A STUDY OF SUCCESS. The world seems inclined to be times unkind somes He is jostled and jeered while he's try ing to find ; A place where his talents will fit a grin That his likeness is truly expressed: 1S a sin, Of the man who is going his best. gets to the top, But when he is toiling to rise The people with plenty of leisure stop To hinder whatever he trie But it's all in the game, and ’ him to Where courage Serve and » crowd shout; nerve f the man who is doing WWoackinge vy asi The Face in tha Sand. ANS NAS NASAL SAN or Boer en atically, Her brother arrived that day confided to him bh annoyance the sculptor was oc her. Tom lost 1 in getting x the who denied all knowledge more empl immediate! no tir the mater, “I am here for rest and am: and the last thing I am likely make faces in the durable material.” “But the likeness and you are the only urged Tom doggedly. “That may be. 1 had nothing to do with it. My word should offset a suspicion. I do not know your to do 15 ¢ sand! 1 work in more unmistal | culptor here.” ster sarcastically, Miss Hartwell was incredulous che heard her brother's report like the man’s face,” she sail “That doesn’t prove he did yours in the sand, Maggie,” returned her brother reproachfully. “I gather from his re- marks that he doesn’t like your face” Miss Hartwell tossed her head. Tom was 50 easy going. She might catch this man at work. Then, she knew she could count on Tom. She strolled along the broad walk, occasionally approaching the rail and looking down on the beach, for the next two or three mornings, early. But she saw no one, Perhaps he had been frightened off, If she could only catch him! The next morning she did! There, crouched on the sand, working in it, 50 absorbed that he never glanced around, was a man! He and she were almost the sole persons abroad at that hour. She recognized the clandestine model- when instead of getting her brother and have him fall upon the delinquent red-handed, she hurried back to the hotel, « sand-artist come d forth again, went and regarded her fea- He sweet smile on the ! Suddenly, she tured and studied The tide was coming in! She stood motionless, thinking . Yes! Every time had seen ‘¢ on the sand it had been early I was about and he ahs ch iH Then wctually put a Ca. she when nobody on her face, re wistfully; then, tuck a pink car ITSAge In Next turned, a ed the sand ov ¥ stooped and ym a cluster at her co k of the damp 1astily retreated to the brother and Miss Cur their akia ation fr IC ne portant. he ini irgaret 1 attacked en enjoyment, : ; 3 10 end of good Mir ap ke Menta! Processes of the Ras A ' ' rs fF NDEI te { minant , have been laiming msistency hat they are the only nation ' deal with tl are themselves an Asiatic justify this pretension by Asiatic military ethics, inate spectacle to massacreing Chinese populations wholesale while diplomatists are sly shielding those in from the just consequences crimes. From © Alexander i who can ¢ question because I hey primitive 1s an and it clive Lee their Oostentation i ICES of their China,” Michie, Where His Reformation Beean, Ipoint apparent able stan his wickedness, He had the close of the school the teacher sat down by him and said: “John, what is the erouble, anyway? Why is it you find it so hard to behave in school?” Poor John, in a burst of confidence, blurted out: “It's cos I'm awful hungry.” reformation must begin in his stomach. Rock Oil From the Ocean Bed, Eight million gallons of rock oil are pumped each year {rom under the bed of the Pacific Ocean. Newell C.i Knight, a prominent busi. ness and society man, has volunteered to serve the icity of Evanston, Ill, as Chief of Polive, without compensation, ——— Curious Case of Frank Rickenburg, = Soldier, A dispatch to the New from Fort Leavenworth, Kan, says a wounded soldier, formerly with the 20th Regular Infantry, is attracting con- siderable attention in military circles in Fort Leavenworth. It is also the topic of conversation in circles Rickenburg was a soldier in the 7th Cavalry and was in the battle of Wounded Knee, the last big fight with tile Indians in northwest was fought December 30, and in a hand-to-hand uggle several Indians Rickenburg's skull fractured and it ws: i would surely die He wi battle along with hospital, and whe lischarged from medical the 1891, he after the rect with the given a commendation that he be pen vund that affected wally impaired his he and wan 1Arge Wires as Weather Proohets, # vy prepara navi gated mn the [e Con hail by a of sh sharp tan e when Was 3 most gent on an CON ever required ort, nt obedient model The completed machine will be 100 feet long by 30 in diameter. inflated with hydrogen, and having lifting power of 7.000 pounds, It will ke a crew of five mena captain and four motormen. In «till weather a speed of thirty-five miles an hour is guaranteed for the in- vention, which is that of M. Gaudron, a Frenchman Its screws, four in number, are sus- pended from a bar which is hung on the cigar balloon, with the old method of s A or cause it to rise or fall. Four pe- will be used. The screws make 1.000 revolutions a minute long and two feet wide~Chicago Re- AA Uncovering the Head. Men did not always observe the pro- pricties by uncovering the head. The custom of lifting the hat as seen now originated during the age of chivalry, when it was customary for knights never ul armor. knight would remove his helmet, to sig- nify that he felt safe in the presence of friends. From this custom came the practice of lifting the hat on meeting a friend, Only four original members of the Crerman Reichstag, which was enab- lished thirty years ago, have seats in the present one. ARDEN a ND f HEAR MERE. aS = : = A SAVING OF LA It would be a great and annoyance if bus: in ha i farms, instead bushel be Con Everything used ducts i abies nailing of whi measure venient wh should be POINTI itrymen has sive poultry, Chickens will be of little vs It is the kind-hearted pe ultryman that 13 sometimes gut much A fat not quite that have to in mud 11¢ As feeding too hen f she 1 ’ 80 were much may lay, but fat she would be a | i If you never tried ge! a few eggs and set them under the hens this spring hatched out to They «Onn are You should be from your ducks to get their food from, you should sup- ply them with green bone and meat, as well as cut clover. Do not be discouraged because your first incubator hatch had so small a turn. out, It takes some time to get every thing learned about hatching, but it will pay you in the end f you and your family would con- sume more poultry and eggs, and less pork, your better health would more than pay the difference in cost. If you have not enough to spare them enlarge your poultry yards, houses and flocks. Why not examine the cellar to see if you do not have a few small potatoes or other vegetables that will soon go to waste. They will make excellent food for your hens and should be used be. fore the grass comes, when they will care but little for it. Begin with renewed energy your bat. le against those lice that are eating all getting a dust the hens thoroughly with insect powder TRANSI One of ary and the Nations aE Eur show that record ms with equa’ tants y-three with thirty nurty-one and pean wut two million in im more than hall struggles and i nient. denationali oppression and emigration. Ye these two «0 lead the rest ir possession of Tray, Fido, kind that practically there is no second. Germany had two less population than France in Now she has 56000,000 people a century under disc onniries the PENNSYLVANIA NEWS. Happenings (Gleaned From All Over the State. half than in the republic across Rhine. Duplicity Exposed. and afterwards explained to her mis tress that the cat had eaten the meat, “Very well,” said the lady, “we wil see that directly.” So saying, she took the cat, put i on the scales, and found that it weighee exactly four pounds, “There, Fredericka” she said the four pounds of meat—but where it the cat?’—Koelner Tageblaty, King Edward VII dislikes police pro ection, While he realizes that it is of cially necessary that he should be con stantly “shadowed” while in public by Scotland Yard, yet he insists that the shadowing be done as unobtrusively a possible, and, above all, that the detec tives in his suite shall not be noticee by the newspapers, AA AAAI Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail. rond-- Doctor Attack :d by Highwaymen--Live Stock Killed In Westmoreland to Check Rabies--Dickinson May Lose Reed. chard Phel shots had by citizens, Dr. Leg to the assail- colored girl, mavor s office lied for band of . some The of have Wal are are : and g in their way rabies as they biting } f the Lutheran Phoenixville. N rristown, Pottstown will give services in those towns dur in the Church of thes Transfiguration, Pottstown, June 6, and John's Lutheran Church, Phoenixvil June 12. The services in Spring City and Norristown will be given in the fall At an carly hour the other morning Mr Jac ob Mast, awakened by the sound of broken glass, saw two men running from the jewelry store of E. P. Zane. He gave the alarm and an investigation was made, showing that no plunder had been secured. Upon returning to his own establishment Mast found one of the windows of his own store smashed and clothing vaiued at about $130 miss- mg There may soon be a vacancy for Governor Stone to fill in the State Library. It was said in Harrisburg that Dr. George E. Reed, State Li. brarian and president of Dickinson Col. lege, ® being considered for the presi- dency of the Northwestern University at Chicago, and that his selection is regarded very favorably, Two more smallp... cases were dis covered at hy making fourteen in all. A scare was caused by a man running through the streets pursued by a couple of men. The report spread that he had escaped from the house for the detention of smallpox cases, and for a time there was much excitement. 1t proved. however, that he was a pugilist in training for a fight. John Mannick, a grocer, of Hazleton, committed suicide by shooting himsell, Mannick told a friend that he would kill himsell. When the friend went to sleep Mamnick stole out into the back yard and shot himself through the heart.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers