AN OPENSECRET. - dost thon love nml dare not tell It ? , And canst tbou hide it In thine eyes ? And canst thou from thy Love conceal It ! And dost tliou laugh lo drown thy sighs ? Alas ! 1 love and must not say it ; My secret tswoet I must not show. I dose mine eves lest they betray me ; { 1 close my Kps that none may know. Tet can 1 hope to keep my secret i When all earth's creatures tell it so ? They sing It , sigh It , and repeat it , [ Till airthe world must know my woe ! The nodding grasses tell my story , J The flowers lisp it to the sun ; And all the birds , the chirping tattlers , , They seem to know it every one. Load they sing it at my window , And I'm happy while alone ; But 1 tremble lest they sing it To some thoughtless , careless one. Then the winds , how they repeat it , Till the crimson dyes mv cheek , Tor very fear lest all may hear itj 8oI pray them not to speak. And the brook , while babbling onward , I Bears my story to the sea ; Then I'm sure the clover knows it Some one told it to the bee. I would gladly share my secret With the flowers , birds , and sea ; But how wrong of them to tell it- Why are they so false to me ? Lena Jiecd , in the Current. THE APACHE CHIEF. ' "It's a lonely place , Sarah , sure enough. " "Lonely ! Why , Ransom , it gives me the creeps to be by myself alone. " "Well , wife , we musn't lose heart at a , trifle like that The time will come svhen we'll have neighbors enough in Long Prairie , and then we'll be glad that we didn't give up at the'start. " Ransom Bishop was girding his sturdy little horse as he spoke. Now lie imprinted a last kiss on his wife's lips , gave the little girl a final toss in Ihe air. and sprang into the saddle. "I'll be back by bedtime , " he said , "so keep some coffee on the fire for me , and a bite to eat in the cup board. " Tho pony started with a snort , toss ing his head until the bridle chains clinked merrily , and old Boge , the big , jjaunt hound , who acted as sentry at the Bishop residence , filled the air with joyous barks , as he capered along beside his master. His mistress called to him sharply , and the hound camoback with his head flrooping and his tail between his legs , the picture of dejection. Little Dora Degan tugging at his long ears and pulling his tail , and the dog soon responded playfully to his little mistress' sport. The mother left the pair rolling and tumbling in the grass and went back to the house. Like a very new settlement there was a good deal to do about the one the Bishops had set up in Arizona , and .husband aiid wife were kept busy from dawn to bedtime doing it. " An hour had passed since Ransom Bishop had vanished over the prairie , and the mother , busied at her household tasks , had quite forgotten her little daughter at play , when the sound of roices outside attracted her attention. Looking out she beheld a sight that made her blood run cold. Seated on the grass , with her budgy arms around Boge's neck , the child was prattling gaily to a stranger that bent over her. And Such a stranger ! ' A stalwart Indian attired in buckskin , with the eagle plumes , that denote a warrior , decorating his glossy hair , and a necklace of grizzly claws around his neck. His mustang grazed quietly on the grass near by , and leaning on his long lance the animal's master was en tertaining himself with the white baby at his feet. Mrs. Bishop's first impulse was to give voice to a scream of terror , but she thought better of it and bridled her terrific tongue. Her second was to rush from the house fcnd clasp her little daughter in her > xms , and on this she acted. At the sound of her feet the Indian Jooked up. He stepped back a pace , ind a smile crossed his savagely hand- tome face as the mother cauht the up. "No "fraid , " he said quietly. "Big Bear no fight babies. " "I'm sure I don't see why you should , " gasped Mrs. Bishop , "for my Dora is the sweetest little thing. " "Little missus much pretty , " said Big Bear. "Here take um , wear. " And detaching a sort of gold armlet of bear's teeth strung upon a golden wire from his strong arm , he placed it around the child's neck. "Maybe some day Big Bear come 'gain , " said the savage. "So by. " Andthrowing himself upon the bare back of his pony he was off like a shot Ransom Bishop found his wife sitting np for him when he got home that night. She could not sleep with the story she had to tell untold. Her husband listened .to it with a serious face. It was the first visit they had ever had from an Indian , and though they had. of course , expected one sooner or later , it was scarcely pleasant news all the same. "He certainly couldn't have had any harm in his heart to make baby a present like that , though. " he said , examining the armlet curiously. 'From all I know of Indians they do not part with their ornaments to every one. " "He seemed good natured enough" eaid Mrs. Bishop , "and I tell you , Ran- com , he was real good looking for an Indian. " "Trust to a woman to find that out , " ' observed the settler. "Anyhow we can't improve matters 'by losing our deep. So let us go to bed. " Settlers on the border have a prov erb that the first visit from an Indian brings manv , and the Bishops realized the truth of the saying very shortly. A couple of days after Big Bear's visit three Indians rode up to the house. They were civil enough , asking for wa ter and drinking heartily of what Ran som Bishop gave them. While they were'lounging about one of them notic ed the bear's tooth ornament little Do ra wore. He spoke in a sharp tone to his companions , and all three" stared at the little girl instantly- When the settler , whoof course , noticed the peculiarity of their chang ed manner , spbtfe to them , they replied with every evidence of respect , and went away with a shout of parting. Ransom Bishop told the story of his last visitors to his nearest neighbor , the ranchman at Cottonwood Bottom , five miles away. The ranchman laugh ed when he heard it. "You are in luck , Bishop"he said. "Why so ? " demanded the settler. "In having such a protector. " "A protector ! Who ? " "Don't you know who Big Bear is ? " "I certainly don't" "Then I'll enlighten you. He is the greatest warrior of the Apache tribe , their biggest and bravest war chief. The fact that he left his armlet with you will inform every Indian of his tribe who sees it that you are under his protection , and very likely save you many an inconvenience in the future. " This Ransom found , indeed to be the case. case.Frequently as his farm was visited by savages they always treated his family with marked respect. * If they wanted favor or drink they asked for it modestly and civilly. The insolent de mands they made on other settlers were never made on the Long Prairie house. Moreover on more than ono occasion the Indians showed themselves ready to do a favor for the farmer of Long Prairie. Once , when a portion of his stock scampered , they drove it back instead of stealing it , as was their in variable custom. Another time they returned him his pony when it strayed , away. The farmer , thanks to these acts , began to congratulate himself up on the good luck which had made him a * friend of the great war chief of the Apaches. That personage turned up now and then himself , and you may be bound always to received a cordial welcome. His chief pleasure seemed to be with little Dora , and he always had a present for her. Once it was a crow that turned somersaults and talked some Indian words ; another time it was a little bow and'arrow , which he taught her how to use. She possessed quite a collection of moccasins , necklaces of dried red berries , and softly tanned deer an.d tiger skins , and every visit added to her store. So three years passed. Slowly but surely the section of Ari zona in which the Bishops had set up their homes had filled up. Where they had been the only one in miles of coun try , the farms were only a mile apart The log hut had been added until it was quite an imposing structure , with wings more extensive than the original house. Herds of fine cattle grazed on their prairie pastures , their barns were full , and all about them abundent crops grew on tho rich soil. In short pros perity reigned at Long Prairie , and not a cloud darkened the pleasant future which seemed to spread before the set tlers there. But unforeseen events were brewing trouble. The Indians had been annoy ed and in some cases treate'd with in justice by the whites , and an outbreak was smouldering among them. It was only held "back by the influence of Big Bear. The war cheif was friendly to the white man , and his potent voice * n the councils of his tribe kept their an ger in check. One day , however , Big Bear wont hunting and met with an accident in a terrific encounter with a grizzly ; he was struck down in a lonely pass amono the hills , and , as day by day passed without witnessihg his return to his camp , the rumor went abroad that the whites had killed him. Then another chief rose to. rule the councils of the tribe. This warrior cherished a fierce and bitter hatred to the whites , and lost no time in declaring war against them. In a single night a descent was made upon a dozen settlements ; and next morning where prosperous fanners and happy homes had been the rising sun saw heaps of smoking ruins. Such few of the farmers as escaped fled to the larger settlements , and the call to arms went throughout the territory. A week of the outbreak passed , and the Bishop homestead remained un scathed. All around the settlers had fallen victims to the ferocity of the savage , but the protection of Big Bear still sheltered his friends. Immunity from attack made Ransom Bishop reckless. He began to think himself safe forever , and though he kept a watchful' eye about him , he still entertained little dread of serious trouble to himself. He was doomed , however , to find himself sadly mistaken. The ferocity of the Apaches grew with their success , and when they had wreaked their wrath at the expense of Ransom Bishop's neighbors , they be gan to cast hungry eyes upon the well stocked farm. He was the friend of Big Bear , it is true ; but Big Bear was dead , they argued. Why , then , should his friendship protect them ? They an swered that question one night by at tacking Bishop's house. To offer any resistance would have been simple madness , and Ransom Bishop knew it. All the hope of safety he possed was in flight But how to fly ? The Apaches , apparently certain of the people in the house , had begun operations by plundering the outlying storehouses. While they&were thus employed , the farmer got his wife and child out by the back way , only to dis cover , to his horror , that the gate of his corral had been beaten in and the horses removed from it He had hardly made this startling discovery when a mounted Indian rode around the end of the house , in whose shadow the fugitives were concealed. Gaunt and thin from sickness the farm er did not recognize Big Bear , and he raised his rifle to his shoulder , when the Indian called out : "No shoot ? ! " he said. "Me come to sabe little missie. " Slipping out of his saddle , he motion ed to the farmer to mount , and hurried away , as he had come. He returned presently with another horse , and , seiz ing little Dora , while Ransom Bishop and his wife mounted the chief's own horse , the Indian .led way into the prai rie. rie.The The fugitives , as they departed , could hear the exultant shouts of the Apaches as they reveled in the plunder of-the .store-rooni but with .the hous between them"and 'the savages the ; , gained the open prairie 'unobserved. As they rode away Big Bear kavo ut terance to a guttural grunt andpointe back to where a red light began to glow against the sombre midnight sky. The farm buildiags had been fired But tho birds they had sheltered wen well on their way to safety. All nigh long the Indian led the way at a gallop through the darkness with his littl friend in his arms ; and as the sun arose it lighted the walls of the military pos at Prescott , a mile away. By"early breakfast time the fugitives rode into town. Safe at last "And now , 'Big'Bear , ' " cried Ran Bom Bishop , as they drew rein in th < plaza , "you've saved one lives. Wha can we do for you ? " The Indian made no reply , sitting bolt upright in his saddle , his haggard .face looking straight before him , rigid and mo tionless as a statue. A thrill of dread ran through the settler , and he put his hand out and touched the bare arm of the savage. It was stiff and cold. cold.The The great war chief had ridden his last ride. With his little protege sleep ing the leaden sleep of exhaustion in his arms , he had borne her in safety with the last expiring breath of a dying man. In the cemetery at Prescott is a grave marked by the headstone , on which 'is carved the rude figure of a grizzly bear. It is the last resting place of tho only consecrated ground , a war chief of the Apaches , who spent his last breath in rescuing the family of the white man from the brutal violence of . own race. - FAME AND INFAMY. Fame is the sum of all the good act of all time. Infamy is the sum of all the bad acts of all'time. Fame confers the highest honor. Infamy the deepest disgrace. Fame is tho-reward of an unselfish life. life.Infamy is the reward of a selfish life. - It is a bad error to mistake infamy for fame. Infamy shows well for a time to the uninitiated , surpassing even fame. Every right work is fameward. Every wrong act is in the line of in famy. , Infamy insures a harder life than fame. ' Fame comes by benefiting our fel lows. Infamy injures them. Fame's honors are pleasant. Infamy's brings dishonor and dis grace. Fame plants gardens. Fame excels in all labor. Fame wins in architecture. Fame is democratic. Fame , succeeds in commerce , excites to labor in school , constructs great works , benefits the state and the peo ple , promotes Christian civilization. Fame is the sum of the ocean of man's best act's. Every right act of the scholar , the statesman , the-artisan , the engineer , the laborer , is a drop inthe sea of fame. Every act of our lives adds to the sea of fame or of infamy. Infamy is fame's enemy. Infamy is the ally of sloth , ease , in dolence , and ignorance. Infamy chooses the down-hill path. Infamy's great works are wrecks. Infamy slanders. Infamy suspicions. Infamy seduces. Infamy is jealous. Infamy traduces faith. Infamy defies law. Infamy promotes disorder and diso bedience. Infamy is the enemy of discipline. Fame begins in the school to labor upward. Infamy floats ever downward. Fame's labor is rewarding and satis factory. Infamy's work is disorganizing and bitter. Improved roses , lucious iruits , finest works , of art , and unselfish Christian lives are the product of fame. Ruins , stolen fruits , lusts , intemper ate and unimely pleasures are the work of infanry. We choose for which we shall strive , the honors of fame or the indolent , poisonous , bitter fruits of infamy. 'Chicago Ledger. Reckless Witli His Blessing's. "Many thanks , my son , " exclaimed a benevolent-looking man as a ragged little bootblack handed him a pocket- book which the former had dr-opped and tho latter picked up. "Now let me see if everything is here , " continued the man as he opened the pocketbook and began an examina tion of its contents. Railroad passses , receipts , and money. Yes , everything is here just as I left it. What is your name my little sony ? " "The kids call ' ' me 'Sheeney Bob , but'taint my name. Bob Miller's my name. " "Well , Robert ! Your are a very hon est little man , and if you keep on you will become an ornament to society. Many thanks , Robert , for returning my pocketbook. My blessing upon you , my child. " "Say , mister , " said Bob , as the mis sionary started away , "don't you go and get so reckless like wid your bless- in's. I ain't got no use for blessin's anyhow. You kinder keep 'em , and if yor ain't got enuff I'll buy yer some. Money ain't no object ter me. I ain't stuck on a quarter like you. Why , mister , I ain't stuck on my life the way you is on a quarter. " St. Paul Globe. His Brother Knew Him. "Goodmoraine : , Mr. Blank. " "Good morning , but I believe you have the advantage of me in the mat- of acquaintance. I don't know you , sir. " "Don't know me ? You ought to ! Why , my brother worked two weeks for you last summerDetroit ! Free Press. ! JJAYVN BROKERS1 SALES. * * _ _ _ - * Buyers Who Know How to Drive o Close Bargain Credit tlio Prin cipal Factor In tlio Business. But one firm in Brooklyn , says writer in The Eagle , makes a specialty of selling at auction pawnbrokers' un redeemed pledges. The business in this city is not as large as in New York , and strange to say the majority of the buyers come from that city. Life in a pawnbroker's salesroom has man ; features which make a visit particular ly interesting. I called at a Brooklyn salesroom one daj * last , week during sale , and after it was over had a talk with the proprietor. On. this particu lar day a sale of women's wearing apparel was in progress. Tho large salesroom was filled with women. They are naturally shrewd buyers , but when their minds ar schooled by many years" experience in the art of making clos < bargains it is extremely difficult to cheat them. The sale began at If o'clock , and by noon ono hundred sep arate lots of clothing had been dispose' of. A casual glance at the majority o : the buyers would give one the impres sion that they were either beggars o female' tramps , so shabbily were . they dressed. The proprietor pointed out to me a . decrepid individual , whose whitened locks proclaimed that she had long since passed the allotted span of life. She was dressed in a tattered gown and wore a disreputable hat. This woman , who is in the second hand clothing business , is estimated to bo worth .from $250,000 to $500,000. Large fortunes have been made by buy ing and selling pawnbrokers' unre deemed pledges. Much experience is required to make a success of the busi ness , as the trade now transacted is often carried on with but a small margin for profit Every article pledged has a market value. These values are known both by the broker and buyer , and it is seldom that great bargains are to be obtained. Pawnbrokers oftener lose than gain by their sales. The sales of men's wear ing apparel , jewelry , and miscellaneous lots of goods are attended almost ex clusively by dealers from New York. The men are even closer buyers than the women. Jewelry experts can in an instant tell the value of a gold ring , whether it weighs five or twenty penny weights , and arc able to approximate the value of diamonds of all kinds and weights the moment the goods touch their hands. Pawnbrokers occasion ally loan on spurious rings and heavi ly-plated watches. The-e are , of course , unredeemed , and n time find their way to the salesrooms. They do not. however , pass the e.-gle-eyed in spection of expert je-volry-buyers. Flaws in diamonds have been discov ered by the expert after they have been passed by the broker as perfect stones. Credit is the principal factor in the pawnbrokers' sales trade. While many dealers are wealthy , the majority do a hand-to-mouth business. - - Although the sales are chielly made on credit , the pawnbrokers receive the amount due them in cash less tlio commission charged , which is 5 per cont. The pro prietor of the salesroom , when at leis ure , said : "There is not the money in pawn- broking that most people imagine. Brokers often lose on their pledges , as all goods are pawned for nearly their full value. I have known brokers to lose as much as $100 on a sale. Of lato I have noticed that Italians have come into the trade , which formerly was monopolized by Hebrews. Oh , yes , I frequently lose accounts by giving credit , but in the majority of cases I find that the class who buy goods "on time usually pay. Men have been on my books for ten years or more , and never during that time have I been able to close the account. One lot of goods is paid for when the next pur chase is made. " "To whom are pawnbrokers' unre deemed pledges sold ? " was asked. "The principal buyers hail from New York. There is little or no trade in this city. Fine goods bring big prices. I have sold overcoats as high as $25 , and dress suits at $20. Dress suits are a comparative drug in the market at any time , but occasionally when an extraordinarily good one is oi fered it brings a good price. While all women's apparel offered is bought by Brooklyn dealers , the jewelry sold is purchased by dealers over the bridge. Silk dresses sometimes Wing as high as $75. One man who does business in Baxter street , New York , has a prac tical monopoly of the fine clothing bus- "What difference , if any , exists be tween Brooklyn and New York pawn shops ? " "In Brooklyn the loans made are not so large as across the river. Neither is so much money required to start in the business. A broker exporting to do a moderate business could commence on 825,000. There are twenty-live brok ers in Brooklyn , and the big ones think nothing of taking in four hundred pledges a day. The smaller firms av erage from fifty to one hundred pledges. All brokers have regular cu - tornerSj and these are enabled to get much better loans than strangers. You would be surprised to see the class oi people who wear second-hand wo men's clothing. I often recognize fur- lined circulars on Fulton street which were originally purchased of me. A large trade is done by Brooklyn deal ers in renting apparel to ladies. " A Texas Editor's Wail. ( Press-room , compositor's case , sleep- ( ing apartments for four , dressing- room , sanctum and business office all combined , and all included in four box- style walls which compose a single room twelve by sixteen feet this is tht manufactory of those newspaper pel lets which we issue weekly under the * label of The Bulletin. The editorial chair is an inverted pinewood box , or- ' ? namented with an artistically engraved ] chromo , beneath which is the suggest- ive inscription , "Polly wants a 1 cracker , " while our writing desk is a. single short board laid across the west' ' end of an overgrown Saratoga trunk.l Es it any wonder that there is a verv perceptible vein of imbecility running * through'our editorial and local pages ! * Ballinger ( Tex. Bulletin. * A salt well was recently sunk near Alexander , N. Y. A Now York sign is : "Boiled Clam- Juice on Draught" Strawberry vines are still bearing in Suinter county , Fla. A forty-livo-inch sunflower is being exhibited at Travers. Cal. Vermont elects state officers , legisla ture , and congressmen Sept 7. ' Thirty-five firms in Barre , Vt. , are engaged in the granite business. A large number of colored people ore patronizing Saratogo this year. Los Angeles , CaL , is considering the proposition to change tho city charter. A collection of eight thousand but tons is owned by a Haleni , N. Y. , woman. Miss Leah Brooks , of Seneca , N. Y. , who is only 9 years old , weighs 129 pounds. A Canadian claims to have found a piece of barbed wire in a hen's egg recently. Over ten car-loads of salmon have boon shipped this season from Oregon to tho cast . Promenading on the beach after dark is ono of the things Asbury Park will not tolerate. A Connecticut editor was compelled to apologize for referring to a court as a Lime-Kiln club. Caterpillars are said to be doing con siderable damage in the cotton-fields near Avoyelles , La. Over $3,000,000 have been stolen by Philadelphia cashiers , clerks and oth ers during the past five years. It has been figured out that it costs $1,900 every time tho roll is called in in the house of representatives. Steamers are carrying cargoes of California watermelons to Portland , Oregon , which soil at S3 a dozen. Frank McDonald , aged 15 years , am Essie O'Neal , aged 13 years , were mar ried recently at Knoxville , Teun. A Bucksport , Me. , idiot recently won a wager of $1 by driving his horse am buggy oil' tho wharf into the river. Two Piirkerslnirg , W. Va. . j-oung ladies have started on a drive to Chirks burg , a distance of one hundred miles The $10,000 floats figured in the Albanny N. Y. , bicentennial cclebra tion were sold at auction recently foi $65. $65.A A tunnel 2,300 feet in length is being cut through the hill at Bridgeport , Conn. , for the new water-works sys tern. tern.A A colored woman at Lcwiston , Va. , gave birth to triplets last Thursday. Their aggregate weight was seventeen pounds. Cat-tails stained red , blue , purple , and other colors are being sold by the Boston small boy as specimens of rural ingenuity. A Now York brewer threatens to close up his brewery unless the quality of water in the public-service pipes is improved. The grand jury which adjourned at Santa Fe , New Mexico , on the last day of July found 250 indictments , mostly on land cases. The Curtis house , aged 250 years , was torn down recently at West Box- bury , Mass. , to make room for modern improvements. Fifty-seven of the one hundred regu lar guests of a Niagara Falls summer hotel are foreigners , and twenty of those are titled. A Hartford , Conn. , man circumvents the gus company by storing his meter in a safe-deposit vault when he goes oft for the summer. The fishermen of Long Island sound are having rare sport these days in the capture of blueiish , which are count less in number. The people of Schenecfculy , N. Y. , are making preparations to celebrate the anniversary of the burning of that town by the Indians. A couple of sword-fish were recently captured in Long Island sound , off Bridgehampton , N. Y. These fish are rarely seen in those waters. In Augusta , Ga. , the churches have ] rules which forbid gentlemen from sitt t ting on the right side of the house , as that part is occupied by ladies. Mobile , Ala. , has the distinction of being the only city of the world which , having tried the electric light for street- lighting , has gone back to gas. , John Slaughter , a colored citizen of Louisville , Ky. , was severely stabbed one day recently for accidentally tread ing on the corns of a white person. One Atlantic city hotel pays $310 a week for its band and boards it The amount spent for music at the various botels this season will reach $25,000. : A New London oyster-dealer has in- rented a dredge with which starfish , the greatest enemies of the oyster , can be taken from a bed without disturbing the oysters. New Jersey pt'ople are hav'ns : an un pleasant experience with mosquitoes : his year. In number they are count less , and their viciousness has never 3een equaled. In a pocket in the clothes of a drown- , jd man found in the canal at St John's , Quebec , was a note-book , on a page of , ivhich was written : "Will be found irownecl ; last drunk. " Since the merchant-tailors of Pitts- aurgh. Pa. , published a black-list old jills are being paid up rapidly and [ lew ones are not allowed to accuuiu- ate as rapidly as formerly. A colony of bugs besieged the stores it Patchogue , L. f. , one day last week , [ n order to escape the insects the mer- jhants were obliged to close their juildings an hour earlier than usuaL A curious publication in the way of mique books is a volume of poems printed in various sized types on paper ; jf every color of the rainbow , and cov- jred in brown paper tied with plain itring. < ' * * ? * " , ? -x : - - , t ' .INSPECTOR. A Tennessee Judge Wbo Visaed To Bo Accomodatlnc. Judge F is a very quiet , easy going man when everything runs smoothly , but let him onco get rattled and the neighborhood can not pacify him. He will snarl at his best friend when annoyed , and the man who plays a practical joke on him had better emi grate. Yesterday , as the clock struck 1 , ho was seated in his office , very much worried over a chancery case in which ho is counsel , and his desk was fairly littered with papers , while ho was hurrying through with a certain part of his work before dinner hour. Suddenly the telephone boll raug a gentle summons , just as though the girl in the central ofiice knew the judge was busy and hated to disturd him , but v/as , nevertheless , compelled to , in order to satisfy the individual at tho other end of the wire. The judge rose J hurriedly , jerked the receiver from tho hook , and yelled "Hello ! " A silvery voice a girlish wont-yoa- oblige-me accent betrayed that one of the fair sex was the caller. The judge toned down and inquired , "Well ? " "Is tljat Judge'F.'s ? " said the sweet- toned voice. "Yes , " was wafted back. "Oh ! I am so ghd. This is Miss . N , and I have been given charge * ' of all complaints on the line. Before making out our new list I wish to learn how your instrument works. " "Just like a charm , " replied tho gal lant judge. "I have no fault to lind either with the instrument or service. " Thank you , " was the sweet rejoin der , "but you know how the managers would appreciate a few words of com- / mendation from you , so , if you are not too busy , would it be asking too much if you would devote fifteen minutes toward a thorough test of your instru ment ? " When there is a lady in tho case the judge i-j never in a hurry , and in his blandest tones he announced himself at the young lady's bidding. Another vote of thanks came over the wire , and the soft voice inquired if ? he could place his ear about ten inches higher than the transmitter in order to test the power of hearing distinctly. Unfortunately , the judge is largo in circumference , but not tar from the ground , and he could net reach his arm above the ear-trumpet rack , much less place his head up there. He ' was a man , however , who was not to be overcome bv triilcs. and an idea struck him. He determined to oblige the telephone girl , and he pro ceeded to inform 'her to hold the tele phone just a minute and he would be ready. Again the bewitching voice uttered thanks , and the judge put his plan into operation. The telephone was along side the office window , about half-way up the casing was a stout nail ; arevolv- * . ing bookcase stood on the iloor. It was quickly rolled over toward the window ; the judge mounted it , grasped the nail on the window-casing with one hand , the ear-trumpet with the other and sang out "All read- . " There was no response , and the judge nearly twisted his neck out of joint as he leaned down and related the words through the transmitter. - ! The sweet voice answered in a low tone , and the judge strained his ears in listening. "Now , judge. " came the message , "listen attentively and repeat the following words back to me , so that I may know you heard them dis tinctly : " "What part of speech is the wordtransinogrificanbandanduciality ? " It was too much , even for tfie judge. On the tenth syllable he squirmed ; tho nail broke ; he made a grab for the tele- * phone box ; the bookcase revolved , and the renters in the story below thought the roof had fallen in. When several of them came running into the room the judge was lying in the middle of the Iloor , the law books from the case between his knees , while in his hand he hugged the fatal car-trumpet , which he had clung to in his fall , and the cord of which had been snapped in twain. f The matter was given into the hands of a detective , who last night reported e to the judge that the telephone corn- pan } ' employed no inspectors or testers af instruments , and further , that tho sail came from a private residence where the judge's wife was spending the day. An air of unusual coolness permeates the judge's home now , and ; he telephone company has lot a sub- * < criber. Nashville Union. Courting : in Fancy Dress. It would seem as if there were no satisfying the changeful mind of vomen. Everybody knows the disas- rous effect produced on the simple vil- agc maiden when the versatile Lord of Y Surleigh dropped the role of painter ind showed himself in his true colors. Caking warning by this young ladj-'s iad fate , Mr. Conway , a thoughtful Hitler , determined to reverse the order > f things in the Lord of Burleigh's ruel proceedings. So he went to America , called himself the Hon. Sey- nour Conway , and wooed and won a ligh-born maiden to be his wife. He hen brought his wife to his butterv in > England , where he of course drop'ped he Hon. Seymour part of himself and ' irepared to settle down to domestic ife. But instead of being delighted at his little surprise the lady is terribly innoyed. It is true she has not died , nit she has done the next best thin" % nd instituted divorce proceedings , hurting in fancy dress seems not to be success whichever wav it is tried. Gazette. The Texan Away from Home. Stranger ( to bartender ) I'm three ays from Texas , mister , whar I was o'n an' raised , an' I want er drink , rimme suthin hot Bartender I can give you some pow ered glass and ar&enie/sir , with pep- . er-sauco and . furniture-polis.h. Stranger No live hornets ? Bartender Not a live hornet in the lace. Stranger Weli. gimme what you've - ] ot. A man can drink 'most anythin' , ut I did want sathin ter warm me up. start fer Texas ter-morrer , stranger. -New York iSirn. ' U - i