1 I I u. if 10 elusion, "you will see me to-morrow; if yon do not seeme I shall be at rest in the world forever. J cannot be unhappier in hell than X am now!" With these words she vanished, to fall lifeless under the oul murderer's hand. My assistant, Grope, brought me a num ber of letters he ionnd in poor Ella's room. These were all written by Cyril Dnrand. They ran through nearly a year. Arranging them in proper eruer I reached the follow ing facts: The earlier letters were all in one Une, that of the deepest lore. The man, Dnrand. reerets his Dovertv he was an inventor, the creator of some kind of elec trical machine of which be had the highest hopes, but which he conld not sell, as it was supposed to infringe on some other patent, whereas he asserted the patent in lringed on his rights. He was not rich enough to go to law, bnt he was ever on the lookout for some mon eyed iadividual who would take an interest in him. One of the sentences from an early letter I extract as of come bearing on the case in hand. It read: "Oh, Ella, darling, if you only had a little fortune, a few thousand dollars, we could speedily become millionaires. But there is no luck for us, and you must labor and I starve." The question of money was always cropping out, and by degrees it seemed to absorb his love. The letters be came more formal and business-like, until tbey developed into a note like this: "Dear Ella I shall not see you for some time. I bear there is a project of lighting Eglatine Hill by electricity, and I ana told that it I can prove my claims to priority of inven tion, I shall have a chance. I am going down there. Please, now, put a chain on your impetuosity; don't dog my footsteps. In place of being a stimulant, you are a weight on me, with your wild jealousy. My success means happiness to both. If you love me, trust me; otherwise I am in de spair." Prom this point the letters grew savage; sow and then there break out little phrases of tenderness and remorse, but as the rule the woids must have been poisoned arrows to a tender heart. Here are some specimen sentences extracted frem several letters; "Xbu must not come here again. Your per petual dogging is an humiliation. If you insist on playing the tyrant, I will kill my self! I must have money, and I will have it Tour jealousy and" persecution drive me to drink and the gaming table. I am becoming reckless and cruel. I have ceased to be worthy of yon. My hopes are shat tered, and I only know peace when I have dulled my brain by alcohol. Do not come near me now; I am more brntish than human! My poor little Ella! That was a Bigh from the dead past. Forget me." The following is the last letter; if the woman was sensitive, she would not have l'elt her death blow after reading it. "Your suspicions are right. Make the most of my admission. I warn you to keep away from me now, for I am dangerous. I hate you! I hate you! I hate you! Curse the world! myself included. Think of me ns you please, but keep away from me, or I trill kill you. (I, Detective Fox, italicize these significant words.) I hsve lost my Eelf-respect; I am ground groveling in the dust; I am a beast, a coward, a hypocrite, a slave. I hate you, and, knowing my cow ardly nature, you know what that means. Any change is prererable to my present con dition, which I have brought on myself, and deserve. Yon must not see me again. If you do, you will take the consequences of meeting a human hound who deadens his soul by alcohol!" This letter was written and posted two days before the murder, and to it, no doubt, poor Ella referred in her parting with her landlady. I will.add that Grope questioned the conductor of the train that stop at Eg lantine Hill, and this condnctor distinctly remembers having received on the day of the murder the fare from a young woman whose description corresponds with that of Ella Constant. He recognized her, as she had been a frequent passenger on his train, and always attracted bis attention by her nerv ousness and anxiety. Three times on the day in question she had said to him: "Be sure and step at Eglantine Hill!" t JOnder the circumstances the arrest of Cyril jr 'arand was imperative; but it was equally Imperative that I should not leave my present field of research. I had sent one message to the city concerning this man, and by Grope I now sent another urging a Particular lookout for Cyril Dnrand, whom again described for the benefit of our polit ical superintendent My duty was more arduous and puzzling, but its complexity only added to my energy. Having dispatched my agent to the city, I strolled in the direction of the old bouse by the pond, trying to hammer into shape certain ideas that were haunting me. My actions were mechanical, but when the de cayed old building loomed in front of me I determined to give it one more search. Glancing down at the pond I saw that the water had risen above the line of the foot prints that I had measured yesterday, but nowhere was it over a foot deep, and I could see clear through it to the bottom mud. It was alive witn tadpoles, and a couple of bare-footed boys were amusing themselves by aiming at the harmless animals with heavy sticks. Entering the old house I gave a compre hensive glance around me, and I was will ing to swear that some person or persons had been here in the intervals between my two visits. In the first place, I discovered the stump of a candle, which I ara willing to swear was not in the home when I first visited it; in the next place, the ground everywhere had the appearance of having been disturbed. Here and there the tall grass was rooted up in patches, and over in a corner a large colany of toad stools had been deliberately knocked off their stems. "What surprised me was that the party or parties made no attempt to conceal their depredations, they had seemingly acted in defiance of the fact that the lynx eyes of a detective were surveying the entire field of action. What were they alter? People don't come to out-of-the-way places, and tear up grass for the fun of the thing; and it was a natural conclusion that the unknown visitor or visitors, had come for the purpose of finding something. Was it something they had lost? 1 did not think bo. and for this .reason the crass was only torn up in certain places. When a thing is lost it might be lost anywhere; the depreda tins in this place suggested system. Were they looking 'or anything? That is, for something that had been hidden and not lost It was probable. Traveling over the cround en hands or knees this probability became a certainty, for here and there I iound the ground disturbed as if somebody bad been digging into it I saw the marks of feet on the monld as if somebody had been pressing it down to conceal their work. I counted five disturbed places. I determined to indulge in a little exploration on my own account. I took out my penknife and amused myself by digging in the same places in which the vis itor had dug, and was more than rewarded for my pains. The third spot I attacked yielded me unexpected treasures, for I dug up a tin box in which druggists do up seidlitz powders, and on cutting the string that tied the box I found the following ar ticles: One solitaire diamond riug, one em erald ring surrounded with pearls, one bracelet representing a serpent, and a plain gold chain necklace; in fact the same arti cles that Mrs.G!aye described as stolen from ber. Evidently she had been robbed after all; but it was equally evident that the thiei who bad hidden the articles had been robbed by another thfe , for the papers were missing, the papers relating to Mrs. Glare's personal affairs. The party who tore up the grass and dug into the ground did not want the jewelry, but only the papers. On the other hand, the party who robbed Mrs. Glaye wanted both jewelry and papers. Here was another nut to crack I What persons liv ing at Eglantine Hill were interested in Mrs. GJaye's personal afitirs? Twist the suljcct as I might, I could find nobody but the adopted daughter. Bertha, who would fit in the vacant position. If .Bertha was the guilty party, I argued this way, she was only interested in stealing the papers, and she had taken the jewel simply to turn attention away from hcrse! , under the supposition the papers contained some thing in which the was interested. Granting this hypothesis, the robbery became a simple matter; for Bertha bad free access to her mother's room at all times and free opportu nity to rob at her unsuspected leisure. The fc!y more I thought of it, the more willing was I to accept this "provisional explanation. But who was the second robber, and how was the discovery made that the stolen papers were hidden in this deserted old building? I am willing to confess that I had no answer to this question. Perhaps, when the nature of the contents of the papers was re vealed to me, the object of both robberies would be made plain. I derermined to ques tion Mrs. Glaye on this point Did the papers have any bearing on the murder? That also remained to be found out Per haps Dnrand had his finger in this pie. as he had his finger in the other pie. Perhaps it was pull devil, pull baker between Durand and Bertha, both struggling lor the money that Mrs. Glaye held on such precarious terms. I thrust the jewels in my pocketand tnen left the moldy old house. I decided that my first duty was to have a little con versation with Mr. Otto Morton. In the first place, I could get him to talk readily on the fascinating subject of Bertha, and in the next place compel him to give an ac count df his actions on the night of the mur der. I hurried to the wharf and round Morton alone in a rowboat just about to go out fish ing in deep water. I descended the steps, leaped into the boat and smilingly hoped I was not disturbing him. "It you have a second fishing line, Mr. Morton, I will willingly be yonr com panion." "Who are you?" he asked, with an angry frown. "Detective Fox, at your service!" He glared at me for a moment, then seized the oars and rowed out into the cur rent "What do you want with me?" he asked, after a little pause. "Several things; bnt first of all to assure you that I would be your friend if you are willing to meet me half way. To be frank with you, I think I have discovered the murderer, but without help I'm afraid that the innocent may be harmed before I reach the guilty parties." "Doyo'u refer to Miss Glaye?" he asked, anxiously. "Yes, and it will be a pity 1" "You do not suspect her?" he said, with a dangerous light in his eyes. "With your help, I hope to remove her out of the line of investigation." "To save her from an hour's pain, I would sacrifice my Hie!" "I will not ask so much," I answered, dryly. "I shall only demand what yon, as an'hocest man, should be willing to an swer." "Then drive ahead." "Why did you tell Miss Glaye that you were in the citv on the night of the mur der?" He stared at me with ludicrous amaze ment, then said: "To save her from knowing what I know." "Yon saw Mrs. Amelia Glaye on the night of the murder?" Again he stared at me. "Yes." "Would you mind telling me about it?" He paused, rested on his oars, frowned, then began to row again. "I may as well tell noff as any time!" he saia gloomily. "Far better now than at any other time, for Miss Bertha's sake." I answered, with meaning emphasis. "What did you see?" "Durand had begged me to meet him at a certain hour in the evening, as he wished me to assist him in a certain matter which he was to tell me when I met him. The hour he appointed was 7 o'clock; but I was un fortunately detained beyond that hour in the hotel, and when I reached his house he had gone out." He pulled vigorously at the oars for a mo ment, then continued: "It was a dark, unpleasant evening, and I was returning over the fields when I heard two people speaking angrily together. It was up under the trees near the pond. For reasons which satisfied mvselt then, as they oawaiy wc nun, JL uclcriUlUCU lO listen, an easy business in tfce darkness. I crept down toward the, pond and easily hid mvselt. The woman was Mrs. Amelia Glaye", the man was Cyril Dnrand. "He was begging, she was threatening; then he begged and she threatened. The quarrel was about some woman whom Durand had promised to meet that night Mrs. Ulaye forbade him to meet what she called the 'creature,' and he in sisted that he must meet ber. She got into terrible passion, and said these words, that still ring in my ears: 'Cyril Durand, if after what I have heard, you dare to meet this foul creature, Ella Constant, I will kill yon and I will kill her. If you have ceased to love me, so much the worse for you; but I will hold you to your promise even if I stain my hands with the blood of murder." She strode from him and be fol lowed, and I soon lost the sound of their voices. I thought nothing of the words at the time, imagining they were merely the ordinary threats of a jealous woman. But imagining that Durand might still need me I returned to his house and waited. I waited and waited, bnt he did not return. I took a little walk and then went back to the house. He was still absent. I did not like him, but I was sorry for him. On my way home to the hotel I met Dr. Brandt That was my experience on the evening in question. When I heard of the murder yon may im agine what horrid meaning I found in the frenzied words of the jealous woman." He leaned on his oars to wipe the perspi ration from his face, then quietly continued his rowing. 'This is all very important, Mr. Morton; but it the woman, Mrs. Glaye, committed thr murder how didsbe dispose of the body. Surely she was not strong enongh to drag it down to the wharf and throw it over." "I do not understand you." I gave him a brief account of the doctor's theory and of mv discoveries, not forgetting the shoe and the bannet "I can't explain what puzzles you, Detective Fox. What I heard I heard; for the rest you must draw your own conclu sions." "Good. Let us now return to another subject You know that Miss Bertha is only an adopted daughter of Mrs. Glaye?-' ""I know it, and rejoice that that woman's blood does not flow in her veins." "I believe that Miss Bertha has no monev of her own?" "She has none." "You know of no papers in Mrs. Glaye's possession that would have any interest" for Miss Bertha; that is, papers which, if de stroyed, may harm the young lady you are interested in." "I have heard the young lady speak of certain papers that she would lite to have in ber possession, but I do not know their nature, as I bad no right to ask." "Miss Bertha spoke on this subject more than once?" "Several times, but never in detail, and it was a joke of mine to laughingly ask her, when we met, if she had got those papers yet" "I am very much obliged to you, Mr. Morton, and if you would row me to land I promise not to trouble jou again." "Yon intend to arrest her?" "Not just yet; she is safe enough where she is, and my investigations are not fin ished. You need not alarm Miss Bertha yetjMji fact, you will be wise ii you say nothing of the business to ber." "You need not i"ear," he answered earn est) v; "she shall not hear any bad news from my lips." He rowed me back to the wharf, and I leaped out. Glancing toward the hotel, I saw two figures pacing slowly ud and down on the. veranda at the back of the bonse. That is, I caught glimpses of them at odd intervals as they emerged from the shadow of the bouse into unobstructed view at either end of the verauda. The figures were those of Mrs. Amelia Glaye and Miss lone Grande. The sight gave me an inspiration. I hastened toward the hotel and entered it. Whisper ing a lew words in the clerk's ear, I as cended the stairs and stopped before Mrs. Glaye's room; the door was locked, bnt I had little difficulty in opening it Once in the room, I advanced toward the little desk, and, thanks to the knowledge previously gained, I uressed a certain spring, and a secret door flew open. I did not touch the little jewel case, but I boldly abstracted the dagger lying beside it, and thrust the weapon in my pocket closing the door of the hiding place. While the opportunity offered, I took the measurements of one of the good lady's shoes, and found it corre THE sponded exactly with certain footprints that I had measured in the mud of the pond. I then left the room, and closed and locked the door behind ine. Everything seemed plain, enough now, if one wereonlv willing to leap at conclusions; but the trouble was that there- were several items that disturbed me, and would be the better for explanation. It is a maxim of mine that nothing is gained by haste, and that a quick ending is generally a very un satisfactory ending. 1 now began to see a case where wheels were working1" within wheels, where large crimes aud small crimes were mingled together in tempting out an noying comparison. A hasty step or action were now worse than a mistake; it was nothing worse than disaster. There must be some guiding thread through this maze, a thread which I must discover. And it came soon enough, sooner than I expected or even hoped. But it is more frequently accident than design which leads to success, and conquest is not so much wisdom as op portunity. Once more in the open air, I breathed freely, and walked onward with brisk strides. Glancing back, I saw Miss lone Grande standing on the end of the veranda lacing me, at the back of the honse. She recognized me and bowed, and although somewhat annoyed at being seen, 'I gal lantly took off my hat and returned the salute. I then continued my journey, but now plunged down to the shore and walked onward. When I was behind the shelter of a high rock, I paused and drew the dagger out of my pocket. The ornamental metal case did not interest me, and so I drew out the blade and studied it The end of the polished mesal was stained; yes, and stained with blood. A few fragments of the dried clotted stuff dropped into my hand.. I did not return to Dr. Brandt's cottage until the dinner hour, when he again treated me to the most tempting repast. The spray ofgoldenrod that I had seen in the morn ing in the window still remained there, showing that the doctor did not share the little Ione's anxiety. I was more charv of drinking wine on this evening, for I believe it was drugged for the kind purpose of put ting me into a sound sleep, as on the even ing'before, although then it bad only mud dled me. Not to arouse the Doctor's sus picion I pretended to drink it, but the handkerchief, a large red one, "with which t wiped my mouth, received the larger portion of ray share. If Dr. Brandt was cunning, Lecoq Fox could give him points and still win. I retired to my room that night, but not to bed. I sat down and patiently pieced to gether the fragments of letters that I had found in the waste basket in the man Dnrand's house. With one exception, there is no need of literally transcribing them; they simply re-enforced facts already known. There were three touching letters from Ella Constant to her indifferent lover; letters that almost moved a world-toughened man like I am to tears; letters pleading for love or death, written with the life blood of an agonized lover. If at that moment my fingers bad been on the man Durand's throat, the hangman would have been saved some labor. There were five letters from Amelia Glaye; the letters of a furiously jealous woman. She had evidently taken possession ot Dnrand, and, tigress like, was guarding him. The letters fairly foamed with love and jealousy, and I was staggered to believe they had been written by the placid matron who had allowed me to question her in her room. They might rather have been written by a maniac. If Durand was the moral coward he confessed himself to be, he niust have had a pretty bad time of it in the clutches of this mature tigress; slaverr would have been a luxnrv to the position he hud. In one of the letters were these words: "Come to met If you dare to see that vile woman woman again, I will murder you and her. You have lied to me, and you will lie to me again, but look out If I am insane, as you call me, so much the worse for yon and her. Insane people are not responsible for their crimes. Come, then, and lie to me, and while looking at you I will believe you and be happy. You are mine now, and nothing shall tear you from me." The good lady was evidently in earnest, and Durand mnst have felt that the money that would come to her ou her marriage would not pay for the wounds her claws and tfti infllplAll- The following brief letter is quoted in full. It was written in a woman's disguised hand, and demonstrably on the day after the murder was committed: Put wings on your coward feet and fly, or your coward soul will rust in- jail. Fly! it not for your own sake, for the sake of oth ers. Look into vour heart for the reason, and, if you can discover none, remain and tempt all. Murder calls aloud for revenge. MTJBDEB! Take the warning you do not deserve and fly." As I have said, the letter was in a dis guised hand, but I saw no reason to doubt that it had been written by Mrs. Glaye, and re-en 'orced an old thought of mine that she had witnessed the murder, if she had not participated in it Woman-like she still loved the wretch, and love, as usual, made her lose her wits. The patching together of these fragments took me into the early morning .hours. Nothing of a susDicious nature occurred in the house up to this point so far as I knew. The doctor's snore from a neighboring room had saluted me uninterruptedly for several hours, and when fagged out I jumped into bed it was still vibrating through the house. I slept like a top until the morning sun blazed into my eyes with its welcome light I raised myself into a sitting position, and was dazed at discovering I was still sur rounded by darkness. Through the window 1 saw the stars still shining in the pale sky, and the chill night air set my teeth chatter ing. I was waked by the light,""and I had not dreamed. I assured myself that my door was still locked, and that nobody was in my room bnt myself. While I was puz zling myself over the matter another flash of light came into my room, followed by a small stone flung against the window pane. I then. remembered these were the signals agreed on in case Policemin Blind needed me in the night I quietly dressed myself, all but my shoes, which I carried in my hands. I listened for a mo ment; the doctor was still snoring. I raised my window, stepped ont on the veranda roof, closed the window behind me, and climbing down the trellis work soon stood on the solid ground beside my assistant. "Blow out your lantern. Blind, and tell me briefly what you have to tell while I am putting on my shoes." "She ha3 left the hotel. I mean Mrs. Glaye, and she is wandering abont the fields. She first went to the blackberry bushes where the body was found, and then to the deserted old house bv the pond, where I left her to run to you. She's got a lighted candle and is poking around the place as if she is looking for something.. You can see the light from here." I glanced in the direction pointed out, and, true enough, I saw streaks of light shining through the chinks of the rotten house. "Keep watch on the doctor's cottage. Blind, from the safe retreat of the bushes yonder, I will take care ot my lady." With the words I started off at" a brisk trot toward the house bv the pond. I, puffed like a miniature steam engine when I reached it, but peeping in through a chink, I was rewarded by discovering .Mrs. Glaye still wandering about with a lighted candle in her hand carefully studying the mouldy funguseated floor of the room. She was dressed in the same attire in which she received me, with the additions of a bonnet, and the shawl from which a fragment had been torn by the blackbeny bushes on the night ot the" murder. Her face was flushed and excited, and her lips continually moved as if she was speaking to herself. At inter vals she groaned'as if in grief or pain, and once she uttered in a voice that was almost a shriek, the wt&rd "Murder!" To fie continued nezt Sunday. We Can GItb John Ball Pointers. Boston Herald. England is following in American foot steps. She now proposes having a rapid de livery stamp to stick upon letters "as tbey do in the States," which insures their im mediate delivery. Our congratulations! The 1-cent postage is also coming along, Mr. Bull. PITTSBURG' " DESPATCH, A NEW ERA IN HOMES. Builders Waking Up to the .Beauty of Old Virginia Palaces. PAST STILES COMING IN AGAIN. What Energetic Northerners Are With Crumbling Ruins. Doing THE APPAEEL OF THE CENTDRT GOHE iTrarmx ron ihi oisrATCH.r N a balcony at night, and in England once said a gentle man: "Those old Virginians surely know f.ow to live; and though I am native here.I do con fess that in some in stances they ap proached nearer the accomplishment of the ideal English home than ever we did ourselves. They seem to have em bodied in their dis tinctive style bits of the beautifnl of all the arts and archi tectures, and to have known just where the meaning of the Saxon word borne begins and ends jurt where a home runs into something too great, too public, too'palatial to 'bear any longer the term so dear to the heart of every true son of British' blood." And this from a gentleman, a scholar, a critic and a poet, whose name is seen every day in print, and .whose songs are on the lips of half the singing world. Coming from one whose opportunities have been large, and to whose judgment all the Na tion bows with at least the show of deference, this was a great deal to say, and speaks well for the geniusofthe old Virginians.- Whether it be true or not, one cannot well visit Ar lington, Carter Hall, The Tuleyries, Mon ticello, Montpelier,- Harewood, Clavmont Court, Westover, Brandon, Carter's Grove, Shirley, or any other of those fine old man sions which dot the beautiful country throughout Virginia without giving voice to a similar expression. BITS OF OLD "WORLD AKCHITECTUBE. I think it is easy to see that settlers of a new country, separate from the old by an ocean, in casting about for models after which to rear their homes, should gather to gether bits of what is good and beautiful of the Old World architecture and embody it in a style that would be peculiarly and dis tinctively their own; for there is nothing here to imitate or build upon. It is easy, too, to understand how this phase of architecture was from time to time copied and modified for good or bad and for the period of the past century, until now there is nothing of the new to outdo or eclipse the old. In time it may be, when the old, which is most purely American, shall have been merged into the new, or the new into the old. There has been for some years a passion for something so modem, even if as it not unfrequently happens it is painfully and sadly so. That which has satisfied the taste for beauiiful home build ing and met with the approval of the ages is ignored in this mad hunt for something Carter Hall, Ktar Millwood, Va. new. Hence it is that the architecture of the present day and of America has no national significance; nothing distinctive is now typical of us unless it be shreds and patches and grafts from . every other nation of the world, and which must some day seem reliquise oi the stuff of which night mares are made. A EESTJBBECTION OF THE OLD. But there is coming on a revolution in architecture, and it will be essentially a resnrrection of the old. Down here in Vir ginia come gentlemen of wealth and entcr Srise from New York, Boston and the Forth, gathering together what are now al most a mass ol ruins, propping up old pil lars, polishing rusty domes, gilding turrets, setting fountains spinning, bnilding huge walls, enclosing parks and pleasure grounds, grading beautiful lawns, breeding beautiiul horses, driving magnificent coaches, blaz oned here and there with gold and filigreed metal, and set with monograms of purest gold. The old lions on the old gate posts are restored to their perch, and the tradi tional family flunkey and footman have somehow been found again after all these years of wandering, and the glad new days spin ns serenely now at some of these old Virginia homes as come our dreams by night of the picturesque, palatial pass. As an instance, there is now in the neigh borhood of Charleston, W. Va., an Old house, once the home of Bushrod Washing ton, bnt at present the property of a gentle man from Philadelphia, which bespeaks the splendor ot the Southern home as truly now as it did in the long ago. There are the noble pillars, fountains and gardens, noble trees and beautiful lawns, statues and tur rets, domes and spires, balconies, lovely carriage ways and walks, and all the old world paraphernalia. "WHAT HAS ALBEAST BEEN DONE. Every one knows how Mr. Jefferson M. Levy, oi New York, has made Monticello once more the palatial dwelling it was in the time of Jefferson, and how Mr. L. F. Detrick, of Baltimore, made of the tottering ruin of Montpelier the beautiful home it is at present. Colonel TJ. L. Boyce, the happy possessor of the Tuleyries, said to me once in conversation "that he could only hope to restore the old place to its former beauty, for there was not a new idea among all the architects with whom he had conversed upon the subject which would in the least aid or embellish the old." To one of these fine old places an archi tect of New York was called to see if he could not improve some of the old work, which was fast going to rack; "and," said the gentleman, "I do not only want the old repaired, bnt I wish you to stndy ont a plan by which we can runout a wing in some di rection so as to give us more room, and, perhaps, add something to. the beauty of the place. So the architect made his drawings and went homeward. Alter some while back: came a drawing and suggestion (the 38551 -X NJjlHj The Aleyrttt, Clarke County, Va. "SsSIIbS'1 SUNDA"?, JUNE 29 , only one the artist had to'offer, he said), that a wing could be run out toward the west, with gabled roof, and over the end a tower. And so it was done. IT WAS AN OLD IDEA. That was all, bnt it was remarkable that just such a wing, running just in that direc tion, and wiih that identical tower, but with yet the addition of a conservatory, as.it was afterwards discovered, had stood there over 100 years ago and had been forgotten. But I have said that there is coming on a revolution in architecture, and that it will be essentially a revolution of the old, and I claim that my reasons therefor are sound. Looking over the country at present, per haps the most gorgeous specimens of archi tecture are to be found in the cities where wealth and affluence do not necessarily or always go hand in hand with ele gance, beauty and comfort, but the ex hibitions there of true home-building are very rare indeed. It is in the country round about the cities of the North, or in very remote places in the South that the genuine spirit' for the beautiful has been at work. Even in the cities the newer squat sort of patchwork-architecture is slowly but surely taking on suggestions of the old. The old tower has been long in fashion; but bereyou find a bit of old Corinthian pil lar or cornice, there a jot of the Doric in the matter of dome or turret or balcony; here, again, in decoration, an idea as old as Dam ascus, there, in outdoor surrounding, some thing strongly remindinl or the banging gardens of old, or perhaps, of what Eden once was. "WE MAT "WEAR OLD CLOTHES. And this is all called new, original and beautiful; yet it is old, very old. and unim proved indeed by any of what could possi bly be called new. Olten we hear that so and so has just finished up a 'room, a whole room, with everything strangely new, but all so beautifully old. Huge old fireplaces, quaint old andirons and tongnes and fend ers, quaint carpetings and rugs and skins, and old jewel-like Italian frames and por traits, quaint old clocks, and fire-screens. and boms, and snufi boxes, and leather trunks, and quaint old everything. I think this indicates something. I think it is something, too, that the ad miration for the picturesque short clothes and apparel ot the gentlemen of the past century is growing stronger and more uni versal, and threatens even a revolntion in the matter of dress. This may seem to have little to do with architecture, and soyit hasr but the indication is most sure and certain, and not to be mistaken. ' And when these beautiful old homes, now so eagerly sought for, and now so surely going into decay, shall have gotten fewer, others will spring up in their stead and about them, and then the revolution will be upon us, and the beginning of it will be down here in old Virginia. Mark it Wilmee Wellington. HE HAULED BBONSON ALCOTT. Frettr Little Story of ibe Philosopher Told by a Politician. Boston Globe. Sherman Hoar, the brilliant young lawyer and Mugwump politician, younger son of E. Bockwood Hoar, of Concord, tells with a relish this story at his own expense: "Some years ago I was at Concord spend ing a vacation. I wasn't putting on much style, but was having a thoroughly good time. One day I was out in a rustic rig used about the farm, and was drqssed in hayseed clothes. Bronson Alcott was alive then, and coming down the road I overtook the old philosopher. " 'Hold on, young man,' he said, HI want you to drive me to the station. It is nearly time for my train, and I am afraid I shall lose it.' 'All right, sir,' I replied, 'get in.' "He did so, and we started for the station. On the way down we passed my sister. She bowed and of course I returned her saluta tion. Mr. Alcott seemed to be surprised and pleased. " 'That is charming' he said. 'The sweet city maiden salutes the rnstic swain, and he, knight-like, acknowledges her saluta tion. They meet on a common level.' "I said nothing, and when we leached the station be said, 'Young man, what is the charge? " A quarter,' I responded, and he paid it. I have the piece now, and I never look at it without smiling aud thinking how eas ily I earned it." CLEVELAND OK HIS 0T7THTO. Dressed In Rongli CloibeaHe Ii theFIctnro of Bustle Contentment. Boston Globe.1 Mr. Cleveland and his wife have been here since Jane 7, and the ex-President has been roughing in true seashore style. When I saw him be was all ready for a fishing trip which he had planned -with Bev. Mr..Ful ler and Mr. Gilder, He wore old shoes, loose trousers, a flannel shirt, a light coat and a straw hat, and was the picture .of rns tic contentment. This has been his rig ever since his arrival here except on what might be termed a few ceremonious occasions. The ex-President is an early riser, and, after his breakfast, looks over bis mail, which is at no time small. Pleasant niter noons he spends on the fishing gronnds. SkippesBoyal Eyderof the sIood Allie is proud of the distinguished fisherman. This old tar has become very friendly with Mr. Cleveland and has many anecdotes to tell. He said to me that it was a pretty safe bet to make that if there were any fish in the vicinity of the boat Mr. Cleveland was sure to land them. He's the most persistent of fishermen, and becomes so interested in the sport that the sun coes down at times before we make tracks for home. Thursday night it was 8 o'clock before the ex-President and his companions returned. All 'had been lucky, and had strings of handsome bass. While they were on the fishing grounds a heavy shower passed over the bay, but the party was well protected by oil and rubber clothing. THE SULTAIT AT DIM EH. His Highness Believes Finger Were In. vonted Before Forks. The Larder.' The Sultan never uses a plate. He takes all his food direct from the little kettles, and never uses a table, and rarely a knife or fork a spoon, his bread, a pancake, or fin gers are fonnd far handier. It requires just twice as many slaves as there are courses to serve a dinner to him. The whole household is at liberty to take meals where it suits him or her best, and thus every one is served with a small tray, with a spoon, a great chunk of bread, and the higher ones only get the pancakes. Nearly; one ton of rice per day is required for the inevitable pillaffe, 600 pounds of sugar, as much coffee, to say nothing of the other groceries, fruit, vegetables and meat. Bice and mutton and bread form the greater parto the food for the majority ot Turks together with fish, sweetmeats, confection ery, nuts, and dried and fresh iruits. That there is enormous waste and extrava gance in the kitchens is obvious, and it is said that enough is thrown away daily to main tain 100 families. All the water for the Sultan's use and the drinking water (or the houshold is brought in barrels Irom two pretty streams at different places in the Bos phorus toward the Black Sea. PAT COLLINS WALKS. Ho Owes His Good Health to nil Persist ence n a Pedestrian. Boston Globe. Washington street pedestrians will not see the tall and' familiar form of General Patrick A. Collins for some weeks to come. He has gone far out to Idaho on business. For the past year hardly a day has gone by that he did not walk in from his Dorchester home to his office, a distance of four miles. 'II can make it in about an hour," he Baid, "and it gives me health and appetite. I weigh more and feel better every way. ' It seems good to go to bed at 10 o'clock and get up at 6. The pleasures or private life are much greater than to be found in the bright gunlisht of publicity.' " 1890; ACTOR AN0 MANAGER. How Both Are Sweltering With Heat and Anxiety in New Tork. GEAND RUSH OF THE SOUBRETTES. The Field Occupied by the Dramatic Agency and Its Usefulness. POPDLAE LADIES KOW 05 THE STAGE fCORRXSPOXBElTClE OT Tint BISrjLTCH.1 New Yobk, June 28. Ol the hundred and odd thousands of people who attend the theaters nightly throughout the coun try, few, perhaps, give a thought to the labor involved in the formation of a theat rical company necessary to the production oi the entertainment. Those that do -probably know nothing abont it, I thought of this the other day while sitting in the office , of a well-known theatrical manager, Mr. Thomas H. Davis, who is also Secretary of the Dramatio Managers' Association. This is the season of the year when managers of the various combinations which are to go upon the road next season are making up their list of performers and arranging dates for the production of their plays. At this season the office of a New York manager is a very busy place. As old a theater-goer as I am myself, I confess that i had very little idea of the routine necessary to bring the actor and the manager together. Nearly all of the plays that are produced under the combination system are cast here in New York. For this reason the metropolis is the Mecca for actors and actresses of all grades and specialties. A large number of these people swarm about the managerial offices and press their own claims With energy and ability. . THE LADIES AREN'T BACEWABD. On the particular occasion ot which I speak, half a dozen women called within half an hour, and taking the manager aside briefly filled him up, so to speak, with their individual merits and professional charms. Modesty is lost on a manager, and very little modesty will be observed among these ap plicants stating their own cases. "It is a very difficult and trying matter," said the manager, "to find a woman who can fill the requirements of the modern soubrette. I am going to try an experiment this season with lour soubrette parts in a single piece, and I hope to encourage such a rivalry between them as to draw ont their best qualities. You know these peonle are very jealous of each other, as a general thing." "Please tell me something abont son brettes. What are the -requirements and what makes them so difficult'to obtafn? ' "This is the age of the soubrette," said the manager. "The farce comedy which is jnst now the rage brings that class into prominence never before known. The sonbrette and the low comedian are the two real leading features of the American stage to-day in points ofnumbers and importance. Promenading ud and down Broadway every afternoon are several hundred women of varions ages and more or less loudly dressed, who call themselves soubrettes. They have played a small soubrette some where at some time, and from that time on besiege the managers for an engagement. A good many of these don't want an en gagement, as they live by their wits. VEBT DIFFERENT FEOil OLD TIMES. "The soubrette part is a very attractive' one and requires peculiar talents wholly dissimilar to the demands of the stage of 20 years ago. It was then the women who could take emotional roles, society charac ters, leading busiuess, juvenile parts, and so on. The present demand is for a woman anywhere between the age of 18 and 25. who is bright, petite, vivacious and sprightly of manner ana wno can sing and dance, as well as cleverly act. Personal attractive ness goes a great ways with the soubrette, and if she be a beauty and yonng and have the above requirements she can make all the way from $60 to ISO a week. Beauty is not necessary, however, and is, in fact, rare among good soubrettes, but she must have personal attractiveness. "Her early training is more than likely to have been received in the variety thea ters. Most of the soubrettes of any reputa tion to-day come from the variety and music halls. They form the training s'chool of the soubrette." "Who are, in your opinion, the leading soubrettes of the American stage to-day?" THE ITEADINQ SOUBEETTES. To mention them by name seems invidi ous. Let me see; there is Katie Hart,, late of Tony Pastor's Variety Theater, now of 'Natural Gas;' Delia Fox, now playing at the Broadway in 'Castles in the Air;' Kate Davis, with Monroe and Bice; Lena Mer ville and Marion Elmore, both graduates of the London music halls. Lena Merville is in the 'Sea King' this week; Marion Elmore has married and retired, you know. There is Flora Moore, whom 1 have just engaged a3 soubrette with my new play, 'The Hustlers,' who is pretty well known by those who have seen 'The Bunch of Keys' and Mestayer's productions. She is also a graduate of Tony Pastor'sand the variety theaters and Is one of the most high-priced soubrettes on the American stage. Theie are Lillian and Daisy Ramsden, who came from the music halls of London. Ollie Arshmere, a California sirl, and Carrie Tutien. Both sing in comic opera now, but go with farce comedy the coming season. Tbeie are "Vivian, Emily and' Veevie, sisters, who formerly did sketches in the variety busi ness, bnt who also now go with farce comedy. The latter played in "The Still Alarm' last season. There are the Irwin sisters and Eosa France in 'The City Directory,' The latter appears in the 'Three Rose Buds' and dances the skirt dance. There are the French sisters who are wives of Evans and Hoey of 'Parlor Match' notoriety. And there is Alice Harrison, who has also been with 'The City Directory' recently. Patrice, who was with Boland .Reed, 'Lost in New York,' etc.; Annie Lewis, with 'Later On,' Patti Bosa, who is now starring, and Flora Walsh, Hoyt's wife, who goes next season with rA Texa8teer,' are some others. SOUBEETTES THE MANAOEBS HUNT. The popular and high-priced sonhrettes are generally modest in attire and equally so in language. You never hear one of them using variety slang. She is in such demand that she does not have to hunt the managers, for the managers are hunting her. She is a conscientious worker and a hard student, and has no time to be loafing on Broadway, and that is the reason you never see her with the mob. "The imported soubrette is not as good as her American sister. She has not the natural sprightliners and keen sense of humor that are a part of almost every American girl. The character of humor which she brings from London would put the American audience to sleep, or drive it out of the house. The English soubrette, however, usually excels in dauciug and singing, and the song aud dance are a diffi cult combination. She has enjoyed a better schooling in the variety business than is usually the case with the American girl. Her methods require a good deal of cor rection before she is fitted for our farce comedy parts." "Where oo the dramatio agencies come in?" FIELD OF THE DBAMATIO AGENCIES. "Some of the managers use dramatic agents to secure their people. This is be cause they are not posted themselves as to the individual record of the parties to be engaged. The first-class farce comedy manager only uses agents in securing the addresses, aud is able to judge of their abil ities himself. The man who has not been in the business must rely more or less ou the dramatio agent to fill" his company, and in doing so he will very often get left with poor people. His mistakes cost him or his backer that much money." . An coBuecwon wun tnls business, which hnt inmnMi .!... , V , , of io much, p ominenca in New York, is the feature of the dramatio agency. The dramatic agent is the medium between the out-of-town manager and the traveling man ager as well as between the performer and his or her employer. There are at leasts a dozen well known dramatic agencies In New York. In a larze building, a few doors from the Dramatic New office, on Thirtieth street, is one of the most prominent. It is an old residence building remodeled on tbe lower floors, three of which are occupied by tbe business. At times there are within sight on these pretty days perhaps 100 in dividuals, and 76 out of thd 100 are con nected with the dramatio profession in some capacity. STALLS LIKE OLD-FASHIONED PEWS. On the plate glass of the lower floor will be seen the names of 40 to 50 managers of tbe different combinations which will cater for the publio amusement throughout the United States during the dramatic season. Within are two long lines of stalls which strongly resemble pews in the old-fashioned colonial churches. These stalls with the desks and fixtures are rented by theatrical managers who come to New York to book their annual attractions at the rate of 75 to $500 per annnm. This is not merely for desk privilege, but is also the compensation of the agency which acts as middle man be tween the traveling and the local manager. Just now nearly every one of these stalls is daily occupied by its temporary owner, who is busily engaged in arranging dates for the plays that are being booked for his theater or circnit ot theaters in some section of the country. Here he may be Iound and here he gets his mail. Sometimes he does the business here and sometimes on the curb in the vicinity. If in tbe latter instance you will see him pull from his vest pocket a little book called a "date book," in which he has arranged seriatim tbe engagements already made, and which shows at a glance the open dates which he has yet to fill. NEGOTIATING PEBSONAL ENGAGEMENTS. In this same building, on the third floor, a large, masculine looking woman sits all day, acting as a like intermedium for the actor and manager in the arrangements of per sonal engagements. The rooms are crowded just now with all classes of actors and actresses on the look out for contracts for the coming season. These rooms are very elabor ately fitted up. On the walls are upward of 1,000 pictures, portraits of the men and women of to-day best known to the profes sion. In the crowd, waiting his or her turn, is every variety of Dlaver. from "Little Lord Fauntleroy" up to the old woman and old man of the legitimate. The dramatic agency as here represented is a thing of comparatively recent growth. Theatrical managers, as a rule, decry the theatrical agency, bnt are compelled to patronize it because the shrewdness and energy of those who have built up tbe sjs tetn has made it an essential part ot the business. From all tbe complaints heard of the dramatic agency as it is to-day the outsider must naturally inquire why the National Dramatic Managers' Association does ndt have a well conducted bureau of its own in New York to insure the desired results with less friction and at less expense to all parties. In a business involving, as this does, millions of dollars every year, and thewell being of thousands connected with it, it would seem that those who are most interested might devise a better system of reaching the desired end. Chables T. Mubbat. BABYS SECOND STJIQDEB. Fresh Air and Care of tbe Diet Wanld Sare a Great Many Iiiale Lire. rwniTTiH ron thi Disrjtxcn. , The summer has leaped upon us like a ravenous tiger. The human frame has be come enervated by the long rainy season of April aud May, the pore3 of old earth have opened wide and the atmosphere is murky and clings to the flesh and the lungs like wet wool, robbing the muscles of strength and leaving no soundness of nerve within us. Our appetites cry out against the or dinary consumption of food, and our diges tions adapt themselves but languidly to their duties. It is a critical period for grown people, but how mttch more for child-life and those poor little morsels of humanity who have not yet weathered their second Bummer. How many city babies have I seen enjoying apparently exceptional health until " the slow, sullen June suns, so particularly try ing to babies everywhere, have visibly and mysteriously changed these conditions. The pretty head droops and sways like a slowly withering flower, the once hard mnscles be come flaccid, and the breathing grows more and more labored in the still hot air. He eagerly craves liquid nourishment, and tbe poor little stomach soon rejects thejinac customed quantity of food; his eyes 'grow dull and heavy, or perhaps unnaturally large and clear, until the poor mother's heart grows faint with nameless iorebod ings. This is the experience of almost every mother to whom several children have al ready been granted, and it is true that while drug's in and of themselves alone never did enre and never can cure anybody, yet some babies must go out of town and have instant change ot air and place, or else go out of life. Early or late summer heats will surely unuermine tne vuai strengtn oi every city and town-bred bahy. The young mother, no less than the one of three or more yountr children, should so order ber domestic ar rangements that a Short sojourn m tbe coun try can be undertaken at a day's notice. An abundance of pure, sun-warmed, living air, whether it be lrom the mountain, or the sea, without exposure to damp draughts or to tbe direct ray3 of the midday sun; this is what baby needs, what you need, what we all need. In choosing a summering place for a fam ily put baby's interests in the foreground. Whyis it that with such constant and in creasing demand as there certainly is, so few country boarding houses and hotels make a specialty of studying and supplying baby's needs, and inviting rather than slighting the little charges. It is a ridiculous prejudice to suppose that the second summer of a baby's life is more precarious than tbe first. It demands fewer victims, and any sensible physician will indorse my statement. But the second summer costs more lives than it ought to. The fault lies not with the second summer, nor with the children, but with the heat and the parents. Summer heat combined with bad diet frequently becomes fatal. All mothers know that sickness among children in summer is caused by some derangement of the digestive organs, and that were these organs not permitted to become diseased fa tal cases might be averted. Now it is usual ly thesecond summer in which we begin the artificial feeding of our babies. HeDce it is to tbe ignorance and negligence in the selec tion and cooking of the tood that we owe the slaughter ol our innocents and not to the st-cond summer. With proper food and in telligent care lew, it any, babies need suffer from stomach or bowel "troubles. And the rules lor the wholesome feeding of children are so simple I Perhaps it is their simplicity that causes their non-observance. Can any thing be more preposterous in tbe matter bf feeding children than allowing them to par take of every possible article of food placed on the family table. "What does the child eat?" was the first question asked by a dear old German physi cian, lamous for his treatment oi children's diseases. "Anything;" or, "It eats whatever is on the table." was the usual reply. "Ei ! Ei I" he would exclaim. "Candy, sour milk, fresh bread, sausage, coffee and tea, raw fruit and vegetables. The result? Of course, diarrheal diseases and death! And then you say the canse of death was second summer! Ach, mein Gott!" F. K. B. Wade. The Demon of Ihe Mnreb, Tbe evil spirit that hovers about sUcnant pools and Inundated lowlands is no materialized bogey, no phantasm of a disordered Imagina tion, but a power of evil far more malieuant than any familiar anathematized by Cotton Mather. It Is malaria, which" has for its de structive progeny fever and ague, bilious re mittent and dumb ague, conquerable witn iaosieiters Btomacn amen, as bio ujw,y, constipation, lirer complaint, etc GOING WITH A RUSH. America Tears Throush life With Bijj Fires in the Furnace AND THE SAFETY VALYE SNORTING. Instances In Every Day Events of Energy Worse Than Wasted. DELIBERATION ACCOMPLISHES HOST nrsniEr tob thi dispatch, t "We Americans are a restless, rollicking set of mortals, always on the move, and never content nnless things are going at lull pressure. A slow train is a nuisance, an old plug of a horsa Is an abomination and a slnsgish steamboat is a perfect trial. Nor is this characterlstla peculiar to tbe native born American alone. The plodding Englishman or the phlegmatic, German for a few years, it may be goes on the even tenor of hid way, bat in the course ot time he walks quicker, talks quicker and drinks his beer with as much avidity as one to the manor born. The motire influence mnst be in the air we breathe. When the American atmosphere can be critically and qaantitivelr analysed we shall find there is something wonderfully stim ulating about lc Now a largo part of this hurry and scurry Is needless, and is simply a sad waste of energy. If we conld take a census of tbe needless pnlsa beats of this great nation what a mighty aggre gate it would make. Waste is always disas trous, sooner or later; yea. is not willful wastea sin. Its usual product, woeful want, proves that at least it is foolish. Deliberation in tha long run accomplishes more than heedless harry, if that deliberation does Dot degenerate into absurd sluggishness and pig-headed con servatism. How Mankind Resembles Hosklnd. In Summit county, O.. a few days ago a farmer, worth $100,000. 6 feet high, and weigh ing 180 pounds, who bad never seen a day's sickness in his lire, undertook on a wager to eat 28 hard-boiled eggs. Ho ate them all and covered himself with glory, bat his celebrity was short-Iired. for in three weeks the clods of the valley covered his stalwart body, and he be came food for tbe worms. Ona wonld think that a man who conld accumulate 5100.000 at farming would not make such an idiot of him self for so brief a notoriety. His astronomi cal energy was commendable if his object was to show the close affinity that exists between mankind and hockmd. bnt hi discretion was abominably out of gear. He wasted his energy. LenTlns Pfrnsant Homes. Two-tnirds of tbe well-to-do families of onr large cities are even now proving the truth of our proposition. In the city of Pltt3burg. for instance, there are hundreds of pleasant homes with every conceivable modern convenience bathrooms, large, lofty apartments, shady lawns and somnambnlent nooks and corners in doors and out, where Veary bodies might find needed rest; choice eatables in abnndance, rapid transit witbont stint, and a thousand and one comforts that country people know nothing of. And yet these city f olWs will soon leave, or have left, these pleasant homes in the city to spend seven or eight weeks in some gizantls caravansary, where hundreds of weary mortals congresate, or tbey will go to some remote farmhouse to sleep in stuffy rooms, eat salt meat and drink water that too often owes its flavor to the close Droxkmtyot the barnyard. To do this requires a vast amount of self-denial and energy. How much of this is wasted energy? Tbe Hammer Reaart Craze. Mrs. Grundy Is a tyrant, and, at her irra tional dictum, society mast bow. Recreation aud oxygen are what onr city people ara after, they tell ns. Welt, if it be recreation to sit at a public dining table with hundreds of strang ers all through the torrid heat of summer, surely they get it. As to tbe oxygen, is it not possible, as already hinted, that soma of It may be imbibed in liquid form? Poor, frail mor tals, who, when at home, cannot submit to tha slightest inconvenience, will endnre anything to please the old lady mentioned above. Wonld it not be better, as some Indeed do, to spend tbe hottest summer months at home, if it be snch a home as those described, and then, when the delightfnl fall comes, with its bealtb-ziYinr. bracine breezes and its chanzlsc: leaves, to sea, to forest and to mountain hia themT Recuperation would naturally follow such a course, and Instead of commencing tha winter season worn out with summer rambtinfrs as some do, our society ladles wonld. like tha rosy fruits of fair October, bear tbe bloom of healthy beauty, instead of tbe frail, faded baa so often seen. Unnecessary exertion indulged in to keep on good terms with 21n Grundy is wasted energy. The Modern Church Festiyal. There is a vast amount of unnecessary en deavor expended lo our churches. The ladies, (God bless them), will and do occupy two or three days getting up a festival or supper. They contribute time, money and strength in pre paring, and then are generally tbe best cus tomers themselves. A cash contribution from each family interested, exceeding not mora than is usually spent upon such affairs, would in many cases net as much profit as is gained when all the endeavor has been expended. Why people should rather stuff themselves with ice cream, cake, strawberries, oysters and indigestion isa question reason refuses to an swer. Is it liOt possible to have enjoyable social intercourse without punishing tha stomach? Is that organ the only avenue to tha purses of the sterner sex? A. man ot pood di gestive powers who cannot be placated by a good dinner is little less than a heathen, bnt at least one half of them do not possess the pow ers of assimilation that tbe majority of people impute to them. Taking it all in all and strik ing an average, a church festival is a piece of wasted energy. Folly Among laborers. As a rule, the easiest way is always tha best. Let an observant and thoughtful man watch two or three laboring men at work where lift ing and moving of heavyweights is a feature. Unless directed by a "boss," whose mind is at work, they will use a large amount of unneces sary physical strength. Tbey seem to forget that there is snch a thing as leverage. Is It rizbt to use to its fall tension all your strength when it can be so easily economized? It is said that out of every five persons engaged in any thing like mnscular labor, one will be fonnd to wear trusses or some other kind of appliance to render a ruptnre tolerable. The majority of these cases are undoubtedly the f rnit of a prof ligate expenditure of energy. Men of unusual streoctb sometimes delight to show their physi cal prowess, and, as a result of such exhibi tions, tbey bring upon themselves disastrous weakness Many an apparently gigantic body is harnessed with invisible supports withovt which it would be little less than a wreck. En ergy wasted; yes, worse than wasted. Wnite In ihe Pnlptr. As a necessary accomplishment for ordina tion to the gospel ministry a knowledge of Greek and Hebrew is considered essential. Re ligious papers are loudly and vainly calling for men to till vacant pulpits. Adequate prepara tion for the office of minister is attained by about ten years of incessant study, a great part of that time being occupied in twisting around tbe gymnasticisms of Greek verbs and Hebrew hieroglyphics- If the Bible has been translated correctly by the brightest intellects of tbe ages, and is rendered in the best English possible, why is it necessary for every student to seek to qualify himself to do that which has been so well done by others? Not one in fifty of our preachers are really Greek scholars, and very of ten tbe nrl ciple that "a Utile learning is dangerous thine"1 meets with affirmation In this connection. It is a great temptation to a man po sossing a smattering of Greek or Hebrew to air that fact before his congrega--tfon. It is verj flattering to see the audienca shake their heads at each other and to bear them at the church door say "isnt he smart?" If some of us ministers who at times forget om sacred doty in snowing on our huuumu ul a literary or oratoric sense, would spend mora of our time feeding hungry souls there would be less wasted energy in the pulpit and out of it. A COUNTBT PASS02T. HANAGIirri A H0BSE. If Be Get" Crnyikr Give Him More of tbe Panel's Than Ho Intended io Take. When a horse stops and proposes to turn around," said a Fifth avenue liveryman the other day, "don't resist the turn, but giva him a quiet horizontal pull in tbe direction he wants to turn, so as to carry him further around than be intended to go, and ii pos sible keep him going around half a doien. times. In most cases this will upset all his calculations, and he will co quietly on with out much ado. If six turns will not do give him 20. "In fact, if he will keep on turning to yonr rein you are sure to conquer, as enongh turning will certainly contuse him, and leave him at vour command. If ha will not turn and will back to the rein, keep him going backward in the direction you want to go. He will soon get tired of that and piefer to go with the right end forward; bat before you let him go give him decidedly more backing than he likes."