liiiii B. F. BOHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE DNION-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Bdltaar sad VOL. XLVI1I MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1894. NO. 45 I e UNWEEPIMG.OR UNWEtT, Tnw?pt. unhoeored and unsung' Were not the worst of Fortune s i rlnlnjj Dread, rather, thine own eyes an 1 tonui fnweepini? and luwingln. tTnweepintf for thy brother, lo:in 1 But struggling in the Soulier Nigh, Unsincrini; from thy vantage-frroun I Th happy tidings of tbe Light. Weep and be sure thou shult tie wept. Ein; gladly, and the joy-sounds rin;rtnr Uaf wake some soul, which long bath spt, To echo back thy singing. Let fall thy tears ! Let rise thys'r.tln ! Bo canst thou never be amoaf Those heritors of man's dii.laiu. The "unwept, unhonore 1 an i unsung. -J. Edmund V. Cooie, in Independent Karl Hagenbeck's Adventures AKL- haoe X BECK, the famous dealer in animals, and I stood by the rase of boa con strictor and py thons in Ham br.rg. . The hu:je or 'ntv.res lay quiet nil still, with Vnrl r ..or, tl ' a .'J. J tou some curious lYn? a'lont taoss snakes. That hiie i.o.-. roa'tr; 'tor," he continued, point- to n s;ii:ie that lay coiled up in a r.r:n-r by itelf, "iirts swallowed - fenr v "iol f ht-ep in una day, and nina days r t -i svi'.r.l it was ready for number Ave. j p.-.-i remember onee we threw a rab bit into a ea?e where there were two ranUes. While the ionr little animal v as shiverinar i" a coi-uer with fright two reptiles fo;ight together as to Ul-'i of th-'.i should ent it; the i: -r i lia gained thfl victory, aud . i- '. : n:i; re'ired to th3 otiiT ead ' tn e.y:s mil l.iy down, ns though .'nrlL'.l ot by th? convict. Tin other i n'-:e nuv.m.'ei! noon it- prey, ami nf i r n while it aNo lay down, with the i.ibbit insula it. The bigger snake j -n, seeing the helpless condition of i.s eui-my, seemed to rouse itself, and r. moment nfterwar :s it vigorously nt ticked the crentur-; that lay gorged in i'.ie corner. We all rushed to sea wh?.t vj:i' 1 InviiTi. and, I declare to roi'," r miin ied Mr. Hagfn'wk, "ih".! in. A Very hhoi'i time the big snn'te had t.7.a:iu.vcd luo small snake, rabbit aud rll. tVonld you like to sea th?m in ration? 'aid Mr. Hagenbeck to me, and ns ha tpoke he opened the cage door sad bohUy atejiped iu among the huge s'eepy beasts, lie then began lifting them up by their enormous coils, just as one would lift up great coils of rope, and there was noon a mighty stirring nuiongst the irurt masses. Furious and e nraged they writhed to and fro, their fc.'n'.e: glittering in the light of the mn. With tremendous hissing and indited rearing back of their heads pn l conduit projection of their long, forced tngues, they began to move abo.it t'uj cage. "I think I will get ont now," said Mr. Hagenbeck. "I hid a tight onee before with snakes, r.nd I don't want to have another," he continued as he closed the doors. ;I wish yon would tell me about H," raid I; '"it must have been very dreadfully interesting," and also I felt sure my American readers would enjoy tome good "snake" stories. "Certainly I will," he replied, "and I can assure you," he added, with a shudder at the thought, "that it was most painfully interesting to me. I very nearly lost my life on that occa sion. It happened in this way. There were eight full grown pythons in one cage. I wanted to put them alt Into one huge box to send them oflf to a menagerie. I handled the first six all right enough, collaring them, as is usnal, by the back of the neck and dropping them into the box. Then I went for number 6even. As soon as I entered the cage she flew at me with oper. mouth, but seeing her coming I took off my hat and thrust it at her, and she bit her teeth into it. I then collared her with the right hand at the back of the neck and dragged her down into the lower partition of the cage. However, when I was going to fetch her out she reared her head for another attack. I then made a cautions movement forward ; at the same mo ment she darted her head at me. X met the second attack with my hat in the same way as I did the first. I then got hold of her by the back of the neck, but I found, to my horror, that I couldn't let her go, as all at once she coiled herself around my legs. "By good fortune one of my assist ants was standing near. I called for him and he came rushing np to me, knowing by the sound of my voice that there was something very dreadful the matter, and so indeed there was, for I saw it was going to be a fight for life or death. However, I kept perfectly cool and gave the order to my assist ant to tiy and uncoil the serpent, which he attempted to do as well as he pos sibly could. I also managed to with draw my legs from her coils. Then I dropped, holding her tight all the time, as I was determined to get her into the box, and I didn't want to have all that trouble for nothing," continued the brave man as coolly as one could possibly imagine. "However," he went on, "I wasn't ont of the woods, even then, as yon English call it, for just as I thought I was getting away all right and could get her safely into the box the lust pvthon in the cage, a tremendous giant, also tried to attack mc. As soon as I saw this I called out to my assistant to throw a blanket over her. This he managed to do. At the same moment I moved backwards ont of the cage and cot Tree of it altogether and then I had x V.tAc rest. Jfr men tried to dissuade 3 rroin going baci:, each ot tiieiu bay ag they would not do it. I felt v.-y rx'httusted, but my temper was fairly ap and I determined I wouldn't bo heateu. j, a.cUr a fs.v moments, I rttnned again into tho cage, caught the'rn both round Vis lucks of their teek. ii.vje:l tjew r.s quickly an I uid to the tde ' thJ cuge and then I rt-s-cen Mr, v.v t'ueui iito th box. I n ! ,..,t niv r.Kitu3tii bccl neiir iaJ i .i'n'ii coill lutf taved IB9 from Vci i . ,. iooo.: i. dcui'i- Ah ! it was a t-rrii.io udveataie," toatinued Mr. ll::ab3k. "audi don't want tvait f.7fi f-f "'4 never movement trh'd'i tk''';0'7i totelltheonlook '4VJ I i'fcOT -tUer th:-y JVfl I ereshveordead. V V ft -"Ah!" said isr experience again, Bow corns ano$ i look at my alligators and I will tell yon r j . , ... . ui bu auventure i naci tritn them. Passing by an enormous aviary in which flattered and screamed thou- sands of beautiful parrots, we came at last to a large tank in which were slow. ly paddling round some spiteful look- ' iajr alligators. There," said Mr. 1 Hagenbeck, as he pointed to the cruel looking beasts, "I had a ghastly ad- venture with them once. I had to pack sixteen of them np for the Du ' seldorf Zoological Gardens. I grappled Iw.l 1 f U A 4. 1 1 - noia oi tne first one and was puiiing him ashore, when he gave a frighful Mow with his tail and knocked me into the tanV, where for a brief moment, I was alone with fifteen alligators. Those who were standing by told me that as soon as I splashed in a number of them made a rush. However, I was ont again like an India rubber ball ; but the whirl of the water aud the open jaws of the disappointed beasts told me that I had not been one second too smart. This was a very ritrrow escape an if one of the croco diles had happened to get hold of me, all the rest would have attacked me, snapping and biting at me at one and the same moment, until there would have been nothing left of me at all : "Alligators are the most determined fighters even amongst themselves. Hix of them, each about fourteen feet long, had a frighful fight amongst themselves once, and so desperately did they fight that within fourteen days they were all dead. Three of them had their jaws broken, and in come cases their legs were torn right out of their bodies. This oeourred at night, and one of the keepers, happen ing to hear the frightful noise which was made by the clashing of their jaws. rushed off to tell me what was happen ing. We lit our lanterns and hurried to the scene of action, but beyond try ing to separata them with long poles it was little we could do. They would only renew the fight with greater fiereeness than ever, and so terribly were they wounded that, as I said, they were all dead in a fortnight. Now, when I get a new consignment of alligators I always muzzle them for four days with a rope ; they then calm down and I out the rope off; other wise, if I did not do that they would begin fighting as soon as they came out of the box, for the first sight of daylight after the long journey always teem to excite- them. "A fight amongst the snakes, also, is a terrible thing. I had once five big pythons, each over sixteen feet long, in one cage. One of the keepers flung in a dead rabbit amongst them, and two of them, being very hungry, at tacked it at once. At the same mo ment the other four flew at thera and in one moment all the six were in one writhing lump. The keeper fetched me and I at once attempted to uncoil them. I succeeded but hardly had I done so, when the fight began between the first two. The larger one threw his tail round the small one's neck and squeezed it with such force against the wall, that it lost all power, then the bigger snake got hold of the rabbit and swallowed it, after which it gradually loosened its hold of the smaller snake. Then came revenge ; the small snake flew at the big one, which was rendered almost helpless by its huge meal, bit it in the back, coiled round and round it, and eqneezed it till it could hardly breathe, although it screamed as I had never heard any living creature scream be fore. When I went to see them next morning they were all right and per fectly good frfffnds. "I was once turned out of bed at 1 o'clock in the morning by one of my keepers, who came in with the news that the big kangaroo had jumped a six-foot fence into the next stable, in which there was a large hippotamus. When I came down there was a most wonderful fight going on. The kanga roo stood up to his belly in water, whilst the hippopotamus, with wide, open javrs, snapped at him right and left. However, the kangaroo managed to 'set in' a good right and left with his front legs, and scratched the hip popotamus in the face tremendously. When the hipopotamus eame to elose quarters, the kangaroo jumped up, gave him a tremendous blow with hia hind legs, and thsn managed to get on to dry land. I caught the kangaroo with a big net, and for all the fighting there wasn't very much harm done." Just as Mr. Hagenbeck finished talk ing, the polar bear at our rear begun growling. Mr. Hagenbeck went np to soothe and pet him. Then he said to me : "I expect I am pretty nearly the only man in the world who can say that he ever rut the nails of polar bear. It was this very beast, and I will tell you how it all happened. The poor beast's nails had grown into its foot, causing it a great deal of pain. We tried to get the feet into a sling and pull them through the bars, but this was very troublesome. So I got him into a narrow cage which had an iron-barred front ; this I turned up side down so that the bear had to stand on the bars of the cage ; then the cage was lifted up about four fe-?t above the ground. I went underneath with a sharp pair of pinchers, and as he stood there with his toes pressed through the bars I managed to pull the nails out. Then I stood him in water to wash and cool his wounds, and in a few days be was all light. "On another occasion a royal Ben . yal tiger was suffering very much from toothache, so two of my men held him by the collar and whilst one of my at tendants opened his mouth my brother ! in-law and I took some pinchers and I pulled out the teeth which hd been giving him so much pain, and which, indeed, had grown so badly that they bad hindered him from biting his food ' properly. "However, perhaps the most terrible ' dventure that I ever had occurred in i Munich during the Centennial fete in 1888. I was going in a long proces sion with eight elephants, and the streets were very crammed. Now, it chanced that we had to pass a great big iron dragon which, by some me chanical contrivance, began to spit fire as soon as we got near it. Four of the elephants at once took fright and ran awav, which was only natural, and then the other four followed suit. The people rushed after them with sticks and loud cries, which really only made matters worse. I managed to get be tween two of them and caught hold I them, but it was of no good, aa ey ran witlimtfcJLaj i laajtnjunjL 1 was torn from side to aide, "and, in deed, at one moment I waa nearly ruahel tn deAth hv ilium acainftt the nlli nf m. Knnu At W tn nt)m elephants came up and I managed to. persuade them all four to stand atilL. Just as I had done so the stupid crowd; came rushing up, and away they wont again. I was too tired to do anything more. All four of them rushed into i house ; the bottom gave way, and they fell into the cellar. A new house hu now been bnilt there which is called to this day 'The Four Wild Elephants.1 .... . ' a tot oi people were hurt ; some, in- deed, were killed, but, as the Polie President had seen all that happened, I was held free of blame. Still it wai the most wonderful adventure I evei had, and how I escaped being crushed to death I cannot understand to thii day. " Atlanta Constitution. Poisonous Plants. Professor Brooks told the Massachu. setts Horticultural Society, recently, that there are thirty-nine poiaonoui plants in the United States which art now or have been used in the treat ment of disease; many of the most virulent poisons are of vege table origin. By far the greater num ber of vegetable poison are alkaloids, a few are acids and gluoosides. Mor phine derived from the popy is one oi the best known alkaloids. One of the most poisonous aoids is oxalic acid; the buttercups furnish examples of th gluoosides ; the poisonous essential oili are illustrated by the oil of hemlock, tansy and juniper. The lower orders of vegetable organ isms develop on such nitrogeniout foods as fish and meat an active poison called ptomaines. The numerous in stances of illness and even death re- suiting from eating mushrooms should serve to cause the refusal of all kind not positively identified. The poetical allusion to the peaceful cow producing golden butter from having grazed on the yellow buttercup, lacks truth, at the buttercups are more or less pois onous and cows refuse to eat them. A virulent poison is the essential oil extracted from white mustard seeds. The seed corn cockle sometimes ground with grain has been known to cause injurious consequences. Oxalic acid ' is not present in sorrel in such quanti ! ties as to render its moderate use in ' jurious, but the practice of children eating these leaves should be discour aged. Death has followed from eating the roots of the wild parsnip, whiob are especially dangerous in the second year. Children should be particularly warned against eating the berries oi the black night shade. The poison ivy is well known and is poisonous to most persons. A thorough washing after a botanical excursion is a preventative of slight poisoning, and a bath in a weak solution of baking soda will often act as an antidote. Some plants, like the potato and celery, are poisonous in their wild state. The Japanese are known to use eighty-four kinds ol plants for "greens" and have discov ered many poisonous species; theit workmen on lacquer often become vio lently poisoned from the vegetable poisons in the polishes and varn:"s. ' New England Farmer. Birth of England's Great Bank. The Bank of England was projected in 1C94 to meet the difficulty ex perienced by William IIL in raising funds for the French war. William Paterson and Michael Godfrey induced forty merchants to subscribe to a loan of $6,000,000 to the Government at eight per cent., the subscribers being incorporated as a bank. Tne scneme was onDosed in Parliament, bnt the bill passed and the charter was granted July 27. 1694. Sir John Houblon bein the first Governor and Michael God frey the first Deputy Governor. Tho bank began active operations July 1, 1695, issuing notes and discounting bills. The notes were for $100 and upward and the usual rate of discount was six per cent. A River Shunned by Indian. The Wiahkah River is shunned bv all Indians. Even when crossing from the Quiniault or Humptulips country to the Wynooche they avoid crossing the Wishkah by going around to the north of its source. Their tradition is that many ages ago some great eagle captured an enormous whale on the coast and carried it to the head waters of the river, and that the whale's de caying body poisoned the entire river, so that a great epidemic came and killed all the Indians living along the stream, and the waters of the river are dangerous even unto this day. From this tradition the beautiful river has its unsavory name, which in the Indian tongue, means "Stinking waters " Portland Oregonian. The Power of Charmlax Snakes. In India and, to a certain extent. In other Oriental countries, the profes sion of serpent charming is said to Im hereditary, and has been practiced from remotest antiquitv. The serpent charmer possesses a power beyond that of other men of knowing when ne is within close proximity to a concealed reptile, long practice having, probably, given them a fine sense of smell which enables them to detect the odor emitted by the serpent, even though it be so faint as not to attract the attention of the novice. These wily fakirs usually ascribe their powers to some constitu- tional peculiarity, Dut it nas Deen but it naa Deen noticea mat tney geuerai.j p j fangs and extract the venom glands or . the reptiles handled in giving exnibi-.1 tions. What power the human voice, 1 - : 4 V a mrttmna nf may uavv iji tuunvii'" ...w these venemous creatures is uncertain ; however, it has been noted that ser pent charmers continually talk, sing, whistle or have an attendant play npon some shrill musical instrument during the time exhibitions are being given. That these sounds have their influence there is not the least doubt. The "charmer" also exerts an influence over these creatures with his eye, some reputable travelers declaring that they have seen fakirs control and govern their poisonous pets by merely fixing their iyes steadfastly upon those tf the serpents. St. Louis Republic. Tamarack is tba most elastic wood Imitation vase Una has bean invent ed. Cork bricks are about aa heavy as ordinary noroua bricks, TiiE BIGGEST GOLD MINE SITUATED IU THB INTERIOR OX VENEZUELA. nas Produced $33,000,000 'WOTth ot Treasure That Blight Have Been I- Mined for 3,00O,t00. FORGE E. WEBBER, JR., for ( the past seven years superin tendent of the El Callado gold mine, situated some 400 miles above the mouth of the Orinoco River in southeastern Venezuela and thirty miles inland, arrived in the city a few days ago, and next week departs for the South African gold fields as an ex pert for the Rothschilds of London to examine into and report upon the pros pects in the Transvaal. The story told by Mr. Webber about the discovery of El Callado and its ex traordinary gold output would seem like a page from the "Arabian Nights" if it had not been fortified by facts. In 18C8 some Jamaica negroes hearing some stories about gold to be found on the big river on the South American coast sailed over to the Orinoco, as cended it, and stopped near where some natives and Americans were "placer ing. " They worked inland and soon acquired as much information about placer diggings as the rest of the min ers, and gradually, when it became known to them that the formation was quartz, cut their way with machetes through the raesquite and chapparal until they found the cropping of a ledge prolific with gold. It was not more than forty feet long and from eighteen to twenty-four inches wide, but was so rich in sparkling gold that it assayed $2 to the pound. Much oi this ore on the surface went up into the thousands, but was worked in a rude and imperfect way. The Jamaicans di vided the territory among themselves into numerous little companies, and when the extraordinary yield of their work went down to the traders on the river they called the source from which it came El Callado the mysterious. In that way the camp became known to the rest of the world. The unexampled prosperity of the negroes brought trouble not only on themselves but on the authorities, and the Prefect of the district finally com polled them to sell out their claims to a number of Corsican traders several hundred miles on the river below. The Corsicans were men of superior intelligence, but know nothing about the mining business, and it cost them when they took rbarge of tne mines $200 a ton to extract and work ore, which in California or on the Corn- stock would not cost more than $6 ton. Notwithstanding this and the fact that in 1800-62 all of the machin ery to work the mines came from Mex ico, operated by arastras, the rough method which literally means "dragged around in misery" the mines vielded enormously and -up to 1870 produced $15,000,000, the great bulk of which was pure profit. The phenomenal yield of the mine in 1876 attracted the attention of the Rothschilds. The great financiers sent the California expert, Hamilton Smith, w ho from 1868 to 1876 had been super intendent of the North Bloomfield, to negotiate for the purchase of the mine. Mr. Smith offered, on behalf of the Rothschilds, 82,000,000 for the mine. The offer was refused, because the owners believed they could find an other bonanza lower down. The same year the offer was refused the mine turned out $3,000,000 in gold. In 1878 Mr. Smith, after a trio to London, came back and offered '$3,000,000 for it, which was again refused, and that vcar the mine turned out 85,000,000, ' one-half of which was profit It is said by gentlemen familiar vrith mining operations that Mr. Smith made a report after that to the effect that the mine was petering out, and no further negotiations for the sale of the mine were attempted, but certainly Mr. Smith made a third and successful attempt to purchase the property in 1883, paying for it around $5,000,000. The mine up to that time had pro duced $18,000,000, ..The Rothschilds incorporated the institution at SI 0,000, 000, and the stock was placed ex clusively on the London Stock Ex change and the Paris Bourse. In the intervening ten years the mine has produced $7,000,000. How much of that yield has been profit it is difficult to ascertain, lmt considering the fact that much improvement was made on the old ' style of operating the mine and the accessibility to the ore, there necessarily accrued a large profit to the owners. It was not like delving below the earth's surface 2500 or 3000 feet, like on the Comstock. In the earjy days of, the mine so rich was the ore that the owners were com pelled to resort to methods similar to those In vogue in the Natal diamond fields. It is estimated by Mr. Webber that $33,000,000 were produced in the limited urea above discribed, of which 87,000,000 were stolen either by the Jamaican or native miners. They re sorted to pretty much the same tricks as those of the native diggers in the gouth African diamond fields. In portions of the quartz the gold was pure virgin and the decomposed quartz had merely to be broken away, and by a simple manual operation everyone of thn two or three hundred men em ployed could stow away two or three ounces of the precious metal about his person. In that manner millions were carried away and given to the village i ,i and river trfulers for rum tobacco, and 3neU other BrticlcB as are known to be llesired on the boraers of civilization, When the fact became known the ....Hntpn.Wt. hit nm tbe xr.Tt C of erecting a searching room near the inouth of the shaft, where every miner, whether a foreman or a cross-cut miner, had to be searched. Mining men in San Francisco say that the product of the Comstock mines ras between '$70,000,000 and $80,000, -100. In th'it estimate they say t'a. the proportion of gold and silver waa fifty-five per cent of the former and forty-five of the latter. But in the sase of El Callado it was all gold and in that respect exhibits the most re markable contrast to any mine known in recorded history. The ore is a perfectly pure gold ore carrying only oiir-hulf of one per cent, mhihurct and not the slightest trace' f silver, and considering the fact 1 hat in about thirty years it produced more Uian $1 ,000,000 a year, with the crudest nethods imaginable, it is regarded with its net crofits of more than ball thj output, as ihe greatest mine the world J ver aaw. Had such a mine been dis- . covered "in the mineral bearing belt ol the Pacific coast at anytime within the past quarter of a century the ex-1 l oi nnn nnn wnnld not have cost $3,000,000. i Experts believe that tne mine nai ..li.nulaii Tr? that tha futnri source of the world's gold supply cat only be looaea lor irom wo qunrwri the Pacific coast and the TransvaaL San Francisco Examiner. SELECT SIFTIXGS. ! At London a telephone costs S50 a year. It would require 12,000 microbes to form a procession an inch long. There are tides in the Mediterra nean Sea, but they are very small. The catacombs of Rome contain the remains of about 6,000,000 people. A convict in the Vermon State Prison received $12,000 for a piece of real es tate a few days ago. The most remarkable springs in the world are in California ; they produce sulphuric acid and ink. Greek temples erected in honor ol the superior deities were always un covered or open to the sky. The smallest bird is the West India humming bird. Its body is less than an inch long, and weighs but twenty grains. A set of false teeth, around which oysters had formed, was unearthed by dredgers near Moorehead City, on the Gulf coast. . A man at Charlestown, ML, has just been convicted under the law of 1723. His offense was working on Sunday. The judge reserved sentence. The whole of Manhattan Island was purchased from the Indians for sixty Dutch guildersr "some of them," it ia said, "being of a doubtful metal." Aunt Eunice Conrad, who lives in Pendleton County, West Virginia, ie 116 years old. Sho-is a widow of a soldier of the war of 1812, and draws a pension therefor. The oldest member of the Philadel phia police force, Daniel Kendig, ie eighty-two years of age, and still does duty as a guard at the Mayor's office. He is as vigorous as the average man of fifty. In the basement of the Bank of England, London, is the barracks wherein half a hundred soldiers are quartered from 7 o'olock every evening until 7 o'clock the next morning for the protection of the bank. There were ninety-five words in the original cablegram, the famous despatch from Queen Victoria to President Buchanan. Owing to a defect of the wires the transmission of the message consumed twenty-four hours. The heads of persons beheaded for state offenses were formerly exposed to view upon long poles on London Bridge. The last head so exhibited was that of Venner, the fifth monarchy zealot, be headed in the reign of Charles II. There has been discovered a German book printed at Philadelphia and dated 1705, twenty years after the settlement of Philadelphia's suburb of German town and thirty years earlier than the date hitherto assigned to the first printing of a German work in Phila delphia. About the year 1767 the beats and calls of the drum, then used in the ser vice, were put into a permanent shape. The tattoo, or beat of the drum calling soldiers to their quarters at night, was once called "tap-too," from the Ihitch word signifying "no more drink to bo tapped or sold." Crinoline dates from the days of Queen Elizabeth and survived until the Commonwealth. It appeared again in 1711 and was enlarged in 1744 and con tinued to the end of the century. It was abolished by Georgo IV. From 1856 to 1866 it flourished in all its glory and attained its largest dimensions. A dog that sucks eggs can always be cured by boiling an egg very soft, then placing it, as hot as boiling watr can make it, in the dog's mouth and slam ming his jaws together, so as to break the egg in his month. No matter how long he may have been abdicted to egg sucking, one dose of soft boiled eggs will answer for the remainder of his days. I Geography of the Moon. ' Sir Robert Ball is reported to have said in his lecture on the moon that the geography of our satellite was bet ter known even than that of the earth. There was not a single spot on the moon the size of an ordinary parish in England that has not been photo graphed and observed. Of course this remark can only relate to the side of the moon which is always turned towards us. Nearly one-half of her surface has never been seen by mortal eye, and never will be, unless the lunar globe should be tilted by collision with comet or some other erratic body. Otherwise it is a fact that photography has done more for the earth's atten dant than for itself. It is analogous to the further fact that the only things which man can predict with certainty ire not those that happen on the sphere he inhabits, but the movements of worlds immensely distant. London Telegraph, A Railroad Trip to Cape Horn, The growth of friendly relatious be tween this country and the South American states ought to proceed more rapidly as the railroad links between them and us are completed. It is not generally known bow near to completion tne scheme to connect all parts of the two continents has been brought At present the traveler can board the cars at New York and step from them at the City of Mexico, over three thousand miles away. Railroad connection will soon be finished from there to Avutia, a placa on the northern frontier, of Guatem ala, 700 miles further on. The drive Into the continent beyond will be undertaken as soon as the inter-continental commission, jointly ap pointed by this country and South American Republics, shall determine bow bast It may ba dona. So that tha day when si man may talk of run ning down to Cape Horn for a day or two -la not nearly so distant as one niaylhink. Pittsburgh Dispatch. DPI IIU TAlMAitK IMJI Vlll a imsiiiaiauaw XHB BROOKLYN DIVINE'S 8U DAT SJUtMON. Subject: "Hadasssah. Tbbt; "and he brought ap Hadassah," EstberiL.7. A besaiifnl child was horn In the capital OfPerMa, She ma an orphan an'l a capttve, tier purits havinr been sio'en from their IaranHtleb home and earried to Shahn and had diet, leaving their daughter poor and tn a stranon Inn l. But an Isriellte who had been oarrwJ Into the same captivity was at-ewot-i by the c:i- of the orphan. He edu cated ber fn bis holv rellirlon, and under tha roof of that good man this adopted child be gan to develop a swe-tnK8 and exeelleney of character, if ever equaled, certainly never Burpnse-'. Bnuttfnl Hadassah! Coold that adopted father ever spare her from his hnupehoM1' Her artlessness, her girlish sports, her fnnooenee, her orphanage, had wonnd themselv-w thoroughly around his heart, jut as around each parent's heart jmone ns there are tendrils climbtau and tst"niog and blossoming and growing i. ronifer. I expect he was like others who have lov"'. ones at home wondering sometime if tickness will come and death and bereave ment. Alas, worse than anything that the let ner expects hnppens to his adopted child? A'wsneru", a princely scoundrel, demands that FFtdassnh. the fairest one in all tha kingdom, become his wife. Worse than death, was marriage to such a monster of ini quity'! Bow crreat the cbamre when this young woman left the home where 6od was worshiped and mlttrion honored to enter a I'.'ilaee devoted to pride; idolatry and sensu a iiv ! '.'As a lam to the slaughter !" - Ahnsueruo knewot that hia wile was a Jewess. At the insti -m ion of the infamous prime minister the king decreed that all the J"ws in the land should be slain. Hadassab, p ends the cause of her people, breaking thrq?h the rules of the court and present- . In ; herself in tho verv face of death, crying, tf 1 perish. I perish !" Oh, Jt was a sad time among that enslaved people! They had. ell heard the deer e concerning tbeirdeatb. Borrow, tr.iunt an 1 chastlv, sat in thousands of households, and mothers wildly pressed their in lints to their "breasts as tho days ot mnssnere hastened on, praying that the same swor-i stroke which slew the mother might so slny the child, rosebud and bud perish lair in tne same bissr. . But Hidassah is bus rat court. The hard henrt ot the king is touched by her story, iD.l a'thongh he could not reverse his de cree .or thaslayin? ot tne Jews he sent forth n order that they should arm themselves for .elene. On horseonck, on mules, on dromedaries, messengers sped through the Imi'l bearing the king's dispatches, and a shout ot joy went np irom th;it enslaved people at tne faint hope o! success. I doubt tot many a rusty blade was taken down and jn"ri ned. Cniearded youths grew stout a prints at tho thought of deiending mothers tin i sisters. Desperation strung up cowards into heroes, and fragile women grasping tneir weapons swung them about the oradlea, Im patient for them to strike ths blow in be half oi Household an 1 country. The day of exe.-ution dawneS. Govern ment offlMal, armed and drilled, cowed be fore the attle s out ot t he oppressed people. Tie cry of defeat rang back to the palaces, hut ubove thn mountains of dead, above 7.000 crushed an-1 mini gled corpses, sounded the triumph o. tne delivered Jews, andtheir rnrhu-iasm was as when tne highlands! ra-ne to the relief of Lucknow, and the Sng fish army, which stoo 1 ia the very" jaws ot death, at the su l ien hops of assistance and rescue lifted the shout above belching can non nn 1 the denth vrom of hosts, cryljg V are saved 1 We are s ived !" SIv subject affoms me opportunity of il-lu-.i rating what Christian character may ba n .ertbe greatest disadvantage. There is no Christian now exactly what be wmts to be. Tour standard is much higher thaa any thing you have attained nnto. If thera be any man o puffed up as to be thoroughly ausfted with the amount ot ex-ellency ha has already attame l, 1 nave nothing to say to sunn a one, but to those who are dissatis fied with past attainments, who are toiling under disadvantages which are keeping thera from being wnat they ought to be, I have a messige irom God. You each of yoa labor under difficulties. There is something in yuurtemp-niovnt in your worldly cir cumstances, in your calling, that acts pow erfully against you. Admitting all this, I Intro nee to you Hailassah of the text, a noble Christian notwithstanding the most gigan'io iffl -ulties. 8!ie whom you might have expects i to be one ot the worst of wo men is on" oTthe liest. In the flr-t place, our subj-ct is an lllus trai .on of what Cnrist ian cnaracter may be un !er orphanage This Bible line tells a long slory a out Hadassnh. "She had neither father nor mother."- A noble:nan become her iruanl'an, but there is no oaa who cm take the place of a pan-nr. Who so able at nicht to hear a child's prayer, or at twilight to c-niilc voiith.nl wanderings, or to soothe vouthiul sorrows? An individual will gothrough life b-iirin;the uiarksof orphan age. It will requir.! more strength, mora pertdsti-ac, more grace to make such a one the rght k -id of a C ihns ian. He who at tony vears loses a parent must reel under the t.tow. Even down to old age men are accustomed to rely upon the counsel or be powerfully influenced by the advioe of parents, if they are s-ill alive. But how niucri greatertheueruavemeiit when it comes In early lite, before the character is sell re liant, and when naturally the heart Is unso phisticated aud ea-ily tempted ! An i vet behold wii a ro dlity of disposi tion Halassah exhibited 1 Thongh faiher mother were gone, gra;e had triumphed over all disadvantages. Her w.llingness to seb sacrifice, her control over the king, bet humility, her faitn ul worsnip of Gol. show her to have been one ol the best of the world's Christians. There are those who did not enjoy re mark able early pnvilo-'es. Perhaps, like the beautiful captive o: the text, you were an orphan. You had huge sorrows in your tit tie heart. You sometimes wept in tbe night when you knew not wbat was the matter. Yoa felt sad sometimes even on the play- groun L Yonr- father or mother did not stand in the door to welcome you when you ame home from a long journey. You still feel the effect of enrly disa (vantages, and you have sometimes offered them as a reason for vour not being as thoroughly religious as you would like to be. But these ex -ases are not sufficient. God's gracs will triumph 11 you seek it. Ho knows what obstaoiesyou have fought against, nnd tne more trial tba more hem. After all. there are no orphans in the world, lor tbe great Ood lathe Father f us all. Again, our subject is an Illustration ot v ml religion may be under the pressure of poverty. The captivity and crushed condi tion of this orn j.ui girl and of the kin 1 man wba ailotited her suggest a condition ot poverty. Yet from t ie very first acquaint. aaee we had with H id issah we find her tba same bappy ant contented Christian. It was oniv bv compulsion she was afterward ts ken into a sphere ot honor and afnueneet In the humble home of Mor'wji', her adapted father, she was a Mgst that ft luiumed every prlvaticn. In soma perloi in almost every man s life there tomes a season of straitened elreamstanees, when t he severest calculation and most scraping economy are necessary tn.ordxr.to saiat- ence and respectability. at me ommeaes ment of tmsiness. at tha entrance pt a I profession, when LrienJs are lew and the world is airaia ot you utanun io luxsitiihtv of failure, aianv of tha noblest j hearts have struggled against poverty and i are now struggling. To inch I bear a message f seed eh I Too sav it is a hard thing for yoa to be a 1 Christian. This constant anxiety, this un. ; resting calculation, wear out the buoyancy n vour nirit. and although v havii told perhaps no one about It cannot X tall that fhH Is the very trouble wnicti kepa yo from be:Dg what you ought to be? You hav no time to think aliout laying up treasure! In heaven when it is a matter ot great doubt whether you will be enabled to pay your nexl quarter's rent. You cannot think of strlvin alter a robe of righteousness uatll yen get means enongh to buy aa overaoat to kerf outtbeeold. Yoa want tha biead of UK Tou think vou must get alone withCM until you can buy another kaarel of flaar tot your wife and children sometimes you sit down oUcouragod and almest wish ye. w Again, our suhjeot Hlastrates what mllcttaai I ay be ander the temptation of personal aa may tract! Ten ass. The Inspire-! record says of the heroin of mr teat. "She waa fair Beautiful.' Hsr very nam signified a yrtle. Yet tha adtaicatioa and paahw and flattery e' the world dM aot bttgtK her ha nvliry. The simplicity of her manners and behavior equaled bar extraordinary attrac tions. It is tbe same divine goodness whieb. puts the tinge M tho rose's ohoak, and too whiteness into the lily, andPthe gleam on the wave, and that puts motor in the obeek and sparkle ia the era, and majesty in the fore head, and symmetry into tne farm, and graaaraineas iat tha gum. thrown too verv omasa Ol appearnnoo, hava beam dsetroyed. simpering and atkotaMoas and manors have oitea booa the of that whioa CH has sent as a feosaiiMl Jopooioaa,' anemones and hei httropaa sewr swasjor at the teaMf whltth Ood planted in tbdr very hue, sepal, acil and miomu, There ato many flowers that bow aewa so modest you osaaot too rh color fa tneir cheek until yoa Hit ap their head, putting your hand under their round chin. Indeed any kind ot personal aMracrioas, whether they ba those of the body, the mind or the ttenrt, may become temptations to pride and arbitrariness and foolish assumption. The mythological story of a man who, seeing himself mirrored ia a Stream, became so enamored of bis appear ance that he died ot ths eaTeota lUuatKttes tbe fatalities ander which thousands of both sexes hav fallen by the view of their own aaperiortty. Buraordinary capacities aaaao extraordinary temptations. Mea who haws (rood moral health dowa in the valley oa tha top of the mountain are seised of consump tion. Hotrimls, the wits of Uithrtdaies, waa straggled with her own diadem. Wbtie the most of is will not have the same kind of temptation that Hadassab must have felt from her attractiveness ot personal appear ance, there may be some to wnotn It will be an advantage to nom up ine o iaracier ui u, beautiful captive who sacrinsad not her hu mility and eernestness of disposition to tne world's admiration and flsttery. The ohief secret of the beauty of the violet is that. awav down in tna grass, irom one weeii s end "to another, it never mistrusts that K is violet. Again, our subject exhibits what religion may be under bail domtta lnaaences. HS'lasssn was snatcnea irom me gouty borne into which she had been adopted and introduced into the abominable associations of which wicked Ahasuerus was the center. What a whirl of blasphemy and drunken ness and licentiousness ! No altar, no pray er, no Sabbat b, no God ! If this capttve girl can be a Cbr.stian there, then it is possible to be a Christian anxwharc There arc many of the best people of theworli who arc obliged to contend "with the most adverse domestio Influences, children who have grownup into the love of God un ler the frown of parents, and un tnr tne discourage ment of bad example. Some sister or tha family having professed the faith ot Jesus Is the subject of unboun led satire inflicted by brothers and sisters. Yen, Hailassah was not tno only unristian wno nau a queer husband ! It is no easy matter to maintain eorrect Christian principle wtien there is a tompanion disposer, to snolT &t them and to tscribc every imper ec-.'OQ of character to hypocrisy. What a harv. 'bia .or one mem ber of the family to rightly kc-ep tbe Sabbath when others are disposed t make it a dayof revelry, or to inoulcate Fr-P"''y ot spe ch In the mln'tt of cnililrei srnen there are X here to offset the instructions by loose or profane utterances, or to be regularly in at- :endanoe upon church when tnere is more lousehold work demanded for the Lord's lay thaa tor any secular day. Do I speak to inv laboring under these blighting disad- rantages? My subject is full of encourage Dent. Vast responsibilities rest upon vou. Be faitntul, thoutn you stand as muon tlone aa did Lot in Sodom, or Jeremiah in leruaalem, or Jonah in Nineveh, or Hadas lah in tha court of Ahasuerus. There arc rare whioh grow the best when their roots jlutch among the jagged rocks, and you ver Uy have but poor soil in which to develop, hat grass is a thorough husbandman and an raise a erop anywhere. Glassware is molded over the Are, and in the same way fou are to be fitted as a vessel of mercy. The brat timber must bsve on it saw and gouge aa i beetle. Tbe foundation stone ol yours and every ot'uer house came out only under erowbar and blast, ri.es ana wrencues ana hammers belong to the onnrch. Tbe Oiiris tl in victory will bo bright just la proportion as tbe battle is hot. Never despair being a thorough Christian In any household which Is not worse than the oourt of Ahasuerus. Finally our subject illustrates what re ligion may be in bigh worldly position. The last we se in the Bible of Hadaasah is that she has become the queen of Persia. Prepare now to see the departure of her humility and self-saeriflce and rolirious principle. As snepoes up you maysipem grace to go down. It iseasiur to be bamblc fa tbe obscure nouse oi ner aaopiea miner than on a throne of doin nion. Bnt yoa tnrsiudge this noble woman. What she was be ore she is now the myrtle. Applauded for ber beauty an-t her Town, sue lorgets not the cause of her suffering people, and ith all simplicity of heart still remains a orahiper of the God of heaven 1 Noble example followed only by a very Few. I aldreas some who. through the good nees ot God, have risen to positions of in lu nee In the community where you live ia law, in merchan lise, in medioine, in me chanics an i in other useful occupations and professions. You hold an influence lor good jr lor evil. us see wiieiuei, nw nnun- ah. vou ean stand elevation. Have you as much simplicity of charaoter as once you svidenood lo you teoi as muon aepsnu- enee npon God, as much . your own weak- lees, as mucn your accountaouity loriaiems ntrusted, or are you proud and overdo mandlng and ungrateful and unsympa thetio aad worldly and sensual and dev ilish? Then you have been spoilsd by your success, and you shall not ait oa tnis throne with the heroine of -my text. Ia the day when HAiassah shall com to tbe grander coronation. In tbe presence of Christ and the bannered hosts of the re deemed, yoa will be poor indeed. Oh. there are thousands of men who can easily endure -o ie knocked down of misfortune who are aiteTly destroyed if lifted ap of sueoous. -atan takes them to the-top of the pinnacle ot the temple and shoves them oil. Their head begins to whirl, and they lose their ba'ance and down they go. While last autumn all through the forest there were luxuriant trees, with moderate out bransh and moderate height pretanding hut little, there were toliage shafts that shot far np, looking down with eontempt on the whole forest, clapping their hands in the breeze and shouting, "Aha, do you not wish vou were as high up as we are?" But last week a blast let loose from the north eame rushing along, and grappling the boasting nan hurled them to the ground, and as tbey went down an old tree that bad been singing psalms with the than- drahantred summers cried out, 'Tride goeth bet ore distinction and a haugnty spirit be ore a fall." And humble hickory and pine and chest n at that had never said their prayers nciore oowea tneir ueaus as uiucu mm to say, "Amen V My rriends, "GooJ resisteth tho proud, but giveth grace to humble." Take from mv subject encouragement. Attempt the service of God wnatever your disadvantages, and whatever our lot let us seek that grace which outshone all the splendors of the pal aces ot S.iusba, TIhv nlio h'.vc ti'C power to ma!:e t ie lies' of life's niisft'lven'tin s amine Cidetit- sre likely to r. neb. agretu ; ,ii;e. In oo-iptninj; his lliet m i neler. Gabriel David Fai.reiiht it took Li I itiest point reached m' tho nierci rv nring the winter of ITOH, at ) itn;i as bis zeropoiut. He "Hi d on September 10, 1730. Ptople who arefri'iibled with sleep issue s should drink coco, ks'fad ol t a or coff e. at the evening m.;nl The ciiemtcil composition, of the el iJennis of tbe lieel h nearly Iht -ame ns that of the matter of nails, horns and hoofs. Mr. Maxim says tij.- the is not try inir t. make a flyi machine for freight or passengers, bat purely for military pnrpost-s. Paper is nsect in Germany in the maLufacture of pian e, being employed for all of tbe parts wbicu are nsuillj made of wood. LAUGH AND GR0WFAT HEALTHY TONIC FOR 1NVAL IDS OF ALL KINDS. fjumorens Anecdotes Gleaned from Tarw one Source Something to Read Which Will Make Acybody Sleep Well-Dettel Thaa Medicine When Taken Before Re tiring. Strong Iraw if Card. Bookkeeper (telephone compmy) Customers are ordering their tele phones out all over the city. They say tbey don't pay. Superintendent Humph! goraethintr tuusi he done. Write an item lor the newspapers saying that by attaching telephone ires to the water-p pes it is possible to hear what is tteine said in the next iouse. .New York Weekly. Conditionally an Heiress. Mr. Blown Miss Tobinson, er ill you change your name to Ilrown? Miss Koblnson Yes. Mr. K Alice, darling: When? Miss It When my uncle, Thomas Urown, dies. He leaves me his money on that cnndi tlon. Vogue. Not Quite Bight Yet. Auntie Aud so you have a do!, that talks and cries and goes to sleep and stands alone? You ought to be very proud of hei. Little V.oee Yes'm, 1 am; hut I do wish we'en 1 take her to the country she'd freckle just a little, so's to sh w folks she hasn't been in t e City all summer." -Good News. Dictated It. An old negro who had business in i lawyer's office was asked if he could sign his name. "How is dat, sab-"' "1 asked." the lawyer answerc 1, "if vou can write your name." Well, no, sah, I neber writes my name; J jes' dictates it, sah." Tid-Hiis No 1 andsrer. Well, Mary, what did you think of the pictures at the academy?" Oh. mum, there was a picture there called Two Dogs after Laudseer,' but I looked at it for neariy half an hour and I couldn't see no Land seer." bpare .Moments. A Considerate Employer. rublisher You look lama I'eef kicked out much? Hook Ageni bout forty times. Publisher (kindly) Well, leave your end eloped . a here and canvass with this sample Hible until your back gets well. ew York Yeekly. Not a Kooter. Hicks It spoils a ball game for tnb to have to take my wife. Dix How so? hicks iien one oi our uit-u scores a home run she 1uok at me and says sweetly: "Now, i.sn t luat too bad?" New York World. Blsing Uiin I'p. Dudely What would it take to make a suit of clothes for me? Ta.I- or Well, from vour appearance, 1 would say $2n worth of padding anc $5 worth of cloth. The Innocents at Home. Children occasionally give some. very peculiar answers. A little Texas boy on being asked how many chil dren his father and mother had, re plied: "I am all the chilren they have got" Another little boy on be ing asked the same question, replied: Two girls and a boy. I'm the boy." Texas Siftings. Too Good to He True. Mrs. Mulgrew. Thlm newspapers tells notbin' but lit s all. the time. Mrs. Mcbrannigan Phwat makes e say that? Mrs. Mulgrew the ould man read in yisthetday's paper mat all the Chinese wor trone to war an' I see lvery Chinese laundr.ry in Oowan- us Is open the same as usual this niornin'. Brooklyn Eagle. I.ltulU of Delaarle. Friend Does the Delsarte system teach you how to act when proposed to? Uride Yes, I studied that part carefully. -Did you use it?" "I used it with three or four whom I r scted and I did it beautifully, I know; but when dear Tom proposed I forgot all about it" New York Weekly. She Came Hlr.h, "Certainly your income is are I large not a don't enough to marry on. You man with expensive tastes. understand why you hesitate," said Assistant district Atlorney Mnrdnna to a friend with matrimonial aspira tions one day last week. - "I said all that to h'lr," answered the friend, sadly. "What did she say?" "That I had made a big mit;ike, for the reason that any one who wanted to marry ber had tli' iiut expensive kind of taste." New York Journn1. Caught. This squirrel must be qUito old,-' said Maud. Why, no; he's not uioro than a year old." "How does it happen be is. so gray? Judge. Why He Swore U(T. First Anarchist I shall ... drink another glass of p er. Second Atiarchist Acli! you vos Itrazy. First Anarchist No; I vos re. up- how dot peer vos nis'le, u tit! I to;, i dot peer preaks de rules of our so ciety; it vorks, Ham; dotpcer vie k :" Brooklyn Eagle. What He Had Against It Boarder There is only one have against the beef, iii:nl.rn. Landlady And what's t,i,i,t. r Boarder A knife; when 1 o have a saw. Detroit Tribune. The Sign or Matritiiony. Mrs. Spinks Is your friend a married man? Mr. Spinks I guess so. lie r hia suspenders with a hairpin it' of a nail. Judge. Probably Correct. He Are you happy, now . married? tine Compa rati vt ly. "Compared with iviiotn?" ".Mv husband." Lilafc m