r LOVE. criwt to prm bota taMit by pain od low and ffln. Through worth una wrong or itammo or km Tb joyi and uwra of faith aad ftwrt That make life fair Urn prwioui ttiart That doth endure and wlU make iiirt Of pnao and rutt-tha nous's lift quest. AFAR IN THE DESERT. la our times, France's groat African colonies are subdued forever: but in other days, during the attempts of a laborious conquest, every moment ' held danger. Skirmishes were incessant, real combats were frequent, and each post of the extreme vanguard had its romantic episodes, to be related later. Here is ono of them. Soft and wavering the wind blew up off the scorched desert, the air freshened suddenly, and suddenly the night felL like a barrier upon the .horizon the as-1 oendlng hills gradually took on tints of gray or lilac: to the right and to the left stretched the plain of reddish sand, traversed irregularly by ravines of less or greater darkness, according to their depth, and by strange palm groves, dusty, yellow, sunburned. Twilight is Unknown in Africa: darkness falls there with a push, like a curtain, and this swiftness of change of setting is accent uated corresponilingty as the dry country is reached, in the heart of the desert, in the unexplored lands. Here, past the : High Plains, beyond 8aida, Ain-Seffra, break the monotony of long days of idle almost Into Moroooo, on the1 borders of I ness. Then forward! Upross and fled the mysterious Fighig, at the farthest from the road the marauding jackals, point whither the exploring columns j whose shrill squeals Insult from afar their have penetrated, this natural phenom- natural enemy, man, onoe he is safely j enon Is profoundly noticeable: the shades past them. Now and then a saber' invade the earth in the briefest moment, sounded against a stirrup, or a horse and change and darken it with their clouds as ink darkens water. A bugle sounded within the circle of touts: the horses of the picket lifted their pect, forming an ever retreating picture, heads, and the chasseurs, in their wide The soldiers were oontent with the ex blouses and trousers or linen, went to! pedition, perceiving that the death of form in line slowly for the evening roll j one mong tlem waB not w be passed cuu. me uugie can, iuuu uuu siu m, was prolonged inlinitely, carried by the sono rous swells to the foot of the tranquil mountains, where the sound died out. The squadron was formed on the right. Cabarousse, captain cwnmanding, and his two lieutenants. Peyralte and Vau dras, all drowsy, regarded the maneuver carelessly, without uttering a word, with their arms drooping, and ull about, fur, near, above, everywhere, there reigned a silence so great that it seemed religious, sacred, full of uugust mysteries. The roll call was begun. After each name followod the same brief, monoto nous answers, as each day at that hour, with the apathetic indifference of me chanical exertion. The adjutant did not even pause before passing from one name to auother. . "Present! esent! esent!" . "Hanrion?" No one answered. The adjutant, sur prised, lifted his gaze from bis roll book and repeated: "Hunriou'r" Nothing. "Well! are you deaf, you Hanrion?" No answer. A soldier was missing. Bis oompan- iuiis ui tue rauss siireuu unur nanus uuu : gesticulated in token that they kww nothing, comprehended nothing. Caba-1 rouses came forward. "Let us see! Who was the last man j to see Haurion? Where was it? When was it? Speak up now!" In the morning, at roll call; none had aeen him since. . i "Finish the roll call! Break ranks!" i . So there was a soldier missing. In ths j neighborhood of a city, Cabarousse would have shrugged Ids shoulders, saying sim-1 ply: "A hair thrown to the winds!" but here in this complete solitude, twenty leagues from the last advanced post, an ' absent man might as well be counted dead at once. Aud In a squadron alone 1 there, isolated, lost, and entirely depen-) dent upon itself, a call without response was enough to chill the boldest. In the desert, ranks are inevitably narrowed, ! and individualities are allied; no one is' unknown, all are comrades, and one of ' these comrades had disappeared. In . very group, whether the sleeves were blank or braided, that disappearance was discussed passionately, with the instino-1 normr 01 ui umugiu u u were 1!" For hutuau seltishness is never lost completely: all solidarity rests on per sonal considerations. The country here was not, however, openly dangerous, not avowedly hostile; the bands of nomad Arabs had been re ' pulsed, driven back to the mountains, and only a Kabyle village bad its huts a abort distance away. But the Kubyles are sedentary, of lazy habits, and they regard with indifference the foreign troops defiling past them in clouds of golden dust, and strike not, unless they are attacked in their own dwellings, un der their roofs of mud and stone. And yet, nevertheless, Cabarousse, sus picious, twisting his mustaches, looked obstinately to that side where lay the Kabyle village. There, he was con vinced, lay the solution of the mystery. Suddenly he strode toward the groups of soldiers. , "Here! let us see about this! no more trifling! Does any one know anything? there must be a woman in this business a Kabyle woman, eh? Answer one or another, or all at onoel But answer! or else" "A woman or mora than one! it is the same thing," let alio a soldier, ahalr. mg his ncad knowingly. i "Here, youl come forward, and tell what you know!1' . ' The soldier advanoed and spoke out, finally. Us was a barracks gossip, a swaggerer, and he spoke after his kind. "Well, this is about it, my captain; one is not made of wood, you see, and ths desert is wide, and six months is a long time It is very hard not to see a woman for that long." Then he went un to say that the Kabyle girls wer wont to go to wash their bright colored rags at a rill at no great distance from the camp, and "The devil! one gets a (wist in both eyes when one sees their brown, round ankles, as they go down to the gully. But that is all! as to their heads, they ate so togged out that one sees only their eyes. But such eyes! That scamp Hanrlon lilted to go to watch them waali a fancy like any other. He declared that the tallest and the shortest of them wiuked at him sidewise as they passed by him; and that always pleases a man, wherever he may be, my cap- tain" "That Is enough!" said Cabarousse, and he gave the order to saddle t!. horses. Thirty men were left In charge of the j tents. The others were galloping in the i bright moonlight, and by the clear rays : horses and riders projected gigantic! shadows, scattered by the haste of march, out equal in their dimensions, j the lines being maintained strictly. The i thirst for battle and the joy of vengeance impelled the squadron; besides, any ex- citement is weloome which comes to which left his place was by force of hand returned thither; but always the troop m,.in,id .dvi.ne.lnf.with .nectral over indifferently, and that all bloody memories would "id prompt vengeance. Little by Utile, a sparse vegetation spread beneath the feet of the horses: then the way was streaked by the silhouettes of palm trees: farther yet, and the Kabyle village stood confusedly out from the earth, with its mud hovels, low, narrow windowed, whose doors were too small for human stature: and round about the inclosures for cattle, now vacant. At a brief word of command, the squadron halted. No light shone, all was dark; no one moved, nor anything whatever. Only a few vagabond dogs, scenting the strangers, barked upon the dung heaps. The troop surrounded, at a walk, the village, still silent, still dark. Dismount! They entered the first hut, and it was vacant; vacant, too, the second; the third vacant; all were va cantthe inhabitants had fled, taking their effects and weapons. This was their guilty confession. More than that all farther search was now useless and without purpose. But what was that? Lying across a doorway, with its face in a heap of filth, was the body of a man, with its- throat cut, its face bathed in blood. It was Hanrion. Then, on the vimt nio-ht. ai-rno a clamor of rage, which presently sinks into grief a tone of unspeakable sad ness, of supreme pity. Afar stretch the undulating plains: and the imperturba ble chain of hills, black now. seemed in solently to liar the way to reprisals. Stiff upon his horse, gloomy and for bidding in the clear night, Cabarousse shook his clenched hand at the invisible as one who dreams of vengeance. "Lieutenant!" he cried, at last, "take fifty men and crush that brood of mag gots until not two are left living! Oh, that 1 must stay at my post! that I might go with you! When the ranks were formed, the sub lieutenant, Phillippe Vaudras, saluted and started with his fifty men toward the Unknown before them, while Caba rousse and his squad returned at a foot pace, in their own despite, to the camp, with heads bent, with hearts saddened, bearing, laid aoroBs two horBes, the bloody body of the murdered Haurion, Toll .U lamima hl.,.,,1., ' -i blue eves, when he left the mill. tary school. Phillippe Vaudras had chos- , M Africa as a held for adventure, and, in a year or camp me, ue nau made nun self noted for his bravery, and tliijin a wild squadron where every man was valiant. Because of his white hands, his sweet voice, and his youth, the sol diers called him "The Little - One," "Mile. Vaudras." or else "My Lady Sub Lieutenant;" but, when he charged across the plain, that "little one" glad dened the heart; his horse had splendid legs and was always first in the combat; and what a powerful tlst had "my lady sub-lieutenant!" His soldiers were fain to follow Vaudras, since they could nev er get before him; and they followed him with enthusiasm, drunken with his wildness, and, above all, so that nothing of ill should befall him. He seemed pre cisely the chief necessary for that ro mantic expedition, for that tragic night, for that setting extraordinarily tragio; after him his troops would follow blindly. At the head of the vanguard and on the flanks of the squads, the guides, the explorers, the pathfinders bent over their pommels, with their gaze fixed on the ground, directing their course by tracks almost invisible by the pale light. Across a width of forty yards there appeared in the sand deep marks, footprints of men and beasts, whose wins the tumultuous fight, the disorder of de feat, beneath the furious lashes of the Kabyle drivers, terrified by that corpse they left behind them, The horses of the pursuers were pant ing. "Haiti" commanded Vaudras. The chasseurs camped as well as they could; they lay down to sleep with an arm through the bridle, and in spite of the jerks and pulls of the animals (heir sleep was deep and dreamless. At last a faint white streak appeared on th.e horizon; dawn was breaking; and suddenly a growing light dispelled the shadows and discovered distant objects. Then on the flank of the hills appeared the tribe they were pursuing, a long, gray line of men. women and children, of sheep and oxen, climbing the heights in haste, and the air conveyed to them like a call the low ing of the oxen and the bleating of the sheep. With one simultaneous shout the rid ers spurred to a gallop, but if they saw they were seen also, and the Kabyles, abandoning already the heaviest of their luggage, ran up the steeps in a revolt of confusion. They were lost to sight In the chaos of gigantic bowlders; one by one, as ants bury themselves in the earth, they were hidden to the last one in the hollows of the mountain. All that remained in sight were a few oxen, un easy, turning toward the plain, lowing sadly, witji necks stretched, muzzle thrust out and nostrils flaring. An hour later Vaudras and his troopers found themselves all at once within a hundred yards of the enemy, having ar rived thither by means of literal goat paths. The Kabyles had made front and were awaiting them. The situation ex plained their audacity. Between the fu gitive tribe and the blue and red chas seurs, the only path open was an ex tremely narrow pass which joined two level spaces. This paBs ran along the side of the mountain like a forbidding balcony hung over a gorge of immense depth. It was not wide enough for two horseman abreast, and that beneath the unerring fire of the Kabyles on the heights. The least slip, the first false step, would send one rolling into infinite space. Vaudras saw this conformation, and, understanding its horror, his face blanched and he shut his eyes. The troopers paused in astonishment and the smoking horses panted heavily and re ceded, necks thrust over cruppers. Evi dently the Kubyles had known of that natural redoubt; the women and children were hidden behind the rocks in the rear, and the men were un their knees or on their breasts, Sheltered from balls by great blocks of granite. They held the mountain and could fire at their pleasure upon the soldiers in the open. Moreover, there was the ravine, the threatening fall. The French soldiers thrust their heads forward to gaze at the abyss, saying by their grimaces: " If we were birds.now!" Suddenly, the bugler, a littie scamp of 20 years old at the utmost, spurred his horse forward in bravado and sounded the charge. The signal was given, the horses started of their own accord, and along the whole extent of the menacing paBS, heads flush with tails before them, the first squad dashed splendidly, under a furious fusillade. Only one man, re straining his horse with both hands only one man rigid as if petrified in his saddle, remained behind it as rear guard. It was Vaudras. One, two, four, five, twenty; the troopers thundered past him, shaking their heads under that hurricane of balls, but laughing and encouraging one another with shouts. The sub-lieutenant remained immovable, with bis eyes fixed on the summit, a oold sweat running off bis templeB. Vaudras was smitten with vertigo. To be attacked by vertigo is almost as bad aato go mad outright. The horror of it suffocates aud paralyzes; and the man predisposed by temperament to that mystenouB potency of empty space, to that magnetic attraction from abysses, loses all consciousness of himself and all will power; he pales, be trembles, he re cedes, and flies from the mute summons of the invisible death awaiting him in the air. Vaudras was afraid. Ah! the battle! there is the powder wlucb laughs, the lead which whistles, the steel which darts, the blood which flows, the splendid shocks, the noisy death at will! But that great mouth, silent, terrific, waiting to suck one in no! nol no! impossible! never! Thirty men had passed, had taken the lead of Vaudras. ; They fancied that their officer, for the best of reasons, doubtless, watched their tragio defile, and would follow to place himself at their head again. None noted his appear ance, none suspected his anguish. The ''little one" afraid! Bah! "Mademoi selle" Vaudras nervous! Indeed, that is enough to terrify. What is the matter? "My lady sub-lieutenant is cryingj" Forty men had gone forward; the balls whistled harshly, scratching the granite walls with terrible rebounds. The Ka byles were firing volleys, continual dis charges, sure that they were lost If the charging foe should reach them. Vau dras was exposing himself as a target All the fifty men had passed by him. He remained alone. He dismounted, meaning to try the pass on foot. His horse broke from him and hurled itself after the others. At a quarter the length of the trail its shoes slipped on the rock, it lost its footing and was whirled into I the abyss, its four hoofs turned upward. Vaudras screamed, his eyes starting I from their sockets. He threw himself i upon his knees, he dragged himself upon I his stomach, but brute instinct drew bun backward. He could not go on. At that moment he saw his men sur rounded on all sides Jby the Kabyles, three times their number, rendered des perate by their danger. The women find children sullied from their rock crannies and bung themselves from the bridles; they plunged knives into the bellies of the horses, they scratched, they bit, they threw stones. In that swarming of the horde, that entanglement, that furious grasp of the raving multitude, the chas seurs, suffocated, dragged down, felt their limbs grow numb. Their bleeding bodies were drenching the earth with red, and their leader was not there to inspire them, to ordain a victory. It was faring ill with them. Their long sabers, dulled and bent, were with drawn with difficulty from their thrusts into the masses. Their arms were weak and broken. They were powder burned at such close range were the Kabyles firing. They were deafened by the yells of the dogs, excited by that combat; they were deafened by the shrieks of the chil dren, by the howls of the women, by the roars of the men; cut, bitten, bleeding scorched on all sides, the little troop melted slowly before the multitude which assailed unceasingly. Sally, ambuscade, lie the attack of what ilk it might, it meant defeat and death to the French cavalrymen. Vaudras once more started to run for ward, and with his mouth foaming he fell back once more the last time. From afar he gazed with an infinite tenderness upon his men, dying there without him but, ah! in dying they were lighting bravely slaying gallantly. Hedrew his pistol from his bell, he held it against his temple, he pressed the trigger, and the last convulsions of tlie deatli agony pre cipitated his corpse into that bottomless abyss which had brought upon him the accursed vertigo. Translated for The Argonaut from the French of Maurice Montegut bv Y. H. Addis. Hot Hard to Hit, The following anecdote admits of wide and varied application. Most of us can apply it to ourselves if we will. It was a story of a minister who. preaching in the pulpit of a brother clergyman, said some strong things about racing and fast horses. He was told after the sermon that he bad touched one of their best members at a ten der point. 'Vi ell." said the preacher, "I cannot change my sermon for him." Iu the evening the man was introduced to the minister, who said, "1 understand that what 1 said touched one of your weaknesses. I assure you that I was altogether uncon scious of the. weakness when I Boid it." "Oh, never mind," said the mail. "It is a poor sermon that does not bit me some where." Youth's Companion. To Save Til-owning Men. A United States navy officer bas invented a life saving device for the dreaded emer gency of "mau overboard" which promises to be of value. A raft buoy of sufficient size to support a man is attached to the vessel by a long aud strong but light wire rope. The buoy is stocked with a small supply of pro visions, and is furnished with a potassium compound which upon contact with the water ignites and burns brilliantly for twenty min- utes. If the drowning man, aided by the flame, succeeds In reaching the raft be can be drawn to the vessel without the necessity of lowering boats. Should the rope break and his own vessel lose track of Dim, ho has, with the provisions, a chance of sustaining life until picked up by others. Frank Leslie's. An African "Wake.' According to news from the west coast of Africa there have been some human sacri fices in consequence of the death of a soo of the king of Grand Jack. Selected victims were obliged to drink "sass water," a poison ous liquor, and were then pitched into the surf ou the seashore. When the rollers dashed them ashore men, women aud chil dren cut at them with knives until they were dead. The chief of the tribe Dies the British flag, and the captain of a trading vessel re monstrated with him in vain, Loudon Standard. The Editor's Insomnia, Patient I wish you would prescribe for me, doctor. I am nervous and restless and my sleep is disturbed by nightmares hideous enough for delirium tremens. Doctor Possibly your heart Is diseased, Do you lie ou the right side Patient Great Scott, doctor! I thought you knew that i am running an independent newspaper and have to Us on all sides. De troit Free tress. A Disconsolate Wife. "I don't believe in these secret societies,1' said one Austin lady to another. "That's very singular," replied the other; "jour husband is a Forester, a Knight of Pythias, and a Knight of Honor, and you will have at least eiu.uuu when be diet. "But what good does all that do me?" was the tearful response, "when he never dies" and the poor creature burst into tears. Texas Sittings. Knew When to Stop. A New England man has bestirs the green goods sawdust men at their own game. He got one of their circulars, and in reply asked for a sample of their goods. Tbey sent him a genuine $1 bill, and the gentleman Btopped the correspondence then aud there. Hew York Sun. A Judge's Advice. Judge Hare, of Philadelphia, recently gave this advice to a wifs beater who was dis charged upon the anneal of the abused wife; "When you find yourself getting angry agaia, fill your mouth with water and keep It shut till you cool off." Chicago Herald. "1 hear young Fastleigh has been painting the town red since 1ub uncle left him quarter of a million. " "Why. anybudy could paint the town red with a quart of vermu- ton." Ule. There are in Rngland 84? female black smiths who actually swing heuvy hammers. and v,liio women employed iu uad making. ALL KINDS OF SPOTTERS. HE WAY IN WHICH WORKMEN ARB WATCHED DAY AND NIQHT. A ftusptcton of UUhoitetty Prompts On Man So Watch Another Ths Bleb aad Poor Alike Are Coaiitantly Under tar vsillsacs Ths Police Mo Kioeptlon. In one of the police courts; the other day a young man giving an assumed name was arraigned on a charge of loitering, and a suggestion of "suspicious character" was also made to the judge. who imposed a fine of (10 upon learning that the young man was employed by one of the big surface railway companies as a "spotter," and he claimed that loit ering on street corners was a part of his unenviable calling. The hatred displayed by the conductor for these monitors in their affairs needs little provocation, and is only equaled by the anger of a bartender when the proprietor of a saloon buys one of those automatic check writers and registering machines. As a rule the conductors get to know the men who are watching them, and they are mighty careful to ring up every fare received when the spy is around, and they generally keep well posted regarding their movements. one conductor telling another of the proximity of the dreaded individual aa he moves along the lines. O!) THE STREET CABS. -The spotter who appeared at court a prisoner was searched, and in one of his pockets was found a number of blanks on which he keeps his memoranda The spaces to be tilled in report the day of the month, year and the exact time of the day at which a car is boarded and in which direction the car is going. Then follow the number of fares recorded by the dial in the car and the number of fares received by the conductor in his presence. The report goes on further to state: Was the conductor polite? Was he careless Was he watchful as to as sisting ladies and children on and off of his car? Was the driver careful with his team? The simple mention of the word spot ter is enough to bring out a storm of in dignation from the ordinary railway em ploye. "Every time I hear of one of these fellows." said a conductor of a cross town car the other day, "it makes me think that my employers think that we aro all dishonest. The bell punch is looked upon by the conductors as a badge of dishonor, and. as far as beating the punch, why it is just as easy to for get to ring it as it is to fail to pull the Btrap on the big dial indicator. 1 "11 a man wants to be dish onest no bell punch or dial can prevent bim from do ing so 1 could point out spotters, any nuinlxT of them, who are laughed at by the men on this road. Some of the dirty work is done by women who pretend to be reading a book, but who, in reality, are 'keeping cases' ou the unsuspecting conductor. If a man in our business is disposed to be dishonest and is not a tool, all the spotters in Christendom ' can't catch him. The crowded cars are bis best field, for who can tell whether he rings up for every passenger or slips one here and there. At night he will have, a few more nickels in his jeans than he is obliged to turn in, but the company is none the worse for it." "I've run on this road now for two years," said another conductor on the same line, "and I think in that time I have seen about fifty different spotters. ... I know them the minute they get on the car. The first thing they do is to size you up; and every time you pull the strap they look at the dial to see if il registers correctly. They are unlike the ordinary passenger, insomuch as they wear an air of assumption that give them 'dead away.' " The "L" roads have "spotters" also.' but not to watch the train hands. These persons are called "inspectors," and they prowl around from station to station at the most unseemly hours, just to catch the drowsy agent or ticket chopper asleep on his post, or neglecting hi business in any wdy. EVERYBODY WiTCHIMO. The policeman dreads bis roundsman, for he knows that officer is appointed to spy upon him and report any failure to perform his duty. And yet what would the police force amount to if there was no sucli officer to watch the policeman? The hallways would be the sleeping place for some and the drinking saloons the rendezvous for others. " No man who is honest at heart," said a well known police official the other day, "needs any watching. A policeman ouglit to be the last man to object to be ing watched, for he is in turn only hav ing done to him what he does to the public looking for delinquents. In the one cose he is looking for lawbreakers; in the other he is being watched so that he will not commit a breach of polio rules. And so it is in all cases where on man Is employed to watch another. "It is notour desire to be good in many cases that keeps us from doing wrong, but our fear of punishment either by fines, imprisonment or the dread of hell fire. If w don't have some one over us to remind us of this punishment occa sionally we poor weak mortals are liable to err." The day laborer is hourly under th eye of th "boss," the boss is watched by the contractor, the contractor by th architect and th whole crowd by th