Bowral ati [Bellefonte, Pa., August 28, 1903. WHEN THE SMOKE LIFTED. ‘“‘And how’s little Michael ?”’ inquired Mrs. Rozanski, in the course of an after- breakfast chat across the dividing fence. ‘‘He’s bad,” answered Mrs. Mallek, with a sober shake of her head—a head rather aisheveled, for the kitchen had been hot. ‘Last night he bad his pains again, and this morning he wouldn’t touch a drop of his broth.” ‘“The Lord have mercy on him !’? sympa- thetically exclaimed Mrs. Rozanski. Meanwhile, upstairs in the Mallek home little Michael lay, as usual, on his bed by the window, and dully gazed, now at the smoky atmosphere pressing against the pane, now at the smoky ceiling close ahove his face. It was very tiresome, thus to re- main, prone and helpless, hour after hour, and scarce anything to note save the monot- onous ache within, and the everlasting smoke without. As ‘‘Mallek’s little lame Michael”’ was he known, through all Bridgeport ; for he never had walked. ‘‘He bas no back,”’ explained his parents. Dr. Azalia himself could state the case no clearer, even though he used long Latin terms. When little Michael had been two years old, and still creeping like a turtle despite the fact that his brothers and sisters had walked by fourteen months at the very lat- est, upon advice of Father Wierzelski, the priest, Mrs. Mallek had wrapped the child in her shawl and had carried him to the doctor’s office. She wished to know why her Michael wouldn’t walk. So little Michael was placed on the floor, that he might creep about, and Dr. Azalia watched him narrowly. Presently the doe- tor raised him upright, but little Michael promptly fell over. Doctor Azalia looked grave. ‘‘That is all—youn may pick him up,’’ he said to Mrs. Mallek. ‘‘He can never walk,’ and he mercifully added—‘‘much.’’ “Gracious Heaven !”’ shrieked Mrs. Mallek. ‘And why not ?”’ The doctor endeavored to tell her the rea- son—which, after all, amounted to this : ‘‘Little Michael has no back.” Mrs. Mallek could not believe him. Hadn’t sheseven other children, and didn’s every one of them walk ? She indignantly wailed her way out of the office and down the street, homeward. That evening the Mallek house was a house of sorrow, and the whole neighborhood gathered in it to condole with the grief- stricken family. Little Michael, however, soundly slumbered and cared naught. It became the custom to call him, ‘‘Mallek’s little lame Michael,’ but soon ‘‘lame’’ was a totally inadequate expres- sion. He was more than ‘‘lame.’”” He grew twisted, and was too weak to creep, and it was necessary to consign him to a bed in the front chamber, upstairs. Here, with the mattress getting harder and harder, and the room getting dingier and dingier, helay on his back summer and winter, spring and fall. To him the seasons were uninterestingly identical, one with another. Indeed, in this section of the city the landscape re- mains always the same. Always the row upon row of tall, slender chimneys belch- ing forth smoke from the steel mills; al- ways the glare. day and night, of the blast furnaces; always the rain of iron dust and cinders, coating wall and yard and pave. Especially, always that smoke, dense, sulphurous, settling like a heavy fog, in the midst of which the brilliance of December and the glory of June are leveled to the self same unrelenting sombreness. In the smoke of the early mornings the Bridgeport men and boys tramp off to their tasks at the mills. In the smoke, later,the children go to school, and in the smoke all day the babies, hundreds upon hundreds of them apparently, play everywhere. In the smoke, at the approach of noon, the women and girls, Hungarians and Poles, barehead- ed or with shawls flang over, dinner bhas- kets and dinner buckets in hand, trudge down the railroad tracks to succor father, husband, brother. In the smoke, at even- ing, the men and boys return home, to eat supper and lounge about until, in the smoke, they go to bed. In the smoke, on his bed by the window, existed little Michael. During most of the day he was alone. His mother brought up his bowl of cabbage soup, and then left him to await the occa- sion for the next visit. Ina household the size of the Mallek’s, and constantly increas- ing, many things arise to occupy the atten- tion and steps of a dutiful wife. Little Michael’s memories were few. With in them was no green grass, nor green trees, nor blue sky. Smoke and dust gnard- ed against an incongruity such as greenness or azure in Bridgeport scenery. But once, on a Polish feast day, the Mallek children —that is, the majority of them —had taken part in a picnic by the church, and had been borne in an electric car into the won- derful woods and fields, and had stayed there from the middle of the morning until sunset. Upon their return, red and happy, they had excitedly rushed to show to Michael their collection of flowers, and to tell him their entrancing adventures. The flowers were very wilted, but the adventures were still vivid. This incident was a fund upon which lit- tle Michael drew forth the only brights dreams that he ever had. Into his fitful sleep glided blissful moments when he, too, was out of doors, in a marvelous land of things that must be trees and grass and birds and blossoms. But just at the in- stant when he was enjoying himself the most he found himself on that hard old bed again. This morning he was very tired and languid and defenceless, for, as his mother bad stated, last night had heen wearing up- on him. His tiny hody was exhausted by the strain, and now it was a great trial for him even to move his head. Therefore, having stared blankly out of the murky window pane, he let his eyes rest wearily upon the ceiling, and with this final effort paused, inert. The cracks in the ceiling he knew by heart. They formed the plan of an en- chanted region through which, in thought, he was wont to wander. For instance, that big crooked crack was the car line, and it was supposed to stop right in the middle of those fabled picnic . grounds where his brothers and sisters had been. Many a time with this map con- veniently there before his eyes, had he boarded a car—in fancy, you know—with a lot of other children or delightfully alone, and away he sped mid ringing of gongs and barking of dogs and flutter of frightened chickens. This was the manner in which the cars went past the Mallek house, and little Michael conjectured that it was the rule all along the line, Often he had fallen asleep ere he had come to the end of the crack; and then, nevertheless, he had continued right on, and bad dreamed, oh, such beautiful dreams. If he might but dream now? He was so wretchedly tired. He would try. All aboard—everybody he knew. He called the roll. What a fine party it was! They were off, faster and faster—and dear me, how sleepy he felt already! No not sleepy, but queer and light and faint ; yet, withal, maybe a bit drowsy. Faster, faster, faster — hurrah! How swiftly the car goes | Clang, clang, clang, through the streets and around the corners. Oh, the glorioas fun ! The jolly ride! The best ride of all. He closed his. eyes, for he conld see as well with themshut. Thecrack route was perfectly familiar. Ah here is ‘‘the country.” Here are more trees than you can count, and more green grass than will cover twenty yards such as the Nabur’s, across the way, and no smoke, not a mite—just as Anton and Louise and Joseph had declared. The car halts, and the people hurry to pile out into the pretty flowers. Look at the children, on all sides, the girls in their white dresses and the boys with new straw bats, scampering between the trees and tumbling over the grass. Lit- tle Michael had no idea that such a multi- tude of children had come. But how was fe to leave the car, when he couldn’t walk? How had he entered it in the first place? He strove to remember what he had done on previous similar ocoa- sions ? Why, there was good Father Wierzelski standing among the children, and beckon- ing to him. It must be Father Wierzelski, although not exactly as he usually appear- ed, either. What a loving face he had !| He was urg- ing little Michael to come ahead. Little Michael timidly obeyed. Was it walking—was this the walking of which peo- ple epoke familiarly ? How easy it was af- ter all! Little Michael felt that he simply floated ont of the car, and grasping the band of Father Wierzelski (was it Father Wierzelski, or wasn’t it ?) and he was led on—and on—and on—— * * * x Having filled her husband ’s dinner pail, and having dispatched Louise with it to the mills, Mrg. Mallek prepared a strong, steaming dish of stew for little Michael,and bore it up-stairs. Suddenly, next door, Mrs. Rozanski, who, having sent one of her daughters, al- 80, to the mill with a dinner pail, was in the act = of setting at the table along with her numerous youngsters, heard a loud out- ory from her neighbor’s house; and flying over, in the hallway encountered Mrs. Mallek, who was desperately wringing her hands and tearing at the abundant bosom of her gown. “In the name of God, what’s the mat- ter ?’’ demanded Mrs. Rozanski, stirred by the lamentations of Mallek mother and children. ‘‘Michael is dead ! Little Michael is dead !”’ came the frenzied announcement. Speedily from house to house spread the news ‘‘Mallek’s Michael is dead !’’ Little lame Michael is dead !”’ Women screamed it back and forth, from doorstep to door- step. ‘‘Ah, the poor mother !”’ ‘‘Yet what a blessing, for he could never walk !”’ : ‘‘Has the priest come ?’’ The mill whistles were blowing noon. Adown the railroad tracks was passing the procession of dinner buckets. The spring sun, stroggling through the smoke, smote hotly upon the cinders and the black dust. But little Michael was roaming amid his green grass and his green trees, and this time was recalled not.—By Edwin L. Sabin in The Household Ledger. * Wallace’s Circus is Coming, This Immense Amusement Enterprise Will Exhibit Here Soon. All contracts necessary for the innu- merable details connected with the exhibi- tion of the Great Wallace shows in this city have been completed, and this show, which is one of America’s largest amuse- ment enterprises, will visit this city at an early date. The Wallace show prides itself upon be- ing absolutely without a peer, in point of equipment, the excellence of its stock, the extensiveness of its zoological display and the real merit of its performances. No money is spared, no expense considered too great to procure the best that can he had in all departments of such a mammoth in- stitution. It is really a credit and a benefit to any community to have a show of such magnitude and character as the Great Wal- lace show to visit it, and its coming to this city at an early date will certainly please the lovers of innocent amusements. Our people always delight in meritorious ecir- cuses, and the fact that the Great Wallace show is in the very foremost rank of such amusements, and in a class exclusively of its own as to exceptional merit, is sure to cause an unuenally liberal patronage upon this visit bere. The Wallace show is one of the biggest ; if is a ten-acre department store whose wares consist of amusements. People who patronize the big department stores are not expected to want something in every department, neither is it expected that a spectator at the Wallace circus will be able to see every act, but it is expected that he will not have any trouble to find what he likes to see. The management has so arranged its program that acts suit- able to the great variety of tastes are al- ways in view throughout the entire per- formance, which lasts two and half hours. The Great Wallace show will give two performances under its immense waterproof tents in Bellefonte on Tuesday September 8th. Nuts and Tomatoes His Food. Minneapolis Man Says He Was Cured From Death by “Fast Cure.” Peter Johnson has had nothing to eat bus a handful of nuts and a raw tomato a day for nine months. He isa living example of the so-called fasting fad. Johnson had partial paralysis of the left side a year ago,and was a victim of Bright's disease, weighed 240 pounds, suffered with asthma and wae informed by his medical advisers that he could not live more than a month or two. Now Johnson weighs 170 pounds, is harder than nails and free from aches and pains. . Johnson fasted nearly 40 days, when he began his ‘‘cure.”” Then, as he tells the story : ‘I ate half a tomato a day for a week and then increased to a whole tomato. After a while I added a half pound of mixed nuts. Three weeks from the time I began eating, I was told to eat more by degrees, but nev- er to overfeed. I shall never take a chance. The tomato and the nuts, with plenty of water, keep me in splendid condition. I am as sound as the day I was born. I can do four times the day’s work I used todo.” — New York Herald. Indian Land Frauds. Friends of Secretary of Interior Hitchcock Said to Be involved. Millions of Dollars Tied Up in 8t. Louis Banks, and Hitchcock Refuses to Release it— investigation Demanded. A Washington dispatch to the Philadel- phia ‘‘Ledger’’ says : Serious acousations have been prepared against Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock, by the residents of Oklahoma, and the re- sult may be first, an Investigation, by President Roosevelt, and, second, a sweep- ing investigation by Congress. Should the charges be sustained, it would mean the re- tirement of Mr. Hitchcock from the cabinet. It is alleged that money belonging to Okla- homa towns has been sollented by the inte- rior department, and that $2,000,000 has been deposited in S¢. Louis banks,in which Secretary Hitchcock's friends are interested and that he positively refuses to release the money. This has been going on for two years,and has caused a great scandal in the West. The allegations are so serious against the secretary that the president will be asked not to permit Mr. Hitchcock to have a hand in the investigations into the alleged Indian office frauds, but to have them con- ducted outside. Indian Commissioner Jones began work on Wednesday on the data lately brought to the attention of the Indian office and Secretary Hitchcock in regard to alleged frauds in the Indian Territory and alleged complicity of prominent United States offi- cials in wresting from the Indians their al- lotted lande. Mr. Jones is only on the threshold of the scandal. He has declared broadly that there must be an investigation, and his influence will be on that side of the controversy. In the absence of Secretary Hitchcock no definite plan has been reach- ed as to how to proceed with the proposed investigation. It is stated here on good authority that there is a strong movement under headway to secure from President Roosevelt a order that will make the inves- tigation absolutely untrammeled and im- partial. The significance of this arises from the fact that many friends of Mr. Hitchcock are involved in the scandal. CHARGED WITH TYING UP CASH. There are no charges against the secre- tary himself, but a number of his official aots have been pointed out to the president which seems to imply a want of confidence among those who are urging the investiga- tion in the secretary’s ability to condnet an impartial investigation. To cite but one of a number of cases on which this view is based, it is stated that large sums of money realized from the sales of town lots in sev- eral thriving young cities in Oklahoma, in- stead of being expended for public uses as was provided by act of Congress, have been deposited in St. Louis banks in which Mr. Hitcheock’s friends are interested as stock- holders. Lawton, Anadarko and Hobart, the county seats of three large and prosperous counties in Oklahoma, have for two years been striving to get the money derived from the sale of town lots within their respective sites applied to the installation of water works, to provide their people with drink- ing water and to protect them against fires. The people in those places are obliged to haul water in barrels for domestic use. Lawton has $410,000 to ite credit and legit- imately available for water works, and her common council has formally acted in favor of spending $150,000 of this amount for the purpose in question. But in spite of the city authorities it has been impossible to get the sanction of the secretary of the'in- terior, and the money lies in the vaults of the Union Trust company, of St. Louis. The other towns have also similar large funds, resulting from lot sales, which they desire to employ for water works, and can- not get hold of it. The citizens have ap- pealed to Mr. Hitchcock without result. They have now gone straight to the presi- dent with their complaint, and asked for an investigation. This is outside the charges of land frauds in the Indian terri- tory. WHY MONEY WAS KEPT BACK. Beginning back in President Harrison’s administration, when Gen. Noble, of St. Louis, was secretary of the interior, a large and powerful interest in Indian contracts, lands and funds came into existence. In time it formed what might be called an In- dian ring. It was not upset by Secretary Hoke Smith, and was assisted by Governor Francis, of St. Louis, when he succeeded Smith at the head of the interior depart- ment. It is charged by the Oklahoma peo- ple that for two years the St. Louis banks have had the use of over $1,000,000 of town lot money. . . The only substantial reason Mr. Hitch- cock advances for withholding these funds from their proper use for improvements in the towns to which they belong is that there is ‘‘a crowd of looters down there,”’ who would steal the money if taken out of the banks. The charges against Secretary Hitchcock were signed bythe mayor and city clerk of Lawton, and thecity seal was affix- ed to the papers. The same charges will be presented to Congress next session unless the investigation should before that time get under head way. The enormity of the frauds on the In- dians in the matter of leases is shown in a computation recently exhibited to the court in a lease concerning the right of a Creek Indian to lease his minor child’s 165 acres allotment. It was estimated by con- servative judges that of the 3,072,000 acres of lands belonging to the Creeks over 2,- 500,000 acres had been leased from them, and that there was not over 500,000 acres that had been leased legally. Notwith- standing the decision of the court in the case in question that the lease of a minors’ allotment was illegal the white lessees are in possession, and it is not easy to see how the agent is going to be able on the com- plaint of the dispossessed owners to oust the whites and restore theland to the right- ful owners. Secretary Hitchcock has instructed the United States district attorney for the In- dian Territory to have the grand jury in- vestigate the frauds. No action has been taken on this suggestion, and it is said the President does not sanction this course in view of the charges recently made that the assistant district attorney is in the land fraud ring. ——*‘‘Look into my eyes,’”’ pleaded the devoted youth, ‘and tell me what you see within them.” The fair young thing, who bad just completed her post-graduate course and received high encomiums on her thesis concerning opties, gazed earnest- ly into his eyes, and then replied : “‘The cornea is slightly distended, and the iris shows: symptoms of dilation, while the But he had gone, searching for a girl who would not insist upon writing prescriptions for goo goo— Chicago Tribune. —_—yy ——People who offer excuses for their habits do not do so because they are sorry, but because they are afraid of the conse- quences. Stop making excuses and turn over a new leaf. Speaks After Long Silence. A Woman In Brest, France, After Twenty-eight Years Regains Her Voice. } Intense interest continues to be shown in France in the case of the woman employed ona farm in the neighborhood of Brest, who, after having lost the faculty of speech when she was twelve, has so suddenly re- covered it alter the lapse of twenty eight years. So many people are traveling to the spot to see her that she appears to be in a fair way to making up for lost time in the talking line, and it cannot be denied that she has a very peculiar tale to relate. Marie Raguenes, for such is her name, has in- formed the representative of a Parisian con- temporary, who looked her up for an inter- view, that she lost her voice after brain fever. She was an orphan, and she went from house to house in search of work, but for some time could only obtain an occa- sional job. At last a farmer took pity on her forlorn condition, and engaged her to look after hie cattle. Between eight and nine o’clock on the morning of Wednesday, July 15th, as she was with her cattle in a field, seated with her hands joined in pray- er for France and for Brittany, she saw an old man approaching. Becoming alarmed, she rose to her feet, but the stranger assur- her. ‘‘Do not be afraid my daughter,” he said. “‘I have not come to do you any barm, but to bring you the favor for which you have so often prayed. I restore to you the power of speech.”” Without a moment’s reflection the woman exclaimed, ‘‘Oh, mon Dieu! Are you the good Lord ?”’ “No,” answered the old man, ‘‘but I come with a misson from Him. Do not be puffed up with the mercy which youn have just obtain- ed,but pray on and pray often,as the world is not improving, but is growing from bad to worse.”’ Filled with awe, the woman threw her- gelf on the ground, and when she recovered her visitor had vanished. She describes him as an old man with a long white beard, attired in a black overcoat, a hat the same color much the worse for wear, patched white trousers, and shoes which could scarcely be warranted to keep the mud out. As for Marie Raguenes, ‘‘La Miracalee,”’ as she is now styled in the district, she is a healthy working person, rather small, but well built with bright eyes and a profusion of hair which is beginning to turn gray. She had never been regarded as a hysteric- al subject, but her marvelous ‘‘vision’’ and its extraordinary result are naturally sug- gesting some theories on that point. To Get Gas Out of Cold Water. Chicago Inventor who Studied in New York Makes Startling Claim. Heat and light from cold water at the cost of a song is claimed for a new inven- tion now being perfected by Attilio Monaco a druggist, at No. 425 Clark street, Chi- cago. He says that he has found inexpen- sive chemicals which will separate water into its constituents, hydrogen and oxy- gen, and believes that he will be able to furnish gas for heating at 15 cents per 100,- 000 feet and for lighting at 25 cents per 100,000, which will revolutionize the in- dustrial world. ‘The process will cut the cost of light and heat to one four hundredths of what they are now,’’ said Mr. Monaco. ‘‘My in- vention isnot yet perfected, but I hope to have it in practicable shape within a short time.”’ Water can be reduced to hydrogen and oxygen by means of electrolysis, which is simply decomposition by means of elec- tricity. The cost is prohibitive, however. An oxy-hydrogen blast may generate al- most the most intense heat known to science, and may also be used for lighting purposes. Mr. Monaco claims that the simple addition of chemicals, known only to himself, will decompose water rapidly and effectively. It then only remains to store the two gases in tanks. The inventor is twenty-six years old and a native of Italy. He has studied chemistry in the New York school of pharmacy and in Italy. Steamboating and railroading, together with manufactures,smelting,treat- ment of ores will be made new industries, he claims. He is now at work on a branch of the in- vention by which he hopes to eliminate the salt from sea water, enabling a vessel to start across the Atlantic empty and arrive at her destination with a cargo of salt drawn directly from the ocean at small cost. Law that Dairymen Must Observe. Following is the fall text of the law un- der which prosecutions for selling adulter- ated milk are being brought against dairy- men. Section 1. Be it enacted, ete., That if any person, firm or corporate body, hy himself, herself, or themselves, or by his, or their agents or servants, shall offer for sale, expose for sale, sell, or have posses- sion with intent to sell, for human con- sumption, milk or cream, to which has been added boracic acid salt, boarie acid, salioylic acid, salioylate of soda, formaline, formaldehyde, sodium fluoride, sodium benzoate, or any compound or substance for the purpose of preserving or coloring of same, shall be deemed guilty of a mis- demeanor, and, upon conviction thereof in the court of quarter sessions of the proper county, shall be sentenced to pay a fine of not less than §50 nor more than $100, or to undergo an imprisonment not exceeding 60 days, or both, at the discretion of the court. Section 2. The agent of the department of agriculture, known as the dairy and food commissioner shall be charged with the enforcement of all the provisions of this act, and shall have all the power to enforce this act that is given him to enforce the provisions of the act by which he re- ceives his appointment. Section 3. All penalties and costs for violations of the provisions of this act shall be paid to the dairy and food commissioner or his agent, and by him into the state treasury, to be kept as a fund,separate and apart, for the department of agriculture for the enforcement of this act, and to be drawn out upon the warrant signed by the secretary of agriculture and the auditor general. Of Interest to Law Students. The Pennsylvania State board of exam- iners for registration of students at law will hold examinations on September 22nd and 23rd at Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Har- risburg, Wilkesharre and Williamsport. The credentials of applicants must he fil- ed on or before September 1st. Danville Woman Hangs Herself. The home of James L. Pursel, of near Danville, on Saturday morning, was dark- ‘ened by a sad tragedy, the wife and moth- er, while the others slept,steathily leaving her bed and taking her life, by hanging herself in the woodshed with portions of a hammock. oo HIER, Lyddite’s Terrible Power. How Shells are Filled With the Explosive at Wool. wich. For a long time after its first discovery picrie acid, which is the foundation of lyd- dite, was used in the arts chiefly as a dye, and was often stored in large quantities, without any idea of its terrible power. A number of years ago a fire occurred in a building in one of the large manufacturing towns where a large amount of picric acid was stored. During the progress of the fire a terrible explosion ocourred, the cause of which could not be explained. After a time experiments showed that picric acid when rapidly heated and burned in a con- fined space appeared to undergo a process of decomposition, which transformed it from an inert substance into one of the most terrible. of explosives. M. Turpin. a French chemist, recogniz- ing the possibilities of the substance in- vented the preparation of it, which he nam- ed after M. Meline, the then French Pre- mier, and it was adopted in the French military service. The English War Office, some years afterward followed suit, only their adaptation of picric acid was named not after a prominent politician, but after the gunnery school at Lydd, in Kent, where the first experiments with it were carried out by British artillery experts. Lyddite melts at a temperature of 122.5 centigrade, a degree of heat about 40 de- grees Fahrenheit hotter than boiling wa- ter, when it assumes the form of a pale yel- low liquid. The method of filling shells with it is to melt the lyddite and pour it into the shells, which are then allowed to cool. If ignited in the open air it burns away harmlessly, with a smoky flame. To develop its explosive quality it must be fired by a detonating substance, such as fulminate of mercury, when it instantly resolves itself into gas at terrific pressure. In the filling sheds at Woolwich Arsenal the shells, after being filled with Iyddite, are left to cool in the shed. When quite cold the fuse hole in the nose of the shell, through which the charge was poured, is closed with a wooden plug, driven in with a lead hammer, so as to avoid risk of sparks, and the shell is then placed in store. No shells in the British service of a larger calibre than 10 inches or of a small- er size that 4.7 inches are at present filled with lyddite. Those of a larger or smaller size are filled with ordinary gunpowder in the form of what is known as ‘‘pebble” powder, from its bulk and shape. Lyddite shells are always fused at the point, so as to avoid the risk of premature explosions in the bore of the gun when the shell is fired. It this accident happened no gun would be strong enough to resist the pres- sures that would be set up. Indeed, a pre- mature explosion of this nature did oceur some years ago in one of the English war- ships when at practice in the North Sea. The gun in which it took place was cus off at the point of explosion as cleanly as if it had heen done with a lathe. Fortunately, the burst occurred in that portion of the gun which was outside theside of the ship, 80 that there was no fatal result. The inquiry which has been ordered by the War Office into the dreadful accident last month at Woolwich may disclose the cause, but this is extremely doubtful. If, as is the accepted theory, one of the 10-inch shells burst, detonating the others near it, it is possible that the accident was cansed by a particle of grit on the wooden plug with which the filling hole is closed. This may have caused a tiny spark that fell on and ipnied the lyddite charge within the shell. ‘The man who drove in. the. plug could not, of course, notice this, as the plug would prevent him seeing it, and the charge would burn quietly for a second or two, until the pressure and temperature rose sufficiently high, when the whole con- tents of the shell would instantly detonate. Be that as it may, the fact that lyddite is exceedingly safe to manufacture and to handle is proved by the fact that a quan- tity of the exprosive which was in a melt- ing pot in a shed near that destroyed was quite unaffected by the explosion. Husbands Whip them Home. Ever since the Doukhobor outbreak in Manitoba, a year ago, when over 2,000 fanatics started off on a pilgrimage in search of Jesus only to be called to a halt by the mounted police, run into a corral aud bundled off to their homes in closely guarded trains, the religious excitement has been smouldering in the faraway vil- lages of the colony of this strange Russian sect. Several times it has blazed forth in small crusades, hut the presence of the police on guard and the growing influence of the more enlightened of the Doukhobors have prevented a repetition of a crusade of equal magnitude. About a week ago a woman agitator named Sophia Storboloff managed to secure a following in one of the settlements be- hind Swan river. The men were away at work in the fields some miles from their homes, and in their absence she wrought up the women to such a pitch tbat they all discarded their cloth- ing and prepared to follow her on a jour- ney to Christ. : ' Word was sent to the men at work and they followed the women to bring them back. Words were of no avail and resort was had to force. The men used the whips they had for their horses and oxen, and the naked ranks were soon broken and in home ward flight. Rural Service Short $6,000,000. Congress at its next session must author- ize a deficiency appropriation of $6,000,000 or the establishment of rural free delivery routes must be suspended from January 1st to June 30th, 1904. The astonishing discovery has just been made by the postoffice authorities that half of the $12,500,000 appropriated for the rural free delivery service during the pres- ent fiscal year has been anticipated. Only sufficient remains to continue the develop- ment of the system during the current cal- endar year. August W. Machen, former superinten- dent of the service, now under indictment, is held responsible for this condition. He practically mortgaged the appropriation for the current fiscal year by establishing routes during the last months of his incum- bency. More than one-half of the appro- priation will be required to carry routes already established. Postal officials are irritated at the way George W. Beavers has been permitted to evade arrest. They are perturbed over the action of the authorities of Brooklyn, and do not hesitate to so declare themselves when talking in private. District Attor- ney Youngs comes in for criticism. It is considered strange that a person under in- dictment is not at least served with notice of the indictment, particularly when his whereabouts are declared to be known. The suspicion is held by many that strong influence has been exerted to stave off the arrest of Beavers, 200 Dead In Jamaica. Seventy Killed Outright and 500 Hurt By Hurri- cane—Damage $12,000.000. A dispatch to the London “Daily Ex- press’ from Kingstown, Jamaica says that seventy persons were killed and over 500 injured by the hurricane that swept over the island last Tuesday. It is believed Shas the total number of dead will reach a damage to property approaches $12,- Thousands of homeless people are wan- dering about in a condition of extreme misery. Only six houses are standing in the town, of San Antonio. Fifteen hun- dred persons there are homeless. Two thousand are homeless in Port Antonio. Only the tail of the hurricane struck Kingstown, which was less damaged than the other towns, although the electric lighting and water plants were damaged kg the shipping was more or less in- jured. HURRICANE A HELP ? President A. W. Preston, of the United Fruit company, Boston, says that in his opinion the hurricane in Jamaica will prove beneficial to his company, because the sur- plus crop of bananas has* been destroyed. While there will be some losses on build- ings that will amount to little. “Every year,” said Mr. Preston, ‘‘it has been a bother for us to take care of the surplus fruit in Jamaica which we have under contract, between October 1st and March 1st. Our chief plantations are in Costa Rica, and in the past we have had to destroy vast quantities of bananas of our own raising there, in order to try to care for some of the stock in Jamaica, which we have had to contract for in order to get the frais in the season when it is not so plenti- al. ‘‘This hurricane will enable us to use all our own Costa Rica frnit and obviate the necessity of destroying any of it there or in Jamaica. BANANA INDUSTRY THE MAINSTAY. A former overseer of Jamaica plantations said on Thursday : ‘‘It the cabled report to the effect that the banana industry of Jamaica has been almost entirely wiped out be true starva- tion confronts 800,000 people—the popula- tion of that island. Of that number, over 500,000 are helpless, ignorant negroes, whose only means of subsistence was by laboring on the banana plantations. ‘The island has led a hand-to-mouth existence during the last 20 years. Jamai- ca coffee became of little or no market value; sugar was only a beautiful feature of the landscape. ‘It will take 14 months, at least, for the banana plants to yield again, provided there is money enough left in the island to replant. ‘It was about 20 years ago that the island of Jamaica awoke to find that the sugar crisis had come and tbat complete demoralization, financially, was immiment. A clamor arose for annexation to the United States. The islanders were en- raged at the treatment accorded them by the mother country. Then one Sunday, while the people were praying for assist- ance in the chapel at Port Antonio, an American schooner sailed into the bay, and a Yankee skipper, Captain Bush, said he wanted to buy a shipload of bananas. ‘‘The people thought he was mad. No- body there set any value upon bananas. But it is handed down that even clergy- men assisted in the loading of that schoon- er. Thus began the enormous banana trade which is perhaps blighted to-day. *‘Capt. L. D. Baker, of Boston, presently followed with another schooner, and soon was formed the Boston (now United) Fruit company, with Baker at its head. ‘‘Cane, cocoa and coffee crops total loss. Fruits and vegetables positively destroyed. Every town and village injured. Thou- sauds of houses down. Deaths few. Com- munication diffienlt. Bread-stuffsand pro- visions, galvanized roofing will find sale,” is the cablegram which was received at the state department from John E. Jewel, American consul at Martinique. Woman Drifts Out to Sea. Drank Salt Water and Became Delirious. Picked Up After two Days. Mis. Clara Carter, of Munroe’s Island, Me., was carried out to sea in a dory in a gale on Sunday evening, and was picked up thirty miles east of Mount Desert Rock on Tuesday afternoon by the fishing schoon- er Hazel Oneta, of Gloucester. The wom- an was nearly dead from exposure and from the effects of the salt water which she had drank to quench her thirst, but will proba- bly recover. Mrs. Carter is now at Swan’s Island. Early on Sunday morning she started from Owl’s Head for Munroe’s Island in a light dory. Under ordinary conditions the passage of three-fourths of a mile would have been made in a few minutes but the breeze stiffened into a gale and Mrs. Carter found it very difficult to manage her craft. Then one of the oars snapped, leaving her helpless. It was so dark that nobody on shore ob- served her predicament, and the gale drowned her cries for help. The dory drifted out to sea, and the gale continued all day Monday. On Tuesday, more than forty hours after Mrs. Carter bad left the mainland, the schooner czme up with the dory. It had drifted about seventy-five miles, and was half full of water when picked up. Still Ten Cents a Drink. The newly-discovered process of distil- ling whisky from sorghun molasses, it is said, brings the cost of production down to eight cents a gallon. But this is no indica- tion that whisky is to be cheaper. In re- cent years the cost of production has never cut much of a figure in determining the selling price of whisky. The government tax of $1.10 per proof gallon is one of the chief items, and the storing of the liquor until it ages of course adds to the price the - consumers pay. Kansas Women Smash Joint. Eight women, concerned in the smashing of a “joint” in Wichita, Kan., last week, were arrainged in the city court on Wed- nesday. All pleaded guilty to assault and were fined $10 each and costs. Those who were fined were Mrs. Dixon, Dora War- dell, Mrs. Mitchell, Mrs. Lave, Mrs. Bra- den, Mrs. Weyoff, Mrs. Freeman and Mrs. Rogers. Warrants were sworn out against Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Sloat, also, but the cases against them were dismissed. The com- plaint was filed by attorney S. B. Amidon, and the women were charged with assaunlt- ing T. H. Mahan. The attorney and his client were forced to beat a retreat amidst a shower of eggs, thrown by the women, who had just finished their work against the saloon. The men had gone to look after Mahan’s interests in the saloon.