i $ i a Be The Cat and the King they ran a race; fo judges an Qwl with solemn face, ‘And three blind Crabs of courtly grace. af The Cat and the King stood toe to toe; The Donkey gave his trumpet a blow— One, two, three, and away they go! Sure, it was a wonderful thing; ‘A wild shout made the welkin ring— To think that a Cat should beat a King! an P The Cat bowed low to the stately ion, he Goose and the Donkey of haughty © mien, ‘And even the Lobster proud and green; ‘But then she rose with a pompous air, 'And tossed her head and tail in the air, ‘And challenged the fleetest runner there. The Lobster strode forth with native grace, But the ained to run him a race, ‘And she flapped her tail in the Lobster’s 8 . W i THEY hp i The Lobster caught the tail in his claw, The audience shouted a grave guffaw, ‘And the Cas struck out with a flew-i-aw.” ‘Around the track the runners tore, : The Lobster behind, the Cat before, She would reach the goal in one leap more. a vn STAT pe iF But the Lobster he struck a bit of a mound : : ‘And gre the Cat’s head went with a und, ‘And a yard in advance he touched the ground. : -~Abbe Reed, in Good Literature. THE NEW GUN. Johnny had a brand-new gun which was a gift from his Uncle Robert. Johnny had been wanting this same gun for a long time. ' He used to walk down by the toy store and gaze longingly into the shop window at the gleaming barrel, at the wonder- ful trigger, and at the dark-polishead stock and wish and wish that the beautiful gun belonged to him. At last someone told Uncle Robert about the boy’s great desire, and the other little friends were playing on {1 went up to the hill. that was tied up to the dock, and, FT) AW next day a long wooden box was un- loaded at John’s house, addressed to Master John Howard. In great ex- citement he tore away the wrappings, | and you can imagine his joy and hap- piness in at last being the proud own- er of such a wonderful gun. The following Saturday Johnny dressed himself up in a pair of over- alls, a pair of stout shoes and an old cap. He loaded his gun, and with plenty of ammunition and a small box of lunch he started forth. : “Where are you going, Johnny?” asked his Aunt Minnie, as he passed down the garden walk. “Out to shoot Molly Cotton-tail,” he answered, proudly. Aunt Minnie disapproved of the gun, but Johnny had been allowed to have his own way, so she said noth- ing. It was a beautiful day. Johnny | walked across the meadow. At last he saw a small object hopping along ! in the grass. The small object hopped upon a tiny mound and blinked his eyes at Johnny. Johnny was all ex- citement, but he drew his gun and took careful aim. There was a loud report and then a very small, excited boy ran hastily after the little bob- tailed creature which was now hop- ping painfully upon three legs. “Oh, little Molly Cotton-tail!” cried Johnny, as he caught the rabbit in his hands; “oh, oh, I have broken your poor little leg! How cruel! I am so sorry that I shot you. I will take you home with me and bind your poor little leg up.” Johnny gathered the poor, fright- | ened creature in his arms and carried it home with him. Soon he had band- aged its legs and put it in a big box, where he might tend it until it was well. \ : “But where is your new gun?” asked his Aunt Minnie. “Oh, I left it in the meadow,” an-- swered Johnny. “I will go bring it to the house and let you hang it up in my room. I do not intend to use it on poor little harmless creatures any more,” and Johnny never did.—The Child’s Gem. : A STRANGE ANIMAL. I am a little boy, eight years old, and I thought I would write a little letter. About one month ago I and some the old fort green. We were playing hide-and-go-seek. Two or three of us were hiding in a tent down by the road, when suddenly one of the boys said: “Look over the hill? Isn't that a giraffe?” We all looked. We all thought it wag a giraffe, so we The hill was a piece of land going up higher than the level earth. When we got up the hill, what do you think we found the animal was? A leopard? No A goat? No. A calf? No. Well, it was a little deer. The people were feeding it crackers. There was a lit- tle hoy, with white, curly hair. A woman was trying to take a picture of him and the deer, but she could not; the deer walked ‘around too mach. But some time afterward she did. I walked up to the deer to pet it, but instead of petting the deer 1 got some saddening hits on my head. Next time I went down, two or three days afterward, it gave me some more. So I gave it some candy, and I don’t think it will hit me any more.— Clayton B. Seagears, in the New York Tribune. 7 ny Ey Camere wy a A VISIT TO THE NAVY YARD. Last autumn I had the pleasure of a visit to the Brooklyn navy yard. I was invited by the father of a friend of mine, and we asked a few of our friends. hil 9 The day was a fine one, and after crossing the Brookilyn Bridge in a trolley car we walked to the navy yard. ; One of the boys had. brought a kodak with him, and expected to take some pictures, but as we were about to enter a blue-coated official said that it was not allowed, and he had to leave his camera behind until we came out. : : After entering the yard everything was a hustle and hurry. There was the hum of drills, the screeching of engines, ‘and the incessant hammering as the men fitted the pieces of metal on the huge sides of a battleship that was being built in dtydock. We then walked over to one of the battleships securing permission, we climbed ‘up deck, where one of the sailors offered to show us around. ] Everything was intensely interest- ing, and we enjoyed our visit very much.—~Howard Townsend, in the New York Tribune. The recent prominence in the suf- frage discussion at Albany of Dr. Mary | Walker recalls one of the cleverest remarks that the lamented Bill Nye | ever uttered. He described Dr. Mary | as “the only self-made man in Amerie ca.” \ " wah Eng TT CR a 1 GENERAL D. PORFIRIO DIAZ, PRESIDENT OF MEXICO. Calculating Rule and Pencil Holder. For the benefit of the engineer and draftsman who is required to make hasty calculations, a combined pencil holder and calculating rule has Boilermaker Best Lawyer, In spite of the fact that Vincent J. Thompson, a young boilermaker, arrested on a charge of moving mort- gaged property from Michigan City recently heen devised. The calculat-|to Gary, was opposed at his trial by Calculating Rule and Pencil Holder. ing rule is of tubular form, and is fitted with a slide indicator, formed in the shape of a cuff. One part of the tube comprising the rule is pro- vided. with a slide member, which is graduated and used in the manner of the ordinary slide of a calculating rule. Within the tube a pencil may be fitted. By thus combining the rule and pencil, the danger of mislaying the rule is avoided, and the com- bined instrument is of convenient form to carry in the vest pocket.— Scientific American. S— A Plant Watering Scheme. Persons engaged in rearing house- hold plants are often in a quandary when it is desired to leave the house temporarily without neglecting the plants. An arrangement can be readily rigged up so that the necessary water will be supplied to the soil automati- cally. Take a bowl of water and raise it well above the level of the plant to be watered by means of a bog or a pile of books. Twist several strands of common darning wool to- gether to form a long thread and soak them in the water. If one’ end be hung over the bowl and the other end left in the water a steady drip, drip will commence and continue until the bowl is empty.—London Globe. "two of the ablest members of the bar at Hammond, Ind., he pleaded his own case so well and baffled the pros- ecution without the aid of a lawyer that a jury in Judge Ames’ court found him not guilty. Thompson compelled one witness to swear that he did not know the difference be- tween a kitchen table and a cabinet. All the oratory of the lawyers availed nothing against Thompson’s clever cross-questioning. : Se > / Book-Marking System. Among the recent inventions is a very ingenious book-marking system designed for use by teachers, students and others who have occasion to read from or consult different parts of a book. The scheme consists of a series of target-shaped cards of grad- uating width and of sufficient length to rest across the page and protrude from the edges of the leaves. The extending end of this is marked with figure, letter or other note suiting the convenience of the ome having occasion to consult the book. The other end of the slip is fitted with a rubber band, which is of sufficient proportions ta fit arcund the volume from top to bottom. The functien and to permit of an arrangement of markers in such a way that one will net overlap another and hide it from Pa AEA PERS ater SAW view. For a lecturer having occasion to refer frequently to the different parts of a book during the course of his remarks the convenience of this scheme will be readily appreciated.— Washington Star. ‘THE NEW SKIRT AND THE POETRY OF MOTION pA Edith (breaking into a hop)—*"“Hurry up, Mabel; you'll never catch the train if you keep on trying to run.”—From Punch. ’ ~ [1 | ~rmsmmcorely | { / mIAA INS . Pree are wedi 1 re ori fi of this is to hold the marker in place PILOT AND “DRUMMER?” IN BRITISH COMMONS. Census Shows Wide Range of Popular Representation in New Parliament. ! The oft-asked and much debated question as to whether the British House of Commons is more represen- tative than the American House of Representatives is answered by the following census of the new Com- mons, taken for private reasons by Lewis Appleton, of Old Queen street, Westminster, and furnished by him for publication. It has been com- pared with the official records and found correct. Commercial travelers ste sss steve sts . Directors of public service corporations. 12 Real estate, accountants and auctioneers 7 Farmers ...... ef hen iene sale 13 Randiowners ... i chi sia 56 Iron founders and merchants. ........... 13 Manufacturers ard spinners............. 51 Poekors ov. iin hs nrg Storekeepers ....... ei erates aeineig OO Clergymen .........00 0 a ia 3 Automobile makers and dealers. ......... 2 Newspaper owners and journalists. .... . 38 Peers’ sons and brothers............... . 45 Artidenlers [00 8,0 on oa he Pilots vov0......0 00... i eae eas +. Printers, booksellers and authors....... 8 Professors, schoolmasters and tutors.... 14 Railway and naval contractors.......... 3 Secretaries (stenographers) ........... . 10 Ship owners and builders............ are 12 Stockbrokers ........ sire eee es evel Military officers. .... STS TT, vee. 44 Navalofficers.......... ., olin. ee 2 By the foregoing census it appears the House of Commons is like the American Congress, a popular place for lawyers. The English legislative body, though, is strongly represen- tative of a number of trades gnd pro- fesstons not markedly present in the lower House in Washington, notably storekepers, farmers, teachers, mili- tors, literary men and clergymen, Peers’ sons and brothers, too, are in a class by themselves, inasmuch a3 there are few men of leisure in Con- gress who could them. cos - The American Senate is almost en- tirely made up of lawyers and cap- tains of industry, whereas the Brit- ish House of Lords is almost entirely made up of men of leisure. a . an WISE WORDS. A contented heart is a cash register full of gold coin. : whole world is trying to do “fancy work.” ge : uncommauntcative stenographer would be a curiosity. \ If lots of people were portioned out the kind of cake they deserve life would give them sponge cake. * A man who has money to throw at the flocks that hover over him. The famous shot heard round the to the modern chorus girl’s kiss. Opportunity, like repartee, hath a feniinine way of ringing her bells when she turns the corner out of sight, : : : the ugly old world is appreciative enough to adore even attractive veneering. A woman when she puts k»r money in a bank has the same feeling as when she leaves her best fsdend in the graveyard. : % Consider the ways of the diligent man, my son; he standeth in the presence of princes. Observe the methods of the diplomat; he sits right ‘along up beside them!—New York ‘relegram. Tin Corsets Draw Bolt. stays, came near causing the death of Mary Taylor, tHe nine-year-old daugh- ter of John P. Taylor, a farmer liv- ing several miles south of Petersburg, Ind. During an electrical storm the child crawled heneath the rear porch at her home, looking for a hen’s nest, and while there lightning struck the house, partially wrecking it, but injuring none but the little girl in her hiding place. The child was taken from under the house, unconscious from serious burns. Her mother, in undressing her, found the child had on rudely constructed corsets, which had been made of tin taken from the sides of old cans. The metal had been mashed the child. One of the stays contained a small hole and the tin was melted. The child recovered. Some Style. Sam Sunflower—‘ ‘Pete Green am gittin® mighty tony in his invitations dese days.” ; ‘Bill Blackberry—*“How’s dat?” Sam Sunflower— “Why, Pete killed dat old rooster he had foh last five yeahs en den invited de parson to a ‘chanticleer dinner’ on Sunday.”’— Chicago News, Bankers and financiers............0v0... 13° AWYRIS Ll pe Re oe 155 Brewers, distillers and wine merchants.. 13 Builders, architects and surveyors....... 8 Civil and mining engineers....... doesrraidh ‘Coal mine owners and dealers........ arid Diplomatists and Government officials.. 8 tary and government officials, doc~ be compared with A literary editor knows that the Typewriters tell no tales, but an the birds can hardly see the sky for world is a toy ‘pistol report compared | Beauty may be only skin deep, but A pair of corsets, made of tin’ into shape and covered with cloth by ok