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I ' INFLUENCE. The Yjunal lost bark on life's tumultuous _'ocetm Will leave a track behind forevermore; Tlio lightest wa^e of influence, onco in motion. Ex ton-is and widens to tlio eternal shore. We should he wary, then, who (.ro before 'A myriad yet to he, and we should take Ou i hearing carefully, where breakers roar And tearful tempests gather: one mistake May wreck unnumbered barks that follow in our wake. ?The Christii.n Advocate. f TROVATA I ft ft % By M. CORBETT-SEYMOUR. ? ^fie? i l^ i 6?6 i eZZr&eZfr* ^ Charles Danford's friends agreed unanimously that ho was making himself ridiculous. ITo had fallen in lovo Rlmnlv frnm in"'"" ^ ,..j QUO..If, I1UI 111 Cl crowded concert room once during the brief, bright, London season! simply from listening to the pleasant tone as her voice as she talked with a lady and gentleman, much older than herself, who wore her com panions. Now lovo?so-called?and young Danford wore not qui to unknown to each other. Me had twice proposed and been rejected; he had once been engajS**'. for a period of three weeks, at the end of which the girl threw him over for the sake of a man old enough to be her father. The the younj* fellow registered . something resembling a vow tliat ho I would have nothing to say to women ' ?cxccpy tho elderly. "Stow It?do, dear fellow!" said I Stewart, his special chum, when Charlie tried to tell the oft-told tale J of his experiences. "Everybody knows 1 all about it. and how you are never ! going t<? marry any one. Talk of ' something else." Yet hero lie was, declaring he would woo and wed a girl whose name he had never heard?and perhaps never would hear. Kven Rodney Stewart was inclined to have done with him, and told him plainly that ho was a fool. There ensued some coldness he uvwn im; iwo young men; they not over it and were friends a^iiin, but for weeks it left Charlie free to wander here and there, in the hope of coining across that charming young woman of the concert room. Some people say the world is small, I and we are forever seeing those we least expected to see. Hut this par(, ticular young man was not of that nni 11 inn -*? London is fairly largo; and wandering In th(> l'nrk, in Regent Street, and other place* whore Indies congregate, lie was fain to admit that nothing short of i> miracle would effect. a meeting with tlial fair-haired, brown-eyed maiden, who bad unknowingly made captive his h -art. And yet?for such is the doggedness of some hnmnn hoiiifv? n.> "V severed in his search. Sometimes his heart bounded within him as ho fancied he discerned a figure liko that of <)i<> unknown; thon, with t lie discovery ot the: mistake,' ills ; hopes wont, down v ry considerably below zero. In due course came July, London began to empty itsolf after the fifteenth, and, like other young men who have opportunities, Danford accepted several country house invitations. iM>\vii?ru did j ato put lilm in tho way of the unknown; tho ;;irl.-> lie met foilih1 him chilly and tinnppn ciative, and tho older women pilled his depression, trying to discover its cause. Charlie, however, was not com- i ninnicativc. Stowast was his only conndant, and Stewart liad gone Norway. So beyond vague assertions that iifo was not worth living, lie said nothing about the change which had come over him- -once so light-hearted a fellow. It. was just the time when people who love traveling start here and there in search of health or variety. Thiu nifi l/inl<i? .h .ikii >imiiis inilii was pnysically so unci enough, but ho resolved to croas the Channel, like the rer.t; in one or another pleasure resort, he might see the lady whom bo wanted to see. It is scarcely necessary to say that Danforil had plenty of money. Work, if such had been an obligation, would have quickly taken all tin* sentimental nonsenso out. of him; but the blessedness of "something to do" was unknown to him. As economic arrangements did no! form part of his program, young Danford put up at one of the most expensive hotels in Oxtonde when the mail-boat landed him there, lost a little money at the Kursaal and then went on Jo Brussels, Ho found the Vrighl city charming. Ho ran against an old acquaintance, who introduced lilin at the Legation, and that of course led to a good deal of visiting among the British resi- | dents. So Charlie's spirits rose ? little, though ho did not forget the "raison d'etre" of his continental trip, nor forget the sweetness of a certain musical voice, nor the beauty of fair hair combined with eyes of a lustrous sherry-brown. Indeed, lie was constantly thinking of the girl, sometimes even dreaming of her; and as he did not know her rlelitfiil ny ucsiywtiii on nor that of "Trovata," which seems to suggest lils sjerr<)t conviction, that patlonco and perseverance will accomplish all things, even (ho finding (without any clue) of a lost young lady. And he did And her; hut not in the little Helgtnn capital. Returning to his native land by way of Paris, disappointed but not yet despairing, Mr. Danford dropped In one afternoon at a tea-room In the neighborhood of the faubourg St. Honore. lie was glanclne at n and not Just, then thinking of liia "Trovata," when the wound of a voice at a lit tin table closo by bo startled him that he almost dropped his teacup. It was her voloo! Ho should have known it anywhere; nay, ho had BometiineB borrownd a poetic idea and assured himself that ho should be able to recognize it ovou had ho "lain lor a century dead." ^ I / I A n|- in actual boing! Sherry-brown ' eyeB, Pair hair, and voice; charmingly I dresseq, and In the company of two j other Indies, evidently English. it.. i ? i 1 ... -- -- vnai 11{; iuokuu rouna mm wildly. i He could not hope for an introduction I then ?ind there; it would bo too pre- j cipitate. Hut ho must learn her name ! If ho could?why, there, a fow yard:; away, was Dick Baring, and he always knew everyone and everything! Not without some slight agitation did Dan ford cross the room and make his inquiry. Mr. Baring seemed to understand that the name and antecedents of an elderly lady with white hair and then of a tall tourist in tailor made costume were asked for; but finally ho was made to comprehend. "Do I know her? Rather!" ho ex- | claimed. "The prettiest Bngllshwom- I nil ill I'nric on'l here he named an attache of the Embassy. "Shall I introduce you?" "No, thanks very much; I only wanted to know," said Charlie, trying to appear indifferent. But ho packed his belongings and made for the coast by that evening's train; and the last time I saw him In London I was favored with his declaration that, it was better to bo singlo than married.?Waverley. cuius fou hushing. Nervous Affection That May Yield to l*r<?|>e! Treatment, Blushing is a curious phenomenon, often very disagreeable to the sufferer. It is due to a sudden relaxation of the walls of the minute blood vessels of the surface of the body and is classed by physicians among nervous affections of the circulation. Self-consciousness is usually the j exciting cause of habitual blushing, which occurs therefore more commonly in bashful children, and in Kirls more frequently than in hoys. Those who blush easily are generally of a sensitive, nervous temperament, and as contact with the world modifies this somewhat the habit gradually disappears with age. The face is the part where blushing more commonly occurs, although any other part of the body may show the same change. One who watches the blushes of a painfully embarrassed person may see a faint pink flush spread over the ears and throat as well as the cheeks. It is said that among uncivilized tribes, where much of the body is habitually exposed, blushing, when it occurs at all, may involve all the uncovered parts. It is probably because the face is the part by which one isidentified ?that which personified the individual?that it is the recognized seat of the blush. Sudden attacks of general blushing without any apparent reason may af- j font, those who are somewhat ad- ' vanned (11 lifo and constitute a most 1 disatrroc able symptom. Children who blush easily should he (rained lo nvurcoiise self-conscious- ; ne:-s or ba.?h fulness. Thev should be persuaded, not forced, to take a prominent. position nmoiiK (lselr playmate:; rather than 10 hold back and speak only when they ;<r<> spoken to. I'nduo timidity tdioubl b?* overcome because it. injure:-; the change of success in j business or the social world. Tho i>|'i;nnius "! lUfn'S 111 HCIIOOI, li IIIO child can b persuaded ii will bo good for liiin, will ^o tar to euro morbid blushing. Tho pponfaneous blushing or (lusbinn of adults may In; benefited by tonics, remedies to aid digestion, a K"iieroua but simple diet, cool baihing' and plenty of ex< reise iu the open air. ? Youth's Compauion. fflM?ACHHe?QSQU(990?(!09(9(ii? 1 ? THE SILENCE OF 3 ? HALF THE WORLD - i O * ?o?aeaeo??????9??Miiooc??e.o ? "Iii regard to the nu n. on I he ot her hand, women are absolutely silent," ; says Inez llaynes Cillmorc, in Sue- ! ccss Magazine, "It may be that they ! discuss their masters anions them- i selves, but if t hey <b>, it is in whispers and under a vow of secrecy. Whether this silence bo through prudonc . through fear, through chivalry, or bemuse they liave not. formulated their opinions, nobody knows. ; Hut it is so ]>rofouud that the men j have leaped fatuously to the conelti sion ilia!, wo in in have no opinion in regard in men or. niori* fatuously still, that there is nothing about men for women to criticise. The women, themselves, are jus;, hc^inninn to bo conscious of their own tongue-tied condition, lOlizabeth liobins, one of the few women earth-writers who has j dared lo approach this subject, says, | |f I wore a r an, and cared to know the world 1 lived in, I think it would make mo a shade uneasy, the weight of that silence of half the world.' " Inserts in Coal. Discoveries In tho coal mines of , central France have furnished by far tho greatest advance that has ever been made In our knowledge of tho insects which inhabited the world millions of years, as geologists believe, before the time when man made bis appearance upon tho earth. In that wonderful age when tho carboniferous* plants, whose remains constitute tho coal beds of to-day, were alive and flourishing tho air and the Boil wore animated by tho presence of files, grasshoppers, cockroaches, dragon flies, spiders, locusts flTlfl kfViPfiu f\C s\* 1 ' * uvnni it'll wnicil exist but slightly changcd at the present time. But the Insects of those remote times attained a gigantic size, some of the dragon files measuring two feet from tip to tip of their expanded wings. The remains of these Insects havo been marvellously preserved in the strata of coal and rock. ?Harper's Weekly. The Sweet Uses of A<1vcr>?ify. You cau wear out your old clothes. You are not. troubled with visitors. You are not pers euted to stand sponsor. Begging letter writers will let you alone. Impostors know it is useless to try to blood you. You can practice temperance. You nro not foolishly flattered. Yon save many a debt and ninny a headache. Finally, if you have a true friend you'll flpd It out.?Life. TOTALLY BLIND, BUT HE BUILDS A HOUSE Remarkable Feat Accomplished by Olney E. uunniagliam Astonishos All Hlr, Neighbors ?Think Ho Has Sixth Sense?Builder Puts Up Frame With livery line Trm and Level, and Shiu{?lc> and Paints Slructuro Although totallj blind and fiftyeight years old, Gluey 13. Cunningham, a carpenter, of Millbury, Mass., has recently completed in every dotail a two-story addition to his house which is said to be a marvel of the carpenter's art. Only through the persistence and courage of a man who has suddenly mot the worst fate which can befall a human being has this strange demonstration come about. The remarkable power which ho has developed, however, is the most surprising feature of the case, since it is now believed that it is through the so-called sixth sense that the carpenter has been the means of establishing what lias so long been a theory. While other blind men have accomplished feats which may approach that performed by this carpenter, to be suddenly stricken blind after nearly a lifetime of nnrmnl ..,..1 ?i..-? to accomplish the feats which he performs is one of the wonders of the town of Millhnry. For Cunningham became totally blind only about live years ago. Is ii possible that, great tragedy, such as the loss of sight, may develop in a person a power ol which he has never suspected he possessed? This is the query of those who have observed ii is movements carefully. Olney 10. Cunningham, the man who builds houses by guesswork, lias for years been a resid snt of the town of Millbury, The family is one of the oldest in the town. At a very early age Cunningham began to learn the trade of carpenter. Hi* fitimr wno an expert, mechanic, and the son seemed to inherit many of his qualities. As soon as Cunningham, according to his story, served his apprenticeship, he began to work at his trade. After several years he sav< d some money and began to contract, for small jobs himself, lie was successful, and for ih<" last fifteen years has been fairly well known in the western part of the State as a builder. About seven years ago (,'unninghar; organ (O lose His sight. !lis hearing began Id bo affected slightly. Other physical iniirmit i< s began to appear. Hir the most Morions was the approaching loss of sight. Tho in:'.n was in despair. A ft.or a lifetime of activity ami in tho midst of important work which ho hail ?>n haa?i i<> be siuhlonly iioroft of sight nr!in il a biitor punishment. Specialists wore railed in and for months ovc yih'.nu p<>: i!il was dotio to restore his sight. },,in...iy all efforts were exhausted end Cmrii'r: ham was told i\" was hopiMesslj blind. His trouble was pri>non:s<- .! t i;;I paralysis of ;no optic norvo. For months tli rarpentor gave way ?o his mifcfori <im\ Me r.-t'iis. d ail efforts to ontiro him from iiis Immi lie sat and broode.l over his awful misfortune. Nothing - ,'1 "'<1 '<> "> * ' liini or take his mind off !iis trouble. Ilis liair, formerly only streaked wiili gray, became mow white. Ilis shoulders drooped and his health appear' 1 to fail daily. i'i i i.ds and acquaintances united in predicting ilia 'iis life was slowly >i?i.u; away iroin grief. But a little more lin n a year .v.'o a change, hecam>' apparent. The builder began to t: ke an interest in affairs. lie insisted upon walking out daily. During l i t manner he I < IUH'11 llltt OKI spirit? and lical: li. The surprise of the tow nsp< i>p 1<' of Millbury, however, knew no bounds when, a little more than two months ago, Cunningham announced he was going ' > build an addition to his bouse, a lance, oldfashioned Colonial buil ling and one of l he oldest in I he town. Against the protest - of his family the l)litid man got out ladders and tools and set to work. I5\ walking repeatedly around the end of j>:s house and labo; iously climbing up bis ladder to the eav> ,, l.e finally succeeded in gelling his men .tin nients. These were all marked Willi a heavy pencil on a soft pine board, making such an impression thai the marks were percrpi ible to his ling t::. Tli n with a saw and chisel he sit to work tearing out the wall preparatory to beginning the extension lo tin; ell. I'.y this time two-thirds of the ci!izens of l ii?* town were deeply interested in the project of the blind man. When the partition w;is torn away posts wero driven into the ground and Cunningham began to set the lower beams of the ell. It was hero that the blind man first demonstrated his wonderful new ability. Illind, unable to distinguish daylight from pitchy darkness, Cunningham laid the first, beam in place. Merely by running his hands hack and forth the. length of this beam he put it In place and secured it. The second M>iiu\ii:u, iiiui i no tmril. A level was put on these beams. Every ono of them lay perfectly in position and did not vary a degree from the horizontal. As amazing as this seemed, the mystery deepened. The framework of the entire new structuro was completed. Not only was every beam in place and tho corners as square as if they had been corrected with the most dellcato instruments, but every beam was exactly set at a dead level. With this new sense to guide him the blind man found each time without an error the exact position for each piece of construct ion. The entiro framework ^f this ell was In position and boarded a fow weeks ago. Not contented with tills, Cunningham ascended tho ladder to tho roof and shingled it. lie claphoarded the walls and painted them, livery lino of the building was as true as if figured with a level and square. Mr. Cunningham says he believes he has Inheilted part, of his wonderful power, sinco his father was a man of extreme1 ruto senses. It was a famous f his father to detect tho posl ft leak In a pipe by merel. , to tho sound of tho ' v I water as it was pumped out. Mr. Cunningham assorts that'his father was able, after listening at the pipe for a moment, to locate within twenty-four Inches the position of a leak on a nine throo-nuarioi'R r>f mil.. J long. lOveu wlum there woro branch pipes running from tlie* main one bo waj-: jus', a.; :;iht asful. Ginckecl Fish in Camp. u.v iii:u!;kkt l. .jim.sox. When it comes lo a real woods d"!icacy there is nothing which can quite equal smoked fish and yet very f < w campers have ever even thought of such a i!iiin connection with woods life, but the process is so very simple and the results so very satisfactory that they ought lo be recorded. The first thing to do is to clean the fish when they are perfectly fresh and open them up as the cod fish is opened. Tlioy should then ho salted down in layers of coarse fine s:.lt, and left for thirty-si { hours. The next process is to lay them on frames built like toasters, smoke them thirty-six hours, turn and smoke thirty-six hours more. They should then be dried by covering with cheesecloth and leaving in the open air. They will then keep a month under ordinary conditions and much longer in a cool, dry place, and there never will I be ;i time during this period that tliev will not prove a delightful appetizer, served in varying forms. The smoke house; may be made of any kind of hark, preferably birch, spruce or hemlock, hni it must be practically air tiuht with ihe exception of an opening at the top to give constant circulai ion. The mo.-M satisfactory arrangement for the lire is to haive it some eight, or ten feet away from the smoke house :ui<1 to conduct the smoke to the house throuuh a tunnel running against the prevailing wind, so there will be les.-j draft, for the temperature must li" normal. If the lire is built in the hnn?> miwI ?h_ rectly underneath, great care must be taken or the flsh will l>e roasted. The real difficulty is to pet a pure smoke, a smoke which is without artificial odor. Corn cobs, if available, make the best of smoke, but hard wood answers the purpose if one nn- , derstands how to smoulder the flame. Hriefly, the wool must burn without, flame, and this t:u>:in- that very little air must reach it. but the trick is soon mastered, and no camper who rei mains in the woods for any letmth of ( time should be without a smoke house. ^,..1 i. > . . .i:n- III Ii III' .11 I1IMV Of pared in much ih<? :>!n<' way.? i-'roni Hi creation. An lloncst < !(! Htoliiiouist. Mayor CotiKhlin. of l-*;? 11 River, | >.pc aking at a n hanquot. told a | story about an ! 1 K;!ll Kiver \holiI Uonlst. "T!ie nhl hoy," ?i?1 .Mayor f'on^h! lin. "went to tii ilieaire in lloston tii'1 t;ii;t anil .aw 'Othelln.' His ; knowl i! of i i t v<I hi '.viiii -a i litniicd: ho Ijad nil i I :? that the In ro (if the nW.'tv wa : wI;51 "ia:i black(IIOll lip. * W'fi5, after the i>ln\ was over a friend askef| hint tvii;it he finvr.-lit of t i art or.;. II cie red his Hi r on t and answered d'd' wratelv " Wall. 1 i> in" all sectional prejudices a i.lo and jitiltin" out of the ion an> (.art ialit y I may 'nave for t he i':u as >"h durii'd i1" I I don't think the ni,,z< r held his own with : nv on *oni! * *?Boston Herald. Scotland and I'll'.*,Ii\:h1. "i! is ti:s11?:"il," said Kir": MvnilM, at the (iViildh;. 1, *'Ili.it two -in .1 nation*. u illi s:: i 1 alii lit i<\-;, should I"' united by i!i> oldest alliance roixisU rd|l in liisloiy." I * ill 1 be Scots will probably want to know whet ho:- :i superior a"' -< lini might not ?,- p re feircd on behalf of ill'* " \iild Alliance" between I'runoe and Scotland, which wit; formally concluded t\v< lve years aft r I!.innoekburn that is. in I liL'i; and lit: .s been going on <-v 1 | >inoe, in ;i wiiv. Tho onlv thin-', how . cvor, in ih.> I" ?: m <>l national "aHiiiili's" (in wh !i this "A 'M All; )!< ' vcsUm! was <0111111011 amiiKfiii. ' 1 10 Knuland, wliilo I lie 1 a11 ? 1. Vvf -n Poiiii.^al :ui<! I). i;lnii(l was ;:i:a! > on ly founded 011 1 minion oppositioi 10 Krrjnce.- l,ond<i Chronic]*!. l-'rom (lie f,< 'oiilVssions <> 1? l!vr.'' I11 "Tln> Confessions or Kvo," 1 pruned in me (iarden of 11! m :ttitl immnilial'lv suppressed by an outraged Adam, Micro is a cni ioii ytor> Inez llaynes (lillmore lias 1111 arthd I it for the readers of Sn> < Magazine. Si>: woiim 11, before.1 s tiling out to attend an > \ iiinj- function, agreed ; each to draw out an Adam oil tin* | subject of lilm<elf, to list- it as lotw; , as lie would tall;. The first woman | lay down on M.e job crawline, home i at. sunrise utterly exhausted. The ; second woman stayed with it until she was stone-deaf. The third was captured after many days- a vcibber1 nft idiot. The fourth eoniinitted suicide. The fifth has never been beard from. And the sixth is listening yet. Vein ill int* Hosouroc. Mr. D? wont to the club, leaving Mrs. 1) with a lady friend, whoso abilities as a stand; i-.longer and mischief maker were pre eminent. When he returned he just poked his head into (tie drawing room and said with a siKli of relief: "That old cat's gone, I suppose?" For an instant thore was a profound silence, for as he tittered Hulas' word lie encountered the stony stare of the lady who had been in bis mind. Then his wife catno to the rescue. "Oh, yes, dear," she said. "I sent it to the cats' homo in a basket this morning."?Tit-Hits. Invisible Dors. The coat of a rod setter normally stands out fairly clearly against heather of the ordinary him. When, however, it gets soaked with rain it darkens very much and blends very closely with tho heather. The Gordon setters are perhaps the worst In this regard of assimilating with tho color of heather, and bo being liable to get a charge rtf shot. ?Country Life. Tho llrst pair of spectacles was mndc by an Italian In 129!). 'W 7 Southern Dishes ? .ier an:! Daughter Finri t vomachs snfl Pockets?Per ViLh Thosj? ns Staples Two \ n a Winter Resort. : $ i>#i> *< <*<> "We have cleared Sloon a season on our persimmon beer, sassafras tea . rid hn' wa'lli declart <1 a young Southern woman wlio keeps a lunch and tea room at a winter resort. "When mother and 1 w < left alone we planned to take Northern tourists; as hoarders. Almost every on- down tberc does, you know. Our house being small we rould only make room for three, and at tho end of the season we found ourselves almost ?.">0 d'tiii'.h wiiii our sroami iiwiir.; itir four tons of hard roal. To persons with tho slender ineonie thni w; nave this deht seemed appalling, and when the next winter came we didn't dare to try attain. "One of the ladies who lrid hoard id with ns returned ih?* next winter and was taken in hy one of our nearest n> i'.hhors. Kverv few days she would (Iron in on ns and try to prevail on mother to take her to hoard ai?ain. j Sbe explained (hat she liked tin* thlnirs wo iravo hor to cat -old fashioned Southern dishes. " \s I had rra'l a lot about the sucpo; of tea rooms ! s;o|;-> to this woman, asking whether if motIi<>r and I should o: op such ;i place she would come :?? ! brill 3 hor friends. She ; sv,iirod us t' *r she would no" otilv :viue for < .1 but would take hor lunches with us ns often as wo had hot fritters or n n "It didn't take nmeh propnrallon. Wo slni'dy threw our parlor and dining room together, sot out all the small tables we h:id in the house, saw tha* the ehina and 'Ivor wor" handy, made a howl of hatter for wafllcF and put a pan of biscuits in the oven when wo paw our former boarder coming up tb" front walk with three wormi) frlo nds. "That was for lunch, ml wlim the frill r left Hi lin.if ...wl > t...ir .... had taken in S I. The food consumed was two broiled I'Mi'lc 'is, ;t i>ati of bi-culls, over > o many lint wami syrup, a small pat of butte;- ind four cups of ton. Ml Wanted <o Kat. "They loft ns wilb tin* unlcr-!andirir that, wo would servo them t<>a. persimmon In it, rolled wpf 'is and fritters that aftornor.n from livo to six. Thov were there on lime with a troop of i i on!" from Mi" tro'i!' links. j li > II.hi i i : r. * ?i .: I ii MM 1 11?* M ' t M - | c rn dishes w.? l::u1 '.riven them for lllllf'h so succor t" 111 > tiiai. 1") 1H everybody in earshot hud enm?? ,.\ >r to see w'n : conbl I)' h?i !n l!;u v..iy o! afternoon ! '"I'llore wove toii r>op!o ' ihftt .".ft.oriioon "i"! lh<-\ ? ; n' >f t.i-* el' persimmon beer '.i ee. v yon know persimmon 1 > ? i no! ; ??>: *lmn bev. -tit?e in the So ' ii lit <1 mother is pno of tho few i >;> 1 in our neighborhood who \\ i;. That v'.r we had put iin !e - i i . n hroo dozen holtley, so ! 11; ; people I' ft our winter's "Vplv w;.: much >1 i >ii hii^twv! "We \v? ;\? s > r.uch " >nra.?C<id, however. thai 1 : o( u;> !;. ?1t.it ni.'.lii writing not! i^-, 1 iia: v. > :i<I imcih d a Itiho!) and (cm rr-.n. t> leave i.1 Hip ofll<- < !' c?;ir oik i h ? i ! and at (lie fount ry clul' We v. - < lim y the next morning n-Cini; on' and jn> paring every!hlim \v bad in t!' on e in liopo of having pftvliiipti as in any as (lit <I:i>' before, (inil y> ' < v> b ?tb so timid niif! unrortain i!i:? \ < didn't daw io tr<i to t'.io \t>? :; < f buying anyihing <'\t i a. When ni-'l i > " v > wore just alum / : n nil! >f lin i.-o an.I homo wit!: : i:i >"> ? our pod i ! . "Aiter litis oxj)6rIchc> wo folf ? >("Ill I llouu'l 1.' I ??"!> lo 1( | ' 't our suppl'm \ Iml to liiro :i voir .:!: ! to lu'lp in ihe Uiiclion am', lc; 'i room ami i\vo 111 <?f?- lo (o:i|i in at'to'noon to Ih' caUfMl on ii< < -i of m >sit> during !!' tea > i: \\'?? had work for th'-iii a!! M' .t ..:'t ! "n. nnd had to r.ond ov< i<> on u< libor: 1 < borrow extra cup : and spoon . "That afternoon fini hed ou. : upp!y of pe> 1in ':! 1' !>: ! ! n t morning I I -vrov.. <1 a i >r an I buggy and drove t n m < wel mil- * limiting for more of it. | . eded in Inning four d<}Sien 1>??' 1 . m uv ) ihree gallon jugs fnHi Willing to Pay "After consulting our <! and former hoarder we decided that, the only way to make our supply of beer hold out was l?-. putting up the price. From ten rents a glass we raised it to twenty-five rents. Can you imagine people paying twenty-five rents for a Miiau glass 01 persimmon i>(< r'.' Well, they did it, and so many of them tliat our supply vanished during I h?> Christmas holidays. Several of them bought it by tho lottle io send back to their friends for Christmas presents. "After tho persimmon beer was all gono we had to fall back on b'ackberry cordial and Scupperm ng wine. This we served with fruit cake tin* kind we call black wedding cake. "I used to think tho.e was no end to the appetites of our customers when we first began to serve that cake and wine. I have seen a man drink a whole bottle of the wine and eat one-half of a lar^o cake, and the women were almost as bad Why they didn't din from indigestion is a mystery to me. Often I ns<'d to toll mother they wouldn't lie able to come the ticvt day. but th<\v always did. "Our marble enko was almost as popular as tb<> fruit, cake. As it is mm h less expensive to make, of 1-mirnr; ?< wurc ;i.ui 10 navo Ii takou ;m a cibst itutc. ,\*o, \v<didn't fiii(' (jftdy IlalUmoiv or angels' food v?m > popular. Penplo would iiifiM when II' y couldn't cot the ? ' i in fnarbh\ Th">* Kflld anor / II tb?". wanted pnwothing I'.i n tbn usual 1 i "1 f cake bijlfhos j: id t^ns wf i < .<1 f] : 1 r on \Y< make 'hem Prove Profitable. ? i he Way to Reach Northern Simmon Rper nnH P.aUn Voiri3n Make a Good Living during th<> summer unci our eusto-i hums either luiy them to take back! North with them or send back to i friends left behind. \Y?> began tlio | business with almost no preparation,! but now it keepa us working hard the I entire summer making preserves, | picklcs and wines for the next sea- ; sun's iiko >1 :?cl<* l( l?y the Barrel. "We make persimmon beer by the l>arrel and usually pi rid of all that we ean supply. Buying blackberries, j muscadines ?ind otiier wild fruit is easy enough. since the negroes are accustomed to feathering them for salt', but it is about the hardest tiling in the world to get persimmons. Why. the first autumn that we deter-] mined to make an extra supply of] beer 1 had go into the country for ?lays with our cook and maid and Kathor tlix persimmons myself "Yes, we had many demands for possum during the last, two seasons, ' and when possible wo had it for lunch. Persimmon beer is the natural beverage for hakcd possum, and my father always had them both for Now Year's dinner. "It is seldom that n persimmon tiw is cut down in our part of the South. 10vu when they are little slips they will he left in tlie fields. This is not only because of the fruit and for tile convenience of liav iiur, a natural 'possum trap on your place, but because the tree is beautiful and affords a delicious shade for man and beast durinp tin- entire summer. Any Southerner will tell you of seeing mules and horses in the plow st up of I heir own accord when they reach a persimmon tre*1. "Of course the main reason for our success is that we were the first in the field. People say they like our things because they are not to be had anywhere else. My mother has always been considered a Rood cook and housekeeper and is certainly fond o!' both. We pive just tin* dishes we would hnve at home could we afford them and prepared in just the same way. To hepln with all our china, si 1 vim* .'Mid plass were old fashioned, and now, inst< *.i<! of buying new thinps, we hire it of a neiphhor who, like most of us, knows the need of a few dollars. "The farnishiiur.: of our lit:le home are aid old. ami ibis verms to 'do an 11 i< >1111 i .1111.11 null III 1)111 IUHIU* r.icrs. At lirst mother and I did ull ?!) > serving. I>uI now tlmt our Inisim< I'm- increased so mother remains in the pantry to servo while 1 sit :it a (lc. K- in th<> front room to receive i!i" chocks and &ivo oh an go, Of i >;i" snaking Si 000 in four months i; jii 'tiy :;o( ! h .sim . for two women in the Sou til." Tmil>nrrn^xin<; l'or Her. I A MiliV: :ili< - i:ki:i rr .! hi \vlfr> re ren : !' iv'l a ? : 1! from an old ! fri ::<! whom (lie; had 1101 11 for ! vi-a!'. ?. .In t li !<>i the three sai down to a litLI<> supper in the (!crnian style, the wife. seizing :i favorable ojijiortunit. , whispered to her li us haml: I "W'e have only throe bottles of ' beer in the bou > iusi enough to go around. Hon't ask him to ha\c> more." | "Very well." an weed the luis| band. wiio chanced to 11. mi-iking of .'Mipothing < 1 - at the time. j llalf an hout- later the ho it, to his wil" conUierrihil >n. asked the guest : to take mot l?t>( . The invitation [ w.!-. politely d eliivd, but sii 11 the ' host 1111 r.oi (' ",i;t. A dozen time s th?> c. Hi : '.vax in* ? >1 t.) drink; a doz* on i in . b iirn !. us< .1. \Y i" " 1: ' ' "i d' |>M .1 111 ' wlfO I >r> . he;1 ! ',!. hand lo ta:-k. "Win on <a; i>. !!'id(> you jit '- int :-o? liiiin't \ t?Il you rht re v ro only t.hroo botl! '? \\ 1!> did dm in i t upon Ilia bavin l. or - bo< : , in :> l>< t, nioro boor'.'" ".Miti'v !" r>v-] iir.iod Ihr- husband I foriiOt ontiri-ly." ' Hut," ; "d i wifo, ' why did you sii|i|ios*> 1 wa. kicking you undc r Mil* l:>blo'.'" ".\ly d<iot',V blnndly replied tho i husband. 'you didn't ki< k i.i v! " ? 1 i p]-i u<?). i .-. ! ' I On tiic fa rim ?;f l!n;',!:ind Iflst year thoro wore 3,191,0$!) horse.-- employ. d. THE BUI How the East Indiar Adapted in r Thingalow I?: an clastic word. The idea is old and it has l?oon adapted to this country within the last fow yoars. There has always been the cottage at the seashore or mountains and the colonial mansion had been here hefore the days oi the oldest inhabitant. In the West, they had shacks and In Italy they have the villa. India had to have something so in tlio galese district, they created the bungalow. Now it is here, but far different from the Hongalese affair. For In Kast India tho bungalow is of flimsy construction, with thatched roof, verandas surrounding the house and with one room divided by -a curtain.. At first, tho bungalow was a eooiingv' off place, a garden or a lod^e. With the name and the idea Amotjh cati architects have somewhat changed things and have shown East Indian people that in this country a bungalow really is something. \Vh<Sp tb6 idea was t ew In this country an avohlteet win n d the difference l>e! twecn :i 1 ungainw and a aivv.e 5 000 nut that doc!?*" wV von t ' :> bungalow $1 j Hi,in Ilia; :m;o' nt. Tim bn !r>\\ , ns built'. .JT v *i < i* I'll''', n ho jv- for .'ill Ihc yo?. i , < uoiuit Uj ?? ,v.r oi.o for There is record of wheat mowing in China as far back as 3000 B. C. The total area sown 1o gingelly In 'he Madras presidency, India, is 035,000 acres, tin* estimateil vlehl for which is 44.4i)S ions. This itf tlio'" commercial name for sesame, from which the value of oil produced anhually is about $3,90:5,014, The output of white salt in tlie United Kingdom in amounted to 1,084)050 tons. Cats arc subject to a form of Influenza which is communicable to human beings, and they can ':atch it from man juot as readily. * Cigar botes of glass are coming more and more into use. They are cheaper than tho wooden boxes and keep the cigars fresh a longer time. The Institute of Marine Engineers in London recently discussed the subject and H. A. Mayor, of Glasgow, said that the prospect for electric propulsion for ships is very hopeful. ? 1 A Berlin paper says that Ne>v York < is 11'.< third Gerlfcun city In the world in point, of population. "With its i r,r,0.000 Germans." it. says, "it is exceeded in si'/o only by Berlin, which J has ahont 2,00(1,000. and by Ham- Y\ bur , which ha.< about 730,000." ?jj ' ,ff | There wro 80.912 miles of over- v head and cable wires in operation in India in 19(i7. against !">;>." in 1857. ' Tho annual earnings of the cables between India and Europe since 1902; I 00snows a surplus each year of frnm "J 1 t inn AAA *^ Ol OAA A A A ii*/in v> i ,wvr?*/?/u CL# Sn,6uu,uu\;. Now York City housekeepers are great sufferers from short weights /, and measures. Chief Derry, of the ijt Bureau of Weights and Measures, r ports that five per cent, of the cin the city use false balar measures, and that to sel* quarter short of the w is quite common. The America at Calcutta, great businr that metrop I paring the are used f binding < purses, kKivcs ai. ? feminine and adornii I 0 CHEAT UIAVAY TUA\ KL. I ' rv Swit/erlaiu ' -tem Operates to Pi inoti / (Ctieral Itusiness. II Is not. generally known t Switzerland maintains a press > in the United States. His " Jkdley }\ Sonme^*. whom r.n ad man of a thdati'ltymrou*^'* :i '"live wire." Ask I the publicity nge^t I ment.' and he will I really represents the j an owned by the Gove i Mr. Sumner was at ' ln.-u niu;lit. His Ant i gardiiigf Swiss raili ('.stIns iravcloptuei ' tiuisiastic on the j uient ownershi' ; Switzerland t.h I pride to tho fa. son is pari own< When Mr roads ho i! touch and ( they pass. Visitors ionize or. publicity has boon p 11)05 10,51 come, and i 10 20,028. rl erland iw is !i ; transportation ! t!io mo?- profita aii., fiftt 273" n I any sort ; liitoly first cia j words, for $1. *'im 11 v.* ua v hi &W : i !') is patch. Close "Theso nicch.ii. life-like." "How so?" "Johnny's autom< down 11m cat and kn dust out of two Ool) Courier-Journal. vfGALOW. i Creation Ha fhis Country. .only. It. is divldod 1' rooms as ta?te and por k but. usually it is a conib reptlon hall, drawing 1 dining room and living i There is no snggeatioi v this tvne of arr.httnotnr/i nishings, to bo in har should , suggest rest, ease i conatort. Straight-back chairs, up .j^t^ry, onyx I / tables and gilt stools art.* ft? o.tti of place in the bungalow.as a afc*'a<a piano in a flat. TheJj4>? cotftHhutes to happiness and A04 IMld?rs pay a oynio rtevo?jgil6Vi* a btiujalow. Q^l^es rave^v^r llhsm, ,fo . '' So popular hay? thny 'b?3omn t"fc builders JitiB ??ttUir. J thelli <tp a then offering Cliom for ?:<)? tor 1 pure ha kit . of 1 eixly . ! 1 ftftv ttiiu ?a- &!Sl*IJa6&SB .*1**. ' *v * 11 wr man who i i m , J-Wif SO 1)1 uch ; as hj^ w&tktbA | 1 *,|th in maiM