be new lorpedoboat Ideflttom uming'has made .a recon) for oilâ€".3 fling‘warshirs by running at the, 9 ul' 2.1.91 knots an hour. This (all S zu'cuulplished during I standard- ' :ion trial-trip of! the Maine CMJ‘ 1 seems to furnish stroll '9'“ hm to me eaectiveneu of oil 39/ -V .-,._ ‘ -« q.†[1: their vacations unt‘l’l now are to congratulated. October ls one o! ï¬nest months of the year (or va- Ions, ?3 any one who has been for- ue enough to lave two weeis (re. Finis time will tell you. The coal!- lies bemre you. There is no bet- exerclse than walking. Nature, the full beauty of her late summer age. is at. her best, and the crisp of the ’approachlng 1.11 ls notice :5 mornings. Soon it will be on ut ten miles 01 the Pam; l are now completed to the potnt.‘ e there my be partial navigation; 9 work on the remainder is going r\ nrw brew-master just hired by 1 , Unï¬s'brewery will draw 825.000 3 M. A correspondence VlChOO‘ With to bmm Llepariment devoted ; Ought to do well mm the col? I year. Pr all the proton there I!“ Pt (519 German government's v. has on the commerce In mv ‘w appears that tho Amen-leg; r who wants to buy that fun P will have u easier time m. P says Milwaukee 3"!!!“ W1.» y. Consul Geno!†Chflee 1)qu { \‘ienna'repom to the “Mk of commerce and labor that u k, flan syndicate recently has been! I ‘ ï¬led for the development of my»: - ileposits near Knlnu in Gulch. Gaiicia mines have been world In a. innited extent and are known a rich in fertilizing and at A_ ‘ .Vir. Denby says: "Anetnlia In; ) annually about 5,000 tons d mic salts. valued it about 31,290; from permany. where the but; is _a monopoly. it is stated that industry in Germnny yields hand- ,» profits, and that the minesnre- - ; pushed to the limit of prune: jess, which gins nubstantial ren- to believe that the local inï¬utm King in a fellow ï¬eld will We u l shcceu. The enterprise I.“ , e by of note in the United Stetee in ‘11 other countriee buying min ‘ ‘ier‘tilizer and other salts in.En-; ‘2‘ f I a rush. The completed portion tearly one-01th of the who] , al- Igh of course what remains to be is ta\ the most dimcuit including Culebra cut and the construction he Gatun ~dam. Yet “coming events 1 their shadows before,†and it is : exile-at that the ï¬nish of the in- Keanic waterway is a matter 01 spamively short time., There hu :1 not very much talk of late, but He Sam and his (althful engineers n on the isthmus have gone right as sawing wood," and their works follow them. Chicago him“: It," [use or'vlmbrl ‘3 ,,,.n__ The ï¬nest ‘hose who Vbave been. able to hold†all day. Why not keep ’n-uir vacation habits 3H ‘ 'he wooipecker has been nub-fl- :d for the bald-headed eagle‘as the. ‘nholngioal emblem on the ofllcia! l uf‘the note of Washington. whingmo. havin: become a fruit- »wing staie, 13 full.“ enthupium the bird that work: to keep I†rstr and orchards elem" of Insects. : what u! dignny? 1: utility is ~rything, what is to prevent some n: from choosing as its emblem a X of spraying nutd. compounded Of xpsuds and. hermene?‘ I |. This is due. haven]; to "“5; Mon of the policy at German. , In it seems, expects noon to" Germany in the production :1 sing salts. and theUhitcd Stud will have two phces from which y and thus ohm]: I mgum-o of ' [tom the Germ potash mo.“ .IU Mien 3 future 893“.“ .n to complain ‘0 high. lw sounc: or Pong", :matters 1!. II '0 1°" ‘ The wander! 0‘ W “de,th to 111011 {all l_s nonco- it will be on keep up ’0‘“ | all winter? the bill,†l“ or 1 are ,‘ p, SILIESTROM lnlnks' , Taoveling Bags and Suit Cases. Harness' , ‘D. McNEIL' Carries a full line of '.CONTRACTOR ta tarnished at reasonable prices 80x 102. HIGHLAND . PARK * FOR SALE AT. NORTHWESTERN DEPARTMENT STORE. “handle all kinds of Express and “‘3'!†_m connectlon with MOV‘ ALFREDA. MOSES Proprietor 1-3 Central Avenue. Tel. 241 HIGHLAND PARK D. A. HOLMES. Cubist Io Comlon. Price 53 up. . For slender ï¬gures W. Bf Nufurm modelsVare unsurpassed for variety and beauty of sqle. Price $61 up. The W. B Reduce cor'sel will pnsitivefx givethe wuman with a maxronly ï¬gure morefs =lendur ï¬nes withoutany sacraï¬ce Ice, Géal, Coke Wogo’ Â¥ Kind/mg J. M. BIL HIRZ 11d eight Transfer E NORRLEN is now réady W. 5. 0058578 .74 ï¬tï¬cc uni Yudl 5 [1851‘ S'l‘._AND ELM PLACE 7 P1100665 makeup PARK. ILLINOIS e Savings and Checking Accounts ’ Solicited ..... HIGHLAND PARK. ILL Supplies and Repairs F. W. CUSHING. “raid“ STATE BANK IN :01), miss, that rope ain't tor we clothes," said the woman. "It is for the baby to {all on in case he tumblel out of the window." ’ “ ' nuns mm. y--. ...- "Why do you stretch your clothel line so dose to the wall?" said a new customer who bud poked her: head through the washerwoman's back win- dow to see 'what kind of 1 place she had to dry the clothes in. "The things will flop against the side of the house and get dirty." “Oh, miss, that rope ain't for the ‘ Au " mm than woman. "It is for . 'Primltl‘ve' Life Saving. Expedieuts for saving lite and limb among the poor are many and original. 7 - â€"-- -I-Ah_ v.uv_., where in sympathyâ€"is not this-to knï¬w both wisdom and virtue and to dwell with happiness?-â€"Iv‘l'om Robert Louis Stevenson's “Walking Tours.†Contemplation as a Part of Life. We are in such haste to be doing, to he writing-to be gathering gear, to make ouryoice audible a moment in the derisive silence o! eternity, that we. forget the one thing, of which these are but the pawâ€"namely, to live. We‘fali in love. we drink hard, we run to and fro UM the earth like frightened sheep. » And new you’ are toask yourself if, when all is done, you would not have been better to sit by the ï¬re at homehand be happy, thinking. To' sit still and con- templateâ€"to remember the faces of women without desire, to be pleased with the great needs of men 'without eavy, to be. everything and every- Approaching a Walled City. After the drab outskirts of Pisa, the Maremma and the dyked road. I galu- ed Cascina, a walled. arcaded town at the limit of the Vico Pisano. gray within a red husk of walls, inexhausti- bly picturesque; then came Pente- dera, walled againâ€"and with each a thrill. That is a.thlng you may count uponâ€"that flutter of expectancy and its full reward whenever you approach a walled town by road. By road. ob- serve, but not otherwise. Seen thus, the wall must be negotiated; you must page through the gates with other wayfarers. A walled city is like a veiled bride. What is one about to embrace? There are. no gradatlons, no straggling llne of suburbs to water down the type before you reach the heart. The truth is flashed upon you, plump and plain} You leave the ï¬elds, you clear the gates-here is Cascinn, here Pontedem for good or illâ€"From Hewlett’s “The Road in Tuscany." The tigers and puma. scornfuliy re- fused to notice the herb when it was presented to them by the keeper, but the lion, the lioness and the big leop- ard were boisterous in theirmunifes tations of pleasure. The lion‘ planted a foot upon it. smelled it, licked it, sprawled upon it and tossed it about in ways unbecoming his kingly dig-. nity. The leopard picked it up in her huge paw, took long and ecstatic sniffs and rolled over and over upon it in the exuberance other delight. In her eflorts to apply it to the upper part of her head she performed acro- batic feats of an astonishing kind From his experiment the investigator was satisï¬ed that love of catnip is not conï¬ned to the domestic branch of the cat family. A curio’us investigator'and a few sprigs of catnip led to an amusing scene at the zoo in Cincinnati. , 1 7.; -V- The family name of Blathwm be- came extinct through the marriage of the sole son of the line to a'we‘alt'hy Miss Winter. who restored the fallen fortunes of the Blathwayts on condi- tion that her husband adopted the name of Winter. One of the Winter: accompanied Sir - Francie Drake around the world as his viceâ€"admiral. and another of the family was a vice- admirai imder Drake when he des- troyed the Armada. WILD ANIMALS AND CATNIP Licn} and Leopérds in the Zoo Were as Delighted With It as Is the Domestic Cat. When-William Penn was asked by Charles II. to name the new colony over the see. he proponed the name of the queen. William Elathwayt. the commissioner of plantations. bluntl! negatived the proposalfin the pm enee or the court, and suggested the Quaker’e own name as the proper one for the vast territory that owed its 'coionization and development to him. The king was not oflended, but sided with 'Blathwayt, and Penn himself_ was greatly†flattered by the compli- ment. Several letters on the subject were written by him to Blathwayt. These letters were carefully pre- served by Biathwayt’s descendants, and being recently put up at auction with the original draft by Charles 'II. of Pennsylvania to Penn, brought nearly $1§.000. One Way, Anyway, My little son, who was just over two , A ' Au mm a" while at dinner William NAMING OF PENNSYLVANIA "Nam Blathvnyt, Commluioner o! .Plamtlons. Suggest-d It 3- CaNed After the Quaker; the NW“? Shem Newman" Montana eénlu under arrest 10: turns. And â€at ‘ um will not no. for a “Wise ‘0 Prpbabl’ it S01 I high _C's.' Asthecenmmmhm’ an more minor. inter!!!â€- Farmers will not become greatly ln~ (created in aeroplanes. monophnee and blplamm until they have won out their “Mobiles. Wé imagine that Esperanto would be a good hnguate to use when ult- tng back to your wife. comers who are ushered into that new fall all over him taking their plum It takes a man with am to make him move along. Thin former conducton has the grit, and he has he: gained from experience. That II wh'y m I made him usher." , Con" Knew' Hls Duty as Usher. A . he congregation of I certain church is not "exclusive," but some oi its members were surprised at the sp pointment of a new usher. They said that he might be a very good young man. but he had not belonged very long to the church, and, besides, it seemed unlikely that a street car can ductor would suit the etiquette of a house of worship. But the trustees said that he had been chosen for that very reason, adding: “We need a man of that kind to deal with the and seat hog. He is a greater nuisance in the church than in the cars. Early in the service he plants himself at the aisle end of a tree new and latezf “His case is typical of hundreds at others," said an srmy worker. “Our! collection wagons are veritable curt‘ osity shops on ’wheels. Household goods and clothing comprise the bull of'the load; 'but it is topped 0! by curious odds and ends. Penurious or poverty-stricken souls keep en eye on the most conspicuous contributions anti when they see snythinx they went th simply. follow the wagon down hegeadqusrters and uh for it." "Why did you so to them for such u thing as that?" someone asked. - “Because I knew they had them.“ he‘sald. “I saw one of their wagons go€down the street with two strings of horses' ï¬onneta stretched from the top 0'! the 'cover to‘the tailgate, no I hustled down and asked for one Do tore they were all gone.†A teamster who needed Lbonnet for his scrawny horse applied to the Salvation army. ASK THE SALVATION ARMY “Wedding parties," “id be. “they want a-blz cake in the center-of the tnble for show, but u coke of that size good enough for 3 wedding would cost more than they can aflord to pay. so they order one cake put up in individual boxes for the guests and use the bride's cake just as In orni- ment. They don't buy it. they rent It. Sometimes a cake is rented a dozen different times. After each weddin‘ it is treshened up with a. new coat of icins and looks as good do new (or the next occasion. A good rents: fetches about 83 h wedding. That I: What Many Do When The) Want Anything, Even a Bonnet for the Horse. cake?" some ono‘uked‘ Afton Each Ooculoo. There was something m m the cake, the baker sold; It looked a: right and It smelled .11 right, but NI artlsuc 'aenso.told him It would not taste all right. “Then fix it up in]: In extn cost of icing‘ sud we will "keep it for s muggy," said the proprietor. WEDDING CAKES FOR RENT Show Confoctlém Mny I. HIM hf About .3 Each and Arc Ro-Icod It's about time A New York mail is (skint-Ills mum ‘fNo. The life prederven Im‘ along me rail of the IN]: looked a- Ictly Like automobile that." . Remind." of Trouble. "I thought you told me I set w use would are m. mind 08 I traumas.†and the unlucky motorist ‘\ “Didn't It?†and the {allowing dialogue ensued: Fatherâ€"Don' t do um Inufn. sonny Sonâ€"Me will. Fatherâ€"Wen. don't let me see you. Son-Shut 'ou eyes don; nrest for p94“!!! their '0' And yet we no told am II:- restore It: tone. little duty «In the la“ yer, “how you an no your lul- tam [or I divorce on the won a! night- . Tho Flm Club Sandwich. A New York Inwyor chin to hnvo discover“ the In! club undwlch. which I: now tho popular My 0! every ten room. '30 W11 awn In New Mexico ten nut :30. He stopped at n Inn]! town and not Do- lng on the trun m‘ n dining cu. went Into the lltflo “It pine. IN! ordered I donon onndwlehu. hall at which were to be hnlnnnd halt mm. After he hnd bonded tho troll nod sandwich hot! n null; on. of ham nnd one slice of mu. the Inventor of then. sandwich. wu not to tnr out of tho why. chem. "Bee-nu It's I undo sucker." add thetmnmuhqbemtom tunaâ€"Yonkers Mm. “I've got 0; new on an. manual Why I. u one-cent lump like :1 ' “My guess u hoe-nu I uh uh it go.†Inflected the at W It the end of the MIC. "Very cool.†uld the thin Ill. "but. not the correct mun.†no good. tut!" he nabbed. "1 Noel the peaches rightemul; Butâ€"ltâ€"II fair lick: we '0' yet got that mm o' my corduroy u:muu.â€â€"Aum iuzupr' , "Beam." bean m uemnpw‘ with hot on: on duo coiling. "No." thw- not the moon.†and All his ripe Mb†had departed} disappeared, dour-ted. Some thief the night had phyod havoc emu ltorhldden trait. end Proteeeor Pu- perdlnck could and no clue but + ï¬nger prlnt lelt on en unripe speci‘ men. Nevertheleu, it w eolnethlu; end he had his IuepIclonI. l‘ortlwlth: the professor made no enlargeme- Ind shortly after not the Impact. “All Jake," he said. "did you know eone one robbed my Men the 00:. night?†“Did '61:). m?" at Jake innocently. “Yen," nodded PM, fessor pumpemnck; "put the uni leit his mark behind. no I'll eully: trace him." He produced the Quiet-[oi cunt. “Do you see out?" Jeko' kneel began to quiver. Then he to into noodl of unwell. "I see it Ill sloop?" the Tho Conundrum Club. § It was during the prune m It the boarding-house bmkfut table. The thin mu spoke: FINGER PRINT WAS ENOUGH Guilty Peach TM“ Thought It Wu I Pictun of HI. Many Tm on, and Confuud. gunmen-MW mmmunflbhu awnumwmmm nmattorofhotbdhvcnnoi skilled phnichu Inn m nevi; edge of the nbkcttohuflohuï¬ with-any mum in strychnlno In nob can... Thu at homer. In «new and“. m lygoflflthouthflmhu‘ mom-m I. the Only mum M dot. for a II; Injection 0' BEST RATTLESNAKE REIED' The w «Jim my a Stadium ll mm tho on! A Clear Ono. A mfg". r Run: 03 to†1’ ‘ rm" cm. um. awn-kwâ€: {Opp N. W. Depot “In! M 2"!“ Phon- 'n Muhl’hnu 13! Faro-KW. F1...‘ on urn Ethnic-“F ..n<. £36 10.. «0|. ..I. E Theiuuhhuhnff o... m... Ynezâ€"mu W >53." g8? Pih â€pg-I'm not expensive. '1]- â€IL-Remar“... , {.PmWOmsnglIL guarantors-18. 1.1.71... “ Munol. 03l- e an; 5 L133. 78 1.1: a. 3 luau-LL51. A E. flu-.03. .I a}; of. 336g“ >I Mar nil- e an 3‘81‘ 073!- {o 2:313. things». moundâ€"r or. 3.89.5.3! Own-o e ‘hay th‘ do" 1-59: of writh‘ DMIST I‘tutl‘llm N. W. (1-le ions: 0 n. I. \o Ip. n. FIRB INSURANCE- Tel. 2454. No. 7 St. John’s Ave 'boulul» aha-hum Contact!!! fa- Pulik Wed Pone 220 228 Put Avenue. E. M. LAING ‘ YOU WILL DR. B A. HAMILTON BATON. CRANE â€PIKE Fiat. “a purity- 5mm 0‘ W. EBRAND. Agent. 15 BHERIDANfROAD. wmuwm’m Hiuhlmd Park Hotel Reddick Bros anon J. mucus, Pm» Table Vim Maui-nude†q ABANA â€at.“ Adv-III Admire