; 18 THE PZETSBURG DISPATCH. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 189L return to New York that Kathleen became engaged to Alonzo Lispenard. The be trothal vraB still a relative novelty. Mrs. Kennaird had been delighted by it. She affirmed it lar better than having a cripple for a husband, even though he might have made his wife Lady Egbert I'oindeitcr. Now at last to this fatigued straggler would come the blessed release of repose. Not the repose of rest, however. Margaretta Kemiaird was of the kind whose most peace ful hours are spent in the bustle of ball rooms, and for whom there can .be no mora distracting mental turmoil than simply staying at home? The remark which we have heard regard ing the richness of Kathleen's costume worn at her lover's little banquet in her honor contained an undeserved sneer. Mrs. Kemiaird had gone rather deeply into debt since the encasement, but she had not bor rowed a dollar of Alonzo. Her course, how ever, had worried Kathleen not a little, and it was with reference to that 6ame sable trimmed garment that the girl had said: "Mamma, what is the use cf such splen dor? Everybody knows we can't afford iL" "My dear," was the reply, "nobody knows Tery much about us financially. I "read in the 'society column' of Eome paper the other day that my late husband had left me only 57,000 a year. I couldn't help wishing heVf left me one. Est I'd just as lief have It thought that I T.ossessed 510,000. If you can't be comfortably well off the next best thing is to appear so." "I don't agree with you; I think just the opposite," protested Kathleen. "Besides, mamma, there's but one way that these bills can be paid " "Certainly, there is but one way, dear. Tou will pay them after you're Mrs. Lisp enard." "But it isn't nice " "To mention the matter now? "Very true, It isn't. But von brought it up, my child. I've always insisted that taste and silence are twin sisters, and that our salvation largely depends on the things we do not say." This evening, after they had reached home, Mrs Kennaird's humor was notably bland. The event of the afternoon had put, as it were, a final filigree on the structure of her attainments. Her future spread dellciouslj halcyon. Still, during dinner, and tlnoughout the remainder of the even In, sho Had much to say concerning the Chiceter suicide, and lior words were hie nded v ith hint-; of worriment that came and fled alons the current of hersneech like lights and shades along a lapse of meadow. "We tnifht have pone to the Ogstons, after all," bh said to Kathleen at desert. It's only a small affair, and the Patriarch's ball niay quite i-poil it; but then the Ogstons nre soselec. Ih y have no real riplit to their extremely lofty position, itV true, but" "Dou't you recollect, mamma?" Kathleen broke in. "We thought it best not to go everrwhere nowadays on account of rump inp good gowns for larger enteitain ments. Kow, don't change your mind at tho last moment: please don't. V e an interest Inp book, and I d intonded passing a quiet evening with it." "Then Alonzo isn't coming at all to night!" "I think he will not come," replied Kath leen, who at the same time hoped ho would come, yet did not jjresume to prophesy Alonzo, as it turned out, lemained absent Kathleen forgave him, knowing what an ex cuse he had forstaying away. Yet she passed an evening of suspense that was ended by disappointment. Sho slept ill that night, and rose so lato that when she appeared at bicakfast her mother had completed the meal and met her witna naii-crunipieunionung paper in one hand, while the other employed itself in lit tle agitated waves. "There are dreadful things printed about the suicide of Mr. Chichester," Mrs. Kennaird announced. Oh, perfectly dreadful things! It csin't be true though that ho has ruined the firm bo fore blowing his brains out!" "So. no," laltered Kathleen, as sho seated herself at the breakfast table. "aIoaso will will be here this morning, I'm sure, and tell us the real facts." lie came, but not till lato that afternoon. Tie had been with his uncle until quite lato on the previous evening, and he had spent all the earlier part of his day at the b.ink. "Kuin, ruin, or something almost ns horri ble," rang tnrough hisbntinus he stood at Kathleen's doorstep. He w as silently quot ing the words of his uncle, uttered just be fore tjiev parted. Kathleen received him alone. "I'm so plad your mother in't here," he began, ns they sank beside one anothor on a sofa. "I've a great deal to tell you." And he made clear what he had to tell. It was terrible tidings. The Lispenard wealth had been wildly squandered. "I'm a poor man," Alonzo nt length finished As ho thus spoke he caught Kathleen's hand, and Instead of pressing it waited for her to do so. The clasp came, but more faintly than ho had expected. "Kuttileen!" he exclaimed, and withdrew his hand entirely from hers. "Lonz! Lonz!" ehe said, and looked at him with wistlul eyes that a threat of tearful storm, seemed darkening , Just then Mrs. Kcnnaird entered. She had been listening, but by no means had caught all that Alonzo had spoken His voice had been too low, in the fir-it place, and in tho second she had need an overplus of caution. A'onzo gae her a somewhat flurried greeting and slipped from the apartment within the next few minutes, promising Kathleen that he would come back that evening. Bat it wns five good days before he came back. During this time he wrote his sweet heart set eral ager and soulful letters in more than one of which he offered toielcaso her from all bonds of betrothal. Repeatedly Kathleen replied that she would not consent to he released. During those days tho very worst became patent to Alonzo. A mere wreck was left to his sister and himself of their former splendid patrimony. The young man was surprised by his on n calm ness. He arranged in the most quiet way for a sale 01 all his possessions; ho held moro than one very painful interview with his sister at his own residence; he discharged his servants and engaged a small suite of rooms, placing a bill upon nis house in Gramcrcv I'aik. nis many costly art treas ure, he offered to an anctioneeron condition of their immediate sale. He amazed every bodv who observed him by his coolness and teienitv. And all tho while his heait was strained bvawretched suspicion ofiCathleen. 2"ot that "he thoroughly doubted her, hut there had been a nameless dread born of that last meeting a dread winch her letters did not dissipate, for he seemed to read be tween their lines, and as ho thus lead, a voice vaguely cried to him "It is not she! It is not the woman you so trusted! Some thing that vou believed would leap from her and breathe itself to you, burning, living, unmistakably has not shown itselt." And yet ho might bo wronging her so sternly! What if his dear and faithtul friend, Philip Lexington, would gotohcrand hold a little talk w ith her. and tell him afterward whether he was a madly self-conscious fool or whether there had really been good cause for his doubts? Alonzo lelt his heart warm toward Philip Lexington as he thongbt these thoughts. Dear Philip!" ran his musings. "He will come tome ontne instant and ieckto aid me all he can." Lexington obeyed the summons. He looked as handsome as ever and listened with his usual gracious calm to all that Alonzo 6aid. When his turn canto to reply, bowe er, Lexington shifted his legs uneasily and posed a little sideways his dark, shapely head. "I don't a bit want to sound Miss Ktnnaird on this question," he softly declared. "I'd ever so much rather be excused. Frankly, I would." Alonzo stnred at Mm and then dropped his eves. "Oh, you prefer not to serve me? All right," "Why put it like that?" came the reply. "I'd serve you. If I could, in some other manner. I " "Don't think of some other manner," Al onzo broke in, with his voice keen and cold. This little lavor tests your friendship, I think." "Oh! ' exclaimed Lexington, "you can't mean that!" And as he spoke thero rang to the hearer a chilling difference 01 intonation from all others that he had ever heard leave his friend's lips. "I do menu it," averred Alonzo. "Tou know just what trouble has come to mo." "Yes. It's too bad. It's really horrid, you know." "I've lost my fortune, Philip, I'm a poor man." "Yes. I'm awfully sorry for you." "Thanks for vour sympathy." Lexington began to cuil his full, dark moustache by slipping a thumb under one of its ending curves and n forefinger precisely above the thumb. Then, whilo completing a little airy twist of tho grasped hail s, he ic plied: -Look here, my boy; you're devilishly sensitive, I should wiy." "ll'sui, riiilip. I am sensitive. Haven't I rcist n to be? Save is the ttmo that w hat friends I've had shouldMand 113- me. I never thought I had tniinv real Iriends; I hardly believed. lor that matter, tuat I had any at all. But I did count on you. And this thing I have asked you to do is such a small thing." Philip Lexington rose now with a weary sneer 1111 his iinelv-chlsclled face. "A small thing,'" he bioko forth, mocking ly. "What, prav? I go and ask a girl who engaged herself to jon because you had lots of money whether she will have you now vou'vo lostnearlr everything? Can't yoa see beforehand -what her answer will be? If you've fancied th ere was anything Jn h er deportment the last time you met her, can't you?" - ' "Stop there," said Alonzo. He bad risen, too, and though he preserved much com posure, an abrnnt wave of the hand bespoke excitement. "I I deny that Kathleen Ken nairdever engaged herself to me because, as yon put it, I had lots of monev." Then you're wrong," said Lexington, gaz ing down at his well" varnished boots. "You're" with anotner twirl of the mous taohe "dead wrong I assure yon." Alonzo gnaw ed his lips. Phil," bo cried, 'what are you saving?" "Only tho truth!" "The truth!" "Yes yes." "But" you must be mad to state that Kath leenOil, no, no, no, Phil." Alonzo had caught his friend by either shoulder and was plunging a penetrant look Into his eyes. Tho latter, with a coldness unexpected, yet distinct, answered, while Alonzo withdrew froiu him: "It's so: you ought to know life. You're old enough." "Philip; Philip;" broke from Alonzo. "I'm so sorrv I asked vou to go to her. But you're mv frie"nd still? 'It isn't mvlostmouey that you're thinking 01? Xo, no, Phil, not you not vou." 'Don't be tiresome!" Lexington might have said volumes and yet not have expressed a more pungent lit tle series of words than those three. "I'll try not to be tiresome," cams Alon zo's answer, as if between shut teeth. "It's quite clear to mo, Philip, that my request bores vou." Well," returned Philip, doggedly4 after a sMMit silence, "it does." n?t wouldn't have done so a short time ago." "I don't understand." "Don't yon? I do." "You seem angry at me," muttered Philip, and tor no reason." "For no reason." "Xono that 1 can see. A short while ago? You mean, tl.en?" "Oh, I mean what I mean, Philip. There's hardly any favor that vou'd have refused me a short while ago. Sow, you find me of no importance. I've lost my money, and I'm not worth cultivating." Lexington flushed hotlv, nnd then tossed head. "Isn't that rather uncivil of you?" he frowned. "Yes, if you choose. But the Incivility of raw truth has sometimes a certain refiesh ing refinement." "I don grasp your paradoxes. Tou always excelled in them, however." Alonzo had grown very pale "Let it all rest there, then, Philip," he said. "You've disappointed me, horribly. Good by." And ho turned on his heel with a dismissal at once quiet and imperious. Lexington walked to a door and seized its knob, "Oh, jut as you please," he said sul lenly. "You keep up your pride, but I'm afraid it won't serve you as well as yon mini;. iin regara to me money j. owo you. since we've both been mentioning money so so broadly, I'll do my best." But here Alonzo shot out these ringing words: 'I don't want a dime from you, and I'll only be too glad if you'll consider that debt cancelled, so to speak, by the cessation of our acquaintance.1' Across another threshold Alonzo swiftly quitted the room. So sooner was he alone, however, than he reproached himself for undue severity. And yet ho did not regret having broken with this man. It was mer cilessly patent to him that Lexing on had been the most t me-serving of friends. A kind of clairvoyance had told him this, by flashes at once intuitive and acute. Hun dreds ot other men placed like himself, might have meant as much as he and said a great deal less. But Alonzo had rarely dealt m self restraints. Those who liked him best liked him because of such candors; those who liked him least did so because his free speech, his wearing the heart 011 the sleeve, repelled them from tho point of view of taste, if fiom none other. And these latter critics would have.been Ju-t the ones to de nounce his openness with Lexington as vul gar. ho ever much thoj disapproved the conduct ot Lexington himself. They were Rlreadv snnnlied with inanv instances of his pi evious harum-scarum deportment. Thoy would have told you that he lacked gentil ity to almost the verge of grossness, and that "his being such a good fellow at heart" was merely the shallow excuse1 made for him by a spirit of faithful indulgence. But perhaps If ihey could have seen him seated in solitudo long after Lexington had left him lorevcr, and have marked the twitching of his lips, the moisture that glistened in his honest eyes, tho occasional clinching of his hands or nervou3 tapping of hi feet against tho floor, they might have been touched by a form of human sorrow which ranks witn the most piteous we are ever called upon to undergo. For Alonzo had meant generously, kindly, even nobly toward his world, anil was now being con fronted with its hollowness and hardness. But yesterday people had smiled on him who to day scarcelj chose to veil their in difference. He. had referred with cynical Bhrase to his own position as a favorite, nt ho had never reallv believed his own bitter allusions, for his nature was too re plete with warm good-will toward his fel lows. And now this fine nnd wholesome loving kindness In him was being taught the sternc-t of disillusioning lessons. "I may have doubted manv of them-," ho told him self, "but at least I firmly trusted Phil. Well, well, what I asked him to do was per haps better left undone. At least I can do it raoi e capably than ho. I need no emissary. I'll go to her mysclt and f.ico the worst." He went that same evening. He did not nsk for Mrs. Kcnnaird, but that lady chose to receive him. He instantly Eaw that her demeanor was formal, and even a trifle aus tere. "I am so sorrv that poor Kathleen has a horrid headache this evening," she soon said, "and is lying down. Pray accept me, will you not. as her substitute?" Alonzo was quietly desperate. He looked the speaker straight in the eyes as he answered, leeling that the air bristled with coming dis cord: "My dear Mrs. Kcnnaird. you are tho most chai mine of persons, if you will permit me to trauiesuch a common place. But ! must be frank and inform yon that for Kath leen thero can be, to my thinking, no possi ble substitute." He watched her eyelids quiver a little, and her large form slightly stiffen. "But you will show mercy to "my poor child's head ache'," "You will be good enough, on that account, 1 nm sure, to make the best of mo under the circumstances." Alonzo gave his head a short negative shake. "I can't. I want Kathleen, headache and alL" "Oh, but vou're presumptuous." "That's just what yoa force me to be come." "Xot at all." "Then allow Kathleen to appear." 'She is too much indisposed at I told you." "I would like to learn that, If you please, from her on n lip V "Bless me," said Mrs. Kcnnaird lifting her shoulders tora moment and putting up her glasses. You're ruder than I thought you knew how to be." "Say more decided. And I'm compelled to add this: If Kathleen is forbidden mo I neither can nor shall accept you as her proxy." "Xo," replied his hostess, with hardening face. "But suppose my daughter desires just that arrangement?" 'She does not desire it." "You speak with a delightful confidence, really." "Oh, madam, let us end this!" cried Alonzo, feeling himself grow pale. "If you attempt to keep Kathleen from seeing me your effort can only produce transient re sults." Mrs. Kennalrd threw Dack her head a lit tle, as though on the vorgo of a scornful laug' But cither she checked herself or something in the visitor's look checker her. Like a flash her whole vis age changed, Not that it became softer, but that It surely lost In expression both subtlety and restrain- "My dear young gentleman," ebo said, "I'm very 6"rry for you, because I've al ways liked you. But the truth may as well be told w itliont another instant of delay. Your engagement to my child must cease, and you knaw wuy?" "So, then, It's open war," murmured Alonzo. "I prefer that." "It isn't war at all. It's worldliness, any bad name you're bent on calling it." "I'll call it the same spirit, then, that made you try to entrap into a marriage w ith her that crippled young English lord." He had hit, and with poignant thrust, the heart of a wound that had never healed. She frowned, and tho color left her tighten ing lips. While she stared at him he went on: "Oh, Kathleen has told me! But she never knew what love meant then, and that was why she was such wax in your hands. It's altered with her now; your rule isn't what it once was. Ii it had been you'd have kept her from wilting me those letters. I've offered to reieaso her, but sho has refused. The terms of her relusal have seemed to carry with them-a certain tang of yourself. Pel haps I've judged her wrongly." Sow he rose and went toward a door which led into the other apartments of this limited flat. He caught with one hand the curtain (.'.raped across this door and diew it slighly aside. "It's not your opposition I fear; it's the thought that sho may be influ enced by it. I know you've done nil jou could to dissnade her. But she must come to me scorning (yes, that's the woid scorn ing!) such odious arguments as you've douutless addiesscd to her, or she shall not come at all." At this point he drew the little curtain still fmther aside, "and, knowing that his voice needed only to be raised a key or so above the ordinary to make it reach tho furthest, room ot the suite, he called with clenraccCnts: 'Kathleen! Kathleen! I am here and wish to speak with you. "Will j-ou not come to me for at least a few moments?" An exasperated cry broko from Mri, Kin naird, who bad now gained her feet. "You're insolent," she cried. "You're out rageous! I told you my daughter was 111. And now. sir, I command you to leave these apartments." But Alonzo scarcely heard this voice, for another, faint, sob-broken, and somewhat distant had fallen on his ears. He still held the enrtaiu sideways when Mrs. Kennaird sprang toward him and tried to wrest It from his grasp. "Do you call yourself a gentleman?" she gasped, as he thwarted her attempt. "Do yon call yourself a mother?" he re plied. Artd then Kathleen glided quickly through the open doorway, pale and trem bling, though quite tearless. Alonzo at once receded. From that In stant his mien and voice became Judicial in the calm. It was he who broke silence.after the trio had thus met. "Tell mel' were Ills first words to Kath leen, "why, when I came here, did you per mit your mother to meet meet me in your place?" Kathleen, with compressed lips, remained sptechless. "Tell mo," Alonza repeated. The girl shot a look at her mother. "This man lias hohavpd likea ruffian." now .rang from Mrs. Kennaird. "Go back to fyour room, my dear, and show him that you will not see mo insulted." But Kathleen had now turned her gaze upon her lover. "Mamma wished to meet you before I did," she said. "Iliad not expected you. Your comirc unnerved me a little, and so I " Sho drooped her eyes as that last sentence faltered feebly into silence. Alonzo took two or three swift steps toward her, and then paused. "What purpose could be served," he ques tioned, "by your mother meeting me first?" "Xone none,'.' she stammered. "Are you not my promised wife? Is it not settled that we shaltshortlv marry? Have I not offered to break our betrothal, and have not vou ?" "I've insisted that It should be kept." And she stretched out both hands to his. lie advanced and caught them In botn ws own. "I will believe you!" he cried. "I will be lieve that you never once swerved from me. It's all that evil genius of yours that de plorable mother." "Ah!" said Mrs. Kennaird, In severe to proach to her daughter, "can you be will ing, Kathleen, to let me suffer such Indig nity?" e "Your mother has Just told me, Kathleen," hurried Alonzo, while he still clasped tho gill's hands, "that our engagement must cease." "Yes, those were my words, dear," panted Mrs. Kennaird, "I don't deny them. You've heard me say them to yoursell quite often of late." "Too often, mamma," came the answer. "And I've always begged you not to try and move me, but you would keep on trying, and it has done no good." She let her beautiful crystal eves caress nis iaco now as sne turned to'Alonzo. "Yon"!! mako this sacrifice, Kathleen?" hotlv demanded her mother. "You'll marry a ruined man you, with your ideas, your ambitions?" "Yes, yes. mamma." "I don't want you to look on It as a sacri fice," protested Alonzo, with lips leaned close to her cheek. "And have you such grand ideas, ambitions? ir this be true, why, perhaps then, as I wroto you, it's better to" "So, no," she interrupted him, and snntched her hands from his only that she might throw both arms about his neck. And now,-half whispering in his ear, sho said what served for him as an ugly counter stroke to the pang of happiness just dealt him. "When I see yon, Lonz, I'm so strong ! All doubts of our future vanish. I can't help, you know, being her daughter. There are times I've told you of them when sho seems to govern me against my will. And then she's my mother, and I lovo her. If I'm disappointed if I'm fearful of Just how I shall be ablo to bear it all if moments come to me when, ns yourlettershintcd, I feel that our life together may havo lost something of ot tho expected savor and ease and grace fulness my fancy clothed it with; be lenient, be forgiving Will you not, for mvsak?e" He withdrewhimself from her, and at once said, with tones that bore no trace of con cealment : "To me, Kathleen, our life together would now be even happier than before. And if those moments do come to vou at tbis early period, what may not occur Vhen you're the wife of a poor man? a man who means to work Instead of idling, and can give you simply his homespun dovotion instead of that other luxurious existence you foresaw and counted on ?" , "Everything horrid and forlorn may hap pen in the case you've pointed out I" ex claimed Mrs. Kcnnaird. "If Kathleen marries you she will make you the worst of wives l" Alonzo had for a brief while forgotten the very presence of that lady who had Just de clared it with such emphasis. "Oh, it's you" again!" he said, and his coun tenance grew one cloud of disgust. "For God's sako cease your persecutions of this poor girl, whose greatest misfortune Is the fact ot her being your childl" "Forshame!" broke from Kathleen. "What you say is false!" And at once she moved toward her mother, who swept an arm about her waist with a glad cry. "Oi.lv a few minutes ago, my darling," Mrs. Kennaird now eagerly said, "ho had the insolenco to tell me that unless you treated me with scorn scorn, mind you. mv dear! he would give you up!" Kathleen flnshed, and curled her lip. "If he wants mo to hate you," she said, "he will find himself woefully in error!" "I don't ask anything so unnatural," here struck in Alonzo," as that you should hate your mother. But I demand of you that you shall both hate and despite her views of living. I know something of her past life: I've taken pains to inquire. She is ono of tlioso women who go about the world making themselves Arm und sworn foes of the sanctity of marriage. "Hpar him I" said Mrs. Kennaild to her daughter. "And you'll stand this? You'll marry tho man who can so slander your mother?" "Truth nnd slander llvo miles apart," said Alonzo. "Kathleen," he went on, with his entire mein racked by agitation, "if you come to me at all you must come with no mere n 01 Idly regrets." "You 'must come'l Listen listen I" mocked"Mrs. Kennaird, while she drew tho girl closer to her breast. "Was there ever such an autocrat? He's repulsed you once, mv dear; will you let him do so again? "Where is your womanly spirit?" "It's here," said Kathleen, drawing her self up and touching her bosom with ono hand and giving Alonzo the haughtiest look ho had ever teen bred in those limpid eyes. "There's an end of everything between you nnd me," she w ent on. "I hope I may never see you again; but if we should meet, be sure I'll never speak to you. Come, mamma." The two women left the room together, and each gave him a plan to ncross her shoulder. Mrs. Kennaird's, which was ono of disdainful triumph, he did not see; but Kathleen's, which brimmed equally with anger and mrlancholy,haunted him tnrough many n future day. To be Continued next Sunday. J THE CLEABING HOUSE BETUEUS. One Beacon "Why Pittsburg Doesn't Get-the Bank It Really Has. In some cities business firms have printed in the left-hand top corner of their checks the sentence: "This check must be passed through the Clearing House," Baid a promi nent business man to a reporter the other day. That means that if it had been paid top neighboring house, banking close to the bank of issue, or even at the identical bank, the Clearing Honss formality must be gone through just as though it had been made payable to a firm 1,000 miles away. This really explains why come cities have such enormous bank clearing returns in pro portion to the volume of business trans acted, and why Pittsburg is so severely handicaped in the matter. Here the Clearing House Is only nsed when necessary ior legitimate transaction of business, and checks representing tens of thousands of dollars daily never pass through it at all. If that little Clearing House condition were placed on every check printed for Pittsburg banks and its terms enforced, our clearing returns would increase 50, if not 100 per cent, as a matter of course WOEMS IN THE FI0UB. They Come and A fterwards Go In an Alto togetlier Inexplicable Way. Every miller in the United States would like to know where flour worms come from and how they manage to disappear, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Vou take the best flour that ever came from a roller mill, set aside for a few weeks in an air tight barrel, then open the barrel, and the probability is that you will find in the flour a number of small worms about an eighth of an inch long. Head np the barrel and wait awhile longer and the worms will disappear. Nobody knows how they got in, uobodv can see where they got out, nor does their presence impair the quality of the flour. It is one of the mysteries of the business. t . The popularity of .Salvation Oil is not astonishing when we hear of its many cures. HELMS II ORES. The Untold Treasure in the Loins, of the Porcupine Mountains UPON WHICH PITTSBURG DRAWS. The HatcMess Norrie MIno That Frodnces a liillion Tons a Tear. HW THE IEOH WAS DISCOVERED prBrnrs ron the nisrATtaui Article No. 2. EOM the deok of the steamer John Harper, seven or eight hours before we arrived at Ashland, "Wis., a distant view of the Porcupine Mountains was obtained. Locked within their loins is that great mag netic iron ore bed which has added billions to the wealth of the nation. The range slopes off from the shore of Lake Su perior to the southwest, so that the docks at Ashland lay from SO to 40 miles north of the big ore mines of the Gogebic region. THE ATTRORA Leaving the steamship at the docks, a train of empty ore cars carried me back to the mines. The recrion is sparsely settled. The Chippewa Indians have an extensive reservation not far back of Ashland, but they are poor and lazy, and make no at tempt to advance in civilization. Tho country for the most part is an unbroken wilderness. There are no farms, and, save for a lumbering camp here and there, you seldom meet a white man. This is on the edge of that vast fores' territory from which Wisconsin is still supplying the wood mar kets ot the country. A FABADISE FOB SPORTSMEN. The scenery is rugged and picturesque. Deep ravines, bold mountain knobs, and almost impenetrable glades make it hard to believe that only an hour or two before you left the pmooth, rolling beach oi the great est inland ocean. Here the hunter for elk may find a paradise in winter, and the fish erman glory in summer. In beautiful Lake Gogebic, in Tomahawk Lake, or in the Eagles' "Waters, are abundance of the mighty muskallonge, the gamy bass, or brook trout. In the midst of this untamed tract Pitts burg capital has seamed the earth for its treasure. Pittsburg iron manufacturers, together with syndicates in Ohio and Michi gan, and the Illinois Steel Company, dumped their thousands into these woods as the mightiest pioneer. And, after riding through 35 miles of wilderness from Ash land, you suddenly come upon the frnits of that golden pioneering. The Montreal river is the State line dividing "Wisconsin from Michigan, and on both sides have been opened up enormous iron mines. Thousands of laborers people these pits, and, though you do not see much of them above the sur face, the huge piles of ore are the evidence of their living presence balow. TEEASUBE AT A TREE'S BOOT. Just six years ago, when this Gogebic bed of ore was discovered, there was much ex citement about it in Pittsburg. The man who claims to have made the discovery is at present living in Ashland. His name is OrEN PIT Captain "N". D. "Wood. "With other explor ers he was traversing the fastness of the Porcupine Mountains, when he came upon a tree that had been uprooted by a storm. To its huge roots, lying upturned in the woods, was found a soft, red metallic sub stance. It was the valuable hematite ore. On that spot tho famous Colby mine was opened shortly afterward. One of the photograph; accompanying this article is of that mine. In its first year, 1885, the shipments of ore from the Gogebic region aggregated 109,061 tons. Two years later the output reached 1,000,000 tons, and in 1890 it had swollen to the magnitude of 2,174,556 tons. Up to the present moment this wild stretch of terri tory, under the maic wand of King Iron, has yielded a round 10,000,000 tons of ore. Every ton is worth $7 at Pittsburg. The magnificent total of 10,000,000 tons multi plied by S7 conjures up the picture of a gold field quicker than a dirty iron range I A MILLION TONS A TEAR. At the head of the big producers in the Gogebicran 'e is the matchless Norrie mine. She is discharging high grade Bessemer ore at the rate of 1,000,000 tous a year. The only other mine which can compare with this in the United States is the Chapin pit, in the Menominee range, Michigan, which sent in 1890 the aggregate of G69.192 tons. The other big producers are the Minnesota Iron Company mines and the Chandler mines, of the "Vermillion range, in Minne sota; the Ashland, Pabst, Colby, Iron Belt, Aurora and Germania, of the Gogebio range; the Florence, Drummondj Iron Itivcr mines, of the Menominee range, and the Pittsburg and Lake Angelinc, Cham- Sion, Superior and Cleveland mines of the arquctte range. The two photographs show open mines. All the others in the Gogebic region now are closed pits reached by a shaft, just like the ordinary coal mines. Some of these shafts are G00 feet deep. Explosives are liberally used in loosening the ore, and then it is shoveled into deep iron" buckets in which it is hoisted to the. surface above. Great stock piles have accumulated around iHfejg-- k.lHiJ1f.'B. J T llT'il 'MiUltn I 111 ll'WflJl many of the pits, though the ore of the Norrie and other large producers being of the Bessemer class is quickly gobbled up. "WTIAT THE NEEDLES TOLD. But the above relates to the Gogeblo range only. A party of Government en gineers were surveying in the neighborhood of Negaunee, on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, on September 19, 1844. They noticed that the needles of their compasses varied greatly. That set them to thinking, and after they emerged from the wilderness they reported that there must be iron ore up there in great quantities, at least they believed that was what disturbed the mag netic needles. An exploration was made in 1845 under the direction of P. 5L Everett, who still lives at Marquette. The company back of him had been organized at Jackson, Mich., and the explorers were guided to the spot by an Indian named Manjekijik, who, it is alleged, was to have a thirty second interestin the companv for giving up his secret. A suit is still pending in the Supreme Court, brought by the heirs of this Indian, to secure this interest that was denied him. Thus the first iron ore in the entire Lake Superior region was discovered. The Jack son mine was the pioneer mine, and it was afterward ascertained that it was located just about on the spot Vhere the surveyors' needles had been observed to fluctuate In these days, however, the means of mining were primitive, and tho Government canal at Sault St. Marie had not yet been thought of, and Lake Superior HAD SO NAVIGABLE CONNECTION" with the other lakes. But, even at that 'early date, iron was" destined to lead the procession 01 commerce on iue unsaiieu seas, and point the way for the opening of its path. The Jackson company got down to work in 1849, and in .180 the United IRON MINE. States Government and the government of Michigan combined took the first steps toward the construction of the canal which was to give Superior a navigable outlet southeast. In 1855 the first steamer was successfully locked through from Lake Su perior to Lake Huron. In my previous paper I made the state ment that the sister steamships John Har per and Alex. Nimick would carry between them at one trip 5,000 tons of iron ore. Now, in 1855, the total iron ore shipments of the lakes were 1,457 tons, or less than the cargo of ono or these boats. In 1856, thoy aggregated 11.597 tons: in 1857, 16,181 tons: in 1853. 30,327 tons; in 1853, 80,000 tons; in 1860, 150,000 tons. Why, the shipments of all those six years combined will not eqnal what iron oro the city of Pittsburg alone receives in one year nowl But big ships onlv got at the Lake Superior oro piles in 1872, when the second and deeper canal at Sault Sto. Marie was completed. GROWTH OP THE INDUSTRY. When the big ships came, then the iron ore Industry commenced in earnest. It had only been toyed with up to that date. Since then it has "boomed." High-water mark was reached in 1399, when the shipments out of the entire region for tho single season reached nearly 9,000 000 tons. They were divided as follows: Marquette range, 2,6)6, 423 tons; Gogebic range, 2,531,570; Menominee range, 2,153,010, and the Vermillion range, 870.818 tons. This ore is loaded on steamers at Ashland, Marquette, Kscanaba, Two Harbors, and Gladstone. In 1SS5 the Gogeblo range was last on the list. In 1890 it was second, and, as Bessemer ores aro much In demand, Gogebic bids fair to tako first place soon. This year tho blast furnaces in Western Pennsylvania blew in late, navigation did not open on the lakes until nearly May, and owing to the active movement ot wheat on the lakes, the rates of freight on iron ore aro expected to go up to such a figure that ship ments may cease this fall unusually early. So that, with the season lopped off at both beginning and end, the totals for 1891 may not be as high as heretofore. THE IMPROVEMENTS IN MININO. To get 150,000 tons of ore out of a mino 20 years ago would have been considered a miracle. Hon. Samuel J. Tllden got far less than that from his pioneer New York mino in the Marquette region. As the quickened COLBY. pulse of the Iron Industry in Pennsylvania warned.the lake carriers that they must get larger vessejs and faster engines, so it also gave an impetus to mining genius and scientific-Invention. Methods were too primitive even In the day of Mr. Tilden's ventures in the Lake Superior region. Not over ten years ago It was thought.qu!te impossible to put down a shaft throusrh quicksand. Now that is done with comparative easeand the other contrivances hauled into tharGoiroblo forest mako it a pleasant task to Hit 1,000,000 tons a year ouf of the Norrie pit. Here are a few examples of Lake Superior mining inguenuity: The deepest mines, and those that extend farthest away from the foot of tho shaft, are lighted by electricity. Thegeneraois, of course are outside. An electric pumping plant was recently in stalled at the Hamilton mine. The pnmp, which is located 1.325 feet below the collar of tho shaft, has a capacity or 100 gallons per minute. Tho generator is located awav off in the electrio light station of the Iron Mountain mine. But perhaps the greatest mecnanicai cnumpn among mo miners win be the pumping out of the water of Lake Angclinein order to secure the deposit of ore known to exist beneath the betl of the Lake. Tho feat will be commenced shortly. LOTS OP MONEY IN IT. D0C3 it pay? There can be no donbt about that. This is regarded as a year of more de pression than usual in the 010 business and yet I beard of two instances of big divi dends. One was the Chandler mine, which showed earnings of $400,000 besides large acquisitions of new property. The other instance was the Minnesota lion Company's 6 per cent dividend, equivalent to a distri bution ol $480,000. But by this time the train of cars for Ash land docks ha received its load, and I am call'-d to jump aboard. "Perhaps thl- does not look to you like much of aload,"iemarked Mr. M. Schranlc, Superintendent of the docks. "It may sur prise you to hear that each one of these cars contains 20 tons of ore.and there aie22ca;s on tho train. Now, if you were to see ono locomotive hauling 23 other locomotives, nouo i-t which had any steam up, you would be very apt to sav that was a remarkable load for ono locomotive to pull. Well, tho locomotive on this train is at this moment hauliug a heavier load than 22 dead locomo tives. That is what this long string of cars amounts to, sir." L. . Stofiel. 1-pJf mrmi FIRST OF THE LAWS. The Savior's Anstver to the Lawyer Who Headed the Pharisees. MOBILITY ALONE IS NOT -ENOUGH. A Eeclprodtj of the Divine Lore Is the Great Commandment. THEOLOGY DIFFERS FROM BELIGIOK rwp.rrrijT fob the DtsrATcn.l "We are all clients of the lawyer who came to Christ with that deep question: "Which is the great commandment in the law?" He represents us when he asks that. "We all want to know that. It is true that the lawyer asked the ques tion, according to his legal habit, not for his own information, but, as we would say, lor the information of the jury. The jury was the crowd of citizens and countrymen who were gathered about the Master in the temple. Some were on His side, some were against Him. There was a great discussion going on about Him. The Saducees had had their turn at questioning Him, think ing to bring discredit upon His teachings, and His wisdom had put them to silence. And now came the Pharisees with the lawyer at their head, "tempting" Him, the record tells us, that is putting Him to test, setting Him on trial, trying to catch Hip in Mis answers. There was no religion in the question of the lawyer. Here was no eager disciple running to the Master, de manding what he should do to inherit eter nal life. There was no thought of disciple- snip in the lawyer s heart. THE RELIGION IN DOCTRINE. There is always this possibility of wide distance between theology and religion. The discussion of doctrine, the determina tion of duty, may be no more religious than the transactions of the Stock Exchange. The distinction between the sacred and the secu lar does not depend on the subjects that men talk about, Sr on the profession and position of the debaters. An election is not made sacred by the fact that the peo ple are voting for a bishop, nor is it made secular by the fact that the people are vot ing for a Congressman. A good; many po litical speeches have been really more re ligious than many sermons. "We must not think that people are religious either our selves or others because they talk a great deal about religion. They may be just as much opposed to that which is best in religion as this questioning lawyer. The difference between the sacred andthe secular is altogether a difference of spirit. That is what God looks at and. cares for "We read that one day at the Feast of Pentecost the Holy Spirit passed by the splendid temple altogether and overlooked the High Priest in his gorgeous vestments, and chose rather to visit a common house somewhere in the city, just ah ordinary house, with a flat roof and a courtyard, and a pair of stairs on the outside like a thousand others, and to grant His special benediction to a com pany of common people there assembled in their working clothes. It is the heart that makes men worthy or unworthy in the sight of God, and not the pious lips. THE LAWYER'S INTEREST IN IT. This is a significant figure, this lawyer standing in Christ's presence, looking straight into His face, questioning Him, listening with respectful attention to His answer and having within him not one smallest trace of the faintest purpose to follow what the Master said. At the best, he had. an intellectual interest in Chris tianity, nothing more. There was a gambler in New Tork, who got into the newspapers the other day, who, it seems, had for years attended a Christian service everv Sunday. He never knelt down, he said, nor answered "Amen" to any of the prayers. He had never joined the church, nor had he ever made any difference in his evil living. He said that he went to that church because he liked the preacher; he considered him the finest preacher in the city of New YorkI There are people not so bad as that in all the churches. They show an interest in re ligion by their constant presence, as this lawyer showed his interest by his presence and his question. And they listen, like the lawyer, to all the praying and the preach ing. And then they go away, a hundred times a year, and one year after another, and never make a change in their living, never get any closer than they were at the beginning to Christian discipleship. At least, so far as we can sec. Nobody knows what God sees. ALL ARE HONESTLT DISCONTENTED. And yet there times in every life when the lawyer's question is asked in earnest, not as the lawyer asked it. The "great commandment." what is it but the Divine ideal of that which is the first ami chief essential in human character When we learn it we.know what God cares the most for in the temper and disposition of His children. "We discover what our heavenly Father most of all desires to see in us. And we ail want to discover that That is the discovery of discoveries. For we are all of us honestly discontented. The better wo are the less are we satisfied with ourselves. Not one of us but has some sort of vision of a higher life, and is aware of the distanoe between that vision and the every day reality. "We know what kind of men and women wc would like to be But our ideal changes. Sometimes it is but a low achievement that we find our selves striving alter. "We think that money mav perhaps content us; we will be satis fied if we can but gain some sort of worldly prize. It is evident enough that some people seem to have no higher ambition than this. They bend all things this way. They appear to "be willing any day to trade a heavenly mansion for a good storehouse on a salable corner. On the other hand, in proportion as men and women keep the will of God, so their ideal of right living is more and more uplifted. Character is seen to be the richest of all treasures. KNOWLEDGE OP THE STANDARD. Now what we want, with our ideals going np and down like the mercury ih a ther mometer according as our zeal is hot or cold, is to know what the standard is. "We want something to measure by. And we do not need anybody to teach us that the one accurate judge of human life is He who set human life agoing in this world. That alone is best which is accounted best by God. And so we come in good earnest to the lawyer's question. "When we are honest with ourselves, when we stand up and look out into the inter minable sky, when we contemplate the cer tain end oi this life and the inevitable be ginning of another and realize that in spite of all the noise and jostle 01 the busy day we arc still alone with God, and must give account of ourselves to God then we ask in all soberness what God thinks about this human life of ours. "What is the Divine stand ard of man's behavior? hat is of value and worth while in the sight of God? "What is the great commandment in the law of God? And who can teach us that? Surely the great spiritual Master. No man ever spoke nor will speak like this man. Christ knows more than we do about God, "Who will deny that? Christ knows more than all the preachers and all all the philosophers, and all the magazines and the books about the mind and the will of God. Christ the manifestation, the speaking revelation, the actual incarnation of pod. Even on the lowest ground, the holiest man is always the wisest in spiritual things. Anv man ought to know most about that which he studies most. And knowledge of spiritual things, above all other knpwledge, depends upon sympathy of spirit. The pure in heart shall see God; that is one of the essen tial axioms. To whom shall we go; who else has the words of eternal life save the spiritual Master, the one ideal, pure, per fect saint and hero of all time. MORALITY INSTEAD OF RELIGION. I emphasize that because the answer which Christ gave to tho lawyer's question is not the commonly accepted answer. "Thou shalt love the iord thy God with all they heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind." That, He said, is the first and great commandment But we are in clined to doubt that Ask any dozen men their real opinion nd we will find that ten of them will hold that the best that men can do is to do right, to live honestly, to help his neighbor, and to'do his daily duty. The best of life in the judgment of a large proportion ot tho readers of this sermon, is morality rather than religion. Is it better that we should love our neighbors than that we should love the Lord God Almighty. One of the best men I know said to me the other day in a letter: "iou know that I belong to a family that is more noted for their honesty than for their religion, and personally, while not claiming much of the former, I frankly admit to you having little or none of the latter. " And, evidently, the difference here in tended between honesty and religion is that honesty looks toward our fellow men, while religion looks first of all to God. Now, the most important fact anywhere in the whole circumference of truth is the fact of the ex istence of God. The most important being incalculably the most important in the whole universe, in the whole range of life is God. God made us; God set us in our places in the great brotherhood of men; God gave us ALL THAT WE HAVE. Of heart, of soul, of mind, of strength, God keeps us in being; to God we go at the last. IS o man made himself. And no man has lived long in this world without becom ing aware that he is set in the midst of vast, mysterious, uncontrollable forces. Nature is but the garment of God. All motion is but the movement of God. Back of every fact in nature, in history and in human ex perience, we come to God. And after death is God. The first step in the argu ment is the Human soul; and that means the divine soul, God; and God must be supreme. Over all and in all is God. . Christ said that the most important thought that anybody can think is a thought about God; aud that the supreme human du,ty is our duty toward God. "Whoever leaves God ont of his reckoning goes adrift inevitably. It is more important immeas urably to reverence, to fear and to love God than U is to tell the truth, to conduct an honest business, to visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, or to keep one's self nnspotted from the world. No amount of obedience paid to the last six command ments can make up for any man's neglect of the first four. JSo amount of devotion to the second of the two Commandments of the Gospel can take the place of disregard of the first No man is living a right life, no mat ter how upright or how honorable, who lays the emphasis of his endeavors upon honesty and is contented to let religion go. You may think of your neighbors all day long and spend your whole time in the effort to be a helper, an uplifter, a bringer of good into the dark places of a bad world; you may be the best of benefac tors, the most public-spirited of citizens, the most devoted of all men in your love for your family, perfectly straightforward, immaculately honorable, the soul of virtue, the mirror of all human graces but if you leave God out, do not think of God, do not pray to Him nor worship Him, do not love God, you have, after all, left out that element of human life that gives it value. Your life is like a clock without an hour hand; all that busy ticking, swinging does not count THE IMPORTANCE OF FAITH. That is a hard saying. But you know the emphasis that is laid in the Bible upon faith. Again and again in various wayswe are earnestly assured and warned that with out faith it is impossible to please God. And faith what is faith? Not an accept ance of the statements of the theologians. No; faith finds a good definition in the "great commandment" That is what it is; to do that to love God with all the heart, and -soul, and mind. Faith, whatever mean ing we attach to it is pre-eminently con cerned with God. That is perfectly evi dent Nobody will say that faith and morality are the same thing. Faith is the heart of religion. It is, of conrse, as plain as day, that the fruit of faith is all manner of good living. Nobody can possibly believe in good and love God without desiring in everything to please God. And God has left us in no doubt that there is no way in which we can please Him better than by keeping His com mandments, by doing His will. And the supreme commandment which follows that which sets our love toward God, prompts us to love our neighbors as oursalves. It is indeed impossible, in the nature of things, to love God without loving our neighbor, to have faith without works. The very sign and proof of Divine love is human love. No man is a godly man unless he is a good man. So strong is the bond, indeed, between faith and works, between goodness and godliness, that we hope that the first is a proof of the planting of the right seed, that the good life indicates a good heart, and that the man who Teally loves his brother loves his heavenly Father also. IT'S THE MOTIVE THAT COUNTS. But the difference between the second of the commandments of the Gospel and the first lies just in this: That God looks at the heart rather than the hands, accounts the motive as the part of the deed that de termines its value, and cares supremely for man's love. The distinction between two good deeds, which sets one immeasurably above the other in the estimation of God, is that one good deed is done for the pleasure of the doer while the other good deed is done for the pleasure of God. One man did his good deed never thinking about God at all, leaving God altogether out, as if there were no God. The other did his good deed desiring to please God, because it was the will of God, out of love for God. That is not hard to understand. Every father and mother knows the difference be tween an obedience whieh is meant to please them, and an obedience which disre gards them altogether. The parent desires the love of the child, wants the heart of the child, measures the value of obedience by the love that lies behind it And so does God. That is why the love of God is the subject of the great commandment Because God, as Jesus Christ revealed Him to us, stands in a personal relation to ns, a relation of which that between a parent and a child is but a faint symbol; God loves us every, one unspeakably. And God wants us to love Him. No wonder that without faith it is impossible to please Him. God is foreyer looking for our love. God forever finds a lack in every deed which shows no love. Ont of all that we can give Him, this He sets highest, that we love Him. WONDER OF THE DIVINE LOVE. Do not think that God has no love tor the unloving, that He turns in the least away from any man who looks out and not up, and loves his neighbors more than he loves his Father. Do not think that God does not take account of every good thing that He can possibly find in the remotest corner ot the most lorgettui neart uou Knows the whole soul of every man that breathes. God alone can tell better even than the man himself can how much real love for Him is hidden away in the deeds of a man's life. But do not think that God will ever care more for aman's money than He does for his motive, that He will ever look at the out side and not at the inside, that He will ever exalt a man's love for His little circle of temporary neighbors above the love which He Himself asks of the heart, and soul, and mind of every man, that He will ever re verse the order of the two great command ments, and set morality in the place of re ligion Wonder of wonders, that God shonld so love us! What is there in the world more wonderful except the faintness of our love to HimI George Hodges. The Coarse or Empire. Tho poet informs, is westward. Emigrants in that, direction should be provided with Hostotter's Stomach Bitters as an antidote to malaria, the bane to newly settled clear ings. Moreover, the peerless fortlrying agent neutralizes the pernicious effect of dump and exposure, "mental and bodily latigne and nervous strain. Traveler, tour ists, miners, navvies and mariners use it with advantage. Store and office furniture to order. Haugh & Keenan, 33 Water street sa A KOVZL B0BT 07 7USL.' GreatHeat From Air Directed Upon an tar candescent Substance. Htw Tork Son. J The recent advocacy by some of the ntt of atmospheric air as fuel is pronounced one of the most remarkable results of modern experiment with one of the essential ele ments of the universe. As Is well under stood, air is mixed with coal gas and with hydrocarbon vapors, and the compound when burned generates a much greater heat than if the air was absent so, too, a power ful air blast is a great economizer In smelt ing and reducing ores. The new fuel" however, is the air Itself, which in a powerful blast is directed upon an incandescent substance say, coal mads white hot, pure carbon, or any other mate rials that can be made to glow. Coal hydro carbons, or what not, may be employed tc 'give the initial incandescence, but once the blast strikes the luminous body, the utmost intensity is secured of heat, apparently by the combustion of the air, and maybe main tained for an indefinite period; this is ac complished by merely preserving the incan descence of the surface a result brought about by a slight manipulation of the sur face thus in an incandescent state, and with some slight renewal of carbonaceous mate rial. AN OLD STYLE GE0G3APHT. Curious Questions In a Text BooJcTVrtttea In the Eighteenth Century. IteUglo-Pollosophlc&l JonrnaLl A curious relic of pedagogy In the mlddli of the eighteenth century has been brought to light in Germany. It is a geography edited by Gottlieb Enderfelder, rector of the Friedland High School, for the enlight enment of the students under him. He begins imparting geographical Information by means of answers to supposititious ques tions. Q. What did Satan sho-tr ths Lord on the map? A. All the kingdoms ol tha world and their glory. A few pages further the learned rector turns to the details ol the science in ques tions and asks: Q. Which wine receives its name from leather sacks. A. Sec. Q. Why? A. Because It Is carried in. I put her wiiptc n Q. What do the women of Bayonns pet instead of lap dogs? A. Pigs. Q. How are the streets of Genoa built? A. So narrow that two women in their big skirts can hardly pass each other. HEiNO ft Home Comfort. 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