prairavs jBUHDlNCt 1 The democratic Norwegians desire! a democratic" king, and could nave made no wiser choice than that of Prince Charles of Denmark, nov/ Haakcn VII. Compared with Sweden, Denmark is tery democratic, as some line phrases it, in Denmark the aris tocracy has gone to seed. “The ‘upper .-lasses’ in King Christian's realm (now •King Frederick’s) are largely wealthy merchants and farmers of the ‘scien tific’ sort. Titles of nobility are no longer issued in Denmark, and the few remaining ’noblemen' in the kingdom are not much seen at court. It would be pleasant to believe that not all royal marriages are mar riages of convenience, and it is heard on all sides that Haakon and his queen made a real love match—but this sort of story is very apt to be told even of the most boldly "arranged” affairs. Hut on the supposition this really is an exception, let us give credulity to the tale (jf the courtship of the Danish prince and English princess. They met when the latter one time accom panied her mcthe- on a visit to her Danish relatives. It was at the Ama lienborg palace, Copenhagen, the prince and princess made acquaint ance, and, so the story goes, fell in love at first sight. The princess is three years the prince's senior, but that was no matter, the course of true love ran sm ;a!y, the couple was married in the royal chapel at Buck ingham palace. Whether or not the marriage was a political one, it is rather fortunate for Haakon, ruler of a country with a long coast iine to de fend, to have such a powerful ally as King Edward. To be sure. King Haakon has other connections of due importance. You •emember hts grandfather, the lament ed King Christian of Denmark, was t ailed fat her-in-la .v * of Europe, and liuakon is related to almost all the crowned heads; the czar is his first cousin, the king of Greece his uncle, be is a grand-nephew of King Oscar of Sweden, his queen is cousin ol the raiser. King Haakon is popular in the best sense of the word, not because he makes a bid for popularity, plays to :he galleries, but because he is natural ly kindly and good-humored. When the news was flashed abroad that he was to occupy the throne of Norway, > Paris paper spoke thus of the newly elected sovereign: “His wife adores him; but who does not?” A most de voted husband, essentially a domestic nan, a favorite among his many broth ers and sisters, prime favorite with his father-in-law, King Edward, we'l liked tiy the democratic Danes, it is readily seen he appeals to many rneu of many kinds. Charles was a sailor prince, and this fact proved very agreeable to Norway, with her long line of famous sea kings. No doubt the schooling he received in the severe discipline of a'training ship had no small influence in his develop ment. A former cadet in the Danish navy and a messmate of (he prince's recently wrote for Munsey’s Magazine n spicy article on this period in the life of the new king of Norway. The writer, Hrolf Wisby, says; "But the rough and ready course of training through which he had to pass on ship board, where nobody cared a fig for his rank, and where he had to learn prompt and implicit obedience to dis cipline, determined his character in after life, impressionable as the lad was, he would have shrunk to a mere princely puppet T he had been left to develop only in the atmosphere oi court life. Instead, the human side oi the boy was brought out by contact with his comrades in the navy, and un der the pressure of their rigid code he was taught to work and to piav, tc endure and to enjoy, like other health} lads of his age. It was a lesson that lias been of inestimable value in hi; cubseauent career.” When the proposition was made te Prince Charles that he become rulei of the independent nation of Norway the prince mentioned three objections: his poverty—comparative, of course; the fact that his wile was averse to as suming the burdens of a queen: lha’ he ought to lie elected by the peopli rather than by parliament. As is wel known, the objections were overcome Promise was given that a fund wouh be provided tor ihe proper maintenenci of ins family and s:i event of depositiot that a life pension would be grantee him. King Edward persuaded Princes: Maud to consider with favor the posi tion of queen of Norway. And popula: vote ratified the choice of the nev king. Ail was auspicious, the nev king accepted the proffered responsi bilities. solemnly swore to support the constitution of Norway, and as King Haakon VII. became head of the na tion. His formal coronation takes place June 22 Haakon is a name that has honored^ place in Norwegian history, and that, this title should have been chosen is significant of Norway s national pride.. The wife of Haakon VII. will be known as Queen Maragretha, another name highly honored in Norwegian history. It was Maragretha (1353-1412) who. brought Denmark, Norway and Sweden under one rule, foimed a great union, of all the northern countries. The lit-i tie son of the present king and queen the Norwegians have requested should be called Olaf, a true Viking name.' Haakon VI. and Maragretha had a lit-; tie son Olaf, who died when but five, years old, reterred to by a certa:;^' writer as “the least and last of the kings of Norway." lying Haakon and Queen Mara gretha! How far away these names seem from the iwer.tieth century, this modern machine age. They suggest old days and deeds, when Norse kings were giants indeed and royal women were other than mere figureheads. Let us travel back through the centuries and try to catch some glimpse of that mysterious romantic past. First let us speak of Norway as a great mother country, not big enough to keep all her sons and daughters at home, but sending them forth to he p people other lands, to Iceland, and Normandy, and Greenland, to. Scotland and Ireland. Let ns pause to contem plate Harald Fairhsir. he who united his country under one head and made a kingdom ct it, which it has since continued. In his youth Harald aspired to marry the beautiful Gvda, a proud princess, who declared she would not stoop to a mere Jarl; if he would have her let him do as Gorra ol Denmark, Eric of Sweden, Egbert ot England, subdue the contentious Jarls about him and become a great king. Then Harald swore a mighty oath tnat he would not cut his hair till he had accomplished the subjection of the other kings, tint:' Gvda was his own. Twelve years pasted ere Harald’s mane was shorn, Gyda came to his home; 12 years it took to subdue the Jarls and conquer the Vikings of ihe, as Carlyle * tails them, out-islands. Then Harald spent about 60 years m organizing a government for his con quests—Harald l'airhair had a reign long as his renowned mane. After him, came his son Eric Llood Axe, who wad ..npopular in Norway and was suc ceeded liy the first Haakon, Haakon the Good. Haakon the Good had been brought, up at an English court, and when he : began his rule over Norway tried to tea h the people something of Chris-; tianity, and practiced as well as preached; did not, like his father, force the boys to go to sea, did not take from them in greed. King Haakon spoke to the people assembled at a Thing (a sort of parliament) of the I Great White Christ, and at the next meeting at Yule refused to drink to the j god Thor. This made a great hubbub but the people had faith in Haakon the Good and began to believe a little in the Christ, though they forced some of their heathen observances on the king The laws of Haakon made at a Thing at Gula were good laws, and ever loved dearly by the Norse folk. When Haa i kon died he was lamented by Doth j friends and enemies; they said that never again would Norway see such a king. It is told that the year Haakon was chosen king the birds built their ne3ts twice, and the trees had two crops of apples! There follow after Haakon the Good Harald Fray Fell; Haakon Jarl; Olaf Tryggveson; Jarls Eric and Svein (quasi sovereigns); Olaf the Thickset, a true Viking, in later years become Olaf the Saint; Magnus the Good; Olaf the Tranquil; Magnus Barefoot; Sigurd the Crusader; Magnus the Blind; Har ald Gyllie, and now the “Fairhairs” rage among themselves and become ex tinct. We have the rise of Swerri, whe led the wretched Birchlegs in many victories and became king of Norway; founded a new dynasty which was to last as long as Norway kept her in dependence. Is it not of interest that the new king of newly independent Norway is a Danish prince and of close kin to the royal family of Sweden? May the Dantsh-Swedish-Norwegian king bind in peace and fraternal feeling the peo ple of Scandinavia. CHRISTOPHER WEESTER. TOO MANY LANGUAGES. The late Lieut. .John I\ rraristreet, of tlio Fiftieth Massachusetts, was for many years a deputy sheriff and turn y under High Sheriff Herrick at the Lawrence house of correction. All the newcomer* were by him assigned to tin ir proper quarters. One day. upon the arrival of a new squad of itiiVintP.s. there was one who scorned somewhat more “tony" than tin- r^st. end. calling the lieutenant aside, he claimed a little more cousid eration than the others, owing to bis previous standing in society. “I never was in such a situation be fore.” said he, "and I trust you will give me a little different quarters than those other fellows. I am highly edu rated, and can speak seven different languages." “Seven?” remarked the lieutenant “That’s altogether too many. We don't have hut one language here, and d—d little o' that."—Boston Herald. IS NOW THREE SCORE AND TEN SPEAKER CANNON CELEBRATES SEVENTIETH BIRTHDAY. Illinois Representative Says He Is Net Too Old to ‘‘Build Castles in Spain’"—Doesn’t Want the Presidency. Washington. — “The reminiscences which come with the seventieth birth day are in the main pleasant, but 1 am thankful that the duties of the present give but little time for reminiscences, and i am still more thankful that 1 have not entirely lost capacity for the building of castles in Spain. In fact. 1 I have been so busy for the last ten years I have not bad time to stop and think how it feels to be 70 years or 60 years old or young. “Of course, I should be glad to live to the age of Methuselah, if, in the liv. JOSEPH G. CANNON. (Speaker of House Who Declares He Has j No Presidential Bee in His Bonnet.) In?, I could continue to be useful. | But. when the time comes for me to go. i can lift my hat and say good-by with the assurance that 1 have lived in the 70 years of greatest progress—meas ured by the confidence that the next 70 will show as much, or even greater progress.” Thus spoke Joseph G. Cannon, speak er of the house of repres ntatives, on the eve of his seventieth birthday, re cently. No man thinks of “Uncle Joe” Can non as 70 years “old.” To all who know him he is 70 years “young,” and young he is, measured by every stand ard. Verile, vigorous, clear-eyed, strong as a horse and with a capacity for work equaled by few men. Mr. Cannon has stolen ten or 15 years from “Father Time.” Neither by the masculine test of “as old as he feels,” nor by the feminine test “as old as she looks.” would the Epeaker cf the American house of rep resentativ s be placed in the septagen arian class. Yet the family Bible, carefully treasured in tlie modest home in Danville, I!!., shows that Joseph G. Cann n was horn on May 7, 1 S3*>. The greatest birthday party Wash ington has ei ,• known was given in celebration oi tie seventieth anniver sary of speaker Cannon's birth. Mem bers of the house were hosts. On tJielr invitation, the president, members of the cabinet, senators, representatives justices of t!ie supreme court, govern ors of states and hundreds of others in official life and out of it, gathered in the Arlington hotel to extend thrir con gratulations and sincerely to wish for Mr. Cannon “many happy returns.” When John Sharpe Williams, Champ Clark and other southerne-s talk, au they often do, of the salvation of the country depending upon the e-lectior of a southern man to the presidency, “Uncle Joe" smilingly agrees wi£h them and points to himself. He is a native of North Carolina. It was in the Colony of Friends, in Guil ford, that he first saw the light of day He was not long a Carolinian, his pa rents migrating to the middle west when he was four years old, but he never lets his southern friends forget he is a “native," especially w’hen they indulge in this talk about the presl dency. In his serious moments—and he has them—Speaker Cannon flouts all sug gestions of presidential lightning com ing his way. He recently gave out a formal statement to that effect. Be fore that he had gone to Secretary Taft to urge his acceptance of the place on the supreme court bench tendered by President Roosevelt. The newspapers had suggested that some persons with presidential aspira tions wmuld like to see Mr. Taft go on the bench. The speaker based his ar> gument solely on the country's need of the present secretary of war in the highest court. “Now, Taft,” said Speaker Cannon, in his heart-to-heart talk, “you won't misconstrue my motive, for you must know that I am not fool enough tc think that any man could run for the presidency at 72 years of age.” The “castles in Spain” Mr. Cannon Is building these days have, therefore no connection with the White House. “I have no ancestry to bother me much and no gout,” is one of “Uncle Joe’s” favorite expressions. Neverthe less, he is proud of his sturdy ances tors among the Friends, haters of war but lovers of liberty, wffio gave their lives in behalf of liberty at King's Mountain and in other battles of the revolutionary struggle's; haters of war. but worse haters of slavery, who went to the front in the great civil struggle of the sixties. “The records show," says Mr. Can non. “that in proportion to its member ship, the church, or Society of Friends, sent a larger number cf its young men into the union army than did any other church." IS FOUND GUILTY OF HERESY, Eev. Algernon S. Crapsey W:I1 Be Suspended from Episcopal Pul pit Unless He Recants. Rochester, X. Y —Rev. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey will be nspended from the pulpit until he con; , ms to the teach ings of the Prote-tant Episcopal church, as the result of his recent trial for heresy. The sentence will be im posed in 30 days, unless I-'r. Crapsey conforms to the doctrines he is ac cused of having rejected before that time, according to the verdict deliv ered to him the other day. The verdict expresses the hope that Dr. Crapsey may conform to the teach ings of the church before the sen tence goes into, effect, in which case he will not be suspended, and is as fol lows: “That the respondent should be sus pended from exercising the functions of the church until such time as he shall satisfy the ecrl metical authori ties of the diocese that his belief and teaching conform to the doctrines of the Apostles’ creed and the Nieene creed as this church hath received the same. However, we express the earn est hope and desire that the respond ent may see his way clearly, during the 30 days that under the car.ons of the church must intervene before sen tence can be pronounced to the full satisfaction of the ecclesiastical au thorities oi' such conformity on his part.’’ Crapsey has been rector of St. An drew’s Episcopal church here several years, and is 50 years old. He is an ardent student, a man of simple tastes REV. A. S. CRAPSEY. (Found Guilty n( Heresy After Episcopal Church Trial.) and is noted for his philanthropy and his services to the poor and sick. He is further described as a lover of home and family. The charges against Dr. | Crapsey were based on his book, “Re ligion and Politics,” and on a sermon he delivered last December. His ac cusers charged that, in general, he de nied the virgin birth of Christ, His resurrection, His miracles and His di vine character. FEUDAL DESIGN IS ACCEPTED. Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts Decides on Coat of Arms at Bos ton Convention. Boston.—The Episcopal diocese of Massachusetts has a seal or coat of arms for the first time in its existence. Some objection was made to the de sign on the ground that the sword is an emblem of barbarism and that the coronets are monarchial, and that iPL. 11_1 THE NEW COAT OF ARMS. both are out of place in American ec clesiastical insignia. Objectors suggested that the pro posed seal could more properly be composed of insignia identified with some of the early rectors of the Epis copal church in Massachusetts, or that it should at least contain a design in some way suggestive of the local ec clesiastical history, rather than of feudalism. The design submitted to the conven tion which met here recently and which was accepted, is a combinatior of parts of three older coats of arms A broad red band down the middle of the shield, bearing a sword, blade sil ver, handle gold, is from the arms o, the see of London. Eng., of which the Episcopal church in this country is an offspring. The three coronets are from the arms of the city of Boston, Eng., from which our city took its name. The two narrow stripes, eacu side of the sword and crowns are white and pure ly ornamental,' the broad expanse at each corner of the shield is blue and it, with a silver star in the upper cor ner, are taken from the Massachu setts coat of arms. Become Skeptical with Age. The venerable Prof. ATexander Stephens, M. D., of the New York College of Physicians and Surgeons, said in a recent lecture to his med ical class: “The older physicians grow the more skeptical they become of the virtues of medicine and the more they are disposed to trust to tile powers of nature. Notwithstanding all our boasted improvements, pa tients suffer as much as they did 40 years ago. The reason medicine has advanced slowly is because physicians have studied the writings of the prede cessors instead of nature.” To Honor Cuban Patriot. The people of Matanzas, Cuba, will honor the memory of Jose Marti, the Cuban patriot, by the erection ct a | monument in that city. i A3GUT FLOOR COVERINGS. Denim May Be Used to Cover Colter of Worn Carpet—Bugs of Home-Make. It is real economy to cover the floor of two or more rooms with' the >use kind of carpet, then when they become worn through the center the best part can be put together to make one carpet. \ Many housekeepers use a large quare of uenim in the middle of the room when the floor is covered with a thin carpet, or with one that is bad ly worn. It saves the carpet wonder fully and is made by sewing several widths of denim together. Be sure and select a denim that will go well with the carpet, it is said that denim itself makes a very satisfactory floor covering for bedrooms if several thick nesses of paper are placed underneath. It is a real bleating to the careful housewife that rugs continue to be so popular as floor coverings, as there are so many ways ot making ’hem at home by using the cast-off and out grown garments. It is a good plan to have the carpet bails woven Into rugs instead of the old-fashioned rag car pets. The rugs look very neat and pr-itty if they have a solid middle of some plain color wilh a contrasting border The middle may be of the hit and miss and the border of a plain color I saw two very handsome rugs recent ly. One had the middle of a solio green with a rich dark red border The other had a blue center with 3 striped white border. White and faded cotton pieces caD be colored any of the bright shades with the diamond dyes for cotton arm the faded woolen pieces with the dyes for wool. The woven rugs are much easier to make than any other home made nig, all that is needed is to cui the rags evenly, sew and wind them into balls, and for a few cents a yarn the carpet weaver will do the rest.—* Prairie Farmer. HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS. If alum is added to the paste used in covering boxes with paper or lor scrap books moths or mice will not invade them. Ink and fruit stains may be removed from white linens and cottons by soak ing them for a few hours in kerosene, then washing in hot water. Allow a shorter raising for bread to he cooked by steam, since the dough will rise during the cooking because of the lower temperature employed. You can free a moth-infested closet.of the "creatures,” larvae and eggs, by pouring hot vinegar into a red-hot iron or tin ran set upon hot bricks in the closet. Shut the door as soon as the vinegar hisses upon the heated surface of the pan and don't open again that day. In shaking blankets care must always he taken to catch them about s foot from the selvedge, otherwise a risk is ruu of tearing them. Skewer baked fish with thin slices of F lit pork or bacon. Fresh f-h will he improved in flavor if fried in fat used previously for the same purpose. Coffee and tea stains, if rubbed with butter and afterward washed in hot soapsuds.- will come out, leaving the tub'e linen quite white and fresh. To have one's kitchen free front smoke or odor wh< n frying griddle cakes try adding one teaspoonful of molted lard to the batter and do not grease the griddle. If you susoect that pickles have been co’ored with copper, you ran satisfy yourself with a very simple test. Fut some pieces of the pickle into a vial containing a mixture of enttnl parts of ammonia and water. If there is any copper present .the liquid will become blue ir. -olor.—Chicago Daily News. Rice Croquettes. One cupful rice, one quart milk, one tablespoonful chopped parsley, yoikf of four eggs, salt and pepper to taste Wash well the rice, put on to boil in a fauna boiler with the milk, or use cold boiled rice, and set to boil with the milk after pressing through a sieve. If the rice has not been cooked let it boil about an hour, if it has been already cooked 20 minutes will suffice. When quite thick take from the tire and beat until smooth, mak ing all the grains. Then add well beaten yolks of the eggs and cook eight or ten minutes longer. Add he parsley and seasoning, using ‘ac white pepper. Take trom the fire and mix well, and turn out in a plate ana let it cool. Then form into pretty cylinders about three inches long and one and one-half broad. Roil these In beaten eggs, then in bread crumbs and fry in boiling lard. Drain and serve with any meat cooked wi h gravy. Japan’s Catholic Church. The Nippon Sel Kokwai. or ho’y Catholic church in Japan, includes all the missions of the American Protest ant Episcopal church and the Church cf England. In this church there are now more than 12.000 baptized mem bers, of whom 5,985 are communicants. The growth of the church has beeD very rapid, 1,600 baptisms, two-thirds cf them those of adults, having been recorded in a single year. Bread Pudding. Use two cups of stale bread crumbed, two cups milk, one cup flour, one cup sugar, one cup raisins a tablespoonful of melted butter three eggs, two small teaspoonfuls baking powder and a half teaspoonful e:;;h of common allspice and cloves Boil for two hours in a well-buttered mold. Serve with meringue and drops of currant jelly on top. Sweet Potato Fritters. A pint of hot mashed sweet potn toes, two eggs, a cupful of flour, into which has been sifted a teaspoonful of baking powder, salt and enough milk to make a batter. Drop the bat ter, a tablespoonful at ai time, in deep fat, smoking hot, and cook to a light brown. Tomato sauce may ba served with the fritters. An Old Story. "Did you ever experience a change of heart?” asked the kind old lady. "Well, I should say!” laughed the girl. “I’ve been engaged four times.” --Detroit Free Press. IQ THE SOUTH POLE! ' EXPEDITIONS AFOOT EXPLORING I ANTARCTIC BEGION. . Problems '.Vhicli Explorers Are Try ing to Solve in the Interests of Science and Human Curiosity. Three, if not four, expeditions, are expected to ue in the anue.xtic area again within dip next i3 months. '1 he six expeditions, from Capt. Geriache, if Belgium, to Dr. Charcot, of Frame, that spent the past few years in the for south discovered new lands and penetrated far Inside of one long: stretch of coast, but failed to ascer tain whether these ljinds are ail bound together, forming a continent. Capt. Scott made his way up the gen the ice slope for JO0 miles into the in terior of Victoria Land, but was not able after all to snow whether he had marched into a continental mass ,.r only a large island Every expedition that is going to this field hopes to shed light on the question of the south ern continent. The problem is to be attacked on the American side of the antarctic by Lieut. Michael Barue, of the Discoveiy, who is preoaring to go to Graham Land, about 690 miles south of South America. Explorers have been up and down the east and west shores of Gra ham Land, aud what they have found of it is about 430 miles long and from 50 to 100 miles wide, but it widens rapidly toward the south; they do not know yet whether it is a large Island or a promontory. If, as some of the students of the antarctic problem conjecture, the ex tent of land in the south polar regions ■ Is about 3,500,0(i0 square miles, these lands are about as large as the United States, including Alaska. Human u riosity will never be satisfied till the whole extent of the land is laid down on the maps, end the geograoh-:s , know now that for the next 20 years this field will be the scene of the largest exploratory activity. it is strange mat tne mysterious south land which long before the dis covery of America was marked on the maps as Terra Australis should be the last and greatest problem of geog raphy to be solved in the twentieth century. The statement has been published several times recently that no investi gations are now in progress :n the antarctic. This Is slightly inaccurate. The Argentine government has jrst established a meteorological and mag netic station at Wandel island, far south on the west coast of Graham Land. So ihe antarctic regions are at present not entirely deserted by explorers. LIKE A CARGO OF SNOW. Steamer Brings in Load of Salt from Sicily Which Looked Wintry. Looking down over the high hatch way combing into the after held of a steamer discharging at an East river ! wharf up by the Grand street ferry, a waterside stroller saw in the hold below what seemed to be a cargo of snow—an odd cargo for a vessel to 1 bring, says the New York Sun. Tbev had already got out the bulk j of it from immediately under the hatchway and almo.-t down to the ves sel's floor, but all around still arose white banks of it reaching up almost to the vessel's decks; and half way up one of these steep snowbanks a man was at work with a pick, dis lodging masses of it to fall to the open space at the center, where stood men with scoop shovels piling this j snow into great iron tip buckets, which, as fast as they were fill d, we-e hoisted up to be dumped into a chute running down over the steam er's side, this chute emptying into carts on the wharf. From the steamer's forward hatch, at the same tme and in like manner, they were discharging front ttie same snowy cargo, but over the other side of the vessel, the cargo from the after hold going across the wharf into a warehouse, while that from the for ward hold was going into lighters alongside, a customs officer at each point noting the weights of it as the stuff was hoisted out. It was salt, the snowy white cargo with which from stem to stern this steamer was loaded; a cargo of 3,500 tons of salt, brought from a place in Sicily where they make salt by the evaporation of sea water from arti ficially made ponds of about 20 inches in depth. To one whose ideas of salt were confined to the trifling quantities of it that he saw in shakers and salt cellars on the table this cargo of thousands of tons seemed like a lot of salt; really like something curious and interest'ng and remarkable. Asa matter of fact in the various uses to which it is put salt is used in enor mous quantities, and to those ac quainted with salt and the salt trade salt In full cargoes, large and small, is something quite familiar. Artificial Storm at Sea. The inhabitants of Aboukir, near Alexandria, were recently treated to a wonderful spectacle. It became necessary to destroy some 16 tons of powerful dynamite, and the explo sives—sufficient to blow up a town_ were taken to sea and placed beneath the water. Something like a subma rine earthquake followed the explo sion, which was heard for miles around. A waterspout shot into the air to a height of about 2.000 feet, and fell back in dazzling spray. Simul taneously the sea became a whirlpool of seething water, as if agitated by a hurricane. She Was Forehanded. A wealthy Parisian, tired of sup porting his nephew, determined to get him married off and settled. He called upon a matrimonial bureau and looked over his album of candidates for husbands. To his horror he found the picture of his own pretty wdfe. He reproached her and demanded an explanation. “I do not deny it,’" she said, "but it was last year, when, a3 you know, dearest, you had been given up fat all the doctors.’’ BURNING MINES OF UTAH. Veins of Coal That Have Then Afire Since They Were Discovered by White Men. Through a,long line of cliffs fr. Colorado to central Utah, and i:. : southwest toward Arizona, extensive beds of teal are found, and recent r i iogieai in, esilgali;n into this coai formation of tue tar west has devel oped what nuty be termed burning mountains, or coal beds, a flic with surface indications of constant com bustion for ages past. These coal Acids of Utah are some what widely separated, and even Un known fields have been comparatively little explored; therefore very little i» known of their productive area. The edges of these beds come to the surface in tnese cliffs nearly 1.0 t te t above the bordering desert, and in ages past this coal has burned into tne mountain cliffs until smothered by the accumulations of ashes and covei ing of superincumbent rocks. In p.aces the heat of this burning coal lias been so intense as to melt tbe rocks. From surface appearances the fin s have gone out in these cliff's, but at one point in the canyon of Prince river, where the coal is being mined, the rocks are found to be uncomfortably hot and the miners were compelled to retire for fear the fires would again break out. Other coal fields lie in the desert west- of Green river. At two places near tributaries of the Fremont rivet the coals are burning, and have been without cessation since they were dis covered by the earliest explorer. The origin of these fires has been the sub ject of much speculation. Three explanations are commonij heard among the Mormons, who in habit this peculiar country where the mountains burn. One explanation i= that lightning has hy chance struck the edges of these coal beds at various times since these mountains were lilted up. Another is that forest fires raring in the mountains came in contact with ex posed coal. 1 he more thoughtful point out that the forests in this desolate re gion are too sparse for forest '.res to occur. btui another ant! more common ex planation is that the Indians built their campfires under the protecting ledges of the mountains against the coal, and it was thus ignited. They point to the iact that there are ruins of the habitations of cliff dwell*r? her. and that in their day the coals began to burn. THUNDERBOLT SHEATH. “Lightning Hole” Made by Descent of Shaft Into the Earth. The following is one of the in'erest ing and valuaole bHs of information sc often to be found in the Scientific American: “Did you ever see the diameter of a lightning Hash measured?” asked a ge ologist. “Well, here is the case whicE once inclosed a flash of lightning, fit ting it exactly, so that you can jusi see how big it. was. This is called a •fulgurite,’ or ‘lightning hole,' ano the material it is made of is glass. I will tell you Itow it was manufactured though it took only the fraction oi t second to turn it cut. "When a bolt o." lightning strikes a bed of sand it plunges downward into the sand for a distance, less or great er, transforming simultaneously intc glass tlie silica material through wnich it passes. Thus, by its great heat, it forms at once a glass tube of precise ly its own size. Now and then such a tube, known as a ’fulgurite’ is found and dug up. "Fulgurites have been followed intc the sand by excavation for nearly :1G feet. They vary in interior diameter from the size of a quill to three inches or more, according to the bore or tbe Gash. But fulgurites are not alone produced in sand: they are found also in solid rocks, though very naturally of a slight depth and frequently exist ing merely as a thin, glassy coating on the surface. Such fulgurites oc cur in astonisning abundance on tli6 summit of Little Ararat, in Armenia. The rock is suit, and so porous that blocks a foot long can be obtained, per forated in all directions by little tubes filled with Dottl° green glass formed from the fused rock.” ACTING OF THE AMATEUR. Illustrative Instance of the Work of Ambitious But Incompetent Beginners. It is surprising to discover how very iifferently people who have played mrts all their lives deport themselves before the footlights, writes Richard Viansfield, in Atlantic. I was acquaint ed with a lady in London who had Seen the wife of a peer of the realm, who at one time had been a reigning seauty, and who came to me, longing for a new experience, and imploring ne to give her an opportunity to appea? iV>on the stage. In a weak moment I consented, and. as I tpas producing a iiiay, I cast her for a part which I thought she would admirably suit— that of a society woman. What that woman did and didn’t do on the stage passes all belief. She became en tangled in her train, she could neither sit down nor stand up, she shouted, she could not be persuaded to remain at a respectful distance, but insisted upon shrieking into the actor’s ears, and she committed all the gaucheries you would expect from an untrained country wench. But because every body is acting in private life, every one thinks he can act upon the stage, and there is no profession that has so many critics. Every individual in the audience is a critic, and knows all about the art of acting. But acting is a gift. It cannot be taught. You can teach people how to act acting— but you can’t teach them to act. Act ing is as much an inspiration as the making of great poetry and great pic tures. What is commonly called acting is acting acting. Sad Measure. Friend—Hpw many lines has a son net? Poet—All mine appear to have had 23.—N. Y. Sun.