THE MEXICAN BORDER How Both Sides of the Line Are Watched and Guarded. UNCLE SAM'S BRAVE RIDERS. The Work That Is Performed by These Well Mounted, Well Armed and Cour ageous Patrols—The Mexican Rurales and Their Methods. If business or recreation should tuke you down to thnt long line which forms the boundary between the United States and Mexico, you may by chance meet a well mounted rider, armed with rllle and pistols, pacing observantly along some bypath or canyon. He is one of the United States boundary riders ap pointed by the treasury department to patrol the border on the lookout for smugglers, cattle runnel's and other persons whose presence on the Amer ican side is generally undesirable. For this position the man selected must possess courage, judgment and no little physical endurance, for his duties may call him forth at all hours aud seasons, and he may be responsi ble for a stretch of border land many miles in length. For example, between San Diego, on the Pacific coast of California, and Yuma, in Arizona, there is but one boundary rider to patrol a line of over 150 miles, and this is in part over a sparsely settled mountainous region and partly through the waste of the CoioraUo desert. As opposite him, 011 the other side of the tine, the Mexican government main tains from fifteen to twenty rurales for the same work, it is 11 good illus tration of tlie trust reposed in a single American citizen by his government, it is probable there. Is 110 other man in the United States whom it would be harder to find at a given moment than tlie boundary rider of the Sail Diego-Yuma district. He may be down on the Colorado desert, watching near some water holes for a venturesome band of cattle runners,or in some canyon of the moun tains on the lookout for a wagon load of prohibited immigrant Chinamen; but, wherever he is, one may be fairly sure it is not where the transgressor of the customs laws expect him to lie. That he must possess both judgment and courage the following incident, which took place during the career of the former boundary rider in this dis trict, will aptly illustrate: For some time a band of cattle run ners had been working successfully back and forth over the line in spite of the boundary rider's vigilance. They seemed to be able to divine his move ments, so that while he was watching a trail through the mountains they were rushing a bunch of cattle over the desert. But at last he managed to surprise the band and, rifle in hand, drove two of them into Canipo. Then, however, arose the question as to the method of taking them down to the coast. 110 hired a double seated vehicle, the only one in the place. But at once another question pre sented itself. How was he to seat his prisoners, for either they must be placed together on the front or the back seat or separated, both seemingly a hazardous choice? lie finally decided to separate them, and so, with one on the front seat with him and the other behind, he started for the coast. The two cattle runners managed to communicate with each other by signs : and at a rough part of the road made { the boundary rider, in turn, their | prisoner. Needless to say, they then ! made the best of their opportunity to j escape over the border, but as they fell j into the hands of the unsympathetic j rurales they would have been better j off if they had submitted to the law of their own country. This brings one of the somewhat dif- j ferent methods pursued by the Mexi- I can government in guarding their side I of the border. From a cursory inspec tion of the line one might suppose that i the Mexican side Is not guarded at all. j You may cross the line ten times at 1 different places and never set eyes 011 1 a ruraie, but it is well known that you I have done so nevertheless, and 011 the I eleventh excursion you are likely to | find yourself surrounded by a pictur esque group, who will carry you off to jail if your explanation is not satis factory. As a rule, the rurales patrol back 1 and forth in detachments at a distance , of from ten to fifteen miles from the • actual border. Many a headlong dash j for the American side has been made by perfectly law abiding citizens, with the rurales nt their heels, because they have been heedless in obtaining a per- | mission to cross the border. Trne, an American citizen may cross 'he border at will, as far as he himself | Is concerned, but as ho Is almost cer- 1 tain to carry some article liable to duty j it is upon that charge that ho may be arrested.—Michael White In Youth's ' Companion. Rural Claims. Through the influence of the daily press cities and their needs have come 10 absorb such an amount of daily attention that the importance of tlie country and its inhabitants to the wel- j fare of the nation is largely overlook- j ed; hence the call to do everything that ' can be done to enlarge, to refine, to j purify and to strengthen the life of ! our country people. And one means to tills end which has not hitherto been used as much as It might liav»> been Is the cultivation in the school and in the home of the habit of read ing good books.—Bishop of Hereford la Nineteenth Century. Feminine Intuition. nattie—Tin positive George loves mo and wants me to be his wife. Ella- Has he told you so? Ilattie—No, but he has taken such a strong dislike to mamma.—Chicago Tribune. The liaeleasness of Worry. Sympathy !s loving understanding, and the expression of It helps a lot Worry is sympathy run to seed—and that doesn't help in the least—London Sketch. Occasions do not make a man either strong or weak, but they show wjat be is.—Thomas a Kempls. PLEA FORJHE BlßffiS, Why A. H. Howell Urges That They Be Saved. MANY KILL BOLL WEEVILS. Biological Survey Expert Tells of the South's Need of Them—Protection to Cotton Industry the Keynote of the Warning From Washington. Protection for tlie birds of the Unit ed States is being urged by the biolog ical survey of the department of agri culture. The economic importance of such protection to the cotton indtutry is pointed out in a recent circular pre pared by Arthur 11. Howell, assistant In the biological survey, who has in recent months made a minute study of the extent to which the boll weevil Is destroyed by birds. Something over a year ago the bio logical survey took this matter up and sent out literature urging bird protec tion. It was pointed out that the resi dents in the northern states could do a great service to the south by seeing to it that tlie birds that nest in the north ern latitudes in spring and summer and goto the south In winter were shielded from destruction. Tlie Inter est awakened in this matter was great, and there was eager response from farmers, school children and others. Now, says the Washington correspond ent of the New York tilobe, in the light of more recent Investigations showing that the boll weevil is destroyed by 1 birds to a greater extent than was at i first realized, another plea for tlie pro- j tectlon ol' the birds is being put forth. ; The region now Infested by the cot ton boll weevil includes the greater part of the cotton growing area of 1 Texas and Louisiana and parts of 01. j lahoina, Arkansas and Mississippi. Texas and Louisiana produced in 1900 ■ more than 5,000,000 bales of cotton, valued at upward of $270,000,000. The loss caused by tlie boll weevil is va- j rlously estimated at from 10 to 50 per cent of the crop, or even more in bad ly infested areas. Even at the low est reasonable estimate the loss to the cotton planters of Texas and Lou isiana from the ravages of the pest yearly aggregates many millions. As the weevil extends its range eastward into the more humid regions of the lower Mississippi valley, the damage it does will be proportionately greater than In the drier regions to the west ward. Investigations conducted by the bio logical survey on the food habits of birds in Louisiana in January nnd February, 1908, showed that more birds were feeding upon the weevils | and that many more weevils were de stroyed by them than In any of the ! western localities where birds have j been collected at a corresponding sea- ! son. The destruction of weevils in I winter Is much more important than In summer, since the death of every • weevil at that season prevents the pro- ; duction of u highly numerous progeny ' in the early summer and postpones the date when the Increase will become so 1 great 11s to destroy the cotton squares as fast as they appear. "The service rendered by the vast j army of birds which occupies the cot- ; ton plantations of the south during j the winter months," says Mr. Howell, j "Is only beginning to he appreciated j During the first season in which birds j were studied In their relation to the I weevil only twenty species wore dis j covered fo feed upon the Insect, and ; It was supposed the influence of birds | in keeping down the post was slight, j Later Investigations, however, carried [ 0:1 during several years and at all sea- I sons have shown that 110 less than I fifty-three species of native birds feed I upon the pest, many of them destroy- | iug largo numbers of weevils during | the most critical period of the insect's life—winter and early spring. Various kinds of blackbirds, mead ow larks, sparrows, pipits or titlarks. 1 wrens and titmice are mentioned as useful in the destruction of tlie boll 1 weevil, and many other well ki: e..11 j birds, such as tin." oriole, the swallow and the mockingbird, are in the list j of those thnt feed upon tlie pest ol the cotton regions. A Hybrid Sunflower. In every respect except one :i leaves, stalks and the name 011 re package—lt is a sunflower. But it his no black or red center. It is a 111 of tine yellow petals like a dandel >1 and looks something like a big chr.vsa 1 tliemum. W. F. Johnson of Kant ; - City planted its seed in his back yar-' to raise real Kansas sunflowers. Ii r the result of the seeds was so que m that he took it to florists to find whit j it was. They said they didn't know i that he could call it anything he plea j cd. So he has named it the "east slf.e j sunflower." The Airship. When our good ship speeds on her soar ing flight And long held fear outbraves Or rolls on tlie billowy Of atmospheric waves wi" sing a song as we fl >at along 1 ' <'rr rns come true nt Inst, iff :i .- -1 that 3 kissed by the cloud borne Of Joyful antepast. Tor we labored long on the craft we steer Where ] Jumollke mist foam clings And fashioned it well ns wo fought the fear That only hope had wings. And now we ride on the pneumotido That swiftly ebbs and flows. And wo steer our ship where fog waves drip And stormy petrel goes. The Invisible waves that wash our deck Will fill the leaks they flnd. From the dread of reef or of sunken wreck We're free as passing wind. And wo spread our sail for the sea or gale. For sea and gale are one. And we ride abreast of the storm king's crest And sail to seek tho sun. —New York Tribune. Very Desirable. On rodbot summer dajws What comftrrt it would b« To have at hand always An educated tree To follow us around the town, no matter wh«re we strayed. And furnish us with shade And, If it were a lemon tree, with lemon ade! ■-John Kendrtck Bangs In Harper's Weekly. fJWA ELK HUNT AT pSfMTWO OCEAN V PASS BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT [Copyright, 1898, by G. P. Putnam's Hons. Published under arrangement with G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York and London.] OODY and X started to hunt over the great ta ble-land, and led our stout horses up the mountain-side, by elk trails so bad that they had to climb like goats. All these elk-trails have one striking peculiarity. They lead through thick timber, but every now and then send off short well-worn branches to some cliff-edge or jutting crag, commanding a view far and wide over the country beneath. Elk love to stand on these lookout points, and scan the valleys and mountains round about. Blue grouse rose from beside our path; Clarke's crows flew past us. with a hollow, flapping sound, or lit in the pine-tops, calling and flirting their tails; the gray-clad whisky-jacks, witli multitudinous cries, hopped and fluttered near us. Snow-shoe rabbits scuttled away, the big furry feet which give them their name alread: turning white. At last we came out on the great plateau, seamed with deep, narrow ravines. Beaches of pasture alternated with groves an ! open forests of varying size. Almost immediately wo heard the bugle of a bull elk, and saw a big band of cows and calves on the other side of a val ley. There were three bulls with them, one very large, and we trie! to creep up on them; but the wind was battling and spoiled our stalk. So we returned to our horses, mounted them, and rode a mile farther, toward a large open wood on a hill-side. Win 1 within two hundred yards we heard directly ahead the bugle of a bull, and pulled up short. 111 a moment 1 saw him walking through an open glade; he had not seen us. The slight breeze brought us down his scent. Elk have a strong characteristic smell; It is usually sweet like that of a herd of Alderney cows; but in old bulls, while rutting, it is rank, puugent, and lasting. We stood motionless till the bull was out of sight, then stole to the wood, tied our horses, and trotted after him. He was traveling fast, oc casionally calling; whereupon others in the neighborhood would answer. Evidently he had been driven out of some herd by the master bull. He went faster than we did, and while we were vainly trying to over tike him wo heard another very loud and sonorous challenge to our left. It came from a ridge-crest at the edge of the woods, among some scattered clumps of the northern nut-pine or pinyon—a queer conifer, growing very high on the mountains. Its multiforked trunk and wide-spreading branches giving it the rounded top, and, at a distance, the general look of an oak rather than a pine. We at once walked toward the ridge, up-wiud. In a min ute or two, to our chagrin, we stum bled on an outlying spike bull, evident ly kept on the outskirts of the herd by the master bull. I thought he would alarm all tlio rest; but, as we stood mo tionless, he could not see clearly what we were. Ho stood, ran, stood again, gazed at us, and trotted slowly off I pccrctl over the crest. We hurried forward ns fast as we dared, and with too little care; for we suddenly came In view of two cows. As they raised their heads to look, Woody squatted down where he was, to keep their attention fixed, while I cautiously tried to slip off to one side unobserved. Favored by the neutral tint of my buckskin hunting-shirt, with which my shoes, legglns, and soft hat matched, I succeeded. As soon as I was out of sight Iran hard and came up to a hillock crested with pinyons, behind which I judged I should find tlie herd. As I approached the crest their strong, sweet smell smote my nostrils. In another moment I saw the tips of a pair of mighty antlers, and I peered over the crest with my rifle at Lacked Relish. A good many of the Sac and Fox Indians do not talk much, and when they are in a store and see something they want they pick it up and pay for it. When Tom Hall was keeping a drug store an Indlau woman entered It and picked up a can of varnish and paid for it. A few weeks later the same woman was In again and Tom asked her if she wanted another can. She said no. they couldn't eat the can »he had.—Stroud (Okla.) Messenger. Tlie favor of great men and tlie praise of the world are not much to b« relied on.—T'repcli Proverb. the ready. Thirty yards off, behind a clump of pinyon?, stood a huge bull, his head thrown back as he rubbed his shoulders with his horns. There were several cows around him, and one saw me immediately, and took alarm. I fired Into the bull's shoulder, inflicting a mortal wound; but he went off, and I raced after him at top speed, firing twice into his flank; then he stopped, very sick, and I broke his neck with a fourth bullet. An elk often hesitates in tiie first moments of surprise and fright, and does not get really under way for two or three hundred yards; but, when ouce fairly started, he may go several miles, even though mortally wounded; therefore, the hunter, after his first shot, should run forward as fast as he can, and shoot again and again until the quarry drops. In this way many animals that would other wise be lost are obtained, especially by the man who has a repeating ritte. The elk I thus slew was a giant. Ilis body was the size of a steer's, and his antlers, though not unusually long, were very massive and heavy. He lay in a glade, on the edge of a great cliff. Standing on its brink we overlooked a most beautiful country, the home of all homes for the elk: a wilderness of mountains, the Immense evergreen forest broken by park and glade, by meadow and pasture, by bare hill-side and barren table-land Some five miles off lay the sheet of water known to the old hunters as Spotted Lake; two or three shallow, sedgy places, and spots of geyser for mation, made pale green blotches on its wind-rippled surface. Far to the southwest, in daring beauty anil maj esty, the grand domes and lofty spires of the Tetons shot iuto the blue sky. That night, as on more than one night afterward, a bull elk came down whistling to within two or three hun dred yards of tho tents, and tried to Join the horse herd. The moon had set, so I could not go after it. Elk are very restless and active throughout the night in the rutting season; but where undisturbed they feed freely in tho daytime, resting for two or three hours about noon. Next day, which was rainy, we spent in getting in the antlers and meat of the two dead elk; and I shot off the heads of two or three blue grouse on the way home. The following day I killed another bull elk, following him by the strong, not unpleaslng, smell and hitting him twice as he ran, at about eighty yards. So far I had had good luck, killing everything I had shot at; but now the iuck changed, through no fault of mine, as for as 1 could see. and Ferguson had his in nings. The day after I killed this bull he shot two flno mountain rams; and during the remainder of our hunt he killed live elk—one cow, for meat, and four good bulls. Tho two ranis were with three others, all old and with flno horns; Ferguson peeped over a lofty precipice and saw them com ing up it only fifty yards below him. Ilis two first and finest hulls were ob tained by hard running and good shooting; tho herds were on the move at the time, and only his speed of foot and soundness of wind enabled him to get near enough for a shot. One herd started before he got close, and lie killed tho master bull by a shot right through the heart, as it trotted past, n hundred and fifty yards dis tant. As for me, during tile next ten days I killed nothing save one cow for meat; and this though I hunted hard every day from morning till night, no matter what the weather. Our ill success was In part due to sheer bad luck; but the chief element therein was the presence of a great hunting-party of Shoshone Indians. Split Into bands of eight to ten each, they scoured the whole coun try on their tough, sure-footed ponies As they slew whatever they could, but by preference cows and calves, and as they were very persevering, but also very excitable and generally poor shots, so that they wasted much powder, they not only wrought havoc among the ells, but also scared the survivors out of all the country over which they bunted. Day in and day out we plodded on In a hunting trip the days of long mo notony In getting to tho ground, and the days of unrequited toil after it has been reached, always far outnumber the red-letter days of success. Hut it is just these times of failure that really test the hunter. In tho long run, com mon-sense and dogged perseverance avail him more than any other quali ties. The man who does not give up, but hunts steadily and resolutely through tho spells of bad luck until the luck turns, is the man who wins suc cess in the end. After a week at Two-Ocean Pass, we gathered our pack-animals one frosty morning, and agaiu set off across the mountains. A two-days' jaunt took us to the summit of Wolverine Pass, near I'lnyon Peak, beside a little mountain tarn; each morning we found its sur face skimmed with black ice, for the nights were cold. After three or four days, we shifted camp to the mouth of Wolverine Creek, to get off the hunting grounds of the Indians. We had used up our last elk-meat that morning, and Tho Reason. The new dlrectoire gown Is expen sive, uncomfortable to wear and very striking in Its appearance, which Is why the dear women will Insist on wearing It. Not So Bad. Mr. Subbs (after engaging cook)— There's one other thing I suppose you ihould know. Miss Flannlgan—my wife Is a chronic Invalid, confined to her room. Miss Flannlgan—That's fine. I wor afeerd she might be wan iv thlin cbronic kickers that ar-re confined 112 tb' kitchen, begobs!—Pack. when we were within a couple o» hours' Journey of our Intended halting place, Woody and I struck off on foot for a hunt Just before sunset we came on three or four elk; a spike bill! stood for a moment behind some thicn evergreens a hundred yards off. Guess ing at his shoulder, I fired, and he fell dead after running a few rods. I had broken the luck, after ten days of ill success. Next morning Woody and I, with the packer, rode to where this elk lay We loaded the meat on a pack-horse, and let the packer take both the load ed animal and our saddle-horses back to camp, while we made a hunt on foot. We went up the steep, forest clad mountain-side, and before we had walked an hour heard two elk whis tling ahead of us. The woods were open, and quite free fro» under growth, and we were able to advance noiselessly; there was no wind, for the weather was still, clear, and cold. Both of the elk were evidently very much excited, answering each other continually; they had probably been master bulls, but had become so ex hausted that their rivals had driven them from the herds, forcing them to remain In seclusion until they regain ed their lost strength. As we crept stealthily forward, the calling grew louder and louder, until we could hear the grunting sounds with which the challenge of the nearest ended. He was in a largo wallow, which was also a lick. When we were still sixty yards off, he heard us, and rushed out, but wheeled and stood a moment to gaze, puzzled by my buckskin suit. I tired Into his throat, breaking his neck, and down he went In a heap. Hushing in and turning, X called to Woody, "lie's a twelve-pointer, but the horns are small!" As I spoke I heard the roar of the challenger of the other bull not two hundred yards ahead, as if in defiant answer to my shot. Itunning quietly forward, I speedily caught a glimpse of liis body. lie I raced af tc r him. was behind some fir-trees about seven ty yards off. and I could not see which way he was standing, and so fired into the patch of flank which was vis ible, aiming high, to break the back. My aim was true, and the huge beast crashed down-hill through the ever greens, pulling himself on his fore legs for fifteen or twenty rods, his hind quarters trailing. Kaclng for ward, I broke his neck. Ilis antlers were the finest I e%-er got. A couple of whisky-Jacks appeared at the first crack of the rifle with their customary astonishing familiarity and heedless ness of the hunter; they followed the wounded bull as he dragged his great carcass down the hill, and pounced with ghoulish bloodthirstiness on the gouts of blood that were sprinkled over the green herbage. These two bulls lay only a couple of hundred yards apart, on a broad game trail, which was as well beaten as a good bridle-path. We begat) to skin out the heads; and as we were finishing we heard another bull challenging far up the mountain. lie came nearer and nearer, and as soon as we had ended our work we grasped our rifles aud trotted toward him along the game trail. He was very noisy, uttering his loud, singing challenge every minute or two. The trail was so broad and firm that we walked in perfect silence. After going only five or six hundred yards, we got very closo indeed, and stole forward on tip-toe, listening to the roaring music. The sound came from a steep, narrow ravine, to one side of the trail, and I walked toward it with my rifle at the ready. A slight puff gave the elk my wind, and lie dashed out of the ravine like a deer; but he was only thirty yards off, and my bullet went into his shoulder as he passed behind a clump of young spruce. I plunged Into the ravine, scrambled out of it, and raced after him. Ins minute I saw him standing with droop ing head, and two more shots finishc il him. He also bore fine antlers. It was n great piece of luck to get three such fine bulls at the cost of half a day's light work; but we had fairly earned them, having worked hard for ten days, tljrough rain, cold, hunger, and fatigue, to no purpose. That evening my home-coming to camp, with three elk-tongues and a brace of ruffed grouse hung at my belt, was most hap py- TY~^CF r ~.2 Pyramids. The largest of the Mexican pyramids, that of Cholula, has a base measure ment of 1,488 feet and a height of 178 feet. The Great pyramid of Egypt, sometimes called the pyramid of Che ops, stands on a base each side of which was originally 764 feet long; but, owing to the removal of the coating, It is now only 746 fet Its height, ac cording to WlLkenson, was originally 480 feet 0 Inches, Its present height lx> tn» 4rtft f»ot_—New York American. Teacher—What little boy can tell me where is the home of the swal low? Bobby—l kin. The home of the swallow to the stomnrlck. HIT THE WRONG BANK Story of the Man Who Wanted to Open a Small Account. A WALL STREET EXPERIENCE. The Would Be Depositor of Modest Means Found Himself In a Place For Millionaires—An Official's Courteous Explanation and Advice. "When," said the man who writes pieces for magazines and things, "by Borne strangeand unprecedented chance, I had got hold of a matter of $350 all at one and the same time It looked big to me. By an even more curious chance there wasn't anything that I really needed to do with the money, so I decided that I'd bank it "Now, X knew in a general way that in order to put money in a bank you've got to be known and give your pedi gree and look respectable, and all that, and I hated to approach a bank with out any sort of credentials. Therefore I went to the business manager of a certain magazine which occasionally prints pieces that I write and asked him what I'd better do. " 'Simplest thing in the world,' said he. 'l'll give you a note to our bank.' "That sounded fine to me. lie wrote me the note, and I started for the bank a good deal tickled over how easy the little depositing proceeding hud been made. "The bank to which I had the note Is in Wall street. 1 asked the uniformed man who was standing around where I'd find the receiving teller's window, and he pointed that window out to me. I got into line and watched the teller take In money. "I must own that I was a bit stalled to note the great size of some of the deposits he was receiving. Why, fel lows were giving the money to him by the satchelful. But I had my note in my pocket, and I remained complacent enough with that consciousness. "When I reached the receiving teller I passed in my note, and the receiving teller, a decidedly civil young man, opened it and read it. Then he looked at me, after which he read the note again, this time with a sort of puzzled expression on his countenance. I didn't see why the receiving teller should be puzzled over such a simple matter, but puzzled he seemed. lie rang a bell, and the uniformed man who'd directed me to that window appeared. " 'Show this gentleman to the office of the cashier,' said the receiving teller to the uniformed man, at the same time regarding me with a pleasant smile, and the uniformed man led me down the passageway and took me behind a railing whero there was a handsome gray haired gentleman sit ting at a desk. "The handsome gray haired gentle man received me cordially and Invited me to be seated. I handed him my note, which the receiving teller had returned to me, and he leaned back In his chair and read It carefully. Then he, too, looked puzzled after he'd road the note a second time. Then he look ed at me pleasantly over the tops of his spectacles. "'Ahem!' said the handsome gray haired gentleman, not disagreeably, but In a nice, banker-like way. 'Might l— er—lnquire, Mr. l'enphlst, without seeming to be unduly Inquisitive, as to how—< «• large a—er—balance you would usually be carrying?' "Well, that was a civil enough ques tion, nothing inquisitive about it. " 'Why, sir,' I said to the handsome gray haired gentleman, 'I am opening an account with a matter of some $350, but I shall no doubt make some addi tions to that within the next two months, and probably I shall carry a balance of—well, say, SSOO or SOOO right along.' "The kindly cashier with the gray hair fairly beamed upon me. " 'Er—just so, just so,' said he, twid dling his thumbs. 'We feel compli mented, Mr. Penphist, we really do, that you should have come to us. And it is unfortunate—er—really unfortu nate, that we are so utterly lacking In facilities for taking care of accounts of such a character.' " 'You see, Mr. l'enphlst, our institu tion Is of—er —a sort of special charac ter. It Is used as a depository by— well, perhaps 1 should put It in a clearer manner. I say It to you quite In confidence, you understand, Mr. I'eu phist, but we have only 1,000 deposit ors on our books, and these 1,000 de positors' aggregate balances amount all the time to a matter of $110,000,000.' "Well, that was about enough. 1 saw the light then. I'd drifted Into a millionaires' bank on the careless cre dentials of a business manager who'd written me that note no doubt in a thoughtless mood. "The gray haired cashier acted bully übout it. He recommended a fine bank to me—'one that combines ])erfect re sponsibility with the necessary facili ties for handling accounts like—er— yours, Mr. Penphist,' ho added. "For all of the cashier's nlceness I walked out of there into the cold gray light of Wall street feeling like a good deal of a human caterpillar. "I didn't goto the bank recommended to mo by the cashier; didn't have the nerve to visit any more banks. I've got SO2 left now of the $350, but I'm going to use that as a nest egg, and muybe some day even yet I'll have a bank account."—New York Sun. _ Art of the Superior Smile. The superior stnlle Is a useful accom plishment for any young man. It Is much In vogue at the universities, where It may lie studied at its best on young Don. Many men who learn nothing else at the universities learn this art and And It uncommonly useful In after life. It Is an excellent cover for a nuked mind and should be sought after by parliamentary candidates.— Oxford Varsity. Ftocring Papa. Five-year-ohl Tommy was being put through a test in numbers before the admiring family one day at dinner. Finally papa asked him the question that had proved the Waterloo of the older children In past years. "Now, Tommy," said papa, "how many are two apples and three pears?" "Flvtt fruits I" promptly answered Tommy.—Delineator. TO RESCUE NAPOLEON A Bold Plan That Was Matured In This Country. IT WAS A DARING SCHEME. The Enterprise Was Known to the Ex ile of St. Helena, but Just as the Preparations Were About Complete the Fallen Emperor Died. Even in"the last phase" our coun try sustained a certain association with the captive of St. Helena, says a writer in the Magazine of History. The English felt that any danger o£ rescue would originate upon the west ern shore of the Atlantic. Admiral Cockburn occupied the neighboring Island of Ascension, avow edly to prevent it falling Into the liunds of Yankee raiders. The feeling In the United States against England was at that time quite bitter. Napoleon's landing at St. Helena followed the bat tle of New Orleans only about seven months, and the downfall of the revo lutionary monarch aroused deep sym pathy throughout the country. Hut the actual grounds for believing in the existence of a rescue party and rescue plans in the United States rest upon the movements of General Lalle mand and his associates. This officer's military record, from the revolutionary days to Waterloo, had been distin guished by notable feats of daring. His devotion to the emperor was loyal and persistent; he had followed him until his embarkation from the shores of France and bad tried in vain to accompany him to St. Helena. He was condemned to death by the reac tionary tribunals of 1810, but had suc ceeded in escaping and joining his brother at Philadelphia. At this time our country was literal ly swarming with French military ref ugees, many of whom, like I.allemand, were under capital sentence for their conduct toward the Bourbons during the hundred days. The Lallemands proceeded ostensibly to unite a number of these veterans into a military colony which they called the Field of Asylum. Our government granted them 100,- 000 acres on the banks of the Tomblg bee, bnt as their own project required their establishment near the sea they sold the lands and with the proceed* settled on the Trinity river, in Texas, about fifteen miles from its mouth. The second In command was Haron Rlgaud, whose kindly feelings toward the ancient regime had been illustrated! by publicly stamping the cross of St. Louis under his feet. Needless to say. he was also under sentence of death by Louis XVIII.'s court martial. But the best known of all this de voted band was the famous pirate La tltte, who had lx»gun life as a Bor deaux blacksmith, had killed his lev© rival In a duel, had become a noted corsair, the terror of the Antillean seas, had been the effective ally of General Jackson in repulsing the Brit ish at New Orleans and at the time of the French settlement of old guards men in his vicinity was established at Galveston. This narrative does not require a de tailed statement of the affairs of th» 400 grenadiers, of the attacks of the Mexicans on their camp, of their final removal to New Orleans. All the circumstances indicate that It was not the intention of the Lalle mands to found an agricultural colony, but to unite about 1,000 old soldiers for the deliverance of the great pris oner. The location of their camp was most favorable for the scheme, being near the sea in an unsettled country where their movements would nut be watched and, above all, being in proximity to Lafitte, who commanded the required ships. Besides these desirable vessels, one, a model of swiftness, was con structed at Charleston and eqtiipiied for its purpose in the most complete manner. An Intrepid captain named Boissiere, who navigated for pleasure, bad ac cepted its command, and this was the ship destined to carry awaj Napoleo© Bonaparte, while Lafitte would land the guardsmen and engage the atten tion of the English cruisers. The enterprise was known to the captives, as shown by Bertrand's dis closures. But when the preparations were al>out complete the news arrived of the emperor's death. Words From the Army Mule. [The automobile has been proved use less for army purposes.—Extract From Report to War Department.] They trr to cllml> a hIU That Is with a will As a ruK\ And when Mr. Auto skkls Clear as laughter of kids Out of school Comes a cynic heeltaw note Prom the ntx Caruso throat Of a mule. "They have sought to throw me out For a bucking runabout." Quoth the knave. "I've my faults, I will admit— I mill kick when I am hit With a stave- But you bet when bullets whiz I'm the mottre power what Is— I still wave!" BH NEW! A. Sellable TIN SHOP Tor all kind af Tin Roofing, Spoutlne nnd Qanoral Job Work. Stoves, Heatara, Rangae* Furnacea, ato- PRICKS THB LOWEST! QUILITY TBS (EST! JOHN HIXSON NO. U# & FRONT IT..