UN PRESS, VOLUME XX. FRANKLIN. N. C. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1905. .NUMBERS THE JIM BLUDSO. (Tj iht Late John Hay.) Wall, do; I rant tell you whir be Uvea, iifrap be don t live, you we; Lcaxiwayo, he rot oik . tut hnblt Itf linn' like vou and me. What Law y,u wen for the last three year 'li.at )u Luvn t hta.d tili.a tell I low jittttuy iHudno :uMtd to his cUccka . ihe iiLLt ot lue 1'iairU Belle: lie weren't no saint them enlueera la a!l piTiiy nuuh alike One vli'e tu .au hes undr-the-Ulll, And auoioor one hero, tn I 'Ike ; A keeilet nan In hi talk wan Jim, And an awkward hi: id fn a row, lint he never flunked and he neer lied 1 rtvkon he never Know id how. And this was all the rcllpion he bad Hi itiat his engine well ; Never be missed on Ihe river; To mlr.ci the idM't bell; And if ever I lie rmirle itelle took Are A thousand t linen he swore, He'd hold her mizzle aijln the bank 'i'iil the last soul gut ashore. All brats Iiuh their day on the Mlsslsslp. And ber day come at Inst The Movaslai v as a better bat, Itnt the lt.'lle hhe wouldn't be passed. And so ff eome tenrln' alone that night The oldest cra't on ihe lino With a tilRgiT Mjunt on her natety valve. And her fuinuee eruwwed. rosin ana pine. The Are -burnt out a sh'1 r tared the bar, And burnt a huh In ihe nlffbl. And qub-k as a tfanh she tu-ind. and made l or that wilier hank on the riyht. There ras runnln' and lursln', but Jim .teHetf out. Over all the infernal rear. "I'll hold her nurfle ai'ln Ihe hank 'Till the ht. fcnlmit's ashore." Thmurh the hot black brtalh of the burn In' lat Jim Itludsi.'H voire was heard. And they all had trust in his mmednesa. And knowid he would keeo hi- word. And, Hiire's you're horn, they all Rot oK Afon the smokestacks fell And Itludsos host went up atone In the smoke or the I'inlrle Itelle. He weren't no saint : but at Judgment I'd run my chance with Jim. Xonjrside some phm centlennn That wouldn't shook linnds with him He seen bin duty a dead sure thing And went fnr It ihar nnd then; And fhrlst ain't n going lo he too hard On a man that died for men. FROM Tf-iE-BAGK OF BEYOND. By Lady Napier of Magdala. The potatoes were rattling in the tin cans, goodly pywnidal piles of them, covered with rich brown earth agi inst frost, showing that there was n plenteous harvest of that precious tuber. The crofters paused In their labor of lifting them, shading their eyes from the long, level rays of the sun to gaze at the last tourist (or "swift") steamer of the season bearing Its load of South rons to the nearest railroad station "away south," with their haunches of Venison, their hordes of laie, greedy sdi sej Ifed it, Innovations, inventions quit of them Tor many months to come. The roads still echoed with the sound of their horses' hoofs as they trotted away, with the shrieks of their motors, one and all flying south, as though the Evil One were at their heels, the land plague-stricken. Such Is fashion! The weather was lovely, the color a dream and a glory; but it was the time for going south Now the needy laird might return to the home of his fathers, which bitter necessity forced him to let for each shooting season. Now he might come back and shelter In the storm-b;aten old house through the long northern winter and spring, pondering sadly as to whether he might dare to count on rojourning in the lands called by his name until the day came when he Fhould be carried out whither he would not, feet foremost. Shooting rents were going up; but who could count on them for what changes might be in store, what fads might be started by some new government. Inebriated with the exuberance of Its own gen erosity In dealing with and distributing the goods of others drunk with power, mad with furious desires to reverse the order of things as they are, no matter who went, so long as they stayed (In place and power)? "Well, well," said the laird to himself, "any way, today It is ours; the herring have been plentiful, and there Is no potato disease, and this dirty thing is to the good;" and he trust his shooting ten ant's check Into an envelope, addres sing it to his long-suffering bankers. So peace settled down oo the winged Isle once more. A crofter woman stood on the shore, watching her little lad stumbling over the slippery rocks on his way home from Ashing, a string of "cuddies" and rock-cod in his hand, his cocked Ash ing rod over his shoulder. Her six-year-old daughter clung to her skirts. The sun had sunk behind a heavy bank of cloud, and a moan came up from the sea. The tide had turned, and the wind was rising. The woman sighed, and gazed sea wards with tear-Ailed eyes, for her husband was away at a late Ashing, and his boat was old and crank. The threo walked slowly up to the little black house on the hill, one of the poorest-looking In the township, but warm and snug inside, and water tight withal, with its Ane dose thatch. The children In bed, the woman crouched over the peat Are, her thin hands locked together, her knitting unheeded on the Aoor, where a little cat flayed with the ball of yarn. The wind roared round the house. It had risen to a gale. ... At length her head fell forward on her breast, the tired body crying out - for Bleep and rest She awoke with a start and sought her bed but sleep for sook ber weary eyes. The gala waa at Its height. . Little Halrl moaned In her aleep, Kid ber mother rose and took the &lld Into ber own bed,- finding com fort In the contact of the soft, small body, and in listening to the regular breathing of childhood' heavy sleep. Wide-eyed she listened to the howl ing of the tempest. -The peats fell to gether; and, as a bright fiame sprang ap, he door suddenly opened, and her husband, clad In dripping oilskins, came Into the room and walked up to the fire place. .':' Something tied the wife's tongue, and also prevented her rising to greet him. He raised his arm and groped la the chimney for a moment, peering up it; then she heard him sigh, and he turned and looked at her, and she knew that he was dead, for as she looked he vanished. With earliest daylight the distracted wife betook herself to tne house of her sister, and told her what she had seen. The women never doubted, and wept together during that day, apd alas! and alas! the vision had warned too truly, and the dread message came In due course, telling the poor wife of the loss of her husband's boat and the drowning of Its crew. The heavy days crept on, and winter asserted itself. The poor must work though their hearts bo broken; and little Mairl was often left at home alone to watch the Iron pot while her mother carried creels of peat and potatoes on her thin shoulders, the cold rain beating on her bare head, the wind piercing through Ihe ragged skirt she had herself dyed black In respect for poor Donald's memory. "Mother." said the child one evening, In the familiar Gaelic, "there is a stone loose in the chimney. All day I was afraid would fall into the pot." "Where Ib It, ghaol (love)?" said her nioll'cr. Sho looked, and there was in deed a loose stone that she removed with her hand, and behind v.i stone a hole had been scooped out, and in the hole was a canvas bag containing twen ty pounds in gold and one-pound notes. ro(ir drowned Donald's savings! The widow burst into tears. "Would to God that he had got a better boat for hirnseli. sno sobbed, "Hut he never thougut of himself, not he; and now he Is pone and we ar alone." Chamber's Journal. NOT SO DEADLY. The Torpedo in Warfare Has Not Come up to Expectations. One thing which the present war in the Far East lias proved is that even the modern torpedo is not quite such a--dcati'y a n.d effectivo weapon as it was supposed to "be. The war began with a torpedo attack by the Japanese in tUe moHl favorable circumstances; that is lo say, a surprise swoop upon an unready enemy. The assailants at Port Arthur discharged more than 20 torpedoes and made only three hits. But the hits knocked two of the fin est Russian ships off the effective list, so that tile attack may be considered successful, nlthougii In theory not a Kussiau vessel should have been left afloat. Torpedo warfare is the most dashing, dangerous and ruthless of all the forms of modern fighting at sea. With a craft whose outside cost may bo put at $35,000, manned by a few dare-devil officers and men, It Is possible with luck to destroy utterly a ship on which $5,000,000 had been spent and carrying nearly 1000 souls. (mKT1trraSsaJMii5. craft Is totally removed and her people kil or drowned, yet her loss Is a trifle if her mission of sinking or completely incapacitating a battleship or cruiser has been successfully accomplished. The odds are obviously against a de stroyer which makes a swoop on a watchful and prepared enemy, risk ing everything and making a dash through a literal hall of shot In the hope that before annihilation one or both the torpedoes which are carried in tile tubes may be fired and tho object struck. Another way is to steal unobserved toward a war ship as the Japanese iid at Port Arthur and let one or two of the terrible weapons loose before retiring swiftly into the darkness, in any rase, with an effective hit the end is quirk and sure. The cruiser or battleship struck well below the wa ter line In that unarmored part which rends like paper heels over and sinks before anything can be done to save her or her people can escape. The lessons of the war so far, while show ing that the power of the torpedo has been somewhat overrated, still go to prove the formidable nature of this weapon when skilfully and courag eously handled, and incidentally show the wisdom of the change of construc tion In British destroyers. Of the dangers to our own shores, says an English writer, In case of war with a first-class continental power, particu larly from torpedo attacks, not a few writers and speakers have drawn lur id pictures. In the House of Lords recently Lord Ellenborough, himself an old naval officer, pictured a sur prise descent on our coasts. "A night attack," he said, "made by 50 or more torpedo craft might sink all our avail able battleships and destroy our navaj supremacy nt a single blow." Motor Ca Finest In England. A lawyer complains In The Pall Mall Gazette of London against the absurd local variability of penalties for excessive speed. What costs an offender 10 pounds In pne district Is only 40 shillings' worth in another; and a schedule shows that the aver age rate varies from seven pounds in Kingston, Southampton and Cullomp ton (Devon) to 30 shillings In Gull fcrd and Epsom. It is ridiculous and unfair, undoubtedly, but we do not quite see how It Is to be obviated. Even judges of the high court vary as to the penal tic j they Inflict for the same offenses and country benches naturally vary tn accordance with local feeling. No cast Iron rule is possible, since the fine must obvious ly depend on the circumstances of the particular case. If the speed limit is retained, probably general average will work Itself out in time. Mean while a motorist can only keep on the safe side by being careful not . to transgress anywhere. A. Profitable 8turgeon. The prize cow sturgeon of the sea son was landed at Chester on Tues day by Ikle Rothwell and a fellow fisherman. When drawn the big fish yielded 71 pounds of roe, which was sold at 65 cents a pound, netting the fishermen $46.80. The carcass, after the roe was drawn, weighed 847 pounds, which was sold at 4 1-3 cents a pound, netting fll.lt, the entire sum real ized tor roe and stargeon being $57.82. ,,V - ". .; :: - W-'-vV-; From the money standpoint Fish erman Rothwell and bis companion ran claim that -they have made the biggest catch of the season. Ches ter Indenendent, Mntt'nn Must Supervise The Corporations By President Theodore Roosevelt (Speech n.de WANT to say a word as to governmental policy In which 1 feel that this whole country ought to take a great interest, and which is Itself but part of a general policy into which I think our government must go. I have spoken of the policy of extending the powers of the Interstate Conlmeice Com mission and of giving them particularly the power to fix raleB and to have the rates that they Ax go into effect prac tically at once. As I say that represents in my mind part of what should be the general policy of this country. The policy of giving not to the state, but to the national government an Increased supervisory and regulatory power over corporations Is the flrst step and to my mind the most important step. In the days of the fathers of the old among you the highways of commerce for civilized nations were what they had always been; that Is, waterways and roads. Therefore they were open to all who chose to travel upon them. Within the last two generations wo have seen systems grow up and now the typical highway of commerce Is the railroad. Compared to the railroad, the ordinary road for wheeled vehi cles and the waterways, whether natural or artificial, have lost all their im portance. Here in Colorado, for Instance. It Is the railroads which are the only high ways that yen need take into account In dealing with the question of com merce in the state or outside of the state. Therefore, under this changed sys tem we see highways of commerce grow up. each of which Is controlled by a single corporation or individual; sometimes several of them being controlled in combination by corporations, or by a few individuals. When such is the case, In my judgment. It Is absolutely necessary that the nation, for the state cannot possibly do It, should assume a supervisory and regulatory function over the great corporations which practically control the highways of com merce. As with everything else mu idane, when you get that supervisory and reg ulatory power on behalf of the nation you will not have cured all the evils that existed, and you will not equal the expectations of the amiable but lll regu lated cnthuslust who thinks that you will hive cured all those evils. A meas ure of good will come. Some good will be done, some Injustice will have been prevented, but we shall bo a long way from the mlllenium. Get that fact clear In your mind, or you will be laying up for yourselves a storo of Incalculable disappointment In the future. That Is the flrst thing. Now the second step: When you give a nation that power, remember that barm and not good will come from the giving unless you give It with tho firm determination not only to get justice for yourselves, but to -do justice to others; that you will be as Jealous to do justice to the railroads as to exact justice from thom. We cannot afford In any shape or way in this country to entourage a feeling which would do injustice to a man of property, and more thnn'Wr would submit to injustice from a n an of property. Whether the man owns the biggest railroad or the greatest outside cor poration In the laud or whether he makes each day's bread by the sweat of that day's toll, he is entitled lo justice and fail dealing, no more and no less. "To-Day:" A Editor of the News QRN between twoJjCM eWling ori breath; fjiTTiilrffl rtfTTomorrow without ever r-'nr -" " '1 , J j " the swift ness of a weaver's shuttle; dropping one by one Into the ocean of eternity, as precious pearls might slip from a silken cot J into some deep lake; as unfaltering in Its flight as is the motion of the earth on its axis, and ever bearing our l'.fe with it from one eternity to another, there is nothing more real, nothing more elusive thai that period of time which we call "to day." Our life for a day Is but an epllonie of a lifetime. We wake In the morn ing with no knowledge of where our souls have been wandering while our senses slept; with fresh vigor and Interest we enter upon the occupations and Interests of our daily work, find fulfill our duties with a vigor which be gins somewhul to fail as the evening shadows lengthen. As darkness deep ens, the freshness and strength which marked ti.e early hours of the day give place to weariness, and at last we are glad to lay aside our work and cares nnd to surrender ourselves to the sleep which so closely resembles death, even though we have no certainty that we shall ever wake to Bee the light of an other day. Each day has Its own allotted task, and It is seldom more than we have the strength to perform. It is only when we go beyond that which was given us for the day and force the tired mind and body to go on and on doing what might well be left till the morrow; when we are not content to bear the evils of the day, but harass our souls by anticipating those the future may bring; when we are not satisfied with the "dally bread" for which one wiser than we taught us to pray, but strive to "lay up much goods for many years;" when the pleasures that were given us to enjoy in moderation degenerate into wild excesses, that nature takes revenge for the neglect of her laws, and sanitari ums and lunatic asylums are Ailed with victims of ill-regulated lives. Judges Always Fail Heredity and Environment Make Difference. By Justice David J. Brewer. HE highest thought of the judicial life Is Justice. That Is Its ultimate purpose. But what Is Justice? As between indi viduals it is securing to each the exact measure of his rights and taking from each the exact amount of his obligations. In other words, it establishes a perfect balance between e' - j act and its result to the actor. Hence the frequent picture of the blind goddess. Law in the moral world is as imperative as law in the T ih: material. The inexorable certainty which appertains to the latter is an attribute of the former. The one Is the mathematics of matter; the other the mathematics of the spirit The scientist Is never satisfied until in all the phenomena of matter he has disclosed that certainty. The judge longs to discover It In all actions to which the moral test Is ap plicable. But here we come to the parting of the ways. The student ol tat ter may succeed; the judge will always fall. There are two geat forces creating and molding our characters heredity and environment Two men are brought to the bar of criminal justice. In the eye of the law they stand alike, and yet In the essential elements of char acter, those elements that enter Into and determine the question and quantity of moral guilt, they may be as wide apart as the poles. Through past generations forces beyond human ken have been operating to give form and shape to their characters. They are unlike because they come of separate ancestry, and different influences have from remote time been at work fashioning them into being. Those two men stand at the bar ot human Justice on the same plane, and tor the concrete fact proved against them suffer the same punishment; but in the eye of higher wisdom there is a world-wide difference between their guilt. -The extent of that difference is something which no human knowledge can de termine. In some other time and place the failures of justice on earth will be rectified. Infinite wisdom will there search the past of every life, measure with exactness the influences ow heredity snd environment, and out of the full ness of that knowledge correct the errors which we are powerless to prevent The Inevitable failure of Justice in this life is an assurance of a life to come. . . . Peculiar Case of Smuggling. A smuggling case .which is proba bly unique, even in the strange an nals ot contraband, has just been be fore the custom court ot Marseilles. On board the French steamer Tour sine there was found a large quantity ot opium smuggled, not by any in dividual in particular, but by the wholo ship's company, and the strange spectacle was witnessed of the heavy tin of S pftunds being1 levied on all, every man In the vessel being mulcted in his proportion, assessed according to wages. ,. 4 4 at Denver.) Rha - Taw a Real Absent-mindedness. " "As Tor absent-minded men," said the youth with red hair, who had just been reading a 'live Topic' about one "the best sample I ever saw was a Kan who was lighting his clgarxon the platform of a car. He had a sliver match safe, When the cigar was lit he threw away thu matchbox and carefully folded op the wax and put It in his pocket" New York dun. Missouri produces' 14 per cent of all the sine and DO per cent of all the nickel mined in the United States. THE PULP1T. AN ELCQIJENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE RtV. F. E. TAYLOR. Knhjrcli Clirltl an I Ihe Multitude. Brooklyn, N. Y. Sunday morning, In the Greene Avenue Baptist Church, tho Iter. Frederick E. Taylor preached on "Christ and the Multitude." The text was from Matthew, lx:3.-38: "And Jrsus went about all the cities and the villages," etc. Mr. Taylor said: Kor nearly two years Jesus bad min gled with the people of Palestine. He had visited their towns ami villages, had seen life in all its different phases, and had been a source of blessing to all who sought His favor. He had wit nessed the hollow mockery which passed for rcllgiou among the Phari sees nhd had burned with indignation as He saw the people receiving stones Instead of bread from those whose duty It was to feed their souls. The whole nation had been astonished by His miracles, and nfter a year of com parative obscurity. He- had entered upon one of popular favor. His popu larity was now at Its height, and thou sands were found eagerly listening to the words of authority with which He spake. Notwithstanding His great popularity a careful observer would hare noticed that instead of a look of triumph. Ills face Indicated tender con cern for the great multitudes which were continually seeking Him. He was beginning to realize more snd more the awful need of the people, and His spirit was stirred within Him as He saw the possibilities for good r.moiig those who flocked to hear His words of life and pence. Living in a great city, surrounded by thousands of men and women who are careless nnd Indifferent nbout their earthly welfare, we are constantly fac ing the problem of how to reach and help those for whom Christ died. What was the attitude of Christ to ward those unsaved masses? How did He seek to solve the problem of reach ing them? Is there any way of our helping the people of our day and gen eration? These are some of the ques tions which wc shall attempt to an swer. I believe that when the church of God follows the fxample of the Master in His treatment ot the masses, the masses will be reached nnd saved. In the first place. I notice that Jesus was tilled with compassion for them. "When Hp saw the multitudes He was moved witli compassion for them be cause they were distressed and scat tered as sheep not having a shepherd." Compassion is the keyword to the life of Jesus Christ. Wc find the evangel ists reporting instances of His compas sion again and ngaln. When a leper comes seeking health, Jesus, i moved with compassion, puts forth FLU. hand and with a touch .rstores hV trdstrength and vigor. jde, slon nnd imli to supply their need, it tbe compassion of Jesus that led the healing of the two blind men tear Jericho, and It was this same feei ng that prompted the resurrection of lut! nmutv a nun ill ahiii. Not only in His nets of kindness, but in all His teaching we find that the spirit of compassion Is dominant. Tha best known parables uttered by the Saviour are the parable of the Good Samaritan nnd the parable of the Prod igal Son, and compassion is tbe key word .n both. The compassion of a Samaritan Irads to the saving of nn en?my, nnd It was this same spirit on the part of the father which made the home wining so sweet to the Prodigal. This Is the need of the disciples of Christ to-day. The multitudes are all about us. They are careless, Indiffer ent, sinful; but only because they do not know the love of Christ. Deep down in their lives there is n hunger for something better, nnd in mnny cases men nre groping nfter light on the pathway of life. The church can ond should meet the need, but only a realization of the need nnd an Infilling of the spirit of Christ to meet it will solve the problem. If the great heart of the Master was moved with compassion for tbe multi tudes of His day, what would He think nay, what does He think when He sees the vast multitudes in our grent city who are going about as sheep without a shepherd? I believe that if we are true disciples of our Lord we will feel as He felt, and instead of Ig-j norlng or condemning those who know' not Christ, we will leave no stone un turned until they come to know Him, whom to know Is eternal life. In tbe second place, I notice that Jesus saw a harvest ready for the reaper. He said, "The harvest truly Is plenteous." He saw the possibilities among those who flocked around Him, and knew that among them there were many who could easily be led Into the i. ... p.in paths of righteousness. And this wns characteristic of Christ. It Is true that much ot Ills time was spent in sowing the good seed of the kingdom, but It Is also true that Ho was constantly find ing opportunities to reap rich harvests of souls wherever He went. He goes to the seaside and finds a harvest among the fishermen. He stops at a well side and reaps tbe first fruits of a splendid revival among the despised Samaritans. At the seat of custom He finds one who is to be an apostle and write down tbe good news for the Hebrew people. Wherever He went Jesus always found the fields white and ready for the reaper. And, brethren, I belleve'ibat those who pos sess the spirit o' tbe Master will al ways find abundant opportunities foi rich harvests ot souls. On one of these occasions Jesus said to His disciples, "Say not ye there sre yet four months snd then cometh har vest? Behold, I say unto you, lift up your eye and look on tbe fields, for they, are white already to harvest," The trouble with us Is unbelief in tbe possibility of a harvest here and now. Some time In the dim future we expect to reap, but the years pass on snd tbe conditions grow less and less hope ful nnd golden opportunities are lost forever. But I notice In the third place that Jesus not only saw a great need, Jiut He told His disciples bow it could be met "The harvest truly is plenteous,"' said He, "but the laborers are few." Surely uo one ever fei the need of laborers more than Jesus Christ -Face to face with thousands who yearned to know tbe way of life, and limited by His humanity, to that It was only possible to deal with a very few of those who cauie to Him, He felt the need Of laborers ss uo other ever did. It Is true that He had a band of chosen disciples to carry on tbe work that He began, but at this time they could not be trusted to do very much, ss tbey themselves only knew the truth Imperfectly.'-, Every true servant of flort has felt his bfiirt sink within luliu more thnu once, as, looUIng out over the multi tudes, he hasWen the grent need tot men unit woiicn, who, counting their lives not dear Vuto themselves, would lay them down nt the Master's feet to be spent In loyal service for (hose who knew Him not. It Is not necessary tn discuss tbe need for laborers; this Is so apparent that it iinpils no discus sion. What we need to-day Is to know the remedy and then appl; It to the disease. More than one earnest minister of the Gospel bus presented the needs ot bis field, and then sup posed that the people would flock to his support, only to be sadly disap pointed. No, the Muster's way is the best way. He did not tell the disciples to go out nnd exhort the people to be come laborers for Hlin: He sent them to the owner of the vineyard with n request that he send forth laborers into his harvest; "Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that He send forth laborers Into His harvest." Prayer is the divine method, nnd I be lieve that more workmen have gone forth In response to definite, earnest petition offered by men nud women who have felt the need for laborers than by the use of any oilier method. Let the members of tiie church begin to feel tho multitudes without, let them begin to piny that the people may be saved, let them ask the Lord of tbe harvest to send forlli laborers and hundred" of those who nre to-day with in tbe. very li:v!ov of our churches will be led Into the way of life. And now. lit conclusion, may I sny that those who nre led to pray for the multitude are usually led Into a larger service on their behalf. Thirty years ago, says a recent writer In n religious paper, the re?ion about London docks contained as large u population ns any district In Africa. Back of the huge warehonses were Innumerable courts and alleys filjed with fog and dirt, and every horror of sight nnd sound and smell. It was a rendezvous for the lowest types of humanity. The wealthy and Infltienllal classes In this settle ment were the rumseliers and gam blers. Children were born nud grew to middle age In these precincts who never heard the iininc of Jesus except In nn oath. Thirty thousand souls were Included in one parish here, but the clergyman never ventured out of the church to teach. A young man named Charles Lewder, belonging to an old English family, happened to pnss through the rtistriet just before leaving Oxford. His classmates were goini; Into politics, or the army, or the bar, full of ambition and hope, to make n name in the world; but Lowder heard, as be said, "a cry of mingled agony, suffering, laughter and blasphemy coming from those depths, that rang In his ears go where he would." On his knees before his Maker he asked that help might be sent to those who were dying for the Water of Life. God gra. eioiisly led him to see that the man who felt the need the most would be tne one who could do the most for the people, nnd lie gave up nil plans for bis life and went to labor among those for whom he had prayed. He took n bouse in tbe lowest slums nud Jyed In it. He preached every day In eets, mid for months was peltefl bats, shot at and driven back He bad Hiifortniuiately rlilch to reaO (Kun: be was I "Xnw. TSMWrTnn, speaker; u .... W but he was hold, pStlent and In earnest. Even the worst ruffian learned to re spect the tall thin curate, whom he saw stopping the worst street fights, nursing the victim of Asiatic cholera snd facing mobs bent on taking bis life. Mr. Lowder lived in London docks twenty-three years. Night schools wer opened. Industrial schools and a refuge for drunkards, discharged prisoners and fallen women. A large church was built and several mission chapels. His chlpf assistants In the work were the men ntid women whom he had rescued from, the paths that abut on hell. A visitor said that tbe church differed froiri others In that "all were In such (teiilly earnest." Mr. Lowder broke dolvn under his work nnd died In n vll Uhf in the Tyrol whither he had gone fftf n rest. lie was brought back to the, docks where he had worked so long. Across the bridge where he had once been chased by a mob bent on taking bis life, his body was reverently carried while the police were obliged to krep back the crowd of sohblng peo ple who pressed forward to get a glimpse of "Father" Lowder. as they called him. Nn such funeral, says London papr, has ever been seen in England. Tb? whole population of East London turned out. stopping work for that day; the special trains run to Chlselhurst were filled, nnd thousands followed on foot. miserable men nud women whom he had lifted up from barbarism to life nnd hope. Charles Lowder bad seen th? multi tude, the compassion of Christ had Ailed his heart, his prayer had been answered, and if he could have look.ed river ihe fiattlements of Ileavrn that day he would have realized that his labor had not been In vain In tha Lord. Jot. True Chrlstlnn Joy Is glorified joy, says the Apostle Paul. That Is, It has the glory of Heaven sinning upon n, filling, suffusing, transfiguring It, In tensifying it. In other words, there is no other Joy anything like so rich, so deep, so full, so blessed ns the joy which comes with religion, which springs out of faith. "Believing wo rejoice." It is a Joy, too, tiint rises above all sorrow and trouble. Suffering saints have often been the most Joyful. "We rejoice, though now for a season, if need be, we nre in heaviness." "As sorrowful, yet always rejoicing." It Is our duty to be Joyful and our privilege to sprend Joy among others. It is also nn effective means of qpm mending the religion of Christ to oth ers. , Take joy home, And make plsce in thy heart for her; And give -her time to grow, and cherub her; Then she will come and sing to thee. -(). B. V. Hnllock. D. D. Latest PUraeT "The latest purse Is appropriately called the money spinner. It Is made ot gold mesh formed exactly like a Spider's web with a huge Jeweled spider in tbe center. On the hand that holds the. bag la shown one ot the smartest suede gloves at the mo ment, finished with a bracelet of black and white silk around the wrist 6p Reaoedlng the Pasture. Tr a permanent pasture timothy, redtop, orchard grass and white clover are generally used, as these grasses seem to hold out as well as sny. Other kinds may be added, if preferred, but the three mentioned should never bo omitted. The fall or early spring is an excellent time for reseeding the pastures, but In so doing the farmer should use. clean seod, use it plenti fully and scratch it In If possible. One of the best plans to assist a pasture Is to sow white clover seed on the bare nlaces, as it will make growth where ome seeds will fall. 8owlng Rape In Corn. Farmers, where corn Is grown as a pi.aclpal crop, are. frequently advised to combine sheep or pigs In their op erations. The advice usually tendered Is to pop In some catch crop like rye as soon as the land Is clear of the corn crop, and wherever tho plan has been tried it has been very successful. Mr. F. M. Webster of New York State, who is an ardent advocate of cultivat ed pasturage, has been trying to save time by sowing rape broadcast among the growing maize Just before horse hoeing it for the last time. The rape thus sown docs well, and by tho time the grain is harvester there Is a lino Trimming. Trees should have the branches shortened In when planted. "I hate to cut the branches back," exclaims :h well-meaning planter, "ft spoils the looks of the trees." So It does tempor arily; but at the end of the season the trimmed trees will have made twice the growth of those untrimmcd. It is of the utmost importance that each kind of tree should be trimmed In accordance with its needs. With apple trees, shorten back three-fourths of the growth of the side branches. Leave a dominant center so that the next set of branches will be at least a foot above the present set of branches. Cherries should be shorten ed as to the side branches to threo strong buds. Peach trees should have the branches shortened to one bud at the base of the branch and the trunk of the peach tree, no matter if five or six feet In height they should he short ened to 30 or even 24 inches. Rural World. Drawing Buttermilk and Washing. When the granules are of the right size, and If salt In the buttermilk is not objectionable, the addition of this will make It draw better, but I have seldom been troubled that way and there 1b no need of losing a single granule as a strainer, or better, a hair sieve should be used In drawing. When this is done, about the same amount of water from 50 to 55 degrees should replace the buttermilk (If the granules seem very soft 45 degrees may be allowed); the churn should be turned a few times. Unless It Is de sired to harden the granules Ihe water should be drawn at once, it is a big mistake to leave the butter to soak In water for hours. As a rule, two rinsings should be enough and indeed some of the finest butler is made with out rinsing at all, relying on tho work ing to remove ue buttermilk. The Danes used to do this, but now they rinse the granules by dipping them from the buttermilk with a hair sieve and then removing this gently In a tub of cold water, thus washing the but ter only once and only for a minute or so. As in most other matters, the best road lies in the middle courso. J. H. Monrad. New York. Feeding Silage. In his recent elaborate enquiries In to the cattle feeding problems, Prof. Mumford of the Illinois agricultural college station reports in circular 'J2 on the subject, the experience of an old feeder In Henry county (hat sti.:-.', from which we take the following: "I am now fattening my fourth car of beef using silage as one feed per day and with such satisfactory results that I expect to continue its use as long as I am In the cattle feeding business. As to the method ot feeding, we feed one-half bushel of silage per head in the morning and scatter five pounds of bran per head over It and stir It all up together; then let the cat tle Into the shed to the feed. ThcB they all have an equal chance to get their share. At noon we feed a hun dred hills of shock corn per car of 20 head, and at night a peck of ear corn per head, broken In the boxes, aiming to feed only so much at any one time as the rrtttle will eat up cloai before they, leave the racks and boxes. The amounts of shock corn and ear corn are varied some so as to give the cat tle all they will eat up clean. I find that cattle fed on silage as a part of the ration, while not ready tor the market quite as soon as those fed a straight corn ration, make mora growth per month during the fattening period than when fed clear corn as Is the general practice In this country." This feeder .buys In the tall .steers weighing 800 to 900 pounds, feeds them six to nine months, and reports aver age gains of 60 pounds per month. He omits silage from the ration during tbe last month of feeding. His cattle graded "choice" when fat, selling from 40 to SO cents per hundred weight be low the "top" of the market Indiana Hurmer. ' . Separating Oeam. The temperature of the milk when separated ought to be uniform. If there Is a variation of tea or more de grees when the milk is run through the separator at different times the richness of the cream will vary with the temperature. In soma cases, owing to some delay, (he separator may not be started so soon after milking as la others; the, milk then tools ol be low the proper separating temperature," and unless due allowance Is made for this loss of fat? will occur. H The sneed at which the ienaritor Is turned has considerable Influence on the thoroughness ot separation, and upon tho texture of the cream. If at any time the work is hurried, and more milk is run through the machine in a given time than Is usual, the qual ity of the croam will be changed. The . : amount of sklmmilk or water run . through the machine whon the sep arator is about finished, will Influence . the quality of the cream, depending upon whether the machine is flushed out with a little or a large quantity , of water or milk. After a person be comes aware of the effect of each OlN these things upon the texture of tbe 7 cream, he can, If he likes, run the ; separator each time, so that his cream will bo fairly uniform. Sometimes the separator Is started as soon as milk ing Is commenced. This is all right If matters are so arranged that the machine Is running at full capacity all the time, but when the supply runs out, and the machine has to be 5 -stopped, or to run empty until a fur ; ther lot of milk Is brought, then wt got a cream that Is not uniform In composition. The chief points In running a sep arator so as to obtain uniform reaults are to watch the speed at which tho machine Is run, the temperature ot ' the milk, and the amount of milk ; skimmed per hour. The American Cultivator. Sound Clover Hay. J pivfer lo-cniOn t for the reason that clover has little chance to cure before falls and will not. be affected if it were partly cured. The next day, after the dew is off, go over your clover, giving It a good turning, either by hand or by a ted der, and if the clover is heavy it will be well to give two turnings or ted- dings. By this time tho clover will be gin to show signs of being partly cured, and still it isn't dry enough to break off the leaves, heads and smaller stems which are the best parts ol the hay. Then start the rake and rake it into medium-sized windrows. I prefer to do my raking In the mid dle of the afternoon and avoid raking in the evenings. Next day, If you are not sure the day is going to be such as to finish curing the clover In the windrow, take your fork and slightly nTwtMnonii- iras"" ter ejjAWTWapart JaVihya-VuTy 1 :-un have a better chance to shine on 1 the clover and the breezes to pass " through which is a great aid in cur ing hay. After the dew is off, lift the clover off the ground and Invert It Then after dinner, if It is well cured, begin to draw In and mow away. A good way to test (his matter Is to take some stalks and twist thenf together and if they show no signs of ' moisture generally your clover is all right. If the day has been a bad one " 1 would prefer to leave it a day longer by bunching it up. I-ast year I spoiled what would have been choice hay simply by draw ing it in when it was too full of mois- -ture. Tho weather was threatening, and I did not rare to leave It in the field over Sunday, so drew it In; but next time I have hay under similar cir cumstances 1 shall bunch'lt together and take my chances with the rain and last year It didn't rain after all The stock eat it and seem to liko It ' as a change, but it is not choice hay. C. F. B., in tho Boston Cultivator. A Few Poultry Notes. When alralfa cannot be had, give Ihe chicks a chance at red clover. - Poultry raising is now the fad lc Florida, where the Industry has long been neglected. Quarreling hens should be separ- -ated, as a hen (hat Is worried will not" do her best at laying. Give the bens and young chicks a chance for an occasional dust bath, which will drive away lice. An ugly rooster should be disposed of. He is as dangerous in tho flock as when running at large. When killing fowls, let the blood drip into a pail of bran, as the mix ture makes a splendid food. Grit, oyster shells or a baked mix ture of salt and charcoal should al- -waya be available for the hens. It will soon be time to dispose ot tho old hens, which should be done along in the summer when they quit laying. .... ; ,,.:r.. - A poultry raiser giyM-ttartlloivtngeV-, combination for morning feed for lay ing hens: Mash of bran and dry cut alfalfa, equal parts, 5 percent meat and blood meal, same amount ot crushed charcoal, the whole Seasoned with salt. The Oldest Indian. 8wltchley Lowery, a full-blooded Cherokee, perhaps the oldest Indian in the' five nations, died recently, at his home, on Lowery Prairie, 16 miles north from Tahlequah, says the Tahle quah (I. T.) Leader. He was one of the original emig rants from the southeastern states, but his full sojourn in the west Is not exactly known. He has probably been here 100 years. : Several generations have sprung from- htm, who lived In different parts of the nation, and are and have been good citizens. Mr. Lowery had a good name among his neighbors, and everywhere he was known, having the respect and confidence of all. Mlsplaced. The tourist left the train at every station and went ahead to the bag gage car to ask It his trunk was safe. ' "Are you. quite sure," he asked the baggage officer tor the sixth time, "that my trunk Is safe?" "Begorra, I wish tbe Ird had mada ye an elephant, instead of an ass," was the exasperated reply, "an' then you'd always have your trunk la front of you," Harper's Weekly.