BOYHOOD RECOLLECTIONS. 1 recollect my childhood days; I recollect the school here I was licked and frequently informed I was a fool, I recollect the babbling brook, the miller’s dripping wheel, And likewise I recall to min I recollect my sweet first lov: Whene'er 1'd ask ber for a kiss she'd ban d the stone-bruise on my heel, e, the fairest of the flock; me with a rock, 1 recollect the picnic grove where I would sometimes play, But where they'd never 'et v I recollect the village folks me go when it was picnic day. , 80 hearty and so hale; 1 recollect they always said that I'd wind up in jail, I often run my train of thou I love to recollect those day ght on recollection’s track— s, but I don’t want 'em back! ~ Philadelphia Bulletin, GER RRARINL ARRAN ARARERRTERRRRRRNR RRS GROMER ARERR RRR RRR RR RRR The Professor and the Tiger SESE ERTAR RARE EARNER RRR ENRRR VERA “p a woman, a -» - SOERRRRAEE RRR ERA RRR ROAR RTS - » Strensasnrensrsnstnenne -» By J. Sackville : Martin } CEREAARRRRIEERRRRORREES RERARERERERRSARRREERER ENON SE000 EEE EEEEISRERES TERSSEES TERRES FEEEEESEERRSETES Shortly afterward we put to sea. Ior the next few days we had the best of weather and everything went smoothly, I had my time pretty well taken up with my work, but for all that 1 could see one or two things that set me thinking. The first was that the old man was making himself uncommonly attentive to Miss Sandford. The sec- ond was that this Mr. Hay in a quiet and timid sort of way, was thinking a good deal of her too. Hoskins saw quickly enough that he had a rival, but as he had started off with a healthy contempt for him, he didn't disturb Limselt over and above muck. For my part I thought the girl fancied Hay rather thaa Hoskins; and though she couldd’t avoid the old man, and could not help listening to his sea yarns, I could see her eyes turning forward toward the waist, where Hay was put- ting in his time looking at the tiger. One afternoon the skipper was sit- ting beside Miss Sandford on the poop deck when Hay came up the compan- ion and made his way toward them. “There's something I want to teil you, captain,” he said. “It's getting on my mind and making me quite un- comfortable. That man whose busi: ness it is to look after the tiger isn't doing his work properly. The animal isn't getting enough 100d. It is devel- oping a savage nature. And yesterday, when 1 wen: to see the man about it, I found that he was irtoxicated. I really think you should interfere.” Of course, the old man should have interfered. But he didn't like being told his duty by the little professor, e¥pecially when the girl was about. So Le just sneered. “I suppose you're escaping?’ he said. “I should certainly regard it as ua- fortunate,” the little man replied. “You see, a drunken man mignt be careless about the fastenings. I must really ins upon your spezking to Lim.” “e's not one of my crew,” said Hoskins. “I have enough to do to look after them. If any of them get drunk, they'll hear of it. But this chap is a passenger, even if he is only a steer- age one. He can do a3 he likes with his spare time. If you're so blamed frightened about the beast you'd bet- ter look to the fastenings ycurself.” “Kxcuse me,” said the professor stifily, “that is not my business. The animal does not belong to me. I have done what I believe to be my duty. 1 can say no-more.” He turned away without even a glance at the girl. “That man,” said Hoskins, looking after him, “is frightened at his own shadow: Let me give you a bit of father'y advice, Miss Sandford. When you are looking for a man to marry, never marry a coward. A girl like you wants some one who will protect you in time of danger; some one she can rely on and look up to.” “I'm not thinking of getting mar- ried,” she said shyly. “But when I do I'll bear your advice in mind, captain.” “That's it,” said Hoskins. “Think over it carefully. And as for getting married, I'd be glad if you'd think over that. too.” She started like a frightened horse. “Oh, captain!” she said. “I don't understand. What do you mean?” “You do understand,” he said ten. derly, drawing his chair a bit nearer to her. “Miss Sandford! Hilda! Haven't you a word for a poor old seaman who worships the very ground you tread on? Think it over. None but the brave deserve the fair, you know.” “You mustn't speak like this,” she exclaimed, rising as though she was distressed. “You are older than [ am. And I don’t know that you are a brave man. I have only your word for it. Please don’t speak to me about this again.” The old man saw that he had gone a little bit too far. “Wait!” he said; “don’t be fright- ened. I promise not to say a word until we reach England. Before we get there, if we bave a bit of rough weather, I'll show you tLe sort of man [ am. I should love a bit of-danger for your sake.” afraid .f the beast It’s natural to them. But with A man ought to ” BERRA ERRR Erk Sarthe tbh bbb hed LAVERY, doctor (said my B friend, the third officer), isn’t such a simple thing as you think it. One man is brave in one way, and another in a different one. Often enough, that which is called bravery is nothing more than custom. You wouldn't go up on the fore-royal-yard in half a gale to reef sail, would you? Not rou! You'd be afraid. Well, you might think me a brave man because I would. But then 1d be afraid to cut a chap's leg off. and you wouldn't. That was what old Captain Hoskins, whom I used to sail with, could never understand. If a man was a bit ner- vous about the sea, he used to look down on him as all sorts of a coward. But there came a day when he learned better, It happened when I was with him in a three masted sailing ship called the Arrow. We lay at Singapore, alongside the Tanjong Fagan Wharf, loading with a general cargo for Liv- erpool. The principal object of that cargo—or at least the one we took the most aotice of—was a tiger that we were shipping for Loadon. It lay in a strong cage of wood and iron, with a door in the front through which it could be fed. It was a fine big brute, and every time it stretched itself you could see the muscles slipping over its sides and the big, wicked looking claws peeping out of the pads of its feet in a way that made you very thaa'.ful tor the bars. | Wa had a passenger or two. One of them was a young girl who went by the name of Hilda Sandford. She had been a governess in the family of one of our agents out there, but the climate hadn't suited her, and she had to go home. She was coming with us instead of by steamer because she got her passuge for rothing and she wasn’t too well off. Directly the cid man set eyes on her trim figure and the wealth of golden brown hair about her head he was struck all of a heap, so to speak, and I coula see that he was promising himself a mighty pleas- ant voyage. The other passenger was a strange, little, dried up man, who wore gold pince-nez and kept peering about the ship in a most uncomfortable way. He gave his name as Mr. Hay—Professor Hay, he called himself, though we didn’t #ad out what he srofessed until later. Of course, the tiger had its at- tendant, but he berthed “orward. An hour or two before we started this Mr. Hay came up to the old man and began asking him a lot of ques- tions. “Captain,” he said, nervously, hope we sh.. i have a quiet passage.” “J don't see why we shonldn’t,” said Hoskins genially. ’ Mr. “ay looked up at the sky. “There seems to be a good deal of wind about,” he said. “Pretty fair,” said Ifoskins. “That's what’s going to take vs home. Not being a steamer, we can't do without it.” “You're sure it’s safe?’ asked Hay. “Safe!” says the oll man, getting on his high horse, “safe! I'm sailing this ship.” The liti.e.man smil=4 ap-logetically. “You will excuse me, captain,’ he zaid, “I did ot mean any offence. The fact is I am constituticnally nervous on shipboard. It is a feeling that 1 have never been able to overcome.” The old iran looked #¢ Lim with & gort of good natured contempt. “You've ne call fo he alarmed,” ae said; “we'll take zou to England safe enough.” Mr. Hay smiled again and walked off nto the waist, where we had fixed up the tiger's cage. It seemed to have a sor: of attraction for him, for he rtood before it for at least a quarter of an hour. Hoskins looked after him, and then turned to Miss Sandford, who was sitting near. “Nice sort of a chap to have on a ship,” lhe said. “A man like that ought to stick to dry land.” “Well, you know, I have a fellow feeling for him, captain” she an- swered; “I'm afraid of the sea my- self.” “Ah.” he said, “but you're you see. woman. a man il's different. be afraid of nothing. “And are you afraid of nothing, cap- tain?” she asked. “Not 1,” said Hoskins. “You can have the biggest storm ever hatched “by the China seas and I'll thank yon for, it. It brings out all the good in a man.” “It must be nice to be brave,” she exclaimed. “Oh, it’s all right when you're used to it,” said Hoskins, modestly. “And a brave man and a pretty woman are two of (he finest sights in creation. They ought always to be together.” There was something in his tone that made her blush. And though she said she agreed with him, she took the first opportunity of clearing off to another part of the deck. A bit of fear is all right in a | For the next few days he went about whistling for a wind, as though {he wanted to send us all to Davy Jones’ locker. 1 believe he would have been glad of a typhoon just to show his seamaurhip and his contempt for danger. As for his seamauship, no one ever questioned it; and as for ais con- tempt for danger, he was to get his chance all vight, though not quite in the way he expected. It was about a week alier his con- versation with the girl that it came. Hilda was sitting on the poopdeck readin a book. ‘he old man wag marching up and dow: with a quarter- deck trot, casting glances at her think- ing how pretty she was, when sudden- ly he let ofc a howl thet would have frightened an elephant and sprang into the port mizzen riggizg. I wasn't far off him at the time, and I looked at him, wondering whether he had gone mad. Then I saw what he had sceu, ghrouds as quickly as he had -gone up the port ones, The girl raised her head and looked up at Hosking, and he gaped down at her ard tried to shout, But foi come time be could only make faces, “Look! Look!” he “Come up the rigging, loose!" She spran_; to her fee’ ani. looked about her, Not four yarus away from her the tiger was playing with a coil of rope, It was paylug no sort of at. tention to her at the mowaent, but she felt that it might take it into its head to spring at her at any time. As she stood she was cornered between the stern of the ship and the cabin door. There was nothing to be done but to climb up the rigging. She tried, but yelled at last. the tiger is and I went u) the starboard mizzen| GOT SMANGERS FAME FOR VALOR FRIEND AND HIS FAMILY, Je33e530% River, thirty-five years ago, was the first step was too high, and she | could not manage it. And when she | realized that I thought ghe was going | to faint. Hoskins was just going down to give her a hand, but at that moment the t-| ger looked up and saw him, and gave a kind of a roar. The old man stuck | where he was then, and sort of shiv. ered all over likgga jelly in a gale. As for the girl, she went white all over, and gave up herself for lost. And { then—out of the cabin came Professor | Hay. He just took one ‘ook around and saw the tiger. Then he picked up a| broom that some one who had been | washing decks had left leaning against the deckhouse, and pushed at the tiger | with it, looking it straight between the | eyes. I'd heard of the power of the | Luman eye before, but I had never be- | lieved it until that afternoon. He kept walking forward, pushing the beast gently before Lim right into the waist and back into the cage. When he had it safely fastened in, he came astern again, looking not in the least bit ex- cited or worried, and put the broom carefully back into its place. The girl was looking hard at him, and her eyes were shining, and he didn’t seem to be aware of it. Hoskins had come down the rigging and was looking a trifle ashamed of himself. He hadn’t known it was so easy to push tigers into their cages with a broom, or Le might have had a try at it. After a bit he spook up. “That was a fine bit of work, sir,” he said. ‘If I hadn't seen it I couldnt have believed it.” “Oh, it's nothing,” said the professor. “It's my business. I tame wild ani- mals.” After that he seemed to dismiss the whole subject from his mind, and went down into the cabin. But I saw him, later in the evening, talking to that girl, and he must have had some- thing important to say to her, for when the old man met her the next mora- ing and began making excuses for him- self, she cut him short. “Captain,” she said, “do you remem- ber advising me to marry a brave man?” “I do,” said Hoskins, a bit puzzled. “well,” she said, softly, “he asked me yesterday; and I'm going to take your advice.” Which shows you, doctor, that brav- ery is very much a matter of custom. As for poor old Hoskins, we had mill- pond weather the whole way home, and he didn’t even have a chance to show himself.—The Sketch. WILD GEESE ON MIGRATION. How the Old Leader Gathers and Starts Them on Their Journey. At the end of March or during the first week in April all the gray geese in the Outer Hebrides collect in one place before taking their departure for their nesting haunts within the Arctic Circle. To estimate their numbers is impos- sible, says the London Mail, and to be- hold this vast concourse of geese is one of the sights of a lifetime. The vast host of birds stands packed together in a huge phalanx till the king of the grayleg starts the flight. As the old leader ascends 100,000 voices salute him, but none stirs till from overhead he gives the call for his subjects to follow him. Some fifty birds rise in the air and follow him, and as they go gradually assume the wedgelike formation, with three single birds in a string at the apex of the triangle, and in a few min- utes are out of sight. Yhen they have been fairly started the king returns, and after a few minutes’ rest he rises into the air again, and the same pro- cess is gone through before he leads off: another batch: Again and again he returns until all are gone but 300 old veterans, which rise to meet him in the air as he flies back to them. Then, with their sov- reign at their head, these also wing their way toward the Pole, not to re- turn until the following October. It Was His Only Tie. One morning, as Mark Twain re turned from a neighborhood morning call, sans necktie, his wife met him at the door with the exclamation: “There, Sam, you have been over to the Stawes’ again without a necktie! It's really disgraceful the way you neglect your dress!” Her husband said nothing, but went up to his room. A few minutes later his neighbor— Mrs. S.—was summoned to the door by a messenger, who presented her with a small box neatly done up. She opened it and found a black silk neck. tie, accompanied by the following note: “Flere is a necktie. Take it out and look at it. I think I stayed half an hour this morning. At the end of that time will you kindly return it, as it is the only one I have?—Mark Twain."— Ladies’ Home Journal. District Attorney Jerome, of New | a grove near the Rio Grande camped a body of fifty men in the loose uniform of the Texas Rangers, says a writer in the Chicago Record-Herald. The grove was about half a mile in diameter, and nearly circular. The rangers sought rest after a fruitless search for bands of Apaches known to be on both sides of the river. It was customary for the rangers and the Mexican rurals to help each other when near the border line. The rangers were a stalwart, bronzed and hardy set of men, of intelligent face and quiet in conversation and manners. They were maintained by the State to suppress internal disorder and repel external invasion; they were selected from the better class of citi- zens who were endowed with civie virtues and governed by patriotic pur- poses. Long service had given them the mastery of every kind of warfare with the desperate, lawless and pitiless Indian. Their discipline was perfect, either in camp or field. They were equipped in picturesque garb and armed most effectively, as taught by experience; Each man carried a huge bowie knife for close fighting, a carbine for range fighting, two six-shooters each and a saber for the charge, and they were more expert in the use of these weapons than any other body of men living. Great care was shown in the choice of their horses, for they were invaluable in service and in fact, made the rangers’ work on the vast plains of Texas possible. Speed, endurance and courage, with intelligence, were the qualities of the steed, which under kind training, made the soldier and horse a modern Centaur and irresisti- ble against the wild tribes of the West. Each man held twelve lives in his holsters, one in his carbine, and all who came within the deadly lunge of the knife or sweep of the saber perished. So prepared and arrayed for stirring adventures and ruthless war, the ranger went forth as the knight errant of a boundless domain to protect and defend life, liberty and property de- pendent upon his chivalric mission, against legions of the cruelest foes that ever cursed any portion of the human race. SLAYING WOMEN AND CHILDREN Around the grove from the river to the staked plains on the north was a level prairie extending far and wide into Texas and Mexico, the abiding place of many primitive homes and more pretentious and wealthy ranches. A great horde of Apaches in their an- nual August foray were slaying, burn- ing and driving away women, young girls and boys, while infants and chil- dren too feeble for flight to the moun- tain villages of the invaders were at once slain without mercy. This hellish work was going on in old Mexico some miles west of the river. There was much less hard fighting and more plunder here than in Texan territory. And thus the red fiends reveied to sur- feit in their saturnalia of crime, with none to oppose but the helpless victims. The rurales were in hiding or. hunting for the rangers to help them. At midnight, after the second day of encampment, a vaquero was brought in by a guard to Major Wiard, the officer in command. He told a most distressful tale of attack upon the ranch of Don Morales Eleardo, his master, a rich Mexican of aristocratic lineage, his family of wife, boy of twelve years and beautiful daughter, the Senorita Dolores. It was vigorous- ly defended by the owners and sixty vaqueros against an overwhelming NEW YORK A CITY OF ISLANDS Some of Them Mere Dots, Others as Big as Separate Citles. No large city of the world has so many - islands. within its municipal boundaries as New York, says the Sun, of that city. Some of these islands are mere dots. Others are large enough to have almost the dimensions of cities. Governor's Island, with an area of seventy acres, is the property of the Federal Government, and is assessed at $3,600,000 by the city, which is $80,- p00 an acre, and, as land values go within New York, that figure is low. Blackwell Island, which covers 124 acres, is valued at $12,000,000, which is at the rate of nearly $97,000 an acre. Ward’s Island is valued at $9,000,000 and Randall's at $5,000,000. North Brother Island is valued at $220,000, Riker's Island at $337,000 and Hart's Island at $350,000. The most important of the islands in- cluded within the boundaries of the yreater New York is, of course, Man- hattan Island. the value of which Is practically incalculable. It is at least $3,000,000,000; how much morz is con- jectural. The Borough of Brooklyn includes Coney Island. The whole of the Bor- ough of Richmond is an island, an isl- and valued by the city for tax purposes at about $30,000,080. The area of Sta- ten Island is 36,600 acres, which is al- most three times the size of Manhattan. York, pleads guilty to three weal nesses—candy eating, cooking strange dishes and making furniture, The .aborers in the rice fieids of Italy live on less than seven cents a day. | Meat and fresh vegetab es they never see. HARDY FRONTIERSMEN SAVE THE LIVES Were Besieged by ApacheseecIncident of Warlike Tribes Burned, Plllaged and Slew. 38¢38tEISE3%E Satietieriet iets OF A MEXICA the Frontier When otietletIREIe et nie tet atin int se: body of red devils, who had burned the corral and outbuildings, but the stone ranch house and high, thick sur. rounding walls resisted. The vaquero, being away with a drove of horses, had not hurried into the ranch and kept beyond the reach of the redskins until the idea struck him to find the rurales. In doing this le blundered into the grove. The romantic feature of this tale of war is involved in the fact that the Major and his brother officers had often visited the home of the don and enjoyed his hospitality. The Mexican dons are noted for their genial and generous freedom in social life to Americans of the higher grade. The deadly peril aroused the officers and men to instant action. The trumpet call of boots and saddles brought promptly the squadron into form for advance. They knew not che number of their enemies nor cared for consequences; the only thought and ery of that superb band of heroic men was “To the rescue!” And they sped onward over the dry bed of the river across the prairie to the scene of con- flict. The light of burning buildings indicated the locality through the dark- ness ten miles in the distance. In less than an hour the rangers were within hearing of yells, shouts and wild war cries, and, halting here, they formed for the attack, resting their horses for a spell after the swift ride. The Apaches were all unconscious of danger and mad with the excitement of battle and its changing fortunes, for the gallant don and his men still held the rugged walls of the ranch house, while the frenzied savages in hundreds raged around and assaulted with horse and foot time'after time, but they were always baffled and driven back in im- potent fury. Yet numbers must at last prevail, other things being equal. The don and his force were fighting with despair in their hearts, while laying a mine of powder to blow everything into the heavens as a final escape from capture, torture and a fate worse than death, when a trumpet blast sounded the charge of the Texas Rangers. Every living thing along the border line far and near had heard those ring- ing and terrible notes of coming bat- tle. It sounded like a voice from the skies to the despairing Mexicans and a warning of direful wrath from their angry gods to the panic:stricken Apaches. They knew the exterminat- ing power of their awful foe by many a deadly trial. Confused, dazed and scattered in groups, they were strutk as by a thunderbolt in that cyclonie charge that passed over and through them as the besom of destruction, leaving in its wake dead, dying and wounded in heaps and fragments here and there upon the field. Forming anew like lightning, the rangers cut lines of carnage through their helpless foes again and again, un- til they were tired of the harvest for the grave, and paused, reformed and rested on their horses until the fugitive remnants escaped upon the plains and in the nearest mountain ranges. It was a fearful visitation upon the Apaches and long remembered in joy and peace by the Mexican people in those regions exposed to the murderous raids of the mountain tribes. It was a heavenly redemption to Don Morales and his family, for it res- cued them from the valley and shadow of death that followed in the footsteps of captivity by the vilest, cruelest and most barbarous race of Indians on the continent of North America.—J, Hild- rup. VAST SPREAD OF TELEPHONES Increased in United States in Two Years Over 1,000,000. Over a million more telephones were In use in the United States/at the be- ginning of 1905 than two years'before; according to a report just issued by the Census Office. In round numbers there were-2,815,000 in the country at the end of 1902 and 3,400,000 at the beginning of 1905. That this country is far ahead of Europe is told by figures showing Europe's entire equipment January 1, 1905, to have been less than 1,500,000, less than Lalf the number in the United States. an There were over 5,000,000,000 ‘phone calls in 1902, of which nearly 121,000, 000 were “long distance.” Ohio led in the number of messages, although there were more “long-distance” messages over Pennsylvania telephones than in any other State. San I'rancisco, with a telephone for each nine persons, was the best equipped city. The report speaks of the effect ‘of the telephone in reducing or checking the amount of telegraph business. It says the rates of the two systems for medium distances do not differ great: ly, and for very long distances they are overwhelmingly in favor of the tele: graph, if the message be taken as a unit. But, if the number of words ex: changed be taken into account, as well as the time required for getting inte communication, the telegraph is at a disadvantage. Norway exported about 68,000,000 pounds of fresh cod and more than half that amount of salt cod last year. Ip — FRENCH JOURNAL -— —— Powerful, Entertain! Literary Merit, All France is centred in Parls, and the Parisian newspaper is the gossip of the world for the provinces. A few . srovincial newspapersoutside the great gay city have attained success, and they are often fully equal to distine- tion, but in the farthest corner of France the Parisian news-sheet may be found carefully put away for peru- sal in a lelsure moment, and is part of the literature of miner, farmer and tradesmen. It is in most cases good literature, too, for every writer of note in France uses its columns to treat of art, books or polities, or to run a story gerlally, and it is often fully equal to the best of our magazines. It caters to two sets of people within Paris itself, those who go to their newspaper in the morning for the se- rious business of the day, and the peo- ple on the Boulevard anxious to be amused as well as informed, and the result is that the evening paper is by far the more popular, since the French- man can leisurely unfold it at his cafe, or chat about it to his friends after business hours. It oddly bears the date of the following day, not the date of the day of issue, at the top of the page. Often the reader will buy a certair sheet because a writer of note daily signs a certain article, and this has created In France a unique type of journal that may be properly called a one-man newspaper, a pecuilar Pari- sian institution that dates from the day of Rochefort, who found himself black- listed, to use an American term, by the whole French press becguse of his po- litical views, and was forced to start a newspaper of his own. With the evi- dence of power of some gifted individ. ual, capital eagerly centres around his pen, and he becomes a national figure Lively, and who may attain political fame with a "*- rapidity strange to the foreign specta- tor. The more fearless a thinker he proves himself to be, the more likely he is to gather about himself a “set” that will follow his lead in any na- tional emergency. A newspaper with the American fea- ture of giving extended telegraphic news has been issued by an enterpris- ing American, and has found a place. There is, however, enough of the busi- _ ness spirit among French journdlists to keep the Parisian newspaper thor- oughly up to date, and the foreign methods of handling news are studied and copied. Curiously enough Paris has produced a paper, La Fronde, which is managed, edited and composed by women. It has obtained quite a circulation and con- tinues to hold its own. i Penny papers have gained a foothold | and the time is not far distant when a Parisian, like the newspaper reader everywhere, will question the wisdom of paying two or three sous for news that is given with equal completeness by the cheaper papers. Custom alone has kept up the higher price. In investigating the success of the really great French newspapers, one soon discovers the overshadowing im- portance of the literary qualities of the chief editor. He must in addition have a thorough knowledge of world politics, must read several languages, and be ready to adequately meet a po- litical emergency. When he is power: ful enough he can and has affeeted tre< mendous revolutions. He may some- times be a charlatan, but while clever- ness may hold the boulevard readers for an hour, it cannot be pretentious in the face of the political changes which France is undergoing. Editors are familiar figures on the floor of the Chamber of Deputies, and they have been a notable part of every Cabinet. No paper that is not Republican ean count on a great circulation in Paris. There are, however, a few’ newspapers of different shades belonging to the monarchical parties that find a fanati- cal following. Catholicism also bas its hearing in these days of struggle be- tween the Church and the French State. Foreign governments have their subsidized press in Paris, and are able to prejudice the masses when a foreign controversy is on the horizon. The Pillager Indisns. . A long, deep, clear and very jo body of water called Burntside Lake, north of Lake Superior, near the Ca- nadian boundary, contains, among oth- .er 100 beautiful islands, a certain sunny islet that is of great interest to the archaeologist. These islands and waters constitute the hereditary home of the Pillager Indians, who are pagans. * * * One of these islands (known as Flower Island) is, as it has been for genera- tions, the seat of the Pillager kings. On it sleep, according to tribal tradi- tion, over fifty successive Pillager rulers, the ancestors of the present chief or king, who, he says, must have reigned an average of thirty or forty years each, as he himself has been y chief for more than half a century. Think of a dynasty extending over a period of perhaps twenty centuries! The more modern graves are carefully roofed with cedar bark, which, when kept dry and away from the earth, is almost imperishable. The very ancient graves have been essentially obliter- ated by the ravages of the elements. At the head of each of the traceable graves is carved the peculiar heraldic insignia of the king who sleeps be- neath, and above him are placed re- ceptacles for the mah-no-min (wild rice), fish, berries and other food which are brought annually by the related members of the tribes tc appease, as they suppose, the hunger of the depart- ed.—Frank Abial Flower, in Records of the Past. The canaries of Germany excel al} other canaries as singers. One has been recorded to continue a single trilll for one and one-quarter minutern, with twenty changes of note. ry , The 000; t 114 1X the L year i includ don b as gre extray With 1 reach t blood to cur Hall’s + acts di Hall's It was clans i ular p best to blood | ous su the tw wonde jor test F. 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