LADIES' COLUMN. UNAPPRECIATED. (By Lucy Sherman Mitchell.) , who to please a woman striveth much, Doth seem to price the least her who for him Hath sacrificed the most. A servant, w. such As he might hire for gold one strong of limb To wash and scrub, and cook a tooth some meal At small expense would serve his purpose well As doth the faithful wife whose woe or weal He scarce considers. She in error fell Through strong desire to make his bur- den light. And take her share In what he count ed til. Had she Instead claimed homage as her right. Or, like a child accustomed to Its will Ruled strength by weakness, she had been a queen. And he her willing subject for all time. But even Interchange Is seldom seen,- And strange perversity calls love sub lime What so exists; and women worthier far Of worship, holding place aa high above . As o'er the earth Is yonder shining star. Stooo not to learn by art to win man's love. The dolt, the fashion-plate, the but terfiy, The wily flatterer, the vine ' that clings. Do so confuse his brain, he looks not high Enough to see those borne aloft an wings. , MILLINERY. The woman wno cannot find a hat to suit her style, this season, must be constructed on a most peculiar plan, for never before were the millinery shops so rich in variety. The newest bats look to be much heavier than they really are. This Is lue to the arrangement of the trim ming, for, as a rule, small foundations -are used the turban and toques, and hats of the flat walking order being fa vorites. But among these may ' be found many Dlrectolre hats, heavily trimmed with ostrich plumes, which etart from the center front and fall back on either side, and these are al most the only new hats showing os trich plumes. Most of the new hats may be worn over or off the face, accoidlng to the fancy of the wearer, but the Dlrectolre is always set well back. Many of the new hats for young faces are becoming -when tilted Jauntily toward one side. The amtetials used for trimming pre vent as great a variety as may be found in studying hat-frames, but -velvet leads, and black Is the popular color. Taffeta, corded, stitched, shirred and tucked, ranks next. It is used to over crowns, as a draping for bri.ns, or to form graceful, undulating folds In different forms. A favorite scheme seen In many of the better-class types ja to take the several shades of one olor In their natural gradations, plait them softly, and dispose around the fcase of the crown. A striking favorite is a rather tall- ! frowned velvet hat In which the ma terial Is laid in rather cloe folds, sur rounded by an lrnmenw bow of taffeta piece silk. In some stores these bows may be obtained already made up, and: are a great help to the home milliner. There Is very little demand for fancy "feathers, and It is predicted that, for the spring trade, they will disappear entirely In favor of mallnes, mousse lines and chiffons. Even at this season if the year these materials are popular for trimming. They are made Into im itation plumes, rolls or wreaths, and .are combined with velvet, furs and other materials in endless confusion. Strings are ir.ore generally worn than they have been In a long time, and are of tulle, sable, velvet or ribbon, as best suits the hat They must either be very broad or extremely narrow me .jdlura widths being entirely forbidden. J i THINGS WORTH KNOWING. Salt thrown on soot which has fallen an the carpet will prevent stain. To curl feathers easily, dampen lightly and place them in curling pins 4 such as one uses for curling hair); allow them to remain two or three days, then separate them out carefully. The feathers will not be so much In jured as when curled with a knlft, dons ver so carefully. If knives or other steel articles are to be stored, smear them well with mutton fat, wrap In tissue paper, then 'In heavy wrapping paper, and lastly in Hud. Aluminum Is so generally used for toilet articles, ornaments and household artesurti that a wash that will restore It white color will be appreciated. Dis solve thirty grams of boras in one liter 0t water, add Ave or six drops of am xtjonia aod It will come out as beautiful FAVORITE RECIPES. Cake. One cupful of sugar, one en, two-tfctrdo capful of tweet milk, one tablsspnnnfnl of butter, two teaspoon fats of cream of tartar, one ttaspoonful 4l goda, sad one and one-half cupfuls f Sour. Thla recipe la good for a layer Olagor Snap. One cupful of molaav flaa. as. mpful of sugar, one tabte- i until ef glasTer, six tsblespeoufuls erf mm ttslsnwi iifwls of water. lit'tMMwfMsa of mas of tar tar. ' wlt -sMtt AH. COLLtai Q1RL UVII SHAKES. Betoian With Cardan Snake and than Got tho Larger Varieties. Miss Caroline Morse is looked upon with awe by her fellow freshmen of Wellesley college, because she loves snakes and makes pets of them. She Is the daughter of Prof. Morse of Amherst college and Is 1 years old. Only In respect of her fondness for reptiles does she differ from the popular Ideal of what a sweet girl undergrad uate ought to be. Miss Morse dates her remarkable fad back to the age of 10, when she caught and tamed her first blacksnake. A fearless lover of nature, she felt no re pulsion for It, because she knew that the species was not poisonous. It de lighted her to see it drink the milk she would place for it In a saucer. Her love of snakes overmastered hei one day when she was out bicycling soon after her admission to Wellesley last fall. Espying a large garter snake she dismounted and caught It by the tail. Remounting- and steering the wheel with one hand, she rode for her boarding place; all whom she encoun tered along the road gave her a wide berth. , This was the beginning of her collegt menagerie. .Soon afterward she caughl a second fine garter snake, which so perfectly matched the first one that she called them the big twins. The next addition to the family was a little green snake, which she captured one day while roaming the woods with a pack of children at her heels. The youngsters fled In panic, and Miss Morse has not since been harassed by small admirers while hunting snakes. She housed her pets In a glass Jar covered with wire netting. Sometimes they would escape id hide under the carpet or climb plet . of furniture. The areen snake one nU.it took refuge In Its mistress' bed. A blacksnake, which was the next tc be domesticated, rut out all the otherr in Miss Morse's affections. She enter tains a high opinion of the Intelligence of blacksnakes. This one was only s baby, but he proved a constant sourc of delight up to the time of his dis appearance. . "1 hunted and hunted." said Mini Morse, In telling of the tragedy. "Then I found that one of the big twins had broken from his box. He was In th closet, and so big and distended that I knew poor blackie's fate. He had gont to sustain his brethren." WOMEN IN CENSUS OFFICE. The Director of the Census Wants Women Clerks. (By Elnora Monroe Babcock.) Some time ago it was announced that women were to be gradually eliminated ' from the governmental departments at Washington. Every reason but the tru one, which is that women have nc votes, was given aa an excuse for suet a course. In contract with this actlor of the various heads of departemnts lr Washington It is refreshing to find one man who overrides political bosses and Insists upon employing those best fitted for the work, Irrespective of sex. Th following announcement comes from Washington: General W. R. Merrlam, director ol the census, refuses to accept any more men as clerks. He wants women. He has addressed a letter to ea'-h member of congress and Informed him that hereafter he will not admit the exam ination of men for positions. On July 1 he will employ from 1.500 to 1.800 , women. i Against this there has been a decided t protest. Republicans and democrats alike have political favors to repay,' and women vote only in a few states. Already there have been charges that men have been found deficient In ex aminations, yihlle women have nearly always passed. Director Merrlam will have the employment of nearly S.00B persons, and Insists upon appointing women to nine-tenths of the places. Senators receive fifteen appointment! each, representatives six, and members with a "pull" as many as they like. Few senators or representstlves have filled their quotas, and unless appoint ments are made before the examina tions In April, Director Merrlam him self will make the selections from th civil service eligible lists. At the recent municipal elections In Ohio the women turned out In large numbers to vote for members of the board of education. Over 1.000 women voted In Cleveland, Mrs. Taylor, the only woman candidate In that city for the school board, receiving 21.21 vote. The highest rote received by any msn running on her ticket was 17,220. A woman was also elected at Ravenna and several other places. Six hundred women voted In Toungstown and 1,500 voted hi Canton. Over 1,000 women attended the re publican primaries In Cleveland for the purpose of securing the nomination of good candidates. The movement was not confined to any one party, demo crats, republicans and noo partisans all making an excellent showing. All SB-reed on one vital point, that the schools must be divorced from politics. Methodist leaders, those who are In the midst of affairs, declare there Is not th slightest probability of any thins; whatever being done this year toward union between Methodist north and south. Neither side want union; th south, because many of the old leader are still In control and have the old prejudices, and the north, because they say that as a body the general conference la too big now. A working basts of ministerial exebangr and of church comity la respective Held sn arrived at four year ago. It may be further perfected at thla tljaa, FARM NEWS NOTES. GROWING COLTS. The colts are beginning to come on the farms of the west, and farmers should remember the tranacendant Im portance of management duilng the first year of the colts' life, as it affects the future usefulness and value of the animal. A colt may be ever so well bred and yet can easily be spoiled dur ing the first year. It should be han dled early and continuously In auch a way that It may never have cause to suspect that Its owner is anything else than Its best friend. Every day that handling and petting is postponed makes work for the "horse breaker" later on. Sudden, violent motions must be avoided until the youngster's confi dence is gained; It should be accustom ed to the halter early and then to the bit and gradually toother parts of the harness, so that Its education goes on continuously. When this Is done the animal will never need "breaking." which a barbarous term anyhow in connection with horse growing. It Is in the feeding of the colt and the core it receives, however, that the owner Is so largely the arbiter of its destiny. It ought not to go into a re mote pasture with the dam where it is only occasionally seen, nor should It follow the dam over a plowed field backwards and forwards, snatching a mouthful of overheated milk from time to time when the dam rests from her work. It should get Its milk at quiet Intervals and when the udder Is not fevered, and supplementary feed ing should be Introduced as early as possible. As soon ss the colt begins to eat, it should have bran, crushed oats, clover hay and other growthy food, not much to begin with, but gradually In creasing ro that when weaning time arrives the dams' milk iray be with drawn with just as little disturbance k possible. The feeding should be lib eral, for on this depends growth, good bones and good joints, all very im portant things In a horse; and liberal feeding requires plenty of exer'lse ac company It, for It Is a good muscu lar system that is wanted, and not fat. Plenty of pure air, plenty of sunshine, a good place i lie down comfort with out coddling all these are essential to good colt growing. After weaning continue to feed liber ally on foods of growth, and when winter comes make It a matter of prl le to carry the youngster through so that he will show no signs of a "hard win ter," but In such a way that he thrives during the cold season and gets his fair share of growth then. A large number of colts are spoiled by bad win tering, and a great many more are tar fro m being the valuable animals they might have been If properly wintered. If the colt is carried through till grass comes as It ought to be, it is well-nigh reared, for it Is the first year that Is the trying one and the rest of colthood is comparatively plain sailing. EXERCISE- FOR SWINE. j Do hogs need exercise? is asked by a correspondent. Yes, at most periods of their lives they do. although the ten enis of modern breeding has all been In the direction Df early fattening and nicking the largest gains on the small est pcifciilUe amount of feed. The suck ing pig needs exertit-e or plethora and nn attack of thumps may be expected. The time when thumps is most com plained of is when, after farrowing: time, there is bad weather that ke.p the litter and the dam confined to the pen. where the former surk and sleep and have no work Jo do to keep thfrn healthy. In good weather, with room enough to run about out of doors, the litter always gets exercise enough and rarely hai thumps. Growing pigs need some exercise, too. but they can be re lied upon to take all they need If glv-n room enough, ani the weather Is not too unfavorable. Breeding stock ehould always have plenty of exercise or they will become shy breeders and the pigs they have will not be vigorous, and they may even become entirely sterile. When hogs get their rrowth and are put In the yard for fattening Is the tme when they need exercise least. For a short time that remains before marketing they can both safely and advantageously be kept as quiet as possible. The time Is oo brief for them to suffer Injury for want of ex ercise, and the feed will have a quicker effect If they do not run l off. The answer to the quei.tlon should therefor be that hogs do need exercise, but no partlculer pains need be taken to see that they get It except in the case of young pigs In bad weather, or In that of breeding stock that has been fat tened for the show ring. The latter. when they reach borne after the shows, need reducing, not by cutting off the feed so much as by exercise, and In doing thla driving them around the yard with a buggy whip for a while each day Is often resorted to. ORAM LAND MANAGEMENT. There I In many part of th west a great deal of complaint about the fall ure of grasses to be permanent and productive. Much of the complaint, however, I due to the prevalence of the Idea that almost any kind of soil will do for grass, that abundant fertll lty la not essential to the crop, and that almost any kind of preparation will answer. There never was a great er mistake, and yet many make It, even to the extent of believing that land that ha been laid down to' timothy will somehow become fertile, even tho' It were not so when the grass seed was sown. Land Intended for grass grow- Ing should be made rich or It will not produce rich grasses nor any consid erable tonnage. It should be t borough ty well prepared, for culture I needed for graa. and th only kind that oan be given to It la the preliminary culture and an occasional loosening of the sur face with the harrow when It become root bound. Many think that because most of the tame grasses need a good deal of moisture, und rained land will answer for meadows and pastures. This Is an error. Meadow land should be well drained and underdralnlng on soil that need It dries it if too wet and gives it the power to retain moisture in dry seasons. It stimulates growth ear lier In the reason and maintains It longer In the fail by cerrylng of! cold surface water and reducing the chill that evaporation causes. Dry seasons are never so injurious on well drained lands as they are on undralned soil, and good drainage makes many solis that are intractable and sour, mellow and sweet. At all points grasses ate benefited by good drainage, good pre paration and the maintenance of fertll lty, and those who do not act upon this theory are not likely to find them profit able. VEGETABLES FOR THE FARMER. Does the average farmer pay suffi cient attention to growing vegetables for the family table? We think not. We are glad to see that our agricultural experiment station la doing work along these lines ss well as the more im portant ones of stock snd fruit raising A bulletin just issued gives Interest ing Information regarding the farmer's vegetable garden and the cultivation of some of those beautiful but too seldom grown vegetables. This bulletin should be In the hands of every farmer Inter ested In adding to the comforts and happiness of home. It recites the ex perience of the horticulturists at Ames in growing many varieties of such veg etables as lima beans, cucumbers, to matoes, egg plants and sweet potatoes. We understand that It may be secured by writing to the director of the agri cultural experiment station, Ames, la. FEEDING BROODER CHICKS. All persons do not succeed alike in feeding brooder chicks. Neither do all who feed chicks running with hens feed them alike. The hen herelf can furnish no food. All she can do la to furnish heat for warming the little fellows, give them exercise, hunt for food with them and by so doing she will find a great deal of food that cannit be supplied In any other way. She may act as company for the little fellows- She may succeed In getting a great ninny of them to maturity, ,r she may rear only a few of them. The greatest loas comes from leg and bowel troubles, both of which are at tributed to not enough heat at the right time. We have reared a brooder of chicks and have had but little trou ble and again we would lose many of them and all with the same manage ment and feed. In feeding chicks we begin on plnhead oatmeal and we feed four times a day at the beginning, later only three. For three weeks the great er part of the food Is cooked or baked. After that they can have some raw food If thought best. At no time Is It thought best to give ecur food, though there may be a temptation to do so sometimes because some has been left, A box of bran left where they may pick at It will be good and also char coal with some grit. They do well on green stuff, and if given In the right manner plenty of It will do but little harm. As they rrow older they may have millet seed, cracked wheat or cracked corn. They should be fed the first thing In th morning and when very young they may be fed the last thing before bedtime. They will eat by lantern light when fed and this makes the night shorter. Feeding carefully and keeping an even temper, ature will succeed. THE EGO BUSINESS. The business of getting eggs Is a dis tinct business in poultry management, and In many Instances this Is the most profitable part of poultry keeping. To get eggs Is the constant study of some poultry keeper, and they will do any and everything to keep up the laying. The hen that Is uncomfortable will not lay eggs. The hen that is not well fed will not Isy eggs, and the hen that is too fat will lay but few eggs. The hen that haa to shiver sll night In a cold house or In an oetn shed will lay no eggs. It Is an old argument that "mother's hens laid plenty of eggs and roosted In trees." Others hold the theory that hens ready to lay eggs will lay them without regard to the weather or the food conditions. It Is quite true thst many hens roosted In trees, hatched !n the weeds and brought up their broods In the fields, but the msn who haa winter layers doe not adopt that plan In this day. It is quit generally believed that the egg formation take place mainly at night Let ua suppose there are twen ty fertilised cells In the egg sack of a healthy hen. Under fsvorable condi tion lahe will probably lay twenty egg within twenty-live or thirty days, but If exposed to weather she may not average an egg a week. This can al ways be observed during a cold snap. Hen will be laying right along and some oort of adverse weather or other condition will arise and stop laying at once. The way to keep up the egg pro duction I to give the matter some thought and do everything that can be done 4o keep bens laying. The deepest ocean temperature ever recorded was aboard th Pacific sub marine telegraph survey ship Nero re cent)?. At a depth of 8,070 fathom a temperature of St. degree waa re corded, and at a 5.101 fathom, 24 de green. The deepest previous cast were mad by th British survey ahlp Pan gala. WISS VIEW OF AMERICA. Isnproaelon of a Swiaa Travolor 1st ! tha llnltari Htmtaa. By Prof. August Forel of th Univer sity of Zurich, Bwltxerland.) I shall try to give In the following t few impressions ef the United Stales, ut in doing so I wish it plainly un lerstood that this Is merely s hasty ikelcn penned down after a short jour ley. A good deal is being written ibout American corruption. The Eu o pea n who goes to the United Stales hinks It absolutely necessary to pro fide himself with- a revolver and con stantly watch his pocket book, as hit nlnd is hounted by thieves and swln llers intent on cheating and robbing aim of his valuables. In this respect Je's happily disappointed. Tou travel n the United States as safely as In our wn country; people are courteous, lonest, respectable and scrupulously :lean, and there Is no more cheating, Jing, overcharging than with us. Es pecially the policemen excel in theli gentlemanly manners. There Is not :he vexatious red tape and chicanery so sommon with our officials. Also with regard to morals the North American excels the European. Family ife is held sacred. Where, then. Is that Ill-reputed cor ruption? For It cannot be denied that t sxiats. It Is the worship of the dol ar which creates and maintains it. An American lady with whom I dis cussed this subject said to me, smil ing: "We have an amendment to the :lghth commandment, viz.: Thou shalt not steal, except from the stater " The itate is the cow of plenty of the weal thy; It would appear as though every body, even those otherwise honest, con iplred to plunder it. The unconstrained liberty of acquir ing wealth has killed in the American almost every feeling of solidarity and responsibility with regard to state and ociety. His patriotism is a Chauvin istic sentiment, a kind of monomania for boasting of his being the cltlien jf the most powerful republic. It raise in him great national enthusiasm, bul Joes not animate him with the con sciousness of duty and responsibility toward the entire body of his fellow :itlzena. I was struck bjr two things the uni formity of Aemrlcan fashion from one end of the land to the other, and the power of Americanization. Though the American fancies himself free of preju dices, he Is In reality chock full of them. Everybody is a slave to custom. which accounts for many strange things that shock the foreigner. An atheist will say grace at table, merely not to offend against a good old cus- '.ocn. MARRIAGE A BAR TO SUCCESS. Opinion of Edwin Markham on tho Question. Is marriage a bar to success for an ambitious man or woman? All such questions are difficult ones. They are too complex for any general rule. Each life is a problem by Itself. You say "success," but what is meant by the term? Mere worldly success, that Is one thing. But some lives are successes though weighted with poverty and oth er lives are failures though' winged with wealth. It may be said safely that a true marriage a spiritual mar riage would be no bar to success of any sort. Hut such a marriage of souls Is not common, fur It Is a union founded on fundamental fitness for each other and for marriage. i In some quaiters marriage la recom mended for young men as a preventive of perilous vice; In other quarters it Is looked on as a means for enlarging one s circle of inliuence. It serves these ends In many cases, but these considerations degrade the noble ideu of marriage. Success by such means is only another name for failure. There is but one success worth while the re- Izatlun of charai-ter. The question Is asked: Will the mis ery a man suffers by an unhappy mar riage tend to help rather t the development of special the sufferer is really capable would barm the development. Joy the normal condition of all excelle work. We are told that the poets "learn In suffering what they teach In song." Doubtless there is truth In this state ment. But the poet does no work while misery Is delivering her Instruc tion. It Is long afterward that he ut ters his lyric word long afterward In some tranquil hour. Then It Is that be else from the hand of memory the precious element In all that bitter past seises the thing thst Is eternal, let ting the Insignificant and superficial go. 7 fsayl V It Is a fact that does much to nkJ.The csar occasionally attenrfi th. or mar many of ua. We know thl plant Is conditioned by Its environment! It prospers In a warm atmosphere. Love Is the warm atmosphere of the soul. In a true spiritual marriage the wo man become the chief Inspiration, of a man's csreer. She I th muse quick ening In It beautiful way the sleeping forces of hi life. She I an expression of the eternal womanly leading him onward forever. Political combination In the canvass for the new Methodist bishops sr In Ihe air. They are declared to be neither political , nor combine, but they are slates just the same. For example.dur Ing the past few days (certain men whose friends sre pushing Ihem for the honor have held conferences. The gen eral concensus of opinion just now ar rived at Is that the Interest of the de nomination demand the election of four new bishops. What In real politics would be called a slate hue appeared, and It bear th name of Rev. Drs. Joseph F. Berry of Chicago, A- J, Pal mer of New Tork and J. W, Hamilton and D. II. aloor ot ClnclnaaU. MtA. OVER THE WAVE Oooorlptlon of a Now Klnsl av So Craft Despite the msny failure that has mended the efforts on th part of a lumber of Inventors to construct a soat to roll its wsy through th water ressels of this type are being constant, ty brought to the front. There eeema to be s deep-rooted Idea In the mind yt some few designers that the passage ;lme between the two continent Will 3t halved In this way. and the fascina tion of thus lowering the time between the two worlds Is such a fasclnattag jne that there seems to be some ofc hammering away In this direction con-,, tantly. An entirely new design Is her alded from Cansda. This craft has been constructed at the boat yard of Walter Dean of To ronto, and It is about to be put to a trial roll. The vessel, according to the Scientific American, consists of a cigar-shaped steel hull, which Is encircled) for about a third of Its length by aa outer revolving cylinder. The cigar shaped portion of the vessel contalnn the motive power and the crew, and the outer cylinder, which serves as a propeller, is rovlded with project ing metal blades, which are wound) helically sround It. The outer cylinder revolves upon the Inner cylinder, fric tion being reduced by Interposing care fully constructed roller bearings. It la driven through a gear wheel, twlva Inches In dlsmeter. which works In a wster tight case and engages a circular rack formed upon the Inner face of tho outer cylinder. The vessel Is driven by a four-horse power gasoline engine. lo order to prevent any rotary movement of the Inner cylinder. It la provided) with a keel which Is about twelve Inches In depth and Is hung below th vessel. The keel Is also Intended to prevent the vessel from making lee way. The shsllow depth of the keel and the fact that It weighs only about 125 pounds, will render It difficult to keep the boat on an even keel, and II has been suggested that a deeper keel, carrying a cigar-shaped weight, some thing after the faahlon of the bulb keel of racing yachts, would give better re sults. In addition to the accommoda tions within the hull there Is a deck al each end, which Is protected from lbs wash at the water by coamings, con nection from one deck to another being had by means of a bridge, which ex tends shove the revolving cylinder. STORIES OF ANIMAL LIFE, it la said that silkworms are vei sensitive to the action of light of differ ent colors, and according to expert mrnts f recently described by Flamr marlon, before the French Academy of Science, silkworms were kept in boxes covered with glass of different shade. The silkworms all received the same food, but they gave different results aa to the quantity of silk and eggs. - Maternal Instinct waa curiously ex hibited the other day by a cat. Some of the officials of the Norfolk county asylum, England, caught a young rab bit, which they gave to the cat, think ing that she would kill and eat It. T their astonishment puss did nothing ol the kind; she adopted It and reared It with her own offspring. Both the rab bit and its foster mother seemed to b perfectly happy together. One white fox in the flesh and In th fur has been discovered in the Esse Union country of England. It was on of a litter of four reared In Norsey wood, near Billerlcay, last spring, anxl the hounds got on to It recently when cub-hunting. Owing to the poor scent, however, this unquestionable rarity, which waa viewed by many of the field, escaped for the time being Its pursu ers. A white fox is a real rarity, and the many superstitions concerning It render It a curiosity. 'Recently a captain captured a young seal near Anacapa island, California, and took him on board his ship. A the vessel started the mother seal waa noticed swimming about, howling pit The little captive barked Hively. After reaching th wha nta Barbara the captive was tied tn a jute sack and left loose on he deck. Soon after coming to anchor the seal responded to Us mother' call by casting Itself overboard, all tied up as it was in the sack. The mother seised the sack and with her sharp teeth tore It open. She had followed th Lump eighty mile. NOTES OF THE DAY. Once a week the staff officers of tha Russian army aasemble under the pre. Idency of the Grand Duke Vladimir ta discuss tho progress of the Boer war. i. The city of Akron, O., Is entitled ta the credit for Installing the first auto mobile police patrol. It Is of the largest si, having a seating capacity of M persons, and was built at a coat of 12,200. A group of literary folk In Boatoa have started plan to observe the one hundredth anniversary of th birth of Longfellow In 1M7. The people of Port land, Me., where he waa born, will ala celebrate the date. The recently published statistic Europesn countries regarding emigra tion and Immigration during th lat ter part of into show that Ihe United Etates still offers th strongest attrac tions for Europeans who wish lo eav their native lands. Walters In the most exclusive restau rants have rome to look upon th tip s so rertslnly thelf right that they hav rome lo assume an air that I of fensive In the extreme. There Is no ao knowledgment from Ihem for this cour tesy on th part of the diner now. Th waiter merely grab It aa a thing thai belongs to aim. ft