TISS ME DOOD-NIGHT.' "Pfi, mamma, pease, S me dood nigbt," My blue-eyed love, with sunny curls. Stood pleading 'tween ber obs and tears, I said, "I can't kiss naughty girl." I led her to her snowy cot. Peae, mamma, pease," she sobbed again, "I won t tie naughty any more." I left her, all her pleading Tain. I had been reared in Spartan school. And deemed it duty to control With rigid rule, nor never knew That love with love should away the soul, I heard her sob, my mother h'-art With yearning tilled, to soul he and cheer. Yet I refrained, and in her sleep My balie still lay sobbing there. 'Twas midnight when I felt a touch A fever'd bund lay on my brow. My white-robed baby pleaded still. "Pease, mamma, pease; 1 can't sleep now." AH through that agonizinj night Delirious she moaned in pain. The "ittle broken heart still begged For kisses that I gave in vain. At dawn the angels hovered near: She nestled close, and smiled and said, "I won't be naughty any more," And in my arms my babe lay dead. And I am old; the passing years Have brought no comfort in their flight My heart still hears that sobbing cry. "Pease, mamma, pease, fisa me dood night." Kate Thyson Marr, in Form, THE PRINCE OF PEACE AT LOGO. The day Logo was born there came with the rush and roar of the boom tide a Baptist missionary preacher ready to open a gospel tent. . A marked feature in the opcnijjg of nearly all the boom towns of Okhinoma was the presence of the missionaries of the Roman and Evangelical l'rotestant churches, contesting with the gamblers, dancehouse men and others of that ilk for land on which to erect buildings. At Guthrie the "Dodge City gang,' which was aiming to establish quarters in vari ous parts of the town, attempted to drive out of a choice corner a preacher of the Methodist persuasion who bad g it there first. The preacher was a fight, us par son, but there is no doubt that he would have been either moved or removed but for the fact that a number of men who were not much on piety an their usual gait, came to the help of the Lrd against the mighty. On a count of grins the Dodge City gang concluded it would be policy to withdraw. If they had reached a different conclusion the history of Guth rie would be bloodier that) it is. - The Logo parson was called Brother John, and the strangest part of it was that no one knew him by any other name. Even the appearance of the name of John Wentworfh at the bottom of his church notices appearing regularly every week in the Logo Bloomer could not rid the community of its fixed habit Brother John he had been known, from the begin ning and Brother John he was and is lo remain until the end, which, I hope, is yet far off. Brother John was a man of good works. He was at constant war with the worid, th flesh and the devil. He knew that the only way for him to reach the hearts of the men with whom he hail to deal was to preach Christ and him crucified. For it is a true now as it was during all the long and dark night of the middle age that the men of the most desperate valor the most warlike instinct She most bloody-minded men. if yon will, are. those whose eyes turn most longingly to Calvary; who adore most, that sublime self-sacrifice, abnegation and humility of which they know themselves to be incapa ble; who aspire most to that meekness so foreign to their natures. The weak man sneers at the cross; the strong man never. So when Brother John preached the cross in Ligo he struck the popular chord. The people heard him gladly. Sometimes ;!T night, when he heard the shots in the street, followed by the rush of feet find the excited exclamations, which to'ii fht some new tragedy bad been added to the history of the tow n, he would rise from his bed and remn!n in prayer f ,r hour, and often until, with the early da.vn. someone would tap at his humble dour to ask him to come around and officiate at the funeral. As Christmas drew near a new inspira tion and ft new resolution came to Brother John, He had been talking in the ab stract. He would be concrete. He had been telling, these men of the Christ life nd urging thetn to I've as near to it as possible. But he had not been practical in hi methods. He had set before them an example impossible of full and com plete attainments, but he had neglected to proTide means enabling them to attain , to it, even in part, in any practical and comprehensive way. He would urge them to make a supreme effort. He would admonish them, as the birthday of Christ drew near, to make a sublime attempt to overcome the weaknesses of the flesh. Brother John had a pretty good idea of what the old-fashioned Christmas season In Logo would be like. He knew these men, or their kind, of' old. He knew that what are called the holidays in other parts of the world would be the busiest season of the year for the doctor Md the undertaker at Logo. And his heart yearned to make a new dispensa tion and a new departure. Christinas fell on a Sunday that year. So la the istue or the Logo Boomer the aext but one preceding the day Brother John iueerted this notice: "A the First Baptist Church the pas ter will preach from the test: "I am the ay, the truth and the life,' being practi cal aarrfee a to how, the birthday of (MM aaoald he speat. The pastor haa a plan to propose for giving Logo a boos. Clan one, come all. "JOHN WBNTWORTH." Toahaot" Sawyer, the greatest boon tZJm the ftonthwe haa ever seen or OTJrtl aae. tare thia aotiee a proaiaeat r-st la of colama and Mst to read ,i . w. That vaa tfc ataaa ha alwaa saying, fro aa Barter, Jaam Wmt atJUI ft JIM tUi (M ai Bad Lkjktt 1 sww iaaao girt from th Orlaa 'T rMl wfai it far lint drinks of all kinds. Everything hot, red hot. "The 'f tars everything hot fists; at the Oriental everything goes, The heart of Brother John sank within him. iln could he bring the spirit of Christ into any community afflicted as this'; If Christ was to 1 made manifest I j was not the devil equally manifest in this proclamation ot me ueo igat: tiut lie ; was the stuff men are made of, and the J more convinced he became that it was the devil himself who urn challenging hiui to J a struggle for the tidd, the Wore deter- I inmen ne grew to win me ngnr. ms saints in all this wicked w orld shall con- uuer ere they die," was the refrain that rang through his mind as he metaphor ically buckled on his armor ami went out to do battle in the name of the Lord of Hosts. He would have a week's start. That was a irreat tbin. 1 he sermon he had prepared for the Sunday before Christmas would be at least four or live days ahead j of the new dance girls aud the hot drunks aud all the other hot stuff promised by the Bed Light. The seed he would sow would not fall upon stony ground. He would have the tirst deal in this game of cards with the I'riniv of Darkac, and Brother John flattered himself that he had not entirety lost the skill aud dex terity in dealing which had characterized his play in the Gunniaon country lefore he saw the error of his ways. He was not disappointed in the site of his audi ence. It was the largest ever assembled in the small frame building he had erect ed on the corner lot he had held at the muzzle of a Winchester for twenty-four hours after the opening. The building was not only filled to overflowing, but it being a mild day, all the windows were filled with eager and expectant listeners. The morning stages had brought visit ors in from all the boom towns along the trail. They were there from Lido, Mar low and Heno, from Hennessey and I'ond Creek; from every town which in that early day of Oklahoma history regarded Ljgo as 3 rival in the race to determine the location of the future metrojtolis. "Come here to take notes on the boom sermon." whispered Thompson Travis to Otis Kldridge, pointing to Colonel Miles, of Lido and "I'ony" Sanders of Heno, who had come early aud taken front seats. ' rears ter me taint jist the right sort o' play to advertise your boom pointers ten days ahead." The reader of this narrative is already advised of what the "boom pointer" in the sermon was. Brother John, in his game with the devil, had played a card ! out of 1 leeve in advertising a 1kkiu sermon. played for a crowd, and he had won the fir,t point in the game. And the crowd inspired hint. He threw him self into bis work with an eloquence, a force and a vigor, an earnestness, an ap pealing enthusiasm which moved bis au dience at his will. He dwell upoD his hope? and fears for the Christmastide. He told of how he dreaded most the Haul ing out of the men of wrath; how he feared strife, contention, murder find nil nncharitalilenens, and bow he had held the image of Christ before them, hoping that they would worship it not only in the spirit, but in the ilesb. "Oh, for a week of Christ-life in Ixgo," he cried, spreading his arms above his Hock. "Oh, for only a day of that life. We might stumble, we might fall, but if we rose again and pressed onward we would be doing his holy will. He who seeks shall surely find, though he may be long In the search. How many here want to be like Christ T Kvery band in the audience went up. "How many will try to be like him'" Every hand went up again. "Then every man here will sign this contract, to run for the rest of Uiis year," said Brother John, as he took a paper imt of bis pocket aud read: "We, the undersigned, this 1SU day of December, IS'j'i, agree for the rest of this year "Not to drink. "N.-vt to fight "Not to kill. "Not to rile anybody. "Not. to bear firearms. "To be patient and meek. 'To bear insult and injury. "To tnra the otlc:r cheek if struck." "I move to strike out the first clause in that contract," said Duple Dodge. "if that goes I fear ail the rest will follow it." said Brother John, sorro-w-fuliy. "Not necessary," said Ihiplee. "We've got rid of all the skunks around here, and the men of I Ago are good for their word, drunk or sober." Bo the pledge against drinking was stricken out. All the others stood, with the distinct understanding (bat every man living in Logo must sign the compact When the paper had been circulated through the audience and was returned to Brother John he found that not a man in the town had been missed. "Where does the boom come in on this thing?" asked Thompson Travis, some what uneasily. "The boom will come," said the preach er, triumphantly surveying the list "when we prove to the world that we are capable of doing this thing." But while the preacher bad been bnay nd so far successful his arch enemy the devil had not been idle. It was he who put it into the minds of the boomers from Lido, Keno and Marlow to appear at the meeting. And it was certainly his evil influence which suggested to them tht the success of the scheme meant the suc cess of Logo in the metropolitan race. His nejrt suggestion, naturally, was the advisability of disseminating the informa tion up and down the trail that Logo was going unarmed; that she had to the last man swore off from fighting for two weeks; that her fighting men bad agreed to take insults and tarn the other cheek when strnck. "We una must stay together," said Col onel Miles at a whispered caucus of the rlaiting boomers held in the stage office. "Bnt what the hell can wo do to break it np? I know none o' my f el (era will come here to raise a row when they hear thia whole town' under a pledge not to "OR np your rapscallion," aaid "Pony" Bandar, meaning in the language of that eoaatry, the men who browbeat the Inof faaaliw aad defenieleaa, who take advan tage of every opportunity to' bluff and wh are ambition to cat a notch on their gun handles whenever the thing can b4oa without the leaat danger to thatn- Tkt daril firat appaared to Logo la aW a am M 2 'dock 4a th aftanMO af tk TMadar foUowlag the atmI. rata na f ram the old Fort Rapaiy trail atawart Lit. Is tfca awM there waa aa ooemaloaal rad giaaa aad g kd Mam BfM with a yafl which strwk upon tuany an ear in Loen with a iuot familiar sound. Soon t!ie horse and nd.-r ame into clearer view and then Thnuip-a. Travis H.iuted bis Diiuer down tlx- trad and said: "Thar coin I.ura Viiy. hark agin." "Iaujn me if tm't. growled Otis Kl dridge,, Wha:'ll we do to him"?" ""What kin we do? We're under oath, and that vanniut knows ii." Lugo shook with indignation ar the re turn of Lutii Pa Igett. Three nioutiis be fore he had been run out of town for quarrelsomeness, cowardice. bluffing. i cheating and genera! eussedness and i wan.i-d u-t t come bark. Sim- then be I had been driven oi.t of a doseu tow ns, but bad finally settled down iu Lido on parole that is, with the understanding that in esse of any misunderstanding be might get into he was to be presumed guilty until proven inmeent Lmu fired a half doien shots as he reach.il the Bed Light, where he threw his cay use hack on the haumhes and took a l.Hk at the crowd, which by this time hail assembled. "Why. you coyote," he yelled, rising in his strtp. "Did sich rapscallion as you mis think you could skeer Lu;n i augcii : n uy. don i you Know me; i m the cyclone of the plains, tne blizzard of the north, the ui k cantankerousest, most contraries!, niot iudependentest cu you ever seen. I kin w hup my weight in w ild cats, list light or gun play, I don't kecr which. "Is they a man beer?" he asked, as he resumed his saddle, "as wants to take me up? I ni kou not. You all know me, and you know I'm a man as won't, be fooled with. The best men among yoii haj licked my boots in fear and tremblin. Otis Eldridge is one of 'em; Thompson Travis is another; Syl Carney is another, and Dupe Dodge got down on his knees once and begged me not to kill 'im. Tbey collogued together agin me at last an' drove me out o' here, but I've bin layin' off to come back, and here I am. Whoopee!" And he fired another salute of six ronnds, A council was immediately held by the four men who had been named by Padgett. They met in the upstairs room of "Old '"!," the general headquar ters of the vigilance committee. Kvery man was white to the lips. "I guess we're in fer it," groaned Thompson Travis, "but we'll have to pull our freight. We can't stay iu this coun try if we take it" Just then Frank head up through shouted: "The Arkansaw I'ieper pushed his the tradMr and traveler's comin' hackr The council rushed to the window opening to the street, and there ssw that the crowd had left the Itod Light and moved down the block to a point iu front of Old 'ill, where a long-haired and Inn-tern-jawed individual, astride of a spav ined steed, was evidently haranguing them. "I've come hack to stay as long as I ff-el like it." floated up to the windows as the council opened. "I wuz druv out o' heer by a hundred men ou one, an' they ain't none o' them men now as'll dure to face me in battle. I don't wsnt to brag on myself, but. where I'm the best known, in Arkansas, they tnmble at my ! "I will." said Thompson, as he turned name. I've come back here for revenge, ' W left cheek to the bully and drew a and I hereby give ten days' notice to Otis bowie knife from the pocket of his Hun Kldridge, Frank I'ieper, lien Bruce, Syt j day coat. "Now strike it." Carney, Duplee Dodge and Thompson i "That's agin yer pledge." said Hairtrig Travis to go armed, for at the e:id ' that I ger, white as a sheet, as he pointed to the time I'll begin to shoot They're a lot weasui. o' ornery cowardly sneaks, an' I'll get "'Taiu't firearms," was all the answer even with 'em, if I have to camp on Travis made to the protest. "But why their trail till the judgment day." don't you hit tother cheek''' The ''Arkansaw traveler" had dis- "Yer might kill me," said Hairtrigger, mounted and was about to go into the "an" that'd shore he a hreakiu' o' your "Old '7(1" for refreshments, when another J pledge. I won't tempt no man to go back volley was heard OB the outskirts of town, on hi vows." and a moment later another horseman ! ".Mtn h obleeged," growled Thompson as emerged from another cloud of dust, with I he moved away. a salvo of yells and artillery. That incident aroueed Hainrigger lira- "Hairl rigger Brady," said Svl Carney. ' necessity of doing something "I saved his life in Deadwood once when 'h-lrale. His desperation took the the crowd was going to hang him for ; shape of shooting a tuuday sojourner in Khootin' a woman in a dancehouse. He s i ,ht toa 8 S- Unis drummer,' stopping the ornriest, dirtiest ctir this side o" hell." at the Southwestern Hotel. -Getitlemen." said the stranger, as he 'J " ,'Kii'"'' csmmiuee ordered the stood up in his stirntps. "I'm glad to see nirxhal to rintf the lire hell fer a pub thin welcome to a perfect stranger in vour I H1' '''-' Thompson Travis was or midst. I was e,v'ctin' it and it kinder j ''r ,0 l,r""-' brother John before the overpowers me like. I ve heenj o Iogo ever sence this country opened, an' I've! come to see fer myself what you've got here. They's only one trouble 'lout me, I'm too easy riled, and that's how I've come to be called 'Hainrigger' Brady wherever I'm known. I've got too many notches on my stick, an' no man knows it beter'u I do, but I can't help it when I'm riled. So, gentlemen, don't rile me an' we'll get along all right together." "D' you know the pledge this town's tuk?" asked .Martin Davis. "Oh, heavens," said Hainrigger Brady, throwing up hi hands. "You don't mean to fell me Logo' gone dry and quit drink in r "No," said Martin, "but every man in town's swore off fightin' an' rilin' one another." "Jist the place I bin lookin' fer fer yeers and yeers," said "Hairtrigger, as he dismounted. "Ood must 'a showed me the way heer, gentlemen. It's a place o' rest, sweet rest, fer a man of ungovern able temper, who can't sleep o' nighta fer thinkin' o' the widows an' orphans an' broken-hearted mothers and sisters an' sweet hearts he's made In hi anger." About sundown of that day it waa an nounced that the Holy Terror had come into town on the fteno eooeb. Thompson Travis, Blufe Reno, Allen Down, Ben Bruce and Kyi Carney were in the '76 when Otia Kldridge threw open the door and announced: "Here come the Holy Terror back agin." ..... . The populace of Logo was by thi time thoroughly alive to the situation and acted as a committee of escort for each distin guished arrival, who might be expected, under the new order of thing, to visit nomination and disgrace upon the well known and recognlied fighting men of the community. Ho a the Holy Terror turn ed into Main street the crowd came with nim tod it aPtomJly ch-rld M ht mounts a dry good box hi front of the Rad Light "Gentlemen." said the Holy Terror, "it fill my heart with pride and Joy to git etch a reception aa thia when I mm back U Logo, 1 told them coyote that tied me to the mule that night that I'd coma back an' drink by myself an' nose of 'em would dare aay a word. I drink by myeelf wbea I feel like It, and if aay maa here don't like It he know what he kia do. Yoa knew met I'm the Holy Terre. $ I ain't called the Holy Terror far aataiag ', I've buried my dead la retry ftcata aad territory waat of the Mlaaiaaiavi river, and to-atgat the owl croak akwre aha grave of taa laet maa that riled ft ' ; "How," ha eaUaaaa, aaw jiaat J a anee on his audience, "I want this crowd to go with me ti the 'TH saloon. 1 will go inside an' tall fer a drink by mjself. That crowd of coyoles'i! ! there, an' if they've got the grit to ha k up what ihey said ttiet'H kill me f. r cctuiii' hack here an" vioiatui' what flu-. the Social code u' this town. I ii, . y Lave to die, but if 1 do. gentlemen, I'll !ietmeaiid luM with htiilet holes. If not. an' they tiike my dare. I'll whiniie u' the rowd'il take drinks or me." And that is bow and why Otis Kldridge threw open the dint of "Old 'jii." where the "coyotes were aiciiibled with the announcement: "Here comes the Holy Terror ba k agin." A moment later the Holy Terror came through the d'xir outside of which the rod stood in client exje-luiic. He gazed defiantly, noting particularly, as could lie seen by the inuveuieut of his eyes, the fact that iione of the group liore side arms. Then he struck a tragic air. "Cowards," be hissed. "Lveu thus am I reienged. When you used the brute force of number to drive me from this town I said nothing, hut resolved to re turn some day. at all hazards, aud to do as I pica. It may he a law in this town that no ii m u sluttl drink by himself, hut no law wss ever made than can run me, an' that's why Via called the Holy Ter ror." ' Walking up to the bar. he called for glass and bottle, and when these wi re set out proiTedid to till the glass to the brim. It was the most direct and insulting chal lenge the committee had yet received and Thompson Travis, w ho was himself easily riled, w as for a renunciation of all Chris tian life on the spot. He pointed toward the Holy Terror and urged that he be again deported. "What yer promised to do if I rune back," said the Terror, "was to kill me. I dare ye to do it. I'll fight any one o' yon or all o' you together." He drained bis glass and whistled and instantly the crowd iourcd in. To he thus humiliated Iwforc the public eye was add ing injury to insult, and the committee went upstairs, w hile the Holy Terror en tertained the crowd. After this things went from bad to worse. The "rapscal lions" continued to pour in. All the Fal staffs of the plains were inquiring the way to Ligo. "Three-Hall Charlie," "Dead Shot Dick." "The Alligator" and "The Fox" and a virtual reign of terror were all on hand liofore Christmas day came. That day brought the climax. "Hair trigger" Hrady bud slap-d Thompson Travis on one cheek and demanded that be turn the other. It was just after the Christmas sermon, preached by llrother John, in which lie bad thanked Cod for a week which had tried so sorely, without weakeuing, the patience, the honor and faith of the men of Lgo. "TLe victory would lie less." he said, "if it had been less dearly lought. Only through overcoming temptation can we be made free from sm. Brethren, again I adjure you. turn the other cheek." "Turn the tother one this way," said Hairtriggir Brndy in front of the Ked Light, alter he bad left the marks of his fingers on the right check of Thompson Travis. "I'raefice what yer preacher ; preaches." ' o" "- w-wkt appeared one member of the vigiisuce committee after another demanded the abrogation i of the cimiiaet. "Lven the city marshal." said Otis El d ridge, "is gon" around w ithout a gun an' takin' insults from varmints. We wants a stop put to it." 1 "The town is swannin' with rapscal lions," said Duplee Dodge. "An' every man in this town is under bond not to ' hurt 'em." j "Tbat'a a mistake," said Brother John. ' "There's one man here didn't sign the ; pledge." ' "Who Is he'" asked a doien voices. "I'm the man." said the preacher. "None of yon thought it necessary, and I hd thi very contingency in view when 1 kept my name off the list. I've brought along the gun 1 used to carry at lomb- j stone aud in the Gunnison and now I'm going to drive the rapxillious out of town." "We'll go with you," volunteered Syl Carney, Ben Bruce, Thompson Travi and a dosen others. "No, no. You're all under pledge and I'm not. All of" yon stay where you are and see the procession go by." Ten minute later there came the noise of a aerie of shots to the crowd in wait in- "He' found 'em," aid Byl Carney. "He' rounding 'em op for the trail," aid Ben Bruce. In another five minute the Holy Ter ror came Into view belaboring a mule, which was doing ita very beet nnder the preaeure. Cloae behind were "Hairtrigger" Brady, "Dead-Shot Dick." "The i'oi," "The Alligator," aad, bringing up the rear, "Lum" Padgett, the cyclone of the plain and the billiard of the north. Close behind thi panting and terror stricken cavalcade came the parson, mounted on Moea Thompson' mole, and firing freeh volley at every Jump. He (topped in front of the meeting house and raised hie hand for aUenee. "Meeting to night at early candle-light,' ha aaid. "k waa a powerful meetio'," Jed Wltb row aaid, in daaciiblag It Brother Jeha Poored oat hie soul. He teld hew the etreaf man Uvea in the fear af the Lord aaa by Ood' mercy. Be deeerfbed hew "the eeward and bad mea" had ftad at the tret abet aad then be prayed, aad thadaeeef thelavocatiea waa: "Oa earth feed wfll reward BMa." . , .. i a eeere af veieea. aad area aa, with three i -aaajr aud fheat m aiiiclag Wltam aTaejwadjaa ANSWERS MADE TO OBJECTIONS M US. M A Ul'H A Ht'SIINKI.L Cdli iie. a u eu.l cr i f the Col ora io State Legls'atuie. ha J I answers to three of the ede piiMislie jcti!iis timt f reijueiiily heard to wom an suffrage. 1 he answers ars a fol low : Nu. 1 "Men w ould lose their n (ct for women. A woman running for otlii e would he liable to iisnault upon her char cter, and a campaign wo'lid nci eritate Uer coming into contact wha d:s:ig cable and degrading coudiiiotis." Aiocwer. My ;iwu observation and exi ri. !ic-e do not iu the bast snstaiu this lAijeciinn. The men with whom we came iu nuiaci treat ed us iu previsi ly the same manner which prevails when men mid women meet in society, in church or elsewheie. 'I'iiere were the tames of thirty-three women ruiididatcs on the ballot of our nsl elec tion, hut not one word derogatory to the Jiguity of oil) .ne of those women ap peared, so far as I know, in any news paper iu the State. t "dejection No. "Woman would lose her love for domestic avm atiotis, her chil dren would he neglected, and home would he no longer attractive to parents and children." Answer: A true woman's home is to her the tirst consideration on arth. Very little else should be required if the mother of young children than their proper care and training. But the mother uf young children is by no means the only "on in n. Not one of the women elected in Colorado this year baa young children, and these women will probably enjoy as much of the society of their families as is usual in the average home where the avo-i-atiotisnf ihe different members separate them through the day. Objection No. 3 "Women of immoral "haractcr would lie particularly active in politics, nnd women who are now self-re-ipi-eting would lie contaminated hy poli tics and Income as corrupt as the 'gang' element among the men." Answer: The women of tliis class in Denver declined to register, but were nmM lleil to do so. 1ko to vote, by the "gang." Their action hows that if left to themselves thev would take no part In the election. The limn! cultured, most intelligent women of the State are the ones most deeply inter ested and most active in jsilitics. C'.ood Teeth and Hcinty. Voltaire nice w rote a couplet to the effect thill there never was an tig'v woman with ti good set of teeth nor a pretty woman with a Imd set. It is a fact that nothing adds a greater chitrm to an otherwise plain face than nice, even while tceih. It Is a moilier's duty as soon us her children first teetii show eigns of decay or coining out to lake them to a dentist nnd have their teeth iiMeiidcd to. in tin.st cases lr-1 regularities can he put right when the second lei'tli begin to make their ap pearance which it-Is (Jilfh-ult and pain ful to do when the teeth are more iirni- ly fixed in the jaw. r.anj decay i tin? teeth is a sign of delicacy and an unhealthy state of ihe stomach, which may not iiiifniiucntly he alleviated hy proper medical atten tion. Among the many cati-.es of injury to the teeth we may mention the taking of very hot food and drinks, strong acids are also very Injurious, is said to be had for the tceih. Sugar , This is true ir It Is taken In ton large mntl ties, ti8 the excessive use o sugar is , apt to disorder the stomach and en-: gender an acid which Is very injurious j lo the enamel. A good Mound set oft teetii are indispensable to healili, and tnose uiki value gYiod digestion fth't consequently good health should he careful to have their decayed teeth stopped or extracted and to have ab- aetit teeth replaced hy false ones, as nothing tends to age one so much as the loss of teeth. nirs, jnsirp'i I c la Mar, Mrs. Joseph De la Marin the most ad mired American woman in Parte. The renchmcn simply rave over her. Mr. De la Mar la now T2 years old, has a profusion of fair hair, regular features aud a perfect complexion. Iu direct contrast to the furor her beauty has created Iu J'arla was the colduee with which ahe waa received in NewKiri. She. with ber bus hand, occupied the King cottage, on Bellevue avenue, dur ing the summer of 1KU5, and was not received in the beat aoelety. The nu n aaid that Mm. De la Mar wa too pretty to be tolerated by the women. Captain De la Mar, who la the owner of Color ado mine, ia aaid to have a prodigious Income, and haa lieen apoken of aa the modern Monte Crleto. Physical Kacrclea for Uirle. While many people are naturallr graceful, as otbera are try nature awk ! ward, there are few that will not be come more aupple, etronger, healthier and therefore better able to realat dla- aaat by Judicious physical training. The chief difficulty la lo maklne- a heiB. nine. "What la tha tmat form r .... elaer la a qjeatiea fraqueotly aaked. Ajt4 there can ba bat otat raply, '-flncb eiareiaa aa wSU aaratop alike all por- I asH? tions of the t ody." To attempt to train a girl's miixl hy forcing her ti follow j a Mingle line of study, as I-'i!lu or matU I i ioatics, for el.i.ol le, w ould be no ; greater folly tliaa to try to develop her i physically hy the practice of a single ! form of exerciw, as walking or awlng ; lug Indian clubs. For one who haa never taken exercise systematically, the gymnasium U the best place to make a Iteginning. At all t tinea keep the head erect ami the shoulder thrown hack, filling the lungs n fully e po" hie at each briath; make a pnc- I th e of doing so, and before long th chest will U-ln to expand, the lungs will demand more air, and with the j Wood lienor oxygenated, the eye will row ur:'iier, uiti cuecas uiure luuuy and the brain clearer. David Sum mers. Able Woman Lawier, Mi Caroline B. Hendricks haa the distinction of lsdng the first woman lawyer In Indiana to plead a case In oral argument liefore the Supreme Court. Misg Heudricka Is young In the profes sion. She Is Hoosier born, aud with the exception of a few months ulie ha passed her entire life In ludlanapolla. She has also received her education In the acbisds of the city, excel one year at boarding-school in New Haven. She is possessed of an analytical mind and always Intended to Ik- a lawyer so that he grasps! the first opportunity when the Indiana law Hchool wna opened, and from It ahe graduated List June. Mis Hendricks has a hereditary powivssioii of law. Her father was A. W. Hendricks, of the d!- j titigtilwhed firm of Hendricks, Baker, Hor.l & Ileiulcks, the tirst tiiemtx-r lie- itig Thomas A. Hendricks, once (iover uor or Indiana and Vice rresbh-tit of the Ctiitcd States. Miss Hendrlcka' father left a tine library, in which nht has always reveled. She i thorough i ami painstaking iu her work. The in diaiiaiMiIis Journal of the day following: the cn.se hud this to say alKitit .Miss Hen dricks: ''She KMike for nearly half an hour, quoting auUioriiy both from mem ory and from reference like au old at torney. Hit manner Is eartntrt and hiisiuenslike, free from all oratorical H!,'bt and flowery cxpn-hsintm. Her argument was clear and concise, nnd would have 'done credit to any lawyer." ''V:n-g n I omi-ntutioo. When a foiticntatioti in prescribed hy n physic dan. or when It slmll tlll1l, lit e the tirotier thing In the emoro,...,. ,.t evtn.fini tnlorroil ixiiio !...,.. .c . i " i ". b iwuaei ciom may he folded, wruiig out of hoi wtter ami nppiui directly to the skin. Nev ertheless, it is better after wringing out the Hanm 1 as dry as desired to fold it In n dry flannel cloth of one or two tlilcknmse before applying, it to the patient. A little time Is required for the heal of the foinentatloti lo tiejp1- trate the dry flannel, and thiw the jkiii Ls allowed on opportunity to nciju'rn tolerance of the heal, and tt greater de gree of temperature cat) he liortie than If the moist cloth U brought directly Iu contact with the surface. The outer fold of dry flannel will also serve to keep the cloth warm hy preventinjt evaporation. Fomentation thoroughly applied will relieve most of the local pains for which liniments. lotions and poultices are generally applied, nod an; greatly to he preferred to !h.vi. reme dies, since they arc cleaner n.M aid nature more effctnally ItrrextorSii the part to a annul condition. Keeping Awor the Moth. A Chicago upholsterer give thia ad vice to the public: "i'pbobitered furni ture mu lie kept free from moths by taking It outside about once a mouth and beating tt tlwrwuchly with Wrirw of ticking HlHiut an inch wide attached to a piece of broom handle. Khotild one hit the wood hard with thia It, will not war It, while the regular rattan and wire latent nmr more parlor frame, ruin more covers and brink up more Iu! aide tilling than a down children could do. The maiu reason wc have moths I we arc alwaye going to beat out our up. holatered furniture, but rarely ' get around to it. Clothing, Including fun to be stored in the wardrolie during Nttmnier can be kept entirely exempt from attack If pnt Into new Hour aacka, linen aacka, or anything of that nature and tightly tied ao that a moth cannot enter at the mouth. Chest nerve tha aame purpoae when tight enough to prevent the motha from entering." Coastant in Una Tbnr. Fair woman taints away no more Nor essay the pathetic; . Hbe not the ahrinking thing of yore-- Hhe goee In for athletic. . A full, free etrld that' aliuoat bold - Hnceeeda tha high-heel wriggle Bnt la one way ibe'a a of old ' She haa (be aame old giggle. Lord Kelvin, a noted authority, re jorta taa riewa of Ball, Langley, at al. and declarea that the earth la ooa htaav tfrad mUlloo year eld. i'AUoLINK H. HEN' f KICKS. I : 5"" i