Spring Males Me Tired To many people fpring and iu duties mean an aching head, tired limbs, and throbbing nerves. Just as the milder weather comes, the strength begins to wane and -that tired feeling" la the complaint of all. The reason for this condition ii fouud in the deficient, quality of the blood. During the winter, owing to various causes, the blood becomes loaded with impurities and loses its richness and vitality. Consequently, as soon as the bracing effect of cold air is lost, there is languor and lack of energy. The cure will be found in purifying and enriching the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the greatest and best spring medicine because it is the greatest and best blood purifier. It overcomes that tired feeling because Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier ' Prominently in the Public Kye Today. 4'uereut tooDmriit. There are too many defaulting bank re at liberty. Buffalo Express. The Chinese should tear down their great wall and build schoolhouses with the material. New York Advertiser. Even in the height of his fame Na poleon never dreamed that he would one day be on a level with Trilby. Brockton Times. ' I nlnss the British Hon changes its position the work to be attended with tome difficulty. Chicago Tribute. KNOWLEDGE Brings cafart sad Improvement and tends te, aenoneJ enjoyment when fMatly wmL The Many wko live bet er thaa others and enjoy life more, with lees expenditure, by more promptly adapting she world's bent products to the'neeaa of physical being, will attest the value to health of the purs liquid Illative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Iu eioeiicnce U due to its presenting In the form ta.wt acceptable and pleas ant to the Unte, the refreshing r.nd truly senefieial properties of a jrt t lax ative. crTecuially clesncint' tint nyatern, dispelling onloa, headaches wiJ fevers and permanently curing constipation. It hait given Mtiafartinu to miHiiis and met with tbe approval of the tr: "ileal i profviwion, becauw- it acB on the Kid uv, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it u perfectly free from every objectionable substance. , Syrup nf r'iirs i for sale by ail drug gieU in 50c and $1 buttle, bi't it ii man ufactured by the California Pi;: r-yrup Co. ouly, whose niiiui! in printed u'l ; very package, also the name, Sti.ji of Fig, anil U-iuir well iittorjicd, ' .;i wiil nut f,cct" ' -'- f ASKYOUR DRUGGIST FOR The best FOR Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and AGED PERSONS JOHN CABLE SONS, New York. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH CRAOC COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES Oa aale Ceatlaaal, aeea rMdTal HI6HE8T AWAR08 tnm Ik creel Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS In Europeand America. Valleatka butet rm. Alae ar otiMr ChaMlreU or are hmi la ar r lelr arvM.trina. Tlwlf fallelaea BaCAKf AIT COCO ( ibMluul u4 carta Urn uaa tm tint a y. ad uieeM, SOLO SV OROCIBS IVIRYWHtSI. WALTEH BAKEH k 00. MRCnESTEH, MASS. lt Bt. Joseph and Qtaad hind 1. B SHORTEST and QUKMIT LINK NORTiR" WEST 5E? EAST SOUTH .ta.srr Union Pacific System m iii rawwire says f TeeMife, tofeeeae ell Waatasw Polasa, for laawssaese rafaraiei reeee. eea., van n . r. eaisaoa.ja , Aft. I Hitafsavis. Isaesl . . it makes pure, rich blood. It gives strength to nerves and muscles because it endows the blood with new powers of nourishment. It creates an appetite, tones and strengthens the stomach and digestive organs, and thug builds up the whole system and prepares it to meet the change to warmer weather. Hood's i-arsaparilla is a medicine upon which you may depend. It is the only true blood purifier prominent ly before the public eye today. It bas a record of cures unequalled In the his'ory of medicine. It is the medicine of which so many people write, "Hood'i Sarsaparilla does all that it is claimed to do." You can take Hood's Sarsa parilia with the confident expectation that it will give you pure blood aud renewed health. Take it now. -Nat ure a M omiera Harrier reef is a coral reef extending along the northwest coast of Australia for nearly 1,300 mile. 'Hie Siena Nevada range of maoun tains in California la iiu.irly 500 mi lei long, 70 wide and lioin, 7,bO0 to nearly ld.tXU feel, high. Th-re in a gigantic "rocking stone" or bai.nued bowlder on tha pinnacle of Tandil niourilain, Buenos Ayres. It if 24 feet in height, ift feet lung and will weifh 25 tons. Hot hrlng, Kutith Dakota, a meetinir (iftv nromlnem At Illinois physicians, held during theli recent trip of investigation to Hot Springs, South Dakota, it ws resolved tnat a committee of rive be appointed to draft suitable resolutions, voicing the sentiment of the meeting cenctrn ing the Dakota Hot .springs, as viewed! frtm the jihysicians' standpoint. The' following Is the report: 'I hi mrmbrt. ot tile vUltlnr delecatlon of IlllnoU f.hyilcin, twembled In the town hall at Hot .ritiK, 8 D , diiire to ripreM their henrty appreeiiilon (,t tho oprtrtiiBlty tliui alfi.rrtacl them to become pi actlcailv acqiialnted will) I oc dvtjlai(eii of lhi place ana hultti rort. I he ihe, tared lor atlon of thff fiprlngs um the foutharu nlope of the Blaclt H 1 1 la. In a valley ttaat U protevted from tliu biaili of w.uLtr and from lorua of lumiuerj the dryneu and lalubri'y uf lha utino phera ud loa moderate eleratlou above aea level' (37(10 feat) combined with eaey ai ceni from all d reelloi , render Ilia piaoa )eeuliariy attract ive to all who Hud their advaulugi; iu auemape fiom aatrotuea u( heat, cold, dn nip aud atmor j.herlc preanura. The purity of the ateri, and their (lei Ided inedlctua! uuallty alau commend' the fiprli;( to tne inudlcal profelon and to all ln allua who mlfer with cutaneoua arlhrlllo dlataaea aud with luch dlaordera of 'he dlgosl Ive and i llmlnativa oruarn aa need foriheir relief a continued gentle stimulation of llm liver arid kldueya. tor the ra.lef of the diner em forma of ehroulc rheuuatlwin the inai nlluent pluiise balh. iu wnleh active elimina tion, loaether with lurtliient lien. la.- of th? mleeted Joint and mustlen, re happily com blued, cannot be too highly pralaed. ''inkini! into cunttderatluu the eae of acce'l the ample aud comfortable accoiniuodotloui that Kin provided at mwlerale cunt, and lha healing piop-Tliea of the mineral watem, it ti evident that ih Hot Sprlnga of bun b Ijatola Milord opportuuiiiea for rrat, recreati n aud ree-iv ery of health that are not aurpnAed by any Muno.r resort in tt, country. To tha meinberx ot the medical profrHhlnu who a:e w eking Kir their patients a loea'.ioa luiU ahall i-oiiioliie ihe aovauiagea of northern mid Hiullu ni climate., ea.lern and wrateru leveli oi elevation, ntunc,iie iu'euery and the eom lortu of i lviilatlou, aao.iated with noclai siinpllelty of hie thin place cau be most colt ll lenily reei inmended." Himby M. Lyman, Chicago, fc. V. Ciki, Men. una. J W. 1'owill, Peoria Willlam A. KliiIh, Uloomlngton, E. htillmaM-IIaILIV, CBlragu. CoiumlUee. Tor a beautifully illustrated folder descriptive of this famous health anoj pleasure resort, aud also for Informal tiou about the Burlington Route's rates and train service to Hot bprlngsi write to J. Francis, O. P. & T. A.J Omaha, Neb. The American turf congress has ruled that a jock 9 can weigh In witty any amount of overweight, but under weight is limited to two pounds. Ton Don't Hare te Swear Off, ays the At Louie Jouraal of agrleajlrura In an editorial ancm so 10 nit, tne ramoue to. bacco nablt cure. "W know or many caaae cored by No-To-Bac, one, prominent Ht. Leula architect, emokad and chewed for. twenty years; two boiea cured klm ao that even the anieil of tobacco mekra him ale.", N'o-To Mac eold: aad gaaraateed by Drufnete every wnare. 19 care no pay. uooa tree. Starling Remedy Co., New York or Chicago. Current Comment. It Is becoming more apparent every day that the successful bank robber II the one who draws a salary from tbt institution. Chicago Poet. The polling of tbe legislature on pres idential candidates baa begun. Ittlok let the vanity of tbe legislators, but il doesn't settle the qnestlon. If aldermanic votes are really market able, lent It abent time to Inaugurate 1 system of advertising for bids, bo thai all can bave a fair chancer IV ma rt.IaSaW WORK eaally eanred Uraaat M I as.aaflg aTlee!aa far tf- r Ageee? la aall tkl MM C$EftU sMUTOsU to raeaaoM aaa afaya. uaa eiyi hut number ef lea franal. aaal f&mm aaa. ItaaanrhIM, wrlle laf a-ava Bees Free, KiVis M aaa Oaa airla araa aha N mber el aaa Jhanal. Aaeaher will aooa M aaa ItaaawkiM, wHU l aaSaeaaa Ulaa w.yaa Bewk Pre, fivis rimiim buisi. asi laiCdTUU auMaVaataven. a W. Uka Si. Ckloaga TJIIKTY THOUSAND! A HOST WILL ATTEND THE DEN VER CONVENTION. Thirty Fourth Anaual MmIIdi of the Ra tional Kdnratlonal inorbtlon, July S-H Many Imminent Ktiucatora on thn Program Kara Opportunity ror Boat and apart Among- tba Koealee Cheap KalM to Danger. In 1805 tlie educator of America take up tbe cry. "Westward Ho!" and the National Educational Association has fixed upon Denver, July 5 to 12, as the place and time of Us thirty-fourth annual meeting. The association cornea so far West this year for the second time In Its history. In 1S8 the Bt-s.tfi was held in San Francisco, but the President of the association for '88 was Aaron Gove, then and now Superintendent of the Denver schools- Tho San Francisco meeting was the largest the association has ever held, before or since that time, ana auen enmusinsm as was manifest ea in lsxis lias not been known until 1895, when the fame of Denver bas called forth, four months before the time set for the July meeting, an en thuslasm on the part of educators throughout the country, which assure an attendance of between 20,0J0 and 80,000 people. The Sau Francisco at tendance was 12.000. The National Educational Association was established In 1857 In Philadel phia; its object, as stated In the pre- aniDio 10 tne constitution, Is "To ele vate the character and advance the In terests of the profession of teaching, and to promote the cause of popular education In tbe United States." Dr. Nicholas .Murray Butler, of Co lumbia College, Professor of Philoso phy and education, and State Univer sity Examiner for New York, Is Presi dent of the association. Dr. lSutler Is oue of the young men who have of late years coma to the front In educa tional llm-s. He Is thlrty-threo years of age and Is recognized as one of the most advanced thinkers, and among the most progressive educators In the world. Superintendent A. O. Lane, of Chica go schools, Is Vice President ; Irwin Shepard, Slate Siiierl!itenderit, of Min nesota, Is Secretary; KuiHTlntendent J. Al. (ireenwisid, of tho Kansas City senools. is treasurer, and Sui;rlutend ent N. A. Calkins, o the New York senools, is (lialruian of the Hoard of Jrustevw, the governing body of the association. The membership Is com posed of men and women eminent In educational lines In tho United States and Canada, aud numbered last yeai- over 0,1 mh 1. THE CONVENTION PROGRAMME. The National Educational Association has eleven departments, each of which has a meeting place and holds sessions or Its own, In addition to those of tha general convention. Tbe departments are: Kindergarten, Elementary, Sec ondary, Higher, Normal, Manual Train lug, Art, Music, Business Education, Child Study; and a National Council of Education. Among the iioted educa tors who will read papers and take part In the discussions of tho conven tion and lis departments are: Presi dent Do (iarmo, of S wart h more; Com missioner Han-Is, of the United States Bureau of Education; Hon. Hoke Smith. Secretary of the Interior; Prof. Jackman, of the Cook County Normal School, Illinois; Chancellor W. II. Payne, of Nashville University; George II. Martin, Suiiervlsor of Boston Schools; Prof. William Carey Jones, of the University of California; James L. Hughes, Inspector of Schools, To ronto; Dr. J. M. Rice, of New York; Mrs. Mary Hunt, of Boston; Prof. Rich ard T. Ely, of the University of Wis consin; N. C. Shaeffer, Pennsylvania State Superintendent; Halsey C. Ives, Chief of the Art Department of the World's Columbian Exposition. THE CONVENTION CITY. Not only haa Denver become famous a a city of conventions, some sixty organlnatlons having mot here In con volition last year, but no city of the age and trtze of Denver la so well known throughout the country for the superior excellence of Its school sys tem and for tbe educational advan rages It affords. The excellent condi tion of Denver schoola Is due. In the greatest degree, to the work of Superin tendent Gove, who has given twenty years of hla life to perfect the school system, aa It now exists. A (iron (Jof$, Ever since the Knight Templar Con clave, of August 1H1I2, when 100,000 guest were so royally entertained In Denver, tbat city has always been con j ill Dr. Butler, Pra. JV. K. A. Jfr. sidered In chooelng a place for large conventions. Several other cities, east and west, fought hard for the '15 con vention of The National Educational Association, but the stroug fascination of Denver prevailed. SUMMER SCHOOLS IN COLORADO The summer school at Colorado Springs, the world famous health re sort, will appeal to many teachers. The corps of teachers aud lecturer in cludes such men as Richard T. El v. of Wisconsin University; Woodrow Wilson; E. Benjamin Andrews, Presi dent of Brown University; and Wil liam J. Kolfe, of Harvard Uni versity. The Rocky Mountain Cha tamjua at Gleu Park, Is making prep arations for a season of unusual Inter est, many noted educators who will at tend the edu"atioual convention having ix.-en secured to appear upon the Cha- tauq.ua platform. Among other supe rior opitortuultles for summer studv will be the summer terms at the State University at Boulder, a summer school at the State Normal School In Greeley, and another at Fred Dick's Normal School In Denver. OUTING IN THE MOUNTAINS. No State In tbe Union offers so unl form a climate and outing and health resorts ao well adapted to building up the body and mind, wearied by years of work, as does Colo rado, wun its perpetual summer sunshine and Its pure mountain air. Scores of springs, both hot and cold, famous for their medicinal prop ertles, are easy of access In various parts of the State. Colorado Springs Is 10 miles from Denver; Alaultou five miles from Colorado Springs, "the Saratoga of the West," at the foot of Pike's Peak, and at the Gateway of the Garden of the Gods; Glenwood Springs, in the ellvan valley of the Grand River, Is replete with the at tractions of a year round resort. FAMOUS MOUNTAIN SCENES. Peaks and passes, canons and catar acts, greet the eye of the Colorado tourist UKn every line of railroad In the northern, western or southern part of the State; Spanish and Collegiate peaks, whose grandeur la excelled only by "Sovereign Blanc" Itself; Sierra Blanca, Marshall Pass, the Grand Can ons of the Colorado and Arkansas, their walls rising 2,000 feet above the rushing waters; Sangre de Chrlsto, Gray's and Long's Peak, which tower over 14,0i0 feet above the sea. Then there Idaho Springs, on the Union Pacific, Denver & Gulf line, thirty- seven miles from Denver, at the exit from Clear Creek Canon, one of the grandest In the Slate, wiili Its famous Hanging Rock and Dome Rock. No feature of Colorado seeiuery will be more highly appreciated by teachers than the excursion of the ltlo Grande road "Around the Circle" to Montezuma county, In the land of the Cliff Dwell ers. Here will be seen upon their na tive heath, or rather among their na tive mountains, the strange home of this prehistoric race, models of whose dwellings formed a famous feature of the Columbian Exposition. THE SPORTSMAN'S PARADISE. The primeval mountain, forest and plain of Colorado still afford the sjwrts- man a happy hunting ground. Trap pers Lake, Grand Lake, Twin Lakes and .Trout Lake, are a few of the liquid gems set In the mountains and surrounded by cushions of forest green. Their waters and those of the numer ous streams, contain an abundance of mountain trout which may be taken with hook and line from June 1st to December 1st. The hunting grounds of Colorado, occupied almost undisturbed by wild animals, ore larger In area than tho State of Now York. Through out Grand, Ijtiko, Routt and Garfield counties are to be found elk, deer, an telope, rabbits, ducks, geese, grouse, quail, and frequently a mountain lion or a bear gives zest to tho sixirt of the hunter, who will find himself real izing, In the Colorado mountains and forests, his Ideal dreams of early days In the undeveloied West. Ten thous and tents are available to the Denver committee for the use of campers, and cau be rented at a cost not to exceed $2 per week; each tent Is large enough to accomodate six persons. A camping equipment of stove and dishes can be taught for $, and lislilng tackle aud hunting outfits cau be rented at rea sonable rates. A SUMMER IN DENVER. But it Is by no means necessary to a pleasant and profitable summer in Colorado that tbe time be spent at these famous resorts. Denver, Itself, with Its cool. Invigorating air and s many attractions, makes an ideal sum mer city. The cable and electric lines, I by their systems of transfers, furnish ride of ten or twelve miles for 1 nickel fare. Elltch's Zoological Gar dens: Manhattan Beach, with its ex cellent summer theaters and Its boat ing; the Montclalr Art Gallery and a score of other points of Interest make the city of Denver a charming summer home. RATES TO DENVER AND TO COLO RADO RESORTS. From all points In the East, railroads will sell tickets to Dencer and return at one fare, plus $2 for membership In the association. These tickets will read, "good returning July 15th or 10th," but If deposited with the Union Ticket Agent In Denver the return cou pons will be extended to any time up to September 1st The rate from Cali fornia and Pacific Coast points to Den ver and return Is $(10. Numerous ex cursions will be given to points of In terest In Colorado and other States among the Rocky Mountains and rates to these places will be very low. The Rio Grande offers trips around the famous circle at $20, which brlnc the tourists to Mancos In the country of Hie Cliff Dwellers, A rate of $20 from Denver to Salt Lake, and return, has been fixed. For $2.25 the Union Pa cific, Denver Sc Gulf lines offers a one day trip to Sliver Plume, over the fa mous "Loop." The rate to Leadville and return, good until September 1st. Is $8; to Grand Junction, at the con fluence of the Green and Grand Rivers, the return rate bas been made $15. The 8anta Fe route will run an excur sion to the Olty of Mexico and return at $40 for the round trip. From July 0th to 20th all tbe railroads will sell tickets to any point In tbe State of Colorado, at one fare for the round trip, limited to September 1st, so tbat teachers and their friends who ma desire to spend their vacation In tba mountains can avail themselves of this opportunity, after tba doee of tba ootv TMtlon. The Interrupted Letter. I HIS Is a short tale of what passes for romance In these latter days. There was a time when every romance was a love-story also, and all ended alike with "and so they were married and lived happily ever after." That time is not now. We no longer know the ending of every story, hardly even when Death causes an In terruption. There was a certain house, not too large for comfort and not too small for generous entertainment, not ornate to ugliness nor plain to severity. A house wuu wide windows, airy rooms, and rouud-the-corner verandas, set on a velvet-green lawn that sloped to a broad avenue, lined on either side with similar well-appointed homes. Out of this house one May morning, when Na ture In shrubs aud ornamental beds and highly trained vines smiled a well- dressed suburban welcome to him, stepped the owner, snug and satisfied with himself and his belongings. He stood on the wide stone steps for a few minutes with his after-breakfast cigar between his fingers, nud enloved all the delicious sensations of elation and dominance that his well-made aud dain tily-served cup of coffee had sent trick ling over his nerves. He was a hand some, well-set-up fellow, who might nave been carefully preserved at 45 or a little gone off at 35, aud the pride that percolated through him stiffened up his back erect, swung his legs out vig orously, and put a good-humored smile on his naturally kind face. His morn ing thoughts were taking account of stock, for this was his wedding anni versary, and the balance on his side was a handsome sum to contemplate. There was professional success to his credit, and he felt a keen Joy at the long list of legal fights In which he stood the victor. The money that had come out of It was very good to have; ho liked to be finely appointed and si lently served; but he was not sordid, after all, and the fever of the battle was his chlefest delight. And then there was the social success he had won, he and his wife, and she certainly came In for a share of the deserts there, for bIic was like all his belongings the best to be had. Yes, Constance was certainly his most paying Investment, and the thought of her lovely presence ran through his meditations like the chorus In the Greek piny not, perhaps, Indispensa ble, but essential to Its perfection. She was a woman of few words, but those were always to the point No nonsense about Constance, either; no poetry and that sort of thing, and so she was a woman to be trusted. Here he gave a linlf-unconsclous smile at the absurdity of nny man he knew being preferred to him. She was a woman of stately dignity, too, and the idea of her conde scending to anything approaching a ntrtation was too Incongruous. He had always allowed his wife the most perfect liberty In her dealings with tbe numerous men who thronged their so cial functions, and she was safe, for all her beauty and fine presence oh, yes, perrectiy sare almost too safe! A lit tle spice of the devil was unquestion ably a great attraction In a woman, but In a wife certainly not, It would never do. Constance's morning letters and notes were In his pocket now to be posted In town, and several of these were ad dressed to men. All social missives of course, that had to do with the en gagements they two made, accented or declined, together or apart, as they ueeiuoti. tine or tnose letters he re membered was pretty bulky for a note, lint Constance was snfo, perfectly so, and mcy understood each other. She wasn t a woman to expect too much, cither. Of course a good deal of the demonstration will wear off In ten years; a man can't be always making love to his wife, and decidedly Con stance wasn't the woman to expect IL These reflections had somehow wan dered on, uninterrupted by the epi sodes of tho ride ou the cars, the meet ing and greeting of many friends going Into town, and they followed him Into his office, where ho opened his mall n:d called In the boy to carry out his otters. As he lf;ld them out on tils desk, he almost without thinking push ed aside the bulky one from his wife's packet, and sent off the rest without It. Ho could not have said why he did It, nd nt Intervals through the morning ii looked at It nnd meant 10 send It, nit somehow he waited. It was ad rcssed ns ninny of their Joint Invlta lons or her own brief com.nunlca- ons were, to "Mr. Roland Van Slt- irt" There was nothing unusual' i about it. Van Slttart was one of their most Intimate friends, though some how he never quite liked the fellow now that he thought of it, and, as he turned It over, he noticed that the flap of the letter had come loose. At last the temptation became too great for him. He took out the letter and read it from beginning to end. Me had never done such a thing before In the ten years of his married life, and he knew perfectly well that It was not the sort of thing gentlemen do. He did It, he assured himself, against his own will and quite without suspi cion of Constance. This Is what he read: "It Is quite useless for you to say more to me upon this sublect You ask the impossible, and with a man's calm oblivion of any view of It but his own. You think that if I were in love with you, as you are with me, happi ness could only be achieved for us by going away to live our lives out togeth er. I am not even sure that this feel ing we bave for each other would bu lasting. My husband bad it at first for me, and It did not last He loves me now as I have loved him In a kind ly way that Is like an intenser friend ship. But even this makes a bond be tween us that you do not understand and that I cannot break. If I hated him, I should go with you, loving you as I do; but I also have love for him, and I could as soon do violence to the tie that binds me to my mother or to a child, If I had one. There Is no pas sion between us, but there are ten years of a kind of affection that you cannot comprehend, a thousand expe riences that have come to us two alone of all the world, and two little graves. That alone would hold me to him, and the memory of his gentleness and con siderate kindness to me even when at last I had to do without his passionate love, would embitter my days with you. If I had found you years ago, it would have been different how different, it breaks my heart to think; but it is too late. You say there are no children, as If that altered the case. But there is a memory of little, clinging hands that unites us more firmly than any marriage vow. If you had found me the woman I was ten years ago, I dare not think of what we might have been aud havo lived, of the happiness we might have known together. But now It can never be, for I am that woman no longer. I am, as every wlfo Is, a part of the man to whom I then joined my future. Marriage is not a thing of words or promises; it Is a re molding of life, and there Is no going back or starting over again. "It Is not as you scornfully say, 'the Fetish of convention' that holds mo true, It Is my own heart and that is what marriage has made It There aro married relations from which I should go unhesitatingly and without sense of guilt, straight to the man I loved, but those relations are not mine. Afy life with him Is not what I hoped or longed for, and that through no fault of mine, but there Is In It not a llttlo of beauty, after all, and much of deep affection aud truth, aud I shall remain faithful to It, God helping me, as far as in me lies. It might be made easier for me, perhaps, by your going away for a time, but your going or staying will not alter it What I am I shall re main. CONSTANCE." The man finished the letter, folded It firmly, aud pasted it shut Then ho rung for the boy and sent blm out with It to post After that he locked the door and sat down with bis head clasp ed tightly between his hands. What had happened to the world to turn It upside down like this? Was he going crazy? He got up and looked In a hanging mirror to see If his hair hnd turned gray. Then be sat down again, and waited for the emotion that seemed bursting his heart to straighten themselves out Anger against them both, friend and wife who bad deceived him, against life that bad lied to blm with a false prosperity, then misgiv ings as to his own course all raged within hlra by turns. But above and within It was one predominating thought as persistent aa pain; that bet ter than all the world he still loved bis wife. What should he do, go home and de nounce the whole thing to her face, kill Van Slttart, or bury the secret Iu his sore heart and try to win back her love? He had taken It for granted for so many years that now perhaps It was too late. He burled bis face In his folded arms upon tbe table and wept His life that had seemed so rich, and full, and prosperous In the morning seemed now so meager and bereft What Indeed, was ha to do? What would rou bars done? Annie E. P. Searing, In San Frandeoo Ar gonaut