IN A FRIENDLY SORT OF WAY. When a mnn nln't got a cent, and he', feeling kind o' bine, An the cloud, hang dark an' hriivy, an' won t lot the aiuiHhine throuuh, Jf. thing, uh, my brethren, fur n feller just to lny Ilia hand upon your shoulder in a friendly suit o' wuyl It makes a mnn feel curious; it ninkea tlin tennimna alnrt, An you sort o feel a flutter in the ipgiini of vour heart. Jou can t junk up and meet his eves; you iloii't know what to ay, Wlien hit hand m on your shmildui in u friendly sort o' way. Oh, the world', a curious compound, with its hmicv nml its gall, With its rates and hitter crones, lint a good world alter all. An a good Cod must have made it leant wava that ia what I say, hen a hand is on my shoulder in a friendly sol t o' way. lumen' Whilcomb Riley. I orooooooooooooocnooooooocoscxocoooocooooooooooooooooo ' mv mjK. a &jy ri li By C. A. .. . OOQOOOOOOOOOSOOOCOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOOOCOOCQCO.-SCOOOOOOO o When tidings reached ns thnt In 4he great conflagration of Inst August Fertile and other new towns of the Crow's Nest Taas region In British Columbia had been destroyed, my first thought was of nn old school mate, named Murray Bartlett, who Went West from Mnlnn twn vpnrn nrrr. to embark In the lumber business in j that viclnltv. According to tin rpnnrta flrat tntn- ... .., , .. ..... . If 41 1.. 1 ni'ui iiiniuirua, il nui luuiiaii.tn, f the people about Ferule bad per-j tehed; and for some time we feared tt XT n .....1 1.1- ........... ..!r. I ... jiiuunj mm ma luuiiu wnom we lial also known well, were I morn; the victims nf flip flrp I I rejoiced, therefore, when twelve iye later a letter came, written by " ' ' aye later a letter came, written by Murray nimscir. "We are ptill alive," so his letter pens, "but It was touch and go with Os one day. I had seen forest fires before, but we never bad anything like this in Maine. I could give you . no Idea of It If I tried the heat, I mean, and the great waves of flame that rolled through the sky! "Just one little thing saved our lives and the lives of eight others who took refuge in our house Just ne little Iron rod. "That will sound so queer to you that I shall have to explain It. "Our house Is on the Elk River, bout five miles out of Pernio. I built it myself. It was just a Bhaeli . - f squared logs, thirty-two by twenty, with a shingle roof good enough in a new country for Elsie and myself. I had trouble about getting a well there on account of ledges. For over year I used to bring all the water ,we used in buckets from the rivor The Elk Ulver comes down a great I - -- - Talley between the mountains west t the Crow's Nest Pass and empties Into the Kootenay, which Is a large tributary of the Columbia. "But I grew tired of fetching water bo far, so last May I put up a wind mill at the riverbank, one of thoBe mall iron 'turbines' such as sell for fifteen dollars. A slender steel tri pod, or tower, thirty feet high, came with It. The only woodwork about K was the long pump-rod, and that was broken coming up on the cars from Spokane. So I replaced it with a little iron rod which I pieced to gether at the sawmills where I work. I mention this because I suppose we 11 owe our lives to that half-Inch rod. If the wooden pump-rod had not happened to get smashed on the ears, well, you would not be reading this letter, that's all! "The windmill worked all right. I got, two hundred feet of pipe, and then nailed together a wooden tank In the kitchen, where Elsie found it great convenience to have plenty of water handy. "All through the Inst week of July It was very smoky. This whole Elk River valley was heavily wooded; nd since lumbering began, there weremiles and .miles, of dead, dry treetops and brush. Not a drop of rain' had fallen for, weeks. You can Imagine how dry all this Waste stuff became. It was like so much tinder. Even the forests over the mountains were very dry. "On Saturday, August 1, I went to the mill, as usual, at seven o'clock, t noticed that the wind was blowing pretty hard. But in the mill we were 11 busy with saws and planers. Not much attention was paid to things outside till toward noon, when two Welsh miners ran in and shouted that . a big fire was raging on the ther side of the river.' While they were talking, five Chinese came run ning down the river road, their pig tails streaming out behind them, they were so scared. They yelled to us in tne mm as they ran by and made ex euea gestures up-stream. "My house was up in that direc tion and without saying anything more to any one, I threw the belt off my machine, grabbed coat and hat and jan for home. The smoke was driving down so thick that my eyes marted; the air, too, felt very hot. "When I came in sight of my Bouse. I saw Elsie out throwing water on the roof. "'0 Murray!' she cried, when she aw me. 'Help me wet the house own. They say there's a big fire earning this way! I'm afraid we'll lose'our house!' " 'Not If we can both help It.' said I: and catching' another bucket, I began throwing water. '.'The wind appeared to be rising; the gusts roared Ithrough the woods. That IHtle windmill of ours was Just whirling for all it was worth, and a mart stream of water was coming into the tank. I should say I threw fifty bucketfuU on the roof and on the walls. 1 meant to soak the whole utside of the house If I could. The Ir was so hot and dry that the hou teamed like a boiling pot. "Just then three or four lumber- o o o I') o o o r n m m m u ti u bi STEPHENS. O 5 men came down the road, riding their team horscB. " 'The fire's crossed the river up here In the woods!' one of them shouted to me. 'It's a hot one! You'd belter be on the move!' " 'What do you think, Elsie?' said 1. "Let's Rave our house!' she ex rlnlmed. Hut neither of us realized .. ...... ,n 1.11111111, l oiiu, 1 1.1 i wnnc was coniln;;; If we lind, we nnttiuu iinvH run witii me ouiers. i "We wont on soaking the house and wetting the ground round it for ten ne.. . . ur iiueen in I nil ten more, tlin kihiiI.-p getting thicker all the time. We hrrn'.I ...... i , " i.u.n.,1. 111 Ultl JUiUl find pretty goon saw her coming, trv-! ing to run. crrvln dm,. 7, i.A, . ing to run, carrying one child , lu'-r , ai ms and pulling another along by ,,,, ,.,,.. V ' tne Hand. When she saw us throw- .,. , . , , 2V.t-l.'bn Tn:t nJ?l J?. ,., ,,, , , """ gai tan llllnnrn ix-lvpa ami nra .n,tl,1 not understand much that she said, save that a great fire was coming. I did not know what to do about hav ing her stop there; for In case our house burned, It was wasting time for her to tarry there with those children. "While Elsie was talking to her another woman, a strangor to us, came running, and with her was a boy ten or twelve years old. They also turned in; and close behind them a bndlv frlelitnnpil nlil riiinn ,ii6iiiiriieu ulu V.II1I1U- man made his appearance from over the river. He, too, ran to the door and pushed Inside, jabbering ex- clteillv t v,im irii'. and set him to passing water from the tank to me. 'Thus far there had been no fire n sight, merely n storm nf think - -e"-, ...ccij a Biunu ui llUCK smoke and ashes driving past. Thefl all at once flainea nnnpnrai! ovofv. where in the woods, on both sides of the river and all about us! Such a fierce wave of heat made itself felt that we all ran inside and shut the door. It was bo hot that I knew the house would soon dry and burn un less I kept it wet. ."I set a box on top of a table, grabbed an ax nnd cut a hole through the roof large enough to put my head and shoulders out. ElSfe and the Chinaman passed up buckets of water to me and I sluiced the roof. If the shack had been a large house I could not have done much, of course, but being bo small, I kept the roof wet and a Bheet of water running off the eaves to the ground. "Within three minutes' It grew so hot that I could not keep my head out at the hole. Waves of clear flame swept overhead. Hot, blazing cin ders came in at the hole; I had to soak a blanket and stuff it in to keep the fire out. . "We heard pitiful cries at the door and Elsie opened It a crack. There lay two more Chinese, who had crawled there through the smoke and fire; their clothes were burning, their very hair was singed! We pulled them in at the door and threw water on them. "The roar of the fire and the wind outside was now awful like a great furnace roaring up Its chimney. But soon above it all we heard a fright ful squealing. Four horses, with which some teamsters had been draw ing a load of lumber up the river, came galloping along the road, with broken harness flying. The luckless beasts either saw or smelled the water on our house. Instinctively they rushed to the door and crowded their bodies against the dripping house. Elsie looked out at the door. " 'O the poor creatures! " she cried. 'Shall I let them crowd in?' "'We can't.' I ald., 'Thero'a no J room!' But one t,2 them thrust Mo head in as she spoke, ,,. , M . , i I rushed to push the door to, but the horse pushed harder than T mnin hold. He forced his way in among us, his mane all afire, his whole coat smoking! We had to get out of the way and make room for him. But I managed to shut the door. Two of the other horses perished Just out side; the fourth ran a little way down the road and fell and died there. "There was hardly space to stir IyibMa 1(1.1 - . . . """ iiiuo irouc room. Tne horse squealed and groaned from his e8j-.tj.eve.8veke-eve"3kek9ei.e' Counterfeit But the worst enemies of religion are not those who turn away in disgust from its perversions. "Not they are profane who reject the gods of the vulgar, but they who accept them," says Lucretius. . Yet it may be partly a question of words. If men stop their ears to shut out harsh and jarring Bounds, it will not do to conclude that they hate music. They may love It all too well to lUten. And, if I hold up some theological daub, and tell them that it is a portrait of Deity, will it be strange if some take me at my word, and cry out, "Then we are atheists?" Yet when did men ever deny or doubt the reality of the universe, merely because science gave absurd or Inadequate explanations? Charles a G. Ames. bums; the stenoh of bis burnt hair was dreadful. "Then came another of those aw. ful waves of fire. The heat of It nearly suffocated us. I knew the bouse must soon, catch and tyirn and soaking a table-cloth for my head, I got up to the hole In the roof and began throwing out water again as fast as Elsie and the old Chinaman could pass It to me. With every third or fourth bucketful I soaked that tablecloth and kept It over my head and shoulders. When the gusts of flame came I had to draw down till they passed. "The gale had been blowing from the west, but now the gusts seemed to come from every quarter; they were like whirlwinds, sucking this way and that. Most of all, the wind mill worried us. If that stopped whirling the water would stop com ing into the tank. Then nothing could save us. The water was our only hope. When these counter gusts began to come the windmill would stop and whiffle round and Elsie would cry out, 'It's stopped! Oh, It's gone!' Then up at the hole I would strain my eyes to see if the wind mill had blown down. "Often I could not see It for smoke. I expected It would blow down, for It seemed as if nothing could stand those gusts. nut every time, when the smoke cleared a bit, I saw the faith ful thing whirling again. ' How It stood it I don't know; but it did, twirling first this way, then that. If It had been of wood it must have burned with that first wave of fire. "I ketit (llniilnir tnv hnniln In thn ..... . .... , " "l "r. " m "'DUt M.MWered and smarting, although water and splashing my face; but I J" t Z L !T, " ,,UB3 ' the te,ent I hardly not ced "'-at. The logs at the north end of n i. , . . ., . .. the shack took fire three t mes, but -tcblng n,y chance, when the gusts slackened, I rushed out and dashed water on them. White steam rolled up In clouds off the whole house. "At length the counter gusts were so conflicting that the windmill stopped pumping for Borne minutes. The clouds of smoke and fine ashes, too, were now bo thick that we could not see down to the river. Elsie is a plucky girl, ns 'brave as need be, but for a moment or two uhe was in despair. " 'It's all over with us, Murray, she whispered, for she knew as well as I that the house must burn if the windmill stopped. "But Just then I caught sight of It again, twirling round In the smoke, the tall bobbing this' way and that. It looked lopsided, it was getting such rough usage and I could see thnt It wabbled as It started to turn again. But turn it did; and a moment later Elsie came running from the kitchen and shouted up to me that water was coming once more. But I can tell you that those were anxious moments for us! "It went on much like that for nearly two hours; and then I began to notice that the Are and smoke were thinning out for the very good rea son that everything combustible had burned up, evergreen trees and old stumps clear down into the' ground, with nothing left but ashes. So great had been the heat that when once .it was gone it was all gone, with no coals nor brands left to smoke or Bmolder. "Miles away we could see that the conflagration wbs still raging, but round us it was over. Terribly deso late, too, the whole region looked, with all the green forest gone. The outside of our shack was actually charred black. "What with thnt humeri hnrsn mil all, we were in such bad shape inside our shack that I got them all out of doors as soon as the ground was cool enough to step on. Two of the Chi nese had their clothes nearly burned off them, nnrl WPrA In n nnrl rnnrll- tion, whimpering from their burns. tne children, too, were crying and the women lamenting that thev had no ho roe left and nowhere to go. "We soon learned that Fernle had wholly burned, as also the lumber mills and nearly everything else along the river. Luckily we had flour and other groceries in the kitchen. Elsie began cooking; and we fed and did what, wn cnnlrl fnr our queer refugees for two days, till tne relict trains began to come in from the outside world. "But that afternoon, as soon as we were able to Btir out of the house. Elsie and I went down to the river bank to look at that windmill. The paint was all blistered off the vanes and the tripod. It 'limped' and squeaked as it turned, for the oil had burned out of the cogs. It was a wreck, yet It still turned and kept " j ii. oiiu milieu i water going up to the shack. 'Elsie shed tears over it " 'Oh, you poor dear, brave thing! sne criea. "i Know you re notblnz rP i Europeans have discovered that American sirup barrels, once used, are better than new ones. They are used especially for the pickling of meat, and If of hard wood, even In the United States, bring better prices than new onpg vs. Genuine. The Confessions of a Fakir. ByJamesAndfewa, , m NTAVKil even guessed that i was a seer until the spur of poverty drove tne into prophecy. Then I happened to light upon the ad vertisement of a wholesale dealer In prophesying machines at an ' address in Brooklyn of nl 1 places! and he sold me an outfit for a low price. Advice he gave free. "Look wise," he said. "Hand 'em a line of hot talk full o' big words. They'll fall easy." The machine has been seen by millions of Amerlcuns and trusted Implicitly by hundreds of thousands. It is to be found at nearly every seaside and moun tain resort In the counfy. Whnt met the eye of the victim was a swarthy, hol low, bodyless hend of papier-mache, mounted on a tall tube that sprang from a pedestal. The head was wrapped In a turban, nnd the dreamy eyes peered afar Into the future over a scrubby plantation of black Oriental beard. That head was my familiar, and 1 was Abdul Aziz Khan. Had 1, too, been of swarthy nd Oriental appearance, that fact might have been some pallatlnn of the folly of the gables who (locked around the cheat. But, far from suggesting the mys terious l5aHt. I am .hlond. hlue-eved. thin, nervous American, Impossible to be mistaken for a citizen of any land east of Cape Cod. The stupidity of the dupes was gross and unpardonable. .Madame and I collected the nickels nnd distributed the blank sheets of paper among the dupes, asking each jolterhead whether he or she prererreu an answer in English, French, German, Spanish, or Italian, and giving one (. sheet bearing the prophecy already written In the language chosen. My loyal partner never iinrmltttMl hpruelf Hip liixurv nf a smile Ht the gross credulity all around tifl. Each dupe wrote hlslnltlals with paper handed to him, and when thirty or forty or fifty sheets had been coneciea I put them In a solid block In the metal box, nnd mumbled a Jumble of poly syllables at the crowd, while the invisible words were Btewlng into visibility. This done, I tapped the box with the wnnd most majestically, opened It to the accompaniment of an Incantation, and distributed the sheets, each to Its right ful victim. Shall I ever forget those scones, always alike, the quick gasps of surprise, the gleam of of staring eyes, the hastening off to a remote corner, there to read In obscurity the oracular hodgepodge I had cooked for them? Sometimes I could have sworn that I heard the papier-mache head laughing. Toor old Abl He did the work and got none of the nickels. Harper's Weekly. 0 & TtaFirstgf Living Irishmen. By Sydney BrooitB. iT Is twenty years since Sir ill life. He entered it with all the advantages of a fresh eye and mind and a keen, untrammelled outlook acquired by years of ranching and roughing It on the Western American plains. In po litical opinion he leaned to the Unionist Bide, but he quickly saw that the Irish nroblem was only Incidentally one of politics or of "race" or of religion, and that at bottom It was a human prob lem, a problem of the Irish mind and character. He at'mlttod altogether no Nationalist could do so more completely the results of history, of lopg cen turies or English persecution and wlsgovernment, and of the failure of either people to understand the other. But he held that "great as Is the responsibility of England for the state of Ireland, still greater Is the responsibility of Irish men"; that the Irish through their absorption In a peculiarly rhetorical form of politics, their habit of living In the past, their overoonfldence In legislation as a cure for economic Ills, and the defects of their character and temperament their "laeTt of moral courage, Initiative, Independence and self-reliance" had aggravated the effects of English misrule; and that their duty now was to overcome these defects, to cultivate a salutary Individualism, nnd to turn their thoughts to the ways and menns of practical Improvement. To do this what was needed was a positive Irish policy, springing from the people and depend ent for Its success upon their own powers of application and energy. The form such a policy should take was prescribed by that characteristic of the Irish peo ple which Sir Horace was the first both to appreciate and to utilize their clan nlshness, their faculty for acting In common. They had pre-eminently, he argued, the associative qualities; then let them associate. The Irish problem on its economic side was predominantly agricultural; then let them associate In agriculture. iSuch was the central idea, simple as all great Ideas are, of the Plunkett policy. Harper's Weekly. Our Foolish Ambassadorial Rank By Henry M. Hyde. TIE carefully trained diplomats sent abroad by foreign countries where diplomacy Is a regular profession are letter perfect as to the gymnastic and sartorial details of their Jobs. Born with the mildew of caste in their veins, they glory in the triplicated kow tow and gloat over the backward glide. Diplomacy, the French say, is the art of tying one's nicktle X mas and, under that definition, foreign diplomats are its masters, am in handling men, In adjusting really Important affairs ,ln promoting interna tional amity and understanding, In dealing with those quick crises which are the true test of diplomacy, the wider training, the broader outlook, and the more diversified experience of the American ministers made them unequaled. IMeanwhlle the stupidity or the cowardice of Congress statesmen are wel come to the choice which was responsible for the creation of the ambassa dorial rank without providing funds for its support, will stand In the way of applying either possible remedy to the Impossible situation. And so the Amer ican people must continue to sponge on the private fortunes of ambitious mil lionaires who are anxious to buy for themselves and their families some tem porary glitter and -glory abroad, until the National Legislature either makes suitable provision for ambassadorial support or quickened and Inspired by the living memory of Abraham Lincoln returns to the old Ideals of republican simplicity. Success Magazine. 0 0 NatureV Stamp of Approval Is Sugar By Dr. Woods Hutchinson. HY do we always couple "sweetness and light" -with sweetness In w mm the lead as our highest conception of spiritual development? Why Is it that In all literatures and legends "sweet" is invariably associated with "sound," wholesome the scent of flowers, the song of birds ,the golden sunlight with everything that is pure and fresh and sound? Why is a sweetheart the most delightful form of cardiac motor that nnvwhere? Whv don't we say "sour as breath of klne, "bitter" as the nightingale's song, "nutritious" as the new-mown I hay? Because deop down, Instinctively, In the heart of us, we feel, no matter j what the preachers or philosophers or the nealtn Journals may say tnat, to paraphrase Browning's defense of beauty, ' If you get sweetness and naught else beside, You get about the best thing God Invents. Sweetness Is to the taste what beauty Is to the eye nature's stamp of ap proval and certificate of wholesomeness. It Is one of the most universal flavors of foodstuffs known. Over one-half of our rea'i foods taste sweet or sweetish that is, they contain sugar In some form. Success. s& m brigandage. By Oillon Wallace. v . tJE Rurales, or mounted brigandage. Several years ago, during the presidency of Comon fort, the government recognized the wisdom of the old adage, "Set a thief to catch a thief," and offered pardon and protection to all brigands who would come in and enlist as Rurales. Alost of them took advantage of the offer, and with these men on the side of Baa law and order, holdups soon became infrequent, and the Rurales developed into a wonderfully efficient mounted force to hunt down bandits. They are fearless riders, they know every mountain pass and fastness, and when they once start after a man he Is pretty sure to be caught or killed gen erally killed. , The Rurales of Mexico compare favorably in bravery and reckless daring with that wonderful organization, the Northwest Mounted Police of Canada, and are by far the best armed force in Mexico. Their calling gives them opportun ity for wild adventure, and thus satisfies the craving for a life of danger, wbtch led many of them to be brigands in the first Instance. They are a free and easy lot, quite In contrast to the peaceably-inclined policemen of the towns, and the low-moving, indolent soldiery of the regular army. From "Beyond the Mexi can Sierras," In The Outing Magazine. Taking the average for the world, there Is one newspaper lor 82,000 ia-uablunts. lead pencil on a iproper blank sheet of Horace Plunkett entered Irish public 0 can be 'begged, borrowed, or stolen a May morning," "alkaline" as the m police, have pretty nearly put a stop to A purchase dn a Geronan tuoacco shop entitle you to one telephone caU. To Carry Freight by . Air-ship. t Germany will soon be leading the world In air-ship construction If the enthusiasm over the sport, or indus try ns some consider It, continues to be as wide-spread as it Is to-day. The Zeppelin alr-shlp made several notable performances before its mis bap; the Wright Brothers are urged to give some exhibitions with their aeroplane at Berlin; a company was recently organized to promote an ln-ter-ctty aerial passenger service la Zeppelin machines; and now a dirigi ble balloon for the carrying of freight Is proposed. Professor Svhtiette, of the Technl cal High School at Danzig, Prussia, I the Inventor of the new cargo balloon oon to be constructed at that place. The gas bag will be 310 feet long, with a diameter of about fifty feet, and the skeloton frame Is to have double diagonal wooden ribs Instead of the customary aluminum ones. A car 120 long by twelve and a half feet wide will be carried, and the power for driving the propeller will be generated by two gas motors of 150 horse power each. By the sub stitution of wood for aluminum, th. ability of the machine to carry weight Is much Increased, and, In addition to the equipment and crew, 4000 to 4500 pounds of freight may be .taken. It Is estimated that an average speed of fifty miles per hour attained by the new dirigible. Harper's Weekly. liONCJ DISTANCE MARKETING. Rural Telephones a Business Piece, slty to Kvery Knrnier. , Practically every business man in the city has a telephone. No one who deals with his commercial colleagues would think of doing without the phone It pays to have one. That's iiiiu m I'm city uui uu yon realize Just how much more valuable the tel ephone is to the farmer? Those with whom he deals are often miles away. To him It Is an absolute necessity, and to do without would be worse than uncomfortable. For Instance, take the stock raiser who wants to sell some animals. What a Job It Is to drive them along the road, to find his man, and, If the bargain Is not made, to drive them all back again. If he has a telephone, arrangements are made for a meet ing, or even a dicker can be made over the long distance wire. What a relief It is to the farmer to be able to find out how prices are In town to watch for a good market and sell at best advantage to himself. Yes, a relief, but not only that, a sav ing of money real, jingling coin la his pocket. A glance at the sales reported this season gives an idea of the growing popularity of this great medium of comfort and convenience. The West ern Electric Company, the largest manufacturers of telephones and tele phone apparatus in the world, sup plying the entire BeU system with ap pliances, reports having sold no less than 50,000 rural telephones in the past sixty days. ma ot Like the Tone. A Door foreign mnnlrlnn was I a it. --a " O gedly wrestling with his trombone outside a village Inn. He knew that The Last Chord was somewhere in that Instrument, but the latter seemed loath to part with It. At length the landlord appeared at the door. The poor musician bowed, and. doffing bis cap, said, "Musig hath ' Jarms," and smiled. "Well, not always." he said: "hnt try that tune utslde that red brick bouse and 1 11 give you sixpence." Three minutes later the trombon ist was back again, mud bespattered and forlorn. "You vos right," he said, slowly ana sadly; "musig hath Jarms not al ways no. A mad vellow out ov dat house came and me mlt a brlgg he knocked down yes. He not like that tune ntf, no," and he rubbed the back of his head. "I thought he wouldn't," said the landlord; "he's Jusi done a month's hard labor for -baling a clothesline from a back g-.Jtn." Dundee Ad vertiser. Needless V.'.- ir of Roads. A county surv. ' r protests against the habit which :,. my motorists have of doing the m-..'.,.:ty of their driving on the crown or centre of the road. This method of driving means that one portion of the road takes all the wear, and naturally of course gets worn Into ruts and ridges. If the traffic would spread Itself and make all that portion of the road from gutter to the top of the crown take a share of the wear, road sur faces would laat much longer and would require less frequent repair. In these days when roads are made almost flat there is no excuse for this . habit of clinging to the crown, but where roads are made with a great deal of camber it Is perhaps excusa ble, as driving on a continuous slope is the reverse of pleasant. Gentle woman. . How Elephants Sleep. In captivity elephants stand up when they sleep, but In the jungle, lu their own land, they lie down. . The reason given for the difference, between the elephant in captivity and in freedom is that the animal never acquires complete confidence in hi keeper and always longs tor liberty. The Watchword. The newest department store tn New York will have a bank of fift levators.