iNjOANj (JcCCCCCCCCCCCQOOCCCQQCCCOC trt GREAT old sweet-snielliug gar s den, and one little maid among " the flower Mid bees and butter ies. All alone she was. for mother did pot come out Into the garden much thaw days. Joan stopped before a tall pink hollyhock, and spoke. "I don't theriuk this is such a nice summer as most," she said. "I used to amy 'link," ouce oh, years and years ago, when I was ker-wite a little baby, but say Iherink,' now, cause I'm most grown up, you see." Then she walked on agalu down the little twhited gravel path, with her hands clasped behind her. and her vows grave with thought. For no Man Paddy used to walk when he was Saving a big "therlnk." "But It's whole days 'most years ilnce Man Laddy went away," she Mid. stopping beside a gray green jush of lavender, "and he said good by to hasty, he squeezed me so hard that le hurt, and bis eyes were angry, and ! hadn't been naughty at all. Are you lorry, aweet lavender?" She buried her face in the fragrance, jhen trotted on down the little, path, !lf she came to a tall foxglove. She tilted back her yellow head and gazed up at the white and red bells with wide eyed gravity, her hands still clasped behind her back. "One day," she said, "a lady came to ee mother. It was it was a long. big time ago, afore you were horned, pretty ladies wbat txiw, and she tried to kiss me when she was going, but I didn't like her, you see, and I would not kiss her, and 1 ran In to mother, and mother was lil on the I forgot jthe bed without covers in the draw-lng-room, you know, and the lady .was smiling ever so, anil her dross "was as lonf as a new little baby's, and that was the day Man Daddy went away." She bowed gravely to the polite fox gloves, and. trotted on. Before a group of tall, white lilies she stopped again. She came closer, and, stretching up her arms, pulled one gently down and laid her soft cheek against the snowy petals. For a moment the baby lip quivered. "Man . Daddy loved you the bestest of all. 'Queen of the Garden' that's what he called you, you know." Then a cry went up In the warm, sweet air. "I want Man Daddy oh, I want him so bad"' The little hands were unclasped only to be locked together tighter still. "For I'm most grown up, you see." whispered Baby Joan to the tall white lily, "and grown-ups don't cry, you She left the lilies, and walked on in deep thought. "At the end of the path her wee red sunshade was tied with a string to a nail In the wall. Such a long while it bad taken to fix that sunshade "propelly," but Joan eyed It proudly now. "Are you ker-wlte happy?" she said, peeping round at the clambering white and pink convolvulus behind the lit tie parasol. "Poor muslin ladies, didn't the wind blow you drefful?" Then she watched a little blue butter fly as she fluttered about from flower to flower, and finally sailed over the wall.. 1 "If I was a butterfly." she said to the convolvulus. "I would soou find Man Daddy." She sighed, so that ber small muslin-pinafored bosom gave a big heave. "But then." with another thought, "I'd have to leave mother." She sighed again. "Mother say, 'Don't worry, Joan," when I ask when Man Daddy's coining home, ami' then she kisses me ever so, to make up." She trotted ou again with hands be hind her back. A woman looking from a window turui d away In anguish from the small feminine imitation of Man Daddy. Suddenly the chubby legs twinkled in wild haste up the garden, across the velvet lawn, out of the open gate into the road. "I can go 'most as fast as a butter fly," said Joan, "and I'll find Man Daddy at the nice place where Fido was took when he was lost, where there were sueb'a heaps and fieaps of dogs. I know Man Daddy'll be there." with a gleeful chuckle that brought the dimples laughing to her cheek.! "Mother never thought of that, 1 1 ' b'lleve ft was the lilies what put the therink In my Inside.' Along the hot. dusty road, meeting no one In this peaceful dinner hour, she trotted, ber unbonnet dragging behind ' and ber yellow hair rivaling the glow ing cornfield on either side. In her desire to emulate the butterfly she got over the ground at a surprising pace. 8be put all ber heart and soul Into ber endeavor, as abe always did Into every thing she undertook. Life to Joan wis a deep and an earnest thing. Bbe hardly knew that ber Short legs were aching, or that her " carls were sticking to ber damp little brow. By tbe time the village dinner hour was over the village was left fsr behind br Joan's determined leg She began to meet people, and a few asked bar where sbe was going. Joan's . beaming, moist smile and bar answer, "Has Daddy Jus' theM," with a grimy 'oreflnger , pointing apparently ' totbeeadaf tlttfMd or last, or Held, aartoned them. ut presently Joan . gtoTMd le talk te a great fniower 1 sOc It gaUto bead at ut cr ' fit tsih-r st a UKT gifts. It : e 7a nr. cr i - w mm "" tut L,tm mw Mm tag t ;.f"-Ti an gt Z rpes tow far and gazing up at it wistfully, "I'm not really a butterfly, and my legs hurt a little." The sunfl .wer nodded encouragingly. "It's a long way," said Joan. I've run mihes and miles, pretty good lady oh, miles and mile miles" her voice trailed off Into a drowsy murmur "miles:" she said, with a sudden Jerk and sitting upright. She gated up at the sunflower reproachfully. "I mustn't go to sleep." she said. '"I've got to find Man Daddy in the big place where they took Fldo when he was lost. It's Jus' there," pointing down the road. "Ooodby, gold lady. 1 must be quick, 'cause Man Daddy will be lonesome without me and moth er, you see, and mother will be lone some, too." She started at a run, then looked back over her shoulder at the" sun flower with a troubled little laugh. "My legs wou't work propelly," she said, and struggled on. The sun had gone behind great threatening cloud, but Joan took no heed. Ail her mind was centered on getting. on. She took no more rt till she came suddenly ujKin a group of poppies growing in the grass at the wayside; by them her legs stumbled and gave way, and she sank down on to the grass. She whis pered to them in a little voice that was breutulewi and fill of tears. "I want mother and Man Daddy!" she said, and then she lay still and set all her teeth together to keep the sobs back. But presently she sat up. "Dey'g coming," she gaswd, her grammar growing weak in her extremity. A suocic-n gleam lit her face. "Grown-up angels try to give the flowers water," she said, as a great tear rolliMl down her cheek, and kneel ing, she bent over the poppies and sob bed her heart out. while the tears splashed on to the flowers. But other drops came and mingled with hers great angry drops from dark clouds overhead drops that beat the poppies shuddering to the earth. "Tbe angels are crying, too," murmured Joan, sleep ily, and rolled over and lay still. The angel's crying was long and ve hement. It woke Joan several times, but she was dazed with weariness. Once sbe murmured with a smile: "It's 'most a cold bath 'stead of a teppy to-day, mother," and went to sleep again. II. In the dimly lit room on the white little bed Joan tossed wearily from side to side. "You see, little blue ladies. It hurts bad In your stummlck Jus' here," laying one hot little baud on her chest, "but I'm not crying, you know." "No, my brave little darling," mur mured the woman, bending over her. Hut you Is, mother: In an access of utter surprise. "I felt It on my bead. I fluked therlnked grown-ups never Ob, it hurts,, mothtr'" her fingers clinging around her mother's; "It hurts, you see," drawing a long, sobbing breath. Presently she began anxiously: "That did sound like crying a bit. but," with a tremulous little laugh, "it wasn't it wasn't, really " "No, no, dear I know try to go to ' sleep," and she began to sing a In! lu by. "You sing very nice, all of you. babbled the restless voice. "I do like flower singing you can hear tbe wind shaking their voices but Man Daddy won't come: One day. It was years and years ago, little pink ladles, I ran and ran you see, I'm not really a butterfly, but, then, when butterflies use their legs they go quite slow, and I haven't any wings, you see " A frock-coated llgure lient over the bed now, and the woman's eyes never left Ills face. "Fever high she must be soothed. "I want Man Daddy you're not Man Daddy d:i you know, one day, when I was ker-wite little I cut mine finger I cried wasn't It funny? But Man Daddy tied It up and I laughey, 'cause he said It was a dolly. Would he tie my stunniilck up if be was here? hurts, you see oh, It hurts.'" Anguished and broken came the wo man's voice: "I do not know where he is." The doctor looked grave, and pres ently be went. "Darling, you are to brave and good will "you try to go to sleep, to to be well when Daddy comes back?" Is he coming back, mother? Oh It hurts:" with a sob. "it uuru so, mother." If vou bo to sleep, dear oh, do try, Joan, do try!" I will shut mine eyes tight, mother, The restless little body lay rigidly stni. 'Think of the sheep, dear," said the mother, using a recipe she had found sticessful with Joan In s farmer cb.U Isb Illness. "Count tbeni as they come up to the gate snd Jump over It 8ee, there they go one, two, three." Presently tbe great eyes opened with a plteously worried look. Mother." tbey stlckl They won't Jump over the gate at all!" All tbe woman s pride bad gone. Sbe racked her bruin for some clew of her husband's whereabouts. At last she thought sbe bad one faint and tluslve, bat sbe would try she would telegraph. Sbe crept from the room while Joan lay In an uneasy doze, snd wrote ber telegram, and sent it off wit wild prayer In ber hesrt. ' Tbe tahtHw long thai Jaa thought each dsw that H was a fresh ftt bejru agam passed; tbe sun rose In a glory that flooded ths room and shone pink on the weary lit tle face lying on the crumpled pillow; and then, when the pink glory bad fad ed and left only one bar of gold peep ing through the blinds, and resting, lovingly on the yellow curU, he came., Straight to the little bedroom he' came. ! "You see, queen of the garden," babbled the restless little voice, "It hurts rather bad. He loved you tbe bestest of all; but he won't come and I mustn't cry, you see. But It hurte"' He bent over her, ber tiny band In his. v "Joan " ' . Joan's beaming smile greeted him. "Ke has come, queen of the garden Man Daddy has comer she said; with an Infinite content, and fell asleep.. When she awakened the pain bad "'most gone." "I k no wed you would take It away, Man Daddy, but" wistfully "I didn't find you. did IT He glanced across the bed at the woman's down-lient bead. "Yes, Joan, you did. If you hadn't looked for me I should not have come." She half smiled. "But" "Never mind now, little one. It Is gH through you I am here." "Honest Ingln, Man Daddy?' "Honest Ingln, Joan." She tieamed. satisfied. "If I hadn t looked for you. you wouldn't have corned. Aren't you ever so glad, mother?" Low and puniest came the woman's answer: "Yes, dr." "May I go and tell the flowers now, Man Daddy?" "Not yet. Joan." "But you haven" tied up my stum- mlck into a doily" Not this time, l.le still and be good. little one." "Yes, Man Daddy. Kiss me." He bent over her and kiswd her. "Y'ou, too. mother." Then suddenly he dlmbled gleefully. "I want a Jumble kiss," she said. Then? was a little constrained pause. "You haven't forgotted, Man Dad dy?" in shrill tones of woe. "No." "Then be quick"' holding out her hands. "Come long, mother. "We must humor her," murmured the mother, with downcast eyes. "It is a foolish game, but " The man kept his arm around her when the "game" was over. We must pretend well, she U so sharp," he muttered, weakly. Joan lay and chuckled drowsily. When the long lashes rented on the baby's cheeks, the woman made a slight movement away from him; but his arm tightened. "Suppose she wakened 7' be said. There was no s juikI then In the room save the ticking of his watch. Pres ently he spoke: "Nora, I cannot go away again." "Stay" she breathed "I do not be lieve that tale." "God bless you, dear"' Silence again. Then "I should have denied It, Nora.' "No no; I was wicked to doubt you. "I deny It now, before ' But she stopped him with a kiss, "Man Daddy, kiss me, too. May 1 go and 'tell the flowers In the morn in'? I am ker-wite well now." "Go to sleep again, little one." She shut her eyes obediently, then opened them with a gleeful sttiil All the sheep are Jumping over the gate now, mother:" she cried "ev ery one of them!" Quiver. WARDS OFF THE LIGHTNING Clothing Warranted to Protect Wearei from Electric Strokes. Thanks to the researches of a Bus slan savant, man may now, like Jove, defy the lightning's stroke. He has in, vented a garment that is said to be a. certain protection against a stroke of the electric fluid. It Is light and ties. Ible and does not In the least Interfere with the movements of the wearer. The garment Is made of fine gauze, of brass threads, and couslst of a shir and trousers that reach IsMow the feet. The sleeves end In gloves that are pro vided with buttons for fastening. A hcid cover the head, buttoning on the body part of the safety garment. When the wearer of this garment ap proaches too near the current of an eleetrle machine, Iniead of harming him, the current is conducted to t lie ground by the suit of gauze and the, person inside experiences no Inconven ience. The wearer of this suit can stand between the two poles of a hlghi tension current of electricity and the spark will pass from one to the other across his Intervening liody without shocking blm, tbe discharge going through the metallic covering. The Inventor of the lightning pro tector donned bis gauze garment and placed himself under a conductor that bad s tension of 50.000 volts. With bis bauds, his elbows, bis arms and bis bead he attracted brilliant sparks, but was not tbe least inconvenienced. He grasped with bin hands two electrodes. of .! volts pressure and caused to pass th rot tii thu protecting garment electricity amounting to l"i amperes. a current so strong that when be wltb drew bis bands an electric spark two feet long shot out from tbe machine. At tbe termination of the experiments it was found that tbe gauxe gsrment had not been damaged by the sparks. with tbe exception of small holes st be points of contact, that did not 1m pair the protecting action of the inven tlon. TaajMla fmg by Aats. ' Tbe ants of South America bar bt known to construct a tunnel three mile la length. VERMONT- LAS I -fAINTE' ro Coeatryaea Track and Kill Htaa ad Get 912 Mmle Huuatr. "They's people in Vermont as bought tliat the painters was ill dead," said "Black Bear ioe" of Hen mountain to a rrlter In the Boston Journal, is he sat on a barrel in the back shop f a Main street store iu Burlington. 'But they wau't. I beercd one on 'em breech up st Hen mountain In the nlddle o' the night this winter, sn" it riz my blood up tighter'n a drum. "I came down by .Montgomery Colt er way t'other day. an' there I heerd ell on the biggest painter that I evr iecn. Some folks call 'em panthers an" me folks call 'em painters, an uiore'u 11 of 'em call 'em wildcats. But the eal name, I heered tell when I was lown to the sportsman's show, was a nountain lion. Them's the crittuis hnt they let the President shout down Arizony, an' they is scheduled to un up as rar as i.-innuu an unn icrofs the northern end o' New Voik n' over Int'T Maine, New Hampshire nd Vermont. "Bakersticld mountain Is 'bout the ast place Unit you'd exieet to find a eal live panther. But they kill d one her' t'other day. "Some of the boys was out In the lills gunning au' digging spruce gum m' the like when they came utxiu the rlHur's tracks. They was big enough o 1? a tiger's steps an' one of the ads foiiml where a fox h;id been iuglit and eaten. The snow was nil nicked down and bloody like and the bide was torn up somewhat. Bear lever tear up a hide but skin It off larerul like an roll it up on tlie ground. 'None of the young fellers could inake mn what the tracks was. But !' Teddy Sheldon, who Is now going )n to 71 years, an I suppose lias klil- d more than seventy bear, shook his bead and said to the young uns. ses 'That's a painter, or my name lin't Theodore. I'm TO, but I'm ble-s-d if I don't git out the old gun an' jave a try at the fl2 that Its iiide'lt bring in Isjunty.' "He an' William II. Jewett polished 'jp their guns an' set out. They found where a de-r had been pulled down in' 1it throat bitten by the panther, but the deer had evidently shook the tinite off an' got away. After running long distance It fell and died. Prob'ly the painter was too full o' bis parller dinner to foller an' so lie never knew that the deer db-d. "They got some o' their dogs ok the track of the panther, an' after a li y :tiase tney round tuc trail leading t.tvu Into Cold holler. Now, Cold boiler is r valley that no one ylt ever had good luck hunting In. Cal'late that they would 'a' had If they bud gone there, but the name sorter gives all tbe Bh- kersneld mountain boys cold feet to !iear, an' they have fought shy of it. The panther was lying along a log ' maple when they came up with their iogs In leash an' after letting out one ir two o' his bl .ody screeches he went Into the trees and began running along in lumping irom Unit) to limb u ree to tree. Kvery now and then lie Bouid stop an' sort it turn back to tight ut the dogs troubled him. I cal'late a full-sized pantluT will tackle a man my time, 'specially at night. At last the dogs driv' him Into a !ree that sb.od all alone an' there be liimed at bay. Jewett Ami at him, tbe 'jiill going through the shoulder mus les. The great cat fell sprawling Into he snow, but immediately ran up an itliiT tree, where a bullet, fired from die rifle of Sheldon, reached his brain. "Old as I am I'd given a year off the fust end o" my life ter have shot he last painter In Vermont, for 1 eaP iate that's wtiat It was. Ain't been none shot loTe for fifty years as I inow on. "When I was a boy they pulled down iittle an' children 'most every day. Sheldon nn' Jewett took him to the own clerk of .Montgomery ('enter an' ollected $12 bounty. Might jus' well lose the account. Ain't no more com ng In." Hack to the Farm, After ten year as a St. IOill pollce iinu Hugh McMahon tired of life in a frjit city ami has gone back to the ottntry. Like Clarence the Cop. he las ixvti "transferred again," but this .line at his own wish. lie has gone back from the force to he farm; from sil!llcs to statis-s; roiu courts to carrots; from station to itable; from clubs to clods; from 'plug-uglies" to plows; from "pinches" o parstil; from mud to mendows; 'rom garbage to garden; from blood to ilossoms. He has gone back from writs to 'oe; from arrests to rest; from hh1- ioms to cool rooms; from sunstn kea o sunflowers and sunsets; from vl' ence to violets; from helmets to holly locks; from dens to daisies; from rim- ting crooks to running brooks; from nnrderers to meditation; from quick hleves to (pile! thoughts, and from 'green goods" men to the green things f Nature herself. Who shall say that he ha not chosen he lietter part of life? "Ood made he country and man made the town," md at the very !et. It sometime wems, man made a nsd Job of It, It. l)iil Post Dispatch. Onter or Population. When Henry XIarr, of Columbus. I md. goes to his. barn lot and siep. Ipon a neaiiy csrveu aian ovarium mr hscrlptlon "1D0O" be has l.tiV).()j people on all four sides of blm, for he b the center of populstloo man of the whole United States. There are some positions fist s.e.o a require men who don't kixtw vr such. Tbe aurora borealls, as lately seen In the early afternoon by an English observer, appeared as a black arch with black streamers against a blue sky. Tbe sun was shining brightly. and some bright white clouds were being driven rapidly in front of the aurora. By means of a new system of print ing called "ealluypy,-the -ordinary typewriting machine can be employed for making the matrix from which printing types are cast. ' By special devices the difficulty of bringing the ends of the lines into vertical adjust ment and of niHking corrections has. it is asserted, been successfully over come. A rise of body temperature from 98.4 degrees K. the normal -to 107 de grees Is speedily followed by death. Drs. Halliburton and Mott find that cell globulin coagulates at the latter temperature, and tbey conclude that the fatal results of high fever are due to coagulation of tills proteld iu the cells of the nerve centers and other parts of the body. To eye strain, usually unsuspected, Dr. George M. Could attributes much of human misery. He linds evidence that it was Indirectly responsible for the opium habit of De Quincy, caused the morbid condition and breakdowns of Carlyle. and gave Browning his headaches umLvertlgo. Printing lssks in white ink on black pajs-r Is a sug gested means for lessening eye strain. . According to W. K. D. Scott, of Princeton I'nlverslty, there Is special cruelty in the manner of killing birds in Florida for use on women's hats. The huntsmen take advantage of the devotion of the parent bird to their young by lying In wait near the nests, before the young birds are able to fly, knowing that their cries will bring liack the parents agalu and again, iu spite of the disturbance made by tbe slaughterers. With Flobert rifles the devoted birds are picked off at a dis tance of only ten or twelve feet, j Reptiles and amphibians are attract ed to water from such distances that Dr. F. Werner, of Vienna, supposes they must be endowed with a special sense. Sight Is found to be the most acute of their ordinary senses, but alligators and crocodiles see a man not more than ten times their own length, frogs see about fifteen or "twenty times their own length, fishes not more than half their own length, and suukes only one-fourth or one eighth of their own length. Most rep tiles and amphibians are totally deaf. None are entirely without taste; and the snake's tongue rapidly vibrating Jhe air. seems to feel objects without actually touching them. ' Some fifteen years ago a Virginia gentleman purchased lu Alexandria, Egypt, from a native who had found it In the wul! of a building broken during k conflagration, wbat appeared to be a mass of corroded copwr weighing twenty pounds. It was kept as a hearth ornament, until recently it was found to consist of about 5M) Roman coins, struck In the days of the early j'aesars. Professor Duunlngton, of tbe University of Virginia, finds thul the coins contain one part of silver to four of copper, but when dipped In acid a part of the copper disappears, .leaving a silvery surface, which "wears" as a white metal. He le lieves the coins passed for silver. The mass had become encrusted with a double skin of malachite and of red oxide of copper, and remarkable changes had gone on within, although the lettering uud the dates remained l-Sll'le. GET8 ROYALTY FROM KIPLING. Bright American Hojr ftuegceted a Be rle of Stories to bnslieh Author. Mr. Doubleday, who Is one of the American publishers of tbe books of Rudyard Kipling, has a small win who is bound to make his mark In the busi ness, world. When In America Mr. Kipling was a frequent visitor at the Doubleday home and the small boy's admiration quickly grew to devotion. Ho watched with the most fervent In terest cv-ry step of progress In a b'sik of Mr. Kipling's ss It went through Jhe publishing house, and he had n moment of real ecstacy when he bold In his baud the first finished volume. One day he came to bis father with sn esger, questioning face. "Pupa." he asked, "don't you believe Mr. Kipling Is going to write any more children's stories, something like the 'Jungle Book," you know?" "Don't know, my son," snswered Mr. Doubleday, "but I wish be w ould." "I've been thinking of something," said the I toy slowly, "and I've been writing a letter about It to Mr. Kljv lint I think he could make great sto ries out of 'Where tbe Camel Got Ills Hump' and sbout 'What the Elephant Puts in His Trunk," don't you?" "Do you mind If I send blm I ho let ter r "Not at all. Mr. Kipling wilt b dellgbted to hear from you." "And now, paps. 1 want to make s business proposition. If Mr. Kipling should write some of these stoil n I have asked him to and if you shiu'.d publish tbim and tbey should sell Ilk hot cakes, would you be willing to pay me 1 per cent royslty for thinking up new plots?" "I shall be moat bsppy to, my boy." "And draw up a regular contract in you do wltb authors?" "Most certainly.'' "And advance me k ccnu now off my royalties to mad a latter to Mr. Kipling?" Mr. Doubleday gravely laid a nickel In the boy's hand. Tbe contract was drawn up that af ternoon. One month later came a cordial let ter from the famous author to say tbst the suggestions were fine, exactly what he wanted, and that already he wsa at work on the first story. Last Christmas Master Doubleday re ceived his first check, the royalties of 1 per cent on the "Just So Stories. It amounted to $3tf). WOMEN OF THE ORIENT. Tia Fiacc In All the 'Aorld Good a Cairo to ntady Them. In no other city of the Orient has one so good an opportunity to study the women of the eitst as In Cairo. In this, the "smelting pot" of the Moslem races, Persians, Arabs, Turks and Greeks, together with a halt do.en other races, dwell side by side, mixing with tbe native Egyptians. Women of all these races are on ps rade every afternoon on the Mousky or Mohammed All street, the shopping street for Hip rich resident. All these women wulk abroad heavily veiled, each one closely accompanied by a eunuch. In these afternoon prome nadesfor shopping Is with them mainly an excuse for a sort of half-fre'doin-"thcy show by their eyes, which are the only parts of their faces not hidden by their veils, that thej would not lo averse to a little flirtation, but the alert, scowling eunuch keeps them moving on. The masculine acquaintance of the Mo hammedan woman of Cairo is limited to her husband and her attendant eu nuch. The promenade Is their one glimpse of fieedom. Otherwise they dream their lives away In vacuity. None of them can read. Education Is not per mitted to eastern women. They have no part, practically, in the Mohamme dan religion, which Is a man's faitn. This Ignorance and vacuity of life be Icngs to all classes, high and low. Their life Is an animal one. Under tin sc. clrcumstnuces. It Is not strange that the women of the Orient are usu ally better and finer physical speci mens than their men. They have noth ing to do but cultivate their bodies. The Copts are exceptions. They are Christians, and. while the men hem their women slout to an extent un known in the west, they are still free h.s eagles as compared to the Mos lem women. Even among the Copts, however, there Is a certain amount of polygamy. If the life of the aristocratic woman Is one of vacuity, that of the low caste woman Is one of absolute slav ery. They are made burden bearers from the nge of 10 or 12. They. too. are fine animals. I have often watched a group of these women sitting at rest along the river banks. There they sat, staring at nothing and doubtless thinking of the same thing. As Is usual in Egypt, the files were thick and ven omous. I myself had to keep a sitlall horse hair wisp busy warding then from my bead and eyes. But there these women sat with the flies swarm ing over their eyes, their lips, their throats, and never so much as lifted a hi:nd. A cow or horse Would have bishiHl out vigorously, but they made no move. "What Is the use';" that tva their thought. If they thought of the mat ter at all "Tbey would only come lack again." High and low, rich and ioor. their lot Is one of legal slavery. Marriage Is n purchase. The market price of girls has been fulling steadily, until. In the lower classes, a girl without ex ceptional charms Is it drug on the market. Fifty dollars, or even less, will purchase u good animal, sound in wiud and limb. 1 was much amused by n talk which I held with a young Arab of fashion, a mini of exceptional Intelligence. He was iilwiut to I married. His father hud just bought him a wife, whom he had seen for the first time. He was tremendously elated over the fact that she was a large, fine specimen of a woman, and was correspondingly grateful to his father for the lllH'rallty of the gift. Farmers and Factories. Farmers In those districts that bars extensive manufacturing establish ments are able to pay double as much for land as those who live In tbe strict ly agricultural districts and then real lie double the profit from the crops grown. The farmers of New England, occupying a soli originally thin, in an uncongenial climate, sre able to pay higher wages than the farmers of tbe South, although tbe natural fertility of the soil and Its capacity for pro ducing a great variety of crops I not half as great as It Is In the South and the staples grown in the South are of world-wide demand and of paramount necessity. Southern Form Magazine A Piccadilly lUtiuke. Even pickpockets should have clean hand. One tried to remove tbe valu ables of a Piccadilly "irreproachable" us he sauntered to bis club the other morning. The irreproachable seized the thief by tbe wrist, gazed at bis filthy paw. and flung It from blm wltb disgust, saying: "For goodness sake, my good msn, w n h your band before you put them In a gentleman's pocket" London Ex press. No Risk to the Ileatlet. Dentist Will you lake gss ? Patient-Is there any risk. Dentist-Mot for. me. You'll have ta pay In advanced-Detroit free Press.