YOST USEG PRUNING KNIFE ON WOLVERINES ENEVIEVE3 ork Some Girls Take Much In terest in Labor 1 Tri"BT srvn tr $ Alone 1 JVNUWHfe Iso thrif lAMBES By JULIA HEED V. f.W Wv PW T HAY SEEM somewhat paradoxical to say that a girl may take too much interest in her work, but it is nevertheless true. Of course, thero iB the class of girl (and she might bo called almost typical she js so numerous) who is merely poised, so to speak, on her position temporarily, waiting until she shall flutter away to a husband and a home, but there is also the girl who becomes so wrapped up in her work that only on the rarest occasion can she take a peep beyond the narrow horizon that bounds it. ' , She works early and late until she is practically a nervous .1 . 3 , :l L'.tV t ,j...-a nun ih mnns 11111111 mint! uh il limLLCi ui luuisl. f course, it is a truism that she who'wishes to succeed must put her heart into her work. This is eelf-jevidefit. ut thero is a sane and safe level between neglecting one's work and for that and nothing else. ! '), e good worker should also bo the good player, and above all sho tl learn to dron her work when she leaves the office or schoolroom rkshop, and learn to take an interest in something outside her own base of operations. People quickly get the habit of avoiding as if she were a pestilence i i i ii i: ii. l : s ii. i:i ill Will? IB UU1131U11UJ ljUUklU 11112 IWM Ui U1U1U Ui U1V l LI kj ality of the work she does. lie UlllUalllg UUll0 U1UL HUppCU Ut LUC UUlCC U1U llllllUUlC BUUJCUIO onversation, and will be welcomed when recounted at home or at tho liner nouso. dui i.ne nureiv Dusmeess uuiuiia uumuiu us a ruiu uui, uiu glimmering of interest for the outsider. This kind of girl beco.mes rather a nuisance to Tjoss" himself in time, for sho is always ready to offense at anything which she considers a slight. Many girls undergo real suffering by having cer- work they were in the habit of doing given to one else, when it should have been regarded as a r j . 1 . 1 1 i n The girls who can think of nothing but clothes, who will suddenly break into any conversation some irrelevant remark as to tucks or gathers or -1 Jl J 11.-J. TL..1i ! i ui lb. mill UL'iimim liiul vuu biiun uivu vuur uum- 1f i.V ? li ' 1 the girl who thinks too much of her work, but atter is nevertheless bad enough. A X d&a or nrnp assm By N. K. KILBERG "I am' going home," was the remark made to me by a friend and I immediately responded by asking: "Where is your home?" And the reply came: "In a flat building." But homes are few and flats u.iie om mea oi a real nome is last uis appearing. Clearly, the change has come to stay; it may be worse .s time goes by, but improvement is beyond hope. What i3 the remedy? Simply to make tho best of tho situation instead of the worst. The wife of my friend was reared in an. ashionert home, wliile toclav sne nresmes over n. modern tint nf rit TT 1 "1? A 1-1 il l 1 1 (1 flat is domineering. They are comparative strangers, but the spirit of the latter soon dis- t j. at. ;a a- l il ii i i i i I do ? We have moved three times already on account of unneigh- neighbors, but tho change has been for the worse instead of the r. i i i ii i. ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii in it'll r in in in i iim i unr. t nnr. mnnv nnrtTim UL LJ1UL LUU L,iiUUUtL J.U11U Ul U1B U1U V iUL' W1SUU1I1 la LU HULL laUIL. 1 UU11 k rue ji e riena or armer The papers have lately published the season for shooting quail and prairie chick ens in Illinois. There should be no season for destroy ing these friends of the farmer. Our legislators do not read the agricul tural reports of the university at Cham paign, which show that our various birds feed largely on the injurious insects so de structive to the crops of grain and fruit everywhere. Tho birds are the scavengers of tho fields and the orchards. Instead of granting a season of privi- to the reckless hunters, the law should make thb shooting of all birds 11 rt mm iiiit'iiKi?. Farmers should have conspicuous notices on fences and trees, "No 1! .1 U JJ .1 Z 1 ? 1 . l i t Let us have the music and services of tho birds, and let hunters who hungry for that kind of meat raise Plymouth Ifocks. By W. W. DAVIS Chicago hat JL To illustrate tho power and beauty of mathematics I have proposed the following problem : What is the amount in cents from the year 1 till 1910 of one cent compound ed annually at six per cent, interest? The problem is easily solvable by means i :ii - ..: ii n i t v-b 1 ui lugurmiius, using uic uii-jvuunu xurui- eally I ula for compound interest The nximber of cents is approximately a figure with 49 numbers in it. If all of these cents were mado into one solid sphere it would have a radius of ap- ximately 370 times the distance of the earth to the sun, i. e., 370 times on nnn 54 09K nnn nnn niin. Indeed, at first one would not think that the interest on one" cent lid bo 6o great pans Park Bidde. III. g7 HELEN HELP The Genevieve Who Is a Noble Nagger Captain Wello of Michigan. After Coach Yost got through with his pruning knife on thq Wolverine squad thero remains tho following players: Conklln, Garrels, Ponttnus, BADGER STAR BACK IS HURT Half-Back Gillette Thought to Have Been Badly Injured, Quickly Re covers and Returns. Eddlo Gillette, the star left half back of the Wisconsin University foot ball squad, who strained a ligament In one of tho early scrimmages with the reserves, has fully recovered. Keckie Moll, Eddie Gillette and Bull Roberts1 seem to be tho only men on the varsity squad possessed of any Eddie Gillette, Star Badger Back. "pep" of ginger and but for their work In carrying tho ball the freshmen would havo held tho varsity scoreless In a recent scrimmage. Lange, tho sophomoro, who failed to report for th4 freshman team last ear, has been declared eligible. Feature on Swedish Program. One event on the Swedish, program moro suited to the knights of yore than athletic club stars of today Is the "Modern Pentathlon," comprising a swimming event, shootliig, riding, fencing and cross-country run. Decathlon Is Commended. The decathlon which will be used in the Olympic games at Stockholm his all the good points and none of tlw objectionable features of the A. U. J1 around championships. Allmendlnger, Peterson, Boglo, Wells, Craig, Torbet, .Thomson, Carpel, Bar ton, Robleer Qulnn, Gates, Plcard, Hubel, Meek, Wenner and Herrlr gton. GOSSIP SPORTDOM Packey McFarland still hopes. Pogel thinks it's Alexander the In grate. Coach Cavan'augh seems to be doing things at Dartsmouth.. A Chinaman on the Brown team? Change the college yell. Who is tho most valuable man in tho National league, anyhow? Davey Jones is slated to Join the "ones who were" next season. Notre Dame appears to be pretty well frozen out of football now. Perhaps It Is called Indian summet on account of tho football games. Minnesota's football team is mak ing haste more slowly this season. Karla, the Indian wrestler, is seek ing a match with Mahmout or Zbyszko, It looks as if Harvard were to have a real nice football team this year, too. Late season golf doesn't make much more of a hit than late season base ball. Why not a world's series for the Boston Nationals and tho St. Louis Browns? Usually a strike for more salary by a baseball player presages a falling off In ability. Kid McCoy is also coming back. He knocked out some dub the other night in New York. Italian prize fighters with Turk names have been placed in the most absurd position. A rumor now that Ad Wolgast was contemplating retirement would soux next year's peach crop. Japan having taught Russia the bear dance, Italy will try teaching the sub lime porte the turkey trot. Apparently lack of ability to "make" the team is the cause for much o) the "parental objection" to football. Fur reports on the prowess of Chi cago football players one has to read the results of eastern college games. Unless Maroon football players im prove their kicking considerably, most of the kicking will'be done by the rooters. Yost is not going to quit Michigan Even the imagined loss of Yost ano Jennings In one fell swoop would hurl the state. Bob Bescher, the Reds' outfielder has stolen more bases this year thai any other player ever did In the Na tlonal league. Bob has stolen 78 basos, which beats Jimmy ShockardV record of 78 In 1909, Tho Genevievo that I am going to tell you about is a noble woman. And besides that, she is suro that everyone olso ought to be a noble woman, too. Sho used to say to a flirtatious girl friend: "I do not seo how you can justify yourself in acting to Clarence as If you enjoy his society, when only last, week you told mo you wero in lovo with Wllyum. This -is not the course of a truly noblo girl; and I al ways thought-you had such high stand ards, too." Then her friend would say: "Oh, goodness, of course, I am in lovo with Billy; but I can enjoy tho society of piarence too, can't I? Billy knows all about Clarence, anyway, and, be sides, thero isn't anything to know. He is Just funny well, ho is a llttlo in lovo with me, but not enough to hurt. Why, it isn't important." Then Genevievo-would feel awfully about it, and make it the subject of serious conversation, compelling gay llttlo Clara to turn herself Inside out as to action, and chasing every llttlo motive to its lair with utter un relenting. Well, in tho course of time Gene vievo married, and tho James sho ac quired was one "of those blunt-featured, good-enough looking Jameses who build bridges and know about con struction and concreting and steel girders, and tho strength of tho span and things like that things requiring" somo concentration and nico calcula tion, and an absolute knowledge of matters and a power of taking re sponsibility; because otherwise things might fall down rather disastrously. Thus, in his curious masculine way, James had qulto'a conscience him self. Well, ono day after they had been married awhile, James happened to mention that Johnson had been in tho office looking for a Job. Ho said Johnson was a good man and ho thought they would put him to work. Genevievo looked at him in dumb horror but it didn't stay dumb. "Do you mean to tell me, James," sho said, in as sepulchral a tone as so said: "Well, Genevieve, we need our Job, I am not arranging matters for my firm, thank you." "Genevlove," says James somo time later, "two - of the men I graduated from Tech. with aro in town and I would llko to bring them homo to din ner tomorrow. I guess I'll bring a quart of fizz with mo. They'll llko it." "I will bo very glad to welcome your friends, James," Bays Genevieve, "but I draw the line nt liquor. It shall never como under my roof." "Why," says tho bewildered James, "you used not to mind " "That was before I had a serious re sponsibility of bringing up a child prop erly," says Genevievo. "But Jlmsey is only three months old what harm can it do him?" Well, Genevievo was right enough, perhaps. Sho know Just what tho at mosphere of tho home ought to bo from f the first, and sho was going to keep it that way. And she did. Jlmsey kept on growing up and tho atmosphere of tho homo came to bo something llko this Jlmsey being three years old and a capablo young citizen. "Doesn't little son know that it is very wrong? Isn't Jlmsey sorry? Why isn't Jlmsey sorry? But Jlmsey ought to bo sorry. Oh, Jlmsey, you hurt mamma so when you aro not sorry. .Doesn't Jlmsey know that his llttlo heart ought to bo clean and good?" And all that llttlo Jlmsey really needs fs a light but rapid hand applied ex ternally a moment, and tho words, spoken in a clear, calm voice, with a downward inflection: "You mind me." Soon Jlmsey would learn to recognize kindly authority, and after awhile be old enough to see tho value of exorcls- Jng authority over himself. But James is told about Jlmsey and ho, too, must look sorry and probe aft er finer feelings, whilo Genevievo says: "I don't seo where ho got such a disposition but, perhaps, if ono ap peals to his better nature! " And then she looks at James and James' better nature all curls up and crawls into its nest and hibernates, while his worse naturo is .on tho job, trying to dodgo this noblo -woman's caso of con science. James' firm now says: "Ho is a good man, but you have to let him pro ceed on his own lines. Well; he is worth thousand's every year to us." Genevieve's friends say: "Sho is a lovely character, and .isn't it a pity that her husband has such a cold, hard naturo? And as for that child, he Is such a torment." And Genevieve's very dearest friends say: "Heavens, how sho does nag that poor man! And as for Jimsey!" (Copyright, by Associated Literary Press.) "It Shall Never Come Under My Roof." happy a now-made wlfo could say it, "do you mean to say that you consid er Mr. Johnson a good man?" "None better in his lino," replied James cheerfully. "Ho Is a cracker jack at handling men, and wo need such a man just now, having to start on a big bit of construction work very soon." "James," walled Genevieve, "James, do you mean to say that you have for gotten that Mr. Johnson Jilted Dorothy Blake? That they were engaged and ho flirted with that horrid Mrs. Ran bier till it broke Dorothy's heart? Do you call a man llko that a good man?" "Oh, by tho way, that's a fact," ob served James oulusely, "ho did rather go the pace last year. But I saw Dor othy out with young Mlllyuns yester day, and it looked as though he was mending her heart all right. And John son is a peach to manage men." "But, James, you do not understand mo," urged Genevieve. "Mr. Johnson Is not a good man. He is a very bad man, Indeed, and I should think my husband would have too much princi ple to employ him." "Oh, is that what you're getting at? Well, Blako is a fine executive, Gene vievo, and tho firm ought not to recog nize llttlo personal affairs. After all, Mrs. Ranbler was a widow, so thero wasn't anything actually criminal about it, was thero?" James heard a few of his Genevieve's serious views during tho honeymoon and before, but ho simply looked at her with admira tion as a peach of a good girl, you know. It did not interfere with busi ness. But this tlmo it was serious, indeed, and Genevieve gavo James mighty lit tle rest about it. At last, sho was told that sho did not understand business. Then sho inquired if her husband was to lower bis standard of right and wrong for racro business; and James looked at her a bit quizzically and Humiliating. That the motorist was rich beyond tho ordinary dreams of avarice every thing went to show; and he stood haughtily silent when the magistrate, in the usual form, asked him If he had aught-to say why sentence should not bo pronounced. Haughtily silent and with lip slight ly curling ho stood. "It is tho order of tho court, then," the magistrate went on, "that you pay a fine of $1 " "Ono dollar?" the motorist gasped. "One dollar and costs nmountlng to 57 cents." The man's panoply of disdain was broken through. Ho winced visibly. A shadow of pain flitted across his face. "Mon Dieu! Is thero nowhero in this mob-ruled land that -a person of real consequence may exceed tho speed limit without loss of self-respect?" ho cried. Flinging a piece of gold on the desk, he fled without waiting for his change. Puck. Language Stud!e3 In Dutch Schools. "While the percentage of educated persons in Holland is not greator than in the United States I am inclined to think that more attention is given in the public schools of Holland to in struction in foreign languages than there is in this country," said J. A. Grutterink, an engineer of Tho Hague, hero on a mission for his government. "In our Dutch -schools it is part of tho course of instruction to teach tho three principal languages French, German and English. "When a pupil reaches the period of graduation ho must tako an examina tion in theso languages as well as in other studies. It therefore is not strange that a person of fair educa tion in Holland is able to speak Eng lish understanding at least." Lights on Battlefields. One would suppose that powerful searchlights would lllumlnato fields of battle best by night, in order to dis cover and bring in tho wounded. But experiments in France provo tho con trary. They are of small benefit, be cause the slightest obstruction such as a house or slight irregularity on tho earth's surface will create a great cono of shadow, within which nothing can bo seen. Tho best devico tried so far is tho individual acety lene lamp, carried on the backs or in tho hands of the hospital qorps when going over tho field with their litters.