VOLUME XX. A QUESTION T a certain crooked city street, throuj'd which I often ass. There's n narnnv little window, set with liny lflnea vt kIhks, where It necii! tn m tlie moments must In Rwcctncs ullp awtty. For a Utile randy maker stands at work llinre every dav. lie wears a a: and apron which are pic- tureHtpu'ly ! rench ; There an aimwy llmir and ausar scattered all about Ins Ix nrh ; In fact, I ulni'.st fancy, neong thlnsa so spick fend-KpHii. That this Utile candy-maker la a little waiuly man ! Rut how queer a candy man can be I never rrally knew Till I happem-d to passing when the mid day whistle blew. And thought to su-: and atare a bit could hardly te a crliui. Just ti see tin- t. (i ,,f randy he would eat at luncheon time. I A STRANGE CLEW I Captain." When I was quite a young man I counted among my cloaa friends a pri vate detectite. The two of us were enjoying a quiet smoke and chat in his cosy little office one day when the door opened and his boy ushered in a lady client. She was apparently under twenty and was quite fashion ably attired. Her form was tall and slender and her face exceedingly at tractive; but It Lore traces of some sudden and overwhelming affliction, lor her eyes were red with weeping. "Mr. Banks, the detective, I pre sume?" she queried, turning, after . quick glance at me, toward my more mature companion. ( "At your service, madam. Pray bo seated." "I am in sore trouble, sir," she said. In tremulous tones, applying her hand kerchief to her eye3. "Death has sud denly robled me of a father, and the prison, if nothing worse, threatens to take a dear cousin from me." "That Is very sad," my friend said, sympathetically. "But compose your self, my dear lady; we may yet avert the latter half of your trouble." "Oh, sir! Heaven grant that you may, for my cousin, whom they sus- peci oi me muraer or my poor iatner. was to be my husband," she said, the seriousness of the case quite overcom ing her natural modesty. "But he la UocejULi know it, I feel it, in spite THE FRANKLIN PRESS OF TASTE. Then the sight was so surprising that my vision seemed (o rail. For frwu underneath his sugared bench he And, as If he didn't tare at all for any sort of sweet. This funny candy-maker fell to eating bread mil tnrnt ! Now don't you think that such a taste was Hometning very stranger Consider what a diet he coil Id easily ar ranre : On solid thine like taffy-balls, for Instance, he could dine ; For luncheon, i and led violets so delicate and tine ! And on leaving In the evening, when the honeyed day had fled, Ife could take a box of creams to eat be fore he went to bed ! I wonder, now, whHt vou and I would like If we were French .And moldod caudles all the day behind a sugared bench? Being' slightly acquainted with one of the clerks, I stepped up to him for a moment's conversation. When I re turned to my friend's side ho waa pocketing a sheet of paper which he had been examining with his micro scope. A quick glance at hU face :thowod me that he had hit upon a promising clue. "I think we have seen sufficient," he said immediately, and in a few minutes we were on our way back to town. "Found something, Banks?" "A mere trifle," he responded, "but mum's the word, my boy, even for you. A little spice of mystery, yo.i know, will sharpen your Interest." It waa about 4 o'clock in the after noon when we again entered the fac tory office, Banks carrying a package about fifteen Inches square. ' You will oblige me by gathering all the employes of the factory to gether in this office, Mr. Williams, ' said Banks, addressing the head clerk. "Let the outer doors be locked, and when the men are all In here see that the office door is securely fastened also. I wish to try a very -interesting little experiment" "I observe that you use a type writer," he went on, after Mr. Will lams had given orders to have the men called. "Will you kindly remove the ribbon or if you have an unused nn.n. better still." roeeeded other pursuers realized what wu hap pening John Trasker was struggling to free his pinioned arms from ta iron grasp of his muscular captor. "Why, If it isn't Stanton!" cried Mr. Williams In surprise as he and the others came up. Arriving at the factory, Trasker broke down and made a most abject confession. He had planned to remain behlrd that evening to rifle the open safe. Overhearing the quarrel between uncle and nephew, he saw how it miKht be used to his advantage. On his way through the general office he looked through Stanton's desk and se cured his knife. Returning after the deed, to complete the evidence against Cie young fellow, he had left the incriminating thumb mark. As for Stanton, his story was very simple. He had retnrnel to Cis premhi last evening villi r. view of a. o!o. lalng to his uncle, but, pride overcoming his good lntcifloi, he lird gone away wX: out entering. Shortly afterward, meeting a friend who lived some twenty miles from town, he had been tempted with the prospect of a day's shooting to accompany him home. Thre o'clock that afternoon, and Just after they had got back from the woods, the first Information of whal had occurred 'reached him, aud, bor rowing his friend's mare, he started for the factory, with what result has already been made known. Hanks received a check and abun dant thanks from his charming young client, and come fifteen months later an invitation to the wedding. New York News. THE PROVIDENT LOAN. A Society to Aid Deserving Poor by Loans on Personal Property. The Provident Loan society of New York was incorporated In 1834, "for the purpose of aiding such persons as the society Bhail deem In need of pe cuniary assistance by loans of money at Interest, upon the pledge of per sonal property." It was organized by 1 number of New York City's leading citizens, Including James Spcyer, Beth Low, Abram S. Hewitt, Otto T. Ban- nard and Solomon I.oeb. It chargaB 1 percent Interest per month on loans of less than J250, or at the rate of 10 ercent per annum on loans exceeding that amount; and these rates are rec ognized as somewhat phllanthroplcal, considering the class of Eecurities of fered, many of which, such as furs, being likely to deteriorate In value un less cared for at considerable expense. It .Is true that the patrons of the rr"vl lent Xoan have been mainly of gjisayeraglng FRANKLIN. N. G. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, THE JUNGLE'S TERROUS WILD BEASTS AND SNAKES EX ACT A HEAVY ANNUAL TRIB UTE. The Total Loss of Life Ir) India Through the Depredations of the Ti ger and the Cobra Is Appaullng Government Powerless Against Sup erstition. It Is popularly believed by English people whose friends have recently gone to India that tire tiger and the snake play an important and incon venient part in the domostic economy of the Anglo-Indians, and that the per ils of life, already sufficiently numer ous by reasons of climate and epidem ics, are augmented by the aggressive ness of wild beasts and the insidious ambushes of reptiles. To allay these apprehensions the unqualified assur ance may be given that the majority of Englishmen, and certainly most English womon, never see a tiger dur ing their slay in India, and may In all probability never see a poisonous snake. In the great cities and the larger -civil and military stations, where most of our countrymen pass their lives, the houses are immune from wild beasts and snakes, and even In the more prlmitlvo and out-of-the-way places, In which British officers sometimes spend their lonely exist ence, the house is secure from the maneater, and the premises, thanks to the mongoose and the vigilant fox ter rier, are fairly free from snakes. If ever there Is an encounter with a tiger it usually arises from no fault of the tiger. But the life of Europeans In India is one thing; the life of the Indians is quite another matter. The aver ago European, who observes a few ob vious precautions and treats the In dian sun with respect, will find the conditions of life quite as healthy, If not healthier, than those which are found in Europe. His dress gives him an immunity from snakes, and, as some think, from plague, whioh the bare-legged, bare footed Indiana do not enjoy, and his place of residenoe and habit of life do not expose him to dan gers from wild beasts. Unhappily, in spite of the rapid Bpread of roads and railways and the enormous Increase in cultivation, the Indians in tin villages, and even In the small towns of certain provinces, every year offer a number of victims to the tiger and the cobra and the other wild beasts and snakes, which they at once venerate and dread. Scarcely a day passes without some e tn tho Indian press of tbe depre- 1 1 P &3MBMXiJ& worship and respect. Among tho mora Ignorant sections of the people It is be lieved that the cobra has supernatural powers and can Influence their for tunes. No Indian would kill a cobra If he could help It, and It is said that, when a cobra is killed perl-irce, It Is given all the honors of a regular cremation and assured with many protestations that Its reluctant destroyers are guilt less of its blood and that it was slain of necessity. This unfortunate attl tu3 of the millions of India toward the snakes makes it almost hopeless for government to diminish the Iobb of human life. Many an effort has been made to discover some antidote for snake poison, but so far without suc cess. One Is forced back on tho somewhat helpless conclusion that the snake ter ror will never be removed from the people until real education has freed them from their superstitious fears of the serpent. It has been well said that In India we htfve to deal with "creeds that range between the ex treme points of the basest animalism on the one hand and the most exalted metaphysics on the other, and with standards of life that cover the whole Bpace between barbarism and civiliza tion," and no one who has listened to the stories of tho Indian peasants about king cobras and tiger Incarna tions can gainsay the truth of the ut terance. It is a melancholy present ment of Indian life, this short annual statement of men and cattle killed by wild beasts and snakes; but the back ground of terror and superstition is darker still. London Times. THE GREAT TITIAN His Was an All-Embracing Genius, Courtly, Serene, Majestic. At once a genius and a favorite of fortune, Titian moved through his long life of pomp and splendor serene and self-contained. He was of old and noble family, born at Pieve. in the mountain district of Cadore. By the time that he was eleven years old his father, Orcgorld dl Conte Vecelli, rec ognized that be was destined to be a painter and- sent him to Venice, where he became the pupil first of Bellini, and then of the great artist Oiorgione; from the first, Indeed, he enjoyed every privilege that an artist of his time could need. Tbe Doge and Council of Venice recognized bs ability, as did the Dukes of Ferrara and Mantua. As the years went on, kings, popes and emperors were his friends and patrons. In his home at Blri, a suburb of Venice, from which in one direction the snow-clad Alps are visible and In the other the soft ...u i'rr"""nln"""". he 1005. THE PULPIT A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY MAUD BALLINCTON BOOTH, OF THE VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA. Siibjccii Freedom Through Clirlit. Brooklyn, X. .-The seating capac ity at the Mnjestlc Theatre was taxed to its utmost Sunday afternoon nt the meeting under tbe nllsplccs of the Y. M. C. A. nnd many were nimble to se cure admission. At the close of .Mrs. Booth's address there was n most Im pressive sight. As she gnve the invita tion for men to definitely accept Chrlsl, men nil over the house stood with bends bowed and after u moment of prayer the audience was dismissed. Mrs. Booth said in the course of ber address: I esteem It a (Trent privilege to have the opportunity of bringing a message from my heart to this great nudlenec this afternoon, and 1 am so glnd Unit 1 come to you merely as a messenger; thnt I have not to rise before this audience to exploit some hobby of my own; that I do not couio to you with some theory, but thnt 1 renlize s i Btand up and speak that my mcssnga is not only my own, but that I come to you as I went to my nudlence this morning with a message from One who cnu follow the message with the divine touch. As 1 looked down upon nnd out upon tills audience trying to gather something from the faces of those whom 1 was to address I saw arise be fore me again my audience of this morning, n very different one In one sense and very similar in another. It was an audience of men nil men and nn nudlence perhaps nenrly us large as the one which I address this afternoon, but, ah, what a difference. It was an audience behind prison walls. An au dience of men who have lost their chance, nn audience of men shut nnny from the world nnd Its sunlight nnd blessings and happiness and freedom and joy, and who in the darkness of prison walls have learned to the lull the bitterness of a life of sin. nnd yet as I rise to speak tq this audience this afternoon my message will be very much the siiine as my message to Hint nudlence this morning, for I come not here to speak to Christians this after noon. My message Is a tnejsnge to the captive, a message of liberty to those who nre bound, and it does not take the walls of Sing Sing; It does not tnkc those narrow cells to make bondage, but there are many who walk the streets of Brooklyn In the sunshine to day and who boast that they are free citizens, who are shackled and bound because they have not yet learned the freedom that the dear Christ can bring. - As I spoke to my boys this morning I quoted to them two lines that some how or other came to my notice a little while ago, and I told them that there were Just two classes of prison ers before me in that prison. Tbe lines ore these: men looked out over prison bars, "it.the mud. the other saw the we want to know nnd when we want to see then the light will come to us; a revelation will comic tiiul we shall lenrn In truth the message or Christ, but we must leave our position as a critic mid we must come down nnd as a penitent sinner nt the foot of the cross iiinl (he light nnd glory of rev elation will stand behind that divine and beautiful figure of the loving, teu dcr, compassionate Christ and we shall see. Him, not n dead Saviour, not even a great mid mighty judge of the world in the future, but our own tender, loving, personal friend. What is the next thing Hint seems lo me the greatest hindrance of men who should swiftly run the race, to tho men who should bravely climb the hills of power, to il.e men who, wilh their manhood ami strength, should battle on tin? side of Christ' It is one word and It Is Hint word Hint has done more to fill our Stale prisons than anything else. It Is weakness. We nre not nc customed when we speak of the human race to think of men as weak. Woman Is always spoken of as the weaker ves sel, but I spent; not of coiuparlsou be tween men mid women, but between men and men. it Is weakness that has led men to go with the tide, in Rlenil of llglning against It. It is weakn.ss that has iniule them yield in the presence nf evil companionship nnd do that which their manhood and conscience rose against. It Is weakness that has made tliein se.l tl elr sauls to drink. It is weakness '.lint has made them, Mislead of being the pro tectors of the weak, trample even women under their feet. It Is weak ness Hint lias made them hide their colors when the name of Cod is taken lu vain or when ribald jokes nre made, when they should rise nnd proelnim their Indignation against It, nnd, if you should ask me what keeps these men between prison walls, I should not answer the desire for my of these things, but weakness. And no man ran have strength unless the spirit of (.'ml Is within him. It is weakness Hint drn','s him down and strength Hint enables him to mount above, mid strength can oi'!,v couio from the touch of tbe bund divine. Ferh.ips you sny to me: "Do yon be lieve that all nu n are weak?" Indeed, I do not. I have known men, strong men, but I have known no man strong enough to be strong without the di vine Christ. I have known strong men who have said thnt they were strong enough to ll?ht the evils of this world nnd It bus termed that the grosser evils have pnss-'il them by because of the strength nud nobility of their char acter, but (hey needed something more thnn that. If they would be a bless ing to the world, that needed more thnn their great, manly strength they need ed the strength divine. And even Into these very strong men's lives have come some one temptation stronger than themselves, nnd 1 hnve known what It wns to see the strong man de feated. And yet I hnve known what It wns to see poor weak men, men whom I hnve seen wrestle In anguish over the past, men who have (aid to me: "I cannot live right. Look what the past bus been -n series of attempts to do right ami nil hnve failed. I am too weak." And 1 linife seen them NUMBER 11 WITH A STOCK COMPANYg ft was a prontl and happy day When HiiHsell I'rane SaWlnl tiray Joined n Muck (T a 'ho- Tnllc, r real stock tfoupe ; V. I" ' as laVea In the group Willi t In- Htoi-k. Tlir started west without delay. And ItiiHsoll I'rane Stilvinl lirny Wore a frock -A lovi-ly ri al with fonsrlnna air, KelnlrliiK Ki-catlv to bo there With 11,,' stuck. They bnstf-d cut near Santa P. And ttTi4Mi-l 1 I'rnm' Salvinl dray. Who couldn't Ituek Ilia cl'ith'-H at iiiiyihlm; like par, Cam? Iiiirm' lnnlde a tattle ear Willi Hie Mock. l.'tuiitrillr Cnnrirr-Jnurnal, JUST FOR FUN He Has he a college education? 8b --J Oh, yes; he plays football, golf and he's a crackajack at tennis. Yonkers Statesman. " . Gerald. Mamma, can you change 15 cents for me? Mother How do you wish it changed, dear? Gerald. Into quarter. Puck. Lady Oh, that big dog isn't the one I advertised for. My dog was a little fox-terrier. Boy Yes'm. Your dog's in side o' dls one! Puck. Suitor I came to ask your daughter' hand, rather Can you support her J auto In the manner to which It lutf been accustomed? New York Sun. Mayme What a gossip Mrs. Gadby .s! Edith Yes, Indeed. I never tall her anything without finding out that she hA already told it herself. Phil adelphia Bulletin. 1 'Giles So you've got a place in that banking house? I suppose it was be cause you knew the president? Harris tnew the president? Harris ' i t.Bnt""XU2' because he did' me. nfiijlr Transcrtptr- ranger Excuse, me, sir, but '".': Partly that, not know me. Seedy Stranger- can you change a dollar for me? Hu manitarian Why, yes. . Seedy Strang erThanks. And now will you kindly tell me where I can get the dollar?-? Cleveland Plain Dealer. ,( "That Mrs. Snaggs Is too much of aristocrat fur me to mingle, wld.". "How's that?" "She waa knocked down by a pushcart and she had It put into de paper dat she was hit by an auter mobllo." Detroit Free Press. ' ' Rimer "Do you really prefer to have long poems sent in to you rather than short ones?" Editor "Yes. When they're long, you see, I don't luu'C to, think up any other excuse for reject ing them." Philadelphia Press. ; ' , Mamma "Fighting again, Wllllel Didn't I tell you to stop and' count one hundred whenever you were an- In this audience to- In their helplessness ei a? 1 Willie- But It dtnn't do any ist two classes of upon the strength o There nre They have coine, upon life. strength, the; iwenk