IN A LUTHER BUHBANK GARDEN. White ant the coreleas apple buds, As your hand in mine I claap, The cactus plant ne'er cackle now, ,,v., lin in minn 1 cl.lsn. nm ut ircm ll.ive nil l.-PCll nr.-livn. And we wander through the eyeleaa apuda And calm there falla upon your brow And the raapberriea, sans raap. Yon plucked a blackberry, daarhng white, Aa we chanted a tuneleas rune, And I took a Inarioua, eoulful bit Of n pitleaa, akinleaa prune. The light of a aunleaa dawn. In this dear plare I would live for aye. Discussing the whyleaa how. And apeeding the minnteleaa lionra by, From the path of the pathleaa now. fltnver Republican. TARRY I could see nothing, hear nothing, m I waited In the appalling stillness for them to come for come thta way they muat. Before me stretched the long, white road, a porfectly straight line ruled between strips of green, and empty of living creatnre or obstacle of any kind. What a road for racing; how impossible to come up with any thing that had got the start! Sud denly came a low droning like that of a bumble bee close at hand, a tiny speck appeared over the edge of the world, and in the same instant (as it seemed to me) a Napier car went roaring by in a whirl of dust, and I caught a lightning glimpse of its two crouching occupants, tbelr white overalls grotesque and distended by the tearing wind. Like an apparition. It had come, It had gone. I could almost have doubted if It had ever been there had it not left on my mind an impression at once amazing and intoxicating intoxicating, as illustrates human possibilities applied to locomotion; amazing, that a man should have the nerve and skill to control so enor mous a projectile. But Major Colllngwood had nerve enough for anything, even to run ning away with my sweetheart, for it was Tarry who sat beside him, and whose attitude, as she flashed past, gave me the impression of fear. Yet they were guests in the same house. What wsb there out of the way in their having a trip before breakfast In the new car, of which the man was so proud, and that had only just arrived? Well enough I knew how women with diseased nerves, living only for excitement, found a fierce joy in these mad rides, eourtlng danger as a fillip to the'r jaded senses; but Tarry was not one of that sort, or she had not been so dear to me and others. That Major Colllngwood had abducted her, I was morally certain, yet there stood I like a clod and a fool by the dusty hedge, not knowing what I should do next, and knowing well enough that whatever I did I could not come up with a motor car that was going at the rate of eighty miles an hour. Across the fields showed the gables of the bouse at which I was staying, and to which, at S o'clock that morn ing, bad come a wire which had planted me here In the high road, to see what I should see and I had seen It. "No breakfast!" cried a voice from the other side of the hedge, "and all to 86 your beloved flash by with Dolf Cefltngwood! Fastest pace I ever saw but the roads about here are heaven-born for motors." "How could you possibly tell who the woman was?" I inquired, jealous for her honor. "Because Tarry is so pretty you'd know her in the dark," said my host, equably, as he lit a cigar. "She is almost the last survival of the old de lightful type of woman that has not lost its femininity by over-indulgence In outdoor pursuits and masculine vices. Lord, you-'sjnay walk the Lon don streets for da, v. and see tons of well grown, aggressive women, and not one really pretty girl like Tarry among 'em all! But what's the trou ble? They are merely out for a morn ing scamper." "Look here," I said, and gave him the wire I had received that morning. He muttered over its contents half aloud. "Colllngwood taking Miss Well born out on racing car to-morrow be tween 8 and 9. Means mischief, Look out for them. London road. Toby." "Up to his tricks again," said Bob, frowning. ' He forgot you were stay ing here; also reckoned without Toby. But Tarry's as straight as a die, and it's broad daylight, man. He can't drag her by her bonny brown locks to his lair without somebody seeing him. "Tarry is rich," I said briefly. "Colllngwood is poor and desper ate. Toby is no fool. Depend upon It, he did not warn me without rea son. Will you lend me a horse?' With which to catch a Napier doing its eighty miles an hour?" "Accidents happen they must slow down at the villages. Tarry may be able to attract attention to her plight fifty things may happen Now will you tell them to saddle a horse, and I'll get Elsa to give me some breakfast? Bob went off to the stables, and Elsa poured out my tea, and blamed me for leaving Tarry alone in a house wheie Major Colllngwood also was a guest. "Didn't you and Bob beg mo to come over for a couple of days?' began, indignantly, "and ain t I as aura of Tarry as she is of me?" She looked comical at that, and told me never to be sure of a woman and thought it was awfully smart of Toby to wire me, and wondered how he got the tip. "Colllngwood let out something in his cups, I expect; it's the only time he la ever known to speak the truth." She nodded. "That la the secret of his Influence over us women," she aald, "that he never lets ns see ourselves as we really are, only we think we are and he is genuinely In love with Tarry, quite apart from her money. .You don't think!" She put her im pertinent head on one aide, and there was a suggestion In her eye that made me long to box her ears soundly. "No, I don't!" said, curtly, and Vent oft to the stable, a4 in another doubt- minute was out on the road fully encouraged by Bob. "They are thirty miles ahead of you by now," he said, "though, of course, they can't go the pace all the way they did here. His extraordin ary nerve and skill will enable him to negotiate awkward corners, but you must hear of him as you go along. Still, bar his having a smash, I don't see how you can possibly come up with him." "I mean to try," I said, waving my hand to Elsa, who maliciously mur mured : "They'll have fleet steeds that fol low, quoth young Lochlnvar," as I departed. There was no difficulty in finding out which way Major Colllngwood had gone. The road had a deserted appearance here and there carts wero drawn up beside it. I saw white faced, trembling people into whom the very fear of God had been put as he leaped upon them, as It were from the ends of the earth, and, used as they wero to motors, they had never seen anything to go the pace this one did. In the villages where he had slowed down the wom en told me that the lady had seemed "afeared," and several times had tried to Jump out, but the gentleman had only laughed and held her fast. and said that his wife was "nervous.' All spoke of his incredible skill and luck; he had injured no one, his car was unhurt, and he seemed In the best of spirits. They must have reached town long ago, I thought, as at 11 o'clock I came to a place where the London road forked, and by a de tour of about a mile one could follow seldom used road by which one ventually returned to the highway. As I passed the corner a scrap of something white, caught on a thorn bush, arrested my attention, and, obeying some unaccountable Impulse, turn aside, secured the bit of cam bric, and in the corner of it found the initial I had somehow expected. s With beating pulses I followed what I felt sure was a signal flung out in despair, and I had not ridden far, on an exceedingly bad road, when came upon a motor car lying in uinR, a man pinned beneath its wreckage, and a little terrified figure sitting in the hedge with hands clasped over Its eyes. "Tarry!" I cried out, and at that she jumped up, and, running toward me, fell into my arms as I dismount ed. "Frank! Frank!" she moaned, and wept as It her very heart would break. I kissed the grimy little lace, in which at least the blue of her eyes was untouched, and leaving the horse went to see If her abductor were dead or merely lnsnnslble, and when I had lifted the lighter wreckage from him (he lay face downward and hl3 un changing luck had decreed that he was pinned In such a way that he had escaped visible injury) I was about to turn him over, when Tarry seized my hand and dragged me in the op posite direction. For the moment. I had no impulse to go back and play the part either of good Samaritan or of Nemesis. What I had to say to him could be said later, and curiosity gripped me. "How did it happen the accident, I mean?" I said. Just whore the roads fork we heard a fast motor coming up behind us, and a man'avolce very like yours; I am sure he thought it was you. He lost his head and took the wrong road, while I draw out my handker chief as a signal, in case it was you for I knew you would follow us. This road is quite unfit for motors, and. though we were not going fast, sud deniy a tire burst, the car ran up a bank, turned a complete somersault back into the road, hurling me into thiti hedge, while be was under the car. I think It happened ages ago for fainted." "Tarry," I said quietly, "what have you been up to that the fellow should dare to take the liberty of running away with you?" "You would go away, Frank, to your dear friend Bob, and I told you Major Colllngwood was worrying mo and refused to believe that we liked each other." "Tarry, you're'a flirt," I said, with conviction. "A decent girl shows her lovo for the man she is engaged to so plainly that" Tarry looked wisely at me some how I thoughtof Elsa; in some thlugs women are very much alike. "His new racing car only came last night," she said, "and he begged me to have breakfast early and go out for a trial spin in It. I tried to get out of it, but my hostess backed him up, so at last I gave In. But we had barely started when he told me coolly that, ub I didn't seem to know my own mind he had made It up for me iiul he was taking me straight to town ho had the special marriage license in his pocket! But he couldn' make me, you know. And I was pray ing that you might see us from the gables, when we passed you In the road, and I did everything I could to delay him so that you might come up with us, but It was no good. In the villages I triad again and again to get out, and begged the people to help me, but he only laughed, and said his wife was nervous! His wlfe-1 So nobody dared to help me!" "Cowards! ' I said. "Think of It, Frank, that the worst brutality used by a man to a woman Is uot Interfered with because she Is his wife!" "Much motoring hath made him mad," I said. "Uvea if he got you safely to town, what could he do? And he must have known there would be a hue and cry raised after you." "He reckoned on the scandal on my not facing It, I mean," said Tarry. "You are a very proud person, Frank supposing you had refused to take me back." The tearB had made 'two clean run nels down her cheeks. It was almost Impossible to recognise in her one of the daintiest little girls that ever lived, and, Inwardly, I vowed that If I ever bought an automobile, her looks should not be sacrificed to either reckless conceit or the manu facturer's advantage. "Frank," she said, "I've heard women say It's heaven going at that terrific speed but It's just hell, and the wind tears the breath out of your throat. It's mad, it's brutal, It's wicked for men to build, and men to drive, such things just to cut one another out " "In other things than speed," I said. "Well, it was boldly planned, and but for Toby might have suc ceeded." "Toby?" cried the girl, startled. I took the wire out of my pocket and gave It to her. She gasped as she read it. "Oh! the scoundrel!" she cried, and clenched her fists. "Tarry," I said, "prepare for a shock. Major Colllngwood abducted you, not because he loved you so much as because he loved your money more. I am rich myself, so your for tune Is no serious drawback to you In my eyes. But Colllngwood spends alt his money on automobiles 'and wants more " Tarry turned an Indignant shoul der on me. and I put my arm around it, and said in her ear: "So it was not wise of you to put such a temptation in his way " "Temptation?" " or good form to be racing about the country with one man Spread of the Tip Graft. Millions Paid Yearly to Porters and Waiters. One Custom We've Borrowed From Europe to Our Own Disadvantage Pullman Employes Alone Get $2,000,000 a Year Easy Money Made In Hotels Bctere-eeeree ctrt.-r-r'r--T' ! Witch Doctors. while engaged to another." "But all the women do it " "Yes but then you see you are the woman." "I was angry with you for going away," she whispered, "and though I'm not a motor-maniac I'm afraid to be for once that mad fever got Into my veins. I'd never settle down or make any home for you worth having. In moderation, I like it the incredible ease of movement, the swallow-like sensation, the exhilara tion; so you shall buy me a car. sir. but not a racing one, when when" and she impudently pinched my chin instead of completing her sen tence. "Tarry," I said, "don't you think you look far nicer with all your fril lies on, sewing under a tree in your garden, than as you do now?" "It is all you men care for frills," she said. "Do you do you think he is dead? I I'm afraid to look!" I started, the sheer Inhumanity of the thing, leaving him untended yon der while we laughed and talked to gether, struck me with sudden force, and I turned hurriedly back. Tarry following at a distance. At the bend of the road I drew a deep breath of relief. Colllngwood was sitting In the hedge, his attitude ono of deepest dejection as he gazed at the masB of wreckage before him. "All's fair In love and war," he said, airly, as I came up; "you've won, and be hanged to you. There," and he pointed to the smashed car, goes 1200 and there," he pointed to Tarry, "goes the only woman I ever wanted to marry." "Aud there is 'Mie horse that brought me," I said. "It I give you a leg up can you ride to the nearest doctor?" for I saw by the way his left arm hung at his side that it was broken. Ho nodded and got up. Shaken and grimed as he was beaten, too, in his mad enterprise the old reck less light still showed In bis eyes as. having mounted, he turned in the saddle and looked at the motor. "I'll send you these pieces," he said, then looked at Tarry. "Of all the little devils to run away with" he said, then was gone, while I shouted after him to return the horse to Bob Fansbawe, to which he yelled back that he would. For a moment we listened to those galloping, retreating hoofs, then I said: "Tarry, there must be no more of these accidents. When will you mar ry me?" "When you like!" MttjtMft "To-morrow?" "O! yes yes only take me where I cau get some tea!" The Bystander. The manner In which the people of the United States are borrowing the tipping habit from Europe Is a matter for grave concern. Take the case of your smiling friend the Pullman por ter. Do you know that the dimes and quartern and half dollars given him by our traveling public every year amount to more than $2,000,000 and that we present him with $6000 every morning before breakfaat? Let's figure It out. There are about 8000 porters la the employ of the Pullman company. If the total amount received by each of them was a dollar a day, that would be $8000. But In order to make allow ance for time off and for stingy or frugal travelers who give little or nothing suppose we knock off a cou ple of thousand dollars every morn ing. That would make $6000 a day, or $2,t90,000 for the year. This generosity on the part of the traveling public would be all right If the porters got the benefit of it. But they do not. Cnder present con ditions the tips are merely another source of profit for the Pullman com pany. One would suppose that all the timo of a grown up man, In most instances with a family to support, would at least be worth $10 a week, or $40 a month, to a concern earning millions of dividends. But the por ter gets only $2 5 a month, and is left to get the remainder from the pub lic. Therefore the Pullman company, on account of tips given to its em ployes, makes a saving of $15 per month on each of them, amouuting to $120,000, or $1,440,000 a year. After the thousands of passengers arriving at their destination In this country every morning turn over $6000 to the Pullman porters, they give away another thousand to sta tion boys who carry their bags out from the trains. Before they get comfortably settled down to the breakfast table another donation of $2000 or so is made to hack drivers. Then the waiters proceed to "get theirs." After the porters no other class of servants depends so much upon tips as the waiters. In many of the large establish ments in the cities the attendants have a perfectly organized system for securing and sharing the proceeds they get from the public. One way of working it is this: When you enter the dining room for a first meal at a hotel the head waiter places you at a table and then watches carefully when you leave to see It you fee the waiter. If you leave some change the head waiter claims part of It. It the one who attended you should re fuse to divide, the next time you en ter the dining room you will be put at some other table, presided over by a "square man." Sometimes the only way a waiter can get prompt service In the kitchen for a favored guest is to "see" the server. Thus, when you leave a quar ter under the edge of your plate It does not always go Into the pocket of the man who attended you, as you might suppose, but Is distributed among a number of employes with whom you do not come In contact. If you fall to leave any change under, your plate and remain at that hotel for any length of time you will be likely to receive scant consideration, for the servants will be busy looking after those people who are not nb eeutmindud when they finish their meal. One hotel proprietor tells this ex perience he had with a new waiter who came to his place. The new man :auie on at the breakfast hour, and In the course of time way set to wait upon the manager without knowing who he was. Instead of serving a imall cup of cream for the coffee he brought milk with it. The manager laid to him: "Here, take this milk back and bring mo somo cream." 'We havo no cream," said the new comer. The surprised manager looked up at him quickly and said: 'Like thunder you haven't. I am the manager of this place, and I just tfix Miracle and Medicine in Brittany. By W. C. FITZ-GMALD. M i SI I I AND .UK. checked in a hundred gallons of cream not more than twenty minutes ago." With genuine embarrassment the new recruit replied: "Oh, I didn't know you were the manager; I'll bring It at once, sir." The motive was to please; certain regular custom ers of the dining room, who made a practice of tipping, by keeping a lib eral quantity of cream In reserve for them, giving ordinary patrons milk with their coffee. The barbers In the large establish' ments of the cities are also well or ganized for securing tips. Most of them work on percentage and have all kinds of extra things they try to sell each customer. The man who does not give ten cents above the regular tariff Is an unwelcome cus tomer in most of the big shops. The up to date barber "educates" his customers to the Idea of tipping. He begins a friendly line of talk and tells you confidentially that things are going pretty bad with him.' He will likely say: "Do you have any idea what wages they pay in this place? They pay so little that It it were uot for the tips we get wc could not pay rent and provide for our fam ilies. Of course, nearly everybody, that comes In here gives us some thing, so we manage to worry along." By such means the barber makes his customer understand that something extra Is expected. If a good "edu cator" opens up on you and you fail to take the hint, you had better look for another shop. A dodge which is worked with uni versal success by many crafty ton sorlal artists is the soiled towel trick. In order to Induce his customers to buy shampoos he keeps a towel at hand the corner of which is very, grimy. When you get in his chair he passes this over your head, then shows you the dirt, which did not come from your hair at all, but off the heel of his boot. As he flashes the soiled towel he will say: " Lota of dirt In your hair. Better let mo wash It out," and In nine cases out of ten the unsuspecting victim will say "go ahead," when he probably doesn't need a shampoo at all. Once when the writer was discuss ing tips with a foreigner he made the following explanation of why it is done in Europe: "It is merely a lit tle cash concession made to men who have to labor at tasks not quite worthy of human dignity. It is not. It you think of It, quite worthy of human dignity that a man should spend his life in setting down baked meats on a board for other men to eat. This is why we have invented tips, to reconcile men to perform menial offices with an appearance of contentment." Any self-respecting man " who works for his living ought to resent such an attitude as this. Honest labor of any kind, even of a personal character, can be dignlfled if it Is done In a dignified way. The functions of the waiter and the barber are necessary parts of our living. We are all more or less de pendent on one another, and tho most menial service is respectable If done In a respectable manner. Here is a chance for organized labor to assert itself. Receiving chance gratuities in the place of salaries is neither dig nified nor profitable, but It is demor alizing. The particular classes of labor that receive tips should stand together and refuse to take them. They should demand wages in keep ing with the service they render. That taking chance tips instead of receiving an adequate salary is not profitable is shown by the condition of affairs abroad. In those countries where the tipping system has been in vogue the longest labor Is the most debased. In Berlin one is even ex pected to tip the street car conductor. In Vienna one must fee the janitor who lets him la or out of his own house at night. Practice has made this so universal that It is almost as binding as it it were law. New York Sun. This item of veran in floating around. Credited to the Expreaa (iaaette. but ea what city, or the name of the uncrowned laureate, son of man knoweth not to thkt dav. The name of the mapireil writer annum be written in lettera of gold op in the Hall of Fame. I'm the beat pal that I ever had, I like to be with me: I like to ait and tell mvseh Things confidentially. Genesis of Burdett-Coutts' Fortune. The death of the Baroness Burdett- Coutts throws one's thoughts back to the lady from whom she inherited her riches. Helen Mellon's career Is one of the romances of the stage. From a stroling player she became first, the bride of the leading English banker of his day, and, subsequently, Duchess of St. Albans. In Sir Walter Scott's journal for 1825 Is an account of a visit paid by Mrs. Coutts to Ab- botsford, with the duke, her suitor, in her train. We may gain some ldeu of how people traveled In the. pre- rallway era when we read that the wealthy widow for this Scottish tour required no fewer than seven car riages. With three only of these she came to Abbotsford. Sir Walter was evidently interested in the forthcoming union, which, like a more recent union, had Its critics. On November 25 he writes: "Mrs. Coutts, with the Duke of Bt. Albans and Lady Charlotte Beauclerk, called to take leave of us. When at Abbots ford his suit throvo but coldly. , . Shi had refused him twice and de cidedly. . . . What then? If the duke marries her he ensures an Immense fortune; If she marries him she had the first rank. If he marries a woman older than himself by. twen ty years, she marries a man younger In wit by twenty degrees." Sir Wal ter, very shrewdly, goes to the heart of the matter. Eighteen months later Mrs. CouttB became the duchess, a dignity enjoyed by her for ten years. Columbia University was chartered as King's College in 1764. The name was changed to Columbia College in 1784 and Columbia University in Japan In Australia. I can corroborate your correspond ent, Mr. H. P. Lyne, in his statement :oncerning tho successful navigation by the Japanese navy of one of the most difficult harbor entrances in the world Port Melbourne, Australia. Some six or seven years ago my husband and I were lunching with u well-known Melbourne family, and the daughter of tho bouse turned to me and said: "We had such a jolly surprise a lew weeks ago, Mrs. VII Uers. One of the Japanese battle ships came into harbor, quite un known to anybody, during the night, and after the usual salaams sent round invitations for the most rip ping dances and things." I looked across at my husband, for he and I had often talked over Jap an's intentions toward Australia, and replied: "One day, I'm afraid, you will wake up to find invitations Is sued for quite another ripping sort of dance." Of course, they all laughed at me then; but, on our re turn to England, my husband, lectur ing on Kangarooland, said, practi cally, all that your correspondent does in warning about the knowledge possessed by Japau of that now more or less wasted laud of milk and honey Australia. Letter to Londou Daily Mail. Til Una n Likes Roses. At his home in South Carolina Sen ator Tillman Is famous as a gardener. He produces, among other things, the best asparagus and the finest roues to be found anywhere in the State. Like other South Carolina farmers, Tillman raises corn and cotton. These are staple products of that region. Lately Tillman has made a specialty of cultivating asparagus for the early Northern markets, and his Income from this source is considerable. The cultivation of roses amounts tj pas sion with the pitchfork advocate. In bis home garden he has no less than MO varieties ot them. -The Pilgrim. Greenhorns as Inventors. In 1827 a carpeuter of Sandwich, Mass., wanting a piece of glass of a peculiar size and shape, conceived the idea that the molten metal could be pressed Into any form, much the same as lead might be. Up to that time all glassware had been blown, either offhand or In a mold, and con siderable skill was required and the process was slow. The glass manu facturers laughed at the carpenter, but he went ahead and built a press, and now the United States is tho greatest pressed glassware country In the world. In 1890 a novice In the plate glass Industry, Henry Fleckner, of Pitts burg, whose only knowledge ot glass had been acquired In a window glass factory, invented an annealing "lehr," the most important single improvement ever introduced in plate glass manufacture. In three hours by the lehr the same work Is done which under the old kiln system re quired three days. In four years the importations of foreign crown and plate glass Into the United States fell In value from $2,000,000 to $200,000. About the same year Philip Argo bast, of Pittsburg, also a novice in glassmaklng. Invented a prooeas by which bottles and Jars may be made entirely by machinery, the costly blow-over process being avoided and the expense of bottlemaklng reduced one-half. The result has been that more bottles and Jars are used in a month now than in twelve months ten years ago. Cosmopolitan. Where Giant Cabbages Grow. The soil ot Culm Is very fruitful. Cabbages grow so large that heads weighing twenty pounds each are common. All vegetable do well. Radishes are ready for the table within from fourteen to eighteen days utter sowing, lettuce In fire week biter sowing, while corn produce three crop eaoa year. The mixture of medlrine and mlra le I familiar to us In books of travel lealtng with remote and ssvage re Jlons, such as Zululand, Morocco, islatlc Turkey and China, where the amlly "practitioner" squats by the oadslde selling amulets and charms, ove philtres, mysterious protection .gainst invisible enemies, and cures or all Ills, even more weird thao hose of the witches in "Macbeth." But who would look for witch and vizard doctors at this day in civilized France? It need hardly be said that heir habitat la beautiful old Brittany that paradise of artists, where the vorld has stood still for centuries and ill conditions of life are in some re- '.perts as backward as they were in he twilight days of King Arthur and lis knights. Even the marriage cere- ! uonles, with their barbaric open air ! 'easts and dances and the queer 'pursuit" of the bride, are survivals ' if paganism when marriage by cap- j ure was In vogue. The Bretons speak a tongue of j heir own, and In many villages of he Department of Morblhan French is entirely unknown. Everywhere MM comes across quaint old manners md customs, for the people arc filled with superstition and cling to the manners of their forefathers wltb nosltlve fanaticism. This Is nowhere more In evidence .nan In the matter of the village doc ;or or doctress grave persons la ionic in speech, and supposed to be 'Hied with all knowledge ot the leavens and the earth and thlngi '.hat are under the earth. In villages like Concarnau or love y old Quimperle one meets the Breton maglclan-doctor at his best It may be the patient is a flshermac ,vho haB badly sprained his back on a 'ugger. and knows no peace until the loctor Is sent for. The treatment id many cases is given In the open air, :or a number ot reasons. First, the 'oars and yells of the victim, much llmlnlshed by space, do not so great J distress his relatives; and, more iver, the scene draws a small crowd it respectful spectators who are vast ly impressed by the wonderful skill or occult knowledge of tho operator. The wizard doctor of Brittany hat to "bedside manner" to speak of He Is sent for for a specific object, i nil strives to attain this in the most In--, i and vigorous manner posalulo. well knowing that unless his herb po lions are appallingly nauseous and drastic in result and his bone setting i matter of agony little faith would e put In him and his payments ic rash and kind would dwindle to th vanishing point as murmurs against ais feeble methods slipped from vil lage to village. A matter like neuralgia, being dif ficult to cure in any showy or dra matic manner, calls for the "magic 'wand," with much cabalistic mutter 'ng and "laying on of hands," more or less after the manner of the apos- les. Some of these go-called doctors 'inqunstlonably have a rude notion ol boue setting, aud their treatment of iprnins and simple fractures, al though causing intense pain to the patient, undoubtedly attains its ob ject. The women doctors are usually old, with a primitive knowledge of the effects of certain herbs upon the system, and their specialty is the treatment of children and women. Their methods would excite dismay in New York, London or Paris, but a most touching and implicit faith is put in them, even when they act as dentists by the old string and chair method. Fees are frequently paid in grain, hay, native costumes and sil ver ornaments, but tho women also often pay the witch doctors by means ot their own hair. It should be explained that there is a regular hair harvest In Brittany, and the girls and women do not mind much parting with their back tresses, because the native Breton bonnet conceals the loss. The doctors also practice a certain kind of hypnotism, especially in the case ot nervous affections, and fre quently succeed In persuading a pa tient (even with blows, curses and contumely) that there Is nothing at all the matter with him, and that he ought to be ashamed ot himself giv ing up work these hard times and causing anxiety to his friends and relatives! Mud poultices, cats' fur, dogs' hair, human blood, parchment with mys terious words written on it these are some ot the "remedies" which the quack doctors of Brittany commonly use, and which are believed in by the patients with tho faith that moveth mountains. The more successful of these village practitioners employ as sistants, especially in dislocation cases, where the patient Is likely to put up a stout resistance to the dras tic and painful methods employed to put the bone back Into Its place. In some of the very smallest ot Breton villages, however, the man or woman doctor adoptB this honora ble profession only as occasion may arise, and as a kind ot "side line." Thus it may be a small farmer or an old woman who keeps a tiny store both ot them with an hereditary knowledge and a taste for the cure of Ills. It must be borne In mind that even these "occasional" doctorsenjoy their meed of respect and local renown, and are frequently called upou to cure a sick baby or growing child, or even to treat an adult person with strange drugs of tbelr own brewing, ot course entirely unknown to the pharmacopoeia, and seriously applied. For the physician in most cases be lie, es as implicitly In the treatment as the patient himself; the tor aer has seen these weird remedies ap plied alt the days of his life, and well knows they Have come down from time immemorial. It is the doctor, too, who Is fre quently employed as a "go-between" in Initialing the elaborate and com plicated ceremonies that mark Breton wedding. New York Tribune. I often ait and aak me if I ahnuldn't or I ahould. And I find that my advice to me la always pretty good. I never ant acquainted Wild MvaelF till hers of late. And I find myself a bully chum, I treat me aimply great. I talk with me and walk with me And ahow me right and wrong. I never knew how well myeelf And me could get nlong. I never try to cheat me, I'm aa truthful aa can be; No matter what may come and go, I'm on the aquare with me. It'a great to know youraetf and have A pal that's all your own; To be auch company for yourself You're never left alone. You'll try to dodge the maaaea. And you'll find a crowd's a joke. If von only treat yourself as well As you treat other folk. I've made a study of myself, .? Cotttpersfl with me the lot, And 1 ve finallv concluded I'm the best friend that I've got. Just gel together with vouraelf And trust yourself with you, Ami on'll lie surprised how well yourself Will like you if vou do. Lots of women grow old before their time trying to keep young. New Orleans Picayune. "Is Maude taking a day off to cele brate her birthday?" "No; she's tak ing a year off." Boston Transcript. "You surely don't meet them o clally." "Oh, no; only to have a good time, you know." Los Angele News. "My face is my fortune.' said Angelina Brown. Said Isabel Smith, "To be sure. You are not to blame; and, beaides, we all know It isn't a crime to be poor." Life. "How many children have you?" "Two living and one writing jokes for a daily paper." Cleveland Leader. Redd "I see they have a new dance, called the automobile dance." Greene "Is it a breakdown?" Yonkers Statesman. Church "How are the New York ers on the transportation question?." Gotham "Oh, they stand pretty, well." Yonkers Statesman. "Don't curse muh, George," pleads ed the heroine, shrilly. "He couldn't If he wanted to," the villain snick ered; "he's forgotten his lines." s Puck. "That handsome Jack Savage) kissed me last night." "I thought he would. He told me he felt sw fully sorry for you." Cleveland Plain Dealer. All lawyers like to take a rest, i Like moat of ua, and still J The average lawyer's happiest " When wormng wun a win. Philadelphia Press. Farmer Wayback "Here's a col umn In the dally paper headed 'The People's Forum.' " His Wife "For who, Silas? Why don't you read on 7" New Orleans Times-Democrats1 Jones "Do you believe there 1 safety in numbers?" Skorcher-Af "Sure; whenever I'm exceeding th speed limit I hang some other chap'; number on the back of my auto!" Life. " 'Rastus, you look as If you had been run through a cider mill. What' the matter with your faco?" "Ovah confidence, suh." "Overconfldence?" "Yes, suh. Ovahconfldence In my, lalgs. I thought I could call a man a Hah, an' git away an' I didn't git away, suh." Chicago Tribune. These Men Are Needed. Workers. Progressive men. Men of gumption. Men who have no time to croak. Farmers who can organize and lead. Men who believe in new enter prises. Farmers who believe that farming pays. Solid business men with a farm training. Men who will develop the social life of the town. Men who will develop the horn) market. Hustlers who will combine West ern push with Eastern shrewdness. Men who love the boII and are not ashamed of their calling. Men who take pride In their town and try to advance its welfare. Men who will practice and teach the business end of farming. Men who are not afraid to do their duty when holding local office. Men who will save and work, aa they would In the West, to succeed. Men who believe that, everything considered, their owu State la good enough for them, and as good as any other section of the wide earth. American Cultivator. Why Animals Fatten. Why do some animals atore up tat mora readily than others? An Eng lish professor claims that animals) having small lungs fatten easiest. H says: "The disappearance of food from, the system of an animal is ow ing to a combustion ot the food by, moans of the ulr taken by the lung. The oxygen which, has once entered the system never again escapes from It without being united either wltb part ot the body or ot the food." That is, large lungs burn up or breathe away the food, while small lungs cave It. This theory has a plausible sound and is supported la auch Illustrations as that ot tht pig. with its small lungs and large fatten ing powers, in contrast with the horse, which has the opposite quali ties, but there seem to he various objections to the general tateuvwt. ,