4 "I 1 4 ' '1 !?,' It ' OPINIONS OP GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS m 11 An Old, Old Slory. a i nANDSOMIQ Denver woman lert n goou husbnnd because she was "tired of him" and married n man who was a rnko. The expected 1 . t 11.1,1 linnnrmeri. !L WIIH tllC mntl WHO KOI urcu una Mmc. He did not take tlio woman nway from he other man because he loved her. Ho mere-ii-qnlrwl to lmw whnt he could do. One dny this Bccond husband Intlmaled Unit ho was through with foer. Mudo dCHpernte, tho woman shot the brute and killed him. Tho wholo thing, tragedy and nil, was logical. The woman Invited retributive Justice. And so did the man. When the woman left hor faithful husband, lured by the tempter, sho cut herself from hupplncsH. She was too proud to crawl back and beg tho forgiveness of the mnn tho had descried for a whim. And she lived every day 8f her llfo In tho scorn of the man who had done with her what ho would. What wonder Bhe wan desperate to madness? And as for him ho got what he wanted when toe took tho woman from tho aide of hor husband. It wan small satisfaction. It was too easy. And when the do wived, allly creature realized her status the man got what lie desorved. A real man would have staid by tho woman to the blltor end. Hut real men are not In tho business f stealing men'u wives. Tho wholo mlnerablo business, from divorce lo mur der, Is only another lining of tho curtain on the old, old vorld-trngcdy entitled, "Tho Soul That Hlnncth It Shall i)Je." Tho play docs not always end in murder, na In the JDcnver case, but it never ends happily You can kill a axul without taking n life. Dos Moines News. rr careful physician would probably iu-ist upon an interval of at least two hour.i between nmul and bath; one hour Is a fair compromise between zeal and prudence, and a half hour the absoluto minimum for 3afety. Finally, don't enter tho water timidly and by degrees, but boldly and with a plunge, wetting the whole body at once. If one is not ablo lo dive In, ho should wado in to knee depth, then wet his head thoroughly and plunge la bodily. These rules have been repeated often enough to be familiar to overyhody, but they are continually disregarded. When in distress In the water, cool presence of mind and calm self control are the essential means of salvation. It Is a panic of fear that carries the struggling victim to death before rescuers can reach hhu. Anyone who has con fidence can float, especially In salt water, almost indefinite ly, and with yracUcally no ruusculur exertion. New York Sun- Why tho PostoHico Doesn't Pey. iHE managers of tho ponl office announce tear fully that the rural free delivery nyntem will causo a deficit. Rural free delivery enables farmers to get mall regularly. It enables a " good many people to rnako a respoctable llv-1 lug and, above all, It keeps tho Inhabitants of the nation In touch with each other and vrltlj civilization. Where tho rural free delivery goes &iere Is no more of that dreadful unbroken monotony which (311s Western Insane asylums with farmers wives. -.Postofllco olllclals and others, more or loss Interested, fcltrlbulo lo the rural frco delivery system tho national postoffioo deficit and attack rural frco delivery by Impli cation. They aro wrong. In the find place, tho rural free delivery system should be constantly extended even It does cause a deficit. In the second place, It Is not ffural free delivery which Is at fault, but tho national sys tem of allowing tho railroads to swindle the government jSirough tho posslolllce. Tho fifteen millions deficit la a Very amall flca-blto compared to the enormous sum that the fallronds steal every year from the government. The government hires Its mail enra from the railroads and pays for a year's rent an much aa tho car costn to 4-alld. And those cars, outrageously overpaid for by the .government, aro such flimsy deathtraps that no company vlll insure- tho lives of tho postal clerks that work In Jbcm. For hauling (heso mall cars on the same train that featils prlvato express cars tho railroads charge tho gov )rnmcut nuywhorc from one thousand per cent up In ex- teas of the rnto that they charge the express companies. The Last West." niiN the convulsions of war and of politics bring into existence a new State, it attracts tho attention of the world. Not less worth noting are the great economic movements which aro constantly changing tho pageH of our geogra- itrrrphles. a'"" It Is not many years since there was llttlo to nay about Western Canada, exrept that great stretches of unoccupied prairie extended north nnd west, from Win nipeg to the foot of the Rocky Mountains. Out of this territory west of Manitoba two now provinces Saskatche wan nnd Alberta will, on Sept. 1, come Into existence us full-fledged members of the Canadian confederation. In this great Western Canadian area, including Mani toba, there were, by the censiis of 1001, only about as mnny people ns In tho single city of Cincinnati. Yet Its agricultural resources will support twenty millions, nearly one-half tho population of the Rrltish Isles. The room for development Is thus ample, and that Is tho first essen tial In the building of a great commonwealth. The new provinces will be largely devoted, as Is Mani toba, to wheat, with some cattle-grazing. They have not been fully occupied heretofore, because the world has been able to get along without their products But tho United States must, before many decades, cease to export wheat, so large will be the demands of its own inhabitants. Tho densely populated countries of the world aro ever seeking their food supplies from Its newer areas. This great region of Canada has been called "tho Inst west." It might also be called the "first north" of tho American continent, since the successful cultivation of tho soli, through Improvements In agriculture, is steadily mov ing northward, and It Is possible that another generation will see the tide of humanity rushing Into nrens not now deemed sultablo for fanning. The length of the summer's day, toward the arctic circle, offsets to Bome extent tho shortness of tho season. More Important still, areas gov erned by Pacific temperatures arc everywhere warmer than In the older half of the continent. Youth's Companion. Summer Drownings. N nine out of every ten of tho numerous cases of drowning which sadden tho summer season he fatal accident may be traced 'back cither to gnorauco of a few simple rules that should be mown nnd observed by bathcr3, or elso to a rash and reckless disregard of them when known. In tho cases of tho drowning of good irwlmmors, the fatal cramp Is generally duo to their having gone Into tho water too soon after eating or when over heated, nnd therefore with their strength, unconsciously to ftemsolves, below Its par value. Here arc the cardinal rules for swimmers: Never go -to tho water when overheated, or soon after eating. Tho Ml A Dwarfish Murderer. ID have before hnd occasion to note tho grow ing public Indifference to the brutal murder of Innocent men coincident with a sentimentul repulsion at the thought of tho legal execution of the brutal murderer. A ense In point: Tho Chicago papers tell us that a fellow of tho direct, 17 years old, with a shocking record of fiendish crimes, concluding with a particularly atrocloua murder, was let off because he Is dwarfish In stature. It appenrs that this youth, with others, broke Into u butcher shop, but found no money, which angered him. He selected tho biggest knlfo In the shop, and ns the gang left, said: "Watch me; I'm goin' to get even wit' some guy fer tils. Do foist guy we meets gets dls sticker in his gizzard." It Is said "Richard Carvel" has yielded Mr. Churchill $120,000 In book rights atomy It Is not generally known that this popular author's first aspira tions wero toward the navy, and that he actually begun u courso at tho An napolis Naval Academy. Dr. Henry Van Dyke's "Story of tho Other Wise Man" has just been translated into Spanish. This has been from the first one of the most popular little classics over written. It has been translated Into German, French, Welsh, and, most remurka blo of all, Into Turkish. "Trilby," once on all lips, lately for gotten "like a dead man out of mind," Is to experience n revival, It is predict ed. At least tlio llurpors are printing a new edition, to be sent to England. and It Is said to be the third that has been on the press within a few weeks. The revival of the play has, of course, had something to do with the renewed call for the book. Dr. William Henry Druiumond, the author of "Tho Habitant," "Johnnie Courteau" nnd "The Voyagcur," for many years set so Utile value on his poems which appeared from time to tlmo In various periodicals, that he made no attempt even to keep copies of them. It was his wife, who shares his literary tastes nnd who has her self written some clever stories of the Jamaican negroes, who collected the scattered fragments of his earlier verse, kept copies of his poems, and finally persuaded him to submit them to the publishers. Thomas Dixon, Jr., author of "The Clansman" and "The Leopard's Spots," Is the most picturesque person ality the South has given us In many years. Ills portraits show a strong, virile force, full of character. Though but 41 years of age, he has been suc cessively lawyer, minister, lecturer and author, achieving distinction In ench vocation. As pastor of the Peo ple's church he was tho most talked of preacher lu Now York, though his views proved too liberal to please tho orthodox. Ills resolution to become nn author was made when ho was still a boy, though he even then determined not to attempt a book until he knew something of life, and his previous oc cupations ho looked upon us prelimi naries to his real life work as writer Wo reud too many books, declares Richard Le Galllenne, who has per petrated a few himself, "and too many that, as they do not really Interest us, bring us neither profit nor diversion Even from the point of view of read Ing for pleasure, we uianago our read ing badly. Wo listlessly allow our selves to be bullied by publishers' ad vertisements Into reading the latest fatuity In fiction without, In one case out of twenty, finding any of that pleasure wo aro ostensibly seeking. indeed, we nro bored and onervuted, where we might have been refreshed either by romance or laughter. Such reading resembles the Idle absorption He planted numerous trees and tt& big flocks of birds that know him and came to his homo every morning to. pick the crumbs of bread which hs threw In the patio. Mnny years ago, nnd this Is well rh membered by the peasants, It wn Good Friday. Everybody In town had attended the religious services of tha morning nnd they wero going to thcit homes when a terrific nolso was hcurd, They rushed to the street where It cainn from, to find ort what It was, and saw how the earth had opened under the cursed man's feet Ho was enveloped by thick flames and smoke, nnd disappeared beneath the surfngf . . ... ... tm tno enrtn. Tins was couamcicu most deserved punishment. While the faithful wero In tho churcH tho cursed man was loafing around nnd hnvlng seen a big crucifix upon an altar erected on the street, ns was doiw In those days, he placed n burning cigarette in the lips of tlio Imago, Scarcely had he made eight or tej steps, when he was engulfed by the lo ferno. That day all the trees ho planted, except the cursed one, dried up, an nil the birds he had fed died. An nttemnt wns made to cut down tho tree that had not dried up, bu tho man who made tlio attempt drop pod dead upon stepping upon" tin shadow of Its foliage. The man's bodj had to bo left thero to bo eaten up by crows, because nobody had tha courage to approach and removo it. Since Unit day numerous person have mot a tragic death under tha tree. A pedestrian who went under It for shade on a hot summer dny was bitten by a snake nnd died In two hours. Three men, on different occasions, sought shelter from rain under Itl branches, and were struck by llghb ning. A woman who wns hanging som clothes to dry from the trunk of Uii tree was attacked and killed by a blllyt goat that came from nobody knowq where, nnd that wns never seen again, Two years ngo a little boy wns riding f burro, Innocently led his nnlmnl to thf tree. The burro threw him off and kicked him to death. The last victlnl of this fatal tree was a man nnmccj Mclhiundes Arevalo, who, during heavy rainstorm, ran under tho trol for shelter; like his predecessors on such occasion, he wns stmck by light ning. Mexican Herald. 4 4 EAGLE HUNTING IN THE ALPS, A young fellow came swinging along, unconscious of danger, of innocuous but uninteresting bever- anu tno uwarr stubbed blm to death with the butcher ages, which cheer as little as they ln knlfe. The Judge refused to sentence tho murderer to bo ebriate and at tho pnme time make hanged because he was "too small." Mistaken Bontiment. frivolous demands on tho digestive ti .a uiK unuiign to xuuraer ue in uig enough to uuug. functions. No one but n publisher OUIl I' UHIL-ISCO ArgOHUUt. follld (Mill COMPARATIVE S1HENGTH OF THE WORLD'S NAVIES IN COMPLETED SHIPS. could call such reading 'light Actual ly It Is weariness of the flesh and heaviness of the spirit No reading docs us nny good that Is not a pleas ure to us." MEXICO'S "DEVIL TREE." Great Urltnlu, 1,595,781 tons. Franco, 003.7.1 ton. German)', 411, 49 tout. Vnltecl State?, C-16.523 tons. Italy, Ja-v.-, .'54,510 lonu. 252,061 tons !usia, ,' , 37 tons Austria. 112.330 tons. JUST GETTING A NEW SUIT. When a Ulrd Moulin It In in the Hum! of Itrt Till lor. Wo get a now suit sonio of us be causo our old one wears out. That Is the most apparent causo for the now annual suit of tho birds. Yet with entirely lost. Here in my woods la a crow with three of the large quills In his right wing gone. I can see tho gap as ho files over. Ilo has been shot ut, and nature must replace those feathers If that crow is to survive, oven though ho comes juslly (human standards!) by bis loss from stealing corn. Tho feath- iKrtm ii fi will) Hniiin nf Mm fnvnml of 8 humans, the feathers go out of fash-! cr of this crow ,uul ()f n Wr13 might Ion. Rut the annual moult Is, first of tov two years or longer, but to oil, naturo's wlso provision for tho , tl, raco at il lM!l- nuturo Im8 afcty and llfo of the bird. Feathers lt "ccessary to provide u now ,,r,r nnv roverlu.r but also moans Plumngc at leant onco a year. f locomotion, nnd nonce tlio bird's nlv menus of llfo. A year of use Rut thero aro other reasons, t least thero nro ndvanlnges taken of tho leaves many of them worn and bro- i moult for other onds; such as tho tem fcon, some of them, through accident, , poruturo of tho Beanona heuvJer tn winter and lighter In summor, also the adaptation of the oolor of tho plumage to tho changing colore of tne environ ment ns tlio change from tho dark summer color of the ptarmigan to its snow-white winter plumage to mulch tho snows of Its fnr northern homo; then, and perhaps most Interesting of all, Is tho advantage taken of tlio moult, for tho adorning of the bird for the mating season. Indeed, nature goes bo far, In somo cases, ns to causo a special moult to meet tho exigencies of the wedding as if fine featliors do mnko a Hue bird. All this to meet the fancy of Uie bride! So at least the scientists tell uo, Country Calendar. Denth to All Who Vent Within Its Fate ful Bhudow. Recnuse of the mnny fatal accidents that have occurred under a huge tree that grows In the Ilaclendlta ranch, In the Zumora district, Michoacan, pens ants of the region are growing more and more superstitious about its sup posed fatal omen, nnd they begin to call lt "arbol mnldlto" (cursed tree). The tree is supposed to be over seventy-five years old, and Is snld to have been planted by a man who, because of his enormous crimes nnd his forgot fulness of tho divine law, was swnl- lowod up by the earth. The man nover went to mass, never confessed, did not have the Imago of a saint In his house, did not carry a rosary around hl3 nock, and never made tho sign of tho cross. There was not a beggar In the town who had ever received a "tlaco chlqulto" (old coins equivalent to 1 -. cents) from him. lie never gave anything for the church and never look off lils hnr wlii'ii hn mnr n "ivuli-nnNn" -f - -- - - ItW on the street. It was rumored that ho was respon sible for mnny murders and other atro cious crimes, but he was never in Jail, neither could he be Incarcerated bo cause ho hud n compact with tho tic. 11, and whenever ho Invoked his sntnnlc majesty the latter rendered him cither Invisible to human eyes or smaller than nn nut, so that lie could easily escape dang'r. He hnd no friends nor rela tives, because ho was shunned by all. Tu Uilugk" ha loved, birds ana trees. l'criloiis anil ICxcltltitr J-port for Bloun tain Climburt). Eagle hunting in the Alps Is a peril ous and exciting sport which Is be ginning lo attract the attention of Eng llsh as well as Swiss Bportsmcn, tele graphs the London Express' iiyti correspondent1. During the past few days scores o( plucky climbers huve been trying la scale the almost inaccessible rocks oq which the nests of the eagles are built In tho hope of capturing eaglets. In tho Rcrnese Oberland, and In the Gri ons, their efforts hnvo led to some Bar age encounters with the parent eagles and to some wonderful escapes. In the Engadine an English sport man has captured a line young eagle Id tho Val Chumuern. The .nest was on the face of an almost uncllmable rock, protected from above by an overhang Ing cliff. After somo perilous climb ing, the spot wus at length reachetj from below, and after a severe tussle tho young bird wns captured, and ht describes the sport as one of tho most exciting that he knows. At Entlcbuch a mountaineer scaled a rocky peak and hnd succeeded In so curing two englcts, when the pnren birds attacked him with such violence thnt ho fell from the rock and was badly Injured. One of the old birdi wns, however, shot by a spectator. lj measured over seven feet across tho wings. Near Oberborgll two peasants so cured a fine eaglet, while the parcu birds wero absent from the eyrie, by descending on a swinging rope 1,00(1 feet over the face of an overhanging precipice. In the nest were part of H lamb, a small pig, several large fowls. bones ol I and an enormous store birds nud animals. of Hiuu.'i o KI morv. Melissa is u vail, line-looking colored girl, nnd Mrs. Compton, with whom Melissa lives as cook, is a small, fair haired woman. The mistress enter tains great respect for her maid's cull nary powers, and Melissa adores Mr Compton. "I reckon I's done lenrned nn awfuj lot since I come hynr to lib, Missy Compton," said Melissa, t ' niphantly one day. "I's done learned hovfco walk an 'pear Jes like do quality fT3s , when I goes out. An' now you's glb. ben mo tint handsome yallcr pa'sol, I " 'spects nuHln but tint do first tlmo I walk out under it do riilnlster'll step up to me nn' he'll say, ' 'Sense me, but am I spenkln' to Mis' Gen'ral Comp ton?' " t 4 Knew II - lijibn-4. "Don't you think," suggested tlio old friend of the family, "that you would do well to keep a watch on your son?" "Impossible," replied the father of young Wlldrake, "lt wouldn't bo lony before he'd exchnngo it for it puwn, ticket." IMiihidelphla Tress.