v .t 1 fc M ' K IB SUFFICIENT UNTO THE DAY IS THE EVIL THEREOF. tM not the heart a future grievance bor row, Nor o'er out path ono faintest shadow Let not the londs which may ansa to morrow Obscure the fairer sunshine of to-day. To-day is ouis the past linn passed for ever, Its jovs and griefs alike are ours no more; Tho future Ilea beyond Time's silent river, A dim and distant and untrodden shore. Tho world's no fair, and life no grand, that living Should one sweet hymn of purest rap lure he: From Nature's hand, so bounteous in her giving, - The fulnes ours, to reap uncrniinglj", And ours the lilies, thuuigh Hope's en chanting vi'ion, K'en ilatkencd skies to view with prom ie rare; , To grnup at Jovs, though Phoonix-hkc they're risen I'rom out tho ashes of a past despair. As (o the day. Its burden or its sorrow, So U onr strength by Love all-wise de creed; I'oyond the trust which lookclh to the morrow Not ours the striving, nor is ours tho need. He Isnowrlh best tho sowing and tho reaping Who left the power of will unfettered, free; The great, kind God, who holds within His keeping Faeh dav and hour through all eternity. Beatrice Tlarlowe. in the November Woman's Home Companion. HffHHfHHvH4t -4k " 3: fhe Unseen Singer : 1WAS nlone In the little seaside town, the solace of work being denied mo because of the Illness that bad brought me there to seek for health. I was desperately tired, und my nerves were in n Btnte thnt rendered all enjoyment Impossible. I used to He lute In the mornings, for there was nothing to do but wan der Idly on the promenade, and the trivial pleasures of the crowd vexed me unutterably because I could not ehnro them. It was only nt night I realized thnt possibly this Irksome time of rest was bringing me nearer to the recovery of my health. Then I used to wander un til! nil but the latest of the visitors hnd loft the promennde. It was Impossible not to be nt rest. The coolness of the ulght, the soothing murmur of the sea, and the shining jellow lights of n fishing village across the bay, com bined to make a perfect world, and ns I watched I know thnt even the garish duy might presently give mo pleasure Hgnln. I bad been perhaps a fortnight In tho place when tlrst I Haw tho lady of whom I would tell you. It wns only for n moment, ns she drove pnst In the compnuy of nu older woman, but thnt moment's sight wns enough to till my thoughts until I saw her ugulu upon the morrow. She wns beautiful beyond all words; I fnnclod alio could hardly have passed tho ago of twenty; and speech and bearing hnd been denied her. She had tho innocent gladness that remains while they nre yet young with some who are thus allllcted. She looked upon tho world with beautiful bright wyes, nnd, In despite of fate, was well plensod to be alive. Hut she was talking with her lingers to tho older lady, her companion, In whoso eyes ns they looked au the girl I saw nn lullnlte pity expressed. That pity Instantly Invaded my own lienrt, though its object wns gone out of my sight within a few seconds of iier appearance; anil, despite the fact thnt I knew not so much as her nnme, there was mixed with the pity a sense of angry rebellion against the fates who had thus allllcted her, wantonly robbing of Its vnluo a generosity that, through hor, might otherwise have gladdened tho wide world. Now, more than ever, I regretted my loneliness, for I had no ono from whom 1 might expect to gather any Informa tion of my gaming the privilege of her acquaintance. I made some futile In quiries at the hotel, and only got so far as to bo almost certain she was, like myself, a visitor. On tho next day, at nbout the same bour, the carriage passed ulong the length of the promenade. She was Htlll Innocently glad to be alive, eon tout to accept her burden so If It were no burden at nil; It was with smiles sho looked Into the pitying eyes of her companion, and I could fancy thnt tho messages sho wns conveying with nwlftly moving lingers were humorous appreciations of what she saw ill-omul cr. My earlier questions had been ml. dressed to it quaint, elderly waiter nt the. hotel, a man who had In some sort made It his especial task to see to my well-being, and who was tho nearest approach to n friend I possessed with in a hundred miles of the place. It happened thnt I was lunching at the open window one day when the car rlngo passed, a little earlier than usual. "That Is the lady of whom 1 was epeaklng," I said to him. He looked out of the window with quick Inteiest. "A dear little maid, If I may say so. Yes, uifd the poor dear Ib deaf and dumb; she's tnlkln upon her lingers. Well, I thought from what you told me thnt they must bo strung ers In theso pnrts and so they are. I dou't even know the horses nor the carriage." Thus passed several dnys. I began to llnd myself vitbtly better, and, with tho growth of energy, to look forward pleasurably to the time when I should return to my work In London. My good friend, the waiter, hnd sue ceedod, much to his delight, In getting mo to go for numerous drives through tho lovely country that surrouuds tho watering place. I had evon, an dlvero occasions, net forth on foot and ex plored the const nnd the Inland Inncs for myself. I went nlonc, but I never felt the nhsenco of companions, for my expedi tions nlwnyw took plnce before or nfter the hour nt which sho might he ex pected to pass nlong the busy prom ennde, nnd bo my thoughts were al ways htiHy, whether with anticipation or remembrnnce. Never ouco did she fnll me: never onco did her n III let I on seem to ma the bountiful gnyety of her mood. It np penred Hint she snw mul enjoyed every little thing thnt could be Been; nor wmh It nltogetlier a young m nil's vnnl ty thnt mndu me wonder whether nhc bad begun to notice the fact thnt a certain Hallow Invalid was nlwnyH Idl ing on the promendu nt the hour when Hbe drove by. I enme to understnnd the rontlno of their dally outing. They were mani festly living somewhere to the west of the town. Every day they went through the Inland lunen nt the buck of It until they were n mile or two to the cast, nnd, then, descending sea wnnl, drove home by the promennde nnd the road thnt RlcIrtH the Ben. Now, one day, with no Ret purpose thnt I would have confessed, not even to myself, I took the western rond and went Into the country. The road lies for Borne dlstnnce between low hills and the Hontbern sea: at tlrst the sun's heat was Intolerable, but gradually one mounted higher, nnd then the sunlight .nu lint Hut fit iif-nnmnniilittiirit nf Mm lv,lv wlnl tlmt ,,u,w tnm ,(! Hn' sn I wiiir iiii-wiii'ii in iiii insr nr spirits until I had come to the edge of n great valley that runs lutand from the sea. Some dozen or so eottnges nnd n lit tle pier stood nt the margin of the sea. Inland n few bouses were seen among their fruitful orchards. Hut at the edge of the slope there was a little space of wild wood, nnd, this, as I looked across the flower-grown hedge, tempted me to rest. I climbed the Intervening barrier and lay down In the shelter of a little oak tree. It may be I slept. Certainly I wns n long time under the oak before I be came nwnre thnt I wns not the only occupant of the wood. Some ono was singing softly, nnd I could benr foot steps moving slowly through tho fern. I could tell by th sound thnt the new comer wns stopping hero nnd there to pick dowers. Now, I hnd enjoyed tho solitude, but even nt the llrst the person who wns coming townrd me did not strike me ns nn Intruder. Her singing wns In absolute concord with my mood; It wns as If one hnd thought of a poem, and u moment later found oneself humming the melody that would make of It n perfect song. I lny and wultcd and the singer came nearer. The song ceased when she presently appeared. She was n little sturtled, but not near bo much as I. "Then you are not dumb?" I cried Involuntarily, an I started to my feet. Sho hesitated, nnd a llttlo smile played nbout the corners of her pretty mouth. "It la my nuut who Is dumb," she Bald. Then, with u sudden re covery of her dignity, "I don't know why you should nsk." lint that was a matter I hnd no great dltllculty In explaining ere I came back to London the happiest man ou God's earth. Hlack and White. Hello of the Days of the l'retonilor. A little south of the county-house at Iturlliigton stood 150 years ago a small liulliiu village, which Is marked ou the old maiis of Northern Pennsyl vania as Oschuuu. Many interesting relics of r. bygone civilization hae been found In the grounds where this Indian village was, near thu country house. When the excavations were made for the foundations of the couu-ty-hous , nmong the relics found were a number of coins that bore different dates up to near the advent of the white man lu Bradford County. Sev eral of theso coins were presented to tho Spauldlng Museum at Athens. Two coins belonging to Superintend ent 12. W. Putnam are of bronze, ono an English halfpenny of the reign of King Goorgu I and the last a larger piece, which Is very singular In Its make-up ami history. On one side it bears an Irish harp, with a crown ahovo It. On the reverse sldo Is a room containing a table with money upon It. A hand is extended toward the table, as If to take the coins. Au mined man with a drawn sword threatens thu hand, and above lu an are of tho circle are the words: "Touch not, says Klldaro." Thu piece be..rs the date oi 17-15, which luniks the year when the young pre tender, Charles Edward, was trying ' i raise a rebellion In Ireland, nnd thu coins must have been brought to Bur lington within a year or two by somu French refugees, who hud been con nected with thu pretender's party. Troy (Pcuu.) Gazette. Hns Xumes to Spurc, The Dowager Empress of China re joices in tho names of Tzehsl Toonyu Knngl Chnoyu Cliuunnchcng Sholumg Chtuhlen Clumgslh, but such a name being clumsy, they call her simply Tze-hsl. She is a lady of middle height, with black hnlr, dark eyes and feet shaped according to nature, A witty Journalist described her oh -tho ouly mini lu thu Celestial Empire. Such Is tho Empress Dowager of China. It has been frequently stilted that Tze-hsl's parents were of the lowest social grade actors according to some, smull merchants according to others. Both statements arc erroneous. Tzo hsl's fnther, Ll-Tzuu, wns n Mnnchu noblo who held, somo years before the birth of his daughter, an Important Government post at Peklu. Every body's Mngnzlue. It never rains but it pours. Unnk dcfnlcatlons long hid nre now coming to the surface In nil directions. During tho present century 100 hu man lives, $125,000,000 nnd 200 ships have been lost In fruitless efforts to find the North Pole. iUv And now It nppenrs from records found In Pekln that the Chinese dis covered America. They mnde about as much use of It ns they did of gun powder or the mariner's compass. A Brooklyn woman who was charged with horsewhipping her husbnnd ad mitted the truth of the nccusntlon In court, nnd added: "I only did what any woman would do." Docs this explnlu the meek air of some Brooklyn hus bands? i p The London Dnlly Mall snys thnt the days of the banjo nre numbered In England, and that that Instrument will soon be Included In the same category with the mouth organ and the accor dion. The zither Is growing In popu larity, nnd will probably be tho favor ite Instrument during the winter. Spectacular science astonishes tho multitude and wins their money. The philosopher patiently studies tho laws of nature, and modestly announces his discoveries. Then the scientific prcs tldigltateur goes Into partnership with the promoter. Soon nfter "the pub lic" acquires souiu new stocks und somo experience. Scarcely a dny passes during the hunting season that the news reports do not tell of one or more persons shot for game by careless hunters, but Bel dam or never Is there any mention that the gunners hnvc been nrrested. Is It not time to mnkc nn example of some of theso people, by way of teaching others to exercise a llttlo prudence? It deems fair to absume, from recent reports of wild animal experts, thnt the giraffe will before long be known ouly in nursery books and dusty rec ords of science, for ho seems to bo rapidly approaching extinction. Once this unimal was abuudnut In South Africa, but he has been pursued by hunters until ho Is now very rarely met with. In ono of tho school buildings In Grand Ilnplds, Mich., there wns a plan proposed, some eight years ago, to havo a savings bank, in which chil dren might deposit their pennies. It was a grcut success, nnd lately was Introduced Into other schools, until at present there are 000 such banks, with several thousand depositors, whose savings amount to over $1700. Lord Puuucefote in refurnishing and decorating the interior of the British Embussy, nt Wnshlngton, puys Ameri can upholstery and decorative wall papers the compliment of using them In preference to those of British manu facture. He Is reported ns saying that the American goods nre better In qunll ty nnd cost less than British goods of n similar kind. He thinks there is no doubt thnt lu this Hue of manufac tures the United States leads the world. This is Indeed a remarkable compliment to be paid by the Ambns sndor of one grcut Industrial nation to the manufacturing genius of another. Miss Alice French Octave Thnnet at n recent meeting of the club women nt Lincoln, Neb., sounded the praises' of the "modern man," claiming thnt he is generally unappreciated. Miss French believes that the modern man Is doing his unobtrusive best In every walk of life, and that the modern womnn Is doing hers. That sho is n good wife, a good mother, a good friend nnd neighbor. Agnln, that "tho modern man" Is under lire from his owu familiar friends; In Is attacked by extremists ou both sides, and yet, harassed, worried, gondett, he doggedly lights on with a Jest instead of n groan, and never BUspects that he Is either a hero or a martyr. The news from the universities nnd colleges all over tho United States tells of an nctlvlty In the higher education most encouraging to every lover of progress. Our institutions of learning have mndu remarkable advances in this gcnerntlon, nnd In faculties, In students uud In every provision for the purposes for which they were founded they are going far beyond their previous achievements. lttch streams of benefaction have poured In upon them. The number of new buildings, thu establishment of new professional ehnlrs, tho enlargement of tho legions of tutors uud Instructors, the swelling of tho classes and other signs and proofs of an American lib erality toward tho uppei schools of culture, glvo causa fur rejoicing to every iutelllgeut patriot. (TROUBLES OF THE POOR, Food and Clothes Are Possible, Bat Rent Worries Thetn. "If you own tho roof over your head, you don't know whnt rcnl trouble Is," snld the factory hand. "Of course folk havo got to eat, nnd they've got to hnve clothes to wear, but It Isn't tho thought of that that's always hanging over their heads, making them work themselves to death wheu they've got work, nnd fret themselves to death when they haven't. Every now nnd then wo boo something In tho papers how easy It Is for a poor widow (or worse than widow) to feed herself nnd a family of children oi twenty-five cents n day, and if the woman hns good Judgment and under stands marketing such stories are not bo far wide of tho mark. Ontmenl nnd potatoes nre cheap, nnd there's odds nnd ends of meat nnd bones thnt mny be had for next to nothing that will moke good soup. "As for clothes, all poor folk who try to keep themselves looking de cently know how far contrivance will go In making them hold out. Skirts mny be turned Inside out or dyed when they nro faded or spotted, and there's n lot of wear In the second-hand shoes that tho cobblers sell cheaply. Of course, we'd all rather cat the best steaks nnd wenr Bilk nnd velvet, but It Is not having to do without them that keeps folk awake at night. It Is the rent. Thnt goes steadily on, no mat ter whether you've trot work or whether you are lying around Idle, and it Is n hnppy day for a tenant when the Inndlord can bo talked Into bringing down the rent by a dollnr. Not that nil landlords nre hard hearted, as some folk seem to think. Landlords nro Just like nil other men. some being better nnd some worse. Now, there's n poor womnn who works In the snme plnco with me, n widow with two children, nnd Bho lives In one of the toughest neighborhoods In the city. Well, Inst full when that womnn wns too sick to go out to work, she got 918 behlndhnnd with her rent, nnd found out nfterwnrd thnt the mnn whoso business It wns to collect It hnd been paying it out of his own pocket right straight nlong. The house be longed to n family In which there were some minors, nnd bo nil expenses nnd revenues hnd to be nccounted for to the family lawyer, nnd thnt was why the eldest son, who collected the rents In person, could not remit the widow's ?0 a month, ns his fnther might have done, but all the snme he wnsn't go ing to see her turned out on the Btrect, knowing her to be a good ten nnt. Of course, she begnn to pay the money bnck as soon as she got to work again, but It was n great help, his advancing It, for If It hadu't been for that she would have had to pnrt with her sewing machine, which she hnd Just finished pnylug for on tho install ment plan. As long as she can hold on to that mnchlno there Is no great dan ger of her starving, unless Bbe Is too sick to hold her head up. Thore Is a benevolent ioclety that, when she Is laid off from the shop on account of work being slack, gives her four wrap pers a week to make nt 50 cents nplece and pays for them In provisions." Now York Times. A Frank of tho Great Storm. W. It. Householder, ono of the em ployes of the House of Itepresentn tlves, tells an Interesting experience of his son, a corporal In Battery O, First Artillery, ami the Galveston Hood. "My son," said Mr. Household er, "was stationed nt Fort Snn Ja clnto when tho storm broke, nnd we at llrst feared thnt ho was among the twenty-eight soldiers drowned at the time. We aid not hear from him for three or four dnys, uud iiien we got a card saying ho was all right, but had lost everything he possessed. He had kept his clothing, letters uud money In his locker, and it had been swept away, A short time after the disas ter I received a letter from a Mr. Webb, of Lamarque, Texas, saying that a locker had been fouud there bear ing my name and containing articles that evidently belonged to my sou. I ordered the locker sent hero to me. We fouud everything intact, although the clothing hud been damaged by tho water. Tho locker hnd beon cnrrled over llfteen miles by water, and left thnt fnr Inland from Galveston. My son hnd n close shnvc, nnd nearly lost his own life. Ho had a number of closo shaves while serving In the Phil ippines as n sergeant of tho Twenty third Infantry. He was In half a dozen battles In the Philippines, but his experience ut Galveston will linger with him longer, he Bays, than any ho oer had In the army." Washington Star. Just What She Deserved. In tho railway carrlnge snt a woll dressed youug lady tenderly holding a very small poodle. "Madame," snld tho gunrd, "I nm vepy sorry, but you can't havo your dog lu this compartment." "I shall hold him in my lap all the wny," sho replied, "and he will dis turb no one." "Thnt mnkes no difference," snld the gunrd; "I couldn't even nllow my own dog here. Dogs must ride In the lug gngo vnu. I'll fasten him all right toe you." Don't you touch my dog, sir!" said tho young lady. "I will trust him to no one!" And with nn Indignant nlr sho marched to thu luggago vun, tied up her dog, and returned, bout tlfty miles farther on, wheu thu guard came along agnln, she asked him, "Will you tell mo If my dog Is all right?" "I am very sorry," snld tho guard, politely, "but you tied him to n port mnuteuu, and ho wns put out with It at the lust ututIou."-TH-Blts. !J38&K3SC8 good Roads Rotes S833Kv$)353Sf33iH, Oiled Itoiwls and Their Ileneflt. F. WHITE talked not long ago to the Good Bonds As sociation of Southern Cali fornia about some experi ments mnde by him nt Chlno. For the Inst two yenrs a good deal hns been done in his pnrt of tho country with oil on country roads, tho prime object being (as on railroad beds) thu suppres sion of dust. This wns the only thing nought when Chlno contrnctcd for Its llrst lot of oiled roads, some twenty llvo or thirty miles In length. But It was soon discovered that oil might bo made to build up a surface that would resist the wear of travel, nnd thnt Is thu grent nlm of the Inter practlco there. Mr. White said thnt the roads were orlglually constructed by a con tractor who guaranteed "a dustless road" from May till December. Dur ing the llrst seasou the contractors sprinkled them three times. Subse quently, the town undertook to care for the roads Itself, and It was then fouud that one application of oil would do more good than the contractor's three. Oil sprinkled directly on n sandy or alluvial road will do little good, Mr. White says. It should be surfaced with a firmer material before tho oil is applied. Sand, properly covered, makes n wonderfully linn bed. When Mr. White was put In eharo of the ronds of Chlno, he found a section of sand half a mile loug over which a clayey gravel bad been hauled from u distance. The stutT hnd once been used for making bricks. Only n few Inches of It hnd been spread over the sand. Yet It mnde n line road for dry wenthcr. When wet, holes would work through In a short time. But by oiling the rond wns greatly Improved. Tho gravel employed Is peculiar to Southern California, but Mr. White is confident that any disintegrated granite, such ns mny be found lu other Stntes, would work equally well. In mnkitig new ronds he llrst grnded the foundation nud then put on n lay er of this gravel seven Inches thick lu the middle uud six nt the edges. Af terward ho made It nine Inches thick In the middle nnd eight on the sides. The foundation was rolled hard and kept wet Just abend of the gravel. The latter was also thoroughly soaked when spread. A heavy orchard culti vator was run through It, while tho water was being poured on. Harrow aud roller were used to shape the rond up, and finally it was given a chance to dry. When the rond had dried out to a depth of fully two Inches it was care fully Bwcpt and the oil put on. The llrst application should be liberal. On a rond eighteen feet wide Mr. White puts from 100 to 150 barrels for each mile. Before the oil Is applied It Is heated to a temperature of 200 degrees or over. The hotter tho better. Sote dltllculty was experienced In getting tho oil well distributed, and llnally Mr. Whlto Invented a machine of his own to do tho work. Tho trouble at first was to regulate tho Uow. Mr. White ndds: "The result of our experiment nt Chlno hns been u road that Is hard and smooth, nnd shows no appreciable wenr nfter It hns been down over n yenr. Mnny visitors mistake It for a bitumen road. A number of the store keepers kept It swept before their places. This rond hns hnd three ap plications of oil since It was built, two last year and one this. The quantity put on this year was not more than about one-fourth that put on the first time. When oil Is applied to such a road nfter the llrst application there Is but llttlo penetration and the sur face Is left sticky. To remedy thlB, some gravel (the same material of which tho road Is formed) 1b screened and sprinkled over tho surface by a man expert In the use of a shovel. Just sulliclcnt Is put on to take up the surplus oil uud no more. Tills is im portant. I designed a machlue for this work, which will do It more evenly than a man with a shovel, and at less expanse. This sprinkling with gravel makes up for the previous wear on the road, and In a fuw dnys pneks down with the travel to a Btnooth, hard surface. If desired, it can bu packed down at once with a roller. The llrst application of. oil to a road built as above described penetrates, If all tho conditions nre right, to n depth of about an Inch. Uniting with this top layer of gravol It forms nn elnstU covering to tho road beneath and takes the wenr. And yet "olnstlc" Lis not quite the word. Tho aurfaee hns more of the yielding nnturo of lend aud has a "flow" like lend. A heavy load on a narrow tire will dent It some, a wider tire following with smooth out tho dent. It yields slightly to horses' feet, nnd Is, therefore, a fa vorlto rond with horsemen, giving less Jar than a stone or cement road. Such a surface, which can be easily kopt Intact by Blight repairs dono at tho proper time, serves as a buffer between tho Impact of horses' foot, the Imprint ing of wheels nnd tho roadbed beneath and accounts for tho slight wear, "Women Soldiers In China, Women In China hnvo tho privilege of lighting In tho wnrs. In the rebel lion of 1850 women did as much fight ing as thu men. At Nnnkln, in 18511, 500,000 women frpm vnrlous pnrts of the country were formed Into brigades of 1!J,000 each, uider femalo oUlcers, Of theso soldiers 10,000 were picked women, drilled "iiso.ied lu tho city. LEARNING HOW TO WORK. The Foor of Flttsborjr Are llelng Taught Many Useful Lessons. In such societies ns the Domestic Arts Association, of Pittsburg, one dis covers a movement in tho direction to ward teaching woman how better to conduct the kingdom which Is Indis putably hers. The object of the association Is to establish Biich n school where young women may bo thoroughly trained in' tho home making artn. Tho originat ors of the plan believe that, by estab lishing such a school, household work may bo raised, ns nursing bun boon In n similar mnnner, from tho rank of raenlnl lnbor to a profession which capable and competent young women will enter. The nssoelntlon's work this yenr hns been divided Into four departments. The department of foods hns opened cooking clubs In tho tenement districts of Pittsburg, tenchlng the housekeep ers of thnt district bow to buy nnd cook food so ns to obtnln the best re sults possible from their small In comes. This work has been most suc cessful, the women having shown iv great Interest in It, nnd nn eager de sire to learn as much as possible. Thu department of clothing hns do voted Its efforts to tenchlng poor women how to moke their clothes nnd keep them In order, and has met with such success that the present equip ment In the way of machines, etc., Is Insulllclent. The Junior department, devoted to the interests of the children, has dono a variety of things. There has been classes In cooking nnd sewing, nnd tho dltllculty has been, not In securing pupils, but In providing n Mifllclcnt number of teachers. This department has also established n penny savings bank for the children. It hns started nlso n circulating library, the books having boon lent by the Carnegie Li brary. The fourth nnd Inst department Is known as the department of service, or employment bureau. Three of these were opened In different parts of Pittsburg. The head of this depart ment Btntes In her report thnt sho ) thinks It Impossible to do much, If anything, for employer or employed until the time nrrives when a training school for domestic service can bo opened. A member of the society snld recent ly: "In nil these efforts to Improve the conditions of home life we find thnt the greatest need of needy people Is the need of knowing how to work." New York Tribune. WORDS OF WISDOM. In noble souls valor does not wnlt for yenrs. Caroline. Nothing is bo dangerous ns an" Ignor nnt friend. Ln Fontaine. Kunvery nnd llnttery nre blood rela tions. Abraham Lincoln. Humility is the true cure for many a needless henrtache. Montague. To give np interest for duty Is tho alphabet of morals. James Hluton. The freedom of the mind is the h'gh. est form of independence. G. B. Fisk. Whilst we nre considering where to begin it Is often too late to act. Quin Milan. The end nnd nlm of nil education Is the development of character. F. W. Talker. We are ashamed of our fear; for wo know that a righteous mnn would not suspect danger nor Incur any. Wher ever n man feels fear there Is an avenger. Thorcuu. To acknowledge our faults when wo nre blnmed Is modesty; to discover them to oue's filcnds In Ingenuousness Is confidence; but to preach them to nil the world, if one docs not tuke cure, Is pride. Coufuclus. Thu wise mnn has his follies, no less than the fool; but It has been said Hint herein lies the difference: Tho follies of the fool nre known to tho world, but nre hidden from himself; tho follies of the wise are known to himself, but hidden from the world. -Coltou. Half the dllllculty of fighting nny severe bnttle or accomplishing any hnrd tnsk vanishes when a man feels thnt he hns comrades nt his side fight ing In the some cause, or that the eyes of those he loves are upon him, aud their hearts praying for his victory. C. J. Perry. To get good Is animal, to do good is human, to be good is divlue. The true use of a man's possessions Is to help his work; nnd the bust end of nil his work Is to show us what ho is. Tho noblest workers of our world bequenth us nothing bo grent ns the linage of themselves. James Mnrtlneau. A Lensnn In FersoTeranre. One of tho drollest of anecdotes pos sessing whnt might be termed nn "animal subject" was told recently by Lord Blbblesdalo at a meeting ot Progressives ln London. To cheor them who were t bout to enter the elec toral fight, he narrated this fablo, which It Is no exaggeration to call un matched even In the pages of the great Aosop himself: Two frogs fell Into a bowl of cream. Ono was an optimist and ono n pessimist. The pessimist frog, at once growing hopeless at tho general look of ills surroundings, let himself sink, to rlso no more. Not so, however, the optimist frog. He re flected thnt he hnd never boon lu any such situation' before, but thnt he should do his best to got out of It. And so hu swam aud swam, and though he soon became convinced that ho could not possibly cmorgo from the bowl, ho at longth grew assured that tho iluhl through which he pnddled wns getting thicker. Ho did not nt all understand this state of things, but continued to paddlo uboujtjghero and there, till nti. Inst. lo. lie Wi?V unthroned secure! v on-l u put of butter whlcn he himself had I unwittingly created ffjrwKe (