THE LAST JOURNEY, The little traveler set forth With one last smile of sweet content. There are no footprints south or north, To show to us the way she went; No tiny footprints in the snow. No flower for token backward thrown, "Sweetheart," we wept, "why must you po?" Smiling, she went her way, alone. The little traveler went her way And left us all who loved her so. She journeyed forth at break of day—■ A long, long way she had to go. The stars were paling in the sky— Their kind eyes must have seen her start. "Come back to ua.dear heart,dear heart!" The little traveler's tiny feet Have found a path that we must find. She w .3 so little and so sweet! We cannot linger, left behind. We stumble, seeking day by day, 0 little traveler! Who will .send A guide to point us out the way To find vou at the journey's end? —Francis Carine, in Youth's Companion. The Wooing of Is'bel. By ALFRED J. WATERHOUSE. 99999999fW 99^999999999^999 £ r s s'E night there was n I 1 dance down to Angels," V/ said the Old Settler, "a IT Reub Banuertou, bein' kin der lonesome, e'neluded he'd go. He was a mighty modest man, Reub was, an' he was sittin' by the wall, not cale'latin' to dance, when a girl he never saw walked up to him. She was n big girl with square shoulders, an' anybody could see she didn't need much male pertectlon. Reub looked at her an' then looked nway, nn' she says: " 'Hev the nex' waltz with me, pnrd ner?' "Reub was new in this country, then, an' didn't know much 'bout the ekallty of the sexes. So he sorter shuffled his feet aroun' an' fin'ly says: " 'l'm mighty Borry, hut I don't know how tor wnltz,' which was a lie due to his bashfulness, but Is'bel, which was her name, didn't know It then. " 'Oh, come on,' she says, 'that needn't make no diff'rence; I can swing you.' "So lie went, an' if you'd seen the subsekcnt proceedin's you'd hev thought she could swing him. More'n half the time his feet never touched the floor, an' ills faee shone so with perspiration that It looked like one of these new-fnngled Indecent lights. But he kept tliinkln', 'Waal, it'll be over pretty soon; I won't hev to stand it long.' "The waltz ended at last, an' Reub was wondcrln' whether he orto thank her for the pleasure or she orto thank him, when she says: " 'lf It don't make no diff'rence to you we'll go out on the veraudy an' sit out the nex' dance. I'm tired.' "It did make a diff'rence to him. for he was gittln' oneasy, but when he come to look at her he couldn't think of any way out of it, so he went. "The firs', thing she did after they got on the vernndy was to grab Ills hand, Reub tided to pull it nway, hut she grabbed it firm an' unyieldin' an' says in pleadin' tones: " 'Oh, my b'lovcd one!" " 'I ain't neither your b'lovcd one,' says Reub, soothin'l.v, hut firmly. 'I ain't never done notliin' to encourage these unman unwomanly perceedin's of yours. I never saw you 'fore to night.' " 'You are, too, my b'loved one. You may not know it. hut you are my soul's 'finity that I've been waitin' fer, an' I felt it jus' as soon as I saw you. Oh, my 'dored one!' . "Waal, Rculi sot there more'n fifteen minutes tryin' to convince her that lie wan't her 'dored one, an' that prob'ly her soul's 'finity'd he 'long on the ne:i' emigrant train, but she only grabbed his hand tighter an' tried to pull Ills head onto her shoulder. He asked her to tlflnk how his mother would feel if she knew how he was bein' led on, hut she still clung. She was hit hard, Is'bel was. "Fin'ly she let go of his hand to hruSli a fly off lier ear, an' Reub run. Is'bel looked after him, sayln' so that Bill Hawkins heered it, 'He ylt shall he mine, my b'loved one; he yit shall be mine!' "Nex' mornln' early Reub started out propectln'. Ho said he felt zlf he was a ha'nted man an' reckoned he'd better seek s'elusion. "The second day he was out, 'bout evenin', he was sittin' by his cabin door when n liorso an' his rider come aroun' the big rock by his cabin, nn' a tender voice says: " 'I have found you, oh, my b'loved!' "Reub didn't look up, hut he says: " 'I ain't your b'loved, I tell you, an' you orto know it by this time.' "Rcnb says her voice was low an' ecstatic, though somewhat bass, as Is'bel's voice allers is. when she again says: 'I have found you, oh, my b'lovcd!' he kinder hesitated. Then lie gays: " 'Waal, s'posln' you have found me, though I ain't any such thing, what do you propose to do about it?' " 'Oil, the delicious bliss of this here moment when I again found my soul's 'finity!' " 'You may have found your soul's 'finity, hut it is due to j'ou for me to suggest that iy has not found you. nn' I want to know what you propose to do 'bout it, as I said before.' " 'lt does not matter; to be with you Is enough.' " 'Waal, it does matter, too. I'm a lone an' lonely mnn, hut if worse comes to worst I can pertect myself. You may be stronger'n me, hut you can't lure me. What would the world say if it knew 'bout this?' " 'I can trust my soul's companion.' "By this time Is'bel had dismounted, an', seizing Reub's hand in her own, she says; " 'l'm goin' to set right here till you promise to he my own.' " 'All I've got to say is that you've laid out a long program for yourself.' "They sot there, an' sot. Is'bel 'peared to be c'ntented jus' to set an' hold his hand, an' Renb tried to whis tle nn' act zlf he didn't know she was there. Every onco in n while he'd try to pull his hand away, but she'd grip It the tighter, an' then he could hear lier wliisperin' low to herself, 'Oh, my b'loved!' "After a while the stars come ont an" begun to play hide an' seek with them through the branches of the pines. It got chilly, too, nn' onco Reub suggest ed that lie would git a blanket for Is'bel, cale'latin' that he could make n run for it if he could git a start, hut she ouly says, 'Oh, my b'loved!' an' hung right onto his hand. She was hard hit, Is'bel was. " 'Bout dusk, too, the bullfrogs over by the spring struck up, nil' as it grew darker an' darker they became more 'n' more Interested In the couple. Firs' a little fellow would chirp out au' say, 'What's he gain' to do 'bout it?' Then the little feller's ma would ask his pa, 'What's lie goin' to do 'bout it?' an' his pa would c'nsidor for a minute, give it up an' ask anybody that could answer. 'What's lie goin' to do 'liout it?' Leas', that's the way Reub said it seemed to him. "Then, long 'bout ten or 'levon o'clock a big gray owl come an' perched in the branches over their heads, an' pretty soon he got cnr'us an' says 'Who-o-o?' an' Reub was so mad by that time that lie answers right up. 'lt's me, blame you! What you got to say about it?' But Is'bel only kinder sighed an' says, 'Oh, my b'loved!' She was hard hit, Is'bel was. "It got to he midnight, an' still they sot there. Reub was most froze, but Is'bel didn't seem to mind It. 'Bout 2 o'clock, Reub says, lie got sorter dis couraged, bein' mos'ly an icicle by that time, an' so he soys to lier: " 'Waal, what do you want me to do?' " 'Only to be my own, my 'dored one.' "Reub won't quite broke down ylt, so lie says, "Waal, I'm blamed if I will!' But after nn hour or two morn ho got plum tired out an' made his las' argument. 'I don't want to git mar ried,' ho says; 'I ain't got 'nough money to s'port n wife, anyway.' "'You needn't worry 'bout that b'loved. Only say you love me an' I'll s'port you.' "Ileub see lie didn't stan' no show; so lie inquires, sullen like, 'Waal, where do you want to take me?' " 'To Tarson Elder's an' git married to once, b'loved.' ■ "All the way to the parson's—seven teen miles it was—they walked, Is'bel lcadln' the horse with one hand an' Reub with the other. She didn't take a single chance till after he'd admitted to the parson that lie took her till death us do part nn' nil tile res' of it. Then she heaved a sigh nn' let go of his hand, tenderly sayin', 'My own b'loved!' She thought n consld'hlo heap of Reuben, Is'bel did. Reckon I'd better meander." The Old Settler "meandered," but at the door he paused for a final re mark : "I don't s'poso there's no happier couple in Californy than Mr. an' Mrs. Reuben Bannerton, or per'aps I orto say Mrs. an' Mr. Is'bel Bannerton. They've been married seventeen years, nn' lias five children, lint she nllers c'nsiders Reub the firs' and tenderes' of the lot. She's c'nsid'ble fond of Reuben, Is'bel is." Then ho "mean dered."—Now York Times. IMsgulseg of Nature, By a decree of nature, one-half of the world flourishes at the expense of the other half. The sparrow chases the butterfly, hut the hawk chases the sparrow. For the problem of life is twofold. It is not enough merely to eat; it is necessary to avoid being eaten. Yet nature detests killing for killing's sake. Massacre forms no part of lier great plan. So we see that every creature is provided with some more or less effective quality of de fense, by means of which the nttacks of its natural enemies are rendered less frequent or less deadly. Thus the nntelope, by means of ift superior speed, at times escapes from the Hon. The nrmadillo, rolled in its wondrous coat of mall, lies secure among n score of hungry, gnawing foes, while the white hare, scarcely distinguishable from the white snow on wiiieh it crouches, Is often over looked by his foe, the fox. But of ail creatures none have received more nmpb protection than the insects. Some of them possess stings, others bite and a few puff out clouds of pois onous vapor to stupefy or blind their pursuers. Again, there aro insects clothed in impenetrable armor, insects ' covered with sharp spines and prickles | and others whose means of defenso I consist in nothing but a likeness to the I objects which surround them.—Royal | Magazine. Splnitfim Drink I.ens Tea. Along with other characteristics of spinsterhood that have gone glimmer ing down the aisles of memory and tradition Is that of devotion to tea. The spinsters of to-dny drink coffee, good and strong, much more frequent ly than tea. Not a few of them de mand even stronger beverages, but fori none of them would the teapot be an) appropriate emblem. Ten no longed serves, perhaps is not needed, to soothe the wounded vanity or console tliosd women who are outside the mntrß raoninl palace of bliss. "Afternoon | tea" still stands ns a convenient termj j but it includes almost everything exJ I cept tea, and when that harmless bev erage is served it is so doctored that the tea-drinking old maid of tradition would not recognize it.—Taeomfl Ledger. (She Ff lde of UfCo OVERLOADED. Don Cupid's lot is hard, indeed, And labor is his guerdon: The little god who used to laugh Now bears a heavy burden. Ilia bo-v and arrow cast aside, Hi., woe he scarce can smother; With Dun's tucked underneath one arm And Bradstreet's in the other. —New York Times, HIS, ENGAGING REMARK. Mr. Dumhead—"Nelson was coming to call, but I told him you would be engaged this evening " Miss Olemade (rapturously) "Oh, William!"—Princeton Tiger. SEVERED HIS CONNECTION. "Were you discharged from your last plpce ?" "No; they didn't want me any longer, and so I left."—Brooklyn Life. TnE LANDSMAN AT SEA. "What was the matter. Captain?" "Oh, nothing at all, but the engineer thought the screw was broke." "Well, no one could see it tinder the water, so it would not matter anyway, would it?"— The Moon. YIELDED TO THE INEVITABLE. Bllson—"So you have a titled son-in law? I suppose yon consider him a hlgli honor?" Tribbler—"Well, yes, ho did come rather high, but Carrie seemed sort of set upon buying him,"—Boston Tran script. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN ALL. Ho—"I kind o' think I'vo eeeu you lie fore. Ain't you a shop girl at Bar gen's?" She—"Sir! I'm a saleslady." He—"That so? I'm an elevator gen tleman at the same place."—Philadel phia Press. AT A STREET CORNER. Old Crusty (to beggar)—" Look here, my fine fellow. An. able-bodied man like you should work, not beg. You ought to be given In charge." Beggar (bitterly)—"l'm safe agin you, anyhow, if there's any glvin' In it. Y'ou alnt 110 gtver." ~ QUITE DIFFERENT, May—"But why do you think be mado a mistake in taking up music as a profession? I always thought he played the fiddle rather welL" Ann—"lt's quite evident that you never heard him perform upon the vio lin."—Brooklyn Life. IMMEDIATE RESULTS. One day my. little brother insited on staying out In the rain. On being asked why he dkl not come in he said: "I have to get watered so I'll grow." Next day he said; "Yesterday I was only up to my nose, and I've grown to the top, of my head in the night, be cause I stayed out in tho rain." WHAT DILTHE MEAN? Phil Uppe—"l'm tired o' dls trnmpin* business, Pete, and I'm goin' ter make a change." Pete —"What's ye goin' ter do?" Phil Uppe—"Well, I t'ink I'll open a bank." Pete—"Wld dynlmlte?"—Detroit Free Press. WHY HARRY WEPT. "Why, Harry, what's the matter?" asked a mother of her four-year-old j hopeful, who was crying as If his heart I would break. ] "G-grandpa slipped on the s-street ! and g-got his c-clothes all m-muddy," j sobbed the little fellow. "Well, don't cry about it dear," said tho mother. "I'm glad to see you so ; kind-hearted and sympathetic, how ever." "It a-ain't that," sobbed Harry. , "S-stster s-saw him and I U-dldn'L" ' Chicago News. | HER DOUGH "RIZ" ALL RICHT. The Embarrassing Experience of a Kind. Hearted Woman of Skpwhegan. A medicine bottle, n mirror and a bunch of keys, all sticking to a cbnnk of dough ns largo as your head was the sight that met a Skowhegnn wom an's view when she opened her satchel in tho Skowhegan car en route to Lew iston. She had wondered for some tlmo what it was that was swelling out tho sides of her satchel in such an unpro portionnto manner, and she opened the satchel to find out She utrugglhd to close it, but she could not. Tho man In the rear seat looked over her back to see what the matter was. The con. ductor stopped to look at ber in her helpless state. "What's the matter, madam?" he In quired. "Oh, nothing. Bread Is rising, can't you see? Oil, get away!" She got her fingers In the dough and then she got mad. She tried to pull them. She tried to close the satchel, but it would not close. "Confound that thing," she said, and the satchel, comb, mirror and dough disappeared out through a window. When she tells her friends about the case now she laughs at tho horrid fellow-passenger and conductor, but she did not feel like it then. She was coming to visit a friend in Lewiston. The friend admired her bread very much and said it was tho best in the world, so, not having any bread ready to bring with her, she seized upon a large piece of dough which was raising in a pan before the fire, and, wrapping It in a napkin, she placed it in her grip with the above result.—Lewiston (He.) Journal. , Tho Istisslnn Succession. It was hoped and expected in Russia tlvat tho Czar's ouly surviving brother, tho Grand Duke Michael, who now bears the title of Czarevitch, would shortly be displaced from this position by the birth of a male heir-apparent in the direct lino, hut for tho fifth time since his marriage Nicholas 11. has been disappointed, and this time more acutely than before. Four daughters have been born to him at pretty regu lar Intervals since lS'Ju, but now tho Imperial court physicians certify to the premature confinement of the Em press. The question of tho Russian succes sion is by no means clear. According to n decree of the Emperor Paul of 1707, the succession is by right of primogeniture, with proference of male over female heirs, hut this must be a different law from that of our own royal house, otherwise the Czar's brother would not be his present heir apparent In preference to his eldest daughter. Since the accession of tho Romanoffs Russia has been ruled at various times by four Empresses, but it is not certain that, failing the present Czarevitch—whose constitution is by no means robust—his position ns the heir-apparent would not be taken by the Czar's uncle, the Grand Duke Vladimir, tho handsomest and ablest member of the imperial house—a kind of cross in character and accomplish ments between Nicholas 1., our an tagonist of the Crimea, and liis son, Alexander 11., tho emancipator of tho serfs.—London Chronicle. Stolen Watches Not Pawned in Paris. Of watches alone there are received nt Mont-de-piete and the twenty-two branch offices from 1000 to 1200 a day, about 350,000 in a year, tho average loan on a watch being thirty or forty francs. The official assured me that 111 this great number of watches scarcely one in 1000 has been stolen, the fact being that people who have come dis honestly by watches or other property fight shy of the Mont-de-plete. Tho reason of tills was presently made plain as we watched the formalities of record, and I realized how difficult It would be for any one to do business here under a concealed identity. Ev ery client receiving a loan greater than fiften francs must produce some of ficial document—an insurance policy, a citizen's voting card, a permit to carry arms or a rent receipt bcnrlng ids signature and throwing light upon his station In life. For loans under fifteen francs the client is simply required to show an envelope sent through the mails to his address. All these facts with various others, are duly inscribed upon huge record sheets, so that who ever deals with tho Mont-de-plete ex poses hlqisolf to n scrutiny that must be ungrateful to folks of shady ante cedents. Indeed, certain persons make this a grievance against the Mont-de piete, and declare tho Paris system an impertinent intrusion upon a client's privacy, which would F mi a point badly taken if the client is an honest man.—Century Magazine. The Shriveling of the Earth. Measured by the yardstick, the world to-day is as great as in the days of the Pharoahs. A hundred years ago it still retained that formidable girth. To day, measured by the hourglass, tho planet has shriveled luto a mere mlnln ture of its former self. Under the com. pressure of electricity, steam and steel bridges, a spectacle is presented of practical time and space annihilation. Seas have been dried up, continents pushed together, and islands wedded that this might be. Nations once iso lated are now In earshot of one an other, and the markets of all peoples lino a single street. American wheat fields are days, not mouths, away from British hakeshops. New York Is on the outskirts of London and Paris not a block away. Deep sea cables and land wires hom tho buyers and sellers of the world into a vortex of competi tion, whose diameter is a minute, and qithln whoso circumference are gath ered all the produce and the purses of mankind.—National Magazine. If you would have your affection re '■ clprocated get stuck on yourself. The Sanatorium Treatment of Tuberculosis By Dr. Herbert M. King. SHE climate must be neither very cold cor very warm for the treatment of the consumptive. It must be dry, but not dry enough to hold dust suspended In the air. The air must be stimulating and the elevation should be more than 1000 feet above the sea level. "y Two things are needed in the successful treatment of the consumptive—hyperaea-atlon and increased nutrition. There should be systematlaed feeding to the limit. Exercise in the open and rest in a redlining position are needed. The weight is Increased by rest and "stutiing," but if the weight is increased above the nor mal it is at the expense of the well-being of the patient Take as an analogous exaaiple stall-fed animals, which are prone to tuberculosis. The laboratory of a consumptive sanatorium should be equipped for medical research; there is little research at these institutions except at the one at Sar anae Lake. The minimum time for an incipient and uncomplicated case in a sanatorium is three months; for a more advanced case, six months or more. If they have clean homes and wholesome occupations, they may then go home. In acute cases liquid food should predominate. As pulse and temperature fall, more proteids should bo given. Baths, according to the ability of tho patients to stand them, should bo indulged In, and light outdoor exercise is beneficial. Games, such as croquet, outdoor bowling, archery and modified golf may be pursued, but not until the patient is tired. Jc? Clean and Unclean Money. By the Rev. Dr. P. S. Grant. S3 the man who lias done some wrong to bo denied the right to do some good? All these big gifts to institutions proceed either from motives of contrition or else the man is not so bad as we think him. I think it is pretty generally understood that all those gifts are In a sort of way an expiation, a sop to relieve the conscience. The more public the gift the more fully it is understood that the man is sorry. Some man to-day consolidates a few railroads and demands and gets a fow millions of dollars for his pains. Are wo going to refuse the gift of the man who has mado his money in this way, saying that it is tainted money? We must not be too squeamish about these gifts under the present industrial situation. We see the college professor who Is giving his best so inadequately paid that he well-nigh starves. Out of all this giving we may arrive at a state of society when we will not try to wring the last cent out of our neighbor but rather enjoy the blessed pleasure of giving. Great gifts from tainted fortunes are nets of restitution. Judas's money was not put in the treasury of the temple but devoted to the use of the com munity as it was "blood money." That is the only use for these vast fortunes. / There is no fear that gifts to educational institutions from such sources will i result in the elimination of free thought in those colleges and the substitution for them of views peculiar to the donor. Let us tako all the money we can from such sources. They cannot restrict education or net in any way harmful to the public weal. <6? The Law and the Penalty. , By George Harvey. ——*o such of the students of evil as wish to understand its nature rather Tthan to practice It, there has been nothing more dismaying than the apparent uncertainty and even inability of the law in the case of many offenders against it Not only the law which is supposed to be administered in what are drolly called the courts of justice is of this faltering and erring effect, but the law by which a man of bad XX Xv. conscience judges and punishes himself, when there is 110 statute made and provided for his misdemeanor, is equally inoperative. It __J has been noted by those who have much to do with criminals that ■> remorse is apparently more the effect of temperament than of re sponsibility, and that those feel it most who need feel it least. Tho guijjw man is said to be more concerned in getting off than in lamenting his misdeed! and this fact, if it is a fact, has been turned to account by the agnostic science of a period which seems now closed, in disestablishing the notion of a moral government of tho universe. Tluit science discarded the old idea of Come uppings in the affairs of men, and left tho strongest to survive, without regret, by whatever menus he would. It concerned itself with tho physical and in tellectual evolution of the race, and allowed the individual to wander In dark ness as to what would happen to him if he did wrong, even what would happen to him from himself, or from tho god within him. Bnt there are signs that this sort of science has had its day,- and there is an obvious return to some of the former Ideals, especially among the psychological inquirers. These find it their business not only to ascertain new facts, but to revise the conclu sions of science in regard to the old ones. Tho soul Is once more having n chance and conscience is coming back to its own, at least iu the interest of the spectator. Whether it will come back a chastened and instructed conscience, or tho sick and crazy thing it too often was, a Bourbon that has learned nothing and forgotten nothing, remains to bo seen. What is certain is that It is meeting the recognition as a moral force which has been largely denied it for a genera tion past, and that It is being studied with an Intelligence freed from theological preoccupations to fresh activity.—Harper's Weekly. JZ? JS? Success—lts Cause and Effect Merit and Work, Not Luck, Are the Watch words. By Emily Elsnor. ■ UCCESS! Is there a brighter word In our entire dictionary? Does it not scintillate with all the good things of life? Is it not Success, or even an approach to it, that entices the weary trav ■ —| eler into dark and unknown paths, buoyed up by the hope that I fl? v B this beacon light may cast its ray 9 o'er the end of his journey? ■ 9 When you hear of a successful mail, you instantly conjure I J V up visions of a pompous, self-satisfied gentleman, leaning back a 1 in his office chair and toying with his watch chain, while, com- jS plaeently, he looks from tho high pedestal of success down on 11 the tolling mob at his feet Ho entertains royally, his dinners W are the talk of the town, his wife's gowns and Jewels are tho envy of the women of her set, and the finest tutors of the gentle arts and graces are engaged to teach his children the very latest foibles In culture. Take it all in all, the petals of roses are cast in thick, soft profusion in his path, while the thorns are thrown into tho road that the unlucky ones may tread thereon. "Luck—that's the thing," yon grumble, enviously. Jenlousy rankles in your breast, and you shulllc along, cursing the fates that deal thus fortunately wltliV one man and harshly and ungenerously with another. "What's the good oif starving?" yon say. Luck is against you and you might as well give up. "Down with the rich!" you cry, striking the universal chord of the unfortunate. Instead of studying the science of accumulating money, you study the evils of accumulated wealth. Thus you go through life, bemoaning your own fate, and In your heart envy ing and hating the successful man. You like to tell the story of so and so, the successful man, who In your boyhood days was proud to be seen playing mar bles wtth you; and you like to wind up dramatically: "See him torday. He Is rich—l am poor; wo are farther apart than the poles. He scorns me. His money separates us. The fates Will It sol" As a matter of fact—the fates had nothing to do with It.. The man of sound mind and body, the man of will, energy, perseverance—the man of good heart and spirit is master not only of his destiny, but of destinies! The qualities I have enumerated are the heritage, the birthright of every man! He who al lows any of these, his natural faculties, to wither for waut of exercise. Is not and cannot hope to be the successful man! With the perversity of human nature you study only the effect of success. Why not study its cause? Therein, and therein only, lies your chance. Ite meinber, while you are talking and moaning the other man Is doing! Doa'jt . blame things to luck! It is work, work, work—faithful, persistent, unceasing* work that wins success. Could you but see the successful man produce his success a little admiration and wonder might join and possibly preoedo your Ire and envy. Day after day and ffir into the night, he toils with body and brain, often putting in three times as much work a? the meanest and most ill-paid of his employes—and does his worli cease when success crowns Ills efforts? ( N'o! While It means hard work to gain success, It is none the less hard work to keep it! I -could cite thousands of living examples of this living truth—success tvoi work, and work means successl