Topics of the Times After putting your best foot forward get there with both feet An old bachelor says an optimist U a married man who la glad of it. In the bright lexicon of th hustler there la do such word aa 'Voouih." A wise physician sometimes flatter a man by telling him be haa brain tag. Many a woman who ran convene In five languages la unable to ahut op In one. If wires woukl continue to be sweet bearts lota of husband would, ceaae to pay their cfub dues. An honest nilllcr separates the wheat from the chaff and converts the latter into breakfast food. Many a man talks back to his wife for the purpose of affording her the pleasure of getting in the last word. A colored philosopher says there Is less luck In a rabbit's foot than there Is in a chicken's foot providing the rest of the fowl is attached. Jean Pe Resxke gets $30 an hour for music lessons. Perhaps If Patti could do that she might forego the sweet sor- ' row of saying good-by to American au dlences. The Kin? of .Spain has consented to act as arbitrator between Honduras and Nicaragua. Who can deny that Progress is progressing when children may settle disputes between great na tlons? A Boston society woman wno en deavored to smuggle a pearl necklace through a custom house was caught at It and the Jewels were confiscated. Still, this probably had less than Mr. Douglas' advertising to do with the result in Massachusetts. "Not a single religious problem of any Importance has been solved by the theological seminaries of the Unit ed States in fifty years," says Presi dent Harper of the University of Chi eago. Therefore he wants his univer sity to go to work and solve them all It is a great undertaking, and will probably keep the Chicago institution busy for the next year at least Spain is about to abolish bull-fight lng. No country In the civilised world has changed so much in the last six years as Spain. The effect of the prompt and unequivocal defeat admin istered to her navy by . the United States has been highly beneficial to the nation. Her people no longer stand against a wall and whine. The loss of their colonies has proved an incentive to the development of the resources of the peninsula. The lowering of the traditional Spanish pride has Induced Inhabitants of city and country to work as never before since the Roman invasion. We pray thee, 0 Yankee Ingenuity, to give as: A window shade that rolls up straight a window shade roller that stops winding when the tassel reaches the pole, a window sash that doesn't rattle when the wind blows, a rug that won't turn up at the edges, a silver service that will not tarnish, door hinges that won't creak, door locks with spring latches which yield to their keeper without the constant assistance of soap, a bunch of keys that will not rust milk bottles that will clean them selves, garbage palls that will defy white wings and the porter, steam heaters that won't stink, gas tips that won't clog and fish tall, a griddle that won t smoke, a clock that keeps time, Sunday long since ceased to be ex clusively a day of worship in the Unit ed States. In fact the percentage of tne population who are habitual church goers is comparatively Insignificant Sunday has become not much more than a day of rest and recreation. In spite of helpful laws and ordinances it is a difficult thing to preserve a de corous observance of Sunday. The declaration of Christ that the Sabbath was made for man, not man for Sab bath, has been given a latltudinarian Interpretation that allows not only or gent and necessary duties to be per formed on that day but tolerates open saloons, theaters, ball games and other kinds of sports and amusements. You've formed your notions of coun try people from "The Old Homestead and these by-gosh Mirandy novels. The real farmers nowadays drive into town In double-seated carriages with match ed bays curried so that you could see to comb your hair In their glossy sides, The single rigs sparkle in the sun, con- veying young men and young women of such clean-cut high-bred features as to make us wonder. They all come from good old stock. The young fel lows run a little too strongly to patent leather shoes and their horses are al most too skittish, but the girls are all right If their clothes set better than you thought they would, why you must femember that they subscribe for the very same fashion magazine that you do. While we still insist that people who deal In articles wherewith one may take life secretly shall be licensed and made to show their fitness for public and professional trust, we show a sin gular inconsistency in demanding no license to make Cr sell or use the means of sudden and violent death, In other words, while w demand skill and care in making, bottling, labeling, prescribing and selling certain strenu ous alkalis, aclda and drugs that have a specific effect on the functioning of various organs, we will sell to any bvdy a gun, jjUUm', a box of ammuni tion, a ton of dynamite, a keg of pon der, a bomb, a rocket, a dagger, any thing In fact wherewith the end of an enemy or a host of enemies can be se cured. A magailne writer says the church is in crying need of "business clergy men." lie explains that congregations of which he knows have grown from almost nothing to great slie because ot the business ability of the pastors chosen to lead them. He thinks the lufluence of the church will wane and dwindle unless men fitted to deal with administrative and financial problems enter the ministry In large numbers. We do not remember ever having seen the commercial trend of the present age better Illustrated than In this ar ticle. Probably the WTlter would con sider a great poet great scholar or a great statesman a failure unless his success were attested by the number of his disciples or the site ot bis bauk account Business ability Is a good thlug to have, whatever one's calling, but the need of the church Is more true spirituality in its leadership. It may always have been so, but It Is especially true to-day, that this coun try Is producing a higher type of wom anhood than of mauhood. In all our towus and cities there are more young women whom you would welcome to your homes as daughters-in-law than young men whom you would welcome as sons-in-law. There are reasous why this Is so, but there Is no excuse that It is so. There Is nothing In the world so well worth looking after as the boy, and there is no human being in the world so neglected. We have pro vided little place, scant room for htm. He is welcome to the home as a baby and he is welcome as a man, but there Is little welcome for him as a boy. We chaperon our girls and carefully guard them against unworthy boys, but we leave the boy to choose for him self his associates and his achieve ments. We give him much sage ad vice, perhaps, but little sympathetic guidance. The loneliest most unloved human creature la the boy. Girls are naturally winsome, gentle, companion able. They win their way In homes and hearts. But the boy, noisy, awk ward, mischievous, is invited Into few homes and feels none too much at home in his own. About the only door that swings with sure welcome to the, boys, about the only chair that is shoved near the fire especially for the boy, about the only place where he Is sure of a cordial greeting Is where he ought not to go. It is one of the hard est things in the world to get hold of a boy to get a sure grip on him. It is hard to win the companionship, the faith and confidence of your boy. He has almost occult powers of observa tion and conclusion. Ton think yon know him through an occasional glance, but the chances are be knows yon far better than you know him. He Is hungry for companionship and be will have it Tou can't chain him away from It He wants the com panionship of boys, and nothing will take its place. If the rime of selfish ness has so Incased your heart that the joys and hopes of your boy cannot enter into it the boy is to be pitied. but so are yon. Few fathers and sons are more than fairly intimate acquaint ances. It is always the father's fault People go to the city to buy goods, thinking they can buy them cheaper, Ordinarily prices are higher in the city than in the country and the only rea son the customer does not buy at home Is because he thinks be can buy cheap er In the city. It devolves upon the home merchant to obliterate that "think" by liberal advertising. A merchant in an Iowa town states that his advertising last year cost him 54 cents for every $100 worth of goods sold. He used a half page for his business announcement each week and says that as long as people read news papers he will advertise. There's a man possessed of a good head. Just as soon as merchants begin to look upon advertising as a branch of the business which requires as much care as any part of it then will advertising pay. Honesty, force, originality and persistency in advertising make it a paying Investment An advertisement which Is so con structed as to leave every reader who has taken the pains to go through it satisfied that his time has not been wasted, even though he has no need of the particular thing advertised, is a good bid for publicity. An advertiser's offering should have enough thought and care and skill put on it to pay any one for reading it whether he is t customer or not Advertisements should be instructive, thought stimu latlng and newsy. It is worth some thing of any man's time to read any thing in a newspaper or periodical, and woe betide the newswriter or "ad." man who does not keep this end con stantly in view. Advertising doesn't pay unless it gives the reader some thing to pay him for the time he spends in perusing it pro , CIVILIZED MEN SHOllD BE ABOVE WAR. r I prefer teaching our children that war Is one of the direst curse that afflict this earth, and that while all should be prepared. If needs be, to defend our Independence, our persistent aim should be to avoid all wars, and as was well said by liord Tercy "nations should consider, not how little they can concede to one another, Ltut how far they can meet each other's views." This Is the spirit that now animates the work- 10L J lni nieu of France, of Germany, and of ers are ever deprecating any recrudescence of the military spirit that has conduced so often to war fn the past It Is the spirit that animates our owu worklngmen. ir we were attacked they would need no military tomfooleries In na tional schools to Induce them to fight for their country. But they know that peace is the best of policies for them, as never has there been a war which has not been harm ful to those engaged In Industry. Napoleon lufused a mili tary spirit into Frenchmen. What did the worklngmen of France gain by hi conquests? What do British work ers gain by our annexations of 1'ganda. of the Soudan and of the empire of Sokoto? What have they gained by our war in South Africa, except having to pay more for some of their necessaries and the knowledge that it has paved the way for the Introduction or Chinese chattels to work in the Transvaal mines for the benefit of cosmopolitan mil lionaires? A tribe of savages Is always cultivating a military spirit. Its sole occupation Is war. and the arts of peace are de spised as contemptible to men of spirit Among clvlllied men there ought to be a higher Ideal, and there would be were It that there are usually too many missionaries of strife among them ever appealing to the baser passions and trying to persuade their fellow-countrymen that there Is something noble and elevating in war and that a soldier la the noblest of human beings. Armies are necessary evils, but for my part I prefer a procession of trade-unionists to the marching by of armed regiments, and the simple ami homely garb of a worker to the tawdry trappings of men of war. I respect a man who honorably fulfills his calling as a soldier, but he Is no better in my eyes than the man who honestly labors In other and more peaceful avocations. WHY HEROES' TAME IS ACCIDENTAL. i ' i There are hundreds In every fj every country there are thousands of men, ll women and children with a latent capacity of fj heroism who go through life unnoted or despised. fj because no accident has evoked It Again, the W recognition or Precognition of those heroisms f which accident has evoked Is often accidental. J They happen, perhaps. Inopportunely, when at- Jj tentlon Is absorbed by something which Imposes more upon the public Imagination. In the same week In which the name of the boy hero of the Norge was In every paper and on every Hp a boy hero of our own, who threw himself In front of an express train to and fling him aside off the truck at the attracted hardly a moment's notice. Dumont records the following Instance of a woman's heroism during the siege of Gibraltar: came to St. Koch to visit the place and member that his highness, while Inspecting the lines in company with the Duke de Crlllon, both of them with their suite, slighted, and all lay flat on the effects of a bomb that fell near a NEW ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVc. Fntare Ballroadlng- Us? Be Greatly Chang; ed by Speedy Engine. A new electric locomotive which may revolutionize the motive power on rail roads was given a trial at Schenec tady, N. Y., a few days ago, while scores of men prominent In railroad and electrical circles watched the tests. The locomotive wss built in that city for the New York Central termi nal service in New York City, and the . v. . - i .: r i.:iljf NEW YORK CENTRAL'S NEW trials demonstrated that it will ulti mately provide high srd motive pow er for railroad traffic. It is expected to develop a speed of 100 miles an hour. The official tests of the big. Otf-ton electric locomotive took place on a stretch of four miles of especially pre pared track near Schenectady, and in the presence of many leading railroad officials and hundreds of deeply Inter ested spectators. This extraordinary locomotive, the most powerful trans portation engine In the world, pulled a train of four heavy coaches at the rate of 72 miles an hour, and only the shortness of the track prevented it from attaining an even higher velocity. In the cab of the locomotive, when it left its shed for the trial was W. K. Vanderbllt Jr., who worked the con troller. The' engine was pronounced a great success and nil who watched the tests were strong in the belief that it will be a great feature in rail roading in the future. This' locomotive is the first built of 40 ordered by the. New York Central for its New York terminal. It had had several preliminary trials, but this was the official test for speed, drawing ca pacity and acceleration. Prominent electrical . engineers and railroad men from all over the country were pres ent There Is little doubt in the minds of the officials who witnessed the tests that a speed of 90 to 100 miles an hoar can be made. V . ( ' . "t v ft - f ' 4 ).. i f - ktawr-V Jr,'m . - V I II nrr laSx'ftr, where a Frenchwoman had a canteen. This woman, with two children on her arm, rushes forth, sits with the ut most sangfold on the bombahell, puts out the match, and thus extricates from danger all that were around her. Num bers were witnesses of this Incident his highness granted her a pension of three franca a day and promised to promote her husband after the siege. The Duke de Crlllon imitated the Prime's generosity aud lusured to her a payment of five francs a day." Here, from a contemporary Journal, Is an account of an act of similar Intrepidity, giving ttie names of the heroes: "After a royal salute from the principal fort St Ilellere, In the Island of Jersey, the matches used on the occasion were lodged In the magailne without being properly ex tinguished. On the evening of the same day smoke was perceived to Issue from au air hole In one end of the maga ilne, and the alarm was soon spread. Three men volun teered their services and were nM enough to advance to and break open the magaslne, where they found two cais sons of wood, filled with ammunition, on fire, near which stood an open barrel of gunpowder. A flannel cartridge waa ajmost burned through and mine of the beams that supported the roof were on Are. By their exertions the Italy. Their lead fire was extinguished. t The magaslne contained 200 barrels of gunpowder, besides charged bombs." FORTUNE TELLING k side of physiology. The whole soothsaying business Is a matter of tricks, such as can Impress the credulous alone. I never heard the case against palmistry ami fortune-telling at large better summed up than In the expression of an American critic. He declared that If there was any truth or reality In the art, the palmist could make his for tune on the turf by backing winners, that his operations on the stock exchange would soon render him Independent and that if a life. Insurance company could trust to his revelation regarding the duration of life of Insurers, be would be retained by it at the salary of a president That which also surprises me Is the faith which cul tured people occasionally are found to place In fortune telling. I have read of cases In which It was averred that a lady looking into a crystal described to bystanders scenes she had never witnessed, but with which scenes they were themselves familiar. Now, one would wish here for much more exact evidence than mere hearsay. In a scientific In vestigation we should have all the evidence duly noted, and every possibility of fraud or error avoided. There would require to be an exact inquiry Into all the circum stances under which the alleged reproductions In the crys tal, construed by the brain of a jn-rson unfamiliar with the scenes, were carried out. I do not know If In a single. Instance this plan was pursued. Why should we not apply the care we exercise In ordinary matters of life to the pre tensions of the fortune-teller? Besides, even on scientific grounds, we might find In certain braln-vagarles materials for accounting for the phenomena on the lines of uncon scious memory ami reproduction of Impressions. As for the palmists, let us devoutly hope we have heard the .last of them. On this point I have my donbts.' Br f. r. O'Cesser. great city, and In seize a little brother cost of his own life, "The count d'Artols works. I well re the ground to shun part of the barracks There was no beat in the cab, no noise save the whirring of the air com pressors for the brskes and no smoke to pollute the clear country air,, yet this huge machine with its 8,000 horse power pulled a train of ten cars, weighing 600 tons, at the rate of 50 miles an hour and actually beat an ex press train wblch passed on another track. It alsp pulled a 400-ton train of five cars at a speed of V2 miles an hour. The locomotive is one of a number -4 n Hi i v.. : -' ' -: E. .-jrTT.r,. ... .J,:" ' -MW ' ...Uf-t. ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVE. that will be used by the Central for hauling through passenger trains through the Park avenue tunnel in the metropolis. With one of this type, trains of ten or more cars may be haul ed at express speed of GO to 70 miles per hour, and the design and method of control are such that two or more lo comotives can be coupled together and operated by a single engineer from the lending cab. so that the size of the train that may be under the control of one engineer Is practically unllm ited so far as the question of motive power Is concerned. The locomotive Is double-ended and can be run in eitner direction with equal facility. The maximum horse power of this locomotive is approxi mately 3,000, which is considerably greater than that of the largest steam locomotive. ' WHAT WOMAN CONFE88ED. When Wealth and Business Came In Love Flew From the Hearth. "Did anybody ever tell you that in some far prehistoric time I was in love with my husband 7" said Mrs. Romalne carelessly. "Well, I was. 1 used to go to afternoon services in Lent and pray for that love to last because the sensation was so much to my taste. used to have ecstatic feelings when bis foot was on the stair and I sat sewing little baby clothes. We lived in plalnlsh way then; $3 spent in two Jw-i-moiST V IS INSCIENTUIC Br Ja- wiUom. To assume that In some mysterious fashion or other the Indications, not of character merely, but of a person's past aud future, are to Iw deter mined by a survey of certain lines on the palm, la to assert a doctrine which Is monstrous in re spect of Its absurdity. Such a statement Is easi ly made, but when one calls for proof he does not find It In the results of the palmist's practice, and certainly no explanation Is forthcoming from the theater tickets was a tremendous out lay: and we walked out to dinners 1 tucking up the train of my best gown uuder a long cloak and laughing if the wind snatched it away from ine at the corners and whipped it around my feet Then be grew richer, and we broadened the borders of our phylac tery, and then how when dear knows if 1 can remember, we grew farther and father away from each other. Now, when be Is at home, I am aware of it because be Is thero behind a newspaper; but that Is all! When our Hps meet It is like two pieces of dry pith comtng together. I know nothing of his affairs, nor he of mine. I have money In abundance Money money who cares for money when a man's heart and soul and brain have gone Into It?" The above Is a true experience in many a woman s lire, says George T. Angell In Our Dumb Animals, nnd In reading Ittho thought comes what a blessing it would be If a hundred thousand American girls, now striving to get places In shops nnd stores and do unhenlthy work In offices, could thoroughly prepare themselves for do mestic life, and, marrying young men of about their own age, be content as we were years ago to hire a little house out of town at $150 rent, and living with economy, with no need of wealth, have more of heaven in this world than they are ever likely to get In any other 'way. Man a Ilenibnr of Mineral Kingdom. That the minute traces of metallic substances found In living bodies are not accidental, but essential to the performance of the functions of life, Is asserted by Ilerrera, a French bi ologist, lie goes so far as to say that zoology and botany are but chapters of mineralogy, so Important Is the role played In organic life by these so-called Inorganic substunces. For Instance, all the phenomena of movemment In an animal are, he asserts, due to oxida tion. As to nutrition, it Is Impossible, he says, when the food Is deprived of 113 mineral elements. Dogs fed on substances from which the salt and other Inorganic matter has been care fully removed die ot starvation. At the bottom of our vital processes, as serts this writer, are fermentation and oxidation, or their analogies; and these depend on the presence of certain mln eral bodies in the tissues. Even the role of pepsin in digestion seems to de pend on the presence of iron. In short the organic substances on which life depends are, be says, "prepared in In organic workshops with mineral re agents;" , and thus a living being la practically a member of the mineral kingdom. Success, A man's relatives should live so far away that he feels like putting on a clean shirt when he goes to see them. IN THE SICILIAN HIGHLAND Magnificent Htcacrjr Hurronn.U Moun tain Town of La Utaaroaa There Is, except from Mount Etna or from the oviub of the C miliars ta, from the great ruck above Cwstogm vannl. or from tfce Malls of Centurlpe or Trolua, or from the lecb wood of Maniac at the summit of the Serra del Ito, no view In Sicily comparable In magnificent range with that from I .a lleucrosa, a Polltxl 1 aur named, says a writer la the AUautlc Mouth I. This small town, ouce a Norman eyrie of Couitt Roger his mountain whip fur the Saracens stands ou au extraordinary rock or precipice at an elevation of over 3.000 feet sheer from tho surrounding luouutatn reglou. In the middle agv Polltxl waa one of the moat prosperous Inland towns of the Sicilian lilghluuda, though bow It could ever have been so may well pus tie the traveler of to-day, who looks up to Its crag-set height either In the blaxo of the merciless heat beating with a furnace-wlug against the arid rock, or against the sleety rain and tempestuous cloud of the tromonta or grcgitto In the dreaded staglone dl tern pornle the season of tempest. The Immense panorama of the view extend over much of central Sicily from the last spurs of the Macedonia!! range on the north, above Ofulu and the Tyrrhene Sea, to the height of Knna. lu the south; from the Monte- tnaggtore and Cumin unit a Mountain. range of the wet to the sleeve of M cexla and Trolna and to the snow of sky-rvaehliig Etna on the east. Fur below In the rock valley from the tor rents which become the Flume Hsiao (the Ulmern Meridional!) aud the Flume Grande (the Illmeru Heptentro nails). Near by aro the precipitous neigh boring mountain towns of Castelleua, on ttie flanks of Monte Balxa the site, It Is believed, of the am-lcnt Iiiiik tin. And even In the little town Itself Hmto are things of Interest to be seen In particular some One carving aud other sculptural adornment lu the Puoiuo, or Gtilneae Ma trice, as the cathedral church Is slways called In Sicily, aud in the Church of Hta. Maria degll Avu gell, a really fine archaic triptych, brought here no one seems to know when or by whom, but obviously paint ed by a disciple of Memlng, If not by the great Fleming himself. FLAGGING THE ENEMY. The agent for "The Modern World of Music" hcsltutcd at the foot of the driveway and glnm-cd again at tho bright red ling which fluttered from the front porch. "Coining up or ain't ye?" railed a loud voice, aa a tall figure rose from a chair on the porch ami turned toward the stranger. "Are you going to have an auction or have you got scarlet fever or some thing there?" called the agent. " Taln't any auction, that's certain sure," bawled the voice from the porch; "ami I don't reckon it's scarlet fever, either,, leastw ays the doctor alu't said so. Come up, won't ye?" "I guess not to-day!" called the book, agent, and he sped on up the road. The man on the iorcn resumed his seat and looked affectionately at the small red flag. ' living outside the vlllago as we do, I don't know how we'd manage without that little flag," he remarked to the summer boarder. "It comes handy more ways than one. Folks are apt to be klml o' wind ed after they've dim' up the hill, and In time past we've had agents for one thing or another setting on this plaxzarette hours at a. time. Hut I most gen-ally hewr of 'cm In the vil lage the day before, and since the Ice man give me that little flag I haven't bad a mite o' trouble. "I guess now 111 take her In; the Iceman don't gen'lly come by on Thurs days, an' yet of course "he might take a notion; but If ho don't get along by tills time o' day I am apt to give him up. Usertil little critter; , and ho smoothed the small flag tenderly as ho took It Into the house. The Ufo of a Hook. Interviewed by tha Hook Monthly, A. M. S. Methuen admits that "an enormous amount of rubbish Is pub lished," but he holds that because it has no likelihood of living it does little harm. There are few people, he tells us, who realize how short the life of an average book is and how far short- er It Is getting. "Fifteen years ago you could count on its existence for two or three years. Now three books out of four are almost dead as mutton in three mouths. You may sell a few copies afterward, but the sale that remuuerafes the au thor and publisher Is over before you know where you are." Taken alto gether, Mr. Methuen considers pub lishing 'the most difficult business In the world," adding that "with compe tition It-Is getting more difficult.' Tho publisher need not look for wealth; but among his compensations Is tho Interest of his calling "the literary in terest, which Is grateful and agreeaMo under all circumstances." London Outlook. Two Kinds of Actors. "Actors nowadays," said Mr. Storm lngton Barnes, "are divided Into two great classes." "Tragedians and comedians?" quer ied the friepd. "No. Amochewers and scene-chew ers." Washington Star. When there is a death in tho family.. people begin to realize the kindness of 80,116 neighbors. A card of thanks 1 ' reaI,1Jr creditable. '