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,.t--f z. .ALLLD ,/ ah·~r 4~ Alluring Models in Fall Wraps. There can hardly be said to be any istinct fashions for either house resses or ball gowns for the autumn onths, but rather advance winter yles are worn for what few informal airs there A.re during the day-and, eedless to state, a ball is almost as aheard of in October as is a snow torm in Auglst. It is then more ith outdoor costumnies-tailor suits, oaks, wraps and hats-that one has o deal at this' time of year, and most lluring are 411 the models in long Soats and jackets now to be procured. This year hpe separate wrap forms nore than evyir an all important part fa completd. outfit, and three, four, ve or more handsome wraps are con dered by no means an unnecessary ?r extravagant number of expensive 4loaks to he. possessed at once. One reason for this is that the gowns to lay are made up in such bright and varied colors that the wrap must either one in most perfectly with somo color `cheme employed or else match exact. y the shade of the dress. White Iloaks are still smart, but are not seen n such numbers-for which we should eally be thankful-as last year. A ark red, cream or a handsome black eau de sole or brocade cloak can also worn with a quantity of different hades; but as can easily be seen one ires very shortly of an all white or ill black wrap unless there be some arments with which it may be worn terchangeably to relieve the monot ny. New and Novel. A tangerine chiffon cloth waist, rimmed with white velvet flowers em proldered in silver threads, would have uch beauty added to it by being orn with a picture hat of white chif. on cloth and velvet, the high crown ncircled with a vine of the white vel et flowers And a cluster of tangerine nd white ostrich tips caught at the ft side, where the brim should co uettishly 4are. Picture hats having e high crown wound with stuffed silk rds have a soft and pretty touch yen them;;by introducing fluffy frills f lace for ,he wide brim. Very many f the picturesque dress hats are trim ed with either a long, shaded ostrich lume, a group of ostrict tips or a ery long, graceful Paradise plume. ite plush Directoire hats are very in style, with a long white os ch feather for the trimming, which ows at the tip some pretty delicate r perhaps brilliant color, which in ne way or another appears in the wn with which the hat is worn. Bows Are Growing in Size. Bows for'young girls and hair orna ents for their elders seem to grow c size. Little girls wear two large c s, one on the top of the hair, r ere it itdrawn to a pompadour, and I o at thoenape of the neck. Butterfly c we which require a yard at least are f high favor, and Alsatian effects are L rn by older girls who have plenty of I, fr. Sprays of flowers developed c m chiffon make a pretty ornament a the evening. For Young Girls. u Loose coats with plaited skirts ake exceedingly attractive costumes t' r school and similar occasions and b in the height of fashion. This one t made of cheviot in shades of brown n 4 tan and is simply finished with I tchings in tailor style. The coat d a, tt ye ve sti pa S-thA I iches a ro. o Gboiwn l p giprer h are lured for the leiwht eij si tan gowns. A new model seen re Th hmg a skirt which has on the bri on the sides a round yoke, ing to which the skirt lproler is shirredl, 'nv with the exception of the front use lbroadth, which consists of two fiat mln plaits turned toward each other. These Ater are Iastene(d from the waist line tb a nal third of the length of the skirt by rd, nItians of crystal buttons and loops of as white silk braid. The same. motive w- ap;pears on the pointcld belt. A bolero are hangs over this, but is shirred into its, the figure at the edges and has a deep ias collar ,f English embroidery. The ost sleeves are full puffs. which fall be org low the elbow. where they are gath cer. eyed into a band trimmed with loops ms and buttons. The band is not tight art and falls over an undersleeve of Eng. ur. lish embroidery. try One of the New Waists. ie Blouse effects below shallow yokes me are exceedingly becoming to most to- fgures and are eminently fashionable. .ud ter lor ite en I ld s A ck iso ret d nt or ne ot st, was Th aoe woman of medumie 11 h a// ace ue This very pretty blouse shows also I he the new sleeves that are full at trhe !o- shoulders and is finished with deep fi cuffs. The model is made of pale blue 1k crepe de chine with the yoke of lace re and the band and cuffs of enibroider ci ed taffeta but various combinations f might be suggested and tihe designt Ssuits the rodd waist and the gown Sequally wrnell. When likel the yoket a can be mare trarsiearent, the lining e. beneath Ieing cut away. To make ry the waist for a woman of mediun sizes ,- will be required 4 yards 21, i% yards eh or 2 leve8 are 44 inches wide, w ith to inard of all-over lace and 1o yards n of banding. maals Il Styles in Shirt Waistsh. a With the shirt-waist Stilts-whis c i are also worn in mohair, light-weight a- velveteen and silk-a separate cost is w of course, a necessity. It is more we often loose-fitting than tight, and thr r, most favored models are three-quarter y ,d length. Deep capes and shoulder h ,y capes, as well as a cape drapery just 'e for the sleeve, are much seen. A corn e binaton of velvet and braid is a fashn td sf lonable trimming, especially when the o d coat is in one of the much-in-demand a smooth-faced materials. A A filmy separate waist-a mass oA shlrrs, gathers and fine tucks-is a ,A useful addition to any woman's ward to use, and the effect of the waist may . b cler c e y iesby its e trimming. A v ine of velvet flowers Smakes an attractive deorat for the o T t descent sequins efmay also be charming Ar ly introduced and painted laces and also seqirinfscattert laces combineg efecetively with the chiffon cloth. A aeWith a dressy waist likes this a pic ture hat teo match will do Its share toh 1 ant dinner, reception or theater party costre loue.ue. T Thray silk frock pis detgietl HI rhesin e Wiith gts plosy smoothke d tue anelvt medallions roell to the frbonbf treatment.d itne ae n oithe r cerie ce velo ta or stvivdeetr t would beb. stareihly faftted i the accesso- i go rimes. Some mective gowns are de- i1 0 einnnerable tiny satin htichc~ of "tfi t~ea palest pink or blue. These are used sit the euiiture beingl o soft satin or thed Io -I we and: IY~n~vn feo a t the blouse b rbbone held in plarce oa -either.d ide oef tbe neutral fioundation. o ha Skirtt r Are Plaited. sea lag taIlored street frock- 1 TIME TO JUDGE SCENERY. Observant Man Advises Waiting Until After Breakfast. "It's curious, you know, it really is, said a returned summer boarder, "what effect a good square meal will have on the imagination. "We arrived at the end of a long roailroadi journey, on our way to where we were to Slpen(l the sulmmier, at 5 o'clock in the nlorning. Then we took a stage and rode minis further over a hilly road, in the chliilly morn ing air to one end of a lake,. where red, we took a steamboat and role some runt more miles to our final destination, ar fiat riving there at 7 a. ti. 'ese "Seen under such circumstances, tb a after ;being routed out of bed at 4 a by m., and before breakfast, the scenery wof was disappointing. The lake seemed tive not. much bigger than a good-sized lero mijl pond, the trees were all stunted into and the mountains were not muieh tel) bigger than hills, and we were inelln'. The ed .to take a gloomy view of things, 1 b,- and in that frame we remained until, I ath- ,at 7:30,, thi tocRin sounded and we ( .ol* went in for blreakfast. ight "That was a good breakfast, with Cnag. everything well cooked and admirably c served, and with particularly excel lent coffee, and we acd "the appetites of hungry mules and lingered long. kes "When we had agaln'come-out the lost sun wg shining and the lake had been ble. enlar d by four acres at least; each individual tree of all the innumerable thousands that everywhere fringed the lake's shores and rose upward on its mountainous sides had grown forty feet, and the mountains themselves now climbed to the sky. "It was all noble and restful and beautiful; and so it remained, grow ing on us all the time as long as we S were there. "Hereafter I shall never pass judg ment on scenery till after breakfast." --New York Sun. GAMBLE ON RULERS' LIVES. English People Make Practice of This Form of Insurance. "Policies. I'll wager, are already being taken out in London on the life of little Alexis, the new heir to the v Russian throne." baid an insurance agent. "The English gamble horribly in life insurance, and Alexis must ap- o peal to them as a wonderful risk. 1, They will pay high for him, though. s Iso I "The insurance rates on all royal 1 the lives are a tribute to the power of t eep the nihilists and anarchists, for they a lue are so huge as to be almost prohibi- .i tCO Live. The rate on the King of Eng ler land is enormous, and among mon iris archs his is the lowest rate of any. ign That on the Russian czar is the high- C wn est. The czar is a bad risk. Many >ke companies would not insure him on any consideration. 1, tke "But Lloyds, the great London con- . ize cern, would insure anything or any- of -ds body-Prof. Langley going up in one t, ith of his flying machines, a Japanese spy p; .ds about to enter Port Arthur, a Russian (11 battleship going into hattle. And hence S( Lloyds is willing to insure the poor p, little Russian heir, and a certain class of men, taking advantage of this fact, Ci eb are procuring policies upon the baby's p; ht life. is, "Gambling on lives is a ghastly w re form of sport, and I believe that it is a h practiced nowhere but in England. It 'G etr aught not to be practiced there. The st eIr law ought to prohibit it. At Lloyds, th st hiowever, it is always going on. Poll- "g . ties at Lloyds are continually being tro h taken out on persons of eminence all th Saver the world." a How Nature Works. W l A lonely rock uprose above the sea, Pr The coral insects fretting at its base; 'A a And no man came into its loneliness, d The very storm-birds shunned its evil IC Only the ocean beat upon its breast, y Only the ocean gave It close embrace. tS An island was upheaved toward the skies. S A central tire within its heart had S burst; oe The rock became a mosntaln, stern and strong. Wil Only the dlesolation showed at first: Un SA stray bird dropped a seed nthat fructl id eird, bet No longer reigned the barrenness ac- la * cursed. the A little world stood out among the seas, he e. With singing brooks and many a fra grant wood, 3 Where lovers heard again their story . sweet, And truth grew fair, more fully under y stood. The tender flowers o'ergrew the chasms S deep, And God looked down, ~pd,saw that it was good. -Barah Williams. . ..,'. QCanada's New sovernor. : ; AAmerican boy who was travel SIng In:iouth Africa in 1896, toward the Sclose of the Matabele troubles, recalls his Arst sigl)( of Earl Grey,' tbe flew goverir 'r goirta'l d' f" Ctiala. "His' lords tl," thys th':A:mlhic-fi': ferri'd f to, ' not' look' a blit. lke a Ielted; rearl. hough administrator ofl Rhoder: I sla rithe:tlme,; h, .bi .: in hi ..shirt Ssleev'with a.tair pofpbviog.,r y ready Smad trousers and a disreputable' slou hat Heq:rA4 .a epDll atffriends. Swer e ga gaj rial. , .t e , ar olF t Bu! Jy9 @, ., ,Lsprl: Gr¢e,,., ty,, tpq way as born i'. a royal resfdencge. His her .ws ' t" u, V i~dia, a . "9 eh -wk tiop g t;i St mes I.dlee &t the tl am "i"Aod est Old'te 'tnN a1h etr ~n e r tIe lyor's hoBiinnl asre, IPra cetyeaiph fa, o :haes . celebrating .b ons ,. ret e:end t birthday. ''id oi'ad man ilo in, Brait~ore,eifJi . 22,01800, !:< zi ita and mad It a n sapPrentice Ap b oy the trigate Constltutlom . liis sce' birtbhay anniversaries, in o ecent years o havpebeen memorable events, Lat rfg year Attorney General Moody, then laSt secretary of the navy, was In Phila- brot delpkla, and made it a special polrt the to congratulate the old man. "Bily' his is still nimble on his feet, and on his fs * birthday danced a couple of steps topp of the sailor's homrpipe, to the un. dau measured delight of his aged fellow daui ) who ter I Until AS THE WORLD Is, REVOLVES rder, DEATH CALLS EX-GOV. CORNELL. long iy to Former Chief Executive of New York nmier, Passes Away at 72. n We Alonzo 1B. Cornell, fornier governor thier 't New York, died at his home in tornl ithaca last week of Bright's disease here afteTr an illness of several months. iomi lie was a son of Ezra Cornell, the f, ar- founder of Cornell university. Edu cated at the Ithaca academy, young ICes Cornell at the age of 14 became a tele 4 a graph operator, having been influenced nery r, tmibark in this work by reason oft mell his lather's connection with Prof. S. ized F. ii. Morse in the original develop rnted nt-ant of the magnetic telegraph. Bo ih giming at the heuttom, he rapidly cln' pushed himstelf upward, allnd was pro nlg, m:ted fronm one post of responsibility ntil, to another until, after Ilii expe'rience Wte of more than twenty years in the vari cuts grades of t('ltegraph svrv!c,,, Mr. with "Cornell in 1ht; \.was elected a director ably of the We'.ten I':on Telegraph comel crel ;ites the i / /c on I )rty a ves 3 and we st." t 1 it his th ti idy in life A` c 2O B cc LL to the pany, a position which he retai!ned on ic nee til 1890J. He was also intere-tetl in bly lake transportation and banking. IUp h ap- on the organization of the Republican th sk. party hee bcm afiliatl with it and at gh. soon took a prominent place in tlhe at yal larty coul;sels. For many years priot We of to his electioni a:s governor he servedl su ley as chairman of the Nt w York ietpilb to hbi- licau state committee. we ng- ------- sp on- PASSENGERS GOT OUT PAPER. hi ny. gh- Delayed by Flood. They Passed Time Tc Mny in Unique Way. co on "The Daily Washuttr." Volume 1. No. st. S1, wIas published at San Marcial. N. th Dn- M.. on Oct. 1. 1904. by the passengers de ny- of Santa Fe train No. 22. running ie. I an ne tween El Paso anti Kansas City. The th PY paper will be treasured by passengers ph an delayed by the recent floods in the tin ice s,uthwest. It contains a list of the re. or passengers on the train, including per. HE tsS sons from points as far south as the litt Ct, City of Mexico. as far north as St. the V's Paul and from San Francisco and New York. One of the personals, Ev Iy which is but a fair sample of the rest, pr< Is ays: "Mr. Dick and Mr. Lester, the tho It 'Gold Dust Twins,' will give a barn, a e storming show at the opera house br , this evening." Another one reads: olu lI "Somebody who has seen the Primmi fig Eg trunk in the baggage car has started hal 11 the report that Mr. and Mrs. Primm 1 are 'enjoying' their wedding trip. sar When approached by our reporter, Mr. thr Primmn coughed and Mrs. Primm said: dri e; 'Are we, Jamie, dear?'" tha 'iI ------ Icoft ROCKHILL GOING TO CHINA. Ithe e. I ------ anc Will Succeed Edwin H. Conger as eff United States Minister. org William Woodville Rockhill, who til will succeed Edwin H. Conger as don United States minister to China, has I been director of the Bureau of Amer- as ican Republics since 1899. He entered the the diplomatic service in 1884, when que he was appointed second secretary at T Nat y frot stet mot cal -185/"t c ¢,eidglmad!s ,f quit of r •' T,! , . " .T crol SIf, s I her ever attE his Korai, 1886.' FrIa . Rishti: tra o: tpsrdtern was made minister to pose da9gh arriedt Sr Joha nHarstattseop, h repngsighePne te cn' t yh Lescent. nate brother, with Anna Maria, daughter of Sure Ad I~qglsb:,f~i irl~clqaly d '4 Note-The following article has been widely published and is one of the most remarkable illustrations of the value of careful marshalling and analysis of facts in presenting a sub ject to the public. ELL. LEVELERS. York The Mission of Whisky, Tobacco and Coffee. rnr The Creator made all things, we be e in lieve. Ihs. If so, lie must have made these. ths We know what lie made food and e water for, and air and sunshine, but Swhy Whisky, Tobacco and Coffee? tekle They are here sure enough and netl each performing its work. nc c There must be some great plan be hind it all; the thoughtful man seeks to understand something of that plan and thereby to judge these articles Be idly for their true worth. Let us not say "bad" or "good" ilit without taking testimony. There are times and conditions wari- hen it certainly seems to the casual observer that thrse stimulant narcot tor Ics are real blessings. am Right there is the ambush that con ceals a "killing" enemy. One can slip into the habit of either whisky, tobacco or coffee easy enough. but to "untangle" is often a fearful struggle. it seems plain that there are cir cumstances when the narcotic effect of these poisons is for the moment Sbeneficial, but the fearful argument against them is that seldom ever does one find a steady user of either whis ky, coffee or tobacco free from disease of some kind. Certainly Powerful elements in their effect on the human race. It is a matter of daily history, testi fied to by literally millions of people, that Whisky, Tobacco and Coffee are srilling, promising, beguiling friends on the start, but always false as hell itself in the end. Once they get firm toldenough to show their strength, they insist upon governing and drive the victim steadily towards ill health in some form; if permitted to continue to rule, they will not let up until phys un ical and mental ruin sets in. I in A man under that spell (and "under t 1:p the spell" is correct) of any one of can these drugs frequently assures himself Ind and his friends, "Wiry, I can leave off the any time I want to. I did quit for a I *io week just to show I could." It is a ei sure mark of the slave when one gets t ill to that stage. Hie wiggled through a : week, fighting every day to break the I spell, was finally whipped, and begani . his slavery all over again. The slave (Coffee slave as well as me Tobacco and Whisky) daily reviews his I condition, sees perfectly plain the' \o. steady encroachments of disease, how Nthe nerves get weaker day by day and i v ers demand the drug that seems to smile v be. I and offer relief for a few minutes and t 'he then leave the diseased condition r _rs plainer to view than ever and grow- t he Ing worse. Many times the Coffee slave h he realizes that he is between two fires. t er. He feels bad if he leaves off and a b he little worse if he drinks and allows r 3t. the effect to wear off. ad So it goes on from day to day. t( Is, Every night the struggling victim n st, promises himself that he will break a be the habit and next day when he feels a -n- a little bad (as he is quite sure to), c se breaks, not the habit, but his own res- I s: olution. It is nearly always a tough m fight, with disaster ahead sure If the ed habit wins. t n There have been hundreds of thou- st I. sands of people driven to their graves di r. through disease brought on by coffee t 1: drinking alone, and it is quite certain st that more human misery is caused by pi coffee and tobacco than by whisky, for i' the two first are more widely used, Iof and more hidden and insidious in the ci to effect on nerves, heart and other vtal organs, and are thus unsuspected un- A: o til much o' the dangerous work is fo s done. th s Now, Reader, what is your opinion r- as to the real use the Creator has for d these things? Take a look at the n question from this point of view. t There is a law of Nature and of BI Nature's God that things slowly evolve ko from lower planes to higher, a sturdy. by steady and dignified advance toward mi more perfect things in both the Physi- be cal and Spiritual world. The ponder- hi ons tread of evolutionary development bo is fixed by the Infinite and will not be quickened out of natural law by any fir of man's methods. lo( Therefore we see many illustrations he showing how nature checks too rapid de advance. Illlipois raises phenomenal set crops of corn for two or three years. If, she. continued to do so every year to her farmers would advance in welth plo ,arz byond those of other sections or (ex1 countries. So Nature interposes a bar mt every three or four years and brings teol ona ."lad year." for .4Iere we see the levilfhg Influence ' at work. .: : fice A man is pfopieroud in' his bisinese of, 'tor a' iumbet of years and gitws rich. p 1o Tlefl'Nature sets the "leveling iaglI fQ. IdnCe' at work.on hib. oprpe of his we inlvestmet]oid, t'; hertri~d .inhi4xtrF Cki oba , coffee, women, gamb.pig or, '··IaR1gie they orm The tpt kt ind ipose is tdloirr.,j---klpuietn from for ;evol'rving too far ahead of the masses. E At nation becomes prosperouse and Chi great 'like anclent Rome If. no level, Sin .Influenee set in. ehq would domi- ag: nat (the world perhaps for. all time, fee Bu tDame Nature sets her army of E "levble'rs" at work---luxury, overeat- a Inlaiid drinking, llcentiouSness, waste hoe and extravagance, Indulgences of all Yo, kinds-then comes the wreck. Sure, beg Sure, Sure. didi TWe law of the unit is the law of tenl the mass. Man goes through the same process. Weakness (in childhood), gradual growth of strength, energy, J5 thrift, probity, prosperity, wealth, com- the fort, ease, relaxatiop, self-indulgence, F luxury, idleness, waste, debauchery, lan has citease, and the wreck follows. The e of "ek' clers" are in the Ibu-he. along thte s of path way of every sI(cessfulll man a,! and omanl, and ti 'y bag tihe m;ajorty. sub.- Onlly now and thaell can a i an alan,. out against thte-e "le\.iirs-" and Lic hi. tortunet, lfame; and heaith to t!:,e end. So the C'riatr 1i hc use, for Whii~k~ and I'obaIcc ani (c'ltus to h,vcl down ti:h lc(''ccesful ones andil those o1ho slihow be'- iigns of being succt's-ful, and 1i,( them back in the mace, us that tit. e. great "tield" (the mnases) may nut hI and lqit too far behind. but And yet we nml.t admnit that -am.* all-wise Creator has placed it in lh, and power of nlia to stand upright, clotihe,, in the armor of a clean-cut, ,tealdl he- tiind, and say unto hitiim.elf, "1 deciin. eks To exchange my birthrigit for a me. lan of pottage. 'les "I will not detadrn lmy senses, weal, en my grip on affairs and keep inm .od" self cheap, common and behind in lto tune and fame by drugging with whis ens ky, tobacco or cofhee. Life is to, ual short. It is hard enounlh to win the cot- good things without any sort of hand; cap, so a man is certainly a 'fool trad !on- er' when he trades strength, health, money and the good things that corn her with power for the half-asleep condi igh. tion of the 'drugger.' with the certain rful my of sickness and disease ahead." It is a matter each individual mu-' cir- decide for himself. Hle can be a lea.d ect or and semi-god If he will, or he can ent go along through life a drugged clown, ent a cheap "hewer of wood or carrier of Des water." uis-I Certain it is that while the Great ase Father of us all does not seem to "mind" if some of his children are eir foolish and stupid, he seems to select others (perhaps those he intends for sti- some special work) and allows them )le. to be threshed and castigated most ire fearfully by these "levelers." ids If a man tries flirting with these lev el! tilers a while, and gets a few slaps as rm a hint, he had better take the hint, or th, a good solid blow will follow. ve When a man tries to live upright, Ith clean, thrifty, sober and undrugged, ue manifesting as near as he knows what Ys- the Creator intends he should, happi ness, health and peace seem to come er to him. Does it pay? of This article was written to set peo elf pile thinking, to rouse the "God with off in," for every highly-organized man a and woman has times when they feel a a something calling from within for ts them to press to the front and "be a about the Father's business." Don't he mistake it; the spark of the Infinite an is there and it pays in every way- health, happiness, peace and even as worldly prosperity-to break off the its habits and strip clean for the work he cut out for us. Ww It has been the business of the ad writer to provide a practical and easy le way for people to break away from id the coffee habit and be assured of a n return to health and all of the good w- things that brings, provided the abuse re has not gone too far, and even then s. the cases where the body has been re a built on a basis of strength and health ºs run into the thousands. It is an easy and comfortable step y. to stop coffee instantly by having well m made Postum Food Coffee served rich tk and hot with good cream, for the color Is and flavor is there, but none of the ), caffeine or other nerve-destroying ele s- ments of ordinary coffee. h On the contrary. the most powerful e rebuilding elements furnished by Na. tore are in Postum and they quickly Sset about repairing the damage. Sel s dom is it more than two days after e the change is made before the old n stomach or bowel troubles or com y plaints of kidneys, heart, head or r I nerves show unmistakable evidence i, I of getting better, and ten days' time e changes things wonderfully. S Literally millions of brain-working I. Americans to-day use Postum, having a found the value and common sense in the change. SC. W. POST. e Generous Deed cf Elks. Through the generosity of the t Bridgeport lodge of Elks, Peter Mar. e koon of Wallingford, Conn., will profit by the unfortunate accident which he I met with while witnessing the Elts' banner raising. A runaway horse ran him down and dislocated his collar Sbone. S The bone was not fractured as at Sfirst reported. Markoon was here looking for work, and when the E!lks Sheard that he had a wife and family dependent upon him for support they sent a committee out to investigate, Markoon, as a result, was sent back to Wallingford to-day, after the Bridge port lodge of Elks had paid his medical expenses, secured his ticket, given him money for incidental expenses, and told him to calculate upon $8 per week for the next four weeks. The Elks went further. They noti filed 'tlie Wallingford lodge to take care of Markoon a~id help him to get erm p!'loyment.' Markoon is. not a member. .0. the,prder, never was and the Elks were not in any way liable for the ac alint.-Boston Globe. ThB Eternal, Feminine. t i'e-4TiWill yon-O, will yon be mine forever? She-Mercy, no! I just accepted :Cholly Saphedde last night. He-?What' Has all your enoeur agement "to me meant nothing of at fection? She--Oh, I assure you it has meant a 'good deal. In fact, I don't know Show I'd hbave managed without you. You see, until you came along and I began to be so nice to you, Cholly didn't seem to have any serious in tentions at all.-Baltimore American. Thits One of the Years. Johnny-Pa. when was the year of the big wind? Father-Any year when there was an eleetioan.