r',-!JyS ,f W , " "l&TvrfX??fSi& -- -' .-- A'v: -ii-Tw. -fcjrr .nvs: k.iMS"1-" - tt s ! V ' hS. :. , , - a-ai rati- rc sr ;T j!t In I- 5 f fcw K ') r- 4- ColumbusJournal P. K. rrHOTHER, COLUMBUS, Man jhmi fjimpieyer. the inexperienced yms caters the business field, the first thfnc he runs up against Is the other "mi'i point of -view. He starts out fan of hinmelf ud of what he can do of how he cu do it After a he begins to wonder why he i't get oa; If he is a stupid, blun- feUow, he never tads oat. for I the stupid man goes through life fight las his employer all the time. If yon are eager to rise In the world, con sider yoaraelf in relation to yonr cm : payer's business from his standpoint 'Try to get at his aims aad difficulties, taad consider your work in relation to those aims aad difficulties. Ask ; yourself whether your work is fni thering his aims, if you want to know 'Whether yoa are making progress to ward ultimate success. Try to think out your employer's method of deal ing with his problem and with his employes. Not till you have gained some Insight iBto these things are you la a position to take the first step to ward the realization of your ambition. Consider the fact that the head of every business concern has definite aims and definite methods by which he Is accomplishing or hopes to ac complish those alms. He requires em ployes who will consent to become the comparatively Insignificant wheels in a more-, or less complicated ma chine, of, which he furnishes the mo tive power. As the employe is ob liged 'in any case to come up to bis employer's requirements if he is to please and succeed with him. he will profit by 'meeting those requirements as fully aad with as good grace as possible. Six and Five Point Stars. The stars on the great seal and the seal of the president of the Unit ed States are five-pointed, while on the sea of the house of representa tives they are six-pointed. The 13 stars on the obverse of the present half and quarter dollar are five-pointed. The reverse of the present half and quarter dollar is a copy of the great seal, except that the clouds are omitted. It is evident that heraldry 'has not taken a very strong hold in these matters in the United States; 'therefore It Is not in the power of any one to say without a doubt why the difference in the stars on the flag and the coins. So tar as is known, 'with the exception of the reverse of the present half and quarter dollar the stars on our coins are copied from .the colonial coins, which were, no doubt, made after the manner of Eng lish heraldry, while the flag was made up after the design of Washington's coat-of-arms, containing three five pointed stars. Growth of Kindness. The American people, in their need ed work of reconstruction, are not .losing their characteristic virtues of kindliness and good-humor. A leader in reform, in a private letter, writes thus: "After all, human sympathy is the foundation-stone of democracy. I have imagined that our criticisms of life were becoming kinder; I mean the ordinary run of newspaper criti cism; and kinder means broader. Some of us. perhaps, went rather far In the heat of attack; and I think the increased kindliness, which leads more surely to sympathy, is an excel lent tendency. Lately it has seemed to me that' we needed more than any thing else in this country kindly ex planations. If we could only under stand one another, intolerance would expire." All of which is true, declares Collier's Weekly, and truly said, and charity is a friend and not an enemy to reform. Soon after King Edward of England decorated Prince Henry of the Neth erlands for his gallantry in rescuing passengers from the wrecked steam ship of the Hook of Holland, in Feb ruary. Queen Wilhelmina presented gold medals of the Order of Orange Nassau to the three sea-captains who assisted in the rescue, and silver medals to the members of the boat crews who risked their own lives in the work. Lord Curxon. when he was a stu dent at Oxford, burned the midnight oil, won scholastic honors galore, took a brilliant degree and won the grand prise of a fellowship. Lord Rosebery; on the other hand, took no honors, was rusticated, and didn't even get an ordinary degree. A man has just been acquitted in Missouri on the unwritten law. When the people of that state all learn to read and write they will not have to en the country squire to tell rhat Is law. They can look in the book and see. President G. Stanley Hall of Clark university coined the word curophia in an' address he delivered some time ago, to the graduating class of a wom an's college. Europhia Is the joy of living. It is said that the government can not secure enough pure-food inspec- Naturally, this is a difficult po to fill, as recent revelations have made it very plain that pure food is something very few are able to identify on sight Though the late shah of. Persia pos sessed jewels worth SS0.0Ov.900. it would be m mistake to suppose that he did so snch marrying In order to get a amMdeat number of wives to wear dM 1 aaAaBJi 1 tjBrBaff f "h. r)smahL.i uV pPppapaBBBf tw SJFS r'Mmm3mmNauuV "f 3 , ' ammmmt:Halm?H9mmm vamr fiT f mmmmmmml yOCt9mmWam Ji.fimmmmmM mmmmmmmmmmmmmaV wMIH7 MfMfMfMfMfMfMfMfMfm. W VflV mmmmmmB' THE DELUGE B4VHCmUHAM CHAPTER XXIV-d?MitiiHMd. . As the Albatross steamed Into the little harbor, I saw Mowbray Lang don's Indolence at anchorl I glanced toward Steuben Point where his cousins, the Vivians, lived and thought I recognized his launch at their pier. We saluted the Indolence; the Indolence sainted us. My launch was piped away aad took me ashore. I strolled along the path that wound round the base of the hill toward the kennels. At the crossing of the path down from the house, I paused and lingered on the glimpse of one of the corner towers of the great showy palace. I was muttering something I listened to myself. It was: "Mul holland, Mrs. Mulholland and the four little Mulhollands." And I felt like laughing aloud, such a Joke was it that I should be envying a policeman his potato patch and his fat wife and his four brats, and that he should be in a position to pity me. You may be imagining that through all, Anita had been dominating my mind. That is the way it is in the romances; but not in life. No doubt there are men who brood upon the impossible, and moon and maunder away their lives over the grave of a dead love; no doubt there are people who will say that because I did not shoot Langdon or her, or myself, or fly to a desert or pose in the crowded places of the world as the last scene of a tragedy, I therefore cared little about her. I offer them this sugges tion: A man strong enough to give a love worth a woman's while is strong enough to live on without her when be finds he may not live with her. As I stood there that summer day, looking toward the crest of the hill, at the mocking mausoleum of my dead dream, I realized what the incessant battle of the street had meant to me. There is peace for me only in the storm." said I. "But thank God. there is peace for me somewhere." Through the foliage I had glimpses of some one coming slowly down the zigzag path. Presently, at one of the turnings half-way up the hill, appeared Mowbray Langdon. "What is he do ing here," thought I. scarcely able to believe my eyes. "Here of all places ! " And then I forgpt the strangeness of his being at Dawn Hill in the strange ness of his expression. For It was ap parent even at the distance which separated us, that he was suffering from some great and recent blow. He looked old and haggard; he walked like' a man who neither knows nor cares where he is going. He had not seen me. and my im pulse was to avoid him by continuing on toward the kennels. I had no es pecial feeling against him; I had not lost Anita because she cared for him or he for her, but because she did not care for me simply that to meet would be awkward, disagreeable for us both. At the slight noise of my movement to go on, he halted, glanced round eagerly, as if he hoped the sound had been made by some one he wished to see. His glance fell on me. He stopped short was for an instant disconcerted; then his face lighted up with devilish Joy. "You!" he cried. "Just the man!" And he descended more rapidly. At first I could make nothing of this remark. But as he drew nearer and nearer, and his ugly mood became more apparent I felt that he was look ing forward to provoking me into giv ing him a distraction from whatever was tormenting him. I waited. A few minutes and we were face to face, I outwardly calm, but my anger slowly lighting up as he deliberately applied to it the torch of his insolent eyes. He was wearing 'his old familiar air of cynical assurance. Evidently.' with his recovered fortune, he had recov ered his conviction of his great su periority to the rest of the human race the child had climbed back on the chair that made it tall and had forgotten its tumble. And I was won dering again that I, so short a time before, had been crude enough to be fascinated and fooled by those tawdry posings and pretenses. For the man, as I now saw him, was obviously shal low and vain, a slave to those poor "man-of-the-world" passions ostenta tion and cynicism and skill at vices old as mankind and tedious as a tread mill, the commonplace routine of the idle and foolish and purposeless. A clever, handsome fellow, but the more pitiful that he was by nature above the uses to which he prostituted him self. He fought hard to keep his eyes stead ily on mine; but they would waver and shift Not however, before I had found deep down in them the begin nings of fear. "You see, you were mistaken," said I. Ton have nothing to say to me or I to you." He knew I had looked straight to the bottom of his real self, and had seen the coward that is in every man who has been bred to appearances only. Up rose his vanity, the coward's sub stitute for courage. , "You think I am afraid of your he sneered, bluffing and blustering like the school bully. "I don't in the least care whether you are or not" replied I. "What are you doing here, anyhow?" It was as if I had thrown off the cover of a furnace. "I came to net the woman I love," he cried. "Yon store her from me! You tricked me! But by God. Blacklock, I'll never pause un til I get her back aad punish yon!" He war brave enough now, drank with the fumes from his brave words. "All my life." he raged arrogantly on, Tve had whatever I wanted. I've let noth ing interfere nothing and nobody. Tve been too forbearing with you first, because I knew she could never VmHP&frraf'TSE'CasZUr gxBBizzz canaamo care for you, and, then, because I rather admired your pluck and impu dence. I like to see fellows kick their way up among 'us from the common people." I put my hand on his shoulder. No doubt the fiend that rose within me, as from the dead, looked at him from my eyes. He has great physical strength, but 'he winced under that weight and grip, and across his face flitted the terror that must come to any man at first sense of being in the angry clutch of one stronger than he. I slowly re leased him I had tested and realized my physical superiority; to use it would be cheap and cowardly. ' "You can't provoke me to descend to your level," said If' with the easy phil osophy of him who clearly has the bet ter of the argument He was shaking from head to foot not wUb terror, but with impotent rage. How much we owe to accident! The mere accident of my physical su periority had put him at hopeless dis advantage; had made him feel inferior to me as no victory of mental or moral superiority could possibly have done. And I myself felt a greater con tempt for him than the discovery of Ills treachery and his shallowness had together inspired. "I shan't Indulge In flapdoodle," I, HOW THAT HORRIBLE LOOKING AT HER. FEAR AT HIM, went on. "I'll be frank. A year ago, if any man had faced me with a claim upon a woman who was married to me, I'd probably have dealt with' him as your vanity and 'what you call 'honor' would force you to try4to deal with a similar situation. But I live to learn, and I'm fortunately, not afraid to fol low a new light There is the vanity of s&called honor; there is also the demand of Justice of fair play. As I have told her, so I now tell you she is free to go. But I shall say one thing to you that I did not say to her. If you do not deal fairly with her, I shall see to to it that there are ten thorns to every rose in that bed of roses on which you lie. You are contemptible in many ways perhaps that's why women like' you. But there must be some good in you, or possibilities of good, or you. could not have won and kept her love." , i v He was staring at me with a dazed expression. I rather expected him to show some of that amused contempt with which men of his sort always receive a new idea that is beyond the range of their narrow, conventional minds. For I did not expect him to understand why I was not only will ing, but even eager, to relinquish a woman whom I could hold only by asserting a property right In. 'her. And I do not think he did under stand me, though his manner changed. to a .sort of grudging respect He was. I believe, about to make some impulsive, generous speech, when we heard the quick strokes of iron-shod-hoofs on the path from the kennels aad the stables is there any sound more arresting? Past us at a gallop swept a horse, on his back Anita. 8he was not in riding-habit; the wind fluttered the sleeves of her blouse, blew her uncovered hair this way and that about her beautiful face. She sped on toward the landing, though' I fancied she had seen us. Anita at Dawn Hill Langdon, in a furious temper, descending from the house toward' the landing Anita pres ently, riding like mad "to overtake him," thought L And I read confirma Smmmmnm ' i XSwSsSSPSafiKSrfMUUUnwaSBlBBSHHBjKBVERSSlllMlli ESnry ViCr iPllnlSHI S --!-s5 XWisunManmTSTgWTHiMiJMJr" 5OV . !m W (PI5tUUrMVmVUnBMinjHMllSlsrN r3f O'lmumffipBlr 4&rjr7 Willi k .JBnuuuuuuuuuuuunufcsnuawSfV duTmvSJt Izsmma. m m J?K I Www tion In his triumphant eyes. In an-l other i N ,Sl w. - J - i suppose myrury woaia have 'seen'Jwyoaeray power to.'re- -strtlitJaet then the 'day grew dark for me. and I wanted to hid away somewhere. Heart-sick, I was ashamed for .her. hated myself for hayingblnndered into surprising her. She reappeared at 'the turn round which she had vanished. I aow'noted that she was riding without saddle or bridle, with: only a halter .round the horse's neck then she had seen us. had stopped and come back as soon as. she. could. 8he dropped from the horse, looked swiftly, at me, at him, nt me again, with Intense 'anxiety. "I saw your yacht in the harbor only a moment ago she said to me. She was almost panting. "L feared you might meet him. So I came." "As yoa see, he Is quite Intact" said I. '? must ask that you and he leave the place at once." And I went rapidly along the path toward the kennels. An exclamation from Langdon forced me to turn In spite of myself. He was half-kneeling, was holding her in his arms. At that sight the sav age in me shook himself free. I dashed toward them with I knew not what curses bursting from me. Lang don, Intent tfpon her, did not realize until I sent him reeling backward to the earth and snatched her up. Her white face, her closed eyes, her limp form made my fury instantly collapse. In my confusion I thought that she was dead. I laid her gently on the grass and supported her head, so small, so gloriously crowned, the face so still and sweet and, white, like the stainless entrance to a stainless shrine. How that horrible fear changed my whole way of looking at her, at him, at her and him, at every thing! Her eyelids were quivering her eyes were opening her boeomv was rising and falling slowly as she drew long, uncertain breaths. She shud dered, sat up, started up. "Go! go!" she cried. "Bring him back! Bring him back! Bring him" There she recognized me. "Oh," CHANGED MY WHOLE WAY OF AT EVERYTHING!" she said, and gave a great sigh of relief. She leaned against a tree and looked at Langdon. "You are still here? Then tell him." Langdon gazed sullenly at the ground. "I can't," he answered. "I don't believe it Besides he has given you to me. Let us go. Let me take you to the Vivians." He threw out his arms in a wild, pas toooooooooooooooot Lively Time Broke Loose on Shipboard and for Two Days Had a Circus. An exciting story of a baboon's escape from its cage on the Union Castle liner Comrie Castle was told when the vessel reached Plymouth, England, on the way to London with a large collection of wild animals on board, including five wolves and eight zebras, the property of Heir Wind horn. Herr Windhorn, who for 30. years has collected wild animals which he sells to dealers and zoological gar dents, said the baboon stood four feet six 'inches in height and was very wild. About a week after leaving Cape Town it broke out of its cage, but fortunately the escape was dis covered before the animal reached the deck. For two days, however, it wa3 at liberty in the hold, showing fight whenever it was approached. An effort to snare the baboon by the cargo nets was found impractica ble on account of, the 15-foot leaps which the animal made whenever it was approached. At length Herr Windhorn ventured into the hold with his keeper and endeavored to secure the baboon, the keeper offering it food while the owner tried to come to close quarters. Herr Wfodborn's foot caught In a aet and he slipped, whereupon the hahooa at once made a furious on slaught ob him, fastening its teeth in the collector's leg. It was impossible .V sieaate svstnre; he was-atfteny T himself. His emotion burst through amjl. iIiimJ aaul MaUM?! IiiMini y m m u, mmmm uw. hard crust of selfishness llhe tmiex-l pioaing powuer onrsung iae.aaea -ji can't give yoa up; Anita!" he'-ek-clalmed la a tone of utter deeperatioa. "I can't! I eaal!"' . Bather gaze was all this time stead ily oa me, -as it she Jsared twouM go, should she look away. "I will tell you myself." she- said, rapidly, to me. "We Uncle Howard aad I read in the" papers hew they had all tamed against ryou;.and he brought me- over here: He has been telegraphing for' you. This morning he went to tow,' to searchfor you. About an hour ago Langdon came. I refused to see him. as I have fixer since the time I told you about at Alva's. He persisted, until at last I had the servant request him to leave the house." "But bow there's no longer any reason for your staying, Anita," ha pleaded. "He has said yoa are free. Why stay when you would really no more be here than if you were to go. leaving one of your empty dresses?" She had not for an instant taken her gaze from me; and so strange were her eyes, so compelling, that I seemed unable to move or speak. But now she released me to blase upon him and never shall I forget any detail of her face or voice as she said to him: "That is false. Mow bray Langdon. I told yon the truth when I told you I loved him!" So violent was her emotion that she had to pause for self-control. And I? I was overwhelmed, dazed, stunned. When she went on, she was looking at neither of us. "Yes, I loved him, almost from the first from the day he came to the box at the races. I was ashamed, poor crea-4 tare that my parents had made me! I was ashamed of it. And I tried to hate him, and thought I did. And when he showed me that he no longer cared, my pride goaded me into the folly of trying to listen to you. But I loved him more than ever. And as yon and he stand here, I am ashamed again ashamed that I was ever so blind and ignorant and prejudiced as to compare him with" she looked at Langdon "with you. Bo you believe me now now that I humble myself before him here in your presence?" I should have had no heart at all if I had not felt pity for him. His face was gray, and on it were those signs of age that strong emotion brings to the surface after 40. "You could have convinced me in no other way," he replied, after a si lence, and in a voice I should not have recognized. Silence again. Presently he raised his head, and with something of bis old cynicism bowed to her. "You havepavenged much and many," said he: "I have often had a presentiment that my day of wrath would come." He lifted his hat, bowed at me with out looking at me, and, drawing the tatters of his pose still further over his wounds, moved away toward the landing. I, still in a stupor, watched him un til he had disappeared. When I turned to her, she dropped her eyes. "Uncle Howard will be back this afternoon," said she. "If I may, I'll stay at the house until he comes to take me." A weary, half-suppressed sigh escaped from her. I knew how she must be reading my silence, but I was still unable to speak. She went to the horse, browsing near by; she stroked his muzzle. Lingeringly she twined her fingers in his mane, as if about to spring to his back! That remind ed me of a thousand and one changes in her little changes, each a trifle in itself, yet, taken all together, mak ing a complete transformation. "Let mc help you," I managed to say. And I bent, and made a step of my hand. She touched her fingers to my shoulder, set her narrow, graceful foot upon my palm. But she did not rise. I glanced up, she was gazing wistful ly down at,me. "Women have to learn by experience Just as do men," said she, forlornly. "Yet men will not tolerate it." I suppose I must suddenly have looked what I was unable to put into words for her eyes grew very wide, and, with, a cry that was a sigh and a sob. and a laugh and a caress all in one, she slid Into my arms and her face was burning against mine. "Do you remember the night at the theater," she murmured, "when your lips almost touched my neck? I loved you then Black Matt Black Matt!" And I found voice;' and the horse wandered away. The End. With Baboon to shake off the powerful beast. In his effort to release himself Herr Windhorn tried to force open the jaws of the baboon with his hands. He was in a measure successful, but the baboon quickly fastened its fangs in Herr Windhorn's right hand, which was injured even more extensively than the leg. The keeper, who hur ried to his master's aid. quickly be came the subject of attack, the baboon inflicting several bites on him, while the boatswain of the liner was also bitten. The beast afterward refused to be overcome by half a bottle of whisky and a dose of opium powerful enough to poison ten men was also given him in a bottle of lemonade without effect Eventually a large grating was fixed outside the companionway and then by means of a display of fruit the brute was coaxed near it and as he stretched his arm through the grat ing to grasp an orange he was se cured. Legs and arms were at lsagth tightly lashed, after which the ba&oon. attached to the grating, was returned to the cage and then released. He died four days later and Herr Wind horn says he thinks death was due to a broken heart. Irony in Death. Dr. Edward Hoeber, of the staff of the Berliner Tageblatt who not fen ago wrote an article on how to avoid Alpine accidents, was killed the other day while climbing the Little ZInae, la Dolomites. ", ' CHANCE IN THE TOM tV Thtea tm .Bit !- trmtm 3- lfcV x c .v --- ' "There-are hundreds of women who clean house aad every article, evea down to an insignificant little pin cushion, is pat right hack m its oh! accustomed place. There is nothing so monotonous ra a house forever pre senting thVsame appearance. It is Pleasant to .make a eaeerfal IB every room. There is a who makes It'a rule to always some of her pictures. She has a m her. of heautifnr frames, so she se lects new prints for them. The best masters are copied and it is possible to secure beautiful pictures for only a little money. Then the old prints may be put away for future use. It has a great deal to do with making home look a little more cheerful. Women have learned that a few goad articles In a room are more artistic than a great amount of gaudy-furniture, and this new regime of house hold affairs is responsible for less work, too. la this age. when there is every convenience imaginable, it really seems strange that any well regulated household would need the assistance of servants only on spe cial occasions. But it seems the more women have to work with, the less able are many to do even a little work without having the assistance of a hired girl. To properly age a home every woman must her brains to save her strength, and many do, but there are a great many who merely exist in houses and do not live in homes. LINEN FOR THE KITCHEN. Good Housekeeper Pays Much Atten tion to This. The kitchen department should re ceive the same careful attention that is lavished on the more showy table linen. The homely things of the kitchen may not be quite as apparent to your guests as the napkins and dollies, but there is a great peace and self-respect for the housekeeper In the knowledge of neat piles of towels and dusters. A dozen crash towels of two grades, coarse for kitchen utensils and finer for china; a dozen glass towels for sil ver, glass and porcelain; a half-dozen heavy crash floor cloths; a half-dozen dish cloths; a dozen dusters of cheese cloth, or, as some greatly prefer) silk aleen; a half-dozen roller towels; two or three canton flannel bags to pin over the broom in dusting poished floors, and three chamois skins for polishing silver or brass all these hemmed by machine if need be. by hand if possible, and marked with red cross stitch in a uniform manner all these are essential to neat work in the kitchen. She Made Pretty Portieres. It is not always easy to secure ma terial for portieres that are at once pretty and inexpensive. One woman who has been searching the town over for a fabric combining the two qualities was almost In despair when a friend, a decorator, suggested that she get mocha canvas for her sleeping-room doors and velveteen in a soft reseda shade for her library door way. As the walls were green the colors harmonized charmingly, and all told did not cost more than 912 for the two pairs. The canvas is loosely woven and resembles burlap in appearance, though much softer, and hang3 much more gracefully. It costs 50 cents a yard, and is very wide. The velve teen, which is also double width, can be obtained in a number of soft color ings, and while handsome is not so rich looking that it kills everjdhinpr else in the room. It is especially ef fective with mahogany or dark oak and with Circassian walnut Homemade Candy. Everton Taffy. Take one oiind of brown sugar of good quality. tv.-o ounces of butter and one-half a glass ful of water. Let the sugar and wa ter come to boil till it forms a hall in cold water, then put in the butter, boiling all till it cracks when thread ed. Add six drops of lemon essence, stirring briskly. Pour Into buttered pans. Separate the taffy while still warm with a knife. Butter Scotch. Boil together one pound of brown sugar and four ounces of butter. As soon as it cracks whea threaded add a good pinch of cooking soda; let it boil two minutes longer, then run into buttered pans. Before it is quite cool mark lightly in squares the required size, give a brisk tap and it will separate. Set in a cold place. x Hominy Crumpets. These must be "set" over night 'Beat well together one pint of milk. one-fourth of a cupful of sugar, twe tablespoonfuls of melted butter, four cupfuls of flour and one cupful of well-boiled hominy. Add one com pressed yeast cake dissolved in fom tablespoonfuls of water and a tea spoonful of salt and set in a warn place. Half an hour before breakfast is served add one-fourth of a tea spoonful of soda, dissolved in a lit tie hot wrter, beat thoroughly for tit minutes, partly fill muffin rings, and stand in a warm place for half an hour. Bake quickly and serve piping hot. Cleansing Agencies. Soft cheese cloth wrapped loosely about a long handled broom, passed over the wallpaper once or twice a month, absorbs the dust. Thick crust? of stale bread rubbed downward will remove soil. To extract 'grease stains from wall paper mix powdered pipe clay with water to "the consistency of cream, spread it on the spots, and allow it to remain over night, when it easily may be removed with a knife or brush. To Shrink Cleth. A simple way Of shrinking heavy cloth is to hang it on the clothesline with the fold on the line and sprinkle it with the garden hose. This method is not good for light or loosely woven cloth, as the weight of the water will make it sag and lose Its shape, but it is a safe and rapid treatment mi Scotch tweeds, suitings, or heavy broadcloths. 1 Tlw ETt)Mf tf BBBBBBBBBBBBBmmBBBBBBBBBBH mBBBalBBBBBflBBBBBB8mmdL dhA9ftA diemm BVemdnmiSBaada' nnasi ea1nt ! . daernw emwEJvSsnl VRfinmv emaPmmmamV MHr XTHT FAMILY MAD ITS fectartiteaalarfe scafe, advertise K sad tarns it weald krg A MORE EXACT AMD SCOTTinC ef these It was need by the MsaaeaHts, el PeaasylvaBna, befsre it was stared ts the fahlic far sale. Dr. Martaaa, TMX OSJGIMAL FOVIDIR Of FXKVMA, la ef asiire arigiB. First, ae areecrisei k ier his smjUni aad hie aatiaats. The sale ef it Increased, aad at last he sstaaliaaei a BMaaiaetary ami far slshsd it to the feaeral draff trade. ia aefal ai a TMOMSAMDtOF FAMOUS MATS UARMID TME USSOFPESUVAaad itsvalaesithe ef these Imnats. They to timet aad believe ia Dr. lit i fan's jadffawat, aad to rely a Ua remedy, Peraaa. First Stranger (oa train) Do you ever quarrel with your wife? Second Stranger Never. First Stranger Have nay trouble with the hired girl? Second Stranger Not me. First Stranger Don't your children worry yoa at times? Second Stranger No. indeed. First Stranger Say, I don't like to call yoa a liar, but Second Stranger Oh. that's all right I'm a bachelor. Laundry work at hoiae would ha much more satisfactory if' the right Starch were used. Ia order to get the desired stiffaes3, it Is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trouble can he entirely overcome by using De fiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of Its great er strength than other makes. Little One's Prayer. Mary always gets a little piece ef sandy every day to keep her from be ing naughty. One day she was naughty, aad she did not get her candy. That night when she was go ing to bed she said her prayers as fol lows: "Our Father, who art la heaven, please give me my dally candy." Protective Paint White Lead Paiat protects property against repairs, replacement ana deterioration. It makes baildings look better, wear better aad sell bet er. Use only Pure Unseed Oil aad Pare White Lead made by the Old Dstch Process, which is sold in hegswkh thmDatchBoy trade mark ea the side. This trade mark protects yoa agamst Sraads leat White Lead adulterations aad SEND FOR . BOOK ke iMbl lafoiw Itlna o th ulit abject. Sent twt NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY Mm wlitUr tftU fttbm. ar atin it mtmrttt jtm: J SWHBUXJUK PsawlfBlycmred ay SmtinU. iMLIKflatllVL HAJNe lOOKDriS. Barb teat, BBBBtftaaarBm- fieaSBBBTBmBBl bbbbbbI MfiBBBBfa- bTbbbbb) fhflh Kbfiw BBarfimai VmBBBHBsmasmm AdaAAfiBaWfJM eaBfladVfe nsieu fwsBBBOT.BewaBd Meter harks. 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