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IN MY 1 In my dreams I often hear them, he From the hillside, from the red r Have you left us altogether? (some Is it really true, ola fellow, you 1 In my dreams I often see them, see On the hillside, on the red road. And my lips would fain give answe But a mocking spirit whispers, "1 In mv dreams I often see it, see t With the briar scented breezes I Nothing great, nor grand, nor gau Just a kind of way back tavern a And I often hear the voices of the s Kind of little shadow children in And I guess that, they are waiting And the dear aid loony bullocks y Shadow nl&ins roll out before me i And I near the yelping brindle as And, anon, a ahftdow figure by the i And I note the look of longing ai Must the dreamer go on dreaming Must he wake to find the vision a God! who fashiored all things perfe Sleeninff sompuSpre in twnffoa c-%^oc ./[libby, 1 J& 0 j a?? H'-^M??? f^j fftIBBY ' ANDERSON hung Sg dishcloth 011 its aceusWB T tomed nail, and sto<?d there surveying it. It was plain. rear - from tiie Tray sue jouscu, ihat she was determined to speak. "Ma," she asked of the woman who was sitting before the little round stove, "what were those papers Dave put in his pocket as I came in?" "Some things he was showin' me." "Ma," she asked, quiveringly, "you didn't sign anything, did you?" "I didn't sign your name to anything." And the needles clashed again. She knew her mother too well to press further. "I just couldn't understand Dave coming here this time of year," she ventured; "and I tholight he acted queer." The old woman was folding her knitting. "I'm going to bed, and you'd better come along, too," was her reply. A week went by, and although Libby had twice forgotten to feed the chickens, and had several times let the kettle burn dry, she was beginning to feel more settled in her mind. She did up her work one morning and went to town. Her first call was at the solicitor's, and there she heard the worst. Ma had assigned their home to Dave. She did not make any fuss; she was too old-fashioned for hysteric;. It was not until the old place came In sight that she broke down. 1 /'It's not fair," she cried out, "when I've stayed here and worked?it's not fair!" And, for the first time in many years, she .was crying?passionately crying. It was a feeling of outraged Justice "that made her speak, for she was just 41 woman?the daughter of pa. "Ma," she said, "do you think pa would like to think of your assigning the place to Dave, when I've stayed here and kept it up the best I could for twenty years?" The old woman put down her knitting. "La, now, Libby," she said, not unkindly, "don't take on. You'll never want for nothinT' Libby stood there looking at lier. "I think you don't realize what you've done," she said; and turned to the bedroom to take off her things. It was not until the nest month, the blustering month of March, that all was made clear. It was early in the afternoon when Libby looked from the window and saw a man coming in at the big gate. "That friend of Dave's from the city Is coming, ma," she said. "Gracious!" exclaimed Mjs. Ander son, "and such a day as 'tis!"' The stranger warmed his hands, and disbursed a number of pleasantries. "Well, Mrs. Anderson," he said finally, "your son wants me to make a , little proposition to you." Mrs. Anderson looked pleasantly expectant. "Dave's always makin' propositions," she chuckled. ? "He's been a good deal worried about you this winter?afraid you were not just comfortable out here?you two, all alone." "Dave's always thinkin' of his mother's comfort," she asserted: and looked triumphantly over to Libby. "Well," he resumed, turning back to the older woman, "it worries Dave to think of your being out hero alone now that you're getting along in years, so he's rented a nice little place in town, and he feels sure it would be better all around if you'd just go in and take it." "If that ain't for all the world like Dave!?always seme new idea in bis head. But you just tell him, Mr. Murray, not to be bothering. We don't want to move to town?do we, Libby?" "Not if we can help it," she replied. "Dave's been away from the place so long that he don't see just how 'tis," ma explained. "Libby and me wouldn't feel at home no place else." "It's too bad you feel that way," he went on persuasively, "for Dave was so sure you'd like the idea that he's gone ahead and made all arrangements, and I'm afraid there might be a little trouble about unmaking them." He turned to Libby. "How soon do you think you could * xnove? By the 1st of May?" "I suppose so," she answered, in a dull voice. April came, and for the fiftieth time the old woman watched the white give way to the green on the hills that curved in and out around her old home. 1 As long as she could, Libby let licr have her dream. Her heart was not hard toward ma now. Ma had not understood. And Libby was glad she coald have those few spring days befo^ she was torn from the old home. "Ma," she began one morning, "I think I will have to be packing up this .week." "Pacing up what?" "Why, don't you remember, ma, we're going to town the 1st of May?" "Oh, la, Libby, I've give that up long ago! I'm going to die on the old ^ filace." ;i -1 DREAMS. ^ ar the far off voices calling oad, from the rolling waste of plain; ^ one told us in the township) will not come back again? t the shadow people waiting j on the rolling waste of plain; t v r something hopeful, if not certain, . ifou shall not return again." t I he dear old shanty standing. ( )laying round the open door; dy, but a quaint old wooden building, h nil a sort of way back store. turdy station children, e the middle of the road; d for the teamster and his wagon > vith their precious border load. U vith a mob of cattle charging, . f she turns them on the rise; old slip panel waiting, ad the sorrow in her eyes. 8 ...I,.,* -k? = ?? uav ?UC 11VAIC JUUUVOO piVWUlVB* II til too seldom what it seems? v ; ct, grant that one day you will find me with the shadows of my dreams. 5" ?Pall Mall Gazette. v a . r )3%%0V^0V%0V%0V%0 y 'JJP . I , ITlfi* i. .\ UNLOVED i "But you know, ma, the arrange- i uients haee all been made. I'm afraid 1 > we'll have to go." [j She turned to her crossly. |! "There's no use to argue wiVme, Libby Anderson. I ain't goin'!" ^ "But what about Dave?" ^ ^ "You can jest write Dave, and s^ his mother don't want to leave the Q] place. Dave won't have nothin' further to say.'! tl She looked off at the meadowland as a if it were all settled. Libby would have to tell her. "Ma," she said, "it's no use to write u to Dave." d( "WK*. "All" ?!.. J I - ' - V.l? it ?2j iivi; sue ucuiuuueu. ill a llllll- aj frightened, half-aggressive voice. _ "He's sold the place, ma!" ^ "What's that you say? Something tr about Dave selling my place? Are you gone crazy, Libby?" "You know you deeded it to him, ma. It was his after you did that. n' And he's sold it, and we'll haver to g, move out." ei Hearing no answer, she turned n] around, and it was then she coveted uj Dave's gift of saying things smoothly. The old woman was crouched low in her chair, and her face was quivering, ?] and looked sui^en and gray. ; ^ "I didn't think he'd do that," she fal- g tered. ^.j "Never mind, ma." Libby said awk- .j, wardly. "Poor ma!" 0, It was the nearest to a caress that ^ had passed between them since Libby was a little girl. Nothing more was said until after ma had gone to bed. Libby supposed she ^ was asleep, when she called quaveringly to her. * "Libby." she said, "you mustn't be 1)( thinkin' hard of Dave. He must have j thought it for the best." AV Libby . was tised to caring "for ma, cc and she needed care now. "Yes, ma," she answered; "I'm sure he must." er It was not until the morning of the fa fourth day that the silence between w them was broken. Libby got up to take down the clock, when she heard a strange noise behind her, and. turning, she saw that ma's head was down jn 1a*t' In h a?? hr. n/Ic on/1. rt'o e f aa!? 1,auu?' """ au^ AY ing passionately back and forward, and ^ crying as though her old heart had . broken. " She put down the clock, and again ^ she wished for a little of Daye's silkiness of speech. But she did not have it, and the best she could do was to pull ma's chair out from the barren . room out into the sunshine of the | porch. The hills, she thought, would . still look like home. ^ Ma did not get up at all next day. j Perhaps she was ill. or perhaps it was j only that she did not want to go out in the sitting room and see how unlike home it looked. Rut the next day she did not get up either, and then 1 1 Libby went to town for the doctor. lie said the excitement had weakened her. P1 and did not seem very certain she 111 111 would ever get up again. That night Libby wrote a letter to Dave, askjng ju him again to let his mother die on the a old place. A week passed, and au answer had not come, and still ma had 1 not left her bed. The packing was all done, it was the 1st of May, and she was just waiting?she did not know for what. Pc Her whole soul rose up against mov- is ing ma from the old place now. when her days were so surely numbered; kc and so she sent a telegram to Dave. telling him his mother was ill, and* asking leave to stay a little longer." *? There came a reply from his partner. fa saying that Dave was a^ray, and would cr not be home for two weeks. "J That night the old woman raised her- w sen nnu suuueu uiu me mini. i?"It's Dave that's killin' ine! It's to jo think Dave sold the place, and turned at me out to die!" And then the way opened before Ioj Libby, and she saw her path. The disinherited child wrote a letter re that night, and to it she signed her w brother's nauie. Out in the world they yc mlfcht have applied to it an ugly word, pc but Libby was only caring for ma. She fa was a long time about it, for it was til hard to put things in Dave's round, m bold hand, and it was hard to say them hr in his silky way. e* The doctor said next morning that It fa was a matter of but a few days at T1 most, for ma was much worse. "It ain't that I'm goin' to die," she Fj said, when Libby came in and found nc her crying; "but I was thinkin' of eu Dave. I keep ^hinkin' and thinkin' of re him when he was a little boy. and bow m he used to run about the place, and how pretty he used to look; and then, just B< as I begin to take a little comfort in reinemberiu' some of the smart things he said, I have to think of what he ' ha9 done, and it doe9 seem like he si| might have waited till?" But the to words were too bitter to be spoken, tii and, with a hard, scraping sound in her fo throat, she turned her face to the wall, wi Libby put her hand to something in of her pocket, and thought of last night's to work with thankfulness. ke About 11 o'clock she entered the m room with the sheets of a letter in her at h/** flat ' ^ \ \ ???inmgmtm "Ma," the said, tremulously, "here's a etter Just come from Dave." "I knew it'd come?I knew it!" And he old voice filled the room with its riumphant ring. Then there crept nto her face an anxious look. "What loes he say?" "He's jsorry about selling the place, na. He really thought you'd like it etter in town. But he's fixed it up or us to stay. He says you'll never lave to leave the place." "I knowed it?I knowed it well nough! You don't know Dave like I lo. But read me the letter." She did read it, and the old woman istened with tears?glad tears nowailing over her withered cheeks. "You can Just unpack our things," he cried, when it was finished, "and et this place straightened out. The lea of your packin' up, and think we o a orAln' In mnt*n In Inrrn ' Vlnn mnt.. ou've made of it! Jest as if D-.ve rould hear of us leavin* the pin e. I lways knowed you'd never 'r eclated )ave." Before morning brok- ina was dead, lappy, because sh nad baek her old aith in Dave -the blind, beautiful alth of the vuother in the son. And ,ibby?1>\- homeless and unloved lbby?was happy, too, for she had n'.-hed well her work of caring for ia.?London Answers. ij HI ii > i <>? ii 11 | j ^Q^fTFToO ^^[NDVSTFJ^; Here's a wrinkle for melon raisers. l French farmer near Marseilles has iscovered that by "watering" his mollis with milk they will grow to twice leir ordinary size. He carries off all le melon prizes at local agricultural Irs. When the electrification of the railays which run underground in Lonon is completed the traveler will be ble to traverse sixty miles underround by electric traction without inning twice over the same piece of ack. A gutta-percha and rubber manuicturing company of Toronto has a Krtlf f s\y* r? rrroln nl fkT-O tnr llf iauc a uai iui a ^iuiu v?v ?w w* ?v t. Johns which is one of the largest rer produced. It is of rubber, and icasures 32o'J feet. Its weight is ine tons*. Machinists and iron workers are eatly interested in the discovery of ic art of welding cast iron, which W. and L. B. Schaap, of Loveland, Col., aim to have made. They declare that is compound which they have invent1 also will braze aluminum as suc>ssfully as borax wililbraze steel. An institute for cancer investigation, i be in the immediate vicinity o? the cademy Hospital at Heidelberg, will J i l>egun soon, and its completion is :pected in the spring of 190d. It will > the first large institution of its kind Germany, and probably in Europe, here scientific investigation will be inbined with treatment of patients. I Any one who can operate a typewritcan transmit messages by the Mury system of high-speed telegraphy, hich the British postal officials have ! /"koflrxr Tf rncomhlac in cnmn pp. i cots, the Wheatstone system. The essage is first perforated on a tape, a machine resembling a typewriter, hen the perforated tape is run rough a transmitter, a facsimile of e tape is produced at the receiving | nt.'oii, and this, upon passing through ! i automatic typewriter, becomes a inted message in ordinary letters. Carlo F.aese, of Florence, has inventI a process of producing bas-reliefs ' ' photography. The basis of the inaition is the property possessed by a m of chromium gelatin of swelling | proportion to the intensity, so that j e light passing through a photoaphie negative produces upon a iromium-gelatin plate a positive in stinct relief. The transparency of an dlnary negative, however, is not only ; oportional to the relief of the origal model, but by an ingenious nutoatie device, involving a double ex- , (sure, this difficulty is avoided, and { negative is obtained having its lights i nl ulindoi nnriv>r>tlv <?rn/lni1 tn nrnrlllfft e effect of relief. Tersely Pat. Hobby has just reached English com sition in his school, and his father a newspaper man, who prides hiinlf on his concise style. Bobby came J imo from school the other day in high , ee because his teacher had praised j s composition on George Washing- j n. lie showed the production to his ; ther with pride, but was somewhat J estfcllen at his parent's criticism: J Too many words, my son. Too many ; ortls altogether. Why can't your j ac-hers instruct you how to express j uir ideas tersely? Now, just sit down that table, take this pencil, cut out cry word you can spare without aving out a single idea, and if your other docs not agree with me that the suit is better than this composition hich your teacher praises, I'll give m hnlf n dollar." The lad took the ?ncil and (fell to work, while his ther read the paper. After a long ale Bobby brought the heavily scored anuseript to him, saying: "It was ird work to keep In something on ery one of the things Washington is mous for, ddd, but 1 guess 1 did it." ais is how the result read: "George Washington became the ither of His Country because he had little boy of his own to whip for itting down cherry trees, and he is markable among American- statesen because he would not tell a lie." J Mamma awarded the half-dollar to abby.?New York Tribune. Defai In Fog Signalling. The preMnt arrangements for fog jnallincmire antiquated and out of uch mm the requirements of the nes. I While perfectly satisfactory r theV^re leisurely working of rail-1 ays prerofcuit during the seventies last centtM^r, they are not adopted the ideas of working and timeteping held by the business depart* ents of railways, or by passengers, the present time. Their defects ar? imerous.?;Electrical Be view, ' i < | '' "FOR DOGS AND CATS." * j Around tho new, low fountains The P. C. autocrats Have placed a sum of wisdom Thai reads: ' For Dogs and Cats."1 Will it catch the eye of puppies Or kittens, do yc'i thinTk, I And lure theru from destruction To a strictly harmless drink? Or will the knowing sparrow, In thankful attitude, Spy this and flit, remarking, ' Hcg pardon, I intrude?" Do they expect the bison, The sprightly kangaroo. The graceful boa-constrictor, Will want to drink there, too. Or must the yak and emu, On little city bats, j Be barred from this refreshment Designed "For Dogs and Cats?" ?Kathcrine L. Mead, in Life. ???GIVING AN ORANGE TARTY. Have you ever given au orange partv? iMis curious and amusing from the xjm start, as each guest is requested ,Jo bring an orange?which request being accompanied by no explanation is quite puzzling, and therofore gives an added interest right at the beginning. Usher each arrival into the dining room, where they are received by the Orange Aid* Committee, whose first , duty is to aid you in registering your orange and tying a ribbon marked by a letter around it so you may identify It later. Then all the guests assemble in the dining room, while the committee continues with its work, which is to count the seeds. Each orange is cut in half, the seeds are extracted, and, after being counted and duly credited to the *THE ORANGE-AID COY owner as entered on the register, they are put into a transparent glass bowl. J Now the guests partake of a repast composed of every conceivable form of orange you can think of?sliced oranges, orange ice, orangeade, orangeflavored candy, etc.?after which you announce that a prize will be offered to the one who guesses nearest to the number of seeds In the bowl, and a booby prize given to the poorest guesser. Also, two prizes will be awarded to the two guests having the most number of seeds and the least number in their respective oranges. Appropriate prizes are in order for a dozen orange sodas at a good soda fountain for the grand prize, and a small jar of orange marmalade win provoke a good deal of mirth when it is given to the winner of the booby prize. And by the time the party winds up you "will lin-l the bowlful of orange seeds have sprung up into a splendid crop of fun. Yet. if you prefer other fruit, you may call the party after almost any variety containing a moderate amount of seeds, although we would not advise a watermelon party, as then the committee would have to spend a week or so counting the seeds.?New York Evening Mail. A SIMrLE EXPERIMENT. Cut two slips of paper long enough for each to encircle the outside of a bottle, leaving an uncovered space between the slips. Fasten them in place by a thread and then wrap a piece of twine around the uncovered glass between the strips. To one end of the twine tie a nail or some convenient hook. Hold the other end with one hand and with the other move the bottle quickly backward and 9 g : HOW PAPER AND STRING ARE PDACKD j forward. This is done in order that the twine my rub upon the exposed glass between the paper bands. This action will shortly cause the surface of the gla-3 to heat. After it is well heated drc > some cold water on it. Now, by a s . -rt stop, you may break the bottle in 1 If so evenly that there will not be one igged place in the entire circle of the Lreak. But of what use is this bit of apparently superfluous knowledge? Well, suppose, for instance, the glass stopper in your cologne bottle (If you are a girl) got stuck and refused to budge. All yon have to do to dislodge the stopper is to wind a heavy cord around the neck, get sOme one to poll one end taut, \ / r t E&r^. /^\ take hold of the other end yourself and wot? the neck mildly to and fro in the string, just as you did in the first experiment. This continued friction will cause the neck of the bottle to become so hot that it will expand, and the glass stopper will be loosened enough to allow it to be pulled out without further trouble.?New York Evening Mail. A NURTURING A CHEERB'UL SriRIT Lucky was the patient In Cednrville who could secure the services of "Aunty" Bond as his nurse, but he must make up his mind that while all his wants would receive due attention and he would have a fair amount of coddling, there were some things in which he could not count on having his own way. "Now you just take that look off your face, won't you?" she halfcoaxed, half-commanded a man who was recovering from pneumonia. "You aren't half as sick as you were a month ago: let your thoughts dwell on that, and let 'em dwell on this: There's lots o' folks outdoors a-falling from the tops o' buildings and a-getting run into and over by automobiles and coutraptions of all 6orts, besides those that are yielding to teniptatiou o' various kinds and being sent to jail, and then to State prison. And while all these dreadful things are going on outside, what is happening to you? You are getting well at home, in peace and plenty, and what's more, in as handsome a walnut bedstead as there is in all Cedarville! "You let your mind dwell on these things a minute, and then you turn IMn'TEE AT WORK. over and go to sleep."?Youth's Companion. COMING DOWN THE NILE. Some years ago an Englishman was coming down the River Nile, in Egypt, on a large boat loaded with grain, and the birds came off from every village and ate the grain piled on the deck. The Englishman asked the Egyptian captain of the boat, "Who owns this grain?" The Egyptian captain said, "I own it." Then the Englishman asked. "Why let the birds eat up the grain?" The Egyptian asked the Englishman, "Who made the birds?" The Englishman answered, "God." The Egyptian asked, "Whether grain was a food which God intended birds to eat?" The Englishman said it was. The Egyptian said. "Can the birds sow and raise the grain for themselves?" The Englishman said, "They cannot." Then said the Egyptian, "Let them eat; God has provided enough for both them and us."?Our Dumb Animals. "BROTHER, WHO KNOCKS." Two players are blindfolded and sit down back to back. Another player creeps to theni and taps one of them gently on the head. The child that is so touched .asks the other blindfolded one: "Brother, who knocks?" If it guesses who It was, the "knocker" must take its place. Hll Prayer. Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, the authoress, says Harper's Weekly, tells of the tribulations of a friend in New York, who is the mother of a particularly mischievous boy of some seven years. "One evening recently," says Mrs. Atherton, "when the mother was getting the boy ready for bed after what she termed 'a day of unmitigated outrageousness' on the part of her hopeful. she said to him: " 'Now when you say your prayers to-night, Richard, remember to ask God to make you a better boy. You have certainly been bad to-day." ? .....iu.w TwrniMtor liocnn hi* ^ICiruiUlUfel.V IUVT jvuuyui o?.. petitions to the Almighty in the usual form. BeforV closing with the customary "Amen," he added: "And please, God, make me a better boy." Then he paused a moment, and, to the utter consternation of the long suffering mother, he concluded his prayer with unabated gravity: "Nevertheless, not my will, oh, Lord, but Thine be done." Abont Cold*. If annoyed by an attack of catarrh, the fumes of a tabiespoonful of tincture of benzoin compound in the room at night will help to relieve it. If the throat is affected by a smarting and rasping, wet the end of a towel In cold water, bind it against the throat and wind around the wet end the dry, warm end of the towel. In the morning the soreness will be retiered. To alleviate a cold, go to bed with i little eucalyptus oil upon an old iiandkerchief, or with a saucerful of the same on a table by the bed. Un:onsclously inhale this during the aight and it will ward off a cold or effect a cure when the cold is develjped.?Philadelphia Inquirer. In the days of the commonwealth Christmas was threatened .with ex* Inction. I _/ * Montreal also is ta-jrinning to talk of ? "greater Montreal." The new Parliament buildipg in Stockholm, which was begun ten years ago. is now completed. The First Royal Fusiliers landed in England recently after twenty-one rears of foreign service. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the Introduction of electric traction into Germany will soon be celebrated in Berlin. The French PostolHec Department is now operating twenty motor car postal routes in various parts of the country. Iu a recent examination of French recruits ten ont of the twenty examined confessed they had never heard of Napoleon. Three of the seedless apples produced by John F. Spencer, of Grand Junction, Col., were recently sold in London for ?25. Prices at Taormina and Messina in Sicily for hotel accommodations during the approaching visit of the Kaiser have been trebled. Toward the end ot May. says the Berlin Colonial Gazette, a thousand Boers wilt probably emigrate from the Trans vaal iuto German East Africa. A granite monument is to be raises! in the cemetery at Middle Village. L. I., to mark the graves of the sixty unidentified victims of the Slocum disaster. Thermometers have been placed In the Chicago street cars, in compliance with the car heating and ventilating ordinance, so that people can see Just how cold they are. For the destruction of tigers in Burma the authorities, says the Lueknow Gazette, noV offer fifty-three shilling# per head, for leopards and panther* twenty-six shillings, and for heart eleven shillings. PKOillNEXT PEOPLE. Speaker (j^nnon is a great lover of green corn. At sixty-eight Grover Cleveland no proaches close to the three score and ten mark. Among the Americans who recently left Paris for Moute Carlo is James Gordon Bennett. It has been officially arranged that the Prince and Princess of Wales shall visit India in November and stay until March. The Japanese emneror's yearly expense of living is limited. For this purpose lie draws $3,000,000 from the national treasury Joseph Clioate. American ambassador to the court of St. James, lias now served longer in that position than any of his predecessors since the retirement thirty-five years ago of Chas. Francis Adams. General Xogi and Genera! Kurokl are members of the Presbyterian cburcb, and Field Marshal Oyaina's wife is also a member in good standing of that denomination. Admiral Togo is a Roman Catholic. France has a financier at the' head of its new ministry. Mons. Maurice Rouvier, the new premier, has been accustomed to say that "So long as the finances of a nation are sound there is nothing to fear " Senor Modesto Garces. former President of the State of Cauea a ad now special" engineer for the National Government of Colombia, is examining the extensive coal deposits on the Pacific slop* with a view to asking bids tor their exploitation. Fifty-six years ago Louis Kossuth led the Hungarian Assembly to declare independence of Austria, and became dictator and commander-in-chief in the unsuccessful war which followed A few weeks ago Francis Kossuth, his son, was summoned to the Austrian capital by the emperor. Slightly Mistaken. The man in the gray bowler a size and a half too small was evidently down on the Volunteers. "They're no soldiers," he said, indicating the local citizen soldiers hurrying to the drill hall. "They don't Know now to waiK use suiui?to aujt one could tell they're brick'ayors' laborers and shopboys at a glance. If It were only by the way they walk. Now, here comes a real old soldier. Great Scott, what a difference1. This chap's been in the regulars I can tell by the quick step and the way he carries his rifle." "Not a bit of It," laughed the man with the unclean collar. "That's my brother Bill, t-'s a lamplighter. 'E got that walk carrying the pole."? London Tit-Bits. It is better to live one verse of tha dible than to be able to preach about hem all. * i Review^! The more Magazines 1 I Indispensable is The F ** Indispensable," " The one maga: I world under a field-glass." "An ec current literature,"? these are some o people who read the Review of Reviews, more necessary is the Review of Reviews, b< is in all the moil important monthlies of periodical literature that nowadays people with it is to read the Review of Reviews, ing section, it has more original matter and i the most timely and important articles prink Probably the moft useful section of all is ] ress of the World," where public events am crpLimd in every issue. Manv a subscribe worth more than the price of tne magazine, depicting current history in caricature, it i Hcviews covers fire continent*, and y Men in public life, the members of Cong captains of induAry who must keep " up v women all over America, have decided thai THE REVIEW OF REV 19 Astor Place, missionary to Cmfa, Is Dr. J. G. Montfort. sento^^^H^^H '.be Herald aud Presbyter, ninety-flfth year . Slgnor Garofalo, tbe oiogist reckons tbat through rope 10,000. persons are annua demned for ranrder. ;./ Jobn Q. Packhard, a rich CaliflQKn. is having a $75,000 library bujAN?rerected for Marysrillc, Cal., 'tfeeat^Kf he got his start in life there. Manuel Enriquez, one of the oldest pioneers of California and the last survivor of General Fremont's battah - t ? > . ion in tne Mexican war, nas jo?i u?w at Los Augeles, Cal. One of the many private pension bill* which passed the House recently provided for increasing the pension oflgfK mtind G. Ross from $12 to $30 a mtia. He was once a Senator. ( nf Dr. Nicolas Senn, of Chicago, III., the noted surgeon, urges general support of the White Cross Society, saying that it is destined to do in time of peace what the Red Cross Society does in war. Captain F. C. March, who arrivedro San Francisco, Cal., recently from * Manchuria, where he was American military attache with General Knroki, brought with him 500 photographs taken on the field of battle. H. W. Kapp, who has just been appointed general agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad lines at Baltimore, Md.,k was born in Marietta, Pa., In 1S44, beginning his railroad career eighteen years later in a humble position. Only one man in the city of London outside the Tower, possesses the password which enables him to answer the challenge of the entries at any time. It is the Lord Mayor, and the pass- , word is given to him by authority of j the King. ? j rAnu&o. a Mrs. Charles Warner Fairbanks holds three collegiate degrees. Princess Christian, one of King Edj^H ward's sisters, is interested IiljjmuihM charities. Madame Zola has converted the nor-r\ elist's home at Medara into a house for nurses. Miss Helen A. Knowlton, of Rockland. Me., is the only woman Lawyer in that State. The Canadian|Arctic gold fields hare ; one female Government official. Miss Ryan. For seven years she has held the post of inspector of gold dust. ": Mrs. C. P. Woolley, a well-known Chicago clnbwoman find writer, is to 4 I take up her residence in a sociai set-Mi tlement among the negroes on the ?fl South Side. I Another woman has been appointed postmaster In Indian Territory by J|1 President Roosevelt. Mrs. George Ket- ll-l ton having been placed iu charge of MJ the office at Marlow, I. T. \ , j The St. Petersburg correspond* the Daily Mail says that Grand Dncb- jH ess Elizabeth, accompanied by au aid, visited the assassin of Grand Duke ^ Sergius in his cell at Moscow. Miss Luella Miner, a graduate of ] Oberlin in the class of 1884. and for I many years a missionary lu China, has I been made executive head of the a Bridgman school for girls in Pekln, I China. J Miss Alice, Robertson, postmistress fl at Muskogee, I. T., is the grauddaojgi ter of the Rev. Dr. Worcester, pioneer missionary among the Cherokee* be fore their removal from Georcta to H the Indian Territory. 9 To, assist her husband and son in fl their undertaking business, Mrs. A. J. H Glackuian, of Rockfort, Iud.. studied fl einblnming, and cares for the bodies of H women and children. Mrs. Glachw^n^B recently received a State licence an<r"^B thoroughly understands her work. i M Economical John Chinaman. ^9 An amusing trait of the Chinese character is pointed out in the last^H report of the British consul at Foo^H chow, says the London Daily Mall. A British company started a matct^H factpry to compete against the anese. It seemed to prosper, and stopped. All the consul drily remarks Is. would be well, however, if they bo^^H in mind that the Chinaman not on^^^l counts the number of matches box, but also takes into conslderatil^^^| the number of those that break striking or fail to ignite, these bei^^H the complaints brought against matches hitherto turned out by company." An English physician declares the eating of flesh meat makes a Immoral. There is no question the paying for it makes him ;irofaH^^| declares the Washington Post. ^^^^9 Reviews there are, the more Lcview of Revicv/s must take,** "The in public affairs and ? the phrases one hears from noted The more magazines there are, cause it brings together the best tha^^^^^^^^^H the world. Such u the flood say tl.at the only way to rp Entirely over and above this review 11 titrations than mot magazines, d in anv monthly. Dr. Albert Shaw's illustrated " 1 issues are authoritatively and :r writes, " This department alone \ The unique cartoon departraei^^^^^^^^^J mother favorite. Review is American, flrft and rest, professional men, and the nth tne times," intelligent men it is "indispensable." IEWSCOMPANY^M^^^^^B New York 1