1 ! I OLD FAVORITES Bieaal to the Roaiai, Friend! ( come not here to talk. You know too well Ilia atory of our thraldom. We an slaves! Vb bright iua risae to hie count, and lights A race of slaves! He lets, and bia'last brum Falls on a !av! Not uoa M, ep By the full tide of power, the conqueror lead To crimon glory and undying fame, But base, ignoble ilavea! Slaves to hurdw Of petty tyrant, feudal despots; lord Itieh in some hundred speannea, only great In thnt strange apell a name! Each hour dark fraud. Or open rapine, or protected murder, Cries out against them! But this Ttry day An honest man, my neighbor (pointing to I'aolo) there be etande Waa struck struck lik a dog by one who wore The badge of Uraini! becauaw, forsooth, lie tossed not high hia ready cap in air, Nor lifted up hia voice in servile ahouta, At aight of that great ruffian! lie we men And suffer such dishonor? Ilea, and wash not The stain away in blood? Suck bamas are common. I hare known deeper wronga. I, that speak to ye, . I had a brother once, a gracious boy, Fall of all gentleness, of calmest hope, Of aweet and quiet joy; there was tha look Of heaven upon his face which limners give To the beloved disciple. How I loved That gracious boy! younger by fifteen Brother at once and son: He left ray side; A summer bloom on his fuir cheeks, a smile Farting bis innocent lips. In one short hour The pretty, harmless boy was slain! I S.'IW The corpse, the mangled corpse, and then 1 cried For vengeance! Hn.ni ye, Romans! House ye, slates! Have ye brave sons? Look in the next tierce brawl To nee them die! Have ye fair daugh ters? Iiok To see them live, torn from your arms. distiiilicd. Dishonored, and, if ye dare call fur jos lice. Be answered by the lash! Yet Chi is ltnine, That ant on her seven hills, a in from ber throne Of beauty ruled the world! Yet we are Itomaus! Why, in that eldcT day, to be a Human Was greater than a king! And once a gain- Hear me, ye walla, that echoed to the tread Of eirher ISnttua! once again, I swear, The eternal city shall be free; her sons hal' walk with prince. Muey Basse!! Mitford. flier of the Kvenlnsr. Benutiful rtsr in heav'n so bright, i.ftly fulls thy silv'ry light. As thou movest f piuii earth afar. Star of the evening, beautiful star. Chorus: Beautiful star. Beautiful star, Star of the evening, beautiful star, lu fancy's eye thou seem'st to say, Follow tue, come from earth away. Cpward thy irit' pinions try. To realms of love beyond the sky. Shine on. O, star of love divine, And may our oui's nffts-tion twine Around thee as thou movent afar, Star of the twilight, beautiful star. -James M. Suyle. OUR SOLDIERS DRIVEN MAD, Philippine Climate ami Isolation He- poneible for (tiiicblal Mania, In an Interesting article In tlio New York Herald Stephen Bonsai, the fa m oiis war correspondent, discusses at length the remarkable prevalence of suicidal uiiiiilii among our soldiers In the Philippine. While nduiltfing (hut whisky tinil liathe pulMUi'Uis drinks of which our soldiers luie become enamored nro responsible fur h purl of the ninny eas of midden madness, which nro ko often attended with mur der unci suicide, he maintains thnt fully twice ns ninny lire due lo the climate, t 111. terrible lwinllou which the nun sometimes undergo; mid to 1be awful hi rn In to which (Vy me sometimes Hiilijwiiil In buttling with n wily and bldilen foe. To the deir us ing Isolation he Hltrlbu( s most of the cases of suicidal find luurderoiiH mania which results In ol!h cr and men nllke running amuck. We quote from the article one Incident from which Mr. Jlonsnl (.In mis sponsor: "The ollicer who lost Ills life In this instance was one of the most prom ising of iik n. I kin-w hltn well In tin trenches before Santiago and In (lie lonely Million In 1'"' Philippines to which hewn aflerwnid assigned, lie stood six fM I wo lw 'u s in his s-t ek lllg''. Was magnificently piup; rtl.-lieii, and was kbowu throughout th" '-r-vice is the hotidi-onicst tmin of hi rank, and din-re was certainly no one who gave mors certain promise of nn honorable career; "He til a (Indent, and It seemed to ma when I loft hi m In one of the ' lunelles! province of I.nxon that here win a roan iimii whose hands the time would 'not hang heavy ns long us be had 4ils district lo police, his men to take care of and bla military books to Siudy. "A few weeks after I left kin, how ever, he run amuck In hia own gar rison unl wounded ail men, two of whom afterward died. The night be fore the frenzy manifested Itself' he hud shown himself kinder to and more appreciative of hia men than ever be fore. He visited the hospital, and with hia own bands changed a bandage which be thought the hospital stew ard had arranged somewhat awkward ly. "He went to the guard house and liberated a man who had been detain ed for some minor offense. Then be went to bea, aud the ueit that waa seen of him, and the last, waa the fob lowing picture: At reveille ki the morning, as the men hastened to th parade ground, rifle balk came lip ping In their midst. "For a moment but only for a mo ment there waa confusion; then the hostile fire, which had already brought down two men, was traced to the cap tain's quarters. The first sergeant took command of the company aud acted promptly. It was evident to him and the men that the insurgents had sneaked Into the town during the night, murdered the captalu and Intrenched themselves In his quarters, becans that was the most commanding position In the town. Rallying round the sergeant, the men of the company In small skirmlshln squads charged the quarters. Whaf was their dismay as they drew ne:i to see the captain Intrenched behind mattresses and furniture, tiring upoi them with bis rifle as fast as the mag azine could be loaded. The sergeant In imminent danger of his life, par leyed -with him, but to no avail. Th men withdrew, and a telegram was sent to the district commander inform big him of the strange situation and asking for lnnLruetIons. "Before these came, however, th captain left his quarters and charged down through the barrack yard with a pistol In one hand and a knife In the other. Sis men of his company had been seriously wounded and fev eral natives, when at last one of the soldiers who was lying on the ground, almost helpless from the wound lit hud received, shot the captiiin in he was approaching with the evident pup pote of tinlshlng his victim." "Send by Inclosed (Jirl." An East Side druggist U preparing a unique scrap book. It contains the written orders of some ctiMomcrs of foreign birth, mid these orders are both curious and niuuslii;. Here are some that are copied from the original "I have n cute pain In Uiy child'i diagram. 1'leie give my toii some thing to release It." "Iieur liocther. pies git bearer five sense worse of Auntie Toxyn for garle baby's throat and obleage." "My little baby lias eat up Its filth cr's parish plaster. Send an ancc dote quick as possible by the inclosed girl." "This child Is my little girl. I send you five cent to buy two sltless pow ders for a groan up adult who ii sike." "You will please give the Iettle boi five cents' worth of epecac for to throw up In a tlve months old babe. N. B. The babe hns a sore Ktummlck." "I haf n hot time In mv ltisldes am! wlch I would like It to be extinguish ed. What is good f . r lo extinguish lt'i The Inclosed money Is the price of tin extinguisher. Hurry, pleas." LinlergrouiKl Waters. The earth contains an abundance oi Wiiler, even in places like some of oui great Western plateaus where the sur face Is comparatively arid. Tin greatest depth at which underground water can exist Is estimated to In about six nillis. Below that, it is be lleved, the cavities and pores of thi rock are completely closed. Tin amount of wuicr In the earth's crus. Is reckoned at nearly one-third of thai contained In the oceans, so that I would cover the whole surface of tin globe to n depth of from three t three thousand live hundred feet. Tin waters underground flow horizontal! after slnkl.'ig below the unsaturnte zone of the rucks, but in the sands oi the Dakota formation, which supplj remarkable Artesian wells, the motloi does not exceed one or two mlli-a i year. The underflow toward the set beneath I lie grent plains may some llnien take i lit form of broad stretuni or moving sheets of water. Hut tin movement Is excessively ilow. Italy's King's! bum in llnglish Throiu When Klin; Howard went to ltalj he met, nccordiiiK to the London Chron Iclo," a King who Is more of a Stiuir than himself. Both are deeenio from James.. 1 but the King of Itnlj Is also, through his mother, 11th Ii descent from Charles I. In strhr lli;lit, Victor Emmanuel has more rlgh to the British crown than his roya guest who wears It. But for tin Catholic re'l'icn. the Savoys woul( have been Installed to rule over Eng laud, mid not the Brtmswlcks, w hei the Smarts were evicted. After tin children of .lame II, tin; next ll blood -was the Kuchess of Savoy, (laughter of Itcnrletla, the younges child of Chillies I. But idic wns nf n I'rotestant, ami she was debarred Thus It was that the British crow I was pnss d fo the House of Itnins wl k by the act of settlement In 1701 Otherwise the Savoys would now 1 the royal family. Cue Siunn Anvils. So little have the Industries of Indh been nlTected by the British oceupa t ion that the native smith still forge locally made Iron on a stone anv, within eighty miles of the town o Kluiln. A married mau who tries to flirt, I nlsiut as ridiculous as a woman win tries to be coy after she hat reacbei the rtouble-chiu period. "The Adventures of Gerard" is the title of A. Oonan Doyle's new book. Mlas Caroline Brown has sent the manuscript of ber new book, "On the We-a Trail," to the Macmlllan Com asua. It Is a tale of Indiana In the closing years of the revolution. "The Pool In the Desert" Is the title of Mrs. Ever&rd Cotes' (Sarah Jeau nette Duncan) new volume of short storlea which D. Appleton & Co. will Issue. There are four tales in all, each said to be very Interesting. Myrtle Ueed's new uovel, "The Shadow of Victory," will be published by O. P. Putnam's Sons. As has been announced, this is a romance of Fort Dearborn, the little trading post from which developed the city of Chicago. Bliss Carman's first book of prose, "The Kinship of Nature," la announced for early publication L. C. Page & Co. It will be followed Immediately by "Sappho, One Hundred Lyrics," with au introduction by Charles ii. I), Roberta. "Ferns." by Dr. C. E. Waters, Ph.D., John Hopkins university, Is to be brought out shortly by Henry Holt & Co. The book describes all the ferni In the northwestern States anil Is In tended to cover the same territory as Gray's "Manual." Arthur Severn, the artist who mar ried Buskin's cousin and ward, Miss Joan Buskin Agnew, has nearly com pleted his "Recollections of Buskin," whloh should prove Interesting, con sidering the author's Intimate associa tion with Buskin and his great talent as a raconteur. The Macmlllan Company have just published a new abridgement of I.iri gard's well-known "History of Eng land," brought down to the present. An abridgement of this book has for fifty years been used in most of rhe Catholic schools of Great Britain ns the text-book In English history. It Is understood that Samuel Merwin completing a new novel, which w ill be called "His Little World." This story Is described a including the presentation of an original and strik ing character-a real man doi.-.g a man's work in the stirring shipping and lumber life of Lake Michigan. During one of his recent watidefings abroad Clifton Johnson visited tin; County of Wiltshire, where he sivuivd twenty-five of the finest picture- of nature and rural life. These photo graphs will be used to Illustrate, the new edition of Richard Jeficrles' well known work, "Wild Life In a .Southern Village," which Little, Brown i Co rwlll publish under the title, "An Enh' lish Village." aii important utile volume Is an iiounced by Houghton, Mifflin & Co by the late George S. Morisoii. former ly president of the American So-iely of Civil Engineers und classmate and close friend of John Fi.ske. "The New- Epoch as Developed In the M.uiuf.K ture of Power" is the cumprehei i-ive title of the essay, which bids uir ta iirouse no little Interest among selcn tints and others. James Otis Kaler, better known as James Otis, the writer of, stories for 'young people, is now at work on his ninety-fourth book, which is to be pub lished by J. B. Llpplncott Company When It Is added that all the Otis rbooks are yet on sale, It can be under stood that the author has made no fail ures lu the enormous amount of vo:-k performed. The new story from Mr. OUs Is to be. called, probably, "The Treasure Hunters." Jean's ltevenge. An avenger need not necessarily be a naturalist, but there are cases where lie would take his vengeance more fo the purpose If he knew the habits ol his victim. Llppeifcott's .Magazine tells a story of Jena, the Fri-m-li-Cii iiatllau gardener, who was found slumping on a little mound of fit-sh earth and chuckling to hlmsi If. "Ah, m'sleu'," he cried, triumph (intly, 'I inn not a one to be trilled "with! 1 am a cr-r-r-uel man when i.iice I inn mouse. .M'sii u' will renum ber the mole that lias long time rav iige the slrawbirry lusls of madamei Every morning iiiiulume she say, '.lean 'why catchest thou not that mole?' inn ine iiioio wiif wise; e Wiia iiieck. Always I look nml look, 1ml never can I find hcciu. But at insi tliees very inoinitig I catch heem. I hold heem tight In my hand- so and I say, 'Aha-n-a! Is !t thou, then that has vexed inadanie, nml rav. aged her beds of the strawberry? Alm-a! i ou shall repent of thexs wick etlness." 'Then I wonder how I shnll kill heem. He must be punished as well as klll 'd. I wonder and wonder, but at last I have the grand Idea. Ah, ,lt was cr-r-tiel, m'sleu', that way I kill heem! But what would you? Did he not deserve of the worst? But be will vex liiiulame no more. 1 fix hei-ru I bury heem nllve!'' Afraltl of EnuliKliinen. The Moscow Gazette, warns the gov iTiiineiil against allowing English liien to aotfle In the oil districts of (he rniiciisiiH, as the sltimtl, n may become the mime as that In the Transvaal be Ifore the war, When you are passing a house, and make remarks about the people on the porch, did you ever think they are say ing something about you? 38 EnDnTdDM als OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Fuel of the Future. aaaaiaB x waa recently calculated that the risible coal Jrjl T I supply which is never visible till it is brought VI I I to the surface, hence the real meaning is, the paarAaraastl calculated aupply would last the world for about a hundred yer.rs longer. But within a few weeks reports of remarkile discoveries of new beds have been brought from the Mid dle West, where anthracite is alleged to have been dis covered; from the South, especially in Tennessee, about 70 miles from Knoxvllle, and in the Peace River region of Atliabasca, where it i claimed that 250,000,(X)0 tons are "in sight." The supplies in China are also considerable and if Grant Land and Grinnell Land can be In future, there are deposits in those may be worked at a profit And In spite of the activities of forest choppers and burners, farmers, and others who utilize the products of the soil, the world is still putting forth so considerable a quantity of vegetation that the making of new coal may be going on, unconscious to us, and not to be completed for centuries. Every bog la a possible peat bed, and peat is but unliardened coal. The great fern forests and marshes of calamus that we are burning now under our boilers and in grates no longer exist, but we have certain of their ana logues, and no attempt has been made by scientific authori ties to estimate the mass or value of potential fuel that is being stored In odd corners of the earth to-day. But possibly the fuel of the future will be water. That Is, we shall not turn much of it, but we shall use it for heating purposes by converting the force of its fall into electric currents, as they are doing already at Niagara and on the upper Hudson. For our posterity the blazing hearth shall not burn; the family will collect about a steel plate, on cold nights, and do the cooking over a metal basket. Most of the wood will be obliterated by that time, and with them of course, the streams will go; hence we must look to see the power of the ocean converted to electricity. But it is a comfort to know that we have con! to burn for a few years. Brooklyn Eagle. Farms and rainier. N a long and thoughtful editorial, the Chicago Tribune of recent date dwells upon one feature in our agricultural situation that is far from reassuring to the man trained to think along American lines. Statistics are marshalled to sliowconvlneingly that the percentage of fann ers who own and operate their land has been IT steadily diminishing for years, tenant farming showing a corresponding increase, in 1880, 74.4 per cent of the farms were operated by their owners. In 18!X) the per centage hud fallen to 71.C, and by the census of 1'JOO is shown to have dropped to 03 7. Coincident with this decline lias been a gradual but very perceptible growth In the aver age size of farms. It was 13(1.5 acres in 18!H) and 14li.G acres in 19W. There can be no mistaking t he trend. It is in the direction of larger holdings and an increase of the landlord class. All this is to be expected by one who has studied the tendency of our people to flock into the towns and cities. The strength of this tendency is amply exhibited in census figures. Away buck in 1790 only 3.4 per cent of the popula tion lived in towns of 8,000 people or more. By 1800 this proportion had risen to lti.1 per cent. It was 22.6 per cent in 1880, and no less than 33.1 per cent In 1900. There Is thus outlined what almost amounts to a revolution in the last twenty or thirty years. Our farmers, having secured a competence, retire to the cities, where they may enjoy advantages not to be had in rural communities. Their land Is rented to tenants, and whatever of surplus income ac crues Is forthwith invested In Increasing their holdings. Their children, bred to city life, cling to it, so that farming Is more and more given over to the hands of those who have lot the Intelligence and energy that characterized the farmer of twenty years ago or more. It is not difficult to see In all this the operation of the same economic and lodal laws that have developed conditions In the Old STURDY AMERICAN FIGURE. Thomas Kwlnsr, Our Flrat Secretary of the Interior. Certain events In the Indian office have directed attention to that depart ment and have caused comparisons to be made between the present head thereof and the fl r s t secretary, Thomas Ewing. In sterling integrity they were alike; lu the experiences of their lives wholly unlike. Ewing Is one of those inter esting figures of iiiomas kwino. whom the student of Anierlcnii history finds so many. Horn near West Liberty, Ohio Coun ty, Vu., Dec. 2H, 17K0, lie was the son of a revolutionary father. It was In the region of Athens County, Ohio, liien unsettled, thnt he was reared. III.-: sister taught him to read, nnd In I he evenings he studied the few books at his command. In his 20th year he left his home and worked lu the Kana wha Suit establishments, pursuing his Kindles at night by the aid of the fur nace fires, lie remained there till he hud on mod enough money to clear rrom debt the farm his father had bought In 17!2, and had qualified him self to eiiter tlie Ohio University nt Athens, where. In 181,", he received the llrst degree of A. Ii. flint was ever granted In that section, lie then stud led law in Lancaster, was admitted to the bar In IKHi, and practiced with success for fifteen years. In 1S:i1-:i7 he served as fulled Slates Senator from Ohio, having been chosen us a Whig. He supported the protective InrllT system of Clay, and advocated a reduction In the rates of postage, a l ecliai ter of I he Fulled States Hank, and the revenue collection bill, known as the "force bill." Senator Ewing opposed the removal of deposits from the Culled Sttea Hank, and Introduced a bill for the settlement of the Ohio boundary ques tion, which was passed In 183(1. Dur ing the same session he brought for ward a bill for the reorganisation of the general land office, which waa pnssed and ho also presented a me morial for the abolition of slavery. reached more easily Arctic regions that is Hard n1K. Fresh T r T--" T? TO country every year. In July, J8.'M, the Secretary of the Treasury issued what was known as the "specie circular." This directed receivers In land office to accept pay ments only In gold, silver or treasury certificates, except from certain class es of persons for a limited time. Sen ator Ewing brought in a bill to annul this circular, and another to make it unlawful for the Secretary to make such a discrimination, but these were not carried. After the expiration of his term he resumed the practice of law. Ewing became Secretary of the Treasury in 1841, under Harrison, and in 18-1!) accepted the newly created portfolio of the Interior, under Taylor, and organized that department. Among the measures recommended in his llrst report, Dec. 3, 181!), were the estab lishment of a mint near the California gold mines, and the construct ion of a railroad to the Pacific. When Thomas Corwln became Sec retary of the Treasury In I.sr(l, Ewing was appointed to succeed him In (be Senate. During this term he opposed the fugitive slave law. Clay's compro mise bill, reported a bill for the estab lishment of a branch mint in Califor nia, and advocated a reduction in post age, ami the abolition of slavery In the District of Columbia. lie retired from public life in 1 sr. 1 and again resumed ins law practice in Lancaster. lie was a delegate lo the Peace Congress of 18H1. During the Civil War Ewing gave, through the press and by correspond enceand personal Interviews, his couu sel and Influence fo the support of the national authorities. While he de voted much of his lime to illticnl subjects the law- was his favorite study and pursuit. He early won and maintained throughout his life unques tionable supremacy nt the Ohio bar, nnd ranked lu the Supreme Court of the Fulled Slates mining the foremost lawyers of the lmtloti, In 182(1, just after his father's dentil, General William T. Sherman, then a boy of I), was adopted by Mr. Ewing, who afterward appointed him to (he Fulled Hlfltes Academy, nnd In 1S50, Wherman married Ellen, the daughter of his benefactor. Every big girl In a family complains that the children tag her when she rnns over to the neighbor's. World. They have been retarded by our institution, M doubt, and in case we adhere to present ideals, their fur ther action may not lie destructive to personal liberty and national virility as in other countries, ancient and modemv At the same time, there are few who will not regret that the day of the small, independent American farmer H giving way to that of the landlord. New York News. Money in Fact and fiction. HPCP ... . : , , . . . . mmuge nines in me accumulation ot I fortunes stranger than any fiction could ever I have made them. Think of it for a momentl anui-ew . arnegie, a canny little Scotcn Doy, came to this unknown land a few decades ago barefooted, and last year offered to settle the Venezuelan imbroglio between Germany, Eng land, France, and Italy and the South American republic by loaning Venezuela the entire sum of these international debts. And yet a fortune so huge as to permit of such offers is as nothing to the power of another man. Mr. Rockefeller, personally a quiet American citizen from Cleveland, a simple liver, with few habits of luxury, could easily buy half a dozen of the independent kingdoms of Europe; could without feeling it to any great extent in hia pocketbook take up the debts of all the republics of Central and South America. Again, in 1844, Alexander Dumas published a book called "The Count of Monte Cristo," the basis of which la the fabulous wealth of an individual. The Count finds a cave full of almost priceless jewels. He buys men's lives; he spends money everywhere; he comes to Paris with a notice from his Italian bankers giving him unlimited credit on a Paris bank. There is no limit on what he can draw from M. Danglers. It is entirely unprecedented. Nothing like it was ever known before. He draws five millions of francs, and ruins the banker, and still no complaint fronts his Roman house. He rights wrongs; he saves more lives" he punishes the guilty by the use of unlimited wealth. Andy then by and by he leaves Maximilian on the island of Monte Cristo with his bride and sails away. As Maximilian sees his ship disappear on the horizon, he finds Monte Cristo'a will leaving him his whole fortune. This fortune, Dumas suggests in two or three places, was one hundred million francs $20,000,000. It is the greatest private fortune the Frenchman could conceive of in 1S44 it is considerably less than the income of John D. Rockefeller in 1903. Harper'i Weekly. Working Human Heart. .t u - Siu-ula " wuu an apiuuue ior statistics has I been doing a little calculating on the subject of the human heart and its activities. The nor mal ueu.ii, ii appears, ueats about seventy-five times in a minute, so that an hour's record would be something like 4.320 ben iug that a man lived to be 50, his heart would have beaten 1.8'j2,1G0,000 times. If a son of this man, more robust thaa his father, should fill out the Scriptural allotment of three score years and ten his heart beats would number 2,(i49, 024,000. It is easy to understand, after such a computation, why this hard-working servant of the human body so frequently wears out. Harper's AVeekly. Air and Sound Health. am ri.m. 1 . . , a icinuiis who seem airaia or " I the fresh air. A little rain, a little wind, a I little fog, a little chill in the air will keep them vviiuui uuuia. uoing out, they bundle up In clothes so thickly that one would think they were tender shrubs transplanted from some more genial clime. The henlthv nnu i ever, are not the health cranks, not the people who run to the doctor every time they feel an ache. They are the peo ple who walk a great deal in the fresh air, who live in the open as much as they can. and who t!ik- a mi;., i - - i. "11 i, iUS San Francisco Bulletin. Wordsworth and His Neighbors. The worthiest of Wordsworth's vil lage In the lake country of England had their own ideas of his value as a man and poet. When questioned after hia death ns to his personality, they read ily admitted that he was kind to those who were In sickness or need. They could count on him on a pinch. Bnt he did not hobnob with bis neighbors. "He did not notice them much," said an old man, in answer to questions asked by the auftor of 'Lake Country Sketches." ' "A Jem Crow and an auld blue clonk was his rig," continued the old man, "And ns for his habits, he had noan. Xiver knew him with a pot i' his hand or a pipe I' his mouth." After deep probing the author brought out: "Yes, Wordsworth was fond of a good dinner at times, if vou eouiil get him to it; (hat was t' job." 1 hen the poet's aloofness was again touched upon. "Ho wns forever pacing the ronda and his own garden walks, nnd always composing poetry. He was ter'ble liming In visitors nnd folks ye mini ken at limes, but If lie could get awa fia them a spell, he was out upon his walk. "And then he would set his head a bit. foiTnd, nnd. put his hands behlnt his back. And Mien lie would start a bumming, and it was bum, bum, bum, and go on bumming for long enough,' right down nnd bnck ngnln. I sup pose, ye ken, (he bumming helped him out a bit." Dale Man a Quick Wit. The Unlled States ship Dale, belong. Ing to the Maryland Naval Hrs;rvea, presents a very "homelike" appear ance, and has often been referred to facetiously by strangers who beheld her for the first time. While passing through a lock on (he Chisapeiike and Delaware cnnnl some time ngo a bystander cnl.'ed (o one of the Dale crew: "Well, I sec you have (he ark and all the menagerie on board!" "No," replied the quick-witted Re serve; "we lack one monkey. Come aboard!" And the Dale floated on In peace. As a rale, the man who fusses aost about taxes, la moat sMe to pay.