I i V Ll fm V i M v t IT 4 if t I- w M M 7V3 i O M r b ar vfmrv S WHEN SUE GLANCED AT ME The world can boast of many things not known of long ago When earth seemed troubled with the gout and science and art -were slow 2ow everything conspires to bring but luxury and ease And progress has some say improved on nature by degrees But naught can give its substitute as naught has yet improved The genuine old fashioned thrill that comes of being loved Such as I own 1 felt of old in eminent de gree When Sue behind the window blinds once shyly glanced at me She was a little lass I knew away back in my youth And if not up to date the fact awakes in me no ruth To days affected love of art for arts sake would have been To her old fashioned views of tilings but little short of sin She never dreamed that paltering would strike the tempter dumb And Zolaism furnished not her mental pabulum And all this purity was there I could but clearly see -When Sue behind the window blinds glanced shyly out at me It ill becomes the heart of age to over flow with sighs If gone the rows says the poet their ashes must suffice Vhen -white hairs tell the time to leave off cakes and ale is here We ought to turn our thoughts upon a more enduring sphere IBut somehow theres a pleasure yet in caJling up the way fThat one bright pair of eyes could make of night the fairest day Por on my sight there glowed the light neer seen on land or sea When Sue behind the window blinds glanced shyly out at me Chicago Times Herald AS A MAN SOWS M HBB9BSM HEN Dick Tre mayne Lieutenant in the One Hun dred and Twenti eth Queens Own Royal Rot ers -went down to Stretton on leave he -was about the unlikelle s t man possible In the o p in i o n of his friends to fall In love at first sight The unexpected however always hap pens and in accordance with this trite but true saying the gallant soldier fell -an easy victim The whole affair was absurd he knew The mere idea that he Dick Tremayne heir to his brothers title and an acknowledged eligible in the k matrimonial market should ever give a serious thought to his sister-in-laws pretty governess was in itself ridicu lous Nevertheless it was a very pleas ant pastime in the dusky evenings out on the moonlit terrace to saunter along with the prettiest girl he had ever met The few days of bis leave fled by swift ly and to Joyce Cardew they were laden with sweet memories while Dick himself was really unfeignedly sorry as the time drew near for his de parture to join his regiment which was going out to India One evening when the scent of the xoses filled the cool air with fragrance and the night breeze sighed in the pop lars on the lawn he came very near to destruction They were on the terrace looking down into the somber darkness of the plantation where shafts of silver moonlight pierced the black shadows and threw fantastic shapes on the lawn beyond They were silent and Dick looked furtively at hs companions sweet lace spiritualized by the mystic moonlight her blue eyes shone darkly in her pale face and the hair which V was the envy of many dusky auburn in color and curling distractingly over her shapely head made a picturesque framing to her delicate loveliness Presentlj he spoke suddenly and with vehemence Taking her hand in bis Intoxicated by her loveliness and the strange influence of the stillness he murmured words which brought a bright flood of color to her cheeks and a glad light into her eyes then N Joyce Are you there Lady Tremavnes voice broke tke magic spell and he dropped her hand -they turned to the house and Joyce went in Can you write those few notes for me said Lady Tremayne not notic ing the girls brilliant eyes and the un Tisual color ia her soft cheeks and -Joyce writing at the table in the li brary her heart beating fast and the light still in her sweet eyes lived over -again those few dangerously sweet moments Presently voices on the terrace caus ed her to start it was his voice and the other Roger Temple ber lady ships cousin The two men were sauntering up and down in the dusky coolness Pretty I should think so indeed aid Temples voice Are you cutting In at the lasc moment old fellow Not 1 said Dicks voice with a laugh though I nearly did for myself just now she looked so confoundedly jprettj dont you know and goodness only knows what I was saying what I might have said if Grace hadnt come out just in the xiick of time Uncommon xame Joyce isnt it After all one must amuse ones self in a place like -this and ia petite does charmingly pour passer le tsmps Let us go in The voices died away into silence as the men joined Lady Tremayne in the drawing room Joyce sat sat on still and cold the pile of finished notes be fore ber The candle burnt down and lwent out with a splutter and still she ylfsat in the dark where later on Lady Tremayne found her and alarmed at the sight of her pale tired face and heavy eyessent her to bed while down stairs Dick was Inquiring the where abouts of pretty Miss Cardew When he left next day he found him self thinking of ber with very real re gret If she had not been poor and if he had not been leaving England he felt he could have risked it after all though by the way she had bid him good by with a cold composure which left him no loophoe for a repetition of last nights scene While she If he could have guessed the depths of her feelings even tien at the last moment he might have spoken again and savetf himself a bitter reaping II Three years hive passed Dick Tramayue has received his pro motion and is on his way home During his voyage his thoughts turn again as they have done many times before to Joyce and his long remembered last evening in England Thinks of her with late remorse mingled with a pleasanter feeling for has he not made up his mind to speak to her at last and ask her to make him more happy than he deserves to be It is a dull dreary November after noon when he arrives at the Manor liouse and he feels an agreeable sense of expectancy as he alights at the fa miliar door A vapory fog envelopes everything and the thought of the warmth within and Joyce is very pleas ant to him Lady Tremayne is out says the old butler and no intimation of Captain Tremnynes arrival has been received but Lady Carew is in the drawing room Dick wonders who she may be as he goes Into the cozy drawing room which is illumined only by the dancing fire light A delicious perfume of flow ers fills the air and as he enters some one rises from a seat near the fire a slender figure in white As she ad vances out of the shadow a fiery tongue of flame leaps up and lights upon the sweet fair face and a great joy falls upon the man It is Joyce He starts forward with outstretchea hands and eager glad words rise tu multuously to his lips Dont you know me Joyce he cries and then a look of recognition comes into ber eyes but he does not no tice the little frown which wrinkles her forehead for a moment Of course I remember you Captain Tremayne she says and to his ears her voice seems to have become sweet er He had had no idea that she would have developed in three years into the lovely woman who now stands before him with a new dignity and sweetness which become her well I am evidently an unexepected guest he says laughing as they sit down in the pleasant glow of the bright fire but I do not regret that as I have met you first A STililo prrsrd hor line nnrl eli w looks into the glowing nre You did not expect to see me here still I dare say Are you home for long Yes I hope so and then when I go out again I do not intend to go alone He is very confident of his position and not the least glimmer of doubt darkens his present happiness Joyce he continues softly have you never guessed that I love you dear Do you remember that evening we spent in the garden here before I went away I have never ceased to think of you and now ah Joyce I love you I love you Forgive my long silence and make me nappy at last The eager words break from his lips in a torrent and then she looks at him with a smile Her sweet clear voice strikes him as almost cruel when she speaks There is nothing to forgive she says coldly We are both quite aware that that past you speak of was purely a matter of amusement One must amuse ones self in a place like this you know And after all it was simply pour passer le temps He looks at her uncomprekendinglj till a glimmer of the truth breaks upon him with terrible force There is no hope Joyce he cries desperately is this all you say to me after years of devotion His absolute selfishness startles her and words rise to her lips which might have torn the veil somewhat roughly from his eyes but she checks them and rises from her seat What more can I say she says sweetly We are all fools at some time of our lives and we were no ex ception to that rule Ah Ted is that you The door opens and a man enters Jo3ce lays ber hand on his arm He is a tall fine looking man broad-shouldered and stalwart Captain Tre mayne she says turning to Dick with a smile I must introduce my husband Sir Edward Carew Ted this Is Sir Johns brother The two men shake hands and Dick reading the absolute trust and love for her husband written in Lady Carews sweet eyes mentally curses his folly and knows that what he has sown that surely he has also reaped and the har vest is bitter The Daughter Which Pingrey I hardly know whether it is safe to propose to Miss Winkle or not Sometimes I fear she would refuse me and then I flatter myself she would jump at the chance Fogg Yes but which way would she jump Boston Transcript Avoiding Distinction First burglar Ill have ter geta bike soon Second burglar What for First burglar Well if I dont Ill soon be known to de police as de only man in de prefesh what dont ride- LITTLE WEATHER PROPHETS Bees Seem to Know in Advance What the Weather Will Be The question whether various insects and animals have the powers popularly attributed to them of knowing in ad vance what the weather is going to be and in particular of predicting the se verity of a coming winter has fre quently been discussed A correspond ent of Cosmos M P de Ridder writes to that journal that he believes the bee to posses this power beyond doubt and he proceeds to give his reasons for that belief We translate his letter below Says M de Ridder Every one knows that at the ap proach of winter certain birds leave northern regions and fly southward seeking under a warmer sky a refug against the cold and rigors of the north But every one does not know of the admirable foresight shown by the bee about the time of the earliest cold weather It also feels the approach of winter nay more the bee seems to understand a long time in advance whether the winter is to be mild or se vere Between the migratory birds and the bee there is this difference The former are driven away by the cold and the bad weather from the regions where they are the latter are guided by a special instinct of foresight an Instinct which I make bold to call the bees meteorology But the bee does not know how to flee before the approach of the winter and cannot do so he cannot abandon the store so laboriously laid up during the fine weather he cannot leave the hive where he has put away the neces sities of life for the coming winter Many times have I witnessed the vigilance and foresight of the bee For ty years ago bee keepers were still using the old mlter shaped straw hives with two openings or entrances Well I noticed that about the beginning of October the bees stopped up these two entrances with wax so as to leave pass age for only one bee at a time thus giv ing a fiesson to the bee keeper who had neglected to put a board over the en trances to prevent the introduction of cold air Certain persons think that the bee plasters up these openings as the cold increases but this is an error The bee knows enough to take bis precautionary measures in good time for when the temperature of the air falls to about 40 degrees Fahrenheit he does not leave the hive and when the temperature approaches freezing he cannot without exposing himself to paralysis and death separate himself from the mass of in dividuals who then form a compact ball There are others who believe that extraordinary precautionary measures taken by the bee are only the result of coincidence and that chance plays the chief part in them This hypothesis is not tenable Besides the bee keepers of all countries agree in saying and their attention must have been often called to the phenomenon that every time that the bees have taken care to seal hermetically the entrances to the hive so as to leave but a minute pass age for air the winter has been of ex treme rigor On the other hand the years when the bees have done nothing to preserve themselves from the cold have been marked by relatively mild winters during which no heavy frosts have occurred Here the question naturally pre sents Itself How can the bee foresee the weather so far In advance when man with all his intelligence and his knowledge has not yet succeeded in do ing this In truth I find no satisfactory an swer to this question Must we suppose that toward the end of the summer a rigorous winter is heralded by drafts of air of exception ally low temperature that escape our perceptions and our instruments but are perceived by the bee and utilized by it as signs that it must take meas ures In due time for protection against the cold However it may be before this In stance of prediction whose exactness is not open to doubt on the testimony of a large number of bee keepers every ob server of meteorological phenomena should stand confounded and express his admiration for the mysterious me teorology of the bee Literary Digest Woolly Journalism This is the way they write up a cy clone out West It turned a well wrong side out in Missouri it turned a cellar upside down in Wisconsin mov ed a township line in Nebraska blew all the staves out of a whisky barrel in Iowa and left nothing but the bung hole killed an honest Indian agent out West changed the day of the week in Indiana blew the hair off a bald-headed man in Ohio killed a truthful law yer in Illinois blew the mortgage off a mans farm in Kansas scared a red headed woman in Delphi until her hair turned white blew all the cracks out of a fence in Dakota and took all the wind out of a politician Pretty hard blow Deaf Smiths Triumph At the battle of San Jacinto when Santa Anas forces had routed Hous tons left wing a deaf Colonel by the name of Smith did not hear the order to fall back and kept on fighting until his example and success on the right wing caused a general rally which re sulted in the total defeat and capture of the Mexican army There is a coun ty in Texas named Deaf Smith in hon or of the hero Population of Crefeld The population of Crefeld Germany Increased from 53975 in 1867 to 100 000 in 1887 but since that date the In crease has been only 8000 There is many a slip twlxt the cup md the Up but there is only one be tween a man and the sidewalk When marriage is not a success di vorce 1b Its successor JAPAN IS WIDE AWAKE Takes Advantage of Whatever Will Increase iier Advancement Whatever the popular opinion may be regarding the present attitude of Japan toward the United States and the pro test filed through its legation hero against the annexation of the Sandwich Islands by this Government one is forced to admire the cleverness with which this little country has in the last quarter of a century conducted her domestic and foreign affairs and to wonder at the position to which she has raised herself among the nations of the earth Her phenomenal progress dates from that period when she became imj pressed with her own limitations As soon as she realized them she set about improving and strengthening herself and she owes more to the fact that shf has laid stress on the education of bet people and has aided and encouraged them in their efforts selecting hei functionaries from the cleverest of her students than to any other cause The present minister to Washington for instance is a man thoroughly versed In his profession A long resi dence in this country when the opposl tion party was in power and he prac tically an exile has given him an ac quaintance with the internal affairs oi the United States which has been oi incalculable value to him in his diplo matic career and perhaps no one of hid colleagues is better equipped to man age the delicate matter he has at pres ent in hand His predecessor wiio will be remem bered as having been successful in making for his Government a new treaty with the United States was at one time a student at Harvard and it is safe to assume that all future minis ters from Japan to this country will be selected from those who have had an opportunity of studying the institutions and people of the United States at close range It is surely flattering that Japan models so many of her institutions af ter those of this country During the last year for many years past in fact Japanese delegations have crossed the Pacific for the purpose of studying various subjects in the United States from stock breeding to electric rail ways and there Is hardly a time when some distinguished Japanese are not staying at the capital for the purpose of investigating matters of especial in terest to their country There Is at the present time T Kochi be a professor In the Imperial Univer sity and director of the geological sur vey of Japan and N Tsuneto an agri cultural expert holding a high position in that department who are on their way to the international geological con gress which will meet in St Peters burg this summer Mr Kochibe and Mr Tsuneto have been the guests of Prof Walcott of the geological survey who has had much pleasure in making them acquainted with the workings of his department Japan boasts a thriving geological survey founded in 1879 whose first director was a German Dr Edmund Naumann It has grown constantly since its organization and in recogni tion of its work received gold and sil ver medals from the Paris exposition of 1889 From the Worlds Columbian exposition It also received three med als awarded for Its exhibit of maps typical specimens of soils minerals rocks and fossils There is also staying in town Massan Maeda former minister of agriculture In Japan and Mr Furuya the repre sentative of some Japanese commercial companies who acts as his secretary and interpreter Mr Maeda is here in a strictly private capacity has no offi cial mission and his purpose is to fur ther trade relations between Japan and this country He believes that a great reciprocal trade could be built up be tween itlhese two nations and is working enthusiastically for that end New York Tribune A Peculiar Funeral A funeral without a corpse was tne queer spectacle which the people of Williamsburg N Y witnessed recent ly The way it came to occur was this Henry Milthack a resident of that town sent his wife to Germany for her health and on Sunday received a cable message to the effect that she was dead and that she would be buried on Tues day Of course her husband could not get across the ocean in time for the funeral so he resolved to have a con temporary funeral in Williamsburg minus the corpse An undertaker was engaged who arranged for the affair in the usual manner Announcements were put in the papers and friends of the family notified At the appointed hour the house was filled with mourn ers and the minister preached a funer al sermon Every detail was carried out the same as if it were an ordinary funeral until it came to going to the cemetery and there of course it had to stop Rather Inconsistent Father Come young man get your coat off and come with me TommyYoure not going to lick me are you dad Father Certainly Didnt I tell you this morning that I would settle with you for your bad behavior Tommy Yes but I thought it was only a joke like when you told the grocer you was going to settle with him Dull in Pumpkinville Hodge Hello old man whats goln on in Pumpkinville Podge Nuthin Wy its got jest so blamed dull house rent has stopped an the interest on what a feller owes has plum quit Atlanta Journal Training will do much for a man but It will mot teach him to look for the towel bdf or filling his eyes full of soap d DR MARCUS WHITMAN Missionary He Did Not Forget to Bo a Zealous American To commemorate the massacre of Dr Marcus Whitman and his wife on Nov 29 1S47 a marble shaft has been raised to his mem ory The site of the monument is at Whitman Mis sion just seven miles from Walla Walla and here only recently the remains of the vic tims were disin terred and now He dr whitman Jn new made graves on the same spot It was through the efforts of Dr Whitman that that portion of our country now comprising Oregon Washington and Idaho with portions of Wyoming and Montana was saved to the Union Previous to the final establishment of the boundary line between Canada and the United States by the treaty of 184G the Hudson Bay Company was in virtual possession of that whole coun try It opposed all efforts to civilize the Indians for the reason that civili zation would interfere seriously with their trade In 1832 four Indians came from Ore gon to St Louis a journey of more than 3000 miles for the sole purpose of obtaining for their people the Book from heaven the white mans Bible The Methodist Episcopal church sent out the Rev Jason Lee and his asso ciates in 1S34 and in 1835 the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions sent the Rev Samuel Parker and Dr Marcus Whitman to explore the country On the strength of their report the Board Commissioned them to establish a mission among the Nez Perces and sent two other laborers the Rev R H Spalding and his young wife to accom pany them Mrs Spalding and Mrs Whitman were the first white women to cross the Rocky Mountains They reached Vancouver in September 1S3G having journeyed by wagon all the way and having proved it possible to take emigrant trains from the Missis sippi to the Pacific coast In 1842 there were 322 Indian fami lies which under their tuition had be gun to cultivate the soil In September of that year Dr Whitman met at a dinner table at Walla Walla several of the chief officers of the Hudson Bay Company and heard what convinced him that effort was being made to stim ulate immigration from the British pos sessions and to raise over the whole Territory the British flag Excusing his hasty departure he rode twenty five miles to his home and before he had leaped from his saddle announced his purpose I am going to ride to Washington God carrying me through and bring out an immigration next sea son which will save this Territory to the United States Within twenty four hours he had started with one companion who worn out with toil and exposure was obliged to remain at Bents fort on the Arkansas River until spring After suffering untold hardship with his ears face and hand frozen Dr Whit man reached St Louis in February 1843 and on March 3 he arrived In Washington five months from the time of starting His first question on reaching civili zation was as to the Ashburn treaty He was told it had been concluded How about Oregon Left out of the treaty was the reply The whole question of the boundary west of the Rocky Mountains had been reserved for future settlement Dr Whitman was able to give such information as to the value and the accessibility of the country as determined American statesmen not lightly to surrender it Daniel Webster said to him that moun tains and deserts made communication with Oregon impossible I took a wagon over the mountains replied Dr Whitman and have the wagon now The same summer Dr Whitman conducted a party of nearly WHITMAN MEMORIAL GOO emigrants with 121 wagons across the mountains into Oregon and practi cally settled the question as to which flag should float over the vast domain Iegal effect was given to it by the Ireaty of 1846 The hostile influences however of the Hudson Bay Company and others continued to work on the minds of the Indians with the result that on Nov 29 1847 he and his wife witb thirteen other persons were foully massacred by the people they had come to benefit Viviparous Fish A doubt that has troubled scientists for years whether there exists a vivip arous kind of fish one that gives birth to Its young in a Uring state waa defi nitely settled In the affirmative the ot er day when the City Hall fountain of the capital of Arizona Territory was cleaned out In turning the water out of the big cement basin where a gold fish variety of the carp family has long disported itself for the edification of the Phoenix nurse girl and the Mari I copa County hobo it was found that j many of the fish had given birth to I progeny fully formed and ready to dart i about in search of food at the moment of coming into their watery world Oth ers had given birth to tiny creatures that were globular in shape except for the protruding eyes and a nascent tail fin that could scarcely be seen without a strong glass From all evi dences it was clear that the clean up had been made during the breeding season yet there was no sign of fish roe or eggs Many specimens of the strange young fish were collected and will be shipped to different experts one lot going to the Smithsonian Insti tution Phoenix Ariz Correspondent St Louis Globe Democrat MKINLEYS FIRST SWEETHEART The Story of How He Wooed but Lost Miss Lydia Wads worth Mrs Lydia McMong of Big Rapids Mich has at last consented to tell the story of the early romantic love pass age between herself and the man who Is now President of the United States Away back in the days of their blooming youth when both lived In the village of Poland Ohio William wooed Mrs McMong then Miss Lydia illif H MRS LYDIA MMONG Wads worth She was a pretty girL with plenty of admirers but of themj all she favored but one and that wa3i William McKinley The energetic lad I wooed like a Napoleon but he met his Waterloo at the hands of the old pie As soon as they discovered that the young couple were contemplating matrimony they interfered McKinley1 was poor and to the shrewd eye 6ts John Wadsworth he did not appear likef a man calculated to get on in the world and for this reason he denied him the hand of his fair daughter The usual j result followed Clandestine meetings and surreptitious correspondence wasi resorted to Whispers of a possible elopement were wafted to the old folks5 ears They resolved upon stern meas ures and the romance was at an end There was In Poland a young man named McMong who had persistently wooed the fair Lydia Her parents fa vored his suit and declared that she must marry him There was a stormy scene and the girl vowed that she would have the man of her choice or none but In the end she yielded She married McMong who has been to her all that her parents anticipated To day she is living in Big Rapids with her husband and two pretty daughters Their home is cozy and comfortable and they have the respect of the com- munity and a substantial part in its social life Some Slipshod English Carlessness in grammar and rhet oric is not by an means confined to the uneducated I will try and do you no harm say3 one of the leading characters in Mar cella And again You will try and make him alter his mind I will go and see her soon is another examplo of making and take the place of to The use of the verb in the plural ber after neither is a frequent error Neither of the girls are going Neither of them were really gay The adjective real is often made toi do duty as an adverb by careless speaW ers We had a real nice time Ob thats a real good book To say the mother insisted on May going instead of Mays going is asj far from right as to say they depend on him going Yet some of our bestj writers are guilty of this omission of the possessive case Funny in the sense of singular ot peculiar Is a word that Is often beard In connection with very serious mat i ters It is funny that no notice was given of the funeral It is funny thaJj none of them wore crape Harpers Bazar British Progress in India A railway to India from Alexandria to Agra and Bombay is proposed by C E D Black in a paper read before the English Society of Arts The llne would be 2400 miles long from Port Said to Kurrachee and would cross up j per Arabia to Basra at the head of the Persian Gulf and skirt the north shore of the gulf and the Arabian Sea to Kurrachee on the border of India Mr Black advocates the route for politicall purposes mainly through he thinks the revenue would be sufficient to pay a fair interest on its estimated cost of 75000000 A woman is very apt to regard hfo friends as so many debts to be fully and promptly met The opposite side of the street is one thing that never comes to the man wha waits What the average Kentuckian need la a waterproof coat for his stomaciu f o 4b A smi W 1 1 t I