— HIS TRUE WORTH Fate threw him a sop in the shape of some pelf, And®straightway the man fell in love with himself; Grew arrogant, boastful, looked down on mankind; Imagined, poor fool, he had greatness of mind. = : The world paid him homage, its doors opened wide; He swaggered and strutted, all swelled up with pride; “The world recognizes my value,” he. see, her string: Then, tired of the sport, she gave him a fling, cash, trash. Herald. In (he Chances of War. BY MARGARET SEYMOUR HALL, Tis not possible to disguise the fact I that it was a distinct shock to the family when the heir of all the Van Stuyvens announced his intention of enlisting for the Spanish-American War; not only announced it, but did s0 with an utter absence of the apologetic preface which ought prop- erly to have accompanied such a be trayal of their hopes. Far otherwise had been their plans for his summer, and closely connected with a Gilded Heiress lately imported on a visit from the Far West. The Heiress had been f& schoolmate of his sister's, her beauty was patent; also, were a certain Western vigor and breadth of horizon, which, under other circum stances, might have been viewed with distrust. But this doned since the gilding tioned; for, truth to tell, in the course of generations growing as thin and tarnished with the Van Stuyvens as was the gilt of the frames of the old Stuarts aud Cop leys and Smyberts that looked down pon them from the walls of the din ing-room, where the family were as sembled at breakfast when the bomb of the son's announcement burst lo their midst. “After all, it is In the line of our traditions,” sald Honoria Van Stuyven, the eldest daughter, and the embodi- ment of pride of ancestry, which caused her to shine out resplendent on certain days with golden decorations of patriotic orders; and as she spoke she glanced from the portrait of Gov- ernor Jan Van Stuyven on a military charger to the Revolutionary sword of Captain Stephen Van Stuyven, who fell at White Plains. “But at his years to bear such a burden!” sighed his mother. (The command of a regiment is a terrible re spoasibility for a young man.” At this moment there became ob- gervable a remarkable phenomenon upon the face of the Van Stuyvens' English butler. If the same facial aud sO, energy was con WHS Ungues- tl had this last less perfectly trained and tarbable than Simmons Mrs. Van Stuyven would have called it a grin. Even though after a moment she felt played her false she was conscious of something of the uncomfortable amazement that must have filled the mind of the prophet Balaam when his versation. For the first time she was vaguely reconciled to the hought that, from motives of economy, she had been obliged to give Simmons his dismissal, and that he’ was about to be replaced by a maid, a blow which, to bear. “1 don’t suppose I shall quite enter as 4 colonel, you know, mother,” modestly explained her son, sition belongs to O'Reilly.” “My dear,” said his mother, “what a name! family.’ answered her son, provokingly; and here, for the first time, the Gilded Heiress joined in the martial conver- sutlon. “We know who Colcnel O'Reilly is in the West,” she sald. “I don't won- der you want to go twith him. He has done some magnificent Indian-fight- ing, and was ralsed from the ranks for courage.” Mrs. Van Stuyven shuddered. “Raised from the ranks! Not a West Point man? How can my son wish to serve under him?” “But he doesn’t seem to look at it quite as you do,” insisted the visitor. “Julius, I regret to say,” explained the mother of the errant one, “has never seemed to care as much as we would wish for his line of descent, but the rest of us possess very strongly the pride of ancestry. I suppose you do not have it in the West.” “Yes,” sald the girl, thoughtfully, “1 think we have, though perhaps we do not realize it, and we don’t often talk about it. I'm afraid, somehow, people wouldn't like it. But our town was founded by a Swedish miner who ceme over with nothing but a pick and his two hands to help him, He made lots of money in silver, and he was a real fine man, doing a great deal for the town. his pick-axe in his hand, and the fam- ily are thought a great deal of.” “lI don't think we mean quite the same thing” answered her would-be mother-in-law, with not a little stiff ness, “No doubt he was a man, but it was not like the feeling that comes with gentle blood, care to dwell on it, but certainly It must be a satisfaction to know one's ancestor who first came over was a man of rank and not an peasant.” “And I suppose he was ever so much wiser and better than the poor labor them, and and advise wrong? Yes, that is fine.” The other coughed slightly, were certain state records not There uneon had never cared to dwell at length. “Well, not exactly,” admitted. “But he came from a noble house.” “And perhaps it was made courage and bravery? 1 can too." any she 80 under The older lady conghed again, It was a well-known fact that the title and fly through an ancestor who married a lady of the court second were Pil ’ Ol the standards Mayflower grims. In the midst of the the heir of the Van Stuyvens departed for the armory. His mother and sisters wept, and the visitor wrung his hand warmly, while for the first time Te discussion shining in her brown eyes. He, poor lad, bad been only too ready to fall head over heels In love with this breezy Western beauty, the belle par excellence of a town where all the girls were belles; and where ten men to each girl was the usual ratio De- tween the sexes. But the visitor had 80 far shown a pleased Interest In everything and everybody save In him for whose sake she had been expressly imported, and he had felt that his case was hopeless. Perhaps it was net altogether patriotism that had driven him so early to the ranks of Uncle Sam, where, in was accorded but a scant Instead of the ready and his heroism deed, he welcome, grateful of which his mother's mind ing, it actually seemed as If there was a doubt as to whether his country wanted him on any terms, even as the The Doctor, a plain sort of fellow whom Van Stuy ven wouldn't bave voted into his club, put him through a searching physical examination, in the course of which he offered a number of personal remarks that made the subject of them long to punch his head. Van Stuyven heard that his eyes were defective, his knees weak, his chest not broad enough for his height, and after two hours was recognition was pictur await judgment. In dejected silemce he retired frem the examination-room, and heard the in its tone, “There's a chest and an arm; I wish I could enlist a regiment like him! Served in the Seudan, did you? Six years? Promoted to cor- poral? Here, Captaln, here's your man! Meant for a sergeant! He'll help drill your raw recruits!” and so on. Late that afternoon the Van Stuy- vens, with their guest, arrived at the armory, prepared to see their pride and hope in all the glory of command, The main body of the building was filled with marching men; at one end the drill, at the other men were signaling colors, The visitors’ gallery was thronged with people, some of whom were crying and some clapping, but all were following with their eyes each movement of the men in the hall be low, “But where is Julius? asked his mother, after her gaze had traveled over each officer in turn. she caught sight of the squad. it was, it actually was, Sim But it was a new, a trans Simmons—Simmons mons! formed issued sharp, peremptory orders to ble! But the Gilded Heiress, with flushed cheeks and dewy eyes, was leaning forward across the balcony, gazing at the manual, and as she turned there was a new light in her face. “Do you see that?” she sald to those beside her. “1 did not think he had It in him! I did not believe he was In earnest! I'm proud of him, I am! Yes, Mrs. Van SBtuyven, he asked me and 1 refused him, but [ won't again; and If he comes back”-a sudden choke “he'll find me waiting for him, even If it's for years!” And that is bow Van Stuyven came to win his commission and add another to the list of the family's brave offi- cers. And all his family talked of ‘he Alliance, which, however, was delayed for two years, and then took place in San Francisco, where the transports landed those who were Invalided heyne from the Philippines. But Van Stuy- ven, whose wife had pursed him oack to health and strength, always main- taing that he owes it all to Simmons, — Woman's Home Companion. The Earl of Minto is the presen Governor General of Canada. His sal- ary is $50,000 a year. FIVE REAL ROMANCES, Cood Luck of Poor Girls Who " Caught” Mi lionaires. From England come five romances In real life, yet like the fairy tales of childhood days where the Prince mar- ried Cinderella and they both lived happily ever afterward. The first story girl who was a weaver in one of the mills near Brad- some For years iradrord. After she went away this boy sweetheart of hers He and TFORe grade to another finally from a All this had HOAs, the woman who Bradford ower when he was rich and famous he him of “‘'t mill lassie” to America her back old Bradford as his The man is knighted now and his lady lives In a magnificent man that is part of a reudal castle, young tut “be came 10 sion | around it, while the most of her relatives, except those whom she has helped by her bounty, keep an eat prosperous Yorkshire as “the four o and t' two of pudden” A young inventor in Lancashire who worked for many years as an ap tice at £3 a devised a that in ten years wus bringing him over $400,000 a year in royalties alone, for it was applied to countless indus tries. The juventor on- tirely changed by his rapid to wealth, One day he was in a chem ist's shop his town, pale, pretty nursemaid of years of age rushed in carrying in her arms a child, the charge of another nursemald, who, hysterically weeping and walling, followed behind pretty nursemaid had the dent befall the charge of the nurse, and flying to the rescue picked the child up and carried it to the chem ist's and worked with it until it had partially recovered and could be taken The young imventor was struck by the in that out the nurse girl and eventually mar ried her, but not until a few days In fore her marriage did she know that her future husband was i inventor A millionaire member of Parliament from fashionable of pie order. week, young was rise when na in own about 1 The seen nee other home, #O dent he sought the wealthy Lancashire took rooms in the West End Looking down from his window one into the courtyard beneath, he noticed an extremely beaatiful girl not much past 20, who was apparently the governess to the children landlady. After a time he sought an introduction to the governess in a short while the acquaintance had ripened into love, and the marriage fol lowed soon after At a popular resort om the south coast of England a young nobleman, the descendant of a long race of bank ers, and himself wealthy, fell In love with the young girl who acted as as sistant at the village library. They married and the young woman is now in the peerage, although the Euglish paper relates In the most solemn horror that “her parents keep a small shop.” A lady's mad to the wife of a London day af his and with her mistress, attracted the atien- tion of a young man who was a guest on board the yacht. The two were married, but on the voyage home the young man died, leaving his widow a fortune. On her next voyage. this time as a widow and in her own yacht, she was left by mistake in a foreign port. While there she met a nobleman of ancient title, and before her sailing master had returned with her yacht, to take Lier the widow was gaged to the nobleman, and the mar- riage took place soon after the return of the two to England Chicago Tri bune. away, en- Unexplained Accident on a Battleship While the Thunderer, battleship, was on her way from Pembroke dock her guns, the cause of which Is so far unexplained. The vessel left Pem- broke about 0 a. m., and when she put out for firing practice, the 10-inch A projectile had been placed In one of the guns and the electric turned on, when there was an explos- fon quite different from that which ususlly sccompanies the discharge of a prejectile, Nothing came out of the gun except a few fragments of the projectile, which were thrown some distance from the ship. The base plate of the projectile was left in the gun, as well as a portion of the frame, and when the plate was afterwards removed the pressure of the gas left in the gun caused a portion of the projectile to be expelled with some force from the breech end of the gun. When the second gun was fired a hole, between two Inches and three inches in diameter, was blown through the projectile, the outer part, tegether with the base plate, being left In the gun. In this case the base plate was sepa- rated from the rest of the projectile. #uch a thing is believed never to have occurred in any ship before. The only explanation so far suggested Is, either that the powder in the projectile was damp, or that there was a quantity of water In the guns, A east will be made of the Inside of each gun, to as certain whether either has been dam- from the sound. London COT BACK HIS THIMBLE, The Experience of a Younz Milliner With Chicago Highwaymen, A young man, who, by the way, Is a milliner, was caught Ly highwaymen the other night on hls own doorstep, One man held the gun while the other pointed significantly to the young man’s pockets, “Give ns all you've got!” he demanded gruffly. Now, the young man made no pre being a hero—he didn't have courage to resist nor even to cry for help. He just put his hands quiet ly into his pockets and gave up all he hada silver watch and chain, $7.90, a pearl-handled knife and. a gold thim ble The highwaymen laughed when they 80 thimble and the man was encouraged by their mirth to plead to the young “It's a thimble I've had for twenty years and I think a deal of it, If you could just spare it 1 would let you have the rest without a but it does seem too bad to lose that thim ble after all Just let me keep the thimble? 1 it in my I'm a When the highwayvmen oH wl Care, these years Can't vou need business milliner."” heard laugh “It geems too good to young man was a miiliner they ed rome be more true.” sald one of them “Bat it is" protested the man, who was very much in The tallest of the there is always a tall “It's too bad to deprive 8 m thimble—shall highwaymen ae hesitated we do It, neked il looked Car 10 see that no one ¥ looked, the in his ut hand ton, ¥ before seem k nd of $0 generou Mow Foxes Cot Rid of Fleas, n ol oy d nat fleas narrati cks xlowly stream with a portion pelt of a rabbit in his month, fox I The fox's and fur, aml meal water drives the fleas and ally out po then toward then the fox drops the his pests are done for The local hunter and naturalist ferred to, strange todsay, had never heard or read this story when he told of actions of a fox which he served the other day In the waters of the Patapaco river. The little he stated, ba river ly. with =0 much wondered what It meant It carried something, he did know what, it fta mouth, and dropped the something re the ob animal, ked into the slow deliberation that he not 0 when out in deep water. Then fox hurried ohjeet floated er, and havled it stick literally through which to be a Lit of raw rabbit fur The ob server had a puzzling ox plained to him, He says his admira for the shrewdness of the fox more and more he grows older and learns his ways Ialtimore Sun. the feft he Fleas the ohiect, aw The pear to the obaery with a swarmed found ay ashore Wis mystery tion as A Model Girl, A Kansas girl graduate, de serves a place in the Hall of Fame, was given the time-worn theme, “Be yond the Alps Lies Italy.” and produoc ed the following: “1 do not care a cent whether 1thly les beyond the Alps or in Missouri. 1 who with my future career. 1 am glad that I have a good, very good, education, but 1 am not going to misuse it by ture woman. It will enable me to cor- rect the grammar of any lover | have, ghould he speak of ‘dorgs’ in my presence, or say he went ‘somewhere.’ or ‘seen’ a man, It will also come handy when 1 want to figure out how many pounds of soap a woman can get for three dozen eggs at the grocery. Bo 1 do not begrudge the time 1 spent in acquiring it. But my ambitions do not fly so high, I just want to mar- ry a man who ean ‘lick’ anybody of his weight in the township, who can run an S80-acre farm and who has no female relatives to come around and try to boss the ranch. I will agree to cook dinners for him that won't send him to an early grave, and lavish upon him a whole lot of wholesome affec. tion, and see that his razor has not been used to cut broom wire when he wants to shave, In view of all this 1 do not eare if I do get a little rusty on the rule of three and kindred things as the years go hy” The distance from Philadelphia to the Philippine Islands by the sh REV. DR, TALMAGE, THE EMINENT DIVINE'S BUNDAY DISCOURSE, Bubject : A Way Over Jordan « Ths Lord Will Send a Bost « From the Other Shore It Will Come to Transport the Falthful to Eternal Life, [Copyright 199. | Wasmixaron, D.C, incident of olden time Dr. Talmage in this discourse draws some comforting and rap- turous lessons. The text is 11 Samuel xix, 18, “And there went over a ferryboat to carry over the king's household.” Which of the crowd is the king? short man, sunburnt and in fatigue dress It is David, the exiled king. He has de- feated his enemies and is now going home to resume his Good! 1 always like to see David come out ahead, But be- tween him and his komme there is the cele brated River Jordan, which has to be assed. The king is sccompanied to the nt of the river by an aristocratic old gentleman eighty years, Barzillai by name, who owned a fine country seat at Bogelim. Besides that, David has his fam ily with him. But how shall they get across the river? While they are stand ing there I see a ferryboat coming from the other side, and as it cuts through the water | the faces David and his household up the thought of mn getting home. No sooner had the ferryboat the shore than David and his fan and his old friend Barzillai, fromm Hog 3, get on board the boat Either bing oars at i wit wEhing #101 wilh one Ig AL Lhe paiace, of Bes of brighten at BO BOM struc) Lhe or stern of the they LY eastern bank of the and start for the western bank. western bank is black le, who are waving the Xi from the other side! Transporiation at ast for our souls from the other shore; everything about this gospel from the oth- er shore; pardon from the other shore; mercy from the other shore; pity from the other shore; ministry of angels from the other shore; power to work miracles from the other shore; Jesus Christ from the other shore, “This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save zin- ners,” and from a foreign shore 1 see the coming, and it rolls with the the dead adjust their apparel so that they may be fit to come out, That boat touches the earth, and glorious Thomas Walsh gets into it in his expiring moment, say- “He bag come! He has come! My beloved is mine, and J 2m His” Good Barah Wesley got into that boast, and as she shoved off from the shore she cried: “Open the gates!” 1 FE the boat came from to take David and his across so when we about to die boat will come direction. God fortnd that anything that bless God the men the that other shore are 1 should starts from this side Again, my =u WE Cross over the last the King will be on board boat : Bible times was in its infancy. The boats were not skillfully made, and I can very imagine that chi dren of the king's have nervous afraid that tl might give be dashed boats then 1 eo startling “Oh, ing down! board the ever {rust to sugpests that when the Bhip carpentry in CasLY the women and household might going th boat, carsman or the bhelmsman that the 1 rocks, Leen about on taal and the oul on wi family ashore there much it excitement it prot ike arziliai e the iy irs aged h other neve mee! again eir Lipe met as King Lal, atl Lhe prow of rever River Jordan, all languages, ihe Doundsry earth yet when, on a former ocea preached 0 you about the Jordanu 11 au een between in ages has the sym line 2 G heaven, e 1 have no doubt that some of you i ngly said: “The Lord might have ded Jordan for but not rae Cheer up! I want to show you that there is 8 way over an well as through it. My text says, “And there went over a ferryboat to carry over the king's household.” AH our cities are fasuiiar with the ferry boat. It goes from San Francisco to Oak land, and from Liverpool to Birkenhead and twice every secular day of the week multitudes are on the ferryboats of our great cities, so that you will not need to bunt up a classical dictionary to find out w I mean while I am speaking to you about the passage of David and his family across the River Jordan My subject, in the first place, impresses me with the fact that when we cross over from this world to the next the boat will have to come from the other wide. The tribe of Judah, we are iaformed, sent this ferryboat across to get David and his I stand on the eastern wide of the River Jordan, and I find no shipping at all, but while I am standing there | see a boat plowing through the river, and as 1 hear the swirl of the waters, and the boat comes to the eastern side of the Jordan, and David and his family and his Joshua JOT Jordan mightily impressed with the fact. that when we cross over from this world to the tie wvety day 1 find people trying to ex. temporize a way from earth to heaven They gather up their good works and some sentimental theories, and they make a The fact i» that skepticism and infidelity never yet helped one man to die. I invite all the ship carpenters of worldly philosophy to come and build one boat that can safely cross 1 invite them all to unite their skill, and Bolingbroke shall lift the stan: chions, and Tyndall shall shape the bow sprit, and Spinoza shall make the main topgailant braces, and Ravan ghall go to tacking and wearing and boxing the ship All together in 10,000 years they will never be able to make a boat that can cross this Jordan. Why was it thet Spinoza and Blount and Shaftesbury lost their souls? It was because they tried to cross the stream in a boat of their own construc tion. What miserable work they made of dying! Diodorus died of mortification be cause he could mot guess a conundrum which had been proposed to him at a public dinner; Zeuxis, the philosopher, died of mirth, laughing =t a caricature of an aged woman, a caricature made by his own hand; while another of their comapany and of their kind died saying: “Most I leave all these beautiful pic tutes” and then asked that he ight be covers to tatters. This idly philosophy helps a iagara Falls said to me, t rock down in the rap- Yes” “Well” he said, Arg On r branches uggests over at the ding than the vet piace withing to and nothing handle » taste then I will langh, too float about in ether about your hands and air discriminately, ons centre of the sun to 4% going to EWIinging forever, } the beaven. Dissatisfied with John's matersalistic heaven, theologi eal tinkers are trying en that will heard of pt St to patch up a heav do for them at last. 1 never any heaven | want to go to ex: John's heaven believe 1 shall hear Mr Toplady sing and Isaac Watts recite hymns end Mozart play. “Oh,” you say, “where would you get the organ? The Lord will provide the organ. Don't you bother about the organ. 1 believe I shall vet see David with a harp, and I will ask him to sing one of the songs of Zion I believe after the resurrection I shall see Massillon, the great French pulpit or yet ator, and I shall hear from his own lips how he felt on that day when he preached the king's funeral sermon and flung his whole audience into a parosysm of grief and solemnity And so you and I will be met at the landing. Our arrival will not be like sten ping ashore at Antwerp or Constantinople among a crowd of strangers. it will be among friends, good friends, those who are warm hearted friends, and all their friends. We know people whom we have never seen by hearing somebody talk about them very much We know them almost ag well as if we had seen them And do you not suppose that our par ents and brothers and sisters and children in heaven have been talking about wus all these years and talking to their friends? So that 1 suppose, when we cross the river at the last we shall not only be met by all those Christian friends whom we knew on earth, by all friends. They will come down to the landing to meet us. Your departed friends love vou now more than they ever did : You will be surprised at the Inet to Sind how they know" about all the affairs of vour life. Why. they are only across the ferry. and the boat is coming this way, and the boat is going that way. I do pot know but they bave already asked the Lord the day, the hour, the moment when you are coming across, and that they know ow, but 1 do know that you will be met at the landin The poet Southey sid he thought he should know Bishop Heber in heaven by the portraits be had seen of him in London, and Dr. Randolph said he thought be would know William Cowper, the poet, in heaven from the pictures he had seen of him in England, but we will know our departed kindred by the por traits hung in the throne room of our hearts. On starlight nights you look up—and 1 suppose it is so with any one who has friends in heaven-—on starlight nights you look up, and you cannot help but think of those who have gone, an suppose they look down and cannot but think of vantage of us. u au they have the » e know not w their werld jov is. They know when we _ of But there is a thought that comes over me like an electric shock. Do 1 belong to the King's household? Mark you, the Jext que, “And Shete wont ove a ferry. earry over ng's honsehold, household and none but the king's belong to t their