Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1905)
A SON OF WEALTH By KEITH GOR'DON Cefyright. 1901, tj T. C. MtClur, 1 At first it was merely the rumor of a rumor, theu it became an authenticat ed report, ami last the town, or at least that part of it which considered itself Indubitably "upper crust," thrilled with Uie knowledge that Hemingway Trent was to spend a month with his aunt, Mrs. Ordway. .Set down in black and white, this fact appears insignificant, but just think a moment and repeat the name over and over to yourself "Trent, Trent" and you will doubtless begin to thrill, for the name of Trent is known wherever pickles are eaten or money spent. It is only fair to the present Treuts to explain that it is a far cry from the original pickle, or, rather, from the little patch of ground on the edge of a young city where that first pickle, that Alad din's lamp of a pickle, grew to the present representatives of the family. Hemingway, the future head of the Trent family, aged twenty-six. was coming to Carriston for a visit. A blaze of interest sprang up in anxious mother hearts at first rumor of this fact, and, though they guarded eye and lip, some sparks llew and little ad ditional fires sprang up in the hearts of marriageable daughters. Finally the air became surcharged. Adamantine iamer nearts gave signs or emotion, a restlessness, a critical, lingering sur vey of daughterly charms. Several rush orders for gowns of more than ordinary beauty were sent scurrying across the continent. And it was sig nilicaut that this finery to come was never mentioned, not even between the best of friends. Amid all the intense, subdued flur ry of preparation there was one family that remained serene. Mr. and Mrs. Barry of Barrydene went their elegant, languid way. undistracted and unmov ed, though they. too. had a marriagea ble daughter. The way of the Barrys had long since ceased to be atlluent. If the Hemingways, for whom Trent was named, had left a ramshackle shanty far behind them the Harrys, on the oth er hand, had come from a rare old co lonial mansion that overlooked the riv er Severn. The only difference be tween them was that they had started at different ends of the chain. Still. Brenda Barry, only child ami chief depository of the practical sense of the house of that name, was usually filled witli a tingling resentment when she heard of the enormous fortunes of the "new" people. Being a woman, she could not fail to feel the subtle tense ness in the social atmosphere, and for the same reason she instinctively dlvin ed its cause. And to say that she was scornful but faintly expresses it. There was nothing about the good looking, athletic young fellow whom she met a week later to justify that scorn. He was the usual thing a very much washed. Immaculately dressed young man of the day, with a desire to please which was so apparent that Breuda had to goad herself into rcmcm bering how frightfully new and dis gustingly rich he was. This attitude on the part of one whose head might well have been turned by the flattery and attention he was re ceiving on all sides mollified her some what. Then by chance she happened to encounter a rather vindictive glance from Helen Carrington's violet eyes Helen was wearing an exquisitely sim ple gown that had not seen the light before and suddenly her own plan of action was clearly mapped out in her mind. ' Too much soothing sirup." she re flected ironically. "What he needs is a tonic." This mental comment of hers may have had something to do with the delightful sense of refresh meat young Trent felt in her presence. She asked him none of the usual ques tions with which the others had pes tered him until he wondered impa tiently if they had nothing to think about but him. Indeed, she didn't seem to be very clear as tj his identity, so that he felt compelled to refer rather diUWeiitly to the fact that he was on to visit his aunt, Mrs. Ordway. Even then her face was impassive. "Bather a stunning girl, that Miss Barry." he remarked to his aunt the next day on their drive as she pointed Barrydene to him, while he noted with Interest its picturesque decay. The stucco house was a beautiful soft gray, and what had once been a gar den after the Italian manner was now overgrown and neglected, yet full of wistful beauty. Near a corner of the house he caught the gleam of a light gown and energetically tried by means of hypnotic suggestion to cause his uunt to stop, but she sat placidly be side him. utterly unaware that the cas tle of her mind was being assaulted. Trent reasoned that If you pass a person's house often enough you are " - W - I pretty sure to meet that person. On . the third successive morning that he passed Barrydene she came through the gate in the neglected hedge just as ( his horse Jogged slowly by. , sue wore a short pink gown, with ; sleeves turned back and collar turned , In. and in her hand she carried what , appeared to be a wet napkin. She greeted him with a negligent nod, put ting him still further at ease by her inquiry. "Have you-I don't suppose have-but have you seen a small dog that looked as If he were sneaking aiy from home rent was - - -"he while be assured her that. had encountered no such animal, he Uievcd Td obey in a Jiffy If youM tell me to come in," Trent ventured uouiij Miss uarry was an uen 'moment; then a wicked gleam (laUCeu Into her eyes. . "C;u,c-prny do," she Invited sweet- ly. Andanonentlaterhehadtu.dlns horse and was walking beside her up ZZ&E S S ...... i... i.i if Khou u me ioi . - " was sure mai ne wum . , . VMitii. arn,n:,nd. M;-ayhIsoffen bost"nJed The "Oh he'll, come back! Only A bet No. 10 W) cents dat you .now' it's wrong and 1 like to be - mo "-Harper's Weekly. tonal sort that lias mi attraction .m its own. o i ic;.i:.:gway Trent. ac hs touted t. grounds that were bntiie.j and shaved almost as regularly as il -ir masters, it was oddly charming. His companion, low ever, noticing hi- mns ing. lingering gaze, construed in a dif ferent way. "Pities us. I suppose, because wi haven't a head gardener and two or three assistants." she thought to her- self resentfully cided to shock Thereupon she do lus sensibilities still more. "It's rather informal, I know," she said glibly, "but I'm going right on with my work." And she led the way around to she rear of the house. "You see. I've just been doing a few of the small line pieces myself; the China man brings them back streaked in so many shades of pink and blue." Site looked at him furtively, but it was evident he was thoroughly mysti fied. She was obliged to be more ex plicit. "Washing, you know," she elaborat ed, pointing to an Indian basket heap ed with linen that stood on the grass. "Now just make yourself comfortable and talk to me while I work." And she proceeded rather ostentatiously to spread out some dainty handkerchiefs and napkins on the adjoining rose bushes, while her caller looked on in shocked, speechless amazement. "Oh, I say! You oughtn't to do this, you know. It's ridiculous; it's an out rage. Get a Chinaman who'll d the right thing. There must be one some where." Miss Barry became sweetly pensive. Besignment spoke from every line of her face. "There are some," she admitted, "but they charge, oh, fearfully!" Then, with hands locked behind her. she stood back and regarded the bushes where all the sweet rose faces were now hid den from the sun witli a virtuous en thusiasm. "That saves papa as much as a dollar." she said proudly, "and every little helps." Trent murmured something, he did not precisely know what, so busy he was trying to think what it must be like, the financial condition that made the saving of a dollar so great a tiling. Iirenda covertly watched him with fiendish delight, which was. it is true, modified whvn she discovered that his surprise was changing into a sort of awed admiration. Stiil she managed to convey to him before lie took his dazed departure that she usually spent the early morning hours gardening, working in another pathetic reference their need of econ omy. Promptly the next morning Trent, clad in the most disreputable clothes he could procure, might have been seen hanging about the Barrydene hedges. When the daughter of the house finally made her appearance it was not so early, though, as he had j been led to believe. He walked in bold-1 ly. announcing with the simplicity of the early Treats the market garden ones that he'd come to help. Miss Harry's face turned a riotous red. and she tried to dissuade him. but for an hour or more he digged and delved at her side right sturdily. Once begun, there was no stopping him. and Carris ton watched the disgraceful affair aghast. When later on the gardening led to the usual result Brenda looked him straight in the eye. "I fancy that I have angled for you just as much as the others." she said breathlessly. But Hemingway Trent only laughed. "What difference so long as I like your bait:" he questioned. Great Men Who Were Little. Canon Kingsley not king before his death drew attention to the number of short men who could be seen in a Lon don crowd. He looked upon ii as a sign of the deterioration of the race. But there are those who look at it as an indication of progress In intellectual lines at least, for many if not most of the great men of history have been men below the medium height. Canute the Great was a singularly smnll man. Na poleon was undeniably short. Nelson had no height of which he coul boast, and the great Conde was hardly more than five feet tall. Illldehrnnd Greg ory VII. the greatest of all the p ipes, was quite a diminutive person. Mon taigne was short; so was Pope, "a little crooked thing that asked questions;" po was Iiryden. and so was Scarron, who alluded to himself as "an abridg ment of human miseries" on account of his short stature and ill health. Chi firm Pecnllnritle. In giving his opinion of China Cap tain Faulkner of the artillery corps epitomized the Chinese characteristics so cleverly that some of his listeners copied down his words. "China." said Captain Faulkner, "is a country where the roses have no fra grance and the women no petticoats, where the laborer has no Sunday and the magistrate no sense of honor, where the roads bear no vehicles and the ships no keels, where old men fly kites and the needle points to the south. j whom the place of honor Is on the left hand and the seat of Intellect in the I stomach, where to take off your hat is J an insolent gesture and to wear white garments Is to be in mourning, a coun try which has a literature without an alphabet and a language without a 1 grammar." London Globe. Won ITIn Itct. A hotel proprietor in Baltimore tells an amusing story. In which the main figure is an old gentleman well known to the waiters In the hotels of the Mou Citv for his aversion to the -m . , gt;u(leul:ulf ;iv. O. j u k (llnmr,Vns preparing ng Jiuisl, d l, . ' ,)0W(h1 JU1(1 s!lW "Tlnfn!: you very much, sab." What She Wait Pouted. said Mr. Hazzard, who was 'Now, , w i ti... mrsioriim of milf. ninu utu6 - -- - "vou know what a 'too' Is. Let me ex- nnw u., of tno -caddie.' ? L interrupted, ..Ul0 O con . I a tea caddie ls."-Ph,lnde,- the deuce are you thanking f - ' nmfiii I' flflTII'llllllNI iiii mil r - .. I.t il 1.1 ..! VASHINGTON LETTER" Spi'clul Correspondence. Professor Merrill, curator of geology f the National museum, recently daccd on exhibition in that institution vhat is undoubtedly the largest mass of pure amethysts in the world. Early in ilXU the agents of one of the great gem cutting works of Ober- tein. Bavaria, discovered on the slope if the Serra do Mar, iu the Brazilian tate of Bio Grande do Sul, the largest mass of pure amethysts ever brought to light. The mass occurred in the form of a geode, thirty-three feet in length, five feet in width, three feet in height and weighing tniriv-uve ions, ran 01 mis geode was exposed standing upright in the form of a huge violet colored mono litli. but the lower end was firmly Im bedded iu the original melaphyr mat rix rock. Most of the great scientific institutions of the world would havi given thousands of dollars for this giant amethyst mass, but the agent, having an eye only to the commercial value of the geode, broke it up into fragments, in which form it was ship ped to Germany. Professor Merrill recognized the val ue of this geode to the world of learn ing, and it was due to his influence that the Smithsonian institution pur chased from the German gem cutting works the largest of the fragments then remaining, which, notwithstand ing the fact that It forms but a small part of the original geode. weighing only -KM) pounds, is nevertheless the largest mass of amethysts in the world. Historic Table 3Iut lliited. Immediately after President Boose volt took the oath of otlice iu front of the capitol on March 4 and left the stand one of the Invited guests of dis tinction drew a knife from his pocket and sliced an oblong splinter half an inch thick from the famous walnut ta ble at which presidents have been sworn into office since the days of John Ouiney Adams. It has been ru mored that the vandal was a foreign diplomat and that the police refrained from making an arrest because of his otlicial position. All rViitloiin Invited. The president lias issued a proclama tion inviting all nations to be repre sented by their military organizations and naval vessels at the celebration to be held in the vicinity of Jamestown, Va.. from May Bl until November. 1907. Vt hite House Itar.o Hnml IIukn. persons familiar with President BooM'elt's private hatred of body guards and similar precautions are wondering how soon he would give a gentle rebuke to the zealous otlicial re sponsible for a new rule In respect of White House visitors. The rule is that no one shall carry a valise, suit case. satchel, bundle, package, parcel or, In fact, anything in a wrapper Into the exeeiuh e mansion. Sunday llliscrviinci'. The past social season at the capital witnessed a marked broadening in the manner in which Sunday is observed. The puritanical restrictions thrown about the day In bygone years have been loosened despite the warnings of the clergy against the tendency toward the cntinentnl tsuuday. Society's progress toward a more lib eral Sunday has been gradual, but the broader regime has come steadily on. Bi-h p Satterlee of the Episcopal dio cese of Washington bus frequently spoken of the practice of making Sun da like every other day In the week, but society lias gone merrily on. Sun day dinner parties have become more and more the vogue. The capital on Sundays lias had Its round of dinners, informal at homes, afternoon teas, the ater parties for the evening concerts, which are the only attractions at the l"eal playhouses on this day, with gay Mill' suppers afterward at the hotels ami cafes or at the homes of the hosts and hostesses. ( I f t .h to the (iivrrniurnt. Slightly removed in spirit from the couM-icuce fund, but belonging to the "I uliar" receipts of the government, are the gifts which It receives from its citizens. Occasionally a man bequeaths his property in whole or In part to the I'nited States government. This was true of General Nathaniel Lyon, who was killed at the battle of Wilson's Creek while lighting valorously to save Missouri for the Union. one of the most curious gifts which the treasury regularly receives- four times a year Is a seventy-two dollar check. The giver draws a pension of that amount. He does not want to re linquish it for fear that some time lie might want it, but so long as lie retains a lucrative position which he is able to fill he thinks lie ought not to hnve the pension. Seivntre Puniplucr Plant. The magnificent new sewage pump ing station, which for all time to come, it is claimed, will be sufficient for the needs of the city of Washington, Is to be ready for operation in June. For the storm water and ordlnarj' street sewage there are eight pumps, each with a capacity of Go.OOO.OOO gallons per twenty-four hours. These will han dle the drainage from what Is known as the "low surface area," which cov ers about 1)00 acres In the heart of the city from B street south to F street north and from the capitol to the treas ury. On the east side of the engine room are the four sewage pumps, three of which are of the same capacity as the rain water pumps, while the fourth Is a sort of "pony pump," having the ca pacity of ".0,1)00,000 gallons in twenty four hours. Each of the twelve pumps has Its In dividual engine, and power Is furnished from the big boilers now being In tiUlled immediately to the south of the engine room. CAUL SCTIOFlELn. Avoid Worrj-. No large, generous soul was ever a worrier. Calmness, serenity, poise and power to move through life rhythmical ly, without jar or fret, are characteris tic of greatness and true nobility. Success Magazine. A One Mxht Stand. Bosh Is IVIank on the stage? Josh No. Bosh- Why, yes he is! He told me that he made his first appearance two years ago. Josh Unihuh! He made his last appearance on the same night. Detroit Free Press. WOMAN AND FASHION Fashionable Coat. The box coats are high in favor am ire seen among the mo t fashionable f the season's m aids. The one here illustrated was made of covert cloth and Is in long hip length. The fronts DOUBLE BREASTED BOX COAT. lap in double breasted style, and the notched collar may be of velvet If pre f erred. The coat sleeve Is wide enough to wear over the full bodice sleeve now demanded by fashion, and a shaped strap extends well over the sleeve, giv ing a square shoulder effect. Broad cloth, cheviot, silk and all the materials used for coats are adaptable. The me dium size will require two and seven eighths yards of fifty-four inch mate rial. Trimming Topic. Tiny buttons are not confined to lin gerie effe'Cts. Steel spangles are among the favor ites. Flowered nets are exceptionally love ly. Pale green bids fair to be in high favor. Lots of lace is to be worn this sum mer. Persian effects are seen iu many guises. Tiny roses, two rows, adorn some. smart hats. A chain of green bends is worn to advantage with a gown of a darker green. The Popular RcdinKote. The red ingot e is still very fashiona ble in Paris. It is built of every light material, but taffeta is especially mod ish, and it lends Itself well for the pur pose. Colorw In DreNM. The smartest of costumes will be ruined if too many colors are used in its composition. For Instance, an en tirely blue gown Is much prettier than a blue skirt and a pink waist. Try to keep the same color scheme through out your whole costume. Different shades of the same color mix prettily, and one contrasting color Is all right, but never wear a skirt of one color, a waist of another and a hat of a third. A Denlrnble Model. No woman of today considers her wardrobe complete unless It contains n variety of pretty waists suitable for every occasion. These are not the "shop made" waists either, for In these days of paper patterns, which almost do the work for you, every woman takes a certain pride In making her liADY'S BLOUSE. own waists, and that Is why they hnve an Individual look, although the mate rial may be ever so Inexpensive. The model here depicted Is especially desir able. It Is not too elaborate to be at tempted by the home dressmaker, and it lends itself admirably to effective combinations of mnterial In both cot ton and silk. It Is suitable for a sepa rate waist or ns part of the season's f.hirt waist suit. The blouse Is tucketl and finished with duchess closing. The yoke Is a pretty Idea, although If one desires a plain tucked waist It may be omitted. The sleeve Is the new shirt waist model and may be finished by the cuff or In any preferred manner. A Woiiwwi'h ToiiKtie. "Woman's tongue Is . her sword, which she never lets rust," wrote Mute. Necker. "The -tongue is not steel, but It cuts," wrote Erasmus. "The tongue "kilty more than the sword," wrote ;eslk, the Ottoman statesman. Solomon, tho-embodlmcnt of wisdom, wrote, "It Is better to dwell In the corner of the housetop than with a brawling woman and In a wide house." And St. James wrote. "Tfie tongue is a little member and boasteth great things." However, the good King Arthur said. "Deny not to woman the proper use of her tongue." HEROISM IN ANIMALS. Ulnntrated by n Itnm That Defended a Flock of Sheep. A writer on natural historj' com plains that men are prone to regare masculine courage in defense of others as a virtue purely human. In reality self sacrificing for the female sex or for the young is part of the scheme of nnture, and every male thing is strong and splendid in appearance becaust he Is the descendant of those who have proudly helel and guarded "the privi lege of 'death." Another writer tells a story which Illustrates this point. Two entwnologlsts, hunting at night, clam bered over a gate with their swinging lanterns and found themselves In a field filled with sheen. Tho result of their coining was panic and a furious stampede. The sheep charged belter skelter away from the lanterns awl huddled together at the far and of the field. But there was a ram among them, and as the flock scurrletl nway tills creature stood firm, covering the retreat. Then, steadily and majestlcal ly, the huge ram advanced with lower eel head toward the mysterious lights and pressed them back to the gate This is only one graphic story of many that might be told of mnsculluo cour nge throughout nature. Man has some virtues which animals, so far as we can judge, know nothing about, but heroism the pride of affording protec tlon to the weak and daring death for the security of the flock is not a hu man attribute alone any more than Is maternal affection. THE SPIRIT OF HOME. It Mnnt De Within You If You "Would Create a Home. To create a home you must have the spirit of home. Just as the smallest village may have Its history, Its moral stamp, so the smallest home may have Its soul. Oh, the spirit of places, the atmosphere which surrounds us In hu man dwellings! What a world of mys tery! Here even on the threshold the cold begins to.penetrate; you are ill at ease; something intangible repulses you. There no sooner does the door shut you in than friendliness and good hu mor envelop you. It Is said that walls hnve ears. They have also voices, a mute eloquence. Everything that a dwelling contains Is bnthed In an ether of personality. And I And proof of its quality even In the apartments of bach elors and solitary women. What an abyss between one room and another room! Here all Is dead, Indifferent, com monplace; the device of the owner Is written all over It even In his fashion of arranging his photographs and books. All Is the same to me! There one breathes in animation, a conta gious joy Iu life. The visitor hears re peated In countless fashion: "Whoever you are, guest of an hour, I wish you well. Peace be with you!" Charles Wagner. Dondtimen. In his "History of Coal Mining" B. W. Galloway points out that what ap pear to be traces of a primitive state of servitude existed In Staffordshire, Euglaud, where the laborers employed n the haulage of coal continued to be Known as "oonusmen, a name prou- ably coming down from a remote pe riod, a supposition which receives sup- ort from a peculiar service required of them known as "bulldases. ' This consisted In working at times in the morning without receiving any pay ment beyond n drink of ale. This cus tom of exacting labor without pay Is supposed to represent some ancient service required from their tenants by the monks of tho abbey of Bulldwas, n Shropshire, whence the name was derived. Ancient Thomas Parr. Thomas Parr lived 152 years and was burled In Westminster abbey. Born In Shropshire, England, In 14S3, Parr led the life of an agricultural laborer In his natlvo place till blindness and extreme old ago kept him indoors. Early In 035, his longevity hnvlng made him famous, Thomas, earl of .Arundel, took him to Loudon to be exhibited to Charles I. He was lodged In the Strand, but the change of nlr and diet told upon him, and In November of that same year he died. He was described as a good looking man of medium size, with a deep chest and a thick beard. le attributed his excellent health to moderation In eating and drinking. The Pepper Vine. The most common and widely used of all spices Is pepper. It is a natlvo of the East Indies, but Is now eultlvntcd n various parts of tho tropical belt of this hemisphere. Tho plant Is a climb er and has a smooth stem sometimes twelve feet long. The fruit is about the size of a pea and when rlpo Is of a bright red color. In cultivation the plant Is supported by poles. In some ocalltles small trees are used Instead of poles, for the best pepper Is grown n a certain degree of shade. FIRST MAP OF THE SKY. It XVnn Made 1.420 Yenrw nefore the ChrUtlnn Era. t a very early period in the history of astronomy it was felt that the stars should be divided Into distinct groups or coustellations. This Important task las engaged the) attention of astrono mers from remote tlnii'H and has only een brought to ; Its present perfection by a long series of Intellectual efforts. According to (lleinent of Alexandria, t wos Chiron, believed to be the mak er of the first celestial globe, who, 1,-1 'JO years before the Christian era, divided Uie starry heavtjiiB Into constellations and so mapped out the sky. Newton upheld this opinion, which is further corroborated In the book of Job, when? allusion Is made to Orion, the Pleiades, and the Ilyades, a proof that at a very early period there had been a grouping of the stars. Ileslod in his "Works and Days," written 2,700 years ngo, also refers to several of the constellations as though their names -wero familiar to his renti ers. Her clever Scheme. Fanny-Why In the world do you send nwnv for n mum nntnlncmna niwt . then never buy anything? Suzette To keep the postman coming here. I don't want those women across the Btreet to know that Jack and I don't correspond any more. Detroit Free Tress. NEW SHORT STORIES Drew the Line at ICinniniC. This is the true story of how a cer tain pianist wuo uas neon amusing New York with his music and his man ters got possession of his mutfirr. He saw It first the niuiller that became his own on the neck of a man to whom he had just been introduced. "I like your mufller," he said by way of conversation. "I give you a dollar for your mufller." "Extremely flattered, I'm sure, but I don't care to sell out just at present," replied the American. "I give you a dollar," reiterated the pianist serenely. "The muffler will be second hand. A dollar is a good price." The American pulled the mufller from his neck. "Accept it with mv "i'll be hanoed if you do!" compliments." lie said weariedly. "Keep your money, and be so good as to accept the mufller." The piani-t was overjoyed. "Gener ous man. lie exclaimed, with tiars in his voice. "I kiss you for that!" Spread ing out his arms, he rushed on the American. "I'll be hanged if you do!" cried the intended victim, who proceeded to gra-p use piano pounder by the shoul ders and shake him until his teeth rat tled. 'lhe mu:ic:u recovered his breath as the American was 3'anishing out of the dooi . "Men of your cauntry are so cold, so very cold, he remarked to a bystand er. -.New lorlc Evening Post. I'cilotv Student. at Ann Arbor. When former Senator Joseph V. Quaries of Wisconsin was ready to take the oath of office as judge of the diMrt court iu Wisconsin he made arr.iu.'i-iiient.s to have the oath adinlu- isi -red by Associate Justice William 11. Day of the supreme court, says the Washington Post. There was a senti mental reason for this. Some time after (Juaries became senator he was sitting in the lobby of a Washington hotel ami was approached by a tall, spare man, who in holding out his hand said: "Is this Joe? I am Rufe." (juarles was for a moment non plused, but he then grasped the out stretched hand and shook it heartily for some time. Explanations followed. William H. Day. called Bufe. and Jo seph V. Quaries, called Joe, were stu dents together at Ann Arbor, Mich. They were ro.imtnates and close friends, but in the work of life the had lost sight of each other until they met in Washington, one being United States Judge and the other a United States senator. So Quaries had his old college friend as justice of the highest court complete the final act which made him a judge for life. Her Son an Abolition Int. "When I was a boy," remarked Rep resentative Hepburn of Iowa, "I well remember that my mother was a very ardent proslavery woman. She came from the south and owned in her right an old colored auntie, and she could not look upon the matter with un prejudiced eyes. I was one of three young fellows who wrote out by hand the notice's for the first Republican convention held In my town. There was no printing office there, so notices had to be written. When It became known that I was In the movement my mother asked me If I had become an abolitionist. I told her that I was a Republican. I remember how she held up her hands aghast and cried out, 'To think that a son of mine should become a black abolitionist!' "Wash ington Post. Chanced the Subject. At a reception last week Professor Frederick P. Lee of Columbia universi ty, who has recently been granted con siderable leisure for original research, was overheard asking a lady if she hail seen the Aphrodite. "No," she replied. "Isn't It wonder ful that such a reptile should have ex Lsteil upon the face of the earth?" "I said Aphrodite, not dinosaur," said the startled professor. But she looked so puzzled that he changed the subject. New York Times. IllfCh mid Low Church. Irving Grlnnell. treasurer of the Church Temperance society of New York, was talking about the difference between high and low church among Episcopalians, says the New York Tribune. "I heard two boys talking on the street the other day," he said. "The first said in a boasting way: " 'Our church Is awful high. We have matins. " 'That's not'in',' said the other boy. 'We have carpets.' " Dumley I never saw a man like Brixton to drift away from the subject under discussion. - Barrass As, for Instance? Dumley I Just nskeel him what he was doing the night I saw him down ! the road, and he evaded an answer by remarking that he had known people to got rich by attending to their own DUSineSS I hnve no doubt he has, but n1n oilill 1U1J riJVIIMi v. - Boston Transcript. Tho vivacity which nugments with years Is not far from folly. Rochefoucauld. j't j j HUMOR OF THE HOUR Stiee Advice. "I know that I am homely," snid the youth who was consulting the seer, "and I lane ::o form of grace nor have I any money. More than that, I lack ability to earn money; I cannot carry on a conversation, cannot sing, cannot dance, can.iot write cannot do any thing. Yet I wish you would advise me how to induce some girl to marry me." "Have you any bad habits?" Inquired the seer. "Indeed, no," answered the yojith proudly. "That's my one and only rec ommendation. I have absolutely no bad habits." "Your only chance," said the seer, with an air of great wisdom, "Is to shake your gooel habits at once and ac quire all the bad habits possible. Then some girl will marry you to reform you." Judge. Man Overboard. On a trip of one of the Illinois river packets, a light draft one, as there were only two feet of water In the channel, the passengers were startled by the cry, "Man overboard!" The steamer was stopped and prep arations made to save him, when he was heard e xclaimlng: "Go ahead with your old steamer! I'll walk behind you!" Philadelphia Ledger. A Grent Truth. "Yes," said the man who occasionally thinks aloud, "that's why so many mar riages are failures." "Why is It?" queried the party with the rubber habit. "The average young man thinks a girl would rather be loved and pitied than dressed and fed," explained the noisy thinker. Chicago News. The Correct Simile. Bobby I've been working all day like a dog, pop. Father Glad to hear that you are -' getting industrious, Robert But what have you been doing? Bobby I've been digging out a -wood-chuck, pop! Puck. Where the Shoe Pinched. Curious MotherWhat was It that Ferdinand said to you just as he was going out that made you so angry? Disappointed Maiden It was not what he said, but what he didn't say. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Ilorr It Leaked Oat. "Yes. their marriage was secret, and It would never have been discovered but tor one tiling." "What was that?" "They couldn't keep the divorce pro ceedings from becoming public." Didn't Look It. Harris Kllbert's wife is rather lit erary, isn't she? Bert I don't think so. Why, she's as neat as a pin and as perfectly . groomed a woman as you could wish to see. Boston Transcript. Thnuffht. "Bliggins puts a great deal of thought Into his work." "Yes," said the sarcastic person. "lie works ten minutes and then thinks about It for an hour and a quarter." Washington Star. At Her Oivn Estimate. Lucy (enviously) As regards MIs3 de Style's looks, you must remember that "beauty Is but skin deep." Lavlnla True; but, ns you yourself have often said, she Is awfully thick skinned. Judge. Her Advice. "Yes, Laura, he said his heart was in ray keeping." "Take my advice, dear, and tell him you are not running a storage ware house for damaged goods." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A PoMNlble Career. "What." asked the professor, "Is the future of the Russian soldier?" "Well." answered the student, "he ought to be able to win medals as a sprinter." Washington Star. That Destructive Bump. Phrenologist Your bump of destruc tiveness is very large. Are you a sol dier or a pugilist? Subject Neither; I'm a furniture mover. New York Weekly. HIn Preference. "They say you are a great linguist. Professor Talkleigh. Which tongue do you prefer?" "Canned." New Orleans Times-Democrat. lie Wnn Practicing. -Why does Dodson wabble so when h walks? nas he been In a wreck?" "Goodness, no! Die's taking physical culture." Chicago Record-Herald. A Saccestlon. The Shell Game Man Why not try the game? It's simply giving away money. The Stranger But why not give nway the money without going through what seems to bo a needless formality? New York Tress. More Than Beauty Needed. "You are beautiful enough to be woo ed by an emperor." "Am I beautiful enough to be wooed by a duke?' "Yes, Indeed; but not rich enough." Houston Post. pina rrcss. liwoi'tler. but It was of the plc-