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' LOVE RE! "My Kr*e no longer loves meTbe glory is gone out upon i And the gray downfall of its The old bright places of the e Why should I wander up and To every ghost of joy whose The heart of sorrow till my I will lie down upon my face i One bent above him with reap " 'Twas not her love for tni Twas thine own love for b Joy sent him like an arrow fr "Show me the rough ways ' I never loved before, O Lo ?From "Doria The Turning of the Tide < . By CHRISTABEI/ROBINSON. In contrast to the load of excursionists going out of the harbor was the figure in the rowboat, indifferently .taking the slap, slap of the steamer's wake. More than one handkerchief fluttered in his direction before merry laughter died away, but perhaps none noticed that he was young and handsome and ought to have been happy. A girl in the stern, who might have seen and understood, was not looking. Chin buried in hand, she read a newspaper and looked up only occasionally when popcorn papers or lunch boxes were thrown over the side. "D A.anln rr Vioroolf O f IcnS'th- She XVUUOIU5 uvsiov.**. M? toBsed her paper overboard and raised a pair of very tender, thoughtful eyes - In a determined effort to appear interested in the coast line, just beginaing to appear. In the rowboat, the young man, too, was rousing himself. Impatiint ly he noticed the debris left behind ^by the steamer. Taking a firmer grip v f,a oarg he pulled for an island. ,'jjp "Convention school teachers," he s&ld to himself, "going to Plymouth. ; Of course they have to see all the > , r . sights, but wouldn't they kick if the *v children cluttered up the school yards like they've just decorated the bay!" { ..Grounding his boat he jumped tLshore and sat down to do some hard thinking. At the end of an hour he \1lfrtl decided that any young man like ... himself who cannot get along with a father like his might better come on $$ East, just as he had come?might ]/ better eat humble pie away from I' V.'--' eyes that knew him?even eyes% like a certain little teacher... had?and wonld better, judging by the absence . \ % of the old familiar silver jingle in his pocket, take any sort of job that any r man who could overlook inexperience and college training would give him. THwfc* thoro nrmctirlprations Of the lit i- tie teacher entered again. "She was always tactful, and if some other people?Oh, pshaw!" he 'interrupted himself. "What's the use of thinking about dad? He'll never realize that I might be a useful member of society and I'm not likely to go crawling back begging for a decent job in his business. I would go in w swimming if this water wasn't so dirty. Between sea weeds and empty boxes a fellow would have to swim out a mile to get clear. Hello! There's a newspaper floating in on that culch." Reaching out with a stick, he poked the paper towards him. The little yellow address slip read plainly, "Baxter Evelyn L. Bay avenue, Detroit." Amazed, he carefully spread the she^t before him. - ' "The Detroit Call. Well, where did you come from? Must have been tossed overboard from that steamer. By George! How does it happen that her paper is floating round , these parts? Of course it must mean that, a maid has brought it East on her waj* home to I^ova Scotia for the ammer." Meditatively he sat until the trouble crease left his forehead, and the present was far behind the ruture passing before him?until a new idea came to him. Why not try to see whp brought that paper? Even cross old Mary, from her home, would have news. He jumped into the boat and rowed vigorously to the city. "Is there another boat for Plymouth soon?" he asked on the wharf. "No? Well, when does the last one return?" Eight hours to wait to satisfy his curiosity and a tiny hope vigorously growing in his heart. Of course he . couldn't wait. Whoever went down on that boat might'be seasick and return by train. Again, possibly, no one went down to Plymouth?the paper might have come from a steamer going to St. John. -He must find out. It was a very poor, but impatient, young man who went to Plymouth by train, and an interested, observant young man that alighted and "did" Plymouth in a rush unequalled by any of the visiting crowd of teach ers, all decorated with their little State badge. "Michigan." What a lot of Michigan teachers, and not one from Detroit! At the end of an hour he was tired and discouraged as he crossed the gang plank of the steamer and took up a position of vantage to watch the'arrival for the home trip. Of course the pretty young woman with the thoughtful eyes came aboard. One would have been surprised if she had failed to carry out her excursion plans or other undertakings. She had lost part of her abstraction and her eyes looked straight into the two looking" for her, as she stepped on board. Without any preliminary two hands were stretched toward him, and with equal expedition two extremely satisfied young people found a niche in th-s bow where they lost themselves until the pushing crowd signified that the steamer had arrived in Boston. "Of course it will take me much longer to make my way here than with father's help in Duluth. But he's hard as nails, you know?and you wouldn't want me to go crawling back to him like a whipped beast, would you?" were part of his words. "What if I should say that he wants you to return? Would you think me in a hurry to marry you?" Eloquent silence spoke for a moment before being interrupted. *How can you urove it?" SURGENT, -let me die! the hills. > ashes fills, arth and sky. down and cry ! presence thrills cup o'er-spills? and die." lendent wing: se set earth aglow; ler?that still js thine." om the string: where her feet must go? ve divine!" . n Days," by Wendell Phillips Stafford. ' i "If you had seen the advertisement 5 in that home paper washed in shore ] you would have read, 'If Abbott i wishes to return home his father will be glad to talk over a little business i scheme with him.' Your father felt ] surer than I that you would let me < know where you had gone, and asked \ me to send the paper to you. As it j happened, the turning tide was any postman?" Then all business conversation ceased.?Boston Post. < THE BANK OF ENGLAND ( 1 Has More Romance Attached to It ' Than Any Other Institution. There is no institution that has J more romance attached to> it than the | Rank nf Knelarid_ according to Ches ter E. Symonds, a banker, of London. "It has been nearly ruined on several occasions; it has been beset by thieves, one gang robbing it of more than $500,000 thirty years ago; forgery and frauds have been practiced upon it by the most accomplished criminals in history, and yet 'As safe as the Bank of England' is a saying which, in spite of the institution's many ups and downs, is true to the letter. Had it not been for a very smart ruse on the part of one of the directors the bank would have failed over a century ago. This is what happened: A panic sprang up among ^ banknote holders, a panic that spread and spread before any one was aware of what was happening. One morning, just after the bank opened, an angry and excited crowd thronged the street, demanding cash for notes. The value of the notes in the hands of the mob was actually aouDie mat oi me gold in the bank, and the outlook was a bad one. Gold had to be got to pay to every claimant, but that took time. So the directors sent men with notes into the crowd, and their claims were attended to first. Each was paid in sixpences and shillings. Some of them walked away with sacks of shillings over their backs, but the time gained by thte method of payment saved the bank, and every claim was paid. "After this the bank decided to reassure its depositors by displaying in the windows and near the cashiers' desks sacks overflowing with sovereigns, but the public did not know that the sacks were full of coal, with only a layer of sovereigns on topi"? Washington Herald. A Window Pane Photograph. Photographed on a window pane t at the home of Dr. L. L. Capron at i Central City, Neb.1, is the face and ' figure of Miss Alice Logan, of Omaha. I ] Til/onopo wac fi rat SPAT1 a fflW I ( days ago, when Dr. Capron happened I to look into the house from the out- I side, although facts show that it was I impressed there a full year ago by a 1 freak of lightning. Dr. Capron was, 1 of course, startled at first, because ' the image appeared to be that of a I young woman sitting at the window, I with features most distinct and de- i sign and color of dress plainly visible, t Miss Logan having been an inti- i mate friend of the Caprons -for years, 1 the doctor was in no doubt as to the i identity of the person revealed in the * picture. On being asked Miss Logan 1 remembered well being seated in the : position shown in the window pane while a thunderstorm was jaging out- I side. She said it was a little more 1 than a year ago. Cases have been re- i corded of the outlines of human ' hands being registered by lightning, 1 but the case of a woman's likeness be- < ing preserved in a pane of glass is ] something new to Nebraska.?Wash- 1 ington Herald. 1 3 Handicapped People. ] Much of the important work of the world has always been done by men severely handicapped ? by physical ] defectives, cripples, the maimed, and s the chronic invalids; and this is some- 1 thing for us who live in an age of the cult of athleticism to bear in mind. ' Darwin was subject to distressing headache? all his life, and yet he "made good," as the phrase goes, leaving an immortal name in the hall of fame. Sir Andrew Clark, physi- 1 cian to Queen Victoria, was, as a ' young doctor, told by older men in i ' his profession that he had but one * lung and would die in six months. ! "If I have but one lung," he said, "it < must do the work of two." His long and eminently useful medical career 1 did not terminate till he was past ! three-score and ten. One of the most 1 progressive statesmen of Mexico, the ! late General Carlos Pacheco, who was 1 /Tvm?>arorl hv Prpsiripnt Diaz to a com- ' bination locomotive, had but one arm 1 and one leg. "Half a man, but worth ! a man and a half," the President re marked of him.?Mexican Herald. 1 Choosing a Trunk. A good trunk is not necessarily an ! expensive one, but it may be service- 1 able and of neat appearance. Always select a frunk of skirt length. Small . trunks are usually thirty-five and thirty-nine inches long?not long enough for placing full length skirts in them. A paper lining in a trunk usually covers cheap material, and pique or cretonne linings are usually 1 earmarks of better grades. Slatbraced trunks are durable, yet less so than plain trunks with bound corners. Mark a trunk with initials, star. ! or conventional design so that it may easily be found when some rapid transit is necessary at a railroad station. Always have two keys and insist on having an excellent lock.? Philadelphia Star. North Carolina, South Dakota, Colorado, Alabama and Virginia, in the | order named, lead in the production ; cl mica. Words to the Shop Girl. Standing behind a counter eight long hours, and sometimes ten hours i day, is weary work and your temptations to say snappy things to incon- 1 siderate shoppers is strong indeed. But it does not pay, either from a business or a personal standpoint. When you get home and sit down in pour own quipt little room to "think it over," you will be glad that you lid not meet discourtesy with discour- 1 tesy, but remembered the soft answer that.turneth away wrath. , ' Color Effects. In writing of color effects on white :ostumes Vogue says that many of ; :he white costumes have yellow and pale copper tints for collar, cuffs and ; front emplacements to the Etons or : short bos coats. Some of these are 3f silk, some of cloth in the chiffon juality, while linen and pique in yellows, pinks, cerise and blues are also ised for such contrast trimmings. Ml gray costumeB of a light shade in :he softest of fine linen crash ;rimmed with silk braids to match, ire extremely distingue, having jnough white lingerie worn for relief n nhemisette anri In nartial sleeves :o make further becomingnes6 as(ured. Some of the white-haired ma:rons seek darker grays and wear ;hem with brilliant touches of cardiaal red, burnt orange and parrot jreen inset in plastrons, turn-over jollars, revers and cuffs of white an:ique lace or of very yellow lace, the :ostume presenting a very dressy effect. , \ J Currant Tea Cakes.? 0) if butter and add gradually ^ ' of a ?upful of sugar; th a. and sift two and one-thi X j spoonful of salt, and fou 0B? ? Add to first mixture alterr |S Ji stir in two-thirds of a cu 0 i one-third of a cupful of 1 CL*1- tins 1? a moderate oven.? <3 Quickly Made Salads. j cold boiled potatoes very en V their' quantity in pecan nu ? i_ V dress with oil and vinegai ? ?j ? cold boiled potatoes very | O \ celery and blend with F V onion juice may be used i 3 c . Rice For the Invalid. ? makes it hard to digest, b + ? eat it. Use two quarts 0 Si' it well, and have it boilinf L. q_ ; rice and boil twenty minut 2 Li every kernel will be oepai !S? 1/ ble or with sugar and crea Q V and a tablespoon of mill ?i excellent luncheon dish. The Telephone in the (Country. The farmer's wife has a new resource. Her lot has been improved In many waysi in the last ten years, rhe "separator" and the creamery iave relieved her of the severest toil )f the dairy. The rural free delivery wrings magazines and newspapers to ler door. Lately the telephone has jut her within distance of her neighDors. The nearest farmhouse may be lalf a mile away, and the Tillage :hree miles. The lines of poles and :he wires, perhaps merely the wire fence, have suddenly drawn her into in intimate relation to both, unknown x> her before. To one who has never experienced the solitude of the farm t is hard to realize the joy of the vife and mother at being able to consult a friend about the cut of the jaby's coat, the recipe for mince pies >r the dose of cough syrup. The demand for the telephone in :he country is imperative. "Everybody's got one," said the village storekeeper to the city visitor. 'Why, there's three families that's being helped by the town, and every ane of 'em has got a telephone. , Old Mis' Bearce says she'd rather go without her victuals than have the telephone taken out!" What a testimony to the desire for human companionship! The gossiping Instinct, tome cynic will say. But, after all, WJQat 15 tnai uul lilt? wish iu i-uui^aic notes on the permanently interesting study of human nature?a study as fascinating to the unknown country svoman as to the famous psychologist? ?Youth's Companion. Now For the Spiral Garter. An eminent London physician, whose specialty is the treatment of children, inveighs against the modsrn suspender?a substitute for the ;arter introduced during recent years and very generally worn by the present generation of girls. The suspender is at attachment of the stay that clips the edge of the stocking above the knee and keeps that garment taut and trim. Mothers and nurses applaud its neat appearance, and children like it because it is comfortable. But many of them are prone to the use of the suspender in a very tense form, injurious to health and growth, urging against a loose strip of elastic its inability to keep the stockings from wrinkling. The old elastic garter worn loose defeated its own aim; worn tight it interfered with the circulation of the blood. The suspender in its taut form is apt to press unduly upon the hips of the growing girl and to drag, her down. It is condemned on this account by the specialists, who recommend in its stead the old-fash ioned grandmother's garter, made of cotton. These were knitted by hand upon two fine steel pins, and usually fourteen stitches were set on the first pin and the simplest knitting pattern known was employed. Expert knitters, however, chose to embellish their handiwork with openwork bars between solid pieces, to vary the monotony of the design. The essential characteristic of the garter was its length, which was never under one ;md a half yards and often measured close upon seventy-two inches. It was wound round and round the leg, and as a rule below the knee, while the final end was tucked into the rest I 1 f IICI II I ra\fp^4 to keep the whole sufficiently firm ai reliably secure. Such garters do not compress t; limbs nor Injure the circulation, n 3o they strain the strength of growli girls.?London Mail. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young. Speaking about remarkable worn* in the United States, no one shou overlook Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, Chicago. She was elected preside of the National i^uucauonai associ tion in Itoston the other day. Whi Mrs. Young wants an honor of th kind all 3he has to do is to say so ai leave tt.e rest to her enthusiasl friends. The nominating committee of t! National Educational Association d not favor the election of a woman president of that body. The comm! tee was against Mrs. Young, and recommended a man for the pla< but Mrs. Young's friends got busy ii mediately, and when the voting w over. Mrs. Young's name "led all t rest." It was the same way a year a; when Mrs. Young ran for Superinte dent of the Public Schools of Chicag Half a dozen men wanted the job, ai strove for it with might and mai These men had influence in a politic way. She had never attended a wa convention in her life. She kn( nothing of party rules or usuag< She had never cast a vote or "flxei a precinct, but she knew a lot abo schools, for she had been teaching long time. The Board of Educati< took the sensible view that scho Cream one-fourth of a cupful of while beating constantly, one-third ;n add one egg well beaten. Mii rd cupfuls of flour, one-half tear teaBpoonfuls of baking powder, lately with one cupful of milk; then pful of fresh currants-mixed with lour. Bake in buttered individual -Woman's Home Companion. ?For a tasty potato salad, slice thin, toss together with them half ts, as much minced watercress arid \ For a quickly made salad, slice thin, mix them with finely diced 'rench dressing. A few drops of f it is wanted. ?It is the starch in the rice that mt cooked in this way any ons> can f water to boll a cnp of rice, salt j hot. Into this plunge the washed tes, pour into a colander and drain; ate and tender. Serve as a vegeta.m. To any that is left add one egg c and fry in a little hot fat. An knowledge and experience were mo important to educational progre than a political pull. Therefore M: Young got elected and the politicia got left. Chicago has about 500 pub schools, and Mrs. Young is boss every one of them. Chicago has 30' 000 school pupils, and Mrs. Young to a large extent the arbiter of th< educational destiny. When she w first elected some persons had th< doubts as to whether she would me* ure up to the requirements of the s uation. Nobody seems to have a: such doubts at the present writir It is generally conceded that she h made good in every particular. T schools were never better conductt and the system, was never more hj monious. The teachers like M: Young, the pupils adore her, and t taxpaying public is well pleased. Mrs. Young is sixty-five years o! and doesn't hesitate to say so. In t light of her achievements, the Osl theory isn't worth a cent. The > tional Educational Association h done itself credit in selecting her its president, ? Louisville Courii Journal. PiRCTTY |?? ^MWSS,fik * TOY^CAR^p Immense hatpins are still used. Pink linen is extremely fashic able. Fans are so huge that they a most awkward. All the new neckwear shows the < feet of the frill. The girdle is a pronounced featu of the best gowns. Cotton voile is in vogue for bo children and grown-ups. Negligees of soft colored silk mi are shown in the shops. The kimono to or below the elb< leads all others in sleeves. The new stockings are embro: ered in vivid colors on instep a ankle. Foulard, veiled with chiffon, mak up simple little afternoon or visiti gowns. The newest shoes are arched f the shortening effect, and have a n dium vamp. Children's silk -socks are embrol ered in small detached flowers in si tone. The old-fashioned mixture of pa lev and fringe is shown in most of t shops in many articles of clothing a other accessories that women use. Black and white, gray and dull pt pies are all allowei for second or hi mourning. Girls with gowns to their knees a wearing embroidered stockings in si and lisle. Most of the Frenchfrw:ks are she enough to show the instep. Dotted Swiss is much used this s? son. It is very striking to have t dot done in black. Embroidered chiffon gowns s made over heavy satin; black 01 white is especially smart. A novelty in hats is to have a d ferent color from that of the bri but matching in shade. I I If - " i - NEW YORK'S TASTE. 1 She Wants What She Wants When She Wants It. t Henry Pruger, of the defunct Cafe de l'Opera in New York, aaid of his failure a few days before he rei turned to Europe: "I didn't understand, I'm afraid, I the taste of New York. It is peculiar, id New York contains a good many j Judge McCorkles. be | "Old Judge McCorkle, so the story or ' goes, made his pile in Arizona. He ag j then repaired to San Francisco to j spend the rest of his days in luxury. ! He had $300,000. I "The judge was dazzled by the ! splendor and opulence of San Fransn cisco, but he did not let this be seen. Id j Quite the contrary, in fact, of ' "The morning after his arrival nt! Judge McCorkle entered the breaka | fast room of San Francisoo's largest 511 i hotel, and, having studied the comat | plex menu a long while, he said to ad the waiter: ;ic " 'Young man, some frijoles.' "'Beg pardon, sir. Some what?' he said?the waiter. id "The judge sneered. as " 'You don't speak Spanish, hey?' It- he said. 'Well, then, bring me some it beans.' :e, " 'I'm sorry, sir,' said the waiter, n- i out we aon c serve Deans ior DreaK? as ' fast.' he ." 'You don't hey?' said the judge sarcastically. 'You don't serve beans go for breakfast, hey?' His voice quivn ered with scorn. 'Wall, young man. ;o. I come from Arizony, the poorest nd kentry on this here globe; but even u. in Arizony we git beans three times a :al day.' "?Washington Star. rd - , ;w Dresses For Children. ?s. Shirts are sometimes discarded d" when only slightly faded or a little ut worn at the neck, so a rgood use is a made from them Into dresses or on rompers. Cut the shirt straight ol across from the bottom of the armhole. This makes the body part of the dress. From the upper part of shirt sleeves make the 3leeves for the j dress. From the bottom of the sleeves i save a piece to be inserted where I the shirts split at the bottom. This ! makes the skirt part even and ready ' to hem. Now use the box pleat of | the skirt for the opening at the back j of dress and you won't have to both| er with buttons and buttonholes. To j form a shoulder seam begin an inch | or so from the edge or side seam of j shirt and stitch about two inches j leaving the rest to be gathered to a j neck band for Leek. S.itch in your j sleeves and yoi hare a plain little dress just gathered at neck. A different styie' can be made from stiff bosom shirts by making a yoke dress. Stitch your shoulder seam longer to allow for a wide tuck to extend over the shoulder and this makes a still different way. By sloping the to? of the dress and also the sleeves to match' them, gath er sleeves and a'.l on one neckband re J and you have bishop style. Rompers are made just the same, using the box pleat for opening in the back. The ^ front half of the bottom is used for one little bloomer and the back part llc for the other. The sleeves make from the top of shirt sleeves. A piece e saved from any other part will make pockets, etc. These dresses are just the thing 511 ag for the little ones for house wear and ;Ir the rompers are fine for the little ^ tot that creeps or the little man that sits In the dirt and sand to dig.? Mrs. F. M. Herzig, in the Boston / Post. ig. as he A Novel Picture Gallery. >d. Photographers always have a large ir* i collection of places on hand from rs- work done and passed out of use. he Generally these plates go through a chemical bath and hate all foreign 'd, matter removed, leaving the glass he J clear. A club of men which boasts ler j several photographers, amateur and ^a* , professional, among its members has ias | recently acquired a new country club as house for its summer use. In reality 3r" this is a much tumbled though picturesque old Pennsylvania farmhouse. The ciub members, with much enthusiasm, have been spendI ing some days in repairing the place i and making it fit for occupancy. The j windows were all paneless, and for ; | the club to buy the quantity of giass i necessary to fix them ail up was uot I of the questioa. An ingenious mind got to work; the photographers were in- ' called upon for contributions in the | form of old plates, and now the old ire ; farmhouse is a curiosity to all who | have entry there, for the members j I who did the glazing decided that the " ; plates were good enough as they i were without cleaning, so every pane ire is a discarded negative. "It's all ! right," said a member; "it's the be>th | ginning of a picture gallery."?Philadelphia Record. all Ancient Barge From the Thames. jw At Westminster, where the work of building the new County Hall is id. rapidly progressing, the black nd Thames mud has yielded up an interesting relic of the past in the form es of the remains of an ancient barge _ in an excellent state of preservation The first signs of the vessel were discovered last February, and since thai or time the work of clearing away the ,0- ' - ?_ 1 IJ.j v,?? Slime in wuica IE is emueuueu uac been carefully proceeding. The work Id- has disclosed a boat eighteen feet slf wide by nearly forty feet long, solidly built of oak. There is no sign is- that any metal was used in its conhe struction, and the planks, which are nd between two and three inches thick. are held together by stout wooden lr. pegs. jjf To the lay mind it appears proboMq fr.nf- the hnat- was abandoned after running on the Lambeth marsbes owing to bad steermanship or in the course of a raid, and that it gradually settled down in the inud.? )r' London Daily News. !a* Three Royal Georges. h p There are now three King Georges ?George V. of Great Britain and Lre Ireland, George I. of Greece and 'er George II. of Tonga. The last named is now little more than a nominal if- sovereign, but he is still on the roll m, of reigning munarchs.?Detroit Free Press. V All starlings have a very peculiar formation at the extremity lof the tongue, which gives the appearance of a piece having been nipped out of It. This fact gave rise to the "mistaken Idea that a starling's tongue must be cut before it can be taught to speak.?Scientific American. It Is reported that the Lehigh Valley Railroad will soon put in service a dining car which is practically germ-proof. The usual ginger-bread carvings, moldings and hangings will be dispensed with. The woodwork will be of smooth finished mahogany, so that a microbe, according to thesuperintendent of the road, "would slip off and break its neck."?Scientific American. The War Department has considered the advisability of immunizing soldiers against typhoid fever by vaccination. It has decided that inoculation as a preventive against typhoid has been so thoroughly demonstrated in foreign countries and its efficacy so well established that the vaccination method is to be adopted in the United States army. ? Scientific American. '\i Cornish miners of half a century ago sought for what are known as * simple ores and threw aside the complex ones as refractory. In this way they found uranium ore and sent it to the smelters as "black copper," only to have it returned to them as rubbish, and so some 40,000 tons of ore containing perhaps ten per cent, of pitchblende estimated to be worth $2.50 .a pound, has been found dumped at the head of the Wheal Trenwith mine near St. Ives.?Scien* tific American. . \ The use of the telephone for train dispatching on electric roads is becoming very common. The various j systems employed were discussed in j a recent paper by Frank W. Fowle. I The relative advantage of stationary | j and portable telephone sets was con- | I sidered, witn tne arguments iavormg j the former. The objection to the lat! ter being that at night it is difficult to make the connection with the wires by means of the so-called "fishpole," without coming in contact with line wires.?Scientific American. A prize offered by a German society of manufacturing chemists for a method of removing, a^seijiureted hydrogen from crude hydrogen gas has been awarded to 0. Wentzki for the following process: The Impure hydrogen is caused to flow through a cylinder filled with a mixture of two parts of dry chloride of lime and one part of moist sand or any similar inert material. The cylinder should be vertical and the gas should be admitted at the bottom, immediately above which it is advisable to place a piece of fine wire netting. The cylinder should have about one-third the capacity of the hydrogen generator. >?Scientific American. ! JUDGE tjBEWEIfS TALE 5 S ON TOLERANCE. S The late Justice Brewer vas noted tfor his tolerant and broad minded views. A Washington diplomat re called the other day a story told by Justice Brewer in illustration of the need for tolerance. "We should respect the views of others"?so the story ran?"for morality itself is only a matter of environment. "A missionary in the South Seas was distressed because his dusky par. lshionerg were nude. He decided to try delicately to get them to wear at -least a little clothing, and to this end he left a great many pieces of scarlet and. green and yellow calico lying about his hut. "An elderly dame called one afternoon for spiritual advice. The missionary noted how enviously her eyes rested on the calico, and he took up a two yard piece of the yellow, saying: " 'I'll give you this if you'll weai it.' "The female draped the calico about her like a skirt and departed ir ! great glee. "But the next day, nude, as before, ! -v.~ ??t,irnnd with th? fahrir undei SUC ICbUiU^u n.vM her arm. Handing it sadly to thf missionary, she said: " 'Me no can wear it, missy. Mf too shy.' "?Washington Post. Eureka. Eureka, or, rather, Heureka, is the exclamation of Archimedes, the Syracusan philosopher, when he found oul how to test the purity of Hiero's crown. The tale is that Hiero suspected that a craftsman to whom he had given a certain weight of gold to make into a crown had alloyed the metal, and he asked Archimedes to ascertain if his suspicion was well founded. The philosopher, getting into his bath, ob: served that the water ran over, and it flashed into his mind that his body displaced its own bulk in water. Now, suppose Hlero gave the goldsmith one pound of pure gold, and the crown weighed one pound, it is manifest that if the crown were pure gold both ought to displace the same quantity of water: but they did not do so, and therefore the gold had been tampered with. Archimedes next immersed in water one pound cf silver, and the difference of water displaced soon gave the clue to the amount of alloy i intjv-iriurori hv thfi artificer. ? New | York American. Bacteria. Not long since it was announced that Regnault had discovered bacte-, ria in coal. Continuing his researches] he found evidence that bacteria were probably coeval with the first appear- j ance of organic life on the earth. They attacked vegetable tissues, as well as the bones and teeth of animals, but as a rule they belonged to species distinct from the bacteria of to-day.?Philadelphia Record. I as ? am 11 -nitiftii.', " C0NF1NED-T0 BED. Rldgway, Pa., Woman Endures Terrl* bio Suffering. Mrs. Jacob Fair, 4C6 Broad street. Rldgway, Pa., says: "I suffered the worst kind of pain through my back, ?the kidneya were weak and I had dizzy spells. For a long time I was unable to attend to my work and was confined to bed for weeks. I doctored constantly to no , avalL Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, art soon I was cared. I am better and stronger than in years." Remember the name?Doan's. For salt by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foater-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. \ NATURAL QUESTION. Landlady?I cannot accommodate ^ you. I take In only single men. Hj Wigson?What makes you think S I'm twins? ? History Cleared Up. MS The third grade was "having his- Hj tory." Forty youngsters were mar H king guesses about the life and char- fl acter of the Father of His Country, H when the teacher propounded a ques- . H tion that stumped them all. w "Why did Washington cross the H Delaware?"" H Why, Indeed?- Not a child could H think of anything but the answer to Bj the famous chicken problem: "To get H on the other side," and, of course, H that wouldn't do. Then little Anfiie'a H hand shot Into the air. Little Annie H crosses the Delaware every summer H herself, hence the bright idea. 588 "Well, AnnieV 9 "Because he wanted to get td Atlan- B tic City."?Pfilladelphla Times.: 9 The Wrong Sort. SB An old Irish peasant was one Sun- Hj day sitting in front of his cottage ,B| puffing away furiously at his pipe. |B Match after match he lighted, pnlfc H jng hard at the pipe the while, until B at last the ground all round hiB feet was strewed with struck matches. H "Come in to your dinner, Patsy," at length called out bis wife. flfl "Faith, and Oi will in a minute, Biddy," said he. "Moike Mulrooney has H been a-teiling me that if 01 shmoked Bj a bit ar ghlass 01 cud see the shpots KB on the sun. 01 don't know whether Hj Moike's been a-fooling me or whether . Oi've got hold ar the wrong kind of H ghlass."?Scraps. Hj It Wouldn't Stretch, ' [J The assessor was doing t^e very Hj best he could, but the farmer was H shrewd and wary. jH "How many acres of farming land HI have you?" he inquired warily. BI '"Bout 20, I guess," said Reuben. aH "Twenty: Why, it looks to me like flgj nearer 120. Oome, now, can't you ln< H crease that a little? There are surely more than 20 acres in that tract Suppose you stretch that a little." jHj "Say, feller," said the farmer, "this E9 ain't no rubjer plantation."?Harper's i Monthly. ?Ul j 119 Years Old When He Died. SB Paddy Blake, who was born at Bal- Hfl i lygireen, parish of Kilnasootagfc, Coun* KB | ty Clare, Ireland, 119 years ago, has : died in the Corofin Union hospltaL B{ Paddy had a clear memory of events j that happened a hundred years ago |H : and was one of those who went to see HH ! Daniel O'Connell passing through Bun- UHj ' ratty Pike an bis way to Ennls for H9 the great election of 1828. Uncouth. BHj "He's so uncouth." HH "What's the matter?" Jg "He actuaHy eats the lettuce leaf the salaa rests on." - I A COOL ll I PROPOSITION IB E And a Sure One.> g gfl | The Body Does Not Feel Heat | H I Unpleasantly if It has ft i^B Proper Food? 1 Hfl Grape=Nuts |l People can live in a temperature ' which feels from ten to twenty degrees : cooler than their neighbors enjoy, by HH ' regulating the diet SH The plan is to avoid meat entirely for I breakfast; use a goodly allowance of^Hj | fruit, either fresh or cooked. Then*fol- HB i tow with a saucer containing about four ^Bg heaping teaspooafuls of Grape-Nuts, HB treated with a little rich cream. Add tQ^S this about two slices of crisp toast with ^Hj | a meager amount of butter, and oneHH I cup of well-made Postum. HB By this selection of food the bodily^Ha energy is preserved, while the hot, car>^^B bonaceous foods have been left out^^B The result is a very marked difference^Hfl in the temperature of the body, and^H? to this comfortable condition is added^HB the certainty of ease and perfect diges-HH tion, for the food being partially pre-^^H digested is quickly |ssimilated by tho^^fl digestive machinery. MH Experience and experiment In food,Hu| and its application to the human body^EB has brought out these facts. TheyHH can be made uce of aad add materially^^B to the comfort of the user. HH Read the little boak, "The Road tAH 1 Wellville." in okes. "There's a Reason.'SH )