WOMEN'S AND STORY PAGE IT By JANE OSBORN. "Ia this the man who writes up the elopements? Daisy Maidstone looked with trust ful appeal in her blue eyes at the youngest reporter in the office of the Morning Trumpet. "Yes, elopments and obituaries,' grinned back the youth. "Anything I can do for you?" "Yes, thank you," said Daisy, and then she drew the proffered chair close to the young man's desk with an air of having something to confide "You see, it's this way." The young man drew forth pencil and copy paper, -conscious as he did so that the girl was very pretty and that Bhe was totally Inexperienced in the ways of newspaper offices. ."You see, I wanted to get the an nouncement of this elopement in for the Sunday morning paper. It is go- ing to take place Saturday night, and I thought I'd give you plenty of time and let you have it now. You see, it is to be a complete surprise. No one but the elopers and the best man and I know anything about it. Of course, you won't tell anyone, will you?" And as the young man promised secrecy, Daisy went on with her story. Half an hour later, Daisy's blue eyes were opened to the admiring gaze of Theo Drew, son of Senator Drew, the millionaire politician, who shared with her the exclusive confidence of the coming elopers. They were drinking tea at Greeley's and were soon to Join the afternoon dancers who were trot ting, tripping and ambling past them. "Yes," said Daisy, gracefully break ing into an English muffin, "everything is ready. I smuggled Theresa's suit case to my house this morning, and tomorrow I'll get it to the station. There isn't anything left to do tomor row. Theresa asked me to take care of the newspapers. She said it was better to let those reporter people have the story right because they'll get it anyway, and of course we want everyone to know about it Sunday, when it is all over. I was going to . send around the notice to the Morning Trumpet, so they'd get it Saturday aft ernoon, and then I was afraid that wasn't time enough. So I Just dropped round at the office this afternoon. We thought we wouldn't let any paper but the Trumpet have it." Theo Drew poised his teacup in mid air and scrutinized Daisy Intently. "DaiBy, you are a little goose." "Why, Theo?" "If you give that story to the Trum pet today don't you suppose they'll come out with It tomorrow morning before the elopement has taken place and spoil everything? Theresa's old aunt will know about It and lock The resa up and Daisy, I'm surprised; honest I am." "But the reporter was so nice, and he said that he wouldn't tell. I was afraid that If I loft it till tomorrow it would be too late, and Theresa was so anxious that everyone should know about it after it happened. Oh, Theo, you don't suppose that nice young man will print the Btory tomorrow, do you?" "Surest thing, you know," comment ed Theo with an air of finality. "And that, of course, means that there won't be any elopement at all. 80 the little game is all off and my friend Daisy Is to blame for it." "Theo, I think you are dreadfully cruel." Daisy was fumbling In hor gold mesh bag for a filmy piece of luce and linen to wipe away the tears that were coming into her blue eyes. "Well, what shall we do about It?" Theo asked himself this question rath er than Daisy, but Daisy answered it. "We'll have them elope tonight in stead of Saturday night, and then they'll be all eloped and away by the time the Btory comes out." "Silly child." Theo dismissed the suggestion. "Don't you know that Fred couldn't possibly reach here till tomorrow afternoon." "Then I'll Just go to that nice young man and tell him all about it. I'll put it up to him as a gentleman though really, Theo, I am sure that he doesn't intend using It. He seemed bo inter ested In the story and so grateful to mo for telling blm." "All the more proof that he knew It would be good for a first-page, double column story In the morning." "But he was so anxious to know that nothing had been given out to the aft ernoon papers and that we had told no one else about it." "That is because he wanted to make a scoop cut of It. That's what you call It when your paper beats the ethers out of a good piece of news. And it , will be a good piece of news. Society debutantes don't elope every day, you know. It wouldn't be much more of a sensation If Daisy Maidstone herself ran away to be married." "But it wouldn't matter If I did." Daisy was almost sobbing. "You see, now that I am of age there is no one to keep me, and not having any family but only a few bald-headed ex-ftuardl-ans I couldn't be stopped. But The resa's aunt keeps her eagle eye on her all the time. She'd Just lock ber up and make her life miserable." "Hard luck," muttered Theo, medi tating fixedly over the Blcwly ascend ing fumes of his cigar. "Well, I'll tell you what to do, little girl. There's Just one chance that the reporter man is an easy mark. If he is, he ll hold out that story. You go back to that office alone, aa you went before. Use 11 your feminine persuasiveness, but don't get hysterical about it, and don't let them know who you are. Perhaps It will be all right." Half an hour later Daisy was look ing Intently into the callow face of the youngest reporter of the office of the Morning Trumpet. "But don't you see how dreadful it will be? Why, I am really surprised that you would think of betraying a confidence. I never would have thought such a thing If It hadn't been that Mr. Drew suggested it." "I thought no one but you was In the secret besides the bride and groom," commented the reporter, tak ing mental notes of the name of Mr. Drew. "And the best nan," assented Daisy. "What Mr. Drew Is that? Theo Drew, the senator's son?" "Yes. That is I can't tell. I think you are very unkind. Please don't use our names. Oh, you mustn't. Why, I never saw anyone so inconsiderate." "You never were in a newspaper of fice before, miss?" grinned the report er. "Folks don't generally tell their secrets to a newspaper man unless they want them made public. Honest ly, Id like to accommodate you, but we haven't had any real good local first-page stuff for a long time. The public is getting tired of wars and strikes and explosions, and row's my chance to give It to them. And that Mr. Drew being tho best man Just sets it off. I'll use his picture with the story. We've got It in the morgue." "Where?" queried Daisy. "Oh, the place where we file away the cuts. Theo Drew's pretty promi nent here, you know, and we keep 'all those pictures on tap In case of death or something of that sort. I'm ever so much obliged to you for the additional Information, miss. Good afternoon." Daisy's eyes were misty with tears when she met Theo Drew again at the Greeley at seven o'clock that night, but he had the expression of a man who sees his way out. "I've thought of a plan, Daisy, and It all depends on you whether or not it works cut. Come over here while I try to make myself clear. You know, you Just said that it wouldn't so much matter If it were you " And seated on a deep divan in a quiet end of the Greoley foyer Theo spent ten minutes In explaining his proposition. "Now come over to the telephone booth with me while I phone to that young news scout. Oh, I know you've got to pack four trunks and fifteen hat boxes before 9:15, but you've got to help me with this message. "Hello, I want to talk to one of your reporters. Tall, slim, young chap. He wore a gray suit and what was it?" this to DaiBy "yes, blue tie, and tan button shoes and, yes No, no mus tache. Yes, that's the one. "Oh, hello. I'm Mr. Theo Drew. Yes, I think you are wise to a little elopement that was going to be pulled off Saturday night, and, being on your Job, you're going to take the public into your confidence tomorrow morn ing. Oh, I'm not asking you to can it, exactly. Wouldn't expect you to do that. I know the young lady didn't Just understand the ways of the news paper game. That's why she told you beforehand. "Now, this Is what I want you to do. What you want Is a real live local story, a scoop for the Trumpet? Well, I'm in f ' posits to lve you a story somowl.Jolgsw man that. My condi tions are that you'll keop the other one dark till the Sunday morning pa per. You give me your word of honor as a gentleman? Here goos: "Miss Daisy Maidstone yes, tho holress to the Maidstone millions. Yes, old Maidstone mnde It In tho mus tard business. But I haven't time to give you the dope on it. You'll And It In the morgue, I am Bure. Yes, well, Miss Maidstone is about to elope with Mr. Theo Drew. Yes, I am the lucky man. You know all about me, do you? Thank you. I really didn't know I was such a celebrity. They leave on the 9:15 for parts unknown. Quite right. They are to be married what's tho name of the nearest state where you don't have to have a Uconso? Yes, they are going to make tracks for that state and be married tonight there. Thank you for the information. No, there will be no attendants. No no one knew anything about It. It came as a total surprise. No engagement had existed between the two contract ing parties so far as was known, al though It was an open socret that Mr. Drew was an ardent admirer of MIsb Maidstone, and had been ever since hor dobut a year ago. That's the kind of dope you're looking for, isn't it? What rea veppemont? ings you fld objec Stone's t Mr. Well, tlik-V don't VT tlcn on 1 family, for. Drew generally he pleases. YcV pictures of Miss Si Drew that you want as you like. But remember the condition that you'll can that other dope tilt Sunday morning. And it you tnthbls to the reason why the other elopement was pulled eft you'll keep It to yourself. Thank you. Ycu're true gentleman, and I trust you." (Copyright, 1918, by McOur. Newipaper Nymlk-ale.) Toe Emotional, "The leading lady seems miffed about something." "Yes. She complains that the lead. Ing man makes love to ber with too much fervor." "That's singular. I don't understand It." "Such cases are not uncommon on the stage." "But this chap Is her husband." Ths Right Place. "Jack is whispering soft nothings to Betty In the conservatory." "Well, that's the proper place to un load hot air, isn't It?" 1 Jte!fi tt VIEW IN IT IS thought by some that Paul's defective eyesight may have pre vented Ills appreciating natural Bcenery. However that may have been, it seems impossible that he should not have been Impressed by the splendid views that anyone sail ing up the coast of Sicily through the Straits of Messina and along the south Italian shore enjoys, says Rev. Dr. Francis E. Clark In his series, "In the Footsteps of St. Paul," In the Christian Herald. He would have seen at first smiling, vine-covered hills; and before he had gone far, glorious Etna, snow capped for much of the year. An ever-changing panorama delights the eye until wo come to Reggio, the ancient Rheglum. Alas, a pitiful sight there greets the traveler today. Mes Blna on one side of the narrow strait and Reggio on the other were both wrecked almost beyond recognition by the disastrous earthquake of 1908. On the Messina shore one sees great rows of little wooden houses scarcely larger than henhouses. These are the port able bungalows which were transport ed from America, ready-made, to re lieve the sufferings of the houseless and homeless people. They are still occupied, for little has been done to build up the ruined cities. The authorized version of the thir teenth verse of the twenty-eighth chap ter of Acts says in describing St. Paul's Journey after leaving Syracuse, "and from thence we fetched com pass and came to Rheglum." An amus ing Btory is told of an Infidel who de clared, misquoting Luke's words, that now he had proved the Bible to be a lie, since "in the book of Acts It was said that they fetched compass aboard Paul's ship, and everybody knew that this was long before the compass was Invented." The revised Version has taken the wind out of the Inaccurate Infidel's Balls, to speak nau tlcally, by translating the passage In more modern phrase: "And from thence we made a circuit, and arrived at Rheglum." Here St. Paul's ship evi dently waited for one day, perhaps to discharge some cargo, or possibly wait ing for a fair wind, which soon blew, for we are told that "after one day a south wind sprang up, and on the sec ond day we came to Puteoll," 182 miles to the north of Rheglum. Between Scylla and Charybdls. Shortly after leaving Reggio wo pass botweon Scylla and Charybdls, the fabled monsters of antiquity, the rock and the whirlpool, which have been robbed of all their terrors since steam navigation came to bless the world, and to make tho traveler's bur dens and dangers light. Soon after, the active volcanic mountain of Strom- boll, on one of the Liparl islands, Is seen, and all the way along the glori ous South Italian Bhore reveals Itself; splendid mountains rear their heads In the near distance, their sides clothed with vineyards and olive and orange orchards far up their slopes. As we approach the Bay of Naples the scenery becomes constantly more entrancing. We see the promontory of Sorrento across the Bay of Saler no, and soon Capri with Us blue grot to comes In Bight on the left, and tow ering Vesuvius with Its constant plume of smoke on the right Sailing across the Bay of Naples, past the spot where the notable city of the present day Is situated, a place which was then comparatively insig nificant, our travelers came to Pute oll, or Pozzuoli, as It is now called, at --yesent decadent suburb of Naples. A - ThlC miserable and dirty town of some 11,000 inhabitant, as It now Is, Is connected by trolley and steam rail way wltatbtttlea, and Is often visited by the modern tourist who wishes to see the remains of the ancient tem ples and amphitheater and the mighty mole, which still tell of the ancient glories of Puteoll. Nearby, too, la the yolcanlo field of Soltatara, not mountain, but flat plain, the crator of low volcano, into which one can thrust his cane in many places and And smoke and sul phurous vapor Issuing from the hole as he withdraws It Probably there are few more dreary or disreputable places in Italy than this modern suburb of Naples. It has not the ragged plo turcsqucness which somewhat redeems the worst slums of Naples, but Is squalid, unwholesome town of the worst type. Was Nottd Roman Resort It is difficult to realise that it once might have been called "the Liver pool ot Italy," that here was the Lu crlne lake, which supplied the pam pered Romans with their famous oy sters, and that the whole bay was VOZZUOH covered with the beautiful yachts of the fashionable folk who made Baiae, Just beyond, the most noted resort, as corrupt as it was noted, for the in valids and fashionable idlers ot Rome. There were famous springs here, which attracted the sick from many quarters, and it Is said that the an cient name came from the sulphurous stench which they emitted. Puteoli is no longer a fashionable watering place, but from other causes the same name might be applied to the mod ern Pozzuoli. Yet here we can look upon many of the things which St. Paul saw; the sea itself, fresh and clean as ever; the encircling hills, no less beautiful In their spring greenery than on that spring day when Paul sailed within their encircling arms. We can even see the 17 piers of the great mole which stretched far out into the bay, within whose shelter vessels anchored, one the Alexandrian grain ship on which Paul had arrived. Today we can see the ruins of the temple of Serapis, or the splendid marketplace as it is now thought to be, which very likely was In its pristine glory when Paul landed. Tens of thousands of travelers from many lands sail into the famous har bor of Naples every year, but com paratively few of them realize how near they are to the footsteps ot St. Paul, and how, after a short trolley ride from the city, they can plant their feet where he trod. Let us take the electric car from Largo Vlttorla, where the beautiful park, Naples' famous promenade and Rotten Row, begins; a park that stretches for nearly a mile along the water front. Soon, however, we get beyond the fashionable quarters and the Innumerable hotels. The car makes Its Blow way through a slummy re gion where the air is rent with the raucous cries for which noisy Naples Is famous, and the nose is assailed by more than the seventy odors of Co logne. Tunnel Under Posillpo. Shortly a tunnel is reached under the green hills of Posillpo, a tunnel almost as ancient as Naples Itself, for it was dug by the Romans to avoid tho steep climb over the precip itous tufa rocks of Posillpo. Seneca, we are tcld, grumbled at the dust and darkness and the odor of this tunnel, and they have not been improved since his day. The noise is deafening from the clatter of horses' hoofs, the pat ter of herds of goats, the grinding tor ture of the electric car wheels, and above all the brazen throats of the Ne apolitans who urge on their donkeys with an indescribable noise, guttu ral and grating, which seems to come from the innermost parts ot their anat omy. Imagine all this noise, dupli cated and reduplicated by the resound ing arches of the tunnel, and one can have some idea ot the grotto that loads him to Pozzuoli, the auclent Pu teoli of St. Paul. Another slum awaits us at the other side of tho grotto, followed by vine yards and orange groves and truck farms, until, after a ride ot four or five miles, the last part of which affords glorious views of the bay and its islands, which never lose their charm, we at last find ourselves In an other slum, more hopeless than any we have yet seen on the way, and find that we have at last reached the old Puteoli, and that the electric car leaves us but a few stops from the spot where the great apostle must have come ashore. The Immediate surroundings of the great pier where St. Paul landed are as filthy as any other part ot Poziuoll. Indescribable old hags leer at us from the doorways; ragged and dirty chil dren, wholly unacquainted with the use of a pocket handkerchief, swarm around us. Several small fishing boats are drawn up on the shore, and a little church, called St Paul's Chap el, stands Immediately behind the an cient mole. The modern pier, built over the an cient mole. Is a truly magnificent one of so'Id cut stone, which runs far out into the sweet, clean water, and by going out to the far end we get be yond the reach ot the importunate tout It one can forget the approaches to the pier, he can here enjoy the en chanting scenery ot sea and shore, while bis mind la stimulated by mem ories ot the mighty past. But the volcanoes have brought blessings as well as curses, tor the ash which they pour forth becomes In a tew years a soil ot almost Incredi ble fertility, like the volcanic soil of the Yakima valley on our owa Pacific coast THROW BALL OUT OF BASKET Only Necessary to Pull a Rope to Rs move Object From the Closed Bottom Receptacle. The closed-bottom basket used to the game of basketball is so high that It Is difficult to remove the ball after a goal is made. Generally a long stick Is used tor this purpose, but I desired to have a better way, and the device ihown in the Illustration was the out come, writes Annie B. Currine of San Diego, Cal., In the Popular Mechanics. A light Iron rod was hinged to the edge of the basket and bent to its In ner shape, the lower end resting at about the center of the basket A rope was attached to the lower end and run up and over a sheave pulley attached to the basket support, then down so It could be easily grasped. Removing a Basket Ball. When a goal is made, it is onlv neces sary to give a pull on the rope for tnrowing tne ball out of the basket CLEVER TRICK WITH KNIVES Puzzle Is Not Difficult of Accomplish. ment as Illustration Given Herewith Will Show. An interesting trick may be per formed with three tumblers and three table knives. Place the tumblers 1 an equilateral triangle on a table w the knife ends," when the knives art Knives Placed In Such a Manner as to Be Supported by the Three Glasses. laid between them, as shown In tho plan sketch, are about one inch away from the tumblers. The trick is to arrange the knives so that they are supported by the tops of the three tumblers and nothing else. Most ob servers will say that It is impossible; some will try it and in most cases fail, writes R. Noland of Minneapolis, Minn., in Popular Mechanics. It can be done, and the illustration shows how simply it may be accomplished. USEFUL TOOL FOR THE BOYS Handy Implement In Winter to Push Light Snow From Paths, or in Autumn to Rake Leaves. Here Is something, boys, that yon can make, which will be useful either la winter to push or drag light snow from the paths, or in autumn to push or rake large masses of leaves on your lawn. It is made in this way: Get board half an Inch thick, one foot wide, and about three feet long. Lay a steel garden rake on it in such a way that the head ot the rake rests flat on the center of the board, and the handle sticks up near ly at right angles. Take three staples of galvanized wire, such as are used to fasten wire fencing to the posts, and drive them through the board so that each will inclose one tooth of the rake. Let two ot .he staples grip the two outside teeth near the iop, and the third hold one of ihe intermediate teeth near the point. The board will then be less likely to spilt Clinch tho points on the back. By driving the rake teeth sharply down as far as they will go into the staples, you will have a handy tool, useful for different purposes; and when yon wish tn use the rake alone a slight upward tap will at once re lease the board. Judging Alt by One. Do not Imagine that all your com panions are untrustworthy Because one told you a falsehood. Do lot fancy that all are unkind because one laughed when you fell and hurt your elf. To Judge all the world harshly, because of the fault ot one, la n treat tolly. Girls' Companion. Spoko From Experience. "Johnny," said the minister, "can roo name tho three graces?" "Sure," replied the little ttlkm "Breakfast, dinner and supper." Ell ONLY KEf TO GOOD LUCK 3elf-Conqueat Always the First Step Leading to' Real Success in Life. Is success "luck?" According to the president of the great telegraph com pany, It depends upon what may ba called "stimulated luck;" 1. e., the art; )f taking prompt advantage of oppor tunities. The telegraph man says, for Instance, that he has conscientiously tept himself in good condition of body ind mind, so that when "opportunity same he would know it and be ready, idding: "There have been great Blck men, but most great men have been well. Edison Is well. Probably none af the many victories of Roosevelt's sareer was harder won than his vic tory over physical weakness." Certain ly the victory over self is the initial victory, Bays Collier's. He knew this who wrote that tho man who ruleth his spirit Is greater than he that tak- eth a city. After self-conquest, the habit of industry is conquerable. William Cobbett, the self-made Jour nalist who came to America in the early days and made a name for him self as "Peter Porcupine," offers tes timony to this effect in his diary when he writes at an inn: "Weary of being Idle. How few such days I have spent In my whole life." Cobbett thus re cords another secret of his triumph over circumstances: "Scores of gentlemen have at differ ent times expressed to me their sur prise that I was always in spirits, that nothing pulled me down, and the truth is that, throughout nearly forty years at troubles, losses and crosses, assailed all the while by numerous and power ful enemies. . . . and performing labors greater than man ever before per formed; all those labors requiring mental exertion of the highest order; the truth Is that throughout the whole Df this long time of troubles and labors have never known a single hour of real anxiety; the troubles have been no troubles to me; I have not known what lowness of spirits mean; I have been more gay and felt less care than any bachelor that ever lived. 'You are always In spirits, Cobbett!' To be sure, for why should I not? Poverty I have always set at defiance, and I could, therefore, defy the temptation of riches." We have defined worry as "diseased thought." Cobbett's mind was essen tially free from this poison. Is not al most every man whom we describe as "lucky" equally free from It? Where Aristocrats 8hlne. Your aristocrat Is doubtless often a very objectionable person and in a Democratio country like thlB we affect to turn up our noses at him and regard him as a cumberer of the earth. Yet it must be said for him that worthless as he may be in peace, and contrary as his claims of superiority may be to all proper principles of natural equality, he rarely, almost never, falls to give a good account of himself when his country needs him in a great crisis. in tne French revolution the old no bility of France showed the world that they knew how to die it they did not know how to live. And the casualty lists which are being published in London now prove once more that when it comes to courage and patriot ism the 'aristocrat" is seldom found in the rear. At the rate at which the aristocrats are being killed at the front in France and Belgium there will be no "lords and gentlemen" left in Great Britain If the war lasts much longer. If all the "common" people in England were doing as well, there would be no criticism of Enifllsh na- triotism. In spite of their leanings to uemocracy, American sympathizers with the allies, In view of the promi nence ot titled names on the honor roll of the dead, might almost be in. ciined to wish that the entire British nation waa composed of aristocrats today. Can it be true after all that were is a real significance in the old phrase "blood will tell" and "no blesse oblige?" Baltimore Sun. To Amuse Children. So much has been written reeardtne entertainment for little folk on rainy days one would suDnose all had been said. Not so, for little people will take great delight In the following pastime, which is so easy that the mother will feel well repaid: Take an old magazine, on its Dazes carefully paste cuttings, some news illustrations, which make the book quite attractive. Save the fairy and other stories which are published In tne bunday newspapers: ask a friend or two to do the same; supply the children with blunt-pointed scissors and a Jar of paste. The result will be many happy hours and an amusing as wen bb instructive book. Of course, a blank book or a scran- book la more substantial, but for econ omy and pastime an old magazine will answer. Pictures from old calendars ire good, as they usually picture some noted spot about which mother nr nurse can readily weave soma iinn starting with the time-honored "once upon a time." Restraint Needed. "What haVO TOO to SSV fnr vnnr. self?" asked the Judge ot the nrlsoner at the bar. "Just this, your honor: I'm afflicted with a dual personality. Good and evil are constantly at war within me ana tne crime or which I am accused was committed when my better self had been overthrown." 'In that case, the best nlace for vn Is a prison cell where even If your nvil side does triumph occasionally. It will oniy result in a minor Infraction ot tho rales; two years." HATRED THAT WAR BREEDS Remarkable Changes in Pleasant Re lations Caused by Hostilities Be tween Nations. Hate and war must go hand In hand. You couldn't go out and shoot your neighbor to death unless you first hated him. It circumstances should force you to such a thing you would ipeedily, by a sort of self-hypnosis, work yourself Into a state ot mind where you honestly believed that kill ing was entirely too good for him. This is Just what the nations in Eu rope have done, writes Martin Mar shall in Leslie's. We read now how the Germans have despised the Eng lish in the past and how the French have for 44 years longed for revenge on the Germans; ot how Belgium hated the kaiser with the hatred of fear, and of mutual antagonisms be tween Teuton and Serb. These senti ments were partly official and conven tional, but mostly imaginary. The people got along pretty well together. Frenchmen did business in Berlin and Germans went holidaying to Paris; London's restaurants were largely manned by German staffs and Russian peasants helped to reap the harvests In Prussia. Educated men In each ot these nations prided themselves on their familiarity with the languages ot the others, and enjoyed their litera ture, art and music. Then came war, and all was changed. Some millions of men were going to slaughter each other, - and first they had to convince themselves that they ought to do it. The prelim inary era was of window smashing, street demonstrations, trade boycotts and Imprisonment of Inoffensive na tionals of hostile nations. Then Wag ner's music was tabooed in Russia and France; St. Petersburg must have its name changed to cleanse it from the loathsome Teutonic termination; Eng lish table sauce disappeared from Ber lin restaurants; Paris styles were. an athema in Vienna; London poured Munich beer into the gutters; a Paris magazine started a popular prize con test for the best substitute name for Eau de Cologne in short, Europe ran the whole gamut of silly, sentimental hysteria preliminary to shooting of suspected spies, the bombardment of peaceful villages, the killing of women and children, the "strict military reprisals" that always occur In war and always shock the victims and the neutrals. Big Pin Money. Some of the large dress manufac turers in New York, in whose factories a considerable amount of draping must be done, find that their bills for pins frequently run as high as $1,500 a year. Used only once, the pins are removed and permitted to fall on the floor, where they are swept -away. Even if gathered up at the day's close they would be too dirty for use again. A company, Just starting In business, proposes to effect a saving In the pin item by taking all the used pins, and, having cleaned and polished them, re turn them at half what they cost the manufacturers originally. The experi ments to produce a clean, reflnished pin entailed over a year's work. It was found that If the pins were gath ered together by using a magnet they made a mark on white fabrics, so this " method was discarded. A process has been discovered, however, whereby tho satisfactory result was obtained. Shifting Scenes In Public Life. ay tne time that Concress has been some months In session, the mem bers form fast friendships, and the Impulse to have a little fun now and then will assert Itself. The other day one of the large paintings on the stairway was being taken down, rope and tackle were required to handle the gigantic gilt frame, and the sena tors stopped while going to lunch to discuss it. One of the Democrats remarked that "If we are going to make real changes in this administration, let us make some that the people will rec ognize as they come and go. You'll notice that Colonel Roosevelt's and President Taft's portraits no longer adorn the executive office," he finished exultantly. We muBt let the shift Ing pictures into the story In these 'movie times."' "Affairs at Washing ton," by Joe Mitchell Chappie, In Na tional Magazine. The Road to Sueeessvllle. "The road to success I speak of financial success is rarely long and arduous," said George W. Perkins In one ot his brilliant T. M. C. A. ad dresses In Cleveland. 'It Is, as n rule, short and easy. "A man nodded toward a handsome young millionaire and said: " 'He began, I suppose, as an office boy In the establishment and worked his way up, step by step, to his pres ent management ot the whole vast business ? "'Not at all,' was the dry answer. 'Not at all. He began as Harvard's champion baseballer and married the boss' daughter.'" Japan In Korea. Japan has undertaken to reforest the bare bills of Korea, and in the last tew years has planted 12,400,000 trees In that country. This is a piece of far-sighted common sense which Is bound to benefit the Korean people, even though not de signed for that purpose. No Ameri can feels like approving the way in which Japan overrode the rights of a weaker power and annexed Korea, but every candid observer must admit that the mikado's men have carried with them better government and a higher Civilization. Chicago Journal