1 1 f h i 1 1 V T i Y y i i S M 1 rAS n r RrfUSnHHnBBKHMMH SHELL WISH SHE WASNT NEV When her dutys manifolded And her hours of ease are few Will a change come oer the spirit Of the woman who is new When shes drawn upon a jury Or is drafted for the wars Will fehe like her freedom better Than the chains she now abhors When shes running for an office And pets left and has the blues Wont she wish that she was back in The oppressed old womans shoes When the ship of state shes steering Mid a storm of mad abuse Wont she wish that for the ballot Shed neer thought she had a use When she finds that she is treated Like a man oh tho shes longed For just tliat wont she be tempted Oftentimes to think shes wronged When no man eer gives his seat up In a car or deigns to hold Her umbrella when its raining Wont she wish that she was old Wont she think the men just horrid Left to hustle for herself Where shes looked on as a rival In the race for power and pelf When mans reverence no longer Is accorded as her due When he treats her as a brother Shell be sorry that shes new Boston Globe A NOVEL IN A NUTSHELL No one brought into casual contact with Edward Flint would have sus pected that he was of unsound mind None the less he was one of the most dangerous lunatics that I had in the X asylum He had been an exceptionally able lawyer and up to his 40th year had been making a large income Over work had however told upon him and he was suddenly seized while in the company of some friends with acute homicidal mania He had been with me for four years and on the average had an attack of mania every six or seven weeks During his period of lunacy he was so ferocious as to de mand constant care and supervision and of course as a result had to be de tained in the asylum In his saner intervals no man could have desired a pleasanter companion and it was my constant habit to spend half an hour or so a day in his con genial company One day just before his periodical attack he told me the following story which is of such a unique character that I give it just as he told it me At its conclusion wrought up to a pitch of fury he made a determined attack on me and I near ly paid for my tale with my life being only rescued with difficulty by the at- tendants I was what the world would call a successful man and on my fortieth -birthday I reckoned I was making over 2000 a year I had always been a lonely man and had never had the least inclination toward female society con tenting myself with my work and my books One day however I had to wait upon an old gentleman who had recently come to our town for the pur pose of drawing up his will When this was done I was introduced to his daughter a girl about 20 Ethel Milli kin was not what might have been called a beauty still I knew at once that 1 had met my fate To you doctor married young and happily it may sound ridiculous for a middle aged man to be bilking of love yet to me it was a desperate fact I will not bore you with her description suffice it to say that trembling I took my leave and went back to my office There I thought long and deeply over this new phase in my life and finally resolved that cost what it might I would mar ry Miss Millikiu and that if I couldnt no one else should It was clearly absurd for me to at tempt to win her love in the usual way the disparity in our years was so great so I decided to win her respect first I took time over it and quietly inter ested myself in her pet projects sub scribed to her sick fund lent her books and was of use to her in many ways Already she regarded me as a very dear friend and I have no doubt would soon have learned to love me One night I was to take her and her sister to the theater and had booked three stalls At the last minute how ever to my secret joy her sister had a bad headache and was unable to go We went as arranged and I decided to put my fortunes to the touch during the performance On our arrival the theater was crowded and to my in tense annoyance I found a young cli ent of mine Sir Edward Berkley in the next stall to ours I was obliged to introduce him and had the mortifica tion of seeing that Miss Millikin had made an impression on him What chance had I against a young wealthy and handsome man And with jealous eyes I already saw the Chateau dEs pagne of love that 1 had so carefully reared in ruins On our return from the play Berk ley insisted on accompanying us to Mr Millikins house and was introduced by me to him The acquaintance ripened into friendship and friendship into love which I was powerless to prevent and one day Berkley burst into my office in a great state of excitement and ask ed -me to congratulate him Me of all men How I managed with impotent rage at my heart to keep a smooth and smiling face I do not know but to add to the bitter irony of the situation I had to receive in structions to draw up my successful rivals marriage settlements I could have cheerfully murdered him as he sat in his chair so bright and cheerful with the happiness of youth glowing In tils face Suddenly his face twitch ed and he hastily put up his hand to his brow What is it I eagerly asked hop ing he might be going to be ill Nothing only neuralgia I have suffered from it for years and have tried everything and seen all the doc tors but to no avail So now I make the best of it So saying he got up and took his leave to go and make love curse him to his fiancee No one knows what days and nights I spent although I worked until my body was aching my brain would not let me sleep I roamed up and down my room planning impossible methods of revenge- only to see the futility of it all The times are not suited for melodrama and if tI could only watch and watch and wait On morning I crawled down to the office feeling utterly done up and list lessly examined my correspondence Among it I noted one from an old friend who was practicing as a physi cian in Paris Tossing the rest of the letters to the managing clerk I began to read my friends long letter Sud denly a paragraph in it seemed to stand before my eyes as if written in fire It ran thus You will I know be keenly inter ested in a marvelous discovery that Dr Luys of this city has just made He is our great authority on brain dis eases and also dabbles in hypnotism and other kindred subjects He has established beyond any doubt that it is possible to remove the delusions of an insane person pre viously hypnotized by means of a thin magnetized steel band worn around the patients forehead for about a week This is sufficiently marvelous but is nothing to the fact that if a sane man or woman wears the band pre viously used by the lunatic the delu sions of the latter pass in their entire ty to the wearer who becomes an echo in every action of his predecessor At last At last Crushing the paper in my hand I revelled in the exquisite revenge the letter Revealed to me My brain preternaturally excited in a few moments planned the whole scheme Violently ringing my bell I informed the clerk who came hurrying in that I had to go to Paris at once on urgent business I told him to ask Sir Edward to meet me at the office in four days time to finish the settlement and I started at once for London en route for Paris Fatigue was gone Once more alert and active I felt as if treading on air On the journey I rehearsed and rehears ed the scheme I had planned out until I thought it perfect I at once on ar rival hastened to niy friends house and pretended that I had not received his letter After breakfast he took me to Dr Luys clinic and there I saw that the powers he laid claim to were indeed his Selecting the neediest-looking of his assistants I gently touched him and drew him aside In my best French I told him that if he came to my hotel that evening with the band just removed from the lunatic who had been relieved before my eyes I would give him 2500 francs or 100 At first hewouldnot listen but at last he did and I went back to mj hotel content That evening I left Paris with my re venge carefully packed in a small box On arrival at my house I slept for twelve hours a thing I had not done for weeks and awoke ready to carry my scheme through I see ydu shudder doctor but I felt calm as fate itself The following morning I was closet ed with Berkley for some time poring over deeds of title and old musty docu ments I purposely delayed in order to fatigue him Presently I saw the tell tale contraction of his face and I knew he was mine Leaning across the table I said I had intended Sir Edward half ruining myself in giving you a wed ding present but I have altered my mind I will cure your neuralgia in stead What said he eagerly Id give anything if you could its the only crossI have to bear Well Ill cure you on one condi tion Name it Ill do anything That jou give me your solemn word of honor not to disclose to any one the method of cure All right only cure me Well Ill tell you first why you have had to promise You must know that this office that is myself is the repository of half the secrets of the town This is because everyone thinks I am a model for solid common sense Now if you blurted out that I had ad vised you to use a half spiritualistic half quackish remedy why my repu tation as an embodiment of practical sense would be gone I used myself to suffer from headaches and do now for that matter and had tried every remedy that the doctors could suggest At last I was persuaded to try a spiri tualist to whom I went at night He gave me a thin band to wear whenever I had a headache and he said it would relieve it if due to overwork or cure it if due to neuralgia It was to be worn for eight days constantly and to en able you to do it I suggest that we both take a weeks holiday and go to some small fishing village and try the treatment I paused and waited with throbbing heart for his answer How awfully good you are Flint I can never repay you for your kind ness I owe you more than I can tell already Why you introduced me to the loveliest -Stay stay Dont begin that I will arrange to start next Monday Will that suit you So it was agreed and he left the of fice in high spirits while I sat on and thought of Ethel my wife in the fu ture In the little village of Ancorn I bound the fatal band round his fore head I could not hypnotize him but T felt sure that my intense desire for the success of the band would be as good as any other mans hypnotic pow er And so it proved for on the eighth SerN l 1 ft U lJ T nwwMlm m 22o2 day I found Sir Edward Berkley Ethels promised husband in his bed room a gibbering lunatic I at once secured the steel band which was soon destroyed and then summoned assist ance With great difficulty we had him removed to an asylum and I went back to break the news to his fiancee I did It I flatter myself well and then left her alone for a month Then I gradu ally began once more to frequent the house until I stood again in my old po sition Berkley had been away for five months and I thought the time had arrived to speak my mind to Ethel I went one afternoon to see her and if possible to win her Sitting at her side I was just going to speak when I heard a step on the stair and turned round and to my amazement saw Sir Edward Berkeley himself Then I saw all was over a blind fury seemed to seize me In a moment I was on him Ah I have you now I have jou at last With a bound Flint was upon me I fought for my life but fortunately assistance was at hand and fighting yelling and struggling the maniac was secured London Sketch TWO JOKES And of Course One Had to Be Fun nier than the Other Mr Giddy invited two friends to dine with him the other evening and when the first of them arrived he found the host in a very merry mood Glad you got here first he said Ive got a joke on Jonesby that the boys will tell around the office for a year and I want to tell you about it be fore he comes Jonesby is something of a joker himself isnt he returned the guest He thinks so now but he wont af ter he finds out You see hes played a lot of fool tricks on me that he thinks funny and Ive been waiting to get even Of late hes taken to buying lots of neckties and keeping a comb in his desk and the boys think hes in love with the typewriter Well thats no joke Im sure I wasnt sure about it myself un til to day when I saw him sneak in and lay on her desk a big candy box done up in white paper and tied with blue ribbons If he hadnt run away as fast as he could hed have heard me laughing for I couldnt restrain it an other second Well said the guest who was won dering how soon dinner would be served Well I knew I had him then so l just grabbed the candy box and slid it into my overcoat pocket just as tho typewriter came into the room Did she suspect No I guess not She asked me what 1 was laughing at and I told her Id just seen a fat old man slip on a ba nana peel She smoothed her hair down and said she didnt see anything funny in that she knows Im married you see I see We have typewriters at our office too 4 Yes Then I invited Jonesby to din ner to night I brought the box of can dy home Ill bet its good too Told my wife to put it on the dinner table Ill tell old Jonesby the joke after its all eaten Wont he be mad though Sh thats him Dont say anything Hello Jonesby old man youre late I thought you werent coming I am a little late returned the new comer The fact is I stayed later than usual at the office this evening Fact is Id put up a joke on the typewriter and I wanted to see what shed do Joke on the typewriter eh What was it said Mr Giddy winking at the first guest Put a box with two mice in it on her desk I knew shed think it was can dy and whats the matter old man I I want to tell my wife some thing faltered Mr Giddy But just then a series of the most appalling screams coming from the di rection of the dining room told that he was too late Chicago Tirnes HeraltL The School Shows Off In illustration of the way in which teachers lessons are frequently lost on their pupils a Chicago teacher tells a story of some of her pupils showing off -under her auspices She had been drilling into them one afternoon the difference in the meaning of the words taught and learned over and over again in the presence of a late visitor she had explained the use of each of the words and had given them several examples in which the words were cor rectly ised Now she said I think you have learned your lesson as well as I have taught it to you Willie will you give me a sentence with the word taught in it A fair haired urchin on the front seat spoke up promptly I fought it was time for school to let out No no Mamie you may give me an example she said turning to a bright girl farther back I fought it was time to go home answered Mamie with an air as if she had done exactly the right thing And though she tried several times more no other form of the word than the variation fought could the teach er get out of her school Nothing Pat said Tommy to the gardener what is nothing There aint any such thing as noth In replied Pat becase whin ye find nothin and come to look at it there aint nothin there Harpers Round Table A man wastes a lot of time every daj talking foolishness and iu listening tc foolishness as it is talked by other men No wonder his business suffers Whenever we hear a woman say that she loves housewonc and the care of 9 home we long to carry her off THEODORE ROOSEVELT Eotinc Politician Recently Appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt whoVas recent ly appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy became a character of national interest as president of the Board of Commissioners of Police of New York City Roosevelt is a striking example of what a rich young man of energy can do if he tries Coming of a wealthy Knickerbocker family he might have turned out as so many others have un der similar conditions a 5th avenue chappie But he didnt When he was at Harvard he distinguished him self by studying as hard as if he had his living to make after he was grad uated He had barely taken his degree and returned to New York when he became active in politics He was unmerciful ly snubbed by some of the older poli ticians but in less than two years he was elected a member of the State As sembly where he served for three suc cessive terms He had been a legisla tor but one term before he became the leader of the Republican minority and was a candidate for Speaker He took a hand in national politics too and led the band that routed the stalwart THEODORE IJOQSEVEIT forces when Roscoe Conkling and oth ers tried to force a third term for Grant on the party In 18S6 he ran against Abram S Hewitt for Mayor of New York and was badly beaten but not discouraged When Gen Harrison became President he appointed Mr Roosevelt a member of the United States Civil Service Com mission and in that capacity he served for six years ne only resigned his post to become president of the police board of New York City and in that office he directed with characteristic boldness such a shake up as no munici pal department ever had in that mis governed city since the time of the Tweed exposure In private life he has found lime to thoroughly enjoy himself in his own peculiar style He runs a ranch in Dakota and when he is not hunting for official corruption he is shooting grizzlies roping steers or taking part in cowboy frolics THROWING THE DISCUS A Novel Sport Unearthed froin the Antiquities of Greece A sport new to modern times has been adopted from the Olympian games of ancient Greece and may become a favorite among athletes of classic tastes It is said that the pastime of throwing the discus was invented in Persia and Homer states that it was a favorite diversion of the troops be sieging Troy Originally the discus was of stone and disks of this charac ter were used along with those of metal THROWING THE DISCUS down to the latest classical times Homer represents some of his heroes as contending with a lump of iron per forated in the center for the passage of a handle the prize for the winner being nothing more or less than the discus itself Some of the Americans who vis ited Athens last year are trying to In troduce discus throwing among college games But the matter has not yet passed the theoretical stage It is time for something new in sport however and throwing the discus combining as it does both strength and skill is a formidable candidate for public form A Fellow Feelinz You dont look literary said the poet though you say you are Those rags Hold cried the tramp I have been trying to make a living by selling your books Then the poet put his arm around him and they went in and ordered din nerAtlanta Constitution Not Even Then No my dear its no use talking I shant give up smoking until Im dead His Wife bitterly What leads you to believe that you will give it up then Brooklyn Life CRISP FORMS OF THOUGHT SOLOMON AND TUPPER TWISTED TO SUIT A MODERN TRADE Tlie Wisdom of the Bases and the Wit of the Masses EVen tho Work of the Missionaries Are Grist in the Mill Tkey Are Poached Upon by Authors and Advertisers Whether Solomon invented all his prov erbs or gathered them from many sources with a nicer sense of permanent worth than Mr Tupper exercised in his later compendium is and ever will he an open question Solomons copyright ran out long before Tuppers time and both are now poached upon with impunity by all classes from authors to advertisers But taken by themselves proverbs well of ethnology repay careful study Students ogy find in the proverbs of the different races the clearest proofs of their real char acteristics for they are the shrewdest and yet most intimate expressions of their daily life Judged by the comparison of these homely sayings it will be found that all nations are of one kindred possessing common needs common aspirations and seeking similar reliefs from toil and la bor On the dustiest shelves of our li braries may be found collections of all the proverbs of the different nations quite a large proportion of the work nav ing resulted from the interest which mis sionaries have taken in their earnest studies of the uncivilized peoples whom they seek to instruct That the shrewd sayings of the Scotch or the bright hits of the Irish should he carefully collected gives little cause for surprise but a col lection of Abyssinian proverbs of those of the Tamil language of Icelandic lore of the Sanscrit South Sea Islands Chin ese and Hottentot Solomons does excite curiosity The missionaries have found it a pleasant as well as a profitable task It delves deep into the idioms of the lan guage tells with unerring accuracy the mental tendency of the people and by in troducing the foreigner into the inner thought of both home and trade shows him the real life of those who adopt them as every day expressions It is impossible to read the well-collated proverbs of the Chinese without realizing that a home life exists in that flowery kingdom which rivals that of many more civilized countries No Solo mon no descendant of Abraham could eclipse the trade proverbs of the Chinese They touch on trade with a keenness and thoroughness which proves them to be masters in that school The baser life of the Hottentot the loose morals of the fel lah the independent spirit of the Briton are all crystallized in their national prov erbs In England and many other countries it was formerly very usual for a trades man to select some proverb as his motto and thus post his principles plainly over his shop door It remained however for an American house to appropriate the proverbs of the world en masse and use them for their own advancement New Yorkers who ride on the elevated roads or people who in less favored localities still jog along in the slow street cars are familiar with the blue and white proverbs which proclaim the merits of Sapolio to the woiId Every omnibus in London and almost every tram car in England is similarly adorned They made their first appearance on the Broadway omnibuses were gathered out of over 4000 pages of the worlds collec tions and twisted to suit the case Many are beyond easy recognition in their new dress many are entirely original but these are also printed between inverted commas which lend a glamour of anti quity to them To day we are told that over 20000 of these blue cards are dis played in public conveyances carrying over 6000000 passengers daily Condensed thought generally requires padding to make it intelligible to the masses just as the stomach of the horse must be distended with hay to make the oats digest readily but with proverbs it is quite otherwise Their popularity is only reached because they have passed muster as being clear to every mind They tell their story with a directness and brev ity which pleases the public as the dic tionary did the old Scotch woman They air braw stories she said but unco short Turned to tell the practical story of Sapolio they often acquire new inter est Who reads the advice Be patient and you will have patient children with out an innate respect for the advice which follows not to fret over house cleaning but do it easily with Sapolio And who can repress a smile when the Sapolionic artist pictures the patient father and the X impatient twins defying the proverb But the mother will be back sooner if she fol low the advice Our familiar The pot calls the kettle black takes a new inter est in its Italian form The pot says to the pan Keep off or youll smutch me The universal toil of the world finds ex pression in the Catalan phrase Where wilt thou go Ox that thou wilt not plough Almost all nations possess a proverb which declares that if you forbid a fool a thing that he will do and with confidence in the good will of the public the advertiser of Sapolio puts it hi this form Forbid a fool a thing and that he will do So we say for variety Dont use Sapolio but then youre not a fool A touch of nature which makes all the world akin springs out of the quaint thought that A needle though naked Itself clothes others Who can hear it once and ever see a needle without recall ing it Who fails to recognize the picture it suggests of the aid given to the poor by the poor and of the help which is every where gained from the humblest of assist ants What can be more practical than the statement that a handsaw i3 a good - tiF Twnr thing but not to shave with which a- f urally suggests the proper use of SapoKo ty Slang never can be confounded with n proverbial phrases It seems universal but it is merely a local form used to ex press a transient but popular idea Years ago when a general rush at hotel keeping teerxRUHt resulted in many failures the slang ran Hes a very good man but he cant keep a hotel All such phrases are local and temporary They do not survive indeed rarely possess merit enough to reach a second year without evident decline in popularity We have noticed that none of the advertisements of Sapolio make use of slang and probably for this reason Naturally many of the best proverbs used in this connection relate to household cleanliness and all the original ones oxf framed to that end Dirt in the housef builds the highway to beggary deserves recognition despite its origin House hold sayings in the sense of four walled buildings full of furniture are quite lack ing in many Eastern tongues We believe that no reference to clean housekeeping can be found in the Koran or even in the Bible except that of the woman who swept the house to find her lost coin Shakspeare rather slights the subject but whether because it was not deemed impor tant in that intellectual but dirty age or because he soared to grander things we will not discuss but the England of to day well says of home The cleaner tis the cosier tis and our American adver tiser improves the opportunity to add that humble homes made bright with Sapolio are better than tawdry palaces Alas for the thoughtlessness of the man who forgot to ask whether his bride used Sa polio The Scotch proverb records his case Ye hae tied a knot wi your tongue ye winna loose wi your teeth A PROFIT ON BIG FAMILIES Mill Operatives Find an Advantage in Many Children The cable dispatches telling of the proposal of the French government to offer premiums for large families hop ing by this inducement to restore the native population to its size of a quar ter of a century ago merely broach as something novel a system which has for reasons not of statecraft but mere ly personal long been in operation in Eastern Connecticut In the mills which are to be found wherever in this hilly portion of the State there is a water power the work ers are French Canadians Big mills with their hundreds and even thouX sands of operatives are numerous and little mills each employing from twen ty to thirty to 100 to 200 workers of both sexes are tucked down between the hills in all sorts of possible and seemingly impossible spots In the large mills is to be found a sprinkling of women of other nationali ties but fully 90 per cent are French In the smaller mills there are practi cally none but French workmen What surprises the visitor who has come out of a New England city like Hartford or New Haven to see how cotton and woolen goods are made is the number of children in the factories Should this visitor ask the tendent of a small mill to point out the children of one family he will name half a dozen inthe room in which he happens to be indicate another on the stairs and four or five in the various workrooms The father and mother may or may not be workers in the factory If the family is large enough the mother is the housekeeper and the onerous duty of the father is to escort his offspring to and frofn work He goes to the mill with them in the morning and knows that they are all inside the gate before the hour for starting the ma chinery At noon he conveys them home to dinner and back to the fac tory At night he may come to take them home but this is not an Impera tive duty On pay day he comes to the factory and draws the wages of all of them This child farming is but one act of the drama of French factory life The years during which all the children work and the father draws the wages are necessarily few The fund for a life of ease must be made quickly The female child which at 14 Is the source of greatest profit is ready to marry one of her own class at 16 and she does so promptly The new husband and wife will work on in the mill for the next five years with occasional Inter ruptions when there are additions to the family and then they vanish They have gathered their savings and gone to Canada to raise a family They make no fuss about the matter It h the regular thing Ten years later or even sooner they will be back with a big string of boys and girls to earn money foe them they will gather the profits and retire for life to the Cana dian farm as their fathers and moth ers did It is noticeable of late years that the operatives are more in haste to be rich than formerly They rush back to the factories with smaller families than were common twenty years ago In deed it is rarely now that families of more than thirteen are found and few in the factory tenements exceed ten in number New York Times Papa said a boy I know what makes people laugh In their sleeve Well my son what makes them - Cause thats where their funny bono is Spare Moments i Xi i V M f i i