i t V 11 f h 4 Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY,' NCR. aoinf H. IUCAM, ... PabtUiber One xvay 10 i . . i y experience 18 to peculate in future. Invisible p.-.Mns arc not used In patching up quarrcln. The reddest apple doesn't nlxynys tnake tho bent wmw, Somehow, the majority of our good habits never get found .out. Wise Is tin? ninn who knows when fco treat and xvhen to -ret rent. It's easy for n deaf mute to love ft girl more thnn tongue can toll. ; Many a FpliiHtor xvho could have mar tried In haute repents at leisure. No ninn can sneak Into heaven on fht strength of his tombstone, epitaph. ' Onr Idea of a romantic girl Is one Who Rends out invitations td her elope Wnt Nobody ever heard anybody complain that going to the devil Is a lonesome Journey. Somo people think they nro In the manufacturing line because they make promises. j A bird can sing without a piano no jCorapanlmcut which Is a blessing we often overlook. 1 One may get nlong without doctors, lawyers and preachers, but the grocery- nan Is Indispensable. I j King AIphoiiHo, of Hiinlii, wouldn't jnake a bad sort of antl-raoo aulcldo citizen of the United States. I The averag.) married man has about as much to do with managing his home as a mouse has with managing the fam ily cat When a girl tries to dodge a kiss he always manages to do It In a way that enables her to catch It equnro ou Pr lips. ' ' It was a colored girl that won the Championship In the spelling contest In Cleveland. But the negro la used to hard words. ' They are going to tqiond $1(1,0(10,000 for the Improvement of the Hussion army. We never knew anything that needed It more. We have heard a great deal about the mayor of a Texas town who draws a salary of $1 a year, but not, a word to the effect that he earns it I Ida Tarbell wants the women of the jworld to unite and prepare to light their common enemy man. If It Is all the same to Ida, man would ranch prefer waiting for cooler weather be fore opening hostilities. The t "abandoned" farms of sevornl of the New England States present no doubt a gloomy picture to somo per sons, and yet, so far as future growfn la concerned, there Is more hope In tho act that these farms are not worked than there would be If all the avail able land In the six Now England Ktates were cultivated to tho limit of lt productive power. The farms which have been abandoned are to the future Of New England what the land which , fas never been brought under cultiva tion la to some of the States of the IWest At some time In the future they jWlll be occupied and tilled, for the de xnand for land will force them luto e.' Neglected now, they are never theless a source of future wealth and production. New England as a whole has a long way to go before It reaches In density of population the condition of tome countries In Europe to-day. To become gloomy In reflecting upon Its future Is to Ignore what may be learn , d from tho history alid the example of other prosperous and yet more ' tensely populated parts of tho world. The Immigration commissioner of a .Western rellroad recently applied to an Eastern trnfllc manager for special "homeseckers' excursion" ratea to en ablo runners to go out nnd look at his , .Western lauds. "I won't help you at cent'a worth," said the Easterner, em phatically. "Every farmer you take off our lines makes a dead loss to us of at least a thousand dollars a year." The estimate must have been a largo one In the went each new settler la expected to add &)00 a year to the lucome of the railway but It Is of Inturest us UluS' tratlng the fact that every one of us, no matter how ho may esteem Ida own worth to bis community or to society In general, has a value to his felltws that can be figure! In dollars and cents. What he produces others consume, nnd what he consumes other produce, Prosperity Is a mutual affair. Especial ly Is this so as between the farmer and the railroad or between the railroad and every other man. What each new eettler produces the road must haul to market; and all bis machinery, all his clothing, all h(ls fuel, a!! that his owu land docs uot glve.hlni, the road must tring. The truo soMnee of trausjmrta- tlon Is based on tlie knowledgo of mu teal dependence, o:id the problem the rate regulator must solve Is that of eu abllng the farmer to net the most wares Into the best-paying market, maintain ing a profitable rate on the carriage nnd on the return haul of what hi surplus buys. It would be an interest ing problem for sonic readers to figure out their own cash value to the road wlib h serves thorn, and to their fellow:, and thus fleleruih t whether they nre giv ing as much im they receive, jrap plixss Im not a matter o dollars and a-utv, but nun h comf ort i begotten of a proper sharing of prosperity. In this free country, with -nilvertsul dii'.V 'n, with the richest natural nv ourrt In thi world, needing only de velopment by men "is of labor nnd cap ital to produce wealth enough to lift the entire pc'-utaUm above want, tn fart remains Hut the numbers of tho Bbl.Mioilld poor are very great, and the condition Is not confined to hard times. Tea million people an eighth of the entire population aro In a con dition of what may lx conshUred ex- tromt' want. Vet It Is stated on good statistical authority that within a hun dred miles of New York City, where thre Is a very large poverty-stricken population, there are hundreds of aban doned farms with thousands of acres of Idle land. Not only Is this true, but within tho territory named there aro allowed to go to waste each year thou sands of bushels of apples, gar den stuff and other produce, much of It being left to rot 'on the ground. - .Something like this can be said of every city where unemployed people are found In largo numbers. II all the unemployed people who could get work In the cities, If they wanted It, were earning wages, and If all who cannot find employment In the cities would seek It In the country, there would bo a decided decrease In por- erty, not only In a hard times period but at all periods. The marvelous pos sibilities of the millions of acres of vacant land In this country are only beglnrlng to be realized. Intensive farming Is making land wonderfully productive to nil who will bring Intelli gence and energy to bear upon It Tho world never yet had too much to eat and wear nnd provldo shelter. There can be no overproduction In this lino as long as there Is left a hungry mouth or a rugged back. Those who think that Invention la approaching Its limits would do well to consider the fact stated by M. Abra ham, an authority on this subject that tho best telephone does not transmit to the ear more thnn one one-thou sandth of tho energy that It receives front the line. Although there may be cases In which ono could wish that tha telephouo would transmit less rather than more, yet, seriously, It Is a chal lenge to Inventors, as well as an In dictment of human Inefficiency, when an instrument of such universal utili ty Is allowed to remain so prodigal. The Immense advances recently mado 1 1 the power and speed of transatlantic steamshlim have not yet In tho opin ion of J. J. O'Neill, a Scotch engineer, been carried to the limit Addressing the Institution of Engineers and Ship builders hi Scotland, Mr. O'Neill said that the lengths of the present liners warrant tho belief that greater power can "lie obtained with the samo dimen sions, tho present speeds with shorter lengths. Investigation shows that. the variations of form Involve relatively small gains, nnd Mr. O'Neill thinks that If the samo attention had been devoted to the development of the screw pro peller that has been given to the form of vesKsels greater advantages would have been secured. i Trot Joel Stcbblns and Prof. F. O. Brown have recently constructed a small selenium cell, which, when placed In tho focus of a twelve-Inch refracting telescope, causes measurable deflections of tho needle of a galvanometer In re sponse to tho Impact of light wave from Individual stars. The planet Mara gave a deflection of nine millimeters, the star Aldobnran a deflection of 8.4 millimeters, nnd even a fourth magni tude star, Gamma Arletls, caused a vis- iblo deflection. It Is hoped that by the use of a specially sensitive galvano meter this method may be greatly im proved, and that if certain disturbing Influences, particularly temperature changes, can bo eliminated, accurate measurements of starlight by moans of selenium cells will become possible. C. S. Gager presents In the Journal of the Now York Botanical Garden some Interesting facts about the eelf pruulug of trees, as observed In the gar den. In October the sapling poplars litter tho gronnd about them with branches, most of which are two years old and bear winter buds. The catalpa, the allantus, the horse chestnut, the elm, the lilac, the mulberry, the maple. and seventeen or eighteen other varieties of tree have this habit of self-pruning. With some, as the maples. It occurs In spring or early summer; with others. In tho autumn. The purpose appears to be to get rid of suierfluous branches. The branches thus eliminated are not dead to begin with, but die as a result of the pruning profess, which begins by tho formation of an "abscission lay er," or a brittle zone, at tha base of the branch. O Jok on Somebair. Calling on a maid one evening la tho season of food cheer, William saw green decoration Hanging on the chandelier. William was a bit near-sighted, But you couldn't call hi in slow; And he thought he knew hU business When ho sighted mistletoe. Then ho up and kissed the maiden. Kissed her for an hour or two. But she merely smiled demurely As shy maidens often do. "Tell me why you smile?" ho asked her When they iwrted In the hall. "lteally. can't you pie?'' she giggled That's nt mistletoe at all!" Voukers Siutesman. Takes 'Km Knar. "Does she run after the men?" "No, she doesn't 'have to. She wins In a walk." .Cleveland I .eider. We are always herring It said tha this or that uun will iu time come ouj all rl'ht, and that he would lie all rl-Iit If ho tin 1 a chance, but the greut deinnud of tho hour Is for men who amount to something NOW, whether they have n chance or not The average woman's letter begins one uf two ways: "It Is a itrfect shame 1 have not written to you before," or "Do 1 owe you a letter, or do you owe me oneT" Too many people pray for .what they want lnstcud uf for what they uctsj. 'lermond A mlildon. Ambition Is natural to men; Indeed there Ih little hojK for advancement In llfo without It Itev. Dwlght E. Mar vin, Presbyterian, Brooklyn. Personal Kalvullon. The work of the church Is not slmplj to overthrow tho outward forms of vice, but to redeem the victim Kev. James M. Tabor, Methodist, Newark. The nischt Christian. The right Christian Is the man who knows he has not yet attained, but de votes his energies to attaining. Itev. John Aehesoii, Presbyterian, Aurora. God Is the light of tho soul. If we, like the glowworm, shall absorb the spiritual light, we shall reflect the great Creator. Kev. 10. E. Phreancr, Metho dist, Providence. flrllulnn with Education. Itcllglou with educntlon brings out the young man In all his character! shows the format ion and basis of his character and Ideas. Hew. Y. F. O'llure, Koman Catholic, Williamsburg, n. y. I.untl ( Promise. Despite the execsacs, inorul enormi ties and excrescences on our country, this land Is great ami glorious and full of promise, and from this country xmicH a movement for the Improvement of the human race. Dr. Felix Adler, Ethical Culturlsf, New York City. Manly Strength. There Is too much of the sisterly weakness of man In dealing with vital Inten sis. No matter how they may differ from us, give us men that know and fool nnd are loyal to their convic tions. itev. W. II. Jordan, Methodist, Minneapolis. Tho Saloon. The saloon Is the only Institution on earth powtesslng not one single j;edeem lng feature. From a moral, civil, eco nomical or commercial standpoint, not ono thing can bo said In Its defense. Kev. William B. Beauchamp, Metho dist. Louisville. Modcktr, The characteristic that all mei, fven tho worst of them, most respect a wom an for he? sweet modesty, her best friend, . her safeguard from evil" her moral protection. She who refuses or neglects to hood its least prompting la In danger. Kev. M. G. Dickinson, Bap tist, Ilobokon. Art. Art Is n marvelous thing. It l able to take the common and produce the beautiful. Life Is enriched because of the spiritual. Supremo art la- the art of living. There Is no other realm that has such materials, no other that has such poKslbllltlos. Itev. C. T. Horn, Methodist, Chicago. I'nMla Conscience. Tbo recent unprecedented exposure of graft and corruption, or of "wicked ness In high places," plainly lndlcnto an awakening of tho public conscience to higher and better things, nnd point with certainty t n final reign of right eouHnoKS.Bev, Septimus J. Ilunna, Christian Scientist, Boston. Tho nd to God. A man may hold high converse, yet perform a low ticrvlee. Ills reverence for God has committed to him the se crets of an ever-abiding Lord. It mat ters not where he be or If his tasks are trivial, he Is on tho road which leads nearer to God. Itev. John F. Goucher, Methodist, Baltimore. WUdom. Wisdom Is won by tho discipline of life as truly as by the discipline of tho school, uud many a young college grad' mite has learned by bitter eriverlenco that he cannot afford to despise tho Judgment'of men with less book lenrtt Ing but greater life, wisdom Itev. Dr. Fonn, Episcopalian, Bsoton. The Absentee God. Tho Idea of an absentee God hah boon a calamity to tho race. What hu manity needs la not a God locked up In heaven amlst saints and angels, but ono living and moving among us, who euros for us,' pities us and helps us as a father cares for his child. Rev. George B. Yoshurgh, Baptist, Denver, Human Liberty. For the man who realizes the soli darity of human smioty there is no such thing as absolute liberty. Human liberty is relative, nnd ho enjoys most of It who most fully acquiesces In thoso laws and measures which contribute tho greatest good to the greatest num ber. Kev. William Y. Chapman, Pres byterian. Koseville, Human' SnD'eriiitf. If the very Sen of God suffered for the uiijniit that lie might explain God's dealings with men, wo can also enter th.-ni Into ituJuHt sufferings for others, that .Ii.mii Christ may Ik glorified In us n: wo exemplify His character of self denial nnd forgiveness In the hour it soxerest t rial Kev. M. L. Blaney, Methodist. 1'rox idciice. Source of Crime. A man m.iy read out of his creed the n:o;v of Adam's fall; he may eluss it iiijioug the iiiyihs of his race, but he ma as well deny t bo MinlxVr.sul laxv thai like produces HUo as to deny that a g-.vat many of the sins and crimes of the pros nt generation aro traceable to tho indulgent and criminal sins of a di.-oliciliciit ancestry. Kev. lVmald D. McKay, 1'resbyterlan, Minneapolis, Mian. Coldly CoimlUrred. ' I. sir," remarked tho self-important statesman, -w;i never upproaehed with a pi'oiMisitlou of graft iu my life." "That fact," unaxx-ered Senator Sor ghum, ''limy be a recognition of your honesty, nnd then again It may be a re rcelli.il on yor-r Influeuee." Wualilng ten Star. , After a woman passes a certain ag nhe has to become Interested In praytt ineetiig. or sitting up with tho sick and the dead, or he doesu't see' any society at all. GERMANY'S T0Y3. their Maanfactar One nf the Coon- r Big ladaatrles. 8ome Interesting particulars of tho toy Industry of Germany have been published by the British consul nt Ham burg. Toys constitute one of the most Important branches of German manu facture. Id the year 1003 the total vol ume of toys exported from nil parts of the German Empire was 34,717 tons, rained at il3,0,11,f)"0. Though there Is hardly any country In the world to which German toys are not exported, the most Important customer of Ger many la Great Britain, which In the year nnder review received 12,218 tons. The second most !miortant market for German toys is this country, tho ex ports to which amounted in 11)0.1 to 11, 055 tons, valued at t 00:1,135. Tbo most Important centers for the manufacture of toys In Germany are Nuremberg nnd Fucrth In Bavaria, Son neberg and some other ports of Thur lngln and the Saxon "Erzegeblrge." Nuremberg, above all, has long been known throughout the world for Its trade and Industry, and German toys, wherever made, still go In many coun tries by tho name of Nuremberg toys. STUDYING MAN ' 4 ' tt -hi b T 1M Ikj v.; ,vy v ,,i - v 1vW imirc. $ THE CALOItlMETEU C'HAMBEU. Some time ago Dr. Andrew Wilson discussed the cnlorhuetrlc experiments at an American university. Sheffield University has now Installed a similar chamber, In which a man Is shut up In order that the heat generated by tala body may bo observed. By a system of registering Instruments the heat ' generated by the body lii action and la repose Is minutely recorded. The prisoner has to live for several days In a culorlmeter, and his food Is passed to him through a porthole so contrived that the heat of the chamber cannot be affected by the opening of communication with the outside world. For exercise he rides a stationary bicycle, and during tho time ho is on the ma chine a record Is taken of the change In the temperature of the body. Illustrated London News. At Fuerth, vhleh Is close to Nuremberg, a flourishing trade and Industry, has likewise sprung up since about the end of the eighteenth century. Next to Nu remberg and Fucrth tho town and di trict of Souneberg has for many years enjoyed tbo best reputation for Its toy Industry and trade, while lu the Saxon "ETzgeblrge," a district comparatively poor In nntural products, the manufac ture of toys has likewise for some time furulBhed a source of livelihood to thousands of Its Inhabitants. The toys mado at Nuremberg nnd Fuerth are chiefly of the metal variety, mad either of tin, tinned sheet iron or of tin and lead nlloya Of the more than 200 toy factories established In both of these towns, about 150 nre de Yoted exclusively to metnl toys, the only part of them worked by hand be ing the final painting, while nil tho rest Is manufactured by machinery. In this respect this toy industry of the two Bavarian towns occupies a rather dif ferent position from that of all the other parts of Germany, where It Is ul inost exclusively carried on by manual labor; that Is to say, by workmen and women In their own homes. The suc cess of the Nuremberg and Fuerth met al toy manufactories la mainly attribu table to the skillful manner In xvhlch the materials have been employed, and lu which the machinery and tools used for the work have been adapted and gradually Improved by the toy manu facturers themselves, t thus eriuhltng them to produce largo quantities of articles within a comparatively short time, and to reduce trio excuses of pro duction, and In consequence also the sale prices of the articles manufactured by them. Sclcntilic American. HJJ WAS AN IRISH CHINAMAN. llow Celtlo American Decnina a C e Irallal Cttlaen. Willie on a visit to Washington, D. C, recently, John B. O'Neill, u former Washington attorney, xvho Is uoxv en gaged as military Instructor lu China, related an Interesting and out-of-the-ordinary tiappoiiing in xvhlch he was a principal. It occurred, says the Wash ington Star, about fifty miles from rckla "We were trying to get a big gun across a little stream," said Mr. O'Neill. "I had ubout thirty Chinamen engaged at the task, while fully a hundred more stood about the banks of tho stream and looked on. When the cannon had reached tho middle of the crock, or river, It became stalled In the soft mud at the bottom. I was yelling at flic Chluke' In pidgin English, trying to get them to extricate the gnu, when abor the babel of Chinese voices there came in a high laisedo and decidedly Irish brogue this remark: "Why the dlvll don't ye2 spalpeens pull th' cannon to Jez right? Begor rah. ye'r a lot ov low-tide clams!' "I looked In tho direction whence the voice came and saw a short China man, as I supposed, with a long queue and a. gtnulne Celtic cast of counte nance. He wns holding a little Chinese boy by the hand. "'Who nre youT 1 shouted at him. " 'An Amlrlklii, like yersclf, wns the reply. "I am n Clilnese-lrlsh-Amerlcan, nn' me name Is O'Fluherty.' " Mr. O'Neill said he had n long talk with tho quaint fellow, xvho informed him that he left Tyrone. Pa., for China about txventy years ago, and ukiii his arrival In tbo celestial empire he mar ried n Chinese woman, adopted their manners and garb. Including n faNo queue, lie ndded that he was the f:i ther of several little Chinese-Irish O'Flahortys. "Why have yon not dropped the 'O' fornlnsf yoAr name It" asked Mr. O'Neill. "You seldom fee an O' Flaherty these days. They are all Flahertys." "I didn't drrp me 'O' for th same r'ason ye did not drop .vers. Ye know AS A MACHINE. J t-A ii I if r . . 1 ! 4V HV?i,( in th' oxvld counthry the O'Flahertys aud the O'Neills 'O' lx-erybody." FARMER'S LAND WAS SOUR. Blniplo Test with Lltmna Paper Showed Acid. Tho Stnto experiment stations nre doing a great xvork for the farmers. The following Incident hoxxs hoxv sim ple some of tlie tests aro "xvhen you know hoxv," pays a writer In Country Life In America. A station official was going over a farm with the owner when they came to a crawflshy piece of land just back of tho barn ; the very xvceds looked yellow aid unhenlthful. "I am Inclined to think," remarked the agriculturist, "that this land is too acid for productivity. Wo can deter mine this In a moment." Taking n blue piece of paper from his pocket he stooped and dipped the paper In some of the soli water that was standing in a cow track. To the owner's astonishment the blue paper changed to a red color as soon as it was Immersed. "There," said the agriculturist, "xxe have our proof. This Is Just a piece of litmus paper. For 5 cents you can buy a similar pleco at any drug store. Its change of color shoxvs that the land Is Bour. Crops cannot thrive on sour land any more than children can thrive ou sour milk." "Xohnddv" Anwered. The average small boy's opinion of himself Is none too high, but tho reply of a small stable boy In Chicago may scarcely be taken as the average. A xx oman whose husband kept the driving horse In ono of the many "boarding stables" in the city telephoned tho other day to have the horse and carriage brought to the house. A strange volco answered the telephone. "Is this So & So's stable?" queried the woman. "Yes," came tho answer. "Well, xvho Is tills?" "A xv, 'tnln't nobuddy. Walt a mln nlt and I'll call somebody," camo the answer. Too' Hmpatuetlc, "There Is such a thing as being too considerate and tender-hearted." "Whut's tho trouble now?" "My daughter refuses to boil the drinking water for fear of hurting th germs." Washln gt on Sta r. We have never heard of a man who bought n farm with the money saved by quitting smoking. Still, the Sunday school books say such a result la po slble. Small thluj;s worry small inluls. A new story told of F. Marlon Craxv ford, In a London paper, is that be was seated at a dinner next to a loquacious lady who talked with him of the Im mortality of tho works of certain au thors no longer among the living. Said the lady to the novelist: "Have you ever written anything that will live after you have gone?" "Madam," Mr. Crawford replied, "what I am trying to do Is to write something thatwill enable me to live while I am here." The Argonaut. One of the best and most popular governor gcneralB of Canada was the Marquis of Lome, noxv Duke of Argyle. His reminiscences have Just been pub lished in this country by Dodd, Mead & Co. under the title "Passages from the Past" Somo of the famous per sons whom ho recalls In this volume of reminiscences, to mention them nt hap hazard, are Wordsworth, Tennyson, Browning, Lord Brougham, Lord Duf ferln, Cavour, Garibaldi, General Lee, General Grant, Seward, Longfellow, Blamarck, Emperor William I., Victor Emmanuel, Emperor Francis Joseph, Mr. Gladstone, Louis Napoleon, Euge nie, Disraeli and Queen Victoria. Morjorle Bowen, or Gubrlelle Vere Campbell, to give her her real uunie, author of "The Viper of Mllun" whose latest book, "The Sxx-ord De cides." has Just been published though she has lived in London nearly all her life, la a native of Hayling Island In Hampshire, on the south coast of Eng land. At an early age she showed ap titude for painting and began to look upon art as her profession. Writing was more or less a secondary matter a pleasant way of whillng away an Lour or .two In the evening. She lives with her mother and one slstier, and most of her work Is done during the morning. Every day she writes at least 1500 words, often considerably more. One of Miss Bowen's American admirers is Mark Twain, and the au thor reciprocated by dedicating "Tho Master of Stair" to tho humorist. "Diet" Is the subject of an article In tho Saturday Eeviexv in which the writer says: "incidentally diet pro vides all women and many men with a plausible but pnltry excuse for minding Other people's business. When, after much searching of heart and much reading of medical dictionaries, xvhlch even the authors scarcely profess to understand the science of medicine comdsts of pouring drugs of which we know little Into stomachs of which we know less a man has found a diet which suits him It is all Lombard street to a China orange that this Iden tical diet would starve or Burfelt his next door neighbor. Let tho young men who cannot digest boef by nil menns eat something else, but not talk about it, and though they may never aspire even to sublime mediocrity they can at least learn for themselves before they are of age to eat what suits them, and above all to keep their fads and symp toms to themselves." THE LABRADOR HERO. Dr. Grenfell la an All-around Ilnnflr Man In the Arotlo Ileclon. Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell, the hero of the Labrador coast, is more than a physician and a missionary. lie ia a scientist and an all-round handy man. He has a steamer with hospital amid ships, and he Is the master and navi gator of It; he can amputate a leg, contract the "walls of a pleuritic lung by shortening tho ribs or cure by the use of modern methods, but with b.ome-mado , appliances, a man suffer ing from a pertain form of paralysis; 150 miles from a shipyard ' he can raise tho stern of his little iron steamer out of the water by the rough application of the principles of hy draulics and repair her propeller; he can handle dynamite and blast an ex cavation under one of his simple hos pital buildings; he can start a lumber mill and teach tho Inhabitants of Labrador not only how to handle a saw, bnt how to sell the product for a living wage; he can establish a co operative store, and, what 19 better, make It pay. He Is a magistrate of the territory he traverses, and ono of the tales they tall of him concerns the way In which be compelled one of the most prom inent merchants of Newfoundland to come Into church, coufesa publicly that he had wronged a follow man and pay the latter a thousand dollars. Then Dr. Gronfell told tho congrega tion that they must not Fpetik to the old sinner for a year, after which, If he showed signs moot for repentance, they might associate with him again. The merchant fled the place rather than endure th'at punishment. Dr. Grenfell Is now planning to Introduce reindeer Into Labrador In order to further tho Industrial development of the country. "SNOOFUfa." It Pays to Keep lOvcrrthlnv Readr for "Snoopera." "I call It snooping It's nothing else!" Kathlo sputtered, as she bolted into her mother's room and closed tho door behind her. "I haven't said It to any one but you, mother, but I can't help It If she Is my father's aunt she snoops. She went aud ioked all through the drawers of my machiiui, aud then said, 'I Just wanted to sen Wliether she kept them In order.' Sis was there, and alio told me." "Were tho drawers out of order?" Mrs. Psrrlsh asked, sensitive to tbo thought that Aunt Murcla hud found something to criticize lu Kathlo's train ing. .'"N they were in apphs-ple condi tion, for i wonder. l had a spasm of orderlraewa yesterday, and put every thing straight. But that doesn't alter the fact that she was snooping. She had no right, and I'd like to tell hr so.' "0 no eti tidier" Mrs. ParrUh laughed with evident relief. "She'a kind-hearted old lady. She doesn't mean any narm." "SJie may bft llnd-heartcd.r but she Bnooix",' Xnthlo persisted, tier face still Hushed with Indignation. "It's bad enough to have to nso that miser able old fashioned machine, xvhen Maud Lewis has a Ivautiful new one with a drop-head and all kinds of fancy at tachments, but to have her broking all through It 1 think It's a little too niueti to bear." With the help of her mother Kathle did bear It, however, and two weeks later, when n long-coveted new ma chine, addressed to herself nnd benring Aunt Marvin's' card, was dejioslted at the door, several kinds of expressions crowded each other on Kathle's face. At the first opportunity fllie shut her self in with her mother once more. "I haven't said a word against her to any one but you, mother," she be gan, hurriedly, "ami I'm so glod I haven't I toll you I've learned one lesson." "Of course you have." "You knoxv what I menu?" "Why, I suppose it's that ' even 'snooping, may be prompted by gener ous motives." "No, 'txvasn't that." Kathlo In dulged In a guilty giggle. "My lesson ' wasn't a bit Sunday-school hooky. I am most ashamed to tell It now. I I've Just been putting my bureau draw ers in perfect order. The lessoh I meant I'd learned wns that It pays In this life to keep everything ready for snoopers." i A EIT TOUGH. "No," said Mrs. Brexx-er, thoughtfully, "you wouldn't call him absent-minded all the time. To be sure, he Is forget ful, but I don't like to think of John as absent-minded. That sounds as If he hadn't any mind at all, you knoxv." "I knoxv," chimed In her friend. "My Roger my oldest boy Is that way sometimes. I remember once when there was company ho nte a doily, a new. hand-embroidered doily, that Aunt Jennie made herself." "Ate a doily!" exclaimed Mrs. Brew er. "Isn't it dreadful to think of? It happened Just as easy, though. 'You see, Mr. Herbert White, the lecturer on negro education, came to our house to dinner because he used to go to school with my husband years ago. It was Just before the lecture, so xx'o had to hurry a good deal, although we did sit down early. Of course 1 had nil my ts'St things out, and got doxvn those thlii glass finger boxvls I keep for company." "They are pretty," said Mrs. Brexver. "I think so. " Well, ns I xx-as saying, wo had strawberries and cream for dessert, and I had tho finger boxvls oa my pink and blue saucers, with tho dollies Aunt Jennie made. "Now what do you suppose Roger did? He took off the finger bowl with out the dolly and put his berries nnd cream right on the plate just tho same. I was so anxious seeing that Mr. White shouldn't be late that I never noticed! a bit" "What a boy!" exclaimed Mrs. Brew er. "I know It," answered her friend. "You see, the dolly was so sort of lace llke that It all hunched up with tho cronrn and the berries nnd the powder ed sugar, and he chexved It right doxvn, talking all the time to Mr. White." "Didn't he realize it at all?" in quired her companion. "Not a mite, till ho got nearly done. Then he said. Those were givnl berries, mother, only a llttlo tough. May I have some more, please?"' Youth's Com panion. On a Ken Fool Inc. Absalom Foote, an eccentric old gen tleman who had grown tired of life In the city, decided to move to somo small er town, free from the roar of traffic, the bustle ant confusion of the throng ing multitude, where ho could end his days trunquilly, as became u man of his age. In casting about for a loca tion, his eye chanced to light upon the advertisement, In a village paper, of one Thomas It Foote, who wanted to dispose of his boot and shoe store, at a bargain, having made up his mind to remove to the city. "That's Hie very thing," he said. "Selling shoes Is a nice easy occupation. It will give me Just enough to do to keep me from stagnating, and It won't xvear me out with overwork. I'll Inves tigate It It's queer, though, that his name Is Foote, my name Is Foote, ho wants to come to tho city, and I want to go to the country." A visit to tho little town decided him. He liked its appearance and loca tion. He was pleaded, moreover, xvlth "Foote's Shoe Store," and bought It, good-will and all, at a bargain. "Well," suld tho other Mr. Foote, "you won't have to change the sign." "No," he answered, slowly; "I'll just add a little to it." The next day he added this. Just be low the sign : "This Place Has Changed Feet." An I'aaccountablc I'nillnu. It was a severe trial to .Mr. Harding that his only son's memory xvas not all that could be desired. "Where In tho world he got each u forgetful streak from is beyond me," s::bl the exasper ated father to his wife on one occa sion. "What hus he forgotten now?" asked Mrs. Harding, with eyes downcast and a demure expression. "The figures of t'ie Inst return from the election, on the bullctiu-lxiard," and Mr. Harding Inuerted a linger in his collar as If to loosen It, and hook his head vehemently. "Looked at 'eni as ho came pant not half nn hour ago and now -.iu't tell me. "As 1 wild to him, 'If youVo tso Klu. pid ou oau't keep u few simple finires in your head, why don't you write viu down on a piece of pr, u.s dl) aiu, have done all my life, i!g before I was your vgY " T1h greatest quarrJs Inthe world'! history have bttm between people xvho were once friend. It Is easier to rest too much thnn It la to work too much. ( " ' 1 '