;. I ' i mi . . WMIWIIU. Whre lie tbe land of "ornewha but daaor jnntn)? Vhrre brown bees over hum there 'Mnnfr flowers of endless Mar? Ko matterl Desert, mutt be ci oaa,, On wairur barks will oft be toawd, .And many dreams aa Jeisam lost, tre reach n tbee, O tomnbar Far. dim-rupaned realm of Somewhere, Keyond he present's pa a. Where rial jrtng- aaila that coma there Ne'er leave thr porta aaa'il Tb life Is doue. and atrlvina'a o'er, iluy some strong hand upon thy shore beach out a well ome evermore To I'llnrlms seeking Pomewherel Will T. Hale, in Memphis Commercial-Appeal. IN THE BREAKERS. As the violent storm of the other night has thrown us on tbe Corsican coast let me tell you a terrible atorr of the si' a, of which the fishermen of the pl;ice often speak at eventide, ana about which chance has enabled ine to learn stranue particulars. It was three years ago. I was ailing tbe Sardinian bea with seven or eight sailors of tbe Coast Mirvey. It was a rouh voyage for a novice; we did not have one good day through March. The wind was fu rious, and the waves never calmed. One evening, as we were flying be fo.e the tempest, our vessel came for r tue tj the mouth of tho Straits of Houiu 10, among some little islands. 'itioir aspe.t was not allur.ng. They were great, bald rocks, covered with birds, some bushes of lentisk. a few tufis of at'Siutbe, and here and there, in the slime, decariug pieces of wo d. But, by my soul, it was better to pass the night among the-e sinister rocks than to be on a frail o!d baric, half decked, where the blat came in as though it were quite at home; so we con tented ourselves. So sooner had we disembarked than the sailors lighted a tire for the fish soup, and tbe captain called me, pointing to a little Inciosure sur rounded by a white wall almost lo t in the mist at the end ot tbe island. Will ..ou come to the cemtteryr" said be. A ce . etcry, captain! Whore are re?" On Via l.avezzi Islands, monsieur. The i.lO men of the frigate hemil lame are l-uned here at tbe spot where she was 1 st ten years ago l'our fcliows: As they don't receive many visits, the least we can do is to go ml say "lion jour to theiu as long as we aie here." Willi all ray hearT, Captain." How ud it wat, the cemetery of the Seiuiilante! 1 sec it still, with its little, low wall; its open dior. rusty and bard to open: Us silent chapel; tbe hundreds of black crosses bidden by the weeds Not one wreath of immortelles not one sou venir nothing: Ah, the poor, aban doned dead? II.. w cold they luusl bo lu their chance tomls! We stayed a moment, kneeling. Tne Captain prayed aloud. J-.n ur inous gulls, the only guard ans of the cemetery, circled over our heads, pjingling their hoarse cries with the wailing of the sea. The prayer Bn iabe.l. we c.uue sadly back to the cor ner of the island where the bark was anchored. iNo time had been ot duriag our absence. We found a great tire flaming in the shelter of a great rock, and the soup smoking, biitii.g down in a circle, with our lect to tbe flames, soon each bad on his knees a bowl of red pottery, in which were two slices of tl.i k bread, covered plentifully with the broth. The repast was a silent one. We we:e wet. we were hungry, and then, the nearness of tbe graveyard: However, when the bowls were emptied we lighted our pipes and taUed a little naturally of the bemlllanie. Tell me, how did It happen?" I a' lied the Captain, who, with his bead in bis hands, stared at the flames with a thoughtful air. How did it happen?" said tho good Liooetti, with a heavy sigh. Alas, no human being can tell. All we know is that the eiuil!ante. laden with troops, left Toulon the even ng before in bad weather. Iur Ing tbe night it grew worse wind, rain, and a terrible sea, the like of whi' h was never seen before. In the morning the wind fell a little, but tbe sea was worse. If poss.ble, and with it the devil's own log, so that one could not have distinguished a beacon light four feet away. These fogs nioiiflen: You have no Idea tiow deceitful they are: I'.ut I also have an idea that the Semillante must have lost her helm In tbe room ing, for the captain, even in a heavy fog, could hardly have made such a mistake. He was a well-tried ma riner. We ail knew blm. He had commanded the Corsican station lor three years, and knew tbe coast as. well as I, wbo knew nothing else " "At what time ao they think that the .Semillante perlshel?" It must have been at noon yes, monsieu-, fully no n, but; forsooth, with that fog, that noon was worth no more than a night as black as the Jaws of a wolf. A life-saver of the coast lold me that the same day, to ward 11:30, having gone out of bis cabin to fasten his shutters, tbe w.nd whirled away his cap, and at the risk of being can led off himself by the blast be commenced to crawl along the beach on all fours after it- You see, tbe douanlers aren't rich, and a cap costs. Well, it seems that our man, lifting his head, 6aw right near him. through the roz, a great ship scudding aton? under bare poles to ward t he Lave.zi Islands. 'This ship went very fast, so fast that he had hardly time for a good look. Everything points to the be lief that it was the Semillante, be cause a half hour later the shepherds of the islands heard why, here comes the shepherd himself; he will 1 ell you. l ooiour, l'aloiulK Come, warm thyseir. Have uo fear." A inu i ed man whom I had seen sor s me minutes prowling around our 11. e, and whom had taken for one i t the crew, because I did not know 1 hat there was a shepherd on tho inland, approached us timidly. He was an old leper, three-quarters of i.n id ot ami a p:ey to I know not what other scorbutic evil, which luade his lips horrible to behold, so swollen were they. They explained to bitu at length what we were talk ing about; then lifting bis dreadful lips with hi linger, the old man said that on tbe day in question, about noou, be heard from bis but a fright ful crash on the ro ks, but as the is land was covered with water be could not get out to see. It was not until tbe next morning that on opening bis door he had seen the beach cov ered with driftwood and corpses, left there by the waves. Insane with fear, he had fled to his boat to go to lionifacio tor help. Tired with having aald so much, the shepherd sat down and tbe cap tain went on with his story "Yes, monsieur, It was this poor old fellow who came to warn us. He was crazy with frtgbt, and aver since bis brain has been off tbe track. To (ell tbe truth, there was otuee enough for it Imagine r00 corpses In neap, on tbe sand, mi ed with great timbet and strips ot 6a iL Poor Semillante.' The sea bad crurhed her into crumbs with one blow 1'alombo with diffi culty got enough wood to build s fence aiound his but As for the men, nearly all of them were horribly disfigured and mutilated. It wai pitiful to see them clinging tozethei in bunches. We found the captain in gaia uniform, tbe cbapla'n wlto his stole. In a corner, between twe rocks, there was a little cabin boy. with bis eyes open. One might bav thought him alive; but no, it had been decreed that not one should es cape." Here be stopped. Careful, Nardi," said he, th nre is going out." Nardi threw two or three tarred logs on the embers, which quicklj blazed again. Liooetti continued: "Tbe saddest part of the story is yet to come. Three weeks before the disaster a lit tle cutter, which was going to tht Crimea like the Semillante, was wrecked in the same wav, nearly In the same place, only, this time we managed to save tbe crew and twenty soldiers wbo were on board. We took them to Bonifacio and kept them there at the station with us for two days. Once thoroughly dry and on foot again, it was good-bye, good luck. They returned to Toulon, from which port they embarked again sev eral days later for the Crimea. And Imagineon what sbipl On tbe Semil lante. We found them all twenty lying among the dead just where we are now. 1 picked up myself a band some Brigadier, with along mustache, a strapllog from Paris, whom I bad taken to my own bouse, and who made us laugh all the time with bit stories. To see him there crushed me Oh, Holv Mother!" Thereupon the good Lionettl, much moved, shoo tbe cinders from bis pipe, and rolling himself in bis cape, wished me good night. Still under the influence of the lu. brious tale which I had heard, I tr.ed to rebuild in my fancy the poor, departed ship, and the story of thi, agony of which the seagulls were the only witnesses, several details which had struck me, the Captain in gala dress, the Chaplain's stole, tho twenty soldiers helped me to imagine all the scenes of the drama. I saw the frigate leaving Toulon in the night. She loses sight of the jort. The sea Is high, the wind high. The Cautain is a valliant ottlcer, and every one on board is undisturbe '. In the inornlug a mist arises from the sea. They commence to be un easy. All the cie w are on de k. Tli captain does not leave the bridge, lietween desks, where the sol diers are shut up. it is dark, the ail is close. Some are iil, lying on theii knapsacks. The ship pitches iior. ribly. It is impo-sitile to stand up. Sitting on the Hour, talking ic groups, they cling to the benches. It Is uecessary to shout to be heard. oiuebegin to be frightened. Lis ten then: Wrecks are freciuent la these waters, the sailors are there to say so. and what they say is not re assuring. Their brigadier, too, a Parisian who alwavs talks wildly, makes his t'.esh c ccp with his jokes. A wreck! Oh, a wreck Is amusing, very. We will be well out of it af ter our iced bath. Then they will take us to Bonifacio, io eat black birds with old Lionetti." Suddenly a crash! What Is It What can it be? 'The helm Is gone." cries a drip ping sailor, who goes running between decks. "Bon voyage:" snouts tbal madman, the brigadier but no on laughs r.ow. The fug prevents theii seeing one anof er. Tbe sailors gc and come, groping along frightened. Tbe helm is gone. It is in.possibl to guide the ship. The Semillante, adrift, t ies before the wind. It is at this moment that the doiianier sees her pass. It is hall after 11. .lust ahead, they hear, lig the roar of a cannon, the breakers! It is finished. There is no hope. They are going straight on the rocks. The captain goes down to his cabin. He comes up in a moment to take hli place on the bridge in bis full uni form. He wishes to meet death ii brave attire. Between decks the soldiers In mortal terror gaze at one anotbei without a word. The sick try to sit up: tbe little brigadier laughs no longer. Then tbe door opens, and tbe chaplain with bis stole appear, on the threshold. 'To your knees, mr children: All obey. In a ringing voice the priest begins the prayer for the dying. .Suddenly a fearful shock, a great cry, upstretched arras, clinging hands, wild eyes, before which tb vision of death has flashed. Miserere, It was thus that I passed tbe nlgbtt dreaming, bringing back through tea years the souls who had perished in the poor ship whose debris sur rounded ms. Far away in the strait the tempest raged. Tbe Came of t.i 2 re bent under the blast, and I heard our bark tb. ashing and straining at her moorings at the foot of tht rocks. Roma nee. Two Reason. At a circuit court held some yean igo In a Western State an action of tjectment was tried "by the court with ut a Jury." The decision rendered ivas couched in such a way that it .Mused considerable amusement The suit was brought by a religion, loclety to recover possession of a cem etery. The defendant was a physi cian In active practice, who, as one of i committee appointed by tbe church, had bought tbe ground for the use of tbe society. Afterward he severed his connection frith the society, and It was found that be had taken the title in his own name, ind Intended to appropriate the prem ises for his private use. The defendant insisted that he bad bought the ground In his own right after his relations to the society bad ceased. The court, after bearing the evidence ind arguments, proceeded to state the grounds for his decision, and ordered ludgment for the plaintiff. 'Whereupon the defendant's counsel arose, and ask ed the court to state more fully the reasons for the decision. "Certainly," said his honor, promptly. "But as you have heard what I have laid, I have only two additional rea sons to give: One is that the church ieems to need a cemetery, and the oth er that the doctor has failed to show that bis practice Is sufficiently large to make It necessary for him to keep burying ground of his own." Two Thousand a Week An expert employed by a New York house earns a salary of $8,000 a year for Jnst four weeks' work two In the autumn and two In the spring. His business la to go to Hamburg, and, out of thousands of designs made there and submitted to him for "edgings," to select those that shall be manufactured for the American market. Oxen form tbe circulating medium among the Zulus and Kaffirs. OP VALUE TO SPORTSMEfl ' ja djsvMxble dtetke Hassle ead the Two-Eyed Starlit. One ef tbe greatest Improvements It he history of the gun, or fowling piece, is It was first called, was the Introduct ion by old Joe Manton ef what la armed choke. The choke system has ts drawbacks, nevertheless. The priii jjial one is that while the uncooked B-llnder will not kill at much over ards, the choked gun at that distance boots like a rifle, the shot flying so lose as to become almost a bullet, ne essltadng a very close aim, and some tmea riddling a bird with the amount f shot poured Into It In European overt shooting the sport varies from abbits in a bunch of gorse, getting up .t 20 yards, to the spinneys, where the taeasant rockets at 50 to 60 yards above be tree tops and goes like the wind. To set these exigencies it has always een necessary for the sportsman to ave two guns, one choke and one al sost cylinder. They have, In some asea, been partly met by having two ets of barrels differently bored for the sme gun, so that they can be changed t will according to the game to be hot The latest solution of the prob m Is celled tbe edjnstsble mnszle, and i, as Its name implies, a muzzle of bout three Inches in length, forming radically an extension of the barrels ADJUSTABLE CHOKK STCZZLB. lready on the gun, and capable of bo ng affixed at pleasure. In this addl lonal muzzle is placed the amount of ihoke desired by tbe shooter, so that rhen tbe muzzle is adjusted the gun at ince kills to the greater distance de li red. The attaching of the muzzle to lie barrel is done by a lock screw at he upper part of the barrels, and by a teeuliar and very close fitting screw vhlch passes through the full length of he adjustable muzzle into a olId re ceptacle (threaded) for It, in the rib letween the barrels. This Is calculat k1 to hold it perfectly secure and gas Isht. To the wild fowler In the coming rason, especially, this will be useful, ts when the fowls leave the open water ind take to the sedges a different gun s generally desired. Another Item, while not exactly new, as been of late years so much lmprov k1 that it may almost be ranked as new. This Is the two-eyed sight It was in tented by a butler in an English no ileuian's family, who was first struck y the remark of an eminent London culist to the effect that nearly 73 per s-nt of men had defective vision. This toct made the butler, whose name was llbert think about the number of poor hots there were among the English ;ontry. After numberless experiments le evolved a rather crude arrangement if two things like small square needles i sixteenth of an Inch thick, one about Ive inches long, the other about three nches long, which were fixed on the rib letween the barrels of a gun near the right and were expected to remedy he defective left eye and regulate the -lght He managed to get the Earl de 5roy, the famous running rifle shot; he Marquis of RIpon, Lord Mnnson, Mr Ralph Payne Galwey and others to ake the thing up, try it and report on t, and In almost every case the report iras very favorable, to the effect that It iertalnly did improve the shooting. Dutslde of these experts the rank and lie of gunners would take no stock In It !t was claimed, and with reason, that lie average wing shot never saw the dghta on a shotgun, anyhow, .nen ixperiments evolved a number of cu rious things, one of which was that the nuzzle of a gun or rifle could be pushed trough the crown of a stovepipe bat !rom tbe inside to the outside, so that be muzzle projected six Inches, and hat while the left eye was shut it was impossible to aim with any certainty, be bat blocking the sight, when the eft eye was opened It was possible not )nly to aim, but also to see the sight on be end of the barrels, the bat prao Ically becoming transparent Marriages of To-Day. The well-poised, self-respecting Ctrl of the day is In no baste to wed. the must be educated first, which tneans a communion with books un til she is one-and-twenty. After that, n all irobabllity, she enters some hosen field of labor, and finds in con itant occupation less time for senti ment than was allowed tbe lacka laisical girl of the past It is our lamest conviction that many girls bave been led into tbe error of a foolish marriage through a lack of ccupation. Busy, active, lntelll tent women have no time and less nclination for the making of re liances. They are absorbed in art, n music, or in more humdrum occu pations that return an excellent re uuneration and which they are too ise to give up until they are certain lhat tbe man who asks them is able to compensate for all that they put iway for nis sake. Many a woman lefers marriage because she feels that her duty 11 a at home in the care ot in aged father or an invalid mother r helpless brothers and sisters wbo lepend upon ber alone for support I erbaps some one argues that all Ibis tends to the establishment of a tast spinster-hood, but let us whisper that after all when the right man tomes along, when real love creeps mto the heart, and wily Cupid makes lis presence felt, then it matters not ebat &pecious argument may bave keen advanced heretofore, engage bent aud marriage appear to be tbe truest art and the noblest duty; for, Ifter all, women are but women, kowever brave and self-reliant the bay be, . "BunWna. I rues a, la about est man of his years In this oity," said the citizen who Knows a great deal, does hersOtoea a great deal? I should say ee, IVftm sir, that man knows almost as iboeb ea his lvyea-eia.angnter who MCVn IU1C WITH TWO-ITID 8IOHT IX POSITI OH ROMANCE OF A GOLO MINE, What a Mln'na Bfaa Foaad Una Aaaaaa; tb Mlaaa off Arliaam. W. n. Combs, a well known min ing operator, has just returned trom a four months' trip to Arl. ona, and is at the Albany. Mr. Comb.' pur. pose in takiug tbe trip was to se cure some valuable gold mines in tbe vicinity ot Pr.scott for an .Eastern syndicate. His .mission was entirely suicessinl, and resulted In securing the valuable group of claims known as tbe enezia group in tbe Has syanina distr eta, thirteen ml es from 1'rescott Tbe consideration paid was large, but the mines are said to be of great richness. 'There is quite a romance eon nected wltb the d is o very and de velopment of these claims," said Mr. Combs yesterday "In 1885 Ferdi nand Scopel, an Italian of the mid dle class, borrowed a mule from a Mexican and started out from Pres cott p ospecting. He bad just 11 In money when be discovered the Ven ezia vein and on finding it of such rlcbness be began to work it, putting up an arrastra, which he worked wltb bis mule. 'He took out considerable money In tbe course of time, built a cabin, and brought bis wife and daughter, who is a baudsome and athletic young woman. He purchased more mules, and now has six arrastras running; lis has twenty-four feet of water, which be uses for six mouths of tbe year, employing steam tbe remainder ot tbe year. Ills wife and daughter help bim to mine tbe claims and run the plant. "Tbe, daughter, wbo Is a pretty girl, strong eoougb to throw a burro from tbe trail and speak Ave lan guages, packs tbe ere and wood and runs tbe windlass, while tbe wife tuns the arrastras. They bave al ready taken out and sold over $30,000 in gold. In the courso of time Scopel has added six other claims to bis original location, and bas done 000 feet of development work upon tbe property. Tbe o:e is of a hlgb grade milling quality, yielding from ilO to 1150 per ton. Tbe vain itself ranges from eight inches to eight feet wide. It adjoins the old Cook prop erty in Cook canyon, which bas pro. duced from $200,000. to;ioo,000, and it is estlmatea that In the Venezia group there are between 100,000 and 150.000 tons of ore insight" Denver Republican. Faclnc Death. In a recent number of the Contempo rary Review, the late Mrs. Alexander Ireland gives an account of an experi ence she had during a visit in October, 1H89. to the home of James Anthony I-'roude, tbe historian, in Scotland. Mrs. Ireland went on a boating expe dition with Mr. Froude and his daugh- er. Tbe young lady spoke somewhat .pologetieally of the wild look of the sea and her father's love of danger, and '.egged their visitor not to feel com pelled to go. But I was In no mood to manufac ture fears, and felt none. The wind and tide were both against us, and It was slow work for the three strong boatmen to pull against both, and '.here was a sense of labored strain In our progress. After two or three hours tbe order ras given to go homeward, and a largt nil was hoisted. Now, with wind and Ide in our favor, and the wind begin ilng to blow most violently, we literal y Hew along the water. The sensation vas exhilarating and deeply exciting. ! Suddenly there was a change in ses ;nd sky. An ominous blackness lay on lie water around our little boat Th hi n still shone at a distance, but w teemed In night The cry of the wind vas a wild shriek, the water rose tu nultnously, and rain and hall fell ibuudantly. We shipped a good deal if water. The little craft could not b lghted. 1 "Are yon afraid?" asked Mr. Fronds n a loud but thoroughly unmoved voice, ind with what seemed a sardonic smile, "Not In the least," was my reply. The storm grew more violent Mls4 Troude, who was self-possessed but rery pale, said, so as to be heard, "I hink we are in danger, father." To .vhlch the reply, given without a tings f emotion, was, "Very likely." , I realized that there was a near pos ilblllty of our being drowned. Sud lenly Mr. Froude called, close to my, ar, "Are you ready?" And something nerved me up to add listlnctly, "Quite ready. The place tnd the hour end the company will do rery well, if it Is to be now and here." -Well," he said, "if 'Us not now. 'tis ct to come the readiness Is all" Almost as the words were spoken Jie boat righted, the storm abated, and xe got under shelter of some rocks. Then Mr. Froude said, coldly: "Don't trust to first Impressions, Mrs. freland." And he gave me one of his nnfavora- )le, searching looks. Brain Work and Vitality. Fou may kill a man with anxiety very quickly; but it is difficult to kill him with work, especially if he re tains the power, which most men of intellectual occupations more or less possess, of sleeping nearly at will, and without torpor. The man who bas used bis brain all bis life, say for six hours a day. bas, In fact trained bis nerve power and placed it beyond tbe reach of early decay, or that kind of feebleness which makes so many ap parently healthy men succumb so readily to attacks of disease. Doctors know the difference among jien In this respect quite . well, and many of them acknowledge that the habit of surviving" which they find in their best patients arises from two causes one, which used to be always pleaded, being tbat soundness of physical constitution which some men enjoy by hereditary right, and in the other, some recondite form ot brain power, seldom exhibited, except un der strong excitement, by any but those who throughout life have been compelled to think and, so to speak, use their thoughts as other men us their ligaments and muscles. Clf such a man is tired of life, medi cine will not save bim; but, as a rule, bis will, consciously or unconciously, compels tbe trained nerve-power to struggle on. Whether the brain can actually give power to the muscles is not certain, though the enormous strength sometimes developed in a last rally looks very like it; but tbat it can materially effect vitality is quite certain, and has been acknowl edged by the experienced in all ages. London Speaker. "Ml mux," said the tramp, trying to work on her sympathies, 'can I have a fit in your vestibule?" "No," she aald; "go across the street to the UUiot sooi.M Ciyeisllimil mint leaves in a new eotaleetion headed round at fashion able dlaeen with salted almonds. Bemevber that what your children takes wings nj flies I And pains of rheumatism can be eurad by removing tbe oanaa, laetie sold In tbe blood. Hood's 8a raa par Ilia, auras rbao matiam by nnfarallaing this aeld. Gas Sarsaparilla Hood's Pills era mild and efsetlve. AND THISTLES. MOTHER'S leva is tbe same kind of love as God's love. Tn most that any one can lose is to lose faith In Ood. It yon are praying for a re vival don't do it on a back seat. Ko man gets jiuch great pay " the one wno aoes God's work. Tins religion of Christ never puts a long face on anybody. I r often happens that a dog with out teetb barks tbe most No one can bave joy to-day who is worrying about to-morrow. So onb can be truly brave who la not trying to be truly good. The first prayer was made by the man wbo bad tbe first need. It doesn't pay to build any kind of bouse on a poor foundation. Tms meanest man you know de mands that God shall be good. Tbb people who need your prayers most are those you don't like. Thk right time to repent is when you find out that you are wrong. Toe dovl.'s best time to make bay Is when Christian's are not busy. NoTrnN'o keeps a stingy man from stealing but the risk of the thing. There isn't a promise in the Bible for anybody who Is not in earnest TnE devil never puts on mourning when a stingy man joins the church. Heavex is alwavs bending to er nelp the man who carries a heavy bur- . ..,.. . l On-e of tho most foolish men la the one who worries about things he can't help. God never disowns His children be cause they now and then make a mis take. If you arc leading a child, it mat be that you are commanding an army. God was never able to say what be wanted to say to men until Christ cam a If there were no troubles to talk about some people would be always silent This man who is not honest In bis religion is not to be trusted any. where. Whejt you want to find a coward, nunt up tbe man who knows he Is Wrong. anytitivo that makes us take an unselfish interest in others makes us i better. j A revival is in good condition when taking up a collection won't i chill it Toe devil has to work extra hard to get hold of children who have good mothers. One of the hardest things to get people to believe, is tbat little sins are deadly. If you want to have a good time in Heaven, stop hunting for an easy place here. Christ has nowhere promised to bear the burdens of people who bor row trouble. Tbe woman who talks about bei neighbors is no worse than the one wbo listens. The woman with two mites dldn'v do any more than every Christian ought to do. It is bard to convince a man who has no religion that anybody else is as good as he la Wobkiko without a plan Is one ot Che best ways in tbe world to waste your strength. No man can get any nearer to God than he is willing to try to bring everybody else. There Is something wrong when a church member bas to go to tbe thea ter for enjoyment People who never worry do a good Jeal of missionary work tbat they don't get credit for. "Know thyself," is ffood advice nut "know about your tne general practice. neighbor" is ' ' Blaaps Wit Her Eyas Ofwa. Richard Risley of Port Jefferson, La. L, is a hard-working bayman. He bas a rather pretty daughter, wbo for the past year, according to tbe New York World, has been puzzling the doctors in consequence of a peculiar affliction which has attacked ber eyes. , Miss Risley is about 17 years old. A year ago,, while walking on tbe beach near ber home with ber mother, she suddenly exclaimed that something , bad entered her eye. She pressed ber hands over her eyes and a moment later fell in a St The young woman ( was carried home in a partially un conscious condition. When finally she was restored to consciousness it was discovered that her eyes bad a strained look as though some inward pressure was forcing them ont of their sockets. She complained of no pain, but her eyes continued to protrude more and more until It would that m ust fall out Tbe eyes are) so much protruded that the lids can not close down over them, so that the sufferer sleeps at night wltb ber eyes wide open. Her sense of sight la gone while she Sleeps, thia having , been demonstrated by experiments. The peci'Mar trouble which baa at tacked her eyes also appears to be sapping the young woman's health. She has become pale and emaciated, and bas the appearance of a person suf fecing from consumption. Her con dition bas thus far defied tbe skill of the doctors, wbo admit tbat tbey are unable to explain tne cause. ! There Is one sort of Ignorance that becomes women; ignorance of men. The Son In law (gratefully) I don't mow what I should bave done if you sadn't given as ell this farsltare. The father-In la w That's so, my boy; wltn rat it my daugbter couldn't bave given yon much of a home. New York Mao aid. A new process of making gas from crude petroleum, water and peat is being tried in Boston with good re- suits. . The Empress Josephine. . was fond of orange water. ndjS I FIG8 i -r e - -at i w i IgTot a xarmmoui.i She was a youug teacher from tbe Bast en ber way to tbe Western States to teach school. She had gone away from borne with an idea tbat her des tination was in "a wild and wooly slace and that the biggest crop was Indians. Her ideas rapidly changed .. . j . i la sne was speeaing on wwntu wm kroad Pacific, she confided ber double ibout civilization to a fellow-passe n rer, a harmless-looking, middle-aged man, and told blm tbe purpose of ber trip was to teach school. "Are you prepared?" be asked in the tone of a clerical examiner to one about to depart on the long journey from which there is no end. "Yes," she said timidly, "I think io. I have been graduated twice and taught a whole year at borne." Indeed! You have some advan tage anyway. Will you permit me to ask you a few questions?" "Oh, yes, I wish you would. . I have passed good examinations in the East, but I think I don't fully understand Western ideas." "Well, suppose you tell me what sonstltutes glass?" "Why, white sand and wby. ion't remember what else. How lueer! I am so sorry. I wish " "Oh, never mind. Don't get ex sited. It's all right. Wnere is alu minum found?" "Oh, tbat is mined. Isn't it?" "No: it is a product of manufac ;ure. What is brass made of?" The muscles about ber mouth quiv jred and her voice trembled slightly is she said: "I guess it is made of copper and iron, but I don't know. It's so stu pid of me to forget, but l bave wonted so hard to remember every thing and I haven't succeeded. It n ake me feel very bad." "My dear young lady, you are on ;he road to success. You can't teach the voung idea now to shoot any bet I ler for knowing tb j composition of ill things probable. Know few things out know them well. What the West is flooded with is walking en cyclopedias and we've had enough of them. Just throw off your superflu )us knowledge and you'll succeed." And she did. Origin or Tabla Ctonull. A French writer attempts to trace table utensils most of them of re nt introduction to their origin. The Romans took their meals lying upon very low couches, and It was not until about the time of Charle- Imagne thit a stand was used, around 'hi..h -ra .,, 11(ih. ions, while tbe table made its ap pearance in the middle ages, and with it came benches with backs. Tbe Greeks and Komans ate from a kind of porringer, et during a por tion of the middle ages slices of bread cut round took the place of plates. The spoon is very ancient, and many fine specimens are in existence that were used by the Egyptians In tho seventeenth century B. C. The knifo though very old had not come into common use as a table utensil in the tenth century. The fork was abso lutely unknown to the Greeks and Romans, appeared only as a curiosity in the middle ages, and was first used upon the table by Henry IIL Drink ing cups in the middle ages, made from metal, more or less precious naturally date from the remotest antiquity. The use of glasses, from Venice, began to be general in the fifteenth century. The salt cellar appeared at a very early date, and occupied tha place of honor at the banquets of tbe Greeks and Romans, many of them being of gold and sil ver. The castor Is probably not older than the sixteenth century. An Old Jewish Custom. At the borne of a well known Jew was recently 6een a tiny flame burn- Inn fat 4a flna -r-v Vl a t Vvaminofinn 1 1 jet sae ee uuu fwavu mauuiiuaviuu showed the goblet to be half filled with water, on the top of which .floated an inch of pure olive oiL A ' :-.!.. 1. t ,1 Hn either side of a metallic ring, rested upon the oil On tbe ring was placed a wax taper, passing through a small circle of thin wool, so that the lower end of the thread dipped througb tbe ring into the olive oil. The upper :nd of the taper was lighted as above mentioned. The oil drawn through the wax-covered taper served to keep t alive for several hours. "We burn this," said the lady ot ;he bouse, "in memory of one of our dead. When the taper burns nearly out we substitute another, so that tbe flame, like the vestal fire, never goes out We light the taper when our relative dies and let it burn a year, tbe last one being allowed to burn out We attend to these lights with great care, thus keeping alive the memory of our loved one. It is 'an old custom of ours, and one seldom now observed, bomo burn It for a week, while others burn it for a yv month. Our family adheres to the j custom in all its purity, always keep ing tbe name alive for a year. In the time of Christ the seven bright stars collectively known as "the Big Dipper" was in the form of a dia mond. Hippocrates prescribed the oil of roses as a medicine for several kinds of disease. 021$ KIVJOY Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant and refreshing to the tarte, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 8yrup of Figs ia the only remedy; of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the tasto and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known, i Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 : cent bottles by all leading drag gists. Any reliable druggist who ! may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one Who wishes to try it. Lk not accept any substitute, Q ft mi icnouiM riB ei avt SAW AMffCSCO, C4C m -;iVo QT T A Pflft IT OFF" FROM RfclUKflLTIlj. IttAl SQUIRRELS ARE SHREWD. XX Takes a Smart Haater to Oat a Sfcol at Baahytatl. "Of course," said the hunter, "every, body knows that when a man with a gun comes along the gray squirrel goes around on tbe other side of the tree. He doesn't get killed If he can help it, and he can help himself pretty well I remember once coming across a gray squirrel np a big oak; he was ont on a branch about forty feet from th ground. He saw me as quick as I did him quicker, I guess and when I wai ready to Are be was around on tne j other side of the branch. This branch was very small, only a little bigger than tbe squirrel, but he bugged It so clos and be was In such perfect line with me that yon couldn't see anything ol blm at ail except a little bit of the Up , of hie tall that was blown out by a strong wind. I biased away at him j and never touched him. Then I wenl around on the other side of tbe tree, thinking that possibly I could get s shot at him from there, bnt as I wenl one way he went the other, and by th time I had got over on the other side h was on the aide I had come from and In Just as perfect line with me as he wai t first and just as safe. I tried hlnr again with just the same result "Then I pulled a stake out of a rail fence near by and planted it in tha ground on one side of the tree and hung my coat on It, and went myself ovei to the other side; I thought that pos sibly I might make the squirrel think there were two men there, or put him In doubt long enough to enable me to get a shot at him, but he never paid the slightest attention to the coat I don't suppose It would have made any difference to him If I'd opened a cloth ing store there; he knew the man wltb the gun, and It was the gun tbat be was looking out for. Well, we dodged around that tree for quite a spell long er. There wasn't any other tree neat by that the squirrel could go to. and he knew his only safety lay In sticking to tbe one he was in, and the way he did stick to It and keep around always on the other side of that branch was something wonderful. I fired five or six shots at blm altogether and filled the branch nnder him half full of shot but never touched him, and when I thought I had wasted time and ammu nition enough I left him." New York , Sun. Another Interpretation. What la commonly called inspiration may sometimes be only another name j for conceit. An uneducated young far mer presented himself at a Presbyter- j lan conference and said he wanted to i be ordained as a preacher. "I ain't , had any great learning," he said, frank-. ly, "but I reckon I'm called to preach, j I've had a vision three nights running; j that's why I am here." '"What was ( your vision?" Inquired one of the eld- ors. "Well," said the young man, "I : dreamt I see a big. round ring In the sky, and In the middle of It were two great letters P. C. I knew that meant ' Presbyterian Conference, and here I am." There was an uneomfortaMa pause, which was broken by an eldet who knew the young man, and wai well acquainted with tbe poverty of hli family end the neglected condition ol their farm. "I have not any gift al reading visions," said the old man, gravely, as be rose from his seat "but I'd like to put It to my young friend whether he doesn't think it possible those two letters may have stood foi Plant Corn'?" This version was finnV ly accepted by the applicant. Can theaaleof an Inferl r .rilMo Increase tor 28 TaaraT Dobbins' E eelr.c Soap bas been on tba market er-r ainee im n...i i. to-day a. ever, the belt and purest fhml toao 1 , j ib. auur grocer Will get lu Among everv 1.000 inhahitanta in the United States there is an average of 381 who are under 16; in France there are only 270 such to the 1,000. I eannnt anaak tnA nt THu. rn Con-umptlon. Mas. Fkank Mobbs. 215 W. i2d H, X... T." 1 f. .. ,ia 1 . . . , VI .VIA, Wh. A., lO. Huburt the great Canadian author ity on potatoes, says that 10,000,000 tubers of tbat species can be raised from a single one in four seasons. S'rs. Wlnilow'a Sootblnif Syrup for children reetblna, softens the aums. reduces tntlainmi Uon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2uc a bottle. In one of his astronomical lprtiirea Professor Proctor once said that 300. 000 worlds tbe size of onr earth could be put inside the sun. The People Believe what tbey read about Hood's Sarsaparilla. Tbey know tbat It la an bonest medicine, and tbat It cures disease. HawMl'e FtUa care all liver Ills. Paner m a r h p ia a naar malarial i used in constructing hipvciAn an,l if J seems they stand tbe wear and tear of neavy wore: very wen. Ir. Kilmers 8 w a Mr-Hoar e'irji all Kidney and Bladder trouble!. I amplet and Consultation Irei i-aboratorr Blncbaioton, -S. i. Hie Rat. It Is a pleasant European custom to Aft the hat to gentlemen, as well as to ladle. Out of this practice arose tbe remark of a well-known London hat ter, who met an acquaintance wbo awed him for the hat he wore. The hatter, who was accompanied by , friend, lifted his hat to his debtor, but the latter made no sign of recogni tion. "He does not salute you?" aald the batter's friend. ) "No." aald the hatter. "I think ha might at least touch my bat to me!" Forgot Himaeir. Archbishop Trench was a victim o absent-mindedness. Dining at home one evening, he found fault with tbe flavor of the soup. Next evening he ' dined out at a large dinner-party. For ! getting for the moment that he was not io his own house but a guest, ! he observed across the table to Mrs. Trench: "This soup Is, my dear, again a failure." Some men Who are so attached to a farm that rather than give It up they t will spike it down with a mortgage. A woman's heart was really broken. burst into halves, in England recently, not from love or sorrow, but from eating to hearty. S DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY SAPOLIO VTIG CHEAPER KJ THE END. Foolin." 0 IT D0ES K0T "F00L 'RocRh"; us uiivww ""ir bObS STRAIGHT IO WORK OH PAW AND DRIVES IT OUT AND "SHOTS a war knervrro s duoi.iecjs. Tbe Contentious Lip. The compressed lip beloved by thi novelist is a sign of weakness rather than strength. The strong man bat every feature, every physical attrl. bute under control. Assured of hli men's obedience, the commanding officer does not habitually keep his lip muscles in a state of tension. Look at the sea captain, tbe most ab go utc monarch on earth He carries authority and power in his face, but It resides in bis eye and tbe confident assurance of his easily set mouth, Every spar, shaft, and muscle in his t oating realm must obey bim, and be knows it This Is probably , reason wby the sea captains and the engine drivers show a certain aimi. larity of type, Tbe engine drlyer can make bis captive giant, strong as ten thousand men, obey the prewure of his finger. His lips are usually calm, like those of tbe statues ot the wielder of thunderbolts on 01ympui Wbo ever saw a man commanding man-of-war or driving a locomotWa with tbe contentious lip of a 6cboo usher?,. Itia-l Thia J M W offer One Humlrel Iinllnrs Ttewr.rd fnt nvcaneof Catarrh tliat caiiuut becuied bt iiUl'8 ,'at.irrii Cure. F. J. Cb ENty & Co., Props., ToMo, 0. the tinleriKTil, lmve known fr J.ctia ney for I he bust 15 years, and U-lieve him twr. f-:tlY' bonorui.le In all tmHines trHn.wOyma ami rinanc ally ahln to carry out any obii-a. lion ra.-ulfl by tbo.r firm. Vtsr & TiiL Ai , Wholesale Dropsists, Toledo, Ouio. Wauim. Kixi-aw & Marvxx, 'WTiolMato e liruircisl:, Toledo, Obiu. na'l'B Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act. Int? dirwtiy uHn the biuo.l an-l inuciuatur. faces of llie syMein. Pri.-e, 7-V. per bottle. SoW fay all Drugidta. Teatimooials free. The manuscripts of the fifth and twelfth centuries are written with very good black ink, which 1ms not ehown the least sign of fading or obliteration. FITS stopped tre ny DR. hi.iiiii Onui "Kve KtsroKKR. No flu after u rut day's nw. MaTeloiis cures. Treatie and Sin. trial tou l.e Irea. tlr. Kiln--. ll Arcli bt.. i-hila.. Pa. Unternfied small boys in Portland, Me,, stole the grave markers from the cemetery for use in marking bounds for hockey .laying. A recent test of sea water proves that the two main oceans, the 1'acifie and ttie Atlantic, hold not less tliau 2,000,000 tons of silver in solution. "An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure." An ounce of healthful food is better than a ton of medicine. Buckwheat, And throw away the medicine bottle. itapbarl, Aoslo, Uubeo., T Tbe "LnfT.NE" are tbe Bext and Moat Keonont eal Collars and Cnfls worn: thay are mad of nag rlotli, both si.lffs ntnstit! alike, and beina tvrenai bls one collar ia equ.il to two of any other ctnd. Tar. tit Ultt voir we.U an-t Imtk WIL A boael T.n Collars or Five I'airs ol Oofla (or Taeaay tin Cena. A Haople Collar and Pair of Otffs by saafl a SI O re, Kanie style aud size. Address KKVKBSIBLE COLLAR OOstPAlTT, TT Vraaklin St.. Wew York. 17 Kllby St., aaaaaa. Dltl'! Mill fhnw TOO how to a d -y; eth-olutfly mire; w tut- til .h lllrt Wo and ttsttvn you it j entity whertf y'H work in the litMlity wherw J"" I wail tu y.'ur aridrv and wtu espitua tdr buKlniM fuilT: nTQemi,r w guar- antraolMrirMit ti $.1 iir-Try iy ..rk: i-.-hit-lT mr-: wrlta at stfl.tL X(Mrt(TVKIa lit Ufa Ma Poa LB. Uetr.il, Ml. il.lllltlllllllllltlllltllllUtti i.ttlMtlllltai MICHIGAN LANDS j 2 F-r eale 10,(n acre flrst-ola Und in Central Michl-1 Z iran. on the "MirhttraM tvntrul,' "iH trolt aod X Hn(inat:, and "Ion Lake" Kai.nrfu'a. TheteUcd? ; will It- mM r.t a tcrtflr to flow an ewtatrt. WrlW; U. M. I'lEHt E, AOICNT, W liST HAY CITY, KICH. j ItlllllllllttlllllltltllMf IttllMlltllllMllllflMlllltlltMl TTTK A FR MOTOR CO. flo half th WjiTJ wimlraia buaiius9t LMH-tu.se It bad reduced cai Wind iMiwer to 1 what it wan. It Loa umnT branrl a . it a... ..i. sni4 t-srial ra Duuisra, ail ii Biiyyi ipb na bi"j - . TOUT U(Kr. it ijau ewiu t"w s a tus ninnsi than 'othem It make purapJeT (re anil. Stel, Ulnid f!.ar" riit7 and Fixed Steel i ower. we. UMf" tFraiuea, titeel Ked I'utters and j$A Grinders. On appllratlon It will Dme one fit vi ineate axuciea iiixi i January 1 at 13 the usual pnc It also mae TaUtas and t'utiirwur all kind. Send for catAinf'.av Ft-urj: Uth, KocawcU tn4 HUmor Streets. Culcat .. i.i i atku n -very State to introduce T ti.ii.eL t Rim-ra. Km. rely Dew. Profits Immense., A ..tre-n Alk-n. Oleaaon et Co.. X. P.. La Croaee. W S. SX FRANCISCO LOTS, by the Golden Gate, KOMip. term 10 per month. TANHHcD A I'MTlOV LAND CO., 046 Market St., San Fran Cisco, LaiifoiU.a. A California Income-Yielding Home. with flrrall capital, l arge rolonv; tine fumi . Irriffa Ion, IKalib. Fruit, Milk, "j'ork, Poultry, Honey, B. MARKS, Por 175, Omaha. Neb. SALESMEN WANTED TO PEI.L MY MTK. y.h stock. All gooit warranted firat-cUfj. I'ennanrnt, profitable Kltlon for the right man. fasti paiil weekly. No experience neoesssrr. Write for terms, pivlng aire and reference, ii YATES, Nureeryiiiaut Rochester, N. Y. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. mlri4 female to sell ten ct:.t Homoeopathic Keme dies to lumilu". Immense profits. The Dr. O'Uw Med. Co., 1817 Columbia Ave., Philadelphia, r"s. PATENTS I-P4je Hook Krsy, Illation . IMIUIB Washington, 1. 'J!!r"my", kD.J.B.M.VM. ""' '",12 THII.A..PA. h. .l.nr.; 1.0 ot.rt..n irT.l.f ut"" Cormlta'.-. .rr. Knd. n.m?nuof ,.tj .n f "StT sr.(.ituct. bobj tmr .IrnJar. Uf&ewb.Br-.S-ll-lor.aw art Cuuah SrruDVTaauis Gicd. Cat In tloisi Bold br druggists. aralaatst war. ISatUudiceUu- claioia, tiy.m lTiwiftcis.n31U.'i.i MUUtKO fa5 1 ILLtS.hr .. sw-mcj. aaBBBBjaBBBJBBBBBBaBBBBBBaaaVIlWKSUWai W QE?'s.