FHfELBHD TRIBUNE. KSTAHLISHKD 18*8. PUBLISHED KVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY. Limited OFFICE; MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUItSCKI PTION K ATES FREELAXIX— I'lioTiti BUNB isdelivered by carriers to subscribers in Freelandattho rate of l-Jy* cents per month, payable every two months, or sl"jOa year, payable in advance- The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct form the carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardv delivery service will re ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL —The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for sl,sJa year, payable in advanoe; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made nt the expiration, other wise tho subscription will be discontinued. Entered at tho Postoffloe at Freeland. Pa M as .Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks, etc. ,pnyible to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. New Zealand is the latest customet for American railroad equipment, hav ing bought 1000 tons of steel rails and several hundred cars. Thus does our export trade widen its held. While the old idea of Siberia was that of a desolate, frozen region, without material value and a dumping ground for the criminal refuse of Russia, it is now known to posess di versities of climate, vast areas of fer tile soil, and illimitable timber and mineral wealth. The chief fire warden of Minne sota, which Commonwealth lias a law for the prevention and suppression of forest fires, reports that there were only lu such conflagrations in the Badger state last year. These burned over 3033 acres, and damaged timber to the extent of only $1541. It is said that the Emperor William of Germany lias received a snub from his dear friend the Sultan of Turkey. The Sultan is, indeed, a dear friend it costs a trifle too much to have close dealings with him. Anybody who would practice economy politically would better remain free from en tangling alliances with the sublimely ridiculous Porte. By order of the London school board, the teachers in all the schools of that city have tested the sight of the chil dren under their care. Over 23 per cent, were found to have defective vision. These children were given no tices, in which the announcement was made to their parents that the pupils were suffering from seriously defective vision, and that their eyes should be treated by oeculists without delay. A young man and a young woman belonging to the smart set of New York City, preparations for the usual consummation of whose engagement were in the initial stage, eloped the other day, and gave as their reason that they wanted to avoid an elabor ate wedding. This sort of thing can- not occur many times without itself becoming fashionable. We shall have quiet a weddings "the style," and who but florists, caterers, and dressmak ers will fail to welcome the change? The parade of a fashionable wedding necessarily occupies the minds of the contracting parties to the exclusion of reverent consideration of the solomn obligations marriage imposes, ob serves Harper's Bazar. The opening address of the Women's Legal Educational society was deliv ered by a prominent young Woman of New York City, fclio defined the objects of the enterprise as follows: "These courses have been framed to meet the wants of women who desire familiarity with law. either for practical purposes in business and the administration of trust estates or for its value in general culture and as a higher study for mental development. They also fur nish preparation for entrance upon the professional study of law, with a view to active practice at the bar." It would bo interesting to know what the gentlemen of the bar think of the growing independence of women in this direction. Now comes the London Lancet and places tobacco as next to regular food in its benefits to the system. It is as serted that tobacco is a healthy and de sirable stimulant for soldiers and those engaged in hard manual labor. So poor is the spelling in some of the Chicago schoo's that a return to the spelling methods of the country schools of two decades ago is earnestly advocat ed in that city. In China -there is twenty times as much coal as in all Europe. STRENGTH. That I am strong, my friends, oh! pity me; Nor think me blessed that I can bear alone More than my she c of burden without moan; More than your praise I need your sym pathy. I am in servitude, while you are free. Who bids the useless hands to toil or bring? What hunter presses hard the broken wing? In your soft helplessness is liberty, And your the gift of tears—the sweet relief. For all life's woes, the stricken heart's outcry. T may not voice the measure of my grief; The strong their right to weeping must deny. But credit me, a deeper pathos lies Behind the sterile anguish of dry eyes. —Juliet C. 1 sliatii, in Harper's Bazar. I SISTER ROSE; - * By Helen Forreet Grave.. * -K * *************** THE sunshine was steeping nil the meadow lands in gold; the wild-roses were opening their pink cups along the eourse ot the little brook, and a fragrant rain of daisies and buttercups followed the "swish" of Harry Huttou's scythe, as he worked on the hillside. And little Barbara, perched on the fence, with her lap full of wild-straw berries, watched him, with a sort of dreamy delight. Harry Hutton and his sister Bar bara were all aloue in the world. A little to the south, half hidden in a tangle of brooding apple-tree boughs, could be seen the steep gable-roofs of the old Hutton farm-house; and more than one blooming village maiden wondered that Harold could be con tent with only old Betsey to keep house for him, and little Barbara to he company in the big, echoing rooms. "He can marry if he chooses," said Alice Lee, with a sidelong glance at the mirror. "He's rich!" "l'es, if!" said Amy Yokes, saucily. "But you know he has never seen the right one." So there he was, all unfettered by Love as yet—straight, manly, beauti ful to look upon as Apollo's self, with the glittering scythe swinging through the high grass, and little Barbara sit ting on the fence, with her brown, gipsy-like face half in shadow. "It was so nice!" said Barbara. "Oh, Harry, if you could only have seen it!" "Nonsense!" said Harry, Hinging down his scythe and leaning up for a moment against the fence. "A com mon traveling circus! I can't think little Bah, how Uncle Potter ever let you go to such a place!" "But the lions!" cried Barbara. "And the elephants! And the lovely young lady that rode 011 the white pony, and jumped through the garlands of roses! Oh, Harry, do take mo again! Just once, dear Harry!" And she throw .lier arms around his neck, and pressed her strawberry stained lips to ids bronzed face. "They're going to stay in Jlillville all summer, Harry," coaxed the elf. "And Uncle Potter is going to take the chil dren once a week, lie says!" Harry resolutely shook his head. "Not I!" said he. "A circus, indeed!" And nothing would induce him to go and see "Mademoiselle liosita Raven, the Dnnseuso and Equestrian Queen," who formed tiie most attrac tive star ot the traveling circus. "Her very name is enough for me," said Harry, with a shrug of his broad, finely-modeled shoulders. "A painted, spangled popinjay, risking her life to make the gaping crowd stare; No, I've no curiosity at all to see Mademoiselle ltosita liavcn!" There was a little one-storied cot tage, however, 011 the outskirts of the village—a rudely-built nook, witli a popular reputation of being "haunt ed;" and about this time it obtained a tenant—a dark-browned, soberly dressed young woman, who was usu ally mending stockings or hearing les sons for two blue-eyed, golden-tressed little maids, who played around the door-stone; and as Harry Hutton, whose business frequently took him into tiie village, rode past the humble domiclde, lie looked with a sort of pleasure upon the moving pictures at the cottage door, and wondered, vague ly, why the little blondes and their olive-faced young protectress were so unlike. "They are like twin daisies," lie said, to himself; "lint she is a royal rose. I wonder wiio they can lie?" One day his horse dropped a shoe in the road. One of the little lassies ran after hint, with it held aloft in her hand. "Thank you, my girl," said lie, stoop ing from ids horse to give her a coin. "\\ ill you tell me what your name is?" But the child shook lier head, all dancing with sunny curls. "Sister Rose don't let us talk to strangers," said she. Blood rushed to Harry Hutton's face; but he smiled, nevertheless. "Sister Rose is quite right," said he. "Nevertheless, I 11111 much obliged to you, my pretty maid!" Anil tiie next lime lie passed the cottage, the picture lie saw through the half-closed lattice was pretty be yond expression-Sister Rose at her sewing, the queenly brow half bent, the black braids drooping 011 the neelt, and tiie children reciting their cate chism lu shrill chorus, to her, chirping out: " 'To get mine own living, and to do my duly in that state of life to which It shall please Clod to call me!'" "And that is n lesson," the young man thought, to himself, "which a great many of us are slow tuough to learn. Sister Rose Is bringing up her little ones In the right way. I won der how sho came to lie living in Pol lard's cottage, though?" So that when, a week after, little Barbara was nearly drowned by the upsetting of a boat in the pond below, and they carried her to Pollard's cot tage, the whole tiling seemed a curi ous coincidence. Barbara was sitting up, all wrapped in blankets in Sister Rose's big rock ing-chair, when her brother, who had been sent for, came hurriedly In. He ruined the hat that shadowed his pale feco when lie saw the beautiful young brunette who was bending over his little sister. "I am not intruding, I hope?" h said, with all chivalrous courtesy. And siie answered. "Not in the least, sir." "Oh. Harry, Harry!" cried breath less little Barbara, "she has been so good to me! I was dying, and sho brought me hack to life!" "I thank her from the bottom of my heart!" said Harold Uutton, with a quiver in his voice. So the acquaintance begun; and one montli from that hour, Harry Hutton, the owner of Hutton Farm's broad acres, the Adonis of the village, the mark of many a matrimonial schem er's flower-garlanded arrow, asked Sister Rose—whose real name he had discovered to be Rose Blauchard—to be his wife. "I cannot marry, Mr. Hutton," she said. "1 have my brother's two orphan children to maintain nnd educate. I vowed it on Ids death-bed." "Nor would I have you break that vow," said Harry, eagerly. "They shall become my sacred charge, also. They shall be brought up, carefully tiud tenderly, with my Barbara." But still she shook her head. "Mr. Hutton," she, "we think differently on many subjects. You were born to a peaceful competence, while I have always had to fight my own way with thu world. Our life paths lie apart." "By the sun that shines above us at this moment," cried Hutton, "they shall lie together henceforth!" But she smiled that snd, Madonna like smile at his eager enthusiasm. "You do not know who I am," said she. "I know you are an angel!" "I am Mademoiselle Itosita Raven, the circus girl," sho said, speaking with a little effort. "The company leaves Mlllville next week, and I must go with them. The children's mother was a circus girl, also. My brother saw her, and fell in love witli her. He was a scene-painter of a theatre; and when they were dead, there were the children. I had to do somthing for them, so I turned 'Equestrienne Queen,' also. It was not a lofty walk of life, but It was all I could do, and I have done my best. I would not let Barbara tell you who I was, because I dreaded that you should know. But it would have been better had her childish tongue betrayed her, for now I have to tell it myself." "Rose—piy Rose!" He advanced boldly, his arms out. She stood still a second; then uttered a little sobbing cry, and tied to the safe shelter of his in-cast. "Yours!" she cried—"yours, forever, if you love me still, now that you know all! But I had been told that you spoke disparagingly of me." "Not of you, dearest, In particular," lie exclaimed, with a pang of remorse —"only of the stupid Idea 1 had formed of you. For I never had seen you when I spoke those silly words. And my self-asserting idiocy stands re buked before the noble purity of your true presence." So Hutton Farm got a mistress, and iiltle Barbara plays in the sunshine with the two golden-haired orphan children. And Sister Rose grows sweeter and more beautiful with every day; nnd Harold Hutton is firmly convinced that lie is the happiest man in all the world.—Saturday Night. Onuses of Insanity. The difference between a man's heart and a woman's is shown oddly and well in this year's report of the Pennsylvania Hospital, in the table giving the causes of insanity among 11,500 patients, (1101 of whom were men and 51.10 women. Women, this table shows, arc nearer to nature than men. The things which drive women insane are the simple, elemental things, those tilings which the Bible and the great poets regard as most im portant in life, though men are apt to hold them lightly. Homesickness made insane eleven women, but only one man; domestic trouble 137 women and fifty-five men; mental anxiety, 402 women and 230 men; grief, 31.1 women and ninety-two men; fright, sixty-four women and twenty men. On the other hand, vicious habits and Indulgences made Insane 125 men, but only sixteen women; business cares and perplexi ties, 41.1 men and eighty-nine women; excessive study, fifty-one men and twenty women; intemperance, 0.18 men and seventy-eight women. From the opium habit an equal number of men nnd women—thirty-one—became insane. Among the occupations of the insane men, that of farming was, as usual, well to the fore, there being 598 farmers among the patients.—Philadel phia Record. Clieftterfielri's lletort. During the great Chesterfield's wan derings abroad he once rested at an inn which was kept in any hut a neat condition. Not only were the rooms untidy, but even the dishes from which the guests were expected to eat were dirty. This was too much for Lord Chesterfield, and he soundly rated the waiter. "Every one must eat his peck of dirt," the latter coolly observed. "True," was the instant retort, "but no one is obliged to eat It all at once." STOOD BY HIS BARCAIN. Tlio Chariot Seemed a ISit Gauds*, But He tVas Willing to fee It. "It's a hard life," declared the old circus man, according to the Detroit Free Press, "and I always say at thu close of every season that 1 am •through with it. Put there is some thing in the life, tile smell ol' the saw dust ring, the glitter and noise, the changing scene, that appeals to a man a lio has once been in the business, and it is seldom that one leaves the life hntil death steps in. There is a good deal of liumov in the business, too, as we are brought into contact with all sorts and conditions of men. "I am reminded of a funny thing that happened to me a good many years ago when such a thing as moving a circus by rail was not thought of. It was part of my work at that time to drive our great $,10,000 chariot, not only in the parade, but between towns as well. What little sleep I got I had to catch here and there on my seat while we were on our way to another town. One night my doze turned into a sound sleep, and when I awoke I dis covered that the team, left without a driver, had turned into a farmyard and come to a stop before ;* haystack, where they were quietly eating. While 1 was rubbing my eyes and trying to grasp the situation the old man who owned the hay caiiie out where I was and walked around the chariot and looked it over with a critical eye. " 'Well,' said I, with a grin, 'what do you think of it?' " 'Gosh,' said he, 'ain't hit jes' a trifle bit gaudy?' " 'Well, what do you expect?' said I, indignantly, at this implied reflec tion upon the great moral show that I represented. " 'Well, I suppose lilt is all right,' answered the old man, doubtfully, as lie looked it over once more. 'I or dered hit, and I'll stand by my bar gain. Hit seems tor me that hit is jes' a hit loud. But I suppose I ain't used to city ways.' "It was now my turn to he surprised, and I was about to ask him what he was driving at. when he added that I might as well unhitch, as the funeral wouldn't bo until two in the nfter noon. "Then there were explanations all around. It seems that the old man's wife had died, and lie had sent to the nearest city for a funeral ear. and had mistaken our great SIO,OOO chariot for it. There had been a good deal of rivalry in the neighboruood in regard to funerals, and the c'd man had made up his mind to outshine them all, and I think he was disappointed in the end when he discovered that he had been mistaken." WORDS OF WISDOM. A good conscience is to the soul what health is to the body. It pre serves* a constant ease and serenity within us, and more than countervails nil the calamities and atllictlons which can possibly befall us. To meditate daily, to pray daily, seems a means indispensable for breaking this surface crust of form ality, habit, routine, which hides the living springs of wisdom. Never be discouraged by trifles. If a spider breaks his thread twenty times, he will mend it as many. Per severance and patience will accom plish wonders. To commiserate is something more than to give, for money is external to a man's self; but he who bestows compassion communicates his own soul. Despise not any man, and do not spurn anything. For there is no man that hath not his hour, nor Is there anything that hath not its place. Mere ideals, unsecured by deeds, are like untrained pictures. They do not long retain their freshness and whole ness and beauty. Generosity, to deserve the name, comprises the desire and the effort to benefit others without reference .o •elf. The loveliest things in life are but shadows, and they come and go, and change and fade away as rapidly. An avowal of poverty is a disgrace to no man; to make no effort to escape from it is indeed disgraceful. In friendship, as in love, we are often happier through our ignorance than our knowledge. Nothing can be further apart than true humility and servility. Cuban Engll sit. Many of the visiting Cuban teachers during tlicir stay In this country picked up a few words and phrases of English, the meaning of which they hardly understood. Near the Univer sity of Pennsylvania a coal cart driv er, who was standing beside his team, started a conversation with a stout Cuban Senor, says the Philadelphia Record. "So you're a Cuban, are you?" he asked. "Sure," was the rather slangy reply. "You like this country?" "All right." "Were you born in Cuba?" "Sure." "How old are you?" "All right." This ended the conversation, as the eonlcart driver apparently felt that his well-meant efforts were not ade quately rewarded. Iho l'ollte l*liynlc-IHJi. A lady of literary fame once re quested Dr. Reil, the celebrated medi cal writer, to call at her house. "Be sure you recollect the address." she said as she quitted the room, "No. 1 Chesterfield street." "Madam," said the doctor, "I am too great an admirer of politeness not to remember Chester field, and, I fear, too selfish ever to forget Number One."—Argonaut, OUR BUDGET OF HUMOR LAUGHTER-PROVOKING STORIES FOR LOVERS OF FUN. It W as a Bargain—T.itorary Pursuits—Hoi Amendment His Qualifications llls Conjecture—lnured to Disorder— How He Disposed of Ilim, Etc., Etc. "For your thoughts, miss, I will gladly give this," Said the youth, as he held up a penny. "Well, I think one kiss I would surely not miss," Answered the maid, "fcm amopg so many." —Chicago Daily News. Her Amendment. "Well, umbrellas have had an in ninty," said Mr. Snaggs, after the shower. "Perhaps you mean an outing," an swered Mrs. Snaggs. Literary Pursuit*. "I pity authors who have to lead such sedentary lives." "Sedentary! You don't call chasing publishers a sedentary life, do you?"-* Chicago Record. Hi* Qualification*. "Yes, I advertised for a hoy," said the coal dealer, throwing out his chest. "What qualifications have you?" "I can lie a little, sir," replied the boy, timidly.—Answers. His Conjecture. Servant—"There's a niau at the door says he is hungry and has no home." Mr. Gotrox—"Ask him which of my daughters it is that he wants. It must be another one of those foreign noble, men."—Judge. Inured to Disorder. "Jack, you ought to straighten up your writing table." "Lemme alone, Julia; if I were to straighten up this table I couldn't find a thing on it until it got all mussed up again."—lndianapolis Journal. How He Disposed of Him. "Yes. sir," said the returned Ivlon diker, "one of my dogs—just a common mongrel—saved my life." "And you were not heartless enough to sell him, were you?" they asked. "Naw. X ate him."—lndianapolis Tress. Ills Very Own. "It is a Rubens, is it not?" said the visitor, turning from an inspection of the painting to the hostess. "My husband's name," replied Mrs. Caswell, with cutting distinctness, "Is William. It's his all right, tjiougb. He paid .S7OOO for it."—Chicago Tribune. Too Late. Stuttering Employer (writing a let ter) —'"B-b-b-boy, hand me a b-b-b-bl-bl bl-" Office Boy—"A blotter, sir, do you wish?" Stuttering Employer—"Never mind n-n-n-now; the ink has d-d-d-dried." Harper's Bazar. Source of His Inspiration. The poet's eyes flashed as he heard a woman's footsteps upon the stairs. "Ah," he mused, "'tis she! My in spiration!" And fell to writing again. For he had heard the footsteps of his landlady, and his board was over due.—Harper'3 Bazar. Not a Case of Tliat Kind. "Now that you are married," said her intimate friend, "do you intend to hyphenate your name and call your self Mrs. Plumb-Duff?" "No," replied the lovely bride, with a shy glance at her fond and proud young husband. "This is not a con solidation. It's an absorption." The Idea! The sweet notes of the song roso from the girls' room on the floor be low. "I'm saddest when I sing," were the words. "Most women are," growled the cyn ic on the floor above, "because they can't sing and talk at the same time." —Detroit Free Press. He Got IJiRRpr Help*. Lady of the House (addressing young five-year-old who, with his parents, had been invited to dinner)—" Well, my little man, how did you enjoy your dinner?" Youngster—"Pretty well! Sometimes we don't have any better dinners at home; Hut I always get bigger helps." —Berliner Tageblatt. How He Got Religion. "Did you ever get religion?" asked the revivalist. "Well, I should say so—IBS pounds of it," replied the man. "A hundred and thirty-eight pounds of religion!" cried the revivalist. "llow did you get that?" "The only way that a good many men ever get religion," was the reply. "I married it."—Chicago Post. Worth Preserving. Burroughs—"Sorry to have kept you waiting so long for that fiver I owe you, but I'll scud you a check to-mor row." Markley—"For Goodness' sake, don't!" Borrouglis—"Why not ?" Markley—"Because I'd lie tempted to throw In another fiver for a frame for It."—Catholic Standard and Times. Feminine Diplomacy, "Flow do you get on with your new neighbors?" "Very nicely," answered Mrs. Illy kins. "We pursued our usual pro gramme, and as soon as they moved in sent over and asked to borrow their wash tubs, flat irons, gas stove and baby grand piano." "But you have all such things your self." "Of course. What I wanted to do was to head them off."—Washington Star. TIME FOR KANSAS FARMERS. How a State University Professor Dodged an Injuetioii. Kansas is famous for its oddities. Now It is furnishing time calculated from tlie stars to the farmers who live within a radius of twenty miles of the town of Lawrence, first made famous by the Quantrell raid in war times. Lawrence is the seat of the State university. It is a dignified and learned town, and almost the entire population claims kinship with the people of New England, and even the streets have been named after the thirteen original States. The university buildings are situated on the top of one of the high est hills in Kansas, rising a veritable j mountain on the plains. From the campus can be seen a checkerboard of fertile farms stretching away in every ( direction. Professor Lucien I. Blake, bimself a Massachusetts man, is the head of the department of physics and electri cal engineering of the university. Last December he began to furnish the - farmers for twenty miles abound tlie university with the correct time. He put a large foghorn whistle operated by steam on the roof of the physics department shops, ami at 11 o'clock every morning, when the standard time was received from Washington over the wires of the Western Union Telegrapli Company, lie caused the whistle to be blown. When the farm ers heard the whistle they hastened to correct the time given by their watches and clocks. As soon as the telegraph company learned the meaning of the whistle, and that its time news was leaking out over the town and adjoining coun try without compensation to itself. It secured a writ of injunction which silenced the whistle. Then Professor Blake began to study astronomy and determined to furnish his farmer friends with sidereal time if lie was not permitted to serve them witli the solar brand from Washington. Side real time is that obtained from obser vations of the movements of the stars. To obtain these observations in the daytime he bored a small bole through the roof of the building and down through every floor to the cellar. Through this hole, and with the aid of instruments for the purpose, he was able to calculate time to the thou sandth fraction of a second. As soon as he was able to do this he started up the whistle at 11 o'clock every day, and once more the farm ers got the correct time, while the in genious professor laughed the tele graph company's Injunction to seorn. Since then the farmers thereabouts have been living by star time. The Irish Hedge School. > The educational structure for which, taking advantage of the toleration of Government, the hedge schoolmaster now abandoned his al fresco establish ment, was a very humble one of its kind. The peasantry, animated by the strong Irish love of learning, buiit it for him—just as in modern days they assemble and build huts for evicted tennuts. It was not a very formidable undertaking. A deep, dry ditch or trenc hby the roadside was usu ally selected for the site. At the side of the trench an excavation of the re quisite area was dug, so that the clay hank formed three sides of the iu elosure; this saved tlie trouble of build ing walls. Then tlie fourth side, or front side wall, with a door and two windows, was built of green sods laid in courses, while similar sods raised tlie hack to the required height and pointed the galile ends. Voting trees and wattles cut from tlie nearest wood and hound together with straw ropes and wltlics formed tlie roof limbers. Over these were spread brambles, then V came a layer of "scraws," or Blahs of healthy hog surface, anil over all a thatching of rushes. The earthen floor was pared to an approach to a level, tlie rubbish cleared away, au.i a pathway made to the public road. There was your hedge schoolhouse, ready for business.—Donahoe's. The liny Webster. Daniel Webster ns a lad is thus de scribed by John Bacli McMaster, the historian, In the first of his illustrated papers on tlie statesman, published in the Century: As the boy grew in years and stat ure iiis life was powerfully affected by the fact that he was tlie youngest son and ninth child in a family of ten; that ids health was far from good; that he showed tastes anil mental traits that stood out in marked con trast with those of his brothers and % 4 sisters; and that he was, from infancy, , J (lie pet of the family. Such dally work I as a farmer's lad was then made to do was not for him. Yet lie was ex pected to do something, ninl might ' have been seen barefooted, in frock "y and trousers, astride of the horse that \ dragged tlie plow between the rows of i corn, or raking hay, or binding the I wheat the reapers cut, or following tlie cows to pasture in the morning and j home again at night, or tending logs J in his father's sawmill. When sueli j work was done it was his custom to I take a hook along, set the log, hoist | the gates, and while the saw passed i slowly through the tree-trunk, an op (■ration which, in those days, coil- ! sumed some twenty minutes, he would settle himself comfortably and read. Tli© Putho* of Obenity. A very fat woman sat on tlie front seat of a rather crowded cable car, while two thin women were making 1 little Ineffectual passes and rushes to got by her and off. The fat woman wiggled and twisted, and then looked at them with honest, grieved eyes. "I'd get up and go out of your way if there only was somewhere to put myself!" she said humbly. The pathos of obesity could no V further go!— Chicago Times-Herald.