walls to the first floor, with wooden windows above and an iron roof. The poorer class of dwellings are flimsy erections of nipa, built on four strong posts. It is these latter houses which are reported destroyed by the insur- gents, and they can doubtless be easily re- placed, while their owners, because of the mildness of the climate, will probably suf- fer but slight discomfort. The whole isl- and of Panay is about one-third larger than Porto Rico, and its reduction to American authority is not likely to prove a very ser- ious task. The possession of Iloilo give the American forces a commanding posi- tion in the whole Visayas group, and they are likely to meet with little trouble in se- curing the submission of the other islands belonging to it. The Filipino population in the great island of Mindanao, to the south of the Visayas, is small and scattered in towns along the coast, where our naval vessels can enforce our authority. The bulk of the population of this island is in the interior and of a savage or semi-civil- ized character. A School Teacher’s Victory. Miss Mabel Heichel, a school teacher at Hastings, was acquitted this week in the Cambria county court of the charge of as- sault and battery. Having punished a boy named Sheeban for unruly conduct, the boy’s father had the young woman ar- rested. The teacher gave bail for court. The Clearfield Spirit says that the case pro- voked much attention of a favorable kind toward Miss Heichel, as the testimony of Dr. Rice, a prominent Hastings physician, made it plain that the boy had not been cruelly whipped. It was said that Miss Heichel had used good judgment in admin- istering to the boy just enough ‘‘hickory oil,” thus ‘‘suiting the punishment for the crime” with admirable effect. Judge Love tried the case. The jury acquitted Miss Heichel and complimented her efficiency by dividing the costs equally between the prosecutor and the county. Miss Heichel is from Karthaus, Pa. Dead List is Now 23. Four More Corpses Taken from the Windsor Ruins— Hope for the Missing Abandoned. Four more bodies were recovered from the ruins of the Windsor hotel, N. Y., Saturday. The record is 23 dead, 40 or more missing, and a large collection of small hones. The injured in hospitals and other places are recovering. Anxiety on the part of friends of persons reported missing has increased to a certainty almost that they perished in the fire. From the condition of the bodies 80 far recovered there is but little hope that they or any of the bodies that may be found hereafter can be identified. Among the articles found to-night were a woman’s gold watch marked ‘J. W.’’ a metal top of a purse marked ‘“N. P. J.” and some wear- ing apparel marked ‘‘H. H. 8.” Formerly Resided in Beech Creek. ‘Dr. W. P. Rothrock, who years ago resided in Beech Creek, but who is now located at Floral, Kan., was injured re- cently. In getting out of his carriage to visit a patient, he missed the step fell on the front wheel and the tongue, which caused the horses to run off. The wheels of the vehicle passed over the physician, breaking several ribs and his collar bone and bruising his body. When picked up he was unconscious. He is now improv- ing. Dr. Rothrock is over 80 years old. Hard to Make Ends Meet. Appropriations More Than Eat Up State Revenue. Extra Cash Must be Raised—Way Smoothed in the House to Slide Through Pay Roll Bill. Liquor Licenses as Personal Property. Chairman Marshall, of the Appropriations - Committee, made a statement in the House last Friday that the committee had reported all billsfor State and semi-State institutions, amounting to $5,739,000, and that the general appropriation bill, which would be reported by April 4th, would carry about $16,000,000 more. This would amount to more than the revenue in sight, and Mr, Marshall suggested that the com- mittee be not required to report private ap- priation bills until more revenue is pro- vided. A motion was made by Mr. Bliss, of Delaware, and adopted, rescinding that part of a resoluticn which required imme- diate report on private bills. The appropriations favorably reported show an increase of more than $800,000 over the aggregate for the same purposes two years ago. The biggest increases are for the indigent insane and the National Guard. AN EIGHT MILLION SHORTAGE. The nearly $22,000,000 income assured for the next two years falls more than $8,- 000,000 short of the aggregate demands on the State Treasury. In making his caleu- lations Mr. Marshall allows for Governor Stone’s declaration that at least one-fourth of the $3,500,000 deficiency caused by floating debts must be paid off within a year, and the remainder before the end of his term. The Legislature is confronted with the task of finding new revenues somewhere before any money will be in sight for the charities, such as hospitals, which do not come under the head of State or semi-State institutions. In addition to the crying needs of the charities, including the hospi- tals that took in soldiers of the war with Spain. there is nothing but anticipation of the passage of some of the pending revenue bills upon which to make either a partial payment of the floating debt or an appro- priation for the new Capitol. FRIENDLY TO CHARITIES. Leading legislators feel that either by additional revenue or slashing in the Gen- eral Appropriation bill. or both, the hos- pital and homes should be saved from much, if any, cutting below the aggregate of about $1,500,000 appropriated to them two years ago. Neither chairman Mar- shall nor the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, Mr. Hosack, however, seems hopeful that this Legislature can do enough cutting in governmental expen- ses or bring in sufficient new revenue to be as liberal to the charities as was its pred- ecessor. The reform axes will not get a chance at the General Appropriation bill until April 4. Meanwhile the revenue hunters, al- though somewhat discouraged by the kill- ing of the Direct Inheritance and Manu- facturing Corporation Tax hills, and by the prospect of an overwhelming majority against either reducing the $11,000,000 ap- propriation to the public schools or keep- ing all the personal property tax from the counties, will do what they can to send to the Governor the Beer Tax bill, the Bald- win Mercantile Tax measure, the Hosack Corporation and other revenue schemes. Mr. Hasson, of Venango, proposed to ask the House for special orders for his bills to have $4,000,000 expended on the Capitol by a new commission, but refrained on be- ing reminded by Mi. Marshall that as this is an appropriation bill it will go on the special calendar of such bills, and, there- fore, is in no danger of not being disposed of. TO BAR LIQUOR FROM GROCERIES. Earlier in the legislative term, when a new hill had some chance, an influential delegation of prominent grocers from Phil- adelphia and elsewhere might have been expected here in opposition to a bill which Elias Abrams, of Philadelphia, introduced in the House to-day to prohibit the sale of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors at places where groceries or food are sold. The new rules presented by Mr. Abrams’ Sixteenth district colleague. Mr. Stewart, Thursday, and adopted, to expedite revenue and ap- propriation. bills, practically kill all be- lated measures on the calendar except those of urgent importance. LICENSES AS PERSONAL PROPERTY. Representative Fow, of Philadelphia, in- troduced a bill making liquor licenses, wholesale or retail, personal property and subject to levy and sale, and providing for the transfer thereof to the purchaser. Transfers would be under the usual re- strictions. THE PAY ROLL TO GROW. The fact that one of Senator Martin’s stanchest’ friends in the House, Elias Abrams, made a successful motion to-day providing special orders on Monday and Wednesday for the Senate bill increasing the number of legislative employes is ad- ditional evidence that enactment of the measure is expected, through Martin men’s. aid. Mr. Martin voted for it when it pass- ed the Senate finally. The Democratic Representatives will be solid against the bill; but the Quayites hope for its success through Mr. Martin’s support. In the Senate Mr. Brown, of Philadel- phia, introduced a bill to repeal the local option laws in the Fifteenth and Twenty- ninth wards of that city. The House took a recess during the morning and listened to an anti-expansion address from Senator Wm. E. Mason, of Illinois. He said he was confident the American liberty should not be injected hypodermically into the people of other countries with 13-inch guns. Father's Sad Discovery. Found His Boy Dead After Returning from an Errand. Last Friday afternoon the 10-year-old son of George Woodhead, of Estella, Sul- livan county, was assisting his father to boil maple sugar. His father went away for a short time and when he returned he found his son dead a short distance from one of the kettles. All his clothes were burned off and his body was badly blistered. The boy was subject to epileptic fits and it is supposed that during one of these spells he fell into the fire and afterwards crawled away to the spot where he was found. Anecdote of Kipling. Seldom one tells a joke on one's self; not so, however, with Mr. Kipling, who relates an amusing story at his own expense. Dur- ing his stay at Wiltshire one summer he met little Dorothy Drew, Mr. Gladstone’s granddaughter, and, being very fond of children, took her in the groundsand told her stories. After a time Mrs. Drew, fear- ing that Mr. Kipling must be tired of the child, called her and said: “Now Dorothy, I hope you have not been wearying Mr. Kipling.”” ‘‘Oh, not a bit, mother,”’ re- plied the small celebrity, ,'‘but he has been wearying me.”’ . O