' I I" I 6 k I' T ', - ' Ishod by Mrs. LIzzlo Hoffman, of Anthony, N. J. She has worked on It day and night for ten years, and' hop handiwork has brought to completion a covorlld of silicon patches In which there are 14,G0O pioc'os, no two of them aliko In texture or shape. Thoro havo boon patchwork quilts made In all parts of tho country for years, and some havo taken just ns much time to put together as Mrs. Hoffman's and havo contained just as many p.ieces nnd perhaps more, but what makes her quilt dis tinctive abovo all othors, Is that every one of tho 14,000 patches has been taken from the hat of a bride, and tho collection has come from all parts of the United States, so that tho bed cover ing roprosonts just 14,000 weddings. It Is a beau tiful picco of work and tho arrangement of tho shades Is not tho least attractive part of tho spread without considering tho novel character of tho pieces that mako up the whole." WRITING on "Our Enormous Pension Bill" In tho World's Work, Robert Lincoln O'Brien relates some interesting stories. Tills writer sa) that a case is well authenticated of a man draw ing a ponion for deafness incurred In tho service when his playmates remembered that this in firmity was so pronounced in boyhood that he al ways sat in tho front scat at school, and was ovon called by them "Deafle." or courso, no ono can say that this infirmity may not have been groatly accentuated by war service. Tho story of a man who applied for a pension for injuries recolvod by "taking fright at a false alarm" has become classical. In tho old Gulf States, where colored 'veterans and a few Northern people are about tho only Federal pensioners, tho desire to got at tho Federal Treasury Is no less strong. "I had a man como to mo," relates an Alabaman, "to say that ho wanted to get a general law pension for injuries really received from being thrown out of a buggy at Racine, Wis., ten years after tho war. Ho acknowledged that the procedure was not qulto regular, but ho justified his courso by saying that it was only a question of time when ovory Union BOldlor would got a pension, and as ho might not livo to see that day himself, ho wanted to tako time by tho forelock by getting his sliaro now." IT IS further related by this same writer that r thoro is a true story of a man who drew a ponslon for total deafness on tho certificate of an examining board and was subsequently discovered in charge of a telephone instnimont. Ono man who was a pensioner on tho score of total bllnd noss was found reading newspapers and doing cabinet work; another man, officially certified blind by tho United States Government, was en countered in a jowolry shop engaged in delicate mechanical tasks with a magnifying glass stuck In his oyo. A man drawing $72 a month because "ho required tho regular aid and attendance of another person" on account of his disabilities, was seon industriously painting tho side of a four-story warehouse, having arawn himself up on a twenty-foot ladder, handling both the ropes without assistance. While these cases are, of course, exceptional, their existence even in rare instances Is proof of defects in the medical exam ination system, THE trust issue was discussed in tho Senate April 25th. Senator Bacon of Georgia made an interesting reply to a spoech delivered by Sen ator Dolliver of Iowa. Tho Washington corre spondent for tho Now York Horald says: "A let tor written to Mr. Frlck by Mr. Schwab while tho Stool Trust was boing formed was read by Sen ator Bacon to boar out his contontion that under tho oporatlon of tho Dingley schedules tho manu facturers of stool in this country are Belling their product abroad at a far lower figure than they aro soiling similar products to tho homo consumer. This letter showod that wlion steel rails were bringing $28 a ton in the homo market Mr. Schwab explained to his associates in the steel business that tho American manufacturers were able to meet tho English manufacturers in their own market at tho cost of production there $16 a ton and yet havo a profit of $4 a ton. American manufacturers could turn out their product at $12 a ton and soil to tho American purchaser at $28 a ton, which was being done. This was de clared to mean that tho extra cost of production tho cost of transportation, and the tariff of $7 80 ?to?0t only Protected the American producers from tho possibility of competition at the hands of foreign manufacturers, but enabled them to The Commoner, charge an oxecssive and extortionate price, which tho homo ..consumer was compelled to pay." LOVERS of goobers are face to face with a peanut famine. A writer in the Chicago Chronicle saja that the South has furnished the peanut supply; but adds: "Tho spirit of latter day commercialism has seized upon the South and threatens to sever the bond through which that section has contributed so greatly to tho gustatory delight of the Nation. It appears that cotton and goobers thrive best in the same kind of soil, and the high price of cotton has caused Southern planters to devote almost their entire acreage to that staple. As the demand for cotton is increas ing more rapidly even than the demand for pea nuts, it is most probable that they will continue to discriminate in favor of the former staple despite its fluctuating value, and against the latter, notwithstanding the fact that the prico always remains the same, five cents a bag, the country over. The effect that failure to cultivate the pea nut will have upon the social relations of the masses, especially the juvenile element, can only be surmised, and any surmise will be fraught with dark forebodings. Necessarily the decline of tho peanut will have a tendency to restrict the pleas ures of recreation, foreshadowing as it does the doom of the gallery god and the degeneration of tho circus into a hollow mockery." A PROJECT is under consideration for tho creation of a" clinic in New York City where diseases may be treated by hypnotic suggestion. A writer in tho New York World, referring to this plan says: "Such a clinic might serve a good purpose in cases of chronic alcoholism, this form of disease having shown itself readily amenable to hypnotic treatment. Dr. Lloyd Tuckey s statis tics from various sources show its successful use. His own practice gives the number of cases treated as 93, with 75 cures. Milne Bromwell shows 76 cases with 28 cures (17 men and 11 women). Both observers record instances of "benefit" in addi tion to those registered as "cured." Tokarsky, of Moscow, states that he has treated more than 700 patients, including representatives from all classes of the community, and claims to have cured 80 per cent of those who wished to be cured and submitted themselves voluntarily to his treat ment. Ho finds 15 to 20 hypnotic suggestions to bo genorally sufficient, but keeps the patient under observation for a year and does not reckon the caso a "cure" until at least twelve months have passed without relapse. De Jong, of The Hague, has treated 41 drunkards in thirteen years, and reports 19 of them as cured; in some instances tho euro has been illustrated by ten years' absti nence. Dr. Tuckey urges that alcoholic subjects ought to bo given the chance of hypnotic treatment and points out tho advantage this method pos sesses over confinement in a retreat. He finds most alcoholics are good hypnotic subjects." AN INTERESTING senate document re cently issuod reproduces an article written by J. Arthur Hutton, vice-president of the British Cotton Growing Association. Mr. Hutton says "The one solid fact which stares us in the face is that tho present supply of cotton is insufficient to keep the spindles of the worm fully employed and tho cotton trade has developed into a scram ble for the available supplies. Such a position is the opportunity of the speculator, and so long as there is no material increase in the growth of cdt ton so long will the user bo at tho mercy of the gambler. It is perhaps, hardly necessary now to draw the attention of mill owners or of the operatives to the danger of tho position. Thov recognized this fully last year if they had not done so before but I think it is only within the last few months that tho merchants and distributees have begun to realize that they too are to suffer Nor do I suppose that even today it is fully real zed by those who aro engaged in tho many au5 iarv insufficient a7mustnt aLTS aro wo to look for an increasA ? ' n2 where afraid not to tho Umted sSS PhPPly? l am of that great count ? , ?he Ption and is inSslngUrnSdly an'thoi 80'000'000' ments of cotton roods ?Wn rcauire- .VOLUME , NUMBER i7f America there is land enough to produce far mnr& cotton than is pown today, there is not sufficient labor to 'effectively cultivate tho ' 28,000,000 S now supposed to bo under cotton. Five veara Z 23,000,000 acres provided ll,25a,O00" bales of mf ton; today it is doubtful whether1 ! we shall l 10,500,000 bales from a largely ihdreaseTacreaJo I have been Informed that many1 of the labornrt have drifted to the towns, and 'however good im weather may be on many fares' cbtdn has to ri main on the trees-until it is spoiled by the weather for want of labor to gather it.4" weamer t T IS pointed out by this same authority that 1 the consumption of. co.tton in the United States ten years ago was about 2,600,000 bales t the following. five years it increased to 3,000 000 bales. During the last five years it has incrcaZi to 4,000,000. The. consumption in UieVorthS been practically stationery, and the whole of tho increase has been practically in the South Mr Hutton concludes: "I do not think this increase will continue quite so rapidly in the next few years, partly because much of the surplus chean labor has been absorbed and partly because the present high price of cotton can not fail seriously to check consumption; but I think that we can .make up our minds that the United States will use more of their own cotton every year, with the natural consequence that if other supplies are not forthcoming Europe and the rest of tho world will have to go short. The problem today before the world is where those supplies are to coirie from, and the solution of this problem is the raison d'etre of the British Cotton Growing Association; and it can be said, without fear of contradiction, that the movement now started is one of the most important in the world's history. Similar associations are at work in Germany' France and Italy, while Russia is also endeavoring to supplement her supplies by cotton cultivation in her Asiatic possessions. The British movement however, is much more important, for the field to be covered is so much larger. Let us fully realize that on the success or failure of this move ment the future of our great ncotton trade de pends." THOUSANDS have read-the little book en titled "Mrs. Wiggs of the C&bDage Patch." It is claimed that the original Mrs. Wiggs is Mary Bass, living at Louisville. Ky. The Courier Journal says that the original "Mrs. Wiggs" was brought before the Louisville police judge re cently on the charge that "she had emptied a jar of dish-water and potato parings on the head of Mrs. Emily Smith of Hazelwood; Ky." The Courier-Journal says: "The battle of the cabbago patch was fought at the rear of the Bass domi cile, whither Mrs. Smith had gone after repeated but ineffectual efforts, to gain admission at tho front door. The explanation offered by Mrs. Smith was simple. Having read "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbago Patch," her tender heart was moved by 'the simple story of the brave fight against poverty, going, on so close to her door, and straightway she left her home in the placid en virons of Louisville, and hastened to the rescue. Her sympathies were sadly ruffled by the inhos pitable welcome which she had received, and tho spirit of charity was transformed into a spirit of revenge." THE unappreciative woman who, by unkind fate, has been brought into unsought no tor ety under the cognomen of Mrs; Wiggs, ex plained her strenuosity in this way: "Sure an' yer honor, I won't stand for it no longer, that I won't. It's Mrs. Wiggs here and Mrs. Wiggs tnere, until an honest body don't havo no time to rest. There's not a day goes by, sor, but somo meddlesome body comes a'putterin' iroumi to see the cabbage patch Hiven save' the mark. Do J "ok like a Mrs. Wiggs, yer honor, and sure there ain't no cabbage patch inside of two blocks from where I live. An' now here comes along this prying qreature, with her swishln' petticoats awl her shiny shoes, and nothing will do but she will see 'Mrs. Wiggs.'" Here the Irate inhabitant of the cabbage patch designated thy Mrs. Smith by a contemptuous gesture of her strong right arm. "Mrs. Wiggs, indade, sor. It ain't no won der that I let her have my diry dishwater. It's good enough fer tho likes of hor. I was happy, onct, yer honor," continued Miss Bass. 'My little home it wasn't very big but it was good enough fer me, but here comes along somebody and puts jne in a book, and now its all different, bine tins bein'. famous ain't what its' cracked up to bo. they re just making my life wretched, yer honor v A jvt)jm4 IkJx