SED Law times > and near being sack- tells e of- ot be licate kmen f the er at laced from anton, Villar ghter 's old ild in e girl com- only ereby i the- and a State nn se- e im- The he er tin out in Janu- beazin at the n idle n are enant teenth Wash- nk, at Hob- apital be in- eyers- presi- rill of tmore- >f her yeeeds n and L.eech- near force g ma- 1e ma- 1 that ate of caster, he in- e was Riley 5 they nce of r hav- 0 Ex- > boen )X are 1g vil- , has | peni- eight aid of ber of away, town, led by shot- > dedi- pany’s « A SERMON FOR SUNDAY {AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED + STONING JESUS.” The Rev. Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman Pleads . For a Fair Censideration of the Claims of the Religion of Christ—Anything is Better Than Being Indifferent. £ New York City.—The following sermon entitled, “Stoning Jesus,” was preached by the great evangelist, the Rev. Dr. J. fWilbur Chapman, from the text: “Then the Jews took up stones again to ‘stone Him.” John x: 31. The shining of the sun produces two effects in the world, one exactly the op- rosite of the other. In one place it en- livens, beautifies and strengthens; in the others it deadens, mars and decays. So it is with the Gospel of Christ. It is unto some a “savor of life unto life;” unto oth- ers 1t is “a savor of death unto death.” No it was with the coming of Christ into the world. He brought to light the truest affection and the deepest hatred. Men loved darkness rather than light, so Christ’s coming inte the world could only disturb them. If you go into the woods on a summer’s day, and if it be possible, turn over one of the logs which may be near to you, you will find underneath hundreds of ittle insects; the moment the light strikes them they run in every direction. Dark- ness is their life; they hate the light. But if you journey a little further and lift a stone, which for a little time has been covering the grass or the little flowers, the moment you would lift the obstruction these things would begin to grow. The light is their life; they die in the dark- ness. Christ’s coming into the svorld pro- voked the bitterest prejudice and. called forth the deepest devotion. imeon, a devout man, was in the temple when the young child Jesus was brought in, and he took Him up in his hands and blessed God, and said, “Lord, lettest mow Thy servant depart in peace, according to Thy word, for now my eyes have seen Thy salva- tion.” It was just the opposite with Herod. When the king heard concerning Jesus he sent the wise men that he might find out through them where He was, and when they did not return, he was ex- + ceeding wroth, and sent forth and slew all the children that were in Bethlehem and in all the coast thereof two years and under, according to the time which he had diligently inquired of the wise men. These are the two extremes. John’s gospel is the gospel of love, but in it we find the same great differences. Where can you find such sweetness as is contained in these words— For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlast- ing life?” Where is there such tenderness as in this expression—‘Jesus wept?” Only two words, and yet on them the sorrowing world rests, taking comfort and consolation! But where can you find such hatred ms expressed in John wviii.: 59, “Then took they up stones to cast at Him?” and again in the text, “Then the Jews took up stones again to stone Him?” When you remember whom they were stoning, the Son of Man and the Son of God, the One who was going about doing good, the sin is something awful to think about. This text and the verse that fol- Jows is a beautiful illustration of hate and love, brutality and tenderness. He had just said, “I and my Father are one,” words which should have made the hearts of the people leap for joy; that He-was one with Jehovah, who had led their fore- fathers from Egypt to Caanan; who had spoken the worlds into existence; had held the winds in His fists; in whose hands the seas washed to and fro. You would have thought at these expressions of the Master every knre would have been bowed in loving devotion; but not so. The Jews took up the stones again with which to stone Him, and He gave them one of the tenderest answers His heart could dictate— ‘Many good works have I shown you from My Father, for which of these do you stone Me?” The text is an illustration of the fact that those who were models in fairness of their treatment of men are most unfair “in their treatment of Jesus Christ. If vou are familiar with the mode of stoning offenders in the early days, you will be able to see how true this was of the Jews. The crier marched before the man who was to die, proclaiming the man’s sins and the name of the witnesses appearing against him. This was for the humane purpose of enabling any one who was ac- quainted with the circumstances in the case to go forward and speak for him, and the prisoner was held until the mea evidence was given. But the Jews were not. so considerate of Jesus; when He said, “TI and My Father are one,” imme- diately they began to stone Him. All “that is asked for our religion, for Christ and for the Bible is just a fair consideration of their claims. The Bible, we claim, is the word of God, not because it is old only, but because it is both old and true. It seems as if it were written for us as individuals; it is my present an- swer to my present need. We simply present the Book in evidence. Suppose you try to find its equal; suppose you try to produce its simplest parable; failure would be the result. Our religion is the same; we only ask for it a fair considera- tion. For Christ it is just the same. In England not long ago a woman was lec- turing against our religion, and after she had closed. one of fhe mill-hands said, “I would like to ask the lecturer this one question: Thirty years ago I was the curse of this town and everybody in it. I tried to do better and failed. The teetotaler got hold of me, and I signed the pledge and broke it. The police took me and sent me to prison. and the wardens tried 10 make me better, and I began to drink as soon as I left my cell. When all had “failed, I took Christ as my Savior, and He made a new man of me. I am a mem- ber of the church. a class-leader and su- verintendent of the Sunday-school. If Christ is a myth and veligion is untrue, Tow could I be.so helped by them?” : Men are still stoning Jesus Christ. Per- haps you shrink from the conduct of the Jews and cry, “For shame!” but there is a worse way to stone Him than that. Men can hurt you far miore than by striking you in the face or beating you with stripes. Do you imagine that Christ's worst suffering was when they cast stones at Him, or scourged Him, or put nails through His hands? I am sure not. but it was rather when He came unto His own, and His own received Him not: when they called Him “this fellow:” when He was in Gethsemane in an agony; when He was on the cross and He felt so forsaken ‘that His heart broke. . If He were here to-day in the flesh as He is in the Spirit, I am sure there are ways we could hurt Him more than by taking up stones from the very streets and casting them in His blessed face until His eyes were blinded bz the blood drops falling down. INCONSISTENCY. IT. Have vou ever no'‘zed the sadness which throbbed in the words of our Savior at the Last Supper, “One of you shall betray me?’ or when He was walk- ing with them toward the garden, “All of you shall be offended this night be- cause of Me?’ or wnen He was in the garden and we hear Him saying: “What, could you not watch vv'th Me one hour?” The stone that hurts Christ most is not the one that is cazt by the unbelieving world; He expects that; it is the one that is cast by His own people, and there is only one stone that they can cast at Him, and that is the one of inconsistency to talk one way and live another, confessing with the lips and denying in the walk. You never took a step in the wrong direction but it was a stone cast at Christ. I have heard of a young lady who was engaged in the greatest amount of pleasure and frivolity, nearly forgetful of her loyalty" to Christ. One day being asked by her companions to go to a certain place. she refused on ‘he ground that it was Com- munion Sunday in the church. In amaze- ment her friends asked her, “Are you a communicant?’ If the world does mot know it, if our friends do not know it, we gr taking up stones with which to stone im. HATRED. II. On the part of those who are not His followers, with some it is‘ absolute hatred; certainly it was so with the Jews. You read in the text that they took up stones again. The first time we read of their stoning Christ is in the eighth chap- ter of John, and it is supposed that they were near a place where stones abounded and it was very easy to pick them up The second time they were near Solo mon’s porch; and it is a question if there wera any stones there to be found. So if is thought that they carried them all the way, perhaps only dropping them as they listened to His speech. by which the; were so enraged that they stooped ant picked them up and hurled them at Him. Are you casting these stones at Christ Remember that He said, “He that is no with Me is against Me.” INDIFFERENCE. Iil. With many it is the stone of indif- ference. Tt was one of the first cast at Him in the world. It began at the man- ger, going to the cross, and it is still being thrown. With curling lips and in- solent contempt men said, “Js this not the carpenter’s son?’ When He was on the cross, they said in derision, “He saved others; now let Him save Himself.” It is now the ninth hour and darkness is settled about the nlace. Tisten! His lips are moving: “Eloi! Eloi!” Surely this will move them: but some one says, “He is calling for Elias; let us see if he will come to Him.” This is all like the gathering of a storm to me: first the cloud was the size of a man’t hand, that is, at Bethle- hem; it is larger at Egypt; heavier at Nazareth; darker in Jerusalem; then He comes up to the Mount of Olives, and the cloud seems to break as He cries out, “Oh! Jerusalem, Jerusalem!” > Have you been indifferent to Christ? Anything is better than that; better out- spoken opposition to Him than to be theo- retically a believer and to be practically denving Him. How can you be indifferent to Him? A man working on one of the railroads in the State of Indiana discovered, one morning, that the bridge had fallen, and he remembered that the train was due. He started down the track to meet her, saw her coming, and, raising his hands, pointed to the bridge, but on she came, having no time to lose. He threw himself across the track, and the engineer, thinking him a madman, stopped the train. The man arose and told his story and saved the lives of hundreds. Christ did this for you; He purchased your redemption by the giving of Himself whether vou have accepted this salvation or not. Will you stone Him for that? UNBELIEF. IV. When He said: “I and My Father are one,” they cast another stone at Him. That was unbelief. Indifference was hard to bear; hatred cut like a knife, but unbe- lief was the crowning sin of the Jews. Many are hurling it at Him to-day. He has promised to save us if we only believe, and we need only to trust Him to be saved. A little girl in Glasgow who had just fcund peace was heard counseling one of her playmates in this way: “I say, las- sie, do as I did, grip a promise and hold on to it, and you will be saved.” and there is salvation in the child’s words. ow read the verse that immediately follows the text: “Many good works have I shewed you from My Father: for which of those works do you stope Me?” 1It-is supposed that some of the Jews had actu- ally struck Him with a stone, and this drow forth from im words tender enough, pathetic enough to turn aside the hatred of one who had a heart of stone. DO NOT STONE-HIM. 1. Because of what He was, they called Him the bright and morning star; the 9 fairest of all the children of men; the chiefest among ten thousand. Oh, that we might have our eyes open to behold Him! 2. Fifty years ago there was a war in India with England. On one occasion sev- eral English officers were taken prisoners; among them was one man named Baird. On2 of the Indian officers brought fetters to put.on them all. Baird had been sorely wounded and was suffering from his weak- ness. A gray-haired officer said, “You will not put chains on that man, surely?’ The answer was, “I have just as many fetters as prisoners, and they must all be worn.” Then said the old hero, “Put two pairs on me.” Baird lived to gain his freedom, but the other man went down to his death doubly chained. But what if he had worn the fetters of all in the prison, and what if volutarily he had left a palace to wear chains, to suffer the stripes and endure the agony? That would be a poor illustra- tion of all that Christ has done for you and for me. Will you stone Him for that? 3. Because of what He is to-day. In 1517 there was a great riot in London, in which houses were sacked and a general insurrection reigned; guns in the tower were thundering against the insurgents and armed bands were assailing them on every side. Three hundred were arrested, tried and hanged; five hundred were cast into prison. and were to be tried before the king, Henry VIII. As he sat in state on the throne the door opened and in they came, every man with a rope about his neck. Before sentence could be passed on them three queens entered, Catherine of Aragon. wife of the king; Margaret of Scotland. sister of the king, and Mary of France. They approached the throne, knelt at the feet of His Majesty and there re- mained pleading until the king forgave the five hundred trembling men. > But there is a better intercession than that going on for you and for me at this moment. Will you stone Him for that? Looking out from the windows of heaven the Son of God beheld people heavily bur- dened, bearing the eight of their sins, groping about in their blindness, crying, “Peace! peace!” and there was no peace. And He said, “TI will go down and become bone of their bone and flesh of their flesh; J will open their eyes and bear their bur- dens, forgive their sins and give them weace.”” Between man and the Father's house was a great gulf, wider than the dis- tance from east to west, deeper than the distance from north to south, but Christ’s coming bridged the gulf over. Across the chasm He cast His cross, and on the other side I see Him standing, His arms out- spread. His attitude one of pleading. Lis- ten! you will hear Him saying, “Come unto Me, come unto Me, whosoever will. let him come.” Will you stone Him for that? A Will Power. 3 Jt is the written law of God that man shall receive according to his gifts. The law holds in every relation in life, as we deal with men so will men deal with us. Every action in'life has its measured con- sequences. The law of reciprocity holds on all occasions. A man is not entirely sub- ject to his environment. We often hear men complain that they are victims of cir- cumstances, but God has given us a will power which if we but properly exert it will prevail over the evil influences of our surroundings.—The Rev. H. E. Cobb, New York City. What a Man Really Ts. What a man intends to be is what he really iz. He may, indeed, realize that he ought not to be that, but-to be something better. He may, perhaps, wish, at times, to rise above his chosen course, but this amounts to little while he really, in his heart of hearts. intends to pursue the othe: path. God knows what we intend to be, and He judges us accordingly. This is the idea of the inspired declaration: “As he thinketh within himself (as a man purposeth in his inner self), so is he.”’— Sunday-School Times. | 1 WHERE NO ONE. LIVES. WEIRD TALE .OF THE GREATEST ESKIMO VILLAGE EVER BUILT. Boom Town on the Ice Where Thirty- three Whaling Vessels Were Abandoned ~All Went Well Until a Quantity of Liquor Was Found Among the Stores.” In South Africa, as is well known,: news travels from one portion of the country to another by what is called the “Kaffir telegraph” more rapidly than it does by regular white man routes. Some such a service must be common to the Arctic Eskimo, for many things seem to come to his knowledge from far distant sources. Thus, in the fall of 1871 thirty- three whaling vessels were caught and abandoned in the ice near Wainwright Inlet, on the Arctic coast of North America, word seemed to flash along the coast and far inland among the Eskimo villages, and from igloo and topek the people headed north and east and west to the shore where lay the greatest windfall in all Eskimo history. The whalemen had escaped merely with their lives, their boats and scant pro- visions. All else was left behind; and the value of the whalebone, stores and vessels was not far from a million and a half in American dollars. To this place of great riches traveled all tribes that had means of travel. From the bleak coast far east of the mouth of the Mackenzie river, from the sandy peninsula of Point Hope, from the villages of the northern shore of Kotzebue Sound, and from the far interior along the Kobuk, the Noatak and Seclawik rivers the tribes saw the others pack up and move, and hitched up their dogs and followed, knowing well that the prizes for such a jour- ney at such a time of year must be great else none would attempt it. Ear- ly in December, about the time that the sun ceases to rise in the southward on that bleak coast, but merely lights the southern sky with a rosy glow at what should be noon, fully 3000 Eski- mos had assembled and begun to build the greatest Eskimo village ever known in the history of the race. The skin topeks were set up. Where the wind had blown the snow bare from the ledges, they quarried rough stone and built igloos of these, chinked with reindeer moss and banked with snow for warmth. But many of them began to dismantle the ships frozen all about in the shore ice and build cabins from their wood, for the Eskimo knows how to build a rough wooden house when he has the material. If you will visit the Diomede islands, in the fierce cur- rents of Bering Straits, today you will see similar stone igloos and other built of driftwood and rough boards, picked up heaven knows where, reinforced by canvas bought from visiting whalers, and skins of seal and walrus. Such were the nondescript abodes of the new village; and here they settled down in the darkness and fierce cold of the Arctic midnight, content for near at hand were provisicns and loot un- dreamed of in any Eskimo dream be- fore. - The looting went on continuously, and ag first there was enough for all. The 1gloos became crowded with arms and ammunition, implements, canvas, lines and utensils. The ships’ stores were proiken open and much taken, but far more wasted, because the igror- ant men of the sea beach and tundra did not nnow the value of what they had in hand. ‘The whalebone, of which there was much, they took ashore, and the hard bread was a special prize and fought for accordingly, but the flour, of which there wera great quantities, they had not then learned the value of and the barrels and sacks of that were broken open and scattered about in wanten ignorance, With plenty of the prized hard tack, with salt junk in barrels, with oil and wood galore, it would seem that the Eskimo miliennium was near at hand, and that the tribes might live in peace and plenty together for a long time to come, and—who knows?—out of their prosperity found a permanent city and a higher schene cf Eskimo civilization than they nad hitherto known. But alas! the means of their undoing. had come with the means of the upbuilding, and their untutored wills might not re- sist the serpent of their below zero Eden. There was liquor left behind on the ships. Not very much, if divided pro rata among three thousand people, but encugh to fight to get, and to fight still harder because of when once gotten. The fact is, a very little liquor will upset a-great many Eskimos; and no man can describe the orgies that be- gan in the new Eskimo city, once this had ‘begun to get in.its work .upon the inhabitants. Tribal animosity, which had been stilled by plenty and a com- mon object, broke out afresh, and the men of one village fought those of another until sometimes but a spare re- presentative of each was left. As the wild orgy increased and the supply of real liquor gave out, they broke into the ships’ medicine chests, and tinc- tures and solutions of deadly drugs were used with fatal effect. The wild orgy lasted till the spring sun was well above the southern hori- zon, and scarcely half the people of the new city were left to see him rise. These were half clad and emaciated. The dogs, unfed had run away and been lost, or died in the night and trackless snow. The remnant of people were in no condition to travel, yet travel they would. - It is probable that there were enough stores left in and about the vessels to have supported these well until they had a chance to recuperate and still male a village unique in size, and pros- perous, put the survivors of this city of the dead would have none of it. Dead lay in every igloo; and a house in Es- kimo land, whether temt or igloo or temporary shelter, in which a person has died, is henceforth tabooed, ‘and must not be inhabited. i The remnant of the tribes scattered and fled toward their former homes, but only a part of these ever reached them. Scantily clad, their dogs dead or scattered, the journey was one of hardship and disaster long to be re- membered, and the story of the village of “Numaria” (where no one lives) is still one of the mournful folk tales of the Eskimos of northern Alaska to- day. . The next spring an enterprising trad- er brought up in his ship a three-hole bidarka from Unalaska, a port in the Alcutians. When his ship was stop- ped by the ice he went on in the bi- darka, paddled by two men, and reach- ed the village of dead by way of the leads just opening in the sea between the shore of ice and the pack. Here he found no living thing save foxes and crows making revel among the bodies of the dead; but he did find such store of whalebone that he reaped a harvest which enabled him to visit the capi- tals of Europe 1n the style of a bonan- za king. The Eskimos had concen- trated the whalebone of the abandoned fleet in their ‘glcos, and though they knew its value, their horror of the place had been such that when they fled they had neither taken it away nor concealed it. ” Such in brief is the story of the vil- lage where no one lives. Few Eskimos ‘today care to enter its precincts, and none will camp there. The ice and the gales of winter, the deluges of rain and the grass of summer work hard to obliterate it, but still it may be found and its ruins tell the tale of one brief winter to too much plenty and the evil effect of city life on the Innuit. With him, as with the rest of us, self-con- trol is not easily learned where ab- stemiousness is continually forced. It takes a far abler man to stand sudden great prosperity than it does to sur- vive lean years and narrow opportuni- ties.—Winthrop Packard, in the New York Mail and Express. APPEARANCE TELLS OCCUPATION. How to Distinguish the Various Classes of Breadwinners. The Manayunk Philosopher says that by the appearance the occupation can always be told. : “We know the druggist,” he said last night, “by his beard—a short beard that parts down the middle of the chin and ripples back toward the ears in little curls and waves. Behold a beard like that, and you have be- held a druggist. “We know the baker by his pallor and his corpulence. All bakers are fat, and they are all pale. What gives them weight is their constant inhala- tion of flour dust and healthy bread odors, and their habit of constantly tasting this and that and something else. What makes them pale is their night work. Sleeping all day, you see, they and the sun never have a chance to meet. “You can tell a clerk by the droop of his left shoulder and by the lump on the side of his right middle finger. His left shoulder is made lower than the right one by the attitude in which he sits and writes—an attitude where- in thes left side is depressed and the right one elevated for long hours at a time. The lump on the side of the mid- dle finger is a collosity that the pres- sure of the pen causes. This lump is at the first joint, on the side tow- ards the forefinger, and all clerks have it. \ “The jeweler reveals himself by the way he holds his hands. Unconsciously, through the daily lifting and setting down and arranging of many costly, fragile, tiny things, he comes to have a delicate way with his hands, like awom- an. He curls his little finger, and he walks along with his hands held a lit- tle out from his sides and making lit- tle graceful, finicking movements in the air. “You can tell the blacksmith by his tight coat sleeves. His biceps muscle is twice as big as any other man’s, and his coatsleeve fits it shirttight. - “The coachman you tell by his hair brushed out in front of his ears and by his erect carriage. It used to be fash- ionable for everybody to have the hair brushed forward to the ears, but today the coachman only wears it so. “His perfumed: hands reveals the dentist. ; This gentleman, because he always Aavorks inside your mouth, drenches his hands three or four times a.day with cologne. There is al- so about him frequently a penetrating odor of the oil of cloves. Thus he is easy enough to spot. “Everybody knows that the sailor is to be told by his rolling walk. He is accustcmed to the unsteady deck of a ship, and on dry land he rolls from side to side, balancing himself as he would do afloat. “You tell the telephone girl by her ear. The receiver of the headpiece that she wears makes in the ear a circular indentation—a faint indentation, but one visible .enough, for all that, to sharp eyes.” Dangerous Criminals. “Why,” said a lady, reproachfully, to her husband, “you know when I say Denmark I always mean Holland!” Perhaps the city girl in the following story, told by The Philadelphia Tele- grapl, allowed herself a similar lati- tude of expression: She was sitting on the porch, lazily rocking to and fro, and watching the fireflies flitting about her companions and said, in a musing tone: “I wonder if it is true that fireflies do get into the haymows sometimes and set tiem afire?” Everybody laughed at what was ap- parently a pleasantry, but the young lady looked surprised. “Why,” said she, “it was only yester- day that I saw in the paper an article headed, ‘Work of Firebugs!’ It said they had set a barn on fire. Really.” SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. A white rust is an unexplained “dis- ease” of English and German galvan- ized iron that has developed within a year or two. In Roumania nearly all the sugar mills, distilleries, gas works, hospitals and manufactories now use petroleum refuse as fuel, as well as the state railway, upon which it is employed largely for the locomotives. Coal, which comes from England, costs $10 per ton. A Brooklyn firm of coffee dealers and sugar refiners is feeding 100 hors- es used in its business upon molasses. Each horse will eat from 10 to 15 pounds of molasses every day, the cost being about 15 cents. It is said that the horses thrive upon this fare. The firm says that it got the idea from the United States cavalry. A California smelting works has re- cently had constructed a steel stack, 160 feet high, which is lined through- out with nine inches of firebrick. The total weight of steel in the stack is only 120,000 pounds, while the brick lining weighs half a million pounds. The first 25 feet of stack is made of one-half material, the thickness above gradually being reduced to one-quar- ter inch for the last 40 feet. To pro- vide for expansion the brick lining is kept one-half inch from the steel shell, with occasional clots of mortar between the bricks and the plates. Arizona engineers regard the Grand Canon of the Colorado as affording one of the greatest fields in existence for the development of electricity from water-power. In addition to the im- mense power of the Colorado itself, large stores of energy are available in the smaller streams that leap into the vast chasm. The plan by which the power of the main stream will, it is now thought, eventually be utilized is that of “picking up” the fall of the river by means of tunnels. At a point about 70 miles north of Williams it is said that a fall of 5000 feet can be found in a distance but little exceeding a mile. The excellence of the Lick 36-inch telescope, and the steadiness of the air when the conditions are good on Mt. Hamilton, are attested by the state- ment of Mr. W. J. Hussey, one of the observers there, that double stars whose components are nearly equal in brightness, can be measured if the dis- tance between them exceeds one-tenth of a second of arc. What this means in accuracy of definition may be under- stood by remembering the fact that one-tenth of a second is equal to the apparent diameter of the head of an ordinary pin, viewed by the naked eye —if the eye could see it—at a distance of two miles. At the recent meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Prof. Arthur Schuster called attention to the great waste of power in the science of meteorology, where the workers are nearly all devoting their energies solely to accumulating observations. Those engaged in calcu- lating the results of the vast collec- tions of data are but few, and those oc- cupied in deducting from them the physical laws underlying meteorologi- cal phenomena are still fewer. As a consequence, undigested figures are ac- cumulating to an extent which threat- ens to crush future generations. Obser- vations taken without a view to the so- lution of some definite problem are of comparatively little value. Hearing Restored by a Live Wire, One of the happiest boys in Pitts burg is Charles McCormack, 11 yeard old, whose home is in Independence street, West End. His father, George McCormick, is scarcely less gratifled than the boy, who has been almost en: tirely deaf for about seven years. His hearing was impaired by another boy, with whom he was playing, throwing a giant firecracker, which exploded close to his head. Medical men failed to restore the damaged hearing. Now he hears as well as he ever did, and it was brought about almost instantly by his stepping on a live wire Sunday, while playing in the street where he lives. He was thrown violently to the ground and was badly frightened, but when he rose he could hear as well as his playmates could.—Pittsburg Post. Floats Ships With Acetylene. M. Ducasse, a member of the council of management of the Aero club, who has already made remarkable scien- tific observations in a balloon, has in- vented a process of floating sunken ships. It was tried successfully on a 10-ton boat on the Seine at Marly, and consists of the use of small balloons inflated below the water with acety- lene gas. M. Ducasse foresees the ap- plication of the invention to ships to prevent their foundering in collisions. —Paris ‘Correspondence New York Herald. Cornsialks and Straw for Fuel. Edward Atkinson never lacks for in- teresting suggestions in regard to the possible economies of life, and he has now been heard from on the subject of fuel. Speaking before the Illinois Manufacturers’ association a day or two ago, he urged consideration of the use of cornstalks and straw as fuel, | when pressed to the density of hard oak, as they might be. Such a fuel, he declared, would be cheaper than coal at 50 cents a ton.—Springfield Re- publican, Largely Supplied. “Are you a man of family, Sir?” “Yes, Sir; my son-in-law moves ip to-day.”’—Detroit Free Press. ‘digs another hole and PEARLS OF THOUGHT. A contented man is often only ar egotist. Dreaming is sweet; doing is harder, but sweeter. S > In searching for means to an end we often forget the end. Many a man is flattered who is not worthy of being praised. Those who weary in well-doing are those who do the least of it. The man who is simply waiting to do something is not always waiting to do anything very important. It is the most nicely balanced scales which become most easily unbalanced. And is it not so with men? The path of duty may be narrow, but it is not foo narrow to allow us to walk abreast of our fellow men who go that way. The present is ours, but while we are deciding what to do with it the future comes and snatches it away from us. Many a man thinks he is a martyr to unpleasant duty when he is simply do- ing what he legally and morally is obliged to do. A man’s instinct tells him the differ- ence between right and wrong. Thus he judges the acts of others according- ly—and makes excepticns in his own case. NEMESIS OF THE TARANTULA, A Tiny Insect is the Worst Enemy of the Deadly Spider. That deadly pest of the southwest, the tarantula, whose bite is certain death to both man and beast, has at last found its nemesis in the form of a small wasp-like insect that is found quite numerously in some regions. The discovery of a tarantula killer will be interesting news to all resi- dents of the southland. The wonder- ful phenomena is no more than the black wash with silvery wings, which is common in this locality. Hence- forward he will be known as the tar- antula killer, and will be looked upon as a blessing to mankind by all who are mortally afraid of the tarantula. The female wasp keeps a I out for the tarantula, which keeps just as close lookout from fear for the wasp. The latter lights quickly on the tarantula, stings it once, which pro- duces a drunken stupor, and then drags the lifeless victim to a grave previously prepared to receive him. It must be remembered that the tarantu- la is not yet dead, just dead drunk, but he ceils himself into a kind of knot and when safely deposited by the wasp in a desired location the victim is a “sorry appearing aspect. 5 Underneath the tranatula the was in this she makes herself at home until she has laid her quota of eggs on the body of the tarantula. The warmth of the tarantula’s body is sufficient to hatch “the eggs and in due time the young tarantula killers show themselves and then begin to feast on the prostrate body of Mr. Tarantula. The remains are sufficient to keep the young wasps in food until they are large enough to hustle for themselves. This state: ment results from close study made on the matter by a farmer residing near Guthrie, who became interested in watching the movements of the wasp and kept a close watch afterward, learning therefrom the facts above given. This should exempt the black wasp with silvery wings from further execution at the hands of the human family.—Chicago Chronicle. Jack Tar’s Surplus. A captain of one of the steel trust peats asked one of the wheelmen what he did with his surplus earning. Here is the conversation: “How do you like to work. for the company?’ he was asked. “Pretty well,” answered the man at the wheel. A “How much do you make a month?” “I make more than I get, which is $52.50,” the wheelman replied. “What do you do with it all?” “Oh, I pay grocery bills, butch:r’s bills and support myself, and family.” “What do you do with tiie rest?" “I buy shces for the children and books, so they can go to school.” “What do you do with the rest?” “Well, I have to pay rent, of course.” “What do you do with, rest?” asked the persistent questioner.” , “I pay doctor's bills, because, you know, people fall sick sometimes.” “But surely,” venturcd the captain again, “that can’t take all of your month’s earnings. What do you do with the rest?” “Well, I'll tell you,” whispered the wheelman, confidentially; ‘the rest I pack in barrels and store away in the bold!” The captain turned in below.—San Farncisco Coast Seamen's Journal. It Was a Cinch. The editor of the Glasgow Echo avers he is not much of a sport, but, he says, “when we meet a cinch in the road we recognize it.” He accepted a proposition the other day, made by a friend, through which he was io give his friend a dime for every time a woman passed them and did not put her hand behind her to learn if her skirt was all right behind. On the other hand, the editor's friend agreed to give him a nickel for each time a woman felt of her belt behind. “We got 62 nickels,” the molder of opinion says, ‘and paid him one dime—a wom- an with both arms full of parcels came along.”—Kansas City Star. One Better. Mrs. Witherby—We must give some sort of affair, dear, if only to maintain our position. Witherby—I suppose you want it to cost as much as possible? “Oh, more than that!’—Life,