FARMER JOHN Yea, Bary, there's been quit a change Ince seventy years ago; If quite a time to look back to, but yet It don't seem ao; M only seems a little while alnet I was but a child, And you a girl In pantalettea a-rompln' round ao wild. But time flies on with nimble wings, and (aster ev'ry year, Till we've "most reached the end of life; the grave Is drawin' near; And lookln' hack through nil those years, comparing them Willi now, The progress made In everything la won drous, I'll allow. my father used a wooden plow In plowln up hla Innd, !Aad renpin' grain, In them old days, was always done by hand; The women worked out In the fields a- helpln' mke and bind. And did as much at hocln' corn aa any man you'd find. Our women used to card and apln and weave the clothes we wore; Tew pants and shirts were good enough Imck In those days of yore; And linsey-woolsey dresses that the wo men used to wear, If seen upon a woman now, would make our ladles stare. We didn't have no railroads then, with pnlacc-cnrs so gay, Where one can go a hundred mtlea and get back the snme day. Our grain we hauled to market In our lumber-wagons then; Twould take a couple of days or more to go and back again. But everything has changed so much grandfather's wooden plow Has passed away, and farmers till their land with steam-plows now, And women folks a-reapln' In the graln- llelds now ain't seen. For all such work Is quicker done with some all-round machine. Although still under thirty years of ge. Walking Moose was one of the most successful furtakers of Mb tribe. His hunting-ground, which ran north and west between Hudson Bay and the great mountains, was vaster than many kingdoms. Now, after a pros perous winter, he and his squaw and twd sledge-dogs crossed the weaken ing ice on Smoke River and ascended the bank toward the three log shan ties of Alexander's Hope. Walking Moose stalked In front, car rying his trade gun, in its blanket sack, under his right arm. Behind came the squaw and the dogs, drag ging the sledge piled high with pelts of marten and fox, deer and bear. Pleasurable anticipation glowed In the hearts of all four of the little party. The two Indians thought of the treasures of the post. Tobacco and tea would again be theirs, and per lap; the hunter would indulge In a red shirt and the squaw she was a good aquaw would be treated to a blanket and a few yards of gaudy cot ton cloth. Ammunition must be bought for the trade gun, for already the streams were breaking from their fetters, and the beavers, leaving their strongholds, presented tempting marks tor well-directed bullets. The dogs leoked forward to a few extra feeds and the summer freedom from the ledge. The hunter paused half-way up the lope, and turned upon his wife with a cicely calculated grunt The grUnt, and a gesture of the left hand, con Teyed the truth to her. She ceased pulling at the sledge and looked keen ly toward the shanties. "McLeod not come yet!" she cried, tn a shrill voice. "He still way down at the big fort. He not think at all f the poor Injuns." "Walking Moose nodded, smiled wist fully, and continued the ascent. The squaw stooped again and dragged on the leathern thong, but now with a Ttctousness that disturbed the tolling togs. Well, the poor woman bad cer tainly been building on the tea and mew blanket They halted In the lit tle clearing that surrounded the cab Ins, and gazed about disconsolately. The snow lay unbroken by any human nark, and the chimneys stood smoke less above the low roofs. Accustomed M they were to the silence and lone Kness of forest and hill, the still ness of the empty clearing and de serted buildings daunted them. "Too early!" exclaimed the hunter. "No bacey, no tea, no powder and lead .till McLeod come -up from St. John's." McLeod's absence from the little summer post of Alexander's Hope was keen blow to the plans of Walking Moose. The store contained food and unmunltlon that he needed and tea nd tobacco that he craved; his sledge was heaped with the good currency of the land yet he and his squaw must sit idle and hungry until the agent erurned from his winter quarters, three days Journey to the southward. The beavers would expose themselves long hundreds of flooded streams that he knew, while he must sit in Idleness before the empty shacks. He bad intended to rest at the post for only two days, and then set out for bis summer camp on a distant river, bulling beaver as he went. Bnt perhaps the trader even now was travelling northward. Hope glow erf at the thought The dogs were loosed and given their scanty feed of dried moose-meat. fi, fire was lighted before a thicket at the edge of the clearing, a rough shelter was built, and the valuable turs were placed under cover. In silence the two ate their meal of pern nlcan, uncheered by teat uncrowned y the comforting pipe and for weeks they had looked forward to those simple luxuries. Early the next morning Walking Moose climbed to the summit of a hill behind the post and gazed southward. Dark woods and white plains stretched sway foi miles; but not a sign of the CI THE TRADING OF WALKING MOOSE. 3 By THEODORE ROBERTS. ft ON PROGRESS. Wo used to think tho post-boy's horse the fastest thing we knew. And thouL'ht that news was travelln' fast as 'long the road lie flew; Now the telegraph will carry newa from hare to any state, And bring an unswer back to us by wire while we wait. We used to think, tn those old times, 'most everything was known, And no one drenmeU 'twas possible to make a telephone Where we can stand and talk with friends a hundred miles away, And though the dlstnriee seems so great, hear every word they ny. Then, Snry, there's the phonograph, that wonderful machine That takes the cake on everything that I have ever seen; It bottles up for future use the speeches that It hears,. And pours them out when wanted, though uicy limy ue ncyi mi Now ocean cables bind together each And news from Europe reaches us be- lore wiu iimiw 11. d Bciii. They send us news of happenln s on some far foreign shore. And we read It In our papers here the evenin ueiuio. Electric lights change night to day make midnight seem like noon And 'twouldn't be surprisln' if It hap pened putty soon They'd get to bottlln' daylight to save up lor me nigni. If things go on progressln' for the com- In flrty years As they have done in fifty past, I II cer tnlnlv hnvA feArs Some plan will be contrived to change Nature's old-fashioned laws, And stop this old earth's whirlin' with a migiuy suuaen psuso. H. H. Johnson. tardy agent was to be seen. Return ing to the clearing, he discovered his wife at one of the windows of the store, her face pressed against the parchment that served for glass. He pushed her aside roughly; then, un able to withstand the temptation, he took her place and peered Into the dusky treasure-house. There hung shirts of red flannel and blue; gaudy blanketings; woolen stockings of many hues, with dang ling tassels; and here and there he caught the gleams from canisters of tobacco and tea. At one end of the dusty counter stood little kegs of gun-powder and leaden bullets. And as he searched for other treasures with longing eyes, he caught the shad ows of the squaw'B face against the window in the opposite wall of the store. At that he turned away and called to her angrily. But pity for the woman who had worked so well and cheerfully through all that long winter ached in his breast. McLeod did not arrive at the post that day. Neither did he appear on the next. Walking Moose haunted the store, sometimes fingering his empty tobacco-pipe, sometimes contem plating his empty musket. The Bquaw worked listlessly at the dressing of a moose hide, sitting for hours before their rough shelter without saying a word or lifting her eyes. A thou sand swollen streams broke their fetters of Ice, and the beavers swam up from their winter retreats. "Me go get McLeod," said Walking Moose, on the morning of the third day after their arrival at Alexander's Hope, "and you stay with he skins and the dogs." The woman looked up at him pite ously. She was a good squaw and young and her eyes were large and bright. "Yes, me go," repeated the hunter, firmly. ' "Three days to St. John's, and three days back and you take care of the skins." He glanced about him uneasily, high and low, to right and left anywhere but at the woman. "Me travel fast all alone," ho add ed. - A few minutes later he set out on the three days' Journey to the south ward, with snow-shoes on his feet, a pouchful of dried meat at his side, and his useless firearm on his shoul der. The dogs ran after him, but were called back by the squaw. Walking Moose travelled stolidly for ten miles. McLeod and the big fort seemed to be a whole world's length away; but behind him, at the end of the tral lot his snow-shoes, were a woman and two dogs. He continued, the south ward Journey. The sun was In the west, a handbreath above the far hills, when the heart of Walking Moose rebelled against the desola tion and unreason of the lonely Jour ney. Turning square in his tracks, the hunter began to reclaim the miles he had so wearily unraveled. The north cal!s3 to him with the voice of the lonely woman and the enchant ment of the little store at Alexander's Hope. The memory of the red shirts, the powder, the tea and the tasseled stockings drew him and mocked him In the same turn of thought Ont voice spoke within him, "The door is weak. Tou will take what you need and pay fairly with the good skins. It is your duty to supply you7selt with powder and ball for your gun, that you may kill the beaver and musquash and wild geese. And you and the woman deserve tea and tobacco and you have the good furs with which to pay." But another voice whispered that such a thing could not be done; that only an agent of the great company might unasten that door and measure out those needful and desirable stores; that the name of Walking Moose would become a name of scorn In the world if he did hla trading with out waiting for McLeod. But the first voice was the stronger; ane Waging Moose sped along through the fading twilight, stilling the lesser voice at every stride. The sky was clear .and In the star shine the trail of the snow-shoes was plain under the buntsr's feet He ran in the level and open places; and no where did ho halt to draw breath until half of tho return Journey was accomplished. Then he ate sparingly and rested for an hour. Dawn was cray In the east when the huskies uiinounced their master's return with furious barking. The squaw ran from the lodge. "No wait for McLeod," said the hunter. "Come now, and see me make honest trade. Bring the skins." By the pale and unearthly light they broke the wooden hinges of the door and entered the treasure house. "Walking Moose make this trade all alone. You no touch," said the brave. First of all he opened a canister of tobacco and weighed out five pounds of the gold-brown luxury, and placed five marten skins In payment on top of the canister. Of flour he measured out four skins' worth; of powder and lead, ten skins' worth; of tea, five and of dry-goods, seven. In each case he placed the furs on the shelf or pack age from which he had taken the goods. Then he stacked the remain der of his winter's catch on the floor and placed his signature on top of the pile a spruce cone, a strip of birch bark and a porcupine quill that McLeod might know to whose credit to place the furs. They mended the door with care; then pipes were lighted and tea brewed, and the bitterness of the long trails was forgotten. The first enow had fallen In a night and melted in a day. It was in that elusive season called Vidian summer that Walking Mpose came again to Alexander's Hope, this time to buy an outfit for the winter campaign. The squaw and the huskies, and even the brave himself, carried packs of pern mlcan, beaver-skins and Bmoked fish on their backs. The sledge and snow shoes had been cached in the woods near Alexander's Hope. Walking Moose found a stranger a young man with spectacles on his nose smoking a pipe In front of the store. "Where McLeod?" he Inquired. "Mr. MeLeod was promoted to the Bear River post last April," replied the stranger. "I am in charge here now. Post has been closed ha'f the summer. You've come Just In time, if you want to trade, because I'm going to shut "My men are coming up from St. up shop In a few days." The hunter nodded. John's before freezing, with the boats," continued the agent, "and we'll take all the trade back to the big fort. It ain't safe here. Some one got into the store last winter and helped him self." Walking Moose straightened him self with dignity. "Me, Walkln' Moose, done that," be said. "Made good trade; paid honest; left big heap of skins for credit, and mended door." "It was you, was It?" sneered the agent. "You're the honest Injun, are you?" Walking Moose nodded gravely. "Do you expect me to believe that you didn't take tobacco and rum and stuff to the full value of all the furs you left?" said the other. "I know more about Injuns than you think, Mr. Moose." "Me honest trapper," replied the brave. "McLeod he trust me. He full growed man, McLeod. The other laughed unpleasantly. "Well, do you want to trade your beaver?" he asked. Walking Moose shook his head. "Me take beaver way east, to Bear River now," he said. "But take trade for skins on my credit all right." "No you don't, my son," said the agent "You Can't fool Benjamin Brown with your tricks." , "No give me baccy an' powder for my credit, for my good skins in the store?" asked the hunter, sharply. . "That's what I mean exactly. This post doesn't pay twice over for skins when I'm In charge of it," answered the white man. Walking Moose looked round him on every side. His squaw and the hus kies and the robber in front of him were the only living creatures In sight His hand shot out and clutched the front of the agent's shirt. A quick Jerk brought the offender to his knees. In a minute he was bound with thongs at ankles and wrists. Walking Moose, his countenance un ruffled, lifted the agent of the great company Into the store and propped him against a stack of flour-bags. Then he motioned to the squaw to enter. "Now," said he, "you two tee good trade." He found his bundle of skins heap ed In a corner with others, drew It forth and unfastened it For half an hour he measured and weighed provisions and counted skins. Now and then he inquired the rate of trade of the agent When the last skin was spent, he helped the woman make the purchases into packs. Then he turn ed to the agent "Me leave little fire outside. You hop out pretty soon, and burn your bands free. Easy 'nough to do. Walk ing Moose had to do it once himself. Then you better wait for your, men an' don't try follow Walking Moose." The squaw exclaimed then in ad miration. Her husband frowned slightly. - "Me no bad Injun," he said. "No rough Injun 'cept with fool. Now we go to Bear River and trade the beaver with McLeod." Youth's Companion. A Prehistoric Reptile. I'HB DIPLODOCUS SKELETON IN THE CARNEGIE MUSEUM AT PITTSBURG MR. CARNEGIE RECENTLY PRESENTED A REP LICA TO THE GERMAN GOVERNMENT. Ile Cutter. A California man thinks that the common method of dissecting pies by the aid of the ordinary knife Is too Blow and also too Inaccurate for these days of hustle and bustle. He came to the conclusion that a specially de signed pie cutter was necessary for the purpose, and consequently con cluded to devise one, the result of his work being shown in the illus tration. This pie cutter comprises a base adapted to support a pie of the common size and shape.. Hinged to the back of the box Is the cutter proper, consisting of a lever and the knife blades. The latter are sus pended from the lover directly over the place designated for the pie, and are arranged to divide the pie Into six or more pieces at one operation of the lever. - Families containing many children would find this novel pie cutter invaluable. As the pie would be divided into pieces of ex actly equal size, there would be no possibility of showing partiality, and petty quarrels over who was to get the biggest piece would be elimin ated. Too Hasty. Governor Harris, of Ohio, said in an after dinner speech In Columbus: "This matter is a serious matter, and it must be tal.en seriously. Haste is a bad thlig. It surely always causes error. Mused to know a manufacturer. He was a good, honeBt man, but rath er strict, rather close. Furthermore, he was Inclined to be a little hasty. "He had Instituted In bis mill a system of fines fines for lateness, fines for mistakes, fines for spoiled work, and so on. "Well, In the rush season, happen ing to awake one morning very early, he wen: to the mill a little after starting time. As he got out of his automobile he saw a pale,' haggard, hollow-eyed man walk wearily through the gate. " 'Aha, Joe Harris,' he shouted an grily, 'ten minutes late, eh? Well, you're fined fifteen cents. Not a word now. That's the rule.' " 'Take you're time, boss,' Harris answered. 'I ain't knocked off from yesterday, yet' " Washington Star. A Judge's Sharp Tongue. Many aint sayings of Lord Young, a famous Scotch lawyer who has Just died, are being recalled by the English press. Once a ilttle ad vocate who was slightly misshapen heckled the great lawyer beyond what his patience would stand, anl finally pinned him oh the exact mean lig of a mark of Interrogation. "I would called it," said Lord Young, fixing his eyeslasa In his eye, a little crooked thing thai, asks questions." It ris not long ago that, looking HOW MODERN PROGRESS BREAKS f : 4.' A- 1122 A RAILKOAO ENTERING PE across the table at a public dinner at the over-rubicund cheeks and fishy eyes of his opposite neighbor, he In quired who tho owner of the vinous countenance mlgUt be and was told he was the president of a water trust. "Aye," said Lord Young, "well, be looks like a man that could be trusted with any amount of water!" Some one told Lord Young that the House of Lords had on appeal af firmed a decision of his. "It may be right, after all," was his lordship's reply. Bellman. The Happy Reign. Happy, it has been said, is the peo ple that has no history. Yet mori happy the kings who are In the same case. Recently Oscar II. of Sweden visited a Stockholm school. He ques tioned a pupIL the best of the class, they bad told the King. "My little friend," said Oscar, "tell me some remarkable' fact of my reign." The child reflected, hesitated, was greatly puzzled, tben broke Into sobs. "Why do you cry?" said the King gently. "It 1s It Is, tiro, be-cause I do not know any remarkable fact of yur reign." "No more do I," responded the de scendant o' Bernadotte. Le Crl de Paris. Collector of Baby Pictures. The Prince of Wales' pet diver sions, next to shooting, are smoking and stamp collecting. Another queer hobby is collecting babies' photo graphs. The more comical the face of the baby the better its portrait pleases His Royal Highness. He even col lects pictures of babies published as advertisements by proprietors of in fants' foods. His collection of post age stamps is worth at least 20,000. So keen a philatelist is he that on several occasions collectors have had to thank him for throwing light on uncertain scientific points concerning the study of stamps. Tit-Bits. . To Make Pencil Sharpener. How can 1 make a simple pencil point sharpener? B. K. Take a paper dip, A, and a piece of emery cloth, B. Fold the edges over as shown. The pencil point Is Pencil Sharpener In Use. placed In the cravice and moved up and down, resulting in a point as fino as may be desired. If tje pencil .s revolved between the fingers, while sharpening a round point will be the result. Technical World Magazine. Italian Submarines. It is reported that, In consequence of the success which attended the re cent trials of the Italian submarine Glauco in the open sea off Taranto, at a depth of twenty-two fathoms, the Italian naval authorities are dis posed to establish there a station for submarines. Owing to the shallow ness of the local waters, Venice is far from being a satisfactory base for carrying out trials with submarine boats. Engineer. It has been calculated that the cost of a muddy day In London is something like $25,000. DOWN THE CHINESE WALL. 1 1: iLT KB ra sob rJa VfVs. if- KIN NEAR THE SOUTH GATE. W. Burnham. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Time may be money, but It isn't ao scarce. Pome fellows never pay up tilt you run them down. , ' It's generally the nerve of other peo ple that gets on ours. Even a family tree may occasional ly need a little pruning. Some peoplo are satisfied to be un der studies all their lives. Few men thank heaven that they have more than they deserve. Clothes don't make a man any more than a complexion makes a woman. There are few thipgs more certain than expenses we hadn't counted on. Many a man who Is up with the lark has really 'kept the lark up all night. Even after a woman becomes a Mrs. she may discover that things go amiss. A girl can generally manage to keep the tears back if crying makes her nose red. You can't always tell If a man is well bred from the amount of dough In his possession. It Isn't until a man asks a favor that he discovers some of his friends are merely acquaintances. Perhaps It Is possible for a woman to keep a secret, but most of them are terribly out of practice. It would do the chronic bore a lot of good to take a few days oft and get acquainted with himself. Some fellows are in such a hurry to do things that they hate to lose time finding out how to do tbem. The man who takes a cork out of a bottle by pushing it in Is apt to do everything else on the same princi ple. From the Gentle Cynic in the New York Times. LONGEST CIRCUIT. How Telegraph Line from London to Teheran Is Worked. Probably the longest telegraph cir cuit In the world, says St Martln's-le-Grand, has been in operation for over a year on the lines of the Indo-Euro-peon Telegraph company, between London and Teheran, Persia's capital. This circuit is 4000 miles In length, and In Its course it traverses the North Sea for 200 miles and passes through Belgium, Germany, Russia, Turkey In Asia and Persia. The Wheatstone automatic system of transmission and reception Is em ployed on the circuit. By this sys tem messages are transmitted at the rate of from 80 to 400 words a minute, according to the nature of the circuit, as against 25 to 35 words by manual More transmission. On the London-Teheran circuit there are ten automatic repeating sta tions namely, at Lowestoft, Emden, Berlin, Warsaw, Rouno, Odessa, Kertch, Sukhum Kaleh, Tlflls and Tauris. The business for and from Manchester and Liverpool is also ban died direct with Teheran. It will be understood that automatic repeaters virtually take the place of operators at the repeating stations. In the case of the circuit under consider ation there are repeating instruments and batteries at each of the ten re peating stations. As the line is di vided into 11 parts, each part is com paratively short. Speculation. Morris Sellers Largey, the young Montana millionaire, who is devoting himself to the theatrical business, said at a dinner apropos of his new theatre in New York: "I think that theatricals offer a fine field for shrewd investors. They are very steady. They are not as the slave trade was during the Civil War. "Perhaps you have heard of the slave who wanted to buy his freedom. This was before the war, and, since he was a very good slave, his master would not sell him to himself at any price. "But as the war approached Its end the master not unnaturally changed his mind. He sent for the slave one morning and asked him If he was still of the same mind about purchasing himself. "The slave scratched his head, look ed at the ground and faltered: " 'Well, Marse Henry, Ah did wanter buy maself, but Ah been a-studyln' about it right smaht lately, sab, an' Ah done come to de 'elusion dat in these times ntggah prop'ty am too onsartln, Bah, to put any money In.' " Washing ton Star. Parliamentary Language. Representative Champ Clark of Missouri tells a story about former Representative Henry U. John-on of Indiana. "Mr. Johnson." he said, "was en gaged In a debate with an Illinois Congressman and called him an ass. This was unparliamentary, of course, and had to be withdrawn. Pursuant to the order of the speaker, Mr. John son said: "'I withdraw the language I used, Mr. Speaker, but I Insist that the gen tleman from Illinois Is out of order.' " 'How am I out of order" demanded the Illinois man, with considerable heat. " 'Probably a veterinary surgeon can tell you,' retorted Johnson. This was parliamentary and went to the Rec ord." Indianapolis News. St Thomas Episcopal church in New York Is about equally divided whether to expend 11,000,000 on a new church or split the amount and give one-half of it to mission work, using the other half for a church.