,3-- Tw Along the Koail wij. rrt J tree growth along the lines 3f ' jiues Is more nearly fruit OWOi ful In producing financial benefit, pleasing and attractive sur roundings than any other - investment hat can be made in the way of public improvements. -On anaeadamizluff country roads a proper location of trees protects the roadbed from the direct, rays of the sun, which dry' out the plastic cushion forming the covering coat. .' Properly distributed tree growth a fang the sides of a road has the ad vantage of breaking the sweep of the wind, Ivhlch carries off the dried-out covering cushion of the macadam. The covering having been blown away the wind now leeches out the binding ma terial from spaces between the stones of Hie pavement,, the stones then be come loose and picking and raveling begins, and the road becom.es instead of a pleasing surface for traffic, a ver itable nuisance and danger to vehicles and horses' hoofs. The replacing and repairing of the road runs into the use 'of new stone additional binding ma terial, and top surface, together with . the expensive operation of a steam rol ler, costing the community maintaining the road annually no small sum of money. - The proper shading of these same roads by means of trees prevents the direej; action of rain, which washes out the material forming the covering coat and the binding. Properly shaded roads are less expensive to maintain, because they are shaded, and the an nual cost of sprinkling, Which Is prose cuted for maintenance purposes, will ost seventy-five per cent. less "when the advantages of tree growth are se cured for a road system than when they are unshaded. If wisely placed there is no. invest ment for the country road which can he more helpful than tree planting. Judgment, however, must be used. On , the lower grade? of the road and in the valleys tree planting should not be ko closely arranged as to keep the sub--grade of the road too moist. In the oveut of this taking place, the founda tion will be endangered and ruts rapid ly 'formed. On the hill-sides, spacing -a;n be" considered safe for the ordinary growth at about forty-five-feet, 'centre to centre. In the valleys these dis tance.? should he increased to about three time:! the above spacing. Top moisture on an improved roadbed is de sirable; the tree guarantees that. Rub ' surface water for any road is danger- us; the tree roots drihk it up. There is no one -improvement that . miinipinii 1 fn r-inpoi'inn- fii nvrnnrri for that can help a sulru'rLau locality so much as tree planting.- i Thpre is much' difference of opinion concerning the location of the trees of a town or village street, as to wnetner they should be. located back of the fence line or on the curb Hoe. If lo cated on the curb line of sidewalks, which are of the ordinary wdth, the !urb line will be thrown but, and irreg ular in proportion-as the tree .growth progresses. If located back of the fence line, there is Inconvenience for the property owners in the ..shape of ovcrshadii'g the lawn, with less advan tage "in consequence , of less shading for the road system. Trees so located in thickly settled villages or in cities are, of -course, out of the question. If the streets are of ordinary width and land not held at fancy prices so that each particular resident secures more than the ordinary-. twenty-five foot lot, in the interest of wcll-appear Jng and well-maintained streets, the fence line is the better location for the tree. On country roads the best loca tion for the trees is beyond the gutter line, fairly outside of the improvement and beyond the channels which provide for the passage of the storm water. In selecting trees for.your roads, se lect such as- thrive well in your home locality. Henry P. Morrison, . F . "n Good Koads Magazine. They Lead Alt. At a recent good roads meeting on et th sneakers said that the main civ ilizing Influences of a country should be-placed in tto following order of Im portance, viz.T Good roads, public schools and churches. The point in volved was that if there are not good roads, children will not go regularly to school, and if uneducated they will not have sufficient intelligence to at tend and get the, most good from church services. Good Roads Mngr line. A C!tr of Tower. Why not build office towers? Thr curse of ibe tenement is the want of light and air; and the same curse be longs to. modern office buildings. . An Sice tower would secure an abundance of light and air. It might consist of a series 01 rooms arranged one above the other insiuethe tower, with stairs and lifts in projections at the angles; or four towers, each with a room on every fioor, grouped around a stairs and lift block in the- centre. These towers could be carried 300 feet high which is about the height of the cam panile of the new- cathedral at West minster.' A city of spires we already know, but a city of ofiice towers is a suggestion of what might be, and may perhaps be. Builders' Journal. - , The 'largest Island in the world is Greenland, with au area of 2,17VJOO eauare kilometers. LIVING MONTHS IN A SECOND How m Drom Lastinc Knt a Terr Seo onda Seamed Like Month. The duration of a dreani is so seldom accurately measured that a story pub lished in the St. Louis Medical Record is worth repeating. The writer, a doctor whose name is withheld, was seized with an uncon trollable drowsiness during a call, and was struggling to keep awake when he was asked by his companion, "How long may you stay in B -?" His an swer, which came promptly enough, was, "That depnds on the Western Union," and, catching himself, he ex plained that he Tjvas expecting a tele gram. In fact, however, his answer re lated to .the. facts of a dream which had been sandwiched between the two parts of the .sentence. . After hearing the words "How long " the doctor had dozed off, dreamed that after long and tedious experiments he bad Invented n won derful apparatus for holding telegraph poles In a vertical position, had nego tiated with the Postal Company for its sale, but unsuccessfully, and had finally gone to the authorities of the other company. They, in the dream, told him they were considering a Ger man invention for the same purpose, and the dreamer crossed the oceau to examine the rival device, returned, ex plained the differences to the intend ing purchaser, and was writing a reply when he woke in time to hear the end of his companion's question. . . The events of the dream had appar ently consumed months, yet the actual time that elapsed was merely that re quired for uttering about four short words. Evening Post. WORDS OF WISDOM. "The world is too small to. afford a place of safety to the man who dis obeys God." Much good work has been hindered by such anxiety to do better as deters one from promptly doing one's best. Truisms, whether they lie in the depths of thought or on the surface, are at any rate the pearls of experi ence. George Meredith. As you grow ready for it. somewhere or other you will find what is needful for you in a book or a fnend, or, best of all, in your own thoughts the Eter nal Thought .speaking to your thought. George Macdonald. Great and sacred is obedience, lie who is not able, in the highest majesty of manhood, to obey, witli clear and open brow, a law higher than himself, is barren of all faith and love. -lames Martineau. A Later Day George Washington. A young man of the name of George Washington Avas brought before the bench of Magistrates at Bendigo, charged, with "illegally cutting down timber on crown lands." At first' he strenuously denied his guilt, pointing" out that he had nothing of the "nature of a hatchet. When it was urged that by taking this line of defense he was spoiling a good tradition, he at once pleaded guilty, somewhat con fusing the minds of his hearers by add ing that it was worth while telling a lie if it enabled him, even feebly, to imitate Jus great namesake. " The chairman of the bench then took up his parable. "George Washington," he said, "you have plea'dediuilty -in some what dubious language to a most seri ous charge. YAu have no- right to go into the orchard of another to cut doAvn trees, even though they be not cherry trees. I feel sure that in pleading guilty' you are telling the truth, and that when you say you are telling a lie Jn so doing, you are telling a lie. lven-ty-two days." "He might have kept to the book at the end," sighed George Washington, as he went below. Liver pool Post. Bo Gentle. Medieal experts are e lling the at tention of the public to the importance of performing the nose blowing opera tion in a scientific and hygienic man uer. First one nostril and then the other should be blown without undue violence. Doctors state that the two nasal pas sages: should never bo closed at-the same time. If they are obstrueted, as in the case of a cold, the back of the throat is filled with compressed air, and this, together with the discharge and the microbes Avhich it contains, may bo driven through the eustachian tube into the middle car and lead to serious results. A great authority on the subject used to forbid his patients to blow their noses when suffering from a cold. This course is hardly one which will coin mend itself to those in the habit of catching cold. The best advice would seem to be that when it is necessary to blow the nose the blowing should be done gently. Loudon Daily Mail. Original .Restrictions, Judge Harrison, one of the Connecti cut delegates to the recent Immigra tion conference, told the following story: "We have In Connecticut," said he, "many descendants of the first immi grants to America, and probably some of every kind that have come since. But we have also one small group whose ancestors never saw Europe: "In the eastern part of the State there is a little remnant of the ogirinal Connecticut tribes, whom the people call 'the last of the Mohicans.' They have their own church and a pastor of the old Indian stock. Before I came to this conference I talked with all sorts of people to find out the sentiment on this immigration question. Among others 1 epoke to this native clergy man. '"Well,' said he, "I'm in sympathy with your attempt to restrict Immi gration; but I hope you'll have better luck than my ancestors had 230 years ago" New, York Press. With tAc Fanny ! FetlotuJ Mother Gootta M)rDlxd. Little Jack Horner sat in a corner, Eating a "fresh-fruit" pie: Though his ma had read it was most ill bred, Still he stuck in his thumb, and triumph antly said, - . "One can t be too careful on what one is fed; What a lucky lad am I." . ruck. Quite Different. "I thought they didn't allow babie3 In this apartment house." ' "Sh! That's the janitor's baby!" Chicago Tribune. Forced to It. ' "Blank hoists that he lives entirely on a cash system." "Yes, poor fellow his credit ran out." --Detroit Free Press. The) Only Sate Place. "Can you lay this carpet so the chil dren won't wear it out?" "Where shall I put it, madam on the roof ?" Harper's Bazar. Mythology. " Teacher "What is Ceres the goddess of?" Effie "Series, ma'am, is the goddess Of continued stories!" Life. Mind Beading;. "Perhaps smoking is offensive to you. Miss Smith." "On the contrary, I like the smell of a good cigar." Chicago Tribune. . - More Di Wcul t. Employment Agent "I think we can suit you in a cook." Mrs. Holmes "Xo doubt. The ques tion is whether you can suit a cook i me." A I'olnt of Resemblance, "Warships remind me of automo biles." "How?" "They are so frequently in need of re pairs." Her Titian tockg. Leslie "Molly gave herself away aw fully yesterday." Carter "How V" Leslie "Tom insisted that she had a fiery temper because her hair was red, and she had to admit it was dyed to win -the argument!" Detroit Free Press. Smart. ' "I hear Swell-some Grafters has got to go to jail for three months. Doos he feel very badly about it;" "Not so very; he's just got sense enough to know that he ought to be there for the rest of his life!" Detroit Free Press. One Woman's Wisdom. "But," queried the visitor, "what was your object iu putting a stove in this room when it is steam-heated?'' " "Oh," replied the hostess, "I did that so the baby wouldn't catch cold if it accidentally touches the steam pipes." Chicago News. - - Different. Daughter "Oh, mamma, I do" wish 1 were pretty." Mother "You needn't, dear; sensible men think very little about beauty." Daughter "But it isn't sensible men I'm thinking about, mamma; it's Char lie." Town and Country. An Kzplanation. "Why is it?" said the young man with long hair, "that the average wom an would rather marry money than brains?" "She takes less chances," ansAvered Miss Cayenne. "The av;rage woman -is a better judge of money than she is of brains." Washington Star. ' His Crude Idea. Instructor-"You know the law pre sumes that the person accused is in nocent until he Is.proA-od to be guilty, do you not?" Shaggy Haired Pupil "No, I didn't know that, but I know any lawyer will presume that way if you pay him enough." Chicago Tribune.' Boss Was Mend. "When the boss comes in do yoa hide your box of cigarettes?" asked the caller. "Sure," responded the office boy with a grin. "Ah, you are afraid to let him catch you smoking?" "Taint dat; I'm afraid he'll ask me fer a smoke." Chicago News. Unite the Coutrory. Tess "I certainly was surprised to hear that Maud Avas married." . Jess "Yes, ' it Avas rather unei pected." ' Tess "Her family's quite incensed, I hear. They say her husband is a man of absolutely no family." Jess "That's all wrong. He was a widower with four children." Phila delphia Press. His First Intimation. "How did you find out. yon could draw?" inquired the admirer of the cel ebrated illustrator. "By the marks I received in school for the excellence and fidelity of my work," replied the eminent one, "My work was a caricature of my beloved teacher on the blackboard and tii" marks cams from the teacher's cane." Cleveland Plain Dealer. DREAMS THAT CAME TRUE 11 111 14 ill; c aionm in id jti.i of Crime. Some of the strangest stories nnnals of crime are those Avhich the part dreams have played in the dis covery of criminals. One spring day in 1830 a farm laborer, when passing a lonely mountain lake in Sutherland shire, saw in the waters a dead body, which, when , rescued, proved to be that of a well-known peddler who had mysteriously vanished about a nionth earlier. The body bore marks of vio lence, the pockets were empty, and it waa clear that the poor fellow had been brutally murdered and robbed but by whom? That was a mystery which for many a week completely defied elu cidation. One night, however, Kenneth Fraser, atailor's assistant, saw in a dream (he cottage of a man named Hugh Mac leod, and heard a voice say in Gaelic, "the peddler's par-k io lying in a cairn of stones in a bol near this house." He told the story of his singular dream to the authorities, Avho accompanied him to Macleod's house; and there, sure enough, beneath a bean of stones, the murdered man's property was found. Macieod .-was arrested, con fessed, and was executed. Another very remarkable story is told of a tragedy in Ireland. One evening two strangers presented them selves at a Avayside inn near Portland, and after taking refreshment continued their tramu in the direction of Carrick-on-Suir. The incident was common place enough, but it led fo startling de velopments, for in the , Ayayfarers the landlady of the inn recognized two men of whom she had dreamed a very strange dream the night before. In her dream ehe had seen one of them kill the other with a coward's blow from behind, rifle the pockets of the dead man, and stealthily bury him beneath a hedge. So impressed was her hus band Avhen this dream was told him that he made his way to the spot In dicated and there discovered the body of the buried man. The assassin was pursued and arrested, and at the en suing assizes Avas sentenced to death. " There has seldom been a more mys terious crime than the murder of Mr. Stockden, a Loudon victualler, a great many years ago; and- the mystery would have remained unsolved to this day had it not been for the interven tion of Mrs. Greenwood, who came for ward Avlth the statement that the mur dered man had appeared to her in a dream and conducted her to a house in Thames street, where one of his as sassins was to be found; while in an other dream Stockden apnenved- and showed her the likeness of the man. On the strength of this dream clew th indicated man was arrested, and not only confessed his guilt, but betrayed his accomplices three criminals being brought. to the 'scaffold is the result of those visions of the night. , Some years ago a Mrs. Rutherford drepmed that her need relative, T.i'dy Leslie, was about to be murdered by a lrnn Avhom she cJparly saw. She im med lately set out on a visit to Lady Leslie and asked permission to sleep in th huly's room. In th m'ddle of the night Mrs. Rutherford heard some or-r. tryinar to open Ihe bedroom dw. She raised'-an alarm and rhmg onen the door, Avhen Lndy Leslie's two sons rushed out and in a moment had seized the man of her dream. The following story is. perl'n?. the strangest of all. Ome r;,;ht th T"v. Herbert Powys, a' Church of ngl.-nnl clergyman, dream"! that th dar-ebf"" of one of his narlsh'onevs had coro out into the darkness to meet her lovev, vho, at the time, Avas waitimr for hnr In a secluded snot and s'ndiw; the time in dierglng a grave for her. .Tunri i"g out of bed, Mr. Powys rushed to the nlace Indicated in his dream and arrived there just as the man h-ul hurled the girl to the ground by the side of the onen grave and about to kill her with his spade. Tit-Bits. A Tllnn Who Saved Xnpoleon'a Life. A writer in a Dublin newspaner lms disinterred a long forgotten book, pub lished in London in 1S20, Avhich con sists of a series of letters describing a tour in Ireland in 1812 by I. B. Trotter. Avho was a friend of Charles Jnines Fox. Mr. Trotter relates that the Rev. Father Redmond, who was narish priest of the little toAvn of FVrns on the occasion of his Adsif, had actnallv saA'ed Nanoleon's life. "Accident." Avrites Mr. Trotter, "in trod.iced me to Rev. Mr. Redmond, nriest of the place, who related to mo a curious little ancedote. When pur suing his studies, and finishing his course of ducation In France he had snent a summer in Bas Poictou, where Cenei'al Bommarte. tbn a thin, slitrht young hoy, Avas. He had slept in the same room with him six weeks, and nerceived not ring shining or engaging in idm. He was generally employed in making machinery, which he placed on a small Avatercour , A fhe partv were one day shooting, Bonaparte, who was not very rctive, fell into a brook five feet deep, which be endeav ored to lean across. He was nearly browned, when Mr. Redmond imme diately discharged his piece and pre sented the end to him, b which he saved his life.'' Mr. Trotter inquired whether Napo leon had ever shown him any gratitude for this service, and was thus an swered: "No. ami I assure y'ou, Ir, I do not admire his principles." Pall Mall Gazette. Alpine Accidents. It Is not the skilled English Alpinist, nor eA'en the comparatively unskilled one Avho knows the limitations of his experience,, who falls a victim to the perils of mountain climbing, but the, inhabitants of the country bordering on the Alpine region, with whom fa miliarity has bred contempt. Country Gcnthemac. " i - Khreo human lungs one white, one. blacRind one gray form an instruc tive exliJbit 'in aft Edinburgh museum. Tlie firstHame from an Esquimaux. Avho breathed the pure air of the Arc tic regions; tmn second,, from a coa miner, who inhaled ; much coal dust the third, from a town dweller, kept in city dust and smoke. . Professor Simon Newcomb, in his opening address before the Interna tional Congress of Arts and Science at St. Louis, dwelt upon the debt o the world to the original scientific in vestigators who have opened the way. They are the primary agents in thp movement which has elevated man to the masterful position which he now occupies. The example first set by the French, Jtnd , afterward followed in German and other European countries, of em ploying automobiles for military pur poses, has this year been initiated Ji. the United States. In the war gamj at Manassas General Cor bin used a steam car, and in. the military ma neuvres in California General McAr thur employed a gasoline car. One of the latest devices for applying the three-color principle to the, repro duction in a photographic transparency of the hues of nature is the invention of the-Messrs. Lumiere, of Paris. In stead of using three separate color screens to produce the negative, they employ a single screen on which 'the three colors are distributed in micro scopic grains. Although in many parts of the world the forests are receding and disappear ing at a rate which causes solicitude, an opposite state of affairs is reported to exist in tne southernmost district ol the great plains region of Texas. On the Edwards plateau the forests nr slowly spreading over the open lands. Most of the trees are of -the "Atlantic type, such as elms, live oaks, post oaks, Avalnuts, hickories, , sycamores; but from the Rocky Mountains have come pinon pines, cedars and oaks. At the Cambridge meeting of th British Association some singular facts Avere presented about the influence o1 disease and of town life on the pre Availing, complexion of the population of England. Dr. F. C. Sbrubsad said that blonds are found to euffor more than brunettes from rheumatic disor ders, but less from tuberculosis. Blond? also suffer more from diseases in child hood, and consequently their nnmboi in proportion to 'the -brunettes dimin ishes in the crowded areas of cities. The proposed new calendar-of ('a mille Flammarfon,.the French astrono mer, begins- the year at the Venial Equinox (March 21), and to every-quarter gives two months of thirty days and one' month of thirty-one days. Th? 30,") th day, set aside as a fete day. is not counted in jiuy .monjth, two such days following leap year. ' The. object of this plan Is to 'make the snmi date! fall always on the same days 'of the Aveek and thus give a calendar that is good for any year. . Xela.on'? Tuneful, lOO Year Ago. . It has been settled that his lord ship's corpse shall not be taken doAvr the steps in St. Paul's to the vault, a all others have been; but that it hat be lot down under . the dome, Avhen the brass grate is,- the opening of Avhicl not being sufficiently large, a numbei of Avorkmeu are now employed t make it; large enough to let the coffin down; but it will- be sonie time befort it in complete, as there is an immense body of stone to cut through. We do not learn that any other arrangement! are finally determined upon. Mr, Mylne, the architect of the Cathedral, had proposed to Lord Ilawkesbury, and the dean and chapter, a plan for a monument to be erected to the memory of the hero, under the centre of tbi dome; but this was much objected to, on account of its disfiguring the ap pearance of the church.. Mr. Myln has since laid- before them an ancient plan of St. Teter's, at Rome, to prove that his plan Avould not be a disfigure ment to the church. He has likcwis produced an old record, iu which It ap pears that it was Sir Christophei Wren's desire to have a monumenj erected under the centre of the dome to perpetuate his memory. Should Mr, Mylue's plan be adopted, a large ston pillar will rise from the grave a con siderable distance above, the bras? grate, with a very elegant colossal figure of the deceased on the top of it The Bishop of Lincoln,, the dean, is expected iu town in a few days, when a chapter Avill be held, for the purpose of making arrangements for the funer al. It is reported' that a monument will likeAvlse be erected in Westmiustei ! Abbey. London Times, 1SS05. . Tl Simerest I-lattery. A New England hostess quite re cenily entertained the Avife of a Jap anese statesman Avho had been spend ing a few days on the Atlantic coast She gave, out of consideration fo the guest of honor, "a Japanese tea a case of "carrying coals to Newcas tle" which, included its own fitting re' ward. When it came time to say au revolr, the litt-e lady of the lowery Kingdom was very polite and quite unconscious ly. crushing. , -t s j , . "I am delighted;" sb declared, "ai the similarity oi Japanese and Ameri- can ways cf entertaining. ' YouthX Companion. , ; If is said th.-it last ye.-tr thcsalriei of 24,000 elementary school teachers ir Ohio aver.' gc J stv? n:j -iv-,;, cvte ji -7.--. News Notes. .Twenty-three buildimrs were Iwrn- t ed at St. Albans, -W. Va., causing loss of $75,000. . ' John Gerk-m, who-killed Walter I... Fel ton,1 at '.plumber, at-Newport Kewni, was held or trial in $5,000 bail. Norfolk offers .a 10-acre lot, $4O,0O .cash and $5,000 a year for the new State Normal School. . Pointed Paragraphs. She. "How sAvcet of yoii.to that you Avere in the wrong." He (absent-mindedly). 'lY&s; mo ther always taught mo that it wars easier to give in to a Avoman than to argue with her." Avho is great, but ifc id the iaaa wfoo eau use it. . . - Don't lose your head if arabitiKts to get ahead. .: , There is room at the top far t1e man" who can push the other, feKtuwv off. , . ; .' . ' All wom'en are angels figuratively speaking1 and if -wise they'll let it o at' that. ' . Many a man's meanness is due t chronicle stomach trouble. . FlTSenrmatienttvcttreJ. No' fit? or nervous ness after first day's um of Dr. Kline's Kerv Ret;orr,t2trIal bottl ari?treati3efrHP Dr.K.U.KLiKE, Ltd., SSI Arch St.', PMln.. 1". The works ot Schopenhauer are bwmc translated into Jafmnese. A KtiarniiUMMt nre Fn 11 Ttehfn?-. IJHnd, BleVlti", rrohrudti Vft-.-Prutjelstsafeaathorfj'.odto reiaixl mooeyC ra?.o Ointment fails to cu re iu.6 to 14 dayHWts. Cerm.my w gaining on Kuj'and in tfc-expi-rtation ot coal to 1'rauce,. 'Jo t ure it ;il in line Uar Tales T-uxativ -lioiro .i-;j?in Tabtet.. , Drui;:'isfs reund'iiioi.ey it it to -ure. .Grove'siiirnatiire on ach tor. 25c. Or. tjie 603 fema'e ntuden's at the Unt versiry of Berlin, 43 are ('Serin.nis. Itch cured m miuatu oy wooifwd'c ' RitVttry Locion; never t,Vs. Sold b lrui.Ti;ists. Jlaii orders promptly filietS: by Dr. Letcbon, iauonl.wJ!le, Ind. j'.ngiana s nrst spinning wneel to t woikcd by electricity ba-s been started at fendlebury. lie lias poAver to move men-who is immoA-able on God. So. '0G- IOW'; - III V We otter One riundrod Doi'ars Tvewnrd for any ?ase of Catami tiut tannot I'o cured byr ..uii's Catarra Cure; F. ,T. Ciiexey & Toledo, O. Wo, the underfiicned, ir- known J. Chcutiy for the iust lo years, aml ueiievo kira . t-i,,t-i.'tly nonoraOlo iu all bustuiss transac tion? and Hnanirialiy aul to tarry out any ouii!;iLi(jD8 made oy tneir firm. . - Wi.gr Tuuax, Wholesale I' racists, T- leHo.-U. . Vi'aldiso, KiJtsAS & MAi:jy, ' .Wholcpwlo -Untwists, Toiedo, O. Hall'.? catarrh Cu re is tafc en i aternally.afit IcKdirei'vlyupontheulood and rrraenoussur -taees of the system. 'l'eti'tjtjiiak sent ire. 1 io.;, 7i per bottle. &oid J-y all DrnKSl8t! ' 'i'ak Hiill's Famijy Pills for onstipa.uoiw . ' EeSections. of a Bachelor.' , Travel broadens .the oo.jts of some actors and the feet of some other:-;. Conscience Avill.be,. tender where it is lirst Avorn. - ' With the waning of V.ro. honeymoon, many a brave man begihs "to regre'" the failure of the fa'in"t-Jfoartcd riva.L Cut resolutions 'onV ;'.A live the straight life without there, can't yotif - You can 't do a dirly deed in decent manner; no one ever did. Suppose' von were the kind of mar, people think you are, Avould you be" glad? ?' ' ;'e v A spectacular show is o:ie"the b&ld headed tontingent views ..through spectacles. . The 'll-told-you-so'' of his friends adds to, the hardness of thu way of thrs transgressor;'. The man who exeeeds you in poliU ness is a better man than you are for the time being. . . ' 1 . It's an easy -.matter J'or n tvoman to manage a husband if she has tears tw shed arid knows .when to shed thero-. Our idea of a, first, class conlideae man is one who post-.ses tb? abilil.c to unload a gold briek on his wifoV? motiier. ' -' .'I ' ' When some Avomeu tla i b3use thw sweep the dust.from t ho carpet ont!f-. the furniture, then brash "It from tiw--furniture onto the earp't aaitj. . A BOY'S BPAKFftT " There' s Naturat Kooil Tht Mnl-e fi'--Own ATaiy,' . There's a boy up in lloosii k Fnl.'s1, 5". T., ATho-is jcrowinflr into sturdy n':i;v henrt - on Grape-Nuts brcnkfjiKts. ii mlht have been difTercnl with him, ax ..Is mother exnlalns: "My eleven-year-old boy is lar-se, ava developed nnd active,' and has beu-.' made so by hl3 fondne.'s for Grat"" Nuts food. At fiA'e yoars he avs a vet r nervous child and was 'subject to fr qnent attacks of Indifft'stion, avIu used to rob him of. his Htrensrlh ftoKii' were very tronbtesome to deal at!JA. He never, seemed to enre for tnythfrvr; for his breakfast tint'l T -Svfi lrai. Nuts, ''and I have- nevyrd' to charts from that.' lie rra!2fi.j.' izXU'-i brr".ifc--fast of CJrttpe-Xuts fod. , lt:-ls alw?, r.ellsbed by him anT J wy? )'.": -satifass blm better-thin. fl ordar- kind of a. meal. e - . ." f "Better than? "air le r,o 1 3 r, 7 troubled .wrth ln-dfceti'Mj or n erv ness,- and has gat to ). a spIe-::d;-;:-y developed fellow,! nee lieivan in ' (JrapeNuts food." ' Xm&e .-iivca c ' Postum Co., little Cm.. Mich. There's a reason. V-,uu l.i:. book-, '-Ihe Itoad to We'.lv,;; & y. ,

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