The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, May 17, 1908, Page 29, Image 29

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    THE OREGON .' SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, iAA 17, 1908.
By fleumiK Hwinmui,
. . .
lAUthor of -A I- '"nnv" "file
Ballad of a ',f,",1XuiB.t
T.eadill Road tO POIIHg-ll. ajutce. -
Fairy -torlB. '"7- T
T
UXAb EL"'U WlaMM.S
Of .use a fire bowl of cream witn
an .Iron eyoon In It of the size a
hungry man Hkcs.
"Musha. craythtir. us
etharrlv'd with hunger -z must be!
Yfli the fsrlwi's first out l' that pot, an'
the mlnnit yeyi is done I'll have yea
" brewed such a dlirap 0' lav as 'ill rouse
i the hearts In yc-x."
Neither Tenia IMibh nor I needed
ich persua.-lr-i other than that given
rhK to a. lark it with
v-.,' o-on,! x m rwore the fire we
rt.fT.' TJ.l ine 001 between u,
and, getting our legs almut it, plunge.
r...ui it iihinseii
" X. 1: .V-li t"burv men
.ait. .ousmir .11 in the .cream and speed-
intr it on aedili 10 our waU l ing niouiim.
fnr, when viiu've hetn en the hills troni
earlv morninir till late at night, and
eatt'n but a few uiouthfuis of oat bread
ntid butter i the liitttim. what wun
thp walking, the running, the spieling.
- the sliding what with the whiff of the
. heather and with all tne feurfortach
. ?or hiiDgry g.as.) yi must have
tramped over. 1 11 warrsni. luougn jruu
'haTva been the most nismal dyspeptln
- that was ever on a do. tor's books' you'll
brln back an appetita with an edge
fetched back Just such appemes, ana
.verv little else tor I was t putting it
"mllJly .0 indifferent shot and tried
Tonus' temper sorely.
' ft'B.TfbXuVwitriW"f
bTmn0orPtoVemN.ridof us
had time for a word. "Ivery tlms ye
' apaik It's a mouthful lost," was Tomas'
T maxim. We dug our ways through tha
iot from elthef side till only the thin-
. ' nest film separated our -claims," when
- Tomas rung his empty spoon In ths
empty bowl and said, 'od b thanklt!'
on which I. too. feelings sensation of
. satisfaction permeaUna the far lands,
r i threw my spoon to the bottom of tis
i trf.t with . -rhsnks be to God. and
) ' ...
I amen!
And now Ellen was pouring out for
. u. two laraa bowls of tea
that wu
IflirR Villi llLIS. MB MIll'U "M-.
"Do yt Ilka yar tay sthrong, JaimleT'
she asked me.
"Weil," I said, shaking my head
doubtfully at the black flood she was
Souring bito thf bowl, "my mother
oesn't commonly make It so strong."
' "An' there ye sre, now,'' she said.
That's how doethors differ, Tomas
hers wouldn't tell his name for tay Ir
e didn't make It as sthrong far him
as the shafts of a cart"
"Wt.tr t hnnMn't thinv It a mortiat
, bad plan to make a habit of takin' yer
tay Use that, Tomas Dubh," I said.
"Tay," Tomas salo oraaularly, as lia
rased at It with a blissful expression In
his eve. "tav" he aaid. "is nlver so
good an I'd as soon ye'd give me so
.much dishwater to dhrlnk If It's not
made that a duck might walk on H "
1 nao grave OOume aDOUV inia, lim mu
Kllen had the bowls now creamed, and
the piles of oat-bread and the stack of
butter at our elbows, I couldn't gf ford
time to dispute It.
Tomas and I attacked the pile and
the stack and the bowls of tea so brave-
Ir and sustained the attack so spirited-
Iv that It (ra little wonder Kllen ex-
pressed the opinion that she "wouldn't
like to be the altinc-house would do
big thrade with many such customers."
We didn't stoo to bandy compliments
--' With her-. And Tomes only passed two
remarks - during the demolition. He
said; , .
"Ma'am If what yer bread want In
-:. liArdnftRa wa.a hnrrowpd from ver but-
ther, there'd be a big Wndment on
the two of them."
And Inter he said reflectively:
The bark ci me han' an' the sole o'
me fut to you. Mcenavalla!"
I gave him an inquisitive look here-
HAS THE SEAT OF LIFE BEEN FOUND-Con-
turned From the First Page of This Section
It was the adrenal active principle, tiius
dUtributed'to all cells, which sustained
their life. Dr. Sajous has thus solved
simultaneously the problems of tissue
respiration and cellular life.
"Again, he found that tha purpose
-of the secretion of the thyroid gland, a
. very large group of blood vessels near
the larynx, was to excite a center in
the brain connected with the adrenals
-by nerves, and thatrlt was therefore by
' Rtlmulatlng indirectly the adrenals that
the thyroid extract produced its won
derful effects.
"It Is here that the great practical
Importance of Sajous' discoveries is
demonstrated. Not only did the find
that thyroid extract excited the adrenal
center, but that several of our reme
dies Iodine, the Iodide s, mercury, co
coa, and others did likewise.
. "The unexplained action of these
remedies In combating some of the most
destructive diseases of mankind thus
became clear; they increased the oxy
genlsing power of the blood and tne ac
tivity of the vital process, and thereby
the power of the body to fight dlsoaRe
and destroy bacteria, the poisons they
secrete and toxte wastes.
. "Now, as to the functions of the
leucocytes. The white cells of tho
blood bave been given several different
. roles bv physiologists, but Bajous was
the first to show their true function;
'the identity of that which causes them
to act as scavengers; to appeste-Jn gfaa-t"
riumbers in the blood under certain con
ditions, normal and morbid; and to con
tain digestive ferments.
"He showed that their role in the
body, was to lake up or ngulf food
Jiroducts of any kind, both in the intes
tinal canal, efter' the foods had been
partially digested In the stomach and
intestines, and In the blood and other
' body fluids; to convert these food pro
ducts into living granulations throuph
the adrenal principle whloh their fer
ments contain and to transport them
to the tissue cells.
t
I
Bajous thus contributed another
pra.t advance In our knowledge of cell
life; not only did he show the identity
and aoure.n of the i.ynnmio principle
which suutains life, but also the pro
cess through which our foods become
endowed with life. and. moreover, the
nami;r In wnich our tissues are built.
"He describes In detail all the MIs
Mses that are most fatal to mai.tlnd.
and .shows conclusively that vrhesjver
' cure had been effected by remedies. It
; was through agents which, by stimulat
. ink the organs referred to, Increased the
blood's asset in auto-antltoxln the
name given by him to the antitoxin
which oun body produces to antagonize
disease.
,. "But how does anto-antltoxin destroy
f dangerous organisms, the toxins thy
secrete poisons, the toxic products of
chemicftV changes? Bajous shows that
this differs in no way from the pro
cess of digestion, and that if auto-antl-toxln
la present In excess in the blood,
1h red corpuscles themselves may. be
digested."
Why, when the great medical jour
nals joined In such a chorus of lauda
tion, when great practitioners found
themselves constrained te give the work
the cachet of their approval, has it re
mained until now so litUe known, so
narrowly appreciated?
,' The answer must be paradoxical; H
is too Important to have its importance
immediately comprehended.
4.,llyJh.'?i yer" have "apea after
fe first outlines were made public and
when months have passed since' the
whole astounding series of discoveries
was made known, does tits inertia, of a
Vrofeasiun give evidence of betna
swayed.
And this tn spite of the netable fact
that Dr. Sajous, instead of disputing the
j.revlously accepted treatment, screes
substantially with both, thus leavirr
. bis discoveries, comparatively free from
the difficulties and the oppositions that
t.s beset se many innovations of the
Hut the magnitude of the revolutions
md by bis research and the far-reaching
dNit'rtln and eonsemienoee of the
Ttexl, wonders i propounds haveeallnd
f'r rnge of knowledge, a profundity
tt Insight and a btteadth of comprehen-
' r ' "'"-!.-:' :' ..
:' ; e --. v ': .; ., ,' '. . -
" ',.f ;'.' .:--.;.,,-a.:f-;;;w-
' upon, Whilst in, IM a-H r paying wnae
,1 turn a ei vniiM- t-ttll tfAftrf 'Vi 1 1 1 tM ft
' my bowl; hut lumat was too In.
tent unon 4ils business to mind m look.
. Va-h-a Tun,.. fa.lt Wh bnn.x. and
IhirsraTlf ved. and that over and ib..v,
IlflU t.7 ISIO t II 11H iVI )WBItll
piM-sur, n pusnea m empiivu wwi
vor of a
man a tinned witn niratsejr.
Ellen and the whole world, and winding
up with another "God bo thankit!"
turned to the fire, drew out his short
brown pipe' and began to fill It; and I,
feeling within that blissful sensation
which pervades the breast of one who
has hungered and has fid heartily, did
in every particular likewise.'
"What put me in mind of It," Tomaj
said suddenly from out Of the reek of
smoke the little brown pipe was rals
ing, "was j-our flrin'."
T a, .. . I, I (hrAiirn mv nwn
halo of smoke, and tried to see Thomas
on the other side, of the fire. "Put ye
I ,ww m a.- ....... n -- -
in mind of what?'
of it was
your flrin' put me In mind of the Red
Poochers' Oulnealand."
"Ves?" I said, modestly and vain
glory struggling within me.
"An' then ye belli' the worst shot
atween the same two disthriots. ye nat-,
urallv nut ma in mind Of him."
Now I did not and do not claim to
be an expert marksman, but I confess
'-l."t ntl"
w.o.it.n.
Sol. smoked on as alien tl
y as the
asthmano guiiy i pi"o 1 wii
And Thomas. J.syond ths fi
I pulled would permit.
re, proven
pipe nols-
uy p"""""" .1 ... .
"Av course," Thomas said, after a
.coupl. of nlniit. e knew I was game
keeper at Maenavalla waistT
-fl ro4 know what fetched m. out
must 'a been that the owner con
sidered Thomas Pubh had too good a
reputation and was too honest, for to
be watched in Meeliavnia.
'1 was five years in Meenavala'
Thomas sat gn a too,1 " '"TL1?!
his kneas stuck- ti pn a level with his
breast; he rested his elbows upon his
knees and his chin in his hands, and
to d his tory to the fire 'five for m-
self an' Ellen was snug an warm, plen-
ty to alt, an' not much to do, an a flra
K11sA 1mKas nmiil.1 rntfel a niiaHh.
rooplt But the fourth raison there was
an Enrllsh llntleman from a place tbey
oall nartrora naa me snooiin 1 1110
place taken. But lo an' behold ye! tale
first week in A'gust the weather was
mortal fine, an' 1 was templed to sup
off over to ma mother's country to halp
her wld the grain o nay. tor sne was
In the black need o' help without a
man body n it or near her wee place.
Wel over to her, to put as much of
her wee grain o' hay through my fin
gers as I oould do In the time; an' then
hack aifaln. An the first news met me
slan In tha face when I come bank wan.
that I wasn't away ths second night till
the poochers was on the place, an'
night and nightly they had shot It for
the remainder o' the week!
"The curse o' the crows light on the
same poochers as a hard bed to them!
. , m i , uru ii,, iii.
llsh Jlntleman come
But wnen the Bri
Kngl
u poor snooti
aord knows he had:
lit hwci o fiu.f. w.u i. intv
small blame, indeed, to the men an-
ondher the circumstances. He said he
might as well have takiu' the, elenhant
shootln' as the grouse shootln' of Meen-
avails. He wanted to know was there
e'er a chance of g lay-on or a bear, or
any other baste e' prey on the place
hs might get the chance of a shot st.
I, av coorse, . tour him there was no
lor-on in that part o' the wurr)'; an' I
said there was no bear barrln wsn, an
If he shot that wan hs was liable to
be hung for shulclde '
'Arc ye sure ve saved that. Torres?"
"Sartlnt sure put It was when I .got
the rascal's back turned. But I ilia tell
his face wan thing. It was of a day he
had the heart o' me brviuk with the
chlrmln and charmin an' . the bias-
nhalmin' he carried on with. Bis I till
htm. 'Yer honor,' sli I, 'there's wan way,
an' If we could work it we'd get fright-
some big bags o' game, an' no mistake.'
slon to say nothing of the will and the
opportunlty to take up anew the whole
round of physiology, pathology and
thrapetitlcs such as are united in
only a few leaders of the medical pro-
fession.
Now, with the fundamental principles
definitely demanded by the men fore-
most in taa application of the aclence.
It becomes inevitable that the fuli
knowledge must swiftly spread, and
that such a world-wide discussion must
ensue as attends a(l discoveries of so
momentous a character.
Onlv a few vears have .one bv since
Dr.
r. William tjslcr, reviewing the con-
. . - ' . - . -
trlbuttons to medicine during the nine-
, rritin irnilli y ,,i,nri ,ru Hint , , i , ,j
have come into our ken a large number
of drugs of the action of which we
know little, while we put
. . ,, Ihnra Inta
inciii iiiiv
bodies the action of
,-nicn
uaaa IrnAW
" " A.J1UW
less.
. hkoaas dictum is equally ramoiii,
tSknda's dictum I
that we nan diagnose disease, describe
It. and get a grasp of it: but we dare
nnt ainarl hv anir moan, tn enra (t Sir
Michael Foster has declared that our Returning lo the 1'nlted States when
physical knowledge consists largely of he Was 8 years of age, he has made his
guesses and gaps home here ever since graduating from
To the guesnes and gaps of Foster. t Jefferson Medical rotlege in 18i S.
the "black, hopeless, helpless, thera- The Inheritance which came to him
peutln pessimism." as one medical ai speedily reinforced by an income
writer termed the dictum of Osier, the rom the practice of his profession an
earliest hint of replv came in the first income which, by reason of the dls-
volume of "The Internal Secretions and tlngulsned position he rapidly at-
-trte Principles of Medicine," published tained. was considerable, even In that
by Kalous" five years ago In a porten- day of the dawn of wealth for phy-
tous work of sen pages. ,cJftn- , . , ,
He reviewed there the Important de- Then, gradually, out of his vastly
partments of physiology, general pa- varied professional activities, ranging
iholngy, general therapeutics and fm- ss they did from special practice and
munitr. It was too tremendous in Its general Instruction to the broadest ob
clemand upon the intellectual enterprise servntlon of all medical research in his
of the profession; only a few among the edlterinl capacities, there came to him
more discerning grasped Itg real slg- the same black, hopeless realisation of
nificance " the existing theoretical chaos which.
Nevertheless there was that In Its later, has beset the Osiers of the pro
pages which stirred large expectancy; fession. ' t ,
and when, on June S of last year. Dr. fro th" ho"1 when he first thrilled
Sajous announced to the American Med- with the thought of solution as a pos
icnl Kdltors' association, his Intention slbllity. this emluent physician pre
of disclosing shortly the complete de- sented In himself tne phenomenon so
talis of the results which had attended common to modem psychology that of
his patient labors, the medical reviews the man obsessed by an idea. But he
of the country felt warranted in declar- displayed a characterlstio which. In all
Ins; It probable that an absolutely sol- the history of human advancement, has.
entlfic therapy was at last within sight. .
In September the second and concuid- VtTY TP ll t TTiHTTP'n
Ing volume of a pondcrousness greater I I I Ya I I I ff -f - J
than the first, made Its appearance. X X. X.XU 1 XliJX
There the author disclosed lully the "
wonderful new science of the ductless "By Ella Wheeler Wilcox
!. f,VmVll (Copyright, 1W , bynAmer.ca-journal-
."ow'iafe thtV'laJkfope?. anPdOSne.p! WW W ttlh higher phllo-o-
less pessimism which Osier had so epl- I phy. attracting the attention
gramatlcally defined. of the world today.
The mvstiirles of disease, the myster- X ' . Ti a. undermlnlna and aunnle-
les of Its cure, the inf lnltery-greaVT'' l ,w Wwwining ana supple
and more vital mysteries of life and menting old-fashioned orthodoxy,
health in life on which the minor se- it Ig the religion of the future. The
?uvrt oj
fling riddles have now been resolved ta honeycombed With It . It teaches faith
their ultimate human analysis. - in God and a belief In human nature's
Pilled liiJigSJu. TiVor Ind SF2t- ttlharltao1 U U OPtln,l,tlc.
Is hs wrought a structure so cycler self-reliant and wholesome.
petJ.I , .v . .t That ma beautiful and true a phllos-
. His profession, for sli the Innovation , , . . . . h. !..
fbrced upon it by his daring yet patient Pny ,J,,a b o" na rnlsrepre-
gemus, knows bin, I JclMtli? Who ?ik'i.mBi SffiStn.il
values most highly the researches the 0.,,n et M . nl'ortune which
experiments, e?en the empiricism's of befallg every great progressive move-
the science which the mosf eminent of mnt. the Ju,t crlUo .4? not Sn-
hls colleagues profess to regard with dema tha cause because It baa unwise
such melancholy discomfiture. and unworthy followers. .Meantime
A fellow of the College of Physicians such followers should, not bs couote-
of Philadelphia, a member of the Acad- nanoed or patronised. . .
ray of National Science, he is a mem- 4 A woman proclaimed to a class study-
br, also, of that assemblage of dls- 'rig under her direction that to develop
tlnan ihaJ .V. a !i " ar a? tU l'V, I tr a. a. aal' aakaaiiM haa atanh Iiil.
n . . . V , 1 1 1 1 ( M la, lilt, A1UVI1VIU1 111 1 1
his chosen task absorbed him to the t.
unuinucBi society, ana not only a Knight man peing-s one oojsoi io m., in ui
of the Legion of Honor, but an officer " this development necessitated the
of, the Academy ef France, r ' -casting off of husband, home and chll-
Tnti1 the iinnarallelaari ana, ami t Armn thara ahnnlif hai na hAflltuiev aid
elusion of all other Interests be w The woman herself bad followed this
professor of snetomy snd physiology in line of conduct, and the roadway behind
the Wagner Institute f- Science, lec- .her was strewn with wrecks of several
uirer on laryngology In that most r- homes, husbands and children which
epetea,f American institutions,, Jef- hsd served their purpose as "develop
rarson Medical college, and, again, pro- era" and been cast aside by her. ,
Qt. arv'Sgfllogv and dean "of 'the - One look Into her cool snd selfish
la. Ti ,n Wedleo-Chiurglcai eoi faoeiwss enough to warn an Intuitive
. . t . . ' I mind not to follow In her line of devel.
U itvij vj, vav-eu-raieia.
U.
I ?
mm
few 1
'HOW
What wav's that? sis he, coming' till
a stan' still. 'If ye can manage to put
me on slch a way,' sis he, 'I'll make It
well worth your while.' "Well, I'm mor-
tlal thankful till yer honor,' si I back
again till tlm, 'an' the way's simple
enoueli If It only worked
-d ye,'
hi nut
six he, lettin' a tearln' ouns (oath) out
of him. 'an' out with it at wanst. till
w hDK vhlll It'a tiL(A' 'Wal! It'a thfa.
I, . . n ' f .14 nnnlj' mAhw
j . i 1 1. . i , v i , . . . . v ..... . v ... .'..w
or other manage to fetch dqwn ft grouse
with every grown ye give, an' a enlpa
wiih ivrj ruma, wc u navv iiiieuij iuii
w tin 117 ui , la , ,i ,,,,f,i,k,f iuii
bags ere we'd be long on the hill do
ve seer
"An raitn ne aid see it,
an' It's soma
poor body's prayer I must 'a' had about
me at the tune kept him from puttin'
the contents o his gun intil me sowl.
An' I then l'arnt what Peadher Mor,
the tailor Ood rest him!) used often to
tell me that a madman and an Eng
lishman is two shouldn't be Joked with.
"Any how, this lad took himself off
In a fortnight with a bigger load of
sin (I'm thlnkln') than snipes, an' he
wrote a square parch of a complaint to
Belfast, to Mister MeCran. the owner
of the place, an' Misther McCran he give
me the dlvil to alt over business. He
went witnin an ace or niaKin me out
me stick; an' threatened that If Iver
he'd hear of a single brace of birds
beln' pooched off the place again, I'd
go ss sure ns me name was Tomas.
"Well, glory be to goodnss, when I
referring to the Medici Chapel in Flor-
ence, wrote In 1844:
"Sleep in peace In your tombs of mar-
ble ana porphyry, Medicis. You have
done more for the glory of the world
than was ever done before, or has ever
8ina be?,n done by any prjnce, king or
emperor.
.u,,?v"n Medici was created prince
the blood royal by Henry IV In
rn" "d was the founder of
the 1-ranco-Flemlsh branch of the Med-
' family. Among his descendants on
the ono hand, was that Dr. Charles E.
!-3Ea.VBal?L . tb m.e."c?J
Hinnitr iv rprrrwi in nv linn in
hl " ,ri, ' " '
onpr
on Flovence; on the
one of his direct descend-
jintsi W
f ''! " v"
iVia .ij
was Count Charles tie Med-
came to the United States In
nd married here. Returning with
,. i. . t.- ... . a i ui
ay... - .....a
,,JB "n v aJUiuiis ,,n an AuiriK ail Bli'i,
, V. . , 1 . , . . .. t JA if.1.1
.Ptinrlosi Fliinhnriiit a i.a XItHirtRalAiiB
iii l , cnnn i a inaiia uc mvni i, l'l.
'. hn,'dllHn; ,.;,.. n.Mh.,
ijti '
la; ...
Dr. HnlOUS IS. therefore. BS VCarS Old.
" .."B"-' aaaia. -V-a- mYT . I "
no looking bai-kward.
.umeni, yi zor tr r ma ini Wft fht
t.4
J x ii,;
f 1 is . - .y ii a-
Jex I 1 .'i'.i, .1 W- -
DID YE GET THEM piRDS, ME MAN?
come by- a good thing I know it; an'
small blame Xo me, 1 like to stick till it:
so I sayed to meself, Tomas Dubh, sis
I, 'plalse the Lord ye'll sleep with wan
eye open an' the other niver closed for
the saiaons to come, an' then you'll be
as wide awake as who's-tlie-otner; an
frnm thtu nut tliA nnnnnov wtrn mill emit
on your tall 'ill be as clever a man as
Vniir.f1f'
'Wall an nnrl iUa nlf-Bata.n AAnk
, i v., m i in., paiavn i uiu.i
around, an' an Englishman again tuk
the shootln' of MeenavaUa. He was a
Misther Hullock1 ( Lurd save us! what
unchristian names them jigllsh big
bugs do have), 1 b'llevev frtfin head to
fut of London sthreet. Wellhowsome-
dlvlr, this Misther Bullock had tuk the
shootln' this year, an' when Misther
McCran informed ms of this, be toal'
me also if there was as much as the
wark of a poocher's hol found on all
the place I would get laive tP to thrav-
elln' for me health."
"An" for yer appetite, eh, TomaaT'
"On or about the twelfth 'of A 'gust
I gets another letther from Misther Bui-
lock himself, to tell me he had another
shoo1,' taken down the counthrey in-
the miighborhood of Glenvelgb, an' that counf, when I noticed a thrap drivln'
himself an' a frin' he wa fetchln' with .along the road below: an' hajf an hour
him would spend a week on the Glen- afther I sees Ellen on the top o' tho
veigh mountain first, an' then they'd skreg above the house, wavln' her shawl
dhrlve up through the Qlentles way pn tohe. 'Surely,' els I to meself, -It's not
bis buggy, an' take the nlxt week out the Bullock arrived.' But when I
of Meenavalla, an' for nte to be pre reached Ellen, that same was the Iden
pared for them on or close afther the tical news she had for me. An' I'll not
belonged only te the few. He was great
enough to surrender himself to his ob
session. And not himself alone. His practice,
Ms dignities, his emoluments, his whole
professional Income, bis private fortune
all. In the course of these twenty
years of indefatigable research, and
overwhelming labor, have been sacri
ficed that he might carry his first, as
tounded hope to Its doubtful fruition.
Today, with nothing but his two vol
umes as an asset for dig lavisn expend!
rav!h'ndl"
ous Is retir-
ture or weann ana more
ture of life Dr. Bal.
Ioh0nb1uild"trVpn,,. UcTnd"- af'
most he wme ef oatlent
waitingththat nfroWhJ latest bit ch
nf trra,lnptA frnm tha Medlcn.r'hlriir-
'ollese. of whose fseulfy b has
vaia. v. .
been the dean.
Glass of Wine by Hs Own Fire.
From the Westminster Gaietta.
Whan rirnrv T.an. thentr. was flrat
destroyed by f.re-the recent calamity "-J. ' ' J Jt g's wV. .t'mlnut'e'..
was the third of it. klnd-Bherldan, its imj JIK." 'k.'fo ll wn
owner: was occupied In the commons dog as a companion far Rex, who ana tgi? to study bis favorite news
with hi. parliamentary duties and his would then sure 1 not spo,, .nythinr f&MWJ
voted the adjournment f the house
and hurried off to sea the conflagra-
linn QharMan 1, 1 ar.l AVWaAtlalf taiaa'.la- &
lournment. but
being outvoted went and
structlor. of his orooer-
watched the destruction of his proper
tv from a neighboring house of refresh-
ment sharing a bottle of port with
His apparent Indlfferenee-prompted
some rriends to expostulate witn mm
completed Sheridan's finanolal downfall,
and, forsaken by hlf friend, he died
soon after the
s new jsnegvtrt pegan us
checkered career.
shore in
"It's dangerous to hug the
Said vountr Lileutenant McITelt.
"But It s far more dangerous t6 hug a
girl
witn a pin In the back or her belt."
Chicago fews.
SELF "The Best
hard when a man cannot drink a glass f-1 ' t" B".-W,",?-"no."'! ''Ol. I know what it
of wine by his own fire." This fire P"1 l" ? " .w,t "...? buv another
vogue among both intellectual and fashi what Is best for Urn always but, oh, I nian ought to be here now. Perhapg he's
1 arable people in two continents. suffer so at this awful mandate of hist down stairs In the office. De go down
But her sun set, as. all such guns I have always Hyed for him and leaned and sea."
must, not to rise again ontll she comes upon him. and I cannot understand how' Jarvls hesitated.
back with her enlightenment in another any high philosophy can maks a good "He'll be here in a minute," he said.
Incarnation. wan s& cruel.' . "they will send him up."
A man preparing himself to be a No greet,' high philosophy ever makes "Do go down, dear, and see If the man
teacher of the development of the ''God any soul cruel or neglectful of -its pear- there. We can't wait all day."
within" has calmly, coldly and unheal- est duties. ". , Down fee went but not to th offloa
tatingly announced . to a devoted and The man who casta off a. loving de- After a Scotch high ball in the saloon
faithful wlfo that h can no longer live voted and faithful wife to "develop his n the corner opposite, Jarvlg returned
with her. higher nature" will never reach the to the waiting room shaking bis head.
"I have passed beyond the need of mountain top of truth, because ait such "There Is no use, he won't be here to
human ties of this kind." he gays, heights are attained through first flay " he aaid, "we better go."
"You would be a hindrance to me, 1 to climbing step by step by the stairs of ''I'll see myself," said Mrs. Jarvlg
you. Kaoh soul must develop In its own accomplished duties. - trotting down stairs. ""'
way. I have the kindest feeling for There is no wisdom, there is no pleas- "Can you tell me if the man who
you and will always be your friend, but ure, there Is no success on -earth in any wants to sell a bull terrier has called
If you remain with me I shall be unable avenue worth the crushing and wound- yet," she asked the clerk.
to grow as I desire to grow in order Ing of a faithful, true, and li-al heart ' "Tes ma'am, he was in the waltlng
that I may teach humanity these great I ara not a stickler for allegiance to room when you came in. He wen up-
truths v marriage vows after a marriage has be- stairs again a few minutes ago."
Knowing that I had written much on come a mockery- or a hell. A man "Well, he's aot there now," said Mif.
the subject of the "pew thought," this whose wife becomes a virago, a nagger, Jarvls with some heat,
stricken soul turned to (ne in her bour a wasteful spendthrift of a woman, is. The clerk eaid he would run up and
of.a&wful darkness, i to my thtpklng. Justified In separating see. He returned a moment later.
I am not wise or learned," she said, from her. A woman is rlghc in leav- "Tes, ma'am he's there now,"
looking at me with tb eyes of a wound- ing' a man who makes her .life a purga- Mrs. Jarvls went upstair again,
ed deer. JPerhaps I may seem very Ig- tory of discord and misery. Looked around the room with a search-
tip-rant to you, but I want to ask you No human being should bo allowed to ing glance-and shook her ' head,
tf a man has to turn against his nearest destroy the peace of another's exist- "What is it dear?" her husband asked,
and dearest ones fin order tq grow, to fnce when that peace can be obtained . "I can't make it eut at all," she
this new thought. . . by separation. But the man who casts gasped, "Have you seen man la here!"
Is it right for blm to cast off euch. off a good wife or the woman who casts "No dear." he replied meekly,
a love as mine? Jhy. he Is the onlv off a good husband on the plea of 'There was a heavy footstep outald
1 lfr 1 ?ver. ".'a-7 1,6 wooed me when "higher development" Is a culprit and and a tall heavy gentleman came In
1 w '.Llx.t,en old and Would a coward and deserves ostracism. , leading a ferocious- looking mastiff. "
not take No for an answer. J thought It is sn Insult to the God of Love "Oh. there he Is," Mrs.' Jarvls ex.
eaTL,w.rk.aa?d ? 2u.el tb0I ""' J? ., beings pretend to be teacher claimed, "whaj a beautiful dog." "
JtlThtn;0.. uwaal' Tli a.K.1 raaT" of..tta.rutI,! ul "pot them and away "Yes ma'am, and he's an gentle s gn
rled him at eighteen, and w hava been with them I angol" the man said. " "
Pc.t'y haPPV 'or twelve years,. - - 1 , , There new. Fred, do buy him. You
.,,ay vj,, vaiii. ucmin to
hAltAW aaaie lfiralaS linalt aw. ., I. .. - V. .
iVI"?A.h JhU,Fhl-8?p-r ef ATlRiBf '.Sl)..liy?tJl.inp!t. pearest ki-4 aed. The w.i-wltl. the ; mastiff spoker
hi nlgher nature, j want him to do Who Is gli love or- nothing.- t , Well to teU you the truth, mm'tm, this
.. .. w. w a.a..aa Ulllia , IIUAlAIIU
iii.in i inn iii ni.ii.nii ' in.nupM
UM if. -mi VMMnZ
twentieth. An' he sayed It. was toul'
him the lan' had been pooched last year
till the shootln' of It wasn't worth trie
powdher, an' to remember that he wasn't
goin' to stan' ttlch nonsense; if there
was a feather touched on the place he
would shue me must her for all he was
wnrtli 'Mulr uit.ir mini! olaw
sis I, when I read his letther about that.
Thft nttni'tinr uhn wtn a Ktr.t Ma.
na,.aIU n Ib.dh ma . 1. . .
1 1 ,1 ana hvww-ii nun nil tuv iwrniiciii
'ill be a conahumin'Iy clever fellow
who's In the habit o' ge
inn up arore lie
Eties to tied at all. An' verv rood care
I had been takln' for the three weeks
gone that no poochrr would look at It
across a march ditch; an' betther care
still, tf betther oould be, I was goln' tp
tajce that gun s-Iron (barrln' me own)
wouldn't be leveled over it for the nlxt
eight days. For I was on it a" most day
and night, an' the tail of a poochers
coat niver wanst showed; an' I was de-
tarmined It would be ao till the big fil-
low himself would sten on the grass.
"It was lust three eventn's afther the
letiher come that I was out, as usual
on the mill, an' I was bavin' a couple
o' puffs at the arouse on me own ac
CAUGHT IN
B
RIDQET came rushing into the
dining-room shrieking with fright,
r.i. .v...... . i-
on, ma am, there a a rat In
mHI,k 4K . , . "
kitchen the biggest rat I
ever saw,"
Isn't H gtrange that whenever one
U" ?' ,mmen" '' One
n,ver amall rat. especially ser-
vants. It's always the biggest thav
haVe "
Mr and Mr' Jrvl hurried to the
kitchen at once, followed by Hex. Rex
K,. tha. i. . v,.,n a a
.,, h. Tla K "J, "
.......
men jnr. jar via nougnt mm ne
was the net of tha household, but mm.
of his exourslons into the gardens of
the neighbors resulting generllly in the
payment of heavy damaaes hava
iirnmrht him int.. aii.n. ia,uh hi.
ability he proved It In li niinutes. To
ability ha proved It in li nitnutes. To
tell the truth ths kltsben looked like
a political- club after an election, but
ten
C""" ' 'i"i,Uw Kd aZ,SiV
thejeast which had so rudelydls-
r"'v"T""
0.rna8M? and iSr Jsrvls r.o!
" 7,ed Aen MhS
. ff !, Ei, th.11
which had
strolled In-; through the back door...
aflY y? ." tears at tne narsn tnings
. - . . . .
" n. "Ta .rDO,"1 -P.l-a5i?r
3-. -.- -v -
He was a dear, good dog and she would
bava another Ilka him to keen him mil
a. X.ia.i.Ii' "7" ' -'
Nrmornlng Jarvls called at ths of-
flee of "Field and Fancy" and handed
H.Viim? nil briV m?Al?Z
gentle. Any offer accepted.
...a... .aw..u,...7 v-a , 7 ' - - a
inv . Afrap aAOAtitAA lull hl.
,,.1 .1,1,.
Call thl
office Wednesday at neon."
in'iitiArAA'a ha
kl any offer I
ke any offer l
"That settles tr ne mi
left the office. I'll take
Way to Reach It
iiuu inrn.ur!, Boun py meir capacity
a7la.i. aaln.l.lMl.. a I- a? . a - .UV
IZJ I IV I Cl-LI 1 1 1 1 a II1B LieHI. H Tt IP I llat'a.
deny. tbt I gave a hearty good curse, enough for the ; ornnV' Christians, It
.... ils saen ras shootln, Wlen, a hs conrn was nothin' at all irf eomparlshment .
along the road. eon. humln tiU him t with what lie did so fast did thiy
ut I hurried down to the house. Wan dhrop that again' the third night '
4 U) ujaA weei t-the onr t -p urty-r k adthg b!crburty'5nesom"iocifa"
wan) up an' down ths road: an' tha Vh of gams, W ha4 got all nloely bam
. er, who was my man, UIen toul' me, pered an packed off ;' an' he started,
was, in the house. I put ths boldest, himself an' his companion, off in their .
. face 1 could on ma anr marched In as buggy nlxt mornln'. saying he'd have
undaunted as if I'd been onlv savin me nnih thrv .t mnviih arain' s-.i'
prayers on the hill. But I knew be the
Tomas Dubh Gallagher. Ye r mighty
, welooma to these parts, rachln him ma
han' sm glvin' him mprtial sight
warmer , shttka han'g than I seen he
X" poochers I seen on
.'plalse yer fonor," sis I, for hothln-
ws. 'iven. piaiss goodness,' sis he, 'I'll
uuW onimtnat 1 wu n wr ju -ro ; somewhat hatther nor a weox time.
?UuQa;Ua8'nT ". !', he, nuits shortjinV Though both o' them graised ta first
without rach n'lhls han' to mm. Tls. uke Jfntlemen afore they went, be didn't
yer honor, sis ' T rm nvln' jtni hut ...M . AtAM. . ki Kn. ,ka ,..n..F,
' - . hslholiVh miKht
tl hn M SttJ--'M' f oirryln hung over the top of me
all things -onildnars4 "l thought ifbest uni brac 0,t,,Pft managed, by
to tell the thruth n'V shame the dlvli; Fnwiagement tf scrape up- when
1 'No, sir,' sis I 'it was meself 'What"' roun tha bend 0' the road, afore I
l'h;.aveiW turned poochep as weft T"'? .ay,.Fi1 W1" ' comes a twj
s as preaarverT Udou mv word a OUrtv r81" wtl wo jintlemen on it. 'Bad
f "llow J-e i mrml -A burty amekeeoerT uolt t0 ya?. ' an. Qod forgive me
' vXt iS V?Uv. v.-mm?S!'J' to euruWy.--AhnvBlnt t the same
w .ovu an iiitr n niKiii 1111 1 .r-- t , 1 , m , : -I
port ye to yer masther. an' I'm now iu,e1 w" 't 'or natther o'
r vln- warplta' of it,' 1 pleaded with -hem ,h ,d red whiskers o' my man;
Kim as best J eould, W showed him ol lifted me belonging's an' went on
the oyts mr(n q' ths thing, hut I whlt n When the thrap overtuk me,
. miarht aa wn hun Intiiin; Bn.n. it pulls up. an' without as much as
to pavin' stqnes; he. was .bound to pood-morua Qood-evenin', er the divil
; report ins. an' report me he wouli, for V"V' tn biggest lookin' bug o'
it had always been his opinion, he sayed, itwe snaps me up with How did
that afther al ths cry-out ar In' pooch- y1! the Tirds, me rnanr
era there wa no eoocher worse nor thef By golnn' for them,' sis I. 1 knew
famakeenera themselves- an' In the In-"". Was Jin ondalcent way to answer a
lierest c? his brother sportsmen all over sthranger, but the boul'ness of him
tha kingdom, he sayed. more nor in his nt again', ms grain. -Who are. you,
own mmeresiB, nea nave to report it. "'!.'. ""'' ' impornnco no vum
'I see,' als, 'y got my letthar,' tossln' yh. I in son o' me mother's' sli
It fronj bim nto the table, for the ?j maybe ye know me betther now.'
Ifttthe haA hn lvln in th.itnri 'Maybe.' sis he. va'll be so kind to
from the Urns we got It, an he had it
In.hU han' wha I come in. 'I wasn't;
to nave come, as I sayed there, til! the
twentietn, nut my sweetest curse upon
all poochers not forsrettln' all' sama-
keeners -mv awaAtAat puriA An tha whnU
tllfirtmMt a' thorn i Xfw lllAHUftlvh nlaA
when I ooms on Jt was either pooched
or garhekeeper,
r, or both, an' 1 wouldn't
have got hamper o birds off it la a
month, I have promised a great num -
bar a', nraaenta n' fnwla tn mv frlnn'. In
. England-r-promlsed to have them for bour laughed hearty. I turned square
them in the first week an' it'u lookln on the road an I looks at him. 'Te'r i
pretty like as if my promise' is gotn' to anondher a great mistake, sir,' sis I;
be bruk for the first time In me life the shootln' o' this place has been
an' all through poochers an' gamekeep- taken by Misther Bullock, of London.'
frs. d n them! Be ready,' sis he, afther 'Exactly,' sis he, 'Misther Bullock of
he had foamed an' fumed up an' down Iaondon (which- is me), has got the
the house, an cursed curses that I won- Privilege of payin' for tha shootln; an'
dhered didn't burn a hole in the roof bis gamekeeper, be all signs, is to get
gettln' out 'be ready, sis he, "afore the the run an' the snipes.' 'Come now.'
screek o" day In the morra mornln', an sis I, none o' yer tricks upon thravel
be but with us till I see what we can era, Misther Bullock o' Iaondon was here
find In the nlxt couple o' days. In the the beglnnin' o' the week, an' shot the
menetlme go out an' house that pony an' lan' as clean as the day tt was cree
glve him the best care Meenavalla can sited, an' there's not a jlntleman from
afford; yer wife 111 make a little shake- wan end to the other o' London street
vdown for ourselves an' give us a bite but maybe is at the present spalklu1
of anything altable, for our bellies is his tooth In wan o' the grouse, an'
biddin' our backs good morra with the wishin' to the lord he was 10 times
.fair dint o' the hunger.' hungrier.'
"The first sthray light wasn't on the "But, mo bhron! the face that Jtn
hill in the mornln' till the 'three of us tletnan (and his naybour, Atoo) dhrev
?ra there afore it an' us brfngin' away on himself when I .sayeor this, wis
or all we were worth. The two Jin- somethln 'frlghtsome to behold; an' mar
tllmen got intil betther humour when I niver die in sin if the gun didn't
they found how plenty the birds was, shake in me han'. He thundered out
an' they fetchln' them down like hail- o 'him such an oath as would be 11
atones. But, behould ve, I used always Godsend to s quarryman for splitting
feel more or less pride In meself as rocks an'"
beln' a purty, dandy shot, but I can tell "Ellen, a chara, said Tomas, "I mls
ye. them two Jlntlemen very soon doubt me this fire would be out long
knocked the conceit out o' me; the ago If ye hadn't the doors boulte.
second Jlntleman was a pleasure to see Threw a grain iv turf an' another lump
shootln'; but to see the big fellow him- of fir on It, a thalege."
self puffin' powdher was a sight for "Well, TomasT"
sore eyes. That man, sir, could kill "Well, Jaimie?"
round a corner. Goin' on i6 years, now "I want to bear it out. Was that ,
I'm handlin' a gun, an' have come In Bullock?"
the way of a good many sportsmen "Conshumln till him, iv course it
that knew what end of the gun shot was."
come out of as well as who's-the-nlxt, "An' him shot the place? The red
but that man's elqual, or anything com- fellow?"
in' within an ass's roar of It, I nivor "Was the Red Poocher, Iv course,
yet did meet. who was afther sthrlppln' Bullock's
"Anyhow, to make a long story short, Glenvelgh , shootln' as bare as a ba'.il
we dhropped the birds so fast of, I bead Just afore Bullock come on it"
should say. he dhropped them so fast, "An what happened to you. Tomai?"
for though we lowered a smart number "I walked an' I'm here now."
HIS OWN NET
get, then one morning I'll smuggle ths
animal to town with me and tell Lucy
H must have run away."
7 , . . .
"Field, and Fancy" was one of the
waaVw nmr rai in h. hnmaa
the Jarvfs. Bo when he returned on his
V"ua.1 ,rLnon Monday evening Mr.
there H w,
only bull terrier
tfni in luuMti tivirr iii mu vvi iiaeiriaiiia.
was, the offer and the
for sale. Not a word
was said about the affair. Mrs. Jarvls
:&H42.:M
tlon any name or address. Mr. Jarvls
1 hi- brilliant idea.
Mr. Jarvls was wonderfully cheerful
Wednesdsy morning as he kissed his
wif a-omt-hvo Sn .h.
"' Shortly, before 12 o'clock Jarvla left
1,',JI2!" l"w.1iif'. .nd k'1"?!.'0:
-.W
in n.0.-' was published, a clerk In.
formed htm that no one had called yet.
hii i.e- P
MTt'wf:K' T.rt.
342? VJ ,i,.arl18;
? hi1"" at the Person ovr tnB t0P
crld are you dolntr
here. Fred,1
-ha,aua.h7
xclaltsed as soon as-
she cauaht slsht of him.
- "Exactly what I- was
ZS.
going to ask
Jarvls replied, as Via
,Bvou uniowimi irum ma asconisn-
"Ur, .T.rvla lonv. . h.. k..K..a
qulrlngly. Then she
Is. Tau have eema
in duv MHorner nnar Tor ma nivan'i
you?" T
Mr. Jarvls gasped.
Vou know I want one dear and of
.".PW ?.n,i '..
LT
Bourse i can see now mat yeu intended
It:?,1' m by buy,n tliat buU ,r
.Tv-iie-that is mv deeiyT cam.
b.?"A b? bH" t.rrfrr. Jarvls liked to
I a) 1 1 ina iniTn wnen na iwin a
,T. . -- - " ....... ...
I0" HUV1 W11CII
j,ew , weet
of you
Freddy. I
Id buy an-
rlly didn't think you won
'' I1 f.ot 1 Cftm VP ro'
Cow wuch thejr wanted for t;
yself to sea
thin dor. hut
i snaii uvf it so mucn better ir you
buy It" .
Mr. Jarvls looked puxiled but W wife
want on. .
"It's passed 12 Freddy dear, so the
. --. . .3 -
; There now, Fred, do buy him.
promised you would." . - . . - ,
be back to Meenavall wanst mors in
to Misther M'Craa it was his solemn
duty, ha sayed. an' 1
jook It f .
, h--
ft :" a f ,
he couldn't ovar-
second vejiln.
It tlm tboth,.uJl nd bJ"' or 1
r' t"" '" " v mi
va
tU m where Black Thomas Gallagher,
piekeepsr, Uvea In these parts?
frs, 19 pa orr ma,- sis i, wnat s this.
earra to Da erf me,' sis 1, 'what's this,
of who Is ha th)s, t'v been sauoln'f
YIs. I sis to hl, 'J think I can show
ye that, bekaae Tm vth' Identical man
himsnlf. Tlh InrtuBii alw hat nnllln
y
himself.
??m"e" AW
other, -are ye, indeed? I
when. I tuk. Meana. valla
2lan t ""
rr the sal son X had got sich a, witty
' gamekeeper intil the bargain. I'm a
luckv man. truth.' sis he. an' hla tiav.
By Otto Reinert
here dog Is almost as good as sold to a
man what Is been advertising for a
mastiff, but I don't mind letting you
have him for $10 more than I'm offered."
"What's the price?" Mr, Jarvls asked
with a sickly smile.
"Well. I'll let you have him. gov
ernor, for 146. He's worth , a hundred
any day.- He's a dog, sir; I tell you,
he's a dog."
"So I suppose," Jarvla retorted, "do
you thjnk I mistake him fnr a giraffe?"
Five minutes later Jarvla had bought
the dog and paid out $45 and was tak
ing him home, his own property.
"I never knew you were such a dar
ling, Fred," Mrs. Jarvls said as they
walked toward the ferry, "but I thought
yot said you were after a bull terrier?"
"Bo I did. ' It was my Joke."
But Mrs. Jarvls never understood whv
her husband looked so sour at the suc
cess of his own Joke.
Oslerism a Mistake.
It appears that to backseat men at 40
would simply rob ths world of most of
its masterpieces, the creation of which
depends on tb,e Intellect. An Interest
ing article in the Century gives tho
average "ga at which the best work
in various lines lias been produced.
According te the writer of the article
the records give an average age of 60
for the performance of the maeter,work.
For workers the average age is 47 an l
for thinkers 62. Chemists snd phy
sicists average the youngest, reaching
their highest efficiency at 41. which
may account for the theories of nr.
Osier.
Dramatists and playwrights, poets and
Inventors follow at 44; novelists glvj
an average of 49; explorers and war
riors, 47; musloal composers and act
ors, 4S; artists snd divines occupy the
position of equilibrium at 60; essayists
ana reformers siana at 61 ; physicians
and surgeons line up with the states
men at 62; philosophers give an average
pf (4) astronomers and mathematicians,
Satirists and humorists, 56; historians,
7: naturalists and Jurists. (8.
"As may be noted," gays the writer,
"there is a rearrangement of the order
at this time, but the thinkers, as be
fore, and as would naturally be ex
peoted, attain their full maturity at a
later period than the workers. The
corollary 4s evident. Provided health
and optimism remain the man of SO can
command success as readily as the man
of JO."
Russian Empress Romances.
vjf From Tit-bits.
Hew rfany people are aware that the
marriage of the Empress Marie Feodor
ovna of Russia, the csafg mother, who
Is at present in this country visiting
bey sister. Queen Alexandra, and who
hopes te make her home in England,
provided one pf ths roost pathetic love
stories in the nnnalf bf rpyafty?
Before the empress, who was Prin
cess Dagmar . of Denmark, married
Alexander
lit she
was engaged to his
elder brother,-the czarevitch. In 1865
at Nice the OraSid Duke Nicholas fell
from bis horse and was so1 badly in-
jurea tnei nis tire was oespaired or.
His fiancee hastened to him and never
left bis side till be' breathed bis last
Tha succession ta the throne devolved
on the Grand Duke Alexander,
He stood by the deathbed of the csare
vitch, who. In the presence of the tm-'
reror and empress, placed the hand of
he weeping princess Into his, saving to
her with almost his last words: "Marry
my brother: be is true as crystal, and
J wish It." . -J. . i, .
Enforced by political 'reasons, this
request was law to the bereaved girl
:"-., Memories. .
Birds singing in the . blossoms!.
Rivers rippling in melody;
Or ecu meadows .and white olouds
In a bright bend of blue;
The breath of dew-wet violets
And then dreams! area nisi
And p for a lost springtime, v t
--And Lovs.that Is only Memory! V.: .
i Atlanta Constltutlosa
Inwn off ths hill
' - fyl ,