A HAPPY VALENTINE. If I could bo a valentine, j ti I know what I would do. -vju I'd got Into nn onvolopo And travel straight to you. ' .".. And it tho postman didn't know Your namo Is Baby Dear And whoro you llvo, I'd shako bis bag As soon as bo was near. And then with nil my might I'd Jump And run across tho street. (I'm suro Unit ho'd Jump, too, to And A Valentino bad feet.) I'd ring tho boll and r(ng tho boll A mlnllto and a hal And whon you camo and saw 'twas I, Oh, ray, bow we would laugh! Anna M. I'ratt. . They say alio Is out ot duto In this end ot tho nineteenth century, but that 1b wrong. Hho mny bo more coy, moro rotlcont, moro cluslvo, but ebo Is still with b. On each 8t. Valentino's day eho pecpn trom her casement window, clthor literally or llguratlvoly, with Just as enticing a glance; hor smiles nro no loss alluring; her olgho croato fully as much huvoc. Perhaps sho no iongor pins bay leaves to her pillow to tempt fate, or makes a pretonso of drawing hor lot from a bundlo of names written upon slips of material papor all that was but form at best. Tho Hprlto ot tho Valentino know well who was her fato wjthout ,bucu oxpodieuts. And sho knowB'lt now. Tho eyes of common mortals might lio blinded, but hor bright eyes looked clearly into tho futuro and saw thoro tho chained captlvo whq raveled In his chains. Hho read some tender verso and smiled at its Innocence oho who was nil inftoconco hcrsolf, yet glftod with that prescient boiibo of prophecy, or foroknowlcdgo, against which tho clumsy reason ot mortal swain was as liolploBS au tho wIIch of au Infant. Hho smiled and no mystic rlto could bo moro potent. Hhu guvo ono glanco from boncath tho witching frlngo ot hor long lashes, and no other sorcery was needed. Tho samo Is truo today. Uood St. Valentino was n martyr, they tell us, and boiuo can suo no pro prioty in naming this lovers' day for mm; but to my mind tho lltucss Is moat striking. How many a torturod heart has gone tn its martyrdom nt tho oyenttdo ot this dayl Even escaping that, how many a soul has been plncod upon tho rack by tho coquetry ot somo maiden sweet at this samd crucial timol For tho Valontlno Sprlto 1b truo to her box, in splto ot tho traditions that hem hor In and tlx hor placo as eonio meek cnptlvo awaiting tho docroo th.aU shall Rend her rejoicing into whatever arms aro stretched out to rocolvo hor. Do not deceived. Hho has docidod upon tho arms long bctoro, and they aro held forth at her will. Hho may tiave spoken no word save ot tho coy tbut the has willed. Ah, how de ltt4d are they who cast a pitying cyo iffnouah the love lauahsat pe hearts witha$sioffwn$tantalow iOWRwpstneim;evfrDrishtftn(iiwarmv, upon womnn for her lack of tho power to chooso and to plead I Know yo not, my lordB of creation, that by far tho most frequently yo nro tho chosen and not tho choosers? It sho wills you to como you come. It sho wills you to speak you speak, and, moro than that, sho has tho added power to send you away empty If so her caprice decides. This in tho common llfo of every day. What, then, might bo expected In tho mystic tlmo when lovo rulos all? At lonst, Valentino Hprlto holds royal sway. If oho wills your mlsslvo 11 lea to hor. If oho wills sho oven binds a snowy mcssago to tho wings ot Mer cury and bids him speed with It to hor chosen valontlno, for who shall say hor nay? Tho Valentine Hprlto mistakes not whom she chooses hlm'sho holds. liorotoforo, my' brothers, I havo warned you, though tho warnings wero vain, but against this onchnntrcss I cannot bid you stool yourself, for tho soft witchery of her innocent smilo has scaled my lips, and I know not whothor this maiden with tho childish graco and tho woman's wiles bo most a bless ing or a snnro to you. I can only toll you this your struggles against her will amount to naught but your own comploto captivity, for with each piungo you sink dcopor tho arrow that has pierced you. This much of tho mystery, however, I can roveal to you: Mortal maid Is tho Valentino Hprlto until that fateful morning whon tho littlo winged god tiles from chambor to chamber and touches slooplng eyes with tho feathor end ot his arrow, then speods htm on his way before tho whlto lids uncloso In wonder and tho sweot glances go forth with tho wisdom that Cupid alono can glvo and each one Is touched with tho powor of his arrow point. Mortal maid sho Is not from that hour until tho going down of tho sun, and man la utterly helplesB against tho subtlo witchery ot this mystic, love- created bolng who beckons him Into Elysium. Andiyou, O youth, who scoff at tho tlmo-honored prlvllcgo of sending to some lady fair upon this day ot dayB a plea from your heart, hidden and Bhrlncd within boiuo dainty, perfumed nest ot beauty, or who turn with n SHE PEEPS FROM HUH CASEMENT WINDOW. laugh from tho memory plcturo ot your great-great-grandfather burled deop In tho lover's ecstasy and tho poet's rapturo, as ho pons tho words which shall bo his heart mossago to his heart's dcslro, do not too lightly set aside tho good old custom; at letftt, wmtrtutMsmav blow. :kmp6st and at storm: 3 put It away with tender rovoronce, for tho spirits of those olden rites aro not to bo flippantly consigned to oblivion. On every hand tho Valentino Hprlto uprises, nn avenger for any slight, however small, which Is offered to hor patron saint. In tho midst of your scoffing you hear n whisper nt your heart. You blush and sigh and frown, but you lis ten, nnd you feel tho pressing of tho arrow point. "Lovo, lovo, bo wholly mine; Como nnd bo my valentine! " How did tho music of It got into your brain 7 From that tlmo forth you sigh and serve. But this Is vengeanco that tho Valentino Sprlto exacts. In tho end you aro left walling In tho soil tudo of your twentieth-century superi ority: "Love, love, bo wholly mine; Como and bo my valentine!" But it may- not bo. Whllo for you, spirit of manly lovo, with tho reverence of tradition in your heart and tho loyal longing In your soul, there Is a kinder fato. Tho Val entino Sprite, with her dower of mystlo wisdom, shall not beckon you but to taunt. In tho far dlstanco of the futuro years that bind you to her I hear tho echo ot a tender strain:' "Lovo, lovo, so wholly mine, I am still thy valentine!" O poor Mr. Postman, you never will know What ilno things you're carrying there! What dear little doves, Just as whlto as tho snow, What roses bo blushing and fair, What nice littlo Cupid's, so smiling nnd fnt, What Bwoet littlo verses, all rhyming bo pat. 0 poor Mr. Postman, I'm sorry for youl 'Tl3 a vory hard lot, I must say, To carrry such lovely things hidden from vlow, Nor get ono pcop Inside them nil day; And when merry St. Valentino's ended nnd dono, Tp havo given thorn all nwny, every ono! 13. H. THOMAS. A NEW KIND. 'Twas Just tho nicest valontlno That camo to mo today; A protty box, and on tho top A littlo lettor lay, Which Bald: "I know a little maid, She Isn't far to seek; No dainty wild roso pctnl Is pinker than hor chcok; Thcro is no shining hazelnut That's browner than her cyo. Just look within tho box, my dear, This littlo maid you'll spy." Ot course I was in hnsto to sco So fair and swoet a lass. I raUod tho lid, within I found A tiny looking-glass! Helon S. Perkins. Death of Lincoln "Now ho bolongs to tho ages." Tho curtain had Just been rung down over tho llfo of tho martyred president In that humble littlo room opposite the thoator whero tho president had, a few hours, before received tho bullet of tho assassin Booth. E. M. Stanton, sccrotnry of war, gavo uttoranco to tho words quoted. How prophetic; how true. Centuries henco tho namo ot Abraham Lincoln will still retain Us rightful placo in history. Tho president had been carried up tho high steps, through a narrow hall, and laid, still unconscious, still mo tionless, on tho bod ot a poor, little, commonplaco room ot a commonplace lodging-house, whero surgeons and physicians gathered about In a desper ate attempt to rescuo him from death. Whllo tho surgeons worked tho nows was spreading to tho town. Every man and woman tn tho theater rushed forth to tell It. Some ran wildly down tho streets, exclaiming to thoso they mot, "Tho president Is killed! Tho presi dent Is killed!" Ono rushed In a ball room and told It to tho dancers; an othor, bursting Into a room whero a party ot eminent public mon wero playing cards, cried, "Lin coln Is shot!" Another, run ning Into tho auditorium ot Grovor's thoator, cried, "President Lincoln has been shot, In his prlvato box, In Ford's theater." Thoso who heard tho cry thought tho man lnsnno or drunk, but a momont later they saw tho actors In a combat cnllod from tho stage, tho manager coming forwnrd. His faco was palo his volco agonized, as ho said, "Ladles and gentlemen, I feel It my duty to say to you that tho announce ment niado from tho front ot tho the ater Just now Is truo President Lin coln has been shot." Ono ran to sum mon Socretary Stanton. A boy picked up at tho door ot tho house whero the president lay was sent to tho Whlto Iioubo for Robert Lincoln. Tho nows Bpread by tho very forco of Its own horror, and as It spread It met other news no less terrible. At tho samo hour that Booth had sent tho ball into tho president's brain a man had forcod his way into tho houso of Secretary Seward, then lying In bed with a broken arm, and had stabbed both tho secretary and his son Frodorlck so so rlously that It was feared thoy would die. In bis entrance and exit ho had wounded threo othor membors of tho household, Llko Booth, ho had es caped. Horror bred rumor, and Secre tary Stanton, too, was reported wound od, whllo later It was said that Grant had beon klllod on his way north. Dread solzod tho town. "Rumors nro bo thick," wrote tho editor ot tho National Intolllgcncer, at 2 o'clock in tho morning, "tho excitement of this hour Is so intenso that wo rely entire ly upon our reporters to advlso tho public ot the dotalls and result ot this night ot horrors. Evidently conspira tors ar among us. To what extent does tho conspiracy exist? This Is a terrible question. When a spirit so horrlblo as this is abroad, what man Is safe? Wo can only advlso tho ut most vlgllanco and the most prompt measures by tho authorities. Wo can only pray God to shield us, his worthy people, from further calamities llko these." Tho civil nnd military authorities prepared for attack from within and without. Martial Jaw was nt onco established. Tho long roll was beaten; excry exit from tho city was guarded; out-going trains wero stopped; mount ed pollco nnd cavalry clattered up and down the street; the forts wero or dered on tho alert; guns wero manned. In tho meantime thero had gathered in tho house on Tenth street, whero tho president lny, his family physician and intlmato friends, as well as many prominent officials. Before thoy reached him It was known thoro was no hope, that tho wound wns fatal. They grouped themselves about tho bedsldo or In the adjoining rooms, try ing to comfort the weeping wife, or listening awo-strlcken to tho steady moaning and labored breathing ot the unconscious man, which at times could bo heard all over tho house. Stanton alono seemed ablo to act methodically. No man felt tho tragedy moro than tho great war secretary, for np one in tho cabinet was by greatness of heart and Intellect eo well ablo to comprehend tho worth ot tho dying president, but no man In that distracted night nctcd with greater energy or calm. Sum moning tho assistant secretary, C. A. Dann, and a stenographer, ho began dictating orders to the authorities on nil sides, notifying thorn of the trag edy, directing them what precautions DEATH OF LINCOLN "HE NOW BELONGS TO THE AGES." (From tho Palnttns.) to take, what persons lo arrest. Grant, now returning to Washington, ho di rected, should bo warned to keep closo watch on all persons who camo closo to him in tho cars and to sco that an cnglno bo sent in front of his train. Ho scut out, too, un ofllclal account ot tho assassination. Today tho best brief account ot the night's awful work remains tho ono which Secretary Htun ton dictated within sound of tho moan ing of the dying president And so the hours changed without perceptible change In the president's condition, and with only slight shift ing of tho sceno nround him. Tho tes timony of those who had witnessed tho murder began to bo takon In an ad joining room. Occasionally tho tlgures at tho bedsldo changed. Mrs. Lincoln camo In at Intervals, sobbing out hor grief, nnd then wns led away. This man went, another took his place. It was not until daylight that thoro camoN a perceptlblo change. Then tho breath ing grew quieter, the faco became moro calm. Tho doctors at Lincoln's sldo know that dissolution was near. Their bulletin of 6 o'clock read: "Pulso fall ing;" that of G:30, "Still falling;" that of 7, "Symptoms of Immediate dissolu tion," and then at 7:20, in tho prosonco of his son Robert, Secretaries Stanton, Welles and Usher, Atty.-Gen. Speed. Senator Sumner, Prlvato Becrctnry Hay, Dr. Gurley, his pastor and several physicians and friends, Abraham Lin coln died. Thero was a prayer, and then tho solemn volco of Stanton broko tho stillness, "Now ho bolongs to the ages." Two hours later tho body of tho president, wrapped In an American Hag, was borne from tho houso lm Tenth street, and carried through the. hushed streets, whero already thou sands of flags were at half-mast and the gay buntings and garlands had been replaced by black draperies, and whero tho mon who for days had been cheering In excess of Joy and relief now stood with uncovered heads and wet eyes. Thoy carried him to nn Up per room in the prlvato apartmentB of the whlto houso, and thoro ho lay until three days later a heart-broken pooplo claimed their right to look for a last tlmo on his faco. LINCOLN AND THE SENTINEL. In an artlclo in the Century entitled "Our Follow Citizen of tho Whlto Houco," Mr. C. C. Buel told tho follow ing story of Prcsldont Lincoln: "Thoro havo been no soldiers ns guar dians under tho shadow of tho great Ionic columns since war; and oven then, on ono florco winter night, tho boy In blue who was on guard was not allowed to maintain professional de corum. Mr. Lincoln emerged from tho front door, his lank figure bont over as ho drew tightly about his shoulders tho shawl which ho employed for such protection, for ho was on his way to tho war department, at tho west cor ner of tho grounds, whero In times of battle ho was wont to got tho midnight dispatches from tho field. As tho blast struck him ho thought of tho numb ness of tho pacing sentry, and, turning to him, said: 'Young man, you've got a cold Job to-night; stop Insldo and stand guard thoro.' " 'My ordors keep mo out here,' tho soldier replied. " 'Yes,' said tho prcsldont, In his ar gumontlve tone, 'but tho duty can bo performed Just as woll inside as out hore, and you'll oblige mo by going In.' " 'I havo boon stationed outsldo,' tho soldier answered, and resumed his beat. '"Hold on thoro!' said Mr. Lincoln, as ho turned back again; 'It occurs to mo that I am commander-in-chief of , the army, and I ordor you to go In- V HIUUi i