A SONG. 8! ng me • tweet, low song of night And then when the Jtafore the moon is risen. Bend down your head unto me, A song that tells of the star's delight Whisper the word that was born abova Escaped from day's bright prison. Er* the moon had swayed the sea. A song that croons with the cricket's voice, Ere the oldest star began to shine, That sleeps with tha shadowed trees, Or the furthest sun to burn, A soug that shall bid my heart rejoice The oldest of words, O heart of mine, At its tender mysteries ! Yet newest, and swept to ) ea " 1 - . —Hildegarde Hawthorne, in Harper s Magazine. THE DOCTOR'S STORY. J jj By Charles S. Hathaway. My diploma (dated 1878) four years aid, and from one of the best medical colleges in the land, had maintained Its prominent position on the wall of tuy little country office for nearly three years, and as I sat musing be fore the great box stove and its roaring R ood fire one wintry day, mentally sovering ? fair countryside drive, I included that those three years had teen reasonably prosperous. As I dreamed along in this fashion tuy office door was opened with a rush, lad Darius Robison plunged before lie, very scant of breath, with the news that his little boy was critically ■ll of croup and that Dr. Squiers, who Dad been attending him, had recoin tueuded that I be called to"put a tube Dr something in the child's throat;" that it was a new but sure cure with which Squiers was unacquainted, so far as his own practice was concerned, but that he had heard of several suc cessful operations I had performed. "Will you come, doctor?" asked Rob l&ou in tones and manner indicating doubt and the gravest anxiety. "Certainly, Mr.Robison," I replied; "I will be tiieie within half an hour," it which with a "Thank you, doctor," Darius bounced out of the office, and ihe next instant he was running across lUe street to the general store—a com bination of postoffice, drug store and ill kinds of merchandise. Within five minutes I was ready with my instruments and medicine case, and a minute or two later the etable boy brought my horse and cut ter over from the country tavern, where 1 boarded, and I was off. The two-mile drive over good sleighing with a fresh horse was a short one, so that within 20 minutes I was at the side of the suffering child with the grief-stricken parents and good old Dr. Squiers, very dignified but inter ested, watching my movements with the closest scrutiny. I fouud the boy,about four years old, Buffering from acute membraneous laryngitis. He was creeping about over the bed, pursing his lips,opening his mouth, gasping and reaching out with his hands, as if to pull the air down to his little lungs; his face was blue, the chtst was flattened and de pressed between the ribs and above the clavicles, and the pitch aud char octer of his very difficult breathing in dicated tho presence of membraneous obstruction in the larynx aud glottis. Dr. Squiers administered the chloro foim, and 1 performed the operation of tracheotomy, inserting a tube. The breathing of tho child improved so suddenly aud so well that the shock caused tho father, who had watched the operation,to fall in a fainting con dition, thus adding to the terror of the mother and wife, who was waiting in au adjoining room. Dr. Squiers prompt ly attended to this side incident, how ever, and in a short time the respira tious of the child were easy and regu lar, the natural color had returned to its face, aud he had taken a small portion of food. Meanwhile the father and mother had acquired a condition of self-control aud happiness, so that ■when I started lioiue it was in the midst of one of those dense and wholly beautiful lialosof gratitude and adula tion which come so frequently to all practitioners of medicine aud which go a 1 ug way toward wiping out the fa tigue and disappointments so common to the profession. These details told today, in the light of new instruments,uewmethods and new operations, sound common place, but 20 years ago they were un usual and dramatic, aud besides, at the time of which I speak, Darius Rob ison was a county supervisor and was the supervisor whose vote defeated my desire to serve the county. Moreover, he had shown an unaccountable an tipathy toward myself over siuce I had located in the county. Robison was raised a farmer and had a district school education, but he Was of an observing, investigating turn of mind, aud, being industrious, frugal and correct as to his habits, he was recognized as a valuable citizen who was well iuformed, interested iu cur rent affairs and sincere in his devotion to the prosperity of his towuship. Among other things he had made a special study of the tramp problem and by extensive reading upon phil osophical subjects, and the causes which are supposed to lead to meudi cacy and itineracy, had views quite in a.lvauce of those held by his neigh bors. However, he was appreciative and grateful, as were his wife aud boy,over the service I had performed, so that while I enjoyed hearing the words of praise, sometimes quite fulsome,l did occasionally grow weary over the same details of the same story and the same commendations which I was certain to hear each time I met him or any mem ber of his family. Therefore when I learned, about • year later, that the Robisous were going to move to the northern part of Wiscousiu to engage in the lumber business, I felt some regret and some satisfaction in that while I might be losiug a local friend, my reputation would be carried into the outer world possibly to my own advantage. They had been gone a year or more when I received a letter telling ine as to the good health of the family,that Robison was making money and urging me, when I took a vacation, to pay them a visit. I made proper acknowledgment of the receipt of the letter and forgot the matter until a year later I received auother letter of similar import, add ing that the deer hunting in their vi cinity was fine. Again I was obliged to decline the invitation with thanks. Then, for a couple of years, I heard nothing further until ono day I re ceived a telegram summoning me to a small lumber town but a few miles from Robison's mill to perform an op eration. That eveuing I took the train, and on the following afternoon I reached the place,performed the operation and was asking the proprietor of the hotel where I was stopping as to a midnight train I might take on my way home, when I was very much asto lished to see my old friend Robison enter the hotel. He was cordial to enthusi asm, told me how, hearing of my com ing, he had driven into town especially to get me and take me to his home for a visit, told what a fine lad his boy had grown to be and all about the prosperity and happiness of himself and wife. He would not be put oft', so that finally I agreed togo, and we re tired for the night. The followiug morning I visited my patient to find him doing nicely and returned to the hotel just as iuj friend drove up to the office door with a fine dark bay liorse hitched to an open buggy. As I put my foot on the step to climb to my seat 1 noticed, under the seat partly covered by robes, two or three "large stones netted with ropes like the stone anchors improvised sometimes by fishermen. These an- i chors did not excite especial curiosity at the time, but,as we drove along,my friend very exuberant and talkative, those anchors would flash into my mind everj- little while so that between listening to my companion and musing as to tho stones I had little ejse to do. I was surprised at Robison's volu bility at first, and then I was puzzled by the variety of topics he discussed and the unusual energy and excite ment ho showed as he talked. He was still interested in the tramp question and said he was about to solre it by erecting two large treadmills which he was goiug to turn in opposite di rections by tramp power. The shafts of these treadmills were joined to gether at an angle so that they would press against each other, the ends of the shafts when they came together being protected bj plates of iron and a universal joint. The friction result ing from the opposite movement of tho two treadmills and the plates of iron would generate heat sufficient to boil water and produce steam with which to warm his mill,run his electric lights and grind wood into pulp for paper making purposes. Then I was certain I was driving with a madman, and the curiously covered stones under the seat recurred to my mind. At this point Robison turned his horse from the main road into a little wood road, remarking as he did so that he wanted to leave the highway and take a look at some shingle tim ber which he had skidded on the bank of a lake nearby, preparatory to float ing it over to his mill. I was not frightened becr.use physi cally I felt far superior to my madman. Reaching a point quite a distance from the maiu road,my friend stopped his horse, and as he jumped from the buggy I observed that while his face was covered with a strange pallor his eyes were weirdly bright, while a ner vous twitching kept his lips in a rest less state. Surely the climax was at hand, but what was it? Jumping from the buggy I saw,over a slight eminence a very protty little lake,and on thebf.uk in the foreground was a small boat—a scow made of rough pine boards. I remarked the presence of the boat and asked what it was for. "It is for you to ride in if yon wish," he answered in a quivering, shrill voice at which I stepped more closely to him. Then he said, f;s he stopped upon a log, "let's get up on '.he logs; we'll get a better view." As he did this I saw, in the hand farthest from me, the handle of a revolver,and with a powerful spring I leaped up at him, seized the hand holding the pistol and speaking with all tho calmness I could command said: "My dear Robison, you do not want to shoot me; it would be the mistake of your life to commit such a crime." Instantly his eyes filled with tears, he released his hold upon the weapon and answered: "Doctor, I did intend to shoot you; I have Manted to do it for years, but I am vary thankful I have been prevented. As soon as I heard you were coming up this way I resolved to kill you and end my suf ferings." "Sufferings?" I exclaimed in amaze ment. "Yes. They have been dreadful for years," he answered. "Shortly after we moved up here and w hen my boy became old enough to talk in a mature, reasonable way, he would engage his mother in conversation about his ill ness, about the operation, about your skill and about my opposition to you when you desired the county appoint ment It was their chief recreation. the one topic in which they seemed to find perfect happiness, and at lost it became almost unbearable, Why, 1 have bad that boy and his mother tell me over and over again that they loved you better than they loved me." "And yon have brooded over this delusion," I said, "until at last you enticed me to this spot to shoot me, to fasten the stone anchors in your buggy to my body,take me out into this lake and put me out of sight forever." With a face instantly lighted by a sort of fiendish glee and yet in a voice decidedly normal and commonplace he confessed that I had made a perfect forecast of his designs. I continued the ordinary demeanor, talked mod erately and gently and at once realized I was master of the situation. The result was we re-entered the buggy, drove to his home and received a most cordial welcome. Thdre was not, so far as Robisou was concerned, the slightest evidence of the dreadful trag edy he had planned, and I fancy there was no sign given by myself. In fact, save upon the single topic—and I had that well under control—my friend was not only wholly sane, but he was exceptionally intelligent and interest ing. I met the foreman of his mill and his chief machinist, I walked through the mill and about the entire premises with Robison and his wife aud child as mv companions,learning all the de tails large and small of their prosperity and comfort; but during the entire time I think I saw and noted every ar ticle my friend touched and every time he put his hand into his pocket. 1 did not propose to l>e caught napping. We had a superb dinner, the wife seeming to outdo herself and her re sources in the result, aud when we— Robisou and myself—entered the buggy for the return trip to the town ou the railway, I was fully determined to notify the local physician with whom I was acquainted as to the weak spot iu my friend's condition. During the ride I kept my hand on Robison's revolver—l still have it iu my possession—aud by great good fortune so retained my control upon his understanding that the ride was without incident. At the hotel I parte I with him iu the most friendly way possible. After he had started home I ascertained that the physician I desired to consult was away ou his drive, and so, resolving to write to him a complete history of the ease as soon I reached home, 1 boarded the cars. For one reason and another it was nearly two weeks before I got my let ter off to the Wisconsin physician, and the day after it left my hands I read the following in the geueral news col umn of a Chicago paper: "Darius Robison, a wealthy mill owner and one of the most enterpris ing, public-spirited citizens in the state, committed suicide on the 10th inst. by shooting himself through the head in his mill at . Temporary insanity is believed to have been the cause."—Detroit Free Press. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The windows of Persian houses, as a rule, are not visible from the street. A resident of a Minnesota town died recently of obesity. He weighed, at his death, 438 pounds. The most wonderful vegetable in th 6 world is the truffle; it has neither roots, stem, leaves, flowers nor seeds. Scientists say that the orange was formerly a berry, and that it has been developed for over seven thousand years. Certain music prevents the hail from falling, according to one scien tist, while other kinds have a disas trous effect. Iu China, which has long been known as "the laud of opposites," the dials of clocks are made to turn round, while the hands stand still. Pekin is a city of dust, like most Chinese towns. Nevertheless, the only stores that have glass windows are those of the watchmakers. Glass would be a better and more lasting material than stone for making monuments which are exposed to the wearing action of the weather. Wanted, Heavier Revolver*. After the capture of Suakim it wn& alleged iu the House of Commons that the lances served out were totally unlit for use, bending directly they were put to the trial. And now, as the result of the experience of the re cont campaign, the Mauser revolver is being severely criticised. Officers de clare that iu many cases the revolver was absolutely useless, ana rather than lean ou a broken reed they pre ferred to discard the pistol altogether, for it is a serious affair to discover that you have beeu relying upon a weapon which is useless for its pur pose. The same verdict comes from the northwest frontier of India. What seems to bo wauted is an effective "man-stopping" revolver which will stand the test of a campaign. It ia suggested that too much has been sacrificed for the sake of lightness. Of course, weight is an important consideration, but officers would not mind a little heavier pistol provided it was additionally reliable.—Naval aud Military Record. Twenty J-.a*lies for Six 11 aim. A singular theft was tried by Mr. Beal, first-class magistrate, recently. Superstitious Burmans rull out the hairs of an elephant's tail for talis mans, making rings out of them aud other charms. One Nge Tun Liu went into an elephant's shed at Ahloue and pulled six hairs out of a bull elephant's tail, secreting them in his umbrella. The mahout challenged him, and he promptly shook the hairs out of the umbrella. They fell on some straw* were picked up and put forward ip evidence of theft. The man was con victed and sentenced to receive 20 lashes. - -Times of Burmab. THE REALM 1 OF FASHION. 1 NEW YORK CITY (Special).—One of the handsomest shirt waists shown this season is here illustrated, in pink pique, with bands of white embroidered A HANDSOME SHIRT WAIST. insertion, which is firmly stitched on each edge aud then has the material cut away from underneath, with the exception of that in centre front. Five lengthwise bands are thus applied on the fronts and three ou the backs, the pattern giving the correct lines for the placing. The closing is made through the centre front with small pearl but tons and buttonholes worked through the insertion or through the hem un derneath. The back fits smoothly, and comes well forward and meets the gathered shoulder edges of the full fronts. Gathers adjust the fulness at the neck, which is completed with a col lar band, over which a deep stock is worn that closes in centre back. The 6leeves are iu regulation shirt waist style, gathered at the top and bottom, where they are completed with straight link cuffs. Openings are finished with overlaps at the back in the nsual way. Shirt waists of fine white lawn, tucked all over and united with insertion in this style, make wonderfully attractive summer waists, while both taffeta and wash silks may be used to develop handsome waists by the mode. The insertion may also be omitted if n plainer waist is desired. To make this waist for a woman of medium size will require two and three-fourths yards of material, thirty inches wide. A Simple Hut St>)Uli Gown. An exceedingly effective disposition of ribbon velvet is used to decorate the simple but stylish gown by May Mantou, shown in the large engraving. The material is Cuban red wide wale diagonal, on which the black velvet shows advantageously, the flounce being lined throughout with black taffeta. Three round crystal buttons decorate each front. Fitted linings form the foundation over which the -waist is arranged. The plastrou vest is included in the right shoulder seam and hooked over on the left. The frontß are underfaced with the ma terial and roll back in broad pointed lapels at the top, disclosing the prettily trimmed vest. The seamless back is smooth across the shoulders, the fullness at lower edge being laid in overlapping plaits and stitched firmly to linings. A jslose-fitting col lar shaped in points that rise behind the ears finishes the neck, closing in centre back. The sleeves in latest, mode have the fullness at top gathered and arranged over fitted linings, the wrists being shaped to point over the hand. A daintily shaped girdle that dips in front closes invisibly at the left side. The shirt has a narrow front gore and two wide circular portions that meet at the ceutre back. The placket may be finished at the left front seam under the flounce. Short darts fit the top closely over the hips, and the fullness in back is laid in backward-turning plaits at each side of the centre seam. The skirt is of fashionable length and measures about four yards at the foot. ' The circular flounce is applied over the lower edge and ripples slightly at the front edges, where it is graduated to very narrow width at the top. The front gore presents a panel effect that is exceedingly stylish. The costume may be suitably made of any season able material in silk or wool, and a charming effect is produced when the front gore, vest and lapels are of con trasting fabric in harmonious coloring. The decoration may be as plain or as elaborate as desired, the variety of trimming this scasou being almost unlimited. To make this waist for a lady of medium size will require two yards of material forty-four inches wide. To make the skirt will require six and three-fourths yards of material the same width. Buttons and Buckleg the Vojjne. Buttons and buckles are both worn by women, but must havs a reason for their being, either as objects of use or decoratiou; they are not to be put on at haphazard, but given something to apparently hold in place. The jeweled buttons may be found to match almost any gown, as they are made to represent amethysts, carbuncles, em eralds. turquoises, opals, sapphires, crystals, etc. The one-sided blouse fronts fasten with four such buttons, and the velvet belt has a buckle to match.—Ladies' Home Journal. Wniat Wltli IHstlnctlv« Features. A woman cannot possibly have too many shirt waists, and so a variety in style of shaping as well as material is always acceptable. One of the latest designs is here represented in Delft blue and white French percale, a ma terial that is shown in all the richest new colorings. The distinctive fea tures are found in the groups of tuoks and pleats in front and back, and in the shaping of the yoke that follows the shoulder-line, extended back and meet at the neck in centre. This gives a slender, long-waisted appearance that is new, the ordinary shirt-waist yoke being objectionable on mauy for 'the reason that it cuts off the length. The leather belt is fastened with the useful covered harness buckle. TIIK LATEST DESIGN. The full fronts are closed in centre through a box pleat of medium width. At the neck and shoulder edges are groups of three forward-turning pleats, which are stitohed a short distance from the top to hold them in place. The back is laid in three backward-turning pleats at each side of centre that taper from shoulders to waist, where they lap closely. The stylish shirtsleeves are gathered top and bottom. To make this waist for a woman of medium size will require three and one-fourth yards of material thirty inohes wide. ALASKAN FISHERMEN. They Hake Astonishing Catclies With Homo-Made Tackle. With his home-made fishing-tackle one native Alaskan can capture more fish in a day than can any three white men with their latest improved im plements. The Alaskan Indian shows his intelligence by clinging to his own implements and tools, and at the same time in quietly adapting himself to the greatly altered conditions of his environment. He will adopt certain of our customs and utensils, but re fuses to adopt many others. While he will always give you the most superstitious reasons for clinging to his own time-honored tools, he is quick to decide that the spirits wish him to make use of any new idea which will be an actual benefit under existing conditions. These Indians use the same fishing tackle that Bering found them usiug during his explorations of 17-11, and which George Vancouver found dur ing his first visit among them as a midshipmite under the famous Cap tain Cook a few years later. Fish are abundant. Alaskan home? are always near some excellent fish ing grounds. A village is often situ ated in a certain location simply to be near good halibut banks. Hooks used in fishing for halibut are usually made of a fork of spruce root to which an iron barb has been lashed, the only change from the original being in the iron barb, which sometimes takes the place of the one of bone used iu the primitive hook. All bait is secured to the hook by means of a small cedar cord, which is neatly lashed about the hook when it is not in use. Halibut feed near the bottom of tli6* sea. The Indiau has a method, as ingenious as it is rude, to keep his bait where it will bo most tempting. He will tie a itone a few feet above the hook os his line with a slip loop, whieli the halibut, iu trying to get away, will twitch out, releasing the sioue and giving the Indian warn ing that he can draw up his fifty or a hundred pound halibut without the additional weight of the stone. Be tween the hook and the stone sinker is a wooden float whittled in the shape of a duck, which, iu seeking to rise to the surface, draws the hook up the proper distance from the bottom. 8 e;l hooks made after these pat terns have been on the market for many years, but the Indian has better success with his own. His cords and lines are his own pro duction. They are made of cedar bark, split spruce roots, or kelp. The cedar bark is scraped from the tree with a bone shaped like a chop ping knife. After soakiug for several days, the bark is beaten into shreds with a ham mer made also of bone, and picked iuto flue threads, which are twisted into cords by being rubbed between the hand and the thigh. Cords of spruce roots split and twisted are aiso very strong, but those made of kelp are least valued. —Harper's Round Table. How a Knight la Iteallv The party were conveyed by special train and royal yacht to Osborne. They were then assembled iu an ante room, and after beiug instructed iu the respective parts they were to play were admitted one by one to the pres ence of Her Majesty. The knight on entering the room made his obei-ance twice, and advancing close to Her Majesty bowed a third time and dropped on one knee. Her Majesty then rested a sword on his shoulder for a moment, and uttered the words "Sir " (mentioning only the Ch'istian name). She next placed the ribbon of the Order round his neck and attached the badge to a clip which had already been fastened on his breast. Ho then raised his arm, and the Queen placing her hand on his wrist, he conveyed it to his lips, rose, bowed and retired backward. The moment the door closed behind him he was seized by two officials, who stripped him of his ribbon and badge ami placed them hurriedly in a case, which they handed to him with direc tions to "depoiit it with his great coat." The correspondent's friend did not like this. He would have desired that the badge should remain always on his uniform where the Queen had nilixo.l it. After the whole party had been decorated they a l.ourned to luncheon, and were conveyed back to London iu time for dinner. —London Correspondence of the Manchester Guardian. Found n \«■ \v IHIHIHI. A Japanese traveler, Mr. Miztitani Shiuroku, discovered an island in Oc tober, 181)7, lying about (iOO nautical miles to thee :st of the Bonins. It is a s nail spa";, only seven anil one-half miles in circumference, but it i* peo pled by myriads of penguins and pro duces an abundance of bananas and cocoanuts. Some folk say that the place is leally Marcus island, an 1 that it was discovered long ago. I'o that as it may, the Japanese government, on receipt of Mr. Mizutaui's report last June, decided to call the island Minami-tori-shima, or southern bird island, in allusion to the immense colo: y of penguius—twelve diflV r.-nt kinds—that have their habitat there. The prefix minami is used to distin guish the island from Tori-shima (bird island), which lies farther north and nearer to the Bonins. There are no people living on Minami-tori-shima, and a ten years' lease of it has beeu granted to the discoverer, who is said to be making a very profitable specu lation by exporting its fruits, as well as the feathers and flesh of the pen guins. The climate is equable, the thermometer standing generally in the neighborhood of 80 degrees Fahren heit. There is an abundauce of vege tables, but little rain, and a great scarcity of water, so that five stills have had to be erected.—Japan MaiL