The Grammar Class , The bond mistress of a certain pro vincial school WJIB one day examining R tow of hur select pupils In grammar. "Stand up , Jttan , nntl innko mo n Ecntonco conlnlnliiB tlio word 'HO- ! dom , ' " she said , pointing to n Rtnall urchin. Juan paused as It In thought ; then , with n flush ot triumph on his fnco , replied : "Last week fiilhur had ftvo horses , but yesterday ho seldom ! " With n smooth iron nnd Defiance Starch , you can launder your Hhlrt- waist just as well at homo as the nteam laundry can ; It will have the proper stiffness and flnlsh , there will bo lesa wear and tear of the goods , und it will bo a positive pleasure to use a Starch that docs not stick to the Iron. The Mean Thing. She ( eyeing the refreshment booth ) Dearest , while wo arc wait Ing for the train , don't you think It would bo a good Idea to take something ? He Yes , darling ; and slnco It Is such a beautiful moonlight night , let's take a walk. Important to Mothoro. Examine carefully every bottle ot CASTOHIA a safe und sure remedy for infants and children , and BOO that it Bears the Slgnaturo of , . In UBO For Over 'JO Ycaro. The Kind You Have Always Bought He Could Still Lie. "Madam , wo found your husband ly ing unconscious and " "Well , he's such an accomplished Jlnr that I don't think a little thing like being unconscious would umko nny difference. " tThat an article may bo good as well as cheap , and give entire satisfaction , is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch , each package con taining one-third more Starch than can bo had of nny other brand for the same money. A Curious Fact. "Water swells wood. " "It must. 1'vo often noticed that a novelist will wreck a skiff and then float enough Umber onto the desert Isle to build a town. " Try Murlne Eye Remedy For Red , Wcnk. Weary , Watery Eyos. Murine Doesn't Sinnrt Soothes Eye Finn. All Druggist" Sell Murhio at COotH. The 48 Fngc Dome in each Pk ( { . in worth Dollars in every hoinu. Auk your Druggist. Muiine Eye Remedy Co. . Chicago. Work is the grand euro of all the maladies and miseries that over bcHCt mankind honest work which you in tend getting done. Cnrlyle. Lewis' Single Hinder straight Co. You pay 10o for cignrn not BO good. Your deal er or Lewis' Fuctoiy , 1'coria , ill. Contentment la natural wealth ; luxury , artificial poverty. Socrates. KITS , HI. Vltus1 Dnncr. nnd Nnrvnuit 1)1 sen sea | > nr- munentljr rnrril by Dr. iCIIuu'ti Urea I Nerve Kosturur. Semi for PllKH fc UJ trial liuttla and trcntls" . Dr. U. 11 , KIluu , M. . IU1 Arch Slrcou lMilludeli > ! ili > . 1'a. Many a man is out of work be cause there is no work In him. IIo\v many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to como into their lives , and to bo able to utter these words , bub because of some organic derange ment this happiness is denied thorn. Every woman interested in this subject should know that prepara tion for healthy maternity is Accomplished by the use of Mrs. Maggie Gilmor , of West Union , S. O.writes to Mrs. Pinlcham : "I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex , \vhen Lydla E. Pinlcham1 a Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored mo to perfect health , but to iny delight I am a mothur. " Mrs. Josephine IIalltof Bards town , Ky. , writes : "I was iv very great Eiiffcrcr from female troubles , ana my physician failed to help me. Lydla B. Pinkhain's Vegetable table- Compound not only restored mete to perfect health , but I am now a proud mother. " FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound , made from roots and herbs , has been the standard remedy for female ills , andhas positively cured thousands or 'women who have been troubled with displacements , inflammation , ulceration - tion , fibroid tumors , irregularities , periodic pains , backache , that bear ing-down feeling , flatulency , indices- tiondizziness or nervous prostration , "Why don't you try it ? Airs. Pinlclmm invites nil siok women to write her for advice. She hns fjuidcd thousands 1o jtioaltu. Address.Lyusj Muas. ifv v f &S m t - o'raAWV .r * $ ' - WYrW , M H cPP"W : iflUi J * tJ'v 4M , Jamaica , once a veritable heaven KINGSTON villas and southern Industry , now bids fair to puss Into archives of history and within u few years this gem of the south will probably be only a memory In American minds. It is nearly 18 months since the earthquake which tivaled that nt San FrunclBco toro down the beau tiful bungalows and public buildings and desecrat ed the plazas of Kingston , but there has been hardly a move to rebuild the city. As a consequence quence the plnco to-day looka much as It did the nature-blessed , fertile-soiled dot In the great sea would produce under conditions of Intense agricul tural cultivation ! Apparently under the very best Off > of the present-day cultivation about the only effort that Is put forth to produce the most abundant m- crops Is to tear away that which you don't want in mterI order to give a little advantage to that which you want to grow. _ * , - | . H * " * i " "I * " "l I I ( VI _ . . . _ JEH'-,2 ZS5 rt AatrZZ rtmn irmlt x * r.rm Jtttt } & The fruit trees and farms produce their crops all the year 'round. While there Is a natural harvest . . . * * * JX .i * * < < j - i ? * Wre5J T ' * * " morning after the terrible rumblings of the earth announced to the residents of Kingston that they were experiencing ono of the worst earthquakes which over befell the western hemisphere. The sti cots of Kingston are Btlll utrown with broken brick , stone and mortar. Only whore abso lute necessity demanded hns the debris of a year and a half ago been cleared away nnd to-day ono may walk the Directs of thlu historic city and bo compelled to take the iniddlo of the road In order to avoid the great piles of shattered buildings which blockade the sidewalks and most of the thoroughfares. This condition to the minds of Americans Is per haps an enjoyable contrast to that which took place In San Fiancltico shortly after the Golden Gate city was desolated by the quake of a few years ago. The Pacific coast metiopolis awoke the morning following the earthquake and literally went to work then and there to place n now city on the site of the ono destroyed. Workmen were paid wages which diow laborers. mechanics , engineers from every section of the world to take advantage of the high price put upon services. To-day the tourist would sfnicely know there had been a disturbance of Hoismlc conditions. But in Kingston some of Uio lesldents made homeless by the earthquake are still inhabiting tents , others have departed , whllo still others have moved away from the stricken pity. I.Ittlo has been done. And what Is the lenson ? tourists ask. Is It the traditional "tired fooling , " attilbuted to south ern peoples , Is It lack of activity on the part of the government or lack of facilities ? Those are the questions which exports In building and organizing are trying to solve today , many months after this condition was brought about. One reason Is that the English Insurance companies have evaded payment of losses In the lire which followed the earth quake. The cases are In the courts for adjustment , but the piogross Is slow. In many cases whe.ro the property was destroyed the owners are unable to rebuild without assistance and that is hard to obtain while the insurance cases are pending. Others are disheartened Und would rath er sell their land than to rebuild nnd Impiovo It. The scene Is almost as desolate as It was the week following the earthquake In some sections , not ably on Harbor and Orange stioets , the rubbish has been cleared away and small one-story frame buildings have been erected In which stores and business places were quickly opened ; at another point the go\ eminent Is clearing an entire city square for the erection of now federal buildings. Aside fiom these minor matters the city has made little progress toward rebuilding , and business Is generally carried on In tempoinry structures or lit old buildings which were unaffected by the earth quake and which likewise escaped the flames. And yet , Kingston still shows much evidence of its former beauty. The stately palm decs are to bo seen along many highways and In private grounds ; the cocoanut palm nourishes In almost every door yard ; the rank giowth of tropical foil- ago Is quickly covering union of the unsightly ruins and giving an air of life In which the Imnd of man does not op-operate. Before the earthquake the city had many magnifi cent churches , representing most of the prominent denominations. Every ono of thorn was either de stroyed or put out of commission , and services have not been held In a alnglo church of the city slnco the earthquake. All public worship Is either conducted In small buildings near the parent churches or In the streets. The street meetings predominate , and many of these arc fervid almost to the point of fanaticism. The horrors of the earthquake , which resulted in several hundred deaths , made such an Impression upon the minds of the native Jamaicans as to leave many of them hysterically religious. A sight that impresses ono in the Kingston streets Is the prevalence of women laborers. Much of the heavy work Is done by the native black wom en ; they work on the streets , with pick and 3l * sg Fw V shovel ; they help to / % fifc- break the stones for ma - N SJM' - - 5r- - r1 * * - cadamizlng the streeta , and they are to be found In the working gangs In all private and ft > : S , J M Ss SS & public building opera TrjT ! r i * * * v"T * " ° < i 'y ? y * v < * "y''i''i'i ) ! ' tions. It Is said that the stone for the macadam ized highway which rum § SVl'1 " i " * i < 5 ! L' * " ' * * * * * - fe" * * * Ass : * , „ * " cc : - , -c-il ? % - ontlroly ncross the Island ' lfe K5- of Jamaica from Kings -m ton to Port Ontario wad all crushed by native women. One thing can bo said that cannot ba claimed for the states , GORDON however , they receive equal wages with the men for similar work. But to diop the distieasing features of life in Kingston for the more delightful ones of the rest of the Island of Jamaica , which Is truly a tropi cal gem of the first water. Vegetation ! Its lux uriance can linidly be conceived of by a north erner without a peisonal visit. Its productiveness Is almost beyond conception ; fruits grow in rare abundance with only the slightest effort on the part of the ranchmen or native fanners. A trip across the Island either by rail or automobile Is a revelation of beauty on every hand. At every turn now beauties and new delights are thrust upon you ; the fertility of the s-oll both on the hills and lowlands is almost beyond belief ; vegetable growth , rank but perfect , at every point. So far as ono can see , the term "bare land" does not apply In .Jamaica ; vegetation , either wild or un der cultivation , a mass of greenery and bloom. Ileie a liedse , a grove , a hillside , covered with the ever-bearing cocoanut tieos In full fruitage ; there , long lows of banana trees , with great green bunches hanging from the thilfty stalks. Some times they were in scattered patches and at oth ers they were cultivated with skill and precision , and coveting wide ranios ; of land as far as the eye could teach , whllo hero and there were or ange groven or isolated trees , all laden with the tlch , yellow fruit. The little English railroad which crosses the islcnd fiom north to south winds for sonic dlstanco from Port Arthur along the southein const. Then It turns abruptly to the interior , plowing Its way over the hills , through tunnels , across ravines and down Inclines. But at every point , on the hillsides , by the sea shore , in the valleys , oVen In the swamps , the prolific giowth of all manner of vegetation Is evcrywheio present. N'.Uuro 1ms apparently done so much tor the little inland that the people have had no pioper Incentive for effort or development. Why live the strenuous life when It is so much easier to exist with little physical or mental labor ? Why strive lor a competence when the means of subsistence aio at hand without such strife ? Why lay up something for a "rainy day" when It Is the actual lalny days which como so frequently and refreshing-like to this Island that absolve ono from the absolute necessity for such saving ? And such stems to bo the thought of the natives of Jamaica. The English language tu almost the only ono heard on the Island. The natives , even In the In terior , \\lio seldom gel down to the coast , use the English lor.guu In n corrupted form , but easily understood. They are all ptond of the fact that they are English , whether black , bronze , mahogany - any or white and you Ilnd nil shades of color , the black predominating to a very largo degree. In cxcosfc of 90 per cent , of the population of Jamai ca la black. While thoto appear to ho no minerals of value on the IMand except , possibly , n little coppoi Jamaica is ceitalnly one of the iIt-best of Eng land's giout family of Islands Imagine what this time for the various products , the climate is such that with little effort It can be changed to suit the convenience of the producer , just as the skilled florist can produce June roses in December - comber in his northern hothouses. Here about all that Is icquired Is to plant your seed In an ticipation of the time you wish to gather your harvest ; in due time the seed sends forth Its shoots , which blossom , develop fruit that ripens and may be harvested , whether It be October , May or December. What wealth this means for the Island and to the mother country when , in the years to como , the land is put under intense cultivation and ad vantage is taken of all that nature has done for Jamaica , time only can tell. The hillsides and the valleys of this little Isl and are capable of producing crops under the best conditions that would support a largo nation. Mineral wealth Is unnecessary here ; the real wealth , which is perpetual and Inexhaustible , is in the fortuity of the soil and the climate condi tions which have produced such fertility. Theie is no ice , no snow , no frost , here. The rainy season is less severe and extends over a greater period of time than In any other portion of the world. There Is said to be rainfall In some patt of the island every month In the year , and the condition of the crops at any season would prove the truth of this statement. It would bo hard to find a place with more beautiful scenery or more appealing piospects. There are many charming driveways , both for the horse and auto mobile. The feeling of depression that must come to one in the city of Kingston gives way to ono of optimism as he gets out along the seacoast or In to the mountainous country , where everything Is pleasing. It is quiet and restful in Jamaica ; people hero do not do things In a hurry ; the cli mate is not conducive to the hustle of a northern community. Even the turkey buzzards that abound everywhere , soar slowly away over the city or the hills lib If they had no thought of being late for dinner or that the supply might give out be fore the > reached the dining table. And the little brown boys who dive for pieces of money from the decks of steamers or the pier at Kingston go into the water so leisurely and remain under so long that you begin to think they are going to stay down ; but they always come up with the coin clipped in their lingers , and stow ono pleco after another Into their spacious mouths for safe keeping until the sport Is over. Value of a Smile. A pretty smile may make one's fortune. Few women realize the value of a smile. Most smiles are useless. The smile that counts Is one that charms men , and that will secure favors here and survlco there , and go twice as far as a tip or n command. This smile has radiance , Is produced by the eyes as well as l > y tbo lips. and. above all , is never mechanical. Strand Magazine. PROOF FOR TWC CENTS. If You Suffer with Your Kidneys and Back , Write to Thlo Man. 0. W. WInney , Medina , N. Y. , in vites kidney sufferers to write to hint. To all who enclose postage l.o will 10- ply , telling h o w Doan's Kidney Pills cut ed him after ho had doctored and had been In two dif ferent hospitals for eighteen months , Buffering i n t o n s o pain in the back , lameness , twinges when stooping or lifting , languor , dizzy spells and rheu matism. "Before I used Doan's Kid ney Pills , " says Mr. Wlntu'V , "I weighed 143. After taking 10 or 12 boxes I weighed 1G2 and was com pletely cured. " Sold by all dealers. GO cents a box Foster-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. BAD BLUNDER. Admiring Stranger What a stun ning rider ! Er do you think she would feel hurt if I should toss her a kiss ? "No , but you might feel hurt , son ny , " replied the big stranger at hla elbow. "That's my wife. " Couldn't Fool Him. A custom house clerk , who , prior to his entry Into Uncle Sam's service , was a schoolteacher "a good many years yet , " as he proudly Informs his associates , was standing on the corner of Fifth and Chestnut streets one cold day last winter , deeply engrossed in studying a legend which appeared on a dairy man's wagon , as follows : "Pasteurized milk , " etc. His face wore a puzzled expression , but finally betraying evidence of dawn ing Intelligence he remarked to a by stander : "Ain't these here Philadelphia milk men a-gettln' to bo just as deceitful as anything ! Pasturlzed milk , eh ? But they can't fool mo , 'cai'so I lived In the country , and know you can't pasture cows in winter. " A Mere Fad. John D. Rockefeller , Jr. , was talking to a member of the famous Bible class about economy. "But economy , like everything else , may be carried to extremes may bo made a more fad of , " said Mr. Rocke feller. "There Is a farmer out near Cleve land who makes a fad of economy. Every time ho drives Into town ho carries a hen with him tied to the seat of his buggy. "A friend rode with him one day and found out the use of the he.n When , at noon , the farmer lunched under a tree he gave his mare a feed from a nosebag. The hen , set on the ground , ate all that the horse spilled from thn bag , and thus there was no waste. " A Man's Tact. Nobody but Mr. Henley would have asked such a question In the first place. "Miss Falrley , " ho said , "if you could make yourself over what kind of hair and eyes would you have ? " "If I could make myself over , " said Miss Falrley , "I would look just ex actly as I do now. " "You would ? " exclaimed Henley In honest surprise , and to this day he can't understand why Miss Fairley thinks him a man of little taste and \oss tact. DIFFERENT NOW Athlete Flndo Better Training Food. It was formerly the belief that to become strong , athletes must cat wlenty of meat. This is all out of date now , and many trainers feed athletes on ho well-known food , Grape-Nuts , made of wheat and barley , and cut the meat down to a small portion once a day. "Three years ago , " writes n Mich , man , "having become Interested in athletics , I found I would have to stop eating pastry and some other kinds of food. "I got some Grape-Nuts , nnd was soon eating the food at every meal , for I found that when I went on the track , I felt moro lively and active. "Later , I began also to drink Postum In place of coffee , and the way I gained muscle and strength on this diet was certainly gieat. On the day of a field meet in Juno I weighed 124 Ibs. On the opening of the football season in Sept. , I weighed 110. I at tribute my flno condition nnd good work to the discontinuation of im proper food and coffee , and the using of Grape-Nuts and Postum , my princi pal diet during training season being Grape-Nuts. "Before I used Grape-Nuts I never felt right in the morning always kind of 'out of sorts' with my stomach. But now when I rise I feel good , and after a breakfabt largely of Grape-Nuts with cream , and n cup of Postum , I feel like a now man. " "There's a Reason. " Name given by Postum Co. , Battle Creek , Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvlllo , " In pkgH. Ever rend the above letter ? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine , true , and full of humaf/ / Interest.