******* it* it it** *********************** *********** »*»*■) The Danish j r„'"L West Indies j| """.H.. ************************************************* ***i The Danish West Indies have come int i public notice on account of the ne gotiations between the United States and the Danish Government by ■which the three Islands St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix become the posses fiiens of the United States a*t a lower li.-ico than this country was willing to pay for m.-tn many years ago. The islands cover about 12" square miles, and the population is estimated nt about 30,000. Denmark has been in possession of the islands since 1071, 4iit they have never been a preat source of revenue, and for many years \ ia . i ---9 '>«o A \ it has cost Denmark mveh money in excess of the revenue to maintain them. A former resident of Charlotte Amalie, the largest plnci on the island of St. Thomas, in speaking of the sen timent of the people as to annexation, said: The white papulation and nearly all sugar producers are in favor of annex ation, but. the blacks are opposed to the scheme. There are comparatively few whites on the islands, not more than fifteen per cent, of the population. The blacks are of a superior class, and, having the same rights and privileges as 1 lie whites, they naturally fear that their condition would suffer if they be came American citizens. There is no such thing as a color line there. Edu cation is compulsory, and all the chil dren, white and blael:, RO to school be tween the aces of seven and thirteen. In the churches there is also an ab sence of all distinction as to color, and there is certainly 110 line drawn in business. The Dane recognizes a man for his worth, a'id never thinks of ex cluding his neif .lbor from social, busi ness or religions functions because of his color. In the Colonial Council at St. Croix there are two black men, and they fill the places with credit to them selves and to the satisfaction of their associates. Intermarriage between na tives and whites is nothing unusual, and clergymen of the various denomin ations never refuse to perform the mar riage ceremony between white and black men and women. There seems to be a misunderstand ing in the United States as to the lan guage used by the people in the Dan ish West Indies. The fact is that everybody speaks English, and, al though the official language is Danish, English is used in the schools as well as in the court of justice. St. Thomas has no agricultural !m --por nee. A few onions and other veg etables are raised there, but not errigh to supply the 10,000 inhabit ant--. and nearly everything that is CHARLOTTE ASIA LIE, ST. THOMAS, FROM THE HARBOR. used at the table is sent from the Uni ted States. The place has a flue har bor. large coal wharves and a drjdock, and tiuoug the larger buildings are the Government house and a hotel. The stores and shops as well as the houses of the inhabitants are nearly all one story buildings. The old structure# are built of stone, but the modern houses are of -wood, and all are of the old Spanish style. The roofs are tiled and flat and so arranged that they shed the rain into cisterns, -where it Is ltept for drinking purposes, there being no other water available. On the Island of St. Croix Frederiek sted and Chrir innsted are the chief towns. These places have a popula tion of about 1000 encb. They have stores and shops like those of St. Thomas, anil the population is made up of the same elements. There are Episcopal, Moravian, Catholic, Dutch Reformed and Methodist churches and a synagogue, and there are two Ma sonic lodges on the island, one French and one English. In each of these there are as many black as white mem bers. One of the deacons in the Dutch Reformed Church is a full-blood negro. One of the peculiarities of the houses iil EAilith P>tbif \V \ L\ Whv's Vr 1 I' ¥' '\ „ . JRTKEI*AS IT 0 \\Wi to. \Wk T7 \. .„SM/ niz IDEAIL HAMBOn oiy ST.yz-m-'^s. in the Danish West Indies is that they have no chimneys. The kitchens are all detached, and as tire is used for cooking only, houses require no fire places or chimneys. The stores, if they stand directly on a street, have doors front and back, and those that stand away from the regular thoroughfare have openings on all four sides. In or der to protect the merchandise from the sand many glass eases are used. St. Thomas has a eab system which is usually a surprise to the visitor. The horses and cabs are not of the showy kind, but the price is in keeping with the outfit, ten cents a mile being the regular rate. People who travel in the country ride on little ponies, which ore safe of foot and scamper over t.bt mountains li'-o goats. Denmark maintains nn army on the Islands of about 2."0 men. Those are volunteers recruited from the veteran corps in the home country and sent to the islands for a term of six years. They have guard and barracks duties to perform, but those who have trades may work at them when they are not on duty, and when their term of office Is over they receive free transporta tion home, or, if they desire to remain, receive positions on the police force. "The clearness of the air at St. Thomas," said a former resident of the place, " may be judged by my expe rience. I lived on the highest of the three hills on which the city is built, and from my house I could see Porto Rico, fifty miles to the west, and with the naked eye could see the palms of St. Croix, forty miles south. The ther mometer registers between ninety and ninety-five degrees in the shade nine months in the year, but one feels com fortable, and some of my friends who were in New York during the hot sea son last year went home to St. Thomas to escape the New* York heat. "The low price of wine does the peo ple more harm tliau (lie warm weather. For six cents one can buy a bottle of native wine, anil half of that will settle the strongest man. The people are hos pitable to a fault, and strangers are al ways made welcome. People in this part of the world are surprised to hear this, but it is just as true as that the hurricane stories from St. Thomas and St. Croix are nearly all exaggerations, for there are 110 more hurricanes there than there are in the Southern Siates of this country." Then- are thirty-lwo sugar estates on the Island of St. Croix, the product of which goes to one concern in New York. But. in order to protect growers who are not in this combination the Danish Government has established sugar stations where growers bring their cane for sale. It is ground in mills belonging to the Government, and the producer receives pay based on the New York prices. The water about these islands is so clear that the bottom may be seen at any point, and it abounds in fish. Very little fishing is done, but many people predict that it will not be long after the United States has the Islands be fore large canning establishments will bo started there. A sail of half an hour from the east end of St. Thomas takes one to St. John, which lias a population of about 700. There Is much grazing laud ou this Island, and with a small invest ment profitable stock farms might be established there. The inhabitants of this islnnd are nearly ail blacks. The chief judge of the island fills several other important offices. He is the chief of police, the postmaster, the head of the truant school which is situated on the Island, the wharf master and cus tom house officer. The Police Depart ment over which he presides has two members. Sproutliis: Table A three-legged table, belonging to a Donegal farmer named O'Brlan, has been distinguishing itself in a remark able way lately. It has been varnished and revarnished many times. It has §.[X.n | { JL.S? JUrfST LEAVr.S ON TABLE LZdS. never been out in the air, and has not received any excessive amount of sun shine; nevertheless, about two months ago tiny buds formed 011 two of the legs of the table, and now vivid green sprouts have become slender branches, covered with leaves. It is a remarka ble manifestation of the vitality of plant life under adverse circumstances. SILENT MACHINERY. Transmission of Power Through Whff'.i Without Contact. In the illustration is shown the pow er transmitting the device recently de signed by Charles G. Armstrong, the object of the Invention being to drive DRIVES MACHINERY WITHOUT CONTACT. machinery by employing magnetic lines of force. The inventor states that he is enabled to transmit the rotary mo tion of a driving wheel to a driven wheel without actual contact and with out any mechanical wear and tear or noise resulting while the machinery is in motion. The driving wheel is pro vided with magnetic coils arranged around the periphery, with means for energizing a portion of the coils at a time. This is accomplished by passing the electric current from a generator ! through the upper spring contact arm into the two or three coils immediately below, and allowing it to pass out through the lower arm. In this way a strong pull is exerted on the projecting spokes of the larger wheel on the side toward the energized coils, with abso lutely no attraction after the centre is passed. The tendency is for the mng nets and attracted spokes to continu ally approach each other, and as fresh magnets and spokes are constantly coming under the drawing power the wbeel continues to revolve as long as the energizing current is supplied. A New Kaftlanft Wtmun's Invention. A railway snow plow is rather a strange thing for a woman to invent, hut the one shown here is not only a evoruan's device, but has a number of practical advantages which recom mend its use by railways and street •ar lines. The chief feature of the ap paratus is that it will cut through a Irift of crust or packed snow about as ?nsy as uu ordinary plow removes a Hslit drift. This Is accomplished by Brst disintegrating the ice and snow MINCING KNIVES ON THE SNOW I'LOW. ! with the revolving cutters mounted in the mouth of the plow, when it is an easy matter to dispose of the small sec tions. A motor is provided to revolve the knives, and the same power runs the endless elevator which projects up ward from the centre of the car. Di rectly beneath the upper end of this elevator the roof takes the shape of the letter A, with the lower ends project ing over either side of the car. In ac tion the flaring mouth of the plow scoops in the snow, while the revolv ing knives mince it fine and drive it back to the elevator. Here it is lifted and falls on the sides of the slanting j roof, passing thence to the ground on either side of the track. A turret above the knives affords a housing for the controlling motors and the operator who has charge of the machine. The inventor is Katharine C. Munsor., of Massachusetts. Another Marconi Pntent. A patent has been recently granted in Kngland to William Marconi, cover ing Ills invention of a portable signal ing apparatus designed for use in war /j\ , WIRELESS TELEGKAPHING ACTOMOBILK. fare on land. The principal feature !s a i telescoping tower, which is intended for use in transmitting signals and col lapsed when the vehicle is ou the move. The accompanying diagram is from the English patent and shows the construction and the mode of opera tion. Court KMquett© Freuvrvec?. Charles the Second once grunted an audience to the courtly Quaker. Will iam I'enu, who, as was his custom, rufered the royal presence with his hat or.. The humorous sovereign quietly laid aside his own, which occasioned I'enn's inquiry: "Friend Charles, why dosi. Thou remove thy hat'.'" "It is the custom," he replied, "in this place for one person only to remain covered."— The Argonaut. Metal v>—.re is still largely imported by ltusjiia from Germany, though tho United states is proving a strong eoai oetltor DR. TALMAGES SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Suhjeet: The Work Noreit at Hand—Put Your Kellglou Into Practice—He Grate ful For Uod'a Common BlMilifi— Revenue of Spiritual Strength. WASHINGTON, D. C.—ln this discourse Dr. Talumge advises IM to do our best in the spheres where we are placed and not v.ait to serve (tod in resounding position; text, I Corinthians x, 31, "Whether, there fore, ye eat or drink or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." When the apostle in this text set* forth the idea that m> common an action as the taking of food and drink is to be conduct ed to the glory of God, he proclaims the importance of religion in the ordinary af fairs of our Hfe. in all ages of the world there has been a tendency to set apart cer tain days, places and occasions for wor ship, and to think those were the chief realms in which religion was to act. Now, holy days and holy places have their im portance. They give opportunity for spe cial performance of Christian duty and for regaling of the i-eligjous appetite, but they cannot ink* the place of continuous exer cise of faith and prayer. In other words, a man cannot bf! so much of a Christian on Sunday that he can nfTord to be a world ling all the rest of the week. If a steamer put out for Southampton and go one day in that direction and the other six days in other directions, how long before the steam er will get to Southampton? It will never get, there. And, though a man may seem to be voyaging heavenward during the holy Sabbath day, if during the following six I days of the week he is going toward the ' world and toward the flesn and toward the devil how long will it take him to reach the peaceful harbor of heaven. You can not eat so much at the Sabbath hanquet that you can afford religious abstinence the other six days. Heroism and princely behavior on great occasions are no apology for lock of right demeanor in circumstances insignificant and inconspicuous. The gen uine Christian life is not spasmodic; does not go by fits and starts. It toils on through heat and cold, tip steep mount sins and along dangerous declivities, its eye on the everlasting hills crowned with the castles of the blessed. I propose to plead for an everyday religion. In the first place we want to bring the religion of Christ into our conversation. When a dam breaks and two or three vil lages are overwhelmed or an earthquake in South America swallows a whole city, then people begin to talk about the uncer tainty of life, and they imagine that they are engaged in positively religious conver sation. No. "Vou may talk about these things and have no grace of God at all in your heart. We ought every day to be talking religion. If there is anything glad about it. anything beautiful nbont it. any thing important about it, we ought to be continuously discussing. I have noticed that men just in propor tion OH their Christian experience is shal low talk about funerals and graveyards and tombstones und desthbeds. The real, gen uine Christian man talks chiefly about this life and the great eternity beyond and not so much about the insignificant pass be tween thew two residences. And yet how few circles there are where the religion of Jesus Christ is welcome. | Go into a circle even of Christian people, I where they are full of joy and hilarity, and ! talk about Christ or heaven and everything i is immediately silenced. As on a summer I day when the forests are full of life, chat j ter, chirrup and carol —a mighty chorus of bird harmony, every tree branch an orches tra—if a hawk appear in the sky, every I voice stops and the forests are still, j .lust so I have seen a lively religious cir rle silenced on the appearance of anything j like religious conversation. No one had ! anything to say save perhaps some old pa triarch in the corner of the room, who really thinks that something ought to be paid under the circumstances; bo he puts one foot over the other and heaves a long sigh and says, "Oh, yes; that's so, that's so!" My friends, the religion of Jesus Christ is something to talk about with a jjlad heart. It is brighter than the sunshine. Do not go around groaning about your re ligion when you ought to be singing it or talking it in cheerful tones of voice. How often it is that we find men whose liveß are utterly inconsistent who attempt to talk religion and always make a failure of it! My friends, we must live religion or we cannot talk it. If a man is cranky and cross and uncongenial and hard in his deal ings and then begins to talk about Christ . and heaven, everybody is repelled by it. ' Yet I have heard such men say in whining tones, "We are miserable sinners," "The Lord bless you," "The Lord have mercy on you," their conversation interlarded with such expressions which mean nothing but canting, and canting is the worst form of hypocrisy. If we have really felt the re ligion of Christ in our hearts, let us talk it, and talk it with an illuminated counte nance. remembering that when two Chris tian people talk God gives special atten tion and writes down what they say: Ma lachi iii. 16, "Then they that feared the Tyord spoke often one to another, and the Lord hearkened and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written.' Again, 1 remark, we must bring the reli gion of Christ into our employments. "Oh." | vou say. "that is very well if a man handle : large sums of money or if he have an ex i tensive traffic, but in the humble work in I life that I am called to the sphere is too j smail for the action of such grand, henven i ly principles." Who told you so? Do you i not know that God watches the faded leaf j on the brook's surface us certainly as He i does the path of a biazing sun? And the j moss that creeps up the side of the rock j makes as much impression upon God's I mind as the waving tops of Oregon pine and I>ebanon cedar, and the alder, crack ling under the cow's hoof, sounds as loud in God's ear as the snap of a world's con flagration. When you have anything to do in life, however humble it may seem to be, Cod is always there to help you to do it. If your work is that of a fisherman, then God will help you. as He helped Simon when He dragged Gennesaret. If your work is d -awing water then He will help you. as when He talked at the well curb to the Samaritan woman. If you arc en gaged m the custom house. He will lead you as He led Matthew sitting at there- I ceipt of customs. A religion that is not good in one place is not worth anything in another place. The man who has only a day's wages in his pocket as certainly needs the guidance of religion as he who rattles the keys of » bank and could abscond with a hundred thousand dollars. There are those prominent in the churches who seem to be on public occa sions very devout who do not put the principles of Christ's religion into practice. They are the most inexorable of creditors They are the most grasping of dealt' . They are known a.-, sharpers on the st» t. They fleece every sheep they can catc' A country merchant i oraes iu to buy /ring or fall goods, and he gets into the h ore of one of these professed Christian men who have really no grace in their hearts, and he is completely swindled, lie is so overcome that he cannot get out of town during the week. He stays in town over Sunday, gcej into some church to get Christian consols tion, when what is his amazement to find that the very man who hands him tlia poor box in the church is the one who relieved liim of his nionev! But never mind; the deacon has his black coat on now. Ua loots solemu and goes houie, talking about "the blessed ssrmou." If the wheat ia the churches should be put into a the first turn oft Vie frank would make the chaff fljr, I tell you. Some of these men are great sticklers for gospel preaching. * They say: "You stand there in bands and surplice and gown and preach—preach like an angel—and we will stand out here and attend to business. Don't mix things. l)on't get business and religion in the same bucket. You attend to your matters, and we will attend to ours." They do not know * that God sees every cheat- they have prac ticed in the last six years; that He can look through the iron wall of their fireproof safe; that He has counted every dollar they have in their pocket, and that a day of judgment will come. These inconsistent Christian men will sit on the Sabbath night in the house of Cod singing at the close of the service, "Hock of ages cleft for me," and then when the benediction is pro nounced shut the pew door and say as they go out: "Goob bye, religion. I'll" be back next Sunday." I think that the church of Cod and the Sabbath are only an armory where we are to get weapons. When war comes, if a man wants to fight for his country, he does not goto Troy or to Springfield to do battling, but he goes there for swords and muskets. I look upon the church of Christ and the Sabbath duy as only the place and time where and when we are to pet armed for Christian conflict, but the battlefield ii on Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs day, Friday and Saturday. Now, be careful to let none of those an noyances gu through your soul unarraigned. Compel them to administer your spiritual wealth. The scratch of a sixpenny nail sometimes produces lockjaw, and the clip of a most infinitesimal annoyance may damage you forever. Do r.ot let any an noyance or perplexity come across your soul without its making you better. Our National Government did not think it belittling to put a tax on pins and a tax on buckle 3 and a tax on shoes. The indi vidual taxes do not amount to much, but in the aggregate to millions and millions of dollars. And 1 would have you, O Chris tian man, put a high tariff on every annoy ance and vexation that comes through your soul. This might not amount to mucli in single cases, but in the aggregate it woulil be a great revenue of spiritual strength and satisfaction. A bee can suck honey even out of a nettle, and if you have the grace of God in your heart you can get sweetness out of that which would otherwise irri tate and annoy. The only way to get pre pared for the great troubles of life is to conquer these small troubles. And I have to tell you, O Christian men. if you cannot apply the principles of Christ's religion on a small scale you will never be able to apply them on a large scale. If you cannot contend success/ulTy against these small sorrows that come down single handed, what will you do when the greater disasters of life come down with thundering artillery, rolling over your soul? Again, we must bring the religion of Christ into our commonest blessings. W r heti the autumn comes and the harvests are in and the governors make proclamations, we assemble in churches and we are very thankful. But every day ought to be a thanksgiving day. We do not recognize the common mercies of life. We have to see a blind man led tv his dog before we begin to bethink ourselves of what n grand thing it is to have undimmed eyesight. We have to see some wounded man hob bling on his crutch or with his empty coat sleeve pinned up before we learn to think what a grand thing God did for us when He gave us healthy use of our limbs. We are so stupid that nothing but the misfortunes of others can rouse us up to our blessings. As the ox grazes in the pasture up to its eye in clover, yet never thinking who makes the clover, and as the bird picks up the worm from the furrow, not knowing that it is God who makes everything from the animalcule in the sod to the seraph on the throne, so we goon eating, drinking and enjoying, but never thanking, or sel dom thanking, or, if thanking (it all, with only half a heart. T compared our indifference to the brute, but pc-haps I wronged the brute. I do not know but that, among its other instincts, it may have an instinct by which it recog nizes the diviue hand that feeds it. I do not know but that. God is, through it, holding communication with what we call "irrational creation." The cow that stands under the willow by the watercourse chew ing its cud looks very thankful, and who can tell how much a bird means by its song? The aroma of the flowers smells like incense, and the mist arising from the river looks like the smoke of a morning sacrifice. Oh. that we were as responsive! Yet who thanks God for the water that gushes up in the well, and that foams in the cascade, and that laughs over the rocks, and that patters in the showers, and that claps its hands in the sea? Who thanks God for the air, the fountain of life, the bridge of sunbeams, the path of sound, the great fan on a hot summer's day? Who thanks God for this wonderful physical organism, this sweep of the vision, this chime of harmony struck into the ear, this soft tread of a myriad delights over the nervous tissue, this rolling of the crimson tide through ar tery and vein, this drumming of the heart on our march to immortality? We take all these things as a matter of course. But suppose God should withdraw these common blessings! Your body would be come an inquisition of torture, t.he cloud would refuse rain, every green thing would crumple up, and the earth would crack open under your feet. The air would cease its healthful circulation, pestilence would swoop, and every house would become a place of skulls. Streams would first swim with vermin and then dry up, and thirst Rtid hunger and anguish and despair would lift their sceptres. Oh, compare such a life as that with the life you live with your families! Is it not time that, with every action of your life we began to acknowl edge these everyday mercies? "Whether ye eat or drink or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." Do I address a man or a woman who has not rendered to God one single offering of thanks? I was preaching one Thanksgiving Day and announced inv text—"Oh, give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good, for His mer cy endureth forever." I do not know whether there was any blessing on the ser mon or not, but the text went straight to a young man's heart. He said to himself as I read the text: " 'Oh. give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good'— Why, I have never rendered Hira any thanks! Oh, what an ingrate 1 have been!" Can it be, my brother, that you have been fed by tho good hand of God all these days, that you have had clothing and shelter the never offered your heart to God? Oh, let beneficient surroundings, and yet have a sense of the divine goodness shown you in everyday blessings melt your heart, and if you have never before uttered one ear nest note of thanksgiving let this be the day which shall hear you sing! What I say to one I say to all. Take this prac l' J religion 1 have recommended into jur everyday life. Make every day a Sabbath and every meal a sacrament and every room you enter a holy of holies. We all ha*e work to do; let us be willing to do it. We all have sorrows to bear; let us cheerfully bear them. We all have battles to tight ; let us courageously fight them. It you want to die right, you must live right. Negligence and indolence will win the hiss of everlasting scorn, while faithfulness will gather ita garlands and wave its sceptre and sit upon its throne long after this earth has put on ashes and eternal ages have begun their march. You go home to day and attend to your little sphere of du ties. I will go home and attend to my lit tle aphere of duties. Every one in his own place. So our every step in life shall be a triumphal march, and the humblest foot stool on which we are called to sit will be a conqueror's throne. [Casrricht. IMS. L. Klopick. 1