PRO: Ao WRI RA Youma may worty over God's grinding laws, on tay pro probe and probe for the great d pry and look Bua ha fe with an babes hill] Hf self forget ¥ wa on a oy ot ts moody i * you Hiithe as | Tie plan | is simple the then # n wee oi Throught tru smallest in 1 tei at his heart a sharp palo 1 like the plercing of a kuife This restored him to his full reason, Jama he repeated to himself a thousand times that never would Olka's father | ‘give his daughter to a vagrant, and 8 | that be had better think no more of | the young girl. This was easily sald, | ¢ | but the knife had penetrated so deeply | s | that the strongest pincers could not | have withdrawn it. Olka, on her side, at first had loved { Klen's muste, then she had loved the ‘musician. That penniless fellow, queer with wildlooking eyes, dark complex. fon, with clothes always too narrow | ‘aod too short, with long and thin legs like those of a stork. had at last be | come dear to her. The father, though “My danghter will have no trouble to fie | ind better.” he declared. “Does not jevery one admire her beauty? She will never be reduced to accept a man on id | whose arm she would be ashamed to present herself” It wan, then, with 1} grace that he | pened his door to the musician—which | did pot often happen. But the death of Micinitzkl changed everything. . As ad ¢ | woon ax Kien had signed his contract with the curate he hastenad to an. ‘nonnce it to Otka. The father for the $ | flest time invited him to sit down and t offered bim one after another several Hite Klnsses of rum. And when the g girl came in he gravely told her that I a lan Kien was wing toben gentleman-~much better, the first In 3 Ponlkia, after the dean Then, also for the first time, the mu. stelan had been suthorized to remain near Olka from noon untfl evening, {and night was coming as he returned | to Ponlkla with the snow crackling un- | der hin foet, The frost was sharp, but Kien had never bien so happy, and he felt very warm at heart 1a recalling the dents of that Gecizive day, _Ajong the deserted road, to the flelda buried onder the snow, hb carried his od a Joy like a light across the intreasing Lowa bad told him sweetly. “With you 1 1 would go heyond the scan, to the end in | of the world! But for father it is bet had | ter that your position bs settled.” Then bo Ma kissed ber bands relig. . ously, murmuring: | "Olka, dear hiv may G God retarn to ri ft over, he was mote] at big own toolishies? He vg | ought to hive said Bi LR, Aer ently; omitted this, added at, and { particularly atswersd better fo fo (m- portant a declaration; think of a young girl telling a Young man that, If it was not for her father shoe would follow i him oll over the world! It seemed to . | him that both were walking together on the white rond. This did not pres vent him from hurrying hls steps, ay | the snow was cracking in a manner “ mor and my re alas § 1 »ifo! my olka! i freasure, sou are going to be a lady, my lady? His heart swelled with gratitude, Ha! bad she really been near him how { he would have pressed her in his arms with all his might! This is, yes, this ts what he ought to have done one hour before at Zagrab! Bot it Is always so. | At certain mowents one feels dizzy, and the tongue goes astray precisely .{ when It ought to say so many, many things. Decidedly it ls much more easy to play on the organ than to ex- press In worda what one has In one's 14 { Beart. In the cold rky the stars began to . {twinkle with a sparkling light, Rlen felt that his ears burned, To gave time ihe took a small, familisr path across fields. Hig shadow lengthened funnily on the white earth. “1f 1 played on my ute it might re- vive my fingers.” A few sharp notes flew away In the night, They seemed dike birds frizhiened by the surround. 1 Ing silence, the intense frost, and the shroud which covered the land. And up | Kien modulated the gayest tunes of her | his repertoire, those Olka had asked him to play in accompaniment to ber small volce. An old song, called “The Green Pitcher,” had particularly pleased the father and the daughter. It was a dia- rom | logue between a lord and a maiden. rd. Which began thos: “Ha! my green nitcher, The rd has broken 1t!* And the lord answered; “Do not ery, chill; 1 shall pey for thy broken pitcher!” Olka, of comrse, figured the maiden { with the green pitcher, and Klen the Jord. This prodigiously amused the | old workingroan, {| And now, along the little path across Sed, | Rien, With an ecstatic smile, {hardly move kis lips. An impression | he himself also had often empty pock. feta, did mot wish to hear anything of ie | Klien, eal differences (nn the cast of thelr eyes, | fore Irving down, and other interesting way of carryibg thelr tails low, almost which retain many of thelr racial char and Newfoundinnds effect a curve over not ahweys trace the path. He allowed himsell to be directed by chance, Then bo tumbled at every step, burying his ong legs in some unseen diteh : The stars sparkled still colder, end then the wind rose again. Klen was fn | vould not feel his fingers snd econld of overwhelming solitnde dawned upon Bim, He thought of the well-heated house which was ready for Mm sat Ponikla: then of the one where be bad spent the afternoon. “Ola must have retired at this home, and, thank God, under ber roof ft is warm.” The cerialaty that Olka was warm mute him happy. but caused Mm to suffer from the cold still more, He had pissed the fields and was stepping through prairies bristling with bushes. He was so tired that bs thought only of sitting down, no mat- ter where, 1 am golig to rest a moment againgt the wind, nenr these bushes. My! Xo! 1 should free on the spot.” He walked agalo-not much Ex. hausfed, he lit himself fall down. "IL 1 sleep, 1 am lost” He stretched his erellds, shook his arma, moved his fingers, nunfastenesd Lis lips and played on his ote the first notes of “The Green Pitcher” A few thin sounds rose In the joy night, and dled away, slow and melancholy, Klien let fall hia flute, but enntinued to struggle against the unconquerahle stumber. He felt astonished to le alone In that desert of snow, “Olka! Where are you? bs mur mired. He moved once more his fingers, | openad once more his eyes, and whis pered: “Olka™ Dawn lightened: near & bush of broom, a human form with long and thio legs, A flute lay by its side. The bluish face wore still an expression of wotiler and attentivn. Klea died In listening to the old og: “Ha! my The } lord aa bad broken 4 gf Une: wily Gov aa haa Yha Tate of fthe ror A writer In tracing the ancestry of the dng to wolf and jackal notices typl. thelr body eolors and markings, the In | habit of turning around three times be peculiarities, but be does not mention the most striking and infallible way of distingulshiing them, namely, by the fashion In which they carry thelr talla Wolves and coyotes have a snesakiog banging on the ground. while dogs earry thelr talls ap, and the further ree moved they ate from the general type, says Charles Hallock, the higher they carry them. Shepherds and eoliles, acteristies, carry their talls lowest of | nil; setters and poitters, a few degrees higher, stiffening out straight thelr tails to the spinal Hne; Ht Bernards the back, while prigs actually come to a full twist. An old plalnsman could tell | fn wolf or coyote as far as he could see him, and In buffalo days this was n most useful indiention of buffalo berds | belog not far away. These predatory creatures always followed a Sowing : herd. Philadelphia Réeord.™ = Reminder of Britiah Vandsiem, A vivid reminder of the burning of | the Capitol by the British in 1514 came | to hand recently in the repairs which | are being made in the document room | uf the House of Representatives. This | , root 1s 4 thoeve-cornered space Io the northwest corper of the old hall of the House, or Statuary Hall, as it 1s called | new. In making the repairs the old | i window sashes were taken out. Un» | derveath waa a charred window cass, aml when that, too, had been removed | there was & quantity of lead found; | the oll window weight had been melt : ed in the fire and rua down into the | crevice of the stone wall, Thix was | dog out by Joel Grayson, and is being preserved by him as a memento. The | window sashes were covered with a coat of dirty white paint, but thelr | welght attracted the attention of the workmen, amd the paint was scraped | off sufficiently to show that they Were solid mahogany, showing that nothing | wis thought tw good to use in the org. | inal construction of the Capitol. ~Washs | ington Star. The British Beat Us. It tan’t often that a British boat crew ; heats an American; the balance of vies | tory bangs heavily on our side, but re | cently in Spdney the Yankee facklies got an awl walleping. Some months | ago the supply ship Glacier made ber i regular call at Sydoey for a cargo of | meat for the Philippines. la the hare Gor lay the British flagship Royal Ar- | thur, and the crew of the Glacier chal- | lenged her crew to a boat race. While | the conditions were being talked over | it eame time for the American ship to leave 80 the race was postpohind, Aes ‘ Giiaeler got back to Manila she got the cording to Britlsh reports shen the ticked onrsmen In dhe Ameriean fleet | 0 take back to 8yduey with her. The day of the race was made almost a bel. ¥ In Bydpey. Practically all the Pown was on the water or on land where they could see the gport, snd | when the Britishers beat the Yankees by ten lengths In two mies bedlam rifgned. — New York Commercial Ade vertiser. Bad Iorestmonis et-rich-guish monrriapges usuaily hare tie same wind-up as the other invests monte of the same kind.—New York | I ut ath that 5 ow than on the roads and that he could | +, perspiration, but he shivered. He tried | once more to play on his Gute. But he 4 enurl the tips of his right hand aronod against the wood, He was xo finely poled that a Teather-welzht would j amid the cheers of some and the groans of others, he entered the burn Meckling her skirts, A rope with which then with a last tremendons effort he BUH t Home Companion, {and only forty-five. He has been a solitier, a salior, a walter on the Bow Levy. a ship's stewnrd, an actor and a “! tursed out, but as I was leaving the | | returned to the harbar, laden, gol ithe enemy in Jers than a mile, and Cwithont an Iostant's hesitation and - Richmond.” A PIREM N'8 HEROISM. Os. HE act of Dennh Ryer stands out In splendid iso lation. Ryer rescued a woman from the sixth " Mary of a burning alld. tng, He dashed into the adjoining tenement, and ran wp the states to a window on the rixth floor. Horrified, | the crowd saw him rest one foot on the | coping below his window, and reach | with his right hand for the window In | Which the woman stood. Bat he could | not make it; be could barely tonch the edge of the casing with the tips of his fingers. Some ornamental iron piplog separated the buildings, and this he bad practically to straddle. It seemed an impassalile barrier, but Ryer| Stretched forth hie right foot, barely | plating his toes upon the desired cop ing He was suspended six stories up, with only one band grasping the casing ~4 none toofirm bold — and this he knew he must gradually release as he extindad bis reach to the other win | dover. By working the fingers of his left hand fron groove to groove he was enabled to move over and cantionsiy the edge of the easing of the burning window, antl] he was held from falling | by the pressure of lils bent fingertips bare unbalanced him. Little by little Ryvr worked the fingers of his right hand along ont he got a sigh. hold on the inside of the window, and then, ing room. There he found the woman anconscious on the floor, the flames sortie citizens hind stteropted the poor erefiture’s rescues dangled from the roo! In front of the window, Basizing this, Ryer passed it twice around the woinan's body under her arma, and mais the other end fast about his own waist... Then he lowered her from the window, and himself straddling the sill, brought the sash down upon his leg, #0 88 to hold Wmself from falling With wonderful muscular power he be: £81 to swing the woman like a pendn lumi Back and forth she went over the beads of the horror stricken crowd. projected the woman inte the out stredehed arma of some firemen {8 the window which be had quitted—Wormm- A STRENUO US LIFE. Tord Lyveden, who is to bring over 8 party of Parliamentarians this fail And show then the United States and Cariada, 1s big and tall and vigorous rursery man. ( Lyveden was ua clergyman’s son. As Percy Vernon he enlisted In the arti. lery. but bought himself ont and Joined Mr. Baneroft's Haymarket company in Lotdon for a time. Twenty years ago be came to this city with $18 easd capital and became a Bowery walter, Presently be turned up In Charlotte, N. CO. without money. “Like a young fool” he says, according to M. A. VP. *f went to the best hotel and stayed three days. 1 had po money and was | Goor & clerk pressed fifty cents into toy bard, saying, ‘1 guess you'll want 3 , bed tonight, old man’ 1 lodged over a #labie and tn the morning got work ving a carriage. Eventually the {| hotsl Keeper became tiy partner and ‘ beat friend.” In 15850 Mr. Vernon returned to Eng t land, married and started In the nur | gery business, origluating a tomate, | but the enterprise failed and he sailed as third steward on an Irish gea boat, | as aesistant steward on the uulieRy { City of Paris, and ss bedroom stew ard on the steamship Nide, salling to | the Brazils. I's Buenos Ayres ho contracted vel low fever, and on Lis recovery he be eating galoon steward in the Isle of Man service. He served (wo seasons twith this company, then lstsed the ¢ Polytechnle stegm yacht Ceylon as | entot steward. Afterwanl, employing hls own pame, he beesme caterer on the Fotor as (we were In over twenty facing the enemy for eighteen Lowes | foneeit out of Linn He blgidersd like fame to the conclusion that he was guard saw General Grant with his stall aporoaching he sald to Biv men: “Tarn ing general of the Federal army” The engagements), the adjutant, sergeant, | major, captaing and Hentenants gener | thelr hands and empty cartridge boxes The boys were in the hadit of saying know they did It from choles. As the come ap from the ranks, they felt more | af home in a fight with rifles than with | swords. battle often joked with each other to ‘keep up hele conrage Af that time © had a very full eye-an ox eye the boys called ft-and 5s 1 was one of the shortest men in the company. | came, fs a rale, next to our it guile, old Jerry B, whose face showed how he felt when the bullets began to fiy. But no matter how badly seared Jerry was, he always called my attention to the fact that my eyes were sticking ont so | that he could bang biz hat on them. This was said to me a hundred times, and & hundred times I told Jerry that if he was half as seared ae | was bo | ‘would ran” Chicago Inter-Ocean. THE BULLY WEAKENED, the. When the assault was ordered | we were directed to He down, that the advancing Hine might run over use Then we were to rally on the reserve, eighty rods to the rear. To roach the Pestrve wo had to cross an open field | over which bullets ween flying ke | ball, Even fn that crisis 1 hesitated to run the eighty rods, fearing that after would get a bullet In my back. So X sidestepped that eighty rods and was angled at by the boys who made a iyniek ron. “We had in our regiment one of the ldsiyle bulites, who made a good dea! | nf noise In battle. Ho was always | urging our boys and shouting threats to the encioy. Most of the younger en in the reginwnt thought the loud tixlker was a great fighter, but at Fredo irierstarg Re received a slight flesh wound In the leg which took all the $ whipped boy undér his trifting seennd, while dozens of men with aerte tas wounds stood grim and stlent, fighting to the last. We never could et our bully juto another fight. and brave through Ignorance, and that hen Le learned from experience that tadleta would hurt be lost his nerve" Correspondence Chleago inter Ocean. IN CIVIL WAR DAYS, ‘Out in Chattancogs they teil this story of Civil War days: Chatiancoza Creek was the dividing lhe between the outposts of the Federal and Cone fiderate armies. and during « Mil in hostilities the pickets of both cultivar 2d ons aoothet’s acquaintance, having agreed not to five on one another, One day when the captain of the Union aut the guard for the commanding gen | eral” The Confederates on the other side of the ermek, not more than Afty feet away, beard the order, and thelr captain, conceiving the Kea of paying A compliment to the enemy, shouted: "Tom ot the roard for the command. ragged Confederate DMekets stood at | attention for several moments, and then saluted Grant aa be rods away. A DRAMATIC BEPRIEJE On the stage It happens that the Lore Ip reprievest at the eleventh hosr when an the sesllabl, and there are raves pe. cprded in history, Few, however, have | heen so close to death an Joo Campbell, a negro, Who had been condemned to death for murder at Yazoo City, Mo. The negro had the halter about his Doek, and the trap door was ready to | he sprang open, Campbell then tarned fis the sheri® aml confessed the name nf his accomplice. He was (natantly neprieved.~ New York Commercial Ade yertiser. Philosophy of Ballway Ernkes. Tae fundtmental principle governs ig the application of the brake to a SRE, SAFE an enginedr who has recently vestigated the subject, is to stop the Hamburg Harwich line, © thon hp resigned before be suceeded to pl the title. as : In 1580 Led Lyvede on wag nn Char Fh by Centon, UI was then oe parter in ot di gmnll fehing boat” be rays “andl os we | ovity the bar we al wy BIE enor sit 2nd rhe Bont wen The three bade ond mors tanale énoueh fo be res lost everyibing. To a rus ke cane Bn FRIGHT IN BATTLER “A most npusual thing” said the ser | gent, “happensd in ovr company in} West Virginia, There bod been a shire mish in the mountains acrees the river | from camp and our company wis or dered up the road. We found sigus of | fisaily heard the nolse of a heavy ad vansing column Tha company was | pastad to command the mountain read, ard the captain wilh two men went | forward to reconnolter. They eam, 8t a sharp turn of the road. pot ten yands | avay, face to face with the enemy's advance guard, sud the captain, who wis carryieg a musket, blazed away killed the officer in command of the | eriemy. Thereupon the Confederates threw themselves bodily on the captain and his two men and all were sent to “I suppose said the corporal by : ay 1 be Stop vend a8 anickly as is sone Le | Vas it suy 0.7 efficiency Ww i Hy putting th | comparime & Hand brakes am Fir powerful enough {0 secure veclect zlarg of the polat where the wheels HOW sip or “ski” When this Furs It fot eddy Uattens the wheel, effective. Braking ceases. “Bid. Ta Ent not to occur In by th o van of sam] Jars t bie [see goers’ safely, even, the vars stop bw iy for cafelony, 4nd “it looks” as an electrien] journal, sind inerpgse In Torake Volmve to be fallowed ss eenters into padded | fisgmd to be gulls effective, and most af the brakes on troller cars are hand salely. —8peces, Two Cents For 8 Masher. American women whe complain of the apnoyasee of professional mashers Hy the steels of Purls nifght profit fram an experience © beard a boight hperican girl relate the other day She ir walking along in the dayiime, apcempanind by another girl, amd no thwd 3 man following ther, An des i struek her. Reaching in ber purse she | food a small plecs of white paper, then looked around shyly. The masher, the paper she bad in her band. In. stead, however, of receiving the little! elf clutching two sous (two cents) Needless to say, be did not follow | brevet, “that the aptaia hobo eriticiend | Furties-New York Herald. that the shoulder straps pioke ed wi rifles to keep np thelr courage, but we | anost of the conimissioned oficers Bad | “It is true, nevertheless, that men mi _ "At the battle of Fredericksburg our | ‘regiment was on the skirmish Hos for | RB ‘eighteen hours, and hard st it all the | § smrouraged, caught up and grasped at | tote evidently expected he found him. " Lally came out of a fight with rifles in| THE HERG OF THE HOUR. ou Wht to Honies bam arid He gladly lots vou. Sau ae He auiies and shakes vos by the band And then forgets I i : won = be singin Star. pERP MoU RNINO, Mrs. Jone $a to be Eearthroken over her hmshand's death” ; “Xow, oven hor Nalr baw arsed black : aguin."~Brooklya Life i SR RE DEVOTED, She--“You say you are devoted fo art. What ls the particviar art that you love hest? He~"Thou art. "= Kinsas City Times. cot LD MOVE The Exasperated One—"1I'm afraid, air, this town lsn't big enough to old both of as!” The Imperturbalibe—"H'm—why don't yor start & suburb ~ Tit Rite, HER DEVOTED KNIGHT. *1 alt't got no coat to lay down for you to walk on, like that feller in the sory books, bot I'l! be hanged if I'm a goin’ ter be beat in periiteness Ly a farpiner anyway “—New York Times MATTER OF SEX. Bhe—"At the conclusion of an arg tant Between a mag and 8 womss the min is stlenced if not convinesd ” Ife-"Yes, and the woman iv con Yiticed, but never silenced.”—Chicago News AN ULTIMATUM, Mrs, Enpeck—“Henry, are you going to put np that shelf today or mot ™ Enpeck—"Wall, my dear, you soe" Mra Enpeck-"That will ¢o. now. Either put up or shut up." hicago News, SH NOT A GOLD MINE "But I don’t belleve™ he sald. “that & man profits by bis mistakes.” “Nou don't” “No. I don’t. Why. I've made enough mistakes to be rich if I conld prose by thm. "Chicago Post. SOMEWHAT DIFFERENT. “Why, George, what an enormous pile of letters” exclaimed the bride of a ‘week. “Billets doux, I suppose.” “No, my dear,” replied the other half of the sketch. “They are billles overs doe"~ Chicago News. Wr————— HARMONY DESIRED. Knippe~""Why did Johusen hire all south portly people for his servants?” Tucique~"He says that Ms wife ine | plated upon having them like that so they would match ber new heavy din In-room farnitare. "Sram Herald BEOPORIFIC, Mrs, Sharpe~"My bushan®'s heon troubled with tnsomnta terribly of late, but he got some sound sleep last ahh 4 Mra Nexdore—-"Some new med eine? Mra. Sharpe-"Well. yes. I told him § was sure I heard burglary down gtitirs."—Philadeiphia Press BYohuny, what's become of the jam? “Goes, mia t—-New York Journal ALL MARKED DOWN, "0b, yes, le's saved a good many Rees. ™ “Then 1 suppose he bas saved a good j Gal of money, of" “No, he’s poor.” “That's strange. How about the rewards from the grateful people he has pulled out of the water MOb, the trouble with them la that they put their own waluation on the Booda saved."~Clevetand Plain P——