THE CiriZHN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1010, SELECT GOLLINGS Curious Human Nature. Paris was treated to n curious In stnuce .of Inconsistent liuinnn nature the other day. Tho Incident occurred at tho end of a trial for attempted murder. Marcel Itochols, a former ser geant, was tried on a charge of firing his revolver at Gnrmnluc Ilubcrt and wounding her In the head. lie de clared thnt for a long time be had been endeavoring without success to win the affections of Mile. Ilubcrt, whom ho loved more than life. When one day ho saw her on the arm of a rival he resolved to shoot her and then commit suicide. lie was arrested be fore he could complete his purpose. The unhappy suitor was sentenced to eight months' imprisonment and was leaving the dock when Mile. Ilubcrt rushed forward. With clasped hands she Implored the maglstrato to pardon Marcel. She said that she had never cared for the man before, but from tho moment that ho bad shot her she had fallen hopelessly In love with him and was ready to marry him at once. The girl's appeal was granted, and tho lov ers left the court arm in arm. No Boulevards In Washington. Washington 13 to bo congratulated on having no "boulevard." In every city where this word is used for a thoroughfare it has caused trouble. Riverside drive, New York, sounds much better than Riverside boulevard. Tierce Mill road Is more attractive and moro euphonious than Pierce Mill boulevard would be. Chicago has de cided to follow tho advice of tho Mu nicipal Art league and will urge tho park commissioners to use the words "drive," "road" and "way" In place of tho high bred French-German term. Tho word, while of French use, Is of German extraction, a corruption of "bollwerk," meaning bulwark or ram part, a boulevard In reality being a drive laid out on the site of an aban doned fortification. It does not belong to America, being a survival of the age of feudalism. It has no place In Amer ica. Washington Herald. A Hole In tho Sky. Professor E. E. Barnard, in discuss ing the remarkable dark lanes seen in his photographs of the nebula sur rounding the star Rho OphiuchI and the apparent veiling of the more dis tant stars by this and a neighboring nebula, calls attention to "a small black hole In the sky" whlich has appeared on a number of his photographs for the past fifteen years. On account of Its smallness and sharpness and its isolation It Is, he says, the most re markable phenomenon of the kind with which be is acquainted. It is In the constellation Sagittarius, In right as cension 18 hours 25 minutes 31 sec onds, declination south 20 degrees 0 minutes. It lies, says Professor Bar nard, "In an ordinary part of the Milky way and Is not due to the pres ence or absence of stars, but seems really to be a marking on the sky It self." Raising the Hat. The formation of a league in Berlin to substitute a military salute for the practice of raising tho hat has proba bly been brought about by tho spread of the all Invading cap. There was a time when hat raising was a line art. Louis XVIII. once boasted that he was tho only man in his dominions who knew how to put on a hat and to take it off again in the correct eighteenth century style. "And It is true," adds Talleyrand, who records the boast, "that the king took a great deal of pains over the process." But can we imagine Louis taking tho same pains over raising a cap? Brummcll nnd D'Orsay rolled into one could hardly do that gracefully. London Chronicle. What Bismarck Would Havo Done. Colonel Gadkc, the military critic of the Berliner Tageblatt, has been dis cussing the possibilities of a German Invasion of England and of an English invasion of Germapy. Tho English Invasion, he thinks, might be effected In certain conjunctures of tho powers. Including tho hypothesis that an Eng lish army supported by Danish troops "could march against tho Kaiser Wll helm canal from a base in Denmark." But Bismarck himself had no such ap prehension. When once nsked what bo would do If nn nrmy of 100,000 British troops were to laud In Schles-wig-IIolstelu he grimly replied: "Do? I should havo them nil arrested by tho police." Green Snow. The familiar red snow of Alpine nnd arctic regions is well kuowu to be due to the growth lu It of a minute ouo celled species of alga. In n bulletin of the Botanical Society of Geneva R. Chodat describes a now species of alga which grows in snow and colors It green. Tho specimen was collected by Vlret in a depression between tho Ai guilles du Chardonuet and the Grands Mulets, nt tho edge of tho Argenticro glacier. Tho patch of green snow was some thirty-seven yards long by threo broad, tho color being a dirty green. Tho new species has been named Ra phidlum viretl, after its discoverer. Mark Twain. It Is a tribute to Mark Twain's ori ginality and spontaneity that ho has never had an imitator. During a ca reer reaching back almost to tho sec ond series of "BIglow Papers" ho has held tho primacy as master of both gentle and ironic wit. Other humorists havo como nnd gone, but ho has re mained a standard, national and, with all his flavor of tho soil, unprovinclal. no was in his way as truly American as Abraham Lincoln. The Scrap Book Caught Him Both Wayi. While Cliiiuncey Olcott was chatting with a frleud on Broadway, New York, one day a young tnnn whom he hud noticed lu conversation with two oth er men in front of a theater left his companions and, crossing the street, said: "I beg your pardon, but aro you Chauncey Olcott?" "No," responded the comedian; "I'm his brother." "Then I loso my bet," exclaimed the stranger, darting In front of a car and rejoining his companions. Mr. Olcott saw him hand one of the men a bill, and, not wishing the stran ger to loso his money, he started in pursuit to explain. But there was a rush of traffic nt that moment nnd ho lost sight of them. An hour or so later Mr. Olcott was walking up Broadway when the same young mau approached him with an other man. "Aro you Chauncey Olcott?" asked the man. "Yes. I am, and 1 want to say that when I told vou a llttlo while nco I 'was not I didn't know you had a bet on it." "Well, I'll bo blowcd!" exclaimed the stranger as ho turned disgustedly away. "That's two hots I've lost on you this afternoon. I just bet Jim here a five spot that you weren't Chauncey Olcott, and I thought I hud a cinch." Anticipation. It Is a mystery of tho unknown That fascinates us. Wo'nro children still. Wayward nnd wistful. With one hand wi cling To tho familiar things wo call our own And with tho other, resolute of will, Gropo In the dark for what tho day will ring. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Honesty. I was sitting nt my desk when black Sam, who sometimes waits on me nt my restaurant, entered my ofllce. "What can I do for you, Sara?" I asked. "Ah got a chance to change mah sit uation. Mlsseh Clank," he said. "Yo" kin seh a good wu'd fo me, cain't yo tell 'em Ah'm hones' 'n slch?" "Of course," I hesitated, "you're a good waiter, Sam, but I don't know anything specially about your hon esty." "Well, tell em flat an say yo' thinks Ah'm hones'. Dat'll be enough." So I promised I would. "Thank yo, thank yo', Mlsseh Clahk," he said, with a deep bow. "When yo' come over tomorrow sit at mah table, 'n' Ah'll give yo' a sho't check." Success Magazine. The Break In the Fog. There had been half a dozen stories of thick fogs, but Captain Mansfield had waited his turn with patience. It came at last, and tho other captains turned their weather beaten faces to ward him with an expression of cheer ful credulity. "Twas told mo of a house setting pretty nigh tho shore along halfway down tho coast o' Maine," said Cap tain Mansfield. "I could show you the house If It enmo right. It has a curi ous lopsided portico on It, and one day I asked the man that lives there why it happened to be built that queer shape. " 'Well,' says he, 'the talk Is that the man who lived here first had a cousin that was an architect up Boston way. and ono time the feller was down here in a terrible foggy spell, and ho was figuring out to his cousin how he could build a little portico of such and such dimensions, mensurlng out Into the fog with his rule, and so on. ""Twas in tho lato afternoon. He went off next day by train. Tho fog still held, and along In tho morning the man that lived hero happened to notice that the marks of tho rule out into the fog wero still plain, so as he couldn't go a-Dshiug he took soma lumber nnd built the foundations ot this portico. That queer Jog that makes it lopsided is where the wlud boro In on tho fog, they say, and bent the rulo marks in.' " Extra Good Care. Somo years ago tho captain of ono of his British mnjesty's ships while in quarantine at Auckland, New Zealand, owing to ono slight case of fever, re celved some valuable carrier pigeons. Ho gave his colored sorvant strict or ders to tako great caro of them. A few days afterward tho captain, wish ing to make use of tho birds, inquired of his servant if ho had taken caro of them. "Ob, yes," replied he, "mo hab taken berry great caro of dem. Dey no fly away 'causo I hab clipped dero wings!" Friends In Both Places. Mark Twain, tho humorist, had friends In Philadelphia, and ono o them, a woman who was his hostess at a dinner on his last visit to that city, tells tho following story: 'Wo wero talking about tho future lifo and the various kinds of reward nnd-punishment that might bo expect ed in tho next world," sho said, "and Mr. Clemens took no part in tho dis cussion. After a few moments of con versation on tho part of all tho other guests and complete sllenco from tho humorist tho woman sitting noxt to him turned to him and said: '"Well, Mr. Clemens, aren't you go ing to tell us what you think about future punishment and reward?' '"I must ask you to excuso me, madam,' ho replied. 'You seo, I have friends In both places.' " A FIRST PROPOSAL The Way She Was Comforted After It Was Over. By KEITH GORDON. It wos tho softest of spring days, and Mowbray nnd Miss Fnrrar strolled through tho greenery of tho park with tho languid abstraction born of the first warm weather and a friendship of several years standing. Though their eyes drank In the beauty of tho scene about them tho great stretches of greensward, tho trees and bushes that wero bursting Into tho tender green of tho season as into a sort of silent song neither of them was think, lng of It. Miss Fnrrar, indeed, was living over other days Inevitably brought back by tho warm breeze nnd tho smell of growing things other springtimes when life meant only tho beautiful possibility of love. And Mowbray was thinking of her and wondering If by any chanco It would bo worth while to tell hcr, for In splto of her unquestion able attractiveness he could not help feeling that ho would And It hard to look into those calm, clear eyes and talk of love. Yet ho was neither cow ardly uor inexperienced. Ho simply had a natural shrinking from being regarded with suppressed amusement by tho woman ho loved. And in her apparent immunity from such emo tions thnt was what ho feared. She would In all probability only laugh hef light, frank laugh and say, "Nonsense, Clark; don't bo silly!" He sent a speculative glanco toward her as she walked beside him looking off Into the distance with tho preoccu pied air of a woman whose whole mind was given to somo engrossing nnd per iilstent thought. "Let us sit for nwhlle," sho proposed is they reached tho top of a knoll (vhcre, under n solitary tree, a bench in vited relaxation. Suiting the action to tho word, sho seated herself comforta bly with her elbows placed defiantly on the back of tho bench, an attitude peculiar to her aggressive moods and ono which Mowbray had learned to recognize as premonitory of nn inten tion to talk things out to a finish. Ho wondered what it would be this time, for he had long since dropped into his role of mentor. He waited patiently with eyes that roved carelessly over tho mansions on tho far side of Fifth avenue, which in turn sent back a well bred stare, know ing that her feelings would soon reach the point of overflow. At last she broke the silence. "Do I look to you like a person se lected by fate to be distinguished among women disagreeably distin guished, I mean?" she demanded, turn ing toward him with a directness which challenged a truthful answer. He re garded her In a manner intended to convey that ho was making nn expert examination. "No," he admitted, "I can't say that you do that Is" Ho stopped rather vaguely. "Oh, now don't try to soften the truth," she interrupted quickly. "I'm after facts, and I am not going to lay anything you may say up against you." "I haven't tho least Idea what it Is about, but I am glad that there is go ing to bo no animosity," Mowbray ob served politely. Then he settled him self to listen. It was one of his vir tues that he never missed his cue. Her next words camo out rather ab ruptly. "I'm not especially plain, do you think?" Her tono was deprecating, but she turned her face toward him in a man ner as impersonal as if sho wero call ing his attention to tho landscape. Then sho continued impartially: "That is, I supposo I would be classed as 'fair to middling.' " Ho nodded assent, with a gleam of mischief in his eye. "To tell you tho truth" her tono had dropped Into tho personal, confidential key "I'm not nt all conceited about my looks, but I've nlways flattered my self that I am rather interesting." Tbo statement ended with a rising Inflection which mado It a question, and It was evident that sho was await ing his decision with somo anxiety. "Rather Interesting, I think wo may say," he agreed suavely. "And I'm sure I'm affectionate and fairly good tempered and and" Mowbray encouraged her by a nod "and domestic." "I shall havo to tako your word for that." "Well, 1 am domestic. I know I am! So -I waut you to explain to mo" her voice was growing tumultuous "but first promise on your honor that you'll novcr tell how It Is that I've reached tho ago of thlrty-threo without ever having had n proposal." Mowbray throw himself back and roared, whlio her arms camo down off tho bench and sho dropped her faco upon her hands ami sat looking at him with tho puzzled air of n pupil at tho feet of a master. "When you've dono laughing," sho began with dignity. "Pardon, dear, a thousand pardons!" Ho had never called her that before, nnd there was something in his voice which bespoko a new hopo and confl dence, but sho was too engrossed in her pursuit of self knowledge to no tlce. "I forgot to say that I'm sensible. Men always llko that, you know. Any way, thoy pretend to." Sho finished in a way that suggested that sho had her doubt of their sincer ity. With a mighty effort her compan ion swallowed his mirth and prepared to faco tho situation with her. "Is It beceuso you haven't want? any ono to nsk you?" I.o inquired dip lomatically. "No, Indeed 1" "And' no man hns ever told you that bo loved you?" he murmured In a thoughtful tone. "Strangel" "Well-now I didn't say Just that, you know I" Thero was a faint suspicion of a blush on Miss Fnrrar's rviooth cheeks, but her glanco met Mowbray's with Its usual unswerving honesty. "Men have told me that they loved mo several of theml But that's not n proposal, you know, any moro than It's a purchase when I say that I adore a string of pearls at Tiffany's!" "A-n-hl" Tho ejaculation was full of enlight enment. Mowbray was beginning at last to understand things that had al ways puzzled him, as his next ques tion showed. "Would it ho Impertinent to nsk how you havo received these declarations?" "Why, I Just listened. You sec, It's embarrassing. It makes ono feel so terribly conscious." "What about tho man?" Mowbray asked quietly. "Doesn't It occur to you that perhaps ho might need a llt tlo encouragement that perhaps ho might bo a trifle conscious too?" For a moment thero was sllenco be tween them. Tho point of view was utterly new to Miss Farrar, and she was obviously impressed by It. "I never thought of that," sho ad mitted slowly. "I thought that sort of thing wns so in a man's lino his metier." Sho laughed a bit ruefully. A squirrel darted swiftly across tho grass and, turning its head jauntily to ono side, fixed a bright, inquiring eye upon them. Then, with a saucy wave of its tall, it scurried away. "I havo It," said Mowbray, "I havo ft.I Learn from tho squirrel! Light ness, airiness, coqucttlshncssl Don't you seo what I mean?" And ho looked at her teasingly. But sho wns not to bo diverted. "I am serious." sho assured him. "There's always a reason for everything, and there must be a reason for this. There's Alice Nixon. She's not so awfully pretty. I heard her say that she had had nineteen proposals I" Miss Farrar's voice was touched with awe. Then a skeptical thought seized her. "Still she's from tho south," sho add ed, and her tone Implied thnt an allow ance should be made for tbo fact. Mowbray bit his Up. "Then there's her sister Just an or dinarily nice girl follows with fifteen. Marlon Plerco owns up to a dozen, and Beth Garrett dear, homely Beth ac knowledges six! I asked her because I specially wanted to find out. Per haps you can Imagine how queer It makes mo feel." "What do you say upon such occa sions?" demnnded Mowbray, watching tho squirrel that was again eying them from a distance. Thero was a palpable pause before Miss Farrar replied. But at last her straightforwardness prevailed. "Sometimes I shake my bead and look rather shocked. Then they think that I disapprove of such conversa tionsthink I'm noble, you know! At other times I laugh and say, 'I havo never had one!' in a tone which Implies just the reverse." She finished this confession nnd look ed at Mowbray out of tho corner of her eyes in a way that drove tho last ves tige of fear out of his mind. This naivo woman, tho person whoso dignity and coldness he bad stood aloof from in ubsoluto embarrassment for so long! Ho could have laughed at tho absurd ity of it. Why had sbo never shown him her real self before? "I think I shall propose to you," ho remarked deliberately. For a second she looked surprised, and then her eyes danced. "Let it bo in your best stylo," sho pleaded. "Remember, it's my first, and I fear it may be my last too!" Ho leaned toward her and looked straight into her eyes. "It will bo your last undoubtedly!" nis voice was low and tense. For a long moment ho looked at her looked In n way that first mado her small ears burn and then troubled her clear gaze, which wavered and fell. "I lovo you, dear," ho said simply, "and I think you know tho rest. Tell mo that you do." Her cheeks wero hot and her Hps trembled. A strong hand reached out and took hers in n masterful way, and sho knew that something which sho had novcr even dreamed was true. "But I asked, yon!" sho moaned when at last sho recovered something of her wonted serenity. "I positively nsked you!" "You encouraged mo," ho corrected, "and thafs what thoy usually do, only your method was brutally direct." It was when sho began to flush again that bo aded, "I shall always havo something to tcaso you about, dearest." And tho squirrel, which had been watching them in the lingering hopo that they might possibly havo brought him nuts, liko sensible people, gavo up in disgust and- scurried away. Books In the Middle Ages. When in tho middle ages an author at any European university desired to publish his thoughts his book was read over twlco In tho presence of tho authorities and If approved might bo copied and exposed for snle, a practice in which tho germs for stato licensing may bo readily distinguished. It was evidently necessary, however, to keep a strict watcli over tho persons em ployed In this business, nnd tho stat utes of tho University of Paris show that tho booksellers wero subjected t a very sovcro discipline. They wero obliged to keep a list of tho books they sold and to exhibit their salo of charges, and thoy wero forbidden to purchaso any manuscript till It bad been duly approved by tho authorities nnd publicly exposed to view for fout days. The Young Men's Fancy. O summer girl, sweet summer girl, We're watching now for you I We're watting for you to arrive, Tou and your peekaboo. The winter girl Is very sweet, And she has many charms, But now tho summer girl we want To greet with open arms. O summer girl, sweet summer girl, Come early as you can And be, as you havo always been, A blessed boon to man I We'll lavish on you all our love, As we havo dono befotv, And we'll agrco to bow tho knea And worship and adore. Somerville Journal. Courtesy. I deemed it of good augury that the man to whom I presented the bill wns courtesy Itself. "Surely," quoth I, "you will not let mo go away under tho Impression that courtesy doesn't pay?" Ho started, as though such general aspects of the business had not much engaged his attention. Puck. A Born Fishorman. Too tired to work, Too tired to walk, Too tired to read. Too tired to talk, Too tired to cat. Too tired to drink, Too tired to write, Too tired to think, Too tired to ride, Too tired to row, Too tired to stay, Too tired to go, Too tired to want. Too tired to wish, But not too tired To sit and fish! -Joo Cone. Had to Quit. Returned Traveler What has be como of the Munlclal-State-Natlonal-Internntlon Reform club? Resident It has disbanded. "What happened V "The president, treasurer, secretary and board of directors eloped with the funds." New York Weekly. Wise Father. Father has to wear his whiskers Just as mother tells him to. Father ca.t buy clothes whllo mother thinks his last year's suit will do. Not till ma consents can father have a necktie that Is new. Mother never thinks of asking father how to wear her hair. She gets dresses when sho wants them and decides what kind to wear. Dad Is wlso and knows it wouldn't do him any good to care. Chicago Record-Herald. The Men Don't Deserve it. "I defy any one to name a field of endeavor In which men do not receive more consideration than women!" ex claimed the orator at a suffragette meeting. "The chorus," murmured some irre sponsible person. Llpplncott's. . Too Brisky. A young wife concocted a biscuit. Her husband, too fearful to rlscult. Smashed a beautiful vase Which stood near the place Where he slyly attempted to whlscult. Boston Transcript. Tho Hind You Have Always in use for over 30 years, and 7 , Bonal supervision sinco Its Infancy. f-CCcCriWi Allrvtviin nnn fnilnrnlvn vnn In tills- ' All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" aro hut Experiments that trillo with and endanger tho health of Infants nnd Children Expericnco against Experiment. 1 What is CASTOR I A Castorla is n harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphlno nor other Narcotic substance. Its ngo is its guarantee It destroys "Worms nnd nllays Fovcrishncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach nnd Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTOR I A ALWAYS Bears tho The KM You Haye Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMt CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY CTRCCT NIW VORR CITYt In a Minority. In 1747 John Brown was invited to become the pastor ot a church at Hlngham. There was but one opponent to his settlement, a man whom Mr. Brown won over by a stroke of good humor. He asked for tho grounds of his opposition. "I llko you and your manner," was the reply, "hut your preaching, sir, I disapprove." "Then," said Mr. Brown, "we aro agreed. I do not like my proachtng very well myself, but how groat a fol ly It Is for you and me to set up our opinion against that of the whole par ish." The force of this reasoning appeal ed to the man, and he at once with drew his objections. Cleveland Loader. Separation of the Sexes. The separation of the 3exes secma to have been formerly by no means an uncommon practice In the Church ot England. In fact, Edward VI.'s pray erbook specially mentions that at tho communion service "the men shall tarry on ono side and tho women on tho other." Tho papers of a church In Westmoreland Include elaborate directions for the division of the sexes at Its services. All wedded men wero to ho placed first heforo any of tho young men, and all young wives were to "forbear and come not at their mother-! n-law's forms" this was pre- 8umably before the days of the pow "as long as their mother-in-law lives." New English Submarine. A seven foot sink-or-swlm subma rine showed good form at a prelimin ary trial In an English swimming bath. Its propeller shaft can be shift ed to right or left, thus steering tho boat t port or starboard. On each Bide Is a fin, a curved flexible sheet of alloy. No rubber Is needed, as tho fins and propeller take Its place. By working the fins like a large fish the boat coes down deep or comes up to the s rface. The boat Is run by elec tric r otors and storage batteries. Dialogue. "T -acher, - does cocoanuts really grow on trees?" "Why, of course, Jacob," was tho answer. "Where did you think they grew ?" "Why," said he gravely, "I thought the monkeys laid 'em." London-' Globe. ' Conundrums. What is the center of gravity? The letter V. Why ought meat to be on'y half cooked? Because what's done can cot be helped. Why is a school boy being flogged like your eye? Because he's a pupil under the lash. Born at the same time as the world, destined to .;ve as 'ing as tho world, and yet never five weeks old? The moon. Bought, nnd which has been has homo tho slgnatnro of hns heen mado under his per- ( Signature of KRAFT & CONGER HONESDALE, PA. Represent Reliable Companies ONLY