Ft Gos ish oy, ind op- his vas Tis, 20. but at "ob- cat- fire vas nia ers’ ter- ing at ley, ally hil- be- ead Tg. han zed, old, the teel ten- pon org- had t to aim ‘est- r in But- lear 000, C 5 i 3 fd | : gx 2 A ‘ $ r : i i : 2 : | ) ip 7a 7 Py : Il = = i 7 ; j : REAL USEFULNESS. ‘Its; or ‘should be, every girl's de- @ire, even ambition, to bé ‘as useful as she can to her mother in the household affairs, - Real usefulness does mot con-- sist in doing only what one is asked, but in anticipating things to be done, and relieving mother of the necessity of asking for help, says the Cleveland Plain’ Dealer. ‘The most important partiof the service is willingness and cheerfilness. One would much rather do a thing oneself than beg or make Some one clse do it, or eveu ask any one who is not cheerful. . Be real help- ful and try to make your mother won- der what she would do without your assistance. BREAKFASTLESS SHOPPERS. Department store restaurants com- mand a peculiar morning trade. Few of them advertise the breakfast, yet there is quite a brisk trade drawn from women who come downtown very ear- ly in search of bargains. A shop which features Monday and Tuesday morning sales usually has a rush for the bar- gain counters the moment the doors are opened. Waitresses in the res- taurants say that very few women who attend these sales stay at home to eat breakfast Many do not take even a cup of coffee, and once they secure thé: coveted bargains they ad- journ to the restaurant, eat a: light breakfast and then . continue their shopping systematically. FOR THE DARK-HAIRED DAMSEL The genuine brunette, she of the dark eyes and dark skin and neck, rich, red cheeks—can wear cream, deep yellow, orange, ‘cardinal, deep maroon, deep blue; but-mnot purple, golden brown, tans, grays and claret. She should avoid all green, violets. mauves .and- greeny blues. The fair brunette must not think be- cause she happens to possess black or “emg APTOWT black hair that she must dress up to it. The hair is a matter of quite minor importance. It is the skin and eyes that have to be studied and con- sidered. Among the fair brunette’s colors are cream, light blue, all shades of gray, pale coral and pale salmon pink. : For evening the sallow brunette must reconcile herself to Indian reds, orange yellow, deep orange and flame color, while for day wear steely grays, red, tan, crimson, deep cardinal and deep poppy red, tan and strong golden brown are to be recommended. WITH TAILOR-MADE GOWNS. Fancy waistcoats, lapels, collars and cuffs are very prominent in the fashion scheme for street costumes. This fash- ion furnishes an opportunity for indi- vical taste; but it is rather a danger- ous thing for people to go into rashly. The question of contrasts of color is not generally understood, and it is best not to attempt anything too startling. A touch of color, such as blue, green, red, or white, against any dark ma- terial often lightens a gown amazingly and makes it more becoming, but there are very few people who can wear un- asual colors, and there are very few dressmakers or tailors who" know just what one of the many shades of color is appropriate with the heavy material of, which the gown is composed. How- ever, among the more expensive models for winter gowns this fashion of strik- ing contrasts in trimming will be very noticeable, and is a sa! ne to copy advifedly and soberly.~Harper’s Bazar. WHAT WOMEN MOST LIKE. A woman likes to be truly loved and to ‘be told ‘so. She likes some noble, honorable man to bé thoughtful of her, kind and con- siderate of her welfare. “YVhen well’ and becomingly dressed, a quiet notice of it is always appréci- ated. : A word of praise for a nice dinner or supper often more than compensates (BET for the worry and work of prepara- Aion. : ¥ She Wants Her husband not to be her supporter, but her companion, Tre- ‘membering that, it is the kind word hat often brings ber greater happiness ‘than a new Set of dishes, though pres- ‘ents ‘like the latter are always wel ‘come. ‘ © She likes fo be made to realize that ‘she “is good fOr something besides a Taere household: drudge. { She likes to be petted occasionally, but not in public. The little private pet names are very dear to a woman’s heart. HOW TO GAIN A CORRECT POISE ‘The best way to ‘obtain the proper poise is to stand with the face against the wall. The tcoes should touch the wall and the arms bang limp by the side. . This latter is an important sug- gestion. Often when one begins these physical culture exercises the muscles become stiffened, and no benefit is derived. Let the tip of the nose also touch the wall, not the upper part of the nose, which would let the head drop too much, but just the lower tip. Press the shoulders as far back as possible, as if trying to make them meet in the back, and then relax them. The entire length of the body will prob- ably now be reclining against the wall. Draw the abdomen as far away from the wall as you possibly can, and you are ready to walk off. As you step kway from the wall, test the position now touch the wall and so should the shoulders and the back of the head. As. you walk forward a bock placed flatly on the top of your head will not drop off. - : TO TELL LINEN FROM COTTON. It often happens ‘that woolen goods will be doctored with'cotton.: To dis- cover this there are several tests that can be made.” One is the match test. By applying a lighted . match: to a sample of the goods,.the manner in which it burns will be evidence. of its genuineness. , Ni . Wool will burn slowly, while cotton will ‘go like a train’ ‘of gunpowder. Another test is to unravel the threads and the cotton éan then easily be de- tected. A », To the experienced buyer the “feel” of linen is a suyfiicient indication, of the quality, but for those who lack this knowledge there is- an old-fashioned test which our grandmothers used which is unfailing to show if there is cotton in the weol. Dampen the finger and apply to the surface of the linen fabric. If the moisture is seen on the other side you may know at once if is linen. If'it’is slow ‘in coming through, without doubt there is an admixture of cotton. Another method is fo un- ravel thie threads, as in the wool test. SHELL CANDLE SHADES. Almost everybody knows, and has periodically gathered from youth ‘to old age, the pretty little yellow shells scattered so abundautly -through the seashore’s sand. Schentifically,- wor, rather, by the. concholozist; they: are referred to as “jingle” shellsy'and’ cdm- monly dubbed the “daintiest,” ‘the dearest” and “most desired” of all among an upheaval of baby clam: shells, mussels, ‘snails; cockies, and other beach sand ‘life. They’ are ndt, how- ever uniformly .yellow.: Thair tints are oftén’ opalescent, in varied tones of either shrimp’ pink or deep orange, or ‘else they are found almost white, with pale yellow and green shadings. They, besides, are fortunate in retain- ing their lustre even after being car- ried away and given a good fresh wa- ter scrubbing. ; Among quite new uses to which these beautiful little shells are put is that of making them up in candle shades. The foundation shade on which these shells’ are sewn is made of coarse, stiffened linen and has a narrow silk fringe around the bottom. This blends in with and considerably soft- ens the loose hanging shells . which have been strung as d finish to, the shade. While these linen shades. can be found without | difficulty, their usual color is white. The shells, how- ever, look best if made. up Qver pale vellow, especially when the capdle’s light - shines through them.> Kansas City Journal. MAKING A HOME, : The principles which ought to goy- ern in the making of a home—meaning the material home, the house and its equipment and immediate environ- ment—should be clear in the ‘mind of the home maker. But'they are apt to be confused ‘by circumstances. redir- ing energy and initiative to overcome, says Mrs. Henry Wade Rogers. in Fhe House Beautiful. These qualities are not always possessed, and Iess often exercised by the home maker. Thesin- telligent housewife should demand that the house and its environment be in perfect sanitary condition, and refuse to accept anything else. Landlords and builders would find it then to their advantage to meet the require- ment. . , Convenience is a second principle very often overlooked in deciding on a home, and thereby, time, ‘comfort and health are in a measure sacrificed. The endless duties to be performed in a house become, when. it is planned without due regard to the ease of do- ing the work, a tenfold burden. . Simplicity is a third essention prin ciple, and beauty isa closely allied fourth. Either without the other is impossible, and a home lacking in one fails in both. Beware’ of the multi- plicity of things!: This evil is the en- emy of simplicity and beauty, as it-is of time and comfort. One, of the great architects said, in talking with me re- cently about this difficulty of accumu- lation of things in a home: “Pass them on.” It is a wise saying, truly. Some one needs them, and their going will be a double blessing. Pictures, books, bric-a-brae, furniture, which we have outgrown or can do without to advantage, “Pass them on” to glad- den another llome, and permit simplie- ity and beauty to abide in our home. The principles of simplicity and beauty need to be heeded as carefully in the house itself as its equipment ahd furnishing. Everything within or with- out the home departing from the lines of. simplicity may well be tabooed as detracting from the real beauty essen- tial to the home of the.people sensitive to the finer things of life. If health, convenience, simplicity and beauty are the guiding principles in the essentials of a home, we cannot go very far astray on minor matters relating to it. In a dairy, near San Franeisco Cali- fornia, the other day, an overloaded hayloft collapsed upon sixty cows that were in a barn. beneath, and either crushed or smoluered to death all of them, by turning round. The heels should | A SERMON. FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED. "KNQWLEDCE OF CHRIST.” The Rev, Winfield Scott Baer Tells Those Who Would Receive Light That They’ Must; Exercise: Self-Control and:Sacri- tice Pleasure to the Work BrooREEN;:'N. Y.—Tie Winfield Scott B rector of St, ’s, Church, préached Mmday morning one Knowledge of Chrigt?® He took. his text from Philip- pians iii. 8: “I count all things but loss for the exgelléncy of thet knowledge of Christ Jesus my Fozd.” Mr. Baer. sald among other things: Eb : A quarter of a century had passed since Paul onithe way to Dangascis saw, a great light, sineé he who was the fiérseeutor of the chureh became Apostle tothe Gentiles. They were! years of ental .and’ spiritual growthicof missionary zeal and ‘activity, of suffering dnd privagion, and beyond that. of jov and gladness ich no man could tell. Now, looking back over his life fFom prison in Rome, he passed judgment upon his zain and Jess. There was no tinge of despondency which might have come ‘from age or weakness, no’ touch of bitterness -showing that the iron .micht have entered .into his soul, but with the calmness of.a judge and’ the fervor.of.'a seeker after truth, “he cried: “I count all things but loss for the cxcellencv of the Lnowledge of Christ Jesus may Lord.” There aré: many: kinds: of knowledge, gained in different methods and ways. Some comes through exercise of memorv; some through careful observation of: the facts of nature; some by experiment in the laboratory; some bv careful reading of the past and wise judgment upon it; much from the careful study of ourselves. In varying degrees these all'are precious, and they ar€ given only for a price. The school system tof hich we are proud is costly. The vast expenditiire of nione¥ is but an item ia the cost. Fnergy, time, thought of myriads interested in the work of knowl- edge and in training those eommitted to their’ care harder far’ than:hearing lessons froma a book. The years of school, the hours: of study and. practice, the physical confinerent when eh'ldren: would rather be on the street or inibhe-field, all these must be counted in. “We are almost disap- pointed when we do not read among the honbrg of college commencement some men- tionfeof gifts of moncy to. enable the col- lege to, pursue trath; ‘and ‘give.it out to those who seek it; and here alse.are time and labor and research.” So tHése who would receive the full benefit ofthe prof- fered knowledge must cxercise self-control, sacrifice play and pleasure *o the Work. _ This is but the beginning of knqgwiedee. In every realm of life men seek if Haply- they may find. The borders of th@ un-’ known aré béing pushed bick day bv doy, and the light of truth is seen and known over. ever wider tracts. In scientific. re- search, invention, explorafion © of the earth, knowledge of society, knowled&e of “third. en are thinking, working; waining knowledges, They.pay the ‘cost: Thé ice of the north. conld it speak; jyould tell of those who sought the pole, merely. that they might know; the jungles of Asia and the forests of Afrieaxr-are known to ws from the traveler; missionary. scientist, soldier, seeker after cold: with- their different mo- tives: impelling them, they bring forth knowledge, or the world, Human trials, privations and death have been paid for that knowledge. Tew 'as they. take it, think of the price at vehich itis purchased. There are degrees of worth in knowl- edge. That which has most, f-the human in" 3t contains most interest’ for us. Per- ‘Sons are the highest facts: the. kuowledge of persons is the highest knowledge. Tt is a wonderful story which science tells us of the development of the world. It is a more living story for us to know of the develop- ment of mankind; hence, history, biogra- phy and social matters have a deeper in- terest for us. . Nor is it an.easy matter to read “the past or the present.; From the same. chemieal ingredients we expeat the same results. Personality .may conceal or may reveal itself by its words and deeds. None of us needs to be Jekyll and Hvde to appreciate that he is not always ‘elear 23 crystal, to be read by‘all the world. Deeds may belie the heart. None of us knows apother, perfectly. perhans we do not know ‘ourselves. The mathematical fable we: know, bat the knowledge of man- kind is. higher, and .more secret and. diffi-- cw't to gain, To imei som “Tf study of man be our. true study” then the studv of the best i§ our iwise part. How foolish for the student in art to study the chramo when. the masterpiece } is before his éve!’ Why strive to read by light of Jamn-when-therglorious, sain in the heaven floods the: earth with Light? Seek: the noblest, and }éarn of him. It'was this which ‘Paul whs doing. The desire of his heart, ‘the end of his thoucht, the goal of his purpose was that. he might know Christ, and for. that he would feount all things but loss. » Tt gage There has been loss in Paul's Hf# as he gained! this knowledge. Tipss of. money, positign, friendship;. bitterly! hated:by his people, hind now. loss of: liberty, ag captive at Rome. - But these he countdd loss for the knowledge of Christ. “4. © ° . This was more than a knowledge of the o AIS W j0re.4n ’ facts of ‘Christls life; more than an: ac- knowledgmienit of his past and presént-high dignity in the ‘spiritual world; more than a: recognition sof the place! of «Christ in God’s work for ‘man. Ofte might know all this,’ yet not kmow. Christ, as Paul longed to know, in the communion of friendship, in the inspiration of Christ within, ia the power" of Christ raising ‘him from sin‘ fo righteousness, making him a‘ipaptaker of His own life, so that he could say: “filive, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me?’ We may not follow Paul's intellectual flights nor gaze with his vision atjthe mys- teries which are unveiled. Bui we may Jnow the purpose of. God for. us,” which is that. we shall seek the teuth of life, This is found in Christ.” To know .Him is the rivilege of all. There is ne exclusive dass of rich or poor, but the knowledee is open to ail who are wiliine to take if as it can be taught, and are willing to pay. the price. This knowledge of Christ can he known but partially through reading of the skies above or the Scriptures beneath. Many through these come to a knowledge of, God. But such study is foo easy a school for charatter, as we strive to know the living, loving God. ; Li iB E One has told of the search for the snovw- white bird of truth. How, after, weary journeyings. toils, temptations, struggles. at last in the hour ‘of death a climpse of the passing ereature is given, and a feather dropped from its wing is grasped by the dying. man. No such cold truth as that do we seek. Tt is the knowledge of the liv- ing person, Christ Jesus, our- Lord. He can be known truly only through sympa- thy, kindness of mind and heart and life: through personal experience. ; : For suceess in any pursuit of truth there must be desire, ‘concentration, work and vatience, There must be the desire impel- ling the searcher; the concentration of en- ergies on the pursuit; study of the laws of the subjeet; willingness to serve in the hall of patience ere passing into the palace of dom t is unreasonable to expect that the highest knowledge of man, the knowl- edge of life, can be secured without paying the price. For it there is needed a desire which shall overcome all other desires. There must be a purpose of the will, the lifelong endeavor to attain. Paul counted not him. self to have -attained, but he pressed on for the pris There m be purifica- tion of life, for God is } f and noR-distinguished visitors. love not His things, aid without thisisym-' athy- there cannot be the knowledge of pefsdn to person. Because of “this meces- £ity of knowing God through the earnest- ness of desire, thé bending of our will, the sobedience of our life, there comes the struggle in man’s life with trial, tempta- tion, suffering. For if it be the life of Christ we are to know, then itis a life of “truth, of holiness, of love, of self-sacrifice, of consecration to ‘the Father's will. No Jnan can know that life in its fulness save as le ‘cexperiences if. He may discuss it, and’ compare it witii others, but only he | ‘who lives it' knows what it is. B08 the disciples asked the Lord for the “€hief places in the kingdom. He. told them that ‘they knew not ‘what they dsked. Can ye drink the cup that Idrink. be baptised avith the haptism that Tam? They fhought #hey could. Tater, in a» measure.-they did. it the places. are reserved - for “those fo. whom it, is anpointeql,. for those who régfitted. for it. It'is the inner prize of cha er, of holiness, of love; of truth, after the ‘likeness of Jesus Christ whi entitles one to stand near im ‘in gpiritual power and dominion. This is not always dasy "¥@hrist had His struggles. His agony, His creas’ Tho disciple is nat above the Master.. Tt may not mean: the giving ‘up of life.~ Tt does at times in mission lands, But to «ain that knawledee ‘of.Christ will abst. 4s righteousness gained without tef- forts Is forziveriess: of one who has in- jured us a mere bagatel’e? Do all the re- wards. go to the honest and high princi- pled in polities? Ts ‘truth “in business al- ways at a premium? In thé presence of the pleasure and the business of the day js it a simple matter to keen one’s head erect, and work as a son of God, and thus acting, know Christ in truth and love? Does it demand much of us that we shall give ourselves up for those who may scorn or hate ns, so following the examnle ‘of Christ. who gave Himself for us? Ah. we know in our daily life how great the task is set for us in the school of character, that we may know Christ; that we may be like Him; that we may grow in the knowledge of human truth and love as we not only see it in Him, but know it in. ourselves. It costs much because it is'life: and be- cause it is life, it pays. For chief in the joys and glories of truth, there ‘stands this excellency of the knowledee of Christ as apprehended by man: it is the truth of life, the life of God, the life:of man, who is the child of God. Gt ng Read through the history of th& past of those noble ‘ones who have aided, the'maral uolift of the world through thi§ personal living kitowledge of Christ. « They know truthyand love, hecause thev have lived trntheand love. They paid the price. Tt might bé&&poverty, persecution, martyrdom: struggles withins ahd trials without. In the power of Christ's strengthening them to do the things which were right. in the suffering for others that they might be drawn unto (od, thev cime into possession the knowledge of "Christ. through exper- ience. With one accord that noble multi- tude’ which no man can’ number,” of apos- tles, prophets, martyrs, known ‘and rvs known, giving’ thanks unto God for. Hig goodness, ascribes to this knowledge p-o- eminence and’ surpassing glory ‘above al others, ervine out with Paul, We count #1 things but, loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus .our Lord. Liberty: There is no .sweetef word in human. speech than liberty; no. finer thought in human mind, no richer gift in hwman life. What is freedom? ndependence of law? So. many think. But they are mis- taken. He who imagines “freedom -con- sists in getting rid of law is totally and fa- tally wrongs "x ht s Yo eX We offer the Ten Commandments to a man for his moral code. He rejects the code,. saying, “I will be bound by no _ta- ble.of Jaws. I am free.” He is'not free. He may as well reject the multiplication table or the law of gravitation. =» 5 “I will be enslaved by no creed.” Tn- slaved "by a creed? Creeds do not en- slaves i they are “declarations of religious independence, proclamations of emanci- pation, ‘affirmations of freedom. A creed 1s much like a political platform--a state- ment of opinions. No one platform’ ever contained all the political opiniong of the men who adopted it. No one creed ever contained all the religious opinions of ifs. adherents. It is at best only an attempt to state the essential. doctrines in which its makers agree.” * A bird is free in the air. The air is its’ clement. A fish is free in the vater. Wa- ter is its element. Man is free in obedi- ence to the laws of his being. The Bible contains thgse laws. Moral judgment con- firms ttm. Conscience approves when we observe:them, accuses us'avhen ave violate the? A man who persists in ‘sin is as truly ou of hisi‘element.'as a trout in thesaie ox’ a spprrow! in. water. And the end i3:thé, same when any living creature | gets but of its element, out-of; harmony with daw—the penalty. is death: But an intervening hand may Testore the #ish and thelbird to t eik eldments? Yes. "And is. there no han to. yestore a lost man to his, element? 1 Gad’ Chiist \ answer ito that question. “Whom 'ghe Son makes free, he 1 free indeed.” —Philadel- phia Ledger. .;. 7 * a Tags gn 1 §, Pray Not Alone For Self.:.. x. A gentleman who was: trayeling in The lantlisat down one day in a cottage to, talk with an old woman. As they were having theiry, ‘dish of discourse” there came a'clap of thinder, and the old woman &t once spread put her. hands in supplication, cry- ing: Bo ge “God. bless and saye us! : And save his honor, and save thg people and all of us!” For she space of “half ‘an hour the thun- der was frequent, “and? each time she prayed. Then she told. the visitor this story, which has a’ good ‘moral ‘in its defin- ing ol. the proper spirit which should be- léng to prayer: ° a “There was a man, and he was working ina figld like, and it came on’ to thunder, and he put his head in a hole in’ ‘the wail and he said: a “ ‘God save what’s out 0’ me!’ “But he ought to have prayed for the whole of him, for he mo ‘sooner said that thai theswall fell and took his head.off. © “It avas telled to me that this wasia judgment on the crathury becausé if is not right to pray small; just for yoursilf. But vou sirould pray.large—to save us all—pray biz' and open hearted. Dit that may be only a story, sir’? *' Sensitive to Every Impression. In the quaint little house Shere Shakes- pearc once‘lived, writes Peter Ainslee: Tor many vears no register was kept, and vis- itors wrote their names upon the walls md ceilings, until every bit of space had been occupied with some handwriting, and it must nod be forgotten that fully 40,000 peo- ple ;visited there every year. Sir Walter Scott: had. written with his diamond ring his namg upon, the window pane, and there were tHe names of ‘Washington Irving, John Raskin, and a host of distinguished i Standing there, F' felt as though that little room was like the human heart, sensible to every influence, and inviting every comer to write his name upon its. walls, for. the heart is the most impressionable of all God’s works. It gets a part of every pass ing - thought, word, look, picturé—every- thing, and here lies its salvation, if it catches the good, or i nation if it holds the bad. Luther wisely said, “1 am more afraid of my own heart than of the Pope and all his cardinals. And hence that imperative demand, “Love the Lord with all thy heart.” A Pure Home. On a recent Sunday Dr. W. B. Leach, of Chicago, - informed 5 Methodist hearers that pure home rth a thousand women’s clubs for 1 and elevation f tha massag, + SEevees 14 "STALKING WILD ANIMALS, lock 2 § Crdichtare. ~~ H mamal upon his own x * ground, each after its own : fashiom, need never be shy of game, though his outfit ‘be old and wild life in “his region, secarce.: But ‘stalking does ‘not mean lying in: wait ‘all ‘night. at some water hole for deer or wildcat or lion, nor yet. the immo- lating of.one’s self in a blind of tules surrounded ky wooden ducks. Stalking in an open country is in- estimably-harder- than the same kind of sport as followed by our grand- daddies in the heavily wooded slopes of the Adifondacks and later by . our fathers in the Rockies, and even. the nearer Sierras. Hunting of this kind requires infinite patience and not a little knowledge of the animal life of the hunter's country, and was the main standby ‘of the Indians before the com- ing of the white man brought to his use the shotgun and the rifle. In stalking coyotes, the returns from whieh, in this Section, will’ be. one or more good hides and a day’s sport, strike out in the'early dawn of a mid- winter day, on foot, for a coyote will not noticé* a -man on foot. when he would run like a scared deer from the same’ man on a horse. In the early dawn all the little wolves will be com- ing up‘the draws and dry washes from the baynyards, where they have put in the night. So it is wandering along the foothills, down one little valley and up the next, that the stalker should 80, eyes and ears open, his whole body ready to “freeze” inte a fence post or a crooked stump at the instant sight of game: Then softly, Aunning low in the shadow ef, a bank’ or the shallow wash, dodging, imaginary: hounds in every ielump of bush, ¢omes the wild gray dog of ‘the foothills. Then, if ever, the (hunter's museles stiffen, he tries to keep’ the coyote in eye without letting the animal gee him. Slowly, as the wind might raise the limp of a young’ tree, the rifle comes to the shoulder, but the coyote sees and is off splitting the mornimg ‘air ike a gray cloud.: All at once he seems to melt into the ‘landscape; unless one keeps his eye on the gray dog he is apt to lose his chance. If the'eye is good and the arm quick, the 2520's crack will be followed by ‘the sudden: leap and fall of the coyote,” whose fur at this time of the year is thick and long and brighter colored than it will be later. Oftentimes a good stalker, even a me- diocre rifle shot, can in this way pick up two or three nice skins on a fogg morning when the animals hunt later in the lowlands than on clear morn- ings. Another favorite way to hunt these wolves is by hiding at the edge of a little pool or spring in the early morn- ing, as ‘coyotes’ almost always stop for a drink before going to ‘roost’ after a night's hunting. The writer has killed a coyote in this. manner that had for months ‘outrun the dogs of about half a county and outgeneraled the men .swho owned. the dogs until he | came to.be a sort.of Joirah to.all the hunting: grounds of that section. EF But, probably the most difficult of all California” game: animals ‘to’ stalk is any ane of.our deer. .The large Vir- ginian, deer is a particularly unaccom- modating beast in this regard, seldom freqhienting country free on the fighting should cease, seventh New York; one tLat had been recruited from the young men of Sarato We had in our company ¢ Tommie Mat- nat an ol Oy name, he Confe toga, his na- y 9g1-gitio is past master of the of ‘meeting bird or barter, and there was no breach of the | in Company G of the Seventy- ! I s{ OMe of tive town, when a child, to go and live with his aunt, down .in Macon, ‘Ga., and as he grew up he naturally imbibed Southern ideas and prejudices. “I effected a trade one day with a good-looking young private on the other side, giving him a copy of a home paper for some tobacco. As soon as he looked at it he said: ‘Great heav- ens! this paper is from my old home. I was born in Saratoga and have a brother living there. I am named John Matthews and my brother. is named Thomas. De you happen to know him? Did I know Tommie Matthews! Well, I guess so! We had enlisted to- gether and were especial chums. After telling all this, and finding ‘out how eager the Cenfederate was to see the brother from whom he had been sep- arated for ten years, I proinised to ‘arrange +a. meeting between them, if possible, that very night.. A lot of the boys were told of the affair, and when Tommie Matthews himself heard of it he was almost crazy with joy at the thought of the reunion. - ‘That night the brothers were brought together, and a touching meet» ing it was. - A number of the boys who had known John Matthews were wit- nesses, and they begged Him to come back and join his old comrades who were fighting’ for’ the Union. , ‘No, boys,’ he answered, ‘I have cast my fate with the South; and shall stick by it. I am glad to have seen you, and maybe we shall be friends once more after the war is over’ I never knew what his fate was or whether the brothers were ever reunited.”—MWash- ington Post. A TIGER SIEGE, The police station at Katigora was, a few days ago, the scene of great ex- citement and borror when the corpse of unfortunate Nidan Patni, who met his lamentable death from the claws of a tiger, was carried there for inspec- tion. : ; * Four persons were killed during the course of a few weeks, besides a num- ber of’ persons mauled; while carrying away of cattle is going on almost every day. The tigers that have caused seo much havoc here are’ now proved to be four in number, one tiger, one tig- ress and two big cubs, and our sym- pathetic deputy commissioner is said to have offered a reward of Rs. 40 for the destruction of each of them. The ferocious brutes, having taken their abode by the side of the only important road leading from Katigora to the village of Gangapur, have prac- tically laid siege to «the village, with the result that communication.on foot has been stopped. Several attempts that had.been made to,afford zéljef to the unfortunate villagers Were ‘all un- successful. 78 i 3 :u’ A party of local shikaries mustering strong and equipped with firearms marched into the jungle at the head of our energetic Naib Tehsildar Maulvi Mahommed Israil to hunt the tigers, but with ‘all their efforts they could. not make tha master stripes'come out of their recess. The pext day, how- ever, another party, éonsisting of four European ‘gentlemen, with a large number of coolieg, ‘surrounded the jun gle and succeeded"iprarousing the tigs ers, which managed, to. escape through. the line without giving the hunters. an opportunity of discharging bullets, - . They pursued the animals and made them swim aeross a beel. It is a mat- ter of regret that, they brave hunters, failed to hit the animals while they were struggling in the water, although a good number of shot§ were ‘fired. The tigers got to the other .side of. the beel: without encountering further Qpposi+ tion and fell 'upen the said Nidan. Pat- ni, who was grazing cattle near his house, and killed him on the spot. MACEDONIAN RELIEF PARTY. Each day’s work brought some sad story or picture of its own before us. Four little girls, whose parents had both been shot as they: fled ‘from their’ village; three . others—mere babies—' whom we found sitting youdd a great pot in their ‘smoky cabip, their mother dead from exposure, their father in- curably ill at the hospital; a young girl in deep distress, because her wedding clothes had been burned, and. DOW no. one would want a portionless bride: the widow of-a village priest, a woman with wild, hunted eyes, who had not slept since the bodies of her husbgnd and his brother had been found on the mountains weeks before, and ‘who, un- able to rest even ~in° eur hospital, passed on to die a few days later; hag- gard boys and. girls, whose wounds had remained undréssed some six or seven months; men just out of the unspeakable prisons—“*We could live. {ere through the winter,” but had it been summer we must have died’—a village priest crippled for life, and’ still. prostrate from the bastinado he had endured three times ‘some eight months before; an old father and mot- er, who came every week. on.a hope- less mission, a five hours’ journey, to ask if I could give tMem tidings yet of their deaf and dumb boy, wham the soldiers webe supposed to have carried away; sometimes. young girls, for whom one could only hope that forget- fulness or death might come; and al- ways a tale of widows, old and young, to which there seemed no end-—such | ware a few of the cases that dame to us for what help or comfort we could give. An old black woman in St. Vin. cent, whose husband and son had been killed in the hurricane, speaking of ter loneliness, said to me, “And when {1 go to market now there is only me | and my shadow.” But there is somé- more pathetic still, perhaps, in | a phrase one heard often enough in Macedonia in answer to the que | “How many algne.”—Corn i T 1 thing souls are you? “I sat the finest and the world is