THE BLACKBERRY PATCH. The blackberry patch near the garden fence — What marvels it* depths may hold! And far in its jungle what strange events Await, to challenge the bold! What eosv corners which none can see Who chances to know them not! And oft from the cares of the day I flee To visit the friendly spot. And lo! when I gaze at the tangled rows Where a thousand times I've been, A queer little boy. with freckled nose, Appears and leads me in. Together we crawl 011 hands and knees Through a barbed and winding way. And here, in the midst of the ants and bees, To our hearts' delight we play. lie shows me his treasures, one by one: The nest of the old black lien, The web by the monstrous spider spun; The terrible bandit's den; Tiie cunning retreat where Towser hides When lie wants enjoy a bone; And many a curious thing besides, Confided to me, alone. Have vou guessed the secret? Why, don't you know? That queer little boy is I! And lie takes me into the Long Ago, Where the realms of Childhood lie. We play at the wonderful make-believe We often have played before, Till the dawn arrives, and from morn till I am only a man once more. —Edwin L. Sabin, in Puck. THE CRIMINAL AN!) THE 1 PHILANTHROPIST, j - -r OU really are that cele • \/ brated—l should say no- Y torious—criminal, Louis ~P~ Farrage?" asked the phil anthropist, doubtfully. "Certainly," said the big man In the easy chair, lie looked good-natured and at the same time rather tired and contemptuous. He had been through it all; the accepted ideas and the usual people did not matter much; hut there was no reason to be angry with them or anything else. "I was extremely glad that our mu tual friend, Mr. Timmins, was able to Induce you to come and pay me a visit. I need not assure you of our good faith. You have nothing to fear." A smile Hashed over the criminal's face: the philanthropist weut on rap idly: "AVe are not in with the police. I won't say we oppose them —that would be Illegal—but we are not in sympathy with them. Now, before we begin to talk, what may I offer you? A cup of tea"—valiantly outing with his proof that ho was no fanatic—"a whisky and soila? And what about a cigarette?" "Thanks," said the criminal; "I never drink at three in the afternoon. For that matter, I never drink tea or whis key at any time; they undoubtedly spoil I lie nerve. For the same reason I prefer my pipe, if you don't mind?" "By nil means. I'm afraid I smoke four of these every day of my life, and sometimes it runs to five or six mere habit. Now. my views are pretty well known, and it would interest me extremely to have the views of a great —I should perhaps say remarkable criminal upon them. I hold that the prison ruins the bod}*, lowers the in tellect and destroys the soul." The last phrase came pat and mechanical. The philanthropist had used it on many platforms. "Undoubtedly," said the criminal. •'But what else can you expect?" "Surely in this twentieth century," the philanthropist began, and stopped blankly. "Briefly, there are more stupid and ignorant people tliau clever and well Informed people. Our method of treat ing criminals pleases the stupid and ig norant majority." "You're quite right," said the phil anthropist, eagerly. "That majority must be educated. Already there has been some advance. Look at tiie sen tences that used to be carried out less than a hundred years ago; they would not lie tolerated now. But there is much to he learned. Now I see the prison of the future as a handsome, well-lighted, airy place, with a- fine garden attached and a swimming bath, and—or—a gymnasium and li brary. and—er—everything of that sort. There would be comfortable recrea tion-rooms, bagatelle perhaps bil liards. Gambling and bad language! of course, prohibited. There would be an employment bureau, which would look after every man when he had finished his term. There would be a system of rewards for good conduct, and there would he n good deal of mu sic—wo should believe iu a refining process." Tiie philanthropist was conscious that he had put it better on platforms. There was something in the criminal's good-natured and contemptuous eye that disconcerted him. "How docs it strike you?" he asked. When the criminal was able to speak fot laughing, he said: "Excuse me—it's rubbish, of course!" "You dou't think that as a method of reclamation —" Again the philan thropist stopped blankly. 8 "No criminal is ever reclaimed. Peo ple who are not criminals, hut have made mistakes, may see the advantage of not making any more—that happens sometimes. But the natural criminal remains the natural criminal, just as the natural genius remains a genius, atul lor just the same reasons. En vironment and circumstance may make the occasional criminal, but the real thing—that is inborn, that 13 the man himself." "Oil. lint I can't hold with you there," said the philanthropist, plucking up heart. "That is a desperate doctrine. And the facts are ail against you. Do you know the work that the Salvation Army is doing?" "Certainly. It is well meant. And you may depend upon a religious orgy to produce in some people a kind of hypnotic state under which suggestion acts very strongly on them. That is found in all religious. The perma nence of the conversion in the real criminal depends on the hypnotic con dition and the suggestion being fre quently renewed. Take these away and the man goes back again; he is no more reclaimed than I am." "That's not my version of it at all," sadi the philanthropist. "No?" "And look here. You think the pres ent penal system all wrong. You seem to have no faith in wide-minded religious and philanthropic endeavors. What is left?" "Science. The study of the correla tion of mental and physical abnor malities is in its infancy: on the moral side the map of the brain is very in complete. There are some splendid things in their early stages. If we get on as fast this century as we did last In our study of the human double ilumpling we shall have practically settled the criminal question by the end of it." "It's awful—this idea of that irre sponsibility of the criminal." "On the contrary, It's most hope ful." "And how is the brain of the criminal to be altered?" "How should I know? I'm not a doctor. By altering the character of the blood supplied to it, I suppose. Possibly by operation—the tendency nowadays seems to be toward more knife and less pill-box. Of course, where nothing else can be done the criminal will be killed. I personally ought to be killed, and should be if I were in a civilized country. I am the real thing. But we hang only murderers, who nearly always are use ful people, and ought not to be killed at all. It's a funny world. But lam afraid I shall never make you see these things my way. In any case I must be off. I am going to—l shall be rather busy to-night, and I want, If I can, to get a few hours' sleep first. Good-by. Charmed to have met you." He shook hands warmly with the philanthropist and left quickly. "Extraordinary case," the philan thropist thought to himself. "Must have had some smattering of educa tion. Well dressed, too. Wonder if there is any time to make a note of it before I go to dress for the annual dinner." And then he noticed that a little bit of ills watch chain was hnnglng loose from his buttonhole. The rest of it had gone. So also had the very hand some gold watch presented to him by the committee, with the pretty in scription about "twenty years of de voted and voluntary service."—Barry Pain. NEW IN STREET CAR TRAVEL. Toledo merchants Provide n PaasuiiKer Station to Help Their Trade. One of the novelties of street railway travel in this country is a pnssengec station provided rent free by the mer chants of a certain street in Toledo. It lias a uewsstund in It and a parcel check room adjoining. Through this particular street five car lines run, and they bring to the city 011 an average 5000 passengers a day. The merchants doing business in the street, realizing the advantage to themselves of having these passengers alight there wanted the railway com panies to establish the station. The companies didn't see why they should. So the merchants have done it for themselves. They have rented a large store for three years and provided it witli benches and lockers. Any citizen may rent a locker for five cents a day and have packages sent there, to be put in ids box. Then when the time conies for him to go home he can start with his purchases without having had all the trouble of lugging them about with him all day. The experiment, though a new one, lias been so successful already that it is likely to be imitated elsewhere.— New York Sun. Centenarians Without lloubt. Talk about centenarians! A Welsh correspondent informs us, says the Loudon News, that the following in scription on a tombstone in Auirotli churchyard, near Tenby, has just been brought to light: "Here lieth the body of John Rees, who departed this life October 17, 1824, Aged 249 years. Reader, prepare to meet thy God." John Rees is not "in it" when com pared with the following Irish record of longevity sent us by "J. B.": "In the Daily News of the Bth inst. an inscrip tion from Wales records the death of one John Rees at the (over) ripe age of 249 years. John was only a youth in comparison to Dennis Grady, whose gravestone in the churchyard of Bally sallagh, near Charleville, County Cork, reads: IS HIS HERE DIES THE BO I)Y OF DENNIS GRA DY WHO DEPARTED THE STH OF MAY BEING THE 480TII YEAR OF HIS AGE. 1727." But, of course, we know oven tile laws of nature are Inverted in the "dis tressful country." Grout llecord of n Mnrryin); Preaclier. The sixth annual reunion of the Rev W. L. Meese Matrimonial Association was held in Noel's Grove at Lagrange, Intl., and a very large number was j present. The members of this associa tion are the hundreds of couples ninr ried by Mr. Meese. The latter keeps an accurate record of the couples mar ried by him, and 110 other preacher can show an equal number. Of all his • marriages it is claimed that no OHO has j ever been divorced.—Cincinnati Com mercial Tribune. ! Two great Minneapolis flour mills will soon be burning Texas oil instead of coal A street railway company operating in that city, as well as St. Paul, is also conducting experiments with oil for the same purpose. Corn oil, made from the germ, forms the basis of a substitute for rubber when vulcanized. This substitute com pounded with sixty per cent, of com mercial rubber is used in the manufac ture of rubber boots, linoleum, wheel tires, rubber blankets and many other articles. A new explosive, which is said to be more powerful than dynamite, uiaxi lnite or lyddite, and yet which may be handled with absolute safety, has been invented by Professor G. M. Hath away. It Is named liathamite, after Its inventor, and at a recent public test Professor Hathaway demonstrated its safety by pounding the explosive upon an anvil, throwing it into a tire and firing rifle bullets through it at a speed of 1850 feet a second. In ordei to lire the new explosive it is necessary to use a strong detonating cap. About 160 photographs of Nova Per sei were taken during the year at the Greenwich Observatory. The results of determinations of Its parallax from a study of these photographs were negative, the parallactic shift being apparently insensible, probably not more than one-twentieth of a second. This would imply a distance from the earth of at least sixty years of light passage, and possibly much more, so that there is really nothing impossible in Professor Knpteyn's hypothesis that the apparent expansion of the nebula was simply due to the outward pas sage of the light from the nova, il luminating In succession more and more distant regions of nebulosity. The distance required by this hypo thesis is 290 light years, so that the outburst we witnessed last year might have taken place in the reign of James 1., and the star itself actually ceased to exist many years ago. Drs. Sante de Sanctis and H. Neyroa, of Rome, have invented an instrument which they call a Griessbach etliesi ometer, and with which they have re cently been conducting experiments to determine how much excitation is necessary before sleeping people begin to move, and how much it requires to wake them. The sleepers are prodded with this instrument until the desired data are obtained. "It may be used with either a sharp or a blunt point." The practical or scientific value of the information to be derived from this investigation is any tiling but obvious, and the necessity of a special instru ment for securing it is even less so. There are so many factors entering into "sleepiness" muscular, mental, fa tigue, the condition of the stomach, the temperature, pathological condi tions. temperament, etc.—that the bare determination of the stimulus neces sary to awaken a sleeper would have almost no psychological value. A house of artificial stone blocks, two-thirds of which are material aud the rest hollow, will soon be built at New Orleans. The mold in which the blocks are built is a simple contriv ance. It consists of a foundation pro vided with three rectangular columns, that may bo elevated, whose dimen sions are those of the cavities in the blocks; to the foundation of the mold are hinged its ends and sides, which let down. When the ends and sides of the mould are In position, it is mere ly a box; a plate is let down upon the bottom of the mould; then the columns at the bottom of the mould are ele vated through openings in the plate. The mould is then in readiness to re ceive the mixture of sand and Fort land cement, which is shovelled into the mould, filling the entire space sur rounding the elevated columns. It is tamped with great force. After the tamping process, the sides and ends of the mould are let down, the columns are depressed, and the plate on which the materials were poured is lifted out, with the manufactured block rest ing upon it. The blocks are put out in the air, and In the course of a week they are ready to be used for building. They should not be subjected to too great heat from the suu, and it is neces sary to moisten them each day. The great simplicity of the process lies in the fact that sand is absolutely incom pressible, and tamping secures as com plete results as are obtained from the pressing of clay in making the finer qualities of bricks, and with very much smaller expenditure of labor. The sand and cement are moistened while being mixed. GaII mikl Grit. Gail, iu tlic present use of the term, is a persistent determination to do. It is a twin brother to Grit. It is a busincss-brlnger that brings. It is the bell-wether that jumps I lie fence aud gets Tat on the clover. It Is the Gall that wins when the other man lias dealt his cards from the bottom of the deck. Gall is the anti-fat of fate. It is the safest substitute for brains—it is many a politician's capital stock. Iu this new century rush to win you must he brave. Therefore lie not ashamed of your Gall. Add io it Grit—aud you'll win!— Richmond Missouriar Sing to Their Oxen. In France the oxen that work iu the fields are regularly sung to as an en couragement to exertion, and no peas ant has the slightest doubt that the animals listen to Utw with pleasure. ' FAMILIES CROWING SMALLER. Americttn Birth Bute Has Been Declining Since 1(100, Saj - M Dr. Kngelmnnn. [ Dr. George J. Engelmann, of Boston, | has been gathering statistics regarding | the size o? American families, and has sent tho vesult to the Journal of the American Medical Association. His conclusion is that the number of births in American families has been steadily declining ever since 1000, and is now rapidly approaching the statistical level of France. Dr. Engelmann's observations are based upon 1700 cases in private and dispensary practice in St. Louis and the study of 2038 cases from the genea logical records of Massachusetts. These ure his conclusions: Among the laboring classes 21.2 per cent, of American-born married women are childless, and among the so-called higher classes 23.(5 per cent. While the number of childless women is great the average number of children born to each woman Is small, and has been steadily growing smaller. From IGOO to IG3O the number of children in each family averaged 0.7; from 1804 to 1871 it had fallen to 4.27. At the pres ent time, among the laboring classes, cf St. Louis, at any rate, it has fallen to slightly over 2.0, and among other Americans it is only 1.8. Still another investigator in Massa chusetts has been figuring on the same subject Taking the census of 1895 as a basis he estimates that among Ameri can-born married women in that State 20.2 per cent, are childless. Among the the foreign-horn married women the childless proportion is only 11.02 per cent. Diversion is Best. That physical rest may be obtained by bringing into play a different set of muscles from those previously in use is illustrated In tile old story of the pugmlll mule that was found to step off briskly In the afternoon if allowed to reverse the motion of the mill. The child who produces incipient giddiness by twisting up a swing, brings the unequal congestion of the centres of equilibrium to a balance by a rap ! d untwisting motion. Absolute rest of mind or body scarcely exists, relative rest or modification of the mode of activity gives a sensation of rest at any rate. After a long day of close visual application, when the hands, press the tired eyes (although this particular mode of stimulating visual sensation may be harmful), how delightful to many persons are the subjective sensations of color—the kaleidoscopic effects that come aud go with slight variations in pressure. The brain finds rest In an objectless play of color; so the tired mind seeks rest from the stress of routine duties, not In the unconsciousness of sleep, hut In the frolicsome vaudeville, or the per usal of light literature or the news paper. Perhaps this explains to some extent the wonderful demand for hooks of fiction and magazines, as well as for the plotless stage performance so characteristic of these days of strenu oils intellectual life.—American Medi cine. Tricked Out of IKer Girlhood. Angelina had attended all the term with exemplary regularity—therefore It was more than annoying that she should drop out of tile class just as the examinations were coming in. ller work had reflected credit upon Iter. "If she was a stupid girl," her teacher said, "she'd he sure to he on hand to disgrace me. You go right up to An gelina's house aud tell her mother she must send Ange to school to take her examinations." "Yes'm," said the class Mercury, and departed. "Please 'm now Ange's mother says she ain't got no say no more about Ange's com in' to school an' I ast her husband an' lie says she's got to slay home an' cook liis macaroni." "Her husband!" gasped the teacher. "Yes'm yestidy was her birthday she got 13 years old on yostidy, an' lier mother let her get married." But the teacher wasn't lis tening. Elie ,',' as thinking sadly of a blaclc-eyed, bright-faced child who had been tricked out of ber girlhood.— New York Sun. The Country's Paint Output. About thirty million gallons of mixed paint were sold in the United States during 1901. The greater portion of this wa.s not used in the large cities hut in the towns and villages where the structures are of wood. In no country is so much paint made as In the United States of America, and the hulk of that paint is composed of lead, zinc and linseed oil, and only the dark er shades are made of oxides of iron and other pigments. Many manufacturers use n small quantity of water in their mixtures, and when the quantity of water i" not over two per cent, it eannot be re garded as an adulterant. The water used is usually slightly alkaline, and In tile case of lime water it forms a calcium soap with linseed oil and thickens the paint so that it never settles hard in the tin and is easily stirred.—Scientific American. A Substitute For Sleep. A London paper says that the health of people in fashionable society is being dangerously threatened by a new drug which is popularly regarded as a sub stitute for sleep. Very discreetly it declines to name this dangerous sub stance When tea was first introduced into Europe it was commended for the bsiul- virtues, and it was believed that It would no longer he necessary to waste seven or eight hours In sleep. But extended experience has shown the disastrous results of cutting short the period of natural rest and keeping awake by the help of tea. and there is no reason to suppose that uheinists will ever be able to devise any substitute for sleep which will not in the long run bring nervous breakdown. An Exceptional Accomplishment. She didn't know much Latin; She had never studied Greek; Yet she met with admiration Which she didn't have to seek. For in getting off a street car She created no delay; She didn't travel backward. But stepped out the proper way. —Washington Star. Stationary. "There's 110 progress about him." "No? But he's still doing business at the old stundstilL —Philadelphia Press. Rather Rough on Pa. "What is a vacumro, ma?". "That part of your father that is di rectly under his hair."—New York Press. Unoppreciatlve. v'jfTj ' fli§| Js%c "Willie, if yer knew how beneficial mud baths is youse wouldn't put up seeh a holler!" New York Journal. Nothing* Doing. "What is the matter with Bills?" "Worring over business affairs." "I didn't know lie had any business." "That's it. lie hasn't,"—lndianapolis News. Dißcountetl First American Boy—"My papa lives like a prince." Second American Boy—"That's i r.t'u lng. My papa lives like the president of a trust."—Detroit Free Press. Perfection. "Do you think perfection is ever actually attained in this life?" asked the serious youth. "Yes." answered Miss Cayenne; "some people become perfect bores." —Washington Star. The Disappointed Hoy. "Gracious Bobby," said the second Mrs. Jencks, nee Ann Took, to her step son; "what are you crying about?" "800-hoo!" sobbed the boy, "papa promised me a new mamma, an' you ain't new at all."—Philadelphia Kecord. Another Public Benefactor. Hewitt—"That plumber claims to be a public benefactor." Jewitt—"How is that?" Hewitt—"He says that it is a dis grace to die rich, and that he has saved a good mny men from disgrace."—New Y'ork Sun. The Only Way, "Ah, Reginald, dearest," she sighed, "but how can I be sure that you will not grow weary of me after we have been married a little while?" "I don't know," he answered, "un less we get married and see."—Chicago Record-I-lerald. Easy Proposal. "If I only had an ambassador at the court of love!" sighed the bnshful swain. "A minister would be good enough for me," replied the demure maiden. "Arabella!" , "Herbert! And eo they were married.—New Orleans Times-Democrat. Suppressed* Father—"Another foolish question nnd you go to bed!" Willie—"But this ain't foolish! 1 only want to know what holds the sky up an' why ducks don't bark, and if !"—New York Journal. Her Observation. "Miss Gloriana," said the college ath lete in the outing suit, resting on his oars a moment, "let us co-educate a little in rowing. Beavo the tiller, come and sit by me and take this other oar." "But this is not co-education, Mr. McCorkle," she said, noticing that they were a long distance from all the others. "This is segregation." And she put the boat about.—Chicago Tribune. Whitewashing Tre-;. Trees that have been whitewashed are attractive, as they present a cot'.' JJ" trast with the green tinge of the leaves and grass, but the whitewash should be applied several times during the season, or whenever it is washed off by rains. Tlie Pctunin. The petunia in its habit of blooming partakes of the constancy of other ten der perennial bedding plants, being much more continuous in blooming than most of tlie true annuals. On this account petunias in a fair state of cultivation will be found to bloom con tinuously from June to fall, a great ad vantage in home embellishments. There is special pleasure for the home gardener in growing tlie fres 4 flowering single strains. In adaptabil ity petunias have an advantage over ■llmost every other seed grown flower. Do you want a lino pot plant for the w' window sill? The petunia will till the bill second to no other kind. Do you require something suitable for continuous bloom in a large vase or in a veranda box? The petunia will perfectly meet your wants. Is it a fine mass of flowers on the lawn or a lively contribution to the mixed flower border than is desired? Nothing will meet the need as will the various petunias. Do you desire to display taste In training flowers over trellises or to form pillars, cones or balls? Then wo counsel the use of single petunias. They are perfectly adapted to such purposes. A trellis of light stakes and wire is so simple that a child can make it. One plant is set at each of the stakes, these being about fifteen inches apart. J The training is a delightful task. To jk cause branches to spread, pinch the lenders; to elongate the growth In any given spot nip back the lateral shoots. Insoluble Phosphates. The use of insoluble phosphates, whether in the form of phosphntic rock or of the so-called Thomas slag, has long been a hone of contention or debatable matter, not only among the scientific men, but the practical farmers. The former have questioned whether the insoluble phosphate could be of any value as plant food, and some of the farmers have claimed that their crops were very much benefited ' by it. Although we have not tested It, our opinion leads us to believe that the farmers arc right, and those who rely only on scientific principles may be wrong. We do not place confidence in the power of the si 1 ■ and the action of frosts, rain and sum- *" mer heat upon what are sometimes called insoluble fertilizers. We know little of the power that these elements may exert, and when to the natural elements of the soil there may be added the effect of decomposing vegetable matter, either as stable manure or as green manure plowed under, we can only say that we think they have much effect in making soluble not only phos phatic but other mineral elements in tlie soil. Those who have used the finely ground rock or Thomas slag upon fields which had received a lib eral dressing of stable manure, or had been treated with a green crop plowed under, are so unanimously in its favor that we cannot doubt hut that the so-called insoluble phosphates do become soluble in the soil under certain conditions, depending upon tlie soil or the treatment it has received.- \ J American Cultivator. W Tho Seventeen-Year Cicada. The seventeen-year- cicada, or locust, as it is more generally but wrongly called, is now In full possession of the territory in which it is due. In all probability succeeding broods will be less destructive, as tlie areas over which it occurs are less favorable for egg-laying than formerly. Another important, factor in its destruction is the English sparrow. This is particu larly true in public parks nnd other places near cities and towns. The sparrow is very fond of these insects and devours them greedily as soon as SEVENTEEN-YE All CICADA AND YOUNG, they eome from the ground. An adult cicada is shown in our Illustration at c. The female deposits her eggs in twigs and ends of trees nnd shrubs. The eggs hatch and the young fall to the ground, bury them selves and remain below the surface for seventeen years. They then ap pear as shown at a. Crawling upon some object near where they emerge, I they transform, leaving tho skin, as A seen at b, clinging to the object where ' it was fastened. The next appearance of this particular brood will occur in a less restricted area in 1919.— American Agriculturist. Quite Easy. It's easy enough to laugh at troubles unless they happen to be your own.— New York News. '