Show i to dream of for years to come an yet It was a very heavy heart that hi carried with him Into the little motioi picture theater where be sought i Causes Many Heart Throbs and few moments of relaxation later’ on ir the evening He and Madge had oftei Mis Before Disappointments gone there in the days when he be lleved In her and It was with the hope take is Corrected of seeing her at a distance and If pos Bible discovering the identity of the hated Ted that he went By HELEN DISNAY Wearily he made his way to the corthe office on his As Jack crossed ner seat in the box where they had way to his desk his eyes dwelt ten The house was lighted as always sat derly on Madge's nimble fingers they traced what he felt sure was a up and he was conspicuous as he sat but he did not pay any attenthere note to him to surprise Thinking her he drew nearer and suddenly the tion to the audience after a sweeping told him that Madge large writing on the sheet seemed to glance over It had rise up and assail his eyes With hurt was not thereWithout Interest he gazed at horror he read: Indian thrilling story not caring In “DeareBt Ted: — "Of course I love you Why doubt the least If every white settler on the film was wiped out by the bloodthirsty me? As long as I live I'm yours" lie waited to read no further but savages What was the misery of fled to the stockroom where hidden people long ago gone If Indeed they to his deprived of his behind the bales and boxes he fought ever existed out his trouble and decided upon a faith In his love? Listlessly he followed the story of course of action next film There was the usual "My little Madge whom I trusted the Her quarrel between two lovers although with my whole soul” he groaned he reflected bitterly that neither had falseness seemed Impossible Who this fellow Ted was he did not his cause Suddenly he straightened know It was enough that the girl up The lover received a letter from he loved and who had promised to the girl with whom he had quarreled was and it photographed on the film marry him was writing such a letter to another man At last he clenched his hands and setting his teeth went Into the private office of the manager Six weeks ago he had been offered a position on the road one that would pay him a much better salary and had refused not wanting to leave Madge Now he was too Withglad to go and Immediately in two hours of hlB reading the beginning of that fateful note ho was on the train to take up the work of one of the commercial travelers who had suddenly been taken sick to Jack did not stop to say Madge nor did he write heritor he felt that the less said the better I If hurt this get away "Perhaps will stop” he told himself but although he kept busy and in his labors "Dearest Ted:— "Of course I love you me? As long as I live "I wrote the ecenarlo of the photoshe said with proper pride audience forgot the sitting there together again in the happiness of their- love anti he bent over end whispered: "We’ll be married tomorrow so you can go Out on the road with me” “Of course Madge nodded happily for as long as live I’m yours" she murmured and this time the words carried a Joyous message to him (Copyright by W G Chapman) play" They BRIAR Average Work PIPES ARE MADE Smoker Not Aware of Involved In Manufacture of His Pet the Briar root pipes have been in continuous use in this country for years but the general public even the pipe smokers have little idea of how they are made or of the time and attention necessary in their manufacture Hurt Horror Ho Bead turned night into day sending back so much business that the firm believed they had secured the model salesman he could not forget Madge or her thousand and one appealing It was all the harder because ways she kept on writing to him in the same clear flowing hand that had penned the fateful confession of her love for another begging him to let her know the reason for his continued silence Tom his chum wrote him that Madge looked “She’B awfuly close” Tom went on "Won’t give us a squint at your letters though I know Bhe gets one per To write her a love If not oftener song that often with all the business you’re sending In you can’t be hitting the feathers at all Write her to be less close for we're all agog to know how you are wresting orders from the populace as you are But honest boy Madge Is looking badly I think she’s crying all nigh' long Better blow In and try a little consolation or some-- ( ne else may I’d like to but I’m true blue where my friends are concerned and so I won’t ring in any of the comfort dope until I’m sure you’re going to stay away forever and a day but in case you do — well I’ll not let the grass grow under” my feet Madge is a dear girl" Jack groaned as he read the friendand knew that in between the lines was a hint that all was not ly words well alThings looked black to him though he had made such a success In a business way that the office sent for him to come home and make a contract with the firm and although he would have rather remained away forever Jack obeyed and once more found himself in the same city with Madge Being a salesman now he managed to have his interview with the manager without going out among his old associates and so avoided Madge although a sight of her sunny hair through the open doorway turned him As soon as matters sick at heart alwere settled he made his escape though he knew that on the morrow would have to meet the others he Madge among them and receive their congratulations His business outlook was extremely bright much better than he had dared The briar which furnlsheB the root from which the pipes are made Is the shrub called the white heath or heather and is found chlefiy In the south of Italy on the island of Corsica and in The shrub often grows to a Algeria large size although only the roots are used In the industry After the roots have been cleaned of the earth which clings to them they are sawed Into blocks of various aldimensions placed in vats and lowed to simmer for twelve hours which brings out the rich brown color for which the finest pipes are prized Following this boiling process the blocks are steam dried for two weeks and then are sent to the factory where they are converted Into pipes The blocks are sorted according to size by experts are placed on shelves and kept at an even temperature for ten days when they are dried and then are sent to the machines where the actual manufacture begins After the blocks have been trimmed to the proper size the upper part of the bowl Is turned then the lower part and then they are sandand stem The finishing of the bowls papered then takes place Not Beggar Lad Was Merchant An American lady in Rome bought from a little match some matches vender They were wax matches In little decorated boxes She handed the piece and expected boy a to have two soldi in chango but the little fellow shrugged his shoulders and held the change tightly In his hand with a begging expression on his face signifying that he wished to have It given to him whereupon a second American lady who was accompanying the first straightened herself looked Intently at the boy and said: "Merchante non mendlcante!’ (“You are a merchant not a beggar’’) Ttat was an appeal to the boy’s and it so Inspired him that he actually laughed and pressed the change up6n his customer — The Christian Herald French Artist’s Criticism Count Charles de Chebannes the French portrait painter who Is now in this country says that the most beautiful American women are in even the maids of that Philadelphia city he says causldg him to stop and exclaim about their beauty Washington women use too much powder and paint he says and do It so In artistically painting the- same vay i the evening as they did in the men ing with horrible results PIES STATION Prison Heads Think Should Work for THAT ALL WILL LIKE of Had the Sanction Generations of Presiding Geniuses of the Kitchen Recipes Have Convicts Cherry Pie— Line the pleplate with atoned good cruet fill half full with of ripened cherries put a teaspoon flour with a cup of sugar and sift Some of Subjects 8Hould B Trained sprinkle this over cherries dot over a AdOthers Used for Gain It Idea tew bits of butter Now fill the crust vanced In Reporte Given at full to the top with more cherries Jailers’ Congress Cover with upper crust and bake Currant Pie — One cup of mashed Baltimore— The contract system ol currants one of sugar two tablespoons prison labor was condemned in the of water one ot flour beaten with the report of the committee on prison la- yolks of two eggs Fill crust bake bor presented at Jhe congress of the FroBt the top with the beaten whites American Prison association in annual of the two eggs and two tablespoons how- of powdered sugar session here The committee Brown lightly In ever recommended the system when oven no other means of (employment could Cream Pie — Pour a pint of cream be provided believing it preferable to over one aud a half cups of sugar Let idleness it stand until the whites of three eggs the have been beaten to a stiff froth Add The employment of prisoners report maintained should be directed to this the cream and sugar and beat entirely by the state and the products Up well grate a little nutmeg over the of this labor should be disposed of by mixture and bake without an upper cruet the state A heaping teaspoon of sifted The first consideration of Avery or flour sifted with the sugar will make a liked ganlzatlon the repbrt continued firmer pie Custard Pie— Beat up the yolks ol should be the training of the prisoner Ev- three eggs to a cream and after that financial results Stir and sift ery prison should be so classified that together a tablespoon of flour and a certain group of men should at all three tablespoons of sugar add this on farms to the beaten yolks with a pinch ol times be provided with work roads and other outside work and a salt a teaspoon of vanilla and a little larger portion of each prison should grated nutmeg next the well beaten be employed on the state account sys- whites of the eggs and then a pint ol tem scalded milk (not boiled) which haz Mix this In by degrees The committee believed It possible been cooled for every state Jiavlng a population of and turn all Into a deep pleplate lined or more to em- wjth puff and bake from 25 to 30 mintwo mUllonTnCabltants ploy all Its convict population in the utes manufacture of articles for the use of state and its political divisions FOR THE COOKING UTENSILS James H Leonard euperintendent at of the Ohio state reformatory to Ons Accardlng of Extra Shelves was elected president Mansfield Housewife Has 8olved a the association and Dr D C Peyton Problem for Her Jeffersonville' Ind yours' As on a former occasion Jack Btopped to read no further He recognized the clear flowing hand It was Madge’s penmanship that he knew but he also understood that It was never written to a living person The thought flamed through him that there must be some explanation Realizing how his cruelty must have hurt her he turned to leave when In the seat by his side where she had sat so often was— Madge! Instinctively his hand reached for hers and In the tender pressure given and returned everything was forgotten and forgiven "I saw you here" she whispered “and came here to sit by you" How though did they "Darling! get that letter? I saw you write It" he confessed "though not intentional- HOW union WASHINGTON'S Why doubt ly" With FOR SCEHAWO PI10I0-PIA- Those H H tary State were: Secretary financial secreTrenton N J H H Shlrer Columbus Ohio New H Mills Frederick treasurer York mm One usually has so many pans and cooking utenBils that convenient storing becomes a problem They art placed one Inside of the other and noma mom which are being Is one of the six statues by Saint Gaudens the entrance to the union station In Washington The weigh about 25 tons each and are among the largest ever cut from selected blocks of stone The lnBcrlptlone beneath them were Charles ElloL THIS placed statues single by Dr SLAVES GET RUBBER Pitiful Condition Described of in Native Indians Letter Lured by Promisee of High Wages From Which Into a Servitude la StarvaEscape Only tion London — Revelations concerning FIVE MONTHS SPORT Long Barge Woodhall Lost Arrives at Trinidad Oil OF SEAS Believed Accord-'- Ing to Message New York— After battling for five months on a seemingly shlpless ocean Capt Edwin L Smith of London has arrived at Trinidad with the from Engfoot oil barge Woodhall lish shipyards according to word reSmith dared ceived by friends here to pilot the little barge on her perilous trip which was proposed to save the expense of towing where a dozen other London skippers feared to try 1L It was expected that the trip could be made in forty days but she met adverse weather and was the sport ot the seas In the meantime the boat had been given up as lost According to the report received here the captain found an American stowaway on board who helped to deplete the meager supply of provisions During the last few days the crew had to live on a biscuit and half a cap of fresh water a day as they were unable to sight a ship to aid the methods of rubber gathering In Peru are made in a remarkable letter in the Tlmee from F H Fawcett It throws a searching light on the situation showing clearly the huge profits made by the exploiters and their hideous methods of retaining the natives in their service Here le a summary of how the exploring company which has discovered rubber trees performs Its business on returning to civilization: men of straw "Agents with a knowledge of Quichua were contracted as they still are every year to secure labor They are advanced money They visit Indians on the Altlplanlcle tempt them with the advances of sums unheard of hv the them poor Indian highly color the life and make them drunk profits perhaps anyway finally obtain a paper signed WEARS BRACELET ON ANKLE or alleged to have been signed pledgGaze ing their miserable possession of a Churchgoers by the Hundreds hut a potato patch and a llama Approvingly at Combination of Gold and Hose and Lingerie against a contract to gather so many quintals of rubber (a quintal being 100 St Louts Mo— With rings on her pounds) "The Indian on recovery from his fingers and a solid gold bracelet snugMiss Adeline debauch is forcibly ly clasping her ankle away dragged at which the law winks) Gritman attracted the attention of (proceedings to the rubber estates hundreds of churchgoers as she walk"He has to work under task ed to a drug store recently The zephyrs were sufficient to place masters often and is required to transport his own food the skirts and lingerie In just such a 100 rubber and (weighing pounds) position that the ankle and the bracelet over trails no reader would care to displayed their charms and the combination Irresistible for traverse free from a load" proved Men women and children re even those church bound "Yes” assented Mlga Gritman when bought and sold for personal service Parent! sell daughters the brutal appreciation of life is such that there is no security in the Peruvian forests for the possession of children It Is a mistake he points out to Who Bosses the Workmen suppose that It is only a degenerate "Teddy? Are Paving an Alley In class of Peruvian who Is guilty of Chicago abuses They are perpetuated by foreigners of various nationalities Chicago — "Teddy" la a parrot and “Escape for an employe Is very difficult from many places Impossible” a "boss” of men City workmen are paving the alley Fawcett says "They do however home and In the rear of the btrd’a get away sometimes "In escaping he abandons everything they get neither time to loaf nor opbut life He can stay and probably portunity to fatten their pay envelopes for die knowing be can never be out of by making the job last longer "Polly" Is constantly on the Job debt the men except of course when "For all abuses the owners are reis politics "Polly" talking sponsible whether they realize how 3014 Clifton August T Reichmann their profits are gained or not The the Lake agent on the spot Is not always to avenue letter carrier at owner ot Is the blame His livelihood Is bound up in View the martinet "Teddy’’ and describes the business "He can under the guise of honest hold the bird has on the laborers debird fellows!" the "Come on treatment swindle his Ignorant labor At first the men were mystimands force over Its accounts and production and thus keep It In debt and at per- fied and gazed wonderlngly at "Tedmanent work dy” when they received the command: “Or he can starve It The latter "Go to work now boys!” course Is useful when a man’s pro“Polly” alias "Teddy" hae a good duction does not equal the cost of eye for details too her owner declares his food supply as it cannot In the Reichmann Is off several hours every rainy season1 I have known a force of afternoon and declares he has come 800 Indians' who feeding upon forest home and fonnd his pet conversing and giving orders like this: "What are 'eaves died of pure starvation” ''Paid $579 for Love Powder ’ New York— Because her milkman sweetheart failed to return to her after she had paid $579 for "love pow der” to Jane Grindle Mary Jarrin housemaid had the love powder manufacturer arrested asked about the incident "It did create somewhat of a sensation but cannot sea why can yon? Now In New Ycrk where 1 have lived from time to time nobody ever thought anything of it and I wore a bracelet most of the time in the same way "Yon see 8L Louis Is such s small town that anything novel gains so much publicity for one When I first came to work here I wore many novel ideas I have become quite demure In my tastes recently but I like the bracelet Idea think the bracelet looks "Really on the ankle than on the prettier wrist The gold shows off to better advantage over black silk hose than most any other color but it looks good over pink” PROPOSES Girl AS JOKE J V- - when you want a certain pan it Is generally at the bottom After I bad been frequently annoyed in this way decided upon the plan Illustrated To the underside of each shelf I nailed blocks three inches wide and one inch thick and to them I fastened light ACCEPTED Disappears However and vard 8tudent Is 8orrowful Har- by Lose "Cambridge N J— Jimmy Ryan a Harvard sophomore Is conducting a search for a girl to whom he became engaged the other night and whom be had never teen before Ryan and two others were neophytes at a fraternity Initiation and were Instructed to ask every girl they met to marry One girl— "the handsomest girl them I ever e aw’— according to Ryan attracted the youth's eye In Watertown and on bended knee he begsquare ged her to be his Much to his surprise and to the chagrin of those In the girl led charge of the initiation him asldq and accepted his proffered Then taking two little pendheart ants from her ears she placed them on those of the entranced Jimmy to bind the agreement and disappeared around ' the corner Ryan says he will find her If he has to hire a detective Hens Are on 8trlke Washingto— Eggs will be cheaper as the and more plentiful as soon hens get through molting according to Dr H M Lanen government heq expert strips This made an additional shallow shelf for each deep shelf In the picture "C” Is the block "S” the strips It le better to use strips than a solid board' because the latter would hold this which would be difficult to ’remove from so narrow a space — Exchange Snow Pudding This Is fine easy to make and not expensive: Dissolve two tablespoons of cornstarch In a little water add one water and cook five pint of boiling minutes remove from fire add the beaten whites of two eggs and beat smooth add a little salt sugar until and vanilla Same— Scald pint of milk add three tablespoons of sugar then the beaten yolks of the two eggs and add a little salt few minutes cook a remove from fire add tea’ I know you will spoon of vanilla like this especially if In a hurry molds Individual Into on ' and set put Ice Prune and Date Pis prunes over night and remove To two cups of pruneg add cup dates cut n tiny pieces you doing? Stay at 1L Drop that you the grated rind and Juice of one lemon boob” and terminating chatterlngs three tablespoons sugar and the prune with "That’s the boy" frequently ulce Dredge with flour dot with bits “ Teddy' must be honest” said E J on upper crust and Glackln secretary of the board of local of butter put "The name does not bake Improvements This Is appear on the city pay roll ' 8plnaeh Cakes one time the city gets the best of It” The thinnest possible pancakes are baked and filled with the ready cooked CORN HUSKERS ARE ON JOB spinach They must be rolled and put In layers In a buttered pudding dish In Kantaa Henry and a good quantity of sour cream Rivalry Started Hardlck Leading With 160 They are then poured over them Bushel a Day baked In the oven for 20 minutes and served immediately Kan— Rivalry for Topeka honors among the young Cleaning Collar farmers of Kansas has already this collar becomes When the coat year developed many experts In the soiled It may be cleaned in this man-- ' gentle art of "shucking” best The ner: Dissolve one part salt lx four record thus far was made by Henry parts alcohol Hardlck who of Lyons picked Apply this mixture with a sponge cleaned and cribbed 160 bushels ol and rub well corn In ten hours The next best performance was that of Joe Black of Raw 8llced Cueumbera Alden who had 132 bushels In ten Pare and lay them In ice water one hours to his credit Other good rec hour then slice and season to taste ords reported range from 127 down with vinegar pepper and salt Never to 100 bushels In a ten hour day abut soaking In tea water PARROT WORKS FOR CITY - Soak stones t |