J After all, oven If tho French solved thd problem ci( Retting Into F.nRlnnd, llii-y would Btlll lie confronted with 'the other um how to atny there. Tin? OroRon's Rreat trip around the Horn cobI $I7.H7 ami r.O,22(l for coal. It cm well worth the price, seeing that It proved whnt our shlpa roulil Uo In the nmttor of distance. An American girl employed In one of the departments of the 1'nrln Fx position received 177 proposals of marrhtRo from men of fourteen differ nationalities. The American Rlrl la In demand wherever Bhe In. American exports In New Zealand are rapidly Increasing, spoelnlly hard ware. The American firms have wise ly adopleil the plan, which Ilea al the hose of all successful export trade, of supplying what the colonics desire and not tryliiR to force on them whatever the manufacturer!) w I nil to sell. The thousands of sardine and other tin boxes that are thrown awny every month form the hnnla of an IndiiHtry which linn reached vast proportloiiH. These refuse tins are stamped my ma rhlnery Into tin soldiers, and sold an cheaply thnt the poorest children can posses them; yet the manufacturer make a fair profit, which he could not do If he used new material. Frederic Harrison, In the North American Hevlew, scnlhlnRly arraigns the low moral tone of llrlllsli social life. "During the relRH of the Queen," he declares "wanton extrnvnmmce In dress, In IIvIiik. In Riiyetles, has never lieen so crazy as now. with such sor did devices to scrape together the means for extravagance, such open sate of rank and person ny thosi who claim to lead society and to dictate taste." To he naturalized In (Ireat llrltaln an alien must have lived there for at least five years, or have served the Crown for a like period: and he must continue to reside In the llrltlsh Juris diction unless he continue In the rov ernmeiit service In a foreign country. A naturalized citizen has all the "po litical and other rlRhts, powers and privileges" to which a native horn llrlton Is entitled, and Is subject to the samo ohllRatlona as la the latter. A dispatch from London Intimates that the llrltlsh are becoming recon ciled to American meal, and no longer demand that It shall be Imposed upon them under the guise of a product of tho United KlnRdom. Home preju dices are hard to break down, but It will be admitted they are all liable to succumb to reason and other allure ments when we find John Hull virtual ly surrendering the Idea that there Is no meat like "the beef of old Eng land." The University club of Baltimore, a capital of gastronomy, tho other day treated Itself to a muskrat supper. Tho muskrat Is much prizd by the ' Fronch-Cnimdlans, we believe, and by a number of Americans, but his merits as food are too littlo known In the United States. Tho University club steward served him In the Maryland style, stewed In his own gravy; in tho Now Jersey stylo, which offers him up wholo; and In the Virginia stylo, which splits and broils him. Accord ing to the Daltlmore Sun "the muskrat was declared by those present to be a most toothsome delicacy, almost. If not', quite, equal to the dlamondback terrapin and much superior to the rabbit." Chicago papers do not tire of sound ing the praises of the city's Juvenile court, and of the good work It is doing In tho reformation of wayward boys. The reports made are ample Justification for the praise. In the last year six probation officers, aided by 16 policemen, 20 truant officers, and 40 volunteers, have handled 3300 cases of delinquents In the BluniB of Chicago. The fact that the Juvenile court has jurisdiction in all such cases, with power to compel obedience, has a restraining Influence on boys and a disciplinary Influence on parents. In many cases the of fender is not taken before the juven ile court at all. The probation officer sometimes the principal of a publlo school notifies the father that unless the erring boy complies with certain rules he will be taken before the court and possibly sentonced to the John Worthy school or to the refor matory at Pontlao. Then the boy is given a trial. No one In the neighbor hood or In the school he attends knows that he Is on probation. If tho boy chooses to avoid the court he has the opportunity, and In nine cases out of ten, according to the Chicago Inter Ocean, he makes good use of the op portunity. " LET U9 SMILE. Ths thing that goes tho furthest toward ninking life Worth while, That rents the lrnst and dors the most Is juat a pleasant onulo. The smile thnt bubbles from a heart that loves Its fellownien Will drive away the rlotids of gloom and nn t lip mm again. It's full of worth and goodness, ton, will) manly kindness blent It's worth a million dollars, and It doesn't cost a rent. There Is no room for sadness when we see cherry smile It always bus thn mint good look it's never out of style It nerves us on to try ngaln when failure mnkes us blue; Thn dimples of encouragement are good for me and you. It pitv a higher interest, for It is merely lent - It's worth a million dollars, and it doesn't rost a rent. A smile comes very ensy you enn wrinkle up with ilieer A Inmilieil times before you enn sipirers ml a soggy trnr. It ripples out, moreover, to the heart- strings tlmt will tug. Ami always lenvrs nn echo Hint Is very lihe n hug. So, smile nwav. Folks understand whnt by n smife is mennt, It's worth a million dollnrs, snd it doesn't cost a rent. - Ililliinore American. QUKKU MISS MAMA, lly .1. I.. Ilnrliiinr. NO one ever knew the exact ciniHo of the estrangement between Mnrln Devlin ami her distinguished brother, thn lion. Horace lMvlln, The Devllns bail always been wisely reticent regarding their family affairs. It was understood that there had been a violent quarrel over the largo eslnte left by the father of the brother mul sister, and that they had never spoken tu each oilier since the division of the properly. The estrangement must have been einbnr running to both of them, since they lived In a small town and could not help moot Ink frequently. Tin lieu. 1 1 ora ci' wns much moro popular thnii his sister Maria. Hhe hint always been somewhat eccentric, and this eccentricity had become more marked after her quarrel with her brother. Iler father had been n man of very simple tastes, and had lived all Ms life In the plain old red bonne Hint had been his father's and his f.-rniiilfnther's. It was a great and bitter trial to Malra when her brother, not long nfter their father's death, tore down the old house and built on its site a very large and pretentious modern maiiHlou. .Miss Mnrln had her father's simple tnstes, and her associations of tho old house were very dear to her, even when It wns no longer her home. The big, showy mansion was an offence to her eyes every time she passed It. In marked and striking contrast to her brother's house was her own. It wns as much an eyesore to her brut liar as his house was to Miss Maria. When tho Devlin estate had finally boon divided. Miss Marin moved Into a tiny old house once occupied by her father's gardener. It wns hnrdly tou nntnble, and Miss Mnrln mnde few re pairs before moving Into It. It stoed directly across tho road from her brother's line home, and was a decided blemish on the landscape seen from his spacious front piazza. lie had, through his attorney, mado his sister an offer to buy It at a prleo far moro than Its value, but the offer hnd been so promptly and so decidedly rejected thnt It lind never been repeated. It was thought thnt Miss Marin al lowed tho old house to remain In a state of neglect, and tho premises to bo In a stnto of continual disorder, for the sole purpose of adding to her broth er's nnnoyanco and mortification. She also added many Irritating traits to her many eccentricities of character, and was nearly always spoken of by tho peoplo of the town as "queer Miss Maria." Her sister-in-law was nn extremely fnshlonnblo Indy, while Maria went about In the shabbiest and most anti quated of garments. Sue wns far from belug scrupulously tidy, nud seemed to take delight In setting aside the ordinary conventionalities of life. It was known, however, that she was very good and kind to tho poor, whilo her brother was by no moans noted for his generosity toward them. The IIou. Horace Devlin entertained Invlshly, wnllo his sister never enter tained at all, and did not go Into so cltey. It wns regarded as scandalous that Miss Maria should have chosen to spend tho afternoon in her front yard with a man's hat on her head and her skirts pinned up about her waist on tho day of her brother's grand lawn party, when lie had a carload of gnosis out from the city. No tho breach between tho brother aud sister widened until there wns no probability that it would ever bo wculd ever be bridged over. When they met they stared nt each other In Stony silence. Wenfleld, tho town in which tho Devllns lived, wns a small manufac turing plnce. Most of its inhabitants worked in tuo mills. Many of them were thrifty meu and women, who saved as much as they .could of their earnings, and deposited them In the ono savings bank In Wenfleld. The Hon. Horace Devlin was cash ier of the Wenfleld savings bank, nud never had there been such wild excite ment throughout the town as ou the morning wheu a placard appeared ou the bank door bearing the two omin ous words: BANK CLOSED. Men nd women left their work and hurried to tht tinntc with eager and anxious faces. Many had In It the snr- lugs of a lifetime, aud they stared nt the portentous words with wildly bent- lug hearts. There was the most out spoken Indignation when the truth be enmo known. Thn fact was that tho Hon. Horace Devlin bad brought shanin and disgrace on an old and hon ored name, and privation and possible poverty to many homes by becoming a defaulter. It was discovered that he had for years been speculating with money be longing to the bank, and his defalca tions vera sutlleleut to embarrass It, It wns feared that Its doors must be permanently closed, and that the de positors would lose all, or at least the most, of their savings. The Hon. Hor ace Devlin was missing, and no trace of his whereabouts could be found. A week after the closing of the bank another notice appeared on lis doors. The second notice wns ns follows: Notice All creditors of the Wenfleld Pavings Hank lire hereby requested to meet in the lows hull on Friday even ing at H o'clock Many who were not creditors of the bank crowded Into the town hall with the bank depositors ou Friday even ing. Indeed, the hall wns tilled to overflowing, and no one ' seemed to hnve any definite Iden of what was to be done. When N o'clock came no one had yet appeared, on the platform, but a few minutes Intel' a door at tho rear opened, mid to the amusement of nil present. Miss Maria Devlin walked forward and faced the people. There was an Instant hush. One could almost hear the breathing of the spectators. Miss Maria herself seemed calmer than any of them. Her voice wns perfectly stonily when she began to sicnk. lOvery word could be heard In nil purls of the hall. "My friends." she said, simply, "I nm here to make reparation for thn wrong tloiie you by my brother. Hor net Devlin. The Devllns have always been honest people. No man ever had a higher or a more deserved reputation for honesty than my father. He owed no man anything, nor do I. I feel flint I owe 1' to my father to make full amends for his sou's wrongdoing, nud to do all that I can to remove the shame and disgrace he has brought on n good nud honorable name. "Now I am here to say thnt I will pay every dollar due the depositors who hnd money in the Welilleld Hav lius Hank, and; " "Hooray for Miss Marin!" shouted a wildly excited man In the rear of tho hull. "Hooray!" The crowd took up the cry and the ball rang ns It had never had before. "Hooray for the Devlin name!" shrieked some one else, when pnrtlnl order hnd been restored, "Hooray for old Judge Devlin, as good nud honest n mini ns ever walked the eartht Three cheers for lilni and his honest daugh ter, MIms Mnrln!" Again the hall resounded with the plaudits of the mull II mil-. When or der wns finally restored, Miss Maria said quietly: "My lawyer, Mr. Dawson, will tnke charge of the matter of making tho payments due. Thnt Is all I have to say, except to express my deep regret thnt this shameful tiring has happened. Good night." Queer Miss Marin left tho hall amid the reucwed applause of the great crowd. "8ho Is her father's daughter, that's what slio Is!" said Dr. Hale, as tho people were going out of tho ball. "You couldn't say a better thing about her," said Dawson, the lawyer. From thnt time forth Miss Marin had a new place lu tho affections anil respect 'of the peoplo of Wenfleld. Hhe was Btlll "queer Miss Maria," but tho people knew thnt her heart was right. Youth's Companion. No Library Far Architects. "Tho architects of New York City," remarked one of them, "nre handi capped In one respect, ns are tho mem bers of no other professional class. In tills entire metropolis there Is no such thing ng a working reference library on architectural subjects; no publlo library, I mean, nor any similar collec tion, outside of tlioso obtained and owned by individuals. Your lnwyer, desiring to refer to a rare book, has several places to turn to and can enrry out almost any cuurse of Investigation right here In tiwn. Whnt with club nud other organizations, he Is well sup plied. .Even physicians nud the clergy uro fairly well off. Hut where enn nn architect ilnd any reference book lie, youd tlioso of tho most popular or rudi mentary sort? He must buy his own. My partner and I have this year put $1100 Into a library for our otllce, und thero Is hardly anything to show for It. A small bookciiHo ngnUist oue nar row wnllspaco Is not calculated to Im press either clients or clerks with oui storcd-up lcurnlug. Aud when out draughtsmen take out a book of valu able plates nud throw it around the work tables there's uo telling bow much of tho book will ever get put back in place. Ho our $1100 Is as good ns lost In advance. If wo hod fll.OttO to spend, wo might get u library that would mnko a good show for ou archi tectural oftlce, considered ns furniture merely. Uut it would melt away as the books were put Into rough-nud ready use. The New York architect! need not only the books for a public or semi-public library, they need a bouse for it, too, and the surrounding and special enre to moke tho colloe Hon permuueutly serviceable," Now York Sun. The people of Detroit register more letters than those of an other city. Chicago ranks nest. IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOUOOO FARM TOPICS 8 3000000000000000000000000 Farm Work In Winter. All work thnt can be done in whiter Is so much Rain. To rut the food for stock may be laborious, but labor that cannol be employed entails ns heavy n loss as when uo remunernlloti Is re ceived for that devoted to matters on the farm. Kfllrleney of t'henn t r "'era. Cheap fertilisers nre best for some crops. It Is possin.e Hint the land may be well supplied with nitro gen from the growing ou the soil of clover or cow peas. The farmer will then need only potash and phosphoric, acid, which can be purchased nt about five cents or pound. As nitrogen sells for about fifteen cents per pound. Its cost Is three times as much ns thn oilier substances. Tho cheap fort Ills ers nre therefore the most elllcleut ac cording to clt'cumstaticcs- A Peril Mntiger, To make n durable feed innnger gel the base of nn old base burner stove, wire the doors together and set It In A it a not vr.r.n MANnan. place, (hit a circular piece of board and let It lap oun Inch around the top of the Iron manger, to keep thn feed from falling around the outside. American Agriculturist. low lo Keep Oul Urn Wln.l. It costs something to shingle or clap board nn old ham so as to keep the wind and cold from reaching the sta bles, but some have sealed the stables by light boarding Inside the studding, not quite to the top, but so as to cut off direct draughts from the animals, while forcing fresh air to enter nt the top of the stable. Others have lined the walls with straw, held In place by battens, and some have covered all cracks with tarred paper or even sev eral thicknesses of newspapers to keep out the wind. These are but cheap makeshifts, but they are better thau having eold stables. 1'rnner Food For (trowing Anlmnls, The growng animal requires more lime In lis food thau one that Is ma tured, as the bones are composed of phosphate of lime. Corn and oals contain but very little lime, while clo ver, bran and linseed meal are rich lu that mineral. A strong and vigorous animal cannot be produced from an ex clusive grain diet. In some sections where hogs were fed almost exclusive ly ou grain Invest Igallons resulted in the discovery thnt disease wns duo to a lack of the foods rich lu the mineral elements. Many cases of supposed "swlue cholera" hnvo been traced to the feeding of torn to the excluslou of other foods. Economy In Feaillng. Economy lu feeding Is to sell all produce thnt brings a fair price In market aud buy the cheaper by-products. Corn nt fifty cents per bushel mny bo sold to advantage If bran, middlings, linseed meal, cottonseed' meal and gluten meal rnn bo pur chased nt 115 per ton, ns thn corn would giro o profit ou such an ex change. A pound of linseed meal Is worth more than two pounds of corn ns food, ns tho linseed meal contains moro protelu and mineral matter. The samo may bo claimed for bran and middlings. They nre more complete os foods than com or oats, though corn and onto mny also bo added to the ration for some kinds of stock. Where the farmer makes a largo gain by the exchange, however, Is in the In creased value of tho in a mire. Thn by products being In n flue condition re quire no grinding, and when fed In connection with hay, straw or corn fodder, cut line, effects a saving In food nud gives a greater variety to tho anlmnls. Ruch foods may be used every mouth lu tho ycui I'bilii delphla Itecord. I-osa by Uruilng. There seems to bo much truth In thn following statement mndo by Secre tary of Agriculture James Wilson at Canton, Ohio, not long ago: "With re gard to meat-producing animals, the prices are high and will continue high, because tho people west of the Missis sippi Itlver who graze their stock on tho range country hnve been destroy ing the grasses so systematically that they ore uot able, in many of tho States, now to malutaln uioro than fifty per cent, of tho ment -producing animals found there a few years ago. The meats of tho country In the future must be produced on the farms of tho country." Thero hi, and always must be, a loss by grazing, and probably the aereugo that will feed one aulinul running at large would feed three as well if the green product were cut aud fed under suitable conditions. There Is a loss of fodder when grazed, by Its belug trod down by animals lying on It and by their evucuatlons spoiling or cohering It. When we have machines which will cut and gather the gruxs and take It to the barn cheaply euough while the animal has only to ent and digest it, we shall be ablo to keep three or four times as many as now, and tho saving of all the manure tit tho sta bles will enable us to make our land much more productive. American Cultivator. Bill 5 THE eisists New York City. The demand for fancy waists Increases monlh by month. The Mny Mantnn model Illus trated exemplifies the latest features and la suited nllkn to the entire cos- WOMASj'sj FANOT WAIST, tutne and the odd skirt. Fan no vel vet, safln sultan, taffeta and still new er panne plush, are nil suitable for thn latter, all dress inn toIn Is for the former; but nn shown the waist. Is mado from soft finished while taffeta In combination with cream guipure over white hnd pale yellow pnntie vel vet. Tho foundation Is a fitted lining that closes at the centre front and should A STORM be carefully honed. The back proper fits smoothly across the shoulders and Is drawn down In fulness nt the waist line. The lace plastron Is attached to the right lining front Included In tho shoulder seam and hooks over Into place at the left. Single box pleats are formed on tho edges of the fronts, a socond being Invisibly applied at evenly spaced distance. Tho trtmmlnr of velvet-edged Insertion passes around the back at round yoke depth and finishes In pointed ends over the pleats In front. Soft decorative straps of velvet In graduated widths hold thn fronts In position ns Illustrated. The sleeves are In bishop stylo, finished with pointed cuffs. At th neck Is a stocc collar that curvei upward In stylish points. To cut this waist for a woman of medium size three aud a quarto- yard of material twentv-one Inches wide, or one and three-eighth yards forty-four Inches wide, will be required, with three-quarter yard eighteen Inches wldo for plnstron, and two and three quarter yards of Insertion and one yard of panne velvet to trim as Illus trated. Ths Maw Storm Goat. The value of the coat that covers and protects tho gown is too com pletely self-evident to require urging. The exceedingly smart May Manton model shown In the large cut has the merit of belug absolutely simple and practical, as well as In the latest styl and can be made to serve for a general utility garment, or a wrap to wear over evening gowns, as well as for stormy weather. As illustrated tho material Is waterproof cloth and tho cloak Is adapted to damp days; but made from broadcloth and llued with wadded silk It becomes an entirely satisfactory "sortie du bal." aud made from covert cloth or other suitable I material ia again transformed Into a op fashion. stylish ulster or automobile coat. Thn back Is seamless, hut curved to the figure with ease and grace and Is Joined to the fronts by menns of un der arm gores. The box fronts art loose, and lap mm over the other lit dolible-brensted style, a generous palch pocket being placed on each side. Over tho shoulders fall two elrculsi capes and the neck Is finished with deep turnover collnr. The sleeves hro two-seamed and comfortably snug wmioot Doing tight. To cut this coat for a woman of medium slzn six yards of material forty four Inches wide, or four nml three quarter yards fifty Inches wide, will lio required. A Fine, Flimsy Affair. The single iiichIi veil, a line, filtnf affair, Is lu demand Just now In t'arl.4 and London. It will be right welcome; on this side of the Atlantic If It sun- plants thn nrniitn fancy tissues nml fish net cnprlees which make for Indies au effectual disguise. Woman's llreakfaat Jacket. . The breakfast jacket that Is stylish and comfortable at the same time tins liei'oino essential to every complete wardrobe. The May Manton model Illustrated compiles with all the re quirements both of fashion and of the wearer and Is smart at the samo time that It means ease and comfort. The back Is seamless, but, together with thn under-nrm gores, curves to fit tho figure gracefully. The centre fronts are laid In narrow tucks at the tipper portion and fall free below the) bust. The fronts proper are also tucked at the shoulders aim are joined to the ceulre portions beneath the trimming, which can bo embroidered COAT. on to the scalloped edge, or applied, ns preferred. The sleevees are well shaped, but not too snug for ease, and) the scalloped ajver edge flares ovef the hands. At the neck Is a simple turn-ovpr collar scolloped on Its free edge, thnt enn be worn with any style of necktie that mny bo chosen. To cut tills jacket for a woman of medium size three yards of material twenty-seven Inches wide, two and three-quarter yards thirty-two Inches wide, or two yards forty-four inchew wide, with three-quarter yards of con trasting color for centre fronts will be required, or three and three-quarter yards, twenty-seven Inches wide, thre W . af mt: J' . . .Vl wiue. or two ana a cair rt"i.io four inches wldo when only la used. BBSAJtVASr JACKET. V V