ft ST?5SWPf? - & .; THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH; SUNDAX JANUARY 17; 189a r 17 ,,,. 01G LIVEDPEOPLE. n Do Kot Live Fire Times tfie Period It Takes Them to Become Pull-Grown, as Animals Do. IE AVERAGE AGE IS 38 TEAES. Eangary the Death Bate Is Almost Tirice as Great as It Is in ths United Slates. 3TJEES TOE STATE3 AUD (HTIES. nsjlTanla foes Sot Eaii Very Hlsh as Cuapared With Her Eisten. iWUl'ITiar FOR THE DIUM.TCH.1 Vraong the many differences between not ing sad living things is the fact that mges in those which are alive occur in tain definite times; and the amount of le allowed for these changes depends gely on the properties of the living mat itself. The time required to hatch an depends upon what sort of an egg it is; s the same in the chicken-hatching oven it is under the setting hen. Growth, de ' and death have each their allotted times i seasons the little mass of living iter which produces a hair can form just much length of hair and no more, and en it has done its wort it shrivels and s; when another little, mass of cells takes place and begins to push out a new j. The life of a single hair in a grown a is from two to six years. Every day loses from SO to 50 dead hairs and begins prod nee nearly as many new ones. ?o, also, each animal has a certain time ieh it can live; it is like a machine con tacted to run so long and no longer, for st ..niraals this time is about five times it required for the animal to obtain its 1 growth and development, which in man urs when he is from 20 to 22 fears old, that he ought to live from 100 to 110 irs. n Average Ufa Is Thlrt y-Elsht Tears. As a matter of fact, the average life of the babies that come into the world is ly about S3 years; very few live to be er 90, and not more than one out of 2,000 s his hundredth birthday. Is this dee original differences in the babies tbem- ves or in the way they are brought up, in s places in which they live, in the air sy breathe and in their mode of life r they become full-grown? To answer ;e questions one of the first things we int to know is whether people die ually fast everywhere, tad, if not, where :t that they die soonest or live longest. The answer to this is that people die ich more rapidly in Eome countries than ethers, lor instance, they die twice as fast Hungary as they do in Sweden. In the ar 1S69 cut of every 1,000 persons living the following countries there died, in ipland, IS. in Norway, 17; in Sweden, 16; Austria, 27; in Kunjrary, 32; in Germany, in France, 21, and in Italy, 25. How try died in the United States we do not ow; because co account of them was kept the grea'er part of the country; but it is probably IT or 18 out of each 1,000 liv- ;. We do know, however, that thev died .tpr in some cities than in others. For ex- inle, out of each 1,000 people living there d during the year ending May 31, 1890, i'f" Ytrk Citv, 27; in Brooklyn, 25; in ston, 24; in Philadelphia, 22; in Chicago, in Detroit, XI); in tit. .boms, 13, and in nneapolis, 15, while in the country dis cts the Joss was only 11 or 12 out of each 5a Different Farts of the Same City. Also, we know that they died faster in me parts of the same city than they did others; thus, the death rate per thousand Boston in the Eighth Ward was 33, while tbe Twenty-fourth Ward it was 18. In ooklyn. in the Fifth Ward, it was 33, and Twentv-fourth Ward 18; and in Philadcl ia it was 34 in Ward Foarandll in Ward lirty-three. Wh?t are the causes of these eat differences? In the first place they pend upon the number of little children esent in these different places. The br's grasp of existence is at first feeble; e little flame of life in it Bickers and rubles, and it does not require much to it it out altogether. The heavv death rates cur amine the children. Ten"!, in the urtb Ward in Philadelphia out of each ouand white children under 5 Tears old, 5 died; nhile in the Thirty-third Ward lv S3ded, which accounts for a large part the d Terence in the death rate of the o wards, and at the same time shows that -e must be some treat difference between 'j in their influence on child life t is not quite correct to say that in those acssuhere theicwestuumberperthousand e be people live the longest, but it is le in most cases, and we may therefore y that people live longer in small towns n in large cities, and in the country un they do in town's. This is true not !v in the United States, but all over the irld. Octojenarlcns In the Tenth Centum. Let ns now see where the greatest num r of old people, in proportion to the total ipc!stim, are to be lound living in the mtcd States. An examination of the cords ot the tenth census shows that in 80 ihis was in New England. Of each ti 000 white persons there were then ?icg and over 80 years old in Con ctieut, SS6, in Maine, 1,147; in Massa us'c:s, 809. in New Hampshire, 1,478; Khode Island, 827, and in Vermont, 222. These are higher figures than are own for any oihcr State. In New Yorkthe rreeponding proportion was 563; in Penn Ivania, 411; in Maryland, 347, and in elaware, 400. In Ohio it was 412; in In ana, 2Gr; in Illinois, 215; in Iowa, 218; in ichigan. 319, in Minnesota, 139; in Ken cky, 328: in Tennessee, 347; in Virginia, 1; in North Carolina, 507; in South Caro aa, 411; in Florida, 204; in Georgia, 401; Alabama, 341; in Mississippi, 245; in luisiana, 161; and in Texas, 11L In Mon na it was cnlv 27, in Nevada, 36; in Wy ing, 35; in Idaho, 40; in Dakota, 57; in r zona, 53, and in Colorado, 81. From a studv of these figures it is very am that the fact that there are more old ople in one State than in another depends ry much on how long the State has been tt'ied. In the movement from the Eastern States take possession of the broad prairies, the rtilc valleys and the cold and silver raded mountains of the great West, ose who went were the voung, the ener tic and the strong, leaving behind them e fathers and the grandfathers in the old ew England homes. Th- Old Folks of the West. And this movement has been so recent, it s been so comparatively short a time in c i.. story of the nation since the States v -. of the Mississippi have been filled up ii pierced with the railronds now neces rr to supply large groups of people, that ere has not been time for any large num r ot grand athers and grandmothers to oh up and get their hairs properly whit ied and their backs bent to the curve hich belongs to SO years of age. When another hundred years have gone c mav be sure that there will not be nearly great a difference in the number of old sople in the different States, but we may so be quite sure that then, as now, those ople will live longest who live among the ind "swept hills of the Northern and Mid e States ol this country. 'PcrhapsI ought say not "people," but '"white people," r the negro lives longer in the South than does in the North. One ot the best means of measuring fh Ihtive length of life in the different States that afforded by the experience of the 30 principal life insurance companies of this country previous to 1874, including the records of over 1,000,000 of lives, insured for over 2,600,000,000. Records or Insurance Companies. From these records we learn that the States and Territories in which the insur ance companies had the least loss by being compelled to pay the money ttiey had agreed to pay in case of the death of the persons insured in them, or in other words, where fairly healthy, full grown white men and women, sufficiently well off to pay in eorance premiums, lived the longest were the following: Nebraska, 61; Iowa, 76; Wisconsin, 77; Vermont, 80; West Vir ginia, 81; Maine, 83; Massachusetts, 86; Kansas, 86; Oregon, 86; Illinois, 87; Col orado, 87; Delaware, 88; New Hampshire, 89; Ehode Island, 89, and Michigan, 89. In this list the figures following the names of the State show the proportion of the loss by death, if the average loss is considered to be 100, so that the smaller the figure the greater is the average length of life in dicated. On the other hand, stated in the same way, the States where the loss was greatest, and the length of life least, were: Louis iana, 176; Texas, 175; Arkansas, 172; Flor ida, 167; Mississippi, 164; Tennessee, 163; Alabama, 134; and Maryland,- 129. The corresponding figures for some of the other States are: California, 97; Connecticut, 94; Georgia, 96; Kentucky. 103; Minnesota,107; Missouri, 111; New" York, 95; Ohio, 93; Pennsylvania, 92; South Carolina, 115; Virginia, 104. These figures also show that life is shorter in the South than in the North, and in the fiat, low lying grounds than among the bills and mountains. How to Measure a Ufa. Thus far I have been speaking of the length of life as measured by ordinary time, by days and weeks, and years. But there is" another way of measuring the life of a man or of a boy, and that is by the number of new things that he sees and hears, the number of thoughts that he has, the amount of work that he does. There have been men who for several years slept 20 hours out of the 24 each day, and in one sense sucn a life, though extended many years, is but a short one. It is not only how long a man lives but how much he lives that is to be considered. Everv boy knows that a week of one part of his life is worth a month of another part. Where, then, do men live the most? Yon can easily tell the places where men think they live the most, for they are the places where there are the most men that is, the great cities. There is where a man lives not only his own life, but a part of a dozen, a hundred, a thousand other lives as well; where he has the strongest inducements to make the most of every hour he can spare from sleep, either "for work or for play. What almost all bo vs desire is to have much life and many kinds of it; to see the entire show and not have to wait too long for something new. And yon all know that the more life you get in a given time, the more lensations and changes yoa perceive, the more you do, the shorter seems the time. XVonc tire In a Few Tears. When te same things and the same peo ple are seen day after day, a man's days may not only seem long to him, but actual ly be long in the scriptnre sense that i-, increased in number, and yet give him less life. It is the instinctive recognition of this fact that makes the farmers' bpvs dis satisfied with unending country life, and leads the young men and women to seek the cities. And hence it is that our cities are growing so fast, although in many parts of them the people are dying so fast. But is this shortening of life in the cities a necessity? Is it not possible to obtain many days as well as full days, to have most of the opportunities, the excitements, the society, and the pleasures of city life, "or at least all that are really worth having, without giving up the prospect of a peace ful and pleasant old a;e? Certainiy it is; and people are beginning tc understand this, and to ask that it shall be made possible for them to do it This is a niece of work that the boys all over the States, conntry boys as well as citv boy, will have to undertake, and they will have full lives in doing it. How is it to be done that as Kipling says, is another story, which may be told hereafter. Johx S. Billings, M. D., Census Bureau. SHE COULD LOVE AH EHGIKB. Fatted the Black JuVnster, for It Had Erousht Back Her Parents. rwEmxN roK thi dispatch. The transcontinental train had arrived and the great iron monster at its head throbbed and puffed as if tired from its long and arduous trip oyer mountains, through rock defiles, dark tunnels, upon trembling trestles and quaking marshes. The thick black smoke which rose funnel-shaped from its stack, rolled upward into the rafters and out through the latticed interstices into the daylight, where it gave notification that the journey had ended. The din of the depot was deafeninc. Baggagemen trundled huge trucks laden with trunks and valises to the storeroom, around which the arrived trav elers assembled clamoring for their prop erty. Bells of other locomotives clanged, and outgoing trains of cars in motion added to the general uproar. Out of this chaos of sounds a sweet girlish voice was beard welcoming home her par ents who had crossed the desert nnd conti nent in safety. She was a little golden haired beauty, scarcely 5 years or aee, with a quick loving uature added to the spricht liness of childhood, with the effusiveness of which she welcomed her parents. At last the throbbing of the engine grew fainter, and the noise and confusion became less, and then her fond parents took her by the hand and walked slowly to the outer world. As they passed the locomotive where the engineer awaited the signal to re verse his lever, the little golden haired, blue eyed beauty broke away from her parents, ran up to the big bla'ck monster and patted the grimy driving wheels with ber little soft white hands. Lookine up at the smokestack she said, "You good, big, old iron horse. You have brought back my papa and mamma safe over the big, big mountains, and I want to thaak you, even if you don't care for me because I am so little and you are so big." Then she turned to the engineer who gazed at her with a softened expression upon his dust-covered face as he leaned out of the cab window, and said: "And, you, too. I love you both," Then she kissed her chubby little hand to him, gave a last loving pat to the driving wheel and was gone like a ray of sunshine. Just then a fleeting sunbeam from the great orb as it sunk down into the Far West came stealing through a chink in the wall and paused for an instant as it sped on its way to send a shaft of light into the two crystal drops that rested amid the dust and grime on the engineer's face. An instant only it stayed and then the depot became black, dark, and more lonesome than it was belore. Noiiad. This Might Be Harrison and Qoay. Harper's Bazar. , "Cassius," said Cajsar, "yon are all the time criticising the administration; but I notice you have no policy to sustitute in place of mine." 'It would be a big day for Eome, never theless," retorted Cassius, "if you'd take mv advice." ""Which is, brieflv, what?" asked Caesar. "Jump off the Tarpcian Bock." replied the conspirator. "I would if I were as light as you," said the Consul, with quiet dignity, as the lie tors requested Cassius to move on. She Fqaelched the Teacher. Harper's Bazar. Teacher Now, Mamie, tell me how many bones yon have in your body. Mamie Two hundred and eight. -s-vuti i h J u..c vir v.. Mamie (triumphantly) Tes. out I swal- lowed a fishbon at breakfast this morning. OUR BOYS AND GIRLS. BOARDING SCHOOL GIRLS. The Corset and Del Sarte Are Both Fash ionable 2fever-Ceasinc "War Between Them Plain Gowns Show Good Breed ing AdaBache Cone's Ietter. fWBITTXJt TOB THE DISPATCH. 1 OB the dress of the miss who is not yet out fashion lays down an arbitrary law. She says it must be simple. This is .the decree. The height of style for it is reached with the extreme of simplicity. If a young girl wears gewgaws they mark her as not of the elect; and the length of the fashion is illus trated by the dress of a daughter of William Bockefeller recently, at Vassar, who wore there plain cotton gowns made like high necked aprons. Here fashion and taste heartily agree. Elaborations and eccentricities of cut on' growing girls are vulgar as well as un fashionable. Good taste al ways declares for simplic ity, but for the girl in herteens any thing else is a crime. This is the paus ing moment between childhoo d and woman hood, when all is to come; the most b e an tiful time in the development of physical life, as the sculptors and poets say. At this charming Teriod ofad- Oaffonand Crape. oles cen"co complexities of dress are especially hateful. They are a vicious masquerade. A Snre Indication of Cnltnro. Therefore do not catch up anything as good enough for your growing girl. Do not impose on her the wearing out of your old figured or brocaded growns with their passementeries, and jets, and galoons, and artificial flowers. Puffs and biases and such intricacies are far more out of place on her than they were on yourself. The things that she ought to wear cost very little. And as inexpense is a condition of their elegance there is no excuse on the score of cost for improper dress. There is no surer signs of a cultured household than children in plain attire. Even the young girl's party dress comes under the law. It may not be decollete nntil she makes her debut. It is of inex pensive material, high-necked and long sleeved. People on hygienic hobby-horsas will approve of this, and very sensible in deed it appears. If only fash'ion were con sistent. But she isn't; she insists on no more than a surface effect of healthy dress. All the talk about the athletic society girl and her loose garments, would lead to the inference that health is the rage, and that the fashionable miss has discarded all hindrances to muscular development. But she hasn't. Seeing is believing and her gymnastic teacher, at least, knows the truth. Secret of the Del Sarte Teacher. If you would study the wealthy misses of America as they are, yon must visit them in their haunts, the fashionable boarding schools of New York and vicinity, where they spend the probationary years of their time before they arrive at their coming out ball. In these schools the Del Sarte in structors can tell a secret that shivers all to pieces the stories of athletics. Here it is, it is spoken on authority. Every mother's daughter of them wears a corset, and pulls the strings tight. Yes, tight. And the gym teacher divides her time Detween instruction and expostu lation. And the girl backs herself up by home influ ences thus I quote from file: "But my chaper one at home is always say ing to me: 'Pull up your corset strings Gladys. How you lookl' " By ,all of which it is manifest that the society miss stands on the brink of more things than womanho o d. She -still wa vers between the old rule of passivity and the new one of mus cles and aes thetics. Del A Dancing Bourn. Sarte is fashionable, but so are corsets, and they must reconcile themselves as thejr may. Meantime the spectacle of the gymastio in structor hoMing up single-handed her stand ard, while the girls bear dpwn on her class room in stays is a sufficiently significant picture ol the present state of athletics in fashionable society. The Girls' Dancing Gown. But, at any rate, her dancing school dress is all right The skirt is in straight breadths, without gores; it is gathered and sewed to the waist, and is hemmed. The neck has no collar, but is cut down round the base of the throat, making just the outline that a modest necklace would follow. The waist has the outside gathered simply onto the lining at neck and belt; or else it is a baby waist worn over a high guimpe. The sleeves are full bishop, or else are some form of the puffed sleeve. The neck is finished with the narrowest of bindings,' with or without a lace.edge. A sash tied behind with loops and long ends is the main ornament, both beautiful and fashionables It is either of four-inch ribbon, or of the material of the gown, with the ends hemmed or fringed, de signs having the waists more or less modi fied from the model described above and are here suggested: It should be noted that variations are in the waists only, the skirt remaining in II. IBs. 1K7 every case plain. The first design is of dot ted Swiss muslin, has the waist gathered on the shoulders and crossed, surplice fashion, in front. A sash and a Marie Antoinette neckerchief of plain muslin completes its charming simplicity. Another dotted mus lin is surplice back and front, and is worn oyer a tucked guimpe of plain muslin. A sash of white satin ribbon is round the waist. Still another dotted muslin with a baby waist is worn over blue, and hak' a guiujpe of Valenciennes lace. The guimpe is without lining or is lined with ivory white. It is made by sewing insertion, with beading between, in vertical stripes for the nectc, with the stripes running round for the sleeve. Narrow blue ribbon is run through all the headings. Tie these rib bons together in knots and loops round the neck, and in loops and ends down the length of the sleeve. Finish neck and wrists with a tiny bias fraying of blue silk. A Pink and Blue Silk Gown. An exquisite gown of India silk? of pale blue with pink dots, made with a blouse shirred very full on cords in several rows, around the neck, and is gathered at the bot tom and falls over the belt. The belt should be a pink ribbon sash, but if one desires novelty there may be a pointed directoire belt instead, made of blue chamois skin and laced in'front with a pink cord. Col ored chamois skins may be had at the stores for a small advance on the common price. The full bishop sleeves are turned under at the top and gathered an inch from the T - A Tnk and Blue BUk Gown. edge, leaving a frill standing round the armhole. Crepons and cashmeres in all pale tints are much used. A favorite model has the waist round across the back and drooping from the side seams to a blunt point i n front The front of the waist i s some times laid i n plaits that meet in a point at the bottom. Im mensely becom ing to a'dark girl is a crepon ot a yellow ochre tint, with brown vel vet The velvet is in a wide snsh belt, fastened be hind with a big rosette. Chiffon and crape are made up for large girls. They are over silk and satin of their own color, A. School Gown. and are made' in the simple way first mentioned; that is to say, simply gathered round the neck, with no ornaments but a satin sash. The neck of a chiffon dress may be finished with a gathered ruche of unhemmed chiffon. 7has Jewelry She May Wear. If a girl must have a bit of jewelry it is permissible to wear a tiny gold chain with a A Glimpse of Valenciennes. small pendant, or a string nf gold beads. Precious stones and other valuable jewels she should not be allowed to wear. The hair isfrorn in a hanging braid till the age of 15. Afterward it is braided at the nape of the neck and turned under in a hanging loop, or else it is braided from the top of the head and fastened in a line down the back, without ribbon or other ornament A small, curly bang is worn. Stockings and slippers ,of black, rather than the color of the dress, are the con servative choice for girls' evening wear, as being most inconspicuous and simple. The cloat for a girl to wear over her dancing dress should be a single or double cape, or a loose coat with bishop sleeves, reaching to the bottom of the skirt Its material should be an inexpensive wooL It should have no trimming, but it may be -lined with a bright silk. Ada Bache-Coite. The Bright Sunday School Boy. Harper's Bazar. Sunday School Teacher (sadly) I'm afraid, Johnny, that I will never meet you In heaven. Johnny Why? "What have you been doing now? A Cup of Tea. Belle Hunt In Frank Leslie's. Cup of dellciousness thou Irth tayl What elfln "spirits" lurked within thy dregal WTiat witches' spell what Impish bogle's glee What shades of long dead Teddies, Tats, and Megsl Thou limpid, amber innocence Incog! Thou sweetened "fragrant beverazethat cheers!" Beneath those amber gleams were Irish b02S, And braes and fens and ghoulish midnight fears. I see thee sparkling in thy egg-shell shores, Stirred by the silver paddle of a spoon; I hear thee gurgle low on sugar reels, . Lit by a lemon crescent of a moon. Alas! what shoals below that egg-shell rim! What undertow tuzgert at the silver oarl What sirens couched amonpr the sugar reefs, Luring the mariner to treach'rous shorel Thou golden fraud I henceforth thee eschew! I'll sip no gilded-o'er insomnia! Ill hay no more the rayless midnight moon, Hltohing iny chariot to tho pale pole-starl I'll turn me to thy name's traducer teal That baseless fabric of an ovet-stecp. I'll quaff the substance with the spirit flown, I'll know the difference, but. at least, I'll eleep, ,. ' Hi PA ANOTHER DRAWING LESSON. Sttssestloru for Reproducing the Familiar Goat In Black and White Hbir to Get Over the Hard Points A Tonne People's Pastime. rwurriEN re a Tin: dispatoh.1 Young piture-makers will find this goat an interesting art Bl.udy. The form of the animai has many strong characteristics of decided marking. In fact, at first glance, the creature often looks as if it were a caricature, with its ridiculous tail, its odd angles, and its qneer, long beard. Figure 1 gives the side view of a stand- ing goat It' will be seen that the outline is made up of odd, unexpected lines. The bony framework is un usually well defined; the projections are brought out sharply by the various hollow&and flatnesses. Observe that in the goat there are but few rounded sections; that the one conspicuous curved line is that of the under part of the body, and that this is in strong contrast to the straight line of the back tyA above. (Fig. 1.) The upper line of the neck is almost straight; the lower line is slightly convex. The shoulder section rises a little above the backbone. The bank, from the shoulder to tbe hip, is straight The most marked feat ure of the upper outline is the abrupt down ward slant whioh begins just over the hip bone and ends at the tail. (Fig. L) The tail is carried horizontally sometimes, but generally at an upright angle. (Fig. L) The body is noticeably thin from side to O "W! T, r-v-sv V ywsi V S- (Tis: side, except through the rib section (Fig. 2). The lezs are spare and stiff in line (Figs. 1 Bnd 2.) The forehead is prominent; the line from the forehead to tbe end of the nose is slightly concave; the line of the lower part of the face is slightly convex, as is also the under line of the head. Observe carefully tne portions of the horus and ears, and their relative proportions to each other and to the size of the whole head. Note the flexibility of the ear-. Note the peculiar thinness of the lower end of the face. Note the curious beard. To repeat, the special goat characteristics are the abrupt downward slant of the Tiq.Sj back line from hips to tail, the usual up ward turn of the tail itself, the curved lower line of the body compared with the straight lineof the back above, the horns and the flexible ears, the thinness of the nose, and the beard. Once learn to place those prop erly in proportion and position, and you will have mastered the goat. In drawing the goat in different positions and the creature is capable of assuming a great many first put on paper those lines which give the special goat propor- tions and goat characteristics, as in figure 8. Then add the details of the form, also those lines that indicate the rather ragged sort of hairy covering (Fie. 4). Always, so far as possible, make the finishing touches do double duty, bringing out details, and at the same time more strongly defining the first outline. Fig. 5 shows the goat reclining and IfilJ tethered to a stake. Note the ungainliness, the stiffness of outline; note the positions of the legs, their bending, foldings, and angles; note how sharply the collar separ- ates the neck section from the abruptly broadening shoulder section. , """ V ' r'l ' ' 'bjI fl v We will now take up the head in detail, in different positions. The whole mass of the head, with the horns, is rather heavy (Fisr. 6). The horns are broad at the base,' but taper rapidly to a point; they are slightly curved and slant well backward. The forehead is con vex, prominent The nose line is long, slightly concave, and at the end is lost in the upper lip, which projects beyond it The two planes of the end of the face are indicated by two straight lines outside the outline. The union of the lips forms a straight line. The ears are very movable; mey are carried as easily lorward as Cacs:- ward. Sometimes they turn sharply for ward and hide the eyes, giving a very odd, funny expression to the face (Fig. 6). The side of'the neck is strongly marked by a large muscle which starts below the ear at the back of the jaw. In Fig.- 7 observe the position of horns, ears and eyes. The eyes set high in the head; the ears start a little back of the eyes; the horns just above the roots of the ears. These positions vary somewhat in different varieties of goats. When the goat strikes an attitude of de fense he bends his head down, presses his chin against his breast, and his neck curves up sharply back of the horns. (Fig. 8). For a general outline plan of the head in a direct front view see Fig. 9. Fig. 10 gives details of the front view and also shows how the natrowness and oro- j t'cuon oi me nose are represented. Compare the dis- "" tance from the eyes to the top of the head with the distance from the eyes to the bot tom of the face. Note that the horns start from the sides of an eminence at the top of the head, which makes its greatest height between them. Tbe space be tween the horns is often about half the width of a horn at its basi The rounded projections over the eyes are at the roots of the horns. Fig. 11 gives a three-quarters view of the head of a reclining goat Look, now, at the figure of the goat as a whole, in the completed drawing, Fig. 12, and note that the character of the out line, even after it ha's been softened by the hair, is still stiff and ragged. The 'hair clings quite closely to the upper part of the body, and so leaves ail tne depression defined; it is longer and hides the outline more from the tail, down the hindquarters, along the lower part of the body and up the throat to the head; it also clothes the upper part of the legs. In studying goat action, notice that in repose the goat's face wears an expression nv'W of great innocence and seriousness. Very riight movements give him entirely differ ent expressions; with a backward swing of the ears he looks sly, "knowing;" with downward flap of the ears he becomes a grinning satirist; or, looking at you in tently, he turns one ear forward and the other backward as if just for the joke of it Observe how, by merely placing the fore legs close together and spreading the hind legs, the animal takes on an expression of the greatest activity (Fig. 13). For the action ot a belligerent goat see Fig. 14. "When we compare the kid with the mature goat, we find a slighter frame and a softer, less angular outline, as in the F.j.l young of most animals. The- most marked differences in proportion are the very small head of the kid andMts high body line over the hips (Fig. 15). The kid's body is even narrower than the goat's in the thigh and chest sections and its neck even more abrupt in its union with the shoulders as the downward slant from the hips and the tail is even more conspicuous. The kid's head is shorter and rounder, and more "innocent looking" than the goat's; the horns are small; the ears are large; the nose is quite short compared with the goat's (Fig. 17). y" Tbe kid is quick in its f V movements, more nerv 'l VN us, more restless, than J the goat jy As to appropriate A ' ' surroundings in a pict- KtT?1! ure of a goat, it may be '" remarked that the goat is quite at borne in places where most ani mals would be ill at case. You may perch him on the sheer sides of hills, on th: tops of ledges, when, cropping'the grass in crev ices, or snuffing the breeze from some ragscd peak, the animal is alnays striking, always picturesque. . . Caroline Hust Euiirsn. We carry large force of expert furniture packers, and furnish estimates on packing, storing and shipping of household goods. haugh z isEA2r, 33 water street. ' ' iJ-lo IT.J 'Kft-j? ' "sT a. WEITTEN FOR THB DISPATCH BY ELLEN OLNEY KIRK. VEBYTHING had seemed to come to Ted by instinct until he was taught the great "ring trick." He had been born in the cir cus, and long before he could walk was nsed to riding round and round the ring on the "learned pony," swinging his bare legs defiantly and crowing with glee every time he passed the starting post He climbed lad ders and poles, holding on by his chubby little hands, as soon as he could toddle alone, and crept into risky places where, as the whole troupe used to say, watching him. with iov and nride. he van nhliied in "hftner on bv his eyelids." - . o o "When he was 5 years old he used to per form regularly with old Benny, the famous 'bareback rider," in the "wOd Indian" act All the glitter, color, stir, life of the circus was the joy of the youngster's existence. He was so used to the sight of expert riders and acrobats going through their parts he had no thought of any possible danger at tending their exploits, and all that others could do he felt he could do and longed to do. His father had been the wonderful rider, Llenellcn, killed, unluckily, by a kick from hi3 favorite horse's hoof just as he carelessly stooped to feel the fetlock. That was when Ted was but 2 years old, and Llewellen had been so much beloved that the company adopted the boy, as it were and toot pride in his cleverness and promise, for there could be no doubt that nature had given him the true eye, the steady head, the indomitable nerve, and the quick sense of the laws of balance which are needed by a man whose pro fession it is to dangle twixt heaven and earth. His mother was a farmer's daugh ter, who bad made a romantic match or running away with the handsome Llewel len. Brie had remained in the company after her husband's early death as a sort of "wardrobe woman." Old Benny looked after Ted's training. Often when alone with her boy Mrs. Llewellen would string out stories about the old farm where she had spent her happv, free girlhood. Ted knew every flower which grew in the bor ders, and his mouth watered at the account of the applet, white and red, which ripened on the hillside. It is a great deal to know as much about the world as Ted did, so ha used to tell old Benny about the farm, which was to him such a wonderful fairy tale. "Pity now your mother couldn't go home and take you to see her folks," said Benny. "Goihomeandtakeme,"saidTed. "Why, could she?" "Why not?" said Benny. This new and startling idea dawning on Ted's mind took his breath away. "Mother," he cried, running to her, "why don't you take me down to see grandfather and grandmother and the flowers and the apples?" "Ah, why not?" burst out the homesick woman, with a bitter cry. "Because-1 gave all that up when I ran away with your father. Because they wouldn't speak to me; no, not if I went down on my knees to them." "Whv wouldn't thev sneak to von?" M Ted, aghast "Because I belong to a circus." she re plied. Ted comprehended tbe pain behind his mother's words, although he did not under stand the words themselves. He was indeed really amazed that anybody should not be proud to know the distinguished people he was used to. But he realized now that the reason that his mother sighed sometimes was that she felt shut out from the old para dise, and he began to sigh toa Perhaps he was tired; perhaps he had in his young energy gone a little beyond his childish strength, but he began to feel fretted by the noise of the circus and a curious homesick ness grew in him for the whisners of 'the forest the early moraine rush of the birds, and the sight of animals not trained and kept in cages but playing about the fields. He longed to climb the hill and meet the wind ready to buffet him when he reached the top, and to dabble his feet in the cool stream where his mother's brothers nsed to swim on summer after noons. The season was hot and on nights when the animals were restless, when the lions roared and lasbed tbe bars with their tails and the tigers snarling paced their cages and the hyenas yelled and the ele phants trumpeted, and tbe horses frightened snorted and stamped in their stalls, Ted could not sleep. There was no airto breathe and the many scents made him long for the fields of clover and the gardens with its beds of mignonette. "Mother," he burst out oyer, "why don't they like the circus?" "Who?" said his mother, startled. She s a,t late on her sewing as usual, but she had supposed the boy was fast asleep. "Why grandfather and grandmother and the rest of them." "Some people don't like a circus, Ted, ihe said gently. "It's just a feeling." "But it's the greatest show on earth!" "I know it's a great thing in its way," said Mrs. Llewellen, "but you see, Ted, my family are quiet people and their way is different I suppose it is partly the tights and the spangles, and the crowns, the gaudy, make-believe, which made father feel that nothing is modest and honest and real about anybody who belongs to a circus. But if father kuew.old Bennv, if he knew him as you and I do, he would say be was a food man. And if he knew how everybody ad to work, to go over every part again and again, he would see that no good per- iormers coma De uissipaiea oriazy. 1t waa lust at this time that Tk sn. was just at this learning the "ring trick," and certainly there was plenty ot hard work about that. It was, as we have said, the first thing that Ted did not take to by natural instinct, as a duck to water. Never before had he shrunk back from what he was bidden to do, giving J way to a fit of trembling. As old Bennv said the new trick was no harder than the I trapeze, and Ted liked of all things to go ' flying from rope to rope to the topmost ring, loving the idea that the heart of the specta tors sometimes sank into their boots at the conviction that he was in danger, now he ' suffered nameless terrors; he lelt clnmsv. ' k T he had lost faith in himself. The truth was "You see-," the doctor said, "he is shat that up jto the presenthe had gone on doing ' tered. His age is in his favor, and if ha everything that came in his way withont a t could have a good home in the country " thought of what might happen if he failed. I "He3hallhsve a home in the country," Now he was like a somnambulist who said old Bennv, and he did not lose an hour, awakens to find himself in a position of He set off to Mrs. Llewcllen's old home, he ' danger. It was as if he had to learn his saw her father and mother and pleaded his tricks all over again, gaining again piece by and Ted's case with them, but he did not by hard trial and proof instead of heretofore t need to plead long. Ted had his first swiftly and unerringly by instinct Old rllmnsB of the house nd the river and the Benny was patient and tender with the little fellow. I "All rnn have to an in vih IaM f the ring and turn round on it." said hr. t'You know all the while there is a cushion underneath you and that if you were to fall you would not be hurt." 1 shan't fall," said Ted, "but W like it" "You have not got used to it and it'i there that the fnn comes in," said Benny. "Yon never had a stumble yet, not even a balk; you're like a bird." Ted hung his head and confessed to hinv self that he no longer felt like a bird. Ha was so weary. There was a gray haze ove all this narrow little world of his, and each, day it settled closer aria1 closer. He felt dull, inert, as if he longed fo sleep; at least to sit down aimlessly and dream wide awake abont the hill and the river and the cool, quiet niihta in the old place. "I myself have hated to do things that I grew mighty proud of when I had got at th knack of them," said Benny. "Come now, try again, Ted." Ted braced himself up and went through the rehearsal, but when it was over he burst out crying and sat down all in a tremble. "It's A flsfft Kir tn Ti n lifT nT-nM ,3 r "M"r "nil! "Tii..t (. -:-! :' t !j "- - -" . uc .nuns uue js ainiia I of that one trips in, but those one feels too J sure of." They all flattered and encouraged him, ' and Ted felt ashamed of his faint-hearted-! ness. A regular salary was promised him j by the manager as soon as he had made a success oi ine ring trice, and this was what he and his mother had been looking for ward to ever since he was 10 years old. It was odd how he disliked the ring trick, when it was simply a matter of swinging himself up to the top of a high, tall frame work on rings which hung on horizontal bars. The supports below were twelve feet apart, but met with another transom beam and ring on the apex. The way was to catch the lower ring, swing round on it, then with the impetus gained to leap the gap, seize the opposite ring a little higher up and so on from right and left and left and right to the top ring and down again. It was a pretty feat, and, perhaps, nohardsr than any other of the flying tricks, bat it needed a clear head, and the tronble waa Wkff Don't They Hktthe Circusf that Ted had got into a dreamy mood. He was so homesick nowadays for the farm and for the different life. He liked better to brood over tbe idea of the bees humming over the flower beds and the doves and mar tens calling for the cows than to give his whole heart and mind to the actual thing be taw and touched. However, practice makes perfect, and by the time the new season opened in Bright town Ted had mastered the ring tnck. There was a famous programme and Ted had six different Darts: in the Indian act the j buffalo hunt, the chariot race, and so on finally to the wondenul ring tries, now ex hibited for the first time. The excitement was good for Ted. The dull, weary feeling he bad suffered from ot late vanished, his blood warmed to his wish, he liked the mad gallop, he felt th? joy of his own youth and strength and was ready to take wings and float in air. The tent was packed with ad miring spectators, and all the performers were in high spirits. The ringmaster and clown cracked fresh joke', at which even the members of the company could laugh. The horses went like the wind, the perform ing dogs and elephants and bears all seemed singularly intelligent, and altogether it was one othe great days of the greatest show in the universe, and the "ring trick" was to be the rrand climax. "Ail rightl" said old Benny to Ted as the little fellow ran out of tbe dressing tent in bis scarlet tights and cap. "All right, on deck," said Ted. Nimhledy, nimbledy, up I co. The sky above and the earth below." He stood for a moiqent measuring the supports and frames with a knowing glance, then with a bound, caught the lowest ring spun around, and light as a squirrel leaped to the opposite one and thus zigzagging mounted to the upper ring. Here, just to rest and steady himself, he swung round twice then reversed before he should begin the descent He liked it up there. A cold' breath of air freshened him. The middle flat) of the tent was open for the sake of ventilation and light, and as he swung he caught a glimpse of the sky dotted with tender, fleecy little clouds, like sheep in a pasture, as bis mother had ones said. His thoughts wandered to the farm for a minute, then he suddenly remembered what he had to do; yes, he had to reverse. He quit forgot that he had already reversed. What was this? Where was the ring? How still it wasl How cooll Who was it gave a sharp cry? What wa3 that roar? Not of wilubeasts but of men and women. Oh that crash the end of the world must have come. "I'm not hurt," said Ted; "really I'm not!" Then he fainted away and was carried out in old Benny's arms. Word was passed round that the boy was not hurt, and the show went on to its close, although all the periormers were uurriea ana everything went badly. Ted had broken no bones, strange to sayj he had fallen on the cushion, vet somehow he was hurt and badly hurt 2fobody quite knew why they were afraid it was his back. Days came and went and he lay on: tie bed holdinsr his mother's hand. went anu nc lay on his iit- "I couldn't get up to-dav," he would mutter in alarm when anybody came near him, "but I'm getting rested and perhaps by to-morrow " He was so used to playing his parts that he was ashamed thus to lie and eat the bread of idleness. But he and old Benny used to plan the wonderful feats he would accomplish as soon as he got well. Yet it was soon understood that he would never rerain his old powers. Tend within a week. The sight of it brought the coldr to his cheek and the lieht to his rm-"L i - &yk ys. Ufa "Why, mother." he cried, raising himself " 'Jjt up. "It paid. It paid to have the fall. "T . Tviav w ftn1i1n't have eoma hnm If T ' : had not been laid up." , ' O - M -Hi T,'. -ii W siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMWBsiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM tiMisp illl,iiaMaTT7jr1J.11" -"rTirr nasT ,sBjaif"i Plains n-JggJa. inn i -tt e mm ---