HIS WEAPON'S. Here hnngs his gauntlet by the door! At thrice a hundred foemcn's feet Be hurled thin challenge to the floor. And never stained it with defeatl To me he Hropt hie eyei no more I And his the victory sweet! Here, like a silver moon, his shield, That fronted thrice a hundred foes, Cut once, upon the tourney-held, 1 He cast it off to wear my rose. (Be fought and fell; his wound, it healed; But mine, it grows and grows! Froie to the scabbard, hangs his sword That smote the doughty foe to dust, Bis token, like hia promised word. Forgotten in the years of rust; But once he spoke; because I heard, , J trust him still T'trust! L Aloysius Coll, in Lippincott'l. 4444 THE 44444 Struggle on Swartz Kop X 4 Br MARK F. WILCOX. 4444 I With his curly flaxen hair and red eheeks, Plet Joubert was not what you would call pugnacious - looking. He was big and fat, too, or at least lie appeared so; but those who had had occasion to feel the grip ot his Angers said that the plump flesh was 'made of corded steel; and no one in our little South African school cared to pick a quarrel with him. He was a good-natured young giant, though, and rarely did we ever see him in a passion; but then, as the saying goes, he saw blood. One of those times was when he fought the leopard. There were four of us, all stout, , country-bred-ouths of English or Dutch parentage, Plet Joubert, David Saalfleld, John Gebers and myself, out for a Saturday holiday, bird shooting in the bush on Swartz Kop, a broad, flat-topped hill five miles from town. No one of us carried a gun; for, in the first place, we could not afford it, and In the second, there was vastly more sport for us and more chance for .he birds in using sling Shots. None of your factory-made elastics buttoned on a east-iron prong were . these; but thick, tough, genuine rub ber In round red or gray cords the size of a lead-pencil, which we bought by the foot for ninepence, cut into halves, equipped with leather thongs and a pouch big enough to hold acorns and fastened to a stout wooden prong on which was carved In little notches the record of the game killed. We were after rock-pigeon that afternoon, among the squat mimosa shrubs on the undulating hilltop, which was nothing more than a huge ' block of granite with precipices on AH sides except the one toward the school, where a steep, although con tinuous, slope led to the summit. In the excitement of the chase we wan dered over the two square miles ot table-land, until on the side farthest from town, we entered the thickest part ot the bush and became sep arated. Still, We kept fairly close together, for when 'Plet shouted we all heard him; but we all mistook it for the cry he usually made after a success ful shot, and we paid no further at tention to him. It was only when John Gebers happened to stumble on him, about ten minutes later, and raised a continued outcry that we discovered anything out ot the or dinary. - David and I found John, with a bloody nose, sparring with a wild, dlsheveled-looklng man, 'whom, all tatters and gore, we hardly recog nized as Plet Joubert. "Vy not you comes ven I callB! " he roared, and made furiously at us. - Finally, by united opposition, we - managed to pound him Into tarae ness and rationality, so that he was able, in his quaint Dutch dialect, to tell us ot his experience. I cannot begin to do Justice to that phraseology and the characteristic gestures that accompanied it; but perhaps it will prove almost as in teresting if I tell the story in plain, Straightforward English. He had been crawling across a bare, stony spot near the brow of the hill in order to get within firing dis tance of three brown birds in a shrub, when, suddenly and without the slightest warning, one of those small South African leopards, now so rare among the colonies, and yet all the more dangerous because of their in creased wariness and stealth, ap peared, climbing over the edge ot the cliff. . The surprise was mutual, for a fresh breeze blowing In over the hill, had prevented the animal from catch ing tha human scent. It drew back at first, showing its teeth and spitting as any cat will do when cornered. But it was evidently misled by the appearance of a human being crawl ing on all fours, or maddened by hun ger; for instead of retreating whence It came, it made ready, all at once, lor an attack. Plet understood the sudden, men acing flattening of the lithe body on the bare rock, and countered with a swift snap of his already loaded sling. , He never knew where he hit the beast, but the effect was astounding. With a hideous snarl, like the tear ing of canvas, it came swift as a bul let at him. His sling was lost, his bent arms were thrown against his ides, and there was the chunky, warm body ot the animal right against his chest before be could Wink! He liad risen to his knees to make the shot, and the impetus of the at tack threw him back upon his bams; but with a tremendous effort be was able to keep himself from going over Completely on his back. The beast was ripping the shirt off him with horrid digs ot its claws, while Its tense, snapping Jaws shot hot breath into bis face and sought his Jugular vein. Just in time he caught its shoulders with both hands, and by sheer force of will and muscle kept the head away from him. Then it was that he remembered us and called for help; tor he found that he bad strength enough to keep the animal, tor a few seconds, at least, from his throat, and thought that he could hold out until we came. BUt the muscular strain must have constricted his voice, for we heard only a short exclamation, and that was all. When we did arrive, the fight was over. Meanwhile an unexpected dig ot the thing's claws caught him over the eyebrow, and the gush of blood that followed half-blinded and thoroughly roused him; so that now he began to struggle not only for life, but for re venge. Still wrestling with the beast, he managed to get up on his feet, and With a Herculean effort be tore It from him and hurled it to the ground. Before he could jump on it, however. and crush it under his heavy veld-i schoen, the leopard had sprung away. It came back immediately, with a high vault into the air toward Plet's face. He met it with two powerful swings of his. fists on its bullet head that would have stunned an ox; for you must remember that he was a large boy, even for his eighteen years, and had the muscles ot a heavy weight prize-fighter. But the blows caused the leopard simply to drop on Its feet a yard from him, when with Incredible swiftness of rebound It leaped again at him, this time catch ing him with its Jaws high up on the right shoulder. Fortunately the thick double seams of his khaki Jacket turned the ani mal's teeth, so that the bite was hardly more than skin-deep; other wise it might have proved the end of the doughty Boer. As it was, Plet, with something hot and sticky blind ing his eyes and wetting his shirt, and making him feel that the leopard had got the better ot him at last, was maddened to desperation, and put all of his great strength into one last furious attempt to tear the vise-like jaws loose. He gripped the neck, and squeezing hard, jerked savagely away from him. The beast held on with deadly per tinacity, until the checking ot its wind caused it to gasp a little, when, ' with a sickening tear of clothes and flesh, it came away so suddenly that it was propelled far out of Plet's grasp, and the recoil sent the boy flat on his back. He was up again in an Instant, rag ing by now with the fury of the con flict. Wiping his eyes on his sleeve, he looked for his antagonist, and was all the more exasperated when he found that it had totally disappeared. He was still blindly and frenzledly hunting it, when John Gebers and the rest of us appeared; and overwrought as he was from the awful struggle, he turned his mad fury upon us. When he had finished his narrative, David Saalfleld peered apprehensive ly over the hill, and asked what had become of the animal, "I not know dot," replied Plet, in his dialect. . "Maype he gone pack to der cave." ".I don't believe that," broke in John Gebers, who was the oldest and most experienced ot our crowd, "not after fighting the way it did. It doesn't usually attack a man, but when it does Which way were you facing, Plet, when you pulled the thing from you?" "I not know," said the Boer, nurs ing his eyebrow. "Well," declared John, "I believe you must have been facing the preci pice near the edge, and you threw It clean over into the valley." "Why, dot's so! I not dinks of dot!" gasped Piet. We all threw ourselves flat and craned over the edge of the cliff. Only a few feet below was a fissure in the rock that made a narrow ledge on the sheer wall, and seemed to lead into a natural cave. A few days later, armed with a borrowed rifle, we ex plored that crevice, but how we came and saw and conquered the nlate of Plet's leopard is another story. The proof of the Boer's tale, however, was before our astonished eyes, as we stared into the rocky valley far be low. There, caught upon a jagged boulder, was a bunch of dark-spotted brown fur, which, even at that dis tance, we recognized as the body ot a leopard. From the Youth's Com panion. Sounding by Sight. An Ingenious device by which the depth of a swift river above a hlch fall in Ontario was ascertained is de scribed by Mr. H. W. Hixon In the Engineering and Mining Journal. It was too dangerous to make soundings from a boat, so Mr. Hixon planted a transit on one bank, and from it car ried a strong wire, with a heavy lead weight at the end, to the opposite snore. Tne wire was drawn taut, and the weight was gradually pulled across on the bottom of tha rivar At stated intervals a sight along the wire from the transit to the point where the wire dipped into the water gave the inclination of the straight line. The length of submerged wire and its angle with the water surface being known, it was easy to calculate the depth at the various points. , Labeled Workmen. Japanese workmen are all labeled with the characters of their trade and the name ot their employer. Of the seven best graduates abroad recently examined in Pekin, China, five had been educated in the United Btates, New Tork City. Military effects are greatly in vogue just now, and this blouse is one of the fffvorltes of the season. In the Illustration it is made of striped material and its smartness is somewhat enhanced by the fact that it could be utilized for plain fabrics cut on the straight it the bias effect Is not liked. It Is the straps and buttons that really give the military suggestion, and these re main however the material Itself may be cut. The model is closed invisibly beneath the strap at the back, but those women who find that waists that close at the front are a boon can asily make it that way by simply dosing the back seam and finishing the front edges under the strap. The waist is made with fronts, slde frontSj backs and side-backs, the vari ous joinings allowing of the chevron effect, which is so well liked just now. The fronts are joined to the yoke portions and the side-fronts are tucked. The strapB conceal all the seams and the straight military collar finishes the neck. The sleeves are made in sections and the seams join ing them are to be found beneath the straps, while straps also trim the lower edges. The quantity of material required for the medium size is five and one half yards twenty-one or twenty-four, three and one-half yards thirty-two, or two and three-fourth yards forty four inches wide, to cut from striped material as Illustrated; four- yards twenty-one or twenty-four, three yards thirty-two, or two yards forty four Inches wide, to cut from plain material or with stripes on the straight. Collars and Chains For Mourning. Jet collars, necklaces, long chains, bracelets and pins of all descriptions In a dull finish are worn by women who are in mourning. Pongee Parasols. Many of the pongee parasols are embroidered in all-over design, or in a deep border, the embroidery usually being In self color, though occasion ally the Chinese and Japanese designs and colorings are employed and rich Oriental blues, greens and yellows are used upon the natural toned ground. Some very good pongee models are quite plain, save for a wide border ot gay stripes or a border of gay color embroidered in pongee-toned dots. Rang to Return. Bangs are coming back to fashion, but that does not mean that young women need cut their front hair short and do it up in crimps at night, neither smear it with the stick quince seed and dandelion lotions of ancient bang days. The new bang is a soft, fluffy row of what are called pincurls resting on the forehead, Just below the pompadour; and they are called pincurls presumably because a good many ot them are attached to a hair pin arrangement and tucked in after the pompadour Is finished. That is to say, they have no more connection with the wearer's head than they have with the braids and puffs and curs that decorate the top of it. This little' row of curly bang across the forehead is to be considered more and more au fait as the days go by. Skirt With Spanish Flounce. Every design that suits bordered material or flouncing is In demand Just now, when there are so many beautiful fabrics of the sort offered. Here is a skirt that Ib made with a Spanish flounce and which is eminent ly graceful and becoming, while it is simple in the extreme. In the illus tration it is made ot bordered batiste. Bows of ribbon and folds of silk are greatly in vogue for the purpose, and lace and bandings are much used after the same manner, while folds ot one material on another are also liked. The skirt is made with upper por tion and the flounce, The upper edge of the flounce is turned under to form its own heading and is gathered and joined to the skirt, which in turn is gathered at its upper edge and Joined to the belt. The quantity of material required for the medium size is seven yards of bordered material twenty-four inches wide, or seven and one-half yards ot plain material twenty-four inches wide, five and one-fourth yards thirty-two, or four and one-fourth yards forty-four Inches wide. Ylofets Worn on Arms, i No longer does tha New York girl have a huge bunch of violets pinned to her corsage. Instead she ween about her glove a band ot velvet of green or purple as a bracelet, and to this is securely pinned a rather small bunch of violets, flatly grouped. Sometimes there is a gardenia in the centre, with Just a few violets en circling it, and then again there is just an orchid with sufficient violets surrounding it to form a border. FOR CUT FLOWERS. Plant early-flowering cosmos, giant 'snap-dragon, scarlet salvia, let peas, annual chrysanthemums, pop pies of the peony and carnation types, verbenas, asters, nasturtiums, Stella sunflowers, petunias, nlcotlana and zinnias. Ladles' World. FOR EDGINGS. Choose free bloomers of low growth, like sweet alyssum, lobelia, dwarf candytuft, double portulaca, dwarf nasturtium, California poppy, ageratum, dwarf snapdragon, phlox Drummondll, and tor an edging for tall background, the dwarf zinnias. Ladles' World. WHEN TO CUT. Gather the halt-opened buds ot the poppy in late evening or before the sun shines upon them in the morning, and they will keep perfectly for a few days a most effective cut flower. Cut sweet peas and all fragrant flow ers in late evening. Others may be cut in early morning. Place stems in deep water. Ladles' World, FOR MASSING. The edging plants Just given are unsurpassed for low effects, but tor places requiring taller plants, choose giant snapdragon, mammoth zinnias, scarlet salvias, African marigolds, and later, the asters. For massing against high fences and buildings, common single hollyhocks, Alleghany holly hocks, hundred-flowered sunflow ers and rudbeckla golden-glow. Ladles' World. BERRY NOTES. Berry growing, like market gar dening, requires both experience and brains. The successful grower Is the one who selects the crops adapted to his soil and climate and for which there is a demand in his market, and who then sticks to these crops through lean as well as fat years. The most obvious means of con trolling the brown-tall moth, and the easiest one, is the collection and de struction of the winter nests after the leaves have fallen, says American Cultivator. These webs are conspic uous from October to April. SALAD AND "SMELLY" HERBS.. In the days of our grandmothers no kitchen garden was without Its com plement of herbs for flavoring dishes and perfuming the linen closets. These are all easily raised, and many ot them, once started, will seed them selves while others still, once estab lished, only need a little attention in the way ot mulching through the hot months and protecting through the cold, yielding their store ot leaves, buds and blossoms freely, and far superior to any of the commercial "dried" things or tinctures. In mak ing out your order for seeds, it would be well to include an. assortment ot these. Many of them would better be ordered as plants. - Celery, even where not blanched. Is fine for soups and salads, and the seeds, sown in boxes early, germinate readily. Transplant sb the seedlings become crowded, clipping oft the top as they grow to prevent their becom ing spindling. The large plants may be blanched. by wrapping with thick paper. Watercress, peppergrass, parsley should all be grown; chives, leeks, tarragon are grown from bulbs, and used for flavoring soups and salads; sorrel, mustard, dandelion, chervil are grown for salads, while mints, sage, thyme, summer savory, sweet marjoram, sweet basil, dill, caraway and many other things are used in various ways for seasonings for meats, gravies, pickles, catsups, sum mer drinks and the like. The Com moner. , TO PULL GARDEN POSTS. Many a farmer has trouble in pull ing posts, especially if they Ore firmly set. I will furnish you with an easy method which' I have used to avoid the tiresome task of digging them out with' a cpade, etc. Take the hind running gear of a wagon and leave the reach in it. Take a long, heavy polo cbout ton feet long. Lay this over the bolster. Attach a chain about a foot from tbe end of the pol Back the whcsl3 and the pole up to the post in'.oitded to pull. Fasten the chain to the post close to the ground, while one man is lifting the pole on tho other end.' Then when (he chain is fastened let the other man bear down on his end of the pole and the post will come out. Then loosen the chain anl throw the post on the wagon or out to the bide. In this way you can pull from sevenfy Dve to 100 poBts in an hour, and is very simple, because no horse is need 4. Tbe Epltonilst. x tJL. ? )' IP . ilDE-ot AS THINGS LOOK TO THEM. Pa says that things look very dark, Hut ma keeps hopeful right along; She says there's no use feelin' blue, For right will triumph over wrong. Ma's got a lot of fine new clo's. And all her words are full of cheer; I guess that pa will have to wear The spring suit which he got last year. Chicago Record-Herald. POSSIBLE ON PAPER. "Do you believe a woman can dress on )S0 a year?" ''Yes, in a magazine article." Brooklyn Life. UNSYMPATHETIC. . "Sir, I am looking for a little suc cor." "Do I look like one?" Louisville Courier-Journal. A COLLECTOR, PERHAPS. Mrs. Benham "A tramp stole one of my pies to-day." Benham "I wonder what he will do with it?" Harper's Weekly. FAVORITISM. "I haven't a pull with any one,' said the unsuccessful man. "Oh, yes, you have, dear," said his wife, encouragingly, "with the fbol klller." Life. A GRADE HIGHER. "I understand he has risen in the ' social scale." ' "Yes, he used to be a blacksmith; now he's an automobile repairer." Brooklyn Life. MIGHT BE EITHER. Mrs. Baker "My old school friend, Mrs. Jones, writes me that she Is just ucgiiiuius iu live miss Ann ieeK wiuowea or ai- i vorced?" Brooklyn Life. EXPERIENCE TEACHES. "Wot's up wlv yer face?" "Toot'ache!" "Woy don't yer. 'ave it drawed out?" "Ugh! It 'urts too much!" "No, it don't. I've 'ad millions drawed!" Washington Star. ' A HOPELESS CASE. Wyld "I suppose your wife's will Is law." Enpec "Yes, and the worst of It Is that she can't be bribed not to en force it." Brooklyn Life. AN INCENTIVE. "What makes Jones so economical these days?" "Some one gave him a pair of gog gles, and now he's saving up for an automobile." Llpplncott's. THE PRACTICAL GIRL. "Jack told me he could live on my kisses forever." "Are you going to let him?" .. "Not till I find out what I'm going to live on." Chicago Journal. A GOOD WEIGHT. "How did Harry enjoy bis trip abroad?" "Very much. He looks happy, and has gained one hundred and fifteen pounds." "One hundred and fifteen pounds?" "Yes; and she's an heiress." Brooklyn Life. MAGAZINE ASTRONOMY. "What sort of telescope do you use for seeing things on Mars?" The eminent astronomer, habitu ated to scanning the heavens at mag azine space rates, stayed his pen but an instant. "I have learned," he re plied, "not to rely on any telescope. The best ot them sadly hampers the play ot the Imagination." Philadel phia Ledger. A DELICATE TASK. "The newspapers," said the orator solemnly, "do not tell the truth."' . "Perhaps not," answered the edli tor, regretfully. "We do or best. But you know there is nothing more difficult that to tell the truth in a way that won't put it up to some one to challenge your veracity." Wash ington Star. HIGH FINANCE. "Say, Jinks, I have a proposition to put before you." "Put ahead." "Four of us are going to chip in and buy a beefsteak on credit. We propose to bond it for four times the purchase price, sell the bonds and pay the butcher. Then we're going to divide the beefsteak. Are you in?" Jinks was 1".. Kansas City Jour r-A 1 .