NUMBER 51. VOLUME XVIII. .FRANlvLIN. N. ;G..' "WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 23, 1903. rf" 1 " - .. , -w-'K Q I LE It thinful Ugkt thaU put to A,gkt Mm .A. aa fW- rtwM, jw,, wJTftow Tkt uvrrui wkiclbcutvnyj ,Tht beUj ring out tvilh ftttat chimtb And fan tkt ruddy blast anttr. ' Ltt lad and lass tht glad hours pott Piironth. logs and stttHsm gUam, musicjo tMrhym,., Piu fo . And drom,nsong, old ftu4s and wrong, . : No glom ahouU biMn &Astw Hd, .'1 .. A',J'-TU I V JtOM. HE llttlo Green Elf at In v V front of his doorway. He O I 0 (ad very nice house. A 4 long time ago a rabbit bad TKWt' lived In that hole among the roots of the tree, but the little Green Elf had lived there for years, ever since the cow at the olu Kobold, hls.futker.- The cow never Etant to eat Kobold, ,ni4 a leaf. 8he ter she bad swal "mala all love the 4- to hurt tbein o round huuie for the The hou Udy Inutile. There was mostf for a carpet. In the corner was the Dnntrv with rlpnn acorn cups and saucers. An empty nest ww ine oeo, wirt oaa: 'ear pillows and spreads. ' ITsuflllT th lltt1 flMM fi!lf wna ma ry, but this night he fas torrowfuL He sat In a bunch with his hands clasped on his knees. There were holes in nis green coat and the wind blew In. "Pretty sort of weather," he said In gruff voice, bee; use his throat was ore. "Not much to eat, and no thistle down to pay the PUles for a new over coat Never knew such a winter Drooas empty, milkweed crop a fall are, no pumpkin seeds to be bad at any price, and the nuta all covered up with snow! Whew But It's cold! And Christmas Eve, as sure as I live!" "Chee, chee, tee, tee, chee." The little Green Elf stopped shiver ' Ing and listened. "Chee, chee, tee. Fine night, Isn't Kt How do you do down there r "It's the Lame Squirrel." aald the llt tie Green. Elf.- "I thought he must be' froien thla bitter weather, or ') I 4 . i f "'I not to sure of that." aald the "Got anything to eatr'N -" leuty " came the ptowgpice. "Wre' good baric othls tree, Twd, I'm cLnwn icicle. I'm watching the Ctlrlstmae tree -going Into "town, fine tight! You ought to be up here." Thi llttlA Oroon Vlt im1nniA him "hands. He began to whistle softly to himself. Then he took his pine needle Drooih and swept the enow out of his bouse. Next. he scampered off over the snow. lie was not gone long. When noise doing It that one of. the sleeping crickets "woke up. . "What are you doing?" she asked, peering in at tlie door. ' r - "Sh." said thfe little Green Elf. "If s be came back, he was dragging a hem lock branch. He stood It np in the mid dle of the floor. He made so much a Christmas tree for the Lame Squir rel. Don't yon tell him." "Got any fixings for ltT" inquired the Cricket . "Oh, a few," said the little Green , , ..gy - ,v: , :: rg ij Glad Ridings of 8feaf $oy. By Prockhorst, 1825. Elf. "rin rolnir to Iiaiiit mi a luur of chestnuts I was saving for din ner 10-morrow." 'Hold onT' said tl. Ointt imi lust waken a few firefl 1a in ha lltrtiia on the tree.' " A Snowbird fluttered by. "What Is going onr she snld, looking In at the door. ".Sh," snld the llttlo Green" Elf. "A Christmns tree for (lie Lame Squirrel." " V'nit a minute." snl.l the Snowbird. "1 il Wing a bunch of wheat for the t. ..." t'f the Frwt I allies put Ms head : ' td door. 'Vou M'cm to be iff t me j 'i i ' I ( Sul tvtn barf bl tad and rat. ' 'If. was a heMrfTful Christmas tree, The moon ett(e out an burnose to look at It There la stood In the middle of Green Elfi nurlnr. Fmm thA to the bottom It waa ihlnlnv with tile fireflies for lights and the front ;"" . wuuvu w Tvuc. ww urn huu. On every twig there were note. Thera wera rlmlna nf nln muulloa After Yt was all finished, the little ureen l!iland a friendly Pixie went np me tree retch tttJjtme BanlrreL They were a long Mjie bringing blm aown. xoo see ne""vvos so very lame and na hnninnr thnt hA tamm .Aalt. While they were gone, aomethlng bap- penea. isoDoay every round out who aia it. remaps Santa Claus passed by; but wonderful things were left in the little Green Elfs parlor. - When be reached the door with the Lame Squirrel, be stood still. He nibbed his eyes to see If be were asleep. The same Christmas tree stood there, but it was ten times more bonn. tlful. There were slow worms and fallen stars to make It brighter. There were hundreds of nuts, hazelnuts, but ternuts, walnuts, chestnuts. There were bags of pumpkin seed, and cans of milkweed. BeHt of nil was a green ulster for the good VHr. "Green Elf. All night long the ' Lame Biinirri-I sat up and ate nuts. All night long the little Green Elf danced around the ('hrlxtnias tree In her new given ul ster; and the rest, of the wondfolU the I'ixlis. Hit Koboldx. the Omniies. the Trolls, all came out and danced. t 1 AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "AFTERWARD." the r.e. J. B. 'Lsckwood, Formerly tth Connectlcnt LliltaM, Dc)rM that th tVhota Eolf ma at Llf i 8old Cdm Whia To Hold th Kpjword, llaodKLTft, K. 1T, Tht Rv. 3. H. Lock trood. putor of the Kdtigattlck (Cong.) M. E. Church, preached SundKr tndrnlni m Grace M. E. Church in the absence of the paitor, the Rev. Dr. John E. Adams. Mr. Lockwood is well and favorably known in Brooklvu and on Long Island, where he hi held teveral naatoratee. He waa born and educated in Brooklyn and studied la before he entered :the miniitiy. He had the diatinction of being last year, the only Clerical member of the Connecticut Leg islature. He took for the subject of hie sermon, "Afterward," Hie text ws from Hebrews, xii:2i "Now no chastening, but the present etemeth to be joyous, .hut srieVoue; flevertlie'.e s. afterward it yield cth the peaceable fruit of righteousness anto them which are exercised thereby. If r. Lockwood said: Let a consider the tingle word "After ward" at our text. If yeu grasp that word and its rich content of comfort yon will hare caught the whole message of the eer luon, and yon will possess a most valuable solvent for life t perplexing, and often dis tressing, problems. Human life is mvsterlous enir a that has lurceMfully baffled the efforts persist ently made by the profound et thinkers of our race for its solution, 'What it life!" It the still pustling question of questions. At the biologists and their fellow scientists have not succeeded in tellin ut just what that elusive thing we call physical life ia, neither have poett, prophets, philosophers, nor even philanthropes been able to tell ut adequately what real life is. Here Is this strange thins we cttll life, with itt many tnd varied phenomena, and the more profoundly and comprehensively we itudr it the more confused it leave us. There are experience! poiifitely joyous and experiences positively painful, sad there are experiences partially joyous and par tially painful, and we look at this great mass of life's complex drts an-t are quite baffled to know the meaning of it ail. Still, with our hearts, ss well as with onr heads, we ask again the irrepressible inttrrogs tin. ww ;. tif.V . - , V At we, indeed, only a kt -f anlmali-jflf T high class animals, to be 1111 .-, but onlr ai I this mills, nevertheless, tprunr iron) the primA4.,J vai mua and risen to our present inteiir nal and moral exaltation and giorv painful ttep and tin- Hefw--pla7 under abortlv in -' fit cosmit asrici ture to serve tome future cron. a little flW ft we! From mud to mil' rm of evolution Or is it some anlendid ' , - .r- auh we are in, working -rot us, the immortal participants, t far ore exceed ins and eternal weight Of glory lat ahall thrill the soul forever! Have we been but blind snd stiroid workers si the loom of time, weavine an imsffinarv fabrie thst really had ao exittenee, even ai "one that besteth the sir," or are we let- Bally engaged in some rati work of marvel ous design, whose pattern we tee not clear ly and in all its comprehensive details, but Which oar Muter Workman knoweth well! Let us look si the three proffered expla nations of life. Jf'irat, there ia the doleful and distressing answer of philosophic pes simism which assures us that things art surely growing worts ill the time, the world it rolling down hill and there tre no onset mat can tie applied. 1 he world now it better than it will ever be hereafter. If yea like that view, accept it. No, w mutt not say it ao. jnot, do von like it, hut it it true! That ia tht wtv to n. i it; for, pleasant or repusnant, wt mutt accept what it true. But this view cannot possi bly be true nnless the proposition on which It is based is slso-true, the proposition of the foal who said in his heart, "There is no And la the second else ws have the an swer of philosophic optimism, which ss sertt that things tre steadily getting bet m; mat, wnrreas me lo-aay it lar oerter man it wat luuu or lu.uou years ago, it will be far better 1000 or 10.000 veara henca. But this prevalent theory is scarcely sny improvement oa the other, except to the superficial thinker, for it makes no previ sion lor me perpetuation ot personality. Where will you snd I be when those fsr off improvements of our race arrive! Thit materialistic philosophy offers ns of the present no immorttlity, and hence no op portunity for the adjustment of life's pres ent elarina injustices. I am alad to helieva thst the race that shall be resident here 1000 years from now will be a better race. But I would like to be in existence some- wnere, too, wnen tne Better day dawns. Ana even ir i enuid rise to tn annarh tin- Selfishness libs onto that which noeta some times sing; when, temporarily, they happen to be in mat that mood, and could tav I wat content to live and die and cease to exist here or anywhere else if only, as a result of my having lived a while, future generation! might be lilted a little higher; Still, one mast feel that that pretty snd. sfter all. rather morhidlv sentimental scheme does not satisfy the imperative de mands ot our souls that wranaa ahall be adeouately righted, that innocent sufferers shall be compensated and that outraged helplessness shall be avenged. Now comes Christianity, with its ample answer. It admits all the facts, hs ap parent injustices of the present, the pros perity of the unrighteous, the triumphing of the wicked, and. on the other hand, the fullering, snd the teeming defeata of God's heroes and taints in the fierce, hot contest of life: snd then it speaks one blessed word, "Afterward!" snd we can be pa tient: After we have heard that divine word ws can sea the wicked spread himself like a green bay tree, and still we "rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him, and we refuse to fret ourselres because of him who prospereth in hit wsyt, because of the man who bnngetb wicked devices to past. The whole puuling enigma of life it solved St once when yon hold the keyword, snd that word ia the single word ot tht text, "Afterward!" , That it to tav. yon can set no satisfac tory explanation of this strange and some what feverish thing we call life, unless you imai oi wnat is to iouow. A noted Amer ican orator, in a famous sentence of Ii:j; hat told at that we have no lamp with which to guide our feet in the future ex cept the experience of the past. He con . l.l .-j , 1-. 1 1. -. properly estimate the future unless we base our judgment on the experience of the past, jtiow wo miy go on and supple ment Patrick Henry's fsmiliar dictum by saying that we have no lamp to reveal the meaning of the present, except the light of the future. "Afterward" it the word thst explaint the mysterious disciplining and chastening! of the present. If you will grasp that word with firm, athletic grip, it will settle for yon all these ditlicult prob lems that so frequently confront vour soul and disturb your heart. W hen you coma to tome terrific exper ience in lite that all but shatters the very foundations of faith when our soul fulls stricken and wounded on life's crutd bat tlefield a thousand arrowa of temptation piercing the spirit and many a tword of torrow thrust through the heart so that all you can do it to cry in agony and terror, "JViv God, inT God, hast 'liiou forsnken me?" Then alieve the tumult of griff and the roar of the block billows, may God send some ministering anscl of memory to whmper with soothing voice this one word, "afterward;" and the soft, sweet beauty ot it shall solace your aching heart and the peace of God shall once more Hood your old. a , If von look at the lives of the irceut and re;il "licro,. of our race vou will im l tn.-v rn'i'-d n.. 'ty ",.vr fiom the m ur.n ot the hitine. I mcv k"'l one eve o i tne ' alLcl wald. ' lueses dad 1'e-pect uiuo tne rcco.i (....i;d c the r-d -, I of 1 nt I I ! t-e I, and ten der and gentle WoTtf "discipling." Thst il really what the present chusteningt mean vou are being made a disciple vou are taking Christ's yoke upon you and learning of Him as He has invited you to do. You are entering into the fellowship of His suf ferings. But. "beloved, if we suffer with Him. we thall also reign with Him after ward!" After all, how blank and dull, and sadly monotonous life Would be without ltt crises of pain. The problem of Pain- how It hat vexed at and how pnin hat pained ns, and yet how it hat enriched ntt At many a spice plant gives forth Its most fra grant perfume only when bruised and crushed, so a human heart does ltt best for other hum.in hearts sft'r some soften ing: grief has visited it. MartlneaM said I "A world without a contingency or an aeony could have no hcroi and no taint. There ia no epic of the ov'tin''1 end ni Ivric without the surprise of torrow and the sigh of fear. Whatever touches and ennobles as in t e lives snd voices of the past it s divine birth from human doubt and pain." , ' ' . , The sculptors have a maxim to the ef fect that "all that it not tUtue must be hewn swav." At first onr livet are like a rough snd quite meaningless block of mar vl wt.k wnmnit a Inn ham ansla and manv s blemish. And si Michael Angela said of tut stone thrown on the rubbish heap'. . 1 see an angel there and I mutt .get bim out." so Gnd sees the best there it in yon and He it determined to bring ii nut, even if He must needa nse chisel and mallet. And now tha blows are strnck, the chitel rutt detn. the chins fir. "The more the marble wastes the more the statue grows." Thus continues the divine sculptor Hit work snd lsbor of love, until there sttnds forth, sfterwsrd, a glorious tout cf majes tic dimenaiont snd Chrittlike beauty. " Tit the Matter who holds the chitel, snd day by day . He is chipping whatever environs the form That under His skilful cutting the form may be Wrought silently out into beauty, of such degree .'.---- . Of faultiest and full perfection, thst sngel Shall gan cm the finished product with -, new nrrnrite. That even Hit matchless pstience could gtav nit own Feature! a son such fractured and stubborn There ii, nnforlnnatelv, another side tjj promotion, f or tne wicsea at wen - wnj there it sn "after- ""Melancholy scene I 3WJonrpTSrtA. wif peace and rtfwretchec! sequel -.latiira nf things must rbe-v mirl defiance at God's be ia for the tonls of men. nevd .TnJr ss tha tears nf the righteous now shall If terwsrd be transmuted into eternal gemt. sparkling forever in the light of heaven, so the very gems of ths wicked, the tawdry tinsel tnd trinkets snd toys that now seem so bright snd sttrsctive, trill be found, sfterward. to be but ths perishable accessories ot a mid nightmare of revelry and rioting. The empty, idle frllaeies with which they tported here, killing time and killing tools, shall sfter wsrd become whins that lath them torever, scorpions whose tting is eternel. tesrs thst are never wiped away, but which unceasing!- aeld -and scarify the soul like biting acidt eating the heart forever. Pot the devil's dun the inevitable order Is just that now a little temporary pleas ure, jdat enough to bait the toul success fully; snd afterwird, desolation snd sn gnith indescribable, v - : So, to turn it all np what kind of an af terward are you going to have! That de pend! on what kind of a present you are hiving. Would you not prefer to tuffer afflictions with Ood't neonle snd afterward hive glory unspeakable than to enjoy ths pleasures of tin for a season, snd after ward suffer the inevitable aftermath of despair! Say "vet" to thst proposition and I will say "Amen." leelag ths Beaaty. - Some persons tra slwsys looking for the dark things of life, snd of course they find what they are looking for. Others are al ways looking for the bright things, and thev find them. Bishop Nicholson, of Mil waukee, relates that during the first years n his ministry parish matters, social and financial, were in a bad way. and straight ening them out wat alow work. He wat much discouraged one day when, having gone to New York on business, he stopped to look at the Brooklyn Bridge, then building. A man, covered with dirt, was woikins aa the abutments. "That's pretty dirty work you sre engaged in." said the bishop. "Well, yea," anawered the laborer, "but somehow ws don't think of the dirt, but of the beauty which is to come out of our work." "It was the lesson I needed." tsvs the bishop, "snd I went back to Phil adelphia the better for it." It it a lesson which we all need. Happy, indeed will be those who learn and apply it. N. W. Christian Advocate. Oar Part Ksientls.. God hat a place for each one of nt, and a work for each one of nt. God doet not expect us to fill mors thsn our own pltce, or to do mora than our own work; but each one of us is important in his or her own sphere. AH the offerings of the Jealtby in the courts of tht temple of erutaiem were well in their time and amount. But the poor widow, who had only her two mitea, should not havs felt that her gift waa unimportant. It seemed tt if Jesus sat wstching and waiting for that little offering; and the ttory of her dnm her nart has been told the world over in the centuries since then, ss a les ion and at an inspiration. Even though our part ia but a little one, God, at it were. watches and wain tor ta-i. aunuay School Timet. ' The Larger Ut. I am ouit clear that one of onr wont failures ia at the point where, having re solved like angels, ws drop back into the Old maiier-oi-iact ilia ana ao just wnat we did before, because w have always dons it. and because avervbodv does it. and be cause onr fathers and mothers did it, sll of which may be the very re: on wny ws should not do it. There is no station of life, snd no place of one's home, where, if he want to enlarge his life in csring for people outline nuuaeii, ne may ant inn tin a career of enlargement which shall ex pend indefinitely. And we thall find the (answer to our question to be thst the man who enters upon infinite purposes livet tha infinite life. He enlarges his life by every experience of life. Phillipt Brookt. Dally Duties I cannot sav that the tree cart of a man, in relation to God, seems to me to De, to give sll that it canned, and claim nothing that' is not given, - And I pro foundly believe that whoever rill cheer fut) v surrender himself to the daily duty and the prayer of faith, will not long be leu in tne snauows, out win emerge imo light which he knows to be divine.- daines Marlineau. LARDED BEEF. A bit of shoulder or some other Ini expensive piece of beef makes an ex-l cellont larded pot roast, and when properly prepared It ia almost equal to good rib roast. A lean cut which would otherwise lack fat Is moat suit able for llirdlng, and pork which Is firm gnd young Is the best. The strips i-iiouul be cut a;; H.t as till. as a liii'f pencil ! 1 ' 1 t and I i i 1 ! tiirce a 1 -'t iv,o d . f wish a h: i I t t a I 1 a t t which it of little or no value,, tsywsy, iiibntituLe a final ' i." you have the SAVED BY A DEAD RACE. MY8TERI0U3 WELLS. AM 10 THE . ' MOJAVE DE8ERT8 WA8TE. , Built with Skill, Centuries Ago by an , Unknown People, and Today They Frequently Prevent Lost Traveler from Dying of Thlrat' - Numbers of menvowe their lives to the providence of a race which baa passed away : and been forgotten. Neither histccy nor tradition tells aught of It, and It Ii known only by a few of Its works which survive, ; , Thla forgotten rac wan the desert dwellers of a prehistoric period. Their home was In the great desert region of eastern- California, which Is really one unbroken desert, although it baa been divided by the geographer Into two, known as the- Mojavo desert and the Colorado desert. In these deserts are found several water holes known aa Indian wells. They have been walled in to protect tho water from th encroaching sands of the desert, which otherwise would, age ago, have burled the water many feet deep, and tha wells would have been lost ' , , The walls are built with skill and perfect knowledge ot the action ot the winds which sweep the plains. They are so arranged and constructed aa ef fectually to protect the precious water from the drifting sand, and they lave withstood the elements and warded off the sands for more than three centur lea since white men began to traverse those desert wastes, and it la not pos sible to state bow many centuries pre vious to that time. The walla guard three side of the well, the fourth aid being graded and leading gradually down to the water. Borne of the wells are deep In the earth, in which case the grade extends some considerable dlstanceVbacK. In such cases atop lead dowfffrom one nLih&mtitmJor the if nvenlenoe ot the human visit) The known Instances ln'leUfifcthj wells have proved . life savers" are many. Not many years ago two men drove down Into the Colorado desert, bound for Yuma. .They bad a canvas top wagon and a span of mules, and In the wagon waa a aupply ot water. One of the men had made the trip several times and waa supposed to be familiar with the route. The mirage often confuses the most expert of desert guldeepsuid the man became be wildered and got off the course. : The watering : place at which they expected to replenish their aupply waa missed, and they ran out of water. The men and the beasts began to suf fer the tortures of thirst. They be came utterly bewildered and knew not in which direction to turn.;'; :? When despair waa settling down up on the men one ot the mules began to tug vigorously at the bit In a frantic endeavor to turn from the course they were pursuing. The- driver tried to Keep him on the old way, but the mula was obstinate and continued to pull at the reins.,- Finally the drlver'a com panion remonstrated. "Let him have his head," he aald. "These animate often smell water a long ways. Maybe he will take ua to a spring." . The animal pulled away to the right ao strongly and persistently that he drew, his mate along With htm. The course was changed to right angle with the cne they had been pursuing. Two hours later, when the men begun to lose faith In the sagacity of the ani mal, they came to an old Indian well, deep and walled. - Another Mojave desert experience did not have so happy an ending. Two desert prospectors, running shcrt of suppliee at their mine np In the Death valley country, started for Daggett fo rcDlenlsh their atock. They watered up for the first stage of the journey, expecting to replenish at a certain oasis, 'which they were due to reach abont neon of the second day out. ' Early In the morning ot the second day they were overtaken by one of the most dreaded of desert visitations, a sand storm. For a time they, strug gled bracely on, vainly hoping to be able to reach the oasis before the storm got too bad for travel. Thla they were unable to do. The animals became frantic and un manageable, and they were obliged to unhitch them and tie them to the shel tered side ot the wagon with burlap over their heads to keep them from stampeding. Then the prospectors crawled Into the wagon and waited for the storm to cease. i JLong before tb storm abated their aupply of water gave out, and when the wind died down and they could again proceed the mules showed signs of collapse. Before they -had made ten miles one of the animals dropped down and expired. Then the - men : . knew that It was to be a ' battle for life. The : wagon waa abandoned. A pack of ' the provisions was hastily prepared and strapped to the remaining mule, and' the men trudged on afoot, leading the animal. .They went some miles out of their course. and had to retrace their atepa, but be fore they got back upon tha trail again one of the men gave out and sank fainting to the earth.:- The provision pack was then thrown eft and the unconscious man waa thrown across the mule and strapped to the saddle. Before , water was reached he died. Ills companion Anally reached an old Indian well, and be and the mule were refreshed. When be bad somewhat recuperated be led bis mule back to the abandoned provi sion pack, the Journey was resumed a" I Daisgett was finally reached In safety. Ivtursnn and Keiu-y. two Los Anre, 1 s j m b nt 1 a s t e ih's- e. t on f '"t. v, ii t'l.'ir wim-r and pro- v r , 1 to a l-nrro. It was ! it 1 v e . f 0 t t Ii I 1 v 1 his steps to look for bis partner be found his dead body upon the burning sands. Newport Sun. . PRIVATE BALLOONS. ' Sir Vincent Barrlngton Telia of Thslr Ua by Brltiah Aero Club. Sir Vincent .Kennett-Barrlngton, the enthusiastic amateur - aeronaut, says that England la far from being the beat country in the world for bal looning by amateurs, for the reason that with water all around It, there is little opportunity for aerial flights In certain winds without being blown out to sea. Whenever the aerial navi gators find themselves making toward the mouth of the Thames, after rising ever London, they descend again as soon aa possible, knowing that' other wise they will soon be over the water.' It ia possible, however, to cross th English channel In a balloon In a fair northwest wind, and the trip has been made by several of the British ama teurs. They have their aeronauts, however, much as the - aatomobillsts have their chauffeurs. Balloons such aa those used by the Englishmen cost about $750, are made ot silk and are good for about -two years, although they will sometimes last, with care, for three or four years. Sir Vincent remarked In his conversa tion on the subject that he much pre ferred to make an ascension in a two year old bsllcon than In one which was more than three years old. , The silk Is very delicate In texture, and the club employes dry and repair a balloon very carefully after each as cension. Sir Vincent says that It Is a great strain on a balloon to navigate against the wind, and that In the same way there is more strain on a captive balloon than on one which - rises ' free. He himself regards an ascent In a .' captive balloon fully in ilinfWTITH Hil T" o up it a freeojrlv The danger larffeljjm possible rending of the falsrlc. T"ho best balloona are now made In sections, just as ships are made less liable to sink by being con structed In compartments. It la not pcsslble to guard complete ly against rending, for the expansion of the silk in coming into the sun light after contracting In the Intense cold of a cloud makea a great strain on the fabric Another trouble ot the amateur aeronaut la the water, which often forma by condensation in a hol low on tog of the balloon when pass ing through a cloud. It there la only a little of this its weight makes a dif ference, and If there la much of It the balloon : If often forced ' downward some thousand feet by the extra welghC,.;i;i;;i::-;;;;S'P' Sir Vincent does not regard the as cent In an ordinary balloon as very dangerous, although he admits that a aky voyage in an airship la a good deal of a hazard. In ordinary ballooning he saya the principal thing to be ac quired la skill and Judgment In hand ling the ballast Each balloon takes up, aa a rule, three bags of sand bal last containing 60 pounds each, and the trick la to navigate without being obliged to throw out more than two thirds of this before making the de- aired landing. The last third Is usual' ly needed to make the aerial craft come down decently and In order,, at a suitable place, and some of the Eng lishmen are getting to be rather pwf),- clent In the matter, It appears. A handful ot sand makes a difference In the height at which a balloon will ride, and It is clear that If the aeronaut runs cut of ballast while high In the air he will be compelled to rely on the release of gaa to control the descent ot the balloon and will find it extreme ly difficult to come down gracefully. Th balloon grounds la London , are reached by many members ot the club, In their automobiles, and the automo biles are also used to follow the court of a balloon In crdea- that observers may be on hand at the landing place. Boston Evening Transcript. , Where Turnips Are a Luxury. In "A Woman Who Went to Alaska," tht woman herself tells of her first en counter with a vegetable garden on the way down the river from Dawson. Such luxtlrlea aa the ordinary "truck patch" represents are practically unknown on the tables of the Yukon Valley. "Aa we neared the delectable spot," writes the many experienced woman, "the river banka were lined with canoes; many natives stood looking at us from the shore', and while stevedores handled the wood, many passengers visited the town, It waa not long before they came back with handfuls of turnips, just pulled from the ground, Which, had these been the most luscious fruit, could not have been eaten with more relish.' ". ' '.; "I tried to buy one from a young man, but he had evidently been long away from such luxuries, for he re fused to aell. Afterward his gallantry got the better of him, and he politely ottered me one-half ot the y turnip, which I took with thanks. "An my brother poeied the precious thing, I asked him how long It waa since he had eaten one. Two years,' he promptly replied.. "Knowing that he 'waa especially fond of such things, I ate a small slice, an!,gav blm the remainder." llf, . p . . , Remarkable 8hootlng. An Interesting Illustration of the ex cellent toarkmansiatp of Uncle Sam's men behind the. guns, as developed during the recent Inspection trip of the naval committee on the United Ktatos steamship Dolphin, gays the Vashlnpton Blar, has Just come to lU;ht Representative Roberts of Mas snohusotts was of tho party. Approach lug Gunner's Mnte Spocr cf the shin. Mr. I - i'"i's o' .'rcd him a dollar to bit a sea gnu, r iM r tonic a forty pound 6 -mnmnr'rn i on s muomaric g! b' -t a t 1 snot he popped a f t n ti.e f,y at 4c0 y.ud. C".. r. .iotrtvtivos v:i f t !i I t v CYNICAL OAAN'PA. . Gran'pa'a a cynical, tunny old man "- Kindly, but humorous, too. Talks, plaja and woikt Just as hard aa be cant , Hasn't the time to feel blue. Ever so moon tribulation he's bad, But declares, and he wickedly grlnai "1 here's nothing can make a fellow to autd As kicking him hard on the shins I" "Baffled ambition,'' says gran'pa, "hurt sore-. Throws a ebap down la tha dumps. ' Poverty hnmblua a man more snd mot) ., , Misfortune may give bim hit tramps. Unrequited affection may mux a man sad. Men aiay be punished for sins, But tbere'a nothing can make a fellow so , "" mad ' As kicking him hard oa the shins I" Cynical gran'pa sayst "Life leaves Its soars, But soars lose tuelr pain by and by. sNothlug'e worth while 'Death merciless 1 niars I" Gran'pa gives vent to a sigh. Be eyes little Paul and hit features grow glad, And be sings, at s romp se begins! 'There's nothing otn make a fellow so mad At kloking him hard on the thiol 1" Pittsburg Dbpaton. HUMOROUS. A stone weighs less In water than It doea outside, but a trout always weighs most In the water. Somer ville Journal "I did not know that I had so many close friends," said the Bporter, turned down in his tenth attempt to borrow . . ,6. Yale Record. ; f Bings There goes a particular friend of mine. Bangs Friend o yours, eh? Well, he can't ba overparticular. Phil adelphia Bulletin. . - "What did you see about that whole sale butcher's sign that caused you to giggle so?" "Headquarters tor bind-' Quarters!" Houston Post , N Customwrjwhat do you attribute uyr e mosnann yi "si hi , i p? Dealer To Judlcioua advertiae- ing. Chicago Dally News. A correspondent writes to inquire if Idiocy Is absolutely incurable. It ia In the case of the man who stops to argue with a woman. Buffalo Times. "I think I'm not hard to get along with." "Faith, nayther am I, mum! Whin a misthress Is doln' her best, 't Is mesllf thot overlooks lota av things!" Puck. She Do you believe that mosquitoes smile? He Well, It they are not smil ing this season with all the openwork waists around, they never wilL Yon kers Statesman. , . . , "Gracious! What in the world la that man ordering such a lot of dishes ; for? Will he be able to eat them?" ."Oh. no. He merely likes to show that he can pronounce all those French names." San Francisco Bulletin. Mr. Perkins That's a pretty likely lookin' boy you have there, Sam. Mr. Dobbs He's good enough if he wasn't so all fired slow. Why,. If that boy had a' had a job bulldln' the ark w wouldn't a' had the flood yit Roches ter Democrat "Say," demanded the ugly Individual , suddenly appearing from a dark alley, "what time la It?" "You're Just about two minutes late," replied the Chlc agoan; "that other gentleman you aee running away has my watch."-Phll-adelplila Vnm.j.,y "Is the prisoner going to plead In sanity as his defeifvt?" asked the court tnograhirJudgliiJse a nectlon'ot an attorney," repIIedVthe lawyer, who had failed to get the "I should say be . was," Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune, . , . "I don't like these references," said the housewife. "Well, mum," return ed the applicant for a position, "I did not write 'em ao it ain't my fault If you 'don't Ilk 'em Jest you go to th people as gave 'em to me an' tell 'em . so." Chicago Evening Post . "I always take things as they come." said the pickpocket aa he dexterously relieved the man ahead of him ot a watch and purser ' And I take men as I find them," added the policeman. clutching htm gently but firmly by th arm. Dubuque Telegraph-Herald. A Philadelphia parent wrote to a school teachers In that city "Miss Brown: You must stop teach my Liz- sle fislcal torture shee needs yet read In and figors,.BttsVms more aa that, If I want her to do Jumpln I kin make her Jump." New Haven CktDnlcle. Mrs. Nexdore There's a newbabyTiT the bouse the other side of you." Mrs. Peppery Yea, I've heard It Mrs. Nex dore Poor little thing; It does cry so. Mrs. Peppery Yes, but It's so ac commodating. It always cries at the right time and. drowns the noise of your daughter's piano. Philadelphia Press, 'V '.' ; . Young Mosquito Splker Btll savs that If I'll Join In with him and a buncS of others, be will take us to a place where there is a family of seven tat people who sleep with screen!- i windows and scanty covering Old Mosquito Look here, my laddy, you must pay no attention to these j : rich-quick schemes sprung on on1- i line you by the sharpers. Baltimore American. Ancient Insurance. Juvenal In bis satires mentlm remarkable butilness that wns ear ' on In ancient Rome. K consisted, i buying houses on Are. Tha apix-i,-hurried to the scene of the cm " tlon attended by slaves carrjii ; t He Judged the chances of p;i- and made a bid to t!,o d ' - p Owner, who was, as a rulo, ( .t t . cept anything. 1 h b,t air baste, this earlu t of f Bet his slaves instantly to - secured what ho con ,1 : he even put out tho f ; i , nmdo a court. It v t a i il-ilii.lS, lilt 1: e i ulnti'd In a i I v 1'9 it by 1. '1 to I - i i t t ( 1 -i v -r A aars. ! -ilioa that V li.l one, v ' i t r ) V. 1 i 1 1 too. they were so chut f 1 v 1 1 1 t a u lien h .: f..iui, 1 I . the little 1 If lo 1 I O ':lll. '1 he t f d win i I ei 1 1 r i ?! W;tM 1 tc 1 t ( 1 ! ( J f 1 t 1 " : I I... J II , v- t