Dewscralic; Watchman Bellefonte, Pa., April 14, 1899. r—— WHICHEVER WAY. s——— Whichever way the wind doth blow Some heart is glad to have it so; Then blow it east or blow it west, The wind that blows, that wind is best. My little craft sails not alone ; A thousand fleets from every zone Are out upon a thousand seas; And what for me were favoring breeze Might dash another, with the shock Of doom, upon some hidden rock ; And so I do not dare to pray For winds that waft me on my way, But leave it to a Higher Will To stay or speed me—trusting still That all is well, and sure that He Who launched my bark will sail with me Thro’ storm and calm and will not fail Whatever breezes may prevail, To land me—every peril past— Within His sheltering haven at last. Then whatever wind doth blow Some heart is glad to have it so; And blow it east or blow it west, The wind that blows, that wind is Dest ; —Sel. STORY BY THE JUDGE! While several of the old court bhenchers were in the county court house in New York city, the other day, discussing a fa- mous poisoning case, the one called judge inquired: ‘‘Should a lawyer defend a man charged with murder when he knows the man to be guilty?”’ This question led to an animated discussion, which, after some two hours, was brought to an end by the judge suddenly exclaiming: ‘Do you see that man?” The benchers turned their faces in the direction indicated by the speaker just in time to see a tall, lank man in shabby at- tire leave the building. Before a word was spoken hy any of the curious benchers the judge said, as though musiog to himself, though in a tone loud enough for the others to hear: ‘‘Strange that I should see that man just at this moment and when we were discuss- ing a question that he could have answered. His life, like mine, has been a failure, but thank God! my regrets, though many, can never be as bitter as his are. He ruined his career as a lawyer by defending a man who had confessed that he was guilty of murder.” ‘“Tell us the story,” exclaimed the one known as the proctor. ‘‘He was ruined,’ began the judge, ‘by his ambition.” ‘‘Ambition,”” suggested the solicitor, with a genial smile on his kindly, clean- shaven face, ‘‘is responsible for much good and much evil. It is ambition that has made wrecks, legal driftwood of many of us. We have dreamed of great deeds in our profession, we have builded fairy cas- tles in the air, while others have hy hard work succeeded. I for one—’ ‘‘The story! the story!” exclaimed sev- eral of the henchers. The judge, thus urged, told his story: ‘‘Some 50 years ago it was that I entered the small courthouse in a small town in the western section of New York. Court was in session, and the hush that had fall- en upon the crowd in the room was oppres- sive. Nothing was heard at that time but the ticking of the clock and the breathing of the spectators. The presiding judge was looking up some legal question iu the law books before him. The rapt attention of the jurors and the eagerness of the counsel caused me to realize that a trial of more than ordinary interest and importance was in progress. I asked a bystander what the cause on trial was. He gazed at mein surprise for a moment and then exclaimed, “You must be a stranger in these parts?’ “Iam,” I replied. “I have just come here from New York city to file a com- plaint in an action of ejectment.’’ ‘‘This,”” replied my informant, ‘‘is a murder trial, and there, he pointed in the direction I was to look, ‘is the man who will certainly hang.’’ ‘‘I looked at the prisoner at the bar. He was a good looking young fellow of about 25 years of age. There was something in the expression of his pale face that con- vinced me of his guilt. “While the trial judge turned over page after page of the law hooks I learned the details of the crime. “I learned that in his house on the out- skirts of the town, one morning two months before the day of the trial, John Peterkin, a wealthy old man who had been it was said, in the habit of keeping large sume of money in his house, was found murdered, shot in the back. The mur- dered man had been seated when he was shot, for his chair was overturned just as he had fallen from it. Peterkin, who was about 67 years old, lived alone with his niece, a pretty girl about 18 years old. She it was who discovered the murder. When she had sufficiently recovered from her alarm, the niece, Mary Peterkin, aroused the neighbors. ‘‘At first it was thought that the motive of the crime had been robbery, but when the police discovered that the safe, the door of which was unlocked and balfway open, contained $1,750 and tbat the old man’s watch had not been taken, that theory had to be abandoned. For several days the case was a mystery. Then it came to the knowledge of the chief of police that Has- dall Renidder, the only son of a widow, whose father had been postmaster of the little town, had been seen around the house and bad spoken unkindly of old Pet- erkin, Renidder was arrested. “When I had learned this much,’’ said the judge, ‘‘the trial judge, whom we will call Blank, looked up from the legal books and said: ‘‘I will admit the testimony objected to.’ “While Judge Blank was reviewing the law questions I looked at Mary Peterkin. She was seated in the rear of the 2ourtroom and was an exceedingly pretty young woman, the pallor of her refined face il- lumined by large blue eyes. She was in deep mourning, which but enhanced her beauty. “Proceed,” exclaimed Judge Blank. *‘The witness on the stand—a police of- ficer—then testified that he had found a small revolver with an ivory handle in some bushes just outside of the window of the room where the crime had heen com- mitted. ‘“Were there any marks on that re- volver ?’’ asked Horace Dash, counsel for the prisoner—the man I just pointed out to you. ‘Yes,’ replied the witness. “What were the marks ?”’ ‘The initials M. P.,”" replied the wit- ness. ‘Did you ascertain who owned that pis- tol 2’? asked Lawyer Dash. ‘‘Yes—Mary Peterkin."’ ‘‘An exclamation of surprise went around that little courtroom. Mary Peter- kin started up in bewilderment and then fell back into her chair. ‘‘Silence in the courtroom!’ exclaimed Judge Blank. : “With a face paler than that of either the prisoner or the niece of the murdered man, Lawyer Horace Dash, counsel for the prisoner, said to the witness, ‘Step down.’ The next witness called was a woman who had formerly been employed by old Peterkin as a housekeeper. She was ex- ceedingly nervous, and her voice trembled when she swore to tell the truth. There was a malignan#é expression on the face of the counsel for the prisoner when he asked the witness: ‘Do you know Mary Peterkin 2’ “I do,” was the reply. ‘‘She is the niece of the murdered man?’ ‘She is,” replied the woman in a whis- er. P ‘You once lived with the dead man and his niece ?’’ “I did.” Did uncle and niece ever quarrel ?”’ “Must I answer that?’ asked the old woman, turning to Judge Blank. “You must,”’ sternly replied the judge. ‘“‘Yes. They quarreled,’”’” faltered the witness. “What about?’’ asked the counsel for the prisoner. ‘‘She—Mary—wanted to marry a man her uncle did not approve of.” “All eves were turned toward Mary Peterkin, who with an expression of horror on her face, sat crouched up in her chair. Everyone in that courtroom seemed to realize that the testimony already adduced against the prisoner at the bar was as nothing compared with that just brought out against the girl. The prisoner at the bar was pale and trembling and, I thought an object of abject misery. Then the thought flashed across my mind that he might be innocent. It was evident that Lawyer Dash was struggling with himself when he asked the next question. “Did you ever hear Miss Peterkin threaten her uncle 2’ ‘I heard her say once that she wished he was dead,’’ replied the witness. “With a moan of anguish Mary Peter- kin fainted. The prisoner started forward and, despite the efforts of the bailiffs to restrain him, exclaimed: ‘This is a shame. I am guilty, and that man—pointing his finger at Lawyer Hor- ace Dash—knows that I am.” : “What does this mean ?’’ asked Judge Blank, addressing the prisoner's counsel, who was leaning on the table and seemed about to faint. “I don’t know, your honor,’ replied the lawyer, who was seen to press his hand to his heart. “Let the trial proceed,” said Judge Blank, ‘‘and don’t let that woman,” indi- cating Mary Peterkin, ‘‘leave this room.’ ‘Stop!’ exclaimed the prisoner. ‘I withdraw my plea of not guilty. I am guilty.” ‘For a moment silence, oppressive si- lence, reigned supreme. Finally the judge said: “Do you appreciate your position ? That I can pass sentence of death on you?” “I do,” replied the prisoner, with a de- fiant look at his counsel, “but I would like to say a few words.”’ ‘‘Proceed, sir,’’ said Judge Blank. *‘I committed the crime, your honor, but not from desire for gain. It was done in a moment of anger, just anger, and for the sake of my dear old mother. Years ago my mother, so that she might pay some debts I contracted while in college, mort- gaged her farm—the home where she was born, the home that she went to as a happy wife, the home where I was born—to old Peterkin. Each year since then she paid him usurious interest. Finally there came a day when he would not renew the mort- gage. That was the day I killed him. I pleaded with him, but in vain. He insist- ed he would foreclose the mortgage. He called my mother a vile name. I saw the revolver on his desk, picked it up and aimed at him. He wheeled around in his chair toward his desk, and the bullet en- tered his back.” {While he was telling this story the prisoner several times pressed his hand to his left side and moaned as if in pain. ‘‘Have you anything else to say ?'’ asked Judge Blank. “Yes. I want to say,’”’ explained the prisoner in gasping tones, ‘‘that after I had retained that lawyer’’—pointing to Horace Dash—*“I told him I was guilty; that I wanted to plead guilty. He forbade my doing so—said it was a splendid case. He would acquit me and cover himself with glory. He said he would ask no fee. I urged that I was guilty, but he said he could clear me. I consented to the plea of not guilty.” ‘‘Again the prisoner placed his hand to his heart and with an effort said: “I could not save my life at the expense of an inno- cent person, and that person a woman. I am guilty.” ‘‘He sank back into a chair, and Judge Blank turned to Horace Dash, the pris- oner’s counsel and asked: “What have you to say for yourself ?'’ “l1did my duty—my plain duty,’ said the lawyer. ‘‘As I understand it, it isa lawyer’s duty to defend his client and to acquit him as best he can——’ “Not at the expense of an innocent per- gson,’’ remarked Judge Blank. ‘I maintain it is,”’ replied the lawyer. ‘‘Although a prisoner may confess guilt he may be innocent. He might be insane when he confessed. He might be actuated by a desire tosave, at the expense of his life, a guilty person. He might—"? “I am guilty 1” shouted the prisoner. “Idid it. I did it. ‘‘He fell backward on the counsel’s table gasped and after a few convulsive move- ments, attempted to rise, fell back, twisted half around, and his soul passed to a higher tribunal. Judge Blank, after ascertaining that the prisoner at the bar was dead, said: *‘I accept his plea of guilty.” The teller of this story then added: ‘“The man who so strangely passed before me to- day was the prisoner's lawyer. He never prospered at the har. His career was ruined with the case which he hoped would earn him fame.”’—L. C. P. in New York Evening Sun. Lorca? ——1In Forest county there is a 2 year old child with a 16 year old mother, a grand mother who is 34 years old, great- grand parents who are 60 and 59 years old respectively, and great-great grand parents who are 93 and 74 years old respectively. The child mentioned is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Eminger and lives near Marionville. The grandmother’s name is Mrs. Estella Silvis. —!Can you tell me what kind of weather we may expect to find next month?’ wrote a subscriber to the editor of a paper, and the editor replied as follows: ‘It is my belief that the weather next month will be very much like your subscription.’ The inquirer wondered for an hour what the editor was driving at, when he happened to think of the word ‘unsettled.’ He sent the required amount the next day. —_—— EEE A Cruise in the West Indian Islands. 1! The illness of ex-Secretary of the State John Sherman on the American liner Paris, which was making a cruise among the West Indies, has attracted the attention of the entire country to the progress of the vessel. The Paris cleared March 4th from New York for a voyage to the West Indies. The plan of the steamship company had been to give its patrons a cruise to and among those islands which the late war had brought to public attention and interest. Their mag- nificent steamer served, less than a year ago, as one of the swift auxiliary cruising scouts of the government, and it was justly thought that the voyage would be of pecul- iar interest on that account. She carried many first-class passengers and for two days and nights steamed south from Sandy Hook, on her holiday trip. And with the delightfully speeding hours the wind grew balmier, and the sea bluer, and the pale grays and far, faint skies of the north gave place to the wonderful col- orific luminosities of the Antillies, and then, on the third day, the huge mountain- ous bulk of Hayti lifted itself out of the tur- quoise sea. Mole St. Nicholas was sighted. This is the cable telegraph station where the auxiliary cruisers so often called to take or receive the dispatches passing between the admirals of our fleets and the Navy de- partment, in those days when the country was in a fever heat of expectancy. The magnificent steamer made no stop here, but kept her course, to drop anchor next day in the harbor of San Juan de Porto Rico, where Gen. Miles landed his troops to commence his northward march across the fertile island, now sleeping so peacefully under the stars and stripes. For thirty-eight hours the ocean grey- hound rested here, while her passengers visited the quaint town and its envi- rons, and then, speeding southward, touched at Danish St. Thomas, once the most prosperous of the Windward Islands, now lying half ruined and prostrate, but still as beautiful as when sugar was king, and she the centre of a huge trade and shipping. Charlotte Amalie, the only town on the island of St. Thomas, is a pretty place, with an almost entirely land-locked harbor. It has paved streets, and low, neat, houses, and about one-tenth of its population of 12,000 is white. All wear cotton suitings, and broad-brimmed straw hats. The island lies steep in that ineffable blue which Rico loves to give his Venetian pic- tures. Luxuriant foliage climbs its mount- ain heights. Capt. Mahan thinks this island has im- mense strategic importance, and on two separate occasions the United State govern- ment came near purchasing it for a naval base. It belongs to Denmark now. I met a kind old English merchant here, who talked to me of the island’s changeful for- tunes. Years ago, when slavery prevailed and sugar was the best paying staple raised the world over. St. Thomas was very wealthy. Its trade at the beginning of the century was greater than that.of New York at that time. Now, it costs Denmark $150,000 a year. She would like to be rid of it. Indeed, all the Lesser Antilles are an expense to the home governments, ex- cept some of the British isles. Yet, in the past, many of the now well-nigh worthless plantations yielded a crop that sold for $500,000. Think of the ruin this change has wrought! Magnificent country places and palatial homes abandoned, gardens choked with rank tropical growths, cane fields run to waste, fruit groves strangled by the huge, creering, twining vfnes, walls overturned, everything crumbling. The story is much the same in many of ‘these islands. : Just as in our South they used to talk, and still do, of ‘‘befo’’ the ‘““wah,’’ so here they talk of ‘‘when sugar was selling at 52." How much sugar was sold and what money 52 refers to, I don’t know. But the Lesser Antilles are none the less beautiful te the tourist, for all the ruin. There is still the matchless color; still the magnificent forests; still the wrinkled up- heavals, the groves of broad-leaved bananas, the slopes of feathery bamboo, the drooping palms, and the ruins of man’s work seem, somehow, strangely fitting. The population of most of the islands is very dense. Martinique is said to have more people to the square mile than Belgi- um, and Barbados more than China. Southward stil, to the English Barba- dos, now the busiest, and with Bridgetown, its capital, so full of modern sights and buildings, seeming the least exotic and to me the least interesting of this beautiful chain of islands. Southward yet, to old Trinidad, with its mixed population of English, French and Spanish, Creoles, negroes of every tint, Hindoos and Chinese .coolies; and then, after lying here the length of a day, the great ship hurried northward and at last, eleven days out from New York, touched at that fairest and most fascinating bit of earth, that island Paradise, affectionately called, because of its resistless fascination for those who have lived there, ‘‘the land of the comer back’’—Martinique. II. The Leeward and Windward Islands are but the higher levels of a submarine Greater Antillies to the South American coast—great, wrinkled upheavals, often with the narrowest coast lines. Sometimes the slopes are barren, but even then the brilliant light of the blinding tropical sun often breaks upon them through an atmos- phere so humid that, to the sea-voyager, looking across violet water, they are witch- eries of colorific radiance. Often the hlaz- ing greens of the tropical woods cover vast spaces and everywhere tall, drowsy palms lift their spreading heads. The little towns of low buildings, with red and yellow roofs, and tinted walls, frequently seem to be clinging precariously to the mountain declivities. From the vessel’s deck they appear more beautiful than any fancy can conceive. Colors of sea and sky, forest and peak surpass language—surpass the dreams of any who have not voyaged among the islands of a tropical sea. Approaching Martinique from the south, the island lifts on the purple horizon to the northeast, like a vapory cloud; then, as we race on, streakings of ghost blue appear where valleys are; then dim green outlines shape themselves, and suddenly the strong contour of the mountain island, shimmer- ing, million-tinted, is before us, the peak ‘of Montange Pelee, with its aureole of cloud, dominating all. Martinique is a French possession, and as it is the largest and most picturesque of of the Leeward and Windward islands, one cannot refrain from lingering over its charms. It typifies best the matchless loveliness of its sister island, and is far the fairest of all. Its inhabitants, too, are, to the casual observer, at least, superior to the people of the rest of the archipelago— handsome, obliging, and outwardly cour- teous. III. Northward hound, one sights first Fort de France, the capital of the island, and then mountain chain, which sweeps from the. after a brief stop, on to St. Pierre, but fif- teen knots away—heyond doubt the most fascinating, the quaintest of all West In- dian towns. The harbors of nearly all the islands are crossed with bars, and hide dangerous reefs. At St. Pierre, as else- where, the ship lies at anchor a long dis- tance from the beach. The city looks as though it might slip into the sea, so steep is its site. Above and around, the high slopes are clothed with the dense, shimmer- ing, luxurious tropical growths. Cocoa palms shoot up above the roofs, some high- er, even, than the towers of the cathedral, and so dizzy the angle of streets that climb from the harbor, that some one ventured the fear that a sneeze might tumble him into the sea. Here, as in the other island ports, a fleet of tiny boats soon swarms around the ship, in which sit naked boys, of every color from black to the tint of ripe bananas, to dive for coins that passengers throw into the water. Wonderful swimmers and div- ers these little colored boys are. They sel- dom fail to bring the coins to the surface. We are soon on shore in this most en- chanting of West Indian cities. Narrow streets are bordered by low houses, of grey stone, or brick and stucco, with tinted, thick walls, and windows without glass. The walks, even in the principal streets, are scarcely two feet wide. Mounting from the shore, the acclivity is so great that steps are cut every little way, and even the thoroughfares, running across the steeper streets, are not level, but billow away in either direction. The population is of all shades. A white face is a rarity. One hears only the music- al French patois spoken and the costumes of the women are often scanty—a Madras handkerchief about the head, and a simple, loosely-flowing gown of wrimson, yellow, purple, blue or green. Some of the girls are remarkabl y pretty. Many of them are bearing burdens of some sort on their heads, and all walk as one fancies princesses should. Some of them wear costly jewelry of Oriental pattern. What eyes! What sinewy grace. Naked little boys play here and there in the streets. Powerful, muscular forms the colored men and blacks bave. It is said that four or five of them will carry a grand piano on their heads—the usual way of bearing bur- dens. Women coal the ocean steamers, with baskets so carried, and young girl ped- dlers, with trays upon their heads, climb the steep streets, and even walk the mount- ain roads into the interior, bearing often fifty pounds, a distance of twenty or thirty miles in a day. Streams of bright running water flow in gutters along the streets, adding to the cleanliness and salubrity of the town, and keeping it—so it is said—absolutely free from the pest of mosquitoes. At these cold streams the poorer classes may be seen making their morning ablutions, some- times forgetful of circumspect modesty. Bits of artistic, quaint architecture are seen, and every little while, a fountain for public drinking. In some quarters of the town you will find little angles filled with palms, where you may loiter and rest. How foreign everything is! The shops are small, but bright and attractive, and drinking places abound, yet there is little drunkenness. The few whites wear white duck, or cream colored linen suits, and Panama hats. The weather here in March is like August at home. Where there are so few whites (less than five per centum, and the proportion grow- ing less and less with years, ) the merchants and public officers are mostly colored gen- tlemen—courteous and intelligent, too, those we met. Cheerful and polite, also, this fine race of blacks seemed. But be- tween the colored element, and the unmix- ed negro citizens, the social lines are strict- ly drawn. Miscegenation has always been the rule in the French colonies, and by the natural selection of the fairest among the female offspring of such unions, a class has arisen, very fascinating—from the purely physical point of view. The state of morals in Mar- tinique is not edifying. Official returns show as high as 80 per cent. of the births to be illegitimate. There is much superstition among the colored and black populations. Crosses, shrines and chapels are scattered every- where along the mountain roads, and on the - heights overlooking the city there stands a statue of the Blessed Virgin, of heroic size, with white robes—the impos- ing, protecting guardian of this charming city of the tropic steeps. In the markets, busy and interesting places, there are piles of tropical fruits— oranges, mangoes, marmin, guava, tama- rind, custard apple, grancedilla, figs, dates, bananas, saprodilla—and the list runs on past recollection. Many of them are most delicious. And there are as many varieties of fish brought in from the harbor every morning—fish of every size and color, but not to be compared with fish of northern waters for edible qualities. The city washing seems to be done in a mountain stream, shallow, but rapid, that rans through the city. Here the black blanchiseusses stand, with naked limbs, beating linen upon the rocks from morning till night—a most novel and picturesque sight. There is a club, and a large handsome theatre, and there are not afew pretentious and elegant houses high up the mountain slopes. The Creoles live here, much as elsewhere in the tropics. A glass of some stimulant on arising, breakfast at about 11—the mid-day siesta—dinner at night- all, This seems to be the rale.— Pittsburg 0st. Olives in History. When the dove flew out from the ark it brought back to Noah an olive leaf. When King Solomon was settling accounts with the workmen who built his temple he gave 160,000 gallons of olive oil as wages. In Southern Europe for hundreds of years the olive groves have been the fortunes of their owners. ' It is said the gnarled and knotted olives trees in Gethsemane are the same trees under whose branches Christ prayed. It is said Italy’s olive crop is worth $125,000,000 a year. In one year an olive tree will yield 190 gallons of olives and they sell from 50 to 75 cents a gallon. A young tree gives $5 profit a year, and in California, where the olive tree has been transplanted, it begins to yield fruit much sooner than in its origi- nal home. One county in California has a grove of 200,000 trees. Names for Battleships and Cruisers. The President has selected the following names for three new battleships and three new armored cruisers: Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, West Virginia, Nebraska and California. The six new cruisers will be named Den- ver, Des Moines, Chattanooga, Galveston, Tacoma and Cleveland. ——You ought to take the WATCHMAN A Matter of Encouragement. The Widow Said She Was Willing to Meet them Half Way. It was a balmy day in the springtime, with the buds bursting into bloom and the bluebirds bursting into song, as I rode down off of a spur of the Cumberland mountains and stopped at the gate of a hewed log farmhouse, much better than its congeners of the mountains. A good look- ing woman was bending over a bed of flow- ers in the front yard, and to her I addressed myself. “Good morning,’’ I said, “Will you be kind enough to tell me how far it is to Hill’s store?’ “Two mile, er sich a matter,’’ she re- plied as she moved down toward the gate and me. “Is it a straight road?’’ “No, it ain’t. It’s crookeder nera dog’s hind laig, but you can’t git offen it unless you foller some pig path er other.’ I thanked her and was about to pass on when she stopped me. ‘‘Are you goin’ right thar from here?’ she asked. “I am if I can get there.’’ “Well, mebbe tain’t jist perlite to ax a stranger, but I’d be powerful obliged to you ef you’d do an errant for me down thar.” : “I'm sure I'll be only to glad to serve a lady,” I responded, with my equestrian bow. ‘‘Hold on a minute,”” she added and went into the house, to return very short- ly. ‘‘Here’s a bundle I wisht you'd give to the storekeeper,’’ she said, handing me what seemed to be a roll of dry goods of some sort. I was too polite to ask her any questions but I must have looked one, for she pro- ceeded to explain. ‘‘You see,”’ she went on, “I told him t’other day when I was down that when his new goods come he was to send me a pattern uf somethin’ I’d like, an’ he sent me that. It’s black goods, fer I am a wid- der, but it ain’t what I want. My old man has been dead for 14 months an’ Sam Mathers has been coming to see me for the last six weeks, and Sam says that mournin’ ain’t so almighty incouragin’ to a courtin’ man ez it might be, an’ I ought to wear somethin’ else.’ ‘Oh,’ I laughed, ‘“‘you want to encour- age Mr. Mathers, do you?” ‘*No, not pertic’ler, Sam, she hesitated and blushed and smiled,” hut thar’s a few other likely one’s that seems to be a-hang- in’ back an’ I thought ef I could git some- thin’ kinder mournin’ sorter betwixt an’ between, with a yaller posy in it er a pink speck, mebbe it would be a kind uv a sign that I wuz willin’ to meet em half way. In course,” she added apologetically, “I ain’t in no hurry, but thar ain’t no use puttin’ things off, is thar?’’ and I hastened to assure her there was not. Why the Klondike Became Famous. Among the first to hear of the strike were four men who came from above—Dan Me- ‘Gilvray, Dave McKay, Dave Edwards, and Harry Waugh—and they located Nos. 3, 14, 15, aud 16 below Discovery. These men did the first sluicing that was done on the creek, and they made the first clean up with five boxes set. The figures are lack- ing for their first shovelling, but on the sec- ond they cleaned up thirteen and a half ounces of gold ($329.50). being five hours’ work of one man shovelling. The gold varied from the size of pin heads to nug- gets, one of $12 being found. Now the Klondike magnifier began his work with this curious result, that the lies of to-day were surpassed by the truth of to-morrow, uatil it came to be accepted that. ‘‘You can’t tell no lies about Klondike.’’ Me- Gilvray and the rest had perhaps fifteen hundred dollars, surely a large sum in that country and for the time they had worked. Ladue weighed the gold, and as he came out of the store he said to some assembled miners, ‘“How’s that for two and a half days’ shovelling in—$4008?"’ Next time it was an even $4000, two days’ shovelling. The liability to exaggeration about a min- ing camp is so great that itis impossible for any one to escape who writes or speaks in the midst of affairs concerning any specific find. A man with a town site must also be allowed a great deal of latitude in such matters. But soon the joke was on the other side. There were a few old-timers in the pro- cession up from Forty Mile. They knew all about Klondike. It was nothing but a moose pasture. It was not like some other place where they had seen gold, and so there could be none there. They climbed the hills and walked along the divide until they could look down into the valley of Bonanza. Here many of them stopped and threw up their hands in disgust. Others went the round of the creek, cursing and swearing at those who told them to come there. One old-timer got up as far as 20 above, where the last stakes were. He sur- veyed the prospect, and as he turned away remarked, “I’ll leave it to the Swedes.’ (The Swedes were supposed to be willing to work the poorest ground.) Another, or it may have been the same, is said to have written on the stakes of 21, not the usual “I claim,” etec., but, “This moose pasture i8 reserved for the Swedes and Cheechahkoes’ (new-comers). Louis Rhodes staked it right afterwards. When he had written his name, he said to his companions, being ashamed of staking in such a place, that he ‘would cut his name off for two bits’ (twenty-five cents).— Harper's Weekly. ——The losses of our troops in the Phil- ippines since August 6th are officially re- ported as follows: Killed in battle and died of wounds, 214; died of disease, 254. Total deaths, 468. Wounded, 1,020, or a total of casualties, 1,489. The Tenth of Pennsylvania has lost 15 killed in action or died of wounds and six dead of disease; twenty-five are reported wounded and one missing. The usual proportion of wound- ed to killed is five to one, but the Tenth bad 15 killed to 25 wounded, while in the entire army in the Philippines the loss was 214 killed to 1,020 wounded. A corres- pondent writes: At present we know thatabout 400 Amer- ican soldiers have perished in the Phil- ippines, since fighting with the Spaniards ended, who would have not died in the course of nature at home. At the modest estimate placed upon the money value of men by our courts this is a loss of $2,000,- 000 in dead soldiers alone. As the total gross value of Philippine imports from the United States used to be less than $170,000 a year in time of peace, in how many de- cades will the natural profits of Philippine trade, with an open door policy in force, amount to $2,000,000? In how many cen- turies can such trade be expected to bal- ance the other items in the debit account of imperial America? ——‘‘How did the soprano happen to get 80 mixed up in her Easter solo?’ : ‘I suppose that new hat she had went to her head.” Doves of Florence. Tour ists Feed these Pets in Italy's Beautiful City.— Women Sell Corn Near the Colonnade Where the Birds Alight. I was passing the winter in the city of Florence. On a Sunday morning as I was entering the colonnade of the Uffizi Gal- lery the doves that haunt this classic porch were collected in two little flocks in the street, and were being fed with bread from the hands of the tourists, says Our Animal Friends. The old pensioner who sells corn (done up in newspaper cornucopias) looked on ruefully while the doves contented themselves with crumbs instead of grain. To ‘‘treat’’ the doves and to lighten the spirits of the little old corn merchant by making her pocket the heavier by a copper soldo I bought one small package of her merchandise. Pausing at the entrance of the colonnade, as I did so, I had not time even to invert my paper horn-of-plenty be- fore the benediction of wings fell upon me. The blessed birds, with a swift and sweet susurrus, rose from their mean meal of crumbs, circled and settled around me and the prize. Some lighted on the railing; but as many as could find a foothold there chose my outstretched arms and hands. Crowding each other until they made a feathery shield, they swept down and took possession. To make an equal division, I tried to scatter some of the corn for those below. It was gone almost instantly, and So too, was another and another paper bag of grain; and the astonished almoners of bread saw themselves quite deserted for the impromptu bounty of Ceres lavished by my equally astonished self. A little crowd of Italians—of children and the childlike— gathered around, glad to have the city’s pets appreciated, and no less glad, per- haps, of the pleasure which the forestiere had in feeding them. I touched with my face the shield of wings. One small white dove, tamer than the rest, lingered on my arm even after all the corn was exhausted, and did not seem averse to caresses. Later I was told that this dove, which had in some way been in- jured, was a particular pet; and, also, that my lovely experience might occur to any one who would invest a soldo in corn for their benefit when the flock was not sur- feited with the public’s generosity. A ——— A 30 Year's Sulk. Living 10 miles east of Bardstown, Ky., is one of the most singular characters in the State. Now in his 75th year, he has not touched his foot to the earth for over 30 years. Living in a comfortable resi- dence, surrounded by many acres of the best land in Nelson county, he is spending his declining years in solitude. Basil Hayden is one of the wealthiest farmers in a district composed of half a dozen counties, and he descended from a family well-known in the pioneer annals of the State. Many of them have also been distinguished in the different lines of life, says the Philadelphia Times. Basil Hayden, or the ‘‘Hermit,”’ as he is known throughout the section in which he lives, in his youth was a social leader and very popular with a large circle of friends. When the war broke out he entered the Confederate army and made a good soldier to the end. When he returned home he found his slaves free and his property great- ly damaged. The emancipation of his negroes affected him seriously and he brood- ed over it constantly. He hecame silent and morose, declining all overtures of friendliness on the part of his neighbors. He declared the Lord had dealt harshly and unjustly with him in depriving him of his slaves, and out of revenge he uttered a terrible oath that he never again would put his foot on the Lord’s ground. And so far he has kept his vow. Never since its registration has he ap- peared without his door, nor will he have converse with any save two, and then his words are of the briefest possible character- His landed interests are extensive, and, under the management of a competent over- seer, yield him a handsome income. The overseer makes his reports to the queer old man in the darkened retreat, who gives his directions and orders as tersely as possible. He has never spoken to a woman in any manner since his self imposed exile, nor will he allow one to be employed upon his place. How Silk is Made. Where the Trees Come from and How the Worm is Cared for. . Never has silk been so popular as it is to- day. It would be impossible for woman to get along without it. The silk worm and the mulberry tree upon which it feeds are natives of East Asia, and silk has been made from time forgotten. Nearly 3000 years before Christ a Chinese empress is said to have raised silk worms, and from the earliest ages webs of the shimmering substance woven from the cocoons were important articles of commerce. To-day the silk trade of China and Japan is the largest and most important of all their branches of commerce. The white mulberry, upon which silk worms feed, can be easily raised. In April the leaves ap- pear, and then the silk worm grower takes down his cards of silk worm eggs, which he has kept from the preceding Summer and hangs them in some airy place. In a few hours the tiny silk worms appear and are fed with chopped mulberry leaves. They grow for over a month and eat enor- mous yuantities of the big leaves. When ready to spin the worm is 6000 times as large as when it emerged from the egg and is almost transparent. A cocoon consists of a single thread from 300 to 425 feet long, and it takes a week to finish. Out of every 100 only about forty are perfect. The rest, however, are worked up into coarse floss silk. Perfect cocoons which are to be reeled off into the thread for weaving are placed in the sun and steamed to kill the silk worm inside. Japanese raw silk ranks next to that of France and Italy. A Giant at His Winter Home. Eleanor, above Punxsutawney, probably has the largest giant in the United States, in the person of *‘Col.’’ Cooper. His height is eight feet four inches, and he weighs over 300 pounds. He is a foreigner, but became a citizen of the United States by taking out papers at Brookville a few days ago. Cooper travels with a show in the summer and makes his home at Eleanor in the winter. ——One of our school girls asked her teach- er this question the other day: What three noted men had trouble growing oui of their connection with fruit trees? He couldn’t tell, and she enlightened him by saying, ‘‘Adam, with the apple tree; Washington, with the cherry tree and Quay with the plam tree. ——Pimples, boils and humors show that the blood is impure. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best blood purifier that money can buy.