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Show FOR EIGHT ROOM COTTAGE. GOUGH IX HIS PRIME The Chair Bye-By- e MADE dad ! tb clunky nlai:, The r ign nuahcr may ldl tie iliinne All th diy. hut. t;i away, daddy form Hut born sf m ruths old and swi song my nioMer ring I.e h id ms s li When In the ilu-- k i'luwit ft tincup. Kuwn! njruin o' th I'm kins nt niulit ly hn-- t Hsht. though II. a td.lVl Ivt tl.l.lc duWll-tl'What nrwn Is thU ly LumPr Cut? One And " Into Id Oho, (nil. llu-n- , tu-!le- J to iliMtuy? Invasion hJ ly oik o rui.kby BmpMpr rour-hlM- Hilly, boy? crown I Again MU oovtl my kingly . to thins puiloui IIere' to ami -- ruling, rout and is.uk of Kortrcn Hay Chair. And now, M tnut! .My kingly ruh! The aofa clt.nhl. What? MIn-Lnnth? Then up. white lias! To Kingly hops k f.in wrll! Hold, o bonihutillns cuishion host, 1 yield to pui.oi.nl dll. I live to Tbo emperor ban won do hi will. Tho victor' a tcimi? Nor harsh art they; n n toss or two. I gladly yl- Id to such a My tyrant, iIk-h- . u. lotd ns Now, crib! What, no? Your mother' ut ms? 1 grant tin toon with joy. Ho. up tl. Muir! 3o.l queen. pupa.-c- ! Here's Kmperor l!llly-tnand lisMay 1 sit down in Slumher-lowten to the tune That mother voice In cash nee soft and tinder accents cioh? Let me sit down In this drar realm whoso throns Is huilt s fair The throne no man may e't r dispute a Cliulr. mother's Ilyo-Itywi-.ir- 1 d t! kl. - y. n g nth stt l'iie r:'!d that bu liooil'.-th ,(!! Ti mpt.it .I ance a tnl my Cliiii, fib n. I i M vuni.i; ili :tr in ,ti. fall to-da- M. mM u blit.:;. And .Ot ItHilSi;. Hill'll thoUKhlb;. 1 win su 1. re Hut iur bk ami hur ! mi mj to-- i uM. And gaze bind im mi tb years with bi aid r.ilth iiliL'Iii, I do not jui-bmy fall iii:k t t upon tin lull 1 1 ; - I an fc-- nu.b. lhje b ait .ud n. Mvi Hot skikIi in that !t,i-- r . in tin part r hand that bt l.iM'd. know he I. it Uni tin mui In fondly pij". and mid. t! I know ! l.uktd rmtlir smile that I tUtll And at tin- dloS to Ruld; wliiii the Hack f Klchl and Wn.rt; ue dim Tin re was m chining mother light to paint tin wav to him. f tin wmld gaga sin The callou c)i;ii by what I ilono. lift bv hoe of motlur Hut I tan mca-ur- o ta son ; And tb'd. who knows tin human heart has nn n y. har. t snre To him wlui'.e Miul-Httmih was tnd wan o Chair. In mother's H t !' oios-to;- n 1n-- r u -- 1 The Sleep. little bay my Hilly-boy- ! Wo: Id Is Just outside. It dais Kt tight the I'lllaW light; tls Klein in wrath ami ptlde. are blows that shiur strength blows Its I'm hungry for the quaint old songs. clJ It smth s to fu a fall; lullai'li s. my dsar! imt pity idle tears nor heed a Tho Nsnv Is dim. the Then shines clear It does us !i!!. eruvi ns I am llst'nlng hsie. is not to hint who wantonly Yet vletoiy I feel the clasp of moths r arms corns; Stives pain. rounst mo In ths gloom. wrests tin Ir wennans fimn the I aeem to hear aunt la r voice within this Who weak and trnmphs on the slain. hallowed room. It Is not dead, liar honor For chivalry, e The thiill of melodies is in that hut i name. mystic sound. scorn be meed of him who e Tho sanctity of love cncom-passrt- h And hitter bring his mother sh.au. o. me round. s wlm. harking lack to youth. The Woild at times has heat me back in Yet liefoith Iv tiies not and tattles I have fought. life to match the light that Not always has the god Success touched To color shines from inathir's eye.--. tasks In which 1 wioiiglu; Ids vainest faith his Full oft has Koitune slealt a Mow Instead And hafterwholifewith at tutus of bent to bless. And heartache fsillovved close upon the To these old samp of homst love his nmther softly croons. hetls of happiness. But often when a solemn song of woe May walk lolown the ways of Life, and in his daily prayer my heart Intoned. And often when the spirit writhed and Thank imJ that nil his best was born in that old Lye-Ly- e nil my nature groaned. Chair. Then tno icfraln that softened pain, Holman l)ay i:i I'carscm's far not phi used by mortal tongue. o old-tim- old-tim- BEGINNINGS OF THE AUTO. HIGH HOPES SOON DASHED. Gottlieb Daimler Was Father of the Count De La Vaulx Illustrates Infant Motor Car. With Coed Story. How many persons remember, asks Count Henri Do La Vaulx. the noted the London Times, that from 1831 to aeronaut, was talking about aeronaut1840 George Hancocks steam coaches ics in New York. ran at a profit between Paddington Our Aero club in Paris. he said, and the city? Is it realized generally has 600 members. I am sure that that Gottlieb Daimler, the true fathsr there must be quite 6d0 aeronauts in of the petrol engine, had worked in America. Undoubtedly it won't be England as well as In Germany be- long before flying machines will b as fore he patented, in 1S84 only, the common as motor cars. Otto gas engine and fitted it in 1886 The trouble is the immense to his bicycle, which may be regarded amount great of time and money that aeroat the first motor car driven by an nautical experiments require. Full of explosion engine? From this date hope, you work two, three, four years, progress abroad was of remarkable and spend, it may be, $50,000 on a flyrapidity, while in England none was ing machine, and the first time you possible until In 1895. Evelyn Ellis try it crash down it drops, a wreck. imported a four horse power Panhard Then you are, indeed, disappointed and Sir David Salomons a Pcugot. and disheartened. You feel as a denThere followed a modest demonstration at Tunbridge Wells of these two tist felt, of whom I heard the other vehicles, a De Dion steam car and a day.A man went to this dentist to have petrol bicycle, and then, after some a tooth He leaned back in the pulled. agitation, the light locomotives act of chair and the dentist thrust into his 1896. In fact, from a modern point a mouth of pair bright forceps, gave a of view, Gottlieb Daimler Is the para complacent tone: said then in jerk, ent of the infant motor car and Henry the theres Aha, little joker. It Chaplin is its sponsor in England. came out easy, didnt it? Idiot.! Blockhead! exclaimed the Poetic Custom of Japan. patient. Thats the false tooth I paid Among the many pretty customs of $10 to have put in the other day. the Japanese there Is one the American nation would do well to take as Lifes Opportunities. an example. In every well-to-dWe hear much about opportunities. house there is always one room which is called the They are everywhere plentiful. ReChamber of the Inspiring View. And member that your opportunity is the from its windows some beauty of na- little one that lies squarely in front of ture may be seen. It is sometimes you, not the large one which you hope nothing more than a single cherry to find further along. Many a man is tree, a pretty winding path or some surrounded with opportunities who picturesque little hill. This is charac- never seizes one. There are traditions teristic of their simple love of all that that Adam, William Tell and Sir Isaac is naturally beautiful. Newton each had an affair with an While Americans get up dinners and' apple,, but with different, results. parties with everything artificial about Your first duty is always to that which them the Japanese get up parties to lies across your path. The only step visit some field of untrodden white which you can take in advance is the snow, maple trees resplendent in au- next one. This leads to a simplicity tumn colors, or spend a morning on a of action which is commendable. mushroom hunt. Dont ramble. Electrical Review. o Advocate Witty Remarks. and Enjoyed Com- modious Residence. I'leaso publl.-- h u plan of an elght-nxticottage svC2 feci, having a bath room on tin first floor and a close? fiT ah bedroom. n Men of Oxford University Recognized Manly Attitude of Famous Temper- with her down to Sleep In Hye-Hs Dtetgn Showing Comfortable and FRIENDS OF BOISTEROUS STUDENT AUDIENCE. His The accompanjlng floor plans prodoited rooms. Tho ground f)'or plan provides for parlor, dining riom, kitchen, bed rtorn and watet vide tho John II. Gough, the famous advocate of tempi ranee, went to Great Britain In ecmpliance with numerous demands from n ss and public. When he appeartd at Oxford the college students undertook to hiss him off tho stage, so determined were they that temperance should not be preached there. After enduring their hisses and cat calls for about ten miuutes, ho I can startled than all by saying: whip every oiu of you. one at a time." This statement was cheered, and then the young men began calling one of their chums to go up cn the stage. Foon Gough saw a young giant com- ing toward him. As soon ns he was in the center of the stage C ugh shouted: This Is to be an intellectual battle, and not a physical one. Go on with your speech. This suited the college men, and they began calling on their big fellow for a speech. He responded by quoting the epistle to Timothy, in which Haul recommends a little wine for stomach's tliy sake"; and from this ho deduct d an argument in favor of the use of wine. Wlwn he had finished, Gough fared the audience and said: This is not an argument, but a farce. Here Is a young English giant, weighing almost two hundred pounds, who has never been sick in his life, who eats five pounds of meat every day, and who can knock down a bullock with n blow of his fist, standing bore and talking about the need of wine for his stmnachs sake. You'll have to ;cnd me another man. The boys cheered Gough and then yelled for another man tills time a ronior and their ablest debater. He went to tin platform and called attention to the fact that Jesus turned water into wine and advocated the use of it. lie delivered a speech which met with the approval of his fellow collegians, and they cheered him reWhen lie had finished, peatedly. Gough said: This is just the kind of argument that I came here to deliver, and was delivering when you interrupted me. You may drink all the wine you oau hold, provided it is made out of water, as that wine was. Cheer after cheer greeted Gough, and he was permitted to go on with his lecture. He said afterward that they gave him greater applause than ho had over received from an audience of young men. Chicago Record-HeralSunday Magazine. d The Perfect Figure. The height of a person with a perfect figure should he exactly equal tho distance between the tips of the middle fingers on either hand when the arms are fully extended. Ten times the length of the hand, or seven and a half times the length of the foot, or five times the diameter from one arm pit to the other, should also give the height of the whole body. The distance from the junction of the thighs to the ground should be exactly the same as ftom that point to the crown of the head. The knee should be exactly midway between the point and the ground at the heel. The distance from the elbow to the tip of tho middle finger should be the same as from the elbow to the middle line of the breast. From the top of the head to the level of the chin should be the same as from the level of tbo chin to the arm pits from the heel to toe. Chicago News. 51 . 45 . . flTxftOO" KITCHEN 0 't t06 HC ROOH iy iv'6 mW Ground Floor Plan. closet. If desired a doorway may be made between tho kitclu-and bedroom. Tho stairway may go up of? the dining room as shown, or off the front hall. If dcslrod. The chimney starts from tho collar floor and may bo made to answer for tho entire house. The stairway to tho cellar h UHSBBQ suss Upper Floor Plan. off tho Kitchen and under tho front stairs, The upper story provides hall, four bedrooms aud a closet off each. II. Bricks, Etc., for a Cottage. I. I low many bricks would bo required for a cottage 22 by L6 feet aud 17 feet high, having four doors ami nine windows of the usual size? The wall would be of double brick. IIow many mere would lie needed if a bay window were built, and what is the usual size for a cottage of the dimensions given? How much run should the stairs have to rise nine feet? How many square feet would be in the roof and how many feet of rafter would he required? W. It will require 18,875 bricks for this dwelling. A bay window would cost about $35, that is, a square one having four wdndows, one on each end and two in the center. The size of window would be governed by the size of the house, and the room in which it would bv nine be placed. Three and one-hal- f feet is a very good size for a window. It would require eight squares cf shingles and fourteen sets of rafters, set-tin- g them at two feet centers. Building a Brick Chimney. R. IIow much lime would he needed to lay up 700 bricks in a chimney, and plaster the chimney on tho inside? What are the proportions of lime and sand for a strong mortar? Should the bricks be laid C. V. dry or wet? first-name- d Negro Seeks Army Post. Booker Washington, Jr., the rJdest son of Booker T. Washington, has filed an application for appointment as paymaster in the army. The applicant is now a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It would require about two and bushels of lime to lay 700 bricks. The usual proportions of lime and sand for 1,000 bricks is from three to four bushels of lime to cf a yard of sand; some lime In very will go farther than others. warm weather bricks should always three-quarter- s three-quarte- rs be wet before being laid, but in very-coo- l or freezing weather they should be kept dry. Not in iine. How did the election strike It didnt strike me at all. an.-nver--d me. the defeated candidate. Washington Star. It missed |