'I'H"1"H'H TOOMUCH GOODNESS HOW A N EXEMPLARY HUSBAND ALMOST DROVE HIS WIFE O LUNACY THE STAY A HOME AS CONSTANT IRRITANT Woman Should Be Taken to the Thea ter, to Concerts and Balls Man Should So Arrange as to Spend a Portion of His Evenings Away From His Domicile. *.&- v- "^''-'''idHflJt-'s^''-'1*- friend, Ebenezer Butterworth Snagues, tells me that I have made quite a favorable impression among his employes. When he called to see me, socially, the other evening, he said that his pbrter, Clonough, had asked him if he supposed that I could tell him what ailed his wife. I told Snagues to send Clenough up to my office so me afternoon and I would talk the matter over. Mr. Clenough called the next after noon and briefly described his wife's condition. said: "I can't imagine what the trouble is. wife is very quiet doesn't like society don't like to go to the theater, or to concerts, or lectures, in fact, all she does want to do is to st ay at home. She doesn't go out of the house to call on any one once a week. I do all the shopping, such as buying groceries, meat and vegetables, and make life as easy as I can for her in every way." I asked Clenough if his wife had to work very hard. said: "Oh, no! She gets up about half-past'five in the morning and builds the fire. I' ashamed to say, that, but it's pretty hard work in the store, and I don't feel much like getting up mornings, and Mrs. Clenough says she would just as soon build the fire as not. I get up at 6 and she has breakfast all ready for me. Then I have to hurry, because the train leaves at half-past seven, and as I don't have time in the store I read the paper while I am eating and finish the paper on the train. Tnen, of course, after I have gone, the missis washes the dishes and tidies up things and does her routine work about the house. She's a great woman for routine, my wi fe is. Sh has set days for certain kinds of work washes on Monday irons on Tuesday, and so on through the week. Sh is too bu sy to get any dinner for herself she just takes a lunch a bit of bread and a cup of tea, and not always that, because she says 'it's so Mmesome to eat alone.' In the afternoon she begins to get the regular dinner, and that keeps her busy until I get home at half-past six. Then we have dinner, and I read the evening pa per while she does up the dishes, and th en she takes her knitting or sewing a nd employes her ti me while I am so tired that after I have had my smo ke I usually fall asleep and don't wake up again until, bedtime." Irritable and Fitful. "Nothing especial' seems to be the matter with her, but lately she has be come very Irritable and fitful. If I don't listen to what she is saying, when she is asking questions or talking of what has happened in the neighborhood, she actually loses her temper and scolds, and that prevents my reading or thinking, and disturbs my nap, and if I tell her not to bother me she goes off in a fit of the sulks. Sh has been awful ly sulky and morose, lately, and she complains that she is so nervous that she feels as If she would fly, and she is so tired that she "can hardly drag one foot after the other. It' strange, though, I don't see why she she should be so nervous, because there's nothing to disturb her. Ifs al ways quiet in the house. Sh doesn't have much company. There's nobody in the house to worry her, not even a child."* "Well," I said, *I think I know pret well what the trouble is, but with your permission I will drop in some morning and talk wi th your wife." I accordance with this promise I did call and found things as I supposed I should. Mrs. 'Clenough was one of those long and lank women, of an extreme nervous temperament, very unas suming in appearance, of a retiring, diffident disposition, and not at all self assertive. After gaining her confidence by cheerful small-talk, I said it must be rather lonesome here. "Oh, doc- tor," she exclaimed, "lonesome i no name fox it ifs perfectly horrible it's worse than confinement for life on a desert isle. But I wouldn't think of saying that to my husband he's so tir when he gets home, and he has so much to worry him." I thought it was rather strange that Mr. Clenough should have so much to worry about, as he was a steady-going ma n, had no bad habits, had a good, permanent position, and was well and promptly paid but I didn't say so to bis wife. I did ask her if she liked amusements. If she'and her husband didn't go to a concert or a' theater once in a while. Would Like to Go to Theater. She said, "Oh, no. I should dearly love to go to the theater occasional ly, but, as I have said, my husband is so tired th at he doesn't want to do anything when he gets home but eat his supper, smo ke his pipe, read the paper and take a nap and he never thinks of even suggesti ng that we go out anywhere. Why, we don't even call on our next-door neighbors he says .he i no society man and of course if we don't call on the neighbors they wont' call on us." "I suppose, Mrs. Clenough," said I, "that you don't have very much work to do." "Well, yes I do have a good deal," she replied. "It isn't hard work, but it keeps me bu sy all the time. husband i awfully hard on clothes. has to have a clean frock every .day as well as a clean shirt and collar a nd cuffs. S my washing is quite large. Wednesday it tak es about all my spare time mending. Then the hou se is so near the railroad that it gets awfully dirty, and it takes a good deal of my time sweeping and scrub bing. Mr. Clenough is a hearty eater, too, and I cook a big dinner every day a nd Saturday I cook cakes and pies for the week." I didn't make any comments* on her work, but I thoug ht that she had enough of it, and rather too much. I said: "Of course you and your hus band go to church on Sunday," and she replied: "Oh! no Mr. Clenough does not want to dress up Sunday. says he's tired and wants to read and rest he says that's the only time he does have to himself." "I suppose/' I said, "you take little trips during 4be summertrolley rides and so forth." "No," said she, "Mr. Clenough doesn't want to goh says there's su ch a crowd and that he se es enough of crowds in the city every 'day. If he has a day off he goes wi th fX some chum somewhere in the woods, *3 Ashing .or gunning. says that's the kJbd of a rest he likes, 3K- Is a Handy Man. T^ of course, then," said if "yotl botb_sDend a.wek_or twojn. the cou n- A^aBC^iWftttM THE APPEAL STEADILY BAINS] 1It afcnsto publi sh 11 the news pCssible* It does so impartially, wasting no words*' 8Its correspondents are able and energetic- I1 VOL. 18. NO. 30i. I"t'* 'l"'t'-t'l l"t"M'l On an August evening, love, We will talk of Autumn days When the crackling fires are burning And the sun-lit leaves are turning, Golden Autumn days 1 eAV.V.V*V iV.SV.V. wr-ynren rtcr mas ms -vacation.- wo,~ she replied, "he takes that ti me to fix up things around the house. He's a Very handy man he can carpenter, and paint, and do mason work, and plumb ing In fact, there's hardly anything about the house that he can't do. But I hope you won't misunderstand me, doctorhe makes me awfully nervous he's a great home body, and I know I ought to be thankful for that, but sometimes I almost wisn he belonged to a club th at would keep him away from home an evening or twoany thing for excitement." "Well," I said, "I aon't tnink you need any medicine, nothing more than a little beef, wine, ana iron, perhaps, or a little wine to sort of quiet your' nerves and strengthen them, and what would you think of taking a vacation of a week or two?" "Oh, doctor!" she exclaimed, "that would be fine, but I don't see how I could do it Mr. Clenough couldn't get along without me and I wouldn't think of asking him." I told her perhaps we could find that and said: "I would like to see Mr. Clenough tomorrow evening." When Mr. Clenpugh came into my office I nearly scared the life out of him. I said: "Clenough, you've got one wife out of a thousand, but if you don't re form, you won't have any, or else you'll have a lunatic on you^ hands." "Re- form," said Clenough, in an indignant tone. Send Her to Lively Places. "Yes!" said I, "reform. N wonder your wife is nervous working all day like a galley slave, and you're worse th an no company when you're at home. he first thing I want you to do is to send your wife away for a month, and not to the country, either, but to some lively place, where there's something goi ng on, concerts, lectures, balls, com edies, anything that's gay and cheer ful, and nothing that is sad or serious no tragedy, mind you, for she's act ing that now. Don't let her do a bit of work for fear that she should worry about you and the house shut it up a nd get a good room for yourself in town. When she com es back takesher to the theater at least once a week, and when you go home at night chat a while wi th her instead of being as dumb as a mummy. Tell her a few lively or humorous Incidents that have happened during the day. You see enougn of themyo see people enough you see this one and that one, and have a social chat and keep up' your spirits, while your wi fe slaves at home, witho ut seeing or speaking to a single person. N wonder she is ner vous. The wonder is that she is not insane." "There's another thing I want to say Clenough, and I know you have too much sense to get offended or misin terpret my advice. It would be a good idea if you didn't stick quite so close to the house. Of course, I don't want you to spend your evenings in barrooms or any su ch resorts of doubtful character, but there are enough good places where you can have a good time. The fact is your wi fe is suffering partly from too much Clenough. Tou are thoughtless ly selfish and your wi fe is self-sacrific ing enough to let you have your own way and say nothing, but it worries her all the same, more BO than if she gave you a good tongue-lashing once fit* if- 1 ^-^^Steft^L^fc, '1,-^iSi^S^T^ rn tx wmte. xtr-a wie snnnysnct: tndt trv, keep to ourselves that frets the strings of life the most and soonest snaps them. And don't forget that you have a few neighbors. Call on them with your wife occasionally it will do you good and do them good." Clenough followed my advice, and, the last time that I saw his wife she had gained flesh and was as smiling as a basket of chips, whatever that may be, and she had lost that worried, anx ious look, and seemed contented and happy, and the men who work at Snagues' say that Clenough himself is much more of a goqd fellow than he used to be. One of the men, in fact, gave me an idea that I had never thought of be fore. said Clenough was a good man, industrious, conscientious, an em bodiment of all the virtues, in a word, he was exasperatingly good. And there are others just like Clenough. They are models of goodness and propriety, so nearly perfect that they drive the av erage mortal, with his imperfections, to madness. They're so good that they actually make other people bad by irri tation. They're so patient th at they make others lose their patience. And of all these good men the quiet, stay- at-home-all-the-time man is most ex asperating to the good wife, who while she appreciates all his good qualities, wishes for a little excitement, even if her husband furnishes it. It's one Of many cases where you find the good woman nearly crazy from too much goodness in close proximity. It's a puzling case, too, if the doctor is not wise ne's apt to give all sorts of drugs for all sorts of diseases without effect it's not malaria, or hysteria, and all the balm in Gilead will, do no good if the selfish man doesn't lend a hand in the cure. Leon Noel. JUDGE SAYS FATHERS MAY BEAT DAUGHTERS Parent Knocks Down Girl for Going With Young Man and Court Frees Hinj. NEW YORK, July 3tMore of his decidevd view about thi J* ^V^l'^r^l ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS.OTJSmWFUKDAY.JTJLY 26, 1902. ALL THE GOLPEN YEAR. On a Winter evening, love, We will sing of summer time, When the yellow sun is shining, And the tender leaves are vining, -Golden Summer days I wmi tn gin ne would have to be mother as well as father to her now. and laid down the law as follows: "Lizzie, your mother's dead now, and you're only seventeen. I've got to look after you, and the only way I can do it is to lay down an iron rule. Don't you ever go around with you ng men with out my consent. If you do and I heai of it I'll follow you up and thrash you right -before them. Mind what I say." Lizzie yielded to the pleadings of youth one day last week and went to North Beach with him. Papa Weiss followed them up as he said he would, and when he found them he dismissed the young man wi th a vigorous kick and hit his daughter on,the head so hard that an ambulance was called to take her to St. John's hospital. Sh is subject to epileptic fits. Detectives Burden and Nolan arrest ed Weiss despite his protest that Lizzie was his daughter, and he could punish her as he pleased for disobedience. The girl said in court yesterdayy she didn'1 want to make any complaint against her father. rS* th rights of Queens bench by Magistrate Lu ke J. Connorton, in Long Island City. believes th at married women should be in their hous es by 10 o'clock at night, a nd he refused to convict a husband who beat his wi fe for habitually stay ing out later than th at hour. This week he discharged Christopher Weis s, an Astoria farmer, who knocked down his seventeen-year-old daughter, in flicting a scalp wound, which sent her to the hospital for two days. "You did perfectly right," said the magistrate to Weiss, when the circum stanc es .were explained to him. "A sev teST^l^ ^LS 0 wanted i SSliSS'f ar sttr^h Ia an i the magistrate eve ,"i TP2 'L worr yh' sai *lr.S- arg right/' a did perfectly compIaln women ogfsincs y Long Isl- aint the un arm ^viously been theP vX?n?t' Wh a iXj women shouldd hot be al lrrie eea special- lowed out on their own homes after 10 w?^ W igh a o^r the wto keep them at home.u" eleef r!!n?l aid en decision thi i SS?Sl^. 8llown tlie a yearSld VtHS seventee n tha o/a spLSS tne year-old girl ca nt go to North Bearb or Coney Island wi thmady a oung mar from ris 8 hV Unn SSSy men hso J.-L the state department. This man applied rw^ handed down from thei to the ambassador in Berlin on July 2 busIne A to go to a beach resort with a young man if her father forbids it/ Weiss lives on Hurl st avenue. His wi fe died two months ago, and he and his daughter Lizzie teera left a.in STATUS OF FILIPINOS AS TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES Entitled to Unfted States Protection, but Not to a Passport. WASHINGTON, D. July .-^Grad- ually the status of the Filipino In relation to foreign countries is being established. The state department has finally decid ed how it shall take care of Filipinos out side of their archipelago. Ambassador White has established a precedent in the case of Edward Fancixo, a native of Ma nila, a record of which has just reached for a passport or protection papers. The ambassador's certificate says: "Satisfactory proof having been fur nished me that &uward Fancixo is a na tive of the Philippines and loyal to the United States, he is entitled to be ac corded adequate protection by the diplo matic and consular officers of the United States* As, however, he is not a citizen or the Tmitedz States, he is not entitled to a passport.*' PREDICTS A N 18-HOUR RUN v**** jy"$. ^,FROJ* NEW YORK TO CHICAGO 'AsF.sv ForoYjof the Pennsylvania, Says Schedule Will Be Established.v, PITTSBURG, Pa., July -0General Passenger Agent EL A. Ford, of the Penn sylvania lines, predicts the establishment of _etefoteen-hottg_lja^JbefeiEeefK Chicago '^f^T- i.i'*'rSSS^5^'*'*l*tt?---*s*^ fwd|5Ji^ We will sing together, dear, With the future as oiir theme Through the cold andsummer weather We will plan to walk together, All the golden year I and KewTbiTc: HIs"pTeaietlon is eviaem ly based on his knowledge of what the Pennsylvania, special can accomplish, when required to cover delays and keep within its schedule. During the time that train has been running it has been demonstrated that eighteen-hour trains between Chicago and New York are not only a possibility, but that the time can be cut to sixteen hours if necessary. On a recent run from Alliance to Pitts burg, the Pennsylvania special covered, the distance, 83 2-10 miles, in exactly 1 hour and 30 minutes, an average of 55 and 3-10 miles per hour. When the train reached Garfield, seven miles from Alliance, it struck a 72-mile an hour gait, and before it passed through New Waterford was covering 81 miles an hour. up on the run, and Pittsburg wes reached on time. At this rate of speed the run from Chicago to Ne York can be made in about sixteen hours. i MORALITY 1ST THE SCHOOLS. Forceful Reasons Wliy it Should Tangrht..., In one of the sessions of the State Teachers' association at Saratoga Supt. Skinner delivered an address on "Moral Instruction in Our Schools." In the open ing of this address he said: "At a recent educational gathering in Albany the statement was made by one who claimed to b2 an educator, that morality cannot be taught In our public schools. The on ly inference to be drawn from the state ment is that morality cannot be taught apart from religion." Using this as the groundwork of his effort the state "-uperlntendent proceeded to show that morality can be taught and ought to be taught in our public school-*. The proposition that the governing principles of our common school system are incompatible with the teaching of morality is so absurd on its face that it seems almost Impossible that any per son who would be accepted as an au thority In educational matters could be come responsible for advancing It. That sectarianism and religious doctrines arc barred from the schools is true. The reasons for such action on the part of the state are apparent to every intelli-. gent citizen, and are very clearly set forth in Supt. Skinner's- address. I is not necessary to consider them at this time, for they have nothing to do with the question of teaching morality. While it is true that a genuinely religious per son is necessarily amoral person.it is not true that amoral man i3 necessarily re ligious. There are many persons in every large American community who are strictly moral in their lives, but who are not believers in any form of religious faith. They are honest, temperate, truthful, clean-minded, correct In speech and deportment, honorable in their re lations with their fellow men, good citi zens and good husbands and fathers but through early training or some pro cess of thought, which most of their fellow citizens regard as deplorable, they have eliminated religious dogma, prin ciples and feeling together from their lives and disclaim all faith in the super natural and the divine. If that is true, and probably no one wiU have the hardihood to deny it, then it fol lows that the principles which govern their conduct may be taught without in vading the religious realm at all. It would Indeed be a strange state of affairs if the positive influence and direct instruction of our schools were not on the side of tem perance, veracity, honesty, jsusifcz. Vind- awss, gooa cruzensnip, fidelity of obliga tions and other qualities going to the mak ing up of a sound and conservative code of ethics. If any teachers or school offi cials have so curiously misinterpreted the prohibition of religious or sectarian in struction as to assume that on that ac count they were debarred from throwing the weight of their words and example on the side of good morals in their inter course with the children, it is high time for them to be undeceived for there is not the slightest reason or sense in that view of the matter, atfd as teachers they are a failure if they neglect that phase of their calling. show that the duty of instruction in mor als belongs to the schools. The law of Maine says: "Every public and private institution for instruction In this state shall use their best endeavors to impress upon the minds of the children and youth committed to their care and Instruction the principles of morality and justice, and a sacred regard for truth, love of country, humanity, and a universal benevolence, sobriety, Industry and frugality, chastity, moderation and temperance, and all other virtues which ornament human society." The laws of Oregon reauire and the state board enjoins teachers^'to the utmost of their ability toMnculcate in the minds of their pupils correct principles of morality and a particular regard for the laws of society, and for the government under which we live." Similar Quotations might be made from the laws of other states, all tending to show that the functions of the teachers embrace something more than instruction in the arts and sciences. -Our public school system aims to make of the youth of the land good citizens. That is the reason for its being. Without S moral foundation to character there is no such thing as good citizenship. Hence the pupils in our schools should be trained In morality as well as in reading, arith tnetic, geography or any other study. More than that, a person'whose life is Immoral has no business in the schools as a teach er, for example in such a case goes hand in hand with precept.Rochester Demo crat and Chronicle. A RAILROAD EPOCH. HE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT 1 BECAUSE: i- **b 'wIttoth organ of ALL m* ^t ,A'o-*Lr2rr*-rr- ilN^s ftIt is not controlled by any ring orouqps 6It asks no support but the people's. 9 .tiitiAiit. ti iti i 3 TTTTfWFIIItW W the American Construction Passes 200,000-Mile/Marlc. The beginning of the second half of 1902 sees the railroads of the United States cross the 200,000-mile line. Construction during the past six months was not especially active, though it was larger than last year's corresponding time, but the total which had been reached by the end of 1001 was so near the 200,000-mile mark that that line was certain to be passed long before 1902 neared its close. It is only by comparing this mileage with that of some of the rest of the great countries that the Amer lean people can fully realize the tremendous development which has taken place in this field in their own land. Figures of railrSad activities for the world at large.are not very trustworthy/ but taking those which are most recent and reliable, the United States is seen to he far ahead of any other country. Ger many has about 82,000 miles of main track Russia, 20,000 France, 27,000 Austria-Hun gary, 23,000 Great Britain and Ireland, 22,000. .While no other European country has as many as 10,000 miles. All of Europe nas about 175,- 000 miles of road, of considerably less than the United states, wnlle the entire world's mileage is approximately 800,000, of which the United States furnishes two-fifths. All. this railroad construction has coma to Continued dn 2nd Page/ Ufci 82.40 PER YEAR. LIVE WITHOUT LAWSj MAINE FAMILIES WHICH ALSO GET ALONG WITHOUT RELIGION OR MEDICINE PRIMITIVE COMMUNITY OF STRANGE PEOPLE About Equally Divided Between Montreal French and Nova S.cotia ScotchOrigi nally Took Up Four Full Townships of Thirty-six Square Miles EachStory of the Allegash. BANGOR. Me., July 5.Among the strange and primitive communities in the far northern woods of Maine, none is more interesting than the settlement of farm ers and lumbermen that has existed for sixty years at the confluence of Clemen ticook stream with the St. John river. The settlement is in Township XVI., Range 12, owned Jiy the Great Northern Paper company, but the matter of owner ship does not seem to worry the settlers at allthey go on with their farming and other pursuits just if they were lords oft thlev soil. ^'The familieas are about equalleth we aivided between Montreal French and Nova Scotia Scotch, and formerly their rehg-ious differences made a gTeat deal of trouble. Long ago, however, they ef fected a compromise, agreeing to get along without any religion, and ever since that time they have dwelt in peace and har mony, with neither priest nor minister. Nearly a century ago. as it is told on the St. John, a few families from Scot land took up meadow lands along the Al legash, having-a patent from the English king to hold as much territory as ITIey could inclose within the span of a moose hide cut into narrow strips and fasten ed end to end. They killed a huge bull moose, and all one winter the women worked at paring and stretching the strips of skin so as to make tne line reach as far as possible. When the men went out on the crust in March to survey the land to which they were entitled by the deed of gift the- made the shredded moose hide encompass 96,000 acres, equal to four full townships of thirty-six square miles each. Then they built a village of logs and clftared up land for farming. Went Well Until 1840. All went well until 1840, when Edward Kent, the Whig candidate, was chosen governor to succeed Reuben Fairchild, the Democratic incumbent of the office. A hot presidential fight was in progress, and the Democrats, wishing to redeem the state November, called a special session of the legislature and organized a new form of municipality, called plantations, each of which was given the right to vote in state and national elections. It was hoped that as the inhabitants' of the plan tations were strongly Democratic, their vote, added to the regular party vote in the cities and towns, would stem the Whig tide and redeem the state but when the November returns came in, and Maine was found to have cast her vote for Har rison, nearly every Democrat in the Al legash settlements became a Whig "out of spite," and those few who refused to do so were forced to emigrate. Three fami lies packed up and moved to Township XVI., Range 12, here they have ever since resided. Although they cannot vote under their township form of government, every man of voting age is a Democrat Showing that these exiles have remained -steadfasfc m~ their: poHttaaf faithsi^in the Allegash plantation at the last election every one of the fifty-three votes was cast for the Republican ticket, which shows that the great turnover in 1840 is still in effect. Allegash has a stage line, a postoffice and a root and herb doctor as evidences of civilization, but Township XVI., Range 12, is still in primitive innocence. The nearest doctor, lawyer or clergyman lives at Fort Kent, sixty-two miles away to the northeast. There is no church nor post office, nor store of any kind in the town ship. A two-acre plot on a sunny hillside serves as a common burying ground for the villagers, whose graves are surround ed by a strong stump fence. The residents are all farmers or lumbermen. Th farmers raise fine crops of hay and oats which they sell at high prices to the lum ber operators of the region. For six months after April and for three months in midwinter supplies are brought to the settlement from Fort Kent by canoes or on sleds over the ice. During the other three months the place is as inaccessible as the back side of the moon. The ruler and supreme dictator of Township I., is Alexander Castleton, the richest man in the village, who owns a farm of 1,500 acres, yielding annually 2,000 tons of hay, which is sold from the stacks to lumbermen at $18 a ton. "King" Castleton, as he is called, fixes the amount that each resident must pay in money or in labor for the support of schools and roads and to meet general expenses. He makes the assessments, and his sub jects never question his decisions. Jean Boyer, one of the leaders of the French contingent at Township XVI., does a prosperous business in cutting tim ber for the Fort Kent mills. Having no sons to assist him, he has trained his ithree daughters to the business and takes them every winter to the camps, where each has charge of a crew of loggers. The three Boyer girls are skilled in the use of snowshoes and the rifle, end can han dle ax or cantdog better than most men. The company that owns the township makes no objection to the presence there of these squatters, or to their clearing up farms and using what wood and timber they need. It is convenient to have them away up there, partly as a safeguard against forest fires getting beyond control and partly to raise crops of fodder corn for wood horses, thus saving the heavy expense of sending supplies so far into the wilderness. TURNED TO STONE AND THEN HE DIED Strange Malady of New Jersey Man Passes Away After Nine Years-of Pain. WOODBURY, N. J., July/ /.George W. Lewis, aged forty-seven, Is dead at Cross Keys. Mr. Lewis was known as "the man turning to stone," and has been a great sufferer for fifteen years. The case has baffled the ablest physicians in this state and Pennsylvania. Prior to nine years ago Lewis was fre quently 111, but from appearances there was no particular ailment. Then he found that, his fingers were getting stiff and it Was with difficulty that he could move them. This stiffness moved up his arms and soon from the elbows down the flesh hardened until tae arms were useless. The skin was drawn tight and his hands be came like marble. The prick of a needle was not felt, neither did blood flow from a cut. The flesh was nearly white with a marble cast. Four years ago his feet and lower limbs began to harden in the same way. The skin on his face was drawn and he fre quently said he felt he was gradually turning to stone. Years ago he was an inveterate smoker and he always thought this was the cause of his trouble. There was another remarkable ^eaturo. The victim got very little sleep. He did not seem, to need it. Weeks passed at a time when he did not close his eyes. During the day his attention was occu pied by events that came to his notice at the country store, wnere he managed to go with much effort, but at night he sat up and read. ate as little as he slept. Seldom was he hungry, and he went for days at a time without food. Several trips were made to hospitals, where he was told there was no hope. Mr. Lewis' mind was not affected. was a ready talker and was well read. Couldn't Stand Her Cooking, i ,Mrs. RetiredWelL Bridget, now whsfe the matter? Isn't my flwa hter Stother tat the kitchen to help yeu? BridgetThat's just* It, mum. If I*W got to eat her cooking, quit -,^v&jlf W ll IP hi 4