AFAMOUS
Rosa Bonheur’s Stirring Master
piece, “The Horse Fair.”
ACUTE A^oicms. IflEpygE ||^ SILENCE?
It l» Dangerous Only* When There Is
Delay In Operating.
“Acute ajipendicits calls for immedi
ate surgery,” says Dr. Wesley Grove
Vincent, instructor in surgery at 11)6
LtONS* ROARS QUIETED WHEN
HUNTERS ARE ABROAD.
A PRIZE THAT FRANCE LOST.
The Artist’s Native Land Permitted
the Great Canvas to Find a Home In
This Country—The Story of the
Painting and Its Replicas.
One of the chief glories of the ]Meti c-
politan museum in New York is llosu
Bonheur’s stirring masterpiece, “The
Horse Fair,” a picture waich for its
Irresistible movement and living por
traiture of man’s most useful friend
holds a unique position in the aunals
of art and the affections of lovers of
paintings. ,
Few, however, are acquainted witl.
the intimate history of that nutal.'k
canvas, and fewer still are aw’arc that
there are no less than five horst fail
pictures in existence. The one in Nov
York is the original and, it will be
membered, was first the property of A
T. Stewart and then purchased for i!i/
Metroix)litan by Cornelius Vanderbilt
for 250,000 francs.
It was painted in Paris, tho model
used being the horses of the I’aris On
nibus companj' and a few animal;
studied at the horse market of tli-
French capital. It was lirst exhlbitcu
at the salon of 1853, but wont back b:
the artist unsold.
A part of the further history of tb«
famous painting is recorded by Ernest
Gambart in his manuscript memoirs
which have been freely drawn upru
for the “Reminiscences of Rasa Boji
heur:”
“After the closing of tho lSr»3 rari-
Balon ‘The Horse Fair’ intnislod
to the Society of Artists of Ghent f'^
exhibition in that town, where it htid
a great success, but whence it al:^«
came back unsold. In the spring ol
1854 I expressed to Mile. Eonhour tht
desire to buy It from her. At that thn
it was in Bordeaux, her native town.
“Her preference was that the munic
ipality should purchase it for tho olt^
museum, and a price of 12,0X) francj
had been mentioned at which the towi;
authorities might acquire it. Rut slu
said to me that if tho canvas oa)n«?
back to her again she would let nif
have it. However, she could not lei
it go to England for less than 40.0i:C
francs,
“I unhesitatingly accepted tho bar
gain, and it was agreed that the pic
ture should be mine unless sild tr
Bordeaux. As the picture was back
in her studio again in the followiaj:
year, I told Milo. Bonhour that 1
W’ished to take it at once in order re
have it in my 1855 exhibition and iliist
I should like to have it engraved by
Thomas I.andeor, the celebrated on
graver and l>rother to the painter.
“She was delighted at the idea of
the picture being engraved and said t»
me: ‘I have asked you 40,0X) francs
for my picture, although in i'^'raiice 1
cannot get 12,000, and I am pleased at
your consenting to my terms. On t ho
•ther hand, I don’t mean to take un
due advantage of your liberality. How
can we arrange matters? I.,et us see
Well, the picture is very large, and ii
Will be difficult to find a place for it
in an engraver’s studio. Besides, yoo
want to exhibit it. Wouldn't it l»o bet
ter for me to paint you a small*r
copy ?’ ”
That suggestion slie carriel out and
explains how the sec-ond canvas oaint
Into existence. That smaller copy wa?
the one from which liandseei's well
known steel engraving was niade aucl
is the picture which is in the Briiisli
National gallery.
When she heard that it had ))e;*onK
the property of the British nati.>ij
Mile. Bonheur decided to make a third
copy, thinking the second was iio^
good enough for the London collection,
hence “The Horse Fair” No. 3. Bui
the National gallery authorities wero
not able to accept the substitute. a>.
the painting which it was designed tc
replace had been given to them .-is
trustees.
Besides these three, Mile. Bonhr'UT
executed a w'ater color replica an^l a
drawing based on a large photogiai h
Of all these, however, the picture ir
the Metropolitan is by far the finesi
work, which is only as It should be in
View of the fact that the arti.^it ahvay-
found her best public in America.
This w’as recalled to her detrimoni
when the rosette of the IjCgiou of lion
or was requested in her behalf, “^iu
has ceased exhil)iting at tlv- “iilon ’
objected the president, “an-1 sci’s \r.
America everything she paints. ' Tht
complete answer to that was t’.iat tl:(-
French government had had tho c’l
portunity to buy “The Horse I’air,
but had neglected it—Argonaut.
Pacts Noted by Theodore RooeeveH
While In Afrlca—Has Belief That
the Sounds Are Method of
Signaling.
NO PLACE OF ENTERTAINMENT
Campaigning Statesmen Found a Rea>
•on for Primitive Fare They En
countered in Noble l^anslon.
“When I was making my cam*,
palgn last fall,” said Representative Postgraduate Medifal School
Fields of Kentucky, **I started out to , Hospital. Dr, V-incent insisted that
cover a county In which I was but! there was no medical treatment for
little acquainted. Believing, likv I acute appendicitis and that the mortal-
Polonius, that a fine front was a ^t;y following operation was always due
valuable asset, I arrayed myself in to delay, the surgeon being called in
my best. W'hen I got off the train j when too late. |
at the county seat, whence I was to j “The percentage of mortality in op- | Uons are noisy animals where they
make my start, I met the candidate ; erations for acute appendicitis under- have liot been much molested, but, for
for. judge on my ticket, and, making i taken in the early stages of the inflani- | some reason or other, if they are so
hunted that their numbers are much
thinned, the survivors seem to roar
less frequently than formerly, writes
Theodore Roosevelt in Scribner’s Mag
azine.
The roaring is done at night, but,
while late surgery In such cases saves j once in the Lado'l heard a lion roar
comparatively few.” after sunrise. There is no grander
Appendicitis is common among chil- ; sound In nature than the roaring of a-
dren between five and fifteen years of i troop of lions. The old male begins
the village at which we had expectr ; age. There is no particular food that ! find the others chime In, at first with
ed to put up, but soon after It fell v4 j can be singled out as especially liable ! low moans, that grow louder and loud-
spied through the gloom an imposing to cause it unless possibly fruits hav- | until the full lunged roaring can lit*
ing small pits or seeds. Delay is more j orally be heard for miles. Then the
dangerous in children than in adults, i roars gradually die away into gasping
The symptoms described by Dr. J. B. ■ g^hts.
Murpby come in definite order at ap- The volume of sound Is extraordin-
proximatelv regular intervals. They ^^d cannot x>OB8ibly be mistaken
are: First,^.ain in the abdomen, sud- any other noise If reasonably
den and severe; second, nausea and ; ®^ose, but of course if far enough dis«
vomiting within a few hours, most i tant it b^omes only partly audible,
commonly within three or four hours , may then resemble the boomii^
known to him my views, I found he
agreed with me.
“Accordingly, after putting up In
the best quarters at the best hotel In
the town, we next morning engaged
the* handsomest rig the best livery ! peritonitis is practically 100 per cent,
stable could boast, and, with a
haughty driver on the box, sallied
forth to conquer.
“Night overtook us some miles from
mation is shown by hospital statistics
to be very low. It, is practically nil.
* * * The mortality in medically treat
ed cases that are allowed to go on
to gangrene and rupture with general
looking mansion with many lights
a gleam. {
“Ringing the bell, we announced
ourselves; whereupon a hospitabla
gentleman came out and ushered us
into a parlor whose modest furnish
ing seemed out of all keeping with i
the dignity and size of the mansion, i
“When, later, we went to a belated
s«pper, we were astonished to find a
after the oiiset of pain; third, general
of an ostrich heard nt*r by, and in
on the right side or, more particularly,
- , . J.., . . . I over the appendix; fourth, rise of
plained the candidate for judge, and temperature two to twenty-four hours
we grt through a most meager meal gfter onset of pain.-New York World,
as best we could.
"We were up betimes next morn
ing, after sleeping in most primitive
quarters, that did injustice to the
KNEW THE WORD “KIRK.”
spacious dining-room furnished ai i seusitlvene.ss, u,ost marked ;
Its the true yeoman spirit!’ ex-, fm„n, rise
occasional growl—I know no other
word to describe the sound—of an ele
phant, a beast which sometimes utters
the queerest and most unexpected
noises.
It has been asserted that the lion
noble mansion, and after a breakfast But Went Astray When He Followed , never roars when hungry, because to
on a par with the supper we got in i It Into the Turkish. | io bo would frighten his prey, and that
our rig and started away. Reaching To hold ilown successfully the job roaring Is a sign that he Is full fed.
the summit of a hill some half a mile ' of governor of a st^te or vice pres- | This sounds plausible, and yet as a
away, we paused to look back at our ! dent of the United States one does not | niatter of fact I doubt if It Is true. Un
night s resting place. Just then a have to be u[) on oriental languages, i Q^®®tlonabl3^, after a successful chase
horS6man drew up beside us. | go Honorable Thomas E.'Marshall
*What place is that?' I queried. ! never hesitates to tell this on himself:
“‘That?’ he replied. ‘Why, that's it was at a reception in Indianapolis
"QUEST OF EL DORADO.
That Elusive Land of Gold and Jew«ta
In South America.
Guiana is bounded on the north by
the great river Orinoco and on the
south by the still greater river Ama
zon. These two grand rivers are con
nected with one another, the Cislqul-
ure, a branch from the Orinoco, falling,
into the Rio Negro, a tributary of th&
Amazon. Within Guiana itself are
many rivers of very considerable size.
The kingdom of El Dorado was re
puted to exist somewhere between the
Rio Branco and the Essequlbo, called
by the Indians the Brother of the Ori
noco. Manoa, the capital, was said to
be somewhere between the Rio Branco
and the Rupununi, a tributary of the
Essequlbo. From the thirties of the
sixteenth centurj' some eighteen expe
ditions had been sent by the Spaniards
to Guiana in search of the golden king
dom. Diego de Ordas, one of the cap
tains of Cortes at the conquest of Mex
ico, led the first sUtempt in ir>31. After
him followed many a brave cavalier,
but all was in vain, and disasters as
well as failure attended nearly all the
expe>?Jtions.
From a state pajwr in the public rec
ord office, London, it ap[)ears that in
1580 persons who traveled in America
had reported that tliere was a place
w'here the women wore great i»lates o(
gold, covering their whole bodies like
armor. In every cottage pearls were to
be found; in some houses a peck. Ban.
quoting houses wei’e built of crystal;
with pillars of massive silver, some of
gold. Pieces of gold as big as a man’s
fist were to be found in the heads of
some of the rivers Raleigh read ac
counts of these exi)editions, but their
want of success did not deter him from
attempting to find the golden region.—
Blackwood’s Magazine.
A LIGHT IN AN AUTOMOBILE.
the county poorhouse!*
Papain of Great Value.
Papam, the most important chemi
cal constituent of the papya, is the
which took place when the Bulgarian
army was driving the Turks out of
Thrace. The battle of Kirk Kelisseh
had just been fought.
“Odd name that—Kirk Kelisseh,”
! Uons roar freely. I have mos^ often
heard them between midnight and
' morning. But I have also heard r«gu-^
lar roaring—not mere moaning or the
panting noise occasionally indulged in
: by a hungry, questing beast—sootf
j after dark, and this was persevered in
at intervals for an hour or so.
I am inclined to think that generally
subject of a recent report by the Amer-1 said the then governor of Indiana. “It
ican consul at Colombo, Ceylon. Prob
ably few of the travelers in tropical
countries who enjoy the melon-like
papaya realize that this fruit contains
one of the most valuable digestives
known to medicine, though the natives
of the Orient, especially in southern
India and Ceylon, use the fruit almost
universally to preventdyspepsia. There
are several varieties of Carica papaya,
and the papain obtained from the dif-
ferent kinds varies accordingly, the
best being that derived from the male
trees of a hybrid variety occurring in
Ceylon. The digestive and disintegrat
ing properties of papain are shown by
the fact that the native cooks in Cey
lon wrap tough meat in fresh papaya
leaves to make it tender, or apply a'
small quantity of the milky juice of
the plant to the surface of tho meat, op ^
put a piece of the green fruit into the
raw cully when the meat will not boll
soft. Papain is said to be capable of
digesting ten to twelve times its
weight of egg albumen at the tempera-1
ture of the human body.—Scientiflo :
American.
means ‘I'orty Churches,’ or, rather, '
mosques. Now, isn’t it queer that the
word 'kirk.' which, as we all know,
stands for ‘church’ in the Scotch ver
nacular, anti which appears in (ierman
and other languages of northern Eu
rope, should liave precisely the same
meaning in Turkish! It makes us
wonder whether all tongues may not
but that occasionally, whether as sig
nals to one another or from mere
pride and overbearing insolence, they
roar at intervals in their way through
the darkness from their resting place
to their hunting field. Of course, when
they reach the actual place where they
are to hunt they become quiet, unless
they deliberately try to stampede the
have had a common source, and if that animals by roaring, or unless several
is so it would probably ue found that
that .source was in the east.”
There was murmured applause from
every one except an unobtrusive little
professor, who had been hovering near
the group.
“Pardon me, governor,” he piped up,
“but your conclusions, while interest
ing, might be called—er, a little mis
leading. It is perfectly true that Kirk
Kelisseh is the Turkish for ‘Forty
Churches,’ but it is the word ‘kelis-
seh’ that means a place of worship,
while ‘kirlv* means ‘forty.’ ”
And the professor was right—New
York Sun.
are hunting together* spread out
around , a herd of zebra or antelope,
when one may roar or grunt to scare
the animals toward the others.
Safe Topic. |
In his book, “The Balkan "Wnr" [
Philip Gibbs, the war correspondent ■
says that the official regulations for j
war correspondents who were sent
out to the Balkans were appallingly ■
severe.' '
Mr. Gibbs found that he was foijrfd* |
den to describe the disposition of
A South Polo Hero.
Captain Koald Amundsen, the Nor
wegian who put the south pole on the
The Sabbatarian.
Mayor Gaynor, complimented In
New York on a letter that he had
written in defense of Sunday games,
said with his quiet smile:
“Well, you know, some of the««
people would hardly have us breatha
on Sunday.
“They are as bad as the old Scots
woman on Queen Viteoria’s Balmoral
estate. This old woman was scandal
ised because the queen went driving
on Sunday afternoons. She ev^ ven-
aired to speak about it.
*The queen, wno allowed a good
1 Cl I niany liberties to her Balmoral tenan*
“t® : ‘ry. »»W to the old wo-
man:
*But, Janet, the New Testament
July 16, 1872. nis youth was spent
In Christiania and on board sealers
and whnlers command^ by his father.; i';ji;ctl7'that "thr^^
Captain Jens Amundsen. He was ,
twenty-five when he entered on his „ severely, *I know
first south polar trip as the fiist office , ^ does; and I think none the more
of the Belgica expedition. This jour- ■ Nftw TcBfflTnflnt fny **
troops, to give the names of genearals# i ney lasted two^ year's and filled the j
the names and nimiber of the wound- | young sailor with aspirations for fur- j
ed. the success or failure of Bulgarian
troops, the state of the soldiers'
, ^ , Ideal Inspires Deeh^e.
ther explorations in the frozen regions. , ^
His parents wanted him to become ft | truest ideal of the human
health, the conditions of the climate | physician, and he spent a year in a , were started.
and so on. When the censor had told
him all this, Mr. Gibbs asked po
litely:
“Will you tell me, sir, if there is
anything about which we shall be
allowed to write?”
The censor thought deesily for a
moment and then answered quite
gravely:
“There is much interest in Bul
garian literature.”
“Perhaps," Mr. Gibbs suggested sar
castically.
medical college. Later he went to ^ This Is perhaps connected with the
Germany to study sciences that would | that much of our best safe-guard-
aid him as an explorer. His first nota- | comes from nature. i\)r instance,
ble feat was to take a ship through the j frequently a woman, even of full
northwest passage, and on this trip he
twice wintered in the ice.—New York
World.
I Not Catching.
j Jane's sister was coming home from.
1 normal school.
1 “Why is she coming home?” asked
I may also be permitted I neighbor. “Is she sick?”
to describe the song of the birds?”
“By all means,” said the censar,
cordially.
An Accurate Description.
“Did you ever run into a telegraps
pole?” inquired the elderly passengoi
“Yes, ma’am,” said the chauffour
slowing up the taxicab to avoid a c oi
lision with a street car. “I’ve bumpor
Into telegraph poles, I reckon, two o-
three times.”
“Brings you to a pretty sudden ,s^oj>
doesn’t it?”
“No, ma’am; the machine stops, ai
right, but I always keep on gointr.’ -
Chicago Tribune.
Curious.
“I had a curious experience ycptor
day,” said Farmer Corntossel.
“What Avas it?”
“A stranger came along and told m*
a funny story and didn’t try to scl
me anything.”—“Washington Star.
Canadian Nicknames.
Our overseas brethren are keen on
nicknames, remarks the London
Chronicle. Take Can&dtans, for ez-
ftinple. The other day 1 read a short
leading article in a dominion newspa
per in which reference was made to a
neighboring town as tito ^‘Ambitious
city.” And never an explanation was
given as to which city was meant. To
me, and to all others who have had
real estate circulars sent them, every
city in Canada is ambitious, and it was
only after some Inquiry that I found
that the special city referred to was I
Hamilton. |
I discovered also that nearly every 1
city has its nickname. Winnipeg is
the “Prairie city,” Toronto is tho j
"Queen city,” Kingston the “Lime
stone city,” Quebec the “Ancient capi- I
tal” and Montreal is the “Metropolitan !
city.” Even provinces have been nick- j
aamed by the Canadians. Do you' |
“Yes, she is very, very ^ick,” said
Jane.
“What ails her?’’ asked the neighbor.
' “Well, I don’t know exactly. Mamma i best, and wonderful is she in haa^
I had a letter from the principal, and | mony and depth.—Harper's Weelriik
he said it was lack of mental ability
natural instincts, has no special desire
for progeny. Then a strong love
comes, and to what was only a vagae
general idea before, that she naturally
would have children, is added a real
longing, an intense imaginiag of how
pleasant a little creature would be^
and of what a solemn and joyful pos
session would be together. Desires
grow when the Ideal surroundings are
prepared. Nature takes care of us.
She is often careless, but judge by her
I don’t know whether it is catching or
not”—Philadelphia Ledger.
Mystified.
Little Elizabeth was telling her first
dream to hex: grandma and her auntie.
Her mother, who was listening, asked
her a question about it, whereupon
Elizabeth looked up wonderingliy and
said:
“Why, you were there, mamma;
Don’t you ’member?”—Lippincott’s.
Lifelike.
Admirer—Where did you get that
heartrending description of a sick
child? Great Author—It’s the way my
boy says he feels W’hen he wants to
get out of going to school.—Life.
Found on the Film.
A etory of a man's recognition of
his long-lost brother in a cinema play
comes from Whltstable, England. Dur*
ing the exhibition of a certain film at
the picture palace a visitor became
greatly agitated, and was so overcome
by emotion that he fainted, and had to
be carried out of the building. When
he recovered it was ascertained that in.
one of the actors in the scenes depict*'
ed the visitor had recognized a brotb>
I er who went to Italy 12 years ago andi
had not since been heard of.
Only a Comparison.
^ _ _ _ Smith—Does your wife think you’re
Sow^wWch is the “Postage stamp | the best man who ever lived? Jones-
Obedlence is not truly performed bj
the body of him whose heait is
■atisfiedL->SaadL ^
province?” It is quite easy to discov
er. Look at the map of Canada, and
particularly at Manitoba. Surely its
ihape indicates that It 1j| the proftQp»
ineant.
Of course not:
band—Judge.
I’m her second hus-
The greatest fool is the one who
fools himself.
Son of Turkish Poet.
Hallouk Fikret Bey, son ot one of
the greatest poets Turkey has ever
produced, will be the first Turkish sto-^
dent to enroll in the University of
Michigan when he comes next fall to
take up work in the engineering de
partment. He has already had two
years’ engineering work In Glasgow.
His father was for years president
ff the Turkish university of Constanti
nople, and at present is professor in
Roberta college^
Use One of the Spark Plugs When You
Have No Matches.
Did you ever while making an auto
mobile tour find yourself on a lonely
country road, perhaps miles from the
nearest house, and suddenly discover
that you had no matches? If you
were anxious to light the lamps or ea
ger for a smoke such a discovery
would not prove at all conducive to
the smoothness of your temper.
There is a simple way in which any
one may secure a light without the aid
of matches. You may be anxious for
a smoke or It may be getting dark and
you want to light your lamp, but in
any event you can secure the neces
sary light if you will follow these di
rections:
Unscrew one of the spark plugs and
let it lie on the cylinder head. Wrap a
small wisp of waste around the end of
any small stick of wood or if there is
none handy wrap It around the end of
a screwdriver or any other tool. Dip
the waste in the gasoline until it is
thoroughly soaked. Of course you
should have only a very small piece of
waste; otherwise the blaze will be too
big for you to handle. After dipping
this In the gasoline lay it close to the
spark plug and turn the engine over un
til this plug sparks. This will ignite
the waste and you will have a little
torch sufficient for lighting your lamp.
Even If there is a heavy rain or snow,
you can secure a light in this manner
sufficient for your needs.—Detroit Free
Press.
Fear of Old Military Service.
A prisoner’s appeal to the court of
criminal appeal for a longer sentence,
although the first on record before
that tribunal, Is not altogether unpar
alleled at the assize, for offenders who
have had the advantage of inside
knowledge of the working of the pris
ons acts have been known to ask the
judge to give them penal servitude in
stead of a short period of hard labor.
They shrink from the more Spartan
diet and severer restrictions that at
tach to the nominally lighter sentence
A century ago, when capital punish
ment was inflicted for many trivial
crimes, a prisoner was sometimes giv
en a choice—death or service in the
army or navy. And the services in
those days had such a terror for some
criminals that many elected to be
banged instead of serving their coun
try.—Ijondon Spectator.
BRAZIL Ar.1 ’ i
Flag Day There Hrr Mcv.
Great ; :
In the n oi
ruling lau” is : ^ •
welconiii);; is c
the Kuroi'et:n ai I th;' '■
grant, gre it atu ;;r! n \
for some y:;!vs t.
spirit of ];iiri!ni^7o.
The cult of iho iKiii: h I
.and more ;ii‘t > . iw ‘
that peopie, and the “f- -
each recurriiig . v
with more >1 pio-i' ; in;
siasm ail ov_*r fi.c*
on every Brazili;!!! s'
may be. In a coi’r^'ry ijvi*
merou!^ sainls’ days ih,' rr
Flag day has become the
day.
Commenting on t’ais, Le
nomicpie uf I’io Janeiro
people are iciaginative rmc
flag undulating in the L
passes by to the ^tr;;;i .■
music, that tire (ulicors s ' ;
sword and before w“'i -v
covers, spe-iks in. ■ ‘
heart of tiie -en 'o =
toric dat ' wlij. h j ^;
tho con-rete snd ’ K h t •
recalls notLin ■: of si
The I's;-i(>n of the ; h;
the (’luidren nf t' '
and on I'lau- d i ■ i ’ . • .
lie sQuaroH of the city : ’
as in the r?vi(nl ^rt-''- ,
hymns.- Ill* hapojiri No v ;
COLLEGE
It Was Galled ‘'Wreckir«*' f
In St. Aug'T-tiro’c T-
At most .iUneiican .->1! ^
“hazing:” at West I\ i-
“crawling” and r.t I ‘
“fagghig” is oft'Mi ai;;!
Augustine was a !•■;. V\:y
“wrecking.”
In a tri'iiwiation of hi-; *‘i' ;
for which I am i’ul.- ;ti 1 i ;
clerical friend, 8t. Au ■ ,i-
what the boys did at tiu* Ti '
Carthag(‘;
“1 wonid talce lu) part in H;
ings of tlie ‘wreckov.-;.’ c; i- ^
ilislj nai'je. v. iiich w : s 1 ^
the btaiup of lh(‘ bc.-^t t i v
with tliem, ;ii.d of ; un.e i
friends, yet 1 always : ii
ways of u’l ir %
their want( i att ■ i ; ■
of fre''iiuii‘'i a!v' ■ U > !;■ ^ ,
fronts with vrhicii iliey r
malignant a.a -i- . I'i . i .
be more like the cor ; ■
what nanie ‘T";.! i^o -’tt.:-
than ‘wre-K:’! S.’ ”
That s»ii?;.'=s :'•> :i* t'»e • ’
Government of Japan.
The government of Japan is not an
absolute monarchy, the mikado being
largely responsible to the parliament
and, to a degree, to the people back of
the parliament. Under the mikado is
the house of peers, composed of the
princes of the blood and the nobility
and the representatives of the vested
interests, and the house of representa
tives, which is made up of some 380
members, representing the masses of
the people.—New York Journal.
An Exception.
Little Mary was coloring pictures
with her set of paints. She used a tint
that failed to please and exclaimed:
“Oh, I didn’t mean to do that! How
ever, what’s done is done and can’t be
undone—except shoe laces.”—Chicago
News.
Poor Dora.
“Dora must have suffered some ter
rible disappointment. One never sees
her smile now. What is the matter?”
“She's had two front teeth pulled
out.”—London Telegraph.
Up in a Balloon.
To remain motionless and watch the
earth fall away from yon as rapidly as
a baseball falls from you when drop
ped from a window is the sensation of
going up in a balloon.
There is only one cure for public dis
tress, and that is public education, di
rected to make men thoughtful, merci
ful and just.—Ruskin
omore v/as
l;ii
witii self irit^or^'ance a-; Ii • .
sophomore. I inny il -r
tine’s ciit: i -ai oT ' . ''Vi,
more anci'‘j' 't “I ■ i
boys.”—IMu!:’;' T.i -ii-:
Labby’s Lo'g Wc'-';.
In “BotUM.iian I»r y- hi ;
la this Labon' here i
pened when he was I «. i’ a cJ
service and on a i ■
St. Petersbnr:;;
Before stalling I:.- hrd ;t p
the foreign cliice a': ; :t !,! ■ c
Tho foreign ofljre had its
scale; Laboiichere had his.
office refu^-:ed to recc:isi'- i' i
sion. Labouchere took ui.^ I av
ed the channel and wa - to •■•!)
ance lost. A week after the
ed time he h:;d not arriv'd
Petersburg. A rcpresriitafiV'
foreign office was sc ;t out
trail. lie av; traced to I aris a
thence to \ieuiia. v\h!'re he v.
to earth. lii reply to his di "ov
coolly said, “'Fbe fi>n'lgn (•■’'.ce
to pay me my expense.s, and I'r.
Ing to St. Petersburg.”
Precocity.
Little Wil He i.s really too pro(
I met him the other day w
school bag under iiis ar'.o.
“Well, well.” sriid T, “and so
to scliool nov,’, (;hV”
“Sure, :silkel” s.iid lii tie
“Ain’t I over six?”
“And do you lo* e your te.^*;-!
asked
“Aber ult:” siud litlle Wiilie.,
old hen's too >\ \ ler me.” s'rrjsi;
SUir.
Adam’s Ap; ’?.
The projection in tne fnint *
throat in men dei^ntin.^. ? :> ■ ’ •
the thyroid cartilage, i -; , ■■ • /'
apple.” It develops ri,p; ^y ;
when the voice ‘‘break?,’ . 'a,
paratively small in bo li • liHd;'
women. The name arose froiu i'.
dition that when Adam attemp
swallow the ap{)le in i)aradise it
in his throat, giving rise to the
ing since seen in all his adult un
Scendants.
Quite a Difference.
First Comedian—Wlmt’a the
ence between a beautiful joun
and a codflsh? Seeoiai C’on'>:.”
Give it up. First Comedian—On
a chance to become a fall brid^
the other to become a ball i‘i
Brooklyn Eagle.
The Conn^cticn.
Scott—1 ren).'*rnbk* re;:-‘i it■’!' a
rich man v/ho saM heM .- -i/iif
poor. Mott—Yes, and i>roli'ihjy y
member reading soui, wIkm • t!,:
men are liars.—Rovion Tran:>c i >t
/
Fooiirh.
It’s a foolish n;::ii sU:-* ^
ter count his trou K-: ■/> d;-t
gives ’em anoMu'r f i^v sv ■{
—Atlanta Ccmstitutioii.
One pound of lesirnJug reriuire,.
pounds of comm«)u s:‘D.e to apply
Persian Proverb.
\