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is Sc or t lons amacl izenor. ry" is nC Deig prin, so wil. Sia c is A uid 4th, from thi ispensarfyMec naa Tells HBw She .eiTas Being 1111 dulHelped ler. ,G-.-- as. ina tetrible te*. g. Bighamq of ;Ga.. I was s.iak Icould walkacross the room. I -had pain~imy sides and would ' cup soI -ould hardlystan4dit. l .rregdlar and cbud iot do my rk.. Mr head ached aii ' t me, a bad. 'mes I felt like it wouldkil A -suffered with drawing mand my back .irtf !7a -" '.et poorer every -me up able to do my better 'than 1 13ave 4eo menod it to - al. or weak vomen we to Caik It a %tan ition, brightens .,-the c6plexion. reg -and helps'yot back ih hIne f looks and -rom~ pure vegetable ingre n o powerful, min letious compounds cbai qr simla wkidisagme ftl aiss; itjs goo -for rold and should e n -dv % TTY it iggist sells it TiEi5U5 Alms 7CO - dog - A En e so4 SA CoawirED 79q2m00CN * RTAN R OR KI -HLARGESTMUAI - n sittthefatet fas - vb ste and snh T banl walks oife. Ett could take jc at Brooki showyOU how care -~ asShos are m tei understand iriape,. fit bel o~dm f great.' ~make.' najh. rTane cy bass font holds 4 quarts of i fu ab finished ia nickel the Nea'e M anD( -nt' bend morning ar efter dizzy spelS, and kindred anbor of the from bilious or dyspepsia.. >very is mado Mat principles e peranent It is a most. tonic, bowel t a patent medicine or ;ecret nostrum, ed on its bottle-wrapper and attested r. that it contains nd alcohol, or harm' :xtract made with-pure, triple-refined . roots of native American medical, ical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. Y. ,Good sense is better than- good looks, .but few people are afflicted with either. 'pfpE-VALVE"S FITTING AN d S AFMTIG, PULLEYS, BELTS. LOMfBARD IRONWORKS,^"U - U hperHanprs& Painters a ana sWuree itiombcz~b2M wktk no ex .Jal Inva jealt ine~ g Alfred Peta ?PtSe wae -we 1nt worker V.ch wtv and to the irst bond NR~a~,by. peWuouaPYU - t books a bel. S to-' s to from. We oe i ral prot toarreprestative.. MAnwer quickly thassoammay T; oew j., O. sod", gm re of tb er P. -71JINde all ti' aned At Once-A M. :l MEN ts o....soa.Dei..w.sme.a a.a t embind.. Oozrc.e he.cw oirns eMe.W. INOW WANT .. ma Wan s" pr .. wk.." tc .aes -nr Th..t1Z,.In n se e ef bo 000- g aud~ gaocoemiali . .'dsk la In. FrU.S.eON -M ed= l OOXI=asm.ensr me vr --1 sts NoW What e teodp a-g y1 am awel C age. e said, womn T couldmtak austbe a po- furh you ti Vogon cntthe bn m es go be= moos d wl, he con*ted Shie c~eckc~eedh rt us;anot.he on.e 'inIoobhaveT ps-dn the fivsouse and, h &et o Wn n I hathe n te.- S s. the caution ahe aidom"ad togurd mand guie prou welfolo." te he paused -oan anwe1or. po ;fTher pin y e are stronga ne sI hae bad,"-b eupeyn d tune watinly tthe con u ht o Soul mheeo anoerln poit. foih e.Y have alld the finsar aged, l Sea;n on , eax chae the c;ead ppitnt, ,even cauto adthe rnsd7om down pehints you ake.r togL ones" sh sai, 'bt thy led u e o.a hnbad.diti~S Speaing f go~,i, exlaim ~la oes.picThy aeve fhauorusYU0 edow woken, orak -in. he ini tpe to alt ae ti u intoeay larger :alu, tas. andya ter wea oge - value han an tc s mon Tropcs TenMinutes Ii oll heater has ashigher efffelen- 11 )rgreater heating power than the t ERFECTION F Oil Heater Equipped with - Smokeless Device)) a$ Vith it you can go from the cold i the Arctic to the Warmth of the I, pics in 10 minutes. 'he new Automatic Smokeless Deviceb :ens smoking. Removed in' an tnt for cleaning.. si-sflcient to give out a glowing diimper top--cool handle-oil indicaor or Japan in a va'rsety of styles. - : t Youn, Write for Deacriptive Circulaei : Ag- COy PANthe j't~ HEtIaGI --Cartoon by7 I NITD STATES IN PEIL cad of Great Northiern Railw High Cost Of Livin iS I National 'Hol Washington, Ai c. - Presilint Lt'is program -for railroad and trust form legislation: at the next session. Congress was the lodestone ,that ew another railroad man- to" the iite House. He was none other a Mr. James* J. Hill, of 'St. Paul, [m., president of the Great North nRailway. He remained with the -sident long enough to- say a good iny things, and 'when he came out nmonstrated that he was the only A original "artful dodger" in cap ty. When he was asked by the rspaper men what he thought of ePresident's --legislative ideas and iat suggestins he had made to Im ove upon them he seemed inspired deliver a lecture, which began'in Ls *ise: "I am a student of history. 'History ows that the high cost of .living is ebeginning of every national de ne. This country is in grave dan r of entering upon a -period ; of c.adence through extravagance, pub Sand private. Prosperity is not a re; it is only'a help." How much longer Mr. Hill would .e contimied .to delight his hearers th thii dissertation, had not some tbroken in, will never be known. ,was interrupted with a hquestion to,,what all that had to do with iroad and anti-trust legislation. He lled. "What this country needs Is to m house and spend less money and Dp bothering about new laws to rern corporations," said Mr. Hill. sep and eiou osdrto /udb gie /toc t h us Paris-Themysteiousarn bon neaou of Great Nrthe rigniof :s I., and t whic hasseeme for ny lon yeDr atolef l emsis Waohangto, peer an laymienth ret' pogramssed ilra and trgngstd forreitows t the neamou son. orsseas ithas lodesone that le backsint tHe Eas andoas poher anpertition 3.will nofubt.dle re, isaid to the reanth cause a Riwy for-He remaatch from Sin sidetmong tesenger-saa gdoond nthingsc and thhe ecameru msrne ten tthe wasinaeSea. 'It oigis beiv"tl dodgei cays. tat Waidhen he wasased dbamond hisposersin wat the though ofth :te Presien -enlve okIeas and ;enatesthas eded mtsder torym the upothm the semdcc isiredt ows thatbthe highocost of. livingpi .mn This codtry His in arisdan :r wa enter nameda piodathor cad thabrought traagne, pub-t and pite. manyosperityofslesser e and itnl wa hued tathewa ae ntine.of Adlightmis, heares ta bof ke, wl neve bei known. .aInteigrousptempt wtho iespose o wht asblie that hbd wih iela anit-trust takigitiback to Orieat tin cntemp neesl i to nehoIneian spendatessmne.n ~p oterngabutnewlw eet Washngrptons, saihedet Mratell 1908 an thereiostratonsidreatset ud bte giensus oncea tor tu mlatruion the ost yet reodead. rura disrics ollwed the abu l ari.thae msteioustly ona ing Hop Dione 1000 inhabitat ringu the Eastriod the ignat oft -i Englan and wcals wseemed per -nedufor th misfortuneon the grae emrachu, pees ran aymn-wh noeBrrowote faous womienp ytoano the Feda, andurthere, rsersttownn wl udeuwhichlupset re is sd hbtheigatuon A rtentr-lin diachgto, D.iC. cal o aonce toa ful ciidi asfiaton thecpengyrth igrne rita, wclamnkhthywr of the Fec tae mgo in re, hin S ea. h sm ntas ble, the naivs sfshiage sas aot Noihdte Peope.damn is possessifon atnd time ofte, Ifmthse oni thew ystirke, re Pince t ane burnd enyoings mando imtontt, hs ened nesarko aftr Ithdb uposeng ceremonees.p ThJe Tarrtown0. Bnual four-io mient as eveprnaed wither. or J abid Ad brought then jee toe eart wit," madey$4,000,00f lnssne t.mby adsudden rumed tt has et of hrAbde, wHid mdepses iatan ofaTrkey, whnings saior e making iooun temt oips a- OF POLITICS. T"PIE - A sti - Mount -. sound -- -sportsr disguis of the they h Mlurra3 camera \ --In e,, camp Grass of goa1 after t game. - - raphy, era wil or dec< goatski a head hornle sins wi tanned Grer mornir V. A. Rogers, in the New York Herald. stalkin enough MRs HILL TELLS MeT away. 3000 f( and wa ly, in White House Call, Says He the si teal Menace, and Urges donned ise Cleaning. was ral clothing to the masses. A grave dan- on the ger faces the Nation. History shows spent that the decline begins when the cost plorati, of living becomes a burden to the precaun masses, but not to the rich." was sl Just as Mr. Hill was about to es- white < cape from his questioners he bumped Af te squarely into a kindred spirit in the person of Senator Jonathan Bourne, was 1c -of Oregon. Mr. Bourne, as it hap- and or pens, is chairman of the working sub- quite 1 committee of the Senate's new Com- you wi: mittee on Public Exnenditures, of you mi which Senator Hale, of Maine, is the and th head. The business of this commit- Upoi tee is, to tighten the strings of Uncle which Sam's purse, and it purboses to do it. It was fully thirty minutes before Grenle these two economists finished their a posil little chat in the White House iecep- ceedin t:on room. When it was over Sena- he sho tor' Boirne remarked that it would fective never do .to give away ia advance scoop-1 what his sub-committee was going to face, - report, but he was perfectly certain facblac the purchasing power of a Govern- In bla ment dollar could be increased from no hol] five to ten per cent. by the simplifica- an app tion of administrative methods, cen- Gre tralization and the elimination of un- down 1 necessary items. the lef Mr. Hill is likely to come back to bottom Washington again. President Taft the des told him just what he has been telling other railroad men and members of fashioi both branches of Congress who have his m4 had suggestions to make to improve moving his annual,message. In substance it all fou was: aged "What you say is interesting: It The may be imnortant. Kindly put it in writing and submit it to me again aro Then I will give it due consideration." on the _________________the rig lL OF THE HOPE DIAMOND. one o in its m, Drowned in Wreck off Singapore--- had it; Iy in Its Final Fate, as Disaster --- The 0r ssession of the Jewel. boulde Ice Louis XIV. acquired the jewel of the mysteriously, and, although history six inc4 gives saner causes, the French man arch's decay set in about that time. goin The gem was still in the crown of mocca France when Louis XVI. died by the ble alc guillotine amid the storm of the great icy su: revolution, yarn Then the jewel vanished for a time, fingers and it wai. not until 1830 that a Lon- Whe don dealer,, purchasing it from a hundr' stranger, sold it to the famous bak hitchii e, Henry Thomas Hope. As the "Hope Diamond," the blue the ge stone leaped into fame. Hope's note of daughter brought It to her husband, The the Duke of Newcastle, as part of her and ras dowry. Her son, Lord Henry Francis leader Hope, inherited it,. and misfortune be- after t set him early. He married May Yohe, and ap and soon she was wearing the dia- cal sur mond on the stage. In 1899, Lord Hope was in financial This difficulties and tried to sell the gem, the ca: but his family prevented this. After to act his divorce from May Yohe he sold it, the anj however, to Simon Frankel, the New and m York jeweler. It remained in the dya United States until January, 1908' daylly when rumors of the financial difficul--"il ties of Frankel Brothers were fol- the gc lowed by the sale of the jewel. Im- stray1 mediately after parting company with tation. the mysterious gem the firm paid off Gre: all creditors and returned to its for- yards mer prosperity. himsel: It is supposed that, through a se- s cret agency, the diamond came into ~ the possession of Abdul Hamid, then th go the absolute of Turkey. His throne the op: fell before he had possessed the Hope was n diamond even for a year. ment, -not alc -I RATE IN 1908. isr tion a: housand in Area Includ- looked een States-. tcet istraton area was 691,574, while for He the preceding year it was 687,034. hitehi This apparent increase-'of 4540 is ex-u plained by the fact that during 1908upo two new States, Washington and Win- the cer consin, were added to the registration. the pe The month of maximum mortality nose s in 1908 was January, with 67,763 somew deaths, and that of minimum mortal- Was ity was June, with 49,701 deaths. Thegot death rates of the individual States mna vary from 18.4 for California to 10.1 shot for South Dakota. andot, Shot Forty-four Pet Dogs in him th Streets of Montclair, N. 3. get. Montclair, N. .T.-Forty-four dogs disgult were shot as the resultof the procla- He mation issued by Mayor mHenry V. arms Crawford, of Montclair, authorizing slipped the destruction of all unmuzzled dogs five y iuning at large in the streets. finger Policeman Hugh Seery and William bush. Stewart, armed with double-barrelled shotguns, were busy all day killing As the animals. David Steinfeldt, the postur official dog catcher, killed the dogs in -af the centre of the town. Owners plead' came ed in vain for lives of their pets- crest Items of Interest. Aisn Senator Aldrichimade two addresses fierce ik St. Louis on monetary reform, his ea Colonel G. R. Colton was inaugu- He rated at San Juan, Porto Rico, as unwel Governor of the island. | o an It was agreed between the United setts IStates and Chile to submit the Alsop before claim to The Hague court for arbitra tion..it Again risking arrest for contempt posed of court, President Gompers at the -over I Torontconventonl of the Americ shad g "ederation of Labor denounced Jdeand Wright, of Washingtoni D. C; ~io ound s entenced the labor leaders tojaY. yin the Goa. FRANKLIN WELLES' 61IKINS t r - - t t >ry comes from the Bear Grass tins, in Montana, which should a needed warning to those I len who persist in donning es whether of cloth or of skins, nature or color of the animals 1 unt. It is told by my friend, , Grenlet, mountain climber, a , hunter and expert gunner. irly September Grenlet had his lgh up in a pass on the Bear trail. He had located a band :s on a mountain slope above, iree weeks of hunting for this He was prepared for photog- 1 his outfit consisting of a cam Lh telephoto lenses, a disguise >y suit made of genuine white ns-a "four legged" suit with piece comically like that of a ;s goat, and a pair of mocca ith thick, stiff soles of Indian elkskin. tlet was afoot early in the g. It was a beautiful day for g, a trifle cloudy, with breeze t to carry his scent straight Before noon he had climbed et above the Bear Grass River, s in a land of snow and ice. vore no coat or waistcoat, and I Ait of skins which he now, , although clumsy to travel in, her comfortable.- He was now range of his goats, and he in hour or two in careful ex on. He had even taken the tion to coverthe camera, which aung under an arm, with dirty loth. r a time he sighted the band he oking for-seven of them- I t a slope below his elevation, where fie wanted them, for if sh to approach a mountain goat ist, as a rule, descend upon it, it with much caution. i second observation, however, took in all their surroundings, t saw that the animals were in ion where :they would be ex ,ly difficult to come at unless uld, indeed, play the goat ef ly. The animals were in a ike basin, with a barren sur hich looked "like a crazy quilt :k aid white," and there were lows or tree growths to screen roach. let had to go nearly straight to them, keeping somewhat to t to get a snap shot across the . of the little basin. He began cent in a careless and confident i, taking no pains to conceal >vements or the noise of his1 . He hitched along down on rs in the jerky fashion of an 'billy-goat.' ' sloping plateau lay like a great between two ridges, a high one left, thie other a low one on ~ht and in front of him. The the left curved about to join 1er, holding most of the slope elbow. -And the hollow below Soutlet in a precipitous gulch. ly cover was here and there a r or a clump of mountain-sage. nd frozen snow covered much surface to a depth of one to ~hes. This made the side-hill slippery and difficult, even for dned feet. Compelled to hob ng, clinging with his hands to rfaces and wearing only thin ~loves, Grenlet found that his soon became stiff with the cold. n he was. within about two ~d yards of the game, and ~gingerly down an icy slope, ats suddenly seemed to take ~him. smaller ones bunched together Ised their heads, wh'le an old1 raised himself on his hind legs, he comical fashion of his kind, parently took a long and criti vey of the newcomer. was an agonizing moment for nera-hunter. If he should fail the goat pretty satisfactorily, mals would take to their heels, atters would be ended- for the d perhaps for good. However, 'seemed .satisfied at last, and ats resumed their nosing for bits of moss and frozen vege ilet came within a hundred Snally, and was congratulating t on at least a chance for suc rhen, with no warning at all, ats took to flight and went up osing slope with a celerity that tarvelous. In his disappoint the hunter groaned in spirit, if ud. i his back and the muscles of ts aching with unusual exer cd his fingers half-frozen, he about for some dry and de level spot where he could sit and bsjt his hands together. sighted a boulder and was tg along toward It, when, high the left-hand ridge, he heard uck of a rifle, and immediately mliar, spiteful whine of a soft lug which spatted into the ice here beyond him. Sthe fellow shooting at those on the opposite ridge! His lquestion was answered by two close together, and the whistle uud ofc their bullets convinced at he himself had become a tar And he owed this peril to his got to his feet and waved his n signal, and losing his footing, I, slid and rolled for twenty irds or more, till his freezing clutched the tops of a low he raised himself to a sitting e, faint and laughing cheers eeble yet irritating volley l own the wind to him from the of the high ridge on his left. as he staggered to his feet, 3racked, three of them, and the song of their bullets buzzed in knew now the occasion of this come target-practice. A party tumn tourists from Ma~ssachu iad passed his camp three days , with many horses, and ,rmed 'epeaing rifles. .He .at sup these tenderfoots on thetway o the Gatn valley, but they one into camp nearer at kad, their mnountain-elimbers ad game at last - He waved, his- arrai.ad l&SUtB&A mt 'the wind was Againt his voice .ndthireaponse was m&re 4bots andi he uncogfortable whine of jigh ower biillets. Qrenlet sca&eA the t idge for some sight of the enemy, but he men were lying' flat and their mokeless ammunition~ gave no sign. The camera-hunter realized qick y that demonstration would be use ess. Dressed as he was in a dirty 7hite and wooly suit of indefinite out ines, he could appear to these tour ts only as game in the shape of an .nimated blotch on the mottled sur ace of the slope. Whatever sort of ame these Easterners thought him, hey were likely to keep firing till hey hit him. Although the shooting was wild, eng down-hill and at long range, -et the ridge commanded every quare rod of the basin, and there vas fair prospect that the poorest of hots might chance to pot him before Le should be able to get out of range. Grenlet determined to get rid of Lis disguise. To take off his skin nd cast it from him ought, he rea oned, to arrest the shooting. To this nd he flung himself on his back in depression, which would serve to essen a trifle the target space of his ody, and set frantically to work up n the lacings of his goatskins. Of necessity, on account of the ough scrambling, the leathern trings which fastened his decoy suit Lad been tied in hard knots. Gren et's fingers were absolutely without eeling-as useless as dry bones. He ried to beat them into warmth; but ying on one's back on the ice, and a a state of nervous fear, is not con Lucive to warming exercise. In the meantime his movements 7ere seen, or at least his animated iody, and the firing grew sharper and aore accurate. When a slug struck he frozen carth within a few inches if his head and he felt the sting of ead spattered into his face, flight be amae the only recourse. He dared ot feign death, for fear that at :loser range some hunter might wish o make sure with some final shots. He considered briefly the lines of etreat, the routes to cover. The way into the gulch below rould have been most speedy,. but he slope he had already reached'was lifficult enough, its foo-thold barely. enable. To return the way he had ome would have been to lessen the istancd between himself and the hooters. So Grenlet chose a straightaway cramble up the lower ridge, over hich the goats had fled-and he vould have been glad enough could le have emulated the speed of those ortunate animals. And now began a dodging, scram )ling flight along a scarp full enough >f danger without the added peril of >ombardment. The hunters at this moment were uessing their range with a better de ree of accuracy. Their bullets were tiking, spat, spat, spat, within a *adius of ten or twenty yards. At least four men were firing as -apidly as they could work the mech nism of their guns. Go! He went In. every way that a nortal could go-,- dodging and curv ng, leaping and scrambling, much f the time, of necessity, on all fours. 'or a minute the spat, spat of ounce lugs followed. Then, to his immeas irable relief, the firing ceased. He crambled straight ahead now, until uspicon of that lull in the firing at acked him. He -halted, and briefly scanned the urved crest- of the ridge in his rear. and he discovered his tormentors acing like a swarm of monkeys cross a shorter and less steep slope >f their heights. They were gaining sorund swiftly, and he saw that they ould considerably lessen their range efore he could pass over hIs ridge, hould he wait and trust to signaling Lt a nearer view? He dared not, but turned to a labor f superhuman exertion in getting ip the icy slope. When he had a ttle more than covered half the istance to safety, the firing began gain, and from a point nearly at his evel on the ridge directly behind. [he crack of rifles sounded distinctly learer. He dared not now halt for a sin gle second. To present the uncertain .y of an erratically moving target was is only hope. Twice he was hit by yieces of ice or of frozen earth nocked up by bullets. He felt the ting of these missiles so sharply that or the moment he believed he had een wounded. Then in a flash his reprieve came. He was slightly above the level of :he shooters now, and a depression on as left suddenly offered its protec tion. He rolled into this littlet'hol ow joyfully. From this point his way round a curve on the ridge and Lo Its top was of safe and easier as Once on the height, and with his whole body glowing, his fingers tin gling from recent fierce exertion, he speedily got out of his goat-skins. He turned the suit Inside out and wrapped It about his camera. Dressed in a woolen skirt and kha ki knee-breeches, he was seated in a sunny spot on a boulder when five men, armed with rifles, came tearing over the ridge. They did not see him at first, and were surprised to discover him in their path a moment later. Sweating and panting, the tourists halted. With labored breath, one greeted him. "I say--how are you? Did you by any chance-nlotice a gray old grizzly-loping over this way? The beast was probably," he added, with a panting touch of humor, "probably bleeding from every pore." "No. I haven't seen a grizzly," Grenlet drawled. "Some goats came this way from down yonder, and I saw your shooting. A man," he said, "snow-blind, with one arm and a sawed-off musket, could have got that superannuated old billy-goat." A burst of chagrined laughter greeted his dry ralllary, and it Is needless to add that the strangers were not taken further Into- the cam era-hunter's confidence. - Youth's Companion.. About 60,000,000 barrels (of 196 pounds each) of wheat flour are con sumed annually in the United King om of Grat Britain and Treland. A Rita Meter. Rita, Rita, Growing swita Every day.; Will you never, Never, ever Come my way.' Rita, Rita, When you mita Chap like me. You should copper Such an oppor Tunity. Rita, Rita, Whv. Pray, trita *Fellow so? Won't you ever, Ever. never Not say: "No?" .-W. J. Lampton, in Iappincott's. The Journalistic Touch. "At this time of ye: r wasps. are a subject of perennial interest."-he London Telegraph. Heard in a Restaurant. "It gave me the slip." "What did?" "You're dead slow. The cash [ster."-Boston Transcript. Bad Outlook For Cholly. Maud-"Has Cholly Sapleigh a Is ter?" Ethel-"No, but hel wll have on if he proposes to me."-Boston script. AlI Sinners Washed. Vicar-"All sinners, Mary, wil washed whiter than snow." Mary, (anxiously)-"Not them truly repents, sir, I 'opes, sir."-Th Tatler. Disclosures Coming. Ball-"Gall has mac ment for the benenit of Hall-"Well, the in . estate ought to show dozen of my umbrellas At Either Pole. She-"Confess, now, that you would like to see women voters at the polls." He-"I should; Indeed! "Either of 'em, North or South."-Illustrated Bits. - - The Angler. He-"What showy-hats Miss Catch em wears." She-"Yes; she evidently think that you men are like trout, easiest caught with a gaudy feather."-Bos on1Transcript. Pens Fashionoriumi.. Mrs. Upper Tenne-"Yes, doctor, black and red spots appear before my eyes every night. What would you advise me to do for it?" Doctor - "Stop playing bridge, madame."Boston Transcript. Some Excuse Needed. Wfe-"Why did you tell the Jem sons that you married me because I was such a good cook, when you know that I can't even boll a potato?" Hubby-"I had to give some ex cuse, dear, and I didn't know what gse to say."-.Illustrated Bits. A Joint Deal -, \ "My dear." "What is it, hubby?" I wish you would drop around at. the market to-day and inspect a steak that I hold an option on. Then, If' you like it, call at my office, and we'll' sign the transfer papers."-Kansas City Journal. Iooked Promising. Mrs. Highsome-"Why did you leave your last place?" Applicant (for .position as cook) "To tell ye the honest -truth, ma'am, the missus discharged me. M rs. Highsoe-"Then you didn't leae of your own accord. . I'll take ou! "ChicagO Tribune. A Serious Question. ill the discovery of the pole re su In any tangible benefit to man " don't know as it will," answered the press humorist. "I doubt If the few new jokes It afforded will offset the raft of good old jokes It put out everything, ...a everytning!" The Scotch Member-"Young% man. did ye ever have D. T.'s?" Smith-"D. T.'s! Great Scott, Te Scotch Memnber-"Then ye'ye seen owt."---The Sketch. Why She We~t r. Styles"W'hat are you crying abo s. d Yes'mi crying because I ' didnt spend1 that 520 you gave m 'hiszc:-fg. 'M:Styes-Well, yo shouldnl t