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Show ROUGE LEON ilie Worlds Workers SUIT V- aj - ,N n A V VC, f x- - V:- it HARD TO LIVE DOWN NONSINKABLE Jziu REVIEW sf PROGRESS THAT IS BEING MADE ALONG ALL LINES ENDEAVOR V HIS IN FAULT-FINDINDIS- ETERNAL Ead Reputation Has a Habit of almost certain to do the right thing in matters of greater importance. And RUPTS ANY FORCE, he certainly does not have to try to Clinging and Making Its live down acts and deeds of which he Presence Felt. should not have been guilty. Mistake All Too Frequently Made by No Water for Three Months. Those in Authority and Who PosWRONG STEP AVOID FIRST Rome interesting stories of expiratsess a Quick Temper. ions in the Sonora desert of Mexico, parts of which no white man had ever Anderson had the faculty of so con Litof penetrated, were recently related by or Act Deed, Seemingly Single fusing and muddling a girl in fifteen Geoto Dr. Lumholtz Karl the Royal tle Moment, Will Rise Up In After minutes that it would be half a day begraphical Society of England. Dr. Year to Claim Its Payment in Lumholtz said that scarcity of water fore she got back on the right track the Grief of a Boy, or it was of the again. His nagging was the great problem. n. ' May Be of a Man. The strange thing was that the quick, excitable, fussy, irritating vaflora and fauna did not seem to suf- riety. Rehind his back he was "the Many' a boy disgraced by some act fer from this nine Ily half-pas- t aridity. In spite of the dancing master. or deed tries to console himself with lack of rain o'clock on the mornings of his "bad the winter during previthe $houg,ht that he will be able to ous to his visit to the sand dunes, days the whisper would pass from desk to desk. "Hes on the job again live it down. He seems not to appreduring spring, he found at one place ciate that a single act or deed has an astounding growth of flowers, today. much to do with reputation, and that through which they traveled for nearMany a "nagger" half suspects It reputation once established remains ly htree miles; and It had been found himself, many more know they nag unchanged with a great many people. by actual experiment that small ro- and glory in it, feeling that iplnor If his reputation becomes bad It will dents of arid regions had been able to browbeating of this sort is one of the continue bad, even after he has turned live for two or three years on hard perquisites of even a little executive oVer a new leaf and undertaken to live seeds without water. The conditions authority. Hut men of Anderson'e Its he should. A, story Illustrating this in the sand dunes near the coast were, type think they, are really helping the atfact recently came to the writer's if possible, even more remarkable. clerks Individually and the clerical tention and is' worth repeating. Here, as soon as the uncertain rains force as a whole, when they descend ,n a New England village boys had of winter had made the plants on one or all and rampage in petty been In the habit of stealing apples, green, ns the Mexicans say, the cat- Ways. Anderson would have been and the minllstehs sons soon come to tle and horses were driven there and very much surprised If It had ever do, as other boys did.,. They learned remained three months from Febru- been hinted to him that he had this that the deacon had a tree of August ary to the end of May absolutely failing. Sweetings, and helped themselves. without water. In his travels It was One of his slafT, the same capable While one engaged the deacons atten- the usual thing during the winter time young woman already spoken of, once with tion the other filled his pockets for the animals to go without water said of him: He can do more damthe luscious fruit, ran home, and hid every secqnd day. age in destroying the work of a day the apples In the hay mow. Rut they than any other man I have ever seen. deceived themselves rather than the New Paper Currency. If he were really cross, assertive, noted saw who and the theft deacon, The green banknotes of our paper domineering, even brutally unjust. It the thief. Some years afterwards one measure each 3.01 by 7.28 would be hard, but it would not necesof these boys, grown to manhood, was currency they will all be reduced to 2 sarily upset my work. Nonsensical located In another town In wrhlch a inches; by 6 Inches, like the Philippine paper bothering is what sets the business bank was. being established. Among if the plan adopted by Secre- woman's nerves on edge. It distracts, the directors of the bank was this money, committee la ap- like the pricking of countless pins. MacVeagh8 tary same deacon, who was looking for n by congress. The smaller size Cromwell Childe. In Harper's Weekly. clerk for the Institution. As he was proved of .notes would save the government sitting In his office, one day a $1,000,000 a year, since five of them young man en- could be printed where four are New Brush for Street Cleaning. now, tered and applied for the position. with same labor In wetting, examtie the French champion biJacquelin, During, the course of conversation tho Is not satisfied with the ining, counting, drying, numbering, cycle rider, young man mentioned the fact that and separating. With uniachieved In the ririk a sealing has he triumphs years ago both had lived in the same form for races. alt He has general banks distance and design and long own. while the' bank director was a of 19 portrait and his- turned out to be an Inventor of a very deacon In his fathers church, adding: the reduction toric figures to nine, the engraving practical bent of mind. Jacquelin I dont suppose you remember me." might he done with 200 plates where has Just secured a patent for a triOh, yes, I do," replied the deacon; over 12,000 are now In use. The Na- cycle to be used in street cleaning. A you are the young man who stole my tional City bank says that enough cylindrical brush Is fastened by gaa August Sweetings while your brother notes of the smaller size and of all pipes to the tricycle.' In front of It undertook to divert- my attention. I denominations, might be prepared in and between the two rear wheels Is dont believe has any business behind a banks counter." The young advance, so as to effect the exchange a basket or scoop for the sweepings. man protested : that It was a boyish at once, and the business public would The machine does the street sweeping not be inconvenienced by the two more quickly and thoroughly than a prank, that he had lived down that number of men can accomplish It. and other Indiscreet sets. Rut the sizes of paper currency. deacon was firm and the young man retired. Perhaps the hoy had lived down such acts, perhaps he had for years . lived an upright life, and the deacon's reference to the stolen apples was In TIRED BUSI- ater managers, is too tired to sit s certain sense unjust.' Rut how much NONSENSE ABOUT through a serious or profound play, NESS MAN" EXPLODED. better would It have been If he had and so It la a custom to stage musical salted for those apples and not stolen comedies and farces. them, how much better If he had not Now a news item has appeared In done an act that he had to live down! Supreme Is That of Placing Him a morning Journal in which it is asFolly He. might possibly have been made in the Ranks of the Weary serted that a statement made "may clerk In the new bank, and In time Its mean little to the tired business roan," Willies of Fiction. cashier. w hich, wre think, is carrying an absurd And It Is the little things fully as idea a too far. step It might be Interesting to know much as the big things that In the As a matter of fact, there are few tired invented the "the who charphrase, determines estimation of others which is employed If any tired business men. The real A business man, acter and establishes reputation. business man loves his work, and It boy who does the right thing In mai- chiefly In connection with the theater. Is, therefore, not wearying. He Is not the to The business man, according lers of apparently little importance, is a weakling, and his tired condition is nnrnnnnn nriryaJUUMir nr Iri chiefly a fiction manufactured by othcumulative thing Evil fortune seems ers for their own purposes. It Is selto be the same, for we say that It dom that the business man defends or TO BE SUCCESSFUL never rains but It pours; misfortunes excuses himself on the ground that he never come singly, etc. A succession is tired. of days of hard work, unless there is Always look ahead and strive It is Instead, the man who knows ; to equal the man above you. persistence to the end. may not seem nothing at all about business who adThe man who starts In at the to amount to much any more than a mits that he Is tired. The Weary Wilbottom and learns every detail half built tower would be satisfactory, lie of the funnysides is the country's of the business Is best equipped but when some sort of completion Is accepted ideal of weariness. The averlor a job at the top. reached It is possible to realize bow age business man ia a sort of modern Neat appearance and a pleascumulative was each daye work. Atlas, who can bear the weight of the ing personality are big factora The man of high ideals, who wishes world on his back, and come up smilIn successful salesmanship. to become great, reaches forward to- ing which Is going Atlas one better. Inter-est- s Always look out for the ward something very distant and dura, Most fictions are harmless. But It of firm. It will pay In the ble. The fact that a distant goal will ought to be more than common justice long run. t he difficult of attainment and the daya to a and industrious branch Tact In offering auggestiona to long ts stimulus to him. And even of society to find some other excuse customers leads to many sales when complete attainment Is known for puerile entertainment and for oththat would not otherwise have to be Impossible he will choose this er Interesting things than the familiar been made. end Just as readily, rejoicing In the one that they are demanded by "the Never let a customer go away fact that he can spend his life In con- tired business man." Paterson, N. J Successful salesdissatisfied. tinuous labor for the sake of nearing News. men do not have any but satisIt, and 111 a consequent living progress fied patrons. ever to the end. Rut even the well Value of Hard Work. Strive to have the highest at the worlds end has been reached. reasonable person recognizes Every In record your department. The difference between men of very the value of good hard work. Patient That Is what salaries and prosmall place In the world and those of plodd...g nnd persistent plugging away motions are based on. really high place Is Just this: The at a task are better than brilliant fits more Don't be afraid to do one can see only that which Is Imme- and str-rtwhich flash in the than you are paid to do, and that It re- There Is no place in the economypan. something diately present, of don't shirk responsibility. quires but a single effort to get. not affairs for the sluggard. There is litHard, persistent work, comthe long succession of efforts that tle or no hope for the man why watch-ebined with ambition, honesty, reach out toward the greatest nnd best the clock for quitting time. Fortune courtesy, and a pleasing personthings life has to give as a reward favor the Industrious as well as the in will success win any ality, for determined and unremitting In- brave There Is always inspiration In line of business. dustry. such old saws as "No pains, no gains," No sweat, no sweet." and "Diligence Is the mother of good luck. Work a Source of Strength. At the same time it Is necessary to TO HIGH IDEALS REACHING If a man Is well, effort, work, Is a remember that success of any kind If b man Is 111 work may he a Is relative, and that It Is dangerous to Cumulative Work Will Land a Man In joy; In any one direccure. It Is especially recommended as become High Position Before Anything a cure for nervous people who may, tion. Ambition ceases to be a worthy Else Ho May Strlva For. very likely, have won their trouble by thing when It becomes so some form of hanging back. As weak that li la cultivated to the point of Too close application to The men who come to depend upon muRclcs and Joints and tendons art selfishness. ever vartublo circumstance are gam- strengthened by use, so, some of our one task may dwarf and strangle the blers. Good fortune rarely comes by best physicians tell us. beivous broader possibilities of life Roches-te- r a single turn of the wheel. It It a strength Is increased by work. Democrat. ' 0 X..: V &. ' ii HERE NAGGER HURTS v- -' A :: v. A.1''.'- 'A-:..,:- - - A -- t A.X,' AV.. V'l v' .. . I .. g A J V ' A by , V. ' well-dresse- g - HiS WORK A PLEASURE self-relian- s s d 4. ' V NV 'a -; '..v It & St'- ge; ' k asv2-v.v .wx r ovyb.s I EON ROUGE has invented a tionsinkabie suit of tissue cloth which has Li hibits It. He thinks the dutfit will be especially suitable for aviators, ' enthusiasts. created great Interest wherever tie ex steamboat passengers and motorboat VESSEL DRIFTS FAR - HEBREWS RULE TWO TOWNS One (s Angora in Southwest Africa and Other Is Village in Centra) American State. up the coast of the continent, nearly Japanese Fishing Smack Driven always within eight of land, until they Vienna. Those Jews who dissent Off Course by Storm. finally went ashore 30 miles north of San Diego, ending their journey of from the Zionist movement, with Mr. rive , Men Are Picked Up by United States Immigration Inspector After Being at Sea for Three Months. San Diego, Cal. A story vying with Homers famous tale of the wandering of Odysseus is that told by five Japanese fishermen picked up by the United States immigration inspectors In southern California. The men were captured on the road from Encintas to Escondido. Their clothing was tn rags and they themselves were weary and famished. They were taken to jail and there,' through an Interpreter, told the history of more than three months f wandering, beginning with a typhoon off the coast of Japan and ending with shipwreck near San Diego. Last May the men put to sea In three-maste- d their little fishing Junk Symiyoshl Maru (Good Luck Boat) from Yokohama. They were headed for Hakodate, 500 miles to the northward, on a fishing trip. The first day out all went well, but on the next day a typhoon came up. The Junk, unable to make headway, was forced to run before the wind and was driven When .,000 miles to the southward. the wind subsided tbe boat was found to be badly damaged and the steering gear demolished, making her unmanageable. There was nothing for It but to drift and sail as best they might, trusting to their good fortune to bring them safe to port. The first land they sighted was Honolulu, but the wind changed as they neared that port and they were driven 100 miles farther south. They sent distress signals, but no ships passed to notice them. A crude compass, such as is used by the primitive sailors of the Japanese islands, was their only means of discovering their heading. Two weeks out their supply of water was exhausted and they were Just beginning to suffer the agonle of thirst when a tropical rainstorm burst. Rushing on deck they placed buckets to catch the fall and secured enough for a few days, renewing the supply from time to time In the same manner. It was not long afterward when their food gave out. In the extremities of hunger they ate the spare sails. composed of grass matting, and their the straw sandals. Down across Christthe sailed, past equator, they mas Islands and then northward again, toward Central America. Then they were blown out to sea again, just as they sighted land. More than a month ago they passed the Galapagos Islands, fast In the grip of the wind. Aimlessly they drifted t, SEEKSSANCTUARY ; IS SEIZED! Zangwill at their head, have now more than 7,000 miles. two new countries where Hefound The five Orientals gave their names as Yas KamesaLuco Yoshida (captain), brew settlers could form a majority and so secure an autonomous adminisTakamassu Koao, Zuzidu Shimizu, tration. The advantages of these latWorsaki and Shaikanosuke Kono. 'They are being held in jail est lands of promise are now under here until orders are received from consideration. One of them is the Portuguese Col- Washington for their return home. of Angora, In southwest Africa, ony They have been visited by hundreds, crowds beginning to arrive as soon as and the other a Central American the story of their strange adventures state which may not yet be mentioned as negotiations are still in progress. was learned. In this connection a congress of the with RURAL ACTORS ARE TALENTED Jewish territorial organization, Mr. Zangwill in the chair, sat here for four days with closed doors. It1 Humble Thespians in Poland Depict was learned that Mr. Zangwill pointStories With Realism on ed out the great difficulties that had the Stage. been encountered In finding a suitable Warsaw, Poland. There has been a country. In 1907, Turkey, fearing' an surprising Increase in the number of Italian occupation, offered them Barca peasant theaters, which are making (or Cyrenaica), the eastern division of their appearance In every part of but this proved unsuitable for Poland. These Institutions are run al- Tripoli, colonization owing to the lack of wamost entirely by the peasants and are ter made to pay. Only pieces dealing with their own life are attempted and the result Is most realistic, especially as KILLS SELF WITH DYNAMITE the Pole has a strong dramatic instinct Foreman of Logging Camp at Nelson Any hall in a village does for a Island, B. C., Lies on Explosive theater, as the scenery la of the most and Sets It Off. primitive kind. What carries conviction is the entirely natural way In Vancouver, B. C. Chris Dunn, forewhich the actors and actresses play man in a logging camp on Nelson their parts. For the foreigner they Island, a short distance up the coast, give a far deeper Insight Into national blew himself to pieces with four lifq than all the pieces produced in sticks of dynamite. the larger cities. Dunn, had been suffering a great The actors mostly train themselves, deal from a leg which was broken a choosing one of the cleverest men In year ago. He also brooded over the the village to coach them, and they loss of a friend, killed In a dynamite bring with them a whiff of the stable accident two weeks ago, and the cowhouse, which other manAt daylight he arose and went out agers have tried to introduce into to the top of a cliff. There he lay their plays. down on four sticks of dynamite and set them off. His body was hurled BOY REGAINS HIS EYESIGHT sixty feet down the bank. Dunn was 35 years old. He lived la Youth in Wilmington, Del., After Four-tee- n Seattle until three years ago. Weeks Blindness, Can Now See. FINGER SEVERED BY RING Del. acan Wilmington, Following cident by tripping over a carpet In the Spectator Watching Ball Game at kitchen of his home. George W. MorSpringfield. O, From Tree Loses Digit In Fall. gan, Jr., aged twenty-onyears, of East Thirteenth street, who 14 weeks Springfield, O. Excited by a home ago became totally blind, has had his run smash In a baseball game which eyestlght restored. Morgan 11 years ago was hit In the he was watching from a seat In a tree. eye when a email boy hurled a stone. Ernest Rich lost his balance nnd fell. Since that time be has bpen afflicted As he shot toward the ground Rich with eye trouble. Last September he clutched at a limb. A ring he was went to Raltlmore to the St. Joseph's wearing on the third finger of his left worked In hand caught. Rich was suspended for hospital and while the Maryland Workshop for the' Blind. several minutes, struggling desperateFourteen weeks ago he became sud- ly to free himself, until a sudden Jerk denly totally blind while sitting In his threw all his weight on the ring and j tore the finger off. boarding house. e Czarina Alarmed By Cat Condemned to Death, Convict Is Pur- sued Into Cathedral of Veszprlm Screams of Herself and Lady In In Hungary. Waiting Bring Guards of the Palace. Vienna. During the celebration of In mass In the Cathedral of Veszprlm, Peterbof, Russia. People here still Hungary, a man In convicts clothes are laughing at Imperial adventures burst Into the cathedral and, rushing the night before the Czar met the np th aisle, attempted to conceal German Emperor. The Imperial famHe hlmse'.f behind the high altar. ily went to bed early to get up freJi was followed by a prison warden with for the cruise Into the Gulf of Finland. Maas wag rifle and fixed bayonet. At midnight fearful screams came suspended while the warden chased from the Czarinas room, which is Imthe convict round and round the high mediately next to that of the Czar, altar and finally raptured him. The who sleeps with on adjutant, and Is refugee was Vendelen Makkos, under guarded by six soldiers and an officer sentence of death for the murder of quartered In the ante room. The Czar He had Jumped from a pawnbroker. anti the guard rushed Into the Czaronr train to another while being es- ina's room and found her In a terrible few weeks a corted from Budapest fright. An assassin was somewhere In Later be es- the go, but was recaptured. room; both she nnd the lady In caped through a prison window and waiting, who sleeps on a mattress apparently stretched near the bed, heard him mode for the cathedral, with the Idea of obtaining sanctuary. moving about. In a few seconds the room was filled with soldiers, who blocked ail Dons 6u it ; Forgets Loot. After filling hta pock- exits and had orders to shoot down Philadelphia. ets with valuable Jewelry In the home any one who tried to go In or out of Assiatant District Attorney Fox, Every corner of the apartment was a burglar put on one of Foxs sul's and searched in vain. Suddenly a noise came from a cupboard In a distant went away forgetting the loot. corner and tbe Czarina grew hystep, leal. Several soldiers, headed hv their officers, surrounded the cupboard door with drawn swords and called upon the hidden assassin to disarm Dead silence reigned aa the captain heroically opened the door. Out jumped a hugh black cat The Czar, suddenly relieved, laughed heartily and all followed suit except the Czarina, who was too confused to do anything. i ' Woman Hunts Poachers. London. Poachers In Sussex havo now to beware of a ludy gamekeeper, who Is watching over the southern country preserves with a gun. She has been Initiated Into her somewhat arduous duties by her father, who Is also a gamekeeiier, and. although only twenty years of uge, she goes fearlessly about at dead of night In search of trespassers. In direct contrast to the proverbial saying about a woman aiming straight, she Is said to he a deadly shot w ith the gun. fully-loade- d L |