University of South Carolina Libraries
MOTHERS I WHO HAVE DAUGHTERS! Find Help in Lydia E. Pink*: ham's Vegetable Comooufld Hudson, Ohio.?"If mothers realized ; the good your remedies would do deli- | cate girls 1 believe there would be 1 ' ,;'|fp"pr weak and ail- 1 : : ing women. Irreg- ; IfMUP* ;: ular and painful i ibe flrv p e r i0 d s and such : , , Jw troubles would be ! |.|[ ^ ^ Jglii relieved at once in j ply f-v J?;| many cases. Lydia ; PyM - M|i| E. Pinkham's VegePljL vj ::Q - table Compound is | : iFfgrtlL fine for ailing girls and run-down wo- i ifc 'W^ ^Smeu. Their delicate ffi.#?lonraus need a tonic ; r " *ms ^w/>. ai ^gTiand the Compound , 1 fives \ew ambition ard life from the 1 [ rstdose."?Mrs. George Strickler, ! f Hudson, Ohio, R. Xo. 5, Box 32. j i Hundreds of sufch letters from j [ mothers expressing their gratitude r for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- j L ble Compo-uid has accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, ' ilass. 1 Young Girls, Heed This. Girls who are troubled with painful 1 or irregular periods, backache, head- ' ache, dragging-down sensations, faint- t ing spells or indigestion, should take j < a fA n'orH nff CpH- 4 ILL!illCU1 ate at liOii IV n?iu v/*jl vuv wv~? . t ous consequences and be restored to ' ( health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Yege- , table Compound. Thousands have been ; restored to health by its use. If you would like special advice ! about your case write a confidential letter to Mrs. Pinkliam, at j?\ Xynn, Mass. Her advice is free, ; and always helnfuL. '* DAISY FLY. KILLER fe&SGKMS N e?t. c I e i d . oreunen ^tal, convenient, chip, > j Ixtl *11 MllOt. Mide of metal. cannot j jpil! or ttp over, will not j soil or injure anythinj. Guarentee'i effective. Of all dealer! or scar prepaid for 20 cents. | EAB.0LD 80MB7.8 130 IkKilb Avt.' ' ,Brooklyn, H. Y., Laborer's Find of Ancient Coins, j While digging in a field in Goth- ! land a laDorer iouna some cuius uai- ing from the year 1000, and a furth- J er and more exhaustive search ; t brought to light about 7000 Anglo- | t Saxon and 1000 Byzantine coins. j a The authorities were acquainted t with the discovery, and the valuable I . collection is to be transferred to the t museum at Copenhagen. The labor- t er was substantially rewarded.?Lon- t don Evening Standard. * V For Red, Itching Eyelids, -Cysts, Stves. ! f Fai,;ng Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need ( Care, vTrjr Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic i g ' Tubes, Trial Size, 25c. Ask Your Druggist ! y , * or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. 1 i a Boys grow most rapidly in their seven- 1 . teenth year; girls in their fifteenth. I c ! 3 Ask For Allen's Foot-Ease. t "I tried Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic I Powder, and have just bought another sup- , r ply. It has cured my corns, and the hot, ; t burning and itching sensation in my feet '( which was almost unbearable. I would not be without it now.?W. J. Walker, Cam- ! den, N. J." Sold by all Druggists, 25c. j ^ Ther~ is neither thunder nor lightning j! within the arctic circle. , ' * ^ Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for Children ' . teething, softens the gums, reduces mlianuna- > lion,aluyspain,cures wind colic,25c.abonia. i c Eurth and Purity. The love of dirt is among the ear- J llest of passions, as it i3 the latest, r Mud p'es gratify one of our first and j? ^est instincts. So long r.s we are ; c dirty, we are pure. Fondness for the : t ground comes back to a man after 1 ? lie has run the round of Pleasure and j business, eaten dirt and sown wild . j *)ats, drifted about the world, and , vdken the wind of all its moods. The | ( love of digging in the ground (or of ? looking on while he pays another to t dig) is as sure to come back to him s as ne is sure, at iasi, 10 go unuer me t ground and stay there. To own a ' t "bit of ground, to scratch it with a ! i hoe. to plant seeds, and watch their 1 i renewal of life?this is the common- \ t est delight of the race, the most satis- ; factory thing a man can do.?Charles j { Dudley Warner. 1 i Postcard Six Years on the Way. j < A Selkirk man has just obtained ! ] possession of a postcard which was 1 posted by a party in Selkirk to a ! ] friend in Galashiels, six miles dis- J < tant, on January 6, 1904. 1 It was delivered at its destination 1 quite recently, having taken more i than six years to accomplish the jour- j ] ney of six miles, or at the rate of a : ] mile a year. From indistinct postmarks on the card it is gathered that t it has been in Africa and India at any j : rate, but judging from the tear and . wear it must have made an even long- i ' er journey.?Westminster Gazette. \ ? - ' A Happy j * Day j j Follows a breakfast that is j pleasing and heathiuJ.. Post I Toasties i I .Are"pleasing and healthful, and bring smiles of satisfaction to the whole family "The Memory Lingers" Popular Pkg. 10c. I Family size, 15c. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. , EattlelCreek, Mich. J j L. i' TCTE EASY GOING MAN'. Oil. the easv ?oir.^ man Is the m;m wo like to see. The man wiin h.i* : h?> tiir.i> For tlio li.iiiv 011 In-; Uikv T(n" in.tn v. li.i comes along Willi a cheerful sort of smile "And doesn't seem to care Anything for looks or style. Oli. the easy going man Never out of patienco hero. Never anything to say l>ut the little things that che<?r. Noyor cross and never glum. Never really downright sad. Taking tilings just as rliev conio And forever schilling g'.id lie has time for everv one. Everybody that he knows; Never in so great a rush Tha* he cannot hear your woes. On I wonder how it is That h* always gets alouq. When iic never seems to care It a plan of his goes wrong Oh. the easy goin<: man. With ins little words of praise, And his smiles tor one and all That he meets alone his ways. Maybe misses much ot fame And the rich rewards thereof. But he garners, just the same. All the harvest of our love. ?Detroit Free Press. jj SINCE TIME BEGAN. | By CHARLOTTE BANfiS; 15HHSE5ESHSE5ES iSH5HEHS5H?] "Guv Foster is air right. I dare say, but I can't get up much enthusasm over a small man." "How can you think him small? Fie may be rather short, now that I :hink of it. but he-was acknowledged :he finest athlete in his class, and he certainly is fine looking. And he's a :horoughly splendid fellow, which :ounts for more than mere exterlals." The first speaker cleared her hroat as if irritated. "I have yet to be convinced that i small man hasn't a small nature md little manly courage. It is possible for an athlete to be a coward, '"Ou will probably concede." The man on the other side of the vail, lazily reclining behind a clump >f spruces, wondered at the acrimony n the voice. He felt for the moment hat it would give this girl pleasure o know that he heard her scathing emarks of him and that they hurt, ie half arose, upon an ironical immlse to make his presence known, hen drew back as the voices receded lown the country road. Why did she dislike him so blterlv? He had been greatly attracted o her upon his arrival at this place, md a strong sympathy had seemed o spring up between them at once. 3y a mutual drawing together they valked and rode and golfed and alk&d day after day in close associaion with one another until the ad rent of Stephen Bates upon the scene, who, as Foster was told, was an old riend between whom and Rose Jlynn there existed a perfect undertanding. This story was borne out >y the cordiality of their greeting md the attitude of Bates. Guy had hen felt that she had taken him up is a pastime, and with a disappointnent deeper than he at that time ealized, he had thenceforward given ip the field to his favored rival. Miss Jlynn's manner toward him underwent a marked change. She treated tim with slighting indifference, borlering on scorn. He could account or it only upon the ground of the canton cruelty that a certain type >f woman indulges toward the victim >f her charirfs. Her words cut him to-day. Yet. itrange to say, it was the shaft at lis physical stature that was barbed, rhe slur against his '"nature" and 'courage" seemed trifling; but the >ther rankled. Rose Glynn was very all. and Stephen Bates stood a head ibove her. With the thought of Bates the furies suddenly seized him. Sandsome as a prince, of winning >ersonality and great wealth, what :hance could Foster ever have had igainst him. even if he had not been oo late in the field? He felt a coniuming, unreasonable hatred toward ! %??? r* s\s*ssr\+ IfttrAr nf t Vi a c*i rl Q n rl in Lie pLevi IU \ CI V/V. SU1, uuu he fire of his passion there flared up nto his vision the revelation that he limself loved her with all the inensity of his life. It was late in the evening when, ifter a Ions swim in the cooling sea, le returned to the hotel. The hythmic strains of dance music heat softly upon his weary senses, and he paused for a moment at the door of the ballroom on his way upstairs. Fascinated, he watched a certain tall :ouple moving gracefully among the :hrong. They were well matched, he had to admit. A startled look came into Miss Glynn's face when she saw him, and remembering his rough appearance, he quickly withdrew. Going to his room, he packed his trunks ?for he intended to be gone on the morrow, and then went to bed. He awoke, stifling. The room was full of smoke. Some twenty minuter later, standing with a solemn crowd in a neighboring field, he. watched the doomed building By a strange and unconscious mutuality of action he and Rose Glynn were standing side by sid'.*. Suddenly he rernern bered. ' Where is Bates?" he asked sharp ly. Nobody hod seen him. Mis: Glynn had sunk to the ground anc covered her face. Foster bent over her. "Couraze," ho said firmly. "I will brinz him t< you?if he is to be found!" Soon the awe-struck crowd saw : ladder raised and the figure of a inai Swiftly ascend to an upper story am disappear within the burning strur ture. After an agony of waiting they saw him reappear, bearing th< limp form of a man upon his shoul der. As he slowly descended the: saw, with mute horror, the flashin; play of flames in the room froa which the pair had emerged. Shortly after sunrise Guy Foste was pacing the floor of the "bes room" in a neighboring farmhouse his tace and hands swathed in whit lin-'n. His eyes and mouth olou were uncovered. Mis.- Glynn, he eyes badly swollen with wcepin? timidly entered. "How is he?" < anie hoarsely froi the bandaged lace. "The doctor says he is doing well, j i f is fnce was saved by the wet to we.' you hound about his head. You? ' you should have protected yourself, also." I He made no reply, but stood as il expecting her to go. "Why did you speak lo me oi Stephen Bates as you did?" she asked in a strained voice. "He is nothing to nie hut a friend. I am j grateful to you for saving him from so fearful a fate?but you?misun- J derstood?" Her voice trailed fair.t lv away, then strengthened again. ' "I came to tell you that I knew you , were behind the wall this morning, i What I said did not express my real thought?I said it to hurr. you?I ; kuew then it wasn't true?\" His heart was lighter than it had been for weeks. i "Why did you want to hurt me?" , he asked gently. Her hand was on the door knob in [ sudden panic. Ignoring his question, j she bravely finished what she had [ come to say. "I came to ask your forgiveness for the terrible injustice . , of my words." "Rose?Miss Glynn?Hang these ( bandages! How the deuce can a mummy?" But she was gone. Weeks afterward, in her cosey sit- ! j ting room in town, she told him all ( I he wanted to know. "You turned to ice so suddenly," I I she explained, "what could I think, except that I had worn my heart on : my sleeve and you thought me for- I ward. Then I longed to retaliate,-1 and show you vhat?I didn't think j of you! 0 how small and mean my < love must seem to you," she added, piteously. "Hush," he said gravely. "I was : a coward to give you up so easily, j You were right when you said it was possible?" She laid a hand over his lips. "Don't!" sue pieadea, ner cneei against his. And thus they went on, in the fashion of lovers since time began, savoring present happiness with the sweet misery of past woes.?Boston<Post. BACK FROM CANADA. _____ Some Farmers Who Emigrated Are ! Coming Home. A counter movement of immigration from Canada into the United States has apparently set in, if the influx from "over the line" in northern Montana may be taken as indicative of the present trend. According to an official report by United States Collector of Customs Blair at Sweetgrass in that State, hundreds of families have come over from Canada within the past week and have taken up government lands in Montana; | this movement began early in the j winter and has increased each day | until the total of newcomers from ! across the line has reached many j thousands. These newcomers are J v very largely men rfnd women who had , given up their citizenship in the United States in urder to take up Cana- ' dian government lands; some of them , have be&n in Canada long enough to ; prove up their homesteads, but large j numbers of them have come back j without waiting to obtain title to ; their government lands, or have sold ! their relinquishments, or deeded their lands. So there would appear to be j no call for official or other action in this country to "stem the tide" of j American immigration into Canada, j These things always adjust them- j selves if let alone. The Canadian ; land boom, the "call to the far north- j west," caught many thrifty Ameri- J can fr.rmers no doubt who. had tbey , taken thought and deliberately meas- j ured the chances for the success or | the failure of the experiment, would j never have ' pulled up stakes"?and 1 it is this class apparently that is now | moving southward in "the States;" j others will stay and fight it out, of i course. The incident is at least be- ! ginning to disclose tLat there is an. j unstable and migratory contingent among our northwestern farmers that is never quite satisfied with existing conditions. The great bulk of our northern and western farmers must sooner or later learn, however, that if a change is desirable, the south \ holds out the greatest attractions for J j them.?New York Commercial. : Bachelors Boycott Servian Beauty. Sattika Dushitsh, the belle of Zaboya, writes our Belgrade correspondent", is boycotted by all the bachelors of that village, who have sworn not to i marry her because she caused the 1 death of two of her admirers. Sattika declared to Milenko and ' i Theodor, who strove for her hand, j 1 t&at sue would oestow u on wnicn- | over showfed the greatest physical i endurance. They decided ou a sw.im- j ming contest iu the Morava River, j which ended in death by drowning i ; of Mileuko and pleurisy for Theodor, J i which carried him off in three days. The girl declares she has, never> theless, received offers of marriage ; iu private from some who boycott ' [ her in public.?Pall .Mall Gazette. [j I i j Worse Than Pessimism. Andrew Carnegie, at a dinner in i > j Washington, deplored the world's ex' | cessive armaments. 1 "All these billions wasted on bat"jtleships," he said, 'are declared to ; do good in providing work, in ere- | s" j atiug prosperity. That is a shallow I I and false optimism. > | "That, in fact, reminds mo of the , ! man who said vhen his wages were j 5 | cut down: I ' Well, there's one comfort, wnen >' 1 j I'm laid up sick 1 won't lose as much j 1 1 money as I used to.' "?Detroit Free 1 I 1 Press. B Railroad Florists. The name "grasshopper" has rfeen y given to the railroad florists. There 5 is some significance in the name too. a for these men just jump from one railroad lawn to another and keerr , them in good condition. They are est i pecially busy at this time ot' the year >. j in Pennsylvania in fixing up the s:tae'tion grounds and rights of way foi e i the sunuuer months Each division r i has a certain number of men that go r, j from one station to anotaer and . iook after the lawns and see that tne> n i are given the proper attention ?Phil! adelphia Record. Vanity of- Life. How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy. Iu youth we are looking forward to things that are to come. In old age we are looking back to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, even that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy oq some future day when we have time.?New York Press. A Wife's Qualifications. There are three things which a good wife should resemble, and yet those three things she should not resemble. She should be like a town clock?keep time and regularity. She should not, however, be like a town clock?speak so loudly that all the town may hear her. She should be like a snail?prudent and keep within her own house. She should not be like a snail?carry all she has upon her back. She should be like an echo?speak when spoken to. But she should not be like an echo?determined always to have the last word.?New York Press. Mrs. Roosevelt. Mrs. Roosevelt wears wonderfully well. One could not guess from her appearance that she will next year I b<? entitled to silver wedding presents i and congratulation. Her eldest son J is to' be married on her return to the i States. Her appearance is extremely | agreeable. What is so remarkable J in her face is its exceptional capacity to show pleasure in lighting up. The features are of regular proportion and well modeled and bear out her claim to French ancestry?Huguenot, by the way. The deep commissures are distinctly French and may be thought to denote a sense of the ridiculous finer than that of the exPresident. Her comeliness is refined. ?London Truth. oj . 1 Lentil Roast.?Soak t .S* o three or four hours, or o f ^ o 5 water and put on to boil OS 2 ) colander to remove the i +* is / would mashed potatoes, o 5 i sa5e or celery, or other s; 4L 2 I pour in enough milk to m a j generously with bread cri ? ) cream, tnen flecks of butt 3 ? ) and bake until a good b 0 | and serve with cranberry On G'XkI Breeding. A great part of our education is sympathetic and social. Boys and girls, said Emerson, who have been brought up with well-informed and superior people show in their manners an inestimable grace. Fuller say? that "William, Earl of Nassau, won a subject from the Kinp of Spain every time he took off his hat." You cannot have one well-bred man without a whole society of such. They keep each other up to any high point. Especially women; it requires a great many cultivated women? salons of brigat, elegant, reading women, accustomed to ease and refinement, to spectacles, pictures, sculpture, poetry and to elegant society?in order that you should have one Madame de Stael. "Woman and Love. One thing that the generalizes never take into consideration (possibly because they do not know it, and generally because they are men or old-fashioned women) is the enormous percentage ot non-maternal women. Whether this was the case in ancient times, or whether it is the gradual result of education and leisure, increased independence and the facilities for knowing men before marriage, I cannot say, but the fact remains that thousai ('j of women that are married ought not to be; are the dutiful mothers of children whom :hey secretly regard as enemies. They have married in their springtime because tradition and youthful instinct (nothing is more evanescent) suggested it. There was a time, happily passing, when the collocation "old niaid" was almost a term of insult; when it was even a matter of pride to be a young grandmother. There is no possible doubt that whether women get. the vote soon or late, this division of their sex will come early and more early to the conclusion that the less they have to do with love the happier they will be.?Gertrude Athenon, ia Harper's Bazar." A Word About Julia Ward Howe. Jul.a Ward Howe, author and reformer, was born May 27, 1819, in a handsome home in Bowling Green, New York City. At the time of her birth that part of the city was the most desirable residence quarter, being both aristocratic and fashionable. Her father, Samuel Ward, was a merchant and banker of New York. Four of her ancestors were Governors of Rhodo Island, two of them beingWards and two Greens. On both paternal and maternal sides Mrs. Howe sorun& from fine old blood. When in her fifth >ear Julia Ward lost her mother, a beautiful and accomplished woman cf twenty-eight. Six little ones?of whom Julia was the fourth?were l?ft without a mother's love and care. Of her father Mrs. Ward has this to say: "He was a majestic person, of somewhat severe aspect and reserved manners, but with a vein of true geniality and benevolence of heart. His great gravity and the absence of a mother nat" ' * 1 *1? * . ~ ^.1? *1,^ 1 .AllOrt urany suuuueu uie uj.ic vi iuk uuu?fi hold: and. though ;i greatly cherished set of children, we were not a j merry one." Although as a child Julia Ward showed remarkable aptitude in her studies, being advanced to classes comprised of girls twice her own age. she was still a nierrv, playful child at heart, and when, on her ninth birthday, her dolls were taken away from her and she was told iu a serious jig tone by her aunt that ' Miss Ward was too old to play with dolls any longer," the separation from her playthings almost broke her heart, and many nights she wept herself to sleep on her pillow, mourning for her pretty toys that had been so ruthlessly denied her. Her father provided the finest tutors for his children, and the Ward home became the centre of a distinguished class of people, artists, writers and musicians gathering there at regular intervals to enjoy the gracious hospitality of their host and the society of his brilliant sons and daughters, of whom Julia was the most gifted.?Washington Star. ' Queen Goes Shopping. A few days after my arrival at Milan, while strolling one afternoon on the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele, that favorite Milanese and cosmopolitan resort, I passed a glove shop, and remembered that I had left my gloves in the railway carriage. I thought I might as well buy a new pair, and entered the shop. A customer had gone in before me, a lady, young, tall and slender, quietly but elegantly dressed in a plain, dark traveling frock. Through the long, blue motor veil that closely shrouded her face I could dimly see her large, dark eyes and masses of black hair. The face appeared .to be refined and pretty. She was leaning over the counter and trying on gloves which a young shop assistant handed to her. "They are too large," she said, shyly. '"That is because the signora has so small a hand," replied the young assistant gallantly. She smiled and did not ansyer. An elderly lady who was with her gave the youth an indignant and scandalized glance. After patiently allowing the measure of her hand to be taken, open and closed?it was inhe lentils, about a pint, in water for ver night. Drain, cover with fresh until very soft. Strain through a ikins, then mash the same as you Season with salt and pepper, also avory herbs. Put in a baking dish, ake the proper consistency, sprinkle imbs. pour over the top a little rich er here ?fnd there. Put in the oven rown. To serve this cut in slices, or curant jelly. deed a very small one?she found two pairs of gloves that suited her, paid for them and turned to go. Just then the owner of the shop returned. He looked at the lady, gave a bewildered start, and, as soon as she was gone, shouted to his assistant: "Have you the least idea whom you have been serving?" "A very pretty woman?I know that!" "Idiot! It was the Queen! " The Queen! It was my turn to feel bewildered. The Queen alone, unprotected, in that arcade full of people! I was on the point of following her, from professional habit, forgetting that I was not at Milan as an official, but as a private .tourist. But it was too late, she had already disappeared in the crowd.?Xavier Paoli, in McClure's. Two materials frequently appear in one light gown. Some braid novelties show touches of leather in their make-up. Cushion covers of suede leather are exceedingly popular this season. Coarse blue linen frocks, embroidered with blue and coral silk, are made for young girls. Either banding, piping, or feather stitching in color is effective for the small boy's Russian suit. Wreaths, bow knots and roses are the favorite designs on the embroidered silk hosiery for the bride. Thp cIppvpIpsc r>r>nfc r>f tVin mnet diaphanous materials promise to be more popular than ever this season. Parasols of embroidered linen are popular. They are only suitable for carrying with linen or cotton frocks. In place of the narrow stitching characteristic of the short glove of last season, the long silk glove now worn has wide embroiderv on the back in self-color or in black. So popular is the frill of pleating at the left of the front of the shirt waist that blouses which fasten in the back are given the blouse's closing effect by means of dainty accessories. The jabot is a long frill and gives length; the rabat is a flat little tab which lends an air of doctrinal severity to the prettiest face; the plisso is the side frill, the most popular of all. The prettiest raci in fans is tne plisse?the ruff of chiffon with dainty ribbon roses set in to wear over a tailored suit with a collarless blouse. It is soft, crisp and becoming to the face. Little girls are wearing hats that have departed from the simplicity that has been so popular. A mass of lace and frills crowns little ones' heads, no matter how plain the coat and dress may be A very interesting trimming shows (insel cord balls strung 011 heavy soutache, knotted at intervals. This is especially fashionable as an edge, as it simulates the ball fringes with[ out being pendant. Not only is the Chantecler coloring j seen in everything?in hats, coats and I suits?but the form of the bird is also appearing. The 'latest device is the form woven very black, with a tine mesii face veil. * A Maiden's Prayer. 1 (1910) i I may develop eloquence. I Drop petticoat for bloomer; I Or. scorning sham and saving pence, Bar costume and costumer: But heaven grant me recompense? A trace of saving common-sense, j A grain or two of humor. i ?Lift, j Common Consent. : Hicks?"Has he any right to the 1 title of colonel?" Wicks?"Sure. Everybody calls I him that."?Somerville Journal. I i Big Damages. j "Did Simpkins get any damages in that assault case?" "Did he? My dear fellow, you * mis-hf to see his face."?St. Louis ; _ Star. j More Innocents Abroad. "Did you lose anything in Monaco?" "That was the place where you lost your parasol, wasn't it, Jane?"? Cleveland Plain Dealer. Versatility. Dolly?"Is he a great linguist?" Tom?"Rather! He can talk on football, motor car, billiards, golf and backslang and he can swear in three languages."?Illustrated Bits. I Out of Season. 1 i "Curses on that magazine editor!" "How now?" "He ran my college serial so 'that the football chapter will come in mid July."?Louisville Courier-Journal. j By and By. ? If - * 1 + Oldun?"Hey! Got any sand? Dewun?"Get out and try me!"? Trenton American. Lack of Enterprise. "Those Bedouins around Baalbec are a shiftless lot." "As to how in particular?" "They won't keep the ruins in any j sort of repair."?Louisville CourierJournal. Teddy in Paris. President Fallieres (to Roosevelt) ' ?"Well, Mr. Roosevelt, and how do the European monarchs, my col leagues, strike you?" Roosevelt?"They're all very nice, oui raiaer uuiiubive. ?ohuiju^i^si- I thus. 1 ! Friendly Advice. } | "But for my ears being in the way, ! j I could wear one of those very high 1 I collars." I "Too bad, but stick to your ears, I ]( j girl. You may need 'em in your old j , age to hook your spectacles over."? , | Louisville Courier-Journal. After the Carouse. First Reveller?"I say, old man, j your wife won't do a thing to you j 1 whejj she smells the whisky." Second Reveller?"When I'm near t ' her I hold my breath." First Reveller-4-" You won't be able I to. It's too strong."?Boston Tran- r | script. ! ! Winding Up His Affairs. j , "Look here, Ben, what did you j 1 shoot at me for. I ain't got no quar- j 1 rel with you." ' You had a feud with Jim Wombat, j j didn't ye?" i ( /T did; but Jim's dead." j i "I'm his etecutor."?Washington i Herald. Not Complimentary. ' Well." said the young lawyer, af- J te:* he had heard his new client's ' story, "your case appears to be good. 1 I think we can secure a verdict with- 1 out much trouble." ! 1 "That's what I told my wife," said ' the man. "and yet she insisted at first 1 that we ought to engage a first class ' lawyer."?The Catholic Standard and Times. : i His Occupation. ! 1 I I "Whar do you mean by writing ; 1 down a man's occupation as 'liar'?" ! asked the census taker's superior, as he glanced over one of the sheets that had been filfed out. "Surely ( I there isn't anybody who makes lying ins regular nusiutf?. "Well, I thought that was the best j way to put him down. He told me | lie was a painless dentist."?Chicago | Record-Herald. breaking it Cicntly. Simkins always was soft hearted. < and when it devolved upon him to | break the news gently ot' Jones' drowning to the bereaved Mrs. .Tones ! it cost liini much paper, ink and inspiration before he sent the following 1 "Dear Mrs Jones?"Your husband cannot come home to-day, because his bathing suit was washed away " ' "P S. ? Poor .Jones was inside the suit.' ? Modern Society. 1 I - Ill DISTRIBUTION AN EXACT SCIENCE Fully a Million Dollars a Week In Foreign Gold Comes to This Country to Pay For Standard's Product That is Peddled to the Doors of Hutand Palace,According to the Rockefeller Plan of International Earter. This Rockefeller Foundation, to nake a story of it, is in reality just his?it is the dream of a poor boy cme true. It is the happy ending >f an American novel of real life. .Att a the climax of one of the most dramatic and impressive careers that his country, or any other, has ever :nown. . } , The dream?or the novel or drana. whichever you like?began more hac half a century ago. It began in i shabby little boarding house In Cleveland, In the brain of a lad of eighteen who was clerking for a .hipping and real estate company, rhere were at that time about a nillion other American boys of the iaiie age, and not many of them bad ^ceived fewer privileges than this me. He had been educated partly n the public schools, but mainly at iome. by his mother and father. His )ay, at this time, was sixty cents a lay. His hours of labor were from ireakfast until bedtime. For his oom and meals he was paying $1 a veek, so that his net income?the >asis of his dream of fortune and phianthropy?was not more than $135 l year. Even at this time, and with this ncome, he built a tiny little founda:ion of his own. Out of the slity :ents a day, he set aside a few penlies for the church, or for some hungry family, or to drop into some hat hat was passed around in the office. The notebook in which tlnse little * jhilanthropic entries were made Js itill in existence. It is knowi^by :he name of "Ledger A" in the R&rk ;ieuer iamuy. u is a completely vorn out little notebook, with broten cover and tattered pages of laded writing, but it is one of the nost precious treasures in the Hocke'eller vaults. It has more than a personal Interest now. It has sudlenly become historic, because it records the origin of "the most com-' jrehensive scheme of benevolence in ;he whole history of humanity." The managerial instinct was so strong In this boy that he was not satisfied with merely paying his share nto the contribution boxes. By the i ;ime he was nineteen he had ripened nto an organizer of benevolence, tie was a member of a mission :hurch, which was fast breaking idwn under the weight of a $2000 Mortgage. This sixty - cent - a - day pouth undertook to collect the M AMATT n ? In A /I i /J XLUUCJ't auu. uc uiu ik. "That was a proud day," he said In later years, "when the last dollar was collected." Little as he knew It, the boy was then at work upon the fulfilment of ills dream to become perhaps the greatest getter, and the greatest giv?r, of his generation. Later, when he became a prosperous man of business and large affairs, he still retained the habit of organizing his giving as well as his getting. He even went so far as to organize his family into a sort of foundation. At the breakfast table tie would distribute the various appeals for help among his children, requesting them to investigate each ;ase and make a report to him on the following day. In this way his children, and especially his, son and aamesake, who is destined to distribute the revenue of the Rockefeller fortune, received a Spartan training In "the difficult art of giving.".. The whole bent of the Rockefeller mind seems to have been inclined from the first toward the working out of this problem of distribution. The business of the Standard Oil Company itself is much more a matter of distribution than of production, [t was unquestionably the first company that undertook to sell its product directly to the users on a worldwide scale. For the most part, it delivers its oil, not to wholesalers and middlemen, but to the family that burns it, whether it be in the United States or in the uttermost parts of the earth. It has, for instance, no fewer than 3000 tank wagons traveling lirom door to door in the twenty ;ountries of Europe, selling pints and quarts of liquid light to whosoever demands it. Fully 51,000,000 a week, in foreign gold or its equivalent, comes to this country to pay for the oil that is peddled to the doors of hut ana paiace, aauiuiug tu iue Rockefeller plan of international distribution. Consequently, both bjo natural aptitude and business experience. Mr. Rockefeller was well prepared to work out the problem of distributing the surplus money of the rich in a systematic and efficient manner. His new foundation is no afterthought It is no sudden change of mind or change of heart. It is the natural result of fifty years of experience and experiment. What ha began to do aa a poor boy in a Cleveland boarding bouse, he is now about to complete jn an international scale?that is the ' -I" ? o explanation 01 ine new iuai uao ?? excited so much comment and so KB much curiosity. H A Curious Bequest.' U. B. Corbett, of Crabwew Hall, I Mollington, Cheshire, left directions H in his will that he should be cremated, H and added: "I should wish a ?3 cup H to be given to the Cheshire Golf Club, H to be competed for on the day of my H cremation and on the six following H anniversaries." ? Westminster Ga- H zette. H Spanish telephone companies make H their charges according to the occu- H pation of the patron. Social clubs H labor under the highest rate. H A PRACTICING PHYSICIAN H Gives Valuable Advice to Kidney Sufferers. ?->_ r> at n nf Fnrf. fiav. Lfl. I\. r laouci, ? , W. Va., has used Doan's Kidney Pills personally and prescribes them in his HI S practice. Says he:- H "I consider Doan's Kidney Pills the finest remedy on earth for diseases of the kidneys and biadder. I have pre- H scribed this medicine in many cases, and H| at the present time several of my patients are using it with excellent results. I have taken Doan's Kidney Pills personally with entire satisfaction." Remember the name?Doan's. For IB soje by all dealers. 50 cents a box. BB F*oster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y?