THE DAY'S b is splendor of th valltv, Flower etuddd-tUI begfr Lbnpld stream and drooping willow Vith th brw.e and tuDthla flirt, la th pastur on th hllUM Graa too aolamn, meek-eyed kin, Wall th eotne o( th bay Held hflogie whk th odorous pie. Vtnglea with th r' tree's baliam, Waving grain nd Bong ot bird. While th heavens overerehlng Like ateloed glar wludowt foftly Marred, Olor.fr the d)'i swift marching, Led by D.iture' twlllUt byuju, At above lb Deaoeful valley Ibm tb mountalnf tul nd grim, Ida i Genera Lord Marchmont, V. C. By LILUAS CAMPBELL DAVIDSOH. Toe village of Charlton Bishop waa m Tote, with evergreen archea and flag and garland of flower and bay. "Welcome to Our Hero!" "Well Done, Marchmont! " "Charlton Bishop Bids Welcome to Ita V. C. General !" waved frcm banners stretched across the street. General Lord Marshmont, K. C. B., V. C, and most of the other letters ot the alphabet was their own. He was born and brought up In the little creeper-grown rectory over yon der, and In spite of all tradition about ft prophet In his own country, Charl ton Bishop was going mad today In Ita welcome to Its world-renowned hero, fresh crowned with his laurels after the South African war. At the big house where the Vava sours lived there was excitement, tco. Old Sir John had fussed over wreaths and banners, and a house party of eager and distinguished guests waited for the arrival of the hero's trium phant chariot. It was an honor to be asked to meet Lord Marchmont, an honor eagerly sought. Adela Vavasour looked lovelier even than usual In her Paris frock and hat, the rose color of excitement and grati fied antlclaptlon on her cheek. She walked to the open window and tepped out cn the terrace Impattently. "Do you want me, Adela?" Grace Rawson's position at Charlton Great House wns not particularly well defined. She was not exactly a poor relation, not exactly a companion or housekeeper. She was vaguely de acrlbcd as the Vavasours' cousin, to whom they were kind. She had been educated with Adela, and when Lady VavaBour died she took up the place of everybody's friend to the household. Adela was too gay ft person nowadays, too Immersed In her social round and her ambitions and her smart Interests, too occupied In motoring, and being photographed for society papers, and speaking at club debates to have much time to pare for her cousin Grace. Yet she beckoned her out now, and drew her Jong the terrace. "Grace, I feel quite absurdly flut tered, like a girl In her first season, do you know. I wonder how much he has altered? One knows his face so well from the Illustrated papers, and, of course, he la older and sterner, but he ta even more handsome than he used to be. How little one dreamed ot today, when he went away from Charlton Bishop that last time, a raw, awkward gunner. Just expecting his company! 1. one had known then! But how could one? Otherwise I would never have refused blm. But one never dreamed of this!" "I suppose not," said Grace, a little dryly. "Yet he waa the same man that he Is today." "Oh, hardly! One really couldn't have been such a fool as to follow the drum with him cn a subaltern's pay, and spend one's life as a miserable garrison gunner's wife. It was really ft little more than he had any right to xpect, even If we had played to gether In the rectory garden when we were both In the sublime Innocence ot youth. Really, It was presumption then almost Impertinence for him to fancy I would marry him. Now, ot course, it Is another thing." "Is It?" Again there waa a strange, faint smile In Grace's gray eyes, a mile sad In 1U tender memory, "Grace, don't be Idiotic! You talk Absurdly sometimes. Of course I could not marry him then. Now It Is smother matter; of course, he knows that himself. When papa wrote and asked blm down to stay with us, he accepted so eagerly that It was quite touching. He knows now be li it i position any woman would be glad to have." "It ought to be more than flattering a man like Hugh Marchmont!" Adela went on, regardless of any thing but Iter own thoughts: "It will be a kind of romantic com pensation for him like a thing In a book. Here In this very house, where he had his refusal; in the very drawing-room" "No; It waa out here on this terrace. Tou sent me to tell him, because you would not do it yourself, Adela, it waa fttrocious of you! It wasn't womanly! I waa too young to understand then; I can aee how eruel it was." Adela laughed. She had a musical laugh, and Bhe daintily snapped oft the head of a rose that nodded by the terrace wall. , "Was It here? I don't know," she aid, looking about her with Interest. "Ot course I sent you. He would have stormed and been disagreeable. He was always ao desperately serious. What did be ey? I never had the curiosity to ask you. Now it becomes C foresting, in the light of the pres- ' "Never mind what he said." The Ridden vision rose to her unbidden of Che white, pain-drawn face, Uia In SPAN. . Shadows lengihea y I lytsf Homeward lac th rovla; kl- Loud th llttl atrmmlet babble O r th pbbl 'neeth tb vlni Fattr lower droop th tbadow from tlm'i brief loom tb day ll torn, Daraa (hroud tb beauteous vlly Day U dud tb night I bora. B I Th gloom of mount It brok Livid diver thread th air, Him ot light Ilk baraldi follow. Bunt th moon In radiance fair. Talley, streamlet, wood and hill-top, Olorlfled traaiflgured II In lb beauty of tb night time Heats th thron ol (iod on Higo. Lou I Qlbba, la Wsshlagtoa County Port. credulous eyes, the boy's sharp les son In a woman's heartlesaness, that changed him Into manhood, and sent him stung and smarting into the world. "I shall not tell you; only, If you had seen blm as I saw blm you could not have waited till be waa rich and famous and ft hero to ask his forgiveness." "Hla forgiveness I My dear goose! a woman don't ask a man to forgive her because she won't be his wife." "But you let him think you cared for him. You led him on and en couraged him you know it, Adela, Oh, it was horribly cruel! You made him suffer." "That kind of suffering does ft boy good. Ho ounht to thank me, it it made blm a soldier and a V. C. Any how, he can ask the half of my king dom now, and it won't be denied him." Hut even while she spoke there came a shout of cheering. The one gun of the neighborhood exploded with fussy importance, the band at the station struck up "See the Con quering Hero," mixed with the sounds of village hurrahs and the tramp of fast-trotting horses. Adola's still beautiful face sparkled with pride and gratification. "Why, there he la!" she said gayly. "I must meet him at the top of the terrace steps. Run In anj tell the others, Grade. Rout the Duchess out of her room she's writing letter. Tell them all to come out and meot him here." There was a flutter of pretty frocks through the long windows as Grace flew on her errand. People hurried down the terrace to Join Adela; her father came round the end of the house. Another moment and the car riage had flashed into sight had drawn up at the bottom of the steps. The hero of the BrltlBh people. lit tle embarrassed by the warmth of his reception, stood smiling and cour teous at the steps of the terrace, hla hand grasped in his host's, his ears assailed by eager welcomes, his glance passing from one to another of the clamoring group. They were all vehement to shake hands with him, to bid blm welcome home, to shower congratulations and pretty speeches. And still his glance strayed on. Now he and his beautiful hostess were walking down the terrace to gether, and In at the long windows ot the drawing-room. She noted with approval his tine, soldierly bearing, his bronzed, strong face young still, in spite of the faint ly grizzled hair about the temples. "He is better looking even than the portraits of blm," she said to herself. His glance was still wandering. Presently be spoke. "Is Miss Rawson out there on the terrace? I only Just shook hands with her a moment ago. I should like to see her If I might." Adela smiled. She felt she knew hla reason. "He wants to find out from her at once what his chances are," she thought, amused. "Well, he shall be put out of bis suspense." ' Aloud she said graciously: "Do go out and talk to her, while I take all these people to listen to the band." He stepped through the open win dow, quick to accept the permission. Grace stood at the terrace end, near the very spot he so woll remembered, where be bad thought his hope and trust bad been slain. The bond at the other side of. the house waa frantically playing "Sol diers of the Quoen." The air was full of the buzz of voices, the linger ing cheers beyond the park gates. The world seemed all a-flutter with garlands and roses and festoons, all there for his cake! He walked down the terrace, and stood face to face with a quiet girl, no longer in her teons, in a white frock. "Miss Rawson, this is a real pleas ure!" Her band was in his strong, warm clasp, and his kindly eyes on hers. She tried to lay something In response to the congratulations that were on every other Up but hers. He stopped tbem with brief thanks, look ing round him with a half-amused glance. "Why, this Is the very placo where we parted where I saw -the last of you how many years back?" Adela waa right We remembered! He had returned with the Impulse of that memory still in hla heart Grace said something trite about change time had made; she hardly knew what she said. He assented gravely, yet smiling. He waa still looking about him as If he were bring ing' back the little scene. "Yes, ft was here! How often have I thought of It At night over the camp Ire out oa the veldt? under the stare!" "I hop the pda did pot go with your She could not help saying It out ot the compassion in her heart - - : He looked up fulckly, surprised, Thf pain? Ko, no I That waa ft pin-prick a stab tor the hour It could not last I But the memory of that moment lasted; It was at once my solace and my star ot hope. Perhaps you will never know how much I owe to It; it can never be told." Tbe memory of Adela! Had that been his spur, his impulse? Men's hearts were net tbe onlv or.es that had to endure pain She wondered why be should find It needful to put out hla strong hand again and take hers into it while he told ot his unchanged feeling for Adela. "But I can speak some of It I can tlitnk you now for the sweet and gentle womanliness tbat trltd to soften tbe blow It bad to deal me, that showed me all women were not hard and worldly wise and cold. I could have knelt down tnen and kissed the hem of your garment for tbe angel you were to me. It was when I bad put seas between us that I knew. The strong impression of your face as you looked at me with sorrow and sym pathy; the sound of your voice as you tried to comfort me In my disap pointment and distress. One moment like that when two hearts lie open, flashes a searchlight Into them. I knew then how great was my mistake, I bad taken the shadow for the sub stance. I had wooed a dream, the real woman stood at my side. She went with me through all the years that followed. I have come back to try to win her. Will you be my longed-for wife?" And Grace's eyes were misty as she answered, feeling as though the ter race tottered beneath her feet. "I have loved you always. I loved you then, and I love you now more dearly. But I never dreamed ot thlsl" New York News. QUAINT AND CURI0U8. The mole is said to be deprived of eyes, which Is untrue. They are very small, which prevents them from being injured by the earth through which it borrows. When not In use the eyes can be brought forward from tbe mase of fur which conceals and protects them. In the orangery of Versailles Is the oldest pomegranate tree in France. It dates, in fact, back to the establish ment of the orangery In 1685. In ex ceptionally warm and bright seasons tbe old tree still decorates Ita branches with a few flowers, but no fruit has been seen upon it for a long time. One of the principal articles export ed from Morocco are eggs. Last year there were shipped from Tanglcrs alone 62,400,200 eggs, the value being estimated at about $490,000. This trade has sprung up during the last tew years, and has rapidly Increased. The eggs, though small, are of good quali ty, and large quantities are procurable at a moderate price. MoBt ot them go to Gibraltar and the United Kingdom. Five thousand dollars is a big price to offer for one flea, but that la the amount positively offered by Charles Rotchachlld of England, for one ot those bothersome insects. Mr. Roth' schild needs a polar flea to complete his collection of these insects, and th $5000 will be paid over to the person who brings him a flea from the back of the ArcUc fox. The flea of the Arctic fox is to flea fanciers what the egg of the great auk Is to the collector ot birds' eggs. Mr. Rothschild has fit ted out a whaler, which Is now in the far north, to look for this flea among other Arctic curiosities. One of the novel features at the St Louis World's fair will be an enormoui floral clock. The dial of this clock will have a diameter ot 100 feet, the minute hand will be 15 feet long and made of bright-colored foliage plants. Surrounding them In a circle will be collections of 12 distinct plants, each collection being 25 feet in length and 15 feet wide. Tbe hands ot the clock will be of steel and will have wooden troughs for the soil. In which will be planted flowers and green plants The entire face ot the clock will be made ot flowers and at night will be lighted up by 1600 Incandescent lamps. The machinery of the clock will be hidden from sight A curious story of a coin comet from England. Since 1789 and up to a week, or bo ago there has been lying in one of the oldest of London banks s sealed package containing one ot the famous petition crowns of Charles II, known familiarly as the trial piece ol Thomas Simon. Simon made 15 ol these in an effort to convince Charles that be could make a firfcr and more artistic coin than could the Dutch. The. coin in question was offered twice fof sale, unsuccessfully, the last time la 1774. The highest bid was then 2 guineas. In 1789 It was put away to be offered for sale In 114 years. It Is thi property ot a well known noblemot and it is doubtful that he will follow out the purpose ot his ancestor. The "Towing Cure." An eminent London doctor whost nervous system had suffered severelj through overwork recently took a tr from Staines to Oxford, having himself towed all the way. He is now advising every patient whose nerves are un strung to undergo the "towing cure.' The quiet there is in a boat which it being slowly towed, the gentle vlpplt which follows the boat and the sooth ing motion, together with the fresh air, are said to have a wonderful ef feet upon the nsrves. London Truth MAN'S ANIMAL ,f B1END3 THE DOO AND THK HEN MOST WIDELY DISTRIBUTED. Regions Where Horse Can't Live Mules Most Common In South Amer ica Great Range of Cattle Cat's Love of Civilisation Silk , Worm Girdles th Earth. The dog Is the most widely distrib uted of the domestic animals, declares the New York Sun. He lives in the lowly hut of the African savage and Is the companion of the Greenland Es quimaux, the most northern Inhab itants of the world. He Is In fact tbe Inseparable companion of man and Is found wherever tbe human race ex ists. His habitat Is thus extended further north and further south than that of any other domestic animal. The horse has also a very wide hab itat He lives north of tbe Arctic cir cle only in the northern ports ot Nor way and Sweden; tbe northern half o2 North America and the northers third of Asia never see him. Tbe most northern part of his habitat In Asia Is around the north shores of the Sea of Oshkotsk and in the neighborhood of Yakutsk on the Lena river. South of this latitude be Is found nearly everywhere except In very moist and hot regions like the Amazon basin and equatorial Africa and the southern part of India. He thrives In the dry beat of tbe Sahara desert in many of the oases, but he would be nought for In vain In tropical Africa between the latitude ol the Cape Verde Islands and the Tropic of Capri lorn. When explorers pushed northward from the Congo their native servants were greatly surprised on reaching a region near Lake Chad to find the horse In abundance. Their astonish ment was unbounded when they sawthe horsemen ot the Soudan on tbe fleet est of riding animals that bad evr met their 'gaze. The mule is more generally distrib uted over South America than any other of the continents, being found there everywhere excepting along a part ot the hot, damp coast between Pernambuco and Rio Janeiro; and he In also practically unknown In the Gulanas, the Amazon basin and Terra del Fuego. His home covers perhaps a fifth as) much area as that of tbe borse. There are few mules around our Groat Lakes excepting along their southern shores, but from the lakes the animal extends southward to the Straits of Magellan. His heme In all temperate and hot countries, is practically coextensive with that of the horse, but it does not extend nearly as far north as tbe horse's range, and he is not found in the deserts. The range of the ass Is about as large as tbat of tbe mule, but be lives in Asia, far to the northeast of the mule's habitat and his habitat stretches across the continent as far as Irkutsk on Lake Baikal. The range of tbe tame reindeer has been widely extended In northern Asia by the tribes tbat number him among their valuable assets; and now he la in process of being widely introduced into Alaska. Civilization, therefore, has done much to extend tbe habitat of this animal to the south, but the do mesticated reindeer has not been In troduced into most of the great regions of the Arctic, where the wild animal roams at will. The range of cattle is practically co extensive with that ot the horse. Cat tle, however, are found more exten sively in very hot damp climates than the horse and are entirely absent from dry desert regions where the horse is found In considerable numbers. Cattle, for example, are wholly lack ing in the desert of Sahara, but they graze in the southern part of India, where no horses are found. They are grown wherever grass thrives, except in some hot regions of excessive hu midity, 'while the horse Is important only in regions whore grain supple ments grass as a part of his food. The hen embraces nearly all the world, and Its range would be as great as that of the dog if it. extended far ther north and south; but it is found north of the Arctic circle only in Nor way and Sweden, and is as yet lack ing in the scouthern part of South America, except where the Scotch have settled in Patagonia. ' Travelers throughout the most of Africa and India and in many little known parts of the world can usually add chickens to their food resources without difficulty; but there are some largo islands, like New Guinea, where the hen is not found, and more than half of Australia Is destitute ot this animal. We seldom think of the enormous addition which tbe hen makes to our resources. It is well known that our country, year by year, usually pro duces more geld and silver than any other country In tho world. But the last Year Book of the agricultural de partment gives facts to show that the value of tbe eggs sold In this country has every year surpassed that of the gold and silver It bos mined since 1850, except in one year. Nearly all our cats are found to the south of southern Iceland, and New Zealand Is the most southern country In which they live. They are almost wholly lacking among the Islands of the Pacific group. There are plenty of tlrcm In tho Philippines, but they are practically unknown In the myriad islands to the east of that -archipelago. The ca.t has been Introduced Into tbe Danish settlements of southwest Greenland, but as a rule it is not a domestic animal among barbarous peo ples. The result Is tbat the animal s not known in about lne-tblrd ot South America, including nearly the entire Amaaon basin, and Is nevef seen in at least twe-tblrds of Africa. , It lives la Morocco. Algeria, along the Nile and among the whites on tho oast and west coasts; but tbe vast expanses ot tbe Sahara and ot the tropical Interior ot Africa do not know this animal. The dumseitcated .ostrich la not found In any of the haunts of the wild bird, but Is confined in Afrira to the north and tho south parts of the con tinent, where be Is raised for his feathers. As Is well known, there are a number of ostrich farms in Arizona and southern California where the animal Is thriving. The honey bee lives almost all over the wcrld where flowers supply the nectar it requires, except in the Am azon basin, in most of which the bee Is not found. Tbe bee, therefore, Is distributed all over our country, though very sparsely In the dry and unforeated regions of tbe west It is wholly absent In the cold and most of the desert parts of the world. The silk worm girdles the earth be tween the 60th parallel of north lati tude and the Tropic of Cancer, being found further south only In Slam and Cochin China. In other words, It lives wherever the mulberry and other trees on which It feeds are found In perfec tlcn. It belongs distinctively to tho northern hemisphere, but may yet be Introduced Into parts of the southern hemisphere that are favorable tor tbe mulberry. FISHERMAN'S PARADISE. A Name to Which Newfoundland Is Ctrtalnly Entitled. A native of Newfoundland Is a born fisherman or a fish dealer. If the turn of his business life prevents him from catching fish, It seldom, If ever, gets blm out of the atmosphere of tbem. It he doe?n't catch them he sells them, or gets his living In some way out ot them. He lives and thrives, as it wore, on codfish, fresh and salted, or in the fattening from cod liver oil, crude and refined. The scheduled com merce of the Island is made Up of fish the cod, herring and the salmon the latter a mere drop In the aggre gate bucket. This condition has ex isted since tbe early years of tbe 16th century, when the Portuguese, tbe BIs cayans, tbe French and English fought fiercely over the rights to tbe coast fishing. For nearly 400 years the traffic in these special products of the seas was, and is now, carried on purely from the dollar standpoint, and during this long period we find no reference to the angling wealth of the Inland waters, except when, here and there, a stray Waltontan, stranded In transit to his far-off home, Improvised a rod and fishing gear and gave glowing accounts of the salmon and trout waters near the coast. But these reports were few and far between, and owing to tbe Isolated location of the Island and the dearth of transportation facilities, Newfoundland continued to be an un developed Utopia to tbe anglers ot tbe world. This condition existed until within the last decade, when the American tourist, as restless and indefatigable In his search for new avenues of pleasure as he probably had formerly been in chasing the dollar, traversed the isl and and corduroyed, as It were, Its many and difficult portages in his heart for choice angling waters. He found them everywhere; nestled In the lap of every vale; In the concaves of tbe hilltops, and dashing down the monntaln sides, widening from turbu lent trout rivulets Into noble salmon rivers flowing placidly to the sea. For be it known tbut more than one-third of the . area of the island is covered with fresh waters, and In their broad reaches live many species of fish es teemed the world over for their game qualities. It Is not to be wondered that such a country forms an objective point in the Itinerary of the angling season with the fisherman. William Harris In the Illustrated Sporting News. Heat Hints From India. Though Britain is Itself a cool coun try English soldiers have plenty ot ex perlence in India, which isn't, and the British war authorities are cona'B'i-iy testing new devices for avo'dlrg sun stroke. A metal lining for army hoi mots was tried out at AMerbhot .Tiring the recent manoeuvres without decis ive results. Sunstroke occurs In tbe British army In India not In the hottest months but In the miiEgy weather Jusi before the rainy season. The rules -for safety In hot weather are: Eat little, especially of mere fuels, such as fat; tako flu.s freely, as they aid the .ernl ratio cooling mechanist,; wr loose, jor- ovs, thin, light-colored cloth; bewart of over-exercise In hot, damp air. l:ullan experience frowns on the no bat fad. Kipling's advice to the "re crulty" Is, "You must wear your 'el- met." Protect your eyes and brn'n and spinal cord by bafbrlm for tbe eyes, hat fur the se.'vl a- l brim or handker chief dr high collar tor the nape of tl-e ntclt. .ii thin pruutry the ennt profoetj the rest ot the spinal cord, but in India an extra layer of thin cldth Is often sewed into tbe middle of the back of the jiu-ket. Meanwhile tho scientists are still dis cussing whether heat prostration Is caused by visible sunlight or h.T the "Roentgen rsys" therein. New York World. Relics of the Armada. Some interesting relics of the Span ish Armada have been found in Tober mory bay, whore one of the Spanish galleons was sunk. A bronze breech loading cannon, laved 1563 is among tbe finds. YEARNINGS. Brisk, break, bak, ' On thy eold gray moo, O While tb thing 1 want but never as get Speak out In thy plaint to m. Oh. well for tb eonntry lass That tb ehoot th chute with yH, And well for th dry good clerk Tbat h bathe In tbe beating awell Anrl th stately mlillonatr Walk down tb ide with a amlle, But allow. h, show me railway ear With hi d) on both aide ot ih allt Up the beai'h In a great whit t-nt There are pri-acher men today, And people stirred by tbe earnest word Dow down their heade and pray. And It'a well they hope to receive Something they ouslit or ought not to, Sat why ean't I bate an automobile That will aut, and quit when It ought tof f br's wind and the shining ana And th beautiful bright blue bay, While band In hand on th shining sand Contiguous lovera atray. I i-aren In vain for tb founti of Joy Tbat fount aa they bill and eoo, For I'm looking today for fountain pea Tbat will fount when 1 want It to. Oh, well tbat the flrherman mourns For tb lobetera that er Bo mora I B should set lobster pot oa th proper apou. For there' lobetera enough on aborat let the tulug we want but never eau get Make all the iiroxneat bleak. And I'm yearning, In vain, for a loat goll ball That will anawer, "Here, sir," whea I peas, Wlntbrop Tackard, In Lite. HUMOROUS. "So the automoblllst finished tbe race in a burst ot speed," "No; only In a burst of the gasoline tank." Teas Gracious! I must be getting awfully old and homely. Jess Yes? Tess Yes, four girls I know are going to be married and have asked me to be their bridesmaid. "And why do you think you would make a good book agent?" asked tbe manager. "Well," replied the appli cant for a Job, "I used to be a pro fessional hypnotist." "Yes, since Mr. Gotrox broke a mlr ror yesterday she is convinced it is vesy unlucky." "How superstitious. "Not at all. it was a French-plate mirror and cost $400." Horry Blanche says she has lnsti perable reasons for remaining single Horace Yes; I know what they are. Harry Then she has told you? Hor ace No, but I've seen her. He I declare, I feel terribly rattled at the Idea of playing In the tourna ment before all that crowd. She Oh, cheer up they probably won't know any more about tennis than you do. Little Bobby Say, Pop? Father- Well, well, what Is It now? Little Bobby It a Chinaman speaks broken English, would a white man spesk broken cblna? (Exit Bobby to bed.) "What Is a man's ideal?" "That depends." "How do you mean?" "Why, before marriage it's the woman he's going to marry, and after marriage it's some woman that be didn't marry." "You could call bim a captain of ln dustry, couldn't you?" "You could, but you wouldn't do it it you were wise at least not to his face. He thinks he's at least colonel of Indus try." "What a dismal feller tbat man Blgs- by Is." "Yes. What's the matter with him?" "I heard he was crossed In love.' "Is that all? I thought he must o' loBt some money on somethln' se rious." "I suppose," said the Impressionable young girl, "tbat you didn't have to wait long for a husband, Mrs. Sharps. "No," replied Mrs. Sharps, "I didn't, but I do now till midnight, at least, and often longer." Clarence (cautiously) Would r If I were to ask you to marry me ei would you be sure to Bay "Yes?" Clara (also cautiously) Well, If I were to say "Yes" er would you be sure to ask me to er marry you? "Of course," said Mr. Staylate, "there are some things that always go with' out saying" "Yes, and worse still," interrupted Miss Patience Gonne yawn ing at the clock, "there are some oth ers that do Just the opposite. "It will come out all right in time," be told his wife. "Fortune knocks at every man's door once, and some day she'll knock at mine." "It won't help you any," returned bis wife. "If For tune wants to find you she'll have to go to the club and send in her card." While waiting In the reception room for their hostess some visitors were entertained by that ladys 4-year-old daughter. One of the callers remarked to the other. "She Is not very p-r-e-t- t-y." "No," Instantly replied tho child, "I am not very p-r-e-t-t-y, but I am very s-m-a-r-t" "Young man," said tbe stern parent, to the applicant for a Job as his son-in-law, "I want you to know that I spyit $5000 on my daughter's educa tion." "Thanks," rejoined the youth who was trying to break into the fam ly circle. "Then I won't have to send her to school again." "Your . financial rating is satisfac tory," said Mrs. DeSwlm to the appli cant for her daughter's band In matri mony, "but I'm not so sure as to your Uncage." "Ob, I've got a lineage from way back," rejoined the young man. "I've had a father and mother, two sets ot grandparents, four sets ot great grandparents, sight sets of" 8wedlsh Offloer fq Turkey. A report from Constantinople Is to the effect tbat 100' Swedish officers will be Installed In the Turkish gendarme oatrps of Macedonia. Their pay will amount to BO Turkish pounds, or about $260 per month. A Japanese author ta said to have completes' a work of flctrou that runs Into ahasty volumes. THE NATIONAL CAME. Waddell baa the ' smstlpsf bftttm average In tbe American League. That Washington Infield works beat tlfnlly. Too bad they ennnot hit. Joe Kelley snys that ITnrry Dnlsft has played great ball for Cincinnati. Pitcher rounds will finish the sensor . In Denver. More farming uv Brooklyn. Robert Loo fledsc. proprietor of the Ft Louis tenin. will rebuild his base ball park next winter. Tip O'Neill, right fielder of Dnffs Milwaukee tesm, will lo utility player for the Bostons In 1904. Catcher Mornn has put more tmllo over the left field fence In Boston thl year than any otbe- player. tjole again leads all of the bats men with a small average for a leader, tbsnks to the foul-strike rule. Cincinnati pnys Mllwnukee $2000 for Pitcher Elliott, and the player will re ceive $2000, with $500 advance. Cleveland seems to hsve fired a Jewel when Walker was canned. Ills work with Louisville has been superb. Catcher Moron, of the Boston Nation- . sis, gets more assists per game than any other backstop In tbe country. The Philadelphia League Club has released pitcher Jack MeKetrldgp, anrl the New York League Club has signed blm. Cntehpr Nppdhnm. who wns to Jolnv tho Boston Nntlonals, did not mnteiisl Ir.c Ills ' folks do not want blm to piny ball. Clarke Griffith predicts that Cleve land will simply swamp the Reds In the Inter-State games at the close of the season. ntcher Roy Evans, Inte of Brooklyn and Ht. Louis, hns signed with t'lio Fodnlln (Mo.) Club, of the Missouri Volley League. Manager Powell, of the Atlantic? tenin, has offered bis men $1000 if they win tho Southern League pennant, $500 If tbe team finishes In second. Place, and $250 for third place. . j SPORTINQ BREVITIES. v Entries for tbe amateur golf cbam tlonBhip total 14S. The rail bird shooting in Delaware began September L Boxing will be resumed In Bntto, Mont, in tbe near future. Tbe Cleveland Club has purchased? the famous Columbus third baseman, Terry Turner. E. E. Smothers' Billy Buck won the $15,000 Massachusetts Stake for trot ters at Readvllle, Mass. Out of twenty-one games decided by a one-run margin, tbe New York Ameiw leans have won fourteen. Crabs were never more plentiful than they are nt present In all the watcra about New York City. ,j Surf casting is demanding the atten tion of anglers these days. Good catches of wen k fish are being made up and down tbe New Jersey coast Ormonde's Right, son of the famous Ormonde, won tbe Autumn Stake at Sheepshcnd Bny, New York City, rid den by O'NIell, who also won on two other mounts. It is said that boxing is to be revived at Chicago this coming winter. It if further said that tbe authorities msy allow tbe bouts to go ten rounds in stead of six. - . C. S. Titus, who lost bis champion ship laurels to Y. B. Greer, the-Boston sculler.-tn the National championship at Worcester, has entered the Middle States regstta st Washington, so that he may meet bis rival again. Louise Kobcr, an elgbtecn-year-oldt girl, won the 100 yards dash at the games of the Grocery Clerks' Union at Celtic Park, New York City, in tbe fast time of 11 4-5 seconds. A twelve-year-old girl won the potato race. Tbere is talk among tbe most Influen tial Clyde yachtsmen of building so other yacht to compete for the Amer ica's Cup. If it is decided to send a boat on such a quest all designers will be asked to compete, and the best de signs will be accepted. Regulating the Exhibits. All exhibits in the Palaces ot Man afactures and Varied Industries at the St. Louis Exposition will be require by Chief Milan H. Hulbert to conform to uniformity In height, so necessary to artistic effect, in a great exhibit building. All ceilings for booths wll be 15 feet high. The largest Bhow :ases may be 15 feet and surmounted with a dome. The other sizes provid ed for are 9 feet, 6 feet 6 Inches and 12 Inches. Counters are 30 Inches high and on these may be showcases It Inches deep. All tables on which dis plays are made must be of tbe uni form height of 30 Inches. All railings must be 30 Inches high. Bases for ex hibits must be six inches high. Detecting Food Adulterations The photo-mtcroscoplc camera for taking pictures of food adulterant tnd disease bacteria, and the micro :ome for cutting articles of food inte" nrlnitesimol pjeces, have lafely been isod with great success by tbe Agrt .-ultural Department. Imported foods ire now tested by the department In t mkroEcoplo laboratory established for the purpose Many astonishing rev elations have been made under the sew reculatiotiB adorned br Congress. Fifty years ago the population ot England and Wales was divided equal ly between city and country. Now 7T per cent of It la urban. The LATEST FASHIONS IN GENT'S CLOTHING T The newest, finest ok) Ihs, the latest designs, all the most fashionable aula for the summer asasoa. Call at our shop and see samples of sloth oomplete 11ns and lot as ooovlooe you that we are the loader la our lino. Reasonable prtoas always emu usiaoMoa nanus Johns r ThojTyswn..