ySif rip $&&&$&& . - i It j .' V N AS THE WORLD ww ; s wnn the M WEEKLY a: I CORE AN PRINCE TO MARRY How to Catch Rattler AWS m .. fi I AN AMERICAN SCHOOLGIRL ( REVOLVES WM r - ' S&gu i' . . .'-. .-.. '-; -i ,1. t. s i .-i '. :- " .v-.. . . 4 - , . . f. AA i it . -nnnnnnnnnnnnWnnnnnnnW- mnml wftanp'-. . .asBana. IkS. Buns-r'' " V BnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnSI BnBsn j Formal announcement will soon be made of the engagement of Prince Pcnkell Euiwha Yee. heir apparent to the Corean throne, to Miss Mary But tles, a pretty 16-year-old Ohio school girl. The afair has all the elements of a sammer romance, the joung wom an having act the prince while she CALLS MAGNATE A DUDE. Acquaintance Note Change in Ap- pearance of James J. Hill. Since he has been doing business in Wall street James J. Hill, the West ern railroad magnate, has "spruced up" a lot as compared with his ap pearance of yore. A man from the Pacific, coast has this to say: "I saw Jim Hill when 1 was in New York a few days ago and he was a dude com plete. The last time I had seen him .before that be was standing on the rear nlatform of a very shabby private '-.-'. j' --' car, addressing the farmers of the -t.--l- .'Big Bend country, which, all men '5"-.f.-"'--.-Vahould know, is in southwestern ' .' ":-.K" ."Washington. At that time his beard '.; - .:"; -.1 . " we weedy and long and his hair man- tied his shoulders, hih garments were shiny black .and old. Now I observe kisgray beard is Hipped close to his .-jowls, his hair is shorn close to his shead.' that is. such or it as still re- inpitis. His trousers. 1 notice, arc .black. new and creased. A white col- -lar .encircles his throat and the shirt ' "sleeves in which lie mils are inunacu .late." . WOULD SHARE HER WEALTH. J7B5. JUP.C.W4AZZ Mrs. .?. It. C. Walker, who inherited S50.0M.000 by the death of her father, William Weiglittuan of Philadelphia, is 'besieged with requests for charity. She -has no heirs. Seek to Learn in America. Ur. Pnnkall. director of the Royal Ceramic school at Buntzlau. Prussian Silesia, hat- started on a journey of observation and study in the United States on behalf of the Prussian min istry of commerce. Several directors ot German industrial schools and a high -official of the ministry will ac company Dr. Puukall. The trip is ex pected to last two months. Its pur pose is to procure knowledge of the conditions that prevail in the indus trial schools of America and other nsefnl institutions, with a view of imitating them in Prussia. Distinguished Chilian Here. . 'Vice Admiral Alberto Maldonado of the Chilian navy has arrived in this cssmtry to attend the international geographical congress to be held ia Washington the week of Sept. 19. Maldonado has bad twenty years of active service in the navy and has been at -the head of the hydrographic department between the parallels IS and 53 south latitude for over ten years and is at present director of hydrography of the port of Valpar aiso. All the plans of hydrography, navigation and geography are made ap at that port. Increase in Vnrse Rhyming. A startling increase in occasional verse may be looked for shortly, for a new "Rhyming Dictionary" is on the point of publieatJoa: and the rhyme often suggests the idea. Mr. Lorin Lathrop, the deviser of the work, is well known hi Bristol as a popular and Hncieat United States consul. But there are few who know the industry of his leisnre. which has resulted in pseudonymoaa stories in newspapers .-tad in cloth covered novels. Hfc own name is a Yorkshire one of more than n century ago. Mm Light a New Anesthetic Pre. Retard and Prof. Eatery of Genera have discovered a new an esthetic for ase in dentistry. Expert stents to learn the effects of colored lights npon the nerves revealed that Mae light is extraordinarily soothing. A patient was put ia a dark room had Us eyes were exposed to a sixteen candle blae light for three minutes. This caused him to lose the sense of pain and the tooth was then painless ly extracted without the after-effects of ether or chloroform. America Gets Noted Frenchman. M. Prevot, one of the winners of the grand prix de Rome in the architec tural competition at the Beaux Arts, Paris, this year, has accepted the po aittaa of professor of architecture at Cornell' university. - His Beat Years of Study. President Schuraua of Cornell uni- aays that he acquired ssore daring the three years of ftm a groeery, store .than la aay tkree yean since. asmV cLLLLLLLLLrR ' c o was sojourn ins at a Maryland resort. The I'rince is now living at Salem, Md.. whore he is studying under a private tutor. This is not.. the first American attachment of Prince Yee, he having previously been engaged to Miss Clara Bull, a pretty Cincinnati milliner. fcMMMWMVMMM THE NEED FOR EXERCISE. Golden Opportunity for Those Who Possess Inventive Skill. "Wanted, by the millions, the ever increasing millions, who must lead sedentary lives, an interesting exer cise." In these words a writer in the Sat urday Evening Post voices the popu lar cry for an exercise that shall be more perfectly adapted to the needs of men and women who cannot lead outdoor lives. Such an exercise must be one that does not take up too much time, one that is not an end in itself, one that makes the blood circulate and yet does not create a lot of ex cess muscular tissue which is useless in one's daily vocation. " The increasing popularity of golf in this country is a gratifying expression of the popular trend toward healthful relaxation. Links are rapidly multi plying all over the land. The pas time is interesting to most persons, fascinating to many. It takes men and women into the sunshine and the pure air of the country. Equally las citiatmg to others is lawn tennis, a vigorous game that leaves no muscle or tendon unused, developing alert ness. sYiripkncss and strength. But neither ot these forms of exer cise is available in winter, when ex ercise is most needed by those who lead sedentary lives. An effort to take the mental exhilaration and mus- J eclar activity of the lawn tenuis court into the home during the long winter evenings resulted in the game of "ping pong." but most people agico that it is a poor substitute for the real tiling. While the bicycle affords an exer cise that is of great benefit, taken in moderation, the objection urged against it is that it does not bring the upper part of the body into activity. It is true that it quickens circulation and accelerates respiration, but it pro Miles no exercise for the "trunk" of the body ot for the arms. Moreover, wheeling is not a winter pastime. Here is a chance for men of invent ive skill. There's millions in it, for millions want an "interesting exer cise." gcod in winter as well as in summer. Kaiser Carries Resentment Far. The marriage of Count Herbert Bis marck and Countess Hoyos took place at Vienna and it was on this occasion that the kaiser took a step which has leen described as "one of the falsest steps off his life a step equivalent to the malevolent boycotting of the Bismarcks." By order of his majesty Count Caprivi. the new chancellor, wrote to Prince Rctiss. German am bassador at Vienna: "Should Hie prince (ex-chancellor) or his family make any approach to you. pray con fine yourself to conventional forms of courtesy. This order is also to lie observed by the staff of the embassy. I may add that his majesty will take no r.olicc of the wedding." Yeung Woman's Daring Climb. Miss Clara Webb, a young woman of Portland. Ore., has just made the ascent of Mount Hood alone. She was camping with a party just below the snow line and one day decided to attempt the climb to the peak. She started on the impulse of the moment, took no food with her and was near ly exhausted when sro reached the crest. After resting for a short time she began the descent, and madft the perilous trip in safety. The danger of her feat can easily be understood when it is considered that the moun tain is over 1 1 .000 feet high. Long Line of Burgomasters. M. Gilet. burgomaster of Ingcrsheim. Germany, belongs to a family which for 224 years has held that office. First of the line was a French soldier named Dominique Gilet. belonging to Turenne's army. He was grievously wounded in the battle of Turckheim. fought on Jan. 5. 1675. was cared for by a peasant of Ingersheim. recovered, settled there, prospered, married the daughter of hia life preserver and in 1680 became burgomaster: and the Gilets have been burgomasters of In gersheim ever since. alleen Experiments. International balloon ascents, both manned and unmanned, were made in November and December, 1903. in many European countries (the British islands excepted), and kite observa tions were also made at the Blue Hill observatory, in this country. The highest altitudes attained were Trapes (near Paris). 16,000 and 14.800 meters, and Itteville (near Paris). 11,200 and 10.800 meters. At Zuricc the balloons reached 13,000 and 17,000 meters. Dr. Asser Honored. Dr. Asser, a well-known authority on international law, has been ap pointed minister of state for The Hague. He is a member of the per manent arbitration court at The Hague' and was the arbitrator be tween Russia and the. United States in the Behring sea sealing dispute. Women in Dockyard. A new departure is to be made at the Pembroke (FngMaddochyard. by the employmeat of women as tracers. IN "MUTUAL MASSAGE CLUB.' New York Girls Have Organization to Preserve Gcod Looks. A Chicago girl is said to be respons ible for the organization of several "mutual massage clubs" in New'York cit. The fad ks having qnitc a vogue there. The girl in question makes the solemn declaration that bcr idea is not a business enterprise, but is puri! ly for the purpose of aiding wrinkled sir.ters to have tho seams smoothed out of their owu faces and to perform the same office for their friends. The energetic Chicsgoan is only 22, but is precocious beyond her years. She has studied the art of revivifying mori bund cuticle by pressure of the fin gers, with the aid of an emoliem. since she was 1( years old, and she says her six years experience has con vinced her that a party of. say twenty young women, can be helpful to each other, and keep themselves youthful in appearance without expense, fur ther than the cost of a few pounds or tea. which will provide sufficient men tal exhilaration for a whole year. Then the rubbing process will be no end of fun. WILL DIRECT COREAN AFFAIRS Durham White Stevens Selected far High Position. Durham White Stevens, counselor of the Japanese legation at the capi tal, who has been selected to direct the foreign relations of Corea for Ja pan, will depart for Corea the latter itfirt of September and will take up his residence in the capital of the country. The Japanese legation at Washington gives out the information that the selection of Mr. Stevens was fully known to the minister before it was announced .from Tokio and the selection was not made until after Mr. Stevens had been consulted. Mr. Stevens has been in the service of Durham White Stevens. Japan for twenty-two years and his standing is high, he being esteemed as a man of attainments and sound judgment. Start Housekeeping Late in Life. Sixty-three years married and just commencing to keen house is the rec ord of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Apger. who have been admitted to the county in flrmaiy at Bowling Green. Ohio, where, contrary to the rules of the in stitution, they are permitted to jointly occupy a large room and indulge in their limited housekeeping fancies. Mr. Apger is 37 years old and his wife is 83. They boarded when first married, and in the subsequent years dwelt with their children, but have outlived them ail. and at last were forced to become a county charge to secure the attention their extreme age demanded. They have a little property, how ever, and pay toward their own sup port, which relieves them of that feel ing of utter dependence. Superintend ent Frank Brandeberry pf the infirm ary takes pleasure in looking after their wants, and in all probability they will end their days at the county farm. Human Beinns with Tails. A German traveler claims to have discovered in the forests of Borneo a people who still wear the tail of our primitive ancestors. He does not write from hearsay: he has seen the tail, says the London Chronicle. It belonged to a child about six years old. spiting from the tribe of Poeaans. As nobody could speak the Poenan tongue the youngster could not be questioned, but there was his tail sure enough, not very long, but flexible, hairless, and about the thickness of one's little finger. The Poenans are reported to be very simple, honest folk, with a child-like system of bar ter. They deposit in public places the goods they wish to exchange, and a few days later they find there the equivalents they desire. Nobody dreams of stealing. This is almost .as remarkable as the vestige of the an cestral tail. How Great Novelist Works. "My method of work?" said Jules Verne. "Well, until recently I in variably rose at o and made a point ot doing three hours of writing before breakfast. The great bulk of my work was always done in this time. My stories have really nearly all been written when most folk are sleeping. I have always been a wide reader, especially of newspapers and period icals, and it is my custom whenever .- paragraph or article strikes me to cut it out and preserve it for future reference." Make Fight en Consumption. In order to check the ravages of consumption in New Vork city con certed action by the government, by the medical profession, relief agencies and private citizens is now being un dertaken. A municipal sanitarium for patients in the early stages of the dis ease and a dispensary are required to supplement the provision already made, which is more especially adapt ed to advanced cases. Steps have al ready been taken toward meeting these ne?ds. Display of Electric Lamps. An interesting collection of about 7o0 incandescent electric lamps, In cluding the first experimental lamps, is being made by the St. Louis expo sition. The collection is unique, and includes a specimen of every kind of filament lamp ever made in Europe or America. Cape Town Water System. The city of -Cape Town, Soata Africa, is (about to extend its water works at aa expeaditare of ttMOM. 'ssssssw JJ NEW GOVERNOR OF CANADA. Earl Grey Selected by King Edward .- to Succeed Lord Minto. King Edward has approved the ap pointment ci Earl Grey as governor general of Canada, in succession to the carl of Mh.to. Albert Henry George, the fourth Earl Grey, has been lord lieutenant of Northumberland since 1899. He was born in 1851 and was married in 1877. He owns about 17.C0O acres of lauded estates. He is one of the most notable men in the present British peerage, and has made himself known to the world in several conspicuous ways as a financier, a philanthropist and an in dustrial promoter. He was associated with the late Cecil Rhodes' in the de velopment of South Africa, and is ex ecutor of the will under which the Rhodes scholarships are assigned. He was administrator of Rhodesia in 1896 and 1897. At various times he has been concerned in the river tunnels of New York, having- interests in the Hudson river tunnel in its earlier stage and with a tunnel' that was planned from the city hall. Manhattan, to the Flatbush avenue station, Brook lyn, a project that apparently has fall en through. Earl Grey is also widely known among temperance workers at home ant! abroad as the projector of the scheme known as the Public House Trust company, by which it Is pro posed to mitigate the evils of saloons by turning them, so far as possible, into decent resorts, and making the fCW 3S? Al38?T GPr sale of strong drink a secondary fea ture and without profit. The earl is a brother-in-law to the 'carl of Minto, whom he succeeds. Millions of Telegrams in 1903. It is just sixty years ago since the first -.elygraphic message was sent by the Morse system from Baltimore to Washington, and the first message by tiie Atlantic submarine cable was dis patched six years atterward that is to say. in June, 1850. Since then the use of the telegraph has developed at a marvelous rate, until at the present time a million messages are sent over the v.-orld's lines every twenty-four hours. According to some returns re cently issued the number of tele grams dispatched in all countries in 1903 reached, the enormous total of 364.848,474. As a user of the telegraph Great Britain heads the list with 92. 171,000 dispatches, and United States is second with 91,391,000. and France comes third with 48.1 14.1 "1. Germany, Russia. Austria. Belgium and Italy follow in the order named. Russian Talked Too Much. Just about a week ago a young Russian nobleman, arrived in New York under an assumed name. He was not allowed to land. On the way over he became somewhat hilarious in the smoking room one evening. While in this happy frame of mind his discretion broke away from its moorings and he confidentially in formed a couple of fellow passengers that he was coming to this country to study American fortifications and pick up what information he could regarding military affairs. He also, told them his real name. All of which decided the authorities that he was not a desirable visitor, so he re turned by the same vessel without having set foot on American soil. Spending the Geuld Millions. Howard Gould has a large fortuae, and doubtless it is well iavested. bat there is reason to -believe it is not growing very fast, for bis expeadi tures are enormous. Persons living near his country place, Sands Point, speak in awful tones of the money that is being expended there. The sea wall, they swear, cost him $1. 000,000. His cowhouse, built of- stone, cost $250,000. and his chickenbouse. also of stone. $150,000. The iron fence arcund the poultry yard cost $10 a running foot. The Killarney castle duplicate is to represent an outlny of at least $4,000,000. Distress Signals for Autoiets. A correspondent of the London Globe makes the suggestion that mo torists should carry rockets, which might be fired when a breakdown oc curred, and he adds: "The local motor car repairers, if such a custom becomes general, are sure to estab lish 'lookout towers,' on top of each of which they can station a small boy to report motor shipwrecks. Of course the rockets should be made to throw on colored lights for night time as well as a volume of smoke for day. light." Fulfills Gypsy's Prophecy. Theodore Stavarche, living ia the town of Hermezin, near Bucharest, had his fortune told sixty-five years ago by a gypsy, who said that he would die by a bayonet. He fought through the Russo-Turkish war, was decorated for conspicuous bravery at Plevna and Smarden, and never re ceived a scratch. The other day. however, at the age of 75, he com mitted suicide with his grandson's bayonet, thus fulfilling the ancient prophecy. Railroad Company Retrenches. The number of men employed, in the shops of the Pennsylvania' rail road at Altoona on June 1, was about 9.500; two years ago it was 12,000. The pay rolls now aggregate $260,000 monthly; in 1902 the total was $575,. 000. Costly Harbor Works. New harbor works are to be con stracted at Rosario, Argentina, -which are estimated to coat $11,600,000 la SOW. Mfo- '4nmmmmaW It isn't everybody who knows how to c&tch a rattlesnake, even should he have sudden occasion to put such Knowledge in practice. The first in dication of the1 presence of a rattler is the sharp, unmistakable rattle. The reptile is the fairest fighter of all liv ing creatures, never failing to give due warning of its hostile intent. Bending, low and gazing among the shrubs, the dangerous one may be espied. He is curled on himself like a spiral spring,! his head flat and tri angular, and a fourth of his body raised out of the circles of coils and bent into the shape of a horizontal's, ready to strike with' lightning rapid ity. The eyes glare black and cold as the viper is poised like a tense sprit.g. alert and ready to bury its long, nee dlelike fangs and to inject the 'fright ful poison. If the intruder is without striking distance and remains where he is he is in little danger, as only in the rarest cases have the snakes been known to attack and assume the initi ative. If the hunter withdraws, gradu ally the viper assumes a position of repose, which it maintains until again threatened. Bnt to the snake catcher the threat of the rattler is not a seri ous deterrent. He knows the creature I Sardine Crop a Failure j It is hard for us. in this land where the sardines are eaten, to realize. the importance of sardine fishery to the folk of the lands where sardines are caught. The failure of the sardine crop re cently threatened the people of Brit tany with-an outbreak of famine. But. through the liberality of the Parisians, and the help of the French govern ment, relief was given in order that those out of work should be supplied with bread through the winter. On the west and southwest coasts of Europe sardine fishing is as impor tant an industry as herring fishing is on the ooasts of Norway, but this year the output is practically nil. so that several hundreds of people are thrown out of work. Thousands of people now find employment in one part and an other of the work in catching fish, in making tins and in preserving and packing and marketing, and so on. Sardines are put up in greater vari ety than formerly, there being sar Fable With a Moral One day a wolf, who had wandered farther than usual, came upon a farm house to find it seemingly unguarded and many fowls about. "This is the soft thing I have long been looking for." said the wolf to himself, "and I'll just pick up that fat gander." He was about to rush upon his vic tim when he observed a fine, fat lamb just beyond, and he paused and said "Come to think of it, I prefer Iamb to goose, and there are no feathers to stick in my teeth. I'll take lamb." He had approached within a few feet of the lamb when he noticed the mother lying down amidst the grass, and. thinking matters over, he ob served "It's a nice, fat lamb, to be sure, but one would be a fool to take a lamb when he can just as well have a sheep. I'll go for the old ewe." There is serious missionary work at hand for the women's clubs work which ought to be undertaken with out an hour's delay. It is that of bringing well-to-do and fashionable women to a realization of their re sponsibilities in the matter of dress. Every year the fashionable fabrics arc getting more expensive, every year the trimmings and the "findings" for the simplest costume mean a greater outlay of money. Not only are street "and evening gowns more elaborate, hut fashion is now dictating costly toilets to take the place of the simple ami annronriate morning gown. And this at a time when the cost of mere living is ruinously high. Do women with money and position realize what a far-reaching source of evil .their extravagance and elabora- Work for Women's Clubs I Will Go Home" "I will go home, go home!" he said. "My roving life has lost Its- charm: I've found no place in all my quest. So good as that old hillside farm. I am so tired of faces new. And alien voices strange and harli: I am ts homesick as a nwn Bewildered in a midnight marsh." nd he went home, his heart cutsped " The racing wheels beneath the train:: But oh. at last the continent spanned He saw familiar things again! The verv hills nis young eyes knew. The lighthouse on the rocky shore. The vaUev with its river blue What Joy to be at home once more! And there the farmhouse stood, sot round itritt. rru.-u nf roodlv orchard trees: "The garden stretched its sunny length: Along ll walls were iuvr ui mm. But. swift, a strange dog leaped to meet Him -as-he reached tbe .lattice gate. And questioned Wat With' surly bark There where old Xero used to wait! Though it has never been proved that plants have brains, it has been proved often that there is some power within them whereby they combat evil conditions and seek what is best for their good. A resident of Castle Valley. Pa., has a vine that showed itself last month to have, if not a brain, a substitute of equal value. This vine, a young one, grew in a clay pot. A stick stood in the middle of tbe pot. and the vine curled up IL It was about two feet in height; in length, uncurled, it would have measured four feet. Usually the vine was placed in a south window every morning, where it absorbed an day the benefit of the saa's rays. It happened, however, through aa oversight, that oae aft Bnmmmnmnmmnmnmmnanmnmnmnnnnnnnnnnm I Plant Sought the Sun can strike oniy within a radius of about .one-half its length. Having struck, it musf recoil and aim a sec ond time before it can send out its hideous head. A six-foot stick is all that is neccsstry to catch the formid able snake. Pushing the end of the stick toward the reptile, the hunter watches his chance. The rattler is motionless, as if carved out of stone, only its beady, icy eyes fastened upon the end of the stick to await the prop er moment to bite. When that comes there is a movement too quick for the eye to follow, and the long fangs arc sunk info the stick, while the reptile, realizing its mistake at once, is al ready coiled up and again in a fighting attitude. Before it can strike down comes the pole, pinning the long squirming body to the ground, and the hunter walks boldly toward the helpless one, takes it up close behind the head, where the poison fangs cannot rach him, and puts his captive into a bag. There are many other methods of catching the rattler for instance, when the rattler is in its winter quar ters and lethargic and lazy. But the manner described is the way the pro fesslonal -snake catcher secures his specimens. Chicago Chronicle. dines packed in tomato sauce, sar dines in mustard, pickled of spiced sardines, etc.. but the great bulk ot sardines are still put up in oil. Sar dines are put up in a greater variety ot packages than formerly: for ex ample, in various sizes and shapes of oval tins, and some French and Span ish sardines are imported in glass. The great bulk of them are still put up in the familiar square flat tins, the great majority of these being of the sizes known as halves and quarters, and far the greater number of these being in quarters. Sardines are packed 100 tins in a case, and the consump tion of sardines In this country is roughly estimated at from l..r00.00 to 2.000.000 cases annually. Spanish and Portuguese sardines are now imported into this country in large quantities; they are not. how ever, so good as French sardines, foi they lack in flavor, being generally coarse and larger than those imported from France. The unsuspecting ewe was almost in his jaws when the wolf caught sight of a spring calf frisking about, and he smacked bis lips, and softlj whispered "Veal, eh? Veal always tickles my palate, and that calf will make me two good meals. I won't look an further, but just take that calf " "I'd go away back and sit down il I was you," said the farmer, as he came out of the house at that moment with a gun in his hands. ''While I was huntin up the gun you might have got that gander; while I was lookin foi powder and shot you could have gob bled the Iamb; while I was load in" uj: you had time to get away with the ewe: but. now that I'm here you'll have to go without veal." Moral When you strike a good thing hold it down. Liverpool (Eng.) Mercury. tion of attire have become? Do they guess the heartburning of the women of slender purse who belong to the same club, attend the same functions and whose aping of them, so as to ap pear appropriately dressed, means eitber weary, nerve-racking hours ot planning and midnight sewing or else a living beyond the slender income which brings nervous or moral col lapse to the foud and overtaxed hus band? Do they know that to theii door may le laid unhappy homes, em bezzlement. divorces? They declaim loudly against the sweatshops, they talk ably on altru ism. Yet they are blind and deaf to j the need next door of simple idea's of living which they, and they alone. can supply. Heaven speed the day ot unselfish self-control in the matter ot dress! Good Housekeeping. Then to the door a woman came. With lint-white hair and wrinkled f.u-.-Her hll'lit form lent by many litres That early stole her youthful sr:ic. "You are a'strauger. sir. I thiiik. Though I have not m.v glasses on: And. oh! I wonder if iierohaiu-e You brinif me tidings ol my son?" "I am your son! Oh. mother. :: Your verv son. who roKm"d away: I've wandered Jong in dreary land: I crnne a prodigal to-dsiy!" Phe draw him In across the hall. While, trembling, faint with -cstany. And cried unto a helples? man: 'Our son's come home! Father, oli -e. The past wa all fr.rgiv-::. for such Is love the whole wide world around. welcome waits tit roaming son Who comes from earth's remote"! bound: But love, with .ill it Mwer. cannot Recall the useless, wasted yean-. Xor bring the !ust-r back again. To eye washed dim by many tears. Emma A. Iente. ernoon a shutter shaded half the window and the vine was set in the shutters shadow. A fcot away was the sur.Mght. warm, glittering, life givng. but where the plant stood there was nothing but sloo:i. During the four days the vine stood ia the shadov.- with the sunlight near it, it did something that proved it to have a faculty akin to intelligence. It uncurled itselt from its supporting stick, and like a living thing it crawled over the window ledge to the sun. This 'vine, to be sure, did not un curl itself and crawl with the rapid movements of a snake. Its move ments were, indeed, so slow as to be imperceptible. Nevertheless, looking about, it overcame every obstacle, aad anally It lay basking ia the tva. -j iv i VETEB4INSS Days of Enchantment. T3 Iiiiijt :iko. wIk-h 'nc.itli Jlio &!ate Of willows kindly bending low. A carek1!" boy I lovvit t watl- And watch the sunbeams come and no. How ihw tin? rippllni; watt-rs hou; While dancing oVr some tmllinK liough In rhythm to ome wild bird's time! I never see such wonders now. How swift the flashing minnows dart With curious graces all their own! How elumsilv the cray-ush Mart Frcm 'neath the rudelv tilted stone. How lithe the water snake glides by: Ana what strange shapes endow With mystery the clouds on high! I never see such wonders now., Thovcar speeds 'swift from mart to mart With power niched from nature's store: And man his thinking may impart AH swiftly to some distant, shore The battle monsters rage and kill And strange things happen: yet I vow Muse on their marvels as I will I never see such wonders now. Washington Star. LINCOLN ON THE BATTLEFIELD. Preaident Watched Contest For the Poatewion ef Washington. Of all. the places of historic iaterest ia aad about Washington, there is not one that played a more important part in the defense of the nation's capital than picturesque Fort Stevens, just to the north of the city. There, a bit over forty years ago. Abraham Lincoln stood on the parapets of this hastily constructed fort and watched the battle for the protection of the city of Washington. It was the only time in the history of the country wbea the President, who is commander-in-chief of the army, has stood exposed on the field of battle to the bullets of the sharpshooters of the op posing forces. Sacred as the spot' should be. It was for many years neglected. In recent years, however, a dilatory Congress has seen to its care, and now it is at tractive enough to take many visitors dally to the high ground five miles north of the city where the Union sol diers fought It out with Jubal Early's men on that memorable morning of July 12. 1864. There is a little cem etery hard by now. where clustered about a tall flag pole from the top of which the stars and stripes float to the breeze, are the graves of the men who died that Washington might be saved. It is bard to say what might have, been the result had they not checked Gen. Early's march on Washington. If President Lincoln had escaped capture it must have been in flight. High up from the pike, in former days tho main artery between Wash- ington and Baltimore, stands today a , picturesque little church of stone. called Emory Chape!, the home of a congregation of the Methodist Epis copal Church. South. It stands in the very center of the old fort, and in the spot where the magazine then was. Its position is a commanding one. giv ing a view of all the surrounding coun try. Round and about it the breast works of the old fort are yet to bo seen. Here it was that the Union sol diers sustained the only onslaught of the Confederate troops in their attack on Washington. It was first called Fort Massachu setts, because it was largely con structed by troops from the Bay ttate. but after it was strengthened and al tered, in 1863, It was rechristened Fort Stevens, in honor of Gen. Isaac I. Stevens, colonel of the 79th regi ment. New York Infantry, afterward major-general of volunteers, who was killed Sept 1 at Cbantilly. It was In the early part of July. 1864. that Gen. Early laid his plans for a descent upon the national cap ital. Lew Wallace had opposed his march with the 6th corps at Mona cacy, and. though the Confederates won the day. they were so worn by the battle that they had to rest one day before following up their advant age. That one day was fatal. It en abled Grant to overtake the 25th New York cavalry by telegraph at City Point and hurry them by way of Bal timore to Washington. They reached Fort Stevens early on Monday morn teg, twelve hours before the other re enforcements. News ot Early's coming had reached Washington, aad the town was in a turmoil of excitement. It was known that the forts about the city were gar risoned oaly by small forces, com posed chiefly of hundred-day men. convalescents of the vetemn reserve corps and clerks from the government department who had bravely and cheerfully responded to the call for volunteers. So great was the anxiety in the city that a steamboat was l:ept at the river front with steam up ail day ready to taxe away the President and the most valuable government records. It was decided that the main attack would be made at Fort Stev ens, and so what force could be mus tered was concentrated there. The command or the forces for de fense was placed in the hands of Ilaj. Gea. Alexander McDowell McCook. Litent.-Col. John N. Frazee was siven immediate command of the fort. Maj. Gen. Horatio G. Wright was also there. In fact, there were many gen erals and Tew privates. As Early's men advanced, much woodland was cut down and many houses burned, the occupants being g-ror. but a few hours to get 'heir goons nut. A skirmish line wa.? throws out. consisting of the 25th I Naw York cavalry, and, although they lost heavily during the first day's bat tle, they were able to bold Early's j forces in check until re-enforcements arrived tbe day following. On Tues day the real battle was foeht. and tbe morning -after not a Confederate was to be seen. It was a flght in the open, and a bloody one. Of the 1.000 men of the 6th corps who went into (ha fight 230 were either killed or wounded. The opposing fsrecs were not more than fifty rods from the fort, and dur ing it all President Lincoln stood on the parapets, apparently unconscious of his danger until an officer fell mor tally wounded within three feet of him. Then Gen. Wright peremptorily represented to him the needless risk he way running and the dire conse qunres an injury to him would in volve. Four, hundred Union men were Kllieu anu ow luui. - - Small in Comparison lO oiu iruu of the civil war, but the importance of I the result cannot well be overestimat ed. Confederate success would have meant the flight of the President, and the capital of the country in the hands of the enemy. The effect of the re sultant demoralization to the loyal men of the Union and foreign compli cations that would have inevitably fallowed cannot be told. rMyo fcjl8 AJI TO SrESM The little plot of ground a bit tt the north, called the National BattU Rrottnd cemetery, is where forty ot those who fought for the Union on that hot July day rest until the last call. Each year, on Memorial day. the people gather there to do them homage, while the children of the pub lic schools strew flowers on their well kept graves. To the north of this beautiful spot, with its sheltering trees and quaint little stcae lodge, there is another grave, that, of an nakaowa. wearer of the gray. Every effort has been made to teara the aame of tats brave man. who fought until he could flght ao more, but without success. There are several stories told ahoat him. tho most authentic, perhaps, being that told by Charles Hobbs. a native or Montgomery county. Md.. who was an eye witness of the bettte. He says that white Early's men -were falling back ia fnoaLof th ad vancing 6th corps a number of Cob- ' federate sharpshooters were left in the rear to sting the oncoming lines of blue. These riflemen dodged from tree to tree, firing as they retreated. The unknown who fills the lone grave was one of these "hornets." evidently more daring than his comrades, who.. in his anxiety to bring down some'ot tbe enemy, ragged too far la the rear." and met death by a miaie hall through his heart. His body was found the next day in a clump of bashes, where. he had crawled after receiving the mortal wound. He was buried neat' the spot where he fell, and now a Beat marble monument. marks the, bust rest ing place of tbe unknown soh'.ier in -gray. Indiana Veteran Vindicated. The members of the 2d Mass. in fantry association and guests, from the 27th Indiana and 3d Wisconsin. which regiments comprised a brigade ' of the lith army corps, dined in Wes -leyan hall. Boston, during the recent G. A. R. encampment in that city, the comrades rallying around the mesi-'' table nearly 150 strong. ". The after dinner speaking was of unusual interest, as two letters wer? . read that will make history and shin, a heavy load from the shoulders of a Boston man after many years. The responsibility for giving ,th order for the famous charge at th battle of Gettysburg on the morning of Juiv :: is;:: in wiiinii th -m m-im reslmcnt sllfrem, terrible loss, h: been in dispute since the close of th. war. Capt. Snow of the 2d Mass. was ad jutant during the battle and when h: gave the order to Col. Mudge to ad vancc the latter said: "Are you surt that's the order?" When answered in the affirmative, he exclaimed: "That't murder." and then gave the order tc advance. which resulted so disas trously. The letters read are the result ot an investigation in the other, regi ments. They show that Col. Colgrove acting brigade commander, was re sponsible for the order. Gen. Buger, the division commander, had nothing to do with it and Capt. Snow merely delivered the order. It has been claimed for forty-one. years that Capt Snow made a mistakt? Capt. Balsley of the 27th Indiana furnished the information which ex onerates Capt. Snow and tbe veteran? hailed il with delight. Was Marked for Death. William McGinniss. a civil war vet eran of Revere. Mass.. had the unique experience in service of seeing a cof fin brought out for him to occupy, and a detail of soldiers lined up to prepare him for occupying it. and yet being alive to tell the story. He escaped by the intervention of bis comrades, who proved to the satisfaction of his su- periors thai he was not the one to blame for the offense charged. McGinniss was 20 years old. and bad just enlisted in Philadelphia. The foi- ' lowing year he enlisted in tbe navy from Boston and was assigned to USS. Canandaiguu. the flagship of Admiral Green, on which he served eighteen months. He was then transferred to the monitor Passaic, where he served in the assault on Fort Wagner at Mor ris Island and the recapture of Fort Sumter in 1864. He was oae of the detail landed at Fort Sumter to re occupy the old spot, and was there taken sick and sent borne. Before he recovered hostilities ceased. Mr. McGinniss was never wounded, but his hearing was impaired by the terrific cannonading at Fort Wagner. Yaunaest G. A. R. Man. William H. Davis, a member of Gen. G. L. Willaril Post 34 of Troy. N. Y.. modestly asserts that he is the young est member of the Grand Army of tho . Republic. Mr. Davis was born in Rye. West chester county, thirty miles from New York city, Sept. 1. 1848. Aug. 1. 1862. he enlisted at Brooklyn as drummer., boy in Co. A.. 158th N. Y. volunteers, which was attached to the 18th array corps, and later to tbe 24th army -corps. He lacked just one month of being 14 at the time of enlistment. He 'en listed for three years aad he served three years. Mr. Davis is certainly one of the moat youthful appearing men in the Grand Army. He is above the aver age height, bis walk is steady and strong, aad he has all the eathaslasm of youth. Grant and Hht Bay Admirer. Aa intimate friend of President Grant said to him one day. "General, my little boy has heard that all great men write poor hands; but he says he believes you are a great" man in spite of the fact that you. write your signature so plainly that anybody can read it." The president took a card from his pocket, wrote his name on it. and handed it to him. "Give that to your boy," he said, "and tell him jt is the signature of a man who is not at all great, but that the fact must be kept a secret between him and me." Boston Christian Register. Gets so,.,. Husband's Ring. onnr.rr ptllelinrv f tt Wnllv yt has juJjt received word of the fim, ing of a ring on the battlefield at Spottsylvania. Pa., which is marked with the name of her first husband. Corp. David A. Patch. Co. B. 2d Ver mont volunteers, who was killed In that battle. The housewife earns the better half of the nnshaaa'a salary. -. . .- .:.--J I .- tt . . ' -' , 4- -'- ! '5 . k u tSKdkiTJ, . y-gjaj--.'-..