JOCKEYS 1 N TJtATN I NO KEEPING THE WEIGHT DOWN 13 NOT A DIFFICULT PROBLEM. Fattening Fonda Ire Avoided, nnd Jnrilrlnna Kserrlar in ( onrlfd-Ai llnlr, Itldera I, nut n l)irn tears "It Ik popnlnr belief," n well known trnlncr said to n reporter recently, "that n Jockey has to resort to nil ports of Injurious practices In order to keep his weight within required llmlls. The Idea, however, Is n fnr srW'fched one. Of course a Jockey lins to go through ccrtnln exercises each tiny nnd lins to lip very much more careful regarding what ho puts In Ills stomach thnn most people In order to keep his weight down ninl from acquiring n superfluity of ficHh, hut lie certainly dis's not stnrvp lilinsclf, ns Is generally supposed. If lie illil so lie Would break down entirely In a very short time. A Jockey must nlso lie In the best possible physical trim mid luwe Ills wits about blin be fore ft rnce, nnil to atliiln (hat he must lie enreful how he uses his constitution. "There are two very Important things ft Jockey Hi.s to consider In studying his dietary. lie must see to It that his food Is of the best quality nnil that It ran itnlns practically no llesh forming prop erties. All such fattening foods ns, for Instance, soups, beef, pork, potatoes, puddings nntl pastries n Jockey must deny himself. ColTee, ton or other drinks nro only taken very modern tely, as nil liquids help mora or less In pla iting on flesh. "Although a Jockey has to eschew Mich foods, there are ninny other varie ties which lie gets Just ns much pleas ure In eating nml which nt the same time nre equally ns good and strength ening for Ills const Kill lull. A few days before a rnro n Jockey who has n mount In It will not stint himself- pro vided he has no fear of overt Ipplng bis proper weight for the race - In any thing which lie thinks will nut inter fere with his digestive apparatus. "Some Jockeys, of course, take on ami loso flesh quicker than others. I have known one or two who were par ticularly anxious to ride In certain races, but for which they were perhaps as much ns eight or nine pounds too heavy, who reduced that weight In the aame number of days. To accomplish that, however, they have to resort prac tically to a 'starving diet,' leaving as little as the strain on the vitality will penult without breaking down ami try ing to reduro their overweight by cer tain sweating exercises. It Is needless to say that no Jockey could stand too frequent repetitions of such severe measures to subtract from his weight without dnnger of permanently Injur ing his health and even saerlllclng his life; still, many willingly resort to such 'get light weight quick' methods where they see good opportunities of making a name or a pllu of money for them selves. "It must be remembered that by na ture Jockeys as a whole nro not of sub stnntial physique or imposing in height, although they arc ns tongh ns whip cord. If they were, therefore, to In dulge every day In the heavy bill of fare that the average business or work ing man partakes of it Is not probable that they would Increase much In weight or height You often see Jock eys in the big hotels and restaurants at the various racing sections after a race tucking In big and expensive din ners with a gusto and relish that would give a chronic dyspeptic an ap petite for hard tnek. "Walking, running, cycling, punching the bag and hurdle Jumping are favor ite exercises among Jockeys to keep their weight down. On going out for walk or run they wrap themselves in the thickest of woolen sweaters and other heavy clothing, no matter how high the temperature limy bo, and the exercise is kept up for a distance per haps of eight or nine miles, or, as we say, until you are 'drowned In sweat' Turkish baths are also frequently In dulged In by many, and they must wear excessively warm clothing after, and also when going for a gallop, no matter if the weather bo boiling hot "I should say that ten or twelve years Is the average of a Jockey's ac tive turf life. The length of his career, however, depends a great deal on his riding ability and luck. "Jockeys are not of a saving class, and with but few exceptions I know of none who has ever managed to put enongh money away to keep him in even half decent comfort after retiring from the turf. The majority, however, succeed in scraping up a bunk roll of . sufficient dimensions to sturt In some business. Like retired pugilists, they have a fondness for the liquor busi ness, and I know a few one time Jock eys who are prospering In that trade in .different ports of the country. Others, &uin, become 'bookies,' poolroom keep ers and enter into such businesses as enable thera to gratify their inveterate Jove for gambling. I know of only one ex-Jockey who is an exception to this irnle. He retired some years ago with '$50,000 to his credit and he immedi ately went Into the real estate business !in New Jersey. Today he is doing well. He was fortunate enough, however, to receive a good common school educa tion in his early boyhood daysand that's a thing Jockeys very rarely get Outside of their knowledge of horse manship the great majority are as lgnoraut as red Indians." New York pinies. ' Money Talks. "I suppose Duuiley likes to argue as much as ever and is contlnuully worst ed as usual." "No; he's more successful now since be got wealthy." "What has his wealth to do with it?" "Well, when he sees he's losing he Just offers to 'bet a bundled,' and that settles If'-Phlladelphia frees. " FUNEKAL8 IN GREECE. The? Are Somewhat at Shorts ta the America Toarlat. "One thing sure to shock the Ameri can tourist Is a Greek funeral," said a recently returned traveler. "It Is a spectacle which most porr.cr.s of con vention governed decency desire to avoid, bcenuse the body of the dead Is exMsed In an open hearse. Tfc coffin Is shallow, so that not only tho face and head, but tho hands and much of the body, enn lie seen from tho slde Wnlk as tho procession moves through the streets. "Tho lid of the colli n, frequently rich ly upholstered and decorated with gar lands nnd wreaths, Is carried on the hearsn by tho undertaker. Tho priest, tho relatives nnd other mourners fol low, nnd ns the ghastly spectnele moves along It Is eustomnry for bystanders to remove their bend genr nnd cross them selves. "In the Athens cemeteries graves nre rented for a term of yenrs, Just like tho habitations of the quick. Only the wealthy own burlnl lots. This Is In variably nn evidence of wealth or aris tocracy. The poor seldom ilrenm of buying n lot or tomb.' Such purchase would lie deemed ntnong them an un necessary luxury. "At the end of the term for which a grave Is rented the bones aro dug tip, placed In a bag, labeled with the name and dnto nnd deposited In n general re ceptacle." New York Herald. Upwards for Lost Property. "More lost nnd stolen nrtlrlce would bo recovered If tho losers would adopt different methods In advertising for their property," snld a headquarters detective tho other day. "Of course honest persons do not haggle over the remuneration for returning n locket, a dog or anything else. Hut every one Is not built along those lines. It may Bound very nice to say, 'Mitral re ward if returned to owner,' but there are different Idena of liberality. Tho sum usually dwindles In the mind of the owner when ho sees bis property before htm, nnd no one knows this bet ter thnn tho flnde'r. "It is fnr more effective to set forth a definite sum In tho advertisement. Five or twenty-five dollars means more thnn a vague promise to be real gen erous. Of course there nro cases when It Is not wise to be too explicit, but In nine enses out of ten a stated sum will bring better results thnn an Indefinite offer. This Is nenrly nlways true with watches with the owner's monogram engraved on the ease, as tho pawn broker refuses to loan so much on ar ticles so easily Identified." New York Tress. Read Less, Think More. Tho overage person of so called cul ture who has leisure to read reads too much and thinks too little, and in con sequence his conversation lacks fresh ness and siHintanelty. An exchange, after saying thnt people generally read too much and read more than they carry, tells a story of a man who bad been a great reader, but had changed his ways, and people, after bo read less, finding him much nioro interest ing, exclaimed: "How entertaining John was today I He must have been reodlng n good deal." Mcro reading Is a wante of time. To conduce to Intelligence the reader must train the mind to concentration on the subject In hand, and to concentration must be added the effort to clothe and transmit thought in appropriate phrase. The Sallere' realm. How many people landsmen, at all events aro aware that one of the Psalms is often called the sailors' psalm? It is of course realm evil, whoreln occur tho beautiful and famil iar words, "Thoy that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters these see the works of the Lord and his wonders In the doop." Tho psalm is usually read as part of tho simple services which take place on Sundays on ships at sea. For that reason it is known as the sailors' psalm. London Chronicle. The Road to Sneecaa. It is Well for the vonnir nun tn ro. member that if be finishes his educa tion as a skilled farmer or stockman or fruit grower there are nlentv of places open waiting for bleu at good pay, wnue u he becomes a minister, lawwor Or doctor ha mnv hita tn hunt long and far to find place and wait long before a good living la assured. Rockford Register. The Retort CasrtMsu. Smart Passenger TTerA MnitnMAF ta my fare. I had no ifaalro tn hoar tho company, but I thought I would Just See if I COUld fool WH1 hv ffarHnff tins with this newspaper. conductor I saw you, but you looked as if VOU needed Inform Hon a criwl deal worse 'than the company needs money, so l just let you read-Baltl-more American. As It Wu Prlated. There is One Women nnnt In Vaiev York who will read proof carefulry un til the edge of a recent error wears off. She spent two days on a touching poem, the pivotal line of which read: My soul Is a Usbtnouae keeper. When the nrlnhnr ftnluha with Itethai line read: My soul. Is a, light bousekoeper. I Hmt EBMsoaraeTlnar. "Do you know," remarked the pessi mist "I think I have) experienced every kind of hard luck on the list except hanging." "Well, you ehouldn'r-be discouraged.'' remarked the optimist. "Ue member th old adage, 'While there Is life there ' hope.' Cincinnati Enquirer, ' There la no man so friendless but1, what be can find a friend sincere enough to. tell Idui diset trees bit jtrnth. -BulwerfLjrttost. j BERTH JACK SHIRKS. Rova Seotla Shlpa Are laid to Be the Werat Afloat, The worst raso In the way of a ship Into which Jack can go la a Nova Hco tlau. A certain Nova Scotia ship enme Into port nt Pantos one dny with a crew that was little short of mutinous owing to the fact that the captain wns too sparing of the rations. The ship had n bad tin mo among sailors nt th best, nnd ns soon as she wns anchored the entire- crew cleared out. For three weeks nftrr she had discharged and got her new cargo she Iny there with no rrew to tnke her to sen. At last the captain went to some of the crimps on bore nnd told them to round tip a crew under any pretext. The crimps sent men around the docks offering big wnges to nny of the loungers who Would go aboard the vessel to rig some new sails. Homo twenty men were quickly picked lip, many of litem In their shirt sleeves, nnd were taken nbonrd. TUey were then covered with revolvers nml rllles by the olllccrs, nnd the anchor wns weighed, nnd tho Nova Hcotln ship stood out to sea, her unwilling crew leaving families behind without even a chance to let them know what lind happened. The next port wns Sydney, nnd the next Yoko hama, then Han Francisco, then Val paraiso, then Lisbon, and for those men who stayed with the ship It was Just two nnd a half yenrs until she went to (irnnde dil Hill, the nearest port home. Many of them, however, hnd cleared out nnd gone home In other ships long before thnt. Brnughton Brandenburg In Leslie's Monthly. Cicero anil Ills Dana-hler. History abounds with examples of tho love thnt has existed Ivctwccn fn ther and daughter which pmvcdVsu porlor to the changes of time and for tune, defying even dentil Itself, and en tering Into the records of humanity, Imperlshnble anil Immortal. One of the most beautiful Instances wns tho love of Cicero for Tullla. Hhe wns a woman of high attainments and exalted character, with qualities of heart and mind that peculiarly lit t I'd her to be her father's Intimate com panion. After her death he could Hnd neither consolation for her loss nor distraction for his grief. Affairs of state, weighty matters of political and personal In terest, even the sympathy of llrutus and Cu'snr, could not dispel the melan choly that settled down upon his soul and forced him for a time Into retire ment. Ho wrote of her In these touch ing words: "A daughter I hnd In whoso sweet conversation I could drop all my cares and troubles. Hut now every thing Is changed." "It Is all over with me, Attlcus. I feel It more than ever now that I have lost the only being who still bound me to life." An Kxrlnalve Klevator. There is perhaps no elevator In the world more exclustvo than that provid ed at the cnpttol for the supreme court of the United States. That elevator can be used by exactly eleven people, and no one else would for a moment consider entering It except as the guest of one of these eleven privileged gentle men. The fortunate eleven aro the nine Justices of tho United BtntcB supreme court, the clerk and tho marshal of tho court. Tho elevator goes from tho ground floor of the capltol to tho main floor, on which Is located tho supremo court of the United States. It Is n small elevator, so that, with Its con ductor, three iortly forms of Justices of the supreme court of tho United States would All It. It Is ono of the very lntest designs of electric elevators and is finished in magnificent stylo. Washington Stur. Soperatitloas. If two persons raise their glasses to their lips simultaneously they aro in dicating the return of a friend or rela tive from foreign parts. Tho sumo In timation is conveyed by bubbles In coffee or by tho accidental fall of a piece of soap on the floor. A flickering flame in the flro or an upright excrescence in a burning candle is interpreted as predicting tho arrival of a guest, whoso stature is Judged by tho length of the flume or excrescence. If ono drulns a gluss of the contents of which some ono clso has partaken he will learn tho secrets of the latter. MleThtr Cheerful. Mamma had told her little daughter that she could not go out to play, but the little maiden determined to make ono more plea. "Please, mamma, it Isn't very wet" "No, you cannot, Dorothy," sold mamma pleasantly, smiling a little at her daughter's persistency. Dorothy regarded her mother ag grievedly and then said, "Well, seems to me you're mighty cheerful about It" New York Times. Bareaa of Publicity. Mrs. Nagguss What an odd, inter esting piece of furniture! It looks like an antique. Is it a chiffonier or a bookcase ? Mrs. Boras (wife of struggling au thor) Neither. It's my husband's writing desk. He calls It bis bureau of publicity. Chicago Tribune. Bis Part. The Doctor You regard society as merely a machine, do youT ' What part of the machinery do you consider me, for instance? The Professor You are one of the cranks. Exchange. Retaraed His Love. Friend What's the matter, old man? Doesn't she return your love? Jilted One That's Just tho trouble. She returned It and told me to give it to some other girl. Princeton Tiger. One man makes a fortune to eight that become bankrupt In England. THE CEDARS OF LEBANON. Oalr a Few of Three llletorlo Treee Now Iteninla. , There nre only about 4(H) cednrs of I,chnnon now remaining high up on the rocky slopes. Hadrian sculptured bis Imperial nnnthemn against nil who should rut these sacred trees; the Mnro nlte peasants almost worship them nnd cull them the "cednrs of the 1-ord," nnd n fccciit governor of the Lebanon has surrounded them by n great wall so that the young shoots may not be In jured by roving animals. Vet, century by century, their number grows less. Hut If the ccdi'i's are few In number these few are of royal bhsid. They lire not the largest of trees, though some of the trunks measure over forly feet around. 'I Ik If beauty lies In the wide spreading limbs, which often cov er a circle ai hi or IltKi feet In circumfer ence. Home are tall nnd symmetrical, with beautiful horizontal branches; others nr gnarled anil knot led, with Inviting seats In the great forks and charming lads on the thick foliage of the swinging houghs. The wood has a sweet odor. Is very hard and seldom decays. The vitality of the rcdar Is remarkable. A dead tree Is never seen, except where light ning or the ax has been nt work. Of ten n great hough of one tree has grown Into a neighbor, nnd the two nre so boiiiid together thnt It Is Impos sible to niy which Is the parent trunk. Perhaps the unusual strength and vi tality of the cedars are due to their slow growth. When n Utile sprout hardly waist high Is said to be ten or fifteen or twenty years old one cannot help asking, What must be (he age of the great patriarchs of the grove? It Is hard to tell exactly. Ity the aid of n microscope I have counted more thnn 700 rlnts on a bough only thirty Inches In diameter. Those who have studied the matter more deeply think that some of Vicse trees must be more than n thousand years old. Indeed, there is nothing wildly Improbable In the thought thai pet haps the (inn id Inn, for Instance, may have been a young tree when 1 1 Irani le-can cutting for the tem ple at .lent alein.- Lewis Huston Lesry In Hcrlbner's. APHORISMS. Itablt l:i the deepest law of human nature.--t'nrlyle. Good nature Is stronger than tomahawks.- Emerson. TnlebeiircM iiroijust ns bud ns tale tnakers. Sheridan. Almost always the most Indigent are the most generous. Stanislaus. Those who complain most nre most to be complained of. M. Henry. True gentleness Is native feeling heightened and Improved by principle. Ulnlr. He that thinks bo can afford to be negligent Is not far from being poor Johnson. Persistent people begin their success where others end In failure. Edward Eggleston. Ho who commits Injustice Is ever mudo more wretched than be who suf fers It. Plato. A friend that you hnvo to buy won't be worth what you pay for him, no mutter what that may be. Prentice. 3ome li'ormitl Correspondence-. A matter of fact sacristan of the Ca thedral of llerl In once wrote the king of Prussia this brief note: Sire I nc(iialnt your mnjesty, first, thnt I lu re uru winning books of p.iulms for thu royal family. I ucqunlnt your majesty, c:ond, that there wants wood to warm the royal seats. 1 aciiimlnt your mnjiisly. third, that tha bnluatrudu next the river, behind tho church. Is become ruinous. HCHMIDT. Sacrist of tho Cathedral. The reply of tho king wns not thnt of a "gracious majesty." Its stiff formal ity In Imitating the style of tho sncrU tun probubly was not taken by tho re ceiver as complimentary to blm: I acquaint you. Herr Sacrist Bchmldt, first, Unit thuao who want to slag may buy books. Second, 1 acquulnt llorr Bucrlat Schmidt that thoso who want to be wnrm must buy wood. Third, 1 ac quaint Herr Sacrist Schmidt that I shnll not trust any longer to tho balustrade next thu river. And I acquaint Herr Sacrist Schmidt, fourth, thnt I will not hftve any mors correspondence with htm. FREDERICK. Abeent Minded Lord Derby. Lord Derby could bo very absent minded, nnd once on a tlmo be walked with Ixird Clarendon, his opponent, and told blm all the secrets of the cabi net. Lord Clarendon listened amazed, but thought It too largo nn order when he was asked for his advice. It was not for blm to counsel his political foes. At this Intimation Lord Derby woke up, saying, "ltenlly, I thought ull the time I was talking to a colleague!" He bad continued, hardly recognizing the fact, a controversy bo bad been having with other ministers nt the foreign othVe. Of course Lord Clarendon honorably pre served tho cabinet secrets, but he told his story ugalust Lord Derby uud mudo a laugh. Ilia Mistake. Qushington I wonder what's the matter with Starr, the tragedian. He never notices me any more. Crlttlck Didn't I henr you tell him his style was very much like Booth's? Gushlngton Yes. But surely Crlttlck That's where you made your mistake. You should have said Booth's style was like bis. Philadel phia Public Ledger. ol(e Fast. First Girl Those stockings are lovely color. Are they fust? Second Girl If you hnd seen me yes terday when I met a cow you would not huve asked that question. Houston Post "Some men," said Undo Eben. "will put In weeks prayln' fob rain an' den kick cos dey happens to git delr feet wet" Washington Star. " SAVED" H13 FINQER. ' The faithful Rrahmaa relt, Haw ever, That Ma Had Lost t aete. One dny a Brnhtnnn accidentally touched some unclean object with bis little finger. The Itrahuinn thought that now, his little finger having become un clean, nny subslnnco which It would touch would be also rendered unclean nnd thus tunkn blm an ttnelesn man. Seeing no other wny to get out of the scrape he resolved to get the offending member amputated. Forthwith he went to n carpenter nnd explained tn blm that unless the finger wns cut off be (the Itrabman) wns unable to tnke food. The carpenter tried to dissuade tho devotee and urged that all application of some drops of wnter from the sa cred river tiiingn would make the fin ger once more holy, but the llrnhinan persisted, lie mild thnt the finger wns of no use to blin nny longer nnd thnt he would tint rest mil II It was severed. As a final recourse the carpenter re solved to play his nwkwnrd customer n trick. He told the Urn limit n to put his finger on nn anvil nnd to look to the sky while the wound wns Inflicted. The llnilinian did so. The carpenler took up n hatehel and gave th" finger n smart blow with the back of If. This elicited n cry of pnln from the pa tient, who nt once put the finger In Ids innti'h to nllay the agony. The carpen ter, laughing, explained to the llrnh tiiiltl that the blow had missed and the little finger was still enllre; nnd, worst of all, the llrahnian had defiled himself by putting the finger Info Ids mouth. The obliging operator, moreover, offer ed to perform the operation once more, but the llrahnian had bad enough pain for the nonce nml declined with thanks. Golden Penny. Some Slnetnrhe lllatnrr. What Is the history of the mustache? In (1 recce nnd Koine no iiitHtnches were worn without beards, but In the eoinpicrliig iIiijm of the Unman empire several half civilized races who had come partially under the Influence of the Hi. mans and who wished to be rid of the name of barbarl, or wearers of boards, attempted to shave In Imitation of their conquerors; but, ns they hnd very Imperfect Implements for the pur pose iuiiI ns I lie upper lip Is notoriously the hardest part of the face to shave In the case of any one poorly skilled in the art, they were unable to make a clean Job of It nnd left n quantity of hair on the upper Up. This mark was characteristic of sev eral nations on the confines of Itoman clvlll'.allon, of the (iauls In particular, of the lindens nml some others. The I -ii 1 1 ii language has no word for mus tache. This barbarous accident wns unworthy of the honor of n Itoman tin mo.- - Exchange. The Dinner Hour. It Is ii curious fact that with nlmost every generation the dinner hour hns undergone a change, the principal meal of Hie day being eaten at dilTerent pe riods, from ID o'clock In the morning until 10 o'clock lit night. The author of "The Pleasures of the Table" points out that In England -PNi or Tsni years ago people took four meals- breakfast nt 7, dinner at in. supper nt 4 and liv ery at H. In Prance In the thirteenth century ! In the morning was the din ner hour; Henry VII. dined at 11. In Cromwell's time 1 o'clock had come to be the fashionable hour and In Addi son's day 'i o'clo.k. which gradually was transformed Into -i. Pope found fault with Lady Suffolk for (lining so lute us 4. Four and ." continued to be the popular dining hours among the aris tocracy until the second deende of tho nineteenth century, when dinner wns further postponed, from which period it has steadily continued to encroach upon the evening. A rilnic nt Tcnnraon. In tho "New Letters und Memorials of Juno Welsh Cnrlyle" Is a letter to her husband In which occurs the fol lowing amusing little fling at Tenny son : "Did you know thnt Alfred Tennyson Is to have a pension of flW a year, aft er all? Peel has stuted his Intention of recommending him to her gracious maj esty, und that Is considered final 'A chucun seloii sn cupuclte!' Lady Har riet told mo ho wonted to murryj 'must have a woman to live beside; would prefer a lady, but cannot afford ono, and so must marry a maidservant' Mrs. Henry Taylor snld she wus about to write to liliu In behalf of their house maid, who wus quite a superior charac ter in her way." Teeth. Small, chalk white teeth are a sign of a weak constitution. Strong. . normal ! teeth aro targe and yellowish white. ' Sometimes an enthusiastic novelist in ' depicting the charms of his heroine i will glvo her two rows of peurls be tween her ruby Hps. The truth of the matter Is nothing could be more ghast ly or unnatural or unbecoming thnn teeth mudo of peurls. It is only "store ' teeth" that possess it high polish. He Knew a Way. Anxious Father But. my boy. unless you study you will know nothing. You will mnke no money with which to buy things. Young Hopeful That's nothing. I'll huve everything churged, ond I'll keep on thnt way till I got married. Meg gendorfer Blatter. What' Before Them. i "These young society buds are mere i butterflies," said the Hev. Mr. Strait I lace. "They bnve no thought of the i future life." "Of the future life?" replied Miss In nit. "Oh, but they do! Mutrlmony Is always in their thouglit8."-Exchange. Wbeu a greut culnmlty befalls ono, how It lightens It to talk about it after It Is overl Atchison Globe. "Work and look young.' Yva will Saereed It tear Heart la la Voir Labor. Is It bard work thut makes people grow old or Is It bernnsn they do not have enough to do, or, rather, do not find the thing they are best fitted to do? The linnlest worked people In the world nro the Heiresses, yet some of them, without mentioning names, are sixty nnd some play the parts of lovers uud boisterous young tomboys at an even greater age. The Americans are the hardest work ed people in the world, yet foreigners c::ll us it young lisiklng nation. Noth ing makes n people look so young as liberty. There Is none of tho rrnmped, caste restricted blight Uhiii our people that Is seen In KtiriMie. The oldest look ing people In the world nre not those who have worked hnrdest, but th'ste who have not worked nt all. If one would see them be wants to go to tho fashionable watering places. There he will sis- comparatively young men nnd women who have never worked, either with bisly or mind, driven nromid In bath chairs or hobbling nlxitlt on ennes, while men absorbed In business nre of ten ipille robust nt seventy. Where bard work ever killed a ninn laziness and Inai-tlon have killed a score. It Is the class that feels alKive work thnt nature tins little use for. Work nnd look young! Boston Globe. The Rock That Moaee "Smote. The famous "Itoek lii'lloreh," an ciently culled the "I lock of M assail" and nt present known throughout the orient ns the "Htone of the Miraculous Fountain," being the Identical rock which Moses struck with his rod In or der to give, water to the children of Is rael, Is religiously preserved and guarded even down to this lute date. Ir. Hhnw In his Ismk "Hhnw's Trsvels" says. "It Is a block of granite about six yards squsre lying tottering nnd loose In the middle of the valley of Itephidiin nnd seems to have orlglnnlly been n part of Mount Hlmil." The action of the wutcrs of that mi raculous fountain, ns rclntcd In the seventeenth chapter of KximIiis, hol lowed n channel about two Inches deep uud more thnn twice thnt broad across the face of the rock, this not upon un supported testimony, but upon the word of such men as the Itev. Dr. Kliaw, Dr. Pocock, Lieutenant Cloghcr mid other eminent scholars and trav elers. M. llciiumgorton, a German no bleman who visited the "ltock of I lo re b" In the yenr lf47, declares his be lief In the generally accepted story of It being the rock of Moses' famous founlulu. Famous Monted Ifnaaee. The moat which so often surrounded hulls uud ensiles In the old days Is now generally dry uud filled up, but some remarkable specimens still remain. Perhaps the finest example of a monted bouse 1.4 Ilelmlnglium Hull, the sent of Iord Tollcmneho, in Suffolk, ulsiut eight miles from Ipswich. The draw bridge still remains, uud It has been raised every night for more thun SKHi years, the ancient precaution Isdng ob served even though the need for it bus long passed by. The mout which sur rounds I-eeds castle, near Maidstone, is so wide thut It may almost he called a hike. The ancient Episcopal pulnee at Wells Is surrounded by walls which In close nenrly seven acres of ground and by it moat which is supplied with wa ter from Ht. Andrew's well. A vener lible bridge spans tho moat, giving ac cess through a tower gateway to the outer court. Iondon Htuiidurd. Life After Death, A German biologist bus been Investi gating the question of the activity of iiulnial bodies ufter death and lms pub lished some suggestive conclusions. It uppcurs thut ileiith Is not Instantane ous throughout the physical organism, for It has been observed that muny of the different tissues continue active for a considerable period after the time when the animal Is assumed to be dead, particularly In the case of tho lower an imals, (.'ells from tho bruin of a frog, for example, have been kept alive for over n week when held in certain solu tions, uud tho heurt of a frog has been known to beat for muny hours after be ing removed from the dead body. The hearts of turtles and snakes will tsat for days or even a week after death. Harper's Weekly. One tVii ICnonch. "Yon love my daughter?" said the old man. "Love her!" ho exclaimed passionate ly. "Why, I could die for her! For one soft glance from those sweet eyes I would hurl myself from yonder cliff und perish, a bleeding, bruised muHS, Upon the rocks "JCO feet tsdow!" The old man shook bis head. "I'm something of a llur myself," he said, "and one Is enough for a suiull family like mine." Ill Uud Memory. "I suppose." suld the condoling neigh bor, "that you will erect a handsome monument to your husband's mem ory ?" "To his memory!" echoes the tearful widow. "Why, poor John hadn't any. I wns sorting over some of the clothes , he left toilay and found the pockets full of letters I bud glveu him to mall. Heated. Jones Wonder what made Mrs. Sut ton look so heated when she picked up thut photogruph from her husband's of fice desk? Joy ties Good reason for becoming I heated. It was one of his old flames, I you know. Boston Transcript. : Uettlnv Phlloeophr. ! "Do you think that betting U wrong?" "It depends ou circumstances," an swered the town oracle. "If you can't afford to lose it's wrong; if you can it's J merely silly." St Louis Lumberman. BOOTH'S DRAWINQ POWERS. The Fainune Traardlan Was star Monvr Maker, A retired ther.ter malinger snld the other day: "It Is not genemlly known that Edwin Itooth received no per cent of the gnus receipts of bis perform ances while iiniler the management of Me.isrs. Iltisiks A Dixon. There never w,.s n star on the stage who could draw the money that llisith could tn a lh uler. 'il.cre were no spasms nbnnt Ills business. It was ns steady ns Gi braltar. We could bank on It. Out of their half of the receipts Brooks A Dixon paid the rent for theaters, pnld the sn la tics of the company, the Mil ron 1 1 nml hold bills nnd the advertis ing throughout the country nnd made big prollls, which they shared with Horace MeVleker, to whom Ibsdh In trusted his affairs nt the stnrt nnd who afterward nssodnted himself with Brooks fc Dixon. "Booth's Agreement with Henry E. Abbey wns this: After nil expenses of every description were pnld Itooth got RB per cent nnd Abbey 15. lkmth lost a week 111 Philadelphia owing tn the death of Ids wife. The company wns put In there without blm, nnd we hnd to Indemnify the locnl mn linger. Our loss thnt week was $1,0H. Deducting thnt. Abbey's profits on the sen son were f.'io.ooo. I do not know nny stnr, save Itooth, who ever cotnmnnded W) per cent of the gross receipts." New York Press. Where ninod Tells. It wns In one of the fnrmlng districts of New England. The young folks hnd banded themselves together for month ly Jollifications during the winter and were about to celebrate the Inst dnnce of the season ns well ns a couple of engagements which had resulted from the assemblies. Hen Hawkins, the lo cnl Pnganliil, nnd Ids Htrndlvnrlus bad been engaged to lend them through the muses of the country dunce, and all were looking forward to tho "tlmo of their life." But dentil Inconsiderately claimed Mrs. Hawkins for his own on the after noon of the eventful party. Tho young people gathered us arranged, but be moaned the absence of Old Ken, and games were being substituted for the dancing when, to, Hawkins and bis Ad dle appeared on the scene. Great astonishment and many ques tions greeted the old man, but he calm ly slipped his fiddle out of Its green bog and as he meditatively rublwd the rosin on the bow said: "Waal, yes; Maria's gone; died this afternoon. But I reckon 'taln't no sin for me to piny for you tonight, aeeln' she wu'n't no blood relation." Phila delphia Ledger. Yet He I.nved the Sea. It Is suld thut 1 try a n Waller Procter, known as Harry Cornwall, who wrote the well known poem I'm on I tie sea! I'm on the seul I um where I would ever be! whs the very worst of sailors. When we rend that be wns so seasick that bo could scarcely la-nr the sound of a hu muii voice It becomes apparent that bis wife's conduct during bis affliction eould scarcely huve been reussurlng. As be lay ou the deck of a channel boat, covered with shawls und a tur-j puulin, she bud the pleasing liMblt of humming n strain of his Jovial sea song. 'Hie poet who loved the sen, but loved it best nt a distance, bad very lit tle life Just then, but what force be bad wus used In the entreaty: "Don't, my dear! Oh, don'tl" Vet no doubt be loved the sen. A Huile Arrakealnsi. The Centorvlcw (Mo.) Ileeord tolls of a young man who hud been writing a girl in Minneapolis for three yeurs, in tending some dny to ask her to marry him. The other day ho received a let ter and a picture from her. The letter announced thut she had been married two years, and the picture wus of her baby. "My husband and I huve en Joyed your letters very much," sbo wroto, "but I guess you'd better stop writing now, as I have to spend all my time curing for tho buby." The Hecord says the words the young muu used after reading tho letter would shock field of oats. Saakea. Mr. Ilolker In Met 'lure's robs us of some misconceptions as to , snakes. When a suuko Is decapitated It U dead. The tall will remuln sensitive for some hours without reference to sundown. -The rattlesnake does not suicide by bit ing Itself. No snake is susceptible to the poison of Its own kind. That the black snuke will swullow Its young In time of danger Is tru mid they uro then digested, making the mother a canuibul of the worst sort ' llopee. Tess It wus Dr. Killlum who attend ed the lute Mr. Oldgold. wusn't it? Jess Yes. He wus culled In only u few days before the old gentleman llied. Why do you ask? Tess Old Mr. Koxley wus taken slightly 111 yesterday und bis young wife sent for Dr. Killlum at once. Philadelphia Press. Did the Beat She tool J. Mrs. Vppmunn I must tell you, De lia, that I wus displeased at your en tertaining thut policeman lu the kitch en lust night Delta Faith. Ot did ax him into the parlor, ma'am, but he wouldn't go. Philadelphia Ledger. rranilnaT aa Kxraae. Little Boy Please, Mrs. Grumpy, mother wants to kuow If you will leud her your wushtub. Mrs. Grumpy (gruftlyl No. I can't The hoops are off. the bottom's out r.r.d If s full of water. Glusgow Times. When a fool has uiude up his mind the market bus gone by. Spuuisli Proverb.