A BIRD Koon oa tb rardrna fair and stately, CUwe-clipped hdga and arbora rare; Koon In tbe palnpe liush'd aedatnly King asleep In his cunhloned ehalr. Pawn nmldlnpr and Inrda bent over: lireakin mo allenro, fnr and Hweet, "Twcet-tweet-lwevt!" sang a bird in the Warm winds blew It across the wheat! Prlncoa3 Mnrjollne, fair and rosy. Hun a-Ileik on her (jnliieii head, Scowl'd at her lessons dull nnd prosy: "That hint's happy!" she softly said. Knddcd the (trim duenna, sleeping; Kves thnt wiw not, nor ears that hoard; Swiftly the little princes, irrarplna-. Fled, at the call of a vagrant bird! Down nv heiK'ps and beds of myrtle, Tenrinir hues nnd frllla aside; Clad In her short Riven iindnr-klrtlp. Hare little nrnis, and hair blown whin. ff with shoes! and the brown brooks laughter Answer'd the splosh of dimpled reet. Then by the wood-track, following after, Led by the bird's sons, "Sweet, oh, sweet!" Sown hro' the birch-boles treading Brown!" 'a ml barefoot, and half nfrnfli "Come nnd play!" cnll'd the prlncoss brKhlly. "Day with me!" to the cotter's maid. Not n moment of Joy they wasted; Rhar'd the princess the cutter a dole; Never su h toothsome fare she tasted Black bread dlpp'd in the creamy bowl! Rout In the lluhted palace revel'd, Searoh'd and scunn'd waa the lordly place; Cfj IN THE BIOGRAPH. What Old Abner Carter Learned at the Moving Picture ffij (W. R. Rose in Cleveland Plain Dealer.) The laRt man on earth to admit that Abner Carter lived a narrow life would have been Abner Carter himself. That was an admirable form of proof of hla narrowness. All his 64 years f existence had been passed on a farm in a Vermont township not far from the Canadian line. He was two miles from the nearest village and a tiny village It was and efcven miles from the nearest railway. He sold his produce in the village to buyers who were understood to come from far away Burlington and that two miles radius enclosed his little world. There had been talk of another railway, the line to take in the village on its way to Montreal. Abner Carter had resented this proposed intrusion. The village had done very well with out a railway for a century and more. A railway meant smoke and smudge, and noise and cattle killed and maim ed, and depot loafers. He liked the railway still less when a good look ing young surveyor at work on the eoming route saw Sylvia Carter in the lane beside the Carter homestead. Syl via -was pretty, very pretty and smart, too and Abner Carter was proud of her beneath the ehell that hid his emotions. l.;WelJ ,the railway didn't come it may have been nil a financial bluff, but the surveyor kept on coming and one day the good looking young fellow faced him. "Mr. Carter," he said, "I want you to give me Sylvia." Abner Carter's face grew hard. "When Sylvia marries," he said, "she's goln' to marry some steady young feller who was raised In this neighborhood an" it'll be a young fel ler that Sylvy knows an' I know." "I'm a little sorry," said the young man, "that I wasn't raised in this neighborhood, but that can't be helped now. I'm generally considered a pret ty good fellow, as it is, and my pros- nects are excellent. There's a fine po- aitlon waiting for me In New York assistant engineer in a big railway of flee and I want Sylvia to go with me." Abner scowled ominously. "You can't have her," he snarled. The young man drew a deep breath, Then it's up to Sylvia," he said and turned away. "You get off these premises as quick as you know bow," the angry Abner roared after him. Then he stormed into the house. "Sylvy," he cried, "that jackanapes ef a chain toter has Just been askin' ' me ef he could marry you. I sent him packln' mighty quick." He turned to go and then looked back. "I dunno what foolJBhness you've got in your head," he said, "but you'd better get It out as quick as you know how. You nave good as promised to Cyrus Roundtree's boy an' you'll marry him or nobody. If you was to go so far - as to take up with this englneerln' loafer I'd never want you to darken these doorB again an I'd never want to hear your name any more. Ana he talked away heavily and expended his surplus energy in vicious attacks on the woodpile. Sylvia's pretty face had turned very white and her heart beat hard and rant, hut she held her temper and made no reply. That night she ran away with Rich ard Merriam and her name was men tioned no more In the old homestead. - A year later Abner Carter received a letter. At the top of the sheet was a street and number and the letter was dated In New York. The message it bore was a brief one, written in a weak and waving hand. "Dear father," it began, "I am the mother of a baby girl. Her name is Sylvia. I wanted you to know about aay great happiness. Sylvia." Abner stared at this setter a long ' time. Then he growled1 aomething un der his breath and tore the letter to fragment and flung them Into the fire place. "They don't get no moaey out o hi growled. ' Then lite moved along as before on - CALL. Toreh-llt pases, and maids dlaheyel'd Track'fl the prlncea by aoraps of lace! Every hour of dark she number'd Grim duenna wIMi terror wild; While ever the princess calmly slumber'd On the straw with the cotter's child! Connsel'd at morn the lords together; X aceu me mimiin ii ion- -. (Far away, from the grass Kchoed the bird's song, nd heather, Sweet, on, Sweet!") Sudden a tumult guards and pnges, Torn green klit'o nnd golden hair; Punish!" the ol duenna rages; Shrieks the princess: "lou will not dare!" "See I love her! We play'd together!" Small white palm Into brown one strayed; , (Scared, like cnttle In hempen tether. Stood the hinds and their barefoot maid). . "Kind they were when I wandor a thither; . Is It by bonds uch debts we pay? Wicked pnires. to hale them hither! I'm to blame, for 1 ran away! Twinkled the king's eyes, laughter- laden; "Hold and freedom for them," quoth he. "Since they have hous'd this wilful mnlden Who hath flouted my house and me. Klss'd nnd tweak'd in a breath, she winces, , "This for penance, my tricksy eir. Listen whisper; your father, princess Did the very same thing himself! E. Vinton Blake, In St. N'lcholas. Show. 2? the Carter farm as it had been mov ing for sixty years more.' Abner toil ed and saved and steadily added to his earthly treasure and his neighbors looked upon him as a solid member of the scattered community. Ten years had passed when he heard from Sylvia again. The letter was also from New York, but it bore the name of another street and another number. "Dear father," he slowly read aloud, "I am writing to tell you that our lit tle Sylvia, who has been very, very ill, Is going to get well. For hours we thought we had lost her. And when the doctor said Just now that the dan ger was passed my mother heart cried out to your father heart, and so I am writing to tell you this wonderful, this blessed news. Sylvia." Abner stared at the letter for a long time. Then he slowly folded it and put it in the envelop and tucked it be hind the old eight-day clock on the mantel. Then he sat looking into the fire- place for a long time. "Guess I'm gettln' old," he sadd pres. ently. He ran hPs hand through his thick gray hair. "Too much thinkln' ain't good for a man," he muttered. 'More work is what I need. Lemrae read that letter again." He rose up and stretched out his hand. "No, I won't. There's no use getting harried up again. It sounds straight. I re member I felt a good deal like that when Sylvy had dipthery. Down on my knees I was up there behind the bed prayln' that old Dr. Bingham would see a change for th" better. An when he came to me an' whispered there was a chance for her I felt like gettln' out in the back lot an' yeHIn'. She was only five then." He paused a moment. "I wonder how they're fix' ed?" he slowly Bald. "That husband OUR OPPORTUNITY. Life is so short, 'twere well, it seems to me, To look upon it as a breathing space Where clay bound souls may recognize their grace Kre passing forward toward eternity. Tls but one chance in all the darkened way From primal being unto man's estate, Wherein the Ego can consult with fate Before his footsteps to oblivion stray. Here, on this planet, we at least can trace Our varied paths since so called, life, began; Here we may Join fish, reptile, beast and man And, sans all knowledge of our future place, So shape our actions that another sphere Shall find us greater for our sojourn here. t ' L. S. Waterhouse, cf hers didnt look like anythin' of a saver, an' I wouldn't like the child to suffer ian' me here with plenty." He pushed back the old rocker. "AbneT Carter," he harshly said, "you're an old fool." Two days later he was in the village with a load of produce. As he drove up Main etreet he heard the sound of music. He looked around. The mu sic came from one of the stores along the way. The store front was paint ed white and there were pictures on It and a sign in gilt letters over the door way. The sign bore the words "Al hambra," The old man drove up to the gen era store. "hWat's that show place up .th' street with th music?" he presently asked the proprietor. "Movin" pictures," the latter replied. "Panoramy?" "Nope. People move In 'em same as life." "Dum foolishness, I 'pose?" "I dunno. Old man Edison had suth- in' to do with mventln' it My boy BUI Bays they're putting In th' show everywneres. There' tour of 'em la Burlington." "Seen 'em yet?' "Nope, I ain't seen 'em myself, but my folks think they're mighty inter est'. Feller ds doing pretty well, too, I'm told 'specially Saturdays." "Child's play, I guess," growled Ab ner Carter as he turned away. lie was in no hurry to return home. He strolled along the street In an aim less way. This was a changed Abner Carter. He was uneasy and unsettled. He wouldn't admit it, but the letter be hind tbe old clock on the mantel had shaken him a good deal. He wallked by the moving picture theatre and stared at the lithographs as he passed. He had been thinking too much lately. He needed some; thing to get his mind away from that that stuff about a father's heart. A cheap trick to catch his sympathy, per haps. No, no. He wouldn't belter it. Sylvia meant it every word or it. Sylvia it was his mother's name and for years he had barred it even from his thoughts. He turned and walked back ana then, half automatically, found him self pushing a nickel along the glass shelf before the girl in the ticket booth and a moment later was In the dark auditorium. He stumbled to a seat and presently grew accustomed to the novel surroundings. One of the films was nearing the end as he reached his seat, and when he looked up at tbe stage the next series was running. From the first it held Abner carter s attention. He forgot the novelty, tne mechanism it waa all real to him. The story told by the film was a simple one. An old farmer, a stern old man, harsh and grizzled, had an only son, a fine young fellow, smart and active. This lad was very dear to his father, although the old man made few demonstrations of affection. It appeared that he decided the boy should marry Dora, an estimable young woman, a relative of one of the family. But the boy fell in love with the maid, a pretty girl who helped with the household duties, and braved his father for the pretty girl's love. And the hard old man turned him from his door. So William, with his head high went away with the pretty maid and they were maiTled and lived very humbly, William finding employ ment In a quarry. Old Abner Carter watched this pic ture story with a wondering interest, finding no trouble in following It. A child was born to William and his wife, nnd while it was still a babe Wil liam, hurt in an accident, was brought tn tho utile cottage dead. The old farmer, still hardening his heart, would not visit the stricken home and threw aside the pitiful letter his eon's wife wrote him. But Dora, who had loved William, went to the hum ble homo and brought such comfort as she could. And then she thought of a way to soften the farmer's heart. Rhe took the baby boy from tne moin er and laid him In the cornfield where the farmer would see him. But the old man's heart was still hardened ana his words were bitter when he found he bov. Then Dora ran back and told the poor little wife what had hap pened. And the heart of the mother swelled with outraged love and dig nity and she ran swiftly, with Dora following, to bring back her cnua, And lo! when they neared the house they saw tbe old man playing with the child and holding him to his hard old breast and crying over him. And when he saw the two women he DecK- oned to them and they came nearer and noted how broken he was, and then he openetVia heart and arms and his borne to them and to his son 'a child. Old Abner Carter rose up when the little story was ended and stumbled into the open air.- He dimly noticed on a lithograph sheet at the door as he went out, that one of the films il lustrated Tennyson's "Dora," but he knew nothing of Teanyson and be sides his eyes smarted. He hurried back to the tavern sta bles and got his team and drove home, The next morning he was busy with a sheaf of papers and later came to the village and visited the bank. In the afternoon he took the stage for Burlington. The next morning with his frayed valise gripped firmly in his knotted hand, Abner Carter emerged from the Grand Central depot and looked around a little dazed. But presently he straightened up and plunged bold ly Into tbe crowd. He found a modest restaurant and ate a breakfast that he didn't like, and then started out on the quest that had brought him to the treat city. He had the last letter Sylvia wrote aim the letter wlU the address at the top of the sheet, ana he asked a big policeman where the house was. Tbe officer looked at him furiously. "Straight out thie street," he said. Just two miles if you want the walk." I'll walk." eaid the old man and he stepped off briskly. He had eone a mile nerhans when he decided to cross the street. A curious building drew him to a closer view. He was still a little dazed by the bustle and roar of the city. As he stepped from the curb a shrill voice varnsd him Wet hlundored ahead and was swiftly bowled over by an automobile. A policeman readied him almost in stantly and the automobile driver stopped his machine and quickly ran oacK. l ney intea tne oia man to nis feet and held him nn. Ha had heen knocked down not. run over, and his bead had been bumped by the fall. He wasn t hurt, he told them. "Hosnltal?" the automobile driver whispered to the policeman. The keen old ears heard him. "This is where I want to go." he murmured as he fumbllngly brought out Sylvia's address. The driver and policeman looked at It. "Relatives?" the driver asked. "Daughter," the old man answered. "I'll have him there in half a min ute," said the driver. "Help me get him to the machine." It was a brlBk and brief ride, but the old man took no note of it. The gray head toppled back against the cushions and the dim eyes closed. In a stupid way he was dimly conscious that he was being helped up many steps and then he lost all conscious ness. He awoke with the sunshine stream- Ins- into the room, a beautiful room. high and shining. His head ached a little, but he felt refreshed and keen and even hungry. As his head turned on the soft pillow he saw that he was not alone. A child was sitting by tne bedside, a girl whose smiling blue eyes met his wonderlne raze, a girl whose slender fingers were twined about his brown old hand. 'Are you awake, grandpa." the child softly asked. "I'm Sylvia, you know your little nurse. And you are to take a drink from the glass as soon as you wake up that s what Dr. van Gorder said. Let me help you." Hold ing the glass in one hand she clam bered carefully on the bed. Then slipping a round arm under the gray head she put the glass to Abner's Hps. "Whv. grandpa." she said, ' you re crying! Does your poor head hurt you so? I'll call mamma shes wait ing at the door. Mamma!" And Svlvia came so much like the old Sylvia and ran to him and put her arms about him and softly smooui ed his rrav hair. "I'm bo glad you ve come, iatner, she gently sobbed. "Sylvy," eaid the old man m a hoarse whisper, "how are you fixed? Are you comfortable? Can Kicnara support you? Tell your old father th truth 'cause he's got enougn tor you all." Then Svlvia laughed and cried to e-ether and hugged him again. 'Yes, yes, father, we nave every thing wo nnnld want now that we have you. And here's Richard to say rood tnomine." Richard, looking a good deal oiaer and a little careworn, suddenly sn nonrmt and nothing could have ex ceeded the friendliness of his greeting. "We'll noon have you up and around and taking In all the sights, father." h cordially cried. "And what An vnn want to see first?" a vhlmdra took restea on me wHnVlart fane. "Do you have any of those movin picture shows in your town? ne asis ed. v Richard laoighed merrily. "Hundred) of them." "I'd like to go to one," said the old man And when Kicnara lauEueu again he suddenly smiled and looked at the little Sylvia and eortiy aaaeu. Some day I'll tell you wny. The Agricultural Department. (Washington Letter to Boston Tran script.) consent today the ag ricultural deDartment. which is spend tno- ik nno .000 a year, is in a ewe vt nathetie demoralization, becretary -- w Wilson is a benevoieni om to, . nnd of eood intentions. He intellectually and never had any standing as a scientist. He Is a farmer-politician wno inrougu . ria of accidents has been permit ted to hold a place in the cabinet long- , than inT other man in me of the country, his record some time ago distancing that ol tne great uai-i-.i- f ih fnrniative Deriod of the ittuu mw - .,r.He. And vet the waste and mis .nniioatinn of energies due to WU- remalnlne at the head of a de partment which has got entirely away trom him, runs into uemcu B ures. Hla real scientists are only marking time until a new head can come; and he has under him the larg est aggregation of scientific talent to be found on the face of the globe. President Taft realizes the need of a change and told his friends so before his inauguration, but he has felt pow erless to move, and stUl hesitates. In The Good Old Times. A Northerner sitting on the veran da of a Southern home was enraptur ed by the beauty of tbe night. "How wonderfully beautiful Is the moon light falling on the water," he ex claimed. "It la indeed," replied hit dignified but unreconstructed South ern hostess; "but ah I you should have aeen It before the war." Everybody's Magazine. IN CASE OF FIRB Seme Ways It May Happen and How to Act When It Does. Attics and closets are the hreeotn nlaces of mdnr fires. An attic is gen erally the asylum for all sorts of in flammable material, and as it never Is properly ventilated It becomes a fire Incubator when the summer sun strikes the roof. Anions: the odda and ends that malts up the contents of the average attic are old varnished furniture, dry as tinder, rags, many of them greasy ana rioe for spontaneous combustion. painting oils, .liable to take fire when the sun beats on the roof; broken toys and old clothes, the sockets of which may contain matches. Attics and garrets often have a tempera ture of 110 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the ignition point for matches. Floor sweepings under furniture or in a closet are liable to take fire spontaneously or from a flying match head. (Sawdust used in sweeping floors. if left In a corner where there is no current of air to carry off the heat It generates, is very likely to become hot enough to ignite itself. A DreDaration advertised for sweep ing carnets is cointosed of sawdust, Band and a mineral oil to give It col or, together with tincture of benzine to give it odor, according to Good Housekeenlnz. Flies have frequently started spontaneously from heaps of this material. Greasy overalls kept in a tight wardrobe have been known to ignite. The most dangerous closet is that under a stairway, because Inflammable materials may hide there and if a fire starts In it the best avenue or escape from upper stories is cut off. Furnace ashes in the cellar have In them so much fine coal and litter that they are liable to spontaneous com bustion if an open window permfts tbera to get wet by a rain storm. The fine coal from the winters supply may ignite if wet. Flaying with tire and matches oy children is a prolific source of fires in residences. One's ability to extinguish a start- Inor fire denends upon Intelligence and self-control. If the blaze Is Just start ing throw water on the burning ma terial, not on the blaze. One bucket of water will doi more good If thrown on by handfuls or with a broom than dashed on at once. A small fire may he smothered with a rug or blanket or beaten out with a wet broom. If vou cannot nut out the fire in a minute then give an alarm at once. Do not leave a door open when you run out to give an alarm. If the doors and windows are closed when a Hre starts you may be able to get the firemen there in time to put it out while It Is In only one room. The fire soon consumes all the oxygen in a closed room and may die out If it gets no fresh air. After the firemen are called work at eettlne out the things you want most to save. Don't throw the clock from the window and then carry out your clothing, as some persons have done. If awakened In the night by the smell of Are don't dress. Wrap your self In a blanket or quilt from the bed and get out the quickest way you can. Shut the doors you pass through. After calling help look In au nee where and what is the danger. If the fire Is oa the flrst floor it la very dangerous to go above, because heat and smoke ascend. One can often get out through a hall filled with smoke by going on hands and knees when one would fall choking If one Tan. The smoke Is thickest at the celling. Holding a wet towel or anything made of wool, or even a coat collar over the mouth greatly lessens the danger of Injury to the lungs or death from the car bonic acid gas in the smoke. If a man is in a burning building with no Are escape and the stair be low Is burning or the hall filled with smoke, he should shut the door and transom to keep out thegases. Then he should throw open the window to get cool air and to let the firemen and neighbors see where he is, so that they may bring a ladder to the win dow. Who Is Feeding the World? In 1907, the United States produced 634,000,000 bushels ot wheat, in 1908 it produced 664,000,000, and in 1909 no less than 737,000,000. Yet the Euro pean tables show that whereas this country and Canada, up to the middle of the ensuing April, sent 149,000,000 bushels to Europe from the crop ot 1907, and 129,000,000 from the crop of 1908, It has sent only 67,000,000 from that ot 1909. Europe has neverthe less imnorted. from all quarters, 60,- 000,000 bushels more than In either last year or the year before, and the reason Is, that Russia has sent out 120.000.000 bushels more from the crop of 1909 than from that of 1903. The eame thing happened with the crop of 1895, from which the United States sent out 32,000,000 bushels less than a couple f years before, and Russia and the Danube 56,000,000 bushels In 1895. " it was speculation and high prices in America which did the business. New York Evening Post ' No Cause for Alarm. "Dis Is an 'exciting novel, Jimmy. De hero la In a tight place, sure. Think he'll get out alive r' "Sure he'll get out alive. Ain't they advertising a sequel?" Washington Herld. . In 1906 there were 22,810 foreign visitors to Japan, and in 1908 only 17, 293. The expenditures by the visitors of 1906 were 80,000,000 yen, by those ot 1908, 24.774,000. SCREAMED WITH PACT. Rochester, JC. Y., Woman's Terrible Suffering From Kidney Trouble. Mrs. F. M. Carnrlke, 180 Allen St. Rochester, N. Y., says: "My kldneya and bladder were in terrible condi tion. My ankles and wrists swelled and puffy sacks appeared beneath my eyes. The pain when pass ing the kidney secre tions was often so great as to make me Bcream. I was treat ed by a physician, but he did not help me. For months I was laid up and did not walk a step. At last I began using Dean's Kidney Pills and all my troubles disappeared. In a few weeks I was so changed my friends could hardly believe It" Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a box. ' Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. 9Z FLYING CHEAPER WAY About Two Cent a Mile Is Expense of Curtis. The cost of aeroplane flying as com pared with automobile or train travel Is shown by the fact that Curties used Just seven gallons of gasoline, worth about $1.40 at retail, to travel the 75 miles from Albany to his landing place near Poughkeepsle. This comes to less than two cents a mile, which is what the New York Central's rates figure. But Curtiss carried baggage, including himself, weighing 1,000 pounds, and the railroad would have charged extra for his overweight, says the New York World. By automobile tbe cost would vary, according to the type of machine used. But with a machine able to make 60 miles an hour, as Curtiss did, the eost a mile would not be less than two cents and probably more. 21 Electricity from Wind. The machinery of a modern wind mill is just as far advanced over the crude machinery of the windmill of fifty years ago as are the works of a fine watch over the works of a dollar alarm clock. One type of wind tur bine, for Instance, consists of a wheel about sixteen feet in diameter mount ed upon a steel tower fifty feet is height. The entire windmill is ot galvanized steel, and all its moving parts run on ball bearings. Its trans mission gear works in an oil bath, and the best methods known to engi neering have been adopted In order to eliminate friction and enable the wheel to make the best of light winds. Tbe result Is that even In a wind hav ing a velocity of no higher than 6 milea an hour the turbine generates elec tricity. Such a windmill as this is provided with an electric generator and switchboard and a fifty-five cell , storage battery as its principal appar- ! atus. The wheel is always In run ning position, ready to make use of every puff that comes, and it steadily makes and stores current except in times of absolutely still weather. Popular Mechanics. A Great Banana Country. The growing of bananas for export Is the great basic Industry of Hondu ras. Tie enormous increase in recent years In the consumption of bananas and tbe fortune made by successful growers make this a subject of wide Interest. The exports of this fruit from Central America have trebled during the last 10 years and constitute about 80 per cent of all the bananas imported into the United States. The banana In Honduras grows wild in practically all parts of the country up to an elevation of J,0OO feet or more, but the Industry of cultivating this fruit for export is confined to the rich, hot lands along the north coast and not extending further inland at any point than 50 or 75 miles. Puer to Cortes, Celba and Trujlllo are the shipping points. Bulletin of American Republics. ' Delays of the Law. "I understand that you called oa the plaintiff. Is that so?" "Yes," replied the witness. "What did he say?" The attorney for the defense jump ed to hla feet and objected that the conversation could not be admitted in the evidesce. A half hour's argu ment followed, and the Judges retired to their private room to consider the point An hour later they filed Into the courtroom and announced J,hat the question might be put. "Well, what did the plaintiff say?" "He weren't at home, sir," came the answer. Housekeeper. A Pleasing Combination Post Toasties with Cream and Sugar. , Adding strawberries or any kind of fresh or stewed fruit makes a delicious summer dish: The crisp, golden-brown bits have a most delightful flavour a fascination that appeals to tire appetite. "The Memory Lingers Sold by Qrocers, Pkgs. 10c and I5c POSTUM CEREAL Cp., LTD.. Battle Creek, Mich. rf: J ,1