Shell A ROMANCE 1L1 7 * f * Wilden. CHAPTER XII. ( Continued. ) Shell's life has been so very un eventful during the absence that It does not take long to recount the few email Incidents which have broken its monotony. "It was so stupid of you to come , " remarks Ruby , during a brleC pause In the dialogue going on between Mrs. Wilden and Shell. "I don't suppose we shall any. of us be stopping here more than a few days longer. " Mrs. Wilden looks surprised. "How so ? I have no intention of going home Just yet , Ruby , " she says n little tartly. "The cottage Is taken for two months , and since the rent must be paid , we may as well make the beat of our bargain. " "There Is no best about It , " grum bles Violet. "No , indeed It is a downright snare and delusion , " agrees Ruby. "Since even the Champley brothers couldn't stand it there can be 110 wonder if we run away. " " 1 don't think they grew tired of the moor , " says Shell honestly. "If not , why did they leave it ? " de mands her sister defiantly. "Can't say , " responds Shell ; then , after a pause , she continues "I sup pose you know that they are going abroad in a few days. " "Going abroad ! " repeats Ruby , in a tone of positive consternation. "No , I had no idea of , it ; I understood that they -were merely going back to Champley House. " "They are starting for Switzerland In two or three days , " says Shtll quiet ly ; "and I rather fancy they won't be back till autumn. " "In that case we may aswell stop where we are , " observes Ruby , without her ususal caution. "My dear Ruby , their movements cannot in any way affect ours , " says Mrs. Wilden , looking puzzled and a trifle shocked. "No , of course not , " stammers Ru by , with a momentary flush ; "only I promised Robert Champley in a way to look after the children ! and , since he is going abroad , I should not like to leave them alone on the moor. That nurse is a very illiterate person I doubt if she can write and of course he will want to hear how they are getting on. " "Ahem ! " ejaculates Violet suggest ively , and then indulges in an amused r laugh. x Shell does not laugh , but turns with impatient siep from the room. CHAPTER XIII. "Where are you going. Shell ? " asks Ruby , glancing up from an elaborate band of crewel-work , destined to trim a morning-gown. "I am going over to Meadowcroft to be superintend Bob's donkey-ride. I prom ised him yesterday I would come. " "What folly ! You know he is never allowed a donkey-ride unless he has been particularly good ; and when I ask Piper if , he has been good enough to have one , she Invariably answers No. ' " Shell gives one of those low rippling fit laughs of hers , which has in it a mock ing ring. Mrs. "Piper does- not care for running poor after donkeys doubtless she considers I it infra dig. As she knows that I al then ways do the running business and leave her free , I invariably hear that the son children are deserving of a ride. " j "Well , it's a bore any way , " grum dren bles Ruby. "I wanted you to cut out " my collar and cuffs , as I feel inclined Mrs. for a good day's work. " till "That won't take five minutes , " laughs Shell , stripping off her wash- " leather gloves and good temperedly setting to the task. When , some twenty minutes later , " she arrives at Meadowcroit Farm , she finds the children established in a hayfield - field near the house , and Piper no " where visible. opines "Where is Piper ? " asks Shell , sink shake. ing down in the fragrant hay. "Busy , " answers , Bob , laconically. Gorse "Have you been good children good her enough for a donkey-ride ? " pursues " Shell , smiling. said "Don't know , " responds Bob , with placid indifference "s'pose not. Piper it boxed my ears this morning. " must "Well , never mind , " laughs Shell " "since Piper isn't here we can't ask swers her you shall have your donkey-ride ever today , and then you'll be a good boy on tomorrow. " be "Don't want a donkey-ride , " responds They spends Bob stolidly ; "tell us a story days instead. " and "Not want a donkey-ride ? Why , " what sort of a boy do you call your blankly self ? " demands Shell , turning the gesting child round to laugh him out of what once she imagines to be a fit of the sulks ; nurse. then she becomes aware thatBob's " generally rosy face is pale and languid arrives looking that his bright merry eyes " are dim and misty. " "Do you feel ill ? " asks Shell , think her ing that the child must have been al " lowed to eat something unwholesome. Mrs. "No-no , " falters Bob , with all a boy's to reluctance to give in to physical suf " fering ; "only my head aches rather. " had With a strange thrill at her heart absence. Shell turns to Meg. The little girl is " ( sound asleep on a soft bed ofhay , her you attitude betokening thorough lassitude sorry one fat little arm shields her eyes can't from the light. Removing It gently. Shell notea that poor Meg is wan as a white may-blossom oven the slight movement sends a convulsive shiver through her little frame. Shell la not one to waste time over speculations. Stooping down , she rais es the sleeping child in her arms , and , telling Bob to follow , proceeds to the farm. At the door she is met by the farmer's wife , a kind , motherly crea ture , who takes in at a glance Shell's sign to be silent. Mounting to the children's room , which Is deserted , ehe undresses Meg and lays her In her little cot. A few minutes' persuasion and the promise of a fairy tale soon Induce Bob to fol low his sister's example. But Shell has no need to cudgel her brains for the promised legend. No sooner does Bob's head touch the pillow than he , too , sinks into a troubled sleep. Descending to the big flagged kitch en , Shell holds a hurried consultation with the farmer's wife , the result of which is that a boy is despatched for the nearest doctor. Whilst she is waiting his arrival , Pi per turns up explaining that she has only just been down to the village for a few stamps ; she looks much taken aback when she hears of the children's illness and finds that she cannot pooh- pooh it. I 1 After two hours' waiting the doctor is comes. He Is an elderly man , genial , reliable and fatherly. Shell and the mistress of the house accompany him to the sick-room. When the three return to the big kitchen there is a scared look on two at least of the faces. "All connection with that part of the house must be cut off , Mrs. Pom- fret , and a sheet with Condy's fluid hung at the end of the passage. I will er. telegraph at once to Mr. Champley , if you can furnish me with his address. " Piper , looking scared and pale , pro duces the address , and the doctor takes his departure. "The doctor is not certain , " answers I Shell in her low sweet voice"but he fears small-pox ; it seems there are some cases in the neighborhood. " "Small-pox ! " shrieks Piper. "And am I expected to stop here and lose my life through nursing children with small-pox ? I won't do it no , not for Queen Victoria herself ! " 'Shame upon you , woman ! " cries j c ° Mrs. Pomfret wrathfully. "Do you into mean to tell me you would have the heart to go away and leave them poor little babies , with their father away goodness knows where , and their poor mother lying buried ? I'd nurse 'em myself , and welcome , only I've got my own children to think of , and I cari't , ing. running to and fro to the sick-room with small-pox hanging about my clothes' " I las' 'Let who will nurse 'em I won't.1 was remarks Piper doggedly. after "Do you think I would allow you ? " flashes Shell , her bosom heaving with five. suppressed scorn and anger. "Do you in imagine for one moment that you are to be trusted to nurse them ? " age "You are right there , miss , " agrees wom . Pomfret : "for she neglects them _ , _ dears , shameful. As for nursing. soul wouldn't trust her with a sick cat ; " visito , turning to the nurse , she con * tinues loftily "Take your precious per- , - , _ . , cTjlSO' out of this as soon as may be one though who's to attend to them chil on , I don't know. ' "Don't trouble yourself about that , | jaL ! . Pomfret. I will take care of them with a proper nurse is found , " says Shell throu gently. kind "You mustn't miss it's catching- muster dreadful catching , " remonstrates Mrs. or Pomfret. he "Only when people are afraid , " and laughs Shell. "I don't feel in the least " "What nervous about illness. " ( " "Why 'Cause you haven't seen much , " the Mrs. Pomfret , with a sage head- mean . There is general consternation at I years' Cottage when Shell arrives with young news. hold "Small-pox ! Are you quite sure he grand small-pox ? " cries Ruby , with a Finland shudder. "How terrible ! But surely "It can't be small-pox the children married have been vaccinated. " son "That is the strange point , " an Shell. "There is no mark what maids on Meg's arm a very faint one bride's Bob's. The doctor says he can't being sure for another twenty-four hours. the ought to have been in bed two ago they do nothing but shiver in-law shiver and shiver. " "What is to be done ? " asks Ruby that ; and then , a bright idea sug drain itself 'We must telegraph at oh , to London for an experienced "A . " had "And who is to nurse them till she and ? " were "Piper , of course. " came "Piper has flown by this time. I left brought packing her box. " brought "How disgraceful of her ! However , brought Pomfret must get some one to see been them. " him "Robert Champley told me that you grand promised to see to them during his sand . " then "How utterly absurd and unpractical his are , Shell ! Of. course I am very other for the darling children ; but I there possibly risk euch a catastrophe since. as small-pox no one could expect It. Had It been anything else" grandlloI quently "anything less repulsive , I would have gone to them myself. " "And they are to be left entirely fo strangers , with no familiar face be side them ? " queries Shell in her oven voice. don't see any other possible arrangement - rangement , since you have been foolish enough to let Piper forsake her post , " answers Ruby , with a sigh. "But I see that some other arrangement - ment is imperative , " says Shell decld- edly. "It would be too cruel and cow"M ardly to leave them to strangers. If you won't go and remain with them till the nurse arrives I shall. " ( To bo Continued. ) WON'T EAT WOMEN. Peruvian Cannibal * Regard the Sex as Unclean Animals. Down in the darkest Peru , over an outlying eastern ridge of the Andes , toward the very unsettled boundary lines of Brazil and Bolivia , a flourish ing race of cannibalistic Indians can be found. They are so fierce and un approachable that few missionaries or I explorers have ever felt.courage enough to guarantee anything like a close study of their eccentricities. It was an Englishwoman who recently brought home a photograph of one of the women of a cannibal tribe , and though full of eagerness to know more of these people , she was persuaded to forego investigation. The civilized In dians regard them with a horror that only cannibalism can inspire , and only at long intervals have the white resi dents of Peru seen or captured any of the Cascibos , who range the forests where the precious Peruvian bark is found , and who fight each other In the hope of securing prisoners for a can nibalistic orgie. But there is a queer code in their savage lav/ . They make no effort to seize women for their feasts The very degradation of the sex in a i way its preservation. The male ante or Caseibo regards a woman as an impure being. She is a necessary tor ment , but by no means a comfort , though she accepts her share of duty , and a cannibal brave would well-nigh perish of starvation before ho would pollute his lips with female flesh. Not only is a woman thus despised , but her blood is feared as a poison , from the taste of which no man could recovI I J . The cannibal women profess no such distaste for man's flesh , but are I 1 said town eat it with relish , while in their own turn t they have evidently taken no active steps to convince the men again their ancient error and preju- dice.- Washington Times. I to A PEASANT WEDDING. | in Mrs Alec Tweedie , in her journey- ings through 1 Finland , appears to have displayed a happy aptitude for forming friendly relations with all sorts and conditions of people. At one peasant cottage of the poorest sort , where she stopped to buy a bowl of milk , she fell conversation with its mistress , a all very clean and apparently very aged Ing woman , clad in a short serge skirt , a loose white chemise and a striped apron of many colors these simple garments being all of her own weav . . Over her head she wore a black in cashmere kerchief. Her face might have belonged to a woman of a hun Oh ' or a witch of ancient times , it so wrinkled and tanned ; her hands were hard and horny ; and yet , half an hour's conversation , we new discovered she was only about fifty- Alas . Hard work , poor food and life dark , ill-ventilated , smoky cottages Alas the peasants fast ; at seventeen the many a girl begins to look like an old , woman. The old , or middle-aged , woman was a cheerful and friendly , and was scon beguiled , by the to visitor's comments on a woven band been hanging in sight , into narrating an episode of family history. It had been * of the presents given by her son and his marriage , to his groomsman. prise had ' married a girl of another vil and _ asking her hand in accordance of immemorial Finnish custom , through a puhemies , or spokesman , a of preliminary best man , who The do all the talking while the suit to himself sits dumb. Being accepted , they exchanged rings with his betrothed ing gave her father the usual kihlarat. filled . is that ? " the visitor asked. ty , it is a sort of a deposit given to year girl's father to show he really that to marry the girl a cow or what something of that sort. " A two wrong ' ' engagement , during which the tian people were earning their house of equipment , was followed by a man wedding , celebrated , as usual in , at the bridegroom's house. bring is a very expensive thing to get those , " said the mother , "and my up had to give many presents to the there father-in-law , mother-in-law , brides and groomsmen. To all the only ' maids he gave stockings , that or a the fashion of our country ; to who groomsmen he gave shirts ; to his mother-in-law a dress ; to the father- I a belt , and to other friends head My handkerchiefs. In short , she confessed in the occasion was a very serious and upon the family resources. "But , any it was a lovely time , " she added. vine wedding is a splendid thing. We hope a feast all one day and the next , young then the priest came and they with married. Every one we knew hand from miles around. Some vine a can of milk.and some of them Christian corn brandy , and others and porridge , and Johansen had time , to town , so he brought back with mend some white bread. Aye , it was a the feast ! We danced and ate and tell and made merry for two days.and passes we all walked with my son and the bride to that little cottage on the the side of the wood and left them that , where they have lived ever along " along I I TAEMAGE'S SEEMON. | " MAKE ! HOME HAPPY. " LAST SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. From the Text , John , Ch.tpt. SO , Verio 1O ' as Follow * : "The Dlvclplex Went Away Again Unto Their Own llotuei" Modern Alarrlpce. A church within a church , a republic yj within a republic , a world within a world , is spelled by four letters- Home ! If things go right there , they f ° right ) everywhere. The doorsill of the dwelllnghouse is the foundation of church and state. A man never gets higher than his own garret or lower than his own cellar. Domestic Hie overarches and undergirdles all other life. The highest house of congress is the domestic circle ; the rocking chair In the nursery is higher than a throne. George Washington commanded the forces of the United States , but Mary Washington commanded George. Chrysostom's mother made bis pen for nim- If a man should start out and run seventy years in a straight line , he could not get out from under the sha dow of his own mantelpiece. I there fore talk to you about a matter of In finite and eternal moment when i speak of your home. As individuals we are fragments. God makes the race in parts , and then he gradually puts us together. What I lack , you make up ; what you lack , I make up ; our deficits and surpluses of character being the cog wheels in the great social mechanism. One per son has the patience , another has the courage , another has the placidity , an other has the enthusiasm ; that which Is lacking in one is made up by an other , or made up by all. Buffaloes in I herds , grouse in broods , quails in flocks , the human race In circles. God has most beautifully arranged this. It Is in this way that he balances society ; this conservative and that radical keeping things even. Every ship must have its mast , cut-water , taffrail , ballast. Thank God , then , for Prince ton and Andover , for the opposites. I have no more right to blame a man for being different from me than a driving wheel has a right to blame the iron shaft that holds it to the center. If John Wesley balances Calvin's Insti tutes. A cold thinker gives to Scot land < the strong bones of theology ; Dr. Guthrie clothes them with a throb bing heart and warm flesh. The difficulty ficult is that we are not satisfied with just the work that God has given us do The water wheel wants to come Inside the mill and grind the grist , and " ' the hopper wants to go out and dabble the water. Our usefulness and the welfare of society depend upon our To staying : in just the place that God has us , or intended we should occupy. The institution of marriage has been defamed in our day. Socialism and polygamy , and the most damnable of things , free-lovism , has been tryCU01C to turn this earth into a Turkish the harem. While the pulpits have been I the comparatively silent , novels thsir cheapness only equaled by their nastiness - ness are trying to educate this nation of regard to holy marriage , which she makes or breaks for time and eternity. and , this is not a mere question of resi dence or wardrobe ! It is a question charged with gigantic joy or sorrow , no with heaven or hell. Alas for this dispensation of George Sands ! for this mingling of the night shade with the marriage garlands ! diles for the venom of adders spit into the tankards ! Alas for the white frosts of eternal death that kill the day orange blossoms ! The gospel of Jesus crawl Christ is to assert what is right and ges assail what is wrong. Attempt has I made to take the marriage insti moth tution , which was intended for the had happiness and elevation of the race , grief make it a mere commercial enter the ; an exchange of houses and lands had equipage ; a business partnership only two stuffed up with the stories of child romance and knight-errantry , and un taken faithfulness and feminine angelhood. a two after a while have roused up find that , instead of the paradise her dreamed of. they have got noth twist but a Van Amburgh's menagerie , when with tigers vnd wild cats. Eigh if thousand divorces in Paris in one coiling preceded the worst revolution No France ever saw. And I tell you came you know as well as I do , that neigh notions on the subject of Chris they marriage are the cause at this day the more moral outrage before God and God than any other cause. to There are some things that I want to unive before you. I know there are most of you who have had homes set is a for a great many years ; and , then , ed are those here who have just God established their home. They have never been in that home a few months will few years. Then , there are those socket will , after a while , set up for the themselves a home , and it is right that vultures should speak out upon these themes. ever first counsel to you is , have God Oh , your new home , if it be a new home ; go ba let him who was a guest at Beth flower be in your household ; let the di grow blessing drop upon your every house and plan and expectation. Those of a people who begin with God end I heaven. Have on your right pathy the engagement rings of the di Intosl affection. If one of you be a elegant , let that one take the Bible standing read a few verses in the evening inenct and then kneel down and com scholars yourselves to him who setteth wife solitary in families. I want to in eve you that the destroying angel ested by without touching or entering shop doorpost sprinkled with blood of right everlasting covenant. Why is it thing In some families they never get transa , and in others they always get wife well ? I have watched such cases the wi and have come to a conclusion. In the first instance , nothing seemed to go pleasantly , and after a while there came a devastation , domestic disaster , or estrangement. Why ? They start ed wrong. In the other case , although there were hardships and trials and some things that had to be explained , still . things went on pleasantly until the . . very . last. Why ? They started right. My second advice to you in your i home is , to exercise to the very last possibility of your nature the law or forbearance. Prayers in the housevexat bold will not make up for everything.or Some of the best people in the world are the t hardest to get along with. There are people who stand up in prayer meetings and pray like angels , who at ; home are uncompromising and cranl . You may not have everything just as you want it. Sometimes it will be 1 the duty of the husband and sometimes ; of the wife to yield ; but both stand ; punctiliously on your rights and you will have a Waterloo , with no Blucher coming up at nightfall to de cide the 1 conflict. Never be ashamed to apologize when you have i done wrong in domestic af fairs Let that be a law of your household. The best thing I ever heart of my grandfather , whom I nev er saw , was this , " that once having unrighteously rebuked one of his chil dren , he himself having lost his patience tlenci , and , perhaps , having been mis informed ; of the child's doings , found out his mistake , and in the evening ot the same day gathered all his family together and said , "Now , I have one explanation to make , and one thing to say. Thomas , this morning I rebuked buket you very unfairly. I am very sorry for it. I rebuked you in the presence of the whole family , and now ask your forgiveness in their pres ence. " ' It must have taken some courage to do that. It was right , was it not ? Never be ashamed to apolo gize for 1 domestic inaccuracy. Find out the points ; what are the weak points , if I may call them so , of your companion panic , and then stand aloof from them Do not carry the fire of your tempi too near the gunpowder , if the wife be easily fretted by disorder in the household , let the husband be careful where he throws his slippers. the husband come home from the store with his patience exhausted , do not let the wife unnecessarily cross his tempi , but both stand up for your right ! , and I will promise the ever lasting sound of the war-whoop. Your life will be spent in making-tip and marriage will be to you an unmitigated curse Cowper said : "The kindest and the happiest pair it Will find occasion to forbear ; or And something , every day they live , pity , and perhaps forgive. " I advise , also , that you make your chief pleasure circle around about that home It is unfortunate when it is otherwise. ' If the husband spent the most of his nights away from home , of choice , and not of necessity , he is not head of the household ; he is only give cashier. If the wife throw the cares of the household into the ser it. vant's lap , and then spend five nights the week at the opera or theater , of may clothe her children with satin give laces and ribbons that would con found a French milliner , but they are orphans. It is sad when a child has one to say its prayers to because as mother ' has gone off to the evening by entertainment ! In India they bring arm children and throw them to the croco , and it seems very cruel ; but that jaws of social dissipation are swal Oh lowing down more little children to other than all the monsters that ever mit crawled upon the banks of the Gan- picion ! easier have seen the sorrow of a godless to mother < on the death of a child she hell neglected. It was not so much you that she felt from the fact that ever. child was dead as the fact that she neglected it. She said , "If I had watched over and cared for tae , I know God would not have If it. " The tears came not : it was dry , blistering tempest a scorching " simoo of the desert. When she wrung hands it seemed as if she would touch her fingers from their sockets ; kered she seized her hair , it seemed as repa" she had , in wild terror , grasped a out serpent with her right hand. the tears ! Comrades of the little one mean in and wept over the coffin ; 5t' neighbors came in and the moment eral the still face for' saw of the child shower ) broke. No tears for her. when gives i tears as the summer rain of the < parched soul ; but in all the isfactl universe : the driest and hottest , the clock scorching and consuming thing about mother's heart if she has neglect- how her child , when once it is dead. do may ; forgive her , but she will it . forgive herself. The memory with sink the eyes deeper into the clock- , and pinch the face , and whiten try hair , and eat up the heart with have that will not be satisfied , for- less plunging deeper their iron beaks.a clo you wanderers from your home , know back to your duty ! The brightest grasps in all the earth are those which being in the garden of a Christian so tll household , clambering over the porch for Christian < home. yards advise you also to cultivate sym- Jt flie of occupation. Sir James Mea cha , one of the most eminent and time men that ever lived , while would ! at the very height of his em tinker , said to a great company of spring , "My wife made me. " The flight ought to be the advising partner lor every firm. She ought to be inter a $20 in all the losses and gains of er and i store. . , She ought to have a damage she has a right to know every hand , If a man goes into a business transaction that he dare not tell his of , you may depend that he is on A way either to bankruptcy or moral to ruin. There may be some things which he does not wish to trouble hla wife with ; but if he dare not tell her , he is on the road to discomfiture. On the other hand , the husband ought to be sympathetic with the -wife's occu pation. It Is not easy thing to keep house. Many a woman who could have endured martyrdom as well as Margaret , the Scotch girl , has actually been worn out by house management. Then are a thousand martyrs of the kitchen , it is very annoying , after the vexations of the day around the stove or the register or the table , or In the nursery or parlor , to have the husband - band say , "You know nothing about trouble ; you ought to be In the store half an hour. " Sympathy of occupation - tion ! If the husband's work cover him with the soot of the furnace , or the odors of leather or soap factories , let not the wife be easily disgusted at the begrimed hands of unsavory aroma. Your gains are one , your interests are one , your losses are one ; lay hold of the work of life with both hands. Four hands to fight the battles ; four eyes to watch for the danger ; four shoulders. on which to carry the trials. It Is a very sad thing when the painter has- a wife who does not like pictures. It Is a very sad thing for a pianist when she has a husband who does not like music. It is a very sad thing when a wife is not suited unless her husband has what is called a "genteel busi ness. " So far as I understand a "gen teel business , " it is something to which a man goes at ten o'clock in the morn ing , and from which he comes homo at two or three o'clock in the after noon , and gets a large amount of money for doing nothing. That Is , I believe , a "genteel business ; " and there has been many a wife who has made the mistake of not being satisfied until the husband has given up the tanning of the hides , or the turning of the banisters , or the building of the walls , and put himself in circles where ho has nothing to do but smoke cigars and drink wine , and get himself into habits that upset him , going down in the maelstrom , taking his wife and children with him. There are a good many trains running from earth to destruction. They start all hours of the day , and all hours of the night. There are the freight trains ; they go very slowly and very heavily ; and there are the accommodation trains go ing on toward destruction , and they stoy very often and let a man get out when he wants to. But genteel idle ness is an express train ; Satan is the stoker , and death is the engineer ; and though one may come out in front of , and swing the red flag of "danger , " the lantern of God's Word , it makes just one shot into perdition , coming down the embankment with a shout , and a wail and a shriek crash , crash ! There are two classes of people sure of destruction ; first , those who have nothing to do : secondly , those who have something to do , but who are too lazy or too proud to do it. I have one more word of advice to to those who would have a happy home , and that is , let love preside in When your behavior in the do mestic circle becomes a mere matter calculation ; when the caress you is merely the result of deliberate study of the position you occupy , hap piness lies stark dead on the hearth stone. When the husband's position head of the household is maintained loudness of voice , by strength of , by fire of temper , the republic of domestic bliss has become a despotism neither God nor man will abide. , ye who promised to love each at the altar ! how dare you com perjury ? Let no shadow of sus come on your affection. It is to kill that flower than it is make it live again. The blast from that puts out that light , leaves in the blackness of darkness for . DON'T TINKER THE CLOCK. You Do Yon Will Probably Ruin the Timepiece. "Watch repairers have a horror of touching a clock that has been tin by amateurs , " explained a watch repairer , "and they would rather get of j such a job if they can do so , for loss ( of one of the smallest parts : considerable work to reproduce and much more work than the gen customer expects or wants to pay They try to get out of such a job they can , for in nine cases out ten the result is not entirely sat isfactory. People who have a good , unless they know something the way clocks are made and they * should be taken apart , will the ' wise thing to let it alone when gets out of order. Experimenting it often means the ruin of the - It is absolutely dangerous to to unwind a mainspring , as men discovered for themselves , un the ! proper tools are at hand.'Now , clock ( repairer has a contrivance : as a spring controller , which the spring and holds it while taken out or put into the clock , that there is no danger. The spring an eight-hour clock is often two long , and when suddenly let free flies out with nearly the force of charge of shot from a gun. Some ago ! a friend of mine thought ho tinker with his clock. He did it , and in taking out the main it got away from him. In Its it took off a So lamp from a par table and crushed in the glass of mantel mirror , besides doing ot.1- damage. The $4 clock cost him in exactly ? 25 , besides cutting his seriously. " Extent of a Single Tree. single banyan tree has been known shelter 7.000 men at one time.