"TO'THl JEDOMINT DAY. 1 Thtn thtnts sent wron grandfather he'd sr: Well, the world rolls on to the Jcdmlat An' what should we sigh fee ea' why should ws care? na reckonln's oomln' sometline-ome- where! Dear with ths winter, an" dream o ths The world roll on to the Jedgmlnt Day!" When thlnfrs went wrong, an' we knelt In dllHt To thank the Lord fer tho poorest crust. An' the nM-tlme friends that we thought we knowed Had loft UK friendless along life's road. It wa always nothln' but this to say: 'The world rolls on to the Jedgmlnt Day!" Bo we stifled the sigh, an' tried fer the song. Knowln' God made the light, an' would reckon the wrong: An' trouble seemed lighter, an' even the night Had stars never dreamed of to make It bright. We can bear, we can suffer along the world's way. Tar "The world rolls on to the Jedgmlnt lay!" P. L. Stanton, In Atlnnta Constitution. AT NO. 64. ifpOMB up to No. S4, Ellis street," L James hail written to inn, "or wire us by whut train to expect you, and we will meet you." James and Guru were settled at fast, and I was expected to look them up. So in due time I got out of the train, and looked round vainly for James. How like the Indifference of a brother that was! Trust a brother for failing to meet you. For a minute or two 1 thought of Ruing to nn hotel, and (riving him the slip altogether. It would serve him right. I flung my bag into an open cab, and flung myself after it, "No. 34 Ellis street," I said sulkily to the driver. And in a moment the cab was jolting over the wretched cobble-stones. The rain was falling hard when the wheels finally grated ngainHt the curbstone, and the driver opened the door for me, and announced: "Here you are, sir No. 54!" I saw the figures painted on the door, so I paid the driver, let him go, and rang the bell. After a while I pang the bell again, ami yet again, with no result. Then It occurred to me how strange it was that there was no light in the house, when they must have been expecting me, too. Another turn at the bell. This time there wns some response. A woman, evidently a servant, came along the garden at the side of the adjoining house, and snid: "There ain't nobody at home. They've jfnnc to J he opery. And it's the servant's -night out." Then she went -back. The rain was pouring. Judging by tho distance I had come, I must Ik; tnilrs from nn hotel. I must make a run fur smiie shelter part of the house, and try to get into a drier place. My run brought ine to n little ve randa, at the side of the house, and there was another door. I was seized with nn inspiration. I took my home latehery out of my pocket, and tried it in the look. It fitted! I opened the door and walked in, and s;it my hag down with a sij.'h of reJief. "Aha! James, my boy, you might have known your brother better than to try to lock him out!" I said glee fully to myself. And then I struck a match which the wind blew out. After I had spent several minutes striking more matches. I finally lit a set f.ru to the shade. I extinguished the fire by putting the shade on the floor and htamping on it repeatedly. Then I left it where it had fallen. It would teach tiara a lesson, for a great frill'-d afT;ur on a lamp is al ways exceedingly dangerous. The high-pitched barking of a dog began to annoy me, and I went in search of it, lighting another lamp or two on the way. I passed through the hall, and into a bedroom on the other tide, and there was the dog, a wreti hed little png. I have always been a man of ex pedient. I rhnsed the pug into a cup boar!, and, after a brief, violent gym nastic exercise, succeeded in turning a waste-basket over the little beast, and then weighted the basket down with a lar'e l imp of coal. I shut the barking and howling lit tle brute, in the cupboard. There wai a neat little dressing room adjoining. I peeped into it, and found several suit of James' clothes lu.-!;rng along the wall. For the frit t iue I remembered that my own eiothet were damp, ond I hastened to do j-;n what James would have lut'.n:d on if he had been there I put n some dry clothes. Aft'-r that I wandered into the dln lcg room, and was charmed to ob serve that the materials for a pot- opem upper had been thoughtfully vrt on the table, and that there were 'J.'j for u re. Aha! f-o they were e-xjACtir.'jj in", then, lint as Tt was reL'ji I decided t' eat my share fcow, t:A r.ot wait. Happy thought! I at a tery generous meal. 1 hen I went bfatk to the bedroom, t'ghted one of Jam-' cigars, stretched jxtywlf it'll in an eaayehair, with my f-t to the grate, where a warm tff jr flowed, sod smoke and dreamad, I was cot roiud until an agitated XtA was trying to lumrt a kry Into L Uxk of the front door. I failed st lint mrprW I m going ty fire 3nves and Clara. Just then the hall -nawadert' remarked a Tote. - "I benight we tamed all the llg-hta oat!". I dropped back into the chair." The voice did not belong- to Jamea! I had never heard It before! A wild panorama of thing flashed before me. I dashed through a door In front of me, locked It, and found myself in another bedroom, and there I was in a cul-de-sac. The only door of exit led into the hall. J paused, and listened In agony. Oh, my poor darling little Fido!" screamed the feminine voice, as the dog was discovered. "What an awful rruel monster he must have been!" "Well, at least, Lillian, he didn't hurt the dog," said another feminine Joice, with a ripple of laughter in It. "I think he deserves a good deal nf sympathy for that, dou't you. Will?" I henrd referenes to the. police, and the jingling of an excited telephone bell, followed by calls for three or four men to be sent up from tb"5 sta tion. In that single moment I spent a whole long night locked up with the "drunks and disorderlies," and pic tured James coming down In the morning and calling me a fool, while he wa9 making arrangements for my release. Never! I would die first! And I clutched at the collar of Will's suit, and beat my brow with my fist, and groaned. I heard the procession come along the hall, and I knew what awaited them In the dining-room. I opened the door the merest crack, and peeped out. The hall wu clear. Now was my time. With my best run I sped along the hall, and to the room into which I had first broken. It was done. I was Inside, and the door was shut behind me. And then I fell up against the door and gasped. I had missed the direction! There was only one other way In which I could make a confounded fool of my self that night, and now I had done that. This was not the drawing-room at all, but a snowy bedroom, with a young lady standing in the middle of it, looking affrighted at me! She continued to look at me for some time. After a while she said: "Is there anything more you would like to have? If you can think of anything, please don't hesitate to ask for it; but he quick, for the police will be here soon." "I do beg you to believe that this is all an unfortunate mistake," I said. "Will you believe me, on my honor as a gentleman, when I tell you that I will explain it nil some day, and that, If you will help me to escape from this painful predicament, you will be glad when you know the truth?" We heard Will and his wife In loud discussion of the coolness of the burglar, while Will's wife cried hys terically: ; "Where is Uelle? I do wish she would stay with us! We ore all going 'to be murdered before the police get !j,ere;.i ! The voung ludy pushed past me, and opened the door a little. "Don't worry about me Lillian," she culled brightly. "I don't care to see the polica, so I shall shut myself in." Then she closed nnd locked the door, nnd turned to me ntrain. "I have almost told a lie for you," she whispered coldlv. "Worse than that, I am going to help you out of my window. Once outside, you will huve to toko your chance." I bowed my thanks, and wns mevlng towards the window, when I remem bered the bog nnd all it contained to identify me with the wearer of Will's suit. I told her about it and she smiled, nnd slipped out of the room by another door. Presently she enme with the bnir, nnd there was n gleam in her eyes as I profusely thanked her once more. "We are under many obligations to you for not having set fire to the house," she said demurely. We heard the heavy feet of the. offi cers at the door, and their ring at the bell, and then the young lady softly raised the window. I sprang lightly to the ground. Her hand was lying on the window-sill, and I leaned over and kissed it. The window closed with emphasiB. I walked, bag in hand, to the pave ment, and then I started up the street. At the further end of it I plunged into the arms of a man who was coming out of a cottage. "Hang It! What are you racing about the streets like that for?" he roared. Then he flung himself at me, and almost shook my arm off, shout ing, with a grin of delight: "Dave, you young rascal, where have you been?" I dropped my bag, and sat down upon it. "James," I said sternly, "where do you live?" "Why, here, at Xo. 341" he said cheerily. "Where have you been all this time? We went to the station to meet yon, but were too late, and so we rame back home, ami have been waiting for you ever since, and aw fully u:ieay." I had been feeling in my pocket for his letter, and now I spread It out before him, under the light of the hall lamp. "James," I said severely, "what numlx-r is that?" "Why, that is No. 34," he said, with conviction. "Can't you read writing?" "Ijo you vail that 24?" I demanded, with spirit. "Oreat Kcott! iMve," he replied, there it U plain as a pikestaff 3 sad 4. Can anything be plainer than thatr "And who lives at M?" I asked m despair. -(A, that William Ttiofn'on; par Uvular trUiul of luinc; splendid fel iow, too, and feaa a ale tmmij. AmX hy the way, I waa telling them ahoat yon this morning. They've read jroav stories, and are anxious to meet raw, Bat why," -James," I said bitterly. "I wish you'd go to school and leant to write plainly." .- The next time I entered the Thomp son house I went In by the front door, and Jsmes and Clara were with me. I had returned Mr. Thorn peon's suit hi an anonymous package, and had a vague hope that this was the end of It, and perhaps the young lady would hot recognize me, as the light had ueen dim In the room. I had betrayed no secrets to James; far from it. The lovely face of Miss Bella Thompson gave no sign of recogni tion. This was better than I expected. A warm glow went over me as I thought of it. Perhaps they would never know, after all. But when I asked Miss Belle to sing, and followed her to the piano, my eyes fell upon a curious- object hung up in a little nook. It waa a half burned lamp-shade! ' ' She was looking at me, and her eyes were brimming with laughter. "That is a relic," she said. "We keep it to remind ns of a terrible man who invaded our house" She was turning over the masle, and I was between her and the group at the other end of the room. "And -you told the terrible man," I retorted, "to ask for anything in the house he might want, if he hadn't already taken it. Well, there Is some thing in the house the terrible man wants, and some of these days he is coming back to ask for it." "And what can it be? How I hope it is Fido!" replied Miss Bella Thompson. e Will and James have behaved well, all things considered; though when either of them breaks Into Homerio laughter when there is nothing to laugh at I know what he ia'thlnklng of. As for Miss Thompson, she knew as well as she knows now that it waa not Fido I was going to ask for. London Answers. WANTED THEIR PHOTOGRAPHS Tender Dot TaatallslasT Farewell ( Cornell Vaderaraeaate to the Faealtr. Cornell university ha its fair qnota of harum-scarum youths, who, after pyrotechnic careers, suddenly disap pear from the university's ken. A wasteful genius was recently haled before the faculty to answer charges before the faculty to answer charges of such violent fractures of discipline 1 that even In his most optimistic mo-jing of winding it up with the hero menta he had not hoped to explain ine'g letter accepting the hero." or disprove them satisfactorily, ays "Cood idea!" exclaimed the critic; the New York Tribune. However, he . "that'll give you a chance to con faced the music and even stood with elude the whole thing with 'plensc a considerable degree of composure ' excuse bad writing.' " Philadelphia while proof after proof if misconduct . wng presented. Finally when the evi dence was all in and the hush' fell on the assembly that precedes sen tence, the prodigal raised his down cast eyes, and, iu a voice full of emo tion, said: - "I have only one lust request to make. "And what is tlint?" asked the pro siding oflieer. "That you will give me your pro tographs to remember you by." With this parting shot he dodged out of the door, which he had taken i pnins to stand nenr. The professors) lay back in their chairs and laughed . long and loud. Then they took the J vote that severed the official connec- tion between themselves and their tender young friend, Miles ScrnarKlne' First Effort. Miles Scroggins was inure than 50 years old, noted for his droll wit and funny sayings, but had never attempt ed to make a speech. All the mem bers of the club believed he could speak if he would try, and frequently attempted to have him make the ef fort. It was finally determined to compel him to speak. So, upon the assembling of the club, he was called upon and, declining to comply, the boys grabbed him and forcibly placed him Upon a table, amidst the cheers of the crowd. To the astonishment of all he mani fested great embarrassment. The crowd continued to yell, and final- lv he broke forth as follows: I "Ladies and Gentlemen: Oh, I beg your pardon, there are no ladles pres- ent, and d d few gentlemen, if anv." - After this salry the curiosity of the crowd was satisfied, and no further effort was made to have Rerogglns make a siieecb. Huffalo Courier. specimens of Professors Wit. Dr. Varnadoe, a noted professor of Greek, is very fond of flowers, and, some days ago, on returning from IiIb college duties, he found in his front yard a jtestiferous calf belonging to a neighbor. The doctor gave chase, and the animal plunged toward the flower pit, and In another instant crashed through the glass cover and mixed at random with tfie pots and plants be low. When another professor passed a few minutes later, he said, gravely: "I do not understand, Dr. Varnadoe, why you should object so seriously to having a modest cowslip added to vour Ann collection of blants." The J m doctor's frowning face relaxed. "Ah, l.,., " l, ,,rt.,l. -van see. this ' . h was only a wonuiese uuirusn. sr gonaut. t'nwlse Thins; to Da.' "Look pleasant," said the photog rapher. , i "Well, I guess not," replied the man, "This is being taken for some4 distant relatives who threaten to visit as and I want to look as savage and mean aa possible.'' Chicago Post .1 Wt FOBS Soft and crooiccd bones mean bad feeding. Coll the disease rickets if you want to. ;The growing c'ulj nut cat thJ right foou fer jrrowih. Done must h?. 2 bvi. i -oil, blood must ha V- 1 leod f-.-od and on through li.'i. Scott's E:::::;ju n is the right treatment f- r soft bones in children. Link-doses every day give the stiff- v and shape that healthy J v s should have. Bow le-'s 1- row. straightcr, loose joints n f Irr ngcrand firmness com.s Vt ihc soft heads. WroiifT f.z-J caused the trouble. Right food will cure it. ' In thousands of cases Scott's Emulsion has proven to be the right food for soft bones in childhood. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. 400-415 Pearl Street. New York, joc and f i.oo ; all druggists. Br Medleal Advice. Brooks came to the office the other morning with a cigar ten inches long and thick in proportion in his month. "For the love of heaven, old boy," said Hirers, "what are you smoking auch a thing as that for?" "I'm doing it," responded Brooks, "by the advice of my doctor, lie or dered me to smoke just one cigar a day, and I never disobey the doctor. I have a hundred of this size made to order and I use one every day but it keeps me pretty busy." Chicago Tribune. The Wrong- Expression. The policeman heard high wordsand poked his,head in the door. "What's goin' on here?" l.e demand ed. "XawtbJn't Xowthln nt oil!" an swered one of the belligerent Irish men in the middle of the floor. "There's nawthin' goin on, but there's a fight comin' off in liss than a minute, if ye'll only keep movin'." Chicago Tost. Apoloorr Needed. "Thnt," said Scribble, as he fin- Ished reading his mnnuscript, "; story as far as I've got. I was 1 "is the think- Press Small lint Flourishing-. Papa You were up last night, daughter? Daughter Yes, papa; our Fresh Air club met on the piazza. Papa Who belongs to your Frcsh- cjuv? Uaughter (slowly nnd somewhat reluctantly) Well Jack and and me. Detroit Free Press. I.ndrlenl. Bridget Oi can't stay, inn am, on- l"8 3 e P've me more wages, Mrs. Hiram Often What! why, you dont k,low how to cook or rto house work at o11- , Hridget-Thnt's jist it. 'ma am, an not knowin' how, sure the wurk is an the harder for me, ma'am. Philadel phia Press. She Knew Iletter. ' Madeline He doesn't pay the slight est attention to his wife's wishes. Edna llut, she doesn't mind. She does just as she pleases. Madeline Even so, you can't tell me that any woman wuld be tatisledwith auch an arrangement as that. Brook lyn Life. A Xutoral Qoallflcat Ion. "What is your city noted for?" "Well, we have the tallest building In the country, the cleanest streets of any city in the world, the best street car service, the most " "Oh, yes! llut what have you that! the other cities haven't got?" Town Topics. no Amatears. Summer Jlotel Doctor I hope there will be no mistakes in admin- istering these medicines. ... . berTant nave no iear, aoetor. i am a prolessionai nurse, ana madam l a . professional invalid. N. Y. i Weekly. A Favored Exception. The little bury bee goes forth In exultation Just. He gathers sweets for all he's worth And f esrs no sugar tust. Washington Star. DR. FENNER'S KIDNEY .i Backache All diseases of Kidneys, CURE Bladder, urinary organs. Kesrvoisease.oravei, iBropsy.rsttuueiTouoies. Don't become discouraged. There is a Cure for you. If iieuuwary write Dr. tenner. lie Has spent a lira mue curing just su cases as yours. All consultations Free, A gravel lodgnd In my bladder. After ns lew hot Lloa of I)r. Fenner's Kldnev and Backache (Jure I passed a gravel half as larre as a marble. The medicine prevented lurvuer loriuauons. iwaarureu. W.T.OAKES, Orrlx, Va." Druggists, toe., II. Ask for Coos Hook-Tret, JT.VITUS'DAKCEJ.r.r!LVr r SELECTION OF COWS. PC r. f, Cler ratals Oat rfcaaee That Hast o C faUr Ctoaalaered. There are threa phases to ha con sidered in this choosing a cow, said Prof. 8. F. Cooley at a recent In stitute at the Massachusetts agri cultural college. First, I would se lect the cow as an Individual, with out reference to antecedents and rec ords. The most Important indication of a good cow is her udder. No cow can make much milk without a capa cious udder. This is not measured so much by Its vertical diameter aa by its length as measured by the at tachment to the body. It should ex tend well forward and far back or up ward between the legs, and should be wide at the same time, but not necessarily pendulous. The neat point to be considered is the barrel. The cow must have a big body, which la her workshop or laboratory. - Those features that indicate a good breeder or mother should eome next. She should be wide through the hips and large and roomy in the hind quarters. The fourth point to be considered is the forequarters, and here she should be rather thin and sharp, of spare flesh, loosely put together, with chin a little sharp. The neck should be sharp, and rath er loosely put on the shoulders, and the head long. Lastly should come the superficial points, such as good milk veins, escutcheon, fine hair and loose skin. The udder, barrel, pelvic region, fore quartern and superficial points should be considered in this order, but most buyers begin with the last, and seldom get as far as the udder. The second phase of the selection has to do with the pedigree, A ped igree of the right sort should be a record of ancestry that Includes ani mals of superior merit close up. The mother of the cow should be a supe rior animal, and of the type which you wish to perpetuate. The moth er of the cow's sire should be the same. If they are mediocre, you GOOD TYPE OF.XEARLlNO. have a poor pedigree to start with. The farther back you can go with good animals, the better the pedi gree. The next point is uniformity and similarity of animals' on both ' ides. In the selection of a herd, the third phase is to choose a few each year from among those cows you have, and weed them out, selecting a few from outside superior to those you propose to let go. To make selec tions in your own herd, it is neces sary to keep a daily record and to muke frequent tests of the milk. Dis pose of those not making a satis factory profit. At the Connecticut experiment station It costs about $43 year to keep a cow, here about $60. In order to pay for this feed, a cow must be capnble of making 300 pounds of butter per year. The average of the herd ought to be 3S0 pounds, and 400 pounds is possible with care and selection. Too many farmers don't know which cows are making a profit and which a loss. TUBERCULAR BACILLI. Martyr to Inoculation Theory Proves Thai They Can Be Transmitted from Cows to Hen. The announcement made by Dr. Koch, the famous German bacteriol ogist, at the London tuberculosis congress that human beings could not be inoculated with tubercular bacilli from animals was naturally received with much incredulity by physicians in all parts of the world. It was well known at the time that Prof. Koch's conclusions were based upon experiments upon the lower animals, which appeared to indioata that animals could not contract con sumption from human beings. With out having made any experiments upon human beings at the time ha boldly concluded that the reverse of the proposition was also true that human beings could not contract tuberculosis from animals. To prove the truthfulness or falsity of this deduction it was manifestly necessary to Inoculate a human be lng with the tubercular bacilli from a lower animal. To test the theory of Dr. Koch a young woman of Brooklyn less than a year ago sub mitted to inoculation with bovine bacilli of consumption by a well known physician of that city, who not only desired to prove the incor rectness of Dr. Koch's contention but to demonstrate that consumption In Its earlier stages could be cured by inhalation of a medicated air. The woman soon developed ell the symp toms of genuine tuberculosis, and never enjoyed good health at any time after being inoculated. Bus finally died, a martyr to the Koch theory of Inoculation, although her death by no meant demonstrated the Incurability of consumption. The result of tht experiment, with out any reftrtnea to Hi ethical as pects, la Important and mutt have a far-reaching Inflnanoa upon ttate and municipal authotltlee in their efforts to prevent tha tala of milk or meat from eowt affected with tuberculosis. t-Cblcago Bteord-Harald. '..,. .... ' a set luea. ?- fen her.e.e to Ike" Una a a east- e. Eureka Harness 011 MteabSMtathehencet m a 1 hwiaer mind nbi. put, tt7 'I 'Did you get any tips on tht this yenr7" "Yes, I got one from the bos morning. "Whit was it?" . "He said he'd fire me If hi heard that I played them."-ciJ American. Permanent. This strange, eternal, cruel tin Will stick when all of u aind There's always one fly left In tht J no mailer now many you kUL Judge. Good Reason. Wife Well, the cook hut gom it s your fault. Husband Mine! WhvV "She said you didn't treat hn better than you treated me." jj Sun. It Will Shrink. Customer Hut thin niit it times too big. Eichenstein Oh, but mine jhust vait 'til id rains.-HIo Journal. His Sphere. PoHticus There u mat greement among the powers. .Familicus Are you rtlc-rir.; wife, mother-in-law aiv! r.r J ml ire. . All work nnd no play mute a dull boy, and so, to uvi.iil tbi-. dreds of urbnnites are packing trunks nnd hastening M the woods. To give the uiiial and rest and refreshment means p strength for the daily duties tb: nuce of the year, hver.v mM take a vacation, even if only! short time, for a much ine cacn constantly without great war. practice of taking a vacation ir known in the country, vet tl' no reason why the fanner shei have . rest us well $s other p It is true that he breathes I air than his city brother, bnU thelesj, it would do him eijut much good to have a change vironments. 66 nO An Rogers Bros." I. 4k. TmmAm mark that .ppeara on the oM orii VI elUii we Knives, Fork and Spoons. There are many tmitattos "l7'Ms identify" J of the genuine, wli icn b Mil Miff an rm. the mskers fr b?'f Ko. iol,of besutuui"" THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER GU. Meriden, Conn. Your NSgMl; Horse a m Chancel lM f AD11I iwi ii " a u iai1,I " NOT naR0GERSB JI ONLY BUT I w -mm HI I 1 I of theeenulne.wliiciure J by leading; deslrm. f the mskers ffbi? ' Ko. ist,ofbfiitlfulnw I jA THE INTERNATIONAL I SILVER CO. I KJ Meriden, Conn. I "Mhw'J ' V Vtat Wturu' J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers