fT" THE FILLOYV THArS Jam may talk- f your battle erarred heroes Of mtrtjn and atl of the reat. Cst there another 1 think Jat worthy Tba teUow UjU' doing bla beat. i IXc doeaot wear gnld braid and tlnarj. Nor ride on the wave' highest crea Bat be'e alway where duty Thl fUow that a doing Ko trumpet blare tella of bla coming. For tame be U never la quest; Cot he' alway a hero, thl fellow Who ia alway found doing bla beat Vnd I'm aare In the day of tbe Judgment, When many shall fall at the tear. flkere'U be one who will pan wttbout traubW The fellow that doing And the gatea of the heavenly city. The beautiful home of the beat. Will awing wide for my hero The fellow that's doing 'Dallaj (Texas) New. ; A MATTER OF BUSINESS 1 ,o f DONT deny any of your claim. II Elgby, but It has been one of ojr rule to give such a post aa th!a ary to married men. I bd.ere th.re tomes to a man-led man a certain tense of respouaibil ty which make) him more valuable to us and more tare In the portion." "But, Mr. John n." protested youn ftlgby. "there Isn't a man on your traveling force who ha done teter lor you, couslJerlng the bud terr.tory bou gave me. If you'd give me n Chance at New York State I'd break tbe record." : "Perhaps, hot you'll have to pet arried Bret! No, don't argue," r-ltcr-4 ted Mr. John in aa Kiel y t ied to Interrupt "We'll bold the place op,-n- or two weeks. If at the end of that 4lme you can show me a marriage ertl8cate well talk business. "You belong to a club here In town. Bave apartments waiting for you trhen you come In from your trips, g ao the theater some, play the race a dt eh r 1 Rigby nodded hi head. i "Cut it out and get a wife." 1 "But I don't know any girl arbo'd i "VVhatr almost hontcd Mr. Jobn Ki, "do you mean to tell me that In I 11ATK TOC 11 your bumping around tbe country f ou've never met a girl you wool I .-llously con-siiler inar.ying?' lUgty's mind travel U n.p d y over Bis hst of acqual.itaueta tie raise 1 bis bead, aud caught a pair of b-own yes watching him from tbe (!e k in lbi far corner of Mr. Joh: am's office. 4 he ejes beortg"d to Johnsou's p.i Bi.te HU-nosrruphrr. "No. 1 don't know a girl I'd care to marry, nor a girl who'd care to tearry rue." "Well. I'll he hanged!" ejaculated air. Johnson. Uigby was standing rp. He bad tforgotten tbe I.Mvin (ye by th s lime fie ustinlly to j. ot girls ju t this en.ly - "Hut I'll tell you th s mm h. Mr anhuaon. 1 o;i't p' op se to let a I tt! tiling like not having a wife stinid IVtween lie and that-job. I'm goin,' to get l o b Inside of two weeks." . Mr. Johnson, senior member of 'he Johnson Muniifurtii hig (Vitnpany, Chuckled. He bad 1 ked .Rigby fr i " the hour tli lad had started out in th Pennsylvania coni territory to n dl Johnson shoe 4. but he would not vary tils long s' a nding rule tbe best jobi CD the married men. Wllllmet who bad long In Id th tew York ter l ory, was go ng Into business for himself, and his p isit.on Bra the one for wblrb Rigby was taking. 1iHriey Rigby crowed the square, t))s bands thrust drrp'y Into his p k Bt. bis bat pulled over hisejes. He Java thinking about g.r.a' Warn bla father's niony had ben 'Bwept away by II a Jrlawl loviKimenis tV bad rat loos from Ida mother" jfM-e-ple. who hid always i evented ber anarflagr with km rfa'oiiary, cany- volttg lUjrliy ,Xow be flashed that b ikaaT Jct la tenth with tbm aud tbeir sjartel life. fCotonliy of ftratle breeding sod In - C5afk. ke Bad not cared for ia clas ft rrta be atet liriii Hfe as a n- "C-5Tf wvei r. aw ,m "f f'k tatm liaanir Jitarr. WB ra ear ' " J ta In tbe tbea ar anal awaa aim rasl tatMka. :':--.. r ra the iaa araa aai tatai yr O artliasCj tm. bat rr' ' io'tir vr DOING HIS BlSTt demand hi beat. bla to en bla beat. i In Bcranton bad Invited him (d dinner every time be railed on ber fatber but she was not just the aort And matrimony was a gamble, a lottery, after all. It waa juat th) same whether you knew a girl a day or a year. You never really knew her until you married ber. Lots cf the married men had told him so. Then all of a sudden be remembered the brown eyes that had watched him during Johnson's merclieas catechism. Merrifleld. the bookkeeper, saunter ed In for lunch, and lUgby web-ora -d him Joyously. After a few desultory remarks he inquired about the owner of the brown eyes. "You reiiienjbfr Darntia, who wai killed In U.e Suraervllie i-olion last (iinmicr? Well, she's his daughter. Relle Haniton. I think her mother's folks have money, but she wc too proud to a.sk help, and she lives with ber father's maiden sister. I frues all they have Is ber little salary." Hlgby tramjed ten miha tbrontrh the park that afternoon, and reached a decision. It was a coincident that both should be very nearly alone In the world. And then her eyes were appealing. And be really knew her, for often when Mr. Johnson bad been away she bad written him little notci on the road. That uixbt he walked borne with Miss Brown-eyea. The next night h called, the third idbt be took her t the theater but ail tbe while the brown eyes never met bis. And Sunday night of the following week be naked her to marry biin. There were four days of grace. "You know, 1 won't bother yon very much," be explained awkwardly, wishing that tbe eye were not look ing straight Into Lis. "I'll I'll be on tbe road most of the time, and your aunt could stay with you only In n much better bous' and really, I'll d my best to make you baj py " Tbe brown cyca weie ahooting sparks now. "I'm glud yon didn't have the Im pertinence to tell me you loved me, anyhow. There is that much to y iur credit," she was s.ijlng ornf uJy. "Hut you couldn't make me happy. I hate you 1 Kbe said more, but Hlgby could ttol exactly recall It I'erbaps be dMn't want to recall It "I hate you!" That was quite enough. Aud all of a sudden he realized that, above all things, be did not wish this girl to hale biin. lie wonted ber to love him. wnntel it more than ntiy Ihlng else In tbe world even the po sition. " Three days later Mr. Johnson opened a letter from Klgt.y, dated In a small IVunsylvania town. "I have charged my mind. I don't want tbe New-York Job' until 1'vo larneil y wife." ' Then he wrote of sales and custom ers. Johns-ill ilirtated an answer to the business part of tbe letter and Ignored the reference to a future mar raise. ' Hi- gave KlgVy'a letter to trie b-oivn-eved steiiovriipber to fd" with tbe r.-ac of his day s eo. r p indeaee, and nhi read the all-lmportunt paragraph more than once. And M that long, bitter wlntrr Itlgtiy stayed on the road, lift "shtmn -d tbe theater and do :d bis eyia to th racing news. But be sold goods and wrote rejjpilarly 'to the senior mem tier of the firm. " ' "Itlgby'sigot the trade In pennayl vsnla by the boot strap and palling on It to beat tbe band, ola rrel Johnson to bla partner oae day In tbe presence of tbe brown-eyed stenographer. "He ia eurely trying to make a record." And be little tennerapher. endT rarer of her typewriter desk, gar a loving pat ta a fat order Itlgby hud lost sent In , It w snmaiar. before Rlrby pnt th nneetlon again, sad fall before the wedding day waa set. Rig by protest ed. bnt abe waa firm. ' , ' """ " " " wlinf yon to Mate aha' ira trip," be aald slyly. "I want ta writ yon utery day for nyw If. All our i-or reafMtM'aiiee aeretofore baa leaii pure ly a (natter of .bnaesa." Ha hsoked at refsaaeaf nl f "Taa." sae adJnl. satffliHi tra4tly f rvtM nU hrtwn tsa ttani f -7.I '"Jt..7C VJ. iJZZ To C la yaa. aar, for yonf m ant aom letters af my We'll make It Just a year from the day VI r. Jobnaoa told yoa to go aUs-bunt-lng." UIgby alghed resignedly. "All right, but tell m Just one thing. Belle, dear. Why did yon wst b me so closely the day Johns n akd ma If there wasn't aom girl I rouii marry In a hurry T" "Beeaoae because ind th the brown eye were covered with weeping lashes now, "I wm s ao afraid there might be." Boston Glob. PLACES TO AVOta Bare Ar Few BckIoiw la Wadca Ufa la Not Joy. Aa place of residence, neither tbe Babrieo Island. In tbe I'ersiaa Gulf, nor the city of Yakutsk, Siberia, have much to offer In the way of cbjuate, aay the Washington I"ot. "revoIutionU the map of the South In Babriea you cook and In Yakutsk itlantle ocean by finding relatively you freeze. Itahrien la said to be tba ballow water where peclally deep hot teat place In the world! Tbe tber-. rater waa exjiected." Tbe expedition moiueter often register between 1VJ rent ISO miles farther south than Uoas and 120 degre a. nlgbt and day, fur -net rated in that part of the antarctic months at a time. 1 bla rather beats vgiona. Fort Yuma, Aria, which 1 considered Tb, j.p,,, eIMi i making of tk hottest place In the United State. Mper rom the bark of tree and Yakutsk I called tbe coldeat city in rab Aniong the remarkable rarle- tbe world. Tbe thermometer frequent- fle)I lK 0 Kalrcblld mentions tbe thin ly registers 73 degree Ulo aero. aim-proof paper, used Instead of glass Tbougb Yakutak la the coldeat city y,r win(i0W(l lled parere, serving in the world, Verkhowauak. in north- ;or coTerlngj and clothing, and tbe eastern Siberia, claims to be tbe cokl- ,llei tlaue for wrapping delicate arti est Inhabited plate on the globe, tbe xD bark paper, employed for thermometer registering 00 degree seal and grain sacks, la not readily below aero in January. enetrated by weevils and other In It also claim to be the rda" P" lect. Most Interesting of alb perhaps, easing the most variable climate, for ire th leather papers, from which while It is 90 degrees below In Jana- tobacco pouchea and pipe case are ary. It la SO alve In the shade lu riade, these papers belnc almost as August during tbe day, with a drop lough as French kid, translucent, and down to freezing every midsummer is soft and pliable as calfskin, night it ta generally known that lightning Tbe wettest p'.aee In the world Is diking the ground sometimes forms Greytown, Nicaragua, where the an- i,, uDeij w;ln fU(WHi minerals, but nual rainfall la 200 laches. romparatlvely few persons have ever Tbe driest place In tbe world Is ,, the phenomena. In April last probably tbe ralnl ss coast of north- jrlng thunderstorm In Kssex, En- ern Chile. They have a shower there un , t)a)j 0f nre wblch awraed to about once In every ten years. Notbiuj rn8t dnrU In all directions, was seen grows on th'.a desolate strip of barren genrenA from the clouds. There roast and thn dreary town from Knn a rrnsblng explosion, snd sfter- which tbe nllratej and the mineral -nrd. In an oat ncld, three distinct mined In that region are shipped tie- pend for their sul s s euce upon fool brought to them In ships f oru tbe fer- tile strips to the north and south of tbe desert Northern Hussla and the shores of the French Kongo are m d to le tha cloudiest place In the world, end for fog there is no region like the Ornnl Hanks, the southern const cf New foundland and tbe water of Nova Scotia. This region is one or rog ior a larsru part of the year and the very home of tbe fog Is the Island of Orani Manan. at the entrant or tbe Bay of Ftindy. where, the sailors declare, the native manufacture fo?. When bank of specially thick fog is seen an- proacblng over tbe water tbe mar- inflnencei By the winds. In conse Iner turn to each other and say, Tin ounr. . huee ber mar often be seen Grand Manancrs are at work." .- i ..i-iitinn to it other dbtliictlon the year 1!K marks the completion of two centuilea since the first America a ..,.,,r n, atarted. savs Leslie's Weeklv. That vwr was the Boston News U tter, whose publisher anj Both In England and Germany motor editor was tbe postmaster of tba! ear and omnibuses are about to be em town. Althoi'gh tiie Newa letter ron pioyed for carrying and dlstrihutins sisted of a sheet of only 7 Inches by the malls. Tbe Knglish jxwtmaster Iti y.. nrinted on l o h siiie-i. It was thi general lias just arranged for the car- only paper that England' colonic in tbe new world had for over a decad and a baif. lbiladcl:)bla got tbe s;c- sbll-bel in Ametba and ond paper t New York got the th rd. All tbee were technically weeklies, but often lu the early dnys there were Inb-rvaa of two or three weeks Iwtaetu tbeif successive apprarauca. The first daily paper In the new world was tb Vmeriean Oally' Advenlser, piluted la I biladelpbla. Aft. r neatly a century had elapsed lm the first nrWKpa;'r U ' V" , , V there were only flfte n dad s uud 41,;. t nw l, 190 wei'kUes U the I'nlt d K ates. The contrast I ef-vi e;i tboae days and to-day Is Mr.Uug. Tber; are -1.-( isi newspapeia and pet I odl'-als of ail sort; week lb s, Reml-weekiles, rl wci'klles. monthlies and iiirterl s published In the I'u'.te I State- in 10 'I, nf which 2.4HO are iade and Ifi.'OO weeklies. Any one or two or tbr of New York's daiiy papers of 11 has a larger circulation than did nil the dallv and week'r imiwr uublinhc-J lu the t'tdfe-1 States In t)l. of the lio.ston Heiull. This hm'Mamt- - ed room, which for many decades has Winer lint. Ar-Mmm-ilc. contalmd lio httig but an old ir u: A reputable scimdtlc p-iblb-ntion ll i,uj 1,,.. kui touikJihI ly heaps of sponsor lor the s'a emi nt that lbmru,,W(,hi lB bout the be-it pte-es ve I exirt In at least three place in tin auti,te remnant of 1b original State or Indiana springs or wellj ut,tM.y f Eslward the Confiasor, hii.I wboae wsters posss marked masquer. )t rjva m,ariy every other jiortion In Ism and re able to Impart it to te kjiorlcal assocbilion. The chapel was object dipped therein. This prop -ny p,reu ita name be ausi, In addition to bn been retnlited of other spring In fIie roJ.B funds? the regalia and otb-r various parts Of the wo Id. but ucli tn.a!,,iies. it formerly contained the tale bare been received by acientinc pyx." this being, the offlebil box men with caution. , jjh to be Men In wlibb the gold ant In tbl case the tngneOam seem aiTer coins used In detecting counter arise from tbe fact that conalderabla teil were kept At one end of Hik qnanfitiea of carbonate of Iron are d - diapel are the remains of what la ge 1 oiTed In tbe water. Wben 11 tsnd eraily supfxmed to be iin adar.'tnou.h for aome time thl deniiMse ii.ta ouie expert Insist that I! is (be tomb arbotdc acid gas.' which la' i p -a, ami 0f inHollii, lie wa the orlgluaf magiietlr 1roa oxide, which fells totb treaKiirer of the Conf.asor and Is KHid bottom of the containing vessel as a t Usve watched over the excheqner powder. Wben tbe decomposition hat wltb a rlgtisme that kept even, his ceased tba water la no longer mag- royal master In awe. netle. . , The Kings of llnglsnd are snpposd '(beae sprlnji are said to eanaa per to have kept their treasriive snd pre ceptlble devist on of a eomias 'n.'' ,.oni doi iiiuviisli ffi tbe I'vi cbupr dleatBJ'li' knife' Minis' ImifteYsed foi Frer stm tl'Ato&m. . a . U Ova miinifea In on f tba npil k II The place la reached from the east- mgnetbal suttieleiviy to simtaln itea rrn cloister of the abbey, and It Is dlea by Ita point raianilug ibis prop oarded by an undent double ilmr erty far thirty hours. 'JDe water cor having no I cm than seven key, worn radea lo otutlv boiler. bi alien al them of gigantic dlajrneiona I0wa4 to ataad "till till the eartsMan ttt all 3BSan) taa ta aaaj wlH On of th recent intereatlnp food licoverie ia that the growth and fat- "'"S oyster may be promoted by bpptylng with commercial fertlllrers be minute diatom oa which the bl ithe thrive, Tbla discovery ta due Dr. IL r. Moore of th United Hatee Bureau of Plaheriea. A letter from Mr. Bruce, leader of le Scottish Antarctic expedition, ln bcatea some additional discoveries In Le south pour rrgioa. Mr. Hrucc' tarty reached tbe southeastern extrem ty of WedJell Sea, and dlacoverel here a great barrier of Ice, part of i,e ,utarctlc continent Many sound ng, Were made which, Mr. Bruce aays ! 0f holes ranging from nine Inches jwn to one Inch In diameter, were found In the ground. They were ht- ferlly circular. diminUhlng In s!7 an thev went deeper, and were cut through the yellow clay as clean as iuger boles. In the investigation of the currents round the cosst of Newfoundland It lias been observed that there Is at limps a wide difference In the direction of the drift of Iceberg and that of ,)le flat or .,an w,jCD having no (trrat dP,,f u governed In Its motions ... tDe .,(.. Purr,.nta and the winds. w,,rCiI, t.ie leeberga. the larger part of wulch , BUDnu.rK(K to a great ,,, f0iow oiiiv the movement of wter , WD0e an are on. malesticallv maintaining It alow ad vance In opposition to the wind and i general motion of tbe Held of surrounding It The sealers u'""usc 7 niooring their vessels to an iceberg In orJer to Prevpr,t a drlft iwrwarU. T'"K ofhe mail between the HcUto:, terininus of the Great Western Hail- wy te "7 w ""' "'" t'1 sttentiou having been at tracted by tne ktmi success ot tnese vehicles as tiaHwenspr feeder tor the railroad In sparsely settled districts ' u.c- ,..a.. w c,u ,v ,.. r(,!,1 '"ll,r car f.or ulu11 P pout service, both for main and branch lo.ids. On the main roads the cars are to he large enough to accommo date passenger truffle also. Street mo tor cars for mail distribution are also contemplated, and In country districts ; . ' ., having no railroad connections such cur art- to deliver and collect the mails. ANUfcrtT KiX tAfL Trcamirs Vault in Wt-ntmitniter Abbey ticii to tlte 1'ubiic The famous "I'yx chapel" in West ndiiKter abbey, the am lent treasure fault of tbe iii;)i.h kings, is no op.ni to the puLd.c ami lighted vlih e.ecs trieity. wnt.-s a fp -ci.il core?p unieiit And tt la wall' that the oM-tlma "taeasNrte," aa tba Mstarfana rallad It tssiat aaalitttlag tta faia ablaa that aver tatraated to rb) fce9 ing. Tbeae luriuded. beside tba tieaa- or rtest th regidia of tLe Satoi u anarchy, the boly cr"s of HolyMod, from Scotland, the boly cros of ft Neot from Wales, the ampulla of Henry IV, the dagger which wounded Edward I. at Acre, and tbe gauntlet worn by John of France at roUH-ra. Her also formerly were arme mightily interesting relic conneI with Henry VIII. tbe mu'di-marriel king. Among them was tbe pspnl !ml. giving Henry the title of "Iefendr of the Faith," the a ill of the monarch aud also that of his father, as wel) as a whole bag of documents In con ie tlon with Henry's divorce from yuvt Catherine. When American visitor are shown Into the I'yx chal. (16 doubt their attention will be caited to the fact that under the" clamps of the gnat door can be felt a sutisiance wnicn oss nothing whatever to do with tbe d'lor1 construction. It la the skin or a man. and It waa taken forcibly from Its wearer liecause be had forcib'y tsk-n some of the treasures that the chapel contained. This "borglarlrlnK" of the chapel tbe only on record liappen'-d In tbe reign of Edward I. while tl it sover eign was In Scotlund. How he thief managed to ge !n. the hlsto. ans do not ay, but whr tbe treasury ffl'l ils next visited the chapel, th-y fonn I boxes broken open. Jewels '-atterel atotit the uoor and several previous object missing iiiiuiih Ibrua the con secration ring of Henry III., and the reigning klng'a own seal. At thl time, of course, tbe atjbey still was such in fact as well as name. It was obvious that some of Its eccle siastical tenant must have" ten the thief, and forty-e'ght monks, as wed cs the abliot himself, were "taken lnt cunbidy" and all tried, with the result that the crime was finally brought home to the aub prlor and sa-rlst wlt'i what results the cpldermi under th ! Iron clamp Indicates. After this robbery, tbe royal funds were removed from the I'yi chapel and secrete. elsewhere. Finally the old room was placed In the provide hamls of the loard of trade, whose otll' l.-iH the pul lie has t thank for eventually I elng allowed to Inspect the famous room. THE GH iTTO G'-Oa MAKER Cmrloua (k-cnpntinii of an Aifed Jew V bu llukn Globea, In a tenemei.t house In the ghetto Uvea a skilled Jewish globemakcr. whose bnndiwork finis Its way Into the homes of his countrymen snd the museums of curio hunters uptown. The mapped spheres of manufacture are een everywhere, but bis globes are not of this Ilk. The ball of wood which la tbe foundation Is tenderly covered with a papery substance until he thinks It Is thick enough. Wire painted a bright red or green Is strung through the poles; wire aim) makes tbe axia. With tbe aid of Instruments which have been In his family for gen erations, he divides the surface Into hemispheres; then Uie equator Is desig nated; tbe lines of latitude and longi tude are painted In. The maps whieb he uses are Import ed from France, and come In nearly 100 pieces. It requires the greatest possible skill b fit them onto the globe iu exactly the right position. But tbe old man's flngnrs have become accus tomed to tbe work and he rarely makes a mistake. He dm not seem to be thinking of bis work, either, but In tones in an absent-minded way from his beloved Talmud. Tbe lingers from long rubbing and fitting are as sensi tive at the tip as those of a piano player. - "All," be says to the writer, "when I hold the globe that way I know my thumb will be In a certain town In Itussia, and my small finger in an Isl and In the Atlantic Ocean If these things are not so, I 11 111 sure tbe map is Incorrect." For his own people and a few cus tomers be Indulges In novelties such as putting in moon, sun and stars of different metals. The bases of the globe are or;i of pictiirein charac ter. Une was made of liifTerent wood from Jerusalem fashioned to repre sent the steps to Solomon's temple; the symbolism being that the globe rested upon the foundation of the holy structure. Another hit 1 crudely paint ed upon it various s -eiies from the say ings of the prophets with such lines as: "Say nnto the cities of Jud.ih, Be hold your God." "And the ransomed of the Lord shnli return aud come singing unto Zion." "Break forth Into Joy, sing together, ye waste places of. Jerusalem." The old gJobeuwker does not toll by tbe hour; bis. work Is his day dream and (Ills all bis waking moments. The children of the tmienirnt rush Into lni. bumble abode to see htm decora ling hi spberen before they go to school lu tbe morning; at twilight they conic again when their tasks are over; they gate with wondering eyes as he paste on Asia. Europe" and Africa, late lit tbe evening. When they bsve grown tna'tlred, halve kissed him od-nlght-. and are fast asleep In their beds, be Ir till disking stars and moons or care fully fitting together the tails 'of rem) eltront rlrera tiny have become nilxe' up with 0onnbilns. states, lake am! mean3 Jl vlna iifj relation whatever tt. - ''diiMiMeHiiirriiariif "Don't yan tbjbk Mat tba world b- gettlug bs'tterr "Yea," answered the mlanntbrop "If convaleaeiil. but if a long a a. from a care.' Wad.l.igt n Star. ' , -' " 1 . " T1 . Wblrb ; a-otjld yon rat ber paopb atfe riva? COLLEOE fHAWKS. at Eayttoh Madcaa Ava BBaaaa 1 ku la Ttu CMstry. American students ar hardly aa at tbe BritUh staudrd ia tba playlag at college prauk. Not long go oa a wi:er a freshman of Trinity Culiaaa, Cambridge, dressed la hla Jatcra tlothea aud called on th bead Of tna coiiege to complain that "ber brother" ta being brutally Ul-treated by IM college authorities. He wa. ao "aba" asserted, overworked, under fad and cmeliy flotged. The bent.oient old bead a maa much more lnned against than ala nlng listened to these cbargea In hela '.ess amazement "But my dear young lady " ta exclaimed. Thereupon "she" burst Into a atom of sob and would not be comforted. Hi protestations of Innocence anlf made "ber" weep the more copiously. Tbe detr old man never bad a woraa quarter of an hour. The following week be aaw taa Freaiiman play a woman' part la a comedy aud the truth slowly dawned upon him. Meanwhile, the Freshman had collected the bet and spent tba uioDey In a "party." which ended la half a doaen student trying to light the police force of Cambridge and spending Uie night In Jail. The oid "town and gown" rtota, which ued to be ucb a atrenooae feature of life lu English universillea, seldom occur nowaday, but there waa one In Oxford not many year aga which raged for three days and night uninterruptedly. Over MO poMcemea were eventually required to reatore the peace. Houses and abupg were wreck ed and many a townsman and gowun man bad to be patched up In the local hospital afterward. Being an ardent politician. It ia nat ural that the undergraduate should make tbe college elections, which ara fought on political lines, exceedingly lively affairs. Some of the leading universities return member of I'arlla metit to represent them In the lloue of Commons, but they are elected by the dons and graduates without much funs and excitement. The real fun la over" the election of the chancellor, the Wird res-tor, or whatever tbe honorary bend of the unlcrlty may be called, for In that election the undcrgrada ates take a hand. This position Is sought by the great est men in (he land men of the cal iber of Gladstone, Salisbury, Mortef and Balfour. And they are willing ta go through a most severe ordeal ta win It A great statesman who away tba House of ('ominous and helps to shapa the destines of Europe goea election wring among a mob of yelling coilegn boy, mul they think nothing of pelt ing hi 111 with red ochre, bluing and rot leu eggs If he happen to lie of tba opposite political stripe. Election day la always a wild pandemonium in a university town. Wise people stay at home and put up the shutters. FIXING HIGH NOON AT 8EA. Wireleo Telegraphy Hi pre ted KesM la Overcome tho llillicully. The most momeutous .improvement in navigation .siuce the invention of the chronometer, more than 140 year ago, bus just been foreshadowed in a ni.hiei-t paragraph lu the report of lb chief of the bureau of equipment of the United Slates navy. "it Is believed," hitys Chief Mae ney, "that the development of wire lexs teli grapby wilt enable these (tlmoj siginiis to be distributed over water aa well as over land, aud lltat before long every ship at sea. In addition to every hind station, will Twelve dally nooa signals from the hU mi aril observatory clock." . What does that mean Nothing lesa than the elimination of the last ele ment of uncertainty from tbe probiem of llniliug the position of a Klilp at sea. Hitherto the one weak p.'iut la ( navigation has been the difficulty of carrying standard time oil a voyage. Observation for local time a welt as for latitude nitvc been exact, but the compiii isou of local standard Uma for obtaining the lougiTtide has in rtdvrd a certain amount of guess Woia. 'I lie U-st clironomettfr 1h not quite in fallible, and some ailuwance, wblch may not be precisely right has always to be made tor errors. But with time signals received from a mit.oiiaf observatory every day at noon the mariner will know his way over any part of tbe wide ocean as ae curately as If -he were threading a liuujed channel.. The . chronometer will Join the cross-staff and tbe sstro lubeon the Junk heap of discarded makeshifts. And of course a ship that ctfn con. mimical with the shore for one pur pose is equally In touch with Hie world for any other communication it ueedg to make. Almost a Cntifetwleaw Jepnle That t-pl eful Mr. Chatter, ton suid your huslmnd wa old and ugly uud Hint you only married aba lor bis roney, ' . ' . Nettie Add what did you aijr, dart Jennie I said I was slira you dldut tin anything of tbe ort - Nettle Old you er meet my haa bandT ,e -, . , , Jennie No; t never had that plant ""' '-' ,..! Nettle-! thought ao. ' fc ' .I ' " Point or view. ' f'Wd jron uoio'a, bow . I ajavad tta) ilMllenc biaVHidhi' aahsi lb atua elir eluelitlotilst "XIovh.1 imi't the pmper aaaw rat t." repolned bla crltbal frtend, ' little Uort of stampede," The tiuui, 1 11 1 1 dr en, 1 that V&ef leauty kut arlU bar aamU r-rat (j soared. .1 1. ' ' tl V s 1,' u--'-5"