lopics or I imp Souvenir fiends stole a medal from a Jap officer. Why not take the whole Jup? Dr. Long will have to admit that the President has helied hiin to a good, big slice of publicity. King Edward is going to build a castle In Spain. Hut It will be one of the real kind, with a roof that won't leak. Dr. Iteltman asserts that holms neith er carry tomato cans nor wear long beards. Does that avord with your ob servation. Mr. President? There seems to be no chance that the written life story of the Standard Oil Company will ever occupy a place in the Sunday school libraries. We have 2-cent postage and the cry Is for "iK'iiny postage." This may be one reason why the railway people do not enthuse over the 2-cent fare proposition. Mrs. Howard Gould wants $4,000,000 In the way of alimony. People who drop out of the Gould family bcciu to have an Idea that they ought to get big prices for so doing. Just as the rest of tlie world Is con sidering a proposition to give up light ing China begins to arm lierself for war. The Chinese always have had a habit of doing things backward. "The wheat crop Is the vehicle of our prosperity," says a Kansas exchange. Translated Into plain United States, tills means that dollar wheat will Boon enable all the fanners to buy automo biles. It Is said that the King of Italy Is tmlmppy because his wife's relatives In sist on making long visits to Koine. If even a king has to submit to that sort of thing what's the use of being a king? With one fell stroke of his anthro pological snickersnee Prof. Starr am putates eight or nine centuries from the proud record of the late Mr. Me thuselah. Will Methuselah's descend ants stand for this? An Osage Indian baby In Indian ter ritory Is worth $!50,000 as soon as It is born. In lieu of the conventional sil ver spoon the t)sago baby Is born, fig uratively speaking, with a few sec tions of land In Its mouth. It Is the modern theory of education that the best way to teach good man ners to the young Is to be polite to them from the beginning. Possibly some thing of the kind may have been In the mliul of a MasNochuscttM woman who advertises eggs for hutching. Her Advertisement Bays : 'One hundred eggs sure to hatch for three dollars. If called for. Will hatch If requested In Incubator." In ninny educational Institutions of tlie country the students sown to lie allowed too much leeway In attempting to dictate to tlie faculty how the In stitution shall be conducted. This probably originated in the Institutions where the support of the parents of the pupils, as somewhat and' In some In stances Intlucuiccd by the pupils them selves, was dcHndcl uioti for their very existence. It Is conceivable that In Buch cases a timid faculty nmy have been weak enough to allow-students to dictate what &hould and what should not lie. Hut such an attitude Is not comimtible with dignity, even when adopted b a matter of self-preservation. So many school children have been found with defective eyesight that the school couunlttees of several cities have considered furnishing eyeglasses free. It Is a question how far government should go In supplying citizens with the necessary things of life. Most Ameri can imrents will prefer to pay the ocu list In. many cities are free dispen saries where poor children can he treat ed and receive free prescriptions for glasses. Parents should be warned against Incompetent oculists who take advantage of the reports of the boards of education on the matter of eyesight In tlie schools, and try to get business for themselves by exaggerated warn ings to the "parents of school children .threatened with bHudness." Those familiar with the results of American exploration have knowu for few years that tliere are three nat ural bridges In Southeastern Utah as much larger than the Natural Bridge In Virginia as Pike's Peak is than Mount Washington. It Is only within a short time, liowever, that much accurate In formation about these Utah wonders has beeu accessible. In 1905 an expe dition of Salt Lake City men visited them In company with an artist and a surveyor. Pictures of the bridges have lately been published. The Augusta bridge, -with u span of three hundred and twenty feet and a height of two hundred and sixty-five feet, Is the largest, and so far as known there Is none larger In the world. The Caro line bridge has a greater span, three hundred and fifty feet, but Is smaller In other ways; and the third, the Ed win bridge, although not so high as the bridge In Virginia, has a span several times as large. As one has to travel about a hundred miles over a barren country to reach these marveis of na tare, the summer tourist will not visit them very frequently. In opposition to the suicide clubs, race or Individual, which have de manded the attention of the country, several attempts have been made to organize hundred year old clubs, or, more explicitly, clubs composed of members who will endeavor to round out a century of human existence. To a club of this nature belongs Chief Chemist Wiley, and while he is merely In his sixty-third year he expresses the opinion that no man should live to be less than a hundred, which Is In truth scarcely more than a ripe old age. It must be admitted at the outset that tliere are many reasons why human life should be prolonged beyond former limitations. Sanitation and hygiene have done wonders. Diseases that were considered Incurable a few years ago now yield readily to treatment or have been practically stamped out The art of living rationally and well bus be come more generally understood, the ex treme luxuries of a former generation are now the common, everyday accom paniments of life, and If the simplicity of the fathers and their regularity of living are not quite so strongly In evi dence the extravagances are possibly more than offset by the discoveries and general advance In the medical world. On the other hand, It Is not to be over looked that while sanitation and the spread of medleal knowledge have ar rested or averted disease, other perils threaten the would be centenarian. He must take Into account railroad acct dents, the electric cars, and other perils of city streets, and, not least of all, the operations so eloquently urged by the ambitious surgeon. If be escapes these and conforms In his mode of life to tlie careful hygienic directions, he mny live to be a hundred. But what avails it to Mr. Wiley or to any other simple liver that he reaches the century mark if his friends do not accompany him the whole of the way? Who cares to be a hundred, or even the greater part of It, If his children and grandchildren, the friends of his youth, and the sharers of his greatest Joys, drop off at 65? What excesses of pleasure are tliere at the disposal of the centenarian that the sprightly young fellow of GO should yearn to emulate bis example? What assurance have we from the honorable president, secretary, or member In good standing of the Hundred Tear Old Club that after we have conformed to all the rules and regulations of sanitary sci ence and turned the hundredth mile stone, there will be anybody on earth who will give us more than a passing thought or even glance at our picture In the papers? A record of living Blmply to show that Methusaleh and old Parr do not enjoy a monopoly Is hardly worth the while. The pioneer In longevity, In tentionally or accidentally. Is not a hap py person. Let us live to be a hundred when living to be a hundred is the fash ion. BERLIN'S POSTAL SERVICE. Connect the Ontrnl Office With the Principal Stallone. The Berlin postal authorities are revolutionizing the conveyance of let ters and parcels. The Idea on which they are experi menting Is to have an underground tube with a large enough circumfer ence to admit a man In a stooping po sition. These tubes are to connect the central postofnee with the principal stations and with the district oftlces. Two sets of rails are built In this tube or tunnel, one over the other, not side by side. The upper set of rails is supported on the sides of the tube, thus practically dividing It In two. Small carriages, running on two wheels. are automatically driven by electricity along these ratla No locomotive Is used nor Is there any attendant with the carriage. As many as six of these carriages can be run together for conveying letters and parcels from the arrival station to the central postofflce and thence to the va rious districts, or vice versa. By this means letters can be dellv. ered In any part of the cltr In le than a fourth of the time formerly re quired, so rar the scheme Is not be yond the experimental stages, but I promises to be a success and to banish Trora the streets the mall van, with all its poetry and romance. How Inconsistent your nelirhhora era! They refuse to say that you are a good man, but after the undertaker they delight In saying that too were a good man- i i iff y fyC WW-CAm m f v't,': III "--'Wir It 4;1 If-- L stilt h ' j .vr: IV"m XStcVf .ft riif Sgfcx 2 HMlvr JLKh'JS'Jf&rt. -V After ttie mnrringe" or Edna May, the beautiful American actress, to Os car Lewishon, son of tho New York millionaire, at the register's olllce at Windsor, England, the couple went to n beautiful vlueclad villa which the groom had prepared for his bride. Tliere, shortly after their arrival, they were photographed standing together on the porch, n handsome pair In a framework of Ivy leaves and flowers. In 1890 a little girl with parted hair and wise, demure eyes went from Syra cuse, where her father was, and Is to day, a letter-ninn, to New York, where she nsked for a position In a chorus. She was made understudy to Lucille Saunders in Santa Maria. She was recognized us a type of girl which Is as rare on the stage as a rose in a field of flaunting Hippies. That winter was uneventful and Miss May did no more than get n nice little start. After a brief American tour she went to Lon don, where for several years she was In mediocre plays whUh caused little or no comment. In l'.H4 she wns at Daly's In 7'ew York In The Schoolgirl, and the next year she apiieared In The Catch of the Season. Since then En gland has been her field of action. For almost ten years the little ac A GOOD FIFE. Shape Ilee More to Do with Inenrlng Succeae Than Hae Material. Pipes are smoked by millions, and always will be, yet not one smoker in a thousand knows the elements of a good pipe. Engineers have been known to talk bv the hour over the draft of their lire boxes and never once In half a lifetime think of the draft In their pipes which they smoke hourly. 8nge attentlou Is paid to the pipe material, all of which has little If any thing to do with the qualities of a pipe, and generally nothing whatever Is thought of shape and proportions, the two things that make a pipe good- or bad. A two-cent postage stamp spent with Intelligence will buy as good a pipe as there Is In the world; every thing added to that rrlce Is ornament, vanity and especially Ignorance. The corncob holds a high place among pipe smokers and deserves this place usually for the best of scien tific reasons. When a pipe Is built on right principles the bowl Is as narrow and deep as Is convenient to fill; the hole In the stem meets the bowl at the very bottom and In the center, thus In suring a perfect and even burning of tress has been besieged with the atten tion of England's titled sons, and het name lias been In the papers constant ly. That she Is wise to retire In the height of her popularity cannot bt doubted. Edna May did quite the proper thing to wed, and the simple little ceremony which united hep to Mr. Lewis'ion puts the finishing touch to her wonderful career. She and her millionaire husband are going to live a simple life In a "manor house.'' whatever that may be, all ivy-grown and with the conventional swans in the lake nud hungry deer in the spa cious park. Oscar Lewishon Is the fourth and youngest son of Leonard Lewishon. once well known as a "copper king.' Mr. Lewishon, Sr., and his brothel Ailolph were b:th jxior when they landed In New York from Germany many years ago. Their first business venture was made under the all-embracing heading of "general mer chants" but they soon liegan to spe cialize In two things only coffee and copper. By degrees they became the largest operators In coffee, and with H. H. Rogers, of Standard Oil fame, organized the memorable coffee cornet In 1001. the tobacco. The cake prevents the fire from burning the bowl, thus pre vents making Its bore larger or un even, which would In proportion Bpoll the draft The sides of the bowl are thick to keep In the heat, thus making the burning at the same temjierature at the edges of the tobacco as at the center. In thlfr- way a clean, sweet smoke Is assured. An Odd Bnelneae. In France at this season the banks of streams are yellow with bonfires everj- night. About the fires loaf peas ants, men and women, smoking, chat tering, spooning. They keep the blate going all night, and at dawn tlie ground Is an Inch or two deep with May flies, fireflies, moths little creatures that flew out of the darkness Into those clear and gem-like flames, fluttered forth again In agony, fell and died. The tiny corpses are sold to the French bird dealers at five or six cents a pint, aud are resold for food to the owners of pet birds, flnehes, thrushes, canaries, nightingales and the like. It's to a man's credit if he can truth fully say that his credit Is good. COUGHING IN CHURCH. It Is an Opinion of the Sermon oi Sltfn of Wandering lntereet. The epidemic of coughing that at tacks a congregation at times Is re garded as of sufficient Importance by a writer In the British Medical Journal to merit discussion In a column article, lie Is of opinion that the cause Is nervous Irritability, but will not accept the theory of an American physician that It Is due to prolonged attention, holding that lack of attentlveness must . rather be held resiionslble. He goes on with his Investigation thus: "Persons who will sit out a play or listening to an Interesting conversation without coughing seem to be seized, as soon as they compose themselves to hear a sermon, with distressing Irrita tion of the windpipe' that can be re lieved only by violent and "continued coughing. The affection Is contagious, spreodlng from seat to seat, cough an swering to cough, till the church Is as full of noise as Prospero's Island. As far as we know, the etiology of this strange disease has not received atten tion from tho scientific Investigator. I It due to sudden changes of tempera ture In the sacred edifice, or to the sudden Inroads of malign drafts? It may be granted that the eloquence of some preachers has a chilling effect, while that of others Is of a windy char octer; neither of these things, bow-N ever, can be accepted as a vera causa. We note with interest that the problem has been attacked from another side by an American scientist who has studied the epidemic as it occurs In theaters. He has satisfied himself that there, at least, the coughing which sometimes goes far to spoil the 'per formance Is due to reflex Irritation propagated from the ear to the larynx. "The source of the Irritation, accord ing to him. Is to be found In the strain on the auditory apparatus Induced by the effort to hear what Is said on rh stage. This suggests that actors of the present aay do not know how to use their voices. It would be a comfort to preachers If the church cough could also be explained by overstrenuous list ening. We fear, however, that a solu tion of the riddle Is rather to be found in what Falstaff calls -the disease of not listening, the malady of not mark ing.' It Is related that once nnnn a. time when an author was reading a new piay Derore the members of the Comedle Francalse. an actresn fnlt asleep. When the company were ex pressing rneir various opinions, the au thor maliciously lnslted on having !, of the sleeping 'beauty on the ground that the attention she had given to It would make her opinion especially val uable. The reply was dlRmnportinin- to the point: 'Monsieur, le sommell est une opinion" f 'Sir. sleen la n nnin- Ion'). In like manner It may be said that coughing Is an opinion. At a full dress rehearsal of a new play by Sar dou, the audience, which had nnnin.,. ed the first act, began to cough In the m.ume or tne second. The author at once exclaimed: 'Thev cono-h . t oi. ways thought that scene was too long nwic-uers mignt sometimes at least 1raw the same moral rrom the cough ing of a congregation." SEARCHING SEA DEFTHS. Places Where the Long-eat Sounding i.ine uoea Hot Tonch Bottom. The little German nian-of -war Plnnot of 820 tons, Is at Maniln. out from Germany, sailing around" the tape of Good Hope to Colombo and tnence to German New Gninen. an the Los Angeles Times. After this voyage of about 20,000 nautical miles, during which more than 200 riMm-p soundings were made, the ship was oc cupied some three months on survey work around the Bismarck arcbipelngo, off the east coast of New GuJnpn Sho. came to Manila from Yap Island. among Germany's possessions In Oce aulca, having followed a verv Irremilm- course westward to the Philippines, In close study of the ocean's profile be tween ner point of departure and the islands. The most Interesting result f thaoo soundings she has Just completed In the lacinc to tne eastward of tho Phtitn. pines Is the discovery of an unuBual uepression in the ocean's bed off th east coast of Mindanao. About thirty two miles north, 104 degrees east of l-usan point, Mindanao, all her sound. Ing wire was In the water, showing a depth of 4,678 fathoms and no bottom. Mnety-two miles due north of this snot she sounded 4,648 fathoms. Later off the northeast coast of Samnr n flonth of 4,001 fathoms was discovered In a spot twenty-five miles off Tubabat Isl and ana in north 07 degrees east bear ing. According to Commander Kurts thpaa. are very remarkable results, as the ex istence of such a'deeo Phlllnni mm n im pression has hitherto not been suspect ed, and, moreover, suboceanlc slopes snowing sucn steepness as thes quite extraordinary. Plna. The number of Dins m fl n n f n ni-n ml lally In England la ru.oon nnn . in France, 20,000,000: In Gertnnnv 10. 300,000. It la estimated that about .uuu worth of pins are dally lost la I