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Show your daughter; oh. 1 8ay, btt That will save me an awful lot of time and trouble. I expected the deuce of a Job In locating her. Though I knew that I should do it in the end" he added confidently. "Du you mini tell- Shef ontake. ,SE!!'rfll-''tfwyorkl- ) Tourume 1 frog b'ffialh freeze oer j M ing mo your name?" "My Hamer divided between lndls-natioand mirth. "I am James he deelured rather pompously. But Atherley was clearly him na'ne is known. i A Peopit , elf; Better and better," he cried 1 al ways was a lucky chap," Joyously. The elder man leaued back and stated at oi war and woe, ( folk our foe, ith Ifoohambeau. L I 1 &! Uftl LsATKir. f fo him. "My dear young man," began he In his most formal manner, "I think we must understand each other, l certainly fall to see where the luck comes la. Atherley, staring In bis turn, became suddenly enlightened. "Of course. You menu that you dont know me," he cried, oa, thats all right, easily. "Ive heard dad speak of you hundreds of times. Billy Atherley, and I've just been out looking up some properties iu the West." The older rnuu's brow cleared somehow. "Not William II. Atherleys sour Atherley nodded. The same, b'o now won't jou Introduce me to your daughter?" wistfully. "It would save such a lot of time. Arbuthnot, his gray eyes twinkling, looked at the young man quizzically. "If you ure much like your father, and I think you are, you would he hardly apt to wait long for my services," he remarked jocosely. Come along, then. All I ask of you Is please not to get married before we reach The tone strove to be New York. stern, but young Atherley laughed happily. I make no promises," he declared with gay defiance. "Oh, here, hold on a moment, ns a sudden recollection of his unmailed letter recurred to him, Bulling out the envelope lie tore it into fragments, letting the pieces float out of the open window. "It was to say that I wasnt com'ng home," lie explained. "I will telegraph from Chicago. Now, if you are reudy. San Francisco Call. I her v,iant I j be that burned to ,1 t sores, tiniest itlon.i would fain me0 wtio t tit O' V'... , caught the njeara ho a rjrsii UJvej Wlio , j,;, (iliinibers bo 'beyond death ot fffluJlht 'gainst caost 1 's -- be helped free domain tie freedom m iir de the alla. vied "d tj beam, dreamed a dark giant ilL to gain; lUH'lu'fontaine. the New York Sun. Ischia ooooo WAthcrleys Luck. M jy A OGDEN. O COCOO - Ly, morning sun lay warm clear after the rain of the night before, and young HE L j f ffl lit and AST PRESERVATIVE AIDED. as his horse loped easily along the wide jagaload for very Joy of light Out here, away from I'idnesi ;aL crowds, how good life was. Ik min wa In, and Atherley hur round the corner, then halted dazzled by the vision which .Anted bim. On the lower step of araear the middle of the train stood pi her fair hair blowing In the itte bands full of pink roses, her a cuing straight into his. For aad neither moved. Then, as a voice a within called Marlon, the girl, i quid flush, turned up the steps, Atherley, stricken with the con tf his dusty "chaps, huge mialiDinbrero, slipped back, lie Uqtitt forgotten his letter. The preliminary snort, the abourdl hut Ather-,1- I tflaMd motionless, bis eyes fixed Hi ar wherein she had disap it the slow length of the train jinaorethe girl slipped back to l&jkflra for a monient, and on the Mi aland at Atherleys feet fell To spring forward, seize kas.tbea swing aboard the last salt passed was to Atherley but work of another moment Before .j hi fail; realized it he was on the laad speeding eastward ss fast as jt'aj coaid carry him, Prirtlcal thoughts forced a way and j"1 tot set was to tuke account of Atherley, A Really Alive ? n 1IE more that scientists study life mi lietweeu what we call dead the less difference do they things and what we call live things. PARIS INCIDENT A MYSTERIOUS ANCHOR On of the Kplaodai Which Can Happen Th Canadians 1auwi an Odd Kails Whirl Tlijr rruoae to Honor, Only In the tiny Capital. Alderman Rttmsdeit has a schema oa A duke, a marquis and a shlrtraaker have had a lively row In the trades- foot to bring the famous anchor at By Herbert N. Casson uuiu-presse- ld,er !UllfUl i t futui hibred. Ue Are Lower Animals e a.t08t book on this is called "The Comparative Physiology of the Brain,questionProfessor by Jacques I.oeb, of Chicago University. It la like most scientific books hard to read tor those who want something exciting. There ure two kinds of hooks. Some are like sandy beaches .aiU 801ue ttre bbe gold mines. The sandy beach books are for fhnaa ay better than they tike work. They amuse you, and help you m tro"ble8: but after you have got through with them you have left to nothing keep that Is valuable. old mine books are different. Whenever you read one of them, you I a w ork hard. You You dig tip the ideas out of the long sentences. I . t wor,ls bat stick out here and there like rocks. But when vonr ls 0V(r J'011 have some . gold left and your mind Is stronger because or the vigorous exercise. lit I rofessor Iuieb s book there is a chapter on "Instincts, which upsets a grea many of our ideas on living things and dead things, lie says that thou-uni- s of the lower uniimils are nothing but machines. They ure not const Ions any more than a glass of soda water is conscious, lu fact, they ore nothing hut little bundles of chemicals. lake a moth, for instance. Why does it always fly toward the light? Is it because It is fond of the light? Does It have uu Instinct lu favor of bright objects? No, says Trofessor Loeb. Nothing of the kind. It turns to the light for the same reason that a pine hoard will warp if you leave It out in the sunslilnev it curves lit its flight and flies into the flame for the same reason that a plant turns to the sunshine whcti it stands in the window. It is not true that either plauts or moths ure foml of light. Their likes or isllkes have nothing to do with the mutter. They are just ns helpless us photograph ls when it bends anil wrinkles from the heat of a stove. When a moth is flying at the side of a lamp or electric light the rays of light of ihe moth on the side that is nearest to the light and tighten up the uniM-lewurp It around until it flies directly Into the bluze. The plants that move toward the sun turn urounil for the same reason, The rays of light tighten np the side of the stem that ls nearest to the sun and slowly the plant swings around until it faces the light. Us movement Is Used by the chemical effect of light. You may have not. ecu, in the springtime, how the little caterpillars come out of the nest and climb up to the tips of the branches, where the soft young leaves are. How do they know that these leaves are the best food for caterpillars? And how do they know, without being taught, that theso leaves are always at the tips of the branches? They don't know anything about it, says Professor Loeb. As soon as they come out of the nest the rays of light from the suit warp their bodies in such a way that they cannot help climbing upwards. They are little machines, almost like the tin toys that the peddlers sell on the sidewalks. The Instincts of these little moths and caterpillars can be changed. If bright electric light were to be placed at the foot of every tree that has caterpillar nests on It the young caterpillars would come marching down the tree to starvation and death. These curious Ideas, I hope you will remember, are not fancies or guesses. Professor Loeb lias examined dozens of moths and dozens of caterpillars and dozens of plants, to find out why they act as they do. If you think that his ideas are absurd, you can find out the facts by getting more moths and caterpillars and plants than he has, and by atudying them more carefully than he did. New York Journal. foi-m- s -- man's shop near the Champs Elysees. The marquis has a little outstanding As he was bill at the establishment. walking dowu to the club with Ills friend, the duke, it occurred to him that he might look hi on the tradesman and give him 30 on account. Ills friend went with him to the shop, where the shlrtmaker was wreathed In smiles to receive them. But the tradesmans amiability vanished whett lie heard that he was to have only a portion of his due, which was considerably more than 20. He became not on.v chilly, but distinctly disagreeable, and walking to the simp door, abut It, pulled out the removable handle and put it in his pocket. The duke and the marquis were Ills prisoners. He was not going to let them out until the latter had signed a note of hand for the amount owing, and the former had become security for the bill. The duke and the marquis both refused to be coerced, and demanded their freedom. But though they stormed and threat ened and hammered with their sticks on the shop door the shlrtmaker kept the latter shut. A crowd collected outside, and the Imprisoned noblemen made known tlietr plight by animated dumb show. At Inst a policeman strolled up. This time the tradesman had to open the door and let his cap tlveR go. Moreover, the policeman took down Ms name nnd address with a view to summoning him for "seqttes tratlngthe two noblemen, from whom he did not even get the 20 which the marquis had originally offered him. Loudon Dally Telegraph. rnnrjr Trim For Violin. ls still The test of the auction-rooantagonistic to the exaggerated prices which the violin fanciers would have us believe show the true worth of old violins. Some excellent specimens were sold last week, and they wore nearly all purchased by dealers, so that their nuilicnclty may almost be taken for granted, but $1000 was tbe This was highest price secured. gained for a Joseph Gnnrnerins of Holland Landing to Torontd and plnca It on Garrison Common, the eltya proposed new park, as a relic of the Wai of 1812. The history of this anchor, which Is an uncommonly large ones, weighing about two aud a half ton The genew Is shrouded lit darkness. ally accepted theory ls that It reached Its present location after Commodore Perry's victory on Lake Erie had glvea the Americans temporary control of the lower lakes. It ls supposed that the British were contemplating naval operations on th upper lakes, nnd this anchor was being carried by ox teams across the portage from New York to Georgian Bay, and It reached Holland Landing, when forty ntlles from Toronto, the wsr snd. denly ended. The burden was toe heavy and the value not worth th trouble of moving It. further either way, and it was left in the woods, where M was found twenty years er so ago, Rlnee then the trees have been cut away and the land now forms a nle park, belonging to the corporation of Holland Landing. Alderman Itamo dens idea Is that It would be an Interesting relic In this city, which oriic lnally suffered so severely In that way, but of course It ls not certain that the people of Holland Landing would pari with It. Toronto ((hit.) Globe. WISE WORDS. Real grief never goes on dress pa- rade. The burden sharers will b th crown wearers. It doesnt help our bad habits any to call them eccentricities. You can lift t. e 1 ml from your heart by lifting your eyes to God. The foolish man fears death, but the wise umu spends his life prepaw lng to live. The linn of Strive & Thrive builds success oil the ruins of tho firm of Whine & Pine. The follow wuo Is always switching bis occupation never gets well started on the multi line to success. The young men or women wbo writ of a church hymnal on the have ample room there for writing all they know. When we miss an opportunity It la when we grasp as "111 luck," but opportunity we pride ourselvea on u wisdom and forethought The time will come when the maa who drives a clipped horse In winter will not suffer from the effect of the .ante kind of temperature. Did you ever attend a prayer meeting whose attendance was large enough to cause you to think ofe the danger that might result from sudden panic? When men screen sand the fine paw tides sift through aud the big paw. ticlea do not, but when men reach la their pockets for money as the churck collection basket start around the Utile big coins' slip througL end tbe ones come to the surface. Funny. r. Isnt It? Will Mauplin, In The Influence of Stereotyping amt Electro-typin- g 1731, while a Jerome Amnti (with cer on Modern f rintlng. tifleate by the renowned authority The development of hook and newsJosef Chanot) fetched $.100, an A. and II. Amnti of 1030 went for $173. and paper printing has been aided to an some excellent old fiddles fetched by stereotyping, degree extraordinary The little over $230 each. I sometimes says the Scientific American. can wonder that ordinary purchasers do or matrices the plates stereotyping exnot low use at be stored for future buy more at those sales, where, although no great bargains are likely pense and the type can be distributed to be picked up for the dealers would and used anew. It was made practinot allow a violin to go to an outsider cal by Earl Stanhope about 1804, and for much under Its trade worth yet York about New In Introduced was the prices are very greatly below those 1813. The plaster and clap processes asked In the shops, and are of eourse e papier-mach1S29 the in were superseded by almost trivial compared with the figprocess. In which a mold is takures quoted by some of the collectors. en on prepared paper, which Is baked, The $13,000 fiddle is In fact a myth. necand which can then be curved. If Nothing over $3000 has ever been than other dallies, essary. Periodicals, known. London Truth. and books are usually printed from was tried which process electrotypes, ' Hot Hole, But Black Bear. By Nlxola Greeley.Smlth experimentally in New York In 1S41 before wire-thro- ugh "Look you leap, The motto, HUS use your frog: Tut your hook I menn the arming by Professor Mopes. An impression his mouth nnd out of his gills, aud in so doing use him bus been handed down for generations is taken in specially prepared wax, and generations, but it is a curious as though you loved him." and the mold is blaekleaded to insure that a person has never suggested fact of the lover bachelor angler's So lzaak Walton dear old electrical contact. It Is then placed the thought of "thinking before lookIn a plating bath and a shell of copper art describes his manner of baiting fish. if she were so In- ing." If there had ever been a motto And tints the modern husband-hunteis deposited. This Is stripped from the like the latter it ls probable that Ghl clined, might with equal aptness render an account of her eon L. mold, curved if necessary, the back is Future Vmi to Old Af Joy, of Hancock, would never methods of capture. tinned, and an alloy resembling type Ills to shock received the system have fish ht Our old men are going to be Of course, the application ls not to the particular metal Is then poured over it, to give it when he looked future workers, if we are to credit he that armexperienced the hook, the could then Wulton nor is she put wishes to make her own. Neither strength. The electrotype the very good reason Into a hole In the ground and found a theory propounded In a recent work phine.1 so that It will he type high ing wire, through the fishs mouth and out his gills for big, black bear about three Inches from of Prof. Ell Mctcbnikoff, of the Taw for It half-toncuts stand not will creature, elusive when Mocked. Original that the fish, being a lively and his nose. Mr. Joy did uot stay looking teur Institute in Paris. He reminds are often soldered or cast In to in helpless frog can be thus maltreated. Only a Into that hole any longer than was nec- us that, in the case of loute of the fish bites. the wire Is the results. sure good printing Rut once the frog on astonish-meatmost industrious of the lower creawith plain, ordinary, four- - essary to recover from bis Now. the complete angler of old times angled he the and but way up got tures, such us nuts and bees, th 5I1' ! Mark. flow Aldi-li-l- t 1,, It for home and a gun would workers are distinct from the breeder, catches legged often and hook baits her pJtiJmoSnrflnd feminine prototype j la till take the horse If Admiral Alexeicff rose from the back, he third or neutral sex bnvlng been go -!- probably have mude the bear laugh "the frog that would -varlety-w- ith first He fish with a Russian Navy. the of its ranks all to witness Mr. Joys evolved by the modification of one had he (smei the stayed from right. Luckily I as to her. n distinguished marry In thin counother words, the man who wants (JJJutiboot enough for my ticket attracted attention white sprinting act. When Mr. Joy returned both of tho others. With man no neuintf I with his rifle the bear was nowhere to tral sex has appeared, but both sexes Somehow he had de-r- try, a young Lieutenant without how tine her abstract sense of Justice may be. ,k llvod In New York. fluence and without family, lie had tie seen, nor has he been seen sluee. cease the work of reproduction at a her-w- hlch mean not the docs to marry a man meals. Well, who knows landed at San Francisco from a cruise kn' 1 Mr. I .Toy w ill likely get his gun first fixed period of life. This. then. Is th iente cajolery have sandbagged Into the passive e a rt and de ffisJ tura look afterward, If such a ease ever most favorable period for work, and nnd 1, up';" w lih cheerful op In Alnsknti waters on the battleship a,tar-8ca Le hi,a tfeat cltize,m t0 ,be uwailQ, comes up again. Kennebec Journal. Rttrlek when war wuis Imminent be when science hits eliminated tbe InwIt nP be siipaked forward tween Russia and (Irent Britain over pructically ns she pleases. firmities of age, a Prof. MetcbnlkoB the to cabled once Books. at or soon will b Hallow ChaUworth' wr lie the ami Balkans, sat down to ,,'nwUllS This.' MlloSgir. Waltons recipe for baiting, she puts her There are at Cbntawortk two II believes It Is now ablewill be our mosl the to aged do, able rather gibing, over. ,shp wu C(rtttluly a Russian Naval Office asking permission the he painful fillta. etc., regard, a number hook through ills mouth and out at hi. and the vigorous and efficient tollers. This la the Great KlrI! In country this brnrles, to Library purchase Atlerley, feeling deIn his breast pock-lljtortile of vessels to be used a commerce d West Library. The doors are deco- a paradoxical conclusion, and one that P1 V ivm.!0?' I,rror!lo,r;he not, 'll ccordhig' rated with Imltstlou book backs, will hardly gain the consent of all he would probably stroyers to prey on English commerce, regret his that effect the to indUnIldeJ!tion action. and received a reply are due to the effect she know, These are furnished with Imaginary physiologists. Front Success. Alex 'TobVittJe! love I deal. titles reminiscent of the the for ,0 time not ku was there on lt the food 4 Vitki01 on the other man. the of some are Here have of a . will respectful Mach back Too punning. Mstrtmoay, bis pur-eleff telegraphed they frog know that nntll. having served titles Tom Ilood Invented for tbe sham h'v does the poor,aud or our 0,her men message to the effect that he perhaps York World. A marriage epidemic now trouble too Iute2-N- ew is It .aide cast Is be better "Wrens Voyage to the Rervin, and the cattae of tbe trouble I bookcases: America In sltnatlou knew the ,0l,lBpr ina . chatting 'iwh reCanaries, "Egg, by Fhelley, "Horn a system of marriage bank, which f:adln in J' aiM,tll(r father older, than It was known In Russia, and Took on Catching Cows, "Esterbnzy were founded with the Idea of encourA11 hm cu ceived the necessary permission,ships, JZ? "Macadam but Zm, on Fogs," Fprlng JZ? eight had thrift Young men and maiden purchased had he ten an An. days Insplrai on Secret En agingFervla Jones soon blew Rhodes, "Inigo cloud war In lem right, amused and although the pay Into these marriage or trances," "Mlntos Coins, "Beveridge hanks In order to secure making the , was premium Incident im'"r the over, txI"l'b,,H-esnaiiSr on the Itocr Act" Those who know whenever Russia marry. Immediately a they in7.,Uiply w,th ftHHl and Alexcleff. Upon his return to the treasures contained In the Chnts small sum has thus been accumulasbind 'kuru. well, he nitmt he was Riven command of n ship, ami worth libraries, even while they smile lated the desire to marry scema Now Admiral. an was In three years he Keller Helen such a:'1,''.'"rrfuiiy-,at fooling, cannot but mnrvd at By and with the result that the of Greater Ilusia moved neur- - he is Vlee-Czn- r tnd of " Dally first chance or entering the "holy the Incongruity Blind. Dumb between lie D.sf, Uor. hleh w WU S-Wh. tilrl ,h'' lands I Kr0ll' 'thralled "lord of all the i til br!iC 'i Url,.a Hcll.r Clirouicle. maw To seized y Is eagerly upon. I So fr'"bmss. Baikal and the Tarlffe and effects lu life. If It be el!ow to repent ii F test of all beliefs Is their practical In haste usually mean ,lNt ry !rj11 find the tend from the Arctic to the forward world pessimism the and ran'.v, Ilrflrlt. Ituiulnn Hallway optimism compels iu Fervla the effect of and at bed an older man Sea. leisure, II bnrih New Orleans Times Democrat. a pessimistic Last year the Russian railways rnn dangerous to propagate jytards II, then It marnnd bUy bad grow This Is very dls premature behind $2.WMt,(SK). that h Is misery stn widespread riages Bnlil IUM 'who W": oofiiS? H'Ul believes that the pain In life outweighs tbe joy. appointing, In view of the Moscow the government Is now considering one la (trow Kidd of town the than that you How fust adds to the pain. oted to Ktirsk, Southwestern, Ekaterlnoslaff, the advisability of abolishing mar, lim. ..vprciscs that unhappy condition, only minister. sor sya Alhcrlej lug. "Often." said the church, t is an enemy to the race. Even If he Nikoluleff. and banka altogether. T.J'Jfahann.fany. oitsly, In a certain tents. Were It not for these paying riage believed that this is the mo.t wretched of nil po " dnHJ ouea 11,1,1 lit Incident thimu robs which I dont a doctrine most trivial be fellows. would not deficit undoubtedly lines the promulgate n lililc worlds, he should Fit urn! hut That Succeed. ,'llil'K you the (null. leads to thoughts that are 'twiKjt a vast one. As the chrniugs of the t with circumstance, I 1 so ago or the chief element of A Edtteatiou ,,r day Life i. a fair field, and combined Russian systems have fallen M" and eiiiinldliig. men of tl' halt for bmld it was his fault ' ami of the world. 1 ' In success this street, ago ,lw obh-Malt, down necesman's fuming If life gave twitched considerably below the amount (1IU bv our guns, H " a used her?, la meant will prosper education, all By ls nil life Hn.l a turvy, four topsy Jf at for the sign, right profit, the exploitation sary .111 e Jf11 How wrinm' proceed,. " Rut tlsomething more than schooling, ll j I.ct pcinii"U Ren,' n0 cur for Individual or soclul disorder, any nothing of development or exten means Ihe development of the charts 'be ' ear step, con- - no further. M J vanity and vexation 'M. g,a'r. alon, there la nothing for the treasury jqiutinn. ' "aterlstlc traits of the Individual. Every h-we of "fur forgetful t deficit from in rover the "to the pessimist, liked was made up to do but eao-pr n his strong point and 1 pehus i man I be should 'I1:1 1,1,1 nt a f w weeks or "l.ct us other Imperial sources. b,f 111,1 . from the point of view of the pessimist 'h t , culiarly fitted for mime particular line lion the rose, Hurtled couples, "f .....Main ,tto." H I regarded ran of work. Education brings these out mad Wealth, music and a rnrentratd the not visit my eye . church to go lu Cr,!01' undone. f r ti,e light that docs estimated wealth and render Miem available to the ful-etho of seek in never be and satisfied, niul should u some street. Enid tt'kln.) lagle. day lt'l j fn, j 8l)0uUl beg night extent. " ,n of the United States 1 represeiitntcd I"4 rrlJ kllt' "'Hit h white waist , prey to four and dispolr. (hat dors not ring H Board of DirecThis Is being generally accepted by of the the at I . tor meeting to be others Htorlr. apart to escape sit mid happy, aliould U)Vc!f lte.t TI"J I The t0 'ricn" uns la a I" tors of the United States Hleel Cor- practical educator everywhere; hence . Marl, Hut since I t A young lady who i .privation. technolog17 atiy P than u worse at vl.lMr-falter, for he knows his neighbor poration when all the dlreetora are tho growing popularity of which sitter- - m,V ,,nls,-r"W,,MI"I s story-telle- r lu school two also littn ical and colleges, bis represent therefore hold They will present. venture place lie The optlmls e she never dare km, lIt ,P. PullW'Iciit rath.' )( hn-unn. by M i1 may select courses of atudy, Inunto each beurt Is Ita dred other companies operating one-ha- lf 111 be hindered . . "",,il- - A younu a (he children ure '" k,'l q illtnce. In of the railroad mileage the stead of being compelled to take the rcuoi'i ,lll .. how i fearlessly snd u, ,,'lrttiniiiv1"u"'r hnnlljr h control and t M use as r them hand and regular courses arranged by old and country, . corporation . , stoilcs f .v ( circumstance' MMou farm-yarltr own sorrow. enrth.-Er- on, whose aggregate capitalization 1 $U, often unpractical scholars. Pittsburg on "OpUmlsm." win heaven 1.1 lie 'urefuny guard. drett ami ,k'1,r, Ses, idlshmentof Gazette. the net'... A . . him alone depended block hi. path. He will work a If upon U 0,000, 000, " I' ah- - breadth escapes for Hevllle. In uw7 break Vlold to it. tool Lady he riml, Ileal v don Graphic. fly-le- 0 Ihe Complete Angler; or, How to Catch a Husband i mid-wee- en-V-i- II k Com-moite- r, I be e slow-goin- two-legge- "Zmumtter e! V i; F irs S!" vr "t e MS & rT. The wi. Duty of Happiness , n ..! It-Lo- udon 1 'vbir Tran-Caueasii- '"f" r s c.-ii- . ,,,1 - in J, .r" One-twelft- . M J' ,l ts '''"''I" ,lt st 1 ,ut |