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- H HUNTER'S MOO-tr C A froety presage tills the afr,. The hills are lost in haze, and soon igh In the heavens, full and fair, t -Will rise the hunter's moon. -I 4nd with the moonrise she will come Down garden paths we knew of old Where summer's fairest flowers lie nung with withered red and gold; All save the flower of love-confessed The bloom that holds us most in thrq4 end this within her faithful breastj / Doth spring perennial. then rise, oh hunter's moon, and grace> The dark earth with thy silvery boon i A dgarer light thou bring'st-her faoe-,y To me, oh, hunter's moon C -Cliton eollard, In Frank Leslie MIH ELEN. OWDYI 'Tis noL word for it-to( I "genteel by half. We were as wicked a set at our dig gin's as New South ' Wales could shom a -no slight thing. If the world's ket .-tle had been set oz ' '! the boil we'd have I come to G e top as prime scum-truth, and no lie, mate. But among us was a man dubbed "the Squire," because, though he fared like the rest of us, toiled, lived and dressed just as we did, yet there was that in him which stamped him as of quite a differenl breed. S-ells out of luck are to be found by the bushel in Australia; still, I never came upon his double before or since. Rumor went that he was a baronet at home in England, but had been forced to cut and run ; so he tried New South Wales and the gold dig gin's, bent on succeeding. He did not live alone; his daughter was with him, though how and when she reached him none knew; she had reached him, and bore her strange life as best she might. They dwelt in a small shanty in the midst of many pines, a poor, rough place, far apart' from the other huts; a queer frame for such a stately picture of a woman -a lady, with the same superior bear ing visible in her father. I'd walked 3 that way with the Squire once, and she ran out to meet him. The sight of her struck me all of a heap, so unex pected in the lonely spot, where there : was no other company than the bright -winged birds, no other sound than the stir of the windy trees. She was tall, the color of wild roses in her cheeks, heaven's blue in her eyes. Her dress, dark and close-fitting, had none of the I flashy ornaments that women such as I we take up with craR on; her hair, coiled smooth about her head, shone t like black satin. "This is one of my-chums, my I dear," said "the Squire," with his soft voice and his hard smile. Since then, I had hung about the Log house often, labor ended. I I retohed water, got in sticks, cleaned boots, or did such odd jobs which I were not fit for her, and said no word;i but she found me out in a brace of I shakes, and grew used to and was thankful for such help as I could give, knowing that I meant no harm, though I startled her at first-a great Orson of a chap in my rough gear. -' One evening I came on her watch ing in the gloaming. How eerie it was underneath the trees; the windI soughed through the branches, bring ing a dash of rain; a deluge was in the bslack clouds sweeping across the sky. 1 r "I am anxious about my 'father," I she said, looking like a tall white lily I that somehow had been shoved into the wrong pot; and stouching my big earth-stained fingers with her fine, slim hand. "I am always anxious about him; though, since knowing ypu, I have not felt so absolutely dis tressed, for I am glad to recolleot that you are within his call. You would I stand between him and harm, I think." - "Why, yes, Miss; make your mind easy on that score; 'twould be done, with awill. But what harm is like to -ome, that you need flurry?" a-."Ned 1' she cried, stopping sud-. Eenily, (her father always called me' so)ft"I had such a curious dream last night. 9I dreamed that I went down into the little valley beyond the wood, I and there I saw my father lying on I phe grass sound asleep-so sound that Wcould not wake him; while the clus ters of wild flowers sprang up so high that they hid him iand I heard the rpines in the distance chanting a so!-. emn kind of litany. I was crying I hen I woke. " l'You are too much aloney Miss, and grow nervous." "Xy father has been very fortunate lately, has he not?" she asked, "He has had some good finds, miss; .and to-day he got hold of two jolly big nuggets." ' Iam glad. Will he bring them home this evening?-What's that?" and she sprang to the door, flinging it open, the shine of the lamp behind her. "Dearest father !" she cried, "is it you?" But she broke off, alarm in her voicv: "Ned ! Ned !" for no father was there, but two of-the worst of our lot-scamps for whom hemp was grow ing; the one a blackguard sailor; the other a smartish, slimp chap, thin, dark, lying. His name 'was Phil Dawlish. I remembered now, as I saw him by ihe flash of the light, that he as well as I, had been near when "the Squire" held up the two great nuggets; and ii struck me-I'm quick at conclusions that both scoundrels had not intended to come up to the house, but were just 'urking round-What for ? Miss Helen-I only knew her by her Christian name then-faced them steadily, though she had called me to( her, and asked what they wanted. "Why, nothin' in speciaL ms. ,tammered Dawlish, lifting his ragged straw hat with swellmob politeness and a leer which made me tingle to kiel him; "on'y, is the old Boss at homel )-mean your pa. miss," he translated. "No," she replied, nodding her head I .nigh, to show she was not frightened; but I, being close to her, could hear her heart thudding like a hammer, g while the blood flamed to her brows j ender the foul gaze roving over her. c "Why do you ask ?" "Just this, mum. Will you be ah good as tell him that me and my pal'e off to Hulton's R~anch for a short spell, and if he'd like to tramp over-why, ris mihty 'adsm part 'Q tho ountry,' nhe'd beiw1cme, that' She shut the door tipon them, draw ag a stout bar across it, "Are thos he men he works with?" she cried, Is I inging up her hands. 'Heaven help i, s!" C I was casting round for another job, 0 rhen she stayed me by asking if I V rould go to meet her father. . " "But you-" Nei "Nay; I do not mind. The littt r] ouse is secure. Why," with a wist- I al smile, "I am always alone from aybreak until dark." I knew it was the fact; so, bidding i er open to none until she heard me r "the Squire" whistle, I started on r iy errand. fi Not very far had I to go, for I met 0 im in that same little ravine of which U is daughter had dreamed; it skirted h ie pinewood. His pick was over his "Oi ioulder, his right hand in his pocket y -feeling the nuggets, perhaps. He 0 'as singing a song in some foreign P zgo, Italian or Spanish. He looked t iore content than I had seen him- ti iore at rest, nodding to me in his F atronizing fashion. After a few stray f, ,ords, I related what had happened, vising him to be on his guard. "Thanks, I will,"he replied, haught .y, amused at the scamps asking him 3 pay a visit in their company. "But 'e a secret to tell you, Ned," he dded. ."I have done with Green Val )y Creek, and shaken off its crew. 0 ,uck has favored me beyond my hopes. can afford to turn my back upon it. shall take my daughter to Mel ourne. I have thought of settling ere." - As he spoke, the little tie of com adeship between us shattered; in a d ioment we were sunderedas the poles, A D quietly he brushed it away. "You were always an honest fellow, tg ed-a trusty creature! .Be sure that wo -on come to-morrow; my daughter ver rill like to shake hands with you be Dre she leaves;" and he went on gay- Inc F through the rich, thick grass. :ot No rest was mine that night; evil o ras in the air. So, as I could nolt leep, I got up and went out. Not 5h eing a fool-I knew I must keep my ,w xisery to myself! but my life was bul mpty! empty I You see, I was hard it, mate, like the donkeys. What lea ras Miss Helen to me? What could cet he ever have been to me?-a lumber- I I ag, vagabond chap, not worthy to Ne iss the dust she trod on. me, But I must go back and watch the ay ouse that covered her for this last ight, so I returned to the ravine. In He] b were many little dells swarming "I rith the wild flowers of the grand nai ustralian spring. Now, in one of ni, hese same dells what do you think I 6 aw?-a dead man's face. Yes, I knew her t once that he was dead; but so eas- the ly "the Squire" rested on the wet moss to I hat the song I had heard him singing she :ight still have been on his lips. His to >ockets, turned lining outward, were lips -pty. Snatching up his fallen pick, was tore on to the log house, knowing put rll whom I should find there. My me, ang, sharp knife was in my belt. I md aced round to the back; the little epea itchen .door was undone; the fiends whi a possession had small fear of inter- the uption. They were in "the Squire's" eng >edroom, making free with some whis- np. :y which he had kept in a cupboard. arm Vhere was Miss Helen? ..ar I found her in the sitting room, tie& T n her chair, her lips bleeding over ploi ter white teeth; the cursed hounds smc rad struck her. "There are three of I hi iem," she whispered; "those two and ho came and another man. They woi ratched for my father, and murdered son ui-they told me so. Hark ! they j re coming. Ned, they have pistols, Ke] nd will shoot you where you stand. I've ;o away this instant--only-kill me ato< rt ;" and she lifted her white pillar 7j f a throat. n ae "Now, my beauty," roareda drunkez '.--C oice through the thin partition, 'we're bringin' you a cup o' whisky o drink our 'ealths in. Ain't you angin' for us to make love to ye? Ve'll stow away the rhino first, and ( hen-you shall have your turn." .a "Be quiet," I whispered badi: < A t4 Ler, hacking at the cords with my pgs nife; and in a few seconds I had her ~ ut of the chair, and we dashed out Io the house together. - - t On and on and on until the last tret ras at our backs. Then we made for lane which led to yohnson's tavern, - saving the yells faint in the distance; here we stopped, and there she tora iertale. News spread quickly at the diggin's, a bnd adge Lynch is for immediate thr etion. Before noon the stolen gold the -including the two big nuggets-had ~ een recovered, and a couple of fig- iut tha too twe wos Dosi f~;T ~ ' We ero ON1 NJOY~?S *e oth the method and results when nog yrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant nei ad refreshing to the taste, and acts IftE ~enly yet promptly on the Kidneys, an .iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- >ld em effectually, dispels colds,'~ head- iba ches and fevers and cures habitual ho onstipation. .' Syrup of Figs is the to inly remedy of its kind ever pro- ~ uced, pleasing to the taste and ac 'eptable to the stomach, prompt in ts action and truly beneficial in its ieets, prepared only from the most ealthy and agreeable substlinees, its A nany excellent qualities commend it o all and have made it the most onular remedy known. s Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50ja :ent bottles by all leading drug- A -ists. Any reliable druggist who y aay not have it on hand will pro- of ure it promptly for any one who rishes to try it. Do not accept any a bstitute.. lu ig CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. to SAN FRANCISCOCAL.. / box WWnVLJiti KY_ . VW VARX NlPt -r. That Tire L certain indication of impure and npoverished blood. If your blood ould always be rich and pure, full f the red corpuscles upon which its itality depends, you would never be eak, or vous! Boils, pimples, scrofula, salt aeum, would never trouble you. ut our mode of living, shut in all inter in poorly ventilated homes and iops, depletes the blood and there loss of appetite and weakness. ood's Sarsaparilla is the standard medy for this condition. It puri es, vitalizes and enriches the blood, vercomes that tired feeling, builds p the nerves and gives perfect ealth. Read this: ir daughter, Blanche, when four ears of age had a humor break out n her hands and face, which our hysician pronounced eczema. If 2e cold air reached her face or hands iey would swell up, look always urple, and headed blisters would yrm and break, H ood's S4 Is ThE True Bloc s dangled from an oak by the way LS soon as it was possible Miss HeleL .ted for Melbourne, whence she was iet sail for England, where she ild join her mother's relatives y heavy swells indeed, I believe. I I followed her in secret every b of the way, though she knew it until I stood by her on the deck he steamer, after I had helped to w her boxes safely in the hold. n I blurted out that I hoped she uld not be offended at my coming, "-- And then I shut up. 'Ned !" she cried, "brave Ned! r, kind, good Ned! There are ts which can never be repaid, aDa U2 your debtor always-always, S1* and holding out her hands to she bowed her lovely head upon big, brown fists and sobbed. 'You are very welcome, Misb en.". I spoke with a quiet voice. wish-I could have been a gentle i for just a little while, so that I ht have served you better." 'A gentleman!" she cried, lifting face, and looking full at me, and a she raised these hard fists of mine er soft lips and kissed them. Yes, kissed them-and I l-'how was I help it?-the touch of those soft broke me down smash. Yet she not angry-not offended. She out her little hands to me agamn, ning-I knew it-both to silence .to comfort me. She did not aik-for what could alie have said et could any stately lady such as have said ?--besides, the steamer's ines were puffing, and time was She laid her head down on my Sa moment, and then left me with in of pitying tears. Vhen the vessel had passed comn ~ely out of sight, and its long ie line had died out from the sky, rried back to Green Valley Creek, took up my work again. Hard k is the best friend life has for us, etimes. ut I have never forgotten Mist en-I never shall forget her ; and trudged to the old spot often and d before the empty house. 'hat's my story, old chappie ; we'ma i our own, of one sort or another. hambers's Magaine.f -'Cashinre lhavis~.' )ne day we went to town to visit a afactory of Cashmere shawls. After ~rribly unattractive approach, we in clambered up some stairs and irged into a large room, full of a, with about forty men all hard ork. One we especially watched. had in front of him nearly a thou d shuttles of different shades, and of these he would select one thread it through as many of the strands stretched tightly before as his pattern directed, and after loing he pulled toward him a heavy ,which pushed the last little cross Bad quite tight, before putting inl next. n old days one man used to read the pattern to all the rest, but each has his own design on a slip aper in front of him. It is said b the wavy line, so often seen in se shawls, was originally taken n the curves of the Jhelum. It k four months, we were told, for Smen to do seven incho~s of this -k, one yard wide, working from tthe morning till 5 in the evening ry day, so it was hardly to be idered at that two yards should Snearly $500. .s we left the workroom, so glad tc hange its heated atmosphere for a ler breath of air, it was impossible check the obvious thought of the trast such lives are to our own. mingled with the gayly-dressed wd gathered to see a polo tourna it, and our thoughts strayed back hat stifling room, with its ceaseless zotony and perpetual grind, where 2, more like machines, wove hour r hour varying hues of color into harmonious whole. .And yet the simile would also assert itself, t we too, in one sense, are hour by r working in the tiny threads that to make up the pattern and color ur lives. The whole design, how r, does not lie open before us, but mercifully withheld by an all-wise ster hand.--The Cornhill Magazine, ~Here's Talent.^ ges-Great mimic, the Count. es wonderful imitations. ick-Yes; he gave one a year or ligo that cost him three months ir gnes-Impossible! What was it? Lk-Gave his landlord an imitatiou $20 bill.-New York World. Respect for the Czar. ussian journals are still in mourn for the Czar. They will continue surround their front page with a den of black until a year has elapsed n +th ea at e Adat~h_ - d Feeling Discharging a watery fluid, and the burning and itching would drive her nearly wild. Unless we encased her little hands she would tear patches of skin from her face and hands. We tried many doctors and many reme dies and at last gave the case up as hopeless. But our daughter Cora tried Hood's Sarsaparilla, to cure a scrofulous lump near the left breast which caused her much pain and after taking 4 bottles it disappeared. Blanche, who is now eleven, had spent seven years of suffering, so I concluded to give her Hood's Sarsa parilla. She took 5 bottles and her face is smooth and soft as a baby's, the color of a rose petal. Her hands are soft and white, where four months ago they were blue and red and calloused nearly like leather. I cannot express my gratitude by pen or mouth. It seems a miracle and our friends are surprised." MRS. Ax-A L. CLARK? 401 E. 4th St., Da luth, Mian. rsaparilla . Only )d Purifier About Icemaking. A very novel combination of interest% As now being consummated in some of the Western cities in the union of plants built for the production of light with plants for the manufacture of ice, the same companies intending to ope rate the two plants as a joint enter prise. This idea has also taken root near at home, and the plans for a gas and ice plant in a nearby city are al ready in an advanced state of prepara tion, says a Chicago newspaper. This new development of the artfM cial ice business has been brought about largely -by the improvements made in the process of its manufacture, which have not only materially im proved the quality of the product, but reduced its cost to a point that seems to assure a very large profit even at a price much below that possible to those who get their supply from nature't %tock. It is claimed that the "plate" process enables the product to be made entire ly free from impurity of any sort, freez ing from a plate outward, tending, to expel all the impurities which by the "can" process of freezing from the four sides of the cake, are lodged in the cen ter of the block. The "plate" process obviates also all of the necessity for raIsing the temperature of the water before it is frozen and the best results so far gained by the "plate" process indicate a product of ten and five eighths tons of Ice from a single ton of coal where artificial heat is de manded in supplying power for thr anufacture. In the "can" process the results ars said to have never exceeded seven tons of ice to a ton of coal and the averagE product has been much less than this proportion. The "plate" process neces sitates a heavier investment in the or iginal plant, but gives a hIgher per centage of return upon its cost wher once in operation. A "Petrifying Spring" in Georgia. The recent accounts of the wonder 1'u properties of a -certain creek in the Black Hills country, which is said to ~ransform plants, nuts, leaves, and even flesh, into solid stone, reminds ie that there is a spring in Brooks County, Georgia, which in a very short time converts wood and several other mbstances into hard rock. The peculiar :ualities of this Georgia fountain have been known since early in the century, when an old "b'r hunter" accidentally lost his knife in the basin, 'which has been hollowed out of the granite strata by the ceaselesbubbling of the water. & month later the old trapper again repaired to the spring and was agree ~bly surprised to find his favorite knife. The water had had no effect apon the bright steel, not even to the extent of leaving a speck of rust, but with the wood of the knife's handle it was far different. The petrifying particles with which the water is so highly impregnated had entered every pore and sap-tube in the wood, and what was but a few weeks before a hickory handle of "home-make" was now two thin slabs of solid stone, wood-like in appearance, but as hard nd unyielding as a chip from a granite bowlder. To this day the place is known as "Old Moore's Petrifying spring. "--St. Louis Republic. - he Biggest-& - Cask is the new tun at Munich. Diamond is the Jagersfontein gem f 971 karats. Cable message ever sent from Africt, was King Behanzin's $1500 message. 'Photograph was at the World's Faii -ten feet long, eighteen inches ~wide. Lump of coal ever mined weighs 50,80 pounds, and was, of course, at he Fair. Railroad loop in the world is prob able one on a Missouri road. It is seventy miles around. Check ever drawn was for $14,949, i52.20, and was written by the P. R. .. to pay for the P., W. & B. BR B. Other big things, perhaps not the iggest of their kind: Five men in Curtis, Neb., who weigh as much as a ton of coal, 1160 pounds ; a bunch of rapes from Washington weighing six ounds.-New York Recorder. A new telephone invention will con vey 2000 words a minute over the wire. " The Italians reckon-twenty-four hours round, instead of two divisions of twelve hours each, as we do. Any human being who will have the presence of mind to clasp the hands behind the back, and turn the face toward the zenith, may float at ease, and in perfect safety, in tolerably still Toys of G S Maud-What did you consider the most charming feature of the wedding yesterday? Clara-There were several. The .ride's dress fitted badly and I beard a number of unpleasant remarks about the gifts.-Tit-Bits. ., In the Air. Mrs. Sniffwell-Why, Bridget, yor nave been eating onions! Bridget-Shure, mum, you're a inoid reader.-Syracuse Courier. Served Her Right. Lady (in fourth-story window ns flower pot falls)-Mercyl I believe I've killed that man. Uncle Mose-Dat serbes yo' jes' righf o' bein' so careless; I'm glad yo' flow er pot is smashed. Easily Perceived. "I didn't know that very conversa donal gentleman was a foreigner untf a few minutes ago." "Did he tell you so?" "No. I gathered it from his conver sation. He knows so many ways in which the institutions of this country :ould be improved."-Washington Sta Taking Advantage of Feeble-Minded. "It's a beastly shame," said Cholly Cadkins. "It's a downright low twick." "What's the mattah, deah boy?" "I heard that the Prince of Wales al. .vays pays his bills promptly. I discov ered just aftah paying him that the storwy was circulated by my wascal of a tailor."-Washington Star. John's Refusal. John's Wife-John, I wish you'd sar ip some wood for-the house. John-I wish you wouldn't ask me to do such work, Maria. Sawing wood's a thing that even the commonest tramp refuses to stoop to and you know It. South Boston News. Why She Did. Husband-For heaven's sake, what makes you talk so much? Wife (pleasantly)-You do, love. I aave to keep talking so you will not have so many opportunities to say rudi things.-Detroit Free Press. Getting Ahead of the Game. Hangley Greenes-The pool rooms are closed and there is no place to gan ble. Ven DIgger-If it's a sure thing let's gamble they won't open again.-Phila' delphia Inquirer. A Technical Term.. Sincere Church Member-Have yott .ieard that our pastor has got a call to t broader field where he will get a highet' salary? Worldly Church Member-Instead of a "call" I think that should be consid ered a "raise"-New York World. At the Art Exhibition. Mrs. Homespuin-I don't think thlf nin be one of the Imported pictures John. Mr. Homespun-Why not? Mrs. Homespun-Why, anybody can see at the very first glance just what is represents.-Somerville Journal. eached a Good bflI Age. The list of extremely old persons who have died recently is a long one. Greek~ papers record the deaths of Mine. Irene Soma, a Greek woman, in Smyr na, who had celebrated her 112th bIrth day. She was born in Sparta, and had all her faculties to the last. In Ham burg, Frau Adelheid Wagner, who died a few days ago, was 104 years old, and was strong and active until her last illness. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Supfor chfadre teethin, softens the gums, redces inflamma tio. ~l' yaan.cures wind colic. 26ic.a bott. A method has been devised by which aluminum may be substituted for platinum for leading wires in incandes cent lamps. Dr. lKilmer's S WA P-R o OT cnres all Kidney and Bladder troubles. ]'amnplet'and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y. The banks of Newfoundland are formed by the sand, earth and stones brought from the North by the ice bergs. 17 9137 What an ordinary man eats 'and the way he eats it would be enough to give dyspepsia to an ostrich-unldss the os trich were wise enough to as sist his digestion from time to time with an efficient -, ' , combination of '. vegetable ex tracts. Such a ~'jpreparation is 3 Dr. Pierce's . Pleasant Pellets. ha-d-- They are the pills par excellence for those wh o sometimes e at the wrong things and too much., They stimulate action in all of the digestive oraans. They stop sour stomach, windy bechings, heartburn, flatulence and cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in digestion, sick headache and kindred derangements. Once used they are always in favor. KIOER'S PATILLE~Sha. towct&co. aicstown, Mass. W T bysai le toie whlea andi retaIl trades Ssi alary noneveadvanced fo advertising n expenses: rmanent position. Address, wioh stamp, KJI.G MFG. (20.. D 42. Cicazo. Il. IUR WHFJIE ALL ELSE FAILS. ** Tea a e God. Use For twenty years folks rheumatism, neuralgia, and using St. Jacobs Oil. Th for you couldn't fool all the The Pot Called the I the Housewi SAP, Gracious Acts Pay. - ri And these thtgs "pay." Let no gr1 intering life deceive herself into be. lieving that they do not If she even does not want to be gracious and at. tentive to her fellow-kind, because of any moral beauty she may see in it, let her be so because of the policy of It She may contend suecessfully that it does not "pay" In the short run. Othei girls, just as popular, are self-absorbed. cold, egotistical, Indifferent to otheri to the point of brutishness, she may claim. But she cannot prove her case for the long run. There the thoughtful disposition tells invariably. . It is 'not gush that makes the genuinely popular woman, It is not beauty, nor money, nor brains alone, nor even a good heart and a sunny, good-tempered disposition: not as measured by the long span. It Is the woman who seems to know. by a subtle intuition, just when a little note, a few flowers, a message, will strike the right chord, come at the mo -ment when, though quite unconsciously, perhaps, the recipient was craving something of the kind. It is the wom an whose delicacy is never at fault, who Is there just when she is most wanted, and not there when she would be de trop, simply because, having formed a habit of thinking of others, she finds It perfectly easy to put her self in their place, and to feel as they feel at a given instant It Is the wom an who never disappoints. This is the genuinely popular woman. "Oh, well, In the large things of lift ao one wants to disappoint," exclaims one woman. "But In the little things-" Precisely. In the little things. It is :he little things that make up life. Did one ever hear of great deeds, isolated heroic actions, making a woman popu lar? By no means. The little things count And well they may. They are the hardest.-Chicago Mail. ~ W. R. MORRISON'S COOLNESS, iomehow Did Not Make the Impreer sion on His Wife He Expected. A gossiper in the Washington Post tells a story on Col. William R. Morri son. The colonel believes thoroughly in the efficacy of discipline. H'e ha spent a great part of his eventful ca reer in hotels, and one of his theories has always been that the mind can be so trained that the biggest sort of a hotel fire is powerless to sidetrack the reasoning faculties on occasions when presence of mind is needed. He im p ressed this theory very strongly upon Mrs. Morrison by conjuring up a va lety of critical exigencies and instruct ing her how to act in given cases. Fate would have It that the colonel should be put to the test He and his wife were aroused from their slumbers one night by an alarm of fire. The hotel in which they had their rooms was afire and great confusion and tumult ensued among the guests. "Now Is the time to put into practice what I have always preached to you, my dear," 1said the coloneL "Don't get excited. Put on your indispensable apparel and take your time. Don't lose your head. Jst watch me." He calmed Mrs. Morrison's anxiety, handed her the various articles necessary to her toilet, put on his collar and cuffs, took his watch from under his pillow and placed It in his vest pocket, put on his hat, packed a valise of valuables, and, taking his cane, walked with Mrs. Morrison out of the burnng building Into the street. "Now, ny dear," he said when they were safe, "don't you see what a grand thing It Is to keep cool and act with a deliberate p~urpose in an emergency like this'i Here you are completely dressed as though you were going out for a walk, ana over yonder are several ladies in complete dishabille." Just then Mrs. Morrison for the first time glanced at her husband. "You are right, William," she. said, "It is a grand thing to keep cool aryd act deliberately, but if I had been you I would have stayed in the room long enough to put on my trous ers.".. y!Cws ThiIZ We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cuzed by F.l' a Ci~~r - Co., Props., 'Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, L ave ktisown F. JT. Che ney for the last 15 years, and belivve hui pr fectv honorable in all business' traLnsactionls andi iinancially able to carry out any obi;.:a WEST& TuAX, holsale Druggists, Toledo, WALSO, KtsvAs & MARvI:, Wholesale * Druggists, Toledo, Ott- . - Ha'ls Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. ig directly' pon the bloo.1 and mucous sur races of the syst em. Prie, 75c. per bottle. Sold by alt Druggists. Testinmonials free. Professor Rowland, of Johns Hop kins University, has devised a very sensitive electrometer, the working parts of which are immersed in a non conducting liquid. Pio's enre for Consumption has saved mes many a cloctor's bill-S. F. HAicDY, Hlopkins I lace, ]3altimore, Md., Dec. 2, '94. An Oregon man has patented a can making machine by which it it is said that one man can with a single ma. chine, turn out over 30,000 completed cans in a day. To Eunjoy Life the physical machine must be in good rnnning ordr.' A little care-thie use of Ripanfl Tahnles -will give you every morning the feeling that you are "gladl to be nlive." The greater effectiveness and superiority of the electric over the calcium light in lantern projection has been clearly established. Pure Rich Blood is essenltial to good health, becase the blood is the vital fluidl which sup ple- all the organs with life. Uood's sarsapa rila is the great blood1 puritier. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, harmless, efective, do not pain or gripe. There are 105 bureaus or branch postoffices in Paris, all of which, with one, exception, are equipped with nuaticd tubes. 1 over the world have cured all other. pains and aches by ere must be'omething in it, people for so mn er. * (ettle Black Because fe Didn't Use 0 'fur ish steel tanks with coverst'all =al vanized aftircompletion, In nests often, to I2et high and 30 to 38 Inches In diameter, at 24c. per gallon. \ They do not rust; shrink, teake give taste to water, nor allow foreign sub stances to get In. They can be put in garret or barn and thus are protected from freezing. They take no setting up, are cheaper than wood. Tak substructures of all sizes madeto order. Send for price list and designs forsubstructure end ornamental water suppy. AERMOTOR CO. Co'.I yo ever stop to dnk bow ..m." y *he emo s.made the modemn windsili buiuneual Now ft hift ineop olized this entire line of manufacture because CC is ideus. inventions, designs, qualities and Price, or bind Olbqcs to be literal " seMle lmkstaxsf. Wibs de steel wel, the back gared pumper t igh. geredo mill, the steel towers fixed isaA tiling, the a-.-g of work after completion, th. grinder the improved irrigating and ether the - poesaw-one of the most popa=weWW e -th. see strag ed sock tanks. Zverythi=g M. touched webave bettered end e.....an.. .. we have delighted in and itbhas paid WOthavlisdaoe of branch housee, so as to hais all theS goods5 neW thes wh want them. The Aermotor Co. has but one more ambtion. It wants to build and Ill one more new bulding. 'it has 2 seres of land at its present location unoccupied by buildings. It h pbutstocommencinJuetoover that 2 ae with a sine buildin, 7 stories high. This will give it 145.g.screset Ow space. Theo when the pabtic demand requires mre goods than can be produced with this added space, is will refte to extend further. or make any fort. It will bavedoe itahare top t hatdod. I ilithen tam away ailnewomees. VINlAYT ME IT EXPECT " CONTIEUN7 210 Sewn! Tul woRLo WrT TME GREATER PART Of M WIN0 WUZL", TOW1ERS, C D.3, FND CITUS Ds STESLNRAXI1'DUPZ SAWS. SERL ST,,A,, A.M. TASKS. .15TIIL SUBMIECTUEM XTC..' ITC.P 6416 VAJIE AV='TER TI I WILL COStiM TO DEAL 7608! LMlIUIlL WhTI TEE Pt3UnM i1 FV 33.M PAIRS AT A W Arr Ta T= 5053s SQUARE-DEAUMG VID AR AND WATEBOSUWPE MOUSE OF TEE WOR. AZUnOTOE CM.. CICAO. tIE SWAL.OWS IT WHOLE. Better thlan Inneral waters? Well, Ishould smile Three do5Snin'a boB.andt You can carryeiz. In your vest pocket.. Take one every night After dinner, or at bedlIin, ' It beats Congress watr lhlot, Or Kissengen. Tou always have lthanldy, I -Theoeffectis better, and Than any spring in existence .-except a doao sprint I hate a vraughti W.L. DouwLAs $3 *i.TEBEST.,, 45. COleDOVAN) FREcN&DaMrs LEn CAIF, $4.s.FINF.CAIF&KAmMCa $3.iPPOUCE,3sol.ts. s2.$WORKN6~ -LAD'IES= noCCrouILass. * Over One Million People wear the W. L.Douglas $3& $4ShOes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They'give ti-c best value for the money. They equal custom Shoes in style and ut. Their wearing qualities are unsurssd The prices are iuniform,---stassad on sola, From Si to sa saved over other makes.. If your dealer cannot supply yottwecan. E GGS FOR HATCHING from prize stock, -esingle set tingzs or by the 100, A merican White Wond'-rs. Blck Langshangs, Light Brahmas, Barred Plymnouthi Rocks, Brown and Whbite l.eg horns. ete.. etc., send r'or prices. Maplewood Poultry Yards. Faulkner, Maiden5 Mssn. Mention this paper. VITA L ISSU ES perfection of macines lerfrarmers' nse Poer Two Working Qualities Thoroughness of Workmanship The.'e will be found united in thene BAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS lilnstrated 'amphlet Mailed Free. Davis & Eakn Bldg. & 31g. Co. ica. Raphael, Angelo, Rtubens,Tssm The "eLNENE " are the Best and Most Eenen cl ot h sides tittilied alike andenguv bin one collar is equal to two olany othrne Tkeu ttwell, wear well and lto t.lU. A bu Ten Clasor Five 1'airs of Cuffs forTwm'i Cents. A am1 Collar and Patr of Coffby a & Cens. am stleand size. Ades REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANT, 17 Franklin St., New York. 27 EfibySt.e, Bete SFOR FIFTY YEARS! SMRS. WINSLOW'S SOOT HING SYRUP f-r thir cblidlren while Tr-ething for over F:rty Yi'rh. It soothes the ebiki, softens tb 1s the best remiiedy for diarra ,a. Twenty-s've Centa a Botde. 2--aeBook Free.'. PAENSBhI.'lOP & MRE Washington, D. C. 'W L T. NEWVS LETTER of value wpaspr. Charles A. BaldwIn & Co., 43 Wail La ri EinPension Bue.