V 1 $lh)ijftss I gaits of Chopping. "I'vo Just lost a thousand dollars," said tho girl with tho pensive face, casually. "Well, It's hard to keep truck of such a Bmall sum In one's purse," was tho rejoinder tho sarcastic young woman In tho Morris chair made. Tho pciiEstvo girl's nose wrinkled In disdain. "It was this way," she ox plained. "I waa coming homo with one of tho latest novels my friend on the north sldo had lent me. Tho hook I carried was brand new and I was going through a department storo and happened to stop and look at some books in the book department. It was then I thought of It. They aro always on tho lookout for shop lifters, you know, Irand it suddenly occurred to mo that it was quite likely I would feel tho heavy hand of a houso detective on my shoulder, and I walked out of tho store. In fact, I didn't qulto see how a detec tive who was doing his duty could avoid nabbing me. There I was loiter ing around tho books and intending to wnlk away with a brand-now, un wrapped novel under my arm. What grounds would the detective havo for believing I hadn't stolen It? I do elded to remonstrate gently but firmly with him. Ho would scoff. Thereupon I would consent to bo led away. 1 would demand being taken to tho man ager. I would otuto my case to him in a quiet, ladylike, haughty manner which would cow him, so different would it bo from the usual hysterical threats of tho real shop-lifters. He would bo convinced and apologize and hope it was all right. Then I would snillo frostily and make no movo to ward going. 'Oh, no,' I would say, 'It Is not all right. You know perfectly well what n box you nnd your bright detective havo got yourselves Into. I havo a good damago caso against this storo and I Intend to put It in tho hands of my lawyer. Either that and the annoying publicity for you or you sit down and sign a check for a thou sand dollars and hand it to mo.' Of course ho would bo glad to get out of It for a paltry thousand and then I would depart, planning a summer trip to Europe." Tho fascinated audience was listen ing breathlessly. Tho pensivo girl drew a long, long sigh. "But tho horrid house detec tive let mo walk out right under his nose and I flashed tho book in his very face. I could have hit him I was so mad." "It was a shame!" sympathized tho listening chorus. "I did shoplift once," the young woman with tho reputation for pain ful honestly broke tho silence. Every body said, "What!" and sat up. Sho shuddered. "It was this way. It gives mo cold creeps yet when I think what might havo happened to me. I was buying some cheap stick- pins at tho Jewelry counter in a de partment store nnd had laid down on tho card-filled trnys on tho counter a package I carried which was fustoned with two crosswlso rubber bunds. When my pins and chango camo I picked up my package and sauntered out. I walked a block and was wait ing on tho corner for my street car WW "Dressing a Girl. Dress for a girl ot 12 or II, the matc rial a soft white silk with a llttlo sprigged dcsl g n, while for trimming palest green velvet ribbon Is threaded In and out of bands ot lace Insertion, both on the bodlco and skirt, the llttlo squaro cut yoke of transparent laco being finished off at each corner with a rosotto of velvet caught In with a diamond buckle. Wnntcd to Hhakti llnnil. The week of prayer has hud one fun ny Incident so fur at Union City, says tho Philadelphia Times. Jess, a pug dog pet of T. R. Smoot, is responsible for it. .less frequently goes to church with her mistress and ninong other accomplishments she has been taught the trick of sitting tin and shaking hands. Jess and her mistress were lu church, and the dog promptly curled up and went to "lceP- S,1C wua tiwilk ened by the minister, who was Just closing his sermon with a beautiful peroration, and besought thoso who would flee from the wrath to come up flf fjftfe in (Stoat $itn. when my hand chanced to rub tho un der side of tho parcel. I felt some thing strange. I looked. There, slip ped under the rubber bands were two cards, each holding n set of cuff links nnd shirtwaist buttons. Thoy were ex pensive ones, too. When I got my breath I started and Just ran back to that Jewelry counter and almost threw tho cards at tho clerk, as I explained how I had accidentally walked off with thorn. I had chills all tho way home. If a floorwalker or detective had no ticed them as I was leaving tho flint time ho'd havo put mo In tho police station sure as fate. Thero would havo been abso lutely no 'way of proving I hadn't Intentionally taken them. At the best, tho firm would havo let ine go with n solemn warning never to do It again. And I know I'd have been a thief from that day in spite of myself, Just to carry out their set idea of me. Sort of hypnotic ef fect, you know." "Il'm!" commented the sarcastic girl. "Tho moral wo draw from theso harrowing experiences, young women, In regard to shopping, Is don't. Bc- sides, think of all tho things you can buy with tho money you save!" Chi cago News. OUR SWEAT SYSTEM. Mile of inlands Contained hi the llu man llorijr. It may bo Interesting to kuow that ono perspires more on the right sldo ot tho body than on tho left, nnd that tho skin of tho palm of tho hand cX' cretes four and a half times as much proportionately to tho surfaco as tho skin of tho back. Tho pores In tho ridges of the palm number as many as 3,000 to tho square Inch. Thoy aro scarcest on tho back, where there aro only 400 to tho square inch. These pores aro not simple holes or perfora tions in tho hide, us 3ome Imagine, but aro llttlo pockets lined with tho samo epithelium or pavement stuff that cov crs tho external of tho 'body. Thoy run straight down Into the deepest structure of tho skin, and thero thoy kink up nnd coll around till thoy look like a fishing lino that has been thrown down wet. Inclosed in this knot aro little veins that leak tho perspiration through the walls of tho tube, and it wells up to tho surfaco of tho skin. It -Is estimated that tho average-sized man has 7,000,000 of these Bweat glands, aggregating twcnty-olght miles of tubing. Think of it! Twenty-eight miles if all thoso tiny tubes could be straightened out and put end to end! Theso figures, wonderful though they may seem4 aro on tho very best medi cal authority, says a writer in Ains leo's. They nro the figures of men who have given their lives to the study of this subject. But still, If they seem too largo for you, thero is Just as good medical authority for tho statement that thero aro 2,400,000 sweat glands on the human body, each one-fifteenth of an Inch long, nnd that their aggre gate length Is two miles nnd a half I Think of It! Two miles nnd a half! If you object to that, too, I havo tho very best authority for tho statement that they aro ono-qunrtor of an Inch long nnd aggregate moro than nine miles, or I can llguro it for you at seven miles or twclvo miles. Take your pick. Our motto Is: "Wo ulm to please. If one figure suits you moro thnn another, It's yours. Wo can sub stantiate It by the very best medical authority." I find only one figure, however, for the amount, of liquid secreted by tho skin of an avorugo person In a year, though It Is evident that tho quantity must vary greatly, according as tho person works In an icehouse or rldos a bicycle up-hill. From the averagi? poison In a year's tlmo there oozes through the pores of the skin l,!i00 pounds of water Tho exnet length of our year Is 3G." days, ( hours, 13 minutes and IS.ii sec onds and glvo him their hand. No ono re sponded, ho repented the Invitation. "Come along," ho pleaded. "Come up and glvo mo your hand." Thinking tho Invitation was intended for her, Jess Jumped off tho bench on which sho was sitting, trotted down tho aislo and, reaching tho minister, stopped In front of him, raised herself on her haunches and extended her paw. Tho man of God took no notice of tho dog but nearly every other person In the house did, and tho solmcn and stibliniu gavo placo to tho laughable and ridicu lous. Seeing that nobody was going to shako bunds with her, Jess, vory much disgusted, trotted buck to her seat. Ituln Mniln to Order. There Is hardly anything lu the way of altering the face of the earth that tho landbcupo gardener cannot curry out successfully, and any one who cares for a section of the Alps in his buck garden has only to order it. The much-adinlrcd ruins at Virginia Wa ter, which many people think aro genu I ne, were all carefully placed in posi tion by a firm of landscape gardener, and thoro Is in Shropshire a model of tho world-renowned falls of Gelsbuoh. water and all, which owe Its presence to the sanii) art, while in Hertford- -I.,-. !.. .. K..n.r... ...... II.. I.. .. bliue I" a iiijiuiuii utiaiiu iii u mum ur thoilox state of ruin, but built by a Sukscx Hrm. Cliffs can be and havo ( gttNtott'u (Srntmm gventi. r5 Tho Bests aro vory fond of graham bread. Mrs. Best la a New Knglandcr, and natural 1 y knows good bak ing. She knew or thought sho know what it tasted like, also; hut slnco tho advent of a new, green girl her opin ion has changed, says writer in Chi cago News Record. When Huldah, tho new girl, camo Mrs. Best labored Indus triously tenchlng her the family ways, and on Friday, tho regular baking day, set her to mnklng a graham batch. All went well until the doorbell rang und callers were an nounced. Mrs. Best went In to roccivo them and left Huldah to finish mix ing the bread according to minute in structions. After the guests' departure Mrs. Best returned anxiously to tho kitchen, but Huldah had tho mixing all dona and set away to rise. Iite In tho after noon Mrs. Best went to sco how tho loaves looked before they went into tho oven. Huldah removed tho cloth nnd revealed four oblong pieces of spongo that resembled half-worked putty. Mrs. Best frowned in a dubious fashion and remnrked that they looked queer. Hulduh looked Innocent nnd replied that she "haf done yust wot missus tacl her." Mrs. Best told her to set them nearer the heat In enso they should take a notion to rise fur ther, but at tho end ot another hour they still had a discouraged look, and Huldah put them into tho oven With the cheerful perversity of things inanlmnto they camo out look ing beautifully crips nnd light and Mrs. Best began to think hcrsolf de eclved. Tho bread was served and heartily partaken of, though every one ugrecd it had an odd taste, nnd occasionally a gritty section would startle them into a firmer suspicion that something wns really amiss. Nov ortheless Huldah stoutly declared sho had followed tho reclpo to tho letter, As tho bread grow older tho gritty substances became moro pronounced und Mrs. Best be gan investigating in earnest. "Huldah, what did you put Into that bread?" sho asked. "Ay poot sugar butter, salt, yeast and Hour." "Is that all?" "Waol, ay poot In two klnes flour." "What kinds?" "u r a ii a m an whalto Hour." "Why did you do that?" "Ay not hnf nuff graham, so poot lu lectio whuite." 'Show me tho Hour you put !i ." f t . . i .1.. t. t. i . iiiiiuuii urniigut out ine Hour In a yellow paper suck. Mrs. Best gavo a gasp nnd hurried Huldah out to tin guriiugo nox witn Her apron full of bread. The flour Huldah hud used wus whiting, a substance used for polishing silver. been nuulo, aiuLu kii(. with lands or a babbling stream eaby tasks. a few is are quit Altni milling. In Canada aro a number where asbestos is produced of iu:p and dii oi uie largest or Uicho Is near Slier I. . 1 . .. !. - . . iiruuM-, in uiuaiio. Tho serpentine jock is mined in open quarries an after It has been curried to tho surface unit hearing this asbestos Is separate iioiii tuo naiTon material by lmnd picking. At a cobbing house the long iiuercu auuesiOH is Knocked otf from me serpentlno by hand If tho vein aro moro than three-quarters nf inch thick, but in the smaller piece! this separation is made by machinery Tiiniml ITiiiltir Itnyul I'hIh Within a few weeks the tunnel im dor tho royal paluce of the qnliinul at uonie win ue completed. It will puo tlio older part or the eternal city uireci aim icvei communication wit thut now quniter of Home erected sine 1870 beyond the quirinul. It is to i. ..mi. . ir..i.n.i i i. . uriumiiu , iru vy uicrirtriiy an ...hi i . ... iii. win on curuiiiuy wiucneu ny tne po lice, who are In dread lent It inisl erve sonio anarchlm plot. to blow u i he palace above, ' Tho largest mosquitoes In tho world are found lu the ttrctlc regions. I w A - eKt- r i lU- -I IPX Si TO HUDSON BAY. rtallroatt I.lnn from Sault Sto. Marl Turoaich Urn Wllilernn. For years thero has been much talk ot building a railroad between Mani toba and Hudson Bay as a now outlet for tho wheat ot tho Canadian North west. It seems likely that this project will nover bo carried out, but tho now scheme, announced only a few months ago, of connecting the foot of Lako Su perior at Suult Sto. Mario with tho southwestern shores of Hudson Bay now advancing at tho rato of half a mile a day. This la tho Algoma Cen tral rnllroad, building mostly with United States capital, but assisted by the Canadian government, which has mndo invaluablo concessions to tho ompany. About soventy miles ot tho road nro now completed. Some years nso Mr. n. Boll and other Canadian explorers first revealed tho region to the southeast of Hudson Bay. They declared that it contained a great nbundnnco of spruco and other valu able timbers nnd aleo much flne, arable land. It was thought that the corres ponding region to tho southwest of the bay must bo equally valuable, but very little was known of It until early Inst summer when a number of min eral and timber experts wero sent out on tho proposed route to ascertain tho possibilities of tho country. Thero was reason to bellcvo that spruco abounded and the main purpose of building tho road wns to secure lnrge supplies of wood pulp for tho paper mills at SnultSte. Murk'. But it waa thought that investigation would re veal other important resources nnd this bollof Is Justified by tho reports now coming In. Tho prospectors say that vast forests of spruce, pine, hard woods and other cedar Ho all along the route. Thero aro also great beds ot pottery clay, iron ore, copper, gypsum and other minerals besides millions ol ncrcs timbered with muplo, beach and oak that will make line, farming lands when onco cleared. Tho Ontario gov ernment has mado a contract with the company to locato on theso lands sev eral hundred families a year for the next ten years. An emigration olllcc has been established In England und it is expected to send out tho first party In tho coining spring. It is said there Is spruco enough along tho lino of tho road to supply pulp for large paper Interests for many years. Consul Har lan W. Brush has reported from Ni agara FnllB, Ontario, Unit It Is tho In toutlon to establish a "seaside hotel" nt the terminus ot the railroad on Hud son bay. Gamo Is plentiful thero, scores of lakes nnd rivers teeming with llsli may bo easily reached, and tho scenery, tho bracing cllmnte and tho hunting and Ashing are expected to at tract thousands of tourists. New York Sun. SOME QUEER NAMES Sodom, Now Mexico anil Virtue, Ten' n'9, Kztroma Kxamulra. To any ono who frequently consults tho United States oHlcinl postal guldo, which Is a dictionary of post ottlccs, the number of peculiar and mirth-pro yoking names UBed to deslgnnto places whero mall Is handled Is an unending source of astonishment. Many of theso names nro plainly suggestlvo of their origin. "Mud," Texas; "Mule," Ore gon; "Sodom," New Mexico; "Yellow Jacket," Iduho, and "Loyalsock." Penn sylvania, aro among them, but tho do slrablllty of their selection is a matter of serious doubt. "Panther" Is enough to depopulate most any town, out six states havo used It to designate post of llccs. Iowa has mnde n post ofllco of 'Wax," Florida of "Sawdust," Ken tucky of "Seven Guns," Texas ot "Twin Sisters," Tennessee of "Virtue," North Carolina of "Wit," Mississippi ot "Ze ro," Colorado of "Ixivo," Pennsylvania of "Mountain Sunset," South Carolina of "Oats," Virginia of "Pluck," Mis sour! ot "Puro Air," and Maryland of "Sassafras." Mult Is loft at "Option' In Pennsylvania. Tho only "Pious' post ofllco is in Ohio. If "Quality" is what you want, go to Butler county Kentucky, for it. "Rolling Stono" Is In Minnesota. "Rockycumfort" Is tho contradictory nnnio of a Missouri vll lage. If Uncle Sam'B employes catch tho spirit of tho place, mail Is handled with moro than ordinary promptness at "RiiHhmore," Florida to Alabama "Yours Is not tho supposed to bo a hot place. Says MlnneKota. "Pepportown, Indiana, Is only "Pebble" on th beach." A MKiimrliil Cliurrli (lift. Mrs. Augustus J. Smith Weoks, o Putchogue, N. V., recently mude a not ablo gift to the Congregational church of that town. Sho presented it wit) tho property known as tho Ocean Ave nuc Chapel, valued at $10,000. Th chapel was built by her sister, Obnr lotto G. Smith Kecch, In 1870, lu mem ory of her father nnd mother, Mieah und Betsey Nowey-Snilth. She died In 18S7 und left It to Mrs. WeckB aa a sacred trust, and the latter has now given it In tho sumo way. It can never bo sold or mortgaged, and Is to bo al ways used us a houso of prayer, kept Insured, and, In case ot firo, to bo re built. Mrs. Weeks' great-grandfather was ono of tho charter members and helped to 1ulld the llrst Congregational church of Patchoguo In 1701!. Diii'k Iiiloxlcitril. Wild excitement and consternation wero introduced last week by u practi cal Joker in a poultry show at Wllkes barro, Pa. During the absonco of tho attendants tho ducks were fed with com soaked lu whisky. They wore soon intoxicated, and promptly began a furious combat. All the fowls lu the neighborhood of tho drunken ducks were excited by I be uproar and It seemed that the show would havo to end. Hromo neltzor was mixed with the ducks' drinking water and they Dually became peaceable. 11 TW1JL1GHT g Tho day n cone, and from the east, nfar, Night's shadow comes apace! tho loao IlrcathCM out htr vesper fragrance, ero It clone: And yonder, godlike, clenm.i the rvenlilK tit nr. Bllcnco Ik here; rnv Jimt enough of round To innko llu prrprnro felt; there In no stir A robln'n lullaby, a cricket' chirr No moving nlr lu all tho tree around. ThtiB would I end. havo life's buy Journey With shadows sweeter thnn of day. tho Rluro With imislo Hoft, and lu the dappled say Btnr after star, an hero nnd thero n friend Strides forth to blenx tho pilgrim old and ftrny, That, tlko the twilight, puts hi bur den by. C. O. H. A Forgiveness, BY DABNI3Y MARBHALU (Copyrljtht. 1901: Uy Dally Htory Pub. Co.) Ostensibly 81 wns a farmer and blacksmith, and occasionally a cattlo drover, but as tho agricultural region about him wus poor, und tho pasturage though extensive wns Inferior, being covered chiefly with pine straw, a diet to which tho sheep and cows did not take kindly and upon which with tho perversity of dumb "critters" thoy re fused to fatten, the Income from oven triple employment llko .thU would eem to bo necessarily' limited. But genius Is nlwnys superior to cir cumstances, so Emerson says, and Si exemplified tho saying by always hav ing an abundance of the comforts ot llfo and a plenty ot money. His wife ulwuys appeared In a now dress at each annual protracted meeting, his beys wore storo shoes, and always had powdr in their gourds nnd shot In their pouches. As for 81 himself, ho owned a breach-loading gun a drum mer might not disdain, nnd used real smokeless powdor cartridges. His neighbors told visiting friends from across tho river in Amito county, that SI actually paid two and a halt cunts a piece for these, and the neighbors Heard tho stntomeut with unbounded wonder at such evidences of wealth. When collections wore takon up for what iho prencher called "tho spread ing ot tho gospol ot tho sweet Savior among the heathen in China nnd tho pore Catholics In Now Orleans," Si al ways put a dollar In tho hat. Mrs. Hnrdsook fifty cents, tho boyB a dlmo each, and llttlo Lodolla, the only girl of tho family, a silver qunrter. In con sequence SI passed for a deeply re ligious mnn, and the parson always called him Brother Hnrdsook. Nor was Si's generosity purely ec clesiastical. Ho had been frequently known to leave tho railroad with as many us two one-gallon Jugs full of "llcker" and arrive homo with tho Jugs, owing to a liberal sampling of their contents on hla own part, and a generous distribution of tho Bamo to all ho mot, who universally at first ro tused to drink, but finally conoontcd being na how it waa Si as otterod tho Hckor, and they would "moist a llttlo, not as they wero wlno-blbbers and gluttonous, but would tako a swig for "tho good of their innards." Moat of his neighbors drank what was offered them and asked no ques tions and mado no remarks. But some of them were deeply and audibly per plexed us to whero SI got all this money. Cortuin circumstances con nected with 81 would linger In their minds and whut was worse break out on their tongues. They would com ment how tho cuttle of neighbors noar SI had a way of disappearing Just when they were "moat fltten" for mar ket. But in that great unfencod coun try what wns there to prevent cattlo from struylng? "Dumb critters." said SI, "wo mighty blggity and roaming somo any how, and will some times Just rush to their ruin." Somo times nhio In tho fall country stores near him wero robbed und their safes blown open Just after tho money hud been received from tho town bnnkB to pay for tho Incoming cotton. It waB a strange coincidence that after Hiich robberies SI had moro money and dis tributed moro "Hckor" than ubuuI. But SI said "llfo is full of coincidences and a mystery according to tho scriptures, "Leastwise," udded he, "that Is what tho parson miyn the Word nays, and I ain't tho man to dispute a licensed minister of the gorsepcll, nor is you nuthor, neighbor?" he would auk of his listener as ho lovingly toyed with the trigger of his fumous guu. "No, Indeed," replied the neighbor with alacrity, edging olt a little. "I don't dispute the parson uuthcr you ion air both right ub for us 1 knows on." Still somo folks would prove "too leaky of tongue" In regard to Sl'a at fairs, and It wua strnngo how tho corn cribs und cotton houses ot these "measly back-cnppors," us SI called them, hud a habit of taking tiro lu the dead bourn of tho night. But one day tho grand Jury actually indicted SI for grand larceny. Ho wan accused of stealing ten head of cattlo from Mart Smlggles. The chief wlt- nens against SI was Dune Swarrlngton, a good-natured fnrmer too stupid to bo dishonest, whoso farm adjoined tho roud over which SI had to drlvo tho cattle to New Orleans. Tho testimony waa ntroug for the state. SI could al most hear tho doors ot the penitentiary opening upon blni. "It was an awful oxperlcnce for a Christian," he used to say In after years, but then ho would add, "them the Lord lovcth ho causes." SI want upon the stand und testified in his own behalf. He acknowledged thut ho sold tho cattle, it was truu ho wns a fanner, ho said looking at tho farmer Jurors, a stockman If they would. He was uneducated too, no hanger around of lawyers and court rooms, for ho thought an honest farm ur'n placo was lu the Held, and not loultng around umoug them Hint rep resented corporations and xuurcbuuU, and so he did not know much law, but ho was n Christian and an nlllanco man end ho hoped ho did know what was right, it ho did not know what waa lawful, "two mighty different things," he sntd, "as somo nmongst you know, what has had homes closed out under deoda of trust for debts you nover mndo nnd things you nover bought." Tho calo of tho cattlo, ho went on, had como about this way. Ho waa go ing to New Orleans with a flno herd. Among thorn was a most likely male. "I wish you could havo seen him, Jcdgc," ho said deferentially to that magnate. "Ho had grent ahlncy horns samo as it they was polished up fer powder horns, nnd curls llko a city gall right down botween thorn horns. Anil was hlgh-stoppln as a preacher or u railroad conductor." As ho was driving this innio by Mart'n pasture, Mart's helforo hart loped out and mixed with hla cattle. Ho had called for Mart, but ho could not make Mart hoar. Ho himself had driven tho heifers out ot tho cattlo tour times at least, but thoy Jtmt would como buck, Tho attractions of that initio wore simply terrible, no prencher wan moro powerful among tho ulstcro. It looked llko witchcraft or hoodoo or something to him what wnrn't natural. Finally ho tired out driving uucli con-trary-mlndcd brutes. "A man can't bo expected oven by tho law to spend hla wholo tlmo fooling with a passcll of cows when he's got an honest living to make. So ho was forced to lot Mart's old holfors go to thunder; but, would they believe It thoy hadctual-, ly followed him plumb to Now Orleans. What was ho to do with them? Leave them In tho streets to bo takon up and appropriated by the city folks? Not much! They already got a ulcnty ot country folks' stuff any way by clos ing out mortgagea nnd deeds of trust without Just making them a present of tho flneat cattlo In Marlon county. So ho had been compelled to sell Uioh heifers along with his own. Moreover he wus tender ot heart and could not "Don't shoot tho kids, 81." bear to part thorn from that likely male. It wa3 truo ho had never of fered Mart tho monoy, hut he hat! not hud tlmo to do so. With hlu wlfo sick, nnd Lodolla punlng around all tho tlmo and grass Just n whooping In his cotton, ho had not boon ablo to go over to Mart's and tako tho monoy. Ho was going to do ho. on tho very next day, when tho oherlff hud como and Jailed him." "To show you gen tlemen," ho concluded, "Hint 1 ain't got no hard feeling agin Mart, though ain't saying ho isn't treated mo wrongful, I will glvo him tho vally of them heifers hero . nnd now." WJUh. that ho flung the money on tho table In tho court room. Tho Jury votlreil nnd soon brought In a verdict ot not guilty. As the crowd was pouring out ot Hid court room SI nudged Dune on tho arm and said: "So, you aworo agin mo, did you. Dune?" "I had to, SI; I wnr on oath to tell the truth." , "That'B all right about the truth," said SI sarcastically. "Wo ull knows you Just loves tho truth. Just fattenu on it. And I nln't denying that tho truth is a good thing in its placo. but I want to leave with you that tho truth don't stop no lead." An bo walked homoward Dune con cluded thut a change ot air would bo good for his wife's lungs. So ho sold out his llttlo property at a sacrifice and moved to Louisiana. Ono night after family prayers SI'h oldest boy said: "Pap, when nro yo.i golu' to kill that hound of a Dune Swarrlngton?" "When tho crop In laid by, Sontile. I am too tinny now to indulge In pleas ure. Business fust, my boy," Ono morning when tho last furrow had boon plowed, and thero waa no blacksmith work to bo done. HI uaiiv to his wlfo: ' aiaimny, hand mo iny gun, 1 guess I'vo got tlmo to kill Dtino now." A two days' ride brought him in Dunc'B place. Ho slipped through tho plno brush to tho edgo of tho Held whero Dune wns plowing, llo slowly trudged bare-f,ooted behind a stcor that dragged a worn out plow. Hlu whlto wool hat, full of holes, Happed ovnr his face, bronzed and drawn, hunger nml over-work written all over It. Not far off Dune's largest boys woro hoeing, followed by their Hlstor, all baro-footcd and rugged. Further und near tho woods was a six yew old ypmujulor. Dune's buby chap, with a long slender polo minding tho gap In tho fence Dune had not yet had tlmo to mend. Si maidenly confronted him with his gun. Taken by surprlso Dune started and trembled a llttlo at llrst, but soon recovering faced his cnomy without blanching. "Don't shoot the kids, SI," woh all ho said. But SI replied: "Don't bo nowise qn easy, Dune. I havo rodo a liuiiijicd miles to kill you, but 1 guess you nto worse off hero than you'd bp ln .h,ell So I forglvo you, Fully und freely forgives you." SI then started off, but wheeling sud denly pitched, a sliver dcllnr over In tho Held to tho amazed Dune, saying: "Here, buy thut air poaked-fnceil young uu' a square meal. He )oofan hougry."