the crnzicA. piuday, jiia' 22, into. Woman's World Mrs. Clara FolU, First Woman to Bo Assistant District Attorney. MBS. CLAItA SnOnTLEDGE FOLTZ. Mrs. Clara Shortledgo Foltz Is the first woman in the United States to bo appointed to the office of assistant dis trict attorney. Mrs. Foltz has her homo In Los Angeles, Cal., where she was made assistant district, attorney several months ago. She is the sister of Samuel L. Shortlcdgc. who Is the law partner of Del mas. the man who defended Harry Thaw. Up to tbo time of tbo earthquake her home was in San Francisco, but when the conflagra tion which followed the quako destroy ed it she moved to Los Angeles and took up the practice of law there. She rapidly made a name for herself and proved so able In arguing cases that the district attorney Anally asked her to join bis staff. Mrs. Foltz has a commanding pres ence and an eloquent and pleasant voice. Her eyes flash as she speaks, and she puts strength into every sen tence, while her language evidences wide reading and original thinking. She Is not masculine in any sense and is a stanch antisuffragist. When asked to give her views recently on the suffragist question she declared that there was little likelihood that the suf frage would be extended to women and gave as her reason that the women of the country generally were opposed to entering a field peculiarly masculine. "Nature itself has decided the suf frage question by making man strong er than woman," she said. "Woman was intended for tho home and man for the battle of life. Woman has her own sphere, and it is bounded by the boundaries of family life. Take away from woman the power to look up to man. to regard hirn as her protector and guardian, and you take away her dearest privilege." Mrs. Foltz has tho following to say about the power of tho district attor ney's office: "The district attorney Is not and should not be a prosecutor pure and simple, because his position and peculiar relation to tho people make him un officer of justice and not a mere avenger of crime. "It should be his duty and privilege to seo that the scales of justice do not Incline any more to severity than to condonement. aud his aim should be not to achieve n record number of con victions, but rather to bring about the attainment of absolute fairness in the trials in which he takes part." Servant Problem 3,000 Years Old. It is rather comforting for distraught housewives who have difficulties with their domestics to know tho servant problem is nothing modern and not, as has been surmised, on effect of a per pctual war between capital and labor. Mistress and maid, man and master, have always been in antagonism to each other. Reverse the situation and It would be the same, as it has been ever since the world began. A Phila delphia authority rejoices because at I'ordham university it has come to light that nearly 3,000 years B. C. the Egyptians wero having as poor a time with servants as some people In the United States are experiencing this very day. It was not all rapturo and roses in tho best families of Egypt ow ing to this branch of domestic life not bearing proper fruit. From somo an cient papyri which havo recently been unearthed in a tomb near Memphis maxima havo been deciphered that aro eyo openers. Tho Egyptians must havo had a terrible time in their households when such sentiments as theso survive tho centuries: "In Booth thou shalt find It hard to satisfy thy servants desplto thy earnest desires, for if thou bo harsh with them they shall say: 'He is a cruel master. Lo, wo shall go!'" Solo mon knew what he was talking about when ho said there is nothing now un der tho sun, for It mado no difference to Pharooh'fl servant, "oven though thou glvo princely gifts of gold tips, of course and precious stones to thy higher servants, content is not In them, for they shall say: Lo, tho master Is suddenly grown gracious I Wo shall go.'" If any more of theso manu scripts dealing with this subject are found It la hoped they may bo aeel pherod for tho consolation of tlio world Misery always loves company, and even theso musty maxims of 8,000 years ago aro as fresh as daisies. HUMOROUS QUIPS The Pursuit. IThoy nro chnslng horse thieves with motorcars In Kansas now. Newp Item.J Come, crank your swift auto and tump to tho wheel! Wo need all the strength of its iiitlverlnR steel, For forty-five horses ore pone In the night, And we must glvo chase to tho robbers In flight. If forty-flvo horses aro stolen and gono A motor of sixty should catch them by dawn, And wo'H run down the thieves as they gallon away 1 And string them up high, as they do In a ploy. Across tho "pray-raro-rco" we buoyantly bound With wheels that seem scarcely to stay on tho ground. The erarkcr Is working with perfect eclat. The piston is doing much better thnn that. The Hist! There's a cloud In tho dis tance, and seel Tno robbers aro scattering tacks as they flee! Swing oft from tho path! Take a chanco at tlx fence! The way that sho cleared It Is something Immense I And now wo aro closo on tho trail let 'er go! They're riding their best, but their best Is too slow. Tou tend to your driving. I'll shoot when I must. Hang! There Is ono robber who's bitten tho dust. Surrounded by autos they give up at last; Tho horses are saved and the robbers bound fast, And the manager says he Is cure It will go As tho finest of films at a vaudeville show. Berton Draley in Puck. A Pedagogical Tragedy. Dorothy Is in the fourth grade, and she gets good marks in everything ex cept arithmetic. When her father ask ed her why she made such low marks in arithmetic she replied thus: "Well. It is like this: The teacher says, 'Four plus 8 minus 3 multiplied by 2 divided by 0,' and asks me what the answer Is. She talks so fst I can't keep up with her, and I have to guess tbe an swer, and I always guess wrong. Harper's Weekly. Why the Kitties Cried. Wallle, aged six, found four little kittens In the cellar. A. visitor, being told of them, expressed a desire to havo n peep at the new baby pussies. Wallle went to fetch them, and soon pitiful mewing was beard below. "Don't hurt the kittles. Wallle," call ed out his mamma. 'No, mamma," shouted the boy. "I'm bringing them up carefully. I'm car rylng them by their stems." Scraps. Novelty. "I thought you told me you had some- thing original in this libretto," said the manager scornfully. "Here at tho very outset you have a lot of merry villa gers singing 'We are happy and gay.' " 'You don't catch the idea nt all," re plied tho poet wearily. "The 'g is soft It should be pronounced 'happy and Jay.' "Washington Star. Fate of the Unfamiliar. 'I understand that you have two brand new jokes In your dialogue." "Yes," replied the musical comedian. "What are they?" "You recognize them by the way the audience treats them as strangers and refuses to give them a smile." Boston Transcript. A Winner. "Yes. Inkcm got up a summer novel that Immediately becamo a best seller. "That so? Something new In tho plot?" "No. But when it came to tbe page where ho described tho looks of the heroine he had his publisher insert a mirror." Life. A Model Hired Man. "Missus, do you need a hired man?" "Well, yes, I'm looking for a mau Who can do the chores, sweep, clean the rooms, be polite and never be Im pudent." "Say, missus, youso Is lookln' for husband." Success Magazine. She Had the Price. In vain they told tho heiress that tho duke was an Impostor aud worse, "Why," said n friend, "I havo read there la a price upon his head." But tho heiress, all serene, only onswered, "I havo the price!" Young's Magazine, An Impossibility. "Duinjcr received a shock of 00,000 volts through his brain." "Nonsense! How do you suppose that number Of volts could ever have crowded their way through a brain like Dumier's?" Philadelphia Ledger, Tho Wise Fool. "To what d6 you attribute your un varying success?" "To being picked early for tho vlllago fool. Nobody ever tried to get mo to lndorso a note or go Into u scheme." Brooklyn Citizen. The Danger. "It is always dangerous to try to get something for nothing," remarked tho wise guy. "Yes: you might get what you de Berve." added tho simple mug. Phil ndelpbla Record. Tho Secret, "Miss Bright," whispered Miss daus sip, "can yoa keep n secret?" "Yes." replied Miss Bright, also whispering, "I can keep ono as well as you can." Catholic Standard and Times, In the Future. "Wbom ere they after In thla aviator trustr 'Naturally after tho man hlgbor up.' Baltimore American, Tun QPijnni ninncH NIL UUIIUUL UMUULi t Will Tend to Improve Health of the Pupils. DLE LOTS CAN BE UTILIZED Children Should Be Supplied With the Necessary Implements and Trained to Till the Ground on the Idle Spnco Near Schoolhouse. Signs of spring are now noticeable nbout tho schools of many town' throughout the country. Blnygrounils and school garden committees aro be ginning to get active. Swings, slide, running tracks nnd swimming pools aro being overhauled. Hooks on gar den practice, catalogues of seeds, flow ers nnd garden products nnd manuals of instruction in the use of garden A TTPICAIj SCHOOL QARDEX. tools In school gardens nre being dis tributed among the pupils interested in the idea, many who seem to be scholars of the highest grades. In many parts of the United States prln clpals and teachers nnd many others Interested In the health and welfare of the school children nre continually pleading for space on which the chil dren may play during recess and after school hours. Naturally children will take much pleasure out of n swing and toboggan slide or any other appa ratus generally found on the public playground, but give theso same chll dren the necessary Implements with which to till the ground, good Instruct ors nnd seeds to sow and It will he found that they will derive much more pleasure from it nnd at the same time be gaining agricultural training. The movement for school gardens is fast becoming nation wide, and towns that have failed to utilize the vacant spac near the schoolhouse should begin at once, and in a remarkably short time the school board will find that the sick list will decrease to almost nothing and at the same time tend to make tho place more beautiful. Novel Rules For Collecting Refuse, In the town of Port Jervis, N. Y an ordinance has been adopted which re quires every owuer, tenant, lessee and occupant of every building in the city to provide receptacles for holding ref use having a capacity for one week's accumulation. Two receptacles are tc be provided, one for ashes and rub bish, the other for garbage and liquid substances. They must be provided with handles and metal covers and must not be tilled to within nearer than four inches of the top. The two classes of rubbish must bo kept strict ly separated uud must be deposited on private property, but conveniently aa cesslhle to the collector, the garbage being kept where It will not freeze In winter nor become a nuisance In sum mer. These materials will bo removed by the city collectors. No refuse of any kind is to bo accumulated for more than ono week, and nothing which attracts flies or would be a breeding place for mosquitoes or in any way create a nuisance should bo placed anywhere around tho property except In receptacles provided. VIolu tion of the ordinance Is punishable by a flue not exceeding $100, by Imprison ment not exceeding two months or by both. Citizens are requested to burn as much rubbish, papers, sweepings etc.. as possible. This little lesson should le practiced by other towus, aud they would profit thereby. Unique Municipal Enterprise. For the small consideration of ?2 any Milwaukee wlfo can have a hat made. Tho city will do tbo job for that price. Millinery Is the latest en terprlse added to the list of activities of tho municipality, it Is destined members of the school board believe to be of as great beueflt to tho public as some of tiro other municipal enter prises. Tho two dollar hat making will be done by tho students at tho new Girls' Trade school. Dressmaking also will bo douo for tiro populaco at tho same Institution at prices much less than usually charged. Tho com mlttco has decided upon a sliding scale for making dresses. Whether tbo prlco will depend upon tho size of the gown or upon tho amount of "trimmings and fixings has nor. beon determined. House For Garbage and Ash Cans. Things that tend to keep tho outsldo of a house In a neat and tidy condition dd to tlio good appearance of a town, In many towns Industrious citizens build small wooden houses much on tho stylo of a dog konncl to bold their garbage cans and ash cans. Thoy havo two lids and two doors to allow easy access. Thero Is no bottom. Instead tho whole tiling stands on a small brick pavement, which may bo easily washed witli tho garden hoso; conse quently thero Is never any odor. Some people use wooden bottoms. They also have smell. jfjort (5)crmon FOR A Theme: SMALL THINGS. 4 "l" J DY REV. DR. ABRAM S. ISAACS. 4 4" Text For who hath despised tho day of small things? Zech., tv., 10. Tho real things that tend to niako or mar our career are often the small things. The vital Issues of defeat or victory may spring from the veriest trifles. Tho most fatal defects or weaknesses, too, can bo apparently In significant, escaping observation llko tlio tiny worm which pierces the dock's massive foundation or cuts through tho ship's side. Tho prophot does not always speak In rapt visions or restrict his message to a heavenly Jerusalem. His domi nant motive Is to arouso to a sense of each day's importance and to con duct as the essential factor In religion. And as the minutes control the hours and mere fractions of time the months and years, so our character Is tho re sultant of single acts and thoughts, which become in their turn Irresisti ble habits and impulses, like tho sepa rate delicate threads which can be wielded Into an unyielding chain. Tho painter's canvas glows with life and beauty by his deft use of bits of pigment small fragments of color that glvo rise to figure .and landscape of surpassing charm. So the gentle traits, tho modest qualities, the quiet tastes, the unobstrusivo deeds, tho un selfish nttitude, tho little attentions It is Just theso small tilings which render our life fragrant, giving genu ineness and character to our religion. But thore is another view of the text We aro Judged less by the trend of our life In Its vastness and sweep, by the aim and extent of our purposes nnd ambitions, than by the little acta that make up each day's passing ro cord tho chance word we utter, the flash of anger, tho burst of petulance, the whisper of wrong, the bitter taunt. the petty gratification acts trifling and transient in themselves, but ex presslve of character to the casual oh server. How important, then, to be on our guard lest such small things acquire tho mastery over me' They must not be despised, for they may lead to traits and tendencies that may overwhelm our lives, leaving wreck- ago where once were smiling Btreams and happy homes. The sage who knew the stars better than tho roads of his native town, the philosopher so Intent on the secrets of the skies that he fell Into a ditch by the wayside are not these but in stances when In the vain grasp after tho Illimitable and vague we despise the small things that are real and near? So we narrow too generally our conception of religion to the atmos phere of church and synagogue, to swelling music, to stately ceremonial, to solemn litanies and holy vestments. But even these may fall In their pur pose If we realize not the sacredness of small things which we Ignore or despise the deed that uplifts, al though It Is unheralded; the word that Inspires, although uttered bo gently that your neighbors do not hear It; the hand clasp which puts your broth er firmly on his feet without public applause. Tho small things, then, which are usually vital and decisive for success or failure aro not in tie far heavens or across tho distant seas. They are close to us, so close that they are In dispensable for our growth, our disci pline, our perfect development. Hence Uioy dare not bo despised by thoso of us who wish to rlso to higher things. Cultivate a Peaceful Mind. Every morning compose your soul for a tranquil day, and all through It bo oroful often to recall your resolu tion, and bring yourself book to It so to say. If something discomposes you, do not bo upsot, or troubled; but hav ing discovered the fact humble your self gently heforo God, and try to bring your mind Into n quiot attitude. Say to yoursolf, "Well, I havo mado a false stop; now I must go nioro care fully and watchfully." Do this each tune, howevor, froquently you fall. When you aro at peace use It profita bly, making constant acts of meek ness, and seeking to bo calm oven In tho most trifling things. Abovo all, do not be discouraged; be patient; wait; strlvo to attain a calm, gentle spirit Francis do Sales. Herald Blasts. An onomy treated as a friend will soon becomo a friend. Tho religion that boars no cross 1b not tho religion of Christ Enmity cannot live long when It can find no onmlty to feed upon. No ono can know Christ woll, and be ignorant of what Ho taught Tho value of tho diamond Is not In what it does, but in what it is. It is not tlio clock that ticks tho loudest which koops the best tlmo. Tho man who would know God woll must begin with blmsolf. Tho man who would know God well must bo willing to do His will. It la becauso so mnny people boo wrong, that so many things go wrong. Sticking to Duty. None of tho world's common attrac tions, such as position, wealth, fami and popularity, should move tho Chris tlan from duty. Rev. C. W. Webb Baptist, Aurora. CONNIE MACK. 5 ( Manager of Philadelphia Team ) S Pays $12,000 For Young Russell, ) New York, July 1!). "Lofty" CInr nce Russell, the pitching sensation of the Eastern league who has done such excellent work for the Baltimore club this year, has brought the highest price ever paid for a ball player $12,000. The young fellow, when the Eastern league season closes, will Join the Phil adelphia Athletics, the $12,000 having been paid Baltimore by Connie Mack, manager of the Philadelphia team. Itussoll Is only twenty years old. Last year ho came fresh from tho Sunday school league In this city nnd was farmed out. Dissatisfied with his berth, he Jumped to Hagerstown nnd pitched Independent ball. Ills work was phenomenal. This year ho was Induced to return and has won four teen out of twenty-one games. Bus sell's greatest curve is his spltter, which Is thought to be tho best ever sprung by a pitcher. The Bride's Troubles. . It was the servant's day out. nnd the young bride was doing her best to hurry along the dinner she was trying to cook. The husband, tired of wait ing, bustled Into the kitchen and said Impatiently: "You know, we'll be late for the the ater If you don't hurry dinner." "Well." slched the bride, "I can't tell what's the matter, but these cof fee grains simply won't boll soft, aud as for the eggs, they've been- boiling at least two hours, and they're still as hard as ever." But the dinner was concluded at last, and then the young husband de clared he couldn't find his silk hat 'Oh." exclaimed his wife, "you said It needed Ironing, you know, so 1 sent it this morning to the laundry with tb wmh," ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AVegetableRt:paraltonror,s-slrailatingiheRjoianilRcgula-ling (lie S lomhs andBowK of Promotes Digcsttonfliterfur ! ncssand ResLContains neitrtcr OpiimiIorphitic norrliacraL Not Narcotic. fiaptu Sftd" jtlxSama JbthHttSJh- jiaatSad imr tCAO Qaiied Sjgar ' Apcriect Remedy for Conslipa-; lion , aoux aiunuiaiiui'iuu" "Wbrras.ComTilsionsjoTrtsn ncssorul Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper, mm MOSQUITO CONQUERED GREEGK. Clntilo Land Fell Before Macedonia Because of Malaria. Sir James Crichton-Browne, an emi nent English scientist, has been study ing conditions In tho Mediterranean basin at first hand nnd in tho light of ancient history. Ho has come to tho conclusion that Greece foil, not bo foro tho arms of tho Invading armies of tho Orient nor by corrupting vices, but becauso tho mosquito got lodg ment thero and supped the vital forces of thoso horoes by Injecting tho germs of malaria. We presume that it must bo truo If a scientific man says co, although we should like a lit tlo mora demonstration. It Is hard to accept everything on faith In science as well as In religion. Of course, nil know that tho rcece described by Herodotus and Thucydldes and Xenophon Is not tbo Oroeco of tho present or even of the third century B. C. Every school boy who has been roused to enthusiasm over the battles of marathon and Salamls, or Plateau, Thermopylae and even those during tho Intcrneclno Poloponeslan wars; who has waxed enthusiastic over the Athens of Peri cles and Plato, of Aechylua and Sopo cles, the Greece of tho Parthenon, and of the Olympian games every such boy has always felt a dull aching of his heart ns he read of the sudden de ollno of all this grandeur and the fall of Greece Into the maw of the Mace donians. He has often wondered why, nnd perhaps none of tho explanations offered has satisfied him. We all know now, for tho first time, that It was the mosquito and not a lack of bravo men on the fighting line. No soldier could be expected to handle a sword or spear with several billions of malarial bacilli working on his In terior economy. The explanation, however, leaves much to be explained. Why didn't tho mosquitoes go farther north nnd de stroy the Macedonians us well? How does the learned scientist know that the mosquitoes came from Greece on a ship sailing from the marshes along the Nile? If we may trust the re cords of Crete there was commerce with Greece a thousand years before the age of Pericles. Why didn't the mosquitoes emigrate earlier? Origin of Heraldry. According to the highest authori ties, heraldry finds Its starting point In the totemlsm of prehistoric man. In the barbaric custom of painting or carving tbe totem on oars, the bows and sides of canoes, weapons, pillars In front of houses, etc., and In tat tooing It on the various parts of the body, we have the real origin of tho Insignia that are bo precious to tho upper-tendom of to-duy. It was In the Ignorant superstition of the sav age that he sprang from a crane or a bear or some other animal that tho various "coat of arms" of the "big families" of the present time found their Inception. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought n Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TMIOINTUHOOfNT. tf YO OUT. KRAFT & CONGER HONESDALE, PA. Reoresent Reliable Comoanies (ONLY Bears the 9 Signature J$ r . fir I p For