THE FOUBTJHt OF JULY BIRTHDAY OF THE GREATEST OF NATIONS. XVliy Kverjr I'atrlotic American Should Rojolco ami Giro Thanks HUlory of tlio Declaration of Independence Its Signers. One hundred and twenty-one years ago the bell rang in Independence hall in Philadelphia. To the uninitiated it THOMAS JEFFERSON , pealed its sonorous notes for some un known purpose. To those who , breath- less.Vere waiting for the sound , it told the news that liberty had shaken off her shackles in the new world , that she had taken her rightful place and that hereafter the people would ac knowledge the power of no ruler except such as might be chosen by them selves. It was a curious scene in that Btaid old Quaker town , the last place in the colonies where one would have suspected a spark would be given birth to light freedom's torch throughout the western hemisphere. It was oil the seventh day of June , 1776 , that the delegates from the colonies nies sitting in congress iu Philadelphia considered the following resolution in troduced by Virginia's statesman , Richard Henry Lee : "Resolved , That the United States colonies are and ought to be free and BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. Independent states and their political connection with Great Britain is and ought to be dissolved. " There had been murmurings and threats and calm expressions of de termination. But here was united ac tion. The people , by their representa tives duly chosen , formally absolved themselves from allegiance from the mother country and said to the world that they had cast off their swaddling clothes , and were now able to walk alone. To speak with absolute truth , all the delegates did not favor this progressive step. Some opposed it on the ground that it was premature. Nevertheless the resolution over came opposition and was indorsed as stated , by the majority of one. Thir teen colonies were represented. Be cause seven of them voted and stood for independence , the United States is today what she is. Subsequent devel opments prove that had the action tak en been delayed , the question of inde pendence might have slept in peace un til the herald ot the people , no one how many years after , sounded the tocsin of revolution. The dele gates thought it wise to defer the ques tion of final consideration to July 1 , 1776 , by which time they believed there might be a more united feeling among the people. Thus it was that 011 June 11 , that famous committee was apppointcd to frame the declaration of independence. Note the names , and if you are a stu dent of the history of the United States , conceive , if you can , of a betler quin- tct to have represented the American people : Benjamin Franklin , John Adams , Thomas Jefferson , Roger Sher man , Robert R. Livingstou. The first was the man whoso fame is ticked into our ears every time AVC hear a telegraph instrument , whose genius is placed in broad light whenever wo enjoy the il lumination of electricity. The second rose to be president of Ihe nation he helped to form. The third is the fa ther of what the world knows as Jeffersonian - sonian democracy. The fourth , puri tan , patriot , leader , gave more in moral force and determination , in knowledge of thtt law and its common sense principles - ciples than almost any man who as sisted at the birth of the nation. The fifth was the man of whom the major ity of people know comparatively little , and yet there was none who better de served a place of honor in the public miud. Eminent as a financier , a shrewd judge of human nature , his touch ou the helm of state was cx- JOHN ADAMS. actly what was needed to keep the young craft on her course. Jefferson had spoken but little in congress and he had no part in the acrimonies which then prevailed. In a plain brick house , corner of Market and Seventh streets , Philadelphia , he drafted the declaration of independ ence. The work was almo&t wholly JeffeEson's , only a few verbal altera tions being suggested by Adams and Franklin. It then was approved by Ihe committee. A few passages were struck out by congress Caesar Rodney , one of Delaware's delegates , in order to have his vote recorded , rode in the saddle from a point eighty miles from Philadelphia , all night , and reached the floor just in time oa July 4 to cast Delaware's vote in favor of independence. On that day , ever memorable in American annals , the declaration of independence was RICHARD HENRY LEE. adopted by the unanimous vote of the thirteen colonies. The enthusiasm of the patriots at hearing the intelligence was unbound ed. While congress had been discuss ing the subject , crowds assembled out- aide the hall and in the streets , an xiously awaiting the result. When it was announced at noon the state house bell , on which was inscribed "Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto the inhabitants thereof , " clanged deep and melodiously and the throng gave vent to long and loud shouts of exulta tion. tion.The The old bell ringer had been at his post since early morning. He had placed his boy below to announce when the declaration was adopted , so that ROBERT R. LIVINGSTON , not an instant might be lost in trans ferring the glad tidings by means of the bell to the waiting multitude. As the wearisome hours passed and no sign came to him the aged bell ringer finally exclaimed "They will never do it ! They will never do it ! " Just th a he heard his boy clapping his hands and vociferating at the top of his ju venile lungs "Ring ! Ring ! " The old hands swayed the sonorous bell with delirious vigor. Its reverberations was echoed by every steeple in the city. That was a gala day in Philadelphia , what with rejoicings and bonfires and illuminations. The cannon boomed and messengers rode away hotly in all quarters to announce the news. Wash ington then was in New York with the army. By his orders it was read to the soldiers , who acclaimed it enthusias tically. The townsfolk on that night tore the statue of George III. from its pedestal in Bowling Gieen and it was melted into 42,000 bullets for the pa triotic troops. "Yesterday , " wrote John Adams to ROGER SHERMAN , his wife , "the greatest question was decided that was ever debated in Amer ica ; and greater , perhaps , never was or will be decided among men. A reso lution was passed without one dissent ing colony 'that these united colonies are , and of right ought to be , free and independent. ' The day is passed. The Fourth of July , 1776 , will be a memor able epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliver ance by solemn acts of devotion to Al mighty God. It ought to be solemnized with pomp , shows , games , sports , guns , bells , bonfire * and illuminations from one end of the 'continent to the other , from this time forward forever. " By a strange coincidence John Adams died on July 4,1826 , the-fiftieth anniversary of Ihe declaration of in dependence. His last words were "Jef ferson still survives. " But at 1 o'clock on the same day Jefferson also passed away. 7 .1 For Centuries Before tiie Christian Era Tky Were Used Egyptians and the Military Mast , As a place of peril the fighting top of a modern raac-of-v.'itr IP the most exposed position in a heated action , cut off as Its oceupasls are from all sheltering armor and poiacd high and clear as a tempting target for an en emy's quick-firing guns. Let that mast be torn away and swept over board by the tempest of small shell that ships of to-day can bring to bear upon unarmorcd parts of a foe , and the brave defenders must KO to cer tain death without the chance of a bit of floating spar , as in the olden days , to hold thorn up till succor come af ter the fierce rush of conflict. The story of the fighting top reaches way back centuries before the Chris- linn era ; in fact , back to the earliest time when war craft might pardonably bo called ships by virtue of their suc cessful struggle with wave and tem pest ; and , amid the rapid changes of to-day , it is hard to trace the connec tion between those nm-ient craft with their rude equipments and the modern battleship , fierce and strong , by right of the power she has plucked from the bowels of the earth and turned to her own purposes of might and majestic dominance. The carvings and drawings of the war craft of the ancient Egyptians and Asiatics , two thousand years before Christ , bear the embryo of the mili tary top perched at the masthead of the slngls spars that bore their sails then. It was merely a rough basketlike - like arrangement in winch one or two men might stand and assail the war riors of the foe where they crouched behind the sheltering bulwarks of bucklers hung against the sides. Perch ed high above , the men in the "ga- bie , " as later it was called , picked off , like sharp-shooters , the enemy before he oould come aboard or tempted him ir.to open exposure and the consequences quences such rathness brought. Down upon the foe's deck the hurt- Hug spear was sent , while the top- men rested far above retaliation save from the enemy's toymen , if hs had any. During the time of the naval struggles between the Greeks and the Romans , the fighting tops disappeared , for it was customary then to lower the m.-i ta and trust only to the great s ec-ps or oais when going into ac tion. Stracgp as it may t = eem the mer- t vessels alone carried fighting thru , and for the purpose only t ef meeting the atiavk of pirates , with r.'honi nearly cvvry FPU. was then in- fes'.fd. Those tops were not unlike rusks , and , with two or three men in them , could be hoisted v.ell up and into position in time to be of service. Many of our large merchant liners ami all whales cairy a somewhat similar arrangement well up on their masts ? to-day. aul. frous the eicw's nest , as it is now called , most o * the lookout duty f-- BOW uone. The Japanese have adopted something of the kind for their modern naval vessels and the cut of the Chito&eV mast ; s typical. As ( .lie shipn grew iu power th. ir masts had to bp heightened by splicing on additional t-pars , and to give spread for the slpyB and shrouds that held them in place , a platform was built at the lop of the lower mast. There Ihe archer and spearman found ample room for his work , and the Saxon chronicles of that lusty writer. Sir John Froissart , in the latter part of the fourteenth century give as some very interesting accounts of the dam age inflicted upon the French , the Spanish , and the Genoese by the top- men of the British ships. Down up on the fragile etna-lures of wood they hurled great stones that bore dov/n the foe in great bleeding masses , tore through their decks , opened their scams , and tent them to the bottom in a style that Sir John makes highly commendable. In the seventeenth century we find the tops broad and open save for the after patt , where a wooden breastwork was reared to shield the topmen. Why only the after part should have been singled out for protection is open for speculation ; but it is not improbable that the Bails before the mast covered to a great extent the marksmen in the top and behind the mast only did they need supplemental protection. These wooden bulwarks in the tops vere va riously painted according to the na tionality of the t-hip ; and for a coipl of hundred years that style of top prevailed , and in form , square behind and rounded in front , still is in vogue in modern sail powered naval ves sels. During all the frigate actions of the war of 1812 the sharpshooters in the tops of the various ships did excellent work , and there it was the marine showed whr.t could be expected of him , even though he stood out with no sheiivioth r than a "stray hammock or to hastily tiic-cd rp for his protec tion. tion.The The first of < . : : r ships of the now navy had tops that were practically steel duplicates of those of the late war ; and but for the presence of modern rapid-fire guns , were i sally of less defensive value than those of thirty odd years ago. It wasn't till we be- fcMi to build our battleships that WP really launched cut into regular mod ern military masts , and then we fol lowed in principle the practices of t.c French. The modern mast oa a fighting ship is purely for military purposes , name ly , on such ships that ara without a spread of canvas of any sort , and its duty now is principally for a service that was once merely incidental to those of the sailing ship. To bear sig nals Is its iirfct mir-sion , and then to carry an armament of rapidfireguns with which to ir.e l the attack of tor pedo boats , to sweep the open ports , and to enfilade the unprotected gun stations of an enemy. With Galling guns pouring out a veritable rain of bullets at the late of 2,000 a minute , and with other heavier automatic guns capable of hurling : a hundred or more of u'.e-pound shell in the same time the modern military top is someting to be considered where the hand grenade , s\vz..c . * 'J-f ? - ! 3' > r& > r e&ifilQ * " - \&Jhfms \ ; - ' f-'Whi 'tf „ l n TTn J - tin in- a * EVOLUTION OF THE MILITARY MAST the stiiik balls , and the rocks of the past might be dismissed with a shrug. There Is but little doubt that the French have set the pace for the mod ern fighting top , and BO luxuriantly have their vessels developed these growths in riotous profusion and va rieties of forms that it was no wonder we soon heard of wanting stability in their ships. Their most recent de signs are decidedly moderated , but still bear the hall mark of great freedom. With the French the idea has been to cover entirely the positions of the guns ami the men in the tops to give the navigator a chance to guide his ship in action from a point well above the smoke of the guns , and , too , to bear aloft the searchlights. Where- ever a closed In top is found on ships of other nations it is of French in spiration. The British have almost exclusively held to an open or uncovered top , the only real protection to either guns or men being the shields carried on the weapons themselves. With us the gunboats Wilmington and the Helena represent the greatest development of the military mast , in all it means for fighting and signal purposes , for conning the ship , and for the carriage of that great shining eye ( hat is to look far into the night The conning tower , so to speak , is just be- lov the lower top. and is reached through the body of the mast proper. Just because of this curious type of matt , one of the enemy's large auxil iary cruisers took one of these boats for a battleship the other day , and lost no time in hustling for the distant horizon. The national tendencies of the va rious navies are marked by the military masts their recent vessels bear , and whether they seek their inspiration from Great Britain or France it in easy enough to tell. The Russians are unsettled ; Austria is equally divided ; r EL PA HAL , SPAIN'S SUBMARINE TORPEDO BOAT. Germany leans toward the French , while the Japanese and the Italians fol low the English. ROBERT G. SKERRETT. Africa's Ancient Sea. Resent studies of the animal life of Lake Tanganyika have shown that that lake differs from all other African lakes in possessing inhabitants that belong to the oceanic species. Still , these sin gular denizens of lake Tanganyika are not exactly like thn marine organisms of the present day. and the conclusion is drawn that a sea , connected with the open ocean , once occupied the parts of Africa , where Tanganyika now lies and that the lake is the last remnant of the ancient sea. Substitute. "You want a trip to the seaside ? Non sense , Jones ! Put a little salt in your morning tub , cat fish at every meal , wain up to town and back so as to tire yourself out , sleep on tha floor , and let the house be dirty , and you'll fancy you're at Margate. " Pick-Me-Up. Bargain , Claude I thought you were not go ing to pay more than 550 for a wheel ? Maud I didn't mean to when I went into the store , but he said if I'd take the $60 wheel he would let me have a dollar pump for 98 cents. Indianapolis Journal. HOW TO KEEP HEALTHY. Don't worry. Don't lay awake nt night to think about your shortcom ings and other people's sins. Don't care violently for any one. Hearts and consciences are opposed to rounded contours and shapely necks. Eat meats with fat on them. Eat llsh with white sauce. Eat potatoes , corn-starch , simple pudding and Ice creams. Wear warm , luxurious clothing , but be careful not to have it so warm as I * induce perspiration , for that will prove thinning. Do cot let it be too heavy , cither. Drink milk and cream whenever you happen to want them. If you don't care for these nourishing drinks , culti vate a taste for them. Avoid lemonade , lime juice and the like. Eat fruit for > our breakfast , but not the tart grape and the tartar grape fruit. Eat baked apples with plenty of sugar and cream , and nil sorts of stewed fruits , which require sweeten ing. ing.Eat Eat for breakfast oatmeal swimming In cream. Drink not tea and coffee , but cocoa , chocolate and milk. Spurn toast , especially if it be made of era- ham or gluten bread. Eat freshiy made wheat bread , with butter and honey. Do not take more exercise than is ab solutely essential to health. Take- the air yes. But let it be in u carriage , whenever you can. or on a sunny bench in the park. Violent exercise is the worst possible thing for the woman who would fain grow plump. A small wallet may contain a vast deal of coined selfishness. Many men carry themselves in their pocket- books.