a r f i 3 7 H M 1 U I N l If I U 4 J i i If i i r A j W H s Is re f W f ti I - I 1 1 i I til ft l ft St v 1 Tll MMI Illll SffifflsassssfflHfflafflHffiffls A FARMER FOR LOVE mm gf H E N Elliott R a y m o n d bought a farm In Flint valley it was not be cause he intend ed going into ag riculture or be cause he want ed to be quoted as gentleman farmer it was because lie had money he didnt know what to do with Hurrying down to the station one morning to catch the train in order to join the first meet of the Flint Valley Hunt Club he ran against his broker who stopped him long enough to say Great Northeastern went up any umber of points yesterday We sold Ill send you a check for 4000 to day On the train Elliott had time to think over several business matters among them the rise in Northeastern Four thousand was a small sum to Elliott ilaymond but still he didnt know what to do with it Banks were pay lug only 3 General Metallic was away down Real estate was low and it was still a problem when the train stopped and he climbed onto Tom Harveys -coach beside Miss Carruth In her so ciety he forgot all about Northeastern General Metallic and banks that pay only 3 The hunt starts at 1 she said smiling at him with frank level eyes We have luncheon at the Birches and so the conversation drifted fol lowed by a swift run across country fter the hounds a fiash through Patchins woods and gulley and the meadows beyond where Miss Carruth -came in first and won the brush Shall we go home by the Willow xoad she said to Elliott It is the longest way and he said of course for Elliott always agreed with Miss Carruth It was riding home by the Willow road that Elliott chanced to see a sign tacked to a tree near a farm gale This Farm for Sale at a Sacrifice Suddenly he remembered the 4000 The house was away back from the road there was a neat hedge on one side and a grape arbor and a few giant elms Quite a handsome country place Why shouldnt he put his money in this farm He would if it was a good in vestment He would notify Brooks That was how Elliott Raymond came -to buy a farm A distant cousin was brought from the west somewhere and installed thereon while the former owners well Elliott didnt know what became of the former owners Cousin John wrote Elliott that the farm was an an excellent state of cultivation He was going to sow such and such fields with wheat and reserve others for -white oats and would Elliott kindly have the florist send a lot of bulbs for fall planting Elliott carefully attend ed to every request and he used to tell Miss Carruth all about it as they drove out to the foot ball game on his -drag Brooks has sent enough plants and things for Cousin Margaret to plant the Wntire farm he said laughingly Miss Carruth was such a sensible girl she liked to hear about his farm he knew 4ind always seemed so interested Truth to tell Gertrude Carruth had hoped she acknowledged it to herself boldly that Elliott Raymond would some day ask her to share his fortunes Ills interests wherever they might be She did not care about the fortune in itself She looked straight in her mir ror one night and told herself so I wouldnt care if he hadnt a penny he said he is the best man I know At Mrs Westerleighs dinner Miss Carruth was sure Elliott had some thing in particular to say to her They -were in the conservatory she sitting on a rustic seat and he leaning on the edge of a marble basin watching the rold fishes swimming about Neither iiad spoken for some time and she felt -when he did speak it would be some thing she would wish to hear She pulled a red rose from a branch near lier It is beautiful isnt it he said taking it from her lingers It is a crimson rambler I am going to have si lot of them sent down to the farm in the spring He threw away the fra grant white flower from his buttonhole aind put the rose in its place The spell was broken the farm had done 5t Miss Carruth thought bitterly and they walked back to the drawing room Spring came summer passed and the Flint Valley hunts were once more calendared Elliott sent Black Bess down to the farm and he followed by train one October night when it was ust chilly enough for a small blaze in n Vv 1ivnla TV Mc in CUC Ul UiCyiCHV XV ITAd WO HJ4V tw his own farm 3J The hunt was at S oclock with the hunt breakfast four miles away and as Elliott rode Black Bess through the lane he noticed how beautifully the lawns were kept A few chrysanthe mums were beginning to show their colors and a bed of pink and white cos mos that flower that never blooms until touched by frost flaunted fairy faces at him in the sharp wind I will come down here and stay all next summer Elliott said to himself as Black Bess took the front gate and dashed away toward the Laurels Again Miss Carruth was the lender of the chase and again Elliott rode by her side on the slow return You are coming to luncheon with us she said as they paced along the willow road Yes and he looked at his watch We are early Will you stop at the farm and meet Cousin Margaret Id like you to see the place The girl was pleased that he wanted to show her his farm They entered the house unannounced and as they passed through the wide old hall they heard some one singing a low quaint old air to the music of the piano They paused at the door of the parlor A young girl was seated at the piano her back toward them She was singing a song which Elliott had heard a well known Irish tenor sing many tames Give me a word of love Douglas Gor don Just a word of pity Oh my love said she For the bells will ring to morrow Doug las Gordon My wedding bells my love but not for j ou and me Miss Carruths eyes grew tender as she listened to the words She looked at Elliott He touched her arm and they walked softly through the hall to the room beyond where Cousin Marga ret was busy You have company Cousin Marga ret Elliott said after introducing Miss Carruth Cousin Margaret flushed You dont mind do you You see the piano be longed to her and they had to sell it with all the other things Shes such a sweet girl I told her to come in and use the piano whenever she liked It will keep it in tune you know Cousin Margarets explanation was not very lucid but Elliott understood that the girl was the daughter of the man who had owned the farm While they were still speaking they heard the hall door close and the girl crossed the lawn Miss Carruth standing by the window looked after her and with the quick intuition some women have she felt that this girl was to have some influence over Elliotts life Elliott was to remain at the farm for the entire hunting season and now and then he caught a glimpse of the girl but she did not come to the house again when he was likely to be home One day however Black Bess went lame and he returned from the first ditch He heard the sound of the piano as he crossed the lawn and just as he reach ed the door it opened and the girl stood before him Although he had not seen her face he had known she was beautiful and when she blushed her face was like some sweet delicate flower Excuse me she said I didnt know Elliott smiled You are Miss Thompson Cousin Margaret told me you came in to awaken the echoes sometimes I am glad you do His tone was so pleasant that the girl smiled as she again bowed and passed on He did not go to hunt the next day and when the girl came across the lawn he went to meet her and asked if he might come in and listen to the music It has been a long time since I have heard a really good voice he said Do you like my voice she asked frankly I do I came in the other day when you were singing Douglas Gordon It is my favorite song Will you sing it for me now She sang it and many others and so it came about that she promised to come every morning while he sent to the city for his violin and he hunted no more mornings or afternoons Miss Carruth noted day after day that he was absent from the chase and though she at first wondered she was not long in discovering the reason One morning the girl did not come and Elliott paced uneasily up and down the hall drew the bow across the strings of his violin went to the win dow and at last wondered at his im patience I never knew I cared so much about music he said to himself Just then the girl came through the sate Sio had pulled a few of the pink i cosmos and svuTe them In her belt and as she saw Elliott at the window he looked up and smiled If a thunderbolt had fallen out of the autumn sky Elliott Raymond could not have been more astonished than he was at the throb his heart gave when he saw her His sunwise at his feelings was so great that he lean ed against the window to steady him self for a moment Thirty five years old he said to himself and I have never and then she came in You are waiting she said Yes I was waiting She looked up in surprise at his tone When she saw his face she flushed He held out his hands Alice he said I want you always Will you come I want you to be my wife He was surprised that he could not express himself better She looked up at him her eyes moist and glad Do you she asked I do Will you Alice She held out her hands and met his I will she said softly You are very sure Quite sure Alice And so It comes about that Elliott Raymond will undoubtedly carry out his promise to himself to spend all next summer in Flint valley because Mrs Raymond will want to go back to her old home on the farm after the winter of gayety in the city And Miss Carruths gift to the bride and groom is a water color sketch of a slender dark haired girl seated at a piano with autumn sunlight streaming in at the window and the card accom panying it has a most informal line With the best love of Gertrude Car ruth Buffalo Evening News HOW A SHARK CAME ABOARD British Tramp Wilderapool Comes in from Java with a Fish Story When the British tramp steamer Wilderspool from Java sugar laden arrived here yesterday Capt Japp had a fish story to tell Last Sunday night was dark very dark In latitude 3550 N longitude 7055 W the wind was coming in a gale out of the northeast The seas ran high and seemed to be getting higher and higher as Capt Japp stood on the bridge and watched his craft plunge through them heavily The decks were frequently awash When Capt Japp was peering out into the exceeding darkness and keeping himself all ears for any sound that boded ill he heard now and again as the forward deck was swept by the waves a flapping and swashing which lie thought indicated that some sail had broken loose and was beating about the deck He ordered the crew forward to take care of it and when they had gone there their exclama tions which reached his ears through the darkness brought him down to find out just what had happened Flopping about on the deck he saw an eleven foot shark which the seas had cast there a the steamer plunged and pitched and rolled among them The fishs great jaws opened and closed as it was thrown by its own struggles and the vessels motion from point to point of the deck and the crew watching attentively these forci ble reminders that life is short exe cuted some admirable quicksteps on the briny boards One of them stood as if charmed or dazed unable appar ently to move a muscle Why dont you take hold of it Capt Japp shouted at this one You look as if you were afraid The sailorman roused himself and pulling himself together made an ef fort to grab the shark but he was thrown to the deck The enormous jaws snapped again and again and the men fell back loath to help them to a mouthful Eight of the crew finally set about a siege and made at the shark in earnest After a severe bat tle the shai k was beaten and captured and on the following day it was cut up New York Sun A pound of phosphorus heads 1000 000 matches A ton of oil has been obtained from the tongue of a single whale Over 600000 pounds of tea are con sumed in England daily The volcanoes of Vesuvius and Etna are never both active at the same time Web to the length of two and a quar ter miles has been drawn from the body of a single spider A newly discovered spot on the sun which is visible just now is said to be 30000 miles in diameter A complete electric plowing plant has been installed on an estate in France in the department of the Tarn Engineers in Germany receive from the Government a gold medal and 500 for every ten years of service without accident Telegraph wires will last for forty years near the seashore In the manu facturing districts the same wires last only ten years and sometimes less To cool a hot room wet thoroughly a large sheet and hang it up in the mid dle The temperature will go down ten or twelve degrees almost immedi ately Bicycles are now being made with one of the tubes in the frame plugged at each end to be filled with oil through an inlet at the top and drawn off be low so that a cycler need not run out of fuel for his lamp The oldest building in the world that has been uninterruptedly used for church purposes is St Martins Cathe dral at Canterbury The building was originally erected for a church and has been regularly used as a place for re ligious gatherings for more than 1500 years The upper ten is composed of the win- ning nine and the umpire WHERE DEER DRINK NIGHTLY VISITS TO A SPRING IN ARIZONA TERRITORY Strange March Witnessed by a Pros pector in the Iava Beds Herd Ap proaches the Water When the Digni fied Buck Scout Signals Canyon of Tres Alamos No region In the world possesses as much of weird grandeur as the lava beds of Arizona No portion of this wild district is so weird so fantastical ly wild as the narrow canyon of Tres Alamos Securely hidden In the moun tain fastnesses it is the most forbid ding of all the many gulches with which the region abounds Vegetation is almost absent But three evidences of what more favorable ground might do are present These are the three cottonwood trees which give the can yon its name The rocks which com pose the sides and floor of this strange canyon are what are known as con glomerate among prospectors They contain a badly mingled mass of mate rials including the precious metals but they are so fearfully mixed that they are useless for any scientific pur pose Few men have ventured into the canyon still fewer would care to remain longer than necessary to drink of the spring which gushes out of the rocks at the roots of the trees No man who has prowled about Ari zona has seen wilder sights than L J Court He is a prospector who has passed ma 113 years Avandering about the Territories in search of pay dirt He is known all over the Pacific coast and has been in every nook of the dreary region where the earth vomited out Its floods of lava rock He put in several days and nights in Tres Ala mos and Avitnessed the wild animals on their nightly visits to the spring for water He recently made a visit to Phoenix after having remained in the canyon for a time He relates an in teresting story of his observations while out iu the lava beds He de scribes the canyon and then continues as follows A Wonderful Country A cold spring pours out of the solid rock and chatters its way noisily down the narrow canyon Here at the dead of night come the beasts of the barren mountains for miles around to drink of outlined against the sky In a moment his snort was answered by the patter of many feet and he was surrounded by a pack of deer I counted eighteen in all The big buck ventured cautious ly down the lava slope and when half way down he halted tossed his antlers about as he sniffed the air and then gave another musical snort At this signal on came the rest of the pack They halted just behind him Then he ventured further down and presently stood so close to me that I could have hit him with a pistol shot Here he halt ed again again tossed his head up and down right and left then gave another snort and the rest of the pack came up Three times in this way they halted Always the buck acted as scout and no one advanced till he gave the signal Arrived at the water the buck waded in a few steps then signaled for the others to advance and drink And while they drank he fell back of them several yards and stood there as guard j until they had finished Such an alert scout no human being ever made And there was a world of pride and dignity in him as he stood there and watched and waited Surely he realized that the fate of the entire pack depended upon him and his honors and responsi bilities sat heavily upon him It took the pack perhaps ten or fifteen minutes i to satisfy its thirst Then it moved back from the water and stood near the buck Now it was the bucks turn to drink He strode forth bent his head and drew in great draughts of the cool water But he drank with his dignity still upon him The pack waited for him and when he was once more at Its head there was a wild scramble up the jagged sides of the bluff Other Animals Seen I was fascinated by the spectacle and resolved to witness it again So I stayed another night The perform ance was repeated exactly Again on the third night they came to drink in the same and the next night and the next and so on till it dawned upon me that I must quit loafing and get back to work Of course the deer scented me at once and knew all along just where I lay but I kept very still and they did not seem to mind me The smaller animals came at all times of the night and the smaller they were the more noise they made The foxes were the slyest of all and the most timid They go on a dead run all the time with their heads always wrig gling from side to side The first time they sniffed my presence at camp they THE BIG BUCK ACTED AS SCOUT the running waters And here lying quietly in the moonlight I have been a silent spectator of some of the queerest sights that mans eyes ever beheld I have seen the deer and the wildcat and the coyotes and the tufted lynx and even a lumbering cinnamon bear or two come here to drink I have lain quite still in the moonlight and watch ed them for hours and there is no more fascinating spectacle to be seen in the open It is a wonderful country and no man ever set foot into a wilder region There are three cottonwood trees where the spring pours out of the rock and along the banks of the creek are many willows Near the spring is a level spot of ten acres The first night I camped there I was tired But aftr that I stayed on for two weeks because of the wonderfully weird charm of the place The Avails of the canyon are marvels of conglomerate malpais or lava Theres gold iron copper cob blestone granite marble sandstone and silver ore all ground up in a moun tainous mass that is as bare of vegeta tion as the day it poured from the heart of the earth It was A omited forth in the most hideous shapes imaginable and seen in the moonlight these shapes take on all kinds of horrible and won derful aspects Its a region Avortfc traveling miles to see and you oan reach it in a days lope from Congress Buck Acts as Scout But the average man who goes there will not see what I saw in the moon light Ill tell you how the deer come to drin world its the prettiest sight in the The first night I was on the point 0 going to sleep when I heard a snort from the top of the bluff above me 1 1 oked and there was a big buck with njagnlficent antlers standing on the tx r brink bis dusky figure abarply j made a wild scamper back to cover be- hind the rocks but presently they ven tured out again and after three or four essays they finally came down and drank I siiAv only one bear He Avas a pret ty big fellow but I have seen lots big ger He came down the bluff like a big pig his nose rooting in the ground at every step No I wasnt afraid of him There isnt an animal in America I be lieve that will touch man unless man makes the attack He came within a few yards of me stood still and stared at me I met his gaze calmly and I believe fearlessly Then he went on to the water Avaded boldly in and drank his fill Of all the animals that came to drink there only this gruff and daring old cinnamon bear went about his business fearlessly Even the coy otes and bob cats moved cautiously and Avould have turned tail and scam pered off if I had stirred about But Bruin was not that kind of an animal I prospected in the region a little but in a day or so I saw there could be nothing located there The lava is of too recent a date and the conglomerate altogether too conglomerated to be of any use whatever In the early days there Avas a picket post at Tres Alamos and the larger bluff back of the spring V the famous Signal butte that you have read about in Capt Kings novel by that name You cant imagine what a weird and uncanny sight it is in the moonlight nor what entrancing sights I have witnessed there when the deer the bear the lynx the coyote and the fox come out of their hiding places in the dead of night and drink at the springs There are as many chumps to the block in Chicago as In any country town In the West WIFES NOBuE SELF SACRIFICE 3 Gave Up Honor and Reputation to Save Her Husbands Ilfe Five 3ears ago two continents were shocked by the perpetration of a cold blooded murder in Paris France Aa angry American husband shot a prom inent Frenchman for being in his wifes apartments The participant in this tragedy were EdAvard Parker Deacon of New York his Avife former ly Miss Florence Baldwin daughter of the late Admiral Charles H Baldwin TJ S N and Mr Abeille of Paris Deacon was arrested and tried for murder Under French law the only ground on which a husband could ba ims vexcox acquitted of murder under such cir cumstances AA ould be that of the guilt of the Avife and Mr Deacon was prac tically acquitted for his origina sen tence was for only a years imprison inent and President Garaot pardoned him after he had served only a few months When he was liberated he returned to this country and shortly afterward was placed in an insane asy lum Mrs Deacon divorced from her husband remained In France until a few months ago when she also return ed to America to take charge of her four children Since her arrival friend have effected a reconciliation between her and her husband Mrs Deacon to prevent the finding of her husband guilty of murder and to do everything possible to secure his aetnal acquittal did not put In any testimony exposing the perjury of tho hotel clerk Nor did she offer testimony as to her husbands excessive use or liquor and drugs Such testimony would only endanger her husband If she had told the truth her husband might have been conAicted of murder She contented herself Avith merely de nying that there had been anything wrong in the relations between Mr Abeille and herself UNIVERSAL CLOCK It Shows the Time at Any Point of tha Earths Surface wnrivuvtmcm v - schoolroom in which electricity sup plies the poAver has recently been pat ented It shoAvs the days of the Aveek and the hours at all points of the t earths surface The question Jof inter national time is a puzzling one to school children but by having this model con stantly before them it is believed they will gradually obtain without effort definite and accurate ideas on the sub ject A round globe whose surface represents a map of the earths surface 131 inirrirSslfllBlKRTfsiflm ill TELTS T13IE IX AAT COTHfTKr is revolved inside a stationary ring graduated for hours of the day An other disk graduated for the days ot the week is also revolved so as to show through an opening two days ot the week at a time and a line of de markatlon carried by the map disk indicates the dividing line between th days of the week The Worlds Telegraph Lines The actual length of the telegraph lines of the world is 7900000 kilome tersnot including nearly 300000 kilo meters of submarine cable This total is divided as follows America 4030 000 kilometers Europe 2840000 Asia 500000 Australia 350000 Africa 1G0 000 The entire length of all tbes wires joined together would permit of the establishment of twenty lines of telegraph between the earth and the moon Lteprosy in France At the international congress of lep rosy which has just been brought to a conclusion at Berlin the startling fact Avas elicited that the disease is very prevalent in France especially in th northern districts thereof and that it U on the Increase This discovery and the data furnished by the French medi cal authorities contributed in no smai measure to the resolution voted by th6 Congress to the effect that leprosy ia contagious To Fasten Keys A Massachusetts man has invented a key fastener which consists of a H shaped piece of metal which slips over the knob spindle and carries a plate at either end with a screw to draw them together and clamp the key so it cat not be turned from the outside ftv V