OOMPLETEST BUSINESS BUILDING west 0 THE DAZZLIXQ FARM. Miss Mnv was quite unused to country ways; On the farm (he spent a few vacation days: And she lost herself one morn, In a little field of corn, For it was, to May'y amaze, a maze o' maize. Kansas City Time. FULLY EXPLAINED. 'Ta, what la an entente eordlale?" "That's a polite way of referring to it when a couple of fellows who liaven't been the best of friends decide to let bygones be bygones and step in to have a drink on It" Chicago Record-Herald. , FAHTLY niCMEMBERED IT. Teather ".Marcus Aurelius was one f the greatest pagans that ever lived. Remember that, Tommy." Tommy (at home a few hours later) "Markasaw Itcelius was the biggest pig that ever lived, mamma. Teacher ays go." Chicago Tribune. HER POSITION. Nell "She talks a good deal about her grandmother's position In society." Belle "Well, all her grandmother's positions were In society. She never engaged as cook with any but the gwellest families." Philadelphia Led ger. HEROES. "A navnl hero should never allow himself to be forced to explain." said the man who repeats all the good things be bears. No," answered Mr. Dustln Stax. He hafru't the faculty for forgetting things in an Investigation that a finan cier enjoys." Washlngtoa Star. OVERDONE. Mistress "Well, why don't you boll the eggs:-" Cook "I've no clock In the kitchen to go by." Mistress "Why, yes. Bridget, there's a clock in the kitchen." Cook "What good Is It? It's tin tnlnlts fast!" Cleveland Leader. WHY THEY MOVED. Robin "Yes, we're going to move. Our neighbor, the mocking bird, is try ing to imitate a bass drum." HIGHER QUALIFICATION. Cutten "Jorgins is always brag ging about bis wife's cookery. Is she auch a famous cook?" Drydc "No; she's more than that. She's a hypnotist. She has Jorgins under such perfect control that he'll eat anything she cooks, no matter bow bad It is." Chicago Tribune. ASSERTING HERSELF. Mrs. Upniore "A learned scientist says everybody eats three times as much aa-he really needs to eat." Mrs. Lapsllng "Let him speak for himself. .He's got no right to prescribe for other people. When it comes to telling me how much I ought to eat I'll take no man's Ypsilanti." Chicago Tribune. SOMETHING LIKE IT. Marryat "Hello! old man, you're looking prosperous." Munniman "So I am. I'm in the leather business now. I will tell you, there' nothing like leather " Marryat "Think so? Say! come up and take dinner with us to-night My wife's baked some peas for dessert." Catholic Standard and Times. MODEST. "I have always held that when man is wrong he should admit it frankly, at whatever sacrifice to dig nity," said Braggsby. "You!" exclaimed his friend. "Why, only yesterday one of your closest ac quaintances told me that yon had nevet been known to admit that yon were wrong." "Certainly not. But wouldn't I bav done so if I had been wrong?" Chi cago Daily News. AN EXPERT. "Where is the nearest barber shop?" asked the hardware drummer. "Ain't no -barber In this town," re plied the landlord of the village Inn, ''but If you want a hair cut I reckon the editor of the Weekly Clipper can accommodate you." "Get out!" exclaimed the h. d. "What does an editor know about hair cutting?" "That's all right" rejoined the land lord. "That fellow's the handiest chap for miles round with the shears." Chi . cago Dally Kewa. 1 1 Kl n 'v'VifAV eu-l Features of W. L. Douglas' Admlnit tration and Jobbing House. The dedication of the new adminis tration and Jobblug house building erected at Brockton, Mass., by the W. L. Douglas Shoe Co. as a part of its mammoth manufacturing plant at Mon tello was marked by the thoroughness and attention to detail characteristic of the firm in all its undertakings. As the new building is said to be the most complete and convenient of any ever built for a commercial bouse In the United States, so were tbe expres sions of appreciation by the many per sons who visited it for inspection sin cere and of a highly congratulatory nature. The dedicatory program included open house from 11 a. m. to 8 p. m. with concert by the Mace Gay orches tra and the presence of a Boston caterer to attend to the wishes of all. The building Itself afforded a feast for the eye, especially the offices, which are marvels In many ways. Fifteen thousand Invitations were sent out, In cluding over 11,000 to the retail dealers In tbe United States, who handle the W. L: Douglas Co. shoes, tbe others going to shoe manufacturers and all allied Industries In Brockton and vi cinity. Mr. Douglas will be glad to have anybody who is interested call The new building Is situated Just north of the No. 1 factory on Spark street facing the Montello railroad station. Its completion marks tbe es tablishment of a modern up-to-date wholesale Jobbing bouse and ofllce building. Mr. Douglas has long con sidered the advlsabilty of a Jobbing house, not only for the purpose of sup plying his own retail stores more read ily, but that tbe 11,000 dealers through out the United Slates handling the W. I Douglas shoe might be able to ob tain shoes for Immediate use with greater facility. Under the present system all shoes are manufactured to order, and cus tomers sometimes lose sales waiting for shoes to arrive. With the new Job bing house they will be enabled to have their hurry orders shipped the same day they are received, which will be far more satisfactory to the cus tomer and will result in a largely-Increased business to. the W. L. Douglas Shoe Co. The new building Is 2C0 feet long and GO feet wide and two stories In height. The Jobbing department will occupy tbe entire lower floor, while the olliccs will occupy the second floor. Leaving the new jobbing bouse on the first floor, tbe mnln staircase as cends to the second floor level In two divisions separating on the first land ing and meeting again upon the fourth, where the large Palladlan window Is situated, which appears over the en trance. At the head of the staircase In the mosaic floor appears the word "Atrium," the name of the inner hall, planned and decorated after the man ner of the central apartment of th Pompeilan house. This room is direct ly In the center of the main building, being 26x08 and 16 feet In height, and Is lighted by three large ceiling sky lights t classic design. Around the atrium are placed tbe private offices, where the heads of the departments are located, with their assistants. Beginning at the right of the main entrance. In order, are those of the C. F. Richmond, buyer; H. T. Drake, general superintendent; Hon. W. I Douglas, president; and H. L. Tlnkham, treasurer. They are finished and furnished In mahogany and are ensulte. Mr. Douglas' own room oc cupies the southwest corner of the building, and is a very handsome apartment To the left of these comes the room of C. D. Nevins, assistant treasurer, Mrs. Marlon Shields, cor respondence clerk, and the store de partment. On the east of the atrium and open ing Into this ball are two alcoves sep arated by mahogany counters, the fronts of which are plate glass and grilles of bronze. These are the offices of Warren Weeks, paymaster, and Harry L. Thompson, tbe bookkeeper. The next In order to the left are two rooms devoted to the credit depart ment one the private office of A. T. Sweetser and the other occupied by his clerks. The next two offices are those of F. L. Erskine, advertising manager, and hla assistants. The three other rooms completing the outer wall line of the atrium are the reception room to the left of the staircase hall, directors' room and lavatory and the sample room. Here are located the telegraph Instruments, telephone switchboard and booths for nse of guests. The directors' room Is a fine cham ber occupying the space In the north west corner of the building. This room Is finished and furnished In ma hogany and all appointments are in keeping. Here hangs a portrait In oil of Mr. Douglas, tbe president Tbe last room, in this series Is the sample room, also in mahogany. On center with the entrance-and be tween the bookkeeper's alcove and the credit department is a hall leading to tbe general bookkeeping room, where Is located tbe host of clerks which this hnge business employs. Romans Used Concrete. In these days of increasing use of concrete .for building purposes It is interesting to recall the fact that the Pantheon&'n Rome, about 2,000 years old, is cowed by a dome over 142 feet in diameter, which Is cast In concrete. In one solid mass. Need No Compass. In the tropical northern territory of South Australia travelers need not carry a compasB. The district abounds with the nests of the mag netic, or meridian, ant The longer axes of these point due north and south. SCRAPNO is the chosen chow of every man who likes to get a KOft, juicy quid in his mouth ,i chew that is clean above all tilings. SCRAPNO, the Clean Chewing Tobacco, is as clean as any food you eat. Choice, full length, long leaf, packed loose in the biggest kind of a l package always fresh, juicy and 1 1 rn. . inree times as many " chews" average live cents' worth. Kept l a Avaxed paper wrapper, inside a strong THE LABOR WORLD. The teamsters of Miami, Fla., have secured the recognition of theli union. The boilcrmakers of Mattoon, 111., have secured Increased wages and other concessions. Butchers of Evansvllle, Ind., have received an Increase of ten to fifteen per cent, in wages. Engineers have formed new unions in Atlantic City, N. J.; Jefferson City, Mo., and Milwaukee, Wis. Thousands of girl workers In Chi cago bookbindories ma strike on ac count of a cut in wages. All kinds of new local unions are being formed. A baseball stitchers' union was recently formed in Phila delphia. Ithaca (NT. Y.) striking carpenters started a fully equipped planing mill, and are now competing with their former employers. Japannse barbers In California are working for about $5 per week, and are actually driving the white bar bers out of business. Street railway employes of Detroit are agitating for an increase of scale from tweuty-three and one-half to twenty-seven cents an hour. The Building Trades Council of San Francisco has distributed 200 complete sets of tools to mechanics who lost theirs in the recent earth quake and fire. One hundred Chinese recently ar rived at Galnesboro, Fla., to take the place of the striking men in the tur pentine fields. They are to receive eighty cents a day, while the strikers ask for S1.50 and $2. A significant speech has been de livered by Samuel Gompers, Presi dent of the American Federation of Labor, in which the laSor leader again serves notice of the actl7e en try of organized labor into politics. Sometimes the man wno Dets ano wins Is more to be pitied than the man who loses, for there is a danger ous fascination in race track success. It seems so easy; observes the Wash ington Star, this taking away fifty or a hundred dollars by merely risk ing five or ten. Visions of great wealth float before the eyes of the victim of his own good fortune. The habit Is quickly formed. On the other hand, the roan who loses may pos sibly ibe cured by his supposed mis fortune. It he is iwse and philoso phical he regarua his losO as a rich investment in the game for htm un less he becomes a professional, and to be that he must make a close Btudy of conditions, horses and men. He must devote himself to the work as assiduously as he is supposed to devote himself to his own business or that of his employer. And If he goes Into the business he must do so with the full understanding that every dollar he takea in as a winning comes from eome other man's poc ket, and he has given nothing in re turn tor It Is the Chew for rilOMIXrNT PEOPLE. Senator Chauncey M. Depew is tak ing the rest cure at Dobbs Ferry. Senator Hans'irough began as a printer after leaving the public school. Senator Perkins, who was a Maine farmer's boy, went to sea when he was thirteen. Edison is unquestlonally one of the most unassuming and democratic of our great men. The Duke of Abruzzl has sailed for Africa to explore the Ruwenzonl mountain range. King Edward Is fond of plovers' eggs, which he generally spreads on Russian black bread. Before he was twenty Senator Pat terson had worked for eight years as a printer and Jeweler. Professor A. B. Macullum, of Toronto University, has been elected a member of the Royal Society of London. Thomas F. Ryan, who, next to John D. Rockefeller, is regarded in the Wall Street district as the most de termined money maker in America, is a director in thirty-two corpora tions. John Burns, now a British Cabinet Minister, once contended publicly that no man's work is worth rnore than $2500 a year. Yet Burns has accepted an office which pays $10,000 a year. In addition to his knowledge ol continental tongues. King Edward is said to know a little Gaelic. It Is probably not very much, for even Robert Louis Stevenson, a born Scot, could not master this difficult tongue. Elbert H. Gary, Chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, has ordered a family mausoleum, costing $100,000, to be built at Wheaton, 111. The largest root stones ever quarried will be used in the mauso leum. Farming Is now one ot tne Deat careers open to American young mon, and the fact is becoming quite gen erally known. Yet some prejudice! survive from less prosperous times. Now and then a young man, forced to drop out of a college or profes sional school because of Impaired eyesight voice or similar handicap, takes up farming with an air of hope lessness, as if all ambition were passed for him. Such an attitude would mean failure In anything; who tries for little receives less. Let him take up farming with vim and glad ness. For the right kind cf a man there is no nearer road to all that Is most worth having. If you will study and work and hustle, young man, your brains and energy will put you where you belong. But otherwise, If you let yourself sag into the ranks, satisfied with the ways, and doings of the average man. Brace up and resolve to 'become the best farmer in the State-, and pave the way for wtda Influence and leadership. Me! sweet. as in the clean in a paper v,g mw oig racKage For 5 SOLD EVERYWHERE SPORTINO BREVITIES. W. C. Weimer Is the lawn tennis champion of the University of Penn sylvania. R. D. Little won again in the lawn tennis tournament for the champion ship of England. The Elmlna defeated the new scliooner Queen in the New York Yacht Club Regatta, on the Sound. David D. Stowell, of New York City, was elected captain of the Col gate basketball team for next sea son. Rockaway was defeated by Bryn Mawr In the polo tournament for the Woodcrest Cups by a score of 11V4 to 11. Yale won two of he three races at New London, but lost the university race to Harvard for the third time in twenty years. James Braid, with a score of 300 for four rounds at the Muirfleld links, won the open golf championship for the third time. Fay Moulton, of Kansas City, who took second place in the 100-metre championship at Athens, has re turned to America. William Minot, '07, of Boston, has ben elected captain of the Harvard track team for the coming year. Minot Is a consistent mile runner. Sydney Paget bought a yearling colt by Ben Strome Strychlnia. a full brother to the lamented Highball, a winner of the American Derby, at a sale for $10,500. Twenty-one horses, driven during the season ou Alfred Vanderbilt's Venture coach were sold at auction by Van Tassell & Kearney for $9700 an average of $4 61. Eleven members of the Coaching Club, of New York, went on a drive of 300 miles to Lake Delaware and return, the longest round trip run 1? the annals of amateur coaching in America. Morbid, unwomanly curiosity to hear shocking details of criminal do ings is scandalously exhibited In out courtrooms, observes the New York Herald. It is on a par with that sac rifice of honor and esteem to which some women stoop thank heaven, tout few when they visit and coddle condemned murderers In the prisons. It Is a pity that the law does not per mit their being driven from the trial room or cell corridor In defense of the good name of womanhood id gen eral. ' The northern teriitory of Australia Is little more developed. Its capital, Palmerston, contains more Chinese than whites, and the Mongolians gen erally are the masters and the whites the servants. The climate is very trying to whites. .The aboriginal blacks are of a fierce and sanguinary disposition. Vast herds ot buffaloes, the descendants of a few that were experimentally liberated a century ago. roam over the plains. 4n mi1 Hi -i Only MARKETS. 7 cents V ( 8 - PITT3BURQ. Qraln. Flour and P-ed. Wheat No. t rd I AO a It ye-No. 2 ? 7.1 Cera Nn. 2 ysllow, ear 55 5? Nn. S yellow, shelled 45 yl Mixed ear 55 M Oats No. white 43 4 No. whit m 41 Flour Winter patent 4 10 4 is Fancy untight winteri. ....... 4 00 4 1 Ha? No. 1 Timothy 15 00 15 S CloTer No. 1 10 75 118 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton ti 50 MO) Brown middlings 19 so M 00 Bran, bulk 200 21 M Straw Wheat 7 . 7 M Oat 7W SO Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery I !3 27 Ohio creamery , 4? tl Fancy country roll 19 20 Cheeee Ohio, new 11 is New York, new U U j Poultry, Etc. Bens per lb t It 1 Chlrkene dressed , tl M Eggs Pa. and Ohio, fresh 17 1 Fruits and Vegttablat. Potatoes Fancy white per bn.... &5 go Cabbage per ton w 15, Onions per barrel 4 oj 2 'M BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent f 5 et aa Wheat No. red jjj w Corn Mixed 44 47 ggs u 20 Butter Ohio creamery ti t PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I J 05 IB Wheat No. red tH ft Corn No. 2 mixed as 54 Oats No. S white to M Butter Creamery gu gt Bggs PennsylTanla Brats is J NEW YORK. Floor Patents J 00 IB Wheat No. S red 89 W Corn No. . 7 Oate No. S white t4 M Butter -Creamery U 2a hggs State and PennsylTanla.... It U LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1.450 to 1,600 lbs 13 5 $3 Prime, l.aou tol, 400 lbs, . t 40 5 60 Good, l,tf)0tol,W lbs a & 40 TWy. 1,060 to 1.150 lbs H) 5 a Fair, MM to 1,100 lbs 4 V. 4 15 Common, "CO to D0 lbs 4 00 4 7', Common to good fat oxen 75 4 5 Common to good fat bulls i SO 4 1" Common to good fat cows i 00 4 ttl Hellers, 700 tol, ICO lbs lit) 45,1 Fresh cowa and springers 16 00 45 i)J Sheep. Prime wether I 5 &) 57-, Good mixed 5 5 S) Fair mixed ewes and wethers.... 4 50 too Cullsand common 4 ou Culls 10 choice lambs 554 J j, Hoga. Prtmeheary hogs t 7 00 7 1,1 1 nme medium welghui. 7 10 7 15 Besl heary Yorkers...., 7 (u 7 .) Oood light Torkera S 90 7 00 Pigs, aa to quality t 70 ) Common to good roughs. t 40 t ) Stags - 4 00 4 1j Calve. Veal Calves $450 sj HeaTy an 1 thin calves .... t M AM Oil Markets. The following are tie quotations for credit balances In the. different flolda: PennsylTanla. tl W: Tlona, tl T Second Sand, tl 64; North Lima. Sue: Snath Lima Indlana. Wr, Somerset, via; Kagland, Uu; Caa a4a, IL3&.