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Chicago "Owls" Blink at First Broaaway Car 'VE a A tHEI CARP C I('A(;4). 'hicago' first Itroaldw.av car ran 'hrough thy loop dutrg i t tihs other "Ight thlroun h thu La Sall' street tunnell, up (lark strt-t., al,d out ltroadlay It a:s tu o lirst * lence of the" (cit%'s 6 " \arioetos of Inew stroot namntu The car, with no sign s\ale Ilit un wonted "ltroadway" di Iplau e'd, swunrig around the loop at the alcoholic iiour of 11 30', just when the most people' 'wanted a car. Say, now, where'd that come from?" demanded one night owul of an oti,er on the curb, as No. 219 trundled b "Li',ed here all rmy life an' didtn t know we had a Broadway. let alone a car line on it." Nobody could tell him "('ome on, Bill, here she Is'" an nounced a self-confident man to his friend. He tried very hard to walk straight, and asked as he paid both fares : "Broadway car. Isn't it?" "Sure." responded Conductor Reid. "Put us off at Herald square." And he sat down perfectly satisfied Down Randolph street rumbled the "Broadway" apparition, and drew up in front of the Lambs' cafe just as two chorus girls emerged. "Ain't this luck. Lil!" exclaimed one as they peeled their hobbles just high enough to allow them to reach the step. "The way I remembered it we'd have to beat it two blocks to a car. an' here's one right at the door. Call Retired? Not So That Anybody Could Notice It C INCINNATI. O.-Not long ago an , aged man presented himself at the new account" window of a local bank and asked to have his semi-annual in terest entered in his passbook. Ret ognizing him at once, the teller on duty asked: "Are you still retired?" "I reckon I am, as far as ever I was," replied the depositor, smiling grimly. The little joke dates back a year or two to the day when the account was opened. Accompanied by his wife on that occasion, the aged farmer from Ohio's onion belt tendered the tell r a roll of banknotes counting up in the thousands "How old are you?" asked the clerk. pursuant to the bank's practice of keeping such bits of information on file. "Eilghty-six." "Occupation ' "Farmer." "Farmer, retired," repeated the teller and began to write it so. "'Retired,' nothing!" protested the octogenarian. "If you call working 160 acres of land being retired, then I suppose I'm retired." The teller made suitable apologies As it was to be a joint account, the wife also was questioned as to her "Do I have to tell?" she asked. Cleveland Firemen and Police in Fly-Trap Race C LiVELAND. O.-A desire to excel in the manufacture of fly-traps is responsible for "bad blood" between the police at the Eleventh precinct on East One Hundred and Fifth street, near Euclid. and the firemen at en gine house No. 10, next door. Sergeant Cregan, the Thomas Alva Edison of the force, wearied of "shoot ing flies from his face, or pursuing them with a swatter," designed and built a gigantic fly-trap. This was placed near the front door, as the transformation of the stable into a garage had eliminated the busy fly from that region. The flies began to buzz around. Charles Trump, the Marconi of the firemen, chanced to see the police trap and went back to the station with an idea. The firemen contributed to a fund to build the largest and most lethal fly-trap in existence. It was in stalled near the stable, wherein the Whispered Tip to Cop Wakes Up City Employes P 'TTSBURGH, PA.-These are stren uous days for the Coppers-Afraid of-Their-Jobs. What with the wily thieves active and the public claiming the city is overrun with robbers, pick pockets and other plundering rascals, and Director John H. Dailey after these same coppers until they dream of "shakeups" and dismissals, the life of a bluecoat or a plain-clothes man io not pleasant. The other afternoon Lieutenant of Police Charles Faulkner and a couple of "subs" were polishing their but tons in Magistrate Fred Goettman. Jr.'s, courtroom at the North Side po lloe station, while the magistrate told funny stories and drew cartoons on a pad (the court not being then in ses sion), a wild-eyed "taxpayer" rushed in and whispered to the sergeant in charge that "two suspicious negroes were skulking in an alley off Arch street, near the High School building." The tip was given to Lieutenant Faulkner. Instantly he and the "subs" got busy in making a marathon dash for the scene of action. They found *ls at ()nie i undred and Nineteenth ,r' t ,t ( ond tf r " S. retn Ie n t'.heir belief that they were h1,oil,'d :tr 4in'e the- seettled down t, )r i tail Will tis <ar take m- to Elanston avemii ' inlltred a precslte Indl\ idual at ,-, Ii i r ,o k his .i( kc ' and ted th . (ntidi'i ict r uspicpl( u i ltl "Iu' I hclin uriderstatil I rtne r . r bh ar e Ii ` l, i lh tha ti ll e Are oil sure- ' I .. * 'r make room. please, for Ith s.- L..as.tlgtrs8 Itu: hei,. ani a car ta;l. InI, \h liero I at t to go when It rulls (o1 at st' t rli ver 11 st ad of. Antd I te ived oni 10' i (. 1tt 4 itl IllaIlle ma '.t " " All thle a otut the p;i T-< e gentlte tian d(1at1d' 1 pith hinmseli ahote- that iar would land him. But there aerte many oyagers who did not intrust thenieles to thile pi ratical-looklng craft fit 1g such strange colors Sa. ' Wihere does that thing go'?" asked OIre of these frohi the cutrb "light out troad ay,. sir, answered the corrnductor. "Wheri.tell' that ' Ikon't know any mor'nl I did before." "Where do you cant to go?" "Evanston avenue. "('onte along- this car'll take you "Not me. Only got one nickel, an no t"range car don't git that " And the cautious one sheered off until he could find a car with a famil Jar sign Mlanr, thinking they recognized something familiar about the car or crew or both, camne out into the street. looked doubtfully at the unfamiliar "Rroadaay,. and, looking like victims .f misplaced confidence, stepped back to the curb to wait for the genuine blown-in-the-bottle Evanston car. Nothing less would satisfy them. LD AS TW' OLO MAfl IS BUT ('IN EICnHTrY No, not unless you wish." "Well ladies are a little bashful about telling their age after they pass thirty 'Aw, tell the man how old you are Hannah "The husband seremed d:s gusted with coyness. "Well." the old lady made cofes sion reluctantly. "I ain't so old as the old man is. but I'm eight)-four. "And I suppose you are retired. too?' said the smiling teller. That may be your name for it, but what with the cooking and the house work and the milking and the butter ing and all. I manage to keep kind of busy " Roth old people are a little nearer ninety now, but seem likely to go on drawing interest on their savings for years to come It may be that there's something in Ohio's soil or air that strengthens and preserves her chit dren, at least in the onion belt. firemen had an immeasurable ad vantage over the police in the matter of flies. - Then, all confidence, Trump chal lenged Cregan to a fly-catching con test between their respective traps iBecause the firemen had the advan tage of the stable, Trump gave Cr. gan a handicap of 100 files. For days firemen and policemen watched their traps earnestly. Wagers were made on the result and in terest grew to a fever heat Each side accused the other of catching flies by hand and "stuffng" the traps. But, strangely enough, the police trap continued to attract more flies. An approximate gave Cregan a lead of possibly 2,000 files and the fire fighters were in despair. A terrible disappointment awaited the police one morning. With the break of dawn Cregan went out to inspect his trap. He sent in a vocal riot call. The flies were gone and a nervous bat was alone in the cage The firemen laughed loudly and long, but the police may laugh last. ('regan took the bat, chloroformed it and performed an operation. Armed with rubber gloves, a nutpick and a reading glass he proceeded to salvage enough files from the remains to en able the police to make up the lead the firemen are gaining every hour. the suspects sure enough. Both, how ever, were reclining on the sidewalk comfortably resting against a brich house, fast asleep in the broiling sun When yanked to their feet by tna zealous limbs of the law, the darkeys rubbed their eyes and gazed in won, derment at the blue coats. "Whahfah you arrest us, boss?' they asked of Faulkner. "We ian' bin doin' nothin' but waltin' yeah fer de gawbage wagon t' come 'long We all's city 'ployes, we Is. We jees-" 'Bout face!" shouted Lieutenant Faulkner to the "subs." "Forward, march-straight back to the cooler joint. We've been fooled again." LIST' TO THE LAY OF THE OLD SALTS Tell of Many Strange Happen, ings on Amazon River. THROUGH SEA OF RED Huge Alligator Attacks Ship; Mando In Music Lures Whistling Monkey on Deck; Big Turtles Halt Vessel and Men Fight Vampire Bats. New York -Pipe all hands on deck mates, and listen to this gory tale of tile sea It is the tale of the little steamer lavary which recently arrived from a vo(, age of 2,500 mile down the Amazon ri er. ('aptain Alexander Alexander Is mas ter t lthe Javary and many a trip he has mad-, up and dos n the Amazon. The first mate is (; . DI)uff, the sec ond it 1. Purnt'aux, and the third. J i. \\Williams All are familiar with the waters of the Amazon, its mosquitoes, its alligators and its blood-sucking vampires On the second day out, with just a a hiff of breeze to temper the heat, the Javary was coming along slowly, as all sh:ps do in those waters at the start M.r Duff-they call all officers "Mr on all a ell regulated ships-was on deck A huge alligator showed his ugly head above the water near the river bank, then came with a rush on to the st"'amier. With a bang he hit the side of the ship, and the force of the shock bounced him back. Mr. Duff walked dorward, looking over the side, and the alligator fol lowed him in the water. When the) got to the bow the attacking party renewed the attack. A kedge anchor hung over the bow, for in those waters they have to be ready always to drot a hook or throw it into the bank tc warp aroi:nd a bend. The kedge is let go by withdrawing a steel pin from its fastening. Mr. Duff waited unti the alligator was rushing head on at the bow plates, then pulled the pin. With an awful bump the hook smash ed down upon the head of the most surprised alligator ever seen in the P lazon. Third Mate Williams plays the man dolin. One evening, shortly after the alligator episode he was on deck, the vessel being at anchor under the overhanging foliage of the bank As he played he heard a whistling ac companiment to his playing. He stopped, puzzled, and the whistling stopped. toc. He played again and the whistling was resumed. It was eerie While he was trying to make up his Y c The Alligator Followed Him in the Water. mind whether the sound was that of a mermaid or a banshee somethinl fell or Jumped from aloft and landed on his back. He screamed in terror as a pair of hairy arms encircled his neck, and rose to grapple with the "whatever" It was. Sailors ran to his assistance and found him tied up with a gibber ing, Jabbering whistling monkey. It was a species of the whistling mon key of the Amazon, which had been often heard by those on board and never before seen. It was only a few days after this occurrence that Second Officer Pur neaux, who was on deck, noticed a most peculiar phenomenon in the wa ter ahead. The river had suddenly turned black. The officer called the captain and, by and by, through the glass they made out an immense school of turtles They were thick as logs in a Jam in the northwest. The motor boat had to be lowered and the turtles shoved off with pikes, Just as they handle a log Jam, to make way for the steamer. The Jam extended for nearly half a mile. At Aqulm. Hayti, the Javary took on a deck cargo of dye wood. The next day it rained and the dye ran out of wood, flooding the sea with a crimson hne, so that the ship appeared to sail with a sea of blood in her wake. The deck was stained with the dye. All was red, red, red. Rounds Up 15,000,000 Bugs. Carlinvllle, lll.--Farmers In Macou pin county, Illinois, are making a profit out of a peat by taking advan tage of a strange "bounty" offer. Ma coupin county business men organized a committee, which offered $2 a bushel for all cinch bugs sent in by farmers to the committee headquarters at Car. linville. Ike Sneadeker of Jerseyville was the first to claim the bounty. He shipped 32 quarts of bugs. Sneadeker estimates there were 15,000,000 bugs in the conslgnmua' ANGLER HOOKS MAN WHO IS DROWNING Amateur Fisherman Had Nar row Escape From Death in Lake Pontchartrain. Now Orleans, La.-Willian: Klein, an upholsterer, of No. 1514 Euterpe street, an amateur angler, experienced a narrow escape from death just as he had finished preparations for a day's sport in fishing off the northeastern bridge over Lake Pontchartrain, about 500 feet from North Shore. The presence of mind of John Lan dry, a negro living at No 119 North Liberty street, saved Mr. Klein from drowning. Landry cast a line and hooked Mr. Klein as th, latter was sinking. Mr. Klein, accom-'anied by his son, arrived at North Store about 7 a. m. and began walking the "long bridge." When about 500 feet from the shore the crowd gathered on a small plat form to permit an incoming local train to pass. Mr. Klein carried his fishing pole rtrapped across his shoul r-7 The Hook Caught. ders. This was hit by the tender of the incoming train. The upholsterer was thrown in the lake on the Mandeville side of the bridge, landing in the water some what dazed. A swift tide running at the time carried Mr. Klein under the bridge and out into the lake. Ropes were thrown to him, but he was helpless and was rapidly floating from the bridge. John Landry, the negro fisherman, threw his fishing line in the direction of Mr Klein, fortunately striking him on the leg. 'The hook caught and the almost lifeless body was brought up and held at the surface. Several men who witnessed the sen sational rescue climbed down posts and fastened a rope to the fisherman's bhdy. He was held there until a small fishing craft was brought to Mr Klein's side and later he was taken ashore. It was not until some time after his son and several of the amateur rod men worked on the prostrate form that the man was revived. Mr. Klein suffered pain as a result of the fish hook which caught in his leg when Landry threw the lucky line. The hook was deeply imbedded in the fleshy part of the leg and had to be cut out BIG RATTLER CHARMS CHIL,0 Little Girl Wriggled and Squirmed Like Snake Until the Reptile Was Killed. Poughkeepsie, N. Y.--Charmed by a big rattlesnake three feet long with nine rattles, Helen, the three-year-old daughter of Andrew Lahey of Amenia, near here, who was snatched from the reptile by her mother the other day, has caused much astonishment to the residents of that section by her strange actions. The little child wrig. gled and squirmed about like a snake and It was not until the reptile was put to death by the father of the child that the little girl stopped squirming and returned to her normal condition. She was not bitten by the snake. For several days the mother of the little girl noticed that the youngster played around a stone door step in front of the house and disliked being taken away from the spot. Finally the mother noticed the baby playing in the same place and talking to some one. Creeping up behind the baby Mrs. Lehey was astonished to find that her little girl was bent over talk ing to an object under the step. Se curing an iron bar Mrs. Lahey lifted up the stone to ascertain the attrac tion of the baby and much to her hor ror she discovered a huge rattler coiled up under the step. Snatching the child and screaming for help Mrs. Lahey attracted the attention of her husband and he killed the snake. Im mediately after the reptile was put to death the little girl recovered he- nor mal condition. ROMAN GRAVES ARE FOUND Fine Examples of Ancient Pottery Excavated in England on Syn dale Estate. London.-An interesting discovery has been made this week on the 8yn dale estate, at Flaversham, where, in the course of some excavations, two Roman graves have been found, con taining some very fine examples of Roman pottery. The articles include two jars, intact, one of them of very graceful design; several pieces of pseado Samian ware (two are three of these also being intact), and some fragments of a tear glass, a glass vase and a bronze ornament. A Roman camp was located near where the dis covery was made, and it ks probable that the graves were those of Roman soldiers. The 8yndale estate belongs to the family of G. C. H wheeler, I M. P. for Northeast Kent SERVING EGGS AND OMELEh New and Effective Ways of Preparing Staples for the Breakfast or Luncheon. Omelet, Trouville-Beat the yolks of half a dozen eggs till they are almost whie, then beat the whites for the same time and pour them over the yolks; add a dessertspoonful of chopped mushrooms, a teaspoonful of mixed herbs, a dessertspoonful of fine ,ly chopped parsley, a few drops of lemon juice, pepper and salt, six table spoonfuls of milk and three tabl spoonfuls of flour, and beat all well together for at least five minutes. Peel a small onion, slice and fry in butter. When the butter is boiling hot take out the onion and pour in the omelet. Hold the pan over the fire in rather a slanting position to keep the omelet from spreading. When fried a light brown fold over and serve very hot. A little grated tongue is sometimes added to this omelet. Eggs in cases-Make some paper cases about three irtches square, but ter them well inside and half fill them with sifted breadcrumbs sea soned with chopped parsley and a small quantity of cayenne and salt. Stick small pieces of butter over the breadcrumbs, break an egg into eacb and add breadcrumbs prepared as be fore till the cases are full. Put them into an oven or on a gridiron over a clear fire for three minutes. Serve hot. Eggs, Italiano-Boil the eggs hard. cut them in halves, take out the yolks. weigh the latter and place them in a mortar and pound together with a lit tle breadcrumbs soaked in cream. chopped parsley, one anchovy, a little chopped onion, grated nutmeg, pepper and salt. Put the mixture into a saucepan and cook to a thick paste, adding a little cream or gravy. Fill the cavities of the whites with this and serve cold with a salad, or hot in sauce or on a puree of vegetables. Eggs, Sultana-Put into a bowl the yolks of three eggs with a tablespoon ful of chutney and a tablespoonful and a half olive oil and beat well. Break half a dozen eggs, one at a time, into a teacup, put them one by one on the sauce and set the dish into a moderate oven until the eggs are set, but not overdone. Serve on the same dish. very hot. Spanish eggs-Put into a saucepan a breakfast cupful of washed rice with a quart of boiling milk, add half a tablespoonful of salt and boil till done. Strain the rice, drain on a colander avd put into a bowl. Add two ounces of butter, mix well and spread evenly on a dish. Cut into slices six hard boiled eggs, arrange on the rice and serve. Beet Greens. Choose very young beets. Wash with care, taking care that the skin is not broken Cut off the leaves one inch above the beet. Cook the beets in boiling salted water'until tender. If very young, this may take only 45 minutes Twenty minutes before the beets are done, place the greens in boiling salted water and cook with the cover off. Remove the beets from the water, peel, dice, season with salt, pepper and butter and place in serving dish. Drain the greens, chap and sea son, and place around the beets. Green Corn Puffs. Beat two eggs until light. add one cup sweet milk. one pint grated corn seasoned with salt and a dash of red pepper. Butter well six custard cups. Fill them half full of the mixture, place the cups in the largest cooling uten sil, which has been sufficiently filled with boiling water to keep the cups from floating. Fill the cups about level full with soft grated cheese. Heat radiator 15 minutes and leave In the fireless cooker one hour. Serve with tomato sauce. Beef Loaf. Beef loaf, served cold, is an Inex pensive cold meat Mix a pound of fresh, chopped beef with half a pound of fat salt pork chopped fine. Bind them together with an egg and add salt, pepper, a little grated onion and then half a cupful each of milk and cracker crumbs. Roll into a loaf and bake for three-quarters of an hour, bEsting occasionally with hot water and melted butter. Children's Luncheon. A favorite luncheon for small chil dren with dainty appetites is made from a box of animal crackers, one of saltines and a cup of pure maple sitrup. Boil in the sirup until it forms a soft ball when dropped in ice water. Then put a little on each saltine and press an animal into this in a standing po sition. Cream cheese and marmalade with saltines is also a good combina tion. Applerine Pudding. Stew sliced apple until tender. Add two cups of sauce to three cups milk and about two cups of bread crumbs, broken in coarse pieces. Sweeten with one and one-half cups white sug ar, season with lemon, cinnamon or nutmeg, one-half cup raisins cut in halves, pinch of salt, piece of butter size of walnut. Bake one hour. Serve hot or cold with or without sauce. A hipped cream is delicious. To Keep Grapes. Grapes may be kept for months. Se lect perfect bunches and see that the fruit is solid on the bunch. Remove all little s!piders and their webs, but do not wash the fruit. Wrap each bunch carefully in dark blue tissue paper. twisting the ends tightly to exclude the air, then pack the grapes away in a closely covered box, and keep the box a cool. dark. dry place. Plain Cake. Half a cup of molasses, % cup of sugar, % cup of sour milk (sweet will do), 1 teaspoon soda, small piece short, ening. 1 egg, 1 teaspoon cinnamon. 1 teaspoon cloves tscantt, a little salt, Add flour the same as for ginger bread. Bake in a moderate oven. Watermelon Punch. The juice of a watermelon squeezed from the pulp makes an excellent foun dation for a summer punch. Add su gar to taste, a bottle of ginger ale, juice of tou lemons, a quart of spark ling Moselle and cracked ice. Serve ua soon as made. Or?\oKý ýý oe held state in the great palaces of Cnossus and Phaestos tour thousand years ago, there ranked, as we know, vassal princes and noble families, each of whom lived on and by a smaller town ship or district, contributing, doubt less, in kind or in service to the royal treasuries, writes D. G. Hograth in The Illustrated News. Such min or townships, dominated by miniature "palaces," were laid bare in eastern Crete, at Gournla and Palaikastro. by Mrs. Boyd Hawes and the British school at Athens: arnd perhaps the so called "Royal Villa" at Hagla Triada, excavated by the Italian mission, must be regarded, not as a king's seat, but as a very splendid example of a territorial noble's residence, overlook ing a rich fief at the head of the Bay of Messara. Quite recently, by the enterprise and care of the Cretan Department of aniquitles, directed by Dr. J. Haz zidakis, the chief ephor, another of these seigneurial settlements has been excavated at the village of Tyllssos. near Candia. The place lies some seven miles west of Cnossus in a fer tile hill country which extends to the base of Mount Ida; and no doubt it was the center of a territorial fief held under the Minoan kings by some noble house. Large Bronze Vessels. Some years ago it came to the knowledge of the Ephorate that pea sants of Tylissos were in the habit of resorting for building stone to a certain locality hard by the village, and that the stone procured there was ready squared. In the process of quarrying they had thrown out quan tities of potsherds, and one peasant, more fortunate than the rest, had come on some large bronze vessels, much battered and crushed, but com plete. These were impounded for the government, but fbr a long time sup posed to be of Hellenic date. Since. however, systematic excavation has GROUP OC BUILDINGS ExCAVATED been prosecuted, the whole site has been found to be Minoan, and those cauidrons must be accounted rare and precioui survivals of the metallurgy of the Later Palace Period at Cnossus. What has been laid bare at Tylissos is rather a group of large residential houses than any "palace," properly so called. They resemble in type certain houses found in 1900 in the town of Cnossus at some distance from the palace building, but are larger and more richly decorated. The different residences, having had some architec tural connection with one another, seem to have formed a sort of block. much as houses of the same age at Phylakopi, in Melos, were found to be linked one to the next, and probably they represent a family settlement. Around them, but separated, are re mains of a few poorer' dwellings. form ing a dependent village or hamlet, in habited by villeins or retainers, as was the case at Hagia Tritlaa. What buildings are now visible are of the rhird Middle and First Late Minoan Periods-that is, the sixteenth century B. C., or thereabouts; but there were both seigneurial residences and also poor dwellings in a previous age, the Second Middle Minoan, and possibly a village existed before any noble house was built. This point, it is hoped, will be cleared up when the excavations in the area surounding .he main site have ben carried deeper and wider next season. Changed His Mind. When the old farmer entered the "bucket shop" he was angry all over "I do: 't think I'll invest a cent with you," he ejaculated. "I just heard, by Hen, that you handle watered stocks." The take broker was nonplussed for the moment. Quickly recovering his composure, however, he slapped the old farmer on the back and said in his most lubricated tones: "My dear sir, of course our stocks are watered. We water them through precaution." "Precaution ?" "Yes; in these days of fierce germs and ferocious microbes we can't be too particular. That is why we put all of our stock through a hot-water process before putting it on the warket." And the old farmer was so tickled he put up another thousand dollars. Analyzing a Volcanc. Members of the staff of the jeophys ical laboratory of the Carnegie insti tution are studying the physics and chemistry of active volcanoes at the crater of Kilasuea in Hawaii. During The two chief houses of the period repeat several featues l Cnosslan and Phaestian pala-I. ably pillared halls and s with great jars ranged round walls. The larger livtng-rool - to have had finely frescoed Many fragments of their have been recovered and are pieced together to show g Minoan ladies, warriors in p and fan-bearing slaves. Of the furniture, besides the vessels already alluded to. vases inl great variety have found, among which are very igm amples of that use of natural table forms for stylistic which is characteristic of the Late Minoan period; and sowm sels in stone also have been of which one, a slender vase I _ obsidian, of exquisite form uad able symmetry, once more - with astonished envy of the of Cretan craftsmanship. Tht a material as this volcanle could be turned with truth by men who had no tools but -f or soft bronze would never he, lieved, had we not this vase sag early vessels in Egypt to prog fact. The process must have 1u most as slow as a process of One remarkable statuette is has rewarded the Ephor's labseg~ shows a male figure, clad la lion-cloth with frontal flap, aN ing in an attitude of salutatie . is probably an adorant of the goddess. Many similar gl---' similar attitudes have been fond where in the island, notably i: Psychro cave; but none so and scientifically modelled as They all seem to have been in shrines and holy places t desirous to put a vicarious tion of themselves is constant with the deity. If the excavators had foo - ing but this statuette, it woer repaid their enterprises. But they have found much elis, >M have seen, and before they leai sos, should find yet more. CAPTIVE IN MUSIC'S Quall In No Uncertain Mood Whs Heard the Call of the Notes. "A baby quail was captSNO brought to the house. The lM _ provided for him stood upoe a of oilcloth, and this was lISt White's ranch. Here wars - his basin of water, and the where be took his daily dat- c door of his house was alw a but he seldom wandered bw - limits of his own domain. "One thing invariably little recluse to venture itVn was the sound of music. IlOS& boy racing after the band. It_ mert the tones of the piao his quick ear, he started 6n S and the quick pat-patting of W feet announced his a would circle about the piano USE a fluff-fluff of his short w1rlg to the keyboard. The little nor at its end was his cP where he cuddled down COo long as the music continums t expressing his appreciatioln 4l; tented, soft, purring soud." ban Life the summer of 1912 these tors descended into the sr.lt collected gapes directly from t l These they sealed in glass tabs out letting the gases come is with the air at all. They t_' tubes to Washingtqn. Besldes samples of liquid lava direet. the mblten lake, the tnv studied the composition of - gaseous matter in the cloud of above the volcano. Since 5& . thorities have believed that t - no wa r in the material e volcanoes, it is interesting to that the geophysical laborator7 - era condensed no less than alf & of water by cooling one of the that they had taken directly fre boiling lava.-Youth's Complalt .A Take Away Unused SugtW People in France when they restaurant, frequently approp sugar they don't happen to VuS in France is dear, and what is with the coffee belongs, by the purchaser as much as the itself. So why not take a two home to little Jeanne or