Five hundred and thirty million I bushels is the official estimate of the United States wheat crop for 1597. New York claims to bo growing healthier. Tho death rate has do- I creased six and 1 half per cent, since | 1891. The Pennsylvania Bankers' Associa- j tion Las voted to organize a chapter oj j the association, whoso purpose shall be the erection in Philadelphia of a bronze statue of Robert Morris, the patriotic financier of the Revolution, and the founder cf the first organized banks in the State of Pennsylvania and the United States. Mr. Peary, tho Arctic explorer, speaking of tho generous gift of the Windward made to him by Mr. j Harmsworfch, the London publisher 1 expresses great gratification over thh ' striking exhibition of English good feeling. Ho considers it another link in'the long chain of intcrnationa | courtesies exchanged in Arctic cxplor I •tion. It is thought that the influence ol the French language, with its unas pirated h, is the primary cause of thai letter being so much ignored by Eng lish peoplo. French having beer epoken so long in England and tht people near the coast having come iu contact continually with that lan guage, an indelible impression, it is said, is left upon it, increased now by usage. According to the Chief of the Penn sylvania State Bureau of Railroads, the bicycle is hurting tho business ol the railroads. He says: "In cities like Harrisburg and many others il cannot bo gainsaid that the bicycle has become a most serious competitor of the railway. To reinforce this view' of tho caso an observation was made on Third street in that city during the month of October, 1837. The observation covered two days, from seven in the morning to six in the evening. During that time 0078 per sons passed a given point, 1902 in the cars and 4110 on bicycles; 07 7-10 per cent, on bicycles and 32 3-10 per cent, on the cars, or more than two to one in favor of the wheel." Says tho Philadelphia Record Justice Patterson of Now York, in 0 speech before tho Law Club of thai city recently, deplored tho fact that tho law had become so largely a trade instead of a profession; and on the following day Dr. Edward Everett Halo, in an address boforo an educa tional body in tho same city on "Mor ality in the Public Schools," made the declaration: "There is danger of the managers of a great machine taking more pride in tho machine and it 3 workings than in tho results it turns out. This is the dauger in our public schools." These words will, of course, be resented as the views of pessimists; yet they come from men qualified to speak as public teachers, and com ing simultaneously Ihey gain an em phasis which must command atten tion. Wo arc accustomed to flatter ourselves with the idea that our devel opment along material lines neces- | sarily involves a corresponding de- i velopment along intellectual and | moral lines. However that may be, : the fact can no longer be denied that the ! commercial instinct is beginning tc J dominate almost every action of our 1 people. Anent the agitation in the South foi 1 more diversified farming as a partial ! remedy for the alleged over-produe. tiou of cotton, a correspondent of tlio | Charleston News and Courier directs j attention to the fact that many years ago South Carolina had a place in the records us an exporter of wheat floui and of corn. The Hour exports began about 17G0 and continued into the present century until cotton sup planted wheat. It is believed thai ' much more flour was mauufacted in the State one hundred years ago than : now, although population and re sources have multiplied many fold. A i century and a half ago corn was "an important article of export" from the 1 State, aud the trade continued foi j over fifty years, as there is a record ol about 100,009 bushels exported in j 1792. Not long tlinreaf- t corn became an article of im or, and some years 1 ago was report:- I as "the largest" article of that character. What v.m done with the soil of iho Stato 100 ! years ago, tho Courier says, can be j done again. In one country the grow- j ingand grinding of wheat for local con i sumption lias been undertaken, and other counties are advised to follow the example. "Wo have proved by 0 long and stumbling experience," the Courier says, "that cotton does not take the place of wheat as tho 'staff oi life,' and that no community can thrive whose only manufacturing industry is that of ffiuning the fibre for market." .THE SEASONS OF THE HEART. If tvo lto blithe and warm at lioart. If we be sound and pure within, No sorrow shall abide with us Longer than dwells the sin; Though autumn fois the landscape fold. Though autumn tempests roam, Our summer is not over yet— Wo keep the sun at homo. —Edward Wilbur Mason, in Youth's Companion, V 0 V •*' s 't'•*-V♦*V