Cape May Herald, 15 June 1901 IIIF issue link — Page 4

CAPE MAY HERALD.

AM INDKPCNOBNT WEEKLY.

PablUncd Ev*ry Saturday Marniac at S06 Waihlnston Stmt, Cap* May, N. J.

1. L SCOLL • MBrttf ■< fnprlttif. • UBECRIPTIOMt On* Dollar For Yoar In Advanoa.

_ Entered at tb* poet office at Cape May,

i aeocaa-elasa matter, March

X. J., as a 11th. 1901.

Dr. Tahaace airaifna the spirit ol viM specolatioo and pvra some aoconat of tie financial ruin of other days; Prowba xxiil, 5, "iUchea certainly make them•elves trines; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven." Money is a\*old breasted bird with silver beak. It alifhta on the office desk or in the eountme room or on the parlor centra table. Men and women stand and admire it. They do not notice that ft has wings larger than a raven's, larger than a flamingo's, larger than an eagle’*. One ware of the band of misfortune, and it .spreads its beautiful plumage and is gone, "as an eagle toward heaven." my textbook aaya. though sometime* 1 think it goes in the other direc-

non.

» What a verification we have had of

MU, o,. lo not Mie. bat ,.1

their living from tbo Juices of flower*. 1 * ” —- - - -

It.is evident that in mosqnltodom. at least, the female acx is privileged.

A manuscript of Milton's "Paradis* Loaf rocrntly sold for $830. If poets posapssed Methuselah's longevity they might make good money.

CURSE OF SPECULATION. Br. Tala ace Drawa Lesaon* - From Gambliny Crate* Which Have Swept Over the World, latnrity aad VlUatay la Wall Strsct-Meaay la a OaM Brtaitad Bird RIU , Silver Beak.

longest atrteu in all the world. It does abl begm st the foot of Trinity Church, New h ork, and end at the East River, as many suppose. It reaches through all our American cities and acroasytbe aaaa. Encouraged by the revival of trade and

An electric railway which is being by tb« jset that Wall Street disaster* of .11, t... *w f,,. fiber year* were ao far back as to be

forgotten, speculators run op the stocks from point to point until innocent people

bnllt In India baa filed an order for 1,000.000 pounds of trolley wire with Connecticut manufacturing Ann.

a ConnecUcut manufacturing Ann. won id always continue to stcei This Is another triumph for American ptber in from all parts of the country. «r».r RriHsh m»n„f»ef nrors In their ; ^id'amSl *um* of'mOMy!

The cra*h comes, thank God. in time to 1 warn off a great many who were on * | their way thither, for the sadness of the ** , thing ia that a great many of the young , men of our cities who save a little mcocy i for the purpose of starting themselves | in business and who have $500 or $1000 , or $3000 or $10,000 go into Wall Street ■ and loae all. And if there waa a time for j the pulpit to speak out in regard to eerI tain kinds of nefarious enterprise* now

{ ia the time.

I Stocks rose and fail, and now they ! begin to rise again, ana they will fall —^ until t‘ -

uuii of yot —

be rained unlese the printing press and

the pulpit give emphatic utterance. My enmad is to countrymen, ao far as they may bear of this dmcocrae. if (bey have snrphia, to invest it in first mortgage*

imfinir—

T will f I men *

own Held of operations.

The American city milkman Is not the sole occupant of the milk-water trust. Our consul at Frankfort. Ger.. reports that of 122 samples of milk examined by the board of health, over half were diluted with from 10 to 60 percent ‘of water. A test of 3731 samples In Hamburg resulted In proving

475 objectionable.

Illustrating the cheapness of the

parcels postal- service In Germany, it

1. enough to eft. the Met that the are department allows packages to be sent sound and safe beyond dispute, and to

b, .uldirrs .. ,h. =0 p,„,

gigs (5 rents) up to three> kilograms 1 swallowed. What a compliment it ia to <$.« pound.) In weight, ae^rd.** of ™ distance. During last year 3.562,60$ | depressed trade! I thank God that Wall

w«„ IbrouEb . ^ “““T

I ^Sf d o( 0, JL"^"LS and cannon mounted waa built to keep off the savage*. Along by that wall a street was laid out. and aa the street followed the line of the wall it was appropriately caOad Wall Street. It is narrow, it is unarchitectural, and -yet its history ia — ! — Excepting Lombard street, Lon-

i- » on ,v,.

A consular report from Vienna gives results of the census recently taken in Austria-Hungary. It ahowa that the present population of the country Is about'46.890.000. 19.200.000 of which is furnished by Hungary. During the last decade the population of Austria Increased 9.3 percent. Hungary shows an increase of 10.7 percent for the last 10 years.' which is slightly less than for the JO'years preced-

ing.

wniqve. Aawpi

don, it i* the ought planet. There the Government of the United State, was born. There Washington held hi* levees. There Mm. Adams

end Mrs. Caldwell and " ~

We not only furnished million* of dollars' worth of animal horses for South Africa,, but have received orders for millions of dollars’ worth of Iron horses for Russia. The Russian minister of roads and transportation has allowed the government railroads the following sums for 1901; For locomotives, $10,300,000; for freight cars. $9,270,000; for passenger cars. $3,605,000; total. $23,175,000. American firms will get about $20,000^)00 of this.

Mm. the Revolution

displayed their charms. There Withereon sad Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield some times preached. There Dr. Mason chided Alexander Hamilton for writing the Conatitntion at the Uni-

ted State* without any God negroes were sold in the I - '

1. •

There

_ clave mart. harnessed to wheel-

tbe street* behind carta to which they were fastened. There fortune* hare come to coronation or hartal since the day when reckless speculators in powdered hair and silver shoe buckles dodged Dugan. the Governor-Genera! of His Majosty, clear down^to gestaflay at 3 o'clock.

f Wall Street ia to a c

Ngfiffla

An Interesting supreme coart decision in New York holds that s woman in setting off a street car must be given time to gather up her skirts, in addition to time to step-down from the car platform. It is; forth<

luctor's

ca B«n esaanr Moodfesi Ebj-iock-km. I want to pat the plow in at the curbstone of Trinity and drive it clear San 3 - -«

that it is the conductor'!

held

duty to see

.. draw the plow.

Fuat of all. Wall Street stand* aa- a type in, this country for tried integrity and the moat ootrageoa* villainy. Farmers who have on!/ a few hundred dob

. '''akjgSrekMK

krs’ worth of produce to put on the market have but little to teat their charac-

— r r~ | ter, but put a man into the seven times that her skirts are clear of any cflr boated furnace of Wall Street exciteor .u-rb-m. bofor,b,«MT» WSjll223. < SWf tSrfTft the car. If he starts before be aa- ! a black njpral ander. No half way work sure* himself that they are free he , bombpreif. I w<Sd « am^tS^S

and merchants of Wall Street, yet betbere hare been such villainies enact-

near the street or walk up and down it unless ther have buttoned up their last pocket and bad their lire* insured or reLgioudy crossed them selves. Yet if you start at either .end of the street and read the business sign* you will find the names at more men of integrity and Christian benevolence th*$k you can find in the same apace in any street Of any of our cities. Wfeen the Christian com-

is guilty of negligence. The court, on the other hand, does not consider that a woman ia negligent to travel upon

a car with a dress so long that It will : sear the street or walk up be more likely to catch upon sfich ap ; unl Y*‘. t W .have buttoned

pilauces aa necessarily extend above the platform, such as bell plungers,

etc.

The death in Balae of EmlUe Kempln recalled an era that already .eewes ancient. Its date was 1889. There waa then In New York City ho opportunity for a woman to atudy law; nor had any woman advocate invaded fhe city, though the legislature bad in 1886 legalised the admission to the bar of the gentler eex. Mme. K«npln graduated In 188C from the; University of Zurich, but meeting with opposition In her application for a law professorship she came to New York City, where she applied for admission as n

law student at Columbia.. 'Her appll- . ■ —.—

- cation was refused, but she was per* to swre^over'oaT commercial mitted to attend the clam* as a “vis- £*!*■* uolsi^hk Itor.*’ in the fall of i88i ebe founded ! pie u thoroughly settled. That »* no

the first women's Uw e^a In the dty. S^*2?

Later she returned tfl~ Europe. The ~‘ f ’ ‘ ‘ ’ ‘ ‘

number of women lawyers In the me-

were to be supported and missionary aoeietiea were to be eqmppd for their work sjrti ssa 2: been Wall fitreet, and the largest reapohacs in all the land have come from

Wall Street.

But, whils that street is a. type at triad integrity on one hand, it ia also a type of unbonded swindle on the other, There

*-? Bf

proportionally as In R

wswl—but enough hare, entered the

the realm of experiment Truly an

dot* not know when he is rrerpaid 95 by mistake whether be had better take it back or not: that is no {dace for a man ,—— with them; that M no place for a aaan to

to have wltaa Tort World.

>. excUlms the Now

iahiag the world with hi* fortunes and bis forgeries: remember that fatuous man whose steamboat and whom opera houses could not atone for his notorious ridta through Central Park in the face of decent New York and whose behavior 0* Wall Btrsst by its example baa bleated tens of thousands of young men of this Therenot so much admiration for the French Empress who stood in her balcony in Parts and addressed an excited mob and quelled it as 1 have admiration for that venerable banker on Wall Street who in IBM stood on the steps of his moneyed institution and qnietod the fear* of depositors and hade peace to the angry wavs

of commercial excitement.

Go3 did not allow the lions to hurt Daniel, and Ha will not allow the "bears" to hurt you. Remember, my friend, that all these scene* of business will toon havs jaaaed any, and br the law of God's eternal right all the affurt of you business life will be adjudicated. Honesty

pays best for both world*.

Again, I have to remark that Wall Street ia a type throughout the country of legitimate speculation on the one hand and of ruinous gambling on the other. Almost every merchant u to some extent a speculator. He depends not only upon the difference between the wholesale price at which he gets the goods and the retail at which be disposes of them, bat also upon the fluctuation of the

If the markets greatly sink, he e*. It ia a* honest to deal in

deal in iron or coal goods. He who corn!

igs as though they Iquitous simply show* hi* own ignorance. Stop all legitimate speculation in this country, and you atop all banks, you stop all factories, you stop all storehouses, you stop all the great financial prosperi-

ties of this c

SedaU "

w dly le stocks aa to deal ware or dry goc-*-stock dealing*

nubble.

waa the Booth Sea They proposed to transfer all the gold of Pern and Mexico and the islands of the sea to England. Fire'millions' worth

are. The books open, in a ia all taken and twice the an

ribed.

Excitement following exciten kinds of gambling projects came ler the wing of thia South Baa i m. There waa s large company formed _Ji great capital for providing funeral*

for all parts of the land. Another com- ... — _:.i l._ Mn i».l s-seoniw, cap!-

irth of : £300 r day* it sub-

- ..-dev and other* believe that — was translated. John survived all of the other apostle* a whole generation. At the time he wrote the Apocalypse. Paul and the other apostle* hsd been dead thirtv .years; hence -Tohn was truly the patriarch of the anoetolic age. 10. ''To the Spirit •' I'mler-tbe influence of the Spirt, and fi.^d and quickened by the Spirit. TThe Lord's day." The day made sacred to all Christians for all time by the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. It was the day of light and aalva-v-1 !_* i_ v^tmo* late 8atr-

nigbt is pray _ iday morning t^

wed heaven to bis viSabhxth the first day sec here the apostles

EVA#'. tfifSlSSsir-jR tion; another company, with a capital of £4,000,000 to insure people agsrust loss by servants; another company, with £2,500,000 capital, to transplant walnut trees from Virginia to England; then, to cap the climax, a company waa formed for "a great undertaking—nobody to knbw what it is." And. io, £000,000 in shares were offered at £100 a share; books were opened at 9 o'clock ia the morning and closed at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, and the first day it waa all subscribed. "A ^ret undertaking—nobody to know what An old magazine of those day* describe* the scene (Hunt's Magazine). It kaya: "From morning until evening Change alley waa full to overflowing with one dense, moving mass of living beings, composed of the most incongruous materials and in all things save the mad pursuit whereof they were employed utterly opposite in their principles and feelings and far asunder ia their stations in life and the professions they folio

profei Statesmen and clergyme high stations to enter

fierce disputes and

*—*- government

tme they *

theatre of speculation Churchmen and dissenters ' forgot theL —'—* ‘~i the deep and

e.pUyia* .for

if gained, were liable to disappear wt an hour of .their creation. Whig* and Tories buried their weapon* of political :£» ■Sxn.'ss stss/S terodfirse, each exulting «s their etoeka advanced in price and grumbling when fortune frowned upon them. Lawyer*, physicians, merchant* and traveling men forsook their employment, negtetadtheir to whirl along in the stream, to be at forgetting the station and emplovnvrot which nature had fitted them t

n to beggary and ■ort week and P«*which terminated

by whom they rose from poverty to wealth, and from that were thrown want, sad all in on hapa before the ere— the first day of their speculation. ! 1 high rank, regardless of every appear. ux at dignity and blinded by the preliling infatuation, drove to 'the shops of leir milliner* and 'haberdashers and -jere met y>eir stockbrokers, whom they regnkzty employed and through whom extensive talcs were daily negotiated. In the midst of the excitement all distinction of party and religion and circumstances and character were gwalkared OP But it was left for our own country to surpass it all about thirty-seven year* ago. We have the highest mountain* and the greatest cataracts and the longest rivers, end of course we had to hare the laigret swindle. One would have thought that the nation had seen enough in that direction during the moron* multicauii* " * when almost every man had ; crawling silkworms in hi* if which he expected to make But all thia excitement waa aa nothing compared with what took place in 1864, when a man near Titusville, Penn., digging a well, • ” ■ hundred wl- a -

assigned them, aaw it was their pi to become presidents or aecretai members of the board of direction. of these companies herer had a foot of 1, never expected to ha«e. Their equipment waa a map of a region oil might be and two vials of grease, crude and clarified. People rushed down from all part* of the country by ths ' rat train and put their bard earnings in A young man cam* down from the oil gion of Pennsylvania utterly demented.

having sold his farm at a fabuloua price j because it was supposed there might be oil there—coming to a hotel in PhiUdslphia at the time 1 was living there, throwing a 85000 check to par for hi* noonday meal and saying be did not care anything abort the change! Than be

.“sSLffisrji ■«

So-and-so ia president oTit, and Elder So-and-so is secretary of it, and then there are three or four highly respected professing Christiana U the board of dwton" They did not know that when a professed Christian gets into stock gambling he lies like sin. But alas for the country! It became a tragedy, and a thousand million dollar* were swamped. There are families to-day sitting in the shadow of destitution who hot for that great national ort3S,'E£ia. k s ! ^"aRtS

.rJrsjirffj?,-.

THE SABBATH SCHOOL latenutioaai Lctsoo Comm cola For

Satfect: Jasaa Appears le Jeka. ft*v. I, 9-M -■Oil*i* Taxi. flth. xlii. 5-Memory Verses. 17, IKemneatary oa the Day's Lessen 9. "I John.” John, the anther of thia book waa St. John, the apoet>, the eon of Zebpdee. the beloved disciple, and the author of the four other books of the New Testament that bear his name. "Your brother.” A member of the family of God. a Christian. "Companion." "Partner." (R. V.) "In tribulation." A word derived from the threshing of wheat. It took hard blows ol sorrow and persecution to separste the chaff from the wheat. John was at this time an exile for Jasua's sake, and had all the reasons other persecuted Christian* had for being discouraged. "In the kingdom." He was a member of Christ's kingdom, which was in time to Iriomnh over, every enemy., "Patience."

Meekly bearing all aufferines

of hi* Txird and Master, island is in the Aegean Re

i oTGodr V

r ding“

le. He waa banished to because he was faithful

pendlcular one, and bangs back dow

flat-web

.aide u has m aplder art ol

spider*

But t

...

ISS "^'^he^Trtrion reeled to hinTon that Lord'* day. "A book.” A psrchmental roll. "Seven churches." "Seven" denote* perfection.-

.tTh-Tut"-

here wa> the Unrest and most impc

12. "Themet’ it was that apoke,

' k.- c

U it be a borlzoni

•wnward. Some of these can hard]/ walk right ic splderiof art never

more than six legsr'wtalle the real ler has eight, and the spider of often haa three section* of the body, while the real spider never haa more than two. The head and-chest are in one department, bo to speak. There are their eyes, from four to eight in number, and disposed in different patterns according to their po-, lltical affiliations: their Jawa which work sfdewiae. Instead of np and down; their poison bag. and a few other arrangements; and in the abdomen or tilk department are the heart

liver,

slit and tubes that do duty for

PKSWE-a.

-- -r—t. the word ‘Voire" being !3ii2£SS2J2- SL/E2.T aSSSMES TS-t wT’C'A.S'H. riS. S. K

"Eli

S'

■mboUare all

^Burnished iir*re" (R. V.) Th^.^dc-

tadc of knowledge, and

notes Bit stability and strength. are like brass when in the furnsre and *ubjected to a very great beat. His fret were

"strong and steadfast, fupjx i tcrest, subduing Hit

tw. »».t b, « i. sss ‘‘.ryrsz'zzz,,.- -n.™

1. “A sharp two-edged

and heals, and strikes at sin on the right hand and on the left. This wonderful sword hat two edges, sharp as God a lightning—the edge that saves and the edge that destroys. Conipsre Heb. 4: 12; Eph. 6:

the tun the true

iir"*"

ALL SPIDERS SPIN. •at Hot tbs Way Mott Artists Draw

Thsm.

"AH aplder* spin, bnt not all of them spin anarea. those orbed and radiated web* that we see pictured so many time* and every time pictured But that only goes to show lower animal* are not the

Instil

only goc* t ilmala are

only one* that posses* Instinct,

think It will l

artist* hlgbe: Inatin

classed among the

Imals. At any rate, their

Instinct Is to draw a thing, not as It Is, but as it appears to a man that doesn't know very much about anything in particular. So he lays off hla picture of a spider's web with

marvel

e lays

of a spider's web v

a pair of dividers, and people

at the spider's mathematical m-u.c, whereas a spider doesn't bother her head with any-such foolishness. She

puts her llnea where she thinks they

will do the moat good regardless of

their distance apart.

"Here of late, though, I ‘think I hare noticed a little Improvement in

artists. They have begun

> notice

They

that the spider always stands head downward In her web. If it be a per-

il it Is horizontal

(a banana-shaped affair), t the silt and tubes that do

lung*, and the aplnneretb. These last

spread apart and brought together exactly like the thumb and fingers of the hand. Each wart is covered with hundreds of little hollow hairs, through which Is expressed a gummy id that turn* to silk when it dries.

Spider slaps her ei broad against, tb

fast (I don't know how) many hi i of fine filaments.. Then she*

l!qui< Mr*.

dreds pulls them

spinner and stli

spinnerets and shuts

ill of those fin

menu melt inti? one rope, in

ndth

e fi lathick-

ness, about one-flve-tbousandth of an inch.. Insects' silk Is a simple thread'; spiders’ Is compound.”—Har-

vey Sutherland, In Alnslee's.

■ lart or by

held. 'Tcsr not.” Tbsr.

0f 18 hr ^Tbe living One” (R. V.) Tb» became a man and died aa a man; I am the tame One you aaw expire on the cross "I am alive.” Having broken the band:, of death, I am alive "for evermore." "The keys." An emblem of power and

ta is ths ^hkh^hou'heat seen.” Jbe via font be has.just teen. "Which are/' Thi

Individuality la Japan.

The Japanese have bo long been called "imitator*" that the term sound* trite. But ft Is one of those trite expressions of a half truth. As a matter of fact. It Is Impossible for a race which haa such a strong 1 .dlvlduallty to be merely imitative. Its

wonderful metamorphosis of tt 80 yean cannot be accounted

such a simple statement. The Japanese imitate, yes; but what they imitate become* a part of them, and as it is ebsorbed. ft is adapted and changed. How else could the country through thousands of years have remained so absolutely different from every other country? Again and again It received Impulses from Korea and China; its very shntting itself off from the west was an individual act which showed strength Its final frank admission that In many , ways the west was ahead of ttrequlres quite as much. I think of a “Jlnriklsha” man in Toklo who talked learnedly with one of his passengers on the subject of history, literature, etc. The man was much impressed, and asked the coolie to leave his work and come to live in his boose, where he might study. The coolie thought a little while, and then replied that he could not because he would be obliged to give up his Individuality. As It was. nobody expected anything of him, and therefore be could live Just as be liked. It was better so. I know also of a talented artist who waa trained In the exquisite srt of block cutting for prints. When the' revolution of 1868 took sway bis employment, he found that he could no longer pursue hi* calling according to hla old Ideals. Rather than give these up, he decided to be a boatman, and tor years plied a craft. 1IK£ a common coolie, up and down the Sumlda river. Then a publisher who recognized his talent made a place of responsibility for him In his establishment, and the artiatboatman returned to his old work la

tbe old way, bis ideals un dimmed. Newport No Longer n Capital.

ESCAPING FROM SIBERIA

Freed aa. Recent developments In Russia bare served to direct public attention anew to the state of affairs In the vart Muscovite realm. Tbl* la the time of year when the wretched creatures condemned to a life of practical serfdom In Siberia make their mqyt strenuous endeavor* to escape. Practically In no part of Siberia is Imprisonment ao much to be dreaded as In tbe mines of Kara. Spring la considered the best

are passed, and there is then more chance of success. Many miles of desolate territory must be crowed, and In tbe d-ad of winter such attempts ore worse tht= fstile, for the despairing convict only escapes from serfdom to die of exposure or starvation on tbe bleak Siberian desert. Yet. foolhardy &s It may seem, msny do make the struggle for freedom, preferring probable death In

this form t

pen.

Once the wretch** have eluded tbe sharp eyes of tbe guard* and escaped from the prison, proper there Is always tome guide to direct them for the firtt hundred miles or ao. Night la the time for the attempt, and In the darkness some succeed. After the prison Is left behind them al) traveling must be done under cover, of darkness. When a village Is reached all la dark and still, save at one cot. where a light Is ever burning in the window. There the

a to the mlcerles of the prison

and perhaps shelter during the coming day. The system of convict pens Is mot condoned by the natives, and they are ready to be of any powlble assistance. Of course, this mutt be done with the greatest secrecy, as detection might mean the Fame fate for the cottager ana all hla family. Therefore

aution mi r a little

on which stands a lamp, a plate and a Jug. When the cottager and hla family alt down to their frugal meal a choice morsel la selected and set on the plate, while the Jug is filled for the ever expected unfortunate way-

farer.

When the hospitable night sheds her cloak of secrecy over the world the conviaf. leaving his place of concealment. steal* up to the lighted window and. pushing it open, takes the plate and jug-and refreshes himself for tbe next stage of hi.: long, dreary march to liberty. But where to go? Doubtless hi* former happy home has been destroyed, bis family scattered. He cannot return to sec, -for detsetien is doubly sure where he is known. Tbe only resort Is to plod to some neighboring village, where perchance be may learn some news of the dear ones. And all this misery for whst? Because, forsooth, he may have been ipected of disloyalty to his ruler

red th« polled.

wonder that the present uprising throughout the realm ta assuming alarming proportions. The voice of civilization, official edicts, royal ukases may have ameliorated these desperate conditions somewhat, but the system of Siberian banishment Is built on a poor foundation, and It can be only a matter of time when a vast upheaval will bring about a change *o conditions In Rust la.

1 wlM of the local j

Little .

s ... -Which aUH rious—tbe “aacret and «rred nif*c:n* ol what you hav* aeen. “Tbe angrt*-

At least four Umax

Fear

Umax the crown

has bean In pawn. Henry III. and Haory.V., Edward IH. and Richard a. *U resorted to this means of raising money. The marchants of Flander* one* had pcseesslOB of the crown, tha dty of London bald it as security for $10,009 and it was pledged at anethsr Uma for <100.000. Edward HI.

‘ i

tad Chari**

dty of ipltal of

By the recent adoption of an amendment to the State Constitution. Rhode Island has ceased to have two capitals, and the last state Jn the Union to maintain them has given op that peculiar custom. Hereafter the Providence will be tha only oapll the state, and. Incidei Tie at* port edifice. This venerable pile has had a history of which any building within the borders of the "state of Rhode It land and Providence Plantations" might well be proud. If it had a tongue to tell tt might relate many Inddenta of the early day* in New Newport waa one of U America to the rial tor from abroad as “near Newport"; but. unfortunately, the old building aland* In tUenc* upon Its

D* To» Know Knpnmndo? The latest aspirant for honors as a universal language, the successor of Yolapuk, which was agitated some yean ago, is known as Esperando. This is an artificial language, due to Dr. Zamenbof, a Russian linguist. There Is no doubt that, despite the extensive translation of valuable foreign articles appearing in the technical prttt. In these days when every manufacturing Industry is carried on along scientific and chemical lines, a wider Interchange of ideas and discoveries is of the utmost Importance. Such is the mission of’a'universal language, one In which any scholar would be able to describe and explain his discoveries so as to have a universal audience. Esperando grammar Is said to consist of 16 simple rules, without any'* exceptions whatever, and there are but 17 modifications of the termination of worda It is claimed that with 10 minutes' instruction in the grammar a nc-vlce can translate Esperando with the aid of a dictionary only, while a month s study suffices to enable him to, write or speak It. the latter operation ' being simplified by p'honetlc spilling. It Is said that 50,900 people In continental Europe have taken up Us study.

iewport was one of the big cities of New York, was described

Learning tn T«k. Pm p W nt Th*lr BeetOn a of the greatest lessons In life Is to learn to take people at their best.

not ti not ti

not the.ugly; the bright, not the dark; the straight, not the crooked Bid?. A habit of looking for the best In everybody, and of toying kindly Instead of unkindly things about them.

eugthens the character, elevate*iho »1*. and tends to produce happiness. It also helps to create friendz. We

like to be with thaw* who see the divine ride of ui, who see our possiblU-

i not dwell upon the dark life, but upon the bright

ties, who side of c

who do o

upon t

side. This Is the office of a true friend.

to help us discover our noblpst selves

i * *** D * - I. ;

t%m Out »b* Left tuaiBd.

"1 should think that you would feel badly about leaving thia place," said

tid to the departing cook, it; I'm glad to go. I ain't

sorry to toare aay of you—excepting tbe Jog. Boor old Tiger! He always

waaoed the ptetao for

8late Journal.

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