Custer County Republican. (Broken Bow, Neb.) 1882-1921, November 09, 1905, Image 3

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, r' 'j PRESIDENT l EPT BUSY ON
; d' . ' 'HIS TRIP THROUGH SOUTH
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The course tal\Cn by President
Roosevelt on his Southern trip was as
. . 10110ws :
. Thursday , Oct. 19.
Raleigh , N. C.-Brealtfast , on the
train ; reception to state officers in
senate chamber ; visit to state ( air.
address by the president ; review of
I militia ; informal luncheon ; leaving
' 1' . . ' . o.t 1 p. m. with brief stops at Dur.
: ham , Greensboro. Hhh Point , Sal.
. . : . / Isbury and Charlotte , N. C.
. ' : ' ; ' . . ' . Friday , Oct. 20.
r . ' . Roswell , Ga.-President visited the
; > ' : . ' . . , ; home of his mother in the morning.
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. ' ! ' : - - " Atlanta , -Arrive 11 a. m. ; review
militia in PIedmont pilrlt ; address
" by the president ; luncheon and
drIve about the cltr ; leave 7 p. m.
Saturday , Oct. 21.
Jacltsonvllle , Fla-Arrive 10:30 : a. m. ;
military and civic parades ; address
by the president ; luncheon by the
board of trade.
St. Augustine , Fla.-Arrive in the af.
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ternoon ; drive to the Pence de Leon
hotel , thence to Fort Marion , where
the president de1lvered an address ;
supper at Masonic temple.
Sunday , Oct. 22.
St. Augustine , Fla.-Day spent in the
vicinity , with no formal program ar.
. ranged.
, . . ' Monday , Oct. 23.
. Mobile , Ala-Arrivo 4 : 30 P. m. ; drlvo
through the city and address by the
president ; leave 6:30 : p. m.
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Valuable Political Indorsenent. ; ,
A letter received the other day by
:1\10.01' : . McClellan o ( Now York is a
record.brealtcr even among the multi.
form curiosities of Its Idnd sent to
persons in the public eye. The writer
Is a negro , who sars : "I regret very
much that my incarceration in the
" , Tombs on a charge of murder wl11
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prevent me ( rom .taldng an ) ' active
; . { ' part in this campaign. However , I
I want to say that the entlro ticket
" headed by ) 'ourself meets with my
' . . . . - . . fullest approval and has my el rrest
J" support. It Is too bad , though , that
' . . . myoId friend Edward M. Grout Is
: . . . - " . not figuring In the campaign. "
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Tuecday , Oct. 24.
Tuskegee , Ala.-Arrive 8:30 : a. m. , the
president spending two hours about
the town and the institute.
Montgomerr ; , Ala.-Arrive noon ; wel.
comed at state capitol by the mayor
and governor , with an address by
the president.
BIrmingham , Ala-Arrive 4:41i p. m. ;
two hours' stop , speech by presl.
dent ; visit to the state fall' , with
a second address by the president ;
leave 6:46. :
Wednesday , Oct. 25.
Little Rocl" Arlt.-Arrivo D am. ; visit
to Fort Logan H. Roots ; address by
the prcsldent In the City park ;
luncheon ; lcave 4 p. m.
Mcmphls. Tenn.-Party splits up , the
president , Secretar ' Loeb' and Sur.
geon General lIxey proceeding tCJ
Now Orleans , the remainder of the
party returning to Washington.
Thursday , Oct. 26.
New Orleans , Ln.-Arrive D a. m. ; sol !
on the river , followed by an addreSf
by the president and ( ormal lunch
eon ; will leave Now Orleans on f
lighthouse tender , on which he wil :
pass the night.
Friday , Oct. 27 , to Oct. 31.
Homeward Bound.-Salls from Ne' li
Orleans on the cruiser West Vir
ginla to Norfolk , Va" where he wlr
board the 1\Iarfiower for the trlr
to 'Vashlngton , arriving the morn
Ing of Tuesday , Oct. 31.
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Owes Fortune to "Grub.Stake. "
A , D. Parlter , the new vice presl
dent of the Colorado & Southern COlD
pany , owes his good fortune to th (
fact that he once "grub.staked"
prospector. This was five years ago
To-day he is worth fully $800,000 and
has some new mining ventures. The
foundation of his fortune was laid h1
Goldfields , Nev. , where his prospec
tlve partner "struck it rich. " Mr ,
Parl\Or , aside ( rom being wealthy , ie
a preacher of ability. Nearly every
Sunday he fills a pulpit in Montclair ,
a fashionable suburb of Denver , and
preaches In a highly creditable man.
nero
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_ - [ British.Japanese Alliance
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Great Britain and Japan have con.
eluded a now treaty to last for ten
years that malws them closer nllleEl
than ever. The new treaty brings
both powers Into the conflict if elth.
er Is attaclwd by a nation. They were
- \ . ; . ' ( ormerly not committed to Interfere
; i-F until either was attacked by two pow.
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J This alliance will bo formidable In
' ,1 ( ! . ; ; " - war , It doubles the army each has
-r , { ' . available , and combines two fieets
. . . : , J ) ' that are the envy of the world. Great
' ; : ' ' 1 : " " Britain's is the largest in existence ,
with a past hlstor ) ' that olano could
earn it ample respect. Japan's , though
. . comparatively small , has proved its
superiorlt . in the greatest triumph
over won In modern battles at sea.
The Jap navy Is practically Eng.
IIsh built and it is mainly trained
along British and American lines , '
Here is the summary of the com.
. " blne : t : attleshlps , GD ; , armored
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) 'ears ago , when the present I
chlof justlco of the superior court of '
New Hampshire was practising law
! on HllIsboro count ) ' , on ono occasion
ho was cross.examlnlng the defendant
, In a suit by a brother against a sistoI'
wl1l1n the defendant testified that her
borther had called her hard names at
a certain time.
" 'Yell. " said the lawyer , "what was
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that he called " ,
the worst thing you ?
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Atter some hesitation , came the an.
: 8wer , "He called mo a d-d old "
thodox. "
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cruisers , 60 ; protected cruisers and
scouts , 97 ; destroyers , 187 ; torpedc
heats , ID8. Total , 601.
The strengths of other Dowers , ex.
cludlng vessels smaller than cruisers ,
11.1'0 : France , 56 ; RussIa , 17 ; United
States , 54 ; German ' , 50.
Japan has 14 battlesblps , 11 arm'
ored cruisers , 17 protected cruisers ;
Great . Britain 55 battleships , 3D arm.
ored cruisers and 80 protected cruls.
ers and scouts. The combined battleships -
ships and armored cruisers of the twCJ
fieets carry this armament : 4013,5-
inch , ID8 12Inch , 118 10.lnch or D.2.
Inch , 46 8.lnch , 1,22D 7.5 61' 6.lncl1
guns.
Great Britain's standing army to.
tals 1,132,523 men , and Japan's ap'
proxlmate.I ) ' 1,000,000. The armIes 01
other nations on II. war tooting nre :
Austro.Hungar ) ' , 2G76OOO ; France ,
3,33D.400 ; German , 4.017D77 ; Ital ) ' , 3 ,
'II 2D2,440 ; Russia , 4,51i0,000 ; Turltoy .
700dOO.
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Rings That Carried Polson.
I Polson rinss are 'as old as hlstor ) '
Demosthenes wore one , but did n01
use It. When the police came froIr
I
I Athens to arrest him he asked per
I l1Iisslon to write a farewel1 note to
! friend and suclwd hIs pen after dip
, Illng It In IIol60nell Ink , When Cras
SIlS , who was custodian ot the treas
, ures of Rome , was detected in plICer
In a pile of gold that was concealel' '
under the statue of Jupiter ( In Capl
tollno Hill , he brushed the jewel : > 1
his ring In his teeth and . dIed immo
dlately.
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THE GREATEST D M ON EARTH
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Interesting Facts About the One at '
Salt River , ArIzona. I'
I"lfteen years ago the highest dam
In exist once waif the l < urens dam ( In
France ) . the total height of whIch
was 170 ( eet. Since then three very
much larger dams bave been built In
the United States , sa's the Technical
World Magazine. These are the Cro.
ton dam In New York , the Clinton
walerworlcs dam at Denver , on Lho
south ( ark of South Platte rh'er.
Eaeh of these at present haMs the
record In ono r.espoct or another. The
Denver dam is Ule highest In the
world ; the Clinton impounds Ul0
largest amount of water nnd the
Croton dam contnins the largest mass
of masonr ) ' . Dut tbo Salt river dam ,
wben finished , will exceed ench of
these In Its own speclalt ) . ; it. wlII bo
higher than Denver will exceed the
Croton dam in masonr ) ' ; and will 1m.
pound twlco as much water as all
three dams put together. It will bo
270 teet high tram foundation to pnra-
pet , wl1\ \ contain 300.000 cubic : ranls
of masonry and will impound more
Ulan 1,000,000 acre.feet o ( water ; that
Is , moro than enough to cover n mil.
'llon acres (1,500 ( square miles ) to a
depth of ono ( oat. It. wl1\ \ term a
lale twentfive miles long aUll one
to two miles wide , covering an area
of 14,000 acres , Its cost , with maintenance -
tonance tor ten ) 'ears , will be 3,000.-
000 or $4,000,000. .
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ROBBER BETRAYED BY FRIEND.
Plttsburg Man Who Stole $100,000
Caught :1t Bridgeport , Conn ,
Edward G. Cunliffe , wanted in Pitts
burg , Pa" ( or the robbery of $101,000
in caeh from the Adams Express com
pan ) ' , was arrested at Bridgeport ,
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L Conn. , by a Pinlwrton detective. Al ,
. most al1 of the stolen money was re-
I covered. Cunllffo was betrayed by a
I friend In whom ho bad confided. A
I reward of $2,500 was paid to the be-
.
trarer.
I NEED WORKERS IN THE SOUTH. I
, Half Million Men and Women Can
I F nd Profitable Employment.
There is room for at least 500,000
men and women to do the immediate
, worlt of the South , -to say nothIng of
that which Is to bo done hereafter.
In the season of 1904.05 Southern
cotton mills consumed 2,172DD2 bales
of cotton , though their spindle capacl.
ty was sufficient to consume 400,000
or 500,000 moro bales. FaUure to
malto the 1120st of the investment In
machinert' was based upon inahlllty
to obtain p full quota of operatives ,
Some Iron furnaces are falling behind
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their capacity to the extent of 2,500 I
or 3,000 tons 11. month , not because
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there is no urgent. mnrket. but because -
cause they cannot find enough com.
man dally laborers even to move
promptly thousands of tons In their
yards already promised for delivery ,
Railroad contractors 0.1'0 . rivaling one
another in their search for men to
wield the pick and shovel. Cotton
fields 0.1'0 . white to the barvest , but
tbo laborers are few.-Baltlmore Man'
ufacturers' Record ,
TURKISH FORESTS LAID WASTE.
Neglect Will Bring Suffering In the
Near Future.
I Forestry is neglected by the Turk.
ish government , as witness the foHow.
Ing remarlts by an explorer : "The
, most marked feature of all this east.
, ern district Is the entire absence of
I wood , not from any natUl'al condition ,
as trees would evidently grow In most
parts , according to species and to altl.
tudo limits , but owIng to wilful de.
structlon and neglect to replant. Flr
,
wood now comes four and marc tlays'
,
j urney to Erzernm and Is In that
, city the most expensh'e houselwld
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necessity , while across the border ,
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on the Russian side , there are magnifl-
l cent pine forests. This regrettnblc
destruction extendp. all over Aolatlc
, Turkey , square miles of ( crest being
. burnt where as many acres of clearing -
[ ing near sarno village are desired.
Around villages great walls of mag.
, nlficent logs rise up and ground fields
also , so that soon :10 forests will re.-
, main except In the most Inacceoslblo
mountains. "
Japan Seeks Cheap Wheat.
Japan Is to estahllsh a line of
steamers with South America. The
purpose Is to get cheap wheat tram
. Argentina. nice eating In Japan 18
L giving way to brend made from wheat
. or from a mb.llll'e of wheat nnd rice
or other cel'pals Japan's representa.
tlvo In Borlln Is Instructed IJy his
, government to collect data or trade
I possibilities between the two coun.
- tries. Japan , ns Is her right , seems
r determined , says Dally COl1lmlar no.
. ] ports , to go to the ends ot tha earth
to buy l'd IAIL
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POLITICIANS ARE INVOLVED IN
PENNSYLVANIA BANK SCA DAL
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THMOAS LEE CLARK.
Following an investigation which
dlsclooed that the Entel'1lTlso Nation.
0.1 . banlt of Alleghenr , Pa. , was insolvent -
solvent , T. Lee Clarlt , cashier of the
institution for manr ) 'ears , committed
suicide.
One of the most sensational ( ea.
tures of the affnh' Is the charge that
Clark had lonned thousands of dollars
to Penns'lvanln politicians who were
BELIEF IN AN ERA OF PEACE
Natlonll of the World Likely to est
for Some Time.
Wo are optimist enough to believe ,
as even the pessimist hopcs , that an
ern of peace is at hand. Some , in.
deed , contend that Its advent. would
be assured by some International
agreement to reduce armaments.
There seems , however , far stronger
ground for holdIng that mischief
would arise out of an International
discussion on the subject than for ex.
pectlng that it would hasten the mil.
lonnlum. The strong man armed Is
the trustiest custodian of peace. It
is n t the best policed district that
is the most exposed t.o the enterprises
of the burglar. 'rhe growing cost.
IIness of war In blood and treasure is
the strongest guarantee against reek-
less recourse to it br any power Ulat.
Is not absolutely desperate. Under
modern conditions the victor must bo
prepared to contemplate years of
straitened means and painful sacrl.
f1ces : bankruptcy and ruin are the
probable penalties of the vanqusl.ed. !
The progress of sclenco is doing as
mueh as the adVane2l11ent of morality
to convlnco manldnd of the hopeless
wicledness of any war which Is not
undertalten In defense of national
honor of national exlstence.-London
Telegraph.
Delights of Fall Days.
Given health nnd the physical capacity -
pacity for appreciation of this season ,
and man feels the jO ) ' of living In Its
fullest oxtent. Mere exlstenco Is ex.
uberant. Its delights are the right
and the possession of the poorest as
well as the richest. There is no plu.
tocracy in nature. Wealth cannot buy
the joys which the humblest may
gather for themselves. And the Inspiration -
spiration for the future whIch comes
with this season is univer8al. It Is
the time of now endeavor for new en.
terprlses. The vigor which springs
In the sound mInd in the sound body
nder the Impulse of this period
makes for great accomplishment. The
harvest of the fields has been gaUl
erod , but for humanity It Is the seed-
tlmo of actlon-Boston Post.
Awakening of China.
Miss Luella Mlnte , writing from
Peldn , sa's : "Few realize that al.
ready W have a new China , not qulto
steady as yet on her feet , nor qulto
sure of all that she b11nks at with her
long.closed eyes , but full of real life
and ambition. There are ever sixty
high schools In Peldn , with an aver.
ago of over 100 pupils each. These
are all schools of 'western learning'
and are closo.l on Sunda ) ' , One has
six teachers , three of wllOm spealt
English well. A few In high Ilower
It III hold to th\ old regIme , but It will
soon be swept away , and then changes
will come sudden ! ) " . Four hundred
millions ILre now In 11 slate of transl.
tlon , plastic , InquIring , and the church
has never had such opportunity as
now. "
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Largest Drydock In World.
United States Consul BaI'del ot
Bamberg , G01'111I1n ) ' , reports Ihat to.
ward the end of the year 1')05 ) the
port of lIamlJurg will have I he big.
gost dr'doclt In the world. It Is to
have a lifting Ilower of 35 , OQ tons ;
I the largest docl ( at pl'esent lifts 17"
600 tons , The la1'lest : ; shIps of the
! mercantile marinl' can he docled In
'It. ' In building ThiEl dock care Is
taken that , If necel1sary , It can be
transported to the lower I lbe , near
Drunushausen. which , in the event at
1 ! "Ilrr would be Important.
aligned with the ohl Quay machine.
Fredorlclt Gwinner , the aged presl.
dent of the Inslltutlon , snld : "Nearly
$700,000 of the $800,000 state deposits
of our banlt is out on paper of otate
IJollticlans. 'V. II. Andrews has borrowed -
rowed nearly 400,000 ; l mnk J. Tor-
ranco has borrowed consldorable-I
I do not lenow how lDuch. But the
banle is solvent. "
WOMAN OWNER OF MANY TREES
Mrs. Arthur Henry Takes Much Pride
In Her Collection.
Mrs. Arthur Henry , wlfo of the novo
ellst , I1robably owns maI'o trees than
any oUler woman In America. Some
at thom grow on the mlle square
tract which the lIenrys IJOSsess up In
the Catsldlls , but most of them grow
on other peoplo's land. Tree collect.
Ing Is 1\11's. Henry's fad , Whenever
she sees au especially fine tree she
goes to the } Jeoplo on whoso land It
stands Rnd offers to buy It. Usually ,
when the owners find that she wishes
neither to cut down nor to transfer
the tree , but only to teel that It Is
hers themalto ; her a present of It.
Most of her trees are named and all
of them have their pictures talten and
filed away In an Immense album.
" 1\Iy pet tree just now , " she 8a'S , "is
a eucalyptus out In RIverside , Cal.
It's named Bernard Shaw. It's an
orglnal : tree. It sheds Its barlt when
other trees 'content themselves with
sh 1ddlng merely their leaves and it
holds Its leaves edgowlso to the sun ,
so that the tree doosn't glvo a bit at
comtortablo shade to anybodY. It'a
a tree that wouldn't conceal anything ,
least of all Itsplf. "
STARTS AT FOOT OF LADDER.
August Belmont III Enters Father's
Banking House as Clerk.
August Belmont Ill , the thIrd scion
o ( the famous bauldug family , Is SOOI'
to enter his father's banldng house af
a clerlt. Ho Is 22 , hut lools older. HI :
is a trlfio below modlum height. I..IIH"
his father , 110 is an athlete , an ardent
SIJ01'tsman , a lover of horses , 0. goO(1
sailor , a fall' boxer , a hard hitter ana
a Rlmpl liver. Ho dislikes notoriety
and Is less lenown to the public than
any of the ) 'mmg men at New Yorlt
destined to Inherit many mUllons. The
only time Ills name 11as come Into
IJrlnt has been in connection with sail.
ing his boats In regattas on the sounder
or in Jlla'lng polo , a sport which lie
Is as passionately devoted to as his
father always hRS been and In which
ho plays almost as good 0. game as
his father does.
Proper Use of Spectacles ,
Spectacles , according to an oculist ,
often Increase the eye tr9ublo they
are meant to correct because they are
improperly used. "Tho man who
needs glasses to read by , but not to
see at 11. distance , often puts them on
in 11 street car or similar IJlaco , " says
thIs oculist , "and then wilen ho looks
up stili uses them for lookIng at
things a little way off. 'fhls gradually
changes the focus of the eye , so that
ho comes finally to see better with
them than without them. Then ho
needs stronger glasses to read with ,
and the trouble gets worse and worso.
Ono way to avoid this Is to wear the
reading glasses so Iowan the nose
that they may he loolted over instead
of throuh ! : ; when the glance is raised'
-PhlladellJhlll Record.
Grave of Patrick Henry.
Inqulr ) ' is made now and then at
to where Patrlclt Henry Is buried
The omtor lies In a flulet grnve on the
estate In Charlotte county , Virginia
whore he fortnlJrly 1I\'ell. ned 1111I il
the name or the I'stale. which Is or
I the Staunton river , thlrty.plght mllel
from I.'nchbclr. : ' , When Patrlclt Hen
1' ; ) ' hought the place It comprlse ( '
ahout 3,500 acres. Ono of the near
est olghhol's WitS John Randolph 0.
Roanolco , fifteen rulles away. Red IIII
Is now O\vnell by Henr"s grandson
W. W. IIenry.-Now Yorlt Tribune ,
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KEEP OU OF RTIT
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NARROWMINDIIiJ PInION NEVEft !
IS POPUlArt.
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At Le3st Have Some Form of Dlvcrl.
fled Interest on Which You Can'
Converse With a Frlend-MIBtakes
of Some Women.
: Do you lIve In a ruU Women are
very alJt to do so , although the m 1 . .
jorlty of them are loth to I1.dmlt. It.
Narrowmlnlledness , which Is so often I
R result of a lIfo spent withIn can.
tracted limits , Is common toVomon ,
theY say , but th accused will Knswer , i
"Why , my lIfo is not narrowl I have
my house , or my profession , or my
IlOclal circle. Do ) 'OU call that living
In a rut ? "
Any or all ot these Interests may ,
however , result In stagnation , ment"l-
Iy and physically , and , what Is worsO' ' ,
convorsatlonal ! ) ' . Either a woman or
n man Is at liberty to devote all of his
or her Interest to a certhln object.
Dut what ahout the friends at that
person ? Ono may have n sympathet.
Ic Interest In a frleml'o occupation or
h\ her children , or In hcr brldgo play.
lng , but ana occasionally hecomes II.
little wearied t a repetition , II. can.
stant reeurrenco to tlmt } Jet suhject
ot the Innocent but shortsighted wom.
au who hal'\Js \ eternall ) ' upon one oub.
jcet. She devotes lieI' mind amI en'
ergles to that suhject to the oxcluslon I
of all others , She dreams at fl , she
ponders over It , and only too roadlly
she reverts to It so constantly that
her friends at last wish themselves
miles away.
A schoohlrl : ; is OIJt. to ho IIIa111el1 because -
cause her convorsatlon Is IImlt .t to
her school-her friends there and her
studies nnll Illeasll1's ( ) , which are shadowed -
owed br the walls of the schoolhouse
But is her mother free from hlnme
wIlen she herself finds n continual
source of conversation In her servnnts
I and her household gods ? Does It in. I
terest her ( rlends nny more to discUSE '
the children's brllht : ; sa'lng8. , to praise I
her WI\\tress' \ neatness nnd her coolt' ! !
SUIJerlorltr , than to listen to R schoo ) ,
girl's prnttle ? I .
'rhe society devotee Is qulto as a
to overdo the matter S her maI'o do
mestlc sister , a11l1 the woman with I !
profession toUtS "shop" entirely toc .
much as a rule ,
Dut she should not allow herself tc.
I1well entirely upon ono phase of lIto.
There Is plent ) ' of Interest In ethel
people's affairs , there arc gay antI ab.
sorbing pictures In the vlstn of dally
lire , and every woman shouhl watch
herselr carefully lest she fall Into R
rut of ono Bart or another. It Is sur.
prfllng ; to find how readily the habit
1':1 : tormed-more real1l1r , ot course ,
by women than b ) ' men , as the latter
are thrown more Into the world's hap.
penlngs.
A woman shoull1 ever beware 0'
malting herself the centml subject 01
her tallt-her home , her profession
1101' health , how naturally she comes
to consider them. And It Is quite nat
ural that she should. But before shf.
burdens her fl'ienl1s too much wltl :
her history let her stop and wondol
whether she wouIrl 1\1e \ to lIsten tc
her friend Mrs. X. and l1er personal
troubles or her sewing society problems
loms tor 110urs at'a stretcl1.
It Is not meant b ) ' this that ana
should not spealt of or aslt sympathy
In ono's own Interests , but there is a
lImit to patience , and If a woman mu' "
l1avo a "hobb ) ' " she should 110t e , cct
her friends to rldo It constantly , too.
-Phlladelpl1la Ledger.
- - - -
DIviding Up the Honeymoon.
Charles Fellon PIdgin , the statlstl.
clan of Massachusetts , Is Itudylng ! the
question of race suicide.
"It is 0. wonder , " 1\11' . Pidgin sold the
other day , "that we l1ear nothing ot
race sulcldo in Scotland. The Scotch
0.1'0 . a prosaic peolJle. The French , on
the other hand , are as romantic as II. .
poet. ; Yet. It Is the l rench and not
the Scotch who 0.1'0 . permitting the ract !
to dlo out. The opposite is what wo
might expect. 1"01' the Scotch find
little of glamor , even In the honey.
moon. I Imew In Roxbury when 1
IIvecl there a Scotch tobacconist who
got married. Meeting him a tew daYf !
after the wedding I sold : 'Wby , DOIll
old , I thought you were away on your
honeymoon ? '
If 'Well , so we arc , ' the slmplo younG
fellow answered. 'Mary Is down aC
Cousin Tam's for a week , and I'm
gain' to take a weelt when she come.
back. ' "
Twilight Hour.
The 8unllRhl on a waveless scaThe -
The softened radiance fadeth slowlY ;
The folded /lower , the mlst.crowned trcClj
ProclaIm the catherlng twilight.
It Is the hour when passIon bows ;
A solemn sttllnes8 round UII IIngen :
And on our wildly throbbing brows
\Ve feel the touch of ancel fingers ,
It III the hour when lovers fond
( For love Its natlvo air Is hrcathlng )
Drape with fair hopes lite's drear beyon4
Gay garlands for the future wreathlns ,
It III the hour when In tar land
The wandercr , tlrell of cCRseless roam.
Ing. . .
Loni's tor the clasp at Idndred hand ,
And In the dear homo enwrapt 11.
gloaming.
It Is the hour when mankind hearll
Amid earth's mIngled moans and laughter - .
ter , . .
Chords which will swelt . . .hcn unborr
) 'cars
Are burled In the great hereafter , '
-Unldentll1ed.
New Use for Flypaper.
IrIs is the poetic name of a fiutr )
Angora cat which has 1bad habit
at running away. Little Bett ) ' , whe
has a proprietar ) ' Interest in the ani
mal , greeted her mother the ethel
day willi startling news.
"Irlth tried to run awa ) ' , " she sold
"and the wath bad and wouldn't mlndt
and I thtlcked Irltl1 to the fiypnp .
the the couldn't get awn ) ' . "
.
II )