OVERCOME EVIL WITH GOOD. With burning brain and heart of hate, I sought my wronger, early, late, And all the wretched night and day My dream and thought was slay, aod slay. My better self rose uppermost, The beast within my bosom lost Itself in love; peace from afar Shone o'er me radiant like a star. I slew my wronger with a deed, A deed of love; I made him bleed With kindness, 1 filled for years His 90ul with tenderness and tears. —Robert Loveman in the Independent, iL PARE TRISTE. BY WALTER MATSON. — 1 Diego sat on the south side of the ancient adobe church of San Pedro. It was the time of day when the good fathers, whose lives had been passed at the now forgotten mission, were tak- ing their customary seista. It was Die- £0's time to be idle. He looked south- ward, over the almond trees just burst- ing into blossom, over the stubby vines that the half-naked descendants of a once lordly race were training for the winter's vintage, over the garden patch and network of irrigating ditches, avar she great tawny desert of death, toward the land of his birth, The wind, a very mild breeze for February, whistled around the corner of the building. It ame fresh from the Raton Mountains, It chilled him. He drew shelter, It chilied his heart also, and, as he looked over the orchard decked with fragrant he muttered the old proverb, “Presto maduro podrido (goon ripe, soon rotten). dently his mind was pre ted the range of human vision. With the involuntary came the thought of a had not heard own name, Diego whom he had lived imes knew it; Sebastiano, his breast a secret was a grave. He also rememt name had been giver his patron saint, descendant of a generate as he ing this fact. ‘El corazon manda las heart bears up the body), but I endure this forever. | the fathers ght vows.” closer to his promise, presto Evi- beyond jor axpression name that Le uttered his None th for years none confes was, The «an to carnes’ | musi speuk to-ni and take the Three years before, in month when the earth spring beneath the warmth of sun, a wanderer drew rein at the of the Mission San Pedro. His face haggard, his body we ifter the His he i ‘ak desert ride, rse was in as mentable a condition as its master was most boyish, even in the stranger young He youth is but a child and mounted he st the portal for swoon. [It was not h occurrence the AER OTO support the first ti had the lonely mission on the ele The good to do ir such cases more faithtal ic their lis serape, dicated the hidalgo., than have been had the objuct of their soli ftation been the t Iodian New Mexico, When Diego’ came to him iad passed, 1 but as often as he did so, Padre Sebas tiano bid him be quiet and wait until his strength returned. t chanced that on a summer's day, as he sat sadly in the courtyard listening to the trick- ling of the water, a hand laid on his shoulder, and Padre Sebastiano, Yending over him, said: “Tell me, my son, what troubles yon, Yon have never confessed, nor taken the Wessed sacrament.” “Not here father; not here! come into the chapel and I will tell you all; Lut when you hear my story you will tury tne out like un leproso.” “Nay; say not 80! The heart Mother is always compassionate and often, while you slept, my prayers have gone up for you to the holy San Pedro in whose glorious memory this humble mission was founded; but come” The old man led the way to th me $114 an appened ff 2) edge of the Wiha + 3 GR sert, Knew were becau dust-begrim t ed it was they would humbles in self weeks He strove to tell his story 0 3 he feit of the o the little chapel, frescoed by loving hands that had long since entered in*o eternal rest, whose altar was adorned with spoils of conquest and with relics from far-distant Spain, and thence into the confessional where none might hear Diego instinctively fell upon his knees and a shudder went through his well- knit frame as he thus began: “Father, pray for me. My sin | greater than I can bear. 1 cannot coa- fess it, even here.” “Proceed, my son. I trust you have repented. It eannor has sinned unto death.” “I have, I have.” “Tell me, and I will judge.” Thus encouraged the penitent continnad: “My name is Diego Dominguez y Agramonte. My home is, or rather was, in the Boulson de Mapimi, beside Laguna del Parres, You know the place, father—the fairest upon earth, and where the air is always fragrant with the perfume of orange blossoms and of more distant mountain Aowers, There | lived on my father's hacienda, ready near the city of Chihuahua, 1 had read much of the ‘maquina de vaho, but I wanted to see it for mysolf, and the peones who went away to work and came back jingling pesos, when Le. fore they had never seen anything greater than un medio, only whettea my desire to travel.’ “Ah, my son,” said the old man, in- terrupting, “the love of money is the root of all evil.” Nudl intravimus, nudi eximus,' “But, padre, it was not 1 was after. 1 wanted to So just before ‘la dia de nocue bueneg' I started for Chihuahua My mother blegsed me with tears. and my fa'ler, who knew my temper and inexperience, urged me to hasten back and take charge of the hacienda. vas the largest city [ had ever in, and I wandersd about the plaza for u day or two quite last m the crowd money that 30a the worid, beer seemed to have plzaly of money, and ‘no own everything, wand whon I thougnt how our beautiful Mexico had belonged to oid Castile an rad set foot on tae soil 1 hated the vp starts, I soon “ound fri who felt the same way that I did, and we picked quarrels with the g=ingocs until tre po lice interfered. “One night, after I had been thera about a week, we went to a fandango There I met my fate I took my seat beside the most beautiful senorita t I had She was not like our Coahuila belles, but her glinted like the ripening wheat on the uplands, and her deen dreamy blue, and her form heart. She threw back tilla that covered head at me. This gave courage, asked her to dance get the touch of her hand, a thrill that I had never before expe- I felt it often during the next two weeks, but I aN never known The next dance of my friends dropped a rose night was ner names i aie before A mas hat ever seen. dark hea eyes were a well my her and me n ai rienced or since gave to on and. : hey passed nu she my feet defor the ove knew all ato was Maria Sepuev Of cour been much s¢ shown nt This a3 constant as at a fandango, er window iid her all al de Mapimi, things quicl her at 1 ized Diego pat hoked tiano str Was ¢ oked not speak resume such happiness ever, It was te I was to return were at a far ANOS in great He 3 is man 8D gliver § deal and to gamble ent be golden) Hn together, | in her rattle the coins no lock the Key thay went on the floor BAW him whisper sweet words ear, just as [ had done ! in his pocket, and my art became hot within my breast wanted the next dance, but Maria paid no a me, She danced again with When they came near me I scowled ttention the gring He saw me and laughed a rering laugh and said something not understand the know the derstood him, tus and laughed also I could stand longer. | went oufkide into air. It did not cool me. 1 heard the sound of music. It had no charms { now and again, as I looked in, I saw Maria still dancing with my enemy For hours | waited At length the Americanos came out and walked ward their hotel. There were three of them. | followed like cat have followed that man to the end the earth. By and by he stopped Iv hind his friends to light a cigar. This was what | wanted In an instant my knife was between his ribs. He fell with a groan. His friends ran back, and while they stopped to raise him | escaped in the darkness. [ knew Chi. huahua as well as they. [I hunted up my friend Ramon, and told him ail about it "Diego." sald he, ‘they know you, and you have killed a great hidalzo. You must gat ors of the city to-night rght array. You cannot go home, be cause the police will look for you there, and the United States will never let the matter rest.’ “What shall I de?” “Take your horse and go across the river, They will never look for you in | his country. Here is money. Your | father will repay me.” “In another hour I was on my way, II thought that I would go to Santa Fe. 80 1 told Ramon; but the blessed moth- er brought me to your mission. Padre, will you turn me away?” “God forbid, my son. kill Senor Americano?” “That I cannot tell ‘Breaser.” word me She toward it no the cool to a I ecuid f ih But did yon I meant to’ {if you struck him only once. , Americanos have many lives. Do you .ever think of Maria now?” whole life must be one of repentance Do you repent?” “I do, Indeed; and pray all the holy Ora pro me.’ The confessor had self, and knew the great world far bet- than did kis companion. He dia not speak the word that Diego wished but gave him a kiss of ter to hear uttered, peace, and said: “Wait here; 1 go to consult with brethren.” The penitent was safe, but he would about his re. this asylum, He had nct The good man returned with the news that the exile might de- part when he wished The fathers, however, had learned to love him, and he was welcome emain at the mis. sion if he chose “Only,"” said the pr “if you stay you must earn your bread by the sweat of your brow. We hope that some day will be of : manner Jt guez y Agramonte, ruled and never 3 by ti the LARD J Lae the knew that his wondered what Bay gecrot Pas Sebastiano maining in long to walt ior est, you one us } that who this ame about Domini In Diego had went serves always out to Pueble and when hi would comt in the vesper endl height, The we The wy be felt darkness could almost step might not think of dering whence Were they from grimage to the Cy If #n oruld After doomed to meet and ona false a i$ Diego won- mean death this He these travelers Mexico, of the d wae came, making a Holy Faith chance re m thay neze him? Years was He these things before of a midnight hia Journey's end. Voices him, The gpeech was his mother tongue, On the ground near the fire lay a man moaning, his comrades doing all in their power to alleviate his suffering Near by, wrapped in blankets, was sleeping form. Diego tied his horgs and advanced toward the group. He 44 not gee a familiar face, The watchers rose to meet him, “Oh, padre, you are just in time, Jore is almost dead.” “Not so, friends.” he repiied in their own language: “he’s a long way from being a dead man. Put on some wood and mae a blaze. He poured some liquor down throat of the writhing wretch, bound up the wounds and set, as best he could. the broken limb. All this took time, and as the fire burned more brightly and the noise of the conversation grew louder, the form in the biankets moved Then the blankets were thrown back and a woman approached. He saw had plenty of tin ! ponder kering | discl reached oh ight campfire osed @ the “Diego!” El Padre Triste bounded to his feet and turned. The hair that glistened the eyes of dark. dreamy blue love or trouble. Thus time passed until I was nineteen years of age, when strange stories came to us sf the won- derful railroad that was coming from the Rio Grande del Nort», and was al- (bad as I had it in Chihuahua, and some. { times I think that if she were here | could kill her, too.” i i i ! gone. In its place was an expression “Senora Maria, how do you come | as I could, and then-—and then Ramon | sald he thought you had gone to Santa (Fe, and I ran away to find you." { “But, Benor Americano! If he had i been alive you would never have thought of me,” Diego sald bitterly. “Diego,” the old smile crept around the lovely mouth-—"Diego, Senor Amer- cano did not His wife came down to nurse him two weeks after you ran away He {as alive yet for aught I know, He just got a good lesson, and [1 wanted a little fun, you see, Won't yeu forgive me?” “Mariquita!’ | The next morning as Padre Sebas- tiano was looking toward the north- west he saw a cloud of dust approach- ing. It came nearer--a horse, and it carried two. Nearer yet, It was Diego, He smiling, and behind him, {a true knight errant fashion, rode a wo- man. The father, beside himself with amazement, ran out to meet them, and he never quite recovered from the sal- utation which he received Madre Dios,’ padre, I am glad 1 not take the vow.,”-—8hort Stories. die, WAS del I di Gunning of the Afridis. cketed, so that the invest Smith, York frontier, enemy, to us, of Sun Donaldson the Ney Indian LO n the the cident that this ore in 3 wires had been y prevent further od Kid had ia dynamite two of the poles CAs~ have > ago some dar a bungalow ' 8r Was gieepin lac of Largest of Pythons Hampshire had, thers than During that 1 i principally fare iwently years period it with ke, imes swallowed four R11 gus + fox iu it somet Its food was of- it once a week, but it some. refused eat for a month to- The specimen will be mount. the Tring Museum. Scientific at one meal fo to gether, What One Horse Can Eat “An old horse with an inordinate ap- is of the curiosities d on a recent trip to eastern Ken gaid Colonel Andrew Yates last night. “This ancient animal was once ridden by a mail rider over in West Virginia, and had to go in a jog from daylight till after dark each day, ex. cept Sunday. But after long service ‘old Bawley’ was traded off to a far- mer living over on the Kentucky sids of the mountain, and lie recently pen- gioned the animal, putting ‘Bawley’ on the pasture and letting him have ail he craved morning and evening at feeding time An ordinary meal for ‘Bawley’ is two racks of hay, thirty ears of corn a two gallon bucket of bran, a gallon of oats and all the stale bread and meat {3 the house, ‘Bawley’ is as fond of meat and bread as of hay and corn; and, in fact, will eat almost anything not drawing the line at fruit or sweet things. The four-legged gourmapd one broke in the hog pen and emptied a large trough of slop which had just been poured in for the porkera. His owner said he once heard the old horse whining in pain and went out and dosed ‘Bawley,” his imprudence in de. | vouring a bucket of new-made jam having superinduced serious ilineas but the horse was ready to eat the fol. lowing morning as usual.”-Loulsville | Post. Richest Princess. The richest princess in the world 1s ithe Crown Princess Louise Josephine !of Sweden and Norway, married to the in ii petite one ug NOTES AND COMMENTS, Minnie Powers of this city is feet tall, lacking one inch” young woman evidently stands high In the estimation of all know her, A dozen murderers are under 1 sentences in the penitentiary of North Dakota, and it sald that no man guilty of murder has ever been legally hanged in the State, in compliance with the verdict of a court jury. That very who fo is men to her army, and her naval ex- maintains in readiness by the England herself thing. peace for other Among foreign nations Japan is con- gpicuous for her activity in increasing her navy, At the close of the Chinese war she had forty-three warships, be- sides torpedo boats have added to her fleet six battleships of 15,000 tons each, six armored cruls- ers of 9.200 tons each, five other cruls- three torpedo stroyers and ninety torpedo boats, ers, gunboats, eleven de The failure of the harvest has causcd 1 among particularly destitution and distress tussian great the } peasantry in i t of Tamboff, s« are compelled thelr starving from the ch of their ¢ suffering 3 even greater than during 1801, which Was a the central and southeastern provinces In the distri mtheast of the h L& Af ’ MOBCOW people cattle RER he nia particularly sever peopl maladies of hunge beginning t ginning government unfortunate Typhus and ' ‘ other i exXposu w the 0 spread, #hot Lier fron roubies for can new I RDADETR va pes farmers ith symptoms t the mala imals ha Inve gtigation Agri POISONOUS This hi an ulture exterminate which end Agricultural Assistance ns 4 reaaqi £87 (G88 01 riteTr ype i $4 TN S42. 162.184 and silve ountry they must necessarily But as the mineral the United States is only i future » contents of « vet, par can ur hidden treas- + sil " % eioped; the alone ry by luring the data ne of the leading States adverse financ! year, it ap- compiled b companies «¢ embezziems other eriminal in the aggregate increase of nearly amount of money misappropriated during the year past In other words, it appears that dishonesty in the United States has in- creased twenty per cent during the year. This is a most appalling condi- tion of affairs, affirms the Atlantic Con. stitution, and naturally the question arises, is the home life of our people what it ought to be? Do parents rea- lize the importance of instilling into the minds of ther children right prin. ciples of conduct, or do the firesides of the nation rnoed ty be reformed in this respect? Too much stress cannot be laid upon the need of vigorous parental discipline, If boys are brought up| properly under the home roof they are more than apt «0 be upright and useful men. Of course there are bound to be! sume exceptions, but in the vast ma- | jority of cases this rule obtains. Most of the funds misappropriated during the past year are laid to the charge of comparatively yong men which makes the record all the more distressing and pathetic. The secret of Germany's manufactys | ing progress has profoundly impressed a deputation sent from Manchester | England, to study continental institu-. tions. This commission visited at] Crefield a textile and dyeing school of | world-wide fame, which is not only magnificently equipped for teaching every detail of what all nations have done and are doing in matters pertain | ing to textiles, but which makes every | effort to assist manufacturers and mer-| chants. A technical school found in: Darmstadt, a city of only 57.000 inhab- tants, is one of several now having equally liberal provision for giving the most advanced elesirical frstriction. Such schools have ceen stimulated by the success of the large and costly chemical laboratories, where the moat eminent men of science encourage pears from rex v {russ # i he United that nts defalcations and deeds foot make a 22 001 HO nis- up total in the *G 4 o # nst a ——————— A —— AA ANA HOR pupils to give five, six and seven years to study, the result being the easy lead of German and Bwiss manufacturers, especially the former, in the world of An exam- what this of scelentifie ple of poticy on Rhine, This establishment in 1%5 men chemists, 5.0000 100) trained aboratorics including over its themselves being on the scale of those a great university This factory chemical 1} duction of Germany's coal tar industry AFTER MANY YEARS. Meeting of the Colome! and the Mas Wao Saved His Life at Chancellorsville. A few mornings ago a tall, hand- some gentlemaw, with mustache and hair tinged with gray, walked through the iobby of the Ebbitt and stopped in front of the newsstand He was about to pick up a newspaper when a little oid man with gray, shaggy Burnsiders got up from his seat in of the lobby and walked over to him James RK. O'Beirne?" man asked. Gen. “and “Do JOu New York?” “Do | use 10 rem-mber hin one corner “Isn’t this Gen the Jitti Li FILL wy I am O’Beirne, sir,” reply, In who are you, ma) v } ov + remember Major remember h Ca life once “Well little ma person,” said the 1e eves of both ¥ ¥ 3 iet lung regiment af his off ()' Bel the fi New soon as he the broug wist EAwW ht before him as Boil and ome In Bell igited the an H woo whose saved his ad gpent a joined regiment ate lar Fouriezn Thousand Islands Tart ae Ying In hundred vipelago peveral miles sout southern point of Hindostan thou contair ftants, does not from the civilized a visitor has recently desc: islands Austrian geographical periodical number, it appears, not less than 14.600, and are all com- posed of rocks Few them more than seven cight feet above the sea-level, aithough they con- tain cocoanut palms and other forms of vegetation. Hundreds of little isi- ands, ranged around in a circle, with narrow and shallow channels between. form atolls, or rings, having quiet water within, Occasionally an indi vidual island is found in the form cof a ring, with 2 smooth lake caciosed in ts coral embrace. —Youth’'s Compan- fon. he hab tors ibad in 85 They coral} of rise or Heat Under Alpine Ssows. One phase of the construction of tun- nels through the Alps was recently discussed by M. Brandicourt, secretary of France, in La Nature. He showed that only a few thousand feet below the eternal snows of that region so» high a temperature may be found tha: workmen can scarcely live in it. Near. ly all of the other difficulties encoun. tered had been foreseen. This one was It shows how the interior heat of the earth extends above the sea level into all great mountsinous uplifts on the earth's sur. face, a Perseverance. The Chinese have the best illustra- tfon of this principle that we have ev. er seen. One of thelr countrymen who had been making strenuous efforts to acquire literary information, discour- aged by difficulties, at last gave up his book in despair. As le returned to mannal employment he saw a woman rubbing a crowbar on a stone; on in- quiring the reason, she replied tha: she was in want of a needle, and thought she would rub down the crowbar till she got it small enough. The patience of the aged woman provoked him to make another trial. —The Ledger.