10 kUt SCBANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JD NE 3, 1 890. fflSS f EEisnrs SFROMEIflL By JULIAN HAWTHORNE Caffrifht. laM.br Bsehalle. Jofcassa sad BaahsUaa PART I. Mrs. Morforcl, beautiful and rich widow of eiarht and twenty, with an oval face, dark eyes and hair of frosted sll Ter, on returning from her afternoon drive upon the three hundreth and sixty-sixth day of her widowhood, found a messenger from Tillet's await lor her, with the pearl necklace which he had sent to be cleaned, for she was about to-reenter the world. She had loved her husband, but It is as well to say that the silver hair began Ions be fore the worthy John Morford termi nated. The messenger, a reticent and self contained person, guardedly unbut toned his overcoat and produced the gems from some secret shrine within himself, and remarked, while Mrs. Mor ford wrote the receipt, that she would best keep a sharp eye out, for the crooks had got onto the fact that the necklace was out of the Safe Deposit company's vaults. "Aren't they lovely!" ejaculated the lady to herself, when alone. Then she added, with an Intonation of remorse ful tenderness: ".Poor John!" Grief u- J "S TfTM'T TTTEY I OVEI.Y!" K.TACT' LiATED THE LADY TO IIEP.SlCLF. far hrr bereavement, however, could no longer ulmeuiu tli beauty of the ueek-liu-r. Nutur- and tho world have their way. She wns on the point of point: Into her chamber to irtjur for dinner, when Jiltafl Lebfi Peeksklll was announrud, xMie hac! formerly been one of Mrs. J'or fdtci's school-touchers, ami vn;i now an postle of physical culture ami hygiene. Blie was short and uneven of liRure and homely of countenance, and carried a small bluck has. As slip-f'litereil, Mrs. Jtorford closed the irytfoeco case con s'.trinK the peurls. She was perhaps hy of reveollnir tp.ner friend her aban donment of myutiiliifir. Miss PeekU1tl hardly waited to ex--liiu)(t- KfectiiiK hi'fore producing from her bag a leather rerotaele, from which alio drew forth a contilvnnee i-f rubber tubia end bulbs, which slut pro ceeded to Interpret, with fttnaticul en thusiasm, its was her wont. "My new splrome ter.my dear! My own Invention! You have m Idea! It hus Increased the cubic compass of my chest four inches in three weeks! 1 expect to sell B,'M.0lKI of thm, nt three dollars each, the first year! The patent roy alties on SUi.OOO.OOO at ten per cent, will be $1,500,000 steady Income! I hall be treated as a pblio benefactor like Morse, Ether, Morton and Gen. Booth! The lungs nie the life; we Ahull nil have chests like pouter plpeons, figures like Phldlases, eyes like stars, cheeks like flower petals, digestions like Iron mills practical, lmmurtnl health and beau ty! Why look at me!" . "To be sure!" returned Mrs. Morfleld, Yelling tho Biarkle In her dark eyes' with her darker lashes. "May I buy this of you? You will dine with me and we'll talk it over." "You misunderstand me, my dear! This is the only specimen extant. I have not yet secured the patent. 1 am on my way to Washington to do so. I thought you might like to advance the $300 to cover the expense, receiving three shares of stock In return, which will be at least 1,000 per cent, premium in six months. You have done me so many kindnesses, my dear, that I felt called on to make this return for them. I have to take my train at 7.30. Do you dine soon? What did I do with my spirometer cose? Oh, here It Is Oh, my! Your pearl necklace! Then you're going Into the world again? Poor, dear John!" "It Is a year and a day, you know," said tho widow, blushing a little. "Aren't they pretty. "They are! Pearls ore my favorites of 11 precious stones. ' But what are pearls compared with my spirometer, either as regards value and utility? what a nice black lace mantilla this Is. my dear! You'll be leaving it off now, I suppose? It reminds me of one I had once." "You must accept it as a memento of our friendship," said Mrs. Morford, who could take a hint as quickly as anyone. "And now we'll have dinner. What Is It?" This question wan addressed to the servant, who entered with a card on a salver. It bore the name of Rev, Wat son Glen, and in pencil the following: "Will Mrs. Morford permit her late hue band's old college chum to lay his homage at her feet?" After a moment's reflection Mrs. Mor ford recollected having heard her hus band mention a former friend of this name, but she had supposed him long since dead.. Should she receive him? See this Pailt ' Get pne like it from your grocer and try You will like it, but you won't like the imitation. Avoid them. Outttca-hu rd nitk-,fcitiH al MmPj tnii wtl -lm ureal twT Ma. THB S, K. WASStMUOL COMMHT, CkUHlws,PsllsWhk,PIMlslf. ifelene- The manner of his request was attrac tiveshe liked chivalry In a man. "Ask him to come up," she said to the ser vant: and in a minute he made his appearance. He was a middle-area man or tail and elegant flrur set off by a plain clerical garb and a long black cloak. His features were regular, nis expres sion grave but observant, his dark au burn hair was grlssled to the temples. There was a white scar, as of a sword cut, across the outer corner of his left eye, which gave it a slight eccentricity. His bearing was that of a finished man of the world rather than a conventional clergyman. There was something agreeably foreign about it. Mr. Glenn was charming at the din ner table, whither, after the first Intro ductions, the three betook themselves. He had had an adventurous life as a missionary In various parts of the world. He had Just returned from five years tn Cores. A large fortune had been bequeathed to htm from a man whom he had saved from a sad end In early life, who afterwards became wealthy. His purpose had been to search out his old chum John Morford and pass his remaining years near him, engaged in works of charity. The shock of finding him no more had been severe. Though he had never met Mrs. Morford, she would understand why he had wished to see her. "The woman whom my dearest friend loved cannot but be an object of peculiar Interest to my self. But you understand you are In all senses a woman who understands" he added, with a look that made the lady's oval cheeks feel delicately warm. They had a good time. Miss Peeksklll spoke with noble rage of her spirom eter; Mr. Glenn promised to take a hun dred shares as soon as the stock was issued. The conversation drifted to precious stones. He described the mar velous pear of Corea, and produced four fine black ones from his pocket, which he had seen the native divers bring up from the depths of the Indian ocean. Mrs. Morford held them in the roft palm of her white hand and ca ressed them with her rye, her head on one side. "They remind me of the pend ants of my necklace." she said. "You have a pearl necklace?" he asked. "Are the pearls Corean?" They sent the servant to brine the cisf. He examined the necklace with tho fir of connoisseur. "Yes. they arc mostly Cureau," he said nt Inst. "Will you grant inn a great favor?" he added, beiidinif toward her. She bowed her head graciously, but Inquiringly. Permit me to present you these four pearls of mine. Tlv.-y should be with their Bisters. I brought them from the orient with a purpose of presenting them to rny friend's wife; will not his widow accept them? For me, of course, thty can have no value save as thoy may give pleasure to you." Mrs. Morford took a breath; she hard ly knew what to say; she glanced at Mis Heckskill, sighed, and slowly Bhook her head with a gentle smile. "I shall hose to see you here often," she said, giving him back the pearls. "When you know me better, perhaps you will Indulge me more," was his re ply, lie had the fine taste noi to press Ilia oiter. The little party returned tn the draw ing room. Airs. Moitord replaced the necklnee cr.S' on the table, and Miss Peekukill returned to its box the fa mous spirometer, upon the virtues of which she had expatiated at length. The elderly maiden, In spite of the value she placed on her Invention, real ly liked pearls as much as anyone, and was also partial to clergymen. She could not help reflecting that the neck luce would become hor well; she would even have been willing to hang Mr. Glenn's four black beauties us ear rings in her ears, and would not, per haps, obstinately resist accepting tht reverend gentleman himself Into the bargain. But he did not truspect her HE WAS A MIDDLE-AGED MAX. sentiments; at any rate, he did not re spond to them. That Is the way in this world. Seven o'clock struck, and Mr. Glenn, in the midst of an absorbing conversa tion, remembered with a start that he had a train to take at 7.15. He caught up in his haste the cloak which he had flung on the table when going in to dinner, hurriedly shoook hands with the two ladles with Mrs. Morford last and longest and was gone, leaving a favor able Impression behind him. "That scar gives him a queer expression, though, don't you think?" observed Miss Peeksklll, after a pause, feeling that a critical attitude would become her. Mrs. Morford aroused herself from a little fit of preoccupation. She smiled, absently, and said: "By the way. I haven't written that check. What was It to be four or five?" "Three, my dear. You will get your stock in a month or two. So your pearls and his came from the same place! Well, as I will say Is, don't be carried away. Poor, dear John! Well, I must be going, too my train is 7.30, you know." She was pulling on her bonnet. ."Don't forget the mantilla," said her friend, folding It up as she spoke, and placing It in the block bag. "It goes in nicely." "Thanks, my dear; you are really very kind. But, dear me, there is no room for my spirometer case. Never mind: I'll carry it in my hand. Good byl I'll write you when I reach Wash ington. And be careful, remember! Good-by." When the beautiful widow found her self once more alone she sank In a chair, and remained for fifteen minutes In a revery. What was she thinking about? About poor John, perhaps. At length she rose, moved thought fully to the table, and put forth her hand to take up the necklace case from the place where she had laid It when they came In from dinner. The action was half completed before she noticed that the case was no longer there. PART It Bhe looked here and there, at first merely perplexed, then with anxiety, rising to consternation. The case was nowhere In the room; neither was it In the dinlng-rooom. She rang for the servant, thinking she might have re moved tl to hor room, but the man, who had been with her since she and the late Mr. Morford first went to housekeeping, had seen nothing of It. No other servant had been upstairs since dinner. What could have beuoin of It? . "If I might make a remark, mum" said Thomas, deferentially. As she sig nified her nasent, he continued: "That elderly lady, mum, as went out Just now; she was carrying in a case In her hand, mum, and I says to myself, says I, that looks uncommon Ilk tht mines' pearl case, says I. But In course I spoke nothing, as not beln' my place, mum." "That might be It I mean she may have taken It by mistake for the case that had her spirometer In it," ex claimed Mrs. Morford, for the moment revived. "But she must have left the spirometer case behind: I remember they looked a good deal alike." yes. mum. Then it would seem the the other case it ought to be here, mum." "Yes, of course, it must be here!" But alas! her friend of twelve years' stand ing, the subject of. so many benevo lences, had been tempted and fallen! She had seised the opportunity, proba bly while Mrs. Murford was writing the check, to slip It into her black reticule. What treachery! What cold-blooded ingratitude! Mrs. Murford had loved her friend, and would rather have cast the pearls back into the Indian ocean than to have her faith thus terribly de stroyed. She threw herself down on the sofa, burled her face in her hands and cried. Meanwhile the aged Thomas respect- SHE THREW HERSELF DOWN ON THE SOFA. fully withdrew, and with great pres ence of mind and sagacity sent out a call to the nearest police station. Miss Peeksklll had not gone far on her way to the suburban station when she was met by two men, who looked at her somewhat narrowly as she passed, carrying the bag in one hand and the reticule In the other. After exchanging a few words in a low tone, they turned In their tracks and followed her. It was already growing dark. The road turned to the left, passed some untlnlshed and empty buildings and took another turn to the right. When abreast of the buildings Miss Peeksklll felt herself suddenly seised from behind, her arms pinioned and a bunch of some wooley and Ill-smelling material stuffed Into her mouth. A piece of cloth was wrapped round her head, and she was dragged speechless and sightless, but valiantly resisting, Into the basement of one of the buildings and there thrown upon the ground and hurriedly made fast to a loose beam. The reticule she had dropped at the first attack; but tho leather pearl-case, to which she had clung desperately to the last, was now wrenched away from her. A rough voice bade her make no attempt to es cape, under penalty of annihilation In a form too unpleasant to bear ropltitlon, and then there was a round of re treating sts'ps, followed by silence. She lay there a good while, bruised and half stunned by the Ill-treatment and frlfht she had sustained and a prey to the most gloomy reflections. Breathing was also difficult, and there was the chance that some one wns on the watch near by, prepared to make a bloody end of her should she venture to stir. At length, however, further en durance became Impossible and she slowly, and with pain and difficulty, contrived to extricate one arm from the cord which cramped It behind her back. She next removed the hoodwink and gng, and would have been altogether free In a few minutes more, when, to her unutterable terror, there was a noise or approaching steps and voices, and the gleam of a lantern ray gleaming through the dark. The itimdet era were come! Sh" drapced herself to a sitting position, her hair hanging In wituhlike disorder, her eyes staring horribly, and let out a shriek that might have split the tympanum of a bronze bust. Now, the bearers of the lanterns were not murderers nor even footpads, but a couple of policemen following the trail of the pearl thief. They had stumbled upon the black reticule In the road, and by good luck had thought to explore the building. But the last thing they expected to find there was Miss Lesbla Peeksklll, especially in so strange a plight. "Why. this Is the very party that has done the Job," observed one to the other. "And looks like she's been done her self," the other returned. "Say," he con tinued, "your name's Peeksklll, ain't It?" When the maiden recovered her senses sufficiently to recognize that her Interlocutor wore the familiar uniform of the force, she burst into tears and ac knowledged her Identity. Thereupon the first speaker informed her that he had a warrant to arrest her for rob bery, and cautioned her that anything she might say would be taken down and used against her at the trial. At this Miss Peeksklll fully recovered her self-possession, with a wonderful supply of outraged dignity thrown in. She scrambled to her feet and shook her first In the faces of her accusers, launching forth at them a volume of shrill dentals and upbraiding which fairly abashed and overwhelmed them. The gist of her oration was as follows: She utterly repudiated, scorned and hurled back the charge. So far from being a thief, she was herself the vic tim of brutal robbery and violence, and the innocent object of Bcandalous sus picion. She had never stolen so much as a lump of sugar since she was born. She had invented a hygiene instrument of more value than all the pearls In or out of the ocean; and the thieves were now doubtless on their way to Washington to defraud her of her pat ent. Did Mrs. Morford make this charge? Let them be set face to face, and she would soon show them where was the right of the matter! Mean while she called upon the officers, at their peril, to Instantly pursue and cap ture the depredators, and restore her her property. Fifteen millions were at stake; and If it were lost, she would take care that all concerned would re gret it. "Well, ma'am," said the first officer, as Boon as he could pull himself to gether, "what you state may be all right; but the thing is Just here them pearls Is gone. They ain't been seen since you left. They was there just before you left. What's more, the but ler he seen you carryln' them off. If you took'em by mistake for your hy-glu Instrument, why wasn't that left be "WHY, THT8 18 THE VERY PARTY THAT DONE THE JOB." hind in the place of it? But you swiped 'em both, and that s what give you away. That is to say, that's the charge, and it's for you to disprove It if you can. Your yarn about being robbed Is a good card, but you'll have to show it wasn't the pearls you was robbed of. One thief may steal another's boodle, d'you see, but that don't git the first ono out of the jug. If you can get ball, so much the better, but between whiles, I guess you'd best comt along or u." . Had! Miss Peeksklll been a man, tht chances are she would have spent the night in duress. Certainly few men would have asked the person- who caused their arrest to go on their ball bond. But this was precisely what Miss Peeksklll did. and Mrs. Morford. being also not a man. but a woman, and a power In the neighborhood as well, caused a magistrate to be routed out, who Hxed the amount, and by eleven o'clock that night the two ladle were locked in each other's arms In the very drawing-room which had been the scene of the robbery; they were crying and comforting and forgiving each other; and yet affairs, from the legal point of view, were precisely In statu quo; neither of them in the least could explain how Miss Peeksklll had con trived to take the pearls by mistake for her spirometer, and. yet to take the spirometer, too, and until the problem was solved. Miss Peeksklll was In dang er of state's prison, unless she Jumped her ball, which Mrs. Morford entreated her to do, but which the maiden her self utterly declined to consider the pos sibility of. So the night passed, and tho morning came. With the morning .arrived the police captain of the dlstrlet. and requested an Interview with Mrs. Morford. The beautiful woman, pale from the agita tion of the night, met him robed in a delicate satln-llned negligee. In the eastern boudoir, with the morning sun shine falling aslant through the tur quoise blue window shades. "We've got the parties that waylaid Miss Peeksklll, madam." the captain said, "and the necklace with 'em. ' They tell a queer story: it may be straight and It may not. They say they got wind of the necklace being out of the safe deposit, and there was three of m tn the Job. But one of them, an old-timer, whom we know as Scar-Eyed Jack, gave these two the slip, and they'd figured out that he'd nxed up some disguise he has a lot of 'em, and Is especially good in clergymen" Mrs. Morford gave a start" and was going to have a try for the pearls all by himself. They had a description of how the case looked, and came on here after by the first train. They saw nothing of him, but what they did see was Miss Peeks kill, with the identical case In her hand, going to the railway depot hot-foot. Of course they watched their chance and pinned her. If they could have got to town they might have been safe, but we were too quick for 'em, and nabbed 'em as they came off the train. Whether there's anything In their yarn about the third party of course we can't tell; was there anyone called here yesterday afternoon besides the lady?" "Only an old college chum of my late husband a Mr. Glenn, a clergyman, who has lived all his life as a mission ary In India. China and Corea." "All his life? Then you weren't per sonally acquainted with him before, perhaps? I thought not! A good-looking man, was he. dark red hair, a bit gray, scar across the outer corner of his left eye, tnlklsh, good manners, got a nice way with women? Is that about It?" "Ye-es, I don't know but it Is," said Mrs. Morford, faintly. 'Yes, I expected so. Scar-Eyed Jack, sure enough. But what gets me is thnt he should have gone off without the pearls or. hold on! maybe he" At this juncture Thomas entered with a letter und a package, both marked "Immediate." Mrs. Morford, who was now much agitated, bowed for permis sion to the captain, and opened the let ter. "Dear Mrs. Morford I have to offer an apology und explanation. I am not the person I purported to be yester day. Then I was full of hope and con fidence; now I am depressed and Hu miliated; then I was worshiping at the shrine of your beauty and your pearls, now I am kicking myself for my folly and fatuity; then I was a mis sionary from the romantic orient, now am a vagabond in the prosaic Occi dent; then I was Rev. Watson Glenn (I found the name in an old college cata logue of your late husband';year), now am never nuud who, out n any case am left! "You refused my pearls, dear madam. They were not worthy your acceptance. iou can buy a score such lor a dollar or two. On the other hand, I coveted yours, and was firmly convinced that I took them up, wtth my cloak, from the table when I was In such a hurry to catch my train, and carried them away. But man proposes, woman upsets his calculations. When I reached a safe place I opened my case of pearls, to re fresh my soul with their radiance, and found them transformed into Miss PeeksklU's spirometer. At first I was annoyed and inclined to throw the thing away; then being, after all, a gentleman I reflected that the spi rometer had seemed to be very near her heart, and that it might make her happy to have it back. Besides, It did not belong to me, for I never intended (I assure you and her) to steal It!- 'As I do not know her address, I ven ture to send the spirometer to your care, with this note. I wish, madame, that heaven had made for me such a woman as you; had that been the case, I sh'ould not have been, as I am now, the adorer whom you will never again behold, and "The First Victim of Miss PeeksklUs Spirometer." "Good heavens!" exclaimed Mrs. Morford. "And here Is the spirometer, sure enough. Poor Mr. Glenn I mean will you ask Miss Peeksklll to come here?" 'I believe I need not detain you any longer," bowing and trimming his mus tache to veil a smile. "I will attend to that ball bond for you; and mean while I think we may be satisfied to take things as they are!" ' (The End.) The old woman best. The New One with Her Smartness, Does Not Fill the Bill. From the Fargo Sun. The new woman may improve upon acquaintance, but at the present writ ing she Is not a pleasing sight either to man, angels or the truest of her kind. The old woman was Binart enough foH me. She had all her rights. She occu pied a place In history and In the hearts of man second to nothing that God has yet created, and she has aroma in the world like the smell of the orange flowers than sweetened Pasadena. As for me, I would ask no higher tribute than to be written with the obsolete race of women. I desire no loftier meed of mothers whose sons have car ried forward their blessings in lives consecrated to all that was truest and best. The new woman may vote, but no ballot that she can ever cast will equal the prayer the "old woman" offered when she buckled the sword to the side of her boy and sent him into battle, or when by patient precept she guided him Into useful citizenship and splen did manhood. The new woman may ride a wheel, be glib In parliamentary debate, manage real business concerns, whip the men single-handed, organize clubs and wear trousers; she may be bright and brave, active, hustling and vivacious, able to take care of herself and her husband, too, plant potatoes, plow corn fields and break colts, but I shall turn her down with my last ex isting breath unless she preserves her womanhood through it all. She can not do that any more that you can pre serve the flavor of a wild strawberry after It Is canned, or the perfume of a wood violet when you have cultivated It along with garlle. Give me a lender, but let It be the one we are used to. The new one will do for a circus ring, but not for the gardens, the meadow landi, nor the path that leads over the hill to the gruve. ' Will Eatenouch "What have you to- aay, wauorr Walter "Roast beef, roast pork, roast mutton, roawt chicken, sweetbreads, (tib ial sauce, swaet and white potatoes, ham cmelet, string beans, tomato mayonnulsu, pie and pudding," Will Entanough "And n cup of tea, piea." Meaiynn's Uasette. WILL HAVE NEITHER TEETH NOR LEGS - Forecastlat the Horrible Coaditioa el the Conlai Mae. 0L00MY OUTLOOK FOR MALES They Are Deteriorating While Wosaea Are Constaatly Improving, So Says French 8avaatOther Pertiaeat Polats ia Hygienic Science. Says a writer in Household Words: "The conditions of life are changing so much that it is natural to. expect that they will have some effect on the physique of the race. The outlook, ac cording to the pessimistic views of some authorities, - is not particularly bright in this respect. Here, for In stance, Is a French statesman who has been studying military and other rec ords, and has found from his research es evidence of a marked progress of deterioration. In 1610. he says the av erage helghth of man In Europe, was 6 feet inchea; in 17H0 It was 6 feet Inches; In 1120 It was S feet 6 Inches and a fraction, while at the present time it Is S feet 3 Inches. These fig ures show a regular and steady de cline in human stature, and if the calculation . is carried out on these lines the alarmng result appears that by the year 4000 A. D. the stature of the average man will be reduced to 15 inches. The fact . of deterioration Is borne out by the experience of the mili tary authorities of our own and other ' countries, who have found, within a few years, a consider able Increase In the number of recruits who have been rejected on account of their falling to reach the standard of height, even though that has been reduced In certain cases. As In some degree tending to counter balance this unfortunate falling oft, there has been noted, in this country at least, a mprked Increase In the stature of the feminine branch of the rising generation, with an improve ment In the physical development due, no doubt, to the ardor which the sex of late has begun to take outdoor sports and physical exercise. Should this devotion continue, instead of be ing merely a passing fad. It should prove beneficial to coming generations. but is possible that more has been made of this point than It will really bear. But if women maintain their position, -It matters little what may be come of the men, since it has been dis covered by a learned German that 3,000 years hence there will be 220 women to every man! Then, surely, if ever, there will be the millennium." II I! u A LEGLESS OUTLOOK. The same writer continues: "On an other view of the matter, our legs are in imminent danger. According to tho suggestion of Dr. Emll Young, of Gene va, In the course of a thousand years the human race may have lost the ne cessity of the use of legs. Walking Is falling more and more Into disuse. hteam. electricity, tramways, bicycles, have conspired to change the habits of the people, particularly in cities, which are gradually swallowing up the popu lation. The moneyed will take a cab to the next street, rather than walk, and the good old walking tours will be aban doned. In another generation or two aerial chariots will be unchored outside our windows, and electrical coaches stand at every door, and logs will be tipernultles.' All muscular activity will be confined to the hands and arms, which will lengthen and strengthen, while the nether limbs will dwindle to rudimentary survivals. Further meta morphoses await man in tho futur.v His teeth are going, and will entirely disappear, or be dwarfed Into Insignifi cant remnants by the constant use of soft foods which need no chewing, not to speak of the possible introduction of chemical foods which will require no cooking or other preparation, and will scarcely require digestion.. When the standards of beauty are changed In ac cordance with these anatomical altera tions, a person with a fine set of natural teeth would almost seem a beast of prey. The 'coming man' will also be bald, and with the hair the nails will disappear, while the useless division of the foot Into toes Is already supposed to show signs of vanishing. Against these loss es there must be set the great develop ment of the brain accompanying the march of Intellect, for man, as he aban dons physical exertion, having every thing done for him by the perfection of mechanical powers and processes, will turn ull his energies to Intellectual pur suits. The prospect Is not particularly alluring. Big-headed and bald, tooth less, nallless and toeless, diminutive In stature, with no legs to speak of. If his partner, the coming woman, follows similar lines of development, they will form a curious pair." We should say so. LATE STIPER3. The old tradition that to eat anything Just before going to bed was sure to pro duce indigestion and render sleep Im possible Is now happily exploded It is not good, as a matter of fact, to go to bed with the stomach so loaded that the undigested food should render one rest less, but something of a light, palatable nature In the stomach is one of the best aids to quietude and rest In bed. The process of digestion goes on in sleep with as much regularity as when one is taking violent exercise to aid It, and so something in the stomach is a very de sirable condition for the night's rest. Some physicians have declared, Indeed, that a good deal of the prevalent In somnia Is the result of an unconscious craving of tho stomach for food In per sons who have been unduly frightened by the opinion that they must not eat before going to bed, or who have, like many nervous women, been keeping themselves In a state of semi-starva tion. II II II CATCHING COLD. The animal body Is the most delicately constructed thermometer ever devised. It Is entirely self-regulating, and prob ably never becomes entirely deranged. In normal conditions the body con forms to the temperature of the medium In which it finds Itself. The control thus exerted is purely a nervous one an influence exercised by the nerves over the minute blood vessels which cover the surface of the body. There are two sets of these nerves, one acting as the signal line by which the temper ature is recorded In the brain, and the other serving as a medium through which that organ transmits its orders to the blood vessels at the surface. This mechanism works in perfect harmony and unison, except under certain un favorable conditions. Let us endeavor to discover what these conditions are. Except In extreme cases of heat or cold, when these nerves become par tially or wholly paralyzed, they do their work faithfully, so that we shall expect to find the cause of a "cold" In a disturbance of the brain or an Inter ference with the orders which It has sent out to the surface vessels. Obvi ously It is only the latter condition of affairs which Interests us.. Fiobably the chief cause of catching cold lies in the enervation resulting from the hot-house life which too many perHcns load during the winter months, under the Impression that thry are sav ing their bodies from the shock which naturally comes from exposure to a cold and bracing atmosphere. But a gentle shock of that nature Is precisely what Is necessary to tone up the set of norves In questlon.and enable them to perform their work quickly and' properly. Bod ies which are hived up in conflnfment nil winter may blostom out' like the plants In a "greenery," hut like them they will be blighted and sickly undr the slightest change of temperature. Persons who lead such a life may well feel anxious for their safety as the months of chilling blasts and wintry winds draw near. Persons who are Just recovering from an acute disorder, or are still suffering from a chronic complaint, must be especially careful of draughts and undue exposure, since the general vitality Is lowered, and the nervous system us a whole is conse quently somewhat less active, but In no condition will It be found possible to inure the body, to cold by hiving it up for the winter, or by living continually In a state of anxiety. Youth's Com panion. II i! !! UNSOUND TEETH. The belef that unsound teeth belong only to a highly civilised state of life seems to be a prevalent one. But J. Howard Mummery informs us that a very different conclusion was reached by his father more than twenty years ago. after an Inquiry extending over more than a decade. Over 2.000 skulls were examined. Including all the avail able collections in Great Britain. Among thirty-six skulls of ancient Egyptians there were 15 with carious teeth; among 3 Anglo-Saxon skulls, IS; among 146 skulls of Romano-Britons. 41; and among 44 miscellaneous skulls of ancient Britons. . Several other collections gave like results. Ex amining skulls of savage races, 27.7 per cent, of Tasmaniana were found to have dental caries. 20.45 per cent, of native Australians; 4.25 per cent, of the natives of East Africa, and 27.96 per cent, of the natives of West Africa. Natuoe. 1 II II II KEEP THE SHOES DRY. Keeping the feet dry Is of quite as much Importance In summer as In win ter, though many persons do not seem to realise this. In the heavy dews of morning and evening the shoes get damp and suffer seriously, even though the health may not. It is worth while to keep a strict lookout as to the cover ings of little feet. When they come oft at night It Is well to have an old stock ing full of dry oats or beans. Put these into the shoes, tie a string around the stocking Just at the ankle, and set the shoe away for the night. The grain will not only draw out all the moisture from the leather, but will keep the shoes In shape without allowing them to shrink. Rubber boots for men and boys may be filled with beans or oats and dried out when all other means have failed. . There Is nothing more un comfortable than to put on damp and soggy shoe leather, and with fore thought and precaution it is entirely unnecessary. Ledger, II II II IS CYCLING HEALTHY? There are three sets of opinions amongst those who have ridden, or do ride, the cycle as to the effect which riding has on them individually. It Is clear that there are some who can not ride; from the first the exercise does not suit them; from the first It wearies them In mind as well as In body. They try, often under disad vantageous clreumstanees.overwearied with mental or bodily work, or suffer 2,000,000 tefy Made and Sold in Six Months, ending ilarch 1, 1896, Total Product of UWMD The A Mill Alone produced 1,000,000 Barrels, Largest Run on Record. Washburn, Crosby's Superlative is sold everywhere from tho Pacific Coast to St. John's, New Foundland, and in I ngland, Ireland and Scotland very largely, and is recognized as the best flour in th world. ME6ARGEL WHOLESALE AGENTS. Appropriate Buildings Exceptionally Fair. General Justly Keeps LUMBER Present Value. Quality Retains With Xpectancy, Richards Lumber Co,, Gomith LWg. Scranton, Pa. irqm mo STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv. ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sup. plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT STEEL HORSE SHOES snd a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc. TTEII SCRANTON. PA. mm m Mi- For sals by JOHN H. HMti.r'3, Pharmacist, cor. Wyoming Avonua and Spruoo Strsot, Sorantoa, Pa. ing from some symptom of disease, and - not unnaturally tnese discover ' mat ' what they supposed might be .for their benefit Is Just the reverse: their nerv ous centers are shaken, their muscles are tired and strained, their heart ia wearied: If they have gout or rheuma- . tlsm the latent malady comes out: In a short time they show the bad effect of the exercise, and, not liking to say anything by halves, and not believing they could have done anything fur which they were specially unfitted, they are severe In their criticism and condemn a general system on the ground of their own Idiosyncrasy. On the other hand there are men and wo men of all ages who, entering the cycling fraternity, find a pleasure and. a relief In it which are quite phenomen al, and, though It may not last, are suf ficient to make them feel that they must hold by the new acquirement, pa tronise those who excel In It, praise its many and obvious advantages, and by . Imperceptible means become on their part warm and perhaps able. If not. altogether sincere, supporters of it. Lastly, there is a third set to whom cycling comes as a business. For the sake of saving time, or of carrying loads or other useful task, they train themselves In cycling labors and cy cling habits become, without offense, cycling animals and find that they can perform labors otherwise Impossible ' with comparative immunity from In jury. The evidence which men of science can alone accept lies between these three sources, th tast probably . affording the best; and the evidence Is to the effect that, excluding those who are not fitted by constitution to ride at their own physical and mental expense, cycHng is as safe as any other exercise if It be taken In a moderate and common-sense manner. The Lan cet. II II II FOR CLEANING THE FACE. Did you ever come home from a dusty ride, perhaps in a railroad car on a hot day, and after a most vigorous bath still feel dirty, particularly as to your face? And to those who answer affir matively, as almost every one will, a lady says: "There are few soaps that ono can risk using on the face, and even soap will not remove the grime as well as the least bit of cocoa butter. You should be able to get It at any drug store, but be careful that It Is not rancid, and get ony a small quantity at a time, as it Is best to have It sweet. If you want to test Its cleansing 'pow ers, put a little of the cocoa butter on a soft rag after you have washed and dried your face, wipe off your face with this, and you will see by the blackened cloth that It does its work more thor oughly than soap and water. It softens the. skin, and, unlike other oils, leave no traces of greaslness behind It." Country Gentleman. "Come around next w;k Saturday, Hawkins. My wlfo and 1 are going to cel ebrate our sliver wecldlnn." "Sliver wedilnr! Why, you haven't bs married more f.iun twtlve ycar." "I know It, bi't sliver has uprIte4. It's only worth twelve where It uj'i It L twenty-five." BARRELS Contribute Dividends uniir i numc industry ii n Moving NATURALLY. UUR Ttumc II s TEADY inHUC UPON Yours Z-zling 422, &a When Is doubt what to uc tot Nervous UetMii'.y, Lou ot 1'cwcr, Impoiency.Alrophy, Varicocele and otlitrvrailcnt"M;,lr.ira sny cnuu, use Scxinc PUU, Drain, checked and full tiror quickly restored. I r nivln.4. no. trouble, mull f.t.tlv. Mailed forl.U);tlboxci$.M)U. With $j.U0 orders we rive a guarantee la cure or refund the monev. Address J PtALMtOICINE CO., Cleveland, O, HILL DER GO