i"i & m.tf' i; Lrr .Ji i. Cement Talk No. 2 Portland Cement does not come from Portland, Maine, or Portland, Ore gon, and it was not first made at either of these places. It is called Portland because it was given this name by the Englishman v'ho first made it. He called it Portland because he thought it resembled cer tain natural deposits on the Isle of Port land in Enuland. Portland Cement is the fine powder produced by pulver izing the clinker resulting from the burning together of various materials of prop er chemical composition. In the case of Univtrtal Portland Cement, these raw mater ials are blast furnace slag and pure limestone. There are many brands of Portland Cement on the market, produced by different manu facturers. Umverialit one of the best known and highest grade Portland Cements. You can always tell it by the name Universal And the blue trade mark printed on each sack. Forty million sacjwtof Universatire made and used yearly in this country. If you have any concrete work to do, you will make no mistake by using Universal Portland Cement. Universal Isforsalebyrepresentativedcalerseverywhere UNIVERSAL PORTLAND CEMENT CO. ' CUICAGO-PITTSnURG Hoj-lkwoilcrQ Oltice, MiaatapolU ANNUAL OUTPUT 10.000.000 BARRELS MISUNDERSTOOD HER. Mrs. Rceder (making a call) And does your husband interest himself In books? Mrs. Neuriche No. Hiram keeps three bookkeepers. ' Avoid Disputation. The disputatious person never makes a good friend. In friendship, men look for peace and concord and some measuro of content. There are enough battles to fight outside, enough jarring and Jostling in the street, enough disputing in tho market place, enough discord In tho workaday world, without having to look for con tention in tho realm of the inner life also. Thoro, If anywhere, wo ask for an end of strife. Friendship is tho sanctuary of tho heart, and the peace of the sanctuary should brood over it Its chief glory is that tho dust and nolso of contest aro excluded. Hugh Black. Of Short Duration. "Pllmply Is afraid to ask old Mr. Plunkor for his daughter's hand." "Why, Pllmply told me yesterday ha stood in with the old gentleman." "Oh, that was only for a few min utes in the vestibule of an office build ing during a shower." Why, Wllllel Sunday School Teacher Yes, Wil lie, the Lord loves every living crea ture. Willie I'll bet he was never stung by a wasp! Puck. An Experiment. Nurse What is the matter? Johnny Tho baby is a fake; 1 throw him on tho floor, and he didn't bounce a bit. Firmness Is femlnlno and obBtinacy is mascullno so says a woman. ' GET POWER. ' The Supply Comes From Food. If wo got power from food why not strive to get all tho power we can. That is only possible by uso of skil fully selected food that exactly fits the requirements of tho body. Poor fuel makes a poor fire and a poor Are Is not a good steam producer. "From not knowing how to select the right food to fit my needs, I suf fered grievously for a long time from stomach troubles," writes a lady from a littlo town in Missouri. "It Beemed as if I would never be able to find out the sort of food that was best for mo hardly anything that I could ent would stay on my stomach. Every nttempt gave mo heartburn and filled my stomach with gas. I got thinner and thinner until I literally became a living skeleton, and In time was compelled to keep to my bed. A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nuts food, and it had such good effect from the very beginning that I have kept up its use ever since. I was surprised at tho ease with which I digested It. It proved to be Jut what I needed. "All my unploasant symptoms, the heartburn, tho Inflated feeling which gavo mo so much pain disappeared. My weight gradually Increased from 98 to 11G pounds, my llguro rounded out, my strength camo back, and I am now nblo to do my housowork and en joy it. Grape-Nutc food did it." Namo given by Po3tum Co., Dattle Creak. Mich. A ten days trial will show anyone somo facts about food. Read tho little book, "Tho Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. "There's a reason." Eier rend the above letter? A new one nppenra from time to time. Tney re srenulne, true, and full of hnm&a - Utcrcat. THE SILVER By BERNARD MEER (Copyright, 1010 by T was all so now and beautiful that ho found himself talking with un constrained and imper sonal interest to tho head nurso and to two cr thrco of tho cadet nursos In tho hos pital about tho operation they woro going to perform upon him that very day. Tho nurses in their neat littlo uni forms of bluo and white strlpos, tho hoad nurso in her spotless all-white, the resident doctor In his shining white trousers and Jacket', tho plainly dressed women who visited tho hos pital, and to whom, in splto of their simple attlio and manners, everybody seemed to pay such respect and at tention, and tho superintendent of tho hospital himself, who had come up to see Dill threo or four times tho day boforo, while Dill was "resting up" for tho operation, were all so nlco and kind to him that ho almost forgot it, and probably would havo forgotten it altogether were it not for tho fact that ho missed his regu lar breakfast. Over at tho old homesteud in Con necticut Dill hud always imagined that a hospital in tho big city was a dark and dismal den in which a man was Hung in a wet blanket on tho floor and let stay there until ho died from hunger. True, Dill was only nineteen and still had the world before him; and tho experience you are likely to get in nineteen years of tyoung and care-freo llfo on a Connec ticut homestead farm is scarcely tho kind of thing that makes you im pervious to tho strong impressions that stream in upon you when you come to the city and plunge into tho intricate, mazes of an ultra-modern civilization. Dut tho most wonderful thing about all this business was tho electro-magnetic personality of Crlngcr. Crlnger was a surgeon for whom all sorts of hideout long words, con cealing in tho perfectly inscrutable depths of their Greek derivations tbo most awful things imaginable, were the food of his body and tho breath of 'his soul. To know Crlngcr Intimately and well was to be convinced that ynr life was incomplete and a failure had you not been internally mutilated and preferably by the hand of Crlnger himself. And when Dill camo to see him that time about that little trouble in his left upper jaw, Crlnger had so thoroughly hypnotized him that Dill wont to the hospital In tho same state of mind with which ho was wont to look -forward to a Fourth of July cele bration. "It's a pity, too!" tho head nurso said to Crlnger. "He's such a hand somo dear hoy, and so simple and trusting. And he's so big for his ago!" She was pinning a towel about Crlngcr's head as a precaution against posslblo infection of tho patient while Crlnger would be over him at the operation. "What do you mean?" grunted tho surgeon severely. "Why, it'll disfigure him wretchedly, won't it?" "Disfigure him? I should say not!" "Dut you can hardly remove a person's upper Jaw without disfiguring a person, can you?" "Al-ha!" drawled Crlnger, as if he had been suddenly enlightened. "I see how it i3 with you! You havo never heard of such a thing as a sil ver Jaw! Never mind, now! Don't you try to let on anything to the doc tor! A silver jaw is one of the little rrlcks of tho trado that you happened to miss in tho course of your wonder ful experience. Don't you know that wo Just fit them out with a silver Jaw In tho place of tho old one. and that they're Just as good as ever? Yes, bettor than ever. I bellevo that I'd sooner havo a good silver jaw than tho one I've got. And as for this resection that I'm going to do why, It's nothing; nothing at all. I've done it ten times. No more to it thun there is to drinking a cup of coffee before you get up out of bed in tho morning. Aro they ready? Then bring him up." As they brought Dill up ho could near Crlnger laughing with one of his assistants laughing and chatting as If hospitals and other gloomy thlng3 of tho kind had no exlstenco whatever. But Cringer's strong hypnotic Influ ence was not quite sufficient to pro 7ont Dill from feeling a little norvcus is they gavo him an eighth of a grain of morphine and placed t. pneumatic pillow under his head to let him rest a littlo beforo the anesthesia, And Hill was never so surprised In the entire nineteen years of h'l life as ho was when Crlnger lifted him up to a sitting posture and asked him how ho felt. Was It over already? Ho know they liad been doing something villainous to his face, and he was woefully drunk from the mixture of ether and chlojo form they had used In putting him to i)Bep Vi ho certainly thought it TAKING A LOOK BACKWARD Picture of Life Upon Our Atlantic Shoro as It Was Two Centurlea Ago. Brush nway tho fog of a couple of centuries, and tako a look at this, our natlvo land, as It then nppenrcd. Here upon tho Atlantic shore, tbo scream of tho panthor arose on the midnight air with tho savage war whoop, and tho palo-faced pilgrim trembled for the saMy of his defenseless home. wf ja jw i Joseph B, Buwlcn) waB funny If it wob over already. Ho had been di valuing that ho waa one of tho heroes In tho hattlo of Dunkor Hill fighting with a black giraffe who was reciting Lincoln's speech about government for. of and by tho people to tho audienco at tho high school commencement exorcises In tho old smoko house at homo. Dy no means hnd it been a Fourth of July celebration nt loast of tho sane kind and ho was glad It was over. And yet ho Imagined ho would do it again, so Jolly and kind wcro all tho good peoplo at tho hospital in tho days that followed whilo ho was rap idly recovering from tho operation and from tho shock. Dill went homo and In duo course of time they supplied him with a sil ver jaw which took tho place of the one that Crlnger had taken out a silver Jaw so neatly and artfully mado and fitted that Dill himself to say nothing of his mother would never havo known tho difference. Now, I will not be sure that it was tho possession of this perfect silver Juw tlml caused Dill to feel that ho was a littlo better thnn the other young fellows In tho neighborhood; nor is it possible in tho present un certain state of human knowledge to assert with posltlvencss that tho mcro possession of a silver jaw, however perfect, Is nn extraordinary warrant for prefiguring ourselves tho favor ites of capricious chance. Dut apart from the merit's of such a question, It will bo desirable to noto that Dill was soon busy preparing himself for tho practise of law, with tho ultimate object of becoming pres ident of tho United States, or In any event a United States senator tho particular stato ho purposed to repre sent not being specified In tho con tract,. To bo perfectly fair to Bill and to ourselves, I must admit that ho was a trifle crude; crude, I mean, In his notions about tho ultlmato constitution of human society; which means In tho concrete tho peculiar opinion of their own importance entertained, as a general rulo, by the rich. Llkewlso ho was preternaturally slow so slow as to be virtually motionless in his ability to distinguish, by surface indi cations, the essential difference be tween tho very best peoplo tho blue points and cherry stones of tho human race and the oysters that come to us in bulk by the barrel. And if you supply this broad conception of Dill with a rank tendency to speak out his mind but you will see how ho carried It with Angelique Van Loo. Now although Dill had managed to push himself through Yale, and to squeeze himself through tho law school, and to edge himself Into the privilege of practising law at tho bar of New York, he was poorer nt tho end of it than he had been at tho be ginning. His silver jaw did not com pensate him for tho want of a golden mouth, and ho was beginning his jour ney to the Whlto Houso in tho capac ity of a grubstaked hanger-on in tho office of a lawyer who needed for his own use the clients that sifted clown to him from the upper world or that floated up to him from tho under. Dill was about to make up his mind ono day that ho would return to his father's houso in Connecticut when the mystic and magic spell that lay in the sliver jaw flung htm up nt the feet of Angeliquo Van Loo, as she stood on tho edge of tho sidewalk, her hands clasped upon her breast, her face transfigured with terror, and her eye3 fixed on somo indetormlnato point in space. As Dill approached her she turned and seized him by the lapels of his coat. He felt with a strange emo tion the forco of her neatly gloved littlo hands drawing him toward her, ad he was astounded by tho look of distress and horror in her eyes, and by her frantic appeal. "Oh savo her! Save her, won't you? Please savo her! I know I shall dlo if you don't!" Ho gazed around in the general di rection of tho upper storic3 of tho houses nnd then looked down Into tho face of his mysterious besoechor. "You fool!" she cried. "Why do you look around you llko that? Will you save her this mlnuto or will you not? Do you wish mo to go mad?" Agttlu did Bill tnn In the clicum vallate avenuo nnd again look down upon his petitioner. Ho was a shrowd young man with a smattering of tho law, and ho therefore refused to bo drawn Into a careless expression of a wish that madness should solzo upan anyone. But while ho was craftily thinking of all these things sho re laxed her grip upon his coat. "Won't you plenso savo her?" she begged, half coaxlngly, half sad. "Savo WHO?" asked Dill, tho on tiro stnicturo of his four ears of English collapsing at a stroke She was looking at him by this time with nn Impatient yet forbearing con- desconslon, which seemed to say that ono must put up with tho lack of In- , tclllgenco and wnnt of tact ono finds Ho planted his beans In fear and gath ered them In troublo; his chickens and his children were plundered by the too, nnd llfo itself was In danger of leaking out from between tho logs of lila but, oven if It wns fortified with threo muskets, a Bpunky wlfo, and a Jug of whisky. Yea, my friends, this was then a wild, gloomy and desolato placo. Whoro tho Indlaj squaw hung her young pnppooso upon tho bough and left it to squall at tho huHh-aby of tho blast, tho Anglo-Saxon mother now rocks tbo cradle ot her In porsons of n certain kind. Her browa wero lifted with tho barest per ccpllblo touch of scorn nt the mlx-up In Hill's grnvntnnr, but theso wero things that wcro wholly unobsorvod by tho lawyer. "Who? Antolnotto. Don't you sco her?" She polntod to tho street, nnd there In thn very mlddlo of it sat a black Italian toy terrior complacontly wink ing at its mistress from Ha highest plnnaclo of danger. So small It was that Its size, In an analysis of Us gen eral properties and characters, would bo a totally negligible quantity. With tho vehicles that wero clatlorlng or humming ou olthor side of it, at tho imminent rink of Rnufllng It out of ex istence it formed tho antithesis of tho helplessly littlo in tho center of tho pitilessly great. If was hardly tho work of a mlnuto for Dill to cut through tho btrenm of automobiles nnd horses, to mnko a handful of Antoinette, and to return tho toy to tho hand' of tho lady. "Thank you1 sho said with a, smile of relief. "It' was very good of you! Poor littlo thing!" Sho gavo him hor hand and looked into his eyes. What a nlco littlo maid, thought Dill, now that ho had a chanco to study her In what was undoubtedly hor normat stato of mind. In splto of tho hat, tho -volume of which seemed to havo been determined in In verso ratio to that of tho terrior, sho was unquestionably ono of tho neatest little matd3 ho had over seen. To Dill's philosophical eyes sho looked llko a girl who was young enough to bo in tho last year of tho high school and old enough to bo out of It Sho wns Just the kind of a girl ho would havo fancied for a companion, had ho over given any particular thought to tho subject in n serious way. Thcro was nothing extravagant about her If you allowed for tho Blzo of tho hat. And oven in tho matter of the hat it pelf, It occurred to Dill for the first time that perhaps these largo lints, that to him had looked llko Inverted wash-tubs, and had filled him with dis gust' for tho suplno Insanity of men In general and of women in particu lar, had been originally designed for girls of a certain natural get-up like this ono, for example. And then thcro was another phase of her that looked good to Dill and It was a phaso that had been markedly absent from most of tho girls that had both ered him up to tho present. Sho was without question tho most senslblo girl ho had over met. Sho could look at you and talk to you Just as If sho were a man; nothing of the giggling or squeaking order about this one; nono of that fool grinning you 6eo in tho caso of the regular girls you pick up horo and there in the stray mo ments of a busy and thoughtful life. Ho fancied that he would wait for awhile beforo roturnlng to his father's roof, and ho grinned like an lnano lout. "That's a nice littlo dog, Isn't it?" "Yes, it is a very nice littlo dog. Do you llvo In New York?" "Yes. In tho law. With Sklnnlm, S.klnnor & Sklnncm. Yale, nineteen six. Phi Belft Kflppa." "What Is Phi Bota Kappa?" "Don't you know what Phi Deta Kappa is? It's the scholarship frat. They glvo you keys. Llko thU one." "Tho key of knowledge, I presume. How pretty!" " 'Tisn't so awfully pretty, but It's pretty hard to got. Havo you ever been to a college?" No, sho had never been to college. Not a doubt about It, sho was a simple littlo maid. She had never oven heard of Phi Deta Kappa. Ho had a fancy he would llko to tell her about Phi Beta Kappa and tho rost of it. "Wouldn't you like to hoar about tho fraternities thoy havo in tho uni versity?" "Have you time to tell mo about thom7" "Time? Why, yes. I'd just as soon tell you about them as not. You real ly ought to know about tho collego fraternities. People will bellevo that you never had any education at all If you happen not to know about that." "If they do," said the girl, "thoy will happen to bo perfectly right." They were walking up tho avenue nnd It seemed to Dill that she wan looking straight ahead to a degreo that was altogother unnecessary. Nor did she seem at all awaro that Dill was making himself dizzy with tho sight of her. Suddenly oho stopped and faced him. "Aro you on your way to your of fice?" she asked him undor tho caves of tho hat. "Tho office? Why, no. The offico Is nway down town." She looked at him with evident hesitation; with a deep questioning in hor eyes; and then glanced up at tho four-story brown stone houso bo foro them. "This Is my homo," sho said. "Won't you come in?" And that was tho way ho mot her. It was certainly Btrango, thought Dill, that a big lubber like himself could win without trying a trump of a girl such ua Angelique Van Loo. Win her without oven making a light for it. Thero was nothing fidgety or foolish about hor; not a single thing. And thoro was nothing fidgety or foolish about either of hor aunts, either. Solid, senslblo women, all of them. Thoy seemed to bo boarding In that big houso on tho avenuo, al though thoy had never told him so In so mnny words. Thoy had spoken about him with great freedom, but they seldom talked of themBolves or their own affairs. Thoy woro cer taluly good, plain, senslblo women; Just the kind of women that would mako a good wlfo for a man who had I to mako his way In the world by his dollcato babo on tho carpet of peace, and in tho gay parlor of fashion. Tho wild has been changed to a blooming garden and Its limits aro expending with tho mighty genius ot Liberty. Lorenzo Dow, Jr. Some Qreat English Writers. Wordsworth, the brooding northern sun; Byron, tho lighting flash by night; Sholloy, certain offocts of moonlights; Keats, tbe poet ot beauty untouched by other Influences; Brown own brains and onorgy. Dut ho won dered why It wns that thoy never flccmed to have nny company but him self, nnd why It wns that her aunts seemed to bo so Infernally careful of her. Thoro was something mysterious about tho whole outfit when a fol low took tlmo to think It over of nn evening with his plpo. And thinking it over, with nnd without tho pipe, hnd been Bill's solo occupation for a mnttor of thrco months, during which, tho moro ho thought of it, tho stran ger it Beemed to grow. Dill nnd the nunts had talked about every phase of tho caso so far na Dill himself was concerned. Ques tioned by tho aunts nicely, gently, In thn most simple nnd straight-forward way in tho world, but soul-searching and practical, when ho camo to think of It. Dill had been turned inside out and studied In nil his tissues with tho microscope. At ono or another tlmo ho had told thorn when ho camo to think of It everything of lmpor tnnco that had happened since tho day of his birth. They would dis cuss him those aunta of here boforo his very faco, as if ho woro not there nt all, with nods of npproval to each othor whenever thoy wero specially pleased with any of Llll's various ac complishments or virtues. They socmed to bo particularly gratified when he gavo them an account of his family tree, nodding with oxlra vigor, as much ns to say that thero was no need of going into that subject any farther. Yes. yes. Good old Connec ticut family farmers, you know, but with excellent connections, and not undistinguished In history. When they discussed htm In that strango way Dill seemed to fcol rather queer, and yet ho could not bring himself to chnllongo it. They did It In such n nlco littlo way that Dill even at times Imagined for a mlnuto that ho was not tho party undor flro nt all; that ho himself was one of tho aunts, and that tho mnn they wcro talking nhout was somo fellow In New Jersey. But thero wns yet a thing that Bill hnd not given up to them; a thing that, ono way or another, ho could not bring himself to dlscloso, it was alto gether such a dellcato and personal matter with himself. No doubt ho would havo told them long ago about tho sliver Jaw had ho not feared that tho disclosure would provo a Bhock to Angelique. And yet his consclcnco would not let him res; whilo tho Jaw remained a secret. Was it right for a man with a sil ver Jaw to marry the finest girl in tho world without telling her that that left upper maxillary of his was made of sllvor Instead of bono? If she too him with tho understanding that his jaw was of tho usual manufacture, would not tho contract be void, ac cording to tho law of contract as he found It expoundod In the books? It was Indeed a knotty problem; al together too knotty for Bill's as yet undeveloped legal penetration, and ho decided In tho depths of his woe to seek out Doctor Crlnger and get his ndvlco on tho question. Doctors aro alwayB good counsel, thought Hill, especially when thoy have cut threo or four pieces out of a man's anatomy uud have set him up again as good as new. When Dili had told him tho story, bolng careful to omit tho lady's uame, Crlnger becamo thoughtful a mo ment. "Has aho got nny money?" "No," said Dill. "She lives in a big boarding houso on tho avenue." "Then," announced Crlngcr, with prompt decision, "your course is clear. I assumo that you aro looking for a wife and not for a bank-book. In which case, up and tell hor that you havo a sllvor Jaw. If sho cares a straw for you she won't let a little dotnll llko that interfere for a min ute with the business. She will go to you llko a horso to his oats. If aim balks you can bo certain that she doesn't care as much for you as she cares for a baby cat. And in that caso, my boy, you'll bo hotter off with out hor. Tako my own case, for in stance. When I was courting but como back, Dill, and let mo know how sho takes it, will you?" Dill went away no better than ho had como. To him, Crlngcr's advlco had small comfort In II. If sho did not caro enough of him to take him with the sllvor Jaw as boots in the bargain, ho hnd no dsslro to be in formed of tho fact. Ho was anything but hankering for proof positive that ,sho was not tho square littlo, nice 'littlo girl ho thought her. And be sides all that, tho business had run along so smoothly and so faut that it would bo a shame to spoil It now. Hang tho sllverJaw, anyway! Dut ns Cringer's advlco worked it self slowly Into tho texture of his mind, ho began to tako anothor view of tho question. It was posslblo, after nil, tJRt Crlnger was right. It was just posslblo that she had been fool ing with I ' :i all this long tlmo, put ting on those nl"o little ways of hers, looking sideways with her eyes, and nil that sort of business, and protond lng to sigh llko that aa they wero holding hands when tho nunts let them alone for a mlnuto. When ho camo to think of It, ho novor did havo much faith In womon, anyway. They w?ro all a had lot, not worth a man's whilo bothering with, after all I If ho thought sho was fooling him 1 Yes. Ho would follow Crlngcr's nd vlco and put It up to her. But It wns not such an easy thing to do when Dill tried It that vory aft ernoon. She looked n littlo frightened when ho began to stutter and splutter about "a secret In his life that ho felt ho ought to confess," nnd whon ho said that ho had been tho subject of a surgical operation, sho distinctly drew away from him and stared at him with positive alarm. Dut when ho plumped it out and told her tbnt ing, the aentury'B volco of energy and soul analysis as Tennyson of beauty and world-contemplation; Stovonson, the story toller In an ago of fact; Shaw and Chesterton, nllko In wit and para dox; Shaw a colitrlfugul force, repre sents extreme Individualism ot Protes tantism; Chesterton, contrlfugal, tra ditionalism of Catholicism; but Shaw would obtain his end through legis lated Socialism; Chesterton his through free play of Individual. Dr. L. W. Miles In a "Syllabus ot Nine teenth Century EngltBh Literature." tho result of tho operation was tho stiver jaw ho nt that momont was us ing, Angeliquo Vnn l-oo roso from where sho sat and looked nt him with immeasurable contempt. "You 1" sho exclaimed. "You! How daro ou tell mo that) I loatho you! I halo Jou!" Had ho been a honored toad or a Gila monster sho could not havo re garded him with a superior horror; and then, recovering herself, sho left him nlono, tho victim of her lncom prchonslblo scorn. Now this wns a posture of things that BUI had not been prepared for. Had a volumo of tho revised statutes suddenly exploded whilo ho wns read ing at it, ho could not havo boon moro em prised. Ho had fgured on a thousand possibilities but he hnd never oven thought of this; and he wns sitting thoro with open mouth, staring nt tho doorway through which sho hnd disappeared; n mnn that wna wholly undono. Sho had cortainly mado n good job of it whilo sho was Ho turned with positive rollof ns her aunts camo into tho room, appar ently in groat excltomont. They, at least, wcro solid nnd ncnslblo Tomcn nnd would llston to his story with rea sonnblo politeness. But Bill sccmod to bo unfortunate in this expectation also. Tho ladles seemed to havo be come ns frigid an they woro hospit able before. Frigid, nnd decidedly fidgety. . . . A silver Jawl Oh, dear, no. It was Impossible! even to think of mnrrlago when ono hnan silver Jnw! Thoy hoped his good senso would tell htm that any expectations In that di rection would be tho height of the ri diculous. Would ho mind if tho ac quaintance wore considered directly nt nn end? Of course his own appreciation of propriety would directly inform him that it would bo unkind of him to nddrcBS himself further to' Miss Van Loo, should ho chanco to meet her away fiom her homo. In flno, they would send James to usher him out. James was n short species of varlet with nn English accent, whom Bill particularly despised; and with tho nnturnl instinct of his breed ho meta phorically kicked tho young limb of tho law out of tho door and into tho street. And then there followed with BUI a period of depression such na is onuuuii with heroic youtha when the fluent current of their loves is stopped by a pie-wagon or other prosaic and material obstaclo that refuses to bo budged by vain Incantation. For four weeks ho wandered nbout in the rain and shine, by day and night, through the busy thoi oughfarcs, among men, who wero happy in their Ignoranco of AngeliquoB Van Loo nnd other dis turbing factors In business. Ho strayed among the ships In tho East river, and at times thought of ap prenticing himself to a Malay pirate could bo conveniently find ono. And then he thought of Crlnger. Crlnger had requested him to return and ad vise with him on tho result of the ex periment, but Bill had forgotten all about it. Now that ho recalled it, ho decided that he would go back to Crlngcr and confess. He had to talk to somebody or Jump from tbo bridge, and Crlnger wns tho man. The surgeon listened gravoly to tho wholo story this tlmo with intensi fied Interest. "" "What is hor namo 7" bo asked, when Dill hnd finished. "Who Is this miraculous Juliet of tho Capulets?" "Her namo is Angeliquo Vnn Loo," said BUI from tho lowest depths. Crlnger glanced at him quickly us If ho were trying to mako out wheth er BUI wero suffering from homicidal manta or wbb afflicted only with a mild and harmless form of dementia. "You're sure? Aro you euro that that ia her name?" "Why, of course" answered BUI impatiently. "Sho lives in a big houso on tho avenuo with her two old aunts. Of course It's her name. Why shouldn't it bo?" Crlnger gave a long whistle. "BUI," he Bnld, "you are certainly the delight nnd tho wonder of tho world I Angelique Van Loo! Great Scott!" Ho took a turn around tbo room and came back to his visitor. "Great Scott!" He blow his breath through his pursed up lips as if bo wcro exces sively warm and onco again exclaimed: "Great Scott!" And then he looked at Bill with a face of wonder, as if BUI had been a llvo pongo that bad been sud denly picked up In Africa and mirac ulously thrust beforo him. "Don't you know who Angeliquo Van Loo is, BUI? Do you mean to tell mo that you never beard of her?" "No," replied BUI, taking nlarm at Crlngcr's queer reception of the sim ple statement of Angollque'a namo. "Why, BUI, Angelique Van Loo is one of tho most notablo young women in tbo world. Sho is tho sole in heritor of tho Van Loo millions mil lions enough to set you up in tho rail road business if you could got her. But that isn't all," snld Crlngor. "There's a great deal moro to it than that. You bot thcro is!" "What is it?" asked Bill eagerly. "There's something mysterious about them, whatovor it is, Nover saw a soul there but myself. Novor oven had dinner with thorn. Dut I don't care a cent about tho millions, and sho herself didn't seem to care about them either. Said sho was willing to go and llvo on tho farm with mo in Connecticut. Aunts said they'd conifi nlong with ub. Just doted on tbe simplo llfo nnd all that, don't you know." Crlngor was puzzling hlmsolf with a question, and after a bit of reflec tion apparently decided ho would keep his own hnnds out of It Just then. "Talking Buncombe." In historic Buncombo county, N. O., was originated tbo phraso "talking Buncombe,'" for in tkls mountainous covntry 'year- ago Col, Edward Bun combe founded his famous hall and pjaced tho words, "To Buncombe Hall, Welcome All," over his doorway. The expression, "I am talking for un combo," meaning Buncombo county, becamo current hereabouts by horns folks, but unregonerate strangers have used it to Blgnlfy political blarney or exaggerated praise, - " i He took naother turn around tfijp, room, again came up to BUI, and agalftV surveyed him with absent-minded' speculation. This tlmo bo said it 1ob$! drnwn out and laden with subsiding1 surprise: "Great Scott!" ' Thoro wns ovldontly littlo help to M had from Crlngor. To Bill's mind Crlngor was laboring undor an attack of mental aberration from which there could issuo no word of comfort or hopo. Ho took his hat and went awny, leaving Crlnger in a stato ot stupid Inaction. Ho resumed his wandorlng llfo for a period ot two dnys, eating nothing and sleeping hardly nt all. On tho third aftornooa bla hunger tompted him to a meal, nnd tho meal restored his courage, and tho courago eventuated in a plan. Ho would return to tho homo of Angeliquo Vnn Loo and would toll hor what ho thought of her! He would toll hor ho was glad, sho had rejected him. Ho would toll her ho despised her millions and her aunts. Ho would W! br lt ho womM wRt until ho would sco her face to face for tho formulation of the entire mos sngo. Ho could sco her so clearly In? his imagination that bo closely watched tho door ot tho restaurant oa tho chanco sho would enter there. It was odd, too, that ho nover one thought ot James; and when James opened tho door for him, and cams out a littlo way into tho outer hall, nnd stood beforo BUI with a. oneer oat his fat red face, the angry passions of Bill began to rise. But his toIco waa gentlo and calm as he spoko. "Don't look at mo that way, Shorty, I don't llko it!" Tho open hand of BUI camo down! on tho vnrlet's shoulder with rare and wondorful power, so that ono fat woll fed body chook with tho Bhock of it. "Not that way, Shorty (slap), I don't llko it (Blnp). I don't llko (slap) to bo looked at (slap) that way. Shorty; (slap). Do you hear what I say, (slap) Shorty? Now go and tell them. Shorty, that I'm horo." Tho varlet was standing up to the! punishment of his shoulder like a! wooden horso in a gymnasium, and ho did not observe that the two guardians of Angeliquo Vnn Loo wcro behind him In the halt. Thoy now camo forward to Bill in warm and smiling welcome. "Oh, Wllllnm, it's you, Isn't It? So fortunate you called this afternoon I ' Tho dear fussy ladles, one to tho foro and tho other to the aft ot hist, dragged him and pushed him into the big front room, and piled him into a chair. One of them was telling him that sho had told Angelique that sho would nover bellevo ho could bo such heartless fellow as that! Surely even if it were a fact, it would be aa unheard of and monstrous thing for a man to be guilty of such a cruet and unkind trick, especially whon it was known to everybody, and tho poor dear girl was almost insane from grief and shamo. The other one was telling him that of course they had practised a littlo deceit upon him in allowing him to re main In Ignorance of Angellque's wealth, and position, but thoy had done it with the best Intentions tit the world, as It was perfectly obvious that William, being such a simple big fellow, had really never suspected uny thing of the -kind, and probably; would never have suspected until long afterwards, but at the same tlmo sho had said to her sister that wo aro sure to weave a fatal web when first we practise to tell fibs to people, but everything was all right now, wasn't It, or nt least sho hoped it was. And then tho pair ot them joined voIccb, and said it aU over again', thoroughly revised and with the In troduction of considerable new mat ter, which Bill was at a total loss to understand. Of course they had not suspected that he had a sllvor Jaw, too, and that was the reason why; Angeliquo had thought him so very, contemptible for speaking of it. But thoy had planned to tell him all about it tbe very day that he and Angeliquo had quarreled. You know, poor child, she had mado up her mind never to marry, and it was so fortunate that Doctor Crlnger had called and ex plained to thorn the whole strango story! Providential, wasn't it, that thoy had consulted Crlnger about Angeliquo within the very week of tho operation on William himself? BUI was still in tho fog. He looked from ono of tho aunts to the' other, as if thoy had been speaking a particu larly difficult dialect of Chtneso, tho meaning ot which, while intensely in teresting to themselves, no doubt, was of no Importance whatever to the world at large. And whon thoy had thoroughly winded themselves with talk, they had time to tako noto ot Bill's peculiar condition. Tho big stupid! Couldn't he com prehend that Angelique herself had a Bllver Jaw llko his own? And that sho had nover dreamed that Bill was similarly equipped? And that sho had imagined ho was basely hinting; nt the cruel gossip that had malicious ly whispered that if it were not. for her millions sho would nover find & lover who would lovo her and so oa with the rest ot It. Aha! thought Bill. That waa the secret that Crlnger had kept from him, was it? Why, to bo sure! And finally, when It was mado as clear to him as it possibly could be, and when Bill, in his anxiety as to whether a sllvor Jaw could Interfere with tho health and happiness of a certain high-strung and sensltlvo girl, bad gone to Crlnger for his professional opinion, Crlnger had snapped bis fingers In disdain and had given his characteristic reply. "Thcro'B nothing to it, I tell yon. Nothing at all. I'd bo willing to mako an exchango with her myself." :- As (Shakespeare Would Have Said It. Swat tho fly, we pray you, as wo de nounced hfm to you, rlpplngly vita tho hand; but if you muff hlm.as many ot swatters do, we had as lief tho town crier bashed tho files. Nor dq we not saw the air too much your hand thus; but use all gontlyt for in tho very torrent, tempest and (as we may say) the whirlwind ot passloa, you must acquire nnd beget a 'temperance, that may give H smoothness. ... Be not too tarns K neither. . . , do make you readiw-1 'i a! :l 1 --! rsrl 1 i J j i 5 . 1 3S6i -l JI 'll M i .25 m ' li ,-i3