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A queer form of disorder is reported from Denver, where, it is said, the mobs make the cemeteries pleasure re sorts, and flock to funerals to gratify a morbid curiosity. Taking into consideration the num ber of ships that are on seas and navi gable waters of the world, it is esti mated that about 1,700,000 of the world's population are constantly afloat. Following the example of Germany tlic French Government is about to es tablish a State pension system for old and disabled worklngmcn. Like the xystem founded by Bismarck, It is based on compulsory saving on the part of the workingmen themselves. So much for every week they are at work Is kept back by their employers nud turned over to the pension fund. The State adds so much more, and guarantees a certain pension for the balance of lils life to every workman who reaches the ago of retirement (sixty-five) or becomes disabled before. The French Finance Minister states the ultimate amount which the State will contribute to the pensiou fund at 533,000,000 a year. Assuming that the workmen to whom old-ago and disa bility pensions are assured contribute the same amount, it will cost In all $00,000,000 to Insure every working man lu France from want. There are very few men toiling, to day, with shovels and wheelbarrows, or laboring in the smoke and fumes of the upper platforms of the largo Iron and steel plants of America. Gravita tion and electric power have abolished nearly all the bard labor, and science has banished much, if not all, of the smoke and fumes. Much of tho work cau be done by men over fifty as well ns by men one-half that age—an Im portant, interesting, and hopeful fact to many who are trying to face the world after youth's brightest fiowers and ambitions have faded. Brute strength or ability to wheel heavy loads, Is no longer the main qualifica tion for effective work in a steel or iron plant. Judgment, education, a sense of responsibility, loyally to work, and an interest in the valuable machinery, which a mau has in charge, count more, to-day, than strength, and it is all due to the inventive talent of the country, which has done so much for labor-saving machinery, remarks Success. Nat Ashamed of Him. An Englishman named Crowe was a fine classical scholar and a distin guished orator. He made Ills own position in life, oven at a time when classes were far more seriously re garded lu Englaud than they are at present. Ills father was a carpenter, working in the town of Winchester, and on the most loving terms with his sou. One day the sou, then an eminent man, was standing near the catnedral door, talking to the dean and warden, When his father passed by. The old man was in his working dress, with his rule sticking from his pocket, and was evidently willing to spare the son a salutation. But the younger Crowe called out in good Hampshire dialect: "Here, faytber! If thee balut ashamed of I. I balnt ashamed of Vice!"— Youth's Compauion. Contentment. ' Even when one is content with Ills ,i\'n lot he does not like the lot of jomebody else.—Galveston News. A girl may be a peaeb and have a jeart of stone. During the year 1900 no fewer than 272 rocks and shoals which were dan gerous to navigation were reported by the British Admiralty Survey Depart ment. Nine sunken rocks were dis covered by vessels striking on them. Edgar A. Whitney and Ernest Bttr gono, arrested In New Y'ork, have confessed that they were agents of a combine that arranged with the police for protection of gambling houses. \ TID. |j t' 5 ■ J BY JESSIE DAVIS BCHTOS, J [ 4^%* "Do you be Mr. Kane, sir? It's Mr. Peter Tidmore Kane, in tlie real estate business, I'm wantin' to see." The gentleman addressed looked down with somo astonishment upon the sharp little freckled visage that was upturned as he replied: "I am Mr. Kane, my boy. What do you want with me?" "Sure, I'll be tellin' ye, bat it's migh ty glad I am to see you, sir. Silake, then! I'm a namesake of yours, though belike you're not knowin' it, anil I'm glad that I favor you, now that I've set me two eyes on ye." "Favor me, indeed, you young scans crow !" "On the inside, I mane, and I'd be glad if it was on the outside, for It's a mighty fine-lookin' gentleman ye are, then. They do be tellin' me you have the rintin' of a-many of the houses hereabout, and it's to rint tho small place at the foot of the hill I'd be askin'. I'll pay you as much as 50 cents a week for It, -and worruk out the rint if you say it's a bargain?" Mr. Kane tvas growing interested. The small boy had a brisk, business way with him, quite out of proportion to his size, which was that of an aver age 10-year-old. "It is a little out of the usual line to take work in return " "Oh, it will be equally satisfactory if ye pay me in cash, then, Mr. Kane, sir, and 'tis a good bargain yo'll have, wid me mother along wid me, and she that aiger to be at rest wanst more. 'Tis the plazed woman she'll bo that all's eottled so well." "But hold on!" said Mr. Kane. "I like to know something about my ten. ants. What security can you give me that I shall find you responsible?" "Sure, I tould you that I was named after you, didn't I? It's Peter Tidmore Kane Mulligan I am, and mo mother says ye'll be sure to mind Biddy Moran that was cook to ye wanst. But I'm Tid for short. We'll move in the day, and I'll just come up for me orders in the mornin'," anil Tid walked away as contentedly as if he carried a signed lease in his pocket. "Biddy Moran? To be sure. She worked for us one summer a dozen or more years ago," said Mrs. Kane, when her husband appealed to lirr for con firmation of the boy's story. "Not much of a cook, very green and a lit tle queer, as I remember her. I'm afraid they'll be a load on your hands, Tidmore." "Well, the old shell can't be much worse with them in it than standing empty, and I'll warn them out if they prove a nuisance. The boy will get along If ho favors me 'on the inside, 1 as he says," and Mr. Kane laughed in recollection of the sharp, little, un couth figure as contrasted with his own well-favored person. Sure enough, the first sight that greeted Mr. Kane tho next morning was Tid, keenly examining his garden beds, shaking his head portentously over popples and lilies, and getting down on his knees to sniff at the to mato-vines, with a curious uncertainty, not to say contempt, that sent tho garden's owner hurrying down to pre vent any possible catastrophe. "It's a fine lot of weeds ye've saved up for me, sir," Tid greeted him, brightly, "but I'm feared they've run over the plants intirely. Or It Is a wild garden you do be having here? Me mother tells me that you grow things small in this state, and ye Jo it uncommon well, I should say. Belike it has to be tulc out of you that way for the big hearts ye've got," with a re spectful deference that disarmed his employer's wrath. "Why, you young jackanapes, where havo you seen anything finer, that you should bo turning up your nose at my garden, pray?" "Faix, I think it wor in Californay," tiazarded Tid, as if he were drawing his recollections from some deep well of memory. "The tomatuses growed on vines as high as the house, I minJ, and there were men up on step-ladders pickin' them, and the lilies and the vi'lets and the poppies all run wild In the fields, they did, and the roses were like to smother the house, and the cco cumbers were as long as I am, and a dale longer sometimes. That's the country, if it's gardenin' ye're after." "I wonder you left it," remarked Mr. Kane, sarcastically. "I'd wonder that mesilf, if there wor ary show for dacint Americans out there," admitted Tid. "The pigtails and the greasers have it all their own way. It's quare how there's something forninst wan most iverywheres In the West. In Nebrasky it wor the 'hop pers, and in Kansas the drought. Up in Washington it aithor rained all the time or the chlnook blasted things, and down in Texas there wor the cat tle every which way. It do be good to get home to the states," and Tid drew a long breath of satisfaction. "But this isn't worruk at all, and if ye'll put me to it, I'll be diggin' In." Mr. Kane found tho boy eager to learn and tireless in his efforts to please, and although he made some blunders, by the end of the week he hail won the favor of the household, and was allowed to make himself use. fu! about the place in very much his own way. This sometimes resulted in queer turns of fancy, according to the Eastern view of things, as when he •was found in early morning sweep ing up grasshoD'-ers from the lawn to feed the fowls, and carefully treasur ing pocketfuls of gra"el while he was still new to the situation. "Sure, it wor the lashings of 'hop pers we had out on the perraries, hut nlver a stone to the size of a pea there. Ye have them betther distliri buted here, and it's a fine country, though the things do grow small," he decided, approvingly, when the waste of his efforts was pointed out to him. It would appear that the Mulligans had drifted all over the West in an aimless fashion, "salting health and bettherment," as Tid expressed it, till the death of the father left his mother free to return "for the making of me," he confided to Mr. Kane. "Sure, a lad nades to be looking up to a good man, me mother says, and it's a power of t'achin' I'll nade to come up to me name, I do be think in'." Tho amusement that Mr. Kane de rived from tho glorified ideal upon which Tid was basing the formation of his character gave way sometimes to a fleeting wish that he bad culti vated more of the virtues which Tid credited him with possessing. There are drawbacks to being held as little less than a saint by even an Ignorant Irish boy. Suppose, now, that Tid could look beneath tlie surface anil see the true state of the man within him, how would the revelation affect the lad's moral growth? Mr. Kane shrugged his shoulders and threw off his uneasiness. It was by no choice of his that he had been held up as a model. Let the effects of the disillusionment fall where they be longed. It was not likely that he was going to change his business methods, his sharp dealing, his keen seizure of apparent advantages, simply to spare the tender susceptibilities of this small vagrant; nevertheless the thought of Tid was at the bottom of more than one reform that he made in these days. Meantime Tid was cultivating a ten der heart among other things, and when he had the misfortune to set his foot unawares en a toad one lay, he was tho more hurt of tho two. "I'd no more scrunch the crature, and it sitting by to do me a good turn, than you'd squeeze a tenant, sir," he protested, remorsefully. "There are some tenants that need tlso thumbscrews put on them, Tid." "Of course, just as there are pertaty. bugs and cutworms and squash beetles to clane out. It's a fine thing to have the head to pick and choose amoongst them as I weed -out the docks and lave the cabbages, bo hould the helpin' hand to tile wake and nadey, and turn tho cowlil back on the undesarvin." I'm feared I'll be long learnin' all that from you, sir." "Oh, you aspire to a share in the management of the tenants, too?" in quired Mr Kane, with that sarcastic accent which was quite thrown aw'ay upon Tid. "I'm studying hard to be fit to go in the office come fall, when you'll not be natling me in the garding," admit ted Tid, modestly. "I'll be worth me keep there outside of me schoolin', I will that, yo'll see." "Hum-um-m!" That Tid was acting like a prickly bur on his conscience, tho real estate man knew, and the far. reaching consequences of this pro posed move rather alarmed him. Hadn't he closed up the typhoid well and drained Ague Alley and given a contract, for rebuilding Ramshackle Row —all good-paying investments, to be sure, and much-needed reforms — simply and solely through the quick ened moral responsibility that the hoy had roused in him? "If this thing goes on," he said to himself, "I'll he renewing tha Taft mortgage and letting the Hope farm slip through my Angers. It's sheer im becility on my part. Who wants an inconveniently active conscience in these days? I'll throw off the yoke be fore it fastens tighter. I'll discharge Tid and send the Mulligans packing." But to look into Tid's trustful eyes and make this decision known was more than Mr. Kane cared to do at that moment. It might be better to talk the matter out with Tid's mother, he concluded. A little bribe, now, to persuade her to move on, say, without betraying his part in the transaction, would make everything smooth and easy. Mr. Kane had not seen Mrs. Mulli gan. Tid had caught his fancy, but he bad felt sure that th e mother would be a bore, and had avoided the house. Well, they had transformed the deso late shanty into rather a picturesque spot by the vines they had trained over it, and the woman displayed some of TiJ's own confidence in receiving him. "Sure, I felt yez comin", sir," she ex plained. "Bo sated, plaze. I'd pass the chair if I could step a foot under me, but it was the Lord's mercy that I kept on mo legs till we r'ached ye, tliat it was, and I've some use of me hands still, so that I do a dale will them, and I can hitch me chair about .while I do me chores quite nate and convenient. 'Tis honored lam to have ye come sakin' me—regardin' Tid is it, then? He's a credit to yez, that he is, sir. He couldn't take afther you sthronger if be wur your own blood born." It struck coldly home to Mr. Kane's understanding that his task was none the easier for coming here. This lit tle helpless woman with her useless feet and crippled h*nds, all gnarled and twisted with rheumatism, and her wistful face beaming witu tremulous pride, was scarcely a better subject for his retaliation than Tid himself would have been. Nettled and disconcerted, but unwill ing to retreat, he demanded, sharply: "How did you oome by that ridiculous notion of training the boy after mel Wasn't there any better model to be found ?" "Sure, I'd want no betther If I'd a hunder' to choose from," averred the little woman, stoutly, "but I'd none other fit to pattern him by but yersilf. that's the truth. You see, it wor this way. There wor me brothers and me cousbins In the ould country did be breaking their heads in their fights; and there was Mulligan got so in the way of bating people when he wor on the police that he cudn't lave off the thrick while he lived, and there was you with a good worrud to the fore, and a joke when a poor garrul blun dered, and a gintleman's way, whether it was to the high or the low—and It's tho way that comes hisy to Tid, now that he has ye before the two eyes of him," said Tid's mother, proudly, while Mr. Kane groaned in spirit. How could he make these people un derstand that their attitude toward him was both unwarranted and unwel come? Why should he consent to sad dle himself with them? It was only his foolish good nature that had got him into this scrape. They had no real claim on him. "It isn't ivery fine gintleman that I'd pattern him by, that's the truth," went on Mrs. Mulligan. "There's thim, if you'd belave it, wud see hut th? im pydince and niver the honor of having a poor b'y tlirained af'her thim. Like as if Tid wud be welkin' on tub creep, ing thing 3 wid no thought for their hurts, that's how some wud be lcokin' at tile poor people that's to do thim the moil turn." "Oh, I assure you that I feel tho honor of it!" murmured Mr. Kane, ironically; but the struggle to express herself filled the woman's mind, and she went on without noticing the In terruption : "But if he thramped thim all out, he'd be thrampin' on the good frinds of him, and thrampin' out the tinder ness as wud make the good man of hissilf, and niver knew that he wor more hurt by his hadelessness than thim. That's why I'm thankful to the Lord that I'd the right kind to pattern him by," concluded the woman, fer vently; and no light retort fell from Mr. Kane's lips now. What if this were so? What if he were crushing the better nature that was struggling in him when he turned from them? What if the loss were his rather than theirs? What if these peo ple were stmt to awaken his conscience and show him where he was drifting? It was a new thought to him that the claim of humanity might work both ways. From this point of view, he might owe something to the Mulli gans instead of their owing everything to him. Suppose he turned them out, foreclosed the Taft mortgage, seized the Hope farm, fostered the spirit of greed and selfishness and thrust aside responsibility, as his impulse had been; how would his gain weigh in the balance against—what? Surely, the opening vista held mors than he had considered thus far. It was not only that he would shatter their faith in man's goodness by shat tering the idol they had made of him. There was the hardening of his own heart, the turning from his chance to become an uplifting force to the people about him. He was no better and no worse than the majority of careless, thoughtless men; but did he not have it in him to be either better or worse? And which should he choose? He was still wrestling with that problem when a small shadow fell across the threshold, and Tid stood in the doorway. He brightened at sight of the visitor,, and ttlmed to his mother in triumph. "Didn't I be telling you ho would come wan day? She wor cravin' a sight of ye, sir, that she wor, but we wouldn't be askin' a busy man like yersilf to come out of yer way for that." "It's for the good of ye that he's ccme now, Tid. He' 3 said as much." "Sure, he's been doin' us the good turn since the day we r'ached him," said Tid, contentedly. "Thrust his honor for that." Mr. Kane stood up and shook his shoulders as if he were throwing off a load. To crush out trust like this, to refuse the blessedness of such simple faith and gratitude, surely that was not work for Tidmore Kane. Let the name mean as much for him as for Tid. "Blarney!" he said, lightly. "I don't want the roof here coming In on your heads and giving you an excuse to sue me for damages. I'll just look around and see what repairs are needed. And, Tid,"—more slowly—"if you feel ready to come Into the office tomorrow, I find that I am ready to have you there." "Hooray!" shouted Tid.—Youth's Companicn. 'Tirai Her First Love. On a corner stood a little barefoot girl in her rags. Her soiled, liulgy little hands hugged another bundle of rag 3 caressingly to her stained, dimpled cheek, while she enjoyed all bet joys of young motherhood. The bundle was her "baby." Tied with a string near one end, the rags formed into a hea.l. Another string about the middle produced the effect of a waist line. A young man saw the happy little mother. "What's that?" he asked, resting a hand on the un kempt hair of the child. "My dolly," she said, hugging the rags closer. "Your dolly, eh? What a pretty dolly. And what do you call your babv ?" "O tails it—l talis It—l talis It Bum Annie." —New York Times. A Nebraska physician keeps in com munication by moans of carrier doves with oatients living over a circuit of 50 miles. WHAT TO COOK IN CAMP. NOVICES ASTONISHED AT THEIR FONDNESS FOR PRIMITIVE FOOD. fqutrrrl Stew Uroilinq; on n Flank A Man Made Menu ll read with Staying Oualitieg—Making Hernia in the Ground —Canoe l'ie Provided for the laattillon#. Plans for the daily bill of fare, while of a far simpler nature, are as neces sary in the camp as in the home. For, although conventionalities and ultra fastidious tastes have been left be hind, in their place have appeared un wonted appetites for hearty food t..at in a party of healthy people can be re. lied upon three times and more a day. As the object of sv.ch a trip is recrea tion, it is well to heed this fact, for no one can havo a good time while he is as hungry as the proverbial bear and sees no good dinner in prospect. Peo ple spending their first summer in the woods in primitive fashion are inva riably astonished by their sudden fondness for cooking that at the home table would be scorned. Doughnuts and crullers, for example, assume new flavors and, with coffee for tho morn ing meal, in the woods excel the choic est confections.. It is a good idea to take along enough of these cakes to last for at least a week, taking pains to use recipes that insure them against drying too quickly. Once there, they can he put in a good bag and kept in a cool, and, if possible, not too dry a place. Waterproof food hags in va rious sizes are among the conveniences supplied by houses that sell sporting goods. Two or three bakings of mo lasses and one or two of sugar cookies will also bo appreciated. Among the utensils should always he included a covered iron pot; for baked beans after a long day's tramp, or even for breakfast or dinner, if the supply of game fali3 short, are not only nu tritious but appetizing. The baking is an over night or all day operation. First dig a hole in the ground that is three or four times the size of the pot. Start a fire in the bottom with pieces of hark, and then fill with good hard wood. Let it burn for two or three hours until the surrounding earth is well heated and there is a glowing mass of coals in the bottom. Have the beans soaked in cold water for a day or a night previously. Then wash and parboil them, throwing off the first, water, to which some people ndd a little soda. Rinse the beans, cover them with boiling water, add a piece of pork (about a half pound or so to every quart of beans), and cook over the range until the skins loosen easily. Remove the pork and drain the beans, saving the liquor. Put the beans In the pot without breaking them, and bury the pork in them. Sea. son the liquor with salt and pour it over them. Sprinkle with pepper, and if molasses is to be had pour a table spoonful over the whole. Put on the cover, place the pot in the impro vised oven, cover with the ashes and coals and some of the earth, and leave for at least 10 hours. If bread cannot be bought It must be baked. Bread and biscuit can be made the same as at home, the only differ ence being that they are baked before an open fire, in a pan that comes for the purpose. Compressed yeast cakes that will keep all summer should be among the supplies. A brown bread made of one-third rye, one-third flour and one-third cornmeal, recommended by an experienced camper, has stay ing qualities desirable for journeys re quiring a good deal of physical exer cise. It is made like the ordinary white bread. A broiler in camp is not one of the needfuls, for a few shingle nails and a plank, a clean pine board or even a piece of log will answer its purpose. If fish are to be cooked before the fire nail the heads against the wood, flesh side out, of course, and place them before the heat. A steak, bird, rabbit or squirrel can be prepared in the Eume way. For squirrel stew, a famous dish among epicures who haunt forest deeps, the old admonition to "first catch your hare" should be remem bered. If the day's shooting has been a success (from the hunters', not the squirrels, point of view), skin and dress them, cut Into pieces, and soak for a time In cold salt water to draw out the blood. Rinse and cook them with a small slice of salt pork in fresh boiling water, and add about 15 min utes before they are done potatoes and onions cut up fine, a pinch of oatmeal for thickening and salt and pepper. A little beef extract improves the flavor of the stew. Canoe pie, a masculine invention, for those of the party who insist on city ways to the extent of an occasion al dessert, excels, so claims its origi nator, all the ovon baked concoctions in the world. That it can be made, providing the material is at hand, on a minute's notice is an undisputed ad. vantage. Have ready a dish of fresh or stewed berries sweetened to taste. Toast pilot bread, reduce it to crumbs, sprinkle it over the top and the pie is complete. The following menu, a strictly man made one, is contributed by a frequen ter of the wild lands of Maine: Blue berries fresh from the bushes (hand picked by Chaddie); dry, hot toasted bread, assorted pickles. Sizzling hot broiled bacon. Cold water, hot tea. Soaked toast with maple syrup. Fine, soft homemade bread, apple sauce. More hot tea. Music furnished by the gurgling Penobscot, Tepid food and cold grease on the plate do not contribute to the delights of a repast, even in th e woods, but to avoid them some ingenuity must be used, for it is a well known fa<_: that to a certain point foods cool quicker In the open air than in the refrigerator. A hot water plate for each of the party ' a great convenience; but if these are not to be had, heat the plates hc4. There will be no danger of Injury to the polish of the dining table. Keep the dishes that are cooked flret buried in the ashes at one end of the fire until all are done. Then get the crowd together—not the easiest of efforts when all sous of interests are at stake. When all are seated bring OD the hot food. There is no excuse for poor coffee anywhere. The usual difficulty with it is overboiling and allowing the aroma to escape. For the coffee boil fresh water. Scald the coffee pot, put in a large tablespoonful for every one in the camp and throw in an extra one, according to tradition, "for the pot." Add a cupful of cold water. As soon as it boils draw it to a cooler part of the otove and pour in as many cupfuls of boiling water as there are campers- Fill the spout with soft paper and let it stand where it will keep hot, but not boil, for 10 or 15 minutes. Just before serving turn in a half cupful of cold water and let it stand to settle for two or three minutes. Eggs, with the hens far away, are a valuable commodity and cannot be spared for the coffee, but the cold water will answer every purpose. Cold water can take the place of milk in all recipes for Johnny cake, molasse3 ginger cake, plain cake, bis cuit, muffins, etc., by adding a tea spoonful more of butter than the direc tions require. The water should al ways be fresh and cold, not tepid, or the production will be tough.—New York Tribune. SLIPS OF THE PEN. Qneer lCrrors I'erprtrated by Authors Who Know Hotter. When Mr. Anthony Trollope pic tured Andy Scott as "coming whistling up the street with a cigar in his mouth" he not only proved that he had never made personal experiment of the double feat of smoking a cigar and whistling a tune, hut he was unconsciously following in the steps of still greater writers who made their heroes do amazing and impossible things. Those who remember Robinson Cru soe may recall a most wonderful feat of this hero of childhood. When he decided to abandon the wreck and try to swim ashore he took the precaution to remove his clothes, and yet by some strange magic, of which the secret has been lost, the author makes him, when in this condition of nature, fill his pockets with biscuits. The great Shakespeare himself had a peculiar facility for making the impossible happen in his plays. One of the most remarkable of these feats occurs In the fifth act of "Othello," when Desdemona. after she has been duly smothered by the Moor, comes to life again and enters Into conversation quite rationally, even inventing a gen erous falsehood to shield him from the consequences of his crime before she decides to die. The improbability of a person recovering consciousness and speech after being s?nothered, and of dying after performing such a feat, scarcely needs pointing out. Shakespeare, too, had a trick of introducing the most glaring anach ronisms—so glaring, in fact, that there is more than a suspicion that they must have been introduced consciously for some unknown reason. For in stance, he makes a clock strike in ancient Rome at a time more than a thousand years before clocks were invented, when such an event would certainly have been the eighth won der of the world. Quite regardless of the evidence of geography, he transports Bohemia to the seaside, and he introduces a printing prees long before the days of Gutenberg. He calmly introduces a billiard table into Cleopatra's palace, and makes caanon familar to King John and his barons. Thackeray was no mean rival to Shakespeare In vagaries of this kind; hut in hie case they appear to have been the result of pure carelessness and forgetfulness. The most flagrant case, perhaps, is where, after burying Lady Kew and effectively dismissing her from the story, he brings her to life again to help him out of his plot, and in other cases his capacity for mixing up the names of his charac ters is as oonfusing as it is wonder ful. Emile Zola, in spite of his careful ness, makes the astonishing statement in one of his novels (Lourdes) that the deaf and dumb recovered their hearing and sight, an event which savors very much of the miraculous. The moon has innocently been tho cause of much blundering on the part of authors. Wilkie Collins in some mysterious fashion, made it rise on one important occasion in the west; Rider Haggard in "King Solomon's Mines" contrived an eclipse of the new moon for the benefit of his read ers; and Coleridge ingeniously places a star between the horns of the cres cent moon as she rises in the east.— Tit-Bits. An Incident of n flancinc, E. V. Methever, the murderer of Dorothy McKee, a Long Beach girl, paid the penalty of his crime by be ing hanged in the gallows room of San Quentin prison. Methever was dressed in a sombre suit of black, with a white rose pinned over his. heart It was 11 minutes before Drs. Casey, Edwards and Teaby pronounced. Methever dead. In the silence fol lowing the springing of the trap a bird alighted on one of the barred windows of the gallows room and hurst into song. Its voice for several minutes mingled with the prayers of the priest, and it was not until a slip per from the hanged man's foot fell to the floor with a noise that the feathered chorister flew away.—San Francisco Argonaut