Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NIB. John H. Ream, rubllthel i IlegewiKch Illinois, bows humbly to Cadillac, Michigan. Zelaya Is going to write a. book. There is no law against It. Queer aa It seems, the fast man oon overtaken by misfortune. IB Prince de Sagan Is now a "serene highness." He does not even look at the bills. A California woman lost $1,150 through a hole In her stocking. The moral Is obvious. Thirty-two Reasons are given for the high cost of living, but there are proo ably many others. An ear of corn was sold the other day for $6.50. It would make a fine meal for that $10,000 hen. "Is a hen a bird?" asks the govern ment. Respectfully referred to the man who owns Peggy, the $10,000 hen. Prussians want universal suffrago, "but the Kaiser may decide that what they need is something equally as good. A motor road from the Atlantic to the Paclflo is proposed, with road louses, garages and hospitals every Ave miles. Dr. Wiley states that !f an egg floats in salt water It Is not fresh. Grab your egg and start for the Gulf of Mexico at once! Andrew Carnegie says he doesn't want to go to heaven yet. But he must not be understood as being op posed to the place. In St. Louis recently a man won $10 1y eating a dozen eggs within a given time. It wasn't worth the effort If he bad to buy his own eggs. A New Jersey man found $5,000 in a Bible his grandmother gave him tblrty-flve years ago. Some of those old-fashioned grandmothers had a fine sense of humor. A New York man, seeking Ameri can citizenship, declared the United States flag was green. Can a man who Is so color blind an that bo worked over into a good citizen? The weather man at PlttBburg says the groundhog has been wrong for three successive years. It Is not be lieved anything could be gained by submitting the case to Copenhagen. Belvldere Brooks, the new manager of the Western Union Telegraph Com pany, began his business career as a messenger boy in Texas. He must bare succeeded somehow In keeping his front name a secret until he ceased being a messenger boy and got out of Texas. A man In New York State, whl'.o digging for water a few days ago, dis covered a thick vein of excelloiit anthracite clal. Without wishing to be considered pessimistic, we are com pelled to cling to the opinion that th) money he may be able to save on coal will be taken from him by the ice companies or by the people from whom lie buys his meats and groceries. When does an unmarried woman change from a young to an old maid? That was the question, and it is one of perennial interest, discussed In a Chi cago woman's club the other day. No agreement was reached, but when one speaker declared that at 28 a woman is not yet an old maid, and is "prob ably better looking than at any other age," Bhe was heartily applauded by the other women present. It is inter esting thus to discover that the mem bers of the club are all about 28 years old. Particularly annoying and even dan gerous abuses have sprung up in the matter of "Interference" In wireless telegraphy. Amateur operators who delight in sending out hoax messages cutting into Important despatches, an J In general making aerial nuisances of themselves, have from time to time been reproved, but matters have gone to such a length that the government Is considering ways and means of end Ing the trouble. From time im memorial the air has been considered free to all, and the only thing that can wholly control the conduct of those invisibly using It ia, not laws, but manners. Ironing linen has a greater effect than is commonly believed. As the temperature of the Iron may greatly exceed 266 degrees Fahrenheit it has been suggested that the process of Ironing may suffice to sterilize surgical dressings and hence be of valuable service, especially in rural districts and elsewhere, in the absence of dis infecting ovens and sterilizers. Near ly all microbes can be killed by a sufficiently long application of a tem perature of 158 degrees Fahrenheit, but a temperature of 2lti degrees Fahrenheit Ib required to kill certain spores of bacteria and to produce ab solutely complete sterilization. It has been proved by experiment that It ia possible to disinfect clothing very sat isfactorily by ironing. Clothing which has been worn by children affected by various contagious diseases, and which contained bacteria or pus, diphtheria and the like, was sprinkled and Ironed. It was then mount on plates of gela tine prepared for I he culture of bac teria, but not a single colony was de veloped. There 1 comfort for university stu dents al'lVs.; with "lilve slips" In a curious btatlsilvcl study lately inr.;lo of the 1'.; hfiti;y of Yal graduate: and ncr.-Riadua'.cs for half a century, 'the examination was made l:y the sec rr:rry c" : v. Lversity and t'e strik ing results mubt be accepted as ic curate. The only doubt we have about thbai i Just what is meant by non graduate. Probably it means only Students who completed their four years' course and were refused dlpl mas at the end. Surely a different re suit would have been reached if the 1 1st of non-graduates included all who had ever studied at Vale for a longe or shorter time. The result Is puzzling enough anyway. Yale has produced 23,0(10 alumni In the half century an In the same time nearly seven thou sand students were sent away without the coveted diploma. These non-graduates are scattered all over the coun try, came from all kinds of secondary schools, good, bad and Indifferent, and are credited to all departments of the university, though the medical school furnishes the largest percentage. Here 60 per cent fall to get diplomas, thougn only 20 per cent failed In the academic department or college proper. If suc cess In life Is measured by attaining standing In the professions and busi ness, the compilation tells largely In favor of the non graduates. The per centage of them that have succeeded n the arts, Journalism and letters, In the ministry. In the public service, In every business but finance and In farming Is higher thnn the percentage of successful graduates. The latter have excelled only In education, tht other professions, finance and science, and their superiority Is slight except In law and engineering. Obviously graduates have been most successful in professions that exact severe train ing, non-graduates most successful In those where It depends on natural en dowment. WANTED HIS NAME IN PAPER Cm-Ion QnrilUi RaUed la a, Cana dian Court of Iaw. A case of interest to newspaper men came up before Chief Justice Meredith last month when J. B. MacKenzle, a Toronto lawyer, entered an action against the Toronto World and George M. Lee, its Osgood hall reporter, to obtain an Injunction against the de fendants, restraining them from omit ting his name from reports of cases in which he may be engaged as coun sel or solicitor. Chief Justice Meredith took the stand that the World published the report for the Information and Interest of its renders; that this report must necessarily be brief, but that so long as It was in no particular incorrect and contained no reflection in the nature of libel or improper statement of fact. the World had a right to publish what it pleased. In the present case, Printer and Publisher states, the plaintiff did not claim that any incorrect statement hail been made or anything In the nature of a libel published, but merely that the report was not full enough to slut him In that his name and connection with the case had been omitted from It. It renlly amounted to a complaint that the World had not given him the ben efit of advertising in connection with the rase, and this, his lordship claim ed, Mr. MacKenzle could not compel the World to do. He suggested, hu morously, that a contract at so much line be made to cover the situa tion. Mr. MacKenzle claimed, however, that the court had inherent right to deal with the matter, and that every body should be placed upon the same footing or the reports excluded. He claimed that such an omission was an Injury to his calling, in that solicitors from outside points would thus be hin dered from sending him retainers. His lordship dismissed the application for injunction, and Mr. MacKenzle inti mated that the matter is not yet closed. i LESSONS OF LIFE. Kntllltr of Glvlaa; the Toons; the Moat Coatly Tblna on Earth. I wonder if you realize that It is rather a solemn moment for any one of my age to come face to face with boys at your age, said Lord Rosebery In an address at Edinburgh, according to an exchange. I suppose between the eldest of you and myself some flve-and-forty years intervene. Looking back on that period between the ter mination of one's school life and the period at which one has arrived, one reviews It with a sense of one's own great shortcomings, of one's 'waste of time, of one's opportunities missed. No one is wholly satisfied with his life. The best of men that you could think of cannot have felt any complete sat isfaction at reviewing his career. But there are degrees and degrees of satis faction. The most costly thing in the world Is what we are all willing to give to those who are younger, and what our Juniors never accept, but throw away Into the ditch as soon aa they receive It, as though it was destitute of all value at all, and that Is experience. We all buy our experience very dearly, with pain, with anguish, sometimes with our heart's blood, and yet when we try to give it to those who are younger than ourselves they treat It with neglect, and they go into the world resolved to buy their own expe rience themselves. Well, I, therefore, won't ofTer you my experience, because, as I say, you would reject It. Hut there Is a great phase which has come down from the ancients, which embodies, I think, all that a boy at school ought to wish to be, putting religion uslde. I am going to say li in Latin, and you won't un derstand It, because I pronounce it In the Rton way, which Is all wrong, and you pronounce It In the Scottish way which Is nil right: "Mens sana In cor pore sano." 1 suppose you would say (here his lordship adopted tho Scot tish pronunciation): "Mena snna In eorporo sano" a healthy mind in a healthy body. IIOIH'lt-K. Lawyer Von don't like the Jury? Defendant I do not. No. 1 is tn tailor, No. 3 Is my jiroccr. No. f Is my ii'tl k nml dealer an.l No. 7 Is my wlie's Hist lnislati,!. What chance have 1 t;ot ? St . P.itii Dispatch. I-'it t ii I n "Why !s tvnyloc'.y so cordial to .Li'X?" "" 1 t--l;t a ori)!( of M Us or bacon Ju'ii Hfo:e the meat strike went into efiect Ulal he baa some of it yet." llout.tcn I'; :A. It occurs to every man occasionally that he would like to be a pugilist tor about thirty minutes. MASKEKS. ITope, the great explorer; Love whom none rsn bind. Youth thnt looks before her. Age thnt looks behind. Joy with I. row like Hummer's, Core with wintry pute. Masker nr- nml mummers At Life's gate. I'ow'r with narrow forehead. Wealth with niggard palm, Wisdom olil. whose hoar head Vaunts a barren calm; Haughty ovcrromers, In their pomp and state;- Maskers nil and mummers At Death's Rate! -William Watson. TliatCIubSupper T 1"t't"t"ffr ft-H-fT tttt When Mrs. Myron Tuttle spoke up in the business meeting of the Culture Club and opened her house for the an nual supper which that leading wom an's club of Three Pines wus In the habit of giving its husbands and some 8 pedal outside guests Mrs. Lawyer White, who was the president, cough ed a little wildly to gain time. Always the club supper previously had been held at the spacious resi dence of the Springers, who had three full sets of china. This season Mrs. Springer was away, but it had been rather understood that Mrs. Dr. Sprong would offer to be hostess. Mrs. Tuttle had spoken bo quickly when the question was put that every one knew she must have planned It long ahead. And everybody, in the midst of her dismay, wondered why. In the first place, Hetty Tuttle was no housekeeper. She was a large, com placent woman, who did not wince when her small son Tommy scratched the mahogany piano with her em broidery scissors and who was per fectly happy If the house was undust ed and the broom was standing In the front hallway when callers ar rived. Her benighted husband still adored her after twenty-two years of underdone steaks and no place for any thing and everything always out of Its place. Tho way Myron Tuttle let him self be walked over was a scandal. Hetty Tuttle disliked work in any form, so nobody could Imagine why she had put herself in the way of tak ing on so much. Still, Mrs. Lawyer White rather helplessly accepted the offar from this dubious source and then brightly moved that a chairman he appointed to oversee the supper and "TOU PKOI'l.E ARB CERTAINLY SWELL COOKS." relieve Mrs. Tuttle of some of the work. This was conceded to be a decidedly clever arrangement, for there was no use talking Hetty Tuttle never could manage the affair herself. Mrs. Dr. Sprong, who was given the post of chairman, began borrowing embroider ed lunch cloths of every one right and left that very day, for she knew with out asking that Mrs. Myron Tuttle hadn't a couple of dozen laid by, as a good housekeeper should. - "Goodness knows," she mourned, how we'll ever cook the chickens and '.hIngB in her kitchen!" As the time for the supper ap proached the members of the Culture Club took to dropping In on Hetty Tuttle with cut glass and silver In thetr arms. They said they thought maybe she would find such things of UBe in serving so many. Hetty Tuttle accepted all these loans placidly. She was the least concerned member of the club. Seemingly, she did not wor ry at all over this most Important club function of the year, bo every one else fretted herself into a fever. Minnie, the Tuttles' 19-year-old daughter, seemed to catch the excite ment, however. Her mother deferred to her In a worshipful' way and hand ed all the cut glaRS over to her keep ing. "You go right ahead, Minnie," she often said In those days. "I guess you know what Is right and can show em! I guess Alf Kreeble will see your folks can entertain and do things as well as his, even If they haven't got so much money!" At that Minnie Tuttle would turn away with reddening cheeks, for she knew that the main idea behind hav ing the Culture Club supper at their home was to dazzle Alf Kreeble and urge him on a trifle faster. Of late he had lagged in his attentions and Hetty Tuttle could not bear to see her daughter unhappy. The women of the Culture Club will never forget the night of that annual supper. Amid all the hurry and tur moil Mrs. Myron Tuttle moved calm nnd undisturbed, while Mrs. Dr. Sprong In her blnck silk, Mrs. Lawyer White In rattling Jet and Half a dozen others with red faces and glittering eves bumped Into one another In the Inconven'.eM kitchen, called wildly for utensils which were not, exploded at the discovery Ihut there was no sugar In the inutry and had hysterics be cause Mrs. Tuttle had forgotten to or der t'.'P special potatoes for baking. Crow Jed in the parlors around th little tables were tho elite of the nieu folks of the town, w:i;::,g for fool. The tension was terrible. It was nhso 1 nt 1 1 y unthinkable tlmt tho Cull tiro Club should have a failure laid at It- door. So while all the club women except Hetty Tuttle slaved and suffered and ugonled to have Clings as they should be nobody noticed how Minnie Tuttle ami Alf Kreeble were slttini; to gether cozlly on the lower stair. N body observed that Minnie got Alf ul white meat and three orders of dum plings and two pieces of pie and a ridiculous amount of cabbage salad and hovered over blui while be ate. WRECKS TRUCK TO IP1 A mi mi N MM C.V . I t. Wi j Frederick Mayer, dr(W of a hook und lauder i., ... ..... ... .. ...4 oL- lyn hospital after perforrng a splendid deed of herobni while driving to a fire. His horses were on a full run when directly In his path Mayer saw a young woman Btandlng panic-stricken on a cross-walk. On one side, close to her, stood a trolley car filled with passengers; on the other was one of the tall iron pillars of the elevated railway. Had the driver kept on he would have run down the woman; by turning to the right he would have endangered the lives of the passengers. Mayer yelled to the firemen clust ered along the sides of the truck to Jump, gave the reins a mighty tug and ran full tilt into the Iron pillar. There was a crash, the horses were thrown down, badly Injured, the truck was overturned and Mayer was pinned under it with skull fractured, leg broken and body crushed. Meanwhile Minnie looked very pretty in her Huffy white dress. "Say," Alt Kreeble told her at last, "you people arc certainly swell cooks, Minnie! I bet you helped your mother do most of this, now, didn't you? Say, that cake did you bake It?" Minnie was young, but she was wise. She smiled seraphlcally. "I'm so glad you like the supper, Alf," she told him, smoothly. If she had died for It she could not have told who had really cooked the supper she had been too busy thinking of him and getting her gownTeady. "Let's sit over here out of the crowd," she added. That was why a little later In ths evening, when people were talking hard and the women were trying to forget the fatiguing evening they had put In and mentally execrating the serene Hetty Tuttle, that Incompetent hostess was beaming. She was watch ing Alf Kreeble and Minnie In the'.r secluded corner and she could see that Alf was holding Minnie's hand and talking very earnestly. Mrs. Myron Tuttle heaved a relieved sigh at last and absently rubbed a plump finger across the dust on top of a bookcase. "I think," she mur mured, "the club supper's ben an awful fine success!" Chicago Dally News. JEFFRIES AS A TEXT. I'reachrr Thlnka lie Can't "Conie Back" and Polnte a Moral. "Can Jeffries Come Back?" was the title of a sermon preached by the Rev. John Hamilton Timbrell In the Cedar Cliff MethodlBt Episcopal church, says the New York Sun. The preacher took his text from the Book of Judges, and after describing as pathetic and hu miliating the downfall of Samson, he said it pointed a moral to the case of Jeffries, "Can the old-time champion come back?" the preacher asked, and then be said: "This question, so far as its sporting phase is concerned, may have little or no interest to us save as it touches a great fundamental principle that is of the most profound interest to all thinking men, and one which may lead many of them to read what they other wise, would not, the sporting pages of the sporting papers, to see If Jeffries can come back. "What is the point in this case? Jeffries won the belt and much lucre, and then stepped out of the ring to have a good time and enjoy himself, and for five years, like Samson, with his head In the lap of Delilah, Jeffries has slept with his head In the lap of a luxurious and bibulous life. While he has slept a big black gorilla has come Into the ring and has put the world of sport into about the same condition that ancient Israel was in when Goliah of Gath M'os swaggering about and bragging of what he could do In the presence of the crowd that was sore afraid to tackle him. And the pugilistic crowd Is looking the world over to find some champion who can stand up to the gorilla and down him and 'take the belt, which means about the same thing to these modern heathen as the wreath of laurel meant to the ancient heathen In the Corin thian games. And with desperation In their glance they turn to Jeffries with this question, which means far more than a laurel wreath to them: 'Can Jeffries come back?' "A noted athletic trulner has given them his unbiased opinion. He Is one of the best authorities on athletic training. And it is not reassuring to tho crowd who are so eager to bet their shekels on Jeff. He says: 'It makes no difference whether a man Is a runner, Juniper, fighter, ball player or participant In any other branch of sport. If he stops training for three or four years he can never regain his lost form.' Furthermore he says: 'I have never seen an exception to the rule.' "Hack of this statement of the trainer and looking out upon us though, it Is a great fundamental prin ciple that Is as solemn as the day of judgment, a principle that will be found to hold everywhere in the uni verse of !otl, the niotiii'ntousness of which may cause us for the time being to overlook the fai t that our attnaio.i U called to it through the malodor ous channel of Ibe piifillistlc ring.'' Motherly. ' Well, Ktlle, dear, 1 hope ou''e been a little mother to your brother while I've been out?' "Ob. yes, 1 have. I've rmacked him quite a lot!" London Opinion. Painting is more of a habit with tome wouieu than art is with an artUL SAVE YOUNG W0MA1L Tl A Japanese-American version of an ancient Greek myth Is indeed a piece of literature. In some correspondence of Lafcadlo Hearn, published recently In the Atlantic Monthly, there Is quoted such a composition, warranted to be genuine. It was written by a native of Japan in an examination paper. Tlthonus was a youth very band' some and polite. Aurora was the rosy-fingered God dess of the Dawn a very fine young lady with rosy fingers. She was used to get up in the earlier morning every day, and she was very studious. She follen in love to Tlthonus, and by her chariot taked him up to the sky. One day she ask him that "Sir, I can give you all thing you want." Then he ask to her that "Please give me the eternal life." Hoping to enjoy the eternal life of her husband, Aurora ask to Zeus, Fath er of all the Gods; And soon the eternal life was bestow on Tlthonus. But Aurora forget to request for the eternal youth; therefore Tlthonus have the only eternal life. Gods have the eternallty of youth as well as life. Tlthonus came to become thirty or fourty years of age. He became every day more old. He become TOTALLY old. And felt the mlseratlon of this life To the last desire he begged the God to make hirn a glasshopper and to hop on the ground. So for pity the God changed him Into a glasshopper, which could hop about our world. And he Is hop about the ground even now, and bears the dry looking. So from a man becomed the husband of the Goddess, and then to be changed into a vile worm! This should teach us well to ask never the Inconsistent things. Knowledge That Ia Power. The world Is full of people who know a great deal but cannot use their knowledge. They are weighted down with unavailable facts and theories, says Orison Swett Marsden In Suc cess Magazine. You have often met people who seem to know much, who are so encyclopedic In their greedy ab sorption of facts, that their general knowledge -is like an enormous pack on a soldier's back, which exhausts his vitality and impedes his march. It makes them heavy of foot and clum sy in everything they do. They im press you as not being large enough to swing their loads and carry them with ease. They are like children tugging away at great pieces of furni ture which they can scarcely lift. It is not the ability, the education, the knowledge that one has that makes the difference between men. The mere possession of knowledge Is not always the possession of power; knowledge which has not been digested and as similated and become a part of your self, knowledge which cannot swing into line In an emergency, is of little use, and will not save you at a critical moment. To be effective, a man's education must become a part of himself, as he goes along. All of It must be worked up Into power. A little practical edu cation that has become a part of one's being and is always available will ac complish more in the world than knowledge far more extensive that cannot be utilized. Alakkan Glaelrr. An interesting fact about Alaskan glaciers Is that some are "dead" and others are "alive." Davidson glacier, which Is really a tongue of the Mulr glacier, has been ascended by travel ers for u number of years. It Is a dead glacier, having a moraine of sev eral miles between it and the sea. Looking at It from tho boat, it repre sents a Kaleidoscopic appearance as the sun shines upon It, and the sur face seems scratched with tiny pin lines. These are in reality deep crev ices, r. hlch mast be iipprnacht'd cau tiously, for they are lurking pitfalls for the unwary. Vancouver Provi dence. Oue tin lliin. "Pardon nie," said a gentleman at the entrance to a downtown restau rant. "I have something on you." "And may I ask what it is?" "My hat" Birmingham Age-Herald. j; A JAPANESE-GREEK FABLE. WHERE TEXAS WILL BANK. At Prornl Hale of Incrrnw It Will Bp Ihlril Anions; "tatea. If Malnp. say, or Iowa, or even 1111- C( Is, were to gain 2,T.00,0(iO new inhab itants in a single decade the fact would ue readily noticeable by one who dwelt here. Here In Texas, where only 24.500.000 fides out of a total of 141,372,000 acres litis ever been brought within the "cul- Ivated area," Including lands used for pasture, the vast army of newcomers scatters and Is lost to stsht like water that sink" into sand, Collier's snys. This, perhaps, accounts for the native Texan's reluctance to credit the start ing estimate of gain made by the state Apartment of education. He has seen all of the principal cities of the state double their size since 1000, nnd he is prnscious that the acreage of farm Innds under cultivation Is steadily en larging, but he does not frequently en counter the newcomers In his accus tomed walks and he cannot believe Ihey are all here. If the plate's estimate for 1909 be orrect Texas should rank third among the states in population in the federal census of 1P10. led only by New York and Pennsylvania. And if the migra tion Into Texas between 1910 and 1920 continues in anything like Its pres ent volume the largest of the states should also be the most populous ten years hence. Nine hundred miles from north to south. 1,100 miles from east to west, with elevations ranging from sea level to over 8,000 feet, Texas, as she ought within so great an area, ofTers the home seeker all conceivable varieties of climate and soil products. The vir gin soil, with its promise of exemption from the need to use fertilizers for two or three generations, appeals pow erfully to the old farmers of the mid dle western states. SHORT METER SERMONS. If we fail to believe the right ideas, we will fail to do right acts, and re peated failure to act rightly lead3 to a sinful character. Rev. W. Horace Day, Congiegationalist, Los Angeles. We need to purify the spiritual at mosphere of the homes of our country, so that the children may learn to know God and be trained for His service. Rev. A. R. Holderby, Methodist, At lanta. The apostles and the early church drew comfort from the oathbound covenant, and this same comfort be longs to every true Christian down to the end of this age. Rev. C. F. Rus sell, Congregatlonalist, Cincinnati. God is the author of the natural life; He is the creator of the spiritual life. He sustained the natural life by outward means. In similar manner He sustains the spiritual life. Rev. F. P. Siegfried, Roman Catholic, Philadel phia. There Is nothing fairer than a beau tiful woman. No sunset or sunrise, no flower that blooms is to be com pared to the fair and beautiful form fashioned by the hand of God in femi nine lines and proportions. Rev. E. L. Powell, Christian, Louisville. Evolution has never been the origi nating, creating or commanding pow er. Human thought never advanced so far as to get away from the first statement In the book. "In the begin ning God created." Rev. W. F. Day, Congregatlonalist, Los Angeles. To be a Christian means to meet the experiences of life with a calm serenity, and to move ever toward the sunset with sweetness of heart, with sublimity of life conception in tbe furtherance of the spiritual queBt. Rev. Dr. Wllkins, Episcopalian, Los Angeles. The strongest nations to-day are the Christian nations. The most glorious martyrs have been Christian men and women. The brightest force In the world to-day is Chrlstanity, and the noblest manhood is found in the church. Rev. G. R. Edmundson, Pres byterian, Denver. Faith in himself ia a necessity for any young man. He should not pity himself nor allow anyone else to do so, but with the knowledge that God Is on his side, and that if he does right he should be able to face all life's battles bravely. Rev. W. L. Rutledge, Metho dist, London, Can. The man who has grown reflective, and is content to do the will of God, will soon discover that so far from death of the great and good militating against the love of God, it proves that love, for without death there can be no social progress. Rev. H. D. Hlllls, Congregatlonalist, Brooklyn. No matter what men's passions may dictate or society decide, the Christian must remember that marriage is a sacrament, instituted by Christ to con fer grace upon the married couple that they may save their souls and bring up their children In the love and fear of God. Bishop Conaty, Roman Catho lic, Los Angeles. Una by a oae. "Bernard Shaw," said a dramatlt critic, "a, ways does the original thing. I went to jee 'Caesar and Cleopatra' with him once, and as we stood in the aisle the house was crowded a stranger behind us persisted in pok ing his head right over Shaw's shoul der. "Shaw then did the original thing. Taking out his handkerchief, he wiped the man's noe, patting and twisting it pretty vigorously. "The man, with an ugly oath, jerk td buck bis bead. " Oh, I beg your pardon,' snid Sli-iw. '1 thoaivlil it is mine, you kno'v ' " Wasl'.iiirton Star. A Mail ol' tl-nv. Many ears ao in Lugland met could easily be found to give any evi dence upon oi'.lh tht'.t milit be re-ipim-d. ant .-e:a" of these poisons walked opt ;;ly in W estminster hall with a sttaw in one of their shoes to signify they wanted employment as witnesses. This was the origin of the saying, "He is a man of straw." Utit the custom has high antiquity. A writer in the Quarterly Review says that such wtre common In Greece. There is never much disposition t kick about the otUer fellow's taxes. Stella - Two Is company and three Is Bella Dlvorca. The Sun. Teacher How many make a mil lion, Johnny? Johnny Not many. "Ever had appendicitis?" "No. There ain't never been a time when I could afford it." Detroit Free Press. Barber - Have anything on your face when I get through, sir? VlcUm Some skin mid a nose, I hope. Boston Transcript. George Do you think that I'm good enough for you, darling? Darling No, George; but you're too good for any other girl. "The chicken stew has two prices In the bill of fare. How is that, wait er?" "With chicken in it, it is 30 cents, without it, 10." Mother (looking over her boy's 6houlder) Your spelling Is perfectly terrible. Little Son This ain't a spell in' lesson. It's a composition. Politician Congratulations, Sarah; I've been elected. Sarah (with de light) Honestly? Politician What difference does that make? St. Loula Times. The Father Did mamma punish, you to-day, Tommie? The Boy Yes, sir. "What did she do?" "Made me Btay In the house while she was tak ing her singing lesson!" "They are going to lock Jones up for the good of the community." "What's he done?" "He's talking of setting Browning's poems to Rlcnard Strauss' music." Cleveland Leader. The Man No, I don't suppose that t shall ever marry. I'm .too shy, don't you know, and "faint heart ne'er won. fair lady." The Girl (helping hi.m on), But I'm not fair; I'm dark. "Why," asked a Missouri newspaper, 'does our State stand at the head iu raising mules?" "Because," said aa Iowa paper, "that is the only safe place to stand." Jack O'Lantern. Teacher If you wear one pair ot ihoes three months, how long will two pairs last? Jimmle A year. Teach er Oh, no; how do you get that? limmie I don't wear any In the sum aier. "Yes, I do .most of my work at night low." "What's the reason?" "Why, I'm a Wileyite and cook my food four -ours, and being a Fletcherlte it takes Be three hours to eat." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Wlfey Do you think there Is a man :hat could conscientiously say to hia 'ife, "You are the only woman I ever oved?" Hubby Only one that I can :hink of. "Who? You, dearest?" "Oh, jo, Adam." Spare Moments. A woman went to a bank. She no :iced that there was a new face be nind the window. "Has the cashier 5one away to take a rest?" she en juired. "No," replied the new man; 'he has gone away to avoid It." "How do you extract women's teeth s-ithout their screaming? You don't jive gas." "But my office is opposite 1 millinery display. When the worn n get absorbed in looking at the hats :hey're oblivious to pain." Kansas Zlty Times. Young Lady (on first visit to West ern ranch) For what purpose do you jse that coll of line on your saddle? owpuncher That line, as you call it, lady, we use for catching cattle nd horses. Young Lady I dare say. Now, may I ask what do you use for bait. The new housemaid had just opened he door in response to Wigglesby's ring. "Is Miss Darborough In?" asked Wigglesby. "Yes, sorr, she's in sorr, but she's engaged," said the maid. "Yes, I know," smiled Wigglesby. "I'm what she's engaged to." Harper's Weekly. "Then you don't think I practice what I preach, eh?" queried the min ister in talking with one of the de.v cons. "No, sir. I don't," replied the deacon. "You've been preachin' on ths subject of resignation for two yean an' ye haven't resigned yet." Ladles' Home Journal. Tubb Old boy, I want to congratu late you on your speech at the banquet last night. O'Sudds (after waiting a moment) I know you do, pard, and you're awfully sorry you can't do it truthfully. I appreciate the effort, just the same. Nasty weather, isn't it? Chicago Tribune. Mrs. A. I do love lobster, but I never have them at home, because 't seems so inhuman to kill them by put ting them in a kettle of boiling wa ter. Mrs. B. Gracious! I never kill them that way. It would be too hor rible; I always put them on In cold water and let them come to a boil. "I regret very much that we cannot use. your story," said the magazine editor, handing back the manuscript "it's astonishing how much really good literature we are compelled to decline." "It's more astonishing, though," said the disgruntled author of the story, "that you never let any of It get into your magazine." Chicago Tribune. Little Nelly told little Anita what she termed a "little fib." Anita A fib is the same as a story, and a story is the same as a lie. Nelly No, it's not. Anita Yes, It is, because ,:ny fa ttier said so, and my father Is a pro fessor at the university. Nelly I don't tare if he is. My father I a real estate man, and ho knows more about lying than your father. Itiilher !'nr:iiloIeul. "One thing always puzzled nie about a parliamentary proceeding." "What is that?" "How a nun can be so acrobatic as to be the ihairman of a standing cool' mil tee." Baltimore American. J1 ii In re. "The ease of this time I am having is like takiug candy from a buby." "Then you are having a howling time." Baltimore American. Flirtation is attention without 1 teatloo.