THE SUNDAY OEEGOmAlT, PORTL-AJSD, JUNE 22, 1902. 32 SBRMOMS'By FOUR PKOMINENT MEMBERS OF THE, LA1T THE eUHSE OF STRIPE- FCTR GOUD By Professor L. Ferriani FOR several years I have studied care fully the greed and egotism that Is becoming more and more evident among children of this generation, produc ing a race of born usurors, and I, have tried to find the cause for this greed that Is so disgusting In man, but that Is in finitely more so in young children. We all know; of course, that the strug gle for existence is dally growing harder and that the instinct of self-preservation and a certain amount of egotism is not only excusable, but absolutely necessary, to success in life, but we are not justified in raising children in whom egotism domi nates all other feelings. An education without a foundation of altruism dcvelop's a child's egotism, and if we do not continually teach our chil dren that eelf-gratlflcatlon Is not the highest aim in life, if we do not teach them the beauty of self-sacrifice", we will transform them Into heartless, unfeeling fihylocks. From egotism to greed there is only a very short stop, and the step from greed to usury Is still shorter, and from the times of the old Greeks and Romans no living being has been despised so much as tho miser. t Antlsthenes said: "The miser can never be virtuous," and Plutarch says about greed that Is the hardest form of tyr anny, which drives you to want and grasp things, and at the same tlmo'prevents you from using them, which stimulates your appetite and prevents you from enjoying. "When children grow up in the midst of a family where the love of gold is the only god, where the parents always speak about the pleasure of making money as the chief object of human life, these chil dren will naturally develop into what Goethe calls "men with buttoned pock ets,' and their hearts will be closed against all higher and ideal feelings. If the accumulation of wealth is al ways shown to the boy as the most desir able thing in life, it will gradually destroy in him all sense of charity, love and af fection; he will get tho Impression that with money he can accomplish everything; with love nothing, and he will naturally spurn love. His thoughts will get accustomed to moving within one narrow circle drawn around the center of his only god money. He will in time become a miser, and usurer, the most deadly enemy of modern society. He will be as Cain, who only feels hate and inspires hate. There is no sight which is so painful to me as the sight of a child that ought to feel love In Its heart for all the- beauties of this world, thinking of nothing but money and the power and pleasure of possessing it. There is in every child a certain amount of egotism, but -we the parents of children are responsible; we have it in our power to diminish this egotism by teaching love and charity, or develop it by preaching the gospel of gain and the love of money. In many families, especially among those wlio have suddenly become rich, the words "love," "Christian charity," "brotherhood" and "altruism" have been devoured by the fever of money, and in stead of these their children will only hear talk about principal, interest, profit and gain. Parents of this kind, who only adore the golden calf, have absolutely no right to have, children, and would do a kinder act it they killed them immediately after their birth than they do by raising therri to grow up knowing no pleasures In life but those that can bo bought for money. To get material -for tills article in con demnation of this kind of education I have put questions to 100 children, and their re sponses contain the strongest condemna tion that I can imagine. These 100 children all belonged to' the educated and moderately well-off classes, and it is not without reason that I have selected just this kind. Children who have known starvation. who have felt wants and needs of all kinds, and who have received little or no education, naturally have a false idea of the value of money, and from this false idea very often rises their envy of the rich, and for these reasons I have se lected no children among the extremely poor. The 100 children might be dlcided In three different categories. First category: Seventy children who knew that If you were rich enough you might be 'the mas ter of the whole world. Second category: Twenty children who knew that money -would buy everything. Third category: Ten children who knew that to be per fectly content and happy you must havo lots of money. Among all these 100 children there, were only seven who knew that with money you might do good. Remember, I say "mlght dof" not "ought to do." Among these children I found 12 usurers, of whom I shall speak later. For the present I shall classify them physiologic ally In this way; Egotists to a certain extent, 35. Pronounced egotists, 4S. . Indifferent, 17. Greedy. S3. J Usurers, 12. ' In the class of egotists there were 52 per cent girls. In the class of greed 3 per cent. In the class of usurers 1 per cent. I put a number of questions to these children, and shall note. 15 answers here, which are the most characteristic and show their moral state the best. 1. (GirL) When you have money you are happy, because you can amuse your self. 2. (Boy.) "With money' you can do everything. 3. (Boy.) My father is very rich; ho can do anything he pleases. He com mands, he orders, and everybody obeys. 4. (GirL) To enjoy life you must be rich.- x 5. (Boy.) I am rich now, but when I grow big I will become a millionaire. G. (GirL) "When my uncle dies and he Is sick now I will have money enough to marry any one I like, and" mamma says I ssnall marry a Prince. . 7. (Boys.) Mamma has told me that you can buy everything for money. 8. (Girl.) If I should get poor and have no money to enjoy myself, I should die from eorrow. ' 9. (Boy.) Papa has tqld me that to be strong and Independent you must have plenty of money. 10. (Boy.) Money Is happiness, for mon ey will buy everything. 11. (Girl.) "Without money you can have nothing good to eat, no servants, no box at tlie opera and no carriage. 12. (Girl.) I do not see how a person cares to live without money. The poor must be very unhappy. 13. (Girl.) How nice It must be to be rich, so that you can have everything bet ter than all your friends. 14. (Girl.) "With plenty of money you are sure to have no sorrow. 15. (Girl.) I know when I marry I shall have a fine trousseau, but I will marry no one but a very rich man. He does not need to be good or noble If he has only plenty of money. These answers and hundreds of others that I have received are as instantaneous photographs of the minds of children that have been brought up In families where the greed for money dominates all other feelings. They show the pitiful sight of children that hope for the death of their parents to become rich little girls still playing with dolls thinking of marriage only as a stepping stone to riches and I cannot Imagine anything that could make you feel more sad than all these little souls that have been deprived of all true pleas ures in life and that shall never be able to see anything higher than money. Among the boys I shall point out eight young Shylocks. 1. Sold to his friends blank books, that cost himself nothing, for a higher price than they could be bought for in the book store; and not only this, but from every blank book he would tear out a few sheets that he would sell separately. 2. "Would lend money to his little broth er at 60 per cent Interest. 3. Sold pens given to him by his undo at 50 per cent profit. 4. Stole fruit in a garden and sold It at twice Its value. 5. Sold candy on credit at GO per cent profit. 6. Lent his books, pens, pencils, etc., to others at regular fixed rates. 7. Lent money at 100 per cent. i o.. com nam or nis mncn ana lent tno money to others at 20 per cent per week. These facts speak for themselves. It is a brutal language, but It gives us many valuable hints, showing us how necessary It is to eradicate all traces of egotism from the mind of a child or we may blame nobody but ourselves if our child turns out to be a rnlser. a usurer, or even a thief, and this Idea ought to make us use all our efforts -to plant In the fertile soil of the childish mind the seed of love, and keep our eye open for any tare that might show its head and endanger the moral character of our children. LINO FERRIANI. Copyright, 1902, "W. R. Hearst. WHAT CONSTITUTES -REAL HAPPINESS? By Hon. W: Sourke Cockran, L. L. t. O X.IFE can be claimed successful unless It be a happy one. Happi ness is the object of universal en deavor, and happiness alone Is success. Of course, when we speak of a happy life we do not mean a condition of un interrupted bliss. Sickness, death and other disasters He In wait for every man even the most successful making diffi cult the progress which overcomes them wounding and blistering the feet which they cannot arrest. The cup of success cannot be quaffed without tasting some bitter dregs of disap pointment. Perfect happiness is not of this earth. By a successful life we mean not one which has escaped all sorrow, but one which by comparison with others has achleevd a larger degree of happi ness. There is nothing about which men think so much or which they desire so 'ardently as success, and yet I venture to say there are few who would be able to define it, and not very many who have even a clear conception of it. That which today we bolleve absolutely essential to our happiness tomorrow we may regard as an obstacle to it. The event which as we approached it we be lieved to be a disaster, looking back at it we find to have been a stepping-stone to prosperity. To discuss success intelligently, it is , then necessary to agree upon what It is. Having ascertained in what it consists, we can consider how it must be achieved and how it may be maintained. "What is happiness? Is it fame? Some wise men hold that fame is post humous and notoriety contemporaneous, but without pausing to consider the grounds of that belief it is cortaln that the only fruit which fame or notoriety brings to its living possessor Is the sense that his fellow-men are curious about him. To bo gazed at In the street or in a public conveyance soon palls upon the mind; from being a source of satisfaction it becomes a source of embarrassment. The prominence which has cost a life time of Industry and self-denial to acquire can be forfeited in a moment, by an ill considered act or a maladroit expression. This sense of insecurity in its possession robs It of all enjoyment, and speedily convinces any man with sufficient wit to become conspicuous that no one can be considered famous until he is dead. A reward which can be enjoyed only beyond the grave Is not a temporal success, and therefore is not within the purview of this discussion. Is power happiness? I am inclined to mean that it Is far from being it. Ask the possessor of It and he will tell you that it is an obstacle to all contentment. Power is a good deal like commercial credit. A man can pos sess it only while he refrains from using It for his own benefit. An attempt to utilize it for personal gratification destroys, it. "Wherever power exists It must be ex ercised chiefly for Its own preservation; and this is true whether the potentate be the Czar of all tho Russlas or the boss of an American city. The imperial autocrat cannot appoint an Incompetent favorite to the command of his armies without exposing his throne to destruction by foreign invasion or domes tic revolt. He cannot even gratify his own caprice in the appointment of a spy, for his very life depends upon the vigi lance of his police. The American boss must use all his power to enlist the aid of those best quali fied to maintain his boss-ship. If he treated the appointments or nom inations to office controlled by him as porsonal perquisites to be bestowed on personal favorites, his power would not last a twolvemonth. A man can always forqe his appointment on any potentate by making himself the most capable that is to say, the most useful to the ap- ! pointing power. I I do not say that this capacity "which Imposes Itself on power Is always one to be approved by the moralist or encour aged by the patriot. It may be meritorious or it may not, according to tlie system which it is enlisted to uphold, but, what ever the form of ability which authority requires for a prop, tho possessor of that ability can always dictate terms to the possessor of power. "What, then, in the last analysis, is the potentate but an agent to distribute among the capable the theaters on which they can best display their capacity? And to exercise this function of assigning men to different fields of activity, the man of power must pass his days In an atmos phere which encourages baseness and mendacity, which stifles honor and loyalty. The competition for his favor Is so keen that ten thousand active wits study every weakness of his nature and play upon It. The. real friends who would tell him the truths he ought to hear are pushed aside by pretended friends, who tell him the untruths which he wants to hear. While his power lasts the sycophants are numerous to the point of embarrassment; when It falls his true friends have been alienated, and the false ones Instantly abandon him to a solitude unbearable, af ter the atmosphere of adulation to which he has been accustomed. We have the authority of the closest ob server of human nature who ever com mitted his thoughts to paper for saying that It Is not happiness or ropose, but uneasiness and discomfort, which a crown brings to a human head. Is knowledge happiness? Tho utmost that a life devoted to study can hope to accomplish is to discover the fountain of knowledge; not one of us can ever hope to slake his thirst at it. There fore, if knowledge be, happiness, then in deed is happiness unattainable. Is wealth happiness? Look at those who possess it and tell me If you think they are a happy race. Who that has observed In these cata combs of modern cities called safe depos its, the owners of millions, gloomy as the passages through which they move si lently, almost furtively, to compartments appropriately named vaults, where in an Isolation absolute as the grave they count their securities or change them, will say that, judged by appearances, the very rich lead lives of unclouded Joy? The millionaire always appears to be melancholy, but nowhere is he so sad as In the midst of his treasures. He is the only human being who, by the common observation of all men, has never shown gayety, and who Is universally considered incapable of it. I have heard of jolly beg gars, but no one has ever heard of Jolly millionaires. The cripple sometimes smiles on the bed to which ho is chained. The blind are cheerful In the occupations to which their affliction restricts them. It Is as natural for a workman to sing while the object of hl3 labor assumes a form In which it will be at once the monument of his In dustry and the source of his wages as it is for a mother to sing over the cradle of the child she has borne. But who ever heard of a millionaire singing a comic song or whistling a merry tune as he clips cou pons in a subterranean cell? From a somewhat extensive observation of life I can say with perfect sincerity that In my judgment hopeless misery ex ists nowhere except among the idle rich. The man, whatever the difficulties of the pursuit, is always animated by the belief that its possession will be a golden key by which he can unlock the door to bound less happiness, but the man whose wealth is limitless knows how little money can buy, and from that fatal discovery there Is no escape. After he has "built a house, purchased a yacht and established a carriage, what more can the rich man do for himself though his millions be countless? The luxuries which he coveted while they were beyond his reach became common place' once they are In his possession, while the sense that there Is nothing more which he can acquire robs his pursuits of their keenest Interest. Poverty may compel a man to renounce luxuries and even comforts, but it leaves him the blessed Influence of hope. There is nothing to revive the gloom of the hapless mortal who has discovered tho limitations of a check. If wealth, power, fame and knowledge are not happiness, In what does It con sist? Is It unattainable? No, so far from being unattainable it Is not even difficult to reach. It Is at our feet, and, as often happens, we stumble over the substance which Is close to us while straining after its shadow in the distance. Happiness consists not in our posses sions, but in ourselves; not in what wo have, but what we are. I think happiness may be defined as absorption In some form of effective labor. Tou may say some men are unhappy though they work every day nay, some men declare their occupations are sources of discontent because they are arduous. Do not be deceived. A man's hands may bo busy, yet he may be unhappy, but It 13 because his mind is not occupied by hl3 task. Where all the faculties, mental and physical, are absorbed in any form of in dustry', there is no time to feel discontent and still less time to express It. Happiness is effective labor. Our pos sessions are often sources of disappoint ment, but the labor spent in acquiring them Is always a source of satisfaction. W. BOURKE COCKRAN. (Copyright, 1002, by W. R. Hearst.) EVILS OF TOO MUCH MOM Eg' By Mrs. John A. Logan HE indubitable evidence submitted 1 by Professor Ferriani of appall- ing tendency of Americans down to the second and third generation to sacrifice everything on the altar of mam mon Is a melancholy thought. The cos mopolitan character of our people Is such that strains from every race flow through the veins of the American Nation. The prodigious enorgy, dauntless pluck and tireless patience of the generation just vanishing has left to their progeny colos sal fortunes, and while discretion has not always been inherited with them, the spirit of accumulation is assuredly abroad in the land. Eagerness for gold is a fa miliar characteristic. The first and ever uppermost thought of men, women and children is of money. How much can they get out of anything does it pay, and such ignoble questions are tlie first to rise when anything is presented. Were we not confronted dally by these facts one would be disposed to doubt the cor rectness of the hypothesis. Truth compels almost everyone to ad mit that they aro guilty of the serious mistake of helping to encourage tho spirit of doing everything for a promised rer ward. A majority of parents give their children money If they will be good, if they will do certain duties they are promised monev compensation, not in frequently they are promised pay if they will follow a certain diet, or if they will forego sweets or something that Is not good for them, when they should be re quired to do these things from principle. They are encouraged to hoard, to dis courage extravagance, when they should be taught discretion and sound judgment. Parents who laid tho foundation of their own fortunes by thrift and economy naturally feel that the same policy will be as fruitful for their children, arguing that having provided something with which their descendants can bogln life, they should by strict application of the policy which they pursued amass great fortunes much earlier in life. We know parents who double everything gained by their children, thereby stimulating them to the utmost exertion and almost niggardly economy. It is difficult for parents of the present day to Induce their sons and daughters to remain beneath the parental roof until their majority, and few are willing to turn over their earnings for the support of the family, claiming if they support themselves they should havo great credit, and nothing more should be required of them. In tho olden time children were obliged to serve their paronts until they reached their majority, and we arc not certain that It was much better for them than the present custom of allowing them the freedom they now have. They had more respect for their parents and deeper affection for the members of the family they felt were In a wise dependent upon them. Another prodigious Incontlvo young peo ple have to acquire fortunes by fair means or foul Is the Immeasurable In fluence money has In tho world. We see dally men without refinement or princi ple suddenly become very rich without inquiring into the means by which these fortunes are made. They are taken up, everyone accepting their Invitations and vying with each other in heaping social attentions upon them, and in. every way flattering them. Crowned heads join in the mad rush to fete them, expecting sooner or later to use their ducats In the furtherance of some scheme or to aid In the liquidation of some monetary obli gation. Paraphrasing the adage, "Tho King can do no wrong," one would think that In the eyes of the world the "rich can do no wrong." No matter how much of boors they may be, they have only to be lavish with their money and they are forgiven breaches in polite society, per sonal vulgarity, atrocious manners and want of principle. It is not surprising that babes understand the supromacy of money and leaA to feel the want of it almost before thejj are out of their cradles. The nufse girls as they push their baby carriages In the parks discuss the financial condition of their mistresses and dissertate upon the distress of their charges according to their Idea of the wealth of their employers. Money is the cry everywhere. Tlie very servants of your household arc constantly comparing the evidences of money or tho lack of it as they go about earnestly or indifferently, as they are im pressed by your circumstances. Your superior position from a cultivated stand point through your inheritance of an illus trious name makes little Impression com pared to the display and style of your millionaire neighbors. It is not surpris ing that the desire for money should dominate every class of society and fur nish the motive for almost every action of a people who hear nothing else and who are educated to place It above every thing else. NotnIng is too sacred to be weighed by the standard of gold. The holy state of matrimony is far too often entered Into from mercenary considerations. Men and women are equally guilty of being biased in their choice of a life partner by the amount of money one or the other may ' have. ' Poor girls think they cannot marry a poor man and help him to acquire for tune and fame. A poor man hesitates to undertake to supply the requirements of society unless tho young woman he mar ries have a fortune. Some of them have been so selfish and avaricious as deliberately to seek to mar ry some one whose income will multiply ) and make it unnecessary for them to make any effort in life. There can be no hope for a change In the ambitions of the youth of the Nation unless those of mature years, who have all to do with the present and future of our country, take alarm at the present overestimate of money and lack of appre ciation of the higher and nobler possi bilities of mankind. Intelligence, integ rity, morality, education and Chris tianity, If encouraged, are the forces that can eradicate the baser elements that have wrought the great change In Ameri can ambitions. MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN. (Copyright, 1002. TV. R. Hearst.) THE PHILOSOPHLj OF GOOD TEMPER By Harriet Prescott Spofford j F IT were necessary to give an opln- I ion as to what is the first and chief 1 constituent of a happy marriage one might hesitate for a moment over the thought of many almost indispensable virtues, and dally over that of absolute trustfulness on both sides, but one, if thinking and weigh ing deliberately, would decide presently that the real requlslto for happiness in marriage is good nature. Not that a tem pest once in a great while may not be worth while to clear the air and to show how good tho other is, but in the long round year the sunshine and fair weather is tho best. What will you not pardon to a sunny- faced rogue? A man may commit count less peccadilloes, a thousand offenses against good taste, even be guilty of sins, but an unfailing sweetness of disposition will win forgiveness for them alL A woman may be extravagant, a poor housekeeper, even slatternly, or a provok er of scandal, but there Is no disruption In the household of which she Is. mistress as long as with a smile she acknowledges her fault, though her sin Is ever before us. A pair of dimples has saved many a little scamp from a whipping; they are Just as useful when the scamp is oldor and tho dimples arp slipping into wrinkles. For the dimple Is not only evi dence of the smile itself, but it stimu lates tho smiles of others. Who can rebuke too sharply or too fre quently ttW reproach is always received without retort, without affront? Who is not made to feel upon tho spot that good nature is better than any impeccability? We have, most of us, seen exquisite housekeepers who all but follow the In truder about with a broom, who are ready to dust the chair you rise from, require overshoes to be left outside the door; who, if you take a book from one room and lay it down," carry It back be fore your eyes; who make more circum stance of broken china than of broken bones. And moat of -us prefer for a com panion the home-body, who makes no fuss about anything, but who Is tender and caressing and gay and consoling and sympathetic and always sweet-tempered, although there be fluff on her floors and nicks on her dishes and no meal ready at Its appointed hour. And most of us, again, rather than with the petulant and fault-finding man, or with the stern and sour and solemn Incarnation of all the virtues, or with the lofty and superior soul, without whose wisdom and learning , tho world could not revolve, would choose companionship with tho off-hand, Happy-go-lucky fellow, who, if the dinner is late, say?: "Never mind; it will be all the better w'hon it docs come," or if we our selves are late for church or theater or outing, says: "Well, we will enjoy it ail the more when we get there"; or, if the servants are rebellious, condones It by de- olarlni.- Wa nnn't fixnpfit nerfectlon for j the price we pay." And this man may have his bettor faults; he may not be at homo as much as you would like; he may be too careful -about the spending of his money; he may have various habits un pleasant to you; but you Jove him quite aside from them; you regard them as ex terior affairs, for which he is hardly re sponsible; you find some one else to be blamed for them, he himself Is the sunny crcature who brightens gloom wherever he goes, and of whose love you feel as sured, whether in truth It is yours or not. And after all the assurance of love pro duces happiness. In fact, good-nature Is a charm that never dies. Beauty fades, accomplish ments fall, but good-nature survives till all else falls to dust. It blends the oppos ing and contradictory elements like a for tunate solvent. It acts precisely as sun shine does, and where you find It happi ness flourishes and life is enriched. In any individual It declares the existence of a calm and strong nervous tempera- ment, and nothing lends Itself more to peace and prosperity In a household than that. It Is a blessed , thing, then, that such a trait can be established; that re pression here and expression there, and determination everywhere will make it grow and thrive and become a habit. It Is the outer embodiment of love; and tho man who Is seldom without It Is the one to whom the town turns, on whom the beggars smile, after whom the children run, whose presence soothes trouble, and whose wife is sure that even if she wears her old bonnet, she is lovely in his eyes. HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD. GRASSHOPPERS $1 A BUSHEL HOV THEY HAVE RUINED THIS YEAR'S f CROPS IN THE .GARDEN SPOT OF UTAH GRASSHOPPERS are worth 51 a bushel in Sanpete County, "Utah. The market is practically without limit, and cannot be overstocked. Men and women are engaged in the work of collecting the Insects. Boys and girls find profitable employment at the work. The grasshoppers are numbered by the million. They are killing tho crops, ruining, tho trees and denuding every plant of Its foliage. Great armies of them darken the sun and hover xllke clouds of dust over the green fields and gardens. Wherever the destructive pests attack a field of grass or grain they take the entire crop, leaving dust and 'desolation. One year ago the grasshoppers visited Utah and destroyed the wheat fields of Sanpete. They deposited vast quantities of eggs and departed. Examination of soils show that 76 eggs were left' in a space of two Inches square. When the time for hatching came on the entire country was a living mass of young, rav enous grasshoppers. The chickens and turkeys were taken from the homes and turned Into the wheat fields to destroy the insects, but their work was of no avail. Then the plows and other agricultural implements were dragged over the ground. Now the Insects are gathered in bags and boxes and burned. The farmers and busi ness men have contributed ,to a fund for extcmliating thepets. The rnty occupies one of the most im ports grain growing sections of the state. It is ofton referred to as "the granary of "Utah," because of the exten slvo wheat fields. Last year the' crops were destroyed and wheat used for seed and flour has been imported from Wash- I Ington and Oregon. The grasshoppers threaten to kill the grain and vegetables of the gardens and ruin the alfalfa and wild grass fields. The area over which they are traveling Includes 15 prosperous towns and villages, the homes of 20,000 people. The grain is all Spring-sown and practically ruined. The Mormons have a system of Summer-fallowing and seeding only in the Spring. Their -crops for this year will be a failure, and the land for next Spring will be filled with the eggs of grasshoppers. Dances are held by the people for the purpose of raising funds for exterminat ing the grasshoppers. At Ephralm a novel dance has been given. No tickets were sold "and money was not accepted. The only admission fee was a bag con taining at least one-half bushel of grass hoppers. This represented the ordinary price of a dance ticket 50 cents per couple. When the first dance was- over therf participants witnessed a midnight bonfire, made by throwing 75 half-bushel bags of grasshoppers Into one funeral crematory- Thus the proceeds of the ball, amounting to $37 30 actual cash valuation, went up in smoke, while the dancers shouted and sang eongs of ZIon,as a re quiem to the departed insects. Mantl. the county seat of Sanpete, was the second settlement made la the Terrl- l tory of Desoret, In 1819. It is the Tempje City of Central "Utah, having a granite structure representing a cost of over 51.000,000. erected for church purposes. The entire county was claimed by the Ban pitch Indians, and in 1855 was deeded to the Mormoa Church by Arroplne, the pre siding chief. The same year the crops were destroyed by grasshoppers. Indians then said the bad spirit had sent the in sects to curse the Mormons because ot their robbing the red men of their lands. The Indians now number less than 100 survivors of the once powerful tribe, and are presided over by a white bishop, in their 'ward known as Indlan'ola. The Mormon prophets have been preach ing famine for many years. They have warned the saints to lay up stores of wheat against a day when the land would not produce anything. Because of this teaching and persistent preaching of the doctrine, as a revelation, tho Women's Relief Society of Sanpete has several thousand bushels of wheat stored in sev eral church granaries, to be used In times of famine. As the crop failed last year on account of grasshopper depredations, much of the. stored grain wae loaned to farmers this Spring to rcseed the lands. But that remaining In bins will be kept until Winter to bo apportioned out to the poor people. If nothing is grown this year. The coming of the grasshoppers is used as a text for exhorting the saints to more strict discipline and obedience to the priesthood. Tlie preachers have claimed that every visitation of the insects hatt been in the nature of a curse from the Lord, because of their wickedness. At least 35 per cent of the residents of San pote County are Mormons, and the large majority of them are from Scandinavian countries. Thoy observe the elgns of the times, and listen to .the prophecies of their leaders. In 1S67 the grasshoppers destroyed the crops and scattered the seeda of poverty. In their panic-stricken misery the- people called upon their proph ets for deliverance. , It Is alleged that the earth was made dark and the sun Tefused to shine for a period. When light came the ground was covered with sea gulls from the Great Salt Lake. These birds devoured the grasshoppers and left as quickly as they had come. Tho grasshoppers work for a period of six weeks or more, and fly away to other fields. Their departure Is marked by great clouds -that obscure the sky. Where they go la not known. It Is claimed that o.-Vir. thov riicnnnpjir Inirrouns. that few eggs are left for the- following year. While present in tne neias, on tno lawns au gardens and over the orchards, they are the subject of much consideration. Pray ers are made for deliverance from their ravages. Men who lose their all use lan guage not suited for publication. Preach ers exhort and talk famine; singers chant with more, perfection the hymns of ZIon; and everywhere a seml-rellglous atmos phere pervades the fields and homes. But the poor people get the money of the rich for gathering the grasshoppers, and their departure leaves the people on a more universal plane of human existence. The hoppers are considered both a curse and a blessing.- JOEL SHOMAKER. Honey In the Treatment of Barns. The editor of the Georgia Journal of Medicine and Surgery, for March, says that In the treatment of burns of any de gree honey has proved very successful. It should be pure strained honey not glu cose or cane syrup mixed with a little honey to give It what the Germans call the "schmeck.'; The burn is covered with it and kept coy&red. Pain will be alle viated and suppuration prevented. It Is not necessary to sterilize the honey, but If there should be any darkness, or dirt in the injured area It should be mopped off thoroughly with absorbent cotton. Says the editor: "Honeyacts by exclud ing the air, by its chemical composition, and by its. specific gravity preventing germ life," . COMMANDED TO THE QUEEN A DELIGHTFUL STORY OF ROYAL ALEXANDRA AND AN AMERICAN WOMAN HERE 13 a brand-new story of Her Majesty, Alexandra, soon to be crowned Queen and Empress. It was told with quiet glee by the other actor in It. to various and sundry American friends. The other actor Is tho wife of a famous shipowner, and head of a firm of ship builders. Thus she has been for years the heart and soul of various noble char ities connected with English merchant marine. She is further credited with hav ing influenced her husband in affairs of fairly International importance. Alto gether, she Is a3 near to being a personage as a long purse, a clear head, a warm heart, and a charming social tact can make one In the home of hereditary dis tinctions, the British Isles. One of the latpst charities Is a great seamen's hospltaL Royalty deigned to lay the corner-stone of it, and afterward to express great Interest in its success. It began to be hinted that a peerage would reward the people who had built and endowed It. That was an agreeable if distant prospect. It seemed to grow suddenly nearer and clearer when the lady found herself abruptly "commanded to the Queen" and that within the brief space of an hour. "What did I think of first?" she said, in telling it: "Why, that I had not a single absolutely new rag to appear In. Clothes? Oh! Yes plenty; and fine enough for court-wear, but, then, one wants special things for special occasions. What made matters worse'was, a myself had a luncheon on hand we were, In fact, Just sitting down to the table when the royal message reached me. I dare say I turned all colors as I read, but luckily nobody noticed. Instantly I sent word to my maid to get other clothe3 ready, then went on entertaining my guests as best I might, through the first courses. I knew to a fraction of a second how long It would take to dress and drive from my home to Buckingham Palace. I knew also that while tho Queen horself Is never very punctual. It would not do at all for me to be late, and still less to be early. You can fancy my state of mind, lunch ing against the clock both ways. Pres ently, I left my sister to explain my go ing, and was soon rolling oft to see the Queen. "Of course, I thought of many things on the way, but chiefly of the hospital. It must be that which had caused the Queen to send for me. Then foolishly, I let my mind stray to a schoolmate, one Mary z , who it happens had been a girl friend of the Queen, in the days when King Christian was not a King at all, only a poor Danish Prince, and glad to increase his Income of 51200 a year by giving lessons In drawing to the pupils of a girls' school. Mary had told me many stories of her friend Alexandra. I knew also that In the annual gatherings at Frledensborg the two nearly always met. I wondered a little if they had met this last year. It had brought cnanges to both a crown to Alexandra, and a sec ond husband to Mary, who had for years been a widow and thought to be Incon solable. But my. mind did not linger on her very long my concerns our con cerns, indeed, were so much more Imme diate, and living. I had a fair general Idea of how such private audiences went off. but was hazy as to whether I should, kneel or merely courtesy and kiss hands. "The palace authorities coached me the least bit. A lady in waiting met me, took me up stairs and along passages, and at last left me to myself after telling me that the Queen, though quite deaf, hated of all things to have voices raised in speaking to her. I must speak rather slowly, and very distinctly her own quick Intelligence would do the rest- As to de portment I must follow her Indications stand or sit, or retire, at what I Judged to to her will. But she would make it easy for me this I was assured sho made everything easy as far as court etiquette permitted. "Before I had time to get nervous a lackey whisked me into the presence. There stood the Queen, looking very sweet and unroyal, smiling, holding out her hand, and murmuring my name. After our formal-Informal greeting, she led me to a chair a little at one side, and sat down herself in another almost touch ing it. And then she said with a yet more engaging smile: " 'I am 3 glad you have come. I want to talk with you over Mary Z s second marriage. She has told me often how much you were her friend. Do you think she can possibly be happy with a man so unlike her first choice?' "And that was, I found out, absolute truth. For at least half an hour we gos slpped. talking over our friend's affairs with the most bourgeoisie Interest. After wardwell, her majesty said kind things of us my husband and myself and es pecially kind ones of our hospital project. But that was wholly incidental she had sent for me to talk over Mary's mar riage." Which goes to prove how well Kipling knew womankind when he wrote: The Colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady Are sisters under their skins.