a ——_ Bellefonte, Pa., June 19, 1903. RE ————————————————————— == EAA ——————— E———————_———————_——— === — —~~T——__ _— THE OPTIMIST. The green leaves are all dancing in the balmy winds of May ; The children ’neath the shade trees are all happy in their play, And there’s lots of joy in living if you take the proper way, So cheer up and don’t waste time in vain repining. The gentle rain is falling on the fair and fertile fields; The Lord with gracious favor still His loving sceptre wields, And the vineyard, farm and orchard each its richest treasure yields, So cheer up and don’t waste time in vain repining. The bullheads are a-biting from the dawn to twilight late ; The merry birds are singing in a chorus strong and great, And you waste your iime in moaning or in groaning at your fate, €5 cheer up and don’t waste time in vain repining. The clouds may thickly gather, but the sun still sheds its rays ; The day may be full gloomy, but there’ll be more sunny days, And you'll feel a whole lot better, if you sing the songs of praise. So cheer up and don’t waste time in vain repining. . A WARY CAMPAIGNER. “My dear,” said Mrs. Marryat, adjust- ing her chiffon boa upon her shoulders, ‘I can only tell you that May and Fiddy were nothing to her. I took them through two winters each, as you know, and married them.” Mrs. Hayward nodded in appreciative assent at the triumph of Mrs. Marryat’s tone ; to marry May and Fiddy might have corrugated the brows of the ablest mother. ‘“Now,’” Mrs. Marryat.continned, ‘‘what happens? Ihave a really pretty bright child whom any one might think it simple to launch in society, and--the result! I have never had so intolerable a season. Nora has one abominable fanlt. Her name for it is ‘real pride.’ I call it being pos- sessed of the devil I” The two ladies looked at each other. This was strong language. Mrs. Marryat’s colorless, shapely countenance did not weaken. She proceeded :— *‘She classes as false pride every decent act of decent society. She reverses every known law, is cavalier to the eligible, flat- tering to the dowdy, wears her best dress to dine with a trained nurse and her worst to the party of the season. She disobeys every command that I give her with a sweetness that makes it intolerable, and, my dear, she drives me to extremes! I am not used to being thwarted by girls, and—I have a plan.” There was a moment of almost awed si- lence. Mrs. Hayward leaned toward the speaker with fascinated eves, but the latter shook her head. ‘I cannot tell it, Susie. It would not do to tell, even to you. But I will confess that it is not the sort of thing that I gen- erally approve of, or indulge in ; still, am pushed to extremes. I shall manage her without her knowing it.’’ She arose as she spoke and looked down on her confidante. ‘‘I hope, my dear, that you will never have such an experience, ’’ she said, and she swept away, toward the tennis-courts, to find her troublesome daughter. . Mrs. Hayward stared in a wonder that verged on stupor and she watched Mrs. Marryat’s handsome back disappearing. Addie Marryat was a worker of miracles. How, on her trifling ‘income, she not only wore a dress like that, but paid for it ; how she ran with the best, and not only ran with them, but led them ; how, with no money, she ranked among the dowagers of consideration, gave balls or as good as gave them by receiving at them—these were things that no ordinary woman could un- derstand. _ There was the occasion on which, at an informal gathering of matrons, she had charmingly coerced them into getting up a set of dances to which she never: snbserik- ed, but which she undertook to manage. ‘“My dear souls,” were her famous words, “Ill give something better than money : I'll give you time and trouble.” And, by dins of spending their money and her per- sonality with a lavish hand, they were the success of the season. There was the gay December when she talked minuets into fashion (having bad Fiddy instructed during the dull autumn months) and sprang her accomplished daughter on the unthinking mamas and: cotillion-leaders in so natural a fashion that Fiddy was sought by all the sons of. the great houses, and led into empty halls and libraries to practise with these scions, who hung upon her steps, at least ! 3 Mrs. Hayward’s head buzzed as she thought of the wonderful things that Addie Marryat had done—and she thirsted to know what desperate step she was now taking. Mrs. Marryat, when not ‘‘pushed to extremes,”” was so’ formidable that she trembled when she thought of her thus spurred. ! She got up and wandered aimlessly about, chatting with her friends and long- ing to stalk Addie, but notdaring to do 80. She would bave found her very naturally employed in welcoming an old friend. ‘My dear Robert’? she was saying, ‘‘it is really rather nice to have vou back. I think, perhaps, we might almost say that we have missed you!" . The yonng man whom she addressed, and who sat beside her on a long bench near a tennis-court, laughed. ““You are good, Mrs. Marryat,”” he an- swered. ‘‘I am glad to be back.” ‘‘Are you truthful?’ She raised her straight, firmly marked brows. ‘‘But how about the pretty lady in waiting I heard of, and the hunting? Confess that you miss the bunting.” *‘Perhaps I ehall mise the hunting,” he admitted, smiling ; ‘‘bus the lady in wais- ing is a stately fiction. I suppose that I have to thank Marsball for that.” ‘*Mr. Marshall among others.” She smiled, and then, with a little serious look ahead of her, she sighed. ‘‘Robert,”’_she added, ‘‘I am baving a horrid time.” Robert stared in sympathetic wonder. ‘‘My dear lady,’’ he returned, ‘‘what is the matter ? May ? Fiddy?” She again sighed. Mrs. Marryat in a softened mood was extraordinarily charm- ing. Ifshe bad not had astern preocen- pation with her social and maternal duties, she might have wrought a very ‘pretty havoo of her own. § ‘No ; the girls are well and happy,” she returned, with a plaintive note he never remembered having heard and which touch- ed him ; “but my baby, my youngest child, Robert, is causing me so muck dis- tress, so much distress.” rire He shook his head. ‘‘Dear me! What is the trouble ? “I thought some one said that she was pretty and——"’ Mrs. Marryat fixed her eyes upon him, gravely. ‘‘She is pretty,’”’ she said, in a hold- cheap voice. ‘‘Very pretty. What good is that when she behaves as she does? The child is—I don’t know what to call it. She is a socialist. 2 : The young man gave a relieved laugh. ‘Oh, come, Mrs. Marryat, that isn’t bad ! Now, what difference do mere opinions make ?7’ ‘‘Mere opinions !”’ echoed the sorrowing mother beside him. ‘‘If they were only mere opinions. But she won’t be civil to anything less than a pauper. It’s a form of snobbishness, in my opinion,’ she pro- ceeded, in righteous indignation. ‘It’s no better to toady to the poor than the rich. No better to trample on the rich than the poor !”? Robert Spenser broke into an abrupt laugh. °‘‘I beg your pardon,’’ he explain- ed. ‘‘But it does sound funny.’ “Does i$ ?"’ She faced him reproachful- ly, the lilacs on her charming hat quiver- ing in sympathy. ‘‘Perhaps it wouldn’t if you had your child flout every friend you had and truckle to farm-hands.’’ ‘Oh, come !”’ Spenser laughed Sgain, “I wish I could come.’”’ Mrs. Marryat flashed back at him and then dropped her eyes wearily upon the scene before her. “I shouldn’s have spoken of it, only—only —I'm fond of you, Robert ; and you were 80 kind about Fiddy.”’ He did not disclaim. He had been kind about Fiddy, and it bad been up-hill work. He bad drawn one line, however ; he had made it plain, early in the day, that he would not mar her and shetler her from the results of her own dulness, and he had done that and en- joyed it after a fashion—as you enjoy going to work among the newsboys or helping re- formed drunkards, because you have such a light conscience with which to face your own gins. “I've never said a word fo any one,” went on Mrs. Marryat, firmly. ‘‘This is just an ontburst on my part of pent-up feel- ing, and T know you will understand and not repeat a word I say.”’ He nodded. ‘‘Mum’s the word.’ ‘“You will understand just how unpleas- ant it is when she makes your money a disgrace to you, ‘‘went on his confidante ; ‘‘and, Robert, if she could only once like a rich man, it would fall to the ground like other follies and delusions. I wish that you would make her like you! But you couldn’ I’’ She shook her head wearily, drew off her glove and turned her rings thoughtfully on her finger. ~ Spenser lighted a cigarette. “I don’t believe it. Sbe shall like me. Of course she will. She must.” Mrs. Marryat’s rings went slowly round. ‘She would if she didn’t know how rich you are, but the moment she sees that a 49) ‘Oh, come !”” Spenser had recourse to his favorite expression. ‘‘It isn’t written all over my face !”’. : She smiled at him. ‘‘No, but it ia all over your horses.” And they were both silent. ‘‘Robert Spenser,”” said Mrs. Marryat, suddenly, “Ihave an idea.’”” Her dark blue-gray eyes were shining. Spenser watched ber with an amazed satisfaction. Really, you never could tell where pleasure could be gathered—to think that Mrs. Mar- ryat’s eyes should be so handsome ! “I want you to do something for me.’’ “With pleasure! Why not ?”’ His an- swer came promptly, but held a reserva- tion—like his attentions to Fiddy. *‘I want you to let my girl have one friend among my friends, one decent fellow to whom she talks sometimes.’’ Again the unexpected, a spot of color in Mrs. Marryat’s cheeks ! Spenser watched it as he answered. ‘Certainly, my dear lady ; but it is not I who am the stumbling-block !”’ “I know. Well, then, we will have to —to, for once,shuffle a little with the truth and do her a good turn against her will. Robert, I shall tell her that you are a poor man, with no connections !’? *‘Ob, come !”’ Spenser sat up. “I'm coming.”” Mrs. Marryat was al- most beautiful. ‘‘My child, it is an in- spiration—a heaven-sent inspiration I” Spenser stared and thought. touched bottom yet—anything like bottom —but he was having a very good time and what be reveled in : a sense of mental ef- fort. Keeping up with Mrs. Marryat was, going to exercise his every faculty, and he knew it. : “I don’t think I see exactly how it is to be done,”” he said, slowly. ‘‘Details, please.” eT ; ‘‘Let me think! How can Igive you details when this has come, Minerva-like, whole from my poor, anxious head. But see, something like this——’’ Mrs. Mar- ryat hesitated, and thesemblance of vague- ness was perfect. * “Try this. We are go- ing to Louisa’s for a week to-morrow.’ (Louisa had married Mrs, Marryat’s broth- er and given him the righ to be the happy loafer that he was.) ‘‘You—you could come, too. I'll arrange it.”” (Louisa was accommodating.) ‘“No one can tell on us there, aud you can be as poor and uncon- nected as possible. Nora will take you to her heart, and, when we come back and break the horrid truth to her, she will have to confess that money doesn’t ahso- lutely rnin men—on occasion.”’ Spenser hesitated. He loved a mas- querade, like his fellows—and it sounded harmless on the whole, and—and—yet he hesitated. . : “There is Nora,’’ said Mrs. Marryat, quietly, ‘‘coming toward me, now. Are you going to do me a good turn, and cure her of her folly, or be—inadequate ?’’ Spenser gazed gravely at the advancing figure aud its attendant. *'Ob, I'll go in I’ he responded ; and Mrs. Marryat turned her ring so ruthlessly on her finger that it cut. ‘‘Don’t overdo it,”’ she said. ‘“‘I’ll just say a word to warn her against you.’” She gave him the sweetest smile he had ever seen touch her well-cat lips. Ey { The young girl drew near. She was so natural, so gay, frolicking on the verge of their pit of deception, that Spenser felt nos only guilty, but entranced. Tt was fun. = ‘*Nora, my dear, where have you been? Mrs. Marryat’s voice had its usual slightly commanding accent. ‘‘I asked you to be at the pavilion.” li ue Nora stood before them, looking very un- like a culprit. Spenser caught ascent of battle in the cool, independent glance that rested on her mother. ! pizyed, and there was such a crowd, and George and I took a little walk.” She smiled kindly at her companion, who mov- ed his big canvas-covered feet uneasily as he felt Mrs. Marryat’s eyes linger on them. He wished he had bought’ the other pair that the shopman had recommended. ‘Hardly a day for walking, I should think.” Mrs. Marryat’s statement was cold and general. ‘‘Mr, Spenser, you have never been presented to my daughter. I *" believe——Nora, this is Mr. Spenser.” her, but would look after | He badn’t ‘I$ was too hot ‘there, and the band: He bowed, she acknowledged his saluta- tion, and there was an instant’s silence. ‘“There is Mrs. Willoughby.” Mrs. Mar- ryat spoke rapidly, as the occasion requir- ed. ‘‘Will you ron after her, Mr. Car- penter, and stop her for me. I must speak to her about those seats, Nora,”’ Carpenter went on his errand with an ‘alacrity which was a characteristic of moss of Mrs. Marryat’s messengers, and she laid her band a moment on the girl’s arm as she turned to follow him. ‘I'll come back for you,” she said, and added, in a low voice : “Don’t keep Robert Spenser ; he has just come. Don’t begin by encouraging him. He is a pleasant enough fellow, but never has made a penny ‘in his life, and never will, and, altogether ti ‘‘You...will..miss . Mrs. .. Willoughby, Mama,”’ Nora broke in, with the slightly perceptible curl of her lip that Mrs. Mar- ryat had learned to know so well. She nodded to them both and departed with her even, stately tread. ~The sun was straight over their heads, and it was very hot, but just two steps ‘back suretched the long, cool bench in the shadow of the squash-court. Nora glanced about and met Spenser’s glance resting on her with some curiosity and, she thought, even amusement. It ran through her quick mind that he had canght her moth- er’s warning undertone and was waiting for her to get rid of him. She gavea lit- tle mental jerk to the bit as the took it in her teeth and, sitting down, looked up ‘at him. ‘‘Are you going away.’’ she said. you tired of the Marryat family ?’’ Pure coquetry is a rare art ; not to be self-conscious, not to look coquettish to the bystander, which is fatal and disliked of all men, but to be. so, quietly, for the benefit of the one person it is aimed at— that is one of the charming things of the world, and very rare. u Spenser met ber eyes, and they were challenging, provocating, and yet, thank God ! innocent ; he was not a friend to “knowing’’ girls. Fiddy’s one charm had been a certain straightforward freshness. ‘‘Going away?’ he responded. ‘I hadn’t the most remote idea of it, unless you sent me.”’ *‘Why should I send you ?’’ She smooth- ed her lacy skirt with the little ivory fan she held. ‘‘I’'m not such a lover of soli- tude as that comes to, and, then, you are quite new, unknown ground, and I——I am something of an explorer.’’ Her eye- brows were straight and black like her mother’s, but the gray, shining eyes be- neath them were informed by a totally dif- ferent spirit, Spenser was fond of Mrs. Marryat, but he was glad. ‘‘Are you ?”’ was his answer, while his own glance took in these details with lei- surely thoroughness—‘‘so am I, but I don’t think the Casino is, as a rule, the place to discover new regions. One walks through trim gardens nodding’ with roses and lilies, hut for the wild charms of a meadow, the secrets of the woodland, one may seek in vain.” She stared. ‘‘Dear me’ she said, slow- ly. “Ibaven’t heard a word of that sort for months, not since I left the country and went to town to shop with Mama. How strange it sounds!’ She smiled a him. ‘I am glad you came from wherever it was. It’s nice to meet a fellow country man, and I’ve been among these queer peo- ple so long.” He took in the slight flush that accom- panied these words and waited for her to go on. ‘‘Here we talk about the tennis-courts,’’ she continued, ‘‘and the dancing-floors and the weather and our clothes and their carriages, and sometimes we revive our fainting spirits with a hopeful canvassing of our neighbors’ disgraceful family quar- rels—but why do I goon? You probably know if all, and perbaps like it, since you come here as a free agent from some other place.” Sh: EES *‘Pve just come back from the other side,’’ answered Spenser, and then stopped abruptly, his guilty mind suggesting ‘that it was a queer place for a poor man to go. He hurried on to cover his retreat. *‘I stop- ped at my sister’s for a day or two before T came here,” and there I had unbroken rusticity. I took a ride yesterday (each thing sounded more leisurely and well-off than the last, hut he blundered on) and went for miles without seeing a soul.” “Did you? How I envy you!! She looked discontentedly about her. ‘‘Here every road is infested with automobiles, every bush supports a bicycle.” “It was ‘a wonderful place.’”” Spenser forgot his responsibilities as he thought of | his vision of two days before. ‘‘I rode on and en hetween fields and woods without a sign of human life except that the ground’ was plowed and cared for, until, suddenly, I came on a honse lying not far back from the road, which had a stretch of green but rather shaggy lawn leading up to it, It. had pillars and a second-story porch ; it was a big house, evidently belonging to people of taste. There was a garden, run- ning back at one side, and behind it the woods crowded up and almost clasped it in their green arms.’’ He stopped and stared at her with a sudden recognition of her presence. ‘‘It was the nicest place I've ever seen, and I’ve——I’ve been in love ever since.” 5 She smiled. ‘In love with it 2’ she queried. “No. in love with ker,”’ he answered. ‘Oh I" Her smile changed. ‘‘So you saw the mistress of it 2’? He shook his head. ‘I saw no one.’ “But——"? ! : ‘But she lives there, just the same, and: is everything I like best in woman. I sat on my horse,” proceeded Spenser, “‘hesi- tating whether I should risk it and ride ap and ask for her, and then—then I ‘hadn’t the courage, and I rode on, twisting in my saddle until I nearly fell off, watching the Place nntil I got around the torn, out of sight. & But, evidently, not out of mind !"’ She raised her black brows and smiled again. ‘Well, do you know, I don’t think rauch at you—I should have gone in and found er. : ‘I was afraid some one else would come when I knocked and would not understand how important it was for me to see her. She was up-stairs, tying her sash over her dress of lavender lawn,and ‘so she wonldn’t have been in the drawing-room even.” Miss Marryat studied the profile beside her with the eager, ignorant eyes of youth. She liked it. : ‘So she has a lavender lawn, has she 9”? she asked, slowly. ‘‘Does she wear laven- der a great deal ?”? He nodded. ‘‘Yes, and organdies, lots of organdies. There is one with a yellow spring on a gray ground.” Miss Marryat turned away and stared rather disconsolately over the lawn. “I am beginning to feel lonely and Data she said, with a little pout. ‘When I asked you to sit down here, I didn’t intend to talk organdies,”’ penser turned about in his turn and watched the face beside him ; strangely ‘Are abont other peoples’ enough, she was, in his mental vision, clad in lilac, though to an unenlightened ob- server her dress was pink. “Didn’t you?’ he asked. “Did you intend anything when you asked me to sit dowp beside you ?”’ ‘Nothing very definite,”’ she answered, and, being young, she became serious. *‘Only to weigh you a little, and ——" ‘And find me wanting 2’ he interrups- ted, with a very delightful smile. *‘No,”” she laughed, but her eyes gave a little snap ; ‘only to find out if every young man in this place is equally bhope- less as a companion.’ He tried not to smile again. I, also, quite hopeless ?’’ Miss Marryat fluttered her fan softly. “You wonldn’t be if you badn’s fallen in love with %er. I think yom might be rath: “Well, am er-nice if.it were not for that.’’ “There is hope for me, then,”’ Spenser resumed. ‘‘For I am a very fickle person, and I may supplant her image with anoth- er in short order. I wonderif you would take a drive——I mean a walk with me this afternoon ?’’ The girl hesitated. They were sitting facing each other, and Mrs. Marryat ap- proached with an indefinable smile hover- ing on ber lips. ‘‘My dear,” she said ; and Nora started and rose to her feet, as did Spenser also. ‘I've made an engagement for you this af- ternoon, and’ yon must come now ; for luncheon will be ready.” She turned to Spenser graciously : “I’m afraid we shall miss your visit, Mr. Spenser, as we go down to my sister’s place to-morrow. for a week.’ The girl turned to him with troubled eyes. He gazed a moment into their depths and pressed unconventionally the hand she laid in his. i “I'm sorry,’”’ she said. ‘‘You see how Mama disposes of my afternoons ; but, per- haps, when we come back, if ‘you haven’t quite gone, and I buy an organdy, you might ask me again.”’ Again they looked into each other’s eyes, and hoth of them laughed. “I may almost call it a likelihood,’’ he responded, and reluctantly let her fingers £0. ‘‘May I see you to the gates?’ Mrs. Hayward, who stood waiting for her brother, stared at them and felt her eyes growing round as she watched the girl’s manner. Had Addie’s whole story been false ? Impossible ! And then Nora already had a reputation. Was she dreaming, or was this the result of Addie’s desperate remedy? She sank on a bench and gasped asshe saw them go through the gates and caught the flash of the girl’s lovely gray eyes as she looked hack at Spenser. ‘‘Addiz is a witch,”” she murmured ; and she has never had cause to change her opinion.—By Francis Willing Wharton, in the Cosmopolitan. Where the Nile Flows. The Land of the Speechless Sphinx and the Trackless Desert. Port Said and Alexandria are the gate- ways through which tourists usually enter Egypt. The one lies at the northern en- trance to the Suez Canal, the other farther west, in the Delta of the Nile. Visitors who expect to see in either city impressive reminders of Egypt’s ancient splendor are acutely disappointed by their first glimpse of the historic land. The very decidedly modern aspect of Alexandria suggests little of the mysterious Orient. Only a few scat- tered minarets, and here and there a stray palm tree distinguish the bustling town from any seaport on the French coast. We are interested in its street scenes, but we feel no regret on leaving this ancient strong- hold of the Ptolemies’ and eagerly take train to Cairo, the Pyramids and the Sphinx. From thecar windows we get glimpses of a kaleidoscopic procession of Bedouins, clad in their flowing bernouses, of women hideously veiled, of water carriers laden with goatskins filled to bursting, and of nn- gainly camels whose turbaned drivers are starting them on their voyage across the desert. These, and Cairo’ itself, city of mosques and tombs and. minarets, make us realize the ascendency of the cresceut. But it is ever so much harder to believe that this gay, fashionable health resort, this social center of a refined civilization, this many-sided metropolis of today, is now the capital, the living heart of the Egypt of the Pharaohs, and of Cleopatra. "From January until April, Cairo is the scene of incessant revelry. After that the official colony departs, and the gentleman- ly khedive and his court hasten to Alexan- dria. ro : "But during the season the 'Nile's sacred bosom is gay with beating parties, ‘whose song and laughter rebound, from ruined temples where long forgotten priests once. chanted their hynms to the rising. sun. Since that day the massive ‘columns, now prove and broken, have echoed sounds that changed the very face of the globe. Here: the captive children of Israel groaned till Moses led them to Sinai; here Anthony dreamed away an empire; here victorious Islam carried the koran on its sword point and the mighty Mamelukes fell hefore Na- poleon’s army. ih Such levity amidst such surronndings is shocking, of course, and all a startling in- congruity. But we add our own quota when, busy with thoughts of a. wonderful past, we find ourselves eagerly watching the progress of a polo game played in the very shadows of the overthrown temples. To ‘visit the Pyramid Field; we drive through a beautiful avenue bordered with miles of luxuriant lebbek trees, in victorias or, if we prefer, in automobiles. Irrever- ently we wonder what the royal mummies would say to the latter. Poor fellows,they haven’ been treated fairly. After bmild- ing for themselves tombs that have protect-. ed them for ages, and where they hoped to lie until resurrection dawned, we dig them’ out and expose them to view in the musenm at Ghizeh, and add to the insult by charg- ing a small admission fee. Tey ‘Think of wheeling parties picnicking in the shadow of the Sphinax, resting their bicyoles against old Cheops himself, and sending their golf balls out over the plain he has guarded so long. 3 Arrived at the Pyramids we play at mountaineering on the desert and, at the risk of our dignity, we are shoved and hauled up the giant steps of the Great Pyra- mid, laid bare by the thieving Arabs, who, to deck their mushroom mosques, scaled off its marvelous sheathing of polished granite. A staircase to the sky is Cheops. At the summit we drink in a glorious panorama. Close at hand rise the lesser pyramids, great piles of gray gloom that cut black triangles out of the blue and gold sky, and | the motionless Sphinx still patiently wait- ing for the Dawn. Even in its mutilation, the giant head reveals the ancient type of female African beauty. Yonder lies Cairo, its golden domes and its exquisitely graceful minarets gleaming red and white against the purpling horizon; and through the broad landscape winds the sluggish Nile, its outstretched arms caress- ing the low lying islands green fringed with oe EHTS on palms, and far in the distance lies the Del- ta, like a great fan of silver filigree. The excavations pursued by scientists may, ere long, lift the veil that hides the origin and meaning of the Pyramids. But will they ever discover the secret of their wonderful architecture? Where, to-day, is the modern builder who will raise such a structure and set is upon a floor of shifting sand with such accuracy that, after the lapse of ages, it shall vary nota bair’s breadth from the geometric truth with which it was planned ? But Cairo beckons and we close our eyes for a moment to imprint the scene on our minds forever. We wave our hands to the eternal Sphinx rising above billows of whirling sand, we turn for a last look at the Pyramids, hoary with age when Moses lay in his royal cradle. . We dine and sleep at the Palace hotel in Ghizeh, a beautiful palace built for his residence by the late khedive, on so vast a scale that it was known as ‘‘Ismail’s Folly.”” Bought by a syndicate from the creditors of the extrava- gant sovereign, it has been converted into a hotel second to none in the world in luxury and equipment. A discordant jangle of many bells, loud cries of runners, a cloud ‘of dust and behind it a lurching vehicle suspended between gaily. caparisoned camels, attract our at- tention, and we behold a modorn Rebecca being borne in state, a bride, to her hus- band’s home. i - We long to peep behind the swarshy yasmask, but we dare not. Even the man who weds her has not yet looked upon her face. Hoary past and hustling present literally clasp hands in the streets of Cairo. Bedouin women from the desert, hugging close their chubby youngsters, drive into town in the rudest of donkey carts and gaze with wide- eyed stolidity at the swiftly moving electric street cars. The top heavy camel slouches along on guite familiar footing with bicycles and horseless carriages. Native runners, clad io brilliant and picturesque Ali Baba costumes, make their engagements over the telephone. Butchersand bakers, fruit ven: ders, water sellers and candy hawkers ply their trade in doorways and under bal- conies, pierced and crenlated and fretted with a delicacy fit for a lady’s fan. The mosques are churches, tombs, schools, universities. hospitals, and the rallying spots of mobs and demagogues, all in one. Distinctively eastern as is their exterior, in their inner courts the bewilder- ing mass of carving, fretwork, inlay, tiling and mosaic, perfect in every tiny detail of workmanship, fairly takes one’s breath away. Spiral and curve,star and parallelo- gram, these are the everlasting motif; for the koran upholds the decalogue and lays strict injonction against the making of graven images. No wonder we miss monuments and statues; po wonder that flower, fruit and leaf are absent; no wonder that art here de- votes itself to the purely geometric. There is no ritual in the mosque other than—if such it may be called—the re- citing of prayers in response to the muezzin’s call. The better class make their prostrations upon the rugs for which the East is famous. When these praying rugs reach our home marts, the connoisseur seeks the twin spots in the pile, worn there by the hands and knees and toes of the faithful. Those who have been in the East and heard the muezzins call from the min- arets with the regularity of a cockoo clock, and have followed the pious into the mos- ques and noted their postures during pray- er, readily understand the significance of so singular a hall mark.—By Isabel R. Wallach in The Four Track News. Servia’s Bloody Chronicles. Servia is a kingdom in the Balkan pen- insula, south of Austria-Hungary, with Roumania on the east from which it is separated by the. Danube, Bulgama and Albania on the south, and Albania and Bosnia on the west. Its area is but 19,050 square miles, about three-fifths of that of Pennsylvania, but with. a popula- tion of 2,312,000. At Orsova the Balkans are separated from the Carpathian moun- tains by a eleft called the Iron Gates, and through them the Danube rushes. = Servia slopes from the mountains on the south . to the north in a roughly inclined plain, but there are level tracts on the northwest. In the valleys and lower regions the fertile soil grows maize, rice, wheat, bemp and: tobacco. Vineyards are along the Danube, and plum trees, whence the native brandy is distilled. Oak and walnut forests cover’ more than half the territory.- Iron, copper and coal abound, but lack of roads chesks their working. Immense herds of swine are tended in the forests, and this exporta- tion forms the chief revenue. Thus among the peasant ralers figuring in the dynastic history the swineherd often appears. Lit- tle attention is paid to education, and the general condition of the country is far be- hind that of Roumania and Bulgaria. The preponderance of exports and imports ie with Austria-Hungary. Abont 2,500 miles of telegraph and 350 of railroads exist. The inhabitants are a branch of the Slavic. The skuptschina meets annually and has a membership of 262. The inhabitants are almost entirely members of the Orthodox, or Greek Catholio church. Military service is obligatory upon all able-bodied males be- tween 21 and 51. An army of 350,000 can be mobilized. The Servian Mterature naturally involves that of the southern. Slavic languages, spoken in Servia, Herso- govina, Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro and Dalmatia. The Servian and Croat litera- tures come nearer together. The former uses Russian writing characters, and the latter the Latin. But they differ in reli- gious influence, the one Greek and the other Roman Catholic, and thus for centuries were divergent in development. The struggle for liberation from the Turks brought out some fine Servian poetry, but the greatest literary treasures are the Ser: vian ballads. So the Croatian literature has a parallel development under similar patriotic influences. : Belgrade, the capital of Servia, has a population of 54,000. Its Servian equiva- lent is Biel-gorod, or white town. It ison the right bank of the Danube. Its citadel is very strong. Is is the entrepot of com- ‘merce between Turkey and Austria. Its manufactures are of arms, cutlery, sad- dlery and carpets. It has lost its former Oriental appearance because wealthy Turks have deserted it. The Byzantine emperors induced the Servians in the seventh century to leave the Carpathian region and settle in their present abode. Christianized in the ninth, they became independent in the eleventh century, and Pope Gregory VII, recogniz- ed their king. The tenth sovereign, Steph- en Dushan, in the fourteenth century, con- quered nearly all the Balkan peninsula and took the title of czar. In 1389, in the ter- rible battle of Kossova, Servia lost her in- dependence to the Turks and disappeared from history until the beginning of the nineteenth century. Then the peasant, Kara-George, expelled the Ottomans, aided by the Frans and reigned from 1804 to 1813. Again the Ot- tomans overran the kingdom and the swine- herd, Milosh Obrenovitch, who had assassi- nated King Kara-George, headed a desper- ate resistance for 15 years. - Supported by Russian diplomacy, be forced the Sublime Porte, in 1830, to recognize him as heredi- tary prince of Servia. Kara-George, who had led the grand revolt in 1803 against the Turks, bad as his real name George Petrovich, but he was surnamed Tsrni, or Black George, which in Turkish is kara. When Milosh had, in 1830, forced Turkey to recognize him as a prince, he soon forgot his Turkish training, and made himself obnoxious. He was compelled to abdicate in 1839, in favor of bis son, Milan. But he was too feeble to exercise authority, and after his speedy death his younger brother, Michael, suc- ceeded. He in turn abdicted in 1842, and the Serbs then elected Alexander, the son of Black George, or, as his name reads in Servian, Karageogevitch. He was compelled to resign in 1859 and Milosh, now very old, was invited to re- turn from Bucharest. He lived but one year, and dying left the throne to his son, Michael, then 40 years old, thus elected a second time king. Michael had learned much during his exile. In 1862 he sue- ceeded in having the Turkish garrisons re- moved from Belgrade. The Moslem in- habitants gradually withdréw from the country. One mosque in Belgrade is still used by the remainder, but the second temple is now a gas works. While. walking in the Tipshirede park June 10, 1868, Michael was assassinated by the emissaries of Alexander Karageorge- viteh. His second cousin, Milan, grandson of Yephrem (Ephraim ),a brother of Milosh, succeeded. In 1875 Milan married Natalie de Keczko, a Russian. Scandals that af- fected all Europe were followed by his at- tempts to divorce her, which she finally ac- complished herself in 1884. This Milan was born in 1854, and was the adopted son of Prince Michael, who had no children by his wife, Julia Hunyadi. Sent to Paris, to be educated, his plans were changed by the assassination of 1868. He was released from the regency. governing during his minority, and became prince in 1872. In 1876 he proclaimed war against Turkey, and went to the front, but soon returned to Belgrade and let the Russian generals con- trol. TheServians were defeated in a great battle, and the joint war, in which Mon- tenegro bad aided, had to be settled by the intervention of Russia. The Berlin con- gress recognized the independence of Servia in 1878, and extended its boundaries. Milan was proclaimed the first king in 1882. His queen procured her divorce from the patriarch of Servia. She had nev- er taken any pains to hide her pro-Russian sympathies. Milan was compelled to ab- dicate, and the king just assassinated Alexander Obrenovitch, his son was named as his successor. In this same year a more liberal constitu- tion was proclaimed, under which all tax- payers became electors, and by their votes chose the entire skaptschina. Alexander was born August 14th, 1876. He had accompanied his mother, Queen Natalie, to Berlin after the divorce, but was forcibly brought back to Belgrade. He married July 23rd, 1900, Mme. Draga Maschin, a widow, whose father was a liveryman and whose own past had been disreputable. She was 40 years old at the time, and bad a son 16 years old. The king posted a proclamation that his low || caste marriage was to set an example to a peasant people. Ministry and clergy pro- tested. but the marriage was solemnized. A scandalous chronicle has been the sequence. She feigned maternity and tried to palm off a sister’s child as an heir. Then she essayed suicide. The czarina of Russia ignored her, aad diplomatic corps. women held aloof. Last April the king fignred in a coup by suspending the parliament of the kingdom and the constitution,and then as suddenly restoring them. But mean- while as an absolute monarch he bad ab- rogated laws passed under the later organic law, and these were not restored. 'Recent- ly his kingdom bas been involved in the troubles known generically as the Ma- cedopian. . hia “One cause of popular irritation recently has been the rumored attempt of Queen Draga, who was remembered as only a lady in waiting to Queen Natalie to foist one of her brothers upon the throne by arrange- ment with Alexander. Roma ah hi ; From the Third Grade. ‘Miss Petal Pink, who teaches the third grade in one of the publicschools, says that if the daily column people could have their desks in her room newspapers would be considerably brighter and there would be no such word as ‘‘grind.”” iE ‘‘Yesterday,’” related Miss Pink, ‘‘one of the little ones was ill, and we talked the matter over before setting down to work. Little Minnie Briggs had an observation to make on illness in general. * * * Jas Sunday,’ she informed us, ‘my pa had a funny sickness—counldn’t walk straight— and we all had to go over to our grand- ma’s. - After dinner pa was better, only he had a headache; but we all went out to the Zoo 1” ; ; *‘Awhile ago.” resumed Miss Pink, ‘the board gave us a half dozen new chairs for our room, and this became a topic for dis- cussion for several moments. = Minnie, whose eyes miss nothing, in the heavens above or waters beneath, was on’ the spot with an item of interest. * * * ‘When- ever my ma buys new furniture a man likes it so well that he comes a lot of times to see it,’ she declared, just a little proudly. * % % Ts wassome moments before it dawned upon me that Mrs. Briggs probably bonght ber furniture on the installment plan. shail Found Him Out, Little Dot—‘ ‘Mamma, I don’t think Uncle George is half as smart us he tries to make people believe he is.”’ Mamma— ‘Why. do you think that, dear?” Little Dot—‘‘Becanse he claims to un- derstand five or six different lauguages and yesterday I bad to tell him what the baby was saying.’’— Chicago News. ——Farmers and others should he famil- iar with the fact that a small quantity of clean lard rubbed in horse’s ears will keep from the ears all flies, large and small, and save the animal untold annoyance and suf- fering. Will you do it or will you allow the poor brute to worry through the sum- mer for want of a few minute’stime each week on your part. e ——Mrs. Mary L. Harrison, widow of ex-President Benjamin Harrison, contem- plates a trip around the world. She will leave shortly for the coast to take a steamer for Japan, where she will spend the greater part of her time.