THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUCL km. EVA'S STEPMOTHER ooQoo "I snail never forget you," said Bra Challoner. with her dark, fresh face bathed In tears and her black yea swimming amid a mist of them. "You shall always remain, though Hundreds of miles separate ur, Kate, the dearest friend that I have ever possessed:" Eva spoke thus on the day of graduating; lrom hoarding school. She and Kate Broome were bidding each other a long farewell. Kate s protestations were not so warm as fcva's, for hers wa. the calmer as al no the stronger nature of the two. Vhn Kva returned to the spac ious country home In whtcli her ear liest childish days had u'cn passed, she had a feeling of intense loneli ness. iShe missed boarding school and she missed the dear face of Kate Broome, her idol and Idea.. fcva s mother had died In her childhood, she had been the only offspring of Mrs. Challoner's youthful union. Kva loved her father, and per hups If he had been at home dur ing the present period 6he would nave felt far less lonely. At first Kva and Kate correspond Hi with great regularity and !re luency. in one of her letters Eva onndentiaily wrote: "It makes me sad to have papa way Tor so long a time. But now tnd then, Kate, another wretched 'bought enters my head. It Is a -nought that fills me with actual lorror. 1 have a dread lest papa nay marry again. You can t lmag--ne how i destt-st the Idea of a step mother. 1 shiver, now, as I write .ue word. "Mrs. Russel Ogden, a distant rel ive of ours. Is now in Washington, nd she writes me quite often. The jther day she had a sentence In her etter which set my heart beating. It referred to papa, suggesting that of course the chances of his marrying jln were decidedly strong. "Now. Kate, as 1 know you are go g to Washington before very long, want you to promise me that you fill keep a sharp eye on papa dur ag your visit there. Tell me, if he s devoted to anybody, and, in that aae, Just how devoted. You will no Wubt move In the same social c!r 4es. l)o not forget my Injunctions, ow; there Is a dear, good girl." Kate Broome did go to Washlng t. not long afterward, and there he met, for the first time, the fath r of Her dear friend. Challon r was very much courtoi in Boclety, nt deservedly so; ha was brilliant, raiented and han-!:orae. Kate said netting whatever about er friendship with his daughter on er first meeting with Mr. Challoner. 1e somenow had a curiosity to ob rve this famed politician, as one horn he believed a perfect stranger Jth to him and his. Kate was never what la termed good letter-writer, and she now ?glected Kva shamefully. She ;und that she could not go to balls id receptions and at the same time rrespond at all faithfully with Eva, nd she now wrote her friend an oc--sional scribbled sort of note, say--g so. Meanwhile Kva became miserably nurt. and almost wholly ceased writ g to her friend. But one day Mrs. Russell Ogden jpnt her from Washington a com uicatlon that burst upon her like l actual bomb-shell. Her father as reported to be engaged. Mrs. Ogden could not give the nie of the lady as absolutely cer 'in. She had heard It but then her emory for names was so peculiar. Kva's relative then went on to say at gho had met Mr. Challoner and a new fiancee together on Pennsyl ::nla avenue that very day. At the Jd of the letter came a postscript ilch rcn thus; "1 have remembered the ladVs ''me. It is Brush. But of course -nr father will write you Immedl .ely." Kva Mas in a perfectly wild str-.te. e next mall brought a note from r father, telling her of his engege ent to a Mrs. Browne, and promls g that he would very soon write . r more fully. The note was in her father'3 pro rblal handwriting, which was so eglble as a rule, that only those ost familiar with Its dark ways uld make it out. Kva was by no means sure whether title was "Mrs." or "Miss" owne, though the "Browne" part imed indisputable. Kva now wrote her father a pas--. inately reproachful letter. She jmed him for being a heartlens. uel parent. Sne spoke with bitter- i rebuke of her dead mother s . mory. It was the sort of letter she had ; i possible right to send. And It as followed by three weeks of dead ence on the part of her father. At the end of these three weeks. e unhappy girl was In an almost operate condition. She longed to k her father's forgiveness, and i pnae restrained her.. At last one morning a telegram me to Kva which ran briefly thus "1 was married a week ago in L r wife and 1 will arrive at the mettead this afternoon or evening --THEODORE CHALLONER." poor Kva passed the rest of the day in the most miserable suspense. At about 6 o'clock that evening she heard a enrrtaga stop before the front entrance. After that, with beating heart and failing limbs, she slowly descended into the lower main ball. Here her father met her. He kiss ed her as if nothing had happened, making no reference whatever to her upbraiding letter. "My wile hns gone Info the sitting room," he said, and quietly drew Kva toward t hat apartment. A lady came forward to meet Kva, though as lamps had not yet been brought and the chamber was tilled with the deepening dusk, the lady's face did not dawn upon Theodore Challoner's daughter until she was quite close to it. And then a great surprised ex clamation burst from her Hps. "Why, Kate Broome," she cried; and an Instant later she had kissed her dearly beloved friend on either cheek. i "Not Kate Broome any longer." was the sort, tranquil answer. "1 nm Kate Challoner now. Perhaps you can t realize It all at once, Kva. and perhaps you won't like it when yo i do. but I've come to live here as your siepmother." "You:" Kva stared at the speaker in mute amazement for certainly ten seconds; and then, with a sudden outburst of tears, she threw both arms around Kate's neck. "Oh, it seems like a dream," she sobbed. "It's too good to be true! After I expected some horrid, elderly er-ture who would be a tyrant to me. No. no; I shall wake up soon. It can't be!" "Yes; but It certainly is," said Kate, with her rare, brilliant smile. "You see, Eva, I only found out in the most sudden way that your fath er cared for me. He wrote you im mediately after our engagement a short note, if you remember, saying that he would explain hereafter." "And calling you 'Mrs. Browne!' " exclaimed Eva. who was still in tears. "That was the fault of his bad handwriting, he meant to write Miss Broome." "And 1 suppose now," continued Kva, "that Papa's reason for not af terward writing and telling me every thing was" i "Your bitter, unjust, unfeeling note, Eva," said a grave voice in the doorway, which Mr. Challoner's stately form was Just then darken ing. "I understand," murmured Eva, penitently. "But rou forgive me, papa, don't youT I acted hastily, impulsively, and I had such a hor ror of a stepmother, you know. Kate is a very, different afTalr. She will be a comfort a downright delight! We shall have glorious times togeth er. And I shan't be Jealous a bit, papa, of her love for you. But I hope that both of you can spare me a little love." "We promise to spare you a freat deal," said Mr. Challoner, kissing Kva. And Kate with another kiss for her new stepdaughter, softly re peated his words. The Unknown Palisades. The edge of the world, if such a thing may be, lies hardly a rifle shot away from one of the centres of the world itself the city of New Ycrk. The Palisades, those mighty walls, whereon the annals of the centuries are graved what an edge of the world their lip presents to him who cornea, perhaps at night, to their rough-newn elevation! In no P)ace other than this jear proximity to man and one or his greatest cities could a physical feature so profound ly, vast and impressive be hidden from the world; and yet the Pali sades are al.nost, unexplolted and un known to the globe-circling, sight hunting public that rearly traverses the continents or seas to gaze at things less wonderful In some dis tant held oi Nature's marvelous achievements. For little does any onu know of these Titanic walls who has merely seen them from tho Hud son. Were they somewhere off in a land comiiarntivelv InnnncoihU reached by a transcontinental thread of steel, the guide books would be rich in their pictured grandeur and man would rove far to exnlore them. Harpers Magazine. Tit for Tat. "No, 1 don't believe In exnenslve practical Jckes," said a San FranciBCo business man, "except by wav of re taliation. "Now last year I received a tele gram from a friend who was travel ing in Italy, it came collect and cost me Beven dollars; and when I opened it all I read was, "Thank you, I am wen. "Then I Ballled forth and sought me out a cobblestone a nice large cobblestone weighing about eleven pounds. And I wrapped it in excel sior, pink cotton and white rfaper, and 1 boxed It up in a handsome box; and 1 sent it by express, collect, to my facetious frVend far across the bounding billows. "Ana when he had paid his little 115 and had opened the box in St. Petersburg, if I remember rightly, he round In addition to the precious con. tents a note from me that explained. "This is the load that rolled off m-' heart on receipt of the news of your gooa Health." Woman's Home Com panlon. When yoi-r wife ceases to go through your pockets it is not the sign of the mllleniura. Lost curios ity is the sign of lost love. OF A DEEPSEA SHiP After Stranding on a Chinese Is land During a Three Year' Voyage, Reaches Port - CREW'S WENT TO HUNT FOR HELP The Mate and Four Sailors, After Hazardous Journey Through Jungle, Reached a Settlement and Dis patched Tug to the Rescue. Brooklyn, N. Y. Closing a three years' voyage, which threatened to end with leaving the ship Comet's bones to blench on the rocks of P.anka Island, Capt. Davis berthed his ves sel In South Brooklyn late Wednesday and discharged the miscellaneous car go of Chinese goods stowed beneath her hatches. The Comet left Philadel phia In July, I'.tOa. for Kobe, Japan, with a cargo of case oil. After several trips back and forth between Kobe and San Francisco, the ship loaded nt Singapore for New York and sailed Just before Christmas. Everything went well until Decem ber 2G, when squally weather was en countered. For two days the ship pounded along through a lumpy sea. December 27 fell black ns soon as tho sun went down. The Comet struggled along under shortened sail, plunging and rolling In the cross seas. Shortly before ten o'clock the boom of break ers was heard dead ahead, and duly reported. The ship was eased off, but the sound of breakers came from every hand, and, suddenly, with a grinding crash, the vessel brought up standing. The breakers lifted her, forced her forward her full length, and again she 3truck hard and fast Soon after the squally weather abat ed, the sea, never very high, fell away to a long rolling swell, which left the ship high and dry save for her rudder, which was buffeted by the waves. After an examination of the vessel and ascertaining the shlD's situation. Capt, Davis decided to Bend a life boat Tor help. First Mate Charles Hay ward and four men volunteered for the venture. Provided with food, com passes, spare sails, and the shln'a chaft, on which were marked all the data of the voyage, the life boat was towered away and the crew laid a course for Java. Later events showed that, caueht in strong currents, the ship had drift ed from her course and had been drawn Into a narrow channel .between three islands where the swift current had dashed her on the rocks. The life boat made good weather of it. and Just before daybreak the sound of neavy surf betokened near approach to land. Hayward spread the shin's chart out on the Btern thwart, and by the light of a ship's lantern tried to make out his position. Just then a swift current caught the boat, swing ing it In shore and ht?adon to the heavy rolling surf. The boat, tossed about like a chip, was swamped. The mate and one man who was astern were washed overboard. The two men forward leaped out, and all four managed to fight their way to the beach. The lifeboat, battered and ruined, was dashed up on the rocky beach, and the men managed to save some spare sails, the ship's compass, and the oars. With the airs and can vas they struck up a shelter tent, un der which they huddled until daylight Chilled and bruised with their tight in the surf, the men were In despair when the daylight showed them a rocky shore with a seemingly Impene trable swampy Jungle stretching In land in every direction. The mate and one of the crew, a Dutchman, started out to explore, and after forc ing their way inland a mile or two, found a native sback inhabited by a Chinaman who could talk a little Dutch. Under his guidance the four men made their way ten miles through the Jungle to a small settlement at a Chinese tin mine, from which a narrow-gauge railway took them to Ulln Jo. Here they were able to telegraph to Java and thence to Singapore for help. Meanwhile those on the stranded ship were in suspense. Although in no immediate danger, there was the possibility any day of a storm coming up, in which case the ship would cer tainly break up. For live days Capt. Davis and his crew on the liuni isoned ship strained their eyes looking for help to come out of the sea. Fre quently the smoke of passing steam 6hips was seen, and efforts made to attract attention of those on board, but no attention was paid to the sig nals. Rockets sent up at night met no response. Finally, on the sixth day'a tug from Singapore came to their aid. After several hours' pulling and hauling her captain declared he could not drag the ship off. The tug was sent to Blinjo to take oft the mate and his crew, with instructions to telegraph to Singapore for more help. Hayward, the mate, Insisted on the lug going back to the shin ni ing another try to pull her off. This was don.e, and after twenty-four hours hard pulling the big vessel was final ly floated. She proceeded to film pore for repairs, finallv sail in fmm there a, second time January 12 for ivw i urn; AMAZING YARN THE EXPECTANT HAND. N'o Charge Made, But a Present of Money Not Refused. In recording an lltnes of his grand father, Gen. John Watts De Peystcr telis an amusing story in connection with Indian hemp. It Is printed in hla biography by Mr. Frank Allaben. Indian hemp was recommended as a remedy during my grandfather's ill cess, but where to get It was tho question. Finally some one said It was grown in the garden of old Mr. Henry Brevoort, who owned a large plot on the east side of Broadway, ex tending through to the Bowery above Tenth street. Tlraco Church stands on part of this ground. Doctor Dlbby gave me some money, told me to Jump Into his gig, drive up to I'.revoort's old low-storied cottago house on the Bowery, and tell tho owner that I wnn'ed pome Indian hemp for my grandfather, John Watts. I was to use diplomacy If necessary, but not to return without it. ' I trotted along brlt-kly, roused Mr. Brevoort from a nap. stated my case, found no demur, and got tho Indian hemp, which he dug up with Ms own hands. "How much am I to pay?" I ques tioned. "I never sells It," Mr. Brevoort re plied, "because If I takes money for Indian hemp, it weakens the vartoo." ' I stated that I was ordered to pay, and we discussed the matter, walking across the garden toward the gig, which I had left on Broadway. I had made up my mind that I had met with a disinterested Christian, had replaced the money in my pocket, and had my foot on the gig step, when 1 felt a brawny, sunburnt, freckled hand restraining me, and heard these words whispered in my ear: "I never sells Indian hemp, for that weakens the vartoo, but if I gives It, I never refuses a present" I extricated the money confided to me, placed it In the expectant hand. hurried homo and related my story, and I have heard it laughed over many times. . Newsboys. It Is good to hear that measures are on foot to help the poor little New York newsboys, writes N. N. Moore in N. Y. Home Journal. I don't mean newsboys as a class, for they are gen erally an independent and self-respecting set I mean the tired little fellows who beseech one to buy an evening paper at about the hour when the morning paper is coming off the press. There Is said to be In this city no municipal regulation as to the age of the children who are permitted or re quired to do this sort of work. There certainly ought to be. Boston licenses and I believe uniforms Its newsboys, and New York ought to have followed Boston's example long ago. Some of these boys are too bright to be left to grow up on the streets at night The other day a lady stopped to talk with one of these waifs after her escort had bought a paper. "How many pa pers have you left?" "Six, ma'am." "And how much have you trade to day?" "Fifty-two cents since two o'clock." "And do you sell papers In the morn ing?" "Yes'm." "When do you sleep?" "Oh, I gets a snooze now and then. I don't sleep much." "But don't you know that you must sleep If you want to grow up to be a big, strong man?" The little mite looked keenly at the lady did he size her up for a Sunday-school teacher? and then said, "Does God sleep?" That boy might be a Charles O'Con nor If he had a chance. How the Frog Changes Color. The chameleon changes his hue with his environment. A short time nno who could venture to point out all tho molecular and ethereal vibra tions whereby the chain of action is made complete between external en vironment and peripheral tissue change? Yet Sollaud found that the pigmentary changes by virtue of which the frog harmonizes itself more or less with the color of its environ ment are governed by two sorts of nerves. It results from the action of two reflexes, both originating in the retina; and by his Investigations he Is Bbie to map out the paths from the brain to the periphery by each of the reflexes. Now let us picture to our selves the delicacy of this process. First, the green foliage, causing vibra tions in the ether in certain wave lengths, sets up certain molecular vi brations In the retina, which, trans lated to the brain, issue forth at the periphery In such form that neither the skin nor the pigment granules In it are changed Irreversibly, but cer tain molecular combinations are made for the time, or certain Intramolecular changes of the atomic structure are set up in the pigment for the time, by virtue of which a proptectlve color is given to the animal. Census of the Bison. lae Journal of the New York Zoo logical Society gives a census of the American bison, according to which, in place of all the hundreds of thou sands of those animals which formerly roved the plains, only 2,047 were known to be in existence on January 1, 1908. Of theso, 069. were In captiv ity in the United States, and 41 in Canada. Since that date the Pable herd has been sold to Canada. ' Mother Knows. When children r told what a smart man their father is thev look at their mother as it asking her if they lor STEALS WOMAN'S HAT Makts Nest of It and Owner's Cat It Impaled on the Pin, Meeting Tragic Fate. Jacksonville, N. J. When Big Ben, a crow that has been hero for the last five summers, made his reappearance, Mrs. Joslnh Spraguo had no thought that his advent presaged the loss of her new hat and her favorite houBO fat Mrs. flpraguc bought a hat In Paterson nbnut two weeks ngo. It wasn't radlcnl In shapo or style, but It was a bright, attractive pleco of hendgenr. und one of Its appurten ances was a Ion pin, with a shiny silver knob at the end. On Friday afternoon Mrs. Sprnguo, returning from a visit, laid her hat on a chair on the front porch. Three minutes after It was missing. She heard a noise on tho porch when she wan In the house, but It was slight and she could not believe It had anything to do with tho disappearance of tho lint Besides, her hired man, wlo was at work In the garden, had seen no one enter or leave the house. The hat disappeared ns mysteriously as If the wings In the trimmings had car ried It away. Yesterday morning Trlxle, the cnt, which never wnndered far away, also disappeared. Mrs. Spraguo began to believo there was something uncanny about the house. She and several neighbors made a thorough but vain search for both t'.io headpiece and the household pet. To day tho hired man, who was In 'the woods back of Mrs. Sprague's homo, folved the mystery. On a high tree he noticed a gray plume floating above above a basket-like affair that seemed to bo fixed between two limbs twenty feet from the ground. The hired mnn shinned up the tree, and found Mrs. Sprague's missing hat and cat A tragic fate had befallen Trlxle, however, for she was Impaled on the long hat pin that stuck through the hat. The man scrambled down from the tree with the dead pussy and and the hat In his arm. As he did so Big Ben, the crow, and a bird with duller plumage, evidently his mate, circled about him with angry cries, as If to prevent him from making off with his trophies. The presence of the two crows showed that Big Ben stole the hat so he and his mate would have a ready-made nest The death of the cat Is easily explained. It Is presumed Trlxle, v ho had no rever ence for Big Ben's rights, espied the crows In their new nest on the night the hat disappeared. Stealthily climb ing up the tree, the cat must have made a spring for the crows. He reckoned without the presence of the sharp hat pin. The badly clawed con dition of the hat indicated the cat struggled deperately to escape before it died. Big Ben and his mate sat dis consolately on an upper limb of the tree to-day. finding it difficult to make up their minds to begin the building of a real nest. Mrs. Sprngue, too, Is disconsolate for the loss of the hat and the cat In the same day. CANADIAN SLAIN BY WALRUS. Extraordinary Encounter Caused Death of Sergeant Donaldson. Ottawa, Ont From a report which has reached the Mounted Police Do parement at Fullerton, on Hudson Bay, whose death was reported In a recent message from the north, met bis end In an encounter with a wal rus off Marble Island. The sergeant, with Corporal Reeve and an Indian Interpreter named Ford, were making their way from Churchill to Fullerton, traveling in a small sail boat which 5a used for this hazardous trip. Near Marble Island they en countered walruses anu killed several of them. They had towed some of the bodies to their sailboat, but on ono of their trips a walrus attacked them and put a tusk through the bottom of their dingy. They stopped the hole as best they could with a Jacket and pulled for thu shore. Wlfn nearlng it, Donaldson sr't that he would swim the rest of the way, as the boat was filling, but in Jumping out he upset it Reeve hung to the boat and reached shore. Donaldson was rever seen again, and it is thought he was attacked and pulled under by a walrus. REMOVED TUMOR FROM BRAIN. Eerlln Surgeon Lifted Forward Lobes to Excise Mass the Size of An Egg. Berlin, Germany. One of the most extraordinary operations recorded lh the history of surgery has been suc cessfully carried out at the Kaiserin Augusta Hospital by Its chief surgeon, Prof. Krause. It was the extirpation of a tumor which had grown from the hypothysls of the brain, a gland situ ated in the very midst of the skull. The patient was a woman, 35 years old. The tumor was reached by form ing a very large skin and bone flap on the right forehead and temporal region. The tumor was larger than n hon's egg, and was burled more than three Inches deep in the substance of the brain. ' Nevertheless the whole tumor was successfully removed by ' lfitlng the anterior brain. Silk Hat Is Losing Caste. Paris, France. Paris hatters have declared in solemn convention that the silk hat is slowly but surely going or.t of fashion; Is no longer worn by men of fashion except on ceremoalal occasions; that its decline is marked even In London, where It has so long been a badge of respectability, This, tney reason. Is the case In Paris main ly because beeears. ?uiriea mi tv. ers of the pestering fraternity in! rans iook upon the wearer of a silk hat as fair game. A FIRE THAT WON'T GO OUT, Phenomenon Exhibited at Rail ay 8tation In Scotland. It Is not generally known thai a Scotland not more than three miles out of Glasgow, tht.-ro Is a fire ratfoj at a railway station, which has bees guing on for months, and, notwifh standing that tons of water have been poured upon this Insidious fire. It ran not be put out. It seems Incredible, but It Is nevertheless true. The do till:) aro as follows: Several mouths ago a waste piece of ground close to tho station was ws'it ed by thr? railway company as a sidiiii; Tho level of this ground was ton low, so triickloads of refuso were "dumped" on It to bring It to t'.io necessary Icwl. A l.irgo proportion of this refuso en sl.ited of rotting vegetation, and In l!n: course of a llltlo time It hetcl to such an extent that combustion ri In n nil stnrted not only u sniolderiri; fire, but flames ac tually burst throu:;h the ground. Attempts were made to quell this fire, and It waj thought, after sevrril weeks of hard work and tons of wat r, that it had been put out. What 1133 the surprise, however, to see It bn :ik out afresh In another place and niv.ri r tho station. Fears then began t be felt for tho safety of the station bniU Ings, especially ns tho main douMc line to important coast und couuir towns led through It. Fresh energy was then brought t bear, and much more water was pour ed on this fire, which seemed to b.no Its stronghold In the bowels of ihn earth, but from tho volutno of s!v.m and smoko Issuing from innumerable crevices It was seen that the flro dem on was resisting all efforts and wm slowly creeping nearer and nearer to the foundations of the railway stutloi ' It was now whispered and soon bo came known that tho station had ori'.; Inally been built upon a sort of 3ha)e which came out of the mines In Inn near neighborhood years ago. Theso Rhale mounds have been known to take years burning right through, and tho stench from them Is anything but pleasant Now, when It became known that the fire referred to was gradually eat ing Its way to the foundations of thn station, a mild sort of alarm began it be felt, not only by the railway com pany, but tho aristocratic passengers who dally use this suburban station. For the mines have been worked out, and hundreds of beautiful villas hava arisen out of their ashes so to speak. The Are gained ground every day. until by and by it reached beneath one of the platforms, and any day there after might bo seen the novelty of a crowd of poople waiting on a platform from the chinks and crevices of which were arising In many places Jots of steam from the Are below. Such a volume of water was kept continually playing upon it that actual flame a were prevented from showing above ground; but any casual observer could see tho evidence of the great heat below. In time It was observed that the foundations of the station were set tling and cracking and twisting lit many placei, and all sorts of efforts had to be resorted to to keep tla bu ldlngs from being permanently in jured. At this present moment as 111 ;so lines are being penned, tho firo has reached under tho main line of tho trnck and It is one of the curiosities of tho neighborhood to see the Jet of steam and smoko Issuing from be tween tho sleepers. It Is a foregono conclusion that thu fire cannot be extinguished, and it is being left to have Its own sweot wa and burn Itself out. Wlien this will hanpen nobody knows, as there Is a larso part of the foundation of the sta tion not yet reached; and as this has be n going on for many months, it is quite probable thai thli fire In 'he. bowels of the enrth will go on sainir!i under tho station until the buildings Mr ble about the passengers' ears. Tit-Bits. A Eismarck Silhouette. One of the prjnclpal treasures of the Hanoverian Corpi of Gottlngen Is this silhouette of Bismarck, which wbj rriarlo during his' resklenco as a s.u lent It shows the afterward famom lender wearing tho cap and badge of hi.? corps. Tho picture was the wort of a fellow Hanoverian who deveV oped considerable artistic talent, but who, history say?, went antray at th very opening of his career and found It neoeasary to first flee hla native town, and then. In poverty, take hu own life. Each new member of the corps 1 now formally introduced to the sil houette as one of the most Important possession of the body, and it occn pies a conspicuous position at dinner and other functions of the corps. Our Idea of an unpopular man I one with a fad for collecting bills. Australia has a huge public debt, amounting. t. $27$ for WW mai. wo man and cbjlij. while the I'nlted Btatei showa only U per capita.'-. Jpff