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URMllnIS S IDEAL HOME That Is Adapted to Either City or Country. 1TTRACTIVE IN APPEARANCE Re m O. On.4Mry Ho se Is Ai . a y a ip Lgo a t n 4.aber Scthee Aadnreas all t ' The least samber of rooms that witl ,forta aeeNommodate the faidly; venlent arrangement of these $. and anso attractive exterior ap runce are the three prime ~qul es for the amea home. Beemuse are all &Nand In tLe bungalow of home, they are extremely pop with pteLt4ay home bullders. uIoagatws erti ags4e In astaerulal. t lest the eane did. In the mid and easters btes begalows were fr mawy yeirs before the suno known-4hqe et e called cottages. bMgalows have a dstlanetlve about thie and ase a great deal sattrare In epteror aplear. and their lrterior arrangement sekb more convenient than the eat a. t the past g onseatoes. the Inereased coast of every nctres bcianghs, whether tbeq bit0 'or epted., the hbeme-bllsr ·-~ · ` -It Ilk· h T z " ·I·'ZFU ' I. a . ? 4 dingd and the .. rtstle fost porch al combine to give it a one outward ap pearance. Also the high attic insures a cool bhouse .In summer and a warm .one In winter. The feor plea shows the sizes and arrangement of the rooms. Ranged ao one side are Uving and dining rooms and kitchen and on the other three good-sized bedrooms and bath. The front door leads directly into the liv Ing room, which is 14 x 17 feet. a goo4 sized room. This room Is equlpped with a large fire-place in the outside wall with windows on either side. Througt a double cased opening with 4elMonuade is the dining roome also 1. 1 17 feet. with a three-window bay. This arrangement makes these two large rooms virtually one sad permits a free eirdlateon of air in the hot meoths. At the rear of the dining rem I ithe kitchen. 12 x 9 beet S Inches. At the rear is a porch, and at the side a peaanry wit an outside win dow. The stairs to the basement and to the attic lead out of the kitchen. Three bedrooms are ranged along the other side of the house on the first floor. One room. which might be used as a library or den opens of the living reem. The other two bedrooms and bath room are on a short hall, which is reached through the dining room. The front bedroom Is 11 feet 8 Inches - 11 feet; the center bedroom is 1$ feet 6 Inches by 11 feet 6 Inches. ad the rear bedroom is 11 feet 6 lnchel x 12 feet 8 inches. The basement Is arranged for thei aceognmodatlon of the betinap plant. the fuel storage. and the Iasiiry and other storage rooms. This is be typ of house that can be heated l~eiy bl a plpeledi furnace, as the two roonm that demand the moat beat are real7y one. While ttis plan is suggested for the home builder who has not a large fan It. It is well to consult an architect If one is available. and the local contra tae and limber dealer before fnally deciding on the plan for the new homb These men are experts In hbulding and their powledlge and experience wil b pdw ,b. h. S may ' .- - arcrr· J ) pi~rr a. that T 9 t; FtiiIý;Y`I Siy^' } ... i f i t" r - x vn a, * 3y IWIC~ 1 nQuennlororo /.- *fA'~T QU.fabr Brde e ok T HE Queenshoro hrilge, New York. is almost deserted these summer evenings. An occa sional pair of strollers, em braced in the shadows of the great girders, a solitary man whom years have taught a love of peaceful places. a group of small boys lured by the ad venture that beckons from boats and moving waters, a duo of schoolgirls, giggling over secrets. Otherwise you may have the bridge and the quiet grandeur of the view to yourself, says a writer in the Christian SYcence Mon lter. The best time for your your visit is that tudednable quarter of an hor be tween sunset and the beginning of twilight. the hour of color, when com monplace objects, appear n the rich tones that fade into dim color under the latenmer lght of day. This eveniag the blue of the sky was just beginniag Its dissolution into twilihbt's gray when I came up the hag appmeheb to the brtide.4' aintly greealsh it stretched above and be hind the great sqperstructure which has the eccentric carves of Siamese temple room, with pairs of Oellecte aeedle-splres bhosting up from the I am ea the bridge, and the city Ite bearm me. aw eam erbe what I. see? Par below i" a bread Sowing river. with the rleb evlYs and yellow browns at e moms ja.: To the left. as I lean e the Itea pmpet, is Quemns. s.o*4lag be srhs ad week-yards few -Rmi o .fne les Isigas meee b the evtI P owara as yel -aws that a w Denser Is the epbalie ueeinde y a~t Iaekweh' is pd, Its rases lte emerald with mew 10pa' tb trailing ge he rvis lte Mtllatiet ºau h asl s ms0 as It la mpcr igpShI ig epsitleltIe .tu rn e ' na sad ua.p hWttts ble In the ie st edbt w n * e* atssbegMse aim n ° as ss thealus a ittIhM 7.ar L .ame tw shahs lWo e r. f e mebs. tt wree * r s. thae s me . S, ia` eat win Quates aer Ni he .iwn Sr - f _ . 'ice ý+, - - ý". a hilltop now, with a hundred lihted windows. Brooklyn 'ridge is a neck lace of topazes. My thoughts go a wondering among the street markets of the lower East side, dfown familiar ways marked out by rows of lights. And then, Puck-like, It Is In Broadway over which there hangs a delicate gold en haze. farn morganis. The superstructure of the bridge is no longer merely a wonderful mechan isam. It has a mystery. Its masses, black and full of shadows. have taken on a subtle flavor of antiquity. They are not steel girders, erected by men with whom one rubs shoulders In the subway. They are something reared in forgotten times, by forgotten men, and they seem permanent, always ex latent, as only things whose origins are half-forgotten can seem. I look ount again over the waters. The dockllghts Iave dropped floating ribbons, red and green and gold, into the water. The view of Paris from Montmartre is known the world over. This view, IntrinsicaUy as beautiful, and with more of grandeur in it, Is unknown. save by' a handful of prowlers like myself. That the Queenshoro bridge is not, Iike the Hill of Martyrs. an object for pilgrimages. is a profound commen tary on the nature of heauty. For beauty, after all, Is not In the object but in the eye.' We have eyes but we see not. We hurry across the Queensbore bridge In street ears or elevated trains, on business bent. There is no time for seeing, and if there were, would there be any de sire? After all, there is no view from Queaenboro brldg+--aly a fantasy o-setireted from the dreams of boys maeking adrentute, sboolgirls dream ng dreams, sad idlers lled with gagee p-es Fight he White Whale. A campaign against the helgs. or white whale was ereaty started rtem Deam enes to (omearnesI. In Bltt.ay, by the Fre OeeanagrpMhl soiety. is 'whch ete and poison tuhs, were med. The belage. peast of the. AhemLm, i gaesthlly cream whie in eslor. feeds tmanly on mariae 1 sad commtts tevages among the dnateI The average length of the aidlt me is almet eihteen or twenty reet. t'o hunt down the white whale Snet tJe yards long was set up at resprwunesw while another was placed n samltake pesltim n by the fishermen it Csaetereea Fuarthermre, the skip. pets of the sardine beats maed 4.001 rvs Delage poisee talm against the ti iO8a settiae man named raimmond discoveaed ae olittary p is . pInt I the wood, of Xt. Tam many $r'ish. Lotlama. adit is cher t. ,hs. - - a. l' a fr g..w. , and -r*i g heatu e a _te never sama before or thim. s . P or"" up" I m'any be found I* 1r il sas., Per peopwl Y . a mat-sb :~s VLtc~~r vr '4 ,3Mnctbw ;ia -~ - 'meat'0 fibs ~;li~.~lck Ss t, depibr at firs b nwdm WI. . dLwo p mat * rsiarthq - Q IL ~~i~Ljm; ~i. y- - - - - - - - - - - - - CONDENSED CLASSICS KENILWORTH a i wazrTta barc H R could be no fitter setting for a story of love and traged: than that afforded by the cour of England during the reign of Eliza beth. It was the heyday of gorgeous cos turnming and an age saturated with the occult. Everyone patronized the its trologers and the alchemists. Tin queen coupled with the dignity adl strength of the monarch the foibles ol the weak. It was her policy to play one favorite against another and there by secure the working of her own strong will, but ,che often gave way to furious temper and she was most sus ceptible to flattery. She was forever undecided between her duty to her sub Jects and her attachment to Robert Dudley. the earl of Leiceeter, whom, ii was commonly reported, she real ly intended to hiarry, for he was a courtier par excxlence, and his ambi tlon to share the throne overpowered every other purpose of his life. He had, however, been secretly wedded tc Amy Robsart, and so, to further his chances to be king, he consorted with one Richard Varney, and plotted the murder of his wife, which was accom pltshed at Abingdon manor. These threads of fact, With many others of fancy, Scott wove into the fabric of "Kenilworth." The story opens at an inn kept by one Gosling, whose nephew, Michael Lambourne, a swaggering drunkard. returns after years of absence and finds that Tony Foster, an old crony, who lighted the fires when Latimer and Ridley were burned, is keeping guard over a beautiful woman at Cumnor mansion. Lambourne gains admission there, accompanied by Tresillian, a knight of peerless character, who is in search of her to whom he has been be trothed and who has been lured away from her father's house. Lambourne becomes an accomplice in crime .with Poster, and Tresslian meets the mys terious lady, who proves to be none other than Amy Robsart, for it was she who was his promised bride. He tries to persuade her to return to her father, out in vain, and, in at tempting to earpe from the premises he meets Richard Varney, master of horse to Leicester, a shrewd calculat I g villain, who is a constant spur to the earl's ambition to be king. Tressillan naturally concludes that Amy is this fellow's mistress and, drawing his sword, overcomes and wed have shain him but for the time ly arrival of Lambourne, when he was obliged to oee, and, knowing the queen's interest In such afairs, he re solves to obtain her Intervention in Amy's behalL. And here Scott makes use of a s. perstitlous beat of the age. Tressilian's herse loses a shoe and a blacksmith easot be fasnd until to imp of a'boy leads the way to a mysterious farrier, named Waylind Smith, who is thought by these who know him to be an emws ay of saeta ~ who turns oat to be as alehmst with a laboratory un drgrqsend, mat who is persuaded to -tr the empley et ?rellan and withn m vrisits Sir Hu6h Robeart who algs a warrant of attorney to bheip to IeCure Licester's powerful arn sues in persuading the queen to free Asy from Vuruae. Tresillan and Wayland s~o after this make a visit to Lord Sussex, and whent be. for a seemin dlsecorta to the quoeena's physlelan, Is called to court for eplantloa, they aeanepany btm Susex, uapon examnatine, is fully uted, cad thereupon calls the qruesn's attnatioen to the fmct that Amy hebeart in crelly held prIer, and Forthwith Varney and lcester are -sea..omed lute the royal presence. a before thbe latter be opportunlatt to week, ensey dsinm that Amy 13 i wie; and, as everne is - alsent of Leesters cenfhsm, Va. niy assures Eliabeth tatItit Is das to the earl's trsneendant love Fr her -rcles sal t Thease to apparent ry settled, end Vunej Is ordered to ppse ret abs sesa ts sfettea -w to bris with hm the nsef is a peeblct o Am wl aever ceamimto be zseslved se Vanm· 's Ia be meast somebow be detained a OmmaerIl a resevels Lto a sate ae toe _- Demetrire, is Vrermes siel, pre pared a deg fq" Amy, but Wayla., u- Thsen's servant, eners her eprtuta asc a peddl'r ad provides ac autdat" er mte peus, .He also capdes her at the ewomle by whmn .-sL su18 mse sand wit hIm she e ktme g th sget armdlval at tsewite m us esar at id. MS tus se so m-aent r tuther. eray sue or appeak is eeawdeid Wa lsuandw Amy atth themselves to- s Jee'W a ream is ldrvyua'uta to,', wUeib e ad beem deaIgs as yruecsai. t~·1: ~W -w *PM# *j Rere she writes a letter to Lelee~ ter, beseeching him to come to her and, after tying it with a true love knot o. her hair, intrusts it to Wayland to deliver, but it is stolen from him. Meanwhile Tressillan had occasion to return to his room, and is dum founded to find .Amy there; but as she expected Leic.ster would come in answer to her letter, she bound Tres silian not to speak or act in her ne half for the next twenty-four hours and he departed to witness the comº ing of the queen. AIcording to his tory it was a wonderful preparation that Leicester made for the receptior of Elizabeth at Kenilworth. The queen is adorned with countless Jewels and attenced by the ladies of the court and val'ant knights magnifi cently attired, among whom Leicester glitters like a golden image. The pro cession advances over a bridge bullt for the occasion, and here the cour tiers dismount; a floating island reaches the shore and the "Lady ol the Lake" announces that this is the first time she has ever risen to pay homage, but she could not refrain from obeisance to her gracious majes ty. Then, as the queen enters the enstle, there is a discharge of fire works, new and wonderful in that age and she moves on through pageants of heathen gods and heroes of an tiquity to the great hall, which is hung with gorgeous silken tapestry, where she is seated by Leicester upon a royal throne, who after kissing her hand and euloglring her most profuse ly, retires and shortly reappears ap parelled Trom head to foot in dazzling white. ' he queen very shortly after sends for Varney. andt asks why his wife presumes to disobey the mandate of her sovereign and absent herself from the festivities, and he replies that she Is indisposed and presents certificates to that purpose. These Tressillan madly asserts are false, but remem bering his promise to Amy to keep silent for twenty-four hours, he halts and stammers and the queen orders Raleigh to place him under restraint. Then follows the banquet, served upon a most magnificent scale, and at its close Varney seeks Leicester and assures him that the stars promise that he shall marry the queen, and he also notifies him that Tresalian 'bas a mistress in Mervyn's tower. From here events hurry to a climalx The next morning Amy escapes from her room and is in hiding near the plaisance, when close at hand Leices ter avows his love to Elizabeth, and is given great encouragement; but, as they separate, the queen discovers Amy, who declares that she is not the wife of Varney, and that "Leicester knows alL" Accordingly she is hurried to tLhe presence of the earl, whee Eliza beth rages violently, but Lelcester's marriage remains still unrevealed, and Amy is thonght to be insane and ab is placed in custody. Moreover, Leicester is angry with Amy for con ing to Kenilworth and exposnlg him to the reentment of the queen, and he resolves to see her and Insist that for the present she must consent to be known as Varney's wife. This preposition is sornfully rf fused. Amy, no loonger a child, but with the strent of Injure woman hood, calls -upon the earl as a mea and as her lawful huband to take her to suiapth and akaeowlasd that abm is his wite. Leicester yields to this maiastm plea to his honor and prepares for the ordeal, but Varney, clearly pr. celving that this lnvolves M a p. sonal ruin, concludes that "rtier ae or -Amy must die," and is not sew in desedin which it sha eal a a p smades Leleeser that Amy is esalv iug with Trietlsn nd'ao eavatms him of her peridy that the earl nal ly comensts to her doom. That evenaing Leleaster ad Trel sillan meet. The latter st bellevme tat Vasey ld bo As to his me, and he begins to plead for her, but 41i words and motives are inii preted. Sweeds are drawn and they do battle, ut are atareaptelt .d eet again oa the merm w in a se chided ot. ust as sleOater s about to prevall, his sword is wlsed by the oung rscal, Dicky Smudge, who d livers to him ALy's letter, wheh hb had stolen from Wayland. The tang o aRal Ip umeavelled sad Am is pdeae'asd th e mtos at Lel At t ,s restities, Drmboth is a the eae at har ibagriph - aygrlae toergts for a wMe he rel agnity gad receovws emawna thye only whosa L aed lrlgh w-rns her that "sch wekness IRti beo-.mep a u eeu.w Mawh*lB Vael ft4ear as draks lainioerthe s .hh bAmy to COmm where -re ·p ia n s f to IWter' hedh - be, a myiterteus room rekaced by a dmwhrtapM which aes is adm·oa ed nIo e attempt to crss; bt when T'rnligan em Esigh com take ser to Ke~alwori, sad a hears the soana a tiber hoses' hoots, se thiska It is the earl and rahes rm e r res. and VaamO has a manpulted nt drawbridge that ae as s to he deatl aWhe, however, a- -Uash earns bow matters have deveped, he eammats saM deM. i aehmis is found d4d in has aaateqr and awy Fqter dsappeag a a b oletee i faod8 lag aftwn at a arweret ehamhir .wlhsp he hid his gei& sae. r atsr ageto ator e is atig apa, the quee, ad dies at pl .... as h. e bad do The Weess Pusi4 * . INk dlCtrr that I tkilt o down It. tbus1-tr of day it on I~ · 9 - - - k wfe. I - --I ar STOLE TO FEAST MAN SHE LOVED Girl Cashier of Baltimore Inur ance Firm Charged With Embezzling $9,673. CONFESSES HER GUILT Told Detectives She Would Do An"- thing for Man She Loves, and Lat. ter Expresses Willingness to Marry Her. Baltlmore.-Thnt she had embezzled thousandl.of dollars for the purpose of lavishing it on the ruan she loved, was the adtission of Miss Blessle L. Pick, twenty-seven years old. a 'cashier em-t pluyed by an insurance rtiin, uwhen she was questioned at police headquarters. She is now wcked up cha'lged' with embezzling $9,t7i3 from the Nutionat Life Inmurance Company of Vermont. Following a close questioning of the young woman, the detectives arrested Frank Schultz, who is being held on the charge of violating the Malni act. Miss Pick said Schultz had accompa nied her in a taxical)b to C'harlestown, WV. Va.. and spent the night of July 4 with her at a hotel. John A. Iiunt. a chauffeur, told the detective's that Schultz had paid him $60 for the trip and that his hotel bills for the night at the West Virginia town had been paid by the couple. Woman Involved In Case. Involved in the case also is Mrs. ailmar Stearns, fifty years old, at whose house the couple is alleged to have'spent many nights, and where they had obtained a large quantity of whisky. Mrs. Stearns Is locked up on the charge of having maintained a die orderly house. According to Miss Pick's admission, the juggling of the insurance firm's accounts has been go Ing on for some time past, but the defalcations escaped detection until the early part of this month. Miss Pick, had been with the firm seven years and besides acting as cashier, was confidential bookkeeper. Miss Pick told the detectives that bew had often accempanied Schultz lt Would Hand Him the Money. wtalicabe nd that often when tbe7 had rderd diamer at a betl abl sdl:aad a moey abuder e tabe t g him a that be would not be eshar ased when the time came to settle -e bUis. She ild the detectle that she Ie SeI sad shae weoeld do ayrthing ha the world for bls. She sld sbh wam willlg to be married to him. and be has aid be wishes to marry her. PUT NAKED CHILD IN YARD ather Armetd fe Fereing ethe a OeoeI abe to Sleep hi Shed. anaden. N. 3.-I. order to get b~ twentymmnth-old btbe out of the nise. Prank I.uhl. twenty-nine yersm od. placed It by day. eked. In a Slthp al a. At agLt be forced it to iu o as pen abed. 1Sick alnd enaelatl tr lack et' prwepr ride cad rar rThe nef w aend ea" d to the heal of the g withlot asa coverlug or clothes, ] i temeated by ies from an opes . bit e am iearby, by Nr. w. P. Wa14 secrerys of the badea brach o th Society to Preteet (bildree m ea mn b tr. A beawseeep at the Lethi hma . the eemme bl aV, t lof , ed aiSeto him. UOS8 PUT KICK IN IrK Naie Cereinla Parmee o** Th S whekly Ma s. Desme. N ..-4-Jehn KInl a farm er iving mae n etl . ifond two oC o eoes ddgi a- the ground of their Ietare In a st6Lor. epperenrly aof itng free. ,ome strange malady. A veterlnartas was eslled and after lengthy et.mlnstlon pronounced bothl alnmals as .nerely "hesatlv" drunk. A serch for the caunse led to the discovery of a big "moonshine" still It - secluded corner of the pn-totre. The eews had elten a quantity of t mash uSet by the IlIlcit whisky mana- tcturers. Deg Saved Sey Pram Death by SulL B]ersvmlle. O.--D!vertlni the at. tetnles of a baill that hald gored sthr- teem-yeold KarlH Ladrach. a pet deg st, b's life. tVhile the dog held the' bell's attetlke, the lad was ale t se to asfet. hebeteb m w as ese 7l ialue. Itas.st m. . a mj mm- t$l4 to epmIt g ta