i f Six Days in a Swamp f V M By T. C. WIDOW. aMUMMIMIg (Th anTTior IN tTiroo frieod ftrrTnrwi n plnAfiurv-trlp down n Florida river from $ nmn v tribulations ere tbey flnaUr rBVbpl omliration 1 source to month Joanper tbmt b'l ne fxiMMtttt-m wiui tnnt u Ifut liopelceely Uwt In a vut twnmp. And nmWwpnt It was (Imply became no one had ever before rowed down the river from source to mouth that wa were f" keen to make the attempt. It may aound odd to most people's ears to talk of rowing from the source of a river; but Florida rivers are very different from others. As a rule, they rise full-fledged from the lime stone rock great, boiling, gushing fountains of transparent water of such volume that In some cases It Is actually possible to run a stern-wheel steamboat to the very pool In which they appear. The Weklva River rises In this way, but Altamonte Spring, which Is Its source, Is a comparatively small one, and when we lifted our eighteen foot cat-boat from the wagon we had serious doubts as to whether she would fit Into the little pool at all. But there was no choostng our launching Bpot. The spring was the only place where we could reach the water, for beyond It the river plunged at once Into thick "hammock" (hard wood forest) and was lost to view. It was Hobson's choice, and after much maneuvering the boat slid down the steep bank and floated like a cork In the centre of the bubbling pool. We piled our goods aboard and Jumped after them. A shouted good bye to our negro teamster and we were off. There wore four of us who started on that lovely March morning. Three Franks, Myers, and Marshall were Americans; the fourth, your humble servant, an English orange grower. Our Idea was to make a very plcaBant little picnic of the ex pedition. Twelve miles below Alta monte Spring another river, the Clay Springs Run, Joined the Weklva. Five miles up the Run was a settle ment where we had friends. We meant to make this place the first night, sleep there, and start .efreshed next morning for the mouth of the Weklva, where it Joins the St. John's. The latter part of the journey we reckoned we could do In two days, making three in all. How sadly mis taken we were In our calculations we were to discover to our cost. The first part of our journey was distinctly exciting. Tho stream, far too narrow for rowing, ran deep and swift in a series of the very sharpest curves so sharp that, in spite of the best efforts of the man in the bow, the boat constantly charged the high bank In a bull-headed fashion, which half filled her with loam and leaves and made her occupants sit down with emphatic bumps and still more emphatic language. Suddenly there loomed up a dead trunk, lying right across the river from bank to bank. There was noth ing for It but to cut through the ob stacle. Myers sprang out with an axe and the chips flew in a white showbr. So did the nnts. The half-rotten wood was the home of hordes of large red ants, which bit like fiends. Before the boat could be pulled clear sho was swarming with tho fierce little warriors, nnd long after the trunk had parted and the boat had passed on Its way we were busy pick ing' ants off ourselves and sweeping them overboard. For some hours this sort of thing went on, the river gradually growing in size, but still too narrow and crooked for rowing. Sometimes a log had to be cut through; sometimes tt'wns necessary to life the boat ver a half-Bubmerged trunk. The Uanks were high and heavily wooded and the sunlight glittered down through a tracery of delicate foliage. The trees were all hardwood live oak, water oak, bastard uak, bay, red gum. and magnolia, the latter forest giants sixty feet high and filling the air with scent from white blooms the slzo of dinner-plates. Soon after luncheon n scratch re past of biscuits, cheese and peach cider the boat suddenly left the hammock and glided iuto tho mazes of a great saw-grass swamp. Saw-gra3s Is a purely Florldan product. Ten to twelve feet from root to summit, its blades aro grey green In color, wide and stiff, with serrated edges which cut abominably Nothing .short of an alligator can penetrate It; Its groat height and thickness make it imposible to force a boat through It. It covers nun dreds of square miles in South Flor Ida, and many a life has been lost In Us tangled recesses. In the saw-grass the river spread out Into a maze of shallow channels and here our troubles began. We tried one after another, and over and over again grounded or ran Into blind alleys and were forced to return. Once we drove the boat hard aground. The bottom was fair yel low sand. Myers and Marshall pulled oft their boots and sprang overboard to lift her. Instantly they were both up to their knees and sinking fast We in the boat had to pull like grim death to haul them out ef tho patch of treacherous quicksand which they had happenod on. Fortunately, by the use of our mast we managed to pole tho boat back Into water that would float It. The sun -was low before the dark green, headB of oypresses loomed abovo the tall vegotatlon. In an othor ten minutes we had left the grass behind us, and with two men at 'the oars weru pulling down a deep, placid creek between two rows of giant cypress trees. Tho place had a curious resem blance, to the aUle of a great cathe dral. The floor, placid brown water; the columns, giant grey trunks rising many feet before showing a branch; overhead great limbs with heavy In termingled foliage formed a inagnin-cently-archod root. To add to the Illusion, long tralla of grey Spanish moss hung motionless in the breath less a'r, giving tho appearance of tat tered banners depending trout the vault above. From the bases of the monstrous trunks huge knees and buttresses ex tended far out Into the water, gnarled and twisted Into a thousand fantastic shapes, and curiously resembling those peculiar rocks seen where a lava stream has met salt water. Here we saw for the first time what was later to prove cur worst enemy, that curious weed the water-lettuce. The top of the water-lettuce bears an exact resemblance to Its garden namesake, but below Is a huge mass of roots. It floats on the water, and gliding gently down the slugfelst cur rent until It meets some obstruction, gathers In huge rafts, which finally block the whole stream from bank to bank. These rafts rot, and upon them grow forests of other weeds, until at last the river is entirely hidden. It was growing late. There was now no longer any hope of reaching the Clay Springs Settlement that night. We realized that we should have to camp. But where? That was the question, for there was no longer any solid land to camp on. On either side lay miles of Impene trable swamp, deep black liquid mud, tangled creepers, and rotting vegeta tion; the only Inhabitants nUlgators, snakes and turtles. Every one was longing for a cup of hot coffee, so we landed on a great cypress buttress and lit a fire. Alas for our hopes of hot supper! The wator was Just beginning to boll when the buttress, which was hollow, burnt through, and Are and kettle to gether fell hissing Into the black water below. Worse still, the cy press trunk Itself took fire, and wo had to sheer off rapidly and tie up at tome distance away. We had no means of cooking in the boat, and made a miserable meal on biscuit and cheese. Meantime the Are had got a good hold on the cy press, and we were treated to a mag nlflcent spectacle. Tho trunk of the ancient giant was hollow, like the buttress, and under the furious draught the Aames rushed up It with a loud roar, spouting In crimson pen nons from every knot-hole and throw ing a red glare upon the still, dark water and sleeping forest. Bats and weird night-birds swooped above, and every now and then a great branch cams crashing down Into the river. We watched for an hour or more, and then all of a sudden the blazing shell collapsed and fell with a hissing roar into the depths below, throwing up a wave that washed clean over our stern. We baled the boat out and tried to sleep, but an eighteen-foot boat Is narrow quarters for four men, and to add to our miseries every mosquito and most of the sandflies in South Florida had gathered to the feast, and we had no nets to protect us. We smoked till we could smoke no more; then, cowering under the sail, slept a painful, half-suffocated sleep til the first gray light of dawn, when wo ate a few biscuits and started again. We passed one spot where it would have been possible to land and cook breakfast, but would not stop, so sure were we or reaching day Springs in time for midday dluner. But soon we struck raft after raft ot lettuce, some so thick that every yard had to be painfully cut through with a brush-hook, and midday found us still In the Weklva Channel, with no Blgns of the Clay Springs Run to be Been anywhere. We became uneasy; we began to fear that we had passed the mouth of the Run. The trees were so thick and the blind channels so frequent that this was more than possible. If we had done so the outlook was serious. We had plenty of food ot a kind, but it was uncooked. You can not eat flour, hominy, coffee and ba con without cooking them. And though there was wood enough in sight to cook for n nation, there was no ground on which to light a fire. The river was high for the time of year, and the water stretched back as far as we could see iuto the lm penetrable swamp on either Bide. The farther wo went the worse the conditions became. The river was so choked with lettuce that most of our time was spent painfully chop ping our way through great floating islands. The odor from the rotting masses was sickening, and tho river water, which was all we had to drink. was thick and filthy. Our surroundings were most de pressing. Everywhere we beheld the gloomy cypresses rising out of a morass of mud and water, but no life except tho brown water-snakes which writhed among the weeds, and the alligators and turtles that floated Idly In the stagnant stream or lay on logs at the edge. No sound reached our earB save now and then the thun derous hammering of a great Ivory billed woodpecker somewhere far away In the forest. Towards five o'clock It began to rain a thick, flue drizzle. The sky grew raptdlv dark, and we were final ly forced to tie up to a log. This time we lit a small fire In our frying pan and managed to toast a few Slices of bacon, but we could not boil water to make coffee. Another night of misery passed slowly by. Bull alligators bellowed at Intervals, and twice wo were wak ened by the long-drawn, piercing wall ot a panther somewhere In the dis tance. A more creepy sound I never wish to hear. But we were all tired out,, Bnd alept at last even In spite ot the mosquitoes. Morning dawned dull but fine. There was some talk among us ot "trying back," but It was at last de cided to keep on. We felt sure that we were now a long way past the Clay Springs Run and hoped to reach the St. John's before night. Vain hope! After hours of strug gling with over-Increasing weeds we ran into a bank of slime which barred farther progress. There was no need to inform one another what bad hap pened. Somehow we had left the main stream, and, for how long none ot us knew, had been working down TbTtna backwater: There was noth ng for It but to go back. It was nearly three before we were certain we were In the main stream again. The current was so nearly Im perceptible that it was most difficult to avoid the Innumerable blind chan nels. By this time we were all suffering from the effects of the putrid watei and Myers was really 111. Fortunate ly I happened to have a bottle of Ja maica ginger with me. which proved Invaluable. f A third night approached and we had not the faintest Idea where we were. Just before dark we ran Into a tremendous bed of lettuce. Half way through it the boat's bow struck something solid. It was a cypress log, lying Just below the weed. The boat had to be lifted over It. and the work fell to Marshall and myself. I shall never forget how supremely un comfortable I felt m1 stepped over the side and clung with my bare toes to the rounded, stlmy log. We had seen scores ot moccasin? (poisonous water-vipers) In the veed beds. There was more than a chance of treading on one ot these sluggish but deadly reptiles. Or suppose I slipped! There was twelve feet of oily water below the log, and, once under the wood,-the strongest swimmer In tho world would be helpless. It took all our strength' to lift the boat and slide her over the obstruc tion, but It wait done at Inst, and Just as It grew pitch-dark we cleared the lettuce and floated Into a wide lagoon In which bull-frogs croaked dismally and every now and thon a heavy Ash rose with a sounding "plop!" Hero we made another fruitless at tempt xo light a Are. By this time all the biscuits were gon'e, and we made a miserable meal of slices of bacon toasted on the embers In the frying-pan. We were very thirsty, but only dared to drink a' few drops of tho brown, fllthy water. The fourth morning found us much the worse for wear. Our faces Were swollen out of all recognition by Insect bites, and personally I had an ugly feeling of sinking weakness. But tlsero was no use complaining forward was the word, and we pulled on, taking flfteen-mlnute spells at the oars. Hannlly the weeds were no't so thick, and our hopes rose. Suddenly the boat emerged' from the endless arches of cypreBS, and', their place was taken by a forest of tall cabbage palmettoes. The under growth changed, too; It was as thick as ever, but not so lofty. Wild grape-vines matted It, and a flock of birds of the starling tribe rose and winged chattering across the water. Hurrah! Here was land at last! Mud, certainly, and of the blackest character, but still firm enough to bear our weight. Joyfully wo pulled ashore, but the brush was like a quick-set hedge. We had to chop a foothold before we could land. Franks was the Arst to leave the boat. An odd, whirring noise came from the thicket, and he sprang back hastily. Marshall sifatched nj a gun, and as tho heavy report rolled down the silent river a Ave-foot diamond rattler writhed In Its death agony on the mud. "I reckon that was close enough!" was all Myers said. We were too hungry and thirsty to mind even a rattlesnake, and in Ave minutes a Aro was crackling. Our kettle was gone, but we boiled water In the fry" lng-pan, and I never tasted anything so good as that Arst cup of scalding, mllkless coffee, strongly flavored as It was with smoke and bacon-grease. Then we set to work to cook some limpkln which we had shot the pre vious day. They were birds very like our moorhens and excellent eating. We devoured them half raw, and the next thing was to make bread, which we baked In our ever-useful frying pan. We ate every bit of the first batch hot, and then cooked some more After that we made up the Are and, sheltered from mosquitoes by Its kindly smoke, lay and rflept till past midday. We were different men when wo woke, and ready for anything. We felt sure we coulc' not now be far from the mouth of the river, so do elded to push on at once. We had .bread and cooked bacon for another twenty-four hours, and before that time we should certainly reach St John's. But our troubles wero not yet over. A mile or two farther on the river split again Into half a score ot channels. Twice we took a wrong one and wasted hours. Night caught us in a worse place than ever, and quite unable to And ground for a Are rhe longing tor hot coffee drove us to build a raft of logs and try to light a fire on thlB. It was moBt tedious work, for we were now again among cypresses, and their branches were high out of reach, so that we had to depend on floating stuff. But we persevered bravely, and at last got a tiny Are to burn. It was hardly started when, with v. sudden rush aud hiss, down splashed a heavy shower, wetting us to the skin and putting out the feeble blaze. There upon we crawled under the sail and ate dry bread and cold fried bacon. Next morning Myers had a bad at tack of ague "chills and fevdV" as we call It in the South. We knew that we had to get him out of the pestilential air of the swamp or the consequences might be serious, es pecially as we had no quinine. We worked like Trojans, and more by luck than good management kept the main channel. After a time the river grew nar rower and deeper, and suddenly I caught sight ot a live oak among the cypresses, and gave a howl of delight, for this tree was, a sure sign of land. We pulled like furies, frightening cores of alligators, which rolled off the logs on which they had been lying basking uud splashed Into the dark brown water. Ten minutes later we were ashore on a very good Imitation ot solid ground. We slung up a hammock, put Myers Into It, and two ot us be gan the serious business ot cooking, while Marshall took a rod and set to work to lib 1 1 Those Ash could Sever have seen a bait before. It was pure slaughter. First a three-pound black bass, then a great red-throated bream nearly as big as a dinuer-Dlate. the choicest pan-fish In Florida waters. Then more bass, then a cat-flsh, and next a great black, ugly, slimy mud-flsh. weighing all ot Ave pounds. In half an hour we had more than we knew what to do with; 'but Marshall still kept on. Suddenly he gave a yell. "Boys, here's the father ot all the Ash!" Sure enough It was a monster! The stout bamboo bent double. There was no reel, so Marshall had to trust to the strength of his heavy tackle. But the brute, whatever It was, was too much for him. With a sharp crack the line snapped In the middle. What the Ash was we never knew, but there are cat-Ash up to thirty pounds In these waters and bass up to A f teen. Filleted bream were already sizz ling In the pan, and when we sat down to breakfast I verily believe we Anlshed three pounds of Ash apiece. Even Myers revived enough to eat n little. Then, as In gorged contentment we lounged and pulled at our pipes, there suddenly resounded through (Tie silent forest a deep, hoarse hoot. It was the whistle of the St. John's River steamer! Our troubles were over at last. Next morning, after half an hour's pulling, the cat-boat glided out upon the wide bosom of the 8t. John's. We hoisted our sail, and by nightfall bad landed safely at Sanford. the head of the South Florida Railway, where we put our weary selves and our battered boat on the train and were carried rapidly homewards through the pine-forests and orange groves. The Wide World Magazine. Human "Ace of Spades" Tale of Catherine Thevenln, Who Fascinated French Court Typewriting and Stenography By EDWARD WILLISTON FRENTZ. Great numbers of girls who. through lack of early advantages and education, are wholly unfitted for the work, havfc been tempted to learn typewriting and stenography simply rm a short cut to being called Miss 8ralth" or "Miss Williams" rather than' "Jennie" or "Pauline." No girl should think of learning this trade who has not had at least a thorough high-school training; and If, either In school or out ot it, she has been able to glyo time to the special study of English composition of grammar and rhetoric and the correct use of capitals and marks of punctuation so much tho better. Nowadays in the high schools in most of the larger towns one Aads fairly competent instruction In type writing and stenography; but if this la not provided, a course in some typewriting school is advisable. The tuition will cost, on an aver age, four dollars a week, and living expenses must be reckoned in addi tion. The term may be anything. from ten weeks to twenty. The more reputable schools Ax no time limit, but grant a diploma or certlAcate whenever the pupil is able to pass tho examination. It Is, ot course, possible for a bright and persistent girl to learn the trade by home study and prac tice; but In such cases there Is al ways danger of acquiring faulty An ger methods, which later on will be found a serious handicap to speed. A good commercial typewriter should be able to write in shorthand from one hundred to one hundred and twenty words a minute and to pro duce about sixty words a minute on the typewrites. Having mastered her trade, the young girl faces the difficulty of se curing a position. At the start, the school where she has studied will bo of assistance If Its standing and repu tation be good. Applications from employers are constantly coming In, and an effort is made to provide the right person for tho right place. Wages at the start are almost sure to be low. From six to eight dollars Is the usual price for beginners, and unless the girl shows ability and ap titude, that is likely to remain the price. Ability an-', aptitude mean not merely tho power to reproduce the sounds which tho employer utters, but the knowledge of how to correct poor English, when to begin and when to end a sentence, where cap itals should be used, aud how to punctuate. It also means a grasp of business terms and unfailing ac curacy. Girls too seldom understand that a letter Is a contract, for the fulAl ment of which the employer may be held responsible; and that a little carelessness on the typewriter's part may cost him thousands of dollars. The really desirable positions In this trade positions which pay flf teen, eighteen, twenty, twenty-five or even forty dollars a we,ek are held by girls who are much more thah mere typewriters and stenog raphers. They are virtually private secretaries, fully cognizant ot their employer's business, keeping tracV of his engagements, and helping h'lm to meet the needs of the hour. Such women are In constant demand, at high salaries, because they are inval uable to any employer. Girls who Intend to follow the oc cupation of the typewriter and sten ographer would do well to study French, German, Italian or Spanish, or all of them'; for tne ramifications of modern business lite give special advantages to those who are compe tent to conduct the business corre spondence of a general importing house Youth's Companion. The "Papaw" of the United States. The two cultivated and six wild spectes of eastern North American shrubs and small trees, to which the name "papaw" Is commonly applied by tho Americans, are spectes of Asl minla (natural order Anonaceae) closely related to the sweet sop or sugar apple of the tropics. The two cultivated species bear attractive flowers and edible fruits. One will grow in the open in New York State. The true papaw ot the tropics, Carlca Papaya, is not in any way related to the above-mentioned species. It la called in the United States "molon I papaw for the suke of distinction. fit grows in the open only In South Florida; but Is frequently grown la conservatories north ot the frost Hue. Agricultural News, Barbudos. Real estate In New York City is valued at $5,800,632,132, according to the figures ot the Assessor Georges I tp, i his Indefatl gabl researc. 1Jug, old mansions and old document, nas just revived one of the Aspaslaa, of the Louis XVI. days, who, had she been gifted with as much brains as beauty, could have left absorbing memoirs of the memorable personages who made the early days ot Marie Antoinette's court the mirror of mirth and loveli ness that captivated Edmund Burke. By laborious research through masses of police and other archives Le Norte traces the woman who set the gal lants of Paris agog to a little village In Burgundy. Her name was Cather ine Thevenln, but she was known from Paris to Petersburg as the "Ace of Spades." ("IAs de Pique.") Just why Is not explained, unless In allu sion to her extraordinary fortunes. At fifteen she tired nf her wooden shoes, and one fine day quit the pa ternal cot for adventures In Paris. She became known to the "editor" of the police department as Mile. Du fresnoy, In 1772 sojourning in demure splendor as one of the "extra dan seuses" of the opera. It was fortune. If not fame, for any ordinarily good looking girl to be of tho opera In those carnival tlmesof gallantry. The "soft brown hair and roguish eyes" of Catherine were mentioned to tho Duke of Richelieu, and that Alcl blades having confirmed the verdict by a nod and a dinner, the young woman's fortune was made. Riche lieu was In his seventy-eighth year. and he Was known from end to end of Europe as the most dashing gallant of the century. He not only bore one of the greatest names In the renlm was adulated by Voltaire as the hero of Majorlca, where he beat tho Brit ish under Admiral Byng, but still more, while hts army was assaulting Port Mabon invented the "dressing" called to this day "mayonnaise." To spite his son and heir, the pro fligate Duke de Fronsac, Richelieu married In his Beventr-elghth year a bride of twenty. Celebrated by Vol taire and conceded every grace, ac complishment and grandeur that mor tals enjoy, the Duke, who couldn't sign his own name, was elected mem ber of the Academy of the Immortals, and read an address said to have been written by his friend Voltaire. He preserved activities and prowess In competition with his younger rivals by a "treatment" which seems to have fallen Into disuse when he died. He kept on one of his domains near Paris a herd of cows, and every night he caused a calf to be slaughtered. When he retired 'his body was wrapped In the warm Aesh of the calf, and from this astounding blood absorp tion ho retained tho vigor of yoath until long past three score and ten. He was on the verge of eighty when he eclipsed all the younger gallants at the opera ball, when Marie Antoin ette was present. In the masque of "Cbphalus," dancing "like a boy of twenty." He bore a debt of three millions with such serenity that his creditors hadn.'t the heart to disturb him. Hence when this Imposing per sonage allowed It to be known that he thought l'As do Pique pretty the gold en youth of the court hastened to squander the fortunes of their fam ilies to please the Burgundtan maid. At the very time that the Count d'Artols, the King's brother, was credited with too much brotherly af fection for Marie Antoinette the Prince was really patronizing' the de mure l'As de Pique. Her salon be came the supreme height ot fashion for the Dukes, Marqulsos and Princes, who, quitting the Trianon hurried to tho Catherean shrine. Cagllostro, then in his highest flight of wonder making, was seen at tho Pique's Lu cullian dinners whero'the brother of the King did the honors. Ono day Paris was bewildered at sight of a coach with six white horses In which sat a ravishing creature that the plain folk supposed to be the Queen, since the Queen alone had the right to ride behind six steeds. The Pique received the reverential courtesies of the people with affable smiles aud only learned when the police visited her in the evening that the etiquette of the monarchy reserved that Btyle of equipage for royalty alone. Her chief aim seems to have been to ac cumulate money. When the crash of her cortege of Princes came with the Revolution Bhe showed a callous In difference to tho great folk who bad aided in her fortunes. She was seen during the Terror with a pike In hand marching with the harridans who sur rounded the guillotine, and when the Directory succeeded tho Robespierre regime she became one ot the person ages ot Barras' dissolute court. Dur ing the Empire the police lost sight Of her, but In 1825 she appeared In tho royal olty of Fontalnbleau, to the wonder ot the citizens. She sold her palace In Paris to Baron Louis, the Minister of Finance, and, with about a half million dollarsln securities and fabulously interesting bric-a-brac, set tled at 11 Rue Royal, not far from the palace of Fontalnebleau. For years she lived in this man sion, the wonder, terror and despair of the town. She lived entirely alone; she did her own marketing and on such occasions would ask any stout young workman she mot to aid her In carrying her basket. This was to be protected from robbers, since the whisper of her wealth was one ot the standing tales of the town. Foun talnbleau never forgot the day that Mme. Thevenlon suddenly quit the hermit role for a tew hours. Charles X., who had been Compte d'Artols, had come from Paris to hunt In the royal forest, and Catherine, engaging a suite ot servants, caused her an cient barouche to be brought out with a hired team. Decked in faded splen dor she joined the royal cavalcade into the forest to the inexpressible umazement of tne courtiers. At a certain point In the forest the regal company massed. There were the gorgeous bodyguards, the huntsmen, the dames of the court, all the spleu- dor kuown to the King's court. The ancient chariot making Its way through such a grand cortege elicited cries of wonder, and naturally the King was piqued at the strange spec tacle. Some one whispered the I trau ger's name In the King's ear. He turned Ills horse's head and dashed over to the aide of the chariot. It was fifty years since he had laid eyes on the face, but he recognized the l'As de Pique. The sight horrlAed him; he blubbered out: "Ob. mademoiselle, how old you have grown!" He turned his horse's head and made away as If he had seen a spectre. Afterward It was said the King undertook to make amends for his display of loathing. He recommended the outcast to the Church dignitaries at Fontalnebleau, but she distrusted them, sure that they were moro Interested In her money than her soul. Strangers . from all over the kingdom visited Fontalnebleau to get a glimpse of the hag who dwelt alone In the big man sion. But she rarely showed herself. 8ho received remittances regularly from Paris, and these, to the delight of the small boys, wero conveyed on I a wheelbarrow to the hermitage; j that Is, small saeks of gold. Even Parisian journalists as late as 1850 made the Journey to Fontalnebleau I In order to get the ex-AspasIa to re count some of her memories of a half century before. She could have made thrilling "copy," for she had seen the I guillotining of the royal family, the noblesse; she had seon and probably OH Versed with Robespierre; she had, ! In fact, been part of the last days of ' the Monarchy, all the Revolution, all j the Empire, and was still hale. If not hearty, under another Napoleon. Many attempts were made by rob- ! hers to penetrate her fabulous treas- ury; only one succeeded and the booty hardly encouraged others. The hag had firearms within reach of her bed and at the fireplace where she cooked the small dally ration allowed herself. With her lawyer a Parisian chronl quer obtained entry to thehouse. The hag, pistol In hand, opened the door and then seated herself by tho filthy fireplace, nodding to the lawyer to do as he listed. There were many and large rooms, every one filled with such objects of fine art as now cost fortunes, even the Imitations. Heaps of the most exquisite Sevres china were scattered about, some of tne dishes used for the most ordinary needs. The list of the paintings and statuettes rivals an auction at the famous Parisian or London collectors' sales. Titian, Rubens. Vandyck, a dozen of the most valued masters were represented by canvases em ployed to stop the windows' There was a half ton of crystal, which alone ought to have been a small fortune. Gobelin tapestries were used as mats, cameos of some of the most celebrat ed statesmen and worthies of the century wore flung about like so much waste paper. The woman her self was wrapped In frayed lace of wondrous fabric, but so foul that it would have been taken for the most squalid rag. The secret of the scene was that Catherine was unable to read or write, and hadn't the slight est idea of the precious stores she had accumulated In her youth, when dukes and prlnceb vied with each ottew in sending her the treasures of tBolr palaces. A few weeks after this visit, In 1'853, a butcher boy passing the house saw a Gorgon head thrust through the window and heard a shrill voice crying for help. He Aed In terror. But, as he told the story, some of the neighbors thought it would be. only Christian to see what was wrong la the mysterious house. The hermit was found dead beside the chimney place, bo unutterably filthy that it was difficult to get any one to handle the corpse. It was ex pected that the sale of priceless ob jects described by the chronlquer in the Parts press would bring a for tune. But tho public shrank from even visiting the sale. Cameos ot Marshals of France, princes of the blood, scores of the great noblesse, were knocked down for sums like a dollar. The wholo collection didn't bring $6000, though single objects since have brought as high as 50, 000. The hag's body was burled de cently, but her heirs from the distant Burgundy village were so shamed ot tho kinswoman that they had never kuown that they permitted the body to be thrown into the paupers' ditch when the term that the grave was paid for expired. Philadelphia Bui-lotln. f iariii t - ilia Over flve hundred thousand people are employed In Italy In rearing silkworms. No goods that bear trademarks In any way resembling a crescent can be landed In Turkey. In Wisconsin a deer-hunttng li cense holder gets two tags with his license, entitling him to shoot two deer. After a flight of 500 miles ova land and sea, a pigeon bought by Mr. J. Urban, of Tunbrldge Wells, Eng land, arrived at Its old home at Co logne. Bee-keepers In the Isle of Wight are threatened with the extinction of tho Industry, owing to a mysterious disease of a paralytic na'ure which la attacking the Insects. The cultivation of rubber Is now being taught In the schools of West Africa. Every village Is obliged to plant a certain number of acres in rubber trees. In the Congo State JTr. Ouenther Bays that 12,500,000 rubber trees have been planted. On being asked why they had not informed the court that they had come to an arrangement before their lawyers had spoken, the litigants In a peasants' dispute at Thurgovle, Switzerland, remarked that, as the lawyers would have to be paid In any case, they had allowed them to earn their fees. America's Gilded Youth. It is the ambition of many a well-to-do father in these days to shield his son from the struggles and priva tions that marked his own career. The man who had to work from 5 o'clock in the morning till sundown on a farm or associate with ignorant and brutal laborers In menial callings or deny himself all the luxuries and many of the so-called necessities In order to get ahead in the world, says: "My boy must never have such a hard time as I had; bis way to success must be made smooth before him by the advantages he will have over those that I had;" and ho plans la make It easier for blm. Yet It Is one ot tne most familiar factB in life that this affectionate am bition of the rich father tor his boy. falls of realization. Almost every newspaper that falls from the press tells the melancholy story ot a rich man's son who has disappointed the hopes of his family and whose princi pal services to humanity has been to serve as a warning to those who come after him. We kuow what the glided youth with a fabulous Income does with his money and himself. Hts patrimony aud his vital forces are consumed in the mad pursuit of pleasure in some new or extravagaut form. Indianapolis Star. Japan's Peace Program. It is Interesting to note that JaV an's policy utter the war Is clearly indicated ..y next year's budget to bo one of "economic and peaceful de velopment." Harbors and rivers are to he improved, aud education (par ticularly technical education) en couraged. estraluster Gazette. It Is often asserted that Paris wears out people so that they cannot reach an old age. This assertion Is most emphatically contradicted by the sta tistics of the last census. Its Agures go to show that the city alone, with out the precincts, has 10,509 persons) over eighty years of age, a rate con siderably higher than the mean rate of France. Six hundred and twenty persons had on the day of the census passed the age of ninety, and eighty nine were centenarians. Twenty-four had passed the age of 100, and six were more than 102 years old. That the camera reveals much that the eye falls to discover Is Indicated by the case of a Chicago woman who recently sat for her photograph. On receiving the proof she took it back to the photographer and complained ot a number of small spots on the face which marred an otherwise per fect picture. The photographer was at a loss to account for this, an ex amination ot negative faMlng to give the slightest clew to the source of trouble. Several days later an erup tion of spots broke out on the wo man's face, which proved to be the Arst outwai-d symptoms of a severe attack of smallpox. FRIGATE BIRDS. Enormous Winged Birds of the Trop ical Seas. After an Interval of a quarter of a century the Zoological Gardens again possess a specimen ot the frigate bird ( Fregata aqulla). Visitors to the gardens will notice the great spread of the wings, equal to that of a swan's, and tho comparatively small body. "It Is a beautiful sight." says Pro fessor Newton, "to watch one or more of them floating overhead against the deep blue sky. the long forked tall alternately opening and shutting like a pair of scissors and tho head, which is, ot course, kept to the windward. Inclined from side to side, while the wings are to all appearance fixedly extended, though the broeze may be constantly varying lu strength and, direction." Tho frigate bird Is a native of trop ical seas and rarely comes to land ex cept during the breeding Beason. It has the habit, unusual among sea birds, ot nesting in trees, large com panies of them building together in the tops of the tallest mangroves. I.Ike the cormorant and the albatross, the frigate bird lays but one egg. It lives by Ashing and nlso by robbing other Ashers of what, they have caught. In plumage the frigate bird' is brownish black, with metallic green and purplo rcfloctiouB. The dilatable throat Bac In the male Is ot bright scarlet, while the female, of a duller hue, has a white patch on the breast. London Globe. The first copper cet was coined la New Haven lu 1887. A Squash Story. Here Is a pretty good story told by Senator Clark, of Montana, and which) certainly would quality him as a member t the Ananias Club. "That's a pretty big squash," re marked the Senator, while gazing on an Indian Territory specimen. "It reminds me ot a squash that was to have been exhibited at ono ot the county fairs back home. The man that raised It was au enterprising fellow, and he had found out In some way that by feeding milk to a squash vine tremendous squashes could be raised. So he raised this one and It was a whopper. He bad to drive a long way to town over rough roads and unfortunately In unloading the squash It dropped to the ground and burst. What was tho owner's sur prise to find that tho milk which had; accumulated in the squash had been churned Into butter. He was a re sourceful man, so ho entered the but ter among the dairy exhibits aad took a prise with that. You cau't keep some men down." N. W. Agriculturist. The Hallway Signalman. The railway signalman is, in fact, an uuapplauded prodigy. He per forms, In a necessary privacy, the klud ot feat which blindfold cheaa players like Mr. Blackturne and lightning calculatora like Jacques luaudl perform iu public. He has un der his sure and powortul hands the keys of life and death. PaU Matt Magazine. 1