k • f;5'V The iMtling rain 1B pouring d He* it would ill your cup With bitternem If some day it Should start to pouring up! Umbrellas then would be no \ . - And men in rubber boots i, Would have to go, while all the girls Would put on bathing suits. You'd have a fountain on your Beside each blade of grass. - To keep your cellar warm and df)T You'd need a floor of glass. v1,;.:.-. If you were camping In a tent, | , You'd have to sleep on top, And all night you'd be pravia«M|^.r. The cursed rain might stop. In fact, great inconveniences Too numerous to state Would follow if the falling Tain . Should cease to gravitate. So let us hope there'll be no At least in our town, 13/ S that instead of pouring up > rain will still pour down. --Somerville Journal* THE CABECILLA. The good father was finishing Ms mass when thoy brought him the prisoners. It was a wild spot among the Arichule- gui mountains, A fallen rock in which a fig tree had plunged its twisted trunk formed a sort of altar, covered in guise of a cloth with a silver fringed Carlist standard. Two cracked water coolers took the place of vases, and when the sacristan Miguel, who was assisting the priest at the mass, arose in order to change the position of the holy books, the cartridges were heard jingling in his cartridge box. All around the soldiers of Carlos were silently ranged, their guns slung across their backs and one knee on the ground upon the white beret. The bright sun was concentrating its dazzling heat in this burning and sonor ous rocky hollow, where the flight of a blackbird alone, from time to time, dis turbed the psalmody of the priest and the servant. Higher up on the jagged peak sentinels were standing, forming motionless silhouettes against the sky. What a singular sight it was--this priestly commander officiating in the midst of his soldiers! And how plainly the double existence of the Cabecilla showed itself upon his countenance-- the ecstatic air, the hard features, further accentuated by the bronzed com plexion of the soldier in the field, and ascetism without pallor, in which was lacking the shadow of the cloister; small black, very brilliant eyes, the forehead traversed by enormous veins which seemed to bind the thought as with ropes, to fix it in an inextricable obstin acy. Every time he turned toward the spec tators with open arms to read the Dominus Vobiscum, one saw the uni form beneath the stole, and the butt of a pistol,the haft of a Catalonian knife up lifting the rumpled surplice. "What is he going to do with us?" the prisoners asked themselves in terror, and while awaiting the end of the mass they re called all the acts of ferocity which had been related of the Cabecilla and which had won him a special renown in the royalist army. By a miracle that morning the father was in a clement mood. The mass in the open air, his success of the previous day, and also the cheerfulness of Easter, yet felt by this strange priest, cast upon his face a ray of joy and kindness. As soon as the service was over, while the sa cristan cleared off the altar, fastening up the sacred vases in a huge box, which was borne on the back of a mule in the rear of the expedition, the cure ad vanced toward the prisoners. They were a dozen of republican carbineers, ex hausted by a day of battle and a night of anguish in the straw of the sheepfold, where they had been penned up after the action. Yellow with fear, wan with hunger, thirst and fatigue, they clus tered together like a flock of sheep in the courtyard of an abattoir. Their uniforms full of hay, their belts in disorder, pushed up in the flight and in sleep, the dust which wholly covered them from the tufts of their caps to the points of their yellow shoes, all con tributed well to give them that sinister look of the vanquished in which moral discouragement is betrayed by physical dejection. The Cabecilla glanced at them for an iiistant with a little laugh of triumph. He was upt sorry to see the soldiers of the republic humble, wan and ragged amid well fed, well equipped Carlists, Navarre and Basque-mountaineers as I brown and hard as carob beans. "Viva Dios! my children!" said he to • them with a good natured air. "The re public nourishes her defenders very ill. Why, you are all as thin as the wolves [jof the Pyrenees, when the mountains are covered with snow and they come into the plain to sniff the odor of the table by the lights which shine under the doors of the houses. One is treated otherwise in the service of the good cause. Would you like to make a trial of it, hermanos? Cast off those infamous caps and put on the white beret. As truly as this is the holy day of Easter, to those who will shout, 'Long live the king!' I will give iheir lives and the same campaign food I give my other soldiers!" Before the good father had finished all, the caps were in the air, and shouts of "Long live King Carlos!" "Long live the Cabecilla!" resounded on the moun tain. Poor devils! They had been in such great fear of death, and so tempt ing were all those good victuals which hey smelled close to them, about to be [broiled in the shelter of rocks before the ivouac fires, pink and faint in the bright unlight, I believe that never was the iretender acclaimed with such good will. "Give them something to eat at once," id the cure, laughing. "When wolves elp with that strength, it's because they ave sharp teeth!" The carbineers went off. But one ong them, the youngest, remained itanding in front of the chief in a. proud d resolved attitude, which contrasted ith his juvenile features and the fine own, scarcely colored, enveloping his iheeks with a blond powder. His capote, hich was too large for him, was wrin- kied at the back and on the arms, was turned up at the sleeves over two slight wrists, and by its fullness made him look still younger and more slender. There was excitement in his long, bril liant eyes--Arab eyes, intensified by Spanish flame. And this fixed flame •nnoved the Cabecilla. "What do you want?" he asked of him. "JCSTothing. I am waiting for you decide on my fate." "Your fate will be that of the others. I named no one. The pardon was foe all." "The others are traitors and cowards! I URone Sid not shout anything!" The Cabecilla gave a start and looked him full in the face. -, % "What's your name?" "Tonio Vidal." •" '• _ "Whence come youf* "From Puycerda." "What age?" ^ ' ; "Seventeen." : "The republic, then, has no more mm, since she is reduced to enrolling chil dren?" 1 "I was not enrolled, padre. I am a volunteer." "You know, fellow, that I have more than one means of making you shout 'Long live the king!'" The youth assumed a superb look. < "I defy you to do so!" retorted he. . "So you would rather die?" "A hundred times!" . r ? "Very well, you shall die!" Then the cure made a sign, : ecution platoon came and ranged itself around the condemned who did not wince. This sublime courage touched the chief with pity. He demanded: "Have you nothing to ask of me first? Don't you want something to eat? Don't you want something to drink?" "No," answered the youth; "but I am a good Catholic, and I don't want to go before God without confession." The Cabecilla still wore his surplice and his stole. "Kneel," said he, seating himself upon a rock, and the soldiers having with drawn a short distance, the condemned began in a low voice: "Bless me, my father, because I have sinned!" But in the midst of the confession a terrible fusillade burst forth at the en trance of the defile. "To arms!" cried the sentinels. The Cabecilla gave a bound, issued his orders, distributed the posts and scattered his soldiers. He himself had seized a carbine without taking the time to remove his surplice, when, hap pening to turn around, he perceived the youth still on his knees. * "What are you doing there?" he thundered. "I am awaiting absolution, " was the reply. "That's true," said the priest. "I had forgotten you." Gravely he raised his hand and blessed that bowed young head. Then, before go ing away, after glancing around him for the platoon of execution, dispersed in the disorder of the attack, he drew off a step, took aim at his penitent and shot him.--Alphonse Daudet. Pacing Certain Death. his foot caught and firmly heM in a frog on the Reading railroad track at West Falls, John Duffy met death in fearful form. Duffy was employed as a brakeman by the Reading company, and ran ahead of his train to open a switch. That duty performed, he signaled his engineer to bring on the train. His signal was observed, and as the train came toward him Duffy found that his foot was caught firmly in a frog. He shouted for help and made frantic efforts to release himself, but in vain. The noise of the puffing engine drowned his cries, and when the engi neer saw the struggling man in the full glare of the headlight it was too late to save his life. Swiftly the great engine bore down on the frantic prisoner, and though the the lever was reversed and the brake put down hard the locomotive struck Duffy and he was literally cut in two. Death was instantaneous, but the expression on the dead face showed plainly the ter rible agony the man had endured for a few seconds.--Philadelphia Record. A Heating Scheme. A plan of heating mills has been in troduced by which heated air is deliv ered from a large fan into flues in the walls, registers from each flue delivering the air into the different rooms, this air being heated by the waste gases from the boiler. The products of combustion pass from the boilers through econo mizers for heating the feed water, next through a regenerator for reheating the steam exhausted from the high pressure cylinder and on its way to the low pres sure cylinder, and then passes through air pipes, where it heats the cold air for heating the buildings, then passes to the chimney. If heated air is not wanted, but only cool air for ventilation, the gases from the .boiler are turned by a damper into the chimney without entering the heater, and if the gases are not sufficient to heat the air as desired additional heat is supplied by radiators of steam in this heater. The temperature of the air is raised about 50 degrees by its contact with the hot gases.--New York Sun. Beading by Candle Light "I must inveigh," says ail oculist "against the candle as a night reading light. It is quite a custom, I find, for sleepless folks to keep a candle at their bedside and rely upon it for lightxluring wakeful hours that are passed in read ing. As the flame flickers with the slightest current of air, the light is un certain and waving and most trying to the eyes. A small reading lamp takes a few seconds longer to light, but it is much to be preferred." Stage Fright. "Did you ever have stage fright?" asked the interviewer. "Once." "When was that?" "When I met some road agents while traveling in the Rocky mountains."-- Washington Star. fHE DEATH OF THE EARTH* It will Be Occasioned by the Gradual Ks> tinction of the Sun. M. Camille Flainmarion says that in all probability, notwithstanding all the circumstances which threaten it, oui planet will die, not of an accident, but of a natural death That death will be the consequence of the extinction of the sun, in 20,000,000 years or more--perhaps 30,- 000,000--since its condensation in a rela tively moderate rate will give it on one hand 17,000,000 years of existence; while, on the other hand, the inevitable fall of the meteors into the sun may double this number. Even if you suppose the duration ot the sun to be prolonged to 40,000,000 years, it is still incontestable that the s radiation from the sun cools it, and that the temperature of all the bodies tends to any equilibrium. Then the earth and all the other planets of our system will cease to be the abode of life. They will be erased from the great book and will revolve, black cemeteries, around an ex tinguished sun. Will these planets continue to exist even then? Yes, probably in the case of Jupiter, and perhaps Saturn? No, be yond a doubt, for the small bodies such as the earth, Venus, Mars, Mercury and the moon. Already the moon appears to have preceded us to ward thefina! des ert. Mars is much farther advanced than the earth to the same destiny. Ve nus, younger than us, will doubtless survive us. These little worlds lose their elements of vitality much faster than the sun loses its heat. From century to century, from year to year, from day to day, from hour to hour, the surface of the earth is trans formed. On the one hand the conti nents are crumbling away and becoming covered by the sea, which insensibly and by slow degrees tends to invade and sub merge the entire globe. On the other hand, the amount of water on the globe is diminishing. A careful and reason able calculation shows that by the ac tion of erasure alone .'ill the land on our planet will be covered by water in |0«- 000,000 years. Brouze Powder Making. „£jt§arly a hundred establishments are engaged in the manufacture of bronze powder in and near the cities of Furth and Nuremberg, Germany. It is composed of copper, tin, zinc and antimony melted in proper proportions and cast first into rods of half an inch in diameter and about three feet long, these rods being rolled until about two inches wide and then cut into suitable lengths for han dling. The pieces go to the hammers, where they are beaten into a very small fraction of their former thickness, and are then taken to a sulphuric acid bath, where each sheet is washed to remove all impurities, rust and dirt. After being thoroughly dried the sheets are again hammered by steam hammers until no further reduction is possible, there being a limit to which machinery can be used. Up to this 6tage the treatment which the metal re ceives, whether intended for powder or metal leaf, is identical, but now the process changes. If designed for metal leaf, the further beating is done by hand, but if for bronze powder the sheets go to the shears, where they are cut up into small particles and become known as clippings. These are now ready for the stamp mills, which are run in batteries, enabling one man to run or attend 50 or more. When sufficiently pulverized, the powder is sifted in a special manner, the heavier and better qualities going to one receptacle and the inferior grades to an other.--New York Sun. British India. • Great Britain has been stretching her wings over India. In 1842 she laid claim to 626,000 squares miles of that coun try. She made additions to this every year except 1843,1845 and 1852, down to 1856, when her possessions aggregated 856,000 square miles. Advances were made in 1866, 1882 and 1886, and now the area of India under British rule is 927,88? square miles. British India is larger than all that part of the United States lying east of the Mississippi river and its population five times as great as the present population ot. this whole country. Great Britain may not be able to acquire much more of India. Indeed there is likely to be difficulty in retain ing what she has with native dissatisfac tion and the watchfulness of her aggra vating enemy on the north, who in the last 40 years has moved his boundaries over many degrees of latitude.--Texas Sittings. Window Screens. A transparency at a kitchen window attracted my notice the other day by its novelty. "I made it," said the owner, "because I could not get a transparency at the village store. I wanted one of those screens, you know, that permit you to see out, but do not let outsiders see in. I took an old frame for a wire screen, painted it to match the outside painting of the house and then tacked it to a piece of organdie, fitting it perfectly and stretching it very tight. From thin chintz I cut flowers and sprays, and ar ranging the design in my mind proceed ed to paste them on. After all were on I laid a piece of pasteboard behind and put on heavy weights until they were dry. I then gave the whole a coat of white varnish." SENATOR BATE'S CIGARS. Why Be Never Lights the Costly Weed* He Always Uses. William B. Bate, twice elected senator from Tennessee, never lights a cigar* He has always one in his fingers or be tween his lips, but no match is put to it. He is a familiar figure in the upper chamber -- his abundant snow white hair, a carefully tended mustache of the same color, his stewed form and lined face, with massivo underhung jaw, making him marked in an assembly of strong personalities. His advocacy of the "dry smoke." as it is called, and his habit of using 25 cent weeds as chewing tobacco, have continued for more than a quarter of a century. A story is at tached. He is the last man in the world whom one would suspect of superstition, but his avoidance of matches is due to that part of our natures and to nothing else. He entered the war as a private when his state seceded from the union, and rose through the successive grades of lieutenant, captain, lieutenant colonel, colonel, brigadier and major general. He had a taste of military life in the Mexican war and embraced the first op portunity to re-enter it. One day to ward the close of the long and bitter struggle, when the two stars of the ma* jor general were on his shoulder, his corps, which was a part of the army of the Tennessee, was engaged in a battle in the mountain. . At that time he was an inveterate smoker. Always cool in action, his cigar case was as much a part of his makeup as his horse and saddle. Along toward noon, when the fire from the Federals under assault was particularly heavy and vicious, he moved up to an exposed position in order to give countenance to his men. His brother went with him. Senator (then General) Bate reached fear his breast pocket and took "out a cigar. He bit off the end with customary nicety, scratched a match on the back of his saddle and settled down in his stir rups to enjoy himself. There was a shock in the air, the name less indefinable stir produced by the close passage of a shell or round shot, and the match within two inches of the end of the weed went out. Shrugging his shoul ders and preparing to get another light, he glanced about him. His brother, who had been sitting on his horse a little to the left and in the rear was a corpse. The ball had struck him in the chest. The horse stood unmoved. The man who was alive locked at the uuliglited match between his ling^s. He twirled it slow ly a moment and then rode to the rear for an ambulance. The cigar he held in his hand for an hour or two and slowly chewed into bits. From that day to this he has never known what it is to smoke. Some sense of danger providentially averted has been with him. It is possible that he has come to look upon the lighting of a ci gar as a desecration of his brother's memory. Anyhow he does not light it. Day after day in the senate chamber or in the corridors of the capitol he may be seen with a cigar in his hand that is fre quently carried to his lips, but is unlit. When it is worn down to a mere end, he takes another.--Washington Post. The Joke Didn't Work. A group of loungers were seated in .t store when a coffee colored coon with sloping shoulders and ears at right an gles to his head shuffled through the doorway. "Hello, Pomp," said one of the loung ers. "You're looking just like that lion I saw this morning." "Lion!" said Pomp, with his hair on end. "Where was he?" "In Jake Smith's livery stable." "Sho! What'd he look like?" "Oh, he had legs and body and long ears." "Dat wasn't no lion, yo' poor white trash," returned the darky, disgusted. "Dat was a jackass." "Well, you look just like him," an swered the lounger/lwith a grin. Pomp saw the joke, though he didn't like it to be on him. Just then a farmer entered the store, and the negro saw a chance to repeat the jest at another's ex pense. "Morning, Massa Johnson," said he, "yo' look jest like dat lion I sawyes'dy." "Where did you see a lion, you fool?" was the courteous response. "Down Massa Smith's lib'ry stable. Had logs an body an big long ears." "That wasn't a lion," said the planter. "Den what was it?" asked Pomp eag erly. "Why, a looking glass, you black coou," answered the planter contemptu ously, amid a general roar of laughter.-- New York Recorder. Reassured. Angelina (anxiously)--Are you sure, dear, that you don't regret it, and that you don't sometimes miss your life as a bachelor? Edwin (with cheerful conviction)--Not a bit. I tell yon what, Angy, I miss it so little that if I were to lose you--a-- I'm blessed if I wouldn't marry again.--- London Tit-Bits. The Proper Thing. Miss Keedick--Mr. Gilley actually of fered himself to Miss Darley on a postal card. 1 Miss Gasket--What did she do? Miss Keedick--Refused him. Sh^said j she preferred sealed proposals.--Detroit Free Press. 6 To say that his wife can't make as good bread as his Mother did. CI (.LETT'S . . . . Will give you the great advantage which his mother had, and besides, bread made with this yeast will help bring back his boyhood's digestion, ensuring his enjoyment iLwffif the rest of your cooking disc* Get Magic Yeast at your Grocer's. It it always GdOD and always READY. • "Funny" Man's Joke. A "funny" man went into the Lower Arcade the other morning and saw a notice posted up, "If you don't see what you want, ask for it." He thought he Would show how sly he was, so said to the proprietor, "I don't see what I want." "Then ask for it," said the proprietor loudly, and the twinkle in his eye showed he knew what the festive traveler was up to, but that individual never supposed that a shopman would catch up with him, so he went on: "Well, I've asked all over town for it, and I cannot find one." "I have got everything a man can want," said the other encouragingly. "Well, I have found so many smart men in London that I want to find a first class idiot." "John," said the smiling merchant, turning to an assistant, "bring me a heavy piece of wrapping paper and wrap this parcel up," pointing to the funny man. "All right, sir," replied John as he grabbed the paper and made a rush for the funny man. But he was gone.-- London Figaro. She Was Posted. Agitated Young Bridegroom (immedi ately after the ceremony)--Serena, shall --shall--shall I--shall we--shall we kiss? Self Possessed Bride (her third experi ence)--It is my usual custom, William. --Boston Globe. DR. 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