! I e Long Life To Ceatti I c I &i mi ii Ml i -ui.--jiiiI' -; .. The co:-n-'.'a r cot:r.:o:i-u.' beamed 1U" n s ir:: ;aer's moon as U rising tide of voices broke into pea'.s of tei'gTitc r across the tublo. "No, no!" Latimer protested, break ing In upon what prnr.usid to bu tho (oolonol'h hand-hour ho'r.lly to the hot (blood of youth. "No crown of year.! mad honors for mo. please." "A short death and a merry one is good enough for Latimer." Burke in Urrupted. "With a quick death end a sure some one else supplied. "And a large cold bottle and nn other one," Hurke continued, runt-inc the toast down to a finish. Above this uproar of protest and ap plause a clear soprano lifted. "For hes a Jolly good fellow," and the colonel, having gotten only so far aa the battle of Gettysburg In hU remarks. Joined with a will in the chorus and forcot to fini-ih the rest of his one, time-honored speech. Whether the drawn lips framed the words or the cry of her soul thrilled the Question to his own. Latimer could not have said, but aga'nst his will his yea turned to those of the woman be aid him. "For a send-off," he explained with verdone nonchalance. "I got my or 4ars yesterday." Other than an ail but lmperceptiblo Straightening of her shoulders the girl gave no sign she had heard. "Azalie is more radiant than ever to-night," a plump matron leaned cross the colonel to say to a red-hair-4 girl, noting the effect of the un wanted pallor and burning eyes. "Why shouldn't she be?" the red hstfred girl snapped in answer, "with two-millton-dollar count for a hus band?" "la It announced?" the plump worn a gasped. "I had heard nothing of It She has decided then between the oswnt and General Espendola?" "The mere fact of the colonel's ssAdlng her in to dinner with a no-aady-ln-particular like Lieutenant Ittmer points to the fact that she tea decided upon one of them but is aat going to announce it yet," the red Badred announced with an air of su parlor wisdom. "Ah, yes," agreed her fat friend something like a sigh; "I sup even Azalle could not stand out lflBg against two millions." Hare a sudden outburst of laughter at the other end of the table gave Latimer the further chance to add: ''Of course, this is sudden. A sol Oar's movements are bound to be. an know." The shadow of the wr.v:ng, inter 'Ming vines fell in delicate tracery flka the meshe9 of net upon the asm and the wo...:i at his side, and Jfcs heavy fra"" ince of the air drug tad It wit!', bitter-sweet memories -feat would cot down. "But you are ordered back to the "sited States not to Mindanao?" The voice of the questioner and the jrms of the question brought Lan ier up with a pride in the sporting lood of the Dons. He could not see 'to wicked little half-moons her nails ere cutting into her palms. Noting their apparent lack of inter at In each other, a man leaned across e table with a story meant to sti:r.". :te conversation, at which Azali arted her lips in a smile that seemed j pass for mirth. A scarlet cnmelia ad fallen from its high estate in tV lne-black masses of her hair nr.'.' ung rakish);.' over her ear, but she .id not c?.ro. "Latimer if nt i; nv-.'.n, making hr.r ith the lust r-y left." the cV-"..l ent towa'! the r ) rc.n to rry. "ho, seeiiii f:irt'.:( r thr"i the hn: -.ces and the p'e.vi.ing shoulder' implies into the f.u.T.v whitene gainst the t:r i " rt.: ; of '.he men, r.cd d, addlr.--: "Th:- days of our yo :t';i re the day of our i.'.-;r.v," and tl.e vo gray h-ad ler.-.ed el.' .-or to mourn :gether their lost p: r:u! '.--?. "This is r n e hr of your own Peking?" a Hfe'o--.-: :o at Us el- -w aroused La::. .or. "lam art'r? ir-d--.- o.-'. r-" Lr.'!;:-'-: pated, rcr.-ir!.''.; f.r the tn.y In .ont of him, hit the h:.r..l that rolled 'a cigarette was not r. '. the hand .'the man who he'. d :i.eil: '..- for Uiari: ansbip. The red-h-lrc-d girl, Kpr'r. ;::;; ct; !( upon Latii..-.T's unguarded :i.o aat, caught, too, Az.ule's futile ef .rt to raiso her f jik to her lips. "Why, what's the matter with you, salle?" she nslted, directing tlie s" attention to the- girl's nervele-o nd; "your ring positively clatter. ainst your pia'e." trying to hatu ht r ther beauty and great luck. And Azalie, da'lii.g of the god-, jklng into the glitter of light and lor before her, saw only swirling ickness. The niht was sultry to location, but the erect, white flg- shivered. Twirling the heavy seal tg on her flnyer, "this in a most ' -jeresting ring," she said quietly, taing the point of contact from her nd to the heavy ring upon It. "It a history." "And that Is V Burke Questioned, Trying on an animated conversation th his neighbor and hearing every ing else that was said. "The poisoner's rln- given my andfather by Maxlmillian when he nd their cause was lost," she en tered briefly. ' Latimer, listening to the cool tones d steady voice, went down on the es of hla soul to this daughter of a ' Ad red Dons, although he thanked start for this chance to make hla final adieux in public. 8he might weep and swoon or snap her fingers In his face, Latimer had fancied, but this high handed counter-play had never suggested Itself in connection with the mercurial Azalle. An unwelcome vision of the thln souled little wife at home turning him back to Azalle, Latimer whispered softly, "I hope the gods have another meeting in store for us, and that you will not forget." The rubies in her breast flashed like a Jet of blood from a thrust, but the smoke wreath she blew from her lips Interposed a moment's merciful yell before her eyes. "Here's at you ngain, Latimer," Burke, always to be relied upon to do the right thine; at the wrong time, chipped In. "Here's to your safe voy age home and sure return to the Phil ippines." And as the evening waned and the toasts went around the table, tha soprano girl sang to a three-string accompaniment something about lovo and death and evermore, sometimes on and sometimes off the key. At last Azalie poised her glass In mid-air. "Is It a pas soul?" the red-haired girl asked, noticing the tension of her poise. "Long life to Latimer," some one proposed, seeing the glrl'a Instant's hesitation. "Long life to the girl I left behind me!" the trial-apropos Burke again in terrupted, having caught something of the aide-play between Azalle and Lati mer during the evening. With eyes dilating, bosom heaving, radiant, reckless, Azalie faced Lati mer. "Long life to death!" The next instant glass and ling crashed upon the table, the wine tains streaming like blood upon the floor. MARGUERITE STABLER. Crovt as Enemies of Tsrraplns. The crow Is the evil genius of the turtle Just as of the diamond back nd other terrapins. When the warm days of spring come and the female terrapins and turtles leave their beds la the marsh, the crow goes on guard, knowing that a season of feasting Is at hand. Both terrapins and turtles k the warm, sandy uplands near tha shore to deposit their eggs. A hole is dug several Inches deep and from 20 to 30 oblong whlta eggs are deposited and then the nest Is filled or covered with sand. Having neatly piled the sand over the eggs tha turtle raises herself just as high aa it Is possible, then comes down with a heavy thud on the sand. This la con tinued until the sand la quite hard, when the eggs are left for tha aun to hatch. In the meantime the crow haa been on guard, and by means of his sharp hill and strong claws the work of breaking Into the treasure house of the unsuspecting turtle la quickly ac complished and the feast Is soon over. The crow Is considered by many to be the greatest enemy the diamond back has. It Is an easily established fact that the crow destroys thousands of the eggs of all kinds of terrapins, not making an exception of the dia mond back. Physicians' Confessions. "I often wonder," said Dr. Jay F. Schamberg at a recent meeting of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, "how many of our cures are psycho logical. Some time ago I had a pati ent with a severe case of eczema. I sent her to another physician to take sea water treatment. I kept her un der inspection, seeing her twice a week. Immediately she began to tell me how much the sea water was help ing her. She said she was getting better every day, and yet the eczema kept getting v. orse so far as I could see, and I co'ild seo that she was scratching it more all the time." "I have a beter one than that," re joined Dr. C. K. d? M. Sajous. "A man brought his daughter to me for treatment. She had lost her voice. I tried the battery on her, and her voice returned perfectly in a short time. The father was In such glee that he hugged me. When they had gone I happened to loo't at the battery and saw that the current had not been turned on." Theology In the Highlands. The minister's class nt the kirk of Tobermory had been reading the story of Joseph and iiis brethren and it came to the turn of the minister to examine the boys. The replies to nil his questions had been quick, intelligent and correct. "What great erlu.e did these sons Of Jacob commit?" "They sold their brother Joseph." "Quite correct. And for how much?" "Twenty pieces of silver." "And what added to the cruelty and wickedness of these bad brothers?" A pause. "What made their treachery even more detestable and heinous?" Then a bright little Highlander stretched out an eager hand. "Well, my man?" "Please, sir, they sell't him ower cheap." Too Great a Loss. - Whoever knows anything about the small boy and his pride in his first pair of trousers will recognize the truth of a story the Philadelphia Pub lic Ledger prints. Tommy was at Sunday-school In his first "real" clothes. A picture of a lot of little angels was before the elans, and the teacher asked Tommy If he would not like to be one. "No, ma'am." replied Tommy, after Inspecting the picture. "Not want to be an angel. Tommy!" reproached the tencher. "Why not?" "'Cause I'd have to give vp my new pants," said Tomr y, srjely. THE COLUMBIAN. GO IN HIE WOODS FOR SPRUCE GUM There Are Men Who Make a Business of the Trip Into Maine's Wilderness THEY CALL IT "GOING GUMMING" From 25 to 50 Work the Maine Woods Each Spring Leases from tha Lumbermen May Pick $8 Worth in a Day. In the early days of April from twenty-live to fifty athletic, canvas clad young men start for the up-river woods from Bangor, Me., and nearby towns to collect spruce gum from the more than 20,000.000.000 feet of spruce timbers still standing in the northern forests of Maine. Not a few of these men are the well to do Rons of old families, who go "gumming" partly for profit and part ly as a pastime. A majority, however, are trained climbers who know tho woods and who break away from side walks and electric lights to gain health and money at a time of the year when lumbering operations are drawing to a cloae and before the streams open up for driving. Instead of being a solitary and silent man the gum picker as a rule Is as talkative as a book agent and as Ingratiating as a poor kinsman In straitened circumstances, says the Boston Herald. For, in order to se cure exclusive control over the gum territory he desires to monopolize, the picker must claim lease over spruce timber lands whose owners he has never met. Before he can do this he must ingratiate himself Into the favor of the camp bosses and their subordinates. A pan who can sing a rollicking song or tell a lively story Is welcome. The travelling outfit of the gum picker Is very light. A set of steel climbers, such aa are used by line men, a heavy and broad hatchet for cutting oft the gum and for scarring the trees for the making of more gum the next year these with tobacco, pipe and matches, complete his rig. His food and lodging are given to him by the boss of the camp where he chances to stop over night, his cheerful ways and the Jews he brings from the outer world more than pay ing for all dues. The picker who gleans his harvest from the same trees year after year erhances the value of the holding greatly, though this value applies to the gum alone, for the trees are not materially affected. The owners of the woods are too busy to spend time In allotting gum areas, and as the In come from gum picking Is never large and. the time of picking lasts but a few weeks the harvesters cannot af ford to pay the fees for drawing the leases, to say nothing of giving tribute for the gum. A "smart" man working In an old gum orchard of thrifty trees that are scattered widely enough to admit sun light for ripening and hardening the gum can under fair conditions collect in a day from eight to ten pounds of rough gum, which on cleaning will shrink two pounds, worth $1 a pound in the cities. Before starting out to operate n gum orchard a picker must spend one sprin;; fn marking and scar ries tile tree-;, so as to make sure of finding gum er.o.-.sh to pay for his la bor when he c.ll.s arr.:nd a year later. Thi.' is i'o:,e by c'.in.bins a thrifty tre? to riinv.. the old limbs and high into the s;in'ii;".'.it and scarring the FOi.t'l side of the trunk between the whorls of limbs with deep incisions sha; ed like a V. The spruce .'.p exudes from these wound.-; and moving downward along the cut is dried in the sun until a pitchy cru.-t is formed, which fends off the bits of bark and spills blown about by the wind and prohibits the entrance of inquisitive bees and other Insects. Thu! protected from harm, the embryo nugget of gum continues to grow from the inside by fresh sup plies of resinous sap and to harden from the outside by slow evaporation. The sun goes away south, winter ar rives and the sweetening frosts re move the pitchy and acrid taste, leav ing from a score to a hundred of sweet and ruddy nnd cryst;UlUed "teats" of genuine spruce gum. There are good reasons why the harvesters should choo?o April as the month for the tasks. It Is then that the gum Is in Its ripest and best con dition, not so old as to be bard and crumbly, not so young as to be soft and taste of pitch. Tne scaly crust above the winter enow banks among the trees Is then as smooth as glass, carrying all the gum which escapes the hand of the picker into the hol lows among the drifts and holding them safely in plain view until they can be picked up. Before the end of May the coming sun will have warm ed the tree trunks and set the old wounds to bleeding new sap, thus spoiling the harvest for another year. If he Is an old band at se.llng In the city the gum hunter will charge from $1 to 11. DO a pound for bis gum. If he Is new at the business he may sell to some sharp broker or druggist for 75 cents a pound. If he likes to baggie he will call around from place to place and In a day or more can sell out for $2 a pound. New Edge to An Old 6aw. The hand that stirs the kettle Is tho hand that rules th world. Balti more Sun. BLOOMSBUTS& ULru.ili I'fl P. ifli'Jlitl ".t -6. Ra.' tcy, ' c.-ty-six Inches Tall, and her Ti Bnby Alive, Well and r . c gret sing. Philadelphia. Surnical experts an1 marvelling over thu wonderful or? come of a Caesarian operation per f is mod on .Mrs. Lawrence A. Ram sey, who, three weeks afterward, re ceived her friends, nnd showed them the tiny baby. Seldom do both mother nnd child survive this critical operation when the former Is of normal stature, and Mrs. Ramsey, who is twenty-live years old. weighs only fifty-seven pounds, and is only forty-six Inches tall. Lit tle Miss Ramsey weighed four pounds at birth. Her parents are the midget team in vaudeville, known as Wels nnd Ramsey, the mother, as "Queen of the Lilliputians," being well known all over the country. She was mar ried to Ramsey about a year ago. Mrs. Ramsey toid her fiends of the operation and said: "I sat up In ten days afterward. On the fifteenth day I walked, nnd a few days later I left the hospital. The care they gave me was lovely, and 1 was such an unusual case that ever so many doctors and surgeons came to see me, and they were all very kind and considerate, and said it was so strange they would not have believed it if they had not seen for themselves." HUNT FOR MEANEST MAN ENDS. Sarcastic Mount Vernon Shopkeeper Fined and Sign Must Come Down. White Plains, N. Y. Old Scrooge might be a philanthropic Carnegie alongside certain tightwads in Mount Vernon, but William Frledberg has no license to determine publicly who are the men who would squeeze a dollar until the eagle yelled "Help! I'm melt ing!" For conducting a voting con test to determine the meanest man In Mount Vernon Frledberg, who keeps a cigar store there, was fined $5 by Judge Piatt here. A warning went with the fine. Frledberg lives i Astoria, but does business In Mount Vernon. He placed In his window a placard: "Come In and vote for the meanest man In Mount Vernon!" This was followed by a list of names. Conspicuous In the lot were the Mayor and Chief of Police. Then came many solid and staid citizens. After every name was a number signifying the votes the owner of the name had received so far. Great was the wtath of the so called "meanest men." Frledberg was ordered to take the sign out of the window, but he refused to do so. His indictment for libel followed. In court uo pleaded guilty, but asserted he did not know he was violating any law. SHEEP LEADS A DANCE. Heads the GranU March at Butchers Association Festivities. Wilmington, Del. At the annual ball of the Wholesale and Retail Butchers' Association the grand march was led by a sheep. The sheep, which readily obeys the vord of comaiand. Is a pet owned by H. T. Derry. It was decorated with gold and silver trimmings, and rs the orchestra struck up tho opening strains of the march the sheep strut ted down the ballroom floor followed by the long line of men and women in attendance. The animal led the marchers through the figures of the inarch without a mistake. COAL FIELDS WILL LAST. Expert Geologis Says Pennsylvania Mines Are Good for 80 Years. New York City. Prof. Win. Urlfflth. a Pennsylvania mining expert and geologist, a wltnesj in the suit of the government against the anthracite fj:: carrying railroads, estimates t!u -u; ;'y of coal tinder ground in tho !':. :i,-y!v .nla fields at 2,22!.201.;:.) ton.; and would last only about S! j-r i:-;. II.' nuid this estimate for the b-.nUir-R firm of Harvey Fisk & S' ns, v. '.: v, :i:.t- d to know conditions before l::yi:;i: era! bond Tl2 Minister .ens Overi'ls. Mr-ive'tine, Mo. This town a short t!-.:e fir. i- voted out saloons. Rev. ("has. K. IVtrre gave great influence In ridding the community of these places, and as he was walking down the street he passed by where the fixtures of the "White Elephant" were being loaded in drays awaiting ship Hunt. The saloonkeeper, seeing him, asked the preacher if he would vote a man out of town, and then refuse to help him move. Rev. Petreo went home, put on a pair of overalls, and was soon back helping to load the goods. Woman Plans Tramp In Africa. London. Miss Charlotte Mansfield, a young writer, sailed for Cape Town with the iutention of starting on a lonely tramp of eight thousand miles toward Cairo. Two thousand miles of the Journey will bo through the wilds of Central Africa. Miss Mansfield's only escort will be thirty native car riers. A South Carolina Wedding. Winnsboro, N. C Mr. A. U. San ders and Miss Zulu llollis of Great Falls drove into town Monday at noon and went at once to the residence of the Rev, A. J. Foster who united them in marriage while still sitting In the buggy. Hatpin Length Limited by Law. Salem, Ore. A bill prohibiting the wearing of hatpins in excess of ten Inches was passed by the State legls-'ature. iilt KAOLOCKED revolver. Novel, Sight for a Man Unaccustomed to Shooting Galleries. "Maybe It was because 1 don't go around much among shooting galleries that this sight seemed strange to me," said a man who commonly stays pret ty close at home, "but in this gallery it certainly did surprise me to see a big revolver secured to the countor by a padlock. "They Imd a lot of rifles there, magazine riiles, tho all lying with their muzzles toward the targets handily across the board, but that one big revolver was padlocked down so that nobody could pick It up until it had been unlocked. 1 wondered at that. Were they afraid somebody would carry It off? "That seemed scarcely likely, for It was as big as a cannon, a .44, and a man wouW hardly try to slip a gun llko that In his pocket with the gal lery man standing by. But pretty soon a man wanted to fire this big re volver and w hen he ramr to handle It I thought that perhaps we could see the reason why It was kept chained. "The rifles were long enough so that when you threw the muzzle of one up it went above your bead and above those of the bystanders; but big as It was the revolver could still be thrown up to a point where by care lesshandling you might shoot yourself or somebody else with It. Maybe that was the reason why they kept the b'g revolver chained, so that people couldn't pick It up and handle It. True, It would be supposed to be unloaded when lying not in use, but somebody who had used it might have left a cartridge In It, and, loaded or unload ed, a gun Is a dangerous thing to handle; you never can tell. "Anyhow this big revolver when not in use was kept padlocked to the counter." In the Heat of Battle. There had been a hotly contested football gam-3 between the Steam Rol lers of the Benjamin Franklin School and the Avalanches of the George Washington School. It was won by the Avalanches. After the game was over and the contestants had return ed to their various homes, one of tha heroes of the winning team complained of a feeling of soreness in the lower part of his neck. "I didn't feel It until Just now," ha said, "but It hurts like sixty!" His father examined it- It began to swell, and was very sore to the touch. "I believe your collar-bone Is brok en, my boy," said his father. A surgeon was hastily summoned, and made an examination. "Yes," he said, "the bone is frac tured. How did It happen, Walter? Do you remember anything about It?" "Why, yes," answered the boy. "1 remember that when I tackled Skinny Morgan I fell on top of him, and 1 heard something crack, but I thought it was his collar-bone." Melody on the Farm. If you like music and pretty pic tures, you can have them at your will by getting up early on the farm and listening to the songs of the birds and all the signs and sounds of nature's resurrection. You can hear the chick ens, the cows and the hogs the neigh ing horses as the farmer comes with their feed. You can hear the voices at tho lot as the boys or the hired hands draw water for the stock and make ready for the day. Then, as the first long golden lance of light strikes don across the silent fields, you can see all the lifo nnd hustle of another opening day. And all of It is sweet, and brlngeth peace and joy as we lind out sometimes when we have left it and pine for it again. Sylvania (Ga.) Telephone. Health and Mountain Climbing, if women (and men, too) would take suitable exercise, eat moderately and slowly, and get all tho fresh air pos sible, they would not in middle life ac quire figures so ungainly, feel so averse to physical effort, or drop off with heart failure. Even stalr-climb-Ing is better than nothing; for the last year or two, though there is an ele vator, I have done four flights several times a day. Reasonable mountain climbing will bring or preserve health, Joy and youth up to really old age. It does not require great muscle and brawn, nor the overtraining which strains the organs and compels con tinued exercise or collapse. Its vic tories over nature leave no sting; the paths are open to all. Annie S. Peck in Collier's. Caught on the Rebound. The old man was lecturing his mora or less wayward son on the evils of getting up late in the morning. "Remember," he said, "that It was the early bird that caught the worm." "But how about the worm, dad?" queried the youth, who thought ha had his sire up in the air. "Where did his reward for getting up early come in?" "I am informed," replied the old man gravely, "that the worm was on his way home hadn't been In bed at all." And there being nothing more to say, the young man said nothing. Fogs and Wireless Telegraphy. It Is one of the many marvels of wireless telegraphy that the ether waves which carry Its messages, un like light waves, suffer no absorption In mist or fog. Quite the opposite. In fact. Is the case, for the effect on them of clear sunlight Is so marked that they can be sent with equal Ini tial power only less than half the dis tance by day as by night For this reason press dispatches and long dis tance messages sent by wireless teleg raphy are, whenever possible, com mitted to tha either wares after sunset -Illll-x' CAUSED MUCH COMMOTION rll- mi tin have had iin nil j, Tli-y more trouble at our meeting Iioiim-. I.n:-t Sunday Rev. Mr. Moody r, ju t h ---inning his sermon and r.-ui utiiic thi' words, "Brethren. wish to direct your attention i'njj irrrning to the fourth verse of i;J0 twelfth iliMpter of Saint " whin a hen oTii'Tgrd from the recess be. ni -ith th" pulpit. A she had jun In Id an eng. she Interrupted Mr. Moo dy to announce the fact to the ron groftatlon; and he stopped short she walked ont Into the aisle screech. In-! Ktik-ituk-kuk-kuk-te-ko! Kuk-kuk-kuk-kuk-te-ko!" Mr. Moody contemplated her for a moment, and then concluded to so o:i; but the sound of his voice spew ed to ;jrovoke her to rivalry, and so she put on a pressure of five or ii pounds to tho square Inch, and mi such a racket that the preacher stop ped again and said. "Will Deacon Grimes please re move that disgraceful cbickeu from thf meeting house?" The deacon rose and proceeded with the task. He first tried to driv her toward the door, but she dod'tet' him, and still clucking vigorously, got under the seat In the front pirw. Then the deacon seized his umbrella and scooped her out Into the aisle again, after which he tried to "shoo" her toward the door, but shn darted into a pew, hopped over the parti tion, came down In the opposite pt, and in the side aisle, making a noise like a steam planing mill. The deft con didn't like to climb over after her, so he went around, and Just aa he got Into the side aisle the hen flew over In the middle aisle again. Then the boys In the gallery laughed and the deacon began to grow red In the face. At last Mr. Blnns rame out of his pew to help, and as both he and the deacon made a dash at the chicken from opposite directions, she flew np with a wild cluck to the gallery mod pitched on the edge, while she gave excited expression to her views by emitting about 600 clucks a minute. The deacon flung a hymn book at her to scare her down again, but he miss ed her and hit Billy Jones, a Sunday school scholar, In the eye. Then an other boy In the gallery made a dash at her, and reached so far over that he tumbled and fell on Mrs. Mis key's summer bonnet, whereupon she said out loud that he was predestined to the gallows. The crash scared the hen, and she flew ever and roosted on the stove pipe that ran along JuBt under tbe celling, fairly howling with fright In order to bring her down the deacon and Mr. Blnns both beat on the lower part of the pipe with their umbrellas, and at the fifth or sixth knock the pipe separated and about 40 feet of It came down with a crash, emptying a barrel or two of last winter's sool over the congregation. Thera were women In the congre gation who went home looking a If they had been working in a coal mine and wishing they could stab Deacon Grimes without being hanged for murder. The hen came down with the Loepipe, and as she flew by Mr. iiilins he made a dash at her wisn his umbrella and knocked her clear through a $K pane of glass, where upon she landed in the street and hopped off clucking Insanely. Th u Mr. Moody adjourned the congregu t ion. They are going to expel the- owner of that hen from church when tin discover his identity. Very Toii:pliii. A man was brought before a '..' t!io of the peace (.'.'.urged with t'.- eft use of a ki.'-'.-r; a young woir.aa "by force and violence, and agan.' hi r will." The joung lady, who was v :f 'i.iiidsonie, ae her testimony in i mod- st and straightforward manic r, after which his honor gave the fel loe. i:g decision: "The court in tl.ii !!;.-? sympathizes with the defendant, and will therefore discharge him. '.vi'hout fine. Imprisonment or n-prl-r.'.i'.nd, because the comt while tills in'o has been in progress lias been o'.di:e.l to hold on to both arms of 1.1s chair to keep from kissing the complainant himself." Has Many Crowns. The Czar has us many crowns as a fashioable lady has hats. He Is re garded by his people as a religious u' w ell as a secular monarch, and there fore has crowns for every possible i-tuto occasion. Tho R-n-dan Imperial crown is modeled after a patriarchial miter. Five magnificent diamonds, -liiiu ou a lic.fc.; tiowing ruby, or the cross at the summit. Diamonds and pearls of utmost perfection ren der tliis crown unrivaled among all others, and there is one sapphire in it which is taid to be the finest ston of its kind ever mined. Smile's Face Value. Although most of us would hesi tate to express what might be term ed the face value of the "modern r-nille," we certainly realize at time that It Is a form of currency which Is depreciating. In the "modern smile" we recognize the crude, oO rlal thing which neither Illuminate, cheers, nor bridges awful gaps of al ienee. It may savor of suggesting wave of Imbecility to declare that wa ought all to smile more; but Is is certainly true that the charm of woman's smile was once esteemed even above beauty. ; i