Good Neighbors VICTOR REDCLIFFE (Copyright, 1915, by W. G. Chapman.) "Could you lend me your steplad der? I want to take out Borne ot the window screens." The man addressed, next-door neigh tor, Robert Mason, nodded simply. He was the owner of the house Into which Earle Felham and his wife had just moved. Felham had paid a liberal rent for the place. The unsocial manner of his landlord displeased him. The lat ter simply lifted the article asked for over the low dividing fence, bowed and turned away. "Humph!" commented Pelham, al most Irritably, as he entered the house. "What is the matter, dear?" inquired Mrs. Felham, tracing displeasure In his manner and voice. "That landlord of ours. Asked him Just now to loan me a stepladder to get at the screens and he acted as if he grudged even a decent word." "Oh, you misjudge him, Earle, In deed you do!" Mrs. Pelham hastened to say. "I feel so sorry for him all the town does, I learn. His life Is a sad, sad history. A year ago his wife, a bride ot a year, had a fit of sickness which led to a complete nervous break down. She got so bad they had to sond her to a sanitarium. Two months ago she escaped. They have not been able to trace her since. It is feared that she wandered out among the swamp lands beyond the sanitarium and perished from hunger or was drowned." "Poor fellow!" spoke Pelham, hiB sympathetic heart deeply touched by She Turned Toward the Intruders. thlB recital. "I will bo more charitable in my judgments after this." The Pelhams had not dealt with Ma son personally in renting the old home of Mrs. Mason's family, but through an agent. After the death ot the par ents of his wife, Mr. Mason had moved Into the old home. Now he was rent ing It furnished and had taken up more limited quarters in the adjoining cottage, which he owned. The Pelhams had just moved in. Mrs. Pelham was busy all day long get ting the Interior In order. Hor huB- band attended to outsido matters. He removed the Bcreens, tidied up the gar den and both retired that night pretty well wearied with their unusual labor. "The house 1b too large for ub, Earle," Mrs. Telham remarked. wish we had taken the oneMr. Mason occupies. "I don't know that we could got It observed her husband. "I heard he was going to sell both places if he could and leave the town. The assocl ations of . this old house, whore his un fortunate wife was born, must be very painful to him." Robert Mason had given up his wife as dead. In trying to locate hor after her escape from the sanitarium the searchers had discovered several cIuob that led them to believe that the fugitive had wandered Into the swamp district. This was a dangerous and interminable swamp spot, and three days after the disappearance ot Mrs, Mason a fire had swept the greater portion of It. There was every reason to believe that Mrs. Mason had per I shed. A distressing feature of her fate was the tact that the physician in charge of the sanitarium bad entertained groat hopes of her eventual recovery. She bad been improving tor some weeks prior to her escape. It was about midnight when Mr. Pel ham, soundly asleep, was aroused from his slumbers by a quick nudge from his wife. Her voice was tremu lous and agitated as she whispered breathlessly: "Got up at once, Earle!" "Why, what is the matter TM in quired her better half drowsily. "Burglars!" shuddered Mrs. Pelham, "Oh, do be careful! I've been over half an hour lying awake and listening to suspicious sounds. "The wind, I suppose " "No, I thought so at first, but found I was mistaken," continued Mrs. Pel ham in a timorous voice. "First heard the front door rattle. Then Someone tried the side windows. Then there was a window lifted In the gar ret Oh, I am sure someone is up there! Now, Earle do you not; hear?1 "You're right, Rachel," assouted Mr. Pelham, after a moment ot Intense ' listening. There was no doubting tho tact that the floor overhead creaked as hurried footsteps crossed it Thon there was a scraping sound, as of sqmoono pun log a trunk or bos over the boards. Thon breaking sound. Mr. Pslham got out ot bed. dressed, and lighting a lamp got a revolver from a bureau drawer. His wife fol lowed his example by throwing on a dress. She was close behind him as they crept up the attic stairs. "Oh, do be careful!" she implored whisperingly, as they reached the top of the stairs, and a low, vague croon ing sound reached their hearing, from beyond the threshold of the attic door. "Hold the lamp," directed her hus band. "When I pull the door open suddenly lift It so I can see where to Are." Mr. Pelham gave the door a quick pull. With a trembling hand his wife lifted and extended the lamp. "Don't don't shoot!" almost screamed Mrs. Pelham.' "It's a girl a woman!" The flickering lamp fell across a woman, singing softly to herself and taking dress after dress from a trunk she had opened. She turned toward the Intruders In a surprised way. "Visitors," she observed In a soft, plaintive tone. "You will have to ex cuse me till I get ready to go down and meet my guests. I have just ar rived home. Some wicked people stole me from my husband and I escaped " "Oh, Earle!" gasped Mrs. Pelham, tugging at her husband's sleeve, "don't you understand? It's that poor lady next door they mourn as dead, Oh, quick! quick! run for her hus band. She has found home at last and see, that open window. She must have reached It with the stepladder." Mr. Pelham, terribly excited, hurried away. , Mrs. Pelham advanced to the side of the woman, whose garments were nearly In rags. "Pick out your dress, dear," she said soothingly. "Your husband Will be here soon." "But strangers In the house!" be gan the other suspiciously. "Oh, we are just guests," assured Mrs. Pelham. "You will find every thing in order below." It was a great shock for Robert Ma son when his neighbor advised him of the strange arrival of the night. He calmed himself as he realized the situ ation. As he entered the attic, with a wild cry of delight his wife ran into his arms. "Oh, Robert! those, wicked men who stole me away from you " "Gone entirely out of our life, my darling," assured Mason. "Come to your own rooms and get ready to join our kind neighbors at a little lunch," he proceeded, and made a sign to the Pelhams, who retired. Half an hour later Mr. Mason led his wife, neatly dressed and looking calm and happy, into the rooms below. The quick-witted Mrs. Pelham had spread out a small refection. To the letter the program of "visitors" was carried out, and In the eyes of the poor wan derer all could trace a slow but sure returning of reason. "You will have to keep up the pre tense of going over to the next house till I can arrange otherwise," whis pered Mr. MaBon to Mr, Pelham. "Oh, you mustn't disturb your wife with anything," answered Mrs. Pol ham. "And besides we like the little homo best!" Famously good people, the Pelhams shared the glad, grateful joy of their landlord, as the days went on and MrB. Mason came back Into the full sun shine of reason and health. LUCK OF THE HORSESHOE Popular Superstition Has Been Traced to an English Demon of Thir teenth Century. Why 1b the horseshoe considered a sign of good luck? There Is nothing especially pretty about a horse's cast- oft iron Bhoe, and no doubt not one horseshoe bollevor In a million can tell why he troasureB it. The origin of the superstition can be traced back to the thirteenth cen tury. The monk Gervaiae of Tilbury in forms us that at that time there was a kind of demon In England which appeared as a horse rearing on its hind logs and with sparkling eyes, Whenever this apparition was seen It was a sign that a conflagration would soon break out. Hence, as giving a kindly warning, this mysterious horse was regarded as a friendly spirit, and tho animal in general was believed to be a benefi cent mystic power. A horse tooth carried In the pocket prevented tooth ache; It was a Blgn of good luck to find a horseshoe, and one was placed under the pillow ot a child to cure the colic, or nailed against a building to prevent it catch ing fire. This led to its general adop tion as a protective symbol. Stray Storlos. New Idea In Eyeglasses. ' In an effort to devise a means of mounting eyeglasses so as to avoid the skin irritation sometimes caused by the bows resting around the ears and the bridge pinching the nose, Nebraska Inventor has patented an odd plan for suspending the lenses before the eyes. While the arrange ment cannot be called an attractive one as far as appearances are con cerned, It may benefit certain persons who are compelled to wear glasses constantly and find the ordinary mountings objectionable. Large lonses, each having a straight edge on the Inside so as to fit close to the nose, and secured at the top to an adjust able yoke. The terminals ot this are fixed in a headgear, or cap. In thi manner the weight ot the glasses Is supported above tU noso, the lenset morely hanging In front of the eyes. Dubious Praise. "I stand on my record," said the can- dtdate, pompously. "Whoopee!" shouted a member of the opposition. ' "How now, my brother?" "If you can do that you are as sure footed as a mountain goat and as Ugh) as thistledown. . . Boundary Finally Settled. The old boundary dispute between Michigan and Ohio, which was keenest before Michigan became a state was never settled until the last summer, when a new line of handsome granite Markers was let up Scene m T is impossible now to go from Christiania to Copenhagen by boat, writes Mary Ethel McAnley, from Denmark to the Pittsburgh Dispatch. AH lines for passengers have been stopped on account of the mines, so one must go through Sweden by rail and then cross the North sea at Helslngborg. If you go at night the trains are taken over on a ferry, one carload at a time. As the ride is 16 hours long we stopped all night at Gothenburg, the great Swedish seaport town and second largest town In Swe den. It is a great, bleak sort of a place, not interesting, but evidently progressive, for it Is the first place in Europe where I have ever seen any extensive building going on, and large houses were going up everywhere. This town Is where the great Gothen burg system of controlling the liquor traffic first sprang from. I expected to see a very model place, but, alas! we met six drunken men In three squares. Perhaps they were only sailors off duty. The first thing we saw when he landed In Denmark was the Kronberg castle where Hamlet lived. It is a wonderful old place, standing right on the sea. The people around there say that on dark and moonless nights the ghost of Hamlet's father comes out and stands on the ramparts, and waves his long white-robed arms. The ride from Helslngborg to Co penhagen takes about an hour and on the way Is Fredrlksborg castle, where Queen Alexandra ot England stays when she Is in Denmark. Her suite of rooms Is shown to the public when she is not in Copenhagen. Denmark Is a country of palaces and the Rosen borg and Amalienborg are among the most beautiful. Copenhagen Is absolutely full of vis itors, and when we arrived we went to eight hotels before we could get a place at any price, and the prices at ROSCNBERO some of the hotels were as bad as in America. Ever since we have been hore we have seen taxlcabs full of strangers frantically driving around trying to get a place to sleep. Copenhagen is a very dirty- town. The city evidently tries to keep things cleaned up, and everywhere you see the Blgn "Spytnlng formudt." This does not mean spying forbidden as it at first seems, but merely spitting for bidden. Everybody here rides the bi cycle, from the boy ot six to the wom an ot seventy. The bicyclers take up all the street room and part ot the sidewalk. They are very much like the taxis In New York city they don't care whether thoy run over you or not DOG HERO BRAVES FLAMES Pet Animal Smashes Through Glass Window to Reach Master and Give Warning. Mr. and Mrs. John Church, Jr., re siding on a farm near Sherbourne, un doubtedly owe their lives to Shep, their collie, which Baved them when their home burned. They wore uwak ended by the dog standing by their bed barking loudly. The room was filled with smoke, and going Into the hall, they found the front portion of the house and stairway blazing fierce ly. Thoy escaped by the rear stairs. They were In night clothing and were unable to save any ot the contents of the bouse. As they passed through tho kitchen the) saw that one ot the windows had been broken out. Shep had been locked out o' the house when the family retired for the night Cuts on the dog's forelegs and shoulders sun port the theory that he had discov ered the fire In front ot the house and. scenting danger to his master I ind mistress and being unable to get I L -.- zzl Copenhagen Next to bicycle riding the most pop ular exercise Is telephoning. Every body telephones all the time, and the little bells Jingle everywhere. Every street corner has a telephone booth. These booths look like a cupboard standing on a table. When you want to telephone you step inside the ta ble, put your head in the cupboard, close the doors and none of the out side noises can be heard. If you see a fine building in Scandinavia, It Is not a bank, nor a hotel, nor yet a palace, but It is a telephone building central. The Copenhagener likes to think himself very Bohemian, especially in his cafe life. The women also boast of being Bohemian, and a great many of them smoke clgara and drink whis ky. One can often see a young wom an enter a cafe, hang up her hat, flop into a chair and order absinthe and a cigar. The panes are great drinkers and the wine they drink takes the place of the fruit we eat in America. The Danish women are not nearly so attractive as the Swedish and Nor wegian girls, and the women of Copen hagen are not so Btylish as the girls of Christiania. In Christiania one sel dom sees a fat man. There the men are all big and rather angular. Here In Copenhagen the men are inclined to be fat, and they are much shorter than the Norwegians. We asked if there were many peo ple going to Berlin and the bureau said that the trains were crowded all the time, mostly with business men, who had been in Copenhagen trading. The trading that Is going on is enor mous, and the boats and trains are loading and unloading all the time. There is work for everybody, for be sides the trade created by the war, they are turning a big boulevard into a canal. The people are not so gay as In other years with so much to do. The war has sobered them down. PALACE Copenhagen Is full ot soldiers, offi cers, privates and generals, and proud is the maid that goes swinging along hanging on to the arm of an officer While the officers are not so absolute ly enchanting as the Viennese officers some ot them look very nice. We passed the barracks at dinner time and we saw the privates down in the cellar of the building eating. If that is what they get in time of peace 1 wonder what the poor fellows would get It Denmark Bhould get Into war. They had the roughest kind ot food which they seemed to be eating with a relish. Everywhere soldiers are training, but Denmark does not be lieve that there is any danger of her being dragged into the war, Into the house In any other way, had broken the ! itchen window by jump ing through it, the jagged edges ot the glass making .the cuts, and then bad mounted the stairs to their bedroom and barked until they awakened. Blnghampton (N. Y.) Dispatch New York Herald. Dividing the Efforts. He Our expenses are exceeding my Income, and we shall have to econ omise. She All right. You give up your clubs, cigars, golf and fancy neckties and I'll see If 1 can't Induce the cook to got along with less butter. Ancient Weapon. There H on exhibition at Wool wich, England, a bronze gun, weigh ing eighteen tons and made of two pieces ot metal screwed together, which was employed during the de- tense ot the Dardanelles in H68. Many Slavs In United States. There were 2,000,000 Slavs in th United States before the Europe war broke out. f By JANE OSBORN. Like a thief in the night Harvey let himself Into his own apartment an hour before his usual evening arrival. He went straight to his own room Daisy, his wife, was not in and It was Thursday, Jenny's day out. He went straight to his own room his room and Daisy's, and, with fur tive glances, to see that Daisy waB not in hiding, opened the chiffonier drawer. There they were, the shapeless piles of unmated, undarned socks, just where they had been for the last month. Harvey seized the afternoon paper he had bought on his way home, bundled the socks into it and then rolled it into a parcel. He cast about for a string to tie it. His eyes caught sight of a piece of Daisy's pink lin gerie ribbon lying in her bodkin holder on her dressing table. He seized thlB and in a minute his bundle was firmly fastened. Then, with guilty side glances, he hurried out of the apartment, closed the door noiselessly and, avoiding the apartment elevator, passed down the narrow, winding stairs. Once out In the open, he turned the corner sharp ly. Jumped on the nearest street car going downtown and breathed a sigh of relief. Daisy couldn't possibly see him now. On his way down town Harvey opened his card case to find a clipping torn out of his morning paper. "For Busy Women and Bachelors Darning and mending of all sorts done. Anything from a pair of socks to a lace gown mended and renovated by experts. The Mendery, 76 Bristol street." When the car reached BriBtol street Harvey slipped off with his bundle, and in a tew minutes reached the de sired number. It was Buch a very little shop that Harvey would not have seen It but for the brightly paint ed sign which dubbed it the "Mend ery." - It was a ' charming, silken-voiced young matron wearing an osprey trimmed hat, with a veil drawn back, who received Harvey's package and, giving him a numbered ticket, prom ised to have the work done within three days. , Harvey traced his way back to his office. For the first time within the year he had been Daisy's husband he felt as if he had deceived her. He sat staring into the inkwell on his deck and fumbled with the pens. He had broken into his own house when they were away, and still, he mused, they were his socks and any man bad a right to dispose ot his own socks to Bult himself. Still Daisy had given him some of the socks the bright colored socks that he wore only with high shoes were all her gifts. Per haps he ought to have left those. Still, a man couldn't go with holes as big as eggs in his heels. He had bought new socks, but ho couldn't go on do ing that always. And then there was the sort of the socks that alone was enough to vex the heart of mere man accustomed to having a mother or wife attend to such details. But what had come over Daisy Daley," who had up to two months be fore regarded the slightest detail of her wifely duty as a joy and a delight; Daisy, who had Bat at his side in the evening as he read, putting the tiniest stitches into those socks of his and telling him every five minutes what a Joy it was to do it? Daisy had changed. Daisy had met some old school friends who had filled her mind with new interests. Now In the morn ing, when Harvey went to search in his chiffonier drawer for socks, Daisy was already in the dining room, dressed half an hour before he was, and was calling him Impatiently to come, as Jenny had breakfast all wait ing. Daisy always seemed to be eager now to have Harvey leave the apart ment in the morning, and only a few months ago she had begged him so tenderly to stay "just a minute' longer. Harvey pondered over the change that had come In Daisy's attitude toward him. She seemed happy enough, but clearly something or someone was coming between them. Harvey half expected that Daisy might notice the absence of the socks, but when, after a week of the new arrangement, she said nothing, he realized that she didn't even put the Bocks in the drawer. Jenny, the faith ful maid of all work, probably did that after she bad laundered them. Harvey sent his office boy to the Mendery the first time, but the next Thursday afternoon he went himself with the week's Installment ot work. This time he took more than socks. Buttons were missing and rents need ed staying in an increasing number of other garments. And Harvey took them all. To he sure, the price for mending the socks seemed rather high. Harvey meant to mention this to the charming young woman behind the counter, but this time there was another In charge, a black-gowned, pompous Individual, who looked at the offering he brought through her lorgnette with condescension and handed him the numbered card with Ugloved hands. "There must be a good deal of mon ey in mending," he said to himself as he made mental noteB on the quality of her grooming. But the mending was entirely satis factory and the socks were nicely mated, so that never again did he have to spend ten minutes in the morning trying not to wear a gray- and-green striped sock with a mate of raspberry color these were both of Daisy's choosing. For months this satisfactory ar rangement continued. One day Daisy approached the subject rather timidly at the breakfast table. "Harvey, dear, she said, "It Is a shame. I have been so busy lately that I haven't spent much time on your mending. But I thought it you needed anything done you would tell me. wouldn't you, dear? And 1 knew you had bought soma now socks." Harvey felt the blood rush to his face as the matter ot his secret was suggested WHEN IS DARNED of course. Daisy." he said, "It's alM right I know you are busy." He longed to ask her what kept her so busy, but as she volunteered no Infor mation be was Bilent. It was getting to be a regular Thursday afternoon performance for Harvey to steal home for his week's mending and take it to the Mendery. where a succession of distinguished looking attendants presided over the counter. In vain he attempted to broach the subject ot overcharging, but he never got his courage to the sticking point 'Today I'm going to make a kick, he said one Thursday after the bill for the preceding week had amounted to f 1.95. "I don't care If the dame at the counter does look like a Newport dowager. I'll do it. Those people are making too much money at their game." This day Harvey discovered to his joy that the woman behind the coun ter was young and petite. He could tell her about it, he thought, without losing his nerve. He might also ask her why the proprietor made such fre quent changes of his employees. He was fairly face to face with the young woman when he experi enced the Bhock of his life. "Daisy," he exclaimed, his bundle of socks and pajamas falling to the floor. "I've been waiting here for you for several days," Bhe said. "I first sus pected that you came here when I found In my apportionment of mend ing one of those raspberry socka I gave you before we were married. I could tell those anywhere. You poor dear " "But, Daisy," he Interrupted, gather ing together the scattered garments, "why didn't you tell me? I can give you more money. You told me your allowance was large enough. Oh, Daisy, to think that you had to slave like this! You poor dear, why didn't you tell me? How stupid I have been!" Daisy was laughing. "Don't you know, silly? I didn't do this for money. I did it for tho Belgians. Didn't you know that this place 1b en tirely run by volunteers? Why, some of the most fashionable and wealthiest women in town give their time, and I felt quite honored when they let me in on it. And it Is just the richest young bachelors who send their things here." Here Daisy faltered. "I would have told you what I was doing, only you have said so often that you didn't want to go In for the society game, and I was afraid that it you knew I was working with the De Paysters and the Van Duysenspiels you'd think I was climbing. But truly I'm not. I just wanted to help the poor Bel gians." (Copyright. 1915, by the McClure Newspa per syndicate.) Wireless Wonders. Assertions have recently been ap pearing in various publications to the effect that submarine torpedoes can now be controlled and directed by wireless; and to the effect that tor pedoes which can be successfully controlled by wireless can with equal success be diverted by wireless from their objective. Both claims have yet to be made good in contest, but the claim of a well-known motor car company to control a motor car by wireless has been substantiated fully. At the Indiana state fair a car was started every five minutes by wire less from the company's headquar ters five miles away. The car was fitted up with a receiving apparatus and the necessary automatic switches and relays for throwing on and off t'-e electric current of the starter and magneto. An automatic switch was regulated so as to allow the car to run for 45 seconds, after which the magneto was cut off. The operation of starting the car was repeated at five minute Intervals. Wood Pulp. Wood pulp Is just what Its name Im plies, and is obtained by disintegrating wood either by a mechanical or a chemical process. The former variety is prepared by grinding it under wa ter. It is Inferior in quality, as the fibers are short and the product read- lly discolors. Under the chemical process the wood is cut up and boiled under pressure with a solution of caus tic soda, sodium sulphide, or, best of all, calcium bisulphite, and the result ing soft product Is pulped, pressed, washed and bleached. It was the use of this material that so reduced the cost of paper as to make the one-cent newspaper possible. So rapidly, Indeed, did paper cheapen from 1875 to 1885 that the Introduc tion ot wood pulp is said within these years to have trebled the circulation ot England's newspapers. Deductive Range Finding. The Army and Navy Journal tells how some clever English soldiers found thaj range of a hostile battery, "Somewhere in France" a detachment was suffering severely from shrapnel fired from a German battery so inge niously hidden that all their attempts to determine the position of it proved futile. Behind the British position was a hillside field. A shell from the German battery went over the trenches, struck the hillside, plowed the surface for a considerable dis tance, and. failed to explode. That gave the data needed to solve the problem. The furrow plowed by the shell ot course showed the direction ot its flight from the battery to the point at which it struck. The time for which the unexploded fuse had been cut showed how far off the battery was. The battery was promptly si lenced. Distrust. "I see that you are warning against speculating." . "I am," replied Mr. Eustln Stax. "But don't you profit by the specu lation ot others?" "Of course. My warnings won' stop 'em. They'll merely think I'm en vious of their superior smartness and want to keep them from making money. An Alibi. - "Truth, sir," said the pompous, sen tentious writer, "lies at the bottom ot a well." "That may be," rejoined the listen er, "but you may be sure It's not your InkwelL" CAP HOST WAS PLAINLY RESTIVE Football Player Wanted to Show High- Brow Company What He Could Do in Scrimmage. "Henry," remarked Mrs. Twobble, I've been thinking over something I want to say to you." "Shoot!" said Mr. Twobble, briefly. "What?" "Excuse me. Proceed." "I wish you would try to appear more at ease when we have company In the house. You are not afraid ot people, I hope?" No," answered Mr. Twobble, thoughtfully. "It isn't that The peo ple you Invite here make me so con foundedly uncomfortable with their high-brow talk that I sometimes wish they would try to start something, bo could show them what an old-time football player can do in a scrim mage!" ALWAYS AND ANYWHERE. The Preacher Toll me what Is the best foundation for success in bust. ness? The Merchant Rocks. Surpassed. Jinks won't let anybody get tho better of him. No matter what they brag of he always has something bet ter. What do you think he said when a man in a bunch where ho was boast ed of the fine ruby he had on his fin ger?" "What did he say?" "That it was nothing to the car buncle he had on his neck." A Bigger Haul. 'As I waB coming home," said the man who had burst breathlessly through the door, "footpads set upon me and took my watch and scarfpin." 'How lucky," commented his wife, "that they didn't wait till Saturday night and catch you when you were coming borne with the market bas ket" Missing No Tricks. 'People are saying that you do not stand a ghost of a show at the next election." "Good idea!" responded Senator Sorghum. "I have tried to get the In fluence of about every other organiza tion. Maybe we can do something with the Society of Psychic Re search." High Art for Lowbrow. Artist You see, we moderns strive for the purgation ot the superfluous, which throws the accent on the inner urge. Do you follow me? Friend No, I'm ahead of you. I came out of the asylum last week. Life. Queer. "Had- a queer thing happen as we were out in the auto the other day." "Accident?" "No. A fellow in a rig drove out of a side street two blocks ahead ot us and ma, who was in the rear seat never saw him." Not Talking Much. "What are you going to say when you address congress?" asked the friend. "I don't know yet," replied Senator Sorghum. "After the opposition I have met with out home I don't feel called on to make long speeches. I'm lucky to be able to say 'Present!'" Judicial Advantages. "A magistrate has unusual domestic advantages over other men whose wives are always giving them a piece ot their minds." "What advantage has he?" "When she starts In to give It he can bind her over to keep the piece." Comparison. "Marriages," said the old-fashioned sentimentalist, "are made In heaven." "Yea," replied Miss Cayenne. "But some ot them are like motor cars. They run badly after they leave the factory." At a Disadvantage. - "Do you think you can put a man in the, penitentiary and then make t perfect citizen ot him?" "Not always. If you put htm in as warden he's likely to be an object (J criticism the rest of his Ufa."