I § The Constitution | I _WelI Built J Jg The New Method of Construction Adds <2 L Strength and Saves Weight * i The Constitution, tl*? yacht built for She defense of the America's Cup by < the Herreshoff Manufacturing Com pany,is probably the lightest construct- CONSTITUTION ON HER T RIAL SAIL OFF BRISTOL. Ed vessel of her size ever built, and it Is largely on the lightness of lier con struction that those interested in the yacht expect she will make her great gains. In model there is vers* little difference between her and the Colum bia. The slight differences made are expected to enable her to carry ten per cent, more canvas than the cham pion of IS!)!), which alone should make her very much faster than the older yacht, but with the great gains made In the construction of the hull these gains will be much more than they (THE CONSTITUTION'S LONGITUDINAL PLAN, SHOWING FOSITION 1 OF MAST STEP AND LEAD. torould otherwise be. Those who are Interested in the yacht think there is ho doubt of her beating the Independ ence, and they argue that even if the models are the same and each yacht has the same amount of driving power the Constitution, with less weight to drive, will go through the water faster than the Independence, and every one concedes that in the hull the Constitu tion saves tons in weight over the In- Sependence. The Scientific American gives some detailed drawings of the construction of the Constitution, and Shows where the great gains in weight iaving are made. NEW SPORT FROM ANTIPODES. Hx and Saw Contests Are Witnessed by Shouting; Thousands. Tasmania may justly claim the credit bt having given the world a new sport. In that far-off land, among the men of brawn and might, whose swinging axes have felled the towering forests 4nd converted their trackless depths into flourishing farm lands, has arisen a. contest tit for kings; a form of ath letic exercise calculated to bring the thrill of delight to all who have an honest admiration for good red blood and the display of mighty muscle sys tematically trained to do useful work. The new sport may be designated as !'axmanship," and although it is of but decent origin it has already taken the premiership over all other sports. A HANDICAP CHOPPING CONTEST IN FULL SWING. iWhat thd bull tighter is to Spain and Mexico, the cricketer to England, the Bwordsmau to France, ilie hockey player to Canada, and the football and baseball hero to the United States the champion ax man has become to the brawn loving Australians. The championship contest or carni val is held yearly in Ulverstone, Tas mania, some time during the first two months of the year, under the auspices of an organization specially formed for the purpose, bearing the title of the "United Australian Axemen's Associa tion." The entries to the yearly competition kre not confined to Tasmania, but come also from Victoria, New Sontl : Wales and New Zealand. Each dis trie? has its champion, and among th« adherents of these various stars tber« Is the most heated controversy as tc the respective merits of each. Foi months before the great contest thest brawny axmen spend all their spare time practicing, until they develop a speed and strength that is little shorl of marvelous. This year's carnival is conceded to have been the most suc cessful since the yearly meeting was Inaugurated. In the championship chopping con- tests there were six trials and the final. Eight men participated in each of the trials, and the winners fought out the finals. As this contest is designed pri marily to test a man's skill in felling a tree, the log, a great piece of tough wood, six feet four inches in girth, is placed firmly in the ground, as though it were a growing tree. Five minutes before the beginning of the heat the referee's whistle sum mons the contestants into the inclos ure. They are all splendid specimens of physical prowess—thick set, deep chested, iron muscled and bronzed from exposure Each carries his fa vorite ax, the fullest latitude being al lowed in the matter of selection. It is a significant fact that several of tho THOMAS PETTITT, WHO WON THE CHAM PIONSHIP. saws and axes used this year were the product of American firms. When all is ready the pistol shot sounds and the contest is on. Scarcely less exciting is the sawing contest. The log used is the same size as that employed in the chopping con test. but the time made is much more rapid, for the great saw cuts through the wood much more quickly than the axe can go. This year for the first time the ax men's and sawyers' championships were won by the same man—Thomas Pettitt, of Sprint, Tasmania. Not only did he win both events, but he also broke the record for each. In some Italian towns, instead ot giving books as prizes in public schools they give savings bank books, with a small sum entered to the credit of the prize winner. Poooooooooooooooooooo ital For Sick Wheat jf Cereal Infirmary at Port Ar- 6 l on Lake Superior Won- Q ierful Cures Effected. 6 00000000000000000000000000 . The latest thing in the hospital line is an infirmary for sick wheat, where various ailments of the kernel are treated and in many cases a perfect cure is effected. 1 There is an immense annual loss re sulting from wet or diseased wheat. The loss from loose smut alone is at least $18,000,000 a year. The Depart ment of Agriculture has disseminated a great deal of information among the farmers in regard to the diseases of wheat and the means for bringing about a cure, but not much benefit has resulted from the information. In the large wheat sections of Manitoba and the Northwest the same conditions prevail, and it was with the object of reducing the loss to a minimum that the wheat hospital has been estab lished at Port Arthur, at the north west end of Lake Superior. Here an elaborate system is in use for restor ing diseased wheat to a healthy state. The building is in the form of a large elevator, very similar to the common grain elevators of the United States and Canada. It is supported out in tho lake upon crib work, so that vessels may come alongside and carry the cured wheat directly to the East or foreigu ports. About 2,000,000 bushels of wheat are treated in the hospital every year. Where the disease of the wheat is of a very virulent type, it is impossi ble to Improve it in health. Diseases cnown as "stinking smut" or "bunt" ' "WHEAT HOSPITAL," PORT CANADA. are beyond all help. In the advanced stages of those diseases the whole ker nel is infected with the germ and be comes a mass of spores, which have consumed all the nutritive parts of the kernel, leaving only a thin shell on the outside. When this breaks there Is a countless number of germs released, which have a fetid odor and are ruia ous to tiour with which they come in contact. Kernels that are intact in side the brown skin can be successful ly treated, even though they are sa black with smut as to be irrecogniza ble as wheat. In addition to this un sanitary or dirty wheat, there are ker nels that get the dropsy; that is, they become saturated with water, and are uafit for anything except stock fodder. Sometimes an entire crop will be af fected in this way, and it usually proves to be a total loss. The drying plant of the hospital is capable of treating 0500 bushels per hour. The plant includes a series of frames of perforated metal, through which hot air is forced until the wet wheat is completely dried. The wheat is divided into three classes, depending upon the amount of water it contains, and this condition corresponds to the stage of the disease. "Tough" wheat contains about five per cent, of water, "damp" wheat about eight per cent., and "wet" whsat about fifteen per cent. Normal wheat contains about four per cent, of water. After wheat in any of the stages of the disease re ceives the treatment given at the hos pital, it comes out in a normal condi tion and ready for the market as lirst class wheat. Scouring is the treatment given for smut. The dirty wheat is passed through rapidly revolving machines of metal and (he dirt is removed by fric tion. In one stage of the treatment the wheat is thrown from the top of the elevator to the bottom floor, and the erosion is such that in a few months pine planks, two and a half inches in thickness, will be completely worn out. As a great amount of dust is thrown oil' from the smutty wheat in this treatment, the employes in the hospitals are votnpelled to wear face masks. These are made of hard white I' V & ATTENDANT IN A WHEAT HOSPITAL, SHOWING FACE PROTECTOR. rubber, wltli holes iu the sides. In are placed small pieces of dampened sponge that absorb the dust as the workmen Inhale the air. Over their eyes are worn a lame oair of close-fitting glasses. With tM« head dress they look almost like div ers. It Is said that wheat passing through this treatment Is better for milling pur poses than the normal wheat, from the fact that a part of the coat, which has to be removed In milling, is removed by the treatment. There is none of it used in the flour mills of this coun try, however, most of it being shipped to Europe and Eastern Canada. Discovery of Extraordinary Plant. What is probably the most extra ordinary plant ever discovered has now been found by E. A. Suverkrop, of Philadelphia, who, during trips to South America, has for some years been contributing to the collection of ui.s friend, Professor N. E. Brown, of the Herbarium, Kew Gardens. Lon don. The amazing plant -which Mr. Suverkrop has now found is an orchid that takes a drink whenever it feels thirsty by letting down a tube into the water, the tube, when not in use, being coiled up on top of the plant. "One hot afternoon," says Mr. Su verkrop, "I sat down under some brush wood at the side of a lagoon on the Itio de la Plata. Near at hand was a forest of dead shorn trees, which had actually been choked to death by or chids and climbing cacti. In front of me, and stretching over the water of the lagoon and about a foot above it, was a branch of one of these dead trees. Here and there clusters of com mon 'planta del ayre' grew on it, and a network of green cacti twined around It. "Among the orchids I noted one dif ferent from the rest, the leaves, sharp lancehead shaped, growing all round the root and radiating from it. From the centre or axis of the plant hung a long slender stem about one-eighth of an inch thick by one-fourth inch wide, the lower end of which was in the water to a depth of about four inches. "I at once went over to examine my discovery. Imagine my surprise when I touched the plant to see this centre stem gradually contract and convul sively roll itself up in a spiral like a roll of tape. "But more surprising yet was the ob ject and construction of this stem. I found on close examination and dissec tion that it was a long slender flat tube, the walls about 1-32 of an inch thick, cellular in construction, open at the outer end and connected at the in ner end to the roots by a series of hair like tubes. "By subsequent observation I found that when the plant was in want of water this tube would gradually un wind till it dipped into the water. Then it would slowly coil round and wind up. carrying with it the amount of water that that part of the tube which had been immersed contained, uutil when the final coil was taken the water was dumped, as it were, direct into the roots of the plant. The coil re mained in this position until the plant required more water. Should the plant, however, be touched while the tube is extended, the orchid acts like the sensitive plant (mimosa I the coiling action is much more rapid. "I found many of these plants, all directly over the water or over where the water had been. In the latter case it was almost pitiful to see how this tube would work its way over the ground in search of the water that was not." t.!ttle Known About Morocco. Xobody knows what the population of Morocco is. Estimates place it ail the way from 2,500,000 to 9,400,000, says a correspondent of the New York Press. A large part of the country is totally unexplored. The French lately have gone in behind Morocco and ex tended the boundaries of Algiers, so as to take in the Tuat region, a chain of fertile oases through which run the caravan rotes. The Sultan has expos tulated and is still expostulating, but with no effect so far as can be seen. Morocco is sometimes called the "sick man of the West," but those best in formed believe that It is a pretty lively sick man. England Fears Timber Famine. If it were not for the foreign sup plies England receives a timber fam ine would have overtaken the country long ago, because the home-grown sup ply has not been able to meet a tithe of the demand for long enough, and that only of inferior kinds of timber, says a British agricultural Journal. If the foreigu supply of tir alone was to fall off sensibly now the whole building trade of the country would come to a partial standstill and the wagon com panies would be next to idle. The steeple of the Cathedral of Ant werp, Belgium, is 470 feet in helghi, which makes it the highest church stMinle in the world- DB. TALMAGES SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: The Curse of Speculation—ln tegrity and Villainy In Wall Street— Leisom Drawn From Gambling Craxea Which Have Swept Over the World. [Copyright 1901.1 WASHINGTON, D. C.—ln this discourse Dr. Talraage arraigns the spirit of wild speculation and gives some account of the financial ruin of other days; Proverbs xxiii, 5, "Kiches certainly make them selves wings; they fly away as ar>. eagle toward heaven." Money 1 is a gold breasted bird "with silver beak. It alights on the office desk or in the counting room or on the parlor centre table. Men and women stand and admire it. They do not notice that it has wings larger than a raven's, larger than a flamingo's, larger than an eagle's. One wave of the hand of mis fortune, and it spreads its beautiful plumage and is gone, "as an eagle toward heaven," my textbook says, though some times I think it goes in the other direc tion. What a verification we have had of the flying capacity of riches in Wall Street! And Wall Street is one of the longest streets in all the world. It does not begin at the foot of Trinity Church, New York, and end at the East River, as many suppose. It reaches through all our American cities and across the seas. Encouraged by the revival of trade and by the fact that Wall Street disasters of other years were so far back as to be forgotten, speculators run up the stocks from point to point until innocent people on the outside suppose that the stocks would always continue to ascend. They gather in from all parts of the country. Large sums of money are taken into Wall Street and small sums of money. The crash comes, thank God, in time to warn off a great many who were on their way thither, for the sadness of the thing is that a great many of the young men of our cities who save a little money for the purpose of starting themselves in business and who have SSOO or §IOOO or S2OOO or SIO,OOO go into Wall Street and lose all. And if there was a time for the pulpit to speak out in regard to cer tain kinds of nefarious enterprises now is the time. Stocks rose and fell, and now they begin to rise again, and they will fall again until thousands of young men will be mined unless the printing press and the pulpit give emphatic utterance. My counsel is to countrymen, so far as they may hear of this discourse, if they have surplus, to invest it in first mortgages and in moneyed institutions which, though paying comparatively small interest, are sound and safe beyond dispute, and to stand clear of the Wall Street vortex, where so manv have been swamped and swallowed. What a compliment it is to the healthy condition of our country that these recent disasters have in no wise depressed trade! I thank God that Wall Street's capacity to blast this country has gone forever. Across the island of New York in 1685 a wall made of stone and earth and cannon mounted was built to keep off the savages. Along by that wail a street was laid out, and as the street followed the line of the wall it was appropriately called Wall Street. It is narrow, it is unarchitectural, and yet its history is unique. Excepting Lombard street, Lon don, it is the mightiest street on this planet. There the Government of the United States was born. There Washing ton held his levees. There Mrs. Adams and Mrs. Caldwell and Mrs. Knox and other brilliant women of the Revolution displayed their charms. There Wither son and Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield sometimes preached. There Dr. Mason chided Alexander Hamilton for writing the Constitution of the Uni ted States without any God in it. There negroes were sold in the slave mart. There criminals were harnessed to wheel barrows and, like beasts of burden, com pelled to draw or were lashed through the streets behind carts to which they were fastened. There fortunes have come to coronation or burial since the day when reckless speculators in powdered hair and silver snoe buckles dodged Du gan, the Governor-General of His Maj esty, clear down to yesterday at 3 o'clock. The history of Wall Street is to a cer tain extent the financial, commercial, agricultural, mining, literary-, artistic, moral and religious history of this coun try. There are the best men in this country, and there are the worst. Every thing from unswerving integrity to tip top scoundrelism—everything from heav en bom charity to bloodless Shylock ism. I want to put the plow in at the curbstone of Trinity and drive it clear through to Wall Street ferry, and so it shall go if the horses are strong enough to draw the plow. First of all, Wall Street stands as a type in this country for tried integrity and the most outrageous villainy. Farm ers who have only a few hundred dol lars' worth of produce to put on the mar ket have but little to test their charac ter, but put a man into the seven times heated furnace of Wall Street excite ment and he either comes out a Shadrach, with hair unsinged, or he is burned into a black moral cinder. No half way work about it. If I wanted to find integrity bombproof, I would go among the bank ers and merchants of Wall Street, yet be cause there have been such villainies enact ed there at different times some men have supposed that it is a great financial debauchery, and they hardly dare go near the street or walk up and down it unless they have buttoned up their last pocket and had their lives insured or re ligiously crossed themselves. Yet if you start at either end of the street and read the business signs you will thid the names of more men of integrity and Christian benevolence than you can find in the same space in any street of any of our cities. When the Christian com mission and the sanitary commission wanted money to send medicine and band ages to the wounded, when breadstutfs were wanted for famishing Ireland, when colleges were to be endowed and churches were to be supported and missionary so cieties were to be equippd for their work of sending the gospel all around the world, the first street to respond has been Wall Street, and the largest re sponses in all the land have come from Wall Street. But, while that street ig a type oi tried integrity on one hand, it is also a type of unbounded swindle on the other. There are the spiders that wait for innocent dies; there are the crocodiles that crawl up through the slime io cranch the calf; there are the anacondas, with lifted loop, ready to crush the unwary; there are fi nancial wreckers who stand on the beach praying for a Caribbean whirlwind to sweep over our commercial interests. Let me say it is no place for a man to go into business unless his moral princi ple is thoroughly settled. That is no place for a man togo into business who does not know when he is overpaid $5 by mistake whether he had better take it back or not; that is no place for a man togo who has large funds in trust and who is all the time tempted to speculate with them; that is no place for a man to go who does not quite Know whether the laws of the State forbid usury or patron ize it. Oh, how many rjen have risked themselves in the vortex and gone down for the simple reason their integrity had not been thoroughly established! Re member poor Ketcham—how soon the flying hoofs of hiß iron grays clattered with him to his destruction; remember poor Gay, «t thirty years of ace, aston ishing the world with his fortune® and his forgeries; remember that famous man whose steamboat and whose opera houses could not atone for his notorious rides through Central Park in the face ol decent New York and whose behavior on Wall Street by its example has blasted tens of thousands of young men of this generation. I have not so much admiration for the French Empress who stood in her balcony in Paris and addressed an excited mob and quelled it as I have admiration foi that venerable banker on Wall Street who in 1864 stood on the steps of his moneyed institution and quieted the fears of de positors and bade peace to the angry wave, of commercial excitement. God did not allow the lions to hurt Daniel, and He will not allow the "bears" to hurt you. Remember, my friend, that all these scenes of business will soon have passed away, and by the law of God's eternal right all the affairs of your busi ness life will be adjudicated. Honesty pays be3t for both worlds. Again, I have to remark that Wall Street is a type throughout the country of legitimate speculation on the one hand and of ruinous gambling on the other. Almost every merchant is to some extent a speculator. He depends not only upon the difference between the whole sale price at which he gets the goods and the retail at which he disposes of the:%, but als« upon the fluctuation of the markets. If the markets greatly sink, he greatly loses. It is as honest to deal in stocks as to deal in iron or coal or hard ware or dry goods. He who condemns all stock dealings as though they were in iquitous simply shows his own ignorance. Stop all legitimate speculation in this country, and you stop all banks, you stop all factories, you stop all storehouses, you stop all the great financial prosperi ties of this country. Sedate England took its chance in 1720. That was the South Sea bubble. They proposed to transfer all the gold of Peru and Mexico and the islands of the sea to England. Five millions' worth of shares were put OT the market at £3OO a share. The books open, in a few davs it is all taken and twice the amount sub scribed. Excitement following excitement until all kinds of gambling projects came forth under the wing of this South Sea enter prise. There was a large company formed with great capital for providing funerals for all parts of the land. Another com pany with large capital— £5,000,000 capi tal —to develop a wneel in perpetual mo tion; another company, with a capital of £4,000,000 to insure people against loss by servants; another company, with £2,500,- 000 capital, to transplant walnut trees from Virginia to England; then, to car the climax, a company was formed for "a great undertaking—nobody to know what it is." And, 10, £600,000 in shares were offered at £IOO a share; books were opened at 9 o'clock in the morning and closed at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, and the first day it was all subscribed. "A great undertaking—nobody to know what it is!" An old magazine of those days de scribes the scene (Hunt's Magazine). It says:"From morning until evening Change alley was full to overflowing with one dense, moving mass of living Beings, composed of the most incongruous ma terials and in all things save the mad pursuit whereof they were employed utter ly opposite in their principles and feel ings and far asunder in their stations in life and the professions they follow. Statesmen and clergymen deserted their high stations to enter upon this great theatre cf speculation and gambling. Churchmen and dissenters left their fierce disputes and forgot their wranglings upon church government in the deep and hazardous game they were playing for worldly treasures and for riches, which, if gained, were liable to disappear within an hour of their creation. Whigs and Tories buned their weapons of political warfare, discarded party animosities and mingled together in kind and friendly in tercourse, each exulting as • their stocks advanced in price and grumbling when fortune frowned upon tnem. Lawyers, physicians, merchants and traveling men forsook their employment, neglected their business, disregarded their engagements to whirl along in the stream, to be at last engulfed in the wild sea of bank ruptcy. Females mixed with the crowd, forgetting the station and employment which nature had fitted them to adorn, and dealt boldly and extensively and, like those oy whom they were surrounded, rose from poverty to wealth, and from that were thrown down to beggary and want, and all in one short week and per haps before the evening which terminated the first day of their speculation. Ladies of high rank, regardless of every appear ance of dignity and blinded by the pre vailing infatuation, drove to the shops of their milliners and haberdashers and there met their stockbrokers, whom they regularly employed and through whom extensive sales were daily negotiated. In the midst of the excitement all distinc tion of party and religion and circum stances and character were swallowed up.' Hut it was left for our own country to surpass it all about thirty-seven years ago. We have the highest mountains and the greatest cataracts and the longest rivers, and of course we had to have the largest swindle. One would have thought that the nation had seen enough in that direction during the morous multicaulis excitement, when almost every man had a bunch of crawling silkworms in his house, out of which ne expected to make a fortune. But all this excitement was as nothing compared with what took place in 1564, when a man near Titusville, Penn., digging a well, struck oil. Twelve hundred oil companies call for a billion of stock. Prominent members of churches, as soon as a certain amount of stock was assigned them, saw it was their privilege to become presidents or secretaries or members of the board of direction. Some of these companies never had a foot of ground, never expected to have. Their entire equipment was a map of a region where oil might be and two vials of grease, crude and clarified. People rushed down from all parts of the country by the first train and put their hard earnings in the gulf. A young man came down from the oil region of Pennsylvania utterly demented, having sold his farm at a fabulous price because it was supposed there might be oil there —coming to a hotel in Philadel phia at the time I was living there, throwing a S3OOO check to pay for his noonday meal and saying he did not care anything about the change! Then he stepped back to the gas burner to light his cigar with a thousand dollar note. Ut terly insane! The good Christian people said, "This company must be all right, because Elder So-and JO IS president of it, and Elder So and-so is secretary of it, and then there are th.ee or four highly respected profess ing Christians in the board of directors." They did not know that when a professed Christian goes into stock gambling he lies like sin. But alas for the country! It became a tragedy, and a thousand million dollars were swamped. There are families to-day sitting in the shadow of destitu tion who but for that great national out rage would have had their cottages and their homesteads. 1 hold up before the young men these four great stock gam bling schemes that they may see to what length men will go smitten of this pas sion, and I want to show them how all the best interests of society are against it and God is against it and will condemn it for time and condemn it for eternity. I do not dwell upon the frenzied specula tions in Wall Street last month. You have enough remembrance of that finan cial horror. I only want you to know that it was in a procession of monetary frenzies, some of which hare paaaed and others are to come.