The Sioux County OURNAL VOLUME VII. HAKKLSOX, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, AUG. 15, 1895. NUMBER 49. When My Whip Comes In. Somewhere, out on the blue seas sailing, Where the wind dance and spin; Beyond the reach of iny eager hailing, Over the bi-eskent' din; Out where the dark stonii-cloud are lift ing. Out where tin- blinding fun in drifting. Out where tin- treacherous sand is shift ing. My ship in coming In. Oh, I have watched till my eyes wure aching, ray after Weary ilny; Oh, I have hoped till my heart was break ing. While the Ion nights ebbed away; C'ouhl I but know when- the waved had, toSSd her, Coiihl f but know what florins had crossed her. Could I 1'iit know where the winds had lost her, - Out iu the twilight gray! . lint though the storms hi r course have altered, Surely the irt nhe'11 win. Never my faith in my ship 1mm faltered, I know she in coming in. For through . the resiles ways of her roa in ing, Throned the mini rush of the wild waves foaming Through the while crest of the billtiwt combing, My ship is eomiiiK in. Breasting the tides where the gulls arc flying, Swiftly she's coming In: Shallow ntid deep and rocks defying, Itravely sire's coming in; Precious the love she will bring to bless me. Snowy th arum she will bring to caress ni, ' - In the proud purple of king she will dress me. My hIi i p that is coming In. White in the sunshine her sails will be glen mini;, See, where my ship cornea In; At masthead and peak her colors stream- in if. , 1'roudly she's nailing in; Love, how and joy on her decks are rhcering. Munlc will welcome her glad nppearing. And my heart will sing at her stately Hearing, When my ship conies in. Hubert J. Burdctte. The Blush Kohc, Love went roaming one summer day, Within a garden he chose to stray. T'nder a swaying rose tree near, A maiden slept aud knew no fear. The blossoms above were not more white Than her fair bosom nuked quite To love's rapt Raw; one dimpled arm Pillowed her head, and the mystic charm That Innocence knows gave to her fai-c . A beauty greater than Iivc can trace. "Love's place is here," and bending low, Ho kissed her fair form, white as snow, A blush suffusing cheek and brow. Steals swiftly over the maiden now, ( And a feeling never known before Kilters her young heart's inmost core. Innocence gazes in mute alarm. And steals away while the blush is warm. "This blush is mine not Iove's," she said. Another moment and she had fled. Passing, she touched the roses near; They felt the power of her sweet fear. And the blush she carried away that hour Fell on them with a secret power. And the buds that oped to the air that . night Were blushing red in the morning light, Chicago Times-Herald. Lore's Wisdom. Love nerer sleeps when sorrow wakes, And joy the dear one' side forsakes; As swift as thought his path he takes Where dangers threat ami lower. Ills loyal lips forbear the boast, Yet ere the chime that needs him most Love knows the hour. ' Lot hath no lack of skill to Bud Tha wound that needs hi watchful mind; And soft hi touch as in the wind ' That stirs the spider' lace. What though the tight be dusk and dim Dream not the hurt forgot by him; lxive know tha placa. . Lot hath no ueed of treasured lore Nor mystic spell from day of yore To teach hi band the balm to pour Upon an aching heart; Thar la do paag tkat grief ran fed Bat wltk tender grace to bal Lev knows the art. ! Hama4 Mlntura Pack, In Boston Trao- script TALM AGE'S SERMON. TALKS OF THE EYE'S MARVEL OUS CONSTRUCTION. lie Also Bliows How Mutli Mare Overwhelming Is the Inleribubly Searching; Ko of God-Tbe KIm of the Resurrection fight Kextored. Wonder of tha Kye. i Bev. Dr. Tannage, who is still absent on bis summer preaching tour in the West aud Southwest, prepared fur lust Sunday a sermou on "The All Seeing." the text seleeted being Psalui xciv.. (J, "He that formed the eye, Bnall he not see?" The imperial organ of the human sys tem is the eye. All up aud down' the Bible God honors it, extruls it, illustrates It, or arranges it, five hundred and thirty-four times it is men tinned in the liible. Omnipresence-"! he eyes of the Ixird are in every place." Ih 'me' f.ire 'as the apple of the eye." The clouds "the eyelids 'of the morning' IrreTer ence "the . eye that jnocketb at. i its father.',' .Pride "Oh, how lofty are their eyes!" inattention "the foul's oje in the ends' of the earth." Divine inspection- 'wheels full of eyes." Suddenness -Mn the "twinkling of an -eye at the last triHnp." OKvetic 'sermon "the light of the 'bod.vv In tha eye." . This- morning's tmt "He that united the eye, shall he not sec?" The surgeons, the doctors, the anatomists and tho physiologists under stand much of the glories of the two great Mgnrs ftf the human face, but the vast multitudes go on from cradle to grave without any appreciation of the two great masterpieces. of the Lord God Almighty. If God hud lacked anything of infinite wisdom, he would have failed in creating the human eve. We wander through the earth trying to see wonderful tights, but the most wonderful sight that we ever see Is Uot so wonderful, as the instrument through which we see it. It hah been a strauge thing to me for forty years that some scientist, with enough eliMjuc'uee ami magnetism, did not go through the country with illus trated lectures on canvas thirty i-et so.ua ro to startle and thrill und overwhelm Christendom with the marvels of the hu man eye. We want the eye taken from nil its technicalities and some one who shall lay aside all talk about the ptery goinaxillary fissure, and the sclerotica, and the chinsma of the optic nerve, and in common parlance, which you and I and everybody can understand, present the subject. We have learned men who have been telling us what our origin is and what we were. Oh! if some one should come forth-from the dissecting table and from the classroom of the university and take the platform, and asking the help of the Creator demonstrate the wonders of what we are! The Surpassing Human Eye, If I refer to the physiological facts sug gested by the former part of my text, it is only to bring out in a plainer way tho theological lessons of the latter part of my text, "He that formed the eye, shall he not see?" I suppose my text referred to the human eye, since it excels all others in slructure ami in adaptation. The eyes of fish and reptiles and moles and bats are very simple things, because they have not much to do. There are insects with a hundred eyes, but the hundred eyes have less faculty than the human eyes. The black beetle swimming the summer pond has two eyes under water and two eyes above the water, but the four iusertile are not equal to the two. human. Mail, placed at the head of all living creatures, must have supreme equipment, while the blind fish in the Mammoth cave of Ken tucky have only an undeveloped organ of sight, an apology for the eye, which, if through some crevice of the mountain they should get into the sunlight, might be developed into positive eyesight. In the first chapt t of Genesis we find that God, without any consultation, created the light, created the trees, created the fish, created the fowl, but when he was about to make man he called a convention of divinity, as though to imply that all the powers of Godhead were to be enlisted in the Achievement'.' "Let us tnitke num." Put a whole ton of emphasis oh that word "us." "Ift us make man." And if God called a convention of divinity to create man 1 think the two grent questions in that conference were how to create a soul and how to mi'ke an appropriate window fur that emperor to look out of. See how God honored the eye before he created it. He cried, until chaos was Ir radiated with the utterance, "lift there be light!" Jn other words, before he Intro ducid mun Into this teinplc of the world he illuminated it, prepared it for the eye-, sight. And so, after the last human eye has been destroyed In the final demolition of the world, stars are to fall, and the sun is to cense its shining, and the moon is to turn Into blood. In other words, after the human eyes are no more to be profited by their shining, the chandeliers of heaven are to be turned out. God, to educate and to bless and to help the human eye, set in the mantel of heaven two lamps a gold lamp and a silver lamp the one for the day and the other for the night. To show how God honors the -ye, look at the two halls built for the residence of the eyes, seven hone making the wall for each eye, I he seven bones curiously wrought to gether. Kingly pnlace of Ivory Is consid ered rich, but the halls for the1 residence of the human eye are richer by so much as human bone Is more sacred than elephan tine tusks. See how God honored the eyes when he made a roof for them, so thnt the sweat of toil should not smart them and the rain dashing against the forehead sluudd not drip into them, the eyebrows not bending over the eye, but reaching to the right and to the left, so that the rain and the sweat should be compelled to drop umji the check, Instead of falling Into this divinely protected human eyesight, See how Clod honored the eye In the fact presented by anatomists and physiologist that there are 800 contrivance in every eye. For window asTuttrrs, tha eyelid opening and dosing 80,000 times a day. Tha eyelash so constructed that they bars their, saJactioa as to what shall b admitted, sarins to the 4ast, "Stay out," and saying to the' light, "Come in." I'or 1 inside curtains the iris, or pupil of the. eye, according as the light Is greater or less, contractinif or dilating. The eye of the owl js blind in the day time, the eyes of souicieaitire are blind : at night, but the human eye, so.inarvelous ly constructed, can tsee both by day aud by nfght. Many of he other creatures of God tan move' the eye only from side t side, but the 'hunian eye, so miSrreloifsIy constructed, has one timscls to iift the eye j and another muscle tv.lywiTU eye, and auotJier luine le to ryll it to the right, and another niucfu to rolf it to the left, and another musvle pifssing through' a pulley trt turn it round and nemd an elaborate 1 gearing of six muscles as perfect aw God could make tuetu. Tlnre also is the retina, gathering the raysof light and passing tlie visual impression along the , optic nerve, ; about the thickness of the lamp wick passing the visual impression on to the senorinm and on into the soul. What a deticafe- lens, what an exquisite screen, what soft cushions, iwbat wonderful chem istry of the Luiuau eye! The eye washed , by a slow stream of moisture whether we sleep or wake, rolling imperceptibly over the pebble of the eye rfnd emptying into a bonc of the nostril." A'rorttrlvance so won- ' ilcrful that it can see the sun '.fc.lKKl.000 inih-s away and the point of. a piu. Tele scope and microscope in the same contriv ance.,.' The astronomer swings and move this way and that and adjusts and read justs the telescope until he gets it to the right focus. ' The micros opist moves this way 11111I that and adjusts and readjusts the magnifying glass until it is prepared ; to do its work, but the huniau eye, with out a touch, beholds the star und the smallest insect. The traveler among the Alps with one glance takes in Mount lane and the face of his watch to see whether he has time to climb it. The Tear Gland, Oh, this wonderful camera obscura which you and I carry alsiut with os, so to-day we take in our friends, so from the top of Mount Washington we can take In Xew Knglnnd, so at night we can sweep into our vision the constellations from horizon to horizon. So delicate, so semi infinite, and yet the light coining H."i,lMjO, (MXI of miles at the rate of 200,000 miles a second is obliged to halt at the gate of the eye, waiting for admission until the port cullis be lifted. Something hurled !).",() K), IWt of miles and striking an instrnment which has not the agitation of even wink ing under the power of the stroke. There, also, is the merciful arrangement of the tear gland, by which the eye is washed and from which rolls the tide which brings the relief that conies in tears when some liercnvemcnt or great loss strikes us. The tear is not an augmentation of sor row, but the breaking up of the arctic of frozen grief in the warm gulf stream of consolation. Incapacity to weep is mad ness or death. Thank God for the tear glands, and that the crystal gates are so easily opened. Oh. the wonderful hy draulic apparatus of the human eye. Di vinely constructed of the immortal soul, under the shining of which the world sails in and drops anchor. What an anthem of praise to God is the human eye! The tongue is speechless and a clumsy instru ment of expression its compared with it. Have you not seen it flash with indigna tion, or kindle with enthusiasm, or ex pnnd with devotion, or melt with sym pathy, or stare with fright, or leer with villainy, or droop with sadness, or pale with envy, or fire with revenge, or twinkle with mirth, or beam with love? It is tragedy and comedy and pastoral and lyric in turn. Have yon not seen its-uplifted brow of surprise, or its frown of wrath, or its contraction of pain? If the eye say one thing and the lip? say an other thing, you believe the eye rather than the lips. The eyes of Archibald' Alexander and Charles G. I'lnney were the mightiest part of their sermon. George Whiteticld enthralled great assemblages with his eyes, though they were crippled with strabismus. Many a military chieftain has w ith a look hurled n regiment' to vic tory or to death. Martin Luther turned his great eye on an assassin who came to fake his life, and the villain lied. I'nder the-glance of the liiltnau eye the tiger, with rive times a mini's strength, snarls back into, the African jungle. lint those best 'appreciate the value of the eye w ho have lost it. The Kinperor Ailriun by ac cident put out the eye of his servant, and he said to his servant: "What shall I pay you in, money or in lamia? Anything you ask inc. I am so sorry I put your eye out." But the servant refused to ptft any financial estimate oir the value of the eye, and when the enqieror urged and urged .again the .matter he said: "Oh, emperor, I wut nothing but my lost eye," Alas, for those for whom a thick and im penetrable vail is drawn across the face of the heavens and the face of one's own kindred! That was a pathetic scene when a blind man lighted a torch at night and was found passing along the highway, and some oue said,' "Why do you carry that torch when you can't see?" "Ah!" saiil he, "I can't see, but I carry this torch that others may ace mo and pity my help lessness and not run me down." Samson, the giant, with his eyes put out by the Philistines, is more helplesA than the smallest dwarf with vision undamaged. All the sympathies of Christ were stirred when he saw Bnrtimcus with darkened retina, aud the only salve he ever made that we read of was a mixture of dust and saliva and a prayer, with which In cured tho eyes of a man blind from his nativity. The value of the eye is shown as much by Its catastrophe as by its healthful action. 'Ask the limn who for twenty years has not seen the sun rise, Ask the man who for half a century lias not seen the face of a friend. Ask in the' hospital the victim of ophthalmia. Ask the man whose eyesight perished in a powder blas't. Ask the Bartimeus who never met a Christ or the man born blind Who I to die blind. Ask him. . The Kyee of Ood. , The recoil of this question is tremen dous. Wo stand at the center of a vast circumference of observation. No priv acy. On us, eyes of cherubim, eyes of seraphim, eyes of archangel, eyes of God. We may not be able to see the Inhabit ants of other worlds, bat perhaps they may be able to see ns, . We hare not op tical Instruments strong enough to descry thein. Perhaps they huve optical instr.: uients strong enough to descry us. The mole cnuuot sec the eagle midsky, but the eagle midsky can see the niole uiidgrass. We are able to see mountains and cav erns of another world, but perha) the inhabitants of other worlds can see the towers of our cities, the flash of our seas, the marching of our prwessions, the w hite robes of our weddings, the black siiirfs of our obsequies. It passe out from the guess into the positive when we are told in the Bible that the inhabitants of -other worlds do come as convoy to this. Are they not. all nuiiUtcriug spirits sent forth to minister to those w ho shall be heirs of salvation? lint human inspection, and angelic in spection, and stellar inspection, and lunar inspection, and solar inspection are tame compared with the thought divine in spection. "You converted uie twenty years ago," said a black man to my fath er. "I low so?" said my father. "Twenty years ago," said the other, "in the old Hchoolhouse prayer meeting at Bound Brook you said In your prayer. "J'hou, (iod, seest me,' and I had no peace under the eye of God until I became a Chris tian." Hear it. "The eyes of the Loi.l are in every place." "His eyelids try the children of men." "His eyes were ns a Hume of fire." "1 will guide thee with mine eve." Oh, the eye of God. so full of pity, so full of power, so full of love, so full of indignation, so full of compassion, so full of mercy! How it j peers through the darkness! How it 1 outshines the day! How it glares upon the offender! How it beams on The peni tent soul! Talk about the human eye as being indescribably wonderful how much more wonderful the great, search-; ing, overwhelming eye of God! All eter nity past and all eternity to come 011 that retina. The Asterisk. The eyes with which we look into each other's face to-day suggest it. It stands written twice on your face and twice on mine, unless through casualty one or both have been obliterated. "lie that formed the eye, shall he uot see?" Oh. the eye of God! It sees our sorrows to assuage them, sees our perplexities to disentangle them, sees our wants to sympathize with them. If we fight him buck, the eye of an antagonist. If we ask his grace, the eye of an everlasting friend. You often find iu a book or manuscript a star calling your attention to a footnote or explana tion. That star the printer cnlls an as terisk. But all the stars of the night are asterisks calling your attention to God, an all observing God. Our every nerve a divine handwriting. Our every muscle a pulley divinely swung. Our every bone sculptured with divine suggestion. Our every eye a reflection of the divine eye. God above us, and God behind us, aud God within us. What a stupendous thing to live! What a stupendous thing to die! No such thing as hidden trans gression. A dramatic advocate in olden time t night in a court room, persuaded o ." innocence of his client charged 't murder ami of the guilt of the w who was trying to swear the poor T i life away that advocate took up . .1 bright lamp and thrust them close t. ,e face of the witness and cried, "Mil.' it please the court and gentlemen of (In jury, behold the murderer!" and the man, practically under that awful glare, con fessed that he was the criminal instead of the man arraigned at the bar. Oh, my friends, our most hidden sin is under a brighter light than that. It is under the burning eye of God. He is not a blind giant stumbling through the heav ens. Ha is not a blind monarch feeling for the step of his chariot. Are you wronged? He sees it. Are you poor? He sees it. Have you domestic perturba tion of which the world knows nothing? He sees it. "Oh," you say, "my affairs are so insignificant 1 can't realize that God sees me and sees my affairs." Can yot) see the point of a pin? Can you see the eye of a needle? Can you see a mote iu the sunbeum? And has God given you that power of minute observation anil does he not possess It himself? "He thnt formed the eye, shall not he see?" A I.ccend. But you say: "God is in one world, and I am in another world. He seems so far off from me, I don't really think he sees what is going on iu my life." Can you see the sun Kr),000,JO0 miles away, and do you not think God hns as pro longed vision? But you say, "There are phases of my life and there are colors shades of color in my annoyances and my vexations thnt I don't think (rod can understand." Does not God gather up all the colors and nil the shades of color Iu the rainbow? And do you suppose there is any phase of any shade in your fife he has not gathered up iu his own heart? Besides that, I want to tell you it will soon all be over, this struggle. Thnt eye of yours, so exquisitely fashion ed and Htrungand hinged and roofed, will before long be closed In the last slumber. Loving hands will smooth down the silk en fringe. So he giveth his belovei) sleep. A legend of St. Fortobert Is that his mother was Mind, and he was so sorely pitiful for the misfortune that one day in sympathy he kissed her eyes, and by mirac le she saw everything. But it is not a legend when I tell you that all the blind eyes of the Christian dead under the kiss of the resurrection morn shall gloriously open. Oh, what a day-that will be for those who went groping through this world under perpetual ob scuration, or were dependent on the hand of a friend, or with an uncertain staff felt their way, and for the nged of dim sight about whom it may be said that "they which look out of the window are dark ened" when eternal daybreak comes in! What a beautiful epitaph that was for a tombstone in a European cemetery: "Here resses in God, Kntrina, a saint, H5 years of age and blind. The light was restored to her May 10, 1N40." , ; Alclbladcs had a cunning trick of re membering people' children, and often greatly pleased fond fathers by allud ing to their sons, whom he would in quire after by name. It was said of blm that be knew all the boys and young men In Athena, and was, conse quently, Immensely popular among them. ICC CREAM 18 AMERICAN. European Don't Know How to Make It -Their bo da H.Ur a Failure. Ice cream Is pre-eminently an Ameri can specialty. All the Atlantic passen ger Mteainera plylug between this port aud Kurope taktt aboard lu New York a BUttiok-ut sujiply of ice cream for the voyage back to New York a well a for tho outward journey, despite the fact that the cost of the article 1 greater here than abroad, and that it :s expeu alve stuff to keep. The round trip oc cupies at least three weeks, and the cream has to bint that period, one Week of which the ship la tied up ill dock, with the Ice cream eating up Ice in Hie refrigerator at a prodigious rate. When the autumn rush homeward seta lu und the Hteainers aia crowded to the limit, the amount of Ice cream thus carried from this port and kept for two weeks for use on the return voyage is 11 big Item In the provision account Many kinds of provisions and suppjlea are cheaper in Europe than here, and of th.we the steamers lay In a double stock at the Kuroneuu ports. Ice cream, too, Is cheaper In Europe, but It bus the fatal disadvantage that It is not Ice cream as the American regards the article. Ice 1ms come to be less of a novelty on the table in Europe in recent years, mainly, doubtless, because of the in sistence of the thousand of Americans who make Europe their summer play ground. Icp cream, too, you can get In most of the bis cities, even in England. But it usually lucks the main, indefina ble iitinlities that make it so attractive at home. Europeans may talk about the inimitable bouquet of their wines, but the bouquet of American ice cream is beyond them. This is not a matter of natural advantages and facilities, us is claimed for the wines and other things, for Switzerland is full of ice; topped mountains and her valleys filled with cows. A varied and wcent experience with the let: creams of Europe induces the conclusion that only the "sorbetto" one gets 011 the piazza of StMark's in Ven ice approaches the delicious perfection of the ordinary everyday ice cream of America. Perhaps this is because the Venetians themselves eat Ice cream, whereas in most other European cities it la regarded as an outlandish concoc tion, prepared only for the peculiar palate of the stranger. It is a far cry and. a strange one, from St. Murk's to Madison square, but the delighted ex clamation of a group of American girls, ordering Ice cream there as they had doue all the way down from London, "Ah; this is something like!" covered the distance in no time. One liiuls occasionally a solitary soda fountain In Europe nowadays, but the soda water, like the Ice cream, Is unsat isfactory and saddening. Something is wrong, either with the syrups, the soda, or the mixing of them. The drink is either froth without flavor, or flavor, without fizz, or something else equally disappointing. It Is almost always shadow without substance, and always a foreign oddity. There Is the consola tion In regard to soda water, however, that there are substitutes for it, unsatis factory, perhaps, but still wet, while there Is no substitute for ice cream. There is nothing like the abundance of "soft drinks" to be had in Europe that one can get In any American town or village. In England there are the' peppery ginger ale, bottled lemonade, and various mineral waters, while on the continent there Is the everlasting sherbet. In Italy aud other southern countries one can get perhaps half a dozen different fruit syrups, which are served in small quantities in large glasses, the waiter filling up the glass from the water bottle. The country folk of the north make various sorts of light beers from roots and herbs, but these cannot be had at'public places iu cities, as birch beer, root beer, sarsaparllla, aud the like can be got In the I'nlted States. Of course the universal use of beer and wine accounts to a great ex tent for the lack of variety In "soft" drinks. A more comprehensive reason, perhaps, Is that no other people on earth so persistently drench themselves with drinks, in all seasons and at all hours, as do Americans. Anything like the scene of a big soda fountain in any American town on a su miner's day is not to be found in any ortier country. New York Sun. Delightful and Not Costly. To those who can compass It, what ia more delightful as a holiday recreation than a driving trip through a beautiful I country? Four people of congenial ' tastes who are not afraid of minor In. j conveniences, and whose mood Is hide 1 pendent of the- weathtr. can Und real ' Iileastire In this way, and at not too hea vy a coat. The first necessity In un 1 dortaklng such a tour la a pair of strong willing horses, who can easily go twen ty miles a day on ordinary country nmds; the second a driver who thor oughly understands tlielr management and oare. The carriage should lie light and strong. The best for the purpose Is what Is called In gome places a "mountain wagon," a vehicle with a box body, all open under ' the seat, with strong running gear and stout springs. If yow prefer a covered car rlage, this wagon may have a canopy top and curtains that fasten on at will. For traveling neceasltlea you should take for the horses a watering pall and pong with which to wash ' their mouths. Then there must be two hal ters, two litiU aud two blankets which can be rolled tightly aud put under one of tho Keats. It is also wise to carry a wrench, g punch, a can of axle greasa, some extra bolts aud nuts, and strap and strings to use lu caso of accident. The travelers will have to go iu light inarching order a to clothes. For the men, clothes of light weight of some neutral thade of browu or grey, flan nel shirts and soft felt liau are the most comfortable and serviceable. For the ladles, skirts of wiry sergeor some other dust-shedding material, and waists of either wash ma-terial or dark colored summer silk. Their hats should shade their eyes and have simple trim ming which can be easily brushed clean. Each person needs an extra coat or wrap and a mackintosh. The Poisoned Cup. From the days when Cleopatra light ly dropped poisoned rose leaves into the wine-filled cups of the enemies she h 1 doomed, poison has been the chosen agent of women bent on murder. The secret of these ancient poisons has not been transmitted to us. It is only of the compounds used by Luorezia Bor gia that we have formed some accur ate idea. There Is little doubt that the ' beautiful Duchess Fenars employed a while powder resembling sugar, which was an arsenical preparation. The fa mous aqua tofana was only a variation or adulteration of the same drug. In the middle ages the female poisoners operated 011 different systems, but al ways In graceful and elegant fashion. Catherine de Medicis met death in dain ty perfumed gloves. Iu the seventeenth century, an epoch when poisons were freely used, they were currently called by the cynical and Ironical appellation of "pomlre a succession." Madame de Brinvillier.s and La Voisin used an Im mense quantity of this "inheritance powder," which placed many a fortune within their grasp. The trial of the former caused great scandal, although she persistently refused to give any explanation or to betray her accom plices. "If I spoke," she repeatedly de clared, "the whole town would be com promised." The woman Voisin was less reticent, admitting that to her trade in poisons she had added the profession of witchcraft. She paid alie penalty of her crimes and was burnt at the stake. To-day arsenic Is exploded; modern science has made It too easily discover able in the bodies of the victims; In fact, mineral poisons are only resorted to by the ignorant or by passionate, reckless women, who have not the pa tience to wait for the slower effects of vegetable poisons, and wish to accom plish their purpose as quickly as possi ble. A Reconstructed World. We all think we could remodel this disjointed old world greatly to the ad vantage of humanity at large and our selves iu particular, if we only had the -power to exercise our ability. If you had your way every poor girl should marry a "rich man, aud he should love all the family, and set up all the boys' in business, and see that all the girls were comfortably fixed in life. If you had your way there should be work for everybody, and good wages should be paid. There should be no famines. Coal should be cheap. There should be no more rainy winters. 1 You should have all the days sunshiny, and let It storm nights when honest people were lu bed, and it would lie no bother. Bur. glars and stock brokers, and abscond- Ing cashiers of banks should be con. verted, and sent beyond the seas to im prove the condition of the heathen, either spiritually or physically, as could be mutually agreed upon. You would have, if you had your way, less waste of , public money, less taxes, less fat government otlices. Oh, if you had your way, you would bring about a great many changes, and everybody would find fault with them, just as we do with things now; aud nobody would be suited, and you wouldn't be suited yourself, but you don't think so, and you never will, because the chance to convince yourself will never be offered you. , A Menace U the Book Trade. A movement has been beguu in En gland which may possibly have a very widespread and Important influence. A philanthropist, for the better Incul cating of public taste, Is bringing out editions of English poets at the low cost of two cents per volume. The first Issue was Macaulay's "Lays," the sec ond "Marmion," the third "Childe Har old." The fourth Is to bo "Selected Poems from Lowell," und Iyongfellow will soon follow. This revives the ques tion debuted long ago whether it Woulil not be cheaper for a public library to give away luniks than to Incur, the ex pense of a staff of iieople, so as to keep account of the volume going out or coining lu. Statistics on this subject, laised on the one hand on the average current expense! of existing libraries, and on the other hand 011 tlte produc? tlon of the cheap editions mentioned, would be of great Interest Industrious Hen. Edward Atkinson says 10,WX).(X)0,000 eggs are laid In this country In a year. They are worth $140,000,000. , - Cheap Kaomcb. The feeding eipenaaa of the aairaaii In the Loudou Zoo are $600 weekly. i 1 t 1 1 -1 . i n I 3 51 1 i 1