Dym motto
of -the .Piedmont act!
your ads In TttE GRIT.
.put
THE
S
ILER
CITY
GRIT
Lara est circulation of any paper
in the county. Excellent Ad ver-
tisfaif WdBopi.' . 11111
ISAAC S. LONDON, Proprietor
A NON-PARTISAN FAMILY NEWSPAPER
$1.00 A YEAR
Vol.
IX.
$Iier City, Iff. C, Wednesday, May 7, 1913.
No. 38.
SYNOPSIS.
. At tha beginning of great automobile
race the mechanician of the Mercury.
B tan ton's machine, drops dead. Strange
youth,- Jesse Floyd, volunteers, ana ac-
-n
eepted.
the rest during the twenty-
four hour race Stanton meets a stranster.
Miss Carlisle, who introduces herself. The
Mercury wins race. Stanton receives
hey alight to take walk, and
leaves. Stanton and Miss Carlisle
rollow in auto. Accident by w wen Ban
ton la hurt Is mysterious. Floyd: at lunch
with Stanton, tells of his boyhood.
V n.
much If anything happens to you to
morrow because of your strained- arm,
that I wanted to ask yon about it my
self. A weakness there might kill
you, might it not?"
It might, if it existed." he
firmed. "But the strain does not trou
ble me. I, deserved to pay more se-
She did not avoid his keen gaze at
ajftppt. somehow failed to impress her
sincerity.
"It was an accident," she deprecat
ed. "I suppose yon lust forgot. Frank-
bis I IT. though, I wish you were to drive
learn. He never came back to the ho
tel. at all." '
Floyd's slender brown hand shut
hard on the edge of the seat, bis lip
curled slightly.
A woman?" he repeated, his mer
ciless young voice stinging.
They say so and I'd as soon have
thought of Ralph 'Stanton getting
drunk.' -
'You'd better phone to the insane'
asylum," advised the mechanician,
and turned his back to the whole af
fair, watching the brilliant spectacle
before him with scornful gray eyes.
Five minutes passed, ten: The first
car was called to its station. The Mer
cury had drawn fifth in the lottery for
place. Just four minutes before the
starting hour, a taxicab bowled furi
ously across the crowds, came to n
Jerky stop at the edge of the course,
and opened to emit its passenger.
"Stanton ! " hailed his manager, choK-
ing with exasperation and relief.
"Stanton, for Heaven's,
whs"
INTERNATIONAL JOINT BOUNDARY COMMISSION
which Floyd siioHKi
CHAPTER V. (Continued.)
Stanton easned. Where bad
memory been, not to recall the name Duplex or an Atalanta, tomorrow. I
of Floyd? A multitude of confused do not like fie Mercury, it is so often
recollections rushed across his mind, m wrecks.
of that famous manufacturer and ' "It is faster than either of .the otb-
raoer far sheer love of the sport, of ers," Stanton defended, yet moved in
the superb cars be bad built, and of spite of himself by her anxiety tor his
bis death in a railroad wreck, the safety. I am also obliged to admit
previous year. that it is not responsible for any of
TOe tied me in his ear," continued our mishaps, so far, at least; I lead it
Floyd, with a shadowy smile, "when I ""O trouble, myself, sometimes."
was too young to be trusted to bold I ' Her long, fair lashes fell; she tapped
on. If you are going to take my me- her lingers nervously upon the door
chanldaa's seat, Jee," be said to me, panels
"you have got to do my mechanician's "If yon could not race, who would
work.' ' And by the time I was fifteen, be likely to win, Mr. Stanton?"
could. We used to race' with the You are taking it for granted that
chief car tester, for combination train- I will succeed I easily may not. But
tag, on a mile -practice track aseund wlthout&he Mercury, probably the Du-
the factory. I held the wheel myself plex or the Atalanta on this long road
at seventy-five miles an hour, before race. On a track, J would choose the
was seventeen. And he took me Italian car."
with him, as a spectator, to every big She listened attentively, then
race here and some abroad. Of course smiled.
be was training me to take charge; of "1 am such an amateur; I do not
the manufacturing business with him, half understand. I have come with an
not for racing myself. But, somehow invitation from papa. He wishes to
affairs went wrong. When he died, consult yon about auto tires, those
eighteen months ago, everything cot for your next race, and he hopes yon
lapsed and I -found nothing left. The will dine with us, this evening."
factory itself is tied up in a lawsuit ; I Thoroughly surprised, he promptly
may get that out of the ruin; build- declined.
tags fall of silent machinery I have no "Excuse, me to Mr. Carlisle; I must
ki.rJB H sswassasTia
aaE-H B V fl KLiflBw IS
Mm mm mk II
Pi fll m m Wkm Lm-fl saP - HI
' SP'jB ssa : B9
I Ifll Bfe-'-' ,.;Ba
hlscat(rom' b ri2HO M
others," Iff WfStfm sliaK sHii
TOURISTS
slid
trance. "Mask, gloves, you
"Sick?" echoed the unbelieving Mr.
Green, amid the flurry of preparation.
"You. you slckr
Stanton, in his seat, turned a cdlor-i
left face toward; ,hn before clasping
on the nmslt '
"Sick," he5? reiterated explicitly.
"Areryou ready, FlOydT '
The Mercury drew up to her line on
exact time. And in the moments while
the cars in front were being-sent away,
Floyd found an opportunity to put a
question. ;
"You have been ill?" he coldly
asked. 9.
' "Acute indigestion; I've been in a
doctor's office since nine o'clock last
night," snapped Stanton. "Did you
think I was lying to you?"
"No. Are you fit to drive?"
"If you're afraid I'm not, get out and
leave me."
The signal was given. When the
Mercury flashed across the line, Floyd
was almost as pale, from anger as
Stanton from recent illness. Colon, Panama. The rush of tour-
Trie race was for three hundred lists to the isthmus is in full blast.
miles, thirty times over the ten mile Mo doubt, the record will go higher
course with Its sharp elbows and steep than last year, or any year, but there
hills, and was expected to take some are no signs that it will total the fig-
six hours of continuous driving. The urea given in the forecasts of the
strain was not light tor the pilot at steamship managers working their
the wheel. special brand of enthusiasm. Pana-
Fot the first hour there was no In- ma was to see 40.000 Americans "do-
cident out of ,the usual. Floyd attend big the canal;" the tourists probably
capital to use, and no heart to sell.'
There was a pause.
"I wonder," Stanton mused slowly,
"way yon volunteered to act as my
mechanician that night?" .
Floyd's gray eyes flashed to meet
get ready for tomorrow. Moreover. It
fs for the Mercury company to discuss
tires, not for me."
Her small mouth set, she drew aside
her shimmering skirts.
"We will decide that on the way I
his, all his color and animation rush- will put you down at your hotel, at
tag back. v , least."
"Because I love the racing. 1 love I "Miss Carlisle, I am Just from the
H," he answered, impulsively frank. "I. course; I am not presentable."
fv sat mv father's blood in my veins I "That is for me to say." she remind
and tha frail nhvsioue of a useless girl ed. "Pray do not refuse all my re-
quests." '--.'.
W -n of h nn Rt iras m ks m v I Almost under compulsion, Stanton I Perfumes Today Are Extracted From
hat fann nd nnioea tinele. " Be- .entered the car.
rides. I had watched you often, I He could have fancied her breathing
Uhrt see von out out of the run- was quicker; she gazed at him .with
BO singular auu uiopiujjuiuuuaie
triumph as almost to startle htm
Without waiting the chauffeur's move
ment, she herself slammed the door of
v
Photograph of the International Joint Boundary Commission, which was organized last January and consists
of three Americans and three Canadians. Standing, left to right: H. A. Powell: C. A. Magrath and George Tur-
Sitting, left to right: F. S. Streeter, James A. Tawney and T. C. Casgrain. V
PEARY SEES U.S. TAKE ARCTIC
SEE
CANAL
More Than 20,000 Americans
Are "Doing" Panama.
Interesting and Curious Throng Spend
Their Time Riding Oyer the
Isthmus in Sightsee
Ing Cars.
ed strictly to his work and Stanton
drove rather more sanely than usual.
But at the beginning of the second
hour, the rear of the Atalanta car
came in view through the fog of dust
ahead; the Atalanta. which had start
ed four minutes in advance of them.
Stanton sighed with grim satisfaction.
and speeded in pursuit.
"Turn ahead," warned Floyd, at his
ear.
(TO BE CONTINUED.
NOT DRAWN FROM FLOWERS
Almost Everything but Seemingly
Natural Source.
ning. Then, I was tired of" be
checked himself sharply. "Ought we
aot to go back on the course?"
Stanton rose, signaling the waiter.
"Yon saw me through that difficul
ty," he acknowledged. Bvt, yon said
this morning that yon bad a sister; i
wonder you stayed with me for the
season."
"My sister understands," Floyd ex
plained; he had risen also, and stood
for a moment beside his chair, bis
unseeing gase bent oh the ground.
"She knows that I was not brought up
to live woman-fashion. I wish, if ever
you bear anything of me that you do
not like, that makes you fed different
ly toward-me, I wish yon too would
remember that 1 wmn reared by a man
to live among men and missed all that
women teach."
Stanton regarded him In an astonish
ment at once indulgent and Ironic
Tm not likely to hear anything of
you that will shock me very badly,"
he dryly returned. "Do you think I
am a gentle girt myself, Floyd f -
"Not so yon could notice it," sprang
the prompt opinion ; the candid gray
eyes laughed out of their short
eclipse.
They went back to the course to
gether. ' " s ;
The next two hours were spent In
'repeatedly circling the ten mile course
In ten minutes; a reasonable practice
gait, from Stanton's point of view. On
the last trip he and. Floyd disagreed
over a question of mixture, and came
up to the repair pits Quarreling vigor
ously, exciting the Interest of all be
holden.
"If I don't know when a motor needs
more gas, Fll go take a correspond
ence course," was Floyd's last retort,
as he slipped out of his seat,
"It's running like it never did be
fore, and you'll let it alone," Stanton
sent the definite order after him.
The witnesses grinned at one an
other. "Say, Floyd, that's a fine big brute
of a machine you've got there," com
niimanted the broadly amused Georee.
as the young mechanician went by the car and snapped the handle, keep
him. ing her eyes upon Stanton. .
"It sore to," came the cheerful agrees "I thought you would come," she
ment. murmured, hah under her breath, "and
fres. But it's nothing to the brute you will dine witn, us.
nt a driver vou've scat.'
Floyd caused to glance back CH APTER VI.
"Let my driver alone," he advised.
"Stanton and I understand each other Missed.
alljright" The most agitated man In Lowell,
Then you had better quit racing be- on the race morning, was the assist
fore you're demoralised," Jeered the ant manager of the Mercury company,
other, and turned to find Stanton had And there was a maddening irony to
come up behind him. his situation. At a quarter after ten,
TfuwA van not hi Tie said. Stanton fifteen minutes before the first car
went on as If he had not heard. But was to start, the Mercury stood ready,,
he carried with him the discovery that with. In his place, the mm, anaar-ciau
it is the perfection of comradeship to mechanician, concerning Whose pos-
be able to quarrel without bitterness, sible desertion Mr. Green had spent
There Was a tan-colored automobile much worry. But the driver, Stanton
drawn up opposite the exit, when be the unfailing, was missing. In the
emerged. midst erf the gay hubbub of the scene.
"My. Stanton," summoned a low- the Mercury camp was on the verge
toned, smooth voice, from the car; of freray.
Valerie Carlisle leaned out. extending "You've telephoned to his .hotel?''
small baud. Inquired Floyd, no less trtwibled b
She was the consummation of cool cause quiet, as Mr. Green came up
daintiness and repose. , It was Impost Wiping his brows,
sible to meet her, beautiful, concerned "Telephoned! I've telephoned: to.
y . eyei? vjfcofit yie t every hotel in the town, to the police,
least. ' to to every one. He went to his bo-
t.... ( tMi an toi and dfpsftofl fnr the evenine. after
hour," she informed 'htm."f am -ho he left here yesterday, alVsNiippf
distressed that my car should have in an Atalanta automobile witn some
- - hurt you, I. shall reproach mysel& so confounded woman; that's all I can
There are few perfumes today that
cannot be made from chemicals,
synthetically, as the chemists call it.
Formerly all perfumes were extracted
will exceed 20,000, but that number
puts a strain on the accommodations
mere.
And who are the tourists? Natur
ally they are mostly well-to-do citi
zens out for a holiday "taking In
the canal. They are not the fashion
able people in its New York sense of
the word. The latter have barely, it
would seem, heard of it. They can
only move in little certified flocks.
The great bulk, however. Is made
ap of successful business men and
their wives and families, for whom
nothing is too good- i,
A surprising number, too, are farm-
srs who have been fattening on pros
perous seasons in fat lands.
On our steamer we had men and
women from Dlinols Peoria, If you
you to the -great triple locks one be
hind the other at Gatun on the At
lantic side and to the great Gatun
dam and spillway; the second takes
yon to the Pedro Miguel single lock
and the Mirafiores double locks at
the Pacific end; the third takes you
down through' the nine miles of
CuTebra cut. The train consists of
three show cars, with the cross seats
ranged in rising tiers. On the. low
est level stands a guide, who talks
gently through a megaphone, retailing
the wonders which the audience is'
witnessing three cars, three mega
phones, three lectures.
The trains by using the working
tracks are enabled to go close to the
locks, and so forth. The train stops;
the lecturer quits, having invited the
audience to alight and to take a close
look, and everybody is on foot, scram
bling to the front more or less decor
ously, for they are a polite and good
natured folks. Thus you pass over
dizzy heights In safety; you gaze
down or look up; you snap every
thing with your, camera and, exclaim
ing everything from "My!" to "How
perfectly wonderful" you pass on to
the next wonder.
Rear Admiral Believes Government
iviay Try to Make Use of Polar
Lands-
New York Rear Admiral Robert B
Peary, predicted the United States gov
ernment would send an expedition to
the arctic, to see if use could be made
Uncle Sam's Postal Machine Performs Wonders
WASHINQTQNonsider the new
postal machine.
If Solomon could see that machine
he would have, to sit down in all his jT ew ts rtsoa something about
He lets' George do It '
All the nice clerk has to do' now- IS ..-'
to play a little fandango on the top . -roll
piano,, take a crisp note from the
oven, tarn the organ crank, make the . '
pedal thing snap a round bite out of .
your certificate, and ndM?; . .
But, maybe, it might be more relia-
bly satisfactory for you, to go yow
own self to the postal window with
nice little bill and tell the clerk
want to belong. You mustn't get.. ; '
nervous. For while he is a clerk who
looks ' clever enough to write a law
cT SSsCBSHMHrSk - tfSl
SfcStf'o'-J-v':vSS Bg
DEAF MUTE SITS ON JURY
Mystery of a Philadelphia Court Un-
expiamea, out new i rial is Urant-
ed When Discovery Is Made.
Philadelphia, Pa. A new trial was
granted in common pleas court after
it had been discovered that a deaf
mute had sat as a member of the jury
during the "hearing of an ejectment
suit. How the man became a member
of Jh'e jury and why he sat through
trial, ' unable to hear or speak, is
stery which none of the court at
taches could explain.
glory and blue-pencil a certain edito
ril about but never mind. The poof
man is dead.
The inventor who made it is doubt
less at work, this very minute, on a
later model that win put George on
the Bcrapheap of course, the machine
may .now be named George. It just
ought to be, because it does every
thing. Doubtless, also, the wise men in
charge are up to George's every screw
and cogwheel, but
To one plain, business-lacking Ann
woman who got . a port hole peep
through the depositor's window de
partment's latest looks like a kitchen
ette oven in partnership with a top
roll piano player. With an organ grind
er crank on one side, and a pedal
down in front of the roaster that bites
paper like a parrot bites fingera1
when it gets a chance. :
As well as she could see through
the nice clerk's back, he doesn't have
to rummage any more in that box of
Rear Admiral R. E. Peary.
him that makes you know he could be
tagged , for playgrounds and scouts. -And
you can stand up like a soldier
and tell your truly age. He will never
breathe it, for two reasons. One ;jHp
official reference. The other is that
he doesn't care a cahoot. '
a you are a prosaic person witn ::jt
eyes like that hawk that lends Itself
so accommodatingly to sigh-eompari- -sons,
you will, see to George. merely
an invention which will dO things for
the clerk, but V
If your mathematical capacity-P-xhlts
you to put twb and two together
and make five of it, the new machine' .
takes on the aspect , of that
George, who is there to help you down
your wolf, as once he dowaednia. own
dragon. v .-..! ':mK ;
And to have help tar your battle with
the wolf means something. If you
have ever glimpsed the. sharp white
of his teeth. -. "" :
N. B. It is always safest to hedge.
V
yeUow envelopes until he comes toMaybe the maehine isn't so brand-new.
the one with your number and then
dab It with a rubber stamp.
after all, except' to the Woman. And
to Solomon. '; :
What Two Vanity Fair Girls Saw in the fiheflto
A PLAIN, stout woman was cross
ing the cobbles of a street down
town. It was. a street broken out all
over In a business rash of second
hand clothing and noisy with foreign
tongues.
The woman herself had the saffron
glazed skin and soot-black hair of an
other land than ours. Her shabby
black gown was somber enough for
a chief mourner, except for an out
b -st of red on her breast, and
her head was partly covered with a
rusty lace shawl.
A thousand other stout women In
shabby black with shawls over their
heads might have crossed the street
without attracting attention. This
one was the exception. And it is the
exception Jbat counts,
Two young women 01 vaniry irair,
of the large tracts of unexplored terri-
tnv t Vi ore
The admiral added that he l .Tt
. . .. . , , , style In so dubious a quarter, stop
because he felt too old now to make "' " . ... . '
bUUI L Oil. WfiUy Ul U1D FT UlUfWJ
Hlh the oafTrnn skin, the rustv black
Raold Amundsen, who expects to ex- . fc ... thc
plore tne arctic in me rram, wouw Bnawi
Look at that, win you: ma you
ever see anything so picturesque off
the stage? If I could look like that
take "a big chance" if he allowed his
ship to be frozen in the ice and drift,
Mr. Peary believed. The ship might
remain frozen in four or five years
and drift anywhere.
CHURCH WITH SEVEN MEMBERS
woman I'd spend the ..rest of my life
with a shawl on my head."'
"Let's start it Grandma's got a
lovely lace shawL It's white, but she
might let us have It dyed."
"Silly! Haven V you been wear
ing ' scarfs right along? My silver
gauze isn't a patch on that old mow
thing. IH bet it's full-of hoIes.,
"It isn't the veil; it'e that odd-!red
flower. If she makes a red rag look
like that; wonder what ahe could do
with these sweet JMK; m
- The "stylish 'twofililted5- on-'
the other woman sauntered along on
the sunny aide of the street The
blood red flower glowed la dramatic
contrast to its somber setting, hut ft .
was the rusty lace shawl that made
her different from that thousand oth
er women.
For in the lace mantilla of her coun
try is folded the romance of old Spain.
.The mystery of its grace cannot bs
learned from a fashion page. It must
be taught In Spain.
And by way of a first lesson
must be born there.
Methodist Conference Is Unable to
Solve the Problem of Extending
Usefulness of Institution.
Valerie Carlisle Leaned Out Extending a 8mall Hand.
Sightseeing Car In Panama.
please Michigan, Indiana, Ohio,
Iowa, Rhode Island, Massachusetts,
New York New : Jersey, Colorado,
Virginia, Pennsylvania. One Rhode
slander was In his ninety-first year.
Everybody has made preparation
for tropical temperature crash, al
paca ana immaculate linen suits
among the men. and every wonderful
and expensive dress and waist con
ceivable in lace and linen and light
fabrics, with reserves of silks and
satins and jewels for gala nights.
All of which may be preface to a
few words on. the marvel of the wom
an tourists. Probably their greatest
labor is writing postal cards.
When not writing postal cards they
are taking snapshots. Let any one
say "Look at that," and a hundred of
the pestilential machines are pointed
in the direction Indicated. After the
shot the invariable question Is, "What
was It?" - i
The girls of all ages are, however,
other vegetable and animal sub- pleasantly flattery and positive about
stances. The first perfume to be toM"T L
nrP u.h .4 "I don't bother a bit what It Is,
laicu was Yamiia, ui 10 i v. iwuvvi
followed, but obtained by oxidation
of a by-product of camphor.
Terplnol is one of the most freely
used constituents of perfumes. This 1
a near .relation of turpentine. With
this a little oil and aquaf ortis a chem-
said one. "I just snap it. Stand a
moment please," and another art sin
is added to her beadroll. Of course
their paradise is, Jbe sightseeing
train. And" what is a sightseeing
train?- : :
Yon must know the passage from
Colon to Panama across the Isthmus
1st can produce a perfume, that can
exhaled by the IHy of the vaUey. lilac lngfl you -within measurable view
and Cape Jessamine, varylnr nccord- the whole canal-Just enough to
Z .nr, -h.-h k. irritate you. Hence excursions three
chemicals are blended. ' ,
Artificial violet Is a combination ol
nlt-t-nt mi AoaatWA extracted from lem
on), Indian vervaine, or lemon Ver- Colon . .and Panamte
bena. with common acetone, a sub
stance very like pyrollgneous acid.
No chemist has been able to conn
rorfAit mnsk but a synthetic nerfume
caUed musk is made from toluene a Insulted by English 8hetds on Coat of
In number are provided to widen and
deepen , your knowledge. These
trains start on alternate days from
The first takes
New Haven. One of the smallest
churches in this country is the Parker
(Conn.) A. M. E. Zion church of Meri
den. Its membership numbering but
seven regular members with an aver
age attendance at church of about
fifteen persons.
The smallest of the congregation
has always been a puzzle to those in
terested in the church. It has been
organzied sincce 1890, but never
seems to grow any larger despite the
efforts of revivalists and well-known
colored organizers who have visited
the church for the purpose of building
it up.
During Its twenty-two years of exist
ence many preachers have been as
signed to the pastorate, but owing to
the smallness of the congregation of
late years it has been impossible to
raise enough money to pay the preach
er for his services.
At the last meeting of the Methodist
conference the question of the Parker
chnrch was discussed at length by the
delegates. Scheme after scheme for
the building up of the impoverished
treasury, and the congregation, were
discussed, but none seemed feasible.
W. C. Andrews, a lay preacher hold
ing a pastorate in Providence on a
salary,, then came forward and offered,
his services as a preacher.
Leaving his family behind, the
preacher went to Meriden, where he
assumed charge. Inasmuch as he had
no income, it become compulsory up
on him to provide a roof for himself.
Securing some old boards and tim
bers, the nreacher built a small room
on the rear of the church. For weeks
he labored from morning to night until
at last he had for himself a cozy
home at no expense to the church.
Determined still further that tne
church would not, have to Bupport him,
he cast around for a' suitable position
whereby he could earn enough to live
pn. Mr. Andrews was not afraid of
work, and prominent business men of
Meriden who had heard of his efforts
and his eacriflce secured for him a
position with the Meriden Gas com
pany as a porter. ' -
Here six days In the week the
preacher toils as a porter. In the af
ternoons and evenings he gets out and
works among his parishioners, per
forming all the duties of a minister,
such as visiting the sick and officiat
ing at marriages and funerals.
Bent on performing service to his
congregation, Mr. Andrews, however,
shuns all publicity ,and performs his
good deeds without making known his
work. .
Presidential Girls Go About the City Unattended
PUTS HENS IN GYMNASIUM U iSisSSiS
St. Paul Poultry Man Increases Num.
ber of Eggs With Artificial Garden
and Other Devices.
St Paul. Hens should have a gym
nasium, proper training and an occa
sional change of diet in order to break
egg-laying records, according to Sam
uel E. Mahan, a local poultry dealer.
Mr. Mahan recently established in con-
society and the, attendance at public
places are liable to get right fussed
up. Tne nrst appearance 01 una mice
Misses Wilsons at a theater alone oc
curred one afternoon recently, when
they went to the play house to hear
. . . ., . .. wm j ,L
a notea pianist. ;ney wuw m mo
White House automobile, which has
the coat-of-arms of the United States
on the doors and on the big ornamen
tal front piece. They left their three
..in w4th hia rhicken coon a srvrh-
w"1"" " ' . . ... ; . j,
naBium, where daily each hen Is given rur coats in me uio "
two hours of exercise. by the ushers through the publie en-
n t.ru th aa rnntiit of tiifti trance to the theater. Presently some
training the average production of
each hen has increased in nine days
from 65 to 86 per cent
a feature of the gymnasium is an
ni-Hficial zarden bed. where the hens tern t does not nay to try to train
exercise their muscles but find no 1' with both sides in the political
nourishment
kid discovered the White House auto
in front of the theater, and informed
the ushers. Then there was a great
confusion of voices. Consternation
reigned supreme among the theata 1
employes when they discovered that
the ladies of the White House had
passed unknown through the publio
entrance of the theater Instead of go
ing by the Inside entrance. They had
taken their places In a box, however,
and so nothing could be done, The
young ladles were attired Very hand
somely Miss Margaret Wilson, wear
ing a dark blue costume, with a brown
straw hat, with taupe feathers; Miss.
Jessie Wilson, in a charming street
dress of black charmOuse trimmed In
bands of fur, and Miss Eleanor Wilson
in a costume of white lace and black
satin, over which ahe wore a long
coat. Miss Jessie Wilson was -decidedly
picturesque to a big white felt hat
worn with her black, costume, which
had for a trimming white coque plum
age, and the brim underlined with
black velvet .
This Wise Politician Played the Game
SCOTS ARE ANGRY OVER SEAL
by prbduct of benzine and coal tar
Tbis .it changed ;to a complex car-
buret; treated with azotic and sul-
Shurle acids, is diluted and si
Most of the5mswJeTfumes are
itations and they are' almost always
Inferior to the flower extracts.- So It
might properly be SaM that tt; Ts' a
wiseower that toows :toi9,n
fume. , -' ' ' . . r
Arme-Th0y Are Placed
Fourth.
mmeaeim -aaomionvr a
tm-i:saSiauonai
seal bt J3cotl
and the Irish third, as differing from
the royal arms of England, as used by
the sovereign for all ... national puri
poses, which have the English quarter-
ings first and fourth and the scottisn
second. . v -
3 ,,On the j'evetffcir.f side of the Beal
ireris)v'an'-eagy
It
have
same. YOX are uaDie to sow i;u6"w
said Representative Jaorse oi wwcou-
WOMEN NOW SMOKE CIGARS sin. ' mM
1 . aAs,k. M4MmAlv Wf taTT
But in Reality They're Only Leaf you must. anow
Covered Cigarettes, and Sold on ngnt m - - --
the Continent patters, ui wmw. - --
tne oont ex. . i-oder. and the progressives, with
London. Englishwomen are devei which wing of the party I am affili-
nrire the smokinx habit more than ntort
ever. "Not long ago a candidate for the
nf nmiT-an thev do not as a rule eel nnatmastarsnin at me iowa ui
honna ftis-arettes. but recently a netit unt me the following telegram
brand of cigars has been put on tha " T have always suppon.ea your wiug
market It is something like the thin of the party. ! I have always trained
cigarettes which one buys on the con- with the regulars. I want your sup-
tinent for a couple of centimes, ex- port for the post-office at X. Please
,nt that the flavor and strength ar do what you can for me.
mone akin to the Egyptian cigarette. 1 T was very much mystified at the
it is a leaf-covered cigarette, witn message, i couiu uoi uuuoi uu - u..
mimeient nungency to make the fata he ohonld use as an argument tor my
smokers think they are doing some support that no waa ,a regular.
thing daring in lighting up what looks
UJte a cigar. &hm Caht It
Sarah, the new; msii, was unused to
nacrf for mirp.lv local trranta hv the City ways. UnB;J8aF,SWon mter u
- - .. , . . -...r.. tlJ ,
sovereign. And the Scots are wild 1 arnvai ner iou
over rhis "English ImportattonH hanging frb the gas bracket to the
which they regard as a gratuitous in-
bitter dispute is raging
ittish capital over a question
honor. The new great
and, which has just glgg
verse "side the ; royal arms of ScotlaaaTP1
li, wHih.tho Rcnttish nuarterines are M
nrt and fourth, the Enallsh seoond. The giateWMtl'iaVoila la only
completing
...ia n,-MpliS which
suit ' to ' the people north
Tweedy t
of the
-,JRie Afef P'9ht In Prison,
,i New ;iy.ork Cooper Jones, a negro
prisoner '..Stog Sing. ' fought; With
i'ira?- a iirhlte prisoner, Over
the' alleged ibdkSmiWiltf
Jones' stoll wasfxactnred, and he died
sonntoux laei . l ,;, ;.
ball. Suspecting the country girl, sne
called Sarah and asked what it all
meant "WeU, you see, ma'am.' w
plied Sarah, "the master said the gaa.
was leaking, so 1 put "dp the pail to
eatch it"
1 was -enlightened, though, very
shortly, for I received a second mes
sage. It read: 'Telegrapher made a
mistake. Message intended for you
sent to Senator '--. He has yours.'
"On exchanging telegrams with the
senator, I found them very similar.
His read: "
f 'l have always supported your wing
of the party. I have always trained
with the progressives. I want your
support for the post office at X.
Please do what you can for me,'"
v.-- Childish Constancy.
If only we realised it, tt only W cul
tivated it more, we could see. with
olear-eyed vision- that all of a child's
original nature breathes constancy. It
is an essential strength of the nnde
filed child's nature to be constant Not
until our own false examples have at
tacked the natural purity of the child
does it become inconstant unreliable,
Harriet Beecher Stowa. s
"v. Cynic. ::"
Many a ! girl would go through , fire
and water for; ;ni4a evenrOH
his bank, account ;u.
; New: York City, Crowded.
M d!Woi,SiSrt!'rofj Bombay
tnere.;,are "149 'pSrtkins. 'S 'ti acre.
New York has 1,)00 in the same area.
19' SI