QCX)0000O0000000OUUUU j AT THE OPEN DITCH. X 6 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOO0O0OO0OO 1 Du you believe in gliosis, secoua sight, the reappearance of spir its in the flesh. Glyn?". asked Jimmy Bellew, as we sat smoking on evening in his quarters. I laughed. "What! John James Chris topher Benjamin Binns?" I quoted. That sort of thing, eh ? Certainly not. I do believe, though, in disordered serves and liver, the cure for which la a blue pill and a blue ribbon. Why dr yon ask?" "Because," said he, a solemn a a Judge, "on two separate occasions I've seen with my own eyes a person I knew to have been dead and buried for years." Jimmy was going to be married the following week, which accounted for a certain amount of glumnesa on bis part But to take such a fit of the Jumps the night before our races, too was a little too much. "Who was It, man or woman?" 1 asked. Woman," he answered naturally. "It was a queer business. I've never men tioned it to any human being, but I'd rather like to tell you, Glyn, If you don't mind listening." "Fire away." "I met her at Simla," he began slowr ly. "I was doing A. D. C. to Featherly then. One of the best looking women you ever saw; magnificent eyes but see for yourself," taking from a dispatch box beside him a leather case, which he opened and handed to me. "Hand some face, eh? And exactly like her." I nodded. "A beautiful devil, as bad as they make 'em," was my mental ver dict. "It was the usual Kipling business," tie was thinking aloud, in short, dis jointed sentences. "She began It, I fancy, out of sheer deviltry there was some one else a nice young girl she couldn't bear to see another woman." A pause. "Don't you think, though, that I blame her; I was just as ready to be made a fool of as she was to uiakfl a fool of mo. It was an infatuation regular cane of possession while It lasted. We were inseparable at Simla. Later they were at our station good place for snipe not far from headquar ters she came in to the balls I took to snipe shooting. And so, for tbe best part of eighteen months It went on, un til well! that sort of madness wa bound to wear Itself out I began to recover my senses-she grew keener J ogt a iot of ground. Still, he won the as I cooled off made scenes whatever , Regimental cup In a canter and started It had been at the beginning, it was the favorite for the last race on the card real thing with her then. Finally came a challenge cup. I was In the paddock tue climax, sue wasu t violent. eiie only saw tnat, as l no longer careu lorin, up with Miss St. John, who had iicr. we uau uecier pun. iint a id be done? Of course I perjured myself freely to no purpose. She wished mi good -by. " 'Although we may never meet OL'uin.' she said I can hear her speak ing now 'you are mine, only mine. I 6Unll never give you up. Kcuiembet that. Never attempt to put another woman in my place, for if you do, 1 warn you, I shall come back, no mat ter where I may be, even from th grave, to claim my rights.' "The next morning she was found dead in Iter bed. An overdose of chloral she took it for neuralgia accidental ly, so they said. I'd give five years ol my life even now to be able to think so." He shivered. "It's an awful thing tc feci a woman's death at one's door. 1 try to think she wasn't responsible." Couldn't have been," I interrupted decidedly. He sighed. "Perhaps not. Anyhow, It gave me a shock. I was on the high road to D. T. or a lunatic asylum, when Featherly got sent to Burmah and took me with him. The spell of active ser vice made another man of me. I start ed for home at the end of It pretty well myself again. It was then she came tc me." His voice sank almost to a whis per. "I was on deck one evening, talk ing to a girl we'd been dancing when I looked around. There she stood by niy side, tbe moon shining full on bet face. I Jumped back; the steamei gave a lurch, and overboard I went They picked me up, but I had a narrow shave of brain fever, and, at you'll remember, reached home I wreck." I nodded. We had all noticed th extraordinary change In 'poor Jimmy when he rejoined. He went away fuil of life and spirit, the best of company. He came back morbid, morose, without a word to say to his old pals, and II Was ages before he became his cheery self again. But Jimmy hadn't finished. "The next time was three years Iatei at Rathcoolan," he was saying, "when I had dismissed the whole businest as a hallucination. We were out shoot ing. I had Just scrambled over a fence and was holding out my band to heir, Miss Bourke, when I felt a touch on my arm. distinctly. There she was again. I believe she pushed me away. Any how, I slipped up, my gun went flying into the ditch, caught In a bramble, went off, and lodged a charge of shot Id my thigh but you remember? you were there at tbe time. And now what do you think of It? If It were fancy It was deuced strange that one's nervet houlJ play one the same trick twice, without the slightest warning, eh?" "Not at all," I declared. 'The Rath roolan accident at all events, was th most natural thing In tbe world. Yov were making strong running with Mlsj Uourke (she was a pretty girl, and bet t . -, Vi ., i..l' ujuo. uii.muH xor a i-.atch, looked on It, I know, as a set led thing); you'd got the other woman's hreat iu your mind; with your usual loo'l-curdling carelessness It's a mar--el to me you've not shot yourself a iul' Jred times over there you stood on i slippery bank, with your gun at full rock. A twig touched you, you started mii tripped up. Then with your weak lead. In the go of fever that followed, rou concocted out of your fancy a cock-in.l-bull story, and ended by believing t. And I've not the slightest doubt 'ery much the same thing happened on loard sl.!p." Jimmy shook his head. "I tell myself ill that, and for a time I managed to lelude myself iuto believing It. Still, 11 my hoart of hearts I know that she lid come back, as she said she would. In fact, after Rathcoolan, In spite of ny peoirte and the name, and all that" -Jimmy, let me explain, was heir to the atei-haiii title and esiatcs " I made lp my mind not to marry; only fate ust year. In the shape of Kate St John, lecreed that I should change It So !ar, this time, nil has gone well; yet I si n't help thinking something will hap jeu before next week." "Hot!" I retorted brataAr. "You're ooooooooooooooooooooooooo Ike a hysterical school riri with voni nsane fancies. All you've got to do It :o shove that photograph of Mm (Vhat's-her-Xame and everything con lected with her Into the fire, go to bed ind to sleep, and don't give her anothet Jiought. "What sort of a nlghf s rest Jimmy hao do not know, but be completely spoil- Mi mine for me. Not that I put any alth in his story. It waa easy to un lerstand the bold an nnscrnpuioui woman would acquire over an tmprea tiorable, soft-hearted chap like pool f lmmy, who, In bis remorse, bad taken n sober, serious earnest the empty rav Jigs of an angry woman maddened by jealousy. Given such a delusion, a i promising flirtation Interrupted by as I iccident, a bout of llght-headednesa tnd there you have the apparition. What a farce it all seemed. And yel Me frame of mind which produced the ipparition was a very serious thing. Ii nag heart-breaking that so good a fel ow, with everything to make him hap py, should allow bis life to be spoiled y a mere bogey. Besides, a man who ices spooks in every corner had no busi ness to be riding races. Altogether, 1 ipent. a thoroughly anxious, nncon tollable night. Things Improved In the morning. I remember with relief that Jlmmy'i serve for riding so far had never failed blni; that the Bolderton course present ed no very serious obstacles to any borse or rider of average capacity; and lhat Jimmy s jockeyshlp, as well as bli mounts, were far beyond tBe average. Besides, I was much too busy on my vd account to give way to morbid fan :ies. Increasing weight prevented my taking any active part In the day's do ings. Still. I bad a couple of horse running, and what with looking aftet them, giving my subaltern, who was riding for me, orders to which the booby paid no attention talking to va rious old pals who had run down to tee the fun, and feeding the horde of natives who descended like a swarm of locusts on the lunch and tea tent l ror we sent mTiiaiions to every soul I n.u0 lied unon us mv time was m-et 1 1 well takeu uo. Jimmy, too. was not doing so badly, either. He only came In second for the Hunt cup, owing to a loose horse crossing ins mare, Moll; Malone, and upsetting her at tbe watei so that she refused. Jumped badly, and when, as the saddling bell rang, b i ,., over for the dav. and who. It nn. pea red, wanteu to waiic down to a jump. I oCfered myself as escort. Ofl we started and reached the open ditch round the corner, at tbe bottom of th slope, just as the horses came thunder lug down to it Good Lord, what a pace! And that ass Saunders, con found hiiu! Iu front making the run ning, after my repeated warnings ti pare old Timothy down hill! "How fast they are going," prattlef my companion. "Oh, Major Glyn, lsn' It very dangerous?" Well, it might be dangerous for Tim othy's groggy forelegs; or for Vllliers who landed on his home's neck at ever fence; or for Anstruther, riding tha' three-cornered mare of his, who triei to run out half a dozen times: bu' limmy, lolloping along on that old stager Brutus, who could bave gom round half the steeplechase courses It the country blindfolded, was as safe ai if he were sitting in his armchair. 1 told her so, which seemed to reassun her, and having watched them out ol sight, she began to look about her an criticise the bystanders. "Oh, Major Glyn," she suddenly cried "what an extraordinary woman! Suet a get-up! Quite in the style of the yeai one. Do look at ber there. In front ol you. Who can she be? Do you know? I was not interested In the Identity of any weird female; for they were Jus reappearing over the brow of the hill and I was vainly scanning the horlzoi with my glass In search of Timothy However. I looked. By the opposlti mg, rather i.part from the little group f spectators, a woman was standing i striking figure In a black and red own. with a red sunshade. "Never set eyes on her," I began. (vhtn she shifted ber sunshade and xtoved forward a pace or two. I caught light of her face. It waa the origlna? )f the photograph. "Here they come!" gleefully cried Jie little fiancee. "Jim's leading. Oh," with a sudden change of tone, "what If itr What Indeed? I shall never forget the ghastly change that suddenly came aver Jimmy's face; tbe helpless way be reeled In the saddle; his Instinctive vio lent clutch at the reins. Did he pull Brutus out of bis stride, or did thai itrange panic communicate Itself to the Did horse? Who could say? It was all aver In a moment; a swerve, a rush, a grinding, sickening thud, as Brutus, without rising an Inch, galloper straight into the ditch. Poor Jimmy fell on his head, while Miss St. John, with a shriek, fainted lead away. I rushed forward. There he lay, his neck broken, his dead face till stamped with a frozen look of hor ror. And that she devil? Where wai she? I bad seen ber two minutes be fore; the fence was right out in the open, yet not a vestige of the red and black figure was visible. She had done her fiendish work, claimed ber right nd vanished. Sporting and Dramatif News. Hercules Killed tbo Hawk. Some passengers over one of the Ber lin canal bridges tbe other day noticed tbe sudden appearance of two black points In the sky at a considerable dis tance away, which developed Into two ducks. Behind them, at a lower level, flew another bird, which suddenly rose Into the air above the docks, and then shot down upon blm like an arrow. One of the ducks flew sideways to ward the Tblergarten; the other, closely pursued by Its enemy, flew slanting In to the canal, and, reaching the water exactly behind the bridge, dived, while the hawk. In his blind baste, struck against the head of a statue of Her cules and fell, once more flapping Its great wings, dead on tbe pavement of the bridge. Tbe bird was a splendid I specimen, tbe wings bavins; aa eXf jansion of more than three feet. I is just as easy to predict a iever wiuter as any other kind. THE SEKATOR'S BLUNDER: low He TJaJtet 'ally CtarkaJklB) for a CaMtltsnit .rt. hea .Tnterr Mtrtment, a young man from on of the Western States came to Washington try clerical life In one of the depart nents, says a writer In the Washington Star. He bad been quite a ward poll- Jclan In his Western borne and lniag- ned both the Senators from his State srould be glad to do him a favor. He tpent several days taking in the sights it the capital, then went up to the Sen ite one afternoon and sent up bis card o Senator Blank. The Senator re- iponded promptly, bad the visitor ihown Into tbe marble room, and for ome time they sat on the sofa to (ether, talking of borne news and borne Tops. Then the young man broke tbe ce by Informing tbe Senator Just what ilnd of a place be wanted didn't care nuca what department It was In. "Well. I don't know." said tbe Sena or. "Such places are not to be found very day, and there are hundreds here I . . . .k... 1 .I,. TT n I nn tooklng for almost anything In tbe ibape of an appointment. "Come up to my bouse about 8 o'clock -night," aald the Senator, "and we'll a Ik the matter over." , Promptly at the appointed time he wiled the doorbell and waa ushered in o the library, where he found the Sen itor puffing a cigar and looking over the evening paper. I,, "Ah. good evening, Mr. ; I was lust thinking of you." said Senator Blank. "I have written a strong letter Secretary Chandler requesting him a give you a position In the Interior Department" picking up an unsealed etter from his desk and banding It to he young office seeker -"and I would iresent it ahnnt 10 nVlrwr. to-morrow I nornlng. I hare also mailed the Secre- ary a little personal note, letting him tt tuai huvu s waui iujfiuiuji iu uji The young Westerner was bowed out if the room with smiles and a hearty landshake. At his hotel be sat down o think over his good luck; then he hongbt of tbe Senator's letter and ulled It out of his pocket and read: "Dear Chandler Some time to-morrow morning a young citizen of my .t " " Ju , luuunemwii iruui xue lur vici i uave no eanuiy interest n him, so I turn him over to your ten ler mercy. Let him down easy. Yours, "BLANK." The young man dropped the letter, tnd a big sigh struggled up from un ler bis watch pocket "I wonder what le said in the little note he mailed to :he Secretary?" thought the young can lidate. Then he realized that the Sen it or had given him the wrong letter, ind be at once determined to call at lie Interior Department the next morn ng and see what the next chapter would bring forth. About 10 o'clock tbe next forenoon ibo colored messenger showed the roung man Into Secretary Chandler's fBce. "Senator Blank told me last night he ad written you and advised me to call n you this morning," said tbe young rentieman. "Ah, yes," smiled tbe Secretary, good laturedly, picking up from his desk an pen letter and glancing over It "The Senator speaks of you In the highest :eruis, and Is very urgent In his re- juesi tor your appointment wait a iioment," and, touching a bell, be sent lis messenger for the chief clerk. After i moment's conversation with tbe chief ;lerk the Secretary said: "Yon are fortunate. There Is a $1,' 200 clerkship made vacant by resigns' ion this morning, and I have ordered rour appointment to the place." a monin later senator Blank was ralklng through the patent office, and n the corridor met the new clerk In his ifflce coat Tbe Senator waa surprised tnd a trifle disconcerted, but be shook lands with his young friend and aald le was glad to see him there. "Welt I'm glad to be here," respand- d the clerk. "And, Senator," putting lis hand inside his vest and looking iquarely in the other's eye, "right In my nslde pocket I keep that little persona lote you thought you mailed to Secre- ary Chandler, telling blm when you K-anted a thing you wanted It bad." Explanations were unnecessary. Tbe Senator went out of public life and died ong ago, but tbe clerk manages to iqueeze along through the hard timer m bis $1,800 a year. Old Kin Rene's Tomb. The long-forgotten tomb of good King Rene and Isabelle of Lorraine, his lrst wife, was accidentally brought to ight tbe other day in the Cathedral of sogers. Isabelle's tin coffin waa not pened, but Rene's was. A crown, a tcepter, an orb the insignia of his rain sovereignty over Naples were were found In Rene's leaden coffin. As Oiey were covered with green oxide, Jie gold used In making them must lave been well alloyed with copper. Scott Is down on Rene In "Anne of 3elerstein." But be Is not less mis taken In judging him than In "Peverll f tbe Peak" making out Charlotte de a Tremollle a Catholic of the deepest lye. Charlotte was, to the end of her lays, a stanch Protestant and was a good creature." Rene was an exqul ilte artist and a philosopher. In re ipect to philosophy, he was greatly In idvance of his time. Was it not better go on with his painting of a-partrldge Jian to take up arms when he beard iat Louis IX., at the head of a great Force, had come to seize on Anjou ? He coew that resistance was useless, and tvas not going to fret over what he tould not help. Some miniatures he jainted are now shown at the National Library, and are exquisite. His first wife, Isabelle, now lying In ber tin ttffln, used to weary blm with hei nergy and heroics. She waa always h rusting him and herself Into tragto crapes. His second wife, Jeanne da javaJ, waa a congenial spirit They oth used to wander over hm and dale a search of poetic inspiration. Rene's alia da were worthy of being niustrat d by himself. "Regnant et Jeanneton) u. Lea Amours d'nn Berger at (Tana lergereuse," are an adogoa with a y. Rene waa tha shepherd, and his anna tha shepherdess. Parla ooita poar'ce London Truth. Sincerity Itself. Ada How can you be so Insincere, fou said yon were sorry yea wtxt out irhen he called. Ida No; I aald I waa sorry ha called when I waa ant, da Well? Ida Ha la likely to can aone time when I am In. New Tack Herald, .a" J"1 Mistress Boyouhadtonay$yai for this cloth? Ton are Impractical I paid only fa, SerrastYea, tat they tteagntl was rtchtr than yoq - SHE NEEDED A CHANGE. Sot Tired of a Constant Sal Meat Diet.. When Miss Young went to teach ichoo! In district Number Be ven, a .mall :JlilUlUUilJ ill 1110 HU UMU UJT nany friends and relatives thai' It was, no lonely a place for ber to remain in sontented; but she waa of a cheerful lisposition, and undertook her new du Jes wltb a hopeful spirit. So nyi i Toutb'a Companion correspondent, who proceeds to tell how the expert- sent resulted. On Miss Young's first risit home It was noticed that she look id pale, but to all Inquiries she ro lled that she waa as well as usual. "Now, I want to know. Fayette, what a the matter?" her aunt said one day, oon after her arrival. "Is yonr school o hard for you? Don't you Ilk the people? Or what la the matter?" "Are you going to bave beefsteak, for lunch. Aunt Susan?" was the some what irrelevant response. "Yes, but that Isn't answering my Juestion. I want to know why yov Son't like your school." "I do like It Why, the children ar I 1 b!5etaT!fl ttln"J.0,V7e' aw, and so quick to learn! Did I tel f win uiuv nauuiu ami "No, you didn't Well, then, don't She parents like you? Or Is It the folks where you board ? Don't they treat yov well? If they don't I'd change." "Oh, yes. the Smiths are tbe kindes people In the world. I don't supposq I should have come home Just now If Oie Smiths hadn't killed their calf," and Ulss Toung sighed. Her aunt looked at her In evident as- , mnishment j "For tbe land sakes, Fayette! I do tiope you ain't so poorly as to be upset ty a thing like that! I declare to It, rou're worse off than I had any Idee f." No, not exactly: but I haven't tasted ' neat fresh meat that Is, and I watched aiat calf hopefully." I "Pity sakes!" I "Yon ROM. 11 n tlioro fh Ann Uin i You see ery often. When they do. the whole aelghborhood shares In the meat It m happened that the Sraitha had a calf u sacrifice, and I watched that Inno ;ent animal from day to day, and flnal ('y was told that the butcher bad pep I formed his work. "I listened to tbe division of that anl Jial hungrily. Such a neighbor waa to tmve so much, another a smaller or rger quantity; but by careful com putation I found that half the animal was to be kept for family use, and I went to school cheerfully. "But at dinner no roast or steaks, n had fondly hoped. Finally I made ome inquiry as to what disposal was made of the calf, and was told that what meat they kept they bad salted lown for future use. "That was tbe final stroke. I simply bad to come home. As long as I could lee the calf I had courage; but after :hat failed me, I felt that I needed a var ration." FELT HONORED. Because He Had Met a Bluer Mao than Uncle Sam. An hour after midnight the otbe. night a patrolman found a man sen tea on the steps of the postoffice with his elbows on his knees and his head In his bands, says the Detroit Free Press, and giving him a shake the officer Bald: "Come, old man, this is no lodging house r "No, sir," replied the roan, as h. roused up, "this is the postoffice. I knew It when I stt down here. It Is seldom I mistake a postoffice for a lodg ing house. Did you suppose I was la boring under the Impression that I had turned Into a cheap room on the fourth floor back and left orders to be called at 7 o'clock In the morning?" "You'll have to move on," replied tho officer. "Inn't this a Government building?" "Yes, sir." "Owned and run by tha Government of the United States?" "Tee. sir." "And has Uncle Sam ordered me to move on?" "No, sir, but I bave, and you don't want to linger over an hour." "My dear sir," said the night hawk. as he looked up. "are you a bigger man than Uncle Sam?" "I am, sir!"- replied the officer, aa be dallied with Is club. "Then I bow to circumstances am will move on. Could you spare me photograph?" "No, sir." "Will you give me your autograph T "No, sir." "Then let me gaze at yon for half a minute to Indelibly impress your fea tures upon the tablets of my memory. That will do, and I thank you. I have met a bigger man than Uncle Sam, and I shall be able to describe him to the j children gathered at my knee. Officer, ap me over the head with your club." "There It Is!" said the officer, as he fetched him one on his battered old hat. '"liianks thanks awfully! I have not only seen a bigger man than Unci Sam. but (?) ! I tz boom! & 94 S-" Gossip. How frequently is the honesty and Integrity of man disposed of by a smile or a shrug! How many good and gen erous actions have been shrunk Into oblivion by a distrustful look or stamp ed with the Imputation of proceeding from bad motives, by a mysterious and seasonable whisper. Look Into compa nies of those whose gentle natures should disarm them, we shall find no better account. How often does the reputation of a helpless creature bleed by a report which the party who Is at the pains to propagate It beholds with much pity and fellow feeling that she is heartily sorry for it hopes In God It Is not true however, as Arch bishop Tlllotson wittily observes upon it, la resolved in tbe meantime to give the report her pass, that at least It may have fair play to take its fortune In ths world to be believed or not, according to the charity of those into whose hand It shall happen to falL Addison. Tbe Mortgage. A mortgage makes a man rustle and ft keeps him poor. It Is a strong Incen tive to action and a wholesale reminder of the fleeting months and years. It Is fully aa symbolical In its meaning as tha hourglass and scythe that mean leath. A mortgage represents Indus try because it is never idle night or day. It is like a bosom friend, because the rreater the adversity the closer it sticks to a fellow. It Is like a brave soldier, for It never hesitates at charges nor fata te doss) hi em the enemy. It Is like the sandbag at tbe thug silent In sspUcatloa, bat deadly in effect. It is Oka the hand of Providence It spreads war all creation and Its tn finance la everywhere visible. It is like the grasp of tbe aerO-flab the longer It holds the greater its strength, it wffl exer cise feeble energies and lend activity to a sluggish brain, but no matter haw debtors work the mortgage works harder atflL A mortgage la si good thuarte have la a family provided alt ways tt Is hm asjebndy . A Bwlaa Xanovatlom. I dry goods firm In Basle. Switser- ' land, advertises that during the an nual fair, now being held there. It will Ire a good dinner or supper free to very purchaser of 30 franca' worth of goods. The Swiss newspapers seem puzzled by this novel exhibition of en' terprlse; anyhow they condemn It Bmk Far reaaaylvaiaia. The farmers of PeEBsylvaala srs to V congratulated, If. at. Luther, East Troy, Pa., grew over 200 bushels Sjlser's ailvef ' . t.,. III ne oats on one nmasurea men """"'. Itl Now there are thirty thousand ranaan going to try and beat Mr. Luther and wis 100 la gold! and they'll do it, ia Haw York, Ohio, Pnussylvanta and the east. Will yo be one of them? Then there is Silver Kti Barley, eropp en poor soil 118 bos. per aara In 180K. Ual that wonderful and eora SSO baa. sad poca toes and gitaasa aad elevaia, fodder plants ate, eta. rraltffat Is ehaap ta Hew York aa tha east. If toc wnx en Tsns out ajtb ens It wlfi IOol postage to the John A. Bahter Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., yea will reoelv their mam moth catalogue and tea packages grains aad grasses, taoladlng above oats, free. (A. 'Such funny names ont West," said shi "Yet 'twould have been much mon unique It they had boilded Wounded Knee Upon the banks of Cripple Creek!" Chicago Record. People never mean it when they say they don't care bow they look. OIVI5 BNJOYS teoth the method and results when, Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the ta?te, and acts ten Uy yet promptly on. the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head pches and fevers and cures habitual jconstipation. Syrup of Figs is the fcnly remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste 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. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 5C Cent bottles by ail leading drug rists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro nire H promptly for any one who Irishes to try it Do sot accept any lubstitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAM fRAHCISCO. tU UHJisviUE.nr hsw roaic. n r. !5YS? POULTRY YARD iMa.IUtM. WrlttraanMia nianarS4yearMp-rlrare A plain. pranlcal Hyntrm. ...ii i..mMl. nrrli' I nlr dtaeasr. how to make ltrna lay- I hnlfru, .ap A MannVAan-l Ml Imvr. Price. UcOIMM). A Free A.M. I. A NO. o3g I. Chicago. III. QQ A DAY SURE. til land w will fthnw yov h HEM ti yutt MaA LDr) WOTS auiu leau u ;ws hw for in lb locality whrro won tvl ua your trldr" n we will rxpiu th miKiu-wa rally; rvmetnher w gum a,it rlar liritrlt ol att I Of -rtT w rfc. '-tnr-lT ur-: Hi at fVtYal. aHM'Farri IttXK fP. Pa LB. aMratt. P" lb ar tnm lt,M sietiiaof "ft e wrrisa Cripple Creek Gold Fields FREE i Information regardlnc mlntnrntoc t Od properties Write Tbe Mechem Investment Jo., member Colorado Mining Stock lixenangw leaver, Colo. Michigan Lands FOR SALE- r2000 Acres Good Farming Lands Title Perfect. On Michigan Central, Detroit I Alpena and Loon Ijike Railroads, at price nilns from (2 to Per Acre. These lands art dose to enterprising new towns, churches, rhools. etc., wilt besold on most favorable term Ipply to H. M. FlhRCE, AgL West BaycltT.Mict Srtsln iMt war. J&aMiju&CaUliixciMmft, atty siuo (ODER'S PASTiLLE8.rS I HtlTWi v-rillar . Persons destrln ti purchase a frm In one ot be be-t asrlcu tural count es in Illinois can t ajnaMelnfaiiBiniioq by addressing WAaiUt, Baw. SIS, Maamd Cltr. HU PATENTS -jSS Bowk Free. s. IM1HIK Ktm, D. O. CsmvsI la la an rar. "weie .Hit IUL&. Pass sIimmi SoM by antats. -f or Fabulous Cost. Ivory mats are exceedingly rare; it js said ry those who know that only three exist In tbe whole world. The largest of these measures eight feet by four feet, and, t bough made in a imnjl hill State in the north of India, has an almost Greek design for its border. It was only usM on state oc casions, wben tbe rajah sat on it to sign Important documents. The origi nal cost of the mat Is fabulous, for six thousand, four hundred pounds of Ivory were used In Its manufacture. Tbe finest strips of Ivory must bave been taken off the tusks, as the tnat Is flexi ble as a woven stuff, and beautifully Ine. Acme of Politeness. " The acme of politeness was reached tj a mining superintendent who, ac cording to Tit-Bits, posted a placard reading: "Please do not tumble down the shaft" I Till at - 1 I P-5!!ailJ 111 M.J S . A PsIILa.. ri. Eittstani: CettMtw:' aM. Etxtorwai I I mssasa, SoMbraroi nerves npon pore blood, sod tjwywill ant Uithful servants and not tyrnni- fhe levou la I mutfin Krong, cheerful and happy. To yore blood, and to keep pare, 9 . Sarsaparilla ii ii- Din "'" ; nOUU o rlll9 lacuve. o ceuia. ITS LOSING ITS POPULARITY. Calnat Wood Mew Flada Ita Chief - Market ia Other Coaatriee. Aa fancy wood, either In furniture a. a house finishing, wain at has yielded oost of Its prestige to oak. and now the. ralk of onr American walnut goes tbroad. Germany taking the major pot ion of It At least 80 per cent., ot K s shipped to London, Liverpool and lambnrg. There la no reason why wal mt should have so fallen Into disfavor, ut the fact stands that It hi unf sehlon ible and It must go. The foreign ship ments ran along between 8,500,000 and 1,500,000 feet, and the bulk of It comes rom Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Indl ina, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois and Pennsylvania, the remaln ng States furnishing little or none, ftae finest shlDment for 1896 came from I Texas, but. as a rule, Indiana walnut a the best. Kentucky lias more wan tny other State, but It does not average is high as Indiana. The largest walnut law-mill in the world la In Chicago, ind it uses about 3,000 car-loads a year. IValnut Is graded into firsts, seconds, ejects and culls, and the price varies rom $18 to $20 for culls and $35 to $40 tor rejects to $70 per thousand for firsts ind second. At an average price of '50 per thousand. It will be seen that :he grand total of the value of our wal lut shipments Is not a very Urge sum. rhe best grade of walnut Is forest rrowth, what Is known as "cornfield ralnut," being hard and Irregular, alth more or less wlndsbakes. Walnut rrees are worth from $1 up, according their accessibility, and there is no rule of flndlna them. A tree should be it least sixteen Inches In diameter, rhlle some trees go up to over fifty inches, and a log over sixty feet long s found occasionally. Aa a rule. ough, walnut branches low and short bgs prevall. Figured walnut is a spe - rtalty. and Is used for veneering. Its rlce varies from 6 cents to $1 a foot 3ne man In West Virginia is reported to on n a figured tree which cost him n.00, for which he asks $4,000, having refined $3,000. There are over 6,000 'eet In it A walnut tree is at its best it about fifty years of age, or rather t should live that long before It Is cut lown for market The largest collection of walnut a. present ready for market Is at Ironton, Ohio, cut In West Virginia and Ken tucky. There are 393,000 feet of it of rarylng gradea. One farm In Woodford County, Kentucky, last year furnished 193,000 for Germany, and 97.000 feet tor home consumption. The fanner fot $7,538 for the entire lot One Indi ina man is looking for a purchaser for 150.000 feet which be has collected at rarious point In the State. The bulk f the shipments are In tbe log, and the iverage price, from "common Mlssls ilppl points" to Liverpool or Hamburg, s $30 per thousand. Our competitors In tbe European mar tots are Italy and CIrcassIa, the latter lurnlshlng "Black Sea" walnut The to-called French burls which are shlp ed to this country to some extent are lot French at all, but Circassian, shlp- eu to Marseilles and reshlpped from here. Tbe Italian walnut Is small ind not of as good quality as the oth srs. As might be expected. New York s the leading point of consumption in tm erica, and the largest amount Is ihlpped abroad from there, though lome goes from Baltimore and Nor 'oik. Butternut which Is another ape ries of walnut Is a soft wood, light in .olor. not much In demand, not large In mpply, and worth about $25 a thou land. New Tork Sun. irara or onio,crrr ovTouoo, l .. Lfcai ttorrsrrv- fas, Frask J. Cbknst makes oath that he la tha anior partner of tbe Hrmof F. J. Camr e 0., dolnn business In the City of Toledo, Jounty and State aforesaid, and tbat said firm will pay tbe sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- ua K tor eacn aua every case or u tiarrn tnat tmnot be cured by the use of Ham.' Catarrh Jche. Frank J. Cblnst. warn to before me and subscribed In my re nce, luis tm nay ox uegnnoer, A. u. loan. . " 1 A. W. Guasom, ftlCAL 1 ' ' JTntnru PuVft- I all's Catarrh Cure iataken Internally aad acts 11 reel ty on tne oioon ana mucous surfaces ol ne system. Bena rnr testimonials, tree. ... J-Caawar COh Toledo. O. SrSold by Druuslsts. 73a. " A perfectly white sauirrel. with link eyes, was caught by a hunter lear South Windham, Conn, a few lays ago. It is probabtt that what a million women say ifier dallT trial Is a mtaiakar T-Aeu ih mow by test tnat Dobbins' Electric Is inott teo- lomicai. purest sou ont. 1 bey have bad 28 wi wuj 11, j ou sire u eite irtat. It is said that the largest bar of gold ver cast waa sent to tbe Baok of Cali- ornia in 1882. It weighed tllj ounas. Ths Most Simple and sura RtvcDr for ourh or Throat Trouble Is "Brow Branchial rrocAti." Tbey posMss tea merit. one 01 tne curiosities exnioitea at a air io Maine was a horse with a oer- ectly formed caribou's foot Rhraaaatlaaa Is caused by lacUo add la tha lood. Hood's Sarsaparilla neutralizes this add ad completely and permanently cures rbeuma. urn. Be sure to get only Hood's. Rsefi Pills cure nsnsea, sick headache, tn- lgestion, biliousness. Bold by all druggists. It is computed that a well-known ianist in twelve hours' practice truck 1,030,500 notes. I am entirely cured or hemorrhage ot lunae by lso Cure for Consumption. Lodisa Lshua. lis, Bethany, Mo . Jan. 8, "W. The thinnest sheet of iron ever oiled has a surface of fifty-square aches and weighs but twenty grains. 1 would take 1800 such sheets to hake a layer an inch thick. Bastlest Yes Abies Always Fay. That's so, the editor hears Mr. Market akutnaM assasat WaJI saa-akaw dBJaka a. a -Miaaaw mmjm w waa, wsaw UssVI " - '""-" ew are uru iu vnmuvos Hu (nay Biever aVt- ip point you. Bslser is the largest grower ot mgetablea, farm seeds, grasses, clovers, po- Xtoe, et. tr sou wii.l ott rmii ovt sss asms rtq i "jrJr"""? rns wow posaas yw wus asst aaaapw pawa re ef Sarly Bird Badish (ready U U days) avl their great eatalogaa, OsSalegne alone. b. aostsga- (A-) Ninety percent of the 4929 flights t steps in Edinburgh are now lighted line months in a year at a cost of 13.60 a lamp. TeJepfconiaf wilht wires it pre- Panl Bourget is writing a oiie-aci pwr n proTr X Comedle-Fr.nc.laai Th. Jtle le "The Screen." Edmund O. Stedman bas decline a ,ffer of the new Billing, chair In ftnr lsn literature at Tale University. in the Macmlllan's new edition of Mckens. edited by his eldest son. there raany interesting reminiscence, of jie novelist and bits of hie eorrespoaWl ince la the prefacea. The American Bconomle Association alll publish very shortly, "1 r Blcardo to McOulloch.- lately olsoov ,red. edited and annotated byJ. B. Hollander, Ph. D, of Johns Hopkins University, and "Baca Traits and lencles of the American Negro, by U Hoffman. Mr. TV 1. VerdeoaL formerly of . a tan Francisco, but now living la New fork, where bar hueband la a eorre- pendent ef the Ban Francisco Chronl de. haa written a noveL It Is entitled. "Ladles First," and deals with the ex periences of a well-known mine pro moter of early days. nir-tord Hardlns- Davla Is said to bave been paid live hundred dollars by W B. Hearst's New York paper, the Journal, for writing the introduction to the Yale-Princeton football match. Heffelflncer. the gUnt football player. received a like amount from the same newspaper for publishing a technics; description of the game. T. B. Aldrich haa sent the following letter to the Boston Transcript: 'Some verse, called Tbe Ideal Husband,' and having my name attached to tnem a. the author, are being extensively re printed by the newspapers. I beg leave to say and it glvea me great pleasure to say It that I am not the author of chose verses." Douglas Bladen', new book, "A Jap anese Marriage," whlcn has had an Im mense run In Kngiand, haa Just been Issued In America. In It Mr. Bladen 'declares himself a strong advocate of ' the New Woman movement The book 1 is dedicated to the Earl of Dunraven, ."the most eloquent advocate of the rights of the deceased wife's sister." j BpeakJng of a pa8gage In "Yalllma Andrew Lanf aays: " , stevenson was 'crasy over M. -sensations d'ltalle.' and fired " . . . ... dedlcaUon at him It Ut urget ! book-seller s shop In Parte formed me), a dok oui oi u. u.uc. sorely puezled he was as to how to com municate with his remote admirer. Terror of Engagement Time. The daughter in a wealthy household in close neighborhood to Central Park is engaged to be married, and the news of the engagement has been published. "We all wish I hadn't" says paterfam ilias, "because since It got out It has looked as though we would not be able to enjoy life or even to stay In town. Tbe mall we receive and the people who try to get In to see my wife or myself are such as to cause consterna tion. Both the letters and the visitors to furnish flowers for tbe wedding or v mV tho iv)Iiiif mnna, cho.hor we were to have one or no), or to supply the chlnaware or tbe cabs. They are from stationers who desire to print the cards, from engravers, from Jewelers, from dressmakers and tailor, and mil liners, from caterers who will furnish waiters, napery, china, glass, plate even a bridegroom if we ran short I Imagine. The letters pile up beside my wife's plate every morning and the most stylish engraved cards, bearing the names of men and women of whom we never heard, are sent up to the dis tracted woman from the front door all day long. Interesting? - Yea, very; especially the covert suggestion by a Jeweler or two that If we desire to swell the display of wedding presents of gold or silver or Jewels they can be vad on hire." New York Sun. Female Firemen. In Wasso, Sweden, there la a feminine branch of the fire department Their duties consist In filling fonr great tubs which constitute the water supply In case of fire. They stand In two con tinuous lines from the tube to the lake, about three blocks away, one line pass ing the full buckets and the other send ing them back. - Whenever the fire alarm sounds tbey are obliged to come out no matter what the weather may be, the daughter of the house as well as the serving maid, and often their skirts freeze like bark from the water and the? cold. If the men are away they not only carry the water, but bring out tbe bos and ladder, and work the Dumps. A Mysterious Face. While a workman engaged in a Pue blo, Colo., atone yard wa. dressing a block of stone bis chisel laid bare a round knob or knot near the surface of the rock. A stroke of the hammer vigorously applied for the purpose of smoothing down the nodule had the effect of dislodging it entire. An in vestigation proved that the under aide of the atone knot bore a perfect mode) of a human face. ' The Coreast Bat. A singular Coreaa hat Is a great round mat of straw worn by a mourner The hat Is bound down at the sides s as almost to conceal the head and face of the wearer. He carries In his hand a screen or fan. and when in the roar; any one approaches him, he holds tbt screen In front of blm, so that It to gether wltb the hat completely con ceals him. Wben a man disputes with a fool the fool Is doing the very same thing. I r. Kilmers Fusr-Root ents allKldney and Bladder trouble 1 amplet and Consultation fre i-aboratorv Blngnamtoo. & t A law in Basle Swiiserland. nrohibit. the occupancy of a house until four weeks after it has been completed. This is to prevent disease from damp walls. . teething, softens ibe gums, reduces lanamma Uon. allays pain, cures wind colla Desoouu MfillV MlAnl a a la na.J stance, is valued at 9M 1 pound. FITS stopped free or UK. kustb'S ttRBAI NsRVaRaaroMaa. No AU alter first dayV ur. Marvelous euros. Treatise and SAW trial bob tie tree. xwubk. sei Area OL. AaUSW. XTU acid is now obtained from sawdust Well Done Outlives Death. "ivYur Memory Will Shine if You U APOLIO gwwwwv ltm TatUolc ol NEURALGIA 5 IO 15 Years Years Years ss-kea the ;Ktir.i ty lies ia a ST. JACOBS OIL IT CUKXS. oooooooooooooooooooo ud3QDQ? f W. O. Lloyd, a worktngman. rlvlag , at No. 66 White av.. In the 18th Ward, Cleveland. O., tin bought Bipaos T&bules of Benfleld, the drag, gist. In an Interview had with hhm on the 8th of May, 1898, by a rape. . ter named A. B. Calhoun, reddla at 1747 East Madison .v., Cleveland, Mr. Lloyd said that he was at peas ant out ot . Job, but expaeted te ge to work next week at the Bridge Works. "Anyway, I have the prem ise of a Job there," were bis words. He had been out of employment since lant fall. We will lethltnteU bis story in his own wordsi "Worst was a little slack, and I was feeling so bad that I eonoluded to up1t tor a few days, and when I refnred my plaoe was filled, so Tra been out J. I ever sinea. I don't ears muoa, . . though. Tve been gaining rlghrf along by y rest and treatment. Last fall I went to a doctor who eras recommended to me as a good one J and with quite a reputation. He I gave me medlolnes of aU kinds for . nearly six weeks, and I got BO banes fit that I could sea. In feet, I doa't believe he knows what Is the matter with me. A friend ef mine called one evening and told me he had been using Blpans Tubules for a short time and ba 1 never found any thing that helped his atomaeh and liver troubles as much as they did. He banded me a circular about them, whloh I read, and oonelndext that they were Just what I needed and would fit my eaae exactly. I dropped Dr. at once, went over to the dru k store and got a 50-cent box of tbem, ont of which I took two a day for awhile, and within three days notioed and felt mnoh improve' ment. That waa about the middle of Deeember. Lant February I gut another small box of the Tabu lee and took part of them only, as I was feeling so mueh twtter that I didn't think I needed any more. Tbe rest ot the box I gave to John C -7!) the other day. If I bad heard of' them at the time I stopped work I eould have saved my doctor bill, and, better than all, probably kept tight on with my work. But I do not bo grudge tbe time lost nor the doctor : Mil, as I feel I am well paid fothav Ing learned of theTabules. I now , fee no pain whatever In my j Stomaoh, liver and bowels active and regular, and eat like a well nsaa should eat." I SI. an. TuIiiiIm am- InM hv (Irtl.nt.M. OT t)T ( s,bi r.c-- a ix 1- Mm to tub Ktsaat rheniir HVinpsiiy. Nul lu Dpiuos St., e ToStC rhfniV J IVinpany. Na lu Spiuos Mmntf v LU. 10 GCUIS, A lesson in Cooking Two Cupfuls of Meeker's Self-Raising- Buckwheat, Two Cupfuls of Cold Water, Stir a few times. Bake on a hot griddle. . Takes about a Minute. BUCKWHEAT. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Doug lao 3. SHOE besJorTdTm" If you pay 84 to SO for shoes, ex- amine the W. L. Douglns Shoe, and O see what a good shoe you can buy for OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS, vuaukkss, BCTTOaT, and LACE, mad la all k I n d a of t he beat selected leather by skilled X men. AVe make and sWI more 63 Shoes than snanufacturer In the world. None genuine unless name and pnee is stamped on the bottom. siT?urdealer for our S3. ao. a. and aths tot bSvT! TAKE NO SU3STITUTE. If yourdealer cannot supply you xld tory, enclosing price wd to pay carriage. State luriS,Ttvle - aMlue ui ,.ox 1;. W. L. DOUCI aq d. w, .wron. Mas. raci, ajim n Lr ., 1 - cloth, both sidw Bt.,,b r 4iTtS We. one collar is eq.isl t tw ",iDd l?'a1 A Yaluable Medical Book Free n,!!!.150"0?. r the cure oenu iuc for postage. DR. C. H. DIRMITr I9th and FEDERAL STa.. Phiia. 'p.. til ot Urn. .ruiiZ; V "rri.T" "oe ITsMi lnl....l . ,BBSBBaTaLJ