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=a IRE. RE, SR VS ears oe eel 4 lal HUSTINGS OF THE FUTURE. By FERDINAND G. LONG. ee eo ee freee eee eter eee Pee When nerial navigation comes in special trains won't be tn it with balloons as yote-chnee ere tm the farming districts, i i ; i vou a NO, 14.008, Published by the Press Publishing Company, 6 to @ PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Vost-OMee at New York Hecond-Class Mail Matter. /FUKUSHIMA AND OTHER, * MEN AND MATTERS, ne which returned d story is always in point, and here is Palmer, a World correspondent just from China, is télling: ws After one of the battles in whieh the A dor Frederick Gites ~| INTERCHANGEABLE. } Japanese had been long and henvily engaged, the British commander troops er suid to Gen, Fukushima: The enemy is flying and 1u had better rest your men |pursult at present is not necessary," In his precise English, with a pause after every word to jmako sure of the right pronunciation of the next one, Gen, Fukushinin replied: The-enemy-also-are - very «tired, If-we-stop-they=will+ think = that = we-are- 'We-are-very-tired The knowethat-we-nare-tired-and-may - Therefore-forward!"" enemy - nlko-are-very-scared senred Twenty inmates of the Mattoawan Asylum for the Crime inal Ingane tried to eseape succeeded, six of the seven being white WAUE-PYED, | men. Of the six white men all but one ee nL LEO tetrtetetetnte tne Only seven AN have blue eyes ‘This is not, a8 the brown-eyed miny hastily think, in sup~ port of a theory that eyes of blue or some shading of biue indteate a dangerous character, with tendencies to erime Insanity, It js rather in support of the theory that greater force of character ts Indicated by blue, blue-gray ond and blue-green eyes, Look at the men of your nequaintance who “amount to something,” or at the women who are of positive charag- ter, and note how many of them have eyes either blue or 4 pda PPP ooo eee ee ee cee eee es oreo Ped w THE DAY’S LOVE STORY. w DEATH CHEATED, By Maurioe Jokai~Hin Latest Story, yyrighted, 1690, Deir Story Publishing O®) /fume on hie hand. ALAPH APD WAM one day made) you ard speak to the remarkable diesovery that the! feottonate tones, But when you kiss hte | hand of bis favorite deughter the! hand and amell thie odor know that you Deaiitiful Zehtra, wan colt on One MY | ris jawed the hand of the angel of fend warm on the next [death and fea.” ZFehira was betrothed ol is Prince Abdatian. Tho following morning the CaMph aaw Antetotointo! LOVE THAT LASTS. OVE that laste a Iifestime through, Hearts that travel ehtly, that choore the aunny vi aprightly; they that hand In hand Thus wo onward singing All their world's a fatryland With magso chime bella ringtngt For all things love the souls that ‘Then he will summon Hin friendly and af: to the Moorteh Abderam made the observation ¢hat the tell-tale footprints on the taffeta | love, Zetira’e hand was hot on vio nights|, AMMeram rolled up the taffeta and ene And smooth the road they're that Aliden, the imgo, watched at nie | tered with tt the room of the Princess Wending; dedatde. |Zehira The dimpling sky smiles trom One day the Caliph made Althen a} MY beloved daughter,’ he sald, "to + above morrow you will be on the high » where Abdallah awaits you. Greet hym jovingly for me. No one will ever learn anything of your secret.” Zehira fell on her knees before her father and bemged for forgiveness, “But Alben t “Twill dee to tt th he head will be hurt.” Zehira knew what this oath meant. Present of & fine, gold-etitohed pair of Gippere, On the solea of the slippers Mitle golden nails spelled the words tn Arable: “Avoid the woman From the bedehamber of the Caliph a @orridor led to the apartment of the fe Malo Maven and (hence to that of Prine coms Zehira, Whenever the Caliph had fallen asleep Guring the recital of the Arabian tales Around their rapture bending; And ptara in heaven's midnight blue, © shine they ne'er eo Drightly A® on the fouls that love fe through, ‘The hearin that travel iehtly! not a batr on —— Alfton would steal his way ajong the |Not a hatr on Aliben's head wtll be Goreidor through the apartment of the hurt, but Atdemm htmaeit will out off LITRRARY PRESCRIPTIONS, Groping odalirks to the room of his| (he whole hend, OW clearness wad Macaulay beloved, He did not surmise that the| “leash me your hand tn token of [’ For jo read Burke and Bacon. Yong hall and the apartment of the|your vow For notion rend Homer and Scot: Glaves were covered with white taffeia| While Zehira feigned to Kies her! por conciseness read Hacon and Mpe and that on the threshold of the Caliph's chamber a lot of fine biack powder had been woattered, The eyes of lovers are bilnd to such things, They can only eee tho objecia of their affections, “Ah, my beloved,” said the beautiful Yakira, “do you know that we are em bracing each other in the shadow of death’ “Here 1 am tn paradine,’ replied Alt. father's hand in gratitude sie poured 4 drop of her precious perfume on the! ton palin, | Yor common monse read Alderam returned to hie apartment | franklin ‘There Altben awatted him For vivaelty read Stevenson and Kip- Ho threw himself on his knees before | tng Atderam and kiemed Na hand, A @iud-| Por imagination read Shakespeare and der pared through be body when he! Job, smeliod (he drop of perfume on A For elegance read Virgil, Milton and deram's hand. Arnold. Abderam patted Mor sublinity of conception rend Mi) Benjamin the rosy cheeks of For simplicity read Burns, Whiter den, “Zoare nothing for the future.’ the pago with « show of paternal afland Bunyan “Death threatens us, persisted Ze: | fection Mor amoothness read Addison ‘OF AMOOEHNON 4 Addison and Rira, “I have offen though: that if my Come” he paid, “take the Koran, | awthorne father were to learn the seoret of our |W Will go to the tomb of AMnadin and] Mor interest in common things read ove he would have you put to death, |anay.” Jane Austen "T have planned a way by whteh 1 Niven trembled from head to foot For humor read Chaucer, Cervantes Wi be able to inforin you when dan: [le know he meaning of the phranoland Murk Mwain Ger menaces you, Noho this jittlo fasky tO Pray at the tomb of Amadin 4 For cholee of tetividual worte read Which fe known to but fow, It haw a pe Aol fied its on ner | Kewts, Tennyeon and Emerson oullar fragrance, whieh you can for avon to hin, Por tie study of human nature read Gt after you have emeiied tt once A] Whenever ihe Caliph wumpected one ot | Bhat 6 nnd George ilo Grop of this on the hand or dress wi pae f exchane ving alin For | wil pation! observation o: Keop tt@ etrangth for days hy? t mtave girls Nie tie [nature 1 hos and Walton, “Whon my father has joarned our ne Amadin's grave with ty oe Orot he will call ime to him wo ret t fran} ry VATA GD * Mnearoeration. 1 will throw myself on|*ili 69 BLUE ITING GOWN, my Knees and while pleading for ne ‘ ‘ er the Caliph led | Twill manage to piace a drop of this er] 4 Artaud Hiab wn dant ae emellitg and ie i a Jamal! naphe any ee ee WW t wilit r ft dew \ 3 . S ; Aliben suddeniy ed and pus C THEMALG OR PANE, ¢ | Aitesimadeniy tues end piste | heavy fron door Sita ne ey Brief Biographies of the &| The beautiful Zehlra wae making her bridal “rat . | Men Whose vames Are W e the multitude gathered before First Chosen, + | ihe palace to offer t gratulations | # to the wride a eunu ack aa the ave] Bre RALPH WALDO EMERSON, yi ut wages OS ike fenaceaad oie one yey from excitement orted dV boston, Phe angels have carried away the Mar a ty Heaven tben Har been +| Say 6 f|boinint iy Ate eeioattal inom SO, Wan rita eprany We Winalow eraduate) ¢ \t n 1 ” toate came the a Harvard, 41) mi Long ive the new | i821. Taught 4 | dill | school for P| gum panne a he ne is AN ERS five years ¢ | {QUERIES AND ANSWERS, | | Or Bn te een As olerays Cooper Union, tan Im, @ an a young man take mechan. lett the ie H. Db an for the lecture platform i |iioa Wateh Between You And Me + | While We Are Absent from Firet volume of cosays pubs Another!’ Pee es Fire volime of b1 seinaly Aetine the word ‘*Mlepah ag Ae , A HROOKLYNITH. Died, Concord, Mas, Aortt | 7, 1882, i Spain, Rated among the foremost @| To what country it the cain Tam! ie iy of plain aan nfaond broad Pillosophers the censor } 4 4 a belo m one sido WITH atitohed box plaite and lace His reputation tn ws great in 4 |!" ante " ! \ mitate lip yoke, shoulder Breland ay in American, A] iopue VDT Miepantarnm Mex ke ani lower part of w profound thinker and a recog. AR | A neoktie te also show The onde alzed mauter of tho Baglish ¢ Yen are finished with velvet tassels, language 4 rmissibie for a mn ~eepe Tormorrow a short bie. || the Uniied sto to vote, his father NO ADVERTISEMENT, Braphical skeveh of Wobere %| 0! bene oaturain ity and taining payere? WIthoUs tits: ob-| FN houres of the London ne YORKER Ht all the Was once Coroner for the city of New York, Was het Falton will be printed with ¥eo ort funetions at Wind mit. sor or any of the palaces the labels wort . B. bet Q. that Mr. Richart Croker] are all removed, in order that no pers fou may be able to eay that thie brand C. MARSHALL, [of wine or the other le drunk (here, ii. scuba sind 424: aus alii a ll suggesting blue On the other hand, don't forget that among the Northern races there are many times more blue-eyed persons than persons of all other colors of eyes taken together; also that some of the very greatest men in history from Rameses tho Great to William Jennings Bryan have been brown« eyed, —s John Sherman has been dying ever since he was driven from public life, a broken-hearted yic- um of Mark Hanna's Senatorial ambi- tion. His lingering death recalls by con- trast the death of that other great Sec- retary of the Treasury of recent years, j TWO ORATHS FROM THE DRA. MATIC WAND. worn, beectemectceeeenecenes tf William Windom He wae at the height of his fame and of his career, Just after delivering the greatest speech of his life, while the most distinguished of finance in the nation were cheering and applauding, he sank back and was instantly deaa From the standpoint of dramatic effect, of the artistic cllmax and close to a distinguished career, Windom's death | is tdeal and Sherman's the reverse, But it must be said that the dramatic sense is not strongly enough developed in the average individual for him to yearn to sacrifice himself that history may turn an eloquent and effective paragraph, Na- poleon certainly did not agree with those who think he ought to have died at Waterloo, and so abandoned life When life abandoned him, men There is only one conspicuous example in history of o man who lingered after his activity was over, yet died to the satisfaction of the dramatic instinet, That example is Washington, How ineomplete his life would have been without that long and beter e eee enentn eee THE GHEAT IN- STANCE OF ATW LING. HHING, Pte tee eo tetete H tranquil evening Which completed and #o loftily established His fame by demonstrating that he had the true greatness of the unselfish lover of liberty-the greatness that is with- out a stain of self-seeking or personal ambitiont What do you think of Theodore Roosevelt? Isn't it becoming pretty apparent that he is another “awful example” of the honest man who gets the idea that hon-= os = She—T' wenr the! ght over: | ay, dear, but you must wear t ARE WIDE ON THE COMIC SIDE. a THE LOVERS’ QUARREL morrow, for I'm going to a funera) wid must dress dn Mack, oy A CINCH, Wright wih to submit this article on tho "Dally Lives of Our Million alres.”’ Kaltor—Don't want tee toy ar } don't you wetty about " 8 more snap to it? whie! Tenn't maine a than a antitional A COMPOSERH Arai ' “AM of ie fellows in the grad i claws," ald the newstlatmed meio “have deci ted to grow a bea ; ye I oe a ay “That showld be easy,” 1 the g. eareaiie man, ‘Mt you als Nora Grott-Now that we have declared our ony cement off, give me back ether, How many hairs is each to my lock « tiltoute + ON Do T resemble a bottle of hatr restorer? De ee eet oe ee a ae ree ue ooo SPORTING E "Ahead of | ee NOWITINGREATSPEECHES Senator Beveridge Snya the Im- mortal Things Are All Serious N an eloquent article on “Public | Spenking, in Thetaturday Bvening Post of Oot 6, United Btaten Senator Albert J. Beveridee says “Tt 1s a remarkable thing that there te neither wit nor humor in any of the ime mortal epeectes that have fallea from the lips of mun, To find a joke in Web: ster would be an offense. ‘The only things which [ogersol! wrote that will live are bis oration at hie brothers Srave and hie fomous ‘The Past Risen" Heforo Mo tke a Dream!’ But tn neither of there productions of thts wentus of jester te there a single trace of wit, There ts not a funny sally in all Burke's speeohes — Lincotn’s Getty> dura address, |)! and second tn Augurals, his spevet veainnting the Doug Jas campaign and hin Cooper Union ad dress in New York are, perhags, the only utterances of hie that wilt endu Yot thie greatest of mory-tellera since Aesop did not adorn or deface one of these great deliverances with story or any form of humor “The reson for thie te found In the whole tendency of human thought and foeling=in ‘the wotlk molancholy hit. tory of the race where tears and grief, the hart serfousnems of life and the tore rile and speedy certainty of o com: mon fate of suffering and of death, make sombre (hopmaster-chord of exe 4 | WHAT DO you INK Atte teteteebrteereeees # esty is not the best polley for him and tries the other course? A long-headed, unserupulous man may get on fairly well after a fashion=shady, but more or less successful in With him shrewd COMMON-sense acts as fF a low way substitute for conselence, But that will not do for a man like Hoosevelt, with a good brain, but no common sense or discretion It is usually fatal for such a one to step out of the straight and narrow path, RoosevelUs exaggerations and misstatements about his} Cuban his sharp practice and stultifieation| about the canal frauds; his cowardice and double-dealing campaign; in the Van Wyck-lce Trust case have not escaped public| attention, A good many more people than he imagines} know that until the last few months he made no seeret of | his utter contempt for Mr. McKinley, and that he summed up his poor opinion tn his famous epigram, “MecKinley has a backbone like # chocolate eelair,” and they despise him for! bis public adulation of a man at whom he privately sneers, | Finally, have not Wild-eyed frothing-mouthed clamorings for war and grab made him ridiculous and ob his and noxious to the average common-sense citizen? athena ne in in PUT ON FRILLS. | A COLD WINTER 1TEN business wan good they put MB winter weather atgns begin | om” frilly. Judge Parlin Q. Ball, to come th. A Western paper has! of the Bupertor Court of Cook learned that on the buffalo County, Hitnots, was so poor in youth Kraas in West Kaneae is unusually that he was obliged to board at the! thick this year, and the old settlers are on undertaker, He says he predicting « feartully cold winter, Pere! aye tell when his landlord's) haps the weather witohes can tel more Was thriving by the appears about the coming wintes weather later on the butter and @owers on in the fall, after of the politleal | frosta have’ passed. My rind Iotands, Meat Eaten in England, Between Madagascar and the coast of! The annual consumption. of moat in India, there about 16.0% Istands, onl; a tia ety tre cea abs my | Bend i,m phunde per heeds ¥: oor a Jaton ‘The Immortal tities are all setious—even gad," THIS CAT RETRIEVES, ‘This is Woray, a cat which goes hunt. Ing with the hunter and gun and res trieves the game aw the ordinary hunt ine dow usually does, Wusey haa been trained to do this to perfection, nev making the mirtake a dog sometime does of trying to And game when none falls, although the shot has boon fred He has ala acquired other habits of the Jog bevides IK great ability an al retriever, He follows members of the fumily when they go owt visting, and tf} the visit is too long yowls until the hint Is taken and phe visit cut short He roturnp affection and Kisses in a way of hie own, When caremsed he aives sundry roft pate on elther cheek with hia velvety pawe and gently bites and nibbieg the cheek and nose, Jmitare ing the Kisses he receives, He objects 10 & ntistache and resents being big i wy any one With one, A MATT “Deg pardon,’ sald the postal clerk who had sold her the elampa, "but you don't have to put a five-oont atamp on ® letter for Canada “TL know,’ mid she, “but the shade Just matches my envelope, you know,’ ee) A HOTHEAD, XAPRESSION he game," FOR PROTECTION, Perey thing, Gu Miaste—What te it? PeroyI've made an election det with 4 fella, and If T lowe I'm not to whave for forty-elaht hours! ee ad SWEETHEART RING, Tas ‘sweetheart ring’ is a band of heavy gold no whtety ts ine Mead of a Jewel, a cube of gold, On the surface of this the infitals of the and the recipient are lovingly niwitted, sometimes within a heart, I ts by no meana an engagement ring nor does i signify ang especial! bond be yond that of a summer flirtation A pretty idea is to use the rings ag enle, You know, @ varied Inne spoken by colors of sealing wax. Reg would be scarcely proper at the early stage, because it meane ardent to Truth ts typified by blue; green mean that the affection is young and tender Yellow, I suppose, would indicate jeay Foury, And #0 on, done a tewwibly daro-devil Wilfred—Why do you keep your face #0 dirty, Imogene? Imogene~'Caute the candidate pent kine me, das ~ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER | Answers Unhappy W iv aA ot a Pl readera can suggest @ home for this poor Httle girl A Cane that Dear Mri Ayer 1 have a husband, a very good one as far ae money is concerned, but he is very fond of admiration from the op- posite vex, He haw deceived me qui T have caught him telling tes eo offen | Dear Mre Ayer that 1 cagnot believe @ word he says. / My husband disappeared Sept, 6 and 1 Do you sink that a man that fecelves |have not heard anything from him atnee, his wife and goes out with other women 1 am afraid something hae happetied to has any love for her? him, He took his toolt and told me he WRETCHED WIFB. |was going to ko to Jerwey to work for O, T do not think you shold remain tiwo weeks and would be back. 140 not in the position you occupy, jbelleve he deserted me, He was not th think you should have s serlte ining of © man to do that, 1 have cit talk with your husband, onoe for all, & téreai) chiddren, He We slanuch you are positive he has been unfaithful Mra, P. J. CONROY. to you, I cannot see how you can live t , hi with him or expect to do mo in peace; |fimokiyn ‘Is Woodhaven Junciton,Le f although { do know that some women T: etter Is published in the hope | Can Any One Give Thin Wife Ino formationt have Feolaimed just auch husbands as hat It will meet the eye of the tho one you describe; but 1 cannot) husband or of some one who knew think that a woman should be martyr-/)im and who will communicate with thie jaed or that the man who will break her| Poor )ttle woman, Barely the elroum- heart In this way t# worthy the sacrifice | #tances are such as must command the of long years of patient and heart-/sympathy of every reader. breaking gudurance. | — Do not waver in any pase whetever Can They Rem course you make up your mind to take. | Dear Mre Ayer: Do not get angry, above all things.) 1 am a young man, twenty-one yean Give your husband another chance !f/of age, and was married secretly lass you can find it In your heart to be so/ July, My wife and I would like to know lenient to him. Don't be afratd of him] if it would cause any trouble to have or his displeasure, He te In the wrong! another (public) marriage, as we do not nd you have every advantage !n the| want our parents to know of the #eorit matter, marriay THOMAS J. Her Chita Must Leave tome, O, Ht will cause no (rouble. OF ye Deariiaie. Ave course, the first marriage is tho he parents into my con. voman, married, but have not]! should take ¢ eas aie Peat indy for the past | fidenee and acknowledge the. frst mare our support, [have a ebild th years of age whom ft love dearly, but the fam-| ORIGIN OF OXTAIL SOUP HB discovery Oxtulls cond notified them that they must send the be made into a de Je and nutri. ohiid away or else move, as they don tlotte soup belongs, it la raid, to toe you recommend some home where 1] when many of the nodiltty wore reduced could see her often not ao far away? | to sheer want Hides had always been AN ANXIOUS MOTHER. Jatiached, The tile were subsequeaty [ sera wuggest your goin to a} thrown away, Ung the name of a proper piace lo) VvorKe of #tarvation beaxed for of take your child. Lo not know of the} tem, and from it manufactured due 1 bem your adylee, 1am a hant-works legal one, If 1 were in your place three years as he has done nothing for] Mee Ht Is the more sensible pian, iy 1 ive with told me that the landlord ANlow Any ebiidren in the howe. Could] dark days of the Freneh Revolution, 1 am Itving In Brooklyn, went to the dann: with the tatis wttt clerayman or parish priemt and get-| A certain nobleman on the unplearant of puch nomes im Brooklyn, “Aret dish of outa! coup,