THE PRAYER OF CXZLEBt, Another pone! Alas. one more Deluded by woman's triekl Another stalwart bachelor To figure as a benpdick! "A marriage," nee, "has been arranged Between Miss Blank and" yea, and Harry! aly well-loved friend, yon must bar cLanired: Ton, of all men alive, to marry I At Cambridge, on debating nights. Brown and yourself snone in the list Aa valiant foes of "Woman's Bights," A pair of stanch misogynists; Bow valueless yonr spcbes prove Brown, too, I understand, is fated To mike, like yon, the deadly move Which loses ail, by which yea'ra BMUeiL Bat, though I monrn for yon, my friend. My fears are not for you alone; This fall of yours, does it portend A like disaster of my own? Is love a brief insanity Which seizes all of naf Shall no oci Escape its ravages? Shall I Become a lover? Ab!t omenl Oh. Maud, or Muriel, or Kate! Tour name, from force of circumstance 1 cannot definitely state; Let ns entreat yon ir advance; Oh. nnknown maid whoa I shall wee. Let ma put forward mv petition Before you have reduced ma to A semi-imbecile condition. When, on some fragrant summer eve, I vow that you ore quite divine. And ask you simply to believe There never was such love aa mine. Despise such platitudea aa those. From my demented self protect me. And if 1 finally propose. Be kind, be generous and reject me. London World WISE AT LAST. lie had run through soma 30,000 or 40.000. lie had dropped money on the turf, at the tables, and made a fool of himself In various ways; but the fellows who knew him best were all of a mind that "dear old Hurry" bad never before made such a fool of himself as he did la converting little Myra Bromley Into Mrs. ilenry Capel. Nevertheless, It was a matter of opin ion. In the theater. In the dressing rooms, there were not wanting; ladies of Miss Bromley's own profession who considered that the girl was getting a good deal the worse of the bargain. "My dear." said the girl who played the Amazon chief in the highly suc cessful burlesque which bad Just en tered the second year of Its run, "my dear, take my advice and never marry a gentleman! Marry a mummer for choice, or a shopkeeper or a shoeblack, or best of all, don't marry anyone. But a gentleman's fatal, and a gentle man without any money good Lord!" Words failed her; ahe threw up her hands wnrnlngly, and a small chorus of approval showed that the bouse was with her. All the same little Myra Bromley did marry her Harry Capel. For one thing, he was the first man who had ever asked her to be bis wife; and for another, she was very genuinely Id love with him, indeed. She migrated from her "combined room" In the Kennlngton quarter to furnished apartments In Maddox otreet. ami hero, on the first floor of a lodsliis-house, the Ill-assorted couple started housekeeping. It Is scarce necessary to say she left the sta.ee. Some things are Inevitable, and one of thorn Is that an actress al ways leaves the stage when she mar ries, and as Invariably returns to it sooner or later. She did not want to leave It, for she knew her husband's position, and un derstood that the 5 a week salary that she was drawing would be very useful to them, but Mr. Capel Insist ed. "My dear child," he said, "Is It like ly I would allow you to remain? We may not be very flush just at present, but I am sure wo shall be comfort able, and I should not know a mo ment's peace If you continued at the Audacity as my wife. No. no; we'll live quietly here for awhile until 1 drop Into something, and presently, take my word for it, you will forge: you were an actress at all." As a matter of fact, the conclusion was somewhat Irrelevant, for her de sire bad been prompted far less by any yearnings for histrionic triumphs than by the wish to augment their slender Income. But she obeyed, as a wife should, and for six months or more her only visits to the theater were made lu the dress circle or ttas stalls. Sometimes she got orders, and sometimes Mr. Capel paid. At first It was very good fun, the unaccustomed position on tl) other side of the foot lights. She enjoyed the novelty of it. her gloved hands folded and the lorg nette by her side, but by degrees both of the pair began to sigh for the past they had relinquished. The girl's thoughts followed the players to the flresslug-rooms between the acts and tbs man began to reflect moodily that the matrimonial blisses were a shade slow compared with the bachelor frol ics of old lang syne. Ajid he did not "drop Into" anything and their capital ran very low. The gingerbread began to show through the gilt, and It was stale gingerbread, moreover, at least to the man. Little Mrs. Capel was neglected by ber husband and bored by ber medi tations, lie took to going out alone la the evening now. He said that If be was to get bold of any post, it was necessary to meet fellows, and keep lb the swim. There may have been something In It, but It was not lively for the woman staring at the clock tad the reread periodicals or the scaf foldings of the bouse that were under going repairs on the opposite side of the way. Khe told him so once; It was the prelude to the crisis. He wa How Old CD You need not answer the question, madam, for in your case age is not counted by years. It will always be true that "a woman is as old as she looks." Nothing- sets the seal of age bo deeply upon woman's beauty as gray hair. It is natural, thcreforo, that every woman is anxious to preserve her hair in all its original abundance and beauty; or, that being denied the crowning gift of beautiful hair, she longs to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain to this gift or to preserve it, if already possessed. Ayer's Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its original color. It does this by simply aiding nature, by supplying the nutrition necessary to health and growth. There is no better preparation for the hair than t AYER'S HAIR VIGOR. out all czj ani oaiy returned at din ner time to bat My ctfallow the meal and retire to bis roam in order to dress. When ho re-entered tne parlor, she inquired where be was going. "la It essential," she said Ironically, "to come In at all? Tour visits are so brief that It seems to me you most find It an Inconvenience to make them." "What do you mean?" v "I mean." said Mrs. Capel, "that t am moping myself to death. I mar ried you for your society, Harry, and I need not remind you that I am not getting much of it" He was hipped, angry, ont of sorts. He had lost at . a race meeting that day. "I am snrrv." he said savagely, "that you regret my marrying you; If you were single again, you may take my word for It, I wouldn't." It was the first occasion that any thing like plain speaking oa the sub ject had occurred between tbem. He seized bis bat, and left the bouse In a rage; Myra sat still with tears In ber eyea and mutiny la her souL Why should she be left to eat out ner heart Ilka this, aba demanded of herself. Better the distractions of ber old life a thousand times. Ha regret ted their marriage, and she, too, re gretted It Wall, then, be could lead bis own life, and she would lead hers. Sba would go to the "Audacity" the very Beit morning, and try for a re engagement She would go to-night now! The sooner the wiser. To-morrow might be too late. Sba ran Into the bedroom her bus band bad Just vacated, and hastily proceeded to don ber cloak and bat. In fastening the latter, she dropped the pin, and, stooping for It, found that It bad fallen on the jacket be had exchanged for a dress coat She picked them both up together, and a not fell out of the Jacket pock et a note In a woman's handwriting. which began "My Ducky." j She was not a heroine, only a very natural girl, and she read the note through from the address to the slg nature. When she bad finished the perusal, she took the cloak and bat off again and sat down la the armchair, thinking, until Mr. Capel returned. It was 1 o'clock when the atreet door was unlocked, and bis steps were beard ascending the stairs. Mrs. Capel stood up, with fhe note in her band. 'You should be more careful," she said, "or perhaps, since you regretted your marriage so deeply, you were anxious I should assist you to regain your freedom. I promise to do my best" "Are you mad?" "No," abe said, 'I am very sane. We have both made a desperate mis take and my eyes are open to It Six ronths ago I should have been pros trate with misery to find you false to me. To-day I thank heaven for my chance of escape. I -an divorce you and I mean to do it" "You are, mistaken," he answered sullenly. "I am sorry to dispel an lllu s'on, but you cannot diverce me. I may have been false to you, but I have never been cruel. You are my wife, and you will have to continue so." "I will not live with you another day." "Oh, that may be, but my wife you are, and will remain. Any lawyer will tell you as much." She broke down then and vrcpx pas sionately; and clumsily, because be was ashamed of himself, be strove to console her. His efforts, however, were quite unavailing, and after aban doning the attempt In despair and seek ing refuse in a pipe, be left ber to her self and turned into bed. When be woke the next morning she was gone. He must hare slept sound ly, for her box was packed and ber preparations had not disturbed him. A letter lay on the table beside him, and reading it be saw the: she had left him forever. On the whole, he was relieved to learn It and be was not surprised, in the course of three or four days, to see her name announc ed as a member of the forthcoming Audacity burlesque. Well, the episode was over. He bad tried most things and found them a failure before es saying matrimony, and marriage had proved as empty the rest There was nothing now to prevent him re suming, without restrictions, the more unfettered life he hac forsaken at the" temptation of little Myra Bromley's pertty face. He would clear out of tKe Maddox street lodging and take a couple of rooms somewhere en garran. He bal anced his cash and decided that he was justified in treating himself to a well-chosen little dinner and a music ball afterward. As for Myra, he did not want any more to do with her. She had left him. and he did not Intend to think of her again. It was bia "re ward," be told himself bitterly, for mnrrying ber her recriminations and desertion. He felt that be bad been guilty of a certnln King Cophetua no bility In making ber his wife at all, when No, be could not dupe him self about that She bad been hon est enough, but It bad been a mesalli ance, and when a man made a mesalli ance the least be bad a right to look for in return was gratitude and devo tion. Bah! if ho were wise be would go down to the theater and box ber ears in the presence of a witness or two. and let her get her divorce after alL On the whole, be thought he would. Let the account close wipe It out ob literate It Hang ber! Whether be would or would not have done so In the ordlrary course of events, however, there Is no means of determining. He did not as things turned out, because, while be was still ..-onslderlng it Myra Bromley made a sudden and unexpected leap luto pub lic favor and commanded in the course of a very few months a salary of nr&i 25. next f-T0 and then 59 a week. Mr. fr'ant'l. bis ire exhausted, perceived tbut are You? la ridding b'meelf of a wife on whom be bad a xlrtxl to levy handsome con trlbutlons, be would be to use an ex pressive vulgarism pulilng bia nose tc spite bis face. His circumstances, thanks to the IE ness of the "principal," Into whost shoes the fortunate little "understudy" h-!d stepped, were now vastly Im proved. He took -ery cozy chambers, Indeed, called on bis tailor, and was no longer ashamed to sua himself In Piccadilly between the hours of 8 and 5. His correspondence with the goose v ho laid the golden eggs was rare and brief, but sometimes, when bis allow ance failed to suffice for bis weekly re quire-meats, be dropped a polite re quest for an additional "tenner," and as Myra lived quite cheaply she al-L ways had It to spar and sent it to bim. This state of. things continued for three years, and then, as might have been foreseen, Mrs. Henry Capel fell in love with an actor. He was ready and anxious to marry her. but she explained ber position t him and told him, without disguising ber love, that they could never be any thing more than they were to eacb other while her husband lived. 8b was, as she bad been, stralrht as a die, and no breath of scandal bad touched her. Charlies Eames, wb was a thoroughly good fellow, did nol attempt to shake her resolution. He only pondered miserably, and then, arriving at a plan o' action, went tc ber at last and suggested It "This blackguard of yours Ir In so ciety. Isn't be?" be said. "Knows all of swell people, and they ail know he Is married to you? Well, look here, My ra darling, you can't divorce him com pel blm to divorce you. If you arc known to be openly Irving with me he won't be able to help himself, lit daren't let It be said that he refuse to divorce yon because be makes you keep blm out of your salary, and there could be no other explanation of hi attitude. For very shame he'd have to proceed, and I swear to you on all my goda I'll make you my wife the moment the decree Dial Is made abso lute. What do you say?" She demurred a long time, but she. ended by saying what most women similarly circumstanced would have said. She said she trusted her lovei and that ber husband was a scoundrel. She consented, and Mr. Capel, to hi egregious disgust found his band forced beyond remonstrance. Myra Capel Is Mrs. Charles Eames to-day and a very happy wife. Henry Capel Is borrowing fivers and drifting so rapidly toward a subsistence de rived from the billiard-rooms that he already regrets bis concession to ap pearances. Such a number of people know the true Inwardness of the un defended case of "Capel vs. Capel and Eames" that to many this narrative t' it will be dull reading. It is writ ten for the larger public who kuew nothing that did not appear in the newspapers, and who wasted such a great deal of unnecessary sympathy on the petitioner. PIck-Me-Up. There Wa'n't Nothing." The following story of excessive seal Is told by a young minister who spent last summer In missionary work among the Green Mountains. The two mai den ladles with whom he boarded kept no horse, and were wont to rely upon the courtesy of neighbors to bring their mail from the postofEce. As the ladles and their boarders were sitting on the piazza one evening, a neighbor passed in the direction of the village, and one of the sisters called out: "Are you going to the Tillage, Jonas r "Yes," replied Jonas, pulling up bia borse; "can I do anything for you?" "You might get eur mail at the of fice, if you would be so kind," said "Aant Clary." Jonas drove on,- but did not return from the village until after the house hold had retired. Shortly before mid night the whole bouse was aroused by a thumping at the door, and calls of "Clary Clary Aunt Clary!" Aunt Clary arose hastily, lit a lamp. and slipping a wrapper over ber night- robe, descended and unlocked the door. "Why, It's you, Jonas!" said Clara. "What a turn you gave me!" "There wa'n't nothing," said Jonas, as he turned to go, full of the happy consciousness of duty performed. LAID A QUEER EGO. A Brooklyn Hen that Tired of Laying Old Btyla Baiar. In Brooklyn tbe other day one of Dr. O. Peterson's hens laid an egg that 1 quite a curiosity. Tbe chicken bad a nest In the cellar, and while tbe hen was on tbe nest a servant happened In, and saw a rat run across tbe floor and appreacb the ben's location, where II stopped for a moment According to the servant the hen was greatly in terested la and watched the rodent with great earnestness, craning ber neck to peer after the unwelcome visit or until It had diaappeared In a bole In the wait Tben the ben settled down to business, and the servant returned upstairs. When tbe egg which was deposited In tbe nest by the ben that day was gar nered It startled the folks. It was of the usual size and color, but on tbe shell was embossed the form of a rat. The body, ears and tail "were all there, raised distinctly, and as plain as tbe rat which disturbed tbe serenity of tbe hen. The portion oX the shell that rep resented tbe egg was slightly darker than tbe rest of the egg's covering, bu la other respects It was tbe same. Good Thins. Watts It seems rather sad that the old prophets had to die before their prophecies were fulfilled. Potts I think it waa a good thing. Just think what nuisances they would have made of themselves going about and saying: "I told you so." Indianapo lis Journal. More than Home Comforts. Tommy (surprised) Why, papa, I thought that one spoonful of rngar waa always enough jr my coffee? Tommy's Papa This is a restaurant, my son. Take all the sugar yon want Grand Rapids Herald. His Portrait on a Cola. Tbe seal of William the Conqueror is said to give the beet authentic portrait of England's Bast Norman king. Equal ly as good In its character Is that of KM ward, the Confessor Inscribed on bia RAT MARK OS AX EOS SHELL. HER OBJECTION Way a Mother Waste ta Dtaavm Sear Saaejhtsci Wk Kleryea. "I spent the night In a eabt Mar MontlceUo, Ky a few weeks afO," said C. L. Mcllwaiae, of the Bine Grass State, to a Washington Star is.srtsc In the morning a young girl was had cooked the supper the sight before waa missing, while her mother waa la a as rible rage. - "I don't want ter never see that gal agin," she cried vehemently. "What is the trouble r I asked. "Trubble? Trubble enough. That gal o' mine has toped ta Teas W llama." De yea abject ta hlsa very groat 1" "Him I riMn'S maw nnthln Mm. u.m th L Bn tm (57. - v J7. back hyar no mo. I had takea rat ber a fancy ta tbe girl, so I thought I would try to pla cate the mother. "Ton shouldn't be bard oa ber. Young people will marry." "I hain't no 'JectSona ter ber a soar ryin'." "They don't always marry tbe saaa their parents want then to." "I hain't no thin' agin T on." "Some nice girls like to elope. It adds romaacaU. persisted. "I hain't aotbla' ter say boat bet 1 alius tor ber ter run away ter git married. It makes a buaban' better when he thinks he stole bis gal, an' then thar ain't no trubble Axda' fer a weddln' an' dance. She done Joss as I tol' her 'bout runnin off ter town." "Then what Is the trouble?" I asked "Trubble enough. I tol ber when ahe run off ter take tbet thar piece o' five-cent callker and git two ya ds fer a bonnet, an' thar It lays right wbar I put It never teched. I don't know whan I'll git another chance fer git soma. At that moment the girl and ber lov er, riding on a borse, came to tbe back door. Tbe old lady glanced at tbem. "Did you git my callkrsr?" sbesbonted. "Yaas, maw. I lef th' piece, SO 1 made Tom buy four ya'ds. 'Nuff fer t bull bonnet" "Get right of an' cum In. Tom, ptn up th' critter. I'll sea' fer Aba KeoV eoa ter bring 'Is fiddle an' we'll all bev a dance Jess like yo' was married ter hum." And within an hour It looked like the whole population of tbe moon, tain side had arrived, while the bride and her mother were busy cooking chickens for a feast, and Abe tuning his fiddle for use as soon as dinner should be over. Only One Way. Insurance against the dishonesty of employes Is a recognized feature of modern commercial life. One of the treat corporations carrying on this busi ness published an estimate of the amount lost in the year ISM by embea dement and defalcation. The total loss for tbe year was put at tbe enormous sum of S25.000.000. Immense as this sum is. It does not include the losses, undoubtedly large In the aggregate, which have never been made public by the Individuals or firms defrauded. It la far from encouraging to note also that this estimate shows an Increase of about $7,000,000 over the previous year- Most of this kind of stealing Is done by men of good education, and at least fair opportunities for honest success. The real cause Is tbe too prevalent haste to gain wealth and enjoy life without hard work to get something far nothing. One of the most valuable lessons that 'an be learned Is that everything worth having must be earned by steady, bon pst effort. Henry Ward Beecber once ecelved a letter from a lad who wanted to find an "easy berth." Mr. Beecber in reply, after warning the boy to avoid the law, medicine, tbe ministry, trade and other forma of Industry, because each Involved hard work, ended with thte exbortatl: "Don't work. Don't study. Don't think. None of these are easy. O my son; you have come Into a hard world! I know of only one easy place la It, and that Is the grave." Youth's Compan ion. "Two Hearts that Beat as One." Two plak roses drooped from the big brown velvet bat over her dark ualr; the collar of ber seltakln cape was turned up closely around her face, ber cheeks were flushed pink, and ber dark eyes shone. "If there were two or three weeks more," abe said, In a clear, Joyoas voice, "I don't believe I should be ready. But tben," she added, "It Is bad luck to be quite prepared." At that the people on both side of tbe car exchanged smiles, far It la pleasant to listen to the conadeaeas of a brlde-that-ls-to-ba with bat one short week of undivided bliss before ber. The blgb collar cut off the next fsw words, and tben came: "He Is such a happy-go-lucky fel low. He always comes Into the bouse singing be sings at everything. I don't think if he had anything that should really worry htm that be would be worried" "My sister is quite different; she" "He is Just like his mother In that She's seventy-two " Tben tbe party left the car and a number of regretful passengers, for "all the world loves a lover." Jewish tioagevlty. Tbe vital statistics of London are the authority for the statement that on an average the life of a Jew la that city is twice that of a gentile. Dr. B. W. Richardson says that the Jews of that city are exceptionally free from dis ease, and Virchow says that the rase "has at all times been dkettngnathed by great tenacity of lffe. Coosnrmptioa Is scarcely known among the Jews, and suicide Is three-fourths leas frequent among them than It Is among gentiles." "Noah," asked Captain Kldd, "I've always wanted to know one thing- did you only take two of every kind af creature on board tbe ark?" "A passengers, yes," said Noah; "bat out steward had about four huaAred chick ens and lobsters in the lcs-WCtfor Sun days, just the same." Burlington Hawkeye. Be Wanted Chan. A prominent citlxen of Dallas said to bis wife the other Say: 'I believe I'll run down to Galveston for a change." "Yon need a change badly, don't you 7' ahe asked anxiously. "Yea, my love." "Then take me with you for a change. You've left sne beUad yea six in sacoaavftaaVS-atMfl fcUCw. Weald Not Bo Permitted. BoreleJgh I benere la aretlom ex- fstence. I am quite sore I waa oa earth before. Sorsieigh If you were nobody ease knew It Berelelgh Why not? Sonlolgb Yoa would not aai fo other ?n """op an or eurea tbe wonderful record of Hood's ears lparUla. It la the merit of Hood's Baraa Parilla that alras it power ta en re. It is tbe Great Cures by Hood's SaraaparlUa-kaowa and read br all men that lead to ttseaormoas sales. This merit h pemiliar to Hood's Baraaparllla. which eurea absolutely, permanently eurea, when all other medlclnea and even payilctaaa' prescriptions mil to do any good whatever. "When my mother begu taking Hoods Saraaparluasbeeouldaotdoany work at all sad eeuld hardly walk about the house. Now ahe ess get around and help do the house work." Wau T. Tursa, Albert ha, Arkansas Sarsaparilla b tbe bast In hu the One True Blood Partner. HOOd'S PillS v'rry.TO'm ""' TWIN NYLGHAUS. They Were Bora la th Central Part Msnaaerfeb At the Central Park menagerie in New York not long since was born twin nylghaus. The mother of the Infant Is known as "Little Fannie" and is only two years old. "Sport," their father, ta a flae-looklng animal, four years old. Both animals were raised In the park by their keeper. Phil Holmes, Tbe buck received the name of "Sport" be es use of the great pride he takes In himself. The young ones are very fine speci mens and they are valued st $500 eacb. Together they weigh 60 pounds. Tbey are marked alike, a reddish brown, with white spots on their heeds and feet They are two feet high and about two and a half feet long. Their legs are extremely long and tbln. Discovered by Chance. Professor Roentgen's discovery ot the photographic power of tbe kathode rays was due to an aecldent In ex perimenting with a Crookes tube through which a strong current was passing, but Which was covered with a cloth, he happened to bring his hand between the tube and some sensitized photographic paper. Finding lines on the paper for which be could not ac count he hunted for the cause, and found that the bones of bis band bad been reproduced by the rays from the tube. Ia repeating his experiments re cently before the Emperor William, the Wurzburg professor explained that be had not yet solved the theory of the phenomenon, and called tbe rays provisionally X-rays. In the first ex periments the rays did not produce objects hidden by solid matter thicker than one Inch, but since then Roentgen Is said to have obtained pictures taken through aluminum plates a centimeter and a half thick, and also through two aits of books, and at Pesth parts of the human body larger than the hancf have been taken. There Is no doubt about tbe genuine ness of the phenomena discovered. Roentgen's photographs nave been ex amined by Professor Boltzm'ann, of Vienna, who says tbe discovery opens op a new epoch In tbe history of sci ence. The experiments have been re peated successfully, with the same re sults, by Professor Klupathy, at Buda pesth, Domallp, at Prague; Pfandler tod Csermak, at Grata, and In Lon don. Boantgea says that not only are the X-rays not refracted by glass lenses or prisma or In passing through water, but that they have no Influence on the most sensitive magnetic Instru ments, and develop no heat A BrldeaLettr. There Is only one way to act at a fu neral and only one way for a bride to write a letter she always says she Is perfectly happy and that her husband Is the beat man in the world. We sup pose that a bride really thinks for two br three weeks that her man Is all right Atehlaon Globe. A Greater tllt "My papa," said the Senator's son, proudly, "helps makes the laws." My papa,'' retorted the Federal Judge's son, "unmakes the laws and nobody helps him, either." Twentieth Century. A Fntry Starr. Willy Grandpa, tell me a story. " Grandpa Once upon a time, before people thought of marrying for money i Willy Oh, I don't mean a fairy story. Norrlstown Herald. Oaytaai the Speaker. Small Orator When I think of the 'orrtblo consequences of drink, gen tlemen, I boll, gentlemen, I boll. One of the CrowdBut It dlnna take mackle to mak a .wee kettle bflej St Paul's. r Xtea't Tghaaea Spit and Smoke Tear Uni Awar. If yon What ta quit tobaoco osint eaallr and ;le, fall ot new lite and vuror. tne wonaer-woraer nm i atronn. Manv eln ten pounds In tea day. Over 400,000 cared. Bar KoTaBao from your own druggist, under ebaonMa guarantee to care. Book and sample tree. Address b ter ling Keaady OoOhlaago or stew York, The distinguished chemist and ex Minisier of Foreign Affairs in France, M. Berthelot, has calculated that the copper mines in the Mount Sinai range were worked 7000 yean ao, and are, therefore, the oldest mines in the world. l'r. wtna.ow'i aootuine; Syrnn lor etitldm teething, rotten (be ruou reprices iaaaramv tiou. allan lata, cnrei wiad Colic, jjo a u nu i Some idea of the vast extent of the surface of the earth may be obtained when it ia noted that if a lofty church steeple is ascended, and the landscapes visible from it looked at, 900,000 nek landscapes most be viewed in order that the whole earth may be seen. ' OsnaaanaUmalateUvw.MneraajbeW' am. from atoaan, weal er gripe. 10s. Italy has more steam street rail, roads than any other country in the world mUessje of about 8000 kilo- TWIX jrYLOHAVS. rnaeM Oat IV ' 1 want 83mo more chicken," said 4-year-old Franoes at the dinner table. "I think yon have had as much as is good for you, dear," replied Fran ces' mamma. "I want more." And Frances pouted. "You can't have more now; but here ia a wish-bone that you and mamma can pull. That will be fan. You pull one Bide and I'll pull the other, and whoever gets the longer end can ha ye her wish come true. Why, baby, you're got it! What waa your wish, Frances?" "I wished for' some more chicken," said Frances, promptly. She got it this time. Boston Beacon. II ! stlaaatta. The word "etiquette" is Anglo Norman, and primarily had a some what different meaning from lta present one. It formerly meant aim ply the ticket which was tied to the neck of bags or fastened to packages, to note their contents. Finally it seemed that theeword came to be ap plied to cards given out at an enter tainment, with certain rules of be havior for guests printed upon them. Thus behavior was or was not "the ticket," or "etiquette," and the slang term, "Just the ticket," and our ele gant word "etiquette hare tbe same derivation. ClilnC All Ian ta Mia Wlte. TUu German Emperor loaes no op portunity of winning favor with the ladies with bis gallant apeecnea, One of tbe prettiest, of these courtier- like utterances was delivered In an swering a toast to his wife in the province where she waa born: The bond that unites me to this province and chains me to ber in a manner different from all the others of my empire la the Jewel that sparkles at my side, her Majesty the Empress. Sprung from this soil, the type of the various virtueaof aocrman princess. it is to her I owe it if I am able to meet the severe labors of my office with a happy spirit am! make head against them." That Jarfal reeling With the exhilarating aanae of reu-itt-ei hmUa and itreocth and Internal elesnl.neai. whieh follows tho use of Syrap of Figs, la an'tiiown to the fee; wbo have not proeremed beyoal the old-time medicines and the cheap an-ist-tatea aomntimes altered bat never ecceyted bj the weU-lntoruteJ. Of about 8000 children in twenty. five schools in London, whose sight was tested by Carter s method, only forty per cent, had normal vision jn both eyes. Old Philadelphia Familea in Dr. MitcheL's New Story. The older families of Philadelphia will be especially interested in "Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker," by Dr. Weir Mitchell, which begins in the Novem ber number of The Century. Some families like the Aliens, named here end there in the book, are still repre rented in blood if not in name. The Biddies, Owen and Clement, who were free Quakers, are characters in the story, as are the Chews and Sliippens, wbo stood mostly for the crown. The interesting relation f Friends to tho Revolution comes up with the names of Logan, Fisher, Pemberton, Howell, Wetherilt, Scattergood, Wain and Wharton, who are all in the book, as well as the greatest of Pennsylvania's old lawyers, James Wilson, and the famous Dr. Benjamin Rush. Many other well-kr own Philadelphia names appear among the subsidiary charac ters, Ferguson, Grnydon, Cadwalder, etc. The proprietary set is represented by tho Fenns, tilings, and others. It ia safe to a y that Dr. Mitchell's novel will have a large reading here iu Philadelphia. The astronomers calculate that if tbe diameter of the sun should be daily diminished by two feet, it would be 3000 rears before our best instru ments could detect any difference in its size or brilliancy. Cnre Guaranteed by 1R. J. It. MATER, 10 IS Arcb M., l'Ull.A..l'A. res at once; do opera tion or UtrUy Irom bulnt. Consulcauoa free, indorsements ol iihyniciaus, ladles and promi nent citizen beau lor circular, otnc hour i A W. to SI. M. , The Paris doctors are using the bi cycle craze as a means of treating in sanity. Are Ton Tired all the timet Then yonr blood needs to be enriched and pari (led by Hood'. S.ir-ttparllla, the One True Blood Furt- ner. It gives vigor and vitality. Roed'a Pllia are easy to take, ea'y to oper ate. Cure lndlaestlon, biliousness. 2Se. . Luminous inks may now be used to print signs to be visible in tbe dark. Zinc salt and calciums are tbe med iums generally used. MKX and Ladles' In small looms Klahlur to earn $1K a week easily, write ns; we will ex plain. Excklsior ChuiicaL le., Kot-hesier, N. V. Lock box tm. It is usually considered that an adult should drink about three pints of liquid a day. Want billons or costive, eat a CamaraS candy cnthartha, cnre guaranteed. 10c, too. A woman doesn't mind arowlnz old. If providence is kind enough to keep er looning younger tnan ner ausoand. After six rears' suffering I was eared by fl-oji Cure.-MiKV Tuovsos, 2SHi Ohio Ave.. Allegheny. Pa., March 19. 1894. A Neat Swindling Trick. The latest swindling game waa prac ticed successfully the other day st Ben ton, Pa. Two men, who appeared to be strong silver and gold advocates, were In tbe central depot and became involved in a heated discussion. The gold man offered to get a gold double eagle that if he hammered the coin Into a shapeless mass It would still be worth $20. He was ostensibly takea np by the silver advocate, but when It came to selling tbe lump to Jeweler Both tbe store was closed. James Hagerty, a strong sound money advocate who stood by and who had implicit faith In the value of gold, gave tbe man $20 for the battered coin. Tbe two enthusi asts disappeared shortly after, and then It was discovered that tbe metal left by tbem was spurious. The Newest Scheme. Bristow Here's a minstrel ahow that will make a hit. Dorcy What's the scheme t Bristow The management has ar ranged te threw X rays on all the Jokes worked off. Philadelphia North Amer ican. One oa the Doctor Doctor This bacon doesn't appear to me to be well cured; does it te yea? Lady of tbe House Perhaps not, doe tar: it is nrebahlv like secae at jwar patleats--doetered, but sat , ' Sweet as new mown Hay Is the Dimo, washed In tbe SanHht way, with Sunlight Soap Svsijnueiei ftosaevery aserof this soap, come words of hifbest pcaiae ana conwendaUon. If yon hare not already done so, try It for yourself . It eaves In every direction, tiase. Money, laboar ana tbs clothes. One fair trial will con vince yoa. tatsr BfM, lid. BadsoB S Rsrrlsne Sta H.T. A Story from Londoa. A woman living In humble circum stances hi London had a windfall one day. As she was passing through Han over Square she found on the sidewalk a roll of twenty-live five-pound notes about six hundred and twenty-five dol lars. It bad evidently slipped from the pocket of some careless man and gave no clue to the ownership. Tbe woman examined the notes, and waa tempted to keep them, but she was as honest as she was poor and shrank from taking what waa not her own. She went to the police authorities, handed to them the money and left ber address, expect ing that tbe owner, when he was found, would give ber a practical proof of his appreciation of honesty. The owner of the lost property waa discovered by tbe police, but took his own view of the case. He counted the notes suspiciously, declared that two were m losing, and that tbe woman must have stolen tbem. A reward be would not pay, because he Insisted that ehe had already secured It dishonestly. She stoutly asserted her Innocence, and he threatened to prosecute her for theft. The poor creature appealed to a Lon don magistrate to take action on her behalf, but although be contemptuous ly described the owner of the lost prop erty as "a being in the shape of a man," he could not compel the ungrateful fel low' to reward ber suitably. Indeed, sl:e received cold comfort from tbe magistrate. He Inveighed loudly against her accuser, but frankly told her that he could do nothing for her, and that ehe would have acted wisely if she had not gone to tbe police with the money. That was strange and unwise coun sel for a magistrate or from any one, but it emphasized tbe fact that tbe man who bad carelessly lost his money was not promoting the ends of morality by his Ingratitude in refusing to reward an Ill-clad woman who had successfully re sisted temptation. Blag-alar Sea Reptiles. The sting ray, a member of tbe skate family. Is a dangerous Inhabitant of Florida water. Tbe largest specimens of the kind, weighing from 400 to 500 pounds, live at great depths, and are seldom found inshore, but rays from thirty to forty pounds are often encoun tered near the land, and natives con sider them to be fully as dangerous as tbe octopus or the much-dreaded blue stark. The fish Is a large, broad, flat-bellied creature, with eyes of a golden tint, a sharp, epearllke appendage at the end of the back and a long, slender tall that reminds one much of a blacksnake whip. This whip tall serves as a lariat with which an enemy may first be las soed, and tben the barbed spine finishes the work by lacerating the victim In a frightful manner. The sting ray la a villainous creature from any point of view, and has no friends In this or any other latitude. In the Atlantic ocean between the shores of the Bahama Islands and tbe Florida coast there lives a strange crea ture known as the glaucus, or sea liz ard. It hi aeldom, if ever, found near the hind, but seems to prefer deep wat er and a hot sea, especially where a strong current exists. It Is well known that this portion of the gulf stream, crowded In between the Bahamas and Florida, Is very rapid, and therefore the conditions so favorable to the sea liz ard are here to be found to a greater degree than elsewhere in the known world. As a substitute for forelegs It haa two broom-shaped fans, and from. about the middle of the body, including the tall. there are several more fins that spread out like a fan. Inference. "Aha!" And he laughed fiendishly as he read from the morning paper: "The burglar shot at the man, whose life was saved by the bullet striking against a button of his clothes I" "Well?" snapped has spouse, "what of thatr "What of thatr said he, as he felt his collar going up steadily to the nape of his neck. "Oh, nothing, except that the button must have been on." Tit Bits. Benevolent British Land Owner. Buckland-on-the-Moor. a secluded vil lage of Devonshire, England, has no public house, parson, policeman or pau pers. The squire owns all the land. The farms are small, but profitable. The farm laborers live In the squire's cottages. When tbey fall sick the squire pays their wages as usual and when they are too old to work any more they are continued on the pay list and potter about, doing what they please. Absolutely Pure-DeliGious-Nutritious- 'Well Bred, Soon Wed." Girls Who Use APOLIO' tf Harked Improvement. l mt it tmo that young Simpery - - has lost bis mind? Doctor No. elr. h'.s mentality haa really Improved. Biggs How canjbat be? Doctor He Is no louder under tbe delusion that he knows sjontelhlng. Detrolt Free Press. jeer try s 10c. bnx of OseeretP. tbe flaesl liver and bowel regulator ever made. The bones of ged persons bsving more lime in thtm than those of young people, are, thtrefore, more brittle. , Oitarrn Cannot be Cured With locsj applications, m they nr.ct reach tbe seat of the disease. CMerrh Is n blood i ar constitutional disoKse. nu t in order to cans it you inuit lake internal remedler. nail s Cmrrh Cure Is laken Internally, and acta di rectly oa the o ood nnd mucous eurfne-u. Hall a t'atarrli Cure is not a qu ck ineJiciue. it waa prescribed by oneof tl best physicians In tula cnuulry for years and isaretcu'er ireecrition. it Ia composed of thelM-t tonics known. Com bined with the best li i purifier. artinK ui- j eombinatioi of t ie two initredienls ia what pioaurea sucn wonneriui rr.nn. catarrh. rend for testimonial, free. r.J.VnrnKt ScI'm.. Prove., Toledo, Q. Fold by DraK-isu. price 75c Hall's yam Uy rills are the best. England has decided to adopt the metric system of weights and measures, and the Government, in the person of its President of the Board of Trade, haa drafted a bill to be submitted to Parliament at the opening of the next session. FITS stopped free and permanently enrrd. o fit alter first day's use or Ok. Kline's Orcat Kekvk Rutokeb. Free a! trial bottle and treat ise. Bend to Xir. Kliue. UU Arcb &L. Phlla, Pa. Bricks ot glass are now manntao-tu-ed in Sileein. Tbey are cheap and more durable than mud brinks. If afflicted with nore eyei ne Pr. Isaac Thomp son's tiye w.ter. Drug-tlsts sell at 2Ac. per boiue A San Francisco physician is pre paring to construct an air ship, which he declares will carry passengers to New York in forty hours. io is HER HAPPY DAY. A CHARMING STORY OF MEDICINE AND MARRIAGE. Two Open Letters From a Chicago Girl How Happiness Came to Ber. Among the tens of thousands of women who apply to Mrs. Pinkham for advice and are cured, are many who wish the facts in their cases made public, but do not give permission to publish their names for reasons as obvious as in the following, and no name is ever published without the writer's au thority; this is a bond of faith which Mrs. Pinkham has never broken. Chicsgo.Jan. 5tb, '95. My dear Ura. Pinknam A friend of mine, airs. - wants me to write yon, becaase shesaysi"yea did her so much good." I am desperate. Am nine teen years of age, tait, and weighed 138 pounds a year ago. I em now a mer-j skeleton. From your little book I think my tronble is profuse menstruation. My symptoms are e e etc. Our doctor (my uncle) tells father that I am in consumption, and wants to take me to Florida. Please help me! Tell me what to do and tell me quickly. I am engaged to be mar ried in September. Shall I live to see the day? e LUCY E.W. Chicago, June 16th, '95. My dear Mrs. Pinkham This is a happy day. I am well and gaining weight daily, but shall continue the treatment and Vegetable Compound during the summer, as yon suggest. Uncle knows nothing about what you have done for me, because it would make things very unpleasant in the family. I would like to give you a testimonial to publish, but father would not allow It. I shall be married in September, and as we go to Boston, will call upon you. How can I prove my gratitude? e e LUCY K. W. Just such cases as the above leak out in women's circles, and that is why the confidence of the women of America f bestowed upon Mrs. Pinkham. Why are not physicians more candid viih women when suffering from such ailments ? Women want the truth, and if they cannot get it from their doctor, will seek it elsewhere. FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP bashesmiiwd by millions of mother for tbelr children wblle Teething for over Fifty Yeara. It SOOthM thr Child. Hofljna thea artim. .11 - all pafn, cures wind colic and la thai Kmi remedy for diarrhea. Twenijr-nre Cent a ttottto JliDre's HONEYS No buslpMS pays as well on amount nmea aa ery. IT nLCCKKDtM TUAT'sthe eaeaa! LOOMIS A WYMAM. Tiffin. Ohio. AAA fh,r" of ??"? ?, ' ' mercantile wl 3 I business whioh paid lis par eeat. net OcCU proatbilW. lifpareent. annuZ ;o!vE aend guaranteed. rWer's furuiahed. K.J. TIPTOE Attorney, .West Superi.r, WW. if fa 11 E V GOLD, SII.TEU lalUriEI .. ....book ran. Ill Wllal Haa Daneby. fcelasabaa, O. nOillM1""1 "Hmtr habits cured. Book sent Ul IU Mfl free. Vt. It. M. VooLtiv,ATLKT,Q "2? v y f k Best Court fcyrup. Tastes tioodV Use I I H "time, fold by araeatsta. I I The Breakfast Cocoa made; bv Walter Baker & Co. te DORCHESTER. MASS. COSTS LESS THAN ONE CENT A CUR NO CHEMICALS. ALWAYS ASK YOUR GROCER FOR Baker itCo's. Breakfast Cocoa madeatDorchester.Mass IT BEARS THEIR TRADE MARK U BEUE CH W0LAT.I51 ON EVERY CAN. AVOID IMITATIONS Aro Quickly Married.