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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1902)
26 ON THE EVE THE QUEEN'S SHW CROWN. LONDON, March. 3L (Special corre spondence.) All is ready for the coronation of King Edward VII, Ruler by Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of tho British Dominions beyond the Sea, King; .Defender of the Faith, and Emperor of India. His mother was crowned June 28, 1838, and just 64 years later the son, standing little taller, almost as round, fully as in tellectual, sobered by a life of waiting, of play, of practice and of desire, v comes to the crown, takes the oath and starts in at being King in earnest. It is "only a matter of form," the Brit isher will tell you. But as a peer re marked In Parliament when some niggard ly neighbor refused to vote for an. ap propriation to crown Victoria, "xmly a matter of form, but the same can be said of everything. Moonshine and daylight have become to be matters of form with us." For a year and a half the nation has been getting ready io put the crown on the King, and for 14 months His Majesty has been rehearsing. He has made appointments, received hearings, selected colors and ordered the music. He has purchased electric light bulbs, designed the dining-room decora tions lor the great banquet, picked out tbe carpets and had them changed three times, and given orders lor tho menu. He has been praised, advised, cajoled and condemned. Swore at the King:. His severest lesson came from a laborer In Buckingham. A man was sent in by a carpet-laying firm to put down the red carpet in the middle banquet halt The man, chief of (his working division, would not trust an ordinary apprentice, but laid the carpet himself. Fat and puffy, but capable, he had the carpet stretched upon the floor. Then get ting down, he called for tacks and began DSF THE FIELD N VIEW of the fact that Texas is producing eight times as much, pet roleum as the wells In all the world have heretofore produced, and at a cost which permits a great profit if the oil I brings 30 cents a barrel, taken with the I fact that 99 cents worth of oil equals (ln heating- power a ton of coal, the fol lowing excerpts from the United States ! Consul at Cardiff, referring to the use 'of petroleum in Europe, are of great financial moment of this country: An impetus was given to this Industry (five years ago, when petroleum, discov ered in Borneo was found to be well adapted for fuel purposes. This field is .owned by the Shell Transport and Trad ing Company, Ltd. Last year (1901), the exports exceeded 100,000 tons. The Dutch Steamship Company uses jthls fuel in its boats; the Hamburg- American i-.ine nas Duut lour new steam ers adapted for oil fuel, and run them in the Eastern" trade with marked suc- jcess; the North German-Lloyd has two i local steamers using oil; the East Asl fatlc Company, of Copenhagen, employs the fuel In Its local boats, apd is build ing two ocean-going steamers with the i intention of using It; and the China JMutual is preparing three boats for the 'employment of oil. First The saving of labor is large; there will be no ashes to hoist over board after each watch; no need of jstoklng. All that will bo necessary, will be to watch the water In the boilers; the feeding of the fuel to the furnaces will be automatic Second Fewer deckhands will be need ed, as the dirt caused by coal shovel" ing will be done away with. , Third Under proper " combustion, no smoke will' be generated; every atom of oil Is of calorific value; there is no resi due. Fourth The fuel may be stored In the double bottom of a ship, tho fore peak, afterpeak and the tanks under the engine room, thus occupying space not utilized in any other way. No rust Is .possible where It is stored. The space now filled by coal bunkers Is thus avail able for cargo; oil stores in a space of 35 feet per ton, as against 44 feet per ton of coal. Fifth The oil fuel has a higher con centration of heat for manufacturing than can be obtained with coal. The Great Western Railway of Eng land has already a large number of locomotives using this fuel. They say that by its use steam is more easily produced and is maintained up the steep est gradients, and great economy is ef fected by reducing the supply of oil when descending or remaining station ary; the life of the boilers Is prolonged, inasmuch as the tubes do not foul; the nuisance of smoke and the danger of sparks to surrounding property are entirely obviated, and the rolling stock generally is kept in a state of cleanli ness which Is Impossible on a line where coal is used as a motive power. Danger Froin Electric Shocks. In speaking of the danger of death -from accidentally "placing the "body in KUTG EDWARD putting them In "himself with his own hands. The critical part lay near the great wide swinging doors that will let In a dining procession eight abreast In front of these he knelt, and with arm uplifted, hammer In hand, prepared to give the blow which should drive the first critical carpet tack In place It was a trying mo ment Just as the carpet -was properly stretched and the hammer held aloft there was a crash and a bang and the great door flew open from behind. Over went the carpet-layer, hammer and all, and x the carpet slid with him. There was an Instant's silence then came a rip and a roar. Such oaths were never before heard in Buckingham. "You blankety blank blank" and "You blankety blank blank ," swore the man. In the open doorway stood the King, laughing. "I am afraid I upset you," said he. "U-u-up-set N-o-ot at all. Your M-ma-jesty," stammered the man. It took the King's messenger and a court physician to assure the abashed workman that no harm had been done the King by being sworn at. Getting crowned Is not all fun, as the King of England will assure you. So used up Is he with the work that he has gone cruising to recuperate for the final act, while Queen Alexandra has gone Into retirement to take a series of beauty baths for the restoral of her complexion before the great day. "Will King: Edward Faint? Queen Victoria bore up very well dur ing tho preparations, and went through the ordeal bravely, "but a little pale." Just how King Edward will bear It one can only con jecture. There is a legend that no King has ever stood the day with out fainting. The Queen has selected white for her robes. Now, white Is unlucky in history. White satin has been worn by only three monarchs of England, and all came to a violent end. Richard II was crowned in white satin. So was the unfortunate Henry VL Then came Charles I in white. Alexandra will follow. But the Queen, OF SCIENCE HOW PETROLEUM IS NOW STEAMERS & FACTS FROM an electrical current, the Electrical World says: "It was generally admitted that pres sures below COO volts arc very unlikely to produce fatal shocks; while the dan ger increases rapidly above 1000 volts. Of course, no rigid rule can be laid down; because, assuming that all persons are equally susceptible, which is unlikely, the degree of danger would depend both upon the path of the circuit through the body- and upon the strength of the current. The current strength, in turn, depends both on the voltage and the re sistance in tho path. A great mass of evidence has been collected concerning the electric resistance offered by the human body under different conditions, nnd the conclusion appears to be that It is capable of enormous variation ac cording to the positions, surface-areas, and wetness of the electrodes. In elec trocutions the resistance of the body is intentionally reduced to about 200 ohms by the application of large electrodes, thoroughly wetted with saline solution. Between dry finger-tips, on opposite hands, however, the resistance may be many thousand ohms." According to recent researches of Dr. Cunningham, death by the ordinary elec tric shock, when not caused by burning, is due to fibrillar contractions in the heart, or a state of abnormal muscular action In that organ, in which the nor mal functions aro suspended and the circulation stops. The researches which led to his conclusions were conducted upon dogs. Cause of Autumn Haze. . In reply to a letter, asking the cause of Autumn haze, the Chlefof the United States Weather Bureau recently prepared a letter, part of Vhlch Is quoted in what follows by the Scientific American: "The dry haze is undoubtedly due to fine particles of dust. The finest dust Is composed of one or all of the following substances, namely, fine particles of soil, or the dead leaves of plants, smoke or ashes from wood fires, salt from ocean spray, the shells or scales of microscopic clllclous diatoms, germs of fungi, .spores of ferns, pollen of flowers, etc In the still air-of the damp nights these dust particles settle slowly down, and the morning air is comparatively clear. During the daylight the sun warms 'the soil, which heats the ad jacent air, and the rising air currents carry up the dust as high as they go. Under certain conditions which are named In the letter, the layer of dust reaches higher and higher every suc cessive day. During long, dry Summers in India it reaches 7000 feet with a well defined upper surface that is higher In day time than at night time. Tills Is a gen eral explanation of dry haze weather and applies to Indian Summer also. The reason why we have more of such weather in tho Autumn is because there is then less horizontal wind and less rising air. ' No Flat Rate for Phones. It is stated that capitalists in Eliza beth. N. .J., are proposing to establish a telephone sy&tem thvr$ mvr to basis of one cent "per' call, telephones THE SUNDAY OREGONTAtf, PORTLAND, APRIL 13, 1902. OF THE AS A SPORTSMAN. who will change her gown three times, will be robed Irt purple, and once In .Iris color, so these may be a color antidote for white. It 13 a great disappointment to florists that the new orchid King Edward VII cannot be chosen for the coronation flower. This lovely bloom Is so large that it completely hides the wearer, and as a. personal decoration would be Incongru ous. It Is tall, stately and of a royal purple, but its very superiority Is against It. The part of the archbishop of Canter bury Is nearly learned. For several weeks this dignitary has rehearsed the corona tion in Westminster Abbey to the peal ing of the thunderous organ and the sing ing of the boy choir. With stately step he has advanced, making the proper pauses, while the music has Indulged in its Intervals, and finally he has placed a mock crown upon a mock head, while the boys have sung the glorious "Te Deum." The King will follow In a way the cere mony of his mother, but will depart from It In certain manners. The exact route of the procession has not been agreed upqn. though It Is pretty well known, even If not ofHclally an nounced. One street corner rests upon uncertainty, and until the carriage ac commodations of two streets have been measured there will not be the final say. The Day's March. As nearly as has been decided, the pro cession will form near Buckingham Palace at 10 A. M., and will start with trumpet ers and a squadron of the household bri gade. Then will follow the Ambassadors and Ministers, the bands, more cavalry, and the carrlagps of certain Dukes'and Duch esses and some mounted bands. The King's bargemaster and alone 50 special riders will precede about 20 royal car riages which will be required to convey the household. Cavalry will follow music and distin guished officers. The yeoman prickers and foresters, the royal huntsmen, the yeomen of tho guard and officers will ride next. Then In the great state carriage of USED ON OCEAN EVERYWHERE being also installed free, with wires laid underground, which of course, means also metallic circuits. This sounds like a telephone millennium, that has not been realized on euch terms in any American city yet. IE is interesting to note the recognition In all recent tele phone development of the measured rate basis of operation as compared with the old flat rate still prevalent in many quarters. Nctv "Thriller" Invented. Just In tlmo for the Summer-resort manager the machinery for furnishing a new thrill Is patented: An open sub marine boat which is shot down a steep Incline and through a tank of water at such velocity that its occupants, although completely submerged, leave the water with clothing) just as dry as when they entered It This exciter Is based on tho principle that the velocity of the boat Is greater than that of tho velocity of falling water, so that the boat is swept through tho tank before the water has had time to enter. A short upward incline raises the boat out of the water at the end of tho Journey. Where Thin Country Neglects Trade. Of the exports from Singapore last year, valued at n34.432.SG0, 9.S per cent went to the United States, while of $159. 373,210 Imports only one-half of one per cent came from the United States. Thus It is seen that Americans 'purchase In that market nearly 20 times the value of what they sell. This inequality is entirely due to want of representation of American Interests. With exports from the Pacific Coast Europe should not be able to compete, for our Pacific Coast is E00Q miles nearer tho 550,000,000 buyers in Japan, Corea, China, Slam and Polynesia than are our European competitors for such trade Our rivals have also to pay the enor mous tolls of the Suez Canal before they can land a cargo in tho Orient At present these tolls, $1 95 per ton are more than one-half the gross freight from Singapore to New York. Scientific and Industrial Notes. Greece has experienced 31S7 earthquake shocks In five years. T It takes the constant labor of CO.OOO peo ple to make matches for the world. Glass and chlnawaro made In the Tjrilted States Is becoming popular In Rio Janeiro. Tho Province of Quebec, Canada, has a population of 11,545,572; of these, 1,307,950 are French. The gimlet screw, the idea of a lit tle girl, brought many millions of dol lars to its Inventor. The French Government has asked two officials to Investigate tho benefits and det riments of the trusts. Next' Autumn an exhibition of jnotor machines, exclusively American, will be 'had inj Crystal Palace near London. The Austrian Lloyds Steamship Com pany have contracted for 100,000 tons of American coal to be delivered during 1902. The Carrara marble exporters "have formed a trust which will affect the price of the more than threc-auarters of .a million dallars' -Worth 'of monument marble" i eCRONATION THE CLOAK OP ERMIXJ3 AXD VELVET. glass, drawn by eight cream-colored horses, will come the King .and Queen, seated so high that all can see them, and they will be followed by the Royal Archer Guard of Scotland and many cavalry. Along the coronation route to Westmin ster Abbey they will ride, when they will enter and dispose themselves in the order to which their rank entitles them. When Queen Victoria was crowned this wa3 the order, which will be pretty close ly followed by King Edward. The clergy headed the procession, fol lowed by heralds and "household officers, then prelates and officers of state, then the Duchess of Cambridge, wearing a robe of purple velvet, her train borne by a lady. A.fter her the Duchess of Kent Both these royal Duchesses wore a cir clet on their heads, having their coronets borne before them. Of the regalia, the St. Edward's staff was carried by the Duke cf Roxburghe, the golden spurs by Lord Byron, the scepter with the cross by the Duke of Cleveland, a third sword by the Marquis of Westminster, the curtana by tho Duke of Devonshire, and the second sword by the Duke of Sutherland. The coronets of these noblemen were-carried by pages. After the Black Rod, the Deputy Gar ter, and the Lord Great Chamberlain of England came the Duke of Cambridge In his robes of state with his baton of field marshal, his coronet borne by the Marquis of Granby, his train by General Sir William Gomm. The Duke of Sussex In his robes of state followed, his coro net borne, by Viscount Anson, his train by Edward Gore and Lord Coke. Then cime the Duke of Lelnster as High Constable of Ireland, the Earl of Errol as High Constable of Scotland, the Duke of Norfolk as Earl Marshal, with his baton, and the Duke of Wellington as Lord High Constable of England, with his staff and field marshal's baton. The sword of state was borne by Vis count Melbourne, and the scepter with the dove by the Duke of Richmond; St. Edward's crown 'by the Duke of Hamil ton, the orb by the Duke of Somerset, the patina by the Bishop of Bangor, the Bible by the Bishop of Winchester, and the chalico by the Bishop of Lincoln. They preceded the Queen, who wore a tho United States buys at that Italian town. The cost of making cranberry bog pro ductive is $300 to $300 an acre and three to five years' time. The cathedral of Notre Dame, Paris, is to have electric lights. Hitherto, it has been illuminated by candles. The most expensive and roomiest rail way station In the world Is that of the Peninsular Railroad at Bombay. On the date at which the census was taken there was $55,794,890 worth of poul try on foot in the United States. Alligator skins now bring In the Lon don market about 25 cents an Inch, the measure being taken across the should ers. The amount of merchandise transported by rail In the United States is doublo that of all the other nations of the earth col lectively. The death rate in the City of Mexico la 52 to tho 1000 per annum which Is moro than double that of any city in the United States. -The Inks used in the fifth and twelfth centuries have faded, but in a little while those On manuscripts of other times are seen with difficulty. Chambers of Commerce and export as sociations in Saxony are now by legis lative enactment prohibited from giv ing any Information to a foreigner. In every public school of Mexico above the primary grade, in every private school, training school and college, Eng lish is. a compulsory study. Wisconsin dairy products aro now more than S2fl.O0fhA(V tiat- nrmum In vnlitn TMa industry Is rivaled only by the flouring J mills whose annual output Is worth about $27,000,000. At the annual conference last week of the Associated Chambers of Commerce of Great Britain and Ireland, a reso lution was adopted almost unanimously In favor of the metric system. The stringent law against the use of presentations In meat products which was intended to shut out nearly $0,000,000 a year of American exports la found to im perllthe home produced frankfurter. Subsequent to a recently promulgated law, a youth of France of any height above five feet if he weighs 100 pounds, is liable to conscription. Previously the minimum height was five feet two Inches. A Minnesota mill recently ground 12,404 barrels of flour In 24 hours, the largest run ever made by a flour mill. To haul the product for this one day 85 "full-sized freight cars were needed, and the product was valued at $50,000. The pay of the British soldier, which was formerly less than 25 cents a day in time of peace and but SO cents In time of war, has recently been advanced In order to get volunteers for the Transvaal to $1 25 a day with keep. The Army took charge of the health de partment of Havana when deaths were occurring at the rate of 21,252 per year. It gives It up with tho deaths occurring at the rate of 5720 per year. Mortality from yellow fever had for half a century averaged 751 per annum. It Is now nil. The value of the coal mined In Japan is almost equal to that of all other minerals combined. It varies" from the hardest an thracite to peat hut tho quality Is usual ly inferior to that of American coal. Modern machinery and methods have been introduced in the operation of many mines. The National Industrial Association of Great Britain, whose purposes correspond to those of the committee of the 'Civic Federation In .this country, with the ad vancement of trade added, Is growing rabldTiC The'organlzatlon appointscourts THE CORONATION OF QUEEN VICTORIA. (From the painting by Sir George Hayter.) royal robe and was followed by her fam ily and attendants. On this occasion the robes were more than magnificent. But It Is Interesting to note that the Austrian Minister sur passed every one else In magnificence, for he was covered with jewels down to his very boots. A lady who was present wrote that he looked "as though he had been snowed upon with pearls and had also been caught In a rain of diamonds, and had come In dripping." The King will enter the Abbey, pre ceded by the officers of state, bearing the regalia. The oholr will sing "I Was Glad When They Said Unto Me. Let Us Go Into the House of the Lord." This will ring through the long arches ind echo back from the distant roof, while the booming of cannon will be dis tinctly heard from without. Then will come the national anthem, "God Save Our Lord, tho King." A deep hush will fall on the Abbey, and the King and Queen, will kneel be fore the altar for a few 'minutes. As they rise the choir boys will sing "Ed ward, Edward, Vivat Edward Rex." Then will come the recognition, which Is a very striking ceremony. At this point the Archbishop of Canter bury will step up, and with the King will turn unto the right and call out: "Sirs, I here present unto you King Ed ward, the undoubted King of this realm, wherefore all you -who are come this day to do your homage, are you willing to do the same?" To this challenge the people on the right will shout, "God save King Ed ward!" The Archbishop will turn to the four quarters of the compass and shout out the same challenge in each direction. After -the recognition, the King, with his attendants, will kneel upon the steps of the altar and offer a golden altar Cloth, and an Ingot of gold, of a pound weight. Then will follow the litany and the first part of the communion serylce. The sermon will be preached by the Bishop, after which will come the elab orate ceremonies of the coronation ser vice. The Archbishop of Canterbury, ad dressing the King, will ask, "Is your of arbitrators, adherence to whose de cision Is binding upon members. It is expected that evils will be corrected as a result of attracting public attention to them. An old book. In which were recorded the acts of John Walker, a chemist of Durham, England, furnished evidence that I he was the first inventor of the luclfer match. In 1827 he sold the first box, the price being IS pence s In a recent experiment In submarine signaling a bell hung 50 feet below a buoy was struck electrically and the sound was heard by persons who put an oar against a rod held in contact with the hull of a vessel five miles away. The rubber tip added to lead pencils for use as an eraser was one of the most profitable simple devices ever patented In the United States. Its Inventor had an Income from royalties on It of more than $100,000 a year for many years. The condition of the Indians on the reservation of Cattaraugus, N. T., has re cently been described by Dr. Lake, who Is an authority on that race. He finds that they have seriously degenerated under civ ilization both physically and mentally. American glrfseng is worth, wholesale, $4 to $6 a pound In Hong Kong. "Sang" is considered a necessity by the well-to-do Chinese, who use It for a stimulant and attribute to It many.medlcal virtues. Corea sells to China about $250,000 worth of It each year. An agreement exists between the Persian and Russian Governments giving to the latter the exclusive right to"construct rail roads in Persia for a period of 10 years from the accession of the present Shah. This arrangement has still seven years to run. This fact was learned recently by Minister Grescom, of Teheran. The United States stood second on the list of those nations from which France purchased her supplies In 1901 and fourth in the lj3t of purchasers of French prod ucts. In 1901 France imported $93,002,201 worth of goods from the United States and exported $46,220,002 to the United States, a balance In our favor of $46,776,259. The, so-called chamois skin Is recom mended In the Chemist and Druggist as an excellent medium for the clarification of thick liquids.' The leather Is to be well rinsed In cold water, and after being wrung to expre?s the excess of moisture it should be affixed to tho top of the funnol so as not to hang down very much. The ne electric railway to Chamonlx from Fayet, which Is operated by power from the Arvo, a mountain stream, has 9 fer -cent grades, although it has the com mon electro-motor cars with smooth wheels. The Current Is from a third rail, and a fourth rail Is used for a, grip brake. The journey of 11 miles occupies about an hour. Incident to the discovery of natural gas, the manufacturing Interests of Indiana have Increased greatly in Importance. In 1900. there were produced In that stqte $6, 415.0S1 of agricultural Implements, $12,742, 242 In carriages and wagons, and $19,33S, 4S1 In Iron and steel. The value of lumber and timber products have of late years remained about stationary at $20,000,000. The proportion of wage-earners to total population has increased to 6.2 per cent The Chemlker Zeltung 'describes some experiments in the making of artificial diamonds. Carbon was heated in an at mosphere of inert gas, In an Iron flask raised to a high temperature by the elec tric arc Bits the size of a pea were ob tained having the hardness and crystalline form of a diamond. The crystals have a gray tint that makes them worthless for jewelry, but their Use In drills seems to be promising. A French chemist has made minute diamonds by heating pure carbon under pressure. GRAPHIC STORY OF THE CEREMONY OF CROWNING KING EDWAkD VII THE KING majesty going to take the oath?" "I am willing," the King will reply. "Will you solemnly promise and swear to govern tho people of thts UnltEd King dom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Dominions thereto belonging, accord ing to the statutes in Parliament agreed on, and the respective laws and customs of the same?" the Archbishop will ask. "I solemnly promise so to do," the King will reply. "Will you, to your power, cause law and justice In mercy to be executed In all jour judgments?" 1 will." "Will you, to the utmost of your power, maintain the laws of v Qod, the true profession of the Gospel, and the Protestant Reformed religion established by law? And will you maintain and pre serve inviolate the settlement of the United Church of England and Ireland, and the doctrine, worship, discipline and government thereof, as by law es tablished within England and Ireland, and the territories thereunto belonging? And will you preserve unto the bishops and clergy of Englarfd and Ireland, and to the churches there committed to their charge, all such rights and privileges as by law do or shall appertain tq them or any of them?" The King will reply, ""All this I prom ise to do," after which he will go to the altar, and, laying his right hand upon the book of the Gospels, will say: "The things which I have heretofore promised, I will perform, and keep.- So help me God." Then, kissing tho book, will sign the oath and kneel In prayer while the choir sings the hymn, "Come, Holy Ghost, Our Souls Inspire." Next the ceremony of the anointing. The King will sit In St. Edward's chair, and a canopy of cloth of gold will be held over him while the Archbishop anoints him with oil on the' head and hands, say ing: "Ee-. thou anointed with holy oil. as Kings, priests and prophets were anoint ed. And as Solomon was anointed King by Zadok, the priest, and Nathan, the prophet; so be thou anointed, blessed and consecrated King over this people, whom tho Lord thy God hath given thee to rule and govern. In the name of the Father FOR THE SCRAP BOOK TWCJ INTERESTING POEMS PUBLISHED BY REQUEST. The Planting: of the Apple Tree. Come, let us plant the apple-tree. Cleave the tough grceneward with the spade; Wide let Its hollow bed be made; There gently lay the roots, and there Sift the dork mold -with kindly care. And press it o'er them tenderly, As, round the sleeping infant's feet Wo softly fold the cradle-sheet; So plant we tho apple-tree. , What plant we in this apple-tree? Buds, which tho breath of Summer days Shall lengthen Into leafy sprays; Boughs where tho thrush, with crimson breast Shall haunt and sing and hide her nest; We plant upon tho sunny lea, A shadow for the noontide hour, A shelter from the Summer shower. When we plant the apple-tree. What plant we In this apple-tree? 8wcets for a hundred flowery Springs, To load the May-wind's restless wings. When, from the orchard row. he pours Its fragrance through our open doors; A world of blossoms for the bee. Flowers for tho sick girl's silent room. For the glad infant sprigs of bloom. We plant with the apple-tree. "What plant we !n this apple-tree? Fruits that shall swell in sunny Juno, And redden in the August noon. And drop, when gentle airs come by. That fan the blue September sky. While children tome, with cries of glee. And peek them where the fragrant grass Betrays their bed to those who pass. At the foot of the apple-tree. And when, above this apple-tree. The Winter stars are quivering bright. And winds go howling through the night Girls, whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth. Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth. And guests in prouder homes .shall see. Heaped with the grape of Clntra's vine. And golden orange of the line, The fruit of the apple-tree. The fruitage of this apple-tree Winds, and our flag of Stripe and Star, Shall bear to coasts that lie afar.. Where men shal lwonder at the view, And ask in what fair groves they grew; And sojourners beyond tho sea Shall think of childhood's careless day, And long, long hours of Summer play. In the shddc of the apple-tree. Each year shall give this apple-tree A broader flush of roseate bloom, A deeper maze of verdurous gloom, And loosen, when tho .frost-clouds lower, The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower. The years shall come and pass, but wo Shall hear no longer, where wo He, The Summer's tops, the Autumn's sigh In the boughs of the apple-tree. And time shall waste this apple-trec-Ohl when Its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the ground below, Shall fraud and force and Iron will Oppress the weak and helpless still? What shall tho tasks of mercy be. Amid the tolls, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when lengths of years - Is wasting this little apple-tree? "Who planted this old apple-tree?" The children of that distant day Thus to some aged man shall say; And' gazing 6n its mpssy gtera, .The gray-haired man shall answer them: "A poet of the land was he. Born in the rude but good old times, 'Tls said he made somo quaint old rhyme3 On planting the apple-tree." WUHam Cullen Bryant, v AS AN ENGLISH GENTLEMAN. and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." . The Archbishop then pronouncea a blessing on the King and the various Insignia of royalty, the scepters, orb, spurs, etc., having all their civil or ec clesiastical significance, are handed to him with appropriate exhortations. The worda used by the prelate as he places the sword of state in tho monarch's hands are significant: "Receive this king-! ly sword brought now from the altar of! God, and delivered to you by the hands, of uar the servants and bishops cf God.j though unworthy. With this sword do justice, stop the growth of Iniquity, pro-, tect the holy church of God, help and defend widows and orphans, restore the things that are gone to decay, maintain! the things that are restored, punish and reform what is remiss, and confirm what is in good, order; thatdolng these things you may be glorious In all virtue and so faithfully serve our Lord Jesus Christ in this life that you may reign forever' with him In the life which is to come. Amen." The imperial mantle of cloth of gold will then be placed upon the King's shoulder and the ruby ring upon hl3 hand. Next will come the most Important act of all. The Archbishop, having offered up prayer, will take the Imperial crown from off the altar and place It upon King Edward's head. Instantly all the great crowd of peers and peeresses will assume their glittering coronets and the Abbey will ring with the shouts of "God save the King." While the guns are firing, from a sig nal at Whitehall, there will come the pre sentation of a Bible to the King, and, to the singing of the "Te Deum." he, with his Queen, will be conducted to a throne in the center of the church. Now all the princesses of the royal blood, the Dukes, the Marquises, ;thet Earlsr the Viscounty and the Barons will do their act of homage and will kiss the hands oNthe newly crowned sovereigns. For, In the coronation, the Queen, too, will receive her crown. Beautiful, though) light, glistening, tall and royal. It will; set upon the head of the consort as well as upon the King, and ' two sovereigns will graciously rule England. Bong of the Mystic. I walk down the Valley of Silence Down the dim. voiceless Valley alonel And I hear not the fall of a footstep Around me, eavo God's and my own; , And tho bush of my lie art is as holy ' Aa hovers where angola, have flown t Long ago was I weary of voices Whose muslo my hetrt could not win; Long ago was X weary of noises That fretted my soul with their din; j Long ago was I weary of places Where I met but the human and sin. I walked In the world with the worldly; I craved what tho world never gave; And I said: "In tho world each Ideal, That shines like a star on life's wave. Is wrecked on the shores of the Beal, And sleeps like a dream In a. grave." , And. still did I pine for tbe Perfect And still found tho false with the True; I sought 'mid the Human for Heaven, But caught a mere glimpse of ita blue; And I wept when the clouds of the Mortal , .. Veiled even that glimpse from my view. And I tolled on, heart-tired of the Human And I moaned 'mid. the mazes of men, Till I knelt, long ago, at an altar And heard a voice call me. Since then I walk down the Valley of Silence That lies far behind mortal ken. Do you ask what I. found in the Valley? Tls my trysting-place with the Divine. And I fell at the feet of the Holy. And above me a volcu said, "Be mine." And there arose from the depths of my epirl1 An echo '"My heart shall be thine." Do you ask how I live in the Valley? I weep and t dream and I pray. But my tears are as sweet as the dewdrops That fall on the roses In May; And , my. prayer, like a perfume from censers. Ascendeth to God night and day. In the hush of the Valley of Silence I dream all the rongs that I sin?; And the music floats down the dim Valley, Till each flnds a word for a wing. That to hearts, like the Dove of the Deluge. A message of Peace thsy may bring. But far on the deep thtre are billows that never shall break on the beach; And I have heard. song3 in the Silence That neyer 6hall float into speech; And I have had dreama in the Valley Too lofty for language to reach. And I have seen Thoughts in the Valley Ah! me. how my spirit was stirred! And they wear holy v-il9 on their faces, Their footsteps can scarcely be heard; They para through the Valley like virgins; Too pure for the touch of a. word I Do you ask me the place of the Valley, Te'hearts that arc barrowed by care? It Hetti afar between mountain, -And God and- His anrels are there; And one Is the dark mount of Sorrow, "And one the bright mountain of Prayer. ,! ;'.. Father Abram Joseph Ryan.