UNABLE TO GET HELP. ONE OF THE DRAWBACKS WE8IEHN FAinOINQ. TO Cntiaea of Till, Cnndltton lfrtrveat In 1'rnctlcnlly Hliiuiltiiiieoiia nnd Oct tliiu ti New l'leltla 11 f l.nlior Tuliee What Money Worker Una Knrntd. A peculiar situation In which thero Ih iii'ollt fur neither employer" nor em ploye Ih found hi lliu harvest season In tlio heavy t'cion l-prmliicliiK Htntes (if tlio Missouri mill Went Mississippi valleys, says u writer In IIki Boston TriiiiNcrlpt. Heiileh from tliu Missis sippi In IIki cuttle ranges mill north mid hoiiiIi through tlio full extent or tliu wheat I'oiintry reveals only occa sional grain ranches with acreages liiiilllpllcd'lhtu tint thonmiiiilH anil pro cessions of harvesting machines ex ceeding In length tlio parades of grenl circuses. Tliu lent wheat country Ih too. good to lie blocked out Into acre ages ciiuiiuuuly inoro than u section. Quiirlcr-seethm farms nro exceedingly freijiieut, and Hioho of 100 hitch tliu wilier Iiiih found to lie a popular slzo throughout thu wheat country. Prairie farm machinery linn reached Mich it development and dlveralllcittloii of ctnpx, tending to distribute the farm work evenly tliroiiuh tlio hciihiiiih, Iiuh arrived at hiicIi a stage that two men can HiicccnNfiiHy operato a HtaiKlard farm from tho eluo of one harvest season until thn opening of tliu next. Tho gang plow nnil dlHk harrow, tho four-liorxo grain drill anil wide-reaching drug, toKelher with weeks of tlmo In which to do tlio work, enable onu 11 in 11 to need soiiBounbly from ono to Heveral hundred ncreH of Kraln. And thu talo'of thn iiralrlo corn crop la ono of Nwlft method of preparing tho need licit, of planting and of cultivating, and of a long, fair fall for tlio picking Hut tho Hiiiooth running of affnlri) on tho Iiralrlo farm herein lien tho peculiar Hltimtlon I broken at harveat time. Thuro In yet an Imperfect adjustment of funning methods to prnlrlo eondl Hons ono which need", to remedy It, either n vastly clover mechanical lu ventlon or much further progress In dp vcrslllcntlon of Kraln crops. Invention, succoHHfuI with cutting and then with blndhiK Rrnlu, has lmlkcd at thu third operation shock lug. Only rumors of success with shockers aro heard. Inventors have nought to got around tlio problem In hand In conceiving tho "header" and Kreat tliriiBher-liarvester. Tho header, extensively used on iiralrlo farms, cuts tho grain IiIkIi up and throws It un bound Into a parallel wagon ready to Ik) carried to tlio stack. Hut, requiring suven men In Its operation ono to drlvo tho machine, two for each of two necessary wngons and two for tho stack tho header does not simplify labor mutters. Tho process of dl versifying tho Kraln crop growing not only wheat, hut, as far as conditions penult, barley, oats, spell, llax and other crops which ripen at different periods Is going on. Tho soli seeded for years for no other small Kraln than wheat Is beginning to de mand rotation In crops. Hut wheat Is yet tho stnplo Kraln on tho prairies. And when tho harvest tlmo comes, not Held by Held with many days In tervcnliiK, or even weeks, docs tho farm's crops ripen, but practically at once. The harvest should bo as near ly Instantaneous as possible. Tho two men on the -100-acrc, or cvn 100-ncrc, farm need help. Tho situation Is unprofitable to tho employer of farm labor becauso tho workers lu the prairie towns and cities do not tlnd.lt convenient to drop their rcKUlar employment to hasten to tho farmer's aid. And few workmen can I afford to tie without rcKUlar employ ment throiiKh the year for the saku of tho week or ten days' special liar Vest work the farmer will provide. This person must depend for Ids har vest help upon tho temporarily unem ployed Kalhered from the four quar ters (moro strictly spcnkliiK, from tho eastern half) of the country. Indeed, tho KatherlUK Is gratis. Press and railway olllelals are effective iiKents. Tho press dellKhts In tho stories of Brent wiikcs, In the vast Interest of the ' Western harvest. Thu railway olllclal lias a future frelKht Interest and n present piiwongcr , Interest of Impor tance. Hut the situation has a vast dlsadvantiiKO for tho farmer In that tho far scattered hands cannot bo reached swiftly and surely. Tho har vest cannot wait. Tho situation Is even moro unfortu nate for tlio harvester draiwii from nbroad. IIo Is not told that tho ru mored wages aro tho highest offered that low wiiKes aro quite as frequent as thoso which havo liiado copy for tho press correspondent or been skill fully ndvcrtlsed by Interested people. And to thoso tiufalnlllar with Western nffnlrs It Is not explained that tho po rlod of harvest service In a particular community terminates lu two weeks, ten days or u week. And It Is not published that tho belt of simultaneous harvest Is sulllclently wide several hundred miles to require In crossing It, for tho purposo of following up the harvest, a materia! If not a major por tion of tho earnings of tho service. Tho harvest scrvlco ends when tho Kraln Is cut, It does not Include hous ing Ki'iiln, as In tho Kastj pralrlo grain Is not housed. Tho harvesters from abroad rarely And oven brief employ ment Blocking bundles lu tho Held. Tho header, used exclusively lu wldo dis tricts, docs away with bundlo stack ing nnd leaves no moro work but tho thrashing when tho cutting Is done, And whero tho hinder has held sway and tho harvest hand has been a shocker Instead of n member of tho hoador crow thu thrashing Is dono from tho shock. What stacking Is practiced Is dono leisurely by tho farm er nnd his regular help. Thoso unfa miliar with Western conditions nro told that onco tho harvest Is over the thrashors aro In demand. Bucli n state ment Is misleading. It takes no ac- tng outfit. They so simplify thrashing that tho fanners of overy fairly well Bottled t'oniinunlly can tako euro of tho operation without outside holp. THE HOUSE WHERE I WAS BORN. Hound (tie little old deserted house the iiolmimo weeds uru crowing-, And tlio wind uiililtideicd wanders lliroiMtli tlio broken eastern door: Every rafter, bonm mid sash mid Anger marks of Tlmn Is showing, And Decay Is runiihiK Hot o'er tlio rub- Mull-covered lloor. Hero a rotting pillar staggers; there on aged beam Is falling; Over yonder sags tlio mantelpiece, de jected ami forlorn: Tliero is helplessness pathetic and the Voleo of Old Ago calling From curli crumbling bit of mortar In Hi e Iioiino where I wns born. Hero before tlio undent fireplace, where the dust of jcars Is lying, I first viiw the future pictured as 1 watched tho embers glow; Ilcru 1 lay in bojliili dreaming, while the shndows Hitting, Hying, Were a hundred ghosts of fnucy nf they wandered to and fro; I.lttle knew I of the unlrerae which f irt-jicl itself around mo In a canopy of nzmo and a sea of waving corn; All my world was on the hearthstone where my childhood dreaming found me; I was king and my dominion was the houso where I was born. LfcFT HANDEDNESS, Ami I,eftHlileitiis Rnld to lie Inherit' ed from Havnuo Wncin, Much has been written about left handed people, hut as no ono has here loforo tried to determine by menus of Miitlstles how frequenlly they occur, I 'tor. Lnmhroso determined to under' tako that task. IIu inudo observations upon 1,0'Jll operatives and soldiers, and found that tlio normal proportion wns i per cent in men nnd 5 to 8 per cent In womoti. Further research revealed tho fact that tho proportion of left-handed people among criminals Is very much higher. Ho Hint 1'iof. I.ombroso re Kinds left-lianilrdness as a now char acteristic which connects criminals with biiviikos, among whom left-hand-edness Is not uncommon. Ills re searches In this direction led l'rof. I.ombroso to Inquire whether thero Is not nlso what ono might call left-sided- ness that is, whether there nro not people who have n greater sensibility on thn left side than on the right. He discovered that left-sldedness exists In much larger proportion than left-hand-edness, and that left-handed people do not havo moro of tills sensitive left sldodness than right-handed people. In lunatics this sensitive, left-sldedness Is nlinost moro tho rule thnn tho excep tion, tho conclusion being Hint left handed people are moro numerous among criminals nnd sensitive left sided people among lunntlcs. Loin broso remarks: "As man advances In civilization and culturo ho bIiowb nil always greater rigiil-siucdness ns compared to sav ages, tho mnscullno lu this way out numbering the feminine nnd adults outnumbering children. Thus women and snvago races, even when they nre not properly left-handed, have certain gestures nnd movements which nro a species of left-hnndcdness. Somo tlmo ago Dolaunny observed that tho man holds out the right arm, which tho woman takes with tho left; that the woman buttons her clothes from right to left, whllo tho man does bo from left to right, mid that women nnd chil dren, when they trnco a lino or turn n key, for Instance, of a watch, Initiate tho movement from right to left, while tho adult man docs so always from left to right. This explains why, In early times, nnd still among people llttlo civilized, such as Arabs, the writing was preferably from right to left, which Is tho habit of children until cor rected. Deluunnv even wpnt l,i fur In his observations as to discover that 1 1,1 tho lnBt rn's of tl10 sun- TIle blrd nntlnuo chronometers worn u'lmmi "iig ecstatically for a full minute; from rlcht to left, while modem n.,,. ! lh-' unet nl111 8'lence' They wero happy days (lod rent them for my feet hnd ne'er been atrnylng Where the sold Is bruised and broken by the brambles of turmoil; Ne'er tho long years of anxiety my tern pics had been graying, Nor, my weary form bowed earthward 'ncntli the heavy hand of toll; Earth wns then a wonder palace. From tlio eastern window gazing SOME BARGAINS IN CLOTHING THAT PLEASED BOTH FATHER AND SON. Ono of tho most durable woods Is sycamore. A statue made from It now In tho museum of Glzoh at Cairo, Is known to bo nearly 0.000 years old. I beheld the new moon hanging like s Notwithstanding this great age, It Is shining silver horn; assorted that thn Wood itself Is en.1 ,w.u i uuwn uuon ino aesvens ungui tirely sound and natural In the evening star was hlnzlnir: I Hotk wero shining, Just to please me, ... o'er tho house where I was born.! A Dew tael ' belnB manufactured B was a plain, ordinary citizen, with n smile, and a friend nsked him why ho laughed. "Becauso I am happy," replied Tho Man. "I'll tell rnn nl if I 1 My boy needed n now overcoat, and I had S10 laid away, and I was afraid that tho ten wouldn't cover the need. What do I know about boys' overcoats? Ills mother buys his clothes, nnd, Ood bless her, she pinches along nnd makes $2 do tho work of J4, and how am I to know? I didn't think I could do much with less than $12, and I couldn't spare $12 very wolL i u..u u. vniu it, tun uuicu, auu xno uoy anu i went i to fi. clothlnff store. It was n nntv ntniirlnnn r ...... im i- a nnnear- - w. wv. a o.y m ivu Ji i figures on somo boys' overcoats, nnd almost had heart failure: found later I llifll thn f1.i,.M .nnfr n .l-.ll- ' I have passed from it forever. wonder anil tlio glamour In California which Is made from All th twigs and leaves of the eucalyptus tree mixed with crude petroleum. It Well, he tried on one. It was gray and warm nnd had a belt. n,i cum. down to tho tops of his shoes, and he was so tickled he Just giggled, lie kept finding new pockets, and he threw his chest out and said! 'If I could Of the llttlo eastern window from th. Is said to burn freely and give good ' Z.Zr . ,,V.t'T . .. t c'erVa ne.8ttm UVe aolW"- FlTa world have worn away; r,.,uY . pn " mnZ trnm This .L ' "8r fof " hat expanse of coat! I gasped like a drowning man, and said: I have seen It. disappointment; I hav. n, 1 fem .n. f I Boy' don 1 you want otlilii else?' He looked shy, and said he alway. ncam its empty clamor; . , . . ., ,, ' " ' And tho house I once thought wonder- , ln8f 'ongc,r tlmn ycllow plne' Tll fill Iiow pitiful to-day! u,-","llu i" greaier man ine the house where I was born. Leslie's Weekly, IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS. t -e HUKE7.K stirred the follago of the trees at the base of the hills. The air had n touch of chill In It, for the October day lu this Southwestern Dakota country was drawing to Us close. A limn was lying at full length on the gruss that the early frost had touched and killed. Tho man's hands were supporting his chin and his eyes wero looking far off across tho rolling prairies, which here met at tho base of the Hlack Hills. There was pain In the gating eyes. The voice of a her mit thrush hroko the silence. Instant ly the look of the man's eyes changed. Pleasure nnd surprise took tho place of pain. Whr.t a wonder was this, a hermit thrush singing In October Its song of the springtime! The man rose and looked toward the copso whence tho sound came. Thero sat tho bird, Its brown back reddened nro wound In the opposite direction. North American Itcvlew. If Dog Know Ills Ilualneao. A certain oHlcehoider decided to buy a dog. In reply to his "ml." .n man cnlied at his olllco with an Intelligent looking animal, that ho Immediately took n fancy to, though he deemed It ndvlsablo to llrst Inquire Into some thing of Its chnractiTls'.lcs. "What can be do?" he asked. "Oh, sir, ho can do anything. you've lost anything, sir, he'll go direct totheplaeowhcre you lost It. Hell- liy mo way, I've just missed my glovp. Do you b pose he could Hnd It?' "Certainly, sir. Just let hlni Biilff a your hand." The ofllceholdcr held his hand to the dog's nose and the animal trotted i-e-rrnely off. Presently he returned, and with n Joyous wagging of his tall de posited Ills offering at Hie olllceho.d er's feet. At the Same moment the click f tin typewriter In tho next room crasul iV girlish form appeared In the door way. My sash ribbon," ci I d a h'gh sw el voice, "my sash ribbon! The ilog has my tash ribbon!'' The officeholder's fnce turned a dul. red. He cast a furtive glance at the man, dived Into his pocket nnd hauled out a bill. "I guess tlio doR'll do," he said quietly. New York Times. Concerning Cigar Iloxos. Thero nro something like 15,000,000 clRnr boxes used In the United States annually and about ulnc-tenths of Hint number nro made lu thin city, whero the Undo rivals tho clothing Industry in point of capital Invested mid num ber of people employed," said a lead ing clKnr-box manufacturer recently. "The material out of which tho best quality of cigar boxes nre made comes principally from Cuba and Is known ns Hpanlsh cedar. A peculiarity about this wood Is that It always retains tho Havor of a Rood clKar. Indeed, boiuo peoplo claim that it Improves the fla vor, and tho reason given for this contention Is that It grows In tho satuo localities as the finest Havana tobac co." Philadelphia Ledger, Tlio Changing World. "Tho world Is not tho same," I said, "As in the days gono by; The beauty of the sccno tins fled And things have gone awry. The laughter seems to lack the zest And tears tho honest woo They had when earth wus at Its best, So many years ago." The sun that rode his 'customed way AH smilingly looked down; The meadow that had bloomed so gay Lay withering and brown. And through the wind a whisper cnino In mockery of my lot: "Tho world, you see, Is still tho same, lint you, alas, are not." Washington Star. Caleb Fryc rose. He listened n mo ment, hoping to hear once more the voice of Hint prlnco of singers, but no sound came save the slight rustling of the russet leaves. Caleb l'rye turned and walked with shambling gait east ward away from the hills. He strode on for twenty minutes, nnd then, rounding a bit of timber, caino upon n Hut who knows? Perhaps eternity may,"1100' bring n realizing An Innovation In the line of railroad Of the tilings, my fancy painted ovei telegraph service has been put Into AmI' "arfer"."'0' PrPheC7 between mica and Albany. Hy the In ray heart when I lor Hr.nmln i'"eans of the apparatus a single wlro uuu uu ubc-u ior iciegrapn ana icie- phono messages at the same time. While the operator Is ticking away a telegraph In Morse code another per son can telephone n message without tho slightest Interference. In a recent report on the results of extended measurements of mental traits In the two sexes, Prof. E. L. xuornuiKo sam mat In the measure ment of abilities the greatest differ ence found was the female superiority In the tests of Impressibility, such as the rate and accuracy of perception. verbal memory and spelling. In these matters only about one-third of the boys reach the median mark for girls. In general the girls were found to bo mentally less variable thnn the lioys. wanted a pair of golf gloves. Got 'em, too; good ones for 25 cents, and The uoy saiu mac mamma was going to get him a new sweater some day. " 'We'll get it now,' I said, and the clerk flung out a daisy, white and blue, $1.50, and I paid. Say, I guess Boy thought I was going to die right there, and when I told him that he ought to have one of those tasseled caps to go with the sweater ho absolutely looked scared, and snld ho didn't know he could havo It. It wan n beauty 60 cents made of mercerized silk, they said. The Hoy kept the coat on. You couldn't have pried It off hlnv He giggled again nnd wanted me to feel In the pockets, and then he wanted to kiss mo on tbo street. He said he guessed the boys at school would think ho had a pretty good father. "When we got back to his mother he wag so excited that he couldn't talk plain, and he mixed pockets and loving his father and mercerized silk cap nnd golf gloves up scandalously. Then she glanced around to be sure that nobody was looking, and leaned her head up against me and said; 'xou make me so happy, dear.' "And It all cost $7.31, and I figure that there was one thousand dol lars' worth of good feeling In It. I am happy, and yet I feel like a cheat when I think that I ever begrudged my family anything." A thousand dollars' worth of Joy for $7.34. Yes, there are bargains for those who will look for them. Des Moines News. Cnleb Frye laughed. "They're weeds that I'm mighty glad to get," he said. "This Is the Aster Hnarlifollus, and I never before havo been able to And any that were white. Host of them aro violet In color, nnd the white ones nre ns raro as albino blackbirds." "You're a great one for flowers, birds and the like, Mr. Krye," said tho ranch man, "but I never could see anything In 'cm, excepting one chokes tho wheat and the other steals the fruit." "Well, I found something rarer than tho nster to-dny," answered the stu dent "I found a hermit thrush that was willing to sing In October with all the sweetness I have heard It sing In Juno on Mount Washington, at the foot of which I wns born." "Those flowers nre lovely, Mr. Frye," snld Frances Darrow, "even If Mr. Driver does call them weeds. Tell me where they grow, that I may get some In a day or two. Governor Bailey, of Kansas, is The War Department, co-oneratlne Br.cat Clever In corn lands. He owns wun the Shelllcld Biological La bora- 7 . """"'y." " tory at Yale, has detailed 20 men from "e 5elu,?,e3 10 e"' Dolmns, lD.at rn the Hospital Corps of the army to land wl" 60on bo moro valuable thnn go to New Haven under charge of an wheat-producing ground. His proper- assistant army surgeon, and submit ' """" """" u" to cxnerlments Intended r .Werminn thinks, nnd will rise to $100 In Ave whether physiological economy In diet cannot bo practiced with distinct years. Somo sixty-four miles off the coast been discovered. One was found to be inhabited by a former French ser betterment to the body, and without of Tunti a cluster of little islands has loss or strength and vigor. Profes sor Chittenden of the Sheflleld Sclen. utlc School says thero Is apparently seant, Clement, who had disappeared no question that people ordinarily some rourteen years ngo, nna a sman consume much moro food than thero number of natives. The Islands have Is any necessity for, nnd that this ex- ueen annexed by France! nnd Clement cess Is, In the long run, detrimental to nppolnted resident Inspector of Ash- health, and defeats the very objects ,nS nnd of the harbor, registrar and aimcu ac teacner. IAW HIM COHINO AMD WAVED A HAND, An Klaborato lOiplauatlon. "So your Hying machlno Is a fail ure," sulci tho sympathizing friend, "Certainly not," answered tho scien tist. "Thero nro ono or two minor parts that won't work and which Inter- fcro with tho rest of tho npparntus. But, taken as a whole, tho averago of success through tho machlno la very high." Washington Star. Many Chances to Weil. Sntnuol W. Hammers, who keeps a great, rambling ranch house, On the veranda was a young woman hardly past girlhood. She waved him a wel come, which he answered with his hand, but In his eyes thero camo tho look that was there before the thrush sang. Caleb Frye had como to this Da kota country In search of health. He was a student bent on following a life which meant couUnemcnt IIo had broken down, and the doctors had sent him, from New Hnmpshlre to this far- off country to get his health. He was homely man, young. It Is true, but looking old. Ho wns thin to nttenua Hon and of nwkwnrd enrringe. nis eyes did n llttlo something toward re deeming his fnce from positive ugli ness, for there lay In their depths something of gentleness. In tho ranch house, the homo of old John Driver and his motherly wife, Caleb l' rye had made himself a favor Ito. Thero ho had met pretty Francos Darrow, tho school-teacher, who made her homo thero and refused to "board round" becauso she so denrly loved 'Mother" Driver. Cnleb Fryo hnd not known any woman Intimately In his whole life. Ho know nothing of them, He had had no tlmo for anything but tuo studies which held him chnlncd. Hero lu the foothills he hnd the tlmo nnd the opportunity, nnd ho fell In love, but he made no sign. Only a short time after Cnleb Frvo's coming tuero had arrived from tho Enst a young fellow, handsome, athlet ic nnd gifted by nature with every, thing which bad been withheld from Calou Fryc. Howard Denno had como to the rnnch on n Innd prospecUng errnnd. Ho was commissioned by somo East ern capitalists to buy. Ho made John Drlvor's houso his headquarters, and with tho old rnnchmnn hnd looked over tho wholo territory for miles. How nrd Denno should have left three weeks before, but ho lingered. Cnleb Fryo looked nt Frnncoa Dnrrow, nnd knew tho reason for the lingering. As Frye wnlked townrd the house that October ovenlng, John Driver, his country storo near Gettysburg, Pa., I wlro nd Ueano Joined tho girl on the count of cither tho limited number of , advertised for n wtfo recently, nnd In porch- harvesters that could possibly And em ployment ns thrashors, or the reduction In wages that takes placo Immediately the hnrvest Is over. The self-feeder nnd blower n devlco for self-stacking form part of overy Western thrwh- tho course of n fow days received an swers from 2,700 women. Muscular rheumatism Is (ho kind that gets a man on Ills back nad keep "Wbnt did you find to-day, Mr. Fryo?" called Driver to him. Calob Fryo held up,n bunch of whlto flowers. "I found Something rare." him thero for a mouth. "Them's weeds," said tho ranchman. "Ihey are growing by the SDrlnz Just beyond that bit of swamp where Electromagnets promise to come Into 11 Is not known Just how long mos- the big tree wns blown down In the common use for lifting heavy pieces Qultoes can live, but their average life last storm." of Iron In factories and rolling mills. '8 much longer than Is ordinarily sup- "I never knew so much of nature, ' "'stead or the present hooks and posed. 'Ibousands or them live tnrough Mr. Frye," said Howard Deane, "but chains a large piece of metal Is sus- winter, hibernating or asleep In dark from the enjoyment that you seem to Pended above the Iron or steel object Places In barns or house cellars. In get out of It I believe It must be worth to De fitted, a current Is run through sparsely settled localities, where they cultivating. Some day I wish you'd iisiB- .rendering It magnetic, so that It cannot find such places for shelter, teach me how to get Into the good simply picks up the object and holds they live through the winter in hollow graces of the Mother." I It until the current Is turned off. A trees; and, even though the tempera- That night Caleb Frye went to his magnet weighing 350 pounds can carry ture may fall far below freezing, they room early. He studied for a while n loaa or uve tons. The time renulred are not winter-killed, but on the ap- for fastening a load to a crane by tho proach of warm weather become ac- prescnt methods Is estimated to rep- tlve again. Mosquitoes are frequently resent ono-half the cost of handling seen flying about In the woods before the material, so that great saving In the snow has wholly left the ground. nanaung material Is apparent There Popular Science Monthly. is a numDer or tbese electromagnets A hundred pounds of ambergris has now in use nt aurerent steel plants. been seized at Seattle as stolen prop If we must have mosquitoes at all, erty. The appraised value Is $30 an people will regret that tho new species ounce, or $48,000 for the hundred of these Insects which Dr. William L. pounds. A hundred pounds of pure Underwood has discovered Is a natlvo gold would not be worth as much by of the Maine woods Instead of more $10,000. And were a hundred pounds populous parts of the country. For of gold to be stolen nt Seattle a great this mosquito docs not bite, although stir would be made about It Amber It Is so large that If It wero given gris is scarcer than gold. It Is more to biting It would be a terror; and of an uncertain quantity. It Is harder moreover, its larvae feed eagerly upon to And ond harder to transport It Is the larvae of other species of mosqul- found floating In lumps In the ocean. toes. For this reason experlmnts are land occasionally In the Intestines of being maae to determine If the new the sncrmaceU whale. There are. how. mosquito will thrive In the climate of ever, few sperm whales available, and soutnern Aew England. It has recelv- tho lumps of ambergris have been ed tho name of Eucorethra Under- growing scarcer as the whales have wooo.1. ira manner or disposing of decreased In number. tne larvae of other mosquitoes Is cal eulated to make sufferers from recent mosquito bites gleeful. "The victim Is caught," says Doctor Underwood, ','shaken violently a few times, and swallowed!" and then became restless. He wan dered out on to the porch and turned the corner of the building. He heard voices nnd listened Involuntarily. The voices were those of Howard Deane and Frances Darrow. He did not mean to listen, but what he heard made blm know that what had been In his heart must die. Caleb Frye went to his room and threw himself on his bed. The win dow wns open. Downward through the night came the voices of migrat ing birds. He heard tho calling of plover nnd the "chink" of the black bird. "The birds are flying from tho coming winter," be thought to himself, "but for me the winter has already come." The next morning the ranchman and bis two men guests stood on the porch. Mojher Driver came out "Where's Frances, Mother?" asked the ranch man. "She's Just left for school. She went early because she wanted to get some of thoso white weeds down by the spring, and It takes her out of tho way." John Driver paled suddenly. "My God, mother!" ho said, "Bill and I set n spring gun trap thero last night for n benr. I meant to have told every body about It, but I forgot" Caleb Frye shot out over the prairie. The ranchman and Deane followed, but strive as they could they could not keep pace with the long-limbed stu dent, who ran not as a man runs, but as a deer that Is hounded. Caleb Frye rounded the timber. Across tho open he saw tho girl walk ing toward the spring. He shouted gaspingly nnd ran on. The girl heard nnd turned. She saw him coming and waved a hand encouragingly, thinking he was trying simply to overtake her to walk by her side. She stooped to pick a flower, and the student gained somo ground. Then he shouted, "Stop, stop, the gun!" biit the wind bore his words away, nnd the girl did not un derstnnd. Ho could cnll no more. His voice was spent with running, but his limbs carried him on. The girl had entered tho bushes near the spring. The man tried onco more to call. The voice was whisper, but on he ran, and In an other moment had burst Jnto tho copse. lie saw tne glistening of the wire of the trap. The girl was within a foot of it. His voice camo back. "StODl" Startled, sho stumbled forward. Fryo sprang townrd her, and in a flnBh wns In front of her. His foot cnught, ho swnyed, nnd then there enme a deafen ing report. The girl fell backward, fainting. The man's hands wero thrown Into tho air, and then he lay prostrate on the ground, John Driver and Howard Deane raised him tenderly nnd carried him Into tho open, placing him gently on tho dry grass of the prairie. There wns a gnplng wound In his sldo. At that lnstnnt the voice of a bird enmo from the thicket Caleb Frye opened his eyes, "it's summer," be murmured, "Now, even to the unthinking," con cluded the merchant "this sounds pre posterous. But Just the same, it actual ly happened, and had not the dye rubbed off of the little captives, and thereby their idenUty established, I don't doubt that the grafter would have died Independently wealthy. All of which only adds one more proof to the ever-current fact that the public really wants to be humbugged that they are anxious for It. The only real difference being degree." Washington Post POOR ENGLISH SPARROWS. Now "nook of Ages." A missionary lately returned from India expressed the opinion that re' llglous work was going on very slowly town business man, "and every time I there on account of the difficulty in see the busy little creatures now, i un transiting tho spirit as well as the consciously find myself anxiously ex Dipped la Canary Djre They Were Bold for Bonaxatera. "At least some members of the spar row family have been enjoying their ease and a great deal of luxury In pretty, bright brass bird cages within the past few weeks," remarked a down text of the Gospel "Take an Instance," he said. "I tried to teach my converts tho old hymn: " 'Itock of Ages, cleft for me, Let me hide myself In Thee." "I had a native Bible student trans- late It Into tho vernacular. To mako sure that he had grasped the spirit of the words, I took his translation and bad It translated back Into English by another student. It then read: aralning their feathers, wondering the while, if they numbered among the hundred or more fortunate ones that a clever grafter succeeded in pawning 3ff on this evor-credulous public of ours as the real thing In the way of a chirp ing canary bird. The fellow who did the trick has my congratulations. He Is Ingenious, at any rate; and I could not help thinking, when I saw him caught with tho goods on, too, how much real talent and rare qualities of " 'Very old stone, snllt for mv bene enterprise had gono Into seed. Some how, I reit provoKea mat it snouia have been wasted upon a poor little flock of innocent sparrows. "As it turned out, complaints have been coming In thick and fast. Cora plaints that a man has, for some time fit, let mo absent myself beneath ono of thy fragments. "Detroit News- Tribune. The Great Telescopes Outdone. Ilcmarkablo results lu star photogrn phy with comparatively Inexpensive ' t hen norirtiim. urminrt town I apparatus have been reported by Pro- llsh spnrrows tUnt, it has since been fessor Schacberlo. His telescopo was aiscovcrcd, were artistically dipped a parabolic reflector of short focus, tho nto a pretty( brlgllti canary-colored mirror being 13 Inches lu diameter, dye nml dsposed of at a dollar or 4l"-ua Ul - "". more a head: the otter dcDend nir UDOn ures of live minutes gave star Images that wero beyond tho reach of the 30- Inch Lick telescopo and that required exposures of two hours with tho 3U- Inch Crossly reflector. Stars fainter than tho seventeenth magnltudo were Included. I am going up tho mountain path: the hermit thrushes are singing." In n moment his spirit wns beyond the mountnln top, nnd to blm bad come eternal summer and eternal Bong. Chicago ltecoro-llerald. Absence of soft water Is one excuse for drinking hard. Not tlio Ordinary Sort, He's about the poorest actor 1 ever saw," snld tho first manager; "a regu lar ham," "Perhaps he'll get over his faults lu rules consisted chlelly of "don'ts for time." suggested the other. canary birds," uuo rcau: 'Avoid "Not much! He's a ham that can't strong light,' nnd went on to explain tho generosity of his victims, With each purchase was given a slip of paper, upon which was written tho rules which wero to be strenuously ad hered to. Exactness, he explained, be ing necessary, owing to tho unusual re quirements of the peculiar species of canary bird which lie presented. Upon the paper was written n very fow things to do for tho llttlo crcntures In their too small wooden cages. Tho bo cured." Philadelphia Press. i'otoflluo Business, Tho United States postal department handles 7,250,000 letters ami cards a year a number about equal to that of Great Britain,' Germany nnd Prance taken together. Probably some men nieauder nrouiu nil night for tho purpose of satisfying licmselvea that theie is no place llkt i'.ouie. that tho bird was very young, and that Hko nil youug things, strong light wns bad for tho eyes. But the 'don't' that proved tho fellow's undoing and led to his capture appeared In black, capital letters, and read: 'Never bathe tho bird but onco within a month. Tho bird having been just taken fresh from ho bath this morning, there will be no urther trouble concerning Its bath fof i month. All Hi'', thl- bird requires is neuty or rend," A. T. 8TEWARV8 CARPET WAR. How the Merchant Started the Mill at Oloveravllle, N. r. With all his wonderful shrewdness, A. T. Stewart, merchant prince, occa sionally caught a Tartar. Mr. Stewart lived to see the decadence of the Amer ican trade lu foreign carpets, Arst large ly undertaken by him In New York. The manufacture of Axmlnlster and moquette carpets by hand In foreign countries was one of the slowest of trade processes. Two men nnd a boy were employed at one loom, nnd they could mnke but one nnd n hnlf ynrds n day, nccordlng to the New York Times. Alexander Smith and his part ner, Halcyon Skinner, of Yonkers, In vented a loom that made eleven yards a day when attended only by a young girl. This revolutionized the carpet Industry. Stewart, quick to perceive, Immediately acquired control of the output of Alexander Smith & Sons Carpet Company, nnd through his enor mous dealings that concern grew to one of the largest of Its kind In the world. The Smiths had little to say. Alex ander and Warren B. went quietly along filling Stewart's orders and In creased their plant Inasmuch as Stewart had financed the company right along, he thought he owned It One day Smith (it was in 1873) called on Stewart at his store for funds. "If you want any more money out of me. you've got to do something for It" said the merchant. "I've been too liberal with you, and I'm paying too much for your carpets. You must come away down In your nrlces." Smith said he would think It over. The Sloanee, who had started In the carpet business In 1843 In a small build ing opposite the city hall, were not ud to this time, of great consequence In the trade, but when Smith left Stewart to think over money nnd prices he walked straight to the Sloane estab lishment And made a dicker. The next morning Stewart learned to his dismay that the entire output of the Yonkers mills had been turned over to the Sloanes, and he was no longer carpet king. It was a severe blow to Stewart's business, as well as to his pride. For revenge he built an extensive carpet factory at Groversvlile, N, Y., with a capacity of 2,000,000 yards annually. but by some strange perversity of fate he died on the very day that the first roll came from his looms. At the same time Smith quit blm no one supposed the Yonkers manufacturer had a dol lar he cou'.d call his own. tils Inde pendence proved that he was rich. And when Warren B. died the other day the world was startled to learn that the quiet, unassuming, hard working weaver had laid up a fortune of $32,-000,000. The Ubiquitous Flea. She was a pretty and winsome Utile colonial lady of four summers, but, says the Cornbill Magazine, she began her first conversation with the gentleman Just out from England In this unprom ising fashion: "The fleas bite me a lot in the night." "Dear me, that Is very sad!" Then, wishing to administer consolation even. In those trying circumstances, the gen tleman from England added, "Do they bite you ha the day time, too?" "No." "Why not!" "Well, you see In the daytime they's busy biting gra'ndma." Grandma lived In England. Then. llttlo by little, the visitor from that country got at the little girl's theory, wutcn imagination ond geography were queerly mingled. Knowing that was night In England when It was day In Australia, she had pictured the flea as a wandering Jew, dally hopping the world lu pursuit of his laborious livelihood. For Playgrounds. San Francisco's city engineer In cludes an Item of $731,000 for chil dren's play grounds In his report on needed Improvements. It's almost as dlllloult for u medium to predict what U going to happen a It Is for a historian to record what has happened-