THE SUNDAY OBEGONIAN, POKTLAISD FEBKUAKY 18, 1900. il .say .amy at Ar Jf-. sv B -ar- n, j j& v mW . M M M snrmm. flp mktm 3b JHam fe, rgsgieu'"jtfr''fcr'7"pM ' . i Jj J)-T .Zi'TZ """""Xi The Bey With, tke Beak. AVrltten after fliuNc mi ogee bar at Ma desk.1 Oblivious to all earthly- oares, he reeds. Hie brow contract ana bts hair awry. His eves glued to a aoOei and weH-thumbed page Hii dirty collar rtlpnlnc through Ma tie. Who daubed his flngerc -with hat yellow stain, Ind closed Ma laws upon that wad of gum? Waose was the hand that shied him to that chair Ami sealed his ear and made Mm deaf and dumb Is this the boy -who guards die ottee door. And answers maw ogee upon- the- ran TThc ba-s the lmmiuhu of the beggar vtle Vik. scares asmr the Mas who com an to dun? Is this the lad who, one short week aw, -cn d so deonm and swdous tor a ' Job" T. h. offered testtmamuls by the score, "ftl ose being Siwntd with love for work te -hrob What cares he for the seoMtaer of the clerks. The jangling- belt, the mmmds, loud and from Is lie he bor whom aettea oft noscrtboc, VV ho works Ms war from Otto Boy to Boss' T 'leioe sprung that tangled growth upon Ms hiad" "Whence came these streaks of dirt upon Ms palms "Wienoe came tats Sight, e'er whteh. the angels weep AnS utter anytfcmg but arateotwl psalms? "Wiere did he set those Feet so proudly sprawled Beforehlm, over which the passer tripe? WlKse hand besmeared Me boots with snray mud An-i spread mnmeBuii taffiy o'er Ms lipe? E w g ffereat be. from the Idoal OMld - Z whom. J Abbott wrote, the manly boy Who Uiled from A. X. to i p X . ird counted labor an eaqutene Jo! Wlio 11 dare stir up thte hatf-reewmbeat youth iding, preoooMpied, above hto book "U o 11 beard this little lion. In. his den Ana stand unmoved before Ms awful look "VI1 en goaded to skm madness by some man V hn rashly ash. "Is your Smpioyer In" He deigns to rates Mo yes from "Desperate llok Thf Vtmon Terror and His Deeds of Stn"? V1 man so sfcmt of heart, firm, unabashed. As to remain cerono. eahn and vnawed T hen. In reply, thte Awral Youth snarls forth Whats thatT He ain't In! What's Yer ame ' Ob Lord' Ernest AtMnean in New York Sun. LETTERS OF STEVENSON Deep Humanity ef a. Favorite An- tkr Revealed Iatc Pab- IleatleBs. On day in the fait jm, to the teland c: Tahtt. Robert l, Stevenson put 1-fo the hands of Ms stepson, Lloyd Os fc urne a seated paper with the request that it should be opened after hte death. He recovered, as every one knew, and had strength atMMtgk to enjar x yoars more of active Me and wwk In the Pacific isnds When the oacne. and the pa V r was opened, it was found to contain, a-nong other thtoae a request by Steven fcxn hai Sidney Colvta should be asked to prepare for publication "a selection of hie letters and a sketch of his life," The letters with lntroductioae and notes, are I resented as a substantive work by them s lv.s under the title "The Letters of Tobert Louis Stevenson to Hie Family and I ned The bioaraphy Is to be under taken by Stevenson's oouein, Graham BaU four The author of "Treasure feland," c Across the Plalna" and "Weir of Hermte ir did not love writtnc letters, and re t 'M to himself as one "eseendaliy and originally Incapable of the art epistolary." IiJ letters were often most informal, and n generally neglected to date them, but a' er hto own whim, and fashion he wrote a a? t number. Events and facts, "sordid fa i as Stevenson called them, were not i ry o'un sultered to intrude into the - r fpordence. I deny." he writes, iat letters should contain news CI mean ir t tho&e of other people should). But rr e lould contain appropriate sentiments .. J umrous nonsense, or nonsense ith--- ie humor ' Business letters, letters c formation and letters of courtesy he h metimes to write, but when he wrote bi saA s the editor of his letters, "he was t - i he influence of the affection or lm I m, or the mere whim cr mood of te - nmt pouting himself out in ail man r f rhapsodical confessions and specu la , grave or say. notes of observation a-d r.tiustn, snatches of nsmembrance -"' -1 a oblografnjr, morallsinas on matters . rmost for the hour In his mind, com r rJ cnhl own work or other people's, v r3 Idle fun and foolery." letters do not represent Stevenson c a fu ' until about the Mth year of his c He heginntaa: of the settled and mar- 1 ' i of his life From then on- v- they present pretty full and " l 'o autoblogiaplty. If not of his do at ary rate of moods and feelings. :u n has omitted mans lettens of ? v ns s beyhnt and student days as , g 1 immature or too uninteresting, aim of the confidences and oonfes e ' -. his later routh. whether as too in 1" z or as gtrhnr a dtsproporttonate f Tim e to passing troubles. When is I jid In these days writing in a k. a vi. or minor fcer. It must be re r m r d that at tke same moment, in l - i lercourse w4tfc any friend, his t ' s v ouid instantly fse, and hewould lr urd the gayest of laughing cenipan- "x t one interesting period of his I re f - m about his SUt to his 9th year, te m d the habit of letter-writing al- ir r relj in choosing from among vv nmaied Mr Colvin used hte best c s - ion Stevenson s feelina and rela- 5 thrcughout life were in almost all ot so warm anc kindly that next h ng had to be suppressed trom fear l ' g pain It is, perhaps, better on . whole that the work saotild 90 on r -.v w thout the least sting, but when v o i nd me harmless crittcism of toe tk ms o" Kip.lng. sllghtlj veiled that Is, h np p name is n-t expressly gtven-4t u I cne smlie at the caution "1 letters are an interesting and ia e studv of mnd and character of r T ional order No one can help be- -, Joeplv touched by their sweet human The bring into fuU view Stevenson - mar for it is not In books, but in ta sr tten te those nearest and dearest: v ' f ere is no posing for the public no s- "ed cnvesitlotiattUes, no bar to free exrrs on of mood, thought and feeHng. ') the real man comes out. (Charles F r ers Sons, Kew YerlL) A ATSW BIiSMAX-CK. Hendlam's Btoajgniphar ef the Great! Gonsss CHauiQeller. The story of BtsmsKstfs ttfe Is so f utl o it erest that bm th Hunts of even a Tvor biographer ho book must of neces sity be rssdlnble When however, coupled with the interest attaching to the sub ject there is the clearness of. style, the sense of proportion, and the impartial judgment which characterize James Wy cilffe Heaciam's biography of the great chancellor, "Bismarck and the Founda tion of the German Dmpire," the result Is extremely Batlsfjinj?. Mr. Headlam presents a lvid picture of the man and of his work, a wort which la so closely interwoven with Genaan history since 1848 hat his impress is seen upon eery great event. Bismarck's mother, Prauleln Mencken, was a olet er and ambitious wo- From "The Letters of Robert Xenis Stevens on " Copj right, by Charles Scribner's Sons. PORTRAIT OF ROBERT LOtTIS STEVEVSO', AGED 35. man From her Bismarck lnlherled his intellect; from his fatbr he derived gen iality, kindliness and humor. "He vas thus connected with the double founda tion on which Prussia had been built On his father's side he had sprung from the fighting nobles; on his mother's, from the scholars and officials. In later life we And thai while his prejudices and affec tions were all enlisted on, the side of the noble, the keen and critical Intellect he had Inherited from his mother enabled him to overcome the prejudices of his order." Bismarck's mother designed him for the diplomatic service, but he did not take kindly to the work. "He was clearly deficient In that subservience and ready obedience to authority which was the best passport to promotion, In the civil service; there was In his disposition already a certain truculence and impatience, and he therefore resigned his position and re tired to his estate. In 1847, as a represen tative of the lower nobllltv, he was sum moned to Berlin to attend the meeting of the estates general, and from this time the story of his life Is Interwoven with the history of his country. During the troublius period of the revolution of 1S4S, he was an ardent supporter pf the king, and his services were jrewarded by In creasing favor, until he received the cov eted appointment as president and foreign minister. His great t-ervices to Germany are well known, and while he was as un doubtedly unscrupulous and Intolerant to waras his political .opponents, vet tho reader cannot help sympathizing with him in his downfall. (G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York.) Child Life in Colonial Dnju. In her "Home Life In Colonial Days," Mrs Alice Morse Earle touched a very fascinating phase of American history. As In that book she gave minute de scriptions of the customs of our fore fathers and mothers, so in "Child Life in Colonial Davs," a companion volume, she has treatea with the same skillful hand the child life of the same period. Mrs. Earle describes the way In which chil dren were brought up, how they were educated, and how they amused them selves. About 150 illustrations complete the picture of Colonial ch'ldhood, and Illustrate child's dress of the period and specimens of tovs and furniture. (The MacmUlan Co , New York ) Travels in Clilnn. "The Yangtze Valley and Beyond," Is ah aoceunt of journeys in China, chiefly In the province of Bse Chuan and among the Man-Tze of Somo territory, by Mrs J. F. Bishop Few people are fully acquainted with -the -magnitude -and resources of the great basin of the Yangtze, which, In the spring of 1S88. was claimed as the British "sphere-of Influence." Mrs. Bishop wr.tss that it was only at the end of eight months (out of IS months in China) spent on the Yangtze river, its tributaries and the regions watered by them that she began to learn their magnificent capa bilities, and the energy, resourcefulness, capacities and "backbone" of their enor mous population. The area of the Yang tze vallev is estimated at about 650, OW square miles, and Its population, one of the most peaceable and industrious on earth, at from mW0,0S te 130.00e,0S9 The actual length of the river Is not known. but it is believed not to exceed 9600 miles. Although the great rapids in the Upper Yangtze make navigation dangerous. It is traversed annually by 7009 junk, em ploying a quarter of a million of men So dangerous is it that on an average SO junfc. are wrecked annually. Mrs Bishops thoroughness as a traveler Is well known and her skill in recording what ohe sees is such that her readers seem to journey along with her. This latest Journey through a land full of vari ety and contradictions proved to be most tatereetfng. It was not without hardships and perils but the author returned to Shalgoai "truly thankful for the freedom ram any serious accident which she had enjoyed, and for the deep and probably abtdtng interest in China and the Chinese which the journev had giv en her " At the close of the second volume, Mrs. Bishop devotes a chapter to the plum peppy and ite use. and draws a terrible picture of the hold the habit has upon the poofOs, a habit which is rapidly increas ing, and whioh threatenes te sap the hith erto remarkable energy of the Cbnes. Following this Is a thoughtful chapter on Frosientant missions in China, In which the author gives some valuable practical hints. In conclusion, Mrs. Bishop dis cusses the future of 'China, which has now come to the dawn of a new era. Pressed on every side, and With the Euro pean nations thundering at her gates, China needs some such skilled and disin terested foreign advice as was given by Sir Harry Parked to Japan when she em bfcrked onher new career: "Whether the Soth century shall place her where she ought to be. In the van of Oriental na tions, or whether It shall witness her disintegration and decay, depends very largely on the statesmanship and influence of Great Britain." (G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York.) TTSHRUAttY MAGAZIAES Harper's JRcvlcwa tlie Present Condi tion of Science in Europe. One thing Is certain the reduction In the price of Harper's Magazine to 25 cents has not affected its literary quality, tin less it may he that it Is better than ever. Dr. Henry Smith "Williams presents In the February number the first of a series of articles descriptive of the present con dition of science In Europe with a num ber of illustrations reproduced from the author's sketches. The commercial and political conditions In Central Africa and the Congo State today are outlined by Demetrius C. Boulger, and Archibald C. Colquhoun presents the first installment of a paper descriptive of Russian develop ment In Central Asia. Professor Albert Bushnell Hart presents a paper on the commerc'al and Industrial future of the Mississippi valley. "The First Night of a Play," "Through tihe Slums With Mrs Ballington Booth," "What It Means to Be a Librarian," by Herbert Putnam, librarian of congress, and ' The Pew and the Man In It," by Ian Maclaren, are among the notable features of the February Ladies1 Home Journal An American Mother answers conclu sively, "Have Women Robbed Men of Their Religion?" and there Is an inter esting article on Mile Chaminade, the famous composer and pianist. The first article prepared with authority, upon the literary collection of the late Augustin Dalj appears in the February Book Buyer. It Is concerned mainly with Mr. Daly's collection of early editions of Charles Lamb, but there are photographs showing the library and the "basement "den," the remarkable Dutch portrait of Nell Gwyn, the Jonson and Shakespeare portraits, and other curiosities of the col lection. Among interesting articles which are be ing prepared for Leslie's Weekly are: "The Monioe Doctrine- and Our Nay," by Captain A. T. Mahan; "Shall We Be come a Maritime Power'" by Eugene T. Chamberlain, United States commissioner of navigation; "The New- Century's Manly Woman," by Susan B. Anthony. Trank Leslie's Popular Monthly for February numbers among Its literary con- inouior.& uenerai iseison A Miles, Bret Harte, M. E. M Dav s, Edgerton Castle, Jeannette Walworth, Anna Randall Dlehl, Jennie Betts Hartswick, Harold Bolce, Matory De Zapp, and ex-Superintendent R, C. Jackson, of the railway mall serv ice All those writers are interesting in their respective lines, and the p'ctorlal 11 lustrtaions accompanying their articles and stories in this number are even more profuse and elegant than usual. The Forum for February contains many articles of great merit, nearly all written by well-known authorities Lleutenaht General Den Beer Poortugael, of the Hol land privy council, contributes the lead ing" article on "The Relation of England to the Transvaal", an able paper is fur nished on "The People's Party," by Sen ator Marion Butler, chairman of the peo ple's party national executive committee. President Charles Dabney, of the univer sity of Tennessee, writes a timely arti cle on "Washington's University." David Wilcox throws new light on "The Futility of the Anti-Trust Issue," and William R. Thayer writes an unusually convincing paper on "Longevity and Degeneration " The leading article in Appleton's Popu lar Science Monthly for February is en titled "South Sea Bubbles in Science," and sounds a much-meeded warning against the credulity of. the general pub lic toward anything labeiodV. "science, and their readines to put money into enter prises depending on processes about which they knew nothing. It Is written bv Pro fessor Trowbridge, of Harvard university. The mechanism of the trolley car is clearly described and pictured by William Bax ter, jr., C. E Professor Charles A. Briggs, who was recently expelled, from the Presbyterian church and immediately admitted to the Episcopal ranks, con- , 51 IS 2 , "3 . "i -" - 11 '- - 11 Tim 11 mm m n immWIIWIi ! Mali ill . mil n I II I I H linwiMli .A-- ZZ In-vltcd Out to Ten. rive pretty little pusy-cats, invited out to tea, Cried: "Mother, let us go oh, do! for good we'll surely be. "We'll wear our b'bs and hold our things as you have show n us how Spoons In our right pava, cups In left and make a. pretty bow, We'll always say, 'Yes, If you please, and 'Only half of that.' " Then go, my darling; children," said the happy mother cat. x Tho pretty little pussy-cats went out that night to tea; Their headswcre smooth and glossy black, their tails were swinging free, , They held the things as they had learned, and tried to- he polite With -snowy bibs beneath their chins they were a pretty sight But ah' alas for manners good, and coats as soft as elhc! , The moment that the little klto were asked 10 takfe ecme milk ' They forgot their spoon&. forget to bow, ani on, w;hit do jou think? They put their noses In the cups, and all began to drink! Yes. everj naughtly little kit set up a mew for more: 1 They knocked the teacups over quick, and scampered through the door Our Dumb Animals. THE SJORKAND THE BABY Drcndfnl Fate of Little Snschen, Who "Was Dropped From the Sky by a Wicked Old Bird. ' "Well, well!" said an old stork, as she stepped about the grass on her long legs. "Here's a baby; a real baby, to be sure! And left all alone' here under1 the grape arbor, too' People who can' b take caro,of a baby any better than this don't 'de serve to have one. I'll take her home with me. I know how to- treat babies," and catching the white dress In her great strong beak, she flapped her huge wings and flew off away and away, over the red roofs of the houses, out fnto the open country, never stopping till she came to her-own nest and her three little ones on tho roof of an old red barn. Here she gentfy laid her burden down, and, standing on one foot to rest herself, she watched to see how her own children would take to this newcomer. The three little storks had never before seen a baby, but they were delighted to have a new sister. They pecked at her dress and her white cap, while she stared at them out of her big blue eves, for never before had she seen such strange creat ures She did not even put up her lips to cry, for she was not one of the whin ing, crying kind. Pretty soon the good farmer came out to feed the cows, and, looking up at the storks' nest, he saw something th,at al most made his hair stand on-end. Was it really a baby7 Yes, sure enoughs There was a white cap and part of a w hlte dress. He could see It plainly. He called his good frau to come and see this strange sight, while he and tho nlred man got a ladder and attempted to mount to the top of the barn to rescue the stolen child Wicked Mrs. Stork! But Mrs Stork,, as It guessing his Inten tion, snatched the child In her beak, rose from her nest, and right before their very The Ducks-Ah, here's a place to light on- this old log. eyes, flew away, sailing off Into the deep blue sky, until she. and her-burden were lost to sight. The good, kind-hearted frau threw her apron over net head and burst into tears: "Oh, that sweet little baby!" she soTabed. "How itspoor, dear mother, w herever she Is, must be- grieving for it!" Now, when the children, who had taken tho babv with them to ihe'ioTchard came back from their chase aftr tho rabbit. tney saw no DaDy. wnere coum sne oev They left her sitting under the grapa arbor. She couldn't have gotten away by herself, for she wasn't a year old, and couldn't walk, Geita went one way and Hilda 'another, and. Franz still another, searching for the missing baby; but after a while they all came back again to the grape arbor without her. They went to the houo and told the mother. Oh, what a crjing and sobbing time there was' "Where, oh where, was good baby Sus- HE GOT ifiyy UAtm-mv ' t 1 '' (J chen?" was the cry. "Baby Suschen, who never cried, but sat all day, smiling and happy. Where was she now?" They inquired of all the neighbors, they searched everywhere, but no trace of her could they find. Never again In all their lives did they see or hear of the lest babyl Late on the same afternoon a small sail ing vessel, carrj ing a party of ladles and gentlemen, returning from a fishing trip, was making Its way up the river, when suddenly one of the ladles cried: "Oh! oh' look at that!" "A stork with a baby!" cried another. "OhJ how dreadful!" and Immediately the captain was begged to stop the boat Tho stork was coming in their direction, and perhaps she might alight on the deck. Oh, If she only would, and. they cou'd save that precious child I The good captain gave orders to reef sails and drop the anchor, nnd by the time the .R& yhfLSJz. MICE- SclF.ON 1jE-.L it-lb. of duifLZte, grTcJ IKtiR, Tail's boat lay etill on the water the stork was directly overhead. The passengers stood watching, breath less, when suddenly the great bh-d iet go her hold and the baby dropped to the deck, striking her head on the boards with a terrible thud that caused the watchers to turn sick with dread A gentleman sprang forward and tender ly clasped the little form In his arms. Turning Its head, he burst into a roar of laughten It was a big rag doll! No wonder she didn't cry when left alone under- the grape arbor, nor when carried tothe nest on the old- red barn. . Sabbath School Visitor. THORIS THAT BLOSSOMED. Good Deed of an Arab Chief Re warded in Paradise. Once upon a time, away out on the des ert, an Arab was traveling with a caravan and a large amount of valuable silks and rich goods. He knew that the portion of HOW THE 'GATOR GOT HIS MEAL J.i - . - A TheGator-Xow. If I can keep from laughing for a second, I'll the desert through which they were pass ing was frequented by robbers, and he was anxious to reach the end of his journey be fore night. The men and the camels were all weary, for they had come a Jong way across tho dry country, but now they were looking more cheerful, for-Jthey would soon be at a place whereTtheyTcould rest and not fear. The chiefJjvaU leading the caravan and looking carefully Fn every direction, so as not to bo surprised by tho enemy. All at once he hard a cry of pain, and, peering around, saw a boy not far from the path. ""Are you sick?" askd the chief. "I have a thorn in my foot," said the boy, "andI cannot walk. Then the chief got down from the back of the camel and wentHo the hoy and-gently drew the thorn from-hlsJoot. H,eteven delayed to cleanse th soto and rub some ointment on the w ound made by the thorn. He- Inquired about how far the boyHad 'to go and if ho A BITE. had any money. Learning -that the bo; had but little, he gave him a piece ot geld and then went oa his journey. Many years after the chief died and went to paradise. What was his surprise to find himself at qace-in the midst of the most hea"utlful roses. y 3 "Why have Tp sot many roses,?" he asked 01 an. anget sear aim. -raers. areXimany others who heVe dene more good whoxha-ve not as many beautiful xoses." The angel smiled and answered- "Year ago you drew a thorn from the foot of a boy who was crying In the desert. That thorn has grown to be & large rose tree and the roses you see around you are the blossoms from that tree." "One good deed done here below." says the Brooklyn Eagle, which, toils- thlsAe ry. "Is returned sevenfold'iat paiadfee t -r -5? GIAX33OF YORE. Bis People Who Ha.i e Lived. la. Years Gone By, Wonderful giants used to walk tha. earth, even as we read In the Bible oft GO liath, who was slain by the youth David. According te l French scholar, Adam, the first man, wag 123 feet 9 Inches tall, and Eve- was only five feet shorter, Noah was about 2t feet tall, and Abraham measured not more than 20. Moses reached osly the poor height of 13 feet, and finally man had to be contented with, feeble little frames from four to six feet In height. Many huge humanvsReJetons have been found. It is said tha); the skull of Chev alier Rlncon, whose remains were discov ered in 1S0O at Rouen, would hold a-bushel of wheat. The snln bone was four feet long, and other bones were In proportion. One of the world's famous giants was Patrick Coter O'Brien, who-"was born at Kinsdale, In Ireland, in 17L He was eight feet three Inches tall, and was the great est gknt of his day. He -died in 1SW. In the museum of Trinity college, Dublin, is rjjsse,, n y t t t J ? KrnM down &S MrOu, the skeleton of a giant named Magrath, who was seven feet eight Inches high. A story is told that the Empress of Austria, In the 17th century, had all the giants and dwarfs of the German empire assembled at Vienna. They were quar tered together, arid fear was expressed that the giants would terrify the dwarfs. The contrary proved to te the case. The dwarfs tormented and robbed the giants till, with tears in their eves, the giants bogged to be protected from them. The usual circus and museum giants of today are rarely over seven feet in height, but they wear high-heeled boots snd high hats that add a foot or m6re In hfeht ta their appearance. GO TO THE BOTTOM. Professor Dewar Makes Liquid Hy drogrcn, in Wnlch Corks Sink. It seems odd enough. sas the Philadel phia Inqulrer( to spk of a-eork sinking, let alone actually seeing it sink. "Light as a cork" and "It bobhed up like a cork" ' " - II I I III I Get a goodTreaifast'-Xew York World aro familiar expressions to denote light ness. Of course a cork will not sink In water, but a celebrated English scientist, Professor Dewar, of the royal Institution of Great Britain, has recently made a won derful liquid. In whloh a cork goes to the bottom like a stone. Hydrogen Is one of the lightest of gases; It is used for filling balloons so that they will go upward through the heavier ar. Well, Professor Dewar, by the use ef enor moua pressure and great cold, forced hy drogen Into liquid form, just as steam, when cooled, becomes water. The same scientist had already astonished the world by making a liquid of air. Now, you- cannot see the gas, hydrogen, any more than you can see the air; it I perfectly colorless. Similarly, the liquid made from hydrogen Is- colorless; It looks like clear, sparkling spring- water, and it Is by all odds the lightest liquid known. A cork dropped Into it will instantly ge to 2S: the bottom, even a feather will sink through it at once. Although a liquid. It isn't wet ar i t la so eoM, being over 49 degrees below zejs, that it actually sassee the air ab t te become liquid, and then u freezes thm liquid air mto Ice, and the air-toe being heavier than the- Herald hydrogen it sinln at once to the bottom, where it can be seen an ley white hnmp. It seems odd to have the Ice at the bottom of a liquid. Instead of on top. Ot esnxee, liquid hydco gen. is very costly. Because it requilres sueA get pressure and such great osht to produos it, and it cannot be kept long, for it bout away rapidly although 1 Is kept in & vac m tahs covered wl h iqnM air. Aag atthswsjh ss. cahf aoa a ".quid as .weH, it wBJ- bun Savcst?, exactly Bk hydrogen, gas. , "IS TSHAfPC, FRASSCf Polly Soares jBrg-M.3 Array Frsat Her Qmser'a HfeMe. A Philadelphia daftr relates the story si a parrot that proles tsd her owner's heme from burglars, whs had entwredr thssugh one of the front parlor windows. They crept through the bsuroem past the bird and began1 'jimmying open the sMsboard la the dhtmg-reom. where the silver was kept. One of the other men gathered up the? costly Turkish rags on the noon), and another was taking down the curtains, when Polly spefce- up. "Is that you, Prankr she averted. The burglars stopped ns If they had bees shot Polly repeated the question tn a louder and more Imperative key The noise of the parrot awakened her master. He grasped a revolver, which he bad bought only a few days before and kept under his pillow, and made for the head of the stabs. He pressed an electric but ton on the wall and IK the lights In the hallreom, when he saw three- men strug glag to open the front door. fHk promptly opened Are, but they succeed In setting away. MA Flster then wenr down stairs. where he found the parrot In her cage under the piano. The cage was upset, but the btrd uninjured. The owner placed her right side up upon the ptosioy was sne lifted her frightened head from amhtt- her wing and asked: "13 that you, Frank'" ScbshIIs Visit Ieadea. A very mtereetmgj szmnt h wfid bird Mfe Is attracting attention just now m Lon don. Several years ago a couple of sea gulls, during some very cold weather, found their way to the lake In St. James' Park, and discovered that people Mhed them and would feed them. That coup e must have said things to their pals. Ev ery winter since some have returned ts tho park; and each year it has been noticed that the number increased. This year, however, they have come n huge locks. They now form the chief at traction in St James' Park, and they are se numerous and ao daring 'bat they beat elf the ducks from all the ftedtag. sjpen by the erowd. Some will mod from the hand, and all will catch food that hi threw to them. A Little Housewife's Dream. I'd Mice to stall away hi a bast. And never come back at all. To go arittlBK along- upon tho waves Tke waves that are plaeM and smslk Or eke I'd lute all day to ride In a earriage open and easy. Over downs and meadows Jnst essay enough, And o'er hills that were sontly breear. Or. falling both thee. I'd line to He Itr a hammock and swing- and iiwhin. With a beanthtut cherry tree ever my bond. And two Httle birds to stng When I was hungry, he cherries shosht Ml, And when I wanted to slumber.. The two httte Mrds should change there Mae, And sing- lullabies without number. Or, better than all, I should like tv On a. couch a a. splendMl saloon, Arrayed, of course, m boauiMnl sloth 311, And thlnkmg about the moon. While a pretty youth should play the A second should toll mo a tale And a third shouM. stand by wMb a, smte e ieeeream. And some teed lemonade hi & pott. But lastead of all thai I've sot cooMngr hi dot Wasbmer and bnMhg snd men shags; And as for the sent won. It's Jnst tho hrueh Woman's work is never enmrg. S. X. Simons In BkooMyn Ssglo. Youthful Preeoolty. A, little girl who had just entered school lately jubilantly announced to her fiumer, says the Philadelphia Bulletin, that sbo did better than all the girls above' her in the arithmetic ernes and went to the top "That was-smart eC you." semi be. en couragingly. "How ww If "Weir, you see, Mhm 3ifjgJ ashed the girl at the top how noes was ft and 5, and she didn't know, and said EU then the next girl said 9. and the next ona said IL and the next one 14. Such silly an swers' Then Miss Maggie asked me, and I said 13, and Miss Maggie told me te go up top. Course it was 13." "That was nice,' said the father "I didn't know you could add so well. Bow did you kndw it was IS" "Why, I gneseed It' Kobody said 13." Covn With "Spec." Cattle with spectacles are to he seen on. the Russian steppes. The steppes are covered with snow more than sis month of the year The cows subsist on the tufts ef grass which crop above the snow and the rays of the sun on the- snow aro so dazzling as to cause blindness, To obviate thte calamity it occurred to a htari-hearted man to protect the cows eyes in the same way as- those ot human- beings, and he manufactured smoke-colored spec aclea which eould be safely worn by cattle. These spectacles were a great success, and are now worn by upward of 4M09 head of oattle. which no longer satttr from the snow blindness which once caused such suffering among- them. An Bnlarmn. My mat to m about, but not tn bello My second m hurry, but far not In slow Xy third Is ta ocean, out not tn the river. My onrur to In inn but norer In giver My fifth's not m Hotl Gate, you 11 and it In barber. My sixth hi the eost, shady depths? of the arbor. Hi the ehl oat my uOuath. but not in the kHty. My lest m Xew Yorhv that up-to-date e ty My whole a green mot o'er a lovely Jsla To make thte out eutcfefr won t pussl your heads. 1L fJr!&5s!r ilCmV lie Had. Fa, T3at Time. "Papa," asked' Teamsle, "m It cowardly to strike something itttier than you, that e&n't defend Itself?' "It te. Indeed," repHed the father "Wbll, I deaft know, ' reflected Tomanie; T don't see how we could light 'he gaa without striking a- match." Brooky Eagfe. J New Tvric W-crUL