i 1 THEopeople GILDINthe %i $ If if', E A With the Long Bow. Professor Barker of New York has out a booklet on "How to Improve Your Face." He also tells how to strengthen the muscles of the jaw and "develop the neck." If your face troubles you, now is the time to have it im proved before it gets set. A hypnotic magazine states that a man, if he wishes to live to a good old age, should flood himself to the neck with distilled water. The best time to drink it is before break fast. Possibly hypnotism might save even an iron constitu tion from rusting out under so much moisture. After reading Miss Tarbell's cold analysis of his char acter, Mr. Rookefeller is likely to turn gratefully to the blessed life and writings of Jane Ann Stamper. The Eldorado (Kan.) Republican disapproves of the United States senate. Thomas Benton Murdock, the editor, refers to the members of that august body as "whisky drinking, poker-playing political old reprobates" also, "roped and branded old barnacles" furthermore, "bald headed, gravy-eyed old guzzlers" and again, "that inani mate aggregation of bought-and-paicl-for old codgers who blink their eyes in imbecile stupidity." A senate made up of Kansas editors would slap the oil trust on the wrist and have our vested interests doing a ghost dance in the lobbies before the second week of the session. Unless Ida Tarbell is mistaken, and Ida is particular about her facts, young Mr. Rockefeller ought to get his grandpa to go into his Sunday school class. Vesuvius has her back arched and is throwing sparks. Nobody but Americans want to climb the volcano today, and they, like drunken men, seem to be providentially cared for. Mr. Edison says that it is not working many hours a day that kills you, provided your work is as enjoyable as play. It is the kicking yourself thru a hurried day of mean, objectionable work that makes you nervous and restless. "Altho I work a good many hours a day," Mr. Edison says, "my life is a very quiet and restful one. I do not worry, I am fond of fun, and. I like good fello-ws I as clear that Mr. Edison while he is working is having fun. The pioneer 16-inch, breach loading, coast defense gun which cost $200,000 is lying in a ditch at Sandy Hook, and may not be used again. The weight of the gun is so great as to make it almost impossible for its builders to construct a carriage strong enough. Another objection is that too many men are required to handle it. More than half a ton of powder, costing $285, is needed to fire the gun's projec tile, which costs $600 and is about as tall as an ordinary man. In case of a foreign war, it is likely that the gun would be raised from the ditch and some attempt made to use it for the pebble it throws -would go thru, any warship like a hungry tramp thru a cherry pie. Mr. Durr of New Rochelle, N. Y., is a carpenter. He is 35 years old, single, and the picture of health. The other day he inserted the following advertisement in a Stew York paper: I agree to sell my two hearts, the buyer being entitled to sanie after my death. (Signed) A. Durr. Care of the Central Hotel, New Eochelle, N. Y. Up to a few years ago Durr did not know that he pos sessed two hearts. This was discovered when he called a physician to treat him for a slight attack of sickness. Since then he nas submitted to examinations by many of the most celebrated heart specialists in the country. Recently a prominent specialist, tout 9. heartless one, ac- tually offered Durr $10,000 if he would allow him to per form an operation and remove one of the hearts. This the carpenter declined to do, as he feared he might die and not be able to enjoy the money. If Durr .succeeds in getting his price for his body, the money will have to be paid over immediately, and he will give the purchaser a deed, good after death. It would seem that a man with two hearts, if he could lay off one for a rest and pump blood with the other, might be able to live so long a time that he would wear the waiting heart specialists all out. Durr's relations with the other sex, too, are likely to be complicated by misunderstandings. He might sing to one girl the old song: Thou hast* this heart of mine So firmly bound to thine None other\ can I love 6 Save thee alone. And while^he was speaking the exact truth regarding perhaps his principal working heart, yet he would have an other aortal organ pumping away that might pick out an auburn-haired girl to become attached to. Then where would Durr be? There are disadvantages in having a bunch of* hearts working for you. A. J. R. What Women Want to Know* FLUIDS.What is the volatile oil used in mak ing liquid gilding fluids, gold paint, etc., popularly sold on the market?Subscriber. Bronzing liquid is usually sold or mixed with the gold. There are two kinds of this liquid, but the one mixed with turpentine is most commonly used. QUESTION FOR TOMORROW. BIRDS' NESTS.Please tell me what would prevent moths\ from getting into birds' nests which are used for orna ments ?Inquirer. A THREAD 1,000 MILES LONG. '^Thursday Evening, "E%e nature'm walk*, shoot tolly aa It tlha. of a city have to act. The grafter is not going retire of his own 'accord any more than a violent colored man is going to carry a safety razor. A Chicago magazine advertises what it calls the "New Thought Corset," a "corset that breathes." We trust that this corset will not breathe on us after eating the succulent Bermuda vegetable. ISLAND cotton is the best kind," said a south- J- O erner. "It is finer and silkier than any other cotton in the world. A pound of it can be spun into 4,770 miles of thread. "For an experiment, once, in the English town of Man chester, a skilled spinner spun a pound of Sea Island cotton into a single thread 1,000 miles long. "Then, for another experiment, he took another pound of cotton, and spun it into as many hanks as he could get. He got 10,000 hanks in all, and the yarn in each of them measured 840 yards. Thus, out of a pound of cotton, 4,770 I miles of yarn was produced. This yarn, tho, was too fine to be pi any practical utility. Jt Those two experiments made a superb advertisement for the cotton of the south.''' A 11 4 HE WANTS TO BE IN IT. The Lake DwellerHi, there. Don't leave us out! count, even if we are at the lake\ 4iC A String of Good Stories. "I caaaot tell how the truth may be I say the tale as 'twas said to me." SELF-CONVTCTED. GROUP of brokers were discussing the new California law which makes eavesdropping over the telephone a crime punishable by imprisonment. A number of stories of telephone eavesdropping were narrated. Henry Clews said: There is a woman who used to have a party-wire phone a phone whose wire she shared with three other persons. Each of these four always heard the ring that called any one of the other three up, and each, by taking down her re- ceiver gently and putting it to her ear, could hear anything that might be said. "One of the womenMrs. Greenwas suspected of eavesdropping in this way. She was known to have repeated scandalous and yet true things about her three telephone partners, and she could only have learned these things by listening to what went on over the wire. Well, one day,, a ring summoned the youngest of the four to the phone. She said, 'Hello, who is it? and a familiar voice told her that it was a friend in the suburbs. 'Look here,' said this friend I admired immensely that white gown you wore at our luncheon. Do you mind telling me where you got it? 'No, indeed,' replied the lady of the par ty wire. I got it at So-and-so's.' 'Would you mind if I got some white serge like \tV '"Why, not at all.' 'How much does that serge cost a yard?' 'Oh,' said the party wire lady, 'you are coming down town tomorrow. I'll tell you then.', 'But why can't you tell me now?' 'Because,' was the reply, 'there's a Mrs. Green who shares this wire with me, and she listens to everything I say.' 'Oh, very well,' said the other. 'Goodby.' "'Good began the first lady, but/she was'inter rupted. 'Wait one minute,' said a new voice, a venomous voice. I -want vou~to understand that what you have just said is a lie-, and if you are not very careful you'll be ar- rested for slander.' THE RIGHT PLACE. ^""PHE late Judge Albion W. Tourgee," said a Chicagoan, 1 "wa very fond of children, and innumerable were the stories of children that he had at his tongue's end. I dmed with him in Bordeaux one night last fall, and with the coming of^the coffee the talk turned to the little ones. "Judge Tourgee told a hundred children's anecdotes, but the one I best remember concerned a tiny relative of his. "He said he found this relative, a little girl, in a sorrow ful mood one day, and he said to her: 'What is the matter with little Mary?' 'Papa gave me whacky-whacla,' Mary replied. 'Bad papa! And where did he whacky-whack Mary?' 'On the back of my turn,' replied the little girl." What the Market Affords: AM LOAF, 13 cents. Veal loaf, 25 cents. Chicken loaf, 25 cents. Truffled grouse ox wild duck (small eans), 25 cents. Salmon, a la Russe, 40 cents. Potted and deviled ham, 5 to 25 cents. Carrots, beets and turnips, two bunches for cents. Cucumbers, 5 to 10 cents. Telephone peas, 50 cents a peck. Tidbits for the picnic basket are now much sought, and all kinds of canned and potted meats and fish are having a large sale in consequence. The various kinds of meat loaves are an agreeable change from the better-known potted and deviled meats. A novelty of a table delicacy shop is an Italian importation, Saumon a la Russe, salmon put up in oil with several varieties of "vegetables about it as a garnish. It is an attractive looking and tasty morsel. Truf fled grouse and wild duck are savory bits for the epicure. Telephone peas are about the finest thing afforded by the vegetable market, and coming along with them are tiny little carrots that make a delicious and very pretty dish cooked with the peas. These go especially well with either lamb or boiled salmon. "The following salad is seasonable and will be very ac ceptable in the warm weather which July should bring: Pineapple Salad in Tomato Cups.Skin small, perfect, yose-red tomatoes, and with a pointed spoon remove the centers. Pare and shred with a silver fork a ripe pineapple, adding a teaspoon of lemon juice, two tablespoons of pow dered sugar, twelve radishes (peeled and cut in dice) and a cup of mayonnaise dressing. Fill into the prepared to- matoes, setting on ice to chill and ripen. Garnish each with a plume of crisp parsley and serve on a bed of heart lettuce leaves. i?..?*r*. ^dMTsjJSSfeiKSCiSr^i THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL J- We tei 4 4 AMES," said Mrs. Shumaker, "th^tele- phone men have come to see about put ting in the telephone." "Very well," said Shumaker with that exasperating indifference to domestic cri ses that has driven many a woman to an early* grave. And he returned to his newspaper. "-But where shall we have it put?" "Any old place, my dear." "But, James," said Mrs. Shumaker, with an intonation that her husband knew, I have asked you for days where to have that telephone put and it isn't decided yet." "Well, isn't that just a little your fault, my dear?" asked Shumaker. "Every time you have asked me I have said that it should be put in the rear of the hall. That spot really does, in spite of constant and unexplained objection, appeal to me as the very place where it might best hang to suit your convenienceeverybody's convenience." Mrs. Shumaker sniffed contemptuously. "What if bur glars were to come? How could we possibly get down there in the night? One of the chief reasons for having the thing put in is for burglar protec tion. Suppose a fire started in the cellar and our escape from upstairs was cut off, how could we get downstairs to summon the fire department ?"$ "Well," said Shu maker- wearily, you. piefer upstairs, for goodness sake have it placed upstairs and let the matter drop. The thing is for your con venience, and if you feel it is for your con venience to trot up a flight of stairs when- "For goodness', evdr the telephone bell tinkles, far be it from me to suggest the rear of the down stairs hall again." "Of course," said Mrs. Shumaker thoughtfully, I would have to run upstairs every time the bell rang if I have it put upstairs, and that might grow tiresome. But, then, it ought to be there if burglars ever "My dear," said Shumaker, "w have been keeping house about fifteen years now, haven't we?" "Yes said Mrs. Shumaker, with some doubt in her voicedoubt of his ultimate purpose in asking the question. "And in all that tune has anyone ever rattled our front doorknob even with a view of getting unless that person had a legitimate right "Nonsense!" said Mrs. Shumaker. "They may get in tonight and take everything we've managed to accumulate during those fifteen years you speak of. Well, if upstairs won't do, why don't you suggest somewhere else?" "That's easy. I suggest the rear of the downstairs hall." sake, have it placed upstairs and let the matter drop." "Jam'es, I shall scream if you continue to talk about that perfectly impossible place. Why will you be so provoking?" I have no other place to suggest I arot willing, even anxious, that you should suit yourself about it, anyway." "But you won't help me a bit! "Now, you just choose a spot yourself and hang that blamed thing on it for orna ment or use, just as you de cide. Consider the roof, the bathtub, under the kitchen sink "James, you are perfect ly useless. I had to work like a mad woman to get your consent to have that modern convenience here and I have all the trouble of get-j ting it placed, and when I "James' I shall scream if you continue to talk about that perfectly lmpos- come to you lo help all you sible place." ga i r& Shumaker whistled softly. "Becausee yoo asked mLe the best place as I view the situation and I tell you what I consider the best place. Here comes the telephone man. Now you let him settle the matter for you, and then in the future you blame him if things don't suit you." Shumaker was still whistling softly when his wife asked and the man answered the crucial question. But he stopped in time to hear his wife's reply. "Cestainly," she said, "that's what we have decided on. It will be hidden by the stairs, and it would be very incon venient to have it upstairs. In the rear of the hall then." Shumaker began to whistle again, softly and slowly, but meeting his wife's steely eye, he got up quietly and started downtown.Chicago News. A NEW LINE IN INSURANCE. 4 HAVE struck out a new line for myself," said an in 1 "surance agent. "Instead of soliciting insurance in the old and noted companies, I am now going about organizing mutual insurance societies among church congregations, school teachers, telegraph operators, grocers, and the like. "There is a church in Pennsylvania that has run its own fire insurance company for five years. A year's protection in this church company only costs 25 cents per $1,000, and at this incredibly low rate the company is steadily building up a surplus. It was founded by the pastor, a kind of social reformer. He says that the big insurance concerns are con ducted extravagantly, and charge extravagant rates. He &\yz that all churches ought to estblish mutual insurance societies for fire and life. -Paying no rent and no salaries, these societies could give the very best protection at rates unheard of in the past. I took this minister's hint, and I resigned my job as a solicitor with one of the richest companies in the world, ond I began to go about from church to church, and from society to society, giving little, simple lectures on the ad vantage of mutual societies, and the method of establish ing them. "What has been the result? The result has been most encouraging. In three churches, and among six trade societies, in the past month, I have been hired to form mutual societies, five for fire, three for life, and oe for fiie and life both, I am paid for forming these societies, and there is a contract that makes me the general auditor of each of them at a reasonable salary. Altogether, I hope to do very well. I hope to establish mutuals all over the east, and to be kept busy going from one to another of them, auditing the bookj^ 1, "Well,'goodby. I must be off now. I address a min isters' meeting at 2 on 'Churches That InsureA3 Proved th nal i*. 2 9 96 Fifth avenue, over Alden, founder and presiden- general" MINNESOTA HEADQUARTERS. Room 64, Loan and Trust building. 313 Nicol let avenue, Minneapolis. Telephone, N. W. Main 1225 All Sunshine news for publication in the Sun shine department of The Minneapolis Journal should be addressed to Miss Eva Blanchard, 138 E Fifteenth street Not In Vain. Did yoo ever hear of a man who had striven all his life faithfully and singly toward an object and in no measure at tained it They do not toil Content with their allotted task They i but grow they do not aslc, A richer 1p* a higher sphere. But In their loveliness appear, And grow and smile, and do their best. And unto God they leave the rest Farnlngham. Definite Work. Definite work is not always that which is cut and squared for us, but that which comes as a claim upon the conscience, whether ft is nursing in a hospital, or hemming a handkerchief.B. M. Sewell. The Design of God. "We do not always percetve that even the writing of a note of congratulations, the fabrication of something intended as an offering of affection, our necessary in SPECTACLES AND EYE GLASSES PHOTO SVPPLIES. 'Household goods a specialty. Ua equaled facilities and lowest rates. Picking by experienced men. Boyd Transfer & storage Co.. 46 so. 3r4 Si Xtolaobonm llala eSOboth xebaass*. BuflinOloii ~.'hw. INTERNATIONA SUNSHIN E SOCIETY MINNESOTA IKTSBKATIOK AL HEADaTJAKTEES. STATE OFFICERS. President, Mrs Noble Darrow, 816 Twenty-Bee Now York, Cynthia West- ond avenue S, Minneapolis Telephone T. 1402 First Vice PresidentMrs Grace W. Tubb*. If a man constantly aspires- 9 is he not elevated' Did a man ever try heroism, magnanimity, truth, ^sincerity, and find that there was no advantage in themthat it was a vain endeavor. H D. Thoreau. The Lilies. OIL all( Second Vice PresidentMrs. J. A Brant. Third Vice PresidentMrs N A Sprong. Fourth Vice PresidentMrs 3 Wilson. Fifth Vice PresidentMrs E W Kingsley. f Sixth Vice President-Mrs H. Heming. I SecretaryMiss Corlnne De Laittre. TreasurerMiss Eva Blanchard. Corresponding SecretaryMrs A. A Selser. OrganizerMiss Lillian/M Ellis. July 1st to July 4. CHICAGO and Return.. $12.00 ST. L0UES and Return..$l6.50 DUBUQUE andReturn ...$7.80 ROCK ISLAND and Ret..$9.65 DAVENPORT and Ret....$9.65 Also to many other Burlington Koute Points. Inquire for res ervations and particulars at New City Ticket Office: tercourse with characters which have no congeniality with our own, or hours ap- I parently trifled away in the domestic cir cle, may be made oy us the performance of a most sacred and blessed 'work, even carrying out, in our feeble measure, the design of God for the increase of happi ness. S W. Stephens. Borrowing Trouble. I saw a delicate flower that had grown up two feet high between the path and the wheel track. An Inch more to the right or left had sealed its fate, or an inch higher, and yet it lived, to aounsh as much as if it had a thousand acres of untrodden space around it, and never knew the danger it incurred It did not borrow trouble, nor invite an evil fate by apprehending it Henry Thoreau. Hope. Every day is a fresh beginning Every morn is the world made new You who are weary of sorrow and sinning, Here is a beautiful hope for you, A hops for me and a hope for you Susan Coohdge. God's Will. Ev'ery hour comes with some litf fagot of God's will festened upon its back Faber.i CornerThird and NicolletAv. co" & GgiL Office FurnitureE &nfa J-F-QAG (l^jj^^^j Cor. Henn. Ave. and 6th St A Can of Satisfaction Send for color card and let us refer you to our nearest agent. 1101-1111 So. 3rd St., Corner 1 lth Av. S. 4th JUL i RATES J. F. McELHOY, City Passenger Agent. M- jfiKr*i%*-i: rt