81 v tfj HlfW cS laQft - - - - I - e Hood u That plenty but reproaches mo Which leaves my brother bare Not wholly glad my heart can be While his Is bowed with care If I go free and sound and stout While his poor fetters clank Unsated still Ill still cry out Antf ilead with Whom I thank Aim ity Thou who Father be Of dm of me of all Draw us together him and me That whichsoever fall The others hand may fall him not The others strength decline No task of succor that his lot May claim from son of Thine I would be fed I would be clad I would be housed and dry But if so be my heart be sad What benefit have I Best he whose shoulders best enduro The load that brings relief And best shall be his joy secure Who shares that joy with grief E S Martin I A Boomerang BY MARY MARSHALL PARKS Copyright 1501 Dally Story Pub Co When Jared Peters went west to help the country grow up Rose Hawthorne thought her heart was broken This was a logical sequence of the firm con viction that she could not live without Jared which had led her to engage herself to him In accordance with this fixed idea she for a day or two re fused food and mournfully contem plated the prospect of an early demise But an immature mind cannot long dominate a young and healthy phy sique On the third day she made sev eral surreptitious visits to the pantry on the fourth day she dined openly and heartily and the day after she was startled by the discovery that she had not thought of Jared for several hours The Sunday following Jareds de parture she permitted Harold Winter set the son of a wealthy manufacturer from a neighboring city to accompany her home from church and linger for an hour at the gate and she was again startled by the discovery that she en joyed his society quite as much as Jareds Then she went upstairs and sat down in the moonlit window to consider She had all the rules of love at her fingers ends She knew that Absence makes the heart grow fonder that true love never forgets or wavers for the fraction of a second She was therefore forced to the conclusion that sne did not love Jared that she never had loved him and the manufacturers eon was allowed to call regularly Jareds letters were intensely inter esting The little western town which he had taken under his wing was on a boom He had already doubled his small capital and was proceeding to double it again Rose had all the rules of arithmetic also at her fingers ends She knew something of geometrical progression and having become in view of her large experience skeptical in regard to the tender passion she planned her future operations on a strictly commercial basis After care ful consideration she decided that a budding Western capitalist in the hand was worth more than a wealthy manufacturers son in the bush so she did not break her engagement and she did not mention Harold in her nu merous and entirely satisfactory let ters to Jared Although his love was false Jared had one devoted admirer From the day it was declared that the red faced mite of humanity called Jared was the image of his grandfather the old man had found his chief occupation in trac ing his own characteristics in the growing boy Hes a Peters every inch of him 1 lJC - r1 1 ffiC a 11 On the Third Day granther would shout when Jareds boyish achievements creditable or otherwise came to his notice Granther Peters had always liked Rose and of all the grils in the coun try round he would have chosen her for Jared When therefore at the age of sixteen Jared first walked home from church with her granther re tired to the grape arbor and chuckled till he was black in the -face He did all he could to foster the budding romance and when the engagement was formally announced his rapture nearly caused a fit of apoplexy When a tattling neighbor brought the news of Roses double dealing the old man flatly refused to believe it but when with his own eyes he saw Rose and Harold strolling by arm in arm in the dusk ha took to his bed After two or three days of misery mental and physical he arose and spent an en tire afternoon in inditing a letter which struck consternation to Jareds soul It was vague in manner and matter but he gathered from it some inkling of the truth and immediately wrote not to Rose but to one of her girl friends By return mail he re ceived a spicy and perhaps not fl n I Shall Stand by Jared aggerated account of Roses carry ings on Now Jared absorbed in specation as he was had kept a little corner of his heart for Rose and thought himself a miracle of constancy because tie had not allowed another to share it There are pretty girls in Kansas and there was one in particular with wondrous dimples that he had noticed just barely noticed you know so he made the customary remarks about fe male perfidy He wrote Rose a biting letter and tore it up for a subtler revenge had occurred to him He di vined that Rose preferred him to Harold if he succeeded in making money and he plotted accordingly From this date his correspondence took on a dismal hue The boom was declining and there were vague hints of pitfalls that ensare the unwary and the inexperienced Close on the heels of these dire forebodings followed a rumor that Jared had come home un expectedly looking very seedy and it was surmised dead broke Friends and neighbors Rose and Harold among them promptly gath ered on the broad piazza to greet the home comer and learn the truth of the matter One glance at the young mans doleful face was enough Dis aster was written on it At first he seemed disinclined to talk but numerous well put queries finally loosened his unwilling tongue Among the friends Jared made in the west was one who had been born un der an unlucky star He was intelli gent and shrewd but everything he touched turned to ashes Where others reaped golden harvests he reaped mis fortune and his affairs became serious ly involved He was too young to know that while there is life there is hope and one night Jared who room ed with him came home to find his friend stretched on the floor with a bullet through his head and the empty revolver in his own stiffening right hand With the callousness of youth Jared adapted this young fellows story to his own uses Up to the culminating tragedy he told it as his own and told it well He was a clever actor and fully realized the dramatic possibili ties of the situation The stage setting was perfect A rising thunder storm had dyed the summer twilight an inky black and continual flashes of lightning illum inated Jareds handsome melancholy face and sombre eyes He sat oppo site his false sweetheart and Harold and behind him the old man white faced but firm lipped glared over his boys head like a wounded lion ifHTnffirffliiamifrt As Jareds sad mellow voice died away with a little break ho felt a pang of genuine emotion as he remem bered poor Wileys face with the bul let hole in the forehead Roses heart melted All that was sweet and wom anly and good in her untutored soul rose to the surface She crossed the piazza and laying her hand on Jareds shoulder resolutely faced her frown ing parents and the chagrined Harold I shall stand by Jared she said in ringing tones Jared started to his feet In dismay This climax was precisely the opposite of the one he had courted and ex pected The face of the dimpled Kan sas girl flitted across his memory and then disappeared forever The boom erang he had launched burled itself in his own heart The two young things who had been playing with the eternal verities of love and death looked into each others eyes and by the white light of the approaching storm saw there that which made them afraid and ashamed of what they had been doing saw the dawn of an everlasting affection the affection that mocks disaster and calmly ignores doubters and detractors as the placid moon ignores the yellow dog that bays it Granthers face was convulsed with delight Tears of joy meandered un heeded down his wrinkled cheeks as glaring at the dsicomfited Harold he raised his staff and brought it down with a force that split it in twain Shes a Peters every inch of her he roared Leastways she soon will be Rose was somewhat shocked when she learned that Jareds woes were all assumed and that he had prudently escaped from the collapsing boom with the neat little nest egg of one hundred thousand dollars but she became reconciled to the situation in time STRICTLY FRESH EGGS You Caunot Make liens Lay When They Dont Want To With all that men of science have done to procure for our tables luxuries without regard to season so that al most we say there is no season no one of them has yet succeeded in wheedling a hen into laying her best and biggest eggs at any other season of the year than that at which the primal hen so distinguished herself There have been many experiments of all kinds tried with regard to hatching chickens and they have all been more or less successful till the term spring chicken has become a misnomer Or rather there are others beside spring chickens We have winter chickens thanks to incubators and brooders and all sorts of appliances and fall chick ens and summer chickens and chick ens in between seasons which is one of the compensations scattered all through life if we look for them But the hen plods on in that tiresome un changing way and looks untouched by all the means that man has invented for hatching her eggs for her though no one knows just what she thinks Probably her line of thought takes the stand that you may lead a hen to any kind of artificially warmed and lighter nest but you cannot make her lay and cold storage has done much to make us indifferent to the stubborn at titude of the hen The farmer who doesnt know that he may by the care he takes of his hens influence the man ner and kind of eggs they lay for him does not deserve to succeed Hens like clean sunny houses and they like good wholesome food and in variety They want a certain amount of corn and meal and they dearly love a flavor of meat in their food Also they like something in the nature of oyster shells that the shells of the eggs may be up to standard quality Housekeepers who receive day after day from their grocer eggs of not only a uniform size and of even tinting either all white or with a tinge of brown take it as a matter of course and think perhaps that it is just so in every case But there are sorters whose business it is to put Into cases eggs that match in color and size And they do say that in Boston the brownish eggs have the first call while in New York the demand is for purest white It is this demand for uniform ity in size and color that induces a poultry farmer to have his hens all of one breed Epicure Cottage Heirlooms In England It is still quite a common experience to find fine and eyen valuable speci mens of old English furniture chiefly made of oak in the cottages of the village folk These pieces of furniture have been handed down from genera tion to generation of rural folk such as carters keepers woodmen and shepherds How did the family orig inally come by them The explana tion is this in many cases Genera tions ago when the furniture which is once again prized greatly began to go out of fashion and to be superseded by stuff which we view with contempt nowadays it was sold and farmers bought much of it But by and by the farmer being prosperous and desiring to be in the fashion too like his land- i lord bought in its place more modern chairs and tables etc Then the vil lage folk bought for a song the de spised oak chairs coffers etc and now once again the old furniture has come into favor and is finding its way back from the cottage to the hall London Express Onoen of Hollands Crown The crown which adorns the brow of Queen Wilhelmina is said to have cost 1500 In 1829 it was stolen by bur glars and for nearly two years re mained in their possession says Home Notes Some of the stones were event ually discovered in America and the remainder were recovered from Bel gium A iMi imfBfm ENGLISH CLERGYMEN POOR Benefices Said to Ho Worth Cess Than 87C0 a Year The lot of the clergy in the Church of England today is said to be so wretched that even younger sons have given up the career which for so many years was looked upon as their chief resource It may easily be understood that this calling has ceased to appeal to them When the fact is known that out of about 14000 benefices in the church more than 7000 are worth loss than 750 a year and that nearly all of them are decreasing in value About 1500 benefices are worth only 500 a year and less than 250 annually is the return from 300 livings which have been recently described as more nearly starvings to the unfortunates who are assigned to them In the diocese of Peterborough there are sixty one livings that are worth no more than 225 a year and this is not yet the worst as there are in Newcastle bene fices that are valued at only 125 a year The wives of clergymen in these parishes are of course unable to employ servants and all the drudgery of housework falls on their shoulders The luxury of meat is denied to them except on alternate days and their children of whom the number is nearly always in inverse ratio to the amount of the living are prepared by education in the elementary schools or by the teaching their parents can give them at odd times for their descent to a lower social sphere These clergy men as a rule come from good country families Their wives are from the same class and are in few cases fitted by their training for a life of drudgery and hard work The actual return for these livings is frequently much less than the figures quoted here since their value is dependent on the price of corn and this has declined until it many cases what used to be a living worth 500 is now in reality not worth more than two thirds of that sum New York Sun A Spelllnir Parrot Pollys cage when at the seaside hung upon a piazza where the little children were in the habit of study ing aloud The bird apparently listen ing would make an effort to repeat what she could catch Then suddenly she would burst out with Ill spell a strong emphasis on the r continuing with a low chuckle of satisfaction and ending in a hearty and long continued laugh at her suc cess the little ones joining in the chor us She was very fond of the children In the early morning when her cage was opened to give her liberty she would walk about for a time climb the stairs to the childrens room and crawl into their beds before time for rising Cof fee was almost absolutely necessary to her existence She would call early and steadily for it in the morning adjusting her tones to the length of time spent in waiting ordering begging beseeching as the case might be holding her cup meanwhile to hasten matters A very retiring modest servant maid had been long in our em ploy She had a follower named Thom as who nightly paid his visit It chanced one morning that Pollys cof fee had been long delayed A gentle man of the house coming to breakfast met the girl and made an inquiry re garding the meal She turned to reply facing the questioner when Polly see ing her opportunity for revenge took it and in a mans voice called out Mary hows Thomas The woman retreated in confusion while Polly laughed an ugly low laugh but the coffee was forthcoming Our Animal Friends Wonders of the Wire It is not widely known that at the present time between all important telephone centers of the United States while the trunk wires are being used for transmitting speech there are be ing sent over them simultaneously telegraphic messages without produc ing any interruption of the spoken words Were it not for immediate laws of nature which cannot be varied by man or corporation one might be listening and take off the telegraphic message thus traversing these very conductors What a tantalizing pros pect for the wiretappers Although these telegraphic impulses actually traverse the coil of wire in the tele phone held to the car and actually speed along the identical copper con ductor at that time conveying the voice currents you hear neither dot nor dash of the telegraphic message Environments of Some Literary Folk Literary people are evidently not in need of holidays So long as they have pens ink and paper and access to a li brary they can write their books any where and many choose to write them in the quiet seclusion of a country house Rider Haggard enjoys the seclu sion of a Norfolk farm George Mere dith leads a reclusive life among the Surrey hills G A Henty writes all his boys books on board his eighty ton yacht and Dr Gordon Stables has for his study a gypsy caravan in which he wanders at will for a half of every year Street Car Tickets as Currency Portugal is sxiffering from a pleth ora of money just now Not gold of course nor silver but copper So vast is the supply of this inferior metal that ordinary people are exceedingly chary of changing such few gold coins as they may come into their posses sion The copper coinage is big and cumbersome and it is also deprecia ted so that in order to avoid being burden with it it has become the cus tom in larger cities at all events to use street car tickets as currency ikNNiiinWiannrrlifirwrWtftiM MEMBER OF CONGRESS a perfect liquid dentifrice for She TfSl MOIltll New Size S0Z0D0NT LIQUID 25c S0Z0D0NTT00TH P0WDER25c Large LIQUID and POWDER 75c y im At all Stores or by Mail for the price HALL RUCKEL New York i ff JTf f r r y sr Tl Vm AW Xy 71 i feC rtr A NSjHsl a f u8gr the man who wears Sawyer Slickers Theyre made i ioksrs 1 of I 6peclHlly woven goods -double tbrougbout double and triple stltcbed warranted water proof are goft and smooth Will not crack peel ofl or become sticky Catalogue free H H Sawyer Son Sola Mlrs East Cambridge Mass Has No Equal f issrr m mw REQUSE5 NO COOKING PREPARED FOP IMDhYPURP05E50NY yrfvt5v Hr3B R5Sri88 J m mrrmi i M HShflte 3I7J1 Wm 8 rj vwiyi VTRADE y WRK ivf i m wJSct I ApMkMid 111 FROM r c - aartfwwrcnsiaCT SANDWICH SLANDS Cured of Catarrh of the Stomach miiiiiiiiiiiiii by tiitiitiiiniiimiiiuuiitiiii 3 sdtwEffiFfah Peru na t i 1 JOiOZ f 3 - IsMEfflM t a t t 3 UUJNUKJiSSJlAJN K W WlliUU X 3 Delegate to Congress from Hawaii E 2rm t r t tttttttttttt t tttt tttt tt tttt tttt tttttt tttttS Hon Robert W Wilcox Delegate to Gongress from Hawaii and the Sand wich Islands in a recent letter from Washington D C writes have used Peru n a for dyspepsia and I cheerfully give you this testi monial Am satisfied if it is used properly it will be of great benefit to our people lean conscientiously rec ommend it to anyone who is suffering with stomach or catarrhal troubles R IV Wilcox All over this country are hundreds of A laugh to be joyous must flow from the joyous heart It like truth only asks a hearing Wizard Oil cures pain Poverty is no disgrace to a man but it is confoundedly inconvenient Mrs WinsiowB soothing Syrnp For children teetting softens the suns reduces In flammation allay pain cures wind colic 23c a bottle There are 28894 juvenile temperance societies in the British islands DONT SPOIL iOUK CLOTHES Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow All grocers 5c a package Only 40 British novelists are able to live on the profits of their books Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH the only 16 oz package for 10 cents All other 10 cent starch con tains only 12 oz Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded GREATLY KEDUCED KATES via WABASH K R 51300 Buffalo and return 1300 3100 New York and return 3100 The Wabash from Chicago will sell tickets at the above rates daily Aside from these rates the Wabash run through trains over its own rails from Kansas City St Louis and Chicago and offer many special rates during the summer months allowing stopovers at Niagara Falls and Buffalo Ask your nearest Ticket Agent or ad dress Harry E Moores General Agent Pass Dept Omaha Neb or C S Crane G P T A St Louis Mo We should all like to see the under taker prosper if we could designate the source of his income FRAGRANT people who are suffering from catarrh of the stomach who arc wasting preci ous time and enduring needless suffer ing The remedies they try only tem porarily palliate the distress but never effect a cure Remedies for dyspepsia have multiplied so rapidly that they aro becoming as numerous as the leaves of the forest and yet dyspepsia con tinues to flourish in spite of them all This is due to the fact that the cause of dyspepsia is not recognized as catarrh If there is a remedy in the wholo range of medicinal preparations that is in every particular adapted to dyspep sia that remedy Is Peruna This rem edy is well nigh invincible in these cases Dr Hartman President of The Hart man Sanitarium Columbus O says In my large practice and correspon dence I have yet to learn of a single case ofatonic dyspepsia which has not either been greatly benefited or cured by Peruna No one suffering with catarrh of tho stomach or dyspepsia however slight can be well or happy It is the causo of so many distressing symptoms that it Is a most dreaded disease Peruna acts immediately on the seat of tho trouble the inflamed mucous mem branes lining the stomach and a last ing cure is effected If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Pe runa write at once to Dr Hartman giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis Address Dr Hartman President oC The Hartman Sanitarium Columbus O Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH the only 1C oz package for 10 cents All other 10 cent starch con tains only 12 oz Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded When you face a difficulty never let it stare you out of countenance HARVEST required to harvest tlio grain crop of West ern ainuiu Tho most abund ant yield on the Con tinent Reports are that the average yield of No 1 Hard wheut in Western Canada will ho over thirty bushels to the acre Prices for farm heli will bo excellent Splendid Ranching Lands adjoining the Wheat Belt Excursions will bo run from all points in the United States to tho Free Grant Lauds Secure a home at onco nnd if you wish to purchase at prevailing prices and secure the advantage of the low rates apply for literature rates etc to F Pediey Superintendent Immigration Ottawa Can ada or to W V Bennett CanadianGov ernment Agent 801 Now York Life Bldg Omaha Neb When visiting Buffalo do not fail to see tho Canadian Exhibit at tho Ian Auiorican EDUCATIONAL vSsSkSSsE rfsEj33i5te 25 sasi THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME NOTRE DAME INDIANA Classics Letters Economics and History Journalism Art Science Pharmacy Law Civil nechanico and Electrical Engineering Architecture Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses Ecclesiasticastudents at special rates Rooms Free Junior or Senior Year Collegiate Courses Rooms to Rent moderate charges St Edwards Hall for boys under 13 The 58 hYearwill open September 10th 1901 Catalogues Free Address REV A MORRISSEY C S C President Notre Dame Indiana Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy Cross Chartered ISoj Thorough English and Classical education Reg ular Collegiate Degrees In Preparatory Department students carefully prepared for Collegiate course Physical and Chemical Laboratories well equipped Conservatory of Music and School of Art Gymnasium under direction of graduate of Boston Normal School of Gymnastics Catalogue free The 47th year will open Sept 5 1901 Address DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY St Marys Academy Notre Dame Indiana You get chromo starches under all brands and names but they are all the same poor stuff and have to depend upon something to sell them Use Defiance Starch No premiums but 16 ounces of the best starch for 10c Dont forget ft 2 better qual ity and cnethird more of it 4U A u I l V