lul
WASHINGTON
mm
OUR BOYS AND GIRLS.
THIS IS THEIR DEPARTMENT OF
THE PAPER.
IS?
Qu.lnt Bay Iiik tl Cute I)olne of the
Little Koike Kver where, (lutlierc.l
and Printed Here for All Oilier Lit"
tie Unee to Head.
Men In plenty are to tx found that
w ill forgive wrong. Insult anil even per
sonal violence. lut few Hint over for
Clve ridicule. To Ih made a ItmBhliiK
stook to others imiIk deep to the i i l.Jc
than to tie convicted of lying mil Moat
ing; Just an picking a jacket or robbing
a henroost seems to sot out In n more
contemptible light tlinti raiding n hmik.
Men are mightily given to taking mem-
I FIRST IN AA1ER- 2
ICAN HEARTS. 2
3T Is Iuiiost.Iblc at Ibis day to add any
thing of a new character to the ac
count of nicu and events of a hundred
jar and more ago. for the field of his
tory, In so far as it relates to the Ameri
can revolution and the men who were
representative in its accomplishment, has
leen well explored and voluminously ex
pounded by hundreds of men eo.ua! to the
task. Nor is there n school child of 10
years In all this couutry. who has not
ammunition and prcpire for the strujrgle. than twenty four hours put a period tt
'The retreats which he managed In the his life."
1 following years were almost as inspiring The New York papers did not get the
' as the victories he fanned. His must be ! news of Washington's death until Dec.
a waiting game to a great extetjt. aod 10. and It was four days laler when the
how well be played It history tells, lie ' lto-tou pers published their first In
I mtnnelled ISnclaud to recognise the trotl- formation, President Adams lued a
ule as more than a were Insurrection proclamation advising alt ritisens to weal , . v nerlouslv .ami they want to have
and secured thus the rights of civilised crape on the left arm Tor thirty days ano . k
"fare. (setting apart Keb. 22. Wa.klngton. " 'aK t Is ,t the w-.y 111 which n
How great the odds were against Gem birthday, as a day when special service. 1 hence IM ,'w' '"","
Washington can never be rightly esti-1 in honor of Washington should Ik- uHd. nmn " .
n..ti ti,o ....l .-.in . hi. rir New York nakl its tribute to the de- test of character. Not without reason
fon the point of dissolving away. There parted President on Dee. SI. No carts.
were many true hearts In the Congress: carriages or bon-enacK rwers were aiiow.
but there were many, alo, who still lean- ed in the streets through which the fun
ed a little towards England, fearing that j eral procession paed on the way to St.
the new order of things would never be Paul's Church, where Gov. Morris deliv
ered the funeral oration ami itisnop Sam
uel Provost conducted the religious services.
successful. There was only a half-heart'
ed support for the commander-in-chief.
Jealousy Inspired officers to scheme
against him. Money was often scarce
and sometimes not to be had. His men
were sometimes without food, barefoot
ed, and half clothed. Through all these
trying years Gen. Washington had to
has It been Mid: H'dleulo U the Hnai
test of truth." for the truth that tins
gone through the lire of this martyrdom
ami come out so triumphant ns to turn
the laugh on the laughers themselve
Is thenceforth Impregnable.
Therefore, one of the llrst lewions
sensible parent will Insist on with his
children will tie Hint of eonrnge to
Washington's Last Wurtl.
Although some statements have been laugh at themselves, nml to Join tiierrl
made by early biographers of Washing
ton to the effect that be was bled to death
by bis attending physician. Dr. Craik.
rlr mnlnlr nn hlttiKfttf. Hifl volume of
I corresiwndence was enormous. Thousands there was never any foundation Tor tut
of letters did he write, urging Congress, accusations.
I the governors, the influential men of the Washington was only ill two days.
colonies to take this or that step, to having expoeU ntnifou to me inclemency
raise men or money, to help on the work. I of the weather on Thursday, Dec. 12
He was the revolution. Almost always I He became violently ill on the following
In. hail iw.rr.vt -nntrnl nf hit tenner, day and expired between lu ami ii
written his essay on these same men and which was bv nn meSns mild, and over , o'clock Saturday night, his death being . nt ,lmsf If it.il utilmnt conceit or
events, so mat tneir nisiory is in-uurncu nis passions and his positive, aggressive uirecny une 10 a cum in uii iun uu
in ine minus oi an .mii-m-aus. in iui. , spirit, uut sometimes tUe overwueiming iu". ' rwm m unu u.i,. . . . . . . , , iittm.If
I. , ,1... l...,u.r.,l 1.-... Iho ill.tw , . . i. .,!. !!.! In hi. Mount Vnninn homo ! one on " " aU" la"l1' 1,1 Ullimil
Mtion of a creat neoi.Ie towards those must hare been . .orn temntation to of the most interesting iwrtions of the,1" ,no '"'rror OU UIS OWU UUridU, W n
ly lu with the laughter of others nt Ihel
exiiense. Nothing so tnke the noti
sene out of n child as timely ridicule.
nothing makes him so bruve utid hoiisi
ble as seeing the Justice of It, nnd Join
lug in with the laugh iignlust himself.
"Ho that sweareth to tils own hurt and
changes not," may be n very heroic
character; but the boy that has nmile n
who called its nation into existence. And him. And when he watched the intrepid
of the leader of all those courageous , Hamilton dash on to victory in the re-
men, the one who before all others car
ried to an nstonishing and successful
achievement the herculean labors of
bringing victorious a handful of ragged
and untrained soldiers through the dark
ness of n struggle with one of the most
powerful countries on earth, certainly
nothing now needs be said.
As a young man, Washington was prob
ably no less Ihppiut and worldly than
hundreds of others in the colonies. Ills
manuers, which hare been thought extra
ordinary in their courtliness, were prob
ably not the slightest bir more so than
those of the majority of bis acquaint
ances. He was not free from the faults
of men of bis time. He was accustomed
to methodical exactness from bis exieri
ence on his mother's plantation and to
her he no doubt owed mauy of the traits
which afterwards stood him in sncb good
stead, l'rom his school teachers, Wil
liam Hobby, who was also the church
M'Xton, aud Thomas Williams, be learn
ed to read and to write as well as to un
derstand the art of computation. The
latter of the two also gave him the rudi
ments of surveying which served as much
as any other one thing to develop bim in
to the general of the American forces.
For it wns on account of his knowledge
of this science that be spent three of
his years of early manhood In the wilds
of the fo routs, running lines, determin
ing levels, fixing boundaries. His wages
at this time were siilllcieut to enable bim
to purchase large pieces of that trackless
wilderness bordering ou streams, which
were afterwards of great value, thus de
veloping bis Insight nnd shrewdness as a
business man. Hut the lesons that he
learned from that rugged nature In the
kolitary hours, were vriceless, nnd the
constitution that was hardened by his
life lu the woods enabled him in after
years to endure uutolu strains of expos
ure and suffering, to rescue Uraddock af
ter tbaf geuerul's defeat by the French,
to conceive the crossing of the Delaware
on that bleak and cheerless December
night, to undergo Valley Forge and to
emerge from them all, the modest, self
contained, reserved gentleman. It was
because of his knowledge of the ways of
the forest that he was sent on that
seemingly needless erruud to warn the
French off Knglish territory in the win
ter of 175:1-51, ou which he quitted him
self well iumI learned his first lessons In
practical warfure. The next year he
wan chosen to go with Uraddock on his
Ill-fated expedition against the French.
Here it wns that Washington learned for
the first time, that Americans were of
Just as good stuff as Englishmen, that
they could fight just ns bravely as the
hcnsoncd veterans of the mother country.
J-'or It wns through the efforts of the
"bUBh-whucklng" Virginians that Urad
dock's force escaped entire destruction.
The coloiilots knew better than did Urad
dock that the evolutions of the parade
ground were of no avail In the sort of
warfare In which they were at that time
engaged. The physical strain undergone
by Washington at this time was extra
ordinary. From the ninth to the six
teenth of (hat July, he had little ileep,
walking mid riding, sometimes all night
long through the forett, nnd succeeding
In bringing up some support for Urad
dock's retreating army. He wns then
25 years old. In the course of that one
expedition he had keen enough to give
him an uucuuiiieniblc fnlth In the vulor
mid abilities of bis fellow colonists. This
fnlth, it may have been, that so upheld
him through the dark hours of defeat and
intrigue, when his army well nigh per
ished from lack of food und clothing.
Washington had no laen, even when the
colonies were being greatly roused over
the Injustice of their treatment by Eng
land, that the end would be war. Jle
did not desire war. And It was only when
there wns no other wny to decide the
momentous question of principle that he
Mt his heart on hostilities. The cour
age of the uiiiii In accepting the position
of commnmlcr-in-clilef which wns offered
to him by the nHsembly was sublime,
The mother country could semi hundreds
of thoiisiimls of trained soldiers against 1
the colonists: her shins ruled the hens. I
Ou the other hand, the colonists were a
few thousands, undisciplined In any war
fare except that nguinst the Indians;
their resources were comparatively Insig
nificant, It seems as If thcra could haro
been but one outcome. Hut Washington
modestly undertook the task, refusing
lirst any money remuuncratlon for the
services he might render. And then his
mgucity as a commander began to display
iuclf. Quietly did he collect stores and
doubts at Yorktown be must have felt
the weight of the heavy burden be was
bearing rise from his great heart so that
it beat the faster, for he knew that
should Comwallis surrender the war
would probably result victoriously for the
American arms.
The same quiet, firm, far-seeing charac-
colonlal residence of the first President.
Washington's Iat words spoken to Dr.
yet greater hero.
Legion Is the uuiiiImt of children tin
Craik were: "I am jut going. Hare me have gone to the bad through the felir
decently buried and do not let my body of being laughed nt for dolus right.
I.. I a- .1 ..I. : I.... .
in- (nil iuiu ur mull lu irsa mau micvi liOSIOU ilerUIU.
days after I am dead.
Cienge of Date.
Wahington lost eleven days of his lift
in 17o2, when 30 years of age, but he llr-
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
A Wh rill nu to the I.nzjr.
You lazy, laxy Pussy-cats! Ever since
your breakfast
You haven't done a single thing but sit
there in the suu!
I've had to learn my letters four of them
this moruing;
YOU LAZY, I.AZY risifT CATS."
ter led him through the years of bis life
after he had laid down his sword. ben
he stepped out of the position of com
mander-In-cblef of the victorious army,
asking no reward, and quietly returned
to the privacy of bis own home, he fore
shadowed the character of the nation he
bad so largely helped to make. It should
be a nation of Itself, not dependent on
England or any other country under the
globe for Its customs or Its policy. It
was to embody principles hitherto un
heard of In the nunals of history. It was
even in the distant future to take upon
itself the yoke of a burdened and op
pressed people, to free them from their
oppression and to give them back their
country with no thought of price or ad
vantage. And yet this was a man.
NEWS TRAVELED SLOWLY.
WushliiKton Wuaiii the TombTwoDuye
Jieforc New York Knew It,
Had George Washington lived nnd died
nt the close of the present century In
stead of the last his death would havo
been known at all four corners of the
globe Inside two or three hours, whereas
It was not known that he had passed
away for several duys afterward. Even
in Philadelphia, the old capital of the
United States, where the Sixth Congress
had just assembled, It was not known
that Washington was dead until Dec. 10
two days afterward.
News traveled slowly In those days;
cable, telegraph, telephone nud postal fa
cilities were nn unknown quantity, nnd
it took duys and weeks to truusmit Infor
mation then, where seconds and minutes
figure now lu this rupid age of invention
and improvement.
The Alexandria Times wus the first
newspaper to announce Washington's
denth, printing on Monduy, Dec. 1(1, a
single paragraph obituary, thus: "It Is
ouf painful duty first to announce to our
country and to the world the death of
Gen. George Washington. This mourn
ful event occurred Inst Saturday evening
nbout 11 o'clock. On the previous night
ho was attacked with a violent Inflainma
tor aOllctlon In his throat, which In less
D and E, nnd F and G I know them
every one.
"Do you know what will happeu7 You
all will grow up stupid,
Suowllake, Whltey, Puffball! If you go
on this way!
You won't be anything but cats, who
cannot read a letter;
And when-I tnke to writing books, you
won't know what they say."
-St. Nicholas. .
A True Btory About a Illble.
There was a little hoy who wanted n
Dibit very much Indeed wanted It
more than nuythlng else ho could think
of. Hut he wns n poor boy. and could
not nfford to buy one; for he lived n
good ninny years ago when Ulhles coat
more than they do now.
One day two strange gentlemen enme
to his house nnd asked his mother for
something to eat. Although she hml
only plain food, she gave them a wel
come to what she had. As they nto
they saw that the little boy looked sad.
They asked hlni what he wanted, nml
he told them a Illhle. His mother said:
Never mind. Don't fret about thnt.
ed a great deal lu his time and proba
bly made them up. The first celebration
of his birthday anniversary of which
there is record occurred In IMcbmond,
Va., on Feb. 11, 1782, old style. It was
a feast and soul-flow day there and else-
where until 1703, when Feb. 22 was I'" take you to seo Gen. Washington
adopted, according to the new style. next week
"Hut I'd rather have n nihlo than go
"Monlu ' HLwuijUAH I tno to seo Gen. Washington," the boy said.
New Terv iio.,. r.i. v- ..J .ono -or t? Rentleuiwi seemed much
the Father of III. Country. IVil With this nml told him he
Four miles from Princeton. N. J.. ,'Pcd uo wouW always bo ns fond of
stunds one of the historic houses of thi. ',ie Ulble,
country. It is the Derrinn furm house, 'r'ie n?xt 'lay the little boy received n
slolii'. . , ,
llo wns born nt llerwlck, In Mnliic.
nud begun III" Irnvnln nliiumt liimicill
nlely liy moving ncios Into (Ireni
Fnlln. Then he lived nt Um'h,t,r nnd
later leinoved to Plymouth. worUInu
lu the region nbout 'niuitoii nnd Hoi
(leriiesH. hi the village now niUod Ash
land. Ho ?I,IU ('n"1' ul11'" l'B
was 27 year old nml In IH" Muriel
for California. Tho trip cost $U7.r.O.
Ills brief Hlop nmoug thn Hour l
most of Interest Just now, but ho put
In live yours In Hiiermni'iito ami thero
NbotltN. lu AtUoim mill NVw Moxleo
Hiid wus In the rush from Henttlo to Hie
SkiiKK',H mines. IlrltUli Columbia.
Then ho went to Honolulu nud npi'lit
eighteen month lu ilnwull. On Mm roll
"I 1SNJ. ho Mnrlod on his grouto!
trip by inviiinlng olio of the p.irty of
twenty three thnt purchMod tlu brig
nntliio Nnneoiitl. bound for Siberia.
.Seventeen of tho owners milled, with
four outsider as ship's olllrers. Most
of the men wni.tid to go to .South t
rlni, but the eaplulti claimed ho knew
whereof he lulkoil hml Insisted on Hlbe
rn. Tht Nlberliin trip wwt n mistake
nml n failure and tho bout wm de
posed of for oiikIi.
When the venture wns glren ip Mr.
Pciivcy went to lilitoksiullhliig. nml
his Hiibseiiueiit course covered oliiti
In Jnpiin. Coren, Hong Kong, Shanghai.
('Hilton, A limy. Fno Choir nml Tslen
Tsleii, lu China, Manila In the Philip
pines. Slngiion In India. New Guinea,
New Caledonia. Now lleliriiien, me wn-
Why Itrd lliiiiniiii. II
.Modern rim.
ve
Ahi!
'.'Hi
v or ii,.:a
Hod Illiniums are ,.. "Vs
ii a In In, urn, .11. ,..n.. . " 00. J
Vftlllllir I 111 II II tl i. HI
yours nud more ,,.. ,". WEr,
iiioviillliiL- 1 111 .. Ui MOB!
ihio on... Tho . tii,.. rr.,',75
low i iimi iii " rin
" ii ..... . " ..." tw
; viiwn in iiihip IMiiM t j I
Tin yt'llow I'tmaiMi
-1 ii-w
ii ml I Iiiik In i . . .
ii r.n in ini.i nuiKi' II i, (,.
I...II..I- 1 1. in. II , . R"lttlil
' 1 'iltllu . I
l!llllU I III III 1 1 1. ,. I...., '
r... . . '""i
iiiiisi mi iv j vi nn I.
limn
Iiiiiiiiiiii lins iiriii ii uii,
. VB fi
una nt.
milium out.
iui mm M-nr ,ii i ,) i ;
lirllig fittu v nrli in
ns much n m 1 1. ll. ,iv i., OOI
... i... .... . . 'U
a hm..P0l
I.J1 Itll MM M M.lll . -
" " i. ii ii m ii
" b.tnig
"'"Ullni U .
low '.miliums m xi r xi . . . .'MllC
would lie worth fr..,,,
ilicni would be fi ,
- lu u.rtte
Itllll'IIM MM IllL'll III,
-artL T
coiiiparntlvely feu i ui. in j, -".'
aro tiikou by denlirs h, iUiVM,i;
fruits us novoltii'H. in.. rntiij, Opi
inoMsiiro, iloifrmiiiiiig i, ptjjaiv,
might lio nskiil w h (, .,, yfjj
in inn iiiii-n, inure ar 1 Cll!l' j3
to which the answer is i,i ',JS
mil ir
woro raised tho pre .,Uj 5,Q
again, mid there w..ui.i t,v n JMtit
raising thoin for tin- K. u,.rn) Wlf.
In ooinpetltlon with ti. ,,,t, ,,idh
ii..ri i.r.iiiii IMIIh. the 1'rlelldlv iillll So
...... '-- - Ii.nllv imul i .. i
clety Islands, NOW .enillllil, I ..siuninn. ' ' r"mie i!, -p
AiiHtrnlln. Queeiislnml. Tliursdi. Isl- tor shipping ..ll., i.:,Ml S
nnds. New South Wnles. Victoria. Coy- red banana opp. nrs i
lou. Cnlctittn, lloiiilmy. nearly every
country lu the Medllerrniionii, Italy.
Gennany. Hungary. Spain. Trance.
Sweden nml Norwiiy. EiiKhiml. Scot
laud nnd Ireland. On Sept. 'M. "1
yours ago. he sailed for tho old Now
Hampshire hills.
"I've hnd my shnro of travel." mWi
Mr. lVnvey to the reporter, "mid I'.u
home to slay. On the 17th of Inst July
I bought out Tom Hlekey, nnd hero I
shall remain." Ho fulled to llud a fair
one nnywhore who could remove his
Impressions of New IlmiiiHihltV
daughters, and so It happens, as be
says, that bo's still "nn old, old bach."
"lu all my travels." he concluded.
scarcity llko some ..ii,. i u i:,i, ,.P
IHtratlvoly ran- fm t .. ,-, tuvic
gailio. Soino pi-.ip'.- r. '.-r t!,.') V
of the rod Imimnn. h. ni. I r-trri '
tho yellow; It Is prnlml I. ii.ni t!um
nmjorlty would bin.- i, , .d'
the far lower prb e nt i . i, iltttfmSo
liHIIHim oatl lie often l I , i in. InjJmSx
consumer notilc tio- n0a, pitho;
ItflimilHs were tu-x-r I . f .re mfl irfn
ns they have been lu . r n,Ti,i ivoulc:
I'oriucrly u luxury thm i .itlierj
costly than othorw l.-, n, bjuWtHjl
now a cheap liixur) . v. c'vard!
anas can now In- lMmk-i,t . ,iiiti.-I 'Iffi
tho streets lu the
' ' (i i
apiece, or 10 cents a n u(h t'.M
"the lloers wore tho best 'people It. all . uiorly cost two or tlir.f tunc, incctnt
the world to the iriikoo mail, mm tno i-orinerly liniiniuis i-n- )i -ugijiu bof
Inimiinidn t,,.. k.u.,itlil M II ll,-ll IUI i U t .....nilo It Hlll.... . I. i.. .1 '!
MHI11II il V .VfV ....... .w
(N. II.) I'nlon.
WHAT THE CHARACTERS MEAN
Culmllatlc Murks 011 the Inalde ol
Hlioeo lliivc u .Mi-iuilnu.
"PiHiple often ask mo the mentilng ot
the apparently craxy hieroglyphs and
figures that are tnuicl ou the Inner
side of the uppers of ronily-uinile shoes
nowadays," said a shoe denier l..o othei
day. "As every shoe manufactory has
secret stamp code of Its own, nud
there Is, therefore, no (Misslblllty of the
general public learning more tliiin thnt
such codes exist, I niny as well toll yon
that the vanity of customers shall I
say, of women customers particularly 1
Is at the tiottom of these queer stump
ed characters nud figures. Vou'd lie
surprised to know, for Instmice, how
iiimiy women there lire who Imagine
that they wear a No. 3 shoe, when lu
reality the size Is n couple of figure!
larger. A shoe salosmuu who under-
stunds his business can tell precisely
the number of tho shoe n woman cus
tomer wears at a glance. Hut, ns often
as not, a woman whose foot Is a No. 5 tries coming to Atlnnti. portx
country lu sailing . u. iu tl ,rns'o
M'Iiikiiiits which, wlih nor t4U
favoring conditions, u.n.t. .jui trofcS
with ndvonio wonilu-r ir tmg from
tied, the cargoes rntti-d N .w Utxro 1
are lirollght by steam, in fat !'ui.0''
built inpiilally fnr tin- f'u jj
These Nloniuers limy, "f ro'-.,,Bils;'
hold up by storms, l-ui ttn-y i-8 onV
llk'f'y to bo; coininoiilv Hi. y lis
goes lion In n specllli-d time. b) hji'J
best and most suitable . oinl '.ucj1
timidllug nml marketing the liv
vnulnge nml with the n-ant "jpjjj,
wnsto, nud with ndvnniagi t-t'nl
iii-ks of supply. The great tiuli iSM
Imiiium trade lu this ...inn y li Mot
controlled by a company tiicb hVjfjj1
Impottent Imve organized
The bananas en tin in Hiltct 12
rniuo from Costn Kicn. Ilrlt!i.0rty;
Spanish Honduras. ( oluuihis, Ji"8S'
mid Culm; that Is, from coitty'
onnind the southern part of iU I'fso;
of Mexico and around tin- (V r, 'y-
Sen. Tho bulk of the fruit fr 5
Gulf eountrlc goes to Nov t)rlet: TllO
illstrlbutloti. that from tin- otlifr tnvoji
calls for a couple of sizes smaller, nnd
tho mysterious stumped hieroglyph
scheme wns devised for the purjiose of
encouraging her lu the belief that bet
foot Is u couple of sizes smnller than
It really measures In shoe leather.
"When a woman cnlls for n No. 3 to
fit a No. Ti foot 110 snlesman of this pe
riod who cures for his Job Is going to
tell her that she requires a No. r. He r.m Ai,..,tin nnru id!
..!.. l.Hl....u I -' ... .. . 1
n ...,-., i,.i.,h uui ,1 nmie 01 me siyii-i Mississippi valley nnd Hie w
s. 0 wants tnni lie reels confident will hnIf from Nl.w ()r,(.MIIM. , 0M
fit her cotnforlnbly and lets U go at ,, nr)! lmw. ,..,, fr,)m
in. 11. .1 wiiiiiiiii rureiy iiiiiikk to lu
uimiy yenrs timinnns have bail
in ins
ur loss wide distribution from tiKp&Sj
of receipt; but they wore never tPAlii
ho widely dlst'lhuiod. nor Kl'ilffi
cheaply nt Interior points,
liiiimtiiiH nro now Hold, not n rrJly5Jj'j
but more or loss commonly. Inallr.ii t
.1... I .r.l.lHli"
of tho country: practically overri
1 tho enstoru part of tho country I',
' , 'HS
made famous by the fact that It was oc
cupied by Washington as his headquar-
beautiful Hlhle, and on the fly-leaf was
written: "From George Washington."
The ilttlo boy did not know It. hut ho
had been talking to Gen. Washington
hlmseir tho day before. Our Little
People.
warhinoton's UKAiigUAiiTjsits, iiockv mamma.'
JIII.I., N, J,
Iluthluu HavcH Tlicill.
An army surgeon says thnt tho En
glish nnd American soldiers nro so
hardy because they, moro than any oth
er soldiers In the world, llko to bathe,
and keep themselves strong and hanlv
by this means.
WIIU111; to Do It.
"You must never put off till to-mor
row what you emi Just ns well do to-
day, Freddie."
"Then let me finish that pie now,
ters during n part of the revolution. He TRAVELED THE WORLD AROUND.
lived there during the time that Con- , ,
gross held Its sessions at Princeton and Ncw H","M,,lf0 HluckHiiiJtli Who llu
here .Mrs. Washington entertained the keen I,lfc '" livcry c""'c-
notables of the bind. The hoiisi. linn . HlnckHinlth Peuvey must eortnlniv i,
cently been overhauled by patriotic worn- P"t ""own us ono of tho greatest trnv
en. It eoiitiiins muny mementos of the elora among residents of Mnnchostur
d?eds0of,,erSonS!1,iltt',1 aUnUU"y hy ,A Hto1 of "ls " travel from
. "'" i I""" "iiu ins 1110 among diiTer-
I' ranee, with a population of 38.BiH . ent nconlo would nmkn
000, has n peaco strength of 670,000; Itself. Ho Is n bachelor, resided nt
war strength, 4,000,000. Millions nmm 320 Douglas street. In w.i mi,..
could be called out If wanted, but, of tor, nnd ho will bo DO years old next
course, they would bo untrained. Mny. Ho learned his trade nt Ash.
mud, lu this State, nud bus worked ut
quire If the shoo Is really of the slzo
he asked for, for she takes It for
ranted thnt the salesman has given
er what she requested. Hut when n
woman does nsk that question It Is the
salesman's business to unblushlngly re
ply In the nlllrmntlvo and 1 don't
think these little uecessnry white Ilea
are stored up against men lu business.
Tho woman customer might examine
the hieroglyphs Inside the uppers for
n week with a double-reflecting tele
scope without llmllng out dllToronlly,
nnd, even If she hnd tho key to the
puzzle, It would only nuike her feel
badly, so what would be the use? There
aro tricks In nil trades but ours." Chi
cago Chronicle.
shlppi'
Orleans over pretty much all tlie'fi
ern country, to tho Pacific coaw.
A Kctiirn Shut,
A young man nud a young woman
nre leaning over tho front gate. They
aro lovers. It Is moonlight. He Is loth
to leave, as the parting Is the last. He
ls about to go away. Sho Is reluctant
to seo I1I111 depart. They swing on the
gate.
"I'll never forget you," ho says, "and
ir uenth should claim me, my last
thought will bo of you."
1 11 no true to you," she sobs. "I'll
never see anylwdy else or love them ut
long ns I live."
They parted. Six years later he re
turns. Ills sweetheart of former vimn
1 -
mis marrieii. tiiov meet at n nan v.
Sho has changed greatly; between the
dunces tho recognition takes place,
"Let me see," she mused, with hoi
fan beating a tattoo on her pretty ham!
"was It you or your brother who was
my old sweetheart?"
"Iteally, I don't know," ho says.
"Probably my father,"
Tho dressmaker's npprentlco gou
very small wuges-yet sho seems to
niuko a living.
4 Money talks, but a little scare Is nr
to Bhut It up tight 1 I
I ml Inn Hootitlnir
"An nrtlllery oilleer of our n
snlil Itupreseutatlvo Coo;n r to all
of listeners about hlni, recorded!!
Washington Post, "was ronmrki
mo tho other day oti the failure ('j
Hrltlsh In South Africa to mi
scouting parties lu advance of
troops. Ho regnids that ns reKi
for some of the disastrous sklrm
against tho lloers.
"I was Interested," odilcd Mr (Hn I
"In his statement to me that ouri'Tli
lean nrinles could never have froe."Ui
caught so easily In Hoer traps. ItmiiijS
that our commanding ofllceri fMP
practically tho same plans fort-!
that tho I ml In tin havo taught ilifftfeitcii
1 uainns, 110 tells 1110, when mnrcnijMi
hostile country, Unit send one w5rW,
sometimes ou horseback, occ.iloSS)
on foot, fur nhend. Some tlistanct.iS"1'
hind hlni nro two or three ImllD,'S-rVus
still farther behind n Inrger boMJgtg,.
fco 011. Ho regards this inotliodof 'Innetii
lug as tho finest In tho world." 2fy2 '
Chairman Cooper then de8cr!be
vivid fashion the wny Indians wSjJ
tho presence of tho enemy. Tbe ffa"tiv,
stroteheil palm, elevated over lb (-ljmh
without any glanco backward, I'gHnm
signal of danger, which tho IndHn'fiiSJ b
t
'intuit 'k wtillfWi, v II1LJI WIU r"
Uo roar aro (jtilelc to observe nnlPffv
11111111' iui 11 ri.nohnu 11. r. niiipi'iiim: "tiSa
...v ...... ':,imvi
W&n)
rlors. If tho iiilviiiieo l-lilur Is Slldd't
surprised, ho whirls bis non.v rouuilreets
round two or three times, kcentofmonil
faco us much ns possible toward wed
foe, and thon sutlenly doBhes nwfly.'H,IF
gallop toward tho friendly warnta
That signal, too. Is token up l7 'wisa
who nro riding In the rear, and aulj
communicated to tho main wwy. w
Municipal liodglnp; Hour Jk;
Manchester, Knglnnd, nor-
lodging houses under tho c.
city to accommodate uUO u
44..