iE ® a rr cg —— El A ERATE A FOIA Pp 5 I A QUESTICN OF TASTE. Up a certain crooked city street, throu: gh which T often pass, There's a narrow little tiny panes of glass Where it seems to me Zhe moments must in sweetness slip aw For a little candy- Dene there every day. He wears a can and apron which are pie- : turesquely French; There are snowy flour all about his bench ; In fact, I almost fancy, . spick- and-span, That window, set with stands at work and sugar scatter ed seeing things so this little ‘candy-maker is a little candy-man But pow queer a candy man can be I never really knew Till 1 happened to be passing when the mid- ay whistle blew, And thought to ston and stare a bit could hardly be a crim Just to see the kind of candy he would eat at luncheon-time. Then “the sight was so surprising that my yificn seemed to fail, For fram underneath his sugared bench he drew a dinner-pail, ‘Aas if he didn’t care at ail for any sort or sweet This faginy candy- -maker fell to eating bread and meat ! And, Now don't vou think that such a taste was something very strange? Considir what a diet he could On ofa Nings like taffy-balls, for instance, he. could dine: easily ar- For fincheon, candied violets—so delicate and fine! ! And op leaving in the evening, when the honeyed day had fied, He could take 2 box of creams to eat be- fore he went to bed! I wonder. now, what vou and I NOS like if, we were nc And molded candies sigared bench? all the day behind a A STRAN WARRRERRLLRaURZ RHA NIB » 5 Kunne BY “The Captain. 2» $ RRARA ALL RA EU AER REQLAR®? mA AC ARR RAL SRARRARL AT GTA GE CLEW x x 5 x RAGERANR ALAR ALRAR URE When I was quite a young man counted among my close friends a pri- vate detective. The two of us were | enjoying a quiet smoke and re > 13 his cosy little office one day n the door opened and his boy us 1 in| a lady client. She was apparently | under twenty and was q o |} ably attired. Her form was | slender, and her face exce { tractive; but it bore tra sudden and overwhelming affliction, for her eyes were red with weeping “Mr. Banks, the detective, 1 pre- sume?” she queried, turning, a quick glance at me, toward my more | mature companion. ! “At your service, madam. Pray be | | | Seated.” “I am in sore trouble, sir,” she said, in tremulous tones, applying her hand- kerchief to her eyes. “Death has sud- denly robbed me of a father, and the prison, if nothing worse, threatens to take a dear cousin from me.” “That is very sad,” my friend said. sympathetically. “But compose your- self, my dear lady; we may yet avert the latter half of your trouble.” “Oh, sir! Heaven grant that you may, for my cousin, whom they sus- pect of the murder of my poor father, was to be my husband,” she said, the seriousness of the case quite overcom- ing her natural modesty. “But he is innocent; I know it, 1 feel it, in spite of the evidence against him. Oh, be- lieve me, sir, Harry is as innocent of this dreadful deed as I am!” “My dear yoyng lady,” said Banks, encouragingly, ‘before hearing the first detail of your case, I am con- vinced that he is. My beitef in fem- inine intuition is based upon the solid foundation ‘of experience. Beecalm, therefore, and let me have the story from the beginning.” The circumstances she related as follows Her father, Thomas Kempton, was the proprietor of a large furniture fac- tory. He was a man who paid strict attention to business. and was in the habit of remaining in his office after the factory had closed for the night and the men had departed, in order to finish up his large correspondence. One of the clerks in his employ was a nephew, a fine young fellow, strong ‘of body and generous of heart, but not free from the folies of youth. Harry Stanton was a graduate at college and a thorough athlete, and, being yet scarce twenty, he had not outgrown his youthful enthusiasm for sports, Clubs and semi-incidental late suppers With the boys. : Now the old are not always so tol- erant of the ways of the young as recollection should make them, and so it happened that the frequent trans- gressions of the uncle’s office rules by the nephew caused between the two considerable friction. On the evening of the tragedy there had been quite a serious quarrel, and the young fel- low had left the presence. of his em- ployer in hot-headed haste and with angry words. One hour later, and half an hour after the factory was closed, Mr. Kempton was found dead in his pri- vate office. He was seated in his chair, his head falling forward on his desk before him. A clasp-knife had been used to accomplish the deed, and this lay on the floor in a pool of blood at the murder man’s feet. On being cleansed and examined the fatal weapon was instantly recognized by the clerks as young Stanton’s. The safe had been rifled of its valu- able contents, and there was evidence that the assassin, in making his exit through the general office, had stopped io open Stanton’s desk and remove such things as the young fellow, in making a permanent departure, would be likely to take. So much in substance had by inter- rogaiory promptings been drawn from the girl, when Banks said: “And now tell me what steps have been taken.” “Poor papa's head clerk has em- ployed a detective—a Mr. Gregg—who, after looking into the case, started off in pursuit of my cousin, whom he be- lieves to be the assassin.” “Um!” came from Blanks, as he gazed into the fire. “Then young Stanton has dis appeared?” “Yes, tis all a strange combination of circumstances, but I trust, sir, you still believe him innocent.” “My dear young lady, a professional opinion based on the merits "of the case would be rather premature. . For the present you must draw what com- fort you may from my faith in your §ntuitions. If you desire it,’ I shall proceed at once to the factory in or- der to secure some further data.” «Has this desk of Stanton’s been wer: 1] touc jcrers. : erective | thumb marks hed?” 1 inquired presently, pull-, ing out the upper drawer. ‘Fhe contents have not been m responded the head Gregg simply noted articles and the bloody 1ate- the missi finger ma: on the paper where it had been lifted to get at some oid letters Stanton used to leave lying round the bottom. The whole matter e¢med so clear to him that he was re scarcely ten minutes before he started off in hot pursuit.” “Um!” said Banks in his peculiar way, and then he proceeded to go through the contents of the drawer. Being slightly acquainted with one of the clerks, I stepped up to him for a moment's conversation. When I re- turned to my friend's side he was pocketing a sheet of paper which he mining with his micro- had been exa scope. A quick glance at his face #howed me that he had hit upon a promising clue. “I think we have seen sufficient,’ he said immediately, and in a few minutes we were on our way back to town “Found something, Banks?” “A mere trifle,” he responded, “but mum’s the word, my boy, even for you. A little spice of mystery, you know, will sharpen your interest.” It was about 4 o'clock in. the after- noon when we again entered the fac- tory office, Banks carrying a package about fifteen inches square. “You will oblige me by gathering all the employes of the factory to- gether in this office, Mr. Williams,” said Banks, addressing the head clerk. “Let the outer doors be locked, and when the men are all in here see that the office door is securely fastened also. 1 wish to try a very interesting little experiment.” “I observe that you use a type- writer,” he went on, after Mr. Will- iams had given orders to have the men called. “Will you kindly remove the ribbon or if you have an unused one, better still.” This being brought Banks procezded to untie his package. Removing the outer wrapper, he laid bare a- plain cardboard box, the cover of which he was on the point of lifting, when he looked up to see the eyes of all pres- ent gazing upon it with eager ¢uri- osity. ; . In five minutes the men—looking somewhat mystifiedl—were all assem- bled, and everything ready for the next step. on “Now, men,” he said, addressing the gathering, ‘“‘as little more can be done in ‘the matter cf the murder until we hear from Detective Gregg, Mr. Will- iams here has kindly consented to al- low me this favorable opportunity to put: to the test a little theory which it is said that in China all holders of public offices, and especially soldiers, ars. known by their thumbmarks. The arrangement of the grooves and fur- rows on the s..n, it ‘is claimed, is alike in no two individuals. As each man's name is called he will please step forward, press his left thumb upon the typewriter ribbon, and then make an impression upon this strip of prepared glass.” Banks eyed each man keenly as he came up in answer to his name and did as requested. “Now,” said Banks, lifting the mys- terious package, “I have here a small magic lantern through which I pro- rose to put the slide bearing the im- pressions. It is now dark enough, I fancy ,and—yes— the back of that large calendar yonder will serve ex- cellently as a white surface Oblige me, Mr. Williams, by turning its face to the wall. Thank you.” While. pseaking my friend had busied himself in preparing the lan- tern, so that matters moved absorbing- ly and without delay. “To make the test a little more in- teresting,” he continued, “I will show you the thumb-mark of a gen- tleman whom ‘I have a great ‘desire to meet... We. will elu, the’ cthérs with this one.’ we On the disc of light thioW mn up 60’ ‘the wall appeared a peculiar arrangement of limes, jagged, runing and ending in the same place. es $a Presently Banks’ Shiela the slide ‘in and stopped at number For a few seconds he allowed long one. it to show out beside the first. It exhibited a conformation entirely different. He then superimposed them, and placed the .figure on the moving slide direct- ly over that on the stationary one. The result was a confused net work of interwoven lines. Quickly he hurried through the list, treating each in the same manner and allewing the di to speak for themselves one of the cely over the w first built four of the great bridges on the | alarmed?” stationary one that not a single vari ation could be observed; there was no crossing of the lines, ahd no blur. I noticed a commotion in the back part of the room. Then came a yell from Banks. © “Seize him—John Trasker—the mur- “derer! Don’t let hi mescape, men!” Before a hand. could be raised to stay him John Trasker had plunged headforemost through the window and down the street. Ere the doors could be opened and a hue and cry raised he had secured a leng start. = As it was only dusk outside, and there were few -houses near the factory, he was still in.view, however, and the men tore after him with cries of “Stope the murderer! Stop him!” : Presently a clatter of hoofs® was heard and a horse and rider dashed past, them ang gained rapidly upon the fiying fugitive. Seeing he would be shortly overtaken if he kept the road, Trasker climbed a stone wall and dashed across a meadow. With a leap the rider cieared the saddle; with a single bound he went over the wall, and almost before the other pursuers realized what was hap- pening John Trasker was struggling to his pinioned arms from the iron asp of his muscular captor. “Why, if it isn’t Stanton!” cried Mr. Williams in surprise as he and the others came up. Arriving at’ the factory, Trasker broke down and made a most abject confession. He had planned to remain behind that evening to rifle the open safe. Overhegring the quarrel between uncle and nephew, he saw how it might be used to his advantage. On this way through the general office he looked through Stanton’s desk and se- cured his knife. Returning after the deed, to complete the evidence against the young fellow, he had left the incriminating thumb mark. As- for Stanton, his story was very simple. He had returned to the premis last evening with a view, of apologizing to his uncle, but, pride overcoming his good intention, without entering. Shortly afterward, meeting a friend who lived some twenty miles from town, he had been tempted with the prospect of a day's he had gone away shooting to accompany him: home. Three o’clock that afternoon, and just after they ‘had got back from the woods, the first information of what had occurred reached him, and, bor- rowing his friend's mare, he started for the factory, with what result has already been made known. . Banks received a check and abun- dant thanks from his charming young client, and some fifteen months later an invitation to the wedding.—New York News. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Near Pontefract, France, lives a banker who has a museum of old doors They are from old houses, castles or abbeys, that have some ‘historic inter- est. South Africa is to enter the paper- making world, it having been found that a kind of grass which grows there makes an- excellent grade of paper. British manufacturers are already put- ting up mills there. The South American negroes have a queer way cf decorating the graves of their dead friends. It is the custom dcwn there to make a border around the grave of the medicine bottles used during the dead one’s last illness. A blind man named Green made a curious defence at Birmingham, Eng- land, to a charge of smashing a plate- glass window worth £15. He had been blind, he said, for seven years. On the night in question, he cried for assict ance to cross the road, but no one came. Then he heard some one at a distance and struck at what used, when he could see, to he boards sur- rounding waste ground. He was as- tounded when he heard the sound of broken glass. The jury acquitted him and he was discharged. Three of the five women on the Rev- olutionary war pension roll are New Englanders. They are Hannah Newell Barrett of Boston, Mass., aged 3103, pensioned by special act as the daugh- ter of Noah Harrod, who served two years as private with the Massachu- setts line; Esther S. Damon of Ply- mouth, Vt. eighty-nine, pensioned as the widow of Noah Damon, who served in the Massachusetts line from April, 1775, to May, 1780; and Rhoda Augusta Thompson of Woodbury, Ct, aged eighty-two, pensioned by special act as the daughter cf Thaddeus Thomp- son, who served six years as private in Col. John Lam's New York regi- ment. An engineer named Knorr, a German who has become a naturalized Russian, Trans-Siberian Railway including the big Yenisei and Obi Lridges, which cost, respectively, $2,350,600 and. $2,- 000,000. They were great ergipeering feats, and brought him international feme in his profession. But he was pursued by al!curious fatality. A writ- er in-“T. A: T.” says: He had five daughters, who were famous in Russia for their. beauty, and whom he loved deurly. Just after his first bridge was completed one of them died; and as each of his three succeeding bridges was built, another died. He would not build. a fifth bridge. : = - = 14 In Chicago. “Why do those men look so muc! “They have just read in their morn- ing papers that the woman who had five husbands is free again.—Cleveland was flying. with terror at his heels, { : 2 By I K. Funk. - them to a, cheaper r self-denial. Senator Frye, Th Wanamaker, Booker T. Washington, Senator Tillman and Before submitting the pe other nromiment Americans. advanc e, but it does not go far enough. Is it not wholly reascnable to ask tate an increase in insurance rates for ematical and log to help foot his liquor bi Rufus Choate once s 11. aid that justi well-nigh kicks the beam. It is counted on to do the right thir bread depends on their populari and right doing are on the same side. things will make more money for LF 2 2 S Heridood. practically extinct. 126,778 to 119,050, a 1903, San Francisco for th and returning volunt sand Chinamen. The Chinese ccnsul-g women, and children, crease is seen in other places. Alaska, so that, at the beg the United States proper only 89,000. 150,000. immoral purposes by their parents, thu of an increased population. America; and is rapidly approaching o £2 AHH ALALL 36209002 3 s house built. é * carpenter. ® i i é @ ulations forbid. ® p © ® AHO. $0060006 1 . ® © hire of carpenters, Q cancnac® ters, brass-workers, 990000006 own craft guild. He has his clients i claims and privileges. He builds your home according to of the relation. You have really made not break, without good and sufficient tinsmith; if the plaster cracks, you mu < & Arnprn it) Live Up to By 5. M. A Prohibitionist Leader on > Life Insurance Premiums. The request was granted. the trepidation of the balance, but this not a insura couragement to the gencral conscience to add a cubit or two to its growth. Ree The Passing 9) of the Chinese How Nature is Solving the Problem of the “Yellow Peril.” HE prediction is that if the present laws remain in effect and a —the Chinese population of the United States will become more than six. percent. | more than four thousand voluntarily left the port of there are now n It should be borne in mind that the total num- ber of Chinese now in the United States includes inning of this decennial period, there were living in The main adult pcpulation is male; For each master car OSV Abstainers and 3 Insurance 3 F it be true—it seems now after years of battling a recognize¥ fact—that total abstainers from 20 to 30 percent than are moderate drinkers, deal, no more, no less,” as Roosevelt would put it, entitles as a class are longer lived by ‘“ square ate of insurance. Several years ago a petition was sent to a leading New York life insurance company requesting the organization of a total abstinence class which would secure to total abstain- ers the increased profits which accrue from their habits of tition, I had it signed by Abram Hewitt, This was a distinct that the expert actuaries of our best in- gurance companies figure out earefully from the now recognized facts the av- erage rate of longevity of total abstairers and adjust premiums accordingly? I understand that this change is being agitated by leading insurance compan- fes, but that it is opposed in certain directions, largely because it will necessi- moderate drinkers. If that is the math- ical result, the moderate drinker should have the courage of his habit and take his medicine like a man. He surely would not ask others ce deems worthy of careful notice even is a case where one side of the balance rare thing to find men today who can be e teeth of opposition, even when their r in this case longheaded selfishness Conscience is also contagious, and few nce companies than the successful en- =z 22 K in fifty years—perhaps less than fifty, re rigidly executed From 1890 to 1900, they fell away from decrease of nearly eight thousand, or In the fiscal year ending June 30, e land of their birth, the total deported arily being 5020. A very large majority of these Chinamen were advanced in years, and went home to die. A generation ago, there were in San Francisco from thirty to forty thou- eneral there told me that, counting men, ot 10,000. The same pronortionate de- 26,767 in Hawaii and 3116 in A generation ago, there were at least According to the most liberal estimate, there are not more than one hun- dred and fifty legal Chinese wives in San Francisco. ese women is estimated at between one thousand and two thousand. female children as are born to the low est class, a large proportion are sold for But the number of Chin- Of such 1s still further reducing the possibilities is unmarried, or, at least, wifeless in 1d age. Thus by 1930 or 1940, the main Chinese life in America will have become extinct.—World’s Works & 2 OVVY— ] Trades Unions in Japan By the Late Lafcadio Hearn. ¢ ET us suppose, for instance, that you wish to have a good As a general rule you will apply to a master You cannot select and hire workmen; guild reg- You can only make your contract, and the master carpenter, when his plans have been approved, will undertake all the rest—purchase and transport of material; plasterers, tilers, matmakers, screenfit- stonecutters, locksmiths and glaziers. penter represents much more than his n every trade related to house-building and house-furnishing, and you must not dream of trying to interfere with his contract, but that is only the beginning with him an agreement which you must reason, for the rest of your life. What- ever afterward may happen to any part of your house—wall, floor, ceiling, roof, foundation—you must arrange for repairs with him, never with anybody else. Should the roof leak, for instance, you must not send for the nearest tiler or st not send for a plasterer. The man who built your house holds himself responsible for its condition, and he is jealous of that responsibility. the plasterer, the roofer, the tinsmith.—From “Japan; An Attempt at Interpre- Nore but he has the right to send for o 2 flr Your Name Crothers. ~B RPE STE sist thet he shall live ciplin name at first, was also professor of the arts and buildings. ucation. tory. plant,” introduced me to the student. of great intimacy, and that discipline seemed mere pretentiousness. why not call it that and be done with that it aimed at being a university. I “Dispise not the things; tic. Plain Dcaler. a howling wilderness are denominated 4d. city. but if all goes well, tures are added in due’ time. ing visit which I once thade to a ugiversity ina new {eom- monwealth. The university consisted ‘of a board of regents, an unfenced bit of prairie for a “campus,” sciences), a janitor, and two unfinished .A number of the village children tock courses, which, if persisted in for a number. of years, might lead to what is usually termed the higher ed- One student .from out of town dwelt in Solitary state in the dormi- The president met me with great cordiality, and after showing me “the day of small things.” and then they have a trick of growing big before you know it.—Atlan- Frcs mes , OT orly do a man’s friends, but particularly his enemiés, in- up to his name. It is a wholesome dis- e. *In a mew country two or three houses set down in It is a mere other metropolitan fea- I remember a most interest- -a président (who It was evident that they were on terms in the university was an easy matter, owing to the fact that the student body was homogeneous. Now it would be easy for one under such circumstances to laugh at what “It was nothing more than a small school; it?” The reason for not doing so was t's name was a declaration of purpose. The small things may be very real “EYES AND SEE NOT." Simple Affairs of Everyday Life That Pass Us By. ~ How many buttons have you ‘on your waistcoat? This is no ‘‘cateh,” just a simple question, but if you can answer it without counting, it will show, says Pearson’s Weekly, that you possess powers of perception abeve the average. It is a fact that nine en out of ten cannot tell offignd ‘how m many buttons there are onfthe ‘garment which they put on every morning and take off every evening. This exemplifies how many peFsons fail to cultivate their powers of. ob- servation. One could multiply such instances to almost any extent. It is safe to tell almost any man, exeept an architect, that he does not Know how many steps there are in any par- ticular fiight.in his own house, even though he has climbed those stairs thousands of times. It is not that man has not the faculty bt remembering such things That he does possess this is shown by the feats of memory each performs daily in his or her especial line of occupation. | A cook will carry in her head hun- dreds of different recipes, a shipping clerk hundreds of addresses, a shep- herd can recognize an individual sheep out of a flock of several hundred. The mischief is that so few persons train their observation outside their dwn particular lines. Perhaps mo- where is this better exemplified than in courts of law. ? In a recent murder case a man sus- pected of the crime was seen by three tiifferent persons. One, a laborer, said that the individual was rather short and stout, had a beard and mustache, nud wore a dark suit of ciothes and a derby hat. A second witness, a wo- man, declared that the man was above medium height, had a black beard and whiskers, but no mustache, and wore ft cap. Of his clothes she was mot sure, but thought they were light in color. The third witness, another laborer, was positive that the man was short, thin, elderly, had a beard and mustache, and wore a brown coat and corduroy, trousers. Luckily for the cause of justice it turned out that the gray “suspect” was innocent—for it would have been a pretty Lard matter to identify him by such descriptions, to the satisfaction of a jury. t With a view to throwing light on this subject of the contiict of evidence, an interesting experiment was recently tried at Berlin ‘by Professor Von Liszt. He arranged a quarrel in Lis classroom between two of his students, the other twenty-three students to have no Suspicion that the event was “gotten up.” At the time appointed the quarrel took place, amid ‘tremendous excite- ment. The professor tinally put a stop to it. A week later he lectured on “Evidence,” having in the meantime taken the testimony of those who had witnessed the made-up quarrel. Out of these twenty-three well-edu- cated young men the testimony of no two was exactly alike. No fewer than eight different persons were named as the ariginator of the fight in which, actuaily, but two had been concerned. The actual firing of a pistol was ac- curately described by nearly all, but there were four separate versions of the period of the quarrel at which it was fired. The professor's way of quelling the disturbance was described in eight different versions. “You are like most persons,” Profes- son Von Liszt told his students, after reporting the result of this inquiry. “You look but you do not see. It is not wilful perjurers who impede the course of justice—such persons are few—but careless people like jyour- selves, who have not trained the eye to report to the brain.” The Yonmest Span Bridge. There is now under construciion across the St. Lawrence at Quebec a cantilever bridge wnich when complet- ed will contain the longest span of any bridge yet erected, not even excluding the great cantilevers of the Korth Bridge in Scotland. The structure is of the cantilever type, and consists of two approach spans, of 210 teet each, two shore arms, each 509 feet in length, and a great central span, 1800 feet in length. The total length of the.bridge is 4220 feet, and although in extreme dimensions it does mot compare with the Firth of Iorth Bridge, which is about one mile in total sength, it has the distinction of having the longest span in the world by ninety feet, the two cantilevers of the Iorth Bridge being each 1710 feet in length. "The total width of the floor is eighty feet, and provision is made for a double track railway, two roadways for vehi- cles, and two sidewalks. In a canti- lever of this magnitude the individual members are necessarily of huge pro- portions, the main pests, for instaace, being 325 feet in length, and each weighing 750 tons.—Scientific Ameri- can. nD Things Wrongly Named. Titmouse is a bird. Catgut is a'sheepgut, Sealing-wax has no wax, Blind worms have eyes and can fee. Irish stew is unknown in Ireiand. Rice paper is not made of rice or the rice plant. Kid gloves are not made of kid. German silver is not silver, nor of German manufacture, it having been made in China for centuries. —Chicago Post. With the withdrawal of the training ships Northampton and Cleopatra from the active list, the other day, the last shrad of canvas disappeared from the British Navy. A new use of vanadium is announced in a forthcoming invention by Wilhelm von Siemens, It concerns a vanadium glow lamp. 4 “> + Wh ¥trick plora ly di whict these the 1 again usage know laugh itself are ( readi life, watc] or th We think En or w ador a, PI ‘han mis wa the _ car ho da; «1 be: she TOY th er on wl