IX BWIMMIXO-TIME. Jamil W lilU-omr Riley. Cloud above, a white an wool, Drifting over skies an blue Aa the eyes nf beautiful Children when they smile at you; Groves of maple, elm, awl beech, With the sunshine sifted through Branches, mingling w h with each, Dim with shale and bright with dew; Stripling trees, and poplars huar, Hickory and sycamore, And the drowsy dogwood bowed Where the ripples laugh aloud, And the crooning creek I stirred To gayety that now Mates the warblo of the bird Teetering on the haail-hough; Onuwf long and fine and fair As your school-boy sweetheart's balr, Backward roached and twirled and twined ty the fingers of the wind; Vines and nioaon, interlinked Down dark aisles and deep ravines, Where the stream rum, willow-briiiked ftound a Isjnd where some one leant Faint and vague and IndiHtiiict Ai the like reflected tiling In the current shimmering. Childish voices farther on, Where the truant stream baa gone, Vex the echoes of the wood Till no word in undrirstood, Have that one la well aware Happiness ii hilling thorn. There, in leafy coverts nude IJttle bodies po-ie and leap, SpnlterliiK the solitude Anl the tUenco everywhere Mimic monsters of the deep I Wallowing In sandy shoals Flunking headlong out of light; And, with spurting of delight, Clutching hands, and slippery aolna, Cliniliing up the treacherous steep , Over which tlie spring-board spurn Each again oa be returns, Ahl Die glorious carnival! 1'urple liM and chattering teeth Eye that burn but, in beneath, Every care beyond recall, Every tank forgotten quite. And again, In dreams at night, Dropping, drifting through it all I PHILOSOPHY OF TUB STOMACH AM0N0 TUB CITIZENS OF TUB CELESTIAL EMPIRE. Pekln Cor. Rt Petersburg Miwoneer. To le a1lo to eat well nioans, in tlie Chinamon's opinion, to be happy. AH iia cares, troubles, and desiros centre in the same point, namely, good eating. True, everybody tlie world over, taken care to satisfy his appetite in tho bost possiblo way. Hut the Clnnoso dillor from otlior people in the philosophy of the nbjoct. They hold that only the satiated man can be wine, and those who can not make themselves full are surely fools. Their most sacred philosophical and medical treatise deal with the stomach aa the principal source of the spiritual, moral and physical lifo of ri'i - i i i i.: :..: j . wall, xiju ucuu, luwitur upiiuuu, to ua poor dependent on the bounty of the Htomaeh. Not the Load, but the stomach, ought to bo crowned. Thoy bold aa a cardinal axiom that tho stomach is the spring of every thought, feeling and muscular action. IIo who does not out loses euergy. Man differs from wood and stone only becauso be fills up his stomach. They look upon Dr. Tanner's forty days' fust as a clover trick, ibey asHort that tlio American doctor deceived the public by drinking some colorless nutritious substances dissolved in water. Othorwise, they argue, bo would necessarily turn first an idiot, and then a oorpso. When we ponder on sonio difficult subject we often touch or rub our foro Lend. Under tlio same circumstances the Chiuamau puts his fingers below his 1hH. By touching his abdomen ho facilitates his mental process. In view of tlio supremacy of the stomach the Chinese came to the conclusion that the tatter it is tilled the wiser is its owner; hence fatness and corpulence are tho beat mirror of the mind, the best indica tion of sujierior intellect. And, as wisdom brings man to a blissful state and to a heavenly beatitude-, therefore, the Chinamen regard extraordinary stoutness as a symbol of tho future heavenly state. THE "BILLY THE KID" TYPE. "J. R. W. II." in Boston Herald. Let me assuro my younger readers that there is nothing heroic in the "Hilly the Kid" typo on the frontier. The aosjierftdo is too lazy to work for a living. He is a thief and a cut throat whenever ho can cut a throat without foar. Thero are sonio brave men among them, to bo sure, but their bravery arises from a consciousness of their matchless command of their weapons. They kuow perfectly well that they can shoot an ordinary man dead beforo his hand roaches his pistol. Often they have tho triggers of their Colts'-45 tiled oft", and lire by snapping the hammer with tho thumb, whirling the pistols in their hands and shooting as the weapon comes to a level. And ther are dead shots, aa ther need to lie. Yet the "bad men" who haunt the groggeries with their weapons ostetitationsly displayed, who are given to shooting right and left when drunk, and, indeed, to dis charging thoir "guns" at all times these fellows will rarely take tho chauoos in a fair, stand-up fight. They wan unm tney can 'got tue urop" on a man, or shoot him from behind on a dark uight Don't look for any signs of chivalry among them. They are the meanest of all mean brutes, ft is well that the changes wrought in the west by the completion of the various rail roads announce that their race is nearly run. Hut this is an unpleasant sub ject. I have known so much of this sort of thing, however, that I could not forliear a word to offset the curious be lief among some young people in the cast that the western "bad man" is a more noble figure than tho ltostou burglar or wife beater. lie isn't A COSTLY CAULK New Orleans Tiinei- Democrat. Marseilles and Paris are now con nected, at a cost of f 8,000,000, with an nuderground cable. It is laid in a cast iron pipe, six feet Mow the surface, and is so arranged that it can lie from time to time inspected. The success of the undertaking is a good omen for cities that are overladen with tele graphic and telephonio wires. BAPTlSlf t'OH TUX DEAD. The Deaerel News, a Mormon journal, says that in hades water is not plenty, and baptism cannot be administered least of all, baptism by immersion. Hut no one can t saved who is not baptized. Therefore, "the living may stand in the place of the dead and re ceive the ordinance vicariously." This it "baptism for the dead." AFTER AMEBIOAH DOLLARS. The Forelajn Idea of the Looseness of Money la This Country Berk onlns Without Their Host. "Uucla Bill" In Chicago Herald. Thrust your hand into America, grab full of dollars, and then pull it out That the foreign idea of the plenty and looseness of money in this country. In trying to carry into practice the visitor Is pretty sure to learn that we are good bargainers, never buying anything that does not at least promise to be worth Its cost In gratification nf some sort I have read that we are fool because we paid blgb prices for views of Mrs. Langtry, the aocuHation being that we lot ourselves be swindled by expecting to see good actress. We simply bought a sight of notorious women and got it In the case of Borah Bernhardt, ws were willing to give more, because she brought great talent In addition to notoriety; and who can say that we were cheated? Beores of European per formers sorrowfully know that we have de clined to purchase their entertainment, though cloverly importuned to do so. tlio present instance of Irving, our instinctive demand of value for value has kept us sensi ble. Now York has liked some of bis roles and disliked others, praised his merits and condemned his demerits, bought tickets high rates for such performances as pleased and left the speculators heavy losers on the others. Two men of eminence In a holier profession than play-acting are now being rather un pleasantly instructed in this matter of get ting Americai. money. They are Capel, the hnglish Catholic priest and orator, and Hya- cinthe, the French seceder from the Romish church. Each has world-wide celebrity, each needed a replenishment of bis church fund and each concluded to come to the Yankees for the money. Neither is getting it They have been socially made welcome in this citv, and it may be that private subscriptions will help their entirely worthy causes, but the en tortainment-buying publio is not dealing with them to a remunerative extent Hyacinths lectured luat evening In Chlckering ball, which can bold 3,000 persons, but did contain only 1100 The receipts could have no more than covered tho expenses. The metropolis cares little for lectures, and appeals for charity on beliair or foreign building projects do not touch our hearts. Another fact is that our own clergymen justly believe that there are as yet plenty of eligible sites for new churches on this side of the ocean. Capel has bad no backing from Cardinal McCluskey In bis mission, and Hyaciuthe re ceives no Protestant sympathy of an influ ential kind The failure of the latter to draw a crowd to bis lecture was manifestly depressing to hi in, and his eyes seemed to have a dread of the rows of empty scats. His gaze was carefully adjusted, so as not to ex tend beyond the occupied f rout I pitied him. Nevertheless, I bad to laugh when a third of the originally small audleuce departed in mild punia There bad been no intimation in the advertisements that he would speak in French. He had not delivered six sen tences in that language before a horror of hearing him for an bour without understand ing hhn took possession of those who wore ignorant of bis tongue. A bolder man than the rust led a movement to the door, and was followed like sheep after a bellwether. A Lesson In Heal IlealUm. Derrick Dodd in San Francisco Post.1 Boucicault tells another good story which has never yet appeared in print The fol lowing Incident occurred at Jacksonville, Florida, last spring, and the clever actor- aramatiHi says il suggested an entirely new Idea In dramatic construction, which he pro poses to avail himself of some day. The cur tain had just gone down on the tliird act of The Colleen Itawn" when a tall professor- like individual advanced to the front of one of the boxes, and propounded the following unlooked-for conundrum to the audionce: Ladies and gentlemen, why is it that Bliakespcare is the only real dramatist the world ever produced f" As no one replied, the tall man went on earnestly: "Is it because of his marvelous knowledge of human nuture, or bis wonderful command of language and expression! Not at all Uther writers have equaled him in these respect, but the immortal bard Is the only dramatist who recognized the evident fact that in real life vice U not punished and virtue is not re warded, as the sickly, seutimontal playwrights of to-day would have us believe. There is no but act mnke-up-all-around-everybody. get married business in bis plays. Look Othello! Thais the way matters wind up in real life. Look at Romeo and Juliet No "happy denouement" about thorn. My advice to the public. therefore, is to never sit a play out Always leave before the last act, just when the trouble, lllalny and heart breaking is at its worst. and you will get the real realism and natural ness." "Oo onl Go on!" said tho audience, which seemed to be profoundly impressed with this reasoning. "1 have nothing more to say," continued the critic, putting on his hat, "except that the cui-taiu will be mug up iu a minute. I move tint we now adjourn." And lloudrault says that when the curtain went up he was dumbfounded to observe that there was not a soul left in the house. The Chlnamaa and Ills C'etTln. Cor. London Telegraph. J The Idea of the Chinaman is that when he dies he ought to lie buried in the trunk of a tree, and so It comes about that all Collins are designed with a view to keep up the illusion. hey consist of four outside tree boards, and are so fashioned together as to look very like a tree at a little distance. They are, of course, tremendously heavy; but then that is considered an excellent fault If a son wishes to he very polite to bis father, or one friend desires to obtain the good will of another, be makes him a preaent of a good, solid, heavy colli n. The gift is put into an honored place in the house ready for u, and is shown for the admiration, of any frieuda who may call The owner would rather go into his cotlln than part with it, ami, generally speaking, though a Chinaman, may get into debt and be very harshly treated by his creditors, they will leave him his coftln, not wishing to prejudice his entry into the next world, which, according to the Celestials, depends very much upon tlie way in w hich a nun is buried. I was told that half the Chiutwe living in Hong Kong were already in happy potwurion of their cofUns, and ready to enter them when wauted. Yonkers Oasette: Wheo a widow buries ber first husliand she becomes pensive, but after she gets the second she Is Usually ex pensive. An Exqnlalte Vera. Inter Ocean The comic poets have caught np a new sub stitute for ideas, the original of which was the following exquisite Terse: If I were a Lumti-tum-lum -titum-too In the land ot the olive and fig, Td sit all the day on the trolle-tol-loo And play oo the thinjree-rae-jig. And if ia the Rumde-dum battle I fall A what s ita-Dama's all that I crave But bury me deep In the what yon may-ealL And plant thing um-bobs over my grave. PenmanNhlp ef Brltloh Boyalty. St Louis Globe-Democrat An expert in handwriting as expres sive of character hos "written up" the marks of sundry British statesmen, The members of the present cabinet, with the exception of Bir Charles Dilke, do not write bad bands. I he calig raphy of the late Lord Beaconsliuld was elegant, bold and dignified. Hut of all the writing of ministers, that of the elder Pitt stands pre-eminent for its beauty and symmetry. Like Addi son's, his haudwriting resembled copper' plate. The royal family of England have generally written good hands, that -of her present majesty being remarkable for its ease and gracefulness, lior pred ecessor, King William IV., wrote legibly and well. The writing of Queen Anne is large and majestic. Hhe signed herself "Anne It." The first letter of the name was usually a modorutuly- sized capital, but the succeeding ones gradually increased their dimensions nntil the final letter reathed somotimes almost an inch in height. Hor irate majesty was wont to rise on her dignity in much the same way. Mary of .Scot land signed herself neatly and prettily, MaryetheQuone. JiotU the Charleses wrote plainly and "like gentlemen." The same may be said of tho four Georges, although that of George I. is rather stiff and pedantic. There is good deal of pompons display in the writing of Uneen Elizabeth, iior sig nature especially is resolute but showy, An Expert Horseman. Chicago News. Jounny n , a nontenant in my old regiment, was always a groat horse manone of those men who could teach a horse anything, and make spirited animal out of the sorriest plug. tie was always up to some trick or other, in which his trained horse played a prominent part. ben we were on a scout a favorite trick of his was to ride at full gallop into town and drop his horse in a heap right in the street, and the intelligent brute would lie there as though dead. lie would go off and attend to his business and come back to find a crowd aronnd the horse almost ready to mob him for his cruelty, Flinging a ler over the animal's back he would come to life, spring up and be away in an instant Many a time in dangerous scouts has his ability to drop liorse in an instant stood him in good stood, and enablod him to escape cap ture. A peculiar thing was that his horses wonld never do their tricks for any one else. Oflioers usod to take a fancy to some of his trained animals, and pay a large price for them, only to find that they wore very ordinary and stupid brutes out ox their trainers hands. The Inconvenience of lalaeaes. Exchange. A common notion among uneducated pooplo, whose eyes are in good con dition, is that young people have no uso for glasses, and that they wear thorn "jtiBt for stylo." To those who are tinged with this mediievnlism it is re spectfully suggested that they wear a pair of glasses for a week aud see if they are willing to undergo the incon venience for all the stylos in a millinery store. If thoy try that invention of tho evil one, the nose pinchers, less than a week will be necessary, for the tor menting things will gradually slide ofl the nose if that organ is at all thick or inclined to perspire. Nose glasses are the abomination to all oculists, for they know that with them no uniformity of position can be attained. A glass to be accurately fitted to an eye must have its focal centre in a line with the centre of the eye. The wearer of tho eyeglass sticks that instrument of torture on his nose in as many different positions as he can, with the lenses at all conceivable angles. Then the bowed glasses fret the ears and wear tho bridge of the nose raw. The man who would wear glasses for style would wear ear jowelry aud corsets. Creations to Illnatrate the Actor. "Uath" in Cincinnati Enquirer. I passed perhaps the most distin guished actress in this country on the street to-day, whom I do not personally know, and I caught the words as I asset! : " The business doesu't pay." I thought to myself: Here is a woman brought up iu another part of the world, but she is undoubtedly talking, not about her art, but the profits down at tho theatre, which does not especially concern lior, as she has no interest there. My belief is that some of our managers will make a great deal more money if thoy keep their eyes off the dollars and at the art. Pieces that are made in this country at present are nearly all written for somo ono actor, and not based on any genius or interest ing character. An actor is a being to enter into a creation ; but our creations are all made to illustrate the actor. What can Ih expected of a dramatic literaturo which, instead of socking in history or human nature for its hero, goes tlown under the stage to find a postnnst and strutter and manufacture !nm mto a historical hero? Trxaa' Uraalna band. "Hanson" in Chicago Times. It appears that the great Texas past ures of mosquito grass cover at least 150,(R0 square miles, which, it is claimed, will sustain fifty cattle to the square milo. liut in only one place has a test of its capacity been made. A ranch of thirty miles square is inclosed, and now supports 30,000 cattle: nor would it support more thau 10,000 more by tho most careful management. So we may conclude that the mesquite plains would not support more than forty to the square mile, or 6,000,000 in ail quite enough, however, for tho needs of this country. Texas contains 274, 3t5 square miles, of which it is claimed that one-third is fanning land of various grades, ono-half grazing land of the capacity above indicated, and not more than one-sixth complete des ertmost ot this on tho gypsum plains and barren mountains, liut I appre hend it is too early to make so arbitrary a division ; for men are now abandoning tracts they once bclioved agricultural and moving into tracts they once thought barren. A Bridgeport (Conn.) gentleman will publish all the rejected poems he can Mod riGHTIir& USDEB ARREST. A Captain Whs Couldn't Keep oat ol right While en the HklrmUb Line. Inter Ocean. Capt Wheeler was a born commander of skirmishers. He bad a voice like a bugle blast, and an unusual amount of push and dash in bis composition. He knew all about human nature on the skirmish line, its strong points as well as its weaknesses, and seemed guided by an unerring Instinct in ordering forward movements. He always aimed to stampede the enemy i skirmishers, and very often succeeded. The men of the regiment had the greatest confluence, in him, and obeyed him with alacrity, and so, somewhat to the disgust of the other officers of the regiment, be monopolized the skirmish busi ness. In other departments he was not so great a success. He was unscrupulous and reckless, and was occasionally under arrest He was at once the pride and the aggravation of 'Jen. Nelson. The old soldier generally called him a buccaneer, and bad bim under arrest half the time for some of his "devilish practi cal Infringement." Capt Wheeler was under arrest after Bhiloh, and Nelson was con stantly complaining about ' the way his skirmishers acted before Corinth. Nothing was done to suit him, and be was on the line every day fuming and swearing and direct ing. One day be insisted that the post should bo advanced. He didn't want any child's play. The attempt was made, but resulted simply In a listless skirmish fight A man slipped down a line of fence, and was in con sultation a moment with the officers. Then be passed along the line to the right There was a lull. Then rang out the bugle tout of Capt W.t and the line moved forward. There was no child s play. There was a terrible rocket Then there was a charge, and from beyond the wood come the sound of the captain's voice, still urging his men forward. Nelson was delighted and outraged. He sunt an aid to recall Capt W. "Tell the d n fool, sir, be Is under arrest Tell him. by heaven, sir, I'll have him hung if he per sists in his contempt for me and my orders." And then as the shout in front told of an other advance, the old general ejaculated: "Splendid, splendid, by b 1, sir, I believe that man will go right Into Corinth." The whole line was in a fever of excitement Nelson was advancing bis posts and taking advantage of every circumstance. Nelson, proud of having accomplished so much, was still indignant because Capt W. bad sent bim two or three impudent messages. He had three different oflioers under orders to arrest the captain and return him to camp. Finally the captain came back. Saluting, be said: " General, I have the honor to report that the boys have played with the rebel line, and that they await your permission to drive the Johnnies into thoir intrenchments. I took a little swing with the boys and forgot all about the fact that you ordered me to remain in camp, I am now ready to be shot, and you had better shoot me now, because if there is any more advancing to be done, the temptation will be too strong for me to resist" Much to every body's surprise Nelson thundered out, " Re sist I You won't resist it at all You will de light in it You will disobey orders every time. And by b 1. sir, so would L You can return to your company, sir." An American Debutante In Knzland.' Croffut's New York Letter. On first arriving in England six months ago, Miss Detcbon (pronounced De-shon, ac cent on last syllable) spent some weeks in Stratford, where or whereabouts, in a plain blue flannel dress (or gown, aa they alwavs say in England), she ransacked all the haunts of Shakespeare, and shouted herfavoriMparts through the woods and over the hills a pretty vision, doubtloss, to the rustics of those parts. She wont to London, and Mrs. Labou chere and husband became her influential friends, and for some months now she has been chirping in the houses of the nobility. At last Mr. bdgar Bruce, manager of the new London theatre to which the prince of Walt has given his name, decided to accord her a hearing as a candidate to open that fine place of amusement "I have Just been through a most trying ordeal," she says in her letter. "In my ap pearance before Mr. Bruce, everything de pended on being in good health and voice. Alas! I caught a slight cold, which tightened and tightened, and closed down on my voice, which grew dimmer and dimmer. The vital day came. I was reduced to a whisper and a gasp. I resolved not to run the risk of postponement, but to call up all my resources and depend on pantomime. did It Desperately I went ahead. I funned and frolicked recklessly. I sang like a creaking door. I chirruped like a frog. bobolinked without the bobble. Well, I won. And now I hold a contract with Mr. Bruce, by the terms of which be brings me out properly as a star during the gny Lon dou season, on terms highly advantageous aud satisfactory to me." On this very poiut a New York manager showed me a letter from London yesterday which said: "Little MissDetebon, who made such a hi- in "Wives," has been engaged to open the Prince's, at the same salary that was paid Langtry here." A Warning to Mtage-Mtrnrk t.lrls. "Mahlstick" In Courier-Journal. I want to utter one more warning word here to tho crowd of young women, many of them well born and well bred, who, flattered by a most vivid imagination, make a rush at the stage-door and clamor for admission. I have bad, as the well-wisher of one of these aspirants, some little experience within the last few days of the disagreeable task of ask ing favors for another, disagreeable because the result was a foregone conclusion. Here comes to the city a very pretty, amiable girl, supposed to possess enormous talent for the stage. She was Induced to come her through promises on the part of s theatrical individual to assist ber, which promises were , probably found to be of impossible accomplishment I called yes terday upon the manager of one of the besl theatres, an old friend of years standing. 1 said to him: "I want three minutes' talk. There is a young lady here from Louisville aspirations, the stage. Have you a little part, even a line or two, to commence P "Wait a moment," be replied. He opened a drawer and took out a list a printed proof an nouncing the name of the company soon to open the regular season. The number of names was appalling. "You see!" he re marked, "and there are six young women here whom I can not possibly use. As tor the list of applicants, all backed by influence, applicants who possess amaiing genius, I wouldn't tire you by asking you to read it" On Fating Hoop. Croffut in Pioneer Press. For instance, "Dont eat soup from the end of a spoon, but from the side." Such a rule cannot be called etablUhel. The very shape of a spoon proves that it was meant to be eaten from at the end, and to sip from the side successfully without spilling, especially if the diner has a full mustache, is a difficult feat At the same Urns the position of the arm is more graceful, if one sips from the side. It is no sort of consequence which mod is sdcptwl it merely a question of Uste. At an Old-Time Bar. Baltimore Day. . "Are any of the old-time, ante bellum bar-keepers still living?" " Jimmie McElroy is probalilv tho only nnA of nn nrominence. For many years he presided over the bar at Bar- puma n i a wuiu kudu iuv , . v. j -- this source would have alone set the table for the entire hotel. 'Old Jimmie,' as he was familiorly called, was a de lightful companion, and the staid, re spectable citizen who would receive a Jrink from no other hand than his miuuul him ar!lv when he retired to the shados of private life. In those days . . . , . I 11 1L. uarnum s bar was me rosori ior uu ue man ahnnt town. It WOS there that Edward Spencer found the originals of the two characters, tne jauge ana me main wYinaA effort to train a drink at lomebody's expense furnished all the . ... 11.- 1 W..- merriment in mi, vuo Arssumu im nlpr ' Thnaa wern a Dr. Mason and Mai Ellicott They were both mombers of old and highly respected juaryiona families vlin had descended throuch regular gradations to the very depths of that terrible decay wmcn is uesi Known as shabby trenteel. How thoy lived was a mvsterv with which the world little concerned itself. Every morning found them snugly sconced in a quiet corner of Jimmie's bar-room. Here they would sit unobserved by the patrons, but in such a position that the faces of the lat ter wore faithfully reflected in the mir rors. Then one would sally forth and approach the bar in an unconcerned sort of fashion. If his presence was unobserved he would rattle the lid of the cracker-box in such a manner as to attract attention to himself. Recog nition would usually follow. If invited to drink he would say with a patroniz ing air: 'Allow me to introduce my fripnl ' TTia WiTrmaninn. wlin had meanwhile silently joined the group, i -, i rui 1?.1 woum men ue presentoa. xue anut nnnA nwallnwAtl thnv vntihl hnw thA gentleman politely out and retire to their corner to repeat the stratogem again at the first favorable opportunity." "Rihunih's" Crltlrlam of Washing ton Monument. Cor. St Louis Globe-Democrat. Tho most prominent object in the District of Columbia, from every point of view, is the Washington monument, which Las gone skyward at a great rate since spring, and stands now as the ugliest thing for the money human bands could design. This exaggerated chimney of white marble, rearing itnelf solitary on the banks of the Potomac, yesterday attained a height of 400 feet, and when the work ceases for the season at the end of this week the last course of stone will bo 410 feet above the ground. Since congress took the unfinished shaft in hand and raised it by annual appropriations to its present height the monument has been steadily becoming an object of greater interest to sight seers, and groups of thorn visit it every day in the year. lho great column of marble does not convey any impression to the mind but that of surpassing and unnecessary height. ' It teaches no lesson, it ex presses no symbol, and stands for noth ing but so much stone and marble, und careful workmnnship virtually thrown into the air. With neither utility or beauty to recommend it, it fails to impress one with any character or ex pression of its own. The spirl of the btrasburg cathedral, to rival which in height seemed the sole object of build ing this monument to the proposed level, has a certain majesty and impres siveness to it. The airy spire that bears the holy cross and the chime of bells has some rational excuse for being, and the great cathedral walls at its base give a balance and proportion to the soaring tower. If the Washington monument were to be a light house, a shot tower, a bell tower, or even a fac tory chimney, it would appeal to one ana impress one more than it does now by emptiness and nselessness. "For the Brave Dead." St Paul Pioneer Press. , An old story and a Rood ono can be told of Sheahan. He w as a fresh lieu tenant in command of raw recruits at Fort liidgoly when that post was be sieged by tne hionx in 1802. Capt. Marsh, his superior, was slain with a score of men while on tho way from the fort to the relief of tne Lower ap-ency. Lieut. Sheahan announced the death of Capt. Marsh at parade on the day the news reached the fort. "Now," said he, when the sad fact was duly stated, "let us give three groans for the brave dead 1" Victory would have called for cheers. Death, to Mr. Sheahan's Hibernian mind, deserved eroans. The whole company under his Boshnn-like lead, gave three such howls as would have lifted the hair on the heads of Capt. Marsh and his brave men. had any been loft there by their slayers. A Pig-Headed Sovereign. Exchange. "A friend of mine, who was lately in St. Petersburg," says Mr. Labouchere, ana wno naa wnen mere a Koodotmor- tnnity to look behind the scenes, tells me that the emperor is a pig-headed fool, incredibly ignorant, and that, un less he is pushed by his entourage, he is not likely to trouble the peace of the world by any grandiose scheme of for eign conquest. 'Will he,' I asked, 'give his subjects some sort of a constitution?' lie is too great a fool,' my friend re plied. ne will continue to do one day what he did the previous day.' " A DILEMMA. Boston Gloha.1 To write, or not to write, that is the question. ii uviuor it u uomer in me nnna to suffer ThA ronutAtinn nf Kiinc aulra.1 K A young lady to write in her Jautograph album, r ana caving aopi ue dook two years, more or lens. And then not written In If Or to take the pen against s host of doubts And, by once writing, end them! To start to write To write-perchance to make a blot-Ay uteres tne rub; Fnp tn that lUnnu V-n, 1; - - " w.vf ua iiviuin Km Shownf orth nervousness, distrust of self nuu uiwij uuim: iiut urn When ooe is writing to his girL for then It he should maks a blot, he draws a Una 'Round it, and says . It was intentional and meant to mark Believes the yam, and kisses it, and thinks . (BcyLiGirr all the way. plarper's Weekly. "Good-by, Jennie; the road Is long, And the moor is bard to cross; But well you know there is danger In the bogs and marshy moss. But keep in the foot path, J ounle, Let nothing tempt you to stray; Then you'll get safely over it For there's sunlight all the way. Sunlight all the way; So never yon fear, Keep a good heart, dear, For there's sunlight all the way. The child went off with a blessing And a kiss of motber-love; Tbe daisies were down at her feet, And the lark was singing above. On, on, in the narrow footrjth Nothing could tempt hor to stray; Bo the moor was passed at nightfall, . And she'd sunlight all tbe way. Sunlight all the way; And she smiling said, As her bed was spread, "I bad sunlight all the way." And I, who followed the maiden, Kept thinking as I went, Over the perilous moor of life What unwary feet are bent If they could keep the foot-path, And not in tbe marshes stray, Then they would reach the end of life Ere the night could shroud the day. They'd have sunlight all the way, But the marsh is wide, Aud they turn aside, And the night falls on the day. Far better to keep the narrow path, Nor turn to the loft or right; For If we loiter at morning, What shall we do when the night Falls back ou our lonely journey, And we mourn our vain delay I Then steadily onward, friends, aud we Shall have sunlight all the way. Hunlight all the way, Till the journey's ofer, And we reach the shore Of a never-ending day. A WOMAN'S SEASON. hy Sweet Oladys Wept, Tntll the Man In the Moon Mobbed From Sym pathy. Chicago Tribune.1 "God pitv me!" Gladys McXulty, usually so proud and composed and who moved about in tbe little world of those who knew her with the stately grace of a New York Tost editorial, tank on a fauteuil as she uttered these words and sobbed as if her shoestrings would break. In the lindens that lined the entrance to Brierton Villa the robin redbreasts were trill ing their merriest lays. And yet, lying there on the fauteuil, whose velvety surface is not more soft than ber cheek, Gladys McNulty is sobbing away tbe hours of this beautiful June morning and ever and anon there comes from between ber white lips a low, despairing moan that is pitifid in its sad in tensity. But finally tbe oonvuliive sobs that are racking ber dress waist grow fainter and in a little while she sits up, the pink suffusion of a blush telling all too plainly which side she had been lying on. And as she sits there gazing listlessly into the middle of next week, her mother, a pleasant-faced woman, enters the room. "Why are you weeping, Gladys P she asked. The girl does not answer, and strive as she may to keep down the sobs that are welling up from her heart, the effort is in vain and again the pretty face is bedowed with tears. But an instant biter she has conquered her emotions and looks bravely up at ber mother. "I will tell you, mother," she said, "the cause of my sorrow. I was crying to think that you cannot go to the matinee to-morrow." "And why may I not goP "Because," answers Gladys, in a voice that is hoarse with agony, "I have concluded to take it in myself." I'sed to He One lllmnelf. Arkansaw Traveler. "I doan't want a pusson ter pay all de 'ten tion ter der soul. We nius' humor de body a little as we go 'long. It's all right fur yer to sing an' shout but I'd rather beahde pot biliu' when I'se hungry den ter beah any song yer ken sing. Music's mighty fine an' a pra t am t bad, but 1 11 be dinged ef suthin' tor eat don't hit me mighty nochul at times." "Anderson, I'se afeered dat yorsel'f ain't a holy man." "I kain't bep it De Lawd giro, me a long in' fur meat an' bread jes' de same as He gin me a soul, an' ef He'll only take kere ob de soul I'll promise not ter let de longin' airter flesh suffer much." "Yer ought ter be ashamed ob yerse'f." "I kain't hep It, I kain't hep it, but I'se got a longiu' tor chaw suthin'. Quit er puttin' meat iu the preacher's mouf when he opens it and see bow quick he'll turn ' oose de gos pul." " x er ouglitn tor talk dat way." "He'd drap it like er hot pertatcr, I tell yer. UU, yas, da likes ter sing, and some ob 'em ken put up a powerful pra'r, but when da set down tor de table, look out Eat, why dat black slick nigger what comes borne wid yer some times, ken eat more biled co'n den a steer. It's a k'laniity ebery time dat nigger opens bis mouf, an' greens, he eats greens like a cow eatin' hay. Oh, I ustor be a preacher myse'f. I preached till da quit feedin' me an' den I stopped." They Mold Jlim a Hole. WaU Street News He was telling the story in the billiard room of a Denver hotel. Said he: "There were three ot us, you see, and Ne vada was a cold climate for us. We were dead-broke, half-starved, and clear discour aged, when along came a New Yorker. He wouldn't play cards, wouldn't be robbed, and we couldn't stick him with forged bind patents or bogus pre-emptions. One day we trailed out and dug a bole into a hill and salted it a bit, and rushed back and offered the New Yorker the big discovery for $3,000 cash down." "And he bitP "Took right hold like a pair of pincers. Why, he never even stopped to beat us down. We got a cool thousand apiece and made for Freco," "Purty cool that was." "Well, I dunno. If there was anything cool In that transaction it was the way that New Yorker bunted up a pard, set miners to work, bought machinery, and took over t"50, 000 out of that 'ar hole inside of eight months ! Maybe we've got over feeling flat, but I guess not" , A 1'ortnne In One Recipe. Cincinnati Enquirer. A poor soldier went into the store of a hair dresser in London for money to get back to the army. He had already stayed beyond his furlough, and he must have quick transit The halr-dresser felt sorry for him and gave him tbe money. "Now," said the poor soldier, "I have got nothing to give you in return for your kindness except this little slip of paper, which has on it a recipe for making blacking." The soldier gave it not supposing it to be of great value. The man received it, not supposing it to be of any great value. But it has yielded the man who took It $3,500,000, and was the foundation of one of th greatest manufacturing establish ments of England.