. , JHrXODY IN TIIK HKAKT. I By Rer. 4. f. DHon. O. D. Makin melody in your heart unto the i Lord.-- Kphciau. v., Hi. j All music ih nut for the car. A master j painting, tin' colors all hruioiiiy.:ng one j with tin- oilier, i mimic on ruim. A gr.nul cathedral, every part lmruioumng with every oilier part, in music in stone. 1 A L-nrreii of How era. oiling the ai,' with ' rii't odors that please, in tnu-e:; in per fume. Wolds written or spoke-i, 'bat thrill our mills, harmonizjiig with .mi- .iii.c anil truth, in music in thought, ml sometime the emotion of the noul, too il ep for utterance, make music that we eiiiiii' t express, it is too dell.ale to label mill tim awect lo describe. Firat of fill, fait!; is iniisir, in that it in harmony 'witn facta. Chril imiity U a relig'on of fads. We look above us anil we nee fact expressed in atar and plaint; we look about ii- ami ace the facta of nature ('.pressed In H.if and !r- and bind m.ipe, mil from thee facta we itifi-i an nlier fact In-hind them all, and wh 'ii we i)h n the Hook we see tluit fact rev.iled, the facj of a living and loving liod, friend and helper of his people. We ici pi the fact of man's sin that debases. (i ' 1 1 1 1 'H, condemns, e proclaiiu the fact of man's redenipliiiii, .Ies.ua Christ Isiru a babe into '.He world, growing '"lo manhood, fullering on the cross, rising from the de.id, ascending up to glory. To believe in these facta i to make melody in our loans unto thp Lord; to disbelieve them is lo in -'ike discord. Again - hope ix music in that it is har mony with the faithf uliii'sa of !od. Cod ha made Home promises and 1 base my hope upon these promise. I believe that thev will be fulfilled, because I have trusted him in the past, and he has never tiapMiiiited me. Hcspnir is discord. To refuse to hope when (iod proniisea la to make grating discord in his ear. Obedience' is iiiiimIc, in that It is hnr mony with the authority of (Sod. IMs olxdience is discord. A revolt against antic rity may be treason; a revolt against law i crime. Anarchy i the ds.ord of refusing to be ruled by law Blur a revolt against love I ain. The on obey the father, not o much lie ruiHf he must, or because he ought, aa be caiKe he wants to. lie Is not thinking of father' power to compel obedience, hut of the happy privilege of obedience. He just wants to obey him because he loves him. Im that your attitude toward ;..d? Kighteousnea i music, In that It Is harmony with holiness and truth. Ilight relation is uiiiaic; wrong relation Is dis cord. t No truth ever make discord with anothw truth. You sometimes ace ten r fiffijn lnstniinenta in one orchestra, earn omV different, and yet each one in perfect harmony with all the rest. And no It Is with scientific truth, mora! truth, historic truth, religious truth, spiritual truth. Truth harmonises with every truth in the universe. It is one great orchestra of music that sends up its mel ody into the heart of !od. Sympathy is music, in that It is har mony with the attitude of (Jod toward people and cocditioim about us. (jod en ters into the condition of every soul on this earth. What we need to do la to get the attitude of (iod toward all peo ple. We know that his attitude toward ton i one of unrelenting hostility, that Ins attitude toward all kinds of unclean liess is one of opposition. When w-e come into I ;...' attitude toward all tncii, we make melody in our hearts unto him. Humility is music, In that it is harmony with I lie greatness of (iod. The lowest; note may harmonize with the highest and discord may result when the low note tries to climb out of its place up toward the high note, "When I consider the., heavens, the work of thy finger, the' moon, and the rftars which thou hast or dained, what is man that thou art mind ful of him'" It Is not tilting that "an atom of this atom world" should be in 11 a ted w ith his own sidf importance. Conceit often parades as self-rcae-et and glories ill its shame. Coleridge tells of a man who never mentioned his own name without taking off his hat. Ileal jjrealni-ss and true humility are Hiairieav twins; they are muled by a living. liga ment of grace. A man of large B'i mi int auce with celebrities told me the olhcr" day that the greatest men lie kncw-.i-re most oncolicnius of greatuess. 'flff know their limitation and arehumbled as they see themselves In contrast with what they desire to be. Only little men must incrcasv their ai.e by inflation. Those who put on airs do so to hide .heir nakedness, but they only make them selves ridiciiloo. for people can see through airs, however thick. A one rise in real worth of character, he sinks in the scale of self conceit, A we rise to ward heaven, self become smaller, until, by and by, when we reach the height of heavenly character, self nil! not amount to much. When such a climax of char acter Iim liecn reached, the discord of pride will be .'one and the harmony of humility, which makes music unto the Lord. wil till lb ul. Joy is music, In that it la harmony Willi the w ill and pleasure of (Iod. What ever Is against (ioil's will Is discord, and, when there is discord in the mil, there can tie no Joy, Sin, therefore, .siroyi joy. There may be fun at the ejpense of purity, amusement at the expense of good moral, and pleasure at the i-kH-nse of consecration; but such fun, amusement and pleasure banish Joy from the soul, and no aane man can afford to saerillce a Joy which la a foretaste of heaven for fun, amusement r pleasure which ! only the muddy froth and foam of earth. V'ille Ve keep right with (iod there la loy In the aoul which make melody unto Ihe'lord. lint when ln pil'a na out of right relation wilii tlod the soul is filled with grating discord and no laughter pro duced by fun, amusement, or pleasure ran prevent it frointrpltbe conscience anrl giving pain. Ist ua guard onr sou la the master musician guards hit Instru , lent, ttrat he may kH-p ll In perfect tune, f wt weald be titled with Jar, and th pleasure of Cod la the keynote with which every faculty of the aoul run at harmonize, if we would make melody unto the Iird.1- When all that pleases him pleases us we have reached heaven on earth. (iriitihuie ia mnsjc, in that it is har mony with the kindness of (iod. This ia the heart of the text', 'living thanks al ways for all things uu'to God." There ia Ho room here for the discord of com plaint. The purpose of (iod in redemp tion ix to bring the discordant nature and life of man jm,, pcrfct harmony with his own Hature and will. iod uses every i(i.oms to reach the aoul ef man. and bring irth the response of of gratitude and love. Nature ujiotit him tippoal to his sense of the beautiful and the siars above him bid him look irp und worship their Creator. But the love of Jesus is his irresistible appeal. May we fome into such harmony with God that every faculty of our being will vibrne in response to the apjieal, and all the time make melody In our heart to the Ixird. I M A NSW Kit Kl PK A V K KM. By Rev. J. D. Ltek There a sense In which all prnyera are answered either by obtaining the ob ject soiiglu (,r by securing something far better aduptod to the ultimate end of nil true prayer-perpetual happiness, through unbroken goodiics. All prayers will be answered when they accord with wisdom, unselfishness and the highest good. To answer every petition literally un der the prevent order of things would make infinite wisdom the slave of human caprice, absolute holiness a partner in human folly, and boundless compassion the author of endless cruelty. l'rayers are aomctimes unanswered' be cause of the character and tendency of the objects sought. Men. like chibken. frequently crave those things which would be dextructive to their best in terests, both here and hereafter. Like Klijah under the juniper tree, they pray for that which falls far below the high est good, and like Paul, with his thorn in the Mesh, we too often seek ease rather than strength. It is better to have grace to bear burdens than to lie weak and free from burdens. Prayers sometimes remain unanswered because they spring from wrong motives. The soul of real prayer is unselfishness. Prayer in the case of Simon Magus was ignorant, because it sought the mere grat ification of worldly pride. The farmer who prays to nave himself from labor will never acure a harvest. Israel at the lied Sea may call upon (iod until doomsday without avail unless they obey the divine "(io forward;" Mali ciouaiiess will find no aid or comfort in prayer. The "as thon wilt" of Jesn Is the true standard of acceptable' petition. Sometime answers are sought in vain liecanse divine methods of answering are rejected. There is no use praying for rain without clouds. If one pray for a disposition of aweet aympathy hi: may be compelled to accept the breaking pow er of sorrow. There is a divine method in every nat ural and spiritual realm. Kvery grace of the spirit must be purchased by sacrifice. The chisel and the mallets are instru ment by which beauty clothes the mar ble. Purity often comes only by fire. TTie greatest attainments en me at the greatest cost. The pebbles are smooth and symmetrical by the crashing of the floods on the ahore; Joseph's troubles paved the way to Joseph's throne. Through A prison window John Huny.in saw the triumphs of bis pilgrim. True prayer must accept the price of if an swer. Pray to see Knrope and you must ac cept the ocean voyage. Pray for physi cal power and you must accept discipline. Pray for spiritual pwer and you must accept self-sacrifice. Prayer 1. sometimes unanswered he cause of nonobservance of the conditions of true prayer. A purpose to do the will of (iod is the fundamental requirement in prayer. Without this prayer Is not heard, (iod lisiens to man's voice when man Jisteti to (iod'a voice. It must also be addressed to the Father In the name of the only acceptable One'-His Son, Je ans Christ. ' 'Cain prayed in his own name and went nut wilii fallen countenance. Abel came through the lamb of atonement and wn a'cr-epied. The motion of human prayer to be ef fective must Ik- seconded by the Ilvlne Mediator. When prayer is prompted by the Holy Spirit, accompanied by simple, childlike confidence, offered in the name of the Savior, from a pure motive, and the petitioner Is willing fo accept the wise. Just and divine method of answer ing, it will be heard in heaven and grant ed by Infinite Love. Virtue.--Virtue Is colinie.- Ilev. Ir. Caraon, Prealiylerlnn. Hrooklyn, N. V, True Klui'Htlnn. True education means to lie good, Imneat mill pure. Her. Ir. Kerliruch, Reformed, Cunton, Ohio. (Jod'a Vh.V. There should ln no question In our inliula thai (ioil'a way la bent. Ilev. A. H. Con. In, Ituptlal, Akron, Ohio. lnvir of Onr Faith.--Christ la the loor of onr fnlth. There Is no Advance Pin religion knowledge except through Christ; there la no revision In creeds mvc that to which he lends. Without him there inn he (dm nice, but the change will he no Improvement. The only poaalble Improvement Is to attune Hi miiab' of our fnlth to the keynote of his nti'. Kvery forward inovp nient must he through Christ, the door Ilia word l our rharter; hi life our Itnlde; hl perwon onr atar. Our motto la, "Sol new (foopel, lint more to-pVl'-tev. Ir. Van Dyke, Ptrwliytr rlan, New York. i; SERMONETTES i The ear la found by M. Paul Bonnier fo have a wnse of altitude in addition to tluit of hi'KrltiK. It depend on change of barometric pressure due to altitude, and he has proven itn exist ence by hi sensations during a balloon ascent. -It U Wlevetl to be more highly developed. uiuJ more useful In such ani mals an birds than In man. A new French refrigerator consists of cloned metallic cylinders -surrounded by a freezing mixture, being designed for keeping fruit at a fixed temperature with a restricted amount of air and an absence of light. Thawing must be gradual. After two months poaches were In perfect condition, and the meth od Is Adapted for transporting soft frulls. including bananas. I)r. Elliot Smith, professor of anat omy in tint Medical School at Cairo, Is reMjrtel to huve obtained two mouths' leave of absence in order to investigate a remarkable discovery of ancient hu man remains at Cilrgeh, lu I'pper Kgypt. It is said that the series of graves unearthed extends over an In terval of at least 8,(g) years, represent ing the most archaic, of prehistoric per iods.. The bodies, owing to the dryness of ttie climate, and perhaps the excel lence of the methods employed In em balming, are In a surprising state of preservation, and In two cases the eyes remain so perfect that the lenses are In good condition. Prof. It. II. Thurston of Cornell Uni versity speaks of recent experiments with a "double-decked" aviator, by the Messrs. Wright of I 'nylon, hs having distinctly contributed to our knowledge In the field of aerial light. The Wright apparalus, currying one man who as sumes a nearly horizontal position, has a total spread of H(S feet of canvas, the length of the machine Is-lng 2'J feet. The planes have a . curvature copied from that of a pigeon's wing, (iiiding or soaring was successfully accomplished In winds ranging from 11 to 27 miles per hour. Starting from a slight eleva tion, the longest flight was 4ixl feet. No tnolor was used. The operator found no difficulty In steering and balancing. The recurrent alarm about the ap proaching exhaustion of the coul supply in (ireat Hritiiln has been fanned a lit tle by the recent appointment of a royal commission to inquire Into thW matter. About thirty years ago a sim ilar commission Investigated the Brit ish coal supply, but since then, It ia said, unexpected changes in the coal trade have Inketi place, which affect the question. At present (Jreat Britain pro duces oiie-thlid of the world's entire supply of coal. No immediate danger of exhaustion Is feared, but among tbo duties of the new commission Is lo in quire Into the possible substll iitiou of other fuel, or the employment of kinds of power not depending upon the use of coal. Twenty years ago a lightning rod conference, representing several of the leading scientific societies of (ireat Britain, made an elaborate report rec ommending a system of proieetion of buildings against thunderstorms. Kx perlence has since shown that further study of the effects of lightning, and of the means of guarding against them, is needed, and a new lightning research commltte is now at work In Kngland, with the assistance of many observers scattered over the Krlllsli Islands and colonies, and of several branches of the British government, while the Uni ted States Department of Agriculture has promised to furnish data gathered In this country. Photography offers an Important aid In these new researches. DON'T JUMP OFF CARS. Nervona Disorders Said to Kesult from Hrml ice. Jumping off moving trains and street car a practiced to-duy is a fruitful source of nervous disorder and one not fully recognized for Its Im portance by any school except osteo palhs. Vet the fuels are easily compre heudeiL Certain it is that nervousness lu all lis prolenu forms, from irritabil ity, "neurasthenia and general nervous collapse to paralysis, Is so caused, and that the careless habit of so many peo ple of bowling off moving cars stiff leg ged lays the foundation for tbi-se disor ders every hour of the day. In lending the strenuous life of onr cities men and women seem unable to wait to get lo their Journey's end. Be fore trains come to a half stop at cross ings and platforms fidgety pedestrians with muscles tense drop from plat forms, and, almost, before their Ixalles have recovered from the forward mo mentum, are stalking a mad foot race against time In the opposite direction. This enterprise saves ten seconds, of course, for that particular errand, but possibly It hastens by many mouths one's Journey to the grave. Positive injury Is thereby done to the aplno and nervous system which must gather In cumulative effect until one day the whole nervous organism may go to pieces. Then more or less Innocent thing will lie blamed for the col I apse. The doctor may even analyse the vic tim of these Innumerable eoiiciissltn piecemeal In the laboratories to find fhat he I being preyed Upon by ubiqui tous microbes, yet the origin of his troubles I a simple spinal disorder, caused by oft-repealed Jollngs. some of which proved by chance more vicious than the re, throwing one or more of hi vertebral segments out of perfect alignment. Once fhat has come about the foundation has been laid -as oste on thy ahowafor nearly all the Ilia In thVtcalendar of medicine, It Is not to b undemtood that inch concussions produce dislocations of spinal vertebrae In the sense that they are thrown out of Joint, as occurs in a "broken neck." That is no more the case than that china ware must shat ter from every simple Jar before It cracks. The lesser Injuries come be fore the greater, and happen with a thousandfold greater frequency. Mere slips of the vertebrae from their true positions one upon the other and the strains brought to bear In consequence upon the ligaments and muscles bind ing them together, are what first occur from these sudden Innumerable pound ings -of hard heels against adamant pavements. These seemingly trivial mishaps to the body are productive of the most far-reaching consequences. At every point In the spine where such a concussion siwnds Its force a de fective spot develops. It becomes a weak point anatomically, and a point of congestion, blockade and Impaired work physiologically. Osteopathic Health. ONE LOST MINE IS FOUND. Chain of Cnaucceasful Searche Beema Broken in Oregon. An Interesting but true siory of a lost mine being found has been brought to light at Grant's Pass, Ore. A rich mine discovered and left fifty years ago has been found again, the Jubilant discoverer coming Into (irant's Pass with a bag of gold dust and nuggets that he had removed from the treasure. S. I). Johnson, a mining man from Iowa, arrived In (irant's Pass, bring ing wiUi blm a rough sketch or map of the Josephine mining districts that had been drawn for him by a capitalist of Colorado Spring. This capitalist was a clisse friend of Johnson, and in the plo r days had been In southern Oregon prospecting and mining. He made a gimd stake near (irant's Pass, and a ng others, made a very rich discovery on Jack Creek, of the Jump Off -Joe district, Northern Josephine County. This find was in the nature of an auriferous gravel bed, the yellow grains being distributed through It In a most remarkable quantity. He had hardly begun work upon bis bonanza when he ami his companions were at tacked by the Indians and forced to flee for their lives. The bloody Itogue Klver Indian war came ou and the prospector left southern Oregon. He made many later fortunes In Col orado, but did not forget his bonanza on Jack Creek, Jump-Ofl'-Joe. Fifty years passed by, and his friend John sou came to him and wanted a grub stake to Oregon. The capita list agreed to put up all the money required If Johnson would come to Jonephine County and search for the lost treas ure on Jack Creek. Johnson agreed to do so. and with nothing but the rough sketch to guide him came to (irant's Pass. He found Jack Creek and began prospecting. On one gravel bar he dug three shallow prospect holes and took out $'Ji I u course gold. He kept on scratching around and uncovered sev eral big nuggets. He nearly went wild with delight. He came Into (irant's Pass Willi his bug of gold, a much ex cited man. He had found the lost mine. Investigation proved that claim had been since located by Hall, of this county. Mr. Hall, knowing of the discovery, sold claim to Johnson, together Willi water rights he had taken up, the II. not the all for $1.5(1(1. Johnson ha left for Colorado Springs, but will return in a short time with his capitalist partner. They will equip the mine wilh a complete and extensive hydraulic plant and put II In shape for work on a big wale. The gravel of the property is such as to make It one of the ricbiwt placer propositions In southern Oregon. Port land Telegram. WHAT THE INSECTS COST US. Lossra to Crops Cioncl bj the Per nicious Utile I'csIh. The chinch-hug caused a loss of .".(!. (Ssi.iksi in 1ST 1 . upward of $1(Si.msi,shi lu 174. and lu 1NM7, JtKMKHum The Itocky Mountain locust, or grasshop per. In 174 destroyed $Hmi,ishuhio of the crops of Kansas. .Missouri, Nebras ka, and Iowa, und the Indirect loss was probably as much more. For ninny years the cotton caterpillar caused an annual average loss In the Southern Stales of $15.(axi.(HHi. while In ISiiH and IS",'! (he loss reached $:ki,ikni,inni. The fly-weevil, our most destructive enemy to stored grains, particularly through out the South, Inflicts mi annua! loss In the whole country of $4D.(aH).iHMI. The codling inolh, the chief ravager of the apple and suir crops, destroys every year fruit valued at $:K),(gs).(NKi to 4(I.ssi.ii. The damage to live stock iiitllctiHl by the ox-bot. or ox warble, amounts lo $:!. HMi.(MK). These are fair samples of the enor mous money lossi-s produced In one country by n few of the pigmy cap tains of Hrnlcioiis Industry whose hosts operate lu the granaries, fields, stock farms, and the stock yards of our country. What Is the grand lolal? B. !. Wilsli, one of I he best entomolo gists of bis day. In lst'i7, estimated the total yearly loss In the United States rroiu Insects to be from $:i"i.(MNi,(xs to JKKMXsl.CHl. in 1S!M, C. V. Rlley, long chief of the division of entomology, estimated the loss at :gi,(MSl.(). Ir. ,la mew Fletcher, In IStll, footed up the has to about one tenth of our agricul tural product $:i:MMsst,(SM)! In ISlMt, K. Hwlght Sanderson, after careful consideration of the whole Held, put the aiiniuil loss at :HiP,(MSi,iaNi.-Ilar-mt's Maganlne. A woman who ever taught school will hate a school board twenty years afterward. No difference how well you play the fame of life, you are sure to loac. A HEROIC CHINAMAN. Hia Bravery Attracted the Attention of Conajreaa. Charley Tong Sing, whose home is In Los Angeles, Cal., Is the only Chinaman who ever received a medal from Con gress for bravery. He Is a naturalized citizen of the United Stales, and as thoroughly Americanized as his thirty years' residence hcr jnn on ke him. Charley was a member of the (ireely relief expedition of ISM, tong sixci. co mm a n (led by Captain (now Hear Admiral) Schley, but he has a greater distinction than having been a member of this expedi tion. He Is one of the three survivors of the Jeantiette expedition. He was steward of that ill fated vessel when, In lS7!t. she sailed on a voyage of ex ploration in the Arctic seas. His splen did physique and natural hardness were all that brought him safely through the hardships, exposures and horrors of that terrible experience. Charley Joined the Jeannette expedi tion at San Francisco. He was then an experienced sailor, having served aboard American merchant ships in various capacities. He acted the part of a hero during this trip, and when he returned the Navy Department, in recognition of his services, presented Charley with a handsome medal. Upon It is inscribed: "Charley Tong Sing, Arctic Steamer Jeannette; Fidelity, Zeal, Obedience." On the reverse side is a picture of the old frigate Constitu tion, and the words, "United States Navy." By special act of Congress, September 30, 18!K), another medal wrts presented. It betrs the date upon which the act was approved by the President, and around It the words, "Jeannette Arctic Expedition. 1 870-1 KK2." On the reverse side Is presented the Jeannette In the Ice, with the crew waving her a farewell. The medal depends from i clasp held in the beak of a silver eagle. It was not a great while after the Jeannette adventure when Charley Tong Sing started with Capt. Schley on the (ireely relief expedition. After his return from that voyage he served in the navy on the Tennessee, and then he decided to abandon the life of a sailor. AN AMATEUR DETECTIVE. Ascertained Facta by Sherlock Holmes' System of Deduction. Sherlock Holmes has a promising ri val in a barber known to the Philadel phia Heeord. He astonished one of his customers the other day by asking him if he were not left-handed. The man admitted that he was, and suggested that the barber had probably seen him hang up his bat. "No," said the barber; "1 have other ways of finding out such things. I see, to, that you are a bookkeeper." "Yes," admitted the customer, "your guesses are correct. How do you kuoW.'" "It's easy," said the barber. "In shampooing your head 1 noticed ink on your hair at the left temple. This ink, I concluded, must have got there from a pen resting on your left ear, which In dicated that you were a person who used a pen a great deal, as only such persons use their ears as pen-racks. "That didn't convince me that you were a bisikkeeper, however, because a 111 era ry man might stick his pen behind his car for convenience. I learned of your jii'.aaajlon when I applied the lather. This made the Ink on your hair wash out, and 1 discovered two shades of ink -red and black. Nolsidy but a bookkeeper uses red and black ink, so It was easy to class you as a bookkeep er. "I knew you were left-handed be cause the Ink was on the left side the side that a left handed writer would in voluntarily use when sticking his pen back of his ear." "Wonderful, wonderful;" said the custodier. "Now, suppose you stop talking for a while, and finish shaving mo." filed of Improvement. An uptown physician tells of a (ier inan friend, a sor Journeyman baker, who sent his wife to a local hospital when she fell 111. The physician al ways asked with Interest after the con dition of the sick woman when he met the (iermaii, and was told In reply: "Well, doctor, they say at the hospital there's Improvement." This reply did not vary from day to day for a month or more, and was always spoken by Ihe Herman very stolidly, as though be really did not see In the report any grounds for hope. Then one morning, meeting the physician and being asked the usual question, he said: "(), she's dead, doctor." "Dead?" repealed the physician. "What do they say she died of?" "They didn't say they didn't hnve lo," answered the (lernian. "I knew. She died of loo many Improvements." Philadelphia Time. The Kiii'0tcan Plan. Some queer customer are seen at New York hotel. An old farmer from the country fells how he got abend of one of the clerks: "I walked In." h says, "asked the young man at the desk: 'What are your prices?' 'Amer ican or Kuropcan'f he asked me. Now 1 wasn't going to tell where I was from until 1 had seen the lay of the land. 'What difference does that make?' says I. 'If American,' he answered, 'It's 14 per day; If F.uroiean, f 1.50.' I thought a moment, ami then an Idea struck me how to get abend of him. I walked tip boldly and registered from London, Kngland." It almost turns a man from hit friends to hear a man b deteaU boom Inc them. fa&l TEXAS 8TORM HEROINE. Baraelf Tarn and Blaadlaa;, 8k ) caed Brother and Biatara. The heroine of the Goliad storm wtw Bessie Purl, aged 19 years. The Port home was near the river bridge was probably the first house destroy i'd. The wind at this point had that Miliar whirling motion characteristic ct Ihe Kansas tornado. A new wagon wl seized and bereft of its wheels. Af terward a wheel was found north. eawtV south and west of the house, showing tlie peculiar eft'eei of the wind. - The- 1'tirl- family consisted of J...W... Purl, aged 44, his wife, Mrs. Frank Hart, Bessie, Walter, Maude, Alice, Hart, Maurice and the baby. Mra. ilart and Maurice were In the country :it the time, the others being at hornet. A'alter was ou the rear gallery whe lie storm struck, eating a piece of ake. Stepping out to see what w .he matter, lie was caught in the wind aid forced toward the river, a part of ;lie time being forced along like a mill hi the ground, all the time receiving blows from the flying rbris. When b reached the bridge he taught hold of something, btil was hit with a mlsaibs and his skull fractured. When he re vived he was in the river and the wind still forcing him on. The water evfr dently had revived him from the stun ning blow. He was forced on acroaa and escaped to the other side, an was soon in the hands of a neighbor, who took him to the court hotlse. Ht is now about well. He said he atill had his mouth full of cake when h found himself in the river, but spit II out as it was full of sand and dirt His was, indeed, a narrow escape. When the wind struck the house II he other members of the family were Inside. Mr. Purl had his skull crnahe and lived, more thau a day, but neree regained consciousness. Mrs. PurTa neck was broken and Maude waa struck in the face as she "was sitting by a window and her head split almoat iu twain. Bessie, the heroine, clung to the cbttV .Iren, Alice, Oscar and the baby, and fortunately escaped with only severe bruises and cuts. They were carried several hundred feet from the home .ind Alice lost. Bessie at once start-id ;o the ruins of her home and en ronte round Alice, who was bleeding to death 'rom a deep gash across the wrist. With great, presence of mind she sought the ?nds of the severed artery and taking .hem in her teeth, being unsible to hold hem with her fingers, she tied a strinj lorn from her tattered dress around ,t, but the string refused to hold and me had to try again, this time being successful, and the life of little Alice, was saved. Returning to the house, she found the bodies of her parents, pulled the debris from them and laid them aide iy side, uot knowing that her fathet was still alive. Oscar and the baby ca caped with severe bruises and cuts. While performing these heroic deed! Bessie was covered with blood from her own bruised and cut body, bul unmindful of her suffering and terror, she sought only the safety of her loved ones. Cuero (Texas) Record. JOHN BRIGHT AS A SPEAKER. ..tanner In Which He Prepared Him self for Public Oratory. I have noticed a discussion In the papers as to whether Mr. ltrlght waa In the habit of w riting out his speech es. I do not suppose that he ever did write such a thing. But, although I have often heard him scak well with out a note, he generally had very copi ous notes in his hand when he spoke, i remember once In ISC!, sitting with nlm In the smoking room of the House of Commons. He was going to make during the evening a set speech, and lie bad before him a bundle of sheets of paper with which he had come pro vided. He happened to say that he wished his speech was over, on which 1 nsked him how far he prepared hit speeches. On this he bunded me th bundle and told me that I might rend '.lis notes If 1 pleased. They were very .oplons. and every now and then a lengthy phrase was Inserted. This, b told me. was his usual habit. When speaking be held Ihe bundle before him In one hand and as soon as one vheet was exhausted he threw It away. There was no sort of concealment In Ibis, although he seemed to follow the notes closely without apparently rend ing them. He fold me that In acquiring the art of public speaking his great est difficul ty was to avoid a rapid utterance. A speaker should not, he explained pause between his words or his syllii ides, but he should pronounce end syllable of a word more distinctly than lie would do In conversation. -Iondos Truth. Kiample. "You ought not to smoke right b rore the children, Henry," expostulated Mrs. Chlnner. "Can't you see thai you're setting t'uem a very bad exam Die Y" "Oh, that's all right, my dear," re plied her husband, easily. "If tnej follow your example of carrying pint in your mouth they'll nm-er live loin enough fo be harmed by my example Syracuse Herald. The Hoi ii l Ion. Mr. Jaggs John, what are yon do 'ng down there, turning the door knot round and round? Jsgps-IHinnn, m'deareat. Can't fln4 any kesh hole, (iuesaer mush be a lem-wlnder.--New York Hun. World' latrgMt Coral RmC The largest coral reef In the world la the Australian Harrier reef, which b 1.100 mile III length. How a girl enjojra Daring twa htf taggtac altar aerl