OCR Text |
Show ? K EARNING LIVING. A ARRY came In with a hand bag and we were rather t lee surprised him. Harrjr '.,'M"v-.,j Is our and lives nehe, Jie" '(rthmVfjf1 Wf lii" T ntllea away. He , did not aay particuanything larly almul coming, until after one and another of the family had left the rora, and he and I were alone by the health. Then he aald: "Aunt Mary, I've left home" "Left homer" 1 refloated after 'him. a young boy like you left home? Why. what do you mean?" Father and I had aonie word and I quit ' A amlle came partly over my face, only to settle Into a serious look as I aat thinking what a strange situation It would be tf any boy of mine ever had "words and "quit." Our home Ilfs all cam so beautifully before me; there were never words, nobody wanted to go awsy; we only wsnted our little'earth-l- y paradise to last forever and ever. But I muat try to find out what was the matter with that home and that boy. "Harry, what du you mean to do?" I asked. ,"Oh, I am going to take care of my-ehere In the city. I can do It eaatly," he answered me. Probably you could do It some way, tf you had to, but not eaaily , I answered. You know your home Is a beautiful one; you are an only niytiid always used to the best of clothing. You are used to an abundant Mvlng, and you will mlsayour fathers farm, which Is like arrest plantation. You need not yihry about me; 1 can take care of myaef. 1 talked oir'with Harry, and told him kf a boyWhom I knew about hts age, and wtich more capable, who received three dollars a week, and had to be at la place at I in the moimlng I told him how low wages are In the city for boya, especially In hard times, when men are glad to take boys' work. Harry answered that "no one need think he would work for three dollars a week." I guess I won't. I might taka slg. -'- te- lf aqd-koleao- but no less. Harry went to bed, and I hastened to writ to his mother that Harry was safe under our roof, for I could scarcely picture that home from which the only son had run away. To my great surprise, In a day or two all hla clothing was sent by hla mother, hla heavy flannels and winter overcoat and all. Harry looked In vain for work. At last, through a friends of ours, Harry had the chance to go In a store for three dollars a week, and he felt obliged to take the place. Then 1 made up my mind that Harry had better aea what II meant to take fare of oneself. 1 said; Now Harry, 7u have made a good you are In business, and we can- not take boarders You will have to find a boarding place. Harry answered: visit; Aunt Mary, 1 cannot pay board until 1 earn mors." Yts, you must; you have Voluntarily left home to take care of yourself, which means boariP yourself and take every care." Day after day he stayed on until again I had .to tell him; then he found hoarding house, where he was to pay three dollars a week and room with a plumber boy, After a few days there he came up at evening with a sad story. Ths board was poor, there was no butter for dinner, and a great many things were lacking 'which had been Indispensable to Harry. A good deal of mall came to my house -- ing to give myself a day in the country with her. fixing the tltn- -. To my surprise. William met me himself; generally he sent a man to meet any of us. I had often heard him say that Harry was g. f(,r nothing, more trouble than he was worth, etc llut I saw that he was mellowed, ami that he thought he could talka little to me going along and my sister would not hear him. Wil- STABBED ,hTt'hntiirstft'Tutt;g-aa-k--vAP'JbAb- KtiwrkabUi (w of On Clyde Mom, a Ian frn 140 Alur-Maml-Ktruirry Aflrr Attfiujil at fcul- - three MORMON SOCIAL CONDITIONS. of Towa Life Wended with nf Rural F.iletenee. Social changes of a marked character will be wrought by the occupation of the arid region. In this matter also Advantage theme Brig- ham Young sought to found his prosperity not only on Industrial ethics, but also upon the happiness of the people. He would not tolerate Idleness, and the walls of cobblestones still standing in the older portions of Balt Lake City were Invented that the church might pay for the labor of men who would otherwise have been temporarily supported by charity. As a means of furnishing entertainment various diversions were planned, including the Saturday bight 4$Jice, led by the blahops of the wards. The leader'swlsdom Is almost aa clearly exhibited In hla social scheme as Is his plan of Industry. The central A vilIdea In It was the lage alte, generally a half mile square, la selected In the midst of a tract of or .000 acres to be colonized. In Utah there are many small valteya between the towering mountains and tho village site is generally located near the center of t and near the river from which the water la diverted Into canala on each aide at a sufficient elevation to command the Irrigable lands. The half a square mile Is then laid out Into blocks of four acres, with broad avenues between, and the blocks are divided Into lots of an acre each. On these lots the farmers have their homes. Here also are their commodious barns. Here they have their poultry and swine,-whi- le considerable" space Is o a ma rket garden. The far- mer then has hla farm on the outlying lands, which are divided into lots ranging from two up to twenty acres. From the public park In ths center to the farthest outlying farm la only two and a half miles. Moat farmers traverse a much shorter distance to reach the farm from their homes On the other hand, the women and children enjoy the Important advantage of having near nelghbora, while the church, school-hous- e, atoies, and poatofflce are near at hand. Vnder this system the ada vantages f town Jlfe are blended-tvery conatderable decree with the charms of rural exlatence. It Is a system full of delightful possibilities. The Mormons have realised Its" substantial advantages In neighborhood association; but their model will lie much Improved upon by many colonies of more recent establishment. Farm life under the old conditions has Involved isolation. The hunger for human sympathy and company ha driven thousand from the country to cities already overcrowded. This factor Is responsible for many a social tragedy, aa well aa for the problems which have arisen In congested city populations The Century. farm-villag- e. the-vall- ey o jnKii AUNT MART, for Harry rVE LEFT HOME. and I found that he was answering advertisements for easy Jobs, He told a nice pair of trou- jl. - city mall sers and Invested the money in some of the things that you must give a dollar or so security, hut he never heard any farther from hla dollars. Hla father often had business In the L -- i A Mother laguence. The boys first idea of a woman la his mother, and unieaa she falls to win his love and respect he has a chivalrous devotion to her which will cover hla whole life. If mothers would give their children definite religious Instructions by word and example and rule them wisely, lovingly, methodically and firmly In habits of obedience, and purity and truth, boys would less often develop Into uncontrolled, lawless, unehtvalrous men and aelfl.h husbands, and girls would not grow Into frivolous, fast women. Homes vain, would be happier, the world would be raised, reformed, ennobled. city, and met Harry face to face se oral times, but only passed with some light .salutation, as If he had seen him every hour In the day. 1 knew that Harry had grown up a headstrong boy, that money had really been wasted on him. He would not go to the home school. He had been sent to one place and another, but had made little Improvement. On the other hand, 1 knew that the home had not been much of a home for a restless boy. Everything must be In spick-spa- n order Inside that house. There must not be kite timber nor scrap book material nor anything to Won One litter the house. There wa no games An .Intelligent foreigner Is said to and no cne to play gathes with him aa he grew a larger boy. If he coutJ steal have expressed himself after the follow-tn- g fashion In regard to the English out ia the kitchen or stable with the When I discovered that if farm men of an evening and have a language; game of cards he considered himself I was quicklyif I was fast, If 1 stood firm fortunate. His mother had always tried I wa fast, I spent too freely I waa to screen him from his father, and his fast, and that not to eat was to fast, I father was looking up from his figuring was discouraged; but wh-- n I came or newspaper and telling him to stop cross the sentence. The first one won -one guinea prise, I was tempted to give talking pr ge to bed, I made tip my mind to take a day In up trying to tarn the English lanthe country myself, and see what my guage. brother-in-lathought about Harry. have Columbia College a Million. Of course. I should not ask him, for If At the monthly meeting of the trua-te- e 1 did he would not answer me. of Columbia college h(ld at New My sister used to explain to me that York, on Monday. It was (announced he was a reserved sort .of a man who that Prealdenl Seth Low (had given never wanted to be middled with. He tl.000.0o0 to build a new library. This ey enough, ao she used to tell gift waa supplemented by one from him What the could not get along with-cu- t. William C. Schermerhorn. of and really, aha had clothing enough the board of trustees, $3,000chairman to build no In use she choice had the of only the Natural Science building. Mr. Low money: there waa no money that waa said that he wished the llbrary building own. her to be a memorial of hit father, the Ut 1 bad written my alsler that I waa go 1 Ablel Abbott Low; self-contr- ol g. at ' -- r, X, w -- had-mbn- -- MEN KE-reiv- e knife wounds the hei.rt thj demands public that tlyey k e e gracefully oveiafid die.1 This ' "h, la luminous. fciprtD4-- t H-MIi- II lit .'t u s t o to, anddlie exceptions few and between. There Is one in this city, however-Anhis case has already celebrated in local medical circles, says San Francisco Chronicle, I than a Clyde Hess, sefor. ! year ago In an alcholie freak he Jabbed the point of a dagger Into his heart, and yet he lives to act in as good if not better health than ever. The Pacific Medical Journal In Us current Issue devotes two pages to a review of the case and the course of treatment followed by Dr. Tenison leane, the attending surgeon. Hess was in the Auditorium saloon on Powell street about 3 o'clock on the afternoon of June 4 last, lie had been drinking quite heavily during the day, and waa much the worse for War. Accompanying him were n theatrical people. several They all lined up to the bar, ordered drinks, and were talking on the first subject at hand when suddenly, without a word of warning, Hess drew a dagger from his pocket and plunged It into his breast. So quickly waa It done that his companions thought he waa going through a mock tragedy for their amusement, aa he staggered across the floor and against the wall. A moment later the bloody dagger fell from his grasp, the warm blood spouted after it, and the young actor sank limply to the floor, stabbed to the heart. When laid on the operating table at the receiving hospital It waa discovered that the weapon had penetrated to a depth of four and a half inches Into the chest. The point of entrance was one Inch to the left of thd sternum and over the fourth rib. The point of the knife had slipped over the bone and passed through the fourth intercostal space and through the wall of the left ventricle of the heart. The wound was immediately pronounced fatal. An antiseptic dressing was applied and the patient put to bed. An Ice bag waa placed over the dresuag, and ergot and convallaria majnlls were administered. The heart beat was 150 per minute and very Irregular, there being a distinct murmur at the second heart sound. Hesa recovered consciousness the next day, but was very weak from loss of blood and the condition of his heart Respiration was seriously Interfered with. .Dr. Deane removed eighteen ounces "of blood, a llttlo more than a pint, by using an aspirator. After this the heart beat Improved, although there was marked mitral regurgitation. The patient was then given small doses of convallaria majalls every three hours The third day there was a marked Improvement tiL the condition oLTieua, Another pint of bloon was drawn off apd the temperature was reduced to 89.5. Five days later he was removed to his home, and the very next day had two fainting Bpells. Dr. Deane found, at this time, that from the nature of the original wound fluid and air could be expelled, but none could enter. The point where the knife had entered was at least half an Inch higher than where It had penetrated the Intercostal space, the passage forming a valve which allowed the outward passage but remained closed to the outside alr. From this fact alone the case was a remarkable ene, not to speak of the manner in which the heart stood the reugh manipulation necessary to the treatment followed. , With a contrivance composed of a double catheter, an Inspirator, and a douche bag, the surgeon was able to siphon off the accumulation nnd wash out the cavity with boraclc acid in hot water. The curved Bllver catheter was put through the wound and passed around the heart. From June' 12 to July 6 the douches were kept up regularly, and on July 15 the patient felt quite well. The wound troubled him no longer and nothing remained but the valvular trouble, Hess was then removed to Fruitvale to re?t until the original wound healed up, Dr. Deane not seeing him again until Aug. 1. He called at the house where his patient was stopping, and founl him at work in the garden. The doctor found that heart trouble still existed, and all the idiopathic symptoms of mitral regurgitation were quite He Insisted apparent. that Hess should rest and continue the doses of convallaria majalls. Dr. Deane did not see him again until, a month had passed. Whon, after a careful exannnation, fio could discern not the least heart murmur. During the thirty days preceding the heart had returned to its normal condition. Hess state! that he had been 111 for three dajs during toe middle oMhe month of August, when he had had great pain in his heart and A rapid. Irregular pulse. Since that time Qly de Hess has been A well man, despite the fact that th knife of Bandit Sontag had punched a hole In his heart; despite the further fact that the silver catheter of the eur-01- 1 and the finger of that gentleman had pushed the heart out or post-- I Mon time and time again. A peculiar j .eellng, Hess told his doctor, came over . tn foreign bodle touched the I I heart, rather" tiUmblhg le.. Last week he played leading Ju- - lOIt are S' far be-ro- well-know- -- ing than-anyth- A HOUSE'"FOR ARCHITECTURE NOW THE RACE. Mtalnani In , From the CJjFtfgo Record. BlshooFtjtter Is credited with telling the sjofy which, more aptly than the thjadsands of orltief stortea oa the same ubject. .illustrates the abject misery and utter irresponsibility of seasickness. We hardly know why It Is, but It capuot he defiled that any yarn In. solving the horrors of mal de mer is seized upon with avidity by the public generally, and with particular gusto by those Individuals who have themselves suffered the Indescribable wretchedness of tbst grevious malady. "I was coming from Liverpool upon one of the famous liners," says Bishop Potter, "and, although the sky was clear and the weather warm, a somewhat tempestuous sea had occasioned more than the usual amount of seasickAs I ness among the passengers. paced the deck one afternoon I noticed a lady reclining upon one of the benches, and the unearthly pallor of her face srrdhe hopeless languidity of her manner indicated that she had reached that state of collapse which marks the limit of seasickness. blurred Hrrilf to Death. Nina Smith, the pretty daughter of James Smith, of Wolcott, near Rochester, N. Y., died last week of starvation. Miss Smith's death was the result of her own deliberate determination not to taste food. This strange resolve wag made by the young woman thirty days ago. At that time ahe conceived-an idea that the food provided her by her father and mother con: tallied poison and she refused alL nourishment, notwithstanding that the most tempting dishes were placed before her. Hypodermic injections were administered with the result that life waa prolonged d few days. Nina finally died in most Intense agony. Her parents ran assign no cause for their daughter's evident insanity. Coctld Make One to Order. This Is a mighty fine place, I dont think," contemptuously observed the tattered vagrant. The benches taain't been painted fur nine years, the trees need trimmin', and the grass1 is dyln' fur want of being' looked after. You haint got no bump of order." Ill raise one on you mighty quick If you don't move on, answered the park policeman, unllmberlng his club. ODDITIES. The British Museum possesses a collection of old Greek advertisements printed on leaden plates, which show that the practice is very ancient. Germany ts far ahead of other countries In the number of telephones. In the whole of Franc there are not so many telephones as there are In Berlin alone. Fortunate was the severe tumble of Engineer William Ibp, of Stony Creek. The fall Rtralghtcned up Hoop's hip. which had been out of Joint, several years. Women nowadays are generally lodged to lie un Inch or two taller ana two or three irrhes greater tn chest development. UiatL their grandmother IS line Ueea llewand May Ha of e Three htorjr Expense Hfsr hwl That the W 3,000. CtfctJNlAL Tb TT. BISHOP . .. HEX "Ild you ever tell him so"" I asked wouldnt humor him or "Merey, no; spoil him in that way "William, t have heard you say he was good for nothing, but I do not suppose you have tohl him that, have you?" yes; hi mother ha humored him to death and sjsdled him " Then a if he were afraid of betraying some weakness In wishing him baik. he added: "1 know It wuuld please Ids mother to have him come back and stop the neighbors' talk, hut 1 shan't ask him. I ventured more than 1 thought I would, and told William that a boy girl needed a home, hut that alL-tnbook and all the rulea In thqwold would not make It If the tftfe Idea of home was not In the hearts of the two who stand guardlankofthe home; that a home waa no place for aelflahavas. I went backHY my own hearthstone. A few evenings after Hart y came again and aald . "I gM going to leave my place and try loAo better in some other city," I did pot tell him I had been to hla fathers, but t said. "If I were you, I would go home tomorrow morning on the early train." No. I will never go unless father I would go If he did. aska me Harry muat have changed his mind over night, for as soon as the mall could bring me word a letter came from the grandmother of the family, eaylng that Harry wa at home and helping about as If he had never been away, and the only comment was that she guessed "that Harry was a glad to get home as his father was to have him come:" exeilence covery. Am e bfm just when h I getting of use, and now, when I feel my own health giving way. why. e la worth ten dollars a week to me Instead of Mormon venlle roles, and is now preparing to go on the road with a company. He has passed the stage where he cares to plunge any more daggers into himself, and has no pleasant recollection of the last attempt save his remarkable ry fun , te-b- the IN THE HEART, BUT DID NOT DIE." lit liam began ' LIVED ANI) YET HE Plane Supplied Srmuie Htrurture. (Copyright 1895 ) ARK wigwams and log cabins were tbs almost universal dwellings of the Bret settlers of the American Colonies, Lut Ts wealth and social dig arty- better habitations began to appear. For ths most part, these better dwellings were Imitations of styles prevailing In the various "Father-lands- " of the colonists. Penn planned rows of small English cottages for tho Philadelphia settlers, but the thrifty Germans of the Interior of Pennsylvania were long content with houses of hewed logs and barcBeof vast capacity. The Swedes of N6w Jersey built houses with palisade sidings of split timber set upright. The Dutch of New York and the Hudson River region closely 1ml- 11 11 THE RELIGION OF JAPAN. 11 cwNse $0: FRONT VIEW, tated the dwellings of their ancestors. But the fineet Colonial houses, such as were built by the governors and divines of New England, the landed gentry of New York and the great proprietors of the South, were copied from English country houses or halls. An example of this style, modified to meet the requirements of modern life. Illustrates this article. This style Is essentially a costly one. The structure must be of ample size to give It dignity and a good deal of carving and other hand work Is necessary. Pleasing and appropriate colors for the exterior are almost as essential as graceful proportions to Insure an attractive appearance. It Is considered admissible that one of the JsJgns of this series should study the wants of the . were. The remedial effects of laughter are really wonderful. - Cases have been known where a hearty laugh has banished disease and preserved life by a sudden effort of nature. Vnder the Belgian law unmarried men over twenty-fiv- e have one vote, married men and widower with families have two votes, and priests and other persons of position and education have three votes. in a cabin ten feet long and six feet wtdeJ3eorge Braun and hla wife, with eight children, live near Colebrookdale, Pa. The entire family, except the baby, smoke regularly several times a day. FIRST FLOOR. , rich man; that he Is rich is not always hie fault but his misfortune. Inheritance, accident, or unwearied, toll to keep others employed may be to blame. As he Btaggers through life, fired at by politicians, berated by the press and derided by the multitude, accompanied PERSONS AND THINCS, by only his poor relations, who would fain share his burden, about the least A Jacksonville (Fla.) child was thrown we can do for him Is to show him how Into fits on hearing a piano played, and he can provide himself an agreeable died therefrom. Gen. Lew Wallace has delivered 120 resting place. The following will ba lectures In the last season, nnd Is $12,000 found a brief description of this Rethe richer thereby. sign: Size of structure: Width, front, 47 ft; Mrs. ltanlel Webster's slster-ln-laExeklel Webster, Is living In Concord, depth of main part 29 ft. 6 in.; Depth N. H. She Is M years old. over all, 53 ft; size of kitchen extenWithin a year New Jersey has lost by sion, 23 ft. 6 ln.x20 ft. Height of death four nimely,' Bedle, 7 ft.;flrst story, llft.;sec0nd Abbett. Price, and Green. story 9 fL; attic 8 ft. Materials for cx- A young woman named Susan B. Anthony. won a prize as the most beautiful girl tn a contest at Topeka. Kan. Mr. Stead's first novel will appear In the course of the current year and will be called A Modern Maid In Modern Babylon." Norwegian women are raising money to buy torpedoes for use,against Sweden In case Christiania Is attacked by the latter. Miss Winnie Davis, the daughter of love story, to be called "The Veiled Doctor." Mr. W. T. Stead. It is reported la London newspaper circles, has acquired a proprietary Interest in the Echo, and will become Its editor. ' John Thorn, late president of the t'tlca and Black River railroad, a millionaire, left among other'bequests $2,000 each to eight former conductors of that line. At a recent wedding In Memphis, Tenn., the groom was a barefoot negro. The officiating Justice advised him to buy! shoes with the marriage fee, which svaa remitted. Ml Eugene de Robespierre, a' grandnephew of the famous revolutionist, was summoned before a Paris tribunal a few days ago, charged with selling coal under weight, De Robespierre being a coal merchant.. He waa acquitted. Andreas Haftaa, the last veteran of the Greek war of liberty of 182L died tn Athens lately at the age of 118. One of the streets In Athens is named after him, and hla funeral was a public one. He had often expressed the wish to live till im. In order to be able.lo aay that he had seen three centuries. the MUslonarjr Amoog Japaneee Hoe lauaual Ideaa. An American missionary to Japan, who has spent many years In trying to Christianize the Japanese, Is the Rev. L. H. De Forest, who recently spoke In Brooklyn on the subject. His opinions are of peculiar Interest as coming from a missionary, and a few of them are contained In the ensuing sentences: "It is time to quit calling the Japanese heathen. We should cease to sing about them as the heathen who bow down to worship Images of wood and stone. This thing of describing everybody excepting ourselves as idolaters, in the interest of Christianity, ought to stop. We must change our ways of thinking and talking about the Japanese. While I am convinced that Christianity Is the true faith, I believe that there Is some truth and revelation in the Japanese religion. The church, while carrying on missionary work in Japan, must be as polite towards the Japanese religion as ts our government toward the government of Japan. Our hilsslonary maps are often made In black and whita patches, to show how white we are and how black are all the people wo call heathen. We whitewash ourselves, and make our own country white, Just as though vice and crime were not rampant here. Our forefathers divided the religions of the world into two classes, calling our religion the true one, and the others false; but It Is now recognized that there is some revealed truth In all religions. The Japanese have glimpses of the Supreme Being, and we can lead them onward to a better view. The foregoing sentences, which were uttered by the Rev. De Forest in Brooklyn, are detached from their elaborate context, but are In perfect conformity with It. They give evidence that at least one mlsisonary of the Congregational church has enlarged his religious Ideas during the twenty years of bis residence among The Japanese.. A w the late Jefferson Davis, is writing an pense of J150 a room. Accomodations; The main rooms, their sizes, clo3ets. etc., are shown by the floor plans given herewith. Besides these there are three bedrooms with a storage room in the attic, a cellar under Jha mholo of the main bouse and a laundry and servants water closet under the kitchen. The bathroom H provided with a tub, water closet and a wash bowl. The hails are large and well lighted, commanding ail the rooms YEirofifeKblit'' Vhe hotiie . dtUtefc e 8 Isolated and has ample storage and pantry room. Special features; Regarded as a pure example of the best Colonial style, the exterior characteristics of which are a large-sqtia- re structure, with a portico having fluted columns with earved- - caps, a luiivhjere Qn.lJ'O roof, orcutar head windows and delicate details of classic origin. The cost; In the vicinity of New York, well built, without extravagance in detail. $7,000. In many sections of the country the cost should be much less. A .design In this style much smaller than the example Illustrated, would not look well, but enlarging the design enhances its appearance. In conclusion, It may be said that our ancestors of the Colonial period gave architecture a3 they gave statecraft aud the general affairs of life, a wise direction that was in every way admirable. It is fitting Indeed that we should keep them in grateful remembrance. I?1 Fe 4 O U C'tirlatlaa Napoleon' l'e of Etiquette. The uses of rigid etiquette were well understood by Bonaparte. He appreciated the dazzling power of economy, the fascination of condescension, and the mastery of women in the conduct of affairs. All such influences he lavished with a profusion which could have been conceived only by an Oriental imagination. As if to overpower the senses by an impressive contrast, and symbolize the triumph of that dominant third estate of which he claimed to be the champion against arlstoi rats, princes, kings, emperors, the simplicity of the revolution was personified and emphasized by his own form. His ostentatious frugality, his disdain for dress, his contempt for personal wealth and its outward signs. Were all heightened by the settings which Inclosed them, as a frame of brilliants often heightens the character in the portrait of a homely face. Prof. Sloane s Life of Napoleon. WORDS OF THE WISE. Occupation Is the scythe of time. Napoleon I. Our greatest glory la not In never falling but In rising every time we fail. Pascal. There la only one thing we are willing to have others share with us. It Is our opinion. MlgneL Most oT our misfortune are more supportable than the comments of our friends upon them. A. Dumas. To live above our station shows a proud heart and to live under it discovers a narrow soul.-f-H- . Malot, There are many wdmen who' allow themselves to be conquered there are a few who allow themselves to be tamed. Eugene Chav tte; Think wrongly. If you please, but In all cases think for yourself. La Bru-vere. man has a eerlous rival In man a woman likes to it and dream about. Paul Bourget. If thou canet not make thyself loyed much, make thyself slightly feared. Adolphe dHondetot. Great mistakes are often made like great cables, from a multitude of strands. V. Hugo. Love In France. Is a Comedy; in England, a tragedy; 1ft TTatyrBR opera an l In Germany, a melodrama. Lady Every .SECOND FLOOR, terior walls; Foundation stone; first and second stories, clapboards; gables of dormers and friezes of windows and portico are decorated with ornamental work. Roof shingles. Interior Uniats The lower hall is finished with and has an oak floor an (.staircase. The rooms throughout- - are trimmed with soft woods; finished in natural colors or painted white. An open timber celling in the hall, at a cost of about $500, would Improve appearance, as would also finishing oneormore of the main rooms in white enamel and gold at an ex th.-Ide- Eles-slngto- The road o ambition Is too narrow for friendship, tod crooked for love, too rugged for honesty and too dark for science. J. J. Rousseau. They who have never known prosperity can hardly be said to be unhappy; It Is from the remembrance of Joys" we have lost that the arrows of sfRio tlon are pointed. Emile Zola. , f -f 1 |