BLOOM6BUKG, i AMONG THE POETS. In the Thick of It. j ay, whither go these fellow ' With hair o very long, ' ' j Their muscles Indicating t ; That they are very strona-T Thi'lr milts nre thickly padded. With pride their faces glow, Some objects queer they enrry Bay, whither do they go? These rhnps with bulfilng muscle And I'aderewskl hnlr, With pads of large dimension! In clothing that they wear Why, they're the season's heroes, Who bravely strive for fame, 1 And proudly they are going ! To play a football game. Whence come these tattered fellows ' With hiilr so badly torn, While some, all cut and battered, Are by their comrades bnrnc? And hire and there Is limping A chap with bandaged shin. And some have both eyes blackened Where have these victims been? They've not been In a battle, Although It looks that way; Their wounds were not Inflicted By men In deadly fray. Ah, no! these tattered fellows, Some cut, some bruised, some lame, Are hnroes who've been playing A Rugby football game. They don't regard the bruises, They never shrink at mire; For laurels they nre striving, To glory they aspire. !, They're now the season's heroes. These chaps of grit and brawn. Bo call the umbulunces And let the game go on. -Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Actions anil Words, Here's a sentiment worthy to keep In your mind, As you trnvel through life, for It's true, you will find; That you're not so much valued by what you may say, As by what you may do In a practical way. For unless you perform what you say you can do, Grave doubts will arise that you're honest and true; Remember, that actions speak louder titan words. Nor would I discourage the message that cheers, Or the prayer or the blessing of sympathy's tears; They are always In order; they help In their way To hasten the dawn of millennial day. But a little more gold sandwiched In with your prayers Would banish more tears, and lighten more cares; Though your voice be as sweet as the song of the birds, Rsmember, that actions speak louder thnn words. -Charles W. Bcarff, in Rural New Yorker. rinln Snmnnthy Ann. Twice lucky Is the poet who May call his sweetheart Rose. Hl sonnets speak her eyes of blue. His ballads sing her pose; A rhyme with Gladys one might pan. Quite good enough to scan, But what If your girl's cognomen Was plain Samantha Ann? Now, if 'twere Grace or Isabel, Or May, without a doubt The muse would weave a mystic spell And some way help him out; But Pegasus will veer in fright. Dismounting any man Who dares an amorous verse indite To Plain Samantha Ann. There's Poe's Lenore and Burns' Jean For song were graceful themes, They well might speak of modest mien" And weave their fancied dreams. But my sweetheart! Ah, such a shame To thus Indict a ban On rhyming lover with a name Like plain Samanthy Ann. Roy Farrell Qreene, in Detroit Free Press. The Voter. Just before election day the voter's head Is high; .Inst before election day he's lauded to the sky; Msj smokes the best cigars there are, he's treated as a knight. ' Hss told to go and heJp himself to any thing in sight; ;i gets the best attention when he has a word to say, .indall his Jokes aroif unny, Just before elec tion day, Ittst before election day the voter stands supreme, "leatde his power kingly sway Is but an empty dream; h him the nation's hopes depend, he holds his country's fate Vlthln the hollow of his hand he steers the ship of state lut when the votes are counted zitt! his greatness fades away! Is's like a turkey that was proud before Thanksgiving day! -B. E. Kiser, in Chicago Times-Herald. Whistle Awnr. "Yhtstle away, my merry boy, ' Ith happy face and heart of Joy; f it will help you to be strong, i'hlstle a tune when things go wrong. md whistling lightens it for you, . f e'er your task is hard to do. Vhetner It be sowing the seeds, 'toeing the corn, or pulling weeds, 'atherlng fruit, or raking hay, driving cows, whistle away, ThlHtle a tune, if you can't sing, nd that should seem the next best thing hat you can do, perhaps 'twill cheer he hearts of some who chance to hear. better to whistle than to pout, .ind scold and fret, no one can doubt; : i) keep a merry heart, my lad, .'.nd thus make other people glad. I "o all the good you can each day, ;nd as you toll, whistle away. --Toronto Truth. He Whistled on the Way, No deeds of fame enshrined his nam No laurel wreath or bay; .'.nd yet he made earth happier; He whistled on the way. ?hn sorrow frowned and stars wera drowi ed Tn stormy skies and gray, V saw tne light stream through the night; He whistled on the wayl nd even grief found sweet relief Hope shed a brighter ray, . At hearts he knew not blessed him B"or whistling on the wayl -nd when from life's dark shadow He passed Into the day hey wrote above, thin line of love: "He whistled on the way!" S L. Stanton, In Atlanta Constitution. Am Open I.eter to Mrs. Grnndy. oo4 Mrs. Grundy, potent darnel we hum bly bow before you; s jo, who cun make or blast a name, with trembling we adore you. ' strive to gain your great, good will, your favor we have curried; ;.' shall we fawn before you till we're fully dead and buried, old and young, the high and low, are all within your keeping, v-hate'er you say Is law, we know; your edict full and sweeping, .ud so with earr.est hearts we pray on week days and on Sunday, Vhate'er of others you may say, O, spare us, Mrs. Orundyl - JUoa Waterman, la Elliott' Marain ........ . ...,OMB . A FEW VALUABLE RECIPES. ITlumorous directions furnished with nn advertisement of n school supply house, j To Drop Eggs. Let go your hold on them. An Inexpensive Pish. A three-cent tin plate. Clear Soup. Take two pints of wa ter; wash them thoroughly on both cities; pour into a dish or something, and srir around on the kitchen lloor un til done. Touud Cake. Mix up u pound of flour nnd other Ingredients; place in a "cut glass" dish nnd pound; bnke in a re frigerator for half mi hour. This will be found nn excellent recipe. Stomach Cnkc or Stomach Ache.' Line a smnH boy's stomach with green apples, cucumber, ice water and peuehe of "emerald hue." Thin is nn economical recipe and can be done at short notice. Ice Cream. Pry a piece of ice in the sun; wipe thoroughly with a dump cloth; ktir in some cold erenni or cam phorated vaseline; flavor with am monia or kerosene oil; fan until It freezes ajid garnish with spinach. Tlvls should be served cold with hot soup. rium Pie. Make a tough dough; hammer out a front and back breadth; sine a dish with India rubber ovcrshoee; put around ft veneering of dough; fUl the dish with oough drops; put on the to)) crust; feather stitch around the edges and bake in a tinker's furnace. Calves' Foot Jelly. Get trusted for a Chicago calf (they have the Inrgest feet) ; cut oft the calf which can be used for hash or chicken salad; wash the feet; thicken with fish glue and a few drops of molasses; strnin through a cane-seated chair (rocker preferred); pour slowly into a blue bowl with red pictures on the outside of it; set luider a Christmas tree until it becomes of the proper consistency. ASIA AND AFRICA. The population of Jerusalem ia 45, 000. Of these 28,000 nre Hebrews. For the crown prince of Japan a beau tiful palace is being built, with the frame work of iron calculated to with stand earthquakes. Twenty years ago Egypt had hardly a single good rond. Puring the last six years over 1,000 miles of good roads have been built. Russia's Asiatic possessions are three times the size of Great Britain's; but hold only 23,000,000 inhabitants, as com pared with England's 297,000,000 sub jects. The authorities in Algeria gave $40, 000 toward fighting the grasshoppers. In one section 3,200 camels were em ployed to carry the material for burn ing over the places where eggs hnd been deposited. France's Anti-Tobacco society is go ing to make Negus Menelik a member. The society has learned that smoking Is almost unknown in Abyssinia and is punished as a crime when practiced. French explorers have to smoke their cigarettes in secret. A good giraffe skin is worth from ten to twenty dollars in South Africa to-day, and much more in Europe. On their hunting trips ten or fifteen years ago it was a common matter for one hunter to kill 40 or 50 of these grucef ul animals in one day. It is interesting to note that the early Egyptian custom of paying gold in the form of rings has not entirely died out in Africa at the present day, and that English merchants trading with the Kongo are quite accustomed to receiving gold in the form of rings, frequently ornamented with the sign of the zodiac in relief. " A LITTLE OF ALL SORTS. Itaffaellt, the Parisian artist, ex presses the belief that New York has an art atmosphere. The republic of Venezuela contains 500,159 square miles. It is larger than any country in Europe except Itussia. The skeleton of a giant over seven feet in length was discovered by excavutor at King Hill, Me. The site many yeur. ago was used by Kicks poos as a bury ing ground. The camel, inured to hardships and privations, does double the work oi a pair of horses, is tractable and can be kept in good condition on a compara tively smull amount of inferior fodder. According to a London journal, the number of stamps now current in the world is 13,811. England has 131, her colonics 3,843. The United States has 2G8 different kinds, the republic of Sal vador 272. The gold output for the Cripple Creek district for September amounted to $1,731,000, surpassing all records. The production of gold in this district from the time of its discovery in 1891 to date is $02,057,292. Another blue grotto, like that on the isltind of Capri, has been discovered on the shore of the promontory of Sklnnrl on the Ionian island Znnte. The en trance Is from the sea nnd is larger than in the Capri grotto, but the interior is smaller. Fishing boats can make their way in when the water is calm. TOWN TOPICS. N Baltimore claims the largest negro population of any city in the world. An experiment is being tried in Pe troit of allowing the firemen one "day off" in five. A searchlight has been added to the equipment of the New York (Ire de partment to help the men in dark hall ways nnd corners. Lexington, Muss., Is making prepara tions for an elaborate celebration it intends to have April 19, 1!)00, or tlin one hundred and twenty-fifth anniver sary of the battle there. New York want- a museum of "Liv ing History and Court of All Nutlons," to cost several millions, exhibiting con temporaneous art and manufacture from every country In the world. VARIOUS AND INTERESTING. It is said to be Senntor Pepew's wish that all women members of his family should enter professions. Puring the decade ended ISPS our shipyards produced only 213,000 gross tons of ocenn steamships, while in the same period German yards turned out 850,000 gross tons and British yards 0,080,000 gross tons. Bused on Bureau Veritas returns, the world's seagoing sail tonnage in the Inst quarter of a century hits decreased from M,lS5,8:n tons to S,'.Kt,7'.m tons, a decrease of 40 per cent. The decrease in the United Stales has been at the average rate. Through the financial misfortunes of an old New Yorker a famous art treas ure, Gerome's "('onsiimmnt umest," depicting the rrueifixlon of Christ on Mount CnJvary, has been discovered. Art connoisseurs my it is worth from $25,000 to $.'10,000. The New York elevated railway sta tions ore to have slot mnelilnes for sell ing tickets. The ifppnratus is nn elec tric niekel-ln-tlie-slot machine, and there will be four in etieh of the larger stations. This new scheme will do away with the expense of having nn agent nt each station. A Chicagonn hns been awarded a suit for five cents which he claimed from one of the elevnted railway companies. Tie bought a ticket and parsed through the turnstile, then waited half an hour for a train. As no train came, he de manded the return of his fare, which was refused. The cost of the suit was four dollars. The lack of a label on a bottle of car bolic acid caused the death of a woman in Chicago the other day. The nurse had left for her several bottles, some of which were unlabeled, and had given oral instructions for their use. The lady picked up one of these, thinking it a liniment. The burns were such that the woman in the condition In which she was could not survive. PERT AND PERSONAL. John Morlcy and Joseph Chamberlain, although opponents in polities, in ev eryday life are the best of friends. Miss Elsie Pepew Strang, of l'eeksklll, N. Y., a niece of Senator Chauncey Pe pew, has received the degree of doctor of medicine from the Women's Medical College Infirmary for Women and Chil dren. C. Oliver Iselin is credited with de claring that he will no longer undertake to build or manage a yacht to defend the America's cup, and his rutirement will probably be followed by Not llerreshoff, designer of three of the defenders. It is reported that cx-1'rcsident Har rison received from the government of Venezuela for arguing the boundary cose, which has just been determined in l'nris, $150,000 some say $250,000. Undoubtedly it was one of the largest fees ever paid, because the interests were enormous, and there were very few men in the world who could have undertaken the argument. M. Santos-Uumont, member of the Automobile nnd Aero clubs of Paris, seems to have solved the problem of steering balloons. He recently went up at Vanguard nnd first directed his course toward the Eiffel tower, which he encircled. Then he turned off west, ihough n southwest wind was blowing at the time, and finally came down near the Moulin, at Bagatelle, in the Hois de Boulogne. ' BOGUS ANTIQUES. In Birmingham there is a flourishing trade in antique armor made to-day. China-labeled antique comes from France, Holland iind Germany, and the false print is perhaps the commonestof nil forgeries. The demand for exnmples of the work of celebrated old engravers is so great that several firms are engaged in repro ducing them. Many arc sold every day as originals. Forgers have attempted to copy an tique silver plate, but their efforts are usually amiibing. There was once on sale in Borne a great silver cup, said to have come from secret excavations in Sicily. It was ornamented with a cir cular bas-relief of the Parthenon frieze In his innocence the forger hnd given the frieze in its present ruined condi tion. Nutional museum experts nre fre quently cuught. For instance, the Brit ish museum bought a Palissy plate for . 50 nearly $250. An attendant, dust lug it, knocked off one of the seals at tnched to the back of the plate attesting its genuineness nnd disclosed the mark of a modern French potter. Two terra cotta figures of Isis and Osiris bought for the same institution for $5,000 have been discovered to be of modern clay. ARMY AND NAVY NOTES. Naval experts are indorsing strongly the project of a national navul reserve, with four-year terms of service. The navy yard at Charlestown, Mass., is to. have an immense water basin where hips can connect with the Fitch burg railway. . Officers on United States warships in American harbor conipluin that vis itors are so numerous as to interfere with regulur duties on shipboard. Admiral Crowninshleld believes the government should maintain perma nent barracks on shore at this large naval stations for the crews of vessel in reserve and for new recruits which increasing service requires. At the Charlestown (Mass.) navy yard recently 100 workmen in the eonstniu tion nnd repair department were dU churged beeuuse the government allot ment for that department was $14,000 less than had been expected. The appropriation inndo by congress this year for naval construction is con sidered too meager by many naval ex perts, us the demand for refitting ships for the Philippine service has used up already nearly oue-hulf the amount. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. Perfumes and essences made from lemon, orange nnd bergamot long ago made Sicily famous In the annals of the perfumers. The United States manufacture ex tensively perfumes from win tergreen, sassafras and several other woods nnd herbs. Perfumes are made from a great va riety of seeds, nnd by combining some of these new perfumes are made, which resemble none of those pretusly known. On the basis ot results of previous ex hibitions nt Paris, it is assumed that 82.5S8.2S0 people will pass through the. turnstiles, and it is possible that the total numJier may reach tio.ooo.oon. There will be a model American post office nt the Paris exposition. Ar rangements have been made with the French postal authorities whereby mails for Americans in Pnris will 1 sent directly to this office instead of going through the regular channels. The post office will be fitted up with nH of the modern postal appliance. Work hns begun on the renovation of the facade of the Cathedral of Milan. An attempt will lie made to remove some of the inconsistencies of style due to the fact that four centuries were taken in the completion of the eathe-. dral. The plnn adopted Is that of Gulseppe Brentnno, who won the prize over 120 competitors. Nine columns of the hypostyle hall of the temple of El-Knrnnk. nt Thebes, have fallen. The temple of El-Knrnnk is one of the most magnificent temples of ancient architecture in the World. The hall measures 170 by 320 feet. The stone roof was originally supported by 134 columns, the tallest of which was nearly 70 feet high and 12 feet in di ameter. It was built by Setee I. of the nineteenth Egyptian dynasty. AFTER-DINNER TOPICS. For after-dinner topics of conversation the following questions have been voted a prize. They nre considered "sensibly hu morous" and have Just claim to that title, though some of them ore serious enough, Bonictimes.J Whut advantage hns the new woman over the old ? Are heroes or heroine the more to be ndmired? Is it an easy matter to "spot" an old bachelor in n crowd? Poes reading love stories make ladles more Inclined to flirt? How would you cure n man who stops too much at his club? When Is an apology a crime, and wlieu is it merely a blunder? Is it better to marry for love or for riches, or for a compound of both ? When a man has offended a woman should he admit being to blame or not? What means should be adopted to bring u bushful man to the "sticking point?" Why do old bachelors and old maids give their preference to lodgings where there nre no children? If n husband be a few days absent from home should he bring his wife a present on his return? If u cross wife commences to scold her husband is it n good policy for him to commence whittling? Should the husband occasionally re main ut home to look after the children and leave his wife free to go to the the ater? Supposing you had a few friends whom you knew to be downcast, how would you entertain them for an hour so as to make them give a good hearty laugh? ENGLISH AFFAIRS. London holds 03 per cent, of its po licemen for night duty. There are, it is estimated, about 5,000 doctors in London. Manchester, England, has opened lodging-house under the control of the city to accommodate 300 men. A good English authority estimate that $1,000,000,000 foreign capital Is now operating in Russia in manufactur ing, industrial, steamship and other en terprises. The leasing of Covent garden in Lon don by the opera syndicate entil 194S include everything except one box and two 6talls. These the duke of Bedford, owner of the property, reserved for his own use at any performance in the next 49 years without the payment of an entrance fee. Although Chatham Is 60 near to Lon don little has been heard of the great magazines for explosives which the ad miralty are having erected at a cost of ubout $730,000. The magazines will be some distance from the royal dockyard ; and the further the better, for, however cureful the precautious agninsH acci dents, the danger is always, there. These new magazines will greatly facil itate the dealing with large quantities of ammunition and the consumption of ammunition for practice purposes only is increasing at an amazing rate, BETWEEN TRAINS. A little snuke is as apt to bite us a big one. Love is blind, but vain regret has good eyesight. Tlit; miin can never do what the boy might have done. All philosophy is a failure when the philosopher has the toothache. The goose that lays the golden egg generally belongs to a fool who kills it. The more poetry a man has in him the more It tries him to set up stove pipe. If every horse with a fuult were knocked in 1 he head, nobody would ride. No man fuils for lack of talent. The thing that floors him is lack of purpose. Women jump ut conclusions, but the philosopher get there on his hands and knees. When ft man Is starving It is a waste of breath to talk to linn about the chemistry of bread. "Ham's Horn Drown," in Indianapolis News. Tempered with Merry. "Ye. I was drunk, your honor," the prisoner said, "but I've been pretty well punished already. 1 had $00 when I went out on the Mrort, nnd a lot of gamblers got hold of me a.nd swindled me out of $.vs." "Under those circii;nstaiues," re marked his honor, with a sympathetic cough, "the court Is disposed to be lenient with you. The fine will be two dollars." Chicago TrilMn. A HrHnii Cnse. I.nto one evening doctor received n note from a couple of fellow-practitioners, saying: "Pray step across to the club. Wo arc otic short of n game of poker." "Emily, dear," he 1hc;i paid to bis wife, "I am celled iiwny again. It ii pcars to be n very serious ciisr, for there nre two doctors already in attendance."- Tit-Bits. The I r pn rdonntile I'nrt. It It pMtlns "found out" that Is really the curs Of onr wrnnc. for It can't be dmlid That !ic rat In the trap may be rot a. bit worre Than the one that Ih on the outnldo. Klllott's Mure.Bltie. hard o ti:k fa tn sr.w Pot (aged six) Mamma, if I get mar ried will I have to have a husband like papa? Mamma Yes. Pot And If I don't get married will I have to be an old maid like Aunt Mar tha? Mamma Yes. Pot (after a pause) Mamma, it's a tough world for us women, isn't It? Sketch. A Short Story, Fido was small, but dreadfully brave. As every ono knows, for one day He barked at a Rrent big railroad train, And the railroad train rnnnwuy! Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. A Clond's Golden Lining, Ilenpeck There is a man that hns' my pity nnd envy simultaneously you see his wife is one of the most noted of naggers. Friend Now, where does your envy come in? Henpek Well, you see he is as deaf a a post nnd cannot hear a word she says. Judge. I.lvlnic 1 1 to His Principle. "I tell you, sir, the tarring and feath ering of that miserable scoundrel was nn unpardonable outrage!" "Why do you speak so warmly?" "Because I'm vice president of the so ciety that opposes the use of feathers in personal adornment!" Cleveland riain Pealer. No Hope for Him. "Then you cannot be the sunshine of my life?" asked the young man, with the insistence of one under a fixed idea. "No," replied the lady detective, softly, "you know I am a professional shadow." Indianapolis Journal. When to Fly Utah. First English Sparrow The legisla tures are offering rewards for our heads. Aren't you scared? Second English Sparrow No, I shan't worry until they call us game and pass laws to protect us. N. Y. Weekly. Ilenlly nrinnrkahlr AVomnn. "What is there so remarkable about her?" "Why, she' a woman who never kept house in her life, nnd yet she doesn't think she could settle the servant-girl problem." Chicago Post. Hot Cuiupnlijrn. He I went through the fight with that man. She In the Spiinish war, I suppose you mean? "Oh, no; in a church choir." Yon kers Statesman. Not to HI Tnatr. Wlggs Skinner has just returned a book he borrowed. Jiggs Pidn't he like it? Wiggs Yes. Why do you ask? Jltfg You say he returned iu Town Topics. ITntl Nnpport. Judge The charge against you is vagrnncy. The ollicer says you have no visible melius of support. "I's got a means ob suppo't, jedge; but she done took sick an cain't do no wasliin'." Judge. , . In Oklahoma. Caller Is the editor in? Office Boy Yes, but he can't Bee no one to-day. Ho left his gun ut home. N. Y. Journal. or Coarse Tliey Will. Grandma Ah, my deur, the men are not what they were 50 years ago. Ethel Well, granny, you know, 60 years will change any man. Tit-Bit. The Fluent Trnle. "Who Is that man over there who talks so much?" "He's cither u college professor or a barber." Chicago ltcenrd. A Difference of Opinion. Juck Ah, Mabel, you are the apple of my eye. Mabel That' funny. Gecr-ge say I'm u pencil. K. Y. Jouruul. WW RAILROAD 'RUMBLE- Borne of the underground railroad In London cost as high as $3,205,01).') mile. Officers of the street railroad com pany in Denver estimate the daily nr. orngc loss of the company, through tho competition of the bicycles, at $5ii0. The railroads use l,3r,174 cars, of which 3:1,505 are assigned to the pas senger service and l. IS, SCO , to the freight service. Of tho total 43,7.13 nrv used by Hie companies owning them. The Wiigncr-Pullnian Palace ear combination is an important event ia the railroad world. The Pullman com pany was organized in 1H07 to operant n service of sleeping and parlor car?. The company owns and controls about 500 cars, which are operated over I?l, r.n miles of railwny in the I'nititf States, Canada, Mexico and in some places in Europe. A 26-mile railway for the Philip pine waa recently packed in the hold of a steamship ut San 1'raneisejK Everything needed for the railroad was sent except the tics which wilt be obtained in the islands. It is sairt that the railway will be used to ex tend the 30 mires of railroad now con trolled by the .Vmcrlenn troops. TW engineering corps will build the bridges, etc. The work of cutting down the grades on the Chicago division of the Baltimore & Ohio Rail Bond hn.t lv-e begun and most of the heavy work will be completed by spring. The gen eral plan contemplates nn IS font maximum grade from Chicago to JW timore, except over the mountnirrv w here helping engines hnve to be nscA. The reductions will cost about J.10V 000, but will allow an increase of near ly :(0 per cent, in train loading wise they are completed. CONTINENTAL CONCERNS. The crown prince of Germany be comes of age next May and will hut as his sepjirnte establishment the old cast !e ut Potsdam. There is much French and Bclgiat capital invested in the principal rail way lines of Spain, while England owct many of the shorter lines, and is aiw ajt the head of the mining interests. Germany will soon have new postagt stamps of one, two, four and live marks. The styles are to be closely modeled after the si.e and style of flie United States Columbian stumpt of lh93. The engravings show nation events. Hungarian peasants like to have a good time when somebody die. A wealthy farmer at SzabadUa recentlr left 1,500 acres of land and a large sunt, to his nephews. In his poekets were found 0,0110 fibrins in cash. This sum, it was decided, he had set aside for a sump; nous funeral; so the bells were kept ringing two days, and everybody was royally entertained. A "curatoriiHii" for eye troubles ex ists in St. Petersburg, which sends com missions through the country district for tht purpose of giving free treat ment and advice to those among the peasantry who are suffering from af fections of the eyes. The report for the year 1S0S states that 33 of those opht halmologicalexpeditions were sent out during the year to certain parts of the empire. PLAYS FROM NOVELS. Plays are now being given founded on "The Choir Invisible," "The First Violin," "Vanity Fair" nnd "The Tale of Two Cities." John Pryden once tried to make a piny troni Milton' "Paradise Lost," und the awful result is one of the; things best forgotten. ' Also It is rumored that the stage will soon ce plays made from "Itich ard Carvel," "When Knighthood Was in Flower" nnd "David Harum." it was prophesied that "Trilby" staged would be a failure, whereas it brought in so much money thut a rusli began to stage other novels, a rutk which still keeps up. Successful plays have been mad from Stanley Weymun's novels, An thony Hope's, Hardy's "Tess," Barrie' "Little Minister," Twain' "Pudd'n Head Wilson" and others. It is said a big sum of money hn been paid for the stage rights to "Mr. Dooley," though how a play can be made, from these detached bits is hard to see. Tho fact that in modern days the plays made from "Hubert Elsmere" and "The Quick or the Dead" were failures ha not kept ambitious dra matists from trying to put others oa the stage. FLORAL HINTS. Criuums. These bulb should be set about half their depth In soil. Hardy Hoses. The hardiest June-flowering rose I have any knowledge of is the Persian Yellow. Any florist can furnish iU Better defer planting until fcprjng. Cinerarias. Plant for winter flow eulng should be grown from seed. These are much preferable to old plants, us they are strongerin every way. Seed ling plants may be obtained at all the leading florist. Sword Ferns may be propagated by division of the roots, or by rimners, which will root when they uome in con tact with the soil. The new Sword I' crn, Bostoniensis, i much like the old va riety, except tluat. it has longer fronds. It requires the same treatment. Wintering Geraniums. Old plant can be wintered in the cellar. Some hang them up "by the heels" along the celling. Others crowd several into a box and give no water after they are placed In the cellar. Generally the tops die off, but the roots will have enough ntality to produce sprouts II the ljirln.'.- -Ladies' Home Journal.