tff9t?tfft?f ttt? : SUNDAY SERMON : r 5 J A Scholarly Dlicouri Br JJ Rv. Lyman Abbott. J Brooklyn, N. Y. At Plymouth Church, the Rev. Lyman AMmtt, 1). I).. Of-.'iiitfil Ms old pulpit In tlic absence of the present pastor, the lt"V. . 1). Hillls. lr. Abbott's subject was "The Essential Spirit of Christianity." lie chose fnr lils text the passage Matthew x:i:7-.S: 44 Whosoever will be chief among you let Iilin he your servant, even ui the Son of Mini came, not to lip ministered unto, hut to minister, nml to give Ills life ti ransom for many," n nil said: What do we mean ly Christianity ? What Is lis essential, speellie spirit? It Is the spirit of the Christ who "rame not to he mlnlslere I unto, hut to minif ter." The spirit of the Christian is to he li!;e the Christ. It Is to net hack of ft 11 that Is Injurious and all that Is val uable: all the accretions that are injur ing hmiI all the iiiMiiinns which have be.'ii made in tin- irvowth of Christian ity. !o tmic, ill n.i 1 and institutional; to ret back to the time of Clirl-t Him self, and. If we can, n what Chris tianity meant tlicn and tiie.e. in order that we may get at the i eiitlnl spirit of it. Tiler;' appeared at toe beginning of the s;)-ca!i"d Christian era a i-c'.igious tea. lie.' in a province of P.ile-titie. lie was certainly for that age and fur all ngos a singular man. Tiie thins we rare for most lie seme I to be Indiffer ent ' lie did not car,.1 for pleasure, but lie was not ascetic, lie did not hid" Himself from the vo",d. There Is n i Ins'auce in which lie refused an Invitation to a fea;. 1 hi;aii His mini-try he cr.'.itin; wine to probing the festivities at a marriage feast, and yet lie did not care to- wunt men call pleasure. lie said Himself that lie "had not where t i lay ills head." lie often laid down to sleep with only the stars overhead, lie Ihed on the sim plest fund. He did net care for wealth. He never called n man a fool but once, and that was the man "lei -pent ail his life In itccuiiiiiuia'.iiig and then did ii'it know what to i!o with the nccumuhi tions. He did not care for power, for when lie was offered a crown lie re fused it. One day they gathered about Him. waved palm branches and shouted "llosaumilil" and amid all the Joy and acclaim He stopped and wept us He remembered the sorrows which were to come upon Jerusalem. Ambitii.u did tint appeal to Him. He was willing to preach to .".ntui or to Jon or to twenty-live or thirty, or to sit down with one po.ir wretched woman and talk to her by the well: nml It did not make any ditierence. What did He care for? For service to go about among men and make them happy. Thut was what lie cared for. He cared for all sorts of men. Hi- was equally williiiL' to serve the Creek or ihe Jew. If He lived now, He would be as will ins serve the Jew as the Christian, lie was willing to save the poor and the rich. He was not n poor man's prophet, nor n rich man's prophet. He was willing to minister to the Ignorant, and Just as willing to minister to the wise. He would talk with the peasant, or spend an evening with one of the great rabbis at Jerusalem. Chnrneter or past conduct did not separate men from His sympathy. It did not make any difference how badly n man hud HvMit or how rotlpn wits his clinrnntor He was ready to help him. He came Into Jericho one day and the people crowded round Him. It was a city of priests and corrupt politicians. The politicians were more corrupt than In this day, and that is saying .-. great deal. It was .. city of priests and poli ticians, nml one of these latter, who had made money by squeezing the pub lic, was a little man. who climbed into n tree, because he wanted to see this strange man puss. This strange man passed the priests and the orthodox religious people and looked up at the little man and said: "Come down; I am going to dine with you to-day." He sought out the bad man because lie thought He could do something fnr him. He was equally ready to minis ter food to the hungry, healing to the sick, comfort -to ttie afflicted, wisdom to the igno-ant, inspiration to the de pressed or succor to the simple and the burdened. The only question with Him was: "Is this man in trouble''" Wha: kind of trouble? "It does not matter what kind of trouble, I want to help him." That was absolutely His only question. And yet this ma 11 saw that the deepest troubles of nien are the troubles t tin t come upon them because of their wrong doing. In His tirst great ser mon He gave the secret of happiness when He said: "Messed ure the pure In heart" and "Messed are the poor In spirit," etc. The secret of happiness Is whnt you are, not what you have. So the thing He wanted to do was to change men's characters, to get them out of sin and lead them In the paths of virtue and truth and good will. He wanted to lift off the burden of their sins and make them healthy, normal, holy men and women. To this He gave His life. He did not do this Inci dentally, as It chanced Him; there was something more. He said: "That is wha r 1 am here for. That Is what Cod put Me Into the world for; It Is the mlsslc n He has given Me." He be longed to a nation that had been taught to look forward for ilie golden age, not backward. They thought the gnml lime was jet to come. Their prophets hud told them so. They thought it was to be brought about, some said, by the nation. Ij.v a series of prophets, or by a single man. a conqueror. And this iii. :u Jesus .iid: "This kingdom if C'n! is at hand. This goo I time Is already here, and I am the one to bring It about." The first time He preached was at Nazareth and then He told them this. Then Me gathered a few disci ples about Him and nfler a year with them He asked: "Whom do men say that I iini':" They said: "There are many i"'Tcrent things said. Some sny a prophc; some a great teacher; some one tiling and some another." And He said: "lint whom say ye that I am?" One can imagine the moment of si lence and hesitation and uncertainty that followed. And then one, an impul sive one, raid: "You are the .Messiah." He replied: "Yes. 1 am; that is right." The mission of His life was to bring about the kingdom of Cod on the earth v.nil He sail, "'Ihe way to do It Is to he'p iv;i'j c'".! in nesi. No matter wiiat tne character- to help one t. otli. er, that Is the way." The Jews minted it another way. Qiietv people, those Jews! They thought they were the great people, which was very like the Anglo-Saxons of to-day. They thought there were no other people who were ' religious or civilized or who had the se cret of great progress. They said the klngdou' would couio ' Jerusalem, not to Itome, and that not the Uoinans, but Jhe Jews, would be dominant. Hut Christ said. "No. that is u mistake. The kingdom of .oil is uot in Jerusa lem or Itome or Athens, it In la a spirit of universal helpfulness." That is the kingdom of Cod, and the king dom will come when, every man helps bl fellow man out of every kind of feed, whatever It mrty be. i:, was finally arretted and put upon on til and asked: "Are You the Messiah?" "1 am." He said. He claimed to be the Messiah and He claimed to bring about the kingdom of Cod by diffusing the spirit of hope and faith and good will. The apostles went forth and preached what? Not the Ten Commandments or the Sermon on the Mount, but "This Is the Messiah. The Deliverer Is come." In the nature of the case He could not do It alone. If It were to be some sudden upheaval, some cata clysm, some march of armies. It could be done In n single period, but If good will, peace nnd universal helpfulness were to be brought about, that would take generations. That must go from kingdom to kingdom, from city to city and nation to nation. And so He called a few men to carry the message -II est twelve, then seventy. Then He died. Then, after His resurrection, lie sent others. He sent them in the spirit of good will nnd helpfulness, to heal the sick, cleanse the leper ami restore com fort to the sorrowing. To minister tv i every lody. rich, poor, wise, ignorant. to the Jew and the Centile, There was something more. In all ages men have believed in some great occult power lying hack of the phe nomena of nature. The Jews thought there was one great Cod who inexor ably demanded righteousness of His people, and Jesus said. "Cod Is such a one as I urn. actuated by the same .-spirit. In My life and teachings I nm Interpreting tills great Infinite Power, this just, wise Coil, tiiis eternal Infinite Presence." And lie Illustrated His meaning by the parable of the king whose subjects rebelled agaln-t him; by the parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the prodigal son. "That is the kind of Father that Cod Is." said Jesus. There is still more in Christ's mes sage. In all ages men have been try ing to get to this unknown Co.l. They have said: "We have done wrong, we have aroused the wrath of lids Cod. He Is right to be angry with us. How shall we appease Ills anger? We will offer sacrifices." It is illllicult In this twentieth century to realize what wor ship was twenty centuries ago, 1'h'- lure the temple, the nltar. the white robed priests. All around In the outer court the cooing of doves, the bleating of sheep, ami within, by this altar, u butcher's simp, a shambles. Priests cutting the throats of lambs and cattle and the blood flowing in great rivers out from under the altar. Why? He cause these people thought Cod had a right to be angry and they were right. He had a right to be angry and they thought lie was angry and they were half right in that and they thought the way to peace was by sacrifice, and they were wrong in that. Je.-ns never offered a sacrifice, so lar as we know, or told anybody els - to offer sacrifice. This world Is tiod's reformatory and what lie has done Is .his: His Marshal has come for you and mo. Has He come lu power, with greatness of riches or wond-rful display oi intellectual wisdom? No. Come how? In sympa thy, in tenderness. In love, in purity and truth and righteousness. We can see no way to happiness save by en dowing with truth and purity and righteousness, lie bus coin" to us to you and mo. He says. "Y'ou can do the same thing." You say: "I have no power." "Neither had I." "I have not wealth." "Neither had I." "I was not an eccle siastic." "Neither was I." "Come to Me: get My spirit; live as I lived: be willing to lay down your life for others, as I was for you." I have tried this morning to get be hind all definitions, all creed.il state ments, not because 1 think they are bad, but because I am sure the spirit of Christ transcends nil definitions and creednl statements. Christianity ! What is It? It Is the new doctrine of Cod. It is the new faith in Cod. It is the faith of Cod, who Is in His world as He was In Jesus Christ, comforting the sorrowing, helping the tempted. In structing the Ignorant. It is the new hope, the hope of the kingdom of Cod that is coning. There is coming the time when men will give to their fel low men fair, honest, generous meas ures and will "do unto others its they would be done unto." That Is right eousness. There is coming a time when there will be peace In every heart be cause it Is at harmony with Itself, and peace In the whole world between man and man, nation nnd nation. And it is a new hope that Christianity brings when it says: "Now, you can work for that because you lire working In the tpirlt of the Kternal. nnd it Is the spirit of good will, of service, of sacrifice, of laying down our lives for others as He laid down His life for us." Christianity! What is It? It Is that "Cod so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Sou, that whosoever bolloveth in Him might not perish, but have everlasting life." That is the the ology of Christianity. "The kingdom of Cod Is at hand." That is the hope of Christianity. "A new commandment give I unto you: that ye love one anoth er as I have loved you." That is the law of Christianity. WIipta l.ftTa 1, Thpra lm! la. Thoughts that disturb and trouble us seldom come from Cod. It is gener ally best to put them away, and throw ourself, with lucreased trust In Him and mistrust of self, at Ills feet. And never forget, nuilil whatever may be fall yon dryness, coldness, desolation and disappointment, consciousness of many faults, and of great weakness, and want of faith that where love is, there Cod is sure to be. He never yet has suffered any soul to fall wholly from Him which, amid all Its frallltiea and falls, clings to Him In !ove. H. L. Sidney I.ear. 4, oil's KrrnnUa, Difficulties are Cod's errands, and when we are sent upon them we should esteem It a proof of Cud's confidence, Hcecher, Cape Cod Thrift. On the way from one town on Cape Cod to another a contributor came upon a (harming house by the road side, which immediately claimed his attention. It bore a fresh emit of white paint, which was well set off by green blinds. There was a smooth piece of lawn In front, a group of fine shade trees and hammocks, piazza chairs, brilliant sofi pillows and all the adjuncts of summer comfort in luxurious profusion. "Whose place Is this?" he demand ed of the boy of 12 who iccompanled lilm as guide and adviser In general. "That there," said the boy. "Oh, that there's the poorhouse." "The poorhousu'' the man exclaim ed. "You seem to havo luxurious pau' ters In this town." "Well, you aee," was the explana tion, "we hain't got but one, V she's an old woman, 'n' the overseers they board her out with one of the neigh bor! V let the poorhouse to gome o' them Boston folks for the summer, 'n' that pays for her keep." Roston Transcript. HIE SUiNDA SCHOOL NTERNATlONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR APRILS. fnblrrti Jmiii unit h Mbtiatti, Matt, nil., 1-14-OnMrn Text, Kxoit. .. a Mffmnrr VftMAi, 7, S Topic Tli Lord's- Day. 1. An act of necessity performed ou Ihe Sabbath (vs. 1-8). 1. "At that ;ime." It must have been In early sum jipr during the harvest season. 'Through the corn." To an American .pader the word corn suggest the Idpi .vf Indian corn or maize: but the word ,n the text has reference to grain, .nch as wheat, rye or barley. "Hegan Ic pluck." They rubbed It In their hands (I. like 11:1 1 to separate the grain from the chuff. This was allowable ac cording to the law lOent. 2.1:2.1). 2. "Pharlspps saw It." The Pharisees, who wore watching for an opportunity tc catch bir.i. object to the disciples doing this on the Sabbath day. They considered the plucking nnd rubbing in the hand sufllclently near to reaping and threshing to constitute then, sec ondary violations of the fourth com mandment. "Not lawful.'4 The Phari sees extended their Sabbath regula tions beyond what Moses commanded in order to avoid the possibility of transgression. The worthless childish ness of the Sabbath rules Christ op posed may bp Judged from Its being forbidden to go out with a needle or a pen when Friday was closing, as one might forget to lay them aside before the Sabbath began. Thirty-nine classes nf work were forbidden, and each of these had endless subdivisions. These regulations tended to make void the law. and many of them were In direct opposition to the real design of the Sabbath. .'I. "Have ye not read." To vindicate His disciples Christ re ferred the Pharisee to n similar case I'peordpd In their owr. Scrlntures and with which they should have been familiar. See 1 Sam. 21:l-ti. "An hungered." Our I.ord here Is not nr glling fill' nn exensp to lirenlc ttie lnw. but for its true construction. 4. "The l ouse of Cod." The taber nacle. "Did eat.' Ahimplpcb. the priest at Nob. gave David and hi conn anions the loaves of the shew broad. The law provided that twelve loaves of bread should be put in two pile upon the table in the sanctuary, to remain a week r.nd then to lie eaten by the priests only (Lev. 1M :5-!i. Now David. Hiving from Saul, weary and huti'.'ry. had eat ui this bread contrary to the letter of the law. Christ's argu ment was that If David could do this without Idan.e I4, must be right for the disciples to satlsfv tlipir liuntrer on the Siihhafli day. "Shewhread." Liter ally bread cf setting fortli-ttiat Is, bread that was st t forth in the sanc tuary il.ev. 24:t;-S). .". "Profane the Sabbath." Jesus continued KIs argu ment by showing that even Hip law under certain circumstances provided I for flip doing of that which had been expressly forbidden hy the law. On the Sabbath days as well as on the other days the priests were engaged in killing, preparing and burning the sac rifices and In performing the whole temple servlc?. It was one of Hie say ings of the rabbins that there was no Sabbath keeping iu the temple. 0. "Greater Lan the temple." In as much as the one who bullded the house Is greater than the house. Christ refers there to His own authority and power. The law-giver is greater than the law. Christ was greater than the temple. 7. "If ye lual known." A knowledge of the true meaning of Cod's word will prevent rash Judg ment. Jesus here charges His critics with Ignorance of their own prophets. S. Lord even of the sabbath. Jesus now attirnis Hii-self gro ter than the statute law oil Moses; nay. He is greater than the Sabhath law estab lished by Cod at the creation. Thus does He maintain Himself to be the. iuearti; te Legislator of the world. Af ter tne resurrection of Christ the Jew isU Sabbath wt.s aoollslied, and "the Lord's day" (Ke 7:10), or Christiau Sabbath, was given i..j in its stead. II. Au act of mercy performed on the Saboath (vs. V-VJ). 10. "Hand withered." A case of paralysis. Such diseases were considered incurable. Luke say it ,vns his right hand. "They asked Him." From Luke we learn that they had been watching Him before they usked this question. "Might accuse." Might bring Him to trial for breaking 'he Sabbath. U. "lie said." Lu!:e says Ho knew their thought.. Jems proceeded to an ' swer them by drawing an nrgumeut from their own conduct. "It it fall," etc. This was a self-evident proposi tion. Deeds of mercy and humanity did not infringe on the Sabbmh day. "Pit." Cisterns dug In the earth for the purpose cf holding water, into which animals often fell. li. - BHa better than a sheep." Christ always puts uu enormous value on man. A man is of infinitely more consequence and value thau a brute. It they would show an act of kindness to a sheep, would they not show mercy to a man? "It is lawful." This was universally allowed by the Jews themselves. 13. "Stretch forth." A remarkable command. The uinu might have rea soned that his hand was withered and that he could uot obey, but belug com manded it was his duty to make the effort; ho did so and was healed. Faith disregards apparent iu.posslblllties where there is a command and prom ise of Cod. "Restored whole." A little before this Christ had claimed divine authority; He now proves that He possesses it. Obese two cases de termined what may be done on tha Sabbath. The one was a case of neces sity, the other of mercy. It. "Held a council." Marl; says they called In the 1 erodlans who wore in favor of the ltouiau dominion over Judea. Thus did these sticklers for the hw cf Moses unite with its bold, political subverters in order to accom plish their designs against Jesus. Maimed Bird Did Well. "Maimed birds show remarkable In telligence in getting food tor them selves," said a naturalist. "I once found in my garden a blue bird that a atone had wounded badly. The poor little creature could neither walk nor fly. I put it in a cucumber frame and fed It regularly, but I sup pose I didn't give it enough, for It foraged industriously all the time. Lying on the earth, It would cover It self with leaves only its small eyes would bo vislblo. Then, when a fly alighted somewhere near swoop, the bluebird's bead and neck would dart from the covering of leaves and the fly would be devoured. "A finch with a broken wing lived high all one summer In my garden at the expense of the spiders. It pillaged their webs. It wade a round of some twenty webs a day and fattened on the contents of those filmy larders." APRIL. EIGHTH. Our Pledge, and How to Keep It. Matt. 28: 20; Eccl. 5: 1-7; Ps. 81:6. No pledge could snfely bo made to an absent Ood; any pledge He asks may snfely be made to a present Ood. If we know ourselves inwardly true to the pledge, we need never think about the appearance of pledge-keeping outside. An ounce of explntnatlon of the pledge before it is signed is worth a ton of exhortation to keep it after It Is signed. It Is better not to vow than to vow and not pay; but far better than olther Is It to vow nnd to pay. Suggestions, We Bhall not keep our pledge If it Is made to man, but only as It is niado to Christ. It Is quite as much a question of our pledge's keeping us as of our keeping our pledge. A pledge Is never broken so badly that It Is not better to mend It than to throw It away. You keep the pledge in doing not the part you find easy, but the part you II nd hard. Illustrations. A pledge In the old days wag a gage cf battle: so In ours, battle against sin and sloth. The pledge Is not n Jailer's chain to bind you, but a surveyor's chain to mark out the way. The world's business is based on a system of pledges money, checks, bargains, deeds, notes, partnerships. So Is "our Father's business '4 A pledge is like articles of agree ment lu a business partnership; both parties are the gainers. Questions. Is my pledge a burden or a help? Am I keeping my pledge In the spir it as well as the letter? Am I trying to keep the pledge In my own strength alone? SUNDAY, APRIL 8. The Cost of Service. Matt. 10. S7- 39; 18. 24, 25. No great service is given without suffeiing. But that Is proof of the di vinity of service. The world says, "Come and enjoy." God says, "Come and suffer." i he more we love and serve the greater our liability to pain. There never was love like the love of our Iyord, nor more perfei t service, and he was the Man of Sorrows. He was made pel feet through suffering, and there Is no other process of per fection for his disciples. He asks of us the service of our whole being, for others in his stead, and for his sake. He shows us how we may enter, through sorrow and humility and service like his own, Into the high place of his power and glory. Drudgery and pain and humiliation are part of the common lot. When we take them as we nnd them, as Christ did, they lift us into fellow ship with him, and they are them selves transfigured. The angel who was sant to sweep a crossing was as greatly honored as the one who was sent to govern a kingdom. All serv ice rankB alike with God. The Christian life feeds on service; without that It dies. Said Christ, '.'My meat Is to do the will of him that sent me." To do God's will is to he found in God's service. God himself is a servant, and that makes all right service great. Love is greatest when It serves. This is the teaching of Christ's life. The more fully we enter into the mind of Christ the more eager we are to be redeemers of men. We are not only grateful to him for our own redemp tion, but we are stirred by a sense of fellowship with him In his work. Adversity Is another way of spelling opportunity. Put your Christian in Jail and he may write you a Pilgrim's Progress. Make him flee for his life, and he may give a nation the Bible In the common tongue. Send him in exile to a rocky ls'.et, and you may get the Jeweled coronal of Holy Writ the vi sion of Patmos. Chain him to a Roman soldier, and the free spirit writes his letters to the Phllipplans, to the Colosslans, to Philemon, and to the Ephcsians. Her Transient Cat Hotel. The mania for collecting things of some tort strikes almost everybody sooner or later, but there U one New York woman who has an odd fancy. She collects cats, and her family is In a chronic state of indecision as to whether It is philanthropy or a nuis ance. She Is an unusually tender hearted person, and whenever she sees a forlorn or hungry pussy In the street she takes the cat home, feeds It, washes It, pets It up for a while, and then, when she has the former outcast In good shape, she brushes its hair, ties on a ribbon bow and takes it for a present to some friend on acquaintance who will give it a good home. Her house Is a ton of transient cat hotel, and sometimes she has some valuable guests. She has also fre quently been the means of restoring lost tala to their owners uqd of de lighting some people with a feline. Christmas present. , Farmer's Mechanical Figures. Charles Coo, who lives in Killing worth, has arranged a curious set of life-size mechanical figures, which are attached to a water wheel In a brook near Mr. Coo's farm. Theso figures all work on eccentrics- attached to the water wheel. They are niadq to go through characteristic movements. There are eight of these figures anc they cover a space of some twenty-tlvj feet. There Is an old negro mammy who Is beating time to her husband'i fiddle. This fiddle is strung with wires and Is beard to some distance on a windy night. There are twe pickaninnies swinging, and there art two boys teetering on a hoard. There is also an old man sawing wood. These figures are made chiefly out of natural crocks of wood which Mr. Coe got from bis woods, and they are all dressed In appropriate costumes and all work together with precision. Tbey form a queer spectacle and many come to see them. Clinton corre spondence Hartford Courant. TREJJMJTIITS. Lake County, to tho north, of Ban Francisco, is so named from Clear Lake, which Is tho largest body of fresn water 1; tne State of California. In this region may be found much Ann lake nnd mountain gcoiipry, for which reason it has been called the "Switzer land of America.". Clear Lake is about thirty miles long rnd ten miles wide In its broadest port. W hile on a visit there last summer the writer enmo across the remarkable tree shown In the photograph. It is an onk growing near the edge cf the lake, the waters x THE 15 of which have washed away tho soli from the rocts, and then, receding, have left tho tree supported oi ttilts, ns it were. Several other trees on the shore of the hike present n similar appearance, but tho one shown was the handsomest nnd also tho most free from surrounding trees r brush. Scientific American. ROCKING BATHTUB. The ordinary bathtub is amply suffi cient for tho average person, but any one who Is more fastidious nud desires something unique can have recourse to tho bathtub illustrated below, the In- HOCKS BACK AND PORlOt. ventlon of uu Ohio man. The con struction s such that the person sitting In the tub can rock It back and forth, causing the water to swish over him, and, if lie possess n vivid imagination, he will think he is nt the seashore taking a salt-water bath, with the waves dashing over him. The body of the bathtub is supported upon rockers by uprights nt tho front and back. Pivoted to the front of the rockers Is an arm which extends to tho top of the body. A pulley Is attached to this arm, through which passes a rope, tho latter being secured to the body .of the tub, and, passing through a second pulley, connects with a han dle, which Is operated by tho person in the tub to rock the machine, causing the water to flow up Into a back por tion above the seat. It will be readily seen that by pushing the handle the upper part of the arm will be pulled forward, raising the front end of the tub. The lining of the tub Is arranged somewhat in the form of the sent and back of a chnlr, with a deeper portion for the feet. A casing extends around the bnck nnd partially along the sides, nt the TH WILL-O'-THE-WISP im COLD )40 height of the nhoulders of the occu pant, when seated. A covering can be placed over this back portion and be supported upon rods, the covering having nn aperture for the bend, nnd can be used for tak ing Turkish baths. When used for this purpose n box for holding n lnmp Is hung In the front end of the tub. NOVEL LIFE-PRESERVER. A chnlr which serves In case of need n a life-preserver Is shown herewith. In ii moment's notice It can be quickly ON STILTS. converted Into a raft. It is so con structed that it can lie locked in the po sition of either a chair or a life-preserver. The back Is similar to that of nn ordinary chair, with the exception of a cork cushion covered with canvas in steiiil of n hair cushion. The bottom frame of the chair has on opening in tin; centre, nn auxiliary bottom having a cork cushion attached, fitting into ih. sltlon when the device is used ns n chair. The chair Is pivoted in such a manner that when the catches are dis engaged the whole spreads out, with a cork cushion at each end, which gives buoyancy to the raft tho form it them assumes when it is thrown in the water. The auxiliary bottom, being folded to the bottom of the raft, the opening re mains in tho centre, enabling a person to sit on the edges, with the legs passed through the opening. Under normal conditions the chair can bo used on deck ns n steamer chair nnd In the cabin. Philadelphia Record. Advent urrra Rich ttooty When Drake sailed the South Sen In the Golden Hind upon bis pirati cal voyago of circumnavigation In the year ir77-'79, nnd when ho captured the Nuestrn Senora della Coneepclon (surniimed the Caeafuego or Spitfire) off Cape Sau Francisco, it took three days to transfer the treasure from the captured ship to bis own. In that single haul there was realized a "pur chase," ns it was called, of over twenty-six tons of silver, besides eighty pounds of virgin gold, thirteen chests of pieces of eight containing over a million lu money, and an enormous amount of Jewels nnd plate. Har per's .Magazine. OF TUIS DISMAL SWAMP. Drawn for the Witness. ' U")( As ii Life-Preserver. SjS & ' SCIENCE a There Is an electric plant In Call fornln, on the Yuba Hlver, that sendi power 140 miles, driving trains In Oak land. a The average weight of a stationary gas engine, in proportion to Its horse power, la only about one-fourth at great as that of a steam engine. Professor Wilhelm Wundt, the cru alor of experimental psychology, now In his seventy-fourth year, recent'; celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of bis graduation with the doctors 4 gree. A faintly luminous mist In the bull and ou the fingers has been noted bj Trofessor Rommers on rubbing elec tric light bulbs that has beea not lon in use. No satisfactory explanation has been given. Tests of the strength of wire rope, conducted for the French Government, show that the ultimate strength of i round rope is thirty-three per cent loss than the sum of the tensile strengths of Its Individual wires be fore being laid. Palladium, a rare substance little used, is the active agent in automatic gas lighting devices. Flame is pro duced as soon as the Illuminating gal strikes a pellet of nsbestos covered with a mixture of palladium and fine ly divided platinum, known a plati' nu m black. It used to bo that astronomy, with Its stupendous magnitudes. Incredible velocities nud inconceivable distances, seemed to make the greatest demand on man's belief. To-day it Is physics We read, for Instance, that Hertx'i oscillations give rise to X),000,000 os cillations per second. Where Is the man who can conceive ot anything happening In the five hundred mil' lionth part of a second? February, 1002, a great storm sweep ing over the forests of the Vosges in France, destroyed an immense quantity of resinous trees. The trees that re mained standing in the devastated dis trict were more or less injured and weakened by the removal of soil from their roots through the upturning of their neighbors, .since then there has been an invasion of swarms of an in ect called in France bostrlche, be longing to the genus Curcullo, which seems to have taken advantage of the weakened Btate of the trees, as certain microbes seize upon the human body when in an enfeebled condition. Heal thy trees resist the ravages of these insects, but those that have been in jured and wenkened fall victims to the Invaders, so that lu the past three years Ihe destruction caused by the storm hns been greatly extended by the bos triehes. Tho Kill In Other Lands. In many quarters of the world kiss ing is not In favor. Indeed, it Is re garded as an outrage upon human na ture. The Japanese, who bave under stood nnd adopted many of our West ern practices, cannot accept our cus tom of kissing. We remember the startled look of the young Japanese nt n Cermnn university when an en thusiastic Polo drank ''Bruderschaft" with him and kissed him! The South Sea Islanders do not kiss. They rub noses. A most Inadequate substitute, one thinks. When Erasmus was In England and thnt was nearly four centuries ngo be noticed the pleasant custom of the English girls, who kissed you when you enme, kissed you when you went, and kissed you while you stayed. And their lips, lie added, "are soft, warm nnd delicious." In commenting upon this, Mr. Fronde, in a famous essay, remarked, "Pretty good, this, for a priest!" Possibly the formal kiss, which lias nearly died out In Eugluud, received Its death-blow when Queen Anne met the lady mayoress on tho Important 0th of November. Until then the king had always kissed the lady mayoress ns the chairman of the London County Council kissed the market queen. But when good Queen Anne reached the city well, where would the fun come In? She didn't kiss the ludy mayoress. And nn ancient custom seemed to have lapsed. But with the accession of George I. hopes revived. There would be kiss ing again. And Lady Humphreys, the wife of the new lord mayor, concluded, "from his known character for gal lantry" that the king would pay the traditional tribute to beauty. The king took refuge behind the skirts of Queen Anne. He did not give the kiss. And the lady mayoress' conduct nt the slight was such that the rumor went round, "She was borrowed for the occasion!" The king discredited the report. "lie would have borrowed a better!" said George I. Loudon Mod ern Society. Railroad In Mala Wllrfarneii. It Is expc. ted that by some date early In next December tho State of Maine will have another new railroad, a road that Is In some respect tho most re markable of any yet built. This is the extension of the Somerset Itallroad from Bingham to Birch Point, Moone heud Lake, a distance of close to fifty miles. This road runs through the Iieart of the Maine -wilderness for the greater part of Its length, and the scenery to be found along tho line Is tome of the finest in New England. Work on this extension vas begun in the summer of 1004. Only about tlx miles of the road were built during tho first summer. The second summer the work was continued, and up to the present time the road has been com pleted to a point on Moxle Pond, only eighteen miles from Bingham. The contract for the completion of the work bat Just been awarded and the contractor, are given au Incentive to hustle the construction In that they will receive a bonus of 110,000 If the work Is completed by December 1, 1806. Some thirty-odd miles remain to be built Lewhston (Me.) Journal. People have been dying In Mexico of the cold) while up In Maine tne old est inhabitant confesses that lie never knew ot such, a balmy winter.