MRS- PAHItL WILUAHI NW »W "• VtlHft*. "*«C>tl&A»» • NO country has a more splen did system of lighthouses than the United States, and here, where so few profes sions or callings are barred to woman, the position of light-keeper is open to her; provided, of course, she can stand the examination that is necessary be fore she can be placed upon the roll of ollglbles for appointment. The posi tion is both congenial and remunera tive, and for a great many years wom en from time to time have found their way into the profession, until now there are few States with a coast line that do not number at least one among their light-keepers, and frequently a greater number. The accommodations of a liglilhouse station are, of course, varied. Some times they arc simple, but in the case of the new structures they are very elaborate. In the ordinary building there are usually a service-room, liv ing-room, bed-room, oii-room and a store-room. The duties of the lighthouse-keeper are many and important. The top of the tower is usually a tiny room, all glass windows. The lantern is in the centre of the room; it is a great prism of glass in shape like a beehive. The lamp is set into this, and the lenses magnify the comparatively small light of the lamp and make it a great beacon seen far oft; over the waters. Should tiie luminant be a flash-light, there is machinery to be wound up every few hours to cause it to revolve. At sunset MliS. WILLIAMS AT THE FOOT OP TIIE LIGHTHOUSE STAIRS. the keeper climbs the steep steps in the high tower, takes down the curtains that darken it throughout the day, and sets the lamp inside the lantern. As she makes out the last dim sail upon the horizon and feels a thrill of isola tion, and that the sun has left "the world to darkness and to me," she may have a serene sense of consolation in remembering that hundreds of other keepers are climbing upward in the night, and her soul's cry for compan ionship is answered. At midnight the lamp is changed; a freshly filled one is jmt in the place of the first lighted one. When storms are raging or fogs pre vailing the keeper stays awake to wind the machinery that keeps the fog signal booming over the water. Many sleepless nights are thus spent by the in in devoted vigil of the j.Ms to navigation. At the gray of dawn the keeper is again climbing the steep iron ladder to the tower-top. Before the red rim of the sun appears the lamp is extinguished, the fine, prismatic lenses are covered, and the huge panes of glass that form the J^feg^llllilijiiijj( |ijj jjj iiiiisssiiissss! LIGHTHOUSE DWELLING AND BELL FOG-SIGNAL, LITTLE TRAV ERSE LIG MT-STATION. 'walls of the room are curtained. The large lamp is carried down the flights of an almost perpendicular ladder, and when filled, trimmed and cleaned is j-e:;d.Y for the sunset hour. The work of the keeper Is not concluded with this feat; the most perplexing portion of the daily routine is now to be per formed. The light-keeper must give an ac count of his stewardship. A record is kept of qvery gill, pint, quart and gal lon of oil that is nightly consumed by the lamps, the fractional parts of inches of wick burned, the lamp-chim neys broken, and the general consump tion of all supplies furnished yearly in large quantities by the Government. The accounts are piled up in pamphlets full of figuring, and the minutest ac r • is MRS. NORVI2LL ON LIGHTHOUSE TOWER, LAKE POXTCHA7.- TRAIN, LOUISIANA. curacy is absolutely necessary. Trust in a keeper is imperative. Daily, monthly, quarterly and annual reports are rendered to the inspector, and each report is a detective upon the other, every light is a watch-tower, and every visible light-station reports the' others on the log-book or daily journal. The pathetic story of Lena, the six year-old keeper of a port light on the Mississippi River, brings tears to many eyes. The blind grandfather pleaded with the child not to venture to the island post that night, iu vain. Lena had promised the inspector never to forget that light, and, although a >»orm swept the river, she hastened to reach the post, only to have her frail life dashed out by the waves. While Mrs. Fowler, wife of the keep er at the North Dumpling light, Fish er's Island Sound, Rhode Island, was in charge of the tower in her hus band's absence, during a thick fog a break occurred in the machinery by which tiie bell is rung as a warning to sailors. The bell was at the top of the tower, with no regular means of reaching it. Nothing daunted, Mrs. Fowler set a ladder against the tow er, climbed tlie height, tied a rope to the bell, and rang it until the fog cleared away. The Lighthouse Board warmly commended Mrs. Fowler's courage in a letter that is precious to her. These are but a few transcript from official pages. The first woman to act as a light house-keeper was probably Elizabeth Smith, who, 'n 18;M), kept the light at Old Field Point, Long Island, and had full charge of it for twenty-tive years, Nancy Rose was appointed in Novem ber, 1857, as a lighthouse-keeper to succeed her husband at Stony Point, on the Hudson River. She is the first woman keeper whose appointment is on official record. In her seventy seventh year, Mrs. Rose still climbs the ladder to the light with no uncer tain step, faithfully keeping her vigil under stormy and starry skies. Iler bright eyes are unimpaired in vision. The lighthouse stands on the hilltop. The keeper's cottage is surrounded by a well-kept garden that during the summer-time is full of blooming dah lias. Mrs. llose maintains the family tradition in being a light-keeper, ns they have held the post ever since the tower was built. She has raised sev en children, and kept the position through various political changes be cause, as she says,"l have done my duty." The first women to be appointed lighthouse-keepers on the Pacific coast are widows, Mrs. Emily A. Fish at Point Pinos, and Mrs. Julia P. Will iams, of Humboldt, California. Point Pinos light is situated on a point of land jutting into the sea. Mrs. Fish obtained permission to add to the ac commodations, and built a comforta ble residence with modern Improve ments for herself. Mrs. Fish keeps th® light with groat care, allowing uo one to relieve her of the official duties of the station. As a result she received, In March, 1001, a letter of special commendation for the neatness, excellence and faithfulness of her service, a document that is filed with the official records of the lJoard. Mrs. M. D. R. Norvell Is one of the well-known heroines of the lighthouso service. She was born in Washington, I>. C., and her great-grandfather de- ' signed the Washington monument. I The romantic, brilliant and versatile j girl married a young man of fortune, \ who suffered financial reverses, and i was appointed keeper of the light at I the Head oft lie Passes, Port Eads, Louisiana. At his death Mrs. Norvell succeeded him as keeper of the light, in 1891, and she brought up her two children iu the sunshine and storm of a sea-life. Another of these heroines is Mrs. Martha A. Iveeler, who has spent twenty-four years in various light houses along the North Carolina coast. Nine years of this time she was fourteen miles from a postoffice and ten miles from laud, but she had her birds and flowers and books, and be tween them and the performance of her household duties the time passed pleasantly enough. Mrs. Josephine Freeman lias kept the light on Blakis ton Island, near where the broad Potomac Joins the bay, since 1876. Mrs. Freeman says the winters are severe and that terrible storms fre quently prevail. She often walks across the Ice to the distant Maryland shore for mail and provisions. Mrs. Daniel Williams, keeper of the light in Little Traverse Harbor, on Lake Michigan, in a recent interview said tiiis of her work: "I first went into the service in IS6D with my hus band, who was tiie keeper of a light upon an island. In 1872 he was drowned while rescuing a boating par ty. The appointment was given to me, and I continued in my first charge for fifteen years. I was then transferred to the mainland, and I have been here for more than sixteen years. I love my work—it lias its fascinations foi me; and I love the water, although it lias been to my beloved ones a cruel friend. I have had many stirring ex periences in all these years of l'ght keeping. Many are the storms I have seen, watching the wild waves beat ing upon the shore. Every evening us I climb my tower-steps I know that there are hundreds of othe* light keepers doing the same thing. I have many sleepless nights when storms are raging. My station is built of brick and stone, and is very comforta ble and warm to live in. We light keepers feel a great sympathy with our sailors, for we know their eyes are watching to catch the welcome glim mer of the lights as they sail on the stormy deep. The light-keepers arc much exposed to danger, and many lives are lost ingoing to and from the mainland to the lighthouses that are built upon rocks and shoals. Our lives are given to our work, and we feel the great responsibility resting upon us. We are faithful to the duties as signed us, and we keep our trimmed and burning, a guide to mar iners on the way to safe harbors of refuse."—Woman's Home Companion. THI? CHINCHILLA. TTI once It Comes, What It l£ats, Ho'.r I| la Trapped. Very few people seem to know mueli nbout that finest and most delicate of furs, the chinchilla. Were it not for Its lack of durability, the skin being thin and light, this loveliest of pelts would bo more used for whole gar ments. As it is, most of us are con tent to have It for collar and rovers, facings, collarettes, ana muffs. It Is expensive to start out with, nbout the price of a Sealskin, and doubly so, v. hen you consider that its wearing qualities are quite below senl. But it is lovely and becoming, and when you consider that it will last a number of seasons if no strain be put upon it, you can't wonder that so much of it is sold. Some make the mistake of thinking that yellowism, or dull gray, or greasy skins are imitations; rather are they the coats of different sorts of chinchil las which come from Chile, Buenos Ayres aiul La Plata. The real chin chilla, the sort which is worth having, and which has made this fur fashion able. conies from the mountainous dis tricts of Peru and Bolivia. The chinchilla, rodent that it is, lives upon vegetable matter, and is about nine inches in length. The tall measures five or six Inches, and the ears, which are almost hairless, are rather large, broad and silky. Grey is the color of the fur, with blue for ■ - THE CIIINCIirLIiA. the ground color. The light parts are a slate-white, while down the back it is of a dark blue or black cast. While the half savage South Amo> lean Indians still do the catching of these nimble and cautious animals, they no longer surround their holes in the earth with a network of cactus upon which the poor little things used to impale themselves after belug lured out and scared into trying to escape. Besides this punctured the skin, mak ing It less valuable. Then they tried smoking them out, but this turned the skin yellow. Now they use dynamite! Having located their victims they form a network of grasses and hardy plants around a hill on the side of ivhicli the chinchilla burrows. A dyna mite cartridge with a fuse attached is then discharged in the centre of the network and the poor little things are frightened into running out and scampering about, when the Indians dash into the inclosure with clubs, nnd kill them by striking them on the head. To date this is counted the best way out of a bad job; It is a quick death, and does not damage the skins, which bring up to §ls. The skins are immediately removed nnd placed on bushes to dry. the In dians often making their next meal from their hldeless victims. Some In dians limit them with ferrets. To Make 150 Miles an Hour. An electric engine has been invented which is expected to attain a speed of one hundred and fifty miles an hour. A society, lately formed, comprising the leaders of the most noted machine works, has for its sole object the at tainment of phenomenal speed on rail roads. The new locomotive was con structed by Sicilians & Ilalske, and the preliminary tests, which, by special order of Emperor William, were made therewith on the military railroad Berlin-Zossen, are reported to have given brilliant results. uhn llarleycorn Flees 15eftire the Ail vance of the Persuasive Vegetable. Cq.' C-C --'• Prominent workers in social sci ence, addressing the International Vegetarian Congress in London, testi fy that a vegetarian diet is a certain cure ior the liquor habit"- « DR. TALMAGES SEKMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: Secret Societies—Why Silence Is Sometime* Best Organization a That Work For Humanity's Service The True Tests For Secret Societies. I Copyright 1901.1 WASHINGTON. D. C.—A practical ques tion which i« asked in most houses and for many years is here asked by llr. Tal mage and answered; text, Proverbs xxv, 0, "Discover not a secret to another." It appears that in Solomon's time, as in all subsequent periods of the world, there were people too much disposed to tell all they knew. It was blab, blab, blab; phy sicians revealing the case of their pa tients, lawyers exposing the private af fairs of their clients, neighbors advertising the faults of the next door resident, pre tending friends betraying confidences. One-half of the trouble of every com munity comes from the fact that so many people have no, capacity to keep their mouths shut. Wtien I hear something dis paraging of you. ray' first duty is not to tell you, but if I tell you what somebody has said against you and then go nut and tell everybody else what I told you, and they go out and tell others what I told them that I told you, and we all go out, some to hunt up the originator of the story and others to hunt it down, we shall get the whole community talking about what you do and what you did not do, and there will be as many scalps taken as though a band of Modocs had swept upon a helpless village. We have two cars, but only one tongue, a physio logical suggestion that we ought to hear a good deal more than we tell. Let lis join a conspiracy that we will tell each other all the good and nothing of the ill, and then there will not be such awful need of sermons on Solomon's words, "Discover not a secret to another." Solomon had a very large domestic cir cle. In his earlier days he had very con fused notions about monogamy and poly gamy, and his multitudinous associates in the matrimonial state kept him too well informed as to what was going on in Jeru salem. They gathered up all the privacies and poured them into his car, and his family became a sorosis or female debat ing society of 700, discussing day after day all the difficulties between husbands and wives, between employers and employes, between rulers and subjects, until Solo mon, ill my text, deplores volubility about affairs that do not belong to us and extols the virtue of secretiveness. By the power of a secret divulged fam ilies, churches, neighborhoods, nations, fly apart. By the power of a secret kept charities, socialities, reformatory move ments and Christian enterprises may be advanced. Men are gregarious—cattie in herds, fish in schools, nirds in flocks, men in social circles. You may by the dis charge of a gun scatter a Hock of quails or by the plunge of an anchor send apart the denizens of the sea, but they will gather, themselves together again. If you by some new power could break the asso ciations in which men now stand, they would again adhere. God meant it so. lie has gathered all the flowers and shrubs into associations. You may plant one forget-me-not or heartsease alone away off upon the hillside, but it will soon hunt up some Other forget-me-not or heartsease. Plants love company. Y'ou will find them talking to each other in the dew. You sometimes sec a man with no out branchings of sympathy. His nature is cold and hard, like a ship's mast icc glazed, which the most agile sailor could never climb. Others have a thousand roots and a thousand branches. Innum erable tendrils climb their hearts and blos som all the way up, and the fowls of heaven sing in tlie branches. In conse quence of this tendency we find men com ing together in tribes, in communities, in churches, in societies. Some gather to gether to cultivate the arts, some to plan lor the welfare of the state, some to dis cuss religious themes, some to kindle their mirth, some to advance their craft. So every active community is divided into as ! sociations of artists, of merchants, of T bookbinders, of carpenters, of masons, oi | plasterers, of shipwrights, of plumbers, i Do you cry out against it? Then you cry I out against a tendency divinely implanted. I Your tirades would accomplish 110 more than if you should preach to a busy ant hill a long sermon against secret societies. Here we find the oft-discussed question whether associations that do their work with closed doors and admit their mem bers by passwords and greet each other with a secret grip are right or wrong. 1 answer that it depends entirely 011 the nature of the object for which they meet. Is it to pass the hours in revelry, wassail, blasphemy and obscene tall; or to plot trouble to the state or to debauch the in nocent, then I say with an emphasis that no man can mistake, "No!" But is ihe object the defense of the rights of any class against oppression, the improvement of the mind, the enlargement of the heart, the advancement of art, the defense of the Government, the extirpation of crime or the kindling of a pure hearted sociality, then I say with just as much emphasis, "Yes." There is no need that we who plan for the conquest of right over wrong should publish to ull the world our intentions. The general of an army never sends to the opposing troops information of the com ing attack. Shall we who have enlisted in the cause of God and humanity expose our plans to the enemy? No; we will in secret plot the ruin of all the enterprises of Satan and his cohorts! When they expect us by dav, we will fall upon theiii by night. While they are strengthening their left wing we will fall 0:1 their right. By a plan ot battle formed in secret con clave we will come suddenly upon them, crying, "The sword of the Lord and of Gideon!" Secrecy of plot and execution is wrong only when the object and ends are nefarious. Every family is a secret o eicty, every business firm and every bank ing and insurance institution. Those men who have no capacity to keep a secret are unlit for positions of trust anywhere. There are thousands of men whose vital need is culturing a capac ity to keep a secret. Men talk too much, and women, too. There is a time to keep silence as well as a time to speak. Although not belonging to any of the great secret societies about which there nas been so much violent discussion, 1 have only words of praise for those asso ciations which have for their object the maintenance of right against wrong or the reclamation of inebriates or, like the score of mutual benefit societies called by dif ferent names, that provide temporary re lief for widows and orphans and for'men incapacitated by sickness or accident from earning a livelihood. Had it not been for the secret labor organizations in this country monopoly would long ago have under its ponderous wheels ground the laboring classes into an intolerable servi tude. The men who want the whole earth to themselves would have got it before this had it not been for the banding to gether of great secret organizations. And, while we deplore many things that have been done bv.them, their existence is a necessity an» v .\teir legitimate sphere dis tinctly poinV\ v- ut by the providence of God. Such oiydhizations are trying to dis miss from their associations all members who are in favor of anarchy and social chaos. They will gradually cease any thing like tyranny over their members, and will forbid violent interference with any man's work, whether he belongs to | their union or is outside of it, and will declare their disgust with any such rule as that passed in Kngland by the Man chester Bricklayers' Association, which says any man found running or working beyond a regular speed shall be fined two shillings and sixpence for the often?!?, five for the second, ten shillings for the third, and if still persisting shall be dealt with as the committee thinks proper. Let any Christian wife rejoice when her husband consecrates evenings to the serv ice of humanity and of God or anything elevating, but let no man sacrifice home life to secret society life, as many do. I can point out to you a great many name.* of men who are guilty of this sacrilege. They are as genial as angels at the society room * and as ugly as sin at home. They are generous on all subjects of wine sup pers. yachts and tine horses, hut they are stingy about their wives' dresses and the children's shoes. That man has made that which might be a healthful influence a usurper of h's affections, and he has mar ried it, and he is guilty of moral bigamy. Under this nroces.-; the wife, whatever her features, becomes uninteresting and homely. Tie becomes critical of her, does not like the dress, does not like the way she arranges her hair, is amazed that he ever was so unromantic as to offer her hand and heart. There are secret societies where member shit) always involves domestic shipwreck. Tell me that a man has joined a certain kind and tell me nothing more about him for ten years, and I will write hisftistory if he be still alive. The man a wine guzzler, his wife broken hearted or pre maturely old, his fortune gone and his home a mere name in the directory. Here are six secular nights in the week. "What shall I do with them?" says the father and the husband. "I will give four of these nights to the improvement and entertainment, of mv family, either at home or in good neighborhood. I will de vote one to charitable institutions. I will devote one to my lodge." I congratulate you. Here is a man who says. "Out of the six secular nights of the week I will de vote five to lodges and clubs and associa tions and one to the home, which night I will spend in scowling like a March souall, wishing I was out spending it as I have spent the other five." That man's obitu ary is written. Not one out of 10,000 that ever get so far on the wrong ro 1 ever stops. Gradually his health will fail through late hours, and through too much stimulants he will be first-''ate prey for ervsipclas and rheumatism of the heart. The doctor coming in will at a glance see it is not only present disease he must tight, but years of fast living. The cler gyman for the sake of the feelings of the family on the funeral day will only talk in religious 'generalities. The men who got his yacht in the eternal rapids will not be at the obsequies. They have press ing engagements that day. They will send flowers to the coffin, will send their wives to utter words of sympathy, but they will have engagements elsewhere. They never come. Another test by which you can find whether your secret society right or wrong is the effect it has on your seen'in occupation . 1 can understand how through such an institution a man can reach com mercial success. 1 know some men have formed their best business relations through such a channel. If the secret so ciety has advantaged you in an honorable calling it is a good one. But has your credit failed? Are bargain makers now more anxious how they trust you with a bale of goods? Have the men whose names were down in the commercial agency Al before they entered the society been going down since in commercial standing? Then look out. You and 1 every day know of commer cial establishments going to ruin through the social excesses of one or two mem bers. their fortune beaten to death with ball player's bat or cut amidships with the front prow of the regatta or going down under the swift hoofs of the fast horses or drowned in the large potations of cog nac Mononiahela. The secret society was the Loch Karn. Their business was the Ville de Havre. They struck, and the Ville de Havre went under! The third test by which you may know whether the soeietv to which you belong is good or bad is this: What is its effect on your sense of moral and religious obli gation? Now, if I should take the names of all the people in this audience and nut them on a roll, and then I should lay that roll back of this organ, and a hundred years from now some one should take that roll and call it from A to /. there would not one of you answer. T say that any so ciety that makes mc forget that fact is a bad society. Which would you rather have in your hand when you come to die —a pack of cards or a Bible? Which would you rather have pressed to your lins in the closing moment —the cup of Belshazzarean wassail or the chalice of Christian com munion? Whom would you rather have for your pallbearers—the ciders of a Christian church o" the companions whose conversation was full of slang and inuen do? Whom would you rather have for your eternal companions—those men who spend their evenings betting, gambling, swearing, carousing and telling vile stories or your little child, that bright girl whom the Lord took? Oh, you would not have been away so much nights, would you, if you had known she was going away so soon? Dear me, your house has never been tne same place since. Your wife has never brightened tip; she has never got over it; she never will get over it. How long the evenings are with no one to put to bed and no one to whom to tell the beautiful Bible stories! What a pity it is that you cannot spend more even ings at home in trying to helo her bear that sorrow! You can never drown that griet in the wine cup. You can never break away from the little arms that used to be flung around your neck when she used to say. "Papa, do stay with me to-night—do stay with me to-night!" You will never be able to wipe awav from your lips the dying kiss of your little girl. The fascination of a bad secret society is so great that sometimes a man has turned his hack on his home when his child was dying of scarlet fever. He went away. Before he got back at midnight the eyes had been closed, the undertaker had done his work, and the wife, worn out with three weeks watching, lay unconscious L M next room. Then the returned father comes up stairs, and he sees the cradle gone, and he says, "What is the matter? On the judgment day he will find out what was the matter. Oh, man astray. God help you! I am going to make a very stout 'rope. You know that sometimes a ropemaker will take very small threads and wind them to gether until after awhile they become a ship cable. And I am going to take some very small, delicate threads and wind them together until they make a very stout rope. I will take all the memories of the marriage day—a thread of laughter, a thread of light, a thread of music, a thread of banqueting, a thread of congrat ulation—and I twist them together, and T have one strand. Then I take a thread of the hour of the first advent in your house, a thread of the darkness that preceded, and a thread of the light that followed, and a thread of the beautiful scarf that little child used to wear when she bound ed out at eventide to frreet you, and then a thread of the beautiful dress in which you laid her away for the resurrection, and then 1 twist all these threads to gether and I have another strand. Then 1 take a thread of the scarlet robe of a suffering Christ, and a thread of the white raiment of your loved ones before the throne, and a string of the harp seraphic, and I twist them all together, and 1 have a third strand. "Oh, you say, "either strand is enough to hold fast a world." No; I will take these strands, and I will twist them together, and one end of that roue I will fasten not to the communion table, for it shall be removed; not to a pillar of the organ, for that will crumble in the ages, but I wind it round and round the cross of a sympathizing Christ, and having fastened one end of the rope to the cross I throw the other end to you. Lay hold of it! Pull for vour life! i'ull for heaven!