i Che Cljatljam Octora. Olfe dljotljan) Occorlr y EDITOR AND PROPOSTOR fill! I I I l fill! I rEAiis of soasbanc $1.50 PER YEAR St fctly in JlSvco. ja. j ll.U'TKK NV.(tutiif k,U t i'miim' me it 1 si tit r.irtuhns. Tiny i-ian: 'lu t, 1 am bnrcr hi ih1u.i ion from ou. brnth- ,f .1 Iflit-r f . f .i .-lilnllti r, a. !! I mi .1 fVw ul n. my May in yoi r :ty hour, 1 mint I'lier it it a plant c, Kir, 'hut f.T '.It'!'. 1 .111 M'f , .in tl i i-MiT broth,, . . r or my townsa frVn-1. . tuoii KHIok. ami the do - V Si'i.'iii) linrriisllv ilrtv t. t.'. iti.- i-iti:so! a rlosely wrU ,en ret Y:i. wi-!l. I am glad to ee you, i . Vu f.w t-hcly m letter I hn i1 - i;: ri:ii.s Pi-rived from my brother. I 1", lliwit. ni!w rue to introduce Dr. St. ?!' TV nf Wilmington, North Lrtrolitirt, fiiuily plitVu-iaa of my brother A mow. ii:iijr ni:in is my won, HotKTt. Drw ;i i-hair for the doctor, Robert." Ai'i'T urasii'.r.K the hands of he three 11. :i .ivsi-,;t, lr. Strong seated himself n -li. 1 i-.fffietl chair with the remark: "V.f. my departure from Wilmington ry Kiidden. Yonr brother informed i:u that lie had but just written you, but ' .l.'sin'd iv.e to bring his nieces back v iii n:t if the iuvalid could underpo the ;;!! vy. My business here is not of a i:v.n' to detain me for an hour. It was !! to place a son in your medical col .;. 1 desire to return on the evening train. I have left patients at home v.-ho v. i" need my attention." Y were just discussing my daughter's wi'iapjT condition," said the banker. "Dr. I'.ewit pronounces her unable to take the 4"i:niev. lie regards her case as almost i-peJess." My Mod! Is it so bad as that?" ex (i.iiincd Dr. Strong. The banker himself was surprised at the physician's vehemence. "1 have little hore for the patient," said !-. llcwir. "I had just stated to Mr. Ke'.Jogc that in my opinion Janette could survive the journey. Of course I did then know that a physician would at- !. ud her." "I nm extremely glad to have met you ! :e. doctor. If the patient is not utterly 'vend hope and we can give her a com j 'ete change of atmosphere and surround :: g, the result might justify the risk of t!ie removal." "True! The case has thwarted me at nery turn. I thai) be gjul to have you v;t the sufferer with me." "Let us go at once," said the Wilming ton physician. i will accompany you(" announced the Vnnker. HoK'rt, who was greatly gratified over the arrival of Dr. Strong, accompanied ti e party to the carriage, and took a seat Wide the newcomer, at that gentleman's Mi:e?t. Hnt a short time elapsed before the 1; nker and the two physicians stood by tl bedside of the patient. The widow had been greatly surprised ft meeting the Wilmington physician on the l!oir below, and she followed the par ty perhaps with no little apprehension as t what might be the result of the doctor's i;'t. No sooiier had Dr. Strong's eyes rested m the wan. pain-drawn features of the nift'erer on the Ited. than involuntarily the words escaped his lips. "V ry like! Very like! The cases are Men Ileal." '"This gentleman is Dr. Strong, dear," iid Mr. Kellogg. "He is from your un cVs home in North Carolina and has call H to see you." "I am very glad to see you, doctor," Janette said faintly; "but but I think I mi leyond help." "Jteyond help! Not a bit of it. my dear Not a bit of it!" said the doctor as I'e raised one white hand and placed a finger on the pulse. "Why," he contin u'd, "doctor, her pulse is .much better than I would have expected. Her condi tion, with siich care as she will receive, "ill justify her removal." "You will agree with me, I . think" these last words in an undertone to Dr. Hewit) "that it is a last resort. Certain ly there is no hope otherwise. God help ing me, Twill save this girl." "Your will is mine, doctor; I place her i:i your hands." "IlemovalV" moaned Janette. "Oh, doc t r. I shall soon le removed but " "Certainly you will be, dear; I am not p'ing back to North Carolina alone, and 'eii't you believe it, little girl. I shall lave company. Do you know who will 1 f company me? I do. Two sisters, Laura Mid Janette are their names. They are roing to visit their North Carolina cous ins and find fresh sea breezes that will 'Ting back roses into pale cheeks and rength into weak limbs. Oh, it is all titled. We shall leave on the three o'clock train this day." "Why, it caumn be possible!" exclaim ed the widow. "In her condition she could not " "Madam." and Dr. Strong's voice, firm nnd decided, silenced her, "two physicians have decided what is best in this case." Elinor's handkerchief immediately found its way to her eyes. "Oh, doctor," exclaimed Laura, "I thank (iod for this! I know that our 'ear friend, Dr. Hewit, has done' all that " nld be done for Janette in this climate, ' 'k aunt and I have nursed her night :id day. There must be a change. Papa - you " "It is already decided, my child. You "11 st now make haste aud prepare for the j' tirney. Take nothing but what you will "'d at once. On your arrival at your uncle's we can forward all else." "See, seel" cried Laura. "Janette "-rns brizht and boneful already. Are Jiu not pleased, sister?" I am content." said Janette. I am wi!ling to co if it is best. I I wish, to I dislike to lenTe dear aunt; but" "It is for the best, my child," Dr, Strong said, stroking her soft hair. Elinor Kelloce had repaired to her apartmentssobbing. "Itobert." said the banker to his son, ho now entered the room, "you had best remain at the house aud assist Laura and J'our aunt in packing what is needful. Your fcisters start South at 3 P. m. I will way n 1 a. It K n I I km vol. xxi. pittsboro, Chatham 11 go irith the doctor and engare sleenin car accommodations." seeping 'Glrlly, father, gladly f ''1Lpt V at,once." r. Strong said. There is one other matter I wish to at tend to. lint flret- there Ihe doctor pro duced a phial from one of hi. pockets, filled a glass one-third full of water hrst rinsing the gla., then Into the glass dropped twenty drops of a fluid), "here, my dear;' ami .Tan.4te, resting her head on the doctor a arm, drained the glass. Ihe physician hniirt k. ui.t Lauru. 10 Twenty drops in one-third of a glass of water." he said, "each hour until we Am. 1,0 w e,eTn o'clock." u uocior jingered behind as the others ,,"nuu'11 IU "airs. Robert and Laura "" "aiming beside him. I can and will save the life of rour ter. be said: "but one of you must be "M,.,nUy at ner bedxide until she is re inoreu rroni the house. All- . . pass her hps save these drops. Nothing! fA . r...- miivrii h disposition to partake of l J on, jus j,aura, must prepare it l.f. M...y. 1 our aunt, I fear, is too sym pao. ne is so anxious for your sis er'a .'wj' that she might desire to gk h w,ne or something she should not have." "Aunt n her om ?Try day," said Lnu 1 ,",T eiveu her some. Dr. ewitfprescrt. 'Hvl U ln ml quantities." :'8h must Jh lve DO more.until we are en route i Ik ' South. Nothing, aaTe as I have inform J". Your failure to see that these iu'r ,ctions are carried out to the letter will cwt Ja"tte her life. Say nothing to your aurt'f what I haw told you unless she tendrs 8nithing 'to Ja nette, then state that 1. Jon allow nothing save the drop IO tbnt Pial to pass her lips. Can I rel oV you?" "You can, doctor," saVl Robert. "Certainly," Laura sa d. "Remember, not an in.Uaut bu' one of you 'must be at her side." The servants might tender her somethii ig." Five minutes later Thomias was driving the party rapidly from the banker's resi dence. Dr. Hewit left the carriage-at his office, while the others went on. A half hour later a private compartment i tt a through sleeper was secured. At one o'clock Mr. Kellogj; re-entered the bank, where the doctor "wns to meet him an hour lf.ter. The physician himself was conferring in a room at his hotel with the man who had accompanied him from Wilmington Mr. Sella rs, tht Southern detective. For thirty minunes they sat in close con versation, at the nd of which time the doctor arose aud, iaking the detective by the hand, said: "I must go now. Svllars. Have you ev erything needful? Everything you re quire?" "Yes," was the reply, "everything. You will certainly see the young man?" "Y'es; he will be waiting for me." "All right. I will take up the case to morrow." At 2:10 the carriage containing the-loc-tor and Mr. Kellogg was again tnrfore the Dearborn avenue residence. The doctor was first to a?end the stairs to the invalid's room. He glanced anx iously at the figure reilining on the couch. "Oh, you are ready, my girl!" he ex claimed. "You have ."taproTetl fifty per cent already. Miss LiVira, she has had! nothing " "But as you directed, doctor, though aunt three times " "Never mind you can relalo that after we are started. Yon are ready .'" "All ready, doctor." . , "Oh. a rainnte with you, Ibert." the doctor said. And walking t a window facing the street, he handed the young man a letter. "You will find the geutleixan whoso name appears on the envelope at the plae? stated. I wish you to call thre at ten o'clock to-morrow mornin;; and present it. He is my friend and will state to you his desires. You may trust him implicitly. You may be able to aid him greatly." "I will present the letter at ten o'clock," said Robert, as he glanced et the super scription on "the envelope. The tname that appeared there was of one unknown to him. The envelope bore this address: "John Thorn, Esq.. "Sherman House." The widow accompanied the party when Janette was borne, to the carriage She appeared greatly disturbed. Evidently her heart was near breaking over the peril her dear uiece was about to be subjected to. She kissed her a tender farewell as she did so, also Laura, and entered the house sobbing as the carriage was drivem away. At three o'clock an iron horse exhaust ed a volume of steam as it pulled its laden cars from beneath the depot shed. A happy Wilmington physician sat in a private compartment of one of t&e sleep ers. His eyes rested tenderly on the fea tures of a "sleeping girl in a berth before him. A smiling young lady was seated by his side. "Oh, doctor, ' she suddenly exclaimed, I feel that you have rescued' Janette." "From a peril, my dear, of which you little dream. In twenty-four hours she would have been a corpse. "And now?" "Safe, thank God, safe! Ve have left peril behind us and are southward bound." CHAPTER XVI. At ten o'clock on the morning of the sixteenth, Robert Kellogg repaired to the Sherman House, where his first step was to scan the hotel registered arrivals of the previous day. He soon found the name, "D. M. Strong.. M. D., North Carolina," and di rectly beneath it in bold letters was that of the gentleman to whom he was to pre sent his letter "John Thorn, Georgia." "Is Mr. Thorn of Georgia in the hotel?" he asked of the clerk. "In his room, I think," was the reply. "Please' send up my card." The porter was immediately dispatched with it. He soon returned, and Robert accom panied him to the second floor, where he was ushered into the room occupied by one who, for many years in his particular line, .was pne of the most remarkable characters that the South .has exer pro duced. The man to whom he presented his let. ter was Lang Sellars of North Carolina, alias John Thorn of Georgia. Sellars was at this time in his fortieth year. He was of no ordinary physique, being six feet two inches In height, strong and compactly built, and almost as nprlght when standing Mth long-leaf pines of his native State. "I was expecting yon," lie said as he motioned the young man to a chair. "Dr. Strong and your sisters left the city at three o'clock yesterday, I suppose." "They did, I am happy to be able to state that my father this morntng re ceived a telegram from the doctor., saying Janette was bearing the journey well." Sellars was presumably reading the dec tor's letter. In reality he was studying the features of the banker's son. Fea tures, the contour of the face, the 'shape of the head, the expression of tlie eyes, the appearance of the individual, in fact nil these combined, were to the Southern detective an index of the character of the man. "The doctor," he said presently, "did not inform you as to th0 nature of my business in Chicago?" "He did not," was the reply. "He mere ly requested me to present the letter you hold in your hand. Whatorer your busi ness, if I can in any way .aid you, I shall be pleased to do so." "Thanks, young man. many thanks. My friend. Dr. Strong, has sad the life of your sister, and I feel thai I can rely on you.. I shall therefore be .candid. First, then, I am not John Thornv neither am I from Georgia." "Why, then, my letter is not in the hands it was designed to reach. You should not " "Rest easy, young man. Your letter has rached its destination. But John Thorn -tvas a name borrowsd for an oc casion. Throughout the South I am known as Lang Sellars. and am, by pro fession, me of that unfortunate class known as detectives." "Is it possible ?" exclaimed Robert. "I hare often heard and read of the mys teries unraveled by that wonderful man. I am glad to hare met you, Mr. Sellars. But why, Tj, the name, 'John Thorn, on the hotef a egister?" "Oh, with ;oome detectives it is often necessary to raord on hotel registers oth er names than their own. Somehow, I find that Lang &llars has become known outside the confines of the 'Old South State. For certah' reasons I do not wish it known that I an in Chicago. Tho morning journals, aa you are aware, pub lish a list of arm mis at hotels. I had no -wish that the nan to. Lang Cellars, should appear in that lisr." "I see." "I should probalty be visited by your police officials, who, in the matter I pro pose to take in hand, have so far failed. And there may be othTs in your city whom I wish kept ia tguorance of my presence here." "It is perfectly plain to me now, Mr. SaJlars." "Yes? Well, I thought I could make it so. 1 am here for a double purpose. Partly to- bring to the bar of justice the man, or en, who assaulted and nobbed the col lector of the Union Express Company; partly, well, of that hero after." "If I could but be of aid to yon. But I think you will find it a -difficult matter to even obtain a clew." "Oh, as to clews clews are sometimes very obscure. A gt-neral knowledge of the facts as they occurred and a certain intuitive perception has before now led 10 the detection of the ierpetrators of grave crimes. I shall not wait for clews n the matters I have in hand, though in one of them " "What can I do, Mr. Sellars?" "There is one young man I dei.ire to have a conference with. On yesf rday I visited the officer, of the repress company nd interviewed Collector Eh-worth, with whose statement in regard to this rob bery the detective force of yir city are familiar. He yet j-vdheres to his state ment that the man he believes to have as saulted and robbed him lore a striking re semblance in form and icntutes to Earl Newberry.". "Earl Kellogg now." "Yes, I undeistand. "Well, later in the dav I paid a visnt to your fathers bank. I saw, of course, both tho cash.er and the teller. Earl I hate seen many times on the streets of Wilmington." "Oh. then he recognized you. "Not at all. I was Johu Thorn when I entered the bank. I preserted little the appearance that I do now. I had no wish to be recognized' "You saw my father?" "As he entered the carriage before the door of the bank with Dr. Strong. You were of the company. I desire that your father be kept in ignorance of the fact that I am here, or have taken up the ex press case, oit The detective did not finish the sen tence. "My father kept in ignorance? And why. pray?" Oh,-for several reasons. But one will sufBce Ivprefer to co-operate with young er men, those more matured and of your years." (To be continued.) Nature's Gardens In Alaska. The most extensive, least spoiled and most unspoilable of the gardens of the continent are the vast tundras of Al aska. Every summer they extend smooth, even, undulating, continuous beds of flowers and leaves from about latitude 02 degrees to the shores of the Arctic Ocean; and In winter sheets of snow flowers make all the country shine, one mass of white radiance like a star. Nor are these arctic plant peo ple the pitiful, frost-pinched unfortun ates they are guessed to be by those who have never seen them. Though lowly ln stature, keeping near the frozen ground as if loving It, they are bright and cheery, and speak Nature's love as plainly as their big relatives of the south. Tenderly happed and tuck ed in beneath downy snow to sleep through the huge white winter, they make haste to bloom in the spring without trying to grow tall, though some rise high enough to ripple and wave in the wind and display masses of color yellow, purple and blue so rich they look like beds of rainbows and are visible miles and miles away. And in September the tundra glows In creamy golden sunshine, and the colors of the ripe foliage of the hearthworts, willows, and birch red, purple and yellow in pure bright tones are enriched with those of berries which are scattered everywhere as if they had been showered down from the clouds like hail; their colors, with those of the leaves and stems, blending har moniously with the neutral tints of the ground of lichens and mosses on which they seem to be painted. John Muir to the Atlantic Q county, n. c Thursday, august 24, HOW BASEBALL BEGAN. ORIGINATED OVER HALF A CENTURY AGO IN NEW YORK CITY. The First Mitch Game Was Played Jane 10, 1840, at noboken, N. J. -.The uoiacn Age or the Sport Causes of Its Decadence Old -Trine Champions. The first match game of baseball was played Jane 19, 1846, atHobokeu, JN. J., the contestants being the Knickerbocker and New York Baseball Clubs. The sport had begun to take lorm nearly nine months before. Base- oan is the result of evolution. It grew gradually out of tho olJ English school-boy game of "rounders," which gradually became "town ball.' In the latter sport, instead of bases, 41. - m mere were corners. xuese wore unguarded, and the runners were put out by being hit with the ball, which was tnrown directly at them by the fielders. Tho ball used was neces sarily, therefore, much softer and smaller than the baseball of to-day, and was composed wholly of rubber. Origin of Baseball. A number of New York gentlemen, relates the Washington Star, were in the habit of assembling ou a vacaut lot, then a long way out of town, and now covered by the Madison Square Garden, every Wednesday and Satur day afternoon to play town ball. At length some of them began to think that certain modifications would greatly improve the sport. Numerous iuformal discussions took place, and it was finally decided to adopt cer tain changes. Among these was the substitution of bases for "corners," the adoption of a hard ball with a rubber centre wound with yarn and covered with leather, the placing of men to guard the bases, aud having the ball thrown to them instead of directly at tho base runners. It was also decided to change the name of tho sport from town ball to "base ball" on account of the bases forming so important a factor of it. On Sep tember 23, 1845, tho gentlemen who had decided upon these changes formed themselves into an association, to which they gave the name of the Knickerbocker Baseball Club, at the same time adopting the proposed changes ia the gtune of town ball, and voting that their new game should thereafter be known by the name of baseball. Thus the national game was born, and it has undergone in numerable changes and modifications during the long period that has elapsed since its birth, but it is doubtful if it has thereby been made any more enjoyable a a sport, pure and simple. One baseball club causes others, and soon there were a num ber of these organizations in and around New York, and the first match game followed. It consisted of only four innings, the rnle then, being that the club first making twenty-one runs in even innings was the winner. The gradual extension of baseball from New York to other parts of the country was slow, though the metropolitan newspapers did all iu their power to foster the sport. Town ball continued to be played in ether parts of the country aud its players seemed reluctant to substitute base ball for it. Extension Throughout the Count ry. Baseball was not introducod in Philadelphia, only ninety miles from New York, until 1860, fifteen years after its birth. Iu that year the Olympio Club of the Quaker City, which had been organized in 1833 to play town ball, and had done so ever since, decided thereafter to play base ball instead. The first match game of baseball in Philadelphia did not take plaoe till June 11, 1860, aud was between the Equity and Winona clubs. The first match game of the na tional sport in San Francisco took place February '22, 1860, nearly four months prior to the match in Phila delphia. Baseball was not played in the New England States until five or six years after its origination, and then only in such a modified form that it was known as the "New Eng land game," to distinguish it from the game as played in New York. Purely an Amateur Sport. The originators of the national game were gentlemen who played baseball only for recreation, and would have held in very low esteem any man who sought to transform it into a means of gaining a livelihood. It was their in tention, as well as that of other gen erations of enthusiastic baseball play ers who followed them, that baseball Bhould be purely a gentleman's game. As clubs multiplied throughout -the country it became necessary to estab lish some general organization having authority to control and regulate the interests of the sport, to make such changes in the playing rules as might from time to time seem necessary and in every possible way to protect and improve the national sport. TiTo meet this necesfity there was formed the National Association of Baseball Players, in which any club was entitled to membership, with the privilege of sending delegates to the annual meeting. The playing rules adopted by this organization were the standard ones for the game, and were respected and adopted by all clubs, whether members of the association or not. Almost the first .rule adopted by this national association was one positively debarring from membership and rendering liable to expulsion any club iu which there waB a man who played baseball for hire or emolument of any kind. . ; The Golden Age of the Game. The result was that baseball flour ished between the years 1866 and 1871. The club were literally le gion, and in every large city the num ber of matches that were played daily was almost incredible. The grounds were usually upon some vacant lot or common, and were iree-to an. as a consequence the crowds at these con tests were very great, from 10,000 to 80,000 persons being by no means an unusual attendance. In tho city of New York, for example, there were five different baseball grounds within a stone's throw of each other, and scarcely a day passed during the base ball season that there was not a match in progress upon each of theso grounds, and the same is true of other large cities. It is no exaggera tion to say that thirty years, ago 200 games were played for every one that is played now. Some idea of the old-time interest and attendance may be gained from the fact that at a game between the Atlantic Club of Brooklyu and the Athletics o Philadelphia, in the lat ter city, October 1, 1866, the attend ance inside and outside the ground the . housetops being covered with spectators was estimated at 40,000, and, though the price of admission to this game was $1 for general admis sion, even to the bleaching boards. tho crowd inside the gates ' was so enormous that, in order to find room to stand it had to spread itself over the field to such an extent that it was impossible for the players to move about, and the game had to be post poned after the first inning. Amateur games the onlv kind then known such as thirty years ago drew immense crowds of the friends and neighbors of the participants, are played now by college and athletio club teams. Thirty years ago a base ball club was an organisation of gen tlemen for recreation in exercise sim ply. Now it is a corporation with no object save to make as much money as possible out of the hired players. Beginning of Professionalism. The encroachment of the professional player was gradual. The rivalry be tween clubs became so great that iu order to strengthen itself and to win victory over some rival each trould leave nothing undone to obtain the best players. Thus inducements were held out to men who had shown au unusual aptitude for the game to in fluence them to play only with a par ticular club. A wealthy gentleman, for instance, desiring to see -his club in the front rank, would offer some young man of rare baseball playing ability a position in his business house, with a private understanding that his commercial duties were purely nominal, while his real ones were to play baseball. Thus there were num erous clubs in the country which were virtually professional ones long before professional playing was openly per mitted and while the stringent law against it was still in force in the code of ihe American Association of Base ball Players. This was notably the case with those famons old-time op ponents, the Atlantic Club of Brook lyn and the Athletics of Philadelphia. By 1871 the number aud influence o? professional clubs was such that their representatives met in New York March 17 of that year, avowed them selves such and cut loose from the Na tional Association of BasebaU Players, and adopted rules for championship contests, tho most important being that the club winning the largest num ber of games in a series of five with every one of the other professional clubs should be declared champion, championship ganie hating been pre viously unregulated. Baseball Championship. The baseball championship origin ated about 1858. At the Elysian Fields in Hoboken, N. J., the Atlantic of Brooklyn had beaten the crack Hew York clubs, the Empires, Knickerbock ers, Gotham and Eagle, and were gen erally regarded champions. From that time until the establishment of tho championship rnles by the profes sionals whichever club won two games out of three from the champion club became champion in its turn. From the organization of the professional clubs in 1871 amateur playing steadily declined. Many no longer cared to engage personally in a sport which had been made a business. The game came to be looked upon as a. monoy making scheme instead of recreation. Then, too, the steady increase of popu lation and consequent demand for new building sites and ornamental parks did away largely with the vacant lots and commons upon which the amateur games had been played. Injurious Changes. The recognition of professional players is not solely responsible for baseball s decadence. The changes in the game are also to blame. Take pitching, for example; The old rule required the pitcher io actually pitch the ball, and at the moment of deliv ery his hand had to be below his waist. The word pitcher is now wholly a misnomer, for the ball is no longer pitched, but thrown to the bat. In the old days the pitcher was re quired to pitch the ball " just where the batsman wanted it. The latter would call for a ball "shoulder high," "hip high," "knee high" or a "low ball," the last named being a ball be tween the knee and the ankle. Now he must strike at any ball that goes over the plate. Curtailing the rights of the batsman and giving more' li cense to the pitcher was ; done with the intention of reducing the scores. This has tended to greatly diminish the popularity of baseball. Good batting and base running are the most attractive features of the sport, and games i here man after man retires at the home plate on strikes and short flies, or at first on feeble tips to tho infielders, resulting in scores of 1 to 0, or 2 to 4, are simply tiresome: to many. To have the bases' kept filled with runners, and to see run after run scored not by fielding errors, but Jby good batting jtnd base running- many believe would draw twenty persons to every one now auenuing . 11 " ! naseoaii games. f More charts have been rhade of, S. ble Island than probably of any spo-t in the world. 1899. no. 52. A HEMP FAKM IN LUZON. ODD PHASES OF LIFE THAT CON FRONT AN AMERICAN THERE. First He Host Slake the Acquaintance of tue Alleged Great-Grand fat her of Mankind An Unpleasant Predicament 'With Snakes Fruit-Eat Ing Vampire. A Manila correspondent of the Youth's Companion writes as follows detailing some of his experiences on a hemp farm on the island of Luzon: An American has much to learn and many odd phases of life to which to become habituated, before he "gets tho hang of things" in the Philip pines. . Among other novelties he will make the acquaintance of the great-grandfather of mankind according to the evolutionists in the person of a lit tle owl-faced, big-eyed creature, with long, slender fingers and toes, called bytheTagals a magou, and by the scientific professors the tarsius. Also he must come to know a long-tailed, green monkey, called a chongo, that does great mischief in the corn and sweet potato plantations. When hunting in the jungle, he will learn to recognize a tamarau "tunnel" and keep out of it, as otherwise ho will stand a good chance of being run over, incontinently, by a panicky little dwarf buffalo. "When selecting a plantation, ho will do well to inquire whether the district is infested by the babni, the wild hog of these islands, which, when numerous, makes all agriculture impossible, and also about another devastator of gardens, the kalong. Concerning this animal, I shall have more to say presently. In fact, our fellow-countrymen will find that life whether human, ani mal or vegetable is on quite a differ ent key in Lnzon. To illustrate the surprises in store for him, I will re count a bit of my own experience at a hemp plantation, a few leagues out of Manila. I hope my patriotism will not be questioned if I say that I took up this hemp farm in company with a young Spaniard who came into possession of it after the death of his father; for al though, theoretically, a Spaniard may be au enemy, practioally he need not be, and certainly I have found Senor Emilio Arenas a very good friend and partner. I doubt net that in time he will become an estimable American citizen. At present our plantation is- small, but there is plenty of chance to en large. In the hope of increasing our business we have been experimenting with a new steam-power machine for stripping the hemp fibre. The boiler and engine a small one of four horse power are at the foot of the hilly hemp-fields. These border a long, wide swamp through the impas sable jungles of which meanders a sluggish tributary of the Pasig Biver. To shelter the engine and fibre machine from the weather, a shed of corrugated iron was put up and painted white to radiate the rays of the tropi cal sun. The structure is thirty-five feet in length by sixteen in width, and as some of the native laborers are apt to steal the tools, and so forth, we found it economical to provide the door with a spring lock. There are no windows, and that part of the shed containing the boiler is quite dark. There is a loft there, just above one's head with a loose floor, where we put broken tools, hemp poles, iron rods and other spare gear. During August we ran the machine continuously, until the uncertainties of Aguinaldo's leadership began. The vagaries of this insular patriot were past predicting. Filipino bushwhack ers threatened us, so making every thing as snug as possible, Senor Emilo and I left all in charge of Miguel, our native foreman, of whose fidelity we were assured, and went to Manila to wait for Philippine politics to calm down. Trouble was indeed brewing, but General Otis carried so steady a hand with the patriots in Manila, that no outbreak occurred during the autumn, and by Christmas we con cluded that American authority would prevail without bloodshed. There was a week or more of pleasant feel ing, even the. armed band of Filipinos appeared good-humored, and on the twenty-eighth of the month, I ven tured to ride up to our hemp works again. Senor Emilio meanwhile had gone to Hongkong to put upon the market what fibre we had stripped. Proceeding on horseback along the raised highways scene of the more recent bloody engagements I reached the plantation next day, without inci dent worth recording. Indeed, I met but , few natives abroad, for the day was wet, and for Manila very cold. No one was" about the boiler shed as I approached. Miguel was at his hut, for although the distance was half a league, X could hear the chug, chug of his rice mortar. His native wife was at work pounding out their paddy crop. - Heavy fog lay on the great swamp below the shed, and I could hear the alligators grunting down there. The sodden heaps of abaca shuck around the shed were sprouting with mushrooms, and several of the odd brown native rats rose on their long hind legs, to peep at me, as I unlocked the door. There had been s much wet weather that everything was inold and rust within. All ironwork rnsts quickly. in this climate.- Having left in haste, we had not properly covered or coated the engine with oil. I now bethought myself to remedy this over sight at once, since a few weeks of neglect may ruin valuable machinery here. A tier of our wood fuel still re mained in the shed, and as a prelim inary, to dry off the wet, I filled the boiler with water from the tank and kindled a fire in the furnace. Thejirewas soon crackling cheer ADVERTISING Onepquare, one insertion...... $1.03 On sqnre, two insertion. ... l.W On square, one month. ....- 2J9 For larger advertisements libnsr J contracts will he made. 9 fully, for the fuel had been kept fair ly dry. I stood and watchod the steam pressure as indicated by tho dial gage mount slowly from five to ten and twenty pounds, then, inci dentally, I tried the "pop off" to see if it would work. It was rusted and stuck. I pulled an empty box forward to staf d on while I examined tho safety-valve, but had hardly stirred the box, when two snakes scurried from beneath it pretty large snakes, too. It was far from light iu the shed, for the door was open only a crack. Tho snakes ran in back of the boiler. I was afraid they might be venomous. There are two or three "bad snakes" in Luzon. " Throwing open tho furnace door to get more light, I took tho furnace poker, an iron rod about six feet long, and began prodding to drive them out. One started out immediately a yellow, spotted snake and headed for the outer door. I sprang to strike at it with the rod, as it ran. It gained the door, but I whacked it about a foot from its tail, whereat it thrashed back at me, to strike with its fangs. I broke its neck, however, with another blow and threw it out, swinging the door back as I turned to find the other snake. But cither a gust of wind from out side, or the draught of air, caused by the open door of the furnace, made the outer door swing to.with sufficient force to catch and spring the lock. The instant I heard it click, I remem bered that I had lett the key in the lock outside, and realized that I had now foolishly got myself locked into the shed. Not a pleasant predicament, for there was the other snake behind the boiler; and then there was, besides, the rusted "pop off" to deal with and1 that at once, for a glance at tho gagei showed eighty pounds of steam, with the pointer jumping higher every moment. Forgetting the snake for a moment, in the urgent need of preventing a boiler explosion, I hurriedly closed the furnace door and the draught slide to deaden the fire, and of course made it quite dark inside the shed. Then I jumped on the box to start the "pop off." It still stuck, but two or three blows from the poker started it, when with a loud plu-r-r-r-p, a gush: of steam spurted up into the roof of the shed. The effect of that blast of steam was like black magic! A conjuror's wand never called forth a more startling horde! In an instant, the shed was full of rushing, flapping things that squawked horribly and struck me from before and behind! Nasty, clammy hands seemed to buffet my face! Claws clutched my hair! Teeth chattered in my ears! To protect my face I threw up my arms, lost my balance and fell off the box. Horrid furry surfaces rubbed and flapped against my hands. Some thing bit ttij left wrist and clung there. I shook it off by main, strength, and struck right and left with the fire rod. Every moment I hit some flying thing, with a soft thud, and they fell all around me, squaking, hissing and flapping about underfoot in tliejlark ness! "With every blow of the poker the uproar doubled. The whole interior of the shed seemed to be alive with madly fluttering pinions, snapping teeth and hideous, squeaking sounds. Regardless now, either of snakes ou the floor, or overcharged boilers, 1 lashed out with that rod. I knocked everything loose iu tho shed, and brought down upon my head almost everything in the loft. In tho midst of the racket, the door suddenly opened, and Ihere stood Miguel. He had seen the smoke of the boiler stack and had hastened to the shed. Tho light showed me to be, literally, knee-deep among floppiug, hissing creatures which I had struck down around me. "Por el amor de Dios! kalong!" exclaimed Miguel. "Tiene malo, senor?' (Are you hurt, sir?) ; ThatwasmyfirsUntoduction to the kalong, the "flying foxes," the great fruit-eating- vampire of the Philips pines; a brown bat as largo as a cat which knaws and spoils unlimited quantities of fruit in the native gar dens. Twenty-nine of them, some of which had a spread of wing of fully five feet, .lay gasping and snapping where I had knocked them down, and we drove out fully as many more from the loft. They had come in through the ventilator on the roof, and no doubt had found tho place a snug, comfortable haven daiiug the cold rains. Department Stores In'Germany. In view of the agitaliou in this country, aud particularly in ihe West, against the existence of the great de partment stores, the State Depart ment, Washington, has published u report from Consul-General Mason, at' Berlin, on special taxation for depart ment stores in Germany. Mr. Mason shows that a movement began in Ger many iu 1896 to restrict the growth of these stores, and he describes in de tail the various measures that were proposed in the Reichstag and else where to effect this purpose. As in some of tho Western States, a pro gressive tax was the basis of most of the suggestions, but the German Gov ernment, so far, has been unable to find any measure that doei not vio late the higher law of the Empire. The reportincludes, incidentally, a short history of the result of French legislation on the subject, and refer ence is made to." 4he organization of a retail league of 40,000 members, all merchants, to oppose the department stores. According to the statement of tho founder of one department store, it had supplanted at the outset and soon extinguished about 900, small retail shops and store?, and now does a business of $30,SS0,000 aul nually, sufficient' to maintain 1800 to 2000 snail stores, - it i v A .1 5. , J 1 - 1 - 1 i t 1 :- ' It ' 1 J