ft rKUGE KilLED FREE OR REQUEST OF 'S PAW-PAW PILLS The best Stomach and Liver P1IU known and a positive nnl peedy cure for Con stipation, Induction, Jaundice, Biliousness, Bour Stomach, Head ache, and nil ailments arising from a disor dered stomach or slug- 3a.:.iTm fish liver. Tliey con- Lttlll III Hflll' lll ItllVU farm all the virtues and values of Mun Ten's Paw-Paw Tonle tind are m;id! from tha Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. X unhesitatingly recommend thes pills M being- tha best laxative and cathartic ver compounded. Send us a postal or latter requesting a freo pucka gn of Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa tive Ptlle. and wo will mall same freo f chanre. ML'XVOX'S 1IO.MOKO- PATHfC HOME ItKMEDT CO., 63d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. A (nation JmlR. Soma years ago there was a trial for murder In Ireland In which tho evidence was bo palpably Insufficient that tha judge stopped tho case and directed the Jury to return a verdict f "Not guilty." A well-known lawyer, however, who wished to do something for tho fee be had received for the defense, claimed tho privilege of addressing the court. We'll hear with pleasure, Mr. B aid tho Judge; "but, to prevent acci dent, we'll first acquit the prisoner." Tld-Blla. A Dor's Holidays. The ardent controversy which haa keen wag-In; In England and America concerning the best way to dispose of chool boys In the long summer vaca tion haa prompted the Grand Trunk Railway System to issue a special pub lication giving suggestions and practi cal hint to parents, as to what to do with the school boy during the months of July and August. The vacation camp Is one of the solutions and tha publica tion entitled, "What shall a Boy do with his Vacation?" thoroughly covers the ground. A copy may be obtained for the ask ing by applying to W. S. Cookson, 917 Merchants Loan & Trust Building, Chi- It may be better to have loved and lost., than never to have loved at all yet both have their advantages. Me), Weak, Weary, Watery Eye Relieved By Murine Kve Ttomerty. Tr Viirlne Tor Tour Eye Troubles. You Will Like Murine. It f oothps. fine at Ymii IruggUts. Write Kor Kye Hooks. Free. Murine Eye Hcmedy Co.. Chicago. ' l note A Ilea. . "An optimist," said Uncle Allen Spark's, ta (slap) a man who believes tho mosquito (slap) was created for ome lofty and (slap) beneficent pur pose." Constipation causes and seriously aggravates many diseases. It Is thor oughly cured by Dr. Plerce'g Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated granules. Unii,veu.y biiraur. If they wouldn't half sole the cherry pie at all It would be better. SU Louis Globe-Democrat CASTOR I A For Infants end Children. The Kind You Hava Always Bough. Boars tha Signature) FASHION HINTS Oar sketch show one of the lovely chiffon robes veiled in gauie. The robe it creamy white with a iliaded pink bor der, white the overdteti ii a deep pink. A bla:k satin hem maltet an effective and practical finuh to the tkirt. Probably lur itii Trait. "Hello, old chap! I haven't seen yofj Cor a year. Where have you beenf "Down In South AmerW.a." "South America? .What have yoa been doing there?' "O -er Just rubbering around." Chicago Trlr."- A clear brain and Steady, dependable nerves Can win wealth and fame For their owner. Clear-headedness and a Strong, healthy body Depend largely on the ... . Right elements In Regular food and drink. Coffee contains caffeine A poisonous drug. Postum is rich in the Gluten and phosphates that Furnish the vital energy That puts "ginger" and "hustle" Into body and brain. i There's a Reason" ' 4 1' g THE QUICKENING g n n n n n n n FRANCIS Copyrltht. 1906. niArrr.it in. -(Coinmned.) Thomas J fTiTHon. a wi'-st rue k and gaping, found Hrnself fimi -loose for a time In the M il lliDin roi-,md:i while his f.ithi'r (all.cil with a tn:i :i who v.-iint.il In liir';;iln for tho entire output f the l',ir;iili.e furinee ly the year. Thi'iom- mcn-lnl transaction tourlicl him light ly; but the rnovlnu groups, the import ed liell-lioys, the tessclated Hoots, fres coed i-eHing ihi:I plush-i overed furni ture thes hit deeply, t'rfiihl this be South Tied' s;;ir, the place that had hitherto figured chiefly to him im "court-day" town and the resilience of his preacher uncle? It seemed hugely Incredible. After the conference with the Iron buyer they crossed the Street to the railway station; and again Thomas Jefferson was footloose while bis fath er was closeted with some one In the manager's olllce. An express train, with binning air brakes, Solomon-magnificent sleeping cars, and a locomotive large enough to swallow whole tho small affair that used to bring the once-a-day train from Atlanta, had Just backed In, and the boy took Its royal measure with eager and curious eyes, walking slowly up one side of It and down the other. At the rear of the string of Pull mans was a private car, with a deep observation platform, much polished brass railing, and sundry other luxuri ous appointments, apparent even to the eye of unsophistlration. Thomas Jef ferson spelled tho name In tho medal lion, "Psyche" spelled It without try ing o pronounce It and then turned his attention to the people who wer descending tho rubber-carpeted steps and grouping themselves under the di rection of a tall man who reminded Thomas Jefferson of his Uncle Silas w-ith on Indescribable something left out of his face. "As I was about to say, General, this station building Is one of the relics You mustn't Judge Houth Tredegar our new Bouth Tredegar by this. Eh? I bog your pardon, Mrs. Vanadam? Oh, the hotel? It Is Just across the street, and a very good house; remark ably good,' Indeed, all things consider ed. In fast, we're quite proud of the Marlboro." One of the younger women smiled. "How enthusiastic you ore, Mr. Far ley. I thought we hud outgrown all that o moderns." "But, my dear Alias Klleroy, If you could know what we have to be enthu siastic about down here! Why, these mountains we've been passing through for the last six hours are simply so niuny vast treasure-houses; coal at the top, Iron at the bottom, and enough cf ioth to keep tho world's industries go ng for ugesl There's millions In them!" Thomas Jefferson overheurd without understanding, but his eyes served a better purpose. Away back In the line of the Scottish Gordons there must have been an ancestor with tho socr'a gift of insight, and some drop or two of his blood had come down to this sober-faced country boy searching the faces of the excursionists for his cue of fellowship or antipathy. tor tho sweet-voiced young woman called Miss Klleroy there was love at first sight. For a severe, beskllked Mrs Vanudam there was awe. For the portly General with mutton-chop whis kers, overlooking eyes and the air 3t a dictator, there was awe, also, not unmlnglcd with envy. For the tall man In the frock-coat, whose face re minded him of his Uncle Hllas, there bad been shrinking antagonism at the first glance which keen first Impres sion was presently dulled and all but effaced by the enthusiasm, the suave tongue, and the benignant manner. Which proves that Insight, like the film of a recording camera, should have the dark, shutter snapped on It If the picture Is to be preserved. Thomas Jefferson made way when the party, marshaled by the enthusi ast, prepared for Its descent on tho Marlboro, Afterward, the royalties having departed and a good-natured porter giving him leave, he was at lib erty to examine the wheeled palace it near-bund, ond even to climb Into the vestibule for a peep Inside. Therewith, castles In tho air began to rear themselves, tower on wall. Here was the very sky-reaching sum mit of all things desirable; to have one's own brass-bound hotel on wheels; to come and go at will; to give cirt orders to a respectful and uniformed porter, as the awe-inspiring gentleman with the mutton-chop whis kers had done. At the highest point on the hunch ed shoulder of the mountain T.fcomus Jefferson twisted himself In tho buggy seat for a final backward look Into the valley of new marvels. The summer day was graying to its twilight, and a light hae was stealing out of the wooded ravines and across the river. From the tall chimneys of a rolling mill a dense column of smoke was as cending, and at the psychological mo ment the slag flaro from an iron-furnace changed the overhanging cloud Into a fiery aegis. Having no symbolism save that of Holy Writ. Thomas .luffnnnn'i min.i I seised Instantly on tho figure, building far better than it knew. It was a new Exodus, with Its, pillar of cloud by day ana us pillar of fire by night. And Its Moses though this, we may sup pose, was beyond a boy's Imagining was the frenzied, ruthless spirit of com mercialism, named otherwise, by the multitude, Modern Progress. CHAPTER IV. If you have never had the pleasure of meeting a Southern gentleman of the patriarchal school, I despair of cringing you well acquainted with Ma jor Caspar Dabney until you have summered and wintered him. Hut tho Dabneys of Peer Trace Uiruro so lurcj- ly In Thomas Jefferson's boyhood and youth as to be well-nigh elemental in these retrospective glimpses. It was about the time when Thom as Jefferson was beginning to recon slder bis ideals, with a leaning toward brass-bound palaces on wheels and dictatorial authority over uniformed lackeys and other of his follow creu- tures, that fate dealt the Major Its final stab and prepared to pour wine and oil Into tho wound though of the balm-pouring, none could guess at tho moment of wounding. It was not in Caspar Dubm-y to be patient under a blow, and for a time his raglngs mreaienea to shake even Mummy Ju Uefs loyalty than which nothing more convincing can be said. n n n n n LYNDE by Francis Lynie "Mlstiih Sclpio," she world nay, "I'ae Jus' eriioiit wo'ed out! I dine been Ktiowlti' Max'Rliih CiHpah ebber setnc I was ( r .Misiis' tlah-'ooinan, and I ain't iicv' seen him so fractious ez he l.fn Unll,... .1,1 lll.r r...m 4..111 come get il.it po' in gal-chlld o' Maw stuh IOuIsh. Hcenis lak ho Jus' gwlne r'ar round twcl he hu't somebody!" etoainshi illu ctolan shrdlu ctoaln ct Kcipio, tho Major's body-servant, had grown tray In the iJabney service, and he was well used to the master's storm periods. "Hoan' j on trouble yo'se'f none cr bout ilat, MIb' Juliet. Mawstuh Majuh tekkin' hit mighty bawd 'cause Maw stuh Louis done daid. IJut blmcby you gwine see him dlmm on his hawss an' ride up yondeh to whah do big steam boats comes In an'fotch dat li'l gal child home; an' den: uck uh-h! look out, niggahs; dar uln't gwine be nuttln' on do top side dlshyer yearth good nough for ll'l Missy. You watch what I done tol' yer erbout dat, now!" Sclplo's prophecy, or its much of It as related to the bringing of the or phaned Ardea to Deer Trace Manor, wrought Itself out speedily, as a mut ter of course. At the close of the war. Captain Louis, the Major's only son, had become, like many another hot hearted young Confedera-te, a self-ex-patrioted exile. On the. eve of his de parture for France he had married the Virginia mulden who had nursed him alive after Chancellorsvllle. Major Caspar had given the bride away the war had spared no kinsman of hers to stand in this breach and when tho God-speeds were said, had himself turned back to tho weed-grown fields of Peer Trace Manor, embittered and hostile, swearing never to set foot out Blde of his home acreu again while the Union should stand. For more than twenty years he kept this vow almost literally. A few of the older negroes, a mere handful of the six score slaves of the old patriarchal days, cast In their lot with their for mer master, and with these the Major made shift thriftily, farming a little, stock-raising a little, and, unlike most of the war-broken plantation owners, clinging tenaciously to every rood of land covered by the original Dabney title-deeds. In this cenobltlc Interval, If you wanted a Dabney colt or a Dabney cow, you went, or sent, to Deer Trace Manor on your own Initiative, and you, or your deputy, never met the Major: your business was transacted with lean, lantern-Jawed Japheth Pettlgrass, the Major's stock-and-farm foreman.' And although the Dabney stock was pedigreed, you kept your wits about you; else Pettlgrass got much the bet ter of you In the trade, like the shrewd. calculating Alabama Yankee that he was. Ardea was born In Paris In the twelfth year of the exile; and the Vir ginia mother, pining always for the home land, died In the fifteenth year. Afterward Captain Louts fought a long-drawn, losing battle. figuring bravely In his Infrequent letters to bis father as a rising mlnlnture painter. He had his little girl back and forth between his lodgings and the studio where he painted pictures that nobody would buy, and eking out a miserable existence by giving lessons in EnglHh when he was happy enough to find a pupil. The bravo letters Imposed on the M i Jor, as they were meant to do; and Ardea, the loyal, happening on one oi them in her first Deer Trace summer. read It through with childish sobs and never thereafter opened her lips on the story of those distressful Paris days. Later she understood her father's mo tive better: how he would not be a chargu on an bid man rich In nothing but ruin; and the memory of the pinched childhood became a thing sa cred. How the Major, a second Rip Van Winkle, found his way to New York, and to the pier of the Incoming French Line steamer, must always remain a mystery. But he was thero, with tho fierce old eyes quenched and swim ming and the passionate Dabney Hps trembling strangely under the great moustaches, when the black-frockod little waif from the Old World ran down the landing stage and Into his arms. Small wonder that they clung to each other, these two at tho further extremes of three generations; or that the child opened a door In the heart of the fierce old partisan which was locked and doubly barred against all others. It was all new and very strange to a child whose only outlook on life had been urban and banal. She had never seen a mountain, and nothing more nearly approaching a forest than the parked groves of the Itols de Boulogne. Would It be permitted that she should sometimes walk in the woods of the firBt Dabney, she asked, with the quaint French twisting of the phrases that she was never able fully to overcome. It would certainly be permitted; more, trie Major would make her a deed to as many of the forest acres as she would care to Include In her prome nade. How tho French-born child fitted In to the haphazard household at Deer Trace Manor, with what struggles she came through the Inevitable attack of homesickness, and how Mammy Juliet and every one else petted and Indulg ed her, are matters which need not bo dwelt on. Hut we shall gladly believe that she was too sensible, even at tho early and tender age of 10, to be easily spoiled. She never forgot a summer day soon after her arrival when she first saw her grandfather transformed Into a frenzied madman. He was Bitting r.n the wide portico directing Japheth Pettlgrass, who was training the great crimson-rambler rose that ran well up to the eaves. Ardea, herself, was on the lawn, playing with her grandfath er's latest gift, a huge, solemn-eyed Greut Dane, so she did not see tho man who bad dismounted at the gate and walked up the driveway until ho was handing his card to her grandfather. When she did seo him, she looked tdwlce at him; not because he w:is trlgly clad In brown duck and tlghtly buttohed service leggings, but because he woro his beard trimmed to a point, after the manner of the'students in the Latin Quarter, and so was reminiscent of things freshly forsaken. Her grand father was on his feet, towering above the visitor as if he were about to fall on and crush him. "Bring youh Yankee railroad through my field nnd pnstrhnbn, enhf foil th pure el-ah of this peaceful Oyarden ef Eden with youh diist-fllncin', smoke pot locomotives? Not a rod, suh! not a foot or an Inch oveh the Dabney lands.' Do I make H plain to yo i, suh?" "Hut .Major Dabney one moment: this in purely a matter of business; there Is nothing personal about H. n,n company Is able and willing to pay lib erally for Its right of way; and yri must remember that the comlns of llif railroad will treble ui.J quadruple youl land values. I am only asking you tc consider the mutter in a business way, and to name your own price." "Not rtnotheh word, suh, or you'i: make mo lose my tempnh! You arid insult to Injury, suh, when y on o:fe,i mn youh contemptible Yankee gold. When I deslnh to sell my birthright for youh beggahly mess of pottage, I'll send a black boy in town to Infawui you, suh!" It Is conceivable that the locating en gineer of the Great .Southwestern lt.iil way Company was younger than be looked; or, at nil events, that his ex perience hitherto had not brought him In contact wit!) lire-eating g'riilenier of the old school. Klse he would hard ly have said what ho did. "of course. It Is optional with you. Major Dabney, whether you sell us our right of way peaceably or compel us to acquire It by condemnation proceedings In tho courts. As for the rest Is it possible that you don't know tho war is over?" With a roar like that of a maddened Hon the .Major bowed himself, caught his man In a mighty wrestler's grip and flung him broadcast into the coleus bed. The words that went with the tierce attack mado Ardea crouch and shiver and take refuge behind the greut dog. Japheth Pettlgrass Jumped down from his step-ladder and went to help the engineer out of the flower bed. "The old firebrand!" the engineer was muttering under his bream when Pettlgrass reached him; but tho fore man cut him short. "You got mighty little sense, looks like, to me. Stove tip any?" "Nothing to hurt, I guess." "Well, your hawss is waitln for yt down yonder at the gate, and I don't b'lleve the Major Is allow in' to ask yo to stay to supper." When the engineer had mounted and ridden away down tho pike, the fore man straightened himself and faced about The Major hud dropped Into his big arm-chair . His hands shook. Pet tlgrass moved nearer and spoke so that the child should not hear. "If you run me off the place tho nex' minute, I'm goln' to tell you you ort to be tolerably 'shumed of yourse'f, Maje' Dabney. That po' llttlo gal Is scared out of a year's growln', right now." "I know, Japheth; I know. I'm an old heathen! For, Insultin' as he was, the man was for the time beln' my guest, suh my guest!" "I'm talkln' about the little one not that railroader. So far as I know, he earned what ho got. I allowed they'd make some sort of a swap with you, so I didn't say anything when they was layin' out their lines throo' the hawss-lot and across the lower corn field this mornln' easy, now; no more r'arln' and t'arln' with that thar little gal not a-knowln which side o' the earth's goln' to cave In next!" "Laid out theyuh lines across my prope'ty? Japheth, fayeh me by riding down to the furnace and askln' Caleb Gordon if he will do me the honor to come up hear this evenln". If he can. I I It's twenty yeahs and mo' since I've troubled the law cou'ts of ouh po', Yankee-ridden country with any affal ah of mine; and now well, I don'l know," with a despondent shake of th leonine head. (To be continued.) CAT CENSUS IN YOKAHAMA. Feline Infant Mortality I.ea.enec, by a Ilonim on Kittens. Yokohama, which prides Itself upon being the most flourishing port in Japan, received a shock last year. It believed that Ita cat population was decreasing alarmingly. With the painstaking care that char acterizes Japanese officialdom the offi cers of the kencho, or city hall, set their -agents to taking a census of tha cats of Yokohama. There were about 7,000 able-bodied adult cats In all tha confines of the city, these enumerator? discovered; they even established tha fact that less than one-third of the cal population was males. Something; must be done at once, ta encourage the growth of the feline members of Yokohama society, tha kencho officers decided. They were quite sure by observation of the family habits of certain cats selected from tha proletariat that race suicide was not a factor la this decrease of the popula tion. On the contrary, they found It to be a fact that In too many Instances human Intervention during the Infan cy of the cats brought about the les sening of the population by violence. In all Japanese cities bubonic plague Is an ever present menace. There hava been times when the plague has swept through whole districts And only by the most rlgorouB efforts of the sani tary officials could it J.ie stamped out. Rats are the chief disseminators of the plague. On occasions Buch vigor ous campaigns have been waged against the rats that the governments of various cities have offered a quar ter of a cent bounty for every rat car cass. Men went Into the trade of rat catching with handsome profits in sight. But Yokohama decided that the most potent means of rat extermination lay In the city's cats. Hence the alarm felt at the discovery of the decrease la the number of rat catchers. So after the completion of the cat census a year ago the kencho officials decided to of fer a bonus of 50 sen (25 cents) for every kitten raised to maturity. Complication followed fast in the path of this spur to cat culture, the New York Suo asserts. Citlaons flock ed to the kencho with cats not their own and cat chasing became one of the most serious pursuits of the street boys. The kencho officials finally had to rule that a preliminary claim for the 50 sen reward must be made at the nearest police station upon the birth of every kitten and that the bo nus would not he paid until Buch time as it could be shown that the same kitten had advanced to sufficient ma turity to be considered a rat catcher. Consequently for a year past one of the chief duties of policemen has been the Inspection nnd registration of tha adolescence of cats. Yokohama is breathing easier now. The last cat census showed that there were was la round numbers 1:1,000 cats to the city. Yen 1,975 (J9S7.50) hat been paid out in bounties. All Is not gold that la shored, aj yoi for the real shine. ' 1-? i W a . eV What is per baps the most Im portant work of the forester nnd W bt-en to nrotmo public, sentiment against the wan ton, wasteful con sumption of' tim ber. Conservation of tho natural re- sour, es of the country has become an aft used phrase during the last de cade. Thero is none so dull or Isolated these days a.-j not to be able to explain more or less learnedly the need of pro tecting and safeguarding the trees, of their relation to the country's climate, the Important part they play in the precipitation of its rain and the evap oration of its moisture. Even in colonial days, only a few years arter the white man . with his ix had started his work of felling the jecmingly exhauatless forests which stretched from Maine to the gulf and from the Atlantic to the Allcghanles, ome were far-sighted enough to real ize that too great, a zeal ia clearing away the primeval growth might work in injury not easily repaired. Only 17 years after the Pilgrims landed af. Plymouth the trustees of the little town of Watertown, Mass., adopted a resolution fining anyone guilty of fell ing a shade tree by the roadside. A few years later New York found It necessary to regulate the indiscrimi nate cutting oT trees. It was to his practical side that J. Sterling Morton, the originator of Ar bor Day, appealed. As a farmer 'n treeless Nebraska, he had realized, as had his neighbors, the vital need of trees. They needed them as a protec tion from the blizzards of winter and the hot droughts of summer. The government recognized the need when it offered tree claims to settlers, giv ing them free land If a certain num ber of trees were planted. Some of these settlers of German origin prob ably knew the efforts which the Ger man government was putting forth, even In the middle of the nlneleentU century, toward the scientific manage ment of the nation's woodlands. Eu ropean countries learned long befo.-o America the lesson that the forests should be cherished as among the na tion's most precious possessions. That was why Plnchot and Graves could find In Europe schools corresponding to American colleges, established for the special purpose of training men for the successful planting and culti EOY IS TREED BY ALLIGATORS. The body of Ernest Johnson was found In the branches of a tree In Fish Bayou swamp near Palmetto. La., by a party that had been searching for him for a week. The youth took refuge from alligators In the tree and starved. A note found in his hat told the story of his death. He had been fishing in the swamp when alligators swarmed around his skiff. The 'gators attacked the boat and the boy ran to a tree. He climbed the tree, thinking that the alligators would go away, but they maintained vigil at the foot of the tree day and night, until the terror-stricken lad lost nerve and dared not attempt to escape In the boat. He starved to death. SUSPICION JUSTIFIED. It Wnm Not a llouie the Master Heard In tho Kite-hen. The late Rev. Dr. Wlghtman, sitting one night later than usual engrossed In the profundities of a great tome, imagined he heard a sound in the kitchen Inconsistent with the cautious ness of a mouse; so, taking his candle, he proceeded to investigate the cause. His foot being heard In the pasage, the servant began with much noise to rake out the fire as If preparing for bed. "Ye're up late to-night, Mary." "I'm Jlst rakln' the fire, sir, and ?aun to bed." "That's right, Mary. I like timeous liours." On his way back to the sttuly he passed the coal cellar door and, turn ing the key, took It with him. The next morning at an enrly hour thero was a rap at his bedroom door and a request for the key to get some coal. "Ye're up too booh, Mary. Go back to your bed. Half an hour later there was anoth er knock and a similar request. In arder to prepare for breakfast. "I don't want breakfast bo soon, Mary. Go back to your bed." In another half hour there was an TOT-; S'T'. I iJV J vation of forests; why they found the r.iov.t!) of trees and t:ie;r maintenance reduced to a science and the manage ment of public forests lands uu lti ponant department of state. At the annual meeting of the Ne braska t?!ate I'op.rd of Agriculture he!i' in Lincoln, January, 1S72, J. Sterling Morton, afterward Secretary of Agriculture, Introduced a resolution which read: ''Resolved, That Wednesday, tha 10th day of April, 1S72, bo, and the same is hereby, especially set apart and consecrated for tree planting 'n the State of Nebraska, and the State Board of Agriculture hereby name It Arbsr day; and to urge upon the peo ple of the State the vital Importance of tree planting, hereby offer a special premium of $100 to the agricultural society of that county in Nebraska which shall upon that day, plart properly tho largest number of trees', and a farm library of ?25 worth of books to that person, who on that day shall plant properly, In Nebraska, the greatest number of trees." The idea was quickly adopted by other States. Dr. B. G. Northrop, a Congregational minister of Massachu setts, known as the "great apostle of Arbor day," gave up his other work to devote his entire time to the tree cul ture movement. The American Fores try Association made him chair.nian of a committee to push it, and in lec tures, newspapers and pamphlets he spread the Arbor day propaganda un til before his death he had seen It adopted by almost every State and Territory. He even carried It across the waters of the Pacific and Induced Japan to make it one of the national holidays. This was in 1895. Ills word bore some weight In the land of the mikado, and his visit was a happy one for him, as he was well known. At om; time he acted as guardian to threo young Japanese women who had co.me to this country to be educated. One of these became the wife of Oyama, and all that she could do to honor her old friend was done while he waa In Japan. November 3, the date of the emperor's birthday, was selected as a fitting time for the Japanese to ob serve as tree planting day. In this country Arbor day Is a moveable holiday, each State selecting the date most seasonable and con venient. April seems the most gener ally favored time, but its observances ranges from January, the date of the Florida Arbor day, to December, though none of the States uses the summer months. Washington's birth day has been selected by a number of Southern States. In many of the States the date is fixed, as in Illinois, by the governor. The forms of ob servance have gradually become iden titled with the schools, so that in one sense it U practically a school holiday. other knock, with an entreaty for the key, as it was washing day. This was enough. He rose and hand ed out the key, saying, "Go and let the man out." As the preacher shrewd ly suspected, Mary's sweetheart had been Imprisoned all night in the coal cellar. London Family Herald. A New Klml of Revolution, Senorlta Amanda Azar, a beautiful Syrian girl, has been playing the roU of a modern Helen of Troy for thf Santo Domlngan Republic. Despite that she was of foreign birth, the fetching senorlta was nominated for queen of tho National Carnival. The know-nothing element protested vigor ously, and reports declare that the Na tional Cabinet, the army and the police force of the capital became hoipelessiy divided on the Issue. The Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister of Finance endorsed the Liberal move ment to the extent of offering to marry Miss Azar. Santo Domingo is not un accustomed to cabinet crfses, but this waa a strictly new kind and President Caceres had a hard time maintaining his neutrality nnd preserving the peace. A string of duels of the in octto'us Parisian kind was instant to the crisis. On the popular vote, Miss Azar's dark, pensive eyes and dainty olive complexion won in a walk and she was chosen queen. Then It was charged that the ballot box had .been stuffed, though the supporters of Miss Azar disclaimed know ledge of any pad ding. Compromise was finally effected by choosing an assistant queen, a na tive daughter, and the twain presided jointly over the festivities. Success Magazine. How Ho Von Take Voor Defeat f The way a man takes his defeat is a pretty good test of his caliber. The strong man uses his failures for step ping stones instead of stumbling blocks. I know a very successful young man who has made it a rule of his life to use every misfortune that conies to him as a point of departure tot something better. He has had losses and misfortunes which would have crushed most men, but they only stif fen his resolution, nerve him up for a new start. They only make him more determined to conquer the next time. Success Magazine. Ilnldluif I he .I:ikk iu Nature. "Well, what do you think of my son-in-law's ikv.v portrait?" "It's a speaking likeness. He looks exactly as If he was going to borrow $10 of you." FUsende Blaetter. He I niu told he has more money than he knows what to do with. She Has he really? Such ignorance must be bliss. Benjamin Franklin: Think of sav lng as well as of getting. Sarsaparilla Cures all Mood humors, all erup tions, clears the complexion, cre ates an appetite, at'ls digestion, re lieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. C.t It to1iv In usn.il Mould form cr choeolstsd tabids known nsaisntabs. 109 Doses fl. Country I'U-nie of lii-Dnf, Suppose you had been touring in an airship and had been t-:i.i:ins over Kansas In a light sununer breeze. Suppose that you hail noticed signs of activity as yon approach 1 the little town called Frankfort. Picture your astonishment, says J. (!(oi.;e Freder ick In the Travel Magir.l".?, on learn ing that there was an automobile fete oa that day and that nevcral hundred farmers and their familiry were steam ing their cars Into town, until tua streets of the town were quite blocked with autos! Your ldeaa of a backwood3 Kansai town and the farmers would have a rude Jar, for here was Mine. Farmer In a becoming automobile veil and a stylish tallormade suit taking tea at an afternoon reception Instead of working the butter churn, In a wrap per, or staring open-mouthed out ot tha window In a scared way when you teamed past In your auto. And there was her daughter, draped In the sweetest of summer gowns, talk ing of college days with a dapper jrouta with a fraternity hatband and positively the latest thing off Broad way In neckwear! And that waa ont little unknown town In Kansas! Baby Wasted to a Skeleton. "My little son, when about a yeai and a half old, began to have sores come out on his face. I had a physi cian treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come out on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then ono came on his chest, worse than the other3. Then I called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad that I had to tie his hands In cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. "My aunt advised me to try Cutl cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I sent to a drug store and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of the Oint ment and followed directions. At the end of two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sorea of any kind, since. I can sincerely say that only for Cuticura my child would have died. I used only one cake of Cuticura Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. "I am a nurse and my profession brings me into many different fam ilies and It is always a pleasure for me to tell my story and recommend Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Shel don, R. F. D. 1, Litchfield, Conn., Oct. 3, 1909." Wasn't That Sunn-lent f "Willie, you don't chew your victuals well enough. You must learn to Fletch erize." "Why, maw. I do. In my mind." Good for Sore Kye, for over 100 years PETTIT'S EYE SALVE has positively cured eye dis eases everywhere. All druggists of Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. When to Stop Advertising-. An English journal requested a num. ber of the largest advertisers to give their opinions concerning the best time to stop advertising, and the fol lowing replies were received: When the population ceases to mul tiply and the generation that crowded on after you and never heard of you tops coming in. When you have convinced every body whose life will touch yours that you have better goods and lower prices than they can get anywhere else. When you stop making fortunes solely through the direct use of this mighty agent. When younger and fresher houses In your line cease starting up. When you would rather have your own way and fall than take advice tnd win. Nashville American. Love and finance. Omaha folks are telling of the ar dent wooing of a belle of that town by an Italian count, whom the young lady met last year while touring tht continent with her njother. The count hastened to America soon after thi arrival home of the object of his at tentlon and, presenting himself at tht Omaha office of the father, unbur dened himself ot his sentiments. "I lofe her! I lofe her!" he ex claimed dramatically. "I desire ver' tnucha to marry her!" The old man eyed the titled person narrowly. "Well, count," he Anally asked in a resigned way, "what are your lowest terms?" St. Paul Pioneer-Press. Imparting a Lesson. Nan Jack, out of the corner of my eye I saw you looking at me when the preacher gave out his text, "A new commandment I give unto y.ou, that ye love one another." Jack Yes, and you didn't blush the least bit. Nan Certainly not. "Love one an other" is a general command. If it had been "that ye love each other," I'm not sure, bu you stop that, right now! Chicago Tribune. - 1 a s :f . r i