pany, of fa large e Ameri- The con- for 2,000 hich will >t a pas- built at nd. An ites and with the jon. At pany is m 16,000 | shapes, construc- ttleships, 'icited a ar Pleas- in fury sed any 1e oldest derricks 5 twisted ving hail ery ves- ter the 1d to the Although orm was ss in oil 1 $50,000. 1, black- 1 part of mines at >yersdale loss will surance. own, but Of incen- 'n closed and was the com- run the its open- k Spot,” of three Clearfield ess and a hearty ook part iressed a the jail scaffold. a short all pres- gambling liam W. te in the on. His 2,000,000. s of the ns, Will- harge of , and U. 1e United antinople, are made ounty has Newton voluntary - of Alva reek. A involun- Lyman ho threw freight nnigan, a wn of the 1 at Salt s alleged hecks ag- ownsville 1e checks ouglas, of” to return essary. four em- ion Com- x masked > and es- sh. Prep- the gang an alarm d to their elected ughter of 2, teacher Liss May terrace, he _Hizh Williams, osition in 5, Mich, to raise » dam at oyed dur- At the river is smallest all steam- ames An- the thief n Thomp- gion, felt vallet. He hief, who ienderson han 3,000 coke re- veeks has mand for dealers nd West- get. 1 a::01d,s Of 2 train at izing the ship, Mer- Wt Harris- , Of Pitts will be . ore cars wreck at orth of Bessemer All. the The loss near th by BR A LRN NASR Hol A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE BY THE BEV. ‘A. B..SIMPSON. Eubject : The Maniféstation of the King— The, Recognition—=Lord of the Temple —The Children’s King—Curse of the King=The Sceptre of the Kingdom. New Yorg City.—The folowing ser- mon was predched :Sddday by! the world- famous head of the Christian and Mission- ary Alliance, the Rev. A. B. Simpson. His subject was “The Manifestation of the King,” and his ‘text was: Tell ye the daughter of Zion, Behold thy King cometh: unto thee meek, and, sitting upon an ass, | 21d a colt, the.foal of an ass.—Mattaew The time had now come when the Lord Jesus was to be publicly manifested ‘as the son of Davidiand the King of Israel. Hith- erto He had refused the demands of the multitude, who, after His Galilean mira- cles, had tried’ “to take Him by force and make Him a king;” but now as the end draws near it is proper that He should lit- erally fulfil the announcements of ancient prophecy, and far.a brief moment, at least, appear as the heir to David’s throne and the answer to all the Messianic hopes of Israel, sod fg! st feftyvilia I. The Recognition of the King. Tt was strange that the first to recognize Him as Israel's King should be two blind beggars. That which the rulers of Israelavith all their wisdom, failed to comprehend, was discovered by moor old Bartimeus and his blind companion: Celling Him by His Mes- sianic name, they cried, as the.procession pressed by, ‘‘Jesus, Thon Son of. David, have mercy on*us!” When Jesus heard that. name He instantly’ ordered the. pro- cession to halt, and, calling them to Him, granted their, petition like a king, bidding them! receive their sight and follow Him in the way. ais we " Sg: still it. is. eyer, true, “Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them unto babes.” The wisdom of the world andreven- the culture of theo-. logical science have blinded men to the vision of God, and it'is the lowly and often illiterate to whom the Holy Ghost reveals “the. mysteries of. the kingdom of heaven” and the blessed hopes of the coming once more of our glorious King. : et How did these blind -men know that Jesus was the Son of David? With their inner senses they felt after Him until they found Him. .It is so-still that the hungry. heart finds the Saviour, Reaching out in our darkness and sense of need, groping for One who we feel can meet and satisfy our need, we press our way. toward the light even as the blind man, who, while he cannot discern the objects before him, can see vaguely atleast the glare of the light ard press closer to it. Even. so we can prass toward ‘God, and He will meet the seaking soul and reveal Himself in the vis- ion of light and love even as He did to them. § Seeker for Christ, follow the light you have and He will give more as you follow on, and you, too, will héar Him say, ‘“‘Re- ceive thy sight, thy faith hath made thee whole.” . II. The Manifestation of the King. An- cient prophecy had foretold the coming of the King of meekness, truth and love, and His triumphal entry into Jerusalem was a striking fulfillment. Zechariah especially had literally described the scenes por- traved in this chapter. ‘Rejoice greatly. O daughter of Zion, shout, O daughter of Jerusalem, behold thy King cometh unto thee. He is just and having salvation, low- ly and riding upon an ass and upon a colt the foal of an ass.” (Zechariah 9:9). For the first time in His earthly minis- try, our Lord permits Himsélf to be borne by the beast of burden, which had always been recognized as the bearer of kings. Riding upon a little colt never ridden be- fore, draped with the garments of His dis- ciples as they walked beside, and accom- panied by the mighty multitude surging up from the city at this, the Passover time, when the "population of Jerusalem was multiplied tenfold, He slowly descended from Bethany toward the city. At every step the enthusiasm of the crowd grew higher. Cutting down branches from the palm trees they strewed them in the way, and even their garments they flung in hom- age at His feet, while their voices rose to a mighty shout as they cried in the language of an old prophetic Psalm, “Hosannah to the Son of David, Hosannah in the high- est hirom =: But His own demeanor was in strange contrast to all these scenes of tumultuous excitement. Truly, He came as the King of meekness, lowliness and love. This be- came still more apparent when the city suddenly burst upon their view, and the sight of it drew from Him an outburst of sorrow and compassion, and amid all that pageant of popular acclamation He gave way to bitter tears and lamentations over the certain doom which He saw impending upon the scenes that lay spread before Him in all their glorious beauty. But the pro- cession swept on, and in ‘a little while He entered the city and the Temple. His triumphal entry into Jerusalem was the foreshadowing of that glorious time when He shall come again as Israel's long expected Messiah and take His place upon the throne of David, never again to leave it. : It is also typical ‘of His entrance upon the throne of the individual heart when we receive Him as our Lord and King. The little foal on whom no man had sat before is the exquisite type of the heart that gives Him its exclusive affection. He comes to reign, not as tyrant, but as a King of gentleness and love in all the at- tractive attributes so finely set forth in the ancient picture that we are consider- ing. He does not come te repress, but to satisfy. He does not dominate us asa des- pot, but He meets all the needs and long- ings of our being, and so blends with our nature and our will that we become His willing subjects and the very partners ot His kingdom and His throne. Have we thus received Him and known Him as our King? {1I. The King of Zion and the Lord of the Temple. Immediately upon entering the city He passed through the gates of the Temple, and repeated the miracle of its cleansing which had formed the first chapter of His early Judean ministry. The difference between this miracle and the former is that then He called it His Fath- er’s house; now “My house.” He was now taking the position of being Himself the Lord of the Temple and the true theocra- tic Head of the kingdom. A little later the phrase was changed again. As He left that Temple after His solemn warnings and judgments pronounced against the false rulers and leaders of Israel, He de- clared “Your house,” Mine no longer, “your house is left unto you desolate and ye shall not see Me again until he shall say blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord.” The cleansing of the Temple was occa- sioned by the abuse which was made of its courts by a class of money brokers and cheap traders, who took advantage of the people’s desire for silver change in order to pay the half shekel offering which was re- quired of every one entering the Temple, ‘and out of this there grew up a regular business and a large class of men who, at exorbitant rates of usury, supplied the sil- ver exchange to the worshipers as they crowded into the courts without having provided themselves with the requisite coin. Another class of tradesmen in like man-, ner filled up another part of the court with their filthy stalls for the supply of doves and other animals for the sin offerings and burnt offerings of the daily sacrifices. These also were sold at exorbitant prices for the convenience of the worshipers, but really for the gain of the dealers. "he same high place He still claims in qld have,.alas, been more than-,pamle! in the history of Christendom. It vas the sale of indhilgehees in the thde of Lither for the enrichment: of the ecclesiastical par-T ties that brouzht about the Reformation.. . The kind of sin here described is not sec- | ular business in its own place, but the doing of things in the name of religion ' which are prempted by mercenary motives.. The preaching of the gospel for the,sake of ing the ‘ church, the “desécrating of the house of God by social and sedular enter tainments-and methods of raising nianey which appeal to the selfishness and frivol: in-any way as a cloak of covetousness, as heart. The abuse of the Temple epurts of: \ ity of man, and the using of Christianity { gain, wrong. financial methods in support, . i The Milk Veins. an advertisement of business, as a’ means are things which are so common. .on every side of tis that une hearts of many of God’s children ‘have been filled with humiliation and sorrow, and moved .to earnest prayer for the coming of the King.once more to cleanse His Temple and purge from His church these shameful profanations. The second cleansing ‘of the Temple would seem to suggest that before: the Lord’s coming there is to. be a profound work of sanctification among the people of God answering to that first cleansing of which we, read so fully in the early chapters of the Acts of the Apestles. Still more fully does it apply to the in. dividual experience of the Christian. Here, ‘too, there is a second cleansing "which the Lord comes to bring when He Himself enters the consecrated. heart, not only saving. but sanctifying and separating us unto Himself in a deeper sense -than joy of conversion. Have we received: this second cleansing? IV. The Children’s King. . This was not an ordinary .crowd, where the children, always love to be in front, but it was a genuine outburst of heaven inspired love and loyalty that made them cry, “Hosan- nah in the highest.” For the -Liord :Jesus Himself bore testimony to the genuineness, est place over all others as He poted "the ancient Scripture, “Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings Thou has perfected praise.” Others might join in the accla- matioris because of the contagious influ- ence of an excited multitude, but'theirs was “perfect praise.” As usual-the Pharix sees were ready to scorn their juvedile en- thusiasm, but the Lord Jesus yas alsp ready to vindicate them as He had ‘once’ before. ~ 3 : #4 Let ‘us: never forget that Jesus isthe children’s King. By and by, when we wel- come Him to His heavenly throne, we shall find that a vast proportion of that ran somed crowd will i — consist of little ‘chil- dren. Let us train our little jones to know Him and crown Him as their: King: Fhe. word used here in their childish praise is the Hebrew word ‘“‘Hosannah.” fe is mot’ quite the ‘same as Hallelujah, the usual ex- pression for worship and praise. Literally it means “Lord save us.” Our .Hallelu- hs must begin in Hosannahs. Even the children, too, must learn that they are’ sinful children, and that they also require is cleansing blood, and only as they ac- eept it and honor it will their Hosannahs become Hallelujahs, and the XT.ord pro- nounce their homage “‘perfect praise.” ~ V. The Blessing of the King. Immedi- ately after Christ's triumphal entry into Jerusalem and His cleansing of the Tem- ple, we read these significant words, “and the blind and the lame came to Him in the Temple and He healed them.” Purifica- tion always leads on to power. The ¢leans- ing of the Temple was followed by the healing of the sick and the revelation of the great and good Physician. So, still, it will be found in our personal experience. This was not a momentary gleam of divine beneficence over a dark and suffering world, but Jesus Christ is the same yes- terday, to-day and forever: “And warm, sweet, tender even yet A present help is He And love has still its Olivet And faith its Galilee. The healing of His seamless robe Is by our beds of pain, We touch Him ’mid life’s pain and strife And we are whole again.” But, of course, all this awaits its perfect fulfilment in that happier time when the King shall come to His own again “and the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting ‘joy ‘upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away.” Then, when this earth is purged of all iniquity, will it be also true the inhabitant shall no more say, “I am sick, and the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity.” VI. The Curse of the King. But'the King has not only blessing, but also judg- ment in His mighty hand. TLe only mira- cle of judgment recorded in all the life of Jesus Christ immediately followed : these incidents. It was the cursing of the bar- ren fig tree, to which He came seeking fruit and encouraged to expect it by the luxuriant leaves tLat covered (ts branches; but lo! there was “nothing but leaves,” and He pronounced upon it: the svithering words t at left it leafless and dead. 2 This as, of course, a type of the fruit- Jess nation that He had already referred to under the parable of the Barren Fig Tree, and it forecasts the solemn judgment that awaits every professed foliower of Christ who shall meet Him ‘at’ last with empty hands and fruitless life. 3 But there is a beneficent aspect, even in the curse of the King. It tells us of One that has the power to consume and destroy the things which we are unable to cast ouf of our lives. There are fig trees of sinful habit and physical disease which our hu- man strength cannot throw off alone. Oh, how glad we are sometimes to have a God who is ““a consuming fire,” and from whose presence Satan, sin and sickness. flee atvay. He tells us we may eater. into His de- structive power against these things and hand over to His flaming sword ‘adver- saries and obstacles too great for us to overcome. “I am so glad,” said a little child once, “that I have a God that can shake the world.” Our Christ is not all soft and easy benevolence. Back of His gentleness is an arm of might and a holiness as inexorable as the lightnings of the sky. Oh! sinner, whatever else you dare, be- ware of ‘“‘the wrath of the Lamb.” VII. The Sceptre of the Kingdom. In the closing verses of our lesson, chapter 21, verses 20 to 22, the Lord reveals the secret of His own power and tells the disciples how they may share it also, The secret. of :it is faith. ‘If ye have faith and doubt not, ye shall not only do this which is done to the fig tree, but, also, if ve shall say unto this mountain, be thou removed and be thou cast into the sea, it shall be done; and all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believ- ing, ye shall receive.” And so He passes over to us His sceptre, and tells us that we may exercise the same omnipotence of faith through which’ He wrought His mighty works. It was by faith that He overcame and became for us “the Author and Finisher of our f-i'¥7 Totten wiry exercise the same faith, too. Some time in that coming kingdom we shal] be like Him and exercise a power over the uni- verse of God, 8f which, could we fully realize it now, we would be amazed and appalled. But He is training us now in the use of this mystic sceptre, and teaching us the lessons of that faith of which He once said, ‘“All things are possible with God, all things are possible unto him that believeth.” We have but touched its borderland, beloved. There are great continents of faith and power and prayer for vet to explore. “Lord, teach us to pray,” help our unbelief and give us ‘“‘the faith of Tl 5 hi the Church of God and the individual God. we can possibly know, even in ‘the eirly | of their praise and indeed gave it the high-.| \ . The milk veins found along “fhe of social preferment or secular gain—these .-stomach of ‘the'cow should be: vefy tor- ‘tuous.: They wind about on the belly ‘and. pass into the body through orifices .in the rear of the fore flank. Théir duty is to ccnvey the venus blood “to the lungs for purification. Hence, ‘the larger the vein and the greater ‘its’ ram- ifications, the better indication it is that the circulation ‘of the’ blood’ through the udder is very large; and’ naturally, the larger the circulation of |'the blood the greater will be the milk production; bécause milk after all is -really a product of the blood. —Ameri- ‘can Cultivator.” =’ ’ o ie '“* "The ‘Southdown Sheep.” "* -*- The Southdown sheep still stands’ at the head .of all the mutton breeds for quality of fiesh, but some breeders fa- vor Shropshire, because it is larger than the Southdown and shears more wool. The matter of wcol should not be considered at all in the mutton breeds. While the Shropshire is a breed that is not easily, excelled, .yet the Southdown can subsist where the Shropshire would not thrive, and they can also be kept in larger flocks than For improving the mutton qualities of common . flocks the Southdown ‘is claimed .to be, superior to all others. = Improving the Meadow. is There are .many...meadows, yearly. turned into. pastures whicn might be saved for hay yields several years Jonger with a,little.care at-the right time: .One, of the best ways of doing meadow. early in August after manur- ing it. well, and here. is a way of util- izing manure one is storing under. the shed, and which-is going. to waste, and sow rye in early.September at the rate of two bushels an acre. , Sot sin onieh In April-or as. early. as possible, plow under the .rye, .smqoth. and sow. with excellent .in most sections, and will not contain enough clover tQ injure it for sale as prime mixed hay.—Indian- apolis.News.. bei pret ap . The Colt the Coming Horse. It should be remembered that if the colt is neglected in food or manage- ment there wiil be no good coming horse. Sometimes the mare is not a good nurse, and which case the milk may be supplemented with warm fresh cows’ milk, diluted one-third with water. And ra small amount of bran or oil, meal may be added occa- sionally to keep the digestive organs in a healthier condition, supply more bone, and muscle-forming food, and give a sleeker finish to.the colt. Oats should be added to the ration as soon as the fcal is old enough to eat them. By teaching the foal to eat grain ear- ly it can be weaned much more easily. Plenty of good clean water should be at hand at all times. A little attention in these things will make a horse twice as valuable .when .put on the market. or in the field. —Indiana Farm- er. Exhibiting :Grons. Any farmer who will religiously fol- low his county fairs from year to year will observe the opportunities there to make a reputation if he can grow- one particular crop better than another. As everyone knows, one soil worker raises prize swine, another understands eorn better than other crops, and So on.’ i J Let each one take a specimen of that which he can grow best to the county fair and exhibit. Possibly he may not win a prize, but he will have a chance to see what others are dc- ing and thus ascertain his own short- comings. Again, his exhibit may at- tract the attenticn of some one who wants just the produet he produces and a profitable business is worked up. The educational advantages of the county fair ought nct to be overlooked and t ehfamily should be taken to ev- ery ong that can be reached at a mod- erate cost. Get out into the world and see what other farmers are doing; one will find them willing to talk and one may ‘get enough gecd ideas at a single fair to pay for the expense of attend- ance 20 times over. Bear this item in mind as the fairs begin next month and in September. Give the Boys Poultry. As usual there is loud complaint from farmers that the children brought up on the farm are getting uneasy and want to try their wings elsewhere. This is not to’ be wondered at when these young people hear and read of what is going on in the world. The monotony of country life seems un- bearable to them, especially when from the farm they obtain only plenty of bard work, the food they eat and the clothes they wear. True, one may say that is about all any one gets out of life, but if we can plan some way by which the younger people can make a start for themselves they will be much more contented. Poultry offers a way of trying out the feeling of the young folks at small expense. Give them a chance to raise poultry and have the proceeds for their own use and in a year or two they will hawe become reconciled to couuntry life y .any of the breeds except the Merinos. this at small expense is to plow the} F this disaster would be avoided. grass seed, using a mixture best suited. i to, your section or using a mixture of. timothy, red top and clover, which is |. is an expert potato grcwer, another. and be willing to make it their future or they will have shown théir utter lack of adaptation: for it, in which: case the best thing for them .and for the parent is to let them leave the farm and take up the work for which they are better fitted, but don’t lose your first giving them a chance to do for themselves on the farm and show what is in them. The Seeds Readily Take Root. On nearly every farm there ‘are Sev- worth reclaiming, yet much of this 8oil pense. One hardly. realizes how 'read- ‘grasp on the young people without: “is sufficiently strong to make a fair’ "growth of trees with little or no ex- ily thé native trees grow until ‘some- thing calls his attention ‘to’ it. The writer has had ‘much ‘to‘do with grow- ing trees in the nursery, vet until this summer did not realize how readily the seed of the well known sugar maple sprouts. A number of pods were blown from a nearby maple and ‘broken apart by a small boy of an investigating turn of mind. After satisfying his curiosi- ty, the pods were thrown lightly ‘aside. Some of the seed came in contact with the soil and last week four minia- ture maple trees some five inches high’ were found growing nicely. In sections ‘of the country are locat- “ed nurserymen who" make a business "of supplying small séedlings of native trees and at a price’ so low it“is a shame that there is not a grove of trees ‘on every farm in this country. The time is not far distant when there will be a ‘gredt cry over the forestless sections of the country and we will “probably import the lumber nécessary to build houses and make furniture when by a little planting éach year Do your share, readér, in increasing the wood supply of the country; even the farm wood lot will help in the grand aggregate. Wheat for Fattening Pigs. There are a number of states, nota- bly in the west, where corn cannot be grown, but where wheat thrives. Con- ' sidering the comparatively low price that prevails and has prevailed for a number of years for wheat, can this grain be successfully fed hogs? A number of farmers have asked this question, and recently an experiment was performed at the Oregon experi- ment station for the purpose of ascer- taining the value of wheat as a pig feed. Oregon is a state where corn cannot be grown except in favored sections, and I have seen corn thrown to hogs there and the swine would run from it. It was indeed like ‘‘casting pearls before swine.” But wheat. Well, the results of the experiment was such as to settle fully the ques- tion of whether wheat could produce pork equal in quality to corn-fed pork. The fat of wheat-fed’ hogs is very heavy and thick, and firm in texture. The lean meat is very juicy, and light in color. As to the rates of grain pro- duced, the results will compare very favorably with any experiment ever performed by corn feeding. Some farmers mix oats, with wheat, chop- ping the two, and feeding it to the pigs in this way. It has been found that it is not advisable to do this. Pigs do not like the coarse hulls which are present in such abundance in chopped oats. Chopped wheat alone proves to be a splendid feed for hogs. On an av- erage, and when ‘fed judiciously there are 13 pounds of gain for each bushel of wheat fed. From this it can easily be seen that the western farmer who is obliged to sell his wheat for 38 or even 55 cents a bushel, could much better feed it to his hogs. Pigs should be fed slops from the kitchen for a while previous to the beginning of the wheat ration. They should not be allowed to run at large, but should be confined to a pen connected with a small lot, to which the pigs can have daily ‘access. Each ration should be weighed out and allowed to soak tiil the next time for feeding. A handful of salt should be added each feed, and a double handful of charcoal fed twice each week. The breed of pigs used in the particular experiment referred to above, were Poland Chinas and Berk- shires, the Berkshires predominating. The hogs were slaughtered when they reached the age of 11 months. Dennis H. Stcvall, the Epitomist. The Wise Cat. “Labor saving inventions never do any real harm to laboring men and women,” d Professor S. P. Langley, the. scientist and aeronaut, “They who bemoan the apnearance of labor saving devices are unwise.” Professor L.angley smiled. “Such unphilosophical persons,” he resumed, “should learn a lesson from the stable cat. Have you heard of the stable cat? It sat on the horse’s back. ‘“ ‘Dear, dear,’ the horse wailed. ‘Now that automobiles are coming into such favor, I fear I shan’t be wanted.’ ‘“ ‘Nonsense, said the stable cat. ‘Don’t carry on s0, brother. The mouse trap didn’t do away with me, did it?’ ”’—New York Tribune. Se. Quinine in India. The inhabitants of malarious regions in India can now purchase quinine at practically cost price. It is put up in small packages by the government and sold at the rate of one cent for ten grains. | vinced that the skins eral ‘acres ‘of ground deemed hardly | GLOVES FROM RAT SKINS. Only One PafFr"Was Ever Made and It Was Very Small. A report comes from Copenhagen that a great rat .hunt has been or- ganizeéd''there and that the skins of many thousands of the victims are to be used in making gloves. If the rat hunters in the Danish capital cherish any such hopes they .are doomed to disappointment. Rat skins cannot be made into gloves fit for commerce. The belief that a valuable raw material is being neglected here survives only in the minds of the inexpert. The glove mak- er Knows much better. A Norwegian merchant once came to England and informed a well-known glove maker that he had collected over 100,000 rat skias and was prepared ito receive offers : for them. He was fully con- were suitable for glove making. But the manufac- turer found that the largest skin was only some six inches long, and he held up a kid-skin for:the smallest size of glwre, a child’s, which was eight inch- es long, and asked how he was to cut such a glove out of a rat skin. Then he, took up the smallest kid skin for a lady's A eleven inches long, and when he asked how that was to be ‘cut:out of a rat skin the Nor- wegian merchant laughed at the idea and went away disappointed. The best ‘offer he got for those skins, which he had collected with so much care, was five shillingocs a hundred- weight from a man who was willing to boil them down for glue. ‘A famous glove making firm has a : collection iof curiosities relating to he trade, and one of them is the larg: est pair of gloves ever made out of a rat skin. .The belief that such skins could be made into gloves was laid before the managers so confidently that they resolved to put it to the trial, and they ordered a number of the skins of the largest rats which could be found in Grimsby. But the rat is :a_fighting animal, and bears the marks of many battles on his body and it was found that the skins were so scarred and torn ‘that it was with the utmost difficulty that perfect pieces large enough for the purpose could be obtained. In the end, after ten skins had been used, -a pair of gloves was cut and made, and they are retained in the collection to this day.” But they are so small that they would not fit the smallest of small boys. Thus it was shown that, how- ever cheaply rat skins might be ob- tained, they would offer no advantages to the glove maker. The rabbit skin is eaually useless for this purpose, and humane people may also dismiss from their minds the fear that the skins of pet dogs are made into gloves. The dog skin glove of which we used to hear is made of nothing but the skin of the Cape goat.—Pall Mall Gazette. te ti i A New Genius. “A mere girl has just won the much coveted Sully Prudhomme prize for the best poem of the year in the con- test organized by the Societe des Gens de Lettres—to fulfill the conditions of thie Sully Prudhomme donation; the poet himself having won the Nobel prize, thus desired to consecrate a part of it to encouraging poetic pro- duction. “The winner of the prize is a tele- phone girl and lives in a sixth floor garrét in a tiny room, with an apolo- gy for a window, and eats when and where she can. Thus she is a com- plete refutation of the assertion that there are no more poets to be found in the garrets. “Her name is well known in France, for itis. that ‘of :-several prominent statesmen—it is Marthe - Dupuy, and she is the daughter of a sculptor. She could’ not read at ten yars of age, and later was left a penniless orphan. “Like all true poets, her poems are in the minor key, a pronounced vein of sadness running through them. The collection sent in to the eompetitjon is entitled ‘Idylle en Fleurs,’ and is plaintive in character, in the style of Theocritus and Virgil. When she re: ceived the telegram announcing that she had received the prize she could hardly believe her eyes, for the snug little sum of money accompanying it is quite a fortune for her.” Cupid Breaks Up Art School. Prof. Hubert Herkimer, the noted painter, has closed his well-known art school at Bushey, near London, be- cause of the irrepressible love making of the students. The school was es- tablished by the professor 21 years ago, and has been conducted without any gain to himself, but merely out of love for art. The students work together. Of late, especially, they have contrected the habit of falling in love with each other. Eighteen couples out of 35 are now engaged. TL.ove making, the professor says, is far more seriously pursued than the study of art. So he has withdrawn his patronage from the school, which accordingly comes to an end. The students indignantly contend that they are at liberty to court when the day's work is over, and that nothing contributes more .to develop- ing artistic capabilities than love.— New York News. A Winner. “May not be new, but I just heard it,” said the man at the head of the table. “Give it to us.’ “Man from California said raised cabbages out the tub. Man they didn’t brag had been in Ka n three policems t.”—Detroit Frc wash that from Mi e, but d had SCIENCE NOTES. A convenient pyremeter is said to ‘be a series of alloys of silver, lead ‘and copper. A composition of nine parts of lead and one of silver melts at 400 dergees C; three of lead and one of silver at 500 degrees; six of lead and four of silver at 600 degrees, and eight of silver and two of copper at 850 degmees. A remarkable paca-like rodent de- scribed by ‘Prof. C. Peters, in 1870, under the name of Dinomys. branicki, has been known by a single specimen found near a house in Lima, and this lone animal has represented not only a species, butta genus; and even a family by itself. Other .specimens are now reported to be living in a Para wT la. : 3 During an early morning thunder- storm in April a fire-ball descended at Earl's Fee, in Essex, England, with a blinding flash and a terrific explosion. After dawn’ “three distinct sets of holes, ranging from mine inches down to one inch, were found in the stiff, yellow clay of an oat field, these holes being perfectly circular, as clean cut as though bored with an augur, and tapering downward to the rounded ‘bot- tomg®> The influence of the depth of the sea ‘on’ the speed of ships: has been tested by the German navy ‘in the Baltic, torpedo boats being used for og experiments, and the results are curious and interesting. At 12 knots no influénce was shown. At 15 to 21 knots shallow water acted as a serious check, but while in four fathoms of water the horse-power needed to main- tain 20 knots was double that required for the same speed in 10 fathoms or more, .the worst results at 22 to 26 knots were obtained in 10 to 12 fathoms,» and the shoals of four fathoms gave the least resistance. A rémarkable property of aluminum and tin alloys has been described by Hector Pechaux to the Paris academy. When freshly filed surfaces of four different mixtures of these two metals were plunged into cold distilled water, bubbles of oxygen and hydrogen were given off for two or three minutes, but neither of the metals nor an unfiled surface of the alloys gave any such effect. It is supposed that tempering in casting separated the two metals into ‘juxtaposed molecules, Which" formed a thermo-electric couple and generated an electric current until cooled to the temperature of tha water. RAPID BRIDGE BUILDING. A Business in Which the Engineer Must Make the Earth Fit His Purpose. Wherever the demand is made, the engineer must make the face of the earth fit his purpose. In the wilds of the Andes he must throw his struc- ture of steel across a torrential ravine from a precipice on one side to the mouth of a tunnel on the other. At distances of thousands of miles from the place of manufacture the parts of the bridge must fit like watchworks when put together in the finished structure. Five years ago the Pencoyd Bridge company of Philadelphia manufactur- ed for the English government the famous Atbara bridge in sevefi Spang of one hundred. and fifty each, weigh- ing one and one-half million pounds, in 29 working days. The metal was shipped to Egypt, and carried more - than 1000 miles up the Nile valley. into the Soudan. After arriving at its destination it was ‘put together on its piers, ready for raflway traffic within 60 days, "without using any timber staging and with absolute ac- curacy of fit [in all its parts, This bridge was imperative for the sutcess of the plans of Lord Kitchener in the campaign that made his fame and for- tune. : - In 1900 the Pennsylvania Steel com- pany built the Gokteik deuble-track railroad viaduct to ‘cross a ravine in Burma. This viaduct ‘is nearly half a mile long and nearly 325 feet high in its highest portion, and the weight of manufactured metal was about three and one half million pounds. This structure was shipped from the place of manufacture just about half way around the globe, and then transport- ed several hundred miles inland, and rapidly erected, with every bolt and rivet fitted accurately in its place.— Woman's Home Companion. An Unrhistoric Landmark. When Mr. Justin H. Smith visited the-towns along the Kennebee river in endeavoring to trace exactly Arn- old’s march from Cambridge to. Que- bec, he inquired everywhere for tradi- tions and especially for relics. In his book he gives this incident as a re- sult of one such inquiry: Near the point where the army laft the Kennebec are four or five acres of cleared ground and two small farm- houses. Mr. Smith inquired of the venerable proprietor. of one of these places if there were any evidences in the vicinity of Arnold’s march through the country. . “Oh, replied the old man, “there used to be a big rock in my mowing field, with ‘B. D. A’ on it; but the old thing was in the way, and I blasted it out.” “What did those letters mean, ‘B. ves,” D. A’? asked Mr. Smith. “Why, Bennie Dick Arnold; of course.”—Youth's Companion. In Encland the other «¢