I' S5'SS y ; THE" PlTTSBtfL-tt DlSPATUk. . SUNUAX AUGUST 14 1892. 17 COLUMBUS AS BOY AND MAN. A History of the Great Explorer and How He Found America. ESPECIALLY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. WRITTEN FOE THE DISPATCH BY L. H. WEEKS AND PAUL LATZKE. Copyrighted, 1831. by the Authors. water. Most or the people were engaged in shipping or In trading with other nations. There was everything in these surround ings to fire the imagination of adventure loving boys. That Oolumbus felt this ho hai told us himself. "When only a little boy he Knew the name of every tihlp that belonged to the port, and could tell each one by its rig as lar as he could see it He made the acquaintance of all the sailors, and listened breathlessly with longing as they told of their battles with the waves, the" strange tilings that they saw, and the fights that they had with the ships of rival lands. It is no wonder, then, that the great explorer's thoughts turned to the idea of finding for eign lands, even while he was still a child. To be continued next Sunday. CHAPTER L AT I'LAY WITH YOUNG CnKISTOPHEB. Ii you and I had been walking on the sandy beach at Genoa, Italy, one hot sum mer afternoon nearly i"0 years ago, we might have seen half a dozen brown-faced hovs idly louncing there. Overhead was ihe beautiful blue Italian sky. Drawn up ! the beach were several fishing boats. ui in the harbor were many vessels whose : ..'d and rig would make them strange craU in the-e modern days. Behind them Mere the walls of the city with its splendid ciurches and palaces. Terraced and hang in. cardens covered the sides of the hills tun oerlooked it. The boys were having a very good time holding forts, and throwing handfuls of .tad ncr each other. Now and again, re-tar-iles of their clothes they would plunge mo the water and swim and dive like i -"ips. At last when they were tired out m. plav, they began to talk about what ti would do when they should crow up t men. You s-ee the boy's of those days eie very much like those of the present tine When I'm a man I'll be a great mer chant." said one. "I'll trade and be rich and have a fine houe and jewels, silks and loo i thincs to eat." 1 li be a Dose of Genoa, and live in the c 'cat palace and make evervbody do just as "ant them," said an imperious looking . !-.. v pretty little farm for me," exclaimed a 'i rd boy. ! 1 ratiier be a writer like Horace or "1 whom we read of in school," said a thcr. v.l so they ran on, planning, dreaming, -i ug. lmle apart from his companions stood - t the group digging a hole in the sand u i.is bare toes. Despite his plain and an dress there was an air of gentility .1 u him. In his eves was a far-away iv and, boy though he was, his face and ogure were marked by something of Sinfulness and determination that dis- . ished him from his fellows. Vnd you," called one to him, "what Ton be, Ohristoforo? A wool-weaver, mur father? Or perhaps a drawing - r Mnce the teacher praises you for u.i.l with the pencil." ti-'" exclaimed he who was is cduressea. "some dav I'll own a -ship like that," pointing to a t---!i that was just leaving the bay. nearly grown to manhood. Among his play mates he was always a' leader. Whether it was playing ball, fishing, idling on the beach, marching in a church procession, or getting into mischief, you could count upon his being foremost. When all the boys of the neighborhood were suddenly missing on a pleasant holiday afternoon, as indeed often happened, the folks would declare, "They have gone off again with that Cbristoforo Columbol" And so it would generally prove to be. On the whole Christopher was a very good boy. lie ruled his young followers gently. He kept them loval by his winsome ways, his activity and his generous disposition. If he had lived in the nineteenth century in some town of the United States, he would nave been captain ot tne local baseball nine, the sailing master of a yacht or fishing boat belonging to a boy's club, or at the head of the restless spirits who begin to celebrate the Fourth of July at midnight with fish horns and fire-crackers. He nnd his companions had plenty of fun. Their schooling was not as extensive as that which boys now enjoy. But it was thor ough. Thcr learned reading, writing, srram- inar, arithmetic, Latin, drawing and design ing. Columbus was a bright student, learn ing quickly, and often puzzling his teachers with questions that they found it difficult to answer. He had a natural talent for draw, ing and at one time in his life he made his living by this talent. Out ot school he had to help his father sorting over wool and twisting threads to make cloth. The need of the family com pelled that, but the desire of the boy for a seafaring life was looked upon with favor by his parents. Besides Christopher there were three other boys in the family. Bar tholomew, who afterward was with his brother in this country, Giovanni, who died young, and Giacomo or Diego. There was also one sister, Bianchemetta, and altogether it was a very happy, even though humble family. COST OP WEDDED LIFE. A Few Facta and Figures That May Boom the Marriage TAcenis Htulns How Divided Kxpensea Decrease the Total What a Single Man tViutes. 'WRITTEN FOB THB DISrATCTI. J An acquaintance of mine remarked to me a short time since that he would like to get married, but that a woman was so ex pensive a creature that he was afraid to chance it He is a bright, young fellow earning, say 535 a week and saving none of it. I took him to task for libeling the fair sex. Let ns figure a little, and presuming, of course, that a mad is willing to do his part bygiving up his idle, useless, expensive and enervating habits, see if the experience of many men will not bear nut my results To say that woman is an expensive creat ure is, in the abstract, untrue. She is nat urally economical from the highest to the lowest type. Man is the opposite. What does it cost to keep a young lady, not in the "Four Hundred," nor among the slums, but the daughter of a well-to-do man who moves in good society? Let Us see: Two new dresses a year, one $30, one $25. .$ 75 THE UNJUST STEWARD One of the Parables tlio Application of Which Is Not Plain, PROBABLY TO TEACH PRUDENCE. The Wise. Father Overlooks Little Infraa tions of His ilules. SERMON M THE RET. GEORGE HODGES fiwlS Columtwt and Ills Father Combine Wool. House Where Oo'umbus Wat Burn. "T 1 sail all over the world and see (. gc sichts. I'll discover new lands and or t2 riches home with me. Genoa is brauiitul and I love it," he added rK, "but I'd die if I could not be a of the sea." passionate abandon he rushed into the - " a id, with strong, sweeping stroke, r a - tar out, as though he would begin his vovasp then and there. The other t "s Allowed their leader into the water, a i tcia few moments there was a great t. ashing and merry shouting. After a dsev all came back to land again and s Tidied themselves on the sand, so that '. hot sun might dry their dripping gar u.ptns. Then it was plain to see, from the nav la which they gathered about their cnipaniou that they had a great deal of ad miration lor him and recognized him as a n.aster spirit There was as yet, however, little to fa il i. -aie the great career that lay before this t t No one guessed at that time that he s to find a new world. But that was his f ore, for the sturdy lad was Christopher c i- abus. the discoverer of America. i oung Christopher came of a family once r -n aad noble. But now his people were Lit The exact date of his birth is not u"wn. He was probably born some time ti-ween March, 144G, and' March, 1447, al t cuyli it is asserted by some wriiers that b- c. as born ten years earlier than that T-i father, Domiuico Columbus, was a . -.i comber; and liis mother, who, be- re her marriage, was Susanna Fona-- a-'ossa, was a good woman of the I clacs. The father owned a house in -oa, and there Christopher was born. V -j can see the house to this day if you go i ooa. It is a tall, narrow stone build in,, with an inscription over the door tell i - or the event that made it famous. And tl.p guide who takes you about the city will " w you the very room where the baby I - first opened his eyes, a small cheerless a i-ient. with cold, brick floor, big oak 0 t d a little window, through which ;. .ai oflight struggle. ii a- (jsimed Chrisloforo Columbo, as it i w-.K-ii hi Italian. Later in life he 1 s'-u zcl tbe name into Columbus. When i ;-. a.n lie ado;ited the original Jtoman a-iie .' the Uiuiiy, Colonus, condensed to i ion. ha in Spanish he is known as ( itnsioval Colon. His name Christopher i-. derived from Christo-ferens, or Christ- icarcr This significance always impressed i sif stronglv upon Columbus, who roghout his life considered that he was a i j ei of Christ's word to the unknown i ' 'jiyhood of Columbus was not difTer r from that of other boys of his time and '3. He went to school, he studied his ii 'ns a: heme, he played with the other l). i oi the town, lie he'lped his father at ;;rk. and he was faithful in attending church. That made up his life until he was You may imaginfi Christopher running barefooted and barelegged a great deal of the time. That was the custom of the coun try and the boys delighted in it They played ball up and down the narrow streets. For exercise of lungs and legs they raced along the streets, up and down the moun tain side upon which much of the city was built Some of these streets were so steep that carriages could not be drawn up, and even donkeys could scarcely hold their foot ing. To run up until they dropped ex hausted with breath all gone, and to Tun down until they could no longer keep their balance, but would pitch headlong forward unless they stopped bv seizing hold of a post or doorway was great sport In quieter mood they would assemble in the plaza or square in front of the cathedral and play "morro." In this game one boy called out sharply a certain numbersay eight and at the same instant threw out his hand from behind his back with several fingers extended say four. The other boy in the game was expected to call out imme diately the number of fingers extended and and himself show the same number. If he made a mistake he paid a forfeit Unless one was very quick-witted he was apt to be confused and answer with the number that he had heard called instead oi giving the num ber of fingers that he saw. The eye had to be quicker than the ear, as you will find if you try it. But the Genoese boys tlways used to say: "You can't catch Oristoforo very often." His coolness and quickness of perception generally made him come out winner. This game was so popular with the people that it has survived to this day. It is still played in the cities and towns of Italy, and lias been introduced in this country by the little Italian boys who come over in the immigrant ships. When "morro" became tiresome the bos led by Columbus would wander about the olive groves and underneath the orange trees, which abounded in Genoa, where they would pelt each other with oranges. It was a merry out-door life that they led when away Irom school and away from work. There were more serious moments though to most of them, and especially to young Columbus. You probably know that the people in those days were very religious, and that the Iioman Catholic was the only church. Then, as now in Italy, the cathe drals were handsome buildings adorned with beautiful statues, pictures and altars. Columbus was early affected by religion. He was pleased when he could" array him self in his holiday dress of doublet and hose, low buckle shoes, unic belted at the waist, short jacket and jaunty turban cap, and thus attired go to mass or attend some spe cial church service. Nothing delighted him more, unless it was to take part in some of the many church processions that made the life of the city in that period so bril liant Marching at the head of the com pany of boys, decked out in fine robes and carrying a church banner or a cross, it is not strange that he considered himself one of God's chosen servants. In after lite he alwavs declared his belief that he was set apart by Divine favor for the wonderful work that he accomplished. Kis first object at all times was to help the church to which he belonged, and bis voy ages of discovery were made 'principally through religious motives. He wanted to discover new lands in order to secure wealth with which to lead a crusade to res cue the Holy Land from the infidels, and also in order to carry the blessings of Christ's religion to benighted heathens. Ko places in Genoa were more popular with those fifteenth century boys than the docks and beaches where thcr saw the ships sailing forth and coming back richly laden, and listened to the stories of adventure told by the sailors. Genoa was then one of the important governments of Europe. Her lo cation on the north shore of the Mediterra nean, and the fine harbor formed by the Genoese bay made her a great power on the One outer coat and wrap. 35 Two pair of shoes 12 Sumninr dresses, linen, hose, cloves.etc. 25 Millinery and repairs of hats and bon nets 20 Services of seamstress and incidentals... 13 Total $1S0 That is $15 per month. It looks small, doesn't it? Ask some bright, honest young lady to give you the figures from the actual experience of a year, and see how far wrong they are. The Increase of FxpenR. Now, suppose you get married. Let us see how much vou increase your expenses. You rent a small modern house for say $30 a month; your wife, if she has been raised to "keep house," can pay a servant $15 a month, and can furnish your table with bet ter meals than you have been accustomed to get at boarding houses for $35 a month. I will uot go into the details of this item, but it can be verified in the experience of many. Your fuel, light and incidentals will cost you the year round say 55 a month. Now, what have we: Rent for year $ SfiO Servant 160 Table is Fuel, etc 60 Tour wife" ISO Total $1,200 The living I have figured on here )s com paratively luxurious, better than is enjoved by most people, and it presupposes a life of ease and comfort and good cheer. It can be modified very much, but I am figuring on the voung man with 1,500 a year who cannot aflord to get married. Let us see what it costs him to live. It seems a waste of time to go into figures, fo at the end of the year it is easv for him to tell you what it costs $1,500, possibly more. "Nothing from nothing nothing remains. A Tannc Msn'a Xear'y Acconnt Two suits of clothing a vear. one $50. one $40 $ One overcoat a year, $60 one year, $40 another, average Half dozen shirts $12: one dozen collars, $2 60; hair dozen cuffa, $2 50; scarfs', $6; hoso, $S: nnder wrar, $11; handkerchiefs, ti: shoes. $15 Laundry, $'50: shavini. $25; boot Wack. $15: cigar-. $100; billiards, $50; theaters, $:5; bar bill, $150; incidentals, $50 Boarding at $7 a week SO 00 50 00 55 00 465 03 S50 00 Total $ 1,010 00 I will not include any other figures. But, young man, look these over and see how far off they are! Your wife's expenses will not be as great as I have put them after she is married and your expenses will be greatly lessened by her care of your wardrobe, your saving in laundry bills and in useless ex penditures which you will drop when you have a home of your own. And at the end ot the year you will have had comfort, peace, happiness, good health, and you will have money. Tak about women being ex travagant ( ) why, a woman will go away for a month's visit with a railroad ticket and $5 and come home with money! A man will go away for two days with $25 and come home broke! John TBAUBEir. FAITH IN TEE B0BTH STAB. A Long as That Rrmained Fixed No Dan cer XVrk to Bo Fpared. The star showers of 1833 were very alarming to all classes of people, for at that time" the causes of the phenomenon were little, If at all, understood, and most per sons who witnessed the display felt sure the world was coming to an end, says a writer in the St Louis Qlobe-DemocraL One old man in Georgia, not far from the present city of Atlanta, owned a large num ber of slaves, and the night of the most gorgeous display was awakened by their screams and prayers. On looking out, he was almost as greatly frightened as they were, for he thought the stars were really falling. Determined, however, to get at the truth, he fixed his eye on the North Star, and through the showers of meteors watched it intently. "As long as it remained in its place," he said, "I was hopeful, but if it had gone r would have believed that the end had' come." A great many devoutly believed that the day of judgment had arrived, and the amount of praying done that night by both white and blacks in the South was un precedented. The scare lasted lor some time and took peculiar phases. In one town iu Virginia the stock of Bibles held by a local bookseller was all sold out before 9 o'clock the next day, while revival ser vices began in hundreds of towns aud were kept up for weeks. Men who had not for years paid the preachers a cent came up and subscribed liberally to the parson s salary, and all the churches had a large in crease in membership. Ths Camera Lnclda In Micrography. An admirable method of simplifying the practice of micrography has been devised by Dr. Henry G. Pifiard, the eminent scientist and electro-therapeutist Dr. FifTard's inven tion involves the adaptation of the princi ples employed in ordinary projection, as used in connection with the optical lantern, the projection microscope, photo-micrography, etc, and consists in reflecting the projected image onto a piece of drawing paper fixed iu some convenient position. A right-angled reflecting prism is mounted with a short tube extending lrom one of its square faces, the tube being of such a cali ber that it can be inserted into the micro scope in the place of the eye-piece. From the other square face a similar short tube extends, capable of receiving the ocu lar aad holding it firmly. By. the use of this device, after the object is placed on the stage and duly focused and the light is suitably disposed, if a piece of drawing pa per be placed beneath the ocular and the roo'm darkened, a brilliant image will be. projected on the pnp!r, and its reproduc tion with a pencil can be accomplished with a maximum of rapidity and a minimum of discomfort In guiding the pencil the draughtsman uses both eyes, and his spec tacles, if needed, and sits in vhitunr nni. sea. Her ships sailed on every known I tion he finds most comfortable. WniTTKK FOR TUB niSPATCIT.2 The unjust steward was commended. "His lord commended the unjust steward because he had done wisely." The lord of the unjust steward seems also to be com mended in the parable for his wise com mendation. "For the sons of this world," Christ says, and he appears to be thinking of the steward's master, "the sons of this world are wiser for their own generation than the. sons of the light" The unjust steward and his master are both present for our initiation. "Make to yourselves friends by means of the mammon of unrighteous ness; that, when it shall fail, they may re ciive you into the eternal tabernacles." The story, you will remember, is that the steward of a certain rich man was accused to his master that he was wasting his goods; and the master, sending for the steward, de manded of him an account of his steward ship, which being presented He was to be no longer steward. Exactly what was the relation between the lord and steward in the management of the Syrian estates, we do not know. It seems likely, however, that the steward had in his responsibilitv the general conduct of his master's business. He made the contracts, bought and sold ac cording to his own judgment, and had for his salary a percentage of the receipts. The Steward Didn't Got Itlch. The steward is, indeed, called "unjust" in the narrative, but that is a word which here means simply bad, in the sense of un satisfactory. The accusation that he had wasted the goods of his master may have been true or false. It is made probable by what follows that he had made no money for himself out of his transactions. For at once he says within himself, what shall I do, seeing that my lord taketh away tho stewardship from me? I have not strength to dig, to beg I am ashamed. He must make a choice, it seems, between these two alternatives. He has no purse, filled with the waste of his "master's property, to live on. At the end of the parable, his master evidently approves of him. The chances are that the accusation was a false one. Nevertheless, here is the steward on the eve of dismissal, what shall he do? I am resolved, he says, what to do, that when I am put out of the- stewardship they may receive me into meir uouies. .a.na ue senas for certain of his lord's debtors and reduces their bills. Toonewhoowes a bill of wheat he gives a discount of 20 per cent; to an other who owes a bill of oil he gives a larger discount' than that, he divides the sum by two. The steward probably had a right to do that It was his business to make the bargains. It is likely that he bad himself set the first prices. He might reduce them it he would. The Iirsson That TM Intended. This transaction the steward's lord ap proved, ana uurisi appiauaea nis approval. The lesson is that we should imitate the steward. But how? What is the applica tion of this Oriental story to onr modern life? Nobody knows; that is, nobody knows accurately and absolutely. Ther are plen ty of answers to the question, and many of them are very good and profitable answers. But exactly What it was that Christ Him self had iu His mind not the nicest com mentator can say. This, indeed, it is likely, is one.of the de signed characteristics of' Christ's teaching by parable. He desired that there should be a wjde choice of explanation and of ap plication. He wanted us to do our own thinking. He stated truth in such words that it could not be discovered without thinking. And even when it was discovered the discovery might not be a revelation of all the truth. Some other thinker might work the words over again and still find out more of the truth in them. And thus the aspiration to discover truth might be kept alive in men's minds always. The "truth as it is In Jesus" is so great and so deep that no man and no generation of men may say, We know it alL Christ also recognized the fact of dif ference. He perceived that we are not alike, that by nature we look at truth from various points of view. And' He so taught truth that it should meet this condition of our thinking. That is, He clothed His truth, not so much in the drss of precept, as in tne dress oi illustration. The Precept and tho Parable. Precept, by which I mean axiomatic state ment, does not so easily allow of different points of view as narrative, example, par able. A parable is like a page of human life; it possesses countless shades of mean ing. Truth in parable is stated poetically, that is, in its largest way. There is oppor tunity for endless and boundless interpreta tion. Think of the difference between a great picture, and even the greatest artist's explanation of if! How much there is in the picture which even the wisest man misses in bis commentary! That is the dif ference between teachingiby common speech and teaching by parable. This parable ot the uniust steward is not the only one which offers a wide variety of application. Christ meant that all the parables should be variously inteipreted, according to the nerds ot men, according to the clearness of our spiritual sight. The most widely accepted explanation of this parable is that it teaches prudence. The unjust steward was mindful of the future. He was aware that an hour of need was coming, and he hastened to make wise provision for it The moral is that we, who ought to know as well as he did, that all things cannot co on iust as thev are for- .ever, but that sooner or later we too will be required to give an account of our steward ship we also ought to.be making ready. Improving tbo Opportunity, The children of this world are wiser than the children of light Men show more sense in business than they do in religion. Our steward is the strength, the opportunity, especially the money that we have. It is our possession oi unngnteous mammon; that is, of false riches as contrasted with true riches, of treasure down here US' com pared with treasure up above. This we ouzht to use in such a manner that it will bring us in a spiritual and eternal return. The time when the account will be ren dered is the Day of Judgment. The moral is true enough, aud we all need it badly enough. But that it 'fairly repre sents the meaning of tho story, is not so sure. The -disciples, to whom Christ spoke the parable, had no money, and He never expected them to have any. It does not seem likely that He would preach a sermon about money to that poor congregation. It has lately been suggested that what our Lord had In mind here was not the prudent use of money, nor of wordly advantages but of spiritual authority. The apostle were presently going out Into the world to be the preachers and the teachers of the new religion, to be Christ's accredited repre sentatives. And they needed counsel. Christ's great purpose duriug the years of his ministry was to train these 12 so that they might do His work. This parable was ouo of his lessons. upon their own prerogative. Thoy alone were to be the casfers-dut of devils. They' had also desired .that fire might be called down upon a Samaritan village which had reluBed them hospitality. Thev were as sailed by the temptation which lias proved too strong for mnltitudes of their success ors, the temptation to lord it over the herit age of God. They were jealous, so they thought, for me iiora uoil. The personal element seemed not to enter in at all. They felt bound to hold the dignity of the apostolic office, not that they themselves might be the gainers, but that the office might be ex alted. They felt that obligation was laid upon them to insist upon acceptance of the whole truth of God and the whole will of God as it was taught by them. Any allow ance of departure, or variation, or diminu tion, would be treachery to their steward ship. At least, enough of this spirit al ready showed Itself in the conduct of the apostles so that one who knew human nature could readily see that it would pres ently grow into this, and then into worse. Good Ideas nnd Wrong Practices.. The best words in the world have been the maxims again and again of the worst cause. "For the greater glory of God." What an inspiring motto to write upon a banner! Yet it has been the watchword of all theological bigotry, of all ecclesiastical despotism. Men have accounted certain formulas to be the adequate expression of the entire truth of God. And, being in authority, they have refused to abate even a letter. Thus must all the rest of us be lieve, whole and undefilcd, or else perish everlastingly. Or certain customs have been accepted, certain offices acknowledged, ns of the Lord's ojvn appointment. And these have been forced in their entirety upon men's obedience, Tho authority of the church must be maintained. Aud the result, over and over, "has been discord, persecution, spiritual loss. The troubles which disfigure ecclesiastical history from the beginning have arisen in great measure from this insistance of the steward upon the whole amount which he considers to be owed his master. Christ teaches in this parable the lesson of wisdom. The steward is commended who remits somewhat of his lord's bill. The sons of the world are declared wiser than the sons of the light The business man, for example, knows better than to grasp always after every penny that is due him. His purpose Is, indeed, to make money; but he knows that one good way to make money is to make friends. Our Lord seems to mean that the church and the truth will prosper by the same procedure. Ihe Triumph of iho Truth. What we want is the triumph of the truth. We want to bring all men into the knowledge and the obedience of God. And the lesson of the parable, according to this interpretation, is that the triumph of the truth will be won by gentleness rather than by exacting severity. "Make to yourselves inends by means ot tne mammon ot un righteousness." The only unrighteous mammom, that is, worldly treasure well called "unrighteous" from the temptations which it hrings with it the only unright eous mammom which the apostles bad was their position of authority as teachers and leaders ot the church. This they had for tbe good of men, that ther might exalt men into "eternal tabernacles." And Jesus teaches that if they are to be helpers they must first be friends. He was. How pati ent and gentle in all of his dealings with the unbelief nnd the sin of the worldl Never hard, never exacting, never severe except with hyprocrites never tyrannical, willing to accept a part where he would prefer .the whole. Certain it Is, that boys and girls do not grow into the best men and women out of homes where ithe domestic law is enforced in every detail and with unceasing severity. The wise father and mother overlook every day a great many departures from the law. Tbe bill reads a hundred measures of wheat, but tbe debtor may write fourscore. The bill reads a hundred measures of oil, but the debter may write CO. That transaction, translated into the language of morals, takes place between tne parent ana tue cntia in every well-conducted household -every day. Trie Right Kales for the Child. The steward knows that he might not get quite so much wheat and oil, but he would get just so much friendship, which is better. The mother knows that she may not get quite so much actual obedience as if she were more strict, but she will get more love. And love is always better than obedience, for it Includes obedience. What the mother wants is to gain not so much the outward act ot obedience to her authority, as the al legiance of the heart. And she gains that by a wise gentleness, by a judicious com promise, by shutting her eyes and ears a good deal of the time. This is just as needful in the larger fam ily, the church. The purpose of the church is to win men to Christ, to get them to be lieve in Him, and know Him, and obey Him, and love Him. And the church, for the sake of that good purpose, and the bet ter to get it accomplished, must be content to make all allowances, must be patient with Imperfection. Here is tbe complete sum of obedience which we account to be due our Master. Let us not excommunicate all who fail to pay the whole of it, else we may excommuni cate, first of all, ourselves. Let us not try to make the church into a club of saints. Let us not set down a great many elaborate rules ef conduct and say that we will pun ish every act of disobedience. We will dis courage people. Take 20 per cent off from tbe bill. Patient With Imperfections. Here is the complete amount of theologi cal faith which we believe to bo due our Lord. We will not do well to insist upon the prompt and entire payment of every part of it by every Christian. It is remark able how patient God is with the imperfec tions of human belief. A large proportion of the race is still ignorant of Christian truth, and vet God does not seem unwilling to accept tnem; ne uoes not nesitate to love them. Let us not try to draw the lines of faith too narrowly. There ought to be room in the'great church of God for all the hon est heretics. Faith must grow. And we may be snre that it will never grow in the warmth of tbe fires that are kindled by the zeal of persecution;- it needs the warmth of love. Christ won people into believing in Him not by abusing them for laok of faith, but by taking them with whatever scanty faith they had and making them His friends. Take SO per cent off from the bill of faith. George Hodges. OMDCKLEBERRYHILL The Only Spot in Potter County Where the Juicy Berry Grows. RATTLESNAKES ARE THERE, TOO. Dead Ones fold at a Dollar Apiece and f cmetimes Even l'ore. A VANITY FAIR IN TUB WILDERNESS tCOBBZSrONDXWCE 07 TTIH PISPATCTt. JlOULTlTTE, PA., August 13. HEN the first set- tiers came into this part of Penn. sylvania, or into that division of it which Is Potter county, they found bears in plenty and panthers and herds of deer and elk, but no huokle-' berries. There were endless forests of pine and hemlock and of sugar maple, beech and oak, but no huckle berries. There were overtopping moun tains nnd delight ful sweeps of vir gin valley, through which crystal Has Its Annoyances. streams coursed sweet and swift, but no huckleberries. To the pioneer families who came here from Northeastern Pennsylvania, and New England, and the hills of New York State, where this toothsome wild fruit was found in abundance, and who knew the importance of a huckleberry crop ns a factor in the do mestic economy, where for many long months food supplies must come entirely from the natural products of the woods, the 1 1 A YfflRfeS' IIP (lliffiftk Eattlesnaket at a Dol'ar Each. WORK FOB Y0USG EXPL0EEH3. Tbe 4buB of Authority. The apostles had already shown that ten dency which naturally accompanies every kind of authority even spiritual authority tbe tendency toward an exaltation o'f their office. Unfortunately, this exaltation means some some sort of abasement and humiliation of others. The apostles, for example, had forbidden the man whom they had found encroaching, as they thought, A. Tast Field Tet TJndidOoverrdln Uio Amer ican Continent. Youth's Companion, i People are accustomed to think that all the world has now been explored except Central Africa and the polar regions. As a matter of fact, there are portions of the American continent which are as com pletely unknown to science as any part of equatorial Africa. Within tho last ten years a young American naturalist has won renown by his explorations in the basin of the Amazon in Brazil, and a vacation expe dition of college students in Labrador has resulted in important additions ,to geo graphical Knowledge. Lieutenant Schwatkn's explorations in Alaska and his visit to hitherto unknown tripes of cave-dwellers in Northern MeXr ico, revealed the fact that fields are still open on this continent in which young men with a serious purpose, a scientific educa tion and a strong body may distinguish themselves in geographical and ethnological research. In 1890 two large rivers, hitherto un known, tributaries ot the Amazon, were discovered by naturalists. A sreat part ot Guiana, and a still greater part of the vast region immediately to the eastward of the Andes, extending from the frontier of Ven ezuela to tbe Argentine Republic, remain unknown lands, so far as eertain knowledge is concerned. Should it all be gone over and accurately mapped, there would still remain to be learned many facts about it, as well as about the regions already known, which are ot the highest scientific interest, and in the study ot which distinction might be gained, ' utter absence of this great bounty was not only a surprise, but a bitter disappointment But, knowing that in the huckleberry coun tries they had left the bushes bearing this fruit invariably came into existence where pine timber had been cleared away and the' ground burned over, they lived in. the as surance that they would see the familiar foliage springing from the soil after they had cleared their mountain land and put It to the fire. ncaclwnter of thn Allegheny. Such a result did follow down on tho Sinnemahoning and other waters flowing into the Susquehanna, but Dowhere on the watershed of the Allegheny river, embrac ing the greater part of Potter county, did the eagerly awaited 'huckleberry bushes push their heads above the soil tbe ax and brush fire had opened to the sun; nor, with the exception ot an inconsiderable tract in the northwest corner of the county, have they ever appeared anywhere in the county where the headsprings of the Allegheny drain the land. Why this should have been no one has as yet given any satisfactory ex planation. But the early settlers solaced themselves that if thcr had been bereft of huckleber ries they were at the same time spared the annoyance and danger of rattlesnakes, ac cepting a true the apparent fact that wherever there are huckleberries there will rattlesnakes be found as well. There is not now, nor has there ever been, a rattlesnake along the Allegheny waters in Potter county, while over the dividing ridges, along tbe Susquehanna waters, that venom ous reptile seems to find congenial and pro lific homes. It is now a quarter of a century since the last of the great pine forests of Potter county disappeared, and among the last of them to fall was the vast tract that lay be tween Pine creek on the south and south west, the Genesee Fork on the west and Phccnlx creek on the east, in Pike town ship. This forest crowned the steep mount ain that rises in that broad area, its summit being a table land many thousand acres in extent. Drvolopmrnt of a ITnokleberryTatoli. The great canons of Pine Creek are on one side, and the deep defiles of Phceni: Creek on the other. This mountain has an eleva tion of 1,500 feot above tide. When these primitive pines had gone tho way of all their giant fellows, a second growth of pines grew rapidly in their places, but of an en tirely uiiiercni variety. j.ney were Known as jack pines, and were so full of pitch that they uere cut aud converted Into tar, hun dreds of tar kilus being erected on the sum mit, the ruins of many of which are to-day found among the brakes and rocks. 'AVlth the disappearance of the jack pines this great mountain became a treeless, barren, a deserted waste, a prey for bush fires that no one cared to control. Then tho discovery was made, after one of these early spring fires had swept over tho barren, "that huckleberry bushes had come up through the black ashes the pine had left on the stony soil the low bushes of the genuine, rich pulped, full flavored early blue huckleberry; thousands upon thousands of acres of them, growing as thickly as timothy stalks In a meadow. This would have been a matter for no sur prise In tbe adjoining counties of Clinton and Cameron. The surprising thing iu those counties would have" been, rather, the non-appearance of huckleberry bushes on th&burned pine barrens. But in Potter county, where tho berries had persistently refused to grow before, this sudden appear ance of the bushes on the great pine bar rens of the Pine creek waters was as sur prising as if oil hod been struck on tho isolated summit, after the drill had failed to find it elsewhere in the country. Known us nncltlnberry Hill. The crop of berries that ripened on those original bushes was enormous, and in no season since then has the huckleberry crop on the great hill failed. The rock-ribbed mountain soon received the name of Huckle berry Hill, and as such it is known- to-dav, standing unique in its isolation, a3 the only spot between tbe far-off waters of the Sinne mahoning on the South and the great spread of the Genesee on the north, and between the Allegheny portage watershed on the west and the Chemung valley en the east, where the huckleberry grows and ripens as it does in all the surrounding counties out side those boundary lines. The anuual pilgrimage ot this furnace like hill top is now 'at its height for this season. The berry crop was never larger, and every day thus far the barren has been one great, busy, frolicking, boistreous, sweating camp, In which there have been at no time less than 800 people of all sorts and sizes, while on Sundays the gathering has been increased to more than 1,500. The scores of tents that whiten the sun-burned barren liken the scene to come great gather ing of gipsies, or to a big military en campment A large portion of the campers is made up of family and social groups, who remain two or three days on the ground, picking berries-for their own domes tic uses, and the rest are professional pick ers, picking for the market and living on the barren until the season is over. These pickers frequently consist of entire fami lies, from the gray-haired grandfather down to the toddler just big enough to pick td elert enough to keep an eye out for rattle snakes. Tents are struck by the dozen every day by parties breaking camp, but other campers are continually arriving to take their places; and thus while the scene is always changing it still remains tbe same from tne beginning to the end of the season. The Ijmv ot the Eight of Wav. There is but one way by which the sum mit of Huckleberry Hill can be reached with teams and that is by the old road that the lumbermen cut in the side of the hill yean ago to get the pine logs down to tbe Pine Greek valley. This road is a mile in length, in which distance it climbs to an elevation of 800 feet. On one side the steep escarpment of the mountain pitches down into the valley, with bat a foot or two be tween it and the outer edge of the road. The other side is the crowding front of tbe mountain that lifts itself above tbe road. This thoroughfare is so narrow that it is im possible for teams to pass one another, and as conveyances of all kinds are constantly arriving from all directions, laden with berrypickers with their boxes, baskets, barrels and pails, and seeking passage from the valley up the great hill, and as other conveyances that have come before and secured their loads of berries are just as constantly seeking passage down the hill to the valky, not much progress could be made by either going or returning caravans if it were not for a peculiar law ot right ot way wnicn has been established. During a certain hour teams going up the hill have the right of way, and teams headed for home must wait until that hour is up before they may start down. A man at the bottom regulates the up ward train of wagons, while a man at the top of the hill holds the downward teams in check. When the hour is up no wagon is permitted to start up the hill, no matter how many may be waiting at the bottom. The ensuing hour belongs to the down com ing teams, and so they go and. come every other hour. As many as 30 teams have been passed up the hill in an hour. Some of these come from the farthest boundaries of the country and from over the New York State border, many of them traveling all through the night' to reach the spot in good season. During the recent insufferably hot days, when most people were melting in the coolest places they could find, hun dreds of men, women and children were eagerly hastening to tbe summit of Huckle berry Hill to pick berries in the full glare oi tne broiling sun and among close grow ing bushes that glow like a furnace. The Gay Scenes on Sunday. On Sundays this great huckleberry camp becomes a veritable Vanity Fair in the wil derness. Then hundreds of people go to Huckleberry Hill as they would to a circus or a county fair, or other gathering where curious things are to be seen or pleasure ex pected. The facir with bis wares; tbe wheel of fortune man and the shell- game sharper; the rustle swain and his radiant sweetheart, with her inevitable white San day dress and red and green ribbons; tli4 smart town fellow with his smarter girl; the brawny log-chopper, boisterous and rough; the swaggering bark peeler, not only ready but looking for a fight tbe town, the farm, the backwoods flock to the huckle berry barren of Pine creek on Sunday. Here is a dancing platform and a blaring band. Yonder in a tent as big as a circus tent, where can be obtained what no other place in Potter county may supply whisky, g!n,Jbeer,'Tr; what tipple you may name for Potfer" is a Prohibition county, and not a eingle glass ef beer has been le gally sold within its boundaries for more than SO years. But Huckleberry Hill is a law unto" itself It keeps and sells its spirituous wares ostensibly as antidotes for snake bites, but a careful man, viewing the effects of the liqnor on nearly all who te.t it, might well prefer the quality of the rattlesnake poison to that of the venom in the tipple. But to the sound ABEEWITMOSTJM. Remarkable Results Outlined From 4 Variety of Cross Breeding. HONEY SUPPLY OF THE COUKTRY. Wide Colnmns in Boots and Xewspiptrf t Are Hard on the Ejts. THE SCIENCE IS EYERY-DAT UPH 27ie Rustic Swatn and Ills Radiant Sweetheart. . . rwniTTEs- roa rnx dispatch.! i In an 'article on the desirability' of pro ducing a larger race of bees, J. Edward Giles proposes to cross over present races of bees with the giant bees of India and obtain a race with long proboscis and per haps increased size. This improved race should be crossed with the South American stingless bee, and thus a race would bo secured with all the good points of the Italian bee, with lengthened proboscis and. stingless; such a bee, In fact, as it would ba difficult to improve. It might be found desirable to breed out the swarming instinct, for there appears to be no reason why the swarming instinct cannot be bred out of tbe bees as thoroughly as the sitting instinct has been bredont of certain races of domestic fowls; but now that swarming can be so completely controlled by tbe use of queen traps and automatic hivers, tbis is a point of minor importance. Mr. Giles is of opinion that the improve ment of our bees is of sufficient importance, and the prospect of success sufficiently' ' great, to justify the Agricultural Depart ment of the United States in undertaking the cost of the necessary experiments. 3Ir. Giles quotes the honey crop for 1879 as 25, 000,000 pounds, or about half a pound for the year to each inhabitant of the United States. At an average of 10 cents per pound, tbe value of the honey crop for that year woufd be abont 52,500,000, not reckoning the value of 2,250,000 pounds of wax, the amount that would be secreted in the production of the qusntity of honey named. If we had a race of stingless bees there is good reason to believe that the value of ihe crop would soon be doubled, for ' many would be induced to go into the busi ness of bee keeping who are now deterred by tear of the stings or who live in thickly settled villages, and hesitate to keep bees for fear their neighbors will consider their pets a nuisance. Even in the oldest and most thickly settled States the number of bees could easily be doubled without ex hausting the honey supply, and there is practically no limit to the amount of honey which could be produced by planting spe cial crops in suitable places. Mr. Giles differs from those who think that an increased supply of honey would lower the prices and gluttbe market, as ex perience shows that a the supply of any article of food increases the demand always grows. As an illustration he quotes the case of a farmer with whom he compared -notes on the price of farm produce. The farmer was at the time preparing a load of tomatoes for market, and he remarked that it was easier to sell a wagon load of toma toes then than it was to sell a peck when he first began to raise them. The reason it is -difficult to sell honey is that people have not learned to use it When its many wholesome qualities are understood it will take a prominent place as a daily food, and nothing will bring this about more quickly than the proposed new departure in bee culture. Tlacttria on Bank X6t. Some singular facts concerning the dan ger of Infection by paper money have been educed by a bacteriological analysis of tho bank notes of the Spanish bank of Havana in general circulation. Attention was drawn to the subject by the fact that circu lation increased the weight of the netes in consequence of their acquiring foreign mat ter. The examinatjn-iBadejhowed onths, notes in use for some time aconsfderaEle "" number of microbes, and on some notes as many as 10,000 microbes were detected. Eight pathogenic species were encountered, including those of diphtheria and tubercu losis. The result of the examination was that a general warning was issued to tho public against this active source of danger. Tbe use of bank notes is at all times at-. tended with a certain degree of risk, and especially in Havana, where children have the habit of carrying paper money in their mouths, and are thus very liable to swallow the germs of some mortal disease. Action of Cliersa on Nicks'. A singular fact with regard to. an un suspected property of cheese, which has been accidentally discovered, is interesting to chemists aside from its hygienic bearings. It appears that nickel-plated ware, which is deservedly in favor with housekeepers on account of its durability, its handsome ap- pearance and the ease with which it is cleaned, is attacked more energetically by cneese than even by vinegar or lactic acid. All. kinds of cheese are found to produce this effect in the same degree; even when dry, any of them will eat into a nickel plated salver in less than 12 hours. Since ordinary cheese shows a decidedly neutral reaction when treated with litmus paper, it was supposed that the trifling amount of baldrianic acid which it contains would ba insufficient to account for the phenomenon. This assumption, however, turns out to bo erroneous, for as the result of direct experi ment it is found that nickel is speedily corroded by baldrianic acid. of music, and the shouts of dancers, and the noisy and perpetual clink and clatter of classes, and the not infrequent yells of drunken bushwhackers In free and pro miscuous rough-and-tumble, tbe berry pick ers keep busily at their work in the blaz ing, scorching rays of the sun, the heat in tensified and cast back in tbe faces of the sweating toilers by the drv. stonv soil, the gleaming fronds of 1,000,000 brakes and the glistening foliage of acres of heat-conduct ing bushes. It ib doubtful if anywhere else in this broad land may be found "another such camp as this. Many times a day from among the huckle berry pickers, especially the female portion, a lond, shrill shriek of terror will arise, and a berry picker, white-faced and with frightened eyes, will be seen fleeing away from the spot where he or she had been picking. Everyone within hearing knows what that cry means, and from a dozen mouths the anxious cry comes: "Are yon bit?" The answer is usually "No; but there's one there!" Then someone gets a clnb and goes oVer "there" and smashes that "one's" head, and the picking is resumed as if nothing had occurred to interrupt it Onlv one picker has been reported bitten by a rattle snake on Huckleberry Mill g this season a woman, name unknown, who was hurried down to Galeton, four miles away, to a doctor's. Her home was 20 miles away, and she was sent thither. It is not known on tbe bill whether the bite was fatal or not. Between 0,000 and 7,000 bushels of huckle berries will be picked on this lone, wild, banen plantation this season. Those who pick them to sell get 10 cents a quart for all they can supply without taking them off the ground. One man and his wile have picked and sold 100 quyts every day thus far tbis season. Ed Mott. Tho Sons of the Thrnh. The marvclonsly sweet son of the hermit thrash is heard at this season in such bits of woodland In Westchester county as have been spared by the growth of population. The shy songster is seldom seen, but his clear, trilling notes, unlmitable by the human throat, and having a curiously sweet yet metallic tone, are carried for hundreds ot yards through the woodland. A Ntir Artificial Stonv. The production of artificial stone, especial ly for pavements, is largely on the increase. The basis of this product is crushed granite, which is incorporated with Portland cement,' tbe water in the process being automatical Ir ganged. After these materials are well blended the concrete is laid in slab molds lined with zinc. When the slabs are set they are turned out of the molds and , . steeped for about ten days in a solution of silicate of soda, by which process they be' come indurated. Tbe silicate of soda solu tion is made by boiling a special kind of stone with 70 per cent caustic soda, previ ously macie into a solution with water; tbe silica of the stone dissolves and the solution is diluted for use to the required strength. The slabs are taken out of the solution, sconred with water aud stacked in yards where they are kept for months before be ing sent away from the works. TVIfle Colnmnsaml the Er'sighr. Eye experts Insist that people who wish to preserve their eyesight will do well to confine their reading as far as possible to round, fat-faced type, and to avoid that which is tall and thin. It was the shape of the type of the tiny edition of Daute pro duced at the French Exposition almost as much as its minuteness which blinded some of the persons engaged in correcting the sheets. Another imriortant noint is to avoid too wide a column, or the eye is strained. The only way to neutralize the tendency to such strain is to turn the heafl irom side to side, after the manner ot short sighted people. The width of a column of reading matter ought not to exceed at the outside two inches, because that is about the natural range of the eye when the heal is kept motionless. Milk as a Dressing for Wounds. Milk has been found to possess remark able healing qualities if applied to wounds in an early stage, and excellent results have been obtained by its use in the dressing of burns. Compresses are soaked in milk and laid on the burn, to be removed night and morning. An extensive burn has in this way been reduced in three days to one quarter of its original ize. Another burn, which had been treated tor eight days with olive oil .and oxide of zinc, healed rapidly under a milk dressing. .! - ,-"',. ,-, ' ' "' ' ' ' ' ' j&afrfik ,v