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i1 ha ac Aol an g t, i col Ange ntur4 nd pe hat ha 11 the 1; and ti eing wil ncesto'r. g immorn U not sE ent was lling as f constanC brated lov divine." xcellent re; thing immori ust related 1 t," said the 01 "I tell you for this centmr ments are dead act. Sme," said Pres California Nort the New Willar s of historic inte vicinity of Was advertised. ows the history < lonial days down i rm no conception < there are almost a aticnal Capital. E I came near doint without visitin Or Mount Vernon, nc tysburg or Frederick ad to say that I got il tese places, but it wi it of accident than an: d so I made the pilgrin to the joy of my fami] I wanttohmaketiKitg thousandssofjmiresyaw cighteon and not verywenIounyitGttbrga ras fighting blood went.,itcdhwfw eem opnc hzan worthy of the name o h ore ooeo h rae teen, and Although herbu tiktathrwssoelc igelique. and in spite of fut ihtemliue h i t she was an abbess, andWaintnteesolntbead imr cradle, she was theinteeathtaisotfteCp e muischief that ever lived,.alfie ocrylaso ihse i. they met each other and t hsmmrbeso.~ahnt two f~I wantieo mere esutll ad qull nole FrrallRadnd likei the railoa herhan. Tey oldhim "Itwasghatly," graitd that stral * Lo yong.He. rewfu takr. Asientrnd teeor cai from tcmto indc the bloc dohe cained hm ad sad hss fth eseins errr an rcad' 0 neiT enuid. bt emht dlo d too son. Thhsae aoit hda 'nimn cudwhlyben aIguneehttetybuga and tat tme a on " t jposie to one waf thigtee 11se:'battleeld on hisr knI couldrnt hen it wa not mer eleth bak thr And sombi.o way, ut aregu a uml. weth this volie H r is led hi heart WNot n gt od shiershoulno p ada balcony.eear me.' trains out ofa the Cap wach dtahisr Weoual sot."-WashlingtoJ inirea hner a Pnot . vnfa i nie wer e lque.l ifyu ralead in a ihetDarke hi deuall toe Frallea "Itceraigsly, ca.'id heI uandse ofhnd pah e r tl i m to akre arl"A wereue thioarns turha tooug red tew note. thom thenceeter. nth'lckdr toudeg an essTof the explained the matterea tom calme himand ai e sid oehi wethy same ad it ea not ne. to statbonwtcaeyshtwrkdet mntiet coued' Shely nigt etpositehim. He aid intene lendtt Ilme ayou.' Cdar haod bee -oine ofte ma aedncy. Anel ar uague hees ae o . enty-hre w! cith the ltr-teno he heldfo hd kethi. Esephi Saee lge-pitch als ad. git And m sml It hrses.ot al ure, webnohs sawic.lerlyadf way knota aareguarkntly. nl hversurnih uphand dow out. hiser. fleng, mye dpimnd pialyinl. ped nsaned.msl "Therdn the,'a stopd,' and the wer baony ith- derta. Asould man passd tnelli as a n:'nd hertac as noefybows rand sin wereighte thi ii f l er i ng Achet lique' "'I bcertain yc , id h e pIe tcans h~i nt ~a imsoned sxl atcoral lead ineverisedarnes tan i pe. Ya cof iapie ted t thehsuDight. ~~. 'fea the Ollt(Cidnout FiThe is exelleneod thmter in sm< - fi (ly thi undrge ay Hiero saimneer But an thein thet Y a toop f caalies born wpeith cakees bran worked beti whm "toneg t eilte' b nighty tne by foday.s eroeus.ui m herieyheadSh tCsru hat ite contan of hselimr Ferraille soled Bakut itSot ageoftainty-tha re< c0, a :i d s weith nl - the the nint ha et fi m. c ontisep s, with. Her'rte tra cSee hodaloru had ngft Heub si s t h r sesi~ . utr al puri e ling saw clea r ict nt~t oweoer pr and akbti the ('leisdentopsulight t ea out.in vr see, tedg ,u toe icrooanpinful. adsentparohi atle. BTih r the bestsoppe adiwe an geoighe too her pon scout be toohighly paemmnded t: androe are with re acoun oaw ithis consitunt and hi alteri dae aht . be cuh. dica l Ityhad never Gleena. lbn iredo t e ampibe. i pefe t"-Kansa C t y Ind ependent r edsor eday waftr Thoftnidsryo tl nra the dungeoneofardiimportanseceln aod i trib un a r poo cav -liers . t amongally "makesr i n" e poing pari 'o eto~b l n prariyn tan 13nerve hands Mero n eirdatathetes fatriee oeratontain phshor unr.at liefulthy eainderhosphorus hadino db il is f rte- e-aw tedo r a-ic i power g o utn po sph00 orese a eig er screlted. but- empoye 60icro-organim.a ent hi back o his astle Btfshoertebstfdita Outing Hats. 'elt hats for outing wear have ap eared in the shops. Most of them ire n the broad flat sailor order, bird trimmed and mostly white. Another style is mannish or foreign looking. These have round crowns like buns or overturned bowls. The brim is bound with leather, and the rown spanned by a leather belt. One had a crown of seal browi. and a rolled and twisted brim of tan en d circled with folds of brown and orange d velvet, finished with an orange pom pon. e - L- To Keep Young. Simple diet, plain living, active out d door work or walking and absence of e worry give conditions that will devel - op the best physical and moral possibil '5 ities within one. We are all prone to - exhaust nerve force over petty cares. I- We get excited if the rooms are not - prcy. rlv dusted; we put too much of ourselves into our household work; we do not want to learn to simplify; we do not always take the "forty T winks" early in the afternoon. These - are some of the causes of age, and we can avoid them just as we can learn ih to sometimes be idle and at all times be reposeful.-Housekeeper. e ~ Women in Outdoor Art. a Mrs. Charles F. Millspaugh's address it on"Women in Outdoor Art," at the St. Y Louis biennial, will be remembered by . those who were fortunate enough to :)e present at the civics session, in charge - of Mrs. Ralph Trautman. The Im LI portance of the work done by wome-n 0 in this department is meeting with a hearty, if somewhat belated, apprecia di tion from associations of architects, it! landscape gardeners and artists. The YI Municipal Art Society of New York City has lately placed women on its most important committees. Mrs. Ed ward Hagaman Hall is Chairman of - the Committee on Flowers, Vines and i- Area Planting; Miss Carmelita Beck , with is Chairman of the Committee on - Membership, and Mrs. Gabrielle Town - send Stewart is Secretary of the socie ty. Nearly every State federation has . Committee on Forestry, whose work includes civic improvement and out 1 door art. e Good Times For Perfumers. "The perfumery business was never better," said the perfume dealer the t other day. "I sell more perfume tha'n . I ever did before and I think my heavy . sales are due in a large part to the au ,tomobile craze. "You know the odor emanating fromh those gasoline autos is not pleasant. Lovely oman does her best to over come it by using lots of perfume. Just !take notice the next time an auto whizzes by you and see if you don't ~get a good, strong whit of perfume with the gasoline if there is a smartly a~ttired- on e"Women may be going in for athlet ics more than eiver, but they are going Sin for perfumes, too, and the most ex pensive kind. "It would surprise you, though, to Iknow how many men have the perfum ery habit as well. I think the new Sfancy silk handkerchiefs may have Lsomething to do with that." For Children. Guimpes are an important item In the small girl's wardrobe. White dresses are especially desira ble for children, for no other "tub" frock launders so satisfactorily. Berthas of lace and of the material, with bands of lace insertions and edg ings, are always becoming. Ribbon sashes add a pretty touch to frocks for dressy occasions, and under those of very thin, fine lawn or mull, in white, there may be worn a colored silk or lawn slip, preferably of pink or blue. eFor the small girl there is no more gcharming mode than the French dress, with a deep bertha or collar in scol loped lower outline and having an at tached full skirt. The strap or suspender dress is one of the season's most popular styles for small girls, giving the effect of the 'shirt waist and skirt. eMohair,-in plain or checked weave, is a smart and practical material for girls' dresses.. The Benefits of a Hobby. -How often does one hear the expres sion, "Oh, that is so and so's hobby," 1;poken rather disparagingly. It is the tendency of the average mind to re gard a person who has a pronounced enthusiasm as a species of harmless lunatic, rather to be pitied. The truth of the matter is, however, that any onec who has any especial fad is greatly to be envied, as it probably provides more interest and amusement for its possessor than anything else. Any de cided interest in life, whether it is dig nified by the name of an occuiation, or is simply an ':nthusiasm, or ceven ofmentioned slightingly as a fad, iz emi nently desirable. "I have never zeen a genuine colee tor that is not happy when he is al lowed by circumstances to gratify his tastes." remarked a student of human - nature, "and a bent in that direction should always be encour'aged. It is a .curious phase of our humanity that we will work diligently to make provision .for our materiail needs when we arc ;old and quite neglect to store up twi . tal resources that will interest and . iamuse us until w* aire called hacce." I, Indianapolis News. dHow Woman Can Develop Herself. iIn the Woman's Journal, Charlotte Perkins Gilman urges women to take Smore leisure for their own develop ment. She suggests the formation of neighborhood clubs. With what de finite purpose? Nothing more definite than the keeping alive of the individ ,al soul. O AS aO ~t-~ O0J~~i~s its lig might form into little groups and take certain kinds of reading together, spreading indefinitely that way. er One might suggest, as a vital sub- M ject for most women to study, "Their ex own business;" to learn, for instance, whether it is really necessary for so many more to be sick; whether it is ke; really necessary for each lonely woman on to spend her lonely life in doing house- gl4 work eighteen hours a day; whether thl husbands are best cared for and made tl happy by the present system of house- is keeping; whether, in short, united wo manhood cannot do better and more easily -vhat separate womanhood finds se so hard And does so ineffectually. J. ab Giving Away Clothes. sh There are two ways of giving away mj old things, a rioral and immoral. Those an who are guilty of the latter are the peo- ta4 I ple who use the poor as a sort of gar bage barrel, something in which to dump everything that is useless. They ne are the people who give to their wash- F. erwoman old ball frocks and soiled in, white satin slippers and things too hi ragged for any human being to make yo use of. They are the people-it seems se: incredible, but it is true-who careful- ge ly cut off all the buttons on any gar- ee ment that is to be given away, and an never think of mending anything. With efl such persons giving is not a virtue, but a convenience. They feel they can rid themselves of much rubbish and w yet ctain a reputation for charity. A ed ray of illumination on this subject was lif obtained by one woman on seeing a th busy house mother darning some old k( stockings. dt "I must get these finished," said this w] latter. "I want to send them down to ar Mrs. (mentioning a pensioner) to-day." to "You don't mean to say you darn the co stockings you give away!" exclaimed is] the visitor. se "*Why, of course, I do," was the re- in ply. "They are generally too bu'y or 1 too careless to do it themselves." pa Two Neglected Dutles. at "My top bureau drawer and my let- ru ters are the two ends of my duties that to are oftenest neglected." wrote a clev er busy woman to a long-suffering cor respondent, "the reason being, I sup pose, that they are the two things that would not turn over to any one else." One of the many excellent Victorian traditions which a more forward and careless generation is beginning to dis regard is the sacredness of correspond ence, it having always been one of the bt shibboleths of every well-born, well bred British female that 'she should th sit down at her "Davenport" directly after breakfast for an hour or so and answer her notes and letters. Victoria the Good certainly had her young wo mankind in good training, an infin- or ence which extended itself to the Ileis- C ure class of America. and it is a great C piy to see so many of the excellent precepts andl habits which used to be n an integral part of the best develop- n ment of a young woman of the better class falling into disuse. It is rather t the fashion to say nowadays that the strict conventionality of the Victorian era that kept everything within its di- so rect bounds was narrowing in the ef fets; but it is greatly to te questioned whether the "go as you please." latter day methods produce as desirable re- t sults.-Indianapolis News. d - at Skirts, while plainer in treatment,b are fuller an'd more extended than dC ever. m Figured piques are making smart little outing dresses for women who g know. The finer the fabric the better the s blouse will look if made into the tiniest dr tucks. .-c The Greek key design in braiding or re embroidery is muich favored by French at dressmakers. q Dove gray chiffon made over silver TJ gauze combines' beauty and servce in 1o a summer frock. Mits are not universally worn, but I many fashionable women -have -:aken s them up for wear with elbow sileeves. e Many of the new gloves are lined v with contrasting color or have a frill v of lace set on with shirred riibons; and hi faling over the glove tops. Sleeve frills have lost caste heeat:se tI f excessive popularity, and turned- p back cuffs of diretoire stggestion are o having :veat vogue as a sleeve fir isa. of The bird cf p'iradise wavcz upo a he njority 'f the :Ian~zoocst dire( oire be :t3 warai by I'risicnnes. It will w< probatl; be adopted here in the au- op tumu. , at :hc neow coaching pa:-asols are of ne( ver-: hravy silh li plaia color, with ex- ch cdingly loug wvooden handlc3 rnatchi- ''I ing the zilk in color and tied with a big !cr- cf silk like the cover. The indicaions are that the new shades called mulberry will be por ular a colorings in the at~tumn. and that the ~ warm broiwns :.d reseda gr'eens will Ce renew the~r last season' s success. "Cretes" are one of the latest de'vel r pments of 18M0 trimmings. They arem mrly scalloped frills of s:1k shirred d and set on upside down, so that -:aey it. and 'up like exaggerated headings. a One k'f the latest innovations in om- In bre or' shaded effects is shown in the y sha'j- sashes. which are of fair test huF about the waist, but gradually det pen to a dark shade of the same ] color at the ends. at sk~ The state Debt. S Ohio 'ng paid the last of her E deare now six States w~ith g olgalns he rej Nebraska, New Jersey, and Ohio. The debts Ias Kansas, Michigan, Ne-jo akota and Wyomuig are Humo Their Habit. Mary had a little cook I'm told that it was so And everywhere that Mary went The cook was sure to go. -New York Sn. Old at the Game. Stella-"Have you learned to swim yet?" -- Ethel-"Not this season."t-Puck. Locality Makes a DimfareneS. "Is it true, pa, that storks can fly 1 miles an hour?" "Well, not in Utah; they have too many stops to make."-Town TopIcS. Not a Bad Eeason. "Why don't you share yourself?' "Because, I can't find that there 45 any more satisfaction in cutting my self than in having a barber cut me." -Chicago Post. Profeesonal AmendS.' "Dr. Blimber gave Jim Frisbie an overdose the other day." "How did.he square himself?" "Said he'd knock a dollar off tb bill."-Cleveland Plain Dealer., What the Other Gets. "He's going io take the stump one of the candidates." "The stump, eh? Then Il bet other candidate gets the balance o the tre'e."-Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Sarcastic Editor. Poet-"You say S .i found nothing In my poem. Did you consider it well? Editor-"On the contrary, I consi ered it afflicted-With an incurable maD-7" ady."-New Orleans Times-Democrat. But Quite Strong. Waiter-"Boast beef or cured hams.. sir?" "Bring me some beef. The ladre1b ham I, ordered here was only convales cent" - Cincinnati Commercial-T bune. All "Then you hav the deserving worker. "Me?" retorted. "Why, sir, I have thy."-Chlcago Jo He Foan "What," asked who was being shown on, "is the most obj prison life?" "De visitors wot ask answered the surly p News. The Younger Judge-"Can you prov ey ?" Casey-"No, Your but me boy Patsy can He's all t'hough his arlt up in algebray."-Cinim calTribune. Sure of It.I "Ho doyu4nw-twa sf in vestment? "Wll nvr oldgt nthn ou o it"w Yr oun BetrThn0tces "D o hn, ure h lay "tetiewilevrcoewhnal0a tin 0ilgttgehradbr0h "Hondtyuero theapasfir gus."-ehin-g outefws."NwYrJona -Bete TaeHtht. te"Deh o you knowuue the old lary r"dge frm wil young coe" eala toy-"B wi ethogethr." dbr he ,.. Theyma bettry pthde hatn't pliedn tetmn ho." en edn Boy-"Na, news, "but Ithae."-lnever Titews. "Wll I Bse temetsrkest "Now,."(t rumalkedthtn, myunny, ralidge from ugone.edofte"a bole "ytheth, s"I ups o'lb able-maeNotens oyt?Yo-gh gotganyitaeth. Hicy-"I'oe sgot butoI borepw$200 someiwlage." ied"s-"dTae lay pradin orrohe wan00 ofwhe oarer aot tebeafs W"cos-"Thearke dentme hnany f tan, youong from neenlo the ta be stoin tage thed ret?ofi erviStaes(mas.)Jrn. HAg sFianwe. Jhnks-"Saygo papa passing coun somew"Yre." Wkingagte streetic and sawroa $300 counteyoarfe bunth ideal WndkdidTat does't make aoln't dif eeycen orrow' $30earee and ybc $10uot I in tonaalmntlt?"tr asofa"monore so.kely the mi any that yoNLow om wil thin bedam Son-inlenMass. .JommraL-Tiu 'he windmill has been put to work Germany driving dynamos. Lrgon. the recently discovered ele nt of air, is, as was expected from existence in the chromosphere, very at and apparently monatimic. L Swiss scientist has made a discov r of prehistoric remains in the Jura untains which is so important that ensive excavations are being made. Por several years a record has been pt of the wear of locomotive wheels the Danish State railways. The sin drivers are found to wear better in four coupled, the latter better in six coupled. and in all cases wear increased by flimsiness of road. L remarkable luminous meteor trail m at Madrid has been reported by A. Perez. It continued visible from out 10 p. m. until midnight, and the ape gradually changing from an al )st closed curve with a loop in it to enlarged loop with a very faint de hed portion of the primary curve. L local study of rural depopulation ar Paris has been made by Dr. A. Plicque. He finds that the causes !lude sanitary ignorance leading to ;h infant mortality, migration of ung people to towns, effects of con cption, and alcoholism. His sug sted remedy-one that promises suc 3s In Belgium-is improved primary d technical education, with special orts to cultivate a love for farm life. )ld age is an infectious disease, 2ich we may expect soon to be treat by a preventive serum, prolonging e. Such was the view expressed in e late Paris lecture of Dr. Menchni ff. Senility, he explained. is pro ced by certain physiological states, 2ich cause the "macrophages," which e a beneficent species of microbes, increase too rapidly, when they be me injurious. These parasites flour a in the large intestine, which is pos ssed by mammals, but is almost lack g in birds. The result was illus ted by the doctor's own dog and rrot, the former being decrepit at hteen, while the latteri was hale d lively at seventy. While the se m is being awaited, we are advised eat curdled milk. "SENSATION" IN VILLA ART. Dnderful Effect Gained by a Caged Mountain Torrent. Fust across the lake. in the deep ade of the wooded cliffs beneath the zzo di Torno, lies another villa still )re steeped in the Italian garden gic. This is the Villa Pliniana, ilt in 1570 by the Count Anguissola. Piacenza, and now the property of e Trotti family, of Miilan. The-place kes its name from an intermittent ring in the court, which is supposed be the one described by Pliny in one his letters, and it is further cele ated as being the coolest villa on >mo. It lies on a small bay on the st side of the lake, and faces rth, so that, while the villas of. bbio are bathed in sunlight a deep een shade envelops it. sThe liouse inds on a narrow ledge, >a bunda ms projecting into the lali .nd its .ek built against the almost vertical soded cliff which protects it from the uthern sun. Down this cliff pours foaming mountain torrent from the il di Calore, just beneath the peak of rno, and this torrent the architect of e Villa Pliniana has captured in its scent to the lake and carried through e central apartment of the villa. rhe effect produced is unlike any ing else, even in the wonderland of rlian gardens. The two wings of the use, a plain and somewhat melan oly looking structure, are joined by open arcaded ' room, against the .ek wall of which the torrent pours wn, over stone work tremulous with ss and ferns, gushing out again be ath the balustrade of the loggia, ere it makes a great semicircle of ittering whiteness in the dark green iters of the lake. The old house Is turated with the freshness and enched with the flying spray of the ged torrent. The bare vaulted rooms verberate with it, the stone floors e green with its dampness, the air ivers with its cool iccessant rush. te contrast of this dusky dripping gia, on its perpetually shaded bay, ith the blazing, blue waters of t'he ke nd their sun-steeped western ores, is one of the most woriderful ~ects i sensation that the Italian la art has ever devised. rhe architect, not satisfied wit'h di rting a part of the torrent to cool s house, has led the rest in a fall wn the cliff immediately adjoining e villa, and has designed winding ts through the woods frcim which e may look dcwn on the bright rush the waters. On the other side of the use lies a long balustraded te-:race, tween the lake and the hanging yods, and hcre, on the .only bit of en and level ground near the house, e the old formal gardens, now much glected, but still full of a muelan oly chiarn.-From Edith Wharton's .ombard Villas," in the Century. All ead Newspapers. 'The newvspaper which circulates ing the pcople, all the people, is the dium in which I advertise my most pensive carpets and rugs," said a h class dealer. "Rich people do not vc papers of their own, but read the >t enterprising. Some of the people o buy costly goods make you won r where they get the monew to do Anyhow, they' do not read the mag ines, but do read the newspapers. short, everybody reads the newspa rs."-Piladelphia Record. A Royal Athlete. Eing Carlos of Portugal has the rep ation of being a great athlete. His ill at tennis was recently demon ated when he defeated Lieutenant W. McIntyre, of the battleship Io i, during the visit of the United ates North Atlantic fleet. The King so gave an exhibition of his ability a pistol shot for the entertainment his A.merican visitors, who were as dlshed with his acell of fire.. *ONDERFUL NATURAL BRIDGE. Sold Arch Over Three Hundred Fed Wide Spanning a Utah Canyon. Here, across a canyon measuring three hundred and thirty-five feet seven inches from wall' to wall, na ture has thrown a splendid arch of solid sandstone, sixty feet thick in the central part and forty feet wide, leav ing underneath it a clear opening 357 feet in perpendicular height. The lat eral walls of the arch rise perpendicu larly nearly to the top of the bridge, when they flare suddenly outward, giving the effect of an immense coping or cornice overhanging the main struc ture fifteen or twenty feet on each side and extending with the greatest regn larity and symmetry the whole length of the bridge. A large rounded butte at the edge of the canyon wall seems partly to obstruct the approach to the bridge at one end. Here again the curving walls of the canyon and the impossibility of bring ing the whole of the great structure into the narrow field of the camera, except from distant points of view, render the photographs unsatisfactory. But the lightness and grace of the arch is brought out by the partial view which Long obtained by climbing far up the canyon wall and at some risk crawling out on an overhanging shelf. The majestic proportions of this bridge, however, may be partly real ized by a few comparisons. Thus its height is more than twice and its span more than three times as great as those of the famous natural bridge of Vir ginia. Its buttresses are 118 feet fur ther apart than tLose of the celebrated masonry arch in the District of Colum bia, known as Cabin John Bridge, a few miles from Washington city, which has the greatest span of any masonry bridge on this continent. This bridge would overspan the Capitol at Washington and clear the top of the dome by fifty-one feet. And if the loftiest tree in the Calaveras Grove of giant sequoia in Califoriia stood in the bottom of the canyon its topmost bough would lack thirty-two feet of reaching the under side of the arch. This bridge is of white or very light sandstone, and, as in the case of the Caroline, filaments of green and or ange-tinted lichens run here and there over the mighty buttresses and along the sheltered crevices under the lofty cornice, giving warmth and color to the wonderful picture.-From W. W. Dyar's "The Colossal Bridges of Utah." in the Century. WGRDS OF WISDOM. Evil is not eliminated by a synonym. New light does not mean a new sun. Only the truthful can know the truth. Religion is more than a law; it is a life. Divine fear delivers from all Other fear. The lowly in heart are lifted ifi honor. The world is a fearfully noisy place to the man who is waiting for .a chance to blow his own horn. If we expect to dppropriate the "whatsoever" of his promises, we must try to comply with the "whatso ever" of his commands.-Samuel B. Randall. meet always gives one a: greater cour age and hope, as if there were more no bleness and high purpose in the world than one thinks.-C. L. Brace. Seeds of the Yellow Water Lily as Food. Some of the Indian'tribes of the Unai ted States still cling to their primitive forms of food. .A notable instance of this is the continued use of wokas by the Kiamath Indians. This tribe occu pies the Klamat-h reservation, which is a part of the territory originally occu pied by them before the arrival of the white men, and lies in the southern part of Oregon. The land has but a small annual rainfall, but, on account of its situation at the foot of the east ern slope of the Cascade Mountains, it is well watered with streams and con tains two considerable bodies of water. One of these, Klamath Marsh, is par ticularly rich in plants, and conse quently in animal life. Occupying about 10,000 acres of tiiis marsh there is a solid growth of the large yellow 'ater lily, Nymphaea polysepala. In the old times the seeds of this plant were collected by the Indians, and, un der the name of wokas, furnished their principal grain supply, filling the place of the corn used by some other tribes. To-day these secds are still collected and regarded by the Klamath Indians as a delicacy. The lily seeds are har vested in August; the wokas gatherer uses a dugout canoe, and poling herself around among the dense growth of stems and leaves, picks off the' full grown seed pods. Adventures of a 10O0f. Note. A lady passing down the Rue Riche lieu had the misfortune to lose a pock etbook containing among other valu ables a 1000f. note. The pocketbook was picked up by a chairmender named Renaud, who lives at Mon treux. He placed it very carefully in his pocket and proceeded home. It is not often that chairmender has occa sion to change a note for that amount, and Renaud, recognizing the impossi bility of turning it into gold without etection, agreed with a friend to do the business for the consideration of 100f. This friend, Lucien Mathern, also a chairmender, was in turn filled with apprehension. The difficulty was solved by the aid of a horticulturist named Simonnet. who kindly consent ed to buy himself a horse for 300f. and return the change. Renaud thus be came richer by 600f. All might then have gone well if, two days later, it had not been discovered .that the horse had bcen stolen from a dealer at Meaux. This led to the arrest of the trio, and later in the day the police put their hands on the horse thieves. Paris Messenger. Matrimonial Reform in Afghanistan. It is stated by a correspondent from Peshawur that the Amir has ordered that the people of his State should have no more than four wives, and this Is to be strictly carried out by the Afghan Sardars. It is stated that the A-nir himself has divorced his additional wives, and that under this ordertar dar Abdul Kudus Khan has divorc'ed eight and Mir Ata Ulla Khan thirty, MIe.-Lahore Tribune. .