Southern Progress. A monthly, sixteen-page journal containing in each number some twenty narra tives of the South, chiefly J descriptive and pictorial. The paper is undoubtedly the best illustrated journal in the world, and the only publication which presents ; glimpses of Southern life and Southern people. It T is a favorite souvenir with those who have visited the Z South; and it serves a good purpose, in lieu of a visit, to those who have never been there. The regular price of Southern Progress is fifty cents a year, but to introduce the paper we will send it three months for ten cents. FRANK A. HEYVOOD, Editor and Publishes, 21 1 S. 10th SL, Philadelphia. HAIR HEALTH Never falls to R- mvk TottUifut Color Ufo to Grey yi Fl AJR HBilVn. jj it Coven BALD epotA on t Mala akta or lines. IbeoUUlf Gives Perfect Satisfaction. BM1 HAIR OROWin DRBMOIO Only 50 Gents Per Large Bottle. tttut Uroadwar, M. W wb vul email ii?m, i-irathr with oaaa of DR. IIAVtl KH.L. CORN, only rare and o Mi.i thrM botttaj, HJ50. if DON'T ACCEPT ANY SUBSTmTTB.1 Canr.lrVtWrtrtaymalaltaRaiUla DEAFs NESS & HEAD NOISES CUBED tntiantlr. Ooe IirviBlllLfl TUBS t'unhKjcu help wae all toe faila. a in rt. Sir-nantn.l N mi. WVrni Vnrrt. fBJ lo P. IIUeoK C CM Brondwdy. N tor lllaatraiad book boDO SPECIAL NOTICES. Small advertisements of every description, want, Hule or Kimi, Lost or Found, or tlior no. sVses Inserted under this heail (or ono-hal( cent word lor one Insertion and one-founti cunt a wd each Hulw-quent Insertion. Nothing In serted for less than ton ceuls. A Cure for Nervous lleadnrhes. Pnr elif lit years I suffered from costlpatlon and sevure linadncbe, the headache usually lasting a roe days nt a tune. Headache powders rellev me tMinporurtly, but left too bad an effect, atnee. I ban taking Celery Klntf 1 have greatly Unproved lu health, seldom or never have head adL. ,1HT0 vnlned In flesh, and feel decidedly wJi.-Mkn. K. H. IUtch, Temple, N. II. Celerv JUUtrforlliH Nerves, Uvernnd Kidneys Is Bold In 0c. and site, packages bv W. II. Herman, TCOaevllle; Mlddleswarltl & Ulsh, McClure; II. A, Hong In, Allue. , ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Let ters of Administration in the es ttfle of Henry Hrilbh, 8r., late of Centre tnwn rtj). Snyder Co., Ia., dic'd.. having been (fram ed to the undersigned, all p-rsons knowing tuomselves Indebted to said estate are requested 5 make Immediate payment, wlilletliose having lalms will present tiioiu duly authenticated In Um undersigned. HK.NUT U. UKl'MI, Admr. Jacob Ollbort, Att'y. Comrade. Anilentlan. I served from 'M to 'M. and was wounded Muv 10. 1H64. In the Itatlle of the Wilderness. 1 would like to have IilV comrades know what Oftlery King has done for me. In my old complaint, chronic dlarrahoea, came back, The doctors could not sUip It, but Celery King has cured me, Had I am once more enjoying life. Frank Bkkiii.kk. Owohho, Mich. (t!o. K. Will N. Y. V. I.), celery King for the Nerves, I.lverand and Kidneys Is sold In toe. and fse. pai'kages bv W. II. Herman. Troxelellle; Mlddleawarth A UlBh, McClure; II. A. Kbrlgbi, Aline. PATENTS OBTAINED- TEEMS EAST. Consult or communicate with the Editor of (ills paper, who will give all needed Infor mation. 3J"oxr Boolx. Froo. A valuable book giving complete information how I successfully cure consumption and other lung diseases will be sent free to tbe readers of this paper. Address Dr. Burtz, A. Inter Ocean Bldg., Chicago, III. 8 15-fim. HUMPHREYS' 1 Cures Fever. 8 " Infants' Diseases. No. No. 4 It a. 8 No. 9 Diarrhea. Neuralgia. Headache. Dyspepsia. Skin Diseases. Rheumatism. Whooping Cough Kidney Diseasea Urinary Diseases Colds and Crip. IJa 10 Ha 14 Cures No. 18 -1. CO " .a. T7 " P aTflatlat fwnnalld HMTB MmM iv amai aaak FLAG OF DEUVERANC& T tt hQU Ib U auiuiM track Of a DKtloa bora to b fr, -Wbara tbm loom of th MarrtinM v Enrich tba aMa of tha m, ' To tka Ukea of tb tUobar oaoa . Whara tba Island oarlaa run. To tha flalda of tha aouth fuU-blowm With their cotton whKa la tba tun. To tha weatarn rlvera that leap In tba cmn4 Paclflo bay Whara tha wind of aanplra aaraep . And tha btacona of oommerca bliaa For tba rt!n: of bearta that aprtanl To tba thrlU of Liberty call. On tb aky of summer we fling Tba flag that cover them ail! It oear no menace of fata For tb rag of a vengeful txrut. It fllea so alcnal of bate. No lure for tb lust of power. No envy, ambition, or kred. Wherever It color iwlng. The eye that e It shall read In tb Huh of It epleiulld wing. From tb ky it beckoning apeak - W Uh pity' dlvln command: "Oo tear from tb throat of tba weak Tha grip of cruelty' band! Tbo' the aword tb leaaon must write. And cannon utter the word. Bid tyranny ceas to mKa And tha wTong of the poor be beard. Go orueh the hawk In hi qplte And sucoor tb victim bird!" Flag of Deliverance blown On the wind of all the peas, 8ymbol of roalra unknown To tha bending of vasaal kneea Hall It. Invincible states, Wltb the breath of our palms and pineal From Maine to the Ooldvn Gates, Huzza for Its rainbow Unea! And hall 11, heart of the brave. From the heights of the mother tale. Till our banner that arch the wava Shall blend with a kla and smile. Run up the stars to the peak For the England old and new! The cross of St. Oeorge shall speak With our own red, whit and biua.' And the lion from over the aurg Echoes our eagle' behest: "No more shall a feudal aoourge Torment the civilised west!" And to-day Old Glory streams Where desnots scoffed at It birth. Whore a savage past blaapbeme The welfare of all tbe earth. Where worn-out dysastles shake With the groans of the poor they spurn. And the tire Its lightning wake in the grave of Liberty burn. Let It soar till It starry acope Of destiny time unrolls With tha world's to-morrow of bop In Its promise to fettered aoula; And the commonwealth of mankind Tbe last rent scepter ahaU aee. And tha test Slav march behind The banner that lead the free. Tboron Brown, In Youtii Companion. THE WOMAN'S WORK i By OtVXHQ lACHELLZl. MY LIFE had been full of work god worry. On leaving college I had planned to do many tilings that I had never done. I was to travel, I was to read and study, 1 wna to wish and have indeed what waa I not to do and what had I done? Nothing but drudg ery that had prospered so oatobeggat roe of my best hope. The hurry and hazard of buaineia Hfe had never gtven me so much ewen as a day oil. It iad been hard on my wife, and from tha first I felt aorry for her, We had no children and In our little flat my wife Insisted that a servant would be no help. I waa detained at my olDco fre quently until neither my wife nor my dinner were at their beat. I often ate with suppressed emotion those days, while my wife aat beside, me in tears, and I could never quite understand her grieving when I had iro fault to find myself. Early or late, I had no heart for reading, or going after pleasure when I got home. Somehow the weight of the whole daj seemed to fall on me of a sodden. when I sat under my own roof. Gen erally I lay on the sofa with my prpe and paper, while my wife put away the dishes. That done, we talked lan guidly about the events of the day, und were in bed by half after nine. I loved books and bought them freely as I prospered. "I mny break my leg sometime," I used to suy, "and then 111 hove a chunce to rend them." My legs remained unbroken, how ever, and carried me year after year on a steady round of toil. Other peo ple broke their legs now and then, as I read in the papers, and I regarded them with a kind of envy. Many ol amy domestic pleasures irs contingent n that possibility of a brckm leg, I tw ruember. It came to W a standing joke with us, and there was a kit of pathos in it, too. We lsad been married about ten years when I came home one summer evening with extraordinary newt. "Hello, reto," said I that was the name I called her at home Tve. got news." "What do you mean?" she inquired. "It isn't a broken leg," 1 unswered, "but it's the next thing to it a vaca tion. No more business for awhile anyway. Now, I hope we'll have a little comfort together, I want you to join that reading club you spoke of and go and see your friends that's wliut I want. Til look after the flat awhile myself. I can stand it for a couple of weeks, anyhow." We kept to the house that evening, and kiid plans for the near future. Next morning my wife went to town. She was to call on some of her friends and leav her measure for a new gown and do a lot of delayed shopping. 1 sat alone reading for a long time af ter she went away. There was a deadly stillness in the flat, but somehow I couldn't keep my mind to the book. I had read ten chapters when I discov ered myself groping in the gloomy labyrinths of nn Egyptian tomb. How I had get there was mystery to rue. I looked back through a dozen pages, but it was ell new. I had gone as far as the hundredth page with nothing more In my mind than I had had to start with. I had been thinking over the details of my businer-x ever fince I opened the book. Suddenly a fhnrn blast on the whlslle of tl:c Cnnl waller -- TK mimm vehicle nmt f sslirlssj p, presently, and I took off a lot of string beana and pat and green corn and potatoes and beefsteak and butter, and a pair of ducks, and tossed them all into tha re frigerator. Evidently my wife had stopped on her way and left orders for dinner. She had told me where I would find everything I needed for my lunch' con. It was 11 o clock, and to re- 2iev my loneliness I went out for a long walk.. I had no sooner opened the kitchen door on my return than the whistle spat at me as If I had been a cog and it a cat, and no love between us. I opened tbe door at the dumb waiter and a woman's voice came ring ing up the shaft. "Did you take them ducks off the dumb waiter?" it demanded. "Guesa I did," I answered. "Thought they belonged here. Hold on a min ute. Til send them right down. I rushed to the refrigerator for the ducks, and as I did so the outline of a dialogue that was very loud and heavy on one side came echoing up the haft. To my horror, I discovered that in tossing the ducks into tbe icecham fcer I had upset a bottle of ketchup and a bowl of molassoa. One of them looked like a chunk of rusty iron. pave him a bath under the hot water faucet and rubbed him dry with a Turkish towel. Then I thrust them both Into a paper sack and hurled them Into the dumb waiter. "Please, sor!" that voice shouted again. What madam r 1 answered, my hand on the rope. The Mrs. says you'd oughten know that ducks warnt fer the like o youse." "I know it, ma'am forgive me," said I; "here they are," and then I began to pull frantically nt the rope. "That'll do," they khouted, presently. I stopped, puffing with the violence of my effort. Then a wild scream came up at me thrortgh the shaft, and the sound of angry voices, "Please, sor," the woman called again. "What Is It, ma'nm?" I answered, my head In the gloom of the shaft. "The Mrs. would like to know what ye put on them ducks," "Ketchup and molasses," I answered. 'Tm sorry. It was an ackrdent." "May the dlvvle run away wld him," I heard her say then. "He's filled the one o' thlm wld molasses." There came a sharp answer, and then the unfortunate ducks were flung back Into the dumb waiter. "The Mrs. says ye can take 'em an' welcome," and before I could make any answer the door of the shaft came to with a bang and that stratum of light in the depths below me turned to dark ness. It would hove given me Treas ure to buy another pair of ducks for the good woman, but she had not given me a chance to make the offer. I would have gone and rang her door bell in an offer to make amends, but I had no idea where to find her. I ate my lunch presently, and went to our bedroom ami sat in an easy chair by the window with my pipe. The hum of msecta and the noises of the street came up to me, increasing my sense of loneliness. I looked about the room. There were things in It I had never seen before; silken covered bottles with ribbons tied to them; a paper holder delicately embroidered; photographs of myself in little golden frames and others, reminding me of times and faces well-nigh forgotten; a hundred trifles that, one b one, hod: gone un noticed into the building of my home and happiness, I opened a bureau drawer full of plush, covered boxes and silken belts and ribbons, and the smell of violets. In one of the boxes there were a lot of old beads and bracelets, a discarded neck chain and many useless trinkets be delight of some fnr distant day. In another box there was an old photograph of me a cal low looking youth and a bundle of letters. I untied them and sat down comfortably to look them over. I had written a lot of high-sounding rubbish in those letters; I had made many promises; I had painted many pictures of what the future was to bring us. It hod all been very different a life full of drudgery for both, and for her It must have been a desert I thought of the days hi numerable and full of loneliness that she had spent In that gloomy flat I put up the letters and went into tk aitting-reom. It waa two reteck, and I took a book from Ha shelf and lay ow apoa tka sofa in a vain quest after kMM. This time I would set ay maiMiatl road aloud. I remember wtra I led fin ished there was la any eSBeieaKsa about this impression of what I had rend: "I purpose to write the history of England from the accession of King James the Secon down to n ttme that is within the memory of men still liv ing. I shall recount the errors; Good Lord! I have made many errors," And so it went One standing near would have heard the first chapter In a well-known history of England, but I heard only the history of my recent life. I threw the book aside presently and fell asleep. When I nwoke it wab near five o'clock. The Hat was as dark and silent as a tomb. My wife would be coming soon, and I thought I would get the dinner started. So I strung the beans and pared the potatoes and got a fire going. The pots were boiling mer rily in a short time, and then I spread the tnble and got out some of our best china. It occurred to mo. suddenly, that a few flowers would improve the locks of the tnble, and so I hurried down to a near shop ond bought a lot of roses and ferns. On my return a strong odor greeted me at the door. The water hr.d boiled out of one of the pots and the beans had touched bot tom. The potatoes were also crumbling nn the verge of dissolution. I made things move so quickly then that I scalded my hand with hot steam. I lost my temper for a moment and flung the empty potuto kettle Into the nir. Ifleft Its blr.cl: footprint on the wall , and ram down with a mighty crash, and aa it rolled back to ma, I kicked ft across the room with a remark that bad better be omitted. Then I heard the door of tbe dumb waiter open jus below me. "Ve'd better break a hole in the cell ing an' done with It," somebody shout ed, I began to cool down a bit shortly, and swathed my hand in a wet cloth, and fixed the beana and potatoes and put them away in the oven. They looked all right and I began to broil the beefsteak with a feeling of re morse. When it lay on the platter at last with a golden crown of butter on it and a sprinkle of pepper over all, I grew hungry at the eight "Now," I thought "the quicker she comes the better." The table looked superb In its fresh cover of snowy linen with delicate sprays of fern surrounding the center piece of roies, and little groups of china decorated In blue and gold. "There'M be one surprised woman when she does coine," I said to myself as I sat down to cool off. I looked at the clock. It was half after six, and she was long overdue. What could hare happened to her? It had been very hot in the sun perhaps rlie had been overcome and taken to some hospital. The gloomy day grew dusk, and there was something in the bilence like, tbe muffled footfall of the coming night I sat a long time listen ing, hoping, fearing, imagining all manner of evil. I went into the dark kitchen alter awhile and lit a match and peered Into the oven. The Are had gone down; the beans had settled and turned black; the potatoes had a cold end sickly look; the steak had shrunk into a leathery patch at the bottom of the platter. I went back to my chair in the dining-room, utterly sick at heart. "If she doesn't come in half an hoir, I shall send out an alnrm," I said to myself, and then a ring at the bell brought me to my feet. neno, dear, said my wile, in a cheerful tons, as I opened the door "You poor thing, what has happened to you 7" "Madam," said I, with growing in dignation, "I should like to know what has happened to you." 'Goodness! said she in that same kiodly and provoking tone, "make i light and then I shall tell you." "It s a fine time to be getting home. I eakl, with suppressed emotion as I lit a match; "where have you been?" "Been to tbe cJubI"she answered. "Been to the club!" I repeated, with irony. "ies; been to the dub," she went on. ctepplng Into the bedroom and laying off her things. "I stayed longer than I intended and missed my train." She used the same tone of voice with which I had answered ber on similar occasions, and oddly enough, it xvtis about the same story I had told her a score of times. While I was lighting the gas In the dining-room I thoiifbt how suddenly that feeling of romsr.i tc tenderness had pone out of my h:irt. "Come here, uld she, presently. "1 want you to look In the glass, I had already seen it in the manMe mirror that face of mine black will: eoot and stern with emotion. 81: o came Id before I could atnrwcr ntiil :iw the dinner table, and short)-. we both went and washed our faces. My dinner was cold ond weot with a bad relish, but she fell to with a sail ing face and a stout lienrt mid a word of praise for everything, met t I had done always. I felt like talking after din;nr. It wa a great relief to have somebody to talk to swter that long and lonely day. "Tell me what you have been doing all day," I said. My wife sat gaping, her head leaning on her hand, a far-off look In her eyes. She had not heard me. "What did you say?" she inquired. "Oh, come," I said, "wake upl Let's have a good long talk. A wife H no comfort to a man when she sits and gaze at him like a nirmy with nothing to say. Tm too tired" that was her answer "I've to get up early and go and meet a friend of mine over in Brooklyn to morrow morning. I must get through with the work and go to bed." "When am I going to have a word with you? that's what I'd like fo know," I said. "Oh, by'n byt" she answered. "Maj- be TO break my leg one of these days," IwgMlogrow thoughtful tien, and go and helped her clear the table, fl went lalo Uie Kitchen and wiped m dishes lor her. "How nice It is," sold she, "Just as I am abl to go out a bit that you con turn your hand to such things," 'Not much, I answered; "I don t propose to be anybody's servant girl. Well hire one tomorrow, and then we'll get acquainted with each other." And that is what came of it Aalmal at Play. Cats delight in racing about but not ho often, I think, in circlee as dogs do. They prefer straight lines and sharp turns with the genuine goat jump. fhls sudden flight into the air, which appears to take place without the ani mal's knowledge or intention, connot here be preparatory to life in the mountains, but the cat finds the high jump very useful, not only In pouncing on its prey, but in escaping its hered itary enemy. Brehm records a move ment play of young chamois. When in summer the young chamois climb up to the perpetual snow, they delight to play on it. They throw themselves in a crouching position on the upper end of a steep, snow-covered Incline, work nil four legs with a swimming motion to get a start, and then slide down on the surface of the snow, often travers ing a distance of from 100 to 150 meters in this way, while the snow flies up and covers them with a fine powder. Ar rived at the bottom, they spring to their feet and slowly clamber up a"!r Cio .'if". -co .-ve slid dov.r.. E TRAISniO THE Y0U8Q. Read teatraettaa Is a Waaaaalty Wkers t Raaalta Arw I Be alia. It la sot to be denied that wheel: sometimes feel disoouraged at tbe re sults obtained from tea years of per slstent agitation, much thankless la bor and considerable expenditure of money In the esusa of highway im provement At times the efforts that have been put forth seem to have been out of all proportion to what has been accomplished. The temptation, then, la strong to relinquish the work en tirely to those who will be the moot immediate and chief beneficiaries of itt but knowing that the withdrawal of their assistance would be the re moval of one of the strongest supports of the cause, they turn again to renew their efforts in iU behalf. There are some tilings connected with the road problem that are better understood to-day than they were a few years ago, and they have brought to wheelmena realisation that there are many sections of tbe country In which it is weil-nlgh impossible to in terest or instruct the people on the subject and where it msy take a gen eration or two to eonvincetiem that bad roads cost money while good roads save It. Therefore, while in no AN IDEAL HIOHWATip (Teaoeck Road, Between Hackcnsack and Engiewood, N. J.) degree abating their own Interest In highway improvement cyclists find it for their own interest in such district to secure the construction of cycle side paths. Such paths are directly beneficial to all concerned, for the wheelman gets a good roadway and the opposition are afforded food for thought in tbe constant spectacle of the easy, rapid locomotion of vehicles over smooth surfaces. This Is an educative influence, but it cencot alwaya be counted onat suftl eieni. To secure permanent results It should be supplemented by practical instruction, not alone to the adult generation, but to the youth who wHI, before many years, be called upon to decide whether the mudwayt of the past are to be retained, or whether greater prosperity la to be courted by the aid of hard and permanent high ways. Demonstrations of rood construc tion held annually in every county; building of sample stretches on scien tific principles; effort to arouse In terest by pronloting discussion in farmers' granges and associations; olroulatlon of readable, convincing matter, and tbe like, are among the meana that can be need to appeal to tbe adult mind. But youngvf minds ean be appealed to more effectively through the ln struotion of the schools and colleges, In every one of which information on the social and eeonomto value of good roads ought to be given. This Is a phase of the subject that has not yet reeelved the attention its importance merlta. Too much cannot be expected of the present generation, but the on coming one ean be trained to see the great advantages of improving -the highways, so that they will naturally take up the work when their time and opportunity cornea. Uonbtl ess there are obstacles to be eneountered in securing the introduc tion of such instruction Into the com mon schools, but they can all be over come. Not the least among them, per haps, is the fact that few teachers are themselves at all well informed on the subject and might not welcome it at first Few work suitable for pur pose of instruction now exist, and a demand for them would be created; but. in a short time, all this could be remedied, and intelligent Instruction given to the young would eventually bring forth fruit a thousandfold. Good Itoads. Raaata lias Dad Itoada. Baron Duquesne, sent to Russia by the Touring Gub de France for the object of inspecting the roads most suitable for the projected Paris-St Petersburg motor car race, has issued a long report stating tbat roads, as understood in the rest of Europe, do not exist in Russia save in the immedi ate vicinity of the largest towns,where they are few and far between, and very bad at that. He concludes that the Intended race is almost an impossibili ty, as the rough pathway used aa roads would not allow one vehicle ever reaching its destination. Eussla, It would appear from the above, ia sot a country that could be easily iirraded unless the railways were secured first,1 ' C round rye. It Is said, will not make good, naely-flavpred, butter. '"iiUWl it? " GOski? OF THB STAGE. A Japanese opera by Chester Bailn Feraald, the author of "The Cat and the Cherub," is to be produced In Log. don soon, Richard Mansfield bos secured tr the Scribners the exclusive rights, tt this country, for the dramatization of Stevenson's "St Ives." . Reginald de Eoven'a "The Fencing Master" ia to be aungln London soon wttk Marie Tempest in tbe leading role, which she created In the Unittd States some years ago. Alice Nielsen, who ie to star next season under Frank L. Perley. has arrived aafely In Yokohama, Recent ly the singer left San Francisco for a vacation trip to China and Japan. Lucien Gultry, for several years the leading actor with Bernhardt, has gone to another theater, where he will receive a large salary, chiefly because he owns two plays that are regarded as probable successes. Sarah Bernhardt has decided not to appear as Josephine in a Napoleonic play which was made for her. She concluded after two years' delibera tion that the role did not suit her, and Coquelln has taken the play for the sake of acting Napoleon. A stir in London dramatic affairs is made by the promise that Hall Caine will appear at a charity matinee or ganised by Ellen Terry, who is said to have persuaded the novelist to do o turn which has hitherto been seen in a few provincial cities only. Germany ia to have "In Old Ken tucky" acted in Germany by a com pany sent from the Pabst theater in Milwaukee, and accompanied by ne gro dancers and singers. The per formance is seriously spoken of in German journals as a return for the appearances here of Sorma, Engels, Kalnt, Posse rt and Barnay. Wilson Barrett the eminent English actor, has just closed his Australian tour at Adelaide. Mr. Barrett's tour has proved such an enormous financial success his individual share of the profits amounting to at least 13,000 sterling that he has already made ar rangements to visit the antipodes in 1890. CONTEMPORARY FUN. Lodging House Clerk "Bed with both, 15 cents." Weary Watkins "I guess I'd rather pay a little more and not take a bath." Indlanapolla Jour nal. She T wonder why it hi that sum mer engagements never end in mar riage." He (moodily) "The man never ha enough left to marry on." Town Topics. Commissioner (to civil service appli cants for places in the custom hou.se) "When was the diamond duty most' burdensome 7" Bright Candidate "Just before my marriage, sir." Jew eler's Weekly. She "What o lovely summer after noon! How resplendent the bright orb of day bangs In the blue vault above." ne "Y-a-a-s; nice day fer a feller to get bis hair cut" Roxbury Gazette. Jill "You puckered up your Hps so then, that I thought you were going to kiss me." Jack "No; I got some sand in my mouth." Jill "Well, for heaven's sake swallow itl You need it in your system." Troy Times. "Named your boy yet?" "Yes. Called Mm Dewey 8." What is the S for?" "I dunno yet whether it is for Sampson, Schley or Smith, or his mother's father." Cincinnati En quirer. Heroes Yet to Come. "I understand you have decided to postpone the chris tening of the baby." "Yea, You see, we can't tell who we may want to name him after by the time this war Is done." Chicago Evening Post As Bad as Ever. Madge "On ac count of the war, I guess there will be no lack of men at the summer' re sorts this year." Marjorie "But what good will they be? Those fellows who were afraid to volunteer wouldn't ea ter into any engagements." Judge. A Theory ."Mike," said Plodding Pete, "how is it dat some o'dese peo ple kin work day after day an' never seem to feel it?" "Well," replied Me andering Mike, reflectively, "I s'pose dey is started in young an' gets to be immunes." Washington Star. GLEANED ABROAD. The Sues canal took 13 years to build. Germany prints twice a many books as France. In France there are 83 females to every 100 males. There are about 71,000 families in Japan that live by fishing. More than 75 per cent, of the trade of Egypt is with British possessions. In Berlin nearly all the repairs of the principal streets are carried on at night It is said that about 50,000 servant girls go from the German provinoes to Berlin every year. Prisoners when arrested in Morocco are required to pay the policeman for his trouble in taking them to jail. A Japanese bride gives her wedding presents to her parents aa some slight recompense for their trouble in roar ing her. Simla, India, is built on the side of a steep hill, and the roof of one house is often on a level with the foundation of one in the next tier. Barcelona is now the most populous city of Spain, the result of a census just taken, showing 620,000 inhabitants to Madrid' 607,000, Siberia is an empire in itself. There have been discovered along its line of road 64 bituminous coal fields, 20 gold, 40 copper and two.sllver deposits. Any Spaniard over the age of 10 ia liable to be called into military service for three years. By the payment of X.T.VO peseta ($300) he can escape mill- K'xiiik. .....