I ONCE THE KING LOVED ME. I sit me Hewing on my endless seam Within the easement, clad in hodden gray, And count the dial yonder, in the eun Where the leaves' shadow falls; it winds awny Till the day goes, and all the hours are spent; Once the king loved me and 1 am content. I mark the earth turrets, ising high Beyond the forest, dark, and vast, and dim. Mine eyes iirst seek it in the dull, gray dawn, My evening prayer goes there; it holdeth him W ho was mine own one happy hour that went Once the king loved me, and I am content. I mind me of thn forest depth of green. Of sunlight, falling in the wooded plnee, As on yon dial. Was it heaven then? Or saw I only heaven in his face? I know not, all 1 know is joy is spent. Once the king loved me, and I am content, I mind me of the day the shadow fell, And through the gilded halls a whisper rnn And courtiers who had fawned stood cold far. And with a broken heart beneath my hand Whioh held it fast, lest life -itself be rent. Once the king loved me, and I am content. I stood before the queen, who, cold and Hark, Lifting pale eyes, said softly: "Thou dost go." (Never before had she deigned speech with me.) Meekly I bowed and answered, "Queen, I go. With gathered robe and stately step 1 went. ; A Temporary Substitute. Felix Livingstone was not in a good temper. He had a fortnight's leave, rWhtch duty required him to spend iwtth bis maiden aunt In the country, ftthlle inclination strongly urged him to go up to town In order to see the Iglrl he loved, But on this occasion Huty bad to be considered, for Miss IDrury, the aunt In question, was a wealthy old lady, and he was practi cally dependent upon her. ' All things considered, however, "Fate had not been so very unkind to Felix. Left an orphan nt an early age, he had been adopted by his mother's elder sister, who had done !her duty nobly by him. Now nt the age of twenty-fivo he found himself e subaltern In one of the line regi ments, with a handsome allowance from his aunt, and every prospect of becoming her heir. But there Is always a "but" In most people's lives although Miss Drury had been more than liberal to her nephew and iorbore to exercise any but a very nominal restraint over his actions, yet she had given him to understand that she meant to exert her authority In one Important maiter, namely, the Question of his marriage. In due course of tlmo she Intended Felix to become masttr of Wood lands, her beautiful old house, and Blnce his wife would occupy her place as mistress. Miss Drury meant to limit. If not direct, her nephew's choice of a bride. She did not approve of the modern woman, the up-to-date girl, with her cigarette and her slang, her talk of golf and bridge, her contempt for needlework, and all things pertaining to domesticity. Felix could see In his mind's eye the wife his aunt destined for him a meek and modest young woman of ultra-refined speech and ap pearance, and always with a piece of fancy work between her Angers and lie shuddered at the picture. Then he thought, with a sudden tighten ing of his heart, of Kitty Bellalrs, as lie had seen her last summer at the house of a brother officer beautiful, mischievous, high-spirited, a keen tennis player, a brilliant horsewoman, lull of life and laughter. She had tharmed the young man's heart out f him, and though Felix tried des perately hard to banish her from his memory, ahsence, in this case, had certainly made the heart grow fonder. I daren't tell Aunt Minnie about Kitty," thought the young man, dis consolately. "Of course If she knew her as I do she couldn't help but love her, although she Isn't quite her Rtyle, hut I don't see how they are ever to meet, since my little darling knows no one In this neighborhood, and lAnnt Mln never will come up to town." In the depth of his heart Felix was geniulnely fond of the old lady, who had so generously mothered him all fcis life, and he was therefore rather disconcerted to find when he reached iWoodlands that Miss Drury was very much perturbed and upset about (something. Generally his aunt was a very dainty looking little old lady, exquisitely dressed, and the perfec tion of a hostess. But on this partic ular afternoon she greeted her nep hew In an absent-minded fashion, her cap slightly awry, hercheeks flushed, and her beautiful hands trembling. "Why, Aunt Minnie," said the young man, anxiously, "whatever Is the matter?" I "Oh, my dear Felix," replied the eld lady, looking Into his handsome face with troubled blue eyes, "I have had such a dreadful upset. Two of (the housemaids are down with lnflu lnza, and now Parkins, who is quite invaluable, has declared she can hold ,up no longer, and has gone to bed seriously ill, I fear." Felix gave a whistle of dismay. Parking was cook-housekeeper at (Woodlands, and the pivot upon which ithe rest of the household turned. She was an exceptionally good cook, and he knew that his aunt prided herself that her dinners were unsurpassed lin the neighborhood. "I would not have minded had we iheen alone," continued Miss Drury, '"but the house is full of people, and 1 'have a large dinner party to-morrow." i "What a catastrophe," eicaimed her nephew, sympathetically, who knew how vexed was Miss Drury's or 'derly mind when any household af jfalra went wrong. "Can't you get a I woman from the village to help?" . ! "Of course I can, but you don't fknow what these village women are llike, my dear Felix; dirty. Incompe tent creatures, and as Incapable of sending up a dinner as you are. No, I must just leave Susan, the kitchen maid, to do her best; but I know I shall be disgraced to-morrow, and I do not mind sp much, if my guests don't have the best of everything. And to make matters worse, that greedy old Sir Gregory is coming, and he always says he never dines so well anywhere as here. You don't know of a cook thnt you can recommend by any chance, do you, Felix?" she asked desperately. , This wistful appeal touched the young man's heart. As a rule, a sub altern home on leave is not the per son one would naturally apply to for a cook, but Miss Drury was at her wits' end. Felix knitted his brows and thought hard for a minute, at the end of which a brilliant Inspiration came to him. "Look here. Aunt Minnie," he ex claimed suddenly, "don't you worry any more. I'll go straight up to town first thing to-morrow, and I'll find you a cook somehow, and bring her back with me in the afternoon." Miss Drury looked nt her nephew with tears in her eyes. "Felix," she said solemnly, "if you get me out of this difficulty you may ask me for anything in the world." Felix was as good as his word. He departed for town directly after breakfast next morning, smiling good humoredly at the chaff of his fellow guests, and re-appeared triumphant in the afternoon proudly escorting the new cook. "I've brought her, Aunt Mln," he announced, rushing excitedly into Miss Drury's boudoir. "She was at the Rawson's last summer, and an un commonly good cook she is. Blair is her name, it's a great piece of luck that she was disengaged, you know." Miss Drury went hurriedly down stairs to inspect the new arrival and to explain to her the arrangements for the evening's dinner. "I was a little taken aback at first," she Bald later on to her nephew. "Blair looks so young and so pretty, and so er refined, but she seems very capable and fully, qualified to send up an excellent dinner." "Yes," replied Felix, eagerly, "she has had a course of cooking lessons at South Kensington. I believe she is no end of a swell at It." "Really, my dear boy," said Miss Drury, looking affectionately at her nephew, "I am most touched by the Interest you have shown In this do mestic difficulty and the trouble you have taken. If only. Blair does not falsify our expectations I shall owe you a debt of gratitude." The dinner proved an Immense suc cess, and even Miss Drury had to con fess that Parkins could not have done better. As for Sir Gregory, he chuckled with delight and went stead ily through the menu from beginning to end. , "Really, my dear Miss Drury," he said when at length he was obliged to desist, "that cook of yours has sur passed herself. I don't know when I have eaten a better dinner; that souffle was simply a work of art." Only one contretemps marred the harmony of the evening, and fortun ately Miss Drury did not witness this little Incident, as it occurred when the ladles had retired to the drawing room. Felix was doing the honors of his aunt's table when the sound of a scuf fle arrested his attention, and with a Johnny's Last Speech. yOU'D scarcely expect one of my age, in 1 merchandising to engage and hope to get a paying trade without the local paper's aid. And yet I did that very thing; I opened up a store last spring the sheriff took my stock and sold it at the auction block. Don't view me with a scornful eye, but simply say as I pass by: "There goes a fool who seemed to think he had no use for printer's Ink." There is a truth as broad as earth and bust ness men should know its worth, 'tis simply this : The public buys its goods from those who advertise. hasty excuse to his guests he left the room and rushed Into the passage, where he found an ardent young foot man trying vainly to embrace a very angry but bewltchlngly pretty young woman in a white cap and apron. "You impudent wretch!" she was Baying, 'how dare you try and kiss me? Mr.vLlvlngstone, help!" Felix turned on the mnn in a per fect fury and dragged him away. "John," he said, looking as If he could have killed him with pleasure, "leave that lady alone at once and clear out. Here are your wages. Go!" The man gazed at him, dumb with surprise. "I beg your pardon, Mr. Felix," he stammered at length, "I meant no 'arm. I often used to kiss Miss Park Ins. I didn't know as 'ow Miss Blair would mind." The cook's angry face relaxed, and she burst into a peal of laughter, in which, after some hesitation, Felix Joined. "Never mind, John," she said, "I'll forgive you this once, only don't try it again. I dare say Mr. Felix will allow you to stay if you behave your self." Felix nodded impatiently, and the man fled to the lower regions, but it was some minutes before "Miss; Blair" took her place at the servants' hall supper looking rather flushed, or before Felix joined the men in the dining room. Parkins' Illness lasted a week, and throughout that time Blair continued to charm the palates of the Inmates of Woodlands. All the same, Miss Drury was rather relieved when the last day of the temporary cook's stay came, for try as she would to disbe lieve the evidence of her senses, there" was no disguising the fact that Felix was always hanging about the kitchen, on some pretext or another. That her nephew could so far forget what was due both to himself and to her, as to even carry on a mild flirtation with a servant, Miss Drury would not allow for a moment. ' Her horror can there fore be better Imagined than de scribed when, on descending to the kitchen the last afternoon for the pur pose of paying Blnlr her wnges, she saw on opening the door a pretty, white-capped head reposing on her nephew's shoulder, while his arm was tenderly clasping an aproned waist. "Kitty, darling." she heard him sayl tenderly, "I couldn't let yon go away without telling you I loved yon. I know I ought not to have done so, for goodness only knows when I shall be able to marry you." "Do you think Miss Drury will be very angry?" asked the girl. Miss Drury coughed, and at the omnious sound the guilty couple started apart and looked with dismay at the intruder. The old lady's face had turned very white, and Felix, cut to the quick by her piteous expression, crossed the room hastily and took her hand. "Don't look so shocked, Aunt Min nie," he said; "this Is not a cook really; It is the lady I love Miss' Kitty Bellalrs. I met her at the Raw son's last summer and fell in love with her; and I knew she could cook' beautifully, so when you were in such a fix I asked her to come and help. We we thought, perhaps, you might take a fancy to her and ask her to stop." "Are you Archie Bellalrs' daugh ter?" asked Miss Drury, In astonish ment. "Yes," said the girl, gently, "he Is dead, you know, and I am an orphan and very poor but I love Felix." The old lady's eyes grew very wist ful and tender as Bhe remembered the far-off days of her youth when poverty had stood between her and the one whom she loved Archie Bel lairs. She took the girl's hand and smil ingly put It into that of her nephew. "So do I, my dear," she said, "and I am sure you will make him an ex cellent wife. I shall be exceedingly glad to offer the temporary substitute a permanent place in my household." New York News, She Can Smoke. During the hearing of a case which came before Justice Grantham a few days ago, it was mentioned that one of the members of a certain well known ladies' club smoked cigars. Whether they were mild, medium or full flavored was not stated, but the fact that a woman can smoke a cigar tends to dispel the popular notion that she Is constitutionally unfit for such a habit. As a matter of fact the Dowager Empress of Russia, who is an inveterate smoker, prefers a mild cigar to a cigarette; so does the Countess of Paris, the mother of the Queen of Portugal. Tit-Bits. Ooooooo ForthChildrenfe THE THIMBLE FAMILY. Good Mistress Thimble, neat and nimble. Drives Brother Needle with a push and a wheedle, While light bister Thread, with s noiseless tread, A stitch drops behind as she flies ahead. Then comes Father Scissors and gives her a snip, And starts them off on another trip, ' Over a hem, or down a seam, Needle and Thread, a lively team. Fat Uncle Emery, bright and true. When a hard place comes will help them through. And pale Aunty Wax is willing enough To smooth the way when they hnd it rough. Then Grandfather Bodkin, with many a jerk, Will do his part, and finish the work. Now, where is their home? Well, since you ask it, I'll tell you they live in s little work basket. -Martha Burr Banks, in Youth's Com panion. CAPTURING WILD BEASTS. In St. Nicholas, A. W. Rolker writes interestingly of the capture of wild animals in Africa for the menag erie. The easiest victims of the wild animal trapper are specimens of the most ferocious type the Hon, tiger, panther, Jaguar and the leopard, for It is simply a matter of stealing the cubs. The hunter goes to the heart of the darkest, most impenetrable thicket, where the Hon mother lies with her four to six cubs, golden puff balls, scrambling over her great yel low body, which none on earth, save those defenseless kittens, may come near. Says the trapper, "nature her self renders these babies defenseless when the mother stirred by the pangs of hunger, ventures forth to hunt and to eat." Accompanied by two Kaffirs', the hunter steals upon the unprotect ed little cubs, the hunter, rifle In hand, loaded with the heaviest bullet. Quickly the Kaffirs work, for should the lioness return, nothing but a bul let, accurately aimed, could save them from instant death. With the capture of the cubs, which are thrown into a bag, hasty flight Is made. Capturing these cubs, however, Is child's play compared with capturing those lumbering, colossal animals of the pig tribe, the rhinoceros and the hippopotamus. There is hardly a wild animal In existence more dan gerous than this rarest of menagerie captives. Awkward as the great beast appears when at rest, once aroused the "rhino" dashes through a thicket with the Irresistible speed of an ex press train. The hunters make their way into the interior of unexplored territory in Africa, .searching for a rhinoceros cow with a calf old enough to capture, and which is not so large but that It can be transported back to civilization. Frequently months elapse before the search is rewarded with success. This how the capture is made: Noiselessly and from well to lee ward the trapper and his men grad ually steal nearer until the cow and the calf are Inclosed In a circle. From ahead, out of the maze of cane and creeper, sounds the uneasy stamping of the cow. With a half snort, half grunt, in an Instant the rhinoceros is all attention. Head raised and nos trils sniffing, she searches the air steadily. At sight of one of the sav ages the cow dashes with the speed of a racehorse at the man, charging the human decoy, and at that instant the trapper's rifle Is heard, and her furious charge Is over, provided the bullet reaches the heart by striking Just behind the left foreleg the only vulnerable point In the Inch-thick ar mor with which the beast is clad. Now and then it hnppens that the hunter falls to kill in time his gun may miss fire, intervening trees may In terfere, or the marksman may miss his aim. Then the life of the decoy depends on his own agility. To run to one side before the rhinoceros is almost on top of hlra would be fatal, for the swift brute would overtake him within a few bounds. His only hope Is to wait until the deadly horn Is almost at his feet, and then, with the swiftness of a mongoose dodging the aim of a cobra, to leap to one side while the ponderous creature, unable to turn short in time, dashes onward under its own impetus. Twice, three times, a clever native hunter will dodge In this way, giving the trapper ample time to bring down the rhinoceros. '. After the death of the mother cow It is easy to track the frightened calf, which is soon pushed, prodded and shoved up a bridge of long skids into the cage of a bullock cart, after which the weary march to a market begins. While the "ftiolno" is more savage to deal with than the hippopotamus, still the greatest peril lies with the latter, for, as Bays the writer: "The trapper hunts the. 'rhino on land and brings it down nt a compar atively safe distance, whereas In the case of the hippopotamus he must fight in the same primitive fashion 'that savages have used for ages. Hand to maw, as it were, he must engage this two-ton monster while standing in the bow of a frail canoe. For the hippopotamus, as its name, the 'river horse,' means, is a land-and-water an imal, and must be harpooned and brought ashore before it expires, oth erwise Is would sink at once to the bottom of the river, the coveted calf escaping among the other hippopota mi instead of following the stricken cow to shore, so that the youngster may be caught." PLAYHOUSES. There have been much bustle and activity among the little people of the Massachusetts coaBt this fall, for dur ing the summer many playhouses were erected, and the little folks have been as busy closing up their play homes as their mothers with their grown-up home-. These playhouses are much more than shacks, for they are carefully planned and have verandas, three or four rooms and even an 'upstairs." One fortunate little woman who has a house at the end of an old fashioned garden has across the front a covered veranda, furnished as out-door living room. The entrance door, ornament ed with a brass knocker, opens on a small hallway, from one side of which asconds a winding staircase. An oldtlme hall lantern hangs from the staircase beam. To the right opens the living room, twenty feet long by ten feet wide, with a fireplace in which logs are always plied ready to be lighted. To the left of the hall way is the kitchen. Here is a stove of medium size, and along one side of the wall Is a dresser fitted with glass doors, which permit glimpses ' of Dutch china. Directly opposite are a table and a roomy closet, with an ar ray of cooking utensils on hooks. The floors are covered with rag mats. On the second floor is a single room, which the little lady of the house re tires to when she Is tired of the world. There are a pretty writing desk, well equipped with writing materials, and a roomy couch, piled high with soft pillows. The walls are hung with posters. The windows are draped with white muslin curtains, and on the floor is a pretty rug. Another playhouse is like an Eng lish cottage, and has pretty latticed windows which open outward. The shingled exterior Is stained dark red, with door and window trimmings of pure white. The quaint entrance porch opens upon a single large room, furnished with tools and other appli ances for manual training. On the Salem shore is a little house made over from a discarded bath house. It stands near the water's edge, and across the front is a wide covered veranda. Inside Is a fireplace of brick, and between two windows is a piano, which the Bmall hostess and her friends may bang on all day if they please. At Peach Bluff Is a beautiful Col onial playhouse, designed for the comfort of both the boys and the girls of tho family. It is painted white, with green blinds, and the entrance porch la supported by Colonial pillars. As it Is Intended to be a place where the children' can have a good time, the furniture Is of the plainest, most substantial oak, and the floors are without carpets. The walls are of plain boarding, not even painted. Be yond the living room are two smaller rooms, one for the girls, where they may cook to their heart's content, and the other for the boys, where there are tools and a carpenter's bench. One of the most elaborate of these playhouses, a four-room cottage fully equipped for housekeeping, is at Co hasset. It has a latticed entrance porch, with built in seats, with flow ering shrubs about the sides and front, and window boxes in the win dows. The first floor is divided into living room, dining room and kitch en, all furnished with sheathed walls and ceilings and hardwood floors. The living room has low white bookcases, with cretonne hangings of pink and white. Muslin curtains drape the windows, and on the walls are pret ty prints. Small rugs of artistic de sign partly cover the floor. The dln ing room has a plate rail on which have been placed numerous souvenirs. Opening from this room is the kitch en, where the little maiden may cook and serve what she pleases. On the second floor Is a good sized bedroom, furnished with two cot beds, a wash stand and several chairs. Curtains shade the windows, and Japanese grass mats cover the floor. On this same estate in Coh asset Is a playhouse for the boys. This has an exterior finish of Bhingles left to stain with the weather. Across the front and rear extend broad, uncov ered verandas. The Interior consists of a single room fitted up as a boy's den, and in the loft above is ample storage room for footballs, boxing gloves, tennis rackets anc? the treas ures dear to boyish hearts. New York Tribune. Burglars Are. Unknown. Consul Edward 3. Worton, of Mal aga, cannot encourage American safe makers to attempt the building up of a trade in that district of Southern Spain. He writes as follows: Not over half a dozen American-made safes could be found In this entire consular district, and tho outlook for the development of the safe trade is not an encouraging one. The demand for safes generally is extremely light. Many business men possess nothing in the way of a Bate for the protection of valuables or books. The annual fire loss is Insignificant, and burglars or safe blowers are unknown, so there Is no actual necessity for the purchase of a fire-proof, burglar-proof sals., History Lesson. " Diogenes, dear children, was ihe man who lived in a tub, and who searched for an honest man. "I'm honest," cried a candidate for re-election. "Where's your tub?" asked Diogenes. "Look at my barrel!" cried the candidate. But Dl went on hunting. The establishment of a Scandina vian steamship service to America is being actively urged in Sweden, Nor way and Denmark. , XTL fiRNEW THAT PAW-PAWN X a5 PILLVbU TOOK LAST UVIH iTOMACH AND BOWELS IN COODCOMDmal Itlanyen's Paw Pew Pill eonxthsll-e-lnle acuity by gentle methods. They do not scour, (rip or weaken. They are a tunlo to tho stomach, ll-a and nerrosi ln-morte Initead ofweaken. They en rich the blood and enable tbe stomach to nt all the nourishment from fool that Is put Into lb These plllsoontalnnooalonwli they are soothing, hefUroa and stimulating-. For sale by all drusideu In 10c and Sao else. 11 you need medical ad-ice, writ llaa yon Doctors. They will sdriw to the nest of thet ability absoltit-ly free of Chance. IHllNVON's) A3dana JeOersenStSnFhUaaelahla.Pau , Mnnyon'l Cold Remedy earns a cold In one day. FMoeaao. Munyon's Rheumatism Remedy relle-as as a few boon and oores In a few days. Prloa Sao. A Valid Reason. ' The Countr Vat! EconomlteT The Countess Yes. Father say. we are living beyond his means. Lip- plncott's. Only One "Ilronio Quinine," That is LaxHtive Drnmo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2So t Heads of Philadelphia's police de partment plan to equip each patrol man with a pocket electric search light. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forCh!Mrea teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2oc a bottle. Over-Education a Curse. ,. But, some one asks, how can you ever expect a boy to graduate from college or university If his education does not begin until he is 10 years of age? He will be far too old. First I answer that the curse ol modern child-life in America Is over education. For the first ten years of this, the most sensitive and delicate, the most pltable life in the world, I would prepare It. The properly pre pared child will make such progress that the difference In time of gradua tion is not likely to be noticeable; but, even if It should be a year or two later, what real difference would It make? Do we expect a normal plant to begin bearing fruit in a few weeks after it Is born? It must have time, ample time, to be prepared for the work before it. Above all else, the child must be a healthy animal. I do not work with diseased plants. They do not cure themselves of dis ease. They only spread disease among their fellows and die before their time. Luther Burbank in Nau tilus." Charles Reade's Method of Work. Read's literary work was, Sir Rob ert Anderson remarks, a rare combi nation of genius and plodding. A brass scuttle which stood by the fire place held the illustrated and other papers which reached him week by week. From there he culled anything! that took his fancy, and the cuttings were thrown into a companion scuttle, to be afterward inserted in scrap books, and duly Indexed. Materials for his novels and plays were thus sup plied or suggested. The accuracy of his descriptions of events and places was phenomenal. Westminster Ga zette. CLEAR-HEADED Head Bookkeeper Most Be Reliable. The chief bookkeeper in a large buslqess house in one of ' our great Western cities speaks of the harm cof fee did for him: "My wife and I drank our first cun of Poatum a little over two years ago. and we have used it ever since, to tha entire exclusion of tea and coffee. It happened In this way: "About three and a half years ago I had an attack of pneumonia, which, left a memento in the shape of dys pepsia, or, rather, to speak more cor rectly, neuralgia of the stomach. My 'cup of cheer' had always been coffee or tea, but I became convinced, after a time, that they aggravated my stom ach trouble. I happened to mention the matter to my grocer one day and he suggested that I give Postum a trial. "Next day It came, but the cook made the mistake of not boiling it sufficiently, and, we did not like it much. This was, however, soon rem edied, and now we like it so much, that we will never change back. Pos tum, being a food beverage instead of a drug, has been the means of curing; my stomach trouble, I verily believe, for I am a well man to-day and havw used no other remedy. I "My worl: as chief bookkeeper la our Co.'s branch house .here Is of a, very confining nature. During myt coffee-drinking days I was subject to nervousness and 'the blues' In addi tion to my sick spells. These have left me since I began using Postum; . and I can conscientiously recosjmend It to those whose work confines therm to long hours of severe mental exer tion." "There's a Reason." Look In pkgs. for the little book. "The Road to Wellville." Ever read the above letter? A newi one appears from time to time. TTaey are genuine, true, and full of ' tit tatorest, ,.:. , - .