Demon atc, Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 30,1904. THE LAND OF “PRETTY SOON.” I know of a land where the streets are paved With the things we meant to achieve: It is walled with the money we meant to have saved, And the pleasures for which we grieve. The kind works, unspoken, the promises brok- en, And many a coveted hoon Are stowed away there in that land some- where— The land of ‘Pretty Soon.” There are uncut jewels, of possible fame, Lying about in the dust, And many a noble and lofty aim, Covered with mould and rust. And, oh, this place, while it seems =o near, Is farther away than the moon 1 Though our purpose is fair, yet we never get there— The land of “Pretty Soon.” It is farther at noon than it is at dawn, Farther at night than at noon; Oh, let us beware, of that land down there— The land of “Pretty Soon.” = From the King's Own. THE ELUSIVE TEN DOLLAR BILL. Abner Calkins was resting. In order to rest properly it was necessary that Abner should have his feet elevated to approxi- mately the same height as his head, so he had carefully placed them on the railing in the City Clerk’s office. was an old friend, and so was the railing. When Abner came to town to make pur- chases or to dispose of the produce of his farm, he invariably called on the City Clerk and made temporary use of the rail- ing. On this occasion the City Clerk was deeply interested in an old typewriter. He inserted a sheet of paper, and then hit all the keys one after another, beginning at the upper lefs band corner and ending at the lower right hand corner. ‘‘I don’t see what’s the matter with that machine,’’ he said at last. ‘‘It’s rather old and some of the letters are worn, but it works all righs.”’ ‘Is it yourn ?’’ asked Abner casually. ‘No; is belongs to the city,’’ answered the City Clerk. ‘‘It hasbeen discarded by one of the departments and I’m the custo- dian.” ‘“The what?’’ demanded Abner. ‘‘The custodian,’’ explained the City Clerk. “I have charge of it. I have charge of all the supplies and in fact of all property that isn’t in use; but I’m blessed if I know what to do with this. They’re getting mighty particular when they dis- card so good a machine.” Abner puffed at his corncob pipe medita- tively for a few minutes. ‘Liz is dead set to have one o’ them things,” he remarked at last. ‘‘Never saw such a girl in my life—thinks she’s goin’ to be a story-writer an’ says nothin’s 80 good only when it’s writ on a type-write "machine. If they didn’t cost so blame much I'd git her one.” ‘Why don’t you buy this one, it’s going to the store room and it’s no use there.” ‘‘How much?’ said Abner, with the terseness that characterized him when the question was one of dollars and cents. ‘Oh, I guess you could have it for ten dollars,’’ replied the City Clerk. ‘I'll take it,”’ he announced, unwind- ing the string that encircled the pocket- book and producing a ten dollar bill. ‘Oh, I can’t sell it,’’ explained the City Clerk. “I’m merely ex-officio custodian ‘‘Ex-what?”’ ‘‘Ex-officio. I mean that one of the da- ties of my position is to take care of all such things, and they can only leave my possession on the written order of the May- or or the City Treasurer. You pay ten dollars to Barkley, the Treasurer, and get an order from him. We have to do these things by system in a municipality, you know.” ‘Now, look-a-here, Sam Skinner,” pro- tested Abner; ‘“‘I ain’t city bred an’ I'm glad I ain’t, an’ don’t yon go to springin’ . them worde on me an’ makin’ fun o’ me. I reckon I'm smart enough to learn city ways if 1 wanted to0.”’ ‘‘Ot course you are,” admitted the City Clerk conciliatorily. ‘I’m only explain- ing how you will have to go about it to get the machine.” Somewhat mollified, Abner departed to hunt up the City Treasurer, but, unfortu- nately, there was some delay in reaching him. When he was found, however, the business wae quickly transacted. ““Ten dollars for a discarded typewriter in the store room,’’ repeated the City Treasnorer, ‘Why sare. The city’s so hard up and there are so many outstanding bills and judgments that I’m almost ready to taro the office farniture into cash. Give the money to the cashier and I'll write you an order for the machine.’’ Armed with the order Abner returned, only to find the City Clerk absent. The machine was there, but it could not be touched until the order had received the ‘0. K.” of the City Clerk, and that offici- al had not appeared when the lateness of the hour necessitated a departure for the farm. ‘It’s mighty aonoyin',”” commented Abuer to himself: ‘‘but I reckon I can git it the next time I come to town. Knowed Sam ever since his father bad the next farm to mine, fore he come to town, an’ it’s sale with him till to-morry or the day after.” Abner’s daughter, Lizzie, was delighted when she heard of the purchase. She was sure that the road to literary fame was now open to her, for she was in possession of several stories. that she knew bad been re- turned only because they were not type- written. In fact, she was so enthusiastic that she insisted upon accompanying Ab- ner when he went after the machine, and she was very much distressed because three days passed before he felt that he had lei- sure to make the trip. Finally, however, they invaded the City Clerk’s office to- gether. ‘‘Remember Liz, don’t ye, Sam?’’ asked Abner, by way of preface. ‘‘Used to play with her when you was a hoy an’ lived out near us.” The City Clerk threw away his cigar and bastily rose from his chair, for Lizzie was an attractive young woman. He had not seen her for several years, and girls blossom into young women very quickly. ‘‘Come for that there type-write ma- chine,”” Abner went on, ‘an’ Liz is so crazy ’bout it she had to come t0o0.”’ : Thereupon Abner handed the order to the City Clerk, who took it mechanically and read it through twice while he was getting his wits together; for the City Clerk was in a quadary. : “Why why, the fact is, the ma- hive isn’t here now,’”’ he explained at ast. The City Clerk | P ““Ain’t here!” ejaculated Abner. ‘““Where in tarnation is it? I paid my ten dollars for it.” ““Of course,’’ said the City Clerk sooth- ingly, ‘and no doubt we can straighten the matter out all right. But you didn’t come back for it, yon know, and the next day the Mayor sent down an order for it, and aclerk in the Water Office has it now.” ‘‘Bat I’ve got an order for it,”’ asserted Abner. ‘Quite right,”’ said the City Clerk ; ‘but this isn't the place to present the or- der now. Ican’t give yon what isn’t in my possession. You take the order to Mr. Winkler at the Water Office and tell him you want the machine.” ‘‘Come on, Liz,” said Abner determin- edly. ‘‘I bet ye I get shat there machine or I’ll bust things wide open.” Lizzie, doubtful and disappointed, duti- fully followed her aggressive father to the Water Office, where Mr. Winkler sclemnly read the order through. ‘“This doesn’t interest me,’’ announced the latter. ‘‘It's addressed to the City Clerk.” *‘But the City Clerk hain’t got the ma- chine,”’ protested Abner hotly. “‘I can’t help that,”’ said Mr. Winkler. “In a municipality things have to be done according to system. The machine is here by order of the Mayor. You’d better see him.”’ ‘Well, by gum! I’m goin’ to have that machine!’ proclaimed Abner. ‘‘Now you jest watch me! Come on, Liz.” The girl’s mouth twitched ominously as she followed. The Mayor gave the subject a few min- utes of thoughtful consideration before re- lying to Abner’s demand. ‘Neither the City Treasurer nor the City Clerk had any right to sell that machine,’’ be said at last. ‘‘No one has any right to sell city property for which the city bas any use, and this typewriter was sent to the store-room by mistake. It is ser- viceahle and is needed in the Water Of- fice.”’ “But it’s mine!’ broke in Abner wrath- fally. ‘Not at all,”” answered the Mayor. ‘You simply show your ignorance of civic methods of doing business. It's all an elaborate system, you know.’ ‘‘System be dinged!”’ roared Abner. ‘Every tarnation critter talks about sys- tem while he’s beatin’ me out 0’ my type- write machine an’ my ten dollars. It’s a swindle; that’s what your system is!”’ ‘‘Be a little careful Mr. Calkins,’’ cau- tioned the Mayor with dignity. ‘‘Neither the city nor its officials are in the swind- ling business, and you would not be in this predicxment if you were not ignorant of the ordinary routine.’’ “I’m learnin’,’’ retorted Abner, ‘‘an’ I’m payin’ for the eddication.’’ ““The best thing for youn to do,’’ continu- ed the Mayor, ‘is to go to the City Treas- urer and get your money back. While there is use for the machine I certainly can’t let it go for ten dcllars.”’ “‘Come on, Liz,’’ said Abner, his deter- mination and energy in no measure dimin- ished. ‘Dang the machine, anyway ; I'll git the money.”’ But when they reached the corridor the girl hong back. He turned and saw in her eyes the gathering tears that showed plainly how bitter was her disappointment Fortunately there was a settee near. “Now, Liz,” he said, ‘‘you ses right down there an’ wait for me. I'm goin’ to git that ten dollars or break some critter’s neck, an’ then I'll buy you a new type- write machine, if I have to pay fifty dol- lars for it. Don’t you ory an’don’t you worry. Somebody’s goin’ to do some sweatin’ an’ you're goin’ to have a ma- chine. I'll be back in a jiffy.” The City Treasurer was very sorry and was willing to do anything he could to remedy matters. “It you’d presented that order right away,’’ he explained, ‘‘you’d have got the machine and there would have been no trouble.”’ ‘‘Right away!” oried Abner. ‘‘Why, you tarnal tax-eatin’ sharks hain’. got no office hours. You jest work when you happen to feel like it, an’ if a feller asks you out to take a drink, some other feller kicks his heels together till you git back. I waited nigh unto two hours for the City Clerk that day. Now, I want my money back, an’ I want it quick.’’ S ‘But, my dear Mr. Calkins, I havda’s your ten dollars.” ‘I gave it to that cashier o’ yourn,’’ as- gserted Abner. ‘‘You tell him to give it back to me.”’ *‘He hasn’t it now, either. It has been entered on the books and belongs to the city. *‘It belongs to me,’ insisted Abner. ‘‘Ethisally it does, but practically it is a part of the city funds at this moment,and and can only be secured by the regular system.”’ *‘System be swiggled !”’ cried Abner wrathfully, ‘‘I want my ten dollars.”’ ‘‘Naturally,’’ answered the City Treas- urer. “‘I quite appreciate your feeling, and I wae about to say that I'll give you a voucher for it.”’ “Now you're talkin’ business,’’ said Ab- ner with evident satisfaction. ‘‘Give me the voucher an’ tell me how to get the money on it”? ’ ““That’s very simple,” explained the City Treasurer. ‘‘All yon have to do is to present it to the Chief Clerk to be record- ed, and when the city has the money it will be paid.”’ ‘‘Has the money!’’ repeated Abner. “Why, dang it! The city’s got my ten dollars now, hain’s it?’ ‘Of course, but there are claims ahead of yours.”’ “There hain’t nobody got any claim on thas ten dollars but me. It’s mine. ‘“You don’t understand the system——'’ “Don’t you talk no system to me,’’ in- terrupted Abner, ‘‘or I'll smash your head in! e system’s nigh wore me out a’ ready.” “What I mean,’”’ explained the City Treasurer, ‘‘is that the oity is practically bankrupt. There's $58,000 in judgments against it now, and $64,000 in other claims, and everything has to be taken in its regu- lar order. Ofcourse if you're in a harry you could enter up judgment on the vouch- er and then we'd get to it a year or so sooner. This year we'll only have a mar- gin of about $20,000 over actual running expenses to retire these various claims, and the judgments will come first.” ‘‘Hain’t my ten dollars in that twenty thousand?”’ demanded Abner. ‘Of course.’’ ““Then sort it out and give it to me.’ ‘“Wecan’t do that. It’s in the general fund, and can only be reached by system.’’ “‘Stop itl”? yelled Abner. “I'll be com- mittin’ murder in a minute if you say that again.”’ ‘Do you want a voucher in place of that order?’ asked the City Treasurer. Abner considered the matter deeply fora minute, : : *‘T wish I was a city,”’ he remarked at ast. “Why?” “Great Cracky! but I could make money doin’ business that way. I wouldn’t ask no odds of the Vanderbilts or the Goulds or the Rockefellers or mohody if I could jest collect in cash an’ pay in vouch- ers. Bat I'm goin’ to have that ten dol- “lars. I'm goin’ to see a lawyer.” Lizzie looked at him with pathetic anxi- eby ag he came along the corridor, and he stopped to say to her: ‘‘Now, don’t you worry, Liz. You're goin’ to have a type- write machine, an’ I’m goin’ to have that ten dollars. Jest you wait here.” finally said that he saw nothing to do but accept the voucher. : “But that there ten dollars is mine,” protested Abner. ‘‘It don’t belong to the city.”’ a Of course, hut, you see, the municipal system —"* “‘Quite right there !”” broke in Abner. “I'm tryin’ to keep my temper, but I can’t stand no more o’ that system talk.” *‘] admit that it scems outrageous, ’’said the lawyer; ‘but the eity funds are pretty well tied up—"’ “I don’t care nothin’ ’hout the city funds,” interrupted Abner. ‘‘Let em keep ness keepin’ my ten dollars.” “Well, you might recover it by legal process from the City Treasurer personally, if you could show that he acted without authority,’’ explained the lawyer ; ‘‘but it would cost more than ten dollars to do it. My advice is to take the voucher and wait.” Abner sighed. ‘‘How much?’ he asked as he rose to 0. g ‘Five dollars please,'’ said the lawyer. “It beats me the ways they have of makin’ money in the city,”’ muttered Ab- ner, wending his way back to the City Hall, ‘‘It costs a feller money to be bun- koed, an’ then it costs him more to find out that he’s been bunkoed. There's fif- teen dollars gone an’ no ty pe-write ma- chine yet—an’ no ten dollars back. Every body says that ten dollars is mine, but I don't git it. By gum! I wish I could do business like that. ‘The money’s yourn,’ says the city, ‘if you can get it.’ ‘You can’t ges it,’ says the lawyer; ‘five dollars please.’ Great smokin’ ches’nute! I don’t see how anybody but a stranger can be broke in the city!’ To bis surprise, he found Lizzie radiant when he returned. She still occupied the settee, but her face was wreathed in smiles. : “It’s all right, father!’’ she cried as soon as she saw him. ‘‘He’s gone for the type- writer now.’’ ‘“Who’s gone?’’ demanded Abner. *‘Why, Mr. Skinner—Sam Skinner, the City Clerk,” answered the girl. “He bap- pened to see me here, and —and I was ory- ing, just the least little bit. I counldn’t belp it, and now I’m glad I did, for he was just as good as he could be. He said it was a shame, and he’d fix the matter up somehow, if influence could do it.” “I'll bet ye,”’ returned Abner thought- fully. ‘‘that they keep him chasin’ all over the country for three weeks todo it. I know their ways, darn ’em!”’ But just then the City Clerk returned, carrying the typewriter. “I made it a personal matter with the Mayor,” he explained, ‘and he ordered it back into my possession, so now I can de- liver it to you on the City Treasurer’s or- der. It really is tco good to sell, but the city can buy another.’’ *‘Can it?’’ asked. Abner. ‘Of course. ”’ *“Then the fools ain’t all dead yet,’ as- serted Abner. ‘‘I wouldn’s sell she city a blind hoss, with spavins an’ the heavens, without the money was paid into my hand before I let go o’ the halter.”’ ‘‘But we’re ever so much obliged to you,,’ said Lizzie to the City Clerk, “And I hope you’ll drive out to see us,” she added. I certainly will,”’ said the City Clerk. ‘‘Come on, Liz,’ put in Abner, taking up the machine and moving toward the door. ‘‘Going home now?’! she asked. ‘Not jest yet,”’ he answered. ‘I'm goin’ to put this in the wagon, an’ then I’m goin’ to take you over to the lawyer’s office an’ see if yon can’t cry that five dol- lars out o’ him. I hain’t never quite seen your full value till now.”’ Floating Sehool Will Travel the World. Around Recently there left New York harhor one of the newest institutions of the United States the ‘Floating Sohool,’’ which is to take a trip around the world with a couple of hundred of the country’s wealthy men’s sons. This school is the transformed American liner Pennsylvania. It is a novel idea and the first time it has ever heen tried. The pupils will study their Latin within sight of the Roman forum and will learn their Greek history not far from the very ground where Agammem- non and the other Greek heroes fought their battles. The school is called the nautical prepar- atory school, and the scholars are enrolled as cadets under command of United States naval officers, who have been given a leave of absence. The faculty will consist of 25 professors, prominent in all branches of science, classics and languages. . On the deok of the vessel are two big rec- itation rooms, one of which is to be used only as an anditorinom. Surrounding these will be smaller recitation rooms. The dor- misory, which is between decks, is furnish- ed with lockers and tiny desks. Every student is expected to keep a ‘‘log’’ or diary. Rigid naval discipline will be ex- acted, and the boys will be trained in naval tactics as well as their college preparatory studies, just as is done in the private mili- tary academies. Two uniforms are furnished by the school. One is of white duck and the other consists of a blue sweater, blue trousers, buff leg- ging and a pea jacket. The tuition paid by the father of these wealthy young men is $1,300 a year. The boys are allowed a maximum of $100 for spending money. The cruise will last eight months, the regular school year, and all the interesting ports of Europe will be visited. At every port they will be taken ashore and the points of in- test explained to them. To Make Ten. The president of the American Tea Asso- ciation, writing in a well-known trade journal, says : “There are four exact rules to be followed in making tea, and the neglect of any one of them will render the article valueless. Nearly every housewife, neglects at least one.’””. The four rules are these: The water must be freshly drawn from the faucet ; it should boil hard for five minutes before pouring on the tea leaves ; it.should remain oa the leaves not less than ten minutes and should then be poured off into another heated teapot ; use one teaspoonful of tea for each cup of water unless a weak infusion is desired. The lawyer bemmed and hawed, and their old funds, but they hain’t no busi- “Don’t mention it,’’ the latter replied. | Jeffersci’s Success Due to Six Maxims, “Rip Vana Winkle” and “Bob Acres” vanished from the keu of American theater- goers, and two of the brightest, cleverest pictures in the gallery of theatrical art were lost when Joseph Jefferson announced last week that he has retired from the stage. Mr. Jefferson has become seriously alarmed at the condition of his health, as the result of a serious attack of indigestion. Life-long insistence upon six maxims is regarded by Jefferson as largely responsi- ble for his success. These are : ‘“The surest way to score a failare is to imitate someone else.”’ ‘Never act to or at your audience. ways acs for them.’ **Never try to gauge the intelligence of your audience by the price of the seats.” Al- the public.” ‘‘Always do the thing you can do best.” ‘‘No lasting success can be gained if any- thing of vulgarity or impurity is permitted to tarnish a performance.”’ In addition to his life work as an actor Jefferson has found diversions in the achievement of success in lines of artistic and literary endeavor. The paintings of *‘Joseph Jefferson the Artist’’ sell on their merits as works of ars. Jefferson is now 75 years old. When one year old he was a ‘‘property baby,’’ spoil- ing a touching scene in which he was sap posed to lie quiet upon his ‘‘dying moth- er’s breass.”” At three he was posing as a ‘living statue,’ representing the infant hercules strangling a lion. Atfour he was carried upon the stage in a bag, by T. D. Rice, blackened up and dressed as a mini- ature reproduction of the minstrel, and tossed ont before-an audience with these lines as an introduction : ‘‘Ob, ladies and gentlemen, you for to know, That I've got a little darky here that jumps Jim Crow.”’ Thus Jefferson became one of the first of tke coon-song singers of the country. He made “Rip Van Winkle’”’ and ‘‘Bob Acies’’ his own, and few other actors have had the hardihood to attempt either part during the life of Jefferson. ‘‘Rip,’ was written for him by Dion Bouncicault— that is, the play as we know is to-day. The idea of dramatization of the legend of the Catskills was Jefferson’s own, how- ever, and he acted in a play written by himself before Boucicault was called upon to re-construct and to shape up the dia- logue. : Jefferson had played many parts between the time he danced Jim Crow with Rice and his daring and audacious act in stag- ing ‘‘The Octoroon,’”’ dealing with the subject of slavery at a time when the feel- ing of the conntry was at white heat. The part of ‘‘Salem Scudder’’ in ‘‘The Octo- roon’’ hrought him such fame as he had never known before and a prominence that forced him to become from that time a theatrical star. ’ When he decided to become a star the first thing was to find a play. The legend of “Rip Van Winkle’’ appealed to him and nuvtwithstanding the many obstacles in the way he staged the ‘‘lovable drunkard’’ of the Catskills with an art that bas made “Rip’s’’ life run in parallel lines with the stage life of Jefferson. : Jefferson also, as said before, made the part of ‘‘Bob Acres’ his own. He partly rewrote the play, making rather free with the original, and the play of ‘The Rivals” is known to she American public to-day, not as it was written, but as it was given to the stage by Jefferson. At his home on Buzzard’s Bay during the summer and in Florida or Louisiana during the winter Jefferson will apply I'd bave | himself to fishing, painting and perhaps “writing, for he bas promised reminiscences of the years he has spent upon the stage. Ten School Girls Perish in Agony. the rotten floor of an outhouse at Pleasant Ridge school, seven miles porth of Cincin- ‘nati, Friday, all falling into a cesspool be- low. Nine perished from suffocation, and of those who were rescued several may die from poisoning. The tragedy occurred during the morn- ing recess. As soon as the classes were dismissed there. was a playful rush of the smaller girls for the outhouse allotted to them, and 30 crowded into the small wooden building, which was builé over a vaults 12 feet deep. Suddenly the floor gave way, and except for one girl, who was standing in the doorway, all the children were precipitated into the death trap. At the bottom of the vault there was four feet of water. Several of the children, rendered unconscious by the fall, were drowned. Their bodies served to keep oth- eas out of the water and out of the heaviest gases in the vault. During the rest of the day the suburb was wild with mingled excitement, sorrow and indignation. Those engaged in the rescue work recite the most ghastly ex- periences. Even those rescued alive pre- sented such an appearance as to make many in the crowd of spectators faint. The cries and shrieks of the children who ran about the school yard were so loud, that it was almost impossible to hear anything. Voices of the rescuers shouting to the en- gulfed children to catch hold of ropes were ‘almost drowned. Thinks Diabetes Brain Disease. Dr. George S. Conant, of New York, who died last Friday of diabetes, has willed his brain to the medical faculty of Cornell University that further investigation may be made of a theory that his disease could be traced to the brain. He suffered for years and took up the study of diabetes, experimenting upon and reaching the con- Slasion that the trouble had its root in the rain. Asked and Answered. “Why is it,” asked the jolly party, ‘‘shat you are always borrowing trouble ?”’ ‘‘Because,’”’ answered the melancholy individual, ‘‘it is the only thing I can bor- row without security.’’— Chicago News. Lady Curzon, Seriously Ill Near London. LONDON, Sept. 23.—Lady Curzon, wife of the Viceroy of India is critically ill from peritonitis, at Walmar castle, near London. Lord Curzon’s reappointment to the post of Viceroy of India was gazetted to-day. A BoY’s WiLp RIDE FOR LIFE.--With the family around expecting him to die,and a son riding for life, 18 miles, to get Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, W. H. Brown, of Lees- ville, Ind., endured death’s agonies from asthma; but this wonderful medicine gave instant relief and soon cured him. He writes : ‘‘I now sleepsoundly every night.’ Like marvelons cures of Consumption, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and Grip prove its matohless merit for all Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed hottles 500 and $1.00. Trial bottles free at Green’s drug store, **Always keep the promise you make to | Twenty-nine little girls plunged through PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT Save for my daily range the pleasant fields of Holy Writ. Amon he despair —Tennyson ‘I mig THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. Fourth Quarter. Lesson 11. 2 Kings iv, 1-7 October 9th, 1904. THE WIDOW'S OIL INCREASED. The Old Testament abounds in rural scenes, quaint and fascinating. Here is one. See, if you will, a young man plow- ing. The place is called the ‘‘meadow of the dance,’’ because, perhaps, near by the harvest-home is celebrated with rustic festivity on the village green. This soil is ready for the plowshare, having been drenched by copious showers after a long drought. Across these broad acres eleven yoke of oxen are dragging as many plows. Our hero guides the twelfth yoke, and has his bands upon the twelfth plow. He plows in the rear, that he may observe the others, for he is son of the owner and over- seer of thehands. Sweat of honest toil is on his brow, and earth stains are on his person and clothing. He is the imperson- ation of manly independence and industry. Heis not ashamed to be a plowman, though his father is a man of wealth. Yonder is the ancestral manor and the capacious barns. The measure of a man’s competence in those days was live stock, and the father of this young man could set twelve yoke of oxen in a field at once. Bus this scion of wealth is no leech upon his father’s bounty. That is the style of man God delights to honor. How many before and since the days of Cincinnatus, Providence has called from the plow-bandle to positions of honor and truss. And God is going to call this young man, though he is all unconscious of it, and put upon him the holiest and most responsible distine- tion possible to a mortal. And it is no matter of caprice. The young man is worthy and qualified. He is not laying pipes or rolling logs to secure promotion. He is simply acting well his part in the station Providence bas given him. He is loyal to God, to his father’s interests, and to his own sense of duty. That is the spirit which prepares for promotion. Such a mind makes life a success, whether pro- motion comes or nos. Asross this field, running diagonally, probably, was a footpath, sacred to public convenience, never turned up by the plow. It is the wayside on which the seed of the parable fell. On such a path Jesus and His disciples walked one Sabbath, when the Pharisees rebuked Him for plucking the ears of corn. The young man has just crossed the path and is planting the plow! in the soil beyond, and, absorbed in run- ning the new furrow straight, is unconsci- ous of the approach of a stranger. That stranger is of commanding mein. He is accustomed to stand undaunted in the presence of royalty. Armies of aliens could never affright him. Tall, stalwart, venerable. He gazes a moment on the young plowman, then smiling, asifin recognition, he loosens the sheepskin mantle from his shoulders and places it squarly and firmly upon those of the plow- man. By that token the young man, who might hate died an obscure rustic, is lift- ed to the goodly company of the ever-liv- ing men of Providence. All who saw the sign knew its significance. As oil on the head means installation in the kingly of- fice,s0 the sheepskin mantle on the should- er meant induction in the nobler and more responsible office of prophecy. The young man yields instant obedience to the call of Providence. But in the excitement of the moment, when there must be perfect tumult of emotion in his hears, be forgets not his parents. He asks a farlongh long enough to bid them farewell. He ories, ‘‘Let me, I pray thee, kies my father and my mother!”” When a boy can forget his mother, nothing noble can be expected of him. Again he looses not the fraternal spirit toward his fellow-plowmen. He does not feel himself exalted above them by what has happened to him. On the spot he slays his own oxen and roasts them upon the plow he will never follow again, and with this extemporized barbecue he gives the whole company a farewell ban- ques. What made this young man a good plowmen makes him alsoa good prophet. Long after the woman of Shunam epoke of him ‘‘as the holy man of God, which passeth by us continually.’” For sixty- five years he continued to discharge the duties of his high office. The plowman of this picture is Elisha. He who casts his mantle upon him is Elijah. Each of these holy prophets is true to his mission, hut how unlike in character and deed! The contrast between them is the contrast between Mount Sinai and the Mount of Beatitudes. Elijah is God’s flail beating the idolatry of Israel into small dust. He is the prophet of drought, of fire, of eurse, and of dearth. Ahab and Jezebel, the captain of fifties, and the priests of Baal go down before him, A prophet such as had not appeared in Israel since Samuel. More august, more terrible even than he: indeed, the most unique and imposing character of Jewish history. His first appearance is marked and extraordinary. He suddenly and unannounced stood before Ahab and abruptly delivers his awful message. He is an apparition, calculated to strike with terror the boldest of kings in tbat super- stitionus age. He makes no ses speech, he offers no apology, he disdains all forms and cermonies. He does no$ even render the cnstomary homage. He utters only a few words preceded by an oath, ‘‘As Je- hovah the God of Israel liveth, there shall nos be dew nor rain these years but by my word.”’ To all this Elisha’s career presents a marked contrasts. Elijah was she man of the mountain, desert, and cave—the an- chorite, the religious ascetic; Elisha be- came a man of the city, had his own home in Samaria. He was gentle and affection- ate. The exceptions are those which prove the rule of his general beneficence. His first act is to sweeten the water of the city fountain in Jericho, and is significant of his whole career. He miraculously sup- plies water for the troops of Israel, Judab, and Edom. He raises to life the Shunam- mite’s son. He nentralizes the poison that is in the pot, from which the sons of the prophet ate. He heals Naaman of leprosy. Hecaused the axhead of the unlucky workman to swim. Encourages his young servant at Dothan, who, at sight of the enemy, closely investing the city. ories,‘‘Alas! my master, bow shall we do?’ Opens his eyes to see the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha. The one destructive miracle, the havoc among the mocking youths of Bethel is exceptional, like Jesus’ cursing of the barren fig-tree. THE TEACHER'S LANTERN. The comparatively small significance and range of the incident suggested for this date affords opportunity for a broad view of the character, career, and influence of the Prophet Elisha, which has just heen taken. Attention is now turned to the particular circnmstance. * * * * * The imaginative mind of the Jew is in evidence in the suggestion made by Joseph us and others, that this was the widow of Obadiah, and that the debt was occasioned by his feeding the hundred prophets dur- ing the drought. He borrowed the money because he would not support them out of Abab’s treasury. The highest pitch of fancy is reached when it is soberly sug- gested that the creditor is Ahab’s own son, Jehoram. All that can be said is, ‘No evidence.” * * * * The grim orudity of the sosial ethies of the Hebrews at this time is shown in that it legalized the sale of children for their father’s debts. Yet the last century at this point was hardly up to the Jewish standard. Debtor’s prison is a paradox. It is to put a man where labor is impossi- ble, although labor is unecessary to dis- charge it. Servitude for debt is certainly more reasonable than imprisonment for debs. Charles Dicken’s satire tumbled the debtors’ prison in a heap. * * = * * The incident gives an interestinglglimpse of the social life of Israel three thousand years ago. That there was a widow of the sons of the prophet shows that these com- munities were cenobitic, bus not celibate They did not all lead the cloister life. * * * * * That widow showed gumption. She did not waste time inveighing against the cra elty of the creditor. The law was on her side. Her appeal was to the chief of the prophetic society. She stated her case and claim clearly, and followed the program to the dot. There was a dash of passion in it, for she uttered (literally) a heart-dis- turbing clea. * * * » * She was thrown upon her own resources. All she bad was juss enough inferior oil for anointing her person a single time. But she mnst use what she has, not what she has not. * * * * * T1 e door was to be shut, for it was to be a sacrament undisturbed by curious eye or tongue. Prayer, faith and praise were to be the only guests. . * * * * * Well eays old St. Bernard, ‘‘He puts the oil of his mercy into the vase of our trust.’’ It is only a question of receptivity. When the last borrowed pot was filled the oil ‘‘stayed.’’ * * * * * She will not move a hand in disposition of this treasure until she has the prophet’s orders. ‘‘Satisfy your creditor first,’’ is the direction. Nothing is our own until all debts are paid. * * * * ® One pot of oil over against a debs, and that debt large enough to enslave her sons. But no human resource is to be dispised It is the unit which is to be multiplied. She must also personally use what she has. Even the prophet can not pour out the oil for her. ® * * * * ‘‘Go borrow thee vessels.”’ Find recep- tacles. As Dean Trench says, ‘‘Dig chan- nels for the streams of love.’ Labor-Saving Devices Displayed to the St. Louis Visitors. If a home could embody all the latest ideas in labor-saving devices displayed at the Fair the housekeeper’s milennium, with she servans-girl problem solved, would be dawning. nn, Pneumatic dusting devices have already made their appearance in many of the large hotels, and it will not be long hefore the modern house will be similarly equipped. Each room will have its individual dust- exhausting device, just the same as it now has its gas or water pipe. A fan in the cellar, turned on by the simple throwing of an electric switch or the pushing of the familiar electric button, will create suffi- cient suction to carry away every particle of dust. In use a flexible rubber hose, at- tached to the dust exhaust will be passed over the wall, furniture or floor, and, presto! the dust is removed and disposed of once and for good, and not merely transferied to some other less conspicuous corner, as is often the case with the dusting of to-day. Dish-washing, with its pans of suds and hand-coarsening labor, is robbed of its dis- agreeable features by the ingenious devices on exhibition here. A machine for milk bottles and table glasses receives the glass- ware in pigeonholes, and by means of a re- volving wheel construction these are brought into contact with water, steam and brushes until all are as fresh as new crys- tal. sn Electric cooking devices are not also- gether novel, but to the housewife of the great city they are still a novelty. A neat nickel plated slab is placed on the table just touching the breakfast plate, and under this a thin marble slab to pro- tect the table. A wire comes down from the eleotric light overhead and supplies current for this and the coffee urn or per- oolator. Chops, egge, ground coffee in a sealed jar, bottle of cream, butter, pepper, peeled potatoes, pepper and salt—all stand around in delightful array. The switches ‘are turned, the broken into a small ‘porcelain-lined shirring dish, the chops in a flat dish are placed on the nickel-plated slab and soon begin to emit appetizing odors. The housewife, truly autocrat of this sable, looks over the woman’s of the newspaper as the chop approaches the required juicy condition. The coffee is measured with exactitude and placed in the urn. The cosy tet-a-tete breakfast, without servants, bas been cooked to per- fection, and there is neither waete of food nor fuel and everything is properly cook- A real novelty is the combination range, one end for coal and the other for gas. If a light meal is to be prepared the gas end of the stove answers every purpose. If prolonged cooking is to he done a coal fire is desirable, especially if the surplus heat is needed for temperature regumlation. In case of emergency both ends can be used, doubling the capacity. For fine broiling a charcoal pit in the centre is provided, and underneath the baker, in the gas section,is a gas broiler. Both sections of the range connect with the water tank and have water-backs, so, no matter which is used, there is always plenty of hot water. Among the small devices may be men- tioned clever automatic potato mashers, with sieves of many sizes, automatic egg boilers and numerous perfected bread-mak- ing machines for use in small families that have reduced bread making to a science. ——Silence is sometimes the severest criticism.