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Show locks famlHrr. Its Sam Stop, driver! Hollo, Sam! m&m, TENANTS IN THE DEMIJOHN. Rounds! How are you ? bepoetetohre stands test oi m INVESTIGATION. A Former rtctlm of Locomotor Ataxia Now eo from Sofferinf ond iCtirely ot Work Yes,id Mr. Watkins to a reporter, it is trmthat I have been cared of ataxia by Ir. Williams Pink Pills. Are ys sore you had locomotor ataxia? The dctors themselves toid me so. Besides recognized the symptoms. Whatwere they? Well.the first indications were A stiffness coat the knee joints that came on about ionr years ago. A few months after tha' appeared, my walk got to be I lost confidence uncertain shaky-like- . in my pciver to control the movements of my lejs. Once, When I was in the cellar, I tarted to pick up two scuttles of coal, aid my les gave way suddenly, and I tnnbled all in a heap in a basket. I couldrt close lny eyes and keep my to save my life. Then I had (balance pains over my whole body and I f lost coitrol over my kidneys and my 'bowels. " Hot about your general health ? I Sometimes I was so weak that I had to keep my bed and my weight fell off twenty pounds. Things looked pretty bad for me until I ran across A young man who had been cured by Dr. Williams Pink Pills and who advised me to $rj them. Did these pills help you right away?' 1 1 didnt see much improvement until I had used six boxes. The first benefit I noticed was a better circnlation and picking np in strength and weight. I gradually got confidence in my ability to direct the movements of my legs, and to the conrse of seven or eight months the troubles had disappeared. Do you regard yourself as entirely fell now? I do the work of a well man at any fite. I can close my eyes and stand np tgl right and move about the same as cfiher men. The pains are all gone an occasional twitch in the calves my legs. t Mr. James H. Watkins resides at No. 72 fiesterlo street, Albany, N.Y. Dr.Wil-Am- s Pink Pills can be obtained at any drug store. They should be used as soon t the first signs of locomotor ofataxia ap-- l the feet. tor in a peculiar numbness Ml! f. 11 ex--i- J CHAPTER XV. Continued. In an alcove, partially formed by a hay window, stood an easel, upholding a large trame. The light struck the canvas in such a way that Blake did not reecgmze the subject until squarely in front cf it. It was a portrait of Jessie Carden not the Jessie Carden drawn by the San Franct. co artist from the faded tintvpe biu the Jessie Carden of later years, whose face and figure had tak-on the perfect grace ot womanhood. Amazed and lost in thought, Blake did not hear Arthur Morris as he approached and stood back of him. He lushed when Morris touened him on he should, r "By Jove! that portrait must have great att'T.otion for you! laughed 'lorri. "You've been staring at it ive minutes! A box at the opera you 'annot tt 11 her name!" Done! said Blake. "Thats a por-raof Miss Carden Miss Jessie Carden, of Boston. An expression of dumb surprise swept across the face of Arthur Mormouth and starris. With ing eyes he gazed at James Blake. . Wtll, 111 be Well, of all things! He sank Into a chair and I say, old fellow, laughed feebly. you took me off my feet! How the devil did you guess that name? wonderful about It! Nothing said Blake, who by this time had perI met Miss Carfected his course. den years ago, and I at once recognized the portrait. You met her? Where? In the country, near Hingham, Massachusetts. How? When? By Jove, old fellow, this beats me! Wbat were yotl doing in Hingham? I lived on a farm near there, replied Blake. Morris leaned forward. For an instant fear had possession of him. Who was this man who lived n Inns Furnish Tooth Brushes. Japanese mns furnish fresh tooth brushes every morning free to every . I guest. The brush Is of wood, shaped like a pencil, and frayed to a tufty blush of fiber at the large end. FIXING RAILROAD RATES. Making railroad rates is like playing a game of checkers or chess. Communities to be benefitted, producers, manufacturers or shippers to be aided represent the pieces used. Every possible move is studied for Its effect on the general result by skilled traffic' managers. A false move in the making of freight rates may mean the ruin of a city, of a great manufacturing interest, of an agricultural community. Railroads strive to build up all .these so that each may have an equal chance in the sharp competition of business. So sensitive to this I rivalry are the railroads that in order I to build up business along their lines YJW they frequently allow the shipper io Rate makpractically dictate rates. ing has been a matter of development; 'mutual concessions for mutual aeflt. That Is why the railroads of s United States have voluntarily l&i&de freight rates so much lower in tfc.lg country than they are on the s jvernment-owneand operated of Europe and Australia that are now the lowest transportation rates in the world. rall-way- d Modesty. that places In the feeds thand of beauty the scepter that ' ommands power. Helvetius. U modesty TEA I Tell your friends if you like it; if not, tell your rrocer. 4 Ifour grocer returns jour monej U .too don't Ae.SetUUlngs Best. I I I : Dangerous, Anyway. Itf dangerous not to notice a new B.v j your wife has, because she things you are not Interested, and its angerous to notice because It may be new one you forgot to notice before. Nqw York Press. TEA So you think it worth he to serve good tea at TEA TEA 0 Egastray TEA dif-!renc- aound? -- 4- vTTl hard-earne- d gas-save- v, GUI I CHAPTER XVI. Bad News. Blake, arrived in Hingham he felt like a stranger In a foreign land. His parents were dead and his relatives scattered. The village looked smaller than when he was a boy. He felt himself in a living graveyard. Securing an open carriage and a driver from a livery stable, he rode through the quiet streets and out Into Drive to Thomas Bishthe country. ops house, he ordered. shutThe drawn and ters of the old mansion told their own story. From a passing farmer Blake Earned that the Bishops had moved to New York months before. Half an hour later he knocked on Peter Burt's door. As a boy, Blake stood in awe and When mmOT34PQ!?72i4r OT mxs OH20ET, ALAKZ. on a farm near Hingham, and who was once acquainted with Jessie Carden? Was he John Burt? From the time I was thirteen until I ran away from home, Blake continued, with nonchalance and confident mendacity, I lived on a farm about three mites from the old BishMiss Carden used to op mansioi visit there in the summer seasons and I saw her frequently. The last time I saw her she cantered past our house with a friend of mine. That reminds me dear old John I must look him up when I go to Reeky Woods. Blake threw back his head and reflectively exhaled a wreath of cigar smoke. I Does this explain the mystery? dont see anything wonderful about it except that you have her portrait, and that Is probably easily explained. Im not prying into your affairs, old man?" Not at all not at all! Rammohun; brandy and two bottles of soda, ordered Morris, mopping his forehead. By Jove, this is remarkable! You speak of a friend of yours John, you call him what was his last name? Burt. Where is he now? Morris leaned eagerly forward, his face gray and his lower lip twitching. Sure, I dont know! He was with his grandfather on the old Burt farm in Rocky Woods when I left Massachusetts. Why? Do you know John Burt?" Confound it, man, he shot me! exclaimed Morris, springing to h!s feet and pacing up and down the room. Ho shot me, I tell you, and all oar table? but put me out for good! And he did 1 v It on account of the girl whose porF.allway Congestion Is Costly. Owing to the railway congestion In trait youre admiring. The blasted 1 farmers and exporters have cad was crazy jealous over Miss CarVrS"ina, st Enormously. Government lnter- - den, who had been so foolish as to tolmtlqn has been demanded, lncompe- - erate his company. He picked a quarManagement having been stated rel with me In a tavern and shot me C cause. through the left lung. Laid me up for three months. That old desperado of a grandfather of his nearly kilted two officers and aided him to escape. He has not been heard of since." rhich do you spend most Blake plied Morris with questions. iciey on, tea or whiskey? The latter took large draughts of brandy and recited the successive Which pays? chapters which led to the tragedy. il Except that he made himself the heNt. My every man you meet knows ro of the tale, his account agreed with iur remedy for a cold, but he never that told by John Burt. Blake pares i ot himself. took sparingly of the brandy, but Morris fed his aroused hate and recollection with the fiery fluid. According to Morris he was madly , Wiere tea and spirit are In love with Jesise Carden from the moment he saw her. Before he repigli.there is little danger of covered from his wound she was sent abroad tty Gen. Carden to complete Q in the business. her education in Paris and Berlin. I $f a mrried man thinks he Is the Two years later Gen. Carden failed In business, his private fortune being lad ot tb house that's all that Is ; wiped cut In the crash. Jessie came back from Europe and remained a year with the Bishops. Arthur had induced his father to place Gen. Cari den In a salaried postlon with the Ho jiu think the only Morris bank In New York, and he persuaded Gen. Carden to accept a few tea are a Jessufficient to defray loan second a In expenses .ii sies trip abroad. She was In Paris, but Nvb-t- x thought young man calls on had completed her studies, and would E Pr,-!girthe old man doesn't have return In a few weeks. He was en- i .'todetany of his i Su, wbiek ii a for a pant Ijt gaged to the dear girl, but the date of the wedding had not been set. "I've told you more'ii any man living half sobbed Moiris, as he leaned on Janies Blakes shoulder. Tears stood in his inflamed eyes and trickled down his red, blotched cheeks. "Youll keep my secret, wont you, old chap?" he pleaded maudliuly. You're tho bos frien' I've got in the world People don't like me; they don't know me. You know me, Blake, old fel, dont you? Im sen'mental that's what makes me cry. By Jove, youll be my bes' man at weddin bes' man at my weddin wont you? He lurched into a chair. The trained and alert Rammohiln appeared, deftly undressed him, and solemnly conveyed him to an Inner room. Poor John! sighed Blake, a few minutes later, as the Indian servant showed him his room and softly closed the door. "Poor Johu! Love's a tough proposition, and Im afraid Johns on He has waited too a dead card! long. Seated In a stylish road cart, behind trotter was one a rangy, ef the companions of Blake's boyhood. Sam checked his horse and, with a puzzled grin, looked Into the speakers face. "Haou de ye dew?" he drawled, slackening the lines. "Yer face looks like, on' yer voice don't sound strange like, either. I believe 1 It's Jim Blake! Haou know ve! air ye. Jim? Well, well, well! Whod a thunk it whod a thunk it? Sam reached across and shook hands wth a vigor which nearly pulled Blake out of his carriage. 'Air je the James Blake Ive been road m' erbout? The one thats been givin' them New York sharps a whirl asked Sam. in stocks? Blake smiled and nodded his head. Is that o? Well, well, well! Say, I'm plumb glad to hear It!" and Sam's smiling face showed it. "Aint never hearn of John Burt, have ye? No? Well, hell turn up on top some day, an' dont ye fergit, Sam Rounds alters said so. Where be ye goln to, Jim? "Im going back to New York toFrom there night," replied Blake. 1 return to San Francisco, but expeet to make New York my home. I'm livin In New Is that so? York now, said Sam, handing Blake Moved there several years his card. ago. Mother an I are here on a visit fer a few days. Ive been doin' fairly middlin well In New York, Jim. When you write me, be shore an' put Hon. before my name, and Sam laughed until the rocks his merriment. How is that? asked Blake, gaging blankly at the card. "Read what it says, insisted Sam. I'm alderman of my deestrlct, an tew a sechave just been ond term. Fact! "I congratulate you, Sam, said Blake, heartily. Sorry ye havent time tew wait over an go back with us, Sam said "But if ye are goin' tew locate ill New York, Ill see lots of ye. I certainly will look you up when Im in New York, said Blake. "My regards to your mother, and say Im sorry I didnt have time to call on her. Are you married. Sam? Nop, but I has hopes, laughed Sam, gathering up the lines. Goodan more luck ter bye, Jim, good-bye- , ye! Same to you, Sam; goodbye!" fear of the strange old man, but the years had obliterated this feeling. His knock sounded hollow on the great oaken door, and he wondered if the aged recluse yet lived. Mrs. Jasper, the housekeeper, opened the door, and Blake at once recognized her. How do you do, Mrs. Jasper.' My name is Blake James Blake. 1 lived near here when 1 was a boy. Dont you "Little Jimmy Blake! Well, of all I never would have known things! ye. Come right in Mr. Blake. Is Mr. Burt here?" but I dont know if hell see ye, she said, hesitatingly, wiping her He dont see hands on her apron. nobody, ye know. Tell him who I am, and say Im from California, said Blake, who could think of no other introduction. They stood in the old fashioned parlor where Peter Burt had bound the officers tbe night John Burt left Rocky Woods. As Mrs. Jasper hesitated, the door leading to the sitting room opened and Peter Burt entered. Blake could not see that he had changed a whit. Age had not ravished the strong face nor robbed the massive figure of its strength. He advanced to the center of the room, his eyes fixed searehingly on the face of his visitor. What have you to say to me, Blake? Be seated, sir. Blake took a seat In an antique rocker and shifted his legs uneasily. Where is John? John John I dont Do not lie to me, Blake. Tell me what you know of my grandson. He Is in California, sir! exclaimed James Blake. When these words were uttered he felt a sensation of relief which was positively exhilarating. He is alive and well! John Is He Is a millionaire rich, Mr. Burt! many times over! A grave smile lighted the features of Peter Burt. He closed his eyes and lay back in the chair. Go on; tell me about It, he said, as Blake paused. For an hour or more tbe head of the firm of James Blake & Company recited the history of John Burt's career in California, and the result of the recent speculative campaign in New York. Once in a white the old man asketa question, but he made no comment until the narrative was ended. Your heart dominates your judgment, but tbat is a trait and not a fault, he said, as he arose and offered his hand- to James Blake. God gives us emotions and faculties; from them we must develop character. Do not charge yourself with a broken He has kept his picmlse to John. pa:t. I send him my blessing. Say to hlin that I am strong and well and happy. Say to him that his future field of work is in New York city. Peter Burt stood in the doorway and watched until the carriage disappeared beyond the old graveyard. Im glad thats ended! said Blake to himself. "I wonder what I told the old man? Everything. I guess. Im nearing a crisis, am I? Well, Im used to crises and guess I can stand one more, Whos coming? His face THE WRONG WAY TO WALK Old Lady Will Not Uu It for Her Sas- safras Beer. Workmen while digging In the refuse under a wagon house at Newton farm. Merlon square, found a demijohn, once filled with rye Inelegant and Slovenly Galt Noticed All Too Frequently. n whisky. The demijohn probably had The basket Walking one of the most popular required of It, it would seem that the been there for years. and beneficial exercises is well dis- brush best adapted to use in tbe hu- work about It was crumbling away. man mouth should have a short, nar- John Clemmers, one of the workmen, cussed in Good Housekeeping: bria-tlesaid: Very stout or slouchy people allow row head, with short, rather stiff Old Mrs. Summers, over on the trimmed straight longitudinally the abdomen to lead, Brain workers, worriers, all nervous and physi- and convex latltudlnally, that each line pike, has been wanting a demijohn, and he took It over to her. cally uncultivated people, let their of bristles may come successively Into The house dog appeared to take heads lead; the head Is further ad- use as the brush is rotated. great interest In the demijohn, upsetvanced than any other part of the perting it, and sticking his paw In the Breathing for 6trength. son. Dyspeptics whose thoughts are of the above Instead heading neck. Then he drew out his paw centered on their stomachs, often unbe written, "Breathing for life. again and barked. consciously lead with the waist line might A green aud black spotted enake For that is really what we do. And OcJust over the offending organ. demonout of the demijohn and beso is since this fact wriggled easily person percasionally a we to Is about joyously In the twist have It that gan strange strated, mits the knees to lead. When a thin, heat of the stove. Mrs. Summers bad walker moves rapidly, there often not more quickly and fully discovered seems to be a race between nose and that In this vital process lies the jumped upon a table and screamed. secret remedy for a thousand ills, if Another snake and another followed knees, and you watch to see which not the fable fountain of Immortal the first one, until, Clemmer says, he will arrive at the goal first. With the dogs Men have lived weeks with- counted twenty-seven- . youth. When a young womans skirt and a out days without drinking, help he killed them all. eating; a mans trousers show young bulging and Mrs. Summers declines to use the nights without steeping; but how shape over the knees, their owners can we live without breathing? bottle for her sassafras beer. long are leading sedentary lives or have ounces of food and a few never learned to walk correctly. This Twenty He Wanted "Sistom. pints of water will supply the body part of the lower limbs should be kept one At a certain coal mine down In New day; but, upon a low estimate, it cot and the of ball tha foot, straight, thirty thousand pints of air Mexico the Superintendent was greatthe heel, should touch the ground requires in the same length of time. ly annoyed from time to time by emfirst. When the head Is bent for long The delicate machine which this ployes moving Into and out of the hours over sewing machine or ledger volume of air enters Is said to contain companys houses without due notifior onion bed, it Is not an easy matter over 700,000,000 air cells, or little cation of their frequent changes of to pull It back to its proper position Into the walls of these domicile. It became quite impossible and make it stay there, and it seems workshops. there flows, like the sewerage of a to keep the rent accounts straight on so much more easy and comfortable venous blood of the office books, and finally the superto let the chest sink than to hold It great city, the foul, the body. In these remarkable workintendent, In his exasperation, reup to its right place; but the demands He It is quickly transformed Into solved upon stringent measures. shops of health and beauty are Identical in therefore posted the following notice, a rushing red torrent filled with the matter of a head held easily, not oxygen from the air. What a which is given verbatim orthograegotistically, back, and a chest kept wonderful invention! What a miracuphy, syntax and all : in the highest and most advanced lous process! And yet you are trustfebruary the 11th. position. "Notice to all employes ed with operating one of these InstruIt Is a striking tact that this atti- ments. aney Person or Persons that Moves tude of head and chest is expressive, Would you note its magical effect Into A house Without My Consent not only of health and grace, but of tinder proper conditions? Then stand shall be Put out Without anney the finer mental qualities. The em- erect. Open the doors and windows; barrassed boy drops his head; if he or, if you are sick In bed, have them "Dam It I Must and Will have some would hold his head up, his nervousSistom. and Lift and chest chin, opened. your ness would disappear. The shy girl breathe the invigorating air of heaHen Fllster." (Signed.) thinks that every one in the room Is ven, till the muscles of your abdomen Los Anegles Times. looking at her, and her chest sinks; fairly bound with Joy. Now, Isnt that but if she would hold it up assume a tonic. Then take It many times a A Ministers Story. the attitude of courage, though she the son of a clergyman, 1 Being often. dose can You the day. repeat have It not she wouldnt care whethEven as I write the fresh air tickles have some remembrances of ministerier they looked or not. The Among my finger Ups; for when we breathe al stories told in my youth. person who knows he is stiff deeply, it goes to all parts of tbe them was one of a divine who and awkward, and who knows that preached In the city of Portsmouth, body. his stiffness and awkwardness are the and who one summer, with bis family, To "The Sufferin Neet. direct results of his went to a little village on the coast woman was a There little should Imagine that a strong of Maine to spend his vacation. In a very sorry plight; For, strange to toll, this woman string Is attached to the upper part Finding there an unused, dllapldat-eto Disliked dwell with light! church, he thought perhaps he Ten days later James Blake ar- of his chest and held by an Invisible She closed her Minds up tightly, could do some good by holding servrived in San Francisco. He drove to hand above him. All he has to do is Then craped the windows oer, For fear the blessed sunshine He obtained consent, ices therein. Johns apartment, and was greeted by to let his body depend from that Would spoil her walls and floor. and his meetings were fully attended. him in the old study room. Blake sat string and keep his head well back of This dainty little woman In the fall the little vessel came foi where he looked at the portrait of it, and bis mind and body wtll alike Grew very pale and thin. The most him and his family, and Just as they Just like the weak potato sprouts Jessie Carden. His heart sank with- become easy andI free. In cellars deep and dim. graceful walker ever knew told me were leaving he saw a delegation in him. Ah. silly little woman! that she habitually walked by the aid coming hastily over the hill and beck(To be continued.) You have faded out of sight, of this invisible cord. Because you would not let In oning to him. Thinking perhaps they The sweetness of Gods light. had some little testimonial for him DISHES WILL NOT BREAK. Fireside. and Farm Tooth Brushes. shore, when they handed him a bill Dr. S. H. Arnold gives some Interestfor the use of the church. He took Belgian Manufacturers Have Circum-venteConsumption Can Be Conquered. In facts and advice good ing regard tbe bill, paid It, and on reaching The universal Interest In the the Careless Servant. to that daily friend, the tooth brush: movement Is shown In home framed tt and hung It la hit Japies C. McNally, consul of the Nearly all brushes are made from every convention held to consider this study. Boston Herald. United States at Liege, Belgium, has bristles taken from the wild hogs of work. The discussions are practical, manufac a invention the by reported Russia or China. The handles are not Mexico's Growing Prosperity. theoretical. The audiences are which turer there of dinner plates common beef bones. They are made Mexico has been steadily growing In not merely professional. The popular, servants can idly drop upon the stone mostly In Japan, France, England and whole people are Intereted. prosperity for a quarter of a century, floor without breaking, and dishes Germany, and by one firm In the thanks to the establishment of orderIn a session Just closed at Atlanta, which make excellent hammers with United States. Probably English No longer Is Mexico ly government. Here is the brushes are the best made and worst Georgia, many Important and Interestwhich to drive nails. the prevention and cure synonymous with perpetual faction The Com' story in his own words: The French are next in qual- ing phases of shaped. Lambert, of Liege ity, but far ahead In form. Germany of consumption were considered, Dr. fighting, of the most truculent type. pany Du Val-St- . Diaz rules and order Is maintained C. P. Ambler gave a concise review of is manufacturing a hardened crystal and Japan are generally Imitators. steadily, but without recourse to sedish, which in appearance closely re- Some of the most expensive English the duty of the physician in charge, verity. As the people have no revosembles fine translucent china of uni- and French, and all American brushes, to the patient and family. His paper and lutions to divert tnelr time from busiThe are made In factories under more or was enthusiastically received form shape and manufacture. and commerce steadily Inresisting power of this ware is due to less sanitary conditions, but the cheap- adopted as the sense of the League on ness, trade crease. In twenty years Imports have a special hardening process and to the er grades, including all German and this subject. His points were as follows: First, risen from $20,000,000 to $75,000,000, quality and nature of the crystal used Japanese brushes, are made In the It not only successfully resists the huts of the peasants, where cattle, Tuberculosis Is not the fatal disease and the exports from $7,000,000 to Of the foreign trade of $43,000,000. usual wear and tear, but is almost dogs, swine, fbwls and humans are commonly believed. Second While communicable It can Mexico the bulk Is with the United proof against breakage. herded In common. The bristles and harmless by the States. Mexican exports to this counA hardened crystal dish can be bene are given out by the dealer and be made practically thirty years substituted for a hammer in driving taken Into the country, where they are proper course on the part of the try which were $4,346,364 ago. were $43,633,720 in 1904. Mexico nails into wood, while the same ware assorted by the aged and young chil- patient. Third The chief cause of the high Imported from 4he United State laat can be put into boiling water at dren and diseased persons, the strongyear goods valued at $45,844,720, high degree, then plunged into ice er members of the family working at mortality Is late diagnosis. Fourth Late diagnosis Is caused against $5,946,839 In 1874. Boston water repeatedly, without the least more remunerative employment. of the patient to early Transcript. noticeable damage to the dish or These cheap brushes are often In by indifference carelessness on the and symptoms seen The has writer plate. plates the most unsanitary and wretched surThe Losses at Mukden. of the usual form of this hardened roundings imaginable, and It Is a sig- part of the physician consulted. Inthe report that 200.000 men read We Fifth By thorough, systematic ware hurled to the stone floor of nificant fact that after being made and wounded on both sides were kilted results better warehouse and go bounding along the they are seldom sterilized before struction of the patient in the battle of Mukden without fully can be accomplished than by medicawhole length of the building without1 using. realizing what those awful figures suffering the least damage. This same The English brushes are generally tion. mean. Here are a few aids to the famof Instruction Sixth patient, of firm makes glassware the same very much too large to be efficient. Two hundred thousand close and observance Imagination. and friends, corresponding resistance. The French are better shaped, but are ily casualties equal: on their part of the rules laid down too of to be head, long making apt of Its Three hundred Iroqnols theater disLuxuries of Russian Peasant. much waste to the brush, and are too will practically rob the disease asters. method and means of extending. The Russian peasant, even if the long of bristle. A hundred and fifty Slocum disasbread he eats is black, has a bonne A wide brush Is not advisable beters. of Plano Evils Playing. bouebe to add to his meal much cause It limits the movement possibly A French scientist of note maintains Eighty Johnstown floods. sought by epicures in the western longitudinally to the tooth. Long brisThirty Galveston floods. world the wild mushrooms which tles are not the best, because they that a large number of the nervous are to The total population, men. women grow thousands upon thousands on bend when the brush is thrust back disorders from which girls suffer children of a city like Minneapto the and piano. attributed be playing At of Rnssia. the steppes between cheek and teeth, and stay any time one of that olis. statistics shows He by full and savory meal Is provided with bent till the brush Is withdrawn, thus who study this instruThe population of the states of Idathe addition of sausage and onions missing the Interproximal spaces so thousand girls combined. even a mushroom alone often conmuch In need of cleaning. Soft bris- ment before the age of twelve, no less ho and Nevada The entire Boer population, of both tents them for a meal with their tles become softer when wet, and than six hundred suffer from nervous two South coarse rye bread. The poorest laborer utterly fall to enter the spaces at all. disorders, while of those who do not sexes and all ages, of the the resisted which two are African there till only republics later has also a luxurious drink always If the surface of the bristles Is conbegin of the British empire samavailable from the caved longitudinally to fit the labial hundred per one thousand, and only whole power ovar, and the tea they drink would be curve of the teeth, then when the one hundred per one thousand among for over two years. Colliers Weekly. the envy of any American connoisseur brush is reversed and used on the lin- those who have never worked at it. The Neighbor. Is equally injuof that beverage, for the best gual surfaces, only the ends of the The violin, he says. to vmtr temper when hairt 'Tis that he As a suggests rious. remedy in more the is found China's tea Russia, and all brush engage teeth; hence, Vnu hear vnur neighbor's Harking hen to not be should know that she and children feme, permitted classes enjoy Its quality and frag teeth are missed than cleaned, and Vpon the Amid your flower beds soon will be. ranee. Never is the water allowed to the user Is deceived Into thinking he study either instrument before the age the best of men stand on the tea over a few moments, has cleaned his teeth because he has of sixteen, at least, and In the case of Your neighbor seemed Whv should he own a clucking hen those possessing delicate constituso none of the poisonous tannin Is brushed tbbm. mild smooth That turns a tempeiwarm and and wild. To one extiemely extracted, and a delightful, mildly Studying the brush over and what Is tions, not till a later age. I drink Is stimulating, It seema a ahame fora Christian men about measly hen; the result. To quarrel She Was Not Beautiful. Fly In the Ointment And yet my neighbor seems to feel said "I made an extra ten That I'd do anything but steal. At the Whistler exhibition in LonSome Customs of Spain. Lets go to 1 spoke to him about his heedon, said a tourist, I had a chate Mr. Nippy to his wife. Writing of Spanish customs, Israel with Joseph Pennell, the well known a Hungarian restaurant l'll never speak to him again. wild To one call another artist. Pennell had spent his boyhood night for dinner. He aeemed to get ao very Zangwill says: He claimed my dog had bit hts child. by our surnames in Spain would fie In Germantown with me, and so we You'd better let me have It to take I dont care who or what he bites wanting in friendly courtesy; indeed, talked of our old Germantown friends. to Mrs. Jinksons missionary sale, I know I stand within mV rights. for the most part, we are Ignorant of my neighbors say We talked of a boy who had become replied Mrs. Nippy. "I havent more No matter what them. A very grave and reverend I will not send that dog away ! an artist and married a rich wornsu. than a dollar to spend there, otherCleveland Plain Dealer. surbe his addressed by might Pennell said this chap was not wise, and Mrs. Jlnkson has sent me a name and his surname alone but happy. He said he would special Invitation. Filipino Is Complimentary. altogether even he were better adressed by bis "Thats the way It goes, said Mr. Lieut. Crispulo Patajo, who comtell me a story about him that would Christian name, preceded by Don. reveal subtly, in a Henry James man- Nippy, bitterly. The minute we get manded the Filipino scouts on their Senor Don , Is reserved for letters, a little ahead, along come our dear visit to this country, said. Just before ner, the cause of his unhappiness. and then the honor costs you S the mans friends with their hands out. Con"A stranger visited he went on board the transport Thomnot That the Portuguese are studio one day, and paused, full of found this thing of giving to the as with his men, at San Francisco, to be confounded with the Spaniards heathen when we need the money ourthat they had been treated royally wonder, before a is most lucidly learned from their of a woman in a white Greek selves." Newark News. in America. Asked whether he did picture methods of address, for, so far from dress. not feel homesick for the Philippines, addressing a young lady as Juanita or Is this, said the stranger. In a Spoke From Experience. he replied: No, I rather feel home-- ' Isabella, I should have to say her ex- tone of amazement, your ideal. If I had a wife, said the very sick for the United States. Here, In our paiacio, the cellency. No, the artist answered; Its my young man, I certainly wouldnt want very waiter has been beard to give wife. her to be at some womans club disCotton Mill at Shanghai. the order: Fried eggs for Isabella. has a new cotton mill cussing public affairs till midnight. Shanghai And Isabella is a very stylish Neither would you want her to owned by a native Chinese company, Behind the Scenes. demoiselle. Clara Have you heard about Grace discuss private affairs at home after with a mandarin as president The Dresser? She has received quite a midnight, rejoined the man with the mill has 40,000 spindles, and the cotThe man who has only lowers lu absent hair, but Its pickles to fudge ton used is of Chinese growth. The large legacy. the garden" of his life does not neefl ChiHer mother was a she would do it just the same. Maude Yes. help numbers 2,000, all women and to build a wall about It. cago News. ballet dancer. children. weak-wille- g Cem-mon- y. ever-prese- kf-e- straw-colore- se-n- cen-timo- s. life-siz- |