HBa tare
, D AUTHOR OF TNE CAME AND THE CAWLCj
cpfYavr 90 or eaxsi-ssyrtMi ca
YNOPSI.
' K-TIl l,or? Vn on Long Nland. nor
Jorlt f'r. where Miss Emily
rranch, relative of Kthan Ffr-m h.
' inuffiurf of th celebrated "M-r-eury
automobile, losee her way. The
YV "aa etopp.nl and her rnuain. t'lck
5.:!.,!c.1' lo """'Idled with drink to
lEf! r1h They meet another car
wnicn la run by a profi-s.il, msl racer
' ITI l-aetranga. Tha lato-r rtxee up
Trench car and directs Miss Kfrench
5. ' . proceed homeward. Ethan
rrreaeh haa disinherited hia aon. who
. . disappeared. He Informa Emllv
plainly that ha would like to have her
- marry nick, who la a (nod matured but
in.ioi renew it agpeers that a
tartner of Ethan Kfrench wanting an ex
.. P"1 t race with tha "Mercury" at auto
haa engaged l-estranne. and at
''ranch factory Emily encounters the
young man. They refer pleasantly to
thalr meeting when Wok omea along and
T?coenlsee) tha young racer. Dick llkea
the way Leatrange Ignores their Ural
'-tnaaUng when ha appeared to a dlead
vantage. I.eslran-e tella Emily that he
. will try to educate her Indifferent cousin
aa an automobile expert. Kick under
takes) ' hie bualneaa achoollnic under the
tutelage of Leatranite. luck la aheer rrlt.
and In making a teat race mceta with
an accident (.estrange meets Emily In
, , ne moonlit garden of tha Efrench home
Under an Impulse ha cannot control he
ktsaee her and aha leavea him. confessing
In har own heart that aha returns his
Jo. Tha uncle of Emily, learning of
oer attachment to Lestrange. Informa her
. that tha man la his disbarred aon. whom
ha haa never aean before being adopted
'-y him. Ha claims that hla son ran away
1 with a dlaaoluta actreaa, refuses to ae--.
knowledge him. and orders Emily to
think of Dick aa her future husband. A
i'lK raca la on In tha south and Ethan
Kfrench takea Emily to sea It.
' CHAPTER VIII (Continued).
"My mother was a Callfornlan," Le-
- etrange once said, coming back from
a tour of Inspection. "She waa twenty
ttmea as much alive as any Ffrench
that ever existed. I've been told. I
fancy she passed that quality on to
. me you know she died when 1 was
born for I nearly drove the family
mad. They expect--! the worst of me.
and I gave the best worst I bad. But."
, .be turned to Dick the clear candor of
tola smile, "it waa rather a decent
- worst, I honestly believe. The most
outrageous thing I ever did was to
lead a set of seniors in hoisting a cow
Into the dean's library one night, and
r o get myself expelled from college.
A cowl" the other echoed.
A rat cow, and It mooed," he
stuffed the pillow into a more com
. rortable position. "Is that our car
. running In? No. It's Just passing. If
Frank doesn't wreck my machine, I
- get this race. And then, the same
eek, my chum and roommate ran
way with a Doraflora girl of some va
riety snow and married her. 1 was
romantic myself at twenty-one. ao
helped him through with 1L He was
wealthy and she was pretty; It seemed
to fJL I believe they've stayed mar
nea ever since, by the way. But
somehow the reporters got alTalrs
mixed and published me as the bride
groom. Have you got a cigar f
smoke about three tlmea a year, and
this la one of them. Yes. there was
One scene when I went home that
night, a Broadway melodrama. 1 lost
my temper easier then; by the time
my father and uncle gave me time to
speak. I was too angry to defend mv
self and aet tbem right. I supposed
tbey would learn the truth by the
next day. anyhow. And 1 left home
lor good In a dinner coat and raglan
' with something under ten dollars In
odd change. What's that!"
"That." was the harsh alarm of Uie
. smcial klaxon, coupled with the cry
of countless voices. The ambulance
gong clanged as l.estrange sprang to
&is ieei ana reacned tne door.
"Which car?" he called.
Rupert answered first:
"Not ours. Number eight's burning
up alter a smasn on the far turn."
"Jack s ear. Identified l.estrange,
anu stood tor an instant "Go flag
t-rads; in take tne machine again
myself It's one o'clock, and I've got
to win tms race.
Several men ran across to the track
In compliance. l.estrange turned to
make ready, but paused beside the
awed Dick to look over the infield.
Me was in to cnange a tire ten
rnluutes ago," observed Rupert, beside
them. "'Tell Lestrange I'm doln' time
-caicnin mm, ne yelled to me. Here's
hoping bis broncho machine pitched
tiini clear rroin the fireworks."
When the Mercury car swung In. a
moment later, Lestrange lingered for
s last word to Dick.
"I'm engaged to Emily," be said
gravely. "I don't know what she will
bear of me; If anything happens, I ve
told you the truih. I'm old enough to
Fee It now. And I tried to square
things.
" alowW aMJ ta
do tt wtthovi
ley. "But It wont be any use to send
for Mr David, because ba wool
come."
The autocrat of bis little world
looked from one rebel to the other,
confouuded with the unprecedented
"If I wish to withdraw him. It Is to
place htm out ot danger." be retorted
with asperity. "Not because 1 wish to
mortify him. naturally, la that clear?
Dues be want to pass the next thirteen
hours under this ordeal?"
"I ll tell you what be wants."
swered Dick.' "He wants to be let
alone. It seems to me he's earned
that."
west curve, hurtled roaring down the Ethan Ffrench opened his lips and
straight stretcb past the stand and closed them agalo without apeecb. It
DAIRY 1
CHAPTER IX.
In the delicate, fresh June dawn
the Ffrencb limousine crept into the
Ueach Inclosure.
"We're here," said Bailey, to bis
traveling companions. "You can't park
the car In front by tbe fence; Mr.
David might see you and kill himself
by a mlsturn. Come up to the grand
at and seats."
Mr. Ffrencb got out In silence and
assisted Emily to decend; a pale and
wide-eyed Emily behind ber velL
Tbe boys were calling extras," she
suggested faintly. "Tbey said three
accident on the track."
Bailey turned to a blue and gold of
flclal passing.
"Number seven all right?" be
asked.
"On tbe track, Lestrange driving,
waa the prompt response. "Leading
y thirty-two miles."
A little of Emily's color rushed back.
Satisfied, Bailey lead their way to tbe
tiers of seats, almost empty at this
hour. Pearly, unsubstantial in the
young light, lay (he huge oval meadow
and the track edging it
"I've sent over for Mr. Dick," Bailey
Informed tbe other two. "He's been
Aere, ant f can tell what's doing
care are out ot the raew. There's ,
wr. oarfd com In a
crossed before tbem. the mechanician
rising In his seat to catch the pendant
linen streamers and wlp the dust
from the driver's goggles In prepara
tion for the "death turn" ahead. There
was a series of raplj explosions as tbe
driver shut off his motor, the machine
swerved almost facing the infield
fence and slid around the bend with a
skidding lurch that threw a cloud of
soil high In the air. Emily cried out
Mr. Ffrench half rose in bis place.
"What's the matter?" dryly queried
Bailey. "He's been doing that all
night; and a pretty turn he makes,
too. He's been doing It for about Ave
years. In fact, earning his living, ontj
we didn't see him. Here goes an
other." Mr. Ffrench put on hla plnce-nes,
preserving the dignity of outward
composure. Emily saw and beard
nothing; she was following Lestrange
around tbe far sides of tbe course,
around until again be flashed past
her, repeating bis former feat with
appalling exactitude.
It was hardly more than five pi In
utes before Dick came hurrying to-
ward them; cross, tired. dUBt streaked
and gasolene-scented.
"I don t see why you wanted to
come," be began before be reached
them. "I'm busy enough now. We re
leading; If Lestrange holds out we'll
win. But he's driving alone; Frank
went out an hour ago, on the second
relief, when he went through the pad
dock fence and broke bis leg It didn't
hurt tbe machine a bit. except tires,
but tt lost us twenty-six laps. And It
leaves Lestrange with thirteen steady
hours at the wheel He says be can
do It."
"He'a lit?" Bailey questioned.
Dick turned a peevish regard upon
htm.
"I don't know what you call Ot He
says he Is. His bands are blistered al
ready, his right arm baa been band
aged twice where he hurt tt pulling
me away from the gear-cutter yester
day, and he's bad 'bree hours' rest
out of the last eleven. See that heap
of Junk over there; that's where the
Alan car burned up last night and
sent Its driver and mechanician to the
hospital. I suppose If Lestrange Isn't
At and makes a mlscue we'll see
something like that happen to him and
Rupert"
"No!" Emily cried plteously.
Remorse clutched Dick.
"I forgot you, cousin," he apologized.
had not been his life's bablt to let
people aloue and tbe art was acquired
with difficulty
ECONOMICAL TO RAISE COWS
Found More Profitable and Preferable
Than Buying Give Milk Ttstlng
High In Butterfat.
ny U MOUSE.)
I have found It more profitable and
aIteredITtheir meaning
Phrases. P.mI"9 Thf-a
t.one, Become Dl.tor ""
Generally Acknowl.uged.
Word building I. a.
of carpentry a. I now bfW"
Only It take, loiter. So.net lines a
' o v.ul by that time the
century more. And by
ord's tlrnt meaning ""'
the old ,,r'' f"r
..,11, One s K'H'd
"ped
mm
.dm., i me.h.nd tha Preferable to raise my cows rather
feeling, you describe." be conceded, at Jhn ,hp"- A few years ago while
lasL "Rut ,h, i. . nerann who "V'"K In Pennsylvania. I had some
experience along both lines. In two
last "But there la one person who
has the right to decide whether David
shall continue this risk of bis life.
Emily, do you wish the car with
drawn?"
"I?" tha young girl exclaimed
amaxed. "J can call him here safe '
Her voice died out as Lestrange'a
car roared past, overtaking two rivals
on the turn and sliding between tbem
too. The
... . e
was poor
Instances, rlrcunistunces necessitated
my buying cows to replenish a dairy
herd. In all I bought nine cows, and
at the time thought I was buying very
carefully.
Out of the nine, only two proved to
be in any wise deslrablo, the remain
der being from ordinary to poor, and
not profitable enough to keep In the
JL
with an audacity that provoked rounds . th . f , h , disposed
oi applause from tbe spectators. io
call him In from that, to have him sate
with ber tbe mere thought was a de
light that caught her breath. Yet, she
knew Lestrange.
The three men watched ber In keen
suspense. The Mercury car bad
passed twice again before she raised
ber head, and in that space ot a hun
dred seconds Emily reached the final
unselfishness.
"What David wants" aha said
"Uncle, what David wants.'
"You're a brick!" cried Dick, In a
passion of relief. "Emily, you're a
brick!"
She looked at him with eyea ba
never forgot.
will
ed
Kor example,
"nelchhur"
.. ., .1.1. .. uua Liiown ones
Lib" Till, btvan... h''?"r''"
godsib: an J later to "p-h-U' 1"
the words whole liiennlng tnn..M
and go-flp no loiter meant
neighbor, but applied to the sort of
talk exchanged between good nelgn-
bora.
Take the word "farmer,
.o,l for "farmer
(And "boor" later was used for de
scribing farmer-like, or ronnh. per
sons.) Tho farmer living nearest to
one was known as the "nigtiboor.
and this phrase, In course of time,
was twisted to "neighbor "
You've heard the proverb. "Little
pitchers have Mg ears" Well. It
doesn't refer to tho utensil that holds
water or goes to the corner side door
"Pitcher'' was a slang term with
some such meaning as our word "chap"
or "fellow." Thus. "Little fellows
have "big enrs" Is a more sensible
rendering of the proverb.-Chicago
Journal.
ci."v-i-i;i
,-aa.7 JfcsaVtaK-f-'
i
7 w
1- f ,1
If"
GAL ATA V
0
Handy Cow Stanchion.
of at a discount from tbe purchase
price. In the meantime I had grow
ing up six heifers from the best cows
In a large dairy herd of grade Jerseys.
and nut nt a thomnirhhra.l .lerapv hull.
If anything happens to him. I hope Thplla .A ... , nn(W r,llf.trB1
die too." she answered, and drew Jerey bu of g0O(, mdlvl,Iuttl merU
the silk veil across ber face.
and approved pedigree, and their most
"Go back. Mr. Dick, you're no good nronil.ln- hBfr, ,.1,.,, , Pnwhood
here." advised Bailey. In the pause. ,h,, tha ,
I guess MISS Emily I. right, Mr. Almost wlthnut exception th cows
Ffrench; we've got nothing to do but thu. . ,, on. iv.
look on, for David Ffrench waa wiped lne mlxk .. hitrh m hotter fat. the
average herd producing a pound of
butter from much less than twenty
pound, of milk, while such cows as
I had been obliged to buy would not
make the same amount from less than
twenty-five pounds of milk.
The stanchion shown In the Illus
tration, which is self-explanatory, will
be found handy In any cow barn. The
lever attached to the end Is used for
out to make Darling Lestrange.
When Lestrange came Into his
camp for oil and gasolene, near eight
o'clock. Dick seized the brief halt, the
first In three hour.
"Emily's up In the stand," be an
nounced. "Send her a word, old man;
and don't get reckless In front of ber.
"Emily?" echoed Lestrange, too
weary for astonishment "Give me a
pencil. No, I can't take off my gaunt- opening and closing.
let; lt'a glued fast I'll manage. Ru
pert, go take an hour's rest and aend
me the other mechanician."
"I can't get off my car; It's glued
fast," Rupert confided, leaning over
the back of the machine to appropri
ate a sandwich Trom the basket a man
was carrying to tbe neighboring camp.
Go on with your correspondence.
dearest"
So resting the card Dick supplied on
SCK sgulu tl' ,,f
lined world sr. cciitereu u,-
the chaum-l of foniainlii'
wl,d on the Thracl-a I'o.por
u. which form, the outlet t
senaruto. the continent of Asia from
T .. Kurope. The c,:nn:. .r.:.
from th Uuk." '' ".nj
mora, and her It run. Into h lnl
UtckeU little body of ..IT. l' '"'"
nople lie. upon an arm of thla
known a. th. tioMen Horn on the Ku
rope.n .Ida. There Is .carcely a oil
f water on lha face of the
who... name api-are more frequently
In the annals of hutnsn history than
this narrow channel. A the history
of the world center. o largely along
the bank, of the Hler Ithlne .Ince
renierou
l: o po r us. Hut there Ilea betaeeaCta
tunny aud the strait, a vast popuhttloi
uusymplhotlo because not Teutol,
hostile to Germany's siplrsUaoa
(iraat Britain, Franca and Italy anu
terly out of the quest Ion as cotin
ling Constantinople and the Knapon
but each of those nations would oppos,
the control of the advantageous poujt
by any of the other three bacsoss si
the power that would grow out of H4
acquisition.
What look, likely In the future froaj
the preaeut polut of view la the oep,
liatlon of a pan-llalk.n ronfedersug.
of stale, after the fashion of tbs Qar
man empire. Consolidation Is th.es
der of our era from manufactscini
plants and financial enterprise, to u
tioual government, and racial soHdw
Ity. The world owes the Culled Buiaj
PRETTY LANGUAGE OF LOVE
In Switxerland Flowers Ar Msds Us
of by Thos Who Seek Their
Compsnlons In Lite.
In remote Alpine hamlets snd vtl
lBges especially In the Bernese Obcr
land there still exist ancient and pret
ty customs of proposing marriage by
the language of flowers. If a maid
accepts a bouquet of edewelss from a
accepts a bouquet of edelweiss from .
him as her fiance, the Idea being that
the man has risked Ills life to obtain
the flowers for the woman he loves.
Another method which exists In th
Canton of Glarus la for the young man
to place a flowerpot containing a .In
gle rose and a note on the window
sill of the girl's room when she Is ab
sent from home and wait perhaps
duys for a reply If the maid takes
the rose, the young man boldly en
ters the house to arrange matters
with her parents, but If the rose Is al
lowed to fade away the proposal Is re
jected without a single word having comlll( do.n fr, ,h...e Immense rlv- territory I. agriculturally rich. po
a C.....B. els II
. ." .1" ...... fo, .om thousand l""n to be l-aroed from the fa
ear. before C.ar . day. and so I '; aUI O-rwan, ha. Uk.
......i lr...lv .Ince then All j '""' " n anu is pmnting )
sround the lllack sea. on the Asiatic
shores snd on the F.urp-an. lie Im
mensely broad stretches of the most
faiPfltal llttt ,1 unoti the sIoIm- Immense
rivers drain thla territory, keeping lha
lllack .. a full and overflowing through
the Bosporus From the first fawu of
history a large population has always
found hotn.-s on these fertile lands.
and as commerce developed lis pam
it This la suggested as tha outran.
of the present war of tbe lialksaa
Population Missd.
The population of the ststes km
under review I. very mixed. Its aa
tlm.nta are neither Asiatic Dor Kun
pean. but a kind of mixture of tetk
In this way lha new federation woaM
play an Important part aa a buffer ba
lwm Kussla and western Kurope ud
way. multiplied along the . uxlne .... , between the I to continents. Tw
HOLSTEIN COW IS SUPERIOR
No Breed Excels In Great Constitu
tional Vigor and In Fulfillment
of All Requirements.
No breed excel, the Holsteln In
great constitutional vigor. Holsteln
milk fulfills most completely all re
quirements when food for Infants and
invalid, la under consideration.
The suggestion that milk richest In
fat Is not the best for building up
strength In babies seems to be proved
been exchanged between the couple.
Sometimes a fickle girl will keep a
young man waiting a day or two for
an answer, but whatever It may be It
Is considered final.
(,,, the south la the .VI .dlt.-r seaaes great mineral OepoallS. Mam
ranean a large b-dy of Inland waters' l-d over with magnificent foraata, .
replenished by sll the overflow of the) rut tT One rivers and offers sdvast
Black sea and multitudinous rlvere 1 - fr wonderful development
from the Nile to the Khon... surround j ',ry reap- f..r the upbuilding st
ed by broader and richer land., and magnificent cities at many polata
a. commerce grew up around lha M. d ; With the llp.rus. the ttea of Mar
Secret of Hannlne...
Most of us begin well. When we it,,rr.,,n n. t,ihs rrosaed thoa of mora and the Dardanelles In
are quite young, we are full of faith. lh ,..,,,., ,, ,h k., , inn Black "lt of the confederation a fleet
We believe In others, and we also be
lieve In our own powers of overcoming
faults and fallings.
We set out full of the rest of life
no hill Is too high to cllmti, no point
too lofty to reach.
Hut later most of us get discour
aged. We find that our friends are not
sea. and the Bosporus became the con arehlps might be collected stros
nectlng link between. B. low the Sea ! etiougn to bid defiance to bait IM
of Marmora the outlet for tha Black world
sea waters Is the strait of the I "or
danelles. shorter but broader tt.an the
Bosporus
Important Waterway.
Important as this bit of water waa
so noble aa we thought them, that It t0 ,he 4ncU.Ilt 1)ri, u u mrft ,
Is much harder to root out our faults , Ilow iml ,, becoming Increasingly
and fallings than we Imagined, and ,0 M th, Jw tttM With tha d-.el
perhaps In time to take up the fool- opm,.nt of modern nsxal warfare the
Ish. soul-destroying Idea that so long mportanr of Constantinople rises to
as we are "no worse than other peo- , predominance In European snd Asl-
pie" It Is all right. ltlc i(ulr, iCMrri.y r,,ua,.,i tr ,ny
Let us try to keep the high Idea!. othr p,,,,,, th(, lh(,r, f h.
that we learned at our mother's knee, r.,r,ti(.n,. lr . r
to still keep our faith In human na
gets possession of Constantinople and
Excellent Herd Leader.
by the fact that human milk contains
about three per cent, of fat. That fat
in milk provides heat appears proba
ble, when It Is remembered that the
camel, a more or less tropical animal,
gives milk containing only about three
tier cent, of fat. whllo In tho milk
of the dolphin whale, which Inhabits
the waters of tho colder regions, tho
fat percentago Is not less than 4.1 8
The milk of the reindeer contains 17
per cent, of fat. The fat of Holsteln
milk is very finely divided Into glob
ules or particles, and Is very thor
oughly mixed with tho milk or emul
sified.
flirt, nn m.Mi. K.iu, ..ft..n . .......
, " "-. - " " control, the passage of the I nrdinelle
disappointed. It us still strive for Bosporus It will be very possible
perfection and resolve to do our best ,or ,0 dnilnata the forlune f all
again and again, no matter how often! Kurope At the mouth of the great
we may fall. For only by doing this river, that empty Into the Kux.'ne will
van ee aeep our iieans young. How
ever old we may live to be. and only
so can we be our best and do our
best.
If these Teutonic empires .hoold st
brought together they will con.tltslt
a formidable menace to all of Rarest
east and west of tbem. Ko far Engllsl
Influence at Vienna united with that el
St. I'etnraburg baa kept Austria s4
Germany apart But as the (rati
game Is played out there Is no tatllag
what combinations may be ma
which would send thla power to as
rlfire a knight or a castle and tasl
power to give up a bishop or a base
ful of pawns to protect the king ti
together It Is one of the great sal
games of war and diplomacy evet
played by th nations of the world.
English View of Our Politic.
"There are few positions on earth se
the! .fil.h President Tail
"r"r,"" op" orrupf until March 4 -repudiate.
Z , l"""'ru"'"n uf by his countrymen', vote, tut .tUI
naval I w.rfa, a"n' l" oV ' " ,h- '"rM,
. mal i.)ttwt. mm va lha lindtin I htlm
' t I . I L' rl Rl ... .a. a A
of to.lav to c.,.,..r.,c . t r i.i ' ' levelati.1 s ungiove.i nano.
Prepare for Winter.
The cows should go Into winter
quarter, that are thoroughly clean,
bright and sunny. This means that
the cobwebs on the walls and ceilings
must be cleaned away, a good coat of
whitewash should be applied, all tho
broken window lights replaced and tho
window, niacin clean enough so that
tbe sun can shine through.
"Her. Goe. Another."
Don't go off; Lestrange .wears be
feels fine and gibes at me for worry
ing. Don't look like that."
Richard, you will go down and or
der our car withdrawn from the race,"
Mr. Ffrench stated, with his most ab
solute finality. 'This has continued
long enough. If we bad not been ar
rested In New York for exceeding th
speed limit, I should have been here
to end this scene at midnight"
Stunned, bis nephew stared at blm.
"Withdraw I"
"Precisely. And desire David to
com here."
won't," said Dick flatly. "If you
want to rub It Into Lestrange that
way. send Bailey. And I say it' a
confounded shame.
"Richard!"
HI. round face ablaze, Dick thrust
hi. band. In bl. pocket., facing bl.
uncle stubbornly.
After bis splendid fight, to .top him
now? Do you know bow tbey take be
ing put out, thos fellows? Why,
when th Italian car went off the track
for good, laxt night, with It. chain
tangled up with everything under
neath, Its driver sat down and cried.
And you'd come down on Lestrang
when he'a winning I won't do It,
f woo'tf Send Ualley; I can't 111
Mm."
If yoo want to discredit tho ear
the steering wheel, Lestrange wrote a
difficult two lines.
Good Dairy Farmer.
A good dairy farmer haa been de
scribed as "a good general farmer
r aoliiM aiot around the and Its a1 river, ttr. rfrenoa, on can
He was out again on the track plus the love of cows." This Is a good
when Dick brought th message to definition, because the nun who does
Emily. not have a fondness for cattle and
I Just 'old htm you were here, who does not find some satisfaction in
cousin," he whispered In her ear, and caring for them seldom turns out to
dropped th card In ber lap. be a very capable and prosperous
I'll enjoy this mor than ever, with dairy farmer.
you her," ah read. "If. the right
place for my girl. I'll glv you th Good Investment.
cup for our first dinner table, tonight a tank heater Is a good Investment
DAVID." for a dairyman to warm the water for
Emily lifted her face. Th tragedy both cow. and hogs. It take, consld-
of th .cen was gone. Lestrange'. arable feed to take the bump out of a
eye. laughed at her out of a mist Th I cow's back after sha has Oiled up on
ky waa blue, the sunshine golden; lea cold water.
the merry crowds commencing to pour
In wok carnival In ber heart Buy While Cheao.
He .aid to tell you th machln Experience the last twenty year
wa. running magnificently," auppla- prove, that both grain and rough feed
mented Dick, "and not to Insult hi. I are cheaper in the fall than at any
veteran reputation by getting nervoua.
He', coming by look."
H waa coming by; and. although
unable to look toward the grand stand
be raised bl. band In salute a. h
passed, to th on b knew wa
watching. Emily flushed rosily, her manurlal substances and apply them
dark eye. warm and shining. where they are most noednd by tho
"I can wait," .he alghad, gratefully, (rowing crops.
"Dickie, J can watt until It end.
Old Rules for Diplomats.
Thn Turkish government used i
one time to make foreign envoys in
Constantinople conform In some d
gree to Mussulman customs. They
were not allowed to appear In nuhlle
accompanied by their wives as thla
practice might havo caused
burnings among the ,,.iMvp women
who could never hope to be treated
on an equality will, their husbands
Endeavors were ulu ...!-
dairyman is to Increase the amount of time to extend Mohammed'. ,r, ?."."
tlon of wine to for-l,; diplomats This
was found Impossible, mt until the
other time. So If you will have to
buy this winter, buy now.
Business of Dairyman.
The most important business of tho
t-n..f, inn .im-i ll-llHl 'nil Mini Ihm - .,
Victim for Each Bulldina. Kuslne co.,tml. , l,v .,:rll . un" ,n '''""' "
The belief. Illustrated I,, the hnllun1 r,w..r th.... e...... ... " . : successor . Inauguration tne outgom.
of "The Bridge of Arts." that a humaiJble by the combined fore. 'f ,he ! Pf",l,,"nt rhr"- tk
victim Is required to Insure the sta world. It would not be nr.... ,,,,. I Inauguration of Mr McKlnley In 1W
, in... 1 wiiu r ink ni,ib, ,i n sir
on iv or a or i I'm or ritoT,.-i bm. i..... .l i.. ... ...i.. ' in-u inin-u niv me, ......
in dreece today, J. A. I .aw son says.
mere is no muru.-r now it sullied; Bosporus wblih would railroad
to obtain, preferably from an enemy ! trains to pass from one rot. ..,,.- t ,,,
or an old person, a hair, nail paring j the other, r.-sult'.ng in an c k. f
shred of clothing, old sht.e or a threat!: commerce almost uniir.ai-ltiubl In .,
or stick marked with the person'. ' tent With the Iianl iin il.-s r atified '
lw.lr,l. ... r......l... .... I ..... ' I
mill i" mi iiieiiaure. anu uun 'iiu f 1 1 Mnrmoia and 'he i ; , , i ,i . - :
Horn would afford a rendezvous for
merchant ships for a La. k country I Presumption,
retichlng up lo Vl.-nna nn .net t!m ). I "'l.-iiiletiwn." said th" person B
ublal province, and Into I; ihm.i, withi'"''1 ""' ,,',',1'',l k','," "I"'" ll"
Asia on the other n!,e, r;, i-.,,.., (nn .feet without upsetting any of th
rich territories I'Me-i!,,.. ,) (1M n ; glnxHe. In front of blm. "I ran t mux.
lo I'ersla sin! the valley of ti, j.;,, la speech, but I will tell yoil a llttl
phrat. s, going .,n i,,wn In tin- tath of I '"ry that I think will be new to most
Mr
lis Ui
t-en rxamtnlng and signing bills I
hi. last official hours Klght years is
r..te his very last act bad been to hols
bis umbrella over lha head of hi.
c.ssor. Mr. Harrison, taking the osti
of office"
these beneath the foundation stone
The victim die. within a year, but th
building Is safe.
Even a shadow will do. Mr Law
son was himself dragged bm-k hv r
friend in Kantorlnl so that his shad"-.
might not fall across such a fata
spot; and the mayor of Agrlnlan tub
hirn that his four prcrfocc.Mirs bar.
all died from lettering their rhadowr
fall on foundation stone, laid by them
Birds Commit Suicide.
A very si range occurrence In t.a
tlonal history has been nen the
Iloodi d coimiry of tbe Ken dlHtrut b,
eastern England. A narrow bank
runs along.-bte a Hooded ana of in ar
ly L'.'MO a.res Walking along tl.is
wllh Intention of learning what bar
happened to his partridges, a keeper
put up a tovcy. It flew In the dire,
Hon of the longest arm of (lie flood
The birds, which were rather a late
hatched covey, after Hying some dls
tante. suddenly and at one moment
together dropped Into the water and
were all drowned.
It has been much discussed lately
how the partridges Hre able to fy
but the curious part of thlB collapse
was that the whole number fell slinul
taneously. as If they had decided to
die together
now."
Dick weot back.
(TO BC CONTINUED.,
In.ur Aoaln.t Hard Times.
A good dairy herd will Insure a man
against hard time, better than any-
thing !.,
""""""" co;oii.i. into dla and
to thn hank, of the Indus
Tbe nation which could make the
best use of this strategic ,,,,
be Kussla. and the Mus.ohio l,a. c
et.d It for !Nn year, but .!, ,,,,
tlon has been balk, ,) tly the J.-.-, ,ial...
of rival European i,.AeM T.
nation that might make the e,,.,,,,.,,
use of tbe position would b- Austria
with lis Hungarian
lation neither pur-ly Eun
purely Asiatic (ierman
antiex, nn, a, pi,,
ranks third
In the l.osHlbll.lle. pres. ,,. ,, ,r j ,,
tlonal coiuuieri lal dev.-b,.., i .. ., . . .
' ey i no
possession of Conslantinonli, ,,,( ,
RELIC OF GREAT ADMIRAL
English Mu.eum Hit Toy Ship Be
lieved to Have Been Con.truct
d by Lord Nelson.
An Intere.trng addition has Just
been mudo to the historical exhibits In
the museum of the Koyal I'nlted Herv
lee Institution. London It consist, of
a little ship which la believed to have
been nt one til.,., I tm ,,..,., f)f
Lord ,-elHon. and possibly wa. the tov
vessel It, rigging and handling from
which the great admiral learnt the
rudiments of seamanship. At all
events, some forty year. g, ,h, w
given, with this tradition attaching to
her. to Lord Wolscley. who has now
generously presented her to the l,,.,,
tul Ion
Not only . thn lit tin boat built
and rlgg. ,1 on board thn merchant ves
M In which, under Itathbone, one of
his old petty olllcers, Captain Husk'
' i . .nim, nis nephew, for
of you "
'Say," asked a limn at I lie "''
end of the table, "where do you think
most of us have been all these y.-ar..
Homalls Efftct.
"Ilow was your muscle, Mr Won
bnt'"
"Aw, slow"
"Tim aiteudanre waa good; sums of
our best people were lu. re"
"Hut tbe affair bad no ginger Nt
time I'll have a nmn who kiow hi.
ess to go around yelling, "Who
wimi. thn handsome waiter?''
tb.i kind of action I like
That.
nnrl r.9 I I. ev
. v,. . ,K,,.cnTn vintury all the
wlno consigned 0 them h,,d ...
conveyed from the harbor in the dead f",1"0 "! '' ;,r" mnnhlp In 1772. but
of the night so that (he faithful should , 1 ?". 6 l"'"ihU) Also In-
uo contaminated by s.cng th. represent this shin.
jsccamd Ilguor. I "'pecta she Is mor lk an
armed merchantman of th period
limn a ship of the royal navy.
It Is beyond a doubt that If NelwB
helped to rig her aa part of his train
Ing for a sea life he would have kept
her as a memento of those early dsyt.
and now that she Is to be publicly
exhibited and attention Is directed W
her existence, It la hoped that further
light may be thrown upon her history.
Rello of Spanish Armada.
An anchor of the Hpanlsh armada
period, recovered from the Wallett, a
well known "swatchway," three nill
off Clncton, England, ha. been P'
ntcd to Colchester (Essex) Museum.
l-'or generations this anchor ha b
nn enemy to thn trawl, of local fisher
men, but at longth one of the flukr
beiaiu.i worn partially away, and
thn last trawl thnt struck It thus lift
' d It from tho ground.
Labor and Idl.nsss.
There Is but this dlfferenca between
labor and Idleness: That lab
l-rofllahl.. and pleasant
ness a troubln both
conifortle...-J0bt,n '