Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CRT, JOHN H. REAM, . . riblte Operation on t 'astro penns to have n successful, lie was amputated om Vcnrr.url.i. Teddy I going to Include among bis African trophic a knlinu; Is It a qnidrnped or a nut? Aeroplane era almost aa cheap a automobiles f.'VOO'O and turn turtle at 2 . m. with equal facility. . Mr. Thnw has once more received a Judicial bint that It Is not possible to be ctey and nane at the same time. The American fleet passed nlong the shore of Arabia without making a sound. 1 1 nl Its gum arable shoes on, possiWy. V ran he thankful to automobiles for one thine; I hey have mnle ear mufft unsafe and put them out of fashU-n. Taed bachelors would pmbably economize by sending no more candy and flowers, no Homebody had better have n care. If cranks are going to pull beards qf European rulers, whiskers get an other Mow not exactly the kind that blows through. Mr. ICdlson again annoonces a cheap nd compact storage battery. What Is Jeede4 next Is a simple electric rat and roach trap. As tf the perils of pedestxianlsm vera set sufficient already, an east fffi ratios bj& Invented an automo bile fsr the bl-l A Xsw York nan baa married a rind reader. It will not be necessary in blip to explain bow he spent that 10 casts en bis way home. A 9t Louis man was compelled to woo bwsnty-five years before he could get tlje lady to soy yes. It la a bard Otf b have to struggle as long as tat and get an old maid after all. of the preachers says be osn1 believe there ever was Inch n fletto as Salome. We are sure there eter was such a Balome as bas been seen on the stage In various places. A gas well with a flow of 6,000,000 coble feet per dleni has been developed t Medicine Hat. Somebody might ink a hit by setting fire to Ir find thus warming things up In that vlclu- Frank A. Vanderllp's theory Is that access depends on ''work and stom ach." Mr. Vanderllp can do two days' fork in one, and he has a stomuch tfrancan stand any dlsb except shrimp A Pennsylvania banker who robbed depositors of more than $2,000,000 bas been sentenced to fifteen years In the penitentiary. Our dispatch does not say whether he Is to be assigned to the bookkeeping department or Is to look after the feeding of the warden's wife's canary. "Whatever opinionated critics may tare to say as to the decadence of the Qrama and the degeneracy of the pop ular taste, the theater-goer in this country appreciates and will patronize plays Which have some message for the reason and the Intellect as well as for the senses. He will support with his Sttendance sane andwbolesome product ions destitute of exotic and erotic fea tures. The appeal of a play like "The Old nomestead" Is elemental; It touches lost chords and forgotten springs of memory, not merely in the unsophisticated country dweller, but la tha "worldly wine man." A parish priest In Ireland recently Informed the department of agriculture 4 Washington that twelve farmers in bis neighborhood having contributed a dollar apiece, he bought twelve good typdks on agriculture and horticulture, and thus established a small loan 11 Birary which has done excellent service. Secretary Wilson now plans to develop ttmQar idea. He Invites both coun try clergymen and physicians to take $e lnltlatve and volunteers to advise what books shall be purchased, and to fttpply such libraries with department nuhllcatlons. Under these conditions a imall amount of money will go a long Way ' and the farmers who invest it tnay feel aura that they, too, are pro gressing. Tha naa of common water ways has always proven a proline cause of In ternational wrangling. The Joint navl cation of such waters, the loint mn. Txol of water nower. the mmiiiinn fishing rights and the determination of tne use of water in navigable streams baring their rise in one Jurisdiction and their outflow in another bave led to interminable dispute. Later inven tions, especially the use of water power or tha development of electrical en rgy, bave only served to increase the possibilities of dissension. There has been a continuous unsettled ways . debate between the United State and Great Britain from tha time of the colonies. It is therefor of most happy augury for the future that a treaty bas been successfully nego tiated by Secretary Root and Ambas sador Bryee providing for amicable adjustment by a joint high commission f all future water way and boundary difficulties, i Bills to tax bachelors bave for some time been a regular feature of the leg islative year. Originally such bills Mere treated as bits of airy comedy designed to relieve the high serlous jiua of the session. They were p'lt ou the IU of "crauk" bills and addod temporarily to th gayety of the au tlou. Today bachelor tax propositi rvr are taken a little more aftrlously, though no cue experts tbem to be en Acted Into law aa yet What the tli1 nlinH niflv lie t niinther utnrr It way le recalled that Kaiser Wil liam himself not many months a;o. la lightly discussing me neavy iiencits iq the lmierlnl fiiunii-cH nud the necessity of additional taxes. Intlinnted tint bachelors might be subjected to fine or duty not oniy as n means of In creasing the revenues but ns a pra veiillve of undue cultlviitlon of single blessedness or single misery. Tru the statettmon -of the fiilherlntid. when the time for action came, displayed weakness and left the bachelor severe ly n lone. Hut the august royal sane- thin of the Idea hits tended to mnke It respectable If not Immediately prae'l fill, find doubtless henceforth the er) of bachelor tax bills will be richer find finer. Already the dispatches tell of A great ninny people believe there Is unlimited nonsense In the chatter about the lack of opportunity in Amsjl ca for the poor hoy. The thing for the poor boy to do, and the Ihlng for every tiodv to do Is to follow the path of duty with as much Industry and Intelli gence, ns much cheerfulness and confi dence as enn be commanded. It Is a truism that anybody In America who Is willing to work can make a living. It Is also a truism that character Is better thnn riches. Not everybody can he a mllllonnlre; not everybody can he rich, for not everybody has the prac tical foresight or the willingness to make sacrifices of present enjoyment for future financial benefit, usually es sential to the acquisition of larg means. But riches are more of a bur den than a blessing to many who pos sess them. The man who wins suffi cient of the world's wealth to pay his way and retains the respect of bis fel low men makes a success of life. The opportunity to do this Is open to all who bare the will to do It and who do not lose their health. Wby should the whine continue that there Is no chance for the young man? EVEN BETTER. Lot Should lie Reciprocal and. Abound In Mataal Service. Tor thirty days she had taken cars of her hushund-na big, delightful boy a genius, popular, gay, fascinating abroad nervous, exacting, fascinatln at home, She looked after bis bed an board, nursed his Indigestions, cheered his periodical depressions, welcomed bis friends, hated his critics and moth ered bim as a childless wife can mother her husband. When half a lifetime had passed In these varied occupations, Bhe developed a severe and painful disease of the heart. Her husband was amazed, per turbed, distracted. "Doctor," he cried to the old family physician and friend, "I don't under stand what Mary has done to bring on this torrlble trouble 1" "Don't youV" replied the doctor. "I do." Everybody else knew. The husband was honestly ignorant, and was as in nocent of havlag been a party to her sacrifice as an Ignorant, mature man ever can be. Tho story Is as common as life. Now it Is the husband and now the wife who is shield, guide, comfort, protection for the other. Sometimes the task com pletes Itself without a break. Again death steps in and thrusts aside the hands which bnve always been able to do their calming and saving work be fore. Or the flesh succumbs while the spirit is still strong. Whatever happens, there is only one thing more beuutlful In the world than this self-forgetting love which spends lavishly for love's sake; and that Is the reciprocal love which receives and gives, spends and saves, exacts and abounds at the same time, and which never bas to utter in a dark hour the vain regret, "I don't understand I I didn't understand I" Youth's Compan ion. ArlatocrnUo Nnna. The Duke of Norfolk has two slaters who are nuns. Lady Mluna Howard belong to the Carmelite order and Lady Btheldreda la a Sister of Char ity. Lady Edith Fielding, sis tor of Lord Denbigh, is another Sister of Charity, and spends hor days at a convent In Klou-Klang, which Is in China, as Its name indicates. Lady Christina ItandlnL daughter of Lord Newburgh, Is a nun In a French convent, and Lady Leopoldlna Keppol is a nnn of the Sacred Heart, in spit of the fact that she Is sister of a Prot ectant peer, Lord Albennarle. Miss Mary and Miss F-dlth Clifford, sisters of Lord Clifford, of Chndlelgh, are both nuns, as are Miss Cloely Arun dell, slstor to Lord Amndell, and Miss Leonine Dormer, sister to Lord Dor mer. Lord French, who lives In Johannes burg, baa two sisters who are nuns; three Misses Petre, sisters of Lord Petre, are nunsj Lord Herrles has no fewer than four sisters who live In con vents and, as for Lord Trlmlestown, an Irish peer and 18th baron, history seems uncertain as to whether four or live of his sisters are nuns, as several of these ladles have not been raised to the rank of baron's daughters. Soap nnd Towels. The American Indian Is rapidly be coming tamed. A few years ago soap and towels were practically unknown to hlra. But when Frauds K. Leupp took charge of the Indian bureau he began introducing soap, a few hundred pounds the first year, lucres sing as time went by until the Indians of the country now uso more than half a mill ion pounds a year. Then came towels, a few at a time, until now, when towels are ordered for the use of the Indians by the mile where they were formerly bought by the yard. Now Commissioner I-eupp is trying to make short hair fashionable among the red men. He is establishing barber shops on the reservations, and at the agencies. One the Indian, consents to sacrUU-B LU long locks well, he will no longer be an Indian. If you want to see something real ny, watch a widow who has com menced to tuke iiiiHi-m again, talk to a widower. So many poor opinions are ex pressed In a loud and vuufideut volos. Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. mOHT-KIDlNO MUST BZ SUPPRESSED. ENNKKRICE lalla are nt "V I )ous with men arrested on charges of white I I cspplng and kukluxlng. uritiui n lilt; uiuiui L tj iiiiii I iucio n weeks ago of a lawyer who had bought a lake and proposed to enforce fishing priv ileges which were his by reason of the pur chase, there have been numerous minor outruges. One ef these was the whipping of a farmer who sold his crop of peanuts at what other peanut growers considered too knv a price. It is well that the civil authorities In Tennessee are snaking what looks like a strenuous effort In good faith to visit puslshment upon bullying violator of tho law. If the attempt of the civil authorities fulla, the HUite militia should be freely used to prevent riotous outrages hereafter. Should the nnn of the State be not strong enough, the situation would call for help from the federal gov ernment. Nlght-rldlng, whlteeapplng, kukluxlng all ter rorism aid attempts at terrorism must be put down If it takes the whole power of the standing army to do it. The United States must be a country of law and order. Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin. MARRYING ON $6 A OCORDIXG to Justice I marry men earning only SO a week should I do so with a clear understanding that they must cunuuuo to worn lor u living, anu no announces that, whatever other Judges may do, he will never compel a husband with such an Income to contribute any part of it for the separate support of a wife who chooses to leave him because of discontent with the home his earn ings make possible. This rather startling announcement ia sura to revive the old controversy as to the amount of money that makes possible a happy, or even an endur able, wedded life, and doubtless many will criticise Jus tice Foster for laying down a principle that takes so little account ef sentiment and the accepted platitudes about love as the sulHclcnt foundation of matrimonial bliss. And yet bis decision has its merits, and muny of them. All efforts to fix a definite sura, whether of capital or of income, which will Justify a young man and woman In getting married are waste of time. The outcome of tho venture depends almost entirely upon their own peculiar ities of character and capacity, and, while some would get along if they began on nothing at all, no omount would be large enough for others. The one case, like the other, however, I highly exceptional, and for the com mon run of humanity there is an Income point below which matrimony is folly little, If any, less than crim inal. And $0 a week, in this city at least, Is not for two people a living wage In any true sense of the term. Probably they could escape starvation on It, but they would constantly be on the very verge of that uncom "Is It cold enough for you?" asked the shed shoesblner, as the policeman entered, rubbing his stockinet-covered ears. "Cold enough 1" echoed the policeman, I sh'd say not What do you take m foi" mutton gravy T You must think I'm easy chilled. Cold enough- Why, It ain't more'n eight or tea below an' I've been exerclsln hard, blowln' my whistle, all mornln'l Cold enough? Don't yon see the sweat runnln' oft me? What's the matter with you? You don't feel cool, do vou?" "Seems to n?J I can stand It with the loor shut," said the shed shoesblner, closing the door and pressing down the latch. "Stand to one side an' I'll put some more coal In." "Don't on my account," said the po liceman. 'I didn't come in here on ac count of the stove. I came because I'm fond of the society. You ask such smart questions." "You look frostbit, but I didn't know," said the shed shoesblner. "How should you?" said the police man. "You'd naturally think a maa would want Ice Inside his hat on a balmy day like this Is. It's the kind of day a feller wants to cuddle up alongside of an electric fan, ain't It? You don't mind if I take off my coat an rest, do you?" "do aheud," said tho shed shoeshluer, hospitably. "Make yourself at home." "If we could only have a thunder storm an' a good heavy shower it might get a little cooler," said the policeman. "A breath of air would help some. The wind ain't blowln mor'n forty mile an hour at the outside. It's a pity we can't have one o those good, old fash ioned winters they tell about when it Would freeze water If you let It stand out all night. I'm Just rubbln' my nose to get the bloom o' youth on It not be cause it's froze stiff. Hot weather al ways makea my nose pale. Is it cold enough for me? Was you ever at Medi cine Hat?" "Where's that?" asked the shoe sblner. "It's where the cold weather starts from, 'cordlu' to tho papers," replied the policeman. "It gets so cold there It ffeeaea the mercury solid. That's Where I'd like to be. I'd like to get a Job on tho Medicine Hat force an' stand on a crossln all duy with my vest un buttoned makln' motions at the traffic. If I cau't get relief no other way I'm golu' out for a boat ride on the lake to-night in a pair o duck punts. I'd probably get good an' wet if the water's tough, as it's apt to be, an' that would be something. If it wasn't I could hang my feet over in the slush ice an get the burning out o' them. Say, it's a mighty good thing for you that I hadu't the use of my arms when I come In here; I'd certaluly have soaked you one. Is It "ld enough! Say, you didn't notice the icicles on my mustache, did you?" "Of course I si-en you was cold," said the shed khocNhlucr. "I was jest JoKbln' when I asked you If it was cold enough for you." "It's a great Josh." bhUI the pollce BtHii. ' I wish you'd get It putcnted un' I had the Job of arrestlu' every guy .Who infringed on It I'd start la by present are poim- nag WEEK. Foster, women who HE bell clubbln 'em to death, I tell you those. way, rnere s some jokes that s Jokes, an' there's some that ain't. .That one ain't. Not to me. If I was runnln' a furnace In an apartment butldin' a feller might make that crack an' get away with It, but I ain't doln' the right kind of stunt to enjoy It It's too frequent, any way." "I won't do it again," promised the shed shoeshlner. "See that you don't," said the police man. "When a guy asks me If It's cold enough for me he always makes me hot." Chicago Daily News. FLEA FOR THE COMPARATIVE. Overdoing tho Superlative In On National Habit of Ksaarseratloa. Prof. Thomas It. Lounsbury, of Yale, who has as one of his chief de lights In life the shocking of the gram marians, writes In a recent issue of Harper's Magazine in defense of the um of the superlative degree In com paring two objects. In this attitude Prof. Lounsbury will have the hearty concurrence of at least two classes school girls of tho caramel ages and political stump speakers whose ambi tion is to Are the heart of the people. Neither of these have any comprehen sion of any other degree of speech but the superlative degree. The positive is too tame, the comparative is an un known country; the superlative, and the superlative only, fits their excited and exalted moods. Prof. Lounsbury alleges that the hublt of using the superlative when two objects are com pared is one which the best writers are unanimous In following. He allows that such writers employ both degrees in such cases; but he as serts that where with them the com parative is found once, the superla tive Is found at least twice. Of course the fact Is one of mathematics, and probably no grammarian or critic of the grammarians has ever wasted his time in taking a census of the posi tive and superlative aa used by the best writers. Whether Prof. Louns bury la or 1 not accurate in his pres entation of this matter as respects the best writers, we are quite certain that people who rauk below them, or have no rank at all as writers, use the superlative with altogether too much freedom and abandon. Everything, compared or not, la superlative. The best the greatest, the sublimest, the dearest, the darllngest, the worst, are sure to be the adjectives every time. Whatever the Issue on the orator's mind, It Is the most important before the country, without reference to the fact that another Issue was the most Important last night and still another will bo the most important to-morrow night And at the other extreme your effusively enthusiastic iiiIhs has al ways Just had the "dandiest" time, or has reently escaped from the hor rldest people; while all the way be tween all Borts and conditions of men and women scatter superlatives about things of Importance and things of no Importance with lavish ami iinill rlin lnatlng lips. Whatever Prof. Louns bury may have learned from the best writers, the comparative degree la a device of the language that ought to have UMre consideration In a luiul which has yielded Itself to the habit of exaggeration. i:ery man would rather talk about his sins or omlssi.m than about LU Ins of coiumlssluu. fortable condition; they would full steadily in the social and economic scale, and any trivial accident that dimin ished or cut off the wage would inevltablv drive them Into pauperism or crime. If ruin came from no other source, the first child prob ably, and the second certainly, would bring it The no tion that two people, If only they be married, can live us chenpy as either alone is an absurd delusion. Two can live as cheaply as many a one does, but only when the one has been spending a large part of his or her in come for other things than necessities, and is willing, under the new arrangement, to go without them. Twenty dollars Is much nearer thaa six to the permissible mini mum, and, at that, people who have never had to main tain a family on as little as the larger sum wonder how It can possibly be done. It simply can't be accomplished on $0, If Uf Is to be worthy of the name, and its ordi nary decencies are requisite for happiness, as they ought to be. New York Times. ECONOMIC WASTE IN RELIGION. OT alone Is religion In the commission of the economic crime of waste, but it every where furnishes one of the most conspicu ous examples of the tendency. It would be bootless to philosophize over the causes which have produced the Infinite subdivi sions among theologians or over the present- day movement which is leading men to consider more than in the past their points of agreement rather than their antagonism ef belief and practice, yet the building or altar against altar goes on apace, and the endeavor which might be concentrated toward the betterment of mankind is frittered away and lost. Net one intelligent man doubts the stupendous force creative, corrective and remedial which could be exerted by the church people of the land if they could once be united and their efforts concentrated upon the execution of good works and the preventlos of evil, and there are few who do not appreciate the difficulties and the obstacles which have to be overcome before such unity and concentration can be made possible. Philadelphia Public Ledger LIBERTY BELL NO HOBO. is a heritage of the nation, but T Philadelphia Is its responsible keeper. Here, I in Independence Hall, is the one resting 1 .1 V t lllUk DUVUIU till A U V Vt . 1 HliK U away from its surroundings and it loses much of the sentiment that attaches to it To send It on Junketing expeditions Is to cheapen it. If the policy of exhibiting it as a traveling showman would exhibit a wild animal from Africa Is continued, the time will certainly come when, In some railroad crash, It will lie scattered In fragments. It has had one or two pretty narrow escapes already. If any thing should happen to It Philadelphia would never be forgiven. Philadelphia Inquirer. SLOW TO IMPROVE. Ens-land Don Not Rcadllr Take to the 'Hello" Syatera. , In some particulars England Is far behind the main procession that Is keeping up with the latest advance In the progress of modern civilization. It does not take readily to modern im provements and its dislike of telephones Is beginning to annoy even the govern meut. Parliament made up Its mind several years ago to acquire the "hello" system for the state's benefit as fast as the expiration of private franchises made it possible to do so. Of course there was a disposition to popularize the use of telephones as much as pos sible In order to make the government allzed business profitable from the start ; But the private corporations refused to show any enthusiasm. Inasmuch as they were going to lose their franchises pretty soon anyway, they argued, what was the use in drumming up custom ers? To get around the difficulty the government started a system of its own, making it a branch of tte postal service. It was figured that this sys tem would serve as a nucleus for the private lines as they reverted to the state, and that In the meanwhile the poBtofflce could make people acquainted with the telephone's convenience In of fice, shop and home. To make It a really popular feature of modern life the postmaster general put the rate down to $25 yearly for party lines. This was considered pretty cheap and a rush of business was ex pected. But there wasn't any. All government offices were supplied with Instruments and a few upper civil serv ants put them in. their houses. Nobody else seemed to care for them. Investigation proved that the aver age Londoner regarded the mall as quite speedy enough for the delivery of his messages. If he happened to be In' a tremendous hurry he went to the nearest public telephone and didn't complain a bit if the trip was 8 or 10 blocks long. Only peers and millionaires think of putting telephones In their houses. About 1 retail store in 20 has one. The smaller hotels consider them unneces sary. Most big offices bave them, but it isn't an invariable rule, and no one deems it inconvenient or old-fashioned or stingy to be without Some people say the government's trouble with almost all the commercial enterprises it undertakes is attributable to the laziness of the rank and file of English civil servants. Allaylns Ills Keara. The New Convict Say, old man, I'm likely to go stomping around my boud oir at all hours of the night. I'm a sleep walker. It worries me terribly, too. Guard It needn't in this hotel, bo There Isu't the slightest danger of your walking out of a window. Xothlas; to Fear. Motorist's Friend O, I suy! Good ness gracious, we'll be smashed up in a minute! ' ' Motorist All right, my dear fellow, don't excite yourself. The firm I Ixiuubt this motor from bate agreed to keep It In remlr for a year. When a man tells Ills side of the "story," you can't believe all he says. He at least exaggerates lu bis own favor. AN ALCOHOL SCHOOL. It 1srkfi Farmers Haw to Make the Denatared Article. The government has now opened Its alcohol school in the city of Washing ton for the Instruction of the people of the United States In proper methods of making and using the denatured prod uct For this purpose a model still has been erected close by the Department of Agriculture which is big enough to work up twenty-flva bushels of corn a day, converting that quantity of grain into seventy-five gallons of B5 per cent alcohol that Is to sny. 90 per cent pure. The plant represents the small est output that can be conducted profit ably on a commercial basis. The farmers cannot very well see It for themselves, so arrangements have been made by which they may learn about It Agricultural experts from tho experiment stations In every one of the I'-tates are to go to Washington, says Buburban Life, examine the alcohol, making outfit, see how it works and listen to a course of lectures explaining its management. It will be their busi ness when they go home to teach the farmers how to put up and how to op erate plants of this chnracter. Inasmuch as such n plant could not be erected for less than $2,500, it is obvious that the ordinary farmer would not be able to afford to construct one of that kind. But and here Is the point any group of farmers represent ing a small neighborhood might easily do so. Then they would bring their corn stalks nnd other refuse to the mill and receive in return alcohol. It Is a sim ple method which farmers huve long been accustomed to adopt where flour and other necessaries were concerned. The farmers are eager to find a cheap source of energy. Nowadays multitudes of them use gasoline for such purposes as grinding feed, cutting fodder aud running the corn sheller, circular saw, horse clipper and grind stone. A farm In these times is more or less of a factory. But gasoline Is expen sive. Alcohol Is comparatively cheap, and when manufactured from the farm er's own vegetable refuse it would cost next to nothing. In France there are 27,000 faror distillers who mnke alcohol for Indus trial purposes from molasses and sugar beets. It Is high time that this Idea was turned to profitable account in the United States. Hotten apples, frost bitten potatoes, stale watermelons, cornstalks nnd cobs nnd every other kind oft vegetable refuse are available for the purpose. t Wit of the Youngsters $ Little Joe Say, papa, Is it true that history repeats Itself? Papa So they say, my boy. Little Joe Well, mine don't when t try to learn It "Grandpa," asked C-year-old Mildred, "do the good die young?" "There Is a report to that effect," said the old gen tleman. "Then, grnudpa," continued Mildred, "If that's true, you must be awfully bad." "Harold," said his mother, "you were very restless In church this morning. Why couldn't you keep still, like your father?" "I don't know, mamma," re plied the observant youngster, "unless It was 'cause I wasn't sleepy." Small Flossie was a great chatterbox. One day her mother said : "Flossie, you talk too much. You don't hear me Jabbering all day long." "No, mamma," rejoined the little miss,, "but you've lived an awful long time and have had time to get most of the talk out of you." Walter, aged 7, is a wise son who knows not only his own father, but his mother ns well. "Now, Walter," said the teacher, "if your father can do a piece of work in one hour and your mother could also do it in one hour, how long would It take both of them to do it?" Three hours," answered Walter, "counting the time they would waste in arguing about how It should be dojie." Unconquerable. It was a veteran soldiery that repeo pled the plantations and the home steads of the South, writes Thomas Nelson Page In "The Old Dominion," and withstood the forces thrown against them during the period of re construction. In addition to personal pride, self-reliance and physical cour age, they possessed also race pride, which is inestimable iu a great pop ular struggle. However beaten and broken they were, the people came out of the war with their spirit unqueik hed and a be lief that they were unconquerable. A story used to be told of an old Confederate soldier who was trudging home, after the war, broken and rag ged, and worn. He was asked what he would do if the Yankees got after him when he reached home. "Oh, they ain't goln' to trouble me," be said. "If they do, I'll Just whip 'em again." A MlataU Uften Made. "Bishop Potter was a wonderfully ef ftctlve preacher," said a Brooklyn clergyman. "His method wus reserved and quiet. He always had himself well band. "I once delivered a sermon before kHm. I was young and enthusiastic at tile time, a disciple of the methods of Xalmage. I let myself go lu that Her Sion. My voice shook the dum b. My gestures shook the pulpit. "At luncheon, ufterward, I am ashamed to sny that I fished for com pliments. I leaned over the bishop and asked him lu a low voire to give me some advice on prcHcblug. Dear knows what I exiwcted him to reply prob ably that I was beyond any advice from hliu. At any rate what lu did reply was this : ".My dear young friend, never mis take lu tlie pulpit i'i'spii-utiu for In spiration.' " Wueu a man has a mean dog, b usually takes pride in it Old Favorites Beaallfql Snow. Oh, the snow, the beautiful snow, Filling the sky and the earth below: Over the housetops, over the streets, Over the beads of the people yon mt DanoiDg, flirting, swimming along. Beantiful snow, It can do nothing wrong, Flying to kiss a fair lady's cheek, Clinging te Hps in a frolicsome freak. Beautiful snow, from the heavens above, Pure as an aage) and fickle as love. Oh, the snow, the beautiful snow, Hew tha flakes gather and laugh as they go, Whirling along In its maddening fun ; It plays in its glee with everyone, Chasing, laughing, hurrying by, It lights op the face and It sparkles the ye; And even tde dogs with a bark and bound Bnsp at the crystals that eddy around, The town is alive and Its heart's In i glow To welcome the coming of beautiful snow. How the wild crowd goes swaying along. Hailing each other with humor and song, How the gay sledges like meteors flash by, Bright for a moment, then lost to the eye, Ringing, swinging, dashing they go Over the crest of the beautiful snow, 8now, so pure when it falls from the sky. To be trampled in mud by the crowd rushing by, To be trampled and tracked by the thou sands of feet Till It blends with the horrible filth la the street. Once I was pure as tha snow, but I fell i Fell, like the snowflakes, from heavea to hell; Fell, to be trampled aa the filsh of the street ; Fell, to be scoffed, to be spit on and beat ; Pleading, cursing, dreading to die, Selling my soul to whoever would buy. Dealing in shame for a morsel of bread, Hating the living and fearing the dead. Merciful God, have I fallen so low And yet I was one like this beautiful snow? Once I was fair as the beautiful snow, With an eye like its crystals, a heart like its glow ; Once I was loved for ray Innocent grace. Flattered and sought for the charm of my face, Father, mother. Bisters, all, God and myself I have lost by my fall. The veriest wretch that goes shivering by Will take a wide sweep lest I wander too nigh For of ail that is on or about me I know There is nothing that's pure, but tha - beautiful snow. now strange it should be that this beau tiful snow Should fall on a sinner with nowhere to go. How strange it would be whon the night comes again If the snow and the ice struck my des perate brain ; Fainting, freezing, dying alone, Too wicked for prayer, too weak for my moan To be heard in the crash of the crazy town Gone mad in its Joy that the snow's com ing down To lie and to die in my terrible woe. With a bed and a shroud of the beauti ful snow. J. W. Watson. Everybody Lucky. An old farmer of the County of Dur ham called at a roadside public house where he was well known. The land lady asked him to buy a ticket for a lottery they had on there. "Well," he said, "I hue naught In ma pocket, or I might" "Oh, that's a' reet, John," she says; "take the ticket and pay for it any time." Some time later John called again and the landlady asked him if ho knew who had won the lottery. "No," be said, "who won?" "Well, hardly durst tell you, but oor Sam won. Wasn't he lucky?" "Aye," said John, "he was lucky. And who was second, then?" "I durst hardly tell you. Who would you think now?" she said. "I couldn't say," said John. "Well, it was oor Sully. Wasn't she lucky?" "Aye, she was lucky," said John, "ond who was third?" he asked. "Well," she said, "you would never guess, and I might as well tell. I was third. Wasn't I lucky?" "You were," he said. "Did I ever pay you for that ticket missus?" "No, John, you didn't" she said, fawning upon him. "Well," said John, "isn't I lucky?" Simplicity. Flushed and smiling, the girl grad uate seated herself beside her father in the automobile and patted the pale, blue bow of ribbon on ber essay. "Did you like my essay, father?" "Your commencement essay upon Life's Higher Calls," he said, "seemed to me to be too too. But listen, here Is an autograph letter of John Ruskln's that I bought this morning for $17. Maybe, if you had read this letter before writing your essay it would have been better." Then the father read the letter aloud, while the young girl listened with a scornful and sour air. "I was obliged to write too young, when I knew only half truths, and was eager to set them forth by what I thought fine words. Teople used to call me a good writer then; now they say I can't write at all, because, for Instance, if I think anybody's house is on fire I only say, 'sir, your house is on fire,' where I formerly used to say, 'sir, the abode in which you probably passed the delightful days of youth is in a state of Inflam mation." and everybody used to like the effect of the two p's la 'probably passed,' and the two d's la 'delightful days.' - Had Uelter Taate. Father How do you like your new mamma, Elsie? Daughter (turning up ber nose) ITm! Next time you better let me pick one out for you I