3?HE StTSTDAlT OKEG02vIA2s. POBTINDj JASTTJ-AJRY 6. lS9o. 12 mmcK WPT IS Mb ' W THE 1VIXTER KOBIX. 2ow Is that sad time of year "When no flower or leaf Is here; When In misty Southern ways Oriole and jay have flown. And of all sweet blrde, alone The robin stays. To give thanks at Christmas tide; Hopes of spring time yet abiae! See. In spite of darksome days. Wind and rain and bitter chill. Show and sleet-hur.g branches, still The robin stays! Thomas Bailey Aldrich. flapoleor?'? Oplij Sop The son of Napoleon I, Francis Charles Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, kins f '.-Rome, Duke of Reichstadt. Prince of I Parma, was ushered Into the world with a ' pomp, rapturous acclaim and eulogy, that told of his precious dignity and import ance. It was nearly at the cost of her own life that the Empress Marie Louise presented Napoleon with this eagerly de sired heir. Never has there been a more forcible exemplification of the truth that "man proposes, God disposes," than in the "destiny of her child. At the infant's flrbt walling cry, his ex ultant sire saluted the pink morsel of Imperial humanity as king of Rome, and lestowed upon the puling babe the great eagle of the Legion of Honor, the grand oross of the Iron Crown, and the order of The Golden Fleece. When the baby was "baptized in the Cathedral of Notre Dame "by Cardinal Fesch, an archduke of Aus tria and the mother of Napoleon were liis sponsors. O shades of Schonbrunn and pining eaglet of France! How dif ferent the ending from the beginning. It had been announced that if the child -were a son, 100 salvos should be flred from the cannon of the Paris fortifications. Should it prove only a daughter, 21 were deemed sufficient to herald the event. At C o'clock on the morning of the 20th of March, 1811. the first bellow of the braz en mouths told the people that Napoleon liad become a father. Peihaps it was the French passion for dramatic effects that made the interval between the 21st and 22d roar of the cannon longer than that between any of ttie others. Doubt less the breathless eagerness of the peo ple made it seem longer than it was. But 3t came, a louder boom than ever. And "before the grey dawn had caught its echo the populace was shouting, rushing wildly about, thronging to the Tuilleries, and wearing out their lungs in clamorous erecting of the king of Rome. Apartments on the ground floor of the Tuilleries were set apart for the young 3:ing, and all the force and worth of Madame de Montesqulen were given un stintedly to moulding him for his high estate. The following Incident Is a proof that she went about It well. One day the king of Rome got Into a fit of rage as violent and plebian as if he were the baby of a sansculotte. The countess quietly had all the curtains drawn. Struck by the udden gloom Francis Charles demanded an explanation of the thing. "One day," T&plled the countess gravely, "you mubt jrovern these people who are outside the windows. And I did not wish them to see you in such an unworthy fit of anger." But it was not long the Tuilleries and the subordination of all his world to his train ing for imperial power. Before his prpud father could complete the palace which he liad started for his son on the Seine op poslto the bridge of Jena. Napoleon I was an Idol overthrown. In 1814 the allies en tered Paris. A little later the empress another and her Infant son were In flight accompanied uy the faithful Countess of Montesqulen. It was a flight not without its dangers. It was the beginning of part second in the life of the king of Rome, and from then to the wretched end, when after violent convulsions the wasted Duke of Reichstadt died with a piteous cry for Ills mother on his lips, the sadness of it lias hardly any relief. The separation of the boy and his father at this time was a final one. They never naw each other again In life. Seven years later the great Napoleon, during the si:: weeks In which he lay on his bed of slck aiess at Longwood, often turned his dark vyes, whose luster was so dimmed, on the portrait of his son. For one of the most VOUTH'S v DEPARTMENT CQfTCD By - the pleasant lawns of this garden-prison. It was at least some pleasure for him to see the butterflies, to watch the saucy squirrels, to look at the flowers and ride on his pony under the overarching trees. But he still lacked much of the joy ous exuberance In play which seems the natural due of children of his years. One day when the little fellow was about 8 or 10 he gravely said to the Em peror Francis: "Grandpa, Isn't It true that when I was In Paris, I had pages?" "Yes." "And isn't it true that I am called king of Rome?" "Yes." "Bur, grandpa, what is it to be king of Rome?" "When you are okler. I can explain it better," re plied the emperor. "I am emperor of Aus tria, as you know. But I am also king of Jerusalem, although I haven't any power over Jerusalem." The little chap remembered the children who had surrounded him at the Tuilleries and at Rambouillet, and he probably wanted playmates at Schonbrunn. If he were king of Rome he didn't see why he couldn't have them. In 1817, Marie Louise went to her Duchy of Parma, leaving the THE KING OF HOME. in the great cathedral in Vienna and his entrails were buried in the church of the Augustlns. The son whom Napoleon so loved, and on whom he based so many hopes, not only failed Xo realize .any of them but even in his physical appearance, instead of reproducing the dark Italian features of his father he exhibited the blonde coloring of his mother. The tall handsome boy had light hair and soft blue eyes. So, in his last illness, Napoleon, with, his eyes fixed on the portrait of his son, ex claimed shortly before his death: "Mon fils." The last words of that son were a weary wail to his mother, "Melne mutter, melne mutter" What a desperate foil ing of the great Napoleon's most cher ished hope! Death had come to be the chief aspira tion of the unhappy little duke who would at time passionately exclaim, "Oh, why don't they let me die in peace." When the Countess Camerata, daughter of the Prin cess Bacciochi, wrote an account of his father's death to the young Napoleon, after the revolution of 1SC0, and called on him to avenge the death of his sire, is It any wonder that the poor melancholy young fellow declined the task? And shortly before his death there was talk of making him king of Belgium. There was a howl of protest. Then the great king, "Death," removed all fear of cabal that this shadowy Napoleon could arouse by taking him where his father had gone before. The father who had written: "Oh, may I press him to my heart, upon a fairer shore!" Beside the laryngeal phthisis which car ried off the Duke of Reichstadt, he was probably affected b a cancerous trouble in the stomach, an hereditary ailment. In this connection there is a pathos in recall ing that Napoleon, dying at Longwood, had told them to perform an autopsj on him after his death, and ordered that a complete diagnosis of the condition of his stomach should be sant to his son, so that if this hereditary ailment should seize him, he might have this assistance toward combating it. Pathetic, too, was Napo leon's exhortations to his son to complete the work he had begun, and his advice to him, should he be restored to imperial power, to marry into the family of the Russian czar, because of the strength such an alliance conferred. Pathetic, too, those Jast words of the imperial father about his son: "But all that you can say to him or all that he learns will be of lit tle use to him if he has not in the depth of his heart that love of good which can alone affect good things. I will hope, however, that he will be worthy of his destiny." Happily Napoleon died without knowing what that destiny was to be. He was spared one pang by this. JOHN J. A. BECKET. torn and, -within the circle It made the pic ture of a beautiful girl standing by a. milk white caw. There were two peculiarities about the milk-white cow. Her ears were as black as jet and her horns shone and glittered as if they were mads of gold. "The Prince was entranced. He gazed at the beautiful picture long and lovingly, and the cow sat on the rim of the basin and chuckled as proudly as if it had paint ed the picture. The girl was the loveliest the Prince had ever seen and the cow was surely the most beautiful of her kind. The Prince's attendants uttered exclamations of delight when they saw the picture, and his ministers, when they were sent for, were struck dumb with astonishment. " 'If this bird could only speak!' cried the Prince. "But the crow went chuckling about the room saying to itself: 'What a fool a prince must be who cannot understand my simple language!' The Prince rased at the picture framed by the gold ring for a long time. Then he hastened to take it from the water. As he did so it shrank to its natural size and the picture of the beautiful girl and the cow with- the golden horns disap peared, and the ring no longer burnt his fingers. He .dropped it in the basin once more, but it remained a simple gold ring and the picture failed to appear again. "The Prince was disconsolate. He re-' tried to take the ring from the golden horn of the cow. Some said they tried It just for fun, and some said they tried It just out of curiosity: but all of them failed. Even Evlen's stepmother tried, and then she made her daughter try, hut when the daughter touched the ring it burnt her so that she screamed. And then, some of those who had tried and failed turned up their noses and said it was a trick. "Evlen had never thought of tryms She had seen the Prince and admired him, yet she had no idea of giving up be fore all these people. But as soon as her stepmother started for the palace with her daughter, there came a knock at the door. Evlen opened it, and there, stand ing before her, was the old man who had carried her to the Thunder's house, and to the Jumplng-Off Place. She was very glad to see him. and told him so, and he was just as glad to see her. " "Why don't you go and get your ring?' he asked. " 'It is lost," she answered. 44 It Is found,' he said, 'I have placed It on the golden horn of the cow that stands near the palace door. You must so and get It.' " I have nothing to wear, she replied. "Then the old man tapped on the wall and called: " 'Sister Jane! Sister Jane! Where are A. WIXTER. THOUGHT. Old Winter is a surly soul. Gaunt, haggard, pirn and gray; His trumpet blast sweeps frosa the knoll All that is green and gay But isn't he a poet still. Of sweet and gentle art. Who ieels a kind and gentle thrill Of sunshine in his heart When he depicts In dreams wind-tost The flowers of summer's train 3n arabesque of sparkling frost Upon the window pane? R. K. MUNKITTR1CK. malned in the palace and refused to go I you? out. He moped and pined until the fam- j " 'I am where I ought to be, was the little 6-year-old Francis Napoleon in the care of his grandfather. The emperor loved the child in his way. In form he gave him the sort of training the im perial princes received. As soon as the boy got old enough he had one distin guished professor to teach him ancient languages, another to teach him philology, another to drive philosophy, natural law. politeness and economics into his poor head. Major Weiss instructed this little recluse in the palace of Schonbrunn, in fortifications! And he had to pass ex aminations before the imperial family. He is said to have passed them fairly well. When he was 13, Prince Diestrich steln gravely taught him what his father. Napoleon, had done in the way of history. On July 22, JS1S. when he was 7 years old, his grandfather made him Duke of Beich stadt. It was on this same date, July 22, that he learned of his father's death, and also on the same date that lis breathed his last. The child had some en thusiasm, but he was passionate and dis trustful and quick to form estimates of character. With his poor, starved exist ence, it Is natural enough that he should enjoy horseback riding. He loved to ride his horse in the Prater, a beautiful park of 2000 acres, in "Vienna. And the boy alo liked his military practice. His grandfather made him captain of the Im perial Chasseurs. But the life of the young Duke or Reichstadt was not the healthy one of boys of his age. Many a son of an Aus trian peasant had far more fun than he. Some historians say that he was purpose ly thrown with the gay Duke of Salerno in order that he might be led into dissi pations and thereby undermine his con stitution. The thought is too dreadful to be easily credited. In 1831, the year his mother was obliged to abandon her duchy, he began to show too clearly that some wearing malady had possession of him. He had profuse sweatings and contracted a cough which often made him spit blood. His mother's condition in regard to her states fright ened him and he Interceded for her with Francis I. But although he was 111 and sick of life he would avoid taking the medicine the doctors prescribed, which he held in horror. They took the young fellow away from his military exercises and operations, thus removing the one great amusement of his life. No wonder he begged his grandfather to let him "play soldier" again. In the spring equi nox of that year he exposed himself to the MR. THIMBLEFINCER. THE CHILDREN'S SECOND VISIT. (Copyright. 1S95, by Joel Chandler Harris.) VII. "I hope that isn't all of the story If you call it a story," said Buster John. "Which?" remarked Mr. Thimblefinger, with an air of having forgotten the whole business. "Why, that about throwing the gold L 1 I 1 Great Dos. The Points of Breeding- That "Win the Prizes. By John Gilmer Speed. UJT BURNS, IT BURNS," SUE CRIED, "TAKE IT OFF.' '. 1 HlilTf fl A 1 HfilHHf M MMiTT IffilKL uH Miff wBSfm 1 1 H i a ' 1 Jjliilf MM a I I Wilms ? ' ! W i &&m&&w & ummi t J llS If 1a iTlT VAJtil IN THE EUPEEOR' LIBRARY. touching tral'.s in Napoleon was his strong, pure affection for his exiled boy. What over may be thought of the poetic worth there may have been in the verses lie wrote at St. Helena on the portrait of that son, there can be no question that his Iwart spoke when he penned these lines: "These features dear, so sweet and fair. Here shall I ne'er see more: "et may I press him to my heart Upon a fairer shore!" As has been sakl, when the allies came in 1S14. Marie Louise and her infant son of three years hastily left Paris and arrived at Schonbrunn early in May of the same year. This was one of the Imperial pal aces of the Austrian emperor who made it the summer residence of his familj. It raeaas "Beautiful Fountain." It is a raMe and & half from Vienna and there is a menagerie and a botanic garden at tached t it. This was destined to be the abiding place for nearly the whole of his Miert life of the melancholy son of the great Napoleon. It Is some comfort for the sympathetic mind to picture the. for lorn little descendant of emperors run ning about In the greea alleys and over rains and got worse. One day he went out for a morning horseback ride, and in the afternoon went out again for a drive in an open carriage in the Prater. When he came back after this he had a severe hemorrhage. This was too much. For the first time, the poor boy admitted his sufferings. They decided to take him tn Itslv Tint it va tnn lnt Rrt Vila mother came to Schonbrunn one June evening and the sight of her encouraged him. and he rallied a little. Then his peins returned. The night of July 21. one of. his attendants. Baron Moll, stayed up with him. he was so ilL Reichstadt sud denly sat up In bed ami with an accent of despair gave utterance to the touch ing exclamation: "Iche gene unter. Meine mutter! Melne mutter!" that is, "I give it up. Oh. mother, mother." He fell into convulsions and at Z o'clock the son of Napoleon had breathed the last of the many melancholy sighs which had es caped from him in his short but weary llfe. He died in the room in which his father had dictated the peace of Austria. They cave him a raaenificent funeral. His heart, poor broken heart! was deposited SUE TOUXD IT ASD TURXED IT UPSIDE DOWN. ring from the window," replied Buster John. "Well, no," said Mr. Thimblefinger, in an absent-minded way. "In a book, you know, you can read right on if you want to, or you can put the book down and rest yourself when you get tired. But when I'm telling a story you must give me time to rest. I'm so little, you know, that It doesn't take much to tire me. Of course. If you don't like the story I can stop any time. It's no trouble to me to stop. Just wink your eye at me twice and I'm mum." "Oh, we don't want you to stop," said Sweetest Susan. "No, don't stop," remarked Mr. Rabbit, drowsily, "because then everybody gets to talking, and I can't doze comfortably. Your stories are as comforting to me as a feather-bed." "Then I'll add a bolster to the bed." ex claimed Mr. Thimblefinger. He hesitated a moment and then went on with the story. "Of course Evlen didn't know what to do when her stepmother threw the gold ring from the window and pushed her from the room. She went back to her bed and lay down, but she couldn't sleep. After awhile daylight came, and then she dressed and went down into the garden to hunt for the ring. She searched every where, but the ring was not to be found. "Now, the ring-could have been found very easily if it had been where It fell when Evlen's stepmother threw It from the window. But that night a tame crow, belonging to the prince of that country, was rooctlng in one of the trees of the garden." "Oh, was it a sure-enough prince?" asked Sweetest Susan. "Why, certainly," replied Mr. Thimble finger, with great solemnity. "A make believe prince could never have reigned In that country. The people would have found him out and he would have been put In the calaboose. Well, this tame crow that belonged to the prince had wan- dered off over the fields and had gone so far away from the palace that It was un able to get back before dark, and so it went to bed in one of the trees growing In the garden behind the house where Ev len lived. "Of course, as soon as morning came, the crow was wide awake, and ready for any mischief that might turn up. It flew to the ground, hoping to find some thing for breakfast, and hopped about, searching in the leaves and grass. Sud denly the crow saw the ring shining on the ground and picked it up and turned it over. What could it be? The crow's curiosity was such that it forgot all about breakfast. It seized the ring in its beak and went flopping to the palace. It "was so early in the morning that the palace was closed, but the crow flew straight to the prince's window and beat his wings against it until some of the attendants came and opened it. when the crow walked in with great dignity. "The prince had been awakened by the noise, but when he saw the bird stalking into the room as stiff as a major-general of milvtia he fell back on his bed laughing The crow hopped to the foot-board of the bed and stood there holding the gold ring In his beak, as much as to say: Don't you wish you were as rich as I am?' "The Prince rose from his bed and took the ring from the crow, but It was so hot that he made baste to drop it in a basin of cold water. Then a curious thing happened. The ring seemed to expand in the basin until it was as large as the bot- ily doctor was called in. The doctor fussed about, and felt the Prince's pulse and looked at his tongue, and said that a change of air was necessary, but the Prince said he didn't want any change of air and wouldn't have it. In fact, he said he didn't want any air at all, and he wouldn't take any pills or powders, and he wouldn't drink any sage tea, and he wouldn't have any mustard plaster put on him. He was In love, and he knew that the more medicine he took the worse off he would be." "Well, a little sage tea ain't bad when you are In love," remarked Mrs. Mead ows. "It's mighty soothing." "Maybe," continued Mr. Thimblefinger, "but the Prince didn't want it, and wouldn't have it. He wanted the beauti ful girl he had seen in the picture. He was In love with her, and he wanted to marry her. So the ministers consulted to gether, and finally they sent around a bailiff" "Nonsense!" cried Mrs. Meadows. "Tut tut!" exclaimed Mr. Rabbit. "Well," said Mr. Thimblefinger, "he sent a crier around" "A herald, you mean," suggested Bus ter John, who had read a good many 1 story books. ' , "A bailiff, could do the work just as well, but you can have it your way. Well," continued Mr. Thimblefinger, "the Prince's ministers sent a herald around to inquire at all the people's homes if any of them had a cow with golden horns, but nobody had such a cow and everybody wondered what the herald meant. A cow with golden horns! Peo ple went about asking one another if they had ever heard of such a thing before. Some said the throne was totter ing. Others said the politicians were try ing to work a scheme to increase taxation. Still others talked about the peril of the nation. Everybody had gome explanation, but nobody had the right one. The poor young prince was nearly crazy to find the poor girl whose picture he had seen in the basin of water. "For a, few days the people heard no more of the matter, but at the end of a week the herald went round the city again declaring that the Prince would marry any young lady who would bring as her marriage portion a cow with golden horns. She need not have riches of any kind; all that was necessary was a cow with golden horns. This word went around among the people, and from city to city. Rich men with daughters tried everywhere to buy a cow with golden horns, but all to no purpose. "The prince waited and waited and pined and grew thinner. But just as matters were getting to be very serious Indeed, an old man appeared in the palace park leading a beautiful cow with jet black ears and golden horns. The servants set up such a shout when they saw the beau tiful cow that everybody in the 'rlaiace was aroused and all came out to see what caused the noise. Then the servants and attendants ran over one another In their efforts to reach the prince, who was mop ing in his room. As they ran they cried: " 'The cow with the golden horns has come! The cow with the golden homs has come.' "The prince forgot his dignity and hur ried out to see the cow with the golden horns. The old man came leading her, and she was, indeed, a beautiful creature. Her head and limbs were almost as deli cate as those of a deer, and her eyes were large and soft. Her body was as white as snow; her eyes glistened like black silk, and her golden horns shone in the sun. The old man bowed low as he led the beautiful creature forward. " T wouldn't make much of a bride my self, your majesty." he said. 'I have brought you the cow with the golden horns. She might find you the bride that I failed to bring1 you.' " M fear I shall have no such good for tune,' replied the prince, 'but I think you have proved to me that I am not dream ing. How shall I reward you?' " 'I ask no reward, your majesty. I only ask the privilege of taking away my cow with the golden horns when you have found your bride.' "When the prince had given his promise the old man said: You have a ring, your majesty, that came to you In a curious way. Let this Ting be placed on the left horn of the cow. The girl or woman that Is able to remove this ring will be the bride you are wishing for. Every morning the cow with the golden horns will ap pear here on the lawn and remain until night falls. Let it be announced, your majesty, that whoever takes the ring from her shall be the princess of realm. " "Huh!" exclaimed Drusilla, suddenly, "He talk like he been ter college." "Will you hush?" cried Buster John. But Mr. Thlmblefinser paid no attention to the interruption. " 'But how do you know,' asked the Prince, 'that the right one will come to get the ring?' " 'How do I know that your majesty has the ring? the old man answered. "This seemed to satisfy the Prince, who caused it to be announced all through his kingdom that he would choose for his bride the girl or woman who could take the ring from the golden horn of the cow. "Of course, there was a great commo tion among the ladies when this announce ment was madet and nearly all of them reply. The wall opened, and out stepped the old, old woman that Evlen had seen combing her hald by the well at the end of the world. " 'Clothe this child in silk and satin, and comb her hair out fine. Sister Jane. "The old woman grumbled a little, but gave Evlen a touch here and there, and in a moment she was dressed as fine as the finest lady In the land. " 'Now she is ready, brother, said the old, old woman, and then she disappeared in the wall, combing her long gray hair and smiling. " 'Must I walk?' asked Evlen, looking at her satin slippers. " 'Nonsense!' exclaimed the old man. Then he tapped in another part of the wall. 'Nephew! Nephew! Where are you?' " 'Wherever you wish me to be,' a voice replied, and then the wall opened, and out stepped the handsome stranger who had given Evlen the gold ring. What do you want?' " 'A carriage and horses, said the old man. " 'They are at the door, was the reply, 'and I'll drive them myself.' "Sure enough, there stood at the door a coach and four, and Evlen was carried lo the palace in grand style. Liveried ser vants appeared and spread a strip of carpet before her, and the cow with the golden horns came running to meet her, and in a moment she had the ring. Then the people set up a loud shout, crying: " 'The Princess! The Princess!' "And then ths prince came out and went to her. She would have knelt, but he lifted her up, and knelt himself before her, and kissed her hand, and smiled on (CbpjTiglited,lSH,byS.S.McClure, Limited.) The dogs of fashion in America have pretty nearly all of them come to the United States by way of Great Britain. There are to be sure in this country some distinctive breeds that originated on this side of the Atlantic, and the dogs of the Indian villages are probably Indigenous, aboriginal. Among the dogs that are American, in the sense of first having been produced here by a crossing of strains till there was a distinctive type, are the Newfoundland, the Chesapeake Bay dog, the American foxhound, the American bloodhound and oue or two others. The coon dogs are distinctively American, but I am afraid that they cannot be said to form a separate type; yet I do not insist on this opinion. A reference of this ques tion to the members of congress repre senting districts south of Mason and Dix on's line would probably secure some valu able and authoritative information on a subject of which the world at large is now in entire ignorance. But the dog of fash ion, the dog that attracts great atention at the bench shows, the dog that com mands high prices, comes to us by way of Great Britain, and in most instances is practically of British origin. Two of the dogs now bringing the highest prices, and therefore occupying the positions of ultra fashion In the canine world, are not Brit ish, but they are vary fashionable in England, and had this not been so, there is little chance that they would have found such great favor in this country. I allude to the St. Bernard and the Russian wolfhound. Both of these are distinctly show dogs, though under proper conditions, each makes a good and trustworthy compan ion. But at present they are bred ard Imported mainly for exhibition purposes, and at the bench shows they never fall to attract a very large measure of atten tion. The romantic history of the St. Bernard surrounds him, even in thisage, when his occupation Is gone, with an in terest that will not fall so long as we re member the good monks of the hospices in the Alps and their human efforts to rescue the cruel snow-belated and be wildered travelers who had lost their way. As assistants in this kindly work of succor the St. Bernard dogs performed feats of sagacity and strength almost too wonder ful for belief. But the accounts arc so well authenticated that intelligent doubt is impossible. The railway tunnels and improved facilities for travel through the Alps have taken the occupation away from the St. Bernard, and had not fashion come to his rescue the breed would prob ably have become extinct. As it Is, there are many more St. Bernards in the world than when he and his kind were trained to perform and did perform the noblest work ever given to a dog to do. In contemplating the history of the St. Bernard dog, it is easy to agree with Cuvier that the domestic dog is "the com pletest, the most singular and most useful conquest ever made by man." What has been the effect of lack of occupation and training upon the St. Bernard, I am not prepared to say, though upon general principles and judging from the effects of like conditions upon other dogs with which I have a more intimate acquaintance, I fancy the St. Bernard of the bench shows, the blue-ribbon winner, is more sym metrical, of finer coat, of more delicate constitution and of more uncertain tem per. If these assumptions be correct the dog cannot have improved during the gen erations of idleness. But he Is a great favorite and specimens have been bought the form, in Massachusetts of a. legislative enactment declaring it a misdemeanor to keep a bloodhound within the state. As a matter of fact, the English bloodhound Is one of the gentlest members of the canine race, and even the American blood hound hunter of runaway slaves and es caped convicts is not In the least Blood thirsty, all the sensational tales, to the contrary notwithstanding. These blood- hounds, both English and American, fol low man's trail to find their game, but not to prey on it. A bloodhound would no sooner jump on a man he had found than a pointer or setter would jump upon the quail or partridge that had been traced by scent. The bloodhound Is trained to find, not to destroy, and is therefore as useful in hunting lost children as desper ate criminals. Up at Fairhaven, In Vermont, where Mr. Winch ell has a kennel of bloodhounds and mastiffs, a bloodhound bitch was one day quietly sleeping before his sitting-room fire. His son, then 5 or 6 years old, took it into his head that the bloodhound's eara were long, and, finding a pair of scissors. determined to trim them to mastiff size and shape. He put his sturdy little legs over the sleeping bloodhound and sat down on her. Then he began on her ears with the scissors. The bloodhound awak ened, and appeared to realize that if she got up she would throw the boy Into the fire, so she howled with all her strength of lungs till some one came to the rescue. It never occurred to her to bite the boy. r "wrm iV $ 8 Btf?rf, mM tfi:&r ibv jitfv maksxtBnmw l! .s1- c;w.iL? &m "vvv'o i t 'wrs-i j YV I I -vv-u I v-"L4.!nr. rM 3IODJESKA, THE PRIZE RUSSIAN WOLF HOUND. her, for she was the lovely girl he had seen in the picture." "What is the moral of that?" inquired Mr. Rabbit, waking from his nap. "Why, you didn't even hear the storj," said Mr. Thimblefinger. "That is the reason I want to hear the moral of it," remarked Mr. Rabbit. "There is no moral at all," said Mr. Thimblefinger. "Then I'm mighty glad I was asleep," grumbled Mr. Rabbltt. (To be continued.) . The Future of Gettysbnrj?. Gettysburg Star and Sentinel. The Gettysburg battlefield development contained in General Sickles' bill will, when completed, secure for Gettysburg a by American breeders at immense prlces 55000 and $10,000. The newest favorite, and one likely in a year or so to be even more fashionable than the St. Bernard, Is the Russian wolf hound. This dog was also introduced here from England, though within a year or so enterprising breeders have made im portations directly from Russia, where the wolfhound Is a great favorite, both as a companion and as a sporting dog. In this country It Is not likely that he will be useful other than as a show-dog and as a companion. He is without doubt the handsomest of the greyhound family, and is at once both larger and stronger. In deed, many specimens are larger than the deerhound. He is more graceful in move ment than either of these, and in general CHAMPION BEAUFORTS BLACK PRINCE, THE GREATEST OF MASTIFFS. Now. It Is a libel to call a. dog with suclt sense and good temper savage and dan gerous. Those who know the English bloodhound best are enthusiastic in his praise for both intelligence and amiabil ity, and the American bloodhound Is nothing more than a beagle, with a little admixture, perhaps, of the blood of either the Cuban or English bloodhound, the characteristic of the beagle predominat ing. When London was tn a panic of appre hension on account of the horrible and mysterious crimes in Whitechapel of "Jack the Ripper," Sir Charles Warren, then at the head of the London police, determined to see what bloodhounds could do, so he invited Colonel Edward Brough, the most successful bloodhound breeder In England to come to London with his dogs and make some experiments. The dogs were tried in Hyde Park, and wero never ba filed in their pursuit as long as the trail remained in the park, but out side, on the city pavements, where thou sands of tracks crossed each other they went wrong. This experiment was made with dogs whose ancestors, maybe, for a hundred years, has been suffered to go entirely untrained, and the instinct hal quite naturally deteriorated through this neglect. If a family of these dogs were carefully trained for several generations to hunt the clean boot on hard roads and pavements, I fancy they would soon be so sure in their tracking as to be a valu able adjunct of every police force. Another such maligned dog is the mastiff. Every now and again we .read In our newspapers that a child or a woman has been attacked and badly bitten by a fierce mastiff. We read such things so frequently that the uninformed public has, naturally, perhaps, come to the con clusion that the mastiff is savage and un safe. As a matter of fact, the mastiff is the gentlest of all dogs, its instinct be ing to protect life and property. How, then, did it gain this disrepute? Not fairly, It may be depended on. By some curious fact of nature, when the types of dogs are crossed, the progeny Is very apt to have an exaggered form of the bad qualities of both types, and when neither type has bad characteristics, then the progeny is very likely to show qualities of original "cussedness" of an alarming kind. New the instinct of the mastiff, and also of the Newfoundland, is to save life and protect property, yet If you cross these dogs the result will be a mongrel of ferocity and treachery. And so the mongrels showing the mastirx conforma tion to some extent have bitten children and frightened women, and therefore the mastiff type suffers in public esteem. It is wrong that this should be so, for the mastiff is the best dog of all to keep in the country, guard the house and keep watch over the children of a family. At Mr. Winchell's kennels there was a mastiff bitch with a new litter of puppies. A bitch of whatever breed with puppies is always jealous and dangerous to strangers. There was a little child visit ing Mr. Winchell's place and this young ster, being unnoticed by the nurse for a moment, pushed its way into the kennel where the young puppies' were housed. Had a strange man done this the bitch would In all probability have bitten him severely. But the mother left her puppies and taking the child by the sleeve of Its dress pushed open the kennel door and led the child to the house to its careless nurse. Here was an exhibition of instinct In its highest and truest form, and every one who knows the purely bred mastiff will say that almost any good mastiff would Tiave done the same thing. And yet many ignorant persons believe the mastiff to be dangerous and unsafe. This prejudice is probably only temporary, and in the meantime the breeders are making further improvements in their strains, and at this time in Beaufort's Black Prince we probably have in 'America the finest mastiff in the world. I F' i ,aHt&m & a &1 i h DIlfflRv mm": :.m- 'lPT """-tV ;y ... ...w. (K ' ; w,bMji 'vwAswf,, " SIR BEDIYERE, THE GREATEST OF ST. BERNARDS. safe pre-eminence among the world's bat- appearance the most aristocratic of dogs. tlefields. At Chickamauga, the United States has already expended about $600,000. The work has gone on very rapidly, as the United States has sole possession of that field and is not under the disadvantage, as at Get tysburg, of fighting a hostile and selfish corporation Intrenched upon it and re sisting for money-making purposes the carrying out of the plans of the govern ment. Until this difficulty can be over come here work will progress more slowly than it has elsewhere. But it may be hoped that the heedlessness of our people in permitting this heartless invasion of our field may not result In Indefinitely pro longing the Improvements which are of so immense value to our commuity. Keep the blood pure by taking Hood's SareaparUla. Take Hood's and only Hood's. What is probably more to the purpose, he Is likely to thrive in the American climate. v. hlch is fatally hard on many branches of the greyhound family. Tho bloodhound is not a popular favor ite in this country, and his disrepute Is in a large measure due to the strolling com panies that played Mrs. Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" all over the country for more than a generation past. Though Mrs. Stowe only mentioned bloodhounds once in her narrative, and did not bring them on the scene at all, they are a prominent feature in the drama of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" as put on the stage. Ambitious companies have a pack of dogs, and even the little companies that perform under tents always have at least two. And most ferocious and forbidding - looking brutes these are. But they are not bloodhounds. They are generally some mixed breed say a cross between a Cuban or Siberian bloodhound and a mastiff. The-prejudlce by misrepresentation took TWELFTH NIGHT GAMES. The holidays are the times par excel lence for children's parties. A few sug gestions regarding games may therefore be of some value. There Is an old-time game called Draw ing King and Queen which from time im memorial has been dedicated to Twelfth night, or January C. Two cakes are made, in which among the plums a bean and a pea are thrown. Each cake is cut, one for the girls and one for the boys; whoever of the former gets the bean is elected queen of the evening; and the boy who draws the pea is king of the evening, the rest of the company acting as courtiers. The Knight of the Whistle is a lively game in which several of the party are led out of the room and conducted back one by one. Each on entering is greeted with clapping of hands and is with much state invested with the insignia of the Order of the Whistle. A ring is put on his finger. and a cloak, scarlet for preference, is put on his shoulders. He then kneels down and receives the orthodox blow on the shoul der, being bidden to arise with the name of Sir Basil, Sir Blunderbuss, or anything else which may occur to one. He next takes his stand in the center of the room, while the party sit on the floor in a circle around him. To the band of his cloak has been attached a whistle by a long cord; each of the party blows thl3 In turn, chal lenging him to find out who sounded the note, he turning each minute, never dreaming that he bears the instrument upon him. In the game called Jacob, one of the party" is blindfolded and placed In the center of the room, the others circling around him. The blindfolded one then calls out the name of the one he would pursue; she enters the circle with him, then darts away; he then summons her to betray her presence by calling out "Jacob," and she is obliged to at once answer "Here, sir," while he follows, guided by her voice, till he catches her. ' LEXINGTON.