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w > * Man's Love V< By Helen Oldfleld pnaPa?h'a HERE be some subject a fl so. it would seem, bee | ra bility be definitely dec III unprofitable questions ll stant,.v thrashed out t | ^ 1 a woman?" S ^ m To this there wouh feSR^fcgja3E*w cannot be measured measure is but partial Some men love more deeply than women, and vice versa. It seems the : feelings and emotions, to strive to gra wrvmpn as thonsrh thev were of differen all, of the same family. Humanity is one time so wholly selfish that it thin own trials, vexations and suffering; a sacrifices with the spirit of a martyr, w for the sake of the beloved. It is tri humble, yet arrogant. One moment it other It pours forth praises and tender smiling and singing the next, no one phase it may assume. All this applies can determine upon which side the bah The balance of proof of strong ant desperate deeds, such as murder and side of the ledger. But against this i that a man may, if he be so disposed, s pie may consider him a fool and suspe infrequently accounted madness, he w contumely meted out to him as is the po an unrequited attachment. Tradition s that she shall be silent in such case an Is as instinctive with a woman as with auri xnrougu me uean. No one can dispute the fact that inci from the inconstancy or heartlessuess other things, is on their side and agai sources, chief among which is his busi; dote for mental troubles. He can get speak constantly of his sorrow, can ma atmosphere; while the woman, poor s chance of escape from her ghosts nor tures new." Woman's faith and unfaitk, man's 1 treachery, these are to-day, as they ha failing theme of poet and romancer, t history the underlying currents of life ethers arrive safely at their desired ha which shall be saved and which shall b * Every Man's E the St By Loeb Weintrob mHE ear, to have any s riui corresponding to 1 is more eminent, tha should be the most in ever group of facultie the whole ear point. The principal thiui ttie ear, wnetner tne < to the same, and whetl If the convolution is well in evidenc to the rim, you will always find keen i If the rim of the ear is thick, turni notes a thick skull. The brain iM^not If the ear is shapeless, crariTflWL up. any prominence inside, or the shape o convolution, no matter how large the he There is an ear that is often mista . perament. The rim has no particular almost round. The interior of the ear prominent and defined?rather meaty, lobes. The people who have such ear selves, and most of the time with eve nor physical giants, and less so in a sp balance between the individual who is and the one who is running post-haste t The ear that has the upper part dev< Is the centre.) and narrow at the base, w activity and industry in the direction i have this ehr suffer from malnutrition. An individual with an ear like this foo<ds. The theory that to eat a potful to eat the ox and not be able to lift the sounds, in their case. Be that as it may, the diet of peas i lobe on their ears and a fair width! at the ear the keener is the relish for the they will share their substance with c half of the ear is. The perfect ears are those that hav broad and prominent convolution rum around, a fair-sized lobe and the cav whole ear is not too low toward the ja and when viewed in profile with an in< When looked at from the front the in deuce, with little of the points and lob lyiow this ear at once when you see i know it thereby. The owner of this ear will shake tl a little harder for mercy. He will shal the heavenly fruit, as well as the tori . f?" places in order that all of the human s I'ork Journal. JZ7 Jt it the Wrong I By Winifred Hall J\u ^mOW does a girl feel when j1 the woman who knew h L J F tion the girl, who had y^ V this latter it is merely > wwM charm about it. ? Probably it is a firs Into the life of nearly every woman. ] is a flavor distinctly nov^l and interesi It is amusing, too, she thinks, and die realizes that she has to give an a think seriously of the proposal; she mui Is persistent, begs ber to timiK it over. It is difficult to make the ardent 1 reciprocated, and whether the man ho' girl has a trying time keeping the unpl< tasted of love herself, the proposal fro to a girl. Perhaps it happens her own love i yet she sees a love equalling her own I that by 110 will of hers can she take it love should be treasured. She has to wound the man who wo out all the sweetness of his high hopes, prolonged trouble to them both. Her tact born of pity, she will do what sh lover away, and try hard to overcome to battle with.?New York News. , ersus Woman's of never-ending discussion, all the more ause they are such as can by no possiided one way or another. Among these 5 few are more thoroughly and eouhan this: "Which loves best, a man or 1 appear to be but one answer. Feeling excepting by results, and even this other men, more devotedly than some fashion of late to insist upon analyzing sp the impalpable, to discuss men and t species instead ?f one flesh, members, much the same, male and female. At ;ks only of its own gratification, of its t another it will welcome the greatest ill yield everything and endure anything | ithful, yet suspicious; timid, yet bold; is reproachful and complaining; at an protestations. Weeping one hour and knows what to expect of it nor what as well to men as to women, and none tnce sways lowest. 1 irresistible affection, as evidenced by suicide, is largely upon the masculine fact may be charged another?namely, hout his love from the housetops. Teoct him of lunacy, but. since love is not ill have no such measure of scorn and rtion of the woman who openly parades ind custom are inflexible in demanding d hide her wound, however painful. It a wounded deer to creep to cover when n often love devotedly and suffer cruelly of women, but fate, here as in many nst the woman. A man has many re- ; uess, for hard work is a sovereign aiiti- [ away from the familiar places which j ke himself a new life and create a new j oul. must usually "stay put," with no i uuiiiiti ncou uciuo turn pao ? unshaken truth and man's contemptible j ve been from the beginning, the never- j he threads interwoven with all human j and love. Some ships are wrecked and } ven. and none can prcphcsy beforehand j e lost. 2? &r ,ar Tells ory of His Life i igniflcance at all, must have the outer ! the skull. Whatever point on the skull ! t part of the ear corresponding to it evidence, and you will note that whats predominates, to those faculties does g to notice is the convolution inside of ?nr protrudes from the head or is close her it is large or small, e, healthy in color, and running parallel ntelligenee. rlg over on the inner convolution, it deyet fully expanded. or large and flaccid, either flat without f a clam shell, and empty without any ad. it has no capacity. It is a failure, ken for a sign of the harmonious tempoint in evidence more than another? is pretty well developed, but not very and of a healthy color, with fair-sized s are at all times satisfied with thernrybody else. They are neither mental iritual direction; but they strike a good in a tremendous hurry to* go to Heaven :o the other place. ?loped (judging from the opening, which itbout any indication of a lobe, indicates in which the ear points, but those who must be judicious in the selection of his I of peas and be able to lift an ox, and pot of peas, may not be as foolish as it svill not suit the people with a fair-sized the base. The larger the lower half of j goocl tilings or motner eann. 11 cmer >thers depends on how large the upper e fair and shapely development, with a ling parallel to a fine rim all the way. ity in the centre not obstructed. The' wbone, hor too high up. of a good color 'Jination to point upward and forward, ner convolution will be the most in evie protruding. I do not expect you will t, so I will tell its works, and you will le whole world to establish justice, and i te the trees of the celestial kingdom for estrial, and more. He will move both family may eat their full share.?New 7 jZ? Man Proposes the wrong man proposes to her? Ask erself what love meant, and then ques?t to be touched by Cupid's arrow. To a trying time, with a certain romantic t proposal?that something that comes it is enjoyed. Unexpected or not, there ting about the experience, she lingers over the thought of it until nswer, ana mat, or course, sue cuuuui st say "No." This is not easy; the lover to let him try again in a little while, over realize that his love can never be vers around her or goes right away the easant part out of her iuind. If she has m the wrong man means untold misery is unreturned. unsought, unknown, and jeing poured out at her feet, and knows up, caress it, and treasure it as all true I uld give his life for her, to gently crush To fail to do it completely would spell ' task is difficult, but with an infinite e knows to be right; she will send this the sadness that is left behind for her j UNCLE JflfTJ % KftfcWstogS At the St. O ^ States G< & Structure ssjwwh and beau* i ^014* HE Government Building ^ at the World's Fair ranks i O rP O with any on the Exposi- t * * ? ? ^ ^ nuu minium j11 jiuiut \ji i ^OW architectural design and i sculptural beauty. The architect is t Mr. James Knox Taylor. Supervising ! Architect of the United States Treas- 1 ury. The sculptor is .Mr. James Far- 1 rington Early, the youngest pupil ever 1 admitted to the It oval Academy. 1 l'he exterior of the building is clas- ( sic. stately and beautiful. The main ( entrance consists of a portico of eight < Ionic columns, five feet in diameter j 1 and forty-five feet high, surmounted < by an entablature and attic. ] The attic is enriched by eight colos- j sal female figures eleven feet high, 1 r ill : ' f; jjl . GLIMPSE OF THE WORLD'S FAIR ACE OX THE LEFT AND T representing Music, Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, Agriculture, Manufactures, Transportation and Commerce. , On each side of the central portico , and just above the top of the attic are | groups of four figures each. A seated ; '"">oU fimim fnnrtoon foot lii?rh. ren- 1 ICUiUlC Ug,UlV, AVWk VVM 0~, -,4- j resenting America, with a torch in one ] hand and an eagle at her feet, is sur- j rounded by three young athletes, each j ten feet six inches high, typifying the ] youth and strength of the Republic. , Each has a laurel wreath in his hand, j The dome is surmounted by a quad- ] riga, a Goddess of Liberty fourteen feet high, beariifg a torch in one hand. < and an eagle in the other, standing in l the triumphal chariot drawn by four i colossal horses. The horses are guid- i ed by two nude male figures, each ' < twelve feet high. The Fisheries Building, which is eon- i nected with the Fnited States Govern- 1 ment Building by a colonnade, is se- I verely classic in outline. It is as sim- I file as the Greek temple of Poseidon, < which still crowns "Sunium's Marbled Steep." Groups of naiads, mermaids, j snortivp dolnhins. sea shells and tridents adorn every available : place. The friezes and crests around the building all suggest the sea. bUPERallTlONS Or MECHANICS. f Some Oueer liclief* That Obtain Among ! Craftsmen. Cal McSiroms, of the Bricklayers' Union, speaking of superstitions known among his craftsmen, said: "Should a bricklayer drop a brick from a wall while at work and break < it lengthwise it is a sure token of great luck, and that the man will get money, but if it falls and alights on its end and stands in that position for a moment, he is sure to die in a month. The painters have only one real superstition. and that is that, if while one of their number is at work fitting ! a pane of glass he lets it fall, and it is broken .into thirteen pieces, he will meet with ill luck within the next twenty-four hours. Many of the waiters in the restaurants believe if the first order they *' ~ ?? hnm find I take ill iue inui nine jc eggs they will have good luck all that I day. It Is a common superstition among the barbers that if a man comes 'into the shop and has a long beard removed there will be a marriage j among the barbers in the place soon.? I Kansas City Journal. J "What In the King?" I The Hereros, now in rebellion against Germany, have a pretty fair opinion of themselves and of their chief. One of their songs begins: "What is the King of England, what is the King of Germany compared with I thee, O, Mahereo. first among all princes? Have they so many thousand cattle as thou? Xo! Who is so mighty as thou?" The Ilereros despise Europeans. The name for a European is "otvirumbo"?"White thing." I - J rnmmm Hi r WORLD'J fV Louis Exposition tl overnment Has E Which is a Model ty. ? ? r m m a nir tJT?VVTTT >x 1uak1v ? a. The central ornament for the United | _ States Government Building proper is j he statue of "Armed Liberty." The: irst plaster cast of this statue was nade in Borne by Thomas Crawford. | lie sculptor. It was used by Clark Mills in 1SG0 for making the mold in (vhich he east the bronze statue sur-; nounting the dome of the Capitol in ; iVashingto The height of this sta-1 < !ue Is nineteen feet six inches. The | Government Board appropriated $15.-1 K>0 for the interior decoration of the j Government Building. This work was under the immediate supervision j if Miss (trace Lincoln Temple, whose j plans, however, were subject to the ! Approval of the members of the United i States Government Board. j # . * . v ; . SHOWING A BRANCH OF THE W . HE PALACE OF MINES AND MET AI A FEW WORLD'S FAIR FEATURES. In a short article such as this, one ran only refer to such great features is the Philippine exhibit, covering forty acres and containing more than looo natives from those far off Pacific islands; the United States Government Indian exhibit, covering many acres ind occupying a large building; the exhibit of the United States Bureau of Plant Industry, consisting of an outloor map of the United States, covering four acres; the great Athletic Field, where the Olympian Games of l!MK4 will be held; the Aerial Concourse where the airship and balloon contests, j laving prizes aggregating $200,000, will take place: the Anthropology exhibit; J the forty or more State buildings; the j outdoor exhibits of the Departments of Agriculture and Horticulture, covering inniiv neri's: the Palace of Ilortk'lll- ! ture, 400 l>y SOU feet, containing tlie ! largest exhibits of horticulture ever, brought together: the beautiful Temple 5f Fraternity: the magnificent buildings erected by foreign nations; the great Inside Inn, where GOOD guests may find accommodation at rates from | 51.50 to $5.00 per day: the extensive Live Stock Pavilion: the great landscape clock, made of flowers. THE CHOWS A NO "IHcT BALL An Invincible Kjejj That ltHtllfil All Their Attack*. During a piazza game of ping-pong one of the balls was sent quite a dis- j tanee out over the lawn, where a crow j seized it and bore it off in triumph, evidently thinking it was an egg. Afterj much pecking, from all of which the frolicsome little ball bounced away tin-: broken, the crow hail an excited con- j sulfation with several of his fellows, and then deliberately carried the ball to the top of a high tree and let it drop. Again the assembly of black feathered experimenters gathered around in amazement. Was there ever such a remarkable egg? It had fallen from a height that played havoc with their eggs and their little ones as well and yet survived intact! Then one after another tramped ou it, cawing loudly all the while. At last, in sheer exhaustion and disgust, they all gave it up, flew to the top of their favorite tree, and, still cawing loudly, watched one of the ping-pong players came out from the house and carry off the invincible egg that had baffled their boldest attacks.? Boston W ebman. Tlie Otlil Korean Flag. The Koreans, who have lately recalled their Minister in Washington, attract attention for one reason if for no other. Their peculiar flag adorns their legation building. The body of the flag is white, and in the centre is a design about the size of a football in red and blue, looking very much like huge entwined comma marks. On the top. bottom and sides are short lines of dots and dashes, reminding one of the Morse code alphabet. i HRBQILblNQll I he United HlfkWsWjp Vi rected a ? a ? of* Grace S fe 8tmtflK B jj AUTHOR OF THE WORLD'S FAIR HYMN di The selection of the veteran poet. g( Edmund Clarence Stedman, to write the World's Fair hymn, seems to have been a popular choice. NVbeu the question was asked who should be in- v vited to undertake a work of such mo- e< ment, the name of Mr. Stedman was b; suggested from many quarters. tt The poem has now been completed g, and set to music by Mr. Jolui K. b Paine, of Harvard University. The title is the "Hymn of the West." Permission to hear this notable composition is withheld from the public until T e< si si P' ei 01 n n S< ai n n h a; t? ATERWAY, THE EDUCATION PAL- s< .LURGY IN THE CENTER. ? hi ai the opening day of the Exposition, it but thut an unusual treat is in store a< for them is assured. a' Poems by Mr. Stedman have been used for musical settings of several of * the most distinguished American composers, and he is especially gifted in p( lyric composition. The song for the ni World's Fair is considered his best ef- hi fort. T Mr. Stedman was born in Hartford. J'> Conn., in 1S33, and was graduated from Yale in the class of 1S53. lie be- T came editor of the Norwich (Conn.) ^ Tribune and the Winsted (Conn.) Heraid, and in ISO!) joined the staff of the ^ New York Tribune. He if as war cor- r.i respondent of the New York World b; from 1801 to 1800. After the war he pi purchased a scat in the New York rt Stock Exchange* and while devoting v.; his life to literary work, has also ear- 1 ried on a successful business. lie has published many volumes of his own poems and is the editor of several col- jj lections and libraries of poetry and c< literature. la Frank Vanderstuken, director of the Cincinnati Orchestra, has written g, "Louisiana," the World's Fair march. and Henry K. Hadley, of New York. Ui has written the Exposition waltz. c< "Along the Plaza." ai ti DIGGING UP GREECE. t) Studying ArcliHftologtcftl Kemnin* to Flnt, How the Ancient* Lived. They are digging up Greece to find out how the men of olden times lived, a - c( carried on business and died. Accord- fc ing to a dispatch from London, a large j; number of expeditions under the lead- pi ership of scientilic men are at work in studying archaeological remains. r< The American school under the di- ei rcction of T. W. Ileermance will con- J,? tinue its excavations at Corinth, where the difficulties in connection with the expropriation of landowners stopped the work in 11)03. These have now been p settled. The British school will now resume its excavations at Palaeocastro, East- jp ern Crete, where a rich series of My- w cenaean vases and terra cottas have st been discovered. Trial excavations di will be made at Laconia. The first A site will be the Temple of Artemis, at hi Kary. lE The French school will continue ^ more completely and more systemsti- w eally the Delos excavations of 1003. 5] which have already revealed interest- ly t.w. Vwv AAmmornSnl 1o 1IJ1? UULC9 Ul liiC Wiuiucitmi uvitin/ ?v. of Roman republican times. fa g< Onion* For the Xervou*. Onions eaten raw, witb bread and T butter, make a capital complexion clearer and nightcap, especially for ^ the nervous person, who is generally inclined to ley awake o' nights and to make up at disheartening early hours g' of the morning. Slice the onions thin pI and sprinkle lightly with salt to take 0] off the raw, crud* taste, and have the bread thin and a good deal of butter. A Talking of nervousness, there is no ai better nerve food than good butter. it le ifc i ii >iri I . . A 5s JUT LITTLE IS DOING far News Scarce and Practically No ~r Developments OTH PARTIES MOVING SLOWLY ipanese Have a Way OpeneJ For the Landing of Troops ? Russians Are Massing Large Force. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?Official ispatches regarding the fighting iuth of the River Pomaku were reorted last Friday, in which a Russian etachment had three men killed and tvo officers and thirteen men wound 1, say that a Japanese troop-iaaen arge and other boats emerged from le mouth of the Pomaku and attempt1 to cut off the Russian retreat. The arge was sunk by the Russian guns, apt. Sraeizin, who commanded the etachment, has died of his wounds, he Kutshuin had one officer woundi. Further details concerning the Kirmish south of the River Pomaku ay that in following up the general Ian to harrass and impede the Japanse crossing of the Yalu, the Russian utposts on the river sent a detachlent of volunteers in boats on the ight of April 21 for the purpose of jttihg fire to the Japanese pontoons ad other bridge material. The boats grounded on a sandbank ear the Korean side and drew the re of the Japanese outposts. There as a sharp fusilade at close range. The positions of the boats was ighly critical, owing to the appearnee of a number of light barges filled ith Japanese, coming out from a mall tributary stream called the Potakua. which is unmarked even on le maps of the Russian general staff. The intention of the barges was to jt off the retreat of the Russians, his was noticed from the other bank, vo miles distant, and a couple of p!H enns nDenetl fire. A lucky shot ink one of the barges, and the others ithdrew. The Japanese casualties re not known. The Japanese Objective. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?Apparent* reliable information in the posseson of the general staff leads to the elief that the objective of the Japaese campaign does not involve the mbitious invasion of the interior of ianchuria with the purpose of reachig and overwhelming the main Rusan army. If the Japanese ever enirtained the hope of accomplishing a isk similar to that which Napoleon ;t for himself, present advices indiite that they have abandoned it, and ave adopted a much more cautious ad less hazardous programme. If this iformation is correct there will be no Ivance upon the army concentrated t Liao Yang and Mukden, with its atmdant constant lengthening and eakening of the Japanese line of'comlunication. Instead there seems to e a determination to stick as close as ossible to the sea, where lies Japan's atural base of communication, she aving established herself in Korea, he general staff reports that the ipanese have three other objectives? le occupation of a line across the Liao ung Peninsula, for the purpose of cutno. <-,#* Pnrf Arthur thp isolation of ?6 V.11 iw.t . ladivostock, and the establishment of base. The last mentioned movement light be accomplished by a landing car the mouth of Tayang river, which, y threatening the flank of the Russian 3sition at Feng Huan Cheng, might :nder it untenable and make the <idince a column from Korea comparavely easy. Will Not be Hurried. London, By Cable.?The far Eastern ispatches Monday morning are chiefly mc-erned with the reports and specuitions concerning the Japanese landigs and the plan of campaign. The aily Telegraph's Tokio correspondent ivu ?ho nrpspnt delav is more aooar it than real, both as regards field and aval operations. The Japanese, ac:rding to report, are acting prudently ad will net be hurried. They realize '.at certain movements must precede te next coupe by land and sea. and lev are awaiting both favorable eather and occasion, and from Fort rthur to Vladivostock are on the lert. The Morning Post's Shanghai irrespondent says that spies have in>rmed the Rusisans at Kin Chau that ipanese warships, conveying transarts with 30,000 troops, are steaming orthward. The Daily Telegraph's eor?spondent cables that a second Japan>e army will sail shortly and will ind on the Island of Diawato, near ongampho. PLUNGED NINE STORIES. earful Fall of Dr. Henry Lee, a Leading Surgeon of Chicago. Chicago, Special.?Dr. Henry Lee, a ading surgeon of Chicago, and a ell-known clubman, plunged nine ories to almost instant death Saturty in the clubhouse of the Chicago thletic Association, where he made is home. The open shaft surroundig the winding stairway was the mce through which he shot, and a loment after he had been chatting ith a friend on the ninth floor of the e clubhouse, his lifeless body was ing on the marble floor of the street vel, more than 125 feet below. The ill was accidental, there being no sug?stion of suicide. he Senate Will Clear its Calendar. f ~ ? Washington Special.?Th^ time of le Senate the present week will be ?voted to clearing the calendar prefatory to adjournment, which most enators say will occur during the resent week. There remains only ie appropriation bill to be passed y the Senate, that for the Military cademy. A number of supply bills re still in conference, however, and is expected there will be more or ss discussion of conference reports.