ft OO o o .* | ft In Verse ■■ I a a a. «nd Labor. It S>iM v«es le-ln« wed all tee beau- . tiful. Mteltav e»* wsalttey. wise and dutiful U vlshli< voea having what pleasure uslolJ; • WSZ a «»eaviji et Joy and pureeful of •old!' But wl.Aei alas. eiw'but empty bubbles, •wl the longing heart may teem with troubles! •<> Idle wishing is vain, forsooth. As the endless search tor the fountain of youth. but work that holds wealth may be had for the taking; Though It may not bring health, ■tu a balm tor heartaching. And study makes wise, and love; people •ay, Gives the beauty that's truest, wl4ch lasts for aye. Then away with longing, and, ho. for la­ bor. And. ho. for love, each one for his neigh­ bor! For a life of labor and study and love Is the life that fits tor the joy above. —Emma C. Dowd. What Might Have Been. "Ths hand that rocks the cradl«"—but there Is no such a hand. It Is bud tu rock the baby, they would have us understand. So th« cradle's but a relic of the former foolish days When ths mothers reared their children la un-'-letilUIc ways. When they Jounced them and they bounc­ ed them, those poor dwarfs of long ago— The Washingtons and Jeffersons and Adamses, you know. They warn us that the baby will possess a muddled brain It we dandle him or rock him. We must carefully refrain. >1« must lie In one position, never swayed and never swung, Or his chance to grow to greatness will be blasted while he's young, >h tc think how they were ruined by mothers long ago— The Ft sic - and the Uctnsms and the Hamiltons, you know! must feed ths baby only by the schedule that Is made, Anti the food that he I. given must be measured cut an<1 weighed. He may bellow to Inform us that he ten t satisfied, Rut he couldn't grow to greatness if his wants were all supplied. Think how foolish nursing stunted those poor weaklings long ago— The Snakespearis and the I.uthers aud the Bonapartes, you know. We aro given a great mission; we are here today on earth To bring forth a race of giants and to guard them from their birth. To Insist upon their freedom from th« rocking that was bad Fur our parents and their parents, scram­ bling all the brains they had! Ah. had they l>< .-n fed by schedule, would they have been stunted so— The Wehsters and the Lincolns and the Grants und Lees, you know? —Chicago Record-Herald. THE PART HEFTER. in Actor’s Saceess May Not Depend on the Number ot Ills Lines. Au actor, known variously as "expe- •ieticed," “reliable” and “good all sound,” one who has lieen said to "play with authority?’ and whose "scholarly rending of his Hues" hns been the sub­ ject of frequent eulogy, walked out of his manager's office with a roll of type­ written manuscript clutched tightly in his hand and a look of blended joy and thition irradiating his well seamed face. "I’ve got my new part," he cried joy­ ously to a friend whom he met on the sidewalk, “and it's great.” “Indeed,” said his friend. “What’s tlie character?” “Dunno,” replied the Thespian cheer­ fully, "but It’s simply great. If you don't lielleve me just heft this.” And Ills friend proceed«! to "heft" the type­ written roll, remarking as he handed it back that it must weigh at least half a pound. If this good all round actor hail pos­ sess«! any real knowledge of his craft he would have known that the failure he scored was due to the fact that his half pound part was one of those worthless ones which read well and "heft” well, hut which afford the play­ er no opportunity to do anything plens- iug to the public. When Mr. l’ulmer gave out the parts for the tint production of "The Two Orphans" there was one roll of manu­ script that was the lightest of all and weighed so little that the part hefters in the company turned up their noses in scorn mid turned pitying glances on the young actress to whom it was as­ sign«). Yet that was tlie part of Lou­ ise, the blind girl, and Miss Kate Clax­ ton's performance of It will remain in the popular memory long after every other character In the piece shall hnve been forgotten. James L. Ford In Har­ per’s Weekly. ? The Twin Brothers By ZOE ANDERSON NORRIS a a .• ' I < opvrlaM. JSUL by Anderson A’orris May 25, After Supper. BAREST—I like this place you have sent me t*. It is lovely, but It does seem a shame for me to be spending the sum­ mer in the country with the birds and dowers, with you there in New York working away so hard to support us. I know what you said. You would rather work in New York than idle inywhere else. But that was only your sweetness. I remember the Joke you got off, too, when I said I believed one grew more contented with one’s lot in the country, and you said you thought y«u would if it were a lot in a cemetery. Then how you wrote it up and sold it for »2. We might make our expenses, mightn’t we, if only we could think up enough jokes? But the trouble with Jokes is they are no good unless they are spontaneous—that is. not much. If you would only let me help you, but you won't. I shall never forget the time I made the shirt waist for your friend. It is the only thing I can do— sew. How you took her to the theater, to a supi>er afterward and gave her your prettiest piece of bric-a-brac, so that altogether it amounted to about four times as much as she paid me for making the waist. Y'ou hated so to be under obligations. I can’t help you in that way evident­ ly As . tter of fact, I have thought It all out nd concluded that the ouly thing for ue to do is to marry. That is plain, I! seems to me. as the nose on your face. The whippoorwills sing mighty mourn­ fully sometimes in the country. They are singing now. Good night, dear. Your loving MABEL. D May 30, After Supper. Little Momsey—There is the dearest girl here you ever saw. She lias been here all winter. I don’t know why, but I think it is because slie lias no home. Her mother is dead. I don’t know what I should do if you were dead, momsey. Guess what this little girl has done. Caught a beau. Yes, way out here in the country. A splendid farmer who owns a big farm not far from here. Slie is sweet, but a plain little thing. She hasn't half the good looks that this chicken lias Inherited from somebody I know. No thanks for that. So maybe there is a chance yet for yours truly. MABEL. May 30, Same Old Time. Dearest—They al! go to bed at 8. Accordingly there is nothing to do but read or write, so I write. The girl, Delia, has told me all about it. She is going to be married soon. She asked me to go to Middletown with her to buy her wedding dress. I went. It was fun. Her sweetheart sent his run- MODERN CITY LIFE. Its Aspect In the Punnlnic of the Home. Tlie passing of the home Is the sad dest phenomenon of imslern city life. Tlie tenement house, which we seek to disguise under the name of "flat.” is a most wretch«! substitute for the hum blest of homes. That our people endure them Is an Indication of degeneracy, as it will unquestionably be the cause of a more rapid descent. It is morally certain that the vigor of the race can Is1 maintained only by personal con­ tact with tlie mother earth from which we sprang, which nourishes us to her bosom when we die. Why this Is, per haps no one knows, but it is within the knowledge of nil that the vigor of the city Is constantly recruited from coun try life. To deprive children of dally contact with the soil Is a sin. The evil of the tenement house was not realized until It passed from the slums, tiecause few of us know how the other half lives. It Is perliaps not BO desperate a misfortune to those who live by manual labor, for they get their contact with earth In other ways, and their children, less vexed by tlie con­ ventions of society, find acceKs to the soil by some means and pass, while still young, to the occupations of their parents. The most terrible effect of the tenement bouse Is.In the families of the "salaried” class as distinguish«! from the "wage camera" and who tilt from Hat to flat, seldom reinaiuluj long enough ahywbere for home associa­ tions to be formed. There can perhaps be no home association« worthy of the name which are not connected with a piece of open ground In tlie sole pos session of tin» family. It would seem that In our larger cities this privilege can n<> longer be enjoyed except by the rich. San Francisco Chronicle. o o o wills an«I those other bird» that till tlie n.i.trj night with »■» ibiteh nBi.gjj, Wa were quiet awhile, thinking over the w«ldlng. fur wethlings are s deiuu things, dearest. They are so uncertain. You never know wdttber they are to bloKKom Into happine»«i or divorce. But by and by Ton^bagnn to talk. • I had been listening to a thrd that was singing somewhere in the wood, but at the first few worilt I forgot the bird ami listened to him. “I am nelia. It broke his heart when I asked her to marry me. I thought he'd never get over it. Then when you came and he saw how I be­ gan to care for you he l>egg«l me to let him have Delia. “ ’She shall never know,’ he said. ’You remember that time I sat on the veranda with my arm arouud her and SHE TOLD ME ABOUT HER SWEETHEART. about for us. We rolled along the country road—It was awfully sweet, witli flowers on either side—chirping like two magpies, telling each other everything we knew. She told me about her sweetheart. He has a twin brother. They are so alike, she says, you can’t tell them apart. Funny, isn't It? And they have grown to be too large to wear blue and pink ribbons on their wrists, like the twins you see in baby car­ riages. It was very Interesting. One day. she said. Tom—that Is the one she Isn't engaged to-came to see her and sat with his arm around her waist the longest time out on the veranda -you can do that In the country where no­ body passes along- sat there until Dick —the one she Is engaged to—came up the steps and stared nt them and roust­ ed Ills brother out and took, his place. Wasn’t that queer? She said she be­ lieved all the time Tom knew in bls heart that he was Tom and not Dick. She wondered why he did It Well, nuyway, we bought the pretti­ est white silk mull dress you ever saw I for her church wedding—It Is to be very private—and I am going to help I her make It. Wouldn't you? ft I AM SORRY I DISTURBED YOU. other twin, Tom. He has another farm that matches his brother's somewhere about. A large, fine farm In New York state! Think of that! It's not to be sneezed at, Is it? At least, that is the opinion of your devoted MABEL. June 5. Momsey—A queer thing has hap­ pened. I was tired. We had been sew­ ing all day on the wedding dress, Delia aud I, and I had stretched myself out In the hammock on the veranda to rest. I hadn't been there half an hour and had fallen asleep when I was awak­ en«! by a touch of something on my cheek. I start«l up and confronted Tom, who had been there watching me for I don't know how long. I wonder if I snore. Do I, dearest? He said, "I am sorry I disturbed you.” But, looking at the long peacock feather with which he had touched my cheek, I was inclined to be slightly In­ credulous. “I don’t believe you,” I returned. "What did you wake me for? I was having such a nice nap.” "I wanted to talk to you,” said be. With that he sat down by me In the hammock—I had sat straight up when he wakened me—and pushed it for me with his foot. We had grown to be rather friendly in tlie past few days In between tho making of the dress. I was laughing and talking with him and joking when Delia came up the walk with Dick. He was bending over her. "How fond they are of each other!” I said to Tom half jealously. Then I looked up and found Tom's eyes on me with an expression In them that made me blush. These country farmers are very sus­ ceptible. It doesn’t take long. By now Delia stood on the veranda directly in front of us. She was gaz­ ing at Tom with a puzzled look. Then she turned to Dick. “I am getting all mixed up on the neckties," she said. “Did you change yours, Dick? I thought when you came you had on a blue one, and now it is black.” Dick laughed. "Silly!” he cried. “It was your lively Imagination.” Do you know, I don’t get lonely at all now, dearest, when I hear the whip­ poorwills. I am beginning to love them. Isn’t It strange how you get us«l to things in this strange old world? Good night, my little mater. Your loving MABEL. June 10, at 10 o'Clock. Dearest—I am writing you the hour to show how we have Improved in the matter of staying up. The twins have just gone. The wedding dress is finished. It Is lieautlful. I shirred the yoke. Shirring is going to be so fashionable this sum­ mer, you know. Then I am very nim­ ble with my needle when It comes to doing little fine things like that. It Is n merciful thing that I am nimble at something, Isn't it, love? I am not an adept at telling twins apart, I can tell you that. I never know Dick from Tom, though Tom is making violent love to me, and Dick is hovering over his bride elect with all the fervor that could possibly be ex­ pected of him. Then Dick says he is Dick, and Tom says he Is Tom, and you’ve got to take their word for it. That’s all there is to It. Except for that and, as I say, their manner toward us I could never tell t'other from which. At first we could tell by their neck­ ties, but they hnve taken to wearing the same coior. So there you are! What do you think of marrying a man who Is so exactly like another man? Not that he lias asked me yet— that Is, he hasn't asked me in so many words— but what do you think? Answer at once, dear. Your affec- tionate MABEL. P. H.-I haven't tohl you for a long. long time how much I love you. I do love you. I AM NOT TOM. she thought I was you? Well, she shall think It is you till the end of time. She shall never know.’ "What could I do,” he burst out. “loving you, but to let him linve her? Was it unfair to her? 1 think not; I am sure not. Not hulf so unfair as to marry her, loving you. What else could I do?” Dearest, can you think of more than one answer to a question like this? I couldn't. And 1 shall have a big fine house, with a room in It for my little momsey whenever she wants to come to visit me. However, I think that after our mar­ riage I shall have Dick tattooed Just a little on the wrist with a bird or a flower so I can tell him from Tom, if I don't have it doue before. MABEL. DEEP SEA ANIMALS. Hou Th one Who Live Below Vegetation Get Their Food. All “Naturally the fish of the deep por­ tions of the ocean are carnivorous, no vegetable life being found below 20C fathoms,” writes W. 8. Harwood in Harper’s Magazine. "In the Atlantic ocean the vast Sargasso sea, containing 3,000,000 square miles of surface-a great marine prairie as large as the whole of the United States exclusive of Alaska and dependent islands- affords vegetable food for uncountable ani­ mals, which in their due time die and are precipitated to the depths, their bodies in turn to be eaten by the ani­ mals which live far below all vegeta­ tion. So it Is throughout the whole ocean; animal life is constantly falling from the surface waters for the sup­ port of the animal life of the abyss. A very large number of tlie deep sea an imals are exceedingly tenuous or trans­ lucent In form—so to put it—having no special organs of nutrition, but taking In their nourishment through the walls of their bodies, appropriating from the water the food which suits them. Some of them have a bony structure, a skele­ ton, which they form also from the water, silica and carbonate of lime l>e- ing the chief skeleton forming mate­ rials.” ORIGIN OF A PHRASE. MGettlnsr Into • Scrape” Comes So Us From the Game of Golf. Not till quite recently has the trus explanation of the phrase, "getting into a scrape,” been popularly known. It has long puzzled dictionary makes«, one suggesting that it is a corruption of escapade, another connecting it with a Swedish word skrap, to draw lute difficulties. Golf, the royal and ancient game at one time peculiar to Scotland, has of late become such a worldwide amuse­ ment that the mystery of this phrase !>•>•> prartl'nily disappeared. In Scot land muuy of the golf courses are laid out on sandy downs bordering on the sea These are the very places where rabbits abound. One of the perpetual troubles of s golfer was that his ball constantly found a lodgment In these rabbit “scrapes,” from which It was diffi­ cult to drive it with accuracy; hence special rules were framed at St. An drew's, the Mecca of golf, fixing what was to be done when one got into a •crape, The phrase thus started from the golfers in the north and spread southward without Its practical bear Ing be.ng known.—IxiBdon Chronicle. June 30, at 12. Dearest—You will never believe wbat las happened, I can hardly believe It myself. First, the wedding came off with great eclat—that’s wliat they call It in the papers, Isn’t It?—and Della was a lreatn In her little white dress we had made her. I had on my dress you gave me and looked pretty fnlr, considering. tVc had beautiful flowers, and the Can Always Tell. twins were magnificent. “There goes a total failure.” You couldn’t tell which was which, “How do you know he Is?” ss usual, until Dick stood with Della “He’s always sneering at other men’s it the altar, then walked out with her success.”—Cleveland Leader. to the tune of the wedding march. And He Knew Ton. that left Tom with me. Meekly -YÄ. we’re going to move to We drove, all four of us. to the home of the bride, and Tom and I concluded Swainphupit. Woctor-But the climate to walk back again throng* the hedges Yhore may disagree with your Wife. and byways, listening to the wblppoor-g Meekly - It wouldn’t dare! first tuunel under the Hudson. a tube AUTHOR AND REFORMER. through which the pasoeuger traffic karsrtrr aad Career ut ike Bril, from street ear lisst Hasaiaa. Salla Gurkx, llue-i In* New . Jersey The Gram! Duke Vladimtr would Wil) fiud Illi outlet Ike to hang Maxim Gorky, the Russian to New Yotk with ►former, novelist and poet. It la re­ out , use of ferry- port«! that Gorky has been arrested boats. He is t also ■ hns use of his activity in the revoiu rand duke vladimik of tl.e engineer iu fionary events now In prqgress tn the liussla lias proved Ulinteelf a x'harge of the 1’euu vigorous opponent of tbg peo­ Sylvania railroad's lomain of the czar. He is one of th« ple In that country who are project by which tom m It tee of eighty which Las been working for a’ more liberal govern ­ trains will CHARLKM M J ACOBR lirmeit to act as a provisional govern railroad ment. It was under his orders that be run under th« Blent in case of the success of the revo­ the St Petersburg troop« fired ou the Hudson, under Manhattan Island and lutionary movement and was by the workingmen who sought audience with under the East river to that part of the czar at the Winter palace In order Greater New York known as l.oug Is­ Bide of the priests. Father* Gopon and to ask redress for their wrongs. He land City. The tunnels of this system Sergius, when they led the workingmen Is held dlr«'tly responsible for the will meet in Manhattan Island at Thir­ toward the Winter palace on the day brutality which resulted in the death ty-second street and Seventh avenue, »f the first massacre by the troops. A of women aud children as well as de­ where there will be a great central sta­ boy at bls side fell mortally wouuded. and men were slain all around him. fenseless and peace loving men. tion. Three years ago Gorky was spirited Had the Emperor Nicholas II. died Mr. Jacobs overcame great obstacles before the birth of his sou, the Czar- In bringing to completion the first Hud­ iway by the secret police while going owitz Alexis, the crown would have son river tuunel, and devices he em­ from St. 1’etersburg to Moscow. The passed to tlie Grand Duke Michael, ployed reduced the accidents and loss university students of that city liad ar­ the czar's younger brother. The lat­ of life through disease lu the construe ranged a reception for him at the rail­ ter’s health Is delicate, and his death tlou of the tuunel to a minimum. He way station, but the police quietly un­ would have meaut the succession to built u tunnel under the Thames in coupled the carriage at an Intermediate the throne of the London, and It was iu the English cap station and sent it off, with the novel­ Grand Duke Vladi­ ltal that the lute Austin Corbin of the ist Inside, to another place. Gorky «i>ent several months In prison mir. He is the Long Island railroad discovered him. present emperor's Mr. Corbin engaged him to plan im­ in 11(03, but such continement did not uncle and is the provements the Long Island road had lessen Ills opposition to Russian despot­ eldest brother of then in contemplation. Mr. Jacobs, who ism. He has become wealthy through the late czar. Alex­ is now on the shady side of sixty, is still the large sale of his books and has a ander III. He is a in full vigor, and his soldierly bearing well appointed but shuply furnished personage of great and firm mouth give the impression of home at Nijul Novgorod, where he lives—when the police allow him to do Importance, as in a man of much strength. addition to being commander general Grand Duke Sergius, uncle of the of the military dis­ czar of Russia, who has left his palace trict of St. Peters­ in Moscow and taken refuge in the ORAND DI KE burg he is the em­ kremlin, where he hopes to be out of VLADIMIR. peror's confidant reach of the revolutionists, tills had a and one of bls most trusted advisers. career full of troubles. He hns always Though bls recent action hns won him possessed the capacity of getting him­ the enmity of the working people, the self disliked. When he was governor Grand Duke Vladimir lias been more general of Moscow he once gave an or­ popular with the Russians than most der that the horse races should not be­ of the “ducal ring.” for he is a man of gin until lie and his party arrived. He Integrity, is a brave soldier and has happened on a certain occasion to be an steadfastly shunned the vices which hour and a half late, and the delay thus have made the careers of some Rus­ caused came near resulting in bls be- sian grand dukes disgraceful. His Ing removed from office by the czar, wife, who liefore her marriage was the so great was the storm made over the Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwe­ Incident. rin, has many graces of character At another time he gave orders that which have won her popularity among all church bells of the capital be rung her adopted countrywomen. when he or the grand duchess went Thomas Dixon, Jr., whose new novel, to prayers in the "The Clansman,” lias just been pub­ old cathedral. But lished, is a picturesque figure in lit­ this order was not erature. Ills life has been crowded obeyed, much to the with dramatic and texciting Incidents. anger and chagrin While pastor of the People’s church In of his royal high­ New York he was once Indicted on a ness. M. Joanniky, MAXIM GOKKY. charge of criminal libel for Ills pulpit the metropolitan of bo — with his beautiful und gifted wife, Moscow, firmly de ­ attacks on city officials. When the who was Katerina I’aulowna PJeseh- warrant of arrest was served on him clined to allow the GUAM) DUKE kowa, daughter of a Russian officer he set about looking up the records of mandate to be exe­ -I n s. of noble birth. They have several chil­ the members of the grand Jury which cuted. When called had indicted him. Then he denounced upon for explanations, he said that the dren. Though much attached to home the jury from his bells of Moscow were only to lie rung and family, Gorky is known as "the pulpit. The proceed­ when the consecrated heads of the tramp novelist.” That is because lie ings were dropped. church proceeded to their devotions. was a waif and an outcast and lived a The author of The action, declaration and refusal of wandering life among all sorts of peo­ “The Clansman” is tlie metropolitan angered the grand ple as a boy and young man and thus a southerner, and duke, but he was powerless to force the saw a great deal of the misery preva­ his new story, like metroiMilitan to obey his instructions. lent among the Russian lower classes. Maxim Gorky is his pen name, bls a preceding novel, It is also said that the grand duke call­ “The Leopard's ed upon M. Joanniky to remove a priest real nnme being Alexei Maxlmovitch Spots,’’ deals with who was particularly obnoxious to the I’yeslikoff. His birth occurred in 1808 the race probleu* in imperial prince's eyes, but that the at N'ljnl Novgorod, and Ills father, the south. Since he metropolitan ngaln declined to do his who was very poor, died when his boy was five years old. Being left to shift retired from the bidding. The Grand Duchess Sergius was very for himself, he was bootblack, scullion ministry to devote T1IOMAS DIXON, himself to literature beautiful as a young woman. She is a and baker’s apprentice. He was so JR. Dr. Dixon has lived niece of King Edward VII. and. it is discouraged at one time that lie at­ on a large estate In Virginia. There Is said, came within an ace of being em tempted suicide. But he was a great plenty of good hunting and fishing In press of Germany. The story Is thut reader and began to write, his first the vicinity, and the author Is very but for Bismarck's machinations the story seeing the light about fifteen years ago. Tolstoi once called him "the fond of both. In concluding the story kniser would have married her. second free man In Russia,” the first of one of his fishing excursions he once being Tolstoi himself. wrote: ST. ISAAC’S CATHEDRAL. ”1Ve landed them with rod and reel and made the score 105 bluefish. Tired, wet, ImpoaiiiK St. Peteraburv Edifice hear THE NAME AMERICA. Scene of Recent MfiMHcre«. with the bottom of our boat covered Not far from the. Winter palace in When It Wnn First Proposed For the with blood, our clothes from head to Newly Found Continent. foot covered with chum and fish scales St. Petersburg and near the scene of The name of Americn for the newly and the boat literally piled with fish, we the revolutionary activities which started homeward, What a glorious have excited the attention of the world discovered continent was first proposed day we had had! As we looked Into stands the most imposing and beautiful In the little volume put forth at St. Die, our boat ballasted with over a thou- of the churches of the Russian capital, in the Vosges, in the year 1507 by sand pounds of fish for once I was con- St. Isaac's cathedral. This splendid Wnldzeemuller, better known by the house of prayer was ls>gun In 1811» and Hellenized form of his name, Ilyin- tent.” finished hl 1856. Its style of archi­ comylus. Three or four editions of this The British colonial secretary recent­ tecture is simple, but the grandeur of treatise were published nt St. Die be­ ly appointed tlie famous novelist II. the proportions upon which the church fore 1507, and a few years afterward Rider Haggard, author of “She” aud is built makes it exceedingly Impressive. an edition without date was printed nt “The Brethren," a commissioner to in­ There are four great entrances, and Lyons by Jean de lu Place. All these quire into the conditions of the agri­ the photograph reproduced herewith editions are of extreme rarity, and cultural and industrial land settlements shows one of these. The pillars of the probably that printed at Lyons Is the ■jtanlzed In America by the Salvation rarest of all, though the library of the Army. It is said the trustees of the British museum possesses two copies »state of Cecil Rhodes are paying the of It. It has never been suggested that expense of tlie inquiry with the view of any maps were engraved to accompa­ applying tlie scheme to South Africa. ny either of the editions, but it has al­ It may be news to many that Mr. Hag ways been supposed that the earliest gard is regarded as an expert on agri map with the word "America” marked cultural subjects. He was the advo­ on tlie now found world was the "Ty- cate of a scheme to carry cabbages pus Drills," engraved on wood for tho and other garden product« by mail. It "Ennrrationes Joannls t'nmortls In <’. was his Idea that one of the most seri­ Julll Sollnl Polylstora,” printed nt Vi­ ous obstacles to profitable farming in enna in 1520 for Joannes Singrenlus. England might be In this map the new world is represent­ overcome if the gov­ ed ns a long island, on which is tlie In­ ernment would In­ scription: "Anno d. 14117 liaec terra cum augurate an agri­ adjacentibus Instills Invents ost per cultural parcel post, Columbiim Ianuenscm ex mnndnto re designed to carry ev­ gls Castello. Americn provlncla.” erything from cab­ bages to hay, freight BRET HARTE AS A HUNTER. charges to be paid In postage stamps. The lleHNNurl iik WennHice He Receiv­ He wrote a book en­ ed After wn Accident. titled "Rural Eng­ During the time he acted as United II. RIDER UlO- land," elaborating States consul in Glasgow Bret Harte OARD. his ide««., on the occasionally Indulgeil In a day's sport subject. Tlie novelist has a farm of his ST. ISAAC’S CATHEDRAL, ST. PETERSBURG, with the gun, und it was during one of own, consisting of some 400 acres. He portico are monoliths of polished gran his shooting excursions that the famous Is greatly Interested in South Africa, lte sixty feet in height. Over the cen­ American author met with an nccldent some of his best known stories having ter of the cathed’ai rises a great dome w’tH». might have disfigured him fbi the!? scene cf action <11 that part of the covered with copper overlaid with gold. the remainder of his life, his face t>e- world. This dome Is supported by thirty giant Ing badly cut through the recoil of an The author is very gHilant to the fair pillars of polished granite. The sanctu overloaded gun. Fortunately the doc­ sex. Mrs. Haggard not long ngo want- ary of the cathedral is a work of great tor's skill prevented him from being el to engnge a "lady help”—a title beauty and was presented by Prince permanently mnrk«l. given to gentlewomen who through ne­ Demldoff, owner of the malachite Writing about the occurrence to his cessity take positions ns tipper serv­ mines of Siberia. The cost was $1,- friend, T. Edgar Pemberton (who ants and generally overs«» the affairs 000,000. The steps are of porphyry, quotes the letter in Ills "Tribute to Bret of tlie household. To this step Mr. the floor of variegated marble, the Harte’’», the novelist concludes his let­ Haggard was decidedly oppos«l. dome of malachite and the walls of ter by telling of an amusing effort "Now, I warn you. If you get any lapis lazuli. which was made to console him on sc- ‘lady help' In this house I’ll give her count of the accident. Not Enrosrsglns. my sent and wait on her myself." “When tho surgeon was stitching rpe “Good evening,” said Borem when together," he wrote, "the son of the The Haggards hnve no "lady help.” she came down to him. “I really must house, a boy of twelve, came timidly New York city, with Its subways and apologize for coming so late, bnt the to the door of my room: subaqueous tunnels, finished, under cant"— “ 'Tell Mr. Bret Harte it's all right,' “Oh,” she Interrupted coldly, “I don’t he said. He killed the hare.’” way And projected, is The scene of a vast underground activity .requiring mind late comers. It’% the late stayers There Is no animal that exerts less the exercise of high engineering skill. that bother me.”—Philadelphia Ixsiger. energy In the course of a year than the Much of the success {hus far met with T«nr Lap. woodchuck. He feeds upon the liest In in Hie tunneling si the Hudson and Children are notoriously eager to ac­ the meadow and oecasionally In the gar­ East rivers Is due to the skill and in­ ventive genius of Charles M. Jacobs, quire facts. The following question den, being very fond of the juicy peas who stands In the front rank of the was asked by a lad of seven after he and beans and tender lettuce. Then as had ridden upon his uncle’s knee: winter comes on he forgets all care and engineers of his time. Mit Jacobs is chief engineer of the "Hay. Uncle Will, what becomes df wo«y. crawls Into his burrow and, New York and Jenagr Railroad com­ your lap when you stand up?”-— like tlie bear, falls asleep, mA to awaken till spring -St. Nicholas. pany, which recently completed the Youtb’a Companion. Names Seen Ln • the * Dax'v News G