1 Prince Henry of Prussia, 1 S§ Who Is Coming to Visit Us, jljlj | Most Popular Man in the German Royal Family. || y/v/vyy/v/ M IT is the most popular and the most accomplished of the Hohenzollerns who is in a few weeks to visit America as the guest of the nation and the personal representative of His Imperial Majesty William 11. of Ger many. Prince Henry of Prussia, the Kais er's only brother. Is indeed one of the few princes in Europe who fulfill the romantic Ideal of what the son of a royal household should IK I . A naviga tor. a scholar, a musician, handsome and dignified in appearance and lova ble in personality, His lioyal Highness a vlll decidedly be the most Interesting visitor the United Slates has seen in many years. And there is every rea son to believe that the olive branch oi peace which It Is his mission to offer i;s afresh will be extended by a most graceful hand. Henry, the sailor prince of Germany, "Unser Helnrlch," as he is affection ately called, Is now forty years old, having been born on August 14, IB<>2. Among the many points in which he offers a striking conlrast to his broth er, none is more significant than the fact that he was the favorite son of both his mother and father, and that he was loyally devoted to them both fit. a time when William, then Crown Prince, was pursuing a decidedly un lilial course. Personally Prince Henry is a little less tall than his brother, PRINCE HENRY OF PRUSSIA'S WIFE AND FAMILY. but is far more symmetrically propor tioned, and so well have his twenty years of seamanship agreed with him that he gives an impression of perfect health. He has a handsome face and head, and wears a close-trimmed blond beard and mustache, after the fash ion of the present Prince of Wales, his cousin. While Wllhelm's various, remarka ble, alarming and erratic attributes and acts have earned for him all sorts of titles among his loving subjects, from War Lord down through all the degrees of Icli und Gott, Wilhelm the Sudden, Wilhelm the All Knowing, Jack of All Trades, the Mailyphlst, the Plckelhaube, and William the Vain, Prince Henry lias made himself so well beloved among the Germans that they have honored him as they did his lather. They called that good man "Unser Fritz," and they call his younger son "Unser Ileinrieh." lie has earned their love by— 1^ PRINCE HENRY, BROTHER OK EMPEROR WILLIAM 11. (1) Keeping his mouth shut (except once in Kiel): (2) Bearing the haul lot of a younger prince without expectations and with a nailyphist brother, lu silence and w:th Jignity; (3) Minding his own business; (4) Selecting for that business that of sailor. LL ENTERTAIN L(A)t^PAttTY^ —From the New York Tribune. Every nation with a crowned head demands a sailor prince, and the sailor prince always is the favorite. Henry is a real sailor prince. There wasn't any fooling about it. Few admirals in any service in the world have seen as much s«a service as he has. lie worked his way up and served as a captain so long that all Germany be came excited over It, and insinuated that his imperial and absolute brother never would let him advance. Besides being able to steer a ship or get up steam in her or paint h*r or fire her guns or scrub her decks, he can make excellent clocks. If there ever should be a revolution in Europe that would make it desirable THE KAISER'S YACHT AS SHE WILL LOOK WHEN COMPLETED. for the Admiral to emigrate and begiu life over again In a free and easy coun try, he could hang out his shingle In Maiden lane confident that the merit of his goods would bring a reasonable amount of business to Albert William Henry Hohenzollern, : Formerly Member of the Firm of : : William 11. (Limited), : Now Manufacturer of Clocks. : For Priuctt lieary learned clock malting as a trade, following the Ilo henzollern custom of teaching each child a manual art. Wllhelm the Mighty Is a glovemalcer by trade and is said Is to he as good at it as he is at emperoring, sculpture, statesman ship, oratory and poetry. Whatever else lie is, he is no slouch, hut does everything with all his might. The imperial yacht Hohenzollern, which will sail over here, is the most powerful private yacht in the world with the exception of the Standart, belonging to the Czar of Russia. Like that vessel, the Holienzollern really Is a warship. She Is well armed, and capable of being armed far more heavily than she is. Her sides are armor plated and she has a ram. In fact, in all essentials she is a cruiser of no mean strength. Iler crew is uniformed, and the dis cipline aboard is that of a naval ves sel. Her interior is as lavish as her ex terior is grim and threatening. Miss Alice ltoosevelt, who will christen the schooner yacht that Is now lying on the ways at Shooter's Island, in the works of the Townsend & Downey Ship Building Company, is a tall well-built girl of the modern athletic type. She is the daughter of the President by his first wife, and was cared for by his sister, now Mrs. Cowles, wife of Commander Cowles of the Navy, until Mr. Roosevelt mar ried again. She is in her nineteenth year. Prince Henry's Itinerary. This program of Prince Henry's American tour was submitted to Em- GERMAN EMBASSY AT WASHINGTON, D. C. (I'rince Henry's stopping place while at the National Capital.) peror William and the Prince, aud has been approved by them: February 22—The arrival of the Frince aud his suite at New York. February 23—The official welcome by the represent- .j of President Roosevelt, the Governor of the State of New York and the Mayor of New York City. February 24—The launching of the yacht at Shooter's Island and a dinner to be given by Prince Henry. February 25—A reception in honor of Prince Henry, a dinner in his honor to be given by the Mayor of New York and, if consistent with these functions, a reception by the Press Club. February 26—The Prince and his party will proceed to Washington, where the Prince will reside at the German Embassy. He will exchange calls with President Roosevelt and be entertained by a dinner at the White House. February 27—Official receptions and visits aud a dinner at the German Embassy. February 28—The Prince and his party will start for Chicago. The appointment of the Prince's time between Chicago, Milwaukee, Niagara Falls and Boston, all of which he will visit, has not yet been pre cisely made. In fact, any part of the official program may be modified. Before sailing for home Prince Henry will spend two or three days in New York, visiting the city's objects of interest and receiving privately some of New York's notable citizens. The old wooden boat bridge over the ancient Oxus, on the line of the Trans- Caspian Railroad, is to be replaced by an Iron bridge 5000 feet long, support ed on twenty-four piers. The esti mated cost of the structure is $2,t>00.- 000. COMBINATION CHAIR.TABLE. Something Now and Odd in the Way of Furuitnre. Tills unique furnishing piece, the combination chair-table, is designed especially for piazza or lawn use; but COMBINATION CHAIR-TABLE. It is quite attractive enough and suf ficiently finished to form a decorative addition to any room—ln smoking or lounging rooms especially, or where economy of space Is a consideration. "Multum In parvo" might well be used to describe It, as It combines a most comfortable chair and convenient table, wltli large drawer, in one fur nishing piece. It may be had in sev eral designs in ash. dark green or dark brown, or finished in weathered ash, as desired. It is covered with waterproof varnish to withstand moisture or rain when used out-of doors. Its attractive appearance, convenience, substantiality and very reasonable price (from 98.50 to sll in different sizes) will commend this piece to many. The Doctor's Circle." Each physician in the United States has 055 persons to look to for his sup port, for one to 055 Is the proportion, according to the latest Government statistics. California stands at the bottom —or top, depending on the view —of the list, for there are only 410 ac tual and prospective patients for each M.!>., while in Alaska 2341) persons have to depend on or take chances with one doctor. New York is near the average, with 003 persons for each phy sician to look after, and Pennsylvania comes nearer the average than any other States, with 002. Lying partially between these great States comes New Jersey, where the number of medical practitioners falls oft' until one has to care for OSO persons. A Celebrated Roman Kilter* Touching the matter of eating, the. stories told by the old chroniclers and historians of the abnormal appetites of certain Homan and Oriental men of note fairly stagger belief. Gibbon tells of Soliman, a caliph in the eighth cen tury, who died of indigestion in his camp near Chalcis, ia Syria, just as lie "was about to lead an army of Arabs against Constantinople. He had emptied two baskets of eggs and figs, which he swallowed alternately, and the re past was finished with marrow and sugar. In a pilgrimage to Mecca the same caliph had eaten with impunity at a single meal seventy pomegranates, a kid, six fowls and a huge quantity of the grapes ot' Tayef. Itaßgerouß Delights. A New York physician lias recently drawn attention to the danger of tu berculosis infection in childhood from visits to menageries. These greatly loved visits of the little ones should, he thinks, give concern to sanitarians. To visit the monkey houses In the zoological gardens and to remain there as long as nurses, time and temper will allow Is the delight of every child. But monkeys also, like the children of men, are prone to tubercle. The commotion, dust, impure air of the monkey house are cer tainly favorable to the dissemination of tubercle.—The Medical Press. A Qieer London Character Gone. William Day, a l>ondoii character, is d:ad. He always wore a high hat Inscribed in gold letters, "Prepare to meet thy God." He had specli.l per mission from Scotland Yard to wear this hat. lie made a special point of promenading the Strand when the theatre ercwds were pouriug out from the matinees. 1 loir She Figured It Out. Jimmy (with the peanuts)—"A little girl choked to death eating peanuts the otjier day." Jane —"Well, she'd be livin' yet if Bhe'd known you!"— New York World. DR. TALMAGES SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Sabject: Beauties of a Cboerful Spirit— Cauaea (or Thanksgiving That Aio Sel dom Recognized Reuieinber Kully Blessing*—Comforts of Friendship. WASHINGTON, D. C. —In this discourse Dr. Talmago calls attention to causes of thanksgiving that are seldom recognized, and shows how to cultivate n cheerful spirit; tent, Psalms xxxiii, 2, "Sing uito him with a psaltery and an instrument of ten strings." A musician as well as poet and con queror and king was David, the author of my text. He first composed the sacred rhythm and then played it upon a harp, striking and plucking the strings with his fingers and thumbs. The harp is the old est of musical instruments. .Tubal invent ed it, and he was the seventh descendant from Adam. Its music was suggested by the twang of the bowstring. Homer re fers to the harp in the "Iliad." It is the most consecrated of all instruments. The flute is more mellow, the bugle uore mar tial, the cornet more incisive, the trumpet more resonant, the urgan more mighty, but the harp has a tenderness and sweetness belonging to no other instrument that I kno.v of. It enters into the richest sym bolism of the Holy Scriptures. The cap tives in their sadness "nun;; their harps upon the willows." In other ages it had eight strings. David's harp had ten strings, and when his great soul was afire with the theme his sympathetic voice, ac companied by exquisite vibration of the chords, must have been overpowering. With as many things to complain about as any man ever had David wrote more anthems than any other man ever wrote. He puts even the frost.-, and hailstorms and tempests and creeping things and hy ing fowl and the mountains and the hills and day and night into a chorus. Absa lom's plotting and Ahithophel's treachery and hosts 01 antagonists and sleepless nights and a running sore could not liush his psalmody. Indeed, the more his trou bles the mightier his sacred poems. The words "praise" and "song" are so often repeated in his psalms that one would think the typesetter's case containing the letters with which those words are spelled would be exhausted. In my text David calls upon the people to praise the Lord with an instrument of ten strings, like that which he was accus tomed to linger. The simple fact is that the most of us, if wo praise the Lord at ail, play upon one string or two strings or three strings when we ought to take a nr.rp fully ehorded and with glad fingers sweep all the strings. Instead of being grateful for here and there a blessing we happen to think of, we ought to rehearse all our blessings so far as we can recall them and obey the injunction of iny text to sing unto Ilim with an instrument of ten strings. Have you ever thanked Cod for delight some food? What vast multitudes are a hungered from day today or are obliged to take food not toothsome or pleasant to the taste! What millions arc in struggle for bread! A Confederate soldier went to the front, and his family were on the verge of .starvation, but they were kept up by the faith of a child of that 1 ousehold, who, noticing that sonic supply was sure to come, excla'med, "Mother, I think Cod hears when we scrape the bottom of the barrel." Have you appreciated the fact that on most of your tables are luxuries that do not come to all? Have you realized what varieties of flavor often touch your tongue and how the saccharin and the acid have been afforded your palate? What fruits, what nuts, what meats regale your appe tite, while many would be glad to get the crusts and rinds and peelings that fall from your table. For the fine flavors and the luxurious viands you have enjoyed for a lifetime per haps you have never expressed to God a word of thanksgiving, 'lhat is one o. the ten strings that you ought to have thrummed in praise to Cod, but you have never yet put it in vibration. Have you thanked God for eyesight as originally given to you or, after it was dimmed by age. for the plass that brought the page of the book within the compass of the vision? Have you realized the pri vation those sufer to whom the day is as black as the night and who never see the face of father or mother or wife or child or friend? Through what painful surgery many have gone to get one glimpse of the light! The eye so delicate and beautiful and useful that one of them is invaluable! And most of us have two of these won ders of divine mechanism. The man ot millions of dollars who recently went blind from atrophy tc optic nerve would have been willing to give all his mil'ions and be come a day laborer if he could have kept off the blindness that gradually crept over his vision. You may have noticed how Christ's sym pathies were stirred for the blind. Oph thalmia has always been prevalent in Pal estine, the custom of sleemng on the house tops, exposed to the dew and the flying dust of the dry season, inviting this dread ful disorder. A large percentage of the in habitants could not tell the difference be tween 12 o'clock at noon and 12 o'clock at night. We are told of six of Christ's mir acles for the cure of these sightless ones, but I suppose they were only specimens of hundreds of restored visions. What a pitiful spectacle Saul of Tarsus, mighty man, three days led about in phys ical as well as spiritual darkness, he who ifterward made Felix tremble by his elo quence and awed the Athenian phi'oso- 1 phers on Mars Hill and was the only cool headed man in the Alexandria corn ship that went to pieces on the rocks of Mile tus, once Ihe mighty persecutor if Saul, ifterward the glorious evangelist Paul, for three days not able to take a safe step without guidance! Have you ever given thanks for two eyes—media between the soul inside and the world outside, media that no one but the infinite Cod could create? The eye, the window of our immortal nature, the gate through which all colors march, the picture gallery of the soul! Without the eye this world is a big dungeon. 1* fear that many of us have never given one hearty expression of gratitude for treasure cf sight, the loss of which is the greatest, disaster possible, unless it be the lass of the mind. Those wondrous seven muscles that turn the eye up or down, to right or lett or around. No one but God could have created the retina. If we have over appreciated what God did when He cave us two eyes it was when we saw others with obliterated vision. Alas, that only through the privation of others we came to a realization of our own blessing! If you had harp in hand and swept all the strings of gratitude, you would have struck this, which is one of the most dulcet of the ten strings. Further, notice how many pass through life in silence because the ear refuses to do its office. They never hear music, vo cal or instrumental. The thunder that rolls its full diapason through the heav ens does not startle the prolonged silence. The air that has for us so many melodies has no sweet sound for them. They live in a quietude that will not be broken until heaven breaks in upon them with its har monies. The bird voices of the springtime, the chatter of the children, the sublime chant of the sea, the solo of the cantatriee and (he melody of the great worsh ping as semblies mean nothing to them. Have we devoutly thanked God for these two won ders of our hearing, with which we can now put ourselves under the charm of sweet sound and also carry in our memor ies the infantile song with .which our mothers rut us to sleep and ths voices of the groat prima donnas like Liiid and Patti and Neilson, and the sound of inrtrument-s Ike the violin of the Swedish performer, or the cornet of Arbuckle, or the mightiest of all instruments, with the hand cf Mor gan on the keys and his foot on the pedal, or some Sabbath ture like "Coronation, in the acclaim of which you could hear the crowns of heaven coming down at the feet of .Jesus? Many of us have never tharked God for this hearing apparatus of the soul. That is one of the ten strings of gratitude that we ought always to thrum after hearing the voice of the loved one or the last f-tra'n of an oratorio or the clang of a cathedral tower. Further, there are many who never rec ognize how mucli God gives them when Tie "ivcs then sleep. Insomnia is a calam ity wider known in our land than in any other. By midlifa vast multitudes have their nerves so overwrought that slumber has to be coaxed, and many are the vic tims of chloral and morphine. Kler')>ss ness is an American disorder. If it has not touched you and you can rest for seven or eight hours without waking—if for that length of time in every twenty-four hours you can be free of all care and worriment and your nerves are retuned and your limbs escape from all fatigue and the ris ing sun finds you a new man, body, mi id and soul —you have an advantage that ought to be put ia prayer and song and congratulation. As long as you collect vast dividend? and have health jocund and popularity un bounded you will have crowds of seeming friends, but let bankruptcy and invalid ism and defamation come, end the num ber of your friends will be- ninety-five per cent. off. If you have been through sim: great crisis and you have one friend left, thank God and celebrate it on the sweet est harpstring. But we must tighten the cords of our harp and retune it while wo celebrate gos pel advantages. The highest style of civ ilization the world has ever seen is Amer ican civi'ization, and it is built out of the gospel of pardon and good morals. That gospel roc.ced our cradle, and it will epi i taph our grave. It soothes our sorrows, I brightens our hopes, inspires our courage, forgives our sins and saves our souls. It takes a man who i3 all wrong and make, him all right. What that gospel has done for you and me is a story that wo can never fully tell. What it has done for the world and -vili yet do for the nations it will take the thou sand years of the millennium to celebrate. The grandest churches are yet to be built. The mightiest anthems are yet to ba hoisted. The greatest victories r.rc yet tc be gained. The most beautiful Madonnaa are yet to be painted. The must trium phant processions are yet to march. Oh. what a world this will be when it rotates in its orbit a redeemed planet, girdled with spontaneous harvests and enriched by orchards whose fruits are speckless and redundant, and the last pain will have been banished and the last tear wept and the last groan uttered, and there shall be nothing to hurt or destroy in all God's holy mountain! All that and more will come to pass, for"the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." So far I have mentioned nine of the ten strings of t'.io instrument of gratitude. I now come to the tenth and the last. I mention it last that it may be the mora memorable —heavenly anticipation. By the grace of God we are going to move into a place so much better than this that on ar riving wo will wonder that we were for so many years so loath to make the transfer. After wo have seen Christ face to face and rejoiced over our departed kindred there are some mighty spirits wo will want to meet soon after we pass through the gates. We want to sec and will see David, a mightier king in heaven than he over was on earth, and wo will talk with him about psalmody and get from him e::actlv what he meant when he taiked about the instru ment of ten strings. We will confront Moses, who will tell of the law giving on rocking Sinai and of his mysterious burial, with no one but God present. We will see Joshua, and he will tell us of the coming down of the walls of Jeri cho at the blast of the ram's horn a id ex plain to us that miracle—how the sun and moon could stand still without demolition of the planetary system. We will see Ruth and have her tell ot the harvest field of Boaz. in which sho gleaned for afflicted Naomi. We will see Vasliti and hear from her own lips the story of her banish inert from the Persian palace by infamous Ahasuerus. We will see and talk with Daniel, and he will tell us how he saw Belshazzar's banqueting hall turned into a slaughter house, and how the lions greeted him with loviig fawn instead of stroke of cruel paw. We will see and talk with Solomon, v.-hosa palaces are gone, but whose inspired epi grams stand out stronger and stronger as the centuries pass. Wo will sec Paul and hear from him how Felix trembled before him and tin audience of skeptics on Mars Hill were confounded by his sermon on the brother licod of man. what lie saw at Ephesus and Syracuse and Philippi and Home and how dark was the Mamertine dungeon and how sharp the axe that beheaded him on tho road to Ostia. Yea, we will sec all the martyrs, the victims of axe and sword and fire and billow. What a thrill cf excite ment for us when we gaze upon the heroes and heroines who gave their lives for the truth. We will see the gospel proclaimers Chry sostom and Bourdalous and Whiteiield, and the Wesleya and John Knox. Wc will see the great Christian poets, Milton and Dante and Watts and Mrs. Ilemans and Frances Havergal. Yea, all the de parted Christian men and women of what ever age or nation. But there will be one focus toward which all eyes will be directed. His in fancy having slept on pillow of straw; all the hates of the Herodic Government plan ning for His assassination; in after time whipped as though He were a criminal; asleep on the co.d mountains because no one offered Him a lodging; though the greatest being who ever touched our earth, derisively called "this fellow;" His last hours writhing on spikes of infinite tor ture; His lacerated form putin sepulcher, then reanimated and ascended to be the centre of all heavenly admiration—upon that greatest martyr and mightiest hero of all the centuries we will be permitted to look. Put that among your heavenly antic ipations. Now take down your harp of ten strings and sweep all the chords, making all of them tremble with a great gladness. I have mentioned just ten —delightsome food, eye sight, hearing, healthful sleep, power of physical locomotion, illumined nights, men tal faculties in equipoise, friendships of life, gospel advantages and heavenly an ticipations. Let us make less complaint and offer more thanks, render less dirge and more cantata. Take paper and pen and write down in long columns your bless ings. I have recited only ten. To express all the mercies God has bestowed you would have to use at least three, and I think five, numerals, for surely they would run up into the hundreds and the thou sands. "Oh, give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good, for His mercy endureth forever." Get into the habit of rehearsal of the briehtnesses of life. Notice how many more fair days there are than foul, how many more good people than bad you meet. Set your misfortunes to music, as David opened his "dark sav ings on a harp." If it has been low tide heretofore, let the surges of mercy that are yet to roll in upon you reach high water mark. All things will work to gether for your good, and heaven is not far ahead. Wake up all the ten strings. Blessing and honor and glory and power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne and unto the Lamb forever. Amen! [Copyright, IW2, L. Klopaciul