The Syrian New Year Manhattan RKrf5f3LL the Christian! of New WW5kS Vork do not observe Christmas a time tor Santa Claus. The Sy rians, for Instance, who live In the loner end of Island, In Washington ftreet, from the Mattery up to Albany street, have an old custom of giving fbeir presents on New Year's day. Then there also Is a difference In the planner of gl-'ng. The Syrian chil dren do not uang up their stockings. Neither do the parents disguise them elves as Santa Claus. On the con trry. The Syrian child Invariably knows who Is going to be his Santa ClauB, and consequently Is treated to fo extraordinary surprise. There Is pne thing, however, ot which he re frains in Ignorance, end that Is the Mature of the present he will receive. . The child picks ou whosoever he hinks will treat him best In case .he succeeds In meeting and greeting him it the proper time on New Year's day. Then comes a long vigil for midnight, is the custom so prescribes It that the me wno offers the first greeting at iie beginning of the new year shall receive a fitting reward from the one greeted. A good wish for success and prosperity in the first hour of New tear's day Is hold by the Syrians to ugtir well for the following twelve month, and the one who first wishes good prospects is entitled to a reward. Custom prescribes that at the time Of this New Year's greeting whatever the one greeted happens to hold in his (land becomes the property of the oth r The one who receives the greet- ng is supposed to oe so pleased with t that, acting upon the happy impulse of the moment, he hesitates not to re quite his greeter with whatever he first can lay bold on. Tbls latter cus tom originated In feudal times, when the Emir was omnlpitent In his pro vince and his followers depended for their sustenance upon his gifts and what ) allowed them of the plunders of war. Of course you can't nowadays sur- Che Conflict of tfte Yean Br KENNEDY SEATON "TTHE year ii dying. tlL The battl bravely (ought It o'er at last The aged warrior wounded to tti death With Timet fell arrow silently awaits Tris moment of relemje with laboured breath. The luiied of the long-contested fight. Or vict'ry, or defeat, or welcomed trace. The unborn yean shall certainly declare, And turn each well-aimed blow to gain na uae. Ej The warrier, dying, curtained by the night, rj Sect not or knows the gain that it to be, H out diet in raith that right will turely win. And o'er the world will rule eternally. The year it dawning. The young recruit takes up the unsheathed word I li. .mJ Mi, ... A..U. mlA . H And buckling on hit armour, newly bright. tuayt mm torth to venturet yet untried. Alluring dreamt beguile hit onward ttepi, And ritiont bright o( vict'riet to be won : J He ieelt upon hit brow the laurel crown, And heart alar the coveted "well done " No thought of failure man the bUuful j dream, , No craven fear unnervet the heart of .1 . youm; m Great taAt await him, and with faith at f J great, , M truth I ri other day and the Chinese and Japan ese still another, but whenever the day falls, according to their special calendar, there Is always a very Im portant celebration of It The Druids, who were the priests of England before the Christian relig ion was taken into Great Britain, also celebrated New Year's day. They were very Interesting and very strange people, these Druids, and, according to what one reads about hem In history, one always Imagines "l no T-irng beautiful white robes and having tall, magnificent fig ure and flowing white beards and Ji$a&uj&ii .-'rjSJy-.-?. fit&'?&WJtjWMi .m ull fs . ft&M prise . any Syrian early New Year's day fooling with a costly article. Ha can be depended on as knowing bet ter, for either be would have to make gift ot It to the one who first greet ed him. or else he branded as a miser. Wise Syrians carry candy to band to tbe children' who greet tbem. New Year's Day in the Long Ago fTrcjjygjfjONO years ago the people Hbi-! different places In the world were very mucn Interested In New Year's dav. iuat as we are. and ihey did many things In bonor ot the day, exactly as we do. They feasted and decorated their bouses and churches, and at 12 o'clock they vere very particular to show In some way that they were rejoicing that an other year had begun. Not all of these people celebrated New Year's on the same day. The an cient Romans used to have their New Year's day In March; then they changed to January, and a large part ot the rest ot the , world followed tbem. 1 The Jewish people have an- balr. At any rate, they always wore white robes on New Year's day, for that was the day wher they cut down the sacred mistletoe. For ' the Druids didn't think that mistletoe was only r pretty green vine. They believed It to be a mi raculous growth bleb would pre vent people from being harmed by poisonous food or drink. On that day a particularly large, hantlsome Druid. with glistening white beard and balr and rather cold gray eyes DrulJs always bad cold gray eyes we believe and clothed most beautifully In white, would climb the oak tree on which the mis tletoe grew and cut It down with a golden sickle. He wouldn't take It In his hand, because they didn't con sider that respectful enough to the sacred mistletoe, which could do such wonderful things. Instead he would catch It In a pure white cloth and climb carefully down the tree with It. After this an altar would be erect ed and white bulls sacrificed and prayers offered. Then the Druldlcal community felt that for the following year tbey would have all the good luck possible. You see In those days New Year's celebrations were very serious things, and all ot the ceremonies attending them were religious. LEAVES BRACELET TO QUEEN In Order to Prove That Stories About Her Were Untrue Woman Gives Jewel to Alexandra. It used to bo a source of the bitter est pain to Consuelo Duchess ot Man chester to know that certain portions pf the press used to make unkind In sinuations regarding the great friend ship between ber and the king. She was a keenly sensitive woman, but burnlngly curious, and would know all that was said about ber In the press or elsewhere If she could. With lunfalllng regularity she subscribed to numbers of press-cutting agencies here, on the continent and In Amer ica. She was wont to remark: 1 "There are people who won't be lieve until I am dead that there is pot ojie vestige of truth In the horrid thing they say of my friendship with King Edward. I mean yet to prove what a calumny It all Is." Her way of proving it was In the gift of the superb bracelet she left Ctueen Alexandra. It wss only couple (t lairs ago she decided to present t this to ber majesty, the Idea having been suggested unconsciously by Queen Alexandra herself, who is passionately fond ot rubles. "Keally, duchess," she said, "1 nev er have seen so lovely a ruby as that In your bracelet" There and then the duchess wished to give tbe Jewel to the queen, but her majesty would not bear of such a thing. "I should feel as if I had asked for It." she said. ' "Well, then," replied the duchess, "I shall leave It to you In my will." Neither thought at tbe time bow very soon tbe promise was to be ful filled. . Lost Forever, "Ah, you flatterer!" she said, with a pretty pout "Do you really think I am a flatter err he asked. "Ot course," she replied, with a be witching smile. "Well, since yon are not to be fooled. I suppose I may as well admit It" Then sbe angrily got up and left U-n. i30 Blood That Maketh an Atonement for the Soul By PASTOR RUSSELL of Brooklyn Tabi..acle OS- TEXT-The life of the flesh Is In the blood; and I have given it to you upon the altnr to make nn atnnpment for your aouls; for It la the blood that maketh an atonement Leviticus XVII, 2. Ours Is a day in which, more than ever before, the statement of our text is disputed dlBbelleved by Jews, Gentiles and Christians. The great Christian author, St. Paul, agrees ex actly with the words of Moses In our text, saying: "Without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins" (Hebrews 9:22). The orthodox Jew and the orthodox Christian, therefore, are In substantial agreement as to the foundation of things and the unortho dox are in agreement of opposition. The latter agree that there Is no ne cessity for sin atonement that the later thought of all the wise men ot the earth, the greatest ministers and rabbis, la that there Is no such thing ns original sin; henre could be no such thing as necessity for canceling It of making nn atonement or satis faction to Justice on behalf of It. All the worldly wise of Christen dom have reached the point of repu diating the testimony of the Old Tes tament and the New respecting the need of a sacrificial death for the sat isfaction of divine Justice, the cancel lation of sin and the restitution of the sinner to divine favor. The claim of the so-called new theologlsts repu diates the fall, repudiates the ransom and repudiates a restitution to all that was lost claiming that nothing was lost and all that we have Is gain. Thus the world and Its wisdom know not God and appreciate not his ar rangement that, as death came upon mankind through the sin of one man (Adam), even so a restitution to life should come to all men through Christ that "as all in Adam die, even so all In Christ shall bo made alive." These worldly wise cannot deny the fact that there Is sin In the world and that thire Is death In the world and that the tendency of all sin Is toward death. They cannot deny that death is gaining a greater hold than ever before upon our race. Insane asy lums, prisons and reform schools show that, notwithstanding our educational facilities and wonderful achievements under the enlightening Influences of the new dispensation now dawning nevertheless, the Insanity statistics and the prison statistics and the phys ical statistics show that, in spite of everything, our race is becoming men tally, morally and physically weaker day by day. It is for them to explain how these facts fit to their theory of evolution. By the term Christian we refer to those who intelligently believe the ex planation of the Bible respecting sin, that it is a violation of the divine law and carries with It a penalty that Father Adam was created as sinless as are the angels and as perfect as they, only on a little lower plane of being. Obedience was required of him ns the price of divine favor and ever lasting life. Disobedience thrust him from paradise Into the unprepared earth to wrestle with the thorns and thistles, where the decree, "Dying thou shalt die," accomplished bis exe cution. His race was In his loins and naturally shared by heredity his weak nesses and death penalty, so that the entire race Is a dying race. But the Creator was unwilling that Adam and his children should die as brutes. God did not revoke his decree of death nor give any intimation that he had done unjustly in condemning his creature. Ho did, however, provide a way for their relief. He provided that, as the first man alone had sinned actually, so ono Redeemer alone would be neces sary ,for the race. And to him he of fered a great reward, so that his sac rifice for sins would work out to his own advantage, as well as to the Bin ner's. A part of the reward was the high exaltation to the heavenly na ture far above angels, and the gift of the kingdom of earth necessary for the overruling and subduing of the spirit of rebellion In the world and for the exaltation and uplifting from sin and death conditions of all the willing and obedient of Adam's entire race. But why should God ' require the death of a victim as a basis for the forgiveness of the sins of Adam and hla race? We reply that God's law was intended to be an Illustration ot the exactness of divine Justice. Jus tice could not punish Adam nor his children with everlasting torture or any other of the horrible things we once imagined. The severest penalty of the divine law Is represented in our common law, which, aa an extreme penalty, requires the death of the transgressor. After the divine reconciliation comes human reconciliation. The great Messiah will not require sacrifices of humanity, but, on the contrary, will open the blind eyes and, cause the knowledge of the grace ot God to reach Adam and every member of his race. Then all willing for reconcilia tion will be helped by the great Medi ator of the New Covenant and by Is rael, his chosen people and earthly representatives. Th8fbject to be ac complished during Messiah's reign Is the bringing to all the willing and obedient the restitution which God has promised restitution to all that was lost. Ultimately Messiah will transfer tbe allegiance of the whole world (per fected by him) to Jehovah God, that he may be all in all (I. Corinthians. 15.28). ' Perspective. Sometime you muBt go away from your surroundings and get a perspec tive view of what lies about you In order to see its real beauty.Rev. J. O. Hayes, True Life. San Jose. Law. Turn which way we will, law con trols and abides. Rev. George Bailey, Presbyterian. Washington. The Soul. Tbe soul is known only by its er ffct. Rev. Dr. Felix Adler, Thlcal Culturl.t. New York City. SOBRIETY IN GREAT BRITAIN United Kingdom ' More Temperate Now Than Ever Before, Says Alliance Secretary. The amount of beer and spirts con Fumed in the United Kingdom during 1909 Is very much less than the amount recorded for all preceding years. In fact, Great Britain Is more temperate now than Bhe has ever been, declares Secretary George B. Wilson of the United Kingdom Tem-. pcrance Alliance. In his report, re cently issued In the London press, he estimates that the total expenditure on all alcoholic liquor consumed In the three kingdoms last year amounted to 155,162,485, as compared with 161, 0G0.482 In 19V. There hAs therefore been a material decrease of 5,897,997 during the past twelvemonth. On spirits the decrease was 4,800, 000, with a decrease In consumption of 7,022,775 gallons. On bter the de crease was 1,186,000 with a decrease In consumption of 645,396 barrels. On wines, on the other hand, there has been an Increase of 93,000, with an increase In consumption of 103,744 gal lons. Hut, as the secretary's report points out, tbe amount spent on drink as a comparison, falls to picture the true decrease in drinking. Owing to the Increased taxes of 1909, the retail price of all liquors advanced, and hence if the prices of 1909 were the same as the prices of 1908, the de crease in the amount spent would be double what It Is. If there had been no increase in prices the actual reduc tion on the total expenditure would have been 11,147,997. London press reports state unhesl tatingly that the British people have been growing more temperate of late years, and claim that the cxperlenc" of last year loaves no doubt that tax ation Is one great Influence In reduo Ing the consumption of liquor. It is further added that "if this reduction were to be progressively maintained we would soon have no drink bill to pay at all." The Increased taxes applied on liq uors by the budget have been a fac tor of the recorded decrease in con sumption, but It is probably not tbe only potent factor, and it is contended that a marked change In the social habits of the people Is a feature since the masses are being given opportuni ties for developing other tastes. In this education Is tbe great agent and it is confidently stated that "the turn of the tide synchronises with the com ing of a full generation which has been to school. The book is one of the enemies of the bar. There are others. Every park is an alternative, every tram or cheap train, that takes the worker out to the country in his spare time, every Blum that disap pears, and every livable bouse that takes Its place. The empire of alco hol rests not so much on Its own In herent attractiveness ns upon the ab sence of rival attractions. These rivals are growing and before them alcohol is slowly perhaps, but surely retiring from public favor." In a country which has so long been burdened by the drink evil the progress of reform Is slow, but there Is progress recorded in Great Britain as the above figures show. The drink question is still one of the most im portant social iii'obloius the nation has to face, yet the recent constant de cline in the consumption Is regarded as extremely hopeful. DRINK CAUSE OF INSANITY Liquor Responsible for Nearly 60 Per - Cent of Patients Admitted English Asylums. Drink and hereditary Influence were reported as the caue of Insanity In 42.3 per cent of the cases admitted Into Ralnhlll asylum, In England, last year, drink being responsible in 22.8 ot the cases, and a clear history of hereditary taint in 19.5. These re markable statistics are contained in the annual reports of the county asylum at Lancaster, Prestwlck, Ralnhlll, Wittlngham and Winwlck. Just Issued. On the subject of the causes and the preventation of lunacy. Dr. Gig glesworth, medical superintendent of Ralnhlll, Is very outspoken. Refer ring to tho 22.8 per cent, of admissions for which drink was responsible, Dr. Wigglesworth says the figure Is suf ficiently large to Indicate clearly that havoc which drink makes with the nervous system, and adds: "If the evil affected the Individual only It would be bad enough, but unfortu nately there Is reason to believe thtt it Is often handed on to the offspring, owing to the direct poisonous effect upon the germ of the alcohol circulat ing in the blood, and that not a little of the terrible amount of norvous in stability find degeneracy which we see around us has Its origin In this cause." Regarding the 19.5 per cent of ad missions In which there is a clear history of hereditary taint, Dr. Wig glesworth says that no doubt this fig ure considerably understates the real Influence of heredity, owing to the difficulty experienced in getting reli able accounts of the families of the patients. The Saloon Bar. "A bar to heaven, a door to hell. Whoever named It, named It well; A bar to manliness and wealth, A door to want and broken health; A bar to honor, pride and fame, A door to want ami arluf and sham, ' A bar to hope, a bar to prayer, A door to darkness and dlapalr; A bar to honored, useful life, A door to brawling-, senseless strife; A bar to all that's true and brave, A door to every drunkard's (rave; A bar to Joys that home Imparts. A dour to tears and wlilng hearts; A bar to heaven, a door to hell. Whoever named It, named It well." The church often fall at works oecause the preacher la so anxious to succeed In words. THE KINGDOM DIVIDED Suaday Sckeol Letioa for Jan. 1, 1911 Specially Arranged lor Tnli Paper LESSON TMXT-t Kings 12:1-24. Mem ory nrifn, IS. 14. OOMU5N TEXT-"Ile that walketh with wine men shall be wine; but a com panion of fools ahull be drntroyed." Prov. 13:20. TIMK The time of Solomon's death and the division of the Kingdom, H. C. 82. PLACE rtehnbonm's capital wns at Jerusalem. The Klsruptlon oi-ctirred at Bhechem, which was the first capital of ttie northern king-Join, and Oim metropolis of Ephrulm. It wns 80 mllos dlrortly north of Jerusalem, between Mounts Kbal nnd Oeririlm. Kit wore located Incidents In the lives of Abraham. Jacob, Joneph, and Joshua. Close by, douhtloes as a part of the larjfor town, were Jacob's w"ll end Sychar where Jesus talkPd with the Sa maritan woman. And there Is now the seat of the Hnmnrilans. the smallest re ligious sect In the world. This lesson covers the Btory of Re hoboam, and how he lost a kingdom. It Is the story of a reckless, untrain ed, conceited young man, and his com ing into the roul business of his life. He was the heir to a throne, and his name means "Knlarger of the people," expressing the hope of his father for his son. The son disappointed those hopes, and became the "Dlminisher of his people." Alus for such boys to day! His father was Solomon. His moth er Nautnah, a young heathen princess of the kingdom of Amnion on the bor der of the desert east of the Jordan. She v.as one of many wlvee of so'.o mon. Kehoboam seems to have been the natural heir to the throne. Judab ac cepted him. But as in the case of Saul, David and Solomon, at least In Jerusalem, the people bad a voice in tho selection of their king. Accord ingly the tribes were summoned to meet at the old northern capital, She chem, to confirm I he successor of Sol omon. The northern tribes were de termined to obtain a charter of rights that would relieve them from their burdens, as the price of their submis sion. For Solomon had forced thqtn to give their unpaid labor upon his great buildings, and these free and Independent Kphralmltes were re minded of their ancestors' slavery in Kg;pt. They were shrewd enough to send for their brilliant sympathizer, Jeroboam, whom Solomon had ban ished to Egypt. They wire ready to enforce their just demands. Rehoboam, apparently attended by a small force goes to confer with them. Jeroboam is their spokesman. Rehoboam answered the people roughly. One of the most foolish things he could do. "Rough words do one of two things, they wound or they madden." And Israel saw that the king heark ened not Josephus Bays that "they were struck by his words as by an .iron rod." What portion have we in David? What have we of the north ern tribes to do with David's son, Re hoboam, or David's tribe, Judah? To your tents, O Israel. Hack to your homes and prepare for war. Every young man has a kingdom in his own soul. He may throw it away half of It or all of It, in the eamo way Rehoboam did, foolishly follow ing his headstrong will. Or, he may take the advice of wise men and the lilble, and become monarch of all the royal possibilities God has placed in his lite. One's character, already formed, is a powerful factor In all emergen cies of choice and decision. There Is no time to prepare a new character. Rehoboam had formed the habit of taking bad advice when it fitted his inclination, and so ho took It at his life's crisis. On bis return to Jerusalem Reho boam assembled an army of 180,000 men to compel the seceding tribes to return. Hut a prophet forbade tbu movement In the name of the Lord. Rehoboam's goodness was hut tbe early cloud and the morning dew. As Boon as he was firmly established, he returned to his old ways, and "forsook tbe law of the Lord." The deteriora tion of his character and bis king dom waa Bymbollzed by the chango from the shields of gold which Solo mon had made for IiIb palace armory, but which ShiBhak took away, and which Rehoboam replaced by shields of braBs. This deterioration continued two years, when God used another instru mentality for making Rehoboam good. In his fifth year Shlshak, the Pharaoh of Egypt, camo up with 1,200 chariots, 60,000 horsemen, and an uncounted number of common sol diers. They captured the city of Judah, devastated tho country, and carried away tbe treasures Solomon '.ad stored In the temple and In his palace, und tbe golden shields In his armory, Shlshak loft an Inscription on tbe walls of Knrnak In Egypt, giv ing an account of this Invasion. Tbe prophet Shemaiah interpreted the meaning of this calamity; and king and princes bumbled themselves, con fessed their sins, and promised to do better. Tbe lxird therefore delivered them. Rehoboam continued to reign; and though bis kingdom was not destroy ed, yet it was far from what It might have been, tor "he did evil, because he prepared not bis heart to seek the Lord." God's principles are everlasting, but the lorms of their application vary wUh every variation of circum stance. i As patriots, what Is there In our "ouuliy, (bat we with to have go down .he ages as a blent Irg? and what Is here that we should give our whole ou! to clinjiglug or blotting out? Cure for Scratches, Scratches are caused by exposure t cold and wet, local irritation or low condition, all ot which should be voided If possible. In simple caaes apply cloths wet with a weak solution of sugar of lead and In winter cover to keep out cold. "When cracks have appeared, apply a similar lotion with the addition of a few drops of carbolic acid. In cane of discbarge or pus tules, make a lotion of chlorido of vine Instead of tbe lead; finoly powdered charcoal muy be sprinkled (vor tLo clotha, . - THE NEWS OF PNNSYLtfAl3 Kutztown. Ingenuity on the part of Pittsburg capitalists Is shortly to force attention to a new product from the earth, which will be Inade from what has for eentuilis been con sidered a troublesome waste, it is tire utilization of chipped and small bits of slate coining fro, n quairies In the Washington big bod slate re Klons of Northampton County. Some time ago Pittsburg men formed the Washington Standard .Slate Company with a capital of $ 1 imi.ihih, and took over thirty-eight acres of what was called wildcat property mar this place. They will us" tiP waste in molding an artificial stone. Media.- Judgn Johnson henteiiced Joseph I). Green, of Oak View, wlio wan conyicud ol murder in 1 1. sec ond de-tee lor kliootihg bis infant son. Karl, to twenty years in prison for that offense. Green plead niiilty lo the charge of assaulting his wife villi Intent to kill, he liavitiK shot Ills wife at the same time he killed t'.io cliild, and he was sentenced lo five years I'oi that offense, nmkiiiK a total of twenty-five yours. Even with ood behavior he cannot be released lor seventeen years, when he will be t-ixty years of age. Pottsvllle. W. S. Uuiterman, of I'ort Carbon, a w ill-known newspa perman, formerly owner of the Slia mokiti "IMspatch" and Schuylkill pa pers, has had a wonderful recovery from blood poisoning, though the su'eyons found it necessary to am putate most of his toncue. Uuiter man let the ailment, which started from an ulcer, go until the eleventh hour. Reading. The case of Mrs. Kate Edwards, under sentence of death in the Reading Jail for the murder of her husband, will be handed down by Governor Stuart as a legacy to Governor-elect Teller. Governor I'en nypaeker never sot a date for the execution after the Hoard of Par dons declined to Interfere and Gov ernor Stuart followed I'ennypacker's example. C'oate8vllle. Raymond Hebalesko met a horrible death by being drawn through the opening In the bottom of a gondola car and suffocated with pulverized slag. 'The man had crawled in the tar to ride over to the Worth Brothers blast furnace, and when the car arrived the men below opened the bottom of the cat to let the slag fall out. Hamburg. The present scarcity of apples in the rural districts is al most phenomenal. This, in a meas ure, is due to the decreased yield because of the ravages of the San lose scale, and the fact that those who had surplus fruit sold it at fair prices last fall, rather than suffer loss through storage. Caronia. As soon as the weather permits work will be started on an automobile and motorcycle track at this place, which when completed will be the finest automobile course in Herka County. The new track will be enclosed by a low fence and a handsome front will be built at the entrance. Reading. Nathan V. Qulnter, one of the best-known residents of St. Lawrence, died of lockjaw, the re sult of crushing his hand by having it caught between a telegraph pole and a wagon about two weeks ago. He was high constable and roadmas ter of Exeter Township for many years, and was in his C5th year. Bethlehem. WiHIam Flnley and his little brother had narrow escapes from drowning In the Lehigh River. The lads were standing on treacher ous Ice and broke through. William managed to reach firm ice, and then heroically returned to his brother's alii and after considerable difficulty rescued him. Reading. The 5 per cent. In crease, granted at a conference in Chicago between tho Stove Found era' National Defenders' Association and the Iron Molders' Union of North America, will affect over 200 men here and hundreds of others through out the Schuylkill Valley. Pottsvllle. Stlney Waspis, of Minersvllle, was sentenced to eight years at hard labor In jail for kill ing his neighbor, Anthony Wasnock, with a pocketknlfe. The evidence showed that the dead man was the aggressor, going to Waspis' home to pick a quarrel. Easton. Irwin 8. Uhler, a mem ber of the Northamton County bar, was found drowned In the bathtub at his home. Mr. I'hler was a cripple and Is supposed to have fallen Into the tub while preparing to take a bath. Lancaster. Mrs. Mary Greer, the oldest woman In Lancaster county, celebrated her 96th birthday at the homo of her daughter, Mrs. B. Frank Aulthouse, in Hart Township. Mrs. Greer has been a widow for fifty-six years. Shamoktn. Mrs. Aaron Yoder Numedia, an aged woman, was stricken with apoplexy while smok ing a pipe and burned to death. York. Jacob Frutiger, of Red Lion, dropped dead of heart trouble while walking In the yard ot his home. i York. Wbllo coasting on a fiteep hill near his home Earl Gable, 9 y ear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gable, waa fatally Injured, lie was unable to steer clear of a wagon loaded with stone and It passed over bis hips and abdomen. vby WILBUR D NCTPIT The. PLUSH HAT 1 J: kJl en -x 'fc v.y, T'.,.-t-"-!i tots of thlncs IM like to saj nli i'iT tl:e wonp-n'R fail?" to. lav. Alien tiow th,.y today nr- thin and oo t ! if iiinmiw fa t : Hat Just when ptmi;, nt phrase 1 form, Je-t v!a-n my thought arv pelting arm. It I'lipp.-tiM that I Ifink erun my new plush lint. The fanl'sh thine that wnmen d-i T real ly oukIiI to r:'st. tliai'.H :ra.-: The way they tiv to (ret to vote It fiinnv. ns to that: Hut Jhst when f take up niv p-n tt urt'e about the nftise of men My y.s wi'l wander till they see my la w plush hat. I know thM women nhvavs wear ft pile "f nrtinVf.il hair la HWlieu and roll ami ddnty puT and huKe nnd mnnslrms rat. tint ex I turn n paravr inh d .sii-ned to leak.- the relet, r laiiijli Cpnii the honk liefore me Ionian ny new plush hat. fii7.Ky-wiii-.xy thin' lndit. (ey!.(i to mee' toy rrani il need. - P.ut with the laek of lieaii'y of a drip- p ii-.,'. half-drowned at : Before I think that I sheuM try to pick the mote f(,r s-.H'er's eye I meditate a nmineiit on my nw plush ha' n olive erern a dainty preen -a cuts and I'li'inlnif tint. I ween: Flat whither ar- we driftltiic nnd what are we drivlntf at? I eive il up In sure dexpiir: I'll Jest no more of women' weir. Kltlee I Lave been tadueei to don a new I'lllHll I lit. Preparatory Work. Now Is the time to begin searching yourself to decide what bad hnblts you will abandon the first of the year The trouble about good revolutions Is that most of us want to make thero for other peop'e. We have overwhelm ing desires to better the world by building spiritual additions to our friends, or by adding intellectual ga bles and conscientious side porches to onr acquaintances. We have our der ricks ready to hoist the beams from th eyes of the rest of hivimuity In stead of the motes in our own optics. Also, good re; tiliit Iiiiih have been permitted to degenerate Into a con vcntiona.1 giving up of smoking, swe ll ing, or drinking There are many other things that may be given up by those of us who neither smoke, swear nor drink. As a matter of fact, we are not ma lting good resolutions; wo nre making negative resolutions. If we would say: "I will." Instead of "I won't," we tniuht add unto ourselv-s good traits which would crowd out Hie evil ones. There must be a substitution. You've got to get a cork leg for the one you perform the surgery on. If we should seek to add good to ourselves we would not have so much time to find sparable bad in others. Epernay, the (enter of the chain Phgne country, has erected a monu ment In bonor of the founder ot its ircsperlty, the Benedictine monk, i Ann Perignou, 1638-1716, the Invent r of tbe process for the manufac ture of sparkling vines. Ended tne Voyage. The intrepid man lias bidden his friends good by and has posed for his photograph, has given out Interviews and attended a farewell dinner to him self on the eve of his starting for the) north pole In an air ship of his own Invention. a Next morning his neigh bor Is astonished to tee him on the front porch, as usual. "Why," Eays the neighbor. "I thought you were on your way to tb pole." "I expected to be," replies the In trepid man, "but my wife told me last night that Bhe would expect me to be homo at 11 each night, as usual and well thero you nre." Holiday Terminal Facilities. "I don't know what this Is for and I don't know to whom to give It," say the lady, holding up a fancy work contrivance. "Never mind whnt It's for; give It to the preacher," suggests her hus band, with a man's ready method ot disposing of problems. An Old Fogy. "I'd like to have some stories frora young KllngtnW," says the magaxlna editor, "but he Is so old fogylBh." "Old fogylsh? Why, I thought hla plots were all modern." "That may bo, but he stubbornly re fuses to utilize the wireless telegraph or an airship." Why? Men talis a hundn-4 dors, 'tla said. When for tho north pole they explore Hut now Here have w ever read Thai they brine back a half a srora. Helping Papa. . "Ah," sighs tne enamored swain, aa the titxlcab rolls smoothly and swiftly on Its way, "It we might ride on thus forever together! Would It not seein heavenly to you?" "It might be very nice." e'almlv re sponds the beautiful creature. "Papa owns a half lutereet in this tatica company." , .Most of us have given up the search for a wun'HO who looks like the oau pictured on magazine rovers.