toOLEFtTL BALLAD OF A HERMIT. nr . b. .There was a Hermit vii nnd good. Who owned n modoit little cot Close to the borders of a wood. And hnppy was his lot. Bo kind he wns to bird nnd beast, They loved him ns tlu'ir dearest fritnd; They often shared hi ftupial feast. And he the sick would tend. One night upon his rottnue door There came n moat emphatic knock. And still another one, before His hand could roach the lock. He opened, and to Ins nmaze There stood a little brownish bird SVith head aslant and jaunty paze, Who said, "At last you've heard!" "I'll lake a shelter for the night," Said he, excruciating bold, "There is no other hut in sight, Besides, it's rather cold." The gentle Hermit stnred nchast, 80 saucy was his little guest, But spread an adequate repast, And bade him take his rest. The bird just, winked his beady eye, 6aid he, "My friend, I've come to stay; I'll build a nest or two near by. And never move away." land so it was. Before you'd think Some hundreds of his cousins mustered; The Hermit could not sleep a wink. Bo loud they screamed and blustered. Until at lost they drove him out, t Which grieved his, neighbors to the marrow, ftnd long ere this you've guessed, no doubt, This Person was an English Sparrow. -I. F. B. When Pa Kicked Oyer the Traces By GERTRUDE C. BLAISDELl Ma looks out of the window, fan-, Blng herself vigorously with her blue Checked gingham apron. "It beat the Dutch," she Bays to Arvylla, the younger daughter. - "It does beat the Dutch how your Pa tramps over to the neighbor'!! (or water. Here's our cistern full and oil we need Is drinking water brought, and by actual count that's the elev enth time he has fetched a pail to day." - "Why, Ma," says Arvylla, as she drops the pea pods in the wide bas ket, and glances down the path at her father as he plod3 along between the banks of blossoming roses. "Why, Ma, we don't drink no eleven rails of water a day. "Land sakes nllve. Arvylly, of course we don't; ho jlst pours it out and says he thinks he'll get some fresh water. I'm afraid, I'm afraid, Arvylly, that something dretful ails your pa. Now his consin, Sallle Brown, her that was Sallle Perkins, died with some such an ailment, and that is jist the way she acted, was al ways thinkin' about fresh water, would drink a hull pail at a time, so they said." The tears were coursing down Ma's placid face and Arvylla looked up cared and white, "Oh, Ma," she gasps, "Don't." Meanwhile, Pa, the object of their concern, plods along the path and Into the yard of their neighbor, thoughts and impulses to which he had always before been stranger eurge through Pa's gentle breast. Heretofore life has held for him only Ills "wimmenfolks." Ma and the girls have been the sum and sub stance of his existence. When a few years before they had decreed that the old farm should be sold and a home made in town, Pa had not de murred. "Ma knows best," he said. What If out behind the barn with no ene to see but old Rover, a few tears tad trickled down the withered old cheeks. . The "wimmenfolks" had never known. He had said good-by to the dear old farm where his whole life had been spent, to the cows and horses, the lambs and calves. No one fcad known the cost to the poor old man. No one unless It was Rover who looked up in his eyes in such a ympathetic way that Pa felt he un derstood, even it Ma and the girls did not. Poor Rover, town had been too much for the farm dog and the yringa bush had blossomed over his grave now for two seasons. Four weeks ago when Pa had gone to the neighbor's, for a pail of water, there, In the woodshed, curled up be side their savage little mother, were six of the plumpest, most winning fox terrier puppies possible to Im agine. That was the beginning. The puppies were very friendly and soon would scamper to meet him, growl ing and barking and jumping about him in delight and Pa enjoyed the frolic even better than they. "Better take one, Mr. Perkins," said the neighbor pleasnntly. But Ma and the girls had Instantly ve toed such a possibility when Pa had timidly suggested it. "What, a puppy trackln' over my clean floors, well, 1 guess not," gasped Ma. One day when Pa vent -ver there were only five brlght-e.ui, frisky puppies left. The next day Fatty was gone. To-day there is only one, but ' the brightest and best of the lot thinks Pa as he grabs little Spotty np. "Oh, Spotty, Spotty, 1 can't let you go, I can't," lie groaned.. Then something very like a twinkle gleamed in the old man's eyes, and he muttered tremulously: "I'll do it, I will, I'll kick over the .traces this once." If the "wimmenfolks" had worried over him before they were In agony , about him now. His peculiar desire for fresh water gives place to many new but equally' startling vagaries'. It Is a usual thing now when they git down to an unusually- good dinner and ue old ican baa prepared the meat and vegetables for eating to sud denly push back his plate, declaring that he feels "porely" and cannot eat unless he carries his dinner out of doors. "Seems like the smell of the roses and sich makes things more tasty," he murmurs. "Why, sure, father, dear," says Arvylla the first time this happens, "We'll set the table out under the apple tree to-morrow if you can eat better there." Her father shakes hia head, "I want to eat alone," he says, shortly. Bo they watch him nearly every day as he potters toward the barn with his plute. "And he don't even take a fork," sobs Ma. "He muBt eat with his jack knife." As fall draws near the old man grows frailer and thinner, and one morning docs not get up as usual, but lies so still that Ma, with a great catch at her heart, thinks he must be dead. But he Is only 111, so ill that for days and weeks he lies aa one already beyond the borderland. The devoted nursing of the "wimmen folks" wins In the end, however, and one clear, crisp day in November, Pa opens his eyes and knows them. Knows that Ma Is holding his hand just as tenderly as she did bo long ago when they were first wedded; knows that It Is Arvylla who drops the soft ktss on his forehead. Even as the peace of it all soothes him a wild fear and horror seizes him. Spotty! Just at that moment some thing wriggles at the foot of the bed and Pa glances down there curled up, fatter, saucier, more Irresistible than ever, on Ma's best white coun terpane lies Spotty, and as though he understands, he opens his eyes and with a little yelp of Joy wriggles up to Pa and snuggles against him. "Ma," quavers Pa, "I hadn't ought to a done it." "You keep still," sobs Ma, one hand holding fast to Pa's poor bony one, the other patting Spotty's sleek back. "You jist keep still. Oh, Pa, to think of your Btarvin' of yourself and a makin' of yourself sick, jist because I didn't want to be bothered by a dog. Oh, Pa, you was out of your head that first day, and you talked so strange. We never knew how lone some you was without the critters before and thnt you wanted a dog so. That very day I went out to the barn and found this rascal and I brought him in, and he ha3 lived on the fat of the land ever since. Oh Pa," and Ma's head fell down on the bed In an agony of repentance, and Spotty, wriggling his soft little body over In his most insinuating way, gave Ma's shining gray head a few loving little licks. Boston Post. Equ&I to the Emergency. By TOM r. MORGAN. "Mawnln', sah!" saluted a ram shackle looking negro, addressing the cashier of a certain small town bank. "Mawnin' dat is, sah, If yo' Isn't too busy. An' does yo' need a nigger 'round de place yuh nigger wid a ree-commend, Eah; 'dustriois, hon' able cullud man to wash winders an' po'tah 'round. Uh-kaze, it so, I's de pusson, sah, an' dis yuh docky munt am de obsequies dat Cuhnel White done wrif 'bout muh 'chieve munt3." "Ah-h'm!" commented the banker, as he scanned the proffered paper. "So your name is Hilsondlggor?" "Yassah; dafs muh 'dsntification," "And the Colonel writes here " "He sho' does, sah!" "He says Look here! Can you read?" "Who, me? Nussah. Dat is to say, I kain't read writln'." "I thought not. Well, the Colonel says: 'The bearer hereof, Gabe Hll- 8ondiggei, is personaly known to me "Desso, Bah! Aw, do Cuhnel knows me!" " aa a liar nnd a thief, and too utterly worthless to set a good dog on.' Well ha! ha! It appears that the Colonel does know you. Ha! ha! ha!" "Well-uh, well-uh now, now It dat ain't s'prisin'! But uck! dat's de way I likes to heah a white pus son laugh, sah; I sho' does! Takes away dier troubles, Bah makes 'em tuhglt dler tribbylations. Dat's muh puhmlssion in dis world, makin' de white folks happy. Kain't be much fun In dis yuh bank-bldness dess'uh chlnkin' de money an' uh-shavin' off do ten puh-cent. , An' dtz., when yo'a all wo' uot, sah, I comes 'long, an' yo' has a big laugh dat makes yo' feel fine, all day; desg as fine as a dram er. peach an' honey done make yo' feel. Don't yo' reggin, sah, dat yo' could spar' 'bout haffer-dollah for do good joke yo' has on me, an' T'anky, sah; t'anky! Gwine on muh way uh-'jolcin', sah! Gwine nowl" From Puck. . Use ot Magnets in Flour Mills. Explosions are often caused in flour mills and breweries by nails or other iron particles that find their way in the grain and which when they strike the steel rolls of the mills produce sparks and ignite the finely pulverized material about them. Recently a large malting concern that had been troubled by many such explosions installed a set of electro magnets over which the grain is passed before being prepared for shipment to the breweries. All Iron particles in the grain are picked up by the magnets and S00 to 1000 bush els ot grain are cleaned an hour When the magnets have collected a large amount of metal they are swung to one side, degenerzed and swept clean ot any particles adhering to them by residual magnetism. Since the Installation of these magnets ttere have been no explosions la the mills. Scientific America. lisBuil No Back Door for A Country House By E. P. Powell. HERE should be no back side to a house. It should front always, I only with a different outlook; for there Is no direction In which I I you will not find the beautiful, and the moBt beautiful very often I - r ......... hnxen n-lin.n t ll IITO DCA C I fill lies rignt in tne rear 01 u muuu . 1 - - - holes and shlftlessneBS which spoil everything. Yon ought to be able to walk around a house in the country without distress, or catching a bad odor, and there ougnt to be an equauy cneenui welcome for you with porches and balconies, on all sides. Around the kitchen door particularly there should be neatness and sweetness. Keep clean on all sides, and do not Indulge eyourself In slovenliness out of sight of the street. This is one reason for building back from the high way; it puts you on your honor to be decent, and to develop the beautiful. Besides this you will feel that your home Is not built for others to look at, but for yourself to see, and to smell. Flower beds are preferable to ash heaps and decaying refuse. Outing. 0 J$3 & It Is Not Always Possible to Sixve By Walter Weyl. HB majority of the old aBk notning or society, mu mis very wi. I should make the support of society, to those who do need Us aid, I I more immediate and willing. There are many who through mis- I .... . . - .1 , l.nl.. noflirfll aflTW fortune are leit in age Deren 01 mime? uuu m men porters. A bank may fail, an employee abscond, a business panic arrive, an error of judgment, or an unwise act of generosity may MM strip a man or woman of the savings of a liretime. ine who ui Buch a man may lie ill and the savings of years go in a month's doctor's bills. The sudd n Blaying of a husband in an industrial accident may leave the wife deprived of expected support. And not all men can Bave. Some are honest and hard-working, but have not the knack of getting and holding. They are marble to receive and wax to retain.' Others do not marry, or marry and have no children, or they lose their children In early Infancy. Family bonds are mortal. There are always men who through no fault of their own are left naked and alone In their old age. Success. i? 0 0 The Fate of Second-hand Autos By R. D. Heinl. HUE price of a rebuilt car ranges from 1300 to Id.&uu. une arm & I I ported that the average selling price ot Its second-hand cars was I I $2 000. Good standard chassis converted Into, delivery wagons I ... - - , l i t- 1 i mil .1 fnl are selling at $l,suu. Touring cam, wmtu mni jem $1,250 and $2,000, may now be bought for from $500 to $800. A limousine which only saw a few months' service last year was 133 Bold from a second-hnnd shop this year for $3,000. The owner originally paid $4,200 for the car. Tuxedo Park Association, the exclusive residence colony club of New York, recently bought four three-year-old cars, saving fifty per cent, on the original cost. These were formerly touring cars, but they have been rebuilt into station wagonB to carry the members of the colony to and from trains. The Adirondack League Club, of New York, has also purchased second-hand cars for the same purpose. A greater market for second-hand machines is found out of New York. A second-hand automobile firm, possibly the largest in this country, last year sold eight thousand cars. Ninety-five per cent, of these vehicles went to farmers. Leslie's. The Bible as & Substitute for Bridge By Frances Frear. , mmmhgN women in the whirl of New YorK society come logemer iui A J I a week-end study of the Bible, it is of more than passing interest. lfY I Mrs. Martin W. Littleton felt that a more thorough knowledge I ... ..... 1 1 , i .1 I -. . 1 .. H .. 1 tun nmlMnff 01 tne iHDie wouiu nave a nieaujuig nuiucuca 111 ma cam.vub times which JuBt now exist In the feminine world, and so despite the cold water thrown upon her suggestion, friends were invited to her home to hear Dr. C. I. Scofleld, secretary of the Oxford Revision Society, make clear some points in regard to a better understand ing of the Scriptures. Enthusiastic was the response, and preparations are now under way for a longer course of study next winter. A movement of this kind seems to some of us to Indicate even better than the Buffrage agitation that women are really interested in trying to solve the problems which are peculiarly theirs to solve. Respect for women will increase in proportion as they concern themselves with serious occupations, like the study of the Bible or the proper training of children, thus showing that all their interests are not compassed by bridge whist, the theatre and receptions. Leslie's. Knowledge That Is Power By Orison Swett Marsden, HE world Is full of people who know a great deal but cannot use & I their knowledge. They are weighted down with unavailable facts I I and theories. You have often met people who seem to know so mucn, wno are so encyciuyeuiu iu uieir greeny ausurpuon 01 facts that their general knowledge is like an enormous pack on a sqldler's back, which exhausts his vitality and Impedes his march. It makes them heavy of foot and clumsy in everything they do. They impress you as not being large enough to swing their loads or to carry them with ease. They are like children tugging away at great pieces of furniture which they can scarcely lift. It is not the ability, the education, the knowledge that one has that makes the difference between men. The mere possession of knowledge is not always the possession of power; knowledg which has not been digested and assimi lated and become a part of yourself, knowledge which can not swing into line In an emergency, is of little use, and will not save you at the critical moment. To be effective, a man's education must become part of himself, as he goes along. All of It must be worked up Into power. A little practical edu cation that has become a part of one's being and is always available, will accomplish more In the world than knowledge far more extensive that can not be utilized. Success Magazine. Domestic Life. It was the poet Cowper who sang of domestic happiness aB the only bliss that has survived the fall. One of the burning and unsolved ques tions of today is, Will It survive the twentieth century? Will it sur vive rapid transit and bridge and woman's rights, the modern novel and modern drama, automobiles, flying machines and intelligence offices? Hotel, apartment and suburban life, or four homes or none at all? Is It a weed that will grow anywhere In a crevice between two stones in the city? Or is It a plant that re 2 quires tender care and the water of self-sacrifice? Above all, is it desir able Both Italy and Switzerland nre for tifying the entrances of the Slmplon tunnel, whila in the tunnel Itself en gineers are engaged in constructing mines and strengthening those al ready In place, in order to blow up the tunnel at a moment's notice In tha event of war. In Russia cigarettes are used more widely than cigars. MODEL Y. M. Every community that counts Itself a city nas in its midst a stronghold in the building which houses the Y. M. C. A. and serves as headquarters for Its activities. Where once a store or small building answered this purpose, the most modern type of building Is now required, equipped with every facll. lty for promoting the work, and sometimes of the dimensions of a sky scraper. The new Y. M. C. A. building at Detroit, shown in this picture It one of this class. " 1 Hammock Support. For the present hot weather the hammock support designed by an In diana man is highly appropriate. It enables the owner to swing his or her hammock wherever desired, on rough or level ground, to be always sure of shade and to have the hammock at any height from the ground that Is convenient. The support consists of a pair of standards with an awning top. The standards are made with sliding rods and either or both can be regulated to any height. If the ground Is too uneven the standard on the higher part can be shortened or vice versa. The whole affair is, con structed with an eye for stability, and when set up will bear any weight the hammock cords will hold without breaking. The canopy top makes It possible to swing the hammock in open spaces, where there is plenty of breeze, but no other shade. Unfor tunately, shade and breeze do not naturally go together, but the owner of one of thpse supports need not worry about that. Washington Star. EDWARD, NEW PRINCE OF WALES, AND HEIR TO THE THRONE. Ladder of St. Augustine. Girls who wish to spend the pres ent year well and to develop their good resolutions should always bear In mind the famous ladder of St. Augustine and Its five steps, which were, "I am," "I know," "I can," "I ought," "I will," says Home Notes. Let every girl have confidence In herself and say "I am;" let her de velop her Intellect and say, "I know;" let her pause before saying "I can" to any decisive step; above all, let her sense of honor tell her when to say "I ought," and let her make up her mind to surmount all difficulties and say, "I will." - ..j.jt .1... .i..m:,.,i A DIFFICULT TASK. "If you ever dare to deceive Sourbre. C A BUILDING. A Hoodoo Locomotive. l A locomotive with probablfr tha 1 bloodiest record In the world cut up capers In the local yards here to-night, was stripped of two Bide rods and drive wheel when It jumped the track while pulling a local freight out of the yards. The engine is Rio Grande No. 606, The hoodoo which goes with this en gine is so strong that no experienced engineer can be Induced to sit in Its cab. The number was recently changed from 512 to 506, but the em ployes learned this and fight shy of the cab. The engine has pulled trains which have been In accidents in which many more than 100 persons have been killed. Grand Junction Correspond ence Denver Republican. The Man of the Hour. How Weasels Carry Kggs. On Wednesday morning of last ast Ing t week a weasel was surprised crossing; the public highway leading from Jed. burgh Into Oxnam Water. It was oh served" to be carrying something un der its chin and pressed against- slender neck, and when a collie dd belonging to one of the onlookers made a dash at the little creature It dropped its burden a hen's egg and gliding under the roadside hedge disappeared in the woodland. On being picked up the egg was found to be without a crack. The nearest poultry run is about three hundred yards distant from the place where the weasel was intercepted. Scotsman. Negroes Own Boat Line. The Bteamship Rupert City, which was on the run between Seattle and Prince Rupert last year, will be sold to the Ethiopian-American Steamship Company, of Lob Angeles, a corpora tion of negro capitalists, who will op erate a line ot two steamers between Los Angeles and Liberia, says the Spokane (Wash.) Spokesman. Negotiations have been opened be tween the Mackenzie company, own ers of the boat, through Surtess Hope, of Seattle. , When a heavy fall of snow occurs In Valdez, Alaska, the fire department is called out to clear the sidewalks. me. Algernon, I'll disfigure you!" LA ;