5 BANDON MCOllDER. THE POET BURNS. A- CrltleUm Whleh .in-nrpd In the KdlnhurKh -Mnprnr.lne In 17SO. The following brief criticism on the poems of Hums appeared In the Edin burgh Mn.wir.ine. October, 17S0. short ly after the seeoml edition of his works came out: "The author Is Indeed a striklnjr example of native genius bursting through the obscurities of poverty and the obstructions of la borious life. lie Is said to be a com moil plcwman. and when we consider him in .his light we cannot help re grettiug that wayward fate had not placd him'iu a more favored situation Those who view with the severity ot lettered criticism and judge by the fastidious rules of art will discover that he has not the norie simplicity of Ramsey nor the brilliant imagination of Ferguson, but to those who admire the exertions of untutored fancy and are blind to many faults for the sake of numberless beauties his poems will afford singular gratification. His ob servations on human characters arc acute and sagacious, and his descrip tions are lively ami Just. Of rustic pleasantry he has a rich fund, and some of his softer scenes are touched with inimitable delicacy, lie seems to be a boon companion and often startles us with sentiments which will keep some leaders at a distance. Some of his subjects are serious, but those of the humorous kind are the best." ENGLISHMEN OF GENIUS. Some Statistic nn to Their Origin nml I.enKth of Lift. IIavelck F.llis studies of the origin and habits of the British men of gen ius show that most came from busi ness life, many from "good families." so called, and few from the clerical profession. Of HKJ men of eminence in ten centuries thirteen were the sons of carpenters, live of shoemakers, live of weavers and four of blacksmiths. Browning's father was a clerk, and so was Bradlaugh's; Turner's was a bar ber, Carlyle's a mason. Huxley's a schoolmaster. Keats" a livery stable man, Knox's a peasant. Wolsey's a grazier and Whitefield's an innkeeper. Men of genius are long lived. Of those on Mr. Ellis' list more died be tween sixty-five and seventy-five than in any other period. Those living be yond seventy-five numbered 230. tho-e beyond eighty 130. and twenty lived past ninety. A genius is not often an only son. He Is more likely to spring from a large family. Nor is he often the son of a distinguished father. He is some times a tall man. Twenty-six instances are cited of great men who were six footers and over. Among them are Darwin, Millais. Sir Walter Scott. Ten nyson, Borrow, Thackeray and Field ing. OLD TIME COFFEE. The "Way to nrevr the Ileverasre n.i Th or IH.I In lilti'2. An old cookbook, published in 1002. gives what Is perhaps the iirt English recipe for coffee. The recipe reads: "To make the drink that is now much used, called coffee: "The coffee berries are to be bought at any druggist's, about 7 shillings the pound. Take what quantity you please, and over a charcoal fire in an old fry ing pan keep them always stirring un til they be quite black, and when you crack one with -our teeth that it is black within as it Is without, yet if you exceed, then do not waste the Ojl. and If less, then will It not de liver Its Oyl, and if you should con tinue fire till It be white it will then make no coffee, but only give you its salt. Heat and force through a lawn sieve. "Take clear water and boil one-third of It away, and it is fit for use. Take one quart of this prepared water, p. : It in one ounce of your prepared coi fee and boll It gently one hour, and It la for your use. Drink one quar ter of a pint as hot as you can sip it. It doth abate the fury and sharpness of the Acrlmou, which is the gender of the Diseases called Cronieal." Boston Cooking .School Magazine. Thc AriNtoerncy of Park. When Theodore Parker first visited Cincinnati, at that time the recognized leader among western cities, he said that he had made a great discovery - namely, that while the aristocracy of Cincinnati was unquestionably found ed on pork it made great difference whether a man killed pics for himself or whether his father had killed them. The one was held plebeian, the other patrician. It was the difference, Par ker said, between the stick 'ems and the stuck 'ems. and his own sympa thlcs, he confessed, were with tin present tense. T. W. Higginson in Atlantic Month Iv. "VV'here Fnfthlonn Come From. It Is said that a leader of fashion was once driving in the park when hor hat was blown off. The carriage wheels passing over it made it a fearful and wouucrrui chape, but as the wearer could afford to defy criticism she put it on and alnily continued her drive. The next week dozens of hats exactly like the damaged one appeared. This story may be true, but it sounds like a mere, malicious, masculine Inven tion. London Woman. A Finn nc I vr. Maud Isn't the man you are en gaged to a speculator? Clara No. indeed! He's a financier. "How do you know?" "He didn't buy the engagement ring until after I had accepted him." Have you a friend who does well and with whom you occasionally find fault because he doesn't do better? This is the meanest meanness In the world. Atchison Globe. Self Suitlcleiit. A distinguished comedian who tells stories very well was Invited to a din ner and for the greater part of the evening entertained the company. When he returned to his hotel, tlior oughly tired, his wife said: "Well, did 3'ou have a good timcY' "No, I can't say that I did. Indeed. If I had not been there I should have been ytc? " PDLLY LARKIN i ! --r- - -f -'rftr-TVar All or the topics of interest have been lost sight ot tortile time tKMiig, partieu- larly among tlie mirsex, although men, young and old, must plead guilty to building air castles or dreaming pleas- mtly of the good old summer days that are coming, and acknowledge that the l:u lies' and children's query of "Where shall we go for the summer vacation?" is receiving a good deal of quiet atteu- tion from them jus well. They are luestiotung rneiuis as to the auvan- tage of this or that place, whether the price is within their means, etc., and going to a great ileal of extra trouble when they can have the puzzle solved for them by simply sending for a copy of "Vacation 1SKM," which has just made its appearance. The little book let is more striking than ever before. for it is filled from cover to cover with beautiful little illustrations of the many summer reports and various attractive features. It was a happy thought of th California Northwestern Ilaihvay Company getting out this little look- let, ami people are beginning to watch for it from one season to another and glean its pages eagerly to see what new attractions it holds forth. The only tiling that puzzles them after their perusal is in deciding which one to se lect of the many ideal places for a sum mer's jaunt. The California North western Kailway is rightly called "the picturesque route of California." It M'ttliru: fo I It rmr!t T.tMll ljtt.l i ii.- ....i,..., ... luuta, anta Kosa, Russian river, Son oma, Ckiah, Redwood, Walker, ami Willits valleys, and connecting stage lines Jcarry you to all of the summer resorts in Lake, Mendocino and Sono ma counties. In this favored section a heavily timbered mountain range pro tects you from the fogjand winds of the Pacific ocean, while a similar range on the east shields vou from the execs sive heat of the interior. Are you run down and worn out by constant attention to business and household cares? I lien visit some quiet sequestered nK)k. lake one or more of the new lxoks that are being talked about and while vou sway lazily m the hammock read and dream to vour heart's content ami rest the wearv brain and tired nerves. Possibly your physician has told you to do nothing hut eat. sleep and drink, ami you will find that by following his advice you ire gaining ikhuhIs and losing the weight or care and roponsinity that has worn you out and made you ill and irritable. Possibly you will le ordered to th springs to drink the mineral wa- tet-with their healing properties which gush forth in clear and sparkling abuii- V 1 t I uauce m tins section, ine angler win take his fishing tackle and saunter along leide the nunierou streams and laker-, confident of bringing in a good .-tring of trout, for the waters are annu- allv stocked with mvriads of the little fish from the company's own hateherv at l kiah. lhe botanist will simply revel in the varied llora that carpet i hills, valleys and canyons with their fragrant blossoms. Nature has been lavish with her Moral attractions in this favored part of the world, and every jaunt into the woods reveals some new treasure. Kverylody can gratify his or her special whim by eonuIting "acation l'.HJt,' ror it lurni.-hes in formation so that vou can arrange to stop at a hotel or private house in some town, at a mineral spring resort, rusti cate on some farm where you can take life easy, or enjoy camp life with all the coiivenieneesalKMlt you, to be had for a nominal pries and which removes all the disagreeable features of camp life. Many people who have been in the habit of spending their summers along the line of the California Northwestern Railway for several years past have come to find out that it is the garden spot of California and have purchased homes where they arrange to spent! the entire sc:ison in the pretty home like bungalows they have erected for their families and for the entertain ment of their friends. One of the de cided advantages to the business man who can only get away from Saturday to Monday is the nearness to San Fran cisco and the admirable arrangement of the train service to meet the require ment.: of these men wlnse families are spending their vacation in the country. If you haven't got "Vacation 1W1," then get one, for a perusal of it will convince you that you have found an ideal place for a summer nsort. I heard two gentlemen discussing the subject or where they were to spend ....... I 4 1. - .. .1 .... . .... men- Naeauon uu summer me oilier lay. rinally one of them took "Yaca- Hon 1!H)1" out of his pocket and handed it to his friend with the remark, "Keep it, for I have another. Don't think - - i you will find any trouble if you glance ocr mat, lor it ims solved the problem ......... ... . . for us. My IMys anil myself would rather go camping, but, my wife does not see it exactly in that way. She says she knows how it would be. She would have to do all the cooking for a ravenous family who would come in loo tired to get the game ready for the frying-pan and it would keep her cook ing and washing dishss almost con stantly. It would be about the truth. too, iudgimr from nasi oxnerienco. - w i 1 Kvery year we have camped out, and all the rest of the family would come back refreshed and rested after their outing except my wife, and she was even more tired than when we started. She gets all the cooking she wants at home, and I made up my mind last year that it wasn't fair and that we would never go camping again unless we could allbrd to take somebody along to do the cooking and cleaning up. This year we are going to spend our vacation on some farm where they have plenty of fruit, chickens, eggs fresh milk, berries, etc. We can hunt and tish just as well and my wife wil get some little pleasure out of the out ing." "My wife objects to camping for the same reason," said his friend sho is r5,rht. it isIli( r,lir to expet.t her U) stay in camp and look out for the comfort of the rest of us." That is just the trouble with the ma Monty of camp life experiences. One or a few find they have all the dlsagrce- able part of the work to do, ami it is not long until camp life has lost alio its charm for them and they cannot sec the beauties or advantages that tin more favored are ravinir about. Ji is entirely different where one and al i w take a hand in place of leaving it for: few, while they are swinging in the hammocks, loating, fishing or hunt ing, or reveling among the lacy ferns and fragrant llowers BRIEF REVIEW. An Alimony Bill. A proposed bill denying reinarriec divorcees alimonv is hailed with re joicing by the actorsof New York. V and down the Rialto and out along tin "road," the joyful news has spread Senator Russell luis proved himself the actors' friend they say by introducing a bill depriving divorced women who remarry the right to alimonv. Many a leading man who has been kept in tin woods and forbidden to parade Broad way by reason of thearrearsof alimony piled up in the New York courts will rejoice, for there is hope that some day former qouse will niary again, if she has not already done so. Many witless wight who has "done time" in Ludlow for the nonpayment of a wife's weekly allowance will rejoice and Ik glad. There is already talk of organ izing a benefit committee to raise funds for a testimonial to Senator Russell as a token of regard from members of the "Alimonv Club." Chme.se School. Each Chinese schoollov must furnish his own stool and table for school work and the "four precious articles," which are the ink slab, a cake of India ink, a rush for writing and paper. With these he begins his wvary task of learn ing to write and read the thousands of Chinese characters. 1 hoe are to open the way to the Chinese classics, and a knowledge of this ancient literatureand wisdom means education to the Chi- nese. At theopeningof a Chinese school a paper on which is written the name of Confucius is pasted on the wall Before this honored name the pupil and teachers burn paper mouev and joss sticks and bow their heads three times to the lloor. The teacher then tell Confucius the day, the month and the year when the school is opened and m m a begs tor n is lavor. h.very morning when the pupils arrive they must bow twice, once for the teacher and once for Confucius. Flowers En Route Over a half million women annually get freelKHiqiiets at N lies, M ich., when the Michigan Central I lailroad has ju.-t rebuilt its hot-house on a scale that doubles it formercapaeit y. It matters not whether it be midwinter or I lit blisteringmoiiths of summer, there is a fragrant shower of cut t lower.- at this pretty country Matiou-as soon as atrain tops. More than a decade ago the of ficers of that road conceived the idea of raising enough llowers to enable them to throw in the lap of each woman pas senger a boutonnicrc oi cut llowers. An employe in uniform, bearing a bas ket tilled with the favors, passes through the train distributing the fragrant unches. Grain of Corn A Flemish artist has produced what is said to oe l lit smallest painting m the world. It is a picture of a niillo' mounting the stairs of his mill and ear- rymg a sack of gram on Ins back. 1 he miU ,s 'h'picted as standing near a tor- race. Close at hand are a hor.-o and cart, with a few groups of peasant. idling in the road near by. All this is painted on the smooth side of a grain of ordinary white corn. It 1hs not cover a naii-iiieii .-quart, aim it is in many respects one of the most remark- hie art productions of the day. The Candy Ci y New York is pre-eminently the candy city of the world. It has more estab lishments engaged in its mamifacturt and more stores handling it than any city on earth. The output of England, prance ami oermanv is not as large as the output of the Cnited States: ami probably New York City alone pro hluces more than either of the Ihrec ti... ;,... i wiiitu no tliwiu . J tiv, ii tru iimi output of New York State together do not equal in value the candy output. The business has assumed the propor ..cms of a mailt amomr the niaiiufac- turin - industries - Within the last few years the various colonies of Europeans in Kgypt have built their own hospitals. There are now in Cairo French, Gorman, Aus trian, Anglo-American and Italian hos pitals. The. use of electricity in connection with farm work is luring strongly advo cated. The idea that light is deleterious to vegetation is said to be all wrong, and that the contrary holds g. al. The man who thinks the world ow s him a living usually loses no time try ing to collect. Some donkeys wear long ears, others sport decollete vests. The lovable woman always forgets herself. KAY iNG TELLER'S LAPSE. lie and Several OllicrM Fulled to .Vote nn Alimird Error. Banks are notoriously careful about scrutinizing the signatures to checks on which they pay out money, yet, as the following incident well illustrates, it is possible for even the most care- ful and experienced of paying tellers to make mistakes. The Incident is the more remarkable because It reveals a most curious error on the part of a prominent business man as well as an astonishing lapse m the case or a usu- any accurate ami scrupulously exact bank ollicial. Among the depositors at one or tne largest banks in the city is an old and prominent linn which may be called. for the purposes of this relation, Aloyslus Jenkins & Co. All checks is- sued by the firm are signed in person by Aloysius Jenkins, its head, so that his handwriting and signature are thoroughly familiar to the blink ofll- cers at whose bank he has deposited for twenty years or more. During the first week of this month Mr. Jenkins got notice from the bank that -a check signed for $1,S00 In his handwriting,, but signed Aloysius Smith & Co., had been paid by the bank during the previous month and to buy things for herself and chil the sum paid out charged against his dren' account. Aloysius Jenkins was per fectly certain that he had never made such a foolish 'mistake as that. He sent over for the check. It needed on ly a glance to show him that he had written It and the signature really was Aloysius Smith & Go. Hp called up the people to whom the check was payable and whose Indorsement was on Its back. They had not noticed the mistake at all. It had passed through the hands of their cashier and of oth er employees and had been by them sent to the bank, where it had been credited to their account without ques tion, passing the sharp eyes of the pay ing teller and only being discovered by accident nearly thirty days afterward. Six or more experienced and export business men had let that absurd mis take get by without detecting it. It was almost beyond belief. The only more ridiculous thing about It all was the fact that he had missigned his own firm name. By referring to his letter book for the day the enecu was uaicu he discovered that he had been Dusy Just then in closing up an important deal with a man named Smith, mat was the only possible explanation for his slip. He has had the canceled check framed, and it now hangs in his ollice as a reminder that "to err Is hu man" even in the best trained circles. Chicago Tribune. LEGAL TENDER. 1 he Aiiuiitnts it Creditor Mny Accept In IlinVrcnt CoIiin. Ordinarily v. hen a debtor appears be- re a luig time creditor there is no qm'Miouiug ol the I idled States com in wliii ii ii e t.ebt is to be paal. but the wide possibilities possessed by an arbitrary creditor in stipulating Just what coins and in what amounts he will receive navmcnt are enough al most to discourage borrowing. You can't force a mean creditor to take more than 25 cents' worth of nickels or 2. cents' worth ot copper cents. It vou euultl get as much as s worth of old silver three cent pieces et another generation you could unload ?." worth on him. just as lie would have to take ?." worth of the silver live cent pieces and so worth ot the ob solete twentv cent pieces, which made so much trouble in the late seventies. But vou can nay out SH) in silver dimes and silver quarters and silver half dollars. The trade dollars, of which there are a few still coming into the trasury of the Cnited States V... ..... 1 ........ !.. .ii. ,t...i.fli fwttlitfw loi leoeiiiiJiiiMi iul- t.wiiii liwL&iuir.. while the standard dollar Is an un limited letra! tender, as Is the old "dol lar of our dads." the first of which was coined in 171)1 and the last in 1S7II. Coins that virtually have disappear ed from circulation are gold three and one dollar pieces, the trade dollar of ilver. the nickel three cent piece, the copper two cent piece, me copper nan cent and silver three and live cent i i 2 pieces. Chicago Tribune. TWO COMPOSERS. KoH.siiii Wax an Kiiny Worker, "While Meyerbeer Wax Strenuous. Giacomo Meyerbeer went at every thing ferociously. The work of coin- losing made him restless, excitable iiul caused him many sleepless nights. This condition was always worst in the spring of the year. He did his best work when the wind howled, the rain poured dow n in torrents and humanity generally sought refuge indoors. Dur ing Midi natural upheavals the great composer was in ids element. Deluged with ideas, his fingers charmed from the piano the rarest and most wonder ful melodies. Compared to Meyerbeer, Rossini was an easy worker and always ready with his pen. Some of his most charming compositions originated under the most commonplace circumstances. One day while the composer was still abed en tertaining a few friends the poet To- tala brought him the words to the cele brated prayer song in "Moses." Ros tini read the text, and the poet, fear ing some sarcastic remarks on the part of t lie former, said, "It took me an hour to write these verses." "An hour to write such verses?' cried Rossini. "I'll set them to music in a quarter of an hour." He asked for pen and paper, and In ten minutes, while his friends chaffed the an I hor. the great maestro wrote that inimitable prayer song In his op era, "Moses." flrat rnm: of See Serpent. Adam hastily made an Inscription In lii.s diary. "I want it to go on record." he ex plained, "that we had the first case of see serpent ever known." Feeling lie had the bulge on the rest of humanity, he strutted about with a satisfied air. New York Herald. More Definite Information "Wanted. "Now, William." said the man of business to the office bo3 "I am going out to get shaved." "Please, sir." said the boy, hesitating. "if any one calls and wants to know where you are will I say you've gone to the barber's or down to Wall street?" Yonkers Statesman. STRIKING A BARGAIN. A Cunc Whore .Merc .Money Did Xot Cut .Much of u FlKure. "Several years ago there was a boom in certain lands in Florida because of rich phosphate deposits," said a south ern man. "A speculator asked one of those simple Florida folk what would be (lu. iOUlt price he would take for somc. iall(1 i,efove the boom he lia,i ,(,un unallu. to sell for SHOO. The mvnor really didn't know. The snecu hltoI. nfrreed to deposit In bank ?lb000 tu. OWner's credit for the land. But tIlIs aniount of money in bank didn't mean very much to the native. ne s:1fd he wanted a farm of sixty am.s with a house on It, the whole to cost a few hundred. " -What else?' asked the speculator. -('an I have a horse and saddle and bridle?' 'Certainly.' " 'And a ritie? " 'Yes " 'And some provisions?' 'Yes.' "The eyes of the native began to bulge. Thero was a pause. 'What else do you want?' asked the speculator. " 'Oh, give me $r0 for the old woman "He then started to walk away. " 'What else?' asked the speculator. " 'Is there more yet?' " 'Yes.' " 'Well, give me a plug of tobacco and set me down where the fish will bite all day. and j-ou can have the rest.' "Baltimore Sun. POE AND POVERTY. The Poet Wan Horn to Need and Left It un a I.cKiiey. According to Charles Marshall Graves, writing in the Century, the poet Toe was two years old when his mother, a gifted actress, was living in Richmond in the direst want. Mrs. Toe's last stage appearance was in the Richmond theater In October. 1S11. The theater burned on Dec. 2(5. and seventy-eight people perished with it. I'oe's father had died In the spring. and Mrs. Toe and the baby poet and his younger sister went to live on Main street, in the mm in llanu region, in a tenement cellar perpetually wet by the Shockoe creek, which then flow- ed through the middle of the street, Here the wretched woman contracted pneumonia and died. And from the cellar the future poet, described as a "baby skeleton," was rescued by Mr. Allan. Sixty years and more later Rosalie Toe. the poet's younger sister, appear ed on Richmond streets In poverty as bitter as her mother's had been to get a few coins by selling photographs of her brother. The man who was perhaps America's Tea test poet and certainly one of the few poets who have vitally Influenced the literary art lo:h m prose ami verso; was born into the most wretched pov ertv and left need as keen behind him. "When Onion Are Odorle. Hov. many times has every flat dweller entered his home only to cry out in disgust because the odor of the onion or the turnip or something else has permeated the entire six or sevi rooms? "Let's stop having such things for dinner." lie suggests to his wife. " hy. it's mortifying to invite a friend to dine when one knows this sort of at mosphere Is going to knock him down as soon as he enters the door." As a matter of fact, there Is no need for excluding the onion or the other of fending eatables. The simplest way in the world to solve the ditiiculty Is this: Have the cook put into the cooking vessel with your onions Just a piece of stale bread about as big as your list. Somehow or other the bread absorbs the odors, and you don't know onions are on your menu until you sit down at the table. New York Times. A I-'rniik Continent. Housekeepers will appreciate this little story of Dean Stanley: During a visit to America, not long before his death, he was Invited to dine with a certain college president in a southern town. Farly in the meal the dean in quired of his hostess: "Mrs. G , would it bo impertinent to ask what is this gumbo soup?" "Perhaps I can best answer." was the amused reply, "by telling you Lady A 's comment on the uisn when sue tuneu wun us once on a time. She leaned across the table and called to her husband: 'You would better try the soup. It's not nearly so nasty as it looks! All!" said the dean, smiling, "that was ex actly like Lady A- She is a cousin of mine!" Harper's Bazar. Zoological omencIiit nre. The butValo in the Cnited States is a bison; the partridge of Michigan and pheasant of Pennsylvania and other states is a ruffed grouse; the rabbit, so plentiful In the market at times, Is a hare. Both species of grouse, the ruffed and the pinnated, are called pheasant, partridge and patrige. and the pinnated grouse is universally re ferred to as the prairie chicken. Prai rie chicken Is not a bad name for the pinnated grouse, for it is original and does not confound it with other birds. but it is not right to use the names partridge and pheasant when referring to our grouse, for these are the cor rect names of European sneclinens. Heathen ItiiMlnenN Methodn. Business among the Chinese, accord ing to a Russian traveler from Man churia, Is on a co-operative basis. There are neither proprietors nor employees, but all who work In an establishment are partners. From time to time small allowances are doled out to them -barely enough to live on-but at the end of the year all the profits are divided. The Chinese merchants arc so honest that among all the ten branches of the Russo-ChIne.se bank located in China there has been no record since their establishment of a single protested note. Alottt the Size of One. 'Is that a chicken?" asked the boarder dismally. 'Of course," replied the landlady. What did you think it was?" 'A canary," answered the boarder. ns he counted the number of people to be served. Chicago Post CHOICE MISCELLANY Some Oriental IleniedleM. R. L. Jones of Ontario was at the Willard hotel In Washington recently, and to a reporter he told of some of his experiences while traveling on a recent trip in India. "I was sick a few days after I ar rived in India, and I immediately ap plied for medical assistance. It chanced that no civilized physician was to be had in the neighborhood, so I called for a native doctor. "An American friend who was trav eling with me, but who was familiar with the customs of the country, said. Very well, I'll take you to a doctor.' "lie then took me a few hundred yards from the hut where we were at the time, and then wheu I saw the 'na tive doctor' administering some of his medicines I at once lost all signs of ill ness and felt as fine as a two-year-old. "One of their favorite ways of treat ing in India is to raise blisters all over the body. This Is accomplished by the application of a redhot iron. The blis ter is then dressed with cayenne pep per. " 'Gunpowder pills' also are a favor ite medicine in that part of the world. Twelve of them are given for a dose. A minute later a coal applied to a slow match leading down the throat is in serted. A movement among the parti cles then takes place, which either eradicates the disease or the patient, most commonly the latter." Mr. Jones stands sponsor for all this and vouches for its verity. Queen "WIlhelnilnu'N SIiocn. According to the opinion expressed by a Philadelphia traveler. Wilhelmi na. queen of Holland (one may no lon ger write it "little Wilheluiina"). is said to be growing "very plain." but none has yet denied her a large share of very "human" qualities. In proof of tliis this same traveler tells a story which presents her in a pleasing light. It seems that a certain famous Lon don photographer had been sent for to take the queen's picture. It was the second such commission he had re ceived from Amsterdam. When the sitting was over and the plates had been developed Wilhelmina said de lightedly: "Why. this is a much better picture of me than you took before. I wonder why that Is?" "Your majesty has now a more cheerful expression." ventured the art ist. "Perhaps that is what makes the difference." "And I know why that should have been so." added the queen instantly. "The last time you were here I remem ber I had on very tight boots. How can any one look cheerful when her feet are being pinched?" Philadelphia Press. Mr. I'ojser and Hetty Sorrel. A picturesque but unpretentious old building known as Corley Hall Farm was recently sold at .auction in Bir mingham. Kngland. that readers of t.'eorge Fliot will be interested to hear about, says the Boston Herald. This house figures conspicuously in "Ad.un Rede" as the home of the im mortal Mrs. Poyser and her unfortu nate niece. Hetty Sorrel. The novelist was born within three miles ot the place, and American pilgrims to scenes of her early days have always been shown this house on the main road to Nuneaton. Who has now purcll-ed it and whether it must go the wav of all oth er remantic landmarks has no; yet been divulged, but once when the Pov- ser farm was pointed out to a great admirer of Georg" Fliot the lady said she had rather lie in it than in the finest house In Brook ine. and I've no doubt she meant it too. Fluh and I)or Story From Kentucky. John T. Parish of the Holland coun try says lie has a dog that can catch more fish and better tish than any man. He says that when he arises in the morning, if he feels as if he would relish a fish for breakfast, he makes his wants known to his dog, and in a very short time a nice fish is in the frying pan. Mr. Parish lives near the river, and he says he has ejected a little plat form on the edge of the water for his dog's use and benefit. He says tin dog will perch himself on this nlatform and watch for his game. When a nice fish that he likes the looks of mines near enough he dives from his perch and never fails to make a catch. Dur ing shoaling time he frequently catch es two fish at a time. -Allen County (Kan.) Times. Stock For nn Alligator Farm. Several French dealers have recently visited the Cnited States to purchase stock for an alligator farm which they propose starting in the south of France. Alligator skin has become so highly prized throughout France that the animal dealers believe It will pay tvell to raise tin alligators on this, the first farm of its kind in the world. Not long ago President Loub; t re ceived a present of a hunting suit of alligator skin. The skin is said to lie growing scarcer cadi year, and there Is always a great demand for it for uoots. stioes. handbags, writing pads, portfolios and toilet articles. Chicago News. PoljfcnniouH Monarch. No loss than six foreign monarchs with whom the Cnited States and oth er great Christian powers maintain diplomatic relations, accrediting minis ters plenipotentiary to their courts, practice polygamy. They are the Mos lem sultan of Turkey and shah of Per sia, the Buddhist king of Slam, the Shlntolst mikado, the Confucian em peror of China and the emperor of Km rea. Kansas City Journal. tonkins For a finch. Tommy Are you and Sister Ethel goin' to get married? Mr. Stedily -Why er what put such a question In your head. Tommy? Tommy- Oh. nothln', only Billy Daly wanted to bet me a nickel against a cent that the match d never come ofi'. and I'd like a little Inside Information. Puck. II Ik Field. "Why do you always speak III of your friends?" "What would you have? I don't know any other persons." FACTS IN FEW LINES Japan, eluding Formosa, has a pop ulation of 40.000,000. The Irish parliamentary fuud for the year 100:5 amounted to $03,045. France produces more than twice as many potatoes as the United States. Polite Chinamen consider it a breach of etiquette to wear spectacles in com pany. The American Federation of Labor has 2,31'J.OOO members, taxpayers and voters. A correspondent saj's the last was the worst Christmas that makers of dolls and toys in Germany ever experi enced. The British people pay $5,000,000 a year to the tlorists for their produce, out of which $1,500,000 goes to the for eigner. In the window of a Dunmow (Eng land i hostelry appears the notice, "The Encyclopaedia Britannlca at your serv ice within." Colorado Springs has so saloons or low resorts. In tiie deed to every piece of property is included a clause which forever prohibits the sale of liquor. A Methodist church In Kansas was moved a distance of forty-two miles to a new location. The moving required eight days, and not a window was broken. The daily wage for skilled labor In Italy is: For machinists. 55 to 70 cents; masons. 50 to 00 cents; carpenters, oO to 70 cents, and cotton workers, 30 to 50 cents. The fishermen near the Marconi wire less telegraph station In England have petitioned parliament to take it away because it, they allege, produces the deluges descending upon them. The pianist Paderewski in order to show his disapproval of the Prussian government's Polish policy has forbid den his new opera. "Manru." to be pro ruced in the German theater of Posen. On Dec? 31 the 055 trade unions In Great Britain had a membership of 1.00-I.S12 and funds amounting to 5,- UH5.40S. The income for the year was 2.441.427 and the expenditure 2,05S. 030. A petition signed by between 20,000 and 30,000 persons is to be presented to the Edinburgh magistrates asking that the hour for closing the public houses be 11 p. m.. as at present, and not 10 p. m. J A company has been organized in Chicago which contracts to bury people and let them pay on the installment plan. The Installments must all be paid before the funeral occurs, how ever. Tlie corporation of Vienna has voted the golden Salvator medal to Ilerr Turk, the Austrian Sandow, In recog nition of his having brought honor to the city by establishing world records in weight lifting. Lloyd Conway of Baltimore has is sued a challenge for a talking contest, open to the world. lie says he Is the champion talker, and he insists that he can speak 05.040 words in an hour. He is a clerk in a railroad otHce. Citizens of Manchester, England, are complaining bitterly and writing to the papers because the conductors on the tram cars "squeeze twentj- persons into seats constructed for eighteen," and, worse still, "allow some people to stand up." A small boy whose father and moth er. Mr. and Mrs. Kerchew. were stay ing with him at a Chicago hotel be came lost. When found, he had forgot ten his nanut but remembered It when he heard a man sneeze and was re stored to his parents. The last survivor of a little band of buffaloes, the only animals of that va riety at large in Colorado, has been slain by a pothunter despite the heavy penalty lixed by the legislature. The band had been hidden hi Lost park. Park county, for several years. Joseph Wlodarczyk (pronounced VIo darksick). a Russian, went into the common pleas court at Newark. N. J., the other day and got permission from the judge to drop from his name the four letters c. z. y and k. Now his name is spelled W-l-o-d-a-r, and he calls himself Ylodnr. The Colorado promotion and public ity committee has opened headquarters at SI." Seventeenth street. Denver, and announces that "from now on every energy will be bent on making Colora do, its wonders. Its opportunities, its resources and riches known all over the world." A branch otlice Is estab lished at the chamber of commerce of Colorado Springs, Colo. Whereas m 1S70 It was estimated that 40 per cent of the cotton crop of the south was produced by whites and 00 per cent by negroes. It is now claim ed that the whites produce 00 per cent and the blacks but 40 per cent. This, southern men say. indicates that the south must look to foreign immigration to supply It with labor if Its cotton crop Is to be increased. Statistics compiled by the zemtvos of forty-nine provinces of Furonean Russia showed thai b'.U.OOO peasant families, representing a population of perhaps 7.000.000. had only nine acres of land to the family, and that 2.219. 444 peasant households, representing a population of about 1S.000.000, had only twenty-one acres each, although hundreds of thousands of such house holds consisted of from eight to twenty-five members. ' With the view of ascertaining the proportion of foreign gold coin com pared with the French, the directors of the French mint requested the Bank of " France to obtain 50,000 pieces from the tills of different branches In the provinces. An examination of that coin showed that 41.5S3 were French and S.417 foreign, the latter represent ing nearly 17 per cent. Tlie alien gold was principally Belgian. Italian. Austria-Hungarian, Swiss, Russian. Greek, Spanish, etc. rnieonry In Turlcentan. In a remote part of Turkestan Dr. Svcn Ilcdin. the explorer, some years ago discovered the ancient art of fal conry in full llower. "Among the. horse men were eight falconers." he writes, "two of whom carried eagles, the oth ers falcons, all duly hooded. In this part of the world falconers form an In dispensable adjunct in any formal pa rade or procession. Later in the day they gave us an exhibition of their birds' powers by letting them kill four hares and a deer, all of which were presented to me."