.4g 'swMowwasiBgijyg-'ji ' J K. LM .V : V I I ADISTJXGriSIIKDMAN. CEN. JORGE USLAH OF VENE ZUELA IN THIS COUNTRY. I'nirp Own niul 1'r.iiiTlty Hi-lgn In UN t'uiiiilrv 1'rcnlilfnt ri'.iii) n I.-lllllT lit till' low I lug. lYn;ilcl he irc.it ,. KN. .Jorge Fsl.ir. is tho Chauacoy Dopovv of Vene zuela. Hi has been ') proposed ns a chii- iiiuati' for tlu -ucs-Idoncy of oin of Hit' states, ami U spoken of as a cabi net officer under Crespo imniedi.ite- ly upon his return. He Is staying at the Metropolitan hotel. New York, just now. No one Is belter Httcd to steak of the condition of nf. fairs in Venezuela than den. I'slar. He fays: "The piesont situation In Vone zuela Is this: In regard to polities, the country enjoys peace, which Is consid ered peinianent, not only because, the government controls nil the elements necessary to maintain It, but also be cause dining the coming year the con stitutional elections for the highest poweis will take place, thus insiiiing the regular succession of the chief executive. Nothing could Justify at the present moment any dlstuibamv to which, for the lear.ons stated, all the important political factors would be foreign. Ilesldcs den. Crespo has ac cepted the leadership of the 'dran 1'artldo Liberal' (great liberal part.v), OKN. JORC.K I'SLAR. to which about nine-tenths of the Vene zuelans belong, den. Crespo has also raised the 'Handera Amarllla' (yellow flag), which Is the ensign of the people; ho has Incorporated In his party, and will always receive In its folds as old comiades, all tho liberals who will ap proach him. He has determined to leave the liberals In full possession of power, both In tho federal and In the government of the states, den. Crespo Is persuaded that only by strict ndher mcc to this plan can the republic con tinue its onward march to progress. Then his name will be glorified, and he will have nothing to fear from the reac tionary spirits who seem to regard him most bitterly. In the administrative branch, the conduct of the government in the duayana boundary dispute has always been most wise, and Its rela tions with the I'nlted States, In refer ence to this question, are Inspired by feelings of the most patriotic gratltu le Finances arc In a most satisfactory condition and public credit receives due attention. In regard to the adjustnu-nt made with tho railway companies, and the subsequent rontract for a loan to cover it, tho future will judge of itt author, Dr. Clnudlo Burztial, minister of public works." It may Inteiest Americans to know that the Venezue lans have three political parties corre Fpotidlng somewhat to our own. the Re publican, Democratic and Populist, with rlmilar divisional lines, den. Crespo Is leader of the Populists, dovernment railroads and highways are being built all over the republic. Silver and paper is the only money In use and it has be come very plentiful In recent years. REV. EARL CRANSTON. The Sulillcr-l'rlcNt llerrntly Clumcn to Ho a lllilmp. Kev. Dr. Karl Cranston, the soldier priest who has been elevated to the dignity of a bishop of tho methodlst church by the Cleveland conference, has lived a life of Intense religious Vwork, and has traveled widely as a dispenser of tho gospels. Ho Is 5G years old and In tho very prime of his Intellectual vigor and maturity. It was ot tho tender ago of twelve that he DR. EARL CRANSTON. felt Impelled toward methoillsm, and from tho moment of his conversion ho Liet to work to nt himself for tho pur pose to which hla life hr.s b.-en nn Wvldedly devoted. In 1SC1 ho had lust kme out of tho Ohio university with Is first deureo when President I.ln- Jn's call to arms made him n volun- wln the nrmy of his country. From he ho roeo by gallant and mcrlto k work on the fifld nf bntlln in ii.o (of captaiB. In 1SC4 ho icttirncd tc 9 iniM-NUrilMIII rtl.liillmlM. JUf . r.j . --.., ) . C. llonacr, Agt. Hod Clnml, Neb, zJM VW'iJj the university to have confer: 1 upon him the degree of master of arts, and two years later he was preaching to a Methodist ehatge at Mlddleport, Ohio. I'ntll ISTO.Dr. Cranston served the Ohio conference, pi caching to many en picgutlons. In that ear he was tians ferred to Winona. Minn., and there he hullt a church, which was left behind him as a monument to hlscnerg" when, at his own loiiucst, he w.u transferrul to Jackhotnllle. In that city his wife died. Dr. Cranston stayed tils lull term there, and Jacksonville has diaee church as a result of his labors. Kvnii.s. vllle, hid., had him a short tune, and then his duties called him to Cincinnati and later to Denver. Col. For four ears he was presiding ilder of the Southern Colorado conference, and his energetic work In that district won for iilm the ndmliation of all who saw It. In KSSI he was sent o Cincinnati as the rrpiesentatlve of the Western Hook Concern, a position he held when ho went to the conference at Cleveland that widened the scope of his v.ork by making him a bishop. INVENTS WORKMAN'S CAP. Wrnrcr C.m lEfiiiitln llulf an Hour In Home SiikiIii', Mrs. John II. Miller of this city has Invented a wonderful llreman's cap, says the Syracuse Stntid.it il. Mr. Mil ler put on the cap and entered a smoke house co densely filled with smoke that It was Impossible to go near the door without piotection and he rem lined thirty-live minutes with no possible chance of getting air from the oiiflde. A llreinan connected with No. 1 com pany enteied the smokehouse without the contrivance and remained eight soe onds before coming Into the fresh air, half suffocated and gasping for br'Uth. It was then that Mr. Miller tried the in vention and It worked like a charm. The cap Is made of lino strips of as bestos conformed to tho shape of the head. It Is held fast In place by a 1 lib ber band, making It nlr-tlght. Its weight Is only sixteen ounces and It Is so constructed ns to (liable a person to carry It on the arm without liuon venlence. There is a strip of mica be fore the eyes, so no Inconvenience Is suffered in this respi et. A silk sponge, thioiigh which no smoke cm enter, but which permits the Ingirss of air in plentiful quantities, (Ills an aperture for the mouth, and when properly ad justed the cap is so simple that Its i.lll cacy is apparent nt a glance. When It Is understood that firemen are unable to remain In a smoking building longer than three or four min utes at a time an invention of this char acter, which enables a man to grope about In a stilling atmosphere for an hour, certainly i educes chaiucs of los ing life through suffocation to a mini mum. A I.riirnril Nicrn. Rev. J. W. K. Ilowen, the colored Methodist minister, who at the outset led the balloting for bishops at the Cleveland general conference, was born of slave parents at New Orleans In 1S3I, Ills Intense religious nature manifested Itself at tho early. ago of Hi, when he , r V"'WA ' RKV. J. w. v., rowi:n. became ion vetted. Young Rowen started out to get a good education and "iieeeedcd. He entered the rnlvcrslty of New Orleans and left It with the de gico of A. H. Passing through Hoston I'tilverslty, bo was a bachelor of di vinity and wan later given his full degree In philosophy by that .school. He was made doctor of divinity at Oamnion Theological Seminary In 1V.I3. For a time he filled the chair of mathe matics in Central Tennessee College, was pastor of St. John's Church, at Newark. N. J., and of Centennial Church, at Ilaltimore. Ho has (Hied such positions as the chair of church history In Morgan College, of Hebrew in Howard I'nlvorFity, nnd of historical theology In Gammon Seminary. He has been a hard worker and a voluminous writer. His publications Include a vol ume of sermons and nddiesscs: "Plain Talks to the Colored People of Amer ica," '02. Addiessatthededlcatlonof the n(gto building. Cotton States and In ternational Exposition: "Appeal to tho King"; address before tho congress on Africa of tho same exposition, "The Compaiatlve Status of tho Negro nt tho Close of tho War nnd Today." In thesn addlesses ho pleaded for higher edtica tlon of leaders of the colored people. ( llli'iilu' I'll 1'imt. Canada's pet jcet, IUIea Carman, Is known In many parts of (ho dominion where his poetry Is not read, as a fam ous "portsman. This Is especially true of Nova, Scotia, where ho frequently bunts and fishes. Ho In thoroughly at home In the woods, love of which In Milled aonio of his best verse. Ho is probably tho tallest poet nf the time, a trlllo above six feet In Htniiture, and rugged find sinewy. His hair la rid. l!nl;lliilrt (in, "That was the tmklnilcst rut of all," said the lady to tho Interviewer when line raw how they'd reproduced her I photograph. Jr ily. ItHII. " I .-. LOUIS ISAttCiiat & CO., . I'ldl. Ualw, I I'lriii In VV'nallllll'Imi mt. px "W v r r TIJIIIKILTLOI'I) CI11KK. A FLYING JIACHIXK. NO HUM DUG AUOUT PROF. LANGLEYS INVENTION. Vlip Sn rrt.iry of tin- iiilllminliin In p 1 1 1 ii t ton Hit tiurnli'il ii stcjiiii-1'ro prlli it. WIiikimI tiTiiilriiliu Tli.lt llil Alrrmly Miiml Hit' irl. II K problem of the living machine has l ni Kohul. TIiom' who uad this article nie nailing of the fill tlluicnt of a world-old ilieani. Men have thought of (lying since Daedalus Miicad his I T- L?- ' fabled wings l'.TOO years ago. Peihaps lie tore that. No man has as ct i cally Mown, but on May C, a iniiiiiluo did. With that ma chine men will ily, says a writer in the New York World. These are facts, and heie Is an accur ate picture of the machine, primed for the Hist time. At Occoquuii, Va., not far from Wash ington, on the day aboe mentioned, Piofessor Samuel P. I.ungle.v. of the Smithsonian institute, sent up the model of a living machine driven by a miiuII steam i ngine. The machine lose -'OH fiet and Hew steadily about half n mile. The fm I at this point gave out and the machine gently sank to the ground. The engine was restocked and n siconil illght was made as successfully as the Hi st. I'iorKor Alexander drahani Hell, the Inventor of the telephone, was a witness of thise (lights, and describes theni o-rr his own signature. Theie can be neither mistake nor deception about it. This simple statement conies to the Win Id to-day much as tho announce ment of Stephenson's locomotive en mo to the world three-quarters of a cen tury ago. Then as now It was Inipos- fe-'i- I'KOF. rlblo to understand vvhat changcR tho new Invention was destined to bring ibout. Hut to-day we are on the thres hold of a more Important application ol science even than the steam locomo tive. Professor Langley's (lying ma chine that will lly Introduces a revolu tion in transportation more radical :han that which any Invention has wrought in the past, because at last laud and water transportation is transferted to the frlctionless air. For the World Professor Hell has lesciibed Piofessor Langley's Inven tion as follows: "Last Wednesday, May fi. I witnessed i very remarkable experiment with Professor Langley's aerodrome on the Potomac river. Indeed, It seemed to me Hint tho experiment was of such his torical Importance that it should be made public. I should not feel at liber ty to give an account of all tho details, but tho main facts I have Professor Langlej's consent for giving you, nnd they are as follows: "The aerodrome, or 'Hying machine,' In question was of steel, driven by a steam engine. It resembled an enor mous bird, soaring hi the air with ex treme regularity in large curves, sweep ing steadily upward In a spiral path, the spirals with a diameter of perhaps 100 yards, until It i cached a height of ibout 100 feet 111 tho air, at the end of n -oiirso of about half it mile, when tho steam guvo out. tho propellers which had moved It slopped, and then, to my further surprise, the wholo, Instead of tumbling down, settled ns slowly and gracefully as It Is possible for any bird to do, touching tho vvnter without any damage, and was Immediately picked out and was ready to be tried again." The Hying machine carries a small steam engine of one-horse power. The whole contrivance weighs twenty-five pounds. Its light steel framework holds extended horizontally three shoots of thin canvas, ono above tho other. Tho length all over is fifteen feet. The en gine runs two propellent. Tho machine could lly 100 miles, or even a much creator distance with n sufficient supply of steam. Hut the pmnll engine employed Is not of the condensing pattern and has no means of using tho same water over and over. Professor l.angley will soon construct a fiyer of largo size, which will carry a proper mechanical equipment nnd bo capable, of extended Illght. The ono depcrlbcd Is only a model for experi mental purposes. Tho Inventor baa not 11 P- Pitcher's Castorla. . - mt&mmmmmm mm &?& tr.' -.s . 'ji&MvytQik -" Z J' '-. : . - - irK l, . - fc-.Vi .v" ?. . I'MNDAV. .irXKKO. 1JMKJ. tioubl'il blin-iif to any iiuit a'lotit the qui siie.ii of ,1 smtabli engine. w hit It intllil be furnlsh-d eisll.v enough ulirn moiled. The iibiein was to uinkit a machine thai would lly. ninl Ily In the right way, this acioinpllshed, theie was no (illllcully in siipplj lug the power 10 qulied for a long irlp. In short the dllllcultles ore gieally lessenul by the i nlaigetuelit of the ma chine: A llyer of Mils t.vpe eighty feel long would have a Milllclcut area of planes to sustain a powerful steam en glue and a car lair.vlng a number of passengers. The steam may be obtain- en it nm liquid fuel or by burning gas that has hi en compressed and loaded lulo e.vllnilibal reset volts of thin drawn steel tubing. Such a rc-crvoir can be made to bold ion times its cubi cal contents of gas. and Hiiih the air ship Is able to lake un board a great quantity of ftnl in a very small com pass. The toiir-hoiso power I'opiland engine now on the niaiket weighs only ivvontj-soviii pound ami occupies a lloor space of but ten liuhcx squaie, its height being twenl.v-oiie Inchon. Professor l.angley ealls his machine an "noiodionic ' or air limner. Ii trav els at the rate of eighteen miles an hour. The Inventor icganls II as mi Important point of advantage thai P. Is able to go so slowly. This will be un derstood when It Is explained Hint the sustaining power requited by the air ship becomes less In pnipoitlon to the Inciease of lis speed. A man can skate over thin ice vv lili h v. mi Id not bear him if he stood still. The faster he goes the tlilnne: the Ice needed to bold him up. If he go fast enough he could run over the suif.ue of a pond of water. The same piluelple applies to the aeio droine in its piogiess thioiigh the at inospheie. If the iioiodronio is able to sustain itself when il.ving only elghtien mile an hour, It can carry twice as much weight when going twice as fast. Pntll lecently It has been Imagined that the atniosplieie was not don-o enough for propelleis to n.-t upon It effcotlvily. iryi. 7w."T-5:r".l-:i: t.nrj' " V.52&V " "''! x.-ii.-.. L. V iZZTTT-''"-Tri.ii i ! UK I JV . T.E Tir.i!it uTTir' J LANdLHY'S FLYINd MACH1NI3 IN MOTION. (Drawn by the Inventor.) This belief Is now exploded. Pro fessor Langley's experiments have proved that it Is only necessary (o make tho piopellers levolve fas! enough In order to folic the airship along at a rate almost Indefinitely fast. Also, lie has dlscovoied that the resistance ofreied by the air to the aerodrome Is only one-iiftleth part of what was sup- lirinnrl Inmlvltnf ilmi ..m,.!. I,...,. ..... I . , , i".y"f .-. ..ii i- iii- im- iimiT in ueeiieii. i ne speed t- taliKd by tho airship of this pattern will be loo miles an hour or more if doslieil. Such an airship will be able to traverse space at a rate far exceed ing the Illght of the fastest birds, and a Journey across the continent will be nceoinpllM'hcil In scarcely more than a few consecutive twinklings. The theory of the aerodioine Is wholly dilieient from that of the bal loon, i'nllko the latter, it does not aim to iloat by icason of being lighter than tho air. Professor Langley's machine weighs about J.OOO times as much as the air which supports It. H relies upon the air cm rents, as docs a soaring bird. In fact, its pilnclplo Is derived from the suggestions offered by birds of the vulture type. There Is no better ox- ample of snaring than tho vulture, which, though a large and heavy ani mal, will remain for a whole day In the air without a single wing-beat, Hlm ply opposing Its wings to the air cur rents and thus obtaining support from them. Most pcoplo have seen the magician Herrmann throw playing cards fiom tho stage of u theater Into the third and fourth galleries. This Is an Illus tration of the sustaining power nffoided by the air to thin planes moving swift ly through K. The same principle ap plies: to the nerodrome. Suppose that such an airship Is on Its way from New York to Chicago at a speed of fifty miles an hour, tho dny being perfectly calm Of course this means a flfty-mllo current of air In effect. It opposes tho progress of tho vessel very slightly, be cause the latter presents merely the edge of its planes to tho breeze. The captain at the helm Inclines the pianos upward n tilfle at tho front, so that tho powerful air current is made to exercise Its lifting power and keep tho craft alloat. Hut whichever way tho current comes, the planes are governed accord ingly. Tho wing planes on either side nre slanted slightly upward, so that any tendency to tilt will develop creator prcrairfc In that direction and thus ro- Hinro cquiiiuriuin '" " d ,L "CUlfSTA'"ifc CO., Toledo, 2rSiVd by Drub'glnte, 7io. lVi pie commonly Ihliilc of Illght In the nlr hk luiplvlng an ascent to great height?, bill for Unit there Is no ueces sil.v. All that Is required for pracllc.il pin poses l that the aerodrome shall travel at a level high enough to be clear of houses ami tiees. The start must be made from a height. Not the best ll.vcr among the soaring birds can make a stait from the ground without much dilllculiy. The eagle takes a long run before It can il?e. thus gathering mo mentum. The shv-souniilni: condor of tin ndes gels a start usuallv bv drop- ping fiom a lofty crag. An Important part of the piobleni of human Illght Is the question of lauding safely. People aie not going to travel In a vehicle that is apt (o wind up Its journey with a smash-up. Professor l.angley believes he sees the way nut of this trouble, but no guai ils his Ideas on (he subject veiy i llefullj. It may be that the aerodioine of the futiite for p.msi nger trallle will be mod- Hied on the plan of a trolley for the sake of infety. Suppose a line of poles carry ing a trolley who to be elected fiom New York to Chicago. The airship oveiluail would be connected with this who below by two wires. The connect ing wites would travel along the tiolley wire. Ily mians of (his ariangenient tho power for limning the propeller fans could bo furnished fiom il.viuiiuo stations at suitable Intervals along the loiiie. Thus all necessity for carrying an engine on the aerial vessel would be obviated. The airship might lly at a height of too feet or so above the trolley. It would i airy suspended beneath It a ear for passengers. Who can say that ten years hence we may not see such a line as this running across the contin ent, with a continuous Illght of aero dromes departing and arriving at :iu mlnule Intervals? One liupoiiant ad vantage of the trolley Idea Is that the wire would coniiol ihe Il.ving machine, and no steering would be necessary. Fifteen oarn ago a man who had the teinulty to deliver a serious lecline on tho piospecis of navigating the air &'-7(-&i -..'l., ' !J1: U', 7xSA. j' would have mined his professional rep utatlon by tho.indlsciolloii. Now (ho miich-dorlded "cranks" are having their Innings. The foremost advocate of tho practicability of aerial volltatlon Pro fessor Octavo ('haunt, wns not long ago elected president of tho American So ciety of Unglncers. This question Is the last transportation problem remain ing for man to solve. When il. n. ,ii. f0r ,., , M)lv(1 dread of tho air has been conquered when the horror of empty space has been mastered through habit, the human llyer. having successfully lm tatid the birds, will doubtless be able to Improve on their mi (hods. Klml-llrnrlnil, Judge-So you claim lo have entered the loom at night without any nmllco? Why did you take olT jour shoes then? Hurglar Hecaiiso. your honor, I heard that tluio was a sick person li the house.- -Holonil Istok. ADVANCE OF WOMEN. In 15-00 there wero In the Fulled Siiuos l.-ins women doctors against H27 in 1S70. Three hundred nnd thlrly-novtu women denilsls, against 21, Two hundred and forty women law yers against 5. One thousand two Hundred and thlr-ty-iivo women pronniers against 07. Ono hundred and eighty women land surveyors and engineers against none at all In 1S70. Twenty-live women archltectsagalnut ono. Cloven thousand women sculptors and painters against 412. Three thousand against ICO. women writer Klghthundrcd and eighty-eight worn en Journalists against 35. Thrro thousand nino hundred forty-nine nctret ses against G92. and Thirty-four thousand flvo hundred and eighteen women musicians ngaiiiBt 5,73.' Twenty-one thoiiRnnd ono hundred and elghty-flvo shorthnnd writers agnlnst 7. Sixty-four thousand and forty-eight secietarlcB nnd clerks against 8,010. Twenty-seven thousand seven bun dled and twenty-Bovcn women book- I keepers agalnbt nono In 1870. u. "" "" World's Fair HfchYatAwaf bt rk n DEFINITION OF A UAHY. I J'rjIiiK i:ll .mil -, sf itnndli. r I. ore. A London paper has been fishing for definition as m what a baby is and re ceived u long Hit of ilollnltloim. Thai which look the prlo was "A liny feather from the wing of love dropped Into (ho sacred lap of motherhood." Among (ho dellnldoiis were the fal low Iiik: A troublesome compendium of great possibilities. Tho only precious posjoislon thru never oxclles envy. A buhl ascerter of the rlghls of fiea spieeh. A thing everybody (hlnks (hero Ib a gteat deal too much fuss about, unlets it Is I Ik ir own. A thing wo ar expected to kit's nnd look im If vvo onJoKtl It. Tlie only tiling needful lo make u homo happy, Theie is only ono porfeti specimen ol n baby In existence, and every mother Is (ho happy possessor of It. Tho most extensive employer of fe male labor. The pulp from which the leaves of life's book are tnade. A padlock on the chain of love. A soft Immllo of love and troublrr which we c.innoi do without. The morning caller, noonday crawler, midnight brawler. The magic .poll by which tho godtt transform a house Into a home. A diminutive specimen of perverso huinnnltv that could scaicely bo eti dnicd If he belonged to some one else, bill, being our own, Is a never-falling tioasury of delight. A mite of hiiinanlly that will cry no harder if a plu is stuck Into him than ho will If the cat won't pq him pun ber tall. A ciylng evil you only aggravate by pulling down. The latest edition of humanity or which every couple think Ihey possess, the finest (opy. A native oi all countries, who upcakn tho language of none. The hvviotost thing Coil ever made and foigot lo give wings (o. Yhat which Increases (he mother's loll, deciensis tho father' cash, mid serves as an alaim clock to tho neigh bor". A pleasure lo two. a nuisance to eveiy other body, and a necessity lo tho world. An inhabitant of Lapland. LORD CnOMEl! IN EGVPT. IIIn Sure,.., Ilur lo .iii(; I'lchnl Men. few Lord Ciotiier's success lii In particular due to his seeing that (ho only ellldent wny lo nile i:gypt was to have nn Kn gllshninn at hum) to say the Una I word In every department nf state, says tho Spi editor. Ho has never wanted (o Hood Kgypt with Hngllsh adiulnlstra Ioik after the manner of France In Tu nis. Tunis has only a million and n half of people, but there are S.UOO French civil functionaries, besldeo a largo number of military officers. Lord' (Vomer has always preferred that tho Kngllsh heads should mo ICgyptiiin hands. The nallvo cabinet aiid 'the native bureaucracy have gone un touched, except to be Improved and1 stiengthened, but In (he Hliadow behind' every magnificent ministerial fauteiill stands tho Kngllsliiuan who eontioln and directs. This means that our work has been done by a minute staff. F,x crpt In the hrlgatlnn department, whoic high technical skill and the In ability to take billies make It abso lutely necessary to have Hngllshmen, (hero are no visible HiirIIhIi officials. One advantage of a minute staff In that all your men can be picked men. And hi Kgypt, whether soldleni or civilians all thecoutiolllngineii are picked men men who can be trusted not only lo hold on like bulldogs, but who nre also certain to win when brain power, whether In the Turk, tho Armenian, or (he Copi, is matched against brain power, tact and iidroltno.-s. We do not known whether Lord Cromer over expressed the thought in words, but If ho had said, "I will have no regiment of poorly-paid second-rate Kiigllshmen under me heie. but only a few men of the ablest kind hi well-paid, responsi ble posts." he would havo exactly ex pressed the principle upon which he has acted. Another icason for Lord Cromer's sucrcs Is to be round In I ho fact that ho has always used young, men. Kgypt .s the triumph of young men. Ouelit to Un ProiiiniiMl. Principal (to commercial tiavclerr. turning from tho road) How camo you to charge nuch low- prices to Schmidt, who Is known to be a shaky customer? Commerlcal Traveler I thought If tho innn happened to fall wo vouldu $ loto so much by him. Hiinilolszeltuiijj. Congrpittliiiiiil Wny. Hlgbco You women have a queer Idea of a debating club. When I looked in last nlfcht jou wero all tnlk Ing at once. Mrs. Hlgbce-Wo conduct our club on congressional lines, Honry. Phila delphia North American. Iinllililimillr. Neither you nor I havo a right to ask any one to accept our construction of Chrl.it or tho Rible. Tho right to In dividual belief that Is Protestantism, that Is Presbytorlanlsrn, that Is Chris tianity. Rev. F. C. Vrooman, Presby terian, Chlcngo, III. rnllKlitoneil lllin. "Paw," asked Wllllo, "what is 'money easy on call'?" "It must be," said Mr. Ferry, "when you are sure tho fellow you call hasn't any better than two pair against your three." Cincinnati Knqulrcr. d. Ur.'BUcs' Kemwucs nwioro ucau. -.mgi iiwim-g,"iyaff? to? L-.4 ' ft r J! T 'i I J K r I 1 M!l 4 I' I 1 ' I ) I ''. h Lt N H u