-uJ5H5H5eSH5HSaSH5ESHSHSrV J -Harold's Scheme. By ELLA M. HESS. SSS2SH5HSH5E5ESH5H5E5S!? It was the most picturesque cot tage that fancy could depict; a cot tage with pointed gables, and deep 'bay windows, and broad verandas such as wealthy New Yorkers dwell In for the few summer weeks when Fifth avenue Is a wilderness and -the other fashionable resorts in that lo cality are deserted. Mrs. Julian Raymond, In a ravish ' Ing toilet of violet silk and old point '.ace, .sat out on the veranda, pouring ever a novel, Mr. Harold Coverdale, her brother, yawned, threw his weed over the rail of the porcn and contem plated the tips of his well shod feet. "It's a deuce of a bore, this summer cottage business," he said, at last. "How can you be so ungrateful, Harold," she remonstrated, "when we've taken the cottage and moved out here solely for your advantage?" "Come," said Mr. Coverdale, laugh ing, "that's expecting a fellow to be lieve a little too much." "Well, what else was it for?" "To be near Long Branch and the fashionable world, to be sure." "Exactly; and in order that you may make a desirable match, Harold -for really you must do something for yourself now. Mr. Raymond de clares he won't lend you another cop per." "But you'll let me have fifty or so, Alice there's a darling! " "I can't, Harold," persisted the sis ter, with an elevation of her eye brows. "I haven't a cent to spare; Mr. Raymond keeps me so dreadfully ehort." "That's all you have gained by mar rying money," sneered Harold, "and yet you expect me to do the same." "A man is different you know," Bald the millionaire's wife. "If once you marry an heiress you can do what you please with your money." "Do you refer to Mrs. Colby?" "I refer to Mrs. Colby." Mr. Coverdale made a slight grimace. "I hear she Is an ugly old crow," Bald he, with a motion of the mouth ss If he had been taking some disa greeable medicine. "Then you're very much mistaken," aid Mrs. Raymond, with something like animation. "She's not twenty five yet, and quite handsome, and she owns all the Colby estates in her own Tight; and if you don't marry her, after all the pains I've taken to in vite her here, you'll be the most un grateful fellow I ever heard of." "But suppose she won't marry me?" "There Is no danger of that," said Mrs. Raymond, Bmiling and shrug ging her pretty shoulders as Bhe looked up at her tall, handsome brother, who stood leaning his per fect head against the pillar of the porch. "Not if you play your cards veil, Harold." Mr. Cloverdale laughed and made II mock obeisance. "Much obliged to you, ma'am. And when, may I ask, do you expect this money-bagged widow to condes cend to come to a Long Branch cot tage?" "The day after to-morrow." "By train or boat?" "By boat. You'll have to go down to the landing to meet her and that reminds me, Harold." "Of something disagreeable, I am sure!" 'Well, no, it needn't be; only I want you to go down to the East End this afternoon, and bring up the new housekeeper that I advertised for. The Intelligence office peoplo tele graphed that she would be up this afternoon, and I declare I ha-1 nearly forgotten it." "Thank you. T. don't particularly care about driving up the Shore Drive with a fat, red-cheeked damsel at my Bide and two or three bandboxes be hind." "What nonsense, Harold! She Is no common servant. Sh'3 is a very respectable woman who las seen bet ter days." "It is a wonderful and unaccount able fact that they all !aave," sighed Mr. Coverdale. "However, I am at your service, Alice what must be, must be and I'll borrow Hal's wag onette for the occasion. One can stow way th everlastlnj; bandboxes to the best advantage in that, you know. m I'll go down now und stop at the hotel and play a f.ame of billiards wllh the boys before the train will ho In." "Deav, dear!" murmured Mrs. Raymond to hersdlf, as her eyes fol lowed the stately, well-built figure down the windii g path that led to the Shore Drie. "How I do wish he was estabKsl.rd In life! He's al ways borrowing: money and getting Into debt, and it Mr. Raymond should evsr Lear of chat forged check on the hank " But thern was no pitying pang In hor heart for her beautiful young rejioolmate. vhose life she was wlll- ' ing to sacrifice on the altar of her brother's 'jelfish and unprincipled greed? Not one. Mrs. Julian Ray mond was merely a fashionable wo man, and fashion has no soul. And while Mrs. Raymond glanced over the pages of her French novel, and Mr. Coverdale lost more money than he could well afford in the bil liard room of th, hotel, the boat was steadily gaining the dock; and Mrs. .Colby, in her neit, plain traveling dress, and the barege veil she wore to protect her eyes from the glaring sun, looked out at the grand outline of the beautiful bluffs and fast ap- . proaching shore, and smiled 'to think how completely she should take Alice Coverdale Raymond by surprise. "She don't expect me until Wediits day," said Mrs. Colby to her&elf. "What fun it will be!" , Her dark eyes sparkled mlscliler ously beneath her veil at the idea "I wonder," she thought, ur lu sciously following the tlncaf o! her own musings, "If Alice' brother is really so perfect and chlvalroust There are few of that type left in the world, and if I should meet my Ideal out here among the waves, It would be a life romance." "Boat in already!' You dJn't saj so! She made good lime," cried Mr. Coverdale, running down tho steps of the hotel, wiping the cigar s-xhes from his heavy mustache at the same mo ment. "Come on, Hal!" The passinpars were filing into the great four-horse r.tses which awaited the boat; but Mr. Coverdale, settled all perplex! ti'is by calling out "Any one here for the Locust Cot tage Mrs. Julian Raymond's." Mrs. Colby glr.nced ir,i In surprise. Could it be possible that Alice had fathomed her little scheme? "Yes," hesitated she, "I am." "Come on, then, ai;d don't stand staring all daj!" said Mr. Coverdale, with the scant allowance of courtesy he deemed sufficient for a working woman. She stepped in the convey ance unaided. "All right?" he impatiently shout ed, pulling the reins. "Now, Hal, you needn't throw away your cigar," as his companion glanced doubtfully at the veiled passenger. "She don't mind a little smoke, do you, Mrs. What d'ye call yourself?" Mrs. Colby sat in a maze. Was Bhe dreaming, or had this strange char ioteer gone mad? "Oh, you needn't be surprised," said Mr. Coverdale, checking a hic cough. "I'm Mrs. Julian Raymond's brother. She send me to meet you." "I am much obliged, I am sure," faltered Mrs. Colby; "but " "And I hope you'll do your best to keep your situation," went on Mr. Coverdale; "for my sister has had a deuce of a time with these Intelligent people." A comprehensive flash came Into Mrs. Colby's eyes. Mrs. Julian Ray mond's brother evidently mistook her for a servant, coming up in Bearch of a place. "But " she began hurriedly. It was no use. Her feeble attempts at explanation were drowned in the rattling of the wagonette wheels as Mr. Coverdale touched up the spirited horses. "Get up, Maud! Whoa, Nigger! riot a bad team of yours, Hal. I'll buy them of you at your own price when I'm married to the rich widow." "What rich widow?" asked Hal, lazily puffing away at his fragrant weed. Mrs. Colby held her breath. "Don't you know? Haven't you heard? But, honor bright, now, you're not to cut in and spoil my chances. It's one of Alice's old scbool friends Coalbln, or Coldslaw, or some Buch name as rich as an Astor, who's coming up from New Haven day after to-morrow. Con gratulate me." "What! Already?" "It's as good as done. . What's the old proverb? 'I came, I saw, I con quered!' Oh, there's not much doubt in the case, I flatter myself!" "Perhaps you won't fancy her." "She is not of much consequence, one way or the other; it's her money I mean to make love to Ha! ha! ha!" Then the conversation drifted oft upon the subject of the races. Mrs. Julian Raymond was on the piazza, when they drove up to tho door, in one of her ravishing toilets. "Hello, Al!" cried out her brother, checking the horses with a sudden Jerk. "Here's your housekeeper." "Why, she's been here these two hours!", said Mrs. Raymond, opening wide her wondrous eyes. "She came by way of the train. Who on earth have you got there?" "Only me," said Mrs. Colby, spring' ing out of the wagonette and throw ing back her veil, while a mischiev ous smile played around her pretty lips. "Kiss me, Alice. I hope you are agreeably surprised." Mrs. Julian Raymond sprang for ward to embrace her schoolmate. "Dearest Viola, I am so pleased! And you, naughty Harold," shaking her chubby fist at her brother, "are you in the plot, too?" No; Mr. Coverdale was certainly not in the plot, as his dropped under Jaw, staring eyes and sheepish counte nance plainly denoted as he bolted out of the room, unable longer to endure the sarcastic glitter of Mrs. Colby's eyes. "Hal," cried he to his friend, "hold on! Take me down to the hotel with you!" "What for?" "I've done It I've ruined my self!" "Are you crazy?" demanded Hal. 'No; but one would think I km! That that woman " "Well?" "She wasn't a servant at all; tie was the rich widow Mrs. Colby ho self!" Hal whistled and looked shocked. 'Yes," said he, "you have done ii! There can be no doubt on that sub' Ject. Come with me." So the two men drove away. Mrs. Colby stayed a coupl9 oi weeks at the cottage with her eld schoolmate. Mr, Coverdale never showed himself in all this time, and the rich widow knew that she had escaped the snare of a fortune hunter. Waverley. It is probable that the populatloe of the earth has doubled since 1 SO J. Man The By Dr. William HERE Is not a secret In Nature, except himself and what he ii which he will not, unaided, find out sooner or later, and then do with as he flues. Talk of his being of material origin who is now sharply cross-questioning matter Itself, about what it Is. and eliciting the answer that it is nothing T J II but vibrations, which he calls electrons, and which he will II yet cause to dance to his will! Man is destined to be the JJ only wonder left In this world, because by his discoveries he soon makes all Nature's wonders commonplace. Who wonders now at that miracle, wireless telephony? Hence, though he may yet likewise explain all the other mysteries of Nature, he will himself remain unaccountable except as a witness to the unseen reality of realities Mind. It is this transcendence above Nature which suggests the explanation of the evil in the natural world from its remote beginning till now. The en trapping spider, the subtle serpent, the ferocious beast, and every cruel ani mal are but weak counterparts of what man can be and has been. It was fitting, theveforo; that originally he should belong to a world which should foreshadow him in so many ways as the Natural Man of the earth earthy in nature and in spirit. But a last Man appears as Homo Sapiens, the prince of peace in a warring world. What Is that wisdom which made him so and endowed him with all rule? It lies in that exclusively human power which can resist the gratification of immediate natural impulse for the sake of a dis tant good. Man alone, therefore, can be really educated, and again educated. To a being so endowed there Is no limit to his rising from a lower level to a higher. But education is always slow and often grievous, as the school boy knows when told to study and not play. If, instead, he will play, sorrow awaits him in after years, because he ill then betoo deficient In knowledge and the power which conies by education to get his living except by the cheap animal Labor of his muscles. ' But as with the individual, so with the race. A progressive training which bears all the signs of ancient Purpose Is slowly educating the human world not to yelr, as of old, to self-assertion, that cause of all evil In heaven as well as on earth, but to prefer Instead to obey the divine law of self-control and self-sacrifice. Everybody's Magazine. QGVitw file wiQC3 Self 'Centred Woman By Winifred Black l i 1 I t KNOW a young married woman bright as a new penny, pretty as a colored photograph and full of life and fun of living. She went to a new town to live not long ago, and at first she was the rage. Every one called, every one fell in love, every one raved. "fln nrottv " ? itXttttt "So bright." "So full of fun," And then nobody called any more, except the Ill-natured and the gossips, who were not tolerated anywhere else. Then the Invitations began to sag, and then everybody eald no more about the young married woman, and she dropped Into a rather neglected wholly lonely, and pretty miserable life. Her husband eaw that his wife was popular no longer, and he began to look for the reason and find fault mentally. "I guess she Isn't as pretty as she looks to me," he said to himself. "No body else seems to admire her and her temper certainly is bad." The young married man's relations came to visit, and they wondered and raised their eyebrows, and the young married woman eald she couldn't bear the town and that there wasn't an interesting person in it and she wanted to go home, so there. And it was all because she didn't know enough to curb her tongue. Every time she went to a party she had a great time making fun of every one there. At first her partners laughed, but when the next partner laughed the last partner looked uneasy and never asked the young married woman with the penchant for satire to dance again. Every time the yotong married woman went to pay a visit she took up halt the time talking about the last person at whose house she called. She laughed at their ideas or Imitated their little peculiarities, and somehow the visit was never returned. And she really Isn't vicious and cruel or malicious at all; she's Just foolish and light-headed and self-centred so she's shunned and olnely and un popular an she wonders why. I don't do you? New York American Jt JDig issue Be j ore Lon gress By George EENLY-allve to the platform pledges of the Republican par ty, President Taft has made it clear that he is determined to see postal savings-banks made a reality, in accordance with pledges to the people. Seven hundred and sixty-sis million four hundred and seventy-four thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars of deposits in the postal banks of the United Kingdom, to the credit of nearly eleven million depositors in 1907, sug ted gests the enormous fund which will be created when the $60(,000,000 now hoarded In this country, plus the accounts of smaller and more timid depositors in commercial banks, are enabled to gain entire secur ity by tho guaranty of Uncle Sam. The deposits In the postal banks of Italy, In 1907, amounted to $273, 702,695, an increase in ten years of over $160,000,000. Nearly five millions of people have postal deposits In Italy, and It has been found that millions of dollars In savings have been sent from the United States to Italy, and other European countries, for deposit in the postal banks, because Uncle Sam has, so far, failed to make any provision to care for the savings not Intrusted to banks. Not less than $8,000,000 in one year has been sent from the United States in money orders, much of it for deposit and safekeeping in postal systems. Most of these money orders are bought In the states of Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Ohio, Oregon, Texas and Washington. The World To-Day. America's nay in l y Paul S, IIILE American capital Wthe nitrate regions, the indications art not wanting mat m tne development of general mining in Chile It will take a lcad II ' 1- rri 1 .. 1 t n.ij . 1. .1 .... 1 .... . .... . lug rule. iiiero iti aisu a, git-ai uciu lut mo uevi-iuimitrm ui American Import trade in general machinery and textiles. In timber and manufactures of wood, In wagons and agricul tural machinery, in paper, and in the lesser manufactures of steel and iron. The opening of the Panama Canal ought to give our manufacturers a considerable advantage In the way of steamship rates over their European competitors, but here, as in oth er parts of South Aemrlca, we cunnot hope to build up a commerce at long range. It will be necessary for us to interest ourselves personally in these regions and assist in their dsvelopment, by Investing capital, to study them In personal visits and by sending agents and representatives. It is only in that manner that the nation can got a share of Chilian commerce and Industry commensurate with its industrial and capitalistic Importance. The World To-Day. , Only Mystery ? Hanna Thornton every one said. H. Currier . 5? OpportU' 5 Lniie Reinsch Is not much interested thus far In THE LATEST TRIUMPH OF I THE MONO-RAIL ABROAD Nearly two years have passed since Mr. Louis Brennan displayed before a bod? of English engineers a working model of a railway car exemplifying the features of the gyroscopic mode f locomotion. He has now demon itrated In a fashion quite conclusive (o the scientific press of Europe that all the claims then made for the mono-rail are practically realized. Intense interest has therefore been awakened in the prospect of soon pro pelling railroad cars on a single line of rail laid on the ground. They will be maintained upright by means of gyroscopic control, and, in the light of the demonstration Just made, they will turn sharp curves and ascend steep gradients. Apart from ihis gy roscopic control, the railroad cars would capsize. Mr. Brennan imparts stability to his vehicles, as London Engineering notes, through the same principle which we see on its grandest scale when Nature steadies tho move ments of the heavenly bodies in their orbits. The earth revolves on Its THE MIRACLE OP BALANCE. Turning a corner with the utmost ease and at considerable speed during the experiments in England a few weeks ago, the Brennan mono-rail demon strated before a large party of engineers the feasibility, from a commercial standpoint, of this gyroscopic mode of locomotion. The tests were con ducted with the greatest ease, owing to the perfection attained in the bal ancing mechanism, which remains perfectly under the control of the op erator. The cost of construction of railroads per mile will be reduced one half by this invention, and the cost of operation by fully two-thirds. own axis, our contemporary explains, says, Current Literature, "in the same direction as you deal a hand at cards or pass the port, from right to left." It also moves on Its orbit around the sun in the same direction. "But besides these two movements there is a third, which was discovered by the Greek astronomer, HIpparchus, who lived in Blthynla about 160 to 125 B. C. He made several important contributions to scientific knowledge, but by far' the most valuable one, which he must have obtained by an alyzing the Chaldean observations re corded for the previous 1500 years, was that the axis of the earth has a special top-like motion known as 'precession' In the opposite direction to that in which the earth itself ro tates. It you mount a gyroscope, or magic top (a flywheel within a ring), upon a long pair of spindle-legs with pointed extremities, which will not hold themselves upright when the fly wheel Ib at rest, you will find that rotating the flywheel keeps the whole structure steady. By degrees, of course, the outer circle increases its precession to a point at which a fall Is inevitable; but, as Lord Kelvin pointed out, 'hurry on the precession and the top rises.' That is to say, In this kingdom of anomalies we are Investigating, if you Increase a move ment which would, unaided, ha-e pro duced a fall, you actually prevent that fall from taking place. "The peculiar property of 'gyro static domination' has been known, therefore, to exist. But Mr. Brennan Is the first to investigate fully those stresses which it causes In the spindle legs of the Instrument I have de scribed, and ho Is the first to discover a practical way of automatically 'hur rying the precession' in a manner which enables a machine containing his invention to keep its own balance under all conditions. CERTAINLY NOT! Costumer (to customer) "You ft?.;strtnt, belrg only a poor vorklng 'Jv 'iijrosa that you c.r.9." Criminals and Drink., Dr. Albert Wilson, $the brain spe cialist, described the result) of his recent work in a leeture betore the members of the Society for th Study of Inebriety recently. "Although alcohol is so gteat a ) problem in crime, I could fill the,' platform with criminals who are tee totallers," said Dr. Wilson. "A par- ' tlcularly accomplished criminal told me the other day that he must keep entirely away from drink when plan ning a crime. Another, however, said that he required a little stimu lant Just to help him carry out a 'Job. " Dr. Wilson told a story of Berry, the late executioner. After carrying Hilt flva Vl 11 n n f 1 n.nnntlnn. X, A lia came so sympathetic toward criml nals that he gave up hanging and e came a temperance missionary. Talk ing of the magnitude of crlme, fhe lecturer said that a million persons are arrested in this country every year. Three hundred ' thousand, equal to the population' of a large town, are sent to prison, while crime rnnta 110 -PAnnnnftfl a voar Tjinnnn Dally Mall. ' Dickens' Last Words, The most Interesting person at tho recent Dickens Bazaar at Caxton Hall was Miss Georglna Hogarth. Miss Hogarth is 84. She was a child when she went to live under the roof of her brother-in-law, Charles Dickens, and she remained a member of hl household till the final summons came to the great novelist. She was with him when he was struck down. " His last words were "On the ground." She alone heard them. It Is generally supposed that Miss Hogarth was in Dickens's mind when he Jolted down in his notebook the following outline of a "character" for future use: "She sacrificed to children, and sufficiently rewarded. From a child herself always 'the children' (of somebody else) to en gross her. And so it comes to pass, that she Is never married; never herself has a child; is also devoted to 'the children' (of somebody else); and they love her; and she has al ways youth dependent on her till her death and dies quite happily." Lady's Pictorial. Comparisons Are Dangerous. "A chap told me this morning that I looked the Image of you." , Where is the idiot? I'll pound) the life out of him." "Too late. I killed him." New York Times. Not a ltoston Expression. She "That's Mr. Osborn over there. He married a million." He "You don't say. Well, that beats Solomon to a frazzle." Boston Transcript. In Louisiana the law permLta a widow to marry again only provided Bhe has waited until ten months after the death of her husband. must consider, also, madame, tha: tt girl, cannot give that air of dlUw,.V A.