THE NAVAL HEROES OF THE GREAT SANTIAGO BATTLE. A GRANITE PILL i ; I hi., iii. .. ' Hi Focetlons Pngrgeatlon of an Old Bar ; V " . PtateOdd Fellow. ; The authorities of the Oddfellows of Worcester,! Mass., are anxious that nil local Oddfellows shall be burled to gether In the locul cemetery, and, ns an lDdueenieut, the tomb shown hns been put up. The 'monument Is mnde of slabs of solid granite, and has been pol ished. It looks like ft stupendous ball of stone, nnd Is the most conspicuous object In the cemetery. A large plot ' of land round about It has bpen pur- TUB MONIIMR5IT. chased by the committee,' and the Worcester Oddfellows will have their names engraved ou thU unique memo rial. , v - N , ': ; . It appears that some of, tho members do not approve of the Idea, as many people prefer to be burled with their families. Some amusement was caused by one of the objecting members sug gesting that the memorial should be placed over the grave of a doctor who died recently, as the ball of stono would represent a certain pill which It np pears the physician luid boon fond of giving to his patients. " Climate of Iceland. Iceland is not by any means bo for bidding a country as Its name Implies; It Is no more a land of Ice than Green land Is 11 laud of verdure. . It Is not nearly so cold us many places In the I'ulted States, not to meutlon the Cunadlan Dominion. The fifty and sixty degrees below ero registered ev ery winter In the Northwest Territory and AkhIuIIhiIo, and even tho thlrty llvo and forty below experienced In Montana ami Northern Dakota, lire unheard of In Iceland. Neither Is tho other extreme of great heat felt, such as these very regions In North Ameri ca , endure. No Icelander ' knows what a temperature of a hundred In the shade Is. There are no , sudden fluctuations or great changes; tho cli mate Is remarkably equable. A varia tion of thirty degree In a mouth Is probably not on record In tho Island. This equableness Is due, of course, to the same cause that produces a similar effect lu the British lsles-tho gulf stream. This groat ocean current wnshes the southern and western shores of Iceland, Insuring a mild win ter ami a balmy summer. There are cinders, but they form no Icebergs. The sou around the Island Is never frozen, nor Indeod Is any floating Ice seen, save ou rare occasions off the northern coast Now and then, In summer, prolonged storms will carry floating Ice aeross from the Greenland coast, and drive It upon the northern shore of Iceland, together with cold fog and rain. Iu this way polar bears are also sometimes landed on the Isl and. On the other hand, the winters are so mild that thunderstorms often occur. In fact, most of the thunder storms In Iceland are In the winter months. " ' ' . ' ,, , A Tastn of Discipline, t . The woman who Insists on dragging her holpless child Into the most crowd ed of shops Is abroad lu the hind this year, as usual. 1 encountered her, or a certain variety of her, In the waiting room of a big store day before yester day. Sho wasn't quite the. common variety, for her child was not helpless. In fact, It was quite evident that the child had dragged the mother, and not the mother the child. She must have been 5 years old, and was so "spoiled" well, hi my old mammy used to put it, she was spoiled till her presence was really an offense to the olfactory sense. She wanted something her mother couldn t give her, nnd she pro ceeded to scream. The mother coaxed. Tho mother begged. The child scream ed. The child danced with rage, and then Bhe held her breath. The fright ened mother tried to pacify her, and then when the child grew purple In the face and seemed on the' point of choking, tho poor woman began to cry. 'Oh. what shall I do? What shall I do?" sho sobbed. "The doctor told me not to get her Into a tantrum. She'll die, I know she will!" , . . Just at this Juncture an elderly woman, with a square chin, stepped up. She did not say a word. She sim ply reached down, lifted . that child, laid her across her knee, and gave her several resounding spanks. Tho as tonished child caught her breath in stantly. She was too surprised to go on screaming. She simply Btnred. The mother began to say things to the el derly woman with the square Jaw, but the elderly woman walked calmly away. There was the look In her face as of a great desire gratified. Wash ington rout, , ... , , Their Hats Came Oft 7 "I had a bit of fun on Labor Day," said an English resident of New York. "I was on tho big ferry steamer coming aeross the ten miles wide bay, when I said to the crowd on board, Take your hats of.' What for T was the reply, I laughed, and said, 'See those ships over there? About three hundred, aren't there? They are British ships, every one. See that little red flag hanging at the stern of each? Take your huts off to that. Those three hun dred or more flags are Britain honor ing your Lalwr Day; take off your hats Land return the compliment Where are your manners, anyway? And the hats came off." Novel Afittbiirtclar Device. In a report from Lelpslc, Germany, Consul Warner describes a novel Ger man anti-burglar device. This con sists of flexible safety curtains made of hardened tubes properly connected, which are Invulnerable to the ordinary burglar's tools, for the reason that the tubes revolve ftoely and the ceuterblt or other tool cau find no hold. Cannot Work tn Blgh Altitude. It has been found In Switzerland that In building a railway laborers could work only oue-thlrd as long at a height of 10,000 feet as a mile lower. Illithest Point for Health. The highest point to which a man can ascend without health Wing se riously affected Is 10,500 feet TOAD'S INGENIOUS PLAN Owes Its " Board and Keep" to the Electric Light Company. A Kansas City toad owes Its "board and keep" to the electric light, com pany. An electric arc light hangs at tho corner of Prospect avenue and In dependence boulevard, and ait night It attracts myriads of flies and bugs. They flutter too near the flame, become Winded or singe their wings and fall to the toad, who sits below In delightful anticipation. lie dines slowly, as becoms an epi cure, taking about an hour for the per formance, , WORLD'S BLACK DIAMONDS. British Isles Fupply Nearly 88 Pel Cent of All the Coat Mined. The British Isles congratulate them selves that hi spite of their , limited cab BSlTltH Iiia UHlTtO tragi WHAST Slid THE COMPARATIVE OfTrUT. area, they supply 38 per cent of all tht coal mined In the world at the present time. Tho United States Is not far be hind, however, annually digging from the earth 80 per cent of the valuable black diamonds. A Hall of Education, Greater New York Is to have a hall of education, to cost something like $500,000. The project has been drag ging irlong for nine years. It Is to bo used exclusively by the Board of Edu cation, which now rents quarters on the outside from time to time. People are beginning to admit that many men are looking for work who do not want It HOW TTIB ELECTRIC LIGHT FEEDS ItlM. , ISIS DEWEY FIGURES IN IT. Anecdote Showing the Bravery of . American Seamen in Danger, Capt Isaiah H. Grant, keeper of the United States lighthouse department storehouse on Central Wharf, recalls an Interesting anecdote that Is particu larly appropriate at this time, and goes to show the stuff of which the Ameri can navy Is composed. Captain Grant Is a brother of William G. Grant,1 the keeper of the light on Matinieus Bock, and of the later tells this story: It was back In 1S64, and Commodore Dewey was then executive officer on board the United States vessel Color ado.' William Grant was a seaman on the same ship, and Is naturally well posted as to our gallant commodore's fighting qualities.' The Colorado was steaming into Hampton . Bonds, , Va., towing a large boatload of sailors, re lates the Portland (Me ) Express. .' .. ! It was a windy day and the waves were running high. In some maimer the boat capsized, and In a moment ev ery one was struggling In the water. All but one, however, succeeded in get ting on its bottom. One sailor who could not swim sank to the bottom. A boat wag at once lowered from the Col orado, William Grant being one of the men assigned to it . ''.' The men rowed with a will, and soon reached the overturned boat and the sailors clinging to Its bottom. They had so much, headway that the boat Shot over the place where the .unfortu nate went down. Mr., Grant was In the bow keeping a sharp lookout for him when he came to the surface. As the boat moved along be looked down into the water, which was clear, and plainly saw the- man near the surface. Like a flash, he scrambled to the stern of the boat, and, without hesitating a second, dived over the coxswain's head for the drowning man. He calculated Just right and In a moment had him by the collar and succeeded In bringing htm to the surface. .. Both men were taken Into the boat, and af ter hard work the half-drowned sailor was revived. He owed his' life to Mr. Grant's bravery and prompt action. ', The next day Dewey, as executive of ficer, called Mr. Grant up on to the quarterdeck, and before every one. thanked him cordially for his bravery In rescuing the sailor. " A few years ago when Dewey, then commodore, visited the Maine coast and called upon Mr. Grant at MnMnl cus,,the Incident was recalled, and a long talk was enjoyed by the men. Commodore Dewey recalled the matter Instantly and again complimented Mr. Grant Slenklewloi's Method of Wort. Slenkiewiez's, method of making a book Is as follows: He works out a de tailed plan, and writes It down careful ly. He fixes this In his head, and lots It "seethe and ferment" there, as he says. , When ready to begin work, he di vides his time, not into days, but weeks. During the first week he produces a certain amount the second week a sim ilar amount and so on, week after Week. He writes Without correction, and. never copies, producing Just one manuscript the one which be sends to the printer. Each week's work contin ues that of the preceding week. Though the plan of the book Is elaborated care fully in advance, this plan is not fol lowed strictly; from the "seething and fonntmting" In his head changes are suggested to the author, and he makes them, fie has no secretary, amanuen sis, copyist, or assistant To write such books as he does with out copying or correcting, to create works likethe trilogy and "Quo Vadls?" by a series of efforts, each one of which gives a finished part, and each part be ing a seamless and flawless continua tion of the preceding, till the last, to gether with all the others, forms a com plete, unbroken whole, Is peruais the niost amazing tour de force In literary experience. Sienklewlez employs no man or woman to help him. He makes all literary researches himself; visits and studies the places which he. needs to see; and when writing in Switzer land, Italy, France, or other countries, takes with him all the books he re quires, and shuts himself In with them during working hours, which for him are from eight or nine till lunch at one o'clock, and then a couple of hours later on. ne never writes after dinner in the evening, and has so ordered his "works and days" that he needs no assistance. Century, ........ . . .Wesley's Sermon, Now and again, no doubt, the text Is everything, the sermon nothing. There Is an anecdote of a London bishop who, having rend that story of John Wesley cutting out every word of his dlscourst that his servant maid did not under stand, determined to preach to n coun try congregation the simplest sermon he could write. He chose an element ary subject and took as his text "The fool hath said In bis heart there Is no God." On leaving the church he asked the parish clerk what he thought of the sermon. "Oh, my lord." said he, "it was very fine very fine and grand. I've been talking It over with -Mr. Beard, and we aaUl how flue It was. But. after all, we can't help thinking that there Is a God." Tempers of Married People. A recent luQulry was made Into the tempers of married people. Out of '.Ci couples who were examined 52 per cent of the wives had good tempers, and only 40 of the husbands were good-humored. Out of the bad-tempered men 32 had good-tempered and 22 bad-tempered wives. Worse than all, 23 per cent, of wives were fretful, 13 per cent violent and 0 per ceut very masterful. A Woman's Watch. Miss inborn It eenis to run very well for a day and a half, and then It will not go at all." Watchmaker "Yes; It should be wound 1 occasionally." Jeweler's Weekly. CENTENNIAL OF OUR NAVY. Prom the First Its History Has Been . One of Brilliancy. The United States navy completed Its Brst hundred years of existence on Sut nrday, April 30, 1808, and It is a coinci dence worthy of remark that the cen tury ended as It began, with a country facing a foreign war. As a matter of fact, it was the pros pect Of trouble with an alien people that called the navy into being. Dur ing the revolution, In which such cap- mm. JK STEPHEN DECATUR. Who recnpturwl tho Phtlndelphla from Tripoli. talus as John Paul Jones and Esek Hopkins made- the patriot cause re doubtable upon the seas, naval affairs were Intrusted to a marine committee. The few public cruisers which remain ed after that costly conflict were sold, and when the Dey of Algiers began to prey upon American commerce, the In fant nntlon was, for the moment pow erless to protect Its own. This led Washington , to urge tho creation of a naval force; Congress In. 1784. voted money to build six frigates, the Consti tution, President United States, Ches apeake, Constellation and Congress, and on April SO, 1788, the present de partment was formally created. : : ' ' From the first the navy confirmed the wisdom of its creators. Early In 17!9, the Constellation we then had a little misunderstanding with Franco fought and captured the Insurgent In West Indian waters, and late In 1803 a squadron of four vessels was sent to protect American rights and honor In the Mediterranean., The frigate Phila delphia, under Capt Balnbridge, , cap tured a Moorish privateer, but ran aground In the harbor of Tripoli, and the officers were made prisoners of war. ; Stephen Decatur, then a young JAMES LAWRENCE. Who died shouting, "Don't gt dr. the itrtp." lieutenant proposed to the commander of the fleet to put a crew on board a Trlpolitan ketch that had Just been captured, enter the harbor at night and rescue or burn the Philadelphia. This was doue on Feb. 16, 1804. The tiny Trlpolitan vessel stole. quietly to the side of the captured frigate, and De catur and his men recaptured her In ten minutes. But as It was Impossible to move her, she was .flred, and Decatur escaped Into the open sea without the Joss of a man. The navy's part In the war of 1S12 was a glorious one. At the outset of that war Great Britain had 1.048 ships, carrying 27,800 guns and 151,572 offi cers and men. The United States, on the other hand, had but seventeen ships, carrying 442 guns and 5,025 offi cers and men. Yet at the end of the struggle, which lasted less than three years, the little American navy bad for the time swept the British mercantile marine from the seas, capturing up wards of 1,500 vessels, on board of which weremore than 20,000 British seamen. This Is a record without parallel, and It qukkens the pulse to read how In Its making the frigate Constitution, commanded In turn by Isaac Hull, Will lam Balnbridge nnd "Old Ironsides" Stewart, captured the Guerrlere and OLIVEB PERRY. The hero o( Lake Erie. four other British men-of-war; how In the battle of Lake Erie Oliver Terry compelled the surrender, for the first time In history, of an entire British squadron, and Thomas McDonough won a victory not less decisive on Lake Champlaln; how captains like Joshua Barney and Bichard Dale came out successful from a dozen hard-fought battles, or David Torter, In the harbor of Valparaiso, fought the Essex against two British vessels for two hours and a half, and only surrendered wrhen the frigate was burning under him, and finally, how when the British Shannon captured the Chesapeake, at the mouth of Boston harbor, James Lawrence, the American frigate's lion-hearted commander, died nt his post shouting which his last breath,"Don'tglve up the ship!" It is a chronicle that will live as long as the language In which It Is written. THE AUTHOR OF "QUO VAD1S." 1 English Writers. In the Century Jeremiah Curtin, the translator of "Quo Vadis," has a pa per entitled "An Acquaintance with Slenklewicz.", Mr. Curtin says: Slen klewlcz expressed himself at some length on English literature and art. I give his own words; . "Of English novelists I like Dickens best. His 'David Copperfleld' seems to me nearer genuine human nature than any other English production of tho century. Dickens derived immense pleasure from the people whom he de scribed; he had a true and vivid ap preciation of unusual characters. In literature Shakspeare stands apart. His knowledge of man seems to me almost superhuman. I am amazed at his in sight and truthful vision, especially when I compare him with other writ ers. Scott had a power of narration that was really phenomenal, but there Is much in his novels that Is not true; not infrequently he ornamented in his own way beautified, as he thought. His account of the chivalry and knight hood of the middlo ages does not cor respond at nil with ' reality. Still, he was a wonderful writer. Thackeray was a great novelist, but to me he has always seemed enthralled more or less by society, mastered by it In a degree, hence Injured as an artist . Tennyson used beautiful language, but he was artificial; he was the poet not of hu manity, but of a class, and devotion to a class always enfeebles an author. Of receut Englishmen, Kipling stands alone as a writer of Bhort stories. Du Manner was very much of an artist by nature. In Trilby his description of Parisian artist life Is ttne; but the book, though entertninlng, Is too fan tastic; the end especially Is unreal be yond measure, as Is, of course, the hypnotism. Blder Huggard I know to the extent of one, novel, 'She,' which I read In Eastern Africa, ' Though very extensive, English literature Is weak In one kind of mental creation, , in which It Is not likely to be strengthen edthe fable. .In this field the Bus. slans have surpassed all Europe; their Kryloff Is the greatest fabulist of mod. ern times." ' SPANISH PUNCTILIO. Amusing Phase of Castillan Character , Exhibited by a Cabinet Crisis. . The Cabinet crisis which took place In Spian In 1888 exhibits an amusing phase of Spanish character.. . The minis terial crisis had existed almost a year, when the resignation of the Cabinet took place us the result of a trivial question of , military etiquette. The Queen had left Madrid for an excursion to Valencia, which the Minister of Jus tice Insisted on her making, according to the published arrangement lest the postponement should ..boousrue4, as a sign of fear of the Zorilllst republi cans, who had convoked a mass meet ing In the same city. The Infanta Isa bel, who was left to represent her, de cided to take a Journey also, and In formed General Martinez Campos that her sister, the Infanta Eululle, would give out the military watchword. , The military governor of Madrid replied that the married Infanta was not legal ly competent to perform that office, and that It was Impossible, according to military rules, for him to recedve the parole from her husband. Prince An tonio, Due de Montponsler, who was only a captain In rank. The Minister of War, who was not on good terms with the captain general sent a brusque telegram ordering bini to receive the password from the Princess Eulalie, whereupon General Campos offered his resignation. All attempts to settle the quarrel failed, nnd, as a majority of the Cabinet sided with the captain general, General Cassola and the ministers who had supported bis view resigned their portfolios. Senor Sagasta handed to the resignation of the entire Cabinet to the Queen Begent but subsequently, upon the Inter's request formed a new ministry. , T A Tart Inscription. Great Barrington's free public library appears to be under obligations to one of her summer residents In the person of Justice Gnynor of Brooklyn. It hag received a copy of the Bible with the following Inscription on the fly-leaf, signed by Judge Gaynor: "I have vis ited many libraries which lacked many books, but only one library which lack ed The Book and to that one I send this." . Italians and Military Service, Out of every 100 young men called out for military service In Italy In 1800, 62 were refused for physical unfitness or other reasons. "I suppose you are very glad that your husband Is entirely cured of his rheumatism?" said a doctor recently to a fashionable lady of Germantown. "Yes, I suppose I ought to be," an swered the lady, "but from now on we will have to guess at the weather or buy a barometer If his bones quit ach Ing before a damp spelL" Philadelphia Call Proud father My daughter strikes B and Is reaching for C. Friend Oh, but you can't really complain until she be gins to strike you for Vs and reach for X's. Judge. Many a man who has nerve enough, hasn't money enough.