Mf r . JAS3S"TS I o-.'J 3252 . t . Sal3t; . ---! j- .T -. ::","'2rTOracrrer-: SRfi3S kskzWmi --,' - !! -- l"""""l'"lw'llllll'l'll"l,,,a",l'Sg5SKSiaS5 '"-" "' "- i i 11,-irni II'-- - , "" r. - : '( ;. .:! J.-1 ri A: . i I.?: . 'I - I : i-v ri - J. '& Mistress Rosemary Allyn By !ULLICNT E. MANN Copyright, 1804. by siurc i ui a Continued. "True," I replied dryly. "But you were out of town well better late than never." I finished with a shrug of the shoulder. "Was there no post or messenger to send it by?" she questioned. "I preferred to wait until I could see you myself I wished to give it into your own hands," I said. "Do you suppose I would allow any one to hold me to the few words scrawled upon that slip of paper? You must have strange ideas of women, sir, if you think they value their hap piness so lightly?" she asked. I did not answer her. Instead, I said: "I give it up, that you may transfer it to one more worthy of you." "Indeed, sir more impertinence!" he cried in a disdainful manner. "Has someone also conferred upon you the office to pick'aud choose my suitors for me?" she asked, :erti nently. "Lady Felton, be not so scornful." I returned. "Since you are so loath to take the paper, I'll tear it up and so make an end of the miserable busi- HCSS." I made a motion to do so. "Nay, do not" she stopped ne with a gesture. "I would keep it as a me mento of your magnanimity. Co you give me to Cousin Raoul?" With a light laugh the lady lowered the screen from her face, and at the same time dropped into her natural voice. It was Rosemary Allyn! With a bound I was at her side and bad grasped her arm. "What do you mean by this mas auerading?" I demanded. She gave otit a saucy laugh. "Since you have given me to Cousin Raoul you have no right to question ne," she said. "My God! Rosemary, do not trifle with me." I cried. "What do you here? Why, I only lett you a few moments ago." She nodded her blonde head. "Yes," she affirmed; "I believe you were to be with mo in twenty min utes, and so jou are, thanks to me, not you." She made a moue at me. She was adorable! but I was not to be deterred from my determination by her beau ty. "You will tell me what you are do ing here, at once," I said, harshly. "Once you deceived me by masquer ading as a brother, and I shudder yet when I think of what might have been the consequences; now you would as sume the character of Lady Felton I win have no more play acting." "Are you speaking to Lady Felton or Rosemary Allyn?" she demurely asked. "God's blood!" I cried. "You shall not trifle .with me so." Rut she went on. "If to Lady Felton, she must needs order you from her presence. If to Rosemary Allyn that is a different thing." It was like tow playing with fire she had tempted me too much she I fought for a time, Was not to be reristi. I took her Jn lay arms and be.it Lcr saucy head lack while I kissed hr-r oil hair. brow. yes, cheeks, an J m I? mouth, where sy lips would foil: have lingered. "Fie, sir!" ?h gurgled, struggling is ray anus. "Yci- have crumpled my' aew gown; 'tis bye just home from Wanton's." 1 muttered something which con demned Manton to the infernal re gions, i flt a ripple of merriment go through her form. "You shall stay where you are until you tell me what I wish to know." I Mid. "The longer you delay the more delishled 1 shall be." "Release me aud I will tell you," she pleaded. -Pay loll first," 1 replied. "Know, then, sir, what all the town Knows, that I am called by baptism .Rosemary Allyn, Lady or Felton," she said. Then In sheer astonishment 1 let ber slip from my arms. Alas, the bit cf paper which should pave the way for a reconciliation between my "Brother and myself was as nothing. We both loved the same woman! I wondered if Rosemary Allyn Lady Felton would cut the Gordian knot She saw my chagrin upon my face, and said: "Had you any curiosity concerning Xady Felton? Indeed, it certainly is lacking in you, sir. since you did not want to see so famous a beauty, it wonld have been no difficult thing to 'have found out what I have just told -jro-a." "I had none." I admitted. "Be my flea that I was too absorbed in Mis tress Allyn." 1 bowed low before her. "Listen!" she whispered, and held Ber hand up. "I thought so. It is my father. I did not dream it was so He. is comins here." ran to the candles and snuffed out and was back at my aide wMhevt a sound. "Mary." he called at the door, and trtcd the haadte. Seeing it was dark wftklft although 1 felt his cold gray last penetrate the darkness of corner where we stood like cal- ipcMs, scarce breathing. Them eooariag all women to penU- ftJaa he stamMei into aaother room. 1 nre mm sushi, agro with It. rev meat so." whispered. "I let yon oat the mae door." a candle from oae of the I lit it fsiS!Lat ."TfcVT BBBBBjBBBBBBifBBBrf h iff f l 1 ilBBBBBBTBVVjBJi-B&aBaJ!BBBwsSBfli9B LUCAS - L1XOOLX CO. I looked at her inquiringly as we stepped through an opening into a back hall. "You must know, sir," she ex plained, "my father likes you not in the position of suitor to his daugh ter's hand he thinks to decide that question to his own satisfaction in giving me to my cousin Raoul Dwight but," she added proudly, "he has not taken in the reckoning the most im portant person myself." "Sweet Rosemary," I said, and would have taken her to my arms again. "Nay, sir, do not make me blush," she said. "Forgive me," I murmured, and I followed her down the steps to the door. "When may I see you again?" I asked. "I must see you soon. I have much to tell you. I am calling at Lady Dwight's to-morrow morning can you not arrange it so as to be there afterwards?" I insisted eagerly. She thought she could be there, and after kissing her hand respect fully, I hurried the second time that night from her presence. CHAPTER XVI. "To-Night," Although I had come out of Lady Felton's house by the side entrance. I went round to the front to summon my servant. I asked him if any one had entered the house while he waited there. He answered "Yes," and that the gentleman had ques tioned him rather sharply as to his business. He had told him that he was only looking for a stray wayfarer who might wish to hire him. Where at my lord peremptorily ordered him ' off. He had retired from the house but come back shortls. iou see he was a fellow of discernment, and be- J cause of that quality I gave him an extra coin As I walked with my linkman to ward the Blue Boar I felt that I was being followed. We had hardly turned into Holborn before I was pos itive of it A fellow brushed inso lently past me and sought to catch a glimpse of my face. "Quentin Waters, you are my pris oner," he said. He put a whistle to. his lips and blew it shrilly three times. "Out of the way, sirrah," I cried, and drew my sword; meantime Pat rushed to assist me with his light "Put it up, put it up." the fellow bellowed. "I have a warrant for your arrest signed by the King.'" At these words Pat took to his long legs and made strides down Holborn. The shadow of the law was too much for him, perhaps with cause. In his case and also in mine discretion was the better part of valor. I concluded to follow his example. I had not time; before I could fend the fellow off for a few seconds to make the op portunity, his men, those bull dogs of law were about me. I fought for a time, but against odds. "I yield," I panted, seeing I must but against odds. te ccrconie in the end. t"pirvidc-J I may piocrcd to the Blue Bos and ac quaint my man with my declination." The follows :.cv-jng thpy had me would consent, to nothing. I was hustled into a coat-:, carried to Lud low, and there Licked 'n a putrid cell a cell such as -vas used for crim inals of the worst lyp?. An ignominious euaing to a most delightful day! An ending altogether unaccountable to me. "A warrant signed by the. King!" the constable said and that -vas all he would say. Put not your faith in Princes, for when they promise most they do least I wondered how long it would take Gil to find out where I was hidden. I wondered for four days. The first day I paced my cell in varying moods. I damned that linkman up and down the length and breadth of England, that he had not waited long enough to learn where they were taking me so as to acquaint Gil with the fact. I tried in every way possible to bribe my jailor to send word to him. or at least to find out who had been instrumental in my arrest, and what I had been arrested for. It was of no avail. He would only say that he had his orders; I would soon know. The old hypocrite! But what fretted me most was that I could not keep my word fa. three instances: to my lady, who would look for me, and conjecture as to what kept me from her; to the men who would await my coming back of Montague House how they would jeer at my seeming cowardice: and to myself, whom I had promised an in terview with Lady Dwight I was burning to be rid of my news. My plans had been, after seeing Lady Dwight to send Gil on to Long Haut with the information to Lord Waters of another son. When the day in which I was to see Rosemary and the others passed, I calmed down. The following days I passed quite tranquilly awaiting de velopments, losing myself in dreams of Rosemary, quite the most profitable thiag I could do, although it seemed sacrilege to bring my lady even in thoagat into so vile a place as this cell wherein I was confined. It was daak and humid, while loathsome in sects with legs as many as centipedes crawled about In a corner a window grated and barred hang, and through this the light of day altered. I looked toward Its faint beams, oa this the fourth - day '(a .beam however small and lean was preferable to the dark comers of this hole) and saw glid ing in like a fs'ry elfin a butterfly. Poor winton thing! Life must indeed have been monotonous that it should fcrsare licht and joy, for darkness and pain. As I watched it, too high for me to reach, a .stone was hurled through the grates in the window, and hit the luckless flying Insect, that twisted like a leaf in autumn down, down, while the stone rebounded from the wall of the cell to my Teet. It 'had a paper tied about It, and I hastened to pick it up, fearing my jailor might have heard the noise and come to see what it meant.- I hid the paper and listened. All was still. I held it up to the light and read. "To-night." At last! Gil was en evi dence. Now my brain kept tacking to pleasanter things; how would Gil ac complish his task? How wreck these prison bars? I pushed the three-legged stool be neath the window and stood upon it I could just reach the window sill with my finger tips. I drew myself up and looked out, as I had done many times before. I saw tops of trees and far off a winding stream; now all was hazy like a picture seen through a smoked glass. I could see a light bobbing here and there, and imagine I heard the measured cadence of the boatsmen's oars, as they fer ried their fares across. I was not high up in that old prison, else that frail butterfly had not fluttered to its death, or the stone been thrown. (To be continued.) CURED BY HARD WORK. Young Woman's Desire- to Escape Home Life More Than Satisfied. A young woman came to me one day and asked my Intercession in se curing her an opening in newspaper work. I happened to know that there was no need of her seeking work, be cause she had a home and an allow ance. She was needed in the family circle to assist her mother in her manifold duties, which were not a tenth part as hard and disappointing as the work she wanted to do. I knew ihat reasoning would do no good, and was not at all sure that a vivid de scription of the life and 'all it meant would send her home contented with her lot. But I decided to try it The young woman was musical and fond of reading she also had a large cir cle of friends and many social duties. I told her that all would have to be offered up as sacrifices to hard work, so exacting and wearying that there was neither time nor inclination foi the niceties of life, says a writer in the Philadelphia Bulletin. She was obstinate, as I somewhat expected she would be. She secured the coveted position and worked just a month. She needed no more time to convince her that her former life was pretty nearly ideal, and had the good sense to return to it There are thousands like her in restlessness, but few whose native good sense conquers so easily. An Unanswerable Argument. This is the season of the year when a great many people find it hard to get up in the morning. But it prob ably never occurs to them, as it did to Gladstone's granddaughter, Miss Dor othy Drew, when she was not more than seven, that the Scriptures empha size the vanity of early rising. Doro thy positively refused to get up one morning, and her grandfather had to be called to overawe the rebel. "Why don't you get up, Dorothy?" he asked. "Because the Bible doesn't approve of early rising, grandfather," was the unexpected reply. "Really, Dorothy," said the astonish ed statesman, "you must be mis taken." "Oh, no. I'm not," she persisted; "here it Is," and she turned up the second verse of the 127th Psalm: "It is in vain for you to rise up early." The old parliamentarian had nothing more to say. The argument floored him. Preaching to the Deaf. He that hath ears, let him hear, and he that is deaf can now hear by tele phone, and has no excuse for staying away from church. A clergyman in Stratford. Conn., has a number of deaf persons in his congregation. He found that, curiously enough, they could understand what was said to them by telephone. So ho set up a te'ophcn e apparatus on his pulpit sk and ran wires to a pew near the front of (he church. There sit the deaf, holiiing receivers with a light handle like that of a lorgnette. This leaf pew. however, is not necessary. Telephone connection will be made between the pulpit and any pew. A great boon to the really deaf, but rath er vexatious, perhaps, to the persons who are so deaf that they can hear all the jokes at a theater perfectly well, but cannot follow the sermon. "With the Processiou," Everybody's Magazine. Auburn Hair and Intellect. "Did you ever notice," asked an observant woman, "how many intel lectual people have auburn hair? At the theater the other night I don't remember noticirg a single reddish head of hair among the hundreds of uncovered heads spread out before me. They were the well-coiffed heads of the average nice woman. The next night 1 attended a meeting of a very learned society, at which there were perhaps 200 or 300 of the brain iest thinkers and educators around town. And without turning my eyes I picked out at least a dozen auburn haired women in the few seats in front of me. Now, that was more than a coincidence. It argues some thing for the possessor of auburn hair I should think." Chicago Daily News One By Senator Piatt. Senator Piatt tells the following about a real estate agent who desired to get even with a man that had re fused to buy a house and lot from him after he had entered into negotiations- "After relating the circumstances, said the Senator, "the disappointec agent showed me a handsome-looking watch, saying he intended giving it to the man. "My man." said he, "is a com muter and takes a certain train every morning to business. Well, no mat ter if he sets this watch every night, it is so constructed that it will lose about tea minutes before morning. So, you see, time will bring in its re venges for a while, at least" Plans Cheap Incubatsr. A poultry enthusiast proposes to erect a number of incubators near sev eral unused springs at Oleawood Hot Springs, and to use running hot water in place of lamps which asualy supply the necessary heat. The projector of the plan hopes to hatch pot from E.000 to S.000 eggs each month. FUERTO PLATA. WHERE U. S. TOOK CHARGE OF DOMINICAN CUSTOMS ';- ii n n TSJ,... - --JSC. ,-zzJSC- i iBiJiJr-'-T-irii ''t-'-A-A-'i PJax.a 7nd.ependenz.za. jiZ Puerto JRl&?aK. ROMANCE IN CONNECTION W.TH SWEDISH DYNASTY Although of peasant extraction Os car II. of Sweden has for so man.. .cars been the most Imposing and majestic-looking figure among the sover eigns of the Old World that the news of his having been forced by illness :nd old age to surrender his scepter o his eldest son and to step down "rom the throne as incapable of iul iilling any longer the onerous duties of rulership will be received with a feeling of regret even in this country, .v'here popular sentiment is so aveise o monarchical forms of government Oscar was until a few months ago a superb specimen of manhood, tower .ng head and shoulders over every Mher king and emperor in Europe vith the exception of Leorold of Bel gium, while his wonderfully varied ?ifts and talents, his unusual culture .nd his singularly sunny disposition m parted to his manner an extraordi nary charm and fascination that made themselves felt jto all those who had the privilege of 'approaching him. Indeed, for those who believe in the advantages of blue blcod and of an cient lineage it was difficult to realize 'hat this grand-looking prince, so tru !y kingly in appearance and et with 1 so simple and so democratic in his ways, was the grandson of a Pyre nean peasant and the great-grandson "n the distaSf side of a Marseilles shopkeeper. The Swedish Dynasty. There are few stories more roman tic than that of the present Swedish dynasty. Gustavus IV., the last mon arch but one of the Hcuse of Vasa. was brought to the throne at the early age of 14 by the assassination of his father in that very palace at Stockholm where Oscar a ftfw days ago turned over the reins of govern ment to his eldest son. Gustavus IV. proved a most unsat isfactory ruler, and in 1809 was de posed by means of a military pronun ciamento, forced to sign his abdica tion after a most dramatic hand-to-hand struggle with General Alder kreutz and the officers implicated in the conspiracy and was then ban ished, along with his consort and his children, his uncle taking his place on the throne as Charles XIII. The latter being childless and an admit er of France and of Napoleon, selected the French Field Marshal Eernadotte, who had been l:crn as a peasant near Pau and who had risen from the ranks, to become his heir, induced the j the crew from the captain down, be national Diet at Stockholm to ratity trined t'0 "South Car-o-li-na." The his choice and established him In trie j v.a ..Caroiina" is pleasing to the ear. Swedish capital as Crown Prince. , aR(1 is !n its American application, Bernadotte, who took the name of : of hlstoric significance. The early col Charles John, soon made himself the i onv was named from the Latin in non real ruler of the kingdom, asscciat- or'Char-es n. who made the original ing himself heartily with his adopted qrant to the eight lords proprietors, land, and in 1813, when Napoleon's ' Tn jees It is therefore, particularly star began to wane, joined the powers j (Hstisteful to South Carolinans to hear which were striving to crush the em- , their state referred to as "South Ca'-li-peror. His service in bringing about pa and themselVes as "South Ca'lee the latter s overthrow caused the nians .. such corruptions of the two congress oi Vienna to leave him tin- disturbed in the place which he had i attained at Stockholm, and in 1S18. on the death of Charles XIII., the last of the Vasa line of kings, he ascended the throne under the title of Charles XIV.. his wife, Desiree, daughter of the Marseilles stockbroker Clary and grand-child of a Marseilles shopkeep er, becoming Queen of Sweden and Norway. Napoleon Jilted Her. Queen Desiree. it may be added, n-as at one time betrothed to the first , Emperor Napoleon, who jilted her. j Her grandson. King Oscar, is the au- j thority for this assertion, and it will ; be fonnd likewise in the novel which he published some years ago under ! the pen name of "O. Frederick" and I entitled "A Romance of the Times of Napoleon and of Bernadotte." Desiree was, according to her grandson. King Oscar, almost heart broken when Napoleon abandoned her for Josephine de Beauharnais, and never forgave him. For. after indig nantly refusing Gen. Junot and Du phot, as well as several other suit ors supported and sponsored bv the emperor, she finally accepted Berna- dotte. not because she loved him, but I because in her eyes he was the only Curious Receipt for Pew Rent. Mrs. Frank Bingham of Bristol, N. j H.. has a printed receipt. Oct. 20. j 1S27. for the sale of "One pew situat- ed in the Congregational meeting house in said Bristol, on the floor of ' the same, and numbered 13. at $G. by . two several notes of hand of even date herewith; one drawn payable-to the town of Bristol for $4 on demand, , with the interest annually; the other drawn payable to the treasurer of the , First Congregational society m Bris- toi. cr oraer. ior $., m iuui munins, and interest." j German Railroads. A report by the Prussian minister of railways states that the interest of the capital invested in railroads in Germany has increased from 4.9 to 7.3 per cent sines 1890. The report also sajs that the highest speed attained with new locomotives in 1904 was eighty-two miles an hour, but that this speed could not be kept up for any length of time. The minister further recommends that the speed on state lines should not exceed sixty-eight miles an hour. 'Violates Confidence. Herr Barkmeyer, who occupied a confidential post in the Germania shipbuilding yard ,at Kiel, has been sentenced to a year's imprisonment for selling secret plans of submarines constructed by his firm to rival Ger man yards. He was in receipt of a salary of $1,550 a year. He sold him self for $2,750. Bernhardt Going to Pretoria. Sarah Bernhardt Is to make a South African tour next May. man capable of contending with Na irolecn. The match, as might have been expected under th circum stances, did not turn out happily. Bernadotte, on becoming crown prince and subsequently king of Swe den, lost his head so completely that, forgetful of the fact that he himself was a peasant from the Pyrenees, he reproached his charming wife with the lowliness of her birth, declaring that he had been guilty of a terrible mesalliance and that if he had ocly waited he might have had any prin cess of the blood in Europe for the asking this, too, in spite of the fact that he had stood as a soldier on duty on what Is now the Place de la Con corde at Paris on the occasion of the execution of King Louis XVI and that he had taken part in the shout of "Mort anx Tyrans" which greeted the exhibition of the severed head of their monarch to the multitude words which, along with a Phrygian cap. wore found tattooed on his right arm after his death. Inherited Josephine's Eyes. Queen Desiree. whose sister Julia married King Joseph Eonaparte of Spain and lived with him for a time at Bordentown, N. J., survived her husband for many years and died shortly before the Franco-German war, universally beloved in Sweden, and. strangely enough, without ever having revisited her native land since tlfe overthrow of the great Napoleon. It is by an irony of fate that Queen Desiree's only son, Oscar I. should have fallen in love with Josephine de Leuchtenberg, daughter of Eugene de Beauharnais, who was the only son of the Empress Josephine, for whose sake she had been jilted by Napoleon. In spite of his mother's opposition Oscar I insisted upon marrying Jo sephine of Leuchtenberg. and in this way the present king of Sweden, Os car II, finds himself a grandson of Desiree Clary and a great-grandson of Empress Josephine, whose singu larly beautiful and expressive eyes he alone of all her descendants is said to have inherited. "Ex-Attache" in Pittsburg Dispatch. Improving the Vernacular. It is hoped that one of the first things dore aboard the new battle ship South Carolina when it is com pleted will be to organize a class in tho nrrmnnr'ntion of its name. Let ,i-r,i-,if oi-o tntnllv inpvniisahle. Let the . nf th4 -South Car-o-li-na" be trained in the proper pronunciation of 4 " V. .w the name, and perhaps in time north erners who come in contact with the men of the ship will catch the habit. But. for heaven's sake, do hot "have a "South Ca'lina" in the United States navy. Columbia. S. C, State. 1 The Decline cf Chivalry. 1 rhivrlrv irrew ii) in Europe as a peculiar "institution pfter the fall ot tl,e Roman empire and it flourished through the middle ages. Its decay Sgt ta when Cervantes in his famous ..l)on Quivote" made it the object of ,;is delicious and satirical ridicule, i nn after the institution of chivalry ,;r,eared its spirit survived in !iiineared its spirit survived in re spect and courtesy to women, and this has been considered one of the highest manifestations of manhood, la the past few decades it has fallen more and more into disuse because the conventional social barriers be tween the sexes are being rapidly leveled and the women are claiming for their sex political, social and moral equality with men, and thus the rM nrdsr rhnmrps and tho new sHnl relations are growing, up between the sexes. Born to Die in Bed. An Italian of the name of Robarto was rainting SOrae of the iron work of the bridge that spans the great gorge at Victoria falls, Africa the other day. The plank on which he was standing tilted and preciptated him down the side of the gorge He struck the rock three times, turning a half somersault on each occasion and eventually landed among the founda tions a hundred feet below. Beyond three scalp wounds and a severe shak- mg and bruising he was worse for his adventure. none the Hauled from Snowdrift by Engine. "Curly" Edwards, an Ontario & Western railroad fireman, who weighs 235 pounds, got stuck in a snowdrift while on his way to the roun.ihn.,Co way to the roundhouse at Middletown. Several men were un able to extricate him from the snow. As a last resort an engine was run to the scene. A large rope was at tached to "Curly." A full head of steam was applied, and, with a mighty effort the engine hauled him from the drift and over a 50-foot bank of snow. New York World. To Teach Irish Language. A school for teaching Irish, under the patronage of the archbishop of Tuam, will be started in Connaught, at Tourmakeady, on the western shores of Lough Mask, as soon as $1,000 more has been raised to pay for the building. Morgan Not Ostentatious. Ten big charitable institutions In New York city were built by J. Pier pont Morgan, but none bears bis came. THE HCRRCRS OF WAR. Chicago Journal Calls Slaughter Blot en Civilization. History records no greater battle than that fought between Japan and Russia in and around Mukden. The estimates place the number oi dead at not less than a hundred thousand souls. The figure is so great that it beg gars the imagination. Both sides have -.'laced the very flower of their peo ple in the field, men in the full prime of life. The proportion of officers, men on whom the state had expended its utmost resources to fit them for their trade of death, have died with those ihey led. And a hundred thousand iave gone down, "in one ted burial blent." The figure represents the elective r.ale population ot a city of taree iuarters of a million people. Imagine -he dismay that would burst from h orror-stricken world if within a few Jays thai number were to die in such ' city, in Chicago, for example, it .vould mean the total destruction of three out of the every eight men ol military age within its limits. Yet. since it is war. there are no expressions of horror and affright ar such a loss. It is taken quite as a matter of course. Had a Russian or a Japanese city been so stricken in times of peace, there would be great mass meetings everywhere to express sympathy with .he afilicted and tens of thousands oi iollars in money and supplies would oe raised by popular subscription in order to express the world's practical sense of loss. Is the world no older and wiser for all its centuries of Christianity? Is there no sense of human interest and proportion that can put an effect ive end to this infernal slaughter? Chicago Journal. GOVERNOR TO BE SENATOR. James B. Frazier Chosen to Succeed the Late Gen. W. B. Bate. Gov. James B. Frazier was nomi nated by acclamation in joint demo cratic caucus for Democratic senator from Tennessee to succeed the late Gen. W. B. Bate. Kobert L. Taylor and Benton McMillan refused to go into the caucus. The nomination is equivalent to an election. Mr. Frazier lias served two months of his second term as governor of G?x:zy.J5Bzz&z& Tennessee. He was born in Tennes see forty-nine years ago and is a law yer. His great-grandfather was a member of the first constitutional con vention of Tennessee in 179G. His father was appointed judge of the criminal court at Nashville by Andrew Johnson, and was impeached by the Brownlow legislature. He was, how ever, restored to his civil rights by the constitutional convention ot 1S70, and elected to his old position. The Stomachless Man. The stomach proper has ceased to be a serious problem to the surgeon. He can invade and explore it with im punity. He can even, if circumstances demand, relieve "the owner of it entire ly, and so arrange the loose ends that the functions of nutrition are success- fully maintained. To be sure, the pa-1 tient can never thereafter derive much pleasure from his meals; he must restrict himself to a rigid diet but for all the other affairs of life Iip may be as competent as before. Then are to-day several stomachless men who are earning their daily predigest ed ration in occupations varying from clerk to expressman. McCIure's. Censure for Modern Critics. Literary criticism was a bugbear tc Prof. Fraser when he occupied a chaii in Johns Hopkins universit;. He studiously aoided reading book re views and had no patience with the spirit in which many of them were written. "Modern criticism," said he when asked to explain his aversion "seems to me to consist largely in measuring the wisdom and learning of others by the critic's own ignor ance. Why, one celebrated critic laid down a rule that no author can suc ceed in describing what he has not ex perienced. He overlooks the fact that Dante had net been in hell nor Milton in paradise." University Endowment. The Leland Stanford. Jr.. university has the greatest endowment of them all. Its productive funds amount to $20,000,000 par alue. Girard college comes next with $17 715,000; then Harvard with $16,755,000. and Coium bia with $15,847,000. All others are in seven figures instead of eight. And the Stanford endowment is the gift oi a single individual or estate, instead of an accumulation of gifts, as in the cases of the other colleges and uni versities. excepting only Girard. Boston Herald. Millionaire Offers Large Gift. Sir William C. MacDonald, the mil Iionaire tobacco manufacturer of Mon treal, has offered the Protestant com mittee of the council of public instruc tion of that city a proposition to en dow an agricultural training college and a college tor the training ol school teachers in the sum of from $2,000,000 to $4,000,000. Sir William has selected Prof. Robertson, the mac who developed the Canadian dairj business, aa the director of the scheme. Prince to Receive No Presents. The prince of Wales, on his comins visit to India, is to give no presents and receive none. When his father was prince of Wales and visited India he gave presents worth $200,000 and received presents worth $2,500,000. Jesse Pomeroy Seeks Freedom. Jesse Pomeroy, who used to tor ture children to death in Massachu setts years ago, and who was sen tenced to prison for life, has applied 50C 1 to the governor for a pan?' 1 TdE MAN WHOSE .eBv : f,.ufa&& wXk X MVWjii-x31h VBSnMKF I SP I -MMIM MttMtMUM C.u.v.3 ri. l rei-t. itie neiy ap pointed treasurer of the United States is to take ctfice at once, and there- MIRACULOUS ESCAPES ON MANCHURIAN BATTLEFIELDS The story of the soldier who, struck by a bullet jet escaped from death owing to the interposition of a prayer- book in his breast pocket, is as old as the hills. The present gigantic strug gle in Manchuria yields several even stranger and better authenticated in cidents of escape from death by a nar row margin. The Odessa News reports the case. of soldier at the battle of Taschis chao. whose life was saved through his comrade's practical joking "A hum orous sapper had smeared his shovel with tar, and was about to plaster the face of a man named Tsibuilin, who was dozing in the trench, when a shell unexpectedly fell on the parapet and exploded. "The sapper and every man with in ten yard's radius was killed by splinters. Eut Tsibuilin survived. His face was somewhat flattened and blackened by the shovel, the front of UvHch was scratched and scored y splinters. Had it not been for the shovel his face would have been cut to pieces." Another Russian escaped death through boastfully proving that he did not fear it. A Lithuanian was contin ually popping up his had and shoul ders, with the words. "I'm not afnid of bullets." Tired of this, the soldier next him jeered. "I'd like to see you showing your whole body." The Li thuanian took the challenge, sprang on the edge of the trench and leaped about three feet in the air. Before he descended two bullets whizzed un derneath his feet, and lodged in the earth behind. Had he been in his usual position they would have gone through his chest. A pewter spoon saved the life of Sergeant Pristavkin at the battle of the Shaho. Pristavkin was dining on buckwheat, gruel, and had the spoon at his lips, when it was struck by a spent bullet, which glanced aside and went half way through the head of a man some way behind. Pristavkin was afterward nicknamed "Sergeant Lozh ka" or "Sergeant Spoon." Foppishness was the cause of Artil leryman Znvodski's salvation. Zavod ski was the greatest fop in tho bat tery. He trimmed his nails, waxed his moustache, and shaved himself under fire. While the other men were eating their dinner during the retreat from Liao Yang. Zavodski removed his big boots, and cleaned them carefully. While he was putting a finishing touch on the second of them, a bullet from a Japanese sharpshooter pene trated the sole, tearing out the big nails, and fell harmlessly into the toe. Had it not been tor the boot the bullet would have gone straight through his heart. Gortseff, a discontented and nervous soldier, escaped death through his des perate attempt to commit suicide. While the enemy.'s shells and bullets were falling like hail, he hopped vboiit. exposing himself, and altogeth er behaving K queerly that his com rades thought him mad. Sn-idPnly. amid a hail of bursting shells, he unscrewed his bayonet, put the muzzle of his rifle to his throat. and fired. The shot went harmlessly over his shoulder. When the rille was examined, it appeared that he had had a double escape from death. The wood on one side of the stock was torn clean off by a shell fragment which was found at his feet. It was this which diverted the bullet he had in tended for his throat. A Japanese soldier escaped bayonet ting by his knowledge of Russian. During the assault on Nanshan hill he, with a dozen comrades, succeeded in reaching the Russian trenches. All the attackers were slaughtered save the Jap student. Two men, with ferocious cries of "Tchort!" (the devil), attacked him. He calmly par- I it'll l till fcit. C411L .ill l ,.1.11 lilltl I repeated their own cry "Tchort!" tn.l 1...(. ri.wi ,ftll r. .. m ln..k Russell Sage's Joke. Maybe Russell Sage was not aware of it, but he made a funny remark the other day. He went into a barber shop and the boss, frciing honored at a visit from such a noted man. opened a new and fine cake of soap. As he prepared to lather the millionaire's face he said "This is a very fine grade of soap, Mr. Sage, a mixture of t cream and cocoa oil, with a dash of alcohol. Quoth the old gentleman: "Alcohol, eh? Well, remember I am a temperance man, so don't put too much of it in my mouth." Left-Handed Compliment. A certain laborer once asked a coun try clergyman to write a letter for him to a duke, from whom he wished to obtain aid. "But jou ought to go yourself and gee his grace," said the clergyman "I would, sir," was the nervous answer, "but, you see. I don't like to speak to the duke. He may be too proud to listen to the likes of me. I can talk to you well enough, sir; there's nothing of the gentleman about you." London Tidbits. Inebriates' Homes Are Useless. Mr. Justice Wills, in bis charge to the grand jury at the Liverpool as sizes, alluded to inebriates' homes, remarking that all the information he and his brother judges had been able to gather was that they were perfect ly useless as useless a piece of senti mental legislation as ever was passed. Motor Buses for London. Within the year London will have motor cmBlbuses. The drivers j for are being trained now. SIGNATURE MAKES PAPER MONEY GOOD :tr n.s signature vill apt-ear on every p'eec ot rapcr money issued by the United Ststes. The office of treasurer or the United St-.tes is a most responsible ore. yet it is doubtful if one man out of a hun dred met on the streets could tell you the name of the man who holds it. The treasurer is accountable for the custody of every dollar of the govern I ment's funds. Every bank note issued has the guarantee of the government -behind it. as coin or bonds ,are de posited to secure it. Hence, before a bank rote is legal it must bear the signature of the treasurer. The Russians were so much aston ished by hearing the familiar word, that they dropped their bayonets, and took him prisoner Instead of butcher ing him. An act of dishonesty was the cause of Sapper Rozanofl's narrow escape. On the morning of tho battle round "Kuropatkin's Eye." flat, half-pound tins of tobacco were given to each noncommissioned officer for distribu tion among the men. But before it was portioned out. one tin disap peared. All the soldiers denied having taken it. When night closed the fighting, a sapper, named Rozanoff. handed the tin to the sergeant. In the top was a narrow slit, which examination proved to go through tho tobacco, but not through the bottom. Rozanofl's tunic had a similar slit, just above tho ab domen. He admitted having stolen the tobacco. He had hidden it next his shirt. In the hand-to-hand fighting a Japanese soldier had driven at him fiercely with the bayonet. The steel had gone clean through the lid and tobacco, but the force em ployed was not sufficient to send it through the bottom. Rozanofl's con science was struck by his miraculous ' escape, and he had decided to confess the theft and make restitution. LONG TERMS OF SERVICE. Remarkable Faithfulness Shown Austrian Servant. by In celebration of the emperor of Austria's birthday a short time ago twenty purses, each containing the equivalent of $75. were offered for competition among domestic servants in respectable situations. Tbe quali fications of the winners showed some truly remarkable perfnds of service. One of the winners a valet had been in the service of one man for forty-seven years. A maid servant of nearly 80 years of age had served about thirty-nine years in an orphan age, where she was still in active employment when she received the award. Another woman, aged 71 j ears, had entered the service of a family as scullery maid and was still with the same family, after forty three years' service. All of the win ners had been in their situations more than thirty years. Husband Takes Wife's Name. Permission to take his wife's maid en name as part of his own has been granted to Rev. George Franklin Hop kins in the equity court. Washington. The reason given is that his wife, who was well known in various fields of work before her marriage, desires to continue the use of her maiden name. She was Dr. Saleni Arm stiong. who achieved more or less celebrity in the missionary field and wrote a number of books. After her marriage to Dr. Hopkins she found her work hampered by the necessity of appearing under a mnv name. Ac cordingly, hhe and her husband ap plied to the court for permission to change their names to Armstroiig Hopkins. Vireless Telegraphy In the Home. William J. Hammer, the electrical cng-neer. has found a novel use for the wireless telegraph. In his New York home he is employing it to call tho servants. On his dining-room table is a dainty transmitter and pole con nected under the table. Down in the kitche-i is another polo, with trans mitter and receiver, connected with an electric bell. The transmitters are no bigger than paper weights. When Mr. Hammer wants the maid lie terids a wireless current through the walls of the room. The electrical waves are caught by the pole in the kitchen ai d the bell rings. A system of sig nals permits him to call for anj thing he desires. Cheating the Government. People who are honorable in their private dealings with other individu als sometimes fail to treat corpora tions or the government with the same, honesty. How many persons traveling from foreign countries smug gle in goods on which, under the law. duty should lie paid? Cheating the customs is not a serious sin in the category of a largo number of trav elers and merchants. This failure to live up to the spirit of the law is ap parent in other countries as well as our own. Boston Herald. Collecting Monuments. Collecting monuments is the queer est hobby we have yet heard of. It is the specialty of a Pennsylvania millionaire Quaker. For forty years he has spent time and money hunting for tombstones, pedestals, head-pieces, broken columns, gravestones, and monuments erected to commemorate Biblical events and American history. He has them erected in a cemetery plot reserved for the purpose, and spends much of his leisure admiring his collection. Smoking and Growth. As an Instance of how smoking stunts the growth, it is noted that the Russian giant now on exhibition in London is nine feet six and one quarter inches in height and smokes two hundred cigarettes a day. Water Famine in Hawaii. Drought in the Hawaiian islands Is causing serious loss to the sugar planters, in some aisrricts water household purposes i being sold v the gallon- J 'l fl jW,, 5J ' -sWysaK.