T 1 Y ... n Dakota County Herald ' DAKOTA CITY,4NEB IOHN H. REAM. . Publisher. A fool nirl U'.n money often make uslness mighty good for (lie lawyers. A congregation must bo pressed for tin excuse when It ousts a clergyman because bis trousers need pressing. Tlie Simplified Spelling Hoard has been Incorporated. Hut do not worry. It. will not become n trust and lncroaso the cost of living. , Howard Gould Inherited n big bunch Of money, but the trouble be Is having he acquired without any assistance from bis ancestors. If the fanner can save what the ng rlculturnl department says the brown rats eat, they noon will become the millionaires ofthe country. A mau has leen ordered by the court to obey 'his father-in-law. That Is next to the most humiliating imslllon lu ichich the court could phu-e him. Occasionally we hear of some rich man's son who runs the risk of being considered eccentric by marrying a lady who has no connection with the chorus. Dr. Wiley snys It In a disgrace for one to die at an age of less than JOO years. That's merely his opinion, mi l he may change It some day when he doesn't feel good. "now to Become a Successful Au thor" Is the title of a book Just out Of course, If the man who wrote It had been a successful author he would have written something else. ' Some European Inventor has dis covered how to make pencils out of po tatoes. If somebody will turn In now and find out how to make paper from turnips we may be happy yet "In a man and woman of equal weight, the woman's tongue Is smaller than the man's," says the Daltlmore Amerlcaa It will not be disputed, however, that the woman's enn do more hard work. "To prevent appendicitis, walk on all fours a half hour every day," says a French newspaiier. Let's nil get Into this game. Here's our offering: To avoid corns on your feet, walk first on one ear and then on the other. . ' The Oklahoma farmer who says a tornado picked up his cow and carried her a quarter of n mile doesn't ask people to tako his hare word for it. The proof Is at hand. Ho has both the cow and tho quarter of a mile. A New York preacher says most of I the people who fall to go to church re main away because they do not possess good clothes. In these days of general , ' prosperity can It be possible that all the npn-church-goers lack frock coats and tall hats? It Is hard, Indeed, to be lieve that such can ho the case. A duke who had eoino to this country for the purpose of getting a rich wife sailed for home the other day without having found any Aniericau girl with more than half a million who would have him. Our heiresses have pro gressed to the point at which they can regard it as only fair that they should demand something for their money. If tho time during which a body Is falling to the earth be divided Into two equal portions the body travels twice as far and therefore twice as fast and hard during tho second period as during tho first At tho present day there are so many people Jumping out of window to escape tire that this fact In physics ought to be borne In mind. If one of these Jumpers can reduce tho distance he has to full by five feet It may save his life. Tho difference bo tween Jumping from a wlndovvsill and lowering one's self by clinging to the wlndowslll by tho hands may be tho difference between life and death. Several thousand young men have completed the formal part of their ed ucation within the past few weeks, anl are about to begin their lndeiend ent life. They may bo roughly divided Into two classes: those who are per suaded that they owe something to the world, and those who Insist that tho world owes them a living, What becomes of these young men In the fu ture depends largely on the class to which they belong. If tt youth holds that the world owes hlm a living M will not be a particularly valuni.i.. member of society, but rather a sort or uui conecior wnn u grievance tli.it he has to call so many times to get his due. Hut the youth with H sen. of obligation to his generation Is the one Who will rise. All the uplifting forces of society have worked together to make him what he Is, to give to hlm life In an orderly community, to establish schools for the training of bis mind, churches for the uplifting or uis spirit, and business opportuui ties for earning his daily bread; and he seeks to. repay In what measure he Is able the debt that he owes to those who have gone ix'foro. Stieh men as he give their time to the Improvement or tne community in which they live. They Interest themselves In the schools. the churches and the libraries, and If they accept political olllce, It Is for the sake of what they can do In the way or liettcr government, rather than for their owu glory. It Is not of great eon sequence what honest trade or profes sion those about t. be graduated enter Uiiu, The spirit In which thev begin their scir-KtipiKrtIug life Is the Import ant matter. We do not suppose young people or even people who Insist on being as young "us they look" are paying much attention t) the grave cMscussiou by learned doctor of the pathology of kissing, or of the by-products of th, gentle urt lu the way . of germ dlf fusion. Yet an unqualified eoudcinnu tlon of Kissing by an authoritative mrd lcl body would in this age of science lie no negligible matter. Crusades against the practice would he pure to lie started by somelHidy somewhere, and ; !.rofif philosopher and satirist who wondered "what fool It was that first invented kissing" would be deemed to have been vindicated at last against the whole civilized world and countless generations of It. So It Is reassuring to find that the nntl-klsslng opinions that have been expressed nt the Atlan tic City convention of American physi cians have been misunderstood. While It is contended that the' habit of In discriminate and wholesale kissing of babies is responsible for the spread of consumption in many cases, and while even Incipient victims of that disease are warned to refrain from oscillatory salutations, no general edict against kissing Is contemplated. "I.ct healthy .voting people kiss" as usual, says one authority, and another adds that infec tion by osculation Is rare, anyway. since "persistent exjiosure" Is required to bring about implantation of the tu berculosis germ. Hut the suggestion that would-be kissers and would-be kissed should exchange authentic cer tificates of health before translating longings Into facts Is somewhat pro saic? and academic. What would be come of the stolen kiss, the kiss sion taneous, the kiss unconscious? But the mjllcal discussion of kissing has at any rate shown that the poets who ad vised "long, long kisses," or kissing till the cows come home," are danger ous guides. "Persistent exposure" at least should bo avoided. Hygienic kiss ing Implies prudent Intervals and the staccato style. If you are abrupt and disconnected In your kissing the lurk ing germs If any are baffled, even if the numlMT awarded and received be rather excessive from the standpoint of crubhed age. The benefit of advertising In the newspapers In a way to attract atten tion has been demonstrated anew In the case of a weekly publication In New York. Four years ago the sub scribers did uot number C0.000. Chiefly by means of display advertisements In tho leading dally newspaisrs Its circu lation has been Increased to 300,000. The ads. were striking and convincing. Many small merchants in the cities are apt to think that, while the depart ment stores should advertise, advertis ing Is a profitless exixndlture for the smu 11 business that finds its custom only in tlie Immediate neighborhood of the store. These men full to tuke Into con sideration the fact that in many In stances the department store began life as a neighborhood store and Increased Its business by Judicious advertising. Advertising Is Just as profitable for the small business as for the largo one. Judicious newspaper publicity comes first, of course; but In connection with this newspaper advertising tho small merchant may Issue from time to tlmo a store paier. Some kind of advertise ment should be placed In every bundle of goods sent out of tho store, and lu every way tho merchant should en deavor to keep his establishment be fore the eyes of the public. COSTS TWO MILLION YEARS. ' The Vaat Amount of Time Lout by Invalid In the United States, If misery loves company, let the man or woman who la kept home a day or so by some seemingly Insignificant ailment reflect that on an average ev ery American 1b on tho sick list for nine days In the year making a total. for tho eighty million people of the United States, of almost two million years of Illness. Industrially, two million years of human life annually go to waste; and,. moreover, the sufferers demand a vast amount of time and of effort from those who are well. The Invalid, singly, may Beem Insignificant; In uinss, his totals Indicate auoiior inous cost, a pitiful waste, a mighty problem. The cost of Illness Is partly shown In figures preparedly Ir. P. M. Hall, who addressed tho American Associa tion for the Advancement of Science on this subject, lie estimated that tho loss.of wages, at an uverage of a dol lar a day to every iuvalid, would amount to more thau seven hundred million dollars a year. The cost of treatment may easily amount to ns much again. Thus, sickness costs the I'lilteil States something like one and one-half billions annually, u sum uot greatly below tho combined value of the product of our two greatest manu facturing industries I hose of lrou and steel, and of textiles In tho last eeu sus year, l'.i'ii). Of the deaths, tuberculosis claims one-tenth, pneumonia one-tenth, and ailments of the heart a somewhat smaller fraction. This means thut eight million of the people now living lu this c.iutry are to die of tho first disease, another eight of the second, six million of the third. There Is a fatalism about figures. The United States government, ac cording to Prof. J. Pease Norton of Yale, does not devote enough money to lighting disease. If the lmortane of thi enormous waste Is fairly consid ered. He points out that seven million dollars Is spent annually by the fed eral authorities on plant und animal health. Considering tho vast saving of dollars and days that even a slight check to the ravages of any of a dozen of the leading diseases might effect, he urges that the country should slso lay out u tiny fraction of It revenue In measures of national sanitation. We have noticed that In every con versation there is something about "finding out" people. Patience Is the support of weakliest; Impatieuce Is the ruiu of strength. Coltou. Til Saying Wiiat ''if. . 1 re t- j JVl.tET V. STHAl.'SH. V'.I unworthy member. In view of the number of times I was snubbed and punished for till. It would seem that I might have broken myself of the habit; but no. It stuck with me, and so, late In life, when I became n member of the community, a householder, a person of affairs, I was still regarded as a dangvrous Individual for strangers to meet, because, though I might conduct mywlf properly and talk Intelligently, I was quite as likely to say something unlike whut ony one else ever paid, and thus cause the impression that there was something queer about our town. Well do I remember numerous vigorous endeavors on the part of safe and sane people to understand that 1 wasn't to bo taken account of when It came to summing up the cultured people of the place, and that they were never on any account to take notice of anything I said. TliTs left me free to say things, because if nobody was going to notice them one might Just as well experience the relief of getting rid of a lot of bottled up sentiment that seemed anxious to get out. So I Just said them. I said that I didn't think much of womnn'n rights; that I thought the new woman was a fake. I said I thought society a Joke and the affectations of fashionable women disgusting. 1 said I believed culture to be stupid when consciously applied. I said women had run to seed In ntceness. I said kindergarten work taught children to be affected and Insincere. I said I was opposed to young people's religious meetings unless 'conducted by older people. I said I was opposed to lesson leaves; that I did not like audible prayer, except us rend In a formal service. I said I was opisiscd to revival meetings. This does not Ptart the things that I said, but ns nobody pa!d any atten tion to them. It did wot really make any difference. Hut long years of saying things with impunity uud not being actually run out of town, or muzzled by order of the city fathers, has emboldened me, and I may really do some dam age before it is over. However. In late years people have taken to looking with favor upon my open expressions of opinion, snd I really lielleve It pays in the long run to hold to your own Ideas In Pplte of the efforts of society In general to "farm" you. Young people are likely to mistake bluntiiess for frankness, and sarcasm for brightness. These mistakes ft is well to avoid, but If you have an Idea a real belief, an Instinctive objection to some popular theory, stick to It. for flie world Is always coming to grief by stupidity following "popular thought." Juliet V. Strauss, !n the Chicago Journal. RISK FUGITIVES FORGET THEIR TROUBLES; LEAD GIDDY LIFE IN PARIS. in m iiii "i ii 1 ii ii ii i f i .jJidaJso Whatever the plans of the New York District Attorney, William Trav ers Jerome, may be In reference to tho criminal prosecution of the central figures In the great American Insur ance scandal, it Is patent to all Paris, writes a correspotnlent Tu the French capital, that no fear Is eutertalned lu the mind of James Hur.eil Hydet former vice president of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, or Ilichard A. Mc Curdy, who was ousted from the pres idency of the Mutual. For more than a year now these two ostracized mill ionaire votaries of high finance have luxuriated In the distracting atmos phere of Paris. Hyde, who Is really liettcr known In Paris than be was at any time In New York, is living an easy life. Ills most serious effort at the present time is to become known us the king of the Paris Latin quarter. To this end Hyde Is spending his money lavishly, and the wide circle of Hobeiulau painters and litterateurs, . which ho has gathered around hlm, regard hlm as their pa tron saint Hyde lives lu a beautiful and mam moth mansion In Avenue Henri Martin. In the spacious salon of his licautifu! home Hyde gives regular entertain ments, which are the very acme of epi curean splendor. His favorite pastime la to entertain large parties of his giddy friends upon automobile excur- Sumrthluic Like Joanna. A mountaineer of one of the back counties of North Carolina was ar raigned with several others for Illicit distilling. "Defendant." asked the court, "what is your tiume?" "Joshua," was the rcpl.v "Are you the man who made the sun stand still?" yulik us a flash came the answer: "No, sir; I am the man who mudu the niouasblue." Harper's Weekly. You Believe. I have never regarded my opinions ns having any special weight In the community. Indeed. I have acquired the freedom of speech which char acterizes me through a knnviedge that people are not going to pay any attention to what I say. This leyan In childhood, when Isoon learned that my elders were obliged to npofoglzo for me to the nolghlstrs upon the bro:id grounds that no body could be held resonsible for my remarks because tb( re was never any telling what I was going to say. I never did quite learn to avoid expressing sentiments until somebody else had expressed them :iid found they were safe. I always did, from earliest childhood, when I sat listening to the safe and sane conversation of the visiting neighbors who were discussing plati tudes In their company tone, get dreadfully tired of trlod and true sentiment and break out with some mutinous Idea or disturbing question that fHl like a Isinibshell In the camp of the ultra respectable Christian family of which I was an slons In the south of France and else where. Hy these and other means Hyde has at this time successively blotted out. so far as Paris Is concerned, the ostracism which followed his connec- .'LT t' -T- I ti)i tion with tho Insurance revelations. lit Is the hero of t lie Impecunious horde of long-haireil youths of tho boulevards. Hyde participates fu'ly In the free and easy life of the Latin quarter. At the last artists' ball, Hyde made a big hit impersonating an Arabian gypsy. IJecently Hyde has shown a tendency to re-enter aristocratic French society. and among tho fashionables of Paris Ills princely wine cellar Is exciting won der ami admiration. Klchard A. McCurdy's existence In Paris has been quite the opposite of Hyde's, though It is well Intended to blot from the memory of the former Mutual president the disagreeable ex periences of a year anil a half ago. Mi-Ctmly's life lu Paris has amounted almost to monastic retirement, lie is surrounded by an exclusive circle of personal friends, and he Is devoting himself to simple diversions which car ry with them no distasteful memories, lie Is never seen lu the gay centers of Paris, and he Is entirely unknown in society. He reads no iiewspaM-rs. When an effort was made to Interview hlm lie sent word that be would feel keenly any further notoriety In connec tion with the Insurance scandal. At this time It Is learned from a personal friend of McCurdy's that, while he Is attempting In every possible way to eradicate memories of the scandal which enmeshed hlm, he tiiuls It dlfll cult to have any complete comfort In Lhls life. James W. Alexander, ousted presi dent of the Kqiiitable Life, who was a third prominent figure in the insur ance scandals. Is on a trip around the world with a party of friends, The Kun f It. "Why did you d.) that?" demanded the teacher. "Oh. Just for fun," replied Tommy. "Hut didn't you know it was against the rules V" "Sure! Dat's where de fun comes in." Philadelphia Press. Children are natural, but their el oers seem to be ashamed of themselves uud their uutuial Instinct TFiJ) FKT-fP.SV IrvfrVUF Trnrrr? 1" nATUDE'(5 LAVAS DlVEWlCD' ,&r niriGtiMG of waters" or LAKE AMD RAPV Rewrite the Ichthyology of America. Insert under the headings denoting tlie different species many new varieties unknown to former piscatorial lore. Add new subgenera and change the for mation of varieties. For a great trans formation In the fifth class of verte brate nuftnals has resulted from the dig ging of the Chicago drainage canal and the commingling of the lake's waters with those of the rivers. The digging of the channel across tlie great divide that once separated Lake Michigan from the Mississippi Valley has let the lake fish Into the Dcs Plaines, the Illinois and the .Mississippi rivers. The seeming unnatural "coinmiugllng of wa ters lias produced fishes that seem un natural that Is, when compared to our present standards. New forms, new varieties, new types have appeared. differing In color, habits and general description from any other known to the American pisciculturist Coexist ent with the appearance of the new kinds of fishes there Is noted a most remarkable Increase generally lu the number of the finny Inhabitants of the Des Plaines and Illinois rivers. The Des Plaines River fairly swarms with fishes, and fishermen are reaping a har vest such ns their fondest fancy never pictured -In former times. All along the cannl, and the Chicago River, and far down the Illinois River, the same conditions areioted to a greater or less extent. Ichthyologists have marvelled at the seeming phenomena, and from all sections of the country scientists are coming to study the conditions, to make note of the new forms and record them In tlie new history of Amerlcnn fishes, which now must undergo a com plete revision. True, many dead fishes have appeared In the rivers, but all such 'show mnrks of violence and no evidence of disease. It Is evident that a great wurfare Is going on among them over which families and species shall have the best right to make the river their future home. With the Increase In the number of the river fishes, there appears to be n corresponding Increase lu the number of Lnke Michigan fishes. At least, all the lake fishermen are complaining, and the nssertion is freely made that the hike's finny tribe are being emptied through the canal Into the rivers be yond the Chicago divide. Formerly this divide formed a wall thirty miles wide between the lake and the river fishes, and tlie types Inhabiting the two waters, generally speaking, were en tirely separated and distinct But when the canal was dug across the divide and the Chicago River was turned up side down, and Instead of flowing Into tho lake was made to become an out let of the lake and empty the lake's waters Into the canal und thence Into the Des Plaines and on Into the Mis sissippi River near St Louis, the lake's fishes have gone with the outflowing waters Into the rivers, there to Join the river fishes and compete with them in the struggle for existence. Thousands of these fishes, while being hurried on With the current, have been noted with the naked eye by boatmen and people standing on the banks of the river and canal. Sometimes tlie water seemed to be fairly alive with them, and fisher men, unable to resist the temptation, have defied the law, and, in nets, have hauled them to the shore in wagon loads. ' Lake trout and perch, never before caught outside of the lakes, have been brought to shore by thousands all along the canal and tho Chicago and Des Plaines rivers. Liiko herring, cisco grayling, chubs, lake trout, white fish and numerous other fishes, heretofore regarded as exclusive inhabitants of tl.'o great lakes, now swarm In the' wa ters beyond the Chicago divide. White bass, pickerel and musculloiige have been found In goodly numbers, and two ppetimens of the Michigan grayling, heretofore found only in Lake Michi gan and In the waters of Michigan State, have boon caught. Once they have crossed the bear trap dam at Lock port, there Is no way for any of these great swarms of fish to return to Lake Michigan, and they must make their home In the livers beyond and fight for supremacy with the old inhabitants of these waters. It Is probable that the conflict which will result in the survival of the fittest, will cause a weeding out of many of the t.vH-s now abounding, and some of the river fish and some of the Invaders from the lake will undoubtedly become annthllated. Indications are. however, that tlie general result w.ll be most beneficial to the lake fisheries. The In fusion of new blood Into the old river stock already seems to have added new life to the waters, and hence, while the fishes. are fighting for supremacy, they Rre multiplying enormously, and the splendid specimens of all the varieties this season show that the health and general physical condition have been greatly improved. The tisli fin'd upon euch other, and It appeal that none the deaths have resulted from other causes than violemv. The season has afforded unprecedented sport for those searching for game fish. Old-time sKirtsmen have turned their attention from the northern lakes to the Illinois rivers and neighboring lakes. For the small lakes all along the rivers show the same wonderful Increase In pis catorial population. Complaints of tho alleg.il effects' on Lake Michigan fisheries at first were ridiculed by the drainage canal trus tee, but they have become so numerous I that these officials have been fonvd to I t-ll.-.. . w.f. 11 I- i linn ..t 'PI... .1. . It.l.V. l Wlfltl. i III 11)11 gain Is iMke Michigan's loss. It is de clared, and how to prevent the exodus of lake fish is a problem that the sani tary trustees are now wrestling with. S.i far, the only solution of the prob lem lint has been suggested Is tic? luilMiitK of flshwnys nt all the dams aod loi!;s along the artificial water rente. Hut this, it is feared, would weaken the dams, and It Is doubtful If i would be iMiKsibto. to construct them in n manner thc.t would permit the fNIi to make tiuir way back to Lake Mich igan, once they had wandered so far away as tho Illinois River. Two meth ods of constructing the fishways have been proposed one consisting of what Is known ns a fish ladder, which would consist of ii series of stops, over which the water in descending would turn the fall Into a cascade, and thus permit the fish to climb back In pursuing their return Journey to the lake; the other comprising a chute with a sinu ous track for diminishing the velocity and assisting the passage of the fish to the level nlvove the dim. Because of the nature of the locks a:id dams, their width and number, It Is doubted if tills device would prove successful, even if the construction did not interfere so materially with the mechanical opera tions. The appearance of the new types of fish, entirely different from anything recorded by former naturalists, has stirred up the scientists, and the here tofore despised IVs Plaines River has come Into prominence as the center of piscatorial luterest, for it Is here that the new types and Increased number of fishes have attracted widespread atten tion. The strange and new types of fishes, never noticed to any great extent until this year, are undoubtedly the result of the Intercrossing that came about after the Invaders from the lake had accustomed tfiemselves to the new en vironments. On finding It Impossible to make their way back to the lake, they settled down to make the best of their life In the nnrrov confines of the rivers and accept the condition of mis cegenation with the river fishes as the best for all concerned. St Louis Globe-Democrat NEEDLEWORK FOR SCHOOLGIRLS. Denettta of I.eurnlna; Hon to Setr Skllfnlly and Correctly. The ability of a girl to do without teaching anything she is called on to do is pretty generally taken for grant ed. She Imitates the countryman who, being asked if he could play tho violin, replied, "I guess so ; I never tried !" Thousands of girls marry and set up housekeeping whose exis-rlence lu cook ing consists In making "fudge" and concocting a Welsh rabbit on a chafing dish pleasant eating In their place, but Inadequate for the daily food of a hard-working husband. So, also, the girl Is supposed to know by Instinct how to m.?nd and sew. A certain young wife became on her mar riage the stepmother' of three small children. The first week's mending basket was n revelation to her of her own helplessness. "I was tempted to stop the holes with court-plaster," she confessed afterward, "and I dure say it would have been as effective as what I managed to do." Two generations ago In a famous school for girls lu an Eastern city sew ing was an important part of the cur riculum. The first task of a new stu dent was the making of a shirt for father or brother. Every stitch In that shirt was set by a thread. If a sea in had to be ripped a dozen times, it must be tit for the closest inspection. Tills zeal on the part of the school was some times excelled In the home. A tradition lingers In one family of a daughter who went to that school when she was ( years old. So well did she sew at that age that she was excused from making the shirt, and set at once to a bit of fine needlework a wide muslin collar, covered with embroidery as exquisite as lace. The promise of the G-year-oId child was richly fulfilled, and her needle was for a long lifetime a high satisfaction to herself and a Joy to her fortunate family and friends. Sewing was never a slavery to her, but always a fasci nating creative occupation. The patch on a Jacket, the darn of n stocking or the embroidery of a gown or a napkin were alike welcome calls upon her ca pable lingers. When people spoke of THE SAME -Ciuciuuutl I'obt. iter1 v Vv.Vir Kf Vf H M fil Mftf 3 ( AFTERNOON. B0JS? mmk Yi Whk is dead- If cl m r ability to turn off sewing, sli3 ut4' bi say: "Tint's because I ktvnv Imw to sew. I know how he-aitse I was ta'i:''t. Skilful hands, even better than many hands, make light work!" Youth'! Companion. II07 TO GROW II AIR. Former Nnvnl Surneon lln Norel I'lan to Itethateh fluid Pates. Breathe properly, and you'll never bo bald. If you're already partially bald, breathe properly and your hair will start "coming In" again. This Is the boiled down advice of Dr. Delos I Par ker, a former United States naval sur geon. Parker came to the above conclusion by a series of experiments. He Impris oned a quantity of expired breath In a Jar containing a few drops of water, and kept It in a warm room. A week or' ten days later lie Injected a quantity, of the liquid left In the bottom of the Jar Into a pigeon and awaited develop' ments. Presently tho pigeon's feathers liegan to fall out. He continued the In-! Jectlons regularly, nnd vithln a few; days the bird's coat had entirely dis appeared. When the Injections werei DR. DEI.0S U PARKER. discontinued the pigeon regained Its . coat. The experiments were repeated with dogs and hens, and the results were the same. Dr. Parker reached the conclusion that expired air, remaining In a man's lungs long enough for the decomposi tion of tho organic matter to take place, resulted in the formation of a iolson which affected the roots of the hair nnd caused it to fall out. Deop breath ing expels the air and with It the poi son. The doctor secured a number of par tially bald men and got them to breathe by proper methods. In a few days the dandri!2f, which Is Invariably an ac companiment to baldness, ceased; the. hair stopped falling out and a new1 growth started. In six weeks the Im provement was very noticeable. EOW TO REDUCE THE FLESH. Increasing; the Land Capacity la the Flrxt Keqnialte. To Increase the lung capacity Is the first step In the reduction of llesli, says Outing. For this purpose running Is, I think, superior to any other exercise. Boxing aud handball are also excellent for the "wind." Aud those exercises wlll do more to increase the respira tory functions; they will greatly stim ulate the circulation ns well as all the secretory and excretory processes What leg exercise will not do, how ever. Is oxidize, to any great extent, the soft tissues of the trunk ami arms. True, by stimulating Cue organs of elimination and by increasing lung ca pacity, leg exercises will oxidize upper tissues somewhat; but when fat is not replaced by muscle, it has a strong ten dency to reform. A bad effect of leg exercises exclu sively Is that they draw a major part of the blood, rich in oxygen, to the low er limbs; whereas If vigorous arm and trunk exercises were executed, beside the leg exercises, much blood would be attracted also to the upper parts which would then be oxidized to tho lM'st advantage, their lost fat being, at the same time, replaced by solid tis sue, and hence having little tendency to reform. Running, therefore, splen did exercise though It Is, should be supplemented by vigorous ''upper" ex ercises. By vigorous upper exercise I do not mean calisthenics nor any kind of so-called light exorcises; I mean reasonably hard work. Why They Arune. "Some big-voiced men," said Uncle Ebon, "gits into arguments 'cause dey n'.n't got tlmo to go to a ball game and do deir hollerln' In de regular way." Washington Star. What a slovenly old world this would! be if vanity were eliminated therefrom. OLD STORY. into si B fftllllllHIMIt n y ; v.t i 0 ! 1 ,1 'a ' i 1 i i ;3 1 Ii I J L