EES RR NEVER MIND, Never mind the shadows, never mind the rain, Every day that ever dawns brings a touch of pain: Heart afeared and wistful, dreading fortune’s spite, Never mind the darkness so, think but of the light! Never mind the sorrow, never mind the rue, Every day that ever dawns, brings a sigh or two: Heart of weary burdens, Life's sweet living learn, Never mind the grieving so, think of Joy's return! —Ripley D. Saunders. DDADDED ODD LDLLLLL {IN THE TOWER. } YI VY VVvVYVYVYWVY “Aren’t you going to kiss me good- by-Jack?” The little- woman's flush of irritation still burned hotly in her round cheeks, despite the appealing brcwn eyes. Her voice was half re- proachful, half indignant. The operator hesitated, biting his lips. His face, too, bore traces of wrath. Their first quarrel had been a sharp passage and he, being slower of tongue, ncw stood at the door, with an angry sense of defeat. A chance for a parting stab. He hoped it would hurt. It hurt him more than he expected. “No! I'm not,” he burst out, grufily. “We'll skip that, Kate. You women think a man can be made a target for whatever you choose to say, and then brcught around at will. I'm not that sori.” As he stamped down the steps he heard her sob; paused, shook his head resolutely and went on to his post. The signal tower looked gloomy enough in the blackness of the lcwer- ing winter evening. Lawson slipped on the frosty tracks he glanced up at the light glaring from the window. From the heavy, settling sky the flakes of snow were beginning to whiten the tops of the dismal string of empty freight cars on the siding. “It’s going tc be a nasty storm,” the man muttered, climbing the stairway. “Four hours before Bourpe shows up. Well, Harry will be glad to go home to his wife, I wish—no! I don’t. I'd rather be here than uncomfortable. in the house with a nagging woman. Is that what I am gcing to get for ex- pressing my opinion of mother-in-law’s prospective visit? She shan’t come!” “Hullo, Jack! Youre a welcome sight. I was getting nervous; really, it’s pretty poky sitting here alone. Every time the instrument calls, I think, ‘There's trouble!’ Poor Dickson! Whe do you suppose killed him, Jack? A gang, or some ruffian? All alone in the tower, never dreaming of such a thing, and then—Great heaven! 1 wouldn’t take your job for $10 a night. You ought to have some one with you.” “Pshaw, Harry!” Lawson threw off his coat. “You need seasoning, boy. Dickson's was a case of a man who carried a wad and bragged of it. Bound to lose his money some time. That might have occurred on the street cr in his bed. Merely happened to be con- venient to nab him at his table. Tough? I know, but when you've been 10 years in this business one poor devil going suddenly isn’t a subject to get nervous prostration cver. The big accidents are wnat shake a chap.” “But the way of it, Jack. The idea—" “Oh, trot along home, lad. I've noth- ing to attract marauders except my good looks. No one will bother me. Often some fellow drops in for a chat, and Bourne relieves me at midnight. Much obliged for your ‘spelling’ me, Harry. It gives me a chance for sup- per at the house, and when a man’s married——" He stopped with a shrug of his broad shoulders, adding in a dif- ferent tone, “All clear?” “Al clear, Jack. ' Everything on time. No. 78 went through at 6.45. Fast freight due- to pass in 10 minutes. Gocd-by. Take care of yourself.” “Likely boy,” commented Lawson, filling his pipe and sitting down. “Good as any of ’em already; safe and levelheaded. Got nervous, did he? Not the only one on the line, I guess. We all carry a ‘pop’ now. I must say it's a handy ccmpanion.’ He ticked off a message, rose, gazed out, grinned, felt of his hip pocket and scowled. “Thunder!” he exclaimed. “I forgot it. Confound Kate! She drove every- thing out of my head.” Nothing but his ‘‘good lcoks.” The man who stepped inside a half hour later to greet the operator cordially and to seat himself ungracefully was not in search of money. Lawson supposed Sharpson was “over it.’ Lately the disappointed lover had appeared very friendly, even to celling twice at the house. Kate had made him welcome. It was non- sense the way Sharpson had acted be- fore the wedding, but his eccentric temper only rendered him a butt for ridicule. A short, thickset, slouching man, black of sparse beard and small, clcse-set eyes, he held but sorry chances in the lists with John Lawson. A foolish conceit, surely, that Kate Bartley cared fcr him, and would have been his but for the arrival of the big stranger from Whe=zizr Junction, who promptly and effectively captured the affections of the ticket agent's daugh- ter. Six months, ncw, and the wrath of Sharpson forgotten. “Bad night,” remarked that gentie- man, hrushing his sleeves. ‘Thought I'd drop in a moment and warm up before my tramp.” “Where are you bound for? much of a night for a walk.” “Right, in ain’t. Oh! I've got to go clear out to Dashnell’s. He’s sick and I'm on his job. Some things I wanted to ask him.” Tisn't “That's a lovely stretch; a hlamed lonesome road, 8eth. You go hy that Polish settlement, don’t you? Say, they're an uneasy gang, all down on everybody connected with 4¢he road. Better wait till tomorrow. 1 would.” “Can’t do it,” he complained. “Wish I could, but I must report to the bcss at 5 a. m. As you say, Jack, it ain't safe for one of us fellers to go trail- ing out there in the dark. I've no weapon, either. Say, I'll be back by 11 o’clock. You couldn't spare me ycur gun till then, could you? 1 suppose you've got one.” “Seth, I left the blamed thing at home. Came away in a hurry, and never thought of it. Too bad! Of course, I'd have lent it.to you. Been glad to. Go around to the house and ask Kate for it.” : The caller looked down, shaking his head. “No,” said he; “it's a 15-minute walk, and out ¢f my way. I'll step along, It guess, and take my chances before it gets later. The wind is ris- ing from the way those wires hum. I'll be going back, Jack, and maybe drop in on my return. Your're a lucky dog to be housed and warm. I'l think of you when I'm rubbing my ears.” He laughed strangely, turned up the collar of his heavy ulster, nodded and departed. - Outside, Sharpson did not start in the direction of Dashnell’s remote home. Instead, he picked his way across the tracks and climbed into an empty car. ‘They'll meet me here,” he growled. “I've luck for once!” An hour later Lawscn turned as the door opened scftly. “Kate!” he cried, startled. the matter?” “I've brought your pistol, Jack. I got to worrying. I—I'm sorry, dear. Won't you kiss me now?” “There, there!” soothed the man, all his anger vanished, as she shivered and sobbed in his arms. ‘You shculd never have come out in this storm. Alone, too. I'll have to keep you till Bourne arrives. Ve will sit here and ‘make up.” ” He laughed and kissed her fervently. The big revolver was in his right hand, as he playfully pushed her from his knee with his left, bidding her re- move the damp cloak, and he faced the door as it again swung cpen to admit three masked figures, pushing in hast- ily.” A cool man was Lawson, quick and an unerring marksman. He took no chances. A woman's scream echoed above the deafening explosions. Through the smoke, and loud over the heavy grcans from the huddled heap rose the steady voice of the operator. ‘Keep quiet, girl! I've nailed the whole bunch!” Striding to the sprawled figures he tore at the masks roughly. “Good God!” came his shocked werds. “One of them’s Sharpson! I— I don’t understand. Those other men are a couple of brutes from the Polish settlement.” After help had arrived in response to his startling message, and the man who could whisper kept muttering, Lawson bent his head to catch the husky murmur. “Ve vas paid to do it.” “Eh? said the operator. man whe robbed Dickson?” The matted shock of a head moved affirmatively. A pale-faced young man hurried to Lawson’s side. “Your wife is asking for you, Jack. Better take her home. I'll tend to the work. Ain't this aw- ful?” “Might have been worse,” answered his friend, grimly. Much obliged, Harry. I'll get this little woman right out. Sharpson’s gone; the others will live. Say, boy, if you ever refuse to kiss your wife good-by, just forget to take along your gun.” . Harry stared at him, not compre- hending, but he knows the story now, and every man cn the D. P. & L. sys- tem has told his wife the tale of Kate Lawson's good-by kiss and how she saved her husband.—Elliot Walker, in San Francisco Call “What's “By the A Bit of History. Just after the completion of the Louisiana purchase ¢z 1803—which is commemorated by the world’s fair of this year at St Louis—the American Congress, urged by President Jeffer- son’s private secretary, Merriwether Lewis, was appointed commander of this expedition, and he chose as his associate Captain William Clark, an old army friend. A hundred years ago this month these intrepid men, with a smail party of about thirty explorers, were well away on their journey up the Missouri river as far as the mouth of the Platte. In May of the following year they had their first glimpse of the Rockies, and before that year (1895) was ended they had crossed the great range and pushed on to the Pacific ocean by way of the Columbia river. During certain parts of their journey they endured great hardships, and for fifteen months they were cut off from all communication with the outer world. It was one of the most famous of American expeditions, and to the pluck and perseverance of this little band of explorers we owe the acqui- sition, later, of the terri / now em- braced in the three at Sta northwestern boundary—Was Oregon and Idaho.—St. ington, Nin? Jao Nicholas. The Rev. Mr. Ma A suburban minister last Sunday: The preacher in this church on Sunday morning next will be found posted on the board outside this church.” On Tuesday evening he announced a meeting to be held in the village schocl-room, ‘“and please remember,” he said, “that no children in arms will be admitted unless there is gome ope to take care of them.” “HAS THE A ah GOODS.” NEW YORK WRITER FINDS WORLD'S x FAIR BEYOND EXPECTATIONS : SE Ie, After a Week at the Exposition, Expresses Amazement at Many Features---St. Louis Cool and Prices Reasonable. «2. 8T. LOUIS 4 ® Addison SGI. R. ADDISON STEELE: a f well-known newspaper and o magazine writer, of New 8 York, recently spent a week 7 1) at the World's Fair. Re- oR” turning home, he-wrote the following appreciative ac- count of his impressions for. Brooklyn Life, which should convince any reader that it is worth his while to see this greatest of ex- positions: -In the expressive language -of the day, St. Louis “has the goods.” I had expected much of the Louisiana Purchase Kxposi- tion. for I had kept in teuch.-with' the making of it from its very inception, five vears ago; but after nearly a week of jour- neying through this new wonderland 1 must confess that in every essential par- ticular it is’ far beyond my expectations. The biggest-and best it was meant to be and the biggest and best it is. The expo- sition, rumors notwithstanding, 1s quite finished. * * . Those who imagine that the Columbian Exposition remains the last word in the way of a world’s fair should remember crowning feature is ‘the great I.ouisiana Purchase Monument—and across the Grand Basin to the Cascade Gardens. On the right are the Varied Industries and Elec- tricity buildings and on the left the Manu- factures and Education, these—with Trans- portation and Machinery still further to the! rightiand Liberal Arts and Mines be- vond at the left—making up the body of the fan.- For its handle the fan: has the Cascade (zardens—rising in a grand terrace tora’ height of sixty-five feet above the floor level of the -buildings mentioned and ccowned by the great Festival Hall, the Terrace of States and the East and West Pavilions—and the Fine Arts building di- rectly behind. oe ike x In the architecture of the group there is no uniformity “of style. The very liberal use of great columns gives the four build- ings fronting on the Plaza and Basin a certain architectural kinship, but the Mines building, with its two huge obelisks and somewhat Egyptian aspect; the much- turreted and belfried Machinery building; the highly ornate Transportation building. with its gigantic arches and pylons, and eign nations would alone form an_exposi- tion worth the journey from New York to St. Louis. Germany’s building, Das Deutsche Haus, is a reproduction of Char- lottenburg Schloss, 450 feet long and finely located on an eminence overlooking Cas- cade Gardens. The interior as well as the exterior is a faithful reproduction of “the palade; Gobelin tapestries, the old Char- lottenburg furniture and the Kaiser's wed- ding silver having been brought over for the superb apartments. Nearly a mile to the westward France has reproduced, at a cost of half a million dollars, the Grand Trianon, the building and great garden covering fifteen acres. Great Britain has a copy of the banqueting hall of Kensington ‘Palace; Japan, the Shishinden Palace, one of several buildings in a characteristic ark, and China, the country seat of Prince Pu Lun. Italy has a superb Graeco-Roman temple, Austria an architectural glorifica- tion of Moderne Kunst, and Belgium a magnificent structure from an original de- sign. Lesser reproduction of note are the tomb of Etmad-Dowlah, by East India, end the new Bangkok temple, by Siam. ta * x PALACE OF MINES AND METALLURGY. that eleven years have rolled by since Chi- cago invited all the nations of the earth to come within her gates. These having been years of remarkable progress the mere fact that it is up to date would place the Louisiana Purchase Exposition ahead of pot only the Columbian Exposition of 1893 but the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900 —the only other world’s fair of the period mentioned. The great development of horseless vehicles, certain wonderful ad- vances in the field of electricity, the wire- less telegraph, the submarine boat and the practicable flying machine—all' of which are special features at St. Louis—are, for instance, matters of the period since the Chicago event. To my mind, however, the one distinctive feature which places it ahead of all other world’s fairs is the com- prehensive Philippine exhibit. Ahead also of any previous showing are the individual buildings of eight of the foreign nations and, taking everything into consideration, the architectural and landscape gardening achievements are greater—as they ought to be with the world older. ie: *x * One of the greatest, and certainly one of the most agreeable, of my many surprises was the supreme beauty of the main group of buildings. For the simple reason that the camera does not exist which could take in the vast picture as the eye sees it, the early views of the group—a bit here and a bit there—gave a scant idea of the scheme as a whole. Nor did the early views of the ten individual buildings which make ap its component parts do justice to their nobility of architecture and general grandeur. Then again in the ground plans und bird's-eye sketches—the only possible manner of showing it—the fan-shaped ar- rangement of this group looked stiff and unsatisfying. Far from that it 1s quite as remarkable in its way as the famous Court of Honor of the Columbian Exposition. In one respect it is even more notable, for in- stead of two grand vistas it offers a dozen. The main vista is, of course, the one look- ing up the Plaza of St. Louis — whose GCOLDEN CHA\NS., M. Max Regis Wore Golden Handcuffs For Years. It will be remembered, says the Westminster Gazette, that some years ago M. Max Regis was presented by a group of lady admirers with a pair of golden handcuffs, in commemoration of his arrest and imprisonment in the great cause of Nationalism. The An- ti-Semite swore that he would wear the manacles as souvenir bracelets for the remainder of, his life. For some time he kept his promise, and then it was observed that he had abandoned his decorative fetters. Why? Was it infidelity to the cause, or what? Peo- ple wondered, and could get no satis- factory answer, until a few days ago there was a public sale of unredeemed pledges from the Mont de Piete. The golden handcuffs (weighing forty-five grammes) were included in the cata- logue, M. Regis having deposited them with “ma tante” to relieve a tempo- rary indigence, and having neglected to recover them. To complete the irony of the situation, they were pur- chased by a Hebrew, who now wears them in the streets of Algiers and ex- hibits them to ail his friends. Dr. Hale an LL.D. Dr. Edward Everette Hale is now an LL. D. of Williams College, from which his father graduated just 100 years ago. The doctor read an extract from his parent's graduating address, which dwelt with the question ‘‘Has There Been a Progressive Improve- ment in Society in the Last Fifty Years?’ Dr. Hale jocosely remarked that a century ago the boys appeared to be wrestling with the same prob- lems as are now discussed. the Romanesque Liberal Arts building have pronounced individuality. Yet in the general picture all these buildings blend finely. Nor is there any clashing in the case of the French Ionic style of the build- ings of Cascade Gardens. Twelve hand- some bridges across the waterways. which form a figure eight by running from the Grand Basin around the Electricity and Education buildings, further contribute to the architectural splendor of the scene. * Rows of fine, large maples set off the buildings in the main vista, adding im- measureably to the beauty of the picture and furnishing one of the many demonstra- tions of the superiority of this exposition in the matter of landscape gardening. There are also many trees to set cff the other buildings of the group, shrubbery and small trees have been used in profu- sion around the entrances and the bridges and there are handsome sunken gardens in two places. The landscape treatment of Cascade Hill is similarly fine, ’ & Y* * * The Philippine section covers no less than forty-seven acres, has 100 buildings and some 75,000 catalogued exhibits, and represents an outlay of over a million dol- lars. A week could easily be spent there to advantage. Entrance to the section is free, but twenty-five cents is charged to go into each of the four native villages, which are intensely interesting. The villages run along Arrowhead Lake, and the inhabi- tants all have some way of entertaining their visitors. The Igorottes, who wear as little clothing as the law of even savage lands allow; Bontoes, Tinganues and Suy- ocs are in one village; the lake-dwelling Moros and: Bogobos in another; the black Negritos in the third and the civilized Vis- cayans, who have a Catholic Church and a theatre, in the fourth. As a matter of ed- ucation this great encampment of the “lit- tle brown men’ is one thing that no Amer- ican can afford to miss. * Eight of the numerous buildings of for- ONE HUNDRED FOR AN EGG. An Indian Game Fowl That is Very Valuable. Not often does the price of a single egg climb to $100, but this is what was offered for each of the eggs of a cer- tain Indian game hen, which was brought to England some time ago. For centuries the Indian game, or Azeel fowls, have begn the very apex of the game breed, for the pureness of blood and pedigree have been most carefully preserved for so long that the date of the origin of the race has been lost in the past. It is almost impossible to procure specimens of the purest blood, for they are treasured by the Indian sportsman at the highest value. As game fowl they are great fight- ers. Those who have seen them in In- dia — for the finest birds never reach our colder climates—tell of their prow- ess and ungovernable *eracity in bat- tle. With them it is always victory or death. ° In America, however, the game fowls are seldom raised fer fighting pur- poses, lut for show, and as pets and hobbies of poultry fanciers.—Couniry Life in America. A Meodezt Englishman, Like the traditional Englishman, Ar- thur Stanley, Dean of Westminster, wore home from his first visit to America an expression of amazement which only time could effacc. He was at once beset by interviewers, who asked the usual questions. “What was the thing which most impressed you in America?’ was one of these. Without a moment’s hesitaticn Dean Stanley replied: “My own ignorance.” —Arzonaut. The Pike has in the Tyrolean Alps the finest concession that lave ever seen. There is a great square with many quaint buildings, a httle village street, and above the snow-clad mountains—which look very real as the evening falls. The best scenic railroad yet devised affords several fine glimpses of the Alps, and there is a very graphic exposition or the Oberammergau passion play in the little church. The Cliff: Dwellers’ concession also looks very realistic at nightfall. It is elaborate in ar- rangement, and the courting, snake and other dances by the Southwestern Indians make it another of the Pike shows which should be taken in by all. In Seville there is an amusing marionette theatre and some genuine Spanish dancing. For the rest the Pike offers infinite variety, and as a rule the full money’s worth is given. The enor- mous Jerusalem and Boer War concessions are not on the Pike. x * x It is a case of dine at the German Pa- vilion and die at the Exposition. In a beautiful Moderne Kunst building adjoin- ing Das Deutsche Haus the best 0) and the highest prices on the grounds are to be found, the table d’hote lunch and dinner costing $2 and $3, respectively. There is also a la carte service. Everything consid- ered the prices are not excessive, and at least one meal should be taken there for the experience. Another should be taken at the Tyrolean Alps, either outdoors or in the gorgeous dining room in the mountain- side. The best Irench restaurant is at Paris, on the Pike. Lower in prices and in every way admirable are the two restau- rants conducted by Mrs. Rorer in the pa- vilions of Gascade Gardens. The east one has waitresses and no beer and the west one waiters and beer. For a bit of lunch Germany, France and England all offer de- licious pastry in the Agricultural building. These are not free ads., but time-savin, tips for the traveler. There are no end o restaurants to fit all purses on the grounds. THE SILENCE OF BUTTERFLIES. This Insect Represents a Truly Silent 7 World. After all, the chief charm of this race of winged flowers does not lie in their varied and brilliant beauty, not yet in their wonderful series of transforma- tions, in their long and sordid- caterpil- lar life, their long slumber in the chrysalis, or the very brief period which comprises their beauty, their love making, their parentage and their death. Nor does it lie in the fact that we do not yet certainly know whether they have in the caterpillar shape the faculty of sight or not, and do not even know the precise use of their most conspicuous organ in maturity, the an- tennae. Nor does it consist in this— that they of all created things have furnished man with the symbol of his own immortality. It rather lies in the fact that, with all their varied life and activity, they represent an absolutely silent world. * * * All the vast ar- ray of modern knowledge has found no butterfly which murmurs with an audible voice and only a few species which can even audibly click or rus- tle with their wings.—T. W. Higgin- son, in Atlantic. 3 The Playwright’s Complaint, A popular author, who has lately turned to play writing, has not suc- ceeded in impressing managers with the availability of his productions. Not long ago, thinking to ,get some useful pointers from the current dra- ma, he made an observation tour of the theatres. “Well,” he remarked to a friend at the end of the evening, “I seem to be the only man alive who can't get a poor play put on.”—Harper's Weekly. SCIENCE NOTES. ‘American built automobiles of 1905 will not differ m@terially in construc- tion from those of the present year. Prof. W. J. Hussey of the University of California astronomical department at Lick Observatory has just announe- ed his discovery of 100 new stars. At a depth of forty-five feet the tusk and a pertion of the skull of a mam- moth, belonging to the ice age, have been dug up at Schaffhausen, in Swit- zerland. Glass houses of a very substantial kind can now be built. Silesian glass- makers are turning out glass bricks for all sorts of building purposes. That fuel oil is more of a steam pro- ducer than coal, and that, with light distillation, it is less wearing on boil- ers, are conclusions reached by the naval board which conducted experi- ments with liquid fuel. An ingeniously constructed shadow clock has just been invented by Prof. Herth, of Lynn, Mass. The essential feature of the invention consists of a lamp, which throws upon the ceiling an optical representation of a small watch. The climate and soil of Ireland hav- ing been declared suitable for sugar beets, 3000 acres near Cork are to be planted with these tubers, and it is ex- pected that eré long the United King- dom will be able to grow all its sug- ar. i In reply to a question in the House cf Commons Mr. Pretyman of the ad- miralty said recently that the average annual cost of keeping a 13,000 ton battleship in commission was approxi- mately $470,000. The various items were: $20,350, pay of officérs, men, etc.; coal, $118,000; $73,020 for victual- ling, and $75,250 for stores, repairs, ete. Dead Sea to Be Enlivened. It is believed that before very long the Dead Sea will be exploited for in- dustrial purposes. French engineers are at work on three different projects with this purpose in view. The level of the Dead Sea being more than 1300 feet below that of the Mediter- ranean and the Red seas, it is thought that, by connecting either of these le’0 seas by means of a canal with the Dead Sea, a stream of water would flow with a velocity calculated to pro- duce some 25.000 horse-power. There is no danger, it is asserted, of an overflowing of the Dead Sea, for the waters there evaporate at so great a rate (6,000,000 tons a day) that the incoming waters would make no ap- preciable difference in the level. One project is to start the canal from the Bay of Acre, lead it southward past Mount Tabor and let it join at Baisan the waters of the Jordan. Ancther plan is to build the canal along the railway line from Jaffa to Jerusalem. But this would mean blasting a tunnel of some 37 miles through the moun- tains of Old Judea. Toe third project, the cheapest, proposes to start at Akaba in the Red Sea and pass through the desert of Wady-el-Jebel. - Having obtained power in this manner, it is thought many industrial works would be carried on.—London Daily News. How Shall We Save Our Tobacco Ashes. : As everybody knows, the ash le on burning tobacco is considerable and, as a matter of fact, the mineral of the tobacco leaf frequently amounts to as much as a fifth part of its weight. Thus a ton of tobacco leat would yield four hundredweight of ash, which represents valuable min- eral constituents withdrawn from the soil which have to be replaced by abundant manuring. It has been cal- culated that a ton of tobacco with- draws over a hundredweight of min- eral constituents per acre of land. In 1901 the home consumption of the United Kingdom was at the rate of two pounds per head, or a total of about 40,000 tons, which represents, at what is now a probably low compu- tation, approximately 8000 tons of ash annually committed to the winds or dissipated in some way or other. On the face of it there would seem to be a fortune in store for that individual who could devise a successful means for the collection of tobacco ash, and it is a great pity that so much valu- able material should forever be lost to the soil without any attempt at di- rect restoration being made.—The Lancet. Might With Radium See Through Iron. Prof. Wood Jf the chemical depart- ment of Johns Hopkins university de- livered before the Photographic club recently an address on rad- ium and its qualities and the radia- tion of light. He performed a num. ber of interesting experiments during his talk. One of these was to show by means of a spectroscope the radia- tions of radium. Dr. Wood remarked that if the power of the piece of radium were just 100 times as great as it was, or if the piece were 100 times larger it would penetrate with a ray of light a sheet of iron several inches in thickness and make it pos- sible for the experimenter to dis- tiguish objects placed on the other side of the iron—ir other words, would make it possible for a person to sce through iron.—Baltimore Sun. Evans Likes Baseball. Rear-Admiral Robley D. Evans is a baseball enthusiast and seldom misses an opportunity to see a game. He has been visiting Mrs. Evans’ sister in Poughkeepsie, and while there attend- ed a contest of the Hudson River league and “rooted” uproariously for the home team, which won. TN AS se . dis wit the wit ing car abl for Sor anc use i it Ste bax car abl sai sla lan; Tely &bcue / DR cares. 1 Free.