(Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NEB, John H. Ream, - Publisher Thff Russian government Is willing to lot the people have elections, providing they vote for the government. The price of gasoline has gone op gain, and owners arc almost beginning to wish that tlielr automobiles nte liny. i A famous physician Is experimenting with the effects of music on rain. Pay ing them back In their own coin, so to peak. The man who In paying "0 cents n gallon for gasoline. Isn't able to figure rut wherein flo-ccnt denatured olcohol Will help much. Tho Governor of Cuba will receive n salary of f2.,000 a year. It should l remembered, however, that lie will have to Hva In Cuba. The man who seeks divorce because his wife doesn't talk enough will he considered a fit subject fir an Inqulr ndo de lunatlco. A man always finds It hard to con- real his satisfaction when he picks tip another man's hat and finds that It Is too email for him. It Is surprising to read that a new revolt Is threatened lu Russia. Many had supposed that a continuous revolt was good enough fur the Russians. In Pennsylvania there is a man who declares that his wife hasn't Hpoken to him for seven years. Koine people will be unable to understand why lie Is tiiuk Ing a fuss about It If James J. IIIll were younger lie might have hope of some day being lu a position to buy tho caiih and soil it again at a profit of 40 or DO per ceut wbeu the population doubles. Kir Oliver Lodge tells us that the sun will be cold In 10,000,000 years, and what Is turning our hair grny with worry Is the fact that the coal upply will last only half that time. Honor Is being paid to the memory of Mndoc, the Welsh prince, who Is aid to have discovered America lu 1270. Christopher Columbus, however, does not recall hearing anything about S at the time. Smokers who have been fearing that the disturbances lu Cuba might cur tail the output of genuine Havana ci gars will he Interested to hear that the Connecticut tobacco crop Is unusually large. Italians have erected lu New York City a monument to Verdi, tho grand old man of Italian music. This Is the third memorial which the Italians have presented to New York. The others are tho monuments to Columbus and Garibaldi. A hoodlum Is a boy whose mother and father "have tluie to fuss" about him. They "guess he Is big nouglt and smart enough to take care of himself." If a neighbor complains of his mean nets tho parents think that neighbor too low down to live. The hoodlum begins his course by runulnt; wild In the street; he ends It on the (allows. But, as a general thing, his parents deserve hanging better than he does. Marquis I to and Fluid Marshals Yamngata and Oynma have been cre ated princes by the Japanese Emperor In recognition of their services In the war with Russia, and Vice Admiral Togo has been mnde a marquis for the same reason. All that we can do lu America to reward our military heroes Is to advance them In rank, and even then the promotion of successful offi cers over the heads of men who have been longer In the service Is fiercely criticised. In recent years, as all readers of the papers know, It has become too com mon among a certain class of people to have the marriage ceremony per formed under strange and unusual con ditions, as on platforms at county fairs, on the top of a smokestack, etc. The cheap notoriety that attaches to this sort of marriage destroys the sanc tity that should pertain to the cere mony and gives the unthinking occa sion to regard it as a Joke rutber than a serious transaction. There Is alto gether too much trifling with the mar riage tie already without turning the ceremony Into a monkey show. There Isn't niuch question that most of us would get along better If a little more attention were given to mastica tion, if we ate less meat Indeed, less of everything; but there are so many other offences against good physiology more serious lu tlielr results and al most equally prevalent that the layman may be excused for skepticism as to the necessity for political economists deserting tlielr own field to push tne cause of the chewers. A man who cou Intently chews each mouthful of cus tard forty-seven times through life may have a chance of living to bo a 100 a fraction of a point better than tho man who bolts batter cakes whole, but the latter during his shorter earthly so journ, having his attention Jes closely fixed oil his stomach, im actually do more good In the world than tho hu twin hashing machine. Among the cherished memories of u certain charming old lady Is that of a xcatuier or ner childhood, whose theory of life wu reduced to a simple princi ple: -liouru to read well, young la diesto enunciate distinctly, to modu late the voice pleasingly, to Interpret the words of the author with Kjuipii thy and understanding; learn to read well, aud-uil other virtues will follow. It Is possible that the acquirement of j all tbe virtues seems a slightly moro i complicated matter than It did to the I old gentleman of se.cn.y years ago ! Nevertheless. the advlc I. not to " laughed away. If only because It recalls i the days w hen reading aloud was count- j d one of tbe most desirable of the Das arts of life. This Id no reflection upot the art of reading as taught In these latter days; the qucutlon Is not of the actual process, hut of the place that rending aloud used to hold in family life. Many a gray h ilrcd man or wom an who never heard of "r.iund tables," and never discovered that authors had cHrly or late styles, yet knows his Sisrtf or Thackeray or Shakespeare ns few young people of to-day ever know them. In part, this Is due to the fact that the field of rending now covered by young (HMiple in much larger than It wns half a century ngo. A deeper cause lies in the decline of the linlilt of reading aloud. We have no time now ,tn read aloud, we say. IVrbaps not; yet be fore we decide, might It not he well to consider whether any other recreation otters more permanent pleasure or greater enrichment to the life. Hooks read aloud winter evenings nlxnit the lire, with the whole family sharing the Interest and the discussions, will hold a warmth of color which time will not dim. Between their pages will lie countless happy memories a treasure whose value will deepen through all the years to come. While certain elderly gentlemen of athletic proclivities were dixpertinr? in the links of a New York golf club In competitive endeavor to reduce records, a Chicago doctor of theology was l-i-velghlng vigorously against the humor ous Ir. Osier, whose merry Jest nt the expense of CO bobs up occasionally to plague the supersensitive. The theolo gian pointed out that Moses did not be gin to preach until ho was 80 years J age, und from this undisputed assertion ho drew the conclusion that there Is no age limit until n man's vigor has gone. If any argument were permissible It might he contended that much of the great work of Moses was performed while he was yet yuung young not merely from the ancient but the pres ent way of looking at years. Hut no Isjdy now takes seriously the limita tions prescribed by Dr. Osier excot possibly a few over wrought gentlemen who are, unhappily, devoid o. the sav ing grnce of humor. To calm the feel ings of these sensitive few we inav speak not only of the preaching Moses lint of the elderly golfers who went forth to battle amid "wintry blasts and flurries of snow." It Is recorded th.it of this goodly array of competitive an- I dents and honorables not me was tin- I der S5, while most of thein had passed the Osier age of usefulness, and several of them were over 80. A merry young fellow of (8 carried off one of the prizes, and n stripling of two and sev enty figured proudly In the running. And In order to accomplish the task presented It was required of these hus ky sthletes to cover ground to the ex tent of seven miles, a mere bit of at tendant exercise which they considered hardly worth mentioning. In nil likeli hood Moses thought nothing of walk ing seven miles a day, even after he Iss- gan preaching, for he was n pedestrian of large experience and was In excel lent training. Hut the conjunction of the patriarch and the eonteniKray golfers, for Illustrative purposes. Is fe licitous chiefly ns showing that In si) ages of tho world's history decrepitude, physical and mental, Is usually not so much u matter of years as of tempera ment and mode of life. The octogenar ian on the golf links and In the pulpit la constantly with us to remind us f the humor of Dr. Osier's quips and fan cies. PERILOUS RESCUE OF DOQ. Enirllah Colliery Minmtrr Lowered Into Pit to Save Starving Collie. An Interesting story of the rescue of a dog from a deep and disused pit shaft comes from Mealsgate, Cumberland, in spector Hliike Jones, the Cumberland representative of tho Roynl Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, was Informed that a dog had been thrown down a disused pit shaft neur Mealsgate. On arrival he found that the shaft of tho pit, which had not been worked for thirty years, was 540 feet deep, and up to within ninety-one feet of the surface was full of water. The dog could Just bo discerned on a rotten wood ledge ninety feet dowu. and about a foot from tho water. The All Hallows colliery manager. Mr. John Walker Steele, had two beams placed across the pit mouth and a pul ley fixed, and seatlug himself In a looped rope he was swung over the shaft and lowered through overgrow ing brambles down Into the darkness. He reached the unlucky dog, which was by this time starved and weak, and, placing It across his knees, was with out mishap hauled back to daylight and safety. Mr. 8tecle was given a rous ing cheer on emerging. Tho dog, a collie. Is now In Inspector Hlako Jones' IKisscsslon nnd Is doing well. Westmin ster Gazette. Ilame Na tarn's I'uor Taatr. An Englishman who has been visit ing In the suburbs recently is hyper critical, to say the least. Ever since he has been visiting this gentleman lit; has becu finding fault with everything.' The other evening they were on the host's iMMiutlful lawn. "This would be charming, Mr. Hlaiik. If It were not for the color of the grass." "Why, what Is the matter with the grass?" Inquired the surprised host. "Ton green, too green." sighed the English limn; "it 8hjI1s the color effect.' Hon-" ton Itecord. I'rouer After .ill. . "Will you take me?" The girl eagerly awaited an answer from the young man, yet she had the seeming of modesty. ".Sure." he rcs'smded. "In a flash." , As an ambitious amateur ho had been making a specialty of this style of picturePhiladelphia Ledger. At the lalellluriK'e Oll'.re. The I.ady Now. rememlsT, pleae, 1 want a very good maid and one 'that Is absolutely discreet. The Proprietor You can be Nrfcct!y i sure of the maid I nut going lo send ro,, "as Ikvii five y.'srs at a tele- l'houe itchlKard. Ia Sourlie. . TTi 1 T, 11 1 UH " '""' W- ? 1,0 erowg u b There never w as u wife ko old that she didn't look better ai u widow. AJiijrty-lhree Years War A - J. ' ,- z '.' V-' -! .' W a. 1 . f a t Li' 1 The recent capture by a Dutch force Of n native stronghold In the Island of Celebes recalls tho fact, vcrlKkcd In quick succession of more momentous occurrences, that (lie Netherlands are still engaged lu a war In the Far Fast which was begun thirty-throe years ugo. This perpetual war Is not con Heeled with the Celebes Incident. It Is another story and here it Is: At the upper end of the Island of Su mi'.cra. called the outpost of the Dutcli Fast Indies, Is un ancient and powerful warlike ioople called Achlneso, who bear some resemblance to the Malay race, hut are said to have emigrated about the seventh century from India. They are now, and have been since the thirteenth century, Mohammedans, Marco Polo, the Irrespressible, visited the Island toward the end of the thir teenth century, but the first foreigners to attempt the settlement and conquest of Sumatra were the Portuguese, about 'Wi years later. Acbln Is about the si.e of Ireland, and has u population of 7oO,(N)0. For MO years the Portuguese strug gled to overthrow tlie Sultan of Arlrin. hut those" were the days of splendor and power of the Hultanate. , Tho Sul tan carried tho war Into Malacca and although he accompanied an urmhda of TAX) ships, carrying 10,000 warriors, to the iclghloring state, the Dons were able to defeat the Moslem chieftain In Malacca. In his own strongholds In Achln, they were not so suewssful, and retired after an intermittent warfare lasting close to a century. The last of the Portuguese hud de parted 100 years before the advance lH)st of the Dutcli made Its upKar- a nee. For more than fifty years the Dutch were contented to occupy more or less peacefully the lower part of the Island, leaving the Sultan of Achln to the enjoyment of his own. In the meantime it happened that the Hindoo dynasty In Achlu was followed by an Arab race of rulers, and tho Achlnese degenerated In tlielr civilization. Its commerce declined, Its government be came Irresponsible, and gave way to a disordered state bordering on au- archy. Having been swallowed up In the French Empire by Napoleon, the 1st amis of Sumatra and Java, after the conqueror's fall, passed to the iiosses- slou of Pitiglmid. When Holland once moro beean-fi a State, Hugland traded the Islau'l of Sumatra for Malacca, an exchange which was welcomed by both governments. During the ltrltisli occupation of Su matra the English had established a sort of friendship with the Sultan of Achln. The Hrltlsli winked at the buccaneering and piracy carried on by the subjects of bis Highness, so long as they did not make a mistake and capture u Riitlsh ship, und In return for this moral blindness, their good friend the Sultan permitted the English to reside lu Achln and develop trade. In passing title to Holland In treaties of 1819 and IS'JI, the English specially stipulated that the Dutch must not conquer the Sultanate of Achln. And the Dutch, however, unwillingly, have kept, their word. Achln. while It was for fifty years on El Dorado for the English, was a source of much discomfort to the Dutch. There was no responsible gov ernment at Achln. The Sultan was a figurehead, and the sopio were becom ing yearly more proficient lu piracy and buccaneering. Having worked at those trades until the prosHct of gain lKeamo Insignificant, they turned their attention to the Dutch end of the Island. The Achlnese crossed the frontier In largo bands and swarmed over the country. They captured the Dutch na tives and sold thorn for slaves. Their pirates ravaged the strain and the China Sea, attacking and plundering Europeans. The Dutch Indian (Jov eminent, therefore, lu spite of Hid trea ties, had to send armed forces against the marauders. In order to protect their owu end of tbe islands tin? Dutch had to maintain men under arms at all times. The northern part of Sumatra Is probably the worst in the world for a foreign urmy to invade. It Is full of pitfalls and there are trc.tehcrous riv er Issls. Only the native knows the country, and It Is small wonder the Dutch have been unsucivssf ul, and have made little .headway In their campaign. Nearly every general sent out to take command returns to Euros defeated and humiliated. Holland Is compelled to keep In her East Indian possessions au army of ulKnit -10,(HHI men. Most of these are mertviiarles, nnd but for the trouble in Achln half t the force would be ample for keep ing order. i ne AchlncM' are good fighters and, Nelng Moslems, are fctirlcsx lu battle. Ocai.i nnder these circumstances they are told Is but, a transl.tt Ion front this world to Paradise. Naturally they are fanatics and carry on a guerrilla war fare. Their favorite mode of attack Is by ambuscade; they usually devote their attention to culling out convoys, blowing up trains, nnd by these crude, uncxiHH-ted tactics are a hi a to keep the Dutch forces coustautly worn out, fJtntfglc of ft. XKitcK Md the people oF AcMi vKo resist VViijug&tioi wift ANaJey Ferocity Aside from those secret attacks t lie Achlnese fight fairly, and when they capture Dutch soldiers treat them hu manely and usually send them hack to their own camp under escort. Still the war continues. The Achln ese are no nearer subjugation than they were thirty years ngo. In addi tion to tln army constantly kept in the Dutch East Indies, the Netherlands (lovernment maintains n special fleet of warships to patrol the Achln coast. Piracy has. Indeed, been relegated by the Achlnese to the limbo of lost arts, but independence Is still theirs. The war In Achln Is no longer a war of conquest; It Is a war of extermination, KEEP A GAMBLER'S SCHOOL. Monte t'nrlii Mtmnvern Train Their t'rntilt-r Mrntt Methodically. The Monte Carlo casino trains all Its own croupiers, and very rigorous that training Is. When an applicant Is fa vorably considered for training ho has to come up for a medical examination. Alter this examination the recruit to. tne croupiers chair comes up for six hours' training every day in the school which is situated at the back of tho ca sino, provided that he can prove he has been n resident lu the principality of Monaco for at least a year. Throwing money is one of the most important items of the curriculum, for It Is Imperative that a croupier shall be able to throw a handful of money so that It will pitch with unfailing precis ion on any spot on the table. To throw money quickly and so that it does not pitch on end and roll Is not so easy as it seems nnd It Is generally three weeks before the young croupier satisfies his trainer that he is proficient in tills part. Now comes the. most difficult part of the training, learning to reckon money mechanically. The croupier must never count; If he did the slow progress of the game would try the patience of all tho players. He must become a verita ble ready reckoner and this, of course, only coims by practice. Hut to prove to what a high state tills reckoning can be brought It may be said thnt liefore a croupier passes to the caslnao trained staff he Is aide to tell the value or the wins In his hand simply by the feel of them that Is to say, he could pick up a number of coins and without paus ing tell you their value. .Every day each pupil Is made to sit as croupier at a table around which are gathered his fellow pupils, who start playing with metal disks of sizes and values equivalent to the coins used nt Hie tables. This test Is a trying, one for the budding croupier. Everyone does his best to fluster him, tho disks spin across the cloth and If his mind does not take in the proper values and he loses his head he knows that his prosjiccts are in Jeopardy. ' : Once u croupier becomes proficient he can, when drafted into ploying saloons, hold his post for a great many years, but as he only receives $.'100 per annum as a roulette croupier he Is not able to save much. Nevertheless, he Is .well looked after, for If he becomes 111 he has his medical attendance free. De troit Tribune. tiulf of Mexico In Ueep.' An elaborate report has been received nt the Navy Department from Lieut. Holey. U. S. N tin the gulf stream. Lieut. Soiey has charge of the hydro graphic olllco nt New Orleans and he shows conclusively In his report that the gulf stream has an existence in the 1 Ou.f of Mexico, a fact which hns hith erto been lu dispute. According to Lieut. Soley the stream flows In the Gulf of Yucutan channel, where tho water Is deep, 1,200 fathoms In the center, und flows out through the Straits of Florida, where the depth Is less. The center of the gulf is n deep hole of largo area, moro than 2,000 fathoms deep, and tho water here Is very cold. The main current of the gulf Is a distinct part or the gulf stream. It comes from tbe equatorial current, flowing westward through tho Carib bean sen, which Is warm, with a tem perature of 80 .degrees, until It flows Into tho cooler waters of the gulf by the Yucatan channel. The stream fel lows tho general line of the coast until It passes out by Florida. There are some counter currents In the gulf. A notable fact Is that the currents' of all the rivers emptying Into the (hilf of Mexico turn to the right to the west at Motdle and the delta of tho Missis sippi, und to the south along the Mex ican coast In Ilefen of Tobacco. Spurgeou, the preacher, Is said to have said that It was his habit to smoke cigars "to the glory of Hod." hut now we Hud serious people writing to say that the use of tobiu-co In any form Is Improper for clergymen of any denom ination. One wonders why, seeing thnt the iiKHlerate use of the herb is asso ciated neither with evil passions nor with heretical doctrines. The North American Indians, who were the earliest smokers known to history, always brought out the pipe of peace as a symlsil of their intention. if not to beat the tomahawk into tbe plowshare at least to dwell together In unity until further notice. And it Is au Indisputable fact that great teachers have often been great smokers. It was amid "clouds of to baceo smoke" that Tennyson set to work, "In Memorial!!." to reconcile re ligion with science; it was in a similar If not quite so dense an atmosphere that Carlyle ussgned the Deity and Iho devil their resptsiivo roles in the his tory of the French revolution. These prcccdciita should sulllce, and If they do not, there Is the example of Kinrs- ley to lo quoted. He was a parish priest and his standards and ideals were high, but he also enjoyed hi a plpo when his day's work was done and did not hesitate to say so. Loudon Mall. lleriaudana Follr llrpreaeated. The Bermudas have a parliament of thirty-six members, while the number of voters U ouly 1,'JOO. ' GET DOWN TO THE SIMPLE LIFE. By Juliet V. Strauss. Women have run to seed In finding the easy way. The easy way never yet developed character or fosterrd the real religion that made our pio neer mothers so beautiful. .There are certain phases of modern home life which are positively Irreligious. We must get back to our old Ideals If we wish our children to experience any of the crude human emotions we ourselves so hopelessly long for. If you rre Interested In saving the souls s. rit,' if y r JfMET v. sTHACss. f coming generations and saving a foul merely means quickening a human !ody to some sense of the divine you must try to get everybody you love down to n simple and natural basis of living. The children must play heartily and healthfully, and all tbe family must be hungry and tired and sleepy at the right time. The young folk must believe In love nnd the old folk mustn't sneer at them for It. and nil of the f.Vaiily must understand that science, smart modern philosophies, hu man achievement and discovery, modern disregard of old standards of truth and decency nil these things crumble Into nothingness and are hopelessly cheap and futile leslde the plain old Christian Ideal of home with Cod in It. Not the sentimental Cod of the chain-letter writer or the narrow-minded God of the religious bigot, but the Cod which means nil that warms the human heart to hojte, to love, to confldenit! In life Hud morality; to Joy and beauty nnd laughter and tears. The God that responds In us to every form of life and thrills lu us to every sense of rapture and every pang of pain. We have wandered far away from the true Ideal of religion nnd of home, but there are some hopeful Indica tions of a return to quieter ways of living, changed public sentiment and less nuditc-lous thought and Impious ex peri mont. We are coming back to a willingness to believe that "God Is the breath of life" and that marriage and home are his divine institutions. HOW TO HOLD HUSBAND'S LOVE. By Carmen Sylva, Queen of Ioumania. Men look for goddesses In women, not weak creatures who will cling to them for support. And It happens most unfortunately that women, who ns long as they remain unmarried seem perfectly well able to take care of them selves, directly they have taken a husband seem to think it Incumbent on them to assume a helpless dependent air. And they forget that the being from whom they expect guid ance and sup)ort is but a weak, erring mortal like them selves, whom of their own choice they make into an Idol. They have but themselves to blame when the awakening comes, nud they step out of their dream into the reality of life, to find that the being they worshiped and idealized Is hut a mere human creature after all. In that hour of disenchantment such poor deluded wom en may well usk themselves how they could have been so foolish as to give up their cherished Independence and trust to another to direct and supKrt their steps, Instead of confiding in their own Judgment. Most of all will these reflections force themselves on the mind of the wife who cannot help lielng aware that she possesses a more hw erful Intellect and a stronger will than her once adored husband. Is it not hers to remain steadfast lu the fiercest throes of moral and physical pain, to set her teeth firmly THE FLAG GOES BY. Hats off! Along the street there cornea A blare of bugles, a ruffle of drum, A flash of color beneath the sky ; Hats off! The flag is passing by ! Blue and crim.-ion and white It shines, Over the steel-tipped, ordered lines, lints off! The colors before us fly ; But more than the flag is passing by. Sea fights and laud fights, grim and great, fought to make and to save the State; Weary marches, and sinking ships; Cheers of victory on dying lips ; Days of plenty and days of peace ; March of s strong land's swift increase ; Equal Justice, right, and law. Stately honor and reverend awe ; Sign of a Nation, great and strcug To ward her people from foreign wrong; Pride and glory and honor, oil Live in the colors to stand o- fall. Hats off! i Along the street there comes A blare of bugles, a ruffle of drums ; And loyal hearts are beating blah: HaU off! Tho flag Is passing by ! Youth's Companion. H--r-es4'-M--H"-' ! .. ;. .j..n.n PURELY there were horrors S) enough In largo mill In the mid ""illo of winter with all the forelira labor rioting lu a desperate strike Madeline Reynolds had tluuight of them ull, too. Tbe greatest was possible harm to her husband, which took many awful forms. lu this great fear, her petty womanly fears hnd sunk out of sight. That was probably why she had' neglected pull ing tbe curtain low enough to. shut out all sight of the room In which she sat. Red shades are cosy thlugs, so are open fires, nnd the rocking cliulr that Rob ert had given her on Christmas was cosiest of all. Bending forward she pulled a basket towards her, picking out a multitude of small garments. She folded them blow Iy In piles, until she came to some thing partially finished. Slipping on her thimble, hhe threaded a needle witn deft fingers, nnd rocking placidly to nnd fro proiveded to put the finishing stitches to a baby's dainty dress. All tbe time between the curtain and, the window sill there lurked a horror In human fejm. A beard that has grown uutieodcd for week, especially If It tK bluck at midnight, will add an almost Inhuman ferocity to a man's face. ' He wntchtsl because be had nothing else to do while he waited. Two other half-starved human beings would Join lu about flfteeu minutes. The volley that broke foj-th In the eust valley seemed to him to be right on top of Hector's biggest factory. This only raised him to shift hU position to ease bis stiffening kuees and to take a look 1 End of the Strike. X s r:-:. Strip SACREDNESS towards the east to see If it meant a fire. When he looked back the woman stood somewhere In the middle of the room, the tiny white thing nt her feet unheeded. Suddenly she dropped on her knees by the side of a well-worn arm chair, pulled the smoking Jacket that had been foldexl on Its top down ward towards her with a wild, fierce gesture, burled her face In It, and shook. ' It came to the man who watched be tween the curtain nnd the window jlll. that after nil these people could feel. But Reynolds was u lucky man. noth ing ever hurt him. The two or three attempts that had been made directly against him had been turned as If by direct Intercession of an unseen jiower. Didn't she know that? He shrugged his shoulders wearily. What did he care? Pretty soon he would see two dark forms stealing through the bushes and cuie would carry a bag from which u strong oily smell would strike on the nostrils. "Ah, that's the smell for them! She'll feel then what It means to be homeless, thrown out Into the cold." The thought thnt had given birth to many a plan seemed stuuehow dulled of its significance in the light from the cosy room. Tbe woman hurried away suddenly, closing the door behind her. Where hnd she gone? It couldn't matter liny how, with another weary shrug of the shoulders. When the duor opened she was not alone. A young glrly with n shawl r.f the vivid stripes loved by bis com pa - TIIEHK ll'HKKI) A MORIiOII I. A lll'Ml.N rosxi. triots followed her Into the room wi'h u certain familiarity in her surround ings that roused something (tf wonder in the man's brain. Madeline pulled a chair toward tie girl. "I had to run," she said, when she had caught her breath. "They are wild to-night, and they lurk every where." But neither glanced toward the raised curtain. "I feared you would not come to night, Marie," tho woman said, as she leaned against tbe mantel heavily. Ev ery word reached tbe man who watch n in tbe grim, silent struggle, without allowing a groan to escas her to betray her sufferings? But we must not pretend that all women are endowed with equal strength of soul, or that all come out of the fiery ordeal ns con querors. The first fatal and Irreparable mistake lu tuur lied life Is that of confiding one's sorrows to the nearest, dearest friend, of allowing any one u peep Into the diffi culties of the situation. And it must be owned that In this nultter men on the whole display greater reticence and discretion than the majority of women. IDLE QUESTIONS COSTLY. By John A. Howland. the world of nil its Idle, Irritating fric tions and a day might become as a thousand years In achievement. Volumes would not be gin to catalogue nil these possibilities of this endless procession of handicapping Influences. The effect of the Idle interrogator on social and business life Is something tremendous In Its aggregate of evils. Two minutes or two hours after he Is gone the person suffering ironi his questions may reflect tbe feelings upon the wisest, most unselfish of all tils callers. Doing so, too, he makes a lasting critic ol a house's business methods. He may earn his discharge because of the Invasion of Idleness. Or, with shaken, shattered nerves, he may go home to his family In a mood that makes his coming a visitation of evil, rather than the pleasure that It might have been. Everywhere the Idle questioner, with his Insistence, is challenging his own intellect and the time and teiiqsjr of those with whom he distributes his Interrogations. In ordinary swinl Intercourse the person asking it fool ques tion of friend or acquaintance is embarrassed whun he finds there Is no sane answer to the query. But the selfish questioner who runs amuck in the world, asking right nnd left, and Indicriininatcly of bis fellows, liecomes a Sisial renegade against which no statutes huve been framed. You, reader are you one of them? OF LIFE. By Rev. A. Arnold Ross. The reading public Is quite familiar with the brutal theory credited to Professor Osier. It Is to the effect thnt the average man passes tbe period of usefulness nt about 40 years ol age, becomes thereafter a burden upon socle ty and ought to be dissised of In a manner similar to that by which a worthless dog is gotten rid of. While this theory has been al most universally condemned. It 1ms, neverthe less, emboldened certain men and women who look. tit life from n iculiur point of view to advocate n like dlsiwsal of the Incurably sick in body or mind. And now comes Bernard Shaw, of unenviable notoriety as a playwright, to advocate similar measures for the morally unfit. Each and nil of these advocates of the lethal chamber might not find themselves In uncongenial company so long as the tables were not turned upon themselves with that African king whose most delectable pastime Is in ending the careers of certain of his subjects, being the first to put into effect the conviction of the average lover in the edible character of his sweetliearr, he being report-s ed ns having his favorite wife served up for his dinner. f The progress of civilization has been marked by the growing saeredness In which life Is held. Our growth away from savagery shows au ever-increasing conviction that the issues of life und death should be left in the hands of him who alone cun give life, and who nloue has the moral right to take It away. ed, far the window frames of old bouses shrink with age and cold even as do human frames. Ho knew the girl, too. He had scowieu with the sur prise of it when she turned her face to ward the window. "Marie here!" Hut they were talking again. "I have the basket ready, Marie, It is the biggest one. I put in everything except something for Robert's supper and our breakfast. It cught to last for a day or two." "I will see that It does, never fear. I discover It to them by bits. The chil dren never think, and father " she shrugged her shoulders sadly. So this was where "little mother" got the food thnt had roused only u vague wonder in his brain. "Marie, when do. you think It wii! end?" the woman's voice sounded for lord nnd o weary. "I try not to wor ry, but I cnu do so little to help. Rob ert had used all his ready money to. re lieve the suffering. It's all we can do." Her voice sunk into a piteous whlsier. Here was a woman with imagination, with pity! She could see, nnd, yes she could feel. No other forms came stealing through the bushes, the oil soaked bag must have proven heavy, it could be stopped to morrow, the whole damnable busiuess. If he and n few oth er men would say tbe word. Two of them were comlntr. In nnoth. er five mluutes three faces, fierce-eyed, mack-boarded, white and shrunken, ranged along the uurre.w slit between the curtain and the window sill. "Listen," said he who had watched no long. "I exis'ct a box from home lu u dav or two, Marie." Reynolds' wife was sav- ing. "I'll let you know w lieu it come ' by hanging the red shawl from the east window. I think there'll lie clothes for the children, oh I do hope so! Kow is the baby? Is bis cou-h anv belter?" The eager eyes fastened on the girl's race told how near her heart were the troubles of her little friend. "I gave him the syrun as veil to'l me. and wrapped him In the blanket. He was asleep when I came awn v." The girl rose and clasned the woman 3 hands, pressed them again and again lo tier lips. -I must go now. God will bless you. Do not be afraid any more." 'I shouldn't worry If you do nor. dear: but you know he Is my husband, and I love him so." Again the door opened and closed, nnd a few minutes later a figure stole I'lhoriousiy along the street in front. Swifter than she. the men followed. "Let me carry the basket. lit e mother." said a well known voice, soft- er than t-he hail heard it for weeks.' "Your friend is a giid woman, to -morrow the strike shall end. There are others like her. no doubt, who are sd I e i -a use of it. Is It not so, Luii:i? Iiom- luic?" The others nodded. Later. In company with two fx threw others, they ate of the substantial food Madeline Reynolds had provided. They talked far Into the night, and at dawn each went n certain way. In a few hours all disturbances ceased. In an-, other day the companies had Issued or-' der to butchers, growers and clothiers. The big strike became only something to mm uuoui in tue 0ng wluter legs. Boston Post. i 4