i:apfp::s3. The Diff'renco Detwocn tho Sexes In This Important Stnto. One source of wo.iion'rt happiness la 1.) ho fo'.n.d, wo think, In tliolr lovo of rtelnll. They enjoy every ilclnll of ho xBJifll life. ILey love the minutiae of '"llielr work. They do not love It ns n man loves his, for the iinke of an end. They look cloo at what they are do lilt,', and they do not look forward. They take pleasure In their children nit they are. A defeet, even though It lie a serious one, destroys their pleas ure In them far less than It destroys that of a man. They are not constant ly oppressed by the thought of what Hint defect will mean In tho future. If a woman Is by nature apprehensive lier feats apply for the most part to little things. If a man Is upproh'nslvc he fears when the lit Is upon him tho debacle of heaven and earth. For wo men time goes n little slower. They lake pleasure In each Jewel of that mosaic which makes up happiness and nre not fretted because the pattern is not complete. Of this quality they have, no doubt, the Inevitable defects much brilliance, little grasp and a tendency to frivolity. They are apt to fritter away their lives and nilnd-i on little things. They become engrossed with the details of play as well as the dolnlls of work. Men no doubt have more opportunities of koi'ii pleasure Until women have, but the-e opportuni ties are short lived. Tho happiness of Uie moment they aro less lilted to take. T'ho difference between the sexes in lids particular might, we believe, be thus summed up: A man Is happy whenever he has anything to malic him happy, but a woman is happy when ever she Imp nothing to make her tin liappy. London .Spectator. SHELLS THAT Theso Pcculinr Fish Aro Mostly Con fined to Tropical Sons. 4 Tho Idea of shells b.Mng found any where else except upon the seaheach or In river beds is a little startling. Yet the naturalist who pursues his work from a stitp in mldoceau can and i does collect shells by the thousand at every dip or his net or bucket. Swimming shelld-di are mostly eon lined to tropical se.is. The most fn inlllnr Is the nautilus, which is, how ever, not :t shellfish at all, hut a near relation of the euttlellsh; also it Is only seen on the surface at a certain time of the year. The real o-ean shell llsh are mostly very small. In the In dian ocean they may be seen by mil lions. One which bears the appalling name of Cavollnlu trlsplnosa has the odd peculiarity of coming to tho sur face at ( sharp every evening. An other, the Cloodora tridentata, rises at 7. Frail as these tiny shollllsh are, no Rtorm ever injures them. They all possess tho peculiar power of being able at will to sink a few feet below the surface of the sea. and there they remain when gales blow, perfectly safe, and ripe again when the weather improves. The largest of these ocean swim mers Is about three Inches in length. Almost nil are most brilliant In color and their shells far frailer and more filossy than those found upon the sen .beach. Puzzling Measures. Wheat is sold in Omit Hrltaln In twenty different ways by the quarter, roinb. load, boll, bushel, barrel, hun dredweight, cental, wludle and bobbet. Further confusion Is nlso caused by Uie fact that the bushel of wheat va ries from sixty-two pounds at I.lrinlng liam, (Jlouccster and Taunton, to eighty jiounds nt Monmouth and Abergaen ny. while at Aberystwyth It Is sixty Jlvo pounds. Shnlllarly, the boll weighs three Imperial bushels at Newcastle, four throughout Scotland, six at Her wick, 201 pounds at Olasgow aud 1210 pounds at Hamilton. A quarter mens tires -llii; pounds In country districts jukI .)()! pounds in London. London 'Milling. Unique Advertising. A tale is told of Itobert Itonner and of his belief In advertising. One day 'lie engaged a whole page of a newspa per and repeated a two line advertise ment upon It over and over again. It must have been repeated 5.0M) times upon the page in the smallest type. "Why do you waste your money, Itobert?". asked a rrlend. "1 noticed that same line so often. Would not half a page have answered your pur pose?" "Half a page would never have mused ou to ask the question," re idled Mr. Homier. "At least llvo peo ple will ask that to every Hue was the Avny I ilgured It." Opening His Hand. William 1'euii was once urging a ' the llrst hint of daylight had slipped man he l;uev to stop drinking to ex- j through the heavy window curtains he oss when the man suddenly asked. hud arranged a plan of action a plan 'Can you tell me of an easy way to do' wherein, by the simple method of alto ItV" "Yes," l'enn replied readily; "it get her avoiding her, he might sootho Js Just as easy as to open thy hand, i his own conscience and safeguard Chll frlcul." "Convince me of that." the cote's domestic Interests, man explained, "and I wll promise up-i it wiin a satisfactory If a somewhat on my honor to do as you tell me.' negative arrangement, and he rose noxt "Well, my friend." Penn answered, J morning with a feeling that things had "whenever thee finds a glass of liquor , begun to shapo themselves. But chance .in thy hand open that hand bofore tho sometimes has a disconcerting 1 .ck of glass touches thy lips, and thee will forestalling even our best plnuucd never drink to excess again." j schemes. He dressed slowly aud do litis ftasperader (Co tu. i li I go hif.) session of my reason, the full knowl edge of my own capacities. Tho man you have known In the last three weeks, the man you have Imagined In the last four years, Is a shadow, an unreality a weakness In human form. There Is a new Chllcote If you will only see him." Eve was trembling as he ceased; her face was HuMied; there was a Strang brighlnou in her ees. Site was mo". oil beyond '..orsolf. "Hut the other you the old you?" "You must be pal. eat." lie looked down Into the lire. "Times like tho last three weeks will come again must come again; (hey are Inevitable. When they do come, you must Mail your eyes you must blind yourself. You must Ignore them -and uie. Is It a compact V" lie still avoided Iter eyes. She turned to him quietly. "Yes If you wish It," ehe aa.il, below he. breath. lie was conscious of her rlance. but he dared not meet It. lie fell sick at tho ptrt lie was playing, yet he held to It tenaciously. "I wonder If you could do what few men and fewer women are capa le of?" he asked at last. "I wonder 11 you could learn to live in (he pre out";' lie lilted his head slowly and met hei eye. "Tills Is an an experiment," he went on. "And. like all experiments, It has good phases and had. When the bad phases come round I I want ",Y, 7 lmvcnH jot the right." you to tell yourself that you are not altogether alone In your uuhappiuess that 1 am suffering too in another way." There was silence when lie had spoken, and for a space it seemed that Kve would make no response. Thou the last surprise In a day of surprises came to him. With a slight stir, a slight, quick rustle of skirts, she step ped forward aud laid her hand in his. The gesture was simple and very HWOfl. Her eyes were soft and full of light as she raised her face to his, her lips parted in unconscious appeal. There is no surrender so seductive as the surrender of a proud woman. Lo der's blood stirred, the undeniable sug gestion of tho moment thrilled and dheoueertod him in a tumult of thought. Honor, duty, principle, rose in a triple barrier; but honor, duty and principle aro but words to a headstrong man. The full significance of his posi tion came to him as it had never come before. Ills hand closed on hers; he bent toward her, his pulses beating un evenly. "live!" be said. Then at tho sound of his voice he suddenly hesitated. It was the voice of a man who has forgotten everything but his own existence. For an Instant he stayed motionless. Then very quietly he drew away from her, releasing her hands. "No," ho said. "No, I haven't got the right." CIIAI'TRH XVIII. HAT niglit for almost the first time since he had adopted his dual role Loder slept 111. Ho was not a man over whom Im Ill agination held any powerful sway. Ills doubts aud misgivings seldom ran to speculation upon future possibilities. Nevertheless, the fact that, conscious ly or unconsciously, he had adopted a new attitude toward live came homo to him with unpleasant force during the hours of darUness, and long bofore if WM seended to his solitary breakfast vMth the pleasant sensation of having put last nlfjit out of consideration by the turning oyer of a new leaf, but scarce ly had he opened Chllcote's letters, scarcely had ho taken a eurwory glance at (he morning's newspaper than It was borne In upon him Unit not only a new leaf, but a whole sheaf of now leuvoi.lmd been turned in his prospects by a hand Inllnttely more, powerful aud arbitrary (ban his own. He realized within the space of n few moments that the lei sure Hve might have eb'in'o.d the lei sure he might have been templed to de vote to her, was no longer his to db pise of, being already demanded of Iiim from a quarter that allowed of ni refusal. For the first rumbling of the pilltlca' earthquake that was to ' "ti.e the co tu try made Itself audible he.wntd denla' on that morning of March .V7 when the news spread through England that, In view of the dNoi,"iini:'.eii tate .of the I'ei-ilan army nt,1 th" shah's conse quent Inability to suppiess ths open In I'irrectlon of (lie b'irder tribes In tho mrlhoastern d'iM'ictn of Me'hed 7' ula, with a great show of magnanimity, had come to the rescue by dispatching a large armed force from her military station at Merv across the Persian frontier to tLo s;t of tho disturbance. To many hundreds of Huglishmen who read their papers on that morning this announcoiuent conveyed but little. That there Is such a country as Persia we all know, that KnjJIsh Interest-? pre dominate in (he saiitli and Russian in terests in the north we have all super llcialiy understood from childh.iod, but In this knowledge, coupled with the fact that Persia Is comfortably far away, we aro apt L rest content. It Is only to the eyes that see thruig'i lo:.g distance ghssos. the minds thai regaul the present as nothing more or les-i than an Inevitable link joining the ui ture to the past, that til..; c.i uaut. de batable laud stands out In Us true po litical siguilkr.in-e. To the luei'.i-e reider of new i the statement of Hutu's in v seeni I scarcely more Important than h d the llrst report of the bonier rising., in January, but t. the men who had watched the growth of the disturbance It came charged with portentous men lug. Through the entire r.inl.a of the oppasltl )ii, from Fralde himself down ward, It caused a thrill of expectation that peculiar prophetic sensation that every politician has experienced at some moment of his career. In no member of Ids parly did this feeling strike deeper root than in I.oder. Imbued with a lifelong Interest in the eastern question, specially equipped by personal knowledge to hold and pro claim an opinion upon Persian affairs, he road (ho signs and portents with In stinctive Insight. Seated at Chllcote's tabh, surrounded by Chllcote's letters and papers, he forgot tho breakfast that was slowly growing cold, forgot the Interests and dangers, personal or pleasurable, of tho night before, while his mental eyes persistently conjured up the map of Persia, traveling with steady deliberation from Merv to Me shed, from Meshed to Herat, from Her at to the empire of India! For It was not the fact that the Ilnzaras had risen against the shah that occupied tho thinking mind, nor was It the fact that Husslan arid not Persian troops wero destined to subdue them, but tho deep ly Important consideration that an armed Uusslan force had crossed the frontier aud was encamped within twenty miles of Meshed Meshed, up on which coetous Uusslan eyes have rented ever since the days of Peter the Great. So I.oder's thoughts ran as he read and reread the news from the varying political standpoints, and so they con , ulL. , "' hours later, tinned to run when, some an urgent telephone message from the St. Ocorgo's Gazette asked him to call at Lakeley's oillco. TO uu continued. sha1 Urges Church Union. Chicago, Keb. 20. Secretary of Treasury Shaw was the guest thi ol' honor at a banquet of the Intordcnom lnatlonal Social union of Chicago IIIUilUIKU JW1I1 aaaua . vawt-Dw The gathering was coinposed of ren- rcseiuauvus 01 1110 lueiuuuisi, r.va hyterlnn, Congregational and Bnptis! churches. Secretary Shaw delivered tho principal address, urging that the organization of tho union bo made permanent. It Is only because each man Is so dif ferent from his fellows that we are inblo to endure one another's company, t Florida Times. sw JPine GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION OR HONEY REFUNDED. K DOSE AT BED TIME WILL USUALLY RELIEVE THE MOST SEVERE CASE BEFORE MORNING. FOR SHL6 BY tdk Laxative Brcmo Quinine Tablets. Sevm MOSonikaxM soH In past 12 months. This Signature, - PirtirrrHii'-MMiitiNiimiMn,iM'iiii-nniMiiii1iiiiiMMm7rT'MI W H lBi "" Vl B H H " ' """ ' ' '"""" 'I"" 1 -' '" ''"' '"" li tu i HI lit rVregdablcPrcnarationror As similating UicrooilatulRcgula ting the SlQinochs antiBowcLs of Promotes DigcsHon.Checrful ncssandRcst.Contains neither Opnim.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. Ibctpe ofOMllrSAMUELrnxmKR JunfJan Sui" Jlx.Stnna Srtd Imrmint -liOr6analtSim ftirmSttil -CJonhtd Sugar Apcrfccl Kcmcdy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca, and Loss OF Sleep. I !. I Tac Simile Sicjnnhifc of NEW "YORK. Bragging Down Pains are a symptom of tne most aerlous trouble which can attack a woman, viz: falling of the womb. With tills, generally, comes Irregular and painful periods, weakening; drains, backache, lieaJacho, nervousness, dizziness, ir- Vi rltability, tired feeling etc. The cure is M Hie Semale KegUlaiOr that wonderful, curative, vej;ctable ex tract, whldi exerts such n marvelous, strenllioniag hrluence, on all female or;;a- s. Cardul relieves pain and re .ukites the nenses. It is a sure and pcimanent cure for all feainla con:plnlnt-. At all drugMs and dealers in S1.0Q bottles. "I SUSTE3SD AWPUL PAW Naoul Iial.e, of Wcbbter Grove, Mo., ,1 'C.o in niy lir.lit and left biJes, and M r.iy men' es v?-e verj painful at J irrc); 3 u'.ar. Sim.h t T ...i- C irJui I led h.ea ;J now voi.'.an a..d .to not suffer as I diJ, U It is Uie best medicine I ever took." & iRTjajt-US st-iaiffiiiTxiczEmjrA-Haj INFLAMMATORY UHKUMATISM OL'UIID 1 S DAYS Morton I.. Mill, of I.elmtion Inrt . nys; "Mj wife liiul Intliimmatorr lihoumntIm It) ever) niiikOle mid Joint: tier Miffprltn; wax torrlnlr ml tin Itriita rt i f.imi lu A ri c jil 1 jl.i .ill., n .t t... 1 AU IlUt U"IJ II 1 1 It liV UUU niTUtlCJI IWIIllllIir I J JJJJJH!kK,,,,;i ijMH ' .!"i Z K ' bciiollt until htm tried tlio Myntlc Cure rot I TMicunuMlim. It Kim Immediate relict Atid she whh able to walk xhout In three c)rvh. i hit mire it fcnVfd her Ufa." Sold hy II. "e. Orlec DriiSKlst. Red Cloud. I A nnrantccd Care for Piles. Itching, blind, bleeding, protruding piles. Druggists are authorized to refund money if l'azo Ointment falls to cure in 0 to 14 days. r() cents. The & ft rW, Am, Hiiinjtiiitiiii.i nin m CASTORS I 1 ' rc S I EXACT COPT OF WRAPPER. B BJfSfQP I wM 1 K IffV L'w wht7 EpftPJii,! OF BBfflp IMP SLJLC rtacW' HENRY COOK To Cure a Cold in Qm Day lUHo 1 UNA For Infants and Children. (naMMnmiMnaMnranawnnnaiHnl The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CATARRH Jr iiW YK . Oscmscsasaegsi Ely's CAsya Balm This Rcmody 13 a Spociflc, Suro to Civo Satisfaction. OIVKS RELIEF AT ONCE It clonnscs, soothes, hciih, aud protects a dlsciwi'd juombrauo. It cures On tnrrh a ud drives away a Cold in tho Head quickly. Haylouto. ConUiins no injurious drugs. Liirge Ki.c, TA) contti at l)rugglst or ly m.iil ; Trial Si jo, 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren St.. New York. Wliooplno No Opiates, Conforms to rmisrwv&m KUKffll All cough eyrupscontalnlnc opiates consti pate tbebowel8. Bee's Laxative CouEhSyruj moves tho bowels and contains no opiates. HOLLISTER-a Cocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Uusy Mciiioino for Baty Poople. Brinies QolJon Health and honoured Vigor. A Htit'dflo for Constipation, IndlROitlon, Mve "nd Kidney Trouble. Pimple. Kczcmi, Impure illowT, Dad Brcnth, RlURctlali nowris, Hwulncho and Ilicl.-arha. it's ltocky Mountain Tea In to itt form, : o"nts n box. Ocnulno initdo by 'IOU.18TEU Dnuo CnvPiNV, M-tdlmn, Wis. .'.flLDEM Nimr.FTS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE niudlclnal virtues of the crude cums and reslna sears me m mm 1 Q. jTiV m kjijucouluo f lar1 I nf KAff lj For Over I Thirty Years n. niMun umrnnT. n&wr TgnK UITT rSrWiX obtained from the Native Pine have been recognized by tho medical profession for ccnturic9. Pine-ule Contain the virtues of the Native Pinotbatare of value in reliev ing Backache, Kidney, Blood, Bladder aud Rheumatic Troubles. TTJ A rf"U ?J W W . , 1 M fr ,Ofrf' - onij .! JS. Shi Vtr.-, Jt.'. Ji..L J!? A Cures Grip in Two Days $ 7 A yr on everv rnrt - box. 25c. i