——————————— ——- ——————— A ———— THE FOELESS MAN. He grew up in the public scnool In an unobtrusive way; He shared his lunch and lent his top— Had littie enough to say, He drifted dumbly with his class, Was never at its head; But “He never made an enemy,” His playmates always said, He lived his quiet years along Outside ambition’s thrall. ‘The world ne'er knew, from aught he did, He ever lived at all, And when at length to his last sleep He meekly bent his head, “Ie never made an enemy,” The village pastor said. E. W. 0. PP . fat ke 5 5 B 5 + 5 3 “8 vy RE RAQAARRAARAARIALRL AE 8 ORR RS EE eae § Her First Impression. KENNETH, “ BY ESTHER BERLE PERSE “RerereR WDE SE SANE EE ee “It must be the first impression that works the charm!” said Nellie, resting fier beautiful cheek pensively on her fair hand. “Or else 1 am a 1 spoiled favors. jut I think For 1 really of my many lovers, and marry happily. sadly lonely And this lovely reci and f lean chair and look lace of the plat ittle by fortune's it impression. wish I could love one at the Cedars.” nt of beauty ortune shimmering sunsil Hodges), bear grounds Roseb locked: word 1 picnic here, as usual, this year sent word that be available. Isn't it awful?” Uncle Teddy at his niece's success at getting over the hard words she zo ambitiously undertook. “I suppose Miss Hodges right to decline your company chose, Trudie,” he observed. “But isn't it a pity, when there's no other place but the grove, where it go damp, and the common, there's no shade?” Uncle Teddy said, two walked on. But Doctor Carlisle heard more about the plenie and Miss Hodges’ eru- ¢lty at not allowing the Sunday-gchool the use of the beautiful grounds of the Cedars, since they “had always had hat | Hat De the Cedars we Lie smiled bad the if she is where “Yo and the “of her handsome brother's escort, re- quired his company at the church and social meetings of the village, and ev- erywhere he beard of the complaint against the lady. She was selfish, she was proud, she was disobliging. community--that Mr. bad died! “1 am sure I don't know what can be done,” sald Mr. Blake, the minister, a little arbitrary man, who beat his pulpit cushion to rags twice a year. “I do not feel inclined to make a sec: ond sppeal to Miss Liodges. Bo cold Roseborough and distant a deal with.” “Let me try? sald Doctor Carlisle, The general disappointment of the | children, and Trudie's special pleading had prevailed upon him to make a see- ond attempt to induce awful and ob durate Miss Hodges to grant ogee more the accustomed favor of allowing the person +is very hard to! " “She cannot than refuse me, he sald, “and then the matter will be more He had a secret impression that per- | The committee snapped at his offer, | it would be a great favor if; would do so. Followed by the heartfelt blessing of he after Ceda gardener, hir 1 $1 + } i is out tant ~N. 1 hie h a Lhe met pear the small niece set for the r wit gloomy inf “hey nt.” whom gate, orme that tl mistress was rection him point house, and assuring the man would find her, Carlisle set so. But pausing for a admire tor to do momen and understand at » the .hb nsity vith which for tl To find a lady in il ubbery was hem nose, any Ones sought of shr and broken srspiring brow, as | hat in his | wring arap- | r off | Miss Hodges,” he | inex | thus i1is siraw Mert futte Ome ige, relieved his pathway smooth ds about by is Wis { in by the cene of a larg stood at a woman.” hero. ; away I can see her arm wav- Good shall how brave and very WArns me creature! she was ahout to gal no weapon headed at his t It d how sutiful it wa “Miss Hodges!” he exclaimed, anx 1s] ! extreme atin ould the gen th sudden a to me?’ have a few moments’ th Miss Hodges" could hardly most overwhelming his terrib mistake or the error of pre supposing Miss Hodges be old and ugly. Pitying his eonfusion, Nellie 18d the way to the house, do i wit} Hiv have ie which VAs he realization f i of le otaer bo 1 this erestfallen at her best to he easy and sociable gentleman, who first, in almost silence, But, by ti Nellie found the gold eyeglasses and restored them. “They are mine!” exclaimed Doctor Carlisle, at once. “But for their loss I should never have made such a ridie- ulous mistake.” Nellie blushed, for she had laughed, and then blushed again, his gaze was piercing through the recovered lenses, “If you are Miss Hodges” he aaid, “allow me to Introduce myself as Doe- tor Carlisle, a friend of the children accompanied her, total vine © rose “oy | to make his plea. { “I have no hesitancy in saying that {1 do not think too much gratitude can ! be expressed for the favor of being al- | lowed to spend the day in these niece | grounds,” he sald. “And perhaps wuat ‘all have left for others to do, mone | have done.” he added. “You have guessed It,” sald Nellie. | “My stepfather made common propert [and expense often, to repair the dep- | redations of lawless boys, who broke his‘ rose trees, spoiled his paths, and injured his boats; and Le was never I know rendered that gervice any instance, for the 0 declined to have my grounds | common of for the future, | if the request is made as a favor, | use fut " matier. I am certain favor, and it will be n very | now it will that that be | his heart with anticipations the gardener “1 will have wings, « roquet arches put up and rustic scats § i And she cam told her to her the lady und were so grate pretiicest champion nad nterference tantly Cedars, could wire misty Nellie longer that not Y. complain his visits at lonel when hand engaged and heart, became 80 eqquent; red be thelr ofly his they Fe marriage gyer im agined,’ husband “But 1 of first don't believe impressions account Night. SHROUDED IN MYSTERY. Cashed, “There isn't a gr in my business’ nt Ot al of romslce promin- - ked a igo banker riser {or the sther day, “but nox and thea He was very iy. 1 S10.000 rarely never is not nd be 10 interest "ew % therefore, tl when letter “It h one ippened, iat rece ' tor 1 day 1 ved a personal a bit so when | the ex eff eet A woman i present a check drawn by for $5,000, and that as she was un oir depos was #ur fram from till more do it 1. and read it. 1 wording, was had not recall » but was to the within a day or two wold him see that tron hoe ae he wished me to th Known received money without d bring wite t in atlion } would answer and that she wou the {ittle girl, who » questions | her, as ng ues must ask in hi with he gave them The imple enough ull name, her sre born and was dead. 4% wan a good deal that kind of ev I had fornia, 8 letter, the "so being only age 10 of nm ‘little Five thou of m lence the ro oy nn £0 on was all and the depositor i #0 that I eonid not him personally ( he pext day the paying tel his eyes bulz ring that about as hard a loc » of a begg he had it his window with a to of Mrs , and that as he did woman and the was to me with N » i woman as i w kK drawn arder Blank by Mr know the not know how 18Y, it 1 private office, the little rl leas a pieture of m was th the wom gel me about into my not did a sie ov he had come to ask sent fe come did, with an or = ther was she it she had by mail from a 1! familiar present | the eo cheek was received tl in ber 5 + #3 i at ie bank wh th iH fe name instructions the noney would be i! her, if she would fake her little girl with her I asked the child the questions 1 had been re quested to ask, and she answered cor rectly each one, which relieved me of further responsibility, and 1 erdered check to eashed. The woman | did not seem to be greatly overcome | by her good fortune, and as | sould tell her nothing of the man who had given the money to her, she dida't seem to have any further use for me, and went back to the paying teller's win- dow. She asked for the money in $50 bills, and, wrapping it up in an old | newspaper, went out of the bank | without a word to anybody. “She was no longer at the address | ghe gave whea | sent a messenger’ there to make Inquiries, and her | not to Ww to and the be i i i met his death on his way east from I fancy he would not have told me the story of his life, but! carried en our books was the one he carried Im his youth Washington Star. Coat Wagons Are Barred. The Birmingham board of aldermen hag passed an ordinance forbidding drawn by driven or directed through 4 The Omaha Bee predicts that soon B STATE LENDS MONEY. HOW AUSTRALASIAN FARMERS BOR. ROW FROM THE GOVERNMENT, New Zealand Cets the Funds in England at a Low Rate and Lends Them to Colo- nists at a Moderate Profit-System Works Well, We are all of us familiar with the appearance of governments in the ca- | pacity of borrowers of money, but few persons are aware that within the last six yer five Australa sinn colonies have underta posite function; namely, to farmers The New New the (periments 1S, less than no @ ken ‘4 Liki who can to West Wales; ing money rity. colonies Zealand, South ge refer tralia name are and them in order interes made, We may New Zo law were way of example which was the under which, 1900, nearly on ¢ subject, and March, lent mortgage dairying or market gar land ring up to S15. 00K) (HK) had on fir farming. No ban and building advanced used {og used been The money 4 on land tt guburban or manufactu ‘nas secur neither is proj transaction is i ng done on personal of the aland eRRONCe New Ze Government col them ewhat interest, and « lend to nn at a below oe figure higher the ra which f formeriy morig property were The thie i fixed The for advances made by {WoO of the low he low fee nd valuing urity. Only $2.50 | for because of % ng ¥ fered 1 as se to £5) or less the applicant but 85 where “ does £1 asked for in - £7 50 betwee The legal fees on mortgagin as small rt & gots & ¥ in i pegused sgistration ¢ 1 loan De an above ad sums total £5.0600 Lge in but that fixed loans cot New Zealand half the property to be mortgaged of loans, the be equal to th of the to 0% release cases ia £1.25 sale the cred estitnate nat nl instaiment ween, fi Fi hs security if it be a freehold, lessoe's and half the value of the int t where th What safeguard ation? The authorize a tiie reports of 2 BM leasehold is re nst i aver Board alone loan vali only tx own valuers, but on th by the ment, ¢ independent valuations made Government Land Tax Depart the valn 1 of which, made ation as they are for tax Poses, been scrutinized. challenged, wrangled over and reduced. To that the system works well, we need only say that March 31, 1900, \ " ment Loan Office that no urities had back on its bands. Here, of the demands put forward by Kansas Populists actually and successfully earried out—Collier's Weekly. ng pur i have show on the Govern able to been then, was regu thrown irt a ane Long Island Black Sand. Who would dream of an iron-mine on the long, sandy beach of the Great South Bay? Yet, is a fine de- posit of magnetic iron ore running all the way from Westhampton nearly to Fire Island Inlet. It is in the form black sand, occasionally streaked with red. It is of the same chemical composition as the iron-ore of Lake Champlain, and was un there ter district in the Glacial period. It] is mixed with ordinary sand, and must | be separated from the latter to make it marketable. The cost of the opera- | tion is the chief bar to its use on a large scale. When prices in the ore] market are low, it does not pay to work the black sand; when they go up the black sand is profitable. The mining is simple. The mixed sand is shovelled from the beach into ordin- ary carts and carried to a mill. Here it is thrown into a trough, which car-| ries it to rollers on which are fastened | numerous magnets, These draw the fron ore to them and let the sea sand and other impurities pasd by. The magnets are cleaned by brushes, and the iron particles are swept Into a trough, from which they fall into bags and barrels, The mining is done upon | a small scale by a number of thrifty paid fair returns at intervals for the past 45 years. The ore 1s #old to steel tL ores of York bes New placed on a with the Michigan and Minnesota, Post. pit OBJECT LESSONS IN HYPNOTISM, Naw Orleans Physician Gives Some Con. vincing Proof to a Skeptic. A New Orleans physicl who en reputati 11: “an neat little friend the joys something of a Mi As a al walkl gimateur hypnotist, gave object lesson to a skepti night. of the He ue They theatrs WOT other one and sald: “Doctors I ¢ lity of hypnot an atever the You oi upon brain such an sibly produce ho you believe i 1 sian “But a Longevity of Various Races ien Deen It has of while nothing a given age the actuarial phrase, differs ht be expected, in En mea they ably, as might countries, and gl may IONE the wii that prob- life policy based on The tl ner wiod niiy longer perio lad 5 than American's expectation the can years slig other hand, a upon little 3 and a half. It therefore, that the restlessness attributed to the ‘ " (serman of =U 5 ™ count more J would seem American temperament does not neces- sarily conduce to the shortening of life, nor the composure of the German to iis prolongation. Possibly the better feed- ing and clothing of Americans in the lower classes the populatiom is the principal cause of their greater long- evity. Their position at any rate, maintained in later as well as In earlier years. The American who hus g ¢ : oO is, years more, while the jritisher’'s ex- months, and the German's as nearly as possible 12 months less. Both at 20 and at 60 the Frenchman's prospect is a little better than the German's and a little worse than the Englishman’ An Arb'trary Conductor, It is an established proposition that the ways of street-car conductors are past finding out, but a certain member of the guild showed himself in a new light the other day. The Incident took place in a Sixth avenue electric ear, A woman passen- ger asked the conductor if he could He murmured something unin- telligible and passed on without giv- ing the desired ticket. Another woman sitting near ty In- formed the first that transfers were given, whereupon the first replied that she Knew it was so, only some conduct ors would not hand them out. Three minutes later another woman asked toe same conductor for a transfer to 14th street and promptly received it. And the question naturally arose why he made the distinction.~New York Mall and Express, » A BONG OF ACTION, He wrote a quatrain on her eyebrow A sonnet on her throat, And her father put a footprint On the fag-end of his coat. Chicago Times Herald, NOT INTENTIONALLY, HOWEVER. Do you sit while your skates? Yes, on Patience down putting Patrice get them on ter I ian, and frequently a Yonkers Statesu HOW HE DID IT. ' ir, how 1s If ughter? us, sir. (EFREE THE RETORT COURTEOUS. “Your hair Is very thin, sir,” sald ie snapped the vie= i so awfully vul- ZI FINISH. I see our finish. What do you tomo! {Chicago Record. le—~Flying machines, Ww ITH KIM. _¢ D BCHEMH think this heme V3 ife has for 20 sin-- love you Qoubtl my ‘ s that 1 assure you eal 2 I was only won- would last. —De- HIS pay my Llmbing five t look at Fliegende Blaet=- ERATION shopper, just dropped jed here's a man at bargain exclain the or inopportune!” eried the floor- “We have not yet opened our Philadel- rtment. FROM THE HYGIENIC POINT OF VIEW foot- whe Ray ! men yusands of men who jun up anda wn and howl im wut ever getting hurt olis Journal. the fresh at all’ IT WAS OUT OF ORDER. jahan—That coo-00e clock 8¢ an’ didn’t thot clock " jostead av “OOOO 0 say Brooklyn or wie "000. HOW HLSE COULD SHR TELLY He—Darling, in love before? She Were you ever To be frank with yeu, Geor been many times. How else able to tell whether 1 am not Boston Trans— -y I haw : would 1 be a oni pt. love or new? CASILY FOUND. “Do you think it is desirable for a man to study the dead languages?’ “No, answared Mr. Cumrox, with emphasis. “If queer words are what a young man aspires to, the golf sir,” newspaper will supply all kis wants.” —Washington Star. THIS RUSHING AGH. “You must always think before you speak,” sald the cautious philosopher, “Yes.” auswered the very active young man, “and let the other feliow, who follows the popular plan, get in out of what I say. You forget the value of time.” Washington Star. THREE MOTTOS. The Spanish Motto—Never do to- day what you can put off till tomer- tomorrow what you can do today. Th» American Motto—Never put off till this afternoon what yeu can this morning. Puck. THE MODERN MOTHER. “1 do not bolieve in telling a child ghost stories to frighten him when he is naughty. “When Clifford is naughty I explain the germ theory to him and have him jook through a microscope st bacteria. “It frightens him terribly, and at the same time inculeates scientific knows. ledge.” Detroit Journal. EE eM LS L,I, patrons of the wheel i