J2L - 3 WHAT HAVE WE .Wo dhnll do flo much In tlio years to como, But what hnvo wo dono today? VTe ehnll glvo our gold In a princely nam, lint what did wo glvo to-tlay? Wo Bltnll lift tlio heart and dry tho tear, We shall apeak the words of lovo and cliccr. But what did we speak to-dny? Wo nlinll bo bo hlnfl In tlio after-n-whUc, But what hnvo wo been to-day? Wo nlinll bring to each lonely llfo n stnllo, But what hnvo wo brought today? Wc shall glvo to truth a grander birth, And to steadfast faith a deeper worth, Wo hnll feed tho hungering 8ou1b of earth. But whom huvo wo fed to-day? i ft 1 Wo shall ronp mich Joys In But what hnvo wo sown We Bhnll build us mansions But what hnvo wo built Tin sweet In Idle dreams to bask, But hero nnd now do wo do our tnuk? Yes, this Is tho tiling our soul must ask, "What havo wo done to-day?" CZuleUn Intclllgonccr. s B set XI KEEPING DARK HWANT you to toll mo what has become of Colonel Durnnd," said Lady Waters, about a fortnicht fcefore Christmas, and her disappoint- Aleut wns perfectly unmistakable when 1 expressed my Inability to enlighten Iker. , "Every ether person I moot la ask- It&g tho same question," I returned. . "I can't understand it In tho least," he continued. "I confess I begin to feel taamensely uneasy. I ovon went W far as to call at his house " Wasn't ho nt home?" "AI all events, his man admitted he la London. I met him throe Weeks ate at dinner nt Mrs. Norcutt'B. pad he kept us all amused the whole rralaf. Mrs, Norcutt was saying af Merwanls that no ono could possibly bo iler) ae kad a ton who must bo neur it M" t a eye," I asked, "Isn't Cap Mifci Dwa&i expected homo from In- . Afrit. I believe," said Lady Wmtmn. "Yes," sho added, "Colonel ghiaaatf la certainly the youugcst-look-mg mi far his ago in London and M ef the handsomest and pleusunt et. But I can't understand what has 4c opened to him." "Ok well," I Bujreested. "nerhnns te has run down a bit, and prefers to tow." "lie was engaged to dlno with mo )hra days after I met him at Mrs. Nor uttV she explnlnod, "and his letter iff excuse didn't scorn oven to bo writ- 'fes by himself "A woman's hnnd- "Ye cp," sho answered, and a short iftlCBce followed. "IIo must bo nlouo nrllk enly tho servants In Ills house," lm4j Waters continued. "Bart are you certain he is there at I suggested. "1 an not certain of anything," she "I feel extromclT uncertain. (ere la en of the most popular men lie society, who suddenly putt) off ail lUe evtfements refuses to see nny Key, deesn't even write his letters 'HaiBflf. There's mystery In tho face Ma servants: they havo evidently laeeetved special instructions. Now." My Waters added, "I want you to 'clear the matter up." "But how?" "If I conkl tell you how I could ffebnbly act for myself," buo nnswor "but I havo knowu Colonol Durnnd ( geod many yonrs, and I can't help Reeling nuxlous. Something," she In Ototcd, "must bo done." 1 admit a dealro to stand well with Xady Waters, ul though In the present ease it seemed dilllcult to eeo how it 'inras posslblo to gratify hor. Ah I had explained, she wob by no means the 'enljr person to wonder what had oe furred In connection with Durand, who had Ih effoct suudeniy disappeared from his friends. After eotiBldcrablo roflcctlon the only 'feasible plan appeared to bo n Jour sey to his houso in Muuchostor street, wbcro he had lived alone since his 'wife's death, over four years ago vfkoro mora than ouco I hnd boen en teriaiucd nt his munll and very select parties, than whlqh none in London mtsro more cnjoyauic. "Celenel Durand is not at homo, sir.' 4d tho builor, and I placed ono foot ewer tho threshold. "Net out ef Loudon?" I suggested. "No, sir," Ia iho eoloncl quite wcIlV -Quite well, air." "Jlo tlouwu't uppeur lo havo received ewgr-of Liu frhmdi very recently?" "Net yevy receutly, air." "1 nruute." I nexstoted. "that, ai 4heh Ue hi 'not mt homo' t rlsJtorw hweuci yanuuu w aemuuy aHH. hi the DONE TO-DAY? tho by and by, to-dny? In tho sky, to-dny? "IIo is not at homo to visitors, sir," was tlio discreet answer, so thnt I re turned to Lady Waters no whit wiser than I left her. "You didn't attempt to bribe tho but ler," she suggested, whereupon I ex plained that I did not care to bribe any member of n friend's household. "Besides," I added, "tho butler used to be ono of the colonel's regimental servunts; the two left the army to gether, and ho is absolutely Incorrupt ible." "Well," said Lady Waters. "I can't pretend to be satisfied. One hears of tho strangest things. Why should Colonel Durand rcfuBO to receive nny body? Why doesn't he write his own letters? No one outside his own house has oeen him for three weeks, nnd you must admit the affair has a mysterious appearance." I did not dispute tho statement for an instant, although I had no doubt tho colonel had some excellent reason for his retirement. In my case, I did not seo my way to take any further stops In the matter, and, Indeed, both L.auy Waters and myself were ou the point of leaving London for Christ mas. It was the second week In Feb ruary before we met again, nnd then she sent me an urgent summons to her house. "Now," she exclaimed, before I had been a minute In her drawing room, "I am determined that something must be done!" "What about?" I asked, not think ing of Durand at the time. "About tho colonel." "Good gracious!" I cried, "you don't mean to say that he Is still keenlnc dark?" "As far as I can gather," she re turned, "no one has seen him. He has not been to his club I can't meet a man who has entered his house." "Are you certain he is there?" "Absolutely. I have been two or three times this week. The butler ad mits he Is in London, but when I ask ed to see him I was simply told 'not at home." "Then," I said, "there has been no news of Durand for longer than two months." "If I don't arrive at some explana tion before this day week." cried Lady Wutera, iii her most determined man ner, "I shall intorm the police." "Rut of what?" I demanded. "I am tormented by all kind of nun plclons," she answered. "lie tmy hare been murdered" "Oh, but " "It Is quite possible," eIk- f4ktML "and his servants may be in e splraey to net In this way to throw persons oil tho Beent." "Durand might never forgive you If you called public attention to his af fairs," I urged. "Ry tho bye, have you thought of writing to him?" "Of course I hnvo written." she re torted. "1 have begged him to pee me, hinted that his friends are anxious." "Well?" "I received an answer in the Bnme woman's hand," Lady Wnters coutln ued, "assuring mo that there was not tho slightest causo for anxiety, and that ho would ask his son to como to see mo soon after his arrival next month." "Earlier than you anticipated?" "Of course," safe! Lady Waters, "that may be a slip, and Colonel Du rand may not havo received my let ter." ISnger for Lady Waters' sako as well as for Dura nd's to prevent the mlstako ,of informlnff tho police of her suh plclons, I thought the matter over the suine night, with the remdt that I de tarmitittl roycLf to wrlto i the colo nel. Sitting: down at once, I made r clean breast of things, explaining that his old friends, tormented by anxiety, hnd mado up hdr mind to communicate with tho authorities unless her ularm should bo allayed by tho following Monday. IIo must have received my letter in duo courso the next morning, for nt 11 o'clock an answer was deliv ered at my door by hand. Breaking tho seal with not a little excitement, I saw that the short note wuB written by a woman not very well written to tho effect that Colonel Durnnd would bo happy to Bee mo at 3 o'clock tho same afternoon. I confess thnt I had seldom felt more curious or more Impatient for a few hours to pass, for, tax my ingenuity as I might, it seemed dlfllcult to hit upon n probable explanation of Dumnd's retirement "Will you walk this way, sir," said tho butler, and, somewhat to my sur prise, ho led me past tho drawing-room door, up a second flight of stairs to a room at tho back of tho house. "If you will wult one moment, sir," Bald the butler, as ho cautiously open ed the door and about 18 inches fur ther in tho room I saw a second door (obviously a rocent addition) covered with black bnize. When tho servant Invited mo to enter tho narrow space between the two I confess to uncanny npprohenslons, the moro when the out er door was closed and wo stood In the most total darkness. A moment later I was ablo to advance within the room, but this also was in such darkness that It wns impossible to distinguish the position of tho window. Though the day was cold, no flro burned In the grate. I heard tho door shut, and as sumed thnt tho butler had retired, but I felt afraid to go further into the black room, lest I overturn some arti cles of furniture. A second Inter, however, I recognized Durund's voice "That you, Merchant?" "Aro you there, Durand?" I cried, and then I felt a hand on my arm. "Let mo lead you to a chair," he said quietly, and presently his hands were on my shoulders as ho pressed mo down. "But what on earth makes you sit In the dark?" I demanded. "I'm going to tell you though I should have preferred to tell nobody. It's a case, however, of saving one's self from one's friends. You're the first man I have seen since that dinner at Mrs. Norcutt's early in December." "Lady Waters met you therel" "My eyes had been bothering we," he continued, "and I had an appoint ment with Ramsay, the ophthalmic surgeon, the following day." "Good heaven," I exclaimed, "you have not lost your sight?" "Not not yet," ho answered; still in the samo self-controlled voice. "But 1 am going to lose It You understand there Is not the slightest doubt about It. My blindness Is absolutely certain a mere matter of weeks. My my boy Is on h'a wny home. You see, 1 should like to see the denr chap's face once more. I cross-examined Ramsay. Ho said thnt if I lived entirely in the dark, kept quiet, didn't smoke or drink, 1 might Just manage to hold out" "My dear follow " "There are only a few weeks more," he continued. "I believe I shall do It" "Do you mean," I said, "to tell tne you have been stuck up here In total darkness since December " "A ray of light" ho answered, "would absolutely destroy my chance of seeing old Donald. Ifa five years, you know. We haven't met since his mother died " "But haven't you tried to hasten his return?" "One hates to mako a fuss," said Durand, "And, you understand, I don't want to see the chup with a long face. He Is ou tho way, and I believe I am going to hold out So now you can tell Lady Waters that there's no need to send the police. PerhupB both she and you won't mind keeping It to your selves. Now," ho added, as I heard him rise from tho chair, "I am going to ring for Banks to take you nwny." I stood by his side, scarcely know ing what to say, until, first the outer door wns opened nnd shut, then the Inner. "Let me guide you," snld Durnnd, nnd I turned In the darkness n moment later, gripping his hund. "How on onrth do you get through the dnys?" I oxclnlmed, almost In spite of myself. Durnnd laughed far moro cheerfully than I could have dono. "Hoping I shall got a look at old Donald," ho nnswered. Tho Sketch. Htm WtiH tfoing. Hoax My wlfo went out to shop to dny and lost a pocketbook containing 520. Joax Did sho loso it going to tho stores or coming back? Honx Jolng. I eald there was monoy in it didn't I? Philadelphia Record. Itookofollor'a Grant Flower Garden. John D. Rockofoller is to have a flower garden at one ef his summer homes which will cost $50,000. The plana for it were drawn by hla son. The cheaper the ahow, the more It ruxtu lo ptoiwto m& tafrare. ptTujyence, Water now supplies 1,500,000 horso power for electrical work, about one third of it in tho United States. Henry Fuchs, who died recently at San Francisco, was the Inventor of barbed wire. It Is said that he made n fortune from his Invention, but lost It all In Alaska when he went in search of gold. Somo observers hnvo doubted the reality of N-rays because they havo been unable to seo the brightening of a phosphorescent screen. Mr. F. E. Hackett now claims to have measured the brightening, quantitatively, nnd has found that unnnnenlcd glass in creases the brightness 10 per cent and a silent tuning-fork 3 per cent According to Professor W. S. Frank lin, tho most Important things to be considered in placing and adjusting a lightning-rod are a good ground con nection and a direct path to the ground. This matter of directness of path is so vitally necessary that in comparison with It the insulation of the rod from the building, either by air spaces or glass supports, is of small Importance. In fact, Professor Franklin holds that "if the path is di rect there is no need of insulation, and If tho path is roundabout, effective in sulation Is not practically feasible." A curious motor not likely to bo put to practical use haa been devised by M. Leboyer, a French experimenter. After careful search he has discovered a stone called the donilte of Auvergno In which water rises by capillary at traction to a height of four Inches. Placing two square sheets of this stone vertically in a basin of water, he sus pends from them pieces of saltpeter sonked fungus, nnd bencnth this puts n little wheel with blottlng-pnper pud dles. As the water passes from the stone to tho fungus, the latter wets tlio blotting-paper on one side of the wheel, causing that side to fall. Evap oration then lightens tho lower part of the . wheel while another portion is mnde heavy by wetting, rotation be ing thus set up, the rate varying with the state of the atmosphere. In discussing before the St. Louis Academy of Science the origin and evolution of glass lenses as aids to eye sight Dr. O. Barck contradicted some widely accepted opinions on this sub ject For instance, he found, as the re sult of on examination of historical authorities, that to the Egyptians, the Greeks und the Romans glasses were unknown. This Is in contravention of tho common statement that Nero used glasses to correct his near-sightedness. Spectacles, Dr. Barck says, were In vented by two Italians, ArmatI and Spina, at the end of the thirteenth cen tury. At first only convex lenses were used, but after about two centuries concave ones were employed. Thomas Young discovered tlio use of cylindri cal lenses In 1801, nnd the astronomer Airy applied them for the correction of astigmatism in 1827. Bifocal spec tacles were Invented and first used by Benjamin Franklin In 1785. FRIGHTENED BY UMBRELLA. First Uaed n the United 8tate Created a Sensation In Streets. How many persons know that Bal timore 1b the American home of the umbrella; that awuy back in 1772 tho first umbrella ever seen in the Unite I States marched through Baltimore town with a man under it; that good old colonial dames ran for their lives at sight of it; that horses hopped fences and tore wildly from meeting house posts; that barmaids in yo tav ern ran to doors and windows to hois the show, while yo Btar dipsomaniac shouted with "much power nnd great vigor" thnt ho would never touch an other drop; thnt 6ranll boys threw stones nt It, nnd that the town was in an up'ronr? Yet such Is history. A book In the city library says It Is so, hence It must be bo. In fact, there Is not the slight est doubt of It for tho night wnt?h (who Avas called night watch because he worked In the dny) sent in n riot call and re-enforcements were only prevented turning out because there wns only one night watchman on the force In thoso good but somewhat un certain days. It Is to be regretted thnt the um brella was not mado here. It was a foreigner, thouch It was brought by n Rnltlmorean on a Baltimore ship from India. Imagine tho figure the gentleman must have cut In the eyes of the pop ulace as he meandered from the doelc with tho village gang nt IiIh buck and tho village dogs at his heels. There Is no record to show whether he was chased out of town on the quaint old charge of being possessed of tho devil or wns tnken gently but firmly to tho ducking pool and dropped In. But whatever huppened to him It is a very good bot that he did not wander around long without encountering a trouble factory of somo kind. Yet if ho lived it was to laugh. He lived to see others adopt the lmporte 1 Instrument which ut first cauflod a? much nppaehenfilon. He saw the Idea expand and broaden. The fame ef tb Baltimore umbrella traveled to Putt, delphla, and coon it woa adopted by the quakcra with much enthusiasm. Next it was heard of In New ork, whero tho Holland Dutch, who had! brought nothing with them from the l other side but the language they spoke, T marveled among themselves, saying "Verily, this la n good thing to push along." And thus from town to town tha umbrella craze sprond. Tho bicycla mnnla of later years was nothing com pared to It, nnd tho "auto" craze 1st no worth mentioning In the same breatbii y Everybody scrambled for nn umbrella. V Babies cried for thorn. They became the fashion. They became inseporabta, frora tho village sages, who could uMJ think except they walked and whw could not walk unless they had thclc umbrellas under their arms! or may hap over their heads. The umbrella became a badgo of rank and dignity, And all because away back In 1773 a lone man walked through Baltimore town carrying ono, tho first umbrella seen in this part of tho world. CLEVELAND At HOME. Placid Life of the Ex-Pro Bldeut I Princeton, N. J. Lunch at Westland is served at 1 o'clock, when the children return from" school. Several hours later, If tbt weather is fine, the carriage is madf1 ready, and Mr. Cleveland with Mra Cleveland and one or more of the fan lly drive about the town or along om of the many delightful country rond In tho vicinity. The horses are baya, and If not fast, arc safe and service able. Dinner, the formal meal of the da at Westland, 1b served nt 0 o'clock, During tho evening, If tlio family II alone, Mr. Cleveland gives his time tt his children until their rctlrlng-houn, or talks with Mrs. Cleveland. Verj often he reads. The ex-Presldeut U deeply interested in works of hlstorl cal or political character, but he occa slonally devotes attention to a good novel or a work of lighter theme. If guests are visiting the houso, Mr, Cleveland Is not averse to a game of billiards, at which he showB a consid erable amount of skill. Tho routine of life at Westlan moves easily. It is a placid, altogeth er happy existence. Tho ex-President is a prime favorite among the neigh bors, and the lively interest he takes In local affairs, including politics, hat endeared him to all Princeton. When he walks abroad, which he often does, he is approachable and always ready for a talk with any one who greet him.' Mr. Cleveland's connection with Princeton University is a source ot considerable enjoyment to him. though not a regular member of tlr faculty, as Is generally believed, the several lectures he delivers each yeni In fulfillment of a lectureship bequesl gives him a seml-offlclnl attachment He Is on the best possible terms with the university staff, nnd the porch at Westland often contains a gntherlng composed of such distinguished men n8 Professor Frothlnghnm, the emi nent nrchneologlst, and Dr. Van Dyck. For the past few years an address te the students by Mr. Cleveland forms a regular feature of commencement exercises at the university. At these functions the ex-President conforms to all the rules of col lego eti quette, and appears In a black gowa, a mortar-board and the gorgeous black-and-yellow bow of an LL.D. Mrs. Cleveland also takes great interest la college affairs, and she Is a conspicu ous figure in the audience. Woman'! Home Companion. Der Ate Up Ills Turnips. A farmer at Fibre, In the upper pen insula, has a grievance which he hai laid before the Secretary of State. Ix a letter to the department ho says: "I want to explain to you that tht deer have eaten all my turnips. I had two acres of turnips nnd now I hnvi not got a turnip, and they havo de stroyed two acres of my pens. They nave made a complete sweep of both and I can prove It If necessary. Now, gentlemen, If you are gentlemen, ns I suppose you nre, you will net like men with me nnd pny me for their damage. I value tho peas at ?15 an aero and the turnips at ?20 an acre. Now, gen tlemen, If you do not pny me some thing for the grain nnd roots I will put nn end to more deer thnn all the hunt ers from tho lower peninsula. Now," I would like to explain tho matter ts you. They do not mind a scarecrow in the least. Now, the game Inws sny deer enn not be killed only In Novem ber. Do you suppose u mnn has got to let his crop be destroyed about ItA Now, I have nothing to feed my hoga,"F i-i i: i lull iiiuuni:, A Itootor. "Why does he lead the yells?" "Because he hopes to become a pro fessor of languages." "How will leading tho yolls hel him?" "Why, It's Just another form of ex tracting tho roots." Olevoland Pluin Dealer. If you are so mart, answer thl Why does a berae eat grass backward and a cow forward. I - -V.