THE SLEEPY SONG. Ai soon u the fire burnt red and low. And the house upstairs is still. She sings me a queer little sleepy song Of sheep that go over the hill. The good little sheep run quick and loft. Their colors are 'gray and white; They follow their leader nose to. tail J)'or they must be home by night. And one slips overnd one comes next, And one runs after behind; The gray one's noso at the white one's tail. The top of the hill they find. And when tlicy get to the top of the hill ' They quietly slip away, But one runs over and one comes next Their colors are white and gray. And over they go and over they go. And over the top of the hill The good little sheep run quick and soft,' , And the house upstairs is still. . And one slips over and one comes next, The good little, gray little sheep! I watch how the fire burns red and low. And she says that I fall asleep. SPLITTING OUT By ALBERT The keel of the schooner extended over 200 feet 'up the sloping ship yard, from a sunlit harbor to a pile of Georgia pine near the blacksmith's shop. Her Inner "celling" of heavy timber was almost finished, and a big "planking" crew was putting on fetreak after streak outside her oaken frames. Sledges rang on steel bolts and thudded on locust treenails, and the whole yard buzzed with life. Under the bow an old man with gold earhoops and iron gray hair be neath his bandless straw hat kept filling two coal hods from a whitish heap of coarse Trapinl salt. These the carried along gangplank and stagings and emptied between the framea, till each "berth" could hold no more. Thus was the vessel "salted" to preserve her from future decay. The old man's face had a healthy flush; his blue eyes were bright and clear. His bare brown forearms dis played hard bands of muscle; the Tight bore the Stars and Stripes, tat tooed dull blue in India ink; while a fancy scroll pricked into the left en closed his initials, "G. W. N." As he Tested in the shadow of the knight beads I questioned him about ship building. His first replies were mon osyllabic, but on further acquaint ance he grew more communicative. "Yes," he said, "I've worked round vessels Bince I was old enough to drive deck-bungs. Twenty years I was carpenter on different ships, and I've circled the globe more times than you've got fingers on one hand. Storm, fire, wreck, mutiny I've seen 'em all, yet here am I, back in my na tive town, working in the very yard where I learned my trade almost six ty years ago. "The launching ways used to be over there." He indicated a chlp ttrewn slope where lay several un smoothed spars. "Down in the rock weed you'll find some of the oak cob work still. I've been In a good many tight places, but never in a tighter than near those old timber ends one July night when I was seventeen. "This yard was then owned by Enos Carrington, whose ships were famous the world over. The Zeno bla Semple was a beauty of 1S00 tons, the largest and finest vessel ho had ever built. She was finished by July 1, and her launch was appointed for the 15th, at ten minutes before midnight, as in summer the tides by 'night are considerably higher than those by day. "When a vessel is begun, her keel Is set on square oak blocks about five feet apart, which remain under tier until she is completed. Just be fore the launch, a smooth, sloping track of heavy hard pine timbers, called' the 'standing ways,' is laid on the ground a few feet from each aide of the keel, beginning at the how and running clear down Into the rwater. This track is smeared with lard and tallow, and on its greasy surface is laid another line of tim bers, almost as long as the vessel, and called the 'running ways.' The space directly above this is filled up to the bilge with planks and wedges, forming a solid wall, called the 'cra dle.' "Mr. Carrington had determined that the launch of the Semple should be long remembered. ' By eleven that night the yard" was welt, filled with spectators.- The ship was alive with lanterns and. bunting.. Directly before the bow was a platform for the band. With, cap torches flaring on their music sheets, they played two or three selections, while the Wedges were being driven in between the' cradle planks and the bottom of the vessel, raising her slightly, and easing the pressure on the 'shores,' or short props, under her bilge, so that they could be knocked away. "The master builder, who had been walking up and down the yard directing operations, now halted be side the stem, and raised his Hand The music stopped.. "Split out your blocks!' he shouted; and a dozen men with sledges and steel wedges sprang un der the bow into tbe two black tun nels that ran from stem to stern be . tween the .keel and the cradle walls. Lanterns held outside the ways shone through the crevices and gave them light for their work. "The' ship was now entirely sup ported by the cradle resting on the ways, and by the oak blocks under her keel. As these were split . to pieces one by one and knocked aside, josepnine JJaskam, in T. r. s Weekly. THE BLOCKS W. TOLMAN. leaving the keel hanging in air, she settled steadily, bearing more and more heavily on the ways. "Soon her weight would start the running ways moving down over the sloping surface of the standing ones, and she would go Into the water with a rush, borne along as if on a pair of greased hard pine runners fast ened under her bilge. ""Nowadays we split the stern blocks first and work gradually up toward the bow, so that, when the vessel starts, the men under her are pretty near the stem. Of course every vessel is launched stern first. But it was an earlier custom in some yards to split down from bow to stern. The men on the last blocks, therefore, rarely having time to get out before the vessel started, were obliged to let her pass over them, thereby running no little risk from flying timbers. The blocks of the Semple were taken in this latter or der. I had helped wedge up, but was not considered experienced enough to take part in the splitting. "The band was silent. The only music came from beneath the ship. Klang! kllng! klang! pealed the sledges, as the tough fibred oak cubes, hardened almost to iron by months of increasing pressure, were cut away. Slowly sternward moved the ringing strokes; outside the ways the lanterns kept them company. "No sound came from the specta tors. Closer and closer to the rud der drew the hammering. She might start any second. Suddenly she moved two or three inches. The crowd hurrahed, and the band began 'Hail Columbia.' The music ceased when they found she had stuck fast. The block splitters, thinking that she would move in a moment, scram bled from under her as fast as they could. "Now and then rose the cry, 'There she goes! There she goes!' But she didn't go. "The crowd aboard shook the rig ging and ran about the decks, trying td jar her loose; but she wouldn't budge. Then somebody on the ground suggested butting a timber against the stem. Twenty men picked up a big plank and struck several blows; but even that failed. The unsplit blocks beneath the stern held her stock still. A panic seized the gang who had left their duty un finished; not one could be persuad ed to go under again. When she started, she would move like a flash, and the man who did the work would be taking long chances. "The tide had already fallen two inches below its highest point. Soon it would be too late to launch that night. The vessel was chartered to load as soon as she was rigged; and if she lost two weeks by waiting for the next course of high tides, some other craft might get the freight. "Mr. Carrington, hat off, came running down toward the group un der the quarter. All the blocks had been split save the last three, which were Jn plain sight under the keel. He waved his hand toward them. " 'Who'll split those blocks out for ten dollars?' he shouted. No body stirred. " 'I'll make tt twenty-five!' cried he, a little louder. Two or three men . with, sledges glanced at one another, but didn't move. "Just then the band struck up a popular air. The old man grew fran tic. .'. ' 'Tell 'em to stop that noise!' he r Why the Preacher Should Know All - About Farming. m ty ZLH L. H. BAILEY, of Cornell University, . ost Teacher and Writer on A-jriculiirj. Subjects in America. "Every country preacher should take a coarse lu agriculture." This is true. The true preacher should be a leader. He can not lead, without a thorough knowledge of the occupation ot his people. We have known three preachers in our time, who had consider, able knowledge of botany, and to us they were the most interesting preachers we have ever known. No one can estimate the interest it would add to the lives of our rural people, to know the names and history of all the plants Indigenous to their soil. It is remarkable, the amount ot Ignorance along this line. It becomes our preachers and teachers to Instruct our people in this ui .matter, as well as upon the m crop growing. yelled, angrily; and they stopped. Matters were too serious for music then. He tossed his hands above his head. "'Are you all cowards?' shrieked he. 'If I wasn't so old, I'd do it my self. Fifty dollars!' "When he said fifty I thought how much that would mean to my family. Why shouldn't I volunteer? But I hung -back, waiting for some one else. Still nobody took him up. . The more he offered the bigger looked the danger. " 'It's the price of a man's life,' a carpenter near me muttered. "'One hundred dollars! Carring ton cried, hoarsely. That broke the spell. " 'I'll do It, I said, stepping quick ly forward, afraid that some one might get ah';ad of me. But I need n't have felt anxious; nobody else wanted the job, even at that figure. "Carrington eyed me a minute. Then' he thrust Into my hands a sledge and a couple of wedges. A man behind me said in a low tone: " 'It's a shame to let that boy go under. He'll never come out alive.' "That wasn't very encouraging; but I had determined to see the thing through. I crawled over the slippery standing ways- below the cradle end, splashed through the tide covering the rocks and cobwork, and was soon close to the keel, about twelve feet from its end. I began to split sections off the first ot the three blocks. "It was hard. work. Knee deep In water on the slippery logs, I put all my strength into every blow. The time was short. If I took too long, the tide wouj,d fall so that the ship might strike bottom when she went off. "I had plenty of light from the lan terns outside the ways. A few feet off stood Carrington, almost crazy with anxiety. " 'Work hard! Work fast!' he kept shouting. He didnt mean to be heartless; but he came pretty near being so. "Little by little I split away the edges of the first block. Soon It was loosened so that I could knock it from under the keel. Two mofe! "I rained my blows furiously up on the second. Splash! One of my wedges disappeared In the water. Another was quickly passed In to me. I could hear nothing save the ringing of my sledge on the steel. This block took longer than the oth er, but In a few minutes It, too, gave way. A single cube of oak directly under the stern post was all that now held the great ship on the ways. "Mustering my final energies, I at tacked this last block. Strange that a single blow by my tired arms should have affected so huge a mass! Yet that one stroke was what the ship had waited for. 'Along the ways sounded a groan ing; the groaning grew to a rum bling; the rumbling deepened Into thunder. The block before me was crumpled into match wood. The ship had started. " 'Down! Down!' came the warn Ing cry, as the lantern holders sprang back, leaving me In darkness. "I had no time to get out. The moving cradle would have ground me to pieces. I must hold my place, while the ship slid over me. Down into the water I dropped on hands and knees. The lower I could get, the safer I would be. "The next few seconds I have nev er forgotten. I was facing the bow; on my left, the keel; on my right, the cradle wall; overhead the bottom of the ship. It was a tunnel, of which the top and sides were rushing past me, and only the floor was still. Far up under the bilge, but rapidly approaching and growing larger, was a dim square of light, framing the smoky flare of the bandsmen's torches. "I was deafened by the fearful screeching, as the greased hard pine ways ground together. What was I beneath those hundreds of tons of wood and iron! A wedge squeezed from the cradle wall or a swinging timber end would blot me out with as little compunction as If I were a barnacle on the cobwork. Great though my peril was, I could not help a thrill of satisfaction. The job nobody else had dared to attempt had been done by me, and done well. "Lower and lower came the top of the tunnel, as the bilge amidships approached. The wind ot the moving mass stirred my hair. The next two or three seconds would be the most dangerous. I must take no chances. Ducking my head under water, I pressed my face down on the cold, slimy, logs. They, were trembling as In the throes of an earthquake. "A few seconds of rolling thun der, ot cracking, vibrating timbers, then a great plunge! more Important matters of iSaSHSHSHSHSZSHSSSZSZSai1 "I raised my head. A thin smoks cloud, smelling of scorched wood and tallow, swam before my eyes; and amidst a tumult of bells and whistles I caught tbe strains of the 'Star Spangled Banner.' The ship was off, and I had escaped un harmed." From Youth's Compan ion. Tine NDU5TRJ An electrically operated clothes wringer is one ot the latest Inven tions for the domestic laundry. There are 125 miles of electric street railways la Rio Janeiro. The current Is obtained from water power. The output ot the Russian oil fields in the Baku district has been greatly increased by recent installation ot steam turbines to drive the electrle dynamos and for the pumping in stallations. The human system can endure heat of 212 degrees, the boiling point of water, because the skin is a bad con ductor, and on account of the per spiration cooling the body. Men have withstood without injury a heat of 300 degrees for several minutes. Experiments show that there is an Intimate relation between the color ot sea water and the proportion of salt it holds in solution, the blue water containing much more salt than the green, the difference in the two colors being entirely a matter of more or less brine. Thunder is just the snap that we hear in our electric machines greatly intensified, and it is no doubt caused by the violent commotion in the air by the rush of electricity through it. Light travels enormously faster than sound; consequently we see the flash long before we hear the thunder, the interval depending on the distance ot the lightning from us. Fish contain three times as much phosphorus in their composition as quadrupeds, and as phosphorus is an essential constituent of the human brain and requires renewal in pro portion to the amount ot work that organ is required to perform, It fol lows that a dish partly composed of fish will be serviceable to such as are engaged in severe mental labors. Rabies is a far more common dis ease than is generally admitted; so that Dr. E. C. Schroeder, ot the Bu reau ot Animal Industry, urges con stant observation of dogs and their muzzling in public places. Recent progress has greatly lessened its ef fects, for,. since Negri's discovery in 1903 of the distinguishing micro-organisms in the nerve cells, the disease s easily recognizable, and the Pasteur treatment is effective in curing it. The mortality of sixty and eighty per cent, in untreated bits on hands and head has been reduced to 0.75 and 1.25 per cent. Who Did? One ot our subscribers writes us that William Balfour Ker's picture "The First Spank" reminds him of the following story: A little fellow who had just felt the hard side of tbe slipper, when the tears had dried somewhat, turned to his mother. "Mother," he asked, "did grandpa spank father when he was a little boy?" "Yes," answered his mother, im pressively. "And did his father whip him when he was little?" "Yes." "And did his father spank him?" "Yes." A pause. "Well, who started this thing, any way?" Everybody's. The Wrong One, A young man had been calling now and then on a young lady when one night, as he sat in the parlor waiting for her to come down, her mother entered the room instead and asked him in a very grave, stern way what his intentfons were. He turned very red and was about to stammer some Incoherent reply when suddenly the young lady called down from the head of the stairs: "Mamma, mamma, that is not the one." Ladles' Home Journal. Tbe Woods of Idaho.. An example ot tbe progress ot the science of . forestry in this country is furnished by 'the. co-operation Just arranged between the University of Idaho and tbe United States Forest Service for testing the timber grow ing in the State of Idaho. The tests will be specially directed to deter mining the fitness ot these timbers for use as bridge stringers, railroad ties and- paving blocks. One Look Enough. "Are you Mme. Bombazino, the beauty specialist?" asked the fair caller. "Yes, ma'am," answered the elder ly square-jawed matron. "What can I do for you?" "Nothing!" said tbe caller, making a hasty exit. The Tannery. "What building is that?" asked a stranger of Willie Blllfuzz, point ing to the school-house. "That," said the boy, "why. that's the tannery." And he feelingly rubbed his back as he passed on. Uncle Remus's Tbe HomeMagazina. TALE5 OF THE BEAR TRIED TO SAVE. The bears were about to be fed and the usual crowd had gathered before the Iron fence of their enclosure In the Bronx Zoo. The bears themselves knew It was time, and most of them nodded their heads or strolleS up and down Impatiently. Only one- bllnky eyed old brute seemed Indifferent. Her flocked by himself away back on the rocks. His Indifference vanished, however, when the keeper arrived with the menu, which consisted of whole loaves of white bread and several baskets full of small fish. As the man chucked the food Into the enclosure, distributing it as well as he could to prevent collisions be tween hungry diners, the bllnky old fellow showed how fast a bear can move when he tries by getting Into the scrap In ten seconds and -promptly gobbling several fish, while he seized a good sized loaf with his couth paw. Oddly enough the animals did not seem to care so much for the fish, and the scramble for the loaves was ac tive. Perhaps It was only accidental, but the way the bllnky old chap Beemed to sneak an extra loaf away from the others amused the crowd. It had fallen a little to the rear, and as he scrambled over the fish he gave It a slap with his hind paw that sent It back to the entrance of one of the dens In the rear of the enclosure. ""Gee," said a fresh boy, "he's sneakln' the bread away from the other one3 so he can have another lunch all ter hlmselluf when he gits hungry again." It certainly looked that way, and a school-masterly looking person vol unteered the Information that ani mals, squirrels, for instance, often laid by a store of food for times of scarcity. His lecture fell flat on the crowd, and even the bears were for gotten In the comedy incident that took place at the back ot the en closure. The loaf had hardly been kicked to the rear when a tiny pink muzzle and a pair of white whiskers, with beady eyes shining through them, ap peared over the edge ot the. nearest den. Tbe situation was easy; the bears were busy eating with their backs turned; so out popped Mr. Rat, gray and fat and agile. He promptly tackled the loaf and gave it a yank toward the opening. Then out popped Mrs. Rat and Joined forces with her spouse. It didn't take half a minute for them to push and pull that loaf to the edge and down into the dark cave. What happened to it there cannot be- re corded. It certainly was not eaten at once, tor in a minute or so the two gray rats were back again in the rear of the arena on tbe lookout for further chances. When he had finished all the prov ender in sight the old bllnky bear turned toward the dens and the rats ran. "Say! Watch! He's goin after his loaf," chirped the fresh boy. "Oh, ain't he disappointed!" Such a construction might be placed upon the bllnky bear's de meanor if one had the imagination ot a nature faker. As a matter of fact he went nosing around the dens for a minute or so, and then he slow ly and gloomily climbed back to his roost amid the rock work. The crowd grinned at his rueful expres sion. "Well, it's life all over," comment ed a shabby man badly in want ot a hair cut. "You stint yourself to put something by. You wear old clothes and eat ten cent lunches and smoke two for five cigars. You' soak your money away for the time when you'll want it maybe, and when you go to look for it It ain't there. The rats took it." New York Sun. ESCAPES FROM RUSSIAN PRISONS No other country has witnessed so many daring escapes from prison as has Russia, says JaakoC Prelooker, In an article In the World Wide Mag azine. Probably the simplest escape ever effected by a political prisoner was that of the famous Mile. Sophie Perovskaya. Belonging to the high est Russian aristocracy, she joined the revolutionary movement, and at the age ot seventeen was arrested, but was liberated. In 1878 she was again seized and was sent to the Arc tic regions. On the Journey Sophie had several opportunities to escape, but the guards were so kind to hr that aha would not risk the punishment they would suffer. Finally two guards were put over her who were so brutal that she was freed from conscientious scruples. One night the party had to stay at a railway station: the two ndirmH slept in the same room as the pris oner, one at me window, the other on the floor before the door. Sophie appearing to ba fast aaloon the guards soon fell asleep, too. The prisoner then rose, tried the door, which she found to open outward, stepped across the slumbering guard and was free. She managed to slip Into a train for St. Petersburg, while the gendarmes snored on. Sophie took part, in the plot for the assassination ot Alexander ti., and was hanged In 1881. Leo Deutscb, the revolutionist, has a record for repeated arrests and es capes which is probably without par allel. Once he escaped through the medium of a bath. The Russian bath Is a national Institution. The author ity which thinks nothing of freezing, knoutlng and starving its prisoners, never refuses a demand for a bath. All Russian prisons have their bath ing establishments, where the prison ers are sent under the escort ot guards. Deutsch demanded to be taken to a public bath, saying he did not wish to mingle with the criminals, and was allowed to go, with three soldiers as escort. On arriving, two of the sol diers took stand before the two win dows, and the third at the door. Deutsch undressed, and handed his clothing and purse to one ot the sol diers. The soldier felt quite Bate, thus holding the prisoner's clothing, for the cold was so severe there was no question of any one leaving the bath naked. However, when Deutsch entered the hot room he found a com rade, who by previous plan brought him a bundle of ordinary civilian clothing, which Deutsch put on at once, and with an assured air marched out of the premises without any challenge. None of the guards paid any atten tion to the private gentleman leaving the baths, and Deutsch easily escaped. The soldiers waited long for the bath er, and, on finding that he had es caped, could not explain how he got away. Only long afterward did It dawn on the officials that the prisoner must have passed the guards in dis guise. In 1906 an audacious hoax was per petrated in Russian Poland which re sulted In the liberation of ten polit ical prisoners who were condemned to death. The friends who assisted them knew that failure in the slight est detail of their plan meant death to themselves as well as to the "polit icals." The prison administration received a telephone message purporting to come from the chief of the city police, saying that the Governor of Warsaw desired the transfer of the ten pris oners from the Pavlak to the citadel. They were to be conveyed by an officer who would ' bring his own guard. The message was taken in good faith; One evening a man In the uni form of a gendarme officer appeared at the prison and presented an official document ordering the transfer. In the whole proceeding there was noth ing to rouse suspicion. The officer had brought six policemen with him, and no other escort was sent. The gendarme certified that the prisoners had been delivered to his charge. The prisoners were placed in the carriage. The only prison servant with the party was the coachman. As the prison van was being driven down a deserted street the coachman was chloroformed, and tbe next morning was found inside the van, while around were lying prison clothes, uni forms and swords, all that was left of the prisoners and their escort. All efforts to discover the culprits were unsuccessful. BOYS' BATTLE WITH SNAKE. Dan Russell, ot Brownsville, and Wren Tyus, residing west of town, went fishing Thursday in Big Hatchie River, near Van Buren, nine miles from here. A3 they stepped into the boat' they noticed a big moccasin snake crossing the ' stream. They had hardly left the side of the river when the moccasin discovered their design and came back, meeting them in midstream, showing fight by his upright position. Russell struck at the snake with an oar and sent him under the water. He came up more vicious than ever He struck savage ly at the boat and Its occupants and made a dash for the inside ot the boat. In their efforts to keep the snake out the boys overturned the boat and both were in the water with the mad snake. The; dived and came up di rectly opposite the reptile. A second dive was made and the snake followed Tyus and bit him In the thigh. He came up calling for help. Russell managed to get him to the bank and examined bis wound, which was fast swelling. He carried him to his home near by and there medical assistance was rendered. He is very sick, but the attending physician thinks that he will recover. Brownsville Corre spondence Nashville American. NANSEN'S CARRIER PIGEON. One day a carrier pigeon tapped at the window of Mrs. Nansen's home in Chrlstiania. Instantly the window was opened, and the- wife of th& famous Arctic explorer in another moment covered a little messenger with kisses and caresses. The carrier pigeon had been away from the cot tage thirty long months, but had not forgotten the way home. It brought a note from Nansen, stating that all was going well with his expedition in the polar regions. Nansen had fastened a message, to the bird, and turned it loose. v The frail carrier darted out Into the bllzzardy air, flew like an arro-jr over perhaps a thousand miles of frozen waste, and then over another, thousand miles of ocean, plains and forests, to enter the window ot its waiting mistress and deliver the mes sage which she bad been awaiting so anxiously. We boast ot human pluck, sagacity and endurance; but this loving car- , rief pigeon, after an absence of thirty months, accomplished a teat so won derful that we can only give ourselves up to amazement and admiration. Nansen's Arctic Explorations.