T -nSi "' " "V y -j. - j tg-fw.Tt' fwr..- t --TV-'-iiifj"jbfe';V. iTrJS,s''?---i-gab:''-t"-j'?!!5.t--; -jjrl v-ea -- -- MaaBBBHH v -r .--"-t ' - . "- " STTY, - -? ?"- ' rv .- "-,V ."! -- , v -, '$' " -A i- i i, at - -i. 'J" t - T--rt?" frvr-e-vx I i i f .1 .t H 1 1 Cfeltkamlras) VfoTbr. bBB-eiattaa rurtnMirT.riiliBt .Wrtrr nw mwwjmmimomi BBlBeBf.eB'SBBllBeSlBBB yMMJ mw IJ is mwioox'"""" T! KMiMlkiutM"""""t"" , - WKDHWPIT. APRIL 15. 1M8J R. 6. STROTHE1"", ...; F.LSTKOTHER. .'...' Editor ..Maaarer raV-Tteaafte oKWtttioKBUMOt rwBWKwmionK oninr is paid. Thaa JaaflS bows that i beea received a to Jen. h MM. itoM.l,WnlNa. WiMW an ara4e,tae oa,wBJce. nmn aa a reeetj. IMOOimHUAHCXS-RawMribte'NbKrib. ate aril will tn nrtrrn thi-1 - irtlirt tr- - "- T -- dieeoatiase, kmtUMiwiri ttiiriirl " job do not WBBtBBBJeinaleoaAiaaed for another year af- aaai for aaa expired, job eaoald BStodlaeoanaBe it. CHAMPS IM ADDRESrJ-Whaa otderiac a itMu'li (hi ibhj .wlTrlhrnehnnM hit Wnr to atve their eld m well m their new addnM. The time to kill dandelions is about at hand.- Tift for president and Hughes for vicejreaidentis the winning ticket for 1908.' Columbus was a strictly temper- '.ante town for three days, and no one seriously suffered from it. "1," . The success, of the Fourth ward re- -publican dub should induce the re : puUicans of the Third ward to get to ' gether . and organize a permanent jelub. '".-.Our school board at its last meeting ordered the county treasurer to pay off 13,000 of the .bonds of the high school 'building. We are very glad to see "" that, not only because we' want to re . duce our bonded indebtedness, be cause we feel the necessity of having a better school building in the Third wafd,nd we may have to vote other bonds. " J. M. Shively of Fremont is a candi- ' date for commissioner of public lands ." and buildings on the republican ticket . We hope that he will receive the nom- . .ination without any opposition, and that no one will come out against him. -We know Mr.'Shively personally, he . -.is" the right man for the place, he has '.''the. experience and the ability that fits him for that position, and he 'is Always the pleasant, courteous obliging .gentleman. The national convention of the -.populist party has met, nominated ' Thomas Watson of Georgia for presi 'Ident, and adjourned. That is the : 'news -item that is making the rounds, ' ' but in realitv the DODulist party of - this country has gone completely out -; of business, it has really ceased to ex ist It makes no difference whether ' .Watson will accept. the nomination or apt, it cuts no, ice that the Nebraska : delegation bolted the convention in -. the.interest of Bryan, the populist . 'party as a national party is down and out and. wields very little force in the poliltics of this nation. W.- J. Bryan, in his paper, the .Commoner, has issued, a warning to the ..-faithful that corrupt influences are at work to. thwart the will of the people; - .that the Money Devil is busy trying to secure the nomination of Governor Johnson, for president .on the Demo cratic ticket Mr. Bryan's personal record is good, but it is no better than . that of Governor Johnson. Bryan's attack on Johnson is additional evi dence that every time a man begins howling against-the Money Devil, he is actuated by a personal and selfish motive. Bryan attacks Johnson as -promptly .and bitterly as he would .attack a criminal. Atchison Globe. The city election last Tuesday em phasized one point that should be bone in mind, not only by the repub licans of the city, but the connty as welL' The republicans of the Fourth ward organized a republican club when the city nominations were made, and then went to work to elect Julius Nichols to the council. They had an orgaaization and used it) as the results show. The democrats have' iriways had a perfect organization, but the republicans have been deficient in this respect- And it was for the Fourth ward republicans to make a showing as to what could be done, not only .in Columbus, but in Platte county, with an elective republican organization. There k no doubt but what W. J. Bryan will be nominated for president at Denver without any serious opposi tioaC Yet Mr. Bryan seems to have last a great deal of influence he form erly had over hk party admirers. For some reason or other hk demo cratic friends do not accept hk advice er hk commands as they used to. He weatall the way to.Keatacky .to tell te legislature how to vote for a United States fleoator, and thejrtnrn ed down hk advice.- He told the democrats of Illinois to put aside Ro ger Sullivan' as chairman, but Sulli van was made chairman. Mr. Bryan is a great orator and a good actor, he will always be a great drawing card at a chautauqua or "a county fair, but he will never be. president of the United' States. - . TARIFF AND TRUSTS. The Democratic cry. that a protec-. tive tariff is "the mother of trusts" k disproved by so many 'facts that, its iteration is but partisan noise. Dur ing the last great coal strike it was urged that the removal of the duty of 47 cents a ton on imported coal would bring the coal trust to terms and break its power. Congress suspended the duty, and for more than a year foreign coal was admitted free to any port in the United States. The effect on the trust and price of coal in this country was practically nothing. Foreign holders ol coal marked up their price for shipment here, just as the South Americans several years before added 2 cents a pound to their price for coffee exported, when the duty of 2 cents a pound was removed by the Congress of the United States. In his last notable speech in Con gress Senator Vest contended, and no doubt believed, that the duty on for eign coal was the mother of the trust. But the removal of the duty failed to benefit consumers a single cent. The item of 47 cents a ton duty is too small a matter to explain the operations of the coal trust There are ibreign combinations in coal that advanced the price for cargoes to America when the duty was suspended. The Ameri can supply of coal is immensely great er than that of Europe. Large trusts exist in every important European country. Belaboring a protective tariff with the idea that the blows fall on the trusts and that free trade would abolish trusts is time and effort wasted. The result expected can not be reach ed along that road. St Louis Globe- r Democrat HELPLESS AND HOPELESS. When, to all seeming, it k too late the opponents of Mr. Bryan in the de mocratic party are suddenly become somewhat brave and more or less active. Had the leaders of the de mocratic party discovered the force and independence of character that we see in the followers of Cannon, Fairbanks, Foraker, Knox and Hughes, it would have been assurance of some degree of sagacious delibera tion at Denver next July. There was never before such a situ ation as the democratic party k now in the middle of. The weakest under standing must see at a glance that to elect a democratic president thk year at least 1,000,000 recruits must be mustered from the republican ranks in the states east of the Mississippi and north of Mason and Dixon line that cast their electoral votes for the democratic ticket in 1892. Those voters and they are more than 1,000,000 are now holding out their hands in appeal to the demo cratic party and beseeching it to give them a chance to vote the democratic ticket in 1908. But if the now expected should happen at Denver, the democratic party will spurn their petition with a "To Halifax wid ye; there's no room in the democratic party for the likes of you." Thus we may expect to see the democratic party resolve itself into a thoroughly select company of cranks and impracticable, hopeless and help less. Washington Post (ind.) GOVERNING CITIES. Leavenworth, Kas., entered upon the commission plan of government at its recent municipal election and with in a few days the city will be govern ed by the five men who were elected commissioners. The list of cities dis carding the old political system and adopting the new business .plan grows constantly and those who are firmly of the belief that businesslike methods in the conduct of municipalities, are generally demanded will watch with interest the results obtained in Des mar r a - Moines, ljeavenwortn,- .tne .various Texas cities and others that? are .test ing the commission system. In Texas it has proven a pronounced success. No northern city has tried it long .enough to prove its merit Levenworth elected five good men to the office of commissioner, and if business ability and reputation count for anything the city will be well gov erned by them. There was. no parti san rivalry in the election, there being but five candidates for ' commissioner a . and all of them being elected unani mously. The commission plan ap peals to many for thk very .reasonit removes party politics from, the man agement of cities. No one has ever, given a good reason why the tariff question should be tied up with the street and sewer business, or why the currency 'problem or our policy should be hooked up .with fire departments aad city improvement Lincoln Star. VIRUS FOR SWINE PLAGUE. Congressman Pollard brings good news to the farmers of Nebraska on his present visit The department of agriculture has developed a method of preventing the cholera which prom ises at last to put an end to this de stroyer of the hopes of the hog raker. It k announced by- the scientists in the department'that they can begin work even after the cholera has brok en out, and by immediate inoculation with the virus of the plague can save 80 or 85 per cent of the members of a herd. The system once put in work able -condition it k the policy of the department to turn it over to the states, furnishing the virus and the in structions and leaving the experiment stations to apply the remedy as it may be needed. As a member of the house committee on agriculture Mr. Pollard has succeeded in inducing the government to name Nebraska among the first of the states to be supplied with the virus. He waited upon the regents of the university yesterday with a proposition to begin the work in Nebraska as soon as theJ experiment station k able to furnish the necessary means for carrying it to the farmers. When the state provides the money, therefore, the farmers can call at will upon the station for pro tection against one of their greatest enemies, a disease that imposes an al most unbearable tax upon their re venues. Lincoln Journal. OAVK Hit VANITY A SET1ACK. .uslnaaa Man Not as Fascinating i He Thought He Was. Speaking of absent-mindedness there are a lot of men who don't no tice things. They may not be absent minded, but there are a lot of things that get by them. The other day a prominent steam ship man here in town passed an at tractive young woman on the street She bowed pleasantly and spoke to him. And yet lie didn't know her from a bale of hemp. "Huh! I guess I must be pretty good," he reflected. "I must be hold ing my age pretty well when strange young women begin to speak up to me like that Well. I wonder!" The next day the steamship man was riding dowa in the elevator with bis partner, and that same trim little girl was aboard. Once more she beamed upon aim. "Say. I've made a hit with that little girl that was on the elevator," the steamship man confided to his partner after they got off. "Not so bad look ing either. Is she? I don't know who she Is, but she's mighty pleasant and chipper to me. Funny how a fellow '11 make a hit that way with somebody he never even talked to. Makes a man .feel good to think that he still looks yoaag enough for the girls to take no tice of aim. ear The partner was looking at him with an asod expression. "Maybe It would interest you," he suggested, "to know that that girl has been the telephone operator up in our oflee for about a year and a half. You've talked to her a thousand times and passed her 40 times a day." Cleveland Plain-Dealer. COUNTRY AS MINE OF WEALTH. Fatal Agents Misrepresent Conditions te Secure Immigration. "Miarepreseatatloa on the part of paid agents is the chief reason for so Such of the undesirable Immigration this country," said George F. Wag ner of Chicago, who has recently re turned from a trip to Germany and Austria. "The agents go among the peasant -classes and tell them of the money that can be made by coming to America. The standard of wages la so much lower there and the money Itself divided into smaller de nominations that these promises are allorlag. The agent however, fails to tell them that living expenses are proportionately higher in this country. So the peasaat sells what property he has. and with his family takes pas sage for Amerioa, the land of quick fortunes. Arriving here they soon discover that while the scale of wages Is all that they have been promised and that work Is plentiful, they can make no more aad probably not as araoa la thai strange country. Their Idea- of America Is about the same as that of two Irishmen who came over not long ago. They had, been told that In America gold was found lying around on the streets and all a man had to do was to go out and pick up aa much as he wanted. As 'lock would -have It .they had no more set foot on shore than eae of them did and a $10 gold piece. Passing, on they paet oae of the professional blind beg gars. Here,' said the Irishman. Ton take this $10 piece, I am not bUnd aad I calk look for more." A Premising Fruit. The peratmBiea has bees a neglect ed fruit in the northern states, from a supposition that It is not hardy, says the Agriculturist. I fouad the opposite to be. tree .some 90 years ago, aad have a tree at Clinton, N. T., grown from Missouri seed, ihat aever shows the slightest sign ef dhdlkiag aero weather. It. has stood 40 degrees be low sera Blossomlag profusely every year, it- remaiaed entirely aarren. I neat to the horticultural societies of Missouri aad Indiana and Virginia for adoaa. That grand old .worker, Mr. Miner of Missouri, seat me fearnamed varieties. The scions took admirably well, aad I have tested the four .sorts. ripening from September until Decem ber. My tree is availably loaded with geMaa balls, which are very, beautiful after the foliage falls. The fruit la if. properly All Kind! of Farm Iilemts Clover Leaf and Success Manure Spreaders Recognized as the leading Spreaders on the market today More corn on the same s acreage by. using the ' Deere planter. It is always ready for either hilling or drilling Farmers. f in tools and implements to be sharpened and repaired now. It will save yon time when spring opens up. We. keep only the latest and best in buggies and carriages Our horseshoes stick and don't lame your horse try them Louis Sohrieber LEVINSKY HAD QREAT SCHEME. Bright Idea Hs Thought Meant Saving of Twenty-Five Dollars. Levinsky. despairing of his life, made an appointment with a famous specialist He was surprised to nad 15 of 20 people' la the .waiting-room. After a few minutes. he leaned over to a gentleman' near him and -whispered, "Say, mine Went, this must be a-pretty good-doctor, ain't he?" "One of the best," the gentleman told him. 'Levinsky seemed to be worrying over something. "Veil, say," he whispered again, "he must be pretty exbensive. then, ain't he? Vat does he charge?" The stranger was annoyed by Le1 vinsky's questions and answered rather shortly: "Fifty dollars for the first consultation and $25 for each visit thereafter." "Mine Gott!" gasped Levinsky. "$50 toilers the first time and $25 tol lers each time afterwards!" For several minutes he seemed un decided whether to go or to wait. "Und $25 each time afterwards," he kept muttering. Finally, just as he was called into the office, he was seized with a brilliant inspiration. He rushed toward the doctor with out stretched hands. "Hello, doctor." he said effusively. 'Veil, here I am again." Everybody'a Magazine. Tarantula Net Se Sad. ' The terrible tarantula Is said to be more abused than abusive. It 4s not aggressive upon man nor Is it often intrusive even, although every old miner and prospector has shaken one out of his boots or blankets in the morning, and always the size of a saucer. It avoids the hot sunshine and remains well down in Its burrow under the ground. About sundown -It sallies forth and lies In waiting just below the opening of the burrow. It assumes this position whether it de sires food or wishes only to get a bit of fresh air. It does not travel about In quest of food, even when hungry, but remains quietly In the attitude described often for hours at -a time. At the near approach of a caterpillar, grasshopper, beetle or almost any creature of like size, other than Its enemy, the wasp, it rashes out anff seizes it, but rarely goes farther than a few inches from the opening. Oae fair-sized insect a week is suMdent to satisfy Its hunger because of its inactive existence, while it can 'live several months without food, even when most active, provided it -has water. In autumn the spider doses the entrance with a crudely-spun web. It is then ready to pass the .winter. In a semi-lethargic state, partaking of no food. In the spring it digs Its way out. o A Jefferson Davis Speech. On August 2. 1870. a party of young men engaged a bead and serenaded Jefferson Davis. After the band bad played "Dixie" and "My Maryland." Mr. Davis spoke these words: -"My friends, I thank you for this' cordial greeting. Thrown like a wave on a restive ocean, It Is something to receive this good old Virginia wel come. As long as my heart continues to beat It must be still responsive to the. warm and cordial feeling of Vir ginians, which I' have experienced In some of the contingencies of my life. This manifestation of your good. feel ing towards me comes from your gen erosity, and not from any merit ef my own. 'May God. in. his infinite mercy preserve yoa'frem every 111, and may your prosperity. aad happiness. be. as wide as your borders ;may your h0mes be peaceful, is the earnest prayer of one who has no more to say to you on this occasion." Eugene L. Dfdier in Spare Moments. Durability ef. Glass. It does not seem, odd to lad Inscrip tions written ages ago still visible on the Tower of London,' or on the steeple of some cathedral, but oae would hard ly. look on a fragile panel of glass In a common window for characters 200 years old. . A notable case in point Is that of the old house in .London wherein -the notorious Jack Sheppard once lived as a carpenter's apprentice. One 'of the -window paaes still bears aa la scriptloa cut In it by .a glazer'a dlsr moid, recording the name and. address of a man who 'preceded Jack's master la that house. The inscription : "John WooHay Brand, Painter aad Glazier, March It, 170C." 9 , That was lae-sars '.before :the coming to' die abuse of' the fassoue Jack Sheppard. aad. over 200 .years NO SYMPATHY FOR PRObNaAL. i New York Man Telle Hew He WeuM Have Treated-Him. 1 went to hear J)r. HUlls' sermon on the Prodigal 'Son last Sunday night." said an enthusiastic Brooklyn man to a practical New Yorker, "and I tell you he made a brand new point on the parable of the Prodigal Son." "What .was that?" asked the New York man. "It .was about this matter of helping along a man who had made a mistake. His Idea was that after a man had re formed it wasn't fair to hark back to the time whea he was all wrong. Dr. Hillis said it was wrong to mock by referring to a man's past. For ex ample, he put it in this way: Finally, the night of the feasting on the fatted calf was past, and the next morning had come the morning after. There is always the morning after. The affairs of the farm work must be taken up again. The same routine must go on. The time had now come for the elder brother, who was the boss, to set the younger brother to work; ne must assign the prodigal son to his duties as he would have them to do In the future. So, he could say to him: Go feed the horses,' of, Go tend the sheep,' or, 'Go milk the cows,' but not a word must he say about the swine. The prodigal had been tending swine. The elder brother must not mention the, swine; not a .word about the swine. Any thing bat that" "I don't know about that." said the practical New Yorker. "There are two ways of looking at it Mhiak If I had been the elder brother. I should have said : "Now, look here! 'You drew'yqur patrimony like a hog; you went off by yourself and blew it ltkera,aog. you have come home on the hog; now it's up to you to go out and mind the hogs.' " And the Brookly nite laughed In spite of himself. The Sunday Magazine. Heme ef Tokay Grapes. "The .greatest grape producing re gion in the world" is the till 3 claimed by San Joaquin county. California. The average yield In France is 2.7 tons, to the acre. The average for California is two tons an acre, while that for San Joaquin county Is four tons an acre. Lodl is the center of this 'district, shipping hut year grapes to the value of a million and -a half dollars. As only two-thirds'bf the Lodl vineyards are now in bearing it is declared that their yield will soon reach six tons an acre, almost three times that of any other -region In the world. The Flame Tokay Is the great Lodl grape. In September last year the town held a Tokay carnival, lasting three days, the whole town being decorated with vines and grapes and the streets lined with booths where every step of the history of the grape, from making a cutting of a vine to loading and icing cars, was illustrated by the actual work. He Wont Alw.ays.Be One. "I have a clerk," a New York whole sale merchant remarked the other day, "and he sometimes manages to hand back a rather good one. though as a rule he is little short of stupid, ap parently. As a matter of 'Act. I sup pose' he is one of those dreamy sort of chaps; and you never can tell about that kind. "I was sorry after I said it," he con tinued; "but recently he had made a most unnecessary blunder, and I lost my temper. "'I say, Jones,' I sneered, 'you'd make a pretty good clerk, maybe, If you had -a little- more sense!' "He looked at me a minute with a sort of half smile. 'Didn't It. ever oc cur to you, Mr. Brown.' he said, 'that if I had a little more sense I wouldn't be a clerk at all?' "Sunday Mag azine. Test ef theGyraecase. A practical test of the use of the gyroscope for steadyiag vessels at sea was made recently la England on the Seebar. formerly a first-class German torpedo boat, with a displacement of 56.2 tons. The -apparatus Installed consists of a heavy fly-wheel rotating about aa axis, and 'carried by a frame whicli can oscillate about a horizontal axis, the oscillating motion of the frame being checked by brakes. The wheel is 40 inches In diameter, weighs 1.106 pounds, makes 1,600 revolutions per minute, and is steam driven. The periphery is provided with blades and works like- a turbine, the wheel being Inclosed like a casing. In the tests with the gyroscope out of action the roll was 14 degrees, while the boat was kept steady with the machine acting. -Something New, After All. "Well, by gosh," said Uncle Cyrus, "they can.say .all they want to about there beln' nothln' new under the sun, but there Is, and what's more ' the world is growin' better." "What has led you to this cheerful conclusion?" asked his nephew from the city. "I seen an advertisement In our farm. weekly not long-ago, where It said to send a dollar and find out what to do foriCold feet." "Yes?" "I. sen t, the dollar .and got an an swer this mdrnln'. It didn't say to warm 'em." Baffled. .'-'Help you!" snorted,, the stingy citizen. '-'You look Mke a-fake." "Fall, sor," replied the bliad (?) beg ger. "I'm .too polite to say the same o ye; besldea ye have yer hat pulled down so far over yer lace I can't gil a good 'look. at ye." Was Tee Sincere: "Yes, au'am," said the convict, 'Tn AereJUt for tryla' to latter a orleh "The idea!" exclaimed the prison visitor. "Yes. asa'am; I jfet tried to Imitate his -signature on a. check.? . -.- Scenting a Novelty.. -My word!" exelalmed.tke Irst Irit .tah fiat, "its aeer.thsvray Brateley iavwlfe." ear rsmsrtrsd the. other ' 4e An Extraordinary Showing of Spring Sack DeseliiGtivo Style MmiMT oa thc Mamas er iJM I CH A ELS-STERN ; FINE CLOTHING ' , nicMact.e. ercatt a co. -X BOCMCSTCM. N. v. Gerharz - HIS EFFORT NOT APPRECIATED. Young Man's Voice Really Impressed' Congregation But Jacob H. Sctalff. on the way to Egypt on theCaronla. was criticising in thc smoke-room the tenor singing of a young man who gave, all by himself, a little musioale' every night after dinner. "With a voice like that," said Mr. Schiff. "one is apt to meet with ex traordinary experiences. "I have, a friend with a voice like that, a young broker. For his -Christmas holidays my friend made a Jittle tour of New .England, visiting many quaint old houses, many picturesque' churches. v "One Sunday he went to church in Salem or Gloucester or some such place, and lifted up his tenor voice in: the hymns and responses with a fervor and force that made the congregation stare. "Pleased with the attention he at tracted my friend threw back his head, puffed out his chest, and. abandoning the last vestige of restraint, sang with all his might and main. A high note was approaching. He collected all his powers to meet it. They were staring at him now well, he would give them something to stare for. What a glorious thing this congrega tional singing was. He must have more of it. Every Sunday, on his re turn to New York "A heavy band fell on his shoulder. He turned with a start, and saw the sexton, an old, bent man, glowering at him. " 'Here, young feller, hold yer noise.' said the sexton, in a wheezy whisper audible all over the building. 'We pay people to do that here.'" FINDING THE SILVER LINING. tVherein All Might Do Something te Make the World Better. "Please say: "I guess you didn't mean to!'" sobbed a child pitifully when it was discovered in some childish misdemeanor; and the com forting words not only eased the sore heart's trouble, but plainly helped to ward a better life for the rest of that day. and perhaps for. other days. A little boy In one of the kindergarten primaries in a country town a few years ago beg ged wistfully for a "gold star" when be saw the other, boys and girls all getting them. 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Style, as expressed in cele-. brated MiGhaels -Stern Fine Clothing for which we are the local distributors, wins converts from the ranks of the cus-tbm-tailor-educated men. With uncommmon fabric patterns, superb tailoring .and'faultless fiour cloth ing invariably' satisfies the super-critical. Scores of models in worsteds, eas imers. -cheviots of beantifal stripes, plaids checks and mix tures in ."all the new shades of brown, olive, tea, gray aad blue $10 to $25 For the tnBDoe boy. yon will lad ButhiBft to eqaal our special $5 . . twit. It U made of tested fabric, taped, doable-atitcbed aad reiaf orced tailomL to keep it bap, look mart mad dresoy. Norfolk aad doable-breaajed jacket raiti. with. . bloomer trooawa, 8 to 16 year, in plain and fancy fabrics, fully C worth Si JO, special at .... - . Soys' Sprine Suits Specials at $5.00 ' - Flynn Co be you could 'souse a mner1 pleaded; 'Vcause I'm" doing just ' the very'bestest that I can!" It is the . cry our human hearts are always -niaking. . Often the world seems ' ;hard and cold aad does not heed it. ' But we might heed IL We might . turn .every cloudy action round and find 'the silver lining. Wrongdoing; Is-wrongdoing in ourselves or In, another, but we might at least set the worst deeds In the . best light. .. and. see what comes of IL That is . the. rale- of fairness for a picture why not for people's fallings? It 'was a sweet eulogy pronounced ' on . a' sweet woman by her grieving .-friends.'- "She was such an excusing sort-of person always so good ait .finding .excuses- for everybody." CongregationalisL . Accomplishing Results. -.When President Garfield was in col-.-' lege. he was striving for honors In Latiq. His 'strongest rival for the honors lived in a' room -directly across the campus from bis own. Garfield found out that the rival studied his ' Latin-the-last hour before retiring.- " Garfield adopted the plan of studying -hfs Latin at the same hour in fact, he studied 'until the rival turned out his light each nfght. And then he studied just 15 minutes longer. He won the honors'. -The 15 minutes extra each night gave him the necessary slight advantage 6yerthe other man In the . final markings. - The man who puts forth effort ac- ' compllshes results. But the man who ' puts- forth extra effort accomplishes greater results. Why He Was Invited to Dinnsr. ' "One ' of Lord Palmerston's .col leagues in the cabinet well known for' bis love of 'dining out asked him why a certain ambassador was constantly asking him to dinner. Lord Palmer-, ston replied: "'Don't you know? His government -always pays for the dinner 'if a cab- inet minister is present. The anibas-" sador knows that In you there is a sure find. In fact you pay for nearly half his dinners. The rest are distributed, among our other colleagues."- From "Rambling Recollections," by Sir Henry Drummond Wolff. Qualifying His Remark. Henry Peck Such weather! I'm free to say the" Mrs. Peck-What's that. Henry? Henry Peck (meekly) Beg pardon, my dear; I mean, with your permis sion. I am free to say this is the worst climate under the sun. Philadelphia Press. .- : - :?. . i . .- : . 1. ?:. .-- ..j V I -ytt: -( :Vl -M -.-. --. I . . -' - h - '-" -." . J :- -1 - " -" V' .. - . . av ". i - r .fcW V r" s5v . . ys?y.,Aa. --. jA'-'jj.- .gS?V .;tr:;---i ' -A - A , & ?-...-.. w