ll)t Challjam uccoid. v- - ' &t)t Ct)atl)mn Htcorb. H. A. LONDON, Editor and Proprietor, Terms of subscription, $1.50 Per Year. , ttnctlv en Advance RATES Of ADV1RTISIS6, One square, oat insertion One square, two insertion! One square, one month 3 W. For Larger Advertise ments Liberal Con tracts will be made. VOL. XXVI, PITTSBORO, CHATHAM COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY , JUNE 9, 1901, NO. 43. st M b m Copyrifiht by Eoucrt Boyru'e Soxs. CHAPTER L, , . THE BBOTHERSi 1 " ''Well, if I bad determined to go to perdition I would not elect to travel via the workhouse." I had been closely observing my un do for more than two hours, and dili gently noting his words and gestures, when hi utterance of this remarkable sentence confirmed the dislike of him which I tad conceived at our first meeting. With only a brief and nar row experience of men and manners, the words impressed me as harsh, not to say brutal, for a rich man to ad dress to an only brother whom he had not i?een for twenty years, and who was comparatively poor. "I have made no such determina tion.' said my father. "As for the workhouse, my income is still some 700 pounds a year more than nothing, and I don't anticipate becoming a bur flea to anybody, not even" turning his face toward me and smiling "my own son." ' Seven hundred pounds!" exclaimed ray uncle Sam, contemptuously, "seven hundred pounds! And what will that p.'tiful.sum do toward maintaining a f.cntlernan for twelve months? "Why, there are four of the men in my pay who each earn $1503 more than your entire income! But how's this? Hol denhurst used not to be such a beg garly property, or my memory is worse than I thought it was." While my father is occupied with the melancholy recital of the causes, nat ural and political, of the enormous de preciation of agricultural values in England which in ten years had re duced his income by rather more than half I will furnish the reader with a brief history of the men thus engaged. When little more than ten years old my lather, Robert Truman, had suc ceeded to an estate of 2000 acres, con sisting uf two entire parishes, Holden hurst Major and Holdenhurst Minor, situate a few miles from Bury St. Ed mund's, in Suffolk. On his coming of age Robert Truman found himself the possessor of a rent roll of 1500, a lump sum of about 12,000, which had accumulated during bis minority, and a large nondescript manor house of which no archaeologist could deter mine the date oi order, it had been so much altered and added to at various periods. Tn3 estate, which had formed part of the immense posses sions of the rich abbots of Bury, was, upon the dissolution of the abbey there, settled by Henry VIII. in perpetuity upon the first member of my family of whom there exists any record. With but one relation In the world his brother Samuel, two years his ju niorundoubtedly my father entered upon the business of life under condi tions more prosperous than attend the vast majority of mankind. But that balance which men adjust where for tune bus shown more favor to one than to another, themselves making the tale of human happiness and mis ery nearly the same in all cases,' was soon made apparent by the two broth crs. The affections of these young 1 men centred upon one girl. Samuel was the favored lover. But women had few rights and many wrongs in agricultural East Anglia in IS , and so the beauty of Holdenhurst became the wife of Robert Truman; her fath er, a small farmer ambitious of form ing a family connection with the '"Squire," having so commanded her. Before the marriage my uncle Sam left England for America with the ex pressed intention of never again vis iting his native land. In less than a year my father had lost by death the wife he had thus acquired; a loss which, though it deeply affected him. was patiently borne for the sake of the infant boy who was at once the cause of his sorrow and his hope. In American Samuel Truman had entered in commercial speculations and flourished exceedingly. On the death of my mother he had written tq my father a few lines expressing his sym pathyhis first communication with his brother after his departure from England. After that his letters had been brief and infrequent, but reports -reached Holdenhurst from time to time of his extraordinary success in trading, of his ever-increasing wealth and influence, of his shrewdness his penetration, his singleness of purpose. Through all the days of my boyhood I remember no variation in the accounts of the steady and continued decline id value of my father's property, and of the rapid increase of ? my uncle's wealth. Neither of these circum stances, however, interested me until, In my nineteenth year the week- be fore this history opensr'inj father re; celved "a letter from his trotter, la New York stating that he had been married for three years to an Ameri can lady, and that he and his wife in tended to visit Holdenhurst, and mighl be expected to arrive in about ten days. It was almost immediately after the arrival of my uncle at Holdenhurst. thus intimated, that the conversation "with which this chapter opens took place. Uncle Sam did not, however, bring his wife with him ?s he had in tended, but left that. iady In London a fui-ulshe-J house which he had' A WALTER BLOOMFIELD hired at Kensington, she being pros trated by the voyage from America. "Well,"' said uncle Sam, when my father had finished speaking, "I guess your oration would be worth a cool million to the Republican party. You must visit the States and tell the Americans from a hundred platforms all you have just told me. You must come at the opening of the Presiden tial campaign." My father shook his head. "I am no traveler," he said, "or I should have ventured beyond Europe nineteen yeara ago,' again turning toward me and assuming the kindly expression which was never absent from his feat ures when he regarded his son. "The affairs of my own country' engage very little of my attention, and as for the United " "Well, well." interrupted uncle Sam, "we won't discuss that matter fur ther at present. What is the sum total of the two mortgages you have on this' place?" "Three thousand five hundred pounds." "Let me have the papers," said tm cle Sam, stretching his hand out as5 hough he expected that his brother had them ready in his pocket, "and I will wipe them both out to-merrow." "You are very kind," answered my father, somewhat embarrassed. "Er nest, go to my black cabinet and fetch an oblong packet. You will find it in. the top drawer, tied with red tape." With a greatly Improved opinion of my uncle I hastened upon my errand, and in a minute or so my father was handing his brother the papers for which he had asked. "It's a smart lad," remarked my un cle, fixing his steel gray eyes upon me so penetratively that I felt rather un comfortable; "what are you going to do with him?" , "Do with him?" echoed my father; "I don't understand." "Well, do you proptse that he should spend his life in this place watching the crops fail, or selling them for less than the cost of production when they succeed; or is he to be a man whose presence is felt in the world?" "I have not yet seriously considered Ernest's future," answered my father gravely. "Then let me help you do so another time," said uncle Sam. "I'll return to town by the first train in the morning,; and having paid off these mortgages will be back again some time In the evening, bringing Mrs. Truman with me, if she is well enough to come. By-the-by, I suppose this packet con tains all the documents necessary in closing the mortgages. Do Saul and Isaacs hold any of the old deeds?" "All the necessary papers are there' said my father. "The money was ad vanced simply on my note of hand. The old grants of the abbey lands in Latin and Norman French are still in the two old oak chests where they have always been." "I wculd like to see them," said my uncle; "they must be very Interest ing." "Yon shall. Ernest shall get them out for you to look at by the time you return." CHAPTER II. THS OAK CHESTS. Accustomed from my infancy to wander unrestrained through the gloomy rooms and corridors of Hol denhurst Hall, I had flattered myself that I was familiar with every nook and corner of the old mansion. But my mind was considerably exer cised in the endeavor to determine the whereabouts of the two oak chests to .which my father had referred in his conversation with uncle Sam. I did not remember having ever seen any such chests, and could think of no place from garret to basement which I considered likely to contain them. These thoughts much confused with idle speculation .concerning my uncle wrhose acquaintance I had just made, -of my aunt whom I bad not yet seen, and of -.irious ido? started bv the conversa tion of tneT two brothers kept me awake until long after I had retired to bed. I tossed about restlessly and punched' my pillows, but could not sleep. When I lay on my left side, all that my un cle taid recurred to me vividly, and I hated him for his cool cynicism and the sense of power which had now and again been apparent through the calmness of his manner, but, turning upon my right, his generous gift im pressed me as really magnificent, and 1-. could not but feel grateful to him tor relieving xay father of what I knew had occasioned him spme anx- iety. My uncle's wish too, for a voice in' determining my future course in life interested me greatly and opened interminable trains of thought. At last I lost-consciousness, but did not sleep soundly nor for long. When I rose it wanted some minutes to t o'clock. A brilliant streak of sun shine lay across the dark oak floor. of my room; and through the casement could be discerned a clear blue sky such as is seldom seen in England in thy month of March. Brimful ol health and animal spirits, notwithstanding the little sleep I had had, I sprung from my bed, and, hav ing hurriedly dressed, sought my father. Somehow, in an Ill-defined way, I was conscious of the opening of a new era in my life. Whether it was what had transpired between my father and uncle on the previous night, or the joyousness of the opening day, which was of a sort that seemed to confirm the death of winter and herald ap proaching summer, .or both, I know not. but it seemed to me that I had bidden adieu to boyhood and had be come a man. My father had risen a full hour be fore me, and was pacing the outer path of our old garden, with his hands clasped behind him his usual contem plative attitude. "Why," said he, after I had acquaint ed him with my difficulty, "'tis only yesterday that I noticed you sitting upon one of the chests, reading. They stand in the library, one beneath each window, where they have stood for the last 300 years or more. It was your grandmother, I think, who worked cushions and valances for them, and so converted them into strange looking but comfortable set tees." As soon as we had breakfasted my father began to search for the keys of the chests, for he had but a vague idea as to where they might be found. While he was employed rummaging old bureaus and cabinets, I removed the coverings from the chests, marvel ing greatly that they should have so long escaped my notice. To do this, and to clear the table ready to receive the documents, did not engage me many minutes, and I was impatient to obtain the keys. But the keys could not be found. I assisted my father in the search for them, and together we turned over as many knick-knacks quaint jewelry, miniatures, pocket books, tokens, old coins, packets of love letters tied with faded silk and dated early in the last century, metal purses, scent bottles, etc. as would have stocked a first class curiosity shop. But that which we sought we could not find. It was now past noon, and my uncle and aunt were expected to arrive at 4 o'clock. Though we had been search ing for several hours we had not yet examined the contents of half the cab inets and closets which abounded in our old manor house, many of which had not been opened within the mem ory cf our oldest servant. My father would have given up the search but for my advice to him to continue it. Wisely or unwisely, my father seldom or never refused to comply with any wish that I expressed, and he saw that I was interested in the odds and ends accumulated by our family. After another two hours of search ing my father found the keys of the chests, tied together and labeled, in the place where he had first looked for them. With a peculiar facial ex pression, in which it was difficult to determine whether fatigue, annoyance or triumph predominated, he tossed them to me, and remarking that he had had as much of this affair as he cared for in one day, left me to do as I pleased. Having hurriedly deposited the few things before me in the places where they had been found, I hastened to the library and proceeded to open the nearest chest. The key entered the lock as easily as might be wished, but was turned with difficulty, and made a harsh, grating sound. I had no sooner raised the lid than the air became so charged with minute fungi that I vol untarily stepped back and opened a window. - The chest was quite filled with parchment or. vellum documents some rolled and others flat, vnd to nearly all of them were attachejl large pendu lous seals. I did not pause to exam ine them, but transferred them all to the table, and opened the second chest, wherein I discovered nearly as many documents as in the first, all of simi lar character. But there was also a thick folio volume, filled with close, neat writing, every letter of which appeared to be formed with great care and accuracy. About two thirds of "the "book "was English and the remainder strange characters, which I had little doubt were Orien tal, though I was not scholar enough to determine the language to which they belonged. This book, and a cop per box, about eighteen inches by twelve, and five inches deep, were all I found besides the documents. The box, which was locked, was much discolored; but I could discern writ ing upon the lid such as may be pro duced by nitrate of silver upon cop per. All I could decipher at a hasty glance was "Roger Trueman," written in characters rather larger than the others. Trueman being a very old form of our family name, and the box exceedingly heavy for its size, I at once conceived the hope that it con tained something of special value. As I could find no key to the bos, I set it aside with the folio volume, resolving to carefully examine both at my leis ure. At this moment a servant entered the room and informed nc that my uncle and aunt had arrived. Dinner had been ordered to ba served as soon as possible, atd; there barely re mained sufficient- time for tas to pre pare for it Quite tired of my day's wcrk, tha 'intelligence was not unwelcome. Tak ing with me the folio volume and the copper box, I locked the library door and put the key in my pocket, leav ing all the old documents on the table within.' I then sought my bedroom, where, having safely bestowed the book and -box, I made what I then thought was an elaborate toilette such as befitted my introduction, to m American kinswoman. Ta. be eontmuei Humor I o dev Sure Sign. "So you think he's a genius, do you?" "I know it. He's always hungry, and poverty makes him see stars!" Atlan ta Constitution. - Easy. " Miss Pert "Can you diagnose lone someness, Dr. Steel?" Dr. Steel "Certainly. Its chief characteristic is an all-gone feeling." Detroit Free Press. " Part pt Her. - Doctor "Your wife must keep out of excitement." . Mr. Brisque "She can't, doctor. She carries it around with her." Indiaa apolis Journal. ;., Close Quarters. Old wed "Do you and your wife quarrel?" New wed "No; we live in a fiat, and there is no room for argument" Manitoba Free Press. Dauger of a Wreck. "We are told to 'cast our bread ou the waters!' " said the young wife. "But dou't you do it." said her hus band. "A vessel might run against it and get wrecked." What to Eat. Those Bright Girl. She "In a college town the girls are made to walk on one side of the street and the boys on the other." He "There's nothing to prevent the girls from looking on the sonny side, I suppose." Yonkera Statesman. 4, at Holds Them. "It always makes me mad to talk to an actor. He pretends to listen polite ly, but his attention is wandering all thy time. Ever notice it?" "No. I always talk to them about themselves." Philadelphia Ledger. Nothing Done. "I don't think I'll wager with you," said the baker. "You haven't the dough." "That may be,"' replied the butcher, "but I don't see you putting up any stakes." Boston Commercial Bulletin. An Emergency Man. Eleanor "Cook says she must go; we live so far out it gives her the blues." Edgar "Tell her she cau'tgo: we will hire a nice lady companion to cheer her up." Cincinnati Coxumcr-cial-Tribune. l'oint of View. "Kissing," said the coy maid, should be strictly private." "Oh, I don't know," replied the strenuous youth. "Just think of what we would have missed if the discov erer of kissing had never made It pub lic." Chicago News. His Memory Wat Good. Angry Wife "It seems to, ma we've been married a century. I can't even remember when or where we first met." Husband (emphatically) "I can. It was at a dinner party, where there were thirteen at table." Tit-Bits. Hard tuck. "Well, if that ain't just my luck! Here I've went an' lost'that excuse I was bringin' the teacher for bein' ab sent yesterday. An' it took me three hours to write it, too!" New York American. At Others See Them. ; Vegetarian "Don't you know that the strongest animals are all vegetar ians, the elephant being the most pow erful?" Carnivorous Friend ".That's right If they weren't so strong they never would be able to stand a vegetable diet." ,, A Sudden Change. Higgins "Do you believe that any person's hair ever turned gray , in a single night?" Wister "Oh, I don't know! Should think it might happen. Once I jpiew a young woman's hair which ttfrned from red to golden in a single day. It was the day she came into a for tune." Boston Transcript; Bound to Get Him. The lady arose and drew her boa tighter. "Then your answer is no?" she said in husky tones. "My dear lady," the man remarked in his gentlest manner, "I told you eight years ago that I could not marry you, and I have not changed my mind." The lady paused in the doorway.? "I will see you again in four years,"v:sbe said, Cleveland Plain Pealer. When a Russian dies he is buried with a paper in his hands. On this is written his Christian name, as well as a prayer. mMiUMt& In the window of a Duumow (Eng land) hostelry appears the notice: "The Encyclopedia Britannica at your service within." The nine-year-old son of Professor Wiener, of Harvard University, is said to be a master of several dead lan guages, higher mathematics and sci ences. There is often to be seen in the streets of Cork, Ireland, a respectable looking man, accompanied by a tame goose, which follows bira through the busiest thoroughfares. "Don't bury me on Thursday," were the dying voids of John Penu, an Eng lish member of Parliament. "There is a little girl opposite who is going to be married ou that day, and it would be grewsome." During a prolonged attack of hic coughs Thomas McDonald, of Ply mouth, Pa., was the victim of a pecu liar injury. The paroxysms became so violent that two of his ribs snr.pped and were seriously fractured. The two oldest secret trade processes now in existence are considered to be the manufacture of Chinese, red, or vermilion, and that method of inlay ing the hardest steel with gold and silver which seems to have been prac ticed at Damascus ages ago, and is known only .o the Syrian smiths and their pupils to this day. Master Hallie Elcd, of North Star, Mich., eleven years old, is perhaps the largest boy of his age in the State. He is larger than either of his parents, since he weighs 21GV 'pounds, while his father weighs 217 pounds and his mother 150. Master Elco stands five feet three inches high, has a breast measurement of forty-live inches and a belt measure of forty-seven inches Russian Bear Story. There are two kinds of bears in Russia. Here is a true ttory of one Two girls, ages five and thirteen! were attacked by a huge tea- and the younger was carried off, while the eld er, terror-stricken, fled home a d gave the alarm. For three days the inhab itants of three villages sought in vain for the lost child. Finally a cordon was drawn around an extensive traei of forest, and the searchers closing in discovered the bear and her Looty in a dense thicket. The child was per fectly unharmed, and recliued in a deep, mossy couch made for her by the bear. She had gotten over hei first fright and had subsisted fairly well on nuts and other forest fruits brought her by the gentle monster The freakish but kindly disposed ani mal was summarily killed by the vi lagers.-New York Tress. Trees Survive Baltimore Fire. In the burned district there are two trees which, though having been sub jected to a heat which melted iron and caused strong buildings to crumble and fall, are still standing, and are apparently uninjnred. One is on Fred erick street, near Baltimore street, jus1 opposite the site of the Odeon Theatre, and the other is in the rear of the mips of the Southern Electric Com pany's place on Fayette street, neai Calvert street. The tree on Frederick street is in xemarbably good condi tion, and does not iu the least show the effects of fire, although the heat at that point must have been intense, as not a building in that section was left standing. The limbs and branches of M the other tree were burned to some ex tent, and it was almost completely buried beneath a great p"'e of debris- I Baltimore American. Russia's Big Problem. The transportation problem before Russia is more difficult than the public realizes. Assuming the problem is to move 100,000 troops, mobilized along the Siberian road, between Irkutsk and St. Petersburg, the distance from St Petersburg to the seat of war is 6000 miles. It is safe, therefore, to assume there is an average train haul of 3000 miles for this movement. Ap plying the haul to this country, it means moving 100,000 troops and sup plies from Salt Lake City to Southern Florida on a single track, lightly con structed road, ; with short passing tracks, limited .water supply and all the limited facilities that go with such a road with light tonnage. The Rail way World. . Xlimioate'd the "Almond Eye." Prince MiCcbi; grandson of the Em peror of Japan atd hfrir presumptive to . the throrie, is a strong, healthy youngster of three years and is the first baby' in the royal house who has been allowed to have his hair grow like a European ov American child. Soon after his birth a slight surgical operation was performed at the outer- part of his eyelids, the result being that the little fellow's visual organs have not any of the "almond eye' shape peculiar to his race. Prince Micchi's wedding is already under consideration, three tiny ladies being especially regarded, as possibilities. Cupids. Fill gla&ses two-thirds full of red raspberry juice; the tyrup from home canned goods is best. Bury the glasses up to the bowls in ice and salt and when frozen remove the salt; wipe clean; place a spoonful of Philadel phia ice cream on top; scatter hearts, cut from candied cherries, over; thrust a little metal arrows in each and serve with heart-shaped cakes iced in pink. What to Eat Lemon Cake. One cup of butter, three cups of su gar, four cups of flour, one cup of milk, five eggs, juice and grated rind of one lemon, one small teaspoonful of soda. Beat the eggs separately. cream the butter, and add the sugar and yolks of - he eggs. I eat well,' add the milk and flour, then the lemon. Dissolve the soda in part of the milk and add .t after the flour -has been beaten in. Last of all, beat in the whites of the eggs. Stewed Steak. Stewed steak requires to' be very slowly cooked; for this reason put it in a covered jar in the oven, on in a saucepan of boiling water. Do not let the water boil fast after the first twenty minutes, for the contents of the jar must only simmer. Take a good steak for the purpose, cut it into con venient sliced pieces and fry it in hot butter to a good brown. Set it in the jar; fry an onion, herbs and a tomato in the butter, dredge flour in thickly, and add sufficient cold water or stock for the gravy. Stir with a wooden spoon while all boils. Season to taste; color the gravy and then strain it into the jar. Cook for two hours. After washing lace, says an expert, do not starch it and do not allow it to dry before ironing. Iron first under a cloth, finishing with the iron directly on th& hjce. It will be quite stiff enough it treated In this way. "College girl shortcake" is not such a bad affair for an emergency. - It ( earned its name by being about the i only make available for the "spread on the quiet." Plain baking powder biscuit are bought at the bakeshop, heated in oven or even chafing dish, split twice and the sugared fruit spread thickly between. .The result is really more enjoyable than anything of the name purchasable in the ordin ary restaurant for treble the cost, and with the addition of sweetened and flavored whipped cream it is really a. delightful dessert. For the unexpected guest little cakes with a cup of tea or chocolate will do full duly, and they are delicious also to serve with Ices at the luncheon or. dinner table. For these light cakes, baked in small pans, an even, steady heat is wanted; never attempt to bake them with a freshly built coal fire, or with a fire from which the life has largely died out; it- should be in such j condition tnat it may oe regujaieu cas- j ily, and last through the baking with out being replenished. In flavoring these little cakes, do not use lemon juice if a light cake is- wanted. The acid in lemon juice sets free carbon dioxide in a large measure, upon con tact with the soda in the baking pow der. It is best to restrict its use to cakes in which a close texture is de sirable. Bear in mind also that cakes in which the yolks of eggs are used re quire less heat than eakes made with the whiles of eggs, as the yolks of eggs are so rich in fat they brrn quickly. What to Eat. Meat sofHe may serve as the piece de resistance of the luncheon. Since, as a rule, this and similar mixtures are well seasoned, one meat is about as good as another for a foundation, un less chicken is used. The odds and ends of the roast, or of steak or chops, or even soup meat, should be run through the meat chopper with a thin slice or two of boiled ham, one of boiled tongue and one or two of bologna sausage. The last can be obtained from a nearby butcher. If they cannot be had a lit tle home-made sausage and a thin slice of bam, the latter boiled for a few minutes, will work wonders. Grind thesa with the meat fine. Season the mixture vrith salt, pepper, a little chopped parsley and, if it is. wanted, with a little onion juice. Add enough bread crumbs to make sufficient quan tity. The usual proportion, for a souf fle is two cupfuls of meat to one cupful of bread crumbs. To two cupfuls of meat and bread crumbs add a cupful of white sauce and the yolks of two eggs. Fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs, All the buttered ramekins half full of the mixture, sprinkle with buttered crumbs and bake in a quick oven. Serve as soon as they come from the fire, or they will fall. The white sauce is made of one cupful of milk and a tablespoonful each of but ter and flour. Salt and pepper are added to taste. About 730 tons of ore have been used to produce about a fifth of an ounc of radium. To test the mosquito theory of tui; laria, two French physicians propose V be bitten by mosquitoes fed on ftn.gue patient, and to allow any fever' cpu. tracted to run its full course without treatment The curious theory of M. Boyn is that N-rays keep marine .animals their native habitat. These rays enter; salt water readily, but are completl; stopped by fresh water, and they have the remarkable property of increasing visual power, other effects being prob able, i- .-4 'A baker's oven heated by eleclTicliy is a novelty at Montauban, France.; The heating elements numbering twenty are placed at the side of the" interior, and heat is quickly applied and cut off at once, with a consldefa-r ble saving in time. No heat U .loaf; up the chimney, its the only opening Is the door through which the bread' Is passed. ? i ' French statistics show that a total f 238,702 horse power from the falls of the Alps is now used for generating ., electricity. The electric power serve v the following: Aluminum works, 22. 536 horse power; other metallurgicat ? factories, 20,485; chlorate of potas- slum works, 9000; calcium carbide: works, 104,460; sodium chlorate works, 13.500; transmission of power and lighting, 48,727; various Industrie, 19,989. . p- . The human body changes its tempei?- ature very slightly under any condi tions of heat or cold, but a Russian naturalist finds that.the body tempera ture of insects is practically that of the atmosphere. It usually l-iscs more , slowly than the air, though more rap; idly when the air is very moist Wheu the insect begins to move, the temper ature rises rapidly, and may reach about 38 degrees C. (102.2 F). Below 0.5 degrees C. insects reraaiu motion less, and the wings are not moved mi- til the temperature reaches about VI degrees C. The United States Supreme Court. As the hands of the clock point lo : twelve the crier of the Supreme Court of the United States raps with hit gavel, the murmur of conversatiou ceases and attorneys, court officials and visitors rise while the crier slowly announces, "The Honorable the Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States." Robed in black silk gowne. they walk with slow and dignified steps toward the bench, and as the -Chief Justice appears at the entrance-, at the rear they slowly proceed to theiv seats. As they do, the crier cries. "Oyez! oyez! oyez! All persons hav ing business before the Honorable the Chief Justice and the Associate Jus tices of the United States are admon ished to draw near and give their at tention, for the court is now sitting. God save the Government of the United States and this honorable court." i It is an imposing and inspiring spec tacle, 1he mere witnessing of whkh increases the red corpuscles of one'n patriotism. No man entering that domelike court room may wear his overcoat No member of its bar may appear before it in a coat of any other color than black. Such is the dignity and impressiveness of that tribunal that men to whom embarrassment has long been a stranger evidence the re newal of their acquaintance with it by a stammering speech, a quickened breath a nervous manner, when ad dressing the court Green Bag. s faster Lilies From Japan. Our Easter lily, called the "Ber muda" lily, is in reality a native of Japan and China. In 1879 Japan sent us only $2000 worth of bulbs for grow ing them; but in 1895 the exports Jumped to $40,0u0; by 189!) they reached '130,000,. and they have been climbing steadily ever since, while tbv output from Bermuda is supposed to be a quarter less than it' was a decade ago. In spite of heavy freights the Japanese bulbs could often be de livered here for half the price of the Bermuda product. Country Life in America! kiyjr- What Microbes Are. Since Pasteur demonstrated the fact that many human diseases are due to minute living things which grow and multiply in our bodies, there has been a tendency to call all microscopic organ isms, whether harmful or not, "germs" or "microbes" or "bacteria" indiscrim inately. This confusion may be cleared by the statement that protozoa are the lowest form known of animals and that bacteria are the lowest known forms of-'plants-,' while "germs" and "microbes"' may apnly to the djfeease causing forms in either group. From Gary N. Calkius; "Protozoa and U' ease' in the Century; Sv Saccharine Plant. TL'i new saccharine1 plant discovered in outb America contains a eoniider able quantity of saccharine matter, f not fernfeii table.'' an'd is unusually swi-et. T&s plant is herbaceous, grow ing to a height of eight to twelv inches, and its scientific name is Kupa Turirui rcbamliiim. It is expected t prove of rnuch industrial value. It wa discovered by the director of the agri cnJiural in-stitute at Asuncion, and his experiments indicate that the sugar yielded is from twenty to thirty times as sweet ps ordinary cDe or beet su-