VOL. XXXIII MRS. J. E. ZIMMERMAN, Tremendous Reduction Sale fabrics. Ou, ,0,,0,,-lb. filing t.n.c » short for us, but the season has only begun for >ou. BLACK GOOD SPECIAL. A lot new fig- Mohairs, very popular just now for Separate Skirt*. 1 rices 25c, 29c, 40c, 50c, 60c, 75c and SI.OO. FRENCH SERGE SPECIALS. Black ami all the new colors; all wool wrap and filling, 25c,40c. 50c, 75c and sl. NOVELTY~GOODS SPECIALS. 25c. 33c, and 50c A SILK SPECIAL." A i' /en st\lesof rifc-h figures, Tabetta Waiol . ilk were 75c; for this occasion, 50c. A HOSIERY SPECIAL. 1 Children's heavy black ribbed hose, .j| pairs for 25c; fast black. gi SHIRT WAIST SPECIAL. I 75c for Waist with detachable Collar \ ami Cuffs; real value $1.25. i The above SPECIALS have been carefully selected from the different depart ments, and you will find the values axactly a-mepresented. .Ye like to give you these Bargaiu surprises because we know that yqu appreciate them. \ou can buy freely from the lots quoted above with the full assurance that they are all under regular prices. MRS. J -E. ZIMMERMAN T. H. Burton T. H. Burton Why is it that T. H. BURTON is always busy in his store? Simply because the people of liutler county appreciate the faA that he has the best selected stock of Foreign and Domestic Suitings extra pants and Men's and Boy's Furnishing Goods, ever brought to Butler, and sells them for less money. We guarantee everything that goes out of our store to give perfect satisfaction or money cheerfully refunded. T. H. Burton T. H. Burton Sweeping Reduction THROUGHOUT OUR MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. Being a few weeks earlier than usual for our Summer Clearance Sale makes this the great- est Clearance Sale we have ever had. Remember the first buyers get the choice things. M. F. & M. MARKS. 113 to 117 South Main Street, Butler, Pa. As has been our custom our store will be closed at 6 P. M. frcm July Ist to September Ist. / +NOTICED FIRM'S- I have taken into partnership, Mr. Edward J. Grohman, and the drug business will be conducted in the future under the firm name of Redick & Grohman. Mr. Grohman is no stranger in this community. He has been connected with our house for the past seven years, and it gives me pleasure to testify that he understands his business thoroughly. He is a graduate of the Pittsburg College of Pharmacy, is also a Registered Pharmacist. 1 take this opportunity to return thanks 10 a generous public for the liberal patronage extended to me for so many >ears, and I hope to have a cantinuance of the same as we aie now better prepared to serve our patrons than ever before. Respectfully, J. C. REDICK. ounowos 1 "« '•JO J&. »TTs'f* 1 CIKNTS' HOLD, LADIKS' GOI.I). WW A TA C* 3 t tiENTS SILVKK. LADIFS CIUTLAIN. JS3 E 21a ¥4 V 1 (lol« """ ■* •«.*.» K* I that can be rouini in it llrsl cias" store. RODGFI BROS. 1874 }"»''■"»• h| aT[ P pn T p THE L,-. jeweler. No. 13!» Nortfc Maic St, Butler, Pn. 'HilfSl m * gfST GOODS* These are the things that have enabled me to build up a tirst-class tailoring trade during the last year. 6 YVe have the most skillful, painstaking cutter; employ none but 'he verv best workmen; handle nothing but the very l>est goo,ls, both-foreign and domestic and guarantee you perfect satisfaction in each ami every particular and for all' tlYu cLarge you simply a fair living profit. ; j. s. young, Tailor, Hatter and Men's Furnisher 101 op ~ || A BEL) SPREAD SPECIAL. I nil double-bed size, heavy crochete; you have paid {r.75 for no letter; these are yours at $ 1 .25. MILLINERY SPECIAL. Fine Trimmed Hats for $1.49; reduced from $2.-5 and #3.00. Special sale in Untrimmed Hats, Flowers and Ribbons. WASH GOODS SPECIAL 25 styles Dainty Dimities and jaconette, perfectly fast colored, 10c; real value i 2 V 2 'c and 15c per yard, I XDI;K\VEAR SPECIAL. A case of women's shaped Jersey Rib bed Vests, low neck and short sleeves, :i ;c; also Oliu at S C ; value luc. A MUSLIN SPECIAL. S Heavy Brown Sheeting at real pvalue 6c; full yard wide. THE 'BUTLER CITIZEN. No Cripe Win ii you take Hoo-R- I'.Us. TIK t ig, oIJ-fajh • ioned. Ml (jar-ciiat"rt PILLS, which t"ar you *ll to ; .ire nut in it vrltii lloo*l s. Laity to k>i Hood's I and <>a»y to operate, is true of Hood's Pills, which are IB up to date in every respect. 111 fhfc : Safe, certain and sure. All ■ ■■ ■ i druggist*, '-'•"■e. I". I Hoo,l K; Co., Lowell. Mass. The only Pills to tak • with Hood's SarsaiiarllU ! c.x D o wmmiiimima CV3 £N> |UWer- I | Wear | 1 Points | S ' §1 protection cvi OJ CSJ irrititi©!) CO 1 28 oj cv, cv & f oj Mo '-Ifsrm? £-> A'.S i«> Jaro* Hyjuejjie Ue?«»",;l»* ami n»y«» front • 1.00 to » piilr. All Kl,i lea and Wldlht. 1 • **«!' it» U athcr has hicrrased the price ol «»th« r in it t'i« qu.ilitv nn«l r* r, cr. RING PROMPTLY DONE. The Place to Buy GAS COOK ING AND HEATING STOVES, GA.S BURNERS AND FIX TURES, HOSE, BATH TUBS, ENAMEL AND IMPROVED WELSHBACH GAS ww* BURHERi W. H. O'BRIEN I OK 107 East Jefferson St. BTTTLEH. PA., THURSDAY. JVNE'A 189(>. PATICMT. \ «Y WIUIiIAM T. PIICHOUS. v r jg^^&>*T ri e ht - '®* s ' fcy J ' B ' Llrr ' ncotl Co ®p aB J' " XIV. While we physicians busied ourselves in the room in which the injured man lay, making such preparations us were in our power for the grim event on the result of which a life depended, Dorothy Gray was driving briskly along the Ba&settville road. The task she had undertaken was simple, but none the less important for that fact; she had merely to cover more than a score of miles in the shortest time posible. For many girls of hey acquaintance the undertaking would have been the easiest thing imaginable; and with a good deal of envy she recalled the skill shown bv one. or two of her friends on occasions when the moving cause was nothing more weighty than a chance to display prowess as a whip. Unfortun ately for her, she had seldom held the reins over anything more spirited than the lazy animals occasionally hired by hex* aunt on a specific guarantee that in no way could they be started out of a slow trot, hardly faster than the walk for which all of them evinced a strong preference; and, although she had gained a very fair understanding of the idiosyncrasies of the roadster in front of her, her knowledge had the drawback of being for the most part theoretical. Still, she had not begun t-he journey without duly considering ita conditions, nnd, on the w hole, they were favorable to a novice. The road was good, though here and there very narrow, as is some times the case with rural highways; there were no sharp pitches of the kind to shake untrained nerves; and the horse, so far as she knew, was utterly unacquainted with the equine joys of lx>lting. Not to press him at first — that was her plan, for much haste might mean little .speed in the end. For the first half-mile she drove al most leisurely, but when she had reached tho top of the ridge which bor dered the lowlands along the shore she tightened the reins a little, nnd felt in stantly the roadster's response to the summons. He settled down to the work before him as if he liked it, with the long telling strides which covered ground with such deceptive ease. A quarter of a mile ahead was a buck board bearing two passengers and drawn by a horse which, she saw as she came closer, was trotting steadily. It surprised her to observe how rapid ly she overhauled the other conveyance, even when the driver, after a look over his shoulder, plied hie whip with the evident intention of giving her a chnse. A few hundred yards showed him the hopelessness of the contest, and, with native courtesy and perhaps a shrewd guess that his own wheels would be the safer by allowing the stranger a generous share of the road, he pulled his vehicle well out Of the way as she sped by him. She caught a look of cu riosity on his face as she turned in her scat to watch her swift, progress. There wus jvrwt t.lu- tinge of iXClte ment in the ride to make her forget for a time the sorry cause of it. The coolness' of approaching evening was upon the land, although the sun woe still well above the horizon, and what little breeze was stirring blew in her face. On she went, now across a plain, now surmounting a gentle acclivity, now winding along a valley among the low hills, but always with the same smooth motion, as steady as it was fleet. An old weather-stained farm house sprang into view on her right. She remembered that it was counted as marking the half-way point of the road. A glance at her watch showed that, even with her slow start, she had covered a little more than five miles In 24 minutes. With 15 or 16 miles yet to be traversed this might be doing too much; and on the next rising grade she set herself to the task of slacken ing the speed. There was somewhat of a struggle between horse and driver. but at last slie won. More than once was the test repeated before Bassett ville was reached, but when she turned into the main street of the town her watch told her that less than 50 min utes hud sufficed to cover the last half of the trip. A pretty little woman was sitting on Dr. Fowler's doorstep as the fair mes senger drove up. She came briskly to the gate, and, leaning upon lis tened intently to the girl's brief ac count of the accident, and the urgent need of a surgeon's services. "But the doctor's away," the little woman said. "He has gone to Trent, and I don't expect him back before midnight—l'm Mrs. Fov ler.youknow." "But cau't we catch him by tele graph?" Dorothy asked anxiously. "Is there no way ? The case is so desperate. Isn't there anything we can do?" Mrs. Fowler shook her head. "No," she answered, regretfully, for she was proud of her husband's surgical skill, "I shouldn't know where to address a telegram, and there's no train till the late one. Who is in charge of the case now ?" "Dr. Morris —tihat is Dr. Banks. I suppose lie is in charge, with Dr. Mor ris assisting him." "Umphl Dr. Banks —I know him. The other I don't." The lady's tone expressed very little confidence in the surgical talent of Rodneytown. "Dr. Banks has a sprained wrist, and Dr. Morris is a- —a—specialist in a—a — nervous diseases," Dorothy hastened to explain. "They united in sending for Dr. Fowler." "Oh, I understand," said Dr. Fowler's wife, amicably. "It is dreadfully un fortunate that he is away." "Mrs. Fowler, please advise me," said Dorothy, earnestly. "The doctors argue that an immediate operation of fers the only hope of saving the man's life. lam sent here for a surgeon. I find him gone. What should I do?" "There's nobody else here I'd trust with a cat's life. Dr. Morse—l mean Morris —must operate, or you will have to wait for my husband's return. He can hardly get to Rodneytown before two or three o'clock in the morning." A new doubt assailed the girl. How about instruments? Banks and I should have them, she supposed, but there was the chance that we were unprepared with suitable appliances. As briefly as possible she told Mrs. Fowler what was in her mind. "Sure enough," cried the little wom an, "I don't believe old Dr. Banks has anything of the sort. We'll not risk it, anyway," She ran into the house, returning in a moment with a case under her arm. "Here's a set of instruments," said she. "Take it; my husband has an other. Get back to Rodneytown as quick as you can. If they decide to wait for Dr. Fowler they can send word ( over this evening. Oh, don't bother about thanking me; if you ever marry n doctor, you'll be Bure —" But liorothy did not wait for the rest of her sentence. A twitch of her hand had set the hay in motion, auil she was half a dozen yards down the street, leaving -Mrs. Fowler to ponder over the übruptness of her departure. Ouee the town was left behind, the girl lost no time in calling upon her nag's powers, and away he went as readily as if he. were fresh from his stable. Mile after mile slipped behind them. Soon the half-way house joined the procession to the rear. It was growing dusk now. and the air was chilly. ITer wrists were beginning to ache under the pull of the lines, and the thought came to her that perhaps she stixxt in greater need than her horse of a breathing spell. She tried to pull him in the next rise, but instead of slacking his pace he increased it. In vain she tugged and sawed at the bit; the bay was out of her control, and knew it as well as she did. He was trot ting as she had never seen him trot be fore, with the blood of a dozen genera tions of picked roadsters coursing hot in his veins. Just ahead she made out the dark mass of wood through which the road passed. An instant later she was flying alone under the tunnel-like arch where the boughs of the trees met above the traveled way. In the gloom of this passage she could make out litlle of the road, though she leaned from the buggy in the effort to see what might be her course. Then the wood was left behind, and about her was the twilight of the open coun try, seeming almost bright by com parison with the tangle of shadows through which she had sped. The bay, untiring, but with flecks of foam show ing here and there on his coaf, was trotting with the smooth precision of a machine. It was glorious to watch him, to hear the sharp beat of his hoofs. Powerless as she was, the ex hilaration of the race took possession of her: she caught herself encourag ing the animal with her voice; she forgot the pain In her wrists, the very real danger in which she was placed. She thrilled with delight as she flashed by a wagon whose occupant had pru dently driven into the ditch to afford her a clear right of way. He called out-ti warning to her, but, though she heard his voice, the words were indis tinguishable. At last she was at the summit of the ridge looking down upon the beach, and her destination was close at hand. Again she sawed and tugged at the lines. Slowly her efforts told; gradual ly the bay's speed decreased, until, as he neared the farmhouse, she had him well in hand. Mrs. Weston, one of her boys, Mrs. Clark and two or three chil dren were awaiting her at the gate, all eager to learn the result of her mis sion. Dr. Hanks and I were close be hind them, and, as the horse came to a stop, we pustied our way to the side of the uuggy. "You've made wonderful time," l cried. "Where's Fowler? Is he following you?" asked Banks. "He can't be here for six or eight hours," she said, quietly. "But here is a case of instruments." Banlcs and I looked at eaeh other,' appalled by the news. "Dr. Fowler is in Trent," the girl, went on. "lie is expected home at mid-! night. It is arranged that if you need him then, a message shall be sent to him." With liis sound hand Banks lifted the case from the buggy. "This is serious, very," he said in my ear. "We. can't wait for him; it's out of the question. Join mo in your office as quickly as you can." I nodd(kl and turned to assist Miss Cray to the ground. Young Weston led the horse away. "Come," said I to the girl, "you must have some supper. By the looks of the horse, as well as the clock, I can see that you've taken nobody's dust on the road. You must tell me all about it after awhile." "I was in Bassettville hardly 40 min utes ago," said she, with a look at her watch. "But how is he? Have you any more hope?" "He is doing as well as anything hu man could after such a crushing and but our opinion is not changed." She left me and walked away slowly and dispiritedly. The reaction after the excitement of her ride was already upon her. Almost as depressed in spirit as she, I made my way to the office. Banks had opened the ease and was inspecting its contents. The room, in expectation, of Fowler's arrival, had been prepared for the operation. "It is fortunate she brought these, Morris," said Banks. "I'm afraid my old tools would have answered poorly. What a head she must have on her shoulders to have thought of borrowing the case! She is a noble woman, Mor ris, a woman In ten thousand." "Indeed she is." "Best get to work at once," Banks added. "Come, arc you rea^y?" A first capital operation! How the student looks forward to it, how he pictures in imagination the moment when the knife enters the flesh, how he dwells upon the surroundings, the attendants, the bright, keen blades flushing back the light, the odor of the anesthetic, the subject lying there on the table, maimed, diseased, his life dependent upou the skill of the sur geon's liand and eye! Small wonder the novice's heart throbs with pride in the profession he has chosen; small wonder he thinks it the noblest and best in the choice of man. To cut. to cure, to shed blood to save—to him it seems to represent the highest de velopment of the progress of his race. •But when, long 1 afterward, perhaps, this same student, now a genea-al prac titioner, finds himself confronted with the ordeal—all, that is different. Be tween these days and those others when he hurried to the hospital amphithe ater stretch years in which his confi dence may have waned, his memory of the scene about the operating table grown dull. There is no cowardly desire upon him to shirk the responsibility —his professional training would count for little did it not insure him against such weakness—but he understands the extent of that responsibility. As a student-spectator he watched the work of specialists; now, as an oper ator, it is his duty to endeavor to ap proach their skill as nearly as lies in his power, though the knife comes strange and unaccustomed to his hand. Mind you, I am not speaking of the hundreds in every thousand c>f the pro fession tu whom Surgery stands as the best-loved branch of their art, nor yet of ;hotse who have achieved unhesitat ing, unflinching obedience totlo man dates of duty, but of those uthers, among whom I count myself, v.lio find themselves possessed, no matter what their experience, by a reluctance to ply the knife, even while they prepare for the ordeal the necessity of which they realize. Is the feeling rare? It is sel dom expressed, it is true, but never theless it often e\ists, none the less poignant for its concealment. [ have never conquered it. though I ha\ ■> taken part yi many an operation since the one performed in the low-ceiled room of the fariahouse. As Hanks had said, the hope of the patient's recovery rested on his sturdy constitution. Since his removal to the house Jones had hail several intervals of consciousness, although for the most purt he lay in a state of semistupor. More Mian once I caught the word "mis taken" in his rambling talk, when the fog cleared away from his brain, and the memory of Lamar's enigmatic ob servation flashed upon me; but it was no time to speculate upon the coinci dence. Hanks uas at the injured man's head, renily to apply the chloroform. "You'll need an issistant, Morris,'" said he. "Get somebody who can be depended upon to keep his senses and hand you the right tiling when you call for it. Who is available?" There were two or three wide-eyed faces against the window-panes, but I knew too well how much reliance could be placed upon their owners. Isalig< understood my hesitation. Stepping to the door, he called out: "Miss Gray." She could not have been far away, for she resjwnded to the summons lie fore I could make protest. Banks tersely told her w hat was w anted. "I will do my best," she said. Her voice was steady, but, as she entered the room and came into the glare of the lamps, her face showed pale and drawn. "It will be a severe test of your nerves," said I. "Don't undertake it if—" "I am quite ready." she said, quietly, but decisively. "And I'll warrant her nerves," said Banks. "Miss Gray, please hold out your hand. So shaking there, Morris,'' he added, with a little triumph. "No, there's too much tension," I thought, but did not put the opinion into words. Banks passed her an apron —it was an old one of Mrs. Weston's — and she took the station he pointed out to her and listened attentively to the simple directions he gave. There is a place for elaborate de scriptions of amputations, but, 1 hold. It is to be found within the covers of technical publications. There is no good reason for setting down h"re all that we did, from the administering of the chloroform and the applying of the tourniquet to the fastening of the last bandage. The leg was taken off a few inches above the knee; the operation was successful, as the term is. Dorothy Gray did all that was asked of her, and did it well. Only once did she. flinch — that was when a tiny spurt ol blood from a severed vessel stained her apron; but, even then, in an instant she was again self-controlled, attentive, ready. From first to last Ido not think she glanced once toward the face covered by the handkerchief saturated with chloroform. When our task was done, and Jones had been borne to the bed in au adjoining room which l.ad been prepared for his reception, I turned to tind her leaning ngainst the wall, her eyes looking straight before her and the fingers of her clasped hands working spasmodically. She started violently when I touched her arm, and gazed at me as wildly as one roused from an appallirg dream. "Here, here, Miss Gray," said 1, "this won't do at all. We can't have you like this. Let me prescribe for you." "How is he doing?" She pointed to the inner room. "As well as we could ask. Banks is with him, and will remain as long- as lie is needed. Do you come with me."' I led the way to the open air, and she followed with the docility of a child. XV. The evening breeze had died out, and the night was still aud starlit, with a soft coolness unspeakably refreshing after the close air of the office. "You must make me a promise," I said to the girl. "For the next two hours you must be entirely under my orders. Will you promise ?" "Yes," she answered, mechanically. "Then, first of all, get a hat and wrap, and rejoin me here as quickly us you can." Without question she obeyed, return ing to find me equipped with pipe and tobacco-pouch and awaiting her. We passed through the gate, aud turned into the road leading to the village. "With your permission I'll light this pipe," I observed. She nodded absently, though I doubt if she understood a word I had said. "Tobacco," I resumed, after a pause, in the course of which a pleasant glow had been created in the bowl of the pipe, "is a wonderful agent of comfort- It surprises me sometimes that only one sex hereabouts enjoys its blessings. Both of us have seen or heard of coun tries where the ladies blow clouds with all the grace imaginable. Why not in troduce the fashion here?" She looked up at the question, but made no reply. "There was a preceptor of mine," 1 went on, "who made a study of the ef fects of nicotine, and who wrote some 'very able pamphlets on the subject. Among other things, he proved, to his own satisfaction, that even the moder ate use of tobacco impaired me nory, injured the vision, and caused various other ills. He got to be an extremist nt last, putting the weed under a sweep ing ban. But all thiough his life no 'factory chimney smoked more indus triously than he. Finally some of his associates cornered him, and demanded why he didn't follow his own advice. "'l'd be stultifying myself if I did,' said he, coolly. " 'How?' asked the inquisitors in chorus. " 'lsu't it the. first duty of a man to obey his physician?' "'Certainly,' they admitted. 'But ou won't let your patients smoke.' " 'Of course I won't,' taid he. 'lt isn't good for Vjn. Hut Jimmy Bangs is my doctor; at least he's called in u hen anybody's sick at my house.' " 'Well ?' said t hey. " 'So he's my family physician, you see,' quoth the specialist; 'and he doesn't believe that tobacco ever hurt anybody.* "Come," I persisted, after waiting in va : n for her to speak. "What do you think of my old preceptor?" "1 hardly understood the story," she answered, with an effort. "Well, it's a true tale," said ?, "and therefore I'll repeat it." This time she heaid it all. "I)o doctors often reason so logical ly?" she asked. "Sometimes they do. Did you know j that tnany specialists die of the diseases they've studied most carefully? \Phy- 1 sician, heal thyself— that's advice they ' find it difficult to follow." Again tlu' fell silent. "l or a summer night, tin i> a good one for star-gazing." I ventured. "l>o you keep up your i"ovv you might as well hear all. When you finished your ride you were worn out. Apparently vou hadn't lteen run away with, but evmently T IK horse had kept you at work. I'heu came the call for you to help us. It braced you up, of course, but t he strain, coming after the lirst one. left you a bundle of exposed nerves, so to speak. It wouldn't do to let you go to youv room in such a state. Why. you tvonlil have ha I a night id horroi s, lying awiike for hours, tossing, turning, try ing to shake off the nervousness which held you prisoner. If yn* fell into a do/e it would be to wake as suddenly If under a shock of electr t : ty, to wake to find your muscles rigid and your heart pounding like a hammer. Aud even when physical weariness overcame you at last, your sleep would lw brol.en by dreams a dozen times more terrible than the experiences \ ou've jjone through. I know what \.-u are think ing. and I tell you your thoughts must l»* turned into another channel. It's to try to turn them that I've brought you out here, that I've gabbled about noth ings." "I understand," she said, softly. "1 understand, and I thank \ou from the bottom of my heart. If 1 spoke irrita bly, won't you paidon me? I'm sorry, so sorry, now that I understand." "There's nothing to ps.rdon, unless it is the btusqucnesa with which I've blurted out my reasons fa.- getting you away from the house." "You are r.ot brusque," she said, and walked 011 in silence. I could guess how she was striving to dismiss the scenes of the evening from her mind. At lnstshespoke of h; r aunt,c.pressingre gret that she had left the invalid to seek her couch unassisted. "Don't worry," said I. "Mrs. Clark will be only too happy to take your place to-night. Besides, it is probably just as well that Mrs. Lori.ig should not have an immediate opportunity to over whelm you with ques'ions. That would be bad for both of you. I can't have you sacrificed, even on her altar." " 'Sacrificed?' " she cried. "Dr. Mor ris, you don't realize what my aunt is to me. She is the best, the kindest wom an 1 have ever know n. She has treated me as a daughter—has loved me more than many a daughter is loved. A sac rifice! There is nothing 1 would not gladly do for her." "I believe you. And my belief is one of the strongest reasons for advising you not to see her to-night. I'lease re member the promise you gave me." She halted for UII instant, as if in pro test that the pledge had been exacted when she. did not fully understand its meaning, but she did not offer to turn buck. Ao we strolled on. 1 gradually drew her into talk, and after a little she seemed to have freed herself from the spell which had been upon her. At tho outskirts of the village we 1 urued to the right, avoiding the main streets, walked slowly toward the bank of the inlet, up which sm:'!l coasters occasion ally sailed from the bay. From one of the old wooden piers we could make out the shape of a yawl giidiug seaward on the ebbing tide. The voices of two men on board the bout came to our ears over the black water, in which glistened the pin-point reflections of the stars. "I envy those men drifting along so easily," said the girl. "The water al ways has a fascination for me. l'er haps 1 would risk even the darkness if we could change places with them." "No doubt we could get another boat," I suggested. "I fear it is too lute," she answered, with a fnint laugh, the first I had heard from her since 1 watched her start on the ride to Bassettville. "Confound tTie clock!" I cried. "Itis responsible for half our disappoint ments." "Nevertheless, we get on very poorly without it." "All prejudice, and inherited preju dice at that." "Did you ever try to do without one?" "More than try—l've had to," said I, with vivid recollection of occasions on " Sacrificed? " she cried. which my timepieces, for sufficient rea sons, had been committed to another's keeping. "And were you any happier?" "At the time? Xo. But circum stances prevented my giving the possi bilities of clockless bliss a fair trial. Hunger, you may have heard, bars the way to minor enjoyments." "Uut at least such troubles are aJI be hind you," she said. "1 have otten thought that a man should be better and stronger for being able to look back upon privations endured and obstacles surmounted." "That is good doctrine," said I; "but practically—-well, I shouldn't care to double my advantages of experience." "Let us trust there will be no need l'« >r you to do so," she said. "f!ut it is really getting late. Shall we not turn back?" "Miss Gray," said 1, breaking oue of the pauses in our walk as we walked from the village, "if you are so fond of the water, and if your aunt doesn't ob ject, why should n't we have a boat? It could be kept 'n one of the creeks near the house." "Capital!" she cried. "How odd that we shouldn't have thought of it be fore! I should be delighted." "And your aunt?" "She will enjoy it as much as I." "Then you shall have a boat at once," 1 promised. "I**ll arrange for one to morrow. A man named Johnson has just the little era*t to ■•lease you, I be ilcve, :>ite more than repaid 'or any trouble in petting it." pro PE CONTtNrEO. | AMERICAN JUGGLERS. I klUii M:ißi(-iuii4 l>o Trick* Ihut 4*u»ii tnh tlir K«>«1 Men. Christian missionaries have found the Indian mniric a seriots olistscl# to their e> ~ii_eli/H nr etlorts. Sorcery is in timately associated with the aboriginal worship, and the savages, after astonish ing the priests with their tricks,-In igh i t them, saying: "Your religion eau't do sueli things." 1 happen to know of the ease of a Jesuit priest who some years ago went to work among the Arapahoe* and Cheyenne*, west of the Mississippi. He gave up the business ,f saving their souls after awhile, and came away entirely discouraged. They did things which, he declared, were en tirely lieyond his understanding. The my stery uien would go out on the bare, sandy prairie, where there was not a sprig of vegetation, and, after some chanting and various performance?, grass would come up out of the ground - quite a patch of it. green and grow ing, lie himself saw it grow, and there could be no doubt about it. The bravest act I have ever known was performed by one of these Indian jugglers. A favorite trick of his was one that has often lieen performed by white magicians. It consisted in per mitting himself to be shot at, the hocus jioeus being an arrangement by which the bullet fell out of the barrel into a cavity in the stock of the weapon before the latter was discharged. Meanwhile he had another bullet concealed in his mouth, which at the instant of firing ho pushed outward with his tongue, so uJ to make It apj>ear that he had caught the projectile between his teeth. Now , it happened that this man had a rival, who was engaged In the conjuring busi ness in a neighboring village. On an occasion when the trick was to be per formed, the juggler announcing, as usual, that he was ready to be shot at by anyone present, the rival stepped for ward and said that he would do the shooting. But he demanded permission to use his own gun. Naturally the jug gler objected, but his protest was over ruled. It was decided that the rival magi cian might use his own weapon. This meant almost sure death to the per former, yet he did not blanch. To re fuse the test would have been per manent disgrace. There was one chance out of a hundred, perhaps, that the marksman might miss, lie decided to take that chance, and so permitted the volunteer executioner to take deliberate aim and fire at him from a distance of half a dozen paces. An instant later he fell dead; the bullet had passed through his brain. In some tribes of Indians it used to be the rule that a sorcerer w ho failed three times must pay the penalty of death. That regulation has been remarkably widespread among the savages. I un derstand it to have been accepted as far south as l'atagonia on this continent, and undoubtedly it survives to this day in parts of Africa and elsewhere. Hut there was an ingenious magician of my acquaintance who saved himself from this fate by a little device of'liis con triving. Heing jieriuitted to furnish the bullet by which he was to be shot, lie made one in a mold in which a piece of paper was inscrtol in such a manner that the ball was cast in two hemis pheres. These he put together, caus ing tlieiu to hold by rubbing the edges with his knife lade. In this way at the same time the deception was concealed On being fired from the gun. the bullet flew in halves, which, being of such a shape, scattered and left the man un touched. By this means he escaped on several occasions the penalty which ought to befall the wizard who is a failure. Finally, however, he was found out and executed. I once saw au interesting trick per formed inside of a ceremonial wigwam. There was a lot of dancing and mum mery, in the midst of which a woman came forward and struck the ground in the middle of the lodge. Then a mys tery man took his' turn and began scratching with a stick on the spot which the woman had struck. In a minute or two were exposed to view the leaves of a fullgrown wild turnip. The vegetable was dug up and thrown among the spectators, to show that there was no deception and to quell the r.piH-tite of the hungTy ones. Scratching some more with his stick, the magfeian produced several more turnips—two or three dozen of them. It was really wonderful. —St. Louis (.lobe-Democrat. Favored Lucindy Jane. A noted eastern lecturer says thit the most surprising compliment she e\er received was at the close of a lec ture she gave in a town in Idaho. The hall in which she lectured was crowded, and she noticed in the audience an elderly man who riveted his eyes upon her and listened with open mouth to every word she said. He came up to the platform at the close of the lecture and said, heartily, while he grasped lior hand until she winced with pain: "Yer the livin' immidge o' Lucindy Jane, my first wife, an', what's more, you talk perzactly liks her." "Indeed?" "Yes, you do. She could outjaw any other woman that ever walked the earth, an' ev'ry time you opened your mouth I could of took ray oath It was Lucindy Jane eonje hack to life. You ralv made me oncomfortahle, seem' as I've been married three times since Lucindy Jane left me. Heats all how you favor Lucindy Jane. 1 tell you that jou an' her would of made a great team." —Detroit Free Press. rti til® \ iui). Phil Ossifer—There's no place like home. Ilenpcck (ruefully)— Thank heaven for that.—Town Topics. Too Modett "Wliizzer is a very n:odest man." "Modest ?" "Well, he always rides his wheel with his head down."—Chicago Inter Ocean. A Political (sorrow. 'Monfcst Ironies that we must scan. This ono for woe Is seldom matched; Tho ofllco that will seek the man Ne'er has a salary attached. —Washington Star. Complete Annihilation. Perhaps you will allow me to scud you the following specimen of a "bull" which I heard from a Roman Catholic pulpit in Kngland. The preacher may have lieen an Irishman, but I atn not Vire. lie was speaking of the transi toVin PITH AND- l OlfiT. :c .., --Agatha--' t iiarley i» tK;«led v» his lie* nmr.tache, isn't he'."' Marie "Yes. but with a blush; not half a-i much 1 am." Clairmoiit l'agle. The difference between a somnam bulist and a iues>-c!iger boy is trifling. One w.flks In his sleep tind the other sleeps in li s null*. Philadelphia Press. Without Aeeompanimcnt "ls th* young man to whom Miss Songster en- L gi d musical"Oti. yes, indeed. You ought to hear him chant her praises!" —l>«-tro':t Free Presjl. - Wickw ire—"Notice what a hollow laugh Mudge has this evening?" Yabs ley "Yes. He m getting off that hol low laugh to disguise the fact that he is full." Indianapolis Journal. "That." said the crank, as the op position fielder jnuiped apparently about 15 feet in tbe-aii and pulled down a home-run fly, "that is nothing short of a high-handed outrage."—lndianapo lis Journal. —l'seful at Last. —"You should have seen how ,retrally Miss De Frivolous fwept down the avenue yestel day!" "\Y i!. that's the first time 1 cvt . ar«l of that girl doing anything usi ('ul.**— Detroit Free I'ress. —( ountry roatls in China an ever bounded bv fences, but areentii' v un defined. While the farmer has i right to plow up any road passing thiough his l&nd.driversnf vehicles have an equal right- ami they exercise it to traverse any part of the country at large. —"We are thwarted," she gasped, falling into the arms of the leading juvenile. "My father!" "What has he done?" demanded the youth, with an ominous intonation. "He has hidden all of my wardrobe except 27costumes.*' cried, her voice rising to n shriek. Anybody at all conversant with the tendencies of the drama could_see that an elo[>cment was impossible. How ever. they could do n song and dance.— I>etroit Tribune. RIGHTS OF EXPLORERS. Mr. I.al>ouchere I all* to Sec Why Savage* May Not He Kxcluslve. Among the few spots on the face of the earth which have managed to keep themselves out of the grip of European aggression is the plateau of Thibet. This the Thiln tans have so far achieved by absolutely forbidding any foreigner to enter their country. They foresee, I take It, that, once admit the "explorer," and you will find coming behind him the missionary, behind the missionary the trader, and behind the trader the soldier. They judge from what they see and hear that the only w ay to preserve, polit ical independence against the en croachments of the "civilized" for eigner IJriton, Russian, or whoever he may be —is to prevent him from getting a footing in the country under any pre text. That they are right in this, the history "noip-civilized" people abundantly proves. He lore the Uoyai Geographical so ciety recently Mr. .St. George It. Little dale recounted to an adniiringaudience the result of an organized attempt (in his part to break through ihe oxclu sivene!,s of the Thibetans, and pene trate to Lhassa, despite the objections of the people. For this purpose he fitted out an amateur expeditionary force. His party entered Thibet 13 strong, among them lieing a party* o* l'athans armed with rifles and re volvers. When they reached the more thickly populated region of Thibet they were officially ordered to retire, but persisted in advancing. The Thibetans were evidently* afraid to attack, but parties armed with swords and matchlocks lode alongside of tlic invaders. At a river ford the Thibetans made a show of resistunce. "A determined-looking in dividual" laid his hand on Mr. Little dale's bridle. The latter "whipped out his revolver," and ordered his men to load, but, on they meant to fight, the gave way. The invaders pre; ed on to within two marches of Lhassa, where the Lamas came out in force with about 500 men and ordered them to retire. So alarmed was the country that all the bridges between this point and the capi tal were destroyed. At this point, how ever. Mrs. Littledale, who had accom panied the party, was taken 111, and her husband withdrew the "minimum de mand" which he had formulated, that he should be allowed to enter Lhassa, and partly by threats and partly by diplomacy succeeded in getting permis sion and assistance to pass through to Kashmir. I would respectfully ask what right has any private individual to fit out an armed expedition of this kind nnd. at tempt to force his way into a country the rulers and people of which, for ex cellent reasons, order him to withdraw ? It sounds very fine and plucky, no doubt—though to all appearances 20 resolute and well-armed Englishmen might subdue all Thibet in a few weeks. —London Truth. Fighting Fire with Fire. One of the great achievements of the future is to be the utilization of an tagonistic bacilli in stamping out dis cases of various grades. It is thought that there will, in time be discovered germs that will act as spiders do upon fiiea and cate upon njice. .They will simply grapple with and. In a number of instance? accidental In oculation of jiatients suffering from malignant disease with "the germ o1 some other equally serious malady hai resulted in the restoration of the pa tient to health. Just how this Is done, just why it Is, no one seems able to un derstand, but f;wt.s justify this conclu sion. lu one case the patient was con sidered hopelessly ill with an incur able disease. A careless physician! brought from another patient the bacilli of an equally serious ailment ■ with which the sufferer was shortly at-] tacked. After a number of weeks ol: extreme exhaustion and Buffering, tc, tlie astonishment of everybody whei knew the circumstances, the man be ! pan to mend nnd ultimately recovered.!} bearing no evidence of either disea.so.-r which ftce-med to have spent their fore* •• on each other and left the system 01-j most clean. It will be an interesting « day for medical science when doctor* • can bring out an army of erysipelas or j other bacilli to flglit the germs ol , equally malignant diseases.—N. Y, ! Ledger. The Home of a >latne Family. ' Down near Jonesport the hulk of o schooner lies high and dry on the shore. '> It is slightly careened and - the tim- ' bers are not sound enough to swim in the suj-g-. \et they can stillly breast the wind aud the sweep of tly: rain. The suhuuin r is stranded in a lonely cove, and doesn't look very in viting, j"«t the family of a lobster fish erman dwells here in great comfort. They have converted it into a sort ol seaside rudder grange. 'Tween-decks has been partitioned off, vvlndovrs havt been cut through the hull and funnels protruding through the deck carry , away the smoke Irom the two stoves. ' Within, this home is fair ly cozy, even if the floors do have a tilt to starlMianC The children have lots ol fun rolling .marbles down the incline, and as the lady of the house Olwayt sweeps "down hill" work is "greatly lightened.—Lewiston (Me.) Journal'.