THE CRY oF THE DREAMER. “I am tired of Planning and tol ling In the crowded hives of men Heart-weary of butlding and spoiling, And spolling and building again. And I long for the dear old river, Where I dreamed my youth away; For a dreamer lives forever, And a teller 4les in a day. “I am aick of the showy seeming Of a life that is half a lie; Of the faces lined with scheming In the throng that hurries by. From the sleepless thoughts’ endeavor I would go where the children play; For a dreamer lives forever And a toller dies in a day. “I feel no pride, but pity, For the burdens the rich endure: There {8 nothing sweet in the city But the patient lives of the poor. O the little hands so skillful, And the child-mind choked weeds: The daughter's heart grown willful, And the father's heart that bleeds. with “No, no! from the street's rude bustle, From trophies of mart and stage, I would fly to the wood's low rustle, And the meadow’s kindly page Let me dream as of old by the river, And be loved for the dream, alway; For a dreamer forever And a toiler dies in a day.” JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY. The Silver King. out lives in Berkshire, far a little inn, There stood upon a quiet country road, which the wood sign swinging at the door declared to be known as ‘The Magpie's Nest.’ It had been tl the number of magpies borhood straight door stood an oak-tree, among whose Year in and year magpie's nest, people believed magple returned regularly No very elegant ainment offered at the “Magpies Nest” either man beast its thought the fare good; and then it served to them by the most charming rosy-cheeked little maid, who wore cap with bright i } walst that by two hands maid, also, who rector of the the best of neigh the bec the be fore a century ause us named in +c} na uppermost out, always hung count which the the same ry that old entert or but pat could been and had only Betty might stout farmer and he “Magpies master, con where he had several years and ered Betty did no keeping father sec i i Gf ure his John pu silver ring abroad, perhaps by gift, per} many things in It Was not a co not W aps it would be Betty valued it polished to perfection with great pride holidays: but though and looked forward day with jov, bright, wore it and John, wedding on days loved her she would not manner which always belonged her. She with the farmers, flung them back repartee for mgartee, and even gave them those bright glances which John the soldier, thought shou be only given to himself. So John grew jeal- ous, and, being a moody sort man, sald nothing about it It never entered Be the very chanted to alter the had joked coquettish to of mind that had once en- offend him: angry with her and manner wi John should and she herself grew lover for his s Therefore, when a young man from Marseilles, black black-haired, and polite in his man ners, as Frenchmen usually are chanced, in the course of a business Journey, stop at the “Magpies Nest,” ghe felt that he really would be a fine example for surly John Leaf and was amiable to him to a degree that might have made a less jealous man angry. Then, indeed, John Leaf spoke out, and Betty discovered the secret of his ill-temper, Her pride being flattered thereby, she forgave him, and retired on Sat. urday night with the firm intention of winning back John's smiles on the morrow, her holiday, when she would £0 to church in her best attire and charm his heart from him over again, as he walked by her side. What wom. an ever had any design on a man's heart, ever desired to win from him any favor or any gift, that she did not bethink her of ail her finery? Before Betty slept she took from her trunk her Scotch plaid dress, her fringed shawl, her blue-ribboned cap, her Sun- day shoes, and her silver ring, and having given the latter an extra pol- ish laid them where they would mest her eyes the first thing next morning. John Leaf, sulking in his room wun- der the garret eaves, had no thought of this. Those slow natures do not forget and forgive in a hurry any more than they do anything else. The morning sun, against the inn's walls, aroused Batty with his first rays. She rubbed her eyes, opened them, put her little feet upon the floor, knelt down and sald her simple prayer, and then flew to ihe glass. I: was only a crooked now owls French- coved to but sufficient to make happy. She braided her hair, put her cap, buttoned her dress, tied her throat the gay neck-ribbon. her shoes geometrically, and for her ring It was frame, her on about laced then looked gone! She knew the very spot upon the heart-shaped pin-cushion into thrust the needle over ring had been hung. There stuck the needle still, It was the window-sill, on a HHttle it could not have rolled out: but She shook out bed-clothes That which she had which the sliver table; it was not in the room. her dress, her shawl, her She swept the floor. It was gone was the end of it. Betty down and bitterly. All the country people of the day were superstitious. The ring had disap peared in a most mysterious way, for her was bolted, and her window high from the ground, and she firmly believed that the loss portended some great evil Meanwhile little sat wept door of the inn a on. glass at the bar was going The had asked of who was always tapster mornings, had drawn as their hands me upon the li i thick that scene Frenchman ale, and John, on Sunday for him, the act, of his the very had for a when, he customer a saw counter monsieur of the ring, he said, with rt of catching where you got breath “May 1 ask jt? “Ah, Frenchman certainly,” does not i. irl gave me that Yes, and " John turn face any florid » IO t out of the kitchen near the door in her holl- th her white cotton gloves ag pie hattering id turn answer coul ‘hed straigh room Betty's ood going to church asked y } imagina and whe magpies chattered nests y mild fancy their that her unde the with sat with Then the grew wroth fear 1 DOv “If the old find it ge out magples ne, t the heen one the hey'll peck some time,” said be in It's fye boy known to dane often.” But away “I'l about my and leave t the noisy sion of that ing.’ So the boy He planted a ladder against and then swung out upon the branches. There was a grievous noise, and doubtless to this day old magpies tell their children of that massacre of the innocents at the great oak- tree, no birds to chatter and scream in that great rag of a nest which the boy's hands clutched at last. He came down with the relic in his hand, and stood , had John Leaf, the soldier his superstition. magpies no more,” he said. ot a nest of them all rascals will take posses- old rag if it is left hang- all have Cars chattering “Up Some those of obeyed the tree, “Eh, master! may [ have all 1 found in the old nest?’ he asked. “If it is not a magpie's egg.” “It’s a silver ring.” “Let me soe 11.” cried John Leaf, and It was the ring with which he had and he knew that the magpiss had stolen it, and that the Frenchman worse one that resembled it. The first thing that John did was to call himself hard names: “A jealous fool!” “A suspicious brute!” Heaven knows what else. Then he n'@ted, and all by himself in the wood beyoad the { { { i Betty If she suli lived on earth. Where he went, of whom he inquired, matters But day when the he opened to which he had and saw at her knitting, covered porch, his Betty, single bit And she? and did not know sallow face and his not one been directed, under a vine changed one looked at him wooden leg “What may she asked, And he said And she cried out John Leaf!" Then he sat her side ‘You know I never had many Hetty,” he said to the point at once. 1 know true, and no cheat, never my ring found {t—or my did, very good at climbing now magple's nest in the oak- you be wanting, sir?” “Betty! “Why, mercy, it's down on a bench close words now that and that you vou were gave to iad for I'm not in the old 7" sald birds before “So the magpie stole it. eh “Well, they I've heard they've now." are strange taken spoons And so, Betty,” sald John past and let bygones a happy man.” no sald re bygones, John “if you'll be bygones [I'll be “1 owe vou grudge, Through the g in and a sllve the ing mi with finer, who led by hand chile iy ‘ Y ot 1 him to ask ing, ar mine It Mon sald Betty him proved sieur, how a name i aa Big Louis Both are Papans, ‘Big Louis” th mot} an i A influen Louis” Louis’ and pounds Finally Big ing, but Little now f¢ larger Xty stopped Kept on. and weighs two hundred and si while lig Louls” needs make him weigh full Mr, Curtis visited both has a dancing pavilion one he saw at an eastern Friday night he gives a dance, and hundreds of people attend it. He has a lemonade and cigar stand in connec- tion with it, and entertains as well as of the experts in this line. ansas City Star. ETrow the an overcoat two hundred “Big modeled resort io Louis after Every the best i Coon and Muskrat Fight. Mr. J. Hal Grimes caught a muskrat in the freight office at the depot. Joe Booth thought his pet coon could “do” the muskrat, and in order to see whieh was entitled to the belt the two were placed in a slatted box-car, the coon being favorite, They had hardly touched the floor before they began each other up. like he would be a sure victor, and the But in round number two the musk- rat put on his fighting clothes, and no coon before ever got such a walloping. His child-like screams led a number of residents of the neighborhood who didn’t know what was going on to believe that some mother was whip- ping her baby at the depot. At the first pass in the third setts the coon ran up the slats to the top of the ear and refused to fight, while the musk- rat walked about the floor as if to say: “Bring on two or three more just like him. "Harrodsburg (Ky) Democrse PONIES OF ICRLAND. a — PERFECT MARVELS OF ENDURANCE. They Have a Peculiar Pacing Cait Which Under Great Weight Conquers Space-- a Coat, If the camel is the ship of the desert the Iceland pony {8 the ymnibus and tramcar of the wonderful ountry which he belongs, To be Zin with, he 1s a misnomer. He is not + pony, in the ordinary sense of the word, he is a horse in bone sinew, in strength and endurance, manners and deportment—a horse in sverything, in fact, except in inches; and a sober steady, hard-working horse, He {8 very "multum Arvo, a “concentrated essence’ norseflesh He can swim like a fish ‘Hmb like a goat and jump like a deer He sticks at nothing, and takes every variety of travel lava owlders and grass mounds—with listurbed If he kh ‘ord one or two rivers with stron flowing girth deep, work Only give him time halts for refreshment do his per pon cab, to too sand, un bog bed equanimity cents the ind periodical and he and th day's will miles day rive u Iceland ponies n the no taken tion half hands, improved care is though here and there the standir average pony leven and a half to twelve ¢ from e lf hi Very vi kewbalds ommonest fine the rd jest be Are ht points, Is ery I'l r ACES Are fev his are in poor and stored re who fal alrly during the w hay: but, notwitt nany of the well inter hem on hard owever ponies have a The Icelanders h as their means al together in a well ow, and treat them al wrotherly fashion THE DOC AS FOOD, ‘acts That Klondikers May Learn Through Experience, more we know of like dogs men, the misan ani be writes that gr Toussenal inhabitants of the not know men sufficie vell that they still regard the dog asan animal. and one of the most of morsels But #t is to be says La Nature, that in the pro- gress of civilization a day will come vhen these brave animals “candi lates for humanity” according to Michelet's picture BGue expression ¥ill no longer figure on the menus of tate dinners at the Court of Peking Darwin relates somewhere that when he inhabitants of Tierra del Fuego are wressed by famine they kill and eat heir old women rather than their logs, and that in Australia fathers will sacrifice their children in order that he mothers may be able to nourish his useful servant of man The Chi. 1ese, however, logs carefully-—to eat. They also con- dder the cat a choices dish. © Noir, in his “Travels in the Far fast,” relates that in the markets of nany cities are to be seen dogs and eat friend of Perhaps it is the rmpire do Celestia id ntis *dible as MYory oped, or tall, and that on most farms these inimals are kept in little coops like tencoops. They remain thus from two 0 three weeks, condemned to almost cmplete immobility, and are fed oa tothing but a mixture of rice and far- na. We do not know the adible dog sr the edible cat in France, and proba- sly since the siege they have been but ittle served—openly at least—on the #bles of Paris restaurants. At Peking md throughout China, however thers § 7s dainty repast without its fillet or eg of dog: the cat is rather a dish of he poorer classes. These same customs that are so re- wiisive to us as to seem like a kind of emi-cannibalism existed, nevertbalres among the people of classic antiquity. History tells us that in early times the dog was always regarded as an edible animal, The Inhabitants of certain nomes of Egypt plously embalmed their dead dogs, but others considered that it was more in conformity to the rines of a wise economy to kill and them. Plutarch tells that the where dogs were made war the rinchis, who had committed the of eating dogs, In his book Hippocrates, speaking of com- | mon articles of food, is of the opinion | that the flesh of the dog gives heat and strength, but difficult of digestion “Our fathers,” says Pliny, “regarded small dogs as 80 pure a food that they Even Is served at And rd doct eat us honored as divine, on sacrilege in victims voung dog's flesh 8 held in honor of the gods on “This meat was us tallation feasts of the pontiffs Apicius, who has left us treatise on “Cookery.” the Romans ate also adult dogs The of North America lack of provisions, often sacrifice companions of the chase, We that before the introduction the in Mexico used the freely as food that complet i Rpts to-day feast further the ins According a curious in to for their BAVEROS are told of cattle x ’ ’ 1 Spaniards dogs jes na- tive the 5 ed peared the dogs BO has Accord of New Zeala lothed now ing to ( natives and « them BO BOmeLimes tL eat iced to red » lower Con jatek es mage evoary ' Maced with fam- ¢ MN. d a total of § boys earned $£13.- $0.263.12 From boys saved 34.42 N8.21 been acquired t it Plays Possum, should unexplained remark hy any owl be call norepork owl is and is clever in a cousins Australia a Way i 4 naturalist who has just written an interesting book on Australia, the morepork, which was called to his notice one day as he saw drive by a van filled with screeching, tumultuous parrote, cockatoos and butcher birds A pair of moreporke, mere fluff-bails. with gleaming golden eyes, wereamong rabble and Mr. Saville-Kent at bought them and transferred them to his domestic circle. The owls turned out to be such marvelous “guick-change” artists that the amuse- ment they afforded the family, which owned a camera, was boundless. The peculiar specialty of the morepork is that it can stiffen itself so that even close at hand it is Impossible to dis- tinguish it from the dead branch of a iree Again, it assumes a dignified cast of countenance which is ludicrous. or is sentimental, sad or even gay, as it chooses, The morepork has been grossiv slan- pays especial attention to this once but its friend, Mr. Saville. Kent, has at last freed it from that stigma, and explains in this latest work that it only keeps the goatsucker company—another instance of the evil results of choosing disreputable asso- ciliates, Killed by An Apple. George Hall and F. G. Leigh, of East Bridgeport, Conn., were coasting dows a long, stecp hill at Daniel's Farms when Hall's bicycle got away from his control. He was hurled headlong and struck violently on his left side upon a hard appie which he had in his coat pocket. He gasped a few times and dled — New York Herald WES TERN FARM | ABORERS, “Birds of Passage” Who Work in the Big Wheat Fields, between the There July, during “hands Dakota wheat-farms to ripen. In fact, except of men who regularly upon each engaged ploughing season, during harvest, and for threshing comes the most important scient laborers. Frequently birds of passage millar to the foremen, but May apa army of on these North wall for the crops the half score employed are in seeding-time, the is a season which who work are all the the big place who upon men farms at when the men work BECARON do tran are fa who are they faces whose homes Men whose are may be a thousand miles of this Yel now from his loved employ the the BWAY character are not hoboes and then & “harvest laborers comes harvest-time harvests June hi northward the Red River Working closes in pay sands them for ex thous: de into th ‘blind When they hay T DARRARS scenery they nent homeward Worn a1 2 deserts of New Mexico odd great num ike strange branch- ins, mere round b They that Are ETrow SOme Darts always tough skin creatures is drearv wastes in water they are v oat But strong ships like battle guarded by and prickles when they are Pp spines fine hairs that burn into the flesh A Millionaire's Cenerosity. Wilber Scott the made millionaire king, came to the re- lief of H. A. W. Tabor, a former United States senator, and Colorado's first millionaire miner, last week with a purse of $15,000, which he begged Ta- bor to accept as a testimonial for what he had done to develop the resources of the state. For many months Tabor has been on the ragged edge of fortune, and has tried to recoap himself by entering the prospecting field. He staked a promis- ing mining claim, but could not get funds ‘or developing it Then he thought of Stratton and applied to him for a loan. Stration had never before seen Ta- bor, but was familiar with his history. He promised to take the matter under advisement, and five minutes later sent a package containing the currency, with a letter requesting Tabor to aec- cept the money as a gift. —New York Herald, A “ible 350 Years Old. Apropos of the item printed in “The Reco 57 of the 224 inst, concerning a Bible once owned by Martin Luther sry sow in the possession of a Chica- goan, a Frankiinville, Penn., corres- pondent writes: “I have a Martin Luther Bible that was printed at Wit- tenburg. Germany, in 1546 It is bound with wood, has brass corners and weighs 11% pounds.--Puiladeiphia Record. Stratton, newly