BY RUME T, WHEN MOTHER IS AWAY WEYBURN, The house is such a dreary place when mother is away; There isn’t fun in anything, no matter what you The dolls just sit as stupid, and act so still, ang play queers They always say such funny things when mother's by to heat, The little china tea set looks so There's no fun playing party It isn’t like the lovely thing lonesome waiting there; and eating only air! you most believe you see Upon the plates and saucers, when mother comes to tea. There's no use doing up your hair and dressing ap in style, You know it's just pretending, and you're Betty a the while; You never hear a whisper from the chairs against the wall: “Dear we, what splendid lady now is coming here to call!” The pictures in the picture-booke are never half so fine, The stories won't come out and talk for any pains of mine; An hour goes so slowly, it's almost like a day— The house is such a lonesome place when mother is away. Good Housekeeping, —————— he Maturity of the Violet CELL 006660060040000b0b000 HE mainsail swung down with a rattle as the white- painted yacht came up in the wind. With jib and foresail fluttering gently she lay at anchor in a tiny bay. It was ~ © ome of those coves upon the southwest i coast where the trees stand bodly out toward the waves, marking with a fringe of green the landward limit of the beach. Mostyn Gainford clam- bered up the narrow companion stairs. The man who was lounging by the till er regarded his doubtfully. ; “Clean ducks—and such pretty brown boots,” Le mused. “Think it over, Mostyn, Go down again. Change in- to something more prosaic.” Gainsford was gazing shorewards r toward where a roof gleamed through the trees. His countenance contracted slightly. “Because one is about fo marry,” he said, “is that a reason to shudder at cn incident of the past? May I not re- . member a period that was—yes, the most innocent and poetic of my life time” “Such candor in an engaged man is as admirable as it is rare,” returned the other. “But lel me reassure you your words are already forgotten. “It was such a simple affair, Lut- trell,” went on Gainsford unheeding. “She was one of those country girls one reads about but never sees. Peach- blossom cheek, milk-white hand—and a _ disposition! Perfectly pastoral! I saw what lay beneath—the girl had soul f read to her, I talked, I gave her glimpses of the outside world—of its better parts. I set myself to cultivate a mind latent with untold possibilities. It was a fascinating pastime, I admit. it was as thé training of a pretty child. And you would have it there is harm in a pardonable curiosity to see the result of those endeavors of mine bree years ago?” Tuttrell shrugged his shoulders. “In these matters the question is not right or wrong. The point hinges sn the more important lady’s mood ghould she chance to hear of it. Still, it’s no business of mine.” Gainsford’s eyes sought the roof again, ~“\ “It was an idyll,” he said. “Would gou know the extent of our caresses? Bhe pressed my hand, and only at the * parting. It was in token of gratitude, i believe, whereas I owed her more. To me it was a glimpse of purity that { treasured.” Luttrell bad lit a cigar. He watched the flung match as it struck upon the smooth water. “I trust you will not find it a wild- goose chase,” he said. “And yet, per- haps that would be the best, Too tame a bird, you know, might spell complications.” “It is useless talking to you,” retorted Gainsford. “If she is there still you ghall come to see her with me, and then, perhaps, you will understand.” { The dinghy, an oarsman within it, | was waiting at the quarter. Gainsford stepped ‘into it. A moment later the man was pulling him shoreward with quick strokes. “Do not wait,” he told the man as &he boat's nose slid, grinding upon the ch. “I shall be here some time. gd by on board until you hear my pt! to th e walked slowly along the path #Miss Wd from the beach the old famil- geverely Jyith the surroundings was upon this OP¥nce more. He had not thought you iye remembered the spot so well. eveniliscent of the May blossom came ~ MisSgly to him. Itseemed to him that ome sweetness of the perfume had cavged three long years. Surely it was “only yesterday that he had trodden the verdure-lined path. His pulses tingled a little as he set eyes upon a large, flat stone set low gown by the wayside. They had sat ppon it so many times, he and she. A wyoluptuous reverie was upon him. So pleasant was it that, submitting, he encouraged its thrall. He let himself gink down upon the broad slab. It was here that he had first met her. It was here that he had sung the ‘cadence of Wadsworth and Tennyson into hep ears. He had nrarked the parted lips and the light that came and went in her eyes. It had been a pleas- ant fountain at which lhe had drunk. ‘And the waters had bequeathed no bitter taste. She had benefited; he had little doubt of that. He rose slowly and paced onward. He could see the cottage now, with its green shelter of oak and elm. He Jooked more ( osely. There was some- thing strange about the building. ere was an addition, the new white- of which stood out rather glaring- ly from the worn tint of the rest. He had drawn near to the main road that an at right angles between the path and the cottage beyond when he heard the starting pants of an automobile. A brilliant red car went speeding up the road. Its throbbing jarred upon him; the wafted «d of petrol an- nihilated with noisome brutality the scent of the hay. A minute later he had crossed the road and was walking up a narrow garden path. He stared about him in growing unrest. In the place where had revelled a tangle of undergrowth and shrub was now a cleared space, gravel-covered. Two tables were there and a medley of chairs, while nearer to the house stood a long bench. He seated himself upon the latter to await—whatever should occur. A very small infant came toddling toward him from round a corner of the building. The child held a piece of jam-covered bread in his hand. As he pressed his small frame confidingly against Gains- ford the jam left a red stain upon the white duck trousers. Gainsford, in his preoccupation, allowed the misfortune to pass almost unheeded. He looked up quickly at the sound of an exclamation. She herself, the one who bad lived in his mind's eye, stood in the flesh before him. He stared for a while in dumb amaze- ment. The tracings of her features, of her form, all this escaped him. He noticed but one thing—she wore a waitress’ cap and apron. There was a glad light in her eyes as Gainsford’s hand went out toward her. Yet she was not the same. There had been a great change. As is the way in such matters, he could not at first see where it lay. But this much was evident, that where he had left a tremulous snowdrop a firm-stalked sunflower now stood. “Well! I never did!” she cried. Gainsford experienced ,a sudden shiver. Her mode of expression had been more diffident in the old days, but her eyes were as pretty as ever. They were dancing with pleasure now. “To think of it!” she exclaimed. “Why, it seems just like old times see- ing you here!” Her hand was playing with the lace of her cap. Gainsford, gazing at her afresh, disagreed—inwardly, but en- tirely—with her words. His thoughts went back to the shy, willow-figured oir] with the large eyes and tremulous voice that he had known. “The place has changed,” he began. He felt that his voice came from him with a horribly dead sound. “But the path was the same. I passed the stone —the stone where we—-" She broke into a little laugh. “Ah, that stone sees more folks than it used to.” He was gazing hard at her. He wondered whether it was a fleeting blush that he saw upon her cheek. “Lots of people come here now,” she went on in answer to his mute inquiry; “it pays.” She eyed him with a sudden speculative look. “Would you like some tea?’ she asked. He attempted a faint return to gal- lantry. : “Your tea was always excellent,” he said. “It's better now,” she answered; “it's a shilling a head.” “Qh!” exclaimed Gainsford. The verdure and the wall of the house seemed to rock for a second be- fore him. “A shilling—a head,” he repeated dully. “Cream included,” she rejoined. She drew a little nearer. “It was the reading and poetry that first put it into my head,” she confided to him. “After you'd gone I'd get to thinking about the things you had read, and the ideas that came to me were something surprising. There was the one-about the girl that was like a violet by a mossy stone that worried me more than all the rest put together. 1 thought—well, of all the lives. It was a kind of warning.” Gainsford felt it incumbent upon him to fill the gap. “I see,” he murmured untruthfully. “My goodness! What a fright I got in,” she continued. “It was the think- ing that I might get that way myself that nearly drove me clean out of the place. Then Jim came along. He'd had some experience as a walter in London. It was after we'd got mar- ried that we started the light refresh- ment business. And what with the motor cars and the bicycles, and good tea, and :ood service—well, it pays nicely.” The infant was attacking Gainsford once more, A second jammy smear Lis took its place by the side of the first upon his white trousers, Gainsford eyed the child in growing dislike. “Oh, Mostyn, you bad boy!” cried hie mother in reproach, — Gainsford looked up quickly. ‘Mostyn?’ he repeated. It was undoubtedly a blush thar adorned her cheek this time, “We called him that,” she murmured, “because—-" “Because of what?" “You sce, if it badn’'t been for your kindness I might have been gawking on in just the same old way. Jim and 1 have never forgotten that. So when he came we called him Mostyn, Some times after we've had a good day's business Jim'll take him on his knee and call him a little living token of gratitude. But it's only right that you should see Jim. Jim!” she called. A second later a white-aproned man stood before Gainsford. Gainsford un- derwent an inward struggle. Then he held out his hand. The act was a con- cession to the unity of man and wife, The latter hastened away to perform the duties of her office. The child was still gyrating slowly about the pair, The, man bent toward it. “Mossy!” he said, “run away after your mother.” Gainsford shivered, the last straw. “Its a fine afternoon, sir,” said Jim. “The atmosphere of this place is not what it was,” returned Gainsford. “It's wonderful healthy,” protested Jim. Just then his wife returned with the tea tray. The desire of flight possessed yainsford. Heedless of the probabili- ties, he pleaded indisposition. “Of course,” he concluded, “I'll pay for the tea.” Jim’s eyes wavered diffidently be- tween the tea tray and the visitor. “There's no getting away from the fact that it was prepared speshul,” he admitted. “But seein’ as it's you, sir, supposing we say sixpence instead of a shilling ¥” | His wife's fine eyes glowed In ap- probation. Gainsford drew half a crown from his pocket. He swallowed once or twice ere he spoke. “Give the change to—to—Mossy,” he said. The final word was his sacrifice to the ashes of what once had been a glorious spiritual edifice. “No, you need not come back with me,” Gainsford assured Luttrell, upon his return to the small craft; “the fact is that the one I expected to find was not there.” “Ah, it's just as well,” returned Lut. trell. “These little dippings into thé past are either dangerous or bitterly disappointing. I heard from a man who had been there that there is an excellent tea place in the neighborhaod. Shall we go?’ “Not for worlds!” said Gainsford. “You see I happen to have been in there once already this afternoon.”— The Tatler. Mossy! It was Horses No Longer “Pulled.” “Pulling” in all its forms has been checked to a great extent, both here and in England, by watching the per- formances of the horses and the jock- eys, and ruling accordingly. There have undoubtedly been numerous in- stances where a jockey. has beea ace cused of “selling a race,” when he really did his best, according to his lights, to bring his horse in first. These very cases of injustice, however, have served to emphasize the determination of honest racing men to stamp out the practice, and have had a wholesome effect upon the jockeys. Tod Sloan, in some respects the greatest jockey this country has produced, always claimed that his expulsion from the English track was a gross injustice. Be that as it may, foul riding has been much less common over there since he was forced off the track. Our own stew- ards have begun to realize within the last five or six years that drastic meas- ures must be taken to stop jockeying, and as a result several “good boys” were disciplined last season for faults in riding that would have been over- looked in former years. Burning Dead Grass. Dead grass is burning where it rests on the ground in many suburban places, not, as some people imagine, because of carelessness or of the pres- ence of the much blamed spark from a locomotive, but because it has been purposely set afire. Its ashes form ex- cellent fertilizer for he vegetable or flower garden that is to succeed it. This value of small bits of ground on which vegetables or flowers may be planted is more appreciated year by year. Some of this appreciation may. be referred to the increased cost of living, with its consequent necessity, for minor economies; some of it is probably due to the increase of the knowledge of gardening and of the de lights accompanying the growing of plants, and perhaps a portion is due to the example set by the Vacant Lots’ Association, evidence of whose good work may be seen in every quarter of the city.—Philadelphia Record. The Servants Help Her. “Collecting china!” exclaimed the ir- reverent husband of a young West Philadelphia woman the other day, who has had many careless servants during her brief matrimenial career. “Few collectors are in it with my wife. When we started housekeeping two years ago we had not over two hun- dred pieces; now we have at least four hundred.” Transforns Vegetables. Not satisfied with the usual grafting adopted by floriculturists, a French- man, M. Molliard, of Paris, has started in to transiorm vegetables, Already he has succeeded in turning a radish into a potato—according to a Tecery consular report, / SOME TRICKS Scrutiny Accorded Racers—An Incident of Racing Days in Old Kentucky. HOSE persons who have had the privilege of seeing that pet drama of the Bowery, “The Race for Life,” will remember the struggle of the villain through three glorious, hair-raising acts to “dope” the horse upon which all the hopes of the hero for fame and fortune centred. That far more subtle methods of “throwing a race” are now employed than were conceived of in the days when Stevens wrote his palpitating play was shown by the affidavit of the veterinary, in San Francisco, setting forth that he was ordered to give Lou Dillon belladonna for “thumps” be- tween the heats of a race. No better ray of lowering a horse's speed with- out actually incapacitating him could be devised. The only mistake the own- er of the racer made was in his se- lection of a veterinary. He should have picked one who would have stuck to the “thumps” diagnosis through thick and thin. As it was, the “vet” weakened under fire and admitted that he protested against administering a drug, as Lou Dillon showed only the usual manifestations following a hard race. There are training stables where honest doctors are highly regarded. As a rule, however, the most popular vet- erinaries with the professional racing men are those who are willing to tem- per skill with “discretion” and for- get all about it afterwards. AN INCIDENT OF OLD KENTUCKY RACING. In the annals of horse racing in Ken- tucky there is a well-beloved anecdote of a “gentlemen's meeting” between the horses of two of the most famous breeders of the blue-grass State. Years ago, as to-day, it was the trainer and not the owner, in only too many in- stances, who decided whether a horse was to win or lose a race. In the pres- ent case the two old colonels each be- lieved in the powers of their respec- tive runners as they believed in reli- gion. Their trainers, though, had ar- ranged to ‘‘do business,” and while the pwners were betting everything they had on their nags, their trainers were negotiating to “throw” the race by “doping” one of the horses. A few minutes before the mounts were to leave the paddock on the day of the race, some one told the owner of the porse that was to be doctored what was up. He hurried to find his trainer, Strolling up to the darkey in a casual manner, he said: “By the way, Sam, you've been with me a great many years, haven't you?” “Yass suh, suh, dat’s so,” the train- er replied. “Ever known me to break my word?” “No, sul. Deed ah nevah did, Col- onel.” “Well, Sam, if my horse loses this race, as I have reason to think he may, you are going to die very suddenly.” The Colonel walked away, leaving Sam with the sweat pouring down his face, too scared to think clearly. “What's de matter wid you?’ the jockey asked as he came to mount; “you look as if you done hin hoodooed.” Sam, too worried to try concealment, blurted out the truth. “Jim Green an’ [ lowed to pull off a little easy money on de race. I doped Fancy jess a min- ute ago an’ I ain’t no more'n got the syringe in mah pocket, when long comes de Colonel, an’ says ef Fancy don’ win, Ah'm a gone nigger. Good Lawd,” the trainer cried hysterically, “only spare me dis time. ‘Deed dat man’ll foller me to de end o’ de worl’.” “You onnery cuss,” the jockey yelled, leaping out of the saddle. “Yoah a nice one, you is. Let a poah man lay put his good money on a phony race. Ah got all mah wages for de nex’ six monse laid out on dis yere hoss. Hole on dat bit a minute.” The jockey was gone a short time, and returned just as the bell calling the horses tc the post sounded. As the racers left the paddock Fancy bounded from one side of the track to the other, almost unseating her jockey, ane of the best riders in the South. Her owner smiled into his deep linen collar. Evidently his threat to the trainer had been in time. Sam hunted up the trainer of the other horse to varn him so that they might cover their bets. “Did yeh dope her?’ the other train- er asked. “Yass, ah doped her,” Sam replied, “put somehow it don’t seem to work. HOW A LIFE WAS SAVED. The two men hurried to the ring to hedge, just as the flag fell for the start. It is not possible here to give the space to the description of that race which it really deserves. Fancy “made all the running,” to use a cant phrase of the sporting reporter, and It was clear to every one on the fleld before the half mile was reached that the jockey had entirely lost control of his mount. She won by a length and n half and her owner received an ova- tion as well as a lot of money from his wagers. One of the happiest men on the fleld was Sam, the trainer. “God bless you, honey; how did yuh do it?” he asked the jockey as he lifted him off the saddle. “Ah neva'd a- dreamed the old mare was doped.” “She neva’ dreamed it her ownself,” the jockey said with a chuckle. “Jess besor’ we lef, de paddock ah slipped a cAestnut burr unner the saddle an’ an- ther unner de girth. She didn’t have " DODGES BY WHICH RACES ARE “THROWN." i No Longer Easy to ‘Doctor’ —the Lou Dillon Case an Example of the Strict OF THE TURF "a Horse Without Detection the Performances of The ways of drugging a horse so that he will fall off in speed are le gion, and as old as the institution of horse-racing. In England the home of the sport in its modern forms, the dis- honesty of the trainers and profession- al owners became so notorious early in the last century that drastic measures were necessary to rehabilitate the in- stitution with the public. “Doping” in those days was so common that bets were laid not on the past performances of the horses, but on information gleaned from all sorts of sources as to what entry was to be allowed to “take the money.” Even then cheating was so rampant that no one could be sure that they were in on the final arrange- ment, It was this condition of affairs that led to the present elaborate sys- tem under which the stewards of the English Jockey Club watch the past performances of racing horses in con. nection with their conduct in later events. When a horse shows a marked falling off in form, which cannot be explained, the owner, trainer, and jockey are disciplined promptly and with great severity. As a result, horse racing in England is cleaner than any- where in the world, and, while cheat- ing is undoubtedly occasionally prac- tised over there, it no longer exists as a recognized part of turf life. Fifty years or so ago, there were three methods of “killing” a horse, as it was tben called, commonly prac- tised. These were, “balling,” ‘“drench- ing” and “pulling.” The use of many of the subtler drugs such as belladon- ng, cocaine, and codine, which accom- plish as much as the others, but are less easy of detection, was not under- stood in those times, and preparations of hemp, opium, and morphine were depefided upon to stupefy a horse. The drugs were mixed in a ball of bran about the size of a large walnut, and which was placed way back in the racer's throat, so that he was com- pelled to swallow it. English grooms, full of the tradition bf the past, say that so expert were some of these old- time trainers in “balling” a horse that, during a friendly visit of inspection to the stable of a rival they would dose a mount against which one of their own animals was to compete, without any one’s having a suspicion of what was going on. “Drenching”’ consisted in giving a horse all the water he would drink, just before the start of a race. Besides being very dangerous to the health of the racer, it was also an uncertain way of accomplishing the desired result, as some horses can take almost a bar- rel of water and be none the worse for it while the race is on. They are usually taken later, though, with a most violent colic, from the effects of which they never entirely recover. THE ART OF “PULLING” A RACE. “Pulling” a race was and is to-day the commonest way of betraying the betting public. Its success depends wholly upon the skill and judgment of the jockey, and when the simplicity of the thing is considered, it is a won- dér that the stewards have so few in- stances of it to contend with. For “pulling” a horse means merely hold- ing him in, so that, while he gives every appearance of running hig best, he will not pass under the wire ahead of the entry it is really desired to have win. While simple in theory, in prac- tice the trick is really not as easy as it looks. No one who has not tried would believe how hard it is to hold in a horse which to all intents an purposes is running away, without giving any evidence of it. A jockey in the final heat of a race is supposed to let a mount run for all there is in him. So difficult is this to simulate that some jockeys have abandoned the practice of “pulling” in favor of “run- ning a horse out” early in the race. This is exactly the reverse of “pull- ing,” though it accomplishes the same thing in the end. The horse, having been forced to his utmost speed, dur- ing the first quarter or half, and then checked, never rises to a final burst when called upon in going to the wire, Steeplechasing is a branch of racing where dishonesty has a clea Held, free from any chance of detection. §o unreliable are these races over here that persons who know anything abéut the so-called sport never think of wi- ger money on it. Jockeys as a general thing, it is sad to relate, are honest only because it does not pay them to be anything else. When there is an opportunity afforded them to make ex- tra money dishonestly, without fear of detection, they pretty generally wel- come the chance as a dispensation of providence. In a steeplechase there is absolutely no way of “keeping tabs” on the riders. Who is to say that a horse was checked and thrown in go- ing over a hurdle or brought up short in taking a water jump? Then, too, there is always the opportunity as a last resort for the jockey to lose his seat. This is quite a common subter- fuge, and the jockeys become 80 ex- pert at it that they will take a fall with their horse going at top speed without receiving the slightest injury.—New York Post. His Experience, “In my long career of argifying poli tics I hey learned this one thing,” sai VYucle Henry Butterworth, “never q argy with a man that invents his own no time t' think about dope.” statistics,’—Kansas City Times. The Choloe of Paint, Fifty years ago a well-gainted house was a rare sight; to-day an unpainted house Is rarer. If people knew the value of paint a house in need of paint woald be “scarcer than hen's teeth.” There was some excuse for our fore- fathers, Many of them lived in houses hardly worth preserving: they knew nothing about paint, except that it was pretty; and to get a house painted was a serious and costly job. The differ- ence between thelr case and ours Is that when they wanted paint it had to be made for them; whereas when we need paint we can go to the nearest good store and buy it, in any color or quality ready for use. We know, or ought to know by this time, that to let a house stand unpainted is most costly, while a good coat of paint, ap- plied in season, is the best of Invests ments. If we put off the brief visit of the painter we shall in due time have the carpenter coming to pay us a long visit at ouy expense. Lumber is con- stantly getting scarcer, dearer and poorer, while prepared paints are get ting plentier, better and less expensive. It is a short-sighted plan to let the vals uable lumber of our houses go to pieces for the want of paint, For the man that needs paint there are two forms from which to choose; one is the old form, still favored by cer- tain unprogressive painters who have not yet caught up with the times—lead and oil; the other is the ready-for-use paint found in every up-to-date store. The first must be mixed with oil, driers, turpentine and colors before it is ready for use; the cther need only be stirred up in the can and it is ready to go on. To buy lead and oil, colors, ete., and mix them into a paint by hand is, in this twentieth century, about the same as refusing to ride in a trolley car because one’s grandfather had to walk or ride on horseback when he wanted to go anywhere, Prepared paints have been on the mar- ket less than fifty years, but they have proved on the whole so inexpensive, 80 convenient and so good that the con~ sumption to-day is something over six- ty million gallons a year and still grow= ing. Unless they bad been in the main satisfactory, it stands to reason there would have been no such steady growth in their use. Mixed paints are necessarily cheaper than paint of the hand-mixed kind, be- cause they are made in a large way by, machinery from materials bought in large quantities by the manufacturer. They are necessarily better than paints mixed by hand, because they are more finely ground and more thoroughly, mixed and because there is less chance of the raw materials in them being adulterated. No painter, however care- ful he may be, can ever be sure that the materials he buys are not adulter- ated, but the large paint manufacturer does know in every case, because everything he buys goes through the chemist’s hands before he accepts it. Of course there are poor paints Om: the market (which are generally cheap paints). Sa there is poor flour, poor cloth, poor soap; but because of that do we go back to the hand-mill, the hand-loom and the soap-kettle of the backwoods? No, we use our common sense in choosing goods. We find out the reputation of the different brands of flour, cloth and soap: we take ac- count of the standing of the dealer that handles them, we ask our neighbors. So with paint; if the manufacturer has a good reputation, if the dealer is re- sponsible, if our neighbors have had satisfaction with it, that ought to be pretty good evidence that the paint is all right. “Many men of many minds”— Many paints of many kinds; but while prepared paints may differ eonsiderably in composition, the better grades of them all agree pretty closely in results. “All roads lead to Rome,” and the paint manufacturers, starting by different paths, have all the same object—to make the best paint possible to sell for the least money and so cap- ture and keep the trade. There is scarcely any other article of general use on the market to-day that can be bought with anything like the assurance of getting your money’s worth as the established brands of pre- pared paint. The paint you buy to-day, may not be like a certain patent medi- cine, “the same as you have always bought,” but if not, it will be because the manufacturer has found a way of giving you a better article for your money, and so making sure of your next order, P. G As Good as the Mothers of Old. New York and its people are not half as bad as they are painted. The doings of the people in olden times make the weaknesses of the ‘smart set” of to-day look as mild as the do- ings of a well-ordered Sunday school convention. All this and more Mrs. Frank Cronise told the Minerva club at its meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria. She also said that Rev. Dr. Park- hurst and Rev. Madison C. Peters are the Jeremiahs of our time. And there are the Jeremiahs in every age. At this the audience burst into ap- plause, for the club has had troubles of its vwn, and has no use for Jere- miahs of any kind. “You see a few women drink and gamble, and therefore we forget the millions who do neither, and the hun- dreds of millions of men who do both,” remarked Mrs. Cronise, ad- drssing figuratively Rev. Dr. Peters, whom she called ‘tHe apostle at large to the women of Gotham.” “I contend,” she went on, “that we are quite as good wives and mothers as the women of past generations. We differ in degree and not in kind. The standard of living has changed, and we have changed to meet it.” Mrs. Cronise ventured the asser- tion that the clubs of our country and city contain as fine housekeepers as ever managed a household, whose cooking would make the best profes- sional chefs turn green with envy. Millions of Cantaloupes. Twelve million six hundred thou- sand is the estimate of the number of the famous Rocky Ford canta- loupes shipped from the Rocky Ford district in Colorado last season. Sev- en hundred cars were sent out, as against 592 carioads the previous year. Parents too Strict. Fearing that he would be punished for spending 7 pence on sweets instead of buying fruit for his mother a schoolboy at Adorf, Sagony, threw himself in front of a train and was Killed. EME Some de chi silk t There" a beat rosebu troduce called touch effect of pin! WOM A cl family ing, w she pr was § her tc at his chanic a yea She is pairs, the er family ART | To Walk stitute the cc of the mer mn orado in a where ers is this 1 Stratt Chica, specia desigr NOW § 3 Say: happi exper teen 1 ath o get ii fore I use ing. morni eveni in the the d met a of th tion | sourc As {cal ferer mind form whicl produ one « be li sleep, mind much cold huski think cause that formi dead there infini edy. 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