0 LABOR TROUBLES or Twelve Tears in the Great Industrial Army at the Pullman Works. ,000 CONTENTED MEN. ae Town Is Managed on Business Principles From End to End, HILANTHROPI NOT RECOGNIZED. heralitj in the Way of Libraries and Comforts Found to ray. ;del homes i good investment rWlUTTEX FOR THE DISrATCH.! HE conflict atHotne stead between the Carnegie Company and their employes has been so serious as to call attention to the fact that the labor organizations throughout the coun try are becoming more and more an- gonistic to their employers. It has also :en observed that these strikes seem to in in periods. One great strike is gener ally followed by another, and so close is ie union now between all classes of work en that a strike in any one State is eagerly atched and supported by the labor leaders ironghout the country. Thee conflicts cost great turns of money, id often result, as in Homestead, in serious iss of life. Many solutions have been of-" red for the settlement of such disputes, rbitration has been often suggested. But i- to the present time there is no authority 'h enough to create boards of arbitration hich would be recognized. It is possible , jat the matter t ill be taken up at Wash lgton with the view of establishing a Gov rnment commission for the settlement of lbor disputes. It would be an experiment orth trying. "Would it not be better if ach disputes could be avoided altogether? A Corporation That Has "o Strikes. There is a most valuable lesson to be arned in the study of the affairs of the 'ullman palace car corporation. Its man cement never has anv serious trouble -with s employes. There are few corporations "i the world which employ so many men. "here is no corporation in the world which las had less trouble than has this company ith the people employed by it This is .ot the resul' of mere chance, but the out ome of a system. It is, therefore, a sys ein worth studving, in view of the many .ossible disputes between labor and capital rhich may follow the contest at Home tead. The Pullman Company emplovs in its ork at Pullman, I1L, on an average dur g the vi hole year over 6,000 men. In ad tion to this brigade of workmen the 'illman Company" employes upon the ;ous railroads throughout the country n its administration offices 0,000 more .lie. It has in all 12,000 employes. King the average of the families of these eople to be three, this would make some 'j 000 people who are dependent upon the f'ullman system for subsistence. It is with he 6,000 workmen of Pullman that the nost satisfactory results in the way of resu lting labor have been attained. In the iilier branches of the service there, is not tne same possibility for strikes and for labor disputes. An Army of SttHlorf "Workers. In the shops at Pullman there is employed i great variety of workmen. Besides mak ing its own palace cars, the company manu 'actures all kinds of railroad cars, and his rae ot the largest shops for manufacturing street cars in the country. Something of he magnitude of the work is shown, first, sn the number of men employed, and. sec ond, in the enormous output of the shops. In the freight car department one entire irain of car, 40 in number, is manufactured everv day. Two palace cars a week, which involve the most skilled forms of woodwork, carving, painting and decoration, are made, while the vast iron works are constantly f;oing to 11 the orders of the great railroad rnrporations of the countrv which patronize his companv. It has had no strike ot any importaucc since the great general strike in . uca;o following the establishment of the v c-ks at Pullman in 1880. In the town of Pullman and in the works there are be'wecn $7,000,000 and 58,000,000 invested. The capital of the Pullman com panv is now 530,000,000. It has a reserve of 20 odd millions. It is one of the few cor porations of the country that has no great bonded indebtedness. Its stock is quoted above 190, and is chiefly held by in- estors and is not considered a speculative ttock. The Stocti Is in Small noTdingt. Xeither is this stock the property of a few rich people. It is held by many small holders whose principal income is dependent upon the dividends of this stock. The stock payB 12 per cent upon its par value. It has been purchased by trus tees of estates, so that very large holdings of the stock represent ownerships of widows and orphans. The stock has never been un duly watered and has always represented a rood investment to its holders. This lrom the standpoint of a capitalist. The laborers at Pullman are paid the best current wages. The average pay of the workmen in the works is ?600 a rear. The pay ranges from fl 75 a day for unskilled laborers to 57 and $8 a day for the work of specialists, such as decorators, carvers and the like. The pros j .enty of the workmen is also shown in the fact that in the local savings bank there are deposits now reaching nearly 52,000,000. I wish also to call attention to the fact that there is no assumption anywhere in the management ot this company that it is playing the role of a philanthropist toward its employes. The whole system is a busi ness one. " It was established by George 51. Pullman, the President of the company. Mr. Pullman has proceeded upon the theorv that contented, well-cared for workmen wifl do better work than discontented, uncared for men. Everything that he has done for his men has been projected upon a basis of sound commercial principles. Sound Principles From the. Starr. "When he planned the town of Pullman he had it laid out in accordance with scien tific and sanitary principles. In the first place, he began with a bit of virgin prairie and established before he put up a single building a magnificent and uniform system of sewerage. Then followed the roads. Then came the shops and houses. They were all built-upon a uniform system of architecture. The architect, Mr. Beman, is one of the best architects in the West. His good taste and practical abilities as a designer have civen to the town a thor oughly harmonious appearance. These houses are the best that workmen have ever had. They were built under favorable conditions and so can be rented to the workmen at a cheaper rent than they would be required to pay in the alleys or tenement houses ot the poorer quarters of Chicago. And yet the rent pays the cap italist in the form of the company a 5 per cent return upon his investment, and so both interests are well served. The work man has a model house clean, well built, ell ventilated and with great floods of water furnished bv an admirable water.eys teiu, which gives the poorest family of the if'S i.AistJiiM'ii stfsatetfaJaasiiiiMHaMMMatMafr ,?SkiiyaririJV. . . Jk.-.siiaa-l.t..-. Jn unskilled laborer an equal opportunity for wi.uiiiicaa n..u .lie Ulj:uc3. JJB1U UUWGU All Kua on a liasiness Basis. The Pullman company loots after the streets, the sewage and the public.lighting. The sidewalks are also attended to by the corporation. The result is one of the best cared for systems of streets in aurtownin the country. Mr. Pullman has done other thingsor the town. He has built a hand some school building, a church, a market, a great arcade building for shops, in which he has also established a theater as hand some as any in Hew York, and a library, the books being presented bv himselC These represent extra expenditures, yet tney contribute so much to the comtort ana satisfaction of the workmen there em ployed that the company doubtless finds that regarded even as business investments pure and simple they pay. The library especially is of the .greatest adantagc to workmen who wish to im prove themselves. Here will be found all of the best books bearing upon the various trades and industries sought to be devel oped at Pullman. The workmer. are en couraged to come to thip library by every possible means. The regulation are of the simplest character necessary for the preser vation of the library's contents. There is a back room to the" library with a private staircase, where workmen can come in froii their work without changing their dress, as they might feel compelled to do in coming into the large and handsome part of the library. One 1'ollceman Covers the Town. This gigantic experiment at Pullman is one that has attracted wide attention throughout the world. It is the first time that an experiment of this exact kind has ever been attempted There is nowhere the semblance of charity or benevolence. There is no attempt to adopt the co-operative sys tem or to give the employes shares in the profits ot the company. Even the church, which is built in the town, is placed there as a building to be rented by any particular association that the workmen may them selves designate. The workmen are never lectured upon their duties. Mr. Pullman never permits the theater to be occupied by professional philanthropists or lecturers, who have special axes to grind. The town itself has some 12,000 inhabitants. No liquor is sold in the town and one police man is all that is required to maintain law and order. This policeman has probably less to do than any one of the Chicago policemen. Xone of the workmen are permitted to own their houses in Pullman. This is con sidered by many as a hardship. But the Pullman company say that otherwise they could not mauage their property on a uni form and harmonious system. The town is managed as a private estate, and as such it should be criticised and examined. The Pullman company does not require its em ployes to live in the town. Some 2,000 live outside of it. They have all of the advan tages of the town, however, so far as its public institutions are concerned. These 2,000 men have gone outside for the purpose of owning their own homes. The towns of Kosedsle and Kensington, which border upon the Pullman property,have been built up by these employes. The Rentals Are Very Low, But many of the men prefer to remain in Pullman. They say that the low rentals enable them to I've there as cheaply as in their own homes outside. They" invest their surplus in outside properties and so many of them have become quite independ ent. It is true that the leases of the honses in Pullman can be canceled upon short no tice by the company if the tenant becomes obnoxious, but this is never done for any trifling reason. There is nothing ideal about the town. There is is no one there who is not obliged to work as he would in any manufacturing village. There is never any attempt to coddle the workmen. They all live in a state or independence and look to their own mutual aid societies for relief in cases of accident or sickness. The healtbfulness of the town is shown by the character ot the children seen in the streets. Those who are familiar with the pasty complexions, the dark circled eyes of the poor children in the crowded quarters where workmen are generally obliged to live in cities would take great pleasure in studying the character of the children seen in this workingman's town. I spent several weeks in Pullman last year, and I don't think that I saw a single sickly child dur ing my visit. They are all sturdy, strong, rosy and clean, and are always well dressed. The advantages ot theschoolandthe library are very marked. There is no part of the country where children of working people have abetter chance than here. It is from the ranks of these children that the com pany hopes to recruit its best workmen in the future. The Valnn or a Reserve Fund. Very few corporations could afford to set aside such a great sum as was required for the foundation of this village. But the principles of the system it seems might serve with many smaller corporations. "With the Pullman Company it has proved a good investment. It has been the policy of this company to always carry a large reserve. This reserve enabled the company first to construct the town in such a way as to make its foundations solid and its future prosperity certain. This same reserve enabled the corporation to keep its work men busy even during periods of stringency. Railroad corporations, like individuate, are often short of money and would have to cut down their orders if the Pullman Com pany did not stand ready with this reserve capital to extend credit to solvent corpora tions. The car required to keep all of this vast business going is shown by the fact that the wages paid out will average some 5300, 000 a month. It is pleasing to know that this experi ment has been a financial success in many ways. In the first place the model town has paid a good return upon the investment in the way ot rents. Second, the increase of the value of the real estate has been more than enough to give a great dividend upon the investment Adjoining the town and between it and the neighboring ones is a broad strip ot land containing some 3.500 acres. This land, bought originally! an acre, is now worth from f,000 to f5,000 an acre. The town itself is incorporated within the city of Chicago. It has a repre sentative in the municipal council. Its school is a part of the public school system. The workmen are not interfered with polit ically. Although Mr. Pullman is an ardent Republican the town often goes Democratic. The Strike Twelve Tears Asa The most interesting feature, however, is the fact that the prosperity of the place has rarely been shattered by strikes. And even then they have been so mild in comparison with outside strikes as to justify the as sumption that ihe cause was not a very great one. Early in the history ot the town, uhich was established in 1880, there was a general system of strikes in Chicago. The workmen in many of the mills and shops were as savage and determined as were the strikers at Homestead, In some ot the mills in South Chicago their owners did not dare to venture among their workmen tor lear of being lynched. A general strike was ordered all round, and this included the Pullman works. Mr. Pullman was then somewhat dis couraged. He had labored honestly for the interests of his company and his workmen. He went hiineeU among the strikers and re ceived the delegation. He talked to them for upward of an hour as one trieiid would talk to another. He made no sentimental appeals to tbem. He simply discussed the business principles of the situation. He asked them to show him just what they hoped to gain by such a course. They were employed by a corporation which sought to deal honestly and fairly with its employes. He called their attention to the fact that he was originally a poor man with his own way to make, and that he had risen to his pres ent position simply by following the line of his duty by doing in the best possible way what he had in hand. It was a plain busi ness talk. After that there was no further conference. The works were shut down for the first and last time in their history. They were closed for nearly a week. It Looks Lite a Success. During that time there were some dis cussions and some meetings of the working men, but there were at no time any threats and no demonstrations were made against the manager ot the company. Even during that whole period the striding workmen, who had gone out not because ot grievances of their owu,but in accordance with the wishes ot the labor leaders in Chicago, would to a man have rushed to the protection of the property of the company it any one had sought to injure iL There is to-day a good business feeling be tween the employes of this company and its managers. There is nowhere any semblance of sentiment Mr. Pullman , is a frequent visitor at the shops and is constantly going through the works, where the workmen ad dress him at any time if they want any thing as they would a friend. There is nothing like subserviency or cringing. All classes and nationalities are employed here. The American-born workmen are the most skillful and ingenious. The Swedes are considered perhaps the steadiest. There has never been any attempt upon the part ot the company to control the private actions of their workingmen. Nearly all of them belonged to unious when the works were 'first established. Some of them do yet. But in the main the workmen there are not members of any union. They have found that there is no necessity tor any combination to protect their interests at the hands of the Pullman companv There is nothing in the system itself which would prevent its being ap plied to the management of any corporation in the country. It is possible that Mr. Pullman has found the solution of the labor question in the way he manages his own men. His system has been the subject of much criticism, but its unbroken success during a period of over 12 years justifies Us originator's plan. T. C. Crawford. THE BEGINNING AND THE END. The Horning Ilonr of a Tonne "Woman's Llfo as Seen in an Opium Dream. Chicago Tribune. An old and wrinkled woman, shivering over a scanty fire. The wind shrieks like a mad thing around the rattling windows, then rushes off into the night, only to re turn, and with redoubled fury rend at the quaking casements. The snow has sifted through one corner of the roof, and sprinkles with its diamond dust the one thin coverlet of 'a bag of straw which does duty as a bed. The withered crone pulls the ragged rem nants of a shawl more closely about her lean shoulders and fills a long pipe with some brown snbstance she draws from a pocket hidden somewhere in her rags. The opium fumes steal over her and fill the wretched hovel, and in them this is what she sees: A large and beautifully-furnished room, although the fast-thickening veil of twi light is settling down upon the luxurious divans, the embroidered screens, and the soft rugs and half obscures them from view. The wind, heavy with the perfume of near water lilies, strays through the open case ment and out again to murmur in the thiok leaved branches silhouetted against the darkening sky. A nightingale somewhere in the wood is mourning to the wind. Now the Eastern horizon pales at the ap proach of the queen of night. Concerted stars grow dim. The silvery rays light as, with a halo the red-gold curls of a little maid framed in the window seat. Toward the West the dark river turns on its way, and it, too, bears a silver gleam on its crest. There is a face shining through the gloom within the room, framed in shadows like a dream picture, and light fingers sweep the strings of a guitar. Outside the mightier gale mourns to the wind and the odor of lilies weights the air. The fire has gone out. The opium pipe will never be smoked again. A motionless heap of rags in the corner. The war of the elements rages on in the black battle ground of the skv. AN OLD CURIOSITY 8H0F. The Place in York Where the Belies of Unknown Men Are Kepr. Xew York Morning Advertiser. - " "When a person who hasn't a known legal .heir dies in this city bis effects are handed over to the Public Administrator under the law, and are retained by that official nntil the city's right to dispose Of them is made clear. The storehouse is a three-story brick building, directly opposite the site of the old sugar house that played such an im portant part in the early history of the United States. One part of the building is used as a depot by the fire department If there is an old curiosity shop anywhere in New York City it is in No. 5 Duane street. The two floors of the building are jammed full of personal effects. Some of the things are practically without value, and some are strange articles that might have "millions in them." A number of poverty-stricken inventors have died in New York in the past few years. In nearly every in stance they were men well advanced in vears who had lived aloue and were un known outside an exceedingly limited cir cle. Their relatives, it they had any, were distant cousins whose whereabouts were unknown and whose existence was, perhaps, in doubt. Nearly all these men left scanty ward robes, a small amount of money, a few books, and usually a model of something which they had hoped would astonish the world and secure for them unlimited means and great honor. With their death died the idea. The models in every instance proved to be unique mechanical devices, bnt of no value beyond that which the wheels and springs and other contrivances were worth if removed. If some of the old-fashioned clocks or quaint pictures that have been stored in the Duane street building could but speak they might tell some interesting tales of long lost brothers and men who were the last of their race. A LOT W0ETH A MILLION. Euro Signs of How Talnes in the Windy City Are Increasing. Chicago Mill. Just 60 years ago to-day the lot where the Chicago Opera House stands, at Clark and Washington streets, one of the most central in the city, was sold for the sum of f61 lawful money wildcat currency being re garded lawful in those days it you could get anybody to accept it. The lot, which will soon be worth a million, was sold by the Commissioners of Cook county to John Noble, JuneiH, 1832, for less than an extra good suit of clothes would cost now. The Noble family still have the original deed in their possession. It is well not to forget such evidences of our progress, prospects and opportunities. Many boys, and even young men, are now living in Chicago who will be living here 60 years hence, and who will sea more remark able and surprising changes and greater in creases in property values than the Opera House lot shows. This lot is now worth $7,000 or f 8,000 a lront toot, or probably 600,000 to 5700,000. Chicago is destined to have 5,000,000 or 6,000,000 people it will be the London, while New York will be the .Liverpool of America. There are millions yet to "come and millions of money to be made in Chicago real estate. Dancers From Eagles. The gigantic bald eagles of Duncan Mills, near Cazadero, CaL, have been mak ing it very lively for. certain kinds ot live stock and fowls in that vicinity. Pigs, full grown Shanghai chickens and even calves have been carried away in the talona of these great birds. All the sportsmen of the vicinity are keeping their rifles loaded for the big eagles. FITS All fits stopped free bv Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. So fits after first day's use. liar velous cares. Treatise and f- 00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Dr. Kline, SUlArcli St.. full., fa. (a Lies' photo studio, 10 and 13 Sixth street, first-class work, moderate 'prices, prompt delivery. Bring the babies. bu THE BAPTISMAL RITE. At One Time There Was a Great Dis cussion of Regeneration. THE CHURCH WAS DIVIDED ON IT. In the Clearer Light of To-Day the Word lakes a Broad Meaning. EEAHiI A CHANGE OP ENVIRONMENT twarrraN for thb dispatch.! Once upon a time, there was a great deal of discussion about baptismal regeneration. Over In England, by reason of the remarka ble intermingling of politics and religion which they have in that country, the con troversy got into the courts, and was de cided one way or the other, I have forgotten which. I believe that the discussion af firmed the right of people to hold an opin ion in the matter which was not the theory of all the other people. It was made per missible to have mor-, than one theory about baptismal regeneration. That old disputation tangled up the the ologians in this country and even led to the separation of certain particularly enthusias tic controversialists from the church of their birth, and to the setting up of another addi tion to the long and not very honorable list of denominational divisions. I wonder if they still know as much as they did then about baptismal regeneration. The little church which they built here for the de fense of their opinion about that matter has long since been turned into a tenement bouse, and the denomination which was founded upon that corner stone is not at present making anj great noise in the world. We have turned our attention else where. Not Worth Burning People For. Baptismal regeneration is no longer a "burning question" that is, a question for which Christians, if they had tha power, would be glad to burn each other; it has given place to pretention, which, in its turn, will presently be happily forgotten. Our children will 'wonder how we could have brought so much animosity into our obsolete discussions. Baptismal regeneration ceased to be dis cussed, I know not why. Not because it was accurately defined and permanently set tled. That, as I hope to show, is forever impossible. Probably the good, sensible laity grew weary of the complicated'debate, and began to go to sleep when the parsons touched upon it in their sermons. And so the uproar was ended. The word regeneration still remains in the Bible and in the appointed services of bap tism. After all the clash of theories, here is still the cause of all the misunderstand ings and discussions. Perhaps we can get a clearer idea about it now than the fathers could. The moment of theological battlers not a good time for quiet thinking. We are impelled to take sides, to adopt a partisan position, and accordingly to look at truth from one side only. The Service of Baptism. Let us look at it again. What is meant in the service of baptism when the minister ) bids the congregation to join him in a thanksgiving for the child's regeneration? The word regeneration comes into the baptismal office ont of the third chapter of the Gospel of St. John, and out of the epistle which St. Paul wrote to Titus: "Ex cept a man be born again (regenerated) of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God." "When the kind ness of God our Savior, and his love toward man appeared, not by works done in right eousness which we did ourselves, but ac cording to his mercy he saved us, through the washing of regeneration and renewing ot the Holy Ghost." These passages may or may not hare a di rect bearing upon the sacrament of baptism. It. is sufficient for our present purpose that they have always been recognized as singu larly applicable to this sacrament, and that they have given the Church this significant word in which the benefits of baptism ap pear to be summed up and included. Bap tism is always baptism, whether it be ad ministered to a child or to an adult And the blessing of baptism is indicated by the Episcopal Church in the word "regenera tion." No Doctrinal Definition for It. When we come, "however, to inquire ex actly what regeneration means, the church returns no answer. It ia evident from the use ot the word in Holy Scripture that it was never intended to be the basis of a doc trinal definition. It belongs not to the do main of mathematics, ot logic, of scientific theology, but rather to the world of poetry, of illustration, of the imagination. We ought to know better than to make the mis take of Nicodemus and to try to read it literally. In baptism we are "born again." That is not a statement in physiology. The higher we get in the scale of truth, the more do we become aware of the inade quateness of literal definition. In mathe matics and in physical science it is possible to formulate a description which shall in clude all the facts and leave nothing out; so that we may say: This is absolutely true, and no other statement, differing from this, can possibly be true at all. But try this method with one of Beethoven's sympho nies. It is plain at once that here we are beyond the reach of definition. A thou sand things may be said about this beauti ful music; a thousand attempts may be made to set forth the charm that it has for us, and the delight that it gives us. And yet there is room for more. After all is said, the half has not been told. Nobodv can formulate an adequate definition ot a piece ot music Art and Evolution Defy Definition. We are conscious of the same inadequate ness of language in regard to all the higher truths. No great picture, nor statue, nor book; no great emotion, no strong feeling, no supreme joy or sorrow can be adequately expressed in any number of formal sen tences.. Love eludes definition. Patriot ism is above all constitutions and by-laws. These high matters are to be thought about endlessly, with boundless variety in our thinking, with no limit to the possibility ot new discovery. Nobody has ever said, nor will ever say, all that can be said about them. Somehow we are slow to see that the great truths of religion are as incapable of ade quate definition as these other great truths. We are all the time making the mistake of thinking that religious truth is truth of a low order, that it belongs with physics and arithmetic, that the creeds and the sacra ments are like sticks and stones, and the words of Christ like the statements of the multiplication table; whereas, religious truth is ot the very highest order, and be longs with music and poetry, and art, and patriotism, and honor, and love, absolutely out of the reach ot any adequate definition. The good theologians of the Middle Ages were quite sure that the Inquisition was in possession of the whole mind of God. They were as certain of their definitions in the ology as they were of their definitions in science and as mistaken. After all their instructive blunders we are still in search of adequate theological definition. Regeneration Is a Wide Word. Now, the ,word regeneration offers, it seems to me, a way-out of this old error. For here is a wide word, taken out of the world of poetry and capable of innumerable applications. The word regeneration limits no man's thinking. It attempts no theo logical definition. In spite ot all endeavors to get it down into the field of mathemati cal theology it still swings free as the stars. It seta forth no sacramental doctrine. To be baptized is to be born again. , What a boundless area is here thrown open to the devout imagination, to the meditation of the Christian 1 Baptism, the church says, ia regeneration; and the word sets tha door wide for everybody's absolutely untram meled study. One thing is quite clear about baptism; whatever else baptism does it initiates us into the church of Christ It makes us members of Chrjst Baptism is an adoption in the family ot God. It makes us children of God. Baptism is the bringing of 'a hu man soul into the midst 'of spiritual in fluences. It makes us inheritors of the kingdom of heaven. Evidently, baptism is an entrance into the church; and that Is, in a real way, an entrance into a new life. Whatever else regeneration may mean, it may very prop erlymean this. Initiation into this great spiritual society is a being born again. It represents a new enviroment f The Influence of environment. It is not easy to over-estimate the influ-1 ence of environment. The difference Is im measurable which results from the bfrth of one child into one family and of another child into another and very different family. The chances are enormous that 'the family environment will absolutely shape and de termine the child's destiny. In a wider field, see what environment does in the' de velopment of nationality. There is an actual difference, not to be accounted for by any considerations of geograhy or of his tory, between a Frenchman and an Englishman, between an Italian and a Russian, between a citizen of Pittsburg and a citizen of Constantinople. This difference is due to the influence of environment Now, baptism puts a child into a certain environment The child is made a member of the Christian church. Henceforth he is to be surrounded by Christian associations. Promises are made, as a condition of ad mission, that all pains will be taken to train him up in a Godly and Christian life. The change which has come upon thischild, as compared with auother, left in the irre ligious world, is like a removal from Tiui buctoo to London, or like an adoption out of the slums into a cultured .home. Of course, the child may not be receptive of these uplifting influences, or there may be some defect in the application of the in fluences, the church or the child may be at fault; but, iu a majority of instances, this change ot environment, of which baptism is the sign, will and does amount to a new birth. It deserves the name regeneration. The Symbol of New Environment. Some of the illustrations of baptism given in the New Testament show how this mean ing of it was in tho minds of the earliest Christian teachers. A company of He-. brews, under cover ol a great storm, tne wind making a way for them through the water, cross over from Africa to Asia. St Paul says that this is a good illustration of baptism. What chauge did that flight across between the two shores make? Evi dently a change of environment 'Upon the other bank arrived the Hebrews, just the same Hebrews, speaking the same language, looking out of the same eyes, possessing the same infirmities of temper but changed in environment Behind them, Egypt, with its slave whips and idols; before them, the free wilderness, Sinai rising up in the midst of it Those Hebrews were saved when the Bed Sea closed in behind them. Yes; poten tially salvation made possible for them; but no salvation insured to them thencefor ward, no righteousness given to them with out being first earned by hard endeavors af ter it In the end a great proportion of those who were thus saved were lost lost because they did not make good use of their changed environment The Church and the World. Baptismal regeneration may mean a great' deal more than this. The more we stndy it the more meaning we will discover in it But this is enough, I think, to make plain a good many hard sentences. As, for ex ample, that "All men are conceived and born in sin and none can enter into the kingdom of God except he be regenerated and born anew of water and of the Holy Ghost," and therefore we are to implore Almighty God "that of His bounteous mercy He will grant to this child that which by nature he cannot'have." This is a com parison of the two environments, -the world and the church, the kingdom of sin and the kingdom of God. By nature, that is, out in the irreligious world, there' are a thousand graces and virtues; that we cannot have, any more than there can be culture in a slum. We want to bring this child within touch of these spiritual influences which are to be found in the environment of the church. Then, again, in such an address as this to sponsors: "Dearly beloved, ye have brought this child here to be baptized; ye have prayed that our Lord Jesus Christ would vouchsafe to receive him, to release him from sin, to sanctify him with the Holy Ghost, to give him the kingdom of heaven and everlasting life." The sponsors are assured that their prayers will be answered. But at once follow certain conditions. It Carries With It Responsibility. The sponsors must train up the child to renounce the devil, to believe the creed, and to keep the commandments. Tha bless ings of baptism, accordingly, are potential. They depend upon the lite. All this will be given, if obedience and faith are given. Baptism is an act of immense importance, because we attribute to it the possibilities of the futnre, just as birth is an occasion of rejoicing because we endow the child in our thoughts with manhood or womanhood. The newly born has not attained to any thing but the possibility of growth; ueither has the newly baptized. The words of the service are not the words of attainment, but the words of hope. Fortunately the benedictions of baptism do not depend upon the accuracy of our theological information. We get the bless ing all the same whether we understand what it is or not All our study, all onr controversy, will not change the natnre of baptism. We may be sure that God has her a greater blessing than any of us know. The doctrine of baptism and the blessing of baptism do not go of necessity together. Doctrines depend upon men's spiritual insight As we grov we come to know more, and to see more, and our doc trines change. That doctrine of baptism is most in contradiction to the Christian spirit which says: "This is the one true and final explanation;" and leaves no room ibr any, further Christian thinking. George Hodges. A OIHLS' SMOKING CONTEST. George IT. 'Wanted to Know 'Who Could Best enjoy a Cigar. Pearson's 'Weekly. The wild recklessness and extravagance of George IV. have become proverbial in history. During one of his carouses shortly after his coronation, he, in a semi-intoxicated state, commanded that six of the palace chambermaids be brought before him. The order was obeyed, whereupon the King, turning to his associates, asked them to make wagers upon the ladies as to which one would smoke the most cigars in half an hour. Upon hearing what was expected of them, two or three of the maids endeavored to beat a hasty retreat from the royal presence, but were prevented from doing so by the attend ants. A box of mild cigars was produced, and each chambermaid bidden light and smoke one. The ludicrous manner in which most of them attempted to light the weeds caused the most boisterous merriment among the courtiers, in which the monarch heartily joined. With the exception of one maid the rest tried to light their cigars without first outting ofi the end. Only one succeeded in struggling through a whole cigar, but she had to be removed in a fainting state. The others refused to smoke more than half of theirs, to the great annoyance of the king and his courtiers. A Curious Calculation. An English scientist has made a calcu lation about the time it will take to fill the world with all the people it will hold. The present population of the globe is about 1,497,000,000, and he estimates that the maxium of the inhabitants thai can be sus tained on the entire land surface is 0,994, 000,000. and that this figure will be reached A. D. 20T2. Boachts, bedbugs and other insects are conspicuous by their absence in honses where Buglno l used. U cents. a WOES OF A HUSBAND. Flayed the Role of Victim in a Little Discnssion of Burglars. A BOARDING H0DSE EPISODE. Catastrophe Caused by Drowsiness and YiTid Imaginations. M0KAL SUASION IX TWO DIRECTIONS rcoTtBisroirDiiKCB or the dispatch, i New York, July 22. We were sitting on the steps of the boarding house, a dozen or so of us. The landlady had just told a story, which had been pronounced good by such of us as were behind with our board money. The story related to a daring robbery that had been perpetrated in the boarding house across the way. It appeared that some hardened sinner had entered the house in 'broad daylight, "re gardless of his reputation," as our landlady maliciously added. He had taken things very coolly, and among the things which ha had taken were various articles of jewelry which had been rather suspiciously worn by a lady with supernaturally light hair. The burglar had remained in her room nearly an hour and had collected every article of value which she was not wearing at the time, but as she generally wore nearly all the jewelry that she owned, he was short a couple of dozen rings and a watch. Perhaps he was feeling sorry for this, when suddenly and unexpectedly the lady returned and caught him in the act Thereupon she fainted dead away and the burglar removed from her inanimate form those trinkets which the poor fellow might have missed if she had not come back just in the nick of time. The Burglar Was SiUIsfloJ. Some of the gentlemen of our party said that this was rather rough on the lady, but most of our boarders of the weaker sex seemed to think that it served her right for what I did not ascertain. The landlady simply remarked that the burglar was the only person she had ever known to visit that house and come away satisfied with what he got in it This story introduced the general subject of burglars, and the ladies began . to tell what wise and vigorous action they would take in an emergency similar to that which had been too much tor their neighbor. Their methods of actions differed one from the other, but they were alike in this that they left the burglar no earthly chance to escape We Close on the Burglar. with his life. One of them said she would grasp her husband's revolver, etc., eta, but when I asked her which end she would grasp it by, she was unable to state. Another told bow she had once dispersed three tramps by hurling a flatiron at them. This missile had severely wounded the fourth tramp who was approaching from another direction, finally, an intellectual young woman who had recently been graduated from an advanced educational institution (and had married a man who didn't know whether "Hamlet" was written by Shakes peare or Lanra Jean Libby) spoke up in contradiction of them all. She said it was a mistake to resort to violence in such cases. Moral suasion was much better. She knew how it worked because she had had experi ence with the most hardened ruffians on the face of the earth, having taught school in an Eastern seaport town, where, in her opin ion, the boys followed piracy as a trade in vacation time. An Intellectual Woman's Method. She said that if she found a burglar in her room she would politely ask him to sit down. She would then explain to him the enormity of his crime and its inevitable consequences. She would show him that riches acquired in such a way could not bring any real and lasting joy to their pos sessor. She outlined to ns fully the argu ments she would use, add I was of the opin ion that if any burglar took them all at one dose he would not be in a condition to re sist arrest, and in any case a teir quiet years in the penitentiary would afterward appear to him as a blessed relief. ' We talked about this grewsome subject for about two hours, and, when we were done, I think no lady in the party expected to find fewer than seven masked "men in her room when she went no to bed. Only she who had advocated moral suasien preserved a semblance of calm. We dispersed on the stairways and went to our several cages. I had just reached mine when an unearthly shriek rent the air. I rushed downstairs and most of. the others did the same. Two ladies, however, went down on the rear fire escape, and another got into bed and pulled the clothes up over her head. The Moral Suasion Woman Excited. On the lowest flight of stairs I was over taken by the advocate of moral suasion, who passed me in a canter, and, meeting the land ladv in the hall, threw both arms around her sneckand burst into tears. "Oh, .Mrs. Crowley, ' she sobbed, "there s a man in my room."' We were most of us in the hall by this time, and we all talked at once. The only other man besides myself went out to find a Eolicemau, and I think he has not lound im yet It devolved upon me, then, to do something. 'I, therefore, as a preliminary measure of prudence, asked Mm. Hawkins (the lady who had discovered the burglar) whether she thought, from the appearance of the intruder, that there was any danger of his coming down stairs. At this awful suggestion she released Mrs. Crowley's neck and ran down into the kitchen, where she affectionately embraced the cook,whom, no longer than dinner time, she bad reviled. This gave me an idea. I remembered that there lurked below stairs a somewhat tough young man who waited on the table. The violent manner in which he was accus tomed to brandish a loaded soup plate over a boarder's head marked him for one who was utterly reckless of human life. Evi dently he was the man to lend an attacking party" I went down to negotiate with him and all the ladies screamed "Oh don't leave us alone," and tumbled down the stairs after me. ," ' 1 be Tongh loanjr Man to the Rescue. A brief interview with the tounh young man convinced me that my confidence in him had not been misplaced. A burgularin de house?" said he. "Say, young feller, just watch me while I break his jaw." At the mention of this desperate deed the woman who had spoken of her husband's revolver in our hypothetical conversation on the steps fell on her knees and implored me to avoid bloodshed. I' replied that if keping at a safe distance from the scene would contribute to a peaceful settlement I knew of no man likelier than myself to ac complish one. By this time the tough young man had prepared himself for the work before him. He provided nimself with a fresh chew of tobacco as a nerve tonic, but declined all weapons, though we offered him nearly everything that there wasin the house. His confidence somewhat revived the courage of the ladies and made them anxious to keep near him, although he led tbem nearer to the scene of danger. Now, while all this was going on, the man who had caused all the trouble might have ascended to the roof and walked to Harlem over the housetops, or he might have walked down the front stairs without molestation from anybody. But he had made no sign. Mrs. Hawkins had no doubt that he was the same man who Had entered the house across the way. and, remembering the proof he had there given of being a most deliberate and painstaking thief, she pic tured him stowing away all her treasures while we delayed. She was now somewhat calmer, and was able to give a partially coherent description of the villain. It was How She Would Make Him Weep. so dreadful that even the tough young man' was visibly moved. He bit off another fiiece of tobacco and admitted that be would ike to have a good, reliable club. But his disposition was naturally too prone to strife to admit of his losing the chance of a fight. He advanced np the Irout stairs and we followed in his wake. The Ton;h Won a Signal Victory. As we marched up the stairs I took a po sition at the end of the column, where I could cheer the faint-hearted and drive de serters back into the ranks. Thus it hap pened that when Billy Murphy, the tough young man, entered the third floor front room. I was not above the second story. When he pushed the door open the excite ment among our boarders reached such an uncontrollable frenzr that they all yelled in unison and rushed" madly down the stairs, bearing me with them. From above there came presently the noise of conflict, and then Billy was heard coming down the stairs with a heavy tread, and dragging something after him. "Say, I did him up," said Billy. "He wasn't in it, seel De chump was sittin' in a chair, and I give him me right an' left 'fore he knew where he was. Dere's de remains of him, see, an' say dere ain't no flies on Billy Murphy." He cast "his victim on the floor as he spoke. The man didn't appear so far as we could perceive in the dim light of the hall to be capable of doing any further damage, and after a momentary scattering we all rushed toward him. Moral Suasion From the Other Halt. "Suppose you try a little moral suasion," I ventured to suggest to Mrs. Hawkins. But she had something else on her mind. The man had got upon his feet by this time, and was looking around. "What the blooming blazes does this mean?" he shouted. "Has everybody gone clear crazy? Here I go to sleep in my own room, and this big tough breaks my head and drags me down stairs. .Then yon all stare at raa iik e an asylum iuu or idiots. What in ' "Oh, George!" cried Mrs. Hawkins, in a voice choked with misery, "how did you ever get in without my seeing you? It's all your fault for creeping up there alone by yourself." Yes, it was Mr. Hawkins, sure enough. He had got into the house unperceived; had fallen asleep in his chair, and had been mis taken for a burglar by his own wife. When we saw the Hawkinses last that night, the power of moral suasion was being exerted, not by the person who originally advocated it, but Dy old man Hawkins himself. He was trying by a severely logical process, founded on hard facts and a dislocated ear, to convince his wife that she did not know enough to go in ont of the wet Howabd FiixDnro. A CUBE JOB SNAZEBIIE3. An Old Darkey Baa a Concoction Bat Will Mot Give It Away. I have just returned from the southwest ern part of the State, and I saw something there that I believe would surprise the medical men of this city, says a writer in the St Louis Olobe-DemoeraL An old woman had been bitten by a rattlesnake. The poison had begun to ace before they found out what the trouble was and dosed her with whiskey. The patient was delirious and was suffering untold agony. Everybody living near her house went in to see her, and the night I was there an old negro man came in. He watched her face for a time, and at every indication ot pain on the patient's face,his face would assume a simi lar expression. Finally, after watching her face for some time, the old negro started to go. He turned suddenly to inquire what was the matter with the woman. "Snakebite?" ?ueried he, in a loud tone of voice. "Why, can cure dat" He left the bouse, and re turned a few minutes later with a big bottle containing a red liquor with a greenish cast He gave the patient a small glass full ot tbe stuff! and for several minutes afterwards her frame quivered from head to foot The doses were kept ud, and in a few days the woman was on the road to recovery. No amount of persuasion could induce the old negro to tell what his concoction consisted of further than that it was composed of whisky and herbs. Brlcht's Dlsrase of the Kidneys. Will Pe-ru-na cure Bright's disease of the kidneys? The best answer to this ques tion that" can be made is the testimony of the thousands of patients who have Seen cured by it A single demonstration ot a fact is worth many theories concerning it. The following letter is a specimen of what we are receiving from this class of patients: Gilmek, Texas, July 18, 1891. The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Co., Columbus, O. Gents: As my medicine has done me so much good I thought I would write to you and tell you about it. You can publish it if you like. I bought 18 bottles of Fe-ru-na and Man-a-lin, I had Bright's disease and gravel. I owe my life to Pe-ru-na and Man-a-lln. I would not have lived a month longer if it had not been for your medicine. Yours truly, H. G. McCttllotjgh. All persons desiring further details as to the above cure aro requested to write Mr. McCuIIough, who will cheerfully answer all letters of inquiry. There is no form of kid ney or urinary disease for which Pe-ru-na is not a reliable remedy. Gravel, catarrh of the bladder, diabetes, pain or weakness in the back or hips, dropsy, pufnness of the face or feet, smarting, scalding or scantiness are all curable by Pe-ru-na. This remedy can be obtained at most drugstores. In all cases where there is also constipation or ir regularity of the bowels Man-a-Iin should be taken in addition to Pe-ru-nx A new publication on diseases.of the kM neys and all kindred ailments sent free by The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Com pany, Columbus, O. TWISTIS6 IRON rods; A Hew Application of Electricity That Sares Labor and Time. THEFAN FOR THE STAY-AT-HOMES. Poking Incandescent Lamp? Into Yarious farts of the Human lody. THE0WIXQ DICE BT THE CUEEENT rWBITTIJT VOIt THE DISFATCB.I An ontoomo of the increasing use of elec trical heating is the electrical metal twist ing machine. This is used in tbe produc tion of twisted metal bars which are largely utilized for stair rods, fence pickets, office partitions, elevators and other ornamental work. It is found that where the electrio current is employed for heating bar-shaped blanks the metal heats from the interior instead of from the exterior, as in the or dinary blacksmith's forge; also that there are no gases introduced into the metal when it is electrically heated, and consequently when the blank is twisted no scale is formed and the metal is left clear and free from blemishes. Another point which, under the condi tions, is a great advantage, is that the bars retain the electrically produced beat longer than that of the ordinary surface heatinir forge. The metal bar to be twisted is held securely in place by a clamp at each end and a central clamp. The current is then switched on, and in a few seconds that por tion of the metal rod which spans the space between the clamps is heated to a forging temperature, while the parts which are directly in contact with the end clomps re main cool. As soon as the current is switched off the central clamp is released from the bar. A crank at the side of the machine is then turned, the end of tbe bar being still held in its clamp, and the rota tion of this shaft causes the rotation of the bar. The degree of twisting, which is effected in an instant, can be accurately regulated. Lighting Up the Body. A small incandescent lamp now made for ordinary surgical use in examining cavities is mounted on a thin stem containing a spiral resistance, by means of which the brightness of the light can be controlled. This is used with a smr.ll dynamo, with storage or with Lecianche battery. One form of endoscope for searching the more inaccessible cavities ot the body is in the form of a catheter or a rod abont five-sixteenths of an inch in diameter and between eight and nine inches long. At the tip is a minute incan descent lamp, and at a slight bend close to the end is a reflecting prism which, in con junction with a focusing arrangement of minute lenses in the shaft ot the instru-' ment, enables the surgeon to distinctly see the illuminated part Thus the bladder, and even the stomach, mar be thoroughly looked over for diseased spots. It has long been known to jugglers thaty tipping the head well back the route from the mouth to the stomach becomes practically a straight line, so nearly so that they can slide down without injury the straight tube into which they pass the swords. In the same way the physician, after first washing the stomach and filling it with clear water to distend its walls, can pass down the tube fitted with tbe miniature lamp and make a complete search for any abnormal indications. Be sides these minute lamps Incandescent lamps of various sizes are being used in sur gery, especially at the operating table, where, fitted with suitable adjustments and reflectors, they are now almost essential The Telegraph Outdone. The great increase in the use ot the tele phone in England is giving much concern to the Goyernment postoffice, whichjs learfnl that the.spread ol telephtmyMiiaji interfere with its telegraph business. That there is considerable ground for the alarm is certain, as last year tbe telephone companies in Great Britian distributed 160,000,000 mes sages, against a total of 66,000,000 by the postoffice, but it is hard to guess the nature of the proposed remedy. The Government has already a cheap and efficient telegraph service, and if the people find that even with such a service at their disposal tho telephone is better snited to their needs, thejwill talk. their messages instead of writing tbem. According to the present signs the "telepham" will eventually cut out the "telegram." A French journalist advertises that he will telephone in his own language a message of about 400 words for a guinea (21 shillings), the charge for which under old conditions by telegraph would have been 66 shillings, and he evidently makes a good profit out of the transaction. Better Than Human ringers. Some months ago a magnetic separator for extracting iron and steel from bones, oil cake, etc, before putting them into grind ing mills, attracted much attention in Eng land. This machine baa served its purpose so well that it is now used for taking miners' wedges and picks out of coal before grinding for coke making. It consists of a hollow Inclined drum, through which the material is fed. The interior surface pre sents a series of poles, magnetized through half a revolution in such a manner as to pick up and deposit in a tray any magnetio material. It takes abont ten revolntions for any particular piece of material to pass through, and there are ten poles, so 100 chances occur for any piece to be caught It is stated that through one of these machines, which has been in use many months, no( piece of iron has been known to pass, and, irazments of all sizes, from a hairpin to a hatchet head, have been extracted. Gambling by Electricity. The habitual frequenter of the beer saloon is often given in a pronounced degree to tha fascinating practice of "throwing for drinks." Hitherto his gambling instinct has been sufficiently appealed to by the act of shaking the dice box and then making the fateful throw on the counter, but as the age is progressive so is this particular method of coo. netting with Dame Fortune. Instead of using the head, wrist and arm, tho dice thrower can now gamble his fortune away, if need be, by the mere pressure of his fingers. Many places of public resort are being supplied with the electrical dice box, which has five small cupolas of glass, nnder each of which is seen a single dice. Five buttons are arranged in front, and when these are pressed the dice are rapidly re volved and instantly tall into their new position. How to Slake a Breez. The citizen who from necessity or other wise clings to his haunts in the height of summer is coming to realize tB3t a great consolation has dropped into his life in the shape of the" electric fan. One has to look more than once to discover the source of the grateful breeze. The latest fans give an almost imperceptible sound and are fitted to an entirely new attachment Instead of the usual permanent fixture a globe of metal is suspended by three chains from the roof near one of the walls, and insfde this globe is the motor that works the fan. Tbe latest application of this godsend to the city man is to bedrooms. By its use-the most stuffy room is made endurable without subjectinz the sleeper to a dangerous draught Victoria's Two Bracelets. Queen Viotoria wears two enameled braclets. The one on her right wrist con tains a portrait of the Prince Consort, and that on her left a picture of her youngest great-grandchild. Ihe Queen says: "On the right wrist I carry my first and greatest love, and on the left the last bud that it has pleased God to allow me to look upon." t & n V A