Topics of I ABB 8 the Times -Boy In HN Hand Peril." aaya tne neadlluc. Never knew on tht wii not. (.ettlng out of ed In th morning la often th hardest part of daye work. Ther ar lawyer la Congress who will continue to M.-rlfl. their business for $7.jM) a year. . , i .. t...C4..t tS "Miss Helen Oould Is closing up bom flml ,heP two.thlrlt of their friend, of her favorite charltle." Why d.eu't M B p,, ,al,, n the dining room ah begin wltU wiw she doesn't Ilk to of n (yan steamer there wert recently mucbT assembled, by more chance, seven worn- - ., . tS- en belonging to four different parties. A. to th. startling rumor that the n i wM north pole I. moving ";u,hw graduates, and the seventh had entered what other direction could It poaalbly ... Mr,lwlt caMi more? i. an the reault of prejudice It It W- iA bMft It Th harsh crltlclama of women by nieo ami men by women art to be viewed In thla light They betray an utter sbaen.-e of ch obervllo and resuming. Ami where the crltl clama are not J svse they are to be dep recated, aa tending to produce what are called "men hater" and "women bat era," and to give flee Ideaa of life. The extension of the higher education for women baa been ao rapid that college courae la now Tlrtually aa open to glrle aa to boys. Thirty yeara ago a rtrl who waa studying Greek or trigo nometry waa a aort of natural curloalty. Now out of forty-six June graduates in ,h. It,..tnn niels' i-an "" rr.; i - vlliire. and they will The Firm of Girdleslono rilAITEH XV, . n-v .....r.. ma over the crone, who waa addreeaed by Oirdlestooe aa Jorrocka. led the way upatalra and allowed Kate to her room. If the furniture of the din Ing room bad been Spartan In ita aimpllo it. ihia waa mi more ao, for there waa and etudled thero two yeara. Piiring nothing In it aave a email iron ofu"u the rnvaire ther made one another ao much runted from want of use. and a nigh - . : . . . -.1 ...ei-nees aiwiHrn box on wnlcn aiooa me ami,... wa,T Down at Washington someo..,, - - tu ' toiM r-ui.i,,. In aplte of the poverty IIICU H"ri ni "- e--.. 3 I- ' Y A. CONAN OOYLI tble dreary abode? Hha knew Cart well, I bat It wm Melee attempt. ITer tip and waa aura that be waa not man to I trembled, ber eye filled, and with cry alter bia wave uf ijr. , . discomfort I of grief and despair which might have of any kind without sow ry dVBnite ob- I moved wild beaat, ahe fled to ber room, ' Ject. It seamed to ber that tbia waa I and, throwing beraell npoa Ber ixm, nursi new Bimh In th ot which waa being I Into auca acalding teara aa lew wouutt a raw a round iter. I are ever cailea upon to aneo. When ber guard aa bad left the room CHAPTER XVI. It would be impoaxible to describe th auapenae in which Tom Diiuadale lived durinc tbeae weeka. In vain be tried la would be after that ahe said. "There aver manner to find aome wav of traclne ain't no paper br, Dor p,u, neither, nor the fugitive He wandered aimleaaly Ink. neither." I about London from one Inuuir olfice to . . i - rtnat, none! War Mra. Jorrocka, do I another, twlliuar hla atorv and anuealinc have pity on me, tad tH m abeet, bow f(ir aaslataoce. He advert law! in papera ami croaa-queetioned every one who might I Kate aaked Mr. JrruCme for aheet of peper. ibe crou ,uoob ber bead and waggea Ber penduluu, jp deruuoa. m iier iirui.tona thought aa yon Whiit la thla country coming to, any- haa gcctiacd poHMnaatere of not earnlug w llx'lr aiilarlcs. A war cloud Ina appeared over Cen tral America, thla being the reifiilar II.., a aiviritlnir In til a.'lieilule for t war cloud to ap;a-ar there. If Kvelvn rin h.?re hr nume rhanffel back to Nel)lt a!ie will, to that extent at bumf, earn our thanks aa people netting Into college forty yeara ago t... i,.,!.!!,. h niin.i.Pi- at Thawa. wna easier than lb Is now, ao rar aa Ititelleitiiai requirements were coihitu Probably Kaiser YVIIbelin has mil-led. Rut It took moral wurnge of a high Hons of loyal auf.Jecta who would be order to break away from all traditions iiiiikt in tvn hia I, ill and trr to wor- of socletr which reiarded a biue- ry along uncomplulnlnfly on I,0()0.0(iO stocking as both tlresnne and danger a year, 1 ' .v.. . if. ta had never been time of carefully arrwngeu, uuuurm ,,....,,.- chamber written entrance exnmlnatlous for worn- . . c,rD,tlra, room waa en"a colleges, held eacn year at aiairu g hv?n of rnt where ,h. would ,eft tlmee In scores of towns ail over tne on, -.h, pas to her own land, backward to the day when the ,nouihta. Aa aba lay In bed. however, ahe candidate fur admission to the firxt -uuW bear far away the subdued murmur class at Vassnr college, gathered In one of Oirdlestone's voice n1 lr'.!! toa rm.iii. answered in concert questions In of the old woman, lliey were in ueep i.im muthemntl.-a and history, and animated convene. Though they were too far distant for ber to distinguish word, something told ber that their talk waa about herself, and the same Instinct asMired ber that it boded her little good, When Kat awoke in the morning it waa aome little time before ahe could re alise where ahe waa, or recall the eventa which had mad auch a sudden change in mis ' and restricted feminine acquire- ber life. The small window of her apart menta to enough arithmetic for keeping mcnt waa covered by a dirty muslin blind. Recretary Straus la fostering the ex- ho,lsPh()ld accounts, and enough She rose. and. drawing It aaide, looked port of one article In which a balance to read ..r,)rnne. nut the new Vr ' ou.1-. ro.'n ... . ... ".f,n of trade favora.Me to the I'nlteJ States . tt.m h. . Unvrarm ,Mr. the night Derore ana naa nopea U ims ta eceellnffl. Imnortatit and has never ...... Prin t0 wbiin l,Vn,d be nvy . ' " . . .... '" "i mi-ht m.ka amends for its onelinesa by ItitMii, ttie old gracious nems ana pas- deeree of natural beauty. The seen it was not wen existed. This article Is anarchists. hires fall Into neglect, which now met her eyes soon dispelled The (.erninn einiror hints that he n ,ne ()1J dyg t,)nt wnman .h,md tn MpecUtons of the sort. The avenue woum like to nave nis salary as iving . h , d pon.,.,. Dllt no of I'ruHsIa Increased ; hut there seems t(J niIe ,he 0M or ,0 ...Hjjhtp,, th, to be no proli.nl Ml y that bo will go on ofn.p ,t wou,d be ,ve worHe f tbe sirlke In case his dtMiianJ is refused. t'p to date It Is estimated that Count Honl do Custellnne has set the Gould family back about $.'l,HH,(Klf. Consid ered as an lur-Mttnient,' Count Until Is the most unprolltuhle oue the Goulds ever made. I day should come when she had a bead without a heart to quicken It or a con science to restrain It. Hlilps a thousand feet long are prom ised within n few years. A firm of Irish shlji-bulMcrs la making prepara tions to lay the keel of auch a Teasel next year. The biggest slilps now sfloat are less than eight hundred feet lorvr. FOB BEAUTIFUL CITY TAEDS. Art of tandaeape Gardealna; Not Yet Fully Appreciated la America. It Is commonly assumed that land- 1 scape gardening has to do only with with its trees lay on the other side of tbe bouse. From her window nothing waa visible but a dreary expanse of bogland and mudbanka, stretching down to tbe sea. At high tide thia enormoua waste of dreariness and filth was covered by the water, but at present it lay before ber la all ita naked bideousnesss, the very type of dullness and of desolation. Here and there a few scattered reeds, or an un healthy greenish scum upon the mud, gav a touch of color to the scene, but for th moat part the great plain waa all of th acme somber mud tint, with ita monot ony broken only by tbe white fleck wher eer oni and soil. sm, br la aome ailver ! Tou ar rT wcome to It if you will give m uj. materials for wrjtlnf Otie teTTfr Mrs, Jorrock in,..-! lonalngly with ataklaai Batter ea'tae Kara, There ar two prime essential In making butter on th farm a profitable know anything of tbe matter. There uusluea. In the first ro . ' r throw any light upon tbe mystery. No one at the nffia knar anvthlnv of tha he- bleared eyes it the few ahilllnra which moveroenta of the senior partner. To all .a. .n aeia out t her. but sh shook Ber inquirle bra replied that be had been head. "I duma't da it " sh said. lt' ordered bv the doctors to seek coinulata as much aa tny ptct , WOrtb." repose In tbe country. men I aliall iilk duwn to BedswortB I His father- haoama arlnual amiou. myself." aaid K! anrrll. "1 have BO I ahmit tha iim. r.llnw'a hullh II. ata doubt that th pwpi, D tb poatoffice will nothing, and hia sleep was much broken. ui. iuer tai writ It. I loth the old people tried to inculcate Da- Ibe old hug uurhi hoarsely to her- I r(m nil tiuwlaarattnn. aelf until the acnf,y ginew of ber with- "That fellow, Eira Olrdleatone, knowa ered nek atowl wt like whipcord. Bbe wbere they are." Tom would cry. atriding waa still cbucklinund coughing when tbe wildly np and down the room with un merchant came btrk into tb room. k.mnt hair and clenched hands. "I will What then V at aaked sternly, look Ins lia hi. u,r.i it I t.. u from on to tb wher. lie waa himself 0 him." IjirirA arikiia- thiir vim nniifint nfrnrit in engage a flrst-clasa landscape deslguer rma of guile and kittlewakee bad for rltv lot. n.l that thr. la nn anniut iiiea lu tn. uup. Ul pica,,,, up wu- "Southern women," aays Jotiu D. Uockefeller, "are the handsomest In the world." John I), proposes to spend moMt of bis tlmo In the South after this, Hiid It aiiM-ars that In addition to the ability he bus aa a financier he U a good deal of a diplomat. in a rase In which a suit for dnmages whs brought ag:iliiHt a corporation for negligence resulting In the death of a child, a New York Jury determined itn Us verdict by toKsIng up a coin. For this travesty of the duties of Judg ment Impose:! on them the Jilile fined Hip Jurors fifty dollar each. in spending more than $100 ou a back yard, say a writer In Country Life lu America. On the contrary, I maintain that 3 per cent of the entire cost of a bouse and lot ought to be spent on the grounds, and I believe that you cannot have an appropriate graden for less. Of course, you can get a lot 1UU by 150 feet planned and planted for $100 by u tlrst-cluss nursery that bus a ever bad been left by the receding tide. Away across tbe broad surface a line of aparkling foam marked the fringe of the ooan, which stretched away to the horl son. A mile or two to tbe eastward of her Kate aaw aome aign of housea. and a blue stroke which Bickered up into the air, This she guessed to be tbe fishing village of Ia Claxton, which the driver bad mentioned the nlaht before. 8 he felt constitutionally item to merriment, and hi was irrltat) by It In others. "Why are you lamthint Mra. Jorrocka?" I waa a-laugbing at her," th woman wneeied, pointing sUb tremuloua finge Hh vas a-kio' at tor paper, and savin' a sh would go ind writ a letter at th Ileusworth poatuSce." "You must understand once for all." Girdlestun roar4 turning savagely upon the girl, -that fi ar cut off entirely from th outer world. I shall give you no loophole which nu may utilize to con tiuu your intimacy with undesirable peo ple. I bav fivfi orders that you ahould not be provided itb either paper or ink." Poor Kate lut hoi aeemed to be fad ing away. Her keart sank within ber. but the kept a bnv face, for ahe did not wish him to are how hia worda had atrlck en her. Sh bad desperate plan in ber head, which would be more likely to be successful could ib but put him off hia fi.ard. She spent th morning in her own little room. About on o clock ahe beard the clatter of boofi tnd th sound of wheels on the drive. Coins down sh found that it was a cart whirb bad come from Beds- worth with furniture. There were car pets, a chest of drawers, tables, and sev eral other articles, which the driver pro- reeded to carry upstairs, helped by John (irdleiitune. The old woman was in th upper room. It seemed to Nate mat sne might never again have auch an opportu nity of carrying out the reaolve which ahe had formed. Kh put on her bonnet and began to stroll listlessly about In front ot the door, picking a lew straggling leaves from the arreted lawn. Gradually sh sauntered awiy in this manner to the head ot tbe vmo, and then taking one ift, timid glaiKt around, ah slipped In among titer trees, md made th best of ber v,ay, balf-walkitt half-running, down tbe dark winding dm. Oh, the Joy l th moment when the great whit bona which bad already be come ao hateful to her was obscured among the treo behind ber ! She bad some idea of thtrwd which she had trav ersed tbe night Wore. Ilchind her were all her troubles in front the avenue "Steady, lad, steady!" the doctor re- plenty-' of pure, cold water, and then a good enough grade must be turned out to make and hold custom ers. The trouble with nine out of every ten farm homes I they ar not equipped to take car of uillk and creura. When on goe Into this work to make money, better put up a milk room, wher pur water may be bad from pumping or from a spring. Concrete floor and walla may now be built as cheaply a wltb lumber, and It Is a great deal better than lumber. Don't atop here. A barrel churn and a butter maker will be utH-essary In turning out a uniform product. It looke easy simply sepHratlng the cream, churning plied to one of thew outbursts. "There ' V? bU,tter CO'"e"- and Ml"- anJ lnml unm gHsrQ ln moe uamiri, auu tue Z ' -". ' - ; was not slone in th. world, and that even be neat and pleasing, but your garden lo Ma ttTange anJ d,woIate p,,,, ther. wm not nave persouuiiry. u is noi .r. bonellt hrHrt, to whom M , a.t r9. iKiugh that a place shall respect the aource she could appeal, Nvvs of landscape art and have plenty I She waa atill standing at the window .. 1 .1 . 1 . - I ft - I ft ' . I !. a k.nflkina lit, ,1 iiunrii iiiiuiij(iiifiii iuu n-iinuu. it ought to be dominated by the spirit f a cultured iicrsonullty, so that your visitors shall exclulm, "What an alto- It Is a fine bit of chlvnlrous senti ment which lends President Itismevelt to decide tlmt the next new battle ship In tht fulled States nnvy shall lie named the "Forldn." Young Scimtor Hryan requested tlil.i action a few days before bis fatul Illness, ami the Presi dent coulil have found no more fitting way In which to honor the memory of his brief career at Washington. gether lovely garden ! And Itm't It Just like Its owner!" No matter bow cultured your person ality may be you cannot express that personality perfectly through the me- Hoys nil over the country will envy the pupils of a new school that tins Imvii opened In New York. The toucher Is the clown of a large vnrlety tlieuter, who teaches professl'iiutl clowning to bright boys and girls who are ready to study hard. Two hundred sml fifty children are enrolled. The clown Is so busy thnt he has to conduct his school y corresiMMiiience, nut n expects to bavo a "graduation" and addrewt the Miiirwnrtn puiins. .Meanwhile nmnteur townlng thrives lu all the school of the world. hiirploycnr lialilllly. under Kngllsti law. Is a serious matter. When a workman is Injured, oven If the "ac- lilejif may he pnrlly his own fault. be is entitled to receive a S)ecincd sum based on his average eiirtiliigs. If be Mm as the result of his Injury, his le- liciidciil ro-elve s much as be would earn In three years. Tin' qmwtlou what are a man' earnings wns lately ( til.il by the K.iigllsh court of appeal A waiter In a restaurnut car ou a rail wsy was actually paid by bis employ ers twenty. live (millings a week, but lie usiiMlly received ten or twelve still lings a week more as "tlim." Tbe ourt decided that his llm were n part of his ciirnlnir, although thry ,, loi come rrom bis employers, a Imi must pny to thn dead wnlter's heir one liuiiilni sod tlfly six times all that he eanied In s wock about fourttvn humlre.1 dol "srs lu all. In a niectlng'of a prominent woman ciiin. one or the niemlMrs made a tin niopew criticism on the character and performs ii. vs of man, who, she sold k iiill 'iiiitly, m created linmi-llately iiiii-r t!ie billies. And Iti I iirrent Liter hi 'ire for April their was s Hyin,mlirii bv a lot or anonymous philosophers. s i' li lis ' inet cur enmliietor." "n ten 1'inent house comiii!w!nner." and ii !,.e ili -v we:-e afraid or ashannsl to Kiw tlieii- names - who cheerfully ex press i i.. opinion t ii.it women, ns a sex nro wholly dcHtltule of honor." It I: m singular freak of human nature that whenever a ihtsoii Usiin.-s Irritated i.y ine cliarseter or conduct of another .era. the fault Is ultimately sttrlbuted to the offending arson's religion, ns tloiisllty or orx. This blundering con elusion may h the wml of prejudice gainst a certain religion, nationality or ex. or It may be the effect of sheer allow ness and hxuoranc. But If It when there came a knocking at the door, and she heard the voice of the old woman asking if ah were awake. "Breakfast la ready," ahe aaid, "and the master is a' wondering why you bean't down." On tbia summons Kale hastened her toilet and made ber way down the old winding stair to the room in which they lad supped the night before. Surely Jir dlestone must have bad a heart of flint Hum of trees and shrubs and flowers rot to be melted by tbe sight of that fair, unless you have given years of atiuly fiesh face. Ilia features set aa hard as these materials of landsciiite art and to the art Itself. Landscape gardening Is the eighth of the fine arts, differing from the classical seven only In pre senting the actual living things, where as the others represent life. There Is no short cut to the fine arts. The only way In which you can express your personality perfectly In any of these arts Is to get a great artist to help you. I hat way always comes high, and It ought to. The reason why Amerlcnn gardening bus mit yet come up to the standa-d of the P.uropenn Is simply that we do not (iny enough. We employ lncoiiiieteiit landscape designers or none; we beat the nurseryman down on bis plans; we are not willing to pay a first-class gar dener what be Is worth. Yet we are "dead game" when It comes to yachts, automobiles, horses, docs and houses. Why should not our wealthy men be equally willing to pay for good gardens? I Mleve they will. These things ar adamant aa she entered the room, and he looked at her with eyea which were puck ered and angry. "You are late." be said coldly. "You must remember that yon are not in Kccle- ion square. ' You are here to be disci pllned, and disciplined yon shall be." "I am sorry," she answered. "I think I must hav been tired by our Journey." The vest room looked even more com fortless and bleak than on the preceding evening. On the table waa a plate of ham and egga. John Oirdlestone served out a portion, and pushed It in her direction She sat down on one of the rounh wooden chairs and ate listlessly, wondering bow all this waa going to end, After breakfast (lirdlratnne ordered the oli woman out of the room, and, standing In front of the fire with his long Ires apart and his hands behind his hack, he told her in harsh concise language what bis Intentions were. "1 Wl long determined," he said, "that if yov ran counter to my wishes, and per sisted in your infatuated affection for that H-aiiegrace, I should remove you to some fuilililiwl ahiiM cm. , . I. . , . ............ ,..u i.iKiu reconsider I nothing to be gained by violence. They are on tbe right aide of the law at pre- an3 r,a aiil i on fli wrong if you do anything rash. The girl could bav written if ahe were uncomfortable." Ah, so she could. Fh must hav for gotten us. How could she, after all that baa passed?" "Iet ua hope for tbe best, let na bop for the beat," the doctor would say sooth ingly. Yet It must be confessed that be waa considerably staggered by tbe turn which things bad taken. lie had seen so much of the world in his professions! ca pacity that he bad become a very reliable Judge of character. All hia instincts told him that Kate Ilartson was a true-heart ed and well-principled girl. It was not in ber nature to leave London and never to send a single line to Jier friends to tell them where or why she bed gone. There must, he ws sure, be some good reason foi her silence, end this reason resolved itself Into one of two things either sh was III and unable to hold a pen, or she had lost her freedom snd was restrained from writing to them. The last suppo sition seemed to tbe doctor to be tbe mora serious of the two. Had he known the instability of th Oirdleatone firm, and the necessity they were under of getting ready money, he would at once hav held th key to th enigma. He bad no idea of that, but in spite of bia Ignorance he waa deeply dis trustful of both father and son. - He knew and had often deplored the clause in John Harston'e will by which th ward's money reverted to the guardian. Forty thousand pounds was a bait which might tempt even a wealthy man into crooked patba. (To b continued.) he trick la done. That la where ao th Ifors. Rom on ha figured out that It coat on tb averuge ou) one-half as much to feed a borso a It doe to feed a man; and that tb horse will do ten time th amount of work tuut It I powilbl for th man to do, If this est I mat la correct, then a dollar'a worth of food given the horse will pro- due twenty tiuies a much results a th aaiu amount of money will If ex pended In ferd for man. Therefore, when man domesticated th horse he Immensely Increased hi own power of Bocurlng results. When much farm work la to be don ther ahould always tw . eftijftVtaAs to' tii it ' Farmera try to economize ou tb number of horse and bv to Icav much work undone. In tb event of hired help being scarce. It I omctliiic possible to offset this lack by Increasing tbe number of horse kept In somo parts of the West and Northwest, declare the Fanners' Re view, th scarcity of help has resulted In more borsca being used. Fir ar bitched to a double plow, and on driv er I thus enabled to turn two furrows at a time and practically double the work that one man baa to da Tbia I the result of tbe complete utilization of horseflesh. Galde fur Oraar Saws. A very simple method by which one man rnn manipulate a drag saw to cut muny full. Thn.rrp-.QJ msnt-Ut SuurrxfA rt'"' '? ! favfl ticvied by a west af the right teniHrature; It must be neither t sweet nor too aour. Work ing and aaltlng butter to secure uni form color and flavor la a very nice art. Don't try to lenrn to do it lufalllbly In two or three veeeka, but by all means don t practice cm your customers. That menna lose. It la better to wait two or three months before you seek custom ers. I And. before yon shlD. find out how your commission man or prlvnte customers prefer to have their butter put up. Sometimes the packnge means a difference of two or three cents pound. THEY EE3ULATE THE CLIMATE. Marveloas Maehlaea Below Grnaad la Iba Great Metropolltaa llotala. All the modern hotel buildings In New York have marvelous subterranean departments, aays the Broadway Maga zine. The rooms In all of them nowu- gate, Ueda worth u4 freedom. She would I dnya are cleaned by pneumatic flexible send both a telega, ,d tettpr to Dr. Himsdale, and eipUa to biro her exact situation. If tie kino-Warted and ener getic phyaician once kn-t 0f it, h would tuk care that ao harm Wfell ber. IShe could return then, and f with a light heart tbe worst which her piardian could do to her. Here u th avenue en- W ith a glad cry she quirkrned her pace. and in another tnomrat would have been In th high road, whrn "Now then, wher in you a-comln' to?" cried a gruJ voire from among tbe bushes which flanked th (ite. me gin sioppni an in I tremble. la the shadow of tht trees there was a camp pteol, and on tht camp thiol sat a sav age looking man, d rowed in a dark cor- all parts of the same outd.sr life. The i yoaT con,1,", n1 'rm better resolutions more self respect a mnn has, the more he values his family life, and the more willing he is to spend as much on his outdis.r living room ss on oue of tits Indoor rooms. The Tarrrl Battrrr. K.arly In the nineteenth century, In IMI!. Colonel John Stevens conceived the idea of the construction of nn Iron plated vessel of war with a sau.vr shaped hull, propcllisl ,y screws so ar ranged as to give a rotary motion t the structure. The buttery was to be of the heaviest ordnance of the time and the plating heavy enough to resist the shot of similar gun at short range The main purpose of the craft was h.irlsir defense, and the plan of action was to moor the vess. ,v a ch iin lead lug down through the IsiMotu ,,f t:.,. ship at lt center .in, I o spin . r,,iiinl tills center, rir'.m: gun nfi.r gun as it came In the line of tire, thus Hiiliclpat Ing the inter Timby turret, which I i turn wns the serin of tlie modern mm itor armorclad. Such a v.s.el wns ac tually built half a .vnttirj- later by the IJiLsttian government sn was a g,si, representative of tw ,jr. stevena hst tery. CoH(r's Magazine. Han tm l.eaa I)., All the mho borrow hare been shown It seldom recompensed them And that 'lis hard to stand alone When there'i a Ilea against them. Kansas City Times. Ther are mighty few peopi, wno don't occasionally tU stor.a "i" to undo ro th future. This country hou awered the purpose admirably, and as an old servant of mine, .Mrs. Jorrocka, chanc ed to reside in the neighborhood, I had warned her that at any time I might come down and should eipect to find thin? ready. Your rash and hearties, mnduct has. however, precipitated matters, and we hav arrived before her preparations wer complete. Our future arrangemenia will therefor be less primitive than they ar at present. Here you .ln rs-n.aj,. young lady, until you show signs of iss! peiiian-e, anil or a willingm me narm you have done." 'If you mean until I consent to marrt your son, then I shall lire and die here " the girl said bravely. "That rests with yourself. As I aaid ts-fore. you are under discipline here and von may not find existence h !.) of r.c, s It was in K.-eleston square" nn i rut my nut id?' Kat .tin hard old woman in the hoi grim rrom l.,ra to that ,,Tert. m he mil himself join us for a .lay or two in ea, , 'K?ra here:" Kale cried in horror. M.-r r nef consolation through all her tr-m-lies had been that there seemed to be some chance of getting rid of ber terrible .tor. "And why not?" the d man asked an grily. Ar y ao bitter against th lad father r lU ,OCl", cf bi' own Kate was saved from further reproaches ,L , mD,r';? ,b' old wo to clean tb. tbl. Th. I..t ,m of intelligent -f,rrr;Kh'a "T,n b,r ,'rrib" and at th. mm ,m, hti aiw hpf stoBiahmnt. What could th. fast-living (fort aeaklnc maa ul tow a tut U talked along th, o It, her fair skin bristl w an torn and bletfln. with scratches from im- Driurs. until ,,, ,niislil herself thnt here was n In Ii 'there was e asked. "1 I ot'.i smull i . .: i- .i.:. .1. s' iv ulth , I """" door on rue sine ...... u " " lth noting but ih. s .Lr I ... ...i .. .. .... . .... 1 ny rnilttay hw. " " "lichee, s Is . omuig down. I had o,''..,i. " .7 "'lnl'le. ' "' .iironjii ch a nil man wing itnihl pn 4 whi u , guarded "' "" ""inner 1 ,,s,n. The aicken- mind impos- iipsj attached to an outlet found In every room or hall and connecting by n series of piies with vacuum pumps, which suck the Impurities to tbe bas- niont, where they are properly dUposad of. It Is lu the underground hotel worlo, trance now, the high Ik-heo-eaten stone loo, that a stop has been taken toward pillars, with the battered derioe upon the the goal which Howell' "Traveler from top. The iron nt between was open. Altriirla" long ago saw aa attulnabl the regulation of tbe temperature, the control of the climate. In the basement stories of these new pnlnces for trail' slents you may see the thing In Its In! tlul oieratlon Here Is a net work of coils and ducts, and beyond them Hie mouth of a giant air shaft From 400 above the surface of the street, high hlL-h above the dust nncl the germ line. duroy suit, with s blackened clay pip th alr B forwj ltlto thnt Bhaft. Qn the ....- ,u tu. nrr o. ... umma. ... wa d((Wn ,f encouIlter g room full of wiauier-oeaien nunornnj tic waa pien- tifllllv POVPI-mI arirh smaMnnv marks Inil one of his eyes was lifhtlen and white Tul" trMm r"" "leHillly. Ita te.n- from the effects of tb aw disease. II perature mnintaineu ny me ammonia. r. now, and interposed himself between refrigerating plant, which Is also th9 her and the gate. center of the hotel's cold storage syr My good man," she nid la a trembling ini. Itlown through these frigid col! voice, for bia appearance was far from tiw ar then sifted through fllteVlng reassuring. . wnn to to past ana to get , , ., r.l.Ww.l,.h arrant. ft. .U ., -1 I ""."" - - " : ' ZTZ "Ln Zl lirr ' H In racks which form . cont.nuou. V. Her cmnanln. .,r.,rh no a rv S"aiel erics, 1 new u.r .r a.r.s.-s diity haml. took th coin, stain it un obll.piely and thus chilled and purified in the sir, caught It, bit it, and finally 1s conducted through large closed canal plunged it into the depths of bis trouser Into smaller ones. Thence It la fanned jHskeU. "No rotd this way. missy," he to the floors above, being there admit ted to the rooms. On the roof of the building another fan sucks out tbe vl tinted air. These wonderful floors below the street In all the new totels, would fill Sh was only 1 doien yard from th the average housewife's henrt with wild lane which ld to freedom, so she made admiration and despair. Here are mnr- a quick little feminine rush in the hope hi floors, here are tiled ceilings and of avoiding this dreadful sentinel which -tt here sre class and marble tables. bnrred her passage He caught her round nprt , galvanized Iron plate warmers. , u,.'yef. and nurieo ner oacs wonrtprfu nmchlties for washing and drying dishes, other wonderful mn' chines for keeping silver speckles. se- clnl dumb waiters connecting with the dining rooms of the various private suites, all sorts of flres for all sorts of work, from charcoal broilers to gaa boilers. Everything I aa benutlfully clean as Is the operating wards of the best hospitals. The cooks' white uni forms are as shining as the tmrse't rrlsp oik In well-kept wards. All this Is enough to send the average women to her home In a niotsl to regard her own kitchen ns the limit of dirt, disorder, Inconvenience and unhygienic. She, poor thing, has no refrigerating plant; she must take the l-e which the bi company ehsds to give her. pure or Im pure. She or her conk or ber mn lit must patiently wash dishes mid sinr silver and mix bread by hand. A visit to this part of any one of the great ho tels would be likely to convert half tli-s home-keeping women of New York to an advis-acy of hotel life. said. "I've given niy word to th guv' nor, and I enn't r luck from it." "lou bnv no riglit to detain me," Kat ciied angrily. "I hive good friends in London who will nuke you in Her for this.' the wai with such violence that she staggered Serosa the path and would bav fallen had she not struck violently agninst a tree. Kate turned ind retraced her step slowly and sadly jp the avenue. As she glsneed hack she saw a gaunt, hard-featured woman trudging up the lane with a tin can in her hud. lonely and forlorn, but not yet quit, destitute of. hope, ah turned to the Hgbt among the trees, and pushed her way through bushes and bram bles to the boundary of the I'riory grounds. It u , ft w,, at least "it" feet in 1,.;,. -i.h . eni.inr that Kat "e c-nvl,t!on to, .session of her without it , utter i oMllty eiiher to t,.t away or to give the least information ,0 ,ny one in the world as to where ,h,,B, 0r what might le- all her. When !, ran, hack to the house, tired and disheveled ,,. bfr journey of e Ploration. t;irdl,on. w standing by the dor to re,,, hrr with a sardonic mil upon hi, ,ow d0 fon ' the ground ,hMir be asked, with U nearest ?tnm,h , B,rit, which sh. nlL".". h."tTi m bim. "And th. or How a,d ,ou lik thrm aIir Ktt trtei nt 1 na.at kj tk. mom brar. retort, . Aa Attrarllva Gateway. Thl rustic gateway, which was bnllt at a small cost, may lie worth Imitating, uiociineu, of course, to flt tbe surround lugs. This one la between two cedar trees, and from It a winding path lead to a pretty rustic cottage. Such a rate would be entirely out of place at the en trance to a stately or formal building. The euta give an 10 now tne gate Is made. Th. two uprights and the cross-piece oh tho top are of locust All tbe real la of st-oar. rarta of tbe smaller branches have been left on the leces that go to AH up the gate. A gnteway tike thl. vould not prov effective against plga or chlckena, but would turn larger anl mala. It la not only cheap and dur hle, but decidedly attractive, because Bt'STIO GATE. BB??BBs-lBaBBawsB-J S V TWO CCDABB BTANO 0UARI1. I.aa ( Fertllltr br l.eaeblaat. Laud kept constantly aa a gnrden lose much of 'Ita fertility by leaching. A clover rotation I the best preventive of this. There should be at least two or three gnrden apots on each farm kept rich enough so that one year' ex tra manuring will bring It Into the finest poamble condition for garden truck. If fanner could alwaya plant garden on two-year clover aod they would ralae better crop and with less stable manure and other fertilizer than they now require. The clover doe much more than fnrnluh srpen manure to ferment In the soil. Ita roote reach down Into the subsoil, thus not only saving and bringing to th anrface phtut food that would other wise tie wasted, but also by enlivening the subsoil, allowing the roots of crop to go dceer. Clover sod to begin with. If well eurlcietl. Is best for such crops cileumM) anrf euolnnav that arm mi- faye most, likely to- surrer mn drought If la quite Impossible to mak good gnrden crop unless the land haa previously been enriched by a serlo of heavy manuring. The fertility lost by leaching must be constantly renewed. so perfectly In harmony with Its sur roundings. K. E. Miller, In Farm and Home. Color of Him aa Asset. One of the moat potent factors, per haps, that ahould be considered when selecting a breed for producing eggs for market Is the demand of the mar ket at which the eggs are to lie dis posed of, suys The Outing Magazine. Some markets, notably New York City and cities Immediately adjacent, pre fer white-shelled eggs, and tbe best trade In these markets will accept none other. Boston prefers brown eggs, and paya a substantial premium for them ; and, taking the country over, the pref erence la for brown egga by a large majority. However. In many markets no preference at all la expressed; In fact, those Just mentioned are practic ally tbe only markets In which the color of the egg receives attention to the extent of Influencing prices. Where there is a preference, and whichever the preference Is, one should keep a va riety of fowla that lay eggs of tbe pre ferred color. Tesise Tied Talkers. How many educated iieople there ar who have no more than a peasant's vocabulary. They do not use the words that a peasant nses, but they do not Improve upon them. They still go on saying. "How amusing!" "How lovely!" "How nice!" to the end of the chapter. Nobody can be Interestlnf who Is always working a limited iw cabulary.-British Weekly. Mea.arlag l.aad br Wrlabt. The area of any piece of land, no matter how Irregular the boundary llnea, may be accurately ascertained by means of a delicate bnlnnce as follows: Make a drawing of the plat of ground on pasteboard to a given scale, say 4 square roda to 1 Inch. Cut from some part of tbe sheet of pasteboard a piece exactly 1 Inch square, which repre sents one acre, or 4 square rods. Also rut out the plat aa drawn. Weigh the square and the plat. Tbe number of times the weight of the square Is con tained In the. weight of the plat Indi cates tbe area of the land. Kor exam ple. If tbe square which represents one acre weighs 20 grains, and the plat weighs 240 grains, then the plat con tains twelve acres. Scientific Ameri can. Tbe Cars at Wreila. It is for the conservation of moisture that we keep up the cullliitlon of the crop In the summer, but the evniKira tlou which ciin he cluvkisl by this men ns Is small when .oinparcd with the amount of water taken up from th.; soil by an ordltinry growth of weeds. We ran hardly estimate tlie lmtoit ance of killing the weeds. ran J a ONE-MAN SAW. ern tun tier man. in using these aaw two men have heretofore been Dei-rosary, one at each end of t he saw. According to tha new Invention, there la rested against a tree a, rod from which I UKMnded a cord. At the end of the cord la an adjust able clamp, to which one end of the aaw Is secured. At tlie other end of the saw la a handle. In operating the saw to cut the tree, the end orns-ialf handle la aupjiorted by the cord In the same position aa If operated by hand. mtn tbe employment n thla guide tha necessity of an extra mnn to manage one end of the aaw la eliminated. A feed (omnia. Feeding sheep and lambs for the market Is very much of a lottery at best. It Is the punmse of the feeder to buy thin stock and, after feeding It from sixty to ninety days, return it to market at a profit. This la the hope that Impels bltn to put In his time and nbor, else he would not do It There re three Important factors that enter Into the operatlou. The cost of the sheep or lambs on the market, the price of the feed that Is to make them fat. nd the condition of the market when hey are returned for slaughter. The first element Is a known quantity, but tbe second and third are often a chBnce. They have proved to lie very much of a chance tbia aenson. The original cost of the feeders was the greatest on record, feed was high and market conditions have not panned out as good as generally expected. Irov ers' Journal. Idabe Maa Klads Sirs Wheal. A new variety of wheat has been ills- overed by a farmer living nenr Jull- etta, Idaho. He says be found a few kernels of tbe wheat growing wild In Alaska, and being struck with their lunipness, hardness and other appar ent gMsl qualities, he brought home a few kernels and planted them. From those few kernel hev harvested enough the first year to plant several square rods of ground tl.e second yeor, tbe yield from this planting being at the rate of more than 100 bushels per acre, well-tilled heads; the kernela are arge, plump and hard and millers say It makes good flour. a To faavaa llama. When hams are smoked, roll them In stiff paper, cut your .brown muslin to flt them snd sew It on wltb a large needle and twine; then make a starch of flour and yellow ochre, and with a small whitewash brush rover them with It Hang them up to dry. To Cool lb Maaar Ilea. When manure become heat.sl and the odor of ammonia Is noticed there Is then a loss of valnnlde fertilizing sole stance nltrisgen. If the heat Is very high force a crowbar down In the bono In eeveral lilac and pour cold water In to rediK-e the temperature. If the cow la not by nature a heavy and rich milker, all the balanced ra tlona one can prepare will not make her such. 80 with th hen. She will only return for food and attention op to ber original capacity. Poaltrr Note. Clean tbe droppings from under th roosts frequently. Uuckwheat la excellent for both young and old poultry. A laying hen ahould have constant scccs to Hum or gravel. (irlt Is the hen's teeth. I'rovhlo ho with plenty of It, so that she may dU gisst her fcsHl. If yon exrsft the hen to lay freely, you must feed her the kind of stuff that will make eggs, Feod only what the hena will eat np clean. Any kind of feed loft from on day to another Is apt to start disease. Watching the Incubator carefully I the way to get tbe best hotch. A little cnrelessuess Is sure to produce diss trous result. Charcoal or burned corn occasionally Ib a good conditioner for th fowl. It prevents Indigestion and other die to which they art hlr.