BANDON RECORDE«. FACTS IN FEW LINES eu Rule, for she has acted it to the very letter.” “Yes, Ja|aui can go to the bead of the class, and other na­ tions can take note. \ye had better recall our miasiouarMn. First thing we know the little b(t>wn men will be sending missionaries) tg um .” “It la all very well and iooka tine on |>aper, but ttie Emperor’s decision doesn't meet with the entire approval of the Jap­ anese people. Home of them term it a ‘shameful |>eace,’ and 1 wouldn’t be surprised to see the Emperor of Japan, if not assassinated outright, then de- pomai from his throne. 1 tell you he is tottering in his high position for the generous stand he has taken.” “For some reasons 1 would not like to be in his shoes, in others, for instance, look­ ing at it in tlie light of doing to others as you would have othersdo unto you, the stand he has taken is all right and appeals to the Christianized part of the world.” “But, quoting the old war- ery, ‘to the victor belongs the spoils,’ You can't blame the Japanese people for feeling sore over the treaty as signed by ^lieir Emperor. They fought long and hard, endured all sorts of priva­ tions, sent regiment after regiment into the jaws of death. Their lives were nothing in comparison with their love of country. Relatives went down by the scores—but they died for their country. There was no time for grief, and the ranks immediately tilled up. I tell you there is something noble about these little }>eople. Smart as a whip they managed to oppropriate a lot of Uncle Sam's carefully concealed ideas. Think of a war officer acting as an ordinary servant in U. H. Army headquarters to ferret out the secrets that have been successfully used by us! Well, so long.” WOMAN AND FASHION Suitable For Auloiau. None of the many uttrRU'Uve silks for winch the summer ha« beeu so remark­ able gives better service than poug'-e. The many plain colors are quíte suffi­ ciently smart for ordinary use, but ikere Is a peculiar distinction found In the embroidered sort that renders It especially to be desired for formal oc­ casions. Illustrated Is a gown which combines the material with oriental banding and yoke of tucked muslin, the color of the i>ongee being the natural one, which la always charming, while the embroidery ta executed la pale STEAMSHIP VERMIN. The War Ueeaa Llaars Ar* Ullta and Roaches. Hid of Mat and roach catching at the steam­ er docks and ou oceau liners la one of the queer ways uieu hate of making a living And a giasl bring they make at it, too sometimes us much as $10.- ooo a year. The meu who du it never advertise. because the business does not sound as well as it pays, and a man whose house is built out of dead rata and cockroaches would just as soon not have his neighbors know it. Ouce a year docks and piers are turn­ ed over to the rat catcher for a night. The man who has made a fortune at the business In New York still works with his men, for the secret of the busi­ ness is his and he trusts it to no one. Rats run everywhere, but roaches have a special liking for rope lockers, and here they swarm by teus of thousands unless the pier owners have a contract with the rat and roach catcher, who. after a thorough overhauling, guaran­ tees freedom from the pests for a year. Whenever an oceau liner reaches port, whether ou this side or the other. It Is turned over for a night to this same man. Cats do much toward keeping ships clear of rats, but, of course, have no effect ou roaches. Ou this side of the Atlantic roach catching la the more important branch of the business, while on the other side wharfs are almost as full of rat catchers aa the ships are of rats. These once worked with ferrets, but now they use chemicals. Large cage- llke traps are used, In which lettuce leaves are placed after being sprinkled with a liquid—only the catcher knows what Whatever it Is, It Is as Irresistible to rats as the weird piping of the pled piper was to the rats of Hamelin town. No matter bow choice the food in the lockers and In the hold, the rats leave it Instantly when they smell the mys­ terious liquid ou the lettuce leaves. It does not kill the rats, and herein lies another secret of the profits of the bust ness. Live rats are worth money In England, where they arc used for train Ing terriers. Dead rata are worth mon ey, too, us their skins are used for gloves. At 5 or 6 cents apiece, forty or fifty rats mean something, ami this Is quite a usual catch. For roaches a powder is used, but what puzzles all old sailors who used to have the job of clearing ships of touches Is that there are never any dead ones lying around next morning. The favorite way of (Tie sailors when they had to catch roaches was to put U "cob” of bread on top of a coil of rope. Very quickly It would be covered with hungry brown bugs, and these they knocked Into a well greased bls cult pun. The grease kept the roaches from crawling up the sides, and It waa a poor roach catcher who would not have two or three Inches of roaches when he was through, and in a few days he could begin and do it all over again.—New York Herald. DENTAL DECAY. THE KAREN WOMEN. Bad Teeth, It la Clalaiea. May Leak la Aeeeaateiti«. They Have Feewllar I4ra« of Ferae* al Beaatr OKU Aduraiueat. Appendicitis is often - due to bad teeth, said Dr. E 8 Thompson, lectur lug at Greshan college. Ixuidou The same organisms, be said, were present both in defective teeth and lu the dis­ eased appendix, which proved that den tai decay waa capable of causing ap pendlcitta. "I see no evideuce to show that our teeth are deteriorating to an alarmlug extent with the growth of civilisation," be declared, and be pointed out that an even larger proportion of diseased teeth had beeu found amoug Egyptian and Roman remains than existed at present. Tobacco has an Injurious effect ou the digestion," be went on. “but I do uo< think that nicotine baa any more effect on the teeth than alcohol But tobacco certainly blackens the teeth ami so causes uisuy ;>ersous who are careful of their personal appearance to brush their teeth more often than they would utbei wtee do.” He bad found cod liver oil amazingly successful la promoting the growth of teeth in children, aud be recommended the toothbrush drill aa part of the cur­ riculum of schools. Dr. Tbompsou al­ so urged the practice of washing the teeth after meals and rubbing them twice a day, and particularly the last thing at night.- London Mall. Like the Siamese, the Kareu wo­ men are not guod to look u|>ou and do not improve their appearance any by the style of uruameuts they uffect. When very young their ears are pierced to admit a small round stick, which la gradually lacerated in diam­ eter until by the time the little girls have become women their ears easily accommodate a two inch disk of blackened bamtioae This stretches the ears hideously, as may be Imagined, and when the ornament Is laid aside temporarily-well, picture the thlu strip of pendeut ear lobe! Aa a rule, tlie Kareu women wear their hair long, but, like the Siamese, some cut It short and others again keep lu crop ped dose, except on top of the head, where It la allowed to grow to its nat­ ural length, which does not add to their by no means overabundance of good looks. Sometimes the uumarried woman wears a breast cloth, but for the most part meu aud womeu wear a lolu girdle, and sometimes even that is set aside In hot weather. To thoroughly appreciate Japanese womeu one should begin the far east ern trip at the Malay peninsula. Jour ueylug thence through Slam, Anarn. Cambodia and China, though I confess to preferring a good looking Chinese girl to the allege«! Japanese beauty. Bracelets aud necklaces of bamboo are the other usual ornamenta, exc«*pt when they can afford a narrow neck­ band of silver, which protects, so It Is believed, against many evils that lurk along life’s wayside, even lu the jun­ gle. The men also wear this neck­ band and bamboo an Inch In diameter and about four Inches long stuck through their ear lobes. Some of the boys are rather good looking. They wear their hair In a knot like a born on the forehead or at one side or the other of tlie bead or on top, aud usual­ ly a turban crowns the topknot. All In all the Kureus differ not a great deal from the Siamese tn physiognomy, but the people In this section of the far east shade Into one another rather easily.—Caspar Whitney In Outing. Electrified eggs are said to prolong life. France s;>ent $30,000 on the Faul I was waiting for a street-car the Jones ceremony and $125,000 ou Klug other day, and to kill time thought I Alfonso of hpalu. would note the conversation of the An estimate of the accumulated cap­ ital of the United Kingdom put« It at moving throngs of the street as they passed me. It was so interesting after about $80.000,000,000. America alone, during the present I had once put my mind on it that I *a of prosperity, consumes more cham­ let several ears pass before I thought pagne than la produced in all France. of boarding one. Out of fifty men There are said to be nearly fifty dif­ that passed, and that represented all ferent rural telephone lines in Craw­ the stations of life, from the elegantly ford county, Kan., owned by farmers. attired man who could write his bank Professor Gilmore of the chair of account with a good many figures after physiology In the University of Nebras­ it to the street lalsirer and the scavan- ka claims to be able to make short men ger, there were only two out of the long. uunil>er who didn’t emphasize their A Liverpool man spends some hun­ dreds of pounds every year In having remarks with profanity. I wonder Scriptural texts printed on business why it is that so many men, from their youth up, think that it is necessary to envelopes. A couple were recently married at tie profane to express themselves and Bt. Peter's church, Dorchester, whose add weight to their remarks? Boys respective« names were Charles Rose in their teens rounded up every sen­ and Rose Charles, tence with an oath, evidently think- A regatta was rowed on the Zambezi inti it was manly and gave them pres­ the other day to mark the jubilee of tige with the others. This was the Dr. Livingstone's discovery of the Vic­ sum and substance of w hat I heard aa toria falls. There were 7uo visitors. the men, women and children passed : In some of the cities of Spain beg “Graft will be the undoing of Han gers ure licensed to carry ou their Francisco. Ixaik at some of our lead­ trade. Recent figures place the num­ A LOVER OF SNUFF. ing men ; ain’t they tottering now?” ber of beggars in that country at 11M),- said one pompous looking man with a The Qaaae Will aad Faneval ot a 227, of whom 51,948 are women. Queer Kawllsbwernaa. Although only 197,000 workers are diamond on his linger which sparkled The will of Mrs. Margaret Thompson, employed tn the shoe Industry In the in the sunlight as he stroked and which la preserved as a curiosity at United States as against 290,000 In the twisted his moustache. “Yes, that’s Someat Scotch snuff to cover her body. tine gravely proposes that a tax be “My mother-in-law has arrived, This she preferred to flowers, as “noth levied on every dress a woman pos­ looked up to as a shining example of KMBHOlDKRr.il I-oNOKK. Ing conld be more fragrant and so re­ sesses over and above one for every­ integrity, but let him aspire to a polit­ God bless her. Hhe is not one of the freshing te me aa that precious pow­ day wear and one for Sundays and ical life and be elected to office and his mothers-in-law you read alsrnt, but is green, The design is graceful, and, tn addition to serving as suggestion for der." Further, ths six greatest snuff fete days. doom is sealed. He will turn out to be our fireside angel. Khe heard alsiut Immediate wants, will be found desira­ takers In the parish of St James, West Werda, a small town In the kingdom the same common clay as his brother that failure of mine and here she came ble for the laffweeu seasons gowns and minster, were to be her bearers. Six of Dahomey, Is celebrated for its tem­ politicians—who are known to be cor­ bag and baggage to inquire into it. also for genuine autumn. Fashion, old mahl«. each bearing In her band a ple of serpents, a long building In rupt.” It is his finish as a rule,” said Not one word of censure. All she said with all her craving for change, has box filled with the best Scotch snuff to which the priests keep nearly 1,<*X) ser­ the diamond-decked man, as he board­ was, ‘mistakes will happen, and you ordered no material difference In skirts, take for tlieir refreshment as they pents of all sizes. These are fed with meant it for the best,’ and handed over and those that are gracefully full, yet walked, were to bear the pall. Before QUEER THINGS IN POLAND. birds and frogs brought as offerings by ed his car. “Trust her? Why, she's confined at the hips, will continue to the coin to straighten things up.’’ corpse the minister was to walk, S«p«-r«t 11 ion Flay« a Leading Hole the the most deceitful and spiteful person the natives. be favorites, while bodices made with carrying and partaking of a p-.>und of With Young Men and Malden«. Jake Stout, the Doniphan county I ever saw. Hhe----- ” “He did me an deep yokes are to be noted among many snuff. At every tweaty yards a hand BRIEF REVIEW ill turn and 1 ’ 11 get even with him if It is customary In Polish vlllag«»s to (Kan.) sheepman, has purchased nine­ of the advance designs. Silk of all ftil of snuff was to ba delivered to the strew straw over the Christmas eve teen miles of wire fence, 50,000 pounds it takes me a lifetime.” “Bo she’s en­ sorts, lightweight wools and, Indeed, bystanders, and at the door of the tea supper tables and for the young people, Old Men of The Sea. In all, and will use It to Inclose his gaged; don’t admire her taste. Good­ all seasonable materials can be utilized tatrix’s bouse were to be placed two blindfoldtsl or lu the dark, to pick out sheep pastures. The fence will divide ness! she tried hard enough to catch If our forefathers of a century and for the designs. The waist is soft and bushels of the same quality of snuff for each a straw therefrom. Should the 1,200 acres into 30 pastures, ranging tn him.” “The circus has come,” pij»ed more ago lacked much of our modern full below the pointed yoke and Is gratuitous distribution. In order to In straw be green the lucky maiden ex­ size from 5 to 80 acres. a little voice in a high key. “Got lots skill in designing sliijts, they had at ■nade over a smoothly fitted lining, sure the carrying out of her wishes the pects to wear a bridal wreath or the Assistant Corporation Counsel Blake of elephants, giraffe's and thousands least every right to be proud of the sol­ which can be cut away beneath the testatrix mads the legacies given by youth to lead a blushing bride to the of New Haven, Conn., says that there of horses. I’m a-goin’ if I have to idity of their workmanahip, says an yoke when a transparent effect is de- tlie wlU dependent upon an exact and ultar during the approucldug year, but sired. Its sleeves are among the new­ are utiout 4,000 persons who owe the literal fulfillment of the conditions a drl«>d straw foretells to either long steal to get in.” “It’s the circus of English pa|>er, for, while many of our est und best that the season has to city taxes and have either refused or above named. In closing she bade all waiting, possibly even until deuth. the world, ” said a larger boy. “ That ’ s ironclads are being sold practically for offer. The skirt Is circular, with a neglected to pay them, This large concerned to regard suuff as the grand In other rural Polish districts ou the number of delinquents has been accu- what I call a first-rate trade. Traded scrap-iron after a generation or so of ex­ circular flounce that is cut In sections, cordial of nature. "Christ's eve” wine, beer und water off his old boss that stands without istence, there are wooden shifts afloat all of which are stirred and joined be­ mutating for thirty years. are placed by u girl between two can­ neath the headings. The fullness so Mr. Holyoke, a British writer, re- hitchin’ when you want him to go to-day which were launched before ever dles on a table. She then retires into a THE MOSLEM BIBLE. obtained means abundant and graceful most for an old spindle-shanks that Nelson set foot on the Victory. The members a time when “only four men corner or an adjoining room to watch Hare, while the upper portion Is not too How ths Koras, Aceordia* to Tradi­ In Birmingham had the courage to kin go like chain lightning.” Another doyen of these gruml old men (or say full to be becoming. tlie result reflected In a mirror hung Bells. tion. Waa CMvaa to Maa. wear beards," and only military of­ couple passed in silence, but they were or should we say grand old women of for this purpose. If as the clock strikes Bells have beeu employed in associa­ In Arabic the word "Koran" means midnight a man enters and drinks the ficers were allowed to wear a mus­ deaf and dumb. They kept their fin­ the sea is a Danish vessel. The three tion with religious worship since the CMreralng list«. tache. In the good old days one pump gers going and carried on, let us think, Sisters, which took the first plunge in­ In hats it Is wise to avoid the polo early days of Egypt. Cymbals and "that which ought to be read.” The «vine she Is happy, for her wooer will In a yard had to serve working class a conversation less charged witli un­ to the sea at Rudkjobing as long ago as turban even If It 1» the rage at present. band bells and small crotals served for Koran Is divided Into 144 chapters call­ l>e rich. Should he drink the beer, she families. generous thoughts than many of those 1772, the year in which Captain Cook This little pill box hat to look its best the festival of Isis. Aaron and other ed suras, a word meaning really "row,” may be content, for the wooer will be In manuscripts well to do. If the water be chosen, her Of late a number of natives of west who could give expression to tlieir set sail on his voyage of discovery in the requires a certain type of face. Tile Jewish high priests wore bells of gold “order,” “series.” these chapters are not numbered, but husband will Its very poor. But If as Africa have practically refused to ac­ words. upon their raiment. In camp and gar ­ young, slender girl with delicate fea ­ Antartic waters. For 132 years has bear titles, sometimes derhVd from the clock strikes no man comes to her cept any other coin than that having this fine old ship Iteen carrying mer­ tures may wear It and find It chic ami rison the Greeks employed bells. The ti>e subject matter, but usually from table the anxious maiden shivers with the profile of King Edward engraved Romans announced the hour of bathing “I reckon there never was such a chandise over the seas of the world. becoming, but worn by the average by their melody. Copper and tin, the the first Important work, borne chap more than midnight terror, believing upon It. They have an Idea that now woman it only affords an Interesting that Queen Victoria Is dead the British country as this one. No tornadoes or The oldest surviving English vessel study for the caricaturist. And the old composition, Is still regard««! as ters have two or more names because that she Is doomed to be early the of differences lu the manuscripts fol­ bride of death. registered at Lloyd's is the Hannah of cyclones to blow the garden truck out government may repudiate coins bear­ chances are that before the autumn Is the best bell metal. Steel has been ing her Image. Poland Is peculiarly rich in these of the ground and carry your belong­ Yarmouth, a vessel of 108 tons gross here It will have made so many other­ tried, but does not make a successful lowed. Each chapter Is divided Into spreading themselves There are about 25,000 persons em­ ings they have made into kindling register, built in 1704, the year of Lord wise dignified looking women appear bell. Glass bells are mellow and beau­ smaller portions, called verses by non­ observances, ployed In the watch factories of Swit­ wood into the next county, and no Howe’s great naval victory, and lias ridiculous that the best milliners will tiful in tone, but the material Is too Moslems, but In Arabic known as throughout the year, both sexes being fragile. The one metal which Is Im­ "ayat,” signs or wonders. The entire equally superstitious In this respect. zerland, not Including several thousand earthquakes to speak of.” “Her hus­ thus sailed the seas in three centuries. refuse to make It up for winter wear. possible Is that which ev«»rybody Im­ book again Is divided Into sixty equal On New Year's eve the young unmar­ engaged In the "house Industry.” There band only gives her a mighty small Other centenarians among ships are p *rtlo!ia, called “ahzab,” each subdl ried men place themselvra before a tire agines makes the best bell—silver. are 027 factories, 218 of which manu­ Popularity of Chet'kii. tided Into four equal parts, or Into and, bending down, look beneath their facture complete watches, 209 cases allowance and she has to supply the the Rousseau, an American bark, built The vogue for checks is such that Bird«* Tame«. thirty parte celled "ajza,” each consist­ legs Should a woman appear In the and the rest dials, crystals, hands, necessaries of the family with that. at Philidelphia in 1801; the Havltisken the woman who wants a checked gown There are some odd names for game ing of two "ahzab,” and again divided background it Is the one they will He was always noted for his stinginess a Danish brig of 105 tons and of the need not curb her aspirations. The springs, jewels, etc. birds on the Chesapeake. A small shy Into four All the chapters except the marry, but If they see a shupe as of a same ripe age, owned by a Copenhagen long before he was married. He Moroccan troops who lined the road loveliest of checks come In blue and to the palace In honor of Mr. Lowther, would take a girl to a picnic or theater firm; and the Eropa, also built in 1801, green and In red and black and In the snipe that files with a twittering noise ninth begin with tlie bismlllah. "In coffin It forebodes for them death dur­ the head of the British mission, when ami afterwaid would foot up the ex- at Kragero. Thus there are at least shades of green and violet and tn oth­ Is called the horsefoot snipe because the name of the most merciful God." ing the year close at hand. he had an audience with the sultan re­ |>ense account and ask her to pay for it, live of these old merchant vessels of er wonderful combinations. In fact, of Its fondness for the horsefoot or Twenty-nine begin with certain letters THE WEARING OF SHOES. cently, were clad in khaki uni forms, and if she was goose enough to do it wood still doing duty after more than a all of the checks are good, and you horseshoe crab. It Is called also the of the alphabet, which are believed to turnstone from Its habit of overturn be the peculiar marks of the Koran which they wore for the first time. In need not hesitate to Indulge your fancy ing pebbles in search of food. The and to conceal several profound mys­ A ('■«ton That 1« Almost a« Old aa he would accept it with thanks. Same century of service. many cases the sale tickets were still In any or all of them, for fall hints telltale snipe l>eurs that name because teries. the understanding of which, the the Race Itself, girl never went with him twice until affixtsl to the garments. Indicate that checks and plaids will be It always sounds a note of alarm at more Intelligent confess, has not been Roosevelt a Rapid Reader. What Is regard«! as the earliest ref- he met Margie and she, like a simple ­ It Is the amiable custom of the house the vogue until winter the sight of a gunner. Chesapeake cominunh-ated to any mortal, their erence to shoe* Is found in the Old President Roosevelt is a wonderfully of lords to preserve, duly docketed. ton, turned over everything she had gunners believe that a single telltale prophet only excepted. Testament where Abraham refuses to places In the cloakroom for young to him before she was married. What rapid reader. His faculty for speedily Simple Girlish Waist. take m much ns a shoe latchet from can clear a whole region of game birds. According to Moslem tradition, the peers awaiting their coming of age. To do you think of that? There’s my alisorbing matters placed before him in Simple odd waists are useful acces­ The widgeon Is locally called the bald Archangel Gabriel paid 24.000 visits the king of Sodom. Among the Jews show how thoughtful they are In this car. I take the blue one. Don’t re- written or printed form surprises even sories to the wardrobe, and as they respect, there Is n place reserved for |>eat w hat I have told you. Adioa! ” his intimates. On one occasion a Con­ are easily made at home they nets! pute. and the wfllet Is so called because to earth while revealing to Mohammed the shoe played an Important part In of its cry—wlll-wlll-wlllet. the wishes of the Creator. Some few many social usages. When buying or the baby marquis of Donegal against “Their conduct is scandalous an 1 there gressman called with a statement and cause but little expense. Here is a chapters were delivered entire, but the telling land it waa customary to «le- the arrival of his twenty-first birthday. Lo«( Line«. is going to be a great church scandal presented pai>ers connected therewith. suggestion for a cashmere waist In greater part wus revealed piecemeal liwr a shoe, and the act of throwing A safe now being made for the Pre­ Dumas pere, who was proud of the ai»1 written down at the prophet's die down a shoe on territory lmpll««l «x>cu- the new burgundy red, so simple in liefore many days that will give uulie- The President continued conversing mier Diamond Mine company Is In­ design that the girl may almost fuah- prices he received for his work, was tntlon by Zahl. bls secretary. Tbs first puncy The finding of sandals on tended to hold $10,000,000 worth of lievers a chance to down religion.” the while he glanced over the papers, once boasting of the fact. revelation, it is generally agreed, con­ Egyptian mummies proves that the diamonds. It will be the strongest safe “Somebody ought to put a tlea in their which he handed l>ack in a minute or “Beyond a doubt," he remarked, “I tained the first live verses of the nine­ w<>urlng of shoes is almost as old as ever constructed Seven feet high, six ears and stop it before it goes too far.” two, haviug extracte.1 from them all am the beat paid of living men ot let­ ty-sixth sura After the passages had the race Itself. In Venice In the seven­ feet wide and weighing twenty-one “I have just come from a liargain sale, the valuable information. ters. 1 receive 30 sous a line.” beeu written down they were published teenth century every lady of any pre­ tons, It will cost between $7,500 and and my! but didn’t I make twenty “Indeed, monsieur?" said a bystand­ to the prophet's followers, several of tension to fashion or position wore Sultan Hates Darkness. $10,000. The steel door nlone will dollars fly!” “1 was under chloro­ er. "I have never worked for less than whom took «««pl«*, while moat learned whut were called "choppines,” high weigh «ve tons. The Bulan of Turkey strenuously ob- £5,000 a line. What do you think of them lij heart, and ths originala were clogs or pattens, to elevate them from form for two hours. They say I fought Archbishop Ireland seems to have like mad before I would give in and jeeto to darkness ami his apartments in that?” then placed tn a chest In no particular the ground. Thomas 1’oryat. a traveler put a quietus on the discussion as to take the chloroform. You see 1 was the palace and the surrounding gar­ “You are joking,” responded Dumas order. For this season it la uncertain who visited Venice In 1611, says of whether Lincoln was a Catholic by in irritation. wh«ti many of the passage« were re them: "They are so common In Venice dens as well are Hooded with light on quoting the statement made to him by afraid they would liegin to operate l>e- every night. He is read to sleep by a "Not at all.” vealed. that no woman goetli without either Father St Cyr, the missionary. In which fore I was under the influence.” “I “For what do you receive such rates .vbu Bekr, Mohammed'« first succes in her itouse or abroud. It Is a thing Father St. Cyr told him that while take chloroform as easy as falling oft' a brother or a favorite servant, and if he per line?” sor. collected the originals, which were made of wmid ami covered with leath­ Lincoln's father and step'mother were log.” “I’m to be the maid of honor. dreams an interpreter is summoned di­ “For constructing railways,” waa ths on palm leaves and skins, and had er In »undry colors—some white, some rectly he awakes to explain tlie mean ­ both of the Catholic faith Abraham My dress is pale pink crepe, with a answer.—Harper’s Weekly. copies made by Zaid from the dictation red, some yellow. Many of them are never had been and never was a Catti long trail; cut square in the neck, ing of the dream to him - of those who had committed the pas ­ curiously palnte«!; some also of them Member ot Fest a Saeaak. olic. sages to memory. He further placed have 1 seen fairly gilt. There are with a wreath of tiny pink roses edg­ Few meu could tell If they were ask The legal position of Queen Alexan­ Among the receipts In the French ing the neck and the sleeves, which ed bow many feet per second they the suras tn the order etill followed, many of these «-haplne.vs of a great colonial budget there figures a sum of stop at the elliow with a frill of creamy dra is very curious. So far as her pri­ walk. A press photographer whose putting the longest at the bead of the height—even half a yard hlgti and by four lacs of sicca rupees, equivalent at lace—some a*y mother had ou her vate business is concerned, she is not work requires him to know all man­ list without regard to historical ac bow much the nobler a woman Is by so the present time to about $143.135. quence. Borne time later Osman had much the higher are her chapineys. regarded by the laws and customs of ner of speeds said: wedding dress. Pink silk gloves come paid by the British Indian govern the Koran copied In the Quralsh dla All their gentlewomen and most of England as a married woman at all. “ The average man walks four feet ment This money Is paid annually In upto the eltiow; pink satin slippers, She is the only woman in Great Brit­ per second. A dog on Its ordinary led and suppressed the versions made their wives ane of the Married Woman ’ s l ’ roje exclusive right to buy the salt manu­ lie swell!” “I’m through Iwttiiq* I Bare« aad Feaae. walk abroad, to the end that they may deer over the Ice makes twenty-six factured in what remained of the lost a whole month's salary on that ecty Act. The idea of the law is that It Is ataualng to learn that Burns not fa 11.”—Chicago News. feet. A race horse makes forty-three attain« of state consume all the time of French possessions In India. last prize tight. Thought sure I’d feet A sailing ship makes fourteen when just emerging from obscurity CABHMKKK BLOCSK. Our ambassadors of the first rank picked the winner, for I dreamed my the king, and therefore no res|M>nslbil- Jocularly anticipated that bls birthday Classleal Advertising. feet.”—Chicago Chronicle. Ion It herself. A yoke and trimming ure those at London. Paris, llerlln and ity for the queen’s private business would come to be ttoted among other It seems curious to American Ideas man had won three nights la piece of embroidered material are the St Petersburg. They get $17,500 a mm I m upon him. If the queen con­ remarkable events In s letter to his to know tba* there Is a firm of house Battle of the Heyrlaga. only color contrast, while the double year. The ambassadors of the second cession." eurly patron. Gavin Hamilton, in 17*1 decorators in London which has 1>een trasted debts in her husband’s name, The battle of the herrings was the row of (birring around the yoke serves rank are those at Vienna and Italy. comical name given to a fight between be says, "For my own affairs I am In a mentioned by some of the most emi­ I couldn’t wait any longer tha hs would not be responsible for them also aa adornment The blouse closes an English force and a French de­ fair way of becoming as enduent as nent English writers It started In who get $12.000. The English do far aa any other busliand would. The tn back and may be developed Into a street corner, so I boarded my better by their diplomats, as they not and. tachment not far from Orleans In Thomas a Kempls or John Bunyan, 1696, anti Jane Austen, Thackeray and only are furnished with houses, but listene«! to the conversation______ king cannot 1« sued for debt, But the dressy waist with low. round neck 1429. The English were conveylag a and you may henceforth exited to see Lord Lytton are among the many writ tiuwn can lie. Should the king die, and long elbow length sleeves. A soft their salaries are much larger. The me, and found it quite as interesting! large quantity of supplies, mainly my b.rtiHlay Inscribed amoug the won era who have placed tlieir heroes or crushed girdle completes It British representative at Washington as that that I I hail had heard from from tho the moving 1-amaFaiithorlties hold that the queen herrings, for It was Lent to UN army derful events In the Poor Robin ami heroines In rooms decorated by this gets $32.500, the one at Paris $45.000 pictures on the street. Two gent he- .»»arid not marry again in case she Tortarlag Hlw- that was tiesieging Orleans. The Eng­ Aberdeen Almanacks along with the firm. This might be called classic ad­ and those at Berlin and Vienna $40,- wiahetl to do so, without the special "You say you think your girl Is go lish had 1.600 men, the French 6.000. Black Moutlay and the battle of Both vertising —New York Tribune. men were discussing the war situation, 000. as follows: “Doesn't it strike y«m Ihi—in1 and commission of the king’s ing back on you? What leads you to The former repulsed the assailants and well Rrtdar_;_____________ Kekaklag HI« PrrwwMptt««. such a supposition? Did she snub saved the herring«, so the battle was The Real I««««, or. H«^« wha< Mtse*. that Japan has heaped coals of firn-.»® The girl with the auburn hair had you?" named In honor of the supplies. Stern Parent Well, young man, 1 A young man who waa about to be suffered him to put bls arm on the the Russian People’s heads, and at she If your character is l«d you will "No. but she called her little sister know nothing against you, but I'm not married waa very nervous and while back of the seat, but when he tried to Seem« Otherwise at the TrSek. Into the parlor last night and had her very well acquainted with you. Before same time placed herself upon the never have much influence in life. asking for Information aa to bow be take her band she drew It aw*f. ‘‘ Wetlth does not bring happiness. ” pedestal of the broadest magnanimity recite to me. ” — Houston Post. you marry my daughter I'd like to have must act put the question. "In It kiss "Mr. Bpoonall,” she said, "you said the ready made philosopher Dur sins are never fla dark * those that has thrown other countries in the something In the nature of references tomary to cna the bride?”—Brooklyn mustn't try to stretch a base hit Into HI« Cast. "Maybe not, ” answered the man who st «Cher people. or— Suitor I can give references shade and just about staggered th« a three bagger "—Chicago Tribune. "Yes, I quarreled with niff wife about frequents the race track, “but when I Life from three clergymen, sir Parent— universe by her princely gvneroeityT nothing.” compare the facial expression of a per­ That's all very well, but can you give The whole world la marvelling at the I The soft heart is often a safer, bo Many foolish things fall from wise Borne people make themselvrtl at "Why didn't you make up?" son who has wpn with that of a per­ references from many Isinkers? — stand Japan has taken. You can’t cauae a kindlier gul* than the bard I men If they speak In baste or be ex- home wherever they may be—except at "I ’ m going to. All ['rn worried oto'i ’ son who has lost I Bave my doubts» “ — Cleveland I.Aader. • teach Japan anything aliout the Gold-' heart I temporal. Ben Voneoa now la the indemnity.” Pittsburg Post Washington Star.