THE OREGON 'SUNDAY. JOURNAL; , PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 19, 1911. 4 -AV tv T7 ; ra rs n : fr3 F3 Vr77 j rA .M VAPnrfland Woman, ikv ! Hi- . . . Pioneer life .( .sag ; i m n s; v ; : . (Mr.. A. T. M-Atee of 141 Gantenbein a venue, Portland, herewith recites in her own word, some personal experi ence, that" occurred when the Pacific northwest was a wilderness, peopled chiefly by, Indiana. In. this day 'of de veloDment and orogres. tt'ls hard to coneelve of such condition, of pioneer conceive ox won conaiwon- v" nxe navmar nrevaiiea in mis tioihhx eyen six, decadea.aga) .-.v.; THE COLLEGE THE women, colleges are calling : attention to ' the fact that - the . ' higher education of girls appears to he a apeclfio for domeatio mis- , ery. The. records of Vassar ool lege show that not a single graduaU of that institution ha. ever figured la the divorce courts, while the other women colleges, make almost aa good a show ing, the number of divorce, among their alumnae being almost negligible. ' Thia should settle the ancient fallacy that to' give a girl a good education un fitted her to be a wife, for these statis tics certainly . Indicate that If the col lege girl doea not marry aa frequently aa her al.tera, aha stay, married more often. - v . . . - Many explanation, may be offered for this phenomena. The most obvious, of . courM, I iut w., ..... vu power of the college woman 1. better fitted to aolve the domestic problem than the . undisciplined mind of ihe noorlr educated woman, and that there fore .he can more successfully guard : against the conditions arising that lead to qivorce. . !.".;,--, V Learned Profession, in Maiitv TTinkina- a home Is a learned profession. No woman can bring to thl. great - task too broad and profound a knowledrer because It Includes every Vnnwl.r, htMUH it includes every other art and aclence on earth. She win need all that she know, of chem .try in ut uu , , l?Z'!LCb:?artrTl of ln trying" to check hnf 2- or Duioner ana grw, cooKing, an ; inai higher mathematlca - " "L., iT.fc-t vT, S Tan- eery bill., al that shs knows of tan- the multiplication guagea to max. nersen , uaiueiui '"." ,,-,. fc f.mllv rnw The Hindu, and St.ena. 'f..fl?lil2J0 but inevt and Dolores that pass through her kltch- . It ianot only Jncelvabie, but inevi en. . She wil need all of her knowledge , table th. ,fcm" JlV the of hygiene and germ theoriea In sterilik- taught to thln and reason wi n Ing her Saby'a bottles; she will need all capuin of her .oul under eondltion. that of her law toseleth; disputes between would send another woman into hys her7bHdVni5.na.wUl need ail of her terlcs. Also '. v" I- TRIUMPH OF THE TEtEPHONMI MATTER OF FEW SHORT YEARS r ' . . . : ITT life has become telephoned, ; r ... v ri.aali nnta it in B'. nDiuo -.. - the Independent In "tores and hotels this wire-traffe has grown to.n almost bewildering extent., ; v ' "" ' "lter he Vat there and , the third ... scattered sparks from Th. bundred largest hotel, in New .pago ,onT"Vii' residential "eLchone firetorandB as a warning to the llght Tork have' il.000 telephones, nearly; as, lSSl ita anaM to to make hast-. The Golden Bough many "as the cohtihent Of Africa and ! nipain--talked ,ta his managers in glv a host of instances of similar- . niore han the kingdom Of Spain. In an. '"f.1"' u 1B- tht. ln-trument mainly ceremonies as they have been observed i -ena fW'&iS & XTLnr ooun gages.,-,'-: - .. . " m. tha kiieamon medium of converse-' In Roumanla, Bervia and otqer ooun- f There seems -to be no activity wnicn is rTt being made more convenient by the telephone. It is used to eairtne duck Shooters in western v. annuo, w.. Intead of the solitary telephone of the .... - . . .. , a flock of bird, has arrived and to ynYnSin tV the Wh.lt goes in procession from house to bouse rect the movements of the dragon, in ; SK-TbM w " th' XV" Wagner's grand opera "Siegf rled.? :'lia i.tlrr-.- singing , for rain - the householders At th a Vanderblit cup tace W wlres: 3, ;w,"j.un;,l(;,r drench 5 them with bucket, of water glrdled Vthe track and -reported, every -$9Jy h pub 1c official banker. wW gain 'or -mishap of the racing autos pn t ,aBt to accept thf. Htle. fh. J'fFa"t And at such extensive pageants as that telephone. They were slow ta;.m:J f? ,"jffVim. of of the - Quebec tercentenary lrt - 1908. andon the old fallacy that no bus! " J lrl"p',chtd. ' m. ' where 4000 actora came and went upon- W9H ean bs done without'" a wrlttfeii fee- drought during the summer. a ,iq acre stage, every oruer w by telephone'- - . - , .'. Qarflsld Xvas the first among Amerl- Can presidents- to ponscss-a telephone, . An exhibition instrument was placed in hla house without cost in 1878,, while , he waa -still a member of congress." Neither Cleveland nor Harrison, foi" : amnramntal reasons, used the maKlO wlM- very -often. In their time1" there' whs one lonely idle .telephone in. the White House used by the servant.'sev erat times - a wev-a. But with McKtnley came a new order of things. To him a telenhone was J- - -jr . , J J 7 r UW ' -; - . i ' Written for The journal ny an., . V. nu,. in ,S5l i land ilvinV on, Xear .n Portland,' i .mr parent, removed to the west- and .Vir'T-K.'" Vk1- ZZZZ mw jo our. nome ana panoox ox wr iwm. AS AN ANTIDOTE FOR DIVORCE 8be will need all that aha . mtnirtt won't bake and the grocer doesn t Show up .ndn"oted1 Sny comes. to dinner; and .he will need all of the '.elf control that a thousand college, h.r hold . her t neaoe in 7"" " 7t tne grocer doesn't wont JaSt3 0sany comes. could teach her to hold bar; peaoe m jouio l whwl uKl word wtn " ' .....it ..It was a nas- more ttan a ne"B'7' time an exhilarating sport ie . i k. Manv raveled In ; the one TDho7yl" " the eomforur of 'ePhony , c no In 1895 he hadaat 1m Ms c anion --- .traaaclA the custom of a J'n; "Vhh. Tamtly.every '..V.ning? whw he is away fron.-T.oma trd. 1 James Btinman or wew xorii was rirst, among bankers to foresee the tele- I,h0n' era. As early as 1875. while Bell ras teaching his infant telephone . to wheels designed for summer coasting. talk,' Btlllman risked 12000 In a schemeVlt has a regular sled body., The wheels to establish a crude dial system, of wire are not high and they are placed under, communication which later grew ; into the sled Just as runners would be. the " New York's first telephone xchan'ge,-;';"i:.:'twb. rear wheels on a stationary axle, At the nresanl time the banker who tha two forward wheels' on aa axle that. works closest to his telephone la prob works closest 10 nia leiepnone proo- .hi. Rmni-W. Parkin. .-Tha Parkina vably, George W. Perkins-. '-The Perkins plan of rapid transit tejephSny Is . to prepare a list of -names, from 10 to 80, and ' to flash "from one to another aa fast a. the operator can ring them nip, - , v. " rt,- ' ' Tears ! V" '" : . fc tj.- u- My panmw t of?rn'nTo."m a Wna, usually .the akin of and aoo-a , v M b. startled, bv a runt. and ----- -- --------- n w knows ot chemistry In cooking. tt.1.- i k. l.... mm TtrStlm. " Tt teaches women to be comradely a vlr tue which, women seldom posse... . . teacnes women to do comraoeiy b tue which, women seldom posses.. . . ' Another reason Why the college woman is lee. apt to1 make the sort oft ma rrinr that ands In divorce than her 4h "How tq. Break a Drought. From tha London Dally .News. ' .- MpHE tricks are many and various by T wnicn inemDera or mo umiinu MM tn hMnflp rain in Jmnth Tli, la a vll- . loo-- n . -Rnaata: tnr instance. where three men used to climb certain. .V' - ... HKTW- - " " ....... . . . m l r trees in seasons oi uruugm.. vv of water . . woicn no wouiu iiiruiiuo buuu. . One of the two others hammered on, a ketUe or made some similar noise In. thereby, producing- thunder. tr,e" ne cnarm ior.ramw more ..pier turesqua ,Here a . troop of girl..-, the l.?":.- ; Sled for Summer Coasting.4 , -' A novelty in playthings is a sled on is pivoiea ana nas conneciea wun it ahnva -tba ton of the sled a irroHHhar' is pivoted and has connected with it above the top of the sled a cr JNewajva uii rai m vcm like the crossbar on a flexible flier sled, by which the wheeled sled can in like manner be steered and guided. : : The wheeled .led ba. steel .poked ' Recalls Incidents of in Pacific Northwest; Pizo , ) ' - I ..lntotmn was J. vi.vrtvlVi," And while near you. thendfan, earned but lit- w Z 15 "7.. T:i own Imperfect English-. h , . . , n r . , " stay-at-home sister 1. because she marries-so much later in life. The college woman practically never marries under IS, and by that time her character la formed, her taste settled, and .he know. f what she wants and 'requires In a hus band.' - " ' A girl of . IS or 10 will marry a man because he dance, the two step well; because he has a black moustache, or look, like a clothing advertisement pic ture. Then when .he comes to herself, when ah. is woman grown, she finds that she has made a colossal mistake, that there is not one thought or Ideal or aspiration In common between them. Inevitably they quarrel, inevitably they come to hate each other. Inevitably the . bonds between them come to be the fetters of prisoners. ' And only too often the disillusioned, bean hungry woman meets up with a man that 1 her "real mate, and then there la divorce and af finity scandal. Better" to Walt. The late marriage has so much bet ter chanoe of being a success than the early marriage that it would be worth while .ending girl, to college Just to put theni in a place where they would be safeguarded until they reached the age ot discretion. If the college gave them nothing else save protection. 1 Also the college girl, being older and wiser when .he marries than tne orai : nary girl, goes about making a happy home definitely. If she get. nothing else from the history she has studied she ha. acquired a fewpolntere on the Newest Notes. Of all the world', production of S747 tons of qulck.llver last year the Vnlted State, produced butj 771 , ton.. ' ;-'-:- ' - ,.'.'',-' Moving picture, are being em ployed to teach the less civilised Filipinos lessons in hygiene. , More than 260,000 electric flat Irons have been sold within a year In the United States and Canada. The production of sugar cane In Cuba for the crop year ending with September exceeded 1,459,000 tons. ' There are 28 great glaciers in Switzerland. ' A shadow 50 miles long Is thrown on the ocean by the peak of Ten .erlffe. , - An expenditure of $35,000,000 for irrigation is planned by the Cuban .congress; :' . . . - ' " Steel dies now are engraved by electricity. . -( ', Japan now has 45 gas companies, as against only seven five year, ago. ' i ' It ha. been estimated that the eye of a fly can disoern an object .one' five-millionth of an Inch In diameter. ,.- .. wheels, some with metal rims and some i-ubber tired. Obviously it Is not in tended for country uae on soft dirt roads, but for city or town, where there are asphalt street pavements or paved, sidewalks. n- , New Wrinkle In Paper Bags. From the New Tork Sun. . 1 1 One of the latter day minor refine ments of the retail hat - business is found in the furnishing of paper bags in which the customer can carry home his hat - without attracting, attention from I everybody he meeta It used to be that the hat was put In a bag made the time, for often at night th howling of the wolves and the weird chanting of the Jndlana .caused one to tremble with . fear of a hostile vtelt from them: Twice t " during our residence i there we 'were . . 1 obllwHl to go to a fort of safety, and .,"on these occasions we took only such thlnga aa were abaolutcly nscessary, aa ' there was neither time to get much to .. get her, nor means with which to take it A f w Inrilanenanhla articles ware ITOtten tofetlier hastily and we- were- bundled into a farm wagon and were off; ana t i. .v. ... t. "lV:i 'JLw ion, aa things were being put in readi ness for ou going, it always fell to the lot of my eldest sister to fill a jug with molasses,- aa , we always had a, keg of it In the house, and it-seems as If I have never tasted any as good since. , A neighbor named Moore who. lived afew miles from u. had hla bouse ear- rounded by a high wall, hence his house was calleda block houaeTand on on. occasion we took refuge in that, A man was employed to suythere t guard h fort and' to. keen a sham lookout for hostile Indians, while my father and- Air. Moore went to a barn a 'short dls tanoe away to thresh grain, which waa flailed out on the floor or crushed out by oxen. My brother, then a young boy, accompanied - them. On this evening Mrs. Moore, her daughter, and a sister of mine went to the corral near by to dotha milking, but soon they came run. nlng back, greatly excited, exulted, saying that the Indians were i comlng, that they heard their war" whoop, and the tread h. of the horses' hoofs. ; It was a moment of intense excitement. and suspense. My mother "broke down and wept bitterly, thinking ho doubt that those at toe barn had been mercilessly butchered and that we, too, would share a like fate. J Mrs. Moore, however, kept her nerve. Davis, the man In chrge; could find no bul - lets to fit his rifle; but ' Just in tne midst of the confusion in walked the men, followed by my brother, and then explanations followed which set .all minds at rest My brother had been sent to drive in the oxen, and as ha could imitate al-. meat nerfectly the whooo of -the Ind ans, he had unwittingly been the cause Our stay there was - an uneventful onti no trouble was experienced from wr all when it was again considered ,,,, tor us to return to our home. ' safe for us to return to our nome, Ahnnnl WuU r, JVoods Abound With Game. ' WlAi cnlmals were abundant, and my .father, who wa. a good marksman, of- ten brought home one and sometimes . two deer after the day. ehaae, the choicest piece, being cut in ..trip, and dried for uae in winter. v. v ' , - Nor was it uncommon for him to kill ' panther. One evening we children went a short way off to , drive home the cows, when, what was ou? surprise to see a panther ' standing near. Hastily retracing our steps we returned to the house and informed our father, -who shouldered his rifle and hurried to the spot, where he found the animal a. we had seen It and soon sent a bullet into its brain: then he returned to the barn, got the cayuse pony, fastened the pan ther to it and dragged it home. On another occasion my brotner-in- l who lived a short distance from us. left our home one moirning to go to hi. home, the road to which lay through a, strip of timber, and after he had gone out of a ,m hd. XX hlno'uiTmy f 'haOr ' look doim the gun from its accustomed nothing more lormiaaoie pan panuier v,ir.h the, doar-had treea. ana well . A girl of eighteen will marry a man vagaries of men, and so .he doea not trust to luck, but to skill. In looking 111- J JZ hn.hanrt and keenlns , - f V? nortni na kPln mm raacinatea. Not all of the credit for making the g isye t1IASt f I" - If'lLIli! f-JLJL KJ VlXVlX VjVJ , - ' of straw colored paper, and such a bag against ths carrier, darker clothing could be seen a block; but nowaday, the hatter dropa your new hat for you into a black paper bag, a bag made of unglased paper of a dull, grayish black, a bag In which the customer can carry his new hat home inconspicuously. .' Headlight Hunting In Minnesota. ' From the St Paul Dispatch. Hunting, big game In northern Mln nesota at night with the aid of head' ' lights Js In quite general progress and juagaalne. "The only way to get a letter, and for 10 day. prior , to his has been for several weeks, despite the child's speaking vocabulary is to go third birthday ' recorded words a. fnst fact that deer and moose cannot legally after It with pencil and paper. and re- , as we heard them used. We .next add b killed until November 10, and the Hgiously to set down his words, one ed those words which l knew had been further fact that it la illegal, at any by one, not for a day or for several used previously but which haU no' time to hunt with a headlight.' . days. ut for several-weeks. .v.rfehaneM .to-apiear( durtag -this record. A remarkable incident happened in '"When during the 6ourse of a dinner ' Ch Instance we framed up oon thls connection o the Vermillion range table conversation " I asked how many vsrsatlon that : would involve the u. recently, when a man hunting with a- words an. ordinary every day 8-year- by R. of .theword in question in ord;r headlight killed two horses, thinking old boy eould use, the first of my mks sure that-the -word-was still he waa getting moose or deer. The friends 'guessed 150 words: his. estl-nn and -could be -Properly used, hunter paid 8300 for'his experleno. to mate was greeted with derision by, the -,?"y' k ',urn' V In!, "ve a ' India's Gem Irrmorts." i '": One would Imagine there would Jb very . little ImporUtlon .,' of J- precious stones Into India, but that there Is im- tA nnii .Vm.t t( him m Mrih t-.---.--- " of valuable atones is a surprialng fact, Ths diamond Industry of the country ls limited and is confined to the south- .v 41 r awl Vkaa ilfK em and central provinces, c One ruby Ifrkln.. 11 narota ant valliarf mt 1111. 880 was taken out of the ground at next to petroleum, ruby mining forms the largest revenue. Jadelte of . beautiful green veins is also found here and sells for 850 to 8100 a hundredweight' . There is consider- able waste In the cutting of the stone, but nevertheless there is a iBrge profit for tlfose who participate in this branch of the work. - ) ' " . . . ' aimed shot soon brought lofty retreat, it from it. It Is , said that a panther will never spring upon a person if It la looked straight In the eye. I cannot roach for the truth of the statement, but I do know that they seem to have a propen sity for springing when onea back is turned.: - ' --v': ' -' For Instance, , neighbor boy. baying occasion to pass through a -strip of woods, came to a fence, and in climbing' over; it be sat upon the, topmost rail ,..,, nnn hmrA n,ti omfn - are many who observe the laws w.. hiM-rlflafl to see a. oanthar in a crouching; attitude. Frightened beyond " k-i h. waa doing, he took the cap from hU bead, waived it frantically the lr and yelled like a mad man, all tba tlm looking the animal in the eye, when, his unbounded relief, the beast alunk off .". &Uj. forest without molesting blm in the least. . Alice Carey;, sweetest poemoomssw mind ia as i tnins: oi me uuh g"" of my brother In the lonely forest. He died in early childhood. One stansa of this poem is: , -I once had a little brother ' With eyes that were dark and deep, In the lap of that forest olden , . IJe lieth in peace aaleep." ( 'Later, when the child of an Indian who often came to our home died, and after it. body had been suspended from,,"": rZL," ".VJSi 1 the branches of the tree, for a period . Mt,Mm wh A ra,tif( of time, as was their custom, the father came to my father and asked and ob tained permission to inter It beside ,hls child. Those two little grave wire the be ginning of what 1. now a large burying ground. "'- . "- i . My father enoioeed the little grave wlth a pallnr with turned posta at either corner,, made of cedar, and when a few years ago my husband's busi ness called htm to that section of the country, he, in company with a friend, visited the burying ground and, after the lapse of nearly half a century, found the posts, aside from being weather beaten. In almost as good a state of preservation as when they were placed Travel by Ox Tegrn, - . v.My 'aJ?,'d,Jh1 wal m 40 Val" Olympla, which wa. some 40 miie. dl.tant. and as it was necessary to make the trip by team. It was a wtral dayt. journey u WM m tdlou, trip, fraught with more ar less danger. but necessary in ortter to lay in family supplies. I well remember how eagerly 2 watched for hi. return, especially when he had promised to bring me a pair of hoes; and proud and happy was I when my feet were encaaed in those coarse, heavy shoes, into which the little mis. of today , would scorn to put her feet. It has never been ray pleasure to visit the old home plaoe, but I hope some time to be able to do so. I should love to ms the little log school house where I first attended school, but it 1. gone. And the grove, and the hillside, where the buttercups and the' wild strawberries grew all will be changed. Doing Hla Part.: From Houston Post "Mr. Editor, we are trying to start a movement to establish a home for dla- abled poets." "Fine! Hurry it up. Tnere la a wnoie bunch of poets in this town that I will arable a. soon a. yo are reaay ror - Railroad tie. made of reinforced eon- asbestos fibre, have on a Bararlan and hammered way , .. like wood, which they far outlast. because be has a black moustache. college wedding a grand sweet song belong, to the woman. A lot of it goes to, the husband of the college girt undoubtedly .he gets a very superior brand, for it takes one of the finest to qualify for the Job. v : The ordinary,1 average man would no more think of proposing to a college girr than he would put his head In a llon'e moutn. His vanity wouldn't surrer him to. -Nothing on earth could Induce him to marry a woman who knew as much a. he did. or perhap. more, and who would be able to else him up for What he was. He would know that he could not .well around hr, and puff out hi. REMARKABLE VOCABULARY OF THE THREE YEAR OLD CHILD "I BELIEVE that most parents greatly underestimate the num- ber of words that are used by thetr children," writes Professor a. M whlnDla In tha American , pshaw! Fifty words would cover nlhiii. tha hrivhtnat ' t.,.,r. icabuiary of the. brightest, s-year- the vocabulary W-vr knew, ,. iiWVW ....f'""'!.1" "".."itlr 'u ,;'" by count 1771 "different u" o ooun.t- i al"r , worus waa ine occasion' or pome in- , credulity and Jocose commiseration of the -fond but deluded parent. . "HAwaVa fthlam Wwa hill at tw 1st ftn tan.. ord in detail (Pedagogical Semlnafy. Marrh 10(101 . rwl tha lnnlllalHo. n.il, T may learn that, It Is by no mean, the- ported: though to be sure- probably above the average performance.-. '"In .the 10 odd published ""vocabu- larles we find that children from 1 to 19 montha are using from 60 to HI .words, -that 8-year-old children are using from 118 to 1227 words and that the vocabulary Increases rnpldly from that time on. It Is peiiectiy 6r to as- Free Gospel for. Canal Workers L.THOU6H It is the common thought that most of the men now working en t the great Panama canal have left their re ligion behind them In the states. mose wno nve in me canai tone Know .r na Iea the oame pure Uvea tn3Law nomB: r ; , When the canal was bgun andPreal- ?"jj&!7t m,d! T. . '. ?Ve must .I"n",f" J" fcai taaJS " f,0,, wer. btJllti manr m.n Mt 'Unt f,ik.il .,. " nd ,t h Wirt r.mi i .A h " ' women In their homes have been pow erful Influences for good.. These families coming from every: state of the union meant that schools and churches must be provided. ; Again Uncle Sam met the need,' and at every town along the line of the canal built achoolhouses and churches, w Teachers were obtained from the states. - Chap- r.j,im,. Im.riMinn -t. 'Eight chapels were built, jand every one has at least one service each Bab bath. These, are-two story building' , with lodge rooms on the second floor. The room on the ground' floor known as the church is capable . .-f seating i about 159 people. A pulpit at one end I of the room, piano land 'some folding chairs constitute the furnishings. . All authority rests In a body elected! by; the 'people attending, the church, t The executive council of the church in I Cristobal is composed of man of every denomination. There are one Method- i 1st,' two Baptist, two Presbyterians, one' Congregationallst and one Lutheran. Jove the Lord!" lembeiihip The membership is made up of "those i the home church is not changed,: for no one In the "sone" f. expects to stay I long. The service Is broad; the hymns I are those well known in all denomina tional ; circles, and altogether - we af ford a good illustration of the practica bility of church union -isv: The audiences are Interesting. There t are many young couple, here Just start ing on their married live, coming to the Isthmus with the "golden mist" still about thera. In the back row. are many keen, clear cut faces among the bach. elors. There are a few a very few- young ladles. Nearly all of them are nurses from the nearby hospital, though a few are clerk, and stenographers. In Cristobal church a social la held once a month, with a little entertain ment or refreshments. These are man- -aged by the ladles Interested and are a mean, of welcoming the never' ending -newcomers. As there are no financial demands upon the church (the fuel bill doesn't perplex - in the tropica) these socials are never given for the purpose of raising money. The temporary feel ing that prevail, on the Isthmus i. not ' conducive to an established church, as the average length of time men stay la but two years. ' ' " t s ' A New Wrinkle. " ' From Technical "World. . . "What doe. your father do when yoU ask him questions T' asked one small . boy.- .. .. "He generally ' say., .Tn busy now, on't bother me,""., replied the 'other, r don't "Then when . I go out of the room he look. In the encyclopedia." . . '. ' BY DOROTHY DIX chest, and pretend to be Sir Oracle. He couldn't patronise her, and pooh, pooh her opinions. He would have to listen to them with respect, and treat her aa -an equal. . Therefore he marries little . Fluffy Ruffles, who sits at his feet before they are married, and hurls flattery at him with a shovel and tells him how great and wise, and big and strong; he Is, and after they are married quarrels with him until she packs her trunk for P.eno. . The man who deliberately picks out a . college woman for a wife is not a con ceited fool who marries to get a woman to minister to his egotism. Neither does he expect his wife to be a slave or a plaything. He marries to get a com panion. He treats his wife as an equal. He is broadminded, and tolerant and lib ; eral. and perhaps any kind of a woman could live peaceably with the sort of a husband that the college woman gets. , At any rate the showing of -the . woman', college, in the matter of dl- ; vorce is an unanswerable argument in favor of the higher education of women. It makes the college girl the preferred risk In matrimony. . Them r Pleasant Words. 'From the New Orleans Picayune. After trying to reform Chicago, an Indiana, girl tired of her Job and, be- coming de.pondent. Jumped Into the l"s. fortunately being rescued by men near by. Trying to rescue Chicago Is wore than a girr. Job. and the poor "creature who undertook ' the task, ai- though she seemed to fall,- should be respected Dy men ana women alike ror the purity of her purpose.' But Chicago isn i nan as oaa as it looas, ana mere are oiner spots mat neea as mucn aving a. the "Windy" City. Still, it's a man. Job. "not a woman's; nay, it's an undertaking for a crowd of men. Wonder why so many people want to save Chicago? It looks almost saved aa It "IS. . , '-v ,v 11 1 " , " sort that the average k-year-old child makes use of 1000 words. The present vocabulary was assem-., bled in the following manner: We first' Prepared 28 blank sheets, one for each a' ? Z';'Wt " not been recorded by either of the , -1,t,- aimii.riu f t,ed before they were Included. -"Bven after all these devices had been ""Mte6V we doubtless number of words, ss several t missed a terms mi . . , .- ?i'.ra L"rln5.... 'f1 ! J"? f VrTFXlTii -i- -hT,"- , . "..;l'u:r "L. J'.."- are recorded represent a minims! lBUIIJF auu. Ill, nuiiibri- r.f worda known and used by H. prior i "his third birthday is probably - n tut nelgnDortooq 0 a . , , , .. . " Bleep Pue to J oiwon. Sleep, according to two r.TK-h tlsts. Is du l poisonous B ri.. the brain, which acta a an snrn'i.i the pol.ons produced In the higher i centers ty munui. tl"i i