THE DECADENT. Among the viril Conspicuous f an Of sexless beauty. ace ;, God's mighty purpose somehow had gone wrong. Then on his loom he wove a careful song, Of sensuous threads, a web of wordy lace, Wherein the primal passions of the race, And his own sins, made wonder for the throng. A little pen-prick opened up a vein, And gave the finished mesh, crimson ot— The last consummate touch of studied art. But those who knew strong passion and keen pain, Looked through, and through the pat- tern, and found not One single great emotion of the heart. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox, in the Century. 2.0.8... YT TT Twice Told Tale. By LOUIS TIDDEMAN. he Mr. Gillingham proposed to me be- fore he left for Australia, when I had just turned seventeen, he being ten Years my senior. I went direct to my father, as was my wont at any trouble or perplexity, and told him, my arms about his neck, my head pillowed on his shoulder. For a while he did not speak, then he said fervently: “Thank God!” : That decided me—that the sudden clearing of his haggard, careworn face as he clasped me in a close embrace and spoke in flattering terms of my lover, affirming that he was of all men the one he would have chosen for a son-in-law. “His father is my oldest friend,” said he. ‘Jack ig like him, brave as a lion, true as steel and honest as the day. God bless you for the news you have brought, my child; now I shall die happy.” I clung to him in a passion of tears and protested that he should not die, and that God would never be so cruel as to take him from me. ‘No, no, not for many years yet, I hope,” answered he, returning my ca- resses and comforting me as he alone knew how. Soon after this Mr. Gillingham left, with the understanding that in three years’ time I should go out to him, ac- companied by my father. His voice shook as he bade me good-bye, there was even a suspicion of moisture in his eyes; mine were tearless. I was sorry, of course; we had been capital friends all through the summer, but since our engagement there had appeared to be something strained in our relationship. At seventeen one is not, as a rule, much addicted to self-analysis, but it did occur to me that in choosing a hus- band a girl should be influenced by other motives than the desire to please a parent, however good and wise that parent may be. Suppose that when I went into soci- ety I showld meet some cone I liked ever so much better? Nothing of the kind occurred; I returned from every ball I attended quite convinced that Mr. Gillingham was superior to any- one whom I had met. Meanwhile each mail brought me long, lover-like letters, to which I re- sponded in frank, friendly fashion. It seemed to me only natural that he should write as he did, for I, for my part, was not—at least so it seemed— at all sentimental, and it was contrary to my dispositicn to make any pre- tence. Nevertheless, I was really sorry for him when, as the three years drew to a close, I found myself compelled to write and tell him that, owing to the state of my father’s health, it would be impossible for me to keep my promise. I felt for him in his loneliness, and grieved for his disappointment, all the more so because he strove to keep it in the background and to comfort me. “I can wait,” said he, “and will be patient.” He had need for patience, poor fel- low, for my dear father lingered on, and two more years passed befcre death touched him. Then my sum- mons came—a manly, affectionate let- ter, and withal clear and business-like. I was to take my passage on board the Oriental. A friend of his—his dearest friend—would travel in the same ves- sel, and would be happy to do all in his power to be of assistance to me on the voyage. I was glad to go; glad to turn my back on the familiar scenes amid which my life had been passed. Home was home no longer now that my fath- er was dead. I stcod on the deck of the vessel and watched the well-known shores recede from view, straining my eyes to catch the last glimnse of them. Then, turning suddenly, I confronted Mr. Gillingham’s friend. He was very tall, very bronzed, but for all that good to look upon. I know now, as I look back through the mist of years, that there is such a thing as love at first sight, but in these dars I should have ridiculed such an idea. But Mr. Gillingham’s friend was the means of demonstrating its reality. Hour by bour, without misgiving, I sat and listened to his words, at first in- terrupting him by questions relzating to Mr. Gillingham, but eonly at first. Pay by day he waited on me sedu- lously, anticipating my every want. Week by week I learned the silent lan- guage of the eyes, the hidden secret of a fleeting smile, and yet remained ig- norant of my knowledge. He was so much clder than I; besides I was en- gaged and had been so for nearly six years. There could be no danger. Thus I dreamed on until the awiaken- ing came—came with a fierce flash of pain, an agony of self-abasement. It happened one morning, when in the midst of a pleasant chat that he fell back suddenly in a dead faint. He had had a severe illness recently, so! he told me later, and had been subject | to such attacks since then. But I did | not know this at the time, and was | terribly frightened. I remember kneeling at his feet, frantically chafing his hands, sick at heart and trembling. At length his eyes opened slowly and rested on me. I think we both knew then how it was. In my mind, at least, there re- mained no shadow of uncertainty. I knew now what love meant. It was no calm, friendly feeling, but a great, unquenchable passion. Shame-strick- en, I fled from his presence, and fought out my battle alone; the strength of my own feeling was a revelation to me. I had at least sufficient honor to despise myself. Next day I feigned illness, and it was not until the voyage came to an end that we met again, and he stcod at my side once more, helpful as ever but reserved and distant. It made my heart ache, but sympathy, possessing, the rare tact that pierces through con- ventionality. “My dear,” she said, after we had dined, “you wish to be alone; you are in no mood for talking.” I was about to reply as politeness dictated, but she only smiled and shook her head as she led me in fo’ the cozy library, settled the comfortably in the armchair by the firé and left me. How I blessed her for her kindly consideration. Left to myself I could at least try to think. I would be true to the promise I had given so many years ago, but I would not deceive the man who loved me— I would tell him all. So I sat thereinthe dark room and waited till, out of sheer weariness, I fell asleep. A slight sound awakened me. I rubbed my eyes: and peered through the gloom. Surely that was a man seated at the table his head buried in his hands. “Mr. Gillingham,” 1 whispered, “is it you or am I still dreaming?” The vessel had arrived a day earlier than was expected. Mr. Gillingham was not there to meet me, and I was conducted by his friend to the house of his aunt, who had offered to receive me as a guest. She was a model host- ess, gentle and full of I knew it was best so; indeed, I mistrusted myself so greatly that I would have shaken him off had it been possible. TUn- fortunately it was not. “It is I,” he replied in a strange, hollow voice. “And so my wife has come to me at last, after six weary years of waiting. The word “wife” stung me into acute self-consciousness. “Yes, I answered slowly, “I have come, but do not come near me, do not touch me till you have heard all.” He appeared little inclined to do so. He might have been a figure carved in stone, still and rigid, cold and hard. “Listen,” I cried, flinging myself at his feet; “I will be a faithful, loving wife to you who have waited so long and so patiently; but I will not come to you with a lie upon my lips. “I have not been true to you.” “Not true!”’ he cried, rising to his feet; “not true! Child, do you know what you are saying? Who has come between us?” “Your friend, and that by no fault of his own. I alone am to blame; he never tried to win my love; he was only kind—oh! so kind and thought- ful.” “So kind and thoughtful!” My words were re-echoed mockingly, but I paid no heed. “It’s all over mow,” I continued; “trust me; I will never see him again. From this time forth I will put him out of heart forever.” “No, no,” cried my lover, “not for- ever. I hope. Surely there is no need for that.” Then he clasped me in his arms and covered my tear stained face with kisses. It was good to know myself forgiven, good to feel those strong arms about me. For a space I hid my head upon his shoulder; when I had courage to lift my" eyes to his I understood. “Sweatheart,” he said, “it is for me to ask forgiveness, for you to forgive. I 2m both John Gillingham and his friend. You gave me, your prcmise so long ago that strange doubts and fears beset me, and I was fain to do by wooing over again. This time, thank God, I have won.”—From The New York Evening Journal. The Sphinx and the Infinite. ' I can imagine the most determined : atheist looking at the Sphinx and, in a flash, not merely believing, but feel- ing that he had before him proof of the life of the soul of Khufu beyond the tomb of his pyramid. Always as you return to the Sphinx you wonder at it more, you adore more strangely its repose, you steep yourself more inti- mately in the aloof peace that seems to emanate from it as light emanates from the sun. And as you look on it at last perhaps you understand the infinite; you understand where is the bourne to which the finite flows with all its greatness, as the great Nile flows from beyond Victoria Nyanza to the sea—From Robert Hichens’s “The Spell of Egypt” in the Century. In Nesd of Change. A small girl recently entered a grocer's shop in the suburbs of Whitechapel and said to the shop- man in a shrill, piping voice: “Please, sir, I wants ’arf a pound of butter and penn’orth of cheese and muvver ses she will send a shill- ing in when farver comes home. “All right,” replied the man. “But,” continued the child, “muv- ver wants the change, ’cos she ’as got to put a penny in the gas meter.” —London Telegraph. Nef Ppumpresmenindy A Waning Christianity s=and a:- - - Waxing Mammonism THE TWIN SPECTERS OF OUR AGE By President Schurman of Cornell. Urmston yn LI. 00000000000 HAT is the blight and malady of our time? 1s It not the 0990000600 mean and sordid conception of human life which everywhere S 4 prevails? Among all classes and conditions of people do * & you not find a vitally active, if generally unexpressed, belief s 3 that the life of human beings, like the brute creatures about : : them, consists in the enjoyment of the material things which 00000006 p perish in the using? 10000000000 To get and to have is the motto not only of the market, : but of the altar and of the hearth. The energy of the nation is pouring itself into production; we are coming to measure man—man with his heart and mind and soul—in terms of mere acquisition and possession. our age. . And between them not only the natural idealism of the spirit, but the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule are disavowed or disregarded, and in their plate, at least for the six active days of the week, is the ruthless struggle for life and the success of the strongest, the most cunning or tne most highly favored, whether by powers supernal cr by powers infernal. : But the yast majority are fatally handicapped, and goaded either by the “bangs of hunger or the pricks of envy or the stings of injustice, they bitterly the good things of the weild. + .The call to €arn‘a livelihood is two-fold. If you don’t you become a para- site on the community and you stunt your own nature. The idle rich are an excrescence in any properly organized community. The vice of the age is that men want wealth without undergoing that toil by which alone wealth is created. Among the rich and well-to-do business and professional classes “grafting” has been so common that the very idea of commercialism has become a by-word and a reproach. Financiers, capitalists, corporations may be the most conspicuous sinners; who shows his client how to circumvent the laws, or the scholar who glorifies his patron’s success in business, irrespective of the method by which that suc- cess was achieved, or the preacher who transfigures the ruthless oppresser and robber of six days into the exemplary Christian of the seventh. We are dealing with the virus of a universal infection. The whole nation needs a new baptism of the old virtue of honesty. The love of money and the reckless pursuit of it is undermining the national character. But the nation, thank God, is beginning to perceive the fatal danger. The reaction caused by recent revelations testifies to a moral awakening. At heart the nation is still sound, though its moral sense has been too long hypnotized by national prosperity. : 3 The Unlimited Power of 3 3 The People PI By Ex:Governor Frank §. Black, of New York. eeprom) [3 T must be remembered that the people are all-powerful. They can do whatever they decide to do. They are now I checked by their Constitution, but they made even the Con- stitution and they can unmake it. There are at least two methods of doing this—one by amendment and the other by revolution. But the prayer of every patriot in the land will be that the Constitution shall not now be changed. The ideas now most popular are also most dangerous. The clam- or is for the limitation of fortunes, forgetting that that also means the limitation of industry; for the curtailment of the power of the courts, forgetting that that means death to the freedom of the individual; for the equality of men by arbitrary rule, forgetting that this means to clog the industrious and help the lazy. The spirit now abroad if given rein would make the incompetent equal by law to the skilled, the dissolute equal to the sober, the cheat and shirk equal to the honest man. The people, when they try, can raze everything to the ground. They may unmake or remake their Constitu- tion. They may, if they like, abolish their courts and legislatures and take the reins of government directly in their own hands. This means revolution, but are there no precedents for revolution? Is there any prophet abroad in these days who can say how far the people would go in their present temper? Would the majority vote to limit private fortunes? Would they vote to re- distribute private estates which were large enough to tempt their cupidity? Would they curtil the power of the courts? You can answer these questions as well as any body of men now living, and you can also answer whether the suggested changes would be wise. : Rp ry eg Sleeplessness .". Ey George Lincoln Walton, M. D. 9 O one can acquire the habit of sleep who has not learned the habit of concentration, of devoting himself single-minded to the matter in hand. If we practice deveting our minds, as we do our bodies, to one object at a time, we shall rot only accomplish more, but with less exhaustion. Training in this direction will help us, on retiring, to view sleep as our present duty, and a sufficient duty, without taking the oppor- tunity at that time to adjust ‘or to try to adjust) all our tanglesy to review our past sources of discomfort, and to speculate upon the ills of the future. A. walk, a bath, a few gymnastic exercises, will often serve a useful pur- pose before retiring, but if they are undertaken in a fretful and impatient spirit, and are accompanied by doubts of their effectiveness and the insistent thought that sleep will not follow these or any other procedure, they are likely to accomplish little. The best immediate preparation for sleep is the confidence that one will sleep, and indifference if one does not. . This frame of mind is best attained by the habitual adoption of the same attitude toward all the affairs of life. It is an aid in its adoption as regards sleep to learn that mary have for years slept only a few hours a night, with- out noticeable impairment of their Lealth or comfort.—From Lippincott’s, ; La Society's Responsibility for Crime By Deputy Commissioner Woods, of the New York Police Department, HERE is no such thing as a criminal class. Any statement with reference to the so-called criminal] class makes the prosperous feel entirely too comfortable, sitting at the club with their after-dinner cigars. It removes the feeling of re- sponsibility from that section of society where it properly be- longs, and places it on heredity and circumstances over which we have no control. In a large propertion of cases the criminal is society, and not the poor fellow who has gone wrong from lack of work, poverty, strangeness to the cus- N 0 » oflnen SG pd - toms and language of the country, or the sudden flash of passion common to all of us. Economic’ pressure and social maladjustment, well within the scope of our power to remedy, will explain very much of the crime and the making of very many of our crim- inals. "And a great evil in our present social system is that it too often makes a criminal of the first offender—the citizen who has slipped over into wrong- doing once. It makes him hardened instead of dealing with him as a human being. A waning ‘Christianity and a waxing Mammonism are the twin spectres of _ denounce a social ordefin~witich favored claSses monopolize what they deem: but equally guilty is the merchant who cheats his customers, or the lawyer. PENNSYLVANIA STATE NEWS DISBURSE HUGE SUMS. But Pennsyivania State Treasury Still Shows Healthy Balance. Harrisburg.—Since the first of Jan- uary Auditer General Young has col- lected $6,655.279 of state revenue, which is $213,668.31 more than the total collections for the like period of last year. The revenues for March were $1,796,640.87 and for February $2,219,331.75. Including the quarterly payments on appropria- tions to hospitals and charitaple in- stitutions the disbursements for March were $1,885,023.88. The treasurv statement issued April 1 shows a balance of $11,090, 952.52 in the general fund. One month ago it was $11,167,219.12. The sinking fund contains $2,492,458.42, as compared with $2,504,599.70 last month. . MONEY IN THE FIRE His $400 Renner’s Children Used Roll to Play With. ; Beaver Falls.—Distrusting banks, Alexander Renner, a grocer, has been keeping® his money at home. A few days ago he took. from a cupboard $400. in bills and placing.if on a table began counting it. © Renner was call- ed away for a few minutes and his ‘two :little sons began to play with the .money. : Finally one threw the roll of bills at the other Missing its mark, the wad landed in an open grate fire where it was burning when the father rushed in. After severely scorching both hands, Renner rescued most of the money in a partly destroyed con- dition. This morning the charred bills were forwarded to the United States treasury for redemption. . SAW FOUR COFFINS Dream of - Dying Girl Is Fulfilled Quidkly at Washington, Pa. Washington.— When. the remains of Mrs. Wilson L. Smith were buried in the Washington cemetery the dream of a dying girl was fulfilled. Miss Bertha Breese, a sister of Mrs. Smith, while ill five months ago, had a vision in which she saw four coffins, each occupied by members of the family, one being herself. She died shortly afterward. A few weeks ago a 3-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Smith died suddenly. Two monthg ago a 5-months-old baby pass- ed away and last Sunday Mrs. Smith’s death occurred. THOUSANDS RESUME WORK Reading Collieries Will Begin Opera- tions Again Today. Reading.—The Reading Company is making active preparations for the resumption of mining at its collieries. Mahoney Plane, which has been idle since the shutdown,” will be started up and the thousands of idle mine workers will go back to the mines with prospects of continued work during the summer. BALM FOR HER FEELINGS Wealthy Young Farmer Sued for Breach of Promise. Washington.—Miss Margaret P. Hewitt, daughter of the late Samuel Hewitt of West Bethlehem township, entered suit for breach of promise against Joseph A. Wise, a wealthy young farmer of the same township. Miss Hewitt states that she is 22 years of age and that she and Wise, who is 12 years her senior, became engaged in 1901. The marriage agreement was renewed, she says, from time to time until last fall, when Wise went west.- She claims that after his departure he informed her by letter he had decided to break the engagement. Wages Reduced at Lebanon. I.ebanon.—Notices were posted at the car barns of the Lebanon Valley Street Railway Company, notifying the employes of a general reduction of wages. The reduction brings the wages down to 15 cents an hour for conductors and motormen and a 10 per cent decrease for car barn hands. Expensive Chicken Coop. Canonsburg.—Albert Strimmel of Cecil, was arrested by Constable J. Nugent and received a hearing Before Justice of the Peace T. M. Reese on ‘a charge of building a chicken coop on Sunday. Strimmell pleaded guil- ty and was assessed a fine and costs, amounting to $8.42. To Collect 700,000,000 Eggs. Harrisburg.—The state depart- ment of fisheries inaugurated its an- nual field work in gathering“the eggs of wild fish. Large quantities of eggs of perch, shad, Susquehanna salmon, pike and pickerel will be col- lectedd the estimate for this year be- ing about 700,000,000 eggs. Butler.—The exodus of foreigners continues in the Butler district, 200 more having gone to Europe. Three thousand have left for the old coun- try in three months. Transportation agents say the foreigners will not re- teen until after the presidential elec- ion. Oil City.—During a severe electric- al storm, lightning struck the house of George Mudge, tearing a hole in the rcof. Mrs. Thomas B., . Platt and Mrs. Claude Hankey, who were in a house two squares away, were rendered unconscious by the shock. Card Game Ends in Murder. Washington.——A poker game and all-night carousal at Westland, result- ed in the murder of Lee Oliver. The man who is accused of the killing, Richard Lee, went to Constable Ay- ers at Westland and gave himself up claiming he shot in self-defense. He was brought ‘o jail at Washington. Gored to Death by Bull. James McAllay, aged 60 years, was gored to death by a buil while feed- ing his stock on his farm near Crown Clarion county. > . | payments here have BRIDGE 1S CONDEMNED First Structure to Span Allegheny at Oil City Probably Will Be Removed. Oil City—The petroleum bridge, the first structure to span the Alle gheny river at this point, connecting the north and south sides of this: city, has been condemned and closed: to vehicles and street car traffic. An examination was made by HE. K. Morris, a bridge expert of Pitts burg, at the request of the county commissioners. The piers are de- clared to be shifting down stream and the super-structure has weakened. It is thought the bridge will be closed for a year until the new one can be erected. . It was built 35 years ago by a priv- ate corporation and only recently purchased by the county. It is near- ly a quarter of a mile long. SCREAMS SCARE ROBBER Chloroform Fails to Silence Miss: Pickett, but Thief Escapes. Washington.—Miss Ann Pickett, who lives with her brother, Peter Pickett, was aroused early morning by the pressure on her face of a chloroform-saturated sponge. “land aroused her brother. Pickett followed the robber and overtaking. him seized the thief’s coattail. The robber wiggled out of the gar- ment as he ran and turning into a. dark alley escaped. - : MORE MILLS RESUME" American Sheet and Tinplate Plants Again in Operation. Vandergrift.—All the sheet floors, blooming and bar mills and one-half of the open-hearth steel departments: of the American Sheet and Tinplate Company here were put in operation: this morning, making 10 more mills: to resume operation after being clos- ed for several weeks. Workmen of the company from Leechburg, IIyde Park and Saltsburg, where the mills are still closed down, are employed at 10 of the Vandergrift mills. To Openjy Court Bachelors. The Women’s Leap-Year Courting Club of Independence this county, has decided to abandon its policy of secrecy, adopted at first, and will hereafter conduct its operations as fishers of men openly. Bachelors residents of the community are un- easy. “Once ,a week hereafter we ber of the club, “and we are confident of more success. Children in New Home. Washington.—The 70 inmates of the Washington County Children’s home were moved from the old home at Caldwell to Arden, where a new building has been completed. The home has been newly furnished throughout. The 10-mile journey was made overland, 12 big moving vans transporting the youngsters and their effects. Lehigh Collieries to Resume. Hazleton.-—Orders were issued for the resumption of collieries of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, in the Hazleton district, April 1. “This in- cludes the Hazleton Colliery, employ- ing 400 hands, which has been idle since December 1 on account of re- pairs. Children: Burned to eath. Scranton.—Locked in their home at Hughestown, mnear here, while their mother, Mrs. Domtnick Jimitio, went to the butcher shop, the house caught fire and three children— Mary, John and Joseph—were burned to death. They were all under six years of age. Durham: Back from Florida. Philadelphia.—Israel 'W. Durham, who has been at St. Lucie, Fla., has returned home. Mr. Durham made it clear that he had nothing to say her publicly of writing anonymous situation. 1 } Sues for Slander. Sharon.—Mrs. J. H. Harford enter- ed suit against M. P. Billig, alleging slander and asking $10,000 damages. They are members of the same lodge and Mrs. Harford says Billig accused her publicly of writinganonymous letters. Confesses to Murder. ‘Washington.—Louis Boje, charged with being implicated in the murder of Alex. Shumaker at Meadowlands, admitted that he and not Shumak- er's brother committed the murder. He is held without bail. i Whooping Cough at 72. Uniontown.—Mrs. Mary Jane Jac- obs, aged 72 years of Masontown, is il] with whooping cough, which she contracted while taking care of a child who had it. Warren.—A $30,000 addition is to be built in the rear of the Presby- terian church. The basement will’ be given over to meeting and read- Ing rooms, a gymnasium and a do- mestic department. Washington—Seth Holmes of this place - entered suit against the Su- preme Tent, Knights of the Macca- bees to Tecover $1,000, with interest from September 22, 1907, on an en- dowment certificate. Reading Lays Off Men. Reading. —The Reading Railroad Company indefinitely supsended 300 men at its car and locomotive shops here. More, it is expected, will be | laid off. The company’s monthly ay dropped from $350,000 to less than $200,000. —_— | Washington—James M. Lewis and i A. B. Trockmorton, candidate for Democratic nowiination for register {and recorder of Greene county, have withdrawn from the race. This {leaves nine candidates. in the Her screamg drove the robber away" shall hold a meeting,” said a mem- . a AE £ of 8 < w 1] k§ 1 1]