T LARGESS. Life gnve me once a little perfect hour. And then, repenting ot the mood that srent So much on one whilst others Joyless went, Withdrew her hand. Blnce then in glftless silence life has past Beyond her bounty I have stood, out cast; I understand, Ife gave me once a little perfect hour. -Freda Bemler In Harper's Mngaiine. fcVVW'HV,i-''V,' An Interruption. By The Captain. In spite of the fact that it was a rery, very hot morning in August, Mr. Howard Danforth alias John- Detih, alias Mortimer Ritter preferred to aunter up the sunny side of Regent street, London. His preference for the tunny side was due to the fact that his enemy, the policeman, was also on that side, a little way ahead, and walking in the fame direction. Mr. Danforth's eye was fixed on the back of the bluecuet. When the policeman turned down a side street, Mr. Dan forth threw away his cigarette and quickened his pace to Edgware road, where he stopped ' and had a lemon phosphate. He camo out and walked on until he came to a narrow, clean wept turning, on either side of which were high fences and walls from back yards that had each a little door or a gate. Mr. Danfa.-th walked down, (lancing hawk-like to this side and that, until he saw on his right a gate with a white chalk mark near the knob. He inspected the mark with tome care, looked up and down the lane cautiously, then put his foot on the knob and vaulted over the gate in to a graveled garden. Before him loomed the rear of a red brick mansion, whose shuttered lower windows said very plainly that the family had flitted for the summer. Be cause some one had prepared the way a task that had taken the, greater part of the night before and so made necessary Mr. Danforth's day visit he found one of the shutters' loose and his passage to the interior unimpeded. Mr. Danforth removed his coat, cuffs and collar. He had work to do; and being a person of system, he began at the top and worked down. Three hours later a pile of bric-a-brac and pictures at the head of the basement stairs was the fruit of his Industry. The last piece he added was an antique vase. He went to the tin huttered front wiindows to let the light strike the surface and warm the the thing till It seemed to burn. He miled as the color flamed back at bim. He appreciated things of that sort. Under other circumstances he knight have been an artist. ' He was half way between the first landing and the ground floor, when he Suddenly became conscious of a pres ence In the hall below him. In the lm light he saw the outline 'of a wo man's figure. He stopped fhort, and ut his hand to his coat pocket. It was too late to go back. He had been heard, for a somewhat puzzled, uncer tain voice bounced out an "Oh!" and the figure moved a little. It was a young lady. Mr. Danforth breathed again, bowed easily, and con tinued his descent. "This is unexpected," said the lady, breathlessly, but with an effort to ap pear calm. "I I didn't think you Vere in the house now." "No, I fancy you didn't," replied Mr. Danforth. "You are, of course, Mr. Ford." "Ah!" said Danforth, non-commit-tally. "You mustn't think I haven't any right here I can explain really I'm I'm not a burglar." "Aren't you?" he asked, quizzically. "Oh course, it's absurd to find me coming Into the house this way" "I was a little astonished at first," be confessed. "I'm Miss Chester you must have beard your sister Alice speak of me." "Of course," said Mr. Danforth, a little ray of understanding coming to him. "It's so funny that we've never met," he bubbled. "Our cottage is next yours at Maidenhead, you know" . "Ah!" "And today I was coming to town on an errand, so your sister asked me to come, here and get ber copy of Schopenhauer!" "Schopenhauer," he smiled. "She said she'd asked you twice for It, but you always forgot; and it was sot much out of my way. She gave me her latchkey and told me positively that you were only here at night." "She doesn't know my habits, or she wouldn't have told you such an unmiti gated falsehood." "I hope you won't carry me off to make me Identify myself." "Heaven forbid!" he ejaculated. "I'm relieved to think that you came Instead of my sister. Then I should fcave to explain my forgetfulness in she matter of Schopenhauer. But you Xust let me get it for you." He hurried upstairs into a girl's room that he knew now, and from a book case he had taken the trouble to ex amine he picked out the volume. "Thank you," she said when he re turned with it. And she moved toward the door. She had locked It after her, and Dan forth opened It. As it swung' back and let in the light he saw her plainly for the first time. She was tall and pretty. Her skin had been browned by the touch of sea breezes and a sum mer sun. Her eyes were blue, and there was a sparkle of mischief In thew. As he faced her his longing for a taste of his old life came back, "You are gains' to luncheon?" he ventured. "At the little place round in Regent street." Mr. Danforth thought quickly. He wanted Just one hour, it could not hurt her. It was a risk for him. But he liked risks. "Shall we lunch together?" he sug gested. "I suppose we might," she hesitated, "it spite of the fact that we don't really know each other." "Oh, but I'm sure we do." "But It is rather an unusual situa tion. Isn't It, to come upon each other in this way, and then go to luncheon together?" "Ill try to appreciate It," he smiled, as his glance wandered furtively to an officer at the corner. "I suppose you'll eat lobster salad?" he submitted, when they were seated in the lunch room. "Girls always used to." "And then ice-pudding," she declared losing a little of her shyness. "There!" she exclaimed, finally, in an Interval of eating. "Where?" he observed. "I mean I'd forgotten that I must see a girl at Hampton." "You don't know the way?" "I suppose not. One rarely goes to Hampton. But it wasn't that. I'm to catch the 4 train at Charing Cross sta tion; but I've left my watch at Low's, and it isn't to be finished till 3.30. I shan't have time to come back after it." "Your watch?" said Danforth, lend ing his professional ear. "It didn't go. I left it this morn ing." "Your watch!" he repeated. "You must let me get it and bring It to you at the station!" "I've a mind to ask you to take the trouble. It would be a lot of help." They went out together and got on to a 'bus for Charing Cross. "It was left in my name, and here's the ticket," she said, when he left her at Piccadilly. "And it's so good of you." "Oh, no, it Is not," he answered, lift ing his hat, "and if by any chance I should miss you, don't bother about it; I'll bring it up tomorrow when I come." - "Oh, but you mustn't miss me," she said. "I shall wait for you at the en trance." It was two o'clock, and he killed the hour and a half smoking on a bench in the park. Three-thirty found him in the Jewel ler's shop. At the office in the rear of the shop he asked for the watch, waiting a trifle impatiently. Would it be a tiny silver thing of no value, or would it be of gold and Jewels? He chuckled inward ly when he saw that it was gold, with a monogram in diamonds on the case. They put it into a small box ftr him, and snapped on a rubber band. He went outside slowly. It was twenty minutes to four. He thought of the sun in the hair of Miss Chester. She had trusted him. He turned toward the north. "I had Just given you up," exclaimed Miss Chester, as he fled toward the platform with her. "I .had almost given myself up," he murmured. They pushed toward the gate. Be side him stood a plain-clothes man. When the latter's eye caught sight of Mr. Danforth it gleamed. "There's Julia Train," said Miss Chester. She did not seem anxious to Join her, but at the gate they met "Why, Julia!" she exclaimed, just as the plain-clothes man laid his hand on Danforth's arm, "are you going away you know Mr. Ford, of course," she added. Miss Train inclined her head slight ly. She did not know that Mr. Ford, but the plain-clothes man thought she did, and her nod was equivalent to a recommendation. He dropped his hand and looked disappointed. The three pushed through the gate. Miss Ches ter babbling nothings. "It was so good of you to get my watch," she finished, the mischief bub bling up in her eyes. "Your people are expecting you some day this week. Shall I tell them you'll be up tomor row?" Danforth nodded and looked into space. Miss Train colored a little, for she did not understand. At that min ute a comely young fellow hurried up the platform, and as Miss Train per ceived him she looked relieved. "How do you do, Mr. Ford?" she said. "Are you coming with U3?" Alice said she was expecting you." "I am," he said; "but if you want a seat you'd better hurry." For once in his life Mr. Danforth's heart bumped In his throat He was aware that the man he was represent ing was present In his own person. But the next move startled him more. Mr. Ford turned toward his companion. "How do you do, Miss Chester?" he said, as he shook hands, and Mr. Dan forth saw that they knew each other. "Hurry up!" roared the porters. Miss Train hurried on with the ical Ford. Miss Chester's countenance was a mixture of fright and amusement. "You knew I wasn't Ford all the time?" She nodded. "I saw what you had done In the lower part of the lfouse before you and then my idea was to get away; so came down. You surprised me at first. I suggested a part, and you played ur. to It" "But" "It was very daring, of course; but then it promised to be an adventure, and I couldn't resist ihe luncheon. I I'm afraid I like '.ncldent and was a bit sorry for y. I fancied you had not always done this sort of thing." Danforth sobered. "But the watrh? You trusted me!" "A little, yes. I felt that I could, and yet not altogether. You'll find that the house in Beacon street Is being watched. I want to warn you." "Did you really do that?" he smiled. "Good. I bow to you. It was the thing to do. Thank you for the warning; but" he laughed rather bitterly "I don't deserve it." "Yes; you brought the watch, and," she hesitated, "I'd turn over a new leaf if I were you. I'm sure it's not too late." Danforth looked up at her as the train began to move. "Once, if you had asked me I might," he said, speaking quickly, "but now, I'm afraid it is too late," He lifted his hat and gazed after her for a moment in abstraction. Then he took a train for the next station, In order to avoid passing the plain clothes man again, but the pile of goods at the West End house will never fade from his memory. New York News. THE FIRST AIR BRAKE. The Youthful Inventor Had Hard Work to Get It Tried. Persons who should have known better thought Westinghouse vision ary when they were told that he pro posed to Btop a train by air. Nobody seemed inclined to let him try his plan on a real train, but they did not object to his working model of it in a shop where he could do no harm or involve anybody else in ex pense. He knew his scheme would work, but he could not make any one else believe it. So he continued to sen his invention for replacing derailed cars on the tracks and to talk about his brake to any railroad man who was willing to listen. "Well, have you ever stopped a train with this air thing of yours?" they would ask. No, he couldn't say that he had done so. Nobody would let him try It, even on a train of dump cars. One day he arrivnd in Pittsburg, selling his other invention and talk ing about his brake notion to a man connected with a railroad out there. "That's a great idea of yours," said the man; "we will try It on our line!" So the officials of this railroad per mitted Westlnghouse to put his new kickshaw on one of their trams. He had to agree to indemnify the road for any damage that might he caused to the train as the result of his trials. The train was equipped. On the designated day the confident invent or and a group of skeptical railroad men boarded the train on which the first air brakes were fixed. Off went the train on its Initial trip. The engineer put on full speed, and just as he had rounded a curve ho saw ahead, at a grade cross ing, and In the middle of the track, a loaded wagon, a man and a boy, and a balky horse. The engineer moved his little lever, and the first train that was ever stopped by air pulled up at a standstill several feet sh(rt of the obstruction. Thus, on Its first trial, the Westing house air brake saved life and pre vented damage to property. Thence forward talking was unnecessary, nil that had to be done was to make brakes. The inventor thought of that clause securing compensation to the railroad for any damage he might do to the train, and he laughed. His fortune dated from that day. He was then only 22. From Success. Grand, Sweet Song of Burgoo. Who, except Kentucklans and their favored Southern friends end kins men has ever really known the bliss of genuine burgoo? It is a dish of the Olympian revellers, for Homeric ban quets, for Nero and Luctillus, for the trenchermen of feudal days and royal roisterings. Compared with It the haggis of Scotland, the goulash of Hungary, the ragouts and paysannes of France, the possum and yams of North Carolina and the gombo file of Louisiana are mere trivial side dishes, toothsome, no doubt, but flighty, ephemeral and far from filling In the best Jense of the term. To make 200 gallons of burgoo In a single kettle you put 200 pounds of choice neighborhood beef, three doz en yellow legged chickens, five quarts of tomatoes, the same quantity of cut corn, four bushels of Irish potatoes, and a barrel of soft skinned Spanish onions. This celestial mixture is sim mered for ten hours over a wood fire. Every twenty minutes the fat, etc., is skimmed from the top by a watchful colored person who knows his bus iness, after which the brew is gently stirred with a large hickory ladle. Finally the seasoning is added, with a gallon or two of most delectable "stock," and then you have only to let it cool and the banqueters will do the rest. At the top a broth has risen, which you take in a pint cup ot tin. It is a cocktail beside which the Man hattan and the Martini are as tasteless gruel. Then you know the meaning of your "Old Kentucky Home," and the voice of the troubadour comes to you like a message from the seraphim. Washington Post. Making a Life. The late Governor William E. Rus sell, of Massachusetts, was one day addressing a body of young men. In the midst of his speech he turned to them very pointedly as he said: "Gen tlemen, remember that there is one thing more important than making a living, and that is making a life." Ram's Horn. England's imports of watches in 1904 were 1,100,000 from Switzerland, 213, 000 from Germany, 80,000 from France, 04,000 from America. THE TRIALS OF THE TOOK RESULTS OF SOCIOLOGICAL STU DIES IN WASHINGTON. Peculiar Conditions of Living at the National Capital Investigation Con ducted by S. E. Forman for the Bureau of Labor Details of Domes tic Economy in Typical Cases First Care to Be Well Fed Rent, Cloth ing and Miscellaneous Expenses. The Washington (D. C.) correspond ent of the New York Evening Post writes as follows: S. E. Forman has made for the federal bureau ot labor an inquiry into "the conditions of liv ing which prevail among the poor of the District of Columbia." Various economists, from J. D. Rockefeller backward, have arrived, before this governmental maker of decimal points, at the conclusion that household ex penditures increase and decrease with the income. When the wage-earner is regularly employed at a remunera tive rate, his family has better food and more of it than when he is Idle and not earning anything. Mr. For man establishes the truth anew in the case of 19 families who submitted to the inquisition and furnished budgets. Households In which there was suffi cient intelligence to keep a correct ac count of dally financial transactions, and which were honest enough not to falsify the Items, were secured. Their willingness to co-operate, the Investi gator thinks, "Implies a certain good will toward the world." To the un biassed this would appear to put the case mildly. This Investigation, however, has val ue as showing living conditions in the capital of the richest country In the world, where, except for the minor chores of government, retail shop keeping, and a restricted field for arti sans, there Is practically no opportun ity for a man without education to earn a livelihood. The families in cluded in the present study were lead ing a hand-to-mouth existence. Their expenditures in every case equalled or slightly exceeded their Income, and it .would not have been possible by even the shrewdest management, ac cording to our common standards, to have saved any money. "Every fam ily was visibly, palpably, actually poor. The loss of a day's wages would have caused keen embarrassment. The loss of a week's wages would have meant serious discomfort If not suf fering, while the loss of a month's would have resulted In an enforced ap peal to charity." Here are three spec imens typical of them all. It will be noted that all of the families main tained separate dwellings and were not herded In tenements: Seven in family: widow nnd six chil dren ot the following ages; 1C, 14, 12, nine, seven and two. The mother is a charwoman In the service of the gov ernment. Her regular wages are $20 a month, hut her hours of labor- per mit her to earn somo extra money In private families, fioy also works and brings In several dollars a week, but amount is very Irregular. Food con suming power, 6.2.) adult males. Oc cupy small two-story fianio building; with four rooms of medium size, lo cated on the outskiits. The house la not kept in repair and is Insanitary. Rent, $5 a month. Six In family husband, wife and four children of the following ages: 11, eight, six, and a baby. The hus band, a young man, is the only wage earner and is a tinner. His wages are $2.50 a day, but he finds it Impos sible to get regular work. Food con suming power, 4.1 adu.- males. Oc cupy two-story brick dwelling, well lo cated. House has four small rooms and no conveniences and Is unsanitary in every particular. Water Is brought from a distance. Rent, $7.50 a month. Six in family husband, wife and four children ot the following ages: 10, eight, six and three. The husband of middle age, is the only wage-earner and is employed as a clerk. His wages are $12 a week. Food consuming pow er, 3.95 adult males. OejUpy two-story brick building fairly wtil located. The house has five rooms, water in the kitchen, and is sanitary. Rent, $14 a month. These detail's show that the report is concerned with a normal segment of society. The families who have permitted the Intimate fucts of their domestic economy to be set down are representative of a good part ot the population of the district. The bud gets cited below in most Instances cover the expenditures of five weeks three weeks in summer, and two weeks in winter. The most important item in the ex pense account of the families was found to be food. Whatever their oth er expenses were, It was ascertained that they bought and consumed a great variety of food products. The percent of expenditure for food out of the total expenditures, was found to range from 33 to C9.3. Apparently none of these families consciously di rected their purchases with a view of securing the largest amount of nutri ment for each unit of money expend ed. They bought the things they liked to eat. When money was comparative ly plentiful, they splurged, and when the Income was cut down, they bought the cheapest sort of food. To the lim ited degree possible, they gratified their tastes. In the case of one of the families during the week when its food ex penditures was lowest, only 37 cents was spent for meat, while 25 cents was spent for pics, and 55 cents for cake and candy. The widow at the head of this family, and its only wage earner, said in explanation, "Don't eat much meat; -can't afford it." Another family with an average expenditure for food per adult male of $1.08 a week, spent $2.C5 for pics and 1C cents for cake nnd candy. These, however, might be said to be extreme cases. As a rule the amount ot nourishment these families received varied with the amount of money spent. A fall In food expenditurewas usually accompanied nrst, by cutting down of fruits and ve getables (not including potatoes), and then, if necessary, by a cut in lue gro cery and meat purchases. The greater part of the earnings of all of the families studied was ex pendod for something to eat Their bill of fare was not a restricted one. It included bakers' bread, buns and rolis, beefsteak, sausage, chicken, ennned lobster, canned salmon, stewed beef, roast beef, corned beef, fish, pork chops, steaks (sirloin and round), veal, fresh fruit, including apples, bananas, canteloupes, grapes, lemons, melons, oranges, peaches, pears, prunes, rais ins and watermelons. Other items of table fare were milk, butter, cheese, coffee, eggs, sugar, tea, vinegar, and hominy. This is not ,a very limited dietary, and it Is certainly richer and more comprehensive than the same economic class in Europe Is able to afford. The item of next Importance to food is tent, but with this essential differ ence: There is a minimum of expense in buying food below which physical requirements do not permit one to go, whereas, when securing shelter, there seems to be no such limit The de scent In housing conditions continues long after food conditions have reached their lowest point. Rent pay ments are very elastic in comparison with food expenditures. An examina- tlon of the description of the dwellings occupied by the 19 families used in this Inquiry gives a fairly correct no tion of housing conditions; for almost every one of those described Is matched by tens, sometimes by hun dreds, of houses around it In none of the houses was there a bathtub, and in but one was there running water. Where water had to be brought a long distance the quantity .supplied was In. adequate for simple cleanliness. Gas was supplied to but one house. Most of the houses were so small as to pre clude the Idea of privacy, nnd some were crowded beyond the point ot de cency. The rents paid varied from 14 to $14 a month. Clothing Is the next item of expense In point of Importance, and the differ ence in outlay for wearing apparel shown In the budgets was found more pronounced than the variations in rent. One Item in the clothing budgets that appears with great regularity was shoes. Hero Is an expense that cannot always be postponed. A hat or a skirt or a coat may be worn for a long time nnd repaired almost indefinitely, but shoos soon wear out nnd must bo replaced, and cash is required for the replacement. Four of the families studied bought clothing on the instal mcnt plan. All ot these families found It well-nigh impossible to get more than two or three dollars ahead for any purpose, and If a garment costing more had to be bought it was usually secured on the instalment plan. Where working clothes are worn on Sunday as well ns on week days, it was found that church going and visiting were considered out of the question. In several Instances the children were not permitted to go to schopl because they were not properly clad. Fuel, furniture and Insurance make up the other fixed items of expense, The list of miscellaneous expenses Is chiefly remarkable for what it doesn't contain. Two of the 19 families re ceive a penny newspaper with some irregularly, but in most of these tarn Hies such a thing as a newspaper or magazine Is Bcldom seen. As for amusements, not one of the budgets shows the expenditure of a cent. What little money is spent on carfare is for riding to and from the place of work or to and from market This meagrencss is a true Index of poverty. Medicine and the doctor's bill are the two big Items in the miscellaneous list, but none ot the budgets give a full account of the experiences of the families in times of sickness. These expenses are principally met In a hap hazard fashion. If there Is money for medicine, well and good; if not, either the doctor must provide it or it must be procured from a charitable dispen sary. And what Is true of medicine is also true of medlcnl services. An Inquiry into conditions of bor rowing among the poor shows that they are "skinned unmercifully by the so-called loan companies." Usurious rates of Interest are charged, running ad high as 244 percent per annum. Alaska's Charms. "When I tell my friends that In Alaska during the months of June, July and August we have almost con tinual sunlight, and that it never gets dark in the summer months, they in variably ask when we Bleep," said F. A. Cross, a merchant from Council, Alaska, "Well, we sleep whenever we have the opportunity. Very few of us have a regular time of goln? to bed and arising except the miners, who work in shifts and have to be more methodical. "In the winter there is practically nothing doing, and the few people who stay there can sleep all they desire. But when spring opens up business flourishes. Every one has to work all he possibly can, because the summer is very short and a great deal has to be accomplished to make up for the stagnation during the winter months. "We have wonderful summers in Council, as It never gets very warm or cold. Several times, though, I have seen the thermometer register 90 de grees. The verdure and the brush grow with a rapidity that is astonish ing In the warm months. Plants grow so rapidly that we can raise berries and the hardier vegetables before frost seta In." PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Schedule In Effect May 27, 100G. TRAINS LEAVE REYNOLDS VILLE ! For New Hcthlihem, Red Hank, nnd prin cipal Intermediate millions, oil City nnd Pittsburg, D:;jo. H:0S a. m, Iran, 8:07, ":rA (New Ilethlehum only) p. m. week-days. Suuduys 6:80 a, ni., 4:-.'U p. jn. For lHiitois. Driftwood, nnd principal Inter mediate millions, llarriihuru, I'lill:nlu!phla llnltlinore anil Washington, 6:;I9 a. m., k!:U 6:25 p. m. week-days. Hundnys 12:")9 p. m. For liullols only 11:42 a. m. week-days, (: p. ni. daily. V. W. Attrrbitbt, ,t. R. Wood. Gen. Manager. Passenger Traffic Mgr Ur.o. W. Boyd, General Passenger Agent. BUSINESS CARDS. E, NEFF JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney nnd Real Estate Agent. ATTORNEY AT LAW, BltOOKVILLE, Pa q. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Notary public, real estate agent, pitent ecured, collections made promptly. OlhVa In Syndicate building, Keynoldsvlll, Pa. W. C. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAVV, Justice of the peace, real estate agent., col lections made promptly. Olllce In Syndicate building, Heyuoldsvllle, I'a. gMITH M. McCRElGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real ostitis agent. Col lections will receive pr.mpt attention. Office In the Keynolilsvllle Hardware Co. building. Main street, Keynoldnville, Pa. f)R. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building Malu street. Gentleness In operation. DR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, v Office on second floor of the First National bank buildlug, Main street. JJR. R. DEVEKE KING, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate build tng, Main street, Heynoldsville, F t. v . PRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. . Black and whit funeral cars. Main street Heynoldsvllle, Pa. J, H. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The U. 8. Burial League has been testee and found all right. Cheapest form ot in surance. Pecure a contract. Near Public Fountain, Keynoldsrllle Pa. D. H. YOUNG, ' ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Flftn its., Reynolds Tllle.Pa. JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Burreyor and Draughtsman. Olllce In Syn dicate building, Main street: "WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. Between 12th and Kith Bt on Filbert St. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter minal. Five minutes walk from the Penn'a K. It. Depot.. European plan 11.00 per day and upward. Amorlcun plan fc.OO per day, Prank M. Schelliley, Manager. Subscribe for The X Star If you want tb Mew ft Leech's I Planing Mill f s 5 West Reynoldsvffle J m f Window Sash, Doors, Frames. Flooring, jjj STAIR WORK Rough and Dressed Lumber, S etc, Etc sV S Contract and repair work fiyen m S prompt attention. 4 z Giro us your order. My prices 31 are reasonable. s I W. A. LEECH, Proprietor. The real virtue of riches Is that they add to the plcturesqueness ol life, philosophizes Harper's Weekly. Millionaires and even semi-millionaires do a great deal toward brighten ing the landscape, and we ought not only to suffer them to live, but to ho grateful to them. Who would will ingly miss the gay pageant down Fifth avenue on a spring afternoon, and re duce the beautiful city with its glad decoration of well-dressed people tc the gray level of the willing poor? No; the world Is best constituted Just as It is, with ail the varieties, of people and all the varying scales of being and of dressing. Only let the man not yet doomed to being a millionaire realize that, like the pur ple cow. It Is better to see than be one. And joy, after all, 13 really and truly not to be bought with money, nor to be found in any distant corner ot the earth, but is, in very deed, as the sages have known in all ages, the kingdom of heaven within. STOPPED HIM. "Do you think your father would. like me as a son-in-law?" "Yes; I believe he would. "Oh, joy! 1 " "Pana and I never agree ah'.xit any thing, you know." Cleveland Leader. Madame Albanv has nerformed he- fore royalty more frequently than any other actress or singer alive.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers