tfett lntlnstrr. "Who hi that striking looking mna es,r the head of the table?" skd on f the guests. "That's Mr. .Type.." snswc-J the oth er. "He" Wool boiler." "What! A workman at lb stock "yards?" "No, ne; don't you -understand? He writes these aliocklne stories of corpora tion cruelty lo children nnd leoorant em ploye thnt you read In the Magazine." Chicago Tribune. Tender Hearted. Customer On yrm tell me whether the atiiff they pat w thin sticky fly tnKT ia sweet? Druggist No. ma'ntn; I don't know whether It I or not. Customer (wrth a nipb) Well, Ml tske he ever en mm dearer if I could be sure iJiat the poor flic when they fft stink on it ill" "-"'' '". Tan Tan Get Allen' Font-Knse ntfCB Write to-day to Allen 8. Olmsted, fe nor, N. Y., far a I'RKK .ample of Allen' Foot e. a pe4er ( ehake Into your .hoes. It cure tired. aweatlnK, bot, swollen, acta tn fret. M make new or tlrtt shoee eany. A certain rare far Coma and Bunion. Ail DrucglaU and loo Store aU It i5e. 'lroLu.j uy mt .uiile. "Anyhow," fiercely oc l:ilr;v:l Warehnm Thrift, a their irreconcilable differences of opinion gradually led to personalities, "I ain't pigeon toed !" "N'o," enld TtifTnld Knutt, looking at the open work shoe worn by bta fellow traveler; "when ye have them thing on yer feet re H" turn yer toej out." Chicago Tribune. t.ATKST PARISIAN 8HBATII PKIIIT NovH. Vh-prrHody Imiithn. everylioUr want one. H,10 told ot foney Island. All the r-e In New York. Henri 12 cent. Hcckinna Kavetty Co., 8 lleekluan 8t., .New Yark. Too HaaHriloa. "ycsKlr.' admitted a waller, "I shall te Hiroacc4 to throw up tny situation hem." "Indeed! What it the matter?" "More than I can put up with. The Coventor IneiHta on my eating mush rooms la the presence of customers to prove thcf are edible fungi." Loudon Tit-Bits. WE SELL CVnn AND TRAPS CHKAP V buy Fnra & Hides. Write for catalog 103 M. W. Hide & Par Co, Minneapolis. Minn, A Hand ihuii'h Ituae, "My (treat iinelo, who was bl Ind," aid a Frenchman, "once burled $4,000 tn gold leuis under a pear tree In bis Cnrden. Ukt neighbor saw him do it, and In the 4oud of night came and stole the money, replacing tho earth care fully. 'Some ny Inter my uncle brought fifty more lanls down to the pear tree for bnrlirl. lie hoou discovered his loss, ami, sftently tveeplng, he, too, re placed the eurtu. "He anew whom to suspect, and that alght he cjitled on his neighbor. He aecmed tktniglitful and distrait, and tho neighbor asked him what oppressed his mind. " 'Well. HI tetl jrou,' said my great--vncle frankly. '1 have 1,000 louls hid away la a safe place, and to-day a ten ant raid ff a- mortcoeo. and I have another 1,000 loula In cash on my bands. I don't know whether to seek out another hiding place for this money or put It where the other Is. What iff . yon adviser , " "'Whjr,' raid the neighbor eagerly, ' 'If your Brat hiding place is safe and you declare It to be so I should ccr ' talnly put this money there too.' "My great-uncle said firmly that that -was what he would do. It was the wlwest coarse. Then he took bis leavo. 'And when next day be went to the penr tree again there, sure enough, was bis lost ljOOO Inula, nil put back again." Paatrht aad Bled. i "Uncle George did you do any fighting 4a the Kpaaiuh war?" "Yes, oqr boy ; I was fighting nearly all 4he tine. , Those mosquitoes down In Florida, where we camped, were the fiero t thlajs ya erer heard of." "Bat weren't yon in any battles, un cle?" "O, je; we had a few tittle skirmishes -over la Oaaa, at course; but I thought yon wanted sne ta tell you about real war -and blooaaUd." Cliirago Tribune. Mora Trouble, . "I w4sh atf buahond ha J sent ma s rpoatoOios rdcr Invtcad of thia check," said Mm. Ijnswting, as she looked at tin little iAIs of paper that hud dropped out M (be letter. "I suppose, now, I'll have to take (t the bunk and repudiate It . In order U get the money." nia Wat oral Bent. "I understand aid Pslyinan left bis sf- - fairs in pretty bad shape. Are you hav ing any traable In straighterng tbeut - autr "We have found that tfiey can't be atraisbcened. He was a confirmed crook." SOT A MIBACLE ' Jaat mala Can and Effect. There are some quite remarkable thlnga happening every day, which aeera a 1 moat atlraculous. Some persons would not believe that man cautd. suffer from coffee drink ing so erverety as to cause spells of tin onseiotjaneHa. and to And complete relief la changing from coffee to Pos tum la srell wartb recording. "I use4 to be a greut coffee drinker, ao much a that it wns killing mn by Inches. My heart been me so weak 1 would fttM and lie unconscious for nn hour at a time. The spells caught m. sometime twa ar three times n diiy. "My friends, and eveu tho doctor, lold me U was drinking coffee tlnit cauwed the trouble. I would not be lieve It and still drank coffee until I ould et leave my mom. "Then tny doctor, v-.-lio drinks Post urn lilinself. persuaded me to stop cotTe.-.-aud try Pohuhi. Afier much besltatln: I concladod to try it. Tb:it was cIkIii miontlis age. Hlnce then 1 liave Imd bn .few of those isn't la. none for more than four meatus. . . "I feci bettor. Utp In-tter and nm better every way. I now drink nothing tiut Potttum aud touch no coffee, aud aa I nm awtiity years of ape ull my friends think, tiie Improvement quito re imarkabla." 'There'a a He.taim." Name glvtm by Pimtum To., Bittle Creek. II Mi ttettrt. "The Itoad to Well Till." In pkgt Ever read the shove letter? A new ne appears , i foi lim ti tMtc. They are tcuuitc, trtt, and full ot Jiumaa interest. The Qhauffeur and the Jewels CapyrlaM. I, f I. B. Lieeiacorr Coafin. All riant reaer re. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee - CHAPTKIt V. It wss a full hour later that a tall oiing man in a spring overcoat mounted the shallow steps of the Albemarle Adcl phl hotel and entered the lobby, which teemed curiously full of ieop!e. Koine were sauntering about, oilier sitting or standing In little group, while quite a Dumber were leaving. The attention of the crowd was riveted on the hotel om nibus which stood In front of the door. Ths young man pushed pst the throng of loiterers with want ceremony snd mads hi wsy to the clerk's drxk. "Look here!" he said, addressing that Individual; "Just a minute, pleae! Any truth In this report about the Prince del Plno's attack? I'm on ths Morning Post1 nd have been sent to get t ie facts." Ths clerk did not look up from his writing. "Report officially denied," ha said. In his usual singsong. "Boies taken down to the docks this morning. The prince himself lesves this afternoon. Will be down In the course of an hour." Ills speech created a little hntdi in the bass of talk around, and two or three people turned their beads to listen. "That's true," said a man who wss standing nesr the clerk's desk. "I saw those trunks myself go out in ths van three hoars ago crest on every one of them." lis was speaking to a showily dressed woman, evidently an American, who shrugged her shoulders incredulously. "Hell have to let his trunks go with out him, then," shs remarked In a low tons. "The doctor's been here three times to-day, and you know what the chamber maid said. No, I won't believe he's going till I sea him with my own eyes. Look t There comes the proprietor I" She stop ped short, ss a stout mail in a frock coat walked pompously to ths telephone near ths clerk's desk and took up ths receiver. "Give me Adelphl stables 1" be ordered, In a voles that carried through tbs entire lobby. "Hello 1 Jim, send a covered four wheeler right here for His Excellency the Prince del Pino." Then, turning his back to the room, he became absorbed In an interested talk with a man wbo had Just corns in a trim-looking man with a very white face and dressed in black. "Ths prince's valet P ths American In formed her husband, In a loud whisper that reached the ears of ths reporter standing near. Stepping across, he ac costed the valet ingratiatingly. ' "Would It us ponaible for me to obtain a interview with the Prince del Pino? I Corns oa behalf of ths Morning Post. Ths valet shook his head. "The prince Is very hurry," be explain ed susvely; "be leaves In ons all little moment for to take passsgs of ths Ma Jest.lo (or New York." Us dropped his volos. "Dls nighness tvusts that you will most kindly contradict the so falsa report, which hss unfortunately been cir culated. Son Altssss has had a severo cold, from which he has but now recov ered. Ton will excuse me?" Bowing politely, he psssed out, follow ed by the proprietor, Just a a large four-wheeler drew np In front of ths en trance. Some minntee passed. The little groups In the lobby began to how signs of impatlsncs and that rest lessness which hsraida ths appearance of a tong-expected star, and there was a ganeral mnrmar of rsltef when the whis pered announcement, "Hers be comes I" was passed around. At the other end ef ths lobby a lift door shot back and four men came quick ly out. The porter wss ahead, much en cumbered with luggage, then came the' valet, followed by the proprietor himself, wbo walked loftily across the hall, abreast with a tall slight man mnflled in a triple-caped military ovareost with a high collar and wearing a tall silk hat. . As be passed rapidly, the lobby caught a glimpse at a handsome, clean-shaven face and a gllstsnlng monocle. "Certainly bs looks well snough," ad mitted ths smartly dressed woman near ths clerk's dtek, In an aggrieved tone. Ths reporter drew a step towards her. "Do you know His Highness by sight, madam?" he Inquired, In the confidence inspiring voice of his class. But ths American was not to bs drawn eat "No, I don't," shs said shortly; "bs cams bar a week ago and has been In his room sick all ths time. Nobody's aeen him before." , Then, turning, she stood on tiptoe, craning her bead like ths rest ot the room to gat a glimpse ot the four-wheeler con taining the departing grandee, as It bowl ed rapidly out of sight As It rattled off In the direction of the qosys. La do vie Karto, the undeserving ob ject of ao much solicitude and Interest, aat leaning back on ths cushions of ths cab, smoking ons of tbs Dal Pino cigars, and outlining bis plans to Alcssts with a loquacity that had not hitherto character ised ths prince's treatment sf his valet "It Will be easy enough to keep this up," hs said hopefully, In French, "now that it'a started. I shall avoid people as Buck as possible on hoard and stay la my stateroom. There's ons chancs In a hun dred that there will be any one on the Steamer who has aver known either the prince or myself before." "Most Improbable," the valet agreed: "and yoa swear that you will leave those trunks at tbs Waldorf as you found them. precisely?" There was a sbsrp note of anxiety underneath his nervous Insistence. "Remember, 8srto, what I am risking." Ths other met his glance imperturba My. "Have I ever failed you?" he asked quietly; "you snd I havs been through a great deal together, mon vleux." There was a pause. "I hope tue money I have given will be enough for all immediate needs," Alceste pursued, changing the subject retlcsly. "For myself, I do not know what the outcome ot this affair will be. The pro prietor has premised to do his utmost but" he sighed "I ahull neither sleep, nor eat bread, till Son A It esse is safely and secretly out of thst msudlt hotel that Is, provided he does not die before be can be moved." "Macho!" the "hauffeur laughed deris ively, '"ilia prince has no more the sear let fever than I who speak to you. Oan you not see what the doctor really thinks? lis will be ill enira'i but to realise that It la his faithful valet wbo has saved his life, llcin Alcrxte! And, If questions are sukNl, thou hunt tby story ready." "The trunks had to so to allay suspt clou," mumbled the talct. as if he were repeating a Icwion. "KxsetV. An they went In the rhirjre of a trusted, discrwt friend ot thine remember, my nutno does not sppesr who ass Wft them safely at ths Waldorf. By Edith Morgan Wlllett - eeeeeeeeee Thou wilt get my cshle assuring this be fore the prince Is well enough to Inquire into the affair. How he will lw diverted by thy witty plsn for hoodwinking the hotel cstmille!" "I Dover should have thought of it my self," confessed the valet, with a certain enthusiasm. "1 hiring the ten years we have known each other, it wss slwsys you, Ludoiic, who devised the daring plans." "And thou who carried them out suc cessfully," finished the other graciously. "I have faith in thy diplomacy. Remem ber, the prince must lie perdu while he is In England, snd travel to America in cognito, resuming his Identity only ou the other side of the ocean. Del Pino was slwsys ready enough for a masque rade!" he chuckled reminiscently. "The quay already 1" As the shades of evening fell and Rod erigo, Prince del Pino, lay tossing irrita bly on his unwelcome sick bod in a dark ened room of the Adelphl, his ex-chauffeur stood in the most sumptuous stateroom of which the Majestic, queen of Ktor Liners, could boast, taking in hi new quarter with much satisfaction. Certainly Alceste had managed srtis ticolly, the two steamer trunks backing the wall, with the Del Pino crest in full sight, being proofs sufficient to convince the most suspicious steward thst their owner was actually on board. With a sense of security and relief that he. had not known for three long duys, Sarto's eyes dropped to an inconspicuous looking waterproof valise at his feet. Stooping, h opened it and drew out a long, narrow parcel. With deft fingers be unwound its chamois wrapping and let the contents roll out on the floor, lie bad seen superb jewels in his day, but the rye of a connoisseur told hrm that Mrs. Waring's diamonds were deservedly renowned. Taking up a snake of brilliants, tho chauffeur held it by its emerald angs, picturing the gleaming folds around a certain whits throat ; and then witli a curloqs impntieaee whipped back the gems into their fittings and, closing the bag en them, remained kneeling by it absently, his t mind going back over the events of the past few dsys. What a close shave It had been ! one hair-breadth escape after another in the desperst race with his pursuers from the Hotel Maritime to the Majestic. He had won, to be sure, beaten them for the nonce; there was a note of triumph in the thought ; but in the gradual reac tion that was setting in with him now ths chauffeur asked himself moodily it the game had been really worth the can dle? What had he gained, after all ; what was that serpent of diamonds at the bottom ot the valise compared with the tremendous pries It had cost? Dis honor, flight, probable capture, eventual Imprisonment; why had be done this thing? Again and again the question recurred to him persistently, and, like others of his sex, beginning with the very first man long ago in a garden, Sarto shifted the blame on to feminine shoulders, mak ing use ot Adam's time-honored plea. Ac cording to the Italian's fatalistic creed, it was a woman's malign influence, com bined with that mischievous power known s force of circumstances, which had brought him to this psss wss responsi ble for his being here in the cabin of ths Msjestlc, with a borrowed Identity and fifty thoussnd dollars' worth of bor rowed (?) jewels. At this point Sarto s scattered thoughts concentrated, narrowing to an inevitable focus. What was to be done with the Wsring diamond? The snswer seemed obvious, but it met the chauffeur unpre pared. . . Whatever ' moralists may ssy, between the man who oonunirs a crime and the professional criminal there Is a great gulf fixed. Karto had fallen very low in tak ing the jewels ; but when he faced the con sequences of his act, the adventurer, hard ened as be was, shrank from the thief's career that lay before him aqd, hesitat ing, looked half-longingly , back. And while he hesitated, from the deck outside came the ceaseless tramp of feet, and against the shuttered window shad ows of different shapes snd sizes passed snd repassed. As be knelt there Kiirto found himself watching the shadows fur tively, and from time to time he glanced at the 'stateroom door opposite, quite un necessarily, for ho bad locked it himself. At last, obeying a perfectly inexplica ble Impulse, he rose, rather sheepishly, and felt ths knob, trying the lock, mere ly for the satisfaction of reiteruled cer tainty. And then, crossing the room, he crouched down, with his bead to the level of the window, and looked out with a vague, Interrogative glance, which gave way Instantly to ons of blank, startled Incredulity. For there on the dock, within tea feet of him, leaning quietly on the rail, his head and shoulders outlined by the even ing sky, was the msn in the brown ever- cost CHAPTER VI. The detective had his back turned. That was a momentary advantage, giv ing the breathless chauffeur an instant to tske in the full ominous meaning of the situation. For there was only one possible wsy of accounting for that figure outside the shutters. He hsd beon rec ognized, even through the Del Pino dis guise, followed all the way from the Adelphl aud was at that Instsnt a pris oner in his stateroom. With his eyes on the locked door oppo site, Snrto stood an instant and meditat ed, a -dsnrerou gliut in his queer eyes, his right baud thrust into a waistcoat pocket, lightly fingering something that lay there a chilly, metallic object a last resort If it came to the worst. Then, making up hia mind with characteristic swiftness, he swung himself down te the level ot the window and peered out throt.gh the shutters. What lu the world was the matter with the man outside? If sit bad gone with him as the chauffeur supposed, where was the alertness, the unmistakable watchful ness of the pursuer wbo hss landed his prey? Why that languid droop of the brown overcoat? The careless pose of the head? And even ss the chauffeur watched this last it turned slowly in hi direction, a prolile came into view, au eye glanced around negligently. Ah ! Sarto bit bis lip shsrply to sup press an Irrcsistibls laugh a laugh at his own expecse. For be had been abso lutely mistaken. Whatever migkt be ths detective's purpose In crotslng the ocean, certain it wss thst his being In the same ; steamer with the ease he wsa altar was aoMsthlng of which be wss sublimit m wars. That lark-lustre eye gave away the eltustton. For the mcr-opt the blood hound wss off the scent 1 ' At this top notch In the rhanffear'e de ductions, a distant bell-like note rams along the decks. It rose, sang, swelled with a dosen measured modulations, fill ing the ship with the unmistakable brsi en clamor of the bugle. Starting st the noise, the detective glanced nt his watch interrogatively. Then he sniffed the air, hesitating, and finally, turning on his beet, his bands In bis pockets, followed the guiding sound. "Full cry for dinner I" sneered the wstcher behiud the shutters. "With the man lie's after and the money within six feet of hi nose I L'kIi I Rah!" And, with a snnp of his fingers in ths direction of the vanishing brown over coat, the chauffeur moved swsy from the window. For some minute longer the bugle blew sonorously, but to one at least of the steamer's live hundred psssengers Its braxen clamor was absolutely inaudible, a, standi tin i the strip of light from his window, Sarto opened a Russia-leather photograph case be was holding and scru tinised the face Inside with intense anx iety. A long, narrow, clean-shaven face it was, with pin-point eyes embedded in bristling eyebrows that met uncompro misingly. And yet . the high bony nose and the thin-lipped mouth had a certain harsh distinction the hall-mark of a dosen generations. With a smothered ejaculation, Snrto took a step forward, staring half defiant ly at the man who cume to meet him out of the opposite mirror. A tall, slenderly built, olive-faced man, who moved with sinuous grace, his clear-cut festures very subtly moulded as Impassive in their aquiline setting as a handsome bronze. There was no trace of the brown-bearded artist In this attractive personage, no sign of the mustaehed, bearded, begog glcd chauffeur and, on the other hand, no resemblance to the man be was person ating. Seting his brain to work, the discom fited Snrto now tried experiments with a bit of charcoal, drawing bis brows to gether, slightly accentuating the lines about the eyes and mouth. Rut alas 1 the result was in the main the same so was the difference; beyond being of approxi mate height, build end coloring, the real Prince del Pino bore not the slightest likeness to his counterfeit self. "If Brown Overcoat has ever met Del Pino before, my game is up," mused this last. But it was a long "If." The chauffeur's chance lay in the eter nal chance the infinitely small possibil ity thnt on the vast checker-board of Europe these two particular pieces should have been jostled together. The prince and the detective ! Odds enormous odds lay on the probability that they bad never laid eye on each other. (lo be continued.) OVERSTEPPING THE -CIRCLE. Vmrm m Cilrl Should Exercise ta Inter coarse with Yoong Ilea. "Hello 1 What are you, sia a hat rack?" Kent Wlllurd asked, as he came up the steps and found Esther chatting with one of the university stu dents. Esther dropped her caller's hnt as if It bad burned her fingers. "Pshnw, Miss Willardl" Its owner protested. "That bat is honored by having you pet It" f "I wasn't petting It. I didn't know I had It In my hands," said Esther, quickly; but Kent had already walked on Into the house with a manner that left his sister feeling rebuked. When she followed him, a little later, tho first thing she said was, "Kent Wll lard, you were rude to call me a hnt rnck." "Look here, Esther, tell me this. Would you reach into a fellow's pocket and take out anything?" "Of course not" lndiguantly. "If you mean my having his diary, I just caught It out of his hand. He flour ished It round, and said there wns one page all about me." "I didn't know you had his diary," Kent answered, dryly. "Look at this," ho broke off, pushing back his hair and showing a stubby lock, cropped close, to tho forchcud. "Sue Bronson cut that off when I was drawing in the study room. Ono of tho girls dared her. Oh, that's funny, Is it? Well, 'tisn't the hair I cure about, but how would she like it if I did the same thing to her?" "I I'm! You'd better not try It." "It would servo her right. Yoxx girls draw a circle round yourselves when It conies to our taking liberties, but If you don't stay Inside your circle, you needn't expect us fellows to respect It." "O, Kent, you're too fussy I" "Is this fussy, then? Madge Holton sneaked my Lntlu book out of my cont pocket und took out a note that Roger Dunforth hud wrltteu me In class, and theu she wouldn't give It up. She said 'twas her moUierly duty to see what kind of notes I wns getting in school, and all such stuff. I knew she'd feel mighty embarrassed If she did read It twae nothing for her to see so I tried to get It away. "This was all on the street mind you. coming from school, and when she couldn't keep It from me any other way. she dropped It Into the neck of ber waist one of those button-behind af fairs. She'll have to undress to get It out, and she'll feel cheap enough If she rends It, too. I tell you, I wns dis gusted, and when I walked up here, and saw my own sister patting and smoothing another fellow's bat I said to myself that you were all alike." "But such a different thing I And Madge went too far, of course, but don't you know that a girl docs those thlnga Just to flatter a boy to muke him feel how Important he is?" "Well, a girl mnkes one large mis take if she does," wns the emphatic an swer. "We niay laugh and scuffle w 1th her, and pretend to think she's cute, but her strtfk goes down Just tho same, you mark my words." Youth's Com panion. All the horses belonging to the late British ambassador at Constantinople, Sir Nicholas O'Conor, have been sold at auction. The usual notice was put In the local newspapers, but the censor took exception, as there were horses In the list with the names of Pasha, Sellm and Haroun, which he considered was offensive to Turks, and tt ilst had to appear without the names. He that will lose his friend for a jest deserves to die a beggar by the baa gain. Fuller, 11 1 m GOVERNMENT BY RIGHT METHODS. By Qov. Hughes ot New York. We don't want government by ca price; we can't afford to have It That Is dangerous. What we want Is absolute loyalty to the rule of reason, In Insistence upon the de termination of questions after open debute, tn yielding to the will ot the majority after a fair opportunity for its expression, and recognition of the fact that In trying to protect and remedy defects In the super structure we must not Impair tho foundations which are essential to our safety. So it Is not merely what Is done, but the way it Is done, that Is Im portant. Rather a thousand fail ssai.iT ma's. I oov. miotics. ures with a strict adherence to the principles which un derlie our safety nnd secure tho perpetuity of our In stitutlons than any momentary success gained at the price of sacrificing that which alone cad make secure our ultimate achievements. That method, those principles which define the meth od, are simply that each man stands equal to his neigh bor, nnd thnt we are not to bo controlled by any cabal or coterie or any one abusing power, but we are to work through democratic methods, by honorable representa tion of tho populur will. American life is more wholesome to-day and more Intent upon right things; there Is a quicker response to a dem nnd for proper representation in politics, there Is a sensitiveness on the part of those having power lest their abuses of It should be discovered, grenter than ,nt nny time In our history. No battle has been lost. Many remain to be won. PRESERVATION OF AMERICAN FORESTS. By J. S. Whipple, N. Y. Forest Commissioners. All of the work In this respect done In the United States thus far litis been largely ex perimental. The time has now come when real work, hnsed upou n given plan, to be con tinued und followed for years to come, should be commenced. Instead of plantlug 500,050 trees n year, New York State should plant millions of trees, and all of the people who have land adapted to tree raising should im mediately commence the planting of trees thereon. There Is no time to waste. It takes from eighty to one hun dred years to grow a splendid, great beautiful forest tree. A forest crop Is not like the farmer's crop. One is gathered In a senson at the end of a few months' or a year's growth, nnd the other Is only gathered par tially after twenty years nnd partially every succeeding ten years, and finally nt the eud of eighty or one hun dred years. It takes time to rear a forest of commercial value. Already too much time lias been thrown away. The State should make the commencement by provid ing all the money that Is necessary to establish Imme EFFECT OF AN AUTO RACE. Tickle an Owner to Have Car of a Make Which Takes Ultf Prlae. It is, indeed, easily noticeable after a. big automobile race of ny sort. In which the particular winning make of machine gets a great deal of uttentloa, that owners of cars of this certain make are apt to look a little bit nore proud than usual, says the New York Sun. Take, for Instance, directly after the Grand Prix race at Dieppe, where a Mercedes car wns first There have been folks driving Mercedes cars 'n subdued manner, ubout the streets of the city for some years when the Ger man machine wus not showing up nt nil well In races. But the moment thnt the news of Lautenschlnger's victory was spread abroad they began to look a little more conscious as tbey drove about. ' It wns as If each one felt that he bad lite handling of a car that might turn out any day and win just such a race. When the Isotta Frasclilnl ftnl'hed first at Brlarcllff that seut the Vmls of a whole lot of owners of these cars away up. It Is the same with every little thing a road race or a bill climb or some unusual feat; they muka tho driver or owner of one of these trl umphnnt cars a bit more cocky. When the Thomas car was leu ling the others across the continent Tlitu.iaa drivers, whether they were bundling 1904 or 1008 models, apparently all had mental pictures of what they could do to some other makes If they wnutcl to. It Is a sure thing thnt each of tiiese races has such a result nnd soinetli'iea the drivers are surprised and hurt when In n road brush they got left by some car that never won u blue ribbon as a racer. STICKING TO THE POINT. The Question Thnt Won n tiood Posi tion (or a Uoy. A lawyer wanted uu apprentice and placed an advertisement in the local paper. A number of boys replied, so he gathered them nil together In his office at once and looked them over, ne found it pretty hard to make a choice, but at length a happy ideu struck him. "Once upon a time, ho said, "a farmer was very much annoyed by a huge rat that made a very comfortable living by feeding upon bis grain and other products. He tried, traps of all kinds to catch It, but the wily rodent evaded them all and apparently en Joyed the game of hide and seek that the farmer had devised for Its recrea tion. One day. however, as the furme. turned the corner of a haystack, car rying a gun In his hand, he spied the troublesome rodent at the edge of the hay. Instantly raising his gun. ne fired, but the blazing gun wad dropped among the hay" Here the lawyer sto;ed, and, look ing at tho boys, he said. "If any of you want to ask a question, write it ou a piece of iMiper." Each did as sug gested, and here are some of the ques tions that wero asked: "Did ho set tho hay on Are?" "Was the stuck burued to the ground?" "Did tho farmer have his hay In sured?" "Was tho fire engine near at hand?" "Was the rat killed?" The boy that asked the last question was chosen because he stuck to the point American Photography. If religion paid cash dividends every' body would be seeking It RESPONSIBILITY FREIGHT RATES j. j. li ii.i.. fair recompense. INDIANS MAKE GOOD In some of the Western State the potato crop Is largely gathered by In dians, who are permitted to leave their reservations for this purpose. They go out In little bnnds of a dozen or more, with tents and teams, to the potato growing districts. They are paid $1.50 per day and board themselves. They are good help, and In fact in this work cannot be excelled. They are in groat demand, nnd some families are able to earn as much as $259 during the season. A TEST OF COURAGE. I There were two dogs in the neighbor hood thnt had a deep and Insatiable antipathy to each other. Rover, tho yellow dog, had the freedom of a large yard with a picket fence round It, nnd u gate that was always kept fastened. Prince, the brlndle, roamed unchecked In the street ontslde. S henever Prince came trotting along Rover would make u dash at the gate, and he being unable to get out, the two dogs would stand there, one on the inside and the other on the outside, glaring at euch other with inextinguishable fury, barking, growling, and using violent language, the purport of which was that if it wero not for that gate there would be some tierce nud terrible fighting. One morning Prince came along, look ing more aggressive than usual. Rover saw him. The hair along his Imck bristled up. aud with a savage growl ho run dowu the front walk, and charged at the gate lu his customary way. This time, however, by souie un accountable accident, the gate had beeu left uufusteiutl and the Impact threw It wide open. For the first time In all their ac quaintance there wus r.augbt to hinder the two dogs from Ujing at nch other. Nothing was between tliei but their longstanding grudge. Rovr's Impetus had carried him to the edge of the side walk. Prince was wlthi two feet of hUo. It was an awful moment Butueither dog hesitated the s:uul!eat fraction of a Seconal They acted Instautly. With a diately tree nurseries In proper places In which' to rnlse seedling trees for distribution to all who will plant them under proper conditions and the supervision of the de partment. These should be distributed for actual, cost or, better yet, If It may be done, free of cost. There are fiO.OtiO persons In the State of New York suffering from tuberculosis. It has been demonstrated that GO per cent of those In the Incipient stage may be cured by going to the Adirondack and abiding there fur a considerable time. There Is found nature's great sanitarium. The balsam laden air, sweeping across 150 miles of dense woodland, cooled by the great mountain peaks, filled with oxygen thrown off by the forest foliage, produces curative quali ties for this disease beyond the power of man's Ingenuity to produce In any other way. If one casta aside the commercial feature, reforested and protected, the Adirondack and Cntsklll forests, kept for a health resort aud a playground, will reward the State for all labor and money expended. OF THE FARMER. By John Q. Shedd. In speaking ot the farmer there Is only ene word to say: ne is the basis of the structure to-day, and If he pursues a normal course the currency flurry will soon be smoked out. ne lias the real tangible and basic wealth ; the world at large wants it nnd stands ready to pay good prices for it. If the farmer takes bis profits nnd does the natural and normal thing with thorn puts tkem In his local bank Just as he has been doing right ulong then he and the merchant nnd the railroad and the city banker will be all right But If the farmers of the whole country should allow themselves to become frightened nnd withhold their money from deposit and from circulation they can make trouble. The responsibility of the outcome, not of the origin, of the situation seems to me to be clearly In their bands. And I believe thnt tbey are big, broad anuT far sighted enough to recognize; this and net accordingly. Saturday Evening Tost MUST BE RAISED. By James J. Hill. There is no alternative but to raise rates. The credit of the railroads has been seriously Impaired. The way to enhance credit is to increase rates. Wages should not be cut Ef ficient labor is essential to successful oixTution. Railroad employes have pcculiur responsibilities. They have to meet hard tests. They should get Cut wages 10 per cent nnd the man who got $15 Inst week geU $13.50 this week. It la the difference between meat and no meat. Freight rates In this country are low beyond comparison. Receiving but one-half and even one-third of the rate received In Euro pean countries,' the wages paid railroad employes here average 100 per cent higher than those pnid In Europe. POTATO PICKERS. dismal howl. Rover turned In his trucks! and ran back into the yard nt break neck speed, nnd Prince fled for his life down the street, and never again, the neighbors say, did cither dog even look nt the other. Both were cowards, and hoth been found out bad The Overtired Condnetor. When the horse cars were la exist ence there was a greenhorn known as John who conducted on the Thirteenth aud Fifteenth street line, ne boarded with bis two aunts, wbo lived oa Cath arine street between Thirteenth and Krond. One day his aunts though they would take a ride with John and see -how he was getting along, m they waited for his car. Soon the car began to get crowded and passengers got off and on at every square. John began to get angry. At last be became s exas perated at having to sto so ofte that when an old ludy naked him t stop at Chestnut he bawled out: "I'm darned sick nud tired (lulling the belt, it's nothing but stop here and sto(( thero, stop here and stop there. Away with youse nil down to Catherine street with me aunts, and you get out ia a bench" Philadelphia Ledger. Stlrrlnif Time. "What was the excitement ower at the Ilohblcdy residence?" "A bee managed to get Into the hath room through the window blinds wblls Hnbbledy was taking a bath." lllr mlnhain Age-Herald. Edith .lack tried to kiss me last night, but I tliotr;!it lie till been drink ing. Madge He must hare bee- Judge, V