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»1 HANDY DIRECTORY -«P YMB— mASONIC TEMPLH 7 -%XT VJC^ T-v^S^CItesJ t* Tjwrtew. JL Masonic Meetings. ^T\ 8PECIAL COMMUNICATION Marshall Lodge, No. 108 A F. & A. M., Work In first degree Tuesday, May 4, 7:30 p. m. John W. Wells, secretary W. H. Steiner, W. M. 8IGNET CHAPTER. No. 88, R. A- M Regular convocation Monday, ^PJL L. S. Kilborn. H. P. John W. Wells. E*€C STATED ASSEMBLY, King Council No. 20, Solomon R. & S. M. be8 after the third Sunday. I* T, recorder Gcorff© Gregory. T. i. REGULAR CONCLAVE. «.«££ M. S. McFarland. Bee.. Georse Gregory. E'B.GULAF S&f'MsttS FIRST FLOOR MARSHALLTOWN CLUB j. SIDNEY JOHNSON, Secretary. SECOND FLOOR drTr. CTmolison Surgeon and Physician Booms 20T and 208. -Pbona 996. office THIRD FLOOR BSiTFKENCHV COBB Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Specialists —5RTR K. HANSEN Rooms 314-315 Office Hours: 11 to 12 2 to 4 and 1 to 9 p. m. 101: Home 'phone 872 Office 'phone w* Physicians and Surgeons *02 to 306. 'Phone 15 for the following Phy«ician. and surgeon.: .. SS ?elu5o°*h GESROEC M0 OHNSON UF. Kellogg R. J. Andrews DENTISTS Rooms 315 to 317. 'Phone 14 FOURTH FLOOR DBS. LIE RLE & SCHMITZ Specialists Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat GLASSES FITTED TTrmrs 9 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m. r^MUlting oculists Iowa Soldiers H?m^ Sists and aurists Iowa In dustrial School for Boys. DE. WM. F. HAMILTON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 406-8 Masonic Temple. Special Attention to General Surgery and X-Ray Work Rooms 414-15 Masonic Temple Office Hours, 1 to 4 p. m. DR. RALPH E. KEYSER DR. N. E. MIGHELL & DR. G. E. HERMANCE SURGEONS AND PHYSICIANS Office Hours—10 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 6 p. m., and 7 to 8 p. m. Suite 11, Tremont Block. MARSHALLTOWN, IOWA Dr. WiJbert Sh&llenberger 760 OiinrMd M.. Ckkmmo, ifeKiafal, Chronic, Nervous and Special Diseases Onr 8091 at mr patients come I from raeomiscndBtiara at those I bare mred. Conanltation FREE. 173th visit toStoddart Hotel, Marshall town, Saturday, May 1, 1915. MAR8HALLTOWN TYPOGRAPH ICAL UNION Ask tor the UNION LABEL on your printed matter and read newspapers mat are entitled to Its use- Italy's Deep Blus Skies. TIM sky ot Italy is noted for Its ilosnises Ths bias is deeper not be causothe dost there Is finer than in the northern countries, but because In the countries of ths North, due to the greater coolness of the air, the vapor more readily condenses upon the fust particles. The dust particles thus become larger sad consequently not so effectft* In turning back the blue rays alone, but others are also reflected, and a grayish effect Is produced. In a single location the blue of the sky taay appear bluer at one time than an ether. Th* sky is oftentimes said to ^e vsry bine when some white cumu |BS sleuds are outlined against it Ths ky then a deep blue by contrast trltfc the brilliant white. After a jlmwsr when the lower stratum of air jp washed of its coarse dust particles, dsopv lad purer Mmla the results— w», uljp-,,**-/' iJ{K" VX Wm$-IMttavi Published Daily By Tbe TIMES-REPUBLICAN PRINTING CO TBRJCBI J^talav edition bjr mail By the month by mall Delivered by carrier by the month Later edition for mornlns circula tion 4.» Tw1ce-a*Week edition Mr year... l.M Entered at the postofflce at Marshall town aa second class mall matter. PAYING FOR PAVINQ. The Charles City Press says: "The city property owner should no more be compelled to pay all the expense of street paving in front of his prop erty than a farmer should be compelled to pay for improving the roads passing by his farm." Which may be set down as an ab stract expression of simple Justice. However, absolute justice in the division of cost is hard to accomplish. The law, as the lawyers are prone to assert is a straight edge which fills up some Inequalities and cuts off others. It strives to get as close to equality, in theory, as the lay of the ground will let it. The point is that the progressive But under the scheme of absolute equality of cost the paving fails to come. When the majority of the property owners desire paving and are ready to stand the expense because they want it it is up to the minority to come across. It is a penalty which men pay for living on progressive streets in progressive communities. The new law helps some on outlying streets by approximating the simple Justice called for by the Press. But those who want paving and want it when they want it will have to go on paying most of the cost of the Im provement and those who do not want it when in a minority as to numbers and influence will have to conform to the desire of the majority. How would the Press arrange to divide equally the cost of paving and still get the street paved against the general distaste toward a raise in the tax millage. CANNED HISTORY. John Bunny is dead. Tet he is not so dead as other actors are. The pub lic has lost such men as Booth and Mansfield, but it has not lost Bunny. The public may still laugh at his clever work, until the films wear out beyond possibility of reproduction, and when will that be? There will be Bunny "revivals" as there were Sheridan re vivals. The "movie" has made the pantomime actor almost as permanent an institution as the written words of a play-wright.—Clinton Herald. But preservation of John Bunny's smile is an incident and at most not a mighty incident in the things the moving picture film shall immortalize for the uses and behoof and com panionship of the coming generations. John's smile, like John himself Is as grass and shall fade as the leaf. The film has greater service. If the picture machine and its ad junct the phonograph had been in operation the voice and action of Cicero in his denunciation of Cataline might be as familiar to us as that of William Jennings Bryan whose ora tory has rung in the ears of practically every man, woman and child who at tends political meetings or goes to chautauquas. The barons would sign the Magna Charta before our eyes. We should see and hear Webster pro claim this nation as forever indis soulable and Lincoln at Gettysburg. And more, much more that we have all wished that we might have seen and heard. When we realize all that such reproductions would mean to us we can understand what the moving pic ture film may mean to the future when it raises from the past the men and the methods and the lives that are living today when we have been dust for ten generations. The mummies of the Egyptian dynasties are mainly curious. They are merely relics, gruesome, unat tractive, morbid remembrances that men lived and died and strove to defeat decay. The moving picture is the men alive, the life of a period In full swing. It is a dead generation galvanized In to the semblance of life that later gen erations may know and see how It lived and moved In Its dally round. The moving picture film Is the silo of the generations. It Is canned his- WELCOMING NEWCOMERS. When Mr. and Mrs. Jones and the little Jones' moved Into Onetown along with other Jones' and Thompsons and John sons and Browns they were Invited to attend a big hurrah to bs given In their honor at the town hall of the opera house of a theater or a coliseum and orators told them how filled with a great Joy the town was to see them, how the people of the city were over Joyed to know that so much Intelli gence and wealth and social prominence had been added to "our city." Speaker after speaker slathered the gush white Mamma Jones smiled and bridled and Pa Jones swelled op and wished ths folks where they moved from might see and hear his welcome home and the little Junes' eyes stuck out of their And when the hurrah was over and everyone on the program had home about 1 o'clock In ths morning convinced that they were conquering heroes and that Onetown was the only town ever. Mrs. Jones got ready to reoetVe calls from prominent cttisens' wives the next day and sat down to wait the door bell, and sat until she got tired and never heard anything at the front door until the carrier threw the evening paper against It. And went'on waiting. Mr. Jones went down town chesty and full of vinegar. Nobody seemed to recognize him as a newcomer In whose advent "the entire city Joins with pride and satisfaction." In fact nobody saw him except a couple of sharks who wanted to sell him some lots six miles out at $1,000 a lot. When he came home he was tired. Qot his supper and went to bed grouchy. The little Jones boy came home with a bloody nose and the little Jones girl cried because the other girls had sniffed at her clothes. The contrast between the oratory and the actualities was too great. Another Jones family moved to Marsballtown. Nobody met them at the train and they had to pay the dray man themselves for moving the stuff from the car. But a few days after when Mrs. Jones had had time to get householder wants paving before his house and will pay if he must to gef things straightened out one or two It. Sometimes he doesn't want to tj,e pay for it. If he is a landlord figuring chatted. The next week she went to on rentals he is often in opposition to tjje improvements which cost him part of club and called back on two or three his interest returns. If he is in neighbors The little Jones came home straightened circumstances he wonders bloody but victorious and Sissy said how he is going to pay for it. And if he doesn't use the paving to drive over he fails to see why he should pay the entire cost of an improvement which others are to use. neighbor women ran in and ladies' aid and down to the women's she liked her teacher. Pa Jones thought he'd like the town. Had been over to the Marshalltown Club and around town in a few places and liked the way the men called each other by their first names. And they lived happily in that town ten years and cried when the firm moved him to the bigger town and the bigger job. And to this day they call Marshaltlown "back home." The point of this little fable which isn't at all a fable is that nobody is fooled with a counterfeit of friendli ness and that you must deliver the real goods. Oratory Is one thing and home cooking another. Friendliness isn't a business but an emotion and happiness is a state of mind. A cheery "hello" across the street of a morning, a chatty call on the woman of the house, a real interest in folks because they are folks like the rest of us brings home the bacon where oratory doesn't make a grease spot. Topics of the Times The Iowa City Republican along with most of the newspapers of the state believed the Rainsbargers should be paroled. Why not parole or pardon them There has been more expres sion of the propriety of such ai* act than over any other case of its kind in the history of the state. If everybody enjoyed a lawsuit as Roosevelt seems to do we'd have to elect three times as many judges as a pledge to happiness and couttnUutnt If England retains the booze while Russia cuts it out, Russia will hold a big advantage ine th future clash be ween the two. For Russia Is England's next opponent in war. ... Omaha and Jim Dahlman are synon omous. A town is no better than its mayor. Gardner Cowles' lack of confirma tion by the senate is not unique. The senate turned Rood down after Shaw had named him for the control board and Connor when Carroll appointed him to the same place. After war is abolished the peace so ciety can turn its attention to assault and battery. The Impression given by the chief witness for the defense is that he tried to reform Messrs. Barnes and Piatt and didn't get along well with the job. There isn't any middle way as the democrats will discover. When a man's dry he's dry and when he's wet he's wet. It was rather a nervy thing to de stroy the Standard Oil Ship but at that there's some satisfaction in knowing that there are spots on the earth and the waters under the earth that the Standard has to take an even chance in. Well, Who'll earn fame by making the first retraction under the Caswell law? IOWA OPINION AND NOTES. "Yes," replies the Vinton Eagle, "dear reader the Iowa senate made a Jackass of Itself In refusing to confirm the nomination of Gardner Cowles for member of the state board of educa tion." "Probably one should speak well of the dead, politically speaking," says tne Mount Vernon Record. "But it is the opinion of the Record that instead of being the greatest man the country has produced Mr. Root was the great est corporation lawyer, and that his brains have done more to annul the spirit of the trust and corporation laws than any other Influence. Furthermore It is the opinion of this paper that Senator Root could not be elected president on any ticket, and that to nominate him, or any other man of the same training, is equivalent to a defeat." "Those fellows outside this district who are suggesting that Lieutenant Governor Harding run for congress from this district Instead of running for governor, will please attend to their own business," demands the Sheldon MalL "We don't want Harding to rep resent this district and it would be easier to defeat "him for governor than it would be to defeat him for con gress. The Tipton Advertiser sees promise .that Senator Cummins will have solid spoken and fourlfashed the Jontf got delegations from many western states vulcanising shop, Mitchell county pco* TIMES-REPtJBLICAN, MARSHALLTOWN, IOWA: MAT 1,1915. and asks, "well, isn't it about time that the country had a president from the west of the MlsslssipplT" "It Is now claimed" that Lieutenant Governor Harding will become a can didate tor congress from the eleventh district. JuBt rfo be never becomes governor of Iowa it will be all right down this way," says the Bldora Herald. ,, "Take a tin can, go into the back yard and dig some bait—don't matter whether you get a bite or not, the ex ercise will be beneficial—try it," ad vises the Manson Democrat. "As long as the people elect freaks back as members of the state legis lature we will have freak legislature. Not all the bills passed at the Thirty sixth session were freaks, but some of them were and the freakiest of the bunch, was the anti tipping bill," says the Knoxville Journal. "The discussion of the state printer affair," asserts the Iowa City Republi can, "serves to call renewed attention that a lot of Iowa newspapers can al ways be depended upon to defend any graft found around the state house." MR. KERR'S KINDLY WORD. Times Republican, Marshalltown, Iowa: My Dear Sir—Your editorial in a recent issue of the Times-Republican on "Dreams Which Have Come True,'" Impressed me to the extent that I am writing you. The Times-Republican should be congratulated because of the facts contained in that editorial, for It often happens that pioneers In any cause have rough sledding, and when victory does come the credit goes to others, and many times to others who did not reach the firing line until vic tory was in sight. But the Times-Re publican has not faltered because of such a possibility, and it has labored on content to do its duty as it saw fit, and let reward, if any was due, fall where it would, and accept as best it could a condition well depicted by a little verse that It was my privilege to learn many years ago: "Then to side with truth Is noble, When we share her wretched crust. Ere her cause bring fame and profit And 'tis noble to be Just, Then it's this the brave man chooses And the coward stands asldte, Waiting, in his abject spirit, Till his Lord is crucified." While It is wise and Just for the Times-Republican to seek to have credit go where It rightfully belongs it Is not unmindful of the aid and com fort It has received at the hands of friends who have sustained it as the years have come and gone, nor Is It losing sight of the fact that in a battle well fought and in victory fairly won, there is "Glory enough for all." Sin cerely yours, William G. Kerr, Grundy Center, Iowa. Iowa Newspapers IMPORTANT NEWS. [Thompson Courier.] A fellow in (own has discovered a ery simple metho'l to insure a weed less garden. His idea is to plant the seed so close that there is no room left for the weeds. The idea seems scientific and agronomatical enough, and we regret that our wife got our garden planted before we heard about it. TWENTY-FIVE CENTS A CORD. [Manson Democrat.] Twelve years ago the editor of this paper planted some Carolina poplar saplings on his residence lot, and this week one of them Kkd to be cut down to allow room for an addition to the house. Yesterday Charley Smith cut up the tree with his circular saw and it made almost a cord of good fire wood. The original sapling cost 25 cents and it didn't cost one cent to grow it Cheap fuel. CUMMINS. HUGHES OR ROOT. CJefferson Bee.] When the matter of the next re publican presidential nominee comes up, Iowa republicans appear to think somewhat in the above order. That Senator Cummins will be more ser iously considered this year than ever before, goes without saying. He will have, in addition to his own state, a considerable amount of enthusiastic strength in the west, notably In the Dakotas and Colorado. The everlast ing fetich that you "can't elect a western man," which has been dinned Into our ears for a generation past is again being dragged into prominence as discouraging the Cummins boom. It is a hard thing to overcome, but in reality there Is nothing to it The republicans of this country can do any thing they set their minds to in 1916, and they will elect the party candi date, be he from west or east pro vided he passes muster as a good man and one in whose honesty of purpose the people have confidence. A GOOD WORD FOR COSSON. [Grundy Republican.] We understand there is a feeling of resentment in Eldora and seme parts of Hardin county because Attorney General Cosson forced tho resignation of a supervisor, or two, over there, and it was said that Mr. Cosson should have cleaned out Des Moines before tackling Eldora. As we recall things, it was the agitation given the'super visor matters and county engineer af fairs right in Hardin county which brought Mr. Cosson there snd not a desire upon Mr. Cosson's part to butt in. Be that as it may, we merely men tion In passing, that Mr. Cosson has cleaned out the Polk county board. Just as he did the Hardin county board, and also that over In Sioux City they have learned there is a "Cosson law" on the statute books of Iowa. Without hand ing out any political plums in the mat ter, whatever, yo"u have to give it to Attorney General Cosson when it comes to doing things in law enforce ment, and writing laws which get re sults. Some people, whosa friends struck the Cosson reek in the middle of a stream they had long thought was smooth and placid, don't -Mke Cosson, but he's the man with the goods in law enforcement likes and dislikes, friend ship and enmity, to the contrary not withstanding. BUSINESS'OPPORTUNITY [Osage News.] Every young fellow who loafs around Osage gives as an excuse for his idleness that "There's nothing for a fellow to do here." Probably If Osage offered a thousand opportunities where it now offers one the same excuse would be given by tbe bojftor man who doesn't know an opportunity when he sees it. Osage does have opportunit ies, many of them. Somebody is con tinually taking advantage of them, too. As an instance, for a long time there has been a good opening here for a Bukharest.—Again this country is on the brink of war. Indications are that she will join the allies at any day. It is certain that the moment Italy joins the war Roumaina v.ill follow. It is pie own nearly 1,000 automobiles, and that means that hundreds of tires must be vulcanized every year. One young man saw the opportunity, erected a little building, equipped it with the necessary tools, and he's now working day and night to keep up with his op portunity. What that man is doing, any other boy with a real ambition to make a living for himself can do. Don't wait for someone to come and point the opportunity out to you, Hunt it up yourself. If you haven't the initia tive to find your own opportunity, you wouldn't make good If it was discov ered for you. WHERE THE LEAKS ARE. [Des Moines Tribune.3 Little by little the debate over ex travagant taxation and extravagant public management Is getting around to home base. Here is the Marengo Sentinel say ing something out in meeting that ought to be said in every county: "The state levy has been cut Just a. shade pf a mill. But the county dads have spent more Iowa county money, needlessly, in the letting of bridge and culvert work than will be dftved by the reduction of this mill on the state levy. The Sentinel Is begin ning to feel that the high and ever in creasing taxes result from the spend ing of money at home and not the extravagant spending of money by the legislature. Letting bridge work at other than the lowest bidder, paying damages to a man who is injured In a scuffle with another man, paying re pair bills on useless machinery, and other Items in line with these are a few of the ways In 'which the money Is spent." Just at this time attention is fixed on Polk county, where for the second time a house cleanirg is in progress in the county board. But Polk county is not the only one where a moderate application of the Cosson law would bring resignations. It is claimed by those who ought to know that in 75 per cent of the coun ties one or more members of the county board are subject to removal, in many instances for taking serious liberties with the people's money. And this is not altogether the fault of the individual board member. It Is the inevitable consequence of trying to do a big business in a way that was planned for a little business. The county board as we have it was all well enough In the old days when there was little to do, and everybody felt It his duty to help do this little as a matter of public enterprise. But today when every county is a big business, when the county ex penditures run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, the old volun teer board is as out of date as a ten year old automobile. Even In a presidential year Iowa ought not to allow all the attention to be drawn away from the need of changes in our governmental ma chinery here at home. The next legis lature should be elected to do some thing to simplify the machinery of local administration. V: V* ANALYZING THE BURDEN. [Jefferson Bee.] The "April draw" is in relative pro portion to the amounts paid in, divid ed according to the millage In each of the various townships. For. Instance the total levy for all state purposes Is 4.9 mills. The county levy Is 14.1 mills. The total township levies very some what altbo not far from an average of 33 mills. With reference to the coun ty levy item it is hardly fair to call It 14.1 tor tbe reason that this item has in it the 1 mill county road, and the 2 mill county road tuildlng, which event ually, goes back to each township in culverts and road work. Of the county levy also the bridge levy of 4 mills likewise apportions back to local ben efit in proportion to the needs of the lo cality, the river and creek townships, of course, getting a larger proportion than townships where no streams of consequence appear. On the whole, however, the people of each township get the use of such bridges when pass ing that way. To various extents the townships benfeflt also In the levies for county school (1 mill), insane (.7), poor (1.2) and soldiers' relief (.2), the total of all these funds being 10.1 mills. This sum deducted from the county levy leaves only 4 mills which goes exclus ively for county purposes. Thus, to be more voncrete we would K"1i & -SfSS KOUMANIA'S forces ready for PLANNING AN INVASION OF AUSTRIA ^T JLsj- Ifjfs I I 1 "J V| "SI SL ROUMANIAN CAVALRY. ROUMfiM//W /uejtU.£RY agreed that she wants a sHce of Aus trian territory. Roumanla's soldiers are regarded as among the best in Eu rope. The last time Roumania was at war was in 1S78, when she helped Rus say that the general'county levy of 4 mills and the "State levy of 4.9 mills is what each township pays for which It does not see "direct benefits." Thus, in Greenbrier township, where the levy is 33 mills, of the $9,546.28 paid in by tbe farmers of that township during the first three months of the year, only about $2,600 went to the county and state, while the balance $6,946 la pro portionately, what is paid for the use and benefit of the township itself. In other words the township pays $2,600 of the sum for the privilege ot being an integral part of the best county in the best state in the union. What pro portion of this $2,600 eventually goes to the direct use of tbe cltisens of Greenbrier is hard to figure out For instance, the county 4 mills go for official salaries, district court ex penses, bounties on wild animals. Jail expense, assessor's salaries. Justice fees, court Jurors, and the like. As an Integral part of the county Greenbrier township contributes its share toward these necessary county expenses, which after all, are made possible by an as sociation of townships forming a coun ty. Each township, therefore, receives its relative value in return as its por tion of maintaining the county organ ization, and the same may be said, in a more indireot way, of the state levy. For Instance, it costs the state a cer tain amount to maintain the offices and books and clerks of the auto li cense fund. This fund is apportioned back to counties according to tbe number of townships in each county. This comes back as a benefit "to each township, as the fund is to be-spent upon county highways running thru each township. The levies for state schools and colleges has a relative benefit to each township, or, at least to suoh of the population as go away to these schools. A good many people say they receive no benefit from the state schools, but when we come to dissecting that ques tion, as applied to taxation, state schools are probably worth the very small amount relatively that they cost each country taxpayer, as are the town ship and district schools. We would save much tax money by abolishing all schools, the expense of which Is al ways more than half a man's tax, and yet who would favor abolishing all schools on the theory that we did not absolutely need- them! The stae fund goes to maintain the state and supreme cour-ts, state offices, and other com monwealth expense that to a more or less degree, benefits each township. So the map who thinks he Is '"mulcted" for taxes from which he de rives no benefits, will find that his ideas are true to only a very infinitesimal degree. The only Item we could sug gest as coming anywhere near this claim is that of "capltol extension," which costs each owner of 160 acres of land a total of $3. And It would txt, hard to find any citisen in the county who Is not "victimized" to this amount every -month in the year In some line of expense, or personal extravagance, that he, himself, could avoid by his own act and option. .. .'1Named Altar American* It seems that the wistaria, which was originally a Japanese plant, la not the only one named after an! American. "The gardenia," Md a as _• jtw BlUVf VI OUUItt UIW^M mww a a* York, 'is named after Doctor Garden, while the brilliant scarlet fldwer ap popular at Vaster gad Okrlittoas, called the polnsettia, takee lts name from Joel PoiaiMtL wh» tyought the flower from Mexico, when he hid been minister from this country. He brought baCk with hint the first plant of the Mad ever seen in this eoontry. Both these men who gate their namee to popular flowers, moreover, wan na tives of Booth CtfOHaa." For boughs (hat "Hang On." Lingering colds, bronehlal coughs, la grippe colds and similar ailments that "hang on" until May are likely to last all summer if not cored. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound will allay inflam mation, clear stopped passages, relieve distreoelng dischargee at the source, banish stuffy, who say breathing and heal and soothe nnr naaal .and bron chial paseagss. It is prompt In action sue and sure. Contains ho opiates. McBridtf & WUl On* company, "••"Si A sia against Turkey, it is.claimed tha| she won that war for Russia. In th* accompanying cut are shown two o| the most recent photos of Roumanta'i troops. TAMMANY LEADER CALLED AS WITNESS IN T. R. LIBEL SUIT, Syracuse, N. Y.—Considerable Inter* est attaches to the testimony ot .-.'Mi V.. I CharleO F. Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, in the suit for libel brought by William Barnes, Jr., against former President Theodore Roosevelt The" libel suit ig. based on the charge made by Mr. Roosevelt that Mr. Barnes and Mr, Murphy were in an "unholy alliance to corrupt the will of the people." Mur^ phy's testimony and cross examination are expected to be among the eensa-. tional features of this sensational trial, Tho statistics of inaaiity 'show that tho mlnda of men snd women an often made aberrant through tho steady drive of environment, in which tbe simple life and the spurring city life are equally at fault The flgoreo show tho per capita of Insanity differs little in city and country. Rural soli tude and tho abnormal life of tho city arq alike responsible for mental dlK eases. It la as bad for nan to be too much alone as It la for him to be rav rounded by a porfervid life. Tbe hl» tory of the race, the inquiries of 10* veetlgators and the Judgment of spo* delists in tho dlseese of mind and body ten us that tho well tempered life, void of exceeeee, is the pl*n* npon which men and women lxot dure in mental and bodU9 healt% jf temperance of action In an environ ment la which* the.individual leneithp# submerged by httman society nor do laohod from It Mo fcleo TelephOno Planta, The "telephone plant" Is not easy nor to uproot It is a gn' of moot peculiar lubits, slootrlo wirea to tho nourishing It la an :hir plant, aooiothlng llko oraMA* It hao no roots,, tat dort* ltsnoQiii&meat fram tko*ihihe evidently betng carried by tie wind birds and Insoota to aomo jral where they lodge and spnfet. Tliln grovrthls found most frequehUy on wire, although It has boon observed on bare Iron wire that hh* mated. It has nerer been seoift OA BOW ban Iron, ooppor or wire eablei aad oauaoo little trouble, aa the maso la seldom large enough to oroee twa wine.—Telephoning. Oh tho Matrimonial It Is said of Nathaniel Bowdtt4£T the distinguished mathematlalftn aid. navigator, tint no made It a rule of his life never to allow his wlfO to oame tntohle presence withaot his prssriag in some way hls plsasunln her betag thero. And that, as another said, was a vsry good rale of am