EE Deumacvaic; Wald Bellefonte Ye., January 29, 1904. ——— THE NEW BABY. Yes, I've got a little brother, Never asked to have him, nuther, But he’s here. They just went away and bought him, And, last week the doctor brought him, Weren't that queer ? When I heard the news from Molly, Why, I thought at first "twas jolly, Cause you see, I s’posed I could go and get him, And then mamma course, would let him Play with me, But when | had once looked at him, “Why,” I says,' ‘great snakes,is that him” Just that mite ! They said ‘*Yes,” and ““Ain’t he cunnin’ And I thought they must be funnin’— He's a sight ! He’s so small, it’s just amazin’, And you'd think that he was blazin’, He's so red. And his nose is like a berry, And he’s bald as Uncle Jerry, On his head. Why, he isn’t worth a brick, All he does is cry and kick, He can’t stop. Won't sit up, you can’t arrange him, I don’t see why pa don’t change him, At the shop. Now, we've got to dress and feed him, And we really didn’t need him More’n a frog ; Why'd they buy a baby brother, When they know 1'd good deal ruther Have a dog ? — Kansas Farmer. MOOSE HUNTING IN NOVA SCOTIA. The Story of a Thrilling Hunt of Large Game as Told by One of the Most Successful Sportsmen in the Country. Decidedly a propos of the recent transfer of a number of very valuable tropbies of the hunt to the science department of Franklin and Marshall college at Lancaster by Col. A. C. Kepler, of that city, is the following story of his latest trip to Nova Scotia in quest of big game. Col. Kepler is a gentleman by the grace of God and a sportsman by nature. By sportsman we mean to use the word in its highest and best sense, for while he has hunted through southern swamps, scaled the highest peaks of the Rockies and Sel- kirk’s and spent months in the ice clad isolations of New Foundland his sole ob- ject bas been for recreation and for the beauteous, simple life that is to be found alone near nature's heart. The story of his latest hunt should prove of additional interest because being told in his own language weare ready to vouch for the trutbfuluess of every word. Col. Kep- ler is a cousin of Hon. J. W. Kepler, of Pine Grove Mills, and frequently visits at his father’s home there. THE HUNT. Col. Kepler arrived in Shelburne, Nova Sootia on a Saturday in the middle of Sep- tember. Guide and cook bad been en- gaged months ahead, and all the prelimi- nary arrangements to take to the woods on Monday completed. How well this pro- grame was planned may be inferred from the fact that the start was promptly made at the designated time with everything present and not one oat of place. Previous to starting a license was taken out, costing $40. The party consisted of Mr. Kepler, the cook and guide, the latter acknowl- edged une of the most expert moose hunt- ers in that part of the country. The im- pedimenta was loaded oun a wagon drawn by a pair of oxen, which for that section and work were found far superior to either horses or mules. They soared at nothing, were docile, and during the stay in camp could be left to forage for themselves. ROUGH ROADS. The first day the road was fairly good, as highways through mountain and wood- land districts go. It was constructed by lumbermen, whose idea of a roadway is an opening through the forest that will enable them to get out the timber. Inequalities of the roadbed, boulders and chuck holes are matters of no concern, and so remain perpetual causes of miring and jolts. Trav- elling at the rate of about two miles an hour, something like twenty miles were covered Monday, to the end of the alleged road. Tuesday would see the party plunge into the forest primeval without sign of roadway. The next two days not over ten miles each were covered, and such travel-. ling is inconceivable to the uninitiated. It was bumpety bump over rocks or decayed stumps, interspersed with one or both oxen becoming mired in a swamp. This pair of animals had been carefully trained for this work, and exercised wonderful judgment in extricating themselves. At times it was necessary to unhitch one animal and use it to pull the other out of a bad place. The experience was trying, bus the man who hunts moose muss be philosophical and take things as they come, with the con- solation that they are no worse. The fourth day the site of the permanent, camp was struck, the tent pitched and every- thing made as comfortable and convenient as the conditions would permit. The vear- est place that bore a semblance of civiliza- tion was forty miles away, with one vast stretch of forest hetween. : The hunt opened inauspiciously. The weather was unfavorable; in fact, for the four weeks they were in the woods there were ouly four or five days when the con- ditions were really good for successful call- ing. The first week it was warm, rainy, with a wind of varying strength. The noise of the rain and wind interfered with the calling, besides the call could only be heard by an animal on the windward side, and the same breeze that carried the call would convey to his sensitive nostrils the scent of the hunter, which would send the moose skurrying away to a new district, probably ten or fifteen miles distant. ANIMAL AND HUMAN VOCAL DUET. It was about a week after they had pitch- ed camp that the first moose was killed. Notwithstanding the unfavorable condi- tions, they repaired to the calling ground each morning. This place was a small olearing in the forest covered with scrub growth, the plan being to get the moose to come out into the open in quest of the sup- posed cow. Two mornings they received answers, but the moose had secured the companionship of a cow and was loath to leave her. The third day was an ideal one for calling, cool, clear and crisp, and not a sign of a breeze. It was concluded to make another effort and then move the camp ten or fifteen miles farther into the interior. Leaving camp at 4 o'clock in the morning, Mr. Kepler and the guide went to the edge of the clearing a mile away. Placing the horn to his lips the guide sent the mourn- ful imitation ringing over the surrounding country for miles. Within fifteen minutes a bull moose answered. Soon was heard the noise of his coming as he crashed through the underbrush and knocked his horns against trees and limbs. In the meantime the cow he had deserted was plainly heard pleading for him to come back. The fate of the bull 1esolved itself into a contest between the vocal accom- plishments of the cow and the skill of the woodsman and his bark horn. Back and forth he went in turn as the real and hogus call proved the more seductive, but the cow eventually won. Oope time he was at the very edge of the clearing opposite the hunters, and they could see the swaying of the brush as he moved ahout. He eith- er became suspicious, or at the last mo- ment surrendered to the pleadings of the cow and went back and refused again, to be enticed away. As there was no proba- bility of getting him to respond again, the only chance, a rare one. was to follow his trail and stalk him. Under ordinary con- ditions this would not be resorted to, be- cause if it failed the moose would flee from the territory. As they were going to move camp that day it was concluded that noth- ing would be lost if they did scare him away, besides there was a possibility that he might go to a section within calling of their new camp. A SUCCESSFUL STALK. Divesting themselves of all surplus cloth- ing, they crossed the clearing and soon found the trail, which later joined that of the cow, and both led to a swamp. In the centre of the morass was a hog back or hamp of ground higher than the surround- ing swamp. It was dry and covered by a dense growth of fir, generally: a second growth. Through the outer edge of the swamp they followed the tracks to the hog back, where it was judged the animals were lying down. The brush was so dense that the hunters could see but a few feet ahead, and if they succeeded in stalking within shooting distance they would perform a feat achieved by comparatively few sports- men. Separated by a distance of twenty feet they moved through the cover, the greatest care being taken that the pressure of their feet on a dry twig should not give warning of theirapproach. Signals took the place of words as they wormed them- selves through the brush, eyes and ears alert, for both well knew that whatever opportunities were afforded would be only of the snapshot variety, with barely time to place the rifle to the shoulder. HIS JEALOUSY WAS FATAL. They had proceeded but a short distance when a crash and thunderous noise in their unseen front told them that the animals had detected them and were off without a chance to shoot. At this juncture the quick wit of the guide turned what ap- peared to be a sad disappointment into a game of the hunter being hunted. As the moose were crashing through the brush, ears wide open to ascertain if they were being pursued, he scraped the calling horn over some hrushes and branches, thus imitating the noise made by a bull moose when he rubs his antlers against the tree branches. The bhull’s ears caught the sound and his fear turned to uncontrollable rage; for Le thought he had been put to flight by another bull moose, and so had shown himself a coward in the presence of the cow. He wheeled like a flash, and with lowered head charged in the direction of the guide, who was maintaining a dis- creet silence, with rifle ready for the quick work both hunters knew the occasion re- quired. With a mighty rush he burst from a clump of firs barely twenty feet in front of the guide and a little farther from Mr. Kepler, who was to the right. Simultane- ous with his appearance two rifles cracked as one, and the moose fell dead almost at their feet. He was a fine animal, but after a critical examination Mr. Kepler con- cluded that it was not good enough for the present to the college science department. The animal was skinned and the meat bar- relled for use in a lumber camp which the guide will operate this winter. THE GIANT MOOSE TOO CUNNING. The next day the camp was moved twelve miles distant to a beautiful body of water which they called Spectacle lake. It isa place of surpassing grandeur and beauty, and the surroundings ideal for moose hunt- ing. The first night they could hear a bull and cow moose about a mile away in the woods, and from subsequent observation they were convinced the bull was the big- gest moose in that part of Nova Scotia. With the game in such proximity to the camp their expectations ran high, but the old bull proved too cunning. Early the next morning they began the work of coax- ing him from his mate. He was not averse to a little flirtation, but bis caution was exasperating. For several days they man- aged to draw him away from the cow, which each time eventually came out the victor, and one morning they enticed him near enough to see the top of his antlers. The next morning they counted on getting him into the opening without fail, but alas for well laid plans, it began to rain that night and kept it up for three days. When the weather cleared it was found hoth moose bad moved beyond the range of their call, and the big bull’s ¢kin was safe so far as the Lancaster hanter was concerned. A FINE SPECIMEN SHOT. With the advent of clear weather the calling was resumed. This was in the beginning of October. Several morn- ings were spent on the calling ground with- out result” Then came another, with weather conditions made to the order of the moose hunter. As the birch bark reverberated through the forests, there came back a reply tbat carried with it the impatience of the proverbial lover. Plainly they heard him break his way throngh the brush. coming straight for them. As he approached nearer, the bell of the birch horn was placed near the ground and the calls issued in subdued toves. No taint of suspicion reached his nose, aud he boldly walked from the for- est into the opening where the hunters were awaiting with rifle almost at shoul- der. One moment he stood there survey- ing the situation, and the next he fell dead as a bullet fiom Mr. Kepler's rifle entered his vitals. He was standing about 125 yards away when shot. The moose was a much finer specimen than the first one, being five years old, five [eet eight inches high at the shoulder, with a very fine, dark head. The antlers were in prime condition, with a grand spread and twenty tines. LOTS OF HARD WORK. The shooting of the moose was the least of the contract of the hunter to furnish a mounted animal. It bad to be skinned and the hide and bones treated so that they would not spoil, a task that required the best part of a week’s work. The animal was killed early in the morning, and after a round of congratulations they returned to camp for breakfast. All three then went back to the moose, and it re- quired the entire day to skin him and convey the several parts to the camp. There the skin was spread out flesh side up and balf a bushel of salt rubbed on it. Soon in the centre there gathered a pool of brine, and into this were placed the leg bones and head, and tuus left for 2 day and a half. Later the skin was hung up on poles in such a way as not to stretch it and carefully watched and treated for a week. Finally it had to be packed for the rough trip back through the forest, thence by boat, stage and railway to the taxidermist at Bangor, Me., who has in- formed Mr. Kepler that all the parts reached him in.first-class condition, and, thanks to the careful measurements taken of the moose before he was skiuned, and which were sent with the animal, they ex- pected to get an artistic mounting. YOUNG AND RECKLESS MOOSE Another moo-e was killed a few days later by the guide, who wanted the meat. It was a two-year-old bull, which bad not yet reached the age of discretion and show- ed in his love-making more eagerness than judgment. He responded to a call, and when first seen by Mr. Kepler was mistak- en for a hear. He disappeared, and an ¢x- amination of the tracks proved that it was a moose. They began calling again, and the bellowing fell on willing ears. The moose came ont of the brush, and within twenty-five or thirty yards of the hunters. Mr. Kepler wanted to let him go, bat the guide insisted on having him for meat. The rifle cracked and the moose fell dead after running a short distance. Afterwards they saw several mere moose, but they were all too young aud were not shot. One was called up within twenty- five feet of the hunters, and stood there for fully ten minutes before they scared him away® After that came the journey home, which was a repetition of the trip into the forest, with the added respousibil- ity of looking after the trophies. It was one of the most successful moose hunts known in Nova Scotia, and the stalking of the first bull was a piece of exceptionally clever wooderaft, which no doubt will be- come a legend among the hunting stories of that country. The Lad Cremated. An Incendiary’s Foul Work. Logs Piled Under and Around One End of the Building and Match Was Applied. The Tragic Affair is a Mystery. The 9-years-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Charles Tritt, residing near Long Hollow, a few miles east of Catawissa, was burned to death in their home, which was set on fire by an incendiary, Sunday night. The story of the awful occurrence, with its wierd thread of detail, is graphically told in the Bloomsburg Press, as follows: ‘‘Burned so that there is not a semblance of his body to be found, the life of Nathan, the 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tritt, who live near Long Hollow, paid the forfeit of a dastardly act of an incendiary, while the parents and two brothers escaped only with their lives in their underclothes, the house and all its furnishings being the funeral pyre of their youngest son and brother. Seldom has there ever been recorded a sadder death than that which has clouded the lives of the Tritt family. The parents and three song Adam, Frank and Nate, the boys occupying one room, were asleep at balf- past 11 o’olock Sunday night, when a fiend stacked a pileof wood high around the one end of the house, and setting fire to the pile stole away in the dark. Who he was is not yet known. : ““The first intimation the family had of the fire was when the mother was awaken- ed by the crackling of the flames. Rush- ing to the window she saw that the house was already in flames. Screaming, she awakened her husband, aud rushing to the room of the boys called them. The two older brothers, Adam, aged 18 years, aud Frank, aged 16 years, were at once awakened, and calling Nate, he responded, but it was the answer of a sleeping hoy. Believing that he was awake and realiz- ing his danger, they ran for their lives, pot waiting to get any clothing. When they had reached the outside of the build- ing they were yet in time to see the pile of - wood placed there by the hands of the incendiary. It was then that they missed Nate. Risking his own life, Adam started back into the fiercely blazing house, only to be overcome and falling to the floor, He was rescued by the others in the nick of time, for his clothing was already in flames and the skin on his face and neck was in a blister. *‘Not daunted by this he ran to a nearby shed, and getting a ladder he placed it against the side of the house near the win- dow of the room in which they supposed their brother was sleeping the sleep of death. Not once had he called to them, the smoke without doubt suffocating him. Reaching the top of the ladder Adam called to his brother again and again, but no voice answered him. He attempted to enter the window, but the flames drove him back. Then he managed to get hold of the bed- post and was drawing it to the window when it caught fast in the room and could not be moved. While he was yet vainly trying to move the bed the flames belched from the window and he was forced to drop to the ground or likewise meet death. All this time the other members of the family. were vainly making an effort to stay the advance of the fire fiend. No means of fighting the fire were at hand and the fami- ly standing there with little clothing on,in their bare feet, were but ill equipped to battle with the flames. ‘‘Added to all this the wife and one son had to restrain the father,or he would have dashed into the house in an effort to save his child after all chance vanished and when certain death stared him in the face. Suffering from the cold, with the thermom- eter near the zero point, they made their way to the home of a neighbor,James Fish- er, where they stayed until morning. Soon after reaching there the father fainted away and it was with difficulty that he was re- scusciated. For ahout thirty minutes the flames ate their way through the house and after the timbers bad fallen and the man- tle of day had come over the land, a search was made for the body of the son, but not a semblance of a hone could be found over which the last sad rites could be paid. The family have not even the consolation of burying their dead. Never was a body more effectually oremated. ‘‘Not a piece of household furniture was saved, and about $50 in money was burned up. An excellent opportunity was afford- ed the incendiary in the work for the house in whiobh they lived was of two parts, the one part being built of logs, while the ad- dition had no cellar under it and was built on piles. Under and alongside of these piles the fire was built. So far as known there is absolutely no person toward whom the finger of suspicion could be pointed,for Mr. Tritt knew of no enemies that he bad. It is understood the family will purchase new furniture and go to housekeeping in an old house that stands upon their farm. ——Sabseribe for the WATCHMAN. PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT. Save for my daily range Among the pleasant fields of Holy Writ, I might despair —Tennyson. THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. First Quarter. Lesson V. Luke v, 1—11 Sunday February 7, 1904. A SABBATH IN CAPERNAUM It was Sabbath in the city of Nabum (Capernaum ) so famous-in New Testament annals, exalted to Heaven by Jesus’ resi- dence within its limits. The usual audi- ence had gathered in the marble synagogue which love had prompted a worthy centu- rion proselyte to build. The glittering fragments of that house of prayer, with the conventional twisted foliage ornamentation, greet the eye of the m odern traveler, and reminds him of the doom which Jesus pro- nounced on account of the spiritnal obtuse- ness of its popalation Maik’s spirited narra- tive describes Jesus going to the synagogue as soon as the doors were open. By com- mon consent, he takes the speaker’s stand, and utters words that have a principle of life in them. “He speaks the prophets’ words, but with an air As if himself had been foreshudowed in them. The most eminent scribe that ever occu- pied that desk never approximated to the self-assertiveness of the speaker. Hear his “I say anto yon!” “I am the way, the door’ the vine, the shepherd, truth, life, resurrection !”’ ‘‘Before Abraham was, I am!” No wonder that audience was dumbfounded. Moses and the prophets were not authorities to be appealed to. but servants to deck the speaker's biow with aureola of divinity. In the very midst of that fervid sermon, the breathless stillness of the auditorium is broken by the piercing ery of terror aud astonishment with which the underworld recognizes its Sovereign Master: ‘Ah "7 ““Woeis me!’ ‘‘Mine hour of doom is come.’ It was just such a cry as the condemned felon might raise at thesudden, unexpected appearance of his executiouver. The seed of the serpent rec- _ognizes the seed of the woman. But even in his terror the unclean spirit sees an op- portunity to damage his mighty opponent. He fails not to avail himself of it. He will patronizingly acknowledge the new Rabbi’s exalted claims, so that there shall be the appearance of collusion. The venomous Jews shall be furnished with some color for their damaging accusation that Jesus is himself possessed, and by that means exer- cises his authority over demons. The Master checkmates that devil in a single move. He silences him, and expels him. The demon gives an example of his malev- olent ferocity by giving his unhappy vie- tim ‘‘a last fling’’ before he leaves him. In that synagogue by the sea is witnessed a sharp encounter hetween the powers of light and darkness. and Heaven’s final tri- umph is there adumbhrated. No wonder that the fame of it flew with winged feet. The scene of Jesus’ tireless activity isat once transferred from the publicity of the syna- gogue to the sweet privacy of the home of the chiefest of his apostles. What Peter has just seen of the Master’s power em- boldens him to call his attention to an in- stance of sickness in his own house—a low, consuming, fatal fever. The domestic wiracle will produce no such sensation as that wrought in the synagogue; but love for his disciple, and a desire to confirm this somewhat unstable character, as well as sympathy for the sufferer, leads Jesus to give the touch and word of power. *‘What God does is well done.” No tedious con- valescence succeeds the breaking of the fever. As a token of gratitude the sick woman instantly rises from her couch and prepares a savory meal, All unconsciously she gives a convincing evidence of the perfection of her cure; at the same time she refreshes the Master after the toils of the dav, and forti- fies him for the overwhelming exactious of the early evening. For scarcely was the meal finished before the street in front of Peter’s house was converted into a hospital. That miracle in the synagogue had been a silver bell whose notes of hope had sounded in every shadowed home. In obedience to the encouraging call, when the setting sun had absolved the people from their over- strained notions of Sabbath observance, they came with confidence to Him whose sover- eign power had had such a conspicuous ex- emplification. From one sufferer’s mat to another Jesus walked in that hastily-ex temporized lazar-house under the stars. Nor did he desist as long as there was a tiny sufferer left upon any mother’s gentle bosom. Now we know how Capernaum was lifted to heaven in point of privilege. No other city had such a perfect exhibition of Jesus’ power. malevolent demon was expelled, every dis- seased person was made every whit whole. The sun that went down upon a sick and suffering city rose one healed and bappy. Yet see once more the inveterate power of sin. Those mighty works produced no general or lasting faith in Jesus as the Messiah. Capernaum’s doom was deserved. One fairly hears the Master’s stern words, still making the echoes of her desolation: **Thon shalt be brought down to hell.”’ THE TEACHER'S LANTERN. Demoniac possession is confessedly a difficult problem. We do not undertake a solution. Here are some hints only. That it was merely a symbolical way of talking about the dominance of evil (Strauss), or that it was an accommodation on the part of Jesus to ideas then prevalent Trench affirms that demoniacal possession was coincident only with Jesus’ public ministry, a sort of dark background on which his power might be displayed to greatest advantage. Of this we can only say: ‘‘Not proven.” The first Hebrew king seems to have been ‘‘possessed,’’ and modern instances seem nottobe altogeth- er wanting. One more we have ‘‘a devil with a Bible under his arm and quoting texts.”” The exalted title, ‘Holy One of God,”’ is taken from the Messianic Psalm. (Pea. xvi, 10.) In the language of the New Testament there is a great gulf fixed between the kingdom cf light and the kingdom of dark- ness. The former can accept or borrow nothing from the latter, not even words of commendation that will be of advantage. * * * * * There are some ministers who, if they can get some old infidel to ‘‘speak a good word’ for them, are wonderfully elated thereat. They bad better imitate their Master’s example. All compliments from such sources are dubious, and have a de- cidedly sulpburic scent. They ought to be declined with thanks. * * * * That Sabbath in Capernaum is Jesus’ whole life in miniature,—the attendance upon the synagogue service, his sermon, expulsion of the demon, his beneficent deed in Peter's home, the healing of all the sick folk brought at sundown, all olosing with his night vigil in the solitary place. What a tireless toiler! What human life was ever packed with greater industry, and all that he might minister and give himself for others? BE A — In a single night every. CHILD-STUDY AND SUNDAY-SCHOOL METH- ODS. There is a fascinating witchery about the child-mind, the spell and power of which is felt by every onetoa greater or less degree: a certain audacity of thought, luxuriance of imagination, grotesqueness of language, all quaint, artless, captivating to the last degree. Not to be seusitive to and appreciative of this characteristic is the greatest possible disqualification for teaching. It puts one out of touch and tune with the child. Suoch a one is beyond the child’s horizon and speaking in au un- known tongue. A Wail From The Solitudes. The Adventures of M. Dolarr. As I am sitting in the '‘Solitudes’’ gaz- ing through the eye of fancy at the long procession of fantastic characters that one sees on the midway of life--just as fantastic as the real characters one meets from day to day. I am seemingly recalled from my reverie by the sound of a voice near me. A queer little creature appears before me, in a dusty looking garb of giay and green and a rueful expression of countenance. ‘Pardon me,”’ he said, ‘‘I did not mean to intrude. I sapposed this was the '‘Soli- tudes’’ and that I should be alone.” ‘Ah, welcome did you say? Thank yon, I shall be glad to rest,” for a short time, away from the rushing, buffetting throng. I am weary of being tossed hither and thither as relentlessly as a foot-ball or the hero of a season. With your permis- sion I shall relieve my over-charged feel- ings by relating to yon a few incidents from my somewhat checkered career. ‘‘There are many very pleasant scenes which I ean recall, for Iam glad to say that I have helped to bring happiness and prosperity to many. But I have unwit- tingly been the canse of so much misery, sorrow and dishonor that I sometimes feel that it out weighs the good that I have done. “My family is a very ancient one. We can trace our ancestry back through many ages. Our relationship is as wide-spread as civilization. Though the family con- nection is not very generally recognized, owing to our time-honored custom of changing the family name to suit the language spoken in the country of our adoption. “I do not hesitatejto say that our fami- ly in its various positions wields a wider and greater influence than any family in the world. Through our influence deserts have been reclaimed and transformed into gardens of beauty; distant places have been brought into close communication. Em- pires bave been formed, and thrones have toppled over. Through our influence the humblest of humanity bave risen into power, an the great and honorable have been dragged to the lowest depths. (With his rising eloquence, the little crea- ture seemed to expand to wonderful pro- portions, with the mere sense of his own importance and that of his family, but presently recalling himself he continued more quietly.) “But I promised to relate some of my own experiences only. During my whirl in the maelstrom of business life,I chanced one day to find myself in the company of a banker. In a short time a muscalar man in coarse clothes presented a check and I was sent to accompany him on his travels, when he very unceremoniously proceeded to place me in the bottom of his shoe un- der his foot. From there I found my way into the hande of a druggist from whom the wan wade a purchase. He in turn gave me into thé keeping of a lady, who would have been horrified, had she known where I had spent the previous few hours. But not knowing she held me firmly in her delicate, white hand. “This lady sent me into the home of a poverty stricken family, where I was re- ceived with great rejoicing. But I was soon sent back to the same drug store to procure medicine for a sick child, and, carrying some germs of the disease about me, the result was that one of the drug clerks was soon stricken with the same malady, which caused his death. This re- sulted in my shortly finding myself in the hands of an nndertaker. He handed me over to his assistant, who used my influ- ence to get him some cigarettes, and while carelessly smoking one of them, be caused a fire to start in a large building, in which a man lost his life and another was so bad- ly injured that he will be a cripple for life. My next experience was a happier one, for I was sent to buy a pair of shoes for a poor little hoy thereby gladdening his little heart as well as warming his little feet. But alas ! my happiness was of short dura- tion for I soon found myself in the com- pany of a man who took me directly toa rumshop and exchanged me for the magic fluid which transforms men into beasts. And in that condition he is even now ly- ing in an alley. The rum seller sent me to a grocery from where, as soon as I got into congenial company, I made all baste to come to ‘‘The Solitudes.” These ad- ventures which I have mentioned have been crowded into one short week.” (Moved with compassion I say ‘‘stay here, spend your life time here in the solitudes, if you will, far from the mad rush.’’) He replies ‘‘Alas! I cannot, without defeat- ing the end for which I am in existence.” Handing me a card on which was written “M. Dolarr”’ he explained, In my morti- fication at the many embarrassing positions in which I am placed I have been tempted to disguise myself. The name by which I am commonly known is ‘Mighty Dollar.’ Now I must bid yon adieu, thongh I may come again.’”’ With this promise he was gone. It is strange that I never could in- duce any of that family, to remain with me for any length of time. KENDRICK J. ARNOTTE. Aged Couple Tortured. Robbers Beat Their Feet to Make Them @ive Up Hidden Wealth. Breaking into the home of Benjamin Yea ly in Cook township, Westmoreland county, on & lonely by-road at the foot of Chestnut Ridge, two masked robbers Tuesday night, subjected the aged couple. the only ocon- pants of the house, to torture in an attempt to learn the hiding place of a hoard of mon ey they were supposed to have secreted. The robbers secured $8. The robbers bound Mr. aud Mrs. Yealy, and beat them on the soles of their feet with bed-slats and otherwise abused them, notwithstanding their protests that they bad, only $8 in the house. A thorough search of the house was made and many pieces of furniture were demolished. Threatening the couple with death if they attempted to rouse the neighborhood, the robbers left and their visit was not learned by the neighbors until Thurs- day. e————————— et -—Train up a child inthe way he should go and when be is old he will not go to Congress unless he has a chance. A Cyclone Destroys Town! Thirty-seven Persons Killed and Over One Hun- dred Injured. The Path of the Storm was one Quarter of a Mile Wide and Passed Through the Town. Persons Were Blown Many Feet. The most disastrous cyclone that has ever swept over Alabama visited Moundsville, a town of three hundred inhabitants fifteen miles south of Tuscaloosa, at 1 o’clock Thursday morning and as a result thirty-seven persons were killed,five whites and thirty-two negroes, and more than one hundred injured and every business house in the town, with the exception of a small drug store, was completely destroyed. The cyclone struck the town from the southwest. Its path was a quarter of a mile wide right through the town. The following is a list of the white persons killed : E. P. Seymour, of Nashville, Tenn.; railroad telegraph operator. A. H. W. Warren, of Birmingham; em- ployed by the Alabama Grocery Company. J. H. Redmond, superintendent pump- ing station; from Nashville. Robert Powers, of Tuscaloosa. Miss Nettie Farley. The negroes dead are : W. N. Miles, wife and six children. Elbert Holston, wife and three chil- dren. Tke Holston, wife and three children. Thirteen other negroes yet unidentified. Surgeons were rushed to Moundsville from Greensboro and Tuscaloosa. By the force of the storm persons were blown hundreds of feet from their beds 1n the blackness of night. Through the terror a father, mother and three children fled from their home to see refuge and in their excitement left a 5-year-old boy in bed. That morning he was pulled from beneath some timber and thos far it is impossible to find any other member of the family. Bedding, carpets and wearing apparel are scattered a distance of ten miles throughout what was a forest and which is now as clear as if it bad been cut by the woodman’s ax. Freight cars were torn to splinters, the trucks under them being hurled hundreds of feet from the track. The depot, the hotel, warehouses, gins, thirty homes, the store houses occupied by R. T. Griffin, A. W. Wiggins & Son, W J. Dominick, A. D. Griffin and W. H. Phifer, together with their stocks, were completely destroyed. Where they stood it is impossible to find even the pillars on which these structures 1ested. Bales of cotton stored in warehouses, were blown to atoms, the fragments of line, together with the debris, lodging in trees, making it appear as if that section had been visited by a snow storm. Heavy iron safes were carried away by the storm and the doors from their hibges. A young clerk employed by W. P. Phifer, hearing the terrible roaring of the approaching cyclone, let himself down into a well in the centre of the store. He no sooner had found his place of safety when the store was completely demolished. He was drawn out uninjured. Democrat to Endow Party With $75,- 000. Colonel Wetmore, of St. Louis, Provides in His Will for Standing Fund. To Spread Principies. Colonel Moses C. Wetmore, of St. Louis, has provided in his will to leave to the Democratic party a large sum of money to be held as a permanent fund for the uses of the party. What the amount is neither he nor Senator Stone will say. It can be said positively that the figure is not far from $75,000. Colonel Wetmore’s idea is that the Democratic party is to be permanently the exponent .of the principles announced by Thomas Jefferson and that it should not be dependent upon mere temporary contribu- tions, but should be endowed permanent- ly, as colleges are. He thinks the disciples of ‘Jefferson who have means should provide the party with a perpetual fund. Colonel Wetmore’s de- sire, supposed to be incorporated in the will, is ‘that the fund should be invested for a hundred years and then devoted to building a memorial to Thomas Jefferson. Meanwhile the income is to be divided every four years into two parts, one for the national Democratic committee and the other for the organization in Missouri. The St. Louis Trust Company is to be the custodian. For years Colonel Wetmore bas been a regular and liberal contributor to Demo- cratic campaign funds and has taken an active interest in politics. He was a friend of Richard P. Bland, and is a particular friend of William J. Bryan. As general manager of the Liggett & Myer Tobacco Compauy he was for many years a conspicuous figure in the business life of St. Louis. He was born in Illinois and served in the Union army. He bas never married. Paul Kruger’s Days Now are Num-= bered. Qom Paul Kroger is dying. His memory gone, his 80 years pressing heavily on his whitened head, his steps feeble, his pas- sion for outdoor life gone, the man, who brought Great Britain to her knees and staggered mankind in South Africa cannot live longer. His friends are fearing and prepared for the worst and would not be surprised at any moment to hear that the man who was four times president of the South African Republic bad gone to join his fallen com- panions and his wife. The change in his condition began about a week ago. His friends and physicians, however, fearing the effect that the news might have on certain enterprises, kept quiet. He became worse so rapidly that the news leaked out. Oom Paul now has somebody with him every hour of the day and night. He is tired of life, it would seem, and does not, apparently, care to do anything to combat the effects of age and disease. To add to all, the climate, which never agreed with him, is making things far more unpleasant than ever before. There are several matters of importance, however, which he wanted and still wants to see done before his death. For one thing, the unhappy condition of his coun- try and its people bas been a constant thorn in his side. He cannot talk of the outcome of the war with anything bus bit- terness. The impossibility of the Trans- vaal assuming ever again anything like its old place in the world has plunged him in- to the blackest melancholy. , — The Rev: E. H. Mateer, pastor of the Presbyterian church at McVeytown, gave notice last Sunday that he would ask the congregation to unite with him in asking the presbytery of Huntingdon to dissolve the pastoral relation now existing between them at the close of the twentieth year of his pastorate. Mr. Mateer receiv- ed a call in December from the Pittsgrove church, of Daretown, of the presbytery of West Jersey.