r . The Young Tramp. A Story Showing That Persons Are Not Always What They Seem. W. R. ROSE, In Cleveland Plain Dealer. The old man turned an ashen face '. Ho closed his eyes and the smile toward his companion. -It's no use, boy," he thickly said. j i can't go any further." "Yes, you can." the younger man told him. "Here, brace up. None of that." He caught the old man by the shoulders and steadied him. "That's all right," the old man said. "You're a good boy. You've stuck by the old man like a son. No Hon would have done as much. No son would have stuck to such a battered an' disreputable old hulk. You're a flue lad a fine lad." He rubbed his hand confusedly across his eyes. "Come," said the young man, sharply, and drew him forward. "We can't stop here In this lonely place. Come." But the old man's strength was spent. His weary feet could not bear the collapsing frame any further. He stretched out his shaking hand. "I can't see," he said. "Where are we, boy?" ' "We are on a lonely part of the highway," the young man told him. "There's no house In sight." "We should be almost there," mut tered the old man. "I I could find the way If It wasn't so dark. Where are you, boy?" "Here," cried the young man. "My arm Ib about you. Try to bear up a little further. Come, lean on me. Lean hard." He half carried the old man a few feet further. But he could put no life into the drooping form. "I I wanted to get home," sobbed the old man. "The prodigal knocks at the gate. A vagabond, an Idler, a worthless wreck, a feeder of swine the prodigal is fainting at the gate. There Is no father at whose feet I may kneel - no mother to see my shame. Boy, look to the right is there not a tiny graveyard on the hillside?" "Yes," the young man answered. Yes, I see the white stones." "The father is there, the mother Is there. No one is left save the prodi gal's brother. But I ask no odds of him no odds." His head drooped, his body slipped down a little in the young man's grasp. "Stand up, I tell you," cried the young man. "Come, pull yourself to gether. Don't give up. The house you seek can't be much further along the road. Here, here. Look at me. Now step off. One-two-three. Curse those fellows who stole my flask! Don't do that!" His voice was almost a roar. His arm tightened about the old vaga bond. He looked up and down the roadway, but ho human being was in sight. "Let me down," murmured the old man. "I'm tired, 30 tired." His voice suddenly grew plaintive. "It's a long walk to the mill a long walk. But father Is pretty sure to pick me up on the way. Hark, I hear the wheels. He's coming, he's com ing." The young man looked about him despairingly. Then he lifted the frail old form In his arms and laid it on the grass at the roadside, under a spreading oak. He quickly drew off his coat and folded It and placed it beneath the gray head. The vagabond faintly smiled. His seamed and sunken face took on a peaceful expression. "Let me sleep," he muttered; "let me sleep." Thr young man drew himself erect and looked up and down the roadway once more. And now he saw some body approaching. A light wagon drawn by a single horse had appeared from around the bend In the road way. "The wheels," murmured the old man, "the wheels." The younger man ran out In the roadway and waved big tattered hat. The speed of the horse was quick ened. A moment later he made out the driver to be a woman and she was alotie. The woman, she was only a girl, stared at the young man sharply as she reined in the horse. He was dusty and unkempt and unshaved, a shabby figure in the yellow dust of the high way. "What do you want?" she asked. "There Is an old man lying here at the roadside," he answered, and pointing toward the vagabond. "He Is exhausted and In a serious condi tion. He needs shelter and a doc tor." She turned the howe from the roadway, lightly leaped to the ground and ran to the recumbent figure. A moment later she knelt beside It. "Poor man, poor man," she mur mured, and pushed the matted gray hair from the wrinkled forehead. Then without looking up she added, "There la a brook Just beyond the fence. Fill your hat with water." The young man was away In a mo ment, and he was back almost as quickly. He knelt beside her and held the dripping hat. The girl dipped her handkerchief In the liquid and gently bathed the pale face and the gray bead. Then the old man opened his eyes nnii stared up at the face so near bm. A faint smile softened the rugged features. "Mlllicent," he murmured. The girl asped. She gave the young man a startled glance. "Mlllicent was my mother's name," he whispered. "Who Is this old man what la hit name?" The young man shook hit head I don't know." he whispered In "turn. "I met him yesterday-on the road. He seemed Very anxious to reach a house near here." "Mlllicent," murmured' the old ?.au . "Don't ,0 'wn)r- Im "wing , back In a moment. Father It calling me. See, ho U taking flown the faded from Ji is white face "He must be moved at once," said the girl as she quickly rose. "My home Is just beyond the bend. Can we get blm Into the wagon?" "Yes, yes," the young man an swered. "Drive as close to him as you can." A moment later the young stranger stooped and lifted the aged form and placed it in the box of the wagon. Then he put' the coat under the gray head and straightened the feeble limbs. "Go on," he said. "1 will walk be side the wagon." She drove Blowly, avoiding the bad places in the road, and doing her best to make the journey an easy one. Presently they reached the bend of the roadway and a substantial farm house was Been a little ways beyond. The girl drove up the driveway to the side porch. A stout woman ran out from a rear door. "Anna," said the girl, "this is a sick man who needs our help. Heat some water at once." The stout woman turned without a word and hurried into the kitchen. The girl stepped to the porch. The young man picked up the sick wan derer and the girl led the way Into the house. An airy bedroom on the ground floor was given up to the strange guest, and the young man prepared him for the comfortable bed. Then the girl brought the hot water and a stimulant, and In a little while' the heavy eyelids parted and the weary eyes looked around. The old man drew a deeD breath and pushed his wasted hand across the coverlid towards his companion of the road. "Home," he whispered; "home!" men ms eyes closed again. Pres ently the girl went out and a mo ment later the young man Joined her. "He has fallen Into a stupor," he .to do and the doctor says It will not 1 be long. And and you must not worry about my appearance." The girl's face reddened.. "I should not have said what 1 did this morning," she murmured. "It was unkind." "No, no," he protested. "I did not take it that way. I thought It a kindness. It showed an interest In my welfare. It was a gentle reproof, a reproof that I fully deserved not one that I could question. But hark, I hear my patient." For three days and nights the tramp watched beside the vagabond. They were days of weariness and sleepless nights. The old man was restless and at times delirious. But the tramp's voice soothed him, the tramp's strong hands held htm when his mind wandered. On the third morning he was on the porch when the girl came down stairs. -Tho sun wag clearing the fringe of woods on the eastern hills. The girl looked at his haggard face. He nodded gravely. "He passed away Ju3t at daybreak." There was a brief silence. "Quietly?" she asked. "Yes. He came out of his stupor and knew me. I saw that he wanted to say something. As I bent down a smile broke across his face. He whis pered 'home' and was gone." The girl turned away. Presently she came back. There were tears in her eyes. "Was it well for him to go?" she half asked. "It was well." She came a little nearer. "You must rest," she said, with a catch in her voice. "You have done too much. When you have had your breakfast you must go to bed and stay there." "No," he protested. "After I have my breakfast I will be myself again. There Is something to be done. You will need me. I helped to bring you this burden, I mean to stay until until all is over. Tell me what to do." As usual he had his way, and two days later all the arrangements being completed, brief services were held In the house, and then the casket was was carried by six elderly men, neigh bors and fellow churchmen of the absent father, down the lane, and across the field, and a little ways up the sunny hillside, where the new made grave awaited its tenant. 3 , The Ultimate Reality. 1 conceive or God, philosophically, as the bringing to gether of thought and things. On the cosmic scale Ho brings together the mind and the world into the unity of knowledge. In the social and human sphere He brings men together in the bond of love. Behind mind and matter, then, I recognize this third wonder. I see that the soul can not exist apart from the world, nor the world from the soul. I see that what requires ultimate explanation is neither the soul nor the world, but the blending together of both; and then by the clear light of this thought I read the truth that the ultimate reality is One who includes both, and by the power of a natural Impulse the Hps utter the name of God. A final doubt crosses the mind. What if this Ultimate Reality be otherwise unknowable? Unknowable! Of all the truths In this universe it is the very truth we know most thoroughly, most intimate, most constanly. It Is the light of all our seeing. This blending together of thought and things unknowable? Why, we ourselves are Just such a blending together of thought and things. That is accurately what It means to be a self, an ego, a person, and I know it In every moment of my self-conscious existence. The blend ing together of a mind that thinks with something it thinks about makes a Self, and such a self am I. When, therefore, we have got so far as to believe that the Ultimate Reality In the universe is also a blending together of thought and things, It is but a step to the conclusion that this Reality is a Self, a Person, a Spirit, embracing the world. Law rence P. Jacks, M. A. 0 9 0 9 0 9 9 9 0 3 0 3 0 3 3 0 3 0 a t a 9 a 0 3 0, 0 9 0 3 0 3 0 9 9 3 9 9 0 3 0 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 9 3 1 said. "I do not think there will be any Immediate change." The girl looked at him with trou bled eyes. "No doubt you have guessed that this man is my father's brother," she said. "He was always of a wayward disposition. He embittered his fa ther, he quarreled with bis brother. But this door has never been ehut against him, and I am trying to do Just what my father would do if ho were here." "And when does your father re turn?" "Not for ten days. He is looking at some timber lands at a consider able distance from the railroad." "And there is no man you can rely upon?" "There Is no one near at hand, but we will get along somehow." He took his threadbare coat from the wagon and slipped It on. ""Then you will let me stay." "No, no," she said hurriedly. "We have no claim on you." "I am going to stay," he said firm ly. "It will not be for long. A man la needed here. The wanderer likes me. I can handle him better than a stranger could." She looked at his dusky garb, his unshaven and grimy face. "You are very kind to this straager," Bhe slowly said, "but are you kind to yourself?" He flushed a little at this. "No doubt I treat myself quite as wel at I deserve to be treated," bo said. "But here, who Is going for the doctor? I think you can' be better spared." She was back with the old doctor in a little while. She had met him on the roadway. They found the young man sitting beside the wan derer. A liberal use ot water had freshened his appearance. "Thore ht been no change," he said, as the doctor approached. The old physician looked at him disapprovingly. Then he turned to his patient. When he went out be shook his gray head. "It's a hopeless collapse," he said He looked around. The young man was not In sight. "Where's the tramp?" he asked. UoHn I . - .... 7' w .B8la lnejhome. All those wasted hours were "n3 i te.red "!T P0rch- 1 ceneB' h th M lover-and he w.n?ittliri wSro.,,,M" "usgled on with palsied feU I find Bv .tinned i?t K . comfort in this thought. Homeless They stepped into the driveway. and frlendlost. this seared old heart Pretty soon the doctor came back, .tin held Its childlike lov, for home "You can trust this vagabond." he And when he passed away there was said to the girl In his gruff way. ,m,ie upon his face and a single i-nVw"0" - 1 ooks. word upon his lips. That word was I'll take the responsibility for him." home. Ood grant, friends, that when . uc o. sieppea into ms We, too. shall be called awsy, that Phaeton. "I have given him full ln- .mlu m, ,,. ou, tacfi .,' J cry be on our Hps." There was a little silence, and then the group about the grave slowly dli Ahead of the casket walked the young pastor and behind it came the girl. A group of the neighbors followed, and a few more of the church people, and last of all walked the tramp. But there was a great change In his appearance. Renovated garments and clean linen and the use of the razor, had brought an almost start ling improvement in his looks. His ruddy countenance had faded and his rough hair he walked bare headed had been smoothed and dis ciplined. When the arrangements were completed he had gone to the village two miles away and there brought about his improvement. Wheu he returned to the farm the services were about to commence and he waited on the porch, quite hidden from those within. When the casket was set down the people drew a little farther away, and the young pastor uttered a fervent prayer. Then he looked about. "It Is a pltful thing," he slowly Bald, "that none of us knew this man. Even she who is of the same blood had never seen him till he crossed her father's threshold, the threshold he was not to recross alive. The only person present who knew aught in a personal way of the departed is the stranger who supported his frail body and soothed his last moments. Per haps this stranger has a message for us, a message in which we may take comfort and find Hope. Will you speak to us, brother?" The tramp came forward and stood by the open grave. He hesitated a moment. "In the face of this mystery of nfyeterles," he slowly began,' "it would be presumption for me to sug gest any lesson In this man's life, to find any moral In his garnered years. We are not here to pass Judgment, not here to find moral comfort. We are here only to fay farewell to this that wbb our brother. I knew him but a little time. I knew him only as a child a wayward child that bad grown weary with Btraylng. The heart of the child still fluttered in that shriveled breast. Think ot this, friends, when you recall his barren Ufa A r A 1I1.A (ha .l.aJ V. 1 1 J . I-- auu t.aiv .mw ...vti I'UIIU W lit' U the night is coming on, be longed for As the tramp followed the others the girl fell into step beside him. She was softly crying and they crossed the field in silence. "Thank you for that and for everything," she presently murmered. And they walked on in silence. As they neared the lane the young man Btarted. "There Is a man I believe I know," he said. "He must have come for me." "Come for you?" cried the girl, and she suddenly laid her hand on his arm, "Only as a friend," he quickly said. "Walsworth!" he called. The man ahead of them turned back. His face was red. He had been crying. He put out his hand to the tramp. "Jim Arden," he abruptly said. "I've been crying. I followed you up there on the hillside, and that pathetic scene and your talk was too much for me." "Miss Alice Wayne," said the young man, "Mr. John Walsworth." The girl looked from the handsome and well dressed stranger to the pale and shabby tramp. "And now," she said to the new comer, "will you kindly make me ac quainted with your friend," The stranger stared at the girl, and then at his friend. "Miss Wayne," he said, "permit me to present Mr. John Arden, author, essayist, painter in local colors, lover of nature, amateur tramp. He Is to be the new editor ot the Columbian, a place I am here to offer him. I have brought the garments of civ ilization with me, and when he as sumes them he will put oft the char acter of the vagabond, I hope, for ever. " The girl drew a quick breath. "I am very glad." she said, with a quick glance at the young man. "I did my best to make him sae the folly of the idle and wasteful life he was leading." The newcomer, looked at her with smiling admiration. "Jim can't refuse to stay reformed, and take my editorship, after that," ho said. A little later the girl and the young man were alone. He had lin gered to say goodby. "Alice," he said, "sorrow has drawn us together Joy mustn't sep arate us. May I come back soon?" She gave him her hand. "Yes," she answered. C ,3 1 A 1 HotKPHoirii mtm t?i tsj0j Russian Fuddinff. Beat up two eggg In a pint of milk; the whites and yolks must be whisked separately. Add to this two ounces of bread crumbs, two ounces of finely mopped Buet, the grated rind of one I lemon, half an ounce of chopped clt ! ron peel, two tablcspoonfuls brown ! sugar, five tablcspoonfuls golden ! sirup. Boat to a stiff cream. I Fill a well buttered dish with the i mixture, cover with buttered paper ana steam for two hours and a half. Serve with sweetened white sauce flavored with vanilla extract. New York Press. Coffee. The following directions for pre paring coffee as they prepare It at the Waldorf-Astoria, are given in the Na tlonal Food Magazine: Allow one ta blespoonful of coffee to each person. The coffee whon ground should be measured, put In the pot and boiling water poured over it in the propor tion of three-quarters of a pint to each tablespoonful. The instant it bolls take the pot off, uncover and let it stand a mlnuto or two; thvn cover, put it back on tho lire and boil again. Let it stand for five minutes to settle; It is then ready to pour out. rfesscj Chickens. Boil a chicken In as little water as possible till the bones slip out and the other portions are soft. Remove the skin and fat, pick the meat apart and mix white and dark meat. Sea son the liquor highly with salt, pjep per, celery and a little lemon Juice. Boll down to one cupful and add a little gelatine to make It Jelly. But ter a mold or oblong pan, turn in meat, drop in along centre slices of four hard boiled eggs, pour over the liquor when cool and place a weight on the top. When ready to serve, garnish with parsley or small crisp lettuce leaves. New Haven Register. WORDS OF WISDOM. If I rest I rust, says tho key. Gcr man. Man's life on earth Is a temptation. Bible. The fool wanders; the wise travel. French. We learn not at school, but in life. German. The finest Cower will soonest fade. Cerman. Were it not for hope, tho heart would break. Irish. A happy heart is better than a full purse. Italian. The friends of our friends are our friends. French. Misfortune is the touchstone of friendship. German. A villain when he seems most kind is most to be suspected. Spanish. A handsome woman pleases the eye, but a good woman the heart. Dutch. If you would enjoy youi raiment, pay for it before you wear It. Dan ish. Everything Is indefinite, vague end transient; only virtue cannot lie shat tered by any violence. Cicero. Illumination must begin in tho soul. For the face catches the gloiv only from that side. The Fra. Terrapin a la Newbcrg. For this delicious dish a duck roasted the day before will be re quired. Cut the meat into dice and mix with one-halt pound of boiled calf's liver. Put into the chafing dish a tablespoonful of butter and one of flour. Blend thoroughly, then light the lamp and add one-half pint ot cream. When this is boiling add a teaspoonful ot onion Juice, a single clove of garlic split into halves and one-half can of mushrooms. Cook for three minutes longer and then 6tir in the chopped duck and liver. Slip underneath the hot water pan to keep hot for the second helping. Poston Post. About Milliners. An Atchison woman who has a sin cere desire to be economical took a blue feather, some velvet and' a rose to a milliner, asking the milliner to furnish the shape and trim it. The woman was proud of the feather, the velvet and the rose, as they were as good as new, but the milliner cast just one glance at them, and then the woman began to apologize. "Apologies are not necessary," said the milliner icily. "You surely don't expert me to use anything like that!" And the woman didn't. Another woman said to her mil liner bravely: "I want a hat that doesn't cost a cent over 53." "W-h-a-t! " screamed the milliner. "I mean," stammered the woman, "that doesn't cost over $16." "Of, well, that's better." said the m'.innr Kansas City Journal. Eels a la Tartnre. Get your fish merchant to draw and skin the eels, and cut them into lengths of about an Inch long, wash them carefully and parboil them in water to which has been added a lit tle salt and vinegar. Drain them carefully and let them get cold, then dip each piece in boat en egg and fine bread crumbs. Fry them in cooking hot fat till a golden brown and drain them on paper. Have ready a hot dish which has some tartaro sauce poured in the cen tre; arrange the Dsh neatly, and serve immediately, and the heat of the dish will make the sauce go thin. Tartare sauce is made a3 follows: To a gill ot mayonnaise add a tea spoonful of mustard, a little finely chopped onion, some chopped tarra gon and chervil, one teaspoonful of anchovy essence, squeeze of lemon Juice and plenty of white pepper. Cay. enne may be added to taste If li!:-."!. Now York Press. j A Lover of Shakespeare. Although an ardent supporter of everything Shakesperean, Mr. Sidney Lee gives no quarter to those folk who are totally Ignorant of their Shakespeage, but who are filled with rapture and awe every time his name is mentioned. Such a nerann. Mr declared on one occasion, found her self at Stratford-on-Avon. When she reached the railway station, where her train had nnt vet ar.ivD enthusiasm was immense, and' she looicea aoout her with brimming eyes. "Ah." sha sold. T fhinv m place affects me more thnn all. Here ne must nave come to take the train up to London." M. A. P. structlons," be siJ When be had disappeared dowa the road the young man came forward. You will let me take charge here." parsed, all save those who were left be said. I think I know Just what ' to perform tto Ccsl cSa:. A New Language. One day while Gcorir.i AAa '. traveling in the Orient, hft cnniA llnnn a fellow nasscneer in hrr.tert ,iir,a. slon with an old Arab. The lady. a school teacher from Indiana, com plained to Mr. Ada thnr nftci. edit ing Arabic for years, in preparation for this trip, she could not under stand a word that the native eaid. -revor mind," said Ade, consoling, lv. "Can't you sen that im h.,n'i tooth in his head? He's talking s-m- Arauc. success Magazine. Kcpartee. Madame "Julep, we have beca married six months, and you no longer love me." Monsieur "My dear! I " Madame "Oh, It's no use tttoapt lng to deny it You should have mar. rled a stupider woman than I to make turh a denial convincing." Monsieur (a little huffy) "Well, It's not my fault. 1 csuIJn't ttvl C2j." i r.:.a. Chopped olives are an addition to almost any salad. An excellent wash for the mouth before retiring is milk of magnesia. Have you ever noticed the soft, agreeablo tone of the light which comes through the curtain of cream colored cheesecloth? "I always warm the flour," said a housewife, "when I make bread in cold weather. Then thero la never I anv dancer that the bread will not rise." It Is much newer not to put a fancy edge on the curtains of wash fab rics which you may be hanging at the windows. Let them hang straight and plain. Table linen hems much more easily it the dressing in it is first washed out, although there is no doubt but that a hem is turned more easily when now. When maklns fudge use one table spoonful of peanut butter Instead of butter and chopped nuts. This gives a much richer flavor and Is plea3anter to the tongue. When cutting a tomato some pre fer to pass tho knife frequently over the froshly cut surface of a large onion. The resulting flavor la inde scribably delicato. A quick way to bleach linen that has become yellow from lying a long time packed away is to soak it In sour milk or buttermilk for some time before laundering. The woman who knows how to re lax and save her nervous energy sits when combing her hair or massag ing her face. She does her work bet ter because It Is less tlrezome to sit. To use more ot the candlo than Is usually possible, fit a cork Into the candlestick, leaving about a quar ter of an Inch space around the top. Run a heavy needle through the cork and push the candle down on that. THE GREAT DESTROYER BOM H STARTLING FACTS AISOCT TUI2 VICE OF INXKMi'liliAACK. JTo Friend to Me. (N'nt long nno a reformed drunl:nrd told me llie facu mrmte'i here.) X i use to nsl; me. ho.' n, to drink, l'i r tlint I'll never Io; Ju-t. call me nil the nnme you pler.se Anl ny I'm foolish, too. Ilul ir'y.iii'tl t';-n inui-li ui I VouM say tlie foolish one (fis In? v,io tool; the 'Ois,,nel cui; The viie one, he takes none. Ami since you know that drink uruuht me So c!',-e to ruin's door. Why do you ak rue to no in Anil Imve n drink once more? I'll tell you this: you're ujt my frienil To nsk me to to in Anil break my pleitc nnd plunge my soul In misery nii'i sin. No, boys. 1 have no time for you. I'm striving day by duy, Instead of lemliim smiU to death, 1 lift them l.y the way. Anil since you iiim through life but one i ben of you Im st.ni And k'ave the oi!t (intuitu of sin, And tie. er drink n drop. Then when thai moment comes to you When all i f life is o'er. How ulad you'll l,e you tace l nhout And drank the cup no more. KUi.ii li. Young. We So Longer I.anli at Iirttiiknrd.o. A drunken man btasscrcd Into a trolley car and sprawled on iso scat. Whon tho conductor came lor his faro lie fumbled in his pockets, but found t:o money. It- was apparent that he had no clpar idea of whore ho was goint;, cr why he had taken tlx- street car. Ho was dazed, bewildered for the time being n lunatic. The conductor, rather than have n fisht and terrify the other passengers, many of whom were women, rani; up tho drunken man's fare. That meant paying it out of his own poeket. The conductor did not laugh at his help less ptissenser. It was a hopeful sign that none of the passengers laughed. Forunately, drunkenness Is now seldom treated as a Joke. The trag edy of it is understood. Men and women who see a man, maudlin and staggering on his way home to terrify his children and dis tress his wife, can see nothing funny in his antics. They think of what his home com ing will mean; they understand tho pathetic failure that he has made of life. And they would as soon laugh at a maniac, escaued from an asylum, and gibherlng his meaningless rub bish that bespeaks the ruined mind. As men become more intelligent nnd more civilized drunkenness will die out altogether. It was onre con sidered quite proper for United States Senators, eminent lawyers, even Judges on the bench, to bring on themselves the temporary insanity that corms with intodcatlon. Stories of their behavior when under the influence of liquor were told and laughed at. To-day a drunken man in public life is rare. Instead of being laughed tit he is held In horror. I-Vw people laugh when they hear anecdotes of his drunken conduct. In business employers have dlncov. end that a drunken man, however brilliant, is not to be compared with a pober man. The tour is plven short shrift. A second offense usually results In his looking for another Job. The belief that rertnin t 'nines, not. r.bly public speaking, could be clone by some men better when a little f'runk than when fobpr bn3 been ut terly exploded. It h..3 been found that If a man "an make a tolerable speech after three or four drinks lie can make a far bttf r speech after no drink.s at nl!. In ens s whr-re liquor does loosen the tongu" it loosens it too much, and the drunkard babbles things of his own or hn employer's business that makes him bitterly repent when ho Is sober. As lor the poor dipsomaniac, who drinks to forget, it would h" ns wrong to laugh at him ns it would to laugh at the consumptive, tottering feebly toward the grave. Ho has made a wreck of his life: wors still, he has probably wrecked the innocent lives of dependents, broken ihe heart of a mother or wife, left children to strug gle wiih the world unequipped to make a living for themselves. Such a man is rot a 1oi;e he ts a terrible human t;-g.?dy. He needs help and sympathy, rather then good natured contempt. On the stage drunkenness l-t no longer considered ludicrous. Illus trated Jokes about drunkards, once numerous in magazines, are now dls. Appearing. And toleration for the drunkards themselves In actual life Is becoming less and less common. We are really making progress. A hundred years ago Idiots and luna tics, the most horrible of human spec tacles. were laughed ar. Now they are cared for kindly, and given all the heln that can b given while they Uv out their blank, dreadful lives-. To-day we are beginning to think of drunkards In the same way. Scion not even unthinking children will laugh at them as they reel by on the street. Editorial by Arthur Tins bane, In the New York Evcf.lr.g Jour nal. ' State of Pennsylvania KJKC'T MIXISTKll. Itev. Willfiifii II oyer, Mother and Sis ter Again Turned Out. Trevorton. Itev. William Heyer, formerly pastor of the local Lutheran Church, was ejected from the alms house with his mother and sifter, where they sought refuge after he had been evicted from the parson age. The former minister refused to leave tiie institution when requested and a constable had to force hiru from the house. The poor directors claim the min isterial party was entered there with out the necessary legal papers, and that It was unlawful to give them more food under the present con ll'lon of affairs. The preacher and relatives went to a grove near town and prepared to live In the open air. They were without provisions. A resident took them to his home and will k'-ep them for the present. Hev. 1 lever came here seven years ago, los- his popularity and in 1907 the congregation asked for a new minister, saing they had grown tired of Heyer. i - refused to leave the church until he vas evicted by force. CAHXHCilK's HIVAL DE.VI). He Murt'iecl Steel Magnate's Sweet. In'iiit At ( lose of War. Pittsburg. Andrew Carnegie's ri val In love, a poor man, died here. He was "Squire" Kdward Cox Neg ley, Alderman in the Kast End and husband of the girl who threw over the steel master for the poor but gallant soldier Just returned from upholding the honor of his country's flag. During the closing days of the war Carnegie, who was then not a rleli Heel master, attended Central Presbyterian Church. His attentions to one of the choir singers, pretty Miss Crawford, grew marked and at tracted attention. Matters progress ed finely until word came that the South had capitulated. Soon there after a handsome young fellow, wear ing a colonel's uniform, appeared. Miss Crawford noted the gallant young soldier. An Introduction soon followed and Carnegie had a rival In the person of Colonel Negley. Xegley was the favored one and was accepted. AIMS AT IMMJ; HITS WOMAX. Policeman Shoots Three Hobs In Owner Of boomed Animul. Washington. Efforts to send nn unlicensed dog to the happy hunting grounds at Kayette City resulted in Mrs. William HIakely, the dog's owner, being shot three times by Policeman George Eppmnn. Mrs. HIakely wanted the dog killed and was assisting the oflicer. As he discharged his weapon the woman stpppr-d in the lino of fire and was ihot through the leg, the breast and the back. Her condition Is serious. The dog. unharmed, ran away. Charged with sending threatening letters alter accepting settlement for being knocked down by nn automo bile, John Thompson," of Meadow Hrook, was sentenced to two months In jail. Thompson had been hit by an automobile driven by I'rank Hay dell, near Jenklntown. Thompson :onclu.led he hadn't received enough 'omi ensation and threatened to burn ItaydeU's barn if he didn't receive more money. STATE ITEMS. With his fare disfigured and his irm blown off as a result of a dyna mite explosion at No. S Colliery, Erank Mi Cann, of Lam-ford, wu.s tak en to Ashland Hospital In a critical :ondit:on. The body of John Hordeiidorf, ot Wlndgap, a weal' by tanner, was found hanging in the attic of his home by his wife. He had been in poor hialth fur a year or more and is supp"-ed to have become des pond"!it. II" was years of age. A 1'i iin.-;. lvania Railroad locomo tive, which had been retired to the roundhouse at bulersville, run away iiul went, sixteen miles on its own account with no one at the throttle before being captured, and then or.ly bec.ni.se Its steam had bei u exhaust ed. J. S. McFaddcn, of Hanover, near ly lost his life by swallowing a quan tity of bichloride of mercury instead of cough medicine. Judge Staples, in Carbondal. pave ten boys the choice of giving up eigaro'te and staying in after dark or going to the Reformatory. They agreed to reform. Their ages rango from 1 1 to 1 S rnoMixEXT ri:npi.j. - The new contracts alone, made last year by the New York Edison Com pany,' numbered 84,331, aggregating an equivalent of 11,763, 016 lamps of Mxtssn candle-pow.r, coaiumluc City U-atU. Swedish Temperance Education. The Swedish Riksdag has appro- ! printed 280O to the Central Tern- ! oerance Education League to bo used in promoting antl-alcoliol instruction in the schools of l'JO'j. The appro priation for 1908 was used in con ducting courses of instruction In dif ferent centres of population, and es neclnlly a course for teachers, given In Stockholm at tho Royal School of Engineering. The Eight in India. "The Stale-regulated liquor sv,. torn has been demonstrated to be de structive of the highest Interests of the Indian people and opposite to their deepest convic tloas. The prin ciple of local option Is being recog nized, and we are confident that if ho Usue were left to the people of India themselves, they would speed ily extinguish the harmful traffic," writes the editor of Abkarl. the or gan of the Anglo-Indian Temperance Association. Eleven Ileformcd. Ralph Ulllam writes: "in nearly very place where I have ben this winter the work has onened hard, very hard, and yet closed In wonder ful victory. In on place eleven men. all drunksrdn. decided fr Christ, and all are still doing well." lorjranlzrd H Force. The Anti-Saiooa League has so re organized its forces In Washington that the National League directly rep. resent the churches of th dlft.'ict. This gives every assurance taut ! vtneed tempt-rane leiiitllcn will b tnactcd for .the District ce;t year. Work at Beverly, Mass.. on tM sunini"r home of President Tift was rushed. William E. Corey did r.rt deny that he was a prominent Oucrj in a hugs copper combination. Colonel John Jacob Astor Is the owner of tho largest collection in the world of automobiles for personal us?. Jacob Rlls was elected honorary president of the Playground Assoeia tlon of America, In session at Pitts bure. Rear-Admiral I'arbcr and the om cera of his squadron were received by tho Mlkp.dn a:id dln?d by Admiral Togo at TuUIo. Learning ir-nt Mr.gi3trcte V.'al'h bad died poor, his associates ritu'e u.i n fund of S10H0 far his widow, lu New York City Professor Charles Waldstel". of Cambridge University, atut Mrs. Thro, dore Sligmnn, of Nev.- York City, were married In Londor. W, K. Vanderbllt offered to pay the exnenses of uniting the fragments of John Jay Park Into a practically new breathlns spot for New York City. Marquis de Villalobar, first secre tary of tho SpauU'j Embassy at Lon don, v.ill succeed Don Itomon Pins, the Spanish Minister tt Washington. D. C. Rodman Crlscom, brother of Lloyd C. GrUcom, the Amrican Amb&ss. dor to Italy, was received in private audience by King Victor Emmanne!, at Rome. Dr. Harvey W. "lisy, the Govern nnfs food expert, and about 160 delegate to the International Con Krrss of Applied Chemistry, sailed tor London. Truo to Trnlirr3. Generous Lafly "Here, UU'.o boy. i know you are hungry f.-:i bet at these animal crackers." Koy "Much obliged, ltdy; but my folks a;oj vegetarians." Jijs.