4 ' ' ! Mistress Rosemary Allyn By NILLICENT E. MA? JN Cosyricbi. :P01. by CHAPTER x:il. An Interview with the King. A door oji-r ed and a courtier (it wes my bete niire. Sir Raoul Dwight) cam- from the anteroom, into which 1 was waiting to be admitted. It was ident that his Majestj's mission had not retained him from court so long as he had automated. A frown was on hi t.row and his Lead lump. He would have passed m hail not my deep look forced his -. Tin- irown broadened, and a curse burst from hit- sullen mouth. lh hand tlid to iiis swore. Will not to-morrow be time "i.ouah. 'Cousin Raou""?" I asked. Tore Cod! I'll kill ou then," he growled venomously. "At your service." I said. My name being called. I turned mv back uiKjn him and walked to the ' room where 1 was to have mv inter view with King Charles II. Had Raoul Dwight a knife then and no one been about I doubt not but that j Ijongville (he is dead, so nothing can I should have felt it between my . be proved) and the King knowing he shoulders. j was on duty out of the way. all tended His Majesty sat surrounded by his j at the time to lend confirmation to dos. pulling the ears of one, slapping j the deed. Lord Waters questioned another over the nose with his lace j the page. He told him that he had kerchief, chiding yet another who j made a mistake, and handed him an uould be too fond. Doing thus he other note, which proved to be merely kept me standing, inwardly chafing at j a message from the King sending him The delay. upon a mission that should take him At last, tired of this plav. he con- I from the court for a few days. As he descended to speak; before doing so. however, he gave the dog nearest him n vicious twist of the ear, which sent htm yelping back of his master's chair. "So." he said, "so this Is the re doubtable Quentin Waters, son of that r'Ugade Lord Waters of Long Haut. te it?" He looked at m long with a heavy fiown on his thin face. Not an aus 7i ions opening certainly. "Yes," I aJlirmcd, "I am Qucntin "Waters at your command. sir" "And why does Qucntin Waters. Kin of Lord Waters. !aie venture into Ivondon?" he questioned imperatively "Why I have ventured in'o London, and s-eok this interview is -well I am ome upon my fathers affairs." I managed to stammer. "I see." arca.m rang in his voice. "Meanwhile jou spend our time threatening a lair subject of mine villi a meaningless piece of paper profitable business, indeed," he sneered. Evidently Sir Raoul Dwight had not had the ear of the King for naught. j "Not o." I replied; "you, sir. have i been misinformed. I threaten no , lady." "Say you so?" he retorted. "Then where is this paper I have heard so much about the court is wearied to stened to say, "else the war had been death with the various stories rvi'.oat 1 sooner ended and his Majesty a. pris-co?iceT-ning it I would see it." j oner some months ere he was." "If it is the pron.ie of marriase i "How so?" he asked. - 'V."5 ! ' ? v ,'JSS-u 25- U5S4'r.fej. "So," he said, "this is the won from the lady's father you mean. I have it not in my posses-sion." I said. "Promise of marriage." lie repeated. "Poof! it is nothing. I tan do away with it as easily as I can squash this fly." He raised his hand and brought it down upon, he supposed, that trouble some insect, buzzing about so late in the season. When he raised his hand there was not bins: under it; the fly had flown to the wall. "It is not always so easy to squash even so mean a thing as a fly," I murmured. "Think so?" he questioned. He rang a bell. One of his guards came at its summons. "There is a fly on the wall to the, right: kill it." he commanded. 1 The man proceeded upon the chase. It required some effort. His Majesty leaned back with half-closed eyes, waiting, while he fingered the long coat of one of his pets. Once he tapped his foot impatiently at the mans delay I watched the fellow with more interest than the case de manded, and had 1 been in any other presence than the King's I should have laughed at his frantic move ments and the cleverness of that small insect. At last he had him his day was done the man held out his hand to his Majesty, and in his palm lay the crushed fly. "It is done, your Majesty." he said. The King commanded him to leave the room, and asrain resumed his play. "I see." I said after a pause. "A mans word coes for naught in Kinc Charles" court. But your Majesty, if 1 have your permission. I will tell yoti my reason, or rather my mission In London." He nodded. Having successfully demonstrated his object lessen he was in a good humor. "My father, you already know, is Lord Waters of Long Haut, and was Master of the Bed Chamber to Charles I." The King frowned, and I thought it best to get to the very gist of what 1 had to tell at one without any pref acing. "The two beings he held dearest in life were His Majesty King Charles I and his young "wife. One eight it was the night of the 16th of January. 1639 being stationed in an anteroom by the express command of the King, a Tage came to him. saying, A mes sage from the King.' Thinking It only an ordinarv r!sive ienaining to the business en han' he took it from 5hss-iss53t. . ' 'i fjex-wuv- o;i I.UCAS - L INCOME CO. him. opened and read it. Here is the paper." I took from a jeweled locket I wore fastened to my waistcoat by a rosette of ribbons the paper I had received j from my father. I hail kept It secure- ly hidden in its jeweled receptacle I did not intend it should be stolen lrom me a second time. The King took it daintily, rather disdainirg that old slip of paper. He opened it with a bored look: that look turned to animated interest when he ' saw it had hi? deceased father's sig- lift attached to it. "A love letter?" he asked. ' I nodded. "Read it. sire," I begged, I "A forgerv cleverlv done and signed with the King's signet!" he eiaculated when he had finished. "Who would have dared?" 'A forgery, as you say." I said: "and so Lord Waters, my father, in his later years came to think, but not at the time. The artlessness of the pane, young Kenneth, son of old Sir was delivering a cutting reproof to the careless page before letting him go, he saw something in the fellow's face that made him stop and ask him to whom he was to deliver the other note? The page stammered and ap peared so confused that Lord Waters was determined to be answered. Hi3 hand was not light and he soon knew what he feared. It was intended for 1 ady Waters, the page confessed. You see. sire, the name In the note is Elaine it was her name." "Ah!" the King said. I should have be"n hard to please, indeed, if I had not been satisfied with the King's change of manner. "Crazed he left the court, without seeing either the King or his wife. Tis a matter of history how he joined Cromwell, forsaking the King." "Yes." he cried impatiently. "But why did he not see the King and have the note authenticated? Why act like a jealous fool?" "Yes, why?" I said. "He was too sensitive. 1 think." "He had great provocation if it were true." he said, "but not enough, me- thinks, to join that assassin's army and give him service, and good serv ice, too." he finished bitterly. "Not so sood. perhaps, as Cromwell would have wished, however," I ha- zm rm , 7 ' . M Mdvm redoubtable Quentin Waters?" "Alter the battle of Marsden, Lord Waters had the honor of taking his Maje-ty a prisoner." I said. "No? An improbable tale." he cried. "I have proofs." I retorted. I held out to him the tiny brooch, l'e took it with a shaking hand. "His! rot a doubt of it." he whis pered: "the martyred King's!" He got up and paced the floor, look ing at the jewel in his palm. "Yes. as a ch'ld I have seen him wear it." he murmured. "By what machinations did Lord Waters obtain this brooch?" he said cuttingly. "I told you, sire," I replied with dignity. He paced the floor with a more hur ried tread, while he frowned and knit his brow in deep thought. He said: "Now. I remember having heard that after the battle of Marsden. being sep arated from his guards, he had been captured by a man serving on the other side, but when the man found that it was the King he held, he had released him. even given him safe conduct to his men. so that he should not be retaken. It was told me by General Lauderdale, to whom my father had related the incident. Strange! the King, my father, did not recognize so familiar a man at court as Lord Waters." "He was much changed, sire." I said, "and affected the puritanical style. It was also dark and he wished to be unrecognized." "What strange creatures men are!" soliloquized his Majesty. "I would have you know, sire," I continued, "that after that the old love for his King returned to Lord Waters. He resigned from Crom well's army, and went to his estate in Long Haut. There he obtained a divorce from his wife. and. after liv ing in retirement, married my mother, who died in childbirth. During the years of my minority the thought that he might have wronged the King and his first wife never left him. It made him what he has been ever since, a miserably sick man. Owing to his condition he was not able to come himself, so he sent me to lay the mat ter before your Majesty and" plead for forgiveness." I had finished and I knelt before him. "Tore God! you shall have It, he cried, as he motioned me to rise; "but it seems to me that 'Us to Lady Dwight you should go as your father's emlcs?ry to plead for forgiveness." ' '-- Dwight!" I exclaimed. ,' . rxav ,Vr Hi . ' l-Wl 1 'I .. .i-.fT'rt ;l EVJ- .v i s JVi'a stt??z iv&s..a ' . : iMi k;. 1st TMfc;'r- ;i'f fiM '31 I was too astonished to say more. "She is your father's divorced wife," he explained. "My father's wife!" I repeated. "Even so," he affirmed, none too pa tiently. Light dawned upon me and I under stood my lady's fainting fit; she, too, was overcome by circumstances. "And Sir Raoul Dwight?" I ques tioned fiercely. "Your half-brother," he answered; "born in France, six months tfter your father left in such importunate haste." "My (iod!" I cried. "And they talk about instinct; I had not the least in nate feeling toward him. Why, we were ever as cat and dog whenever we came in sight of one another." "Even brothers will quarrel over a woman," he smiled. "There need be no more quarreling upon that score," I replied; "he Is welcome to the lady." "That is good, he enjoined. "You will return the paper at once to Lady Fclton. and renounce all claim to her hand." "Certainly." I replied. "I never In tended to keep her to it. I will get the paper from the person who has it and make her a present of it to-night before I sleep. Had the lady been in town she would have had it before this." "Been in town?" he began. "Ah. yes. So you shall gladden Raoul Dwight's heart; he but now went from here with a hanging head be cause I would promise him nothing." His Majesty yawned and then dis missed me. (To be continued.) HE KNEW THE CREED. Proved That at Some Time He Had Attended Sunday School. There is no clergyman who enjoys a good story more than Bishop Pot ter, even though it touches uiion af fairs of the church. One of the recent occasions on which he indulged in a hearty laugh was while listening to the experience of a young man who is engaged in city mission work on the east side. Among those the young missionary tried to interest jn church work, were two rather hardened characters, who in their boyhood days had, however, attended Sunday school. "Oh. that's all right, boss." said one. "i don't need no church going. I learned all that as a kid and so did Jim here. Why, I know the prayer book backward." "I'll bet you don't," interrupted his friend. "I'll bet you a dollar you cau't say the creed now." "That goes. I'll take you," was the reply. He then proceeded to repeat the Lord's prayer, laboriously but cor rectly, while his friend listened in as tonished silence. "Well. I'll give in." said he, when it was ended. "I don't see how you could remember the creed all these years. Here's your dollar, confound ou!" New York Herald. WATER GARDENS IN THE YARD A Plea for Something Different in the Small Home Inclosure. A small outdoor water garden is just the thing to m:rke one's place dit ferent from the general run of com monplace gardens, s-ays a writer in the Garden Magazine. Why not try some hardy water lilies this year. I have two pools in my garden, and both are a source of great pleasure to my family and myself, as well as the stranger in my gates. One is planted with water lilies and the other with lotus. In thn lormer we hive flowers fror spring to late autumn. The colors are white. el low and pink. The lotus blooms for a peiiod of about two months, and I h:ie nothing in my garden to com pare with its flowers in beauty. If you aie a lazy gardener try water lilies. They require no watering, when everything else is crying up, and no weeding at any time. They multiply so fast with me that most of them have to be dug up every spring, and the increase sells at good prices. Do not grow geraniums, cannas. coleus and the like, when so many beautiful plants can be grown so different from jour neighbors. A Complimentary Contradiction. A New York publisher has a repu tation lor employing the homeliest rnogranhers and typewriters in the city. Efficiency rather than beauty ! what he wants, and he knows the picttiest ones are not the most effi cient. Just the same it is said of him that he doesn't know a pretty woman when he sees one. Still, his wife is an unusually handsome woman. Not long ago she came into his of- nce. w nere tue uppeti onij cit. rare intervals, and only when it is abso lutely necessary. She was met by an office boy. a bright Irish lad. who had never seen her. She asked for Mr. Blank. "Who shall I say wants to see him. mem?" he inquired. "His wife." she replied. He looked at her in open-eyed sur prise and genuine admiration. "Sure, mem. I'll tell him," he said, starting off. "and bad cess to thim that says he has no taste in ladies, mem." The Man Who Loves Words. "Other folks, of course, have their poor pleasures." says Richard Le Gal lienne in Harper's, "but for a man who loves words no joy the world can give equals for him the happiness of having achieved a fine passage or a perfect line. When Thackeray struck his fist on the table, as the story goes, when he had finished the scene of Col. New-come's death, and exclaimed. 'By God. this is genius.' there was no em pire he would have accepted in ex change for that moment. We often hear that your true artist is never sat isfied with his work. His ideal escapes him. the words seem poor and lifeless, etc.. compared with the dream. Who ever started that story knew veTy lit tie about the literary temperament or he would have known that the words' are the dream. The dream does not xist even as a dream, or only very j mpcrfectly. till it is set down in j words. Yes, the words are the dream.' Quaintly Expressed. Some people are noted for the terse ness of their replies to ordinary qaes tions which in not a few instances turn out to be wit. A certain mild mannered old darky who for many years pat has acted as butler for a prominent family on the Park Slope recently lost his wife. A friend of his called on him a few days later, and not knowing of this fact, questioned him. "How's your ole woman to-day. Jackson. They tell me she's kindei been feelin' aiky of late." "She ain't doing so nice ss she might he dis eVnin." said Jacltson. somewhat sadlv. onickly adding. "he's -?d." Brooklyn Eagle. MRMBMKmmm Faiwus Texan ymqSzrvzd and was Last or thl Cheat ComtmiE limits Tall and rugged, every line of his face indicating indomitable will, there stood upon the western bank of the Red rivr a stalwart young fellow of twenty years. In his hand a small bundle tied in a blue handerchief his entire wardrobe. In his pockets a $10 bill issued bv the bank of Holly ) Springs. Miss. his entire fortune. j His face was toward the setting sun I and he IcokeJ Texas ward. , " j It was the afternoon of May 23. 1S39. j i and as the young man looked he real j Ized that in all of the great land be I fore him there was none to whom he might look for aid. His future was his alone. About him on every side were the foes of the frontiersman, but not for a moment did his feet falter; not for a moment did his heart fail. He vas strong with the strength of one who knows himself, and without fear he took up his journey into a strange land. Three score and six years after, the young man, now in his six and eight ieth year, had closed a marvelous ca reer. In his life he had served under three flags, had honored and been hon ored by the people in whose cause he was as valiant in war as he was wise in peace, and finally, in the fullness of years and achievement, passed to his eternal rest.' Born in Sevier county. Tennessee, Oct. 8. ISIS. ?nd dying at his home at Palestine, Texas, March 6. 1905, the activities of John Henninger Reagan furnish an inspiration to all Ameri cans. In the Republic of Texas he fcught in many campaigns against the Indians. In the State of Texas he served the commonwealth as colonel ot its militia, justice of the peace, sat in its legislature and upon the bench. Then he went to Congress and was counted one of the ablest members of the House, which he left in 1SG1 be cause he believed it his duty to cast his fortunes with the confederacy. Under the stars and bars his was high political preferment. First Post master General of the Confederate States of America, he relinquished that post to become, secretary of its treasury, devoting his energies and his fortune to a cause he loved and fondly hoped might prevail. But when the fortunes of war decreed that the southland should not depart the Union returned to nis people to advocate con ciliation and unity. Ripe in experience, he again became a legislator of the nation, serving as a senator from 18S7 until 1891. father ing the "Reagan interstate commerce law," which as afterward amended by Senator Cullom of Illinois became the law which is now in force. The life of Judge Reagan links the history of the old with that of the new. His work was strenuous, history-making. For more than sixty-five years and during the greater part of this period he was in the political imidfr' )S2fi8.Z.-S2& . sw.w.;aatfs.?i wmmm . r)hftiis uft";" y ' uiri !- t. --T a-- The Late John H. Reagan. arena. He remembered the great tar iff debate of 1S32. which resulted in the passage of the nullification act by South Carolina. He could recall the fight made by Andrew Jackson against I the United States bank. As a young man he was thrilled by the cry. "Remember the Alamo," and it may be said that he never ceased to be inspired by Sam Houston's in junction. He saw the Republic of Tex as set its star in the flag of the Union. He saw the gieat West and Southwest won into the circle of civilization. He felt that the war clouds were forming as early as 1840. and he witnessed the cempromise ot ten years later. By him the "Dred Scott" decision was heard as it came fresh from the lips of Taney, and "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was read and given his careful thought almost the moment it came from the press. When the Butler-Brooks-Sumner in cident occurred in the Senate Judge Reagan was a member of Congress. His associates were the great men of Gulf Stream Lore. It Is said that the gulf stream is run ning so much more rapidly than for merly that sailing ships can not make headway against its current. This "river in the ocean" i? caused by the waters of the Gulf of Mexico piling up until that oval caldron rises two or three feet higher than the waters in the mid-Atlantic. Florida strait, about ninety miles broad, forms the only egress for the waters, which flow through this narrow outlet, between Key West and Cuba, at a speed of eight or ten miles an hour. Milk Cende-sers Combine. A combination of the largest mnk condensing firms in Europe, the Henri Nestle and Anglo-Swi condensed milk companies, is announced by the London Express. T e -ew compan will control, practicallj. the European supply. Most of the shares are held in Switzerland. Cor Sensation consists in evaporating a ;.o-Tion of the water and adding sugar. Milk contains SS per cent cf water in its natural state, abct 0 per cent of which is evap orated. 'Frisco Fish Trust. A fish trust has San Francisco in its grasp. Salmon, which not long ago sold at retail for 7 cents a pound, now costs 25 cents, though the waters of California are crowded with the fish, atriped bass, which was 5 cents, now costs 20 cents. The retailers and the public are helpless. Swedish Parliament Building. The new parliament building in Stockholm, which was begun ten years ago, is now completed. It lies on a small island. mm. mm w a -?J5 5fc' I llllk Hi dot foxm am South the period of 1S40-1860. Clay. Cal houn, Webster, Benton, Houston. Breckinridge, Douglas. Cass these he knew intimately. Upon the southern states he saw the war cloud burst all of this he saw and part of this h v. as. He was with Jefferson Davis at Montgomery and at Richmond. He saw the confederacy rise and he saw it fall. He met and chatted with Lee and Jackson and Stuart and Johnston and Beauregard and Gordon. He wore the gray when McDowell was routed at the first Manassas, and he was v. earing it when the great Lee. on that April morning in 1SC5, said to the he roes of the Army of the Virginia: "Men: We have fought through this war together. I have done the best 1 could for you. My heart is too full to say more." The uniform of gray was worn by Reagan after that. He still wore it w hen. with Jefferson Davis, he started on that fateful ride to the southward ftom Richmond. Through the period of reconstruc tion he passed. And he lived to re joice that the men who plundered the South in her poverty, oppressed her in her weakness and mocked at her in her calamity were cast down. In the times of depression, of failure, of dis couragement, he turned his face to ward the morning, he looked to the dawn of a new and better day. Shoul der to shoulder he stood with the great men who emancipated and re deemed the land he loved best of all. In a talk with a friend some time before his death. Judge Reagan said: "I am hoping to have time to write a little something on a subject very near and dear to me. I am not fighting the war over again. God forbid that I should say one word to revive the dying embers of passion and prejudice. What I would do and what I would have all true southrons do is to pre serve the true, loyal spirit of the con federacy and take a positive stand against the perversion of the history of the conflict and its causes. "It is not for the past that I would fight, but for the future. It is not for ourselves, but for our children. It is for them to perpetuate all that is noble and grand and manly in the his tory of their fathers and forefathers and to keep ever in mind and bring to the eye of all the world the history, the true history, of the confederacy, and the causes, the real causes, which led up to the war between the states." This passing of the "last of the con federates" calls to mind the cabinet of the South, its chief. Jefferson Davis, its vice president. Alexander II. Ste phens. Robert Toombs of Georgia was secretary of state; C. G. Mem minger of South Carolina, secretary of the treasury; L. P. Walker of Ala bama, secretary of war; S. R. Mallory of Florida, secretary of the navy, and Judah P. Benjamin of Louisiana, at torney general. The companion and peer of such men as William L. Yan cey, "the morning stcr of session": Benjamin H. Hill. R. Barnwell Rhett. James. L. Orr. R. M. T. Hunter. Augus- I tus II. Garland and Louis T. Wigfall I in the Senate, and Meredith P. Gentry, j Rosier A. Pryor and Thomas S. Bo I cock in the House, his was a position both enviable and influential. In 1STG Judge Reagan was in the urmoil of the Hayes and Tilden con test, and although he believed that the latter was elected and the former seat- ed. he accepted the decision for him ; self and saw it accepted by the South j with absolute loyalty and absolute self ( control. He witnessed all the interest ; ing political and social developments that have made for progress in three ' score years. Throughout his long life ! he conserved the boy into the man and stood for horor. justice and truth, j Pioneer, surveyor, lawyer, soldier. 1 legislator, jurist, statesman, patriot, j honest gentleman. John Henninger Reagan, trie to himself and false to no man. leaves upon the scroll of I fame a name which adds luster to the ' glory of the country. Henry Barrett Chamberlin in Chicago Record-Herald. FEAR INVASION OF "TRADE." Fashionable and Exclusive New York ers in Commotion. Fashionable New Yorkers who live on the exclusive Forty-seventh street block between Fifth and Madison ave nue reported to be much disturbed ever the purchase by a modiste of the house formerly occupied by Richard Canfield as a gambling resort. It is understood that the house is to be con erted into a tailoring establishment. Among the dwellers on the block are Ferry Belmont, the Boardmans, the Alexanders, the Stevenses, the Gilder sleeves, the Eaxters and many more of New York's ultrafashionable folk. They fear that, this proposed commer cial establishment is the entering wedge en their block for the invasion of trade that is driving society off Fifth avenue. As a result of the fash ionable alarm some curiosity is ex pressed as to the school of morals prevailing in a district which protests against a dressmaker but tolerates a gambler. Railway House Partv a Fad. The railway house party is a rap idly growing institution among Amer ican multimillionaires. The hiring of a special car for eighteen full fares from New York to the Pacific coast is of common occurrence. One Pacific coast magnate makes the trip regular ly every few months in his own pri vate car, seldom with anything aboard but his private secretary and his valet. He pays $5,662 mileage for the single trip and declares he saves rhnt mnnh money in the amount of business he ' transacts. Painting Nature. Just down by the stream where the bracken grows she placed her easel and sat by it, sketching from nature. "Please, ma'am, is that me you're drawing milking that cow in the pas ture?" "Why, yes, my little man, but I didn't know you were looking!" " 'Cos if that's me," continued the boy, unmindful of the artist's confu sion, "you've put me on the wrong side of the cow and I'll get kicked over." Exchange. I Naughty Sculptor. The discussion about Aphrodite m New York might perhaps be enlivened a little by the quotation of the inspired limerick: There or.ce was a sculptor named Phidias, Whose statues were perfectly hideous. He made Aphrodite Without any nightie. And thus shocked the ultra-fastidious. Motor Car on Postal Route. The French postoffice department Is now operating twenty motor car pos tal routes in various parts of the country. INVEST VAST SUMS. HOW FUNDS OF GREAT CORPORA TIONS ARE HANDLED. Not Necessary for Officer of These Concerns to Seek Fields of Profit Railroad Bonds a Favorite Form ol Investment Absolute Security Re quired. Under the title of "Investing a Mil lion Dollars a Day," Henry Wysham Lanier tells, says the World's Work. how the great insurance companies dispose of vast funds. Among other things Mr. Lanier says: "The presi dent of one of the great concerns lcoms large In the financial world: Ltit. when it comes to actual invest ing, he is only one of a financial com mittee, whose separate interests and connections are so varied that few projects come before them concern ing which they do not have some out side (or inside) information. As o rule, no investment is made unless tLis committee agrees upon it tinani mously. To begin with, the problem is much simplified by the fact that invest meats now come to them. The great companies, far from having to seek for investments, are continually be sieged by a thousand-and-one people offering bonds and mortgages and tht like. Broadly speaking, everything comes to them and comes before it goes elsewhere. These applications go to one man. generally the assistant treasurer, and he investigates each one. so that it comes before the committee accom panied by the information necessary for them to pass intelligently upon (say) the estimated value of the land to be mortgaged or full facts concern ing the enterprise issuing the stocks or bonds. The three qualities desired are absolute security, adequate inter-e.-t and a long term to suit the many obligations maturing far in the future Practically a third of the insurance assets are in railroad bonds and the companies own about 10 per cent of all the $0,000,000,000 or $7,000,000,000 of outstanding bonds issued by oui railroads. A few years ago the pro posed reorganization of a German railroad (with a whole great plan ol consolidation depending upon it) was absolutely blocked by an insurance company, which held a large propor tion of the bonds, until the terms were modified to meet its idea. Railroad stocks and bonds and real estate mortgages and holdings take up three-fourths of the vast sums the insurance companies invest. The hold also state and city bonds (the former sometimes of "repudiation") a few of United States bonds and a gieat many of those of foreign gov ernments (one of our companies often takes an entire issue of. say. $10,000, 000 of such securities), bonds of elec tric light, gas and water companies, stocks of trust and companies and banks and a few miscellaneous con cerns and $20n.0'i0.000 of loans on premiums to policy-holders and on collateral. Even Boys Learn Grafting. "I have a little hoy in my room who is bound to figure in some great mu nicipal scandal some day." said the M-hool teacher to the Indianapolis Star. "Uo's a lazy little fellow, and he exasperates me because he can do so well when he does work. lately I've been giving him low grade marks j trjc catarrh there is a great accumula to se if that woiild not spur him up j flon 0f germs, which are destroyed by a little. But, while it disturbs his ftnit juice. A well-prepared diet of father, the youngster himself does not seem to mind his low rank. Yes terday he came to me with more in terest in his face than I've seen for some time. "'Say, teacher,' he said. 'dad says if I'll get a sood rank this month he'll give me $20. And I'll tell you what I'll do. If you'll give me high marks I'll divide the $20 with you.' "It was in vain that I labored with him and pointed out tha' he had in sulted me. He insisted that it was merely a way for us both to make $10 easily. If he doesn't get a Folk after him some day I shall be very much mistaken." Luxuries in Alaska. A side light upon the mode of living in Alaska is ghen by stating the fact that in Seattle recently T.r.Oo cases of canned cream, Pfteen freight car loads, was ordered by one Seattle firm from a single cannery for shipment to Alaska. This cream is leally milk condensed to about half its volume, and it is very poj ular in Alaska. The Alaskans drink it as they eat bacon. In Juneau the cold or so-called "shut-in" months are enlivened with club affairs, dances and social func tions, at which the men are required to wear dress suits. There are carpets on the floors of the Alaskan log huts, and the more pretentious houses have almost all American luxuries. Binghamton Piess. Best of All Plays. I do not care for problem plays: give me the kind of play In which the girl is ju?t as pure .i are the tlowers in May: The play in which in time of nerd the hero's right on l-ck. And where the scheming villain Rets it always in the neck. I love to hear the girl refuse the villain's gold to take. And say that rags are royal Uurts when worn for virtue's sak: I love to s-e her beaux decline to heed the rich man's beck. And swat the villain with a club athwart his ugly neck. Oh. not for me the Gallic farce, the Ib;en fol-df-rol. Where man is but a jackanapes and wo man, is a doll: I'll take the sturdy plot in which the villain tries to wreck The hero's life, and in the end just gets it in the neck! Louisville Courier-Journal. Practical Lesson in Jiu-Jitsu. For our fourth lesson let us consider for a moment how to proceed in case any financial weakling were pitted -ingle-handed against the great John D. Rockefeller. The best way in which this new and easy method of conquering an enemy could be applied to John would be to cize him firmly by the pocketbook with one hand while with the other you push heavily on the price of crude petroleum. In five minutes he would rell "Enough!" and offer you several Dright new pennies to induce you to desist from your awful torture. That is all of the lesson for to-day. Baltimore American. High and Low. Irving Grinnell. treasurer of the Church Temperance Society of New York, was talking about the difference netween high and low church among Episcopalians. "I heard two boys talking on the street the other day." he said. '"Our church is awful high. We aave matins. " That's nothin',' said the other boy. We have carpets.'" TUBERCULOSIS IN CHILDREN Appalling Mortality Among the Little Ones Due to This Cause Proper Attention to Health of Mothers Would Save Many Lives The number of deaths due to tuber culosis is tremendous. When the word is spoken one instinctively thinks of pulmonary consumption. This is the form which attacks adults and which we see daily gathering in its victims. There are other forms, however, more common in children, that levy trib ute upon them without calling atten tion to the relationship between these diseases and consumption of the lungs. Dr. Jacobi is authority for the state ment that "Tuberculosis kills as many people, old and young, as diphtheria, croup, whooping cough, scarlatina, measles and typhoid fever taken to gether." In all of our cities active steps have been taken to protect the I eople from the above named dis eases. Until quite recently, however, a few years at most, nothing was done to reduce the mortality from tuber culosis. Now, however, the attention of the world, the common people and the health authorities, has been called to its curability and preventability. The causes, the modes of scatter ing, and the prevention are all being studied, anil an educational campaign is on to wipe out this "white terror." The children suffer from tubercu losis of the bones, the bowels and hmph glands. Tubercular meningitis is frequently found in early life and is uniformly fatal. Only by careful at tention to the food and daily habits can the rising generation be made im mune from these varied forms of tu berculosis. The fact that over one half of all babies born die before they reach the age of five years, proves that the 'con stitutional capital" bequeathed them is small. Is the proper attention paid to the diet, exercise and out-of-door life of the mother? If this were done, the child would undoubtedly have greater vitality and could by proper care and education live above the tu berculosis of childhood and of adult life. t Cause and Cure of Gastric Catarrh. Chronic congestion of the stomach, known as gastric catarrh, is usually caused by one of the following errors, or by all of them put together: Eat ing too much or too fast; swallowing food insufficiently masticated; the use of such coarse foods as cabbage, greens, etc.; mustard, peppersauce, ginger and other condiments and spices; pastry containing animal fats; free fats, which lodge in the stomaoh and remain there a long time; pork, griddle cakes and burned fats these are the things that produce gastric catarrh. The first and most necessary step in the treatment of this disease is to remove the cause of the trouble. We may induce activity of the skin by hot applications followed by cold or hot bath followed by a short applica tion of cold: fomentations followed by a short cold application to the stomach. These treatments are use ful, but the most important factor is the regulation of the diet. A fruit diet is bet, for the reason that in gas toasted bread, zwieback, granose nis- cnit. etc., is also useful in these cases. Bedroom Climate. A person at the age of sixty years has spent about twenty years of his life in his bedroom. Have you inves tigated the average sleeping room cli mate? If you were sent as a mission ary to some distant pestilential spot the climate of which was as unhealth lul as that of the average bedroom, would you not feel that you were risk ing a great deal for the sake of the heathen? On the tombstone of tens of thou sands of those who have died from tuberculosis mteht appropriately be inscribed. "Disease and death were invited and encouraged by a death dealing bedroom climate." To show that this is no exaggera tion it is only necessary to call at tention to the fact that fully half of the tubercular patients placed in out door consumptive hospitals make a satisfactory Tecovery. If fresh air will cure the disease, it is certainly a wonderful preventive of it. It is not more reasonable to deliberately breathe impure air than it is to drink impure water or to eat itnhealthful food or wear infected clothing. Tender-Hearted Savages. One of the most anomalous features of our Christian civilization is the slaughter house, especially the abat toirs of our great cities, where veri table torrents of blood perpetually flow, the ebbing life of millions of in nocents which die that man may feast. Indians ara not noted for being over-sensitive; and particularly de spise any exhibition of weakness. The interior of a slaughter-house, however, is said to have proved too much for their powers of self-control. The Chi cago Record states that "a party of fifteen Blackfoot Indians recently vis ited the killing room of Armour's plant. One fainted, three more were ill, the rest covered up their eyes They were hurried out of the place into the fresh air." A Good Reform. The abominable practice of wear ing long skirts for the street is dying out. Pretty as it is to see a summer Chinese Reformer in America. Kang Yu Wei. formerly secretary to the emperor of China, but now a ref ugee from the wrath of the empress dewager, has arrived in Oregon, where he hopes to find relief from bronchitis, from which he has been suffering. Nearly seven years ago he took a leading part in reform move ments in China, thereby rousing the i anger of the dowager empress. She I ordered his arrest, but the secretary ' firl and sought refuge on a British i war vessel. There is a standing re ward of $100,000 for his capture. He urges his countrymen to study reform methods and then carry the work back to their native land. Minister Fined for "Toting Gun." Rev. Wayman Nilcs. a well known minister of Wayne county, W. Va., admitted carrying firearms because his ministerial duties often made it necessary for him to travel at night, and sometimes through a country in fested with bad men. The plea did not go with Judge Wilkinson, who Imposed a thirty days sentence in jail on the parson and a fine of $25. jm iiuih dress negligently trailed over a smooth lawn jeweled with daisies, the sight of a woman dragging her gown in the street, sweeping up the iltb, and collecting millions jqf microbes, is a revolting spectacle ;and yet -with a long skirt the only alternative isr to hold it up, a practice which in duces cramp in the arm. as well as cold fingers in winter, and gives a decidedly ungraceful walk and atti tude. A Cure for Cold Feet. An excellent and simple remedy for cold feet is the application of cold water. Step into the bathtub, let tha cold water run in a liule faster than it runs out. Standing in the water, rub one foot with the other, rapidly, ten or twelve times. Then change anil treat the other foot in the same man rer. Keep up this alternate rubbing for about three minutes. The feet will have become very red. and as you step out of the water, you will find them burning and glowing with the warm blood brought into them by this means. Some Chinese Baths. A traveler in Mongolia writes: "There are some hot springs on tho read about twenty miles north of Chingpeng. The place is named Tangshan. The arrangements for those anxious to benefit by their heal ing properties are very primitive. A row of twenty to thirty wooden boxes the size of an ordinary packing caso is ranged beside the road. In these sit bathers of every age and both sexes, with their heads protruding. Attendants with buckets continually refill the boxes from the springs. For less luxurious bathers there is accom modation in a pool which has been dug out close by. In this they squat, scoonlnc up the water and pouring it oer their heads with brass basins. It is curious to reflect that establish ments like Homburg and Aix-les-Bains have had their origin in such begin nings." Training the Skin. Tho usual effect of a draft of eoltl air upon the back of the neck is a cold and a sore throat. Many years ago Dr. Brown Sequard. an eminent French physician, devised a means by which sore throat from this cause might be prevented. By blowing upon the back of the neck with a pair of bel lows. Increasing the time each day. he trained his patients until they couhl endure this treatment for half an hour without injury. It is not necessary to be exposed to a draft of air on the back of the neck in order to obtain this result. By means of the cold bath, the wet-sheet rub. the shower bath, towel friction, etc.. the skin may be educated to con tract on the slightest increase of cold. Daily exposure to the contact of cold air is of the utmost importance, it is became of the lonstant exposure to cold that the Indian's body is "all fare" the skin of his whole body has learned to take care of itself. Dr. Lcrenz Strict Teetotaler. At a banquet given to Dr. Loienz. wine was served. He pushed tho wineglass aside. Someone enquired it he was a. total abstainer. He an swered: "I am a surgeon. My success de pends upon having a clear brain, a steady nerve, and firm muscles. No one can take any form of alcohol with out blunting thise physical powers: theretore. as a surgeon. I must not use any form of spirits." Journal of In ebriety. In Harmony with Nature. Modern scicnc" as well as experi ence has shown that contact with nat ural surroundings, especially fresh air. sunshine and the czoning emanations from growing plants, has marvelous health-imparting virtues. In these natural agencies is active the power which creatM and maintains all things and which is constantly communicated to all living things a- the essential condition ot continued life. The more closely man comes to Nature, the more deeply he may drink from tho fountain of life and healing. To live in harmony with Nature in the fullest and truest sense is to live in har mony with God: and to live in divino harmony is to be happy. How to Resist Old Age. A chain is as weak as its weakest link. The body is as weak as its weakest organ. To combat the on ward march of old age all organs must be marshaled to harmonious resist ance. This resistance can be devel oped best by cultivating "reaction." This means that the body forces act against some external stimulation and overcome it. The best developer of reaction is cold either cold air or cold baths. This must be done gradually, espe cially if one Is already weak. Culti vate the power or resistance by daily exposure to cold air. Live out of doors as much as possible. The abil ity to resist cold will also enable one to resist pneumonia, dyspepsia, apo plexy, diabetes, obesity, old age. The cold morning bath is a wonder ful youth preserver. Try it. Begin carefully. At first rub face, arms and chest with the hands dipped in cold water. Then tho rent of the trunk and the legs. Dry quickly and exercise for ten or fifteen minutes. In a month you will hardly know yourself. Try it. Pope Pius to Leave the Vatican. The pope has expressed his deter mination to go to Castel-Gandolfo, a village on the northwest side of Mount Alhano, fourteen miles southeast of Rome, for a few weeks, when the weather improves. The pope's health absolutely requires a change of air and scene-. Castel-Gandolfo, among numerous other villages, contains the summer residence of the popes, which has not been used as "such since Pius IX shut himself up in the Vatican c; a protest against the deprivation of Ms temporal powers and the occupa tion of Rome by the Italian troops in 1S70. Boy a Master of Languages. Martin Sitera, an A. D. T. boy In Omaha, speaks five languages Bo hemian (his own), English. French. German and Spanish and hopes ere long to gain some mastery of Greek and Latin. He was born in Cernikov, a mal! village of Bohemia, but came to this country" about four years ago. Though but 14 years old, he Is an om nivorous reader, devoting every spare minute to hi books. i .i - i v 7 i. m i i i n i '.. - 1