f ROST on the punkin. Vbcn the frost Is on the punkin and the fodder's iu the shock, lad you upar tnw kJ'0,,ck and gobble of the Btrnttin' turkey-cock, And the claokiu' of the guineys, and the cluokin' of the hens, And the rooster's hallylooyer as he tip toes on the fence; 0 it's then's the times a feller Is a feel ' in' at his best, jVkh tlie lisiu' 8,111 t0 Kroot him from a night of peaceful rest, As he leaves the house, bare headed, and goes out to feed the slock, When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock. Whey's something kind o' heartylike about the atmosphere When (lie best of summer's over and the oooliu' fall is here of course we miss the (lowers and the blossoms on the trees, And the mumble of the hnmmin' birds mid bnzzin' of the bees, Bat the air's so appctizin', and the land scape through the haze Of a crisp and sunny morning of the enrly autumn days ts a piilur' that no painter has the color in' to mock When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock. The husky, rusty rustle of the tossel of the corn, And the raspin' of the tangled leaves, as golden as the morn; The stubble in the fnrries kind o' lo?ie- someliko, but still A-prenrhiii' sermons to us of the barns they growed to fill; The strawstack hi the medder, and the renner iu the shed: The hosses in their stalls below the clover overhead 0, It sets ray heart a-clickin' like the tickiu' of a clock, When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's in the shock. -James Whitcomb Riley. . NAN'S KINDEfiGABTEN 56T?F cver 1 wns thankful I am II this minute," said Nan Gray, as she threw herself in an easy chair on the piazza. "It did seem as if school would never end, but ev erything has an end If you can only wait for it, and this blessed day winds up the term, and now for a good sum mer's rest from teaching the young idea and all Its attendant afflictions." "Well, dear, are you tired?" said her mother as she entered. "Tired to death, and I believe I al most wish I might not see a child again uutil September. Don't, please, don't take any children to board at the cot tage this summer, ma." "Why, Nan Gray, 1 always thought you loved children." "So I do, mamma, but after one has eaten a pound of chocolates she doesn't care for any more Immediately, does she? Don't you understand?" "Yes, Nan, I see. We will announce 'Ko children need apply,' bo don't worry." The next morning Nan and George, with their mother, started for their house at the beach, where they were to take a few boarders.- On the steamer sitting near them was a young man with three children and a nurse maid. The youngest child was about a year old, a bright, pretty little thing. The other two were boys, perhaps 3 and 5 years old, with sweet faces and cun ning ways. "Kan," saicf'George, "go and ask him If lie doesn't want a nice boarding place for the summer. That's just what you've been looking for In the way of boarders, you know." Nan flashed a look at her brother, then turned her eyes to the broad ex panse of sea, but in spite of herself her thoughts would come back to the group near by. "I 'wonder where they ore going. Where's the mamma? Per haps she'8 dead. He does look sad and serious. How lovingly he holds the little boy!" But It was nearly time for our travelers to land, and they be gan to pick up their bundles and bags. "Look, Nan, they laud here, too. I'll bet a cookie they are coming in answer to that 'ad' for a few boarders you put 'n the paper. Jolly t wouldn't It be a Joke on you, though, sis?" And George chuckled heartily. "Dear me, I ought to have added 'No ' liildren,' but I forgot. Do you sup pose they can be coming to our house, nia?" "Time will tell, Nan," said her moth er, smiling. They walked briskly on nud reached their house a. few minutes to advance of the "kindergarten par ty." as Nan's brother called it. Looking around, they observed the gentleman evidently Inquiring the way somewhere. He had stopped the local fish merchant, and from all appear auees was being directed to the Gray cottage. In a moment came a ring at the door, to which George responded. "Does Mrs. Gray live here?" Inquired the stranger, who was lending the lit t'e boy of 3 or 4. Closely following was another boy two or three years old er, and the nurse with the baby girl on her arms. George, though Intensely amused at Nan's predicament, Invited the party till VI. I'V hlltnl.. n..n1rn l.tt. juother. : Nan, who had dropped into a chair In the further part of the room, sat gaz tog out of the window Into the orchard. She henrtf the gentleman Introduce himself as Mr. Bailey and tell her mother that he had Been the advertise ment In the paner. TTla a, a year ago. ,, fiInce " toe 2 arter his little ones and directed the servants. IU.t Illness In her own home had ca,led her there, and for the sum! "e at least she must remain away After seeing the "ad" yesterday he JejMed this morning to g. ve he ab a sail down the harbor and see if any mTangcmntforasnrnmerhomecouW St, d ? CT a flultab,e P'ac. was round. The doctor had advised the "ashore, and he wanted then, near enough the city so he could see then every day. "I ngBure you n J ch Wren. Mrs. Gray, and Nu'rse Ma -y " see that they trouble no one. 1 vl 1 pay you well If you will let them ha e a home with you for a while." i( Motherly Mrs. Gray would have said yes immediately to his pleading but she remembered her promise to" Nan 'sensing herself, she beckoned Nan uto a side room. "Well. Nan, you have heard the plea, what do you say?" 'Oh, dear," said Nan. "I don't see how we can say 'no' with those little moth erless things right before us. If I had only been a little wiser on wording that au. i kuow now anxious you are to take the whole brood under your wing, and I know too well what its shelter means to urge you to say no, when your heart says 'yes,' you dear mother soul!" So the little family stayed many weeks. Papa Bailey coming down ev ery night. And so dear did they be come to Nan that It was only with feel ings of sadness that she thought of the:r leuviug. It was the last Saturday of vacation. Nan had taken Baby May into the ham mock In the orchard and had sung her to sleep In her arms. "You little dar ling, I wish I might keep you always." she whispered, as she gazed down Into the sweet, rosy little face. Looking up she saw bending over the hammock baby's papa. "I wish I dared to say the same thing to you. Nan," whispered he, as he looked into Nan's blushing face. "I have wished so many times this summer that I might always have you near. Won't you give up your large school and take a smaller one? We will be good pupils." "I am not used to mixed grades." said Nan, mischievously, "but will try it If you wish it very much. But 1 must tell you a little story first. Per haps you won't care for such a teacher then." So Nan told him of ber weari ness at the close of school, and the nar row escape he had from being summar ily dismissed when he applied for board for his babies. He understood perfectly, and with a loving kiss to both occupants of the hammock be slipped a ring on Nan's finger. In the early fell Nan became Mrs. Bailey, and happiness reigned In the Bailey kindergarten. KEV. MORHISOJf. be was Innocent, FROM PULPIT TO GALLOWS. .Weer of a Tlw Preacher Ended in a Ilatigniau'a Noose. The way of the transgressor, no mat .er what his condition In life, is hard luls thought is brought forcibly to mind by the recent execution of Rev. George E. Morri son, at Vernon, Texas, f .-,i the mur der of his wife in 18517. He adminis tered poison to h'. r, iu order to get rid of her and marry another woman. Morrison met his death resignedly, but declared that which he had no control pluclnir him where he was. He had a largo follow ing of friends who made strenuous ef forts to have the Governor communte the sentence to imprisonment for life, but without success. Morrison was married to his wife, who was Minnie Brady, at Hanford. Texas, in 1881. She sang In the church choir. Later they mover to Pan Han dle City. In 1897 he went to Topeka, Kan., to attend a Sunday school con vention. Here he met Miss Anna Whittlesey, whom he knew at school. She had fallen heir to $100,000, and he fell deeply In love with her. He told lier that his wife had been dead eleven years, that he had retired from preaeh ine and owned a ranch near Hiirehis. Texas. He made her an offer of mar riage and she agreed to become his wife. He returned to Texas and kept up a correspondence with Miss Whit tlesey. To get his wife out of the way was the next question. He made up his mind to murder her. This was In Oc tober, 1807. He went to a druggist to GEN. CIPRIANO CASTRO. the GEN. CASTRO. Who Has Fought Ilia "Way to Presidency of Venezuela. Gen. Ciprlano Castro, the new presi dent of Venezuela, Is only 30 years old, but he has been In politics for a long time. He was always one of the warmest supporters of the Lib eral party, and took part In the war of de fense during the rev- ' V y Crespo. That gen eral did all he could to Influence Castro to his side, and even of fered him a portfolio, but Castro could not be persuaded to take It. The reverse, indeed, was the fact, for Castro severely criticised Crespo's administration. When And rade's star began to rise Castro led a movement against him and Crespo. After the failure of the "Mocho" Her nandez revolution the man who Is now president successfully defeated Mo rales and Larrla and became the domi nant military power of the country. With his new success came hordes of followers, and Castro, afrer carrying numerous towns, at last took the capi tal Itself. President Castro is a highly educated young man and a hard work er, but he Is handicapped with that ex ploslveness of character that Is the greatest handicap to the Latin race. Sorry He Said It. There are so many things In this wicked world we would rather not have said. Mean things, spiteful things, un feeling things, reckless things which trickle over the lips before we realize it. An estimable man In town has a wife who Is a good woman, though she can never be a candidate at a beauty show. He admires her, however, and as he Is the one to be pleased her lack of loveliness Is a small matter. One day he was talking with some friends about his disposition. "No," said he candidly, "you rarely see me get worked up, nervous and cross. I am the easiest person In the world to please." "One glance at your wife shows that," replied a dear friend, who is the soul of politeness, and who, poor wretch, really meant to imply she did not have the looks of a nagged or brow-beaten woman, nnd must get on easily with him. But, oh, It didn't sound that way, and that man would gladly have given cm ,wn for a hole in the ground Just about that tlme.-Louisvllle Times. The one great drawback about loaf ing Is the unsatisfactory compensation. MRS. MORRISON. MISS WHITTI.ESKV. obtain some strychnine, which, he said, was to poison some "varmints" that were killing his chickens. The crime was committed on a Sun day night Before the deed he preached a particularly effective sermon, speak ing In a pathetic manner of the sad parting with loved ones at death. Then he went home and gave his wife an ap ple In which he had put some of the strychnine. She died the same night with her arms about her husband's neck. She never knew of n s treachery. He still continued the correspondence with Miss Whittlesey and the day after his wife's burial he sent a letter In which he expressed his love in the most lavish terms. He went to To peka a few days later and obtained promise from Miss Whittlesey that she would become his bride. On his return he was arrested, suspicious circum stances coming to light concerning his wife's death, but was soon relea.-ed. Il tied, but three mouths biter was rear rested in San Francisco and takea back to Texas, where the full extent of his villainy became known. At the trial Miss Whittlesey was the principal pros ecuting witness and her testimony sent nini to the gallows. Alligator Hiding. Jim Frazier, of Florida, Is called "Wild Jim" because he Is the king of alligator hunters. "Wild Jim" hunts alligators In the Florida Everglades. Ills specialty Is In furnishing baby alli gators to the Northern trade, though he also catches ndult alligators and sells their teeth nnd skins. It is said that he employs several hundred alli gator catchers, and has made a fortune out of his hotel business. Ills favorite pastime Is to watch alli gators eat dogs and cats that he has thrown Into the water to feed them. During the winter he secures hundreds of worthless curs and screaming cats, and In the spring he drives the canines and felines down to his alligator ranch In the everglades, where he amuses himself with alligator-back riding. He Is an alligator charmer and tamer, and is the only man in Florida that would dare mount the back of an old alligator In the water. When he wants to ride he throws his nlligator' muzzle over the head of an nlligator and Jumps on the monster's bnck. The alligator cannot reach the Intrepid rider with his tall, and his mouth Is muzzled. "Wild Jim's" wiry legs are entwined around the forelegs of the nlligator, while the alligator dives and swims nnd lnshes his tall, trying to be free. When Jim gets tired he makes the alli gators swim to the shore, where he Jumps oft and dispatches It. Home of the South Sea Hubble. South Sea House, London, the home of the South Sea bubble, which con vulsed England in the early part of the eighteenth century, Is soon to be torn down to make way for new ware houses. For a century after 1720, when the bubble burst, the building stood practically untenanted; but of late years it has been the headquarters of prosperous traders. GEN. GRANT'S WIDOW. DIDN'T LIKE THE SMELL, At 75, She Is Still Physically and Men- rc Saldf After Blowl Cnt the Qa, Mr Tll rrT Bleeping Thirty Hours. wJ ' ,5" . a fDt- Grant the . Venor- A very "bra mon" is "Scotty" Patter- idnr h. , luei"u'ousarr oiri-re-1on. and he has been away from tbe hi.S reopTd 1,er W ashington Heelands" but fourteen mouths. This ?,5rn bsTe of nourly five n Part accounts for his thoughtless act ujuuius. .ir. virant returns in excel lent health and spirits. Her outing, ' MRS. JULIA DENT GRANT. spent in Saratoga, Magnolia, Mass., and later in Newport, where she attended the wedding of her favorite grand daughter, Julia Dent Grant, proved re plete with Interesting adventures. She especially enjoyed the gayetles attend f Saturday night. Scotty works In the Scotten stables, and takes his niealu In Kurth's Hotel. On Saturday night the Kurth's man-if-all-work, who also comes from the land of golf and the "Bonny Briar Bush," gathered In Scotty. and the two sat quite late over reminiscences an.t Scotch whisky. When it came time for Scotty to return to his room over the stables they found that the Scotch whis ky had quito paralyzed his power of locomotion, as well as his sense of direc tion. Scotty suggested that a vacant room In Kurth's Hotel might simplify matters, and as the hotel was Just across the street, "Jalmle," the chore man, fell in with the suggestion. Ha pulled Scotty up the back stairs and locked him in. Then Scotty blew out the gas at the third lunge and jumped at the bed. This morning Mrs. Kurth found Scot ty's door locked, In fact she didn't know that Scotty was there at all. They looked over the transom and saw a pair of feet protruding from the foot of the bed, for Scotty had crawled under It Inir the nuntlals of the Prl cuzzene, and Is never tired of relating ' The 8me11 of eBCaplng gas was suffo her experiences to her friends. This catInS but lhey kicked In the door and venerable woman, although 75 years of pulled Scotty out H's chaperon had age, Is remarkably vigorous physically qulte forStten n's good Samaritan and mentally. She receives her friends almost every morning In her plensant sitting room In her Massachusetts ave nue home. She Is perfectly Impartial In the reception of these guests. The lowly friends of early years are as wel come as the leaders of society. KING MENELEK. ' ' KISTO HRNKLKK OF ABYSSINIA. I He Is Said to Bo the Greatest of All Africun Monarchs. It Is announced that King Menelek of Abyssinia will visit the Paris expo sition and that on the way to the French capital from his little kingdom In eastern Africa be will call on his friend, the Czar of Russia. The black king is the most picturesque as he is the greatest of African monarchs. A giant In stature, he rules his kingdom with a rod of Iron, and the great pow ers of Europe are all glad to be on good terms with him. He has an army work. The dazed msn was sot down 'n the yard, where he soon recovered. He had been In tho room for over thirty hours, inhaling the poisonous fumes, and hia "bra" constitution and. tho two Inches of opened transom are all that saved his life. Scotty said few things when they pulled him out at 10 o'clock this morn ing. One of his remarks was: "Hoot. mon. but I dlnna like the smeel over weel." Detroit Journal. Sludy of Hhakupeare. "The practice of reading aloud In small or modeinte-slztd gatherings U iu every way to be commended," writes Sir Heury Irving, of "The Study of Shakspenre In Small Communities," in the Ladies' Home Journal. "It is good for the individual, good for the mem bers of the group, good for the locality, good for the nation. No community can be too small for the practice of reading of real fighting men, armed with mod-' In public. If there.be only two per- ern weapons, and both England and ! Italy know to their cost that he has skillful and daring generals and that his soldiers are brave and Impetuous. The king lives In the Interior of his country, surrounded by a great desert, so that it would be almost Impossible for an invading army to reach him. In the center of the royal city he has caused a tall tower to be erected. To this tower he ascends at frequent in tervals, and with a telescope observes bow bis people are behaving them selves In the city below him. Offend ers are punished with great severity, and as a result there Is little disorder of any kind at the court or about It. The king and most of his people are nominally Christians, ami the Golden Rule Is said to be the ruling principle of the Government, In spite of the se verity of the punishments sometimes Inflicted. sous, eucu may, in turn, learn some thing from the successes or failures of the other. No one need be diffident at the beginning; there Is noth ng really difficult. There is no arduous labor; there is no possibility of absolute fail ure where theie. is honest, careful ef fort. Any form or subject of reading, worthy In itself, can be of usa for the Study of elocution. It Is, however, pos sible to get together groups of persons Interested In some common theme, when the mere getting them together without, such an agglomeratlve cause la lacking; and Shaksptare has been, Is, and ever will be, a name to conjure with. A play rend weekly or monthly, with the various characters allotted be forehand, has been a source of much and continuous plensure.'productive of thought and study, ameliorative of de fective power of utterance, a win nower of the chaff of harsh accent or ultra-colloquial mannerism." Peace Offering Precede I Him. She received a large box full of Amer ican beauty roses by messenger from her husband along toward 4 o'clock the other afternoon. "James Is absorbing Martlgny cock tails again," she mused shrewly. Half an hour later another messen ger brought her five pounds of expen sive candy from her husband. "James has ordered that $80 over coat he was talking about, but said he couldn't afford," she mused again. Half an hour later a wagon drew up, with a florist's name painted on the sides thereof, and two hnndsome, full grown palms were delivered at her door, marked as coming from her hus band. "Olive branches preceding him." she mused some more. "He'll be home by dark." He was home by dark. He hnd been absorbing Martlgnys. He had ordered the $80 overcoat The prescience of the modern married woman Is sufficiently iawe-lnsplrlng to persuade any man to raise his bonnet thereto. Washington rost Jufttlce Among the Pursers. Among the Parsees a murderer Is tpunlshcd with ninety stripes on h s bare back, while a master who neglect his dog receives 200 stripes. Counting the People by Jtlaohinery. Our first census, made in 1795, showed the population of tbe United States to be five million, and the count cost Uncle Sam, who was comparatively poor then, one cent for each person. It Is esti mated that the twelfth census, to bo made In June, 1000, will show that our people number seventy-five million, and that the Item of clerk hire, In the Cen sus Bureau alone, will exceed $5,000, 000. Clifford Howard, writing of "How the Next Census Will Be Takeu," In the Ladles' Home Journal, says that "although the work of enumeration will be completed by the first of July, It will probably be two or even three month9 later before the last of the schedules are received at the census office; for not only must they all be first examined by the supervisors, but In many cases they will probably require revision because of some error or Informality. The act ual counting of the people will not be done until the schedules are turned Into the census office. The enumerators simply gather the facts, and the office force In Washington does the counting and the compiling, which Is done by electricity. In 100 days all the facts re lating to 75,000,000 people will be tabulated." Gladstone's Memori I. A marble and alabaster Gladstone memorial tablet has been placed In Hawarden Church, between the pulpit and Armenian window. In the upper part are the words, "That rock was Christ," and on one side are four verses of the late stateman's favorite hymn, "Rock of Ages." On the opposite panel are the same verses In Latin, with the Inscription at the foot, "Translated In 1848 by William Ewart Gladstone. Placed by his grandchildren, In love, gratitude and reverence." London Chronicle. A man with but one Idea Is some times worse off than a man with no Idea at all. Don't worry about slander; It will rub off when It gets dry.