THE QUIET HOUR Here is a delightful plan by which tn< German mothers encourage their l little girls to knit. The wool I is wound into a large ball called a I wonder hall because it contains many 1 little gifts hidden therein by the 1 mother’s fingers as she winds the worsted. As tbc gift at the center I of the ball w ill be found last that is || usually the best and might be a little I gold ring, or any bit of child’s jew elry. At another time the little knit ters finds a silver coin and again ■ something for her dolly. A silvei I® thimble gives great delight. The method stimulates perseverance and lessens the drudgery of learning to ■ knit.—Ex. I Be Good to The Men. Girls, this is for you. Never for « get for a single instant as long as f you live that the ‘‘men folks” are | continually on the firing line in Giis ( battle of life. You little dream what | blows they get and what wounds they carry Never nag a man. Never ^whtne at him. Of course, he doesn't wipe his feet, nor hang up his clot lies, nor put things away, nor shut the doors and drawers. Dear me, you didn’t think you were marrying an "old maid,” did you! Nag & Whine is the firm that runs most of th- divorce mills. Girls, be good to us when we come indoors. There is only a fight, with hard knocks for' us, out ill the world. Listen To Your Wife. Overcome evil with good. Trail-] smut enemies to friends with the elixir of love. Before my Sunday school days 1 used to be in politics. One night after a meeting where I had spoken and 1 had gone to bed, two men stood in front of my resi dence and profanely called mo all tin bad names there are in a rum bottle Out of bed and Into my clothes, grabbing a base ball batt. took but a few seconds. But my wife grabbed me and made me promise ‘‘not to do anything rash.” So in order to find out who they were for arrest on the morrow, I slipped down the street and met them under a gas light. They were too drunk to know me. One was a worthless painter, and the other wasatough car jfentei from Slater's Slabbing Mill. ' By morning my ire had been slept away and morning was done. A little while after that I started the Iron Rose Bible cl^ss, and somehow these fellows got into it. Both were led 'nto the kingdom. The painter became one of the best teachers at the Rock Run mission, and is today ^ one of Coatesville’s best Christians. V carpenter has gone home to What a mistake I would have made withthat old base ball bat! Moral: Listen to your wife! A Frank Confession. ”1 am a farmer, and I raise rye. One day I took a bushel of my rye down to the distiller and sold it to him for fifty cents. The distiller got. iut of that bushel of rye three and a half gallons of proof whiskey—al though I hear now that he can gel four gallons out of a bushel—which he sold lo the saloonkeeper. i then start'd in with the saloon k* eper to drink up my bushel of rye at ten cents a drink, eight drinks to th" pint, or eighty cents for a pint, or $0.40 for a gallon. The three and a half gallons of proof whiskey which my fifty-ccnt rye made had cost me $22.-40. “I had to sell enough rye to the distiller to get money to pay the sa loon keeper. When 1 hauled my forty-four and four-fifths bushels of —-rye to the distiller to pay for what lie uad gotten out of one bushel, 1 said to myself, ‘what a fool I was!’ “Is there another farmer as big a fool as I was?” T obacco. Next to alcohol, the narcotic most frequently resorted to, to afford re lief from rrr*rl**' South Bound Tr. 104—St. Louis Mail and Ex press .1:50 p. m. Tr. 106—Kansas City Exp., 3:41 a. m. Tr. 132 x -K. C.local leaves. .7:30 a. m. Tr. 138 x Kails City arrives 0:00 p. m. x— Daily except Sunday North Bound Tr 103—Nebraska Mail and Ex press .1:60 p. m. Tr. lOo—Omaha Express... .1:48 a. tn., Tr. 137 x- -Omaha local leaves 7:00 a m. Tr. 131 x—Falls City local ar rives.8:45 p.ru. x~ -Daily exceot Sunday Local I rt. Trains Carrying Passengers North Bound Tr. l!>2x -ToAtchison.11:10 a. m. South Bound I Tr. lOlx—To Auburn.1:23 p.m. Burlington Route i West Bound No. 13 Denver Exp.1:10 a. m. No. 15—Denver Exp. (Local).1:40 p. m. No-43—Portland Exp.10:17 p. m. No. 41—Portland Exp.2:25 p. m. No. 121—Lincoln Loc. via Ne braska City.5:00 a. m. East Bound No. 14 St. J., K. C. & St. L. .7:38 a. m. No. 44 St. J., K.C. & St. L- .4:11 a. tn. No. Pi St. .1., K.C. & St. I,..4:22 p. m. (Local) No. 42 -St. .E. K. C. & St. L. .4:35 p. in No 122 l-'rom Lincoln, via Nebraska City. ... 8:45 p m. E. ti. WHlTFOhD. Agent. —We have some fresh Red Seal flour in now. Come and get a sack. —C. A. Heck. j