Lazy. When a feller’s good and hungry, Then he cain’t work no mo’; He's got to do some eatin’ To make the old wheels go; An' when he's hen to dinner An' stowed away a heap. Then what's the workin'? A feller's got ter sleep. use 0’ comin” mo'? 0, when's that good time When we don't work I'd like to go a struttin’ To that there golden sho’, An' loosen all my buttons An’ eat a mighty heap Of yallam yams ag’ possum An' an’ eat an’ sleep! no sleep love th’ I'd stream, ter my there big an’ drear a catfish de pan eatin,” sleepin, tin man! The Houston Pos! J : “They That Have Eyes.” ne5d52525 252525252525 2525252525 05 The of uncertalin 3 who maiden lady ireak fast m, Was finding atllence prevailed taste, She the merry, rounding table old man divided his a cast furtive, | chatter who + his beefsteak presenting any advar i an Sudds dreamed m ver 1ang watch Rympain she remarke rather the % nestle o ven YORICE in't as your boat approach- t? going to ask what it Then, looked rath was like to opposite her went on to explain *It city, you know, and bul 0 close together that at a dis lance some say it just like a flight of marbh stairs carved of the mountain side on which it rises; and others have to a snow drift, and a great chalk pit—"' Oh, yea, 1 recollect,” said young man, glibly, though his toid that he didn’ recollect at ‘Yeu, Algiers is very, very white stayed there almost a week “Then, of course, you visited Great Mosque,” sald the maiden ag; but suspicion shone in her “1 have always longed to soe mosque,” she added, quietly. “It I belleve, the most wonderful archi tectural monument of early Moham- medan art remaining to us.” “Ah, yes,” sald the younger wom: an, smiling brightly, "We It was wonderful. and elabc rate decoration!” appeared as the faces er blank, moat you.’ she is such a 1s or By white looks le out Hkeaed It the tone all We the eyop exclaimed the malden woman. have always understood,” she added, almost severely, "that it is the utter Inck of decoration—simply long vis tus of white in proceeds, which produces “ msoque its unequaled effect ness and mystery.” The young man laughed “Jove! You're as good as a book!” he said. His wife merely “Perhaps you are the cathedrals Spain The maiden woman's gan to revive, “Oh, tell me glorious piles of of vast guide murmured —— right § ol were lovely.” interes: be of ireasures abhout some What them contain!’ "1 don't know I'm they or many -oh! ves, of course, do,” replied the young dreamily, “But they were lovely So solemn sure woman, er You altogett gloomy. thing. The maiden the =) could hardl enthusiasm woman's subject Tell leonine asj me you?’ she i faces he lies Of « View the lion Spain what and ston that IY up They greate No good m procecded toward 3 ticed that the crusty had risen also, walking from the room with bh » jooked up and caught her y with that was almost affad and wasle of mon vad them ere, and pleasure “Sheer nse ey for that” alone nons young up e to BO abr like he sald out in a fie! derive as from IL." as far as two are quite agree with you,” maiden woman, them atl! man. ‘Same with on thelr wedding trip. King at each oilher they another thing.” dawned in the plac |SOMewn i much and benefit “Weil, corned, | plied the “Same with crusty young f Bo busy never ace A light con re those d the h all retorts old ols lo face of murmured gently, “lllustrated Bits, "Oh!" she dersand now EDUCATING crow INDIANS. They Object to Saturday Holiday. At the meeting of the New York City Indian Association in the Colle giate Church, on Fifth avenue, the { Rev. Dr. KE. E. Chivers, whom the { Crow Indians recently elected a chief | of their tribe for his services to them i as fleld secretary of the American H=ne Baptist Missionary Boclety, spoke of the Indian school which he "The Crow sald Dr. Chivers, in Moalana numbering and although they have not verted to Christianity, they appeal to me about two years to for their chi in Large Mont, The sehool which we founded there as the result of this differs from the usual Gov. Indian schools in that it is the homes of the Indians, permits the children both home, flans are 0 glad for opportunity that they and +} i { Choo! 1 “are a tribe about 1 been con sent an REO school ldren Grass built near and BO school and live at this pre- dispense “The In¢ ational exellent order the need of the neces BOTrVi with nO) of a One SHTYy Indian schools Indian White Government the ne shows gif of The grattity notably lands 160 acre Th JAPS MAKE GOOD BALLPLAYERS on the Diamond-— Show Great Skill Are Death on Fly Balls. naval from Bal those and Wis timore Herald The Service of Publicity. Recent events 0 lands Il as here ha id reason the the in New newspaper discus ont to exe other wol able A% an agent York we sion dizpute have ses force the city governm right aw but for the inquiries, expos the re Comptroller complete that proddings monstrances o cute a safe 10 sas the the ures, 1 { the press, Grout the gone and Commissioner Oakley, approval, would on thelr way, lighting monopoly would have firmly strapped upon the city's back And if we Jift Russia at this moment, how signifi cant is instinet of tyrannical re pression in muzzling the press! poleon IIL did not make more telltale haste in suppressing Charivari after his coup d'etat. It is a French writer and publicist, M. Bonal, who has put the truth in con cite form: “Grant that a state may Mayor's jovianlly up our the say nothing.” The press, like every other human institution, is open to criticism; if it 1a wise, It will give heed to Intelligent objections and complaints, and will mend ita man. ners and its morals alike; but it will receive the objurgations of delinquent officials as a welcome sign that it ia rightly playing the ‘part which Romilly assigned to an untrammelled and plainspoken newspaper in a free country. ~Evening Post, WATER lamb, vim; That’ couldn’ Yonkers; TOO MUCH little full of gtreel, Mary had a And it was it got in Wall The lamb it i the end wim. Stat