THE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-JOUJKNAL , FRIDAY. 8KPTKMHKR 1(5. ( 1910. he Norfolk Weekly News-Journa TBe News , Established 1881. The Journal , Established 187 o THE HU8E PUBLISHING COMPANY. W. N. HUHU , N. A. UUHC , President. Secretary. ICvory Friday. Hy nmll per year. $1.60. Knturetd at the postodlco at Norfolk , Neb. . as m-cond cluHB inuttci. TelephonesEditorial : Department No. 22. BimlnesB Olllce and Job UOOIIIB No. 11 22. Even the wisest men do u lot of foolish things. The lazy man never Bcctns to get tired of what ho Isn't doing. If tno United States soldiers nre to fight lire Instead of men , they should bo armed with squirt guns. Germany has sold a lot of second kand battleships to Turkey. That's the only kind Turkey could use. The United States forest service Is advertising for axylotomlst. Hope If they find one they'll keep It chained. Those who have confused county option and dry farming are assured by experts that they are not Just the same. Australia Is having n year of ex ceptional prosperity as both exports and bank clearings show a great im provement. The latest estimate of the popula tion of this country Is 93,600,000. Yet U Is almost Impossible to get together a satisfactory jury. DCS Molnes , la. , Is disappointed In its census returns. Still , 86,308 people , If they all holler together , will make considerable noise. The poorer classes of Paris alone are said to have eaten 200,000 horses. Evidently the automobile arrived not an hour too soon. Your side of the argument may Bcem wholly convincing to you , but it Isn't of much value If It fails to convince the other fellow. It Is a hopeful and wholesome sign of the times that teachers arc coming back to believe in the value of good old fashioned mental discipline. The aviators have done away witli the "splendid isolation" of which Eng land has always boasted by making the English channel an Inconsequent- tlal business. A reinforced concrete building thai rises 295 feet aberv a the street level has been erected in Liverpool. The > are not so slow In the old countrj after all. A 1793 1-cent piece brought $340 Ir New York the other day. Judging bj the way some people cling to theii coppers , they know of an equally gooi market for them. The chipper democrats should be notified that In 1906 , the only fall comparison with this year , the re publicans carried Vermont by nearlj 3,000 less than now. The submarine war craft of the fu ture Is evidently to be of Increasing size. France again leads with plant for a submarine Dreadnaught of 1,00 ( tons displacement. A Florida man Is said to be train Ing nlllgators to drive In harness Thank you , the automobile or even f flying machine is preferable as f means of transportation. It is easier to watch a three-rint circus than to keep a comprehensive grasp on the ever changing politlca situations of the country. It is more than usually varied and Interesting The new torpedo boat destroyei Pauldlng with a speed of 33.04 knots an hour can not only run down ai enemy , but can run away from an ene my If the odds are against her. America consumed seven blllloi pounds of sugar last year , one-seventl of which was beet sugar produced a home. This Is a large gain over tin production of previous years. Stamp collectors are waiting wltl Interest for the issue of the new Eng llsh stamp bearing the portrait eKing King George Instead of King Edward So we have our day and cease to be A Canadian doctor says most Amer Icnns are eaten up by dyspepsia. This is a great surprise to "most Amerl cans. " We have prided ourselves 01 having an average of pretty robusi citizens. A Chicago man tried to kill hlmscl with a revolver , but his skull was sc hard the bullet failed to penetrate There must have been n soft spo somewhere , or ho never would have tried It. The socialist party officially sane tlons woman suffrage and demands Ir its Now York platform "equal suffrage for all adult men and women , " am "equal pay for equal work to nior and women employed by the state 01 any of its subdivisions. " Venice has a fishing licet of 1GO ( vessels that visit different portions of the Adriatic according to the season. It must take a largo number of list ) to keep so many boats busy. St. Louis has an octogenarian min ister who stayed at homo this sum mer and filled the pulpits of younger preachers while they went nwny for their vacations. No need for Dr. Os ier's services there. Chicago's week's exhibition In all the stores and shops of everything "made In Chicago" was a success and the business men hope that mark may nome day bo ns famous as the well known "made in Germany. " It cost $15,000,000 to take the census and no man has been found so far who thinks the game worth the powder If ho had to foot the bill , but with Uncle Sam to pay the price we are all Inter ested to know the slzo of his family. King Hnakon of Norway took a course In dish washing during his service as a Danish cadet. Practical knowledge of this kind may come handy to a man , even If ho Is a king. It gives him an Idea of how the other fellow feels. The effort Is being made to raise cotton In Hawaii. Everything seems to indicate that the experiment will bo successful. And there is plenty of demand In the world for all the cotton they can raise. The colleges of the country are opening this fall with the largest en rollment on record. College training Is becoming more and more a mat ter of course for the young men and women of the country. This country needs more men teach ers , and the only reason It doesn't have them Is because the salaries nre too low to attract young men who are capable of making good teachers. For Inferior teachers any salary Is too high. The "Swift , " a torpedo boat destroy er , recently launched nt Portsmouth , Eng. , Is true to its name and out distances all competitors at a speed of over thirty knots an hour. Her j fires are fed by petroleum and her | turbines give 30,000 horsepower divid ed among four screws. There seems little doubt that the automobile will soon supersede the fire horse and fire lighting will lose much of its picturesqueness when this comes to pass ; but of all places where the motor seems to be the thing for the place , the fire engine should be counted first. That President Taft has a high ap preciation of the Importance of the conservation problems and Is more [ concerned to dlscovf the best way to promote the highest public good than be Is as to who shall secure the glory for originating it , was appar ent from his speech In St. Paul. The adoring young man who found himself provided with a hunting li cense instead of a marriage license when the time for the ceremony ar rived evidently thought that he hail retlffned to the olden times when the brides were won by force and swords were more convincing than bonbons. A 15-year-old Boston girl recently succeeded in that foolish attempt in which so many strong men have fall ed , of swimming from Charleston bridge to Boston Light , a distance ol twelve miles. It is a pity to use up such remarkable strength and risk life as well for no special object beyond - yond doing an unusual thing. The statistics which are given by the "Spectator , " a life insurance pa per , show a decided Increase in the number of suicides in this country and advances many theories ns to the reason for this. Undoubtedly the In crease is more apparent than real The interest in keeping a record ol such statistics is much greater than It was a few years ago. The retiring president of the Na tional Education association recently expressed his belief that in many ol our best schools the way was made too easy for the pupils , thereby mak ing the earnest use of their own minds unnecessary. Muscles grow strong through using them till they ache and brains nre developed In the same man ner. The warden of n South Dakota pris on is In a sad plight. He wants tc establish n prison paper , but finds that there is not an editor among the Inmates of the institution. The cell tor might readily be dispensed with as anyone can edit a paper , but worse yet there is not a printer In the penl tentlnry and everybody cannot set type. Some of the republicans who find It so popular to throw brick bats at Joe Cannon now that they think ho IE down and out , may bo down and out themselves when "Uncle Joe" Is still in congress. Reliable Information from Danville Is that there Is not the slightest danger of "Uuclo Joe" losing his job this time and that the chances nre that his term In olllce will de pend upon his own wishes. Kansas City has tried the scheme ol setting Its prisoners for smaller of feimcs to work on a farm purchasct : for that purpose. Instead of being r constant burden on the city , these wrongdoers become n source of revc nuc , and work In the clear country ah does much for the convicts. It helps them physically as well ns moral ! } and takes a load off the taxpayers Is this not sufficient argument foi trying the scheme widely ? We usually think of American cltl zens as without the possibility of be coming titled. But there Is nothing In the constitution of the Unitet States preventing an American cltl zcn , who does not hold a federal of flee , from accepting a title of nobllltj from a foreign country If It Is offeree ! to him , and still retain his America ! citizenship. Several such Instances have occurred In years past , but there seems no likelihood of n titled arlstoc racy becoming popular in this coun try. ' The old curbing which Is now be Ing broken up and hauled off Nor folk avenue to make room for paving rould be utilized to very good ndvant age If It were piled up on a vncani lot and the hoboes given n job o breaking It up after they appear li police court. The broken rock woule come In very handy to 1111 up bai places In the alleys and on unpavci streets of the city when needed , am In case of n prospective break In the dike during high water they woule' prove Invaluable as a preventive. The report of a triple alliance be tween Brazil , Chill and Argentina may bo premature , but It is to be hoped that It will prove true , since it would mean peace among the thre < strongest and most progressive statei of the South American republic Banded together these three statei would have a formidable strength The combined population Is 32,000,000 Each has well trained and equippee troops and have a good start on fleet ! of Dreadnoughts. President Taft's address before tin national conservation congress at St Paul was an able presentation of hli ideas about the preservation for tin use and needs of the people of tin national resource of the country. Ii his preliminary remarks he said tha a satisfactory conclusion as to mean and methods for the accomplishment ! of this great work could only hi reached promptly by avoiding ncrl mony , Imputation of bad faith , ane political controversy. In this state ment the president Is unquestlonabl ; correct. Through the economy of the power that be , the respectable sum of $414 , 000 has been saved In the printing o the congressional records , phamphlet and speeches. Whether this savlni has decreased the circulation of can ned oratory so that thousands win might have read It and have been In fluenced to insurge or to stand pat an Indifferent , it is Impossible to tell , bu it is likely that many who have beei ! u the habit of receiving severa copies of their congressman's speed es , will be saved the trouble of burr ing those duplicates. The pie has lately been sufferini from various sources. It has been li the hands of its enemies , not it friends and consumers. The healtl department of the government has In spected and rejected the pie of com merce and given it a very bad chai acter. But no one has dared to cas ' a shadow of suspicion on the homt j made pie. It Is admitted by all to b ns dependable , as palatable , as nutrl tlous and as uplifting as it was fl colonial days. A sour pessimist , Ir deed , must be the man who does no hail the pumpkin pie season with joy. I Tne cholera In southern Russia ha caused a nanic among the peoblo .MI , It is impossible to get laborers to cai ry on the current business of the sec son. Exporters cannot get the 7,00 tons of wheat for which they hnv I orders dally , loaded into cars , am the coal mines of they Don basin dc clare that the great coal mining Ir elustry of that section will be rulne < unless health conditions can be rnple : ly Improved. Poor old Russia Is a ways in trouble of some kind. If I isn't foreign war , It's revolution n home. If it Isn't famine , It's pest : lence. This doesn't look ns If Justice 1 being done the men who fought th forest fires In the west , If It Is true 1 The statement is made that the go\ 1 eminent refuses to allow the fort ; 1 men who became blind and disabled while lighting the fires , any fees fo hospital services or any pay except fo the actual days at work. This is ai Injustice and It is hoped that If th statement Is true that steps will b taken at once to fully and completol ; recompense these , as well ns all tb others who became exhausted or li Jured In their efforts to save the foi ests. MURRAY'S GREAT SERVICE. In taking the bull by the horns am going after the bank examiners t llnd out why they are not roportln conditions of hanks as they find then : Comptroller of the Currency Murrn is doing a great service not only t the public in general , but to th banks themselves. He makes the re markablc statement that all recent national bank failures could have been prevented If the examiners had reported conditions au they found them. Getting down to genuine examina tions and correcting bud conditions , will have a tendency to put the whole banking but-lness on n still more wholesome plane than ever It lias I been before. A complete religions census Is to be taken of the city of Chicago In the afternoon of October 8. It took the federal government six weeks to enumerate the Inhabitants of the windy city. But the reeiulrcments of the religious census are simpler name , age , residence , church , mem berships or prefere'iicc and relation to Sunday school , for each person. Time is doing Its perfect work for the cause of Irish home rule. In this present parliament the Irish , for the llrst time , are not only members for Ireland , but Imperial legislators , while even the unionists arc perceiving that the higher good of England and the empire demands that the Irish people ple be satlslled by grants that are just , honorable , and really expedient. When a man takes a stand on a public platform to criticise the official acts of another , ho Is there on honor and should speak the truth , the whole truth and nothing but the truth , just as much as though he were sworn In a court of justice. It takes a strong and honorable man to do this and un fortunately many of those who take part In our preliminary campaigns are neither big enough nor brave enough to avoid moral perjury. American photographers hnva their nerve with them In emergencies and at the attempted assassination of Mayor Gaynor kept their cameras all working as long as he was In dUht. ; The Japanese were equally Imeprtur- bable and were able to supply photo graphs for use in the trial of Marquis Ito's assassin , but when a bomb was thrown at King Alphonso on the streets of Paris , the photographer was so unnerved as to forget his mission entirely. In certain sections of California fireworks are found more effective than scare crows in protecting the great grain fields of the Sandborn and other ranches from the vast flocks of wild geese and other aquatic fowl that settle on the grain at night and do Im mense damage. By frequently firing sky rockets and roman candles at va rious points around the ranch when ever a flock Is heard "honking" In the sky the wild fowls nre induced to give these places a wide berth. During recent years there has sprung up quite a widespread dissatis faction with and opposition to vaccina tion as a preventive of smallpox and much Is being said by medical author ities on both sides of the question. In connection with this subject General Wood , whose medical training enables him to speak both as military man and a medical expert , gives his experi ences in Cuba during the Spanish war as a practical demonstration of the efficacy of vaccination In checking one of the most terrific epidemics of small pox In modern times. Such testimony as this ought to count for consid erable. THE COLONEL TO REPORTERS. Now that Colonel Roosevelt Is workIng - Ing on a newspaper , he seems to have a very kindly feeling toward the pro fession , and he handed out some very friendly advice at a dinner given by the Milwaukee Press club. Colonel Roosevelt is spoken of as an "editor , " but actually he will not be ashamed to take his seat on the reporter's bench. After all , the reporter's work Is of the more permanent value , and the men who perform that function deserve - servo to receive respectful treatment accordingly from the public. An editorial is merely one man's opinion , and all opinions pass and fade away. A reporter Is a historian of the world's acts , and history If written In the true , judicial spirit , never passes awny. The most satisfactory newspapers are those In which , however strongly pronounced editorial opinions may be expressed , the news columns treat political developments ns a matter of news , In which all sides are entitled to fair treatment ns a matter of his torical Justice. That , It Is needless to say , Is the policy of this newspaper. AROUND TOWN. Fremont has six miles of paved streets. Why doesn't somebody chloroform Jack Frost ? By the way , we're In the midst of n political campaign. Is Norfolk going to the bad ? Forty men nre down In the gutter today. Why did those Fremonters have to trot out their best golfers , anyhow ? Was It last Juno or next June that the Union Pacific meant when It promised that now depot ? Anybody found a "topsy" doll on the street ? A teeny , little baby girl broken. If you should find "Topsy" won't you be good enough to bring her to The News olllce ? It doesn't take long for the truth to rise again. A year ngei wo all believed Pot- Cook was the real goods. It's like a three-ring circus to watch the public Improvements In Norfolk paving , library , Y. M. C. A. , etc. It's a silly question to ask how they came out nt Fiemont. If they'd won , they'd have told you before you asked. Hettlng on Norfolk or Fremont In that golf match ? And remember this : Everybody thought Jeffries would whip the negro. A Norfolk woman out for dinner who spilled coffee on the table , offered to take the tablecloth homo to wash It , and the hostess took her nt her word. ATCHI90N ( LOBE SIGHTS. A married woman always likes It If women treat bur husband coolly. Aside from going to sleep , and for getting there doeMi't seem te > bo any general rule for happiness. It must be a great help to mother that she Is so constituted that Ingrat itude doesn't bother her much. Occasionally a modest actress comes to town ; one who says her $500 dresses es wete made in New York Instead of in Paris. Women like to say this : "The only thing n man cannot forgive In his wife is her mental superiority. " If you have a "bad day , " and feel tough , do you Inflict your 111 temper on those who have business with you ? If you do , you are not a fair man. An Atchison man has been sick so long that when his wife meets people on the streets , she says , without being asked : "He's just about the same. " Listen to a group of women long enough , and you will hear one of them name a certain medicine she Is taking that will cure just anything. We were never intended for an idle life ; we feel so tough as a result e > f loafing on Sunday , that we are rea sonably certain it , was never Intended we should be a gent or a man of leis ure. The loafer has a hard time of it. There are certain men who visit cer tain favorite loafing places in Atchi son every day , and they always drop in timidly , as though they realize that their idleness is being remarked. A great many years ago wnen there were Indians and bears , a woman wore her bonnet fastened on with strings ; nowadays with a policeman at every corner to scare the Indians and bears away , she wears a hat pin a foot long. "I am not very satisfactory to wo men , " said an old bachelor , today ; "they don't admire me , and I don't blame them ; about all I have ever done for woman Is that none of them have ever been called upon to weep because of my going awny to war. " Hereafter , Instead of hating the devil , we intend hating those people who are Impolite and unfair , and who make a specialty of making life as un comfortableas , possible. And , Instead of worshiping angels , we will In fu ture always admire people who are nice. If a woman tells how her husband proposed to her , every woman will drop her work to listen. It Is related that an Atchison woman recently told her experience , and one woman listen er became so interested she dropped her baby , and the baby broke In two , and she never noticed It. The insurgents start so many stories that we don't know half the time what we are doing. If we should hear that George Washington were still alive , and writing letters abusing the corporations , we wouldn't feel safe in denying It. Atchison people who crowded around Joe Schott last fall , to hear him tell about a trip to Germany , next gathered around Warrle Guthrle , who had been around the world. But now they are gathered around Frank Casey , who has just returned from the Reno prize fight. There Is some fear that automobiles will ruin the country. We sometimes think a greater danger Is advertising. Magazines are being started almost ns rapidly as automobiles nro being manufactured and a page In the best ones costs more for one Issue than a new automobile. And the magazine publishers are more unreliable about circulation than politicians nre about their principles. Men are not as big liars , wo some times think , as generally believed. Many of the stories credited to them nre Invented by other men , as "Jokes. " W. B. Collett Is reported as saying that during his recent fishing trip to the north , he caught a fish weighing forty pounds. What ho really said was that fishing was poor ; that the largest fish caught where ho fished weighed twelve pounds. The latest disease Is called "Recep tion Paralysis. " Women who stand In line at receptions and shake hands with several hundred guests , nro sub ject to It. The day after the reception the victim feels a numbness In her arm ; the next day her entire right side Is numb , and the disease pro gresses slowly , until , at the end of the fenth day the paralysis strikes her heart , and she has fits. Home Course In Domestic Science XIV. Principles of Home Decoration. Dy EDITH G. CHARLTON , In Ch&rge of Domestic Economy , Iowa Stnte College. CopjrrUhl. 1910. bjr American fr t AtioctMlon. subject of homo decoration THE furnishing IR BO large and comes so closely to the Individ ual life of the family that an outsider hesitates to make ) even the simplest suggestions. And yet Just be cause the subject Is large and Impor taut and he'cause U Is , on the whole , so little understoeHl by the average pur- son Is one very good reason why In struction Is needed along certain lines. All that I Hlmll attempt , however. In these' article's on house furnishing will be Rome of the very first principles , just n few hints for the women who nro not sure e > f their own opinions on such matters , whoso experience has been limited and whoso opportunities for getting really gooel things are very few. few.There There was a time In the history of our country when the family wns con tent with the home which simply nf- feirdcel shelter. That was the primitive object of the home , an Instinct dovel- I COMF01ITAJILK LIVINO 11OOM opeel from early ages , when caves , rocks and later mounds of earth and wood furnished the dwelling place for the family. Undeveloped were the In stincts which prompted primeval man to seek a place of shelter for his own little circle of human beings. They were , however , the beginning of the highest and strongest social Institution in the weId , that of family life nnd the private homo. Now conditions have changed , people have developed , nnd the home must be something more than a place of shelter. It Is still the keystone of the nation , the place where those qualities which make for good citizenship are developed , and therefore It Is worthy of nil the thought , nil the Intelligent planning and the noblest feelings that can be brought to It. The true home should reflect the character of the people who I inhabit It. nnd above ifII else It should be of such a nature as to bring out the best there Is In each Individual beneath Its roof. And n home in the true sense of the word can and does do this. Things Not to Do. Some of the most glaring faults In home furnishing arc the commonest , i those committed thoughtlessly or per haps , to be more exact , those prompt ed by the dictates of fashion. It Is so much easier very oft -n to put Into our homos nnd wear on our persons , even to put Into our manner. the > so things which fashion says are right rather than to adopt those things which suit our own Individuality , environment and needs. Just because fashion states that u certain kind of wall paper. A certain color In carpets or certain styles In furniture are the "latest" nnd "new est" Is no reason In the world why they bhould be put Into your homes unless they will bo suitable there. Yet very many times the decree goes forth and Is followed blindly , with the re- suit that beauty , harmony and repose are qualities totally Ignored In many homes. Some ono bus said : "The world Is full of beautiful things if ono has money to buy them. The world Is also full of ugly things things false In art. In truth and beauty. They are things made to sell with only this Idea behind them. " So do not be tempted by the too common expression , "It Is the very latest style. " when buying j furnishings for your home or wearing j ' j apparel for yourself unless the "very latest thing" has beauty nnd sultnbll-1 Ity to recommend It. i ' ! To have something like every one else Is nlso another fault made in 1 house furnishing. That Is ono reason I why so many country houses try to i reproduce on a cheaper scale the city i homo nnd why there nre so mnny un- n ( tractive homes In smaller towns nnd country places. Ignorance of or In difference to color nnd color harmony Is another cause for lack of beauty In furnishing. Again , pictures , furniture , ornaments nnd everything else arc brought Into our home without n thought of arti cles alrendv there. The now nnd the om nro combined without questioning whether ono suits the other or not , and In consequence both nro spoiled. Some Rules to Follow. To furnish n homo satisfactorily ono must always consider the style of bouse. Its location , the use to which It Is to be put. IIH well IIH the * costlof UB JL m furnishing. Not a single piece' of fur- ' > J nlture should be- bought without some thought HH to whether It In suitable for the home ami Its use ; also wheMher It will be In harmony with furniture al ready In It. When n woman has mitllcle'iit money nt her eommiiiul and can furnish the house * completely from cellar to attic It Is an easy matter to give the con tract Into the hnnelK of n professional , occasionally with good results. HOIIIO * times disappointment. Hut when ono must consider dollars carefully and furnish one room nt n time , possibly only getting the absolute necessities for that re > om nt first. It Is n harder problem to solve. The latter woman , however , IB the ono whom 1 should like to help. Remember , then , In the first place not to buy anything unless It Is appropriate to the uae for which It IR Intended as well ns tor the com pleteness of the room. Remember to always select the real nnd substantial In preference to the showy Imitation. If It Is a question of tables , buy thv simplest form. made of perfect wood , with best llnlsh. rather than the elab orately cnrveel , showy piece ( llmslly put together. A good enameled Ironer or plain brass beelstoael will bo Inllnlte- ly more satisfactory In the end than ono of clump Inlaid wood. A largo expenditure of money eloew not always Imply a satisfactory home. Truth and harmony , the elements of beauty , may bo secured In the most Inexpensive cottage IIB well as In the palace. The Ideal country house Is built on broad , generous Hues. Never should It Imvo the high , narrow , cramped roe > C frequently seen on crowded city streets , where space Is at a premium. It should have also roomy verandas and porches , low ceilings , wide , low windows and hospitable looking doors opening Into comfortable , homelike rooms. Such a house should bo sincere in Its furnishings should not suggest Imitation In any way. This Impression of genuineness can bo given by Inex pensive material , even by homemade furniture , very much better than by showy workmanship carelessly per formed. Treatment of High Ceilings. Some of the houses built forty or fifty years ago have ceilings too high to express reml comfort. A room 10 by 1I feet with n twelve foot cell- Ing has the appearance of being ex tremely narrow , while a room the same size with a nine foot colling may give a real cozy effect. What Is to bo done with the high colling ? The sim plest way out of the dllllculty Is to cheat the eye Into forgetfulness of those extra three feet. This can bo done by using horizontal lines In the wall decoration. Either the celling pa per can be brought down on the wall to the distance of three feet , the up per part of the wall may be finished with a frieze , or three foot at the base may bo covered with canvas or wood paneling , then sir feet of figured paper , finished with a narrow picture molding nnd Joining the celling paper , which has becil dropped three foot. Any of these methods will give the impression of a lower celling. Borders have their place In wall decoration - oration , but they should not bo used In rooms with low ceilings. Such a room should be decorated with striped paper nnd have the wall covering ex tend close up to the angle formed by the celling , and here the picture moldIng - Ing Is put em. Never use wide stripes or large designs of any kind on a small room , and bear In mind that simplicity In design and color Is a good rule to follow In wall decorations as well as In any part of house furnishing Good and Bad In Wall Covering. The owner of a new house Is In clined tei leave the walls undecorated for the first few months nt least after the house Is finished. His reason may be the ndeh'd expense of decoration , or he may think he prefers the plain white wall Just for Its simplicity nnd because It Is sanitary. If the wnlls have been finished with a smooth white surface It Is more than likely every one will weary of them In n short time. Plain white walls give the feeling of being shut In n box. ns If there were a limit to space. A smooth white surface also tires the eyes. Not so the rough plasters , which are quite generally used nowadays. And If to the plaster has been added a little color , a hint of gray or deep cream , the effect Is satisfying for a long time. Indeed , for almost any room In the house , with the possible exception of the reception room or parlor , this rough surface simply tinted makes a most desirable wall finish. The smooth wall may be decorated In almost any color with calcimine or muresco , giv ing n pleasing background for pictures. Whatever the wall decoration , it should be chosen with relation to the lighting of the room ; also to the fur nishings. If the floor covering has considera ble design and color , then the wall should have but ono tint , and If the draperies nre figured again bo careful to select a tint color for the walls. Among the ehle objections to wall pa per nro the exaggerated designs nnd too conspicuous colors , which nre common In most of them. The size of the room nnd the kind of floor covering should largely dete > rmlne whether the wall should be decornteel with n paper hav ing a pattern or n plain design. It la so much easier to err on the side of too much design than too little that unless you are sure of your knowledge of color combination It Is generally bolter to keep to plain effects. Father Knows. She Did you say anything to papa nbout your being too young ? HeYes. . But lie said when I once began to paj your bills I should ago rapidly enough New York Journal. Knew What His Few Days Meant. Qunckly My the bye , have you got $10 about you thnt you don't need fern n few days ? Smnckly I Imvo. but I might need It Borne time. Exchange.