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Show , VARIOUS WAYS OF WORKING. All Men Can Not Follow Same Method in Their Labor. We are not all built alike; what Is one man's pleasure is another mans pain. It is impossible for a power engine. jto do the work of a power engine. ,1 have a cousin who . says his best work is done when he has' to do a days work' in a couple of hours. I think my best work is done when I have a month in which to do a couple of hours work. Practice is absolutely necessary. Some never have been obliged to accomplish a definite amount of work each day. If you are forced Into a narrow' path you are likely to accomplish more definite, results than you are if you stroll on the boulevard. A manager of a jobbing house says he can do four times the work now' than when he commenced dictating. This is due to practice and to limitations in time. He has improved because his work forced him ahead. Earl M. Pratt. one-hors- e ten-hor- Electricity for Vegetables. Dr. Selim Lem Strom, a German scientist, says that by means of electricity it is possible to force fruit and vegetables to twice their ordinary size. Voice From Arkansas. Cleveland, Ark., August 15 (Special). Nearly every newspaper tells of some wonderful cure of some form of Kidney Disease by the Great American Remedy, Dodds Kidney Pills, and this part of Arkansas is not without its share of evidence that no case is too deeply . rooted for rjdds Kidney Pills to cure. Mr. A. E. Carlile, well known and highly respected here, tells of his cure after nearly a quarter of a centurys suffering. Mr. Carlile says: I want to let the public know what I think of Dodds Kidney Pills. I think they are the best remedy for 8ick kidneys ever made. I had Kidney Trouble for 23 years and never found anything that did me so much good as Dodds Kidney Pills. I recommend them to all sufferers. There Is no uncertain sound about Mr. Carliles statement. He knows that Dodds Kidney Pills rescued him from a life of suffering and he wants the public to know it. Dodd's Kidney Pills cure, all Kidney ills from Backache to Brights Disease. , WITH THE COST OF WAR What Might Be Done for the Uplifting " of the" World. ' Give me the money," says a recent that has speculative philosopher, been spent in war and I will purchase every foot of land on the globe. I will clothe every man woman and child In an attire of which kings and queens would be proud. I will build school houses on every hillside ' and In every valley over the whole earth; I will build an academy in every town and endow It, a coIlege7nevery state' and fill it with able professors; I will crown every hill with a place of worship consecrated to the promulgation of peace; I will support in every pulpit an able teacher of righteousness, so that on every Sabbath morning the chime on one hill shall answer to the chime on another around the earth's wide circumference, and the voice of iprayer and the song of praise should ascend like a universal holocaust to heaven. . Clever French Rogues. Among the French coins which are no longer current are, as is . well known, those of a less value than 5 francs, struck prior to 1852, and nearly everybody has had a difficulty in, But now making them circulate. their progress has been made comparatively easy and that by a very simple means. The head of Napoleon III was uncrowned and that rendered them easy to be distinguished. Some Ingenious individuals have undertaken the coronation ceremony by means of an engraving tool, and unless great attention is paid it is very difficult to tell them from the others. JUST ONE DAY Free From the Slugger Brought Out a Fact. During the time I .was a coffee drinker, says an Iowa woman, I was nervous, had spells with my heart, smothering spells, headache, stomach trouble, liver and kidney trouble. I did not know for years what mt.de me have those spells. I would frequently sink away as though my last hour had come. For 27 years I suffered thus ,aud used bottles of medicine enough to set up a drug store capsules and pills and everything I heard of. Spent lots of money but I was sick nearly all the time. Sometimes I was so nervous I could not hold a plate in my hands! and other times I thought I would surely die sitting at the table This went on until about two years ago when one day I did not u'se any coffee and I noticed I was not so nervous and told my husband about 'It. He had been telling me that it might be the coffee but I said 'No, I have been drinking coffee all my life and it cannot be. But after this I thought I would try and do without and drink hot water. I did this for several days, but got tired of the hot water and went to drinking coffee and as soon as 1 began coffee again I was nervous again. This proved that it was the coffee that caused my troubles. We had tried Postum but had not made it right and did not like it, but now 'I decided to give It another trial the .pack80 I read the directions-oage carefully and made it after these directions and it was simply delicious, so we quit coffee for good and the results are wonderful. Before 1 .could not sleep but now I go to bed and sleep sound, am not a bit nervous now, but work hard and can walk miles. Nervous headaches are gone, my heart does not bother me any more like it did and 1 dont have any of the smothering spells and would you believe it? I am getting fat. We drink Postum now and nothing else and even my' husbands headaches have disappeared; we both sleep sound and healthy now and thats a Name given by Postum blessing. Co., Ban ' ""'ek, Mich. Look for - book, The Road to - .Wellville In each pkg. to fill his pipe. As the Virginia calmed and soothed him, the sweetness of his nature was at once in the ascendant; and he said, Lysbet, come then, and talk with m about the child. A ROMANCE OF NEW- - YORK $ She turned the keys in her press . slowly, and stood by .it with them in . . . her band. What has been told thee, , By AMELIA E. BAR.R. . And who has spoken? Joris, Author of Friend Olivio.." I. Thou and the Other One," Eto. 1 Tongues evil and envious, I am shre J, Mead sod Company. Copjrigpt, 188, by Dodd, $ of that. Thou art wrong. The young man to me spoke himself. lit said, I love CHAPTER IV. (Continued. such sorrow come to her and me! your daughter. I want to marry her. " There was something so frank and Sir, you are very uncivil; but to be Well, tnen, he did no wrong. And persuasive about the elegant stranger plain with you, I am determined to as for Katrijntje, it is in nature that 1 that Joris could not refuse marry your daughter if can compass a young girl should want a lover. It she. asked for herself and her the matter in any way. It is now, is in nature she should choose the And. having yielded, he then, open ar between us; and so, one she likes nephew. best That is what I yielded with entire truth and confi- sir, your servant. say." dence. Stay. To qie listen. Not one Yes, it is in nature ttie child should I Elder Semple was greatly pleased guilder will give to my daughter, want- - this handsome but stranger; ll' at his friends complaisance. He gave with me thou wilt certainly Bay, He To the devil with your guilders! Joris full credit for his victory over is not fit for thy happiness; he has his national' prejudice, and he did his Dirty money made in dirty traffic not the true faith, he gambles, he a concession "You lie." best the to make .very fights duels, he Is a waster, he lives was he effort Sir, you take an infamous advanpleasant event. In this badly, he will take thee far from thy She tage. You know, that, being Kather- own people and greatly assisted by Mrs. Gordon. thy own home. set herself to charm Van Heemsklrk, ines father, I w ill not challenge you. She drew close to him, and laid her as she had set herself to charm MaChristus!" roared Joris, chalarm across his broad saoulders; and dam Van Heemsklrk on her previous lenge me one hundred times. A fool he took his pipe from his lips, and I so that and well, would to be answer you. Life my turned his face to her. She succeeded visit, Kind and was God gave to me. when cSir. Roger de Coverley Well, then, only wise art thou, my husband; and whatcalled, Joris rose, offered her his hand my God shall from me take it See ever Is thy wish, that Is my wish and to the delight of every' one pres- you these arms and hands? In them too. her. led will as one be with the dance the child of you ent, year. am I, and I know I am right. It was a little triumph for the elder. Ere beyond my reason you move me, AndRight I think that Neil Semple will Be and he strode to the door ana a very great person. On the go! Indeed, he was so Interested in judges ing to the clever way in which the flung It open with a passion that made bench he will sit down yet. bonnie woman flattered Van Heems-kirevery one in the store straighten A good young man h may be, but that he was quite oblivious of towards the two men. he is a very bad lover; that is the sons his face, . White with rage, and with his hand truth. If a little less wise he could the. gathering wrath in and the watchful gloom in Brams upon his sword-hilt- , Capt. Hyde only be! A young girl likes some fooleyes, as the two men stood together, stamped his way through the crowded ish talk. Little fond words, very Then it strong they are. Thou jealously observant of Capt. Hydes store to the dusty street. thyself said Without to any struck him attentions that be bad not asked the them to me. Katherine.. there name of the man to whom Katherine words spoken on the subject, That Is right To Net I will talk was an understood compact between was promised. He swore at himself a little. A man must seek a good wife them to guard the girl from any pri- for the omission. Whether he knew with more heart than he seeks gold. vate conversation with him; and yet him or not, he was determined to Yes, yes; her price above rubies Is. two men with hearts full of suspicion fight him. Now he must see KatheAt the very moment Joris made and jealousy were not a match for one rine before her father had any oppor- this remark, the elder was speaking man with a heart full of love. In a tunity to give any orders regarding for him. Neil was walking about the moment, in the interchange of their him. terrace, and he joined him. In the meantime Joris was suffering hands in a dance, Katherine clasped You are stepping In a vera majestic tightly a little note, and unobserved as only such deep natures can suffer. way, Nell; whats in your thoughts, I hid it behind the rose at her breast. Capt. Hydes proposal and his posi- wonder? The loving girl thought it no wrong tive assertion that Katherine loved I have a speech to make to put it there; she even hoped that him, had fallen upon the fathers sir. My Were on the law, some kind of blessing or sanction heart with the force of a blow, and which has thoughts a certain majesty of its sacred such keepcome the terror of a shock. might through own. After Hydes departure, he shut ing, and she went to sleep whispering Youd better be o a to herself; the door of his office, walked to the speech you ought to thinking make If me he he I am. Me some loves; minand stood there window, Happy wi you care aboot saving yoursel loves; me only he loves; me forever utes, clasping and unclasping his Katherine Van Heemsklrk. You hae he loves! large hands, like a man full of grief a rival, sir. Capt. Hyde asked Van and perplexity. Ere long he rememHeemBkirk for his daughter this afbered his friend Semple. This trou- ternoon, and an earldom in CHAPTER V. prospect ble concerned him also, for Capt. isna a poor bait. Tali a word o adStrife. was in a manner his guest; vice now. You are fond The Beginning of Hyde enough to My dear Dick, I am exceedingly and, if he were Informed of the mar- plead for others, go and plead an hour concerned to f)nd you in, such a tak- riage arranged between Katherine for yoursel. Certie! When I was ing moping about a Dutch school- and Neil Semple, he would doubtless your age, I was aye noted for my perI much better had Pshaw! feel a bound in himself to honor retire. girl! suading way. Your father, sir, never Joris found Semple and in a few left a opinion of you. r for a rival. I know I love her beyond every- short, strong sentences,.. put the case be continued.) (To thing, and that I am likely so to love before him. her all my life. My certie! When girls are auld, NOT TO THEIR LIKING. Upon my word, Dick, love may enough for a lover, they are a match for any gray head. Im thankfu man live an age if marry it. Let tne .make you understand that that I wasna put in charge o any o How Monkeys in India Were Made to I wish to marry it. Scatter. them. I shall hae to speak my mind " Then the church to Niel, and likewise to Col. Gordon; A plague of monkeys recently sorely ''Oh; lfideerh-ir- ! doer stands', open. Go in. I suppose and you canna put off your duty to troubled the officials at a station on the lady will oblige you so far. your daughter an hour longer. Dear the Saran railway in northwest India. ' Pray, dear aunt, give me your ad- ue!'i To think, Joris, o a man be- Trucks full of grain for export were vice. What is the first step to be ing able to sit wi the councillors o the often stored up In the station, and taken? nation, and yet no match for a lassie the monkeys came down in large .. Go and talk with her father. The o seventeen! numbers from a neighboring grove to As they walked homeward, the elder help themselves to the girl you think worth asking for; but grain, picking it is very necessary for you to know talked, and Joris pondered, not what holes in the tarpaulin roof of the what fortune goes with her beauty. was said, but the thoughts and pur- wagons. The officials were wearied If her father refuses to give her poses that were slowly forming in his out with keeping watch and scaring to me own mind. away the thieves, who daily grew When the evening meal was over bolder, till an ingenious guard hit That is not to be thought of. You come of a noble race. You are not Joris rose, and laying his hand on upon a stratagem. For several days far from the heritage of a great title Katherines shoulder said, There Is sweets and fruits were put on the and estate. If you ask for her for- something to talk about Sit down, roofs of the wagons, with the result tune, you offer far above its equiva- Lysbet; the door shut close, and lis- that the whole of the monkey colony ten to me. were attracted to the spot and soon lent, sir. It was impossible to mistake the became perfectly indifferent to man. Well, this suspense is Intolerable, and not to be borne. I will go and stern purpose on her husband's face, One morning when they were all and Lysbet silently obeyed the order. busily feeding an engine was stealthend Give me your good wishes. reI shall be impatient to hear the Katherine, Ratrijntje, mijn kind, ily attached to the wagons, and sudthis afternoon there comes to the store denly the train moved off. The monsult. .At Van Heemskirks store Capt. the young man Capt. Hyde. To thy keys were quite scared, and made no Hyde asked for the councillor and father he said many- - ill words. To attempt to escape, sitting crouched him thou shalt never speak again. together till the train had gone sevwas taken to his office. Your servant, captain. Is there Thy promise give to me. eral miles and stopped at the jungle. She sat silent, with dropped eyes, Then they wanted no hint to leave. any thing I can oblige you in, sir? Joris asked the question because and cheeks as red as the pomegranate Every monkey leapt down howling the manner of the young man struck flower at her breast. and fled into the jungle, whence they him as uneasy and constrained; and Mijn kind, speak to me. have never returned to trouble the he thought, Perhaps he has come to Weeping bitterly, she rose and went railway. Golden Penny. He was not, there- to her mother, and laid her head upon borrow money. fore astonished when Capt. Hyde Lysbets shoulder. Lawyer and Witness. Look now, Joris. One must know answered: A certain Mr. H. was a sharp lawSir, you. can, indeed, oblige me, the why and the wherefore. What yer and Invariably retained In crimand That in a matter of the greatest mean you? Whish, mijn kindje! No more inal cases, where his peculiar abilities, This I mean, Lysbet. moment. ' .If money It be, captaip, at once I meetings with the Englishman will I were deemed likely to benefit his No love secrets will I bear. client, writes a contributor to the may tell you, that I borrow not, and I have. Danger is with them; yes, and sin, too. Weekly Bouquet Old Mrs. L., the lend not Mijn kindje, listen to me thy father. widow of a small farmer, was remarkSir, It Is not money in particuIt is for thy happy life here, it is for able for her plainness In speech and lar. So? thy eternal life, I speak to thee. This manner, and she was one of the cute man for whom thou art weeping is sort. The old woman was an ImportIt Is your daughter, Katherine. Then Joris stood up, and looked not good for thee. Mijn beste klnje, ant witness for the prosecution In which H. defended the Her steadily at the- - suitor. His large, do I love thee? testimony bore hard upon the prisMy father! amiable face bad become In a mooner, and in the cross examination Do I love thee? ment hard and stern; and the light H. endeavered in vain to confuse or "Yes, yes, in big eyes was like the cold, sharp Irritate her. Dost thou, then, love me? light that falls from drawn steel. At length, turning abruptly to the She put her arms round his neck, My daughter' is not for you to name. Sir, It Is a wrong to her, If and laid her cheek against his, and witness, be exclaimed, Madam, you have brass enough in your face to you speak her name. Like to like, kissed him many times. pall! that is what I say. Your wife seek, - Wilt thou go away and leave me, make a twelve-quaYes, replied the witness, and you captain, among your own women. My and leave thy mother, in our old age? have sass enough In your head daughter Is to another man prom- Katrijptje, my dear, dear child, what to fill got it! for me, and for thy mother, wilt thou ised. The lawyer had done with that witLook you, councillor, that would do?" ness. be monstrous. Your daughter lores Thy wish If I can. Then he told her of the provision me. It made for her future. He reminded Joris turned wbite to the lips. It 8topped the Gambling. is not the truth, he answered in a her of .Neil's long affection, and addA good story is told of a certain about thy own house, colonel in connection with an inspeced, slow, hnsky voice. "By the sun 1& heaven, It is truth! I will take the first step. Near my tion of a crack rifle corps which he house it shall be; and at the feast of commanded. : Ask her. h Then a great scoundrel are you, St. Nicholas thou shalt be married. The inspection passed off satisfacunfit with honest men to talk. Ho! And money, plenty of money, I will torily; there were no complaints, scab-hargive thee; and all that is proper thy and the regiment was evidently in Yes, your sword pull from its But no good order. .JStcHte. - To the heart, strike mother and thee shall buy. me. Less wicked would be the deed more, no more at all, shalt thou see or But, said the inspecting general, speak to that bad man who has so I am bound to tell you, colonel, that than the thing you have done. There was something very impres- beguiled thee. Wilt thou these things rumors have reached me of gambling sive in the angry sorrow of Joris. Yet promise me? Me and thy mother? being carried on extensively among Richard I must see once more. your officers. Hyde persevered in his solicitation.' That is what I ask. That may have been the case, sir, Do but hear me, sir. I have done "Richard! So far Is It? Well, then, said the colonel, some months ago; nothing contrary to the custom .of I will as easy make It as I can. Once but I can assure you that nothing of people In' my condition, and I assure kind Is in vogue now, because Ive you that with all my soul I love your more, and for one hour, thou may see the him.. But I lay ft on thee to tell him won all the ready money In the regibetlovs can her No man daughter. the truth, for this and for all other ment, and I would not allow any ter. time. gambling on credit. "What say you? How, then, do I Now I may go? He is anlgh. Hla love her? 1 who carried her mljn boat I hear at the landing; and 8he What He Ought to Get. witte lammetje in these arms before stood up, intent, hastening, with her The man who tries to ride Into office yet she could say to me, Fader! fair head lifted, and her wet eyes fixed these times His wrath had been steadily growing, on the distance. by yelling calamity and' suddenly striking the desk a ponought to he dipped into a tank of tar, 1 Weil, be it so. Go. thee leaded Into a sewer pipe and shot derous blow with hie closed hand, he With the words she slipped from through a feather bed as a reward for said with an unmistakable passion, My daughter you shall n have. God the room; and Joris called Baltu to such cui edness. Moravian Falls (N. in heaven to himself Lke her ere bring him some hot coals, and began C.) YelL- - xckeL I I The Bow of Orange Ribbon WORLDS FAIR FAR BEYOND EXPECTATIONS t . k Verdict of a New York Writer Who Spent a Week Exposition at St. Louis in July. Fair at St. Louis is ent parts do justice to their nobility the midst of its splendid sea- of architecture and general grandeur. son. Colossal, complete, cosmopoliThen again in the ground plans and tan, it commands the attention of the bird's-eysketche-- s the only possible world as no other enterprise of the manner of showing It the present year. From all nations there arrangement of this group looked stiff are pilgrims coming to this shrine, and unsatistying. Far from that, it is ami from all our states and territories quite as remarkable in its way as the lliere is a constantly growing throng famous Court of Honor of the Columof visitors. United States Senators, bian Exposition. In one respect it is Governors of States, men eminent in even more notable, for instead of two deuce, art and letters all express grand vistas it offers a dozen. The main vista is, of course, the one lookunqualified admiration for the Exposl-ioand free acquiescence in the ing up the Plaza of St. Louis whose statement that this is by far crowning feature is the great Louisithe greatest and best universal expoana Purchaso Monument and across sition ever held. the Grand Basin to the Cascade GarDuring July a magazine dens. On the right are the Varied Inand newspaper writer from New York, dustries and Electricity buildings and Mr. Addison Steele, spent a week at on the left Manufacturers and Eduthe World's Fair, inspecting the cation, these with Transportation and grounds, buildings and various attrac- Machinery still further to the right tions as thoroughly as was possible in and Liberal Arts and Mines beyond that limited period. Returning home, at the left making up the body of the Mr. Steele in Brooklyn fan. For its handle the fan has the published 1 ife the following appreciative com- Cascade Gardens rising in a grand ments on the Exposition: terrace to a height of sixty-fivfeet In the expressive language of the above the floor level of the buildings c ay, St. Louis I had mentioned and crowned by the great has the goods. expected much of the Louisiana Pur- Festival Hall, the Terrace of States chase Exposition, for I had kept in end the East and West Pavilions and touch with the making of it from its the Fine Arts building directly behind. very inception, five years ago; but after nearly a week of journeying The Pike has In the Tyrolean Alps through this new wonderland I must the finest concession that I have ever confess that in every essential par- seen. There is a great square with ticular it is far beyond my expecta- many quaint buildings, a little village tions. The biggest and best it was street, and above the snow-clamounmeant to be and the biggest and best tains which look very real as the The World's r.ow in e n well-know- e d at the infinite variety, and as a rule the full moneys worth is given. The enormous Jerusalem and Boer War con cessions are not on the Pike. It is a case of dine at the German Pavilion and die at the exposition. In a beautiful Moderne Kunst building adjoining Das Deutsche Haus the best fcod and the highest prices on the grounds are to be found, the table d'hote lunch and dinner costing two and three dollars, respectively. There ir also a la carte service. Everything considered, the prices are not excessive, and at least one meal should be Antaken there for the experience. other should be taken at the Tyrolean Alps, either outdoors or in the gorin the mountaingeous dining-rooside. The best French restaurant in at Paris, on the Pike. Lower In prices and in every way admirable are tho two restaurants conducted by Mrs. Rorer in the pavilions of Cascade Gardens. The east one has waitresses and no beer and the west one waiters and beer. For a bit of lunch Germany, France and England all offer delicious pastry in the Agricul-IrrThese are not free building. ads, but tips for the traveler. There are no end of restaurants to fit all purses on the grounds. I tried cine of them and nowhere found the prices more than they ought to be. As a matter of fact, for neither food cor lodging no one need pay any more ac SL Louis than he feels that he can al time-savin- g t. spare-corne- you-don- t if . evil-doe- r. , rt .... . -- , it is. The exposition, rumors notwithstanding, is quite finished. evening falls. The best scenic railroad yet devised affords several fine glimpses ot the Alps and there Is a very graphic exposition of the passion play in the little church. The Cliff Dwellers concession also looks very realistic at nightfall. It is elaborate in arrangement and the courting, snake and other dances by the Southwestern Indians make it another of the Pike shows which should be taken in by all. In Seville there is an amusing marionette theater and some genuine Spanish dancing. For the rest the Pike offers afford, and yet be well fed and housed, it he will use ordinary common sense in making a selection out of the abundance offered. How the Waiter Lost a Tip. At one of the Kansas City hotels where the colored waiters give especially good service, but always expect aaequate remuneration for the same from the guests, a waiter was especially officious the other day in serving a man from whom he expected a liberal tip. When the meal had been served and he was standing off at one ride, eagerly looking for an opportumany, where she has Just taken her nity to be of service, he said to the doctors degree. She is a native of guest: Didnt yo have a brothah heah last Kentucky and graduated with the degree of bachelor of science in the week, sah? No, said the one addressed, I beMassachusetts Institute of Technology lieve noL in 1891. Well, continued the waiter, theb was a gem'man beab at mab table Church and School for Indians. Mother Katherine Drexel of Phila- what looked vey much like you, and delphia, founder and head of the Or- he was so well pleased with the servder of the Blessed Sacrament, com- ice that he gave me 50 cents when he posed of nuns who devote their lives left. The guest had by this time finished to the uplifting of the Indian and negro, has offered $500,000 of her own his meal, and as he arose be said to private fortune with which to build the expectant servitor: Come to think of it, Sam, that was a church and school for the Indians of the Winnebago, Neb., reservation. my brother that was here, and I guess The only condition is that the Indians he paid you for the whole family. He consent, and this Father Schell of may be back again in a week or two. Kansas City Journal. Homer, Neb., has obtained. Ancient Phases Corrupted. Ancient Piets in England were called by the Celtic word pehta or fighters. This was Latinized Into Plo-tl- . So, too. Barbary ot the ancient maps Is a monument to the miscalling of the Berber tribe by the Greek word Even the legsjgnifying barbarian. end of the victory of Guy of Warwick over the dun cow is assailed by ruthless etymologists, who Insist upon Its derivation from his conquest over the Dena gau, or Danish settlement, at the champion's gates. The Celtlo words alt maen are responsible for many old man crags upon sea coasts and among mountains. They mean, however, high rock. Actors Opinion of Managers. Wilton Lackaye, the actor, told a friend some time ago that he had made a dramatization of Hugos Les The friend congratulatMiseraples. ed him, but doubted whether any New York manager would produce the Produce It, sneered Lackaye. piece. Why, my boy, I doubt if any New York manager could pronounce 1L Progressive Egyptian Ruler. Prince Abbas HUmi, khedive ot Egypt, who was In London recently, It a clever farmer, a skillful engineer, e master ot five languages, a scientist, a keen man of business, a yachtsman and a prince of many social accomplishments. He is also a sanitary reformer and has built a model village not far from his place at Koulbeh, on the outskirts of Cairo. He is a well-bui- lt man of medium height One of the greatest, and certainly one of the most agreeable, of my many surprises was the extreme beauty of the main group of buildings. For the simple reason that the camera does not exist which could take in the vast picture as the eye sees it, the early views of the group a bit here and a bit there gave a scant idea of the scheme as a whole. Nor did the early views of the ten individual buildings which make up Its compon- - Ober-ammerg- Bavaria Takes, Step Forward. Miss Dixie Lee Bryant, the first woman to receive such an honor, has been made a doctor of philosophy by a Bavarian university. Miss Bryant is a member of the faculty of the etate normal and industrial college at Greensboro, N. C., being professor of biology and geology in that institution. She has been on leave of absence for three years, studying in Ger- Modest Philadelphia Policeman. Philadelphia policemen are easily One of them arrested a shocked. handsome young lady a few days ago for raising her skirts too high while crossing a muddy street on a rainy day. It isnt often that cops feel called upon to determine questions of ethics. The Justice who heard the case discharged the prisoner. Pennsylvania has no statute defining the exact lines of feminine proprieties in matters of this kind. Lawyers In Public Life. The membership of our house of representatives has 236 lawyers out of a total of 357. The house of commons, on the other hand, has only 129 lawyers In a total of 670, while the French chamber shows an attendance of 139 lawyers In a total of Smart Woman Becomea Citizen. Millie Holmes, English, has, after twelve years residence, taken out naturalization papers in order to he eligible for a position at the Philadelphia mint. Few women apply for naturalization, but It Is noted that Miss Holmes showed a rare knowledge of the constitution and passed the examination with high credit Miss Few of Fremont Guard Left At last accounts the Brooklyn man Work on Garibaldi Statue. engaged in rounaing up the John C. There are prospectB ot finishing the Fremont old guard of 1856 had sucGaribaldi statue in Rome. It wag be- ceeded in getting three responses. He gun in 1884 and may be unveiled in wants them for campaign purposes. If 1911 if all goee welL The sculptor there are more ot them alive It isnt Gallori has been commissioned to com- to be worde-e- d at that they are reluctant to w the fact known. plete the work. 684. Hot? Yes, but on the two hottest days of the summer at SL Louis I suffered no more from the heat than in New York before leaving and after returning. Every day of the seven there was a breeze at the fair grounds and It was always possible to find a shady spot The nights were cool and comfortable. ADDISON STEELE. German Crown Prince Coming. There has been some little Btir over a rumor that the kaiser Intends that the crown prince shall visit America this autumn. The date of the departure from Germany has not yet been arranged, but from other whispers there is some probability that the first stop of the prince, who will make an cruise in a warship, will be at Newport, and the data of the visit September, Biblical Truth Shown by Papyrus. Dr. Carl Schmidt of Heidelberg has succeeded after seven years ot hard work in piecing together 2,000 smalt fragments of papyrus and translating the contents from the Coptic. He says that he has the first accurate and complete account of the acts ot Paul. The papyrus was Inscribed tn 180 A. D. Favors French National Church. According to the Paris Presse M. Combes, the French premier, desires that the French Catholics should break off from the Roman church an& form a French national church, wltlk , a pope of ! own. ; |