|ON THE \ PRAIRIE \ ) \ ) B> IICNORL WILLSIE ( I ( As far as the eye could see the prairie stretched as smooth as a floor. Bhoda and little Dinny str died on and on till j the home paddock was only a dot against the blue sky line. Little l>iuuy darted fro: ;e buttercup patch to another, wit!, wild shrieks of delight in their yellov glory. He pulled up great handfuls of 'hem. rolled over and over in their bed of gold and covered his mother w ( : iiowers of their petals. lthoda pi d little heed to Ditiuy's Joy. The bine delight of the June skies might :ii !i have been November gloaming 112 .£ ail the pleasure reflected iu her bro 'i eyes. The ranch walls seemed to m fle her lately. She had planned all night to take the boy and spend the lonely waking hours iu the open. 1' it IOW. with all the wide space of sky and prairie about her, her sense of desolation and disappointment seem ed a veutuated instead of lessened. She w.is tired of thinking, utterly wear.' of trying to straighten her end less tangle of questionings She want el to get away, to find complete rest. She wondered, in spite of the soft hand of IMnny in hers, if things might not have been vastly better had she never come west to the ranch with Donald. Somehow marri.\ge was so different from her girlish dreams of it. And now at twenty-three, after five years, she was wondering if it really paid. Not but that Donald was kind, not but that he gave li?r all that he could of himself lie could spare from 1 the ranch. It was the hopeless stupid lty of it that was wearing on her. Her life was made tip of inanities. After the advent of Pinny and the continual surprise that lie really was theirs, that he did smile, that it was a tooth and that lie had taken a step nothing had occurred to disturb the cloying evenness of her existence. And Donald. a!l the oil ecstasy of the first marriage r.ays gone, how unessential X \V»v —^ •v \ . THEIIK WIS \ MAD KOAH—A WILD SWlltli OF W1N1». she was to his existence How little he cared, after all. > long as ilie house hold ran smojthly, whether or not her needs were filled. lthoda stooped to pick up Dinny, who insisted that his bumped nose needed immediate attention. She sat down in a buttercup bed and looked at the child. He was very like his father, she thought. Pah! How stupid it was merely to exi-t when she always had planned to live! The morning sun I s'i .idily to ward no,: !'. tt iili L' i t with the dr >v, ' : i her I : • .n.l watch ed the i, . .> tiie ruadi bom Hupp Kit ' : : she • i 1 back no :v >re, supp >i t lie .lon t > the sta tion with tiie child to 1 ■ a trail for home, a she still called the p'? l ee of her childho >d well, and what then? Would she then cease to e:,ist and be gin to live, or would the old inanity of life s.xm overtake her even there? It might be worth the (rial. But what of Donald? How would It affect him? Would he really be disturbed beyond the iucouveuience it would make In his household arrangements, or were there quiet depths within him which she did not suspect? Fur away toward the east she could see ine nnrn urie wblcb meant that the men. with Donald, were "sorting" the herd It would be long after dark be fore Donald came in. She took deep breaths of the prairie i.ir. sweet with Its long sweep over flower laden grass, clear and exhilarating as is no other air in the world. Nothing in her east ern home could compare with this, she thou gilt The ocean Itself would seem too inwisteut. to<> restless, after the subtle beauty and peace of tl.e prai ries. Dinny stirred in her arms and woke. She filled his hands with cookies and watched hiai as he ate. answering his questions In abstracted monosyllables. Suddenly be cried in a shrill little voice: "Oh. momnile, what a funny clood!" She looked lazily to the west; then started to her feet, Dinny In her arms. The air bad grown suddenly unbeara bly oppressive There WHS a strange thick haze over the prairie. Moving up from the west was the old familiar funnel shaped cloud which for the past Ave years bad been her constant dread. The child, after » i > > at her whlffe face, clung whimper ugly to her neck." For a moment she stood undecided. To run with the ciiiid iu her arms was next to impossible. And, even so, of what use would it* be to run when she was |>owerless to tell what would be the course of the tornado? She looked toward the faraway herding line. At that far distance it seemed immovable, yet she knew that already the herd was snorting and wild with fear. In the heavy silence her voW sounded loud and shrill. "Dinny," she said, "we are going to iie down, with our faces in grass, until the storm pauses over us, and then we are going home, and mother will make boy a gingerbread man for supper. Won't that be nice?" As sic spoke Ithoda dropped the boy to the ground, and then, dropping be side him, she drew him close to her with one hand, shielding and protect ing him with her body, while with the other hand she clung to a stubby brier root. Then there were a mad roar, a sud den half darkness and a wild swirl of wind, then gradual quiet and freezing cold with great deluges of Icy rain. When the brst rour had died away in distance HliodlL sat. ut). The tor- nado had passed between her and the ranch house. She pulled off her skirt and wrapped it about the child, who was limp and speechless with terror. She herself was strangely calm. As the darkness lifted a little she tried to look oft: through the driving rain to the herding lino, but she could see nothing. She lifted the child and with him in her arms struggled in the direction of the ranch house. Slipping, falling, wind whipped and half drown ed, shivering with the cold, she strug gled on and on. Then through the swirl of the storm she beard hoof beats, then Donald's wild shout: "lthoda! lthoda! Kliodal" And her husband threw himself from his horse and clasped them both iu his arms. "Are you hurt? oh, you poor, poor girl:" "Oh. Donald, Donald!" she gasped. "Oh, no, I'm not hurt. Neither Is Dinny." •"Dinny—oh, yes, Dinny, too, of course." And he took the little fellow from her and led her tow ard the horse. "1 went home for lunch,"' he panted, "to surprise you They said you were out here. Then the tornado came, and —and I went mad, 1 guess." "Donald," said lthoda, raising her voice above the howl of the storm, "did you realiy care so much as Why, you even thought of me before you did Dinny. Did you really care so much, 1 lonaid ?" Donald looked down into her upturn ed face in dazed astonishment. "Care, Bhoda7" he asked. "Care: Why, what else do I live for?" And he put her on the horse with a touch that thrilled her as of old. She looked down at the child as Donald laid liltn in her lap, and the thoughts of the morning, of the past years, came back to her. "How could I have misunderstood so?" she asked herself "What a fool a woman can be!" Donald, leading the horse, could not hear, but she smiled happily at his back through the blinding rain and hugged the child to her with the old joy of living. The liidlftii of Today. Something more than four centuries have g »ue by since Columbus dawned on the view of the American red man. The nil man's horizon has broadened in that time. A young man who de scribes his adventures among the Sioux for the Booklovers Magazine found the warriors of the plains unimpressed by the noble paleface. "Why do they t*a 11 the Fourth of July Tndejiendence day V " an old warrior askisl ;is they sat by the campttre. The explanation was somewhat inco herent, but included meutiou of a war with < ireat Britain. "Oh, yes, 1 have been there," re marked the Indian retuiniscently. "London is a tine city." Then up spoke another brave form from where he squatted, with dripping rain streaking his war paint, "I like Paris better." The white man gasped. "Archibald was born in Heriin," said the female sphinx at tlitf lard pulls, turning to indicate the child who grin ned toothlessly in the background. "Which do you prefer?"' they asked. "It has stopped raining." said the white man,"and 1 must be going." Later it transpired that one was a Carlisle graduate, and all had been abroad with Buffalo Hill. JJU Mirror .Superstition*. The mistrust of the ghostly mirror la so old and so far spread that we meet with It in the folklore of every land. An old tradition warns us that the new moon, which brings us such good for tune when we look at it in the calm evening sky, carries a message of evil to those who see it first reflected In a looking glass. For such unlucky mor tals it is said that the lunar virus dls tills slow poison and corroding care. And, again, It is declared that the friends who glance at their reflections standing side by side are doomed to quick dissension. In Scandinavia the Swedish girl who looks into her glass by candlelight Is told that she risks the loss of her lover. One superstition In this connection that seems to be al most universal Is that it is very un lucky for a bride to see herself in a mirror after her toilet is completed. If she be discreet she will turn away from that fair picture which pleases her so well and then draw on her glove or have some tiny ribbon, flower or Jewel fastened to Iter gown that th® sour fates may be appeased and evil turned away from the threshold. (ii'ltiiiK « Mexicun I'alcul. To procure a patent in Mexico the party making application, unless pres ent in person, must furnish his repre sentative with a letter of authority— carta de poder in Spanish—signed by himself or herself in the presence of two witnesses. Ordinarily legalization by a Mexican consul is not required. It must be borne in mind that one car ta de poder w ill not answer for several applications, as each application for either patent or trademark must be ac- I companied by a separate carta, de poder. This must be accompanied by a full and complete description and claims of and for the Invention. If they are sent in Spanish ready for filing they must be in triplicate on clear white paper &10 by 'Jl."i millimeters, ap proximately Kt by IS'j English Inches, written with typewriter on one side only of the paper, leaving on each sheet a left hand margin of one-fourth the width of the paper. Of course if they are not sent in Spanish the local repre sentative attends to all the details, which is by far the better way. He should be furnished with full names, profession, citizenship and resident of j applicant A IVnt. Don't ask a to marry you after dark >v!;en she is dressed tit to kill. • 'all mi her, and when you leave inad veri. ;i dr Ip a g!.»ve on the piano. Iteti n IT it iin* next morning at 1) o'clo-k If she comes to the door with orfe h>e siiid iii'- slipper on, her hair doin no hi curl papers, dressed in an dd Mother Iluli'i.inl. our advice is to lake to the woods I'.nt if she appears in a u< t house dress, her hair done up :HH .i r . • in the top of her hair, grab her quick M arionvi Ile iMo.l Free rres< V\ ill II ill It \Vn ytt. YIM* \vlit» v. iii Ihi'ir \vny into Llie .ninost rt'ivs.-er, of others' hearts ii" tint rsualh the most brilliant and • i( I.i» ir those who have sympathy, >:• t :i <- self forgetfuln' ss and that ii ictiiril-.e faculty of eliciting the bct t» • nai ire of otlic s Woman's Life. Striin u Mrs. de Ffsbion (at :# t.-hlldreii'# par ty»— Marie! Nursegiri— Ves, ma'am. Mrs. de Fashion- It's time for us togo home. Which of these children Is mine? - Home i 'hat. Nature is an spolian harp, a musical instrument whose tones are the re echo of higher strings within ns Novails. | The Deputy jj| Game Warden |j | By CLARA TAYLOR g '■ . ' ' • ' • Harry Taylor, Yale graduate a nil ali round good fellow and a general fa vorite. although it was known that he! had li" fortune, hail gone into the Maine woods with a party of . mupers who, like himself, could not well afford the season at Newport. \s it was tlie close season for all kinds of his? game, they made little pretense of hunting. They had I wen In the woods for a week or teu days when Nick Barton, the game warden for that district, hap pened that way and was put up for the night. Before leaving in the morning he said to young Taylor: "Look here, now. I have got togo out of the woods for a week, hut it won't do to leave this district without a warden There are plenty of camp ers coming in, and some of them will run any risk to secure the antlers of o moose. I've got to leave a deputy be- j hind inc to travel about and watch, and I'm wondering why you wouldn't fill the hill." "I have never acted as a policeman yet." replied Harry, with a smile. "But this is a far different thing. 1 shall notice to all the campers 1 come across that a deputy has been left in the woods and that any inter ference with the gillie laws will be, duly and rigorously punished." "i'ul suppose 1 find the law being vio la ted and make an arrest." "AH you have to do is to take yout prisoner before the nearest justice ol the peace and state your case. It Isn't over twenty-five miles to the nearest magistrate. It will beat fishing and dawdling around all hollow." Further objections were made am' combated, and the upshot of the mat j ter was that Harry Taylor was duly and legally appointed deputy game warden in and for a certain district "I Ail A I>EPOTY GAMK M'AHDEN, AND 11 18 M* WYS TO AKKEMT YOU." until such time as relieved, lie hadn't the slightest idea of l>ostirrim; himself us an official, anil it never occurred to hlui that he would be called upon t<: exercise his otildai authority. The unexpected was getting ready to happen, however, l our days after tin departure of the warden his deputy took a stroll through the woods with gun upon his shoulder It was simply a matter of conscience with him, and he did not intend to tire himself out lie had heard of no campers within a dozen miles, and lit* was therefore con siderably surprised at hearing there port of a ritle a quarter of a mile from where he sat resting upder a tree. He knew that the firearm hail been dis charged on the shore of a pond sur rounded by thickets and known us the haunt of the moose. It was more than likely that, whoever the hunter might be, he had tired at a moose and vio luted the law. There was a feeling of authority in the young man's breast as he started out to run down the violator. He did not have much trouble about It. As he ueared the lake he heard a wounded animal thrashing about In the tfrass and water, an I. getting still nearer, he could distinguish a person in a canoe. That person was holding the discharged rifle across his knees as he sat and watched the dying struggles of his game. The canoeist was wearing a nondescript garb, and it was three or four minutes before young Taylor made up his mind as to sex and mut tered to himself: "By Jingo, but it's a girl camper, and she has surely shot a moose! What the deuce am 1 jfoiuy to do about arresting her and conveying her twenty five miles through the woods'/" Two or three minutes later the moose for it was a moose, and a big bull at that -ceased his struggles, und the ea noe was puddled to the bank. "That's right—come ashore:" called Taylor. "Do you know that you have, killed *a moose In the close season und \ thereby subjected yourself to a heavy ■ tine if not to Imprisonment as well? 1 am u deputy game warden, und it i-> my luty to place you under arrest." "Is It—is It Mr. Taylor?" inquired a girlish voies us the canoe was slowly pushed through the to the firm shore "Yes, and you—you"— Taylor stood there for the next two minutes am stared. He had at last recognized Miss Bessie Whiting, daugh ter :< 11 times in society, and it was whisji.-red atroi : mi ill ■ clubs and else where that li;.* had been more than "at tracted." 1 >i:t -he \\; ; the last person he expected to meet in the deep woods of .Maine. "Our camp is only two miles away," she explained as he gave her a hand to help her out of the canoe. "1 came up the pond hoping to get a shot at a wild fowl, but 1 have had great luck. While 1 was resting and lookiug around u great moose pushed his way through the bushes to drink, and, though I tired only one shot. I brought him down. Such antlers! Why, all the girls in the city v,!!! envy me when I get back. Do you think they will have it in the pa pers V" "1 am very much afraid so." he said In a serious voice. "Why, what Is it?" "Didn't your father or brother tell you that it is against the law to shoot a moose this time of year?" "Why, no." "Well, It Is, and you have, as I said, laid yourself liable to a heavy tine. There may be Imprisonment as well, but I am not sure about that." "And what—what am 1 going to do?" she asked in faltering, tones. "If you and 1 keep -i ill about it, how are thoy to know that I shot the moose?" '•There's where the trouble comes in. You see. | am a deputy game warden, and it is my duty to arrest you and see that you are punished." "And I've got to >ro twenty-five miles through the woods with you?" "The nearest magistrate is that dis tance away." The girl s;ii down on a log and began to shed tears. It would be iti the pa pers with a vengeance if she were brought before the law. After regarding her with a sympa tlietii look fir a moment young Tay lor made his way down to the etlge of the pom I to I >ok at the moose. That the animal luul fallen at the discharge of the i i tie anil floundered about for several minutes was a fact beyond dispute. The branches were broken and the grass all beaten down, but there was no moose. The bullet had hit an antler and stunned him, and ou coming to the cunning animal had skulked away with no more noise than a tabbil. He said nothing of this, liowev. :', mi his return to the weeping girl. "\\ heii when are you going to take inc." she asked as she looked up through her tears. "Well. I siipp >se we ought togo to t amp and see your father tirst. I don't exactly see what he can do in the mat ter. but" - "Mr. Taylor, you must get me out of tin- - rape s iuicliow. Why, I'd be a pet i ■ i laughing-lock if the papers got hold <4' it i 'an*t father pay the amount of i..,» line to yo'i?" "i. i. ght, but there's the imprisou iih \hi see fan you say that you thou*:.i the moose was an elephant or a rhiiioci ros'r" "1 1 can't tell a lie. Mr. Taylor." ••t an yuii sa\ ihat you -hut your eyes when you pulled the trigger?" ".Vo-p-e." "Hut there must be a way of saving you." hi said as lie sat down on the log l.e ,iie her. 1 think you shot at a wild g.o e. if nut that, then the gun went oli by accident. As yet 1 have not seen the dead moose, and 1 can't expect that you will give testimony against yourself. 1 think"— "What "If yoit arc t i be in the woods for the < mill, and if I stay here its well, ami if I visit yu ir camp every day to see that the law is not being violated, an I i >ou tiin 11 am not altogether—al logenic; iti,lll.et'etit, why why"— A m hi.h laicr as they were getting reaily : i go oiii of the woods Miss lies -ic -.1 ill . "\, iii iv hi think became of the ho i of that mo >so7 lather and Fred welt! i : the horns next day, but the body h: 1 mysteriously disappeared." "I th... . the li .dy walked off ou Its ow i, le_' bei ; e we got through talk ing.' lie truthfully answered. II r ey. s ilashe I f>r a moment, and then -lie blushed and smiled and saitl: "1 didn't think there was such a mean man in all this world." \ Micriclr: •• itctorl. It: '• inl I'i'it- ei Sheridan always maim 'tiled that the I Mike of Welling ton would in t" i m Portugal, while his ii i,| lie ii'i'al Tarleton hail the opinion that lie would fail The mat ter was otii of constant dispute be tween the two. Tarleton, w h > h.t I been w rong, grew obstinate. «'■iiise«|Ueiilly. when the news of the retreat of th« French at Torre- Vethts arrived in England Sheri dan. by way 'if a taunt, saitl "Well. Tarleton. are you on your high h irse still?" "< Hi. higher than ever." was the reply. "If 1 w as on a horse I eforc. I am on an elephant now." "No. no. ,Ny ileal' fellow." saitl the wit; "you ii in ass before, nml you are on a mule now PELICAN ISLAND. Hoiim* of Ul llir rclirniiN of flit* tlmt ( oi l'lorldit. In that long, narrow lago>u on llie east c iast ■ . Florida known as Indian river there is a muddy islet three or four ; civs in extent. Originally It doubtle>s did not differ from hundreds of siii.il. r neighboring islets, but, for some . ease | -t finding out, this Islet, j and this alota-. forms the nesting resort, ! the liti:tie. of all the pelicans of the Tn | dian river, if not, indeed, of the east coast of Florida. The brown pelican, unlike its white t us u, nests norfhally iu low tre< k an 1 bushes, and there is evidch -e tl t wbci the original pelican col nisihiiitbil on the islet which now 1 bears their name it was well grown with black and red mangroves, in which tin? birds placed their scaffolding of sticks. Exceptionally low temperature and high water —perhaps also excessive use by the birds, which sometimes build as manj as seven nests iu a single mangrove- have killed tree after tree, until at present only three service able trees remain. Still the birds come back, the impelling motive which prompts them to return to this particu lar spot being evidently stronger than that which induced them to nest In trees.—Frank M Chaumau '» t'.nrtw* A Counter Attruction. A recent visitor to Beaconsficld churchyard asked a middle agetl native of the village to be directed to the I graves of Burke and Waller. The man j said he bail no recollection of any such persons having V*n buried there. "But," he added, "you see that little chemist's shop over there? That's the shop where iK'vereux, the trunk mur der man, used to be an apprentice!" Sot There, "Judge," said Mrs. Starveui to tin | magistrate, who had recently come to j board with her, "I'm particularly aim tous to have y hi try this chicken soup.' "I have tried it," replied the mngls ! Jate, "and niy decision is that the chicken lias proved an alibi."—Ex | change. Tlie « nlihttr nenn, i The famous Calabar beau Is said to be worse than strychnine. The natives use it for an or.lesl. If a person is ac cused of a crime he is made to cat one, : being adjudged to be Rulity In case of j death, which is utmost inevitable. An I other seed employed for a like purpose |s that of the ordeal tree of Madagas ' car. saitl to be the most deadly of vege I table products. One of these seed? about tli ' i -'i of «u almond will kll i twenty men [ I ic I ::m! liM-t. All our p. >g ■ s is uu unfolding llfci I the vegetable hud. You have first ai: in«tiurt, then an opinion, then a knowl elg.'. as the plant has i >ii. bud ami fruit Trust i " hi-tlnct to the end thor Ji you ■ i i render no reason, i Lmcrsou )' hnndcrNlood. lie I havt a sweet little home It which I would be to Install you as Its I mistress She Iniicd sir, I'll go inti jno home oil the installment plan- Baltimore American. STOCKHOLM. I lie f » TIIOONHIIU Ulanda and H»«*ky UcefM. I* run Sweden's capital an enthusias tic vmiior v.*rltps: "The sky has an al most Italian radiance as the sun shinea clear and bright on Iho glittering levels of the la goou 111ai divide the new town ■ from the old. Across the water, on 112 which a lleet of white ferryboats ply, • rises tin- broad front of the palace, the ' stern outline of which is relieved by the j srussel glow which time has lent to the liri'-k\V(,. k In front of the palace runs a broad quay crowded with shipping, ! beiiind 11i< 1! one may catch peeps of narrow, winding streets, with sloping tools and painted houses bent with I age. The square front of the palace rises ab >ve the red and gray roofs, geeming to command the old city. On j my right the waters narrow to a swift rushing stream, over which a stately bridge has been thrown, uniting the palace with the pictur»»pie pile of the opera house, or. rather, with the broad square in which it stands. Behind the opera house lie broad streets of mod ern houses, in which there are unex pected glimpses of waterways crowded with shipping. "Stockholm is built ou a series of is lands formed by Lake Malaren. It is, indeed, tic city of a thousand islands and rocky reefs, which are sown broad cast many miles beyond the mainland, where the hike and river join the sea. The steamers which ply up and down the lake afford endless excursions. Seaward you may sail a day among the islands until you reach the long, low reefs on which the ISaltic beats. "In spite of their cold climate the Swedes delight in the open air. After the indoor life of English or Amer ican cities it is a great pleasure to take one's meals out of doors, although it may sometimes he necessary to dina i wrapped in an overcoat. We have seen people dining in the Tivoli gardens beneath awnings and umbrellas in the rain. This habit may explain the health j and vigor of the Swedes." VARIETY IN CHEWING. (•am unit Tobacco Arc Not the Only Materials I'tilized. (ium chicle, which forms the basis of i most American chewing gums, is by no ! means the only chewing material, ' though chewing gum has spread over i a large portion of the world. I Among the old fashioned the gum of the spruce tree is still in greater favor, . and druggists near the great spruce belts dri\«• a thriving trade in the brown lumps. Although the chicle couies from the i tropics. Ii is seldom used as a chewing gum there, uncured rubber being the fashion. In Pern "euca," or cocoa leaves, form the staple chew, the plant being a p >wcrful stimulant, since from its leaves cocaine Is extracted. In the east the beti I nut is chewed In prefer ence, the nut being prepared with lime. To it might be accorded the place of lirst prominence, -ince because of the congestion of population practically one tenth of the'human race give it their preference. One of the oddest chews is the leaden bullet which the English soldier used to chew be'ore the introduction of the jacketed bullets now in use. They de clared that it lessened their thirst and to some extent deadened their hunger on long marches. ) And then there is tobacco. ODD THINGS ABOUT WORDS. Wlicn tin- Word "l.tiiicli" \Vn» First I HIII II tlruul a "Lump." A "lunch." etyniologically. is just a lump. In the sixteenth century a ' lunch of bacon" meant merely a slice or hunk of it S> Burns speaks of bread ffitd cheese "dealt about in lunches." and Scott records that "little Hciijic v. .is ramming a huge luncheon of pie crust into his mouth.'' While in modern times "lunch" is an abbrevia tion from "luncheon." the latter was originally an elongation of "lunch." A philol 'gist s!i i\ s how the old "noon I sic ;ik," n . in dt nk, came to mean noon • rating, and t > appear as "nunsheon," and the development thereafter of -Pine: <• u " from "lunch" was very | natural. t ur.oi:s clu'.nges of words sometimes ' take p!. •• between two languages. ! Thus English has borrowed the French 1 "poseur" and has given to France i -snob" in trade. Frenchmen have a way of takit.g a polysyllabic word and ! using half of it. Thus of "steeple : chase they have appropriated the steeple." aiid now the French sports man speaks of "mounting a steeple* . when lie means to ride a race over the i cii t 'inarv obstacles. A smoking Jack -1 et Is with him a "smoking" and a sleep | Ing car is a "sleeping." Very lliffrrrnl Trial*. Tess Aren't you going to choir re I hearsal lonigutV Jess No. Tess— You'd better We're going to give thai new hymn a trial. Jess—Can't. 1 an going to give a new him a trial my self. Hurrah, or huzzali. is the oldest and most com iron exclamation in all lan guages. KILLTHE COUCH AND CURE THE lungs with Dr. Kings New Discovery /TonSUMPTION Price FOR I OUGHS and POc &SI.OO V OLDS Free Trial - Surest and Quickest Cure for all I THROAT and LUNO TROUB -1 LES, or MONEY BACK. SIHEI! ' A. Reliable TIN SHOP ' Tor all kind of Tin Roofing Spoutlne and Central Job Work. Stoves, Heaters. Ran*«a, Furnaces. «to. PRI® THE LOOT! QUALITY TUB BUST' JOHN HIXSO-N NO. 116 E. FRONT ST. THE TOY INVENTOR. ill m Jliarri «*wl ThnK l» to Catch the i ,»Jll * \ of tin- I'lilille, The small inventor i- an important I fat-tor i;i iIn■ mechanical toy business, ami he earns all «>| the living lit* gets I in thinking 11;> ileviees. Ile is most con cerned with the small medianieal toys, ami. in addition to tlic prime requisite it pulling forth -oinething novel, ho mil I get - ■ icthing which costs as lit tle a> p>'e anil which catches the I'iiii \ oi mil it n!e This last point I ■>:!«• wlii i- most iliitienlt to cover N i r an I maker are in much the same p isiti i is the writer and pub lisher; both go through the same men- ! t.il tiiriii>i.l as in the timeliness of the I output ami both take the same risks The iuveiiior who has been in the I bu-iiie-- long learns at last the best I pi: its at whieli to otter his wares and ha • iii in' or less of an itlea of what they ought to bring him. and once lie has acquired this knowledge his entire energy is devoted to keeping up with the demand for newness. Something absolutely different trim anything else previously offered is in general better than an improvement of au old idea, and that is why in mechanical toys the same device is seldom seen two seasons iu succession. Philadelphia Record. CHOCOLATE. t Wiih ii I. usury LU Thin Country In flit' I litcent Ii Century. Tie Hi-si new paper notice that un iioiiiiced the sale of cocoa and chocolate in America ivail: •'Aino-i Trit, k, at his house a little be low the II tavern in Danvers, makes and sells ch'"-v. e which he will war i ini . > i ;:o i and takes cocoa to grind. Those • 'i . may please to favor Isiin v. their cu toni may depend up o;i i eing - .11 served, and at a very el: r This notice appeared in the Essex (la.i • ol Massachusetts on the l»tb of .112 ine. 1771. hve years before the signing of the lieelaration of Independ ence. I icspite Mr. Trask's assurance that his rate was cheap, chocolate was very expensive ami beyond the purse of any but the wealthy folk. Wouldn't they be surprised to see how generally chocolate is sold these days in packages as cheap as a pennyV When the Spanish soldier Cortes con tjuered Mexico in 1510 he found the people very fond of a drink called "chocolatl." This was served to the ruler Montezuma in :t cup of solid gold. Wlx'ii the Spaniards went home they introduced this drink into their coun try. hut it remained very expensive. The secret of its preparation was never allowed to net «>ut of Spain. Now It Is ih" cheapest article of food and drink we have. \ Sior> nl l)«lMin Forrfal. i : I v.- i; 1 I • rest. 1111- great actor, was lit <":>!ini:l>: -. < >.. • i! one of his tours. It \va* in tlie railroad station at mid night I: v e lil. bleak. biting weath er. .1:1 t !i" eld fellow hobbled up and down the pint form. 1 >ut there was maj esty even in his vry hohhle. An un • ierl.tUer's wag >ll pulle«l up at the sta tion nl a corpse was removed from it. 'i f'" carelessly hustled the body into his diav and wheeled it (own the platform. As he halted, old Forre*t hroke out into the most hor rihle cursing, and with his tongue lash ed the itagg-igeirrm for his careless hundlintr of the human clay. Then he turned, approached the corpse and lir ike into the oration of Mark Antony over the body of i'aesar. No one was there but the frightened baggageman *jid a handful of actors. The great actor's voice r;>s;> and fell anil the sub tle tear- and resolute thunder of the oration awoke the echoes of the statJon as a gran 1 organ in a majestic cathe dral. He read every line of the oration and said in an aside sp* ech as a climax: "There, t-ke .hat, you poor cby in the coifin 1:1 Im ■' 1 I ::iyse'f inside a year." 'ml h< v. * The Home Paper of Danville. ! I i » Of course you read i ! i i | THE NEOPLE'S KOPULAR 1 A PER. I ! Everybody Reads It. ! ! Published Every Except i i Sunday a? : • ! No. IIE. Maho ng St. i . . Subscript ion o ecu r Week. ->■ ' DARING OF LIONS. lociiltMi in In I'ro* e That the Brutes %re \ol ruuardlf. li lias been said many times that lions are cowardly brutes, but of the many lions with which I have had per ; sonnl dealings, cxpectedly and unex pectedly. tin- epithet cowardly Is the ; Id I 1 bb »uld consider appropriate in ; describing tlieni. I have been charged by a I <>n. and lie certainly did not look | cowardly. 1 have come face to face, | at a distance of some twenty feet, with a family party of half a dozen fortu- ] •lately fuil fed. They stood, wit. quiet | dignity. looking at in, and then slowly moved a way, slopping every few yards to stand and look again. There was neither fear nor meanness in their ap pearance or behavior. 1 have seen lions stalking game, and j I have i yself been stalked by them. If I could have encouraged myself with the conviction of their cowardliness when I was the quarry and they the butters it would have put a different aspect on tic si,nation. We were at this time ii\ i;i a station over seven ty Ki'l •< fro!.i tin* nearest connecting 1 link with tie- outside world, and when man eating lions took possession of the one roa 1 which led to this link things became serious. A larg.> troop was reported, and the natives ii aintained that this troop ran along in the grass parallel with the caravan road ta path some ten inches widei. and. having selected the most edible uiMnber of the caravan, jumped upon him like a flash, and, seizing him, disappeared as quickly as they came. Our mail runners, attached to whom were a couple of native police armed with titles, were several times attack ed. Finally, as the wail party was camping one night, fortunately for it, with a n itive caravan, the lions be came so bold that, in spite of tires, they sprang com a native and carried him off into the bush. Mrs. S. L. Hinde in Blackwood's M.-gazine. ASPARAGUS. | It* Hetnlti.il to (lie I HHIOUN tuphodrl of llie Kurly AK*"H. j As a tickler of the palate asparagus i has come down the ages with all the I weight of Greek and Roman approval. I IMato ate it by the plateful, and Aris tophanes. the humorist, regarded it as a great aid in digesting the crank phi losophers of the day It is an o 1 I fact that this culinary plant is closely related to the famous asphodel, which was supposed by the ancients t » be the leading flower in the gardens of the i lysiuni. the Greek pur gatory or paradise. A part of the quaintue-s of this lies in the fact that the roots po»se;s purgative qualities. Tin roots and Iruit of both were for merly much used in medicine for this purpose. According to the superstition of the Romans, the manes of the dead fed on the roots of the asphodel. They planted if. therefore, in and around the ceme teries; hence to this day it covers with its beautiful golden blossoms as pro fusely as dandelions the Apulian hills and valleys, and the sheep feed on it greedily. It belongs to the same natural order of perennials, and the only difference | between the asparagus and the as phodel appears to be in the fruit and the color of the flowers. So abundant Is the wild asparagus in ihe steppes of Russia that cattle eat it like grass. Just as Italian sheep devour its botanical j cousin. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. i How soon we learn that the average ! man's bark is about al' there is to him. When people say anything good about ! you, ever notice what a few are pres ! ent? We all of us claim to be natural, but we all of us know that the only time j when we are not putting on is when ; we are asleep. Somehow the hundred dollars some other man has always looks larger and as if it should go further than thehun j dred dollars you have. There are not many sights more de pressing than to meet a farmer's wag on on a country road going out from town with a coffin in it. When a man says he got up nine times with the baby six nights in suc cession it means that one night he woke tq< and heard his wife g«t up.— Atchison Globe. *6 want to Jo all Ms of Printiai i 1 ! I I II S Nil II SPUR, J lis mt I ■■ ( A. well pi : . tasty, Bill or W / ter Head, P A)Z Ticket, Ciivd. . y*Y Program, St a 1 ment or Card ( w an advertisemen for your business, n satisfaction to you lew Type, New Presses, , Best Paper, M: Skilled Wart, ' Promptness \ll you can a-.sk A trial will make you our customer We respectfulb' usV that trial. No. it H. Mahoning St.