April Snow Blockade in Kansas FOUIt SCENES TAKKN ALONC. THE ST FRANCIS BRANCH OP THE U. M. l'hotos by Roncau, Atwood. Kan. Tics that Bind "Talking 'f family records and (if early marriages," wild a South Carolinian, "ro iiiIiiiIh mo of tho most inarvulouH record 1 over litard of. Thoro lives In l'lckons county, ono of tliu mountain counties of tho state, a woman 2G years old who has four teen children .ind ono grandchild. Tho woman was married when 11 years old and when sho wn at tho ago when ninny women are Just marrying sho wns tho mother of fourteen children, all of thorn nllve. Ono of these children married early like hor mother and has ono child. 1 do not helluve that this record Is easily beaten." A newly wedded pair In New York recently Hlcit with nieces of their wedding enkc hidden beneath tho pillows. This, as peo ple with a mingled dash of sentiment and superstition know, In a sure means to bring gooil luck ami pleasant dreams. I'oHHlbly tho dreams were satisfactory, hut the good luck was lamentably absent, Hurglara broke Into the house that very night and stole everything of valno that could be moved without a derrick. Tho number 13, which gives some people cold chills, occasionally finds a friend. It had no terrorB certainly for M. l'aul Des chanel, tho president of tho Krcich Cham ber of Deputies, who was rocontly mar ried. Neither was his llaucce afraid of It In fact, both tho bride and groom thought It a lucky number. When they announced that they were going to ho innrrlod on tho 1.1th of the mouth tho l'urtsluus rolled their oyes so unanimously that tho entire city had uyiup- A DASHING LITTLE HAT OP BLACK velvet bands threaded with golden tissue for a young girl. Low on tho right side ono scarlet cbou rests against tho hair. tome of au epileptic tit. Hut tho tlaucees had their reasons. They were both borm on the 13th day of tho month. M. Deschunol was born Febru ary 13, 1856; MUo. (Icrninlno Urlco April 13, 1870. Tho namo and surname of tho bridegroom contain thirteen letters. There Is the sumo number In tho bride's name. Tho two met In Florence when M. Dos chauol was traveling incognito under the namo of l'lerro Duclaux nuother thirteen letters. It was on tho 13th of January that Mile, Urlco formally consented to the mar riage, and It was on tho 13th of February that tho ceremony took place. Thirteen yoars from now tho Doschnnols will probably bo able to state positively whether the numbor has really bcou a lucky ono for them. $ A war-tlmo wooing has Just been dis covered through advices from l'ekln, China, that will throw a romantic color over tilt horrors of the slego and its aftermath to many Americans. The heroine Is no less ,, , ,. . a personage than Miss Mary Conger l'lorco, THIS PRETTY IIONNBT WITH STRINGS nloco of Minister K. H. Conger, and the Is one of tho fentures of n summer trous- lover First Lleutonnnt Harold Hammond seaii. It Is a palo, rough goldon straw of tho Ninth Infantry, tho first body of with cream crepe strings, a tall, dark Uncle Sam's soldiers to reach tho Ill-fated blue velvet bow In front, and a block and city with relief. scarlet poppy on either side tho face. MB8 Pierce, who Is an orphan, has for buine years been a member of Minister lunger's household. Lieutenant Hammond is a West, l'olut graduate and hulls ironi Hushvlile, 111. Miss l'lorco is now uu the sen with her undo and lila family on her homeward uip, but sho has left behind hur a gallant olll lor happy In tho security of u promised wltu and a regiment ready to acclaim her its mascot. 'Ihu whole affair came about with u Bud deuiiess that surprised tho young people no less than tho real of embassy society. They met in tho midst of war and disaster Miss l'lerce In the glow of thanksgiving over a foarful peril escaped, tho lieutenant with all his uatlvo chivalry aroused toward u feminine compatriot in distress. Formal barriers Boon disappear in times of trial. Told Out of Court Tho nvorugo layninn who mny atteud uuy of tho more conspicuous trials in tho civil or criminal courts, says the New York Sun, is usuully uinused at lirst by tho wrangles and tilts of opposing counsel, but in tho end ho becomes bored and wonders what is tho point of all this furious recrimina tion. Some light was shed on this matter tho other day by a prominent criminal law yer, who said: "I never engage In any of theso con troversies without un object. When I have a witness who Is going along swimmingly and keeping his head I never mix it up with my opponent, but when my witness begins to got rattled, under cross-examination, for lustauce, I am pretty apt to In terject a remark that will bring a retort from my learned frleud on tho other side. Ono word leads to another and in a Jiffy wo are at It hammer and tongs until tho court stops us. Meanwhile my object U accomplished. Tho witness' mind Is di verted, ho gots a chanco to recover him self, mid, f I happen to have had tho better of the argument, ho feels reassured aud his coulldenco Is restored." feverish head and parched lips the old man went down to the levee nt the appointed time and met tho planter, not yet nblo to deckle what charge he should make. With out asking him for his bill tho old planter snld: "Sit down, snh," and ns he took out a hugo roll of bills added: "Now, snh, I'll Just count out about what I think, sah, would be a fnlr amount, sah, and then, Bah, I'll seo whot you have to say about it, son." Then, picking off a $500 bill from tho roll, the planter Inld It on his knee and added another ami another and an other until there were live of them, and, looking up, said: "Now, sah, that is about what I thought was right, sah, and what havo you to say about It, sah7" Tho old attorney, bursting with suppressed omo tlon ub he saw the bills laid out, never theless struggled to bo equal to tho occa sion. Ho strove to speak, but did so with difficulty. At last his lips parted and he said, with dignity: "Well. 1 think perhaps you hnd hotter make It another live " A story Is told of an old attorney In southern Illinois during tho war times, who, when nil tho younger lawyers were at tho front, was engaged ono day by an old planter to draw somo affidavits of loy olty by which to obtain tho roleaso of cot ton that had been seized for confiscation. The old attornoy drew tho affidavits, and tho planter succeeded In getting his cotton, whereupon, with grent satisfaction, ho told tho nttornoy to meet him on tho loveo 'ho noxt morning nt 9 o'clock and he would pay him. Tho attorney, who wnB sadly In need of funds, lay awko all night trying to decldo what chargo ho should mako, won dering If 50 would bo too much, and If possibly $100 would be willingly paid by tho old plnnter, who hod succeeded In get ting very vnlunblo cotton by his aid, With WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE.