m c J 3 I . MOffi HEADACHE V flTrWTHJ HT T t UllllUUilll I 7EAEfJES3 A2TD PETES riSAPPEAB TOO. Dow n Womiin "Wn I'rerd from Trti!ilc That Hud M.i. I.- I.if- AVrttch.d for Many Yt-ars. The immediate causes of headaches vary, hut most of tlie:n come from jKxir or ioi-ine'l llKnl. In amentia the blood is sanity or thin ; the nerves are iinier fectly nourished ami pain is the way in which tin. y express their weakness. In colds the blood absorbs poison from tho mncous surfaces, ami the poihou irritates tho nerves and produces pain. In rheu matism, malaria and tho grip, the poison in the blood produces like discomfort. la indigestion tho gases from the impuro matter kept in the system affect tho blood in the same way. The ordinary headache-cures nt best give only temporary relief. They deaden the pain but do not drive the poi.son out of tho blood. Dr. Williams Pink Pills on tho contrary thoroughly renew tho blood ami tho pain disappears ierma nently. Women in particular have found these pills an unfailing relief in head aches caused by ana'mia. Miss Stella Blocker recently said: "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did me a great deal of good. I had headache nearly all tho time. After I had taken three boxes of these pills I became entirely will." "How long had you tuffered?" she was ukid. ' For several years. I can't tell thG exact date when my i!InchS began for it came on by slow degrees. 1 had been going down lull for many years." " Did oii haw any other ailments?" " I was very weak ami sometimes I had fever. My liver and kidneys were af fected as w II as my head." ilow did you come to take the rem edy that cured you?" " I saw in a southern newspaper a statement of some jer.vii who was cured of a like trouble by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. My physician hadn't done me any good, so I bought, a box of these pills. After I had taken one box I felt mmiiiicIi better that I kept on until I became en tirely well." Mis blocker's home is nt Lean dor, Louisiana. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are wdd by all dnigirNts. Besides headacho they cure neuralgia, sciatica, nervous prostration, partial paralysis and rheu matism. " Charms of the Riviera. It has been pointed out that tho temperature on the Jtiviera is a very few degrees above that of the south of Kngland. but the charm lies in the almosL constant biiccession of days of sunshine. I'lso's Cure is the lest medicine we ever used for ail :iTtvtio'isf the throat ami luuo. Wii. O. KMisucr. Vaulmren. 1ml., Feb. 10. 1WX). Ten a Penny. Lot us never forget that the best gift within our power to convey is justice. Many a good giver fails to pay his full score, because of preju dice, narrowness, or personal antip athy. Ii Uriiyerc. Important to Mothers. Ilramlnc carefully every ltott'c of CASTOTtlA, :i pafoanJ cure mmi-dy for lafaals uutl children, awl .-co that it IScur tlie Signature of ??-- SyyTj-tUcsUu la Use lr Ui-iT ::o Ytirt The kti.il You lime Always UoUit. Provided Handsomely for Pets. Quite a larire sti'ii was left by a Bajput prince some thirty years xtgo "for the maintenance m comfort" of his thiee favorite elephants and a pet tiger. A curious provision was that special trappings and cloths were to be provided for the elephants, while the tiger was to be regaled with a specially mentioned diet, and was to be provided with a solid gold collar studded with a large number of pre cious stones. Link Sausage Output. A trade journal has estimated, af ter much figuring, that the annual output of link sausage in this coun try amounts to more than 100.000.000 yards, or 'l'l:i'l miles. This is enough to extend around the world nine times at the equator but sau sage will not keep at the equator. Landlord's Abi-urd Prerogatives. The duke of Portland has the right of taking up his abode in any of the tenants" houses on the Welbeck estate, and Iord Balfour of Burleigh can make the tenants on his property as semble once a year bareheaded and barefooted and acknowledge him pub liclv to be their lord and master. Harvard's Choicest Treasure. Harvard college is rich in treasures of many kinds in its vast series of museums, but the choicest of all its treasures, is the Ware collection of Blaschka glass models of plants in the Botanical museum. COFFEE HEART Very Plain In Some People. A great many people go on suffer ing from annoying ailments for a long time before they can pet their own consent to gie up the indulgence from which their trouble arises. A gentleman in Brooklyn describes his experience as follows: "I became satisfied some months ago that I owed the palpitation of the heart, from which I suffered almost daily, to the use of coffee (I had been a coffee drinker for 30 years), but I found it very hard to give up the bev erage. "I realized that I must give up the harmful indulgence in coffee but I felt the necessity for a hot table drink, and as tea is not to my liking. I was at a loss for awhile what to do. "One day I ran across a very sen sible and straightforward presenta tion of the claims of Postuni Food Coffee, and was so impressed thereby that I concluded to give it a trial. My experience with it was unsatisfactory till I learned how it ought to be pre pared by thorough boiling for not less than 15 or 20 minutes. After I learned that lesson there was no trouble. Postum Food Coffee proved to be a most palatable aud satisfac tory hot beverage, and I have used it ever since. "The effect on my health has been most salutary. It has completely cured the heart palpitation from which I used to suffer so much, particularly after breakfast, and I never have a re turn of it except when I dine or lunch away from home and am compelled to drink the old kind of cofTee because Postum Is not served. I find that Pos tum Food Coffee cheers and Invigor ates while it produces no harmful stimulation." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. There's a reason. Ten days' trial proves an eye open tr to many. Read the little book. The Road to feUvUle" la Tcry okg. DEATHXOF FITZHUGH LEE Distinguished Virginia Succumbs to Stroke of Apoplexy-VHad Served with Distinction in Tlwse Wars Consul General at Havana, Just Pre vious to the War with Spain. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee died at Washing ton April 2S as the result of an at tack of apoplexy and paralysis. The end came quite suddenly and was without pain. Gen. Lee was stricken early in the morning while on a train en route from Boston to Washington. A phy- The Late Fitzhugh Lee. sician was taken aboard the train at Baltimore and accompanied the suf feier to Washington. Under the di rection of Major Kean, V. S. A., of the surgeon general's olhcc, the pa tient was removed to Providence hos pital, where he continued to sink until death came. Gen. Lee was fiS years old and al ways had enjoyed robust health. However, he had led an exceptionally THE LOSSES OF WAR. "Upon Human Bones All Empires Have Been Builded." In cases where armies are recruited chiefly or wholly from the offscourings ot the population, the situation is dif ferent; but with the so-called "na tional army system" of the nineteenth century things are m ordered as to raise this element of cost to a maxi mum, writes Charles J. Bullock in the Atlantic. Historians never fail to re cord the loss which France suffered when 't0,MH) Huguenots weie driven out of the kingdom, but they seldom give adequate attention to the cost of the glorious wars waged by the grand niounrtnie and the mighty Corsican. And yet, from the Khine to Moscow, from the Alps to Calabria, from the Pyrenees to Gibraltar, a century and a half of magnificent combat sowed the soil of Europe thick with the skulls of Frenchmen, while distant In- , dia and Egypt claimed a share of the j offering, and many provinces of France engulfed their quotas of brave i soldiers. England, too, as Kipling re- minds us, has salted down her empire with the bones of her sons, depositing much of the preservative in the sea beyond the reach of spade or plow share. Upon human bones, in fact, all empires are builded; and these things must be taken into the account when one tries to estimate the gain and merchandise thereof. DO AMERICANS DIE YCUNG? German Physician So Asserts, and Makes Explanation. According to Dr. B. 1 aquer. in a paper on "Social Hgiene in the Unit ed States." submitted to the Interna tional Congress of Medicine in ses sion at Wiesbaden, Germany, "Amer icans are shorter lived than Ger mans." "Although more temperate in the use of alcohol than the Germans." he says, "and working 10 per cent, short er hours, the Americans are exhaust ed earlier in life." Dr. Iaquer finds that the number of persons from 40 to 00 years of age are. in Germany 17ft. in America 170; persons over CO, in Germany 7S, Amer ica G5. The solution of these facts is doubt less owing to the fact that men live at a more rapid pace in this country than in Germany. M. DELCASSE. M. DELCASSE, French Foreign Minister, who has been induced by his colleagues to re consider his determination to resign. He is considered one of the ablest of European diplomats, aud a stanch friend of peace. The Growing Love of Sports. The great attendance at baseball games, so far, may be taken with en tire confidence as a forecast of what is to follow throughout the season. More than that, it is a sign of what may be expected on the race tracks, at field contests of various kinds, at the tennis courts, on the golf links, on the banks of rivers where rowing regattas are held and. in brief, at all outdoor sporting events. No sign of the times is clearer than the increas ing popularity of many sports out of doors. Cleveland Leader. Automobile Bank for Cincinnati. Cincinnati is soon to have what is said to he the first automobile bank in this country. The car is of chilled steel, with double-walls and a one-inch space between. It will contain a burglar-proof safe, desk and working room for several clerks. The motive power is electricity, and the storage battery can be charged for a 50-mile run. The cost will be 5,000. The use of the car is obvious to save deposi tors from sending to the bank head cuarters. Provides for Divorced Queen. Herr Mankiewicz. a German million aire, has notified the divorced wife ol the King of Saxony, the ex-Crown Princess Louise, that he will present to her the villa at Merin he recently purchased and make her an allowance sufficient to live in it in royal state. Auto-Buses for London. It is estimated that 500 motor omni buses will be running in London a year hence. Drivers of horse-drawn omnibuses are being trained for the new work. .'" active life, being a veteran of three wars. He served in the Mexican war, was in the Confederate army during the civil war, and his conspicuous service in the Spanish war is current history. Gen. Lee, U. S. A., was one of Vir ginia's foremost sons. He was born " Claremont, Va., Nov. 19, 1S35. His father was Capt. Sydney Smith Lee, who left the United States navy at the outbreak of the civil war. Gen. -ee was a grandson of Gen. Henry e; or "Lighthorse Harry," and a vlD tW f Gen- Robert E. Lee, and, "Ke him, saw active service in the Confederacy. He was appointed a cadet to West Point m 1852, was graduated in 1856, and assigned to the Second cavalry. hile on duty in the West he fought a duel with a Comanche chief. Gen. Lee had the proud distinction of having twice held commissions in the army of the United States and once in that of the Confederacy. "I wonder what Jubal Early will say when he sees me marching up in a blue uniform on judgment day?" Gen. Lee used to ask his old comrade in the Confederacy, hut now a retired officer of the regular army, Gen. "Joe" Wheeler. Gen. Lee was appointed Consul Gen eral at Havana by President Cleve land in 1S9', when the Cubans were making their final struggle for inde pendence. The blowing up of the Maine precipitated war with the Unit ed States. He was commissioned by President McKinley as an officer of the army, and was present at the sur render of Havana. At the time of his death Gen. Lee was president of the exposition com pany engaged in commemorating the settlement at Jamestown, Va. DEATH OF NOTED EXPLORER. Capt. Glazier Claimed He Discovered Source of Mississippi. Col. Willard Glazier, who died at Albany, N. Y., last week at the age of 54, claimed that he discovered the leal source of the Mississippi, a small lake south of Lake Itasca. In 1SS1 he made a canoe voyage from the headwaters to the mouth of the Mis sissippi, a distance of 3,000 miles. He COLONUL. WILLAIID GLAZIER. was a.i .t tii.oi. MjinK!' .. i i .jlozer. I He served in tin northern army dur ! ing the civil war and was confined in Libby prison. In 1S7C he rode from Boston to San Francisco on horseback and was captured by Indians near Skull Bocks, Wyo., but made his es cape. Benefit of a Rural Life. Fresh country air is wholesome and a souvereign remedy for many of the ills that alllict the weary city dweller. The tendency in this country has been too much to crowd into the great cities and many of the poor of the slums ami overtaxed tenements would be greatly benefited if they could be removed to the farms. The maga zines that encourage the love of rural life are doing a great work and not the least feature of their mission is the cultivation of the aesthetic qual ity. They promote a love for the beautiful in nature that will result in the preservation of much of the nat ural loveliness of the country that has been too ruthlessly dealt with by the unappreciative utilitarian in the past. Nashville, Tenn., Banner. Spain's Boy King. The young boy king is tall, thin, with a prominent underlip, nose, and jawbone. His eyes are bluish gray by no means Spanish and his hair is nut brown. He has winning manners when speaking or smiling, and it is asserted that he is able to speak six languages fluentlj- viz.: Spanish, German. French, English, Italian, and Portuguese. Don Alfonso is also a military tactician of no mean order. He grasps readily the laws of regi mental maneuvering, and when lead ing a battalion in a sham attack against a foe it is affirmed that he has a natural intuition short of genius for the right move in the right place and at the right time. "Black Snow." A strange phenomenon has been witnessed recently in the snow region about Coire. in the Swiss canton of the Grisons. The wide stretch of snow has suddenly been transformed into a vast sweep of jet black. This is owing to the sudden falling upon the country of enormous swarms of small black insect, without wings, but pro vided with two long legs, that permit him to move after the way of a grass hopper. These insects fall in such clouds that the people of the Grisons call them "black snow." Seeks to Secure Trade. The Manila agent of the Pacific Commercial museum, San Francisco, warns California merchants to look cut for the new scheme of fhe Toyo Kisen Steamship company of Japan, which is to extend its present Manila service between Manila aud Panama. It has negotiated a large loan from the Rothschilds, and is building 12-000-ton 20-knot steamships, and after the war is over will be ready to try to wrest the Oriental market from San Francisco shippers. Soldiers and Artificial Teeth. The British army council has decid ed to discontinue the experiment of providing recruits with artificial teeth. The soldiers would not pay tor their teeth as agreed, out of their pay of twenty-five cents a day, and when the military authorities tried to make them they deserted, teeth and all. California Ships Cherries. California shipped its first cherries of the season eastward on April 7. Thy were of the purple Guigue va riety and were grown in Vacaville. i"""K3Ha7aSj .- ,. '.3afc"Dav s. i' A v'v BEMflKJSHfllHBEIHwk. FUNDS MEANT TO ALLAY PANIC PASSED THROUGH BROKEN PANE M4'4-ae4-3'f Friends of the First National Bank of Milwaukee, wishing to deposit money to show their confidence in its stability were unable to reach the receiving teller's window because of the crowd. A pane in a plate-glass window was cut with a diamond, the panic was broken and tens of thou sands of dollars were deposited in th is way. SLAVS IN UNITED STATES .train Is Certain to Miss Largely in the Blood of the Future Composite American Skilled Trades Have Sparse Representation in Their Ranks Have Not the Fault of Hud dling in the Cities, as Have Other Nationalities. Charities published in a recent num ber the results of a detailed study of Slavic immigration in the United States. In spite of the proportions which it has reached some 230.000 Slavs came over last year popular ignorance on the subject is marked. In northern Pennsylvania the great hordes of Ilutheniau, Polish and Slo vak miners are contemptuously class id as "Huns," and even the more in tilligent are di.-posed to associate them with the followers of Attila. For good or ill. however, the Slavic strain I romi-es to ir.i.x largely in the blood of the future composite American. In tlie c'.iilv arrivals at Ellis Island it is , bv the Italian and 1 Jewish; hence it is ! outnumbered only possibly by the encouraging to note that tlie Slavs, too, improve on closer acquaintance. Properly Slavic immigrants should not be classed as a single group. They are really a congeries of some twenty one peoples, differing in race, lan guage and frequently in religion. They range all the way from the high ly civilized Bohemian, almost invari ably literate and skilled of labor, to the ignorant Iluthene of Galicia, economically and educationally on the lowest plane. Practically all religions are represented Orthodox Greek, Ro man Catholic, Protestant and Luther an, with such eccentricities as the Doukbobors and regularly organized -ets of Freethinkers. According to Miss Kate Holladay Claghorn, the causes of immigration are largely political. Thus it is al most invariablj the subject races that leave home. From Russia the genuine Muscovite seldom emigrates; it is the Pole, the Lithuanian, the Jew and the Finn. The dominant Ger man does not abandon Austria in large numbers; it is the more or less subject Slav. Roumanians do not emigrate from their own country, Rou mar.ia; but from Hungary. Rutheni ans come from Galicia, not from Rus sia. Economic causes, too, are influ ential. According to Ivan Ardan, the peasants of Galicia subsist almost entirely on potatoes and cabbage; 50 per cent eat no bread for six months in the year. Under these conditions a high standard of education and man ners could hardly be expected. They have some traits, indeed, not unlike the Asiatic hordes from which many of them are sprung. They are hard drinkers, ready fighters, though sel dom quarrelsome. With the exception of the Bohemians and Magyars (the Stature in Army and Navy. It is not improbable that the army icgulaticns will be modified in the matter of the stature of enlisted men. Under the present regulations a man must be of pretty good height to be j accepted for either the army or the navy. But the Japanese soldiers and sailors are not large men. The suc cess of the Japs as fighters has caus ed the authorities at Washington to take into consideration the fact that sometimes small men can fight about as well as big ones. Savannah, Ga., News. Control of the Mediterranean. There are four nations which have what may be called a natural right to direct the destinies of the Mediterra neanGreat Britain, France, Italy and Srain. Of these Great Britain has un dertaken with conspicuous success the burden of administering the affairs of J Egypt; France has been given a tree . hand in Morocco; Italy must become the chief power in the Adriatic and Ionian seas, while Spain has enough to do in promoting her internal devel opment. Providence, R. I., Journal. Americn Woman Liked by Queen. An American woman who has quick ly gained the favor of royalty in Eng land and for whom Queen Alexandra is said to have evinced a strong per sonal regard, bears no title Mrs. Frank Mackay, the daughter of a rich lumberman of Minneapolis, Minn. Government Improves City. Servia's government is about build ing T50 miles of railroad lines; aiso sewerage works, water works, quays and storage houses in the city of Belgrade. . latter, of course, are not Slavs, though Ioobely so reckoned by Charities), the rate of illiteracy is high; and the skilled trades are sparsely represent ed. Like the Italians, the Slavs come here first without their wives; send home their savings, and, when work is slack, go back themselves. Also like the Italians, however, they are not contented to remain away; but soon return, this time with their fami lies, and definitely establish here their homes. Unquestionably, the Slavs are more assimilable than some other elements in tho new immigration. They meet the supreme test that of distribution. They do not huddle in the great cities, like the Italians and Jews; there are Slav colonies in New York, hut they are comparatively unimportant. They are distributed pretty generally from the Atlantic coast to the" Missis sippi river, in accordance with the de mands of labor. They have one groat advantage in thatyhe nan of Eurone fro!n 'eh theyme is, physically a"; diiuatieally almost ,,ieiltIcaI ..ii .. wwi. inu lerino plains oi the Danube are reproduced hero in those of the Mississippi. The Russian Jew here takes up a new trade in the sweat shop; the Italian from the farms of Sicily and Basilicata here has to adapt himself to rough laborer's work, but the Slav, in large measure, simply resumes the oc cupations to which he has been bred at home. They are miners in the an thracite fields and iron mines of Penn sylvania; wheat growers in Wiscon sin and Illinois, where they are fre quently proprietors; tobacco raisers in Connecticut; "abandoned farmers." in New England. They are employed" in the steel shops of Pittsburg, the shoe factories of Lynn, the oil and sugar refiners of Greater New York and the hat shops of Newark. They work as stevedores on the docks of Jersey City and in the packing houses of Chicago. They are found in largest numbers in Pennsylvania, where, in the iron and coal mines, there are now about 110,000 in the main Poles, Ruthe nians and Slovaks. To New York state came 32,000 last year, to Illinois 24.000 and to Ohio 19.000. In general, they are industrious and law-abiding; utilize educational opportunities for their children though still too close ly attached to the parochial school; belong equally to both the two great political parties, and constantly im prove their condition. The Magyar colony of New York bounded by Stanton and Seventh streets. First avenue and East River is a distinct gain. Here they are furriers, shop keepers, merchants and workmen in cigar, wire and shoe factories. And in Hungarian cafes they have added an interesting social institution to the metropolis. New York Post. Joke on H. H. Rogers. A practical joker played a heartless trick on H. H. Rogers of the Standard Oil company the other evening at the Board of Trade banquet in New York. As Mr. Rogers stood up to make his speech it was noticed that he had a rragnificent pink in his buttonhole. Later a friend asked him, "Do you know the meaning of that pink you are wearing?" No," replied Mr. Rog ers. "Well, that is the Thomas W. Lawson pink," he was told. What Mr. Rogers taid will never be printed in the newspapers. Own Fine Country Estate. Herman B. Duryea and Harry Payne Whitney, of New York, and Hobart Ames, of Boston, own a 70,000-acre game preserve at Hickory Valley, Tenn., sixty miles from Memphis. Their preserve is considered the fin. est in many respects in America though others exceed it in size. The bird dogs are undoubtedly the best on this continent they have demonstrat ed this in field trials for many genera tions and the fox and bear hounds cannot be equaled anywhere. In Memory of Donizetti. In honor of the great composer Don izetti a museum is to be erected at Bergamo, his native place. Relatives of the late composer have agreed to furnish the material. Baroness Basoni Scotti will supply the furniture of the room in which Donizetti died. Independent Young Americana, The daughters of Capt. John Mullan U. S. A., are running a laundry i-' Washington and are making a success of the venture, though some of their relatives are very indignanL NO JOY IN FORGETFULNESS There was once a poor woman whose life had been such a bitter one that she wanted her memory taken away. He to whom she had given the love of her young heart had not ful filled the promises of his youth; his weaknesses had developed into crimes, so that he was compelled to flee for his life; and the sons and daughters she had borne and brought up had repaid her care and kindness with neglect and abuse, and at last, one by one, had wandered far from her fireside. So the heart of the poor woman was broken, and she passed, a sad and desolate soul, down the dark valley of the shadow of death. She came at last to the dim river, and asked the boatman to take her over. "This is the river of forgetfulness," said the boatman. "Will you stop and drink before you cross?" The woman's face brightened and her voice was full of eager longing. "Yes," she said, "I will drink; I will forget then that my hopes have fail ed." "Yon will forget that you ever hoped," replied the boatman. The woman drew back; then she bent forward once more. "I will for get that I came to hate him so," she said. Much Learned War is abhorrent, but it has at least one innocent use. says the Philadel phia Public Ledger. It is an efficient educator in geography. War teaches this branch of education with more in terest and thoroughness than the most accomplished professor in his classroom and, on the other hand, it is urged by many eminent military men that an accurate knowledge of geography is necessary for successful warfare. The art of war and geography are in intimate association. The latter is called "the handmaid of tactics and strategy." So important is the rela tion of geographical education to war that the London Times has opened its columns to the discussion of the sub ject. One of its correspondents, in true British fashion, says that "to think imperially with any profit we must think geographically." The technical importance of geo graphical knowledge in war and the importance of "thinking imperially" may not appeal to the American read er, but there can be no question as to the educational value of the dis patches and accompanying explana tions chronicling the movements of Playground As mysterious and uncontrollable, as treacherous and as entertaining as the vast ocean, which lies only a few leagues west of its borders, is the great sea of sand which forms a large rortion of California's greatest desert, known, because of its proximity to the river of that name, as the Colorado desert. This desert is tho wind's favorite playground. He comes over the moun tains, from plowing the mighty deep, and works strange fancies in the pli able sands. Ho duplicates the great billows of the turbulent ocean; he imitates the rippling waves of the placid sea; he carves and builds and plays at artist, sculptor and geometri cian. When he becomes weary of his sports he lashes himself to fury and tosses the sand a mile high in the air and flings it broadcast over all the plain, whirling and hurling the particles till he obscures the sun and brings a suffocating darkness to the land. On the east side of the desert he is at present busy engulfiing a railroad. Already he has buried many of the Benefit in Short "Naps The majority of people take a meal of some kind between the hours of 12 and 2 daily, says the London Chron icle. With a number of persons this meal assumes the form of a substan tial dinner, while with others it amounts to nothing more than a light luncheon. In either case, however, the repast requires to be digested, and this necessitates some modification of the activities of the brain, since neith er that organ nor those concerned in the processes of digestion are capable of good work when an attempt is made to put forth their energies simul taneously. A tendency to drowsiness, confusion of thought and inability to make any great mental effort are among the re sults of a diminished cerebral circu lation. These feelings are, therefore, experienced by most persons after a meal, and they are the more pro nounced in proportion to the greater amount of digestive energy expended. The Chosen One That fellowship of genius, unconstrained Of place or riches; nor its precincts gained Of loud alarum; for a brazen Kate Thlok-metab-d. bids tht- wanderer await Until the sacred password is approved By Him who loveth art for art beloved. Xor ever ringeth false upon His ear That magic word that bids the gate swing clear. The moated ditches close, the drawbridge fall. The sentinels move, harmless on the wall. The feast be spread, the laureled wreath be wove. For him who bears the signet-ring of Love. Nor any soul discordant at the feast. Not any greatest one or any least'. But all of common stature, having sipped The cup whose golden sides have dripped and dripped With the rare wine of Song, whobe vine yards lie Where the clear blue of the Parnassian s-ky Dips down to earth to lift the souls of men When Silence Is Golden The best of us talk too much. "The essence of power is reserve," said a man who knew. Many a reputation has been built on silence. Many a one is spoiled through rushing prematurely and volubly into speech. It is safe to be silent when your words would wound. "Faithful are the wounds of a friend," says the old proverb, but one wants to be mighty irare one's friend needs the wounding and that we are qualified to administer It Keep still when your words will dis courage. It is infinitely better to be Jwnb forever than to make one fel- "You will forget that you ever loved him." came the response. The words seemed to stir a faraway memory. There was a long pause. Then the woman leaned forward to drink. "I will forget that my little ones left my arms. I will forget how I wept for them in the darkness when they did not return at night. I will forget that they lost the right path and wandered away, never to return to me." "Yes," said tho boatman, "you will forget that you ever pressed them to your bosom, forget that you ever felt the tiny fingers wandering caressingly over your face. You will forget the visions you saw, the fond hopes yon cherished as you used to rock them to sleep at night." The woman was not stooping by the river now; she had raised herself and was walking toward the boat. "You may row me across." she said. "1 shall not drink of the waters of for getfulness." Have you ever said, dear reader. In a moment of despair, "there is nothing in all my past to be thankful for?" Never say it again. Have you ever wished that jou might drink of the waters of forgetfulness? Never wish ' it again. A. B. Curtis. Through War armies on the war scene and describ ing more or less minutely regions and peoples of which the reader has had very limited and imperfect knowledge. Recalling conflicts within easy rec ollection, the South African and the Spanish-American wars were great educators. No one who followed these wars closely, as gazetted by the newspapers, could have failed to learn much respecting Africa. Spain, Cuba, the Philippines and Porto Rico of which he was previously ignorant. Tho pending titanic struggle in Asia has produced a dct.ige of valuable in formation, geographical, political, so cial, respecting Russia. Japan and Manchuria, quite apart from the in tensely dramatic features of the war. The school books are always years behind that universal school master, the live newspaper. The mass of in formation and permanently useful in telligence presented in the voluminous war correspondence is one of the as tonishing evidences of modern prog ress and of the development of the newspaper's Inaction as a popular ed ucator. The daily newspaper, faithful to its trust, is the world's best text book in many lines. of the Wind telegraph poles which stand along the way and he has invaded the right of way of the road aud the company is busily fighting to hold possession until a new line, which is being built around th intruding hills, shall be completed. Then the rolling billows of sand will be allowed to sweep on undisputed. In the southwestern portion of the same desert is another range of travel ing hills. These are more wonderful, however, than the ones which are men acing the railroad, for upon these hills the wind has practiced his skill at carving geometrical figures. These hills are known as the Crescent hills. Each is the shape of a true crescent, the points of which are toward the east. A hill which is fifty feet high is found to he 100 feet thick at the base and 200 feet from point to point of the duplicate horns of the crescent. If a hill is twice that bight its other dimen sions will he found to have doubled also. Little and big they keep their proportions as they move slowly across the plain. New York Tribune. 99 Since brain work of good quality cannot be produced while the pro cesses of digestion are in active opera tion, it is wise not to attempt it. It is never prudent to thwart the bene ficent intentions of nature. Many per sons struggle against the mental and physical lethargy that accompanies the earlier stages of the digestive act, apparently under the delusion that all time given to the important business of building up and repairing by their tissues Is time wasted. So far from this being the case a well spent post prandial interval tends to the preser vation and prolongation of life. If a tendency to drowsiness is felt sleep should be allowed to prevail, for the proverbial "forty winks" is justified of science. A ten or fifteen minutes nap after a meal curiously enough will enable many a brainworker to arise refreshed who might have spent an hour or two in a vain and mentally confused struggle against the "drowsy god." That fell from Heaven back to Heaven again. And in that din and clamor I axvait The message th it He sfnds who guards the gate. To bid me come within or bid me lay My dnsims asld and diligently stray By field and stn irn and under tlie blue sky. Seeking the truth afar with .ag-r eye. Through many a sleepless night and weary d;n To serve with i ttience. sufffr. learn, and pray. Tntil I gain tl Fcret. and the gate Shall be thing wide and thus, great souls await To welcome m who. like m. unafraid. Untiling. iati. i.t. at the ..! ir laid Their offei ings once and r -e and owe again. And once a hundred tim'c and more; till then They learned that I'ati. re was the word that bad The gate .swii,' v.KK and waiting souls be glad' - New York Times. low-being ? - an'e. to cope with life. Keep sT . when jour words will in cite to arger or discomfort. An in credible amou-.r of oreath is used in the evil prar ' of trying to make our friends di-'ike their friends. Never speak when what you have to say is mere y for the purpose of exalt- inr vour.-elf. Shut jour lips with a key when yon are inspired to babble incontinently of yourself "ur aiIments. accomplish ments, refat.ons. loves, hatreds, hopes and desire? It is only to the choice, rare friend 'hat one nay speak of these thinss without becoming a fool. Philadelphia Bulletin. r HAPPY WOMEN. Mrs. Pare, wife of C. B. Pare, a pro m i n e n t resident of Glasgow. Ky. says: "I was suffering from a com plication of kidney trou bles. Besides a bad back, I had a great deal of trou ble with the secre tions, which were exceedingly variable. some times excessive and at other times scanty. The color was high, and pass ages were accompanied with a scald ing sensation. Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated the kidney secretions, making their color normal and ban ished the inflammation which caused the scalding sensation. I can rest well, my back is strong and sound and I feel much better in every way." For sale by all dealers, price 50 cents per box. FOSTEK-MILBURN CO., Buffalo. N. Y. Increase'- Coinage of Farthings. The British mint has been busily engaged in coining farthings. Until very recently the farthing has been almost an unknown coin in many, perhaps tho majority of the British possessions. They are only coined to encourage thrift in the colouies. By introducing the smallest coin of the realm a saving can be effected on purchaser of small quantities of goods. Wanted Medicine for Right Side. "A woman came into my store the other day." remarked the druggist, "and asked my assistant to give hot something for a pain she had in her right side. While the young man was compounding the mixture, the woman approached me and said: Aro you sure he will give me what I need? Tell him to be sure and make up tha medicine for the right side." Pioneer's Use of Quinina. The soldiers in our civil war de pended greatly upon quinine. The pioneers in our country when it was first settled and civilized had as hard work fighting fever and ague in tho then swampy, malarial districts as in fighting Indians, and quinine was even more necessary than firearms. A Tale of Suffering. Oakley. Mich.. May Sth. (Special) "I could not sleep or rest in any place," says Florence Capen of this place in a recent interview. "I had a rain in my back ami hips. If I sat down I could not get up out of ray chair. I was in pain all the time. I got poor for I did not eat enough te keep a small child. I could not rest nights. "then I sent for a box of Dodd'a Kidney Pills and went to taking them and what do you think, that verr night I went to bed aud I slept tilt morning. I got up and thanked Cod for the night's rest and Dodd's Kid ney Pills. I know that Dodd's Kid ney Pills are all that is claimed for them." This is only one of tho numerous experiences that show the way to build up run down people is to euro the kidneys. Thousands of people in every state bear witness to the fact that Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail to cure the kidneys. Old maids often have tho honesty to confess that they would have mar ried had they been given tho pppor tunity. Investigation of the Packers. Very general interest has been man ifested in the government investiga tion now in progress into the mode of conducting business by the large pack ers located in Chicago and elsewhere. Much has been written upon the al leged illegal and improper modes of business procedure connected with tho packing industry; but it seems that so far no definite charge of any kind has been sustained and no proof of illegal or inequitable methods has been dis closed to the public. While a wave of severe criticism of this great indus trial interest is now passing over tho country it might be well to remember that the packers have had as yet no opportunity to make specific denial, the many indefinite charges of wrong doing having never been formulated so that a categorical answer could be made. The recent report of Commissioner Garfield, which embodied the results of an official investigation undertaken by the Department of Commerce and Labor of the United States, was a vin dication of the Western packers, but this result having been unexpected at tempts in many quarters to discredit-it were made. In view of the situation as it now stands, however, attention may proper ly be called to a few facts that owing to popular clamor are now being ap parently overlooked. Fair treatment in this country has heretofore been ac corded to all citizens whose affairs as sume prominence in tin public eye and some of the facts th it bear upon the relation of the packers to the com merce of the country may at this time be briefly nlltubd to. It would bo difficult to estimate the benefits gained by the farmers t 'he country result ing from the ' rytic enterprise or the packers, for v. i atever is of benefit to the farmer i- a gain to the entiro commerce of tl" country. And con nected with tli r continuous aggres sive work no f.v r- perhaps has been more important 'an their efforts In seeking outlets : . over the world for the surplus pro. nets of the farmer. Our total export- of agricultural prod ucts have gained but little in the past twenty years, and leaving out corn, the total of all other farm products was far less in I'JO.'i than in 1891. But in packing house products there was considerable tain during this period, because an organized and powerfnl force has been behind them seeking new and broader markets. Beside? the benefits reaped by farm ers on account of t!w enterprise and energy exercised by the packers in at taining commercial results by foreign trade, the great development in the manufacture of packing house by-prod ucts has added enormously to the value of all Iie stock raked in the United State--. The waste material of twenty years ago. then an expense to the packer, is now converted into ar ticles of great value, and. as an eco nomic fact, this must correspondingly increase the value to the farmer of every head of cattle marketed at the numerous stockyards of the country. Let these facts be remembered while now it is so popular to regard the great packing industry as deserving of -condemnation At least it must be ad mitted that, so far. there is no ade quate reason for the almost unani mous howl that may be heard every where in the face of the Garfield re port above alluded to which practical ly exonerates the packers from the ob scure and indefinite charges that have been for some time past made the sub ject of popular comment. American Homestead. The poor man has one cause foi congratulations in the fact that he's always got ten times the appetite ot a nUllloaaire. Farm Life. I Y 'SEJ fifl ii&&Eg