KIPLING IN VERMONT, A Pen Picture of the Bleat New England Hills in a Blanket of Snow. DRIVING ON AN OX-TEAJL Jealousies and Internal Dissensions of a Typical Village. SLEIGHING H THE HOOXLIGHT. Itsajing Enovshots and Listening to the Tales of a Woodsman. A GLIMPSE OP MOKADJfOCE H0UKT1ET pTBITTEV POB THE DISPATCH.! After the gloom of gray Atlantio weather our ship came to America in a flood of winter sunshine that made unaccustomed eyelids blink; and the Sew Yorker, who is nothing if not modest, said: "This isn't a sample of our really fine days; wait until such and snch times come, or go to such and such a quarter of the city." "We were content and more than content to drift aimlessly up and down the brilliant streets, wondering a little why the finest light should be wasted on the worst pave ments in the world; to walk round and round Madison Sqnare, because that was full of beautifully dressed babies playing counting-out games, or to gaze reverently at the broad-shouldered, pug-nosed Irish New York policeman. "Wherever we went there was the sun, lavish and unstinted, working nine hours a day, with the color and the clean-cut lines of perspective that he makes. JThat any one should dare to call this climate muggy, yea, even "sub-tropical," was a shock. There came such a man, and he said: "Go north if yon want weather weather that is weather. Go to New Eng land." So New York passed away upon a sunny afternoon, with her roar and rattle, her complex smells, her triply overheated rooms and much too energetic inhabitants, while the train went north to the lands where the snow lay. It came in one sweep almost, it seemed, in one turn of the wheel covering the winter-killed grass and turning the lrozen ponds, that looked so white under the shadow of lean trees, into pools of ink. First SI;lit of an American Cutter. As the light closed in, a little wooden town, white, cloaked, and dumb, slid past the windows and the strong light of the car lamps fell upon a sleigh (the driver furred and muffled to his nose) turning the corner of a street Sow, the sleigh of a picture book, however well one knows it, is alto gether different from the thing in real life, a means of conveyance at a journey's end, but it is veil not to be ovcrcurious in the matter, for the same American who has been telling yon at length how he once fol lowed a kilted Scots soldier from Chelsea to the Tower, out ot pure wonder and curios ity at his bare knees and sporran, will laugh at vour interest in "just a cutter." The jtali of the train surely the great American nation would be lost if deprived ot the ennobling society of brakeraan, con ductor, negro porter, ar.d newsboy, told pleas-ant tales, a they spread themselves at ease in the fmoking compartment, of snow ii:gs i:p on the line to Montreal, of desper ate attacks four engines together and a Enow-plow in front on drifts 30 feet high, and the pleasure of walking along the tops ot goods wagons to brake a train with the thermometer 50 below freezing. "It comes cheaper to kill men that way than to put air brakes on freight cars," said the brakeman. Kipling Takes a Sleigh Hide. Thirty below freezing! It was incon ceivable till one stepped out into It at mid night, and the first shock of that clear still air took away the breath as a plunge into sea Mater docs. A walrus sitting on a woolpack was our host in his sleigh, and he wrapped us in hairy goatskin coats, caps that came down over the ears, buffalo robes and blankets, and vet more buffalo robes, till we, too, looked like walruses and moved almost as gracefully. The night xas as keen as the edge 01 a newly ground sword, breath froze on the coat lapels in snow, the nose became without sensation, and the eyes wept bitterly because the horses were in a hurry to get home, and whirling through the air at zero' brings tears. But for the jingle of the sleigh bells the ride might have taken place in a dream, for there was no sound ot Hoofs upon the snow, the runnels sighed now and again as they glided over an equality, and all the sheeted hills round about, were dumb as death. Only the Connecticut river kept up its heart and a lane ot black Mater through the packed ice. "We could see the stream worrying round the heels of its small bergs. Else where there was nothing but snow under the moon snow drifted to the level of the stone iences'br curling cer their tops in a tip of frosted silver; snow banked high on either tide of the road or lying heavy on the pines and hemlocks in the w oods, where the air teemed, by comparison, as warm as a con eervatory. It was beautiful beyond ex pression Nature's boldest sketch in black and v. hite, done with a Japanese disregard of perspective and daringly altered from time to time by the restless pencils of the moon. Observations on Ox-Drlvlng. In the morning the other side of the pic ture was revealed in the colors of the sun light. There was never a cloud in the sky tuat rested on the snow line ol the Horizon as a sapphire on white velvet. Hills of pure white or speckled and furred with woods rose up above the solid white levels of tbe fields, and the sun rioted over, their embroideries till the eyes ached. Here and there on the exposed Elopes the day's warmth the thermometer was nearly 40 degrees and the night's cold had made a bald and shining crust upon the snow; but the most part was soft, powdered stuff, ready to catch the light on a thousand crys tals and multiply it revenfoid. Through this magnificence, and thinking nothing ot it, a wooden sledge, drawn by two shaggy, red steers, the unbarked logs diamond-dusted with snow, shouldered down the road in a cloud ot lrosty breath. It is the mark of inexperience in this sec tion ot the country to confound a sleigh which you U6e for riding iith the sledge that is devoted to heavy work, and it is, I believe, a still greater sign of worthlessness to think that oxen are driven, as they are in most places, by scientific tivisting ot the taiL The driver, with the red mittens on his hands, felt overstockings that come up to his knees, and perhaps a silver-gray coon skin coat on his back, walks beside crying, "Gee! Haw!" even as is written in the American stories. And the speech of the driver explains many things in regard to the dialect story, which, at its bast, is an in fliction to many. Stories In Swedish or Russian. Sow that I have heard the long, unhur ried drawl of Vermont, my wonder is, not that the Sew England tales should be printed in what for the sake of argument we will call English and its type, but rather that thev should not have appeared in Swedish or Bussian. Our alphabet is too limited. This part of the country belongs to laws unknown to the United States, but which obtain all the world over, to the "Vew England story and the ladies who write it. 3Tou feel this in the air as soon as you ee the white-painted wooden houses. left out on the mow, the austere school house, and the people, the men of the farms, the women who work as hard as they, with, it may be, less enjoyment of life, the other houses, well-painted and quaintly roofed; that belonged to Judge This. Law yer That and Banker Such-an-One. all pow ers in the giddv metropolis ot 6,000 folk over there bv the railroad station. More acutely still do you realize the atmosphere when you read in the local paper announce ments ot "chicken suppers" and "church sociables" to be given by such and such a denomination, sandwiched between para graphs of genial and friendly interest, showing that the country side live (and live without slaying each other) on terms of ter rifying intimacy. The folk of the old rock, the dwellers in the older houses born and raised hereabouts, would not live out of the town for any con sideration; but there are insane people from the south men and women from Boston and the like who actually build houses out in the open country two and even three miles away from Main street, which is nearly 400 yards long and the center of life and population. What Village People Enow. "With the strangers, more particularly if they do not buy their grooeries "in the Street," Which 'means and is the town, the town has little to do, bnt it knows everything and much more also that goes on among them. 'Their dresses, their cattle, their views, the manners of their children, their manner toward their servants, and every other conceivable thing is reported, digested, discussed, and rediscussed up and down Main street. Sow, the wisdom of Yermont,-not being at all times equal to grasping all the problems of everybody else's life with delicacy, sometimes makes pathetic mistakes and the town is set Sudyard ISpttng. by the ears. You will see, therefore, that towns of a certain size do not ma terially differ all the world over. The talk of the men of the farms is of their farms purchase, mortgage and sale, recorded rights, boundary lines, and road tax. It was in the middle of Sew Zealand, on the edge of the wild horse plains, that I heard. ttiis talc last, when a man and his wile, -u miles from the nearest neighbor, sat up half the night discussing just the same things that the men talked of in Main street, Ver mont, 17. S. A, in almost the same words. There is one man in the State now who is much exercised over this place. He is a farm hand, raised in a hamlet 15 or-20 miles lrom the nearest railway and, greatly dar ing, he has wandered here. The bustle and the turmoil of Main street, the raw glare ot the electric lights, nnd the five-storied brick business blocks frighten and distress him much. He has taken service on a' farm, well away from these delirious delights, and. says he, "I've been offered f25 a month to work in a bakery at Sew York. But you don't get me to Sew York. I've seen this place an it scares me. His strength is in the drawing ot hay and the ieeuing ot cattle. The Farm Band's "Winter Soft Snap. "Winter life on a farm does not mean the comparative idleness that is so much written of. Each hour seems to have its GO minutes of work; for the cattle are housed .and jeat eternally; the colts must be turned nut for their drink, and the ice broken for them if necessary; then ice must be stored tor sum mer use, and then the real work of hauling logs for firewood begins. Sew England de pends for its fnel on the woods. The trees are '"blazed" in the autumn just before the fall of the leaf, felled later, cut into four foot lengths, and as soon as the friendly snow makes sledging possible, drawn down to the woodhouse. Afterward the needs of the farm can be attended to, and a farm, like an arch, is never at rest. A little later will come maple sugar time, when the stately maples are tapped as the sap begins to stir, and beringed with absurd little buckets (a cow being milked into a thimble gives some idea ot the dispropor tion) which are emptied into caldrons. Af terward (th's is in the time of the "sugar-ing-off parties") you pour the boiled syrup into tins full of freshsnow, where it hard ens, and you pretend to help, and eat and become very sticky and make love, boys and girls together. Even the introduction of patent sugar evaporators has not spoiled the love-making. The Over-Supply of "Women. There is a certain scarcity of men to make love with. Sot so much in towns which have their own manufactories and lie within a lover's Sabbath day journey of Sew York, but in the farms and villages. The men have gone away the young men are fight ing lor fortune further "West, and the women remain remain for ever, as women must On the farms, when the children depart, the old man and the the old woman strive to hold things together without help, and the woman's portion is work and monotony. Sometimes she goes mad to an extent w'hich appreciably affects statistics, and is put down in census reports. More often, let us hope, she only dies. In the villages, where the necessity for heavy work is not so urgent, the women find consolation in the formation ot literary clubs and circles, and so gather to them selves a great deal of wisdom in their own way. That way is not altogether lovely. They desire facts, and the knowledge that they are at a certain page in a German or Italian book belore a certain time, or that they have read the proper books in a proper way. At any rate, they have something to do that seems as if thev were doing something It has been said that the Sew England stories are cramped and narrow. Even a far-off view of the iron-bound life whence they were drawn justifies the author. You can carve a nut in 1,000 different ways, by reason of the hardness of the shell. Kipling Tries Some Snowahoea. Twenty or 30 miles across the hills, on the way to the Green Mountains, lie some finished chapters of pitiful stories a few score abandoned farms started in a lean land, held fiercely so long as there was any one to work them, and then left on the hill sides. Beyond this desolation are woods where the bear and the deer still find peace, and sometimes even the beaver forgets that he is persecuted and dares to build his lodge. These things were told me by a man who loved the woods for their own sake and not for the sake of slaughter a quiet, slow spoken man of the West, who came across the drifts on snowshoes, and refrained from laughing when I borrowed his footgear and tried to walk. The gigantic lawn tennis bats, strung with hide, are not easy to maneuver. It you forget to keep the long heels down and trailing in the snow you turn over and be come as a man who tails into deep .water with a lifebelt tied to his ankles. It you lose your balance do not attempt to reco'ver it, but drop half sitting and half kneeling over as large an area as possible. "When you have mastered the wolf step, can slide one shoe above the other deftly, that is to say, the sen sation ot paddling over a ten-foot deep drift and taking short cuts by buried fences if worth .the ankle-ache. The man from the "West interpreted to me the signs on the snow and snowed how a fox (this section of the country is full of foxes, and men shoot them because riding is impossible) leaves one kind of spoor, walking with circum spection, as becomes a thief, and a dogv who has nothing to be ashamed of but widens his four legs and plunges, another; THE how coons go to sleep for the winter, and squirrels, too, and how the deer on the Canada border trample down deep paths that are called yards and are caught there by inquisitive men with cameras, who hold them by their tails when the deer have blundered into deep snow, and so photo graphed their frightened dignity. It was all as new and delightful as the steady "scrunoh" of tbe snowshoes and the daz cling silence of the hills. A View of Honadnock, Beyond the very furthest range were the pines turffcd to a taint blue haze against the white, one solitary peak a real mountain and not a hill showed like a glgantlo thumb-nail pointing heavenward. "And that's Monadnock," said the man from the "West. "All the hills have Indian names. You left "Wantastigat on your right coming out of town." You know how it sometimes happens thst a word shuttles in and out of many years, waking all sorts of incongruous associations. I had met Monadnock on paper in a shame less parody of Emerson's style before ever style or verse had interest for me. But the work stuck because of a rhyme In which some one -was: crowned coeval With Honadnook's cress, And my wings extended Touch the Ease and West. Later the same word, pursued on the same principle as that blessed one Mesopotamia, led me to and through Emerson up to his poem on the peak itself the wise old ciant. "busv with his skv affairs." who makes us sane and sober, and" tree from lit tle things, if we trust him. So Monadnock came to mean everything that was helpful, healing, and full of quiet, and when I saw him half -across Sew Hampshire he did not fail. In that utter stillness a hemlock bough, overweighted with snow, came down a foot or two with a tired little sigh; the snow slid off and the little branch flew nod ding back to its fellows. Vermont Comment on Vat God. For the honor of Monadnock there was made that afternoon an image ' in snow of Gautama Buddha, something too squat and not altogether equal on both sides, but with an imperial and reposeful waist He faced toward the mountain, and presently some men in a woodsledge came up the road and faced him. Sow, the amazed comments of two Vermont farmers on the nature and properties of a swag-bellied god are worth hearing. They were not troubled about his race, lor he was 'aggressively white, but rounded waists seem to be out of fashion in Vermont A.t least they say so, with rare and curiouSoaths. Sext day all the Idleness and trifling were drowned in a snowstorm that filled tbe hollows of the hills with whirling blue mist, bowed the branches in the woods till you ducked; but were powdered all the same when you drove through, and wiped out the sleighing tracks. Mother Sature is beauti fully tidy it you leave her alone. She rounded off every angle, broke down every scarp, and tucked the white bedclothes till not a wrinkle remained, up to the chins of the spruces and the hemlocks that would not go to sleep. Tracks That Heap-pear In Snow. "Now," said the man of the West, as we were driving to the station, and, alas! to Sew York, ."all my snowshoe tracks are gone; but when that snow melts a week hence, or a month hence, they'll all come up again and show where I've been." i. A curious idea, is it not? Imagine a mur der committed in the lonely woods, a snow storm that covers the tracks of the firing 'man before the avenger of blood has buried the body, and then a week later the with drawal ot tho traitorons snow, revealing step bv step, the path Cain took the six inch deep trail of his snowshoes each step a dark disk on the white till the very end! There is so much, so very much to write, if it were worth while, about that queer little town by the railway station, with its life running, to all outward seeming, as smoothly as the hack coupes on their sleigh mounting, and within disturbed by the hatreds and troubles and jealousies that vex the minds of all but the gods. For instance no, it is better to remember the lesson of Monadnock, and .Emerson has said, "Zeus hates busybodies and people who do too much." That there are such a folk a long nasal drawl across Main street attests. A farmer is unhitching his horses from a post op posite a store. He stands with the tie rope in his hand and gives his opinion to his neighbor and the world generally: "But them there Andersons they ain't got no notions of etikwette!" BrjDTABD TTrPT.rwYi. CAUSES 07 TYPHOID FXVEB, A Scientist Cites the Case of the-Sonthslde, Plttiburff, In 1887. Cholera and typhoid fever are typical filth diseases that are communicated through air, food and water, and their origin is generally the result of Ignorance, careless ness or superstition, says Floyd Davis, a Western chemist in the Engineering Maga zine. In the fall of 1887 typhoid fever was epidemic in Ottawa, Minneapolis, Pitts burg and many other American cities, and in every case known to us the disease was traced to polluted water. In Pittsburg the Southside of the city was furnished water from the Monongahela river, and the fever was located in this district Through chemical and biological examinations of the water the pollution was traced many miles above the city to a ravine into which drained the privies of several houses where typhoid fever patients had been located several weeks before. A similar but more noted case than the above occurred in the little mining town of Plymouth, Pa., a few years ago, in which about 1,300 of the 2,000 inhabitants came down with this disease. Investigation showed that a sporadio case of typhoid fever had occurred several miles above the town and that the excretions ot the patient were thrown into the stream that formed the water supply of Plymouth. BEILIHQ EGGS BY WEIGHT. The Idea Is Having a Revival In St Xiools and Has Many Good Points, St Iionls Globe-Democrat. The proposal to sell eggs by weight in stead of by count, as has been the practice in this part of the country since a period to which the memory of man does not go, is being very favorably received. A few years ago when the same proposal was made by shippers who had been accustomed to the plan in the East, and who liked it in cpnse quence, the suggestion was ridiculed, but .InAn .I.A.. 41.A H.ll.a fiF a.lltnM 1..... n.nl. try by weight has been found both practical and convenient, and tne result is a revival of the egg-weighing idea. , Tbe chief gain would be in the expense of cases, which, under the count system, have to be made so as to hold exactly 30 dozen eggs When the system of buying by weight comes into force it will be only necessary to weigh the cases fnll and again when empty, and eggs can be shipped packed in sawdust or any other cheap ma terial. A sew book has been placed In the market called Abstract 01 Instructions on the Violin. It contains instrnctions so very much simplified to relieve teacber and scholar of very mnch hard work, to be If necessary a teir-teadier. The rules and points connected with success are so ar ranged with tho progress to be clearly undcistood and easily remembered. Thorn will be no excuse ' for both teacher and scholar to lead an erroneous course. Every one In possession or a copy of this little work is ready to testify to this effect The author, J. D. Loppentlan, 5719 Penn avenue, E. E., this city, has received the most natterinc recommendations from men who were bard to convince of such facts. Ex- Iierlence of more than 20 years' teaching lave brought this result Sold for tne price of a single lesson. There's No Such w Thing as failure recorded when "taw rencevllle Amber" is used, because it is always uniform In quality. You can't go wrong. sn Bronro time is here. The buss will soon, begin to crawl. Kill them all before thev multiply. Bugino will do it instantly. 33 cents, PITTSBURG DISPATCH, WOODLAND MONAECHS Mighty Elms and Sycamores That Knew Pittsburg's Founders. HATUEFS' CHOICEST HANDIWORK. The Kan Who Planted the Oaks, Had Lord Kelson's PleiU lhat THOUGHTS APB0P0S OP ARBOR DiT. WK1ITAN JOB THE DISPATCH. GERMAN proverb says: ','He that pjants trees loves othersbesides him self." An early and excellent illustra tion of this was "Ulysses, after a 10 years' absenoe. re turning home from Troy and finding his father planting trees. He asked hira why, being so ad vanced in years, he would put himself to the fatigue and labor of planting that of which he was never -likely to enjoy the fruit The good old man taking him for a stranger, paused and gently replied: "I plant against my son Ulysses comes home." This old-time picture of contrasts between the Grecian father and son, also character izes the frequent fact that "men seldom plant trees till they begin to be wise, that is, till they grow old." The Importance Being? Beeognlsrd'. The youth of the present time have it in their power, in this matter of tree planting, to show that old heads may be carried on young shoulders. In 'these days of schools How a Sycamore Wat Saved. of forestry, of governmental reports upon the condition and value of our forests, of papers, and societies, and treatises devoted to" the preservation!- and propagation of our, wealth of timber 'lands, estimated by the tenth census to embrace an area, exclusive of Alaska, equal to 15 States the size of Pennsylvania, and of proclamations of the different Governors formally setting aside arbor days to be appropriately observed by the people, it is no unreasonable to suppose, or too sanguine to believe, that the import ance of this subject of arboriculture is be coming more generally apparent and more practically recognized than ever before. A tree doesn't grow in a day. Foresight and perhaps a generous self-renunciation must have borne their fruits within the hu man breast before the life of the tree has had time to respond with the fruits of its development, whether they be of shade, of timber, of fruit, or of responsive beauty. If ever the clement of time is of the essence of a contract, as the lawyers say, it is so in the case of the planting and reaping of trees. A Good Deed Its Own Reward. And vet, here as elsewhere, there exists that human demonstration of that divine law of compensation, by which a good deed done becomes its own greatest reward; very much on the principle of that inquiry of Emerson's pine tree, in his Woodnotes, as to "Whether is better, tho gift or the Sycamore Near Steubenville. tl Tket n girth. donor?" The kindly spirit that prompted the planting is superior to the mere growth or fruits of the soil, even as the artistic de sign of the potter's fertile mind is of a finer material than the clay which he molds in his hands and forms on his wheel. The far-reaching influence and wide spreading results of one man's teaching and example, in this-general matter of arbori culture, are remarkably shown in the life and by the genius of John Evelyn, Esq., the diarist and author of "Silva, or a Dis course on Forest Trees, and the Propasa tion of Timber in His Majesty's Domin ions," as it was delivered in the Boval So ciety on the 15th day ot October, 1662. It was said of this treatise, by Mr. Wotton, in his "Reflections on Ancient and Modern Learning." that "It outdoes all that Theo prastus and Plinny have left us on that subject, and in respect thereto contains more useful precepts, hints and discoveries, than all the world had till then known from all the observation of former ages." A Side-LIcht'on CIdar. It may surprise some American readers and makers ot cider in this apple region of the "Upper Ohio valley, to know that as Evelyn's Silva 'was first published in 1664, in folio, it had annexed thereto "Pomona, or an Appendix Concerning Forest Trees, in Relation to Cyder: the Making and Sev eral Ways of Ordering it" While, there fore, there may be such a thing as sweet new. cider, notwlthstanding'fhe captivating way with which Wendell Phillips, in hit SUNDAY, APRIL 17. polished oration upon "The Lost Arts" used to graciously state, that "there is nothing new under the sun," it is yet historically evident that cider "was manu factured in England several hundred years ago. The publication of "Evelyn's Silva" is said to have caused the planting of millions of oaks throughout Great Britain, and to have effectually checked the impolitio waste of her forests. Even more- interesting are certain other after-fruits of this action; for it is historically stated that the fleets of Selson were largelv constructed from these self-same oaks. Born in 1620, Evelyn died in the 86th year of his acre. Upon his tomb, at Watton, in Surrey, England, is an inscrip tion, placed there by his direction, capable of being read by us to-day with profit, and An Sim of the Chartiert Tbttey. which says: "Living in an age of extraor dinary events and revolutions, he learned from these this truth, which he desired might be thus communicated to posterity: That all is vanity which is not honest; and that there is no solid wisdom but in real piety.' " The Commnnlon "With Nature. If not of this gentle spirit of whom could it be more fittingly said that "The beauty of nature shines in his own breast?" In deed, there is usually a something in the love of trees and nature which seems to exert a refining influence upon the human heart This is well illustrated id tbe lives of Gilbert White, of Selbourne, Izaak Wal ton, the anglers' saint, and of Thoreau, our American poet-naturalist Perhaps the most interesting of American books upon our native trees, for the general reader, is G. B. Emerson's "Trees and Shrubs of Massachusetts," in two 8vo il lustrated volumes, published by .Little, .Brown Ss Co., of Boston. But the most complete and exhaustive work upon Amer ican trees is one now in course of pub lication by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., of Sew York and Boston. It is Prof. Charles S. Sargents' Silva of Sorth America, and is to be complete in 12 parts at $25 a part, several of which are now issued. Of this grand work the Sew York -Sun has remarked: "Every library which aspires to exhibit the state of knowledge respecting the Western Hemisphere must include this indispensable book among its treasures." It will interest local-readers to know that the Carnegie Library at Alle gheny has subscribed for this noteworthy publication. A Tree Through a Poreh. The citizens of Pennsylvania, from the sylvan character of its name and domain, should take an especial pride in.practicing the science of arboriculture and In observ- John Evelyn, Esquire. ing arbor days. The care which is some times exercised to preserve a tree is dis played in an accompanying illustration of an instance in the neighboring village of Sheridan, where a aycaraore a foot and a half in diameter and twice the height ot the house was saved even though it was neces sary in constructing the front porch to build it around tho tree, the trunk of which pierces both the floor and roof. Two illustrations are given of the big trees hereabouts. Thev are made from photographs taken espe'cially for this arti cle. One Is a large elm in the valley of the Chartiers creek, some two miles up from its mouth and not far below where the Steubenville pike crosses. Some immense elms and sycamores or buttonball trees line the banks of the Chartiers near its mouth. A Tree Prominent In Local History. The elm two miles up is noted among. the oldest settlers of the surrounding section as one of the earliest "corner" or "line" trees of the original surveys. It has been a prominent landmark in local history as far back as the lingering traditions run. Since the writer photographed it last summer it has been destroyed. The oil on Chartiers creek took fire and burned a line of trees bordering the stream at that point, includ ing a neighboring house and this.grandold historic elm. It was about 17 feet in cir cumference, and its age must have been very great Only the remnants of the burnt stump and the hole in the ground once occupied by its roots, along which the. consuming fire ate its way, remain. But the largest one of ail is shown in the view of a giant sycamore on the West Vir ginia side of the Ohio river, onnosite the lower nart of Ktlllhnirilli Tho vnnnffl ladies of the Steubenville Female Seminary tied their handkerchiefs around its massive trunk and thus made the measurement of its circumference (which must have been a fair one), 22 feet and 7 inches. It such trees as these could talk, as the ancients maintained thev could, it would be no idle fancjr for us to believe did we but listen sufficiently close that they would say: Speak not thy speech my boughs among: Put off thy years, wash in tho breeze; My hours are peaceful centuries. OBLtx M. Saktoss. The Women's Friend. "Lawrencovllle Amber" Is one of the best friends a woman has, because she is always able to make good bread, and by thin means is sure to be on the best of terms with her family. bu Strom contains no poison. It could be ewallowea with impunity, but it kills roaobes, bedbugs, etc., quloker than light ning. 25 cents at all dealers. .1 J?,j 1892L CHILDREN OF NATURE. Goat-Skin-Clad Heroes Who Tend Their Mocks in Old Poland. ALMOST 1 EACB OP - GIANTS. One of the Few Peoples in Europe Who So Kot Use Wine or Liquors. THHWEAHD HIGHWAYS OP GALICIA tCORRESFOXDIXCE Or Till DIBFATCH.1 Cracow, Austria, March,31. There are two European Galicias. Each of- these in their peasant life possesses great interest to the traveler. Spanish Galicia, comprising the Northwestern Provinces of Pontenedra, Lugo, Coruna and Orense, will ever hold for me the most tender recollections. Its Gallegan folk are the bravest, most patient and loyal in all the world. They love their rugged mountain land with so passionate a devotio.n that they will ' suffer untold priva tion and (yen death before they will give it up. They become the "Gallegan dog" ser vants of all Spain, Portugal and Italy for half their lives, bearing inconceivable con tumely, sacrifice and suffering that they may finally come buck to their dreary crags and wild and almost sterile -glens to the ownership of a little cabin, a tiny patch of land, and tbe to them blessed right to lay their bones in the same graves as those who have labored, sacrificed and died, in pre cisely the same way, for ages before them. They are dumb folk, but not even a Spanish monarch has ever dared attempt their en slavement The other Galicia is less tender and win some in any of its aspects. It is indeed im measurably more somber and tragic. It is Austrian Poland. The Eape of Poland. - Everyone remembers the history of an cient Poland; its line of warrior kings; its splendid and unrewarded victories for Christianity over the Turks; its great uni versities: even its wonderful medieval liter ature; its kingly commoners and its peas ant kings; and the final treachery of Bus sia's Catherine, which led to repeated dis memberment and partition of old Poland by Bussia, Germany and Austria; with the hor rors of a hundred years of insurrec tion, murder, slavery and despotism that followed. It is all too horrible to dwell upon. Aus tria's portion out of the Polish murder and rapine, Galicia, comprises an area of over 30,000 square miles, bounded north and east by Bussia, on the south by Hungarv and Bukovina, and on the west by Prussia and Austrian Silesia, Fully'6,000,000 souls oc cupy this area. Of these about two and a quarter mill ions are Busniaks interchangeably called Bussinen. Buthenens and Buthenians. whom I shall call Buthenians in these papers, and who are of Russian stock and tongue. A million and a half are Hebrews. The remainder are about equally divided between Austrian and Bussian Germans. Almost the entire nobility are of Polish extraction and'are country loving and livine people. The peasantry are all Poles and Buthenians. It will therefore be readily seeh that nearly the entire inhabitants of Galician-towns and cities are Polish He brows and Germans, the former greatly pre dominating. Fonr Classes of People. To illustrate, this ancient city whose population does not exceed 50,000 souls, con tains 28,000 Hebrews. Lemberg, commer cially the leading city of Galicia, has 60,000 Hebrews among its 100,000 people. And I have the word of a friend, a Canadian resi dent of Kolomea, that among the 28,000 in habitants of the latter city more than 21,000 are Hebrews. Practically, then, Austrian Galicia pre sents for study four classes the Polish and Buthenian peasantry who, while theoreti cally free men, are more slavish than slaves, the ancient Polish nobility who are either rich and great enough to live almost regally in ' Berlin, London or Paris, or home-loving enough to live upon their own estates something after the simple and patriarchal manner of Count Tolstoi, not very far to the north of them; the Hebrews who financially own both peasant and master body and soul, as well as all busi ness affairs of every name and nature; and the military who relentlessly control them all. Austrian rule over its share of fallen Po land, Vhich lor the first three-quarters of a century after its seizure was quite as cruel as that of the Bussian plunderers to the north, lias had the virtue of not having re tained its mare barbarous iniquities. It is still impossible to escape the clang of the saber, the jingle of the spur, the challenge of the sentry and the almost intolerable in solence of tne omnipresent soldiery. The Tory Air Listei in Galicia. These uniformed tyrants are in every rail way carriase or station. They accompany everv coach. They dog the stranger from hotel to countryside and back again with imperturbable "eflrontery. They enter the home at will; and by their godless presence snllv everv 'sanctuary and pollute everv shrine; while spies are so thick swarming among all classes in the guise of officials, merchants, artisans, laborers, peasants and comprising In one ferm or other more than one-twentieth of the entire population that the very air is said to "listen" in Galicia. , Despite all this Austrian Poles of Galicia live in "Im Paradisa" in contrast with their brethren, ten miles north of. the city,, in Bussian Poland. The electoral reform law of 1873 gave the Galician Poles direct elec tions to'the Vienna Assembly, by districts, thus breaking down the old' clannish na tional Polish interests. The Government has wisely encouraged agricultural reforms and awakened an emulative spirit between native Poles and Buthenians and many small but thriving German agricultural colonies. And among other sensible things it has done the one thing which should be first and best done in everv farming com munity in the world built roads that will vie in their endurintr Qualities with the finest to be found in England and New Eng land. A Good Road 700 3111e Lone. Indeed in wandering through Galicia, I am not certain but that I'would count these frand Galician roads as the greatest ot all lessings of all time to tbe peasant Poles. Their general direction has been governed by the 'course of the great chain of Car pathian'Mountains which forms the Hun garian boundary on the south. Away down in tbe southeast corner of Bukovina, over against wild and untrav ersed Bessarabia and wilder Moldavia this freat artery of Galician life and commerce egins. Thence to the northeast it passes through Kolomea, which has recently come into prominence from being the base of operations in the new Galician petroleum fields. Thence, through the valley of tbe Prutn into .tho vallev of the Dniester, it touches ancient Stanislavov, whence it bears north to Lemberg, the central and greatest city of Gahoia. From Lemberg it winds like the Carpathians around to the west and passes through this ancient Polish capital, and tnence on to Moravia and V lenna. On this mighty thoroughfare, lolly 700 English miles in length, are all the great market towns of Galicia; and despite her newer railways which for the most part run parallel with it, pass to -and fro to this day most of the goods and. products which the "circles" of Galicia exchange with each other, the rude products of Moldavia and Bessarabia," the cattle from the great steppes which reach the German and Austrian abbat toirs, the willow carts -of fancy wares from Anstriato Bussia, and all the innumerable and uiraamable goods and wares which are smuggled into Bussia. Btndylns; People From the Eoads. Many highways equally well built run , parallel with this main artery for shorter distances. Three great roads, intersect it from north to south. One in the east runs south from Bukovina into Transylvania. In Central Galicia, another, starting at Lemberg, passes south, cutting through the Carpathian range, to Munkacs, in Hungary. The third zigzags southward from this city, passing into Hungary, through the valley of the Arva, at the western base of the Tatra Mountains; and on this mountain shadowed, forest-fringed, cliff-hung and cascade-tremulous highway, I tramped with cartmen and packmen, soldiers and pil grims, beggars and Gipsies, to the Tatra Mountains to know their strange and un known peasantrv. I am thus explicit regarding the thorough fares of Galicia, because without this, those who travel with me can hardly know Gali cian folk and their ways. Their roads fur nish the outward seeming of their lives and affairs. Upon these roads every form of traffic, threading to and from a score of countries and sharply defined peoples, is seen. From them every variation in out door.daily life, aspect of quaint husbandry, ceremonial between classes, and hint and tint of pecnliarity and color in national fact and feeling, comes close and clear to the traveler upon his legs. And I have no where else in Europe seen such a variety and wealth of roadside shrines. A Cross Set TJp Every Hair Mile, I should think that in the 2,000 or 3,000 miles of the great stone roads of Galicia a huge wooden or stone crucifix, or a tiny brick or stone shrine, might be found oh the average at the distance of every half an English mile. Most of the crucifixes are of wood hewn out of beech or oaken logs. Whether of wood or stone, as if from some great burden, every one leans, and this very leaning lends a strangely suggestive sad ness ana loneliness to tne landscape. They are most frequent in districts near est the Carpathians which form the Hun garian boundary. The Buthenian peasants being of the Bussian stock are all Greek Catholics, and the Polish Galicians are without exception Boman Catholics. They are equally pious, and you can never pass crucifix or shrine without witnessing a group of both in rapt devotion,'many of whom are groveling prostrate upon tbe earth before the sacred reminders of Cal- varv. At Whitsuntide one will see crowds of these simple and pious devotees crawling upon all fours, while trailine huge wooden crosses from their necks and shoulders, around every roadside shrine in all Galicia. At the'little inn where I tarry in Cracow, I made the acquaintance ot a youth of 20 who bad tired of Tatras peasant life, and had come to the great citv to seek his for tune as a kellner or servitor. He had led the dog's life of the city inn long enough to pine for his old mountain home with an un alterable longing. I bought his freedom of his landlord master for 80 marks, and thus secured the most devoted guide traveler ever knew to the shepherd hut homes of the wild and almost untraversed Tatra Mount ains. Glories of a Slonntstn Journey. The glories of this mountain journey were unrivaled. Yild, rugged, grand nature, unchanged from creation by the hand of map, was mine for complete enjoyment This, too, was eatrancingly varied by occa sional simultaneous views of a marvelous character. Our way led mainly along the southern or Hungarian slopes. But now and then my guide, Ludvig, who seemed to move straight as the flight of a mountain bird to his own eerie, brought me to the very peaks of the dividing heights. To the north the country sloped across Galicia along the great Polish plain into Bussian Poland. Winter still held all this land of terror and famine in its steely grasp. Only in Galicia, and especially in some of the sheltered southern valleys beside the Carpathians, were tbe greens and gladness of spring beginning to be manifest To the south another clime indeed another world. Hungary, land of wine and dance and song, encircled by its mighty wreath of moun tain?, and, visible as far as Buda-Pesth, lay spread before our gaze a disk ot throbbing green and bloom. That night we came to Lndvig's people. The reunion was touching and jovful. Be tween 200 and 400 souls comprised this one mountain side band. Phere are 100,000 folk of the same sort in the Tatra range. They are all shepherds, principally goat herds, and the number of animals they care for must reach millions: For about four months of the winter they retire to such towns as Niedzwiec, Jablonka, Neumarkt, Thurdorin, Dunajec, Mdgura, Bepisko and Kriwan although many remain in their huts upon the mountains profiting by wood craft in trapping and snaring animals and birds so filling up and overcrowding the villages that they become winter cities. Grand Phyilqnes Without Alcohol. They call themselves Podhalians. Their language is a mixture or dialect of tb an cient Magyar and the Germanic tongue. Their food is simply oats, either boiled into a thick porridge or made into a thin bread of oatmeal and salt, baked before the coaN like the Scotch "bannock,"goat-milkwhey, the wild mountain fruits and such small game as they can secure in the mountain forests. They neither have nor wish any other. Unlike the Galician peasant, who is a slave to brandy, and the Hungarian peasant, who loves and can secure good and cheap wine, they drink no liquor of any sort whatever, and are huge in frame, hand some in face and physique, robust and powerful, and live to an extraordinary old age. The band which I visited was a fair ex ample of them all. It had just come upon the southern slopes of the mountains from the valleys with its herds, but its members had already built a mountain village of 30 huts. These were of tree limbs, bark and leaves, large and comfortable, but all open ing to the souths All the band, including women, weredressed'in the untanned skins of the goat, with hood? and sandals of the same material. They do not remain long in these sylvan huts, but, as the summer ad vances, leave tnem, never to return to tne same structures, for the higher grazing lands, where new homes are built with each change of location. Each band really comprises one immense family, patriarchal in system, and, as nearly as I could judge, to a'great extent communal in regard to their little gainings. By nature they are full of sentiment, and are rude poets and "artists of no mean quality. The mountain giens around them constantly re-echo their wild and endless vocal melodies, and tne exnltant notes of the cziganok and the splendid enthusiasm of their movements thrill one when on an evening they engage in the czardas, as only these strong-legged mountaineers can whirl and leap in this weird Hungarian national dance. They are Arcadians pure and simple; simple, good and pure. Edgab L. Wakeuak". REDUCEDIN WEIGHT TO OrlB HUNDBED AND TWENTX-NINE FOUNDS By Catarrh in the Head. BEGAIHS "WEIGHT, HEALTH AITD HAPPINESS. The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Corn pan r received the following letter, dated April 1, 1892. The letter is given as a fair sample of many hundred received every week. Anyone doubting its genuineness can write to the address below given and convince themselves: "Gentlemen Beceived your letter of March 23, 1891, also your pamphlet on treat ment of catarrh. I am thankful to be able to tell vou that I am well, and am heavier than I have been for 15 years, for which I give Pe-ru-na the whole praise. I believe Pe-ru-na saved my life, for when I began to take it I only weighed 129 pounds, and now I.weighl68." My friends are all surprised, and remark how'fat I am. I think the Pe-ru-na is worth its weight in gold. I only took six bottles of it, and will never be without it again. I wish vou all good luck. "H. C Tatlok, Champion, Ark." A pamphlet of 32 closely printed pages (no pictures or foolish jokes), giving cause, symptoms and cure of catarrh, acute and chronic, la grippe, consumption, coughs, colds, bronchitis, pharyngitis, sore throat, catarrhal dyspepsia, catarrabal deafness, catarrhal sore eyes, etc., sent tree to any address by The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufactur ing Company, of Columbus, 0. 19 CARRIED -ON A WATE. A Steamer That Stands High and Dry Two Miles from the Coast. THE Y0LCAKI0 CRASH OP 1883. Bniows Washed the Lighthouse Top 130 Feet From ea LeveL FOETT THOUSAND LI7IS WERE LOST iwnrrrEr ron the disfatcb.1 Tourists who visit Satavia, south of the great land we know as the Orient, nowadays are quite out of the fashion if they fail to moke the passage through Sunda Strait, and see all that is left of Krakatau, and the ves tiges of the ruin wrought by the terrible eruption of 1883. It they push up the Bay of Lampong, on the Sumatra side of tho' channel, they are likely to land on the low shores occupied by the village of Telokh Betong, and hire carts for a short jaunt into the interior; and when they have gone about two miles they will pause to take in the curious scene presented in the picture) accompanying this article; for here is seen one of the most interesting results still visi ble of the great wave of Krakatau. There was just one man amid all that wild scene of death and devastation who was not overwhelmed in tbe common ruin. He escaped, whilo 40,000 perished. He was the lighthouse keeper who lived alone on an isolated rock in the strait. It wa3 broad daylight when Krakatau burst asunder, but in a few moments the heavens were so densely shrouded by dust, dirt and smoke that the darkness of midnight covered all the channel. A Ughtbonss' Keeper's Zicape. The guardian of the lighthouse was in the lantern, 130 feet above the sea level. Here he remained safe and sound in the midst of MM ...I, i i yr. -1 1 y0$. Two Miles From the CoitL the terrible commotion. He felt the trem bling of his lighthouse, but it was so dark that Jie could not sec the threatened danger. He did not know that a tremendous wave had almost overwhelmed the lighthouse, and that its crest had nearly touched tha base of the lantern. He did not hear it be cause he was deafened by the awful detona tion ot Krakatau. In a lew moment', however, the wave, over 100 feet in height, had swept along a totoTcoast line of nearly 100 miles on both sides of the channel. Scores ofpopulons" villages were buried deep beneath the aval anche of water. Great groves of cocoanut palms were leveled to the ground. Pro montories were carried away. New bays were dug out of the yielding littoral. Every work ot human hand?, except tnat light house, was destroyed, and 40,000 persons perished in the deluge that mounted from the sea or beneath the rain of mud that filled the heavens. Fate of a Pleasure Steamer. The picture shows a little side-wheel steamboat that was borne on the top of that wave throueh forests and jungle, over two miles into the country, and was left as the wave receded in the position here shown. It will be remembered that for weeks before the final cataclysm at Krakatau, the volcano was in a state of eruption. Pleasure parties were made up at Batavia to visit the vol cano. Not a few people landed on the isl and, little dreaming that in the twinkling of an eye two-thirJ3 of it was to be blown into the air as though shot from a gun. They wished to get as near as they thought they might safely venture to the growling, steaming crater. This littie steamboat, on the day before the explosion, carried one of the parties to the island. There were only 20 on board besides the crew. They spent a couple of hours around the island, and then steamed up the deep and narrow bay of Lampong, and it is supposed they anchored for the night in front of the big town of Telokh Betong, which was one of the largest settle ments on the south coast of Sumatra. Only Two Bodies In tho Coat The ill-fated pleasure party was never heard of again. It is supposed that the boat was turned over and over like an egg shell in the surf. It had every appearaneo of such rough usae when it woslound some months later. The machinery and furniture were badly broken, and were strewn about' in the greatest confusion. But the vessel held together, and was finally set down in good shape, erect on her keel, as she is seen in the picture which was made from a draw ing by Mr. Korthals, a member of the Dutch Scientific party that was sent out to study the effect of the Krakatau ernption. Only two bodies were found in the vessel. They .were, of course, below deck. As it was morning when she was picked up by the wave, it is supposed that nearly every body was on shore. Not a vestige remains of the villages that lined the water edge. But the hulk of this little boat still stands, battered and broken, though as erect as when she plowed the channel, nnd she is the most curious and interesting relic of the greatest volcanic eruption of modern times. Cyeds C. Adams. i WORKS WHILE YOU SLEEP. cures pain where others fail. Worth taking trouble to get SOLO Br DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I CURE FITS! TOiea I S17 core I do not mean ineiclr to stop tana for a tims sad then haTC tiiea retnra again. Imaanft radical ears. I hiTS pade tea djuasa of FITS. EPI LEPST or FALLC'Q SICKSESS a ufs-lons itndy. X warrant nu remedy to euro ths worst cases. Becaos otneis hare faCad Is no reason for not now nostras can. Bond at once for a treatise and a FreoBoUIaot ajjafallibleremad. GlTMSipraa and Port Offlce. -. G. BOOT, M. C.,183 Pearl St., N.TS i. -. 11 w 1 AMW l-ir'r -OrWm$F) vr .izT -LLj-i Fesr i3 f o fX w 3-wm 7-r- W00D's 31 Penetrating 1 PIASTER 9 &&!... j. AaJt.iH IrWafg-iTi tfffri-i-Tnrrl mij sum r