gg Til -GARMENT. I fUEIiE wag do skeleton la the armor when Hartpule fouud It; only gome sand and a buucb of tumble-weed, a rattle-snake, and a ta rantula. The tarantula scuttled off, he killed the rattlesnake, and the tumble- weed and sand he emptied out. Then he had the armor done up In a shelter- teut and put upon a pack-mule. After which, the column moved on. It should not have halted at all, for It wag In pursuit of a band of Indians. But there were bands of Indians every day, and the finding of a full suit of armor lying under a mesquite bush beside their trail w as rare. Certainly Hartpole had never beard of such a thing. And, so far as he knew. It was the only fruit of armor ever discovered on the New Mexico plains, but bis lore on the subject was not profound. ' " . . When he got back to his two-company post on the banks of tbe Gila, he found the interest In life, which had been lacking for him up to then, In en larging that knowledge. lie sent East for books and histories and treatises concerning coats of mail and tbe men who have worn them, and he even went so far as to write to tbe Smithsonian Institution, at tbe risk of having a gov ernment commission sent out at once to seize his treasure. And in the Inter val of two months which elapsed be fore be received a reply for the rail road was only to Kansas In those days be set about cleaning thff armor him self, and with big own hands Joining it together. He was so occupied, what with that and the histories and the other books, that he forgot to have Glla-bottom ma - larla and had no time to worry about tbe flies. Then, when the steel was once more bright as the assure shield of Achilles, and be had proved to his own and to every one's satisfaction that it must once have protected tbe body of one of Coronado's men, and must date from tbe middle of Hie sixteenth cen tury, or thereabout, be bung It up In bis one-room adobe quarters, along with the Indian trophies that were as nothing now and the bottled reptiles of many sorts; and the fame of it spread through tbe laud. , An English lord, In a pith helmet and gray linen, whq was going about the country, traveled miles out of bis way to look upon it; and a scientific party from Boston did the same. Hartpole Was beginning to be -very proud, when, one day, he bad a visitor of another kind. '"- - " ' It was a man be had seen sometimes banging around the agency and tbe post a small, lithe fellow, part Coyo tero Apache, part' Mexican,' possibly'' a very small part white; who had some reputation as a medicine man with tha tribes, but not much as anything else. Hartpole was sitting under his ra- nuula on a late summer afternoon, read ing a book whose covers curled up with the heat, when something came be tween li t iil and bis light, and, looking up, he saw the medlclne-iuau peering In the opening. He said, "Hullo, Clcgo and added, "What do you want, eh?" Ciego was so called because he was blind In one eye. He came In under the runmdn, ami stood so close to him that Hartpole moved a little. The Coy otero's cast-off uniform and red head band wero not clean. . - Clcgo spoke excellent Spanish, and, as Hartpole did, too, be had no trouble about making himself understood. He explained that he would like to see the suit of Iron clothes which he bad been told that the lieutenant possessed. The lieutenant was so pleased to think that it had been spoken of even in the fast nesses of the Sierra Rlnnea and of the Touto Baslu that he forgot how dirty Clcgo was, and straightway rose and Invited hi in Into the one room. The medlclne-man stood looking at tbe armor with an Interest and evident .appreciation that touched Hartpole very much. After tbe manner of his kind, be said no word, but presently be went nearer and felt of the plates and chains with bis finger-tips, and put bis good eye close and looked Inside. Then lie turned to Hartpole. "Where did you find It?" be asked. .The lieutenant explained at some length. "is It very old?" ' : ' Hartpole said It wag at least three hundred and thirty odd years old, and went luto a little history. Clego nodded his bead, 'i know," he said. But that was so manifestly ab surd that Hartpole did not pay any at tention to It. "It Is very fine," said Clcgo. "For bow much will you sell It to me?" Naturally, Hartpole only laughed, but the Apache was lu ear nest, nevertheless. "No," he Insisted, looking him sharply In the face. "No, de vera, I wish to buy It from you." "Well, I don't wish to sell," answered the lieutenant, rather vexed at the mere Idea. "1 have five hundred dollars," said the Indian. , . f, "If you had a thousand you could not have it." "I have a thousand."' " - ' Hartpole laughed again, a little Im patiently. "You do not believe me look here." Clego drew a buckskin bag from the folds of bis sash. It was full of gold. "There are five hundred dollars here. In three days I can bring you five bun died more." Hartpole guessed how he had come by It, and his temper rose. ; "That Is stolen money," be said, angrily; "put It up. You can't have the armor. Uka Sliee." "You let me have it." begged Clego; 'I wish It very much. 1 will do mauy things for you." ' ' ':' Hartpoie swore this time mean, . Spanish oaths. "No," he said, "you cau't have It. Go to the Devil get out." - -. ' " - Even though Clego was only a dirty Indian, the. White-Eye should have re membered that he probably bad feel ings which could be hurt. . It Is well, "cowever, for those who have the direc tion of children and savages In their hands to remember that those simple folk have sometimes reasons for the things they do and say, good and suffi cient unto themselves. But It never Occurred to Hartpole what this half- .......... 3 blind Indian's reasons might be. Tbey did not transpire until some weeks later. Yet In Ciego'i tribe there was a le gend of a great white chief who bad once married one of their women, and had ruled over them, and who bad worn a suit of shining Iron. And their tradition ran that whosoever should find and wear that garment again would be Impervious to the bullets of the White-Eye, would become the greatest of medlclne-men, and rule not only over his own people but over all the Apache tribes and those of the plains of the North. And the very founder of that family to which Clego belonged wag reputed to have been the white chief In the coat of Iron. The Coyoteros believed these things and so did the medicine man. So when the news of the armor suit had reached him, he had levied heavy fees for big Incantations .for some months, and, adding these to the gold be had ex changed for Mexican dollars, .collected from many raids, be took himself down to tbe camp of the soldiers to obtain fairly and by purchase that which wag big very own. But fairness and the offers of purchase had failed. Clego looked the White-Eye officer over from his scalp to his toes, and up again, and then with no sound, save Just one grunt, went out from the quar ters and from the post. ; Hartpole told of It at the mess that night, and forgot all about It after that. But Clego did not as Hartpole ought to have foreseen. . rf One night an Indian, his body naked as It was born, a poisoned knife In his hand, stole across the sandy parade ground when the moon wag nnder tbe clouds of a coming storm, and slipped, as silently as none but a savage can, under tbe ramada of Hartpole'g quar ters, and thence through the open door, The Indian bad missed nothing when he bad been In that one small room a month before. He knew where every thing in It was, from the cbromo In a blue frame on the wall to the cot In the corner, across from tbe fire-place.- He bid himself behind the piece of calico that curtained off tbe nook where Hart- pole's clothes bung, and waited until the moon showed for a moment through a break In the clouds, and he could see the figure on the cot beneath the mos quito-net. When the room wag dark again, he slid out; and the blade of the knife in big band went straight through the heart of the man asleep. Then he took the rattling armor from Its nails and wrapped it In tbe calico curtain, and fled through the night, as silently and swiftly as only an Apache can. Now It happened that Hartpole had gone to another post a good many miles to the east that very day, and be had left his striker to sleep In bis quarters and keep guard over big things. So It was into tbe luckless soldier's heart that the knife was driven, and the next day a telegram apprised Hartpole that his striker wag murdered and big suit of mnll wag gone. The day after that all the department knew that the Coyoteroa were on the war-path, and, having cut the reserva tion, were killing right and left. They were led by a medlclne-man called "Clcgo," and the scouts reported that he was dressed In a garment of White Iron which no White-Eye's bullet could peirce. They also reported that tbe Cblrlcahuas and the Pah-Utes and tbe Sierra Blancas were Joining him. It promised to be an Interesting rime for the territories. ?'. Hartpole began to have a dim Idea of why the medlclne-man had wanted his Spanlah mall, now. .,, He was ordered out, of course. Most of the department was. Trouble of the sort that this promised to be had to be checked at once, If at all. It was serious already; but there was one thing in favor to get away. Their fanatical faith in their medlclne-man led them to seek battle rather than to shun It. And twice, having done bo, they beat off the troops, because there were, as usual, too few. But the third time they were caught In a iioeket of the Mogallons, and there were no less than six troops Against them. Hartpole'g was of the number. " The ludlans fought from dawn of the first day until twilight of the second, In tbe open at first, then from behind she! ter, then at last they retreated to a shallow cave high up on a hillside, and there was no getting them out A mountain howitzer might have done It but there was none with the command All dny tbe troops fired volleys Into go much of the mouth of the cave as show ed between the pine trunks aud the walls of rock. They knew that tbe slaughter within must have been pretty severe, but there were no signs of sur render, nevertheless. The hostlles might hold out until the last one was dead; they certainly would until their medicine-man should fall. The medi cineman could be, seen from time to time, a gleaming figure, moving clumsi ly among the trees and underbrush. And for all that It went go slowly and was so bright, no bullet seemed ever to hit .It.?- Even the w hite men began to consider It with awe. - At sunset of the second day, when the sounds from the cave had all but ceased and the Indians wlthlu It were without ammunition aud at bay, the glistening form came clambering delib erately to the top of a high rock, whooping aud yelling, calling the rem nant of Its followers on. It stood so, for a moment, the red sun rays striking through the pine branches on the dent ed steel, a weird sight In the depths of the mountain fastnesses of the New World; so odd and strange that tbe sol diers hesitated with their fingers on the triggers of their carbines. "But Hartpole, kneeling alone behind n bowlder, remembered ouly that that glowing armor was his, and that he wauted It The visor was up and he could see the glitter of the one good eye. He bad won a sharpshooter's med al In his time, and he put his skill to use now. There waa a puff of smoke from above bis bowlder, and the shin ing figure threw up Its arms and stag gered. Then It fell forward, down from : the pinnacle of rock, clattering and crashing among tbe logs and stones. Tbey found, when tbey dragged him out, tbat Hartpole'g bullet bad gone gtralgbt through tbe good eye, and tbat Ciego waa ciego In very truth now and quite dead. San Francisco Argonaut. IT WAS NOT CONSCIENCE. Made Honest by tbe Sight of a Dilapi date t Umbrella. Here I a highly moral tale wblcb will make good reading for both old and young. It la a valuable Illustration of tbe text, "Tbe way of tbe transgressor Is hard." It Is a story of a woman and an umbrella. It Is apparent tbat tbe umbrella boa been the cauxe of tbe fall from strict honesty of many otherwise irreproachable Individuals. The woman In this story, up to the occurrence of this particular event, however, bad found the umbrella to'be tbe source of the display on her part of many excel lent virtues and had suffered many things because of them. She bad been snlpplly treated by women, barely thanked by men and openly snubbed by the autocrats of the surface cars lu her efforts to gee that absent-minded people did not lose their umbrellas. And lu some way she seemed always to be finding unattached umbrellas, and her conscience forbade her leaving them without an attempt to find the owners. On this particular day she waa resting quietly In one of the parlors of a big New York shop when quite .according to her custom she espied beside her an umbrella. It was rather dark In that coruer of the room and she could Dot see tbe umbrella distinctly, but she put her band on It, found tbat It was silk, and with a weary sigh rose to find some one who would take charge of It. Why should she be made the public cus todian of umbrellas? Nevertheless ah .!, . ,, ... . . . ... . charge of the room, but ahe had slipped out. She went In search of a floor walker, but not one was In sight. In and out around counters gh walked' weafly but not a floor walker to be wearily, nut not a floor walker to be seen. Then the temptation came. "What a gooae you aref said the In - ward voice, "Here you upend your tim looking up people to take charge of lost . ,, v j , . ,. . ,, f. . umbrellas, and I don't bel eve that once 1n a thousand years they ever reach their owners. Take that umbrella home with you and don't be a fool." The voice waa growing emphatic. It was probably because she waa tired, but, anyway, without a moment'g resistance the ' woman stopped her search and walkc-d out of the shop with the umbrella which would now be berg. She walked on with conscious careless ness, not venturing to give glance at It She did not do this until she waa In the car on her way home. Then she did look down and saw In her bands a silk j umbrella, to be sure, but old and ragged, an umbrella which would be a disgrace to the poorest costume. Some i woman had bought a new umbrella ' and discarded this rag. And now the finder must get rid of It She hadn't felt like a thief before, but now she did. How could she get rid of It? She did not dare throw It In the street; for that would be conspicuous. . She laid It on the seat as far back as possible, looked unconscious again, and at last sneaked -J-that was the way she felt out of that car and actually ran until ahe was around the corner and no one could pes- sibly return to her the umbrella she had Voluntarily stolen. New York Times. THE HEROINE OF TO-DAY, the laSelf-Rellant, Physically Strong, und Fitted to le Muu'a Companion. The heroine of modern life and fic tion is contrasted with the heroine ef the century's beginning by Robert Grant, In the Woman's Home Compan Ion. In the following passage Judge Grant leaves little doubt as to wblcb of the two he prefers: "Not only woman herself, but tbe universe, rejoices In the new heroine of real life and contemporary fiction the self-reliant, Incredulous, sphere-seeking, critical, yearning modern woman Even the rose on her bosom wears a prouder demeanor, as though conscious of her changed estate. Who would re mand her to her Insipid servitude? Certainly not man. She has become his true companion Instead of bis adoring doll. The Amelia Sedleyg have passed away from tbe face of the earth for ever, and the Marcellag .rule In their place. And yet, with the swinging of the pendulum In mind, a philosopher may be pardoned for dropping a few violets on the grave of tbe heroine of the past; even on poor Amelia Sedley'g Amelia, who would certainly have bored this philosopher to the point of weariness. .. - "Amelia Sedley was the dheer heroine of the past without lights and shadows. But her more attractive sisters He also In their graves, and memories of some of them come back to us fragrant with virtues In . spite of , their limitations, which, It seems to a philosopher, the new heroine the Gibson girl cannot afford to disregard. They had no ml ads to speak of, It Is true. That Is, they were parrot-Ilke In their repetition of what their husbands and fathers and brothers told them was so; and their energies were devoted to household concerns the generation and rearing of babies, the production of delectable food, to darning, nursing, church-work and small charities. They were gener ally timid and afraid of mice, disin clined to athletic exerclge and heroic undertakings; they had no clubs, and did not aim to be original. But think how dainty and pnre-mlnded and ten der they were! Dainty with the nlce- ness of dolls, pure-minded with the In nocence of the moated grange, tender with the loving forgiveness and foolish Infatuation of Idolators, It may be, and yet dainty, pure-minded and tended" Steam and Modern Navies. A whole fleet In the days of Nelson could be built and fitted out at little more than tbe cost of a single Ironclad: the coal expended on a single cruise would pay for the refitting of his whole battle line, while the Immense shells re quired to make any Impression on the modern armor plate cost more than hla whole armament But the modern Kne-of-battle ship could neither be built armed nor fought without the use o! steam, and its evolution may be said to have commenced with the first appli cation of the steam euglne to naviga tion. If you would know a man as he really is yon most dine with htm occasionally. PRIZES HER SNAKES. KLAMATH FALLS PEOPLE DON'T LIKE TO PART WITH THEM. On Plca-ant Par They Mar Be Been br Thonaande Wriggling Abont on Bocky Ledges Beside the Falla Harmleea to Humanity. The snake industry at Klamath Falls bids fair to become Important. A few weeks ago Postmaster Castel received a letter from a concern In Minnesota making Inquiry as to tbe price of the reptiles, and if a shipment could be made to a Minnesota snake farm. Al though the letter was written on print ed letter heads, the postmaster thought some one was trying to perpetrate a Joke upon him. He replied, however, and stated that it would supply all tbe snakes wanted at 25 cents a pound. By return mall, much to bis surprise, came an order for 400 pounds of snakes, de livered at tbe nearest railroad statlou. Tbe Mlnnesotan went on to state tbat next season be would make further orders an object to Mr. Castel, but be would take 800 pounds more this fall. Snake catching is now the order of the day here. It Is a paying business, as one man can easily capture 100 In a day, and this represents at least fifty pounds. The Klamath Falls snakes have a world-wide reputation. The town Is situated at tbe foot of Klamath falls, which begin at -Upper Klamath lake and continue through a narrow, rocky gulch for a mile to tbe lower lake. The descent Is gradual and the falls nothing more than a rapid mountain stream, 100 yards or more wide, between the two lakes. This place forms a sort of curve, or elbow, and was called Ewawa by the Indians, meaning elbow. Along . . . ' " . ritver or f1U on wrm da mlle,8 of -nakei, curling, wriggling and crawt ? D m f ' flnd lf the weather ,s a llttle co1 one . t , f th . . . . . . ... 1 ' T T T. as many do. The stranger on hla first il'ln fn .hla am. Inn la f .... n 1 1 AnAn. . . , , , . , ' . i Ing and Jumping g dewlse, although he 1 , . , 4 . " o iuiviiucu luav i lie icuiucs aic uci- ! fectly harmless. The Inhabitant doesn't mind them at all. . Little girls gather lapronfuls and boys carry small ones I around In their pockets. They are re ' garded as pets here generally and are seldom harmed. They come down Into the very town and while walking along tbe streets a couple of dozen may be seen In going a block. -They simply wriggle out of the way crawl between tbe cracks ,cf the plank sidewalks or move off tq one side. : The snakes are regarded as benefactors by the com munity and there Is some complaint at parting with the few required to fill tbe Minnesota man's order. The reptiles live and breed among the rocks and cliffs along the falls, and it Is asserted Jhjit they have completely routed the rattlesnakes from tbe entire section, besides destroying all tbe mice and other pests that infested the place. They attack a rattlesnake and while one alone has been known to kill tbe largest rattler, a number will wind themselves about the venomous reptile and strangle It In a short time. It ts claimed that before these snakes made their appearance the rattlers Infested the region, but they are now seldom seen. The species Is said to- be a water snake, and this is evidenced by the fact that they will take to the water If there is no other meaus.-of escape when crowded, and move about in that ele ment with the ease and skill of a fish. They are of a dark color, about three feet long when full grown and have a stripe a little lighter' than the general color down their back., AH sizes may be seen among them, from the three or four Inch baby snake to the full-grown ones. On a warm day they are visible by the thousands and in many cases they coil up by tbe dozens in huge rolls. Pictures of ' these rolls have been sent, upon Inquiry, all over the world. A farmer living In tbe gulch by the banks of the river has great difliculty In using his hay at the last of winter. The snakes take refuge In his barn during the cold weather, and as the hay gets low he finds great masses of the, be numbed reptiles rolled together all through the hay It Is believed here that tons of the snakes could be shipped from this place annually without materially decreasing the supply, and the Industry may prove a paying one. Snake oil commands an enormous price for medicinal purposes, and It Is known tbat a superior quality of tbe oil can be manufactured from the Klamath Falls species. Portland l regonlnn. Insurance on Royal Heads. The lives of European potentates are generally heavily Insured. While many of them enjoy practically unlimited in comes during their lives tbey are un able to bequeath anything except to their eldest song. Insurance gives them the opportunity of making some provis ion for their younger sons and daugh ters. Napoleon III. of France was Insured for a fabulous sum; and It is due to this foresight that the ex-Empress Eugenie will leave when she dies $10,000,000 to LPrlnce Victor Napoleon. The late King Humbert of Italy was more heavily insured than any mon arch since that day. No less than 000,000 will be paid over to Queen Margherlta. Scarcely a single English insurance company was without some Interest in the Duke of Edinburgh's life and now the huge sum of $1,500,000 will have to come out of the coffers of these so cieties. The Prince of Wales' policies amount to $3,000,000, while the Czar of Russia is Insured for only $2,000,000. One mil lion dollars Is at stake on the life of Prince Henry of Prussia; $1,500,000 up on that of the Baron de Rothschild, of London. Queen Victoria, as might be supposed, has been a veritable gold mine to Insurance companies owing to her long life. Germany Haa a. New Motor. From Germany comes the design of a remarkable motor that turns beat energy directly Into motion through the Intermediary action of electricity. Tbe machine Is called a thermo-electric motor, and works on tbe familiar prin ciple of tbe electric motor somewhat modified to meet the peculiar exlgen cies of the case. In action it Is essen tially an electric motor, but one deriving- its electrical energy from heat ap plied to it through thermo-electric cou ples. A thermo-electric couple Is com posed of twodlsHilmilar metals, such as iron and copper. Any complete circuit made of two metals must necessarily bave two Junctions of tbe two In it. if mi nf thpse lunc-tions is heated more than the other an electric current will flow in the circuit, Its amount ana direction depending on the nature of the two metals, the difference in tempera ture between the two Junctions and tbe resistance It encounters In its path. On tbe motor machine the couples are made of Iron and nickel, firmly brazed together. They are arranged like the windings of the ordinary electric motor, with one set of Junctions brought con veniently to the surface, where gas Jets nhiv unon them. The other set are cooled by a rapid circulation of air about them, pnceiidered bv the rotation of the machine. While tbe motor is of no practical value, It is exceedingly Interesting exemplification of the ease with which energy may be transformed and retransformed through the various forms of heat, electricity and motion. A lady of literary fame once requested VT. Held, the celebrated meuieai writer, to call at her house. "Be sure you rec ollect the address." she said as she quitted tbe room, "No. 1 Chesterfield street" "Madam," said the doctor, "I am too great an admirer of politeness not to remember Chesterfield, and, I fear, too selfish ever to forget Number One." Justin McCarthy and some friends were talking once about a member of tbe House of Commons. A lady who was one of tbe company said it was a pity for the sake of his personal appear ance that he had such very large ears. "Yes,""ald T: P. O'Connor, the bril liant parliamentary and platform ora tor, "and the worst of it Is that while they are too large for ears, they are too small for wings." When Governor Roosevelt's train pulled out of Greeley, Col., a woman climbed on the back platform In order to five him a home-made enke. The train gained such momentum that when the time came for her to get on she was obliged to make a flying-trapeze leap for terra firma. She rolled over a few times in the sand, got up, and smiled at Roosevelt as he stood worried for her safety on the back platform. Then she waved her handkerchief In evident de light, and became the envy of a hun dred women who had watched her ac robatic effort At a luncheon given by some strang ers in an English town, where he .was lecturing the other day, Israel Zang will was treated as a famous celebrity. and his most Indifferent remark was re ceived with great interest. After luncheon his hostess asked him to write something In her little boy's diary, so that the little man might always re member the day he saw the great writer. Mr. Zangwlll turned over the leaves of the diary, reading here and there: "Got a reward of merit," "Had a birthday party," "Tonsilitis," etc., and then he wrote: "December-ZangwII-litis." Years ago Major Patterson was trav eling on the railroad through Western Kansas, wnen ne fell into conversation with a congenial St. Louis man, who remarked that he had an excellent scheme for hiding bis money. "I simply "Islmnlv put it under the sweatband of mv bat' he said, "and no robber In the world would ever think of looking there for cash." With that he pulled off his hat and showed where he had $250 "planted" as he described. About an hour later the train was suddenly halt ed while it was turning a lonely ravine, and In a few moments a masked man entered tbe car and began to system at'cally loot the passengers, while two other robbers kept them covered with shotguns from the doors. When the fellow reached him the Major looked up coolly and declared be had less than a dollar in his pocket "Now if you"ll leave me that and my watch," he said. "I'll tell you something worth know ing: That fellow in the next seaLhas $250 under the sweat-band of his hat." "All right" said tbe robber, "keep your watch and chicken feed," and he pro ceeded to confiscate the other naswpn. ger's cash. When the agony was all gc, o utt.u. nucu agony was all wucu nuu Mouse over, and the marauders had departed ,lr1' she receives her fod and clothes 1. C T Aula ....... ... .1 . . ' lint! WhatoVO,.. cVtA nnn ....11. -. 11 . the St. Louis man turned around, burst ing with rage and indignation. "That 'e "6 luuiKuuuon. xnat was a dirty, low-down trick!" he roar- ed, "and I'm going to hold you account able for every cent of my money!" expected you to, my friend," reDl'ed!! T . II the Major, quietly, "and here is the! amount. You see," he added, "I hap J pen to be a paymaster In the United States army, and I have a mattw nf $40,000 In this valise by my feet. Under the circumstances I felt Justified in temporarily sacrificing your little $25? to divert attention. I shall charge It uji to tbe Government as 'extra expense h transportation of funds. A Beggar's Piea. "Could you spare a few cents for'i sick child, ma'am?" said a woman to young lady who was about to get on a street car in Bellefield. - . Being of a sympathetic nature, tho young lady looked In her purse and found she could spare a 5-cent nl The coin was handed to the beggar, .who took it and said: "Thank you, lady. It'll be a blessin? to the child. It'll buy him a pint a piut of milk," she added as an after thoitht. The car came just then, and as-the young lady mounted the steps she laid: "O, don't get milk for the child get him tbe pint." J The woman scowled anTe car rolled on. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Coat of Running Atlantic Steamers. In three years the expense o mnning an Atlantic steamer exceeds tij? cost of construction. f .. : r ( The race is not always to 'he swift -It often depends on the character of the' man in the judges' stand. I FOR LABORING MEN ONLY. College n Mlaaonri Center of the Hna kin Hall Movement. A new college, the first of its kind In thig country, has been opened at Tren ton, Mo., and Is expected to act as the parent stem from which numerous oth er similar institutions will sprout. It Is called Ruakln College and Is as far as is yet possible a counterpart of the college of tbe same name which has proven such a valuable addition to Ox ford University, England. The Institu tion Is In part the gift of English work lngmen to their fellows In this country and owes its existence largely to tbe efforts of Walter Vrooman, the young American who with other admirers of the philosopher and critic founded Rus kin Hall at Oxford. The school has for Its object the placing of hitherto unat tainable educational advantages within the reach of young men of small means, thus enabling them, for a time at least, to leave their environment and give themselves wholly to study. When Mr. Vrooman announced that he would at tempt the establishment of such a col lege In this country he received Imme diate offers of help from all over En gland. Worklngmen there showed their KUSKIN COI.I.KOK. gratitude for the founding of Ruskln Hall at Oxford by raising $20,000 on behalf of a similar Institution In this country. On returning to this country Mr. Vrooman received hearty co-operation from educators and labor leaders here and soon the fund was augment ed by $10,000. Funds having been thus provided, the work rapidly proceeded, and now the college Is ready to receive students. Its prototype at the venerable English seat of learning Is devoted to the work of educating young men of moderate means, not with the Intention of mak ing them lawyers or clergymen, but with the hope of sending them back to their own work fully equipped for the leadership of their own class. It has on Its rolls and It educates at this mo ment about 1,500 worklngmen by cor respondence; It has founded other Rus kln Halls In the more Important towns of England. Ruskln College at Trenton hag now necome the central Institution and headquarters of the Ruskln Hall move ment In America, and around It are to be established shops, factories and bus iness enterprises, Including agriculture and horticulture. A WOMAN'S POCKET MONEY. Many Wire Are Compelled to Get Along on a Small Allowance. When a man at the altar utters the words "VUth all my worldly goods I thee endow," what does be mean? Oer tain It is that few husbands live tin to their pledge The majority look upon tne small sums they give their wives betimes as so much money thrown away. One of tbe most charming of women and faithful of Wives endured the parsimony of her "lord and master" as long as she could and then set to work and secretly made cakes and pre serves, which she disposed of at an ex. change, and so earned a pittance which she could dispose of, oh, Joy! "and no questions asked." The man found this out after a while. and then there was a scene. He storm areaarul'y an1 declared that the wlfe of his bosom nad ,ald hlm Pen to ed dreadfully and declared that contumely of his neighbors; that .uuw, yv-aouua uvn luiutk lie liafl stinted her, whereag she well knew that be bad given her plenty of food and lucb clothes as he thought she needed ine little woman had no reply for this irgument, which seemed unanswerable, and so she gave up making cakes, but the next time 8he wanted money to pay the dues of hetf literary cliih nr til buy a new magazine or some trifling bit of bric-a-brac for her bare mantel shelf or a ribbon for her old bonnet she just pawned her watch to get It. TT 1 . ner case 18 not Uniaue. Them nra few promises so often broken as that one made at the altar about a man's worldly goods. The families where tha purse is common to mother and father alike are practically Infrequent rainer is usually an almoner, mora or less gracious, and mother hls.hum hi. ,. . . . . u,c ucusiuucl, wuo comes seklne- nim Tor her work as housekeeDer. nni-so. Jeamstress and often cook and house ......... . i.i. van V I 1U IIOUI QR funds with which she ts flllnwp,! tA ann. ply the Iarder Why she should not receive hnlf th J profits of the business does not appear, ' "fli-un lnouSn ,n(Jeed, she wouldn't ask that s modest ln "er demands. What ,he would llke Is a certain sum, small or large, which Is hers to do with eh pleases, with which she may hnv nen. nuts if she likes without rebuke or giva to the blind beggar at the corner. Chicago Chronicle. Touch or Human Nature. A remarkable touch of human nature was exhibited at Piedmont Park the other day. The sham battle was ln prog ress. Col. Woodward's men had scaled the works and were driving back the enemy. The field was enveloped ln moke, and It was only by lta dense lines that the location of the opposing lines could be traced. The spectators were cheering at the exhilarating scene -all except two children In the grand tand, but a little distance apart, who were crying bitterly. The one, a girl, was weeping lest some one might get hurt in the engagement. The other, a boy, was Indignant because no dead bodies were being left In the rear. "That's no battle at all!" he said. This was humnn nature as it affecta the exes.-Atlanta Journal The Strenuous Life. New Renorter ftirw1 rtt t. a Saturday, and you know that this State Utts aaiuroay falf-hollday law which City Editor By Jinket T Sot it Bush out and get up a five-col-nmn article on how tim i. ki . servedNew York Weekly. ' LARGEST OF ALL DIAMoSj ncignea eur.y MaU a Pound t. Uncut, and la of the F.rst Water No single object exhibited at 'tu Paris exposition even remotely , proacheg In value the gleaming ..j bilee" diamond, as it bag been called i commemoration of the Jubilee of ti reign of tbe Queen of England. it diamond of the first water and-0f beauty and size that leave anythm1 known heretofore far behind thi largest and most costly of all diamond! weighs in Its present shape 239 while the next largest, the "Oriotp crowning tne Russian Imperial scent welghg but 104 carats. Also a gards whiteness and fire, as well as Z the wonderful perfection of Its cut th "Jubilee" excels nil its rivals. For the time being this Goliath among precious stones Is still owned h? a syndicate of capitalists connect with the Jagersfoutein mine, In It warfound. With regard to the pnM one can hardly speak about that until the stone haa been sold, an event which la doubtless not going to take place In a hurry, for the guard stationed by th showcase containing tbe sparkling gem gave iui vuiue at s.uuu.OOO fran, whether correctly or not is bard to st7 Only one thing seems assured, namelj that the stone shown to the admlrinr crowds In tbe palals on the Esplanade des Invalldes is paste, while Its original lg kept somewhere In secure custody This gem was found on June 30, m at Jagersfonteln, In the Orange eiaie. xne stone was picked up by a native while he was loading a truck, and although a white overseer wat standing near him he managed to ie crete It and kept It on his person for some time. In this case, however, it did not appear that he proposed stealing the gem, but only wished to deliver it personally to the manager. This hed'd, and as a bonus he received 150 andi horse, saddle and bridle. The diamond weighed In the rough exactly 97155 'carats, or about 7 1-10 ounces avolrd ( pois. , Unfortunately It had a black spot 'about the middle, but it wna as to allow the stone being cut Into two with the spot falling out. GOOD LOOKS A HINDRANCT. Women of Homely Exterior Succeed Bet In Bnalnesi Pnrnit. As a class, women regard good looks is their most valuable asset In life, yet If they are to engage In business they and that beauty Is a handicap they can adt easily overcome. A few years ago, when woman began to enter business life in considerable numbers, a Hand soma face was esteemed a great ad rentage. To-day the reverse is true. Those still youthful can remember dis tinctly when It was next to impossible tor a homely girl to get a situation. Good looks were Insisted upon In type writer! and stenographers, and mer Aanta Were then under the Impression lhat pretty clerks brought trade. It took Borne time to explode that Idea, The pretty clerks . certainly attracted srowds to their counters, but they were irowds of dudes and loafers, who would buy a 5-eent paper of pins and then dirt away three or four dollars' wortii f time,- While the women, who consti tute four-fifths of the patrons of all retail houses, had a strong aversion to belmj Waited upon by a professional beauty. Moreover, no dependence was to be placed In the clerks themselves. The handsomest girls were pretty sure to be vain and "touchy," and when one proved really valuable she was morally :ertaln to get married at the very time ler services were most needed. So prae deal men began to see that pretty clerks ild not pay, as a cold business proposi tion, and the same discovery was pres ently made at tbe offices. Typewriting belles made more trouble than they were worth. They demoralized their fellow-employes and created no end of ealousy and bitterness and friction. In many cases, perhaps In most, the poor girl wasn't ln the least to blame. She couldn't help being good to look at, and was probably trying her best to attend to her own affairs, but .the idiotic men wouldn't let her. However, results are the only things that count in business nowadays, and a few years ago a big reaction against beauty set In, and now pretty faces are at a discount. Could Not Be Photographed. When Miss Helen Gould visited the tenth annual convention of the rail road department of the Young Men's Christian .Association at Philadelphia the newspaper artists were bound to sketch her as she appeared at the re ception. To this Miss Gould objected strenuously, but the artists were not routed until the railroad men threat ened to demolish the photographers' expensive cameras and tear up the art ists' cardboards. A score of newspa per photographers and artists appeared at the Y. M. C. A. building early and were informed that they could not en ter with their machines. A dozen burly railroad men were ap pointed to smash all cameras found in side the building aud tear up all art ists materials. The picture men then waited outside. When Miss Gould ar rived with Mrs. Sage a flank move ment was made and their carriage was driven around to a side entrance. The men of nictures rushed to the sine aoor, but upon arriving there found tie women surrounded by over fifty tall men, who formed a bodyguard clear Into the building, shutting tbe cameras out completely. In the crush to close out tbe picture men Miss Gould and Mrs. Sage were almost crushed themselves. in seemed amazed at the excitement at first but soon learned the cause and helped to deprive the picture men of snap shots. A Celebrated King. Onoe nftPT ovnnKintr the ridiculoos hlnnilora nf thn nriitnr of certain Old plays, James Russell Lowell concluded with the remark: "In point of fact, we must apply to this gentleman the name of the first king of Sparta." No one remembered, of course, what this was, but when they looked it up they found It was Eudamldas. vr.'.n 1 .i nonnlo lire SO C ail luai euiiic I" v.".- worthless that they need an old fash ioned whipping, but no one dares say 10. " T . J , Wnn-n lifter i is uuw positively mi" " . fears of experimenting, that "wishing ioea no good. Men have lost more by crowding than they have by waiting their turn. I 1