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AT HATH HIS ' [T. : loak. le hill, i _l. ?u ? u suu ui uuc, JWSiiwKEW bough she woke, Mffffcill- 1 B^WanklesirF*e?ie mere ?elt of fir;. 1 Vcs she knew no fear; ] pad lied, the skv was clear, ] lkut scarce astir.. I ^ jwcre all at once undrawn J ins of the day; Fupon the dewy lawn, en hair outdid the dawn, * ept my grief away. Lindsay, in The Athonaeum. j rm THE ROSE, I t fc By MAUIOX PORTER. r Peggy gave a wail of despair. t "Oh," she cried, "I have lost it. I i had it only a few moments ago. i (Whatever shall I do?" I looked at the topaz which had j been my birthday gift, but it was j there, hanging on its thread of chain oyer her heart. Peggy had seemed delighted when I gave her that topaz, t and had Baid it was the loveliest t thing thing she owned. But it appeared from her tone that there was s something of more value at any rate. "How could I have been so care- ] Ipbb?" fncnprt Pa^p-v tparfnllv 1 ? - ~oov ? j "If you'd only tell me," I began, ; but I left off, because it is obviously f y/ foolish to talk to one's self, and Peggy had rushed away to the conservatory where we had been sitting out the last dance. J stood there smiling a little at her impetuosity and sighing * a little?because?I don't know why * I sighed, exactly. Possibly it was be- 1 cause I am only an old fellow and ? am apt to have a hard time keeping pace with Peggy. Or possibly be- c cause at precisely this moment I saw c Evelyn Parr's bright hair gleaming I p i against the dark greenery at the 1 other side of the room. I think I am t always seeing that bronze head of * hers. I saw it last night in my t dreams?and the night before?and < many nights before that. And that ] week when I went to the mountains < for a quiet time, and found her and ; her mother there, and we* walked and 1 drove together during the whole long c , 1 eeveu aays?cnai weeK siui lives iu my memory. Eut there is Peggy? pretty Peggy?who has been my charge since she was in pinafores and ( i who is so sweet and affectionate and contented with her middle-aged , fiance. And, of course, I apa happy [;' enough. A Yet, as I lingered a moment, expecting my little Peggy to join me, I looked across at the greenery and wondered i! it would he any harm if I went to speak to Evelyn for only a moment. I saw a rose lying almost at my foet, as I stood hesitating, and I picked it up" sentimentally enough, likening it to a cheek that had been many times too near mine for my entire peace of mind. And I put it gently into ray coat, although, it must be owned, that cheek did not belong to Peggy. " Young Jack Hammond caught me ? at it. I felt Instantly gvilty and 1 ashamed, for his face was as hard as * if he had read my thoughts. c "G?good'evening," I said, hastily. He made no answer at first, but c stood looking at me as though he 1 wished to speak, but the words would ! not come. "What's the matter?" I said. "Nothing's the matter," he retorted; "I was cnly waiting?look- i ing." ' t "Precisely my condition." I'said as ] Jicrhtlv as nnssihle "Pe2,<rv has left, i me here and hasn't come for me. I 1 am waiting?and looking?" 1 v , "So I should have imagined," he ( said, unpleasantly. I felt myself getting red. ; "I've been waiting so long that I i think she's forgotten where she's left i me," I went on; "and, at any rate, 1 I'm going along." i I moved on, anxious to be rid of 1 Ills searching eyes. And my feet car- i ried me as straight as possible to i where the bright head against the greenery was. 1 She turned away from the man with whom she was conversing when I approached and I saw her pretty flush sga oi recognwion ana ieic an answering || flush creeping up my own cheek. I i| "wonder why it is that Evelyn Parr, '"~--who is no older than Peggy, seems so || jnnch more in sympathy with a man of my age. Why Peggy seems no H older to me than when she used to H fall asleep in my lap years ago. But Evelyn? "I am going to get you an ice," I V said to her, "and we will go into the Wm corner and cat it. I want to talk to l> She turned her sweet eyes gravely |1 up to mine and shook her head. "Whore is Peggy?" she asked me. fli / - "?eggy wont and left me," I asgtt* cured her; "it's all right. She'll jH^: come around when she wants me Hi anin." "I; don't think that's right," said Evelyn, gently. "She won't know Jr -where you are. She may be angry or hurt when she finds ypu haven't ? waited for her. I think?I should i like"?she hesitated without smiling ?'"1 think I would feel badly if you ?difln't wait?if I?if you?" I am sorry. But Peggy should lara been looking out for me, I sup1 ' xtoav. Men are queer things anyway. f 'an't any more have stopped r "''ild have stifled the ' when I i " . I - ' ! I 'and I haven't s-sen it. But when I ?*ou actually give away the flowsr you .aid you would wear for me?" "I tell you I lost it?" broke in ' Peggy, tearfully. "Daro-tf T csonr Phficfflp wifll if tW I j. tQjgj , x oan vuvotvt n *v lis coat. More than that, he had j :aken it out, I think, and was putting it back, and the look he wore was iroof enough who had given it to lira. You've cared for him all the ;ime and you have been amusing ourself with me." "You 3cnow I haven't," cried Peg- i ;y. And then they saw me. The explanations and forgiveness I ind all that were over. Peggy had ;one away with her little nose and jyes red, but happy, nevertheless, I vith young Hammond, who was to i :ake her home. Evelyn and I stood ilone by the divan. "Will you let me take you home, lear?" I entreated. k She nodded seriously. Her eyes j vent to my coat, from which Peggy iad taken the little rose which had nade so much trouble. "You need a posy," she said. And >he stook one out of her hair and >ut it in place herself. "I'll keep it always," I promised;* ; 'and there's the rest that I want you i :o give me to keep?always. Am I ;o have that?" "Oh, you've had that a long time," laid Evelyn, simply.?Boston Post. EDITOR'S OFFICE ON EDGE OF s FOREST. ^fountain Stream Furnishes Power | For Plant of Western Newspaper ?Environs Wild. i Perhaps the most picturesquely sitlated newspaper office in the country s that of the Megaphone at Quilcene, iVash. The owner is M. F. Satterlee, i pioneer newspaper man. He says: "It is hardly possible there is an- ! )ther newspaper in the world situ- , ited in a similar way to the Mega- , jhone establishment. On the one land, within less than four rods of he office, is a virgin forest, extending >ack to Walker mountain, while on he other aye the waters of the Pacific )cean, which pay daily visits within LOO feet of the huge water wheel iriving the Megaphone press. The vheel is turned by a sparkling mounain stream that flows in front of the >ffice and then empties into the bay. iVe can reach out of the window of he establishment and pick from the ree Early Transparent apples, while vithin twenty-five feet are apples of sight other kinds, and prunes, plums md cherries are but a few steps away. "Of wild fruit there are blackberries ar.d salmon berries within a rifle ange of the editorial desk. Then we :an go out on a wharf, 200 feet from he office door, and catch salmon rout, salmon, perch and rock cod, vhile the beach is one spread of clam >eds; and fuel, in the shape of fir >ark, broken in the proper lengths or the office stove, floats to us on ery tide, as it loosens from the logjooms in tow to the mills. The Megiphone office nestles at the foot of talker mountain, "whose shadow in lummer falls upon the spot at 4 p. m., ind where the morning sun, flashing icross the Taraboo peninsula, casts ts beams at an early hour. In winter ;he place is sheltered from the blasts )f the sou'easters which roar over the Sound. From the Megaphone place :an be seen the moonbeams glistenng on the waters of Quilcene Bay j ind miles out on Hood Canal." The Cardinal Stopped the Scrap. Two newsboys were engaged in a ough and tumble fight Saturday af;ernoon on Charles street near Cardinal Gibbons' home. The pugilists were watched by a group of men and boys as well as many women who were shopping. No one seemed inclined to interfere. The Cardinal's attention was I iroused by the disturbance. Taking J in the situation he made his way [ through the crowd. Reaching the boys the Cardinal laid his hand upon ! a shoulder of one of the lads, who j turned to become an aggressor at the j interruption. One look into the face of the Cardinal caused the urchin to pull off his cap. As he did so the Cardinal said in kindly tones: "My son. wait until you have grown to be a man before you indulge in manly sDorts." The next minute both boys had . turned and were scampering down the street in opposite directions. The Cardinal continued his stroll, smilling ; over the success as peacemaker.? Baltimore Dispatch to New York Sun Spelling Simplified. Prof. Alfred E. Stearns, principal of the Phillips Andover Academy, said at a dinner: "The easiest way to raise funds, ag in other things, is the wrong way. I remember a man and his easy spelling rule. In Orange, in my child aooa, i once compiamea 01 me aimculties of spelling. I said that 'ei' and 'ie' in such words as 'believe' and 'receive* always stumped me. "Then this man patted me on the head and smiled and said: " 'My boy, I will give you an infallible rule for "ei" and "ie"?a rule that in forty-3even years has nevei failed me.' "I expressed my delight and waited. The man resumed " 'The rule is simply this: Write your "i" and "e" exactly alike and 1 put your dot exactly between them.' " ?Washington Star. Selling American Wheat Abroad. American wheat is not sold abroad "** or even by sample, rertifl vT;:" . - . w .V| k % ' * fft?MI II IIMf Drawing Room Suffragettes. A great many women are suffragettes because they feel their cause deeply, and understand, with all the mind that is in them, what depends on the question of votes for women. But there are others who join the army of woman grumblers because tbey have nothing else to do. and merely want to fuss over something ?they don't.quite know what!?Gentlewoman. A Monkey Aigrette. Fur is more and more employed for hats as the season advances. Skunk, sable, fox, ermine, chinchilla and opossum are all equally favored at times as a trimming, and also as entire turbans, toques or caps. There is still another fur much used for its long, silky hairs and which forms the most effective of aigrettes. I am alluding to the skin of the monkey that most of the Paris furriers are supplying to our leading milliners. An aigrette en singe, as it is called here, is one of the smartest innovations of the hour.?Gentlewoman. The Stork Card. Perhaps the latest thing in the way of cards is the stork card, used by happy parents to announce to relatives and friends a visit from the stork. It is engraved in blank form like this: ., . : Arrived at : : This day of... 190.. : : [Official Weight : Peal] :... : Within the seal in the lower left hand corner of the card is a thin engraved figure of a stork. The time of the stork's coming is written in the first line, and the day, month and year in the next; while in Baked! Crust Puddin O- !> frequently spoilt by I "o * *ru?al cookery the t Qj ? half an hour, squeezed c cc - are beaten with a fork ? / breakfast cupfuls of th 10 rants, a teaspoonful of O o i1 tablespoonfuls of flour, ** 'I treacle, two of dripping -3 ? skimmilk. Stir all thori r 1 -S ) a little dripping or shr< . S. > put the pudding into th< j a half. If this is nicelj Q ) eat like cake. the full blank- third line may be written tne name 01 tne visitor mm the stork brought. Under this, in the space provided for it, is writteu this visitor's weight, and the last line of the card is, of course, for the signature of the parents.?New York Sun. Censor For Officers' Brides. The military authorities in Russia exercise almost as keen a supervisior over the marriages of officers as dc the courts and chancellories ol Europe over the nuptials of the sons and daughters of the reigning houses It long has been a standing or?ei that no officer in the Russian armj may marry until he is twenty-three and that his bride must possess means of her own as well as gooc social position. Recently steps hav< been taken to make these genera qualifications on the part of the brid< more specific. Where the eagei bridegroom holds a captaincy or an: hieher rank, all details as to th( bride and her family have to be lai< before the colonel of the regiment and unless the young woman meet: his approval the engagement must b< broken off. In the case of subalterns a court of honor, composed of officer; of the regiment, sits in judgment 01 the bride, and even if their verdic is favorable they can do no more thai report to that effect to the colonel in whose hands there still rests s final power of veto.?New Yorl Press. Schools Abroad. Miss Mary S. Woolman, of Teach ers' College, who has just returne from her sixth trip of investigate among schools for women in Europe found iu Berlin a school -where ic struction in a new profession?fo women, at any rate?is given. It i a coursc in professional photograph} with special reference to work in th sciences. Young women trained i this course are in demand by physl cians and scientists who want expei photographs of their specimens an apparatus. Schools in the old country, Mis Woolman found, are paying a goo deal of attention to subjects relatin to farm work. In some, schools stoc raising, horticulture, etc., are takin the place of higher mathematici Various women's clubs in differec parts of the German Empire, Mis Woolman said, are, with goveri mental aid, establishing profession* schools which give free instructio to girls in housekeeping and allie branches. These schools are doin much to break up the old Germa -nirit of class distinction. The elal -vstem of -private trade an -?hools has benefited tt r for In ties *?s are higl 0 hight iSik y[ m: , L D I the most fashionable restaurants?* , .those of world wide reputation among society?the frocks really do not differ from those used for dinners in private houses. Americans still cling to the old custom of wearing hats in public places, therefore the effect in the toilet ia different from that worn at home. With a gown cut decollete, though not aB low as for a dance, a large picture hat is an essential. In London and on the Continent women go bareheaded to dinner. In less fashionable restaurants a girl should wear a light, high neck frock, or one that has some pretense to elegance if the color is dark. A dark velvet, for example, would be correct, for the material presupposes elaboration in effect, if not in fact. The hat to go with it must be of the "picture order. One of the most satisfactory gowns for a woman who dines much in res taurants is a light colored broadcloth. If in gray, champagne, etc., it will possess a certain dressiness, yet be sufficiently strong to endure the wear of street car travel when cabs are not available: Such a frock should be high neck, and if very well cut need not be elaborately trimmed. A black dress is always in good form if it is well made. But it should be relieved about the face with a white guimpe of lace or other thin material to give a dressy appearance. A coat and skirt, with separate waist, may be considered smart and good form, but never by any chance dressy. The suit is intended for service, and no matter how it may be - modelled, the combination never has a dressy effect. For luncheons such may be admirable, but for dinner, : even in a restaurant, it is merely gen eral utility. A dark colored crepe de Chine is i one of the smartest frocks that can be , devised for evening wear in public i places, for there is an attraction and g.?A pudding of this description is ieing too soft, too dry or lumpy, jread is soaked in boiling water for Iry in a cloth, and then all the lumps till quite smooth. Mix with three e soaked crusts a teacupful of curcinnamon, the same of ginger, two three tablespoonfuls of sugar, one of two egg3 beaten up and a pint of oughly, put into pudding dish. Place ;d suet all over the top, and at once i oven. Bake slowly for an hour and r made and baked it will, when cold, i grace to the material that gives it a ; simple elegance, and the gown cannot t be considered ordinary. Some of the i new cloths with high lustre finish" s are also admirable, for they stand hard wear and continue to look fresh. : ?Rosanna Schuyler, in the New York Telegram. Ottoman cloth?a woolen material with a raised rib?is very fashionr able. | The star belt is made of dull gold, j covered with tiny silver sequins on a the shape of stars. 1 A hat of greenish blue moire has > its crown encircled with a wreath of r brown leather leaves. 7 One of the most popular waists for s dressy wear this season is the model 1 with the bib effect. The changed definition of the waist 3 line is one of the most striking fea3 tures oi the new styles. ' Velvet belts, cut In the design of 3 flowers, each blossom holding a gem, J will be a pretty fashion. a The tunics, which arc many and various, are reserved mostly for visit ^ lag gowns and house dresses. k While the plain nets are popular. those w'.th the dot and the vermicelli design are more in first style. The latest whim of the Parisian is carrying the evening gloves in the " hand instead of wearing them. a Q Hatpins of mammoth dragon flies j huge beetles and other terrible things are reproduced of iridc-scent glass, r For evening wear elaborate gold s and silver belts, hand painted, jewr, eled or embroidered, will be popular, e The French tailors are making a n great effort to give the back of the i- new coat a small, contracted look! 'fc With a tailored suit it is fashion^ able to wear a stock of satin with a narrow linen line turned over at tha ? topRings have grown to such large s size and are so enormous that the ^ wearing of gloves has become a ques? tion. 3 For evening wear there are huge turbans of white marabou, trimmed with white aigrettes and a rhiaestone buckle. n ~ d Green Brakeman. s The bralceman was a novice, and 11 on his fir^t run here there was a very 7 steep grade to mount. The engineer always had more or less trouble to 16 get up this grade, but this time ho came near sticking. He almost lost ' his head. Eventually, however, ho reached the top. At the station that crossed the top, -?klnff but of his cab, the engineer new brakei^'ni and said, witb. The rate of the pulse of a healthyS person is four times that of the? ^ respiration. ' ! A new kind of piano, tho chorallelo, has the ordinary keys and hammers, which may be used if desired, ; Dut is also provided with electro mag! aets, arranged to vibrate the wires without striking with the hammers. I To get rid of the fluttering effect of moving pictures, an inventor has applied the principle of the stereoscope. !he picture being thrown on the | screen by two lenses, in front of which shutters open and close alternately, so rapidly that there is no ireak in the aeries. From a report of comparative tests made by an American trunk line on the new ferro-titanium steel rails and , ihose of the Bessemer type, it is noted j that the wear on the former showed L.45 pounds per yard, as against 4.18 pounds per yard on the latter, which Is nearly 300 per cent, in favor of the ! new alloy steel. The United States Geological Survey reports that in 1908 California produced $18,761,569 in gold, 1,647,278 ounces of silver valued at $873,-. ACT 7 AC Aim noa nf r\1 if_ j inum valued at $13,414. This plat; inum was all produced at placer . [ mines in Butte, Humboldt, Siskiyou, j Trinity, Calaveras, Sacramento and i Del Norte Counties', three-fourths of | It having been mined in Butte County. I On the suggestion of Professor Tissot, of France, an international commission has been organized for the purpose of transmitting wireless time signals from stations suitably located on coasts and islands to ves: sels navigating all waters. The establishment of this system would make the determination of longitude at sea very accurate and independent of the errors of the chronometer, which, indeed, would become superfluous. For transmitting the time signals Tissot recommends the wave length of 1800 meters, or about 59?0 feet, which is used at the Eiffel tower station. ! SEVENTY YEAES OF EATING. In That Time a Man Consumes 95 Tons of Food anil Drink. If a man of seventy years was starving, it probably would be little comfort to him to think that he had consumed in the course of his life j flfty-threi. and three-quarter tons of , solid food and forty-two and threej quarter tons of liquid, or about 1280 times his own weight in both solids and liquids, but it would be true. Being a man of average appetite and purse he would have eaten fifteen tons of bread, which would have made a single loaf containing 1200 j cubic feet and appearing about as I large as the average suburban home; ' an3 on this tread he would have ! spread one ten of bu-tter. If his ; baccn had been cut in a single slice, says Harper's Weekly, the strip would , have been four miles long and hia ! chops placed end to end would have j extended two miles. 1 YfCLllJ , U l utuui J giuvu have supplied him with beef, eighteen tons of which he has eaten, along wita five tons of fish and 10,000 eggs and 350 pounds of cheese. If he had elected to have all his vegetables ! served at once they would have come ! to him in a train of cars, the pod ! containing all his peas being over three miles long. He has had 9000 pounds of sugar, 1500 pounds of oalt, eight pounds of pepper and 100 cans of mustard. I Three pints of liquid a day would ! have amounted to 76,600 pints, or forty-two and three-quarter tons. If ' * - J * V?/-? tirAn 1 rl hoxra ne naa Deen a suwkci hc nuum u?.v | burned about half a ton of tobacco in a pipe, or if he preferred cigarettes would have smoked about a quarter | of a million. Deserter's Strange Career, | 'After an absence of forty years John Peck, a native of Nottingham, returned to England recently and dlsj covered that he was still liable to he . arrested for having deserted from his regiment in 1869. His career, however, has been so remarkable that when the facts were related the War Office not only granted him a free I pardon but a pension as well. Peck ran away from home at the : age of twelve and went to sea. He 1 A1-- - ~ j fVi/v ormv nnri I sucsequenuy jujucu mc ? [ served in the Crimea. After peace ! was declared he got transferred to ) another regiment and was ordered j out to India, wheYe he went through j the mutiny. Later he quarreled with j an officer and deserted. He had a hard time as a South i African diamond prospector, Bui whenever a chanco of fighting, occurred he always embraced it, and sa he served against the Basutos, the j Zulus and the Boers. His relative? j had not heard of him for fifty-three I TirVinn ho rowntlv reaDneared J Cat O, nuwu uu avwv*. ? ^ ^ He is now seventy-two years of age and is bent on going back to Soutt Africa to find work in the mines.? London Daily Mail. Not to Give Away. Every line in a newspaper costs the publisher something. If it is for the benefit of the individual it shoulc? be paid for. If the grocer were asked to contribute groceries to one abund antly able to pay for them^he would refuse. The proprietw-^f a newspaper must pay for the free advertising if the beneficiary does not, and yet it is one of the hardest things to be learned by miny, that a newspaper has space in its columns to rent, and must rent thfim to live. To give away rent for anything less tuan living rates is as fa|al to a newspaper as for a landlord to |f urnish rent free. The workW tie Jjngfrau Railjwatfpis progr^smg'so rapidly that it MjW probably /be cpeuet next year to Polly gazed at her beside the bro^HH|mflH3|H0 Saying, "If I bad a I would look. " HHHH .With a flash of pebble in, HH|^HR And it made the middle of her Co an ting B9MHBn Redd?"Did his much?" Greene?"Four pital."?Yoakers S^HGBjHNBH| Blessed is single blessednes<^^HBBBffi8B Father?"That's HmBw says it isn't twins. fljSBsBBBH Like Many Ventures. 'He had set hfc hopes on making fortune out of that stone quarry." "And when they touched off tt explosives yesterday his hopes wei blasted."?New York Journal. Still in the Family. "Don't you think Comeup's remar was twisted that he had a pedigree i hi3 family?" "I don't know. He has a dog wit a screw tail."?New York Journal. ? Fitting. Customer?"You will observe thJ I am awfully broad and that it wi require a lot of niaterial for my suit. Tailor?"We'll fix that all right t using broadcloth."?New York Jou: nal. I^ots of Them. Winnie?"I wouldn't marry you you were the last man on earth." Jack?"I know you wouldn't, could have my choice then." Nothing Short of Disaster. 1 "What is the advantage of a hon< over an auto?" "None. Any time a horse triesji< get over an auto there isn't goingjt* be any advantage."?New York J<*r nal. j Worse Than the Weather, j Skinner?"Good morning, may.m Did you ever see anything so ufcet tied as the weather has been latep?" Mrs. Hashley?"Well, there'sf'ou board bill, Mr. Skinner."?Newi.rcrl Journal. j A Friendly Hint. j Mrs. Youngwife?"My newborn has stained glass in all the windows.' Mrs. Boredwun?"Now, thai's toi bad. Can't you find soraethingthat'l take the stains out?" ? Ne^J Yorl Journal. Making Sure. Olga Call excitement overi Nora' account of her elopement) ?"How rc mantic! But weren't you afraid c *he ladder slipping?" Nora?"Oh, no! Mother \ras hold Ing it,"?Judge. The Higher Criticism. The Clergyniau?"But, my frien<! ? -t V .Vnminnvl way Ili UK. tf UbU Ul bUCU auuuimowi j/aths?" The Motorcyclist ? "Abominably Do you know any better ones?"? Harper's Weekly. Beating Him. "There are times when I envy fa hair," remarked the man who fca failed in seventeen different busine; enterprises. ' j "Because why?" queried his wife.] "Because it is coming out on tAp; explained he of the many failures.New York Journal. Merely a Suggestion. He had managed to accumulate1 lot of money by more or less qu|s tionable methods. "I should like to do something 1? the benefit of the town," he said. I "Well," suggested the poor but <r} erwise honest citizen, "you mjp move out of it."?Chicago News, f What the Shyster Wanted. I "What we want," said the atto?n Jo the reporters, "is justice." | j "What I want," said the die*1*the attorney, "is a verdict in mM*' vor."?Life. B as many excuses on tap as a man v is asked to pay a bin.?Mr* ("Pointed Paragraphs," in the C?"c News. I Not Up to Modern Stani.arMf-s "'Your wife's new hat mak^B*s look like a queen," said the inaBn tries to be complimentary. "Don't let her hear you say^B answered Mr. Bllggins. looked through the Listorigjj^B? HVHr^n i*' 'y JgfJLamm ???1> nKM^ JS I^BB^^Vt T^fWife preaching flH H?^L 2 thte subject of mm xBU^Mm0^tfafe'E^ of Cre- H HHP *?rakte Hfiiought that fH BPtoUIu}^ * too n njKng was eiP mjod> hQ prQ_ MM |H^Bed in ^hese^^HnmenBe unSBV1^ Creai?Jth3st infinitesiUBe created T ^Architect of MM atom inJ ^fashioned also BHC va8t * sold running S| tineat t wh0 made VSM Hough Mppincott's nj B^W'made a ^ B orkl^w^T <J^hter'B mu3ical cation ETjha3 00^ a lot of H U^^ork?"Ye?, did' but I ve got fDacK-" '" V ke?"indeed Pork?"Yes * ^ keen trying to he house e^^01" *or years hey wq^jcjf, sei 1 Bat since corns fcLiW>e sold it to r half-^^H-H^rpcr's Week- fll . MUX* p| JtL&KTHBOPY jB to ^njy11 a Prize Tha* M uid m4lnrt^E*ri>e the health of a han to .snBkr.''?Munyor.. Bj motto, tiy Prof. Munyon iteen ^ the real corof hiatdgfe business. He felt VH people IW^nat'oo were neglect- MB " heaJtPW"? 1:0 lack of money. H .I V the one oiB^ l? v>ew of helping nB ie h-iiity, he grtflEj0 ^e medicine busi- "MB e ir payiBB h^lfr118 ?* money to emi- S| : n 8pecialWuCf?PWn Land tried for- H { n that vert '*? have been sueer jf in curing ??!*?< After carefully cnoiinding thecorr?ll|'a3 and putting WW , th. up in a ifKetaole condition, be * oftd them-^o ?P^'?c for a few pen- fl n ni easily withirfte ?f*cn of the poorest fl f'ty. J5e hirer*n"5eD1t specialists at aa<?rio? their services ab- jH h I i ./ i_ *ii3iDUC to diagnose tneir ^e,y^eetot^Twhat to ? ?^ a AftJSrnSSE?^6 Public a" tbeee M r !'c+ u-^I'Sjf.it^atiHfied and offered I ebt? ne vea?KL ? ere not jn reach 0f flher to tlHW* SJatabliflhed throughout '<H it ^ol fL^^^iSrtwed, asking them to 11 iLCO?I^??l,J?U&*Jor medical ex- HI .. te 5-? Prof. Munyon is still J0B ft0*?00* *!Hc 3kv. and whenever be iy >11 owing out a new formula that r- ^eara ?* 5?2Lj tyfi those that he is at i more jje purchasee them >he time coippo JT?' K H a separate cure for ]Prof. Munjg^ ^ t})ese remedies can be . 9 ,.mc?t ipostlv 25 cents a bot i i w8 the rfemedies, you are tak- M le- g.yr&t teal led a sure thing, for A ng vrtut uiq tb4 to produce satisfactoiy ie our money. This U smi d nr nil JL I i" ui. fl is * remar^Dv **>nuu B ^nwruuie IUBtitu^ioo, 'air t0 *" and a firm I ? ?3rf and.Jef- V I feruon Kt,_foW?h?'- Pn. I 011 Institutions. I [ In one0*-11*?' graceful and felic B ' flous gp?)C*Ws >c which his name is 'fl fverywhf^'ce',rateci Lord Rosebery fl ^cknowl?*8d''ecentIy his admis- W felon to"1? Sinners' Company by TB i Jdisensai* ! institutions of the J /country JpWj17'0. many whe spend a /their kBI, ^tacking the ancient ^ - ...Bnndite nolitical and social fl osUbfflPB?f" Britaln- Their fl k?fe^iljSittIve; they do not V reaJlK*^*^/ gth of tbe institu* $B J tions have marked down i for d^trttCti^' n?r ^ey un^er* m I stand'*1?1 '^se ver*v lnstttutiona iu I they se no good are really of ?r<lt ad-tatage. They are sincere in th** ?Ps^ion, but they are^^f Ll.:he!?' Jghting the "air. Tne 3 jjje * a 3mltlcia.11 is short. The Utej^^M ^ 'fndfution is Iojig. The^ytfS^H 3 hag061,14! inevitable bmrndsT the V9 3 7??, neeu^e -nt^'ne so long as it ?da th- changing needs ]^R oI ,e dayi^ftt does not. if it shows ^ -gBs q^TOgres; i or of usefulness -Hfl It <?*' Hfei^ie3 QOt 1~rom outside , l. Jks, Iff 4wtn ienlle decay and - mple of vI2?r0U8 llf and adpta&llit the City Livery r ^ jpaniepiStand a a foremost ex- ' I c pie. : Ttey have 1 >ng outlived their ginalj ains aad >bjects, but they rvive aiil vill cc itinue to survive Sj icause ;hey ha e found other jheres ofiusrfulnesls , and the benefit j^B ? f thefa* '(rork is cordially recognized Q jy the couary a/, large.?London 11 ,1 6' fj j I. I I k ' JShalespeai-e's Wish. *^>011?gfl jlust handed Skake-^^B ^sl revise of "Hamlet." jHI It air! ?. ** <? t.?.^ F?. j J- amu., S aid tlefmai ger ; "But do you kno^^M ,. can'iheflp [ghiag George M. Cohan J tould jiurrj Up,and get born before^? ,jur first ntht ^ will need a lot^H [. more ijmei before it wi'l be fit for^H #roadW^'J New York Times. ?^ j , The; Argetiae Legislature is.con-^ 1 Biderihf? th< COC3tructiou of under- M P ground raU'kyg f3r Buenos Aires. ^.BIT'S CHAIN i Certain BaJts Unconsciously Formed 1 xiaru iu orvan, philosopher estimates Jfl 3 a rt*16 ar unit of will power neces1 si lifelong habit would, j^R Mf . j co"V b? transformed, lift a KStftt1 W tons. A I It a2,^if?oea requires a higher d?SB L gfee oT n&isita to break the chains bf"2t pernt?uq habit than to lead a forlorn hcF I& a bloody battle. Ad^B lady wrlteifom an Indiana town: "Prom t earliest childhood I was 1 a lover of >ffee. Before I was oifl J^k of my teeis ^a3 a miserable dyspep-d^H tic, sufferf' terribly at times with^^B 1 I my stomacl fl \ "t was evinced that it was coffeeH v* that-"was cUng the trouble and yet^H it i could &<3eny myself a cup foi^B breakfast. ; the age of 36 I was ln^H very poor ,1th, indeed. My sister SB told me I' In danger of becomingjB| c> a cbflee dr-ird. "But I Hr could give up drlnfc-^H to lng coffee breakfast, although fa- kept me o.ant.ly ill, until I trieO^H I postum. irnod to make it prop^H[ ?ho 1 erly accor'to directions, and novi^H om we can ha fl0 without Postum fo^H ago breakfast, Care nothing at all fol^H coffee. "I am r\ger troubled with dys-^Bj pepsia, have spells of suffer-^f hex lug win stomach that used tc^R who tfouble? when I drank coffee." ^H| Look itfs. for the little hook^l iat," "The R>f>VellvilIe." "There's^H nd I ' above letter? [ueen | new th^j^from time to tii^HM