fcmmrMMriir-i.mmat,r-m,- mMMMaMh,. ,,. i, , JL., "Ltftf,. The Iuternational Exposition at Glasgow, Scotland, recently opined, is built on the finest site in the city, in the West End Park. The grounds and buildings cover 100 acres. Just under the buildings is the Uiver Kelvin, and beyond are the steep banks of the river dotted with white pavilions. On the top of the hanks, throned above the whole city, is the university. Towards the right are the terraces which mark the sky line, green! ramparts on which are built some of the mansions . where the wealthier residents of the city have their homes. . ( - - The buildings are divided into three parts, the industrial hall, the art gallery, and the machinery hall. Apart from , Great Britain and Ireland, Russia is the largest exhibiter, .and its buildings form one of the most striking features of the exhibition. Next in importance to the Russian is the French section, occupied by 400 exhibitors. - CanadTi is the greatest exhibiter among the British co'.onies. The United States is not officially represented, but American manufac turers are represented, particularly in the machinery section. - V" :. - THE LOST GARDEN. "Somewhere in the distant Southland Blooms a garden lost to me Warm with poppies burning fragrant, .. Drowsy fires I may not see. "Subtle shadows flit and beckon Where a white wraith wanders lonely 'Twixt the darkness and the dew. "In the ruined walls that echoed Once to happy-hearted moods, Now the stealthy, lightfoot lizards Unmolested rear their broods. "And beneath the oleanders. No clear voice sings, as of old; But the fleet caressing sunbeams Whisper secrets to their mold. "Though I follow as the southwind Fares his way through wood and plain, Though I question hill and valley, I shall never find again "My lost garden where lie buried Joys that swift the glad hours sped; Only one could bid me enter; . Only Love and Love is dead!" Afnslee's. (Tj$ HE ladies of St. Mark's were holding a rummage sale. Beau- tiful women, high bred -and dainty, stood behind the counters and j handled wares with the deftness of their more humble sisters. The accumu lation of cast-off articles, which clutter the attics of every household, was spread upon the counters and shelves. Crowds of people, from the lowest to the highest grade of society, thronged the store, elbowing each other rudely. At the further end of the long store was a table piled high with children's cloth ing of every description. "Your choice for 25 cents!" was the motto upon the card, hung conspicuously above the ta- ' HOMK, JOHN," CBIED NED. ble. Almost hidden beneath the pile was a little heap of baby shoes and stockings, and among them a tiny pair of blue shoes. They were a bit faded and worn, with faint creases at heel and toe, where the chubby foot had pressed'its weight against mother's knee. The soft, white hand of the sales lady seemed to linger caressingly upon this particular pair, as she sorted over the clothing for each new customer. iuere eie luuuu-iuceu insn moth ers, with their frowsy-headed offsprings clinging to their skirts; yellow-haired Swedes, whose wondering blue eyes took In every detail of the crowded ta ble, ani dark-browed Italian women carrying their babies within shawls that were their only covering. Bernlce Colby served them all graciously and sweetly, yet, as each turned away, her eye glanced with half relief at the tiny blue shoes, still unclaimed. "How foolish I am!" she whispered to herself. "Why cannot I give them up?" With a sudden Impulse she held them out as a broad-faced Irish woman, with a child In her arms, stood beside the table. -?- . . - . "Och! Mem, but them's foine, ln dade," said the woman, with a gay laugh. "But Jamey's fut ne'er'd squeeze' into the loikes o them." A scarlet wave swept Bernice's cheek as she dropped the little shoes and has tily sought among the clothing for something more suitable for the sturdy "Jamey." . Far back In the store, partly hidden by the : crowd, a man stood, watching Bernice's : tab'.e. It was a dark, handsome face, yet showing the marks of dissipation." As he witnessed the little scene a sneer curled his lips. -- "Heartless and cold! Willing to sell aer dead baby's shoes," he muttered. Hastily pushing forward, the man ap proached the table. His upturned coat collar and the soft felt hat, pulled down over his brows,-nearly concealed his face, yet as he brushed past the eyes of the two met. For a second, the wom an's heart semed to stand still within her bosom, as she recognized the man's face; then he passed by and was gone. - That night, as Bernlce was : being driven to her own luxurious home, she leaned back amidst the. soft cushions with a weary sigh. Not because of the unusual exertions of the day was she spent and weary, but the sight of that INTERNATIONAL. EXPOSITION AT QLASOOW dark, gloomy face, that for five years she had longed, yet dreaded, to see, had completely' unnerved her.. With the past thus opened, the .waves of memory submerged her. Five years before Bernlce Colby had been a happy wife and mother. Then the dark angel had snatched from her arms their pre cious burden. Selfishly yielding to the grief that overwhelmed her, she had neglected her wifely duties until her husband had . sought more cheerful company and consolation in the wine cup. Suddenly awakened to his intem perate habits, repugnance and disgust for the time, swept love from her heart, and heedless of his repentance and re morse, she drove him from her with stinging words of bitter scorn. She sent him from her to do battle alone with that dreadful demon that lies In wait for the souls of the weak and the unwary. Upheld by the praise of false friends, she deemed herself wise In thrusting from her so vile a thing, yet In the long and lonely years that followed the voice of conscience spoke loudly in her ear. It said that she herself was, in a measure, respon: sible for her husband's downfall. That, had she been stronger, braver, her love and faith, her prayers and purity of living would have saved him. Alas: She had not stood the test! And so, though lacking naught that riches can buy, Bernice Colby was a childless mother and a wife In name only. The rummage sale was still In prog ress, and the next day Bernlce stood behind her table, smiling and gracious, though her bright face hid an aching heart. In turning over the garments upon her table, she missed one of the tiny blue shoes, and with a faint smile she took Its mate and thrust it quickly within the bosom of her dress. - , As the day sped onward, a heavy storm arose, the most severe or the season. - A whirlwind of snownakes blinded her eyes as she left the store, and hid from her view her own car riage, as it stood.amons the Ions' lino of waiting coaches. - Turning in the wrong direction, she stumbled into the arms of a mau stand ing upon the curbstone. Starting back she glanced up into his face, and their eyes met. : "Ned!" - - i. "Bernlce!" they both exclaimed in a breath. "Let me see you to your car riage?" said the man, and without a word Bernice placed her hand within his arm. With the touch of those light fingers, Ned Colby's heart : throbbed with the love of other days, and words of tenderness trembled upon his lips Placing her within the carriage, he was about to turn away, yet her hand still clung to his arm. as she said earnestly: "Oh, Ned! are you not coming too?" "May I, Bernlce?" questioned he, eag erly. ' - .. .. . , "Come!" answered his wife," drawing him Jn beside her with both hands. "Home, John," cried Ned to the won dering coachman, and the door closed upon them. Tears dimmed th nM arva at the sound of that ringing voice. uauK uoa! it's the master!" he mut tered, as he gathered up his lines. "Bernlce, like the prodigal son, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight and am no more worthy- "Hush, Ned!" whispered Bernic cov ering his Hds with her hunrf- T i, done wrong, too. Let us forget the past and begin our lives anew." as she leaned towards him there fell from the folds of .her dress tin. ii shoe. Holding it up, Bernice whispered suiuy: . - . "The baby's shoe." ' . Thrusting his hand Into his coat pocket, Ned drew out its mute anJ crushing them both together In the lit WHOLE COUNTRY SPECULATION MAD. MANIA EXTENDS FROM COAST TO COAST. The country seems to have gone speculation mad. Never before in Amer ica's history has this mania been so paramount as in the past few months From coast to coast, men and women, young and old. Ignorant and wise spptt, the spkculatob facf. plunge in wheat or corn, stock or bond, so long as they are in with the maddened crowd to make a fortune in a short space of time. , Here, as In the closer combinations, thousands and tens of thousands are endeavoring to add a little to their 'gain, ' perhaps made by bard labor. So general from ocean to ocean has been this speculation that the government has found it necessary to sound a warning. SCOTLAND tle hand that held them, he bent aud kissed his wife tenderly. - "Our baby's shoe!" said he with a smile. Philadelphia Item. DAVID D. THOMPSON. He Is the First Lijman Ever Made Methodist Editor. - David D. Thompson, . a" Methodist layman, of Chicago, was elected edi tor of the Northwestern Christian Ad vocate by the Methodist General Book Committee at Cincinnati. Five ballots were taken, with Thompson and S. J. Herben, New York, leading. This is the first time a-layman has been elect ed to such a position, and is taken as indicating the strength lay forces are exerting in the church. ': The so-called "Rock River proposition." for "equal lay representation" in the Methodist General Conference,, was drafted : by Thompson in 1907, and adopted in 190C by ihat body. He was an active mem ber of the Lockland-Wyoming Church, while residing . in Cincinuati, aud at Evanston, 111., where he now lives; but he has never pteached. J The" new editor Is 4 8r4i graduate of Delaware,' Ohio, and - is a son of a former superintendent for fifty years of the Western Book Concern printing DAVID D. TH MI'S )N. department,; where he arose from an apprenticeship to assistant editorship of the Western Christian Advocate. Re cntly ho has had a. similar position at Chicago.' . '. . ; - . . For, several years he was employed on various Cincinnati daily papers, and was particularly interested in the labor agitations of the '. 'SO's, writing ; and speaking; fearlessly as -an advocate of Christian socialism, and In behalf of labor. , He has always advocated tem perance reform, and wrote a pamphlet. "Abraham Lincoln and Temperance.'? Others of his books are "Abraham Lincoln, the First - American," . and "John Wesley, as a Social Reformer' His fellow churchmen speak of him as a man of deep convictions and a thor ough Christian in action as well as principle. ' . - , . - Thompson- has been editor . of . the Daily Advocate, published durlng-Gen-eral Conference session His term will extend to May. 1904. at Si.250 a ver Thompson has been for years assistant and since Dr. Arthur Edwards' death acting editor of, the Northwestern Ad- vocate. ' ; - American Fruit-Growing. The United States leads all other na tions in the matter of fruit growing. Strawberries were valued at $80,000, 000 last year, and grapes at $100,000, 000. - If a woman's confidence in her hus band makes you laugh, be kind enough to both of them not to let her see it. The amateur violinist Is conrinuailj bowing and scraping. , to nave oeen swept along on the great . wave of desire to gain a fortune by the rising or falling of stock and grain. Not alone Is the epidemic an affair of the Stock Exchange of New York. Not a village exists along the great rail roads of the West which has not men among its residents . who take a "turn" at. the market in. tho riH near to them. In every hamlet, no matter how unpretentious as to popula tion, the market prices of corn and grain are closely watched and over the wires comes ticking along the request to buy - or sell, according to what Is considered the. more fortunate side to be on. -: -.:y--y.; , Never in tbe history of the land has the speculative fever been so madly general.' If seems to matter little to the men from one end, of the country to the other, whether they - take a HISTORY OP KUBBEB. WORLD HAS BEEN SLOW TO AP PRECIATE ITS USES. - Man Who Came with Colombo Baw Haitians Playing Ball Early Used to Exclude Water from Coat and Boots Increasing Importations, "The world was a long time learning the uses and value of rubber. . For two centuries after the Spaniards saw. the gum in the hands of natives of the new world, it was little more than a curi osity. Old Herrea, who went with Co lumbus on his second .voyage, made a note of an elastic ball which was mold ed from the gum of a tree. At their games the nude Haytians made it bound high In the air. The Aztecs were familiar with the gum and called it ule, and from them the Spaniards learned to smear it on their coats to keep out the wet. . They had crossed the seas for gold, and never dreamed of a time when the sticky milk the un couth Indians drew from strange trees would be worth more than ' all the treasure of the hills. (On Feb. 23, 1899, a ship carrying a cargo of 1,107 tons of rubber valued at $2,210,000 sailed from Para, for New York, leaving 200 tons behind on the wharf.) Jose, King of Portugal, in 1555, comes down to us as the wearer of a pair of boots sent out to Para to be covered with a water proof gum. Yet three hundred years were to elapse before a Connecticut Yankee should make a' pair of boots of rubber which would not decompose. Dr. Priestley, author of a work on 'Per spective,' now forgotten, recorded that caoutchouc (pronounced 'kachook') was useful in small cubes for rubbing out pencil marks hence the name rubber. The India linked with It refers to the savages who gathered it in the Amazon wilderness. Dr. Priestley's cubes were half an inch long and sold for three shillings, or seventy-five cents apiece. A stiff price, for the finest rubber to day is a dollar a pound. Its price for ten years has ranged from sixty-two cents to $1.09. The conversion of the gum to useful purposes made but slow headway. ; The first waterproof cloth In 179T was the work of -an English man.' It was tentative, and, of course, It would not : stand . heat In 1823 Charles Mackintosh, of Glasgow, dis covered naphtha, aud, dissolving rub ber in it, produced a varnish - which, when spread on cloth,5 made it really impervious to water. As late as 1830 the importation of rubber into England amounted only to 50,000 pounds., f in 1899 ho less than 16,075,584 .: pounds were consumed In that country, and the consumption In - the United States reached 51,606,737 pounds. . Most of the rubber -used in the w&tld still comes from equatorial South America, and the forests where the Indians gathered ule are as dense to-day and almost as little known to white men as in the time of Cortez." Ainslee's. - .. COMICAL WAS CORRIGAN. An Old-Kashlone I Traveling Showman . and Ventri oqnist. - . 'I suppose there are more queer by ways in the show business than in any other vocation, on earth,", said an ad vance agent, chatting af fer the perfor mance a few'uiguf's aiS.7r "Fran acrifis one of the oddities rpcgntly,' he con tinued, "in the person of a .Single-handed entertainer, who has been working a quietJittle circuit of W'a own for the last twenty years, -antf is1 beginning to think about retiring On a snng .fortune, yet; I doubt whether you. could, find a soul in the city who ever heard of him. My discovery of the ' gentleman -was due to a mislaid railroad schedule that forced me. to stop over night at a dreary little country-town in West Vir ginia. " Looking around the 'office' of the hotel, which was also dining-room, reading room and smoking room, I was surprised to see a handbill announcing that Comical Corrigan would "give one of his: well-known and Justly popular entertainments at the brick church that evening. The poster went on to say that there was nothing about the show to offend the most fastidious; that It would include comic; and sentimental ballads, Imitations of wild beasts, ven triloquisms, selections on fourteen sep arate and distinct musical' instruments, a funny stump speech and refined jig and wing dancing, the-whole, to con clude with 'an exhibition" of prestidigi tation or parlor magic' :f-:' "That sounded promising, so after 9upper I sauntered around to the brick church, which I found crowded to the doors..,. I managed .to get a seat, how ever, and, upon my word, I haven't en joyed . myself- as much - for years," quotes the New Orleans Crimes- Demo crat. "I was transported back to my boyhood's happy days, and .for two solid hours I forgot I had a trouble on earth. Comical Corrigan turned out to be a plump, rosy person,-with a flexible face and a jovial eye, and his entertain ment was exactly.; what I remember seeing at-our old town hall when I was a little shaver pt 9. orr 10 the same good, old jokes, the same conundrums, the same "stories, the same songs I don't believe I missed a single boyhood favorite. In the ventriloquism selection he hauled out the twodolls I hadn't seen for so many years; perched them on his knees and began the well-remembered dialogue: 'Well, Sammy, how do you feel?' he asks. .'With my fingers,' squeaks Sammy.f in falsetto. Then Comical Corrigan whacked him over the head and we all roared with laughter. Wlien Mr. Corrigan an nounced that he would 'now recite a pathetic recitation by special request,' I -knew he would favor us with 'Cur few Shall Not King To-night' tefore he opened his mouth, and when he asked for a ring to grind to atoms and fire from a pistol in his chaste seance of prestidigitation, .or parlor magic, I could hardly get mine off quick enough, I was so anxious to see that dear old trick done again. ; ' ' ; "After it Was all over I met Corrigan and found him a first-rate fellow. He told' me he had been doing that sort of thing ever since 1880 drifted into it by degrees, organizing his circuit of towns, making friends of the church and fra ternal '; order - people and gradually building up a clientele that was now as regular and steady as a clock. He sticks to small places, . makes the rounds once a season, and is welcomed everywhere as an old friend. , He la under next to no expense, and If it rains on any given date be simply stays over and gives the show the next night I thought of the trials and vexations of piloting a big company over the road," added tbe advance agent "and I en vied him from the bottom of my heart" -' - , r . . , ... Fooled Htm. '..'" V Up in Harlem there lives an old gen tleman who is remarkable for his absent-mindedness, his nervousness and his disposition to go off at half cock. The other night he attended a dinner and did not teach home until 1 o'clock. He was feeling pretty good, but he was master of his movements. He does not carry a night key, as he seldom goes out after dark, so he rang the doorbell, and his daughter, who had been sitting up for him, opened the door. Her mother had gone to bed and was sound asleep. The ' daughter " is a rather waggish young woman, and, as she opened the door, she said: : "Just think It's . 1 o'clock and papa Isn't in bed." "What!" yelled the old gentleman. "Not in bed? Where is he, then? Oh, he must be In bed!" "; "Yon can look for yourself, father," said she with a grave countenance. -. : Up the stairs he hurried, full of ex citement. He ran Into the bedroom. A Hgbt was dimly burning, his wife was sound asleep, but sue was alone. ; . His daughter had followed him up stairs. . - "My heavens, daughter, where can he be?" cried the old man In alarm. "Here he Is, father," said the young woman, leading him up to the mirror over the chiffonier. - The old man looked and tumbled, and it cost him a half dozen pairs of gloves to keep the incident from reaching the ears of his wife. New York Evening World. . .; An Exclusive Colony. Those who work in the Du Pont pow der mills on the Brandywine, in Dela ware, form a queer colony. They are all Irish people,; whose ancestors came to this country when the Du Ponts started in business and went to work for them. For generations, the Du Ponts and these people have passed their positions from father to son; Like their employers, they intermarry and are very exclusive. They live on what are called Du Pont's banks, which are about three miles from Wilmington. The people of Wilmington know hardly anything about them, for they have few outside acquaintances,' and their visits are not frequent. The hills about the banks are the highest in Delaware, and it is at ;the base of them, that these workers live. The town is lighted at night by the electric plant In the works. The people have their own places of amusements, the principal being the Brandywine Club, which has a finer building than any club in Wilmington. They also have dances and theatricals frequently. Near ly every one of them has lost a relative by an accident in the works. They have their own graveyard, too.-New' York Press. '- " - . A Helpful Institution. A lunch room has been opened in Kansas City, under the auspices of the Young Woman's Christian -Association, where rood is sold at exact cost. The prices seem almost impossible, but judi cious management '. will . accomplish wonders. Cream of tomato soup is sold for 5 cents; roast beef with potatoes, the same; two salmon croquettes cost 2 cents; mashed potatoes the same; peas, 3 cents; cabbage salad, 4; apple pie, it; coffee, tea or milk, 3; cheese, .1 cent; two sandwiches, 5 cents; a hot roll, 1 cent; butter, 1 cent . The men have found out this wonderful opportunity to get food at cost prices and are begin ning to edge their way In among the women. ,- Unless they become too nu merous fhey will not be debarred. . Let us hope so kindly an Institution will prosper, and pave the way for many similar ones. ?-' ' : - Klepnants in England. While excavating for the foundations for the new buildings of the Victoria and Albert museums In South Kensing ton a car load of fossilized bones was brought to the surface by the workmen. These were taken in charge by Dr. Woodward,, of the geological " depart ment, who pronounced them the . re mains of the primitive denizens of the soil that lived there .before man eame to Interfere with them.. The bones be longed, he said to a London newspaper representative, to the elephant, the stag and the primeval horse, and date back to a time before Great Britain became isolated,' ere yet the Straits of Dover had been cut through. I, Not Ijearned in Society Ways. - "There is no use of talking," said one navy officer: "I can't help admiring that man Noah, ? The way he built his own boat and then sailed it was re markable." . " : , "Yes," answered the other.. "It show ed good workmanship. But, you see, Noah wasn't obliged to represent any body diplomatically when he touched at foreign ports. I doubt very much if he would have known how to behave in a drawing room." . " Sickle from the Sphinx. " The oldest piece of wrought iron in existence is believed to be a roughly fashioned sickle blade found by Bel zonl, in Karnas, near Thebes. It was Imbedded in mortar under the base of the sphinx, and on that 'account is known as "the sickle of the sphinx." It is now in the British museum, and Is believed to be nearly 4,000 years old. ... His Next Meal. "That man says - he never knows where he's going to get his next' meaL" . "Is he so poor?" , , "No, but he's a collector and eats wherever he happens to be." Philadel phia Bulletin. - Only a "Bluff." ;- The Parson I hope you are not going fishing on Sunday, my little man. : The Kid O, no, sir; I am merely car rying this rod so those wicked boys across the street will not suspect that 1 am on my way to Sunday school. The more holes there are in a sponge the more water It will hold. Brevity is the soul of . wit but It doesn't always embody the truth. flUMOB OF THE WEEK STORIES TOLD BY FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Odd, Curious and Laughable Phases of Human Nature Graphically Por trayed by Kmlnent Word Artists of Our Own Day-A Budget of Fun. " Farmer See here, you!- Yon remem ber putting two lightning rods on my barn last spring, didn't you? Well, that barn was struck six weeks after and burned down. Peddler Struck by lightning? . ' "It was." " ... t - : "In the daytime?" . "No; at night" "Must'a' been a dark night, wasn't It?" ' "Yes; dark as pitch." . "Lanterns burnin'?" I "What lanterns?" "Didn't you run lanterns up 'em dark nights?" - "Never heard o' anything like that" "Well, if you didn't know enough to keep your lightning rods showin' you needn't blame me. G-lang!" Depends on the I'oztor's Bill. Brown That was a lovely basket of fruit you were carrying : home last night, Jones. How much did it cost yon? - ; ... I Jones I don't know. The doctor is still at the house. - - An Innovation. "1 notice," said Bronco Bob, "that you make a rule at a political gatherin' to have all the speaker's close friends an partners lined up on the platform with him." . , - "Yes; he is usually accompanied by some of the distinguished men of his own party." - "Well, it's a mighty good idea. In Crimson Gulch, when a man has any thing to say, he jes' gets up on the keg an' takes his chances.. But I'll have the boys adopt your way. It keeps the opposition from' makin' a man redick leous by comin' up behind an' gettin' the dfpp on him while he is bowin and scrapin' to the folks in front" Washington Star. Enough for Him. . Eeuben I suppose Sal Whlffletree is all th' world tew yew, Josh? ' Josh WaL no; but she's all I want uv . It forty dern good acres and a peach orchard! Puck. " . "-" --'' Left. ' ' Wylkins Did you ever run for office? Watkyns Yes. Wylkins What luck? W Watkyns The office ran about twice as fast as I did. Somerville Journal. . The Benefit of the Doubt. "Don't you think, some of our Con gressmen" waste a great deal of their time?" ' ' . -: "Well," answered Senator Sorghum, with great deliberation,-"you ought not to be too hasty in judging. Unless you look through a man's private ledger, how are you going to know whether he has been wasting his time or not?" Washington Star. :".-.-'-" The Sponge and Its Uses. , Two little girls with snub roses and public-school voices stood in front of the window of a Third avenue drug store yesterday afternoon. "My!" said one. "Look at the sponges! 'Most : a thousand of 'em. WThat d'yer s'pose they use 'em all for? I didn't think they was so many slates In the world." The other-little girl looked at her companion with withering scorn. . " . "Don't yer know," she sniffed con temptuously, "that windows has to be washedrVNew York Commercial Ad vertiser. .. '-'."".--. Profitable Poetry, Bobbs There goes a fellow who got $1,000 for a spring poem. Dobbs Lucky fellow! Bobbs Yes, it was a poem to adver tise a car spring. Baltimore American. On the Beat. Joakley Well, well, the greed of these policemen! - .. Coaktey What's the matter now? - Joakley Why, . haven't you heard about this new Copper Trust? Phila delphia Press. .. It Cnred Her. "No," said the man In the mackin tosh, "my wife doesn't give away any of my old Clothes or sell them to the ragman any more. I cured that habit effectually once," : : " - "How was that?" they asked him. "When I fould she had disposed of a coat I hadn't worn for several weeks I told her there was a letter In it she had given me to mail the last time I had it on. And that was no lie, either," be added, with deep satisfaction. - ,, The Family Silver.-. , "Fer the land's sake," said the wom an in the blue Mother Hubbard as she fastened the clothesline to the division fence,' "what do you think of them Joneses telling around that the burglars got in their house an' stole the family silver? Family silver! Huh!" r - "It's so, though," said the woman in the next lot . "They had a dollar aa' a quarter piled on the mantelpiece fer the grocery bill, an' It was all in sliver." Indianapolis Press. - - An Earnest Worshlppsr. Dashaway Miss Calloway took me aside yesterday and wanted to know my honest opinion of you. Cleverton I hope, old man, that you gave me a clever send-off! - "Certainly.. I told her that you never made love to a girl In your life that you didn't mean it" : v . . . .... ....... Peeunen. .' Mr. Isaacstein Mist her Rnl fatal n Ait a shentleman gome in here a leedle vile ago mlt hees hat all smashed und dirty. una puy a new one? Mr. Goldstein Veil, maype he might I dunno. : . ' - Mr. Isaacstein Veil, If he dit I glalm a bercentage. . , - Mr. Goldstein Vy Is dot? -Mr. Isaacstein Pecause it vas mine leedle Ikey vat trowed der panapa peel on der sitevalk. - True Love. ; Brlggs Do you think he really loves her? - - ; ' . . Griggs Of course. How can he help ' but love a girl with as much money as that? . . ' 1 Push and Poll. She He's in thejmsh, all right He How did he get there? She-Ou, he had a pull. Spring Warning. . v Let as then be up and working , With our hoe and with oar spade, ' Wiae Restraint. "There's one characteristic in men I profoundly arimlra " ! "What is it, Becky?" "TheV Can be RO raMnct mart At anon other and not show it." Not a Buffaln. "Aguinaldo says he will not attend the Buffalo exposition." : "Why not?" , ; .' v . "Because he is not a Buffalo." Ohio State Journal. A Man of Peace. , . ' ! Biggs There goes a man who will fight at the drop of a hat ' Diggs Who Is he? . State Journal. . Friday Not Unlucky. Quizz Do you thing Friday an un lucky day to move? . . Bizz Not for me; I moved on Friday and found out if I'd waited until Sat urday my goods would have been at-; tached for rent Ohio State Journal. : Compulaory. first Boarder i)o you believe In the" salt cure? .. .. Second Boarder No, but since bufv landlady gives us mackerel every morn ing what's the use; to object Ohio. State Journal. " . The Hat Got It. Dashleigh Did Miss Avoirdupois, make an impression on you at the re-; ception last night? Flashlelgn No, I am happy to say it was my hat. Ohio State Journal. , A Model Relative. -- "I reckon Bobby's got a letter from his uncle." . "Shouldn't Wonder. He's alius been purty kind to Bobby." - "Yes; he's the sort of feller that prom--' ises to give a boy a lot of presents if'j he's good, an' gives 'em to him any-' how." Puck. " Changed the Prescription. Patient Doctor, . would -you mind, 8tODDintr at the drne store and navine! for this prescription." I'm "snort of change. . . ' " Doctor (hurriedly writing .another prescription) Excuse me. I made a mistake. You, don't need any .nerve medicine. - One to Be Avoid -d. "Do you see that very ordinary-look-in"-man over there?" ' es; what of it?" "He's a man with a history.". "" "A man with a history! What has he; ever done?" - ' ' "Nothing at all. He's selling the ffls7 tory by subscription." A True Prophecy. "The late editor's wife Is something of a humorist" "Indeed?" "Yes; took a line from his original salutatory aud placed It on his tomb stone: "What was it?" "' ' J "'We are here to stay!".' ' Defined. . Willie Pa, what's an "old flame?" ' ' ' Pa My son, when a man speaks of "his old flame" he refers to something over which he used to burn his money. Befiaed Repartee. .."I never tell all I know," he said, In tending to be mysterious. :. "Well," she replied, 'it certainly can't be because you don't have time." . Hawsers of Monster Size. The largest cable of modern times Is the manilla hawser which was used to tow the drydock to Havana. It Is twen- ty-three Inches in circumference, but It is by no means the largest that ever i as been made, although it has the rep utation of breaking the record. There are at least two others of a greater circumference, but both ol&rr. One of these had a : circumference of twenty-three Inches, and was used for the purpose of anchoring the ship North ' Carolina in the navy yard at Brooklyn, while the other was a tweniy-four-lnch hawser, which was used as a sheet-anchor cable on the Tennessee, when she was stationed in tbe Mediterranean la the '80s. ;:.; " ;;;. :,: " Such" an enormous rope was naturally found to be unwieldy, a fact which was abundantly.. demonstrated, when ' the vessel encountered a storm In the Hay of .Naples. -When the Tennessee re turned to her native home ih' Amerlcjji the hawser was sent to the oakum mills and made it Into oakum. ' All things are for the best and every mother's son of us thinks he's It