TALMAGE'S SERMON. BUSINESS LIFE , LAST SUN DAY'S SUBJECT. A .Lecture In Common lloncd ? "NoI Slothful In llutlntiJftl Fertmit In Hnlrlt ) Serving the Loril" Horn. lajll. ( Copyright 1S09 by I.ouls Klopsch. ) Industry , devotitneps and Uhmtlun fiervlce nil comnicnded In thut short text. Vhat ! Is It pdsslblo that they shall b"o conjoined ? 'Oh , yes. 'Thoje Is no war between religion and busi ness , between Icdgora and Bibles , be tween churches nnd country houses. On the contrary , religion accelerates business , sharpens men's wits , sweet ens acerbity of disposition , fillips the blood of phlegmatlcs , and throws mqrp velocity into the wheels of hard w.ork , U gives butter balancing to the Judg ment , more strength to the will , more mtisclo to Induatry , and throws into enthusiasm a more consecrated flre. You cannot in all the circle of the world show mo n man whose honest business has been despoiled by re ligion. The Industrial classes arc divided In to three groups : producersj manufac turers , ' traders Producers , such as farmers and miners. Manufacturers , fcuch as those who 'turn ' corn Into food , and wool arid flax 'into apparel. Trad ers , 'such ' as make profit out of the transfer and exchange of all that which Js produced and manufactured. 'A business man may belong to any one on all of these classes , and not one Is Independent of any other. When the Prince Imperial of France fell o'n the Zulu battlefield because the strap fastening the stirrup to the sad- ( { lle broke as he clung to It , his cora- i.ndes all escaping , but he falling under .the lances of the savages , a great many people blamed the Empress for allowing her son to go forth into that battlefield , and other blamed the Eng lish government for accepting the sac rifice ; and other blamed the Zulus for their barbarism. The one most to blame was the harnessmaker who fash ioned that strap of the stirrup out of . .ohoddy and Imperfect material as It was found to have been afterward. If the strap had held , the Prince Imperial would probably have been alive today. But the strap broke. No prince inde pendent' of a harnessmaker ! High , low , wise , ignorant , you in one occu pation , I in another , all bound to gether. So that there- must be one continuous line of sympathy with each other's work. But whatever your vo cation , If you have a multiplicity of engagements , if Into your life there come losses and annoyances and per turbations as well as percentages and dividends , if you are pursued from Monday morning until Saturday night , and from January to January by in exorable obligation and duty , then you are a business man , or you are a busi ness woman , and my subject is appro priate to your case. * * * Traders in grain come to know some thing about foreign harvests ; traders in fruit conic to know something about the prospects of tropical produc tion ; manufacturers of American seeds come to understand the tariff on imported articles ; publishers of books must come to understand the new law of copyright ; owners of ships must come to know winds and shoals and navigation ; and every bale of cotton , and every raisin cask , and every tea box and every cluster of bananas is so much literature for a business man. Now , my brother , what are you going to do with the intelligence ? Do you suppose God put you in this school of information merely that you might be sharper in a trade , that you might be more successful as a worldling ? Oh , no ; it was that you might take that useful information and use it for Jesus Christ. Can it be that you have been deal ing with foreign lands and never had the missionary spirit , wishing the sal vation of foreign peopje ? Can it be that you have become acquainted with all the outrages Inflicted In business life and that you have never tried to bring to bear that Gospel which is to extirpate all evil and correct all wrongs and illumine all darkness and lift up all wretchedness and save men for this world and the world to come ? Can it be that understanding all the in tricacies of business you know nothing about those things which will last after all bills of exchange and consignments and invoices and rent rolls shall have crumpled up and been consumed In the fires of the last great day ? Can It be that a man will bo wise for time and a fool for eternity ? I remark , also , that business life is n school for Integrity. No man knows what he will do until he is tempted. There are thousands of men who have kept their integrity merely because they never have been tested. A man was elected treasurer of the State of Maine some years ago. He was dis tinguished for his honesty , usefulness ana uprightness , nut before one year had passed he had taken of the public funds for his own private use , and was hurled out of office in disgrace. Dis tinguished for virtue before. Distin guished for crime after. You can call over the names of men just like that , in whose honesty you had complete confidence , but placed in certain' ' cVises of temptation they went overboard. Never so many temptations to scoun- dreilsm as now. Not a law on. the statute book but has eorae back door -through which a miscreant can oxcape. Ah ! how many deceptions in the fab ric of goods ; so much plundering In commercial llfo that if n man talk about living a life of complete commer cial Integrity there are those who as cribe it to greenness and lack of ' ( net. More need of honesty now than over before , tried lionesty. complete hon esty , more than in those times when business was a plain affair nnd wool ens wuro woolens , and silks , w.cro silks and men were men. How many men do you suppose there arc In commercial life who could say truthfully , "In all the sales I have ever made I have never overstated tile value of goods ; In all the sales I have ever made I have never covered up an imperfection In the fabric ; q ( nil the thousands of dollars I hare ovW m.idn I hnvi < noli tukrtn nnn dis honest farthing ? " There are mon , how ever , who can say it , " hundreds who can jsuy It , thousands who cari srty it. They are more honest than wljon they Fold their first tlerco of rice , or their first firkin of butter , becausp their honesty and integrity have been , test ed , tried and come out triumphant. But they remember a time when they could have' robbed a partner , or have ab sconded with the funds of a bank , or sprung a snap Judgment , or made a false assignment , or borrowed illlmit- ably without any efforts at payment , or got a man Into a sharp corner and fleeced him. But they never took one step on that pathway of hell fire. They can say their prayers without hearing the chink of dishonest dollars. They can read their Bible without thinking of the time when with a He on their soiil In' the custom house they kissed the book. "They" can 'think of death and the judgment that comes after It without hny flinching that dny when all' charlatans and cheats , and jock eys and frauds shall be doubly damn ed. It does not make their knees knock together , nnd it does Hot make their teeth chatter to read "as thu part ridge sitteth on eggs , and hatchcth them not ; so he that getteh riches , and not by right , shall leave them in the midst of his days , and at his end shall be a fool. " What a school of integrity business life is ! If you have ever beeri tempt ed to let your integrity cringe before present advantage , if you have ever wakened up in some embarrassment , nnd said : 'Now , I will step n little abide from the right path and no one will know It , and I will come all right again , it is only once. That only once has ruined tens of thousands of men for this life and blasted their souls for eternity. A merchant in Liverpool got a five- pound Bank of England note , and , holding it up toward the Ught , he saw omo Interlineations in what seemed red ink. He finally deciphered the let ters , and found out that the writing had been made by a slave in Algiers , saying in substance : 'Whoever gets this bank note will please to inform my brother , John Dean , living near Carlisle , that I am a slave of the Bey of Algiers. " The merchant sent word , employed government officers and found who this man was spoken of in this bank bill. After awhile the man was rescued , who for eleven years had been n slave of the Bey of Algiers. He was immediately emancipated , but was so worn out by hardship and ex posure he soon after died. Oh , if some of the bank blUa that come through your hands could tell all the scenes through which they have pass ed , it would be a tragedy eclipsing any drama of Shakespeare , t mightier than Kinc Lear or Macbeth ! As I go on In this subject , I am im pressed with the importance of our having moie sympathy with business men. Is it not a shame' that we in our pulpits do not oftener preach about their struggles , their trials , and their temptations ? Men who toll with the hand are not apt to bo very sympathet ic with those who toll wltli the brain. The farmers who raise the corn and oats and the wheat sometimes are tempted to think that grain merchants have an easy time , and get their prof its without giving any equivalent. Pla to and Aristotle were so opposed to merchandise that they declared com merce to be the curse of the nation , and they advised that cities be built at least ten miles from the sea coast. But you and I know that there arc no more industrious or high minded men than those who move in the world of traffic. Some of them carry burdens heavier than hods of brick , and are expose'd to sharper things than the east wind , and climb mountains high er than the Alps or Himalaya , and if they are faithful Christ will at last say to them : "Well done , good and faith ful servant ; thou hast been faithful over a few things. I will make thcc ruler over many things. Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. " We talk about the martyrs of the Piedmont valley , and the martyrs among the Scotch highlands , and the martyrs at Oxford. There are just as certainly martyrs of Wall street and State street , martyrs of Fulton street and Broadway , martyrs of Atlantic street nnd Chestnut street , going through hotter fires , or having their necks under sharper axes. Then it be hooves us to banish all fretfulness from our lives , If this subject be true. We look back to the time when wo were at school , and we remember the rod , and we remember the hard tasks , and wo complained grievously ; but now we see it was for the best. Busi ness llfo Is a school , and the tasks are naru , and ttie chastisements some times arc very grievous ; but do not complain. The hotter the fire the bet ter the reflnlnlg. There are men before the throne of God this day in triumph who on earth were cheated out of ev erything but their coffin. They were ! sued , they were imprisoned for debt , they were throttled by constables with a whole pack of writs , they were sold out by the , sheriffs , thpy had to com promise with their creditors , they had to make assignments. Their dying hours were annoyed by the sharp ring ing of the door bell by some impetuous creditor who thought it was outrageous nnd impudent' tlfat' a man should dare to die before he paid the last half dollar. ' 'l had a friend who -lnid many mis fortunes. ' Everything went against him. He had good' business capacity and was of the best of morals , but hu J was one of those men such as you have sometimes seen , for whom everything scorns to go wrong. His life became to him a plague. When I heard ho was dead , I Bald : "Good got rid of the sheriffs ! " Who are those lustrous souls before the throne.2 When .the question Is naked , "Who arc they ? " the angels standing on the sea-of glass respond spend : "These are they who came out of great business trouble dnd had their robes washed and made white in the blodd of the Lnm > . " A man arose in Kuitnn street prayer - or meeting and s.ild : "I wish pub licly to acknowledge the goodness of God. I was in business trouble. 1 had money to pay , and 1 had no means to pay It , and I was In utter despair of all human help , , and , I laid this matter before the. Lord , untl this mornIng - Ing I went down among some old busi ness friends I had not seen In many years Just to make a call , and one said to me , "Why , I am so glad to sec you ! Walk in ! We have sbmo money on our books due you a good * while , but we didn't know where you were , and therefore not having your address wo could not send it. We are very glad you have come ? " And the man stand- iilgi in Fulton street prayer meeting said : "The amount they paid mo was six times what I owed. " You soy It only happened..so ? Ypu are unbeliev ing. God'answered'that man's pray er. er.Oh Oh , you want business grace. Com mercial ethics , business honor , laws of trade are all Very good In tholr place , but there are times 'when you want something more than 'this world will give you. You want God. For the lack of Him some that you have known have consented to forge , and to mal treat their fripnds > and to curse their enemies , and their names have been bulletined among scoundrels , and they have been ground to powder ; while other men you have known have gone through the * very 'same" stress of cir cumstances triumphant. There arc men here today who fought the battle and gained the victory. People come out of that man's store , and they say : "Well , if. there ever was n Christian trader , that is one. " Integrity kept the hooks and waited on the customers. Light from the eternal world flashed through the show windows. Love to God and love to man presided in that storehouse. Some day people going through the street notice that the shut ters of the window are not down. The bar of that store door'has not been removed. People say , "What Is the matter ? " You go up a little closer , and you see written on the card of that window : "Closed on account of the death of one of the firm. " That day all through the circles of business there is talk about how a good man has gone. Boards of trade pass reso lutions of sympathy , and churches of Christ pray , "Help , Lord , for the god ly man ceaseth. " He has made his last bargain , ho has suffered his last loss , "he has ached with the last fatigue. His children will get the result of his In dustry , or , If through misfortune there be no dollars left , they will have an estate of prayer nijd Christian exam ple which will be everlasting. Heav enly rewards for earthly discipline. There "the wicked cease from troub ling and the weary are at rest. " PREVENTING ELECTROLYSIS. A l'osnllil ( ! MulliofI of . JCoiKlurlns Vu- KT.mt itf ! lrio Currents IIiirinlrHi. The amount of damage done to water and gas pipes by electricity that has escaped from trolley lines on Its way back to the power house is almost in calculable. The evil is not so serious nowadays as it was several years ago. Modern methods of providing for the return of the current have lessened Its vagrant disposition. Nevertheless the trouble continues to some extent. A suggestion that bears on the subject was made by the Engineering News a few days ago. In St. John , N. B. , it has been the practice for nearly half a century to close the Joints in city Tvater pipes , not with melted lead , as in most places , but with : pine plugs. The experiment wa's tried m 1851 and again in 1857. On both occasions it worked so well that the same policy was pursued two years ago. The ob ject in view was merely to secure econ omy. But mention of the fact reminds the Engineering News of the insulat ing qualities of wood and of the propo sition made last year that two or more lengths of wooden pipe be Introduced into the mains in every district where tioublo was to be anticipated. Elec tricity will not enter a line of pipe if it cannot get out -again. An obstacle which Would prove offe'ctual at any given point along a system of metallic conductors would dissuade a current from going Into It in the first place. Hence , if the wooden plugs interfered with the conductivity of the pipes it 1 ยง hard to see why they would not pro tect them from invasion. And if the currents would not atterhp't to travel along the pipe at all no electrolysis or corrosion would enaue. VUlicrman'n rnruilUr. The record just published of a fish ing expedition in Lapland should bo good redding for anglers. The party was one of two rods , with followers. They fished for eleven days and se cured u total of 282 salmon and 115 grilse , weighing in all nearly 6.000 pounds. The best day's catch for one rod was thirty-three salmon and twen ty-two grilse , or a total weight of 553 pounds. It sljoukl bo added that the fishing party had to wait their oppor tunity , for when they arrived at their destination the river was frozen , and when the thaw came there was at first too much water for fishing. London Globe. A Chicago rascal who called himself "Hope" secured from $1 to $10 apiece from poor people out of employment , and told them to call later and get po sitions. As might have been expected , both Hope and money arc lost. DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. How SucccMfiil Farmer * < > | t nite This Irf > rtmrnt of' Ilia Farm A Few UlnU UK to Hi * fur * 'of l.l\m Stock HUI | Milk Dilution Soimrulort. New8pap6r liullolln No. 77 , Indiana ' Experiment'Station , ; , Within , ( ho past few months there has been introduced to the farmers , of Indiana .what Js tornied , n dilution cream 'separator , frills Is not u separator as commonly understood by dairymen , whefo cream /B / oeparated from milk by ccrftrlfugal force , but , la a specially constructed can , usually of largo size , I'u which cream separates from milk "by'rising to the surface , by the commqn. gravity process. . The principle of creaming in this can , however , differs from that usually performed in the dairy , through the mixing of water with the milk to assist the cream to rise. These specially made cans haVe certain p6- cullarltles of construction and are ad vertised by the makers ns "cream separators. " The cans of , different manufacturers differ In fern and atylc. but the principal feature with all is to fill the can partly full of new warm milk and the"n at once add' n' largo quantity of cold water. This of course dilutes the milk , perhaps 100 per cent. In this diluted condition , , thp claim of ' the manufacturers is , that' the cream wll rise more completely and rapidly than if not diluted ; that In 20 to 30 minutes it will all rest oil'tho surface of the skimmed milk , Which' may be drawn oft from bolow. In 1893 the Indiana Experiment Sta tion for two weeks carried on an ex periment on th9iuftuGnco.ofdUution of milk on efficiency of creaming. The results of thisi work , as published In bulletin 41 of the station , were that a greatsr loss of fat occurs in skim milk when dilution is practiced than with undiluted milk , that'tho loss is greater with cold than with warm water , and. that by diluting the milk a poorer quality of skltn milk for f9ed- Ing is thereby produced. These results were in accordance with conclusions arrived at through similar experiments at the Vermont , , Cornell , Illinois nnd Ontario college stations. The process of dilution was not to be recommended ns a general practice. These so-called separators are pat- Manly Miles : These arc the two largest geese known ; they are very compact in body , dignified in carriage , quiet and gentle in disposition. When 3 years old and well fattened they will frequently weigh forty-flvo to fifty pounds per pair , sometimes reaching as high as sixty pounds per pair. They will lay from thirty to forty eggs in a season and , &Mtfh all. Their r theTa are valuable , of which they yield about half a pound at a picking. The gos lings are more hardy than the common ' variety and grow very rapidly , fro- ented , and the Cornell Experiment Station at Ithaca , N. Y. , has recently published a bulletin describing and Il lustrating eight forms of thorn , as do- Bcrlbed in ( ho Patent Office Gazette. Persons interested may perhaps se cure a copy of this bulletin on appli cation. The farmers and dairymen of Indiana arc advised not to purchase liese cans. The price as a rule is ox- irbltant and the practice of dilution is undesirable. But if the farmer wishes to secure the same results ad vertised by the makers o ? these cans , ho may obtain them by diluting his milk in a comparatively inexpensive , round can , such as may be secured of iny reputable dairy supply bouse , or : an be made by any good tinsmith. Such a can , however , should have a aucet in the bottom , through which no skimmed milk may be drawn. In fact , If our farmers will set their milk undiluted In deep cans nay eighteen to twenty Inches deep and eight in diameter set in cold water or cold room , they will get more satisfac tory returns than when set in shal low pans or crocks. C. S. Plumb , Dl- ector. About the Poultry Ynrd. The element of beauty should not bo lost sight of in the breeding of poultry. Certainly the good-looking hen is not likely to lay any more cgga than the unsightly one. Nevertheless , there is a real value In having n ( lock uniform in color and markings , nnd withal beautiful. The young especially arc stimulated by the beauty of the fowls to take an Interest In them. This Interest may develop Into something of value to the ones that are moved y it. i Tttfru Feed wp thf > poultry for moulting time. A woll-tlod flock will nomotlmos molt so easily that the process will bo hardly n6tlced , and will oven contlnua to drop R few eggs every day. It la often easy to get meat from the slaughter houses. When-plgs or hogs arc killed there are waste portions that may be cooked and kept for a few dnyu. This will greatly stimulate the pro duction of now feathorj nnd will cor- ruauandiugly relieve the drain on th" system. We notice In a poultry paper the ex pression of the editor , "Never , never , nev'or , food soft mcssca ofi rtny kind. " To us this appears a rather queer sug gestion. It Is queer In the light of modern experience , which seems to have demonstrated that the soft mesa Is1 a1 great boon to the poultry * espe cially if they hnvo boon for. months confined to u grain ration. Many .oC bur most successful poultrymon1 food soft food once a day the year round , and find it of great advantage. The writer of this always had trouble with Indigestion in his fowls before ho adopted the plan of giving the fowls a breakfast of cooked or scalded ground food' Since that time , a period of five years , no Indigestion has ap peared , and ho attributes that fact en tirely to the fact that the whole-grain ration was in part supplanted by a food that required lees work by the digestive organs of fowls. Th * Klnc Itlrd mill the I'ouUrynmn. Don't allow the small boy with the squirrel rlllu to go Into your groves and practice his marksmanship on the King blrda , says Wallace's Farmer. The question is often naked what Is the best method of destroying thai hawks which provo such d hindrance to the poultry ValbWr. Tlitf success which you mcot with in destroying the hnwka will bo nothing to. brag about , It , matters not what plun you may adopt to that ( end. Tho. hawk Is an exceedingly Waryi bird , nndtyou will spend many weary hours trying to trap him , without success. But you can enter Into an alliance with the King birds , and when the hawk cornea stroll ing your way in search of a dinner thqy will furnish him BO much enter tainment that ho will forget what ho came for. Ho will soon learn where a pair of these audacious llttlo fighters arc on guard , and will avoid the local ity In his flights. The King bird kills some bees , and for that reason every body so minded think they have a license to slay them without mercy ; GREY TOULOUSE.GEESE. TOULOUSE.GEESE.U quently weighing , .when 4 or 5 weeks old , from six to eight pounds each , and at 3 months from fifteen to eight een pounds. They require no food but pasturage , except in winter. In color the gecso and gander are alike , but can bo distinguished by the form and voice , the gander being taller and more upright Uinu tlip jposo , wjille they haVe larger necks anu a higher-keyed voice than the goose. Tbo quality of the flesh is good. On this page wo 'show a pair of gray geese of-this va riety. but bees constitute1 but 'a small per tion of their subsistence , and nobody ever had a colony of bees seriously weakened by the contributions which they have levied upon It. They beat everything ngalnst hawks , and If n few families of them can bo induced to make their homes in the premises no other protection is needed. The poultry raiser who sanctions the kill ing of the King birds on his place is depriving himself of thgi services of some mighty good friends. The Old Sltter.-In the meantime the good wife had procured a few old biddies from a neighbor and set them in old barrels. Wo passed hv them several times each day for all the long twenty-one days. Wo never looked about the temperature , the moisture or the ventilation. The old biddies didn't , either. They just set there and slept. The stupid things. How do they know what the tempera ture Is ? One of them is blind in one eye and has her tall feather pulled out. Four of them had sixty eggs When they began to "pip" the old UiU- dies woke up and said. "Chirr , chirr with an occasional cluck. Fifty-seven chicks crawled out of those sixty eggs The old blind hen batched every egg and has not "crowed" about U , either ' She did It with her llttlo "hatchu " Ex. Dyspeptic Fowls. Fowls troubled with dyspepsia can be cured generally Provide ample room for each bird' with pure water , feeding regularly a w oil-balanced ration , with generous exercise in obtaining food , and this will icstoro these cases to health as a role. Ex. _ _ Th'c man who travels alorte tella lies ' THE NAM E STEWART. Whnt lh Correct ofr-lli Nntney At n recent meeting of thclan. ; filewnrt Society in Glasgow , Col. ilbbA' ' Stewart of Ardvolrllch , who presided , referring to' ' the different ways of spell ing Iho clan name , safd fm | | tljo "dif ferent ways of spelling the tfam'o arosn cither from accTdcntnl causes or other woU-dnflncfl reasons. The final letter 't' was Rii'bntltutcd for the 'd' of the original nnmo 'Btewar'd' for the salfb of euphony. The spelling of the name Steuttrt"wml'lqYiUo 'n Mary , on her return from France , French spoiling of her name , a which she had been accustomed , ami many clansmen perpetuated the royal spelling , But , ln whatever way < , hpy their 'namo , they all came from * the original stock. Nor does this cnU > the matter , for it may be rcmcmbere'd by many that the Earl of Galloway re fused to take part In the Collection of the "dtuart exhibition" in London to 188 ! ) , because , the commlttco refused to spell the "Stewart ' " hl.4 name , as lord ship .himself docs , Ho maintained that this wan the only correct orthography , and held aloof from the exhibition which disregarded this assertion , This , however , seemed rather high-handed. cspeblally when we discover by refer ence to historical documents that near ly all the famous people ' 6f the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries sjiclt their ' names in I'wo or three1 different wayb. In short , there was no "proper spell ing , " though Mary Queen of Scots al ways wrote 'IStuart , " for the , almpl rcoaoh tlmtishQ waa educated iniFranco and tlio Frcri6h alphabet had no "w. " Earlier kings of her race spelt their names "Steward1 or "Stewart , " or "iStuart , " at the fancy of llm moment wjie'n tliey held' the , pen."Wo have ncaV-1 ly thi'rty ( .different ways' on * record ot spoiling the surname of Stewart' ' in English , Gaelic , French , Latlti , Italian , Spanish and Dutch , as follows : Stew ard , Stewart , Stowartt , Stuart , Stuard , Stfeuarde , Stoiiard , Steimrt , Stcuert , Stewort , Steort , Stcubhart , Stoublmrtt. Stlubhart , Stovyard , Stlurt , Stewart , Sturgard , Stuyardo , Stywnrd , Stuardus , Estuard , Eatuarza , Stlvard , Stlvardl. It la contended that "the right etymol ogy" Is S-dow-ard the 'Lord ' High , or the Hlfifh Lord that Is , the lord ncxf to the king In power. RUBBER IS GETTING SCARCE. I'ur That ItoiiMiii Oltl Itlcyclo Tiren Are Mnd" Over , ' The popularity of bicycling has cre ated a great , demand for rubber and as a consequence the commodity is becoming - coming scarce nnd the need of econ omy In its use is imperative. It may not be generally known that the india- rubber dolls , animals and other toys used by children In many cases began their commercial existence in the form of bicycle tires. All our India-rubber toys come from Germany , ami several enterprising English shlppors have found that thn shlnmnnt nf old. wnrn- out tires to the Gorman factories is a very profitable business. During the past two years tons of old rubber , that used formerly to be thrown away , or remade into cheap doormats , have been shipped to Germany , and sent back transformed into elaborate and gaudy squeaking dolls , elephants and other toys. Though rubber is used for a wider variety of articles than any other material , moro rubber was useji last year in the manufacture of bicycle tires than for any other purpose , and the demand for rubber is now perma nently in excess of the supply. Moro than 800,000 pairs of , tires were made in England during the last season , and it is impossible to make them of any but the very best rubber. _ _ _ _ _ . 5 - -tt i - { ' Hlcvoiiion n a llurelnr. Edmond Gossc has written a paper on ' 'Stevenson's ' Relation with Ch'ildrcn , " in Chambers' Journal. In it ho relate ? a story of his youthful days , ns. narrated - ' rated to bluiBeJf by Stevenson , Ho "was still a little fellow when in the nUnmiGr * " holidays , after reading a number of detective novels of a bad kind , he was passing one Sunday .afternoon along a rend in an Edinburgh suburb. , There ho saw a deserted house , furnished , but without a caretaker. It struck young Stevenson that it would be .a fine thing to break into the house , which ho ac cordingly did , roaming from room to room , looking at books and pictures in great excitement , until ho thought ho heard a nolso in the garden. Terror seized upon him as ho Imagined him-v self handcuffed and convoyed to prison just as the church folks wore returning home. Ho burst Into crying , then man aged to creep out as he had como iii. , y Day Dreaming- I Day dreaming and the building of ; | fantastic castles In the air is not half so innocuous and harmless a pleasure s it seems. The day dreamer , accord- ng to medical experts , is akin to a lunatic. Children and old , men who revel In day-dreams have mental char acteristics of the insane. Often they tell lies , not because they lack the moral sense , but because they have distorted in themselves imagination. Gradually they lese the requisite will power to concentrate their minds 9n a slven subjqct , and their thoughts be- ' 5ln to wander. Then it is only a race between insanity and death , the win ner claiming the dreamer. Hud the Hyniptoiua. Bllklns Smytho tries to make people ple bollevo that he belongs to the "up per crust. " Wllklns Well , I should think ho did belong to the "upper : rust. " Bllklns In what way does ho show it ? ' Wllk'ins Always shorfand utslly broke. Brooklyn Llfo. . ' ' "