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OlQlOIOIOIOIOIOIOIOIOiOIQ \xr 2 o T o% ? Road to Gi o *> 0 ? ? ?>! 3y Do roth o,? q Author of Georgia.'' C *1 ? V^ Copyright, 1005, by J. f L1PPIXCC ? ^ v ^ oioioibioioio ioT^Y? i o i o*i o CHAPTER IV. 0 Continued. "Her clothes are most extraordinary," Mrs. Hay said eagerly; and Mtes C!ee nodded. "It is the uniform of some home, 1 feel sure," she said with authority. "Of course I cannot say what l:ind of a home, although?" Lise laughed outright. "Xoncer.se!" she said. "You talk ps if she'd come out of a reformatory. It's only the child's physical culture dress that she's w?aring out because it's so comfortable." Meanwhile Tormenti'.la was taking steps. Audrey's unhappy pale face haunted her. That two lovers should be separated by such trifles as a disapproving parent, exasperated her. She felt that she would have made short wcrl: of her father if he had raised objections to her choice. Audrey had no courage, but "I'll give her courage." she told herself. "I'll buck her up. When I've put the thine: to her in a dear light she'll understand what she's doing. She doesn't even seem to realize how much she has at stake. With so much ?her whole life's hanpiness, in fact, hanging in the balance, she must be taught to see?made to realize. If I could only give hor mere grit!" And she longed, she burned, to meet the beloved object, to point out to Mzchacl T\enworthy his clear duty; to show him what he was in such deadly danger of losing. But al* hr\ t rr'-? /-v ? V* 1 *-> ? * Jiiui u.? nc; had never yet been introduced to her. Sh? had been invited to join the Browning Society, but had politely declined. She was afraid she wasn't clever enough, she said, and Lise, who was going merely to kill time, laughed r.nd told her that she envied her sincerity. "Audrey thinks this man intellectual because he has started a society to expound Browning," she said. "I think it is so insulting to a poet to expound' him, don't von?" Tormentilla agreed, and all that afternoon she wandered about the nark and the sun was not too hot. She trespassed once more in the 1 plantation, and had an interesting interview with a pretty little housemaid who was leaning over the hedge, crving her eyes out. because some one who had faithfully promised to be there hrdn't come. "The new parson's been at him," Minnie said ssdly. "Tie's been threatening to sneak to Mr. Groves if he wastes his time here instead of looking after the young pheasants over the other side of the pari:. And Mr. Groves would turn him off as like as not if he knew." j* "He would, would ho?" Tormen2 "tilla said softly. *"Mr. Bromsgrove had hee'er keep to his Browning, I think. Where is Mr. Groves?" i "Hi's talking to Mrs. Gramper now. He'll he going home to his tea presently." "Look here, Minnie, you're hot to I cry any more. Don't take any notice of that man. I-Tc can't turn Willia n cff. You shall meet your sweetheait as often as you like?only?only if I were you, I'd chnose another place. Why not the orchard? The cherry orchard. It's a perfectly ripping place for a girl to mest her sweetheart in! It is really." Her earnest vo'.ce brought a look of amazed dslight to Minnie's dark eyes. "You don't think it's wrong. then, miss? You'll not tell of me?" "Tell!" said Tormentilla sharpl:, tossing her plait back. "I dont "Wish you may die?" "Wish I may die?" Tormentilla repeated in surprised inquiry. "Wish you may die if you tell. I mean," Minnie explained. "It's whit we always say about scoreis." "Oh. I see. I wish I may die i- I tell, then." Tormentilla didn't smie. "Minnie," she pursued gravely, "yiu don't seem to understand. Love Js a beautiful thing, a sacred thing. If you have a lover, and he is true to you. you are the happiest girl in tie wor/d. Don't listen to anybody ele. Stick to him and marry him v.icn nclrc vrm Attri novnr r?ovrvr nvo I him up." Minnie's eyes grew radiant, but tliey auickly clouded again. "I "doubt father *ull sauce i: I lose my place." said she gloomily. "Never mind what your frther says," Tormentilla pursued earerly. "'It's your happiness, not his, tiat's in the balance. And you shan't lore your place. William shall not lose his either. Ami now run ard tell Mr. Groves that Miss Green is waiting to speak to him in Cherry Lane." "Like her cheek, too." said that rentleman to him .elwhen li; sot his rnes>a~e. "Them r.3 wants 10 see me as La'1 as th:v: must wait till they ije? i he chance." Mr. Groves v.as a most gentbman!y man in his shooting parties, "nit he occasionally nnbont when his family '. ere r.:)t at home. 'Le-itin' rabbits Ior.t of tie ;ra;;s as if :jho owned ihc v?ho!e estate. v.".ion a man's back's :urned a?.' ail. Likely." Tr. rrr.ontilla waited " ilf an hour in rherry La:1.", and nicked a bunch -ji -vii.' . ot "3 10 give to Groenlo. At ..he end ci the half-honr she grew i:r.^atici't and began to think of ten. ,nd it was then that she saw coming 'owrvds her from that end of the lane vhich ' "? in o the- Mr-linrier road the man .Vie had Kenworihy. J-lis in hi;- pecker. so wore his i m'is. and hi? head was bent de; < icily as he wa a ion?. Mis i '6 wove nuody. .nou'h sulky, v :.d he .von Yonnen .ilia'.- heart at . : :re by the drer'-fn! unaa;:i?ir.t2s cf ..JLi mariner and mi&n. 'I iiiust take che bull by the horns," flUS . *. lOIOlO'OLQJOlO'O'O'Q'?'^ HE? }|i2 ?etna Green || sp ojo ca Hen kin, !<>|? 'O The WiSiiug Zing," L!c. ?,~ *b >TT COM PA I". AH rights resen'ei1.. ToTo I oRTjoTo" i6767b i o i<5 i o i o | she said at once, and boldly introduced herself. He looked surprised, but his surprise at this frank introduction was as nothing compared with his surprise at the remarks she went on to make. "Audrey has to!d me everything," said she boldly. Michael eyed her suspiciously and his spirits seemed, if anything, tc sink. "Oil. she has. has she? How frightfully interesting for you!" "I vrar.t to help you," said Tormentilla candidly. She was, in fact dying to. "I can assure you that ] can help you, if you'll only give mc the chance." "So one cn God's earth can heir mp nn-cv." he remarked with bitter gloom, and Tormentilla felt as if she could have shaken him for the wa> he revelled in this certainty. "On the contrary," she said briskly, "I can. if you'll only behave like a man, instead of a maundering poet." At la*t she had suecceded in rousing his interest, it seemed. "Can you?" he said. "You seerr quite enthusiastic about us. I wonder why." "There's only one way open to yov now." Her passion for getting to tli< horses had taken the bit in its tcett now. "And what way's that?" Ho regarded her suspiciously as be spoke "The way of Gretna Green!" she cried magnificently. The announcement appeared to deprive him o! breath for a few minutes. 'The way of what?" The horror ir i his tone was refreshing. "Gretna Green. Why don't yov carry her off and marry her? Thai was the way you weed your wife ir the youth of the word. How changed men are! Elope!" "I never thought of that," he ad mitted truthfully. "By George!" "Isn't it time you did think of it I iV Oft ~-U ^ axI.aJ iLiyn . ziiv iiaivcu 111 an tone. "Oh, if I were a man!" "You might feel quite different about it if you were," he suggestec brilliantly. "You never know. Yot forget that I haven't a penny in th< world. It's a minor detail, bu still?" "What dees that matter," criec Tormenting heartily, "if you lov< each other? Eesides, her father ha: enough for you toth. He'll have t< keep you both, of course, if he's pu to it. And he'd be sure to find yoi some work to do then." "Would he, do you think?" Wa: it a mistake on her part to think tha he regarded this possibility with dis favor? "But even then?" "Oh, den't be so prudent!" criet the girl. "It's always a hopelessl; unbecoming virtue, especially in ; lover. I can lay my hands on a hun drerl pounds, which I'll lend you wit! pleasure if you'll only buck up." "Can you. indeed?" His voice wa ! full of frank envy. "I shall love to lend you a helpin; hand." Tormentilla cried eagerly She looked very jolly, -he thought, a she stood there, her red lins parted her brown hair fiung over her shoul ders. "It's awfully seed of you." said he much f.r.ttered. "I'm sure I don't de serve such?" "I weuld help any lovers," Tor mentilla said earnestly, "to take thei fate into their own hands. I ador courage, and you must put up wit! poverty at first for each other's sake Think cf Audrey in a dear little cot tajre, with roses climbing up the wall and nodding through the windows It's a beautiful idea, leve in a cot taee. Think of it." He did think of it, yet obviottsl; ; the rapturous thought seemed to giv | him very little pleasure. I "Ro:C3 creeping through the win dow, and poverty bursting througl the door,-' said he sadly. "Bread and cheese and kisses! cried she to encourage him. "Water coming through the rco and rats in the cellar," said he. "Oh, I do wish you wouldn't tall like an old woman!" Tor mentilla wa gettin impatient, and quick actioi was essentia! in this new and ex^itin game. "I never met any one lessless ardent. Hun away with Audre and carry her of" and marry her, lik j a man. Hire a postilion and a post I chaise ar.d everything necessary, am , then conic home and face the rausi I and Aud-ey's father like a soldic j and a gentleman." "By George!" Poor Michael ru! fled his hair in amazement. "Th girl must he crazy." "Boch:" cried Tormentilla in ho breezy way. "I'll help you?I'3 show you the way. Look upon in as the turning-point of your lives It's at this moment of your eventfu career, vcu see, that Pippa passes." i "If you fling Browning at m ; head." said the wretched youth, "o: i the xop of everything eise, I shall g J mad. I came out here to avoid th ; Browning society." ' "So did I," she cried gleefully j "That ought io be a bond. Brownin j bores me. And Mr. Bromsgrove get j on my nerves. Shake hands en it." Solemnly he shook hands, and i j was at that moment that a big scr.rlc I nic tor-car grunted unexpectedly dow; i the iitile lane towards them. The: had to :-ie;> back hastily into the clitcl to avoid it. The driver had the s;u in his eyes, and could not see thc-i fares. Eut Tormentilla saw him. CHAPTER V. Toy. Tovrncntilin sa*.v him. CrusTiCi ; hack ajrainst the hedge, with a whiti | free, watched the motor maki j its grunting way slowly down th? narrow lr.r.e. Miciiacl Kenworth; studi^a her ?ace in some surprise ? ^im There had been plenty of room for the car to pass them. She had uttered a name sharply, with a quick indrawing of her breath, and the car had been so very near to the pair it had forccd into the hedge that the driver must have heard it. Yet the sun was in his eyes, as I have said, and he couldn't possibly have seen their fares. He went r>n down the narrow lane, arrl at first Tormentilla was too dazed to notice that he was gradually slowing off. But Michael noticed it. In fact, he was beginning to grasp the situation altogether. "You know the man?" he asked, with a half smile. "He is slowing down. Lcoks as if he were going to stop. He is going to stop. Has stopped, in fact. I'm beginning to 1 think I'd better make myself scarce. Good-by. '*hank you very much indead. I suppose I had better go, hadn't I?" "Yes," said she, with a desperate 1 e'rorc to regain her self-possession. "Do?do go, please." Her anrciety to see the last of him was not flattering, but he under' stood that this was not a moment for mere manners, and disappeared round the corner before the owner of the red motor had come up to her. He was an experienced youth. Some1 thirig in the poor girl's eyes perhaps had told him that, the best thing he i could do was to leave her now. r She was still leaning against the hedge when the stranger reached her. Greenie's little bunch of wild roses ' was pressed to her breast. Her wide I brown eyes gazed at him wMi a frightened, reproachful stare. Through her parted red lips her breath came quickly. 1 The motorist was a short, stcckish young man, very broad in the shoulders and ruddy and weather-beaten in i the face. He had small, twinkling blue eyes and light, closely-cronped 1 hair. He wore no goggles, and his big coat and ugly cap were of a dis tinctly sporting cut. But his face bore a curious complexity of expres5 sions at that moment, joy and dis tress in almost equal proportions f predominating. "Sandy!" , i "Leave me alone!" She spoke childishly, petulantly, and her mouth i grew sulky and hard. "I've been tryt ing to forget all about everything i all this time?it's just like you to i come and spoil everything when I was beginning to take an interest in doing good to others, and finding some peace of mind. It's just like you." "Just like me? Oh. Sandy!" 1 "Just like the liatefulness of everything. When I was beginning to lose t myself in other things, and beginning 1 to be happy again." 1 "Happy? Oh, Sandy!" The deep - reproach in his tone infuriated her. t Her eyes blazed. "I suppose you think no one could 1 possibly be happy without you? How 2 like a man! I was beginning to think s of other things and other people. 5 And now?now you come to Malinder t and wake up all the grisly wretchedi ness of everything. How like a man!" s He plunged his hands into his big t pockets and planted his feet far apart - with an attitude of dogged determination. ' J "Look here. Sandy," he said, "you y mustn't speak to me like that. I a won't have it, I really won't. I won't - be bullied. I will explain everything, ti You didn't give me a chance before. I've behaved like a hound, but I ads mitted that before, and I'm ashamed to have to confcss that I didn't know g what I was doing. I lost my head. \ I can't understand 1 It's a thing s I've never done befc. * in my life, [, and yet I wasn't drui. . And you 1- know what Dolly is?I hadn't timo a - ? * ?- i. - 1 - i ? Al X T'J 1 ? I lO ursw ijei'k?to exjjiam liiih. i u iuoi. | , my head?before she'd told your I mother and Peggy and Vic and everybody. it's the most extraordinary thin? I've ever done in my life. I'm r sure I never lost my head with you." e Tormentilla's cheeks flamed. She :j turned on her heel and walked off , down the road. "No," she said in a half-choked s voice; "that's just it." i, "Sandy dear!" He followed her, - but. his hands were still in his pockets and he didn't attempt to touch her. y "Sandy, you're a woman. You can't e possibly understand that a man can be so weak when he loves some one _ else all the time." h "Don't call yourself a man!" "You needn't insult me. I've " ! enough to bear as it is. If I've done wrong, I've got to pay. There's f Dolly, you see." To be Continued. p Kipling's I'mlding. n Rudyard Kipling at an c-arly staga ~ entertained rather advanced theologi_ cai views. His sister v/as a few years y the elder, and. after the manner of e her kind, considered it necessary to . assume a very critical attitude toil ward her junior's manners and morc als. One cay little Rudyard had loft r a small quantity of pudding uneaten. "You must finish that," raid the sis* -- ?? - - _ -l ?Ml ....... ~ ... ?t*U -J ICi", or utiu win uv vi'.} uiiji; witu o i you." "Eco, bco," said the dolin| quent, "then I shall change my God." r ?Xew York Press. [1 e Handicapped. "Fain would I write a poem on tlia '1 delights or fishing," sighed the poet, "but woe is me! I can't find a word >' to rhyme with angleworm." "> "Eut why use that word at the end 3 of a line?" queried the friend. e "Eccause," hissed the post between his cot teeth, "an angleworm is al* ' ways a; the end of a line." S And for an hour the silence was s so c;i!l ihat one could have heard a nin drop.?Chicago News. t * I A I.npse of Memory. Forgetting that he had started to v draw a gallon of whisky from a bar'i rel in the collar, A. C. Hidlav, pro! jivietcr of the Hotel Hidlay, Blcomsl R'l lrv|> r'no cniorif rnviiorl fin and went upstairs. Two hours later ho reinemborcd it end hastened there, lie found that it had all run away and inio the sewor. i!is less becauso j of his lapso of i::?.'?uory will !jc about ? ?1C0.?P!::!a(:el;,ii?a Iteeord. c o Accord in- to o.Mi-ians women's y' eyes ars weaker than nun's and more . j of the fair sex v:car glasses. GENERAL SUGGEi SELECTING Market Flooded With Comrr Private Manufaci Cannot ? (By M. P. RAVENEU M. D? and K. W. SMITH, University of Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment. Station.) The market is flooded with commercial disinfectants put out by private manufacturers. Many make absurd claims for their material. In buying these disinfectants one is apt to pay much more than their true value. It should always be remembered that no one firm has fi monopoly of chemical disinfectants. All commercial lnsinfectants depend on wellknown chemicals for their action. A few manufacturers have succeeded in preparing these chemicals so that they are easily handled and have cer V , . :V?a: % <> ** W *-? %:jf,^' ,. , . - ''.' '":-:r<--x ' / , Applying Liqui tain advantages over the substzmces on which their value depends, but as a rule it is better to buy the chemicals and not some private commercial preparation of them. The action of a disinfectant often depends largely on its solubility in water. For example, some oily substances have considerable power but do not dissolve readily in water, nor mix with it. A good example is found in the cresols, which are the basis of many commercial preparations. The general usefulness of these valuable agents is much increased by combining them with soaps as in creolin, lysol, etc., which mix readily with water in all proportions. For complete disinfection of a room Al * ~ J vi in Vi r\ Knef me gaseuus uisnueciauia cue mc u?i, lor the reason that the gas permeates every nook and corner, reaching places that would not be touched In any other way. It Is plain that the room must be tightly sealed to prevent the escape of the gas. This Is easily done with strips of heavy wrapping paper and ordinary flour paste, put on with a paint or white-wash brush. It Is easily washed off and leaves no mark. Gaseous disinfectants cannot be used In barns and stables, as a rule, on account of the open construction of such buildings. Here we must deHSncretTblo r? ?'-g i fp ?y-] % a* f 1 & | . jrff .%?p:A v 21. ; v> r A bulletin of the Michigan Experiment Station described a silo built of concrete blocks with a face 24 in. by 8 In., and a thickness of only 3 in. These blocks are laic in cement mortar (sand and cement in the propor- j tions of 2 to 1), flush with the inner [ edge of the foundation as shown in ' the illustration. The wall which is With the Sow zr.d Pigs. In many instances, many especially It" the sows are old. it will be best to take the pigs as soon as they come and remove their tusks, on both lower and upper jaws. These tusks are often very sharp ar.d painful to the sow and will cause her to jump up quickly when they are sucking. It is also the cause of sore mouths caused j by the pips fighting for ibr-ir place at the dinner table. Experience has ! shown that the pigs from aged sows are more liable to have sharp tusks than those from younger sows. Pigs must have a thrifty start in life if they make good money for their owner. It requires a lrrge amount of food to overcome the unthrify habit in a bunch o." pig1: and every day they are not gaining they ate | uHMmnm STIONS ON DISINFECTANTS lercial Article Put Out By :urers?Sunlight Jc Beat. the use of some spray. If there is Infected forage or bedding, it should be raked out and burned. Walls must be well soaked with water, then thoroughly scraped. Burn all material removed in this way. All rotten wood In floors, feed boxes, stanchions, etc., must be taken out and burned. Thorough cleaning will often make disinfectants unnnecessary, but no amount of disinfection will take the place of cleanliness. In cases of contagious diseases both cleanliness and disinfection must be employed. When using a disinfectant of any sort two things must be always remembered: 1, use enough of the disin$%.v' *-^ ? -M ?Kji '$'U >x* > - - '? N ^ "?. " r: V : *55 '\ " d Disinfectant. pend on thorough cleaning, airing, and fectant, and 2, give it time to act Many disinfectants are decomposed while acting by the substances with which they come into contact. If a liberal quantity has not been employed, it is a!' used up before disinfection ^ * 1*? r.'i5" - I Barrel-Cart Type of Hand Spray. is complete. No general rule can be given for time. Medicated soaps are usually worthless and should not be trusted. Most of them are not as good as ordinary soap alone. Soaps are useful mainly in making substances soluble, and assisting in cleaning surfaces, garments, etc. osl^OJ^SILO" *i\ S1 ?; -&ccM >: c I: \ - foundation oo iliAirrlif 4c? efrnn ctVionprl hv - C iCCl ill C 10 a uvuDv?vi*v? I 2-in. bandlron hoops on the outside as are sometimes used on staves silos. The foundation of the wall extends 24 inches below ground and widens to 21 inches at the base. There is one continuous doorway about 25 Inches wide, extending from the first course of blocks to roof. losing their owner fcod, care and mcnev. Leading Dairy Bcreds. The herd at the Ontario (Canada) Experiment Farn consists of the three lending dairy breeds, the Hoisteins. Ayrshires and Jerseys. The record of the breeds last year shows that the llelstcins produced the most milk, the Ayrsliires the most butter an,I the Jerseys the richest milk. experience of two years. New Ycrk Farmers. It is claimed that Xew York state j ha:; a higher pcnmtasre of larms op- | orated hy the nscn who own them j than any ether loading agricultural j stale. PttOWpN GOVERNOR STU | Governc C- nominated state, has 1 with most he began ^ public affai tractor, mc an Intimate acquaintance with one f new lines. A big man physically, Stubbs has though It can change Into granite b aroused. His talk Is homely and dlre< tious to go high In politics. He has h not pretend to have any. He has be< state's educational institutions and ap Stubbs began his political career 1904 he became chairman of the Rep such for four years. He nominated E Hoch had refused to accept the nomi to use the long-distance telephone froi who had a phone in his home. It cos1 satisfied with the result. "They wou said, "but when they got a long-dist; thing." As governor, Stubbs sought unsi two-cent passenger-rate law, declarin rate to be a humbug. The legislate coLimlssIon, recommending that the t CARDINAL Gil ?p??????????I James, brated the is noted a: man Catl He was b was taken ' returning while in Charles c< iu Baltimc succeeded was Invested with the insignia of c the third national council of the chui written books and pamphlets on relig itable work. In the course of a general conv? subject of divorce came up and he ai teries. The evils of divorce are eve is a canker which is eating into the interview, in which he also urged y< our whole civilization uprears itself unity of the family. When you att itself. And government to protect a: Its statutes the criminal divorce laws "I pray for he time when men a stand the seriousness of marriage. ] should understand that they are ent< day or a month, but of a lifetime. 1 and forbear. The husband cannot pu must pull in the traces together." v | WILL GIVE ^ ^With | tot the el ness and school cIj ported ic now ever the son a t that "fait: are to be great indeed if all that is shall be carried out. Those who have come closely in he has a serious mind and probabl] he not been destined for great busi magnate. Born and bred in Clevelai the Rockefeller children, to simple lii college by private tutors and sent t< it is said, of keeping him from the ionable institutions of learning. Br antecedents and affiliations, and all tion. As a student Mr. Rockefeller i thoueh he was not given to social p October 1, 1901, Mr. Rockefeller of Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of R'n place In Providence, was a great so guests. The gifts were valued at $7 to Mr. and Mrs. Rockefeller. Gradually the younger Rockefell hilities as a director In large corpora Rockefeller has been an utterer of ] fellow young men. He has advised against borrowing money on friendsh Ing, against shirking humble work, against sourfacedness, against tlmldi been the subjects of platitudes anc associated with morals. There is nothing original in his the outpourings of a sincere, if convei naturally, has been filled with young 1 WEDS A JAP I Miss F ! _ the late . > ; !">3? 0^ V / 111 Boston 1 ' '/ / / iier f:itho ! - 'L President l-.or work yours a~o. Admiral Grlne-Il entered I mid rosl? !o J::'.: rank of iieitfonnnt. Just bv f:;i" the Chinese-Japanese o,T;c; r in lud; in;,' to bnild up and or; choice i'f r!i-j u:ivy board, lie was j I Ja; c.ticsu sovc:-!::nei:i and rvau'laud I advisory capacity. ' " 'It L I I^PLE* ; BBS OF KANSAS |[ )r Walter Roscoe Stubbs, who was reat the Republican primaries of tha lad a sfiort career In politics, compared! leaders. It is only seven years since! to Interest himself at all actively In.'. Irs, and now the governor's ambition lsi . Senator Charles Curtis, whose term; March, 1913, and whose successor vfll IYVU )Cttl?5 11CUUC. Uj Is red headed, like that other Insurgent Kansas Republicans, Victor Murdock. leans energy. Oddly enough, he comesstock. His parents, who lived in Rich., when he was born, were very poor.' ,wo years old, the governor Is wealthy of many years of hard work as a con- , >stly In railroad building. Thus he has eature of railroad affairs, the cost of a face that is often boyishly emotional. lardness when his fighting spirit is :t. He frankly admits that he is amblardly any "book learning," and he does in, however, a very good friend to the predates education. In 1903 by going to the legislature. In ublican state committee and remained ;dward Wallis Hoch for governor, after nation. Stubbs hired two good talkers as Topeka on every farmer In the state : a good deal of money, but Stubbs was ildn't have worried about a letter,** he ince call they knew that meant some? lccessfully last year to have passed a g the statute permitting a three-cent ire adopted the report of the railroad ? - - f'.i wo-cent bill be not passed. . ' '? vi| BBONS AT 76 | j Cardinal Gibbons, who recently celes seventy-sixth anniversary of nis birth. mong churchmen and is head of the Ro ioHc hierarchy in the United States. ft orn in Baltimore, but at an early age i by his parents to their former home 1, where his education began. TJpaa to the United States he lived for & New Orleans. He studied first at St. jllege and later at St. Mary's seminary >re, and in 1861 he was ordained to the L In a short time he was made private to Archbishop Spalding and chancellor * hdiocese. In 1863 he was raised to the s and in 1877 was created coadjutor ? of Baltimore. A few months later he to the see, and on June 30, 188G, he ardinal. Cardinal Gibbons presided at rch, held in Baltimore In 1884. He has ious subjects and is noted for his char* rsation with the cardinal recently, the I once opened up on it with all his batr uppermost In his thoughts. "Divorce very vitals of our life," he said in the )ung men to enter politics. "Society? upon the sanctity of the home and the ack the family you attack government ad perpetuate itself must expunge from which the best of our life abhors. nd women may be persuaded to under-. Regardless of religious convictions, they ;rlng upon a contract which is not of a They should know that they must hear 11 one way and the wife another. They A/AY MILLIONS [j ?? (.he announcement that John D. Rocke, has resigned from the directorate of. lard Oil company and has relinquished ?e business interests to assume charge irk of giving away his father's vast for>w public interest in this young man has ?Iow thirty-three years old, he has been. >on for many years as the heir apparent der Rockefeller's habits of acquisitiTefrugality. His talks to his Sunday ass have been keenly watched and re-' i the newspapers, and their tone has' sidered, by a good part o' +he public at t of unctuous, self-sati*fled piety. But ything is changed; both the father and ro preparing to demonstrate their belief h. without works is void." and the works promised of the Rockefeller Foundation contact with young Mr. Rockefeller say t would have entered the ministry had ness affairs as the only son of the oil , id, he was trained in early life, like all ring and industry. He was prepared for j Brown university with the intention, temptations of larger and more fashown university, of course, has Baptist the Rockefellers are of that denominamingled freely with his fellow students, leas,ures. married Abby Green Aldrich, daughter iode Island. The marriage, which took clety event, and was attended by 1,000 00,000. Three children have been born er has been relinquishing his responsltions. As a Sunday school teacher Mr. many precepts for the guidance of his against living beyond one's means, iip, against drinking anything lntoxicatagainst discontent because of poverty, ty and several other things that have L homilies since religion began to be remarks, though they undoubtedly are ntional, mind. His Sunday school class, men eager to learn the way to success. WAR ADMIRAL lorence M. Roche, the only daughter of lames Jeffrey Roche, the famous poet >r, was recently married in Boston to liral Henry Walton Grinell, formerly :ce admiral" of the Japanese navy, and qow touring Europe. They have been r years. The admiral was a friend of ; woman's father while he was editor lot. During last winter the two were ogether a great deal at St. Augustine long friendship strengthened by con>ciation, led to their engagement. oche is about -5 years old and has lived virtually nil her life up to the time that r was appointed consul to Genoa by Roosevelt in 1905, when she gave up and joined him. !!r. Roche died two :he Uniiei'. States navy at an early age wnr .Japan asked for an American naval sauize !i-S navy. Orinell was made the given the rank of rear a Iir.iral by the in its en.pioy fcr several years iu aa