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Show part; and onr hired boy, who frequently vieited the family, affirmed that the (Tuckers shared tbs Lambs which the bound captured. My partner posted himself behind the pasture fence with a gun loaded with buckshot, hut on the following afternoon the hound entered the pasture and caught a lamb before Ward could get near enough to shoot Jumping the wall, the hound ran for home, half dragging, half carrying the itrug. glitig lamb. Ward gave chase, but waa unable to come near the hound until it gained lta master's dooryard, where it turned and faced him. growling savagely. Ward fired and the hound fell, just as Its master opened the door and raised an expostulating band to prerent the on her A KNOT OF RIBBON. knot of (Ktnty ribbon, That decked a .now jr gown, And hid m the .oil, thak riug.ts Did the rose spring from tout lips, dial? Those bps so aeet nd led; Are you ever lonely now, lov, Down in your quiet tail? ' Of auuuy golden browu. hv nothing left but the ribbon, And s tress of the olt brown hair. To tell of the gentle maiden Who naa dlhtao aweet and fair Oh, littk face, with the glimmer Of love tn your weet, lilue eye, That were deep a. the wave of ocean. And bright aa the summer ahiea. I To think you are gone forever, alone in our grave; While over your mossy pillow. The wild roae gar.aud aave. A knot of half worn nhbou; ho dun ami faded now; Ah me the od i lying Rei-tiu- Above the wearer J a .' blow. averley Mag&xin. The anti-wa- r feeling la very strong Russian students. the among TIV.BER SUNK had expired, and were supposed to year ago, when been poisoned. have much was an Id about the Now, If we had been wise we should "ubamloned fnrms of New A mere smatEngland, I formed with an- have remained quiet. other young ina u what we tering of law, which was all we posIs dangerous knowledge for a foolishly believed to be rather a fine sessed, man to aet on, and is pretty sure to plan for establishing ourselves comhim into trouble. We knew that fortably. We were then salesmen In get we a right to kill a dog attackbad ue of the great stores In Boston. We were not altogether happy In our oc- ing our flock, and that we could legalcollect double damages from the cupation, for we liked out-o- f door life. ly As we had been prudent enough to dogs owner; and as we thought we lave a little money, we thought we had good evidence that these dog were the transgu ssois, we went imlight look about, jiuy some old farm, itoek It with sheep, and live leisurely mediately to McFaddeti and demanded nd healthfully on our mutton and by damages for the seven lambs and two sheep killed. the sale of our wool. McFuilden threatened us with Ills t We talked the scheme over tlirough-nand his wife, declaring that she ax, one entjre winter and spring, and would scald us, put the kettle on a hot vacatwo weeks of uiumer pent c.ir lire. They were very angry over the tion driving through the northerly of loss of the two (logs, Counties of Vermont, New Hampshire Mc- the wood' luck dog, vv ll.cl) In Iml Maine, quest of old farm propl addiM fi had kept ugly erty. At last we found In Maine what the at l.e-d- i in all sunini'T. tenil'j , lulled us pretty well four Instead of obtaining il.unigs fumi adjoining homesteads of about liR) McFaddell for oar slice) mid lai ids, lores each: and we were able to pur- he sued us fur g Ins two dogs; chase nil for an unfortunately fur us, we luid sup-As there was much similar farm i si him with all the evidence lie propei ly near by, we could. If our as- needed. When at last the case came pen m til proved a success, add to our to trail we found the law far different territory and liiciease our stork. At f i oil) what we had sunpnsed it to he. the outset, and during the sueeeeding Tli" following mats came out; lut uiini and wilder, wc purchased Kill First, the fact that these two dogs wo four which divided luto heep, came up and ate of tne .dead sdi p Cocks. did not prove that they had killed the On one of fne four farms was a fairshe. p. In old comfortable the house: and ly Second, as Aunt Deborah was onr tprlng we went there to live, having in gaged as housekeeper mi elderly but hired liotisekeepir, we were as much very energetic woman we called Aunt responsible for her net aa if we bail done tiie deed ourselves. Deborah. Third, although we lud a legal right Our neighbors were seven or eight to kill dogs molesting our sheep, we none some families, wholly prosperous, had no right to poison them; and the llovenly and shiftless; and they all proved fact of our having laid cut kept dogs. polson'V for them subjected us to a a our Within radius of two miles of tine of $50, and also to payment for sheep pasture there were, as we soon hud occasion to reckon, seventeen or he dogs, which were to be worth $0 each eighteeu dogs, including four hounds, Fourth, glass, although not poison In Hid all exceedingly dear to their ownto be poiers. There were otter dogs and Its ordinary form, was held nil intents and purposes when son to "bear dogs and partridge dogs," and to a powder .tad put luto great many very valuable wood- pounded to hat. meat for dogs chuck dogs. And mnny of these prewe went hom from the as Finally, cious animals were fond of making nocturnal raids Into our sheep pasture. trial, the victorious McFadden drove behind us and reviled us. Now, our legislators have not left us Onr own mortification was slight, In darkness as to what sttps may lehowever, compared with that of Aunt en tn. against mischievous Deb. gally be of her dog when the dogs. Whoever will "xamine the sta1 tute books of almost any State will physic were made known to her. w oil'll a for time she thought really fiud articles limiting dogs strictly, and fall sick of tier indignation, and wc declaring that If a dog transgresses the bail some difficulty in preventing lur edicts he may lawfully be killed. For . In Massachusetts the conclusion Is that from visiting1 the McFaddens di's us cost Aunt ei.ploit any person may lawfully kill a tresfliff), In lines, price of dogs and passing dog whenever and wherever costs, but mir lambs were not mole't-efound. that season. That was our In the first spring after we had tak- one again refor crumb of en up our sheep farm we had 1 10 mained not the comfort, doubtthie the that slightest lambs when the sheep were turned out two poisoned dogs were the offenders. to pasture on the third day of May. The fine for poisoning was for exposTour day later six lambs and two which other animals, or Bits of wool, ing poison heep wet a missing. human beings, night partake possibly bones and the remains of one sheep, all of, rather than as a punishment for found In secluded places, showed that this particular mode of killing dogs. some animal bail killed and eaten In law It Is a far less criminal ofthem. fense to poison a dog than to poison a As bears or wildcats were not num- sheep, a cow or a horse. For erous in that locality, we felt morally Indeed, the culprit, in Mascertain that dogs had done the mis- sachusetts, may be sent to prison for chief, and we particularly suspected five years, and in Maine for four year. two dogs kept by a neighbor named In the next summer the sheep of anUcFadden, living a mile distant One other neighbor named Fothcrly came iwts a bulldog, the other a large mon-frInto our field, where potatoes and peas esteemed were planted. They partook heartily cur, on of the roodchuck dogs. of the green pea, and not only of My partner and fellow shepherd. them, but of Pari green, which had RVard, carried two buffalo skins to the been sprinkled on the potatoes to kill pasture, hid himself In a clump of low potato bugs. Two or three of the sheep hemlocks, and watched dur ng the fol- died; and mindful of the McFadden lowing night with a gun resolved to triumph, this neighbor ahoot any dog that came near the re- prosecuted us promptly for exposing alfie saw the of mains none, sheep, poison, and declared that he would though a lamb was killed daring the land us In Thomaston Jalt for It eight In another part of the pasture. But this case went against Neighbor When dogs go sheep killing they seem Fotherly. In addition to the costs, he to revert to the nnnlng and slyness of had to settle with us for the peas at their wild ancestry. our own figures, and also to pay damIn all these vexations e had warm ages for a malicious prosecution, besympathiser In "Aunt Deb." She hat- cause of his threatening publlely beed dogs on general principles, and for fore trial what he would do with us. the special reason that on a number lie suffered to the amount of $150. of nights when the bulkhead door for In this case it was held that the poichanced to lie left open, some animal son was lawfully used. So It is a very Btole Into the cellar and raided her nice question when a man may lawof doughnuts, custard pies aud fully expose poison. pa If those sheep Other eatables. had come into the field through the Now, boys. Just you let me try my least neglect on our part, the result land on those dogs, sho said, at the might have bee., more agreeable tc breakfast table. I'll flu em for you. Fotherly. When It comes night you Just go to The year following our sad legal conbed and sleep. I'll answer for the test with McFadden lambs disappeared dogs." mysteriously werk after week from Go ahead. Aunt Deb, we said. You our pasture. At first we suspected hall have a lamb for every dog you human thieves, as no trace of wool or bones could be discovered; but a boy dispose of. Toward night we saw her pounding whom we bailor mplcyed to wnteh reomethlng In an old mortar; and just ported that a larg- brown and white At dusk she wont alone Into the sheep foxhound had leaned he wail, seized pasture. She bail, although we did a iamb and jumped out with It. all in Hot know it at t1" : o. , pounded up Jess than half a minute. He identitwo glass botl, v.ith the powder fied the hound as the property of one doctored" th" running of the Clncker. a poor neighbor living Lalf a ih sheep and tile land) last killed. The mile away. .next day we discoic-e- l The hound was the mother of five that the carcass of the sheep had been taken away, puppies, and could obtain nothing, or nd on the following day tiding came next to nothing, to eat at home. It that klcFaddeus twe suspected dogs w as doubtless a case of dire necessity o 1 m-- run-out- d poi.-orin- p , The actual number of naval and military prisoners committed to civil prisons in Ireland during 1902 waa 327. gays the Providence Journal: Every-thia- g possible should be done, and at once, to iacrease the safety of human life on American railroad, even If it be found necessary to adopt Senator Hoar's suggestion aDd bind a railroad director to every cowcatcher. According to the Kansas City Journal, ferrets are now making life miserable for the tax Jumpers In sevshot. It Is evident that In the excitement eral counties in Kansas. This is a of the moment uiy partner bad made new scheme in Kansas. The ferrets a rather free use of his gun, but he bad twenty-fivper cent, of all taxes In mind the words of the law: "Any get the tax dodgers dig make wldch they person may lawfully kill him whenever and wherever found." np. The scheme ha worked so well Clucker, the owner of the dog. Incit- In the couuties where It has been tried ed by McFadden and Fotherly, took so far that It will no doubt spread to legal advice and began suit to recover In the State. damages for the v ilawfut killlug of every county his foxhound, which he professed to value at S.U. gays the New York Globe: When A most stormy trial followed; and In the modern steel skeleton high buildthe d vision Ward was held to be In appeared iu our cities it vvai fanli in shooting the hound after its ing that It would prove an Irrethought owner had raised his hand to forbid It; and there was a grave doubt expressed sistible barrier to fire la its neighborns to whether lie had not laid himself hood, and thus minimize the danger liable for unlawfully entering Cluck-er- s from great conflagration. In ordlnury premises with a gun, lu pursuit cases it may be able to do this, but of the hound. In the end we paid ?5 for the fox- wheu fire Is combined with high wind hound; but by a rather curious legal the skyscraper is unquestionably an offset, damages to about that amount added ( lenient of danger of almost inwere allowed us for the lambs killed calculable force. by the bound. The costs of the suit I 11 on us. T lie i ourt shrewdly looked Cldnf Pidgin, of the 5inssnein.cf!s as to that, Clucker being out for Census Bureau, finds that the lnsh uilc.Ty liapacrr.lu.is. the Tlu MiuuiiMon which we arrived at. born residents of this country rmost prompt ar.d unanimous in r Hairing the rig to vole. I i suite of the disujvuu egos which the German Immigrants suffer on account of th diflambs, we iff' m it far safer to shoot ference iu language, they are nlmist li m on our own premises than oil as quick to ( ei and too hallo- as the them, mil posiiivily unsafe to shoot Hibernian irmnl.gra- - ts are. (Lief Pidhim on his master's promises. The latest method of all is to catch hhu In gin discovers that not half ilm Cana trap at the scone of his depredations, adians living In the United States are then Minim. in bis cnsier, and at the naturalized . m.rit ns, and he finds same time inviio one or more disintera decided bnekwirdncsj among the ested parties to see and hear what rohsii and Italian people. takes place. In the State of Massachusetts, and 1 St Taul and MinncapolP. are the believe one ir two other States where dogs are licensed and taxed, the dog largest frog markets In the world. The law provides that any farmer meeting total receipts for the past year from wkh losses from dogs may file a the frog catchers o the State exceedclaim, with proofs of loss, at the assessor'.; office, and be paid the amount ed 500,000 dozen, requiring the slaughcf his loss out of the town treasury. ter of no less than 5,000,000 frogs. Or, If he chooses, he may bring an acFive years ago no frogs were shipped tion against the owner of the dog and out of Minnesota. Now the business recover double, and in some cases a year. of to amounts $100,000 upward but he cannot threefold, damages; In but other are Lund States, adopt both methods. In Maine nnd Frogs most oilier States, however, the suf- there are no frogs like the Minnesota ferer mu.it bring the owner of the dog product for the epicure. This is atto terms, if lie can; be has no other tributed to the clear, cool wat r which mode ,f redress. is found in .tiunesotas 10,0 J luk"s ui Ft c.ts's where two, three or four co,s, b"!o"glng to different panics, which the frogs hve anl have we.it off hy night or day on a joint foray liuo a lio k of sheep, it has been Wireless telegraphy Is rapidly emu lend ib. t in h deg's ov. imr was (vi, y for what his own dog killed ing Into commercial utility i:i or wn.iii'd. If nnvbody could find that and large numbers of spark out: otli'Wi ise all were liable. Youth's as such telegrams are messages, Cj-- i. ..l.oiu transmitted are called, daily. Th ue Is a In service operation between DeniU n Iiay, I .in Twenty mark Is and a the Prussia, while two German day Tirmiiy hearty neals r. (laim of art appetite on exlnbi-t.o- steamers running between Kiel and at to College of luy slcians und Korsoer are equipped with instruSurgeons, New Turk City. Three huncomdred students sat spellbound for two ments, and maintain continuous hours watching a phenomenon discov- munication with both German and ered by Irofeisor W. T. Bilk "This Danish land statious. The system emwondoifnl man, explained Hr. Ball to ployed is the Slaby-Arco- . Private expectant students, has Sieuosis o. messages are accepted at the two of-- , the oesophagus with aesophngeal dinear Kiel, and on the verticulum, or. in other words, he can fices at Bulk, eat without end. Ile'U never have Isle of Felimarn. A fee of seventeen dyspepsia, ns food never passes into cents la charged for every message his stomach by way of his throat How transmitted from one station to the much he enjoys eating we shall see of the number of later as be disposes of this food and other, irrespective It is thence disand words It contains, drink we have here. His life is sustained by liquids administered through patched to any part of Germany or a gastric fistula of his stomach. Denmark at a cent a word. hereupon the gastronomic mantel began devastating piles of food and Within the memary of living men buckets of drink. As be gorged the sack at the base cf his neck began to the standards of wages at the time current have been unsettled throughout bulge. Professor Bull explained that for the country on at least three memoreconomy's sake the patient ate only six able occasions. The discovery of gold lu meals a day, but his capacity possibly was as great as twenty, and that the California In 1819, as a sequel to the man had swallowed some add a year war with Mexico, brought a revoluand a half ago which resulted In a con- tion in prices. The Civil War, 1SC1-0traction of the aexophngus, making it withdrew millions of men from ornecessary for him to take his nourishand left labor systems ment through a tube. Indiauapol.s dinary pursuits to be replaced under rates inflated by News. The war with a disturbed currency. The Mlrrur Nntr Hatter. 1S98, with Ej temporary diverSpain, Be happy, girls, you are prettier than sion of labor and Its territorial expanyou think! is who dissatisfied with sion, has been too recent for Its effect Every girl herself should remember that she Is to be fully measured. Besides these better looking than the kindest of look- influences, the coincident developments ing glasses bills her believe. of steam and electricity, as applied to A mirror cannot flatter a face that and transportation, Is In its natural state that la, not manufactures and intensified and diversified so have Even the very best plate "made up. glass has a pale green tinge, which specialized all forms oi labor that farm reflects a color a trifle less clear than labor Is no longer a distinctive term. the original. can no longer be Hair also has always a more glossy Agricultural labor sheen than the glass shows. If It Ir discussed Intelligently without special wavy, the glass never shows the best treatment of the peculiar forms Into of the waves, and If it is sti.iight. the which It has become separated by glass Increases The sfa.ght appearof soil, climate, and distance ance. More Important and still l etter to be from dense bodies of population. All remembered and c.arefii.'y treasured, this emphasizes the Imperative need no one ever looks at the face so closely of education and training for the work or so critically as the owner of It of tho modern farm, whether In the looks at the reflection In the glass. Blemishes that are n grief to a girl field with grain, stock, cotton, fruit, may pass qnite unnoticed by her dafry and garden product, or In the frienii. PitUburg Dispatch. bauMb pir-son- horse-poisonin- - lf - then-ucsts- .t . u 5, con-dltlo- BEDS. THE DAY Frta e O.ME IN RIVER Await thi iBienlir Mttbtd to UiWTtr It. "If some scheme could be devised," said George W. Noble, of fitill water, at the Plankiuton, by which the sunken logs which fill the beds of rivers and creeks In the logging sections of this country could only he recovered. Immense fortunes ould be made. Along the St. Croix waters it is estimated that logs enough are embedded In the sand of river bottoms to keep the mills running for years. Under present conditions the loss Is total, for no successful method has ever been devised to effect this saving. Occasionally logs cut years ago are forced by the washings of floods from their sand beds and driven upon the shores, where the action of sun and wind driea them out sufficiently to that they will float down stream, but the precentage of logs recovered is small, and millions of dollars worth of property Is lost beyond recovery until some enterprising genius invents a machine or process to recover the timber. At Stillwater logs occasionally come to the sorting booms bearing marks In use half a century ago, and when they appear the old lumbermen grow reminiscent of men who have long been forgotten, but who were important operators in the pioneer logging days of Wisconsin and Minnesota. No possible estimate can bp made of the amount of timber thus lost, but lumbermen estimate that the rivers of Wisconsin, in the value of the logs buried In their sail Is, have fortunes of millions of dollars If ill" logs could be recovered. Of the billions of feet of logs floated down jour principal stienms year nfier )onr, a percentage are lost nnnually, finding graves In the send. Mis oiimii has been one of the leg pine Slates, jour Chippewa, Wisconsin, St. Croix and Menominee rivers end their tr, butanes eonta.n fortunes in sunken timber. Strange as it may appear, the va'ue of the timber Is not lessened, even after it 1ms been submerged for half or quarter of a eenlimy. Efforts have been oecaGonolly made to recover sunken logs. At one true u eoi in iy uns organ ""d at S illw.i or to lnd"" streams and tin's r cover s m e of t. e timber, but the pliu del not work well any groat ilcgn e of success, tff s mi tbod being found too expense e. Some one willeoute along s une day with a plan, and tills Immensely valuable product, row lost, will be recovered. Milwaukee Sentinel. A Wontlfiful Motor. Detnlls are published of a wonderful new motor. Invented by Ieter Thornlcy, an English engineer. This Invention is considered of such importance that its development may result in express railway eng.nes running at twice their present spied at only half the cost and In Atlantic liners crossiug from Liverpool to New York lu three days. It Is almost small enough to be carried In a typewriter ease. The new motor is callable of developing fifteen hundred r 'volutions ,n nunut", giving v th teen er under n b liier pres-Mi..' k'd't noun s to the s inaie inch. In even tbc lm-- t rndvvny lo oimtive after the p.s-otli' st (am is mlm h"S novd from live to eVit in oc ; long tli" c.' litder. Mr. Thumb y ins devised a valve which Will ndii if a given quantity of .sleati at every cr m m neon out of the moke, and s i n eeiy e of adjusted that the etunve Ike steam admit'ed is ,ust Hiffie e:,t to drive the piston at the eml of its journey. By Mio most modest estimate the saving in coil is twenty live per ee it while the mnplieity of the motor is such that the inn, el oust Is much cheaper than cMs.iiig tyjes. New Yoik Com inert ial. hnr-epov- e OF SAUE THE AUCTION eonae over the hill. The farmer-folAnd np from the neighboring vsi. To bid and bargain for and buy The laat of my good for eale! The poster out on the countr-id- e Said: "Everything must go!" But Ill have to turn try eye sway From one poor bid, I know. k One cheap little bid of s mother young Who hve a mile to the west; She ha come to bid my rrad.e in For the babe upon her breast The cradle bought for S mother-briAnd a babe of love first dawn Ill have to turn my eye when- I hear That Uomg goim, goneI remember how the song cf the lark In the tky came trembling down The morning 1 brought the little erik In my wagon out from town! The daisies curtsied along the rosA And the thrushes took peep I know they guessed that the tiny bed Wa a neat for baby sleep o 1 And while the larks sad the thrushes pip4 in the morning dimond-deweThe mother sang by her downy nest And the baby crowed and cooed; Till the baby a famy passed away One night on a starry gleam. And the mother follow ea him, to best The end of his little dream! d. house and cradle a nest for The ail ence is m.v only mate. And my babe is memory! What need of s What need of Jiowt met" I give the crib to the mother young With the babe on her breast at p ay Ill have to imn iny eves, I know, M hen Rje rurr.es it awav1 Alojsius (oil, in the Housekeeper, But When a 'Constant Render writes vv nether lie should eat with a knife or a fork, j in cant help think ing of th damage he limit have pre viuiiMy done wall li s daws. to nsk Yntuli wants to vu II - ,l,r ,i i in. . g id t rite h.s na v it, a - , i Uv,aum oi a . we to iff i.; ) up high i r ll,,oa cfici-ii- l !. J . Judge. jou have died real teaiu la Not (xacllj. an iicun":" You sav your svvered Mr. Morn.mgton Barnes; hut I have lie i templed to when 1 saw W the In.x oliieu stiitem-iiU- ." ashiug ton htar. Larry, jou've heard of this talk lint do you about 'race suicide. th.nk about it'.''' " ell, sor, 1 think th babies that oughtn't lo be horn ar born the ofteuest, begohs! Chicago Tribune. What would you do." said the nor vous peisoii, "if a fire were to break, out iu jour apartment house' Id go right downstairs and thauk the janitor,' answers the man who is always dissatisfied. Washington Star. Whats the matter with your book, ScrlblerV it was to have come out a I know; hat it didnt month ago." lit the pictures that the illustrator drew for it, so, of rour-e- , I had to re vvme a good part of it. Judge. Tins Iff e la all a sti ugg'e d A lit the w "ii iff i - rn'e. , J . It d-- i i i .n g w.ii in ci And m sui.um r k. Vv fin, r, ng i u d. tv i a- - i m.c.o.i j Star. Mrs. H.iuej moon "i in j on love me' (iffl M.i,i (i mill !, n.i.d.v , trim oilier voU sc.it, to lu ci ffm Ii.il "She's icvcii tene:-- , already. I get out with this lure, but 111 leave th gentleman by the vv luJavv." T ho Wan. derer. Mi-- s Fora (to Major Putter, who plaViiig an impintnnt manh, nud ha jiisL lost las hall) 'Oh, Major, do come and take your l.o.rid ball away from my l.ttle i.og. lie won't let m toui h i;, n.nl I know he must be ruin mg his teeth!" Punch. ITcM-T- r. This, said the leading citizen, It I'pon Taking A young woman of readme appearpausing before u large tree enclosed ance from one of the back tourships in a fancy iron railing, is one of our presented herself at the Ciunry Clem's little towns most treasured land I this marks. office in the town of M Indeed? asks the foreign Was it planted by one of where they take out licenses for glttiu visitor. married? she inquired. your Presidents or is it where your mobs lynch their victims? Yes. ma'am, replied the clerk. Cinein uati Commercial-Tribune- . Well, I want one. For yourself? Sorrow of the Harried Dmmatlet. Course. My names Mandy Sikes, nis Rufus Millsap. r'm twenty-threIt is doubtful it the casual playgoer and he's twenty-seven- . Both of us realizes how many dramatists boost Uve in Hick'ry Holler." and shove their wives into exalted The blank was properly filled out places, far above those more talented and handed to her. actresses who have failed to reckon IIow much? the asked. the advantages of matrimony. If Ann Two dollar. Hathaway had utilized the advantage She took two silver dollars out of a of being Mrs. W. Shakespeare in th direction of a itage erreer, her narn pocket In her dress. Thats what I told him it'd be. she would have come to us as the patron remarked, passing the money to the saint of leading women. But among clerk through the little window. It Americans the most difficult case ia ain't me thats payin for this. It's surely George 51. Cohan's. Here Is a him. lie was too bashful to come and young man, who supplies himself and git the license himself, nnd I wasn't four others of his family with parts, going to let no man's foolishness spile and 1ms the further complication of a weddin. lirolher-ilaw as manager. A mother Carefully folding the document, she and daughter can amicably adjust placed it in her pocket aud took her leading lady honors," but a daughter has complicated things to th departure. Youth's Companion. extent that half of last season sister Varltle. In Korea a serviceable umbrella cwsts Josephine did not appear as one of tbt season Mra. about sixpence. The covering is of Four Cohans, and this M. will fact en that disregard George oiled paper. in and the eyn public tireiy, figure Blindness Is very common among the as Ethel Levey, star. When this popn beMoors. At forty-fivtheir eyesight lar family came to the Fourteenth gins to fail. It is said that this af- Street Theatre with Running For fliction is doe to the excessive use of Office, the press agent stood tn th coffee. on the first night and banded A firm with an odd name does busi- lobby ness in Washington street, Buffdlo. typewritten slips to the critics, assurThe firm's name is English & Irish, ing them that there was only on among the Four and English is an Irishman, while Irish leading lady Miss Jnsepidne and non Cohans. is of English parentage. The baya. or weaver bird, of India, other had the right lo claim that title. But if indications of stormy weather spends a good deal of its time in catch- showed in the lobby, not so on th which it mammoth fast firctlies, ing 'us cne and all. k:sed and Cohans, stage. nest to the sides of its with moist clay. On u dark r.icht the baya's nest looks embraced when bowing to encores, and in a box sat a young Cohan, fondly like an eiecuie lamp. waving a rose to mamma, when sh In England telephone girls receive appeared in male attire lending a from $tJi) to $2H the first year, which street parade. F. Elderkin Fjles, Ur U (radially increased to I2S5. Evcryltpdy'a Magaxine. for, fo-e- 1 , 1 e n in-la- e |