THE ffitWOir SATUBDAY EVENiyg . APIUI, lfi, ICO?, - 51 iV POKER GAME LOSS iQuecr Experience of New-York Mer rr : chant and What Came -of It 5 in ra i "Mf uooai," said a prominent New :Vrk merchant "dates from big tort a pud la a poker cam. That expert Lane taught me blessing sqmetlme come In disguise, and you can't begin td guess all the thing that com your war. It had not been for losing In that er game I believe I would b only clerk today. "Alone In lt0 X had 112.000 and all Lkind of ambition. J waa living up la Brooklyn then, but the old bur own t ult me, and neither did New York. I deelded to go to lomt place and grew un with the -country, and then come pack and apend my money. The West looked a bit too lively for me,' and I thought ' it waa pretty well averdooe. Just at that time we began .to heat things about a boom down South, that the land of Dixie waa waking up, and fortune were being made in evary creaaroada town. I decided to- take the , South for mine, and I ratted, for a Jplace called Basio City, Intending to wind us at Roanoke "I had' heard Basic City was moving i pretty lively, but when I got off the train about S In the morning I oouldn't fini the town. There waa -nothing In tmil but Egyptian darknes so thick at I thought I waa in a fog. There wasn't even a depot. " This la a deuce of a note.' I said to 'myself aloud. 'Not even a hotel run JMt here.' It looked as if I would have to hunt for a cornfield to spend the night In. "Hello, young fellah!' said a pleasant voice somewhere in the darkness. "Hello yourself,' I said. 'How did you guess I waa coming V " 'Just reckoned It,' said the voice. 'What are you looking foh hotel? " 'Tea,' I said. 'Can yoa tell me where ta And oner T atop at one. Come over hrah. X just come down to the train to see If anybody was coming In. "I went over, and by the light of a match which he held 1 saw a handsome young man about 21 years old. He told me his name was Bolden, and he was looking over the boom. He helped roe carry my grip to the hotel, about 290' yards away. The sleepy clerk gave me a room, and 1 started off to bed. " 'No use to go to bed.' said Bolden. "Come and let's play cards till break fast time.' " 'Not for me,' I said. I'm too sleepy.' Besides, I didn't care to risk any of tha l,000 I had brought along out of my little fortune. "It did not take me laag when t got up to conclude I didn't care to invest In Basic City. Then I boarded a stage for Clifton Forge, a few mile away, Bol den going with me. We found that town lively enough, especially aftec dark. It reminded me of stories I had heard of Western mining camps, for there were saloons aad gambling places every 'other door. At Bolden'. request I went Into the largest gambling resort. Tou could get any sort of game you wanted -faro, roulette and all kinds of poker. Bolden sat down to a table where four of the toughest looking cus tomers I ever saw were playing straight poker. I urged him to stay away from tha game, but he smiled, and pushed me aside and asked for 120 worth of chips. I watched him for a little while and then went over t0 loolt at the faro table. I had been there about half an hour when I heard a great commotion,. above which rose the cry: " 'Don't shoot! Don't, shootr "I looked around, and' there stood young Bolden, with an ugly-looking gun, covering the four fellow at hit table. And they weren't doing a thing but looking at that gun with hands up. " 'Of co'se I don't want to shoot,' said Bolden in his soft tonos; but I will If I see any ' mo' crooked work. Now alt down and play a gentleman's game,' "They all sat down again, but I no- ticed Bolden kept the gun in his lap. I didn't want to see any row, so I re turned to the hotel. The house waa crowded, and tha clerk had given, me a room with Bolden. I didn't wait for him. but went to sleep as soon as I ould. About f o'clock he came in. " 'Wake- up!', he cried. I've made a Wiling.' It looked as if he had. His soft hat was full of gold and silver, and the bank notea were sticking out of every pocket. - 'Not so bad for a kid against such a igang. is ilT he said.' " You must be a professional, X jaald, somewhat awestruck by the heap of coin. ' " 'Not a bit of it,' he said. 'Just had e run of luck. Now I'll play you till 'breakfast time.' - " 'Not if I know myself," I said. Tm ' going to sleep soma more.' "But he kept on insisting, so that I I reached tip and drew two silver dollars from the pocket of my trousers as they hung an tha aadpoat - J "Til play you 12 freoieout, I said. He agreed. , saying ha Just wanted tb sport and didn't eara for tha money. I dressed, and my '12 lasted till breakfast time. Ia fact, I had increased it to 0. Whea wa want down'ta tha dining room Bolden. Wha anaiaed.to. hava the fever about aa badly aa any man could hava It .Insisted on matching m 220 gold pieces. Thia wa did. to tha scandal af the hotel and tha disgust of the other folk who were eating breakfast. When we got up I had won in all about I J 00. "We than started tor Roanoke, for I could not get rid of Bolden, and he waa so pleasant In his persistence that I hadn't tha heart to snub him. On our way w stopped tor a fair momenta at Buchanan.' There he met some reuows whom he knew. He told them we had juat come from Clifton Forge. " "How did you get along over there? asked one. Oh. I got all they had.' he said. carelessly. 'It waa a booster" game. and. I broke the house.' Then It dawned on me that this sweet-faced, dulcet-voiced kid was nothing mora nor leaa than a profes sional gambler, and about as cold blooded as they make 'em. But he went on with me to Roanoke and put up at the same hotel, although. I. saw ta it that he didn't get a room with me: I looked over the town. It had a boom, and no mistake, and everybody said It was going to be another Atlanta. I decided to put my 23.000 into some choice lota there, and agreed to call and settle thing wit It tha broker that after noon. Bolden told me I was making a mistake, but I saw that he wanted a little of my 12.009. ' He met two friend when we got back to tha hotel and proposed a little game: I refused, of course. "WeIL. Til play yo ingie-nanaea. he said. Look here, Bolden.' 1 aaid. 'I have 2309 of your money, but you can have it back if you are so grouchy about it. I don't want It " "Not at alt sun,' said he in his purr lna- way, But i n tell yp what I will da Til Play yoa just one hand, and then we'll call it Quits.' " 'All right' I ald. 1 can't lose much oa on hand.' ' . . "W went' to hi room, the other two men going along. Bolden pulled out a deck of cards and offered them to me for ft Cut I told him to go ahead with tha deaL although tha pack had not even been shuffled. "What la tha limltr I asked. " 'No limit' he answered. 'It's only on iaekpot and yot can't lose much.' Whan I picked up my band I round that I had four kings and an ace-sider. I opened the pot for IS, and Bolden raised m 16; I raised him 15. He "saw It' and asked me how many cards I wanted. 'Olve me one.' I said cheerfully. T auDDose my two pair are as gooa as yours. "I'll have to draw to my hand,' he I'll take two.' What do you suppose a man would do when he had four kings and had thrown away an ace, and the other fel low drew two eardsT I did what any other player would . do, of course. I started off with a 1100 bet. and Bolden raised me $100. I tilted It for snother 1 100. and he raised me te same amount To dispense with tk harrow ing details. X dug down in my wallet for $200 in addition to the amount I had won from btm. Then Bolden raised me $100. "All of a sudden It came over me that I waa playing with a professional gam bler, that the cards had not been shuffled or out I knew Bolden waa nervy and a bad cltlien. but la my despera tion, If I had had a gun. X would have made a proposition to divide the pot right there, But when I looked into his smiling faoa I knew I waa up against a game I had no chance of bucking successfully. 1 dug for another $100 and sad huskily: "1 call. Lay down your straight flush.' -'That' Just what X haTe.'iuh. ha said. Innocently, 'How did you guess MISS QUEENIE LEROI it ' ' " '' - . ! ' ' ' ' 4 ',, , ,.; ; ., -, ' . J 1 ' . . : '' ) . v :, a ' ;-: --' ! -' f . v ' tC . V :f"'. Jtf In ,-,.i3 I fOUn 5IDC5 Or WHAT" One of the hits of the theatrical sea son is the "Song of the Cities." which is one of the dainty concerts tt "The Prince of Pilsen." Beautiful girls garbed appropriately- represent the different cit ies sung about. Miss Queenle LeRol represents the City of Washington. She Is clad In a stunning red. white and blue costume. FRANCIS IS NOT SEEKING PRESIDENCY: So Declares Chief of the St. Louis Fair. 0MUt lUUUVfyllUJ) T V1U JVU kuupm Itr And he laid down a ten high heart traight flush and raked In tha pot It had hi $290 and $1,000 of my owe money. ' That afternoon ha left town. , "I waa so aggrieved over my lota that I followed hi exampl. That la where I won out- If I hadn't lost that money In poker I would 'have stayed in Roan oke and dumped the whole $2,000 and possibly all the. rest of my $13,000, for the boom fell flat as a pancake. I came back to Brooklyn on the first train and started Into business In New Tork. Now I am wealthy." New Tork Press. Tha Jnggarmohlla. (With apologies to the Jabberwock.) Twaa naptha and the glssy gubs eaied ana wrumoiea wruwruny, TM hornful were the tooting flubs, rvnd the gasoline tsmuii aoieiuuy. From down the street there came the blub Of a sortnl. soatless Song: Jts chorus whs a sul chug-chug, With the bingle of a gong. On. on it enme. with lurid power, While the chHufflneeY Just swore; Maybe.it. was -twelve miles an hour. And roaybe 'twas umpty o'er. Well, ennyhow, lt'swugged the cop Till ha rnlloH nhnnt In ntepea! Then it wauntered away with a hoaraeful Dray,. . i While its enemy slussed his creases. - In smattera and skags he limped along i o ine nome or nis boss ana enter. 'I seen It, all right" 'Wos his snaggy song; "'It was snuckin' along like a thief." "And h8t thou caught the Juggermo- Puggered the chief, with jublle delight. Ah, glubaome day, rfboray! hooray! , This is sure a scrumptious night!" But. the copper bird lubbered his eyes. "It's loabsome news I have," he wailed. "I waa caught from behind, and by sur- firise, - - ' . , , Be I'd had the chuff er Jailed." "Away, away! you ildiot wab," (This from the chief in a rage); ''I'll have -you put on another job---' . . What you need 1 a cage." '" x CWBago later Ooean. Well, Ho, Ifot Tary Clearly. All eggs have a parthenogenetlc ten dency, which, as Boverl demonstrated at the last meetrng of the German Booiety of Naturalists and Physicians, disap pears through degeneration of the coh trosoma. All that Prot. Ioeb of Chicago did was to shdw that this partheno genetlc tendency could be stimulated In aea urchins by a, normal salt solutioa In certain Infusoria the process of fe cundation consists essentially In a subtle osmosis between the sexes. The exparl mentsOf Loeb did not create life, but simply stimulated bisexual generation at tne expense or parthenogenesis. These experiments, therefore, demonstrate nothing as regards the cause of life. Cleveland Plain Dealer, -v,n ,,i 1,,.;, ; -'' Kia idreat Comfort The Rev. John 8. Lyon, at the dinner of the Paper Manufacturers' Associa tion, spoke of a friend who received a letter from on of his parishioners which read: ; "Mr JDear Pastor: I have been lck for two month and have not been able to hear your excellent sermons, which has been a great comfort to to." -New Tork TlmoevA W-.-. V. -r-f: r . (Journal Special Service.) ST. LOUIS. April 18. President Francis of the World's Fair has em phatlcally denied that he is a candi date for the Presidency of the United States. This declaration was called forth by a motion of Editor O. E. Hawkins of the Tecumseh Times at a meeting of journalists that the visiting members pledge to President Francis the electoral vote of Michigan. The incident occurred in the Administration Building, where President Francis waa extending a wel come to tha visitors. - Tha suggestion of the Michigan editor was manifestly a great surprise to Presi dent Francis, but be interrupted any action that might have been taken on the motion by rising and saying: "I desire to impress upon the members of the association that every minute of my time, energy and mind la being de voted exclusively to the success of the Louisiana. Purchase Exposition, there fore udh a suggestion as the gentleman has Just made, "Slough highly compli mentary and receive by me in the spirit which prompts it, is utterly beyond con sideration. "The time for talking of other work and other honors than those in which we ara engaged is a matter of considera tion foreign to the spirit and Intention of the great enterprise of which we hope tn American people will be proud. - "Thia X My Life Work.' The success of the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition ia the present work of my life and the lives of many others, who are faithfully striving to perform their duties as they Bee them. It 1 my Intention to devote my whole time and attention to this great work. l wisn to impress upon the mem bers of this association that I am not a candidate for the presidency, and that neither would I consider the honor, al though it i one to which every Araerl can citizen may feel proud to aspire. I will not urge that the motion of the gen tleman be tabled, but that he will kindly witnaraw it." Editor Hawkins replied In a humorous vein by withdrawing the motion, after aying that President Francis could de- pand upon the solid support of the Michi gan editor, if he wanted anything from tne rresiaency down. Some Peculiarities of Kansas' Honored Son. Oaoted "The RaYar When In- formed cf His Defeat for the Senatorship. Four Stories told by four rn wnpaper mn Illustrate the traits r th,- late John J. Ingalls. who waa for eighteen years In the United States .nat from Kaaaas, and wa the Sunflower Stat' accepted pear In oratory and statesman ship. Mr. In gall. In hi lifetime. . always displayed - a partiality for newspaper men, yet hw did It In such a way that at no time did he sacrifice hi dignity and reserve. . An example of his sensr of humor la Illustrated in a story told I (leorg- Hanson, formerly a newspaper man of Ogden. Utah. "It waa at the time of the big Flts- Simraons-Corbett null in Carson City, said Mr. Hanson, "and I wus ut the Union Pacllta depot in Ogd.n watching for any of the big sporting men that were passing through on their way to Carson City. "On the day before tne right I waa standing on the platform as a train from -the East pulled In. I saw a tall, slender man alight from the'rar step, dresaed in a long gray i'rinre Albert. whose silvery hair, high forehead and stately, dignified appearance Immedt ately Impressed and reminded me Of pictures of the Kansas orator, whom the ministry and the press were rrltlcis ing so harshly for reporting a prl: fight. (It will be remembered that Mr. Ingalls represented a New York dally at the Carson City mill.) "Walking up to him I said: "This ia Senator Ingalls, Is It not?' "He turned and replied: 'I am he. Afid who Is thlsr It took but an Instant for me to explain that I was a newspaper man. and by way of opening the conversation I said: 'Senator, It seems to me we have met somewhere before "The Senator gased away at the sur rounaing mountains,, nis sharp gray eyes sweeping their crests, and far be yond, and then turning to mi! again he blandly replied: .'Maybe so. I've often been there.' " 'Senator,' I continued, 'I am looking for celebrities and notables on their way to Carson City. Are there any on this tralnr -Again tne great statesman's eyes swept the surrounding mountain tops nd slowly descending to the green sward below, at last rested upon me again. " 'Notables, celebrities,' he repeated slowly. Then, with a trace of a smile playing about his lips, he added: 'Ah, celebrities, notable, yes. There's a couple,' and he pointed to two notorious negro prize fighter who were standing by the side of the coach." Bis Power of Oratory, . A. E. McKee, formerly a Kansas City newspaper nun, tells a atory illustrat ing Mr. Ingalls' power of oratory and his personal magnetism' When on the platform. 'I had been sent to 'do' a political meeting in Kansas City, Kan., at which Mr. Ingalls was to speak." said he. "I had heard a great deal about the Kansas orator, but I had never heard him, and had gone to the meeting with the ex pectatlon of being overwhelmed with spellbinding. A crude press table had been improvised, and I was sitting there impatiently awaiting the beginning of the meeting when the Sunflower Orator was Introduced. 'He began his speech with a vivid description of the Impression he celved of the beautiful autumnal day a he came by train up tha valley of the Kaw. Beautiful allegorlea and figures or speech cam from hi lip, which immediately attracted, my Interest, and at last he uttered this sentence in de scribing the day of fall: Triangles of wild geese harrowed the pastures of the deep blue sky.' "My pencil fell from ray fingers to The New Life-Savina Food PREVENTS DISEASE PRESERVES HEALTH PROLONGS LIFE There are many makes of emulsion for sale. Whose do you use ? There is only one emulsion which possesses the True Vitalizing Food Properties needful to build up the Weakened, Devitalized System, and that is OZOMULSION. Have You Tried It? Ozomulsion is the only vitalized emulsion of Cod Liver OS, combined with the blood-germicide Guaiacol, the emulcent food Glycerine, and the Bone and Tissue-binding Salts of Life, the Hypo phosphites of Lime and Soda. Ozomulsion is the Food That Does So Much Good. It is an aid to any medicine you may be taking. Your physician knows the formula and will recommend it Take no emulsion but Ozomulsion and it will make you wclL The great and marvelous building, strengthen ing properties of Ozomulsion are quickly shown in its immediate Good Results for Coughs, Colds Grip, Bronchitis, Pneumonia and Throat and Lung Troubles, Night Sweats, Consumption of the Nose, th table, and when he had finished his Lungs, Larynx, Intestines, Spleen, Kidneys and Liver, Anemia, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and all disturbances of the digestive or nervous system. speech an hour later my notepaper con- tainea not a line, Whining Light. "Hasn't Squallop been fooling us beau tifully n Howr T found out the other day, by acci dent, that he has been a member of a church for 25 year without any of his friends aver suspeotlng It" Chloaga Tribua - . , N " Yammering. "Yammering" is a word about which we raised some question In our. literary columns recently. But it is one of those words which have been caught up Into the literary language from provincial speech, and the verb "to yammer," as a correspondent points out,. Is not a new woru. out nas ueen long in use in Scot land and the North of England. There is an obvious connection between this syn onym of "whining" and the German "Janimer," which Is best? known in th cerrtblnatlon "katienjamm" the after math of a night' debauch. And from the latest edition of Webster we gather that Mr. Kipling, too, has discovered the word, and used it London Chron icle. . Br. atoob. Chosen. Dr. Koch ha been chosen foreign member of the French Academy of Sci ences to flll the vacancy left by the d,eath of Prof. Virchow. Twenty-eight votes were given for Dr. Koch, against 18 for Prof. Agassis, curator at Harvard University; 11 for -8. P. Lana-le of fYKBningxon, ana 1 lor Prof. Van nor vaais or Amsterdam. 'Portland fan hava tasta ia their mouths. a dark brown Am a Wewapsper Kan. Mr.- Ingalls power of deduction 'la depicted in the story told by A. 8. Kane. another former Kansas City newspaper man. Soon after Mr. Inaalla' return fmn Carson City, where he had received $10,000 for reporting tha FUsslmmona- Corbett prise fight, he waa in Kansas Uty. I met him at the Midland hotel. and, of course, wanted an Interview. Among Other things, the Senator wanted ma to explain tha difference be tween a newspaper man and a Journal ist. The press bad named him a Jour nalist, and he could not see the differ ence. "A newspaper man.' said L 'is a man who Writes for a newspaper because ha ha to make a living and needs the money. A journalist write sometimes for amusement, sometimes for fame. and sometimes for pleasure.' 'The Senator thought for a moment! then, putting his hand on my shoulder, replied: 'I'm not a Journalist; I'm a news paper man.'" Could Be Tragio. That Mr. Ingalls could become tragic and dramatic upon occasions Is evi denced in the story told by Dave Leahy of Wichita, well known among Kansas newspaper men. "Having met the Senator many times during his long public career, we had come to know each other well." said Mr. Leahy. It was during his last "campaign when the irresistible wave of Populism swept over Kansas, carrying before It the defeat of Kansas greatest orator. During the heat of the campaign Mr. Ingalls waa on night, a few weeks before th ejection, in Wichita. I called at hi hotel merely to pay my respects. Upon the clerk's giving me his number t Want to hi room, it wa nearly dusk and when I appeared at his open door I beheld htm stretched at full length on is bed with hi face buried In the nil- low, evidently tired and discouraged. 'Uood evening.' Senator.' I aaid. "He did pot turn, but with hi face still burled in th pillow, replied: The voice is that of David, the form that of the devil.' "This was galling enough, but what followed was worse, for ha turned on his ptUow and. looking at me, added: 'I waa neither mistaken In voice nor form.' - "Then he rose to a sitting posture on 'the edge of the bed. ' ' . 'Dava,' he aid, T knew you are tb biggest liar in Kansas, but I know you Its Wonderful Blood-making, Tissue-building and Strength-producing Elements make it the Monarch of all Spring Medicines, Ozomulsion Does Not " Tinker " with disease. It Provides Perfect Nutrition, which is the Founda tion of Health. To prove its great medicinal food value, a largo Trial Bottle Free By Mail will be sent, prepaid, to any reader of this paper on request It is the Kind Physicians Use and Prescribe, and Druggists sell in Extra Large Bot tles, weighing over Two Pounds, for One Dollar. Write by Postal Card . or Letter, (1TUI J VVSA liCUlIb and full address street and number. ' Ozomulsion Food Co., 98 Pine St, New York. ill tell Ingalls the truth. What are my chances in thia district T looked at the Senator almost pity ingly, but I knew I must tell him the truth. 'Senator.' I said, 'overwhelming de feat awaits you.' "Immediately he sprang from the bed and paced up and down the floor, with a look of fire In his eyes; then, turning upon me and pointing his long finger at me. exclaimed: Take thy beak from out my bosom, take thy form from off my floor.' 'I muttered, I don't know why, 'Nev ermore.' " 'Ye, nevermore,' he repeated. 'I'll never be Senator of Kansas again.' " Kansas City Journal. Why They Are Jgft Wervon. Dining in the basement of the tallest building in the world has no terrors for the patrons of Haan's Rathskeller. More than SCO feet above them towers the roof of the Park Row building. They are beneath thousands of tons of stone and iron, apparently sustained only by slender pillars In the cafe. Nearly 6.000 people, the population of the small city, toll in thefflcH of the 32 stories. Dur ing business hours 10,000 persons are In the building at a time. If it should col lapse the list of 'casualties would make it a "catastrophe." But so sublime 1h the faith of New Yorkers in the skill of the builders pf sky-scrapers that they think of the fateful polysyllable only In connection with volcanic eruptions and Kansas cyclones. That Is why the pat ronsxof Haan's are not nervous.' Smbarrassed. "What a beautiful luncheon!" said the guest, "Yes," answered Mrs. Cumrox, "moth er and the girls say it is all right." "But you aren't enjoying It." "No. I'm a little embarrassed. I've been standing pver here trying to figure out Which are the edibles and which are the decorations. "Washington Star. ffl 111 10 Oil! HI Sweetheart of 45 Years Ago Remembered . of Tha Sac Sulold Class. Benner ;I saw the Niltons tn their horseless carriage today. I wonder how they continue to find so much pleasure In itT, West They are a childless' family, you know. They must put in their time some way. Boston Transcript Romance Disclosed by Will Old Captain Miller, Bon Vivant. (Journal Special Service.) NEW YORK, April 18. Like "the ghost of a dead and gone bouquet" there comes out of a dry bit of parchment filed in the Surrogate's office yesterday the will of Capt Thomas J. Miller, one time clubman, boulevardier, bon vivant and famous gourmet, who died at a very advanced-age in St. Vincent's Hospital on March 2 last the story of an old romance. At the Manhattan Club and many ho tels, and among the theatrical and other artistic folk, to whom old Capt. Miller was a 'quaint and likable figure, few knew of the love story that hi will dla closes. Indeed, It la probable that none but himself and Joanna .Mills, who is 78 years old, knew about It at all. Sho was a girl of humble parentage and, Capt Miller was a young naval of ficer when he met her. It waa a genuine love affair. Perhapa the disparity of their positions In social life kept them apart None knows now.' But at any. rata Capt Miller remained a bachelor, to the end of hi days, and when his will waa filed it bora In dry legal terms, all expressionless of senti ment on their face, tha proof of hia faithfulness to the pretty girl whom ha met and loved 43 year ago. For all hi property ta left to Joanna Mills. . a very old, bent and wrinkled woman now. It Is not much-1-, lease hold property In Read street which brings about )600 a year, and oma personal belongings. Capt Davis' at? torneya refused last night to tell wher the woman lived, but It was learned that he and two of her maiden later had modest room in an old-fashioned down town residential section. t Capt Miller never ros to higher rank than ensign In th mavy, for shortly af ter the war he resigned. Ha Joined th life of the town and became a character in It. a brilliant witty companion. For a long time he enjoyed th reputation of knowing more than any man in all New York concerning thing to aat an, thlnga to drink and just how they should . be treated In the moat arttatlo fashion. Kaxioo Military AmblUoa. The army and navy of th Republic of Mexico are undergoing th greatest transformation In their history. From the border to Yucatan and from th Pa ciflc to the gulf coast tha republlo will ' soon be a vast parade ground far troopr and marines. Quietly, but rapidly, th government Is carrying to compkton -comprehensive plan which' will mak .- Mexico one of the strongest military powers for her area on tha glob. With tn a year or two at moat President Dial ' wftl ba able to moboliae on short nolle ' nearly 209.000 well-equipped and well drilled soldier. Be desire to mak Mexico a nation of warriors ; therefor. in nearly 11.000 public schools nearly S0O.00O boys are drilling daily and dreaming of glory to b won n tb bat. . tlefleld. I there raon to- doubt In view of uch facta jut these, that h , Mexico of the future will ba able ta , make demand and enforc thorn tf ed be. NatioTiaJ Magaatna, 'fv: They Follow tha Flagv "We lasat from Father Pardow opinion that divorcMs America's gift to the Philippine. . Ada, a Chlfia? historian, ha well teld that the cock tail follow 'the flag, nd to that we would add th horn run and the !' t to aeeond New York Dally New