THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 9, 1913. AAiiyjc eras a cJnsDr! JffeyS Successes Diet for Indoor and Outdoor "Good Pie Is Not a Foe of Good Workers Cannot Be Fixed, Be cause Individuals Differ." Health and Civilization by Any Means. 99 BY JAMES B. MORROW. ASHINGTON, Feb. 1. (Special Correspondence.) A srn and tempered chieftain, a regular eld Andrew Jackson of the laboratory, was required to bring the makers and canners of food within the great law of 1906. The immense debt of the peo ple to Harvey W. Wiley can never be computed in dollars and cents. Bay the captains and the colonels who were with him in the long and savage fight. But a state of mind, others remark, can become petrified. Dr. Wiley, they assert, held every pickler and preserver to be obnoxiously reprehensible until they convinced his obstinate and skep tical Inner conscience that they were guiltless of wrong, either by act or in tent. He sat. they complain, on a ty rant's throne of his own construction, infallible and Inexorable, and his thun ders and his punishments disturbed the orderly procedure of a respectable and purified business. So, finally, the war having been fought and won, and the canners pen alized out of chemicals and. adultera i tions, a more benevolent administra ' tion was required. Civil government, ro th nre-ument ran. closed in behind General Sherman as he shot and burned his way from Atlanta to the ocean. In a word. Dr. Wiley, still rampant and breathing vengeance on an humbled and suffering Industry, should have sheathed his dripping sword, and, rlosely following the words of General Grant, addressed his shuddering ene mies, and said: "Keep your horses, gentlemen. You will want them to plow with in the Spring." While Dr. Wiley was not actually re moved from office, it is acknowledged that his position was made unbearable to a free-spoken and free-acting man. The Lilliputians, if that be a proper name for them, were tying the giant into utter helplessness, as he saw and felt Ills fast developing predicament. Therefore, he arose from the grouna, put his curt renunciation into writing, and fled to the eager hospitality of the Chautauqua circuit. Is Dr. Alsberg a Policeman f After months of reflection and inves tigation, though his critics lump the two words into one and call it dila toriness, President Taft chose Carl Lu cas Alsberg. A. M. M. D.. to be Dr. Wiley's successor. Intellectually and professionally, Dr. Alsberg meets every possible requirement of the very important place he is now occupying. He Is young enough to have Dr. Wiley for a father, but he ranks high among biological chemists. Whether he has the personality to make a successful chief of the Bureau of Chemistry, De partment of Agriculture, is not known at this time, even to himself. He is a great scientist. Is he also an adminis trator and a policeman? Food is much better than it used to be; it Is cleaner and purer. The blud geon of the law in Dr. Wiley's rough and willing hands changed the behav. lor of a good many ma nufacturers. Heads were whac&ed, and some may require the same heroic treatment in the future. Up to the call that brought aim from among his iiasks, filters and retorts. Dr. Alsberg was unseen and unknown to the public. Science, here and in Europe, had been enriched by his patient and original work. He had traveled in this and other countries. He was talented, amiable, shrewd, adaptable, modest and industrious. His achievements, his culture and his char, acteristics make him an ideal head chemist over the food of the American public, but has he the pluck to pillory an adulterator, and keep his head and hands in the holes of the frame until ae meekly promises to walk in the ways of righteousness? There will be such tasks to perform. Undoubtedly, can ners reformed by compulsion under Wi ley will experiment with Alsberg. Men who understand him say that all such ventures will fall. Dark of skin, with crimpy black hair and a friendly and handsome face. Dr. Terse Tales From THE ri'TCBB GREAT. Future analysts of Oriental literature must take into acccount the influence of the New York high school on the poetry of China, at least, if Oh Poo's dreams of the future come true, and he be accepted by his countrymen as a singer of the national songs. Literary historians will recall that tlte poet speut four years in a Harlem prepara tory school and that at this period of hia life 6ome of his most striking ef forts were dashed off. Oh Poo is now earning the price of a college course by leading a battalion of yellow skinned warriors in the battle scene of "The Daughters of Heaven." The wonders of this spectacle have made a stirring appeal to Mr. Poo's name. Among the bits of verse Inspired by ' them is one about the peaceful storks that wander about the scene in the palace gardens. One of the peacocks in the same setting figures as the villain. The style is that of Ting-Tung-Ling, Tang-Jo-Su or Li-Tai-Po, the great bards of the Orient, but the language may be traced to other sources. Mr. Poo writes: "Su Tchong's he is some stork, bis bill is like a burglar's Jimmy. He boss his wife and she behave, or else he peck her in the bean. But now he act in big. fine play, so stuck up he forget his wife. One of the peacecks. he spot tiic wife and give her the lamp. "And Su Tschong he don't get Jerry." Detroit Free Press. ALL THERE BIT THE BLANKET. Christie MacDonald. the fascinating "Spring Maid." gives this version of a newsboy's story of a fire, according to Young's Magazine: " 'We stood Broun" an" de smoke was rushin" out of de buildin". Gee, it was high. 1 guess it was seven or eight stories. De Are was comln' out and sveryone was yellin' an bowlin' an' iebells waa ringin' an he engines was sinokin' an' dere was firemen in froi.) an' dero was firemen at de side, but dere was no firemen in de alley. I says to Mickey, 'Let's go 'round' into de alley and see what's dere.' We went Alsberg also Is pleasing in manner and converse. He is unassuming end un technicaU not depending on the jargon of science of overawe his callers and to parade his own vocabulary and knowl edge. A recluse among bottles and ele ments, he might have lost his human qualities and emerged a prematurely wise old man. a pedantic or a dry old man. But it is not so. Not aa Enemy of Pfe. "Is pie a menace to civilization?" I asked him. purposely to see if the friv. olity of the question would outrage his professionalism and arouse his official scorn. "No, if it Is good pie: yes, possibly, if the pie is bad," he replied. "New England eats a great deal of pie. Emer son was fond of it. The transeendent alists substituted It for the ambrosia of the gods.'- With such an answer as a bracer Wiley himself might have given it I teit that the interview would be a sue cess. The elder Alsberg was also f chemist. He was born in Germany, was a university man and became a teacher after getting his degree. He comes into this story logically because there Is some relation between him, through the peculiar training he gave his son, and the food question of the United States. University instructors In Ger many must starve their slow way and go threadbare into remote professor ships, after which their pay is suffi cient for the rest of their lives. Als berg, the father, emigrated from Ger many, being unwilling to wait until he was 35 lor the reward that could Be obtained sooner elsewhere. He came to New York. . where his uncle was physician, and taught chemistry at Columbia University for a time. "But," as his son told me, "he want ed to earn money and take a wife. Necessity sets men to thinking. So does matrimony. My father invented a process for the manufacture of ver milion. That soon led him into the paint business. For many years he was a partner in a company that made vermilion, ultramarine and paris green. Such was his business at the time of his death. "Therefore, answering your question I cannot say that I was a poor boy. Financial perplexities have never wor ried me. I am far from being i wealthy man. but there is money enough in the family to keep me from going hungry were it necessary for me to look for another job. I was born and grew up in New York. My father believed In the German Idea of educat In; boys and girls. Consequently. I did not begin going to school until 1 was 9 years old. A Polyglot When a Child. "I cannot remember when I learned to read. My brothers and myself had governesses and tutors and were early taught German and French. It is said I spoke a mixture of three languages at the age of 6. which made communi cation, even in the family, rather dif ficult. We spoke German at dinner and used that tongue or went without a second helping of the things we liked. "My last tutor was the principal of Felix Adler's School. He came to our house each afternoon at 3 o'clock, tak ing us in pleasant weather to Central Park. There, on benches under the trees, he would talk to us about botany, geology, astronomy and other subjects. My first lesson in geography was taken on the Brooklyn bridge. The tutor had a compass and a map of the City of New York. That was the way he taught. When I was 9. I entered a Latin school in Harlem. It was so good that it was soon closed up. I was ready for college at the age of 15. My youth kept me out of Harvard. Co lumbia University graduated me when I was 19. "I had thought, meanwhile, of chem istry as a profession. My father ad vised me to take up something else He saw ahead to the time when ht would die or retire from business. In W MINUTL? WTH TIETUNNT Humorous Pens 'round dere an' gee, de tire was just as bad as it was In the front. Dere was a guy lookin' out of a window on de sevent' sory. Oee, he was high up. an' dere was no firemen or ladders dere. He was shoutin' 'Help, help, police.' Mickey says to me, 'Hully gee, look at tiis.' an' den he shouted to de guy, 'Jump! we'll ketch you In dis blanket.' an' de guy Jumped, an' gee, I fought I'd die laugin' we didn't have no blan ket." 4 . , TOO TENDER WITH IT. A physician tells a story o a phil anthropic doctor in a Pennsylvania coal-mining town who presented each household with a nice thermometer and told the people the necessity of maintaining proper temperature. When making his rounds one day he ob served his termometer banging in the room. He inquired of the woman ot the house If she had remembered his instructions. "Indeed sir, I do," was the response. "I hang the thing right up there and I watch it carefully to see it does not get too high." "Good!" exclaimed the doctor. "And what do you do when the temperature rises above 70 degrees?" "Why, Bir," answered tlie woman with the air of one faithful to a trust, "when it gets too high I take it down and bang it outside until it cools off." Newark Star. KICKINO WITH THB TDE. Percy Haughton, the football coach, was talking about queer football games. "There was a Thanksgiving day game in Philadelphia," he said, "that was played in a deluge of snow and rain, with Franklin Field a foot deep in sold, gray slush. "The Cornell man. who won the toss, said rather bitterly before the game began: " 'Do we have to play in this fluid?" " 'Yes, of course you do," was the Im patient reply. 'Come, come, you've won the toss, which end do you take?" " 'Well.' said the Cornell roan, shak ing hia head at tha gray waste of fr" -, - w ' v - II ffi' U i V 1 1 7v W ' ' i . I - ' - - . either event, were X a chemist, the paint factory would come under my management. He said that the manu facture of paris green was an un healthful occupation. But chemistry, though the factory loomed unpleasantly in the distance, attracted me just the same. , "In those days biological chemistry was not a profession In this country. It can be defined as the science which deals with the substances of life and their reactions upon one another. The nearest approach to it here was physi ological chemistry, which has to do with the tissues and functions of plants and animals. I entered the College ol Physicians and Surgeons, t;oiumnia University, especially to study the branch of chemistry that interested me the most. Three Blea Influenced His Life. Two ereat men had given form and direction to my college life. They were Edmund Beecher Wilson, the zoologist, and George Woodbury, the professor of Iterature. Wilson increasea my entnu- wVters spread before him, 'well. I guess we'll kick with the tide.' " Philadel phia Press. IWCOXSCIOUS HlTMOR. r i. 1 ; nhln1, hanrH 1?PV. W - l in ouuicura . ,1... - - W. Bustard, John D. Rockefeller s Cleveland pastor, address the Christian Endeavor convention was amused by a "While riding in an auto with Rocke feller recently, -some mues iroiu Cleve land," said Kev. Dr. Bustard, "we were i . il. .1. har.fnnt erirl. itIWUl LU IJa A ' a Plodding along through the dust, when air. rtocaeieiier orueieu to halt the car. Then he invited her to . 1 .nnnlnff.hnqrri And step up un . u' d . , asked her where she would like to have the car stopped. The little girl said she wanted to get off at the second crossroads, and asked. "How far are you going?" "Oh, we're going to heaven." Mr. Rockefeller answered. "The little girl was surprised, as many people ara ' when he says that Tbven he asked: "'Don't you think we'll get there r "'No.' said the little girl. "'And why not?" persisted Mr. Rocke feller. i UU'I I. 11.."" J ' " c a gasoline,' she said." Cleveland Press. RANK STUFF. "Ma, wants two pounds of butter ex- J . - .11.. V . -nn O ATI t li a last. TV it 1H " J -- -- ain't wactly like that she won't take It, sa d the smaii ooy. The grocer turned to his numerous customers nd remarked blandly: "Some piople in my business don't like particular customers, but I do. It's my delight" to serve them and get them what tbey want. I will attend to you in a moment, little boy." "B sure and get the same kind," said the small boy, while the storeful ...... -,-- ItatMieri to him. "A lot of pa's relations are visiting our house, and ma coesn t wan. em 10 come again." Newark Star. IMPORTANT, IP TRIE. A big drapery store' in Paris has re cently opened a department where, in exchange for a number, a wife may leave her husband while she does her shopping. Pele Mela. j slasm for science: Woodbury taught me a love of the beautiful. I- was young and Impressionable and they had a wholesome and inspiring influence on my mind. Graduated as a physician, I began to look around. I had never meant to practice medicine. Indeed. I had only been a commonplace student and so was not a Phi Beta Cappa man. Still, I had worked very hard on a matter outside of my medical course. The third, great man. Phoebus A. Levene, had gained my admiration and discipleship. He is one of the most distinguished biological chemists in the world. When I made his acquaintance he was the chemist at the New York Hospital for the Insane. He is now chief of the chemical department of Rockefeller Institute. I worked with him while I was studying medicine. He is the man, really, who caused me to make the chemical side of biology a profession. Aly education was com pleted in Germany, where I spent three years at the best universities. "I returned home to become a teach er of chemistry at the medical school Quips and Flings "I am getting so heavy that I am uncomfortable, said Mr. tiozeweii. "Take plenty of exercise." "That makes me still more uncom fortable." Washington Star. w "I hate a barber that talks politics nil thf time: don't vou?" "Can't say I do. I'd rather have him talk politics than hair tonic." Kansas City Journal. - "I like your cheek," he said, kissing her. Don't be facetious,'" she responded coldly. -Life. "You are the proprietor and phar macist of the first class?" "Yes madam." "And you know your business well?" "From .' the foundation. "That ia well. Give me 2 cents' worth of gum drops." La Rlre. "You've been sleeping in the tele phone booth, I believe," said the man ager of the Summer hotel. "Yes." "I can give you a billiard table now, if vou like." "No; I'll stick to the booth. I rather like the room. Isn t large, Dut li s cozy." Kansas City Star. - Might Just BUggest to Andy, dear. To Oyster Bay he speeds it. And ee if 'round there things appear As if he really needs it. Philadelphia Ledger. "This portrait doesn't resemble me at all." 'Pardon me. madam, but I once made a portrait of a lady that resembled her. London opinion. Painting Master (to pupil) Too much green. Why do you put in so much? pupil Well. I thought it went well with my red hair. Fliegende Blaetter. Little Snob I don't sea any waiters. Why don't they wear uniforms? You of Harvard University, remaining there six years and rising in rank to be a faculty instructor. The position was very burdensome. I had to keep ac counts and write all of my correspond ence out in longhand. Research inves tigation was impossible. I looked into the future and the best I could see was a full professorship, which is an hon orable and useful office. My prepara tion, however, qualified me. I thought, for something different and more ac tive. I wanted, in short, a broader and more original field. Then came an invitation to fill a place in the Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture. A man was needed to study the poisonous and alleged medi cal flora of the United States. I ac cepted the opportunity against the ad vice of Dr. Eliot, by the way because the work was within my own special ty. I could be a nobody in Washing ton, I said, just as easy as at Cam bridge. "We began with plants believed to be poisonous, and that led us into a study of spoiled corn, the eating of which, it can't tell who are gentlemen and who r not. can vou? Superior Waiter (sarcastically) We waiters find no difficulty, sir! London Opinion. iT.o Tr-n t iinHprRtiinn vour daugh ter Jessie has changed her name to "Jeslca." Mrs. Exe Well. I wish she hadn't. She's put the crazy notion into my girl Bessie's head to call herself "Besslca." Boston Transcript. . "Who Is that lame stranger with one c-Tn ..iirin- in 'tin hnvN nuiT there?" "Why, that's the chief organizer of the 'Survivors ol tne Hunting season of 1912.' He's getting up a lodge. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Diggs My wife is a wonderful vo calist. Why, I have known her to hold her audience for hours Biggs Get out! Diggs After which she would lay It in the cradle and rock it to sleep. Tennesseean. "Woman is considered the weaker vessel," she remarked, "and yet " "And yet," she continued, "man Is oftener broke!" London Opinion. Blight What is your idea of bor rowing trouble? Tight Letting the neighbors, use your telephone. Judge. "Tim," inquired Mr. Riley, glancing np over the door of the postofflce, what is the meanln' of thim letters. 'MDCCCXCVIU'?" "They mean 1898!" "Tim, don't it strike you thot they're carryln' this spellln' reform entoirely too far?" Youth's Companion. ... Gibbs Last week I read Mme. Calve's saying, "Sing and your ilia will vanish," and I tried it. Dibbs And did they vanisn? Gibbs No. but my friends did. Bos ton Transcript. Mistress I'm afraid, Bridget, that we will not be able to live together any longer." Bridget Indade, mum: an' where isi It yes do be goln'? Boston Transcript, i was supposed, caused the disease known ; as pellagra. That Is still the theory of many scientific men in Italy, the Prov ince of Tyrol in Austria, and in this country. Our own investigations, let me add, have not established any con nection between spoiled corn and pellagra. The cause of the disease, so far as we are concerned, continues to be a mystery. "Poisonous plants cause. heavy losses every year to farmers and stockmen. A large number of valuable beef cattle die from eating loco weeds, which grow southward from Manitoba through the western part of the United States into old Mexico. We were directed to ascertain the relation of barium, a metal belonging in the group of which lime is a member, to the loco weed dis ease. It was said that barium was the poisonous element which killed live stock. We showed by experiments, however, that barium does not give rise to the symptoms of loco poisoning. It seems, and I go no further, that there are properties or combinations ot properties in loco plants, yet undiscov ered, which produce the symptoms. "Men often write that their pastures contain plants which kill their cattle and sheep. They are mistaken in most instances. Occasionally they are not. Such letters resulted in the finding of prussic acid in certain grasses. A farmer in North Carolina notified us that several of his cows had died, as he believed, from eating a lily which can be found in marsny places all the wav from New Jersey to Florida. We examined theJily and learned that he was right. The research work of which I have spoken requires considerable time, and much that we have accom plished cannot be made public until the whole of the equation has been worked out. Such labor is long and tedious, but Is intensely interesting to a chemist. One may feelfor months together that no headway Is being made. Then all at once, perhaps, many baffling problems are solved together." Man Know What to Eat. "Did our ancestors know about the chemistry of food?" I asked. "Oh, certainly. The Middle Ages had some knowledge on the subject. John Milton, living in the 17th century, said the purpose of a proper diet was 'to preserve the body's health and hardness1 that Englishmen might be strong enough to defend their liberty. Oranges and lemons, it has been known 'for more than three centuries, will prevent scurvy. It was Liebig, the extract of beef maker, who spread and popu larized the science of dietetics. Wrhile man knew little formerly about the chemistry of food as an abstract study, he learned a great deal by experience. There is no authority for saying that the combination of apple sauce and roast pork was originally suggested by a physician. Man knew by his appetite that the acid of the apple helped him dispose of the fat in the meat. The appetite, let me say, is ordinarily a safe guide in the matter of one's diet." "Do Europeans get purer and cleaner food than do Americans?" -I think not. All things considered, our food law Is the best one ever en acted. It fails, however, with respect to drugs, and, therefore, is not so good as the drug laws of continental Eu rope. Measures are taken abroad to give the people pure medicines and to maintain the standards of strength. Laws are obeyed in patriarchal and autocratic countries; they are often dis obeyed in republics. The National Gov ernment of the United States only con trols drugs when they become articles of interstate traffic, when they are shipped, for instance, from Boston to Chicago, or from St. Louis to Cincin nati. We have no jurisdiction within New York City over drugs sold locally on to Albany or Buffalo. The states themselves should get together and regulate the manufacture and sale of all articles used as medicine." Doctors Most Also Be Artists. "What would be a good diet for the man who works at a desk indoors?" "No rule can be laid down in snch an uncertain matter. Man is not a machine.' He is . an independent unit MEN Among the Poets tnvi: MR. CARNEGIE. A princelier son of Plutus never Did in this world exist; To nobody second I'm easily reckoned The boss philanthropist. It is my most inane endeavor To rid myself of pelf So every cent'll Quite iricldental Ly advertise myself. My object all sublime I shall achieve In time To show that opulence is a crime. That opulence is a crime; And make each million spent Eternally represent A never-ending advertisement An endless advertisement. I lie awake nights inventing plans To give my wealth away. I've libraries scattered And spattered and splattered All over the U. S. A. And every hour or so I start A "Fund" for this or tnat; But somehow or other. In one way or t'otheiv They fall extremely flat. I fling my gold like sightless Plutus, The mythological mint. And prattle with unction At every function T .at m ir namA In nrlnt. It Is my dally and dear endeavor. My constant ena ana aim. To scatter my ducats In barrels and buckets. And advertise my name. Chicago Tribune RENUNCIATION". His Letter. Dear Madge: Of course you've noticed by the papers That I've eschewed the Joys of single life: Renouncing all my former merry ca- ners. I snortly take unto myself a wife. My stage-doors days, I feel, have found an ending- and each man is different from all other men. That is the reason the practice of medicine will always remain an art as well as a science. A group of human beings are not like a buttery of steam boilers. The boilers. b(ing of similar size, hold the same quantity of water and generate the same quantity o( steam under the same degree of heat energy. Men. even of the same weight and height, are totally unlike. Some are dark and some are light, some are strong ar.d some are weak. Each is a physiological entity in himself. What, is meat for one may be poison for another. "Speaking generally, an outdoor man requires heat-producing, or energy-producing foods, such as meat, sugar, eggs, beans, peas and so on. The in door man may safely eat the same diet, but in smaller quantities. Any sensible person is capable of regulat ing and selecting his own food. He knows what he can eat and what he can't eat. If boiled cabbage offends thee. let It alone. If lobster vexes thy internals, try beefsteak or mutton chops. Experience and science have found that a mixed diet is better than a diet confined to a few things. Scurvy is caused by the absence of certain food elements. Beriberi, so our inves tigators in the Philippines have shown. Is the result of a changeless diet of overmilled rice. "Food creates energy and repairs the waste that occurs constantly in the body. It must perform both functions if one is to remain in good health. When there is more heat than is neces sary, perspiration begins, the lungs evaporate moisture in the process of breathing and there Is an automatic rush of blood to the surface of the . skin where it is cooled by the air. Tha shiver of a chill is nature' attempt to create a little heat. Why Tropical People Eat Pepper. "Nature, when it Is normal, la always ready with its defenses and its emer gency appliances. But the laws of na ture, unlike the laws of countries, can not be trampled under foot. "Thou shalt eat no clams,' orders the digestive Juices and machinery of a certain man. He defies the warning and is immedi ately condemned without bail or the hope of a new trial. The call of the body usually leads one along the path of safety into good health. It has been said that the appetite lags in hot coun tries where the temperature of the blood is kept up by the peculiar slant of the sun instead of by food. An un used appetite, the same as an unused limb or muscle, loses its vigor. Con sequently, so the theory runs, tropical appetites crave red pepper aa a stimu lant. Thus nature maintains a proper balance. The languishing appetite gets an impetus, as it were, and all goes well with the person who consumes the popper." "Can't the manufacturers of rood get along without using preservatives?" "We know that some canned foods can bo kept without preservatives. Aa to all foods, I am not prepared to give an opinion. We must work doubtful questions out scientifically so that there can be no valid ground for complaint. The canning industry is Important, but the health of the people should be first in the thought of every man con nected with the bureau of chemistry." "Butter made In Winter," I said, "is white naturally. Why should manu facturers be permitted to color it yel low?" "That is a subject for Congressional discussion and action. The law gives me no authority to stop creameries from coloring their product. The American people Beem to want yellow butter. It is yellow when made of the milk of cows eating the fresh, rich grasses of June. " It is white when cows are fed on hay. We think that yellow ness means richness. So we demand yellow butter the year through. The people of Europe are not so foolish or fastidious. They eat butter just as it comes from the churn and are amused to see Americans when at their tables utterly destroy its flavor by sprinkling it with salt." (Copyright, 1913, by James B. Morrow.) of the Daily Press Most circumspect, from now, must be my lot; But, as you see, for old sake's sake, I'm sending An au revoir and this forget-me-not." Her Letter. "Dear Jim: Accept a friend's congratu lations. I hope your luck will be tha bestest yet. Although I fear you'll miss your old flirtations. " Unless you've changed a . lot since .last we met. Be good to her and, ere this letter closes, One friendly word it's quite the best I've got Your marriage, Jim, will not be strewn with roses. Unless the tie's a real for-get-me- knot." Stanley Qulnn, in Judge. PERPLEXITY OK HON. H. PECK. He has bought his Winter coal And his Winter overcoat. But he can't, to save his soul. Decide which way to vote. His appetite is good. And his outlook's fairly bright; He would like to, if he could, Vote to keep things going right. Still, he can't, to save his life. Leave his foolish doubts behind. For the reason that his wife Has not yet made up her mind. "THERE WAS A " There was a young man of Ky, With ladles was almost too ly. Wherever he'd go They would bother him so, by calling him "darling" and "dy." Indianapolis News. SWAMPED. Her liquid voice could set aglow His soul, ere they were wed; And now her words torrential flow O'er his devoted head. Boston Transcript 4 T T