THE SCRANTON TMBUtfE- AYEDNESDAT, SEPTEMBER 27, 1809. .& -vvvvvvvxi))vv;vivvUMv 'A 1 The Dead Man's Hand. 1 :3t KHLSALL nn n brilliant shoe story vvilter nnd a novelet with a future. Although he made n KKd Income from his pen he had some relatives on his hand, bo he kept l'sa than hnlf his earnings for himself, nnd lived In second-rate lodglngr, shar ing his sitting room with nnot.ier man Totson West. West was n Journalist, a man of con siderable learning and ability; on artis tic matteis tin authority; but ho wis by nature unobtrusive and retiring, and to us The Pioneer, apart from his excellent work, he was chlelly notevvoi thy for hi undisguised admiration for Kclsall and his tales. It was a pleas ure to see a man bo appreciative of another. They lled together some four years, and then Kelsall was struck down vv 1th fever. He took a chill when he was recovering and died; nnd there was no one who knew the innn personally or through his writ ings but was sorry. It was a terrible blow to West lTt had nutsed Kclsall with more tha'i a woman's care all through his Illness, nnd he was nearly heart-broken when lie died. Some of us tried to rhei r him, but our vNlts were not welcome 1 and neer icpeated And so he llvol n lone and solitary man, nursing his grief and di Inking Then a most singular thing hap pened West, who went In fot solid truth 01 what he took for It, and wno we did not think capable of wilting . line of fiction to save, his life, sudd lj came out as a storv wiltcr and In a ery short time bid fair to equal Kelsall in I exultation. And he dldn t seem a bit proud of It. but vns moio annoyed thnn anything else when It was referred to. as a matter of fact, he published bis tnles undei1 a pseu donym This did not Insure sec-ecy, and i month after bis first story ap pealed we of The Pioneer knew that 'Caleb Haidcastle" and Tolson West vveio one and the same man. Hefoto long West tluew up his Jour tinlltli woik nnd confined himself tp his tales They weie Jut the antithesis of Kcl sall s blight wi Kings, nnd yet theif weie those who knew of the relation ship of the two men, who said they deter ted Kelsall's Inlluenre in them, and eeu his humor, thpugh most guiesomely motamoiphosed Sim in deed went so far ns to bav that West was palming of Kelsall's unpub'ishel work as his own; in no other w.iv coul 1 thev acount for his outbuist as a rlnl All the while, West, instead of being elated Ijv his sudden good foitune, seemed to grow more depressed and leserved, till at last he became abso lutely misanthropic. He would shut himself up In his sitting looms for days at a time. His meals weie left outside his door, he slept In the loom, nothing wa seen of him, and nothing beaid but the Intel mlnable "click" of his tpewiltei. Hut his talcs' The fairly can led u awav "ith tlnni. Never lnee Svift was tlieio sifti cau.Hle wit and 1 tin F.ttiip; neei since Poe such, il mdonmeiit to the grateque and the ti rilble His plots were daring to tem r mil befoie long It was iiunored h it n ibis a' count home of the mag-a-me were I of using them. 1 v .is sitting In my renin ore night v Ik n n note was brought to rat' !.. Hoi's snko come. T Wet 1 wis s-omewhat miipiIspiI. ns much t . revive the note Itself as nt Its emo tinnil wordini,, for I scarcely reckoned nvsif .iiniint, his friends Indeed, I did in i know he h'ld any r- Hing bo had met with an accident I put on m lint at once and made tialght for bis looms. III lindladv nut me at the door. 'I was to take you up directly you rim. si." sh' said; and then copflden tt lh "and ' m mote than glad Mi. A ot has sent fei vou f don't know wlat has iurii over him of lite" Is he 111. then?' N s , ipstwlp not ns I knowb of. but T haven' seen him for a ween. He hasn t been out of his loom since last ihur'dav." l; this time we had i cached AVet's rto.'i Mis I'arpei knocked and called H Mr netheli. sir" Tit d or wes Hung open nnd West st iod on the thiei-hold He almost diagppd me In and then slammed the fl oi In ids landlady's face. He looked nt me for a moment In a nervous. lies, luting way then rat down, bulled fri fjee in his hands nnd burst Into t an- i' 'me. come, man " I said, "what th d itkens I? up0 You've got a beastly fit of the blues, anyway. You've ben ovtrw mking yourself." He made no reply; so to give him time to lecover h!muelf T walked a' uirul the room, nitlng details ns X did o The plnco was dirty and un tidv in the Inst ilegiee, and It hnd evi dent v bcivel as a living and sleeping 1'ioin foi some time. Unwnslied plate nnd iups weie rcaltcred among th. hi nk-i ind papers empty spiilt bottles were thrown about the flnoi, nnd ,i 'umbler beside "It IJv It was the tvP'1 writer with i blank bluet of pipr In. It and all aiound weie Innumerable i Hheeiu of tyi r-w mien copy, on th!) sofa wero pillows, rjgs and blankets, . and thie fireplace) way chaotic; with cln- W West had Bomewhat recovered by this time and ame tow aid me. He was terribly changed Never robust at his best, he now looked Ilka a hroken-down old man All life seemed to havo left his drawn and bloodless face his eyes glittered with nn un natural light, his hair was jlreaked with gray. His clothes woio ditty and disheveled, nnd I doubtJ If he had washed for a week. "Hethell," he said, as he canto up to me, "I'm glnd you've come I don't think I could havo stood It for a day longer" "Stood what, old chap? Your room? T don't think I could either. Why don't jou open tho windows and havo the place cleaned? You ought to get out for some fresh air." Ho looked at me In a piteous w,;y. "I can't. lUthell; I can't. Would to heaven ' could." "Nonsense man!" I Bald th ai cheery a tone as I could assume "eomo out with me. You can tell nis about It then," nnd I made, as If for the den-. "Don't leavo me, Hethell," ho cried, clutching my arm. "Don't leave me, for pity's Bake! I can't go out. Sit down with me here." Seeing It was useless to do anything but humor him, I did as he asked me, HENRY A. HCRIHQ, IN TEMPLE BAR. j He seated himself opiiosltc on the sofa, and when ho spoke he toyed aimlessly with the rugs and blankets. "Now West," 1 said, "tell mo nbout It. No humbug, you know." He glanced fearfully around, "Do jou think we are alone?" ho asked. "I'd stake my last dollar on It," 1 replied. West leaned forward. "You're wrong," he hoarsely, "Kelsall's here. 1 don't know w bethel whispered, It was tho gruesomeness of the thought or the man's way of saying It that affected me, but I felt a cold shiver tun do'.vn mv hack. "Nonsense, West," 1 said, after a moment's pause, "you mustn't get Ideas like that Into our hend. You ought not to have kdpt this room on; you brood too much." He got up from the sofa nnd stood over me with the uneat thly light In his eyes. "I tell you, Hethell, Kelsall's here. Don't contindlct me," he suld fiercely. Then he resumed his seat I saw it wns no good In Hating him, so went on. "Well, I'll take your wotd for It, West. Put why should you he unhap p If It Is so? You liked Kclsall hot ter than any other man " Ho sat theie lingering the rugs His face twitched spnsmodlcall.v and he staled at the wall behind him At last he snoke. "I'll tell .vou, Hethell, I think I should go mad If I kept It to mself nny long er You never looked upon me as a likely believer In ghosts, did vou " "No You always seemed matter of fact enough." West laughed hatshly "So 1 was till Kelsall died Di otl know, man, I loved him. I would have died for him when he was living: now 1 hate the very thought of him. hut I nni literally djlng fot hir.i today. Cute him'" He hissed out the last wotds and then sat glowetlng at the dead lire, seemingly unconscious of my patience. "fJo on. West," I said nt length, " I'm waiting" He looked up dazedly, and tlifn passed his hand over his forehead, as If to gather his thoughts. "Yes, yes. I ienienibe, 11 diel 'n this room, on this vetv sof.i, and I alone was wirn him. In his last dajs when he knew he wea goiii'?, we. discussed the futute. and I begged h .-.i to come buck te me ft out the grave. He piomlsed, aid he made me swe'ir by all I held sacred that wmvi he came I would do bis bidding I swot nnd he has come " Again he glanced furtively around the loom "You have seen him then and spoken to hlm?"I asked "No, I have neither seen him nor spoken to him." "Then how In the name of foitune do vou know he Is heto?" West spiang up. "Know he Is here man," pointing to the litter of copy on the table. "Know he Is hete' There's evidence for vou Do you see that pile of typed stuff? Hvery word of It was written today by Kelsall." He was mad statk mad, 1 could not doubt It. Yet possibly I mlgnt do something to lestnre his reason. "How do you make that out, West?" I said as calmly as I could, "If jou have never .seen him'" He was now quite composed mil ie sumed his old seat. "It was about a month nf"i Kel sall's death," he went on, "that I I tst knew it. I was working at th tvpe witter which he had left to nr. making out my (list notice of the academy for the Pioneer, reeling thltsty. I got up for a dilnk. I walked acioss o the sldeboaid theie, and while I was stand ing bv it. 'dirk, click' went thp type writer. I tinned around nmaed nnd there weie the letters dotting down one nfter the other, just ns thnugn some one was woiklng It T tell ou 1 was scared, and I stood thr- with my ejes like to burst from their sock ets. On It went, line by line, nnd then suddenly stopped. It was sow time before I had coinage to go neat it. but when T did nnd looked nt wha' bad been wtltten, I was stunn d I just went to the window nnd opn,-1 it. tot following on my report was the be ginning of a tale written bv th it tjpe writer, a tale the like of wn rli nn me living cnu.d have written Y.ni know it. It was 'The Dead Man' Hind'" I knew It well. It was the one that had started West on his cnieer. "When 1 had In a measure tecovered, 1 took out the sheet and lead It. and wns wondering what on caith, or under It. It nil meant, when a few Impatient click'.' of the machine made me look up It was Instinct, I suppose, or was It some uncoutiollablu Impulse that made mo Inset t another slippf I did so, on went the typewiltet, guided by a master hand, nnd the next folio of that tale was tprd. Hy that time I had grown us-ed to tho situation, ana ns fast as the sheets were finished I Insetted others, and within the hour I held in my hands the manuscript of tho best short story that was ever written. When It was finished the ma- (nine lerused to wrlto mote; and I spent the temalnder of the evening und all that night In marveling over the htiange occurrence "I will ndmit that when I had got over my first fear of the supernatural element In It, my feedings were of un bounded satisfaction. That It was Kel sall's tale 1 was lltmly convinced, for ho had promised to communlcato with me. and this, I gatheted, was his onlv means of doing so. Likely enough Iip would again show his presence In the pamo wav. and it seemed he Intended doing me a good tuin by providing me with literary matter which would en able me to eat n money nnd renown On the other hand, did he Intend mo to use this for publication; nnd, If so, wan I Justified In attaching my own name to It? "After much thought I sent It to Cun llffo, with whom 1 had been In deep Iprrcspondenco for Kelsall when he was ill. He liked It, and asked for more of my work, which I was able to send; for during that foitnlght another tale had been written by the tyjie vvrlter, and one quite, as strong as the former. "Hero was a Btrokn of unexampled good luck; and after i had convinced inysolf that It was likely to continue I threw up my Pioneer work nnd de voted myself entirely to the type writer. But befoie lone I was con scious there was a terrible obligation attached to Kelsall's bequest. I could not leave tho machine when It was writing or about to write. Some In visible Influence constrained me to stand by it; whenever I essayed to leave the room or lie down to rest I was held back by nn unseen, nll-coin-pelllng power, nnd It was Blowly forced upon me that I wns Kelsall's slave. "About a month after I left The Plo ncrr I became conscious of nn added horror. Kelsall's presence gindunlly made Itself felt. Hefore then I was able to move freely by the typewriter, even when It was working, and could use It nt other times If I wished, but slowly nn icy-cold horror has crept Into that chair, nnd there It sltB. I know It Is there, though I can see nothing. Hethell, I tell ou It Is a living hell for mo to feel that shadow from the grave, and never to bo able to leave Its side when It wills. It Is there now" I did not believe him, for I felt con vinced ho was suffering from a terrible monomania; t.o 1 went to tho chair, de termined to show hltn how gioundless were his fears, yet his words had made such an Impression on me that I ap proached It with a ccitaln amount of hesitation. I sat down in It; there was nothing. "Thete. West," I said. "It's nil pure Imagination on jour iiart. Come and trj it yourself." "No, no!" he almost shtleked "I tell jou he Is there. He Is there to me If to no one else. I would not sit In that collln-thalt for heaven itself. Kelsall's In It." 1 shrugged my shouldeis and lesumed my former seat. "Yes, Hethell," West went on. "Kel sall sits theie and wiltcs, and with an ever-Increasing demand upon me and what he now writes Isn't lit for print. Head that." He grabbed hold of a handful of copy and gnve It to me. I lead a page, und that was enough. It simply nude my Ilesh cicep. It might have been written by a soul In purga tory, for of all the fiendish honors the brain of man ever conceived this wns surely the most terrible. To think such things was awful, but to lead them Im possible. I let the paper fall fiom my hands In sheer tenoi "And I have to stand bv for days at a time nnd see that, and woise than that," continued West. It's beyond human endurance. Yet If 1 tiy to es cape, this Invisible power holds m- back. Oood Clod' what shall I do?" I must say I felt for the man. In credible as; it may heem, I was begin ning to bdicve In his story, for the evi dence he had Just showed me seemed Insunnountnble Could any living be ing have wtltten what I had Just read' They weie Indeed the thoughts of one from the nether wot Id, and eveiy word West had spoken seemed to come fiom his very henit. Yet, how could I help him In his tenlble position'' "What do vou want me to do?" I asked. "I don't know, Hethell, ' he suld weatllj, "but It has eased my mind to tell jou all. Suiely jou, with your cool head, can devise something. Think It over. Yet, staj , I was forgetting It did not occur to me that If you enme In when the tj pew titer wns woiklng, your ptesuue might counteract Kelsall's In fluence At any late, you might try Come in tomoirow morning and drag tne out by main force, and break this Infernal spell. Will jou " "Ceitninlj I will, West Hut whj not now V "I cannot, I haven't the strength for the stiuggle. I'm dead beat. I haven't slept two houis at a stietch fot a week. I feel better now. though, after this talk with you nnd I think I could sleep." "Right you are. West. I'll come as soon as 1 can tomorrow. I would not leave jou now, but for the ofllco wotk, but I'll not go till jou'vo hnd a good squat e meal. You'll let me ling for Mrs Hatpei, won't jou." West nodded listless)-. The landlady enme In reply to the bell: In a quarter of nn hour West was sitting down befoie a substantial meal Hut he wouldn't eat. He took a few mouth ful" and then pushed the tiav away Impatiently, and nothing I could say would Induce him to have more He diank off some brandy and then threw himself on the sofu I saw a good P,"o made, urianged his pillows and wraps, and then left him, icluct nntly enough. It was 2 o'clock befoie I left The Pioneei office. I was mote than half Inclined to return to Mr. Harper's, but hesitated to disturb the house, and possibly West, nt that time of the night. So I went back to my rooms nnd tiled to get a few houis' test. Put I could not sleep, for my mind was bllhj' with West. Now that I was away fiom his per sonal Influence the utter Impiobablllty of his htoiy fotccd Itself upon me Yet could I say It was Impossible? The nppearance of a friend In spirit from after death was firmly believed In by many Hut even If Kelsall could have vIMted West would he have tumbled and tottuied his ft lend In this way? He was the kindest of i)vn when liv ing nnd 1 knew he w.is attached to West nnd much nppreclated his devo tion. And could he xos,sibly have wtlt ten the hoirois I hnd lead? ' fn.'t yet If be had not wtltten them who had' Could West have done It? Impossible. Aftei all. what I had learned only confirmed what some believed that the tales were really Kelsall's. If It wero not so. what could be done. The mere fot clng of West ft om his room would not brenkthep d! Kelsall would follow him and what then? How would It all end? Weal "He is Wise Who Talks But Littlef This is only a half truth. If wise men had held their tongues, we should know nothing about the circulation of the blood. If it were not for this advertisement you might never know that Hood's Sarsaparilta is the greatest medicine in the world to purify and enrich your blood, create an appetite, give you strength and steady nerves. Impure Blood "Mycomp!eitonwas bid. Hood's SarsapirdU did much good by purifying my blood. &Iy skin is nvx clear." cAnnicD. McCoy, Watsontown, Pa. llood'i l'llli euro liver llli tlie lion Irritating and only c.lliMrllc to Uk wllli llood' Sriaparlllt. Jonas Long's would go mad under the strain If he were no so nlieady. With my brain full of these conflict ing' and dlsttesslng thoughts. I at last dozed awav. I di earned I was In West's loom. Theie was no one thete but myself myself and the typow titer. Vj I l'ji.ked at it the keyswerepi it U down by the invisible hand, and the letters shuck the papei. I was dtawn toward It by the unknown foict that had mastered West I tried to hold back, but it drew me like a magnet, nnd as I came neat" the machine I knew Kelsall was theie. I could feel his ptebence, cold, told In death; and the inviblble fingers moved and tho letters came down. I looked over and lead what thej' weie writing, und as I lead my heart seemed to stand still, nnd I shrieked aloud Hut I could not move uvvny. Then I had to stand, just ns West had done, bv that Icy horrpr, and lead what moital man had never read before. Then I could bear It no longer; I was going mnd' With a ter ilble crj I burst from the fiendish room and awoke, and found myself standing by my bedside, trembling In everj- limb, with sweat upon my face. I went Into mj' sitting room and stir red up the dying fire, made myself a stiff glas-s of hot spirit nnd then turned Into bed again. This time I soon fell asleex, and though vague thoughts of West and Kelsall flitted across mjr brain I slept long after my usual hour. It was eleven o'clock when 1 reached Mrs. Harpet's. "Well, how is Mr. West this morn ing? Did he have a good night'" I inqulied Mrs Hatper shook her head. '"Deed sir, I don't know how he Is. Ills bieakfast has been standing out side his door .since 8 o'clock, and he won't come for It; and It's little enough he f.Icpt, I'm si. re. Iakely he ha 1 an hour or two after vou went; but he was at It again toon after I went to bed, nnd I don't think that horrid typer of his lias stopped once before daj' break I'm used to It now, nnd It doesnt' wotrlt me; but I could hear It in my sleep, and on It went, "cllcketj' elack' the whole blessed night." I went upstaiis and knocked at the door. "West." I called out "West, let me In It's 1 Hethell." Ther was no reply. I repeated this and hammered loudly, still without e sponse. I but st open the door nnd en tered. The room was In seml-daik-ness the blinds down and tho cur tains diawn The candles on the table had burnt out, and the grate wns full of dead ashes And West he wns sit ting at tho table In the very chulr ho said he dared not use. bowed over tho t) pew i Iter, his fingers still on the keys! "Wake up, old man," I said, touching him gently. Ho did not move. I put my fingers on his hand: It was stone cold. He was dead. A letter of the machine still touched tho caper 1 looked at what he hnd been writing. Oieat heavens! it was a continuation of the horrors ho had shown mo tho night before. THE GREATEST CHESS PLAYER. Paul Morphy and His Achievements at Home nnd Abroad. Tudor Jenks In St. Nicholas. Tho gieatest of chess players was yet a boy when, having easily von tho championship of America, he cross ed tho ocean to meet the exnertn of tho old world. Hefore the end of his twenty-first year ho returned In tri umph, having defeated all who ven tured to meet him on even terms, and having In vain offered a challenge to meet any player at odds. When, In 18S8, the American chess players wrote to tho holder of tho championship, the Hngllshman, How ard Staunton, nnd Invited him to visit America and play their boy champion, Paul Morphy, of New Orleans, foreign chess players were amused, To them this bold young player seemed a new Ivanhoe, advancing to strike his lance point against tho shield of the veto- TODAY'S BIG EVENT M: illinerv? emn Grand Concert by Bauer's Orchestra From 2 until 5 O'Clock WeS That Is Why We Sell So flany of Them. For the Fall and Winter of 1899 and 1900 We are showing the finest and most extensive line of Ready-to-Wear Clothing for Men, Young Men and Boys shown in this city at prices within the reach of all. In a Nutshell We give you custom garments cut by skilled workmen, as low in price as for inferior workmanship. Boyle 416 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. We Solicit Your Patronage. ran Hi Ian de Hols Gllbett While their feeling was paitly amus ment, it was partly liritatlon. Staunion r tinted a brief note In a London paper, for w h eh he edited the chess column. sjln? that If Mr. Morphy wei'j "deslious to win his spurs among th chess ehtv nlry of Kurope" he must cross the ocean and enter the list" The Americans had confidence In their plnjer, und l ilsed money to pay his expenses. Thev nad lo.it ned of his exploits from Paulsen, a noted chct.s player of Iowa, und had been Paulsen's prediction that Moipav would win tho Ameilean tou.-auiiient more than fulfilled. Hefore that contest little was known about the Louisiana boj Murphy's gtanlfwtlie- vvns Spanish, n native of Madrid, who had i migrate J to tho United t-'ta: s Paul's f,ahcr was a successful lawyer and became a Judge. Paul learned chess nt ten jears of ace, and by the time he wns thir teen ho was winning many .games from the stiongest playets of his own city When the little player was twelve, Ml, I.owenthal, a celebrated champion, camo to visit Judge Mor phy, and was glad to test tho skill of tho lnfnnt phenomenon. They played tlueo games, Paul won two, nnd the grown-up expert could secute only a draw game. Hut he did not care to bo a professional player. He went to school and college until he wns eigh teen, nnd played chess only ns on amusement, until there was a tourna ment In New Yoik during 1837. Like a tiny Julius Caesar, Paul came, play ed and conquered. No one could stand against him. Much good Ink nnd paper has been wasted upon tho question why Staun ton und Morphy did not play, and that Staunton, for one icason or nnother, avoided a match. Tho Hlrmlngham tournament wns won by I.owenthal, who bent Staunton twice. So It may bo argued that Morphy was moro tlnn a match for the Kngllsh chnmplons. Crossing tho Kngllsh channel, ho de feated the Prusslnn, Harrwltz, tho strongest player In France, and Andei sen, nlso a iPrusstan, who won tho last International tournament; tUen, re Sons ? ell Our $10 Suits for turning to Hnglnnd, he beat the presi dent of the London Chess club seven gnmes out of eight, tho first having been a draw. Having thus scoted a victoty like that of Admiral Dewey at Manila, Motphy pli)ed no moie setious matches The rest of his tour abroad was meicly one of triumph and sight seeing. At a banquet given to him In Pails his bust wus crowned with laurel, and everywhere lie was hailed as the unquestioned champion of the woild. After his loturn to America the pioud chess players of his natlvo land gave him a rosewood chess board with gold and silver chessmen. A HAT OF SPUN GLASS. A guest at one of the leading New Or leans hotels put In an appearance In tho olllce wearing a very peculiar-looking hat At llrtt gluncu It teemed to bo mode of finely woven brown straw, but closer scrutiny showed that tho material was evidently something else. It was passed around among a, group of friends und they all took a guest, Ouo thought It wns prepare u silk uud another thought It was asbestos "You are all wrong." said tho gentle man; "It Is made of t,pun glass You can hco It has conslcletablo elasticity, nnd I fancy It would bo about ns hard to bicak as an ordinary Panama. I value ilio hat chiefly as a curio," he con tinued, "for It In too hot to be vvotu with much comfort. It was made several years ago by nn old Alsatian nt Pittsburg, Pa , who Invented a process for spinning and weaving glass, his Idea being to pro. duco a non-lnflammablo fubtlo for win dow curtains nnd other draperies. It was found, hovvovcr, that the stuff couldn't be made attractive to tho eye It was too stiff und ungraceful and the expense wns prohibitive for theatrical drop curtains tho one purpose to which It might have been ndnpted Anyhow, ho gnvo up tho undertaking nnd this hat wns one of tho lait things ho made. I had backed tho enterprise to a Hinall extent, so tho hat stunrts mo In nbout $1,100. It Is the most expensive article of Httlro that I pos sens. I don't know anything about Its acoustic properties, but I prcsumo cno might talk through it tho samo us through any other hat." New Orleans Tlmcs-Dcrrocrat. " $10 artists and made by is frequently asked Mucklow, CLIMBED MILLIONS OF STEPS. You know how tiring It Is to climb up a flight of steps, even when they ire veil mado and nicely upholstered, but 1 10 chances aro that you have never given tho 'bus conductor a thought, although ho probably climbs more btulrs than nny other Individual in tho world An oblig ing London 'bus conductor bus gono Into tho matter, anil, being nn adept at fig ures, us tho majority of "bus conductois are, ho quickly evohed the following In tel estlng facts "There arc" lie said, "nine htons fiom the platform to the top of tho 'bus, rnd It is rather underrating it to bay that I climb that flight of steps twelve times nn hour during tho fifteen hours I nni en duty every day; twenty would bo nearer tlm mark, but to be on the safe sldo v e will put It down as twelve. "Nino steps nt twelve times un honr, fifteen hours a da), soven days a week. 43,300 a month, or GW.oin a year. Tho number of times I step oft tho 'bus mil on again nnd the incidental number of steps I climb llko any other Individual In the ordinary course of life brings the nnnual total up, I reckon, to 00,004 steps a year. "Itecn at this Job long? I've been working this route Just twenty-one years bo that I've climbed qulto 12.COil.000 steps during that time I don't notice It now hut I did nt the (list go off." New York Telegram. The Hoy's Wishes. Hoys haven't alwavs n great imagina tion, but most of them have a good deal of tcnnclti A man wishing to mnko himself pleasant to the little In other of his betrothed, told him to wish for some thing and ho would give it to him. "A box of chocolates " said the boy "Whit else'" usked tho enorous '.over "Another box of chocolates." "Oh, but wish for something else. Your little stomach couldn't hold nil tbeso chocolates." "Well, then." nnsvveied tho boy. "an other stomach "Household Words, Rl'nY LH'S-AiuI a clear complexion the pride of woman Have you lost these chnrms through Torpid Liver, Constipa tion. HllloUKtiess, or Norvousntss? Dr Akiicw's Liver lills will restoro them to you 10 Little "Ilutilos" in n vlnl-10 cent Aot like a tharm. Never gripe. Bold by Matthews Bros nnd W. T. Clink. -4.