wrynimivfpx IK I t V "I left tho Shenandoah valloy Juno, 1854, to come to Louisville to work. Tho drouth in that famed valloy Jhad already caused much apprehension, on account of tho growing corn crop. I came to Wheeling, and thero hoing no railroad crossing tho stato of Ohio at that time, I took passage on a small stern wheel boat (tho river being very low), and by that was brought to Cincinnati, whore I was put on tho Alvin Adams, a fine steamer of those days, and on that arrived at Louisville. I noticed the wharf was very deep with dust, and was told there has been no rain for a month or more. From that day, Juno 30, 1854, until August 27, 1854, I saw little or no rain. Sunday, August 27, was the date of the storm that carried down the Presbyterian church, corner Thirteenth and Walnut, killing about thirty persons, and ' that storm ended the drouth. That drouth was during tho spring and summer unlike the present one, which is a fall drouth. The first one caused great loss of crops, and many persons thereafter thought its effects helped to bring on the great panic of 1857, which was a tornado compared to the storms of 1873 and 1893. No doubt this drouth will cause much loss to tho farmer, by the seed wheat failing to germinate, and loss of stock and pasturage, but I can't think it will entail th,o loss, the former.one did." TWO hundred years have elapsed since tlte capture of the Rock of Gibraltar by the British. A writer in "Tho Nineteeth Century and After," says that the capture of this fortress was an' accident and that it became a British posses ' sion in the first instance because at a time when we happened to bo at war with one of tho rival claimants to tho Spanish throne our admiral in the Mediterranean happened to have no particular objective in view, and, having failed in his only enterprise of that year, was unwilling to return home with a fine fleet that had done nothing for the honor of the flag. S'o he thought he might as well make an attack on Gibraltar as do any thing else. Nevertheless, his action has to be reckoned among the notable "deeds that won the empire," and one that on its vi-centenary deserves to bo had in remembrance. THIS writer also says: "The fact that through out the eighteenth century when so many conquests in both hemispheres .changed hands backward and forward n successive wars and nn der successive treaties, Gibraltar remained per manently in the keeping of England might seem to prove that British sentiment with regard, to it was from tho first the same as it is today. But this is far from having been the cause. For, al though at tho end of two hundred years of our possession of the fortress, at a time when tho imperial instinct of Englishmen has become more consciously developed and more deeply ingrained than ever before; and at the same time more in telligently appreciative of the true meaning "of sea power and alive to tne strategical require ments of it& maintenance, tho retention of the key of tho Mediterranean has become an essential article of our political creed, it was a considerable tirao before the immense value of -the acquisition was fully realized by British statesmen." MME. JANAUSCHEK, the tragedienne, who died recently in Now York, had a wide per sonal acquaintance in the United States. She was at one time associated with John McCullough, Ed win Booth and other tragedians. A writer in the Kansas City Journal, referring to Mme. Janaus chek, says: "Her art was so broad and penetrating, her sweep so grand and wide, her force so intense and emphatic, and her character so cracked and careened that she demanded all tho favors and forced the great stars to side step, as it were, or bring out their best qualities, or else be domi nated by tho feminine role. Actors, male and fomale, can not tolerate this, and therefore theso ireat alliances did not cohere long. Among tho moot notable performances of Janauschok were Deborah,' which Augustin Daly produced, and tho dual roles of Hortense, the Fonch maid, and Lady Dedlock. in a dramatization of Dickens' 'Bleak House.' Just before retiring, twenty years ago, she portrayed Meg Merrilles, an astonishing performance, which, singularly, was her last part on the mimic stage.. Some years ago Janauschok came out ofthe obscurity of solitude and, for a brief space, flashed across the theatrical horizon. It was a sad sight, this, of an old woman, once the tragic queen of two continents, playing before small audiences, many of those present ignorant of who she was. 'Meg Merrilles' was the vehicle which she rode in this farewell tour. On this' V The Commoner final tour, which bankrupted tho famous actress, tho real tragedy of her life was enacted. Ono could not help contrasting it with tho farewells of Gar rick, Macready, Cushman and a score of other emi nent bay-crowned actors. Janauschek was en feebled; her voice was weak; her movements slow." INTERESTING reference Is made by tho Jour nal writer to the conditions under which other great actors died. This writer says: "Garrick re tired gracefully and with well-stored larder, tho pride of his friends and tho pet of his nation. Edmund Kean ended his meteoric career by sud den death in the limelight, and in his beloved son's arms. Charlotte Cushman died in plenty, but in pain. Others enjoyed the fruits of their labor until transported to Elysfan fields. But not so Janauschek, as great as any of these. Home less, in a foreign land, the poorhouso awaited her. Ono of her creditors proposed to sell her wardrobe and jewelry. She said: "That man will not sell my costumes and' jewels; because he can not. I would like to see him do so withoutvauth ority from me. He has no such authority, and will not get it. I suppose he thinks he will get the few dollars I owe him if ho sells the tatters of Meg Merrilles, or the nightdress of Lady Mac beth,, or the royal robes of Marie S'tuart or Mario Antoinette.' To the last clinging to the tatters and nightdress and royal robes of her mimic kingdom. This is the irony of existence; this tho foible of an unnatural life." AST. PAUL, Minn., dispatch, under date of November 29, and printed in tho Louisville Courier-Journal,, says; . ' A woman inmate of one of the stato insane hospitals has won a prize of fered by a Boston magazine for the solving of a rebus and a short essay on an assigned topic. Tho prize was a trip abroad or $250. Sho has applied to the state board of control for permission to make the trip, but the board does not deem it safe to allow her to go, The board, however, will endeavor to secure the $250 for her." AN INTERESTING analysis of the annual, re - port of the American Federation of Labor is given 'by a writer in 'ine Wall Street Journal, from which the following extract is taken: "The total membership of tho American Federation this year is 1,676,200, which makes it one of the most important organizations in the United States. This is 2 per cent of the entire population of the coun try. It is 8 per cent of the entire number of males of voting age in 19uo. It is nearly 6 per cent of the nunlber of persons, male and female, engaged in gainful occupations in 1900. The vote for Pres ident Franklin Pierce, who swept the country La 1852 was less than the present membership of this great, industrial organization. The vote for Abraham Lincoln in 1860 was only slightly greater. Not only is the membership immense but the growth in membership has been nothing less than marvelous. Since 1901 it has increased 113 per cent and since 1897 it has increased nearly 540 per cent. It is safe to say that no other organiza tion in the country has had so rapid a growth as that." THE following table gives by years the "voting strength" of the affiliated unions, the total membership, and the annual percentage of in crease since 1896: x Voting Total P. Ct. of Strength. Membership. Increase. 1896 2,806 272,315 1897 ; 2,747 264.825 2.7 1898 -2,881 278,016 6.0 1899 ....;. ":3,632 349,422 26.5 1900 5,737 048,321 56.7 1901 8,240 787.5C7 43.6 1902 ;.". 10,705 1,024,399 30.0 -1903. . ..'.. .: . 16,238 1,465,800 43.1 1904 :..... ,17,363 1,676,200 14 5 Decrease. TT IS' pointed out by the Journal writer that in only one year, from 1896 to 1897, was there a decrease. Tho most notable growth was from 1899 to 1900 over 66 per cent. From 1902 to 1903 tho increase was 43 per cent; while in the past year the percentage of increase was only 14 5 nQr cent, yet actually 210,000 new members were ob tained. - THERE are more than. 140 national and inter national affiliated unions in the American Federation. The Journal- writer says: "These MABEL VILLAS,., a little Massachusetts girl, has recovered her power of speech in a most astonishing manner. The New York World, describing her case, says: "By hiding her play things and teasing her almost into desperation, a nurse in the North Adam3 (Mass.) hospital has restored to Mabel Villas the power of speech. The little girl at last cried out in hor rage, 'I know where it is!' and the nurse had done what doctors had despaired of doing. The little gir fell from a piazza and fractured her skull from ear to ar. For weexta her recovery was considered impossi ble. The surgeons removed much of tho skull and slowly the child began to mend and showed every indication of returning mental faculties hut sho was voiceless. Lip language was practiced and articulation of words was tried daily without re sult. The surgeons were about to discharge her as a mute for life when the nurse tried her experi ment. When her voice was restored the child showed that she had been cognizant of everything that had bean going on about her. She knew 1.0 names of the nurses and he surgeon, and aston ished the house doctor by bidding him good morn ing when he arrived." THE X-ray will soon have a ciose rival in a "fluorescible solution' discovered hy Dr. "William James Morton of St. Loijis. Speaking of this new light a writer in the New York Ameri-, can says: "To turn a spot light upon the liver, lungs or any other organ of, the human bod and illuminate it so clearly that a physician can examine it as easily as thou:' it were removed and placed upon the operating table is believed to be one of the possibilities of tho use of tho fluorescible solutions now being 'ntroduced into medical practice by Dr. William James Morton of St. Louis. Dr. Morton's most recent achievements have made possible the illumination of those " cesses of the human body never boforo brought to light except under the operating knife of the sur geon or the anatomical demonstrator at the slao of the dissecting table. Not only do these fluor escible solutions cause a glow of violent light . .0 emanate from the interior of the body, but tney are said to exercise the same curative effect tnw has beeen observed in a greater degree in tne use of radium. The fluorescible solutions which sei up the fluorescent glow within tho body myoj introduced in several ways. Quinine swalioweu in solution and then subjected to exterior excu tion by means of radium sets up a glcv wmcu very. intense and of a deep violet color. Under iu treatment the stomach gleams like an opaii the man who has become tho subject of tnis perimont looks for tho time as though ne swallowed, a handful of fireflies." - VOLUME 4, NUMBER 4, subordinate organizations are comnnOA, . dreds of local unions.'' aj I it H?? of hun' dally the American Federation ? ?: Finan income in 1904 was $220 IM and l Vms' $203,991, and its balanc Ton hand witf n3 urer is $103,017. There are ninSv Ji? le treas' to whom $83,242 wasJd d&SJ defense fund for local trade and feueraf 1? unions is $81,14G. It is notable that the d iff r Z organizations belonging to the wSrtlSftu in the past year in death oneflts $782189. in.1 benefits, $756,762; in traveling bS in ! ? mssr m and in wS WRITING in "The Engineering Magazine" for December, F. W. Haskell discusses rail road accidents. Referring to this article the New nTuZ'J.. tU 0lt Mr. Haskell I vv, u4x nwuimy. no says that the worst accidents happen on the roads which have the bei equipment for preventing them, and where the rules for running trains are practically perfect His explanation of the circumstance is that encl. neers often run by block-signals knowingly, trust ing to luck to escape harm. From experience they learn that the train whose presence in the bio 4 ahead is indicated by tho signal will probably be out of the way before the following one can over take it Having a realizing sense of the need of keeping on-time, they take charces. It is further asserted that the higher officials of the railway companies arq familiar with- the practice and do not discourage it sternly. Mr. Haskell declares that a violation of the rules is not always pun ished, and that thus a certain demoralization among railway employes results. The chief re sponsibility, therefore, is placed xm the 'men higher up.' " b r 5 1 ! fl fl tfl t h tf, ' , "X .V