Her Father's Daughter By ANNIE HINRICHSEN Copyrlihted, tvio, by Auociated Literary Pint , -I wish you would marry me." yerle Adam had lost count of the times be bad told her thin. Each time be said It, bo made the stato jnent with the lame arguments and with the same sincere conviction that marriage with him was the reason able and foreseen result of her here . Itr and environment. "I'm not asking you to fall madly In love with me. Cecilia," he went on. "I ask you to quit chasing new (ancles and go where your natural inclinations lead you. They will bring von straight to me. We are corela tlre splriu; you don't realize It. but do. There Is a bond between us uniting our subconscious selves. You keep It suppressed below the plane of consciousness. But It's there and jt' real and strong." "Becau83 you are a politician and my father la a politician we must necessarily be twin souls? You are totally mistaken. 1 am not your co relative spirit; there Is no subcon scious bond between us. I am not In love with you. 1 shall not marry you "I think you will. For awhile you -will chase fancies and form other at- "Traitor, Traitor, Whers Is Morton?' tachments as strong as cobwebs. Some day you will dismiss this pretty rubbish. I shall wait." "And suppose," said Miss Morton deliberately. " that while you are waiting I marry some one else?" "That ia a possibility, of course. But I don't believe you will. You are the product of a certain atmosphere. It Is not probable that you will marry out of It If you were a man you would run the state with an honest, perfectly organized machine. Being a very beautiful, very conventional young woman this political Instinct shows Itself la a mental attitude. You will marry a: politician. I In tend to be the one. But I believe you think yon will marry Harry Seldon. "He ta a politician and perhaps corelative) spirit" "Seldon a politician? TJmph! He can make a racket on a stump, but be can't deliver a precinct." "You talk like a ward heeler Harry Seldon will be one of the greatest men of th e day. I care great deal for him and for the Ideals he represents." "Does your father share your ad' miration of Seldon?" "Father Is too unhappy to think of anything except his own trouble. Judge Clarkson " "Clarkson," Adams growled, "the lowest traitor that lives. Your father gave htm everything be has. lie compelled the judicial convention to nominate him for the supreme bench Your father's Influence made blm famous man. But be wants to be th greatest political leader In the state. To realize his ambition he has de throned your father. Next week when the state convention meets Judge Clarkson will go as a great man and your father will not be there. Your father, the truest friend I ever had " , The convention met In the Hall of Representatives In the state capltol. The vast room was filled with dele gates, distinguished guests and root ers. They overflowed into the ante rooms and corridors. Cecilia Morton sat In the gallery. Every since she was a child she bad come to the state conventions. To this one she had come with an aching heart. For the first time in his po litical life her father was not there. flf SHELTERING MANHOOD By REV. W. D. BRA0F1ELD Putor Trinity MethodM Episcopal Clunk, Dallaa, Teaaa The Honorable Wlllarn S. Morton, member of Congress, had been side tracked out of his own county organ ization. When Brooke county select ed Its delegates to the state conven tion Mr. Morton's name was not on the list. In his own county his down fall had been designed. It had been accomplished quietly a word here and there, a suggestion at the right moment to a disaffected one and under It all a purpose, subtle and de liberate. The absence of the well-known poltlclan from the personnel of the state convention was an Incident of tremendous political significance. It as the first break In his power, a politician's county Is the cornerstone of his success, and without It he can have only an uncertain structure that will soon go to pieces. From end to end of the state the press commented on the Incident ' and politicians dls- ussed It. ' Congressman Morton's career was ended. He had lost his grip. At me first 'sign of weakness a hundred men were ready to spring upon him and tear from hlra his power. Another faction was waiting to rule the coun ty and the opportunity naa coma. Without the support of hla county ue could not be renominated for Con gress. He would drop out of the political life, and although he woum always stand high In public opinion he would be that most unhappy man a politician shorn of his power. The convention was called to order. The routine preliminaries were gone through. The delivery of oratorical masterpieces began. The chairman announced the name of Justice James Clarkson of the state supreme court. Justice Clarkson rose. "Mr. Chairman," he began, "ladles and gentlemen " There was a faint hiss. The Judge stopped. "It is my pleasure " he went on. The hiss came again. This time It was louder and seemed to come from several parts of the room. The Judge's face darkened with anger. Again he Degan to speaa, uui from one side of the room came a catcall. It was answered from the other side. Several voices took It up.. The chairman pounded on his desk for order. The catcalls grew louder. From all parts of the room came a steady hiss ing. A man in the rear began to yell. In a moment the convention "was a wild uproar of inarticulate, derisive hootlngs. The Judge ghastly, furious,, stood in his place.. A man caught the tails of his coat and Jerked him to his seat. A dozen of his friends sur rounded htm. pushed him upon a chair and shouted to the chairman to I preserve order. As the Judge appeared above the crowd the hooting changed to a reg ular Intonation, accompanied by a steady stamping of feet. Traitor. Traitor. Where Is Mor ton?" The Judge dropped from his chair and burled his face In bis arms and around him the storm of execration raged. From the gallery CpcIHb Morton watched the turmoil with passionate, wondering Joy. Some one had planned this demonstration. Some one had filled the ball with trained rooters and organized the younger delegates Into a Jeering chorus; some one who knew that Judge Clarkson's public humiliation would restore the prestige of the friend he bad be trayed. Harry Seldon, the all but accepted lover, the politician of dreams and theories which bad seemed so beau tiful to her, was running about ' the hall frantically imploring men to be quiet, to cease their dishonor of a Judge of the supreme court. An un utterable contempt for him swept over her. Didn't the man know this was for her father's honor? She looked at Merle Adams He was standing a little apart from the crowd. On his strong, young faco was an expression of quiet satisfac tion. She saw hlra raise his hand In an almost imperceptible gesture. In stantly the regular, rhythmic clacking, the base of sound on which the up roar was built, ceased. The lighter, miscellaneous hootlngs continued toe a moment and thne died aVay. Merle Adams raised his eyes to the gallery. Cecilia was leaning far over the railing. He read the look on her face and the message of her suddenly outstretched bands. Across the mob of excited, gesticulating politicians be sent the answer to her message, pushed bis way through the crowd and ran up the gallery stairs. ALCOHOL AND RACE SUICIDE MIXED MOTIVES WllHam Jay Bchleffelln. vice-president of the Men's League for Wom an's Suffrage, said at one of his stri ding suffrage meetings In Bar Har bor: , "It we studied questions with the ole desire of getting at the truth, then, no doubt, we should all be suf frages. But we can never approach a question, it seems, without taking aides, without becoming partisans, and i partisans, in our hot wish to van quish the other party, truth becomes a UUle bit obscured. . "Few motives. In this world, can be Wre. That to our great trouble." , Mr. Bchleffelln smiled and resumed: "A clerk wept bitterly on the beach stormy day while out on the boll- big sea tossed a cockleshell of a ilsh- tog boat wherein sat his employer. As the cibrk watched with wild eyee the ltle boat now burled under white bam, now shooting forward gallantly, ow buried' sgaln, be clasped thaiid and cried in great anguish; "'It that boat sinks. Job!'" 1 I'll lose my "Your Humble Servant" - Anthony Trollope was at one time appointee a surveyor or inspector of taxes, and Mr. Worstold's friend was one of a deputation who waited on him. After a very heated discussion Trollope said to tbein: "Look berel I want you to understand one thing. When I write to you that I am your humble and obedient servant, I am d well nothing of the sort"-Lou-dou Telegraph. Text. Behold n king nhall reign In righteousness and pi luces ruin In Judg ment. And a man nhall lie a hiding place from the wind, a covert from the tern post; an rivers of water In a dry place; a the shadow of a great ruck In a weary land. -Isaiah 33:1, 2. The text Is Isaiah's dream of a Just government. "A king shall reign In righteousness and princes rule In Judgment." It Is remarkable that Isa iah's lpftleBt conception of the' Mes sianic reign is a Just government A king his Messiah should be who reigns in righteousness. Ixulah's dream Is the dream of the ages. History is lit tle more than a record of a strug gle for Just government. A govern ment allowing equal opportunities for all, giving every man a square ileal, has been the desire of all peoples. Men want Justice here and now. More than benevolence or charity men de mand simple Justice. It la too late now to seek to com pensate men for Injustice here by the promise of Justice after they are dend. Shelterless people here are no long er comforted by the promise of man sions in the skies. Hungry people are no longer compensated for hunger here by the promise of eating bread In the kingdom of God. Men demand Justice here, and the dream of mil lions of hearts Is for the Just govern ment which Isaiah foresaw. The text gives us Isaiah's concep tion of the fountain force of society: "A man shall be as a hiding place from the wind" a man. Society is com posed of an aggrgeatlon of individuals and no scheme for social betterment Is worth while which has a goal oth er -than the improvement of the char acter of individual men. The fountain force of government and society Is the individual. "A man shall be as an hiding place from the wind" a man. The word "masses" was not in the vo cabulary of the Christ. He did not seek to reach men en masse. He aimed at the personal character of individ ual men and women. His ministry was much to individ uals, now to a ruined woman weary of her sin, now to a confused seeker by night The sum total of his three years' work was the training of a half dozen or more individual men. The fountain force of society is the Indi vidual man or woman. Disseminate learning, distribute wealth, do what you will, but you have done nothing permanent for society until you have reached the bettered, the personal character of Individual men and wom en. Exactly this Is the fountain force of society as Isaiah saw it. "A man shall be" a man. The text Is Isaiah's portrait of a sheltering manhood. "A man shall be as a hiding place from the wind, a cover from the tem pest; as rivers of water In a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock lu a weary land." Isaiah looked east of Palestine and beheld running north and south great cliffs of rock. East of these cliffs be beheld the drifting sands of the Arabian desert The great cliffs he had seen rise In their majesty and say to the burning, drift ing sand: "Thus far and no farther." The drift was arrested and to the lee ward of the great rocks he . beheld oases blossom as the-rose. Here he had seen flocks and herds roam. Then In his vision be said: "The time Is coming the good time is coming when a man shall repeat the ministry of the rocks. Under bts sheltering manhood the weak shall be protected and the fainting inspired. A man shall be as a hiding place from the wind . . . as shadow of a great rock in a weary land." It is admitted by all that Isaiah's words are a luminous description of the inspiring and sheltering ministry of Jusus Christ But they are more than that. They are Isaiah's ideal of what every life may be. "A man" sny man, evory man may repeat the ministry of the sheltering rocks. Life, it has been said, has aspects very desert-like. It Is swept by drifts, now of cruel government, now of so cial impurity, now of commercial dis honesty. The arresting force bos al ways been a man. The drift of Per sian cruelty and social corruption was arrested by Mllltlades at Mara thon. The drift of Mohammedan su perstition was arrested by Charles Martel at Tours. The drift of medi aeval eocleslautlclsm was arrested by Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms. Qreat outstanding characters who have repeated the ministry of the rocks which Isaiah saw have made his tory. The achievements of history are at bottom of the work of these men. What Jesus Christ did and what the great outstanding characters of his tory have done you and I are called uDon in ous lesser spheres to do. The manhood of each is to be a shut tering manhood. The weak are to b 4 protected, the fainting by the shadow of our lives, only tnis spirit can solve our problems. Souls must be given to our great corporations an under the shelter of their, benevolence the weak are to be proected. Unselfish service is to be rendered by every employee and under the shel ter of hla fidelity corporate Interests are to be safeguarded. Remember, it ia " man," any man, every man, who la required to repeat the in spiring and sheltering ministry of the eternal rocks which isatan saw. TEMPERANCE LESSON Saaday School Uim for Not. 13, 1910 Specially Arranged for This Paper TEMPTATION WAS TOO GKEAT Two Noted Sclentlats Give Their Views of 8trong Drink and Its Effects. In an address at Philadelphia, Dr. T. A. MacNlcholl, surgeon at the Red Cross hospital, New York, presented this striking comparison In the study of two separate groups of families: "Through a long line of successive generations I have made a study of two separate groups of families. One group, children of drinking parents; one group of children of abstaining parents.' "In ten families of drinking habits there were 66' children. Thirty died In Infancy, three of heart dlseaso, four were Insane, Beven were anaemic, eight were tuberculous, one had dia betes, three had very poor teeth, three hud adenoids. Only four of the num ber were normal. Of the total, two were excellent, six were fair, and sev en were deficient In their studies. "In ten families of abstaining par ents there were 70 children. Two died in Infuncy, two were neurotic and anaemic, one had rheumatism, une was tuberculous, and 64 were normal. In study, 5 were excellent, 10 were fair, only two were deficient. "Of the children of total abstaining families, 90 per cent were normal; ot the total of children of drinking par ents, 13 per cent were" abnormal. "Eighty per cent of tho children of regular drinkers have convulsions while teething. Of children dying from such diseases as measles, whoop ing cough, scarlet fever, and other In fantile disorders, a large percentile are children of drinking ancestry." Dr. T. J. Mays, specialist In con sumption, Philadelphia, In his address before the semi-annual conference of the American Society for the Study of Alcohol and Other Drug Narcotics, de clared that Inebriety was very closely associated with consumption. The former destroyed the vitality of the body and permitted diseusu germs to gather and grow in the lungs. In ebriety and consumption are twin dis eases, the one following the other, The disease germs of the latter would not flourish in the lungs If the brain and nervous system were strong enough to throw them off. Alcohol not only frequently causes tubercu losis, but there are many cases where Hie children of drinkers develop the white plague. A consumptive patient frequently presents himself, In whom the most diligent neareh falls to re veal the slightest trace of family con sumption. The condition la frequent ly found in the young, especially in 4lrls, who, after careful Inquiry, ares found to have a father or mother, or pnmetimes both, who had been tip plers of alcohol. Children of alcohol parents are from 200 to 2(10 per cent more liable to consumption, and from 300 to 600 per cent more prone to nervous dls eases than are children of abstemious parents. DRINKINGtABITS oT WOMEN Lesson Text-Matthew 24 :32-Sl. Memory Verae 44. Uolden Text "Watch and fray, that ye enter net Into temptation." Malt 26:41. -y Licked Wrong Boy. "Teac. w, you Uoad the wrong boy this luortilng," said a pupil la one of the - suburban schools a day or two ago. "How was thatr asked the teacher "Why, Johnny Hardshell bad the money to buy you a Christmas pres- blit ,ut and when you licked blm he gave the money back to the CtUowaT Perturbed Physical Conditions Given as Main Causes Its Results Are Dreadful. Envy. tCnvy Is incipient murder; do tender feeling can dwell in -the same breast with envy. It will drive every good impulse from the heart, and welcomi a brood of vipers that will resort tr any method to accomplish their dlabo teal purpose. "Rev. W. P. Hlnes. Uap tlst, Louisville. It take " ed as well as soil to muk things gio . Inebriety from a fondness for alco hol for Its own sake vicious indul gence Is far less frequent In women than In men, and It Is well that it Is so. Drunkenness Is bad enough in a man, but In a woman It Is even more pitiable, and, If It be possible, more far-reaching and more dreadful lu Its results. With women It would, we think, be safe to say that the origin of the drink habit lies lu perttirhed physical conditions in fact, that It Is a disease, and not a mere moral obli quity, as many would have us believe. The consequences of alcoholism In wo men are not so quickly evident as in men. In the earlier stages of In ebriety In those cases In which there Is "power of volition, a peculiar shrink ing from publicity protects some wo men against the symptoms uoted among men at a like period. Two causes may be given for the lapse of women Into inebriety. First Is the nervous condition due to lack of nu trition and the wear and worry of do mestic life and the demands ' of so ciety an exhaustion for which relief Is mistakenly sought In the transient aid of alcohol; secondly, the pain and unrest Incident to disorders of their sex. for which solace Is sought In the anaesthetic and paralyzing effects of alcohol. In the first place, the woman who flies to drink must be unaware or unmindful of the fact that Its taking involves a great risk of creating a morbid condition that often finds ex pression In constant Inebriety. In the second case, the so-called solace, with startling and sorrowful frequency, ends In confirmed alcoholism. Health CuHure. Less Scotch Whisky Drunk. An unprecedented state of affairs prevails in the Scottish distilling industry. It has Just been announced that the North British distillery Is to be closed down. This makes the fourth large grain distillery which bas ceased op erations in Scotland during the past month or two. At the annual meeting of the Distill ers' company, limited, the predominant producing concern, It was reported by the chairman that their stocks bad in creased by more than 1250,000. He foreshadowed the possibility of having to close down one or more distilleries permanently, and stated that such a contingency had already been provided tor by writing down their value. Brotherly boosting help more thai aUurly sympathy. Drink Cause of Accidents. "Why do we have so many accidents on our road a T" was asked by the hlgb authorities of an American railway system. They made an Investigation and found that tbe losses of life,' limb md property were the result of run" drinking by their employees. Now they have rules that nun who drink -nu at stop It or their places will be filled at once with sober men. Thit has become an old ttory lu a few mouths all over tbe laud. The disciples had accepted Jesus a the Messiah and chosen the way which led to the establishment of the kingdom of Cod. But they were In the meantime to endure great temptations and difficulties; wars, famines, tribu lations, hatred, prisons, death, disas ters, earthqunkes, pestilences, disci ples waxing cold, false prophetB aris ing, stars falling, the sun dnrkened, tiie moon turned Into blood, the pow ers of heaven shaken, "such as had not been from the beginning of the world" then, Christ says to his dis ciples, "when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draw eth nigh; It Is near even nt the doors." And he also adds, Watch therefore. Be ye also ready. For ye know not on whnt day your Lord cometh. The parable of the fig tree Is n beautiful Illustration showing us that while we cannot know when Christ Is coming, we have warnings so' as to In on guard, as the first signs of sprln;; bid us prepare for the summer. This Keneration. that Is while some who wire listening to hlin should Btlll be alive, as he himself said. Tho time to watch Is at the resin ning of t lie course that leads to these results. The day of Judgment Is the I end of the course; the choice lies at tho beginning. Those really watched who so fore saw the future and the true ideal nf their lives, that from the beginning they went on toward it by the only path that led to It. They were faith ful In every duty. They served their Lord by obedience. They reslste.l ev ery temptation. They were on their guard against every wile of the devil. Thev were wide awake, with eyes open to every opportunity, to the signs of the times, to new ways and means, and possibilities. "Blessed Is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so do ing. Verily 1 say unto you, Thitt he shall make him ruler over all his goods." To those who bo watched was entrusted the kingdom of heaven, for themselves and for the world. Those failed to watch who were so absorbed In their own selfish pleas ures and gains that they neglected their duties, forgot their Master's In terests, were eye-servants. This folly was Intensified by beginning "to eat and drink with the drunken." They took the road that led to destruction. Rev. S. W. Hanks, a second or third ! cousin of Abraham Lincoln, years ago devised a most vivid temperance lec ture called "The Black Valley Hall road," which he Illustrated by a large chart. It Is given In a book called "Tho Crystal River." The Land of the Crystal River Is the land which nil children enter when they come Into this world. To live In the Lund of the Crystal River, tho land of temperance, of self control, of good character, of highest usefulness, of prosperity, of religion, of heaven, should be the hope and .the aim of everyone. The Black Valley country is situat ed In an extensive lowland, lying be tween an elevated anil extremely fer tile and beautiful region, called the Land of the Crystal River, bounding It upon Its upper limits and a vast and unexplored desert forming Its lower boundary. Vice and crime abound. In numerable drunkards and criminals are found there. Prisons and poor houses take the place of churches lind school houses. The man in the conning tower nt the Junction of the Black Vnlley rail road with the railroad to temperance would guide all youthful travelers to ,he better way. He urges all to seek he hlKhest and best life. We are building a house for our selves, a body In which we must live, and a character In which our soul must abide. God would have us pos sess a perfect body, and to put away everything which Injures health, which brings weakness or disease. He would have us form a noble character of which we will' not be ashamed, which will fit us for heaven and usefulness, and the company of the good. We can not cheat God, but we can cheat our selves. By using strong drink In any quantity whatever we are skimping, degrading, making poor and weak the house we have got to live lu. Every drunkard was once an Inno cent child. Every one was first a mod erate drinker. No one ever yet be came a drunkard who refused to touch Intoxicating drink. Not all who drink moderately do become drunkards, but no one ever became a drunkard who did not first drink moderately. It Is terrible to let a habit begin In youth which will Impel us to go on do ing wrong against reason, against the power to help others, agalnBt love of God, of man, and of country. "The story Is told of a rich young man who sat at a dinner table with a number of friends, and babbled drunk en foollsnness an tne long evening One of bis friends was a court atenog rapher. Seized by an idea for the help of his friend, he stenographlcally reported every word that the latter uttered. Tbe next day he had these totes transcribed and stnt to the man himself. The latter, shocked, could scarcely believe that he himself had lescended to such a level of linb ell ty. 'If this the way a man talks when 1e is drunk, I mean to keep sober hereafter.' "William T. Ellis. Sign the pledge. Sign it now. Keep It forever. Afghan Horse Thief Gave Owner "Real" Exhibition of How Ani mal Was 8tolen. An Indian officer relates some good stories of Peshawur, which In the early "seventies." before British poli tical Influence had asserted Itself be yond the lonely little forts of "Jam rud" and "Shabkadar," was a some what disturbed locality, in spite of the strength of Ita garrison. It was at Peshawur (he says) that the medlcul ofllcer of my regiment, was Informed one night that a valu able and favorite Arab of his had been stolen! Over the border, gone for ever he never expected to aee his horse again, but next day. much to his surprise, there came to him a bearded rufllan, riding bare-backed the stolen steed. He confessed that he had taken the animal, but. learning that It was the property of a hnklm, (physician! had brought Jt back. The horse had been tethered In lino with others, with men. women, and children sleeping in the open about them . "How did you manage It?" asked tho doctor. "If the sahib will give the necessary order," he said, "I will show him." The entire Bcene was reproduced, even to the night watchman asleep In a corner. Noiselessly the Afghan crawled towards the Arab, threading snakelike through the prostrate forms to where It was standing at the end of the row. Softly hissing to attract the animal s attention, without caus ing him alarm, he gently raised him self with arm extended. Itf his open palm were some lumps of goor (native sugar), beloved of horses, and while the Arab was enjoy ing theso the man was caressing him with the other hand, whence suspend ed a watering bridle taken from his wnllet. Quickly this was adjusted, and then, stroking soothingly, the robber passed his hand over the animal's back and down th e hindquarters. Swiftly the heel ropes were unhitch ed, then tho headgear relensed. and with a bound he was astride and away his right hand ba.-kward flung shout ing triumphantly ns he passed: "Thus was It done!" The Joke was that he never came back! A double restitution would have been too much of a wrench. vby WILBUR D NEmTI c' ANNUAL PROBLEM J See the Cafe I "See, the cafe!" "Yes, a gala scene It Is with Its brilliant lights and rich furnishings and fashionable women and portly men." "Do you know why the men and women come to the cafe?" "I can see well what they are doing. They nre eating and drinking." "Do you know why they are eating and drinking?" 'I suppose It Is because they are hungry and thirsty." "It Is a natural mistake, but such Is not the rase." "Do yon, then, O Sage, tell me why they are eating and drinking." "Because they are not hungry and thirsty." "You talk in paradoxes." "Not at alt. You do not understand. They do not know what it Is to lie hungry and thirsty. If they were hun gry and thirsty they would be In the bread line or at home euting real food Instead of dainties and confections and drinking real water instead of stimulants and narcotics " "But you do not explain why they eat and drink what they do not need." "To show they have money and to show they have time money to Bpend in overindulgence nnd time to spend In letting the effects wear off." "And do they perform no useful ser vice?" "No. To perform useful service Is to produce, which 1b not respectable. It l respectable only to consume." Llf- II- l-umd his l..-.i,l upon Ms hand And thought vMi deep dismay A Mull the thill'---- that lie must Ret To ple on t'hristlims day. "The eook." h- slyh.-d. "must have th lu st 1 l:now how to sel.-.-t. Or otherwise she'll ipilt. nrd then Our household wtP In- wrerkeil. "n,e serond c;Tt must have a fctft '!'l lit wltl il. lluht her heart ' ir lie will frown upon my wife And say thai they must part. The man who tends the furnace he Must be Upon the pat Or else some frigid dawn the heat That cheers us will ho mlased. "Mv nfnYe Tmv tuns have a watch )r a ten dollar hill lf I should f.ul In this I'd have A vacant plate to All. The Janitor, the entflneer. Tim elevator Ivivs Will i-nll for tri'eite anil I munt Add aomethltiv to thetr Joys. "The waiter nt the rluh; the chef; The man who hrltiKs the milk: The R-arhpB man. the faithful con Anil others nt that Itlc Must nil he home In mind, so that None may he overlooked " And so the tin men of each and alt With whut to Kive, he booked. Ho ran his eyes ndown the list And found It was romplete. And thouifht ahout the Christmas hllla Thnt would b" his to meet. "Ataa!" he. wept, "it Is too built" He ahed a hitler tear. "I And I can n?Ti r I no irifts 1'or wife ami ehllilren dear!" Wind. "Did you ever get any dividends e that tunnel stock you bought of th man who was promoting a scheme ( bore a shaft tinder the river?" flsks the mildly Interested friend. "No," explains the other. "That tun nel never wns dug." "O, then It was merely nn air shaft a hot air one. I mean " Optical Delusion. "Have you ever noticed how fat women like to go about in crowds?" asks the man with the thoughtful eyes. "You're mistaken about It; that's all." explains the man with the uncer tain whiskers. "When two or three of them get together It just looks like, a crowd lo you." Cat Catches Burglar. A woman burglar, her face heavily veiled, and accompanied by a man. whs scared away from the house of John Callery, a wealthy coal dealer, living In the Clifton Park section of Weehawken. early the other morning by a servant coming downstairs to let In the cat. The burglars had entered by a front window, which they opened with a Jimmy, and had pucked up all the sil verware, table linen and cut glass ready for removal when the servant girl beard the cat crying outside the kitchen door. As she canio down the stairs to let the cut In she beard the swish of a woiuwn's Bilk gown. Turn ing up a light she found the parked bundles ready to be taken away. She ran to the front door and saw a man and woman running down the street. Kind'y Remembrance. "Do you suppose Cook and Peary will send Christmas remembrances to each other?" asks the man who Is al ways wondering about ihe most nnex pected tilings "Certainly." replies t lie man who wants to finish his paper. "I don't know what I'eary will send Cook, bvrt I should think Cook would send Peary a set of Instructions how to play that old game of Copenhagen." Noble Trait. There is no nobler trait in our American people thsa the big heart ind the liberal hand. May Qod sav ur country from Catnlsm and make true followers of blm who Into Murderous world brought a new spirit ho spirit of brothtrly love. Rev. Er test A. Tappert, Lutbu-aa. New Yc-'k City. Alfonso Enjoys Joke on Himself. Alfonso of Spain has a tremendous appetite; like any boy. he Is always hungry. He Is far from handsome, but like apy boy, again, he does not give a rap about bis looks. A few months ago, while motoring near La Granfo, the king's appetite plagued hlra and he halted at a wayside inn, where he ate with much relish while cracking jokes with the landlord and a few peasants who happened to be there, being unknown to tbem, of course. A little girl entered to buy wine for her father. "Tell me," said Don Alfonso to the child, "have you seen the king since be has been at La OranfaT' "Only once," answered the girl Tie bad on a beautiful uniform, but ha Is very ugly." Th king laughed and told th story oa himself. Peer Attention to Detail. Critic "My dear air, your story very much lacking In attention to de tail. Her you say; 'He watched with admiration th fashionable beauty as she went up U street with free, grace ful, swinging steps."1 Author ''Well what's th matter with thatr "11 she was a fashionable beauty, bow oould ah walk that way todayT . No Mint. Vlt'S Gbb's ""Test. I Invvt-b'v weigh iry wo-ds" Mr B'unt "We i l a a.re.ret tnt yo ntv rver teen accuaed of giving abort weight Padding. 'Yes, It Is n fairly good poem," aa.van tho rarpiing critic, after a hasty perusal of one of Longfellow's ef forts. "It Is really of merit, but th trouble with It is that it Is so great ly padded." "Padded? Why, If doesn't appear to me lo have mi unnecessary word lu It. I don't see where you couM omit a linn or a stanza without spoil ing the sense of it." replies tire other- person. "But can't you see that It Is Mile out with 'Kxcelslor? The Back Fugue. "What is that you are playing?" ask of our friend, who Is pumping hi pianola. "That's a Pack fugue." he says. "It doesn't sound much like Bach." "1 didn't say Bach. I said Back "Back?" "YeB, B-a k, Back." Never beard of such a " "Of course not. It's my own Idoa. I do It by running a porous plaster through the pianola." To Be Envied. "Poor little Bobby Jones Is li; again," said the kind mother. "Do you not feel sorry for him?" "No'ni," answered the truthful ohlld. "I think Bobby Jones Is the Ifecklwst boy lp this town." "Why, Harold! . Lucky? To be IHr "Yes'm. Kvuiy Thanksgiving a Christmas an' birthday an" everything else 'at his folk baa they let him eat enough to make him sick next day." 4 His Mamory. "Don't eat me, Mr. Crocodile! 8e. my wife sent me shopping (or her a4 tied a knot In my handkerchief add one In my tail so I would remember my errand. She will fot-l "She will churUh our memory, Mr, Monkev." Belter. "Thar Is Mr. Gusher. It to'a Lucy be would go to th end of th world for her." "What did she sy to thatr "Asked him If he wouldn't father take her aloug en a bridal trip."