1 HEROES AT HOMB. nt his mouth much wisdom com; i world Took up to him as one well qualified v run me buiiu. aeems to be of better clay than Just the cemmon run of men, And we revore him a a mini whose like we may not meet again. We seem to think that lie's above the ordinary thliiKS of life, Tet he, too, has' to run and hook her waist, when summoned by his wire. Ant he, too, mushy jihrnse spoke and fell upon his bonded knees. And promised, If she'd be his bride, shed always know a life of ease. He's somothiii; wonderful to us, we Bit and gate at htm in awe. But etlll there la a woman who refer to him as son-in-law: And when at home he nlfihtly Roe ana quits the Rlamour of the street, Rl mnntle from his shoulders slip and he Is told to wipe his feet. I ear not who your hero Is, at home he' very much the same A we aro who stand by to cheer at Just the mention of his name. When In his dlnlnir room he sits, shut off from othfir people's view, H dips his eg toast In Ills tea, the way that common mortals do. It matters not how great his fame, like us, when he is all alone, He loves to pick a chicken wing and In his fingers hold the bone. Dot riot Free Pros. It was shortly after my return from Africa and I was booked to give a talk on the "Fauna of the Tropics" to to the Huntsman's club at Hillsbor ough. Arrangements had been made through a committee, and I was to be entertained by the president of the club while In town. 1 was somewhat delayed In alighting at my destination by an annoying old person who Insist ed on claiming my bag as his own. In exasperation I finally convinced him br showing him its contents. A grin ning porter was meantime signalling him from the doorway with a bag quite like mine, and the old fellow hurried off with scant courtesy. I not ed at the time his athletic build, and Blfl complexion, which was as darkly browned as my own. As I walked along the platform of the station, alert for my host, who, by the way, I had never met. I saw my brown-faced ac quaintance and his precious bag being borne off In a sporty-looking rls. No one came forward to claim me, how ever, but at last, as I stood by the curbing with an expectant eye for a friendly face, I saw a buggy coming toward me. It was a low, comfortable looking vehicle, drawn by a fat, easy going horse. These points I caught casually, but my conscious attention was directed to the girl who drove. Instantly Wordsworth's "phantom of delight" sprang' to my mind: PHer eyes ail stars of twilight fair, Like Twilight's, too, her dusky hair; But all things else about her drawn From Maytlme and the cheerful dawn." She was looking directly at me, and I dare say I looked as "haunted, start led and waylaid" as the poet himself could have wished. She smiled brightly. "Is this Uncle Henry?" she asked In a tone that would have no denial. I would have pleaded guilty to an Identity more com premising than any Uncle Henry, with knr eves challenelne me: and as I am known by that appclation to some Jolly youngsters at home, it was quite nat ural for me to answer, shaking hands cordially the while, "Of course It Is. Ndbody else!" "I thought It must be, you're so brown," eho laughed, "though you're lots younger than I expected. Papa was writing and forgot ail about you till the last minute, and then he sent me. You must have thought- yourself forgotten." I was too content with the delightful situation to question how I came to be called "Uncle Henry" by my host's daughter. My semi-public character had accustomed me to many affection ate abbreviations of my name, "Old Hen" being one favorite term of en dearment, and If the Huntsman's club liked "Uncle" I bad no objections, though my age did not warrant the sobriquet. - "Now tell me about the nealhen," she said sociably as we drove along the elm-shaded street. Just then the eporty turnout bear ing my fellow traveller appeared ahead, coming toward us, hot foot My pretty companion with a sudden and effectual use of her whip urged our sur prised old nag around the first corner, thus avoiding a face-to-face meeting with the approaching carriage. My young friend was evidently timid and feared a collision; "Rather speedy for Hillsborough," she said gravely. Then I began to teil her of my ex perience with one of the occupants of the carriage we had avoided. I' must have told it In my wittiest vein, for one seemed genuinely amused. Then shs returned to the subjsct of the heathen. "Oh, they compare pretty favorably with the rest of humanity," I answer ed. "But to tell the truth I was al ways more Interested In the manners and customs of the king of beasts. Ton can't hunt the heatheri, you know, unless you belong to the army." I amlled at her gasp of surprise and pro ceeded to tell her a little about a Hon hunt. We arrived at the house all too soon, and a studious-looking gentleman, wearing spectacles, came down the walk to meet us. "Your Uncle Henry arrived some time since," he said to my fair com panion, who looked aghast. Then be ..'glanced Inquiringly at me. The girl A Lion Hunt. By Marion Forsaltl V J clasped her pretty hands and besought me with: "Aren't you my Uncle Henry I" I smiled soothingly and said to her father. "I fear I have been unwittingly the cause of a slight mistake. I am Henry Dearborn, engaged to speak tor me Huntsman's club this evening." While I explained as well as I could. my brown-faced friend of the train ap peared In the doorway casting suspic ious looks at me. If. anireared that the president of the club bad taken In the first tropicals lnnklnn traveler that had preseuted himself, and discovering' his mistake early had posted back to the station with him, hoping to find me, but fall ing in that had taken the genuine Uncle Henry, a missionary to Africa, to his relatives. Mv niece's fad litem) father, who turned out to be a minister, kindly drove me to my abiding place, where i received a warm welcome, though the wife and daughter of the family ex changed Indignant and significant glances when they heard of my ex perience. After I became engaged to the min ister's dauehter. which was not long afterward, she told me the Inside his tory of our first meeting1. She had been late In starting for the train and had met the carriage of mv entertainer bearing home In tri umph her Uncle Henry, whom she had recognized from a picture of him in a religious paper. Realizing the blunder, and knowing that the Hon of the Huntsman's lecture (the expression was hers, not mine) must have been 1ft hehlnd. she lumned at the idea Of teasing the president's daughter, who had manifested some Importance over the affair, by taking me In exchange for Uncle Henry. Reviewing the con versation during our drive I felt that she had cleverly covered her tracks. "That waa a clever case of kidnap ping," said I severely. "Not at all," she retorted, "It was a Hon hunt, and I caught the Hon!" "And I caught" said I, suiting the action to the word. "A heathen," she whispered before speech was effectually cut off. Boston Post. Church from old boat. Home for Sailors on the Pacific Coast How It Was Fitted Up. It would be difficult to find a greater oddity In church architecture than the Seaman's Bethel, on Rattlesnake Is land, close to the port of San Pedro, off the coast of California. It Is the decayed and weather beaten hulk of an old ship that used to ply the salt seas. Becoming unseaworthy It was beached, made fast with cables and transformed Into a church. The Seaman's Bethel Is a mission church maintained for the benefit of the sailors that come Into San Pedro harbor and of the fishermen of Rattle snake Island. All the machinery and seagoing fixtures have been removed from the old hulk and the rooms amid Bhips that used to open Into the engine room have been combined Into the assembly hall. The after deck has been boarded In and transformed Into a reading room. Tables and chairs, with many books, magazines and newspapers, give the place a homelike apperance, and here the sailors of the Seven Seas, with human derelicts from many lands, con creeate In the afternoons and evenings to find out what Is going on In the great world. Really the Seaman's Bethel Is a sort nf institutional church. The after part of the hold has been fitted up as a evmnaslum. Here also Is a bowling nllnv and In another corner are bath tubs and a water heater. Another part of the hold Is fitted up with bunks, where the sailor who finds nimseii "broke" between voyages Is made wel come to spend the night or as many nights as he pleaseB. Kansas City Star. North Carolina Peanut Crop. "There is a shortage In the peanut cron In North Carolina this year, said Z. W. Evans of Cisco, that State. "The shortage Is due to un favorable weather. There will he enough peanuta, however, to satisfy the demand without Increasing the price or curtailing the package. It Is unfortunate that there should be a shortage In the crop, as the market for the nut Is being constantly widen' ed. The yield of peanuts In this cbun try Is abont six million bushels annual' ly. The value of the crop Is about $14,0(10,000. Suffolk, Va,, is Its head quarters; though we have Important clearing and shipping points In North Carolina. The vines are used as feed for horses or cattle, while hogs de light to root for the nuts which have not been gathered. "The raising of peanuts Is year by year becoming to be a more Important Industry with our people. A fifty acre farm devoted entirely to peanuts Is not uncommon. The seeds of - pea nuts are planted like beans and when the vines have come up and the nuts are ready for harvesting, the farmer takes a cultivator, made especially for the purpose, and starts down the long rows. This cultivator Is armed with two long knives which sink Into the ground deep enough to cut the tap rot of the vine. The vines are then shocked. Ten days later the nuts are gathered." Baltimore American. . A Chinese Takln. A Chinese takln has been mounted In the American Museum of Natural His tory. The animal was caotured In the mountainous regions of China, and was presented to the museum by Mas on Mitchell, former American Con sul to China. The takln has the char acteristics of an antelope and a goat Paternalism By Mayor George of New HERE Is a disposition among us today to forget the sturdy individualism of the past nnd to think of the state as the source of all power and ail blessings. This spirit of pater nalism hus been growing stronger and stronger as the years have gone by; both parties have felt Its Influence, no one in the community has been absolutely free from it. The marvelous economic development of the last half century, the enormous Increase in population and wealth that haa ' AnlA.. i.lnna In 4 li t a ntt lYt tV hnvA nraspnted new problems itintru jjioa.q m uua . un w - for our solution that require wise thought and the greatest care, unleMvwe are to Imperil the happiness of our country. The tendency of the day being toward paternalism, government has in good faith undertaken the solution of problems which a generation ago would have been regarded as the exclusive work of private enterprise. The complicated conditions of modern civilize tion, the centralization of population and werlth have made It impossible for private enterprise to perform certain public functions, and It has been obliga tory upon government to undertake them. The difficulty lies not so much In detei mining what government can un dertake as in determining what goevrnment ought to undertake. There are those who would nevertheless have us inakcgovernment so paternal as to carry us up to, If not over the line of state socialism. Some thing govern ment must do because private enterprise falls In trying to do them, and the danger conies In drawing the line where government activity shall end and private endeavor begin. The risk W tnal government win go ir Internalize every field of endeavor, so that the very spirit of individualism will be lost. Tl.. nw.l,M,m.. i.rnn fhol haa Knan BiVl.CnIna thft miintfT haS TOt been 1 HO pii'iiiuilii'ii nave lino uvsu j t 1 ! .. 1 . !,,.. 4n 41m sentiment which has expressed Itself in not been the cause of the sentiment, forbidding men to drink will not of making gambling in any form a crime win oi liseu siop neiuus. or iims with the primary and election laws will of Itself give u honest primaries or pure elections. No law can be effective that Is not supported by public opinion, for, after all, law is nothing but the recognition of a publto pinion that already exists. f What Is a Selections From a Small Dictionary of Quo tations or Prejudices Cy Scribendi II AT Is a gentleman? W u a scotch-man couu might be something of , j nui iu swine i,ui c;iiciui iuu ,w jm Cromwell called Irishmen "the brlblngest men I ever knew." tclligenz," and an Englishman has been known to say: "I have no prejudices, A Frenchman Is "a person, generally decorated, who Ignores geography.'' A German Is like an oyster, nil st-omach and no heart, which explains why the nation is so bellicose. In Austria, said Wimlischgratz, count." A gentleman might perhaps be a Spaniard; for Lord Dundonald, when he captured a 600 ton Spanish man-of-war with his 50 ton brig, told hte fallen foe "be had fought his ship like a gentleman and a Spaniard." Sydney Smith in 1827 apologized for passing a night at a banker's couu try place. Fielding speaks of "brokers and other thieves of this Kind." Jeremy Bentham said of lawyers the corrupt part of human nature." Sancho Panza declared: "There grandmother used to say, the Haves Haves." Izaak Walton may be the best judge: "I would rather prove myself a gentleman by being learned and humble, valiant and Inoffensive, virtuous and communicable, than by nny fond ostentation of riches, or wanting these vlr tues myself boast that these were In my ancestors." Certainly the man was not- a gentleman who took out a policy against fire for Ms wife when she merely wonted an annuity. She was justified in her dlvoroe. (0 . 3 Power Boat rishing Great Sport for Those Who Go Down to the Sea Ey Louis OWER boats have pleasure. Sailing craft are all right if there Is wind but to lie becalmed, "a painted Bhip upon a painted ocean' within sight of 'i big school of bluetlsh, is very galling, in reference to thu location where August soa fishing is best, there Is no choSce. It Is all good from Key West to tihe St Lawrence Gulf. It Is always best In the neighborhood of the mouths of rivers, large or small, or near rocky shores where seaweed clings and shores, liko that of the Jersey shore, ered with beds of shellfish. The north good as the Connecticut coast opposite. of Long Island is excellent, being cut up In numerous nays ana lmeia, Begin nine at Rockaway Point. Jamaica Bay, Great South Bay, and so on to Mon tauk. Splendid fishing is available from Block l3land to Cape Cod and up to Boston Harbor, and thence along the M'aine coast as far as the Bay of Cha- leurs. The season for this region is but continues on till cold weather nips essayists Ly Elds HE lowest form of art is the essay and the lowest form of humanity is the essayist. The trouble with the essay ist Is that he knows too much. He wins his questionable success by pelting his listeners or his readers with huge ...un .hiinUa tit erudition until they are completely T H submerged and unable to do any more than gasp for breath. In the mind of the essayist the ideal essay is a college & aflnrntlnn In tabloid form. On the other hand, an cs3ay must not bo understood to be appreciated. If it Is under stood, it stands forth, of course, as meaningless as remarks on the liquor question by a politician who doesn't know whether he Is talking to a oaloon keeper or a W. C. T. U. lady.' , If anyone wants to take the pains critically to analyze a really artistic essay, It will be found that almost every statement made is true, but that aone of them makes any difference. From Life. . y : 1 V. McCletlan York . .. v..-i'...o nhnnrtmAnnl trrnmih nf temDeranCe legislative form. The statutes have but, on tne contrary, us uirew reomu Itself keep them sober any more than 5 Gentleman? Cacoethes Clarendon, the historian affirmed: nave euner cuumse uv irunom. - a man." Yet Providence owed the Goethe said: "Per Englander 1st eigentllch ohne In- but I do hate a German." "men below the rank of Baron do not that "their knowledge was confined to are but two lineages in the world, as my and the Havenots, and she stuck to the ' t Rhead converted sea fishing Into unalloyed shellfish may be found. Even sandy are good where the sea bottom is coV' shore of Long Island is not- nearly so On the other hand, the south coast not confined to the month of Aagust, the fingers. O Jones Mrs. Orover Cleveland. !Dea though forty-flve year old, Mrs. Cleveland "till retains her girl ish looks. She la a great walker. Every summer she takes a number of two or three-day tramps over the mountains, and she enjoys particular, ly camping out for the night on the top of a mountain. Her nature buoy ant, sunny and kindly, was, of course, God given; but her wonderful experi ences, whloh would have turned the head of many brilliant women, hav only added to her grace and humllit' Respected and admired by a whole country, and loved by a devoted fam ily and a wide circle of friends, she is what "the first lady of the land,'" Should be on Ideal for the typical American woman. American Maga zlne. THEIR SKIN TROUBLES CURED. Two Little Girls IlnU Kczerna Very Uudly In One Case Child's Hair Came Out and Ijeft Bare Patches Cutit'ura Met with Success. "I have two little girls who hae been troubled very badly Willi eczema. One of them had it on her lower limbs. I did everything that I could hear of for her, hut it did not give in until warm weather, when it seemingly subsided. The next winter when it beeanie cold the eczema started gain and also in her head, where it would take the hair out nnd leave bare patches At the same time her arms were sore thf whole length of them. I took her to physician, but the child grew worse all thi time. Her sister's arms were also affected. I began using the Cuticura Remedies, and by the time the second lot was used theii skin was soft and smooth. Mrs. Charles Baker, Albion, Me., Sept. 21, 19H8." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Man. 41 An Apocryphal Conversation. "Peary Is getting more credit than he had at first," observed the critic "Yes," answered Dr. Cook, "but 1'rr getting more "cash." Cleveland Lead er. The next time ynn feel thst swalhwing sensation, the sure sign of sore throat, gargle Hamlins Wisnrd Oil immediately with three parts water. It will save yon days and perhaps week of misery. Autumn's Color Drama. The man who is too busy or too careless of the beauties of nature to wander off into the autumn wood lands, or that man who cannot ap preciate the truths and the lessons that lie beneath the molding leaves and twigs and In the colors of the foliage, Is Indeed unable to share one of the greatest pleasures which the changing year holds for the human mind. The woods this fall are more beautiful than usual. The trees have put on their beauty garb of gold, crimson and russet earlier than Is their wont, and in the heart of the sylvan solitude Is such a riot of color and beauty now as never can be seen save in the workshop of nature. Women as a rule do not need to have their attention called to these things; they recognize them Instinc tlvely. But too often men, If they can appreciate natural beauty and not all can are ashamed of the fact, strange to say. The Sunday walk that does not lead to the woods these cool, bracing days, however, spurns the greatest show that can be set be fore man's eyes. Baltimore Star. That Medical Mystery. Pellagra, that so called medical mystery which has puzzled Southern physicians, Is simplified by the paper from Dr. F. M. Sandwlth of London read yesterday at the International Pellagra Conference at Columbus, S. C. The British professor, who has made an exhaustive study of the dis ease which has recently so alarmed the south, confirms the opinion of American practitioners that it is caused by eating musty or moldy maize. That, too. has been the view In Italy and other South European countries where pellagra has been prevalent for years. But Dr. Sand w4th adds that the ;hookworm. Dor the eradication of which Mr. Rocke feller has given a million, Is a com plement of pellagra and that they are usually found together. In that case the Rockefeller donation will perhaps serve a double purpose. Great Britain has 500,000 horses available for the purposes of warfare. Silence! The Instinct of modesty natural to every woman u often a great hindrance to the cure of womanly disease. Women shrink from the personal questions of the local physician which seem indelicate. The thought of examination is ab horrent to them, and so they endure in silence a condition of disease which surely progresse from bad to worse. It baa been Dr. Pierce's privllcie to care a reat many women vrho bava found m retain tor modesty In his offer of FREE consulta tion by letter. 2111 correspondence la held as sacredly confidential, address Dr. B. V. pierce, Buffalo, X. Y. Dr. Pierce' Favorite Prescription restores and regulates the womanly functions, abolishc pain end builds up and puts the finishing touch of health on every weak woman who gives it a fair trial. Jt Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. Yoa can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for thi non-alcoholio medicine op known composition. Iho KAYO LA ,AMP i re imii THE STEADY Jt' X0 i WHITE .W7 UGHTt I .-',!il,i?'?ii'''!;,!"3 Mr-' OWES HER LIFE TO Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Vienna, W. Va. "I feel thatl ow the last ten years of my life to Lydia K. xinkiiam's vege- table Compound. Eleven years ago I was a walking shadow. I had been under the doctor' carebntpotno relief. My husband per suaded me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- ound and it worked ike a charm. It re lieved all my pains ;ind miserv. I advise all suffering women to take Lydift B. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. MRS. i,MMA Wheaton, Vienna, V. Va. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harm ful drucs, and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any similar medi cine in the country, ana thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lvnn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, inflammation, uL ceration.displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every such suffering woman owes It t herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. If you won Id like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and always helpful. For Asthma, Bronchitis and all Throat Troubles Take CURE 1&1 KM TOR (U&,SvriS The relief is as quick as it is certain. Pleasant to take and guaranteed fl absolutely free from opiates. I AO Druggists, 25 cent. ,ir.irr.m.,. Whiskered Jurors. An Illinois judge, whose name we will not give, made a recent address before the Illinois State Attorneys' Association, In which he told of the tricks of lawyers to win cases. Speak ing of the prejudices of jurors and of judges he said: "Whiskers play a great part In lawsuits. At present tne prejudice in Chicago Is against jurors with whiskers. It formerly was the other way. I know a Judge who thought he was without prejudice and thought only men with long whiskers made good jurors. The prejudice now Is the other way and attorneys here generally reject men with long whisk ers." It Is fortunate that this pre judice Is not widely prevalent, for If it were there could hardly fail to be a sudden change in men's fashions which would banish the smooth shaven and moustached from Ameri can police society. Green. Bag. Moderation. Drinking is a habit that grows, an occasional smile, but ho shouldn't allow it to develop Into a perpetual It's all right fur man to Indulge in grin. Illustrated Mall. A dentist surgeon expresses the opinion In the Dundes Advertiser tnat the chief cause of the Increase of dental troubles In recent years Is that the bread now generally used Is made from roller-ground flour. Mr i anign grutlu lamp Hum nt a low pric I'M?" 2 :r4 filii fiiMi iismtiilrf' ISO'S 1 Thf re are lamps taut, coat mure hut tiiere in no bettor lump ut uny jirit-ik, Tbo Burner, tiie Wick. th Chi ne Ho rlr ( U hi'' vital thi:. ps n a lump; timm part of the RAYO pm-rertiy coimtrm:i-j(i una more is notui. g Krt of In mum kin thut o ull a-ui to th CYO as a HtfUt-eivin (lev ire. buitnble for Uie houtw. Every iiwl r every b?ri HrlteXurUvhuriiitivu circular to tbj neareM tic Kefining Company tlncrNH at tl