Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NEB. JOHN IL RIuAM, . . fablUiher Pome furincm nre smaller potatoes than they raise. When money bcghm to talk people felt up and take notice. With the numerous courts In session these are trying time. The inuiflplicjitlnn table doesn't sat isfy a small boy's lumper. Jealousy la tliu trading stamp glvep With rath case of true love. Many n man receives cool treatment because of Ills shady reputation. Mankind la divided into happy peo ple, unhappy people, and the Gould fam ily. To choose friends for their appear ance Is no worse than to Judge hooks by the cover. By writing the story of his life nnd suffering himself, Mr. Rockefeller cleverly forest oils Marat Halstead. Dr. Koch's cure for the "sleeping Jckness" Is good medicine to "try on" . tho boy whose Job la the early chores. 'A nose "mysterious murders wuicn are startling Paris would le easy to un derstand If they were not done ia , French. , Tut Japanese government denies that lit Is In sore need of money. This msy .miMi It easier for Japanese tax-dodgers to sleep well. V. I The nation," says John G. Woolley, ."Is awake." Yes. It is even sitting up and noticing things, as old man Castro baa found out Houston, Texas, has a woman who declares that 'she wouldn't marry the beat man living. Perhaps he ought to be congratulated. King Alfonso may as wall give up the hope that he and Queen Victoria will ever be permitted to move Into a fashionable flat According to Mark Twain, "a mine is a hole In the ground owned by a liar." 1 Mark also has evidence that other busi ness enterprises are owned by the same party. Human nature Is a funny thing, and after Anna Gould has had her second bitter lesson with fake "noblemen," there will be plenty of ber country people sorry for her. It la mortifying to learn that Aunt jOarria Nation was fined $25 and costs a day or two ago for scolding. Things have come to a pretty pass If Aunt Car Vie can't express herself In ber custom ary voice and manner without being punished for It Many of the colleges and universities are In no-llcenso towns. Leland Stan ford Is the largest non-sectarian insti tution to enforce prohibition within the ftlverslty domain. latoxlcants are for ldden in boarding houses and fratern ity buildings. Similar restriction has Jong obtained at several colleges which are under the control of influence of the churches. ' The feeling of Cblna for this coun try is unusually friendly, and It Is for , statesmen to maintain and promote the sentiment How far the ancient East can ever be an extension, of the course of empire that for ages has taken its tway westward is a problem that time alone can settle. Dot America and Asia can be friends and commercially inti mate without trenching too far on race and social traditions, habHs, tastes and tendencies. The statue of Gen. Francis E. Spin ner, made under the direction of an as sociation of women employes of the government Is to be erected opposite the Spinner home In Uerk Inter, New York. General Spinner was treasurer of the United States from 1841 to 1875, and when the clerks of the Treasury Department resigned, during the Civil War, to enlist la the army, be recom amended that their places be filled by women. He carried his point against considerable opiwsltioa, and thus opened the door to self-support for many women. He was notable also as the Inventor of a peculiar signature which appeared on all the national po- per enrreney, and was the butt of the newspaper humorists for years. Rut be will be remembered longest 'as the msn who called on the women to take the places left vacant by the men who went to the front to fight. Baron von Sternburg, German urn basKiidor to the United States, In an address at the University of Illinois, once showed that all the greut, leaders of nations, such ns Frederick the Great and K'ang-HI, the greatest Chinese mirror, have taught the tame prln clples of citizenship. He drew an In teresting parallel between the tench- lnp of K'ang-M In the "Holy Edict" and the public utterances of President Roosevelt It Is a truth familiar to all . students of comparative literature that under similar conditions men of moral purpnae have much the same Idem Devout scholars have always delighted In the fuct tlut the noblest sentiments of Greek philosophy nre not uifliki those of the Bible, lliat a modern Diuti uhould preach what was preached by the ancients only bears out lowell's eplgtuui tti it the best thlnga oblIgiir;iy got themselves said several thousand years ago. ' There cannot o a neur woman lu fuct. but l:ii:it;l'iiil:i draws the pic ture of or.? lor us now and then wh a sclemiut or pU'li-s -piier undertakes' to tell wom.'iii wUui will happen If lie keeps doing tilings wild to have iecu unknown ii her grandmother. A ;Wtuutu Is u!.y;j6 u wouiuu, ttUhou'a she may not chooso to hew to the Una fixed by ancient custom. All men are men, even though some of them may be called mollycoddles. Women era taking away men's Jobs, snd It Is said by observers that they ere going to keep doing so and enlarge thoir hold ings In that line. The president of Bryn Mawr college for women says that women "are steadily taking pos session and driving men before them," and. furthermore, they "will be com pelled by economic causes beyond their control to stsy In them after mar riage." Our grandmothers' In their red cheeked days milked the cows, and no one would have dared to hint that a milkmaid was unwomanly because of her skill. They hnsked corn, toe, and when the good man was awsy fed the stock. American womenyfcave always taken up man's work from tftae to time snd put It aside when the need was over. If for economic reasons they are better at typewriting, tele phoning, telegraphing and bookkeep ing than men, they are none the less true women when they do this work. Professor Ross gives the most star tling picture of the near woman when he dips Into the future and sees what Industrial occupations will do for wom en. He says "there will be a rever sion to the type of masculine women, squat, flat chested, broad backed, low browed creatures, working In the fields and factories side by slda with men." We shall be compelled te admit that such "creatures" would be "near women," according to our modern Ideals. On the other hand, President Ellott says, "The higher education ought to fit women for the single oc cupation of bearing and educating chil dren, and it Is the most Intellectual occupation In the world."'. So the true woman has a chance to remain herself In spite of the education which makes her man's dangerous competitor. Per haps the industrial woman of Pro fessor Ross and ef the president of Bryn'Mawr will emulate the educated woman r& the matter of attention semetlmes to the bearing and educat ing of children. In that case the Jewel of womanhood need not depart from women who work, and the talked of "reversion to the type of masculine " is only a bogy. A Old WerM. When the sua comes oat An' the deads go 'way, An' the HttU children Came eut te play, An' the grass looks green, An' the cat sits curled On the gate post ain't It A good old world? When the mocking bird Sings a lilting tune, An' the air is llker The first o' June Than midwinter air, Ain't your griefs all furled, An', honest, alnt it A good old ( world? When sorrow oomss. An' yenr head droops lew, An' yon've come te know All a chap can know Of grief, so yonr hopes Asa in darkness hurled. An' a friend oosms, ain't It A good old world? It's a good old world It's s good world, yes! For the hope an' love An' the tenderness Tbst oosms when a chap By roagh fate Is hurled In a hopeless heap It's a good old world I For the Iktle babies That laugh and run, For the cat a-nappln' Out in the sua On ths high gatepost In a oft heap curled, For the single' bird, Ifs a good old world! Jadd Mortimer Lewis. Ho Forestalled Fate, Joslah Qulncy, assistant secretary of stats under Cleveland, was famed for the energy he showed In getting Jobs for his constituents. One day a laborer in the employ of the Department of the Interior was, drowned while bathing in the Potomac, A congressman who happened to be near when the body was taken fronoj the water, hearing that the dead man, worked for the government rushed off. to the Department of the Interior to secure .the Job for one of his followers. When he reached the department, however, Hoke Smith, who was Secret tary of the Interior, told him that th position had already been filled. "Filled I" cried the congressman, "Why, the man hasn't been dead ball an hour." "I know that," replied Smith J "but Joslah Qulncy heard the man was go ing lu bathing, so he put In an applica tion for the Job by telephone." Satur day Evening Tost. Sir Old Cmrae4ere. "When Commodore Vsnderbilt was olive," says a New York Central offi cial, "tho board of directors of tho New York Central used to find their work all rut out for them when they met. All they had to do was to ratify his plans and adjourn. 'Yet they ha& their uses. Occasionally a man woul'l come to him with some scheme which he did not care to refuse outright. "'My directors nre a 'difficult body of men to handle,' hu would say. 'I'll submit It to 'em, but I warn you that they are hard to muting?.' "The matter would be submitted to the board when It assembled and promptly rejected, "'There,' the commodore would say when his visitor cnino to learn the re sult. '! did ,tlie best I could, but I told you In advance that my directors were nji obstinate lot." Mu Share In Ibe "Whin uiv u crying Tor. my little boy?" "lloo-hoo! Pn fell downstairs tH "Don't tnko on so. He'll get better soon." "Ulster m:iw bi n full all tho way. 1 never saw i!ul!l!i'!"-T-.iiswers. -. , ' i , i ji.-. i ' The' talk of it Kind ninny poople sounds us if they had begun lu the middle. Many a niuu is too lu.y to tuurry a rich widow. Dlaappearlna; CTialra. Thexnulsance and labor involved In removing the chairs from a hall after a performance, so that the floor can le used for dancing, has created a de mand for a method whereby the chairs can be quickly re moved. One of the meth ods suggested is an automatic disap pearing chair, which is shown In AOTOMATiCAiXT tis-the illustration. The ArrxAis. chairs nre arranged la rows and supported on uprights, Which extend Ijelow the level of the floor. Beneath the chair is an opening, covered by a sliding door. Each row Of chairs is connected to a lever, which is exposed at the extreme sides of the hall. By turning the lever the chairs are made to fold up and automatically disappear. What was formerly the back of the chair becomes the floor. Obviously, all the parts are made to fit xactly into place. Improved Oil Can. Ia an oil can recently patented a .Virginia inventor has departed consid erably from the form commonly used. As shown In the illustra tion, the flow of oil from the spout Is con trolled by a small push button on the side of the can and not by com pressing the bottom. Connected to this push button Is a rod, which Is curved to extend up Into the spout reaching al- on caw. moBt t0 jhe tIp wbl,n the can is Inverted this tod drops, forc ing the end firmly against the inner Idea of the snout and effectually clos ng the opening. The oil is thus pre sented from dripping out By pushing the push button with the thumb the rod s drawn sway from the mouth of the opening, allowing the oil to flow freely. In this way the flow of the oil can be readily controlled and does not flow spasmodically, as with the ordinary oil pan. This Improved device should prove p bs especially useful to engineers nnd Inachlnlsts. Helps the Carpenters. Carpenters should take off their hats to the Indiana man who invented the machine herein described, for it will save them much crawling about on their bands and knees. At first glance it looks like a lawn mower, but closer Inspection shows that It is built for a differ ent purpose. The weight of the machine Is thick roller, and roller there pro nooa PLAN KB, supported on a ahead of the jects a frame work that la made to hold two kinds of blades, such as a F liana wonld have. One of the blades straight and the other Is V-shaped, and they are set in at the same inclina tion as the blades of a piano are set. The operator, lnBtend of crawling stiff ly about with a little hand plane, push lea the device about a room with the same majestic air that be would pro pal a perambulator, elevating or lower ing the point to whatever height above the floor be wants It If ho desires to make a deep cut and Is running with the grain of the wood, ho can press the point down hard, while if lighter A short but comprehensive history ft the Jews Is in preparation by Dr. J. Epstein. It will deal with vicissi tudes of the Jewish people from the time of the destruction of the first temple to the present day, and It will have a large number of maps, plans and tables. "The ' One and I" Is the engaging title of a new story by Elizabeth Free mantle to be published next season. It It a story of the Canadian Northwest, written in sprightly diary style. One of the readers, who has followed the story In manuscript ays there is a tmtle 'upon almost every page. Booker T. Washington's new book, to be published In tho autumn, ia to be called "The Story of the Negro." The history of bis race from ItH orig inal dwelling place In Africa to its present position among the white peo ple the author follows and finds a rec ord of triumphant achievement and progress. It begins to look as if Vermont might be fostering a school of authors that In time would become a formid able rival to the Indiana school. Hen ry Holt & Co. have issued in the last seven months three books: "Gunhlld" (a Norwegian episode, by Mrs. Doro thy Oanfleld Fisher, of Arlington), Vt; "A Turnpike Lady" (a story of Vermont in revolutionary days), by Miss Sarah N. Clegborn, of Manches ter, Vt, nnd "Over Against Green Peak" (a book of . reminiscences of country life), by Miss Zephlne Hum phrey, of Dorset, Vt Henry James' phraseology, if it Is not la itself stimulating, acts like a furious spur to clever pens. The lat est piece Is a lese majeste on the purt of a critic la a characterlxatlou of "Julia Bride," which, although it has been published lu Harper's Magazine, does not yet apiear In book form. "This," writes the pen, angrily, "Is the debut of the serial onuuudruui." A work Is needed Jie con merely skim over the surface. Novel Soapbnltbler. For the amusement of the children , New Tork man has designed an en tirely new and up-to-date method of making soap bub bles. The old-time clay pipe Is rele gated to the past In favor of a' com pressible rib be i' bulb. The lntter Is provided nt one end with an air Inlet; and at the other end with nn air outlet, which terminates In a nozzle. For mak SOAP BLHnlXR. ing soap bubbles the necessary solution of soap and water Is mixed and the nozzle dipped Into the solution. The device Is then withdrawn out of the water and the bulb gently compressed and relaxed, this operation being re peated any desired number of times. The compression forces air Into the at tachment and the bubble is gradually formed. When fully developed It is de tached in the same manner as bubbles are detached from the ordinary tube or pipe usually employed for 'making bubbles. The soap solution Is made in tho usual manner, the bubbles being quickly nnd easily formed by means of the hand only, and the necessity of blowing through a pipe or stem Is avoided. Tel3hone Pencil-Holder. With the universal adoption of the. telephone it was soon noticed that a suitable padholder on which to write memoranda was needed. This was quickly provided, but unthlnklngly.no provision was made for the pencil that ihould accompany the pad. ' This oiuch-needed a t -tachment is shown here, the invention pencil holdek. of a Philadelphia man. It consists of a wire having a circular portion adapted to encircle the transmitter of the telephone. The wire also serves as a holder for the telephone number. The pencllholder is in the form of a double coll, which ex tends over the top' of the 'phone, where it can be very conveniently reached when needed. An operator having a 'phone equipped with the pencllholder and pad should have'' no excuse for forgetting' to write the mes sage or other instructions. Water Elevates Itself. The device shown in this cut embodlct a new invention by which it Is proposed to make a moving stream of water ele vate Itself to a point where the fluid can be made use of either for Irrigation purposes or for pow er generation. The . apparatus, ns will be Been, consists of a float on which an endless chain, sup WATEU EIXVATOB. plied with buckets at regular Intervals, la mounted. The wheel around which this chain revolves at the lower end also takes the form of a paddle-wheel, the paddles being acted on by the mo tion of the water. As the wheel Is turned the water Is taken up In thy buckets and raised to a point where It ii deposited In a trough nnd carried awny to some point where It may ba availed of, ns Indicated. Perhaps: and yet could Encllsh he clearer than Mr. James made It when he counted up the eutnnglements of Julia1 "six encarements nnd her mother's three nullified mnrrlnges nine nice distinct little horrors In all?" II. G. Wells In his new book, "New Worlds for Old," bases his thesis on what he calls the two main conernll- zatlons of socialism. The first gener alization Is "that the community as a whole should bo responsible and everv Individual, In tho community, married or single, parent or childless, should be responsible for the welfare nnd up bringing of every child born into the community." The second generaliza tion is "that the comnvinlty as a whole should be lualleuably the owner and administrator of the land, of all ruw materials, of all values and re sources accumulated from the past nnd that all private property must be of a terminable nature, reverting to the community aud subject to the gen eral welfare." Fierce Job. "Well," ho grunted, "there's your old stove up. I hope you'ro satisfied with the Job." "Er- yes, dnr," she replied, dubious ly, surveying the dirt he had made. "I . . . . . .. suppose; i mum oc, since you are so inorougniy sooieu witn it. r-rhlladel-phla Pre. - Source ol .Netia, "I always let our maid have threw afternoons off." "Why?" "Well, vou see. whenever h)m out Bho always returns with a choice nic or gcssip coiKvrning our neighbors." IH'trolt Free Press. A I uunoal lllatlartlon. "My name niny seem common enough to you, but I belong to n family thut boasts two names. "How's that?" "Its name Is Smith and Its mime it legion." Kansas City Times. The trouble U that time ilies with the man who Is lenlly trying to ac complish something every day, aud drags with the laiy loafer who has nothing to'hj. IAFEJSgT&'iaOiFlLjSI THE IDEAL LABOR UNI OH. Dy Chancellor Day ol Syracuse Unlvertlly. 0 There might be a union of great help to Its membership and to business. I believe in la bor organizations as I believe In corporations. But let It be a union upon principles of mutual benefit and helpfulness both to the laborer, and to the manufacturer, both to the work Ingman and to the contractor. Let it be for the purpose of securing to the employer the greatest proficiency, insisting upon only skilled mechanics for mechanics' pay. Let it consider the interests of the business and hew to serve them. Let It compel Its wage, net by excluding those who choose to work for less or to work when the union men will not work, hut by furnishing the highest type of man and workman, so that business men will say: "If you want the moat skilled and reliable mechanic or ' laborer, you must get them from the union. They will have no one in the union but a first-class man." Let the union have clubrooms, and discuss thrift and temperauce and home sanitation and ways and means of getting the home and furnishing it with books and periodicals for mental improvement and spend seme of the time in amusements and healthy games now spent in the saloons. Let the energy now being put into opposi tion to capital be used in self-lroproveuaent and furnish ing a higher class of mechanic. TEAINTNG THE FACULTIES FOR By 0 Concentration of mind In harmonious rela tion with bodily activity is the greatest octlve force in civilization. There are human activi ties which are effective without concentration in the mind, but somewhere in the harnessing ef this force some broad scheme has been evolved without which this aimless force in the Individual would be wasted. Concentra tion of mind Is not a faculty; It is an acquired ability to command the faculties of mfnd and of body, and for the best results this acquirement must Insure a harmonious relation between brain and brawn. Advice to a man, "You must concentrate yourself in your work," hi about as ineffective as to suggest to him that he grow four inches taller than he is. If he has come to maturity without learning concentration, he is not likely ever to appreciate the need sufficiently to undergo the training necessary to get it. Concentration of the faculties not only Is a safeguard against errors, but it is an assurance that when a move has been considered and determined upon the move will have all effectiveness and accomplish the maximum In re sults. There Is no work in life where this attentlveness does not reuder assurance to the worker and to every one Interested in that work. This concentration Is a visible evidence of dependableness In the man. It Is mmmmmmmmm 1 Meeting the Question B Viola met the postman at the front door. n gave her two letters; one was addressed in Diana Colvert's ab surdly angular hand, and was bulky, With a fortnight's accumulated effus ion; the other bore her name In the familiar caligraphy of Eustace Van liver, who had proposed to her quarter ly for half a dosen fears. She went out and sat down on the veranda steps and broke the seal of the first one with eager fingers; Di ana's letters were interesting, if rather voluminous. She consumed the first eight pages avidly, then suddenly the sheets fell from her hands and fluttered to the ground. The roses, the hollyhocks, the snapdragons, the violets and Jessamine, nodding and drooping in the sun-warmed air, melt ed swiftly Into a hideous rainbow of Impossible color, the matutinal chirp ing of the birds grew harsh and mock ing, the blue of the sky turned black. At last she stooped and gathered the letter Into ber trembling hands and went on with her reading. The minister, rheir minister, going to be married and move to Cloverdale! Billy Colvcrt, Diana's brother, had had a letter from him, so there could be no mistake about it And she what a little simpleton she had been to waste ber affections on someone who was go ing to wed another girl. Surely, in their intimate relations of the last year he must have guessed her morti fying secret; probably he was taking this very step to get clear of her. Burn lng tears sprang to Viola's eyes and dripped over her throbbing cheeks. But she dashed them away lu fierce self-scorn, aud read on to the end, her lips compressed, the blood scorching her temples. There were his exact words, quoted from Billy's letter: "I am seriously considering making a change In my residence. I hope soon to marry the dearest girl In the world and bring her with me to Cloverdale. But f course, it will rest with her whether I shall accept the call or not that is a woman's prerogative, Isn't It? How ever, let us see you In Brookwoml whenever It suits your convenience to come, etc." Viola folded up the closely written sheets and returned thorn to the envel ope. Then she ojiened young Vandlv er's letfer with mechanical finders and glanced wearily at.hls twenty-fifth dec laration of love, accompanied by an Im passioned plea to marry him and will for Europe In Juue. whither he was go ing to complete his course ut Heidel berg. Go abroad away from it all show hlui that she had not given her love unnuuked, and that She flung buck her head with a quick accession of pride, nnd"exciteuient a smile to her lips, a glow to her eyes. She would do It; yes. she would ue cept Eustace Vandlvor and go with hltu to the ends of the earth if need be anywhere away from this. II. She went to her room and sat down at her desk, but something seemed to dull her bruin aud numb her hands; she could not write a syllable. In despair she took her portfolio under her arm and returned to the veranda; the shade of tho orchard beyond entic ed ber aud she ran down the steps and past the flower beds to the gate on the other side. Entering, she sought her favorite retreat ia the fork of a guarl- evidence of the quality of brain which the worker pos sesses. It reflects the faculties which education and ex perience have developed harmoniously. Without this power of concentration every one of these faculties must prove a poor, broken reed instead of a lever that might move a world., ENJOY BEAUTY t might have shewn you that tho word of the Master was but the vague expression of His highly complex emotions. It is one of the attributes of God. one of the perfections which we contemplate in our ideas of him, that there Is no opposition in His will and His vision between the impulses of His nature and the events of His life. This, is what we commonly deslgnato as omnipotence aad cre ation. In the contemplation of beauty our faculties of percep tion have the same perfection; it is, Indeed, from the ex perience of beauty and happiness, from the occasional harmony between our nature and our environment that we draw our conception of the Divine life. There is, then, a real propriety In calling beauty a manifestation of God to the ser.Aes, since. In the region of sense, tho perception of beauty exemplifies that adequacy and per fection which in general we objectify In an ideal of God. SUCCESS. John A. Howland. PEOPLE. NOT THE BOSSES. RULE, By Gov. tlughet ol New York. r ed old apple tree. A lazy breeze was blowing, stirring the leaves about her with a vague, musical rustle, and cooling the hot blood in her cheeks. She took up her pen and selected a sheet of note paper. A twig cracked sharply, and she sat up alert The paper slipped from ber fingers. "Did I startle you?" inquired a deep voice under the apple tree. "Not the least" said she, disposing herself with studied primness against the knotted limb at her back. The minister vaulted the lower limb easily and picked out a comfortable seat opposite, tossing his hat on a net work of branches. Viola regarded him first with cold ness, then with assumed Indifference, finally with a friendly smile that was the hardest thing she had ever) ac complished In her twenty-one years. But he must never, never guess unless he had already done so. And If be had she must set to work to prove to him that he was altogether wrong! "Viola," he began in his straightfor ward way, "I've come to you with a confession. I hope you are not going to to disapprove?" For a second the girl said nothing, ne looked rather young for his age, she thought ne must be at least 38, but his black hair was full of waves, BE GAVE BER TWO LETTEBS. his eyes bright and clear, his face rud dy with health. "I'm considering a somewhat Impor tant step," he 'went on musingly, his glance sweeping the sky, tHe ground. and settling at last uion her slightly flushed face, "aud I want your your advice." "Mine?" she queried, a Uny furrow wrinkling the bridge of her nose. Sho crossed her hands at the back of her head ond stared past him at the rows of apple trees In the distance. The minister regarded her soleniuly for a moment, opening his lips twice to s;eak, then cloelug them again uncer tululy. A shadow drifted across his good-looking face. "Perhaps," he sug gested with a downward inflection, "the affair does not Interest you?" Viola could not suppress a smile nt the lugubrious countenance before her, and steudylug her breath, she gazed straight Jnto the minister's eyes. But only for a flash. Something In them that she could not altogether make out caused ber to turn' her head with a swift heartbeat. . "Of course, it Interests me," she said with a rush of ruthuslasm, recollecting her role, "I thought you were sure of thut always." , He straightened himself then, and with a gesture of determination broke precipitately into the subject "It's about some one I love," he said, shak ing rapidly, "someoue, I wsnt to be my wife." ' Viola colored furiously; the leaves all about ber quivered gently. But sho Wjfl?k -.a 7 ft"a!44iiaO WITHOUT ANALYZING IT. Dy Q. Santayana. To feel beauty Is a better thing than to un derstand how we come to feel it. To have im agination and taste, to love the best to be car ried by the contemplation of nature to a vivid faith in the ideal, all this Is more, a great deal more, than any science can hope to be. When a man tells you that beauty is the manifestation of God to the senses you wish ' yon might understand him. Yet reflection You may say all yeu please of tho cunning of political maneuvering, and of the resources of chicanery. All schemes will prove as child' play if the people set out to deal with a teal Issue of popular govern ment and the supremacy of the con stitution of this State over race track gamblers. It is well that there should be organization to advance party principles. It is well that It should be effective; vigorous and skillful leadership Is required. But it is the duty of sn elected officer to serve the people and not any par- gov. ucauxs. tlcular man, and no party leader has a right to assume the role of dictator, or so to vio late the manhood of elected officials as to parade them be fore the people ns subject to his domination. pulled herself together and said In a very matter-of-fact tone: "You want my advice about her? Well, then you will have to tell me something 'about her; her disposition, her hair, her eyee-reverythlng, yout know." The minister contemplated her with a fatuous expression. "Why ns to her disposition," he re plied earnestly, "that is all that could be desired perfect Her eyes," he scrutinized her with surreptitious anx iety, "her eyes are splendidly, wond rously brown " He paused. Viola listened movelessly. "Her hair la brown, too and most beautiful." A queer silence followed his words. When Viola looked up she was pale, but valiant, and she seemed all at once thousands of miles away. "She must be very, very lovely this girl," she said, dreamily. "Do I know her?" The minister looked somewhat in scrutable in he made reply: , "I am not sure perhaps you do not."" Sho returned his gaze with absent eyes. "Well?" he prompted with an enig matic smile. "Well, I really don't see what I'm to- tell you except that I'm delighted to- know you are bo so happy and that -that " Bhe bit her lips, "to congratu late you ond " "But It is not time for congratula tions," he interposed thoughtfully, "you don't understand." "No," said she, shaking ber head. "No, I'm afraid I do not" "It's this way," he pursued eagerly. bending near to her, "I've been called to Cloverdale. I don't want to go with out first finding out whether sho will go with me." He reddened and broke off, keeping his hands locked to the limbs on which they were resting. "Tho only thing," remarked Viola with sage eyes and a sinking heart, "ia to tell her that truth and get it over quick." She caught her breath. "May be you have told her?" she suggested tentatively. "Not Just as I should like to." "Then you will, at once? Put your fate to the test, as they say In tire some love stories." "Do you consider them tiresome?" "Other people's." 'Then we'll not waste any more time discussing other people's." He bent farther, till his warm breath fanned tho loose gold about her temples. "Viola," he said, "I love you. Will you be my wife?" "Oh," she said, "I don't " "You don't love me!" with swiftly clouding eyes. Viola met his look with a wonderful little smile breaking- through the shad ows of her face, "But but my hair Isn't brown at nil," she said bewllder ingly, "and my eyes are unmistakably blue." "And mine," laughed he," with bis arms about her, "are color-blind. Shall I go to Cloverdale?" We mustn't think of It" she said New Orleans Tlnies-Democrat Aa 1'nenthnslaatle float, "Did you Invite Mr. Bltgglns to our bouse purty?" asked Mr. Cuiurox. "Yes," answered Mrs. Cuiurox. "I'm afraid he considers house parties stupid. lie scut his regrets." ' "lie shows sense. I have a mind to send him my congratulations." Wash ington Star. There Is no excuse for profanity, ot course, and a good many men use It freely without attempting to find an. excuse for ' 4 r L