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\lecle CHAPTER 1 ALL AT SEA. "A sail on the larboard bow!" shouted the lookout, clinging to the fore-topgallant stays of the armed cruiser Sea Hawk. "Can you make her out?" called up Captain Ralph Denham, a tall, wellfcuilt, handsome young man, in the undress naval uniform peculiar to Colonial officers in the service of England. This was in the year lt>%, when the *.<?<. ViotTiPiion fho ninthpplnnr! Jtnr! th? WV V ?? W? VUV | American Colonies were strong; out- i Bide foes forcing them to unite for mu- : tual protection, and causing them to j overlook the differences that were yet to rend them asunder. In reply to the Captain's question, I "Can you make her out?" the lookout took a longer and more careful view of the strange craft that had attracted his 'attention; then he called out: "She lies low down, sir. Seems to have rakish masts, and is heading to* wards Montauk." fc As the reader knows, Montauk is the extreme southeastern peninsula of Long Island whprfl the rliffs riso boldlv ud from the s?a, and -where, even at this i early date, fires were kept burning at night for the guidance of ehiDS sailing into the Sound, or seeking from Atlantic storms the protection of the Great Bay to the north. Captain Denham turned to the smooth-faced young man standing near; and in a voice in which authority and courtesy were blended said: "Lieutenant Dayton, take a glass, go ] aloft, and see if you can make out the etranger." "Aye. aye, sir!" replied the handsome ( youth, and, taking a telescope from the stand at the head of the companionway, he sprang into the mizzen-mast shrouds and went up easily and swiftly till he stood on the topgallant-yard, with one arm thrown lightly around the stay. There was a soft, warm breeze blowing from the south. It scarcely ruffled the surface of the sea, but it filled the tipper sails on the tapering masts, causing the stately vensel to glide with a Wonderfully graceful motion, as if propelled by some invisible power. "Well, Dayton/ called up the Captain, who was now standing impatiently by the man at the wheel; "what is she?" t "A war ship, sir," replied the young officer. "Her flag?" r "She fli< s none. Every stitch of canvas is spread, and she comes from the . Bouth." "i-i Ana lb LUUKiug jur -uuuuiui\: ^ "Yes, sir." "That is very stranje," muttered the Captain. He took a turn on the quarter-deck, then picking up a telescope he looked iD the direction of the 6tranger. now visible to the unaided eye as a white epech on the far-off horizon, where the blue eky and the blue ocean met. After an eager survey of some min- i Tites the Captain called out to Lieutenant. Dayton again: "Did you ever see the Adventure Gal- i ley?" "Yes, sir," was the response. i t "Where?" "Last year, in New York." The Lieutenant looked again at the strangei ' and added, with some excitement: "And that is the Adventure Galley or hei ghost." "All right, Mr. Dayton," said the 1 Captain. "Come down." The young officer descended with o , speed that to a landsman would have seemed downright recklessness. But there were no landsmen on the Sea Hawk. Her crew, one hundred and thirty in . number, were all in the prime of life. Stalwart, bearded and bronzed, yet as neat in their attire as if ready for in- ^ epection. The uniformity of their drecs would ' have told the stranger that they were , not mere sailors. But even the unpracticed eye could see this was not a merchant ship. Every pin was polished; every brass article shone like a mirror; every rone was taut and in place. The decks were ] as clean and white as a good housewife's kitchen floor, and such parts a? \ were painted looked as if they had just ! been under the brush. About the masts, in well-oiled racks. 1 were boarding pikes ranged ready tc 1 hand, arid beneath them, with grappling hooks attached, were neatlj coiled ropes. On either side there were ten port ' holes, through which?now that the '' ports were open?twenty great guns 1 iogkod ^ut. ]/ But theSe formidable weapons were j dwarfed by a long brass swivel guD 1 amidships, which must have been the particular pet of the sailors, for its exposed surface shone like a mass of gold. Briefly, the Sea Hawk was a cruiser, fitted out under the directions of Colonel Richard Livingstone?then in command of the New York Colonial militia ?and intended to destroy the pirates, who at that time were plundering the neighboring seas, and even making marauding expeditions into the peaceful bays and harbors on the coast. Two years prior to the date of our Btory, Colon'-l Livingstone had commiseiiined Captain "William Kidd to protect .the comrnervo of the Colonies from piracy, out as that gentleman sailed away and was never sten again, the general belief was that Captain William Kidd had gone to the bottom in some j Btorm, or, still more sad, may have have fallen a victim to the pirates he was sent out to suppress. 1 One thing was certain, the depredations on the 6eas still continued, and, as a consequence, the Sea Hawk was fitted out and placed under the com miiuu m>: giuimii yuuug suiiur, captain Kali h Deuham, of Sag Harbor, Long Island. At that time New York was comparatively of much le-s commercial importance than a* nrncont. otuI 1J>? hava of eastern lvong Island were more ire<iuently visited by ships than the beautiful harbor into which the Hudson empties. The Sea Hawk wns now on her return from a cruise to the West Indies; and as the officers and most of the crew were 4 ?.Unf cfill /.ollml ** T)?t* llimn. 11 I'm \> uttw aic oitii JUC liuiuj'tons," on Long Island, they hailed with delight, the lirst glimpse of th<> bold blue headland of Montauk, that told them they were nfar tho loved ones and the delightful land of tJaeir birth. Under Captain Denham's direetiCns, tho Color, al flag of New York was run up to iho foremast head, and from liio jnizzen gatY the royal ensign of England iiuttered in the fcreeze. - . _ ... j :4 *' i,: . . . . f.* > ^5V By this time the strange ship?heading evidently for the same hnrbor? came so close that her blar-k, well-moddeled hull could be distinctly seen above the water line. The open ports showed fifteen guns on a side, and by the aid of glasses her decks could be seen to swarm with armed men. "That ship is a stranger in theso parts," said Captain Denham, addressing Mr. Hedges, the first officer. Mr. Hedges was a middle-aged, slowspoken man, with a bright blue eye and a sturdy figure, such as we always associate with the model sailor. "She looks to be a stranger," 6aid the first officer, with the judicial deliberation that distinguished all his sayings, "and if she were a foe, I must confess that she'd be about as ugly a customer to tackle as ever came into these waters." "Strange that she does not show her' colors," said Valentine Dayton, the second officer; "if she's a friend she needn't be ashamed of them." "And she isn't ashamed of them, my boy, any more than we are. See; there goes the Union Jack to the peak. Ah. I feel easier to know she is a friend," said Mr. Hedges. "If she were a foe she would hoist a black flag," responded Capt. Denham, with a light laugh, "and she would prefer to flaunt it in the face of a fat merchantman rather than in the beak of the Sea Hawk." , The men not on duty eagerly watch< d the stately stranger, and they saw in her what delights the sailor's heart more than the most exquisite form can the eye of an artist. To make amends for his tardiness in showing his colors, the stranger, byway of salute, dipped his flag three times, nnd the Sea Hawk speedily responded to the courtesy. It is customary for ships at sea to learn each other's names, the ports ^ at* on/? fKnli* uUili wint'il iugj cancu unu uivu ucounations, by means of Hags used as signals, but as the headland of Montauk loomed out of the sea, and both 6hips were making for its eastern extremity, with 1 he chances of their soon anchoring side by side, this formality was dispensed with. The sun was setting as both ships, now not a half a mile apart, headed down the bay. The wind was barely sufficient to force them through the mirror-like water at a four knot speed. The scenes on either hand were Inexpressibly beautiful and animated. The islands, rising in dark emerald masses from the lighter green of the bound; the snores, wooaea aown to xne water's edge; and the forest-crowned hills mirrored in the placid expanse were of indescribable loveliness. Over the forests the blue lines of smoke marked the peaceful settlements. Here and.there a white house could be seen near the shore, with a rosy orchard in the background, for the seasou was spring, the last week of May, when Nature in our zone is in her loveliest attire. Nor did the two stately ships, with their clouds of snowy sail, alone add animation to the bay. On the south shore the long, red canoes of the Montauks, then a powerful tribe of Indians, could be seen darting back and forth under the impulse of long paddles, while to the north, in short punts, tho Shinicook braves could be seen trolling for the bluefish that had just come into these waters. .Nor were tne smaller craus 01 me white settlers wanting. Like butterflies, graceful yachts skimmed over the waters of the bay, and as they neared the ships the crews waved their hats and exchanged cheery salutations of welcome and thanks. At length Shelter Island was passed, and the Sea Hawk and the stranger, which had no name visible on stern or bow, cast anchor a few hu dred yards apart. CHAPTER IL ON 6H0RE. Away from Lone Island the charming town of Sag Harbor is but little known to-day; yet at the time of which we write it aspired to rival New York, and it had the advantage of an earlier settlement. Its schools and cnurcnes naa a locai celebrity, and its sailors were accounted the most skilful and daring on all the :oast. The residence of the leading man? though in a community where all were ambitious and of a descent equally good, 2ach thought himself a leading man? ivas just outside the village. Squire Cundit's homo was certainly nore pretentious than any other building within miles and miles. -?_ It was a cluster of low buildings all joined by covered passage ways. Tho irst log hut built on the site with an juter block-house pierced for muskots svas now used as a kitchen. The next building was a one-story frame, with a roof and quaint gables, and to this structure additions were made to suit the wants and tastes of the proprietors. Squire Condit was a rich man. He paid light taxes on hundreds or productive acres; he owned four whaling ships, and was interested in half the vessels sailing on the Sound. He was a justice af the peace, a deacon in the church, and altogether a prosperous and most important personage. Squire Condit's family consisted of a wife then aged forty-five, and fifteen years his junior, and a daughter, Ellen, aged nineteen, a beautiful, well-educated girl, who was the toast of every gallant in the colony to whom wealth 1,1 ^^4. on IncnfforiihlA ill a uriuu ^uuiu nuu mv **** *uwu..v.??v objectica. l'erhaps Captain Ralph Denham might be considered a member of Squire Condit's familv, for though not related by blood he was a son by adoption. There had been a great deal of mysterv about this samo llalph Denham; we say "there had been" for now that Ralph was a man of twenty-six and well known and beloved, the lact that he appeared as a child in charge of a foreignlooking stranger who abnndoned him was forgotten, or if alluded to by somo old dame it was only to show that genealogy was not always essential to success. The old squire loved the boy as though he had been his own son, and ho educated him to tho best of his by no means limited ability?though there were gossips who hinted that Ralph's guardian got money for his support from people beyond the sea. Between Squire Condit's residence and the village was the fine oi l home of l'octor Hedges, the brother of the first officer of the Sea Hawk, and the uncle of Valentine Dayton, the second officer of the same ship. It was often mentioned as pomething rf>mn Hfiihio thsit. Doctor HodcreS and Squire Condit, two of tho richest men on tho island, and certainly among its foremost citizens, should each have only one daughter and no son. Lea Hedges was a great beauty, and some of tho old maiden ladies who professed to be very often shocked at tho girl's dashing ways, thought it was the greatest of pities that Leu Hedges w;n not a buy. Bhe could handle a boat or manage a horse as well as any man on the island. | 8he wa? thoroughly fearless Ui hef t-'PEAz Ing and her going. Ard though ehe often set the idle tongues of the gossips to wagging at what they considered hei mid freaks, she was beloved for her nobility of heart as much as she was admired for the rare beauty of her person. It might be added that Lea Hedgesthanks to the teaching of her father, who was thought to be a prodigy oi learning, was thought to be a young lad}' of phenomenal acquirements, but at tnaL Lime euucuiiuu uui ^vudiuered essential to the gentler sex, there being a very general impression that "schooling" t nded to give women airs unfitting the subordinate place Heaven intended them to occupy. The moment the Sea Hawk was sighted, the men in and about Sag Harbor forsook their work; the women sped out of their houses, and the children stopped their games and ran down to the white shore. "While the anchors were being dropped, the old sexton rang the bell on the white steeple, and over every building ~c :^ n cViato K)i iiLijJui Ltmuy a xjaj^ was iaiocu ku ouvtt the joy of the villagers. A flag of purest silk was run up from a staff in front of Squire Coudit's mansion, the old gentleman performing the work with his own hands. "It's the flag Ralph gave me before he sailed," said the Squire, addressing his wife and daughter, "and I am sure the dear boy will recognize it." [to be continued.] (>'ame Bird Shooting. Field training is quite as essential for the master in learning to bring down the game as for the dog in prop erly rinding it. ao Kina ox targes shooting will take the place of practice on actual game. A man may shoot a shotgun capitally over a trap, and yet fail miserably in tbe field; and, contrariwise, I have known good field shots who, when placed before a trap, misBed glass balls or clay pigeons with the most consistent regularity. ui course trap Bhooting can accomplish something in the way of teaching the tyro to handle a gun properly, but, considered as mere practice, it is a very poor substitute for field shooting; and considered as eport, it has no rank whatever. If one wishes to "keep his hand in" during the close season, the most efficacious plan is to shoot at a target with a rifle. This, indeed, is excellent practice at all times as an aid to wing shooting, though seemingly the two are so very different. The value lies in this, that rifle shooting teaches one the necessity of accurate aiming, whiah the bird shooter is apt carelessly to overlook, and corrects tbe tendency to jerk the trigger prematurely, which persons of a nervous temperament are prone to acquire, particularly in woodland shooting. Many a man, under the stress of the oxoitoment incident to the flushing of game, acquires the bad habit of habitual and almost involuntary snap shooting, regularly pulling the trigger as soon as the gun is at shoulder, though he may be fully &ware an instant later that the aim was nowhere near the bird. Rifle practice, better than anything else, will tend to correct this, teaching the almost automatic mental mechanism that governs one at the moment of map shooting, to demand at least an approximately aocurate aim before releasing the trigger. Of course no successful handler of the shotgun expects his aim with this weapon to be absolutely rifle-like, but the more nearly one approximates that standard the fuller will be his game bag, on an average, at the close of the day.~ Harper's Weekly. Vegetable Freaks. We who live in the temperate zone are accustomed to Nature on her best behavior. We see her orderly ways in the woods, where pines and oaks, poplars and maples, alders and willows, and other forest trees have roots that grow down into the ground and limbs that grow properly up and out into the air. But elsewhere Nature has other moods and methods. In a tropical forest there is none of this air of dignity and good principle. The odd pranks, the wild absurdities, the vegetable freaks, which she is there guilty of, make a difference that is astonishing. Trees apparently grow upside down, and assume all sorts of eccentric shapes. Great dragging vines sprawl over everything, twisting and distorting the poor tired trees until they are crippled for life with what looks like rheumatism. The heavy rains and the hot sun make the plants grow rapidly, and there are fierce fights to see which shall win a little space in all that tangle. Such pushing, such climbing! Then there is the orchid, clinging fringe like everywhere?frail and lovely, swinging back and forth in the soft air; but it has no conscience. It will not do a stroke of honest work, and is determined to live on some one else, in which it certainly succeeds. And there too is the wild pineapple (called in the West Indies the "pine"), which takes root in the rich mold lying on the upper sides of the largest branches of the migntiest ana oiaeec of the trees. Where its diverging leaves start a cup is formed, which catches the rain and stores it up for the dry season. In this water little tree frogs and small crabs live, and it is told that years ago one of the expeditions sent against the fierce miirooners in the mountains of Jamaica would have perished from thirst had it not been for the little "pines" and their tiny reservoirs.?St. Nicholas. The Indian Tried i'epper S'nuce. My 9ister and I taught school one winter in adjoining districts in Brown County, Kansas, closo to the reservation of the Kickapoo Indians. One member of the tribe, old Joe, - -U - f.-il I n TV TO II tf j U fjUliUCM, UHIU4VW ?V1IW..| a frequent visitor at the farmhouses in the neighborhood, where he used every means at his command, except work, to secure the gratification of his fondness for civilized cookery. He was taken in to dinner one da,y by a kind-hearted farmer at the hotel of the little country town. Joe noticed there, among other things, that the men all made tree with the pepper' bottle. At the first opportunity he helped himself to a liberal portion and took a spoonful of the mixture. Instantly clapping his hand over his burning mouth he sat for u little time with tears running down his face. As soon as he could catch his breath he exclaimed: "Heap good!"?Wash' ington Star. I Standard Oil Company to Control Ire. Tt is rpoorted that tlie Standard Oil Com Ipany wilf enter the ice business next season with a view of gaining complete control of tliut industry. i ^ NEW WONDERS. MARVELS DESIGNED FOR THE PARIS EXPOSITION OF 1900. Huge Surveying Tower?A- Great > Globe?An Enormous Hole in the Ground?Largest Tele scope In the World. ; "1^ "T OVELTY is the note of the i \ times and Paris strikes the 1_\ note. It would be hard in'(? ' deed to provide posterity \ with a better illustration from which j to gauge the taste of the world's pub1 lio during the declining days of our oentury than the scientific and engineering eocentrioities that will mark this exposition. We of to-day are i lovers of wonders. We will find enoagh in Paris four years hence to tickle us to the end of our days. Wonder number one will provide I i jjj, i! ii 11'IIs' <-?i I EXCITING RIDE IN MTD-AIR. an aerial journey more than 900 feet above the earth! The Bcheme ie to awing a midair suspension railway from the top of the Eiffel Tower to the summit of the distant Trocadero, from which will be hang by rollers chairs making the journey back and forth. Think of it! The Eiffel Tower is 985 feet high. It will give you some notiou of what that means to recall the copper cap on the top of our Washington Monument is only 555 feet from the ground. Imagine 6uch a trip! Some folks found the journey round the Ferris I wneei at our world's rair a nervous ordeal. Compared with this aerial cable line, the Ferris Wheel ia positively ridiculous as a harr 6tarter. If shooting through the clouds ip a cane bottomed chair i3 not sensational enough to stir the blood of our modern novelty lover, let him enter the surveying tower, which will be built close by. There is nothing particularly startling about the suggestion of a surveying tower, vou say. Just wait till you hear all. You will enter a leaning cylindrical tower about fifty feet high and made of tempered steel. It locks like nothing more imposing than a metallic Tower of Pisa. You will find a circular seat inside, capable of holding about twenty persons. You will sit down and probably grasp the railing pretty tight, meantime holding your I breath. When the seats are all filled you will suddenly shoot up into the air for a distance of two hundred feet! You will then discover that your tower is made of concentric eteel tubes that telescope into each other, and Hi - ^ li " rnorosED surveying towek i that you are at the npex of the inner<>?,! r>rtw nnnprmost section. But the big tower will not stand straight up. It will bend over, rainbow fashion, in a long arc, with you dangling nt the end of it, for all the world like a fish at the end of a swaying rod. Then it will revolve slowly from it? base, swinging you in a wide circle over a large section of the exposition grounds, and finally land you on a stationary tower, down which you drop by an elevator to tho ground. The scheme of this tower was chosen as the most startling of five hundred remarkable suggestions. One of the rejected schemes, by the way, was to build a temple of literature out of bricks composed of the compressed pulp of rejected manuscripts. The idea appealed strongly to the imagina inno <->f tiu* maiiAc-prs. but the sensa y T tional features of the telescopic tower prevailed. The third wonder is the great globe, 120 feet in diameter, that will exhibit the entire geography of the world in the minutest detail. The exa^t means by which the visitor is to be brought in front of any particular spot on its surface he wishes to investigate is not yet finally decided. The latest plan is to encircle it with a railroad, npon which will run a regular train of cars. It is calculated that this train will enable you to outdo Phineas Fogg's marvellous feat with a very large margin to spare. You can go round the world in sixty seconds! Marvel No. 4 is an inverted Eiffel Tower. In other words, it is an enormously deep hole in the ground. This will lie on the opposite side of the grounds and its bottom will be reached , by a series of elevators. The depth that it is proposed to sink this 9haft is 1000 feet. It will be lighted from top to bottom, and the / construction of the cruet upon which the city of Paris stands will be exhibited and described in detail. One will pass through all ranges of temperature in descending this deep v pit. It is promised that every variety r of climate, from torrid to Arotio, will be encountered, though just exactly how this happens is not yet fully described by the management. Frequent _ stopping places are to be provided so . fhnf vnn can linger in any temperature that fancy dictates, and at these points attractions consistent with the temperature are to be provided. Tte lover of geology can here get the moat .exact data pertaining to hie scientific hobby illustrated in the most effective possiblo manner. The construction of this big hole will be one of the greatest feats, from a scientific point of view, of the exposition. The most distinguished mining engineers in the world have been engaged, and the problem of ventilation is likely to cause no end of trouble. It is not as an engineering feat,however, that the shaft will appeal to the biggest publio. Taken in the oonection with tbe Eiffel Tower, the wonder loving will be enabled to travel two thousands vertical feet Within the period of and hour without climbing one step. But the fifth and greatest wonder of the exposition is to be a telescope. Need it to be added that it will be the largest telescopy in the world? The object lent) ot the Paris Exposition telescope will be four feet, three inches in diameter. Fifty-one inches I Think of that! The largest telesoope dow in existence is me jjick, wuubu object glass has a diameter of thirtysix inches. The second largest is at Pulkowa, Russia, with a glass of thirty inches. The third is at the University of Virginia, with a glass of twenty?six iDchee. Harvard has the fourth largest, with a twenty-four inch glass and the fifth in size in the world belongs to Princeton College. At the present time there is making in Cambridge, Mass., a glass which has been heralded around the world. It is for the great Yerkes telescope, and its diameter will be forty inches. Thus will the Paris Exposition telescope eclipse by eleven inches the dia>'? 'i. (,i j I' ^ I FOR THE l'ARIS EXPOSITION, 1900. | meter of the greatest telescopic object I rrlnaa r>f tho wnrlf] ! It will, so it is claimed, bring the moon within one mile of ue ! The telescope is to be 180 feet long, and is to be rigged so that 61)0 persons can simultaneously view the heaveus with it. The image is to be received on a level mirror seventy-five inches in diameter, and from that reflected upon a screen.. The revelations of the starry mysteries that this gigantic telescope is , expected to make will thus be given not to a solitary astronomer, to be by ; him sent forth to the world in his own good time and to the benefit of his fame alone, but directly to the public, and bd.v of us may be fortunate enough to be personally present at stellar dis* . coveries of vast importance. < These are the five great wonders oi the Paris Exposition. But it is four years off yet, and who knows what those four years may produce? The Herald will doubtless yet tell its readers of other marvels equally great or mayhap greater than these with which the Capital of Novelty will signalize the close of the greatest century of the world's history. Paris may yet give ns seven TrnndAro ?Vow VnrV TTnrold. LARGEST WAR VESSELS AFLOAT. England's Two New Cruisers, the Terrible and the Powerful. England's two new protected cruisers, the Terrible and the Powerful, the largest war vessels afloat, have recently undergone their official speed trials. They are sister ships, built on the same plans, but by different constructors. The estimated cost is 83,300,000. The Terrible is 538J feet long over all, 71 feet wide, and 43 J feet deep from the'upper deck to the keelson, displacing 14,475 tons. The measurements of the Powerful are practically the same. The tonnage is almost double that of our Columbia, which is 116 feet shorter and 13 feet narrower. Thfl Terriblfl is about as loner as the St. Louie and the St. Paul of the American Line, but is eight feet broader aDd measures 2800 tons more. It is 62 feet shorter but 6 feet broader than the Ounarders Campania and Lucania, and measures 1500 tons more than they. It is 27 feet shorter, 13 feet broader, and measures 4500 tons more than the White Star steamers Majestic and Teutonic. The European war cruiser that comes nearest it in displacement is the 11,000-ton Russian Rurik. The Terrible's engines are intended to furnish 24,660 horse power, giving a calculated speed of twentytwo knots with natural draught. The armament consists of two 9.2inch guns, weighing 22 tons each, placed in barbette turrets, covered with 5-inch armor; of twelve 6-inoh ? ? J in 3 I rapia-nre guile, Eixieau lz-pouauers, twelve 3-pounders, and nine machine THE TERRIBLE, GREAT BRI guns. The larger guns are above the protected deok, the ammunition being convoyed to them by armored elevators. There are also two torpedo tubes at each end of the vessel. A turret protected by 10-inoh armor shelters the commanding offioer in ac* tion. The masts are hollow, with am* munition elevator? to supply the fighting topa. HANGS OH TO THINGS. The New York Zoo's New and Rare Klnkajou. There is a new animal at the Contral Park (New York) Zoo. He has a series of names and a long tail, with which THE KIN'KAJOf. he Langs on to things. The name by which he is best known is kinkajou. He is sometimes called a honey bear, thongh naturalists say that he is more nearly related to the raccoon family than to the bear tribe. The Zoo people have placed him in the monkey house, and he appears to be at home there, although he does not make a monkey of himself. The kinkajou comes from Central and South America. He is as large as a big cat, and seems to be a cross between the 'possum, the coon, the bear and the monkey. His tail is longer than his body and is prehensile. His tanguo is loup, and is used for dragging insects and other kinkajou delicacies out of crevices. The kinkajou lives on mice, birds, eggs, honey and fruit. Bananas and oranges are particularly desirable from his point of view. The kinkajou can jump from one tree to another, if they arc not too far apart, and after the jump he wraps his tail around a limb and swings as safely and contentedly as if in a hammock. During [the day tirao he sleeps, wrapped up liken bull. I At night he is lively, find tbe monkej* I at the Zoo have already entered a | complaint about hia nocturnal habits. ; < A CAPITALIST'S CABIN, 9 Built It With His Own Hands and In Prefers It to a Mansion. |H Over in the Berkley Hills, says the San Francisco Chronicle, Captain P. H R Thomas, President of the Standard BE Soap Company, has been busy for sev-j H eral years building a log oabin. Ev? H fjma A CALIFORNIA CAPITALIST'S HOME. i ery stroke of the work, even to cut* ting down the treee, has been per* formed by the well-known capitalist himself, and to-day he celebrated th$ completion with Admission Day exercises which were held at his palatial home, La Loma Park. , . Captain Thomas not only built the cabin, but lives in it, although hi^ handsome hoase stands within a etone'a throw of the novel dwelling. Fire or six years ago the work of building wae begun. The tiees which Thomas cat down to make the logs were the euoalypti growing on the land surrounding the cabin. Ihey were allowed to season, and then the log house was fairly started. Ever sinoe, the old war veteran has steadily pegged away at the task during his hours of leisure from business. Several little thingd are yet to be done within the cabin, but Thomas has already moved hie bed into it and sleeps under a drapery of Old Glory. The log oabin has been erected with two floors and oontains four main rooms., Three are on the first floor and one comprises the entire upper TAIN'8 GREATEST CRUISER. floor and is the room where Thomas ependa moat of hia time. The three room8 on the lowei floor are deoorated with United States flags, war emblems and bric-a-brao of various kinds. The hall above is fitted up with all jB the possessions whioh are nearest the Captain's heart. His sword and old flj uniform hang in one corner and flags I are draped around the walls. On one H wall hangs a large oolored pioture of flj the aerial railway with whioh the I "soap king" expected to connect San B Francisco and Oakland, but for which the Board of Trustees refuse a frau chise. One feature of the room is the w large log fire place whioh has been carefully tiled. Captain Thomas oon* I sidered this the hardest work in build* K ing, and spent several months in fitting I tho tiles. The logs are ohinked with plastering and the living-room of the H Captain is as snag as one in a modern I dwelling. "It is comfortable," says fl Thomas, "and I Jike to be here when H I am through with my business " & Captain Thomns is one of the best Bj known and wealthiest citizens of H Berkely. He is a pioneer of Oalifor* B nia, and erected the first building oa the West Berkely shores, where his soap works now stand. Hj Tho Thriving Alaskan Reindeer. s9 The schooner Ida Sobnauer has Bl arrived from Port Clarence with s Q cargo of ivory and whalebone. She brought one passenger, J. 0. Wedstad, superintendent of the Government station at that point, who is bound for Washington. 99 The reindeers introduced into Alaska some years ago from Siberia are reported to be flourishing, the H herd numbering exactly 1200. Fool hundred and fifty of these are at Port Mj Clarence, where an increase of 182 la reported this season. The animal* are prospering tinder the care of IM Laplanders who went north under HQ contract to the Qovernment three Hjj years ago. Wedstid's mission to the BH capital is to draw up another oontraot. D| He will also recommend a plan whioh, if carried into effect, will be of mucb fl| benefit to the Northwest Territory. The plan in brief is to establish ? number of reindeer relay stations tc Hi bring about communication with thf extreme north; even Point Borrow. B| the northernmost settlement, to be included. This can bo done at nmaU Bfl - ? ? **A?n nnrl twill be of inestimable benefit to fishermen, whalers, revenue cutters and miners, IH particularly the latter, between Ccok'f Bfl Inlet and the Yukon. No ontlaj Dj would be required except for the IH station buildings, as the animals art trained and the Laplanders only toe MR glad to see each other.?Tacomt A Picture oi the Near Future. rBH A practical invention for family exlursions."?Fliegende Blaetter. 3HM I