MORNING AND NICHT. A little plea A little space of pai And then the solemn And space of then-—the A little song and story In sunlight and in rain; A little gleam of glory And then-—the dark again! The darkness, gleam of And so it g And And so, life With then the light; is good morning, night! titufion sad thoughts of good Atlanta ne iser's Secret. (‘ons for whom they had farm during left to take care of itself and produce whatever crop it saw fit; consequently the fertile dense growth The stock had a time, 1 covered of weeds and been sold off, a fes only a small number acres were briars sinntil uni horses remained broken-spirited which to cultivate the patches sit gity forced them to till As the years continued to sli Mrs. Furgis Albert lowed her.and the two remaining chil- dren were left alone in large, caving house. Harold and his continued to work the patches the house, and vear after year mort gage a few acres of land for mony to pay taxes, not daring to sell or rent, for fear their treasure would fall in other hands than their own. Through the long years of foolish and profitleas died. Secon the gigter about it did, was not acted on, that in the farm they had a fruitful and unfailing source of revenue, One day early in June as Harold gat on the moss-grown stoop, gazing dreamily out on the luxuriant and tangled undergrowth, a peddler cross- ed the stile and labored slowl” beneath a pack along the paved walk. “Would you like to purchase a di- vining rod?” he asked, placing his pack on the ground. He held out a polished metal rod that flashed bright- ly to the sun. How is to retain his curi The peddler carefully manner of operating it, Have sold many?’ a old “Not near ter Gael you here," reached this sed returned “have just Name lot,” sald low est Harold vOUI figure for tire jmpatiently, promis not any more { nty, and them A an end he con mounting a chair holding Harold was when kab at his side, candle and cobwebs » 4 groan, the « came to the door and repeated it harsh s dilapidated note; there was a the in a heap. There was a shriek Ow ing tumbled and the sputtering floor ran guilty thir They stood in the em- moment, panting peering turtively into hastened to their apart candle I« to the and the from the hall fright dark ments two like FOOL, nty with the for a and then Morning was stealing gray and shad through quiet old building when Harold stole down the stairway to where lay scattered the wreck of the old clock. He searched amid the de- brig, and brought to Hght a bit of yel- jow, time-stained paper. He brushed the dust from it and read, in a cramped handwriting, the words, "To my wife.” At last. There was no hurry now, Harold ras perfectly calm as he pushed the paper in his pocket and stepped to the stairway to call his sis- ter. She came down presently, heart ail a-flutter with agitation. “Harold, have you found #7" asked, huskily. He bowed his head, and the giow of triumphant satisfaction on his face OWS the rimsc a (4), i Wii perhaps a greater ow all am sare y I will be brief left an orphan couple nd which bones gine; the dust from sawing ie bones is food for cattle ind poui- try: the smallest bones are made into boneblack arh foot vielde a anarter pint of neat's foot oil; the tall goea to the soup tha hrpneh of hair at the end of the tail is sold to the mattress maker. The choicer paris of the fat make the basis of butterine; the intestines are used for sausage cas- ings or are bought by gold beaters. The undigested food in the stomach, which formerly cost the packers of Chicago thirty thousand dollars a year to remove or destroy, is now made into paper. These are but a few of the pyducts of abaticirs. All scraps unfit for any other use find welcome in the glue pot or they do missionary work for Jarmers by acting as fertilizers.” of a while Culengo experts, after a few years ment, sav it is equal to granite ana much better than asnhsit or cedar block paving. Tt 13 cheaper, too. » NOTES AND COMMENTS, Mr from Henry M the matrimonial At last Stanley emerged hs which y plunged some Years ogo Indl overed Madis County that he ha 1, he'd before it on A farmer in ana, announce (din iL new corn better look { after it a little becomes Loo troublesome, now twenty-sey United States membership on descent from an pends distinguished themselve who to America an early ng partici luncheons method, | cold enti mati and { perience that they france in potatoes 11 cooked; If-bot supply a and roll, and will extract plate cold meat, with salad nickel of ten centimes piece of bread and butter and chesse Besides all this a nickel i of hook excellent gl vessels in or a ‘brioche.’ will draw an from one of the the centre of the cafe arg large ” two Again the important question, "How long are Women Beautiful?” is dis- of beauty does not reach itshrdiudiu cussed in an English journal, one writer maintaining that “the fullness under the age of thirty-five or forty.” This claim is disputed by another writer, who cites the opinion of women themselves, ag chown by the undoubt- ed fact that "any woman who craved admiration on the score of her per- sonal appearance would be vastly more pleased were her sge to be guessed as being thirty rather than forty.” it all depends, as Pitti * ing would ob- serve. The race aw the must be considered shriveled or fot nnd enspoless grand mothers before they reach the age vel eianli which i beauty POBBCHEION Monthly the cele announces In the Atlantic brated African explorer his return to the literary worksh gome length th the dark contin AEO of central ODBervi sidewalks them o1 fower serve would be persons nudged in the protruding and sharp elbows There is nothing t participants and nothing more laugh able to the spectator than fo persons dencing np and down and tak- ise both the more annoving LQ iwWo Oe gids each nig a series of steps 1 started lo pass other in wrong direction The bicycle ig unconsciously teach- fg peonie how 4 { each other's way. Any one who does not think the result is sure to be bene- ficial ought to attempt to stem a crowd coming from a theatre or crossing the bridge at rush hours. There will be no polish left on the rash individual's shoes, there will be mud staing on his garments, and a feeling of deep, hitter resentment against all mankind in his bosom New York Journal besl 10 ey out of In 1806 300,000 visitors, represent. ing forty dicerent nationalities, paid admission fo the house in which Golf was invented by a lonely Scoteh shepherd, who had nothing than knocking ad York Expires Suddenly, to the Strain Incident to His Exciting Campaign—His End Was Peacetul and He Passed Away With a Smile on His LipseSketehh of His Varied Carees, { attained a worid In 1838 Mr. George ra r Mayor of New York, i and polled coming in second in race, Last year he was an upporter of William J. Bryan. He we nominated for Mayor of Greater New York by the Demo- eratic A we and other associations of Democratic and free silver clubs. He was naking a vigorous campaign when sud- denly stricken down, consi GRO— the nt = Ir Animal's that Da Not Graw Thirst How long would you be contented without a drog yf water to drink? There are many different kinds of ani- mals in world never in all their lives sip so much as a drop of vater., Among these are the llamas of Patagonia and the gaselles of the far east. A parrot lived for fifty-two years in the “Zoo” at London, England, without drinking a drop of water, ata many naturalists believe the only moisture imbibed hy wild rabbits is derivex] from green herbage, laden with dew. Many reptiles—serpents, lizards and certaln batrachians-live and thrive in places entirely devold of wa- ter, and slothe are also sald never to drink. An arid district in France has produced a race of non