1 ' so- i-v 6 fr r) What Became Mary by .Si'Mul Minium ...By SAMUEL MINTURN of Ellen it n PECK 4 CHAPTER I. HEN Jim Evans bought the I'akvlllo Chronicle ami pnid $T.0i for It people cnlletl it a "line deal." At tlrst Jim con gratulated himself, deeming the phrase a tribute to his shrewdness, hut when he cam" to view his journalistic prop erty It occurred to him that possibly the compliment hail been misappropriated. .shivered over tne paragraph, strange l relate they found the sensation rather pleasant than otherwise, never dream ing that Oakville would ever have more than a speetatorial acquaintance with the fateful .Mary Ellen; yet so It was, and this was the manner of It: It was 11 o'clock. The night per formance had ended, and Evnns was leaving the tent with Jennie Hamlin on his arm when a horrible shriek rang from the tent into the fiarlng His m sgivlng grew when the Argus. tor0 llhnnlm.(1 n ht simultaneously Mirk .f-ol i-1 1 . . . r rt. .....I ...1,1. .1. . 1 - o.n-i-i. i-min- uui me 101 lowing paragraph: "Old Brown of the Chronicle has finally nold Ids moribund paper. It Is perhnps unnecessary to state that his rlctim is a stranger, lie halls from Mississippi and Is redheaded. Let us htve that his llorid locks mav throw at least a hectic glow on the dullness of iur i xpiriug contemporary." "I'm not redheaded; my hair is au burn. ' said Lvans indignantly. "111 make tbo ChronVle a big success if I have to work day ami night. Hang the Argus!" Amen:" Evans had supposed himself alone In came a confused chorus of voices: "Shoot her!" "Shoot her! No. cut her, cut her!" "Too late, she's lettln' go!" followed by a babel of curses and screams from men and women Ileelng In all directions. Evans drew Jennie to one side to guard her from the crush, and. with vague guesses at the cause of the panic, they paused for the excitement to sub Mile before resuming their way. As they stood waiting Tom dashed up. "It's Mary Ellen, the big snake! She's got out and crushed the 'liv ing skeleton.' " cried the boy In one breath, and he dashed back under the swaying tent which trembled and the ramshackle ollice. and. turning ab- shook in the gusty light, suggestive of rnptiy. his glance fell upon a boy of slxtevn. who met his eve with a smile half fearful, half impudent To Evans' startled Inquiry the boy explained that he was Tom Wilson, the Chronicle devil, and upon his Insisting tlwt he "went with the paper' and could set type Evans re-engaged him. ami, with his staff of one. the young editor settled down to work. The ltin most lauded by Iirown had beea the Chronicle's "good will." Ex perience prved th. t this Intangible thing represented the right to solicit advertisements and the doubtful pleas ure of entertaining Colonel Hadhain, a lecaysl politician, who dropped in dai ly with a lnttl" of cough mixture to read the exchanges. "lces he go with the paper, too? uiSked Evans of Tom at the end of a week. "Who, the colonel?" Eraas nodded. "I d.ift know," laughed the boy "He's a chromo-the colonel. That bottle of eough mixture is only old rye. him! he sometimes has the Jimjams. They sy he drink to forget a man he once killed. But he's been to the legis mture, ami everybody else puts up with him. and I suppose we'll have to Yes; I reckon the colonel goes with the paper .Jim ami his bright eyed staff soon became comrades, for there was but eight years difference in their ages, a ppace that youth and sympathy find small difficulty in spanning. Other wise, however, time whs an Item in the Mitle country otlice, and it excited the hoy's admiration to see his chief set ting unwritten editorials to save It. Hut it was when the clean limbed, muscular young editor did the giant swing on the horizontal bar In the rear af the office that the lad would have died for hin Howevt -. This 1-;, of hero worship not being require.! of him. Tom did something th::t pleased his chief far hotter. He introduced Evans to his preuy cousin. Jenny Hamiln. and ere long 4!ni lud another incentive to spur hint on in the race for Journalistic suc cess. The Curonlcie otficc faced Oakvllle's principal street. Evans put his case ami stoul at one window, and Tom VVUtsou placed his by the other. The odltor could look up Mulberry street and the staff down. This arrange ment saved the expense of a reporter, for nothing, from a dog light to a fciw-tlug scrape, could happen in the heart of the town but the eagle eye of ihe Ciiroii!-l" was upon it. and the ed itor or staff swoopvd down, notebook In hand. But there were days and weeks when ttOiiting would happen when not even lite dogs would fight days when the twin fell and the wind sobbed through the ok! southern town ami the ox wag ons creaked diri.es. while the wet sire-ei, littered with soiled locks of cotton and bedraggled corn husks, pre sented a vista of desolation. Tiitise wore trying times. "it's disgusting." cried 'Join one day la despair. "XoIkhIv's died, nobody s married, ami nolnly's been born in tliree wefcs. Xow's the time for the cniotie t tak- the jimjums. If the ooleiiel would only get the monkeys utw him and hang himself. Just think how wo might scoop the Argus." Next wek a circus struck the town Hiwlfoot's Irat S.how. "nine circuses combined' ami Tom was In ecstasy. "Now we'll have plenty of copy." said the boy srleefully. "There's always a scrap In Oakville after the night's per formance. Someliody always get- stab bed or sliot or something, and then ihr's ilto trial This circus will Inst m almost till Christmas." The circus had been billed for weeks. Iuamcute ioters tlared up and down Mulberry street from billboards of un dressed plank: countrymen and negroes stared open mouthed at the mammoth jaws of hug? hippopotami swallowing hip clouted hiilhen and elephants bran dishing Hindoo babies In their gyr.-.r.-ing trunks. But the picture that excit ed most horror was a lurid representa tion of the female anaconda. Mary El . i i:- niMi-i of t jMiSti-r had made a frv iy f the Laocoon In blue, yel hm xtiii cwii. and the (iffect waia l.lotd urdlli.g. " -fi?. sii-.-'t a .rker!" said the ad xvMt'i jieut as he posted Mary Ellen's l:isn-w oa the ij-ianl. "She's not so awful 1 :g. but she's crushed live men to d th, SkUil Hind foot wouldn't take iO.Mr tor her." Tuta, who was standing near, heard Jlils ti'i iiitig statement nd wrote a paragr.:,.!! i.i the Chronicle that spread Alary lwli u's fame far and wide. But Hltcii it lin nature of man that, though iMHJlftte sluhldered at the picture and an antediluvian mammoth In mortal pain. Jim feared that Jennie would faint. or at least scream as the other women were doing, when she heard Tom's dreadful announcement, but f-he did tteithir. She merely clung to his arm and trembled. That no one knoweth when his hour coj..ctl! is true of other things than death. It is equally true of l.we. and quite as veracious in the matter of the avowal, for what man knoweth when he is going to propose! Evans certain ly did not. He had planned It many times, and had even selected the words he Intended to say. but at each occa sion the word and the moment never seemed to tit. though every day his love kept growing stronger and stron- :er and bigger and bigger, till it seem ed to him he would have to get a larger body : hold his heart. And now all suddei'iy. as he felt the arm of the little woman he loved quivering in his own. he told his love almost before he was aware. As for Jennie, she had long known that Evans loved her; her only doubts had been in regard to her own feel ings. But when in her fright she id dNvovered the serpent's trail in he mud .utside. and the men were ;;.!ng to H.-ok her by the aid of pine i .-lu a d.ii.iuit thing to do. for the trad u.k laeeil every feu- yards by ti.o fooipr:;,;s of men and horses. The reptile had evidently been bewildered. :oj tu.ic eru many turns in her course. Finally, however. It took the direction of Mulberry street and the heart of the town. "They'll not lind her tonight." said Evans, who had Joined the searchers. "No." said the boy. "and they don't want to." Still Hindfoot urged on the search, and lanterns and torches passed and repassed each other In ever widening circles, while the bearers muttered curses under their breaths and wished Mary Ellen in the bottomless pit. By and by, when even Hindfoot was beginning to despair, some one cried out no one knew how that Mary El len had been discovered opposite Biggs' barroom. At this all threw down their torches and rushed tumultuously to the spot. The report was false. There was no serpent in front of Biggs' establish ment, though some of the men about Its hospitable door had seen many snakes in their time and doubtless were destined to see many more. Among them was Colonel Badliam. It was probably the colonel who had giv en rise to the false rumor, for when the breathless throng arrived at the saloon the colonel, full of eloquence and "cough mixture." was haranguing a group of Jolly bottle mates on natural history and making frequent reference to the snakes he had seen "before the war." "The blamed old fool!" exclaimed the angry and disappointed Hindfoot. "I guess he's seen his share. But if he meets Mary Ellen on his way home to night he'll never see another In his lifetime, for she's as hungry as a wolf, and I'll bet my biggest elephant she'll swallow something live, before morn ing!" to iu: ro.vj i. r i-:i. A ?A.U IS! AX BEAUTY. CLD BAVARIAN towns. , woman and fashion MME. TALLIEN. WHO, IT IS ASSERTED. SNUBBED NAPOLEON. A IV -.1111:111 IVIune KiitritncIiiK Loveli ness 1S:i ..!! ICvcn llic Women of the French Cap I till The Mild nnd InofVeii.si ve Yoinit? Honnpnrtc. I Mtriug the dlrcetoiro Marie de' Medl el's palace became the center ol gov ernment and Barras reigned there un der the insjiiration of Mine. Talllen. It was she who organized all the fetes set hack close to the Inclosing wall 1 1 . t 1 . if.. ...1 t r . .... ami ceremonies which enuveneu ians The ground lloor of these houses ;if. Mil y of the Smiiller (lues Are .Merc. ly Wnlletl Km rni Villnsje. In old Bavati ii) districts many of the smaller towns are merely walled farm villages. These settlements of agricul turists reproduce the ancient laager for all. Each is built in the form of a parallelogram, the shorter sides hav ing each a gateway, with double gates, over which rise central square watch towers capped with conical red roofs. A narrow road or street runs from gate to gate, with old half timber bouses Smrt I ineii .S'tiif. Walking costume-; made of linen in severe tai'or M vie nmong tlie smart est of the season and are as comforta ble and as satisfactoiy to wear as thev are fashionable. This one Is white, of the sort known as butcher's, but linen MONEY SLANG. AN OPTICAL DELUSION. I 5 To Sailors IlrooUIyn Ilrhle Is One of the World '.n Wonders. One of the world's seven wonders to the s-iilor is the Brooklyn bridge. Turk i?h sailors tell of it in the Black sea. and 1'limish whalemen discuss it in the Arctic ocean. It is not as a wonderful feat of engineering alone that they re gard It. but as one of the greatest opti cal illusions to be met with during a seafaring career. Nor is It less wonder ful In this respect to a landsman. A .-hip comes In through the Narrows, a big four masted ship with lofty rig ging. After all the harbor regulations have been compiled with n tug takes her In tow. It is announced that slu1 is going up the East river beyond the bridge. Then the old sailors who have been tUere before get out their pipes. lean over the railings and prepare for a long comfortable smoke. Not so the strangers, especially for eigners. As they see the big structure before them, anticipating otllcial com mands, they gather up the necessary gear for lowering all the tops. One man starts aloft on each of the four riggings. "Come down there," shouts the mate, "(let for'd. you men. Let alone that gear." The men go for'd, a good deal sur prised. Meanwhile the ship is fast approaching the bridge. The speed continues the same and the black arch Is sweeping down. The men anxiously regard the topmasts, then cast appre hensive glances toward the apparently low hanging bridge. "What is the blame fool skipper try ing to do?" growls an old English salt. Meanwhile the old timers are leaning against the bulwarks, smoking and chuckling. What was once keen anx iety to them is now a huge Joke. The other sailors are getting bewil dered. Apparently the brid strike the foremast Just below after the Terror, in 17UU the beautiful Spaniard was twenty-three and had al ready had an eventful past. The daugh- tir of a financier named Cabarrus, she l.'id married at the age of sixteen the Marquis ile l'ontenay, been divorced from him in 1 7i3 and had remarried, a few months after, Talllen, the convcu- tionni'l. Arrested May 22, 171)1, she was Im prisoned in l.cs Cannes, and it was from here that she wrote the stinging epistles to her husband which Induced that wavering spirit to dare ull In the attempt to set her free. Armed with a dagger in case of failure and all the courage he could muster, Talllen on the famous Oth Thermklor attacked Kohesplerre in a debate which brought about the fall of the "sea green monster." The reigu of terror came to an end, the prisons disgorged their victims, and Mine. Talllen received from the people the title of Notre Dame de Thermldor. The world was at her feet, and she daz zled It by her beauty and her charm. her lovers and her luxury. Even wom en forgot to be Jealous and acknowledg ed what all men proclaimed. The fol lowing description is from the pen of fords stabling for cattle, and from these stables the cows are driven out through the town gates In the morn ing and brought in at night. Town ships like this are merely clusters of la. uses intimately connected with the farm lands that lie beyond their gates. ; The peasantry, whether peasant pro- J prietors or allotment leaseholders, go iu and out to their work. In eastern Bavaria, toward the Dan ube, where the better class farms are to be seen, one finds farmhouses of ! wood, a great shingled roof covering as In Holland not only the large liv ing apartment, with many bedrooms, but also the stables for the horses and cattle. On such farms much of the farm work is done by girls, who usually wear short petticoats, tight bodices and kerchiefs on their heads. Most of the men are either in the army or working at trades. SMOKING A CIGAR. of Some Thlriira Tlmt Evcrr L'.ser Tobacco Din's Not Know. "It's really remarkable, considering the 12.O0n.ooo.00O cigars smoked In the 1 UOX COAT ANI KlVn C.OHKD SKIItT. Llllti'd Mates everv ve.ir liou- leu cine ot her own sex. Mine, de Chaste- ,non ro;llIy ,.now h()U. tQ Klnoke S;I(1 I etamlnes. crash and the like are suita "'i J1 nromilicnt lnli-i.-cn ilonler "Tlinn. I .MIDI Talllen c.une et-rj u.ij one mistake in mirtteiihir tlmf even i.r. .1- tft . . 1 II .... . .fl.1.. I vksj.1 1. arras. 1 110 not unniv 11 poiu.u por!t.nc0(1 smokers sometimes make bio. and various colors are worn, white and the natural tan. however, taking precedence of almost everything else. to be lovelier than this woman was that is in not keeping the tobacco burn-! 'n "- Ink style and can bo iMi; 111 the then. I shallxflways see her like a wiry queen among the rest, her ueau lit" nl black hair coiled simply on her head without any ornament, round her neck a single string of large pearls. She wore a white underdress and tunic of Ink crepe, and. sitting on the ground playing with a child of three, the son of one of Barras' friends, they made a group which no classic sculp ture could surpass." Barras tells us with great naivete, in his memoirs, that the "Little C-rsIean only turned his attention to Josephine Bcauharnals after a fruitless attempt to obtain favor with Mine. Talllen ami that this lady had treated him with great disdain, telling him "she could do better for herself.'' This account of the a tTalr coming from any other quar ter would be more credible. A considerable -jvent was now to take place at the Luxembourg namely, the reception given to Ceneral Bona parte after the campaign of Italy. For this ceremony (Pec. 10. ITSHi the court yard of the palace was transformed into a ort of temple, and an altar to la 1 'a trie erected In the grand entrance hall. The five directors, with Barras at their head, attired themselves as Romans, while Talleyrand, the min ister of foreign affairs, was prepared with an elaborate harangue. The scene was made additionally brilliant by the presence of many Ia-die-. whose splendid Jewels and rich dreses did honor to the occasion, while their eager faces and murmured admiration betrayed their Interest In the young hero. Among these groups not the least noticeable were Mine, de Siael and Mine. Becamler "Wit and B .iiity." as Napoleon himself named them. Alone of all the assemblv the future emperor had assumed no imposing cos tume. His uniform, that of a general of the devolution, suggested a charade of republican simplicity, while his pal lor. his gravity and quiet deimtinor seemed to deprecate the ceremony of which he was the object. The tone of Ing properly. "About 00 per cent, I should say. of all the cigars sold are better on the outside than the inside. This isn't wholly to deceive the prospective buy er. It requires a good quality of leaf to shape the outside of a cigar, while the tiller may be more readily compo.-ed of inferior tobacco. The smoker who permits his cigar to burn inside the wrapper loses the best part of It. Prac tically any cigar Is rank when smoked through the center. The aroma Is lost I made either with or without the collar, while the skirt Is cut iu live gores and closes at the center back in habit style. To make the costume for a woman of medium sisce will be required for coat V, yards 27. yards 11 or 2 yards r.2 inches wide: for skirt. .7s yards 27. Mi yards 41 or 3 yards ."2 inches wide. The S'ninrt Stool-. Tor ni Applied to Coin nnd Bank ..e.s In Knuland. "We may think there is a great deal of slang in English as we commonly use it in this country," Mr. J. E. Sora ghan observe-?, "but In at least one re spect the colloquial tongue of England surpasses the wealth of terms we pos sess in this regard, and that Is the slang relating t money. The American uses astonishingly few slang words In (peaking of pieces of money, perhaps because he has a greater respect for It. A live cent piece Is usually referred to as a ni ki l. but this is practically the only slang term applied to any of our money in general use. A dime Is offi cially a dime, amlso is a quarter. "But tu;n to thetenglisli appellations for their money and hardly a bit of It is referred to under Its authorized and otllcial designation. A shilling Is seldom culled such in London. They call It a 'bob.' and a quid,' which means a piece of tobacco in tin's country, Is what they term a pound. Sixpence they call a 'tanner.' fourpeuce a 'joey' and a penny more often than not Is unknown to the street gamins save as a 'mag.' A cab man will not tell you a ride will cost r t t . . . n siiinmg.s. nut: mat it win renuire a 'hull to pay for It, and a half crown Is 'half a bull.' These are prevailing ex pressions for the pieces of money wide ly handled, but proper terms for higher amounts are kicked aiMe and collo quial terms substituted for them. At a race track if a bettor says he has ventured a 'pony on the probable outcome of a race he does not mean that as it would appear to us, but sim ply that he has wagered 25 on the re sult. Where money Is handled in largo amounts it Is not an Infrequent thing to hear one say of another that he has a 'monkey' of money, meaning that the ndividual referred to Is the proud pos sessor of otX). So you see In compari son with this plethora of riches our one nickel is a poor crop of monetary slang indeed." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. AFGHAN FEUDS. Tower of Hefnpre From Which the Warfare la Conducted. Iu Afghanistan the people are good haters. The blood feu J exists In all Afghan tribes. When a murder oc curs the avenger does not limit his re- The newest and neatest Utile stock , prisal to the murderer, but kills any 1.. tit . . it . to be worn with the tailor costume Is omNsed of an upright linen collar with a turnover embroiderv edge fas- a::d the imioke is bitter and acrid Tutling on a cigar that Is not burn- b-ncd in front with three tiny long ing properly only increases the tlit'ii-ul- shaped bows of black velvet. You may ly. The smoker gets more of the smoke trust a Frenchwoman implicitly where of the inide leaves, and the whole ii- ! m'" ''''tails of the toilet are concerned, gar becomes hot from the effects of the ! her sense of the illness. oTlhliigs en- iii'-reased combustion in the center of It. The proper thing the onlv thing abling her to distinguish between thu addition to lo made to a gown of one to do under the circumstances is to ' ''uitorial and that intended for another. light the cigar again, taking care that wrapper and all are Included in the lighting. If this plan were followed a .....I ......... .... ..I f,'-0 .Miiimnn UUUiUUi. LilililLl' their brand of cigars so often." KEAT OF A MACGREGOR. his siicecli uns eoi:ill- omitct Ills cro,strees. In alarm they hurry aft, as th,.hu. ,,u. Kk. h(l fdt ," his ,.0limrv-s t x il.. 1 .i I 1 ui'hi,i 10 u-ijjc.-ii 10 uie pnoi and tne Mttry JAlai. the bin "tiakc '" clung to his mitscular arm and per ceived how cool' he was In all the panic, his voice as firm as his tlesh. tin' young editor rose rapidly in her es teem. However. It was not till she saw his coolness transformed to ardor and anxiety as he told her his love and waited her answrer that her tottering doubts tumbled and she lost her heart to Jhn forever. It was Just as they reached Mrs. Hamlin's door tlmt the young man's ear caught Jennie's trembling "Yes." And then came the hardest act of his life, for she Insisted that he should leave her immediately and go back to otiicers. but those men are complacent ly tranquil on the poop. T ....I- ,...! C" J i" 1 111 'wn uui. oi.-iuu iruiH miner, yens one sailor. The bridge Is apparently about to sweep through the fore rig ging, when suddenly It shoots upward and curves gracefully over the fore truck. tUly feet above. In a minute it Is all over. The bridge drops again. it actually seems as if it had been raised especially to allow this ship to pass. To the foreign sailors It seems a miracle, and they tell of It for the rest of their lives. -New York I'ress. scientific conquests and her progns iu the paths of peace. Surely no government could suspee a rival in so well disposed a youm man. Two years later the coup d'etat of Brumaire drove Barras from the Luxembourg, and the first assemblv which in I ranee has borne the title of senate, began its sittings In the p::l::ce - Hon. Mrs. E. Stuart Wortley in Na tional Ueview. THE WORD BOGUS. The PITH AND POINT. Old saying: Those who can, do; those who can't, teach. You ladles no doubt have tried many ' remedies." Ever lind one that was a remedy V When there is talk of a duel both par- I'um to keep him from becoming the ties are very fierce in the hope that the prey of "that dreadful snake." lie other will back out. irted to remonstrate, but Jennie closed We have noticed that the weather is the door, and with his betrothal kiss either too wet, too dry. too cold or too warm upon his Hps ho hurried away to warm. It Ls verv seldom just right. Tom. loading Mary Ellen with marrow freezing objurgations at over breath. When Tom Wilson burst back Into the circus tent the spectators had nil t'e-1 and Mary Ellen had disappeared uiiiler a heap of fallen seats and tent po. which the frightened people had o -rti:rned. Around this chaotic mass of lumber the Infuriated Hindfoot was 11 al.ing the air blue with oaths, while a I; mo! of employees nervously stirred the timber-:. A glance told that they had Pon't ever grieve to death if you can help it. Such a death is very unsatis factory to the doctors, as it affords them nothing to cut out. When they were married they had two umbrellas and needed only one. Later on, when one umbrella was all they had. they needed two. We wonder If the author of that say ing. "It is never too late to mend." was a mother who had to wait till her chll ---- --- Ii 1 iiumi 1111-11 110 wish to recover the object of their ,,n'" wt'rt 1,1 Oefore she could get ivarson's Weekly. search, ami If It were found they would no,u 01 UMr fmtne Atchison Globe. all Pee Incontinently. E::ger far com. Tom missed on and I'rom the Dnctor'N View Point entered the cir us greenroom. It wuh There Are Severnl IMiniNihle orle.i lift to ItN Orluin. The word bogus" Is said by Pr. Ogll vie to be derived from Boghese. tin name of a notorious American swindler who about the year lX'.." Hooded tin western and southwestern states with counterfeit bills, sham mortgages and such like. Others connect the word with "bogie," a scarecrow or goblin and so applied to anything fictitious or chimerical. Lowell In the "Biglow Bapers" says 'l more than suspect the word to bi ll corruption of the French bagasse 1111s oagasse was tne sugar cam? as delivered In Its dry. crushed state from the mill, called also cane trash, and fit only for burning, being thus synony mous with useless rubbish. Again, according to Brewer, there Is In French argot, or thieves' slang. word, bogue, which signifies the rind of a green chestnut or the case of a watch, and this also brings us to the Idea of an outward seeming without any solid and reputable foundation. DonUcj-.H In Kfj-ypt. In 1-Vvnl the women si 111 follow Hin All odd Illustration once given Emer- ,.! "custom of rldim- 00 ,lonk-or ti p.M.r'3 lighted place, smelling vilely uon tlH' philosopher, of the fact that Tlll? animals are small and well trahi- I l..-roe:lc. In the center of the com- ,J1VS disease are as beautiful as :uui Carrv their burdens about with . : - plat a group of Jaded perform- lUv 1:lu's ' health Is reported In his r-. Mili in their llohlngs and spnnglort eture on "The Comic," were gathered about the anaconda's WJ,S hastening." he says, "to visit victim. 'ld and honored friend, who I was "!. s dead." said the clown, and a ,,,'jri'l wa in a dying condition, ti ar rolled down his chalk white face, w'm" 1 ,1,(,t ,lIs Physician, who accost made up in a perpetual smile. Itocog- od.,m' 1,1 ;'m,t spJrit.s. ni.ing by Tom's notebook that he was '"And how is my friend, the rever- a r. -pi' -en tat ho of the press, the grief 0,1,1 'u' I inquired. man added: "lie was my 1 snw "lin tills morning. It Is and that needn't have linn- 11 "sl coriect apoplexy I have ever been race and hands livid, breathing utertorous, all the symptoms perfect.' ..vim ne ruuhed his hands with delleht. for In the country we cannot find everv day u case that agrees with the diagno sis of the books." out remonstrance. The riding undei these conditions demands no especial skill of horsemanship. The women make a great convenience of these lit tle steeds, riding them to market or to their shopping as well as on considera ble Journeys. -ir! -ken i-rothcr. peited. Anacondas eat only once In :i ii mouths. The snake should have been iVd btsl week at ('alnesvllle. She ;is hungry; that was all." When Tom regained the searching party It had left, the tent Some one OITcrliili Her a Hand. The Poet - When would you consider ls the best time to offer a girl your hand? Practical Cuss-When she's getting out of a bus. I should say.--Xew Yorker. Wonderful Phj-xlenl Strength Thai Was l'ed to Cood I'nrpofte. Sir William Macflregor was the hero of such an adventure as one expects ordinarily to read about only In fiction of a certain hue. The steamship Syria, with a lot of Indian coolies on board, struck on a rock about twelve hours from Suva, tlio capital of Fiji. Pr. MacCregor. then acting colonial secretary, organized a relief expedition, clambered over a broken mast that was the only path to the emigrants and again and again returned with a man or woman on his back and sometimes a child, held by Its clothes between his Ucth. A man of vast physical strength. Mac;regor wanted It all for his final feat. Pown below on the reef was n woman who had fallen overboard, had got at the spirits and was mad with drink. The captain of the ship and a police otlicer who had gone after her were being swept out to sea. M:ic (Iregor slid down a rope, caught the knot of the woman's hair in his tei th and with his hands seized the two men and dragged them both Into safety. Ho went back to Suva In a borrowed suit of pajamas, having left all his clothes and a good deal of his skin on the coral reef. .Modest, like many heroes, MacGregor left himself out of his own report, nnd it was from the governor that the queen tlrst heard the whole story. For instance, she would never wear with a tailor gown a high lace collar with a large chiiTon rose in front, from which depends a shower of little chif fon buds. vi these airj confections are often svn on the sartorialh' un regenerate. !'u in ps the I'nnhlonahlc Shoo. The adaptation of men's dancing pumps for women's wear last winter proved them to be such smart looking shoes that they have grown to be im mensely popular. Pue of the chief reasons for this Is that the shoes have to be worn iu the smallest jmssible sizes to enable them to he kept on the feet in comfort, and any excuse for wearing small shoes Is eagerly seized upon fty women. The pttmis are made in tan, white, green, brown and th new shade that matches lineti gowns. An Idenl ytiininer Wrap. Little jackets of all sorts are greatly in vogue and make ideal summer wraps. This one Is worn over a waist of point d'osprit and Is of antique green Wocm of an lid i tor. WIicp a newspaper tells the simple truth about a bad man who Is trying to get into a public place where he can steal, the truth Is called "attack." If when the same mnn runs for olUce the facts of his past career are printed to show the people what they may ex pect, the editor who prints these facts J is abused, and the rascal poses as a martyr. When a man turns out wrong, as thi' editor said he would. If the edl- j tin sajs his prophecies came true, the people accuse him of persecuting a ! man and "kicking him when he Is , down." Yet If the paper says nothing : about bad men who are trying to rob the people' they say that the editor Ls bought off and that he has taken hush money. Eiuporla Gazette. J (tyhx , I iff l 1 JL J relative that comes handy. This, In turn, calls for a counter attack, and In time matters become so complicated that whole families are wiped out. When the tribe ls called upon to meet a common enemy the heads of the families who have had a quarrel bury two atones side by side In the presence of the mullah as symbolic of the feud being put out of sight during the pub lic danger. When affairs revert to their normal state the stones are sol emnly disinterred and the two parties are free to go on shooting at each other again. Every Afghan villager of moderate means owns a tower of refuge standing at the corner of his courtyard. These towers, made of stone and mud, are perfectly solid for the lower twenty feet or so, the top being surrounded by a loophole wall and covered over to make It habitable. The base Is protect ed by a gallery, and the only means of ascent is by a rope nnd a hole Just large enough for one man to crawl through. Whenever n man has made things too hot for himself he takes refuge in his tower, and by the un written law of the country he can never be starved out so long as food and water are brought to him by a woman. A. traveler in Afghanistan tells of seeing one tower of refuge whose occu pant had not stirred outside for ten years. His only amusement was tak ing shots at the occupant of another tower, which were duly returned. In the meantime their wives visited each other and gossiped and were on terms of perfect amity. l.oomlntc 31 1 races. In what are called "looming mi rages" distant objects show an appar ent extravagant increase In height without alteration Iu breadth. Distant pinnacle of ice are thus magnified info immense towers or tall, Jagged mountains, and a ship thus reflected from far out at sea may appear to be twih e or fifteen times as tall as It is long. Bocks and trees are also shown In abnormal shapes and positions, while houses, animal and human beings ap pear In like exaggerated shapes. Be fore the sandy plains of our south western states and territories were converted into verdant fields by the ingenuity and tireless euergy of man mirages were very common in those re gions, the Indians regarding the phe nomenon as being the work of evil spirits. Imitation Perfume. "It may seem peculiar." said a per fumery manufacturer, "but perfumes ire adulterated and Imitated Just as diking powder and other things are. "or instance, we make a high grade car nation pink perfume from the (lowers themselves. This, of course. Is costly. but the perfume retains Its odor, and a landkerchlef that has been scented with It will retain the perfume even after It Is washed. A hot Iron will bring out the odor again. Now. a per fume that is just as good to all first appearances and that for ten minutes , will have the same effect can be inado out of the oil of cloves mixed with nl- 1U.OLSK WJIST A N I I.OI.I KO taffeta matching the waist, the trim ming being folds of velvet. The waist is simply full, with wide sleeves tlmt are finished with graceful frills of l.ieo. but Is eminently becoming and suits lace, net and all thin materials to a nleetj. The bolero ls cut with fronts, backs and wide sleeves and Is laid In plaits over the shoulders that give the drooping effect. The quantity of ma terial required for the medium slse is for waist yards LM, -1 yards 'J7 or S-T-i yards 44 Inches wide; for Wlero. 2Vi yards 21. '2 yards 27 or 1 yards 4-1 Inches wide. TrliiiiiiliiK" Kor Gotvn. Points and scallops appear on many gowns; even In some cases the horl- ltellect Intr Lichthou-ies Orirctn. Accident, not necessity, was the par ent of the invention of retlecting light houses. Puring a meeting of a mathe matical society at Liverpool some years ago one of the members laid a wager that he could read a newspaper paragraph at ten yards distance by the light of a farthing caudle. This ho succeeded In doing by covering the In side of an earthen dish vith putty and sticking bits of looking glass on it and then placing his refiector behind the candle. Captain Hutchinson, a dock master, was present, and from this experiment gained the Idea from which he evolved the retlecting light house as built in Liverpool. Chen pi UK-. In parts of Switzerland the bak"er's wife carries round the bread in a sort of hamper, and she has not a fixed. Im mutable charge, but chaffers for a price zontal trimmings have scaiiopeii or j with the customers. The old English pointed edges. Unfiles are arranged in: word for this process was "cheaping, Fcal.'is. and new laces and embroidery which In many places In England ha Insertions have waved edges. Still In Donlit. Bookie So. seo. If the 'orse starts cohol. At the end of ten minutes the nt ""w-" to one you get fifteen quid. odor will be gone." Milwaukee Sen tinel. Titles of honor add not to his worth who Is sz honor to his title. FonL The Troiid I'npn. "Baby carriages? Yes, sir," said the dealer. "What sort of one did you i want?" "Well." said Xupop proudly, "you'd ten to one you get ten quid, five to one five. D'y'see? The Innocent- Oh. yes. I see perfectly. But what do I get If the horse starts at 1 o'clock exact ly? London Illustrated Bits. has been corrupted into chipping. Chip ping Norton, for instance. Is really Cheaping Norton, or the place whcni goods were cheapened that Is. sold by chaffer. better give me a six months' size, only age. j , , -Quite likely. And I shoukl Judge ioWe, ' l)Ut largG fr Ws'that she didt waste more than half -I luladclplua Press. nn hoilr otI tlob."ii.,n)ers Bnzar. A Meil ticl Ion. "ne declares his wife made him all hat he Is." Jievrr a Let Up. "Poor pa's just working himself to Ceath." "Why. I thought he had a political loli." "He has, ,but it seems as If he rio sootier getc? reappointed tl'ian it is neces sary for him to get out and work again ho that somebody else won't get It next time." Chicago Uecord-Uerald. i i