\ON WiLLIE S 1 ACCOUNT r ' r i By BEATRICE STURGES " Copyright, l'.-Jtt. by 11. ButclitTo 112 Willie sat on the steps in a distinctly unhappy mood. It was the first of July, bright and beautiful. The garden was ablaze with flowers and he could pick as many as he wanted. His ball and books and little fire engine lay on the porch beside him, and Ills collie pup was begging him to came and play, but Willie had 110 heart for any of these at tractions. He was grieved. What was the use, he reflected, of being the only child If your father and mother go away for two weeks and leave you at homo? What was the use <»f having a young aunt stay at your house If she shut her self up in her room and wouldn't come downstairs? And what was the use of balng alive at all when the circus was coming to town in three days and no body had Invited y.»n togo? Life was full of terrible problems. He was just wondering if bo liadu't better cry about It when he sa>v a friend coming down the street and hastily chauged 1119 mind. This friend was n 1 less a person than Max liar woo I. chief of the volunteer flr* i.epartuient of Norwood, comtno «.<. Eof the led yachting club and a iio ; -j iu Willie's eyes. By some mys te ijud coincidence Commodore Mai appeared on the scene with great pvjmptaess and frequency whenever Willie's aunt. Miss Marjory Deau, came for a visit, and as these visits had been rather numerous during the year just Willie knew him well enough to rumruage through ids pockets and to boast about their intimacy whenever any of the other boys needed a little wind t;.keu out of their sails. To Willie's surprise Max was pass Uig with merely a wave of the hand. «o the little boy Jumped up and ran after him. "Hello, Napoleon!" cheerily called his hero. It was his fancy to call Willie by the names of the world's great gener als, one after another. "Good morning, commodore; aren't you coming Into see us?" "Guess not, Hannibal: it's pretty enr!y for company." "You have been earlier tliun this," aald the child reproachfully. "Well—er—l'm kind of busy this morning"- Willie was turning away to hide the hurt 1001. In his eyes. Nobody wanted to bother him. Max saw this and has tily added: "But pet your cap and come along. I'm gol'ig down to tlx up the boat. You can me." The delighted child raced back to the hon=_ for his cap and then was off baud in hand with the commodore, happy as a lark. Tl.«*y wo:k'-d all the morning on the bor.: and Ihen the commodore took Willi j up tho river for a sail. "Are you going to the circus, Aga memnon?'' inquired Max, by way of eon versa Mon. With a recurrent touch of gloom Willie was forced to admit that he didn't tblnk he was. "Well. I'd like to take somebody of Just aln>ut your sUe." went on his host, "and I think that somebody is you. What do you say, my hearty?" "Fine! Fine!" shouted Willie. "Well, heave ho, there, and we'll ■plice the main brace. Keep out of the lae scuppers while I hoist the mainsail, na! Ulysses, what do you think of that?" And Max, who loved to mix up nautical terms for Willie's euter tainiue.it, made the cleanest kind of a landing at his own pier. "D'.cl you ever shiver your timbers, coinmod' re?" asked Willie. "Lots of times, Wellington, and still live to tell the tale. Don't forget about the Fourth- side shown, fat lady, pea nuts. eU-puants. pink lemonade—we'll see it all." "Indeed 1 won't!" cried the child, wild with t!e: g! t as he raced into the house to tell his aunt. Bhe was watching for him anxiously. "Ob, Willie boy. where have you frO.LIE LOOKED A.VXIOtSLY FROM ONE TO THF, OTHSat. been all the morning?" she exclaimed, kissing him. He told her breathlessly, and she listened to his admiration of the com modore with rising color. "Isn't he perfectly splendid, Aunt Marlorle V Tliev snv there are ten ele phants and the lions growl something awful.' But 1 won't be afraid with the commodore. Only 1 wish you were coming too. Wouldn't you like It? I'm sure he'd take you, too, if you asked him." "No, honey, i I don't thiuk so. I ioti't expect • to see the commodore Vgain; we—we aren't friends any more." "Oh, «untie!" exclaimed Willie, iu geuuiu- dismay. "And he's so good too." Willie thought for a minute that his Aunt Marjorie was going to cry, and then he was surprised to hear her say iu a 111 anne» singularly unlike her usual gentleness. "Maybe some peo ple think he is good, but I know his true character, and I do not think you ought to gj around alone with him." This speech was rendered with all the dignity that a m otnau of the world ■lueteeu, could muster. it w iih him alone to Ufa of places,' complainc-d Willie "TVu went last night "Yes. mi.l that's just the reason I'm nor poi:i i ngain. if a tuan takes a girl to a dune • iml forgets her he will cer tainly tor?<'t :i little boy when he takes him to the <-in'us. and then what would happen So youV lteally this was awful. Willie had never seen his dear little aunt in such a state, but she was very sweet to hiin and took hiai out driving that after noon, stopping in tile village to buy him eaudy and lots of fireworks for the Fourth. He didn't kuow what to thiuk about his beloved commodore, but saw him the next day and promptly repeat ed the whole conversation It seemed to him the simplest way out of the dif ficulty. "Did you forget, commodore?" he in sisted. "Great Scott, Willie, maybe 1 did; she says so; but she wasn't lonesome,"* he said grimly. "Girls are queer crea tures, Wellington; you'll find that out some day. But don't say another word about the circus. I'll fix it some way. You're going t<> see it as sure as your name is Yineingetorix." So Willie kept his counsel and was petted n;uch by his auntie for the next two days. On the morning of the Fourth he was firing off his crackers from the o|wu window in Ills little niglitclothes at 4 o'clock, and Marjorle said never a word of complaint. She had made up her mind to take him to the circus herself and to get away early to avoid any possible conflict with her former great friend, the commodore — now a stranger forever. Before luucli was over, however, the commodore's touring car stopped at the door and the commodore was standing ou the porch, cap in hand, announcing that he had come. "Yes, I see," returned Marjorie cool ly, but deliberately avoiding his gaze. Max had such a way of lookiug at one. "But what for?" "Why, to take my friend Julius (,'ae Bar to the circus." Willie looked anxiously from one to the other In aiK ecstasy of hope and suspense. "I told Willie"— "Yes, I know,"he interrupted, "but if you come, too, It will be all right." "Oh, yes, auntie!" cried Willie, jump ing with joyful anticipation. Marjorle tried hard to look cold and dignified. "Would you spoil that child's day?" asked the commodore, coming closer. "Marjorie. please!" His eyes urged her as well as his voice. She looked at him. "All right, I'll go. But It's just 011 Willie's account." "Auy reason will do," responded Max as he helped her into the car. "But maybe you can find a better one before we get home. I'm going to ride back here with you and William." lie lifted the delighted child, gave him a hUg, and put luiu in the front seat with the chauffeur. "William the Con queror is going to have the time of his lift." SCOTCH SUPERSTITIONS. (urlon* Method* That Were Adopted In Slclsnem» mid Death. A method much In vogue in Scotland ut one time of ascertaining whether a sickness would prove fatal was to dig two hdes in the ground, one called the quick grave, ihe other the dead hole. The sufferer was then placed between the two, and the hole toward which ho turned indicated what would be the outcome of his malady. Sometimes a piece of rock was broken over the head of a person whose last agonies were painful alike to himself and to those who witnessed them. It was believed that the heart of the sick man would thus be broken and his release hasten ed. Windows and doors are always thrown wide open in order that the de parting spirit may have free egress from the house and escape from the evil ones that hover around eager to inthrall his soul. During the interval between death and burial lions and cats were kept carefully shut up. A person meeting these animals at such a juncture was doomed to blindness in the future. Moreover, unless a stream divided the two houses, farmers frequently refrain ed from yoking their oxen or horses be fore the body was "laid under the turf of truth." Many women preserved, with the greatest reverence, their bridal attire to cover them In the cof fin. Bread and water were placed in the chamber of death, for during the night prior to the burial the spirit of the departed one came to partake of them. Stillborn children and little ones who had not been blessed by the min ister were buried before sunrise. In this way their admission to the land of promise was assured. Not to observe the practice was to destine the souls of these bairns to wander homeless and disconsolate. The fate of the suicide is lamentable. Ills body cannot rest in the kirkyard, for it would taint the souls of those who lie therein. Frequently he was buried in a lone dike which separated two lairds' estates, and passersby were expected to cast a pebble at the rude stone which marked the place. iimtiuH 111 tfircin. In the stormy part of the year a steamer encountered rough weather, and, as often happens at such times, many sea gulls hovered near the ship ami even caine 011 board. One allowed itself to be caught, and it was found that it had a fish bone stuck In the eye In such a position as not absolutely to destroy the sight, but penetrating an inch into the flesh of the bird and pro jecting an Inch and a half. It might have liad a tight with a fish or got transfixed seeking Its prey. The doc tor of the ship took the bird, extracted the bone, applied a soothing remedy to the wound and let it go. It flew away, but returned the next day, allowing it self to l>e caught. The doctor exam ined the wound, which was progressing favorably, applied more of the remedy and let tli - bird go a second time. It flew several times around the ship and then departed ami returned r.o more.— T,ondou Sketch Causes of Headache. People ge' headache because they do not lak ■ snrti ient active exercise to keep the bfo-id circulating actively, be come e .' ited and often about things that .-• pillow, take too much alcoh 'I allow the feet to get cold, hike Iron and quini' 0 when thee drugs do not agree with the system. I'ittsburg Press. Ti-o Return. "I believe" said the cheery philoso pher, "that for every single thing you give away two come back to you." "That's uij experience,"' said Pham ley. "Last .In :e I gave away my daughter, and -lie and her husband came b-'d: Ir us i'i August." It often take a I -i = 112 common sense to get a lean ort or trouble a little housonse f.-.r him into Beaver (Okla.} Herald HEAL RHEUMATISM. The Causes and Symptoms of Urfo Acid In the Blood. Rheumatism, so called. Is probably as common as any ailment one ever hears of, and yet if one were to ana lyze carefully the average case of rheu matism the result would doubtless show that the disease was something very different indeed from tho real thing Almost everybody when suffer ing from a slight stiffness of a joint or n muscular soreness promptly makes a diagnosis of rheumatism when In real ity the case Is nothing more than what In technical language is known as 11- thaemia, sometimes called American gout. The real disease of rheumatism is tho result of an accumulation in tho blood of Imperfectly converted food, princi pally uric acid. This accumulation is due to intemperance in eating and drinking and Insufficient active exer cise. Heredity in some cases seems to play an important part. In the great major ity the symptoms follow a regular or der, beginning with a feeling of full ness and discomfort after meals, indi gestion. nausea and an unpleasant taste 111 the mouth, followed by throb bing headache, nervous irritability and vertigo, muscular pains which may be confined to one or more muscles or skip about them one to another. Lastly, nnd in most cases the most troublesome of all symptoms, is depression of spirits, the patient imagining that he has all sorts of ailments. Persons suffering from mental disorder as a result of this disease have been known to commit suicide. Fortunately these cases are not common, but it should be remem bered that they are among the possibil ities.—A Doctor in New York World. WHY SILHOUETTE. A Curious Bit of History Wrapped Up In the Word. The making of silhouettes can hard ly be classed among the lost arts, since there Is so little art about them. The best of them represent the human pro file in a crude way, and they were re garded as rather a cheap kind of pic tures even in the days when they were most popular. Indeed, the very word silhouette means something poor and cheap, and it had its origin in a spirit of ridicule. It is taken from Etienne de Silhouette, who was a Frencli cab inet minister in the year 1759, when the treasury of France was very low because of costly wars with Britain and Prussia and by the extravagances of the government. When Etienue de Silhouette became minister of finance he set about making great reforms In the public expenditures. lie was by nature a very "close" man, and he went to such extremes in keeping down the public expenses that he brought great ridicule upon himself, nnd finally anything that was cheap and poor was referred to as a la Sil houette. A very crude picture w'as popular at that time. It was made by tracing the shadow or profile of a face projected by the light of a candle 011 a sheet of white paper and the outline defined with a pencil. This was such a very poor and cheap sort of picture that !t was at once called a silhouette in further derision of the very saving Freuch minister, and the name has "stuck." It is an instance of the curi ous derivation of some words in com mon use. mwl tills unkind slur ou o man who was really trying to Intro duce needed reforms in the spending of the public money has long been ac cepted as a good and proper word. In deed, there is 110 other word used for pictures of this kind, although there were such pictures long before M. Etl enne de Silhouette had his name at tached to them in so embarrassing a way.—Morris Wade in Century. A RARE BIRD. Why an A nierican Showman Could Not Get It For His Museum. When the French writer Ferdinand Brunetiere visited the Unit ed States some years ago, lecturing at Harvard and other leading universi ties, he had an amusing experience, which he described in the recollections of his American tour which he after ward published. The great litterateur devoted much attention to the life and works of Bossuet, who was often styled the"Eagle of Meaux," on account per haps of his lofty flights of eloquence. Tliis fact, v, ith others pertaining to his literary career, was mentioned by some daily papers during his stay In this country. It caught the eyes of a t-hrewd American showman, who, how ever, got somewhat mixed over the meaning of the all.isiou. He wrote the following letter to the French author: Sir—l have Just heard that a certain Meaux eagle, very celebrated, it appears. In your country, has become your ex clusive property. Now, I am the man ager of a museum In one of the largest cities In the States. This Meaux eagle, whose reputation has been enhanced by your eloquence, would certainly not fall to excite the curiosity of my If you will let me have the rare bird and tell mo how to feed it. you can quote your own figure. Brunetiere politely explained that the "rare bird" had been dead for nearly S'JO vanrs CORDON BLEU. Origin of the French Title as Applied to a Fine Cook. The Order of the St. Esprit was ere nted in 1 .">B7, was suppressed by the revolution and was revived by Louis XVIII. in 1814. To speak rightly, Louis XVIII. considered that the order had never ceased to exist, for he had given two collars during his exile, iu 1810, the one to Fitincis L, king of the two Sicilies, and clie other to his brother, the Prince of Salerno, the father of his brother's wife, the Duchess d'Aumale. The ribbon of this order was a light blue color. It was worn around the neck in the reigns of Henry 111. and Henry IV.. but was chauged by Louis XIY„ when it was worn across tho chest. The «'hevaliers of the St. Esprit were always known under the name of Los Cordon Bleu, and this was the su preme honor during the monarchy of France. It was from this that the title of "cordon bleu" was given to a first class cook. A gentleman one day de clared after a good meal that he who had cooked the dinner had proved him self a "cordon bleu" among cooks In other words, the master of his art. The title became quite the rage and is now always used <0 designate a good cook without the persons who use it know ing what it means or still leas tho ori gin of the title. Flftti Monnreli* Men. Tile fifth monarchy men formed a re ligious sect that sprang up in the of Charles I. <>(' England. They wore so called from the fact that they as serted that in the lasi days the four an cient monarchies, the Assyrian, the Persian, the Baby lonian and the lto man, would bo r- ■< >v d. and to them would be added a -e -tinn monarchy, or fifth IKi '!■ <>f < lirist would be tli- THE ENGLiSH SYSTEM. Not a Hundred Person* Affected by * Change of Administration. "All told, the government of Eng land consists of only forty-six persons, and the transfer of political control from one party to another directly af fects only these forty-six persons and a few great functionaries of state whose fluties are purely ornamental," ruys A. Maurice Low In Appleton's. "In all not 100 persons are concerned by a change of administration. Post masters, government employees of ev ery class, from messengers to ambas sadors and colonial administrators, are not disturbed hy the transfer of yower. Clearly no political party in England can count upon patronage as a politi cal asset. "The principle on which the parlia mentary system of England Is found ed is the rule of the majority, and the majority elects to surrender its power to one man—the premier. The power of the majority Is so stTictly recog nized that the rules of the house of commons deprive the minority of all power to Initiate or shape legislation. When a majority of the electorate of the kingdom has sanctioned a policy represented by a political party that party is given free hand to put Its pol icy into operation. In all legislatures the power of the majority Is the con trol which It exercises to tax the peo ple and spend their money. Bee. then, how absolute Is the power of the prime minister in his command of the treas ury." LETTERS BY MESSENGER. A Postal Law of Whioh You May Not Have Knowledge. The statement made in an uptown cluh one evening lately that the law prohibits carrying an unstamped letter past a postotiice and delivering It caus ed much argument. Inquiry was made at the postoffice, where an official said that the question had been asked fre quently. "You may send a letter by messenger anywhere, past as many postoffk'es as you please," said the offi cial, "but you have no right to send your mail that way regularly or at stated periods. This is prohibited by the postal laws and regulations. Sec tions 1136 and 1137 were enacted to prevent the establishment of private mail routes, because the poatofflco de partment is recognized as having the absolute monopoly of the transporta tion of letters and 'packets' or bundles of letters by regular trips and at stated periods on all post routes. As to open letters and circulars, they may be de livered by rival concerns, but the peo ple who make the delivery of circulars a business have no right to deliver un stamped closed letters. The law shuts out the milkmen and the tradesmen, who travel regularly along established post roads, who would otherwise be come rivals to the United States post office for the purpose of accommodat ing their customers."—New York Trib une. SiLK OF THE SPIDER. The Delicnte Machinery That Spins the Liquid Threads. The spider is able to secrete at least threo colors of silk stuff—the white, which forms the web, and the en fswathement of captives and the egg cocoon; the brown mass that tills the cocoon Interior and the flossy yellow between that nnons are formed which oue sees In the enswatliement of a captive or the making of Arglope's central shield. This delicate machinery the owner op erates witli utmost skill, bringing into play now oue part and now another and again the whole with unfailing deftness and a mastery complete.—Drv H. McCook in llart>cr'a._ THE WORD "FELLOW." Its Honorable Beginning and Its Lat ter Day Decline. The degeneracy of a good word was Illustrated iu a case at Branksomo (Dorsett, in which a witness spoke of the defendant as "this fellow" and was ordered by the bench to substitute "this man." "Fellow" began very honorably by moaning a person who put down money with others in a Joint undertaking, its component parts being akin respectively to "fee" (prop erly i and to "lay" and "law." To this day it Is dignified to be a fellow of a college, apd nobody minds being called a "fellow citizen," a "fellow Chris tian" or a "good fellow." Rut ordinarily "fellow" alone ranks now as In the painful scene in which Mr. Tupman said, "Sir, you're a fel low," and Mr. Pickwick retorted, "Sir, you're another." in the fourteenth century It was customary to call a servant "fellow" In kindly condescen sion. Perhaps that explains the word's decline, though It may be due to the use of "fellow" in the sense of boon companion. "Companion" and "mate" also were contemptuous at one time. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. There's a lot of foolishness to keep out of. Genius is not rare, but plain com mon sense is. Great things can't be very difficult or an ordinary man couldu't accom plish them. Kverv one naturally dislikes those people who are so good they suggest the top line in a copy book. lie content with your air castle. The chimney in an ,iir castle never smokes, ami the windows do not rattle in every wind. lioin- business without advertising is like win' in- til .i have noticed that chii j : ; more willing to work for the neighbors than at home; also that some of them never outgrow the habit. — Atchison (-lobe There ar.< some truths that are per ceived less by ihe intellect than by the heart, an 1 ?h man who is devoid of this heart perception is lacklug In much. Terrell (Tex.) Transcript. biu CARNATIONS. They Were Cultivated In England in Shakespeare's Time. A tMrist says that we prkle ourselvt* nov. adays on the size of our carna tions. i ut the florists of 300 years ago grecarnations three to four inches ac: as b-rge as any that we see. ami thought nothing of it. "All through Spain, southern France and Italy at nation is the favorite flower and lias been for hundreds of years, but along the Mediterranean there are few glass houses, for In pro tected vitiiutions and on southern slopes of hills even delicate flowers grow outdoors all winter long and bio-mi as freely nt Christmas as In July. "The big carnations, however, were not grown in Spain or Italy, but in i:..i-ila :.l outdoors during the summer time and before glass houses were known. Tii \v may have grown just as l.ir ■ carnation flowers in Spain as in Eu.-laiid at that time, but iu Eng land iiieic was record made of the fact a;t I also of the size, while iu Spain there was not. Shakespeare mentions carnations and gillyflowers, or July flow rs. together as blooming at the same season, which shows that the carnation was then a summer flower, whereas in our greenhouses it Is now a winter Ho.'iner. How the florists of th->se days treated the plants to oh t.::n blooms of such size nobody knows, fer old time florists grew flowers lu si -ad of writing books about them. So all we know is that they had very large carnaiinis iu Queen Elizabeth's time without knowing how they were grown." —St. Louis < > lobe-1 >emocrat HIDDEN TREASURE. New Zealanders Dig For Kauri Qum In the Ground. Many New Zealanders find It profit able to dig for hidden treasure. That for which they dig. however. Is not gold or Captain lvidd's ill gotten wealth, thouglr It has a dull yellow color. It is kauri gum, a resinous sub stance which Is the product of the kauri pine tree. The gum can be se cured from the trunks of trees while they are. alive, for It protrudes In lumps, but it is especially profitable to dig for it in the soil about the stumps remaining after the trees have been cut down. Sometimes chunks weighing a* much as 100 pounds are taken up from the ground, Digging for kauri gum Is profitable, for the gum is used In the manufacture of varnish, and apparently it is one of those products of nature whose place cannot be filled by anything else which has yet been discovered. It has been found that it ran be utwd In.certain enamel paints, and this has bad the effect of bringing the demand up to 8 point above the supply. The kauri pine is a magnificent tree. It rises as straight as a needle to a height of from 150 to 200 feet and attains at times a diameter of-fifteen feet. It is noted for its dark, dense foliage and is much used for masts for vessels constructed for the Rritlsb navy. It is the duty of the clerk to be zeal ous. The low spirited has no place in a bank. Neither has the frivolous. The man who works for a bank Is re spected in his community because It Is known that the character of his work Is important and particular. He must not only be direct and speedy iu what he does, he must not only lie faithful aud constant in all that be does, but he must go a step further and do what he does with a will, and a good will at that. Zeal requires interest and en thusiasm. One of the troubles with the bank clerk is that his senses and his buoyancy are apt to lie dulled by the endless repetition of details. There is no way to shirk it. No bank clerk can go home at nigiit with his work unfinished. C. \V. Stevenson lu Bank ers' Monthly. Bismarck's Love of Authority. At 1» p. in. we took tea with the king. I was seated opposite him when a foot man came and whispered In my ear that Bismarck desired to see me. Great embarrassment! I'uekler having told me I might leave the table, I did so. The king inquired what was the mat ter and permitted me to go. Bismarck had nothing of particular Importance to tell me, and I suspect that he only wanted to show that lie had the right to semi for his employees even when they were with the king.—Hatz.feldt Letter. Strictly Business. "The graspin'est man I ever know ed," said I'ncle Jerry Peebles, "was au old cliap named Snoop ins. Somebody told him once that when he breathed he took in oxygen and gave out car bon. He spent a whole day tryln" to find out which of them two gases cost the most if you have to buy' em. He wanted to know whether he was m&k lu* or losin* money when he breathed." —Chicago Tribune I KILLTHE COUCH IAND CURE THE LUNCS ""Dr. King's j /CONSUMPTION Price linS | UUGHSand 50c & SI.OO | Free Trial. I Surest and Quickest Cure for all | THROAT and LUNG TROUB |I,ES, or MONEY BACK. | SIBI HEW! A Reliable TIN SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofings i Spouting and General Jol» Work. Stoves, Heater*, Ran«ee, Furnaces, eto. I'RIfBS THE LOWEST! QUALITY THIS BEST! JOHN IIIXSON NO. ll« E. FRONT BT, 1 HAPPINESS. V | The Difference Between tho Sexes In This Important State. One source ot' women's Happiness is 1 to lie found, we think, iu their love of I detail. They enjoy every detail of so cial life. They love the minutiae of their work. They do not love it as a man lov i his, for the sake of an end. ; ?'hey I toU dose at what they are do liv-. aud th do not look forward. The } take olea ure in their children as they are. A defect, even though it be a serious one, destroys their pleas ure iu tli ni l.ir less than it destroys that of a man. They are not constant ly oppressed by the thought of what that defect will mean in the future. If a woman is y nature apprehensive j her fears apply for the most part to lit To things. If a man is apprehensive i:e , •.ir- when the tit is upon him the (1 jci •of Ilea ve.i and earth. For wo n. -.i time goe.j a little slower. They take plea -'.ir * i:i each jewel of Ihat u:o«*?r Coiitrol. A lloston w iinan was standing on a street crossing waiting for a car when a box jf powdered charcoal fell from a passing wagon and broke open. The beautiful light dress she was wearing was ruined by the dust. The driver, who stopped to recover the package, saw the damage and said, "1 am very sorry, ma'am." The woman bowed and replied, "It was not your fault, sir." He that taketli a city is indeed a ■mall person beside the possessor of such self control as that.—Youth's Companion. Not Ills ToiiKae. "I ain't got no doubt," said Ililler, "but what I kin git that there job as consul iu that place in England. It'd be a cinch too." "Oh. yes," replied Peppery, "if you can learn to speak the imguage."—• Philadelphia Press. The Home Paper of Danville. Of course you read i i Bj a. i, i 1 1 THE People S !| Kopular 1 aper. . Everybody kc •! that Sii 'lley will always be rememlicn •!. the fact must not be overlooked that ho had a passion for reforming the wovM bcfjre all things. He wrote many ur.ablc c says and pamphlets on a >:: .> i the world with his briili :• y •; a » >.!. of his lyric work it ! ; ! , t'i'l tint It "presents a stun t i . rtvarive uess, profound 1"'•• . ■ i <•'•!>.!- ent music :i < i • 1 ' • .' . . I . !so wlieie i"1- ;I" ' .-ar son's Wee' IJ lif I HI!- He nt to to aii Ms ef PrMnt i I a irs tit l ll i KB. lis Mat it * A. well printc tasty, Bill or !.o \ / ter Head, Po 4 % H/A Ticket, Circulax v*v Program, Sta'.c ment or Card ' " (y ) an advertisemcn for yout busin --ss, a satisfaction to you. Ne* Type, Net Presses, x ,, Best Paper, Mel Wort A ' Promptness- - \ll you can ask. A trial will mate you our customej We respect full" asi that trial. — — ~ No. 11 F. Mahoning St-