NY -—— - “PHE DREAMER LIVES FOREVER. 1 am tired of planning and toiling in the crowded hives of meno ; Heart-weary of building and spoiling, And spoiling and building again.® And | long for the dear oid river, Where | dreamed my youth sway ; For a dreamer lives forever, But a toiler dies ip a day, 1 am sick of shallow seeming Of a life that is half & lie ; Of the faces lined with scheming Io the throng that hurries by. From the sleepless thought's endeavor 1 would go where the chiidren piay ; For a dreamer lives forever, And s thinker dies in » day. 1 feel no pride, but pity, For the burdens the rich endure ; There is nothing sweet in the city Bat the patient lives of the poor ; Oh, the little hands too skillfuil, Aad the child mind choked with weeds! The daughter's Reart grown willful, Aad the father's heart that bleeds ! Ol, no! from the street's rude bustle, From the trophies of mari and stage 1 would fly to the wood’s low rustle, And the meadow's kindly page. Let me dream a+ of old by the river, And be loved for the dream alway ; For a dreamer lives forever, And a toiler dies in a day. John Boyle O'Reilly UNDER THE JOSHUA-TREE. Yes, the story of Little Sammy's career was different. Is could nos be told in a few words; and shen it wae aucient history. There bad been some gossip about it in the olubs of Tonopah end Goldfield from time to time simply because is was different. “Bat, said one of the small colony of pew wmillionairs as he sharpened a pencil with a gold-mounted, diamond-studded jack knife, ‘‘we could furnish you with only the ragged ends of the story. Each one of us is making his own history bere on the Great Basin. Therefore it is diffi cult to follow very closely the history of one another. These is this absorbing stock- board, and we muss talk over the Diamond. field strike—a new boom, dou’s you know, thas will keep us watobful as prowling lynxes day and night. So you see there is Do time for stories—especially nid stories. Why, that most bave been fully three years back. Toivk of it! Almost before the world (our golden world) began.” The others were likewise sxuspeiaiig)y centered. The new ticker—she very first alkali-tape, they said—bad just been in- stalled in the club. Here was something really new. 1 must listen to the wonder of it; what it bad done and what is was going to do for the desert—this said with a wiuk by a vnotoricus wildcaster. 1 protested shat I did not care a fig for their new tape. Siock tapes! Why, there were millious of them in olubs, saloons, and mahogany appointed bling: places all over the world. I was keen, however, to bear about the Joshua-tree and Little Sammy. There was something fresh and new iu ibe sound of that. Is ioterested me vastly more than their stocks and miner and strikes on the Red Maule, and Yellow Dog, and Hompty Dompty 20d. **You persistent hound,” snapped the latest uillionaire ol she los, a platooras of only » week's growth, turning from the ticker savagely, ‘‘bave you not been in- formed that we new-comeis do nos know all the story—just a bic here and a bis there? Now, if yon must learn about that old bandy-limbed Joshua-tree and Little Sammy, run down to Bullfrog aud ask Jouesy. Surely you bave beard of Jonesy, the listle pink-cheeked snow-top oom pounder at the Dizzy Ghost? He's the oracle we all consult, a race mine of stories, aud cao tell thew so shey’ll sink io. *“There now, sou, run along to Bullfrog It is only seventy-five miles, and that Ger- man flyer of the new eixty-horse-power Benziue ‘Bus Line will leave in exactly ten minntes—makes the ran in two bours and a balf over one of the best auto-epeed- ways in the world. Here 18 my anoual pase. It will save a few eagles.”’ He tossed me a card, gilt-letiered, and spravg back 10 the ticker. As I passed out the door and down the etairs there fell behind me a clamor, hys- serical and incoherent, out of which there distinos the scattered phrases: ‘The Pig"’'—'‘swenty points’ — ‘‘thirty pointe” — “Ki!” Yi!” — “Whee!” — “Whoop!"'—" Once again, piggie!"’ “forty points’ —then a crashing of feet that meant a wild, delirious dance. Listle woonder thas my curiosity was so aunoying when their Blue Pig was performing se nobly. So I got me down to the Dizzy Ghost, ove bundred and fifty minutes in a big German car thas shot out of Goldfield with a warning drumming of the exhaust. There had been a gentle clondburst ou the night before, wettiog this anto-speedway of she desert to the hardness of planed baeals, but iu some places plowing rats thas made the ponderous machine bounce like a roasting chestnuts. The ranges of stark, naked hills flashed by with the mo- notony of a sobway, though without its somber gloom. The snnlight could not be called merely bright : it was as dazzling ae white heas steaming from a furnace, and the horizon we raced at was walled with a fence of flame, soggesting the edge of a precipice that let down into the pit. I found the Dizzy Ghoss ae readily as one would find the town ball of a more ee- date community. Jonesy, the white-hair- ed little oracle of Alkali Land, was just going off duty. As he tossed aside his white apron and put on bis coat and par- row-brimmed brown bas, I pounced upon him with the demand : “‘I bave come all the way from Goldfield by express to hear about Little Sammy and his guest of the Joshua-tree.’”” He smiled resignedly, and led the way from the thronged =aloon to a restaurant across the street, where there was gniet and a fresh orate of egus from Las Vegas. Over the egee and coffee and excellent fried bam, a monotonous, but always safe and nourish. iug, desert dies, Jonesy told she story of Little Sammy and she Joshua-tree. “‘Little Sammy was a thrilling picture,” be began without preiude, ‘‘on the day be rode down the trail into Goldfield, then our | ed, Little Sammy asked : pew camp, but now the Big Noise of south- ern Nevada, with a brand new city charter, | n *T was belore they stretched the metals be- low Tonopah. Tbe hoom was in its infan- oy, aod the new diggings boasted only eight wooden shacks ; seven saloons and one dance-hall. Lumber was precious in those days. Even the hank was cauvas, Winchesters served as grilles, and the tell- ers were walking masked-batteries. Ban burglars were soarce. Only one developed, ! and bis development was arrested mighty | sudden and shorough. “So you may get it without the aid of a diagram that the ragged-eared bis ol a bar- ro with Littie Sammy up didn’s pull bis tenderfoot freight iuto any metropolis. A passed bim, I do not mean it whizzed by i without speaking the sirange little craft. | Is hesitated some while the boys looked it | over and wentally shed a few forms of ex- | clamatiou points. Bat they What they saw was hevond words of tle ivory ball barned to a cioder. his spine. He wore glasses ; not the divky | ones with she weazel trap nose-cateh. Nay, | indeed ! His were specs, glazed lavish. | The rims were black rubber, as big as a horse collar, and with a black shaft reaching over each ear. He bad on blue overalls, blue jnmper, a sombrero with a | brim that looked like five laps to the mile, cowhide boots from which protruded swo borse pistols, a belt buckled over his jump- er with two holsters carrying navy Colte, and a kpife-sheath containing something like a Malay dirk ; also a red flanvel shirt. “Do you blame the boys for being silent while the stage stopped, or, rather, besi- tated ? It dido’s even hesitate long—not after the mules glimpsed him. The stage went op, shen, coming into Goldfield with only one wheel touching and the hoys wrapped round each other avd parts of the 'bus—Ilike a shipwrecked crew on a spar wading abead of a typhoon. “Is can’t be said Little Sammy came k | mumps as he was walking into Easy { into Goldfield unnoticed. Even the three : camp cats were lined up on Main Street, waiting. They got one look and skeed : but he and the burro came down the trail just as solemn as a Quaker headed for meeting. Dido’t seem to notice she crowd ; steered siraighs for the Hush-a-by saloon ; and olimhed down off bis dusty little mount, He walked into she Housb-a-by with the clank and rattle of a stamp mill in fall blast. The crowd followed him in, quiet and hashed. *‘He wasn’t a bit fazed, this weird little tad of a tenderfoot ; smiled across the bar at me with a comfortable, home-like grin and said : “My dear man, I'm horribly thirsty. Kindly set me out a bostle of lemon soda.’ Then he turned on the mob grouped about, entranced, carefully removed from his nose and ears she rubber scaffolding and dormer windows, wiped them with a blue silk bandana, put them on again, cleared bie throat, and said breezily : ‘‘ ‘Well, old chaps, what will it be?’ His accent was Massachusetts, eight inches across the a. The boys were still dazed and dumb, but when he offered his hand all round, they moss shook it off. Only aboat fourecore could squeeze to the bar when Sandstorm Smith recovered his plumb and offered a toast, which was : *‘ ‘Here's to the little stranger ! May be live long ; bus the Lord help us if he ever unlimbers his artillery and begins ges- ting bad I" The toast was drunk iu si. lence extept for a little coughing and an occasional splutter. “‘Littie Sammy smiled sort of wistlul as he looked around and counldn’s wee a gon in sight. Then looking down at hie own terrific asmamest, he stammered to Sand- storm Smith : ‘I guess I'll have to regard these deadly weapons as superfluous orna- ments. I shoughs from what I bad read is was good form to wear them. I practiced six weeks in a Boston shooting gallery, but I muss confess I am still afraid of them, they kiok so infernally. [judge from the looks of things, however, that they are not in style ; so I will put them away in my saddle-bags.’ “Good plan,’ said Sardstorm Swith, helping himself to more liquor with a srembling band ; ‘guos like that is cruel. Why, Mr.—er —om—Mr.—' +“ ‘Harbin,’ filled in she little tender- foot—'Samnel Harbin. I beg ten thousand pardons for not intioducing myse!l helore.’ “¢ *Not at all,’ said Sandstorm, soothing- ly ; ‘but as I was remarking, if you hap pened to get careless with that light arsil- lery, you'd shoot cruel apertures through some of os simple sage brush folk. We don’t carry that long barreled breed of cannon at all.” “Do you mean to say,’ asked Little Sammy, bis eyes coming out againet bis glasses, ‘that it isn’t customary to carry revolvers down here? Some of the boys were down on the floor by this time, roll ing ; but there didn’t appear a crack in Sandstorm Smith's features as he went on, with uncommon gravity : * “That ain't juss the point, Mr. Har- bin. I suspect there's a gun or two in this polite assemblage, in addition to the few howitzers with whioh your distinguish ed person is draped ; bat, you see, we al- kali eaters is part civilized, if some savage. It's not de rigger to carry bard ware about in carload lots, and our innate modesty prevents us from showing our bands before we are called. ‘Gunfighting is done more artistic in this elestric age, and in your shoes I'd stow tha bastery right soon. Nobody ever gets Lurt up in this altitude unless be displays too much oiduance and has a nas- ty disposition. A man of that sort is fol- lowed elose by our shrewd undertaker. By the way, I'll introduce you to him—a mighty decent fellow, a troe artist in his profession, and moderate in bis charges. You'll find Philander MoPike genial, hearty, and always ready to talk business 10 atrangers. “Bus Listle Sammy didn’t enthuse Mo- Pike's way lor two bite. He excused him- self suddenly, and olanked off in search of a tens hotel, leaving behind him a fair riot of hilarionsness. Even when he got ’oli- mated he didn’t seem to sake hold that the boys were jollying bim ; juss seemed to drink in everything as gospel. His re- spectful, attentive manner was amazing, considering the yarns that were wove for him. In a decile, believing way he listen- ed to some stories that would bave stirred strange emotions in an ossified imbecile. He was the particular victim of Sandstorm | Smith, and apprared to hang on bis words like a new believer clinging to the discourse of a high-pressure prophet. “One day be and Sandstorm came into the Hosh a by arm in arm, Sandstorm talking away with the exbaust blown ont and Little Sammy listening so bard bis ears were doubled flat against his cheeks. When they lined up before me and order- on are all the good claims gobbled “ ‘Yes,’ said Sadnetorm, bie voice trem- bling with sympathy—"‘all but one bovan. za that bas disappeared most mysterions. That's the little Joshua-tree olaim that Ed- Butts found, and then went and died ore he got it located aud recorded prop- er. Poor fellow passed away with the Street. “Twas thus, lad : i ‘+ ‘Mr. Butts went ont prospecting with | rific band, keepiog st i two mules and a buckboard, and plumb and counteunuces carved solemn. They vavishes for ‘mest a month. Wha be | wet Little Sammy ball way, salaoted with i comes back be has ouly one mule the | both bands, and, making a wide circle, | positi . . buckboard, and poor orister, tbe momps. | menccavered bim in bebind tbe naod. | powision the Jag} piste ol glone in Yoo ex The other male died of eating a rose-bush | Then they beaded back to cawp, the band | ancestors. *¢ ‘IT met Battsy coming in, and be was a sure sick man. few miles above the camp the stage passed | in an oasis some miles across Funeral | him. It carried a full deck and a joker | Range. The thorns did n't take kindly to sitting on the bood. When I say the «tage | bim, spite of the digestive facalties of bis | developed 1 was with him, trying to soothe | thamb and a pinky. “ 40’ course Buttsy was sorry recently discovered tenderfoots heaten thir- | than the mumps. Bot peculiar as it may | ty thousand turns of the wheel and she lit- | ceem, this only made bim more peevish, and gaspy. Absorb | and while I was reading most musical be | the picture now—five feet tall, and so thin | gos bold of his gun and shot the book out cried—‘found the tree just as yon said— | t be could button his vest on the knobs of of my baud, carrying away some of ope | seven feet high, with eleven branches. and i still murdering the same tune. There | wasn't a murmur or even a chuckle in the | ranks as the band swung up Main Street! and wheeled nto she Husb-a-by, led by | Sandstorm, she music, and Little Sammy | When the fatal eymptows | Harhin, still on his burro. ! “Little Sammy was smilivg clear round | ** ‘Sandy, how did yon gness iv?’ * ‘Guess what ?' asked Saudstors, hoarse | i ** ‘Why, tbat I found it,’ Little Sammy | chuckawallabs hobbling all abousis. Yes ;| impetuosity, and by way ofl making good, dykes that ever cropped out of a gold mine. and wipe off that burt expression. roond | he said: “Sandstorm, I’m drawing for wy | I blasted dowo aboat teu fees, and it gets last jackpot, so please purily your lk | beter under. Here are some of the sam- ‘m | ples. And be drew out of bis puckets a going to do you a turn that ’ll make your | bandful of high grade ore as rich, if not | ten.” His voice was going and he could | desert up to that time. just whisper—*'I strack ove of the richess treasure hamisocks in southern Nevada | of funny wen full of zero. ““The wight of that gnartz shot the crowd | Sandstorm fell | a " —— ep, with eyes front The New Pennsy Station in New | York. The Peopsylvania Kailroad placed in terior of its new station in New York city, oo Saturday, July 31st. This involved the completion of stonework enclosing some eight acres of ground, and marks a most y important step in the farther progress of this undertaking. To enclose this vast area has necessitated didn’t speak. | his uneasiness by reading out of a medical | to the back of his neck. Standing up in| b : ; Ba a ag 1 com- | dictionary the terrors ol other diseases a his stirrups. he porred : [the building of exterior walla aggregating ment. They just gazed him. He bad all | blame sight worse and more aggravating | 2,455 feet—neazly ball a mile—in length, aod has required 490,000 cubic feet of pink gravite. In addition, there have been atilized inside the conconrse 60.000 cubic eet of stone. A total of 550,000 cubic feet | of grauite bave thus been utilized in she | for his | and it was growing over coe of the riches: | construction and orpamentation of this | boilding. Is took 1,140 freight cars to transports these 47,000 tons of stoue from Milford, Mass. Io addition to the granite, the construo- | memory of me golden and glorione, Lis. | richer than anything scooped out of the | 4ion of this bailding bas called for the use of 27,000 tons of steel. There hase also been set in place some 15,000,000 bricks, last trip, and it 's only eight miles west of | back auatus: the wall limp as a water-s ak | weighing a total of 48,000 tous. The first this camp. Yoo csn’t miss it, for it's | ed cracker.” marked by a Josboa-tree seven feet bigh, | with eleven branches, and there's a fam- ily of six ohuckawallabs lives under is? “ ‘What 's a Josbua-sree?’ asked Listle Sammy. Sandstorm explaived thar it was oue of those perpendicular cactus plants with the bends. He pictured it as a sawed- | wheel 2" be said of its in bis new sieamer. off Christmas-tree, with most Jonesy gor up suddenly avd poioted to- | ward the door. A lead colored antomobile | was sliding voiselessiy with the oluteh out ! through the gray alkali duss thas the after. | noon wind swirled past tne windows of the | restaurant. i “See that little woguled chap at the “That is Little Sammy He is something of a | stone of the masomy work on the building was laid Juve 15ih, 1908. The entire masonry was thos completed in approxi. wately thirteen months after the work was begun. Built after the Roman Doric style of architecture, the building covers the entire area bounded by Seventh and Eighth ave- branches shot away, and the remaining | roller now, with his string of mines and | - oues twisted and curled, and coated with millions.” —By Barton Wood Carrie, in sues avd 31s apd 331d werects. The depth needles sticking out like the fur on a mad ' the Century Magazine. cat’s tail, which was going some long on description for Savdstormm Smith. Bat after reaching for another: goblet of inspira- tion be drove ou: * ¢ Well, when I'd examined the piece of goartz Battay dragged out from under his blankets, I got so excited I came near bogging him, momps and all. That rook was more 'n hall hiee gold, and assayed $206,000 to the ton. I had the aseay made the day after the foveral. Then I set oat to find that Joshua-tree. But some- how I missed it, vposwithstauding thas I orunised around the desers ‘most a thous. aod miles.’ ¢ ‘Perhaps the poor fellow was deliri- ous,’ said Little Sammy. “ ‘And maybe that piece of quartz was intoxicated with gold,’ snapped Sandstorm, sarcastic. “ ‘Is u't it possible,’ asked Little Sam- my, ‘that you did ©n’t search thoroovghly and with sufficient care?’ “Sandstorm snorted and looked down with a pitying eye ov the five-foot tender- foor. Then be said rather cutting: “ ‘Maybe if I bad those cathedral win dows of yours rigged on my peepers I'd done better. Crawling round the desert a ' sthousaud miles, mostly on your hands and knees, may not seem proper searching to you folks in the East, who are used to the rigors of ‘‘Button, button, who's got the buston?"’ ’ “Bas Little Sammy did o’t shrivel or wriggle under the scorch of sarcasm. He | was sare hard-ehelled as an armor-clad gla lizard that hume a tune onder a mountain shde and pulls himself out of au avalanche in gay spirite. He'd absorbed Sand- storm's every word as plumb aunthentie, and asked again ahout the size and shape of shat Joshua-tree. Also he inguired particolarly about the family of chuckwal- lobs, which isa lizard twice as borrid. looking as a gila. + ‘Seven feet tall,’ said Sandstorm, de- soribing she tree hy raising his baud a few inches above bis head, ‘and it bad eleven twisty branches. In she moonlight those trees look hike Injun ghosts devil-dancing with a saperflaity of arms. As for a chuck- awallah, a man bae got to be delirious to describe it. Jost wait till you see one, and it 'll never erase from your memory or dreams.’ *‘ ‘And bave yon given up search?’ said Little Sammy. ** ‘Yes,’ Saudstorm sighed, ‘I bave, not caring to cash in my last chip on the desert | alore my time.’ *‘Listle Sammy did n't say no more. He was affected speechless, For hall a week be went round hunting up Joshuoa-trees and studying them; then one day Sand: storm Smith staggered into the Husb-a-by aud grabbed the bar-rail to brace himself. He was shaking like & jelly-mau iv an earthquake, and I got ous some of the highest proof in stock to steady bim. He keyed together a little and then gurgled: ** ‘He 's gone after it!’ ** ‘Who ’s gone after what?’ I said. ‘Little Sammy's gone after the Joshuva- tree. Just saw him rolling up the western trail on a burro and leading a three mule commissary. He ’s taken grub and water enough to ines a monih. This is teo waoh!’ Sandstorm slumped into a chair with a groan of ecstasy. “I could n’s locus it guite so hilarious, for I'd seen more than one tenderfoot go up over that western trail through Listie Death Canon. And they never came back, nor sens avy message. There ’s no water for filty miles, aud shat ’'s boiling with alkali. So I said to Sandstorm: ** ‘Look bere, pal, that’s dead wrong, lesting thas fool kid go off You knsw what ’li bappen if he strays.’ “ ‘Smother the bleating, Jonesy,’ he gasped ; ‘he ain’ going far. I told him the bush was only eights miles west, and be ’s got a bag fall of doth pases aid navigating: tools. He's played bis whole stack on his outfit, Litsle Sammy has; nothing left bat a few pounds of silver and his ticket home. Bat the folks ll be glad to see him, and he ain’t cut out for this sort of game.’ ‘‘Sandstorm went about telling she story with joyous effect, so that the boys finally planued to give Little Sammy a grand josh welcome home. Smith nsed up two recruiting a band from Tonopah and . field. By the great yellow lode of Blue Mountain, thas band was a wonder! There was one trombone, five month a base fiddle, two concertinas, and a kettle- drum. The uniforms were overalls, plug bate, and sage-brush wreaths bung round the neck. Then the boys organized a look- out patrol to watch for Little Sammy day and night. The band was under marching orders constant, sleeping on their instro- ments of torture. “Two weeks hed backed into the old calendar when one day abous sun-dip there was a shout from one of the lookoats that was taken op aud echoed over the camp and out to the hills, “ ‘He comes! By Jushua, he comes!’ the entire community chanted. The band struck ap a fierce discord meant for a march, and headed by Sandstorm Smith, who wore a frook-coas, golf pant, aod a brimless derby, ses ous for Little Death Canon, a barrow gully between two straight. shouldered hills. J “I couldn’t leave the Hush-a-by, but I knew all the boys were in behind thas ter- i 1 { | wrote, ‘Read the essay on Barns. | who bas pot seen the dawn every day of | ——————————————————— | ——Do you know where to get the foest caoned good: and dried fruits, Secbler & | Co. | Salnt—Guudens on Stevenson, i From “The Reminiscences of Augustus Saiot— Gaudens” in the June Century. “Is is singular bow one will forges ww] portaut shige. I was abouts to overlook | my experience with Robert Louis Steven- son. which took place in the autumn of 1887. Shortly before this time my [friend Mr. Wells, a man of delicate taste and judgment, great learning and delighifal conversation, as well as a keen lover and | appreciator of music, drew my attention to | she ‘New Arabian Nights,’ by a young au- | thor just waking bimsel! known. aw, | unfortunately, very little of a reader, but | my introduction to these stories set me | we as bave tew things in literature. So when I subsequently found that my friend | Mr. Low knew Stevenson quite well, I] told him that if Stevenson ever crossed to shis side of the water, I should consider it | an hooor if he would allow me to make his | portrait. Is was only a few weeks alter shies that Stevenson arrived in America on | bis way to she Adirondacks. He accepted my offer at once, and [ began the mwedal- | lion as bis roome in the Hosel Albert in! Eleventh stiees, not far from where I lived | in Washiogtou place. **All I bad the time to do for him then | was the head, which I modeled in five sis- | siugs of two or three boors each. These | were given me in she morning, while he, | as was hie custom, lay in bed, propped up | with pillows, aud either read or was read | to hy Mrs. Stevenson. “I can remember some few shiugs ae to my personal impressions of bim. He said | tbat he believed ‘Olala’ to be bis best | story, or that he liked it best, and that! George Meredith was she greatest Eoglish | literatenr of the time. Also he told we | of bis pet hkiog for bis study of Robert Barns. He gave me a complete set of his works, ia some of which be placed a live or two. In ‘Virginibue Puerisque,’ be I think it is a good thing.’ Thus the modest man ! ‘‘Agaio, at the end of one of she sittings, as [ was about to go out, be rose from his bed, and we chatted concerning some com- mercial arrangement he bad his mind oo. He asked wy advice. I gaveis, such as it wae, parentbetically observing, ‘Oh well, everything is right and everythiog ie wrong.’ “While I was speaking, he bad entered a little closet to wash his bands. He came ont wiping them. ‘Yes, yee, that is true, that is true,’ he said continuing so rab his fingers: ‘yes, everything is right and everything ie wrong.’ “1 also recall bis saying tbat ‘The man his life bas nos lived.’ And again, in epeak- 10g of crossing the ocean and sraveliog by sea, be referred to its charm and danger, and added, ‘The man who bas not taken his life in his bands at some time or other has not lived.’ “In connection with this vein in bis per- sonality I remember calling on bim one evening when he lay oo his bed in the balf gloom, she lamp being in another room. I sat on the bed's edge, barely able to die- cern his figure in the dimnees, He talked in the morotonous tone one frequently as- sames when in the swilight, speaking of his keen admiration for Stringer Lawrence, governor of India. Then I firet realized bis reverence for men of action, men of affairs, soldiers and administrators. More. over, he said with great feeling tbat bis chief desire in the world was the power to knock down a man who might insult him, and that perbaps the most trying episode in his life was ope in which he bad a con- versation with a mao thas, had it taken a certain direction, left Bo alternative but one of a personal altercation, where he could present but a pitiable fignre. This impressed me as being the moss [leeling thing be ever said to me. ——Do you know where to get your garden seeds in packages or by measure Seohler & Co. Almost every woman suffers from ‘‘fe- male weakness’ in some form. There is po need to exhort the sofferers from the more serious forms of such disease that active steps should be taken to effect a cure. Pain and suffering deliver that exbortation every day. Itis the fortubate woman whose disorder is seemingly slight who peeds to be warued. Justa brief use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription in her case will establish her in sound health. Neglect always means complications and slower cure. Women who suffer from chronic forms of diseases of the womanly are invited to consuls Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All correspondence confi- dential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Bol. falo, N. Y. wEdith—They say you have to be- come the wile of a man to find bim ou, Helen—Oh, then you find him ous all rigia, Cat at the olub every night, asa rule, of she property on both streets is 799 fees 11} iuches, and she length of the building is 788 feet 9 inches, thos allowing for extia- wide sidewalks on both avennes. The walle extend for 430 feet 6 inches from 31st $0 320d streets, the Seventh avenue facade sigualizing the main entrance. Io designing the exserior of the building, Messrs. McKim, Mead & White, the arch- itects, were at pains to embody two ideas : To express in so far as was practicable, with the unusoal condition of tracks far below the street surface and in spite of the ahsence of the conventional srain shed, the exterior design of a great railway station in a gen- erally accepted form ; aod also to give to the building the character of a monumental gateway and entrance to a greas metropolis, Apart from these swo ideas, the plan of the station was designed to give the great- est number of lines of circulation. The structure is really a monumental bridge over the uacks, with entrances to the streets on ite wain axes and on all four sides. In this respect thie building is unique amoung the railway stations of the world, affording the maximum amonnt of entrance and exit facilities possible. The Seventh avenus facade is composed principally of a Roman Doric colonnade, double at the carriage entrances as the street ends and as the main front entrance for pedestriane in the center, each of the columns being 4 feet 6 inches in diameter and 35 feet high. Above the central colon- pade is an eotablature surmoonted by a clock with a dial 7 fees in diameter. The ceuter of thie clock is on the axial line of 320d street, and 61 feet above the sidewalk. This Seventh avenue facade was couceiv- ed especially to express in largest possible fashion a monumental gateway. It may be compared in a greatly magnified manner to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin,through which passes so much of the traffic of thas city. The main body of the boildiog approxi- mates in beight the Bourse of Paris, reach- ing 76 leet above the street level. With entrances through each of the two corners of the tation on Seventh avenue there are carriage drives, each about 63 leet wide, or the width of a standard New York City street, fronted by double columne and pediments. The frontage on 31st and 33rd streets are similar. The walls of the ex- terior of the carriage drives are of pilaster treatment for a distance of some 279 feet. Midway along the sides of the building, signalizing the entrances on 31st and 33rd streets, are series of columns of the same dimensions as those on the Seventh and Eigbth avenue facade, for a distance of 117 feet. Above these colonnades tbere are also sculptured groups supporting large ornamental olocks. For 116 fees beyond there are interrupted colonoades, after which the walle are of pilaster treatment to Eigbth avenue, with she exception of 45 feet colonnades marking entrances to the concourse. The Eighth avenue frontage is treated on the plan of pilasters except for 44 feet 6 inches which are broken by columns into intervale of three spaces to mark aoother spacious entrance to the main floor of the concourse. One of the distinctive features of this building is the waiting room, which ex- tends from 31st to 33rd streets, ite walls paralled to Seventh and Eighth avenues for a distance of 314 feet 4 inches. The height of thid room is 150 leet and ite width 108 feet 8 inches. The walls of the waiting-rocm above the main body of the building contain on each side three semi- circular windows of a radius of 33 feet 4 iuches and 66 feet 8 inches wide as the base. There is also a window of like size at each end of the waiting-room. The dignified design of she interior of the general waiting-room, while fully adapted to modern ideas, was sug- gested by the great balls and basilicas of Rome, such as the baths of Caracalla, Titus and Diocletian, and the basilica of Con- stantine, which are perhaps the greatest example in history of large rooled-in areas treated in monumental manner. While the facades of the station were intended to suggest the impo-ing character of these ancient Roman temples and baths, the impression intended to be made n the layman approaching the station, in fall view of the exterior of the general waiting. room with ite huge semi-circular windows, is that of one of the leading railway sta- tions of the world. BIOS -OPSIS, Fades the rose and falis the leal— Woul st you have no flower or tree? Though our lite seem all 100 brief Better "tis than not to be, Life is good ; "tis worth the while To beho d the sky's parade, Evening s veil and morning's smile, Endless fugue of light and shade, Worth the while by stabs of pain To be roused Lo consciousness ; Truth and virtue to attain Through the spirit's stoim and stress, Precious is the weleome shining From the face of friend and brother; Priceless is the love vntwining Henrt of child with heart of mother, Painiess, desthless,—man would move Like a soulless sad machine ; Worse than Wandering Jew he'd prove; Love woull leave the earth, | ween, Life witn death is ever blending To a pauseless onward wave ; Lite is good, e'en though its ending Be the silence of the grave, C, C. ZEIGLER. A Wan From the Soltiudes. ~The Flea, My acquaiviauce with the ecmniverous oreatare called the flea is of somewbat re- ceut date, and I may truthfally add, is was not of my seeking. Subsequent events have caused me $0 believe that the avenger-on-general-princi- ples in yuestion is of ancient origin. It was evidentiy the original wearer of a coat. of- mail. The military heroes aud knighte of ancient history quite possibly learned the advantages of wearing mailed armour from she flea. It is not a large member of the animal kingdom ; but what it lacks in size is am- ply supplied in activity. Itis eratio in disposition, tires of one locality and changes its base of operations very fre. quently and unexpectedly. Yet, it has staying qualities-staye right with you all the time. And it is a model of energy and application. There seems to be a popular desire to suppress the flea. Though not any of the governments have yes offered a premium for the scalps ; neither have they taken any measures $o protect this irrepressible combination of activity and aggressiveness. It is a ead fact that all the Peace Con~ gresses that oan assemble cannot prevents war between the omnivori called man and the carnivori known as the flea. The method of warfare is an unsettled question however. Some suggest rolling it about and rubbing it until is becomes un- conscious, and shen beating ous its brains with some blunt instrowens. This method has been tried but found to be unsasisfac- tory on acoonnt of the promptness with which the flea recovers consciousness, and disappears while youn are looking for some- thing with which to deal the fatal blow, The plan of keeping a bammer near a§ hand and giving she offender a smart rap, when and wherever it is found, bas been considered. But the surface on which the flea spends most of its time is too pliable to offer she necessary resistance for a sucoess- ful operation of this kind. There are also other objections to this method. There 1» reason to believe that fame and fortune await the man who will invent an automatic machine which will catch and throttle she flea while you wait. KENDRICK J. ARENOTTE. Sapplied by M. V. Thomas. ~— Do you know thas you can ges the finest, oranges, bananas and grape [ruit, aod pine apples, Sechler & Co. The U. $5. Dairy Division Will Help. Secretary Wilson of the U. 8. Dept. of Agriculture, and Mr. B. H. Raw), chief of the dairy division, assured Manager Van Norman of the National Dairy Show, that the U. 8. Dairy Division would co-operate in she educational fertures of the next Natioval Dairy Show. Plaus are under consideration with a view of makiog the practical features conspicuous. Such fea- tares as a working dairy herd milked with milking machines ; daily records of the milk produced. and cost of production. The actual making of butter, cheese, ice oream and the bostling of milk are all being considered. A display of finely equipped milk wagons aod some horses which will rival the packing house teams, is another feature that will dis- tinguisb this show. The display features will also include every class of dairy product, butter, many kinds of domestio and foreign cheese, and the various products mavufactured from milk. The machinery display will be even larger than tbat of previous shows. Ap- plications are already coming in for the entry of the finest dairy herds which com- jute at the State fairs and she Alaska. ukon-Pacific Exposition. An effort being made to bave on exhibition the cow in each breed which has produced the larg. est amount of butter in a year. Each breed bave produced dow. is the great burglar who breaks into the body. Everybody takes Jrecatition aysiu , more or less thorough. the burglar disease does effect an entrance to the body it is general- ly through carelessness. The busy man gets his feet wes in some sudden rain storm and tramps about through an afternoon in this condition. He takes cold. A cough fastens on him. He begins to bleed from the lungs. The spectie of consumption rises up to affright him. The vee of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery when the cough begins will almost invariably prevent the spread of disease. Even when the cough bas been t aod the hem frequent, ‘‘Golden Medical " always helps and almost al- ways heals. It completely cures ninety- eight per cent. of those who give it a fair and faithful trial. ———————— ——Do you know we have the old style sugar syrup® pure goods at 40 cents and 60 cents per gallon, Sechler & Co.