THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 4, 1900. 21 Mosaic Poetry. I only know she ease and Treat Lowe. Like troutlets la & poet. Hood. She was a. ptaatm of detlgat, Wordsworth. And I w like a ooL Eastman. "On klaa, dear mM," X saM, and sighed. Coleridge. 'Out of those lip uaoboca." Longfellow. She shook her ringlets round her heafl. Stoddard. And laughed In etry toots: Tennyson. "Rhur oat, wild belie, to the wHd sky. Tennyson. ) Tou hear thent. Q, my heart? AMce Carey. J Tls twelve at night by the castle clock. Coleridge. Beloved, we most part." Alice Carey. "Cone back! Caaufrbeekt" he cried in grief. Campbell. "My eye are atorwith tears. Bayard Tayler. Hew shall I live through all the days, Mm. Osgood. AU through a hundred years'" T. S. Percy. Twu in the prime -ef swRSjertime. Hood. She blest ate with her hand, Hoyt. "Re strayed together, deeply blest, Mrs. Edwards. Into the dreaaur land. Cornwall. The laughing bridat roses WoW Palmare. To dress her dark brown hair. Bayard Taylor: "No maid with her may compare Brallsrerd. Most beautiful, most raret . Read." I clasped It on her sweet. c4d hand Browning. The precious gotten" link, SmithY I ctdtned her fears, and she waa calm. GeJertdg.' Drink pretty efeatore. driakt Wordsworth. And so I won mg Qoacvlcve Coleridge And watke in Paradise: -Mmw The fairest tiring- that ever crew, Wordswortlu- Atween me and the skies. Osgood. Chicago Tribune. JOHN FISKE'3 "AMERICA" Rotable Work fey a Historian, Sci entist aaa Philosopher Jfoir In Its Twentieth Taousand. "The Discovery of America," by John Flake, revised and perfected to date, has Just come from the press ef Houghton, Mlflfin & Co. (Boston and New York), in its mk thousand. No work ef the great America historian is more adapted to his powers', or mere important in its con tribution to humen thought. For the historian to be a historian id not enough. Re must be a scientist and a. philosopher. Make is all three. To the general ilew of evolution he has made an original aad important contribution the part played by lengthened lafancy on the advance of the human species. He" has mastered the evolutional philosophy, and -with the natural bent for historical research and the added possession of an at tractive style, he te supremely fitted for investigation of the beginning of Ameri can history. The chief service of the work: embodied In lhee two volumes is its portrayal of, ancient America, and the information an cient Amerioa affords as to the history of the race Here he has collated a vast body of facts in remote and unpublished sources, and popularized them. The results of research by Morgan and others are taken by Fiske and by his exposition of them In relation to known facts of other prehistoric peoples, are made into liter ature The beginnings of human society. dimly legended in the Old World, are here in progress before our eyes. The past anterior to Abraham's and Agamemnon's time, la found to parallel the New World's past prior to Montezuma's time. Europe was behind Asia in its constructive and progressive conditions and results,, and America, in its turn, was behind Europe. "What the Iroquois were doing when the Jesuits studied them in the 17th century, man had been doing by the Aegean before Homer wrote, and in Chahlea before Abra ham went out of Mesopotamia. Nothing could be more impressive than these evi dences of the units' of the race. By pre cisely the same steps man arose from the state of the beast, wherever hp had his habitat. The similarity of these steps as unfolded in the earlier chapters of Mr. Fiske s history, makes a story of en trancing interest. There was no civilisation in ancient AtLenca, and the romances spun about Mi xio and Peru are humiliating enough wicn tbelr nature is exposed, but there d d exist high graaes in barbarism. There is a first, second and third status of sav agery and a first, second and third status in larbant-m. We left savagery behind When abode was settled enough to bring f rth pottery We left barbarism behind us the day we invented the phonetic alpha be' The Mexicans had an advanced state of culture, for barbarians': the Peruvians a state yet more advanced, but neither had an alphabet. The New World, there fore was far behind the old in develop rnrr its phenomena serve to explain re s Mtherto unexplained in the frag mor'arj records of prehistoric Asia and Europe Mr Fiske explains them. They are Indispensable to a correct view of rinan history It is Impossible to discuss or even re- cart th series of remarkable contribu tnf 3 3 history with which these volumes ai -d They epitomise the truth as to Ncrt1 men lstts to -this continent prior to C -irus' they rehearse with skillful art the. absorbing story tof the search for Ca'hay lv way of the Cape of Good Hope; thev set Columbus right before a jealous an 3 forgetful world: they rescue "Yespuclus f-- the calumny that Ignorance and prejudice have heaped upon his name, era they tell here, at length, the true e'ot f Mexico and Peru, derived from cess libraries and archives that have been -ansacked tor the purpose. Tii is no h story of early America to tnpsre with these. Research has been bu Mllh the formative period of the. re- pvoli and the great West, but almost a nnr among American historians, Mr. Ftfke has been drawn to the beginnings of clMlxation upon this continent, and the nmer-oiie period when two streams of 1 rf Viich had been separated for many. mar oemurtee, met on these shores for a rrnbat and an eventual union of won- $rv and unprecedented development ncut the information here afforded, real kr Pledge of our own history is ltnpos si' e and there can be no true compre- Shets on of the history of mankind. "T COfcOSSOS." 7eeil Rhodes ia Fiction "Evolution of Atrophy" and Other Bootes. Only reeenUy R was reported that an it had been signed in behalf of iermany and the British South African -mpanv binding the company under cer- ;.r restrictions in the construction of ita wty In return an agreement was sirned by Oonnanr permitting Cecil EOiodes' Capo-to-Oalro telegraph line to 3c carried through Oerman Bast Africa. . e recall this reoent nogoUatloa between the powcte as & ommat, or sequel ratb f to the true story certain Incidents contemporary pfeliuiiu ceeeoratBg the I intto of life Gne-to-Cako railway 1 plans, which, ia told by Morley B6hert in "The Colossus?' The' financiering of the railway, if waft generally understood, was a ticklish. Job, and required all the wit and strategy of the South African statesman to' britig" it to pass. A beauti ful young- EngHsh woman, in love with Eustace Loder, tfifr "Colossus" in short, Cecil Rhodes Is ambitious to become "Mrs. Loder" or Mrs. Rhodes, if you will and1 finding he will have none of her assistance, she conspires1 on her own ac count, and actually succeeds in accomplishing- with her -woman's wit and charm what these solid powers had failed to achieve. The cross play of Mahomet and the mountain between Gertrude Brough toh and the "Colossus" heightens theclt max of intrigue and interest, and results in a triumph for the woman of course. (Harper & Bros., New York.) Divine Pedigree of Mnn. Few books representing the advanced JOHX thought of the age in the spheres of phi lDspdhy and religion have won the popu larity attained by Dr. Thomson Jay Hud son's "The LaV or Psychic Phenomena" and "A Scientific Demonstration of the Future LKe." A new work from his- pen embodying the results of patient inquiry pursued on the strictest lines of scientific induction, is sure to meet with attention; and when the theme bf Dr. Hudson's fresh Investigations is one of such in terest to all thoughtful minds today as the theory of evolution, a wider circle of readers may "be predicted then even "The Law of Psychic Phenomena" obtained. Dr. Hudson s new book. "The Divine Ped igree of Man," is an original conception of evolution, which is worked out with the same avoidance of vague theory, and the same adherence to a basis of well authenticated facts and to cogent and logical reasoning, which characterize his former works. Jt presents an original and convincing interpretation of the facts which have been accumulated by the la bors of scientists such as Haeckel, Dar win and Spencer; and constitutes an at tempt to establish thereby the belief In Christian theism. It shows that the god like powers of man exist potentially in the lowest forms of animal life known to us; and advances a powerfully eloquent argument against the atheistic attitude which so many evolutionists have as sumed. (A. C. McClurff & Co., Chicago.) Evolution of Atrophy. The purpose bf "Evolution by Atrophy," by Jean Dembor, Jean Massart and Emll Vandervelde, is two-ifold. The authors aim to show, first, that an essential ele ment of the process of evolution as it coes on among plants and animals is the degeneration, decay, or atrophy of organs or parts of organs, at the same time that other parts of organs may be carried and are generally being carried to a higher stage of development, these modifications of structure being attended by correspond ing changes of function. The changes that thus take place in the organism, be they upward or downward, degenerative or progressive, aro a part of the process of adaptation that is everywhere "forced upon the living being by environing condi tions. Secondly, they point out that what Is true In these respects In the field of life or biology, also Is true, though perhaps to a less extent, In social phenomena or sociology. Societies, like Individual or ganisms, are ever changing, ever adapting themselves to surrounding conditions and undergoing modifications through Influ ences that operate from both within and without Just as In the case of plants and animals, the resulting social evolu tion is attended by the phenomena or de generation or atrophy, institutions and customs that were once In the ascendant declining and giving: way to be replaced by more highly specialized forms of activity. In biology the principle of natural selec tion is believed to play a primary part, while In sociology artificial selection is represented as the dominating agent (D. Appleton & Co., New York.) Havrnllnn America. "Hawaiian America," by Caspar Whit ney, abounds in information regarding our new possessions In the Pacific. The au thor says his aim has been, not "to pro duce either a history or a tourist's guide to the Hawaiian Islands, but rather to give a fair idea of the islands and their people, their character and their indus tries; their resources arid their prospects." That the author is an expansionist is indi cated by the opening sentence: "There Is a destiny In our final assumption of au thority In the Pacific ocean, in the recog nition forced from us by the natural se quence of our own acts, of the laws of commercial gravity, which we had Ignored so stubbornly ana so long." Political his tory and the conditlonwof the people, and commercial resources and prospects, come in for a full share of attention. (Harper & Bros, New YorkJ Xciv-Bortt Cuba. Wa have in 'The New Born Cuba," by Franklin Matthews, a full study of Cuba since the close of the Spanish-American war. It Is rull of information along all the lines of interest growing out qf the American occupation of the Island, and the steps taken by our government to reorganise the island's life, industries, morals? health and economies. Never be fore had the world seen conditions simi lar' to those with which the United States government had to deal in Cuba. What the conditions were and how they were dealt with are described in the book-. Whether the result shall be national inde pendence or colonial independence or com plete political assimilation, the author thinks will depend largely upon the de velopment and conditions of the future, and- adds: "Cuba's future, it is safe to. predict, will reveal and justify the wise and beneficent acts: of the American offi cials during: the most critical part of American occupatiofi namely, its begin ning' and early growth-, or during its first CO days. Whatever may be the result of later complications, American occupation of Cuba assuredly waa started right." (Harper & Bros., New York.) Old France and Xew Two series of short stories, one of Francer In the days of the Revolution, aad the other showing vivid pictures, of Canadian-French life, are collected in a volume entitled "Old France- and New," by William. McLennan. The best story In the- first part Is "Monsieur le Comte." an episode In the life of Mlra beau, tellitfg how he saved a tiny maid, who though a royalist, won his love and protection by her sunny, winsome ways. Of the. Canadian stories, old and new. the first two form a link between old and new France, and, although the others are strictly Canadian in character, they have still a flavor of old France (Harper & Bros., New York.) Irrigation and Drainage. The practice of Irrigation is usually as sociated with arid regions only, but it needs to- be first considered with refer ence to its effects on the plant and the soil and the climate. "Irrigation and Drainage," by F. H. King, Is not treated by an advocate, but by a student one FISKE. who is more interested in discussions of principles and reasons than of particular systems. Having once considered the fun damentals, the author proceeds to the de tails of practice. Irrigation for the East L Is discussed, as well as that for the West Professor King has traveled in the Old World, and in our own arid regions, to study these questions. Drainage Is taken up in the same spirit; the book Is a com pact handbook of these Interesting sub jects. It Is fully illustTated.-(Th' Mac mlllan Co., New York.) Bandanna Ballads. When Joel Chandler Harris Indorses a book In the glowing terms which he has employed in the preface to Howard Weed en's "B-ndanna Ballads," further com ment seems unnecessary. He saysi "The art with which the facts are set forth is so felicitous In its touch, so faithful and so informing; that it goes deeper than character and individuality; It re vives and resurrects the period." The delicate lyrics express in the negro's dia lect his own simple emotions, or show the place he holds in the hearts of his "white folks." An artlessness and sincer ity in these tender poems and a total absence of pose or 'of Etrivlng- for effect give them a very peculiar charm. It is not easy to select from so much that is good, but "Two Lovers and Llzette" will give an Idea of the style of the humorous verses: Who, me? in love, an' wld Llzetle? Tou better tflleve I ain't; $a sassy gal like dat could give Bis nigger heart-coraplalnt. If Gord don't love her more- den I, Den all I got ,to say Is, dat her soul's in danger sHo, An' she had better pray! It'a her, dat is In love wid me. An' I Jes" laughs on tell her. "Do fruit dat draps d'out beln shook IS sho' to be too meller!" But all de. same, you talks too much To suit me, 'bout Llzette; Some genfman-'a nigger gwine-gel hurt, About dat same gal yet! (Doubleday & McClure Co., New York.) Forajrc Crops. Under the term "Forage Crops," as used by Thomas Stiaw In "Forage Crops Other Than Grasses" are comprised all pasture plants which are sown from year to year ahd which are eaten by the ani mals In the field. The author demon strates how easily and satisfactorily for age plants can be made to supplement per ennial pastures, how profitably they can be raised ort land which otherwise would be Idle, and how important a place they are destined to occupy In the near future in systematic crop rotation on every stock and dairy farm. The initial chapter is devoted to lorage crops in general, while the succeeding ones treat on the special kinds of crops Indian corn, sorghums, clovers, leguminous plants other than clo ver, plants of the Brasslca genus, the common cereals, millets, field roots, etc. In discussing the various plants the au thor dwells UDOn their distribution, the soils to which they are adapted, the ro tation in which they should be grown, the preparation of the land, the time for sowing- them and the methods of doing the same, the modes of cultivation and of pasturing them when grown. (Orange Judd Co., New York.) Mythology for Moderns. "Mythology for Moderns," which the author, James S, Metcalfe, calls "An Up, to-Date Text Book for Up-to-Date Stu dents," provides more amusement than instruction. He seems to appreciate the humorous side of the religious myths of the Greeks and the Romans and jumbles them up with modern applications and al lusions In a way calculated to provoke laughter rather than convey very deep Warning In mythology. At the same time the tales adhere closely to the original versions; and their fun and satire make them agreeable reading. (Life Publishing Co., New York.) a g As They Met in Hallway. "Darling How glad I am to see you!" "Oh. George, how cold your dose IsT Chicago TrlbUne. Wide; "Wonderful World,. Great, wide, beautiful, -ftonderfal World, "With the wonderful water round you curled, And the wonderful graes upon- your breast. World, you are beautifully dressedj The wonderful air id over me. And the wonderful wind la shaking the tree; It walks on the. water, and whirls the mills. And talks to Itself on the tops of the bills. You friendly Earth, how far do you"gd. With the wheat fields tbdt nod and the rhers that flow-. With cities and gardens and cliffs and Isles, And people; upon you for thousandsof miles? Ah, you are great, and I am so Email, I tremble to think of yotr, Woridat Hit And yet, when I said my prayers today, A whisper inside of me seemed to caj, "You are more than the Earth, though jou are such. a. dot; You can love and think, and the Earth cannot!" Lswlston Journal. . JIMMIE NASON'S DRY-OUT Disastrous Conseqnences Resulting From a Mnd Bath Talxen Our. inc a School Recess. t . Miss Getchell walked up to the school TOom window to see what it was: that at tracted the attention of the girls who stood there, looking down upon the play ground, with occasional expressions of disapproval. "Those boys!" she said, meaning the youngsters jumping up and down In a puddle of water that had formed near the middle of the yard; "and if there isn't Jimmy Nason among them," she added, losing no time In throwing up the sash ard striking her bell with a series of short, sharp taps, the sound of which raused every lad to look up in the direc tion from which It proceeded, then to make a hasty exit from the puddle. Then sho called: "Jlmmle, come straight up stairs!" Jlmmle, drenching wet, arrived just In time to be taken by the arm arid uncere moniously pushed Into a front soat, as Miss Getchell took her place In the hall to meet the lines marching up from after- noon recess. The boys and girls who were hi the room and had seen what had occurred, wondered what she would do with him. Jimmy also wondered. Miss Getchell seldom became provoked. That she was provoked now, though, could be plainly seen, even by the way In which she tapped the bell. She was- so pretty and graceful that the children always enjoyed watching her. She was especially Inter esting now, with the pink, in her cheek? deepened and her movements more ener getic than usual. Returning to her desk, when the children were seated, sho fa vored trie school with a few remarks. Jlmmle Is Sentenced. "I know now," she said, addressing Jlm mle, "why you're' staying at home half the time with sore throat, and," turning to the- other culprits, "I suppose the rest of you like to make ducks of yourselves, too, and that's why you comer here with your heads So stopped up that I can't un. So Would Hf. Mother (to Willie, who refuses to eat his poup) Many a poor child would be glad It he had only half of It. Willie So would I, mamma. Fllgiende Bl&etter. derstand a word you say. A boy. 12 .years old, with no better Sense than to risk- his health In that Wav! But If I can help it, Jlmmle won't lose any mor,e time this term. I'll dry him Out and warm him up so thoroughly, there'll be little danger of His taking cold. Tito, will you go down in the basement and light the Are In the furnace? Fix the dampers so that all the- heat will come into this room." Tito Bernal started, with willingness, nnon the errand for which he had bem chosen. Ofall the boys in the class, Ti- to was the one most often in trouble. It must be admitted that he rather enjoyed the novelty Of taking a part, other than that of a detected culprit, In an affair fTKjEl(pKAr,t-Vhtv. Wtr tuft, tkvyl like the present especially when the of fender was Jlmmle Nas6n, for hadn't Jlmmle called him a "dago" only the day before? Now. no ore had told Tito to add to the fuel that the janitor piled", ready for light-1 ing. in the furnace Nevertheless, wink ing to increase Jlmmie's discomfort, he threw In sEveral extra sticks of wood. You see, he was only a Mexican boy. Ig norant as a little savage of the feeling that would make you ashamed to be so vindictive, even If you'd been called by a worse name than "dago." Tito re-entered the schoolroom, In time S?"" Js3n"" I" i! ' "" "'' umbo mmmtmm . n. to see the drylng-out process begun. Jim role was made to occupy a chair, placed as near to the .register as It could be got ten. While windows were onened In nrder that the temperature might be made ea- railroads, which have complete charge of durable for the others. When the water It until the northwest corner of the state that soaked Jlmmle's garments had been of Washington Is reached. When it ar heated to the steaming point it was found rives at Seattle, it has passed through necessary to remove the orange bios- 14 states, and yet, so far as time- is- febn soma that decorated Miss Getchell's desk, cerned, but orte-fourth of Us Journey has so oppressive did their fragrance become been accomplished. in the warm atmosphere. The school was 1 It ijow takes a sea voyage from Seattle located in a Southern California town, to JuneaU, Alaska, and from the latter and orange blossoms were, at this particu- place Is carried, as I have already de lar season, more common than any other scribed, to Circle CItyJ It may be taken flower. from there by friendly hands farther Into Jlmmle was made to sit steaming until a time shortly before the hour for dls- missing school. Then he was allowed to return to his desk, and Tito was sent back, to the basement, this time to turn off the heat. In making the trip, he con sumed more time" than was necessary, choosing a roundabout course through the WHO CAN TELL? AH hall to Young America. These three Are" posing for their pictures, as you see-. Young- Bill, who on the left appears With placid smile beyond his years, A baker or a president may be. . And little Tommy, in the dirty Jeans. Who doesn't quite get on to what it means. Has naught but mud pies on his mlncU Some loftier object'may he find Perhaps a Judgeship in the Philippines. John R. Rathom la hall, principally In order to learn the Identity of the. boy who bent over a sink, on account of nose-bleed, and walk ing very slowly past the different doors even stopping a moment lit front of them, because he liked to hear the hum of voices that sounded through the wooden panels. ntitZtiSA steps leading to the basement, Tito could When finally he aproached the flight of t,r0.K- o l,1f.nn0n Arn ,n hA --v., .u.uue,.. ..... ""- v.u., ...-j. - acinars ana cenxsT basement was illuminated. At first he a.-M nt- ,!.. i- .u u ....... thought that the-furnace had not been ' n ??. 7, S S ?m wht$Pi"e properly closed, but he entered to find the , a,nd S1?,?" L.6 h basement aflre-not in a smoldering, , f"3. Wsflre, -PJps homeslck and lone smoky sort of way, but with crackling ! ?; - w,th.a loving smile lliumlnat flames, that caught the rafters much as g his face as he reads and reads again th w , ? vinir,r woo in a very word his thoughtful s&ter has writ- stove or grato when you have built a fire that you know Is going to burn. Tito Gets a Fright. For a single Instant Tito gazed" In open eyed fright. His first thought was to bound upstairs and Into the nearest class room, with the words: "Teacher, teach er, everything's on fire In the basement" But he didn't obey this very foolish im pulse. He bounded upstairs, to be sure, three of them at a time and three flights. When he had reached the third- floor' he scUrricd off in the direction of the prin cipal's office. Mr. Cole frowned when, upon answer ing the knock at his door, he found out who was his visitor. As one of the bad boys of the school, Tito came to the office quite often, and Mr. Colo thought he understood what brought him now". It Is perhaps unnecessary to say that Tito told his story as quickly as possible. Then he went back Into the classroom and to his desk. No one could have told that he was thd least bit excited or knew that anything unusual had hapnened. He even took out his grammar and opened it, al though, he didn't have time to begin study ing, for just then the signal for "fire drill" sounded Immediately bosks were packed. The second striking1 of the gong meant "march" Without delay, the drum commenced to beat and the children to leave" the" building as they always did when there was fire drill through the right doors, and In order of age, primary classes' first. No one, except Tito and the principal knew there really was a fire until the II- lvimlvtnflrm in rVi a nti anmnnf wad aCoti lumlnation in the basement was accu i J through grimy, cobwebby windows, those first in the yard. Every pupil by ' was safely out before the flre bell rang, al though the alarm had been turned In as quickly as possible. The flames were fought unsuccessfully, partly because of several mishaps, the most serious of which was a failure of the water supply. San Miguel-street school was burned to ' the ground, and while It Was- being re- built the boys and girls who had attended j there were distributed around in other I districts". Tito Is Praised. The first day In the brand-new building WHERE THERE'S A WILL THERE'S A i"v 1 On orJy pull inn pWj ut- will n commenced with a meeting of all the classes in the assembly hall, where Mr. Cole addressed them. "You've seen now," said he to the as sembled children, "what a very successful thing" the drill is" Then he explained what the consequences Of a panic would have been. "Of course," he went on, "you dldrt't know v.e were having anything more than an experimental drill, but you'd probably have done just as well had you known It ' Then he praised Tito Bernal, who had shown such presence of mind. Tito, whd didn't get praised, very often, was much pleased, and when the principal had finished, he raised hfa IKtFe brpwn hand for permission to speak. "If I'd a known how to do it I'd a rang the. gong, myself, and that 'ud a saved time," he said. "You acted very wisely, as It was." Mr, dole said, smlU> then, he had the pupils march out of the hall and Into their new classrooms. AXIj FOB, TWO CmSTS. Uncle Sam "Will Carry a Letter 700O. Miles for That Price. It may not be out of place, says the Youth's Companion, to give an illustration of the vast distances a letter may traveLon J the strength of a 2-cent postage stamp. Suppose one of the girl readers of the Companion In Key Westr Fla., has- a brother la the Klondike, region; who has risked all to dig fortune from Mother Earth, and writes to tell him the news from home. Sba- drops the letter In the postoffice at Key West, and it starts on its long Journey. It does not of necessity, travel in a straight line to its destination, but must follow the twlstlngs and turnings of the the Klondike country, and finally delivered to tne anxious Drotner. wno nas Deen sagerly awaiting the arrival of the next party from the nearest town in which a postofilce is conducted, in the hope that some one would bring him a letter. This letter has now traveled In the neigh borhood of 7000 miles by railroad, steam- While N'ellle. sturdy Nellie, sitting there And thinking, "Take my picture; I don't care," Will run her race, and Mve her life. A lone okl maid or happy wife An Independent woman anywhere; All hall tb young America. These three Are postng for their pictures, as you see What fortune may the future hold Distress or plenty, rags cr geld? Here is life's greatest, deepest mystery; Chicago Times-Herald. boat, stage, horseback, and, perhaps, dog sled and has been on the i-sad nearly J days, without a moment's rest. No profit in money accrues to the gov ernment for delivering that letter, indeed, each letter sent Into Klondike costs the government for transportatlen many times . ther amount of Postage charged; but in such -noon nhnni rocVrm nmftr nn - ' 7. '. " T 1 " ' w"' ten about home, mother and father, and. perhaps, some one else whom he holda dear? When, finaljy, he places his trea- ! and ungovernable that it was found fcaees s,uro under his pillow and seeks rest, he I sible to persuade the animal to have the is happier than for many a day, and Un- ' wound dressed. Whenever any one ap- HOOP-LA! . l.fllitPiiiiglsmaiitJtiy rgf j- g clc Sam, who has contributed so largely to that happiness, does not regret the small I pecuniary loss he has sustained. fc CHICAGO BOY'S ENTERPRISE. Owns and Conducts Largest Phcas antry in the West. Wallace Evans, a slender, 13-year-old Chicago lad In knickerbockers,, owns the largest pheasantry in the West, selling eggs la a season and hatching nearly as many birds. Such an enterprise con- auctea Dy a Doy ia generally a. nuust:-shlft- but, the EvanS pheasantry Is per fect In construction, having about l?5x 200 feet under wire, with the latest Im proved hatcher and houses. It Is- divided WAY. fr JrM bil ftrny1'; Into a network of special yards, every gate closing and locking automatically, so there is no danger of the birds- escap ing. The flock of golden pheasants is a gor- geous sight, with their brilhant yellow T,Mrf .onoir ,, , m ,t heads, capes' of orange and blue, lined with vivid green, scarlet bodies, bur nished wings and lbng, graceful tails, dotted with, black. They1 are a fad" among fanciers. andv their price is Increasing, as they now bring $ a pair. The beau tifully plumaged hen laVo 30 eggs in a season, wblcB. are worth $10 a dozen. Yesr Bv& has- a large- number of 9ng Heh pheasants; furnishing a fine contrast to the goWaw beawtMS. Tito? hujr from 59 t 7 ogee, whteh aa- raaiWIy sett tor $5 a setttag-. His: coves of ojMeJkv weuM make a hunter's hoax hutsv as? the? ny to cover wtth a whir of -atogs? agd mm- lnsr oritur TW aU hla ttmi Imimim i.nt i from TeMeeae whore theuoanaa. of the luckless- Mmfe tottow a toast of grain Teodthc strsdgh Into a wire malimt cor ral, and are the shtonod to braoefors. Is the center of each yard Is a aaatty stacked pHe of brush ami. straw which affords a native retreat tor all the hMs. The Sngheh pheastwHa as very hardy aBi fiott swiK and lee into ehtt- dreJB, hut the golden hover In their nausea la bkter cofti weather. Then there are fancy chlahanc, CtoMea Polish, wtth aaadtnc feailwrc teat took as if they had been, itopod m gorgeous dyes, and hteck Psnefc whWe-erosted fowls, whose snowy bonnets are Mice nod ding chrysanthemums. Fear Is unknown in the pbeasantrr, even the ttsstd- ojuail, says the Philadelphia Ihtwfcw whteh gives the foregoing mentioned facto, comes to the young breeder's wMette. THE THREH BOY KINGS. Story of Saxon, Qneen Elfrida ani Her Wielced Botfcsir; Several hundred years ago Xtegr Sugar, a boy of 18, ascended the BngMsh throne. He was catted the Peaaeful; why, K la bard to say, for he waa up to as many plots and villainies as a had hoy could be. The kin? one day heard of a girl that was said to be wonderfully bonutKu, Ho thought if this were so he would make her his queen. So he sent Atheiwold, his favorite courtier, all the way to her father's castle to find out aheut it When Athelwohl got there he found sho waft- reaHy very beaatKhU and immedi ately f ett In love with her himself. Then, instead of saying anything- .to the kins about It. he married her himself. When he returned he told the king a his He. He- said that she was rleh, but ugly, and therefore he married her himself Now the klofr did not beHevo this. So he prepared to calt on the young- couple. Athelwofd. seared almost to death, told his wife to make herself look hideous, or else the king might do something doead ful to him. But his wife XKrhta Mk most young ladles, couldn't hear to raak-a herself look ugly, espeeialty as the king waa coming to eat!, so she dressed la her best gown and received him with her most charming smile. Of course the king fell in love with her, too and wfeked man that he was her had poor AthetweM murdered and then he married hie widow, Elfrida. Elfrida had a son whom she wastes to- have made king when Sugar died, but Dunstan, the old monk, made another boy king. His name wa Bdward. Oao day Edward was paoolng the- castle where Elfrida lived with bar Httl hoy Btiteked. The king, wtehmg to he- plsnonnt. stopped to- see them, and wMIe ho was- talking to- the IKtle boy, the old queen, Stfrida, told one of her servants to go around on the other side of the king, who was on horseback, and when he wasn't looking to stab him. And the man did. That waa the end of the- poor king called Bd ward the Martyr. The wicked Queen Elfrida then put. her son Ethelred on the throne, and he ruled for about 36 years. Ha waa guHty of bringing about the very worst crime that has ever been committed on BngHsh. sett. He ordered the kitting on a certain night of every Dane man, woman or child hi the whole-country. Hundred of these Danes had- married UngMsh pooolo and wue quiet, peaeaabie folk. When, the Danish king heard of it he caMectod a great fleet of warships and earma over, captured England and laid it waee. The weak BngHsh king fled to another country and stayed there tHI just heshro h died, and one historian snys that the only good thing hr ever did wae to ato-, and. says the New York Herald mv toMmr the story, we- guess he wan right. So ended i .t.. . r i - i. " lOIil ". I.HWW OWf MngB. Mamma- Elephant Helps the DectorY The intelligence of the elephant fcr well known and Is Illustrated in an interesting incident, as follows, says the Chicago Times-Herakl, A young baby elephant had received a severe wound in its head. the pain of which rendered K so frantie TfTHnrrrimair- Tliisniiii proached it ran oft wtth fury and would suffer no pevson to come within several yards ef It The man who had charge of It at last hit upon a eentrlvanee tor seeucing It. By a few signs and words he made the mother know whajt was wasted. The sen sible creature seizod her young one with her trunk and hold it ftrmiy down, though, groaning with agony, while the- eucgean completely arooeod the wound, and sho J continuea. t8 perform thjj servtoe every day until the animal w perfectly mcov- J ered, "Wasted to Be Pure. A mother waa putting the little ones to bed, and was astonished to hear her youngest baby girl make the following prayer: "Oh, God Hear my papa and mamma, and dear, good Mr. God, please ten grand ma hot to spank mo again, for It hurte so bad; and, dear God; have a new nose- put on Rosy, my sweet Nttle doH; and. eh. Lord, make me Just like baking powder " At this strange appeal the Httle one's mother asked her why" she prayed to the f Lord to make her just like baking powder. The little tot replied- "Because want to be 'aheoratory pur,' " EBJCsma. My ScsL is te. snow, but In rain. My second' Is m ache, but net in pain. My third to hi ran and ales m raee . Myftfwth Is m -vtotfe, tout as Hi race. I My flf hh Is in hovee. but net tot cow My sSttf ar in ushuetiv. mm not in bow. MyaeVesU" is m pen, but not In ink My eighth to la rea bttt Mac At ptak My ninth to to eream. "tot not in milk. My tenth is In thread, but not m eitk My eleventh is in wealthy, hoc not hi poeci Mywhofet- is an author you've heard of, Vm sure. Charade;. My first fe rny second is a f ,H?fHaH5 L2 J !2Lmy br0tl1 I 6s. to mat mMher. My whole la a great I admiral. Pazsle. An old. mind beggar had a brother. That brother died one day but ho who dfed bad no brother. What relation wxa tgey? 1