FT XT J VER THE HILLS AND PAR AWAY. i . 'Ver the hill and far away. t!e hoy steals from his morning play, jA under the bloaaoniing apple tree -i lie lie and he dreams of things to be; ; Of battles fought and of Tictoriea won, ,. Of wrongs o'erthrown and of great deeds - done; "vT-nr that he shall prove some day il!s and far awny JJver the hills aud tar awayl e hill and fur away. 'or the toil the livelone day! Itereth not to the aoul aflame 1 ive for riehea and power au while the sun is high; IfVertnin joys that lie here blazeth the noon of day, Over the bills and far away! hill and far away, n lingers at close of day; " is journey is almost don, fouirht and his Tirtories won, ynesty and truth, ti h and the friends of youth, i fher where are they? ' I and far away f the hills and far away? .Id. NEW COOK. KRTAINLT I was In an awltward fix. My husband did not see It. of course, and when had said for the .hirteenth I love i be accurate r the thirteenth . thnt evenlus, "Whatever am I to do?" he only re plied, to his newa- money will be of i can let you hare "It baa taken your bouse p have .' but be that I -e of Ing jt I would go hat eugges- . . interrupted I, "that .t i!r from the same stand l remember that In the hlgh we are every day being taken yurselves." ulled, nodded, and left the Tt later the door opened gent and a s'.isftt, graceful girl of abchit 23, ith brown hair and eyes, auO pale, gulsr fenfires, stood before me. She was very simply dressed in a well de Muo "rge gown, but her soft, voice, a little nervoiw In Its accents, ras beyond all possibility of doubt he voice of .n lady. I was so much fascinated by that oe deep, musical one. the kind that nt. you, with tho tiniest suspicion ?orM;n accent la It, and yet not n either that I scarcely know s;nmb,i through the usual que t Is your name?" Steven." vou any written character?" i give any references?" im." he proudly raised Ler pret- charaoter, madam, and no I Fhall not tell you any ' myself but my name. I . You eee-Hi a motherly, pjn." (Motherly, and, men mtlnued this strung yn are willing to nrnir in yeur house all wages, for I have I would take any r Ttofhtow 'T bn'lev cflpable cook and a vaf!?" little Fpeoch, you see, with hecks all ablaze, and tiny roiirIy clenched, r." paid I, impulsively, "I will on trust." vc cook csme home. Four icals she prepared, and er r the fifth arrived Harry ed also. 'X thin, quiet man. with iost pure white, though ' over i:r, brushed back idea of an Australian , which indeed he could . called, as of late yars ! himself much to colo Imlocd. If Jim's rn. .r i. could be believed, a great fore him In that direction. ......... ... ... fe sii;ike ott' V -h ajrpi-H.ret tbe load of de ed to be re-tlng a --m1. as my husband to "n great want te. 'Oversation was mo.'l had been a keen observ- hlugs, and could relate mentioned, nor tie dear, dead wlTei Perhaps be could not trust himself to peak of these with composure at lea at not yet. Jim bad intrusted a small parcel to him for us, and a short time after din ner he rose to leave the room to -tch i. At the same time I feCt rather than beard a light footstep ascending the stairs. Carelessly I noted H. "It Is Mary going to bed. She was up early." Her room was on the top flat, and to reach It she bad to ascend tbe front stairs. Mr. Gordon had Just paused on tbe landing, bis band still lightly catching the handle of the door, i Suddenly the footstep faltered stopped. "Harry r "Marie!" Tbe man's heart was in the cry. The Utt!e feet flew on as If on wlnjrs. The door reopened, and with the face of one transtlxed be again stood before us. My husband started up. "What is the matter?" I am afraid I lost my head a little,' and to relieve tbe strain of the situation remarked foolishly: "Mr. Gordon looks aa If he bad seen a ghost Instead of such an ordinary per son as tbe cook." "The cook!" he repeated. "Mrs. Ma son, it Is my wife!" Oeorjre found his Tolee first. "But I thought you said you had lost your wife?" A new light broke upon me. Yes, "lost," but "found." I do not generally speak to my hus band In a tone of authority, but on this occasion I did. "George," I said, "go down to your Rtudy directly and wait for me there. Stop here, Mr. Gordon." I went up to Mary's room a tiny box of a place, 10 feet by T. but I like ear of my girls to Lave a room, bowevei small, that she can call her own. The girl lay prone upon the little white bed. "Mary," I said, "you must corn downstairs." She shuddered. "Is she with him? "She? Whom?" said I. "Oh. there, has been some sad misunderstanding! Come with me." I lad her, unresisting, to the drawing room door and left her there. At this poVnt I may as wvfl tell you. he story which we gathered la detacb I bits later on. '.a her maiden days In that distant ,'.ony Marie Steven bad two lovers, friends of one another, and bearing the su.uie Christian name. There was, hew jever, in her uiiud. no question of choice between them. For her Harry Gordon ra and always had been tbe only niaa the world. ?Yr some time after the marriage the, n.lshlp between the two men con-, d to all seeming unimpaired. Then wliix-pcrs In regard to Gordon's ness aatl personal affairs began t about. These had. of course, ed solety in tbe fertCe brain of' stable namesake, and by b:ni ly arranged that they should :n a dread ofTiVUViug them con- v bis own Hps, abe from tlay ayed relating them to her Wild suspicions tore her eft ber with no rocks of whleti to cllnjf in tbe fat coming. one afternoon Marie V the entrance of her He placed In her -oman slgnms her- ife. amy , nor persuade mil it Hi is reveals." i j'bat same evening one of the great Pacific liners sailed with a new stew ardess, who had turned np at tbe last moment, soliciting employment Juat in time to fill the place of one who bad been taken suddenly UL More than an hour later we went up stairs, to find our gueat and my cook satting on tbe big sofa before the draw-lnfr-iuosi fir;, tieitlier of them saying much, apparently, bnt the little brown head nestling where It should always hare beea and measureless coateat la both tbelr eyes. Prince. What ChlleirM PearS. President O. Stanley Hall .fNClark University has been collection fats concerning the fears of children Th fears of children, he says, are geaer- ally created by parents and servants. He found that 1,701 children bad 6, 456 fears, tue leading ones being the fear of lightning and thunder, reptiles, strangers, tbe dark, death, domestic animals, dlsease,wlld animals, water, ghosts. Insects, rats and mice, robbers, high winds, etc. A few of these fears are rational. In New Jersey no children were found to be afraid of high winds, but in tbe West that fear naturally leads all oth ers. At Trenton, however, sixty-two children were fonnd who dreaded the end of the world, a fear created entire ly by adult teaching. His tabulation shows what education can do In tbis respect. No child was found to be afraid off the devil. Two hundred years ago and less that fear would have led all the rest. Few were found who were afraid of ghosts, a fear that would have stood high on the list not long ago. The fear of robbers and of wild animals Is a survival, though robbers have not disappeared as completely as the wild animals. Forty-six New Jersey children were afraid of being burned alive, a mon strous thing to inculcate In the child mind Fear will always be one of the strongest Influences In human life, but at least It Is possible by teaching what real danger consists of to eradicate groundless fears. Chicago Tribune. 8ernm In Diphtheria. Experiments in the application of serum In the treatment of diphtheria In Purls show that the number of deaths has been reduced from 2,000 to 5(10 annually. S'ome of us have more ups and downe In this world than others, but wben w get to the cemetery we will all be on a dead level. If some women were to cast theli bread upon the water It would be pret ty 6evere on tbe fish that gobbled It un lawyer-Do you tttok that yea art capable of filling tha position, youni .- Ror-Canable!; Why, my boss said I knew mora than edJiH . v.- t K.rl taVtave. Vanity . THE QUE.tr, Ae-r I : -'--sMMirmMwmmrMt JB JI'IC Her Life Haa Been One of Reverence aad Parity. London, aa every reader knows, boa -eceutly witnessed one of tbe greatest iggregations of human beings that tbe world baa ever seen. Millions made pilgrimages to the buge capital to do tiouiage to her who, for sixty years, has sat upon the throne of England, and who Is one of the most beloved women nrho ever lived. When, along the line of the vast pro fession, her subjects saw her, very ninny of them wept tears of Joy. The salvos of artillery at Spitbead, when tho greatest naval review In all his tory was being beld. did not reverber ate by a thousand times as far as tbe murmured prayer, "God bless our Queen!" which, as if by a sacred conta gion, seemed to burst from myriads of lips during the stirring week. Nay, more; the prayer crossed the Atlantic; passed from Halifax to Vancouver; found utterance In Hong Kong; was re-echoed from Tasmania to Australia, and from thence to Cape Town. It was beard in India and Egypt; sad, strengthened by Its colossal march, it reinforced British patriotism at home. Nor was this all. It was not mere form. It came from hearts throbbing with love aad reverence for one woman. It was deeply meant, and wo Americans were not ashamed to add our warm re spect. Now, what was the reason of this? A mere sixty years' reign is not enough iu itself to arouse the whole world's eager recognition. The fact that lnnuy empires have changed, or tended to decay, while one has grown In power and influence, docs not answer the question. To rule over one-fifth of the KloLe, aud to be tbe sovereign of 300, COO.OliO people, does not necessarily command affection, or engender msgo. When a mere girl, this eminent wom an was informed of her accession to the British throne. The first remark she then made bus been the keynote of a long life that bus brought the world to her feet. "My lord archbishop," she said with deep feeling, "pray for mo." To refuse audience to a titled subject because he hud led a questionable llf; to surround herself with the purest court in Christendom; to be high-minded in all pwMic concerns; to be Judicious and wise In the affairs of state the have indicated her character as ruler and empress. The world for many years has seen and warmly acknowl edged them. But the great Jubilee ret) resented more than this. It was th siHHitaneous tribute of a great empir to true womanhood; the deference ol civilization to the regal embodiment of Christian principle. The virtues aud graces that Chrisl declurcs show obedience to livlne au thority are far more compelling to th hearts and minds of meu than rank ot genius, and the glory cf this Queen rests upon the fact that she herself is subject to a higher sovereignty than ber own. Tbe royalty of her character lies Drat and most In this that she rec-osui-ses the grandeur of obedience t the Kiui; of Kins Jouth a Coiapau S4ILS IN A BOAT OVERLAND. DOi-'.Conitruct a Kloop-Risttd Irait ; f of Unique Cburucfccr. Charles Sleeper, a youth of IS, a sistr-d only bv a playmate of the same ng: ha:i constructed 3 sloop-rigged lK:it of u.iique character. The craft Is named Klondike. It rests oa wheels tibrn fronVa toy wagon, two at tb I 1 - BOAT OS WUEEI.S. bow and two at the stern, and a pair of wheels are rigged out from tbe middle almost three feet and touch tbe ground only when the ship careens. The mast Is stepped well forward and carries a Jib and mainsail. The vessel is sent along the streets at a great rate, and climbs a fairly stiff bill with compara tive ease. It has been the wonder of the college town of Berkeley, Cal. New York Evening World. Curious Storage of Hay. An English traveler through Kash mir found in practice there a novel hod of putting fodder up for win- terNyse. i tie country lies in a valley amoiigtnc Himalayas, i ne i-niei in dustry olMhe people consists in raising tine wool, ad in making this into fab rics which haTo carried the name of tbe country all over the world. A curious custoinin some places Is fhat of hanging quantities of hay up among the branches of ees. Why it was done was more than I cruld guess, till my gdidV Informed me thai In wiu ter the snowy's Ave and six yards in depth, and that the supplies of hay. which now lookonly as If they were: meant for camclopards, are then easily reached by the flocks of eheep which ibouDd there. "J""' if one may Judge from the novels tbnr young women seem td read with most avidity, they do not lite a lover to be sentimental, rhetorical or brutal. 1'hey sflll prefer him to be big and strong, but let blm be careful not to put on airs About It. There is nothing which seems to please a little wouiiVi more than to humiliate a big man anK that at ISis own grime. If she can show him that she can sail a boat, shoot a rapid, climb a mountain, or swim further out to sea than he can, she Is In a fair way to acee-pt his humble proffer of love and allegiance lt the next chapter. The prevalent hero is a nianwlio can do almost anything well, but ikeeps It to himself, lie must be a man ot im mense reserve powers, who exn.lbits most Ol liiciu i'luj oil ei"11 vl i"iv, yfr riding to hounds, or running a steaho r'- ..... A II lie permits ine tact, to leua, out. mat in winter be is Intensely Interested In civic and philanthropic problems he be gins to get a bold on the affections of the haughty lady. What tbe modern young woman seems to want in a hero is a correct, fashloneble and rather frivolous manner of life, but Inwardly a treiueuuoua seriousness of purpose. If he simply baa the "purpose" he la all right he need not dp much, for the ther cruel and Th girl "Ina-put nm c own.. -wew . . ., s. . e?HV jY v."VJ it. Warning Netea Calling the Wicked to Kcpcntance. ENTURB U a slippery rond. Bad bablta nev er backslide. Mortal beauty Is but mud In blossom. It takes more than beauty to run a kitchen. The devil Is most like a ronr Ing lion when ho looks most like a sheep. The wounded need the helping band. No expert can pick the locks of Dlety. The true hero bears Insult and keeps tbo peace. It takes wit and grit to paddle your own canoe. Better a hero with bare body, than a craven In armor. He is often sold, who bays much at the bargain counter. If yon would teach your children pa tience, show them what It Is. Without a competency for old age, none are happy and few honest. It Is because men can talk together, that they do not travel on all fours. The man who knows how to live well, will not have to learn how to die well. He who shoots in the right direc tion, will sooner or later bit something. Many a man has to go away from home to become acquainted with him self. It Is a long step in the right direction to be willluz to take things as they come. The devil will keep on coming to us, as long as we let him In when ha knocks. Coffee as a Curative. A Brazilian physician, who haa been experimenting with coffee as a remedy for aenetnia, says he haa brought about some remarkable cures. He requires his patients to refrain from drinking .i-t hiivir but weak coffee, and he even requires tbem to bathe in a weak decoction of coffee. When a girl does not look with favor li non a vounc man's suit he should transfer bis patronage to another tailor. Seven men in the Kings county IVni tciitiurv have iust lieen ail nulled insane :ia a direct conscoueuce of the lack of ,.ci iii.iliiin. The men suffer from various HhIiisioiis. ami are violent at times. One ..( ihcse unfortunates 1'l's constantly for a respite. In addition to these cases there have licen several attempts at suicide during the past few months. HALL'S Vegetable .Sicilian HAIR RENEWER Prevents the hair from fall ing; out, and makes a new growth come in. You save what you have and fjroiorc. No ay hair. 2RAIG FOR I897 CRAKES COMMOS FCHOOl. tJOESTIOSt ani Answer. Hook is enlarged by the addition oi 32 pages of new mat ter. Keali.ing, moreover, that teach ers demand that a (juesttoii Ilook shall Im up to the times, jxirticuLirlii in Hist ry ami (irofrnphy, this work has been revised to 1H'J7. o that the New I'tuiu contains over 850(1 Ques tions and Answers on the different tranches of study, arranged as follows: V .S. History. Ceoeraplir. Reaillne. I bynirol ttoKritphy. iirniiiniHr, I.ett-r Wruiat ilrlh-iKrHpliT. orttmpy nntl 1'hoiiolm-y,' A rltteu Arithmetic. Theory anil fmctlci , of I taclilUK. Alcohol nl Tobarro, Civil Ooyernmea, I'tiyaioluKV, AnHtomy. and Hygiene Nrittiml t'blloftopliy. larllclplcmiKl Indnlttve mndi eur. Wrtllnj, Alsvbin. 'lest Hr. b'enn Id Aluebr i. l'al linnet tary Hult-a. .The onotlon. In eacn department art r umbered, end liWV numbers are given to the Anoweniln correaponitln 0parlnent inak- II a everv iiueitiuu !. a eniwer qulckl) avali kMe wben nine B prekilng. Trice, - $1.59 The above book wi)N bo sent post free to any address, ujMm receipt ot .rice. MORWITZ CO CI2 ana I4 Chetnur.t Street. Philadelphia. A W, H. PODESTA & CO 113 north Ninth St.. Phil . p. Snlid tlultl Spectacles. SJ.OO els:hjrre 5 Fine Steel Spectacles, a or. flsewhrrt- 1 1 00 WE EXAMINE YOUR EYES FREE. CHREWD IrmHTOM! "T O i-atrnt A KfiieU". advertising pnree. mll. "Ke Xr,me.. Writ. .... WATSON B COLK&A.N. Solicitor of l'afnte. oi F. St, Wa.hU.gloa. P.U Wanted, a live acent In every town, (except New Yrk. to Hljtrt in lMisln-a with uiy Illuminating limlxr ami store numlieM, Indorsed by Uetrtmiil of I'uMli- Work. New Yurk 1 ity: also my lllimilna Mien: thi-v are o. K.. and reat eelleni: u hoy can mukettiem nhowas distinctly at nttcht as In tlie day: over l.uoo per cent, prortt: are you tbe man? fetid In your mime; ilmn of a lifetime; full par-Iti-ulnr. ll. W. Tallnian, Poet Ollice box 1173, New Voi .k t ity, DOMB-SHELL. SURE-SHOT. Kv.rv ne ehonld bnT thifl beautifnl picture. in lrtlBerntK',!"r"- KOI'K OF at 1 .tPW Kate. Deliverer! free. Hire He x 3H iurhae. paiuied by hand and copiejifrom Ihe original painting, val ued at M2O.00O. Kvery f.mil. ahould have one. Don't ml it. Send niJmey by mail, pontoffice order, or chH'k. at i.urrlMk. V'vney returned If not Mtnt lactorv. VIANIIATTAV PI BI.ISHIMi t'O., til Warreu rl., er. Vltravway, JS. 1 . DRUNK aJtss eta na aae-4 wltfc- ent thetrvanowledge by Anti-Jag th. raarveloua enre for the urlnk habK. Write Itenova Ctbemloal rv a; m v roll Information (In rlala wrapper) mailed fra beanie Kfcndito Alaska FREE iNF.nKlUOri N BT SlATTLC. Will, aca or CoKHxaci BoBR.tr. SrjTTLit Kr.ovmi-F ca. Wa.hington State. MinitiK ini Atfriiruli auritaa, ttmmerrlal, 'entre: Beet Outnts; rlen.-e; Largest City; halcst Kontes;, Addrette wcretarv. FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP hum bwn uwnI by mMlloiof meChm for tbelr rhiltlrrn whiln TcUilngforover Flftr Tmn. i It 8Vthe thtrCbllfL MftUJl tbe sTURM. snllsiva Mil MiIn, cure wind colic, and Is tbo beat j mwit nhTainrrniPn. TvTfBly.B Cents m Baeil. THIS OOI.D TLM riN. Handle Kara foi . otir liaudaouMCATAVOC, luliag I S free: Vpstage. , M. WATKrNS , atlg.J swat era. "critttirtiTttarri I Ben Uion Hm& -aawea I :iw M I rk TJTO. 1 I 1 V i i mam ''Cv v . sr - am u he. wwa ac auz.rm - v IFOR yACOBgf CURES PROMPTLY. -i a n n n n WHAT WE SHOULD DRINK. Onr Instinct Are tlanally tho Beat Onlde. We should drink from one-third to, two-fifths as many ounces as we weigh in pounds, declares Pror. Allen in a. medical exchange. "Therefore, for a man weighing 108 pounds would be re quired from flxty-slx to sixty-four aunces daily, or from one and one-half to four pints. This we regard as a very ndeflnlte answer, says the New York Ledger. The amount of water required iepends on the season of the year, tbe mount of work done and the kind-of food eaten. In hot weather we require more than In cold, because of the great er loss through the, skin, though this is In part made up by the Jesser amount passed away through the kidneys. If a man labors rery luCd he requires more than If his labor Is light A man working in a foundry where the tem perature Is high and tbe penipiratlon profuse not Infrequently drinks three r four gallons daily. If the food is stimulating and salty more watsr Is required than, if It Is not. Vegetarians and those who, use much, fruit re-i-ilre less water than ,those who eat salted fish and pork, ancj et iloDg with none, except what' 3r food. ' In most cases our instincts tell us , how much water to drink far better than any bard or fixed rule. For ages they have been acquiring a knowledge sf how touch to drink and transmitting that knowledge to descendants, and If we follow, them we shall not go far out of the way. It Is of more use to us to know that pure water Is essential' and that Impure water is one of the most dangerous of drinks than to know how much of it Is required daily. ' If one lives In u region where the wat er Is bad it should be boiled and put away In bottles. Well corked. In nn Ice chest, and in addition one should eat all the fruit he can. If fruit agrees. Fruits contain not only pure waterAbut salts which are needed to carru on healthfully the functions of life. Search for Buried Plunder. The finding of v. revolver marked "Blood for blood" has revived an old story of buried treasure at Fhoenix, Ariz., and a number of men are digging In tbe vicinity of the place where tlie weapon was found. In June, 1S7A, Ave men held up a stage coach on the Black canyon road, near Arastla bill. One passenger" was killed, and the booty consisted of a big roll of new greenbacks and a bar of gold worth" $32,000. A year or so later It was re ported In rhoenlx, and. indeed, throughout the extreme Southwest, that the product of the stage robbery had been burled at Phoenix. Two of the robbers made partial con fessions when mortally wounded, but their explanations were cut off by death. It seems that the robbers hud foared to make use of the greenbacks because these notes were rare In that part of the country and would arouse auspicton. They therefore burled the bills and cut the gold bar In two with an ax ami buried half, together with the pistol of the murdered paasentter. which waa a peculiar one, bearing the words, "Blood for blood." The whole was inclosed In an iron coffee pot. Almost every year since the story of the treasure became known one or more searchers have appeared at Fhoenix. each claiming to have a tip, received at some "bad man's" death bed or in some equally sensatlonnl way. Some years ago a priest from Mngda lena, Sonora, who had been glveu the location by n man who died of a wound received In a fight, spent a Ipng time In searching for it without success. It Is probable that the treasure, if ever burled at all, has been recovered by some searcher who thought It well to conceal his success. New York World fatarrh Cannot be Cnretl With local applications, as tbey cannot reach the iwator tbe i! incase. Catarrh is a uI.kkI or roustitutional diejite, and ill order to cure it you must take internal remedied, llall a Catarrh -ure i taken internally, ami act di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hail's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine, it waa f'rescrihed by one of tbe beat physicians in his country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined vtitll the heat hhmri purifiers, actinic directly on the mucous surfaces. The lcrfect combination of tbe two ingredients is w hat produces such wonderful results in cur. ill catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. K. J. I'hknkv Ac Co., Props., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists, price. 75c. Hall's Family i'ills are the best. The fact that the Hermans are the large-it buyers of the photographs of Frenc h actresses is eotifesscil ly a 1'arisiun photo grapher, anil the ieoile of the I nited States, aei-nnliiig lo the same authority, rank only third. There la a Claaa of People Who are Injured by the use of coffee. Ite oenjly there has been placed in all the grocery vtores a new lre!'ara Ion called Uraiu-O. made ol pure grains, ibat lakea tbe place of coffee. 'I he most delicate stomaci receive It without distress, and but tew can tell It irom coffee. It does not eo-t over one quarter a uiucn. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15 els nrwl eta. per package. Try it. Ask tor Grain Ot. t Kveden Is to receive new fortifications, A ooi mission appointed by tlie King is now selecting the most suitable localities. Iho eot of the plant it they are car-exc-eeJ 3U,tNj0,0O0 ried out .in full, will crowns, v After phyatelana had given me an, I was saved by Plsofs Cure. Ralph kHiau, WU- uaauuort, Pa Jio. zs, lash - The flourishingcity of Mishawaka, 1ml., is alxiut to have aVJileil to its iihlu.-t l ies a manufactory of riller goods, strongly Lacked by EasternV capita I, which will give employment to Kroni 50 to 4u0 ier sons. i nre Guaranteed by rR. J. H.IAtEK, toil aKIH B'l I Hll.A.. PA. Kaee at once; no ... uru,,.. nr ,cl. ir.,m btiainess. Consutlatlon Iie kndnraenients ot pbysiciank. ladles and rntnlnent citizens. Send lew LllcUUt Olllcj Lour. 9 A. At. Iu I P. M. th rmwror of Austria has An his privato lilrarv a collection of flrt.Oxli por traits in yjli aihums. The collections .in cludes 228 dVretit pictui-es ot lumsedi. (if the KmnresX l " ,nal no poiira X exists of later d:. ihan 1870. fits pemasMays-r. ft Da. K. 11. KLta. Ltd, Wl Aiph St,PUUarm Another woman has been fouridwho was kissed bv lieneral I-afayette wen i he ihi. country in 1824. She 19 sMrs. u,....i Itelvea. who is an inmate of i Home for Incurables, and admits being years old. , . CAnthmv siernn for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inflammay" tlon.aliays pain, cu.-ea wind colic, oc a do'" !v,-Jk1v T-nul Re vt tVwo"ld jiave) PAOKj riiY OUR BOYS AND GIRLS THIS IS THEIR DEPARTMENT OF THE PAPER. Qnalnt Sarins and Cute Dolnss of tho Little Folk Trywliere Gathered ana Printed Here for All Otfcer Ut ile One to Bend. A Coincidence. hO mamma!" aaid little Johnny, "What do you think I see? There's a baby 'way back in your eye. And he looks juat like me." "Tea, darling, but a stranger thing I'll tell you. and it's true; There's another baby in my heart. And he looks juat like your Sarah J. Burke. Why Btara Twinkle. Twinkle, twinkle, little star. I wonder why you twinkle? This Is the little song that astronom ers have been singing for years; and not one of them could satisfactorily an swer the question. Now, however, Pr. L. L. See, who is In charge of the great telescope at Flag staff, Ariz., has suggested a solution of the mystery which is awakening wide Interest among scientists. I)r baH folm(, Uie cause of twinkling to be the presence in the at mosphere of innumerable little currents or waves, which dart through the air and cause a break iu the light from the star. The result is that to a beholder on the earth the star has the familiar appearance of twinkling. These little air currents can be distinguished through the twenty-four inch telescope very plaiuly on nights when this twink ling Is observed most, by the simple process of removing the eyepiece of tha instrument. Farming for Frogs. Tou have all heard of corn and pnmp cln farms, but who ever beard of a freg farm? Yet Just such a novelty ex ists in the Trout river basin of Ontario, Canada. It has been in operation for many years and has a large annual out put of frogs legs and live frogs. In the summer time It Is probably the greatest place for bops In the world, and as for orchestras and vocal music few places can equal It. The farm Is mostly a stretch of shallow water and swamps and the frogs are allowed to hop at large and breed until they are three or four years old. Then the "farmers" go -outsat night with torches and the frogs are eaiiffiit Jn nets and placed in pens. j When they are a!tted the water is drained off and the frogs arc sent away to market The farm is stocked mostly with big bullfrogs, which provide the largest and best legs. In 1835 aiiti the "farm" produced the Immense, amount of 5,000 pounds of dressed frog legs, besides 7,000 live frogs for vari ous purposes. Too Bis; a Monthful. Speaking of odd accidents to birds, a friend of the Boys and Girls" depart ment wrote about a surprising thing which lie saw last summer. He wass camped on Lake Geneva during most of the month of August, and he foun-1 much pleasure In watching those fish ers of the air, the osprey and the king fisher. One day he saw a kingfisher drop down from the sky like a shot, splash Into the water near shore and then rise laboriously with a heavy fish in its talons. It flew to the top of a tall stub near shore, and while he watched It he saw it flutter suddenly from Its perch and then drop down ward with apparently helpless wings. He rowed over to the shore and ran to the foot of the dry stub. Tbe king fisher lay there fluttering feebly and almost dead with a small perch stuck fast in its throat. It had tried to swal low entirely too large a mouthful, and bad not the visitor removed the fish It soon would have died. Have any of you ever heard of stranger accident? Chicago Record. Froica. There Is a young woman earned Miss Moua Selden In the towu of Friend ship, New Jersey, who abandoned school-teaching about seven years ago In order to engage in some occupation more conducive to her heaitn. She con cluded to raise frogs for the New York and Philadelphia markets, and for this purpose bought, at $2.00 per acre, twenty acres of marsh land in the vicin ity of Friendship. This tract she fenced In, and has diligently prosecuted the business of breeding, buying and aeiiing frogs, until It yields her an In come of $0,000 per year. We extract from an exchange the following partic ulars In regard to this enterprising woman and her surroundings: "Since Miss Selden turned her atten tion to buying frogs, she has spent less time hunting, but occasionally she goes out for a day In the bog and comes home with a full bag. The twenty acres that she bought she holds as a reserve. and ten acres of It she has turned Into I breeding place for frogs. "She calculates that every spring there are about 20,000 frogs In the breeding ground. She feeds them and they are furnished with clear water from a continuously flowing stream. Under the treatment that the woman gives them the frogs thrive and grow tp enormous proportions. The largest are kept In the "ranch." The medium sized are taken for the market, because they are the tenderest, Juciest and sweetest, and tbey command a higher price than the larger legs. "In ber home Miss Selden has a large aquarium in which she keeps fish and frogs. They are her only pets, and they seem to have an affection for her. The fish eat from ber hand, allow ber to take them out of the water and under go the discomfort of being In the open air without making any objection. The frogs are on more familiar terms with her than are the fish, and they have their hours when they are given thf freedom of the house. One big green r.iow named Dick Is four years old, indv when Miss Selden Is writing he sits -n te table near her and amuses him self with boxing scraps of paper around or chasVig files. Dick as been trained to do a good many interesting tricks. He will hop ver a sticteld by his mistress sev eral lncnea k. -mno noor, wears a .wipei.l - Vail the dignity of C J S : ' Nhis mistress "wr ana gem ;lngs Into. xia :rJ.nrJVannur. t The niue . iei. daughter of the wldoweo , w-, cess Stephanie -or ut. - or tne aU.u -..- in fortunate owner of the smallest band and Is of the siik n breed. It ronneny w'" , : -Waldmann, keeper of a cafe In V lenna. breed. It formerly beiongea innittiRi noo. Tbe miniature creature is 13 centime ters high, 17 long and weighs about a pound. Mrs. Waldmann thought the tiny thing so charming that only a royal child should possess such a rarity. She accordingly applied to the crown prin cess for permission to present it to the little archduchess. Frau Waldmann took the dog with her to the court and showed It to the royal mother. All were at once taken with the terrier's droll ways and its fine little head, and a few days afterward the dog found its way in a small basket to the castle, lielng presented to. the child from its mother and grandparents. Bright Sayinsa of Children. Mama What are you playing with, darling? Darling With a caterpillar and two little kittenplllars. Governess Now, Tommle, if you had eight sponge cakes and gave baby sev en, and then took away six, what would he have then? Tommle A fit, pretty nearly! Mama (severely) Daisy, you have been at my workbox again! I'm afraid that everything I tell you goes In at one ear and out of the other. Daisy (5 years old) Well, mama, why don't you 'top one of zem up? A little fellow, who had his wits nlMiut him when the contribution plate was passed at church, administered a rebuke to his mother, who on the way home was finding fault with the ser mon. "Well, mother," be saia inno cently, "what could you expect for a cent r' A kindergarten teacher was recently reviewing her- little class .on the in struction given the day previous. The following nre a part of the questions and answers: Teacher Now, chil dren, I told you yesterday ulout the various materials from which your dresses are made silk, wool and cot ton. Let me. see how well you re member. Margie, whore did the ma terial come from of which your dress is' made? Margie It once grew upon the back-ot.a sheep. Teacher Very good; and yours, Blanche? Plnnche My dress once grew upoa thebnek of sheep, and a part or it was spun, oy A the silkworm. Teacher Correct! AntlJ 1 '''' The parties were living apart . - ... r.rTtae Gpn.i-ilin oCtler. 4 lie wife Ciril- yours, Lucy? Lucy (wltn evident em barrassment) My dress was made out of nn old one of mama's. nay.. In five hundred has perfectly healthy organs of generation. This points to the 6tern necessity of helping one's self just as soon as the life powers aeem to be on the wane. Excessive menstruation is a sign of physical weakness and want of tone in the uterine organs. It saps the strength away and produces anemia blood turns to water). If you become anemic, there is no knowing what will happen. If your gums and the inside of your lips and inside your eyelids look pale in color, you aro in a dangerous way and must stop that drain on your powers. Why not build up on a generous, uplifting tonic, like Vegetable Compound? Mrs. Edwin Eurio, 413 Church St., says: I teei it my amy to wrive :inu I am better than I have been for I used Lydia E. Pinkham s egetablo Com pound, one package of Sanative Wash, one box of Liver Pills, and can say that 1 am perfectly cured. "Doctors did not help me any. I should in my grave by this time if it had not medicine. It was a godsend to me. I wns excessive menstruation, which caused and I was oblirred to remain in bed for six Pinkham's medicine was recommended after using it a short time, was troubled no more with flooding. I also had severe pain in my kidneys. This, also, I have no more. I shall always recommend the Compound, for it has cured me.'and it will cure others. I would like to have yon rmblish this letter." (In such - -' -----1 GRT THE (iKXllM! ARTICLE) i Walter Baker & Co.'s Breakfast GOCOA Pure. Delicious, Nutritious. Costs Less than ONE CENT a cap. Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark. j Walter 9 (Established i78o ) I .ai I w I Trade-Mack PUBLISHERSand printers The Central Newspaperj Union,MJd 6i4 CHESTNUT ST., Philadelphia, V Furnishes Machine Composition In English ana German. FOR NEWSPAPERS, BOOKS. AUGAZINES. PAMPHLETS, LEGAL DOCUMENTS, ETC Also Photo-Engraving, Line and Half Tone work. Printing in BUok and in Colors, quickly at Reasonable Rates, f " Forbid a Fcol a Thing Bca't A POLIO STAFF OF LIFE IS IN DANGER. Doctor and Other Now Claim tkat Bread In Bad for ttan Health. a -a tho doetors and other peo- AUU " - ole who think for us and tell us what to . a a. A. Av tl em Wat. KabTIIVI SB ft to do haTe - one th!nR wh,ch , considered Impervious has . th mloro. coij ,., nri the wi ones . war oa. " . J " are rommg 1" newspapers declaring that bread, far from being the staff of life, might al most be considered the staff of death. T. P. O'Connor Is the leader of the assault and he advances some novel and Interesting arguments In support v.1. nncitinn that bread Is highly ln- ' Jurious and should be abandoned as steady diet. "It Is a question," says O'Connor, "which lies at the basis of the health of every person in tbe community. If the balamiJ of expert opinion should prove that bread is a destructive agvnt to digestion and health, as so many people think. Is It not time that tbe na tion should be told so authoritatively and that another system of dietary should b recommended for adoption? To persist In the nse of an unhealthy diet Is ethically as great an offense against ourselves as the absorption of gin by tbe sot of tbe west or the eat. Ir.g of opium by tbe wastrel of th east." The contention of those who are op posed to the eating of such large quan tities of bread is that since It contains so much starchy matter It Is very diffi cult of digestion and Imposes a great and unnecessary strain on the digestive apparatus. O'Connor declares that m number of people have come under hla notice who have abstained from bread for years and tbey have retained their faculties unimpaired to a ripe old age. The late Sir Isaac Holden la perhaps one of the best examples of this thSjeTr. He lived to lie 01 years old and rOv ad every faculty until the very laaS. 'He was very active In and out of parlia ment and emoked and drank In modera tion. All of his friends attribute his longevity to tbe fact that he avoided all foods rich In starch, including bread. Starch foods are not digested In the stomach, but in the first Intestine. They are thus difficult of digestion and, there fore, less healthy than other dietary nrtieles. Chlcaco Chronicle. Every man who walks, will make some tracks that others will be sure to follow. This life is the dressing room; death lifts the curtain and we step out on the eternal stage. , -The young man who Is afraid to lose his hours, his dimes and his honor, la a fish worth catching. Future generations will be forced to learn that centralized wealth In a re public Is the nest-egg of revolution. The poor man braving cheerfully the waves of adversity, displays more hero ism than Bonaparte on the field of Austerlltz. The boy at ten, wants to rule the house; at twenty, he wants to rule tha state; at thirty, he tries to rule his off spring, and at forty, he has some seri ous thoughts of trying to rule himself. Justice KcniK'ilv. of Knglaml, has juat il.-i i.l.'.l that a wife may sue her husband imVtfir a sep i-.it ion order, the wife earn ing : her own living, and the husband kepi sfrB'ling defamatory telegrams to her. A TALK WITH MRS. PINKH, AM ' About the Cause of Anemia. Evcrj-body comes into this world with a pre disposition to disease of some particular tissue; in other words, everybody has a weak spot. Iu ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the weak spot in women is somewhere in the uter ine system. The uterine organs have less rty sistanee to disease than the vital organs; that's why they give out the soonest. Not more than one woman in a hundred Lydia H.. l'inltnam s Bethlehem, Pa,, veu you mat, four years. have been been for your troubled with womb trouble. weeks. Mrs. 1 to me, and. Baker & jCo. Limited, 7 ( Dorchester, Mass. T t,w t t I "-I I 1 wi and that ha will do." Uso I n Xk. "v. (Every othery ia trouble hum ilia i is i.sj - ' ' :-dened wi.h a