Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NEB. IOHN H. REAM, Publisher. He J' f Is at court i1n srr who never tried to Him vp himself. Any woman who Is not an ntinrchlst hns a perfect right to talk i;i this coiin- try. "A California rii;tm:i::'.n h;' lnv-itod nn oilorU-sx t.i;l:iii." Then it isn't nn onion. "Just you ;.it." sty :.k- pessimist, when ho Is reminded that h.s prediction was wrung. "Why American Moi:i.-.: Fail." Is the heading of n iua,;:;zi;.e ariii'i.'. P.ut they don't. When n man with a wo".- .-:td several grown-up daug!.rei- In a '. " i-'.u! dis position, It's a sign that he ,r.:i a pret ty good Income. The "nightmare ri I ts'' v.o.il.1 i-ppi'ir to be a inoro pultuMc ::. o for thost' KcntiK'klans who are : 1 1 :tvf ') inany depredations. Ono of the professora dcila'vs t Tin t saving nionoy In dangerous, perhaps the inoat inon nro ma;::mi:!:i: 'y endeav oring to jirotcct us fr.mi i! iiiicr, The Kins of Italy may bo "Wio the possessor of the proud right to say "our Anierlcan cousin." A kins, yon know, nay say "our" Instead of "my." The Oklahoma Legislature has passed o law forbidding eavesdropping over the telephone. 'J'hiis has one of the blessings of living In the country been taken nwiiy frfttn the dear p op. A rcnnsylvnnla boy who recently re covered from typhoid fever now has a mania for writing poetry. Some of the after effects of that terrible disease seem to be worse than the malady It Self. The Mnuretanla, Been at night, I de scribed ns resembling "a city iidrlft at sea." Those who have lichold hirg'j coinnnuiltles voyaging about the ocean will have n vivid mental picture .if the big liner. Chancellor von I'.uelow says Germany has no desire to deprive England of the mastery of the seas. The London Times will regard this as a cunning ef fort to Induce England to waste her resources In building war ships, thus weakening Jierself on land. Ton millions growing moldy In th United States treasury stilTerlng for un owner! What n buntj.i to aii over worked government to have to Bit up o' nights and watch It, and not know to whom it belongs 1 For something over forty yenrs this vast store has been gathering dust, being the proceeds of "abandoned property" captured by the Union soldiers, sold for cash and the money turned into the treasury. To be strictly accurate, there still remains, after millions have been distributed to approved claimants, $10,028,351.83 for which Uncle Sam has never been able to find a proper owner. Defective designing was the cause of the collaise of the cantilever bridge across tho St, Lawrence Uiver at Que bec several months ago, according to the report of the royal commission ap pointed to make an investigation. The designer used the standard formulas In computing the strains, but in the opin ion of the commission he should have modified them, as the bridge was larger than any that had hitherto been at tempted on the cantilever principle. It Is easy to say this now, for all engineers know more about the subject thnn be fore the falling bridge demonstrated that the old formulas were Incorrect But it Is Important to future brldgo builders, as well as to the public, that an adequate explanation of the Quebec accident has been found. In advising China to accede to Jap an's demands, the United States had China's interests in view. There Is a Btrong probability that Japan would have made the Tntsu Incident a pretext for war if China had not receded from its position. War would have resulted in humiliation for China, and possibly in dlsmemlwrmeut. The present out come has aroused a strong feeling of hostility to Japan throughout China. At Peking the United Stutes holds tho favored place among the nations. That alliance of oil tho Asiatic peoples against the whiles Is "ofT." Not for years to come will the yellow peril bo mentioned again. The boycott In Shanghai ami the other Chinese ports against American goods, no fur ns any trace of the embargo Is left, will be lifted Immediately, A Boston neurologist of largo repute bas udvuuccd a novel theory about nervous collapse, based upon u case In bis own practice. He relates that a wealthy business man consulted his physician for relief from u nervous breakdown, lie was ordered to go to Europe und rest, but It did him no good. Ilewas sent to lest cures and anitaiiuii)s, where he was ordered to do nothing which would tire him, lie was Informed that rest was his only salvation. He rested week after week and month after month, and all to no purjMise. At last he consulted this phy sician, who believed In doing some thing. After studying the ease he de cided that' his patient was not In need of rest anil was not In the least fa tigued, but Kluiply did not have enough to do. IIL. nn-ordingry advised him to go to work and quit worrying. The pa tient did so and was cured. The rem edy and Its encouraging result only go .to prove the truth of the old axiom Hint Work Is fie pan.uvn for all evils. Cases or overwoi;., m often n p u-t.-d, are usu ally eno:i of overwoiry. Care mav even kill the cat which has nine live lo Umu's one, but hard, woik without wor ry never kllk'l any one. Work with worry may produce nervous collapse arm onen iiit to suicide, but good poiaait hard work without excitement or strain, and performed within rea sonable time, is the best of remedies to guard against nervous breakdowns. It would be an excellent rcinwiy in so ciety, also, if society! women, Jntled and worn nut by the Incessant excitement, late hours. Imprudent eating, and wor ries of social functions and rivalries Instead or going to rest cures, would take the broom and flatlron and put in several hours of good hard work In the house. They would lie surprised to find how rapidly they would recuperate and restore their wanted energies. It Is well enough known that fre que.;:l human beings when bitten by dogs have died agonizing deaths. Hy drophobia or rabies is the name for the dlseafo under which they have suffered, but so great have been the uncertain ties us to the course of the disease and so poor the opportunities for experi mentation that some medical authori ties have held there was no such dis ease whatever, and that the victims have really succumbed to. self-hypnotism or hysteria. The bureau of ani mal Industry Id the ' Department of Agriculture at Washington has had this question under consideration and has made injury experiments at its experi ment station at Bothosda, Md. Its chief, Dr. A. I). Mel v In, now announces that he has coucloslve proof that such a disease exists and that It is germ-generated and Infectious. One of the In stances which Dr. Molvln cites Is that of a dog bitten by another dog. The biter died of rabies. Tho other dog was taken away and kept under obser vation for two months. It then de veloped u well-defined case of the dis ease, ran amuck and bit n horse and a cow. The cow wus attacked in sixty days, the horse In about a hundred days nnd both died after showing all the typical symptoms. Dr. Melvin states that there are two forms of the dis eases one of them dumb, the other fu rious. In the early stages of the dumb tyic a dog is dangerous, but In later stages It Is not, as Its Jaws become paralyzed. A dog suffering with the fu rious type of rabies Is very dungerous. The frothing at the mouth Is not a Ac tion but a real characteristic of this typo. The experience of England, which, through its strictly enforced quarantine law, has got entirely rid of rabies and kept free from It for inuny years, has been sulflclent to satisfy most Impartial observers that a genu ine disease was In question. The proof that is now brought forward by Dr. Mehiii's bureau should put an end to nil further quips and flings about the Imaginary nature of the disease. Ra bies Is fortunately not common, but It Is terrible enough where It occurs to Justify full precautions against it One of the most Important addition, to astronomical science In years was the recent announcement from tho Low ell observatory, Flagstaff, Ariz.; that the atmosphere of the planet Mars is very rich In. vapor. This Information was gained by a comparison ot the spectra of Mars and the moon. Astron omers have been trying for forty-live years to settlo the question. There has recently been completed at Lorain, Ohio, a dry dock 74o feet long and 125 feet wide. This makes It the greatest fresh-water dry dock In the world, and it comes within Ave feet of being as long as the new dry dock of the League Island navy yard. Four vessels C05 feet long have been launched on the great lakes within the year, and It Is believed that vessels 700 feet long will be built within a few years. A curious occurrence, deemed worthy of scientific record, was witnessed by Dr. J. S. Diller, of the Geological Sur vey, In Oregon last September. It was A mortal combat between a salamander About Inches long and a garter-snake two feet In length. The salamander gripped its foe at the base of the Jaw, and bung on with bulldog tenacity. The fight lasted about three hours. At the end of that time the snake was nearly dead, whereas the salamander "seemed fresh In the enjoyment of his victory." If the sun were blue thore would be only two colors In the world, blue and bluckj or 4t It were red everything would Bo red or black. In the luttcr case there would be red snow, red lilies, black grass, a black clear sky and red clouds. There would be a llttlo variety, however, If the sun were green. Things that are now yellow would still remain that color, but there would be no reds, purples, orange rr pinks, and very few of those cherry hues that make the world bright and pleasant. Besides color, the temperature of this earth would bo very much changed. Efforts are being made to develop more extensively tho petroleum re sources of rem. The known dejioslts of oil occur on a very narrow strip of land between the foot-hills of tho Andes and the shore of tho FaclHc, and much of this Is flooded at high tide. I'lles of railroad Iron driven In tho pure ocean sand, which varies In 'depth from 5 to 50 feet, are used as foundations for the derricks. The shallowest of the driven wells Is ISO, und the deepest 1, "til) feet In depth. There Is very little gas, und the oil is very heavy, so that it can be put Into buckets with shovels, and It Is carried direct to tho furnaces to serve ns fuel. Iiicrriulu, Squlggs Say, Squnggs, you golu' to raise a garden this year? Kquuggs Don't know, Squlggs; I'm golu' to plunt some seeds, hut whether they ylll turn out to be chlckeu feci or garden It's too early to determine." Toledo ltlade. Th Heal Teal. Job may have displayed great pa tience, but it is not written tu tho bMk that he ever had to weur a saw edged Millar. It Is always a xcmree of wonder to a man that a woman can have so much fulth In htm. Ul.ht you are. Al.aaio; the fouuUIn plays becuuae the water works. vttceless. Boy S II (nn Project Poire Wltlmnt 1 of Wire. Hurry M. (Smut, a high school Isiy of Spencer, Mass., says ho lias dls-or. ereil the secret of. transmitting electric waves uirougn tne air wwuout uiu am of wires. Ho has ls-en studying elec- trhrlty for five years and has already biH-ome an exort operator with wire. loss methods of communication, accord ing to the New York World. lie now llghtssa dozen Incandescent bulbs In different rooms In his house by merely pressing a small lever In his room and projecting the electric waves There are no connecting wires letvoen those different lights and the machines which he operates. Each light Is mere ly -onnected with a small battery of It own. Just how the electric jiower which the hundred-odd batteries In tho oer atlng room produce Is made to travel through tho air young Grout as yet re fuses to disclose. He declares that he can now cause this wireless electric jiower to he projected several hundred feet and he further Insists that when he Is able to own n dynamo and pro duce suhVlcnt electricity nt once he will canst? It to tierforin all the maneu vers of customary operation from the shore or from his own room. Ho asserts that when he has accom plished this ho will applyhls tests to torpedoes, i lie young Inventor Is now In communication with n United States weather observatory olliclal In Had dam. Conn., who has been studying along similar lines with Grout and whose first letter to the high school boy said that the Connecticut man lie lleved the two together would be able to communicate with the planet Mars. Young Grout admits that he Is'llevex such a thing jMissil'ile, and he also Is convinced that It can be accomplished from what he has n I ready discovered, providing power enough can be obtain ed to send the force waves such a long distance. .Many electricians have visited the boy and have satlstied themselves that he Is actually causing electric power waves to travel through his home by merely turning on and off the lever. The young electrician said: "I am merely In the experimental stage of my work and now, of course, am not willing to explain Just how I can light the elec tric bulbs In my house without wires. It is sullicleut to say that I do hope to do something more practical with these power waves before spring. I an operate a motor at !)( feet and feel sure that I shall soon be able to put a motor boat through all kinds of paces from the shore within n short time. When I have accomplished that of course the way will be open for sure and safe propulsion and operation of ot'her craft of greater or less size and also of torpedoes In time of war from the land." Grout Is only 18 years of age. ne became Interested in electricity at high school and Immediately branched out beyond the routine work of which his courses consisted. He has charge of the electric equipment of a large man ufacturlng concern In Spencer. i LEARNING TO SWIM. Persistence In undertaking is a laud- ablo virtue, but It can be a bit over dono sometimes, as In a case described by Y. L. Molloy In "Our Autumn Hol iday on French Klvers." Mr. Molloy and his friend, longing for a gtsd dive, went to a swimming school on an Isl and In the Seine. They donned their rented costumes and were preparing for tho plunge, when a man with ropes came along nnd insisted on tying them about their waists. It was according to police regulations, and although they made an Indignant protest, they were obliged to submit. While we were dressing, says Mr. Molloy, we asked the two swimming masters for an extra towel. "Pardon," they replied, "wo must at tend to our monsieur." Then we saw that there had come upon the platform a short and absurd ly fat man, dressed In bathing cos tume, swimming sandals and oiled cap. "Let's see hlni go In," said we. What a splash he'll make!" The swimming masters received tho n?w arrival at the middle of tho plat form. ' There he balanced himself on his stomach on a wooden stump two feet high. The masters seized him by ids hands and feet, and with slow und deliberate movements made him strike out with the action of swimming. They kept this up for a quarter of an hour, and the perspiration rolled off him In great drops. "He'll be awfully hot to go into tho water after that," said I. Hut he did not go Into the water. Tho swimming lesson over, he moved toward the dressing room, saying: "I have done better to-day." "Ah, yes," answered one of tho mas ters. "Your progress Is admirable." The fat man beamed with complais ance, and went In to dress. I called the swimming masters as4de. "Itocs 'our monsieur' practice often like that? He must have great perse verance." "Perseverance! lie has worked like this for live years, nnd he has never been In the water!" Not on lliu t.t-vrl. First Legislator I don't like "the way that subway contractor goes about things. Second Legislator Why not? First Ligislatoi Well, I don't think he works on the level llarvurd Lam- tMMlll. Tho Only Wu. "Then goes a man who made a for tune w rltlng poetry." "Wh-what !" "No, Fin not Joking. He wrote ten der verses to a romantic young heir ess." Kansas City Times. M tat it rurmt-tl. Clubman 1 underhand, sir, that yoo began life as u newsboy. Guest lT the Evening I fear soma one has b.Vu fooling you. I began life as an lnfaut Hostou Transcript SOLVES SECItET 'lermorid A living faith makes a live church. Rev. T. II. McCoi.nell, Presbyterian, Chicago. Men of power are always men of prayer. Kev. E. L. Powell, Christian Church, Ioulsville. Every phase of the life of Jesus Is nn open lsxik for ew ry man. Kev. A. W. I odder. I 1 1 1 : i s t , P.rooklyn. In this day of crime God Is looking for men and women who will stand out for Illm. Kev. J. O. Hoswell, Evangel ist,' Pa wt in kel. Tho modern methods of business and politics thiMW men In the way of temp tation and dec -it.- Kev. .?. II. Iarry, Congregatitiiiallst, Providence. There Is less graft. In proportion t( the opporf iiuit;, in Koosevelt's tinn than there was i:i Washington's. Kev. It. S. MacArlhur, Hatlst, New York. Great wealth has kept more young men away from it pure life than ever bus the want of It.- Kev. William Ed ward Iilcdenvolf, Evangelist, North Camden. It Is not always sale to take n man's profession nor his standing, but to measure him by the cause he cham pions. Kev. Ch tries (i. Kindred, Dis ciple, Chicago. Each mi ml must pay Its own debt. Each man must save himself In the same manner In which Jesus rose to a mighty saving relation to tho world. Kev. William Forkell, People's Church, Aurora. To be good when It Is Impossible for us to do wrong, is no honor to man, but to do good when on every hand there are opportunities for wrongdoing is Christ-like. Kev. L. M. Zimmerman, Lutheran. P.altimore. ' The strongest woman In the world Is not the richest, the best educated, the most graceful nor tho one endowed with the greatest physical beauty, but the purest woman. Kev. P. W. Snyder, Presbyterian, Pittsburg.- . No man can be a mighty man for God or for humanity who has not seen God. who has not touched God, who has not come in contact with the Eternal One I Himself. Kev. W. P. Macl.aurin, Con gregation;! list, P.rooklyn. No matter how much you think, or In what fields of n search, you have not done your duty as a thinker, if you have left unoximiiueil and unconsidered the great Christ prnlHem of the world Kev. J. W. Francis, Presbyterian, Parkersburg. Jesus dumaiubi of every man that he utilize all tho thought, every capacity, every potentiality he iossesses, and that he put down the lower, selfish nature und exalt tho divine nnd the noble that Is within him. Kev. M. Le I toy Hurton, Congrogatl ilist, New Haven. A beautiful house may shelter evil people. The chances are that bad peo ple in the teude'.-loiu would be no more pious if they were suddenly lifted Into palaces. It Is the Individual life and heart that must Ik? changed. Kev. H. Mitchell, Methodist, Cleveland. The richness of the Intellect ami the reflections of the heart that should be Client in meditation upon a better ami a higher life ami in love for God and the Christ are wasted upon worldly lusts and the things that lead to ruin. Kev. G. II. Ko-.ve, Christian Church, Aurora. It is evident that the desecration of Sunday is on the Increase, for we are told that nearly fifty millions of the American people never enter n church Pit that day. It, therefore, behooves the Catholics of the republic, by word and example, to Insist upon Sunday observ ince. Iilshop McFaul, Itmiian Catholic, Trenton. Do not think lor n moment that a man who has enlisted under Christ will have no more battles, or that the first battle will be tho only one to be fought It will be a fight nil along the way, but be will be undor a captain that has never lost a battle, and victory -will purely follow. Kev. (. Campbell Mor gan, Evangelist, at Hartford. The great blessing of forgiveness of sins which are past and even the bless ing of being awakened from the sleep of death would profit mankind but lit tle if the arrangements of that future time the millennial age were not on such a scale us to permit a thorough recovery front present mental, moral and physical weakness. Kev. C. F. Kussell, Congregatlonallst, Cincinnati. Permanent success In any undertak ing Is conditional upon working with God. In every department of activity, certain laws prevail which must le obeyed In order to Insure success. These laws are all God's laws. The physician must understand and observe the laws of health to cure his patient. The Chris tian Is the one who undertakes to con form to the laws of (od in every de partment of his i;fe so far as ho under stands them. Just so far as ho does that, he s a co-worker with God. Kev. J. P. Roberts, Haptisf. Providence'. Religion Is a life, and not un opinion alKiut life. Red 'inptloii s a new and divine spirit, am not a definition of re demption. There Is a new theology and there always will be one. God. love, redemption, remain unchanged. The deilr.itiou of tlios,. things changes. Doo trhvs are like the leaves on a tree. The kindly autumn comes and kills them off. The tree puts forth new leaves. If It does not. bat shows the old, withered leaves clinging to the branches. It Is dead. Doctrines should be evidence of a living spirit. Doc trines die. but the truth d s-s not die. It lives on. Rev. Dr. Eakin, Enlsoo. ")tilian. Toronto. In Cincinnati a man re.vutlv tooU seventeen wives In oue day. He's a photographer. Women wiih natural curls are ant tm have u few kinks lu their disposition 1 .. .".,r,vj,,;j,.;- w.,,.', .n .-.itv?r-;Tr-i, f I I I II I i ill ! I UBTl M HI . -V R. l awas. X. I t-.mmm mtim4 n , - m . M -frMMwm V W OFJ1C2X, Or grag -YORK. XKD 'Bjfyjyjjz eoT"" UN ' 3 sllllilWli PREDICT WAR WITH AMERICA. Vc-m-ziM-Inn Ofiii-lntN Seo Only On Oiileomc ot Axphalt Itntv. War with the United States over fifty miles of swamp land Is predicted by leading Venezuelan oMi-ia's. The strip was under control of tin? asphalt trust until the beginning of the long series of dlfllcultlcs thct now may end in a contest with America. All the turmoil, bloodshed, revolution and International controversies have their origin In this sjK?ck of territory. Upon Its proper development depends the wealth of tho nation; f.r it Is the natural outlet for nil the resources of a country so rich in the earth's treasures that the dreams of a Plzarro might be realized. It was granted to the as phalt trinrt with the agreement that it would lie developed. Canals were to Ut dug so that the boats could sail up the river to the gold mines. Jw silver mines, the oil wells ami the rich coffee plantations. Railroads .were to have been built. One of the Venezuelan gov ernment's principal complaints against the Amerlcau asphalt trust is that it never fulfilled .any of these promises. All the trust did was to push its own bouts Into the pitch hikes, load them and take nway the valuable natural product. The district has remained Impover ished because undeveloped. Its .'.(itiil, CKM) people were poor because they could not get their wealth sold. The rail roads and the canals promised never materialized Into anything better than mule caravans and canoes. The cus toms which composed the chief Income to tho national treasury fell off, for the asphalt was free of-duty. Then the temper of this mixed race of Spanish, negroes, and natives reach ed the boiling point. They tinted those 4,000 white men and their trust greed. They made life dangerous for the for eigners. Suits were filed in the shaky courts of the country to try to get back the asphalt wealth given away. Castro found he was fighting tho most expert trust lawyers, men who knew other tricks besides those of tho courts. Revo lutionary leaders took ndvnntage of the turmoil to start Internal troubles. Ev erybody in Venezuela believes that the Matas rebellion was financed by the trust nnd all Venezuelans Insist that It was Castro's duty to the people to dispossess th(.vtrnst. Meanwhiljtthls land of wonderful wealth lies like n shining diamond in a hill of sand. Its Hrazll wood, coral trees, Indigo, rubber, bananas remain in the forest. Its gold and silver and copper nnd marble and granite are still In the earth, valueless to Venezuela nnd the - commercial world. SEEING LINCOLN IN 1303. lion- n Private Solitler Attended White. Iloum. Ilei-i-tlnn. It was In the spring of 1st ;:. when I was stopping for a while in Washing ton, says u contributor to the Ho-ifon Transcript. I attended, one day, a re ception at the White House. The rooms were, of course, crowded with olllccrs of tho army, legislators and rep resentatives of foreign courts In great abundance. Mr. Lincoln held his r. tvp'lons In the blue room, "opposite tic main entrance. For a long lime ihe passage to him was crowded, but biter the crowd thinned out nlsiut him, so that he had short spaces of rest. I had been wandering mound, and at last found myself close to the main en trance. Soon I saw a common soldier come up to the hall. He was an ex ceedingly rough Junking specimen. Ills clothes rere worn nnd soiled, his boot outside his trousers, dirty beyond di groo. You could hardly conceive a more unfit person to enter that great crowd. He evidently had a great desire to st; the President, but knew his uu.lt uess to enter. Hut It was not long before li mustered courage to push his way un ASPHALT WOItX IN VENEZUELA IS A BONE OF . ' t- r. (Wtl' der the cover of others well Into the hall. Noting the anxious yearning look on his face, I became Interested to watch his movements and note the result. It was not very, long before I observed that Mr. Lincoln had nn eye on him, as he chanced to come near the door of the reception room. Once nnd again I saw his eye search out this soiled and bespattered soldier with the most ten der look. Then came a more vacant space between the two. At length Mr. Lincoln, with an enormous stride and a long outrenchlng arm, advanced, zrasped this soldier by the hand, with a rreeting that must have been scon and heard to be fully understood: "Come forward, my friend ; we are all equal here." With this hand grasp nnd welcome Mr. Lincoln's attention was turnqd else where but I can remember no other In cident that thrilled me as did that Ut ile scene. And the effect of it upon that soldier it seemed to transform him in u moment. What a new manli ness It put into his face nnd attitude. In a few moments he was gone, but It was plain that from that hour Mr. Lin coln had at least one man In his army who was ready to give his life to help Mr.. Lincoln save the cause for which both of them were tolling and sacri ficing. And It seemed at the moment that I could easily do the same. A Marrlaite Fiction. The polite fiction obtains that mar riages are made in heaven. This ro mantic viewpoint Is particularly popu lar lu America, where it la held to be highly Improper for parents to make any move toward securing good hus bands for their daughters and Immod est for girls to manifest any Interest in the subject themselves. The conventional theory Is that the matter Is on the knees of the gods and that in due season husbands will be provided like manna In the wilderness for. sustenance of tho faithful. Unfor tunately this miracle does not always come off for every womnn. The supply of manna gives out. There are not enough husbands to go around, and these are unevenly divided. Some wom en get three or four, while others get none. Hut neither the old maids nor their parents realize that the reason that they did not share In the dispen sation was their own fault, because they did not put themselves, as old fashioned Methodists used to say, In an attitude to receive the blessing. Dor othy Dix, in Aiuslee's. .evr Zealand Mutflr. From New Zealand comes tho follow ing weird yarn : "The tohunga (native magician) was even credited with the power of Influ encing the dead. The present writer was a witness of the following Inci dent: A branch of-the Arawas, the tribe of the district of Kotorua, being at war, had sutl'ered defeat, and one of their braves had been brought home dead. The vainniisl.ed sought at once to find out by s nne omen connected with th- dead chief whether they would be successful lu their next encounter. The tohunga was requested to procure the desired omen, the people squatting in a ring i .bout the bier. Advancing a few pans from the dead body, the ; i ii .it began to recite a powerful incan tation, lntent'Nm making the deceased give some sign, the eyes of all present being fixed on the slain warrior. Pres ently the corpse was observed to move slightly to one side, on which a great cry of Joy rose from the people. The movement was Interpreted as a sign of future victory. This feat was often lirformed by the tohunga of olden times." Chicago News. Wor.t than Kmiltab. The man who forgets his friends may le ungr.-'teful. The one who for gets Ids vno'iihs Is foolish. Chicago Hecord-Heruld. ininnn in CONTENTION. ' kk , y . i Cafzxo or t&cezvxla MEN OF EARLIER AGES. Were They the Mental Peers of the I Men of Today 1 The general Idea that our enormous " advances In science and commaud over nature serve as demonstrations of our mental superiority to the men of ear lier ages Is totally unfounded. The evi dence of history nnd of the earllesU monuments alike goes to Indicate thn?' our intellectual and moral nature has not advanced In any perceptible degree. In the second place, wo And that the supposed great mental Inferiority of savages Is equally uufoundod. The more they are sympathetically studied the more they are found to resemble our selves in their Inherent Intellectual powers. Even the so long despised Australian savages, almost the lowest In mnterfal progress, yet show by their complex language, their social rcgiilatious and often by an Innate nobility of charac ter indications of a very similar inner jf nature to our own. If they possess fewer philosophers and moralists, they are also free from so large a propor-' tlon of unbalanced minds Idiots ail lunatics as we possess. On the other hand, we find In the higher PacUJe types men who, though savages as re gards material progress, are yet gener ally admitted to be physically, intel lectually and morally our equals. If not our superiors. Thirdly, we have no proof whatever that even the men of the stone age were mentally or. Trt rr-n 1 '. rr Ina.lA. 4-a n..n....T n nr...i Russel Wallace in Fortnightly Review. wnT Mvavr-v -mr -man Wherein the Writer Hee tabled the Man on the Buoy, "That writer," said a publisher, re ferring to an author who seemed to be Idling away his time, "is in reality try-' ing hard to work, to get his ideas flow ing, but he is stuck. "He said to me himself that he re sembled a man who made a bet on summerday at the shore that he wouluf swim put a mile and a half to a certain buoy. The bet was accepted, and the man stripped and plunged in. His friend retired to the hotel to watch his progress from the window. "From the window with a field glass the friend saw the swimmer reach the buoy in due course, draw himself up out of the water and sit down com fortably, with his legs dangling over. So far so good. Evidently he was resting well pleased with ils feat "Some minutes passed, and the swim mer had not moved. The watcher "re turned to his book. But every now and then he looked up, and still the swimmer sat in the same position on the buoy. "An hour, two hours went by. Still the swimmer remained. A white, slhu i'1 figure seen against the oncoming dark, he sat on the buoy's edge. Ills feet dangled In the soa. He seemed to be musing. "Finally it began to grow quite dark, and, thoroughly alarmed at last, the watcher got a boat nnd n couple of bargees and rowed out to his friend. 'Out there the mystery was soon ex plained. The man was stuck fast to the buoy, which had been freshly tarred, that morning." Washington Star. lie Waa Particular. One day the mistress of the house had some special delicacy on the table, and the thought came to. her to share it with her laundress, whose day It was at the house. So before the latter went homo she packed a box carefully und took It to her. "I want you to tuke this with you and try it. We consider it unusually nice. I thought perhaps it would save you some work lu cooking when you get supper lonigut. ' The woman received the parcel In the spirit In which it was given, say ing, as she received It: "Thank you, ever so much. I know Mr. will enjoy It. He's Jest as pernlcklty about his vlttles ez though he oarnt 'em." Poston Advertiser. I)llt tinted lfutn. Bacon I see It is said that rats aro judges of music. Egbert I guess that is right We haven't had one in the house since wo pot the phonograph. Yonkers States man. Maple Syrup. Maple syrup which has ferments and U-come sour ran be freshened by r" iicaung 10 i ue mining point and adding , a little soda. Stir thoroughly, then skim. W hen a wise man is too tired t think his talk U sure to sound foolish I