TAKE HE Alii , The litt le pin that sharply pricks, A mmiMttln. mwmtt, of wtw; ?h I It r Its wond hand that ticks HtttMIIH I tut n nut and slow, But dine outlives our little pain Tin iMMiimd Imml moves on; Ami sre we ntu tin pace again The weary buur in none. -Nw York Recorder. THE VOICE OF SCIENCE. Mrs. Ksdnile, of the Lindens, Birches pool, whh h ludy of quite remarkable sclen Nlle attainment. An honorary secretary of the lad left' brauch of the local Kn lectio octety bite shone wltli a never failing bril liance. It wo even whispered that on the occasion of the delivery of Professor Tom llnsou's suggestive lecture on the "Peri genesis of the Plastldule" she whh the only woman tn the room who could follow the lecturer even uh far an the end of his title. It would have been a strange thing had Mm. Esdirile not Iwcn popular among local scientists, for ber pretty house, her charm ing grounds, and all the hottpitallty which au income of j),0(JU a year will admit of, were always at their command. On her pleasant lawns In the summer, and around ber drawing room fire in the winter, there was much high talk of miuroiiee and leucocytes and sterilized bacteria, where thin, ascetic materialist from the univer sity upheld the importance of this life against round, comfortable oompanione of orthodoxy from the cathedral close. And In the heat of thrust and parry, when sci entitle proof ran full tilt against inflexible faith, a word from the clever widow, or au opportune mule over the keys by her pretty daughter, Rose, would bring all back to harmony once more. Roue Esduile had just passed her twenti eth year, and was looked upon an one of the beautieH of Ulrchespool. Her face was, perhaps, a trifle long for perfect symmetry, but ner evw wore ftue ner oxpreanion kind ly and her complexion beautiful, It was an open secret, too, that she had under her father's will 5UU a year in her owu right With such advantages a far plainer girl than Hose Esduile might create a stir in the society of a provincial town. A scientific conversazione iu a private house Is au onerous thing to organise, yet mother and daughter had not shrunk from hm tjub (hi t.lm mnrninir 'of wliinh I write they sat together surveying their ac complished lawrs, with the pleasant feel ing that nothing remained to be done save to receive the congratulations of their friends. With the assistance of Rupert, the sou of the house, they hud assembled from all part of Uirohespool object of scientific Interest, which now adorned the longtuhles In the drawiug room. Indeed, the full tide of curiosities of every sort which had swelled into the house had overflowed the rooms devoted to the meeting, and bud surged down the broad stairs to invade the dining room and the passage. The whole villa had become a museum. Specimens of the flora and fauna of the Philippine is lands, a lU-foot turtle carapace from the Gallapagos, the os f routia of the Hon montls as shot by Captain Charles Beesly in the Thibetan Himalayas, the bacillus of Koch cultivated on gelatine these and a thou sand other such trophies adorned the tables upon which the two Indies gased that morning. "You've really managed it splendidly, ma," said the youug ludy, craning her neck up to give her mother a congratula tory kiss. "It was so brave of you to un dertake It." "I think that will do," purred Mm s dalle complacently. "But ldo hope that the phonograph will work without a hitoh. Vnn lriinur at. t.lm ttnt miwf.lnir of llie Hrit. lsh association J got Professor Standerton to repeat iuto it his remarks on the life history of Medusiform Gouophore." "How funny it seems," excluimed Rose, glancing at the square, boxlike apparatus which stood iu the post of honor on the control table, "to think that this wood and metal will begin to speak just like a hu man being." "Hardly that, dear. Of course the poor thing can suy nothing except what Is said to it. Vou always know exactly what is coming. But 1 do hope that it will work all right." "Rupert will see to It when be oomes up from the garden. He understands all about them. Oh, ma, I feel so nervous." Mrs. Esduile looked anxiously down at her daughter and passed her haud caress ingly over her rich brown hair. "I under stand," she said in her soothiug, cooing voice, "1 understand." "He will exiect au answer tonight, ma." "Follow your heart, child. I um sure that 1 have every confidence in your good tense and discretion. 1 would nut dictate to you upon such a matter." "You are so good, ma. Of course, as Rupert says, we really kuow very little of Charles of Captain Beesly. But then, ma, all that we do know Is in his favor." . "Quite so, dear. He is musical and well informed, aud good humored, and certain ly handsome. It Is cleur, too, from what lie says, that he bos moved in the very highest olroles,' "The best in India, ma. He was an In timate friend of the governor general's. You heard yourself what he said yester day about the D'Arciea and Lady Gwen doline Fairfax and Lord Montague tiros Venor." "Well, dear." said Mrs. Esdaile resign edly, "you are old enough to know your own mind. 1 shall not attempt to dictate to you. lown that my own hopes were set uoon Professor Stares." "Oh. ma, think bow dreadfully ugly he is." "But think of his reputation, dear. Lit tie more than thirty, aud a member of the roval society." i "I couldn't, ma. I don't think I oonld if there was not another man in the world. But, oh, I do feel so nervous; for you can't think how earnest be is. 1 must give- him an auswer tonight But they will be here In an hour. Dou't you think that we had better uo to our rooms r' The two ladles had risen, when there earae quick, masculine step upon the stairs, and a brisk young fellow, with "All ready?" he asked, running his eyes over the 1 ue of relic strewn tames. "All nuulv. dear." answered his mother. : ... "Qh, i am glad to catch you togother." 'mild he, with his hands buried deeply In j his trousers pockets and an uneasy expres sion on his race. "There's one thing that I wanted to speak to you about. Look here, Rosie, a bit of fun Is all very well, but you wouldn't he such n little donkey to think seriously of this fellow Beeslyl"' I "My dear Rupert, do try i be a tittle I less abrupt," said Mrs. Ekl.-IUi, with a 1 deprecating hand outstretches. 1 can t help seeing how tluy have been thrown together. 1 don't want to be un kind, Rosie, but I can't stand by and see you wreck your life tor a man who has nothing to recommend him b.it his eyes and mustache. Do be a sensible girl and have nothing to say to him.'1 "It In surely a point, Rupert, upon which 1 ni more fitted to decide than you can be," remarked Mrs. JfiHdaile with dignity. "No matter, for I have been able to make some inquiries, Young Cheftington, of the gunners, knew him in India. He says" But bis sister broke In upon his revela tions. "1 won't stay here, ma, to bear him slandered behind his bock," she cried with spirit, "He has never said anything that was not kind or you, Rupert, and 1 dou't know why you should attack him so, It Is cruel, unbrotherly." With a sweep and a whisk she was at the door, her cheeks flushed, her eyes sparkling, her bosom heaving with this little spurt of Indigna tion, while close at ber heels walked ber mother with soothing words, and an angry glance thrown back over ber shoulder. Rupert Esdaile stood with bis hands bur rowing deeper and deeper Into bis pockets and his shoulders rising higher and higher to bis ears, feeling intensely guilty, and yet not certain whether he should blame himself for having said too much or for not having said enough. Just in front of him stood the table on which the phonograph, with wires, bat teries and all complete, stood ready for the guests whom It waB to amuse. Slowly his ' political system has developed certain de bis hands emerged from bis pockets as his feots, but no effort is made to get rid of eye fell upon the apparatus, aud with lan guid curiosity he completed the connection aud started the machine. A pompous, husky sound, as of a man cleuring his throat, proceeded from the instrument, and then in high, piping tones, thin but distinct, the commencement of the cele brated scientist's lecture. "Of all the In teresting problems," remarked the box, "wbt oil are offered to us by recent re searches In the lower orders of marine life there Is none to exceed the retrograde met amorphnsis which characterizes the com mon tiaruocle. The differentiation of an amorphous protoplasmic mass" Here Rupert Esduile broke theconuection again, and the funny little tinkling voice ceased j as suddenly as it beftan. The young man stood smiling, looking 1 down at this garrulous piece of wood and metal, when suddenly the smile broadeued t Bcore 0f the baseball games, or the die and a light of mischief danced up Into his coyeries of reporters relative to the latest eyes u. siappeu n.s mgn, anu uanoeu carefully he drew forth the slips of metal ' which recorded the learned professor's re- j marks, und lam them aside fur future use. Into the slots he thrust virgin plates, all : ready to receive an impression, und then, bearing the phonograph under his arm, he vanished into his own sanctum. Five minutes before the first guests had arrived the machine was buck upon the table, and all ready for use. There could be no question of the suc cess of Mrs. Ksdaile'R conversazione. From first to last everything went admirably. People stared through microscopes, aud linked bauds for electric shocks, and mar veled at the Ualiapagos turtle, the os front is of the Bus moutis and all the other cunusiuc wmeu n. uu uaui uu dependenoe aud engrave it in facsimile such pains to collect Groups formed and 1H;uw . chatted round the various cases. The ; 00 WPP"- He earned the preciouBdocu dean of Birchcspool listened with a pro- ' went to the printing o&oe of one Peter testing Up while Professor Maunders held ' Force. When everything was is reach forth upon a square of trlossic rock, with ness, he placed it upon the imposing side thrusts occasiouully at the six duys of orthodox creation; a knot of specialists disputed over a stuffed ornithorhynchus in a corner; while Mrs, ksduile swept from group to group, Introducing, congratulat ing, laughing, with the ready, graceful tact of a clever woman of the world. By the window sat the heavily mnstached Captain Beesly, with the davhter of the House, ana tney tiiscussea a prooiem or their owu, as old as the triassic rock and perhaps as little understood. "But I must really go and help my moth er to entertain, Captain Beesly," said Rose, at last, with a movement as if to rise. "Dou't go, Rose. And don't call me Captain Beesly; cull me Charles." "Well, then, Charles." "How prettily it sounds from your lips! No, now, don't go I can't bear to be away have disappeared beyond recall, all on from you. I had beard of love, Rose; but account of the thieving trick of a gov how strange it seems that I, after spend- ernment which, when they found that ing my life amid all that is sparkling and gay, should only Und out now, in this little provincial town, what love really is!" "You say so, but U is only a passing fancy." "No, Indeed. I shall never leave you, Rose-never, unless you drive me away from your side. And you would uot be so cruel you would not break my heart?" He had very plaintive blue eyes, and there was such a depth of Borrow in them as he spoke that Rose could have wept for sympathy. "I should be very sorry to cause you grief in any way," she said, In a faltering tone. Then promise1 "Wo, no; we cannot speaK or it just now, . artist, and is herself a painter in a small and they are collecting around the phono Wtty Stevenson has been accused of graph. Do come and listen to it. It is so throi,ting hi8 8iater8i hiB COuhui8 and his "Never ''Vey0U eVW U aunu' into' fiction. Certainly, although "It will amuse you immensely, and 1 Fw-ny SteveiiBou has produced some am sure you would never guess what It is creditable work as Mrs. Osborne, she going to talk about" .bad uo reputation for brilliancy in a very "Whatthenr" clever San Francisco set ; There she was "Oh, I won't tell you. You shall hear, introduced solely in thecapacity of chap Let us have these chairs by the open door; enm t(, 8tuiling( m her black silk it is so nice and cool." gown, while bergay littledaughter sang subdued hush as Rupert Ksdaile ipade the 3omiau club man-New York Times. connection, while his mother waved her j . ,., 1 - , white hand slowly from left to right to i Prosperity In Costa Rica, mark the cadence of the aouoroiw address which was to break upoo'ttteir ears, "How about Lucy .Aramintu Penny feather?"' cried a' squeaky little voice. There waa a rustle and a litter among the audience. Rupert glanced auross at Cap tain Beesly. He saw a drooping Jaw, two protrudiug eyes aud a face the color of uuww. . , "How about little Martha Hovedean, of the KuiihuI Choir union)"' oricd the piping voice. , Louder still rose the titters. Mrs. Es daile stared about ber In bewilderment. Rose burst out laughing, and theoHptain's jaw drooped lower still, with a tinge of green upon the eiieeselike face. . "who was it who hid the ace in the ar tillery card room at Pashawurf Who was it who was broke In consequence? Wbo ; was it"- Good gracious." cried Mrs. Esdaile, "what nonsense Is this?" The machine is out of order. Stop It, Rupert, These are not the professor's remarks. But, dear me, where is our friend Captain Beesly gone?" "I am afraid that he Is not very well, I ma," said Rose. "He rushed out of the room." "There can't be much the matter," 2110th Rupert, "There he goes, cutting own the avenue as fast as his legs will carry him. I do not think, somehow, that we shall see the captain again. But I must really apologize. 1 have put in the wrong slips. These, I fancy, are those which be long to Professor Standerton 's lecture." Rose Esdaile has become Rose Stares now, aud her husband is one of the most rising scientists in the provinces. No doubt she is proud of his intellect and of his growing fame, but there are times when she still gives a thought to the blue eyed captain, and marvels at the strange and sudden manner iu which he deserted her. -Strand Magazine. A Frivolous People. I maintain," said a shrewd observer recently, "that the American people are becoming frivolous." When he was asked what evidence he could bring to prove bis assertion true, he replied: I want no better evidence than their indifference to serious public affairs. Our them. The people of some of our largest states submit to 'boss rule which thev could crush forever by giving attend ance at caucus and the polls for three consecutive years. "See, too, how a system of frequent and prolonged holidays has developed. We work fewer days and fewer hours in the day than our fathers or even our elder brothers did. Every one seems to be forever looking forward to vacation, like a schoolboy. "And what do they read? What do you read? When you open your paper m tne morning, to What ao you turn urstr io me proceedings oi congress, or the great happenings St home or abroad? I trow not. You look at the ntkmti murder, or at some other Dever heari fore, and who dragged before the public by circumstances in wmcn tne public ougnt not to nave tne smallest interest. This is a harsh judgment, but it can- not be denied that there is enough truth in it to cause us to pause and remember with the poet that "life is real, life is earnest." Youth's Companion. stealing the liuclaratlon of Independence. When James Monroe was president and John Quincy Adams secretary of state, an ingenious English engraver ob tained permission of the two dignitaries 1 mentioned to take the Declaration of In- stone and laid a sheet of india paper of the same size upon it. Tine india paper was next moiBtened with water in which gum arabic had been dissolved. A heavy proof roller with a weight hanging from each end was then rolled several times over the historic document. When the india paper was removed from the face of the instrument, it took with it at least one-half of the ink used in writing and signing the document The document is less than a century and a quarter years old, and with proper care should be almost as legible as it was on the 6th day of July, 1776. As it is, only 11 signatures out of the 58 can be reud without a glass, and some of them they could not keep the colonies depend ent, stole the very ink, from the docu ment which declares our independence. St. Louis Republic. The Wife of Robert Louis Stevenson. Mrs, Robert Louis Stevenson is a port ly . gray haired woman, who was agrand luother and looked it when she mar ried tbfe second husband. Her son Lloyd, who collaborated with 8teveuson in the ghastly tales, "The Wrong Box" and "The Wrecker,1 was a middle aged man before he began to write. Her only oth er child is the wife of Joseph Strong, the We mav Infer that Co f Rka 1b enlov- ing a period of prosperity-; ,. m the fact that the toiul receipts from traffic over the rail ruadHuf that country from July, 1891, to July, amounted toll,885,,of whioh $407,000 came from passengers, $513,000 from exports and f4r,lt,(iw from unports, an ex- cww 0f pur 0f exports over im- ports. THE BREECHES BUOY. An Ajiparatn That Han ftaved Many Lives oil the Atlantic Coast, Wonderful are the appliances now used on the Atlantic coast for rescuing people from wrecks, and an optimist might And a world of argument io the contrast between those times and those when the wreckers thought only of their booty or, farther "act. wnen snipwrecKea men were seized and held to ransom. The array of lifeboats, ropes and other outfitting fortbe life saving station is extensive, and one of the latest and best is the so called breeches buoy. wnen a vessel goes ashore on the sands of a shelving coast of New Jersey, for in stance, where wrecks are most numerous, the condition nearly always allows the surf men of the life saving stations to launch a lifeboat. It not, they bring out the Lyle gun. This is a small brass cannon, which has a projectile fitting over the barrel like a sheath over a sword. To the projectile is fastened one end or a stout cord. The gun is aimed to throw the projective over the ship and thus bring the cord within the reach of the men on the wreck. It seldom requires more than two shots to land the BOW THE BREECHES BUOT WORKS, cord. The sailors then pull it in and get hold of the rope to which It is fastened. When the end of the rope is hauled aboard, it is made fast to one of the masts. Mean time the surfmen are burying a sand anchor. This is a great square of planking, whose surface grips the sand in which it is sunk. To . it the shore end of tlfe rope is securely fastened. With the rope goes a loose trolley line, by which the men on the wreck haul out the breeches buoy an ungainly pair of canvas trousers hung to a circular life preserver. Into this one of the shipwrecked gets, stick ing a leg through each capaciouB hole and grasping the life preserver, which comes just under his armpits. He does not need to be tied in, for his seat is secure. All be ing ready, the surfmen ashore begin to haul in. The breeches buoy rolls rapidly shore ward, suspended from its hempen track. For most of the distance the man in the breeches is dangling above the water. When he reaches the surf, though, he is bound to get a ducking. He holds his breath as the wild waves go over him, and the nert min ute a dozen strong hands are pulling him up the sand beach and out of his canvas breeches. - When there are women aboard, there is a suggestion of the ludicrous. "Wearing the breeches" may be repugnant to a woman, but she does not hesitate a second, roil ing her dress up around her, in she teps as unhesitatingly, as though she were born to trousers. All she asks at that moment is to get ashore. The breeches buoy is voted the best thing in the business and has al ready saved many lives. HU Regard For HlmieK. The comfortable, well clad citizen was going along Woodward avenue home the other evening when a big, burly tramp stopped him and asked for a dime. The citizen looked him over and asked: "Do you have no more regard for yourself than to beg on the streets "That's just it, boss," was the reply, "It's because i have regard for myself that I do. There's too many dogs in the back yards, Detroit Free Press. Iu Politics It Is "Pull." From the Hopeful Young Man to the Pastor As 1 stand in the broad avenue of life 1 find so many closed doors I know not which one to open. How can 1 tell which will lead me to success? From the Practical Pastor to the Young Man There's only one, and you'll find it labeled "Push." Exchange. Saving and Spending. "I saved up $3.08 last year," said Wal- lis proudly. "And 1 suppose you spent it on pres ents for your papa and mamma?" asked the visitor. "Yes," said Wallis, "That is, all but $8 of it" Harper's Bazar. The man who, after studying a hun dred women, thought he knew the sex thoroughly, admitted, on intimate ac quaintance with the one hundred and first, that he was densely ignorant of the nature of any one of them. The living alumni of the University of Michigan are said to number twice as many as the living alumni of any other educational institution in this country. Harvard is reported to be next, with Yale a good third- It is said that when dressed in the European gowns a Japanese wife pre cedes her husband in entering a room, while m the eastern dress she must fol low him. j 1 Richter was fond of pets and at one time kept a great spider in a paper box, carefully feeding and tending the crea ture for many months. The Japanese say, "A man takes a drink, then the drink takes a drink, and . the next drink takes the man." Seats In the Bitnse of ('ommonst Members who are not officials or leaders of a party have to come down to the house several hours before it meets in order to(,et good seats, and those who are not very knowing or very pertinacious, on days when something interesting happens, have often great difficulty to find a place in which to sit. It is not to be wondered at that there are plenty of members who find such a state of things intolerable, and who hold that a member of parliament who wants to assist at a first class debate tn comfort should not be forced toadoptthearte which have to be practiced by those who want to hear a prima donna sing In a popular opera. Plenty of worry and inconvenience in other wiys have to be faced by the legis lators of the United Kingdom, and it is mon strous to add to these the nuisance of not knowing whether they will be able to take part in comfort in the work of parliament. The fuss and friction caused by the diffi culty of getting a seat is an aggravation to which members of parliament ought not to be subjected. That is a proposition to which all reasonable men might be expected to agree. But though we trust that the bouse will find sitting room for all its mem bers we most devoutly hope that it will not adopt the suggestion that each legis lator shall have opposite his seat a uesa where he can write his letters. Let the men who want to write do so in the writing rooms, but do not let us make the house of commons look like a colossal counting house. In nothing but In size would we alter the look of the house of commons. Its long green benches must rule the empire in the future as they have ruled it in the past London Spectator. , ( How He Escaped Tronble.- "Maria," he said as he entered the house, speaking before his wife had time to say a word, "this house ib in an awful condition." Why, Henry" she began. Don't try to excuse yourself," he inter rupted. "Look at this room! 1 was going to bring a friend home with me, but I re frained for fear the house would do just in the condition that I find it iu." If you had sent word, Henry." Sent word, Mariaf Why should I have to send word? Why should any one who claims to be a housekeeper have to be noti fied so that she can scurry about and make things look respectable? And that gown, Maria! It's outrageous to be dressed in that fashion at this time of day." 1 could have changed it" i 'Oh, of course. You could have done lots of things, but you didn't You should be ready to entertain your husband's friends at any time. I suppose the dinner is cold too?" It's not so good as it waa You're late, you know. "Of course, and if I had brought my friend with me he'd have had to sitdown to a cold dinner or one that was burned to a cinder, and we should have both felt humiliated and should have had to apologize. It isn't right, Maria! It isn't right at all." And after be had settled himseli in bis armchair after dinner he chuckled to him- : self and muttered: George! but I should have gotaroasting for being late if I hadn't started in first It's a great scheme." Boston Globe, The Habit of Sleeping. I can sleep through anything, " I heard a man exclaim a few davs ago during an argument about insomnia, "and in my opinion it is very largely a matter of habit- The reason for my thinking that way," he continued, "is simply this: I used to live In an exceedingly quiet street, where, after 10 o'clock at night, there would scarcely be a sound until 7 or 8 o'clock the next morning. So accustomed did I become to this cemeterylike stillness that the slight- . -. est sound would awaken me the slam of a door, the rattling of a window, or even voices in the street. After a time circum stances changrd and I found myself resid ing near the line of an elevated railroad, so close to it, in fact, that the rumble of the trains seemed to shake the very bouse. For the first week or 10 days sleep was almost an impossibility. It was to be dreamedoionlyinmy wakinghours. Then nature came to t he rescue, asserted itseli, . and I slept regardless of elevated trains, A year went by, and a concert hall was built within a stone's throw of the house. That provided anentirelydifferent kind of noise,, : and it took a little while before I became accustomed to it, but now I have overcome the effect of it and sleep like a top. Ele vated trains may go, brass bands may rack et, milkmen call and horse cars with then tinkling bells go by, but they do not dis turb my slumber." Brooklyn Eagle. No Literature of Nones. - It spite of the learned Slawkenbergius it is probable that no really valuable treatise on noses exists. A new edition of "Notes on Noses," originally published in 1848, has been issued. . Such a work needs the best illustrations possible from historical por- traits. The little wood cuts in "Notes on Noses" are useless. For some reason the nose is usually treated as a comical and unimportant feature. The novelist, sorich in details about his heroine's eyes, lips, brow, chin, ankles, hair and so forth, never says much about her nose, perhaps Up most agreeable sort of female nose is name less. It is Greek, with more vivacity, but nobody knows what to call it The ordi nary classes of noses are familiar and are made by the mind, not the mind by the nose, according to our author. The Bar dolphian nose, however, is created and col ored by solid personal industry. The Ro-v man nose receives great credit for energy, firmness, "absence of refinement and disre gard of the bieuaeances of life." London baturday Heview. Pitied the General. She had a French gardener. , Whatever accomplishments he may have possessed In -other ways, he was rather stupid aboijt n lawn duties. One morning his stupiditj was beyond endurance. She told him most emphatically what she thought of him and finished by saying; , "Now, Francois, you can go, I'll not have you another day." He went, crestfallen, to thestables, where her huHhand chanced to be. He looked at the general thoughtfully for a moment aud then said: -"Ah, general, I'm vftry sorry for you." "Why, what is the matter with me, Fran ooisf" said the general "Veil, I can go, but? must stay.'