The Cure that Cures i P Coughs, Q Grippe, d Whooping Cough, Asthma, A Bronchitis and Incipient V Z Consumption, Is k foITosj ' Ttu CrERMAN REMEDY' " umnAwAyuM avatases. LA4bu, 4rvvi. 25650rtO $900 Mm n l women of goodtxldreastorapreseal .iine to travel .-i.n.' i. a scents, others for SSbsl work liMikiiiK lifter our intcre.tn MAUO suiiiry sisrsnteed yenrlyi extra roramlsstona nod expenses, rapid sdvsnceaient, old eatab inhed bouse Grand chance foresrnesi iwn tr women to ecure pleasant, permanent pni Hon, liberal Income And future. New, brilliant llnea. A riu St once m iff nun rut: M t Inn . li St., New Haven. Uiian. 8-21-lNt. WRITER CORRESPONDENTS or REPORTERS Wanted everywhere. Stories. news, ideas, poem, 1 lustratej artiolos, aivant!e news, drawings, photo graph, uiii(Uo articles, etc., etc , purchased. Articles revised and pre pared for publication. Books pub lisued. Send for particulars and full information before sending ar- Uoles. The Bulletin Press Association, New York. Anarchist Hid In Vatican Gardens To Assassinate The Pontiff. ARRESTED OY A GUARDSMAN Whin Searched By the Police the Prls a ener Had a Revolver and Dirk Upon , His Person Authorltiei Keep His Name Secret Rome, Aug. 27. The Italian police authorities are taking extraordinary precautions to keep secret the name of the prisoner captured In the Vati can gardens, suspected ot an attempt to assassinate the PopeIFhaa leaked out, however, that the man la a noted Anarchist To the police he freely admitted that he Intended assassina tion, lie denounced Leo aa "a spirit ual giant, keeping millions ot men la POPE LEO XIII. thraldom." The Holy Father was aoti fled ot bis narrow escape last night but refused to comment upon It to any way. New York. Ang. 27. According to a special cable dispatch to one of last night's papers, the man carried a re volver and a dirk. He lay hidden in a part of the gardens through which the Pope traverses dally. His Holiness was being carried from bis private apartrcents In a chair to where bis iandau waited to convey hlra to the pavilion of Leo IV.. when a Swiss guardsman heard a noise in the shrub bery tome distance away. The sol dler Investigated and discovered the assassin, whom he placed under arrest At the rooms of the Swiss guards, where the man was taken, the revolver and knife were found. The man said he had been hidden all morning in the .Vatican Hardens and expected to have to trouljle in killing the Pope. I "I haw been Haiti-: CAM AKKTS for Insomnia, wltu which I have been sflltotsd for over twenty yoarsand I cuii say ihut Cascarsts have Riven SIS more relief than any other reme dy I have ever tried, I shall certainly recant mend thorn to my friends as being all they are represented.'' Tuos 1.11. i. Aim. Klein, 111. CANOV I wsnr bAinAnng VSADI MMIN Pltssant. Palatable. Potent. TasU flood. Do wood, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Orle. 10c. 2jc, SUc. ... CURB CONSTIPATION. ... Stoettaf 1U7 frmfi, Calna, Sfrifal, I.w Vert. IK io-to-mc &x?&sm&Mur NSOMNIA 3 OUR TENDERFOOT. How He Repaid a Camp-Mats for a Simple Kindness. BY BOLRUON WILSON. vfvMvvTvvvTvTTTvvTvTTTTv ITS a sure thing that if a man has 1 any rur in him, the hoir of the brute is going to show up mighty quick when you get that man out in L-ainp. Thai's the way it was with Hays; he hadn't been with us a month before he had given everyone in the outfit cause to dislike him, even the "Old Man," who was very slow in such matters. It wu back in 1883. We were down in the eastern part of Chi huahua, making the preliminary sur vey of a railroad that has never been built, and Hays hnl been sent out from headquarters In Boston to take the place of an engineer the Apaches had picked up. That he was a ten derfoot w-as sufficient reuse for all hands to wish him anywhere else but In our party, for tenderfoots always give trouble; and that he waa from Hoston was a grievance additional, for tenderfoots of that brand can't be tnught anything they know too much. Individually, onr dislike eame of various things; the Old Man's and mine was because he had been boosted into his position without having had to work up,, as. we had done. And then he was mortally Stingy! would not come in on our little games of draw, because, he said, he couldn't ifford to risk the money and he re ceived aa much nay qb I did. Jim, ;ur cook, had it in for him because he had ventured one day to mildly criticise .lim's make of buscuit, something none of the rest of us had sver dared do, nlthough they were not always edible. Ahd he had found fault with Jose's method of cinching a saddle, which stung Jose to the quick, aa he prided himself upon knowing all that was to be known about a horse and saddle. And he had been so incautious ns to report Hill and Tex to the Old Man for some tri vial neglect of their work. One morning the Old Man and I no ticed the hoys with their heads bunched, talking in whispers, and we figured it out that thingR were going to happen to Hays pretty soon that the boys were going to make him fight or leave the outfit. We were not mistaken; the fun began that night while we were eating supper. We were about half through, when Hays suddenly laid down his knife and fork, and got up, then walked hurriedly away, gasping and wheeling tike a choking horse. Nobody aaid a word, but the Old Man reached over, and, pouring the coffee out of Hays' cup, discovered a small cube of plug tobacco at its bottom. A few morn ings later, when Hays got on his horse, he waa promptly backed high in the sir, sod when he came down landed in the midst of a big bunch of gray-beard cactus. We cheered him, of course, and, while he waa picking the needles out of his skin, gathered around him, making remarks that seemed to us calculated to make even a coyote light, but not so much aa a scrappy word could we get out of him. Resides that, Jose caught the horse, and, leading him up to us, took from under the saddle a spine of the same gray-beard cactus; Hays saw him do ity too, and of course knew that Jose waa responsible for the accident. Any man who would let a Mexican rub it in that way was n. g. we' thought The boys were just getting their hands in. And so it went on, hardly a day passing that did not bring some accident to Hays; it was enough to make a genuine man lose his nerve, mnch more a Hoston tenderfoot, and so he soon lost bis color, and would start and tremble at every naexpected sound. I got sorry for him in spite of myself, he looked so abjectly miser able, aad had about decided to speak to the Old Man and get him to call the boys down, when the climax was readied. It was one morning while we were slowly picking our way up a steep mountain that was scattered about with loose rocks and boulders. Hays, flocking to himself, as he had to do pretty much all the time, had fallen back about n hundred yards behind the rest of us. Presently Dill stumbled and fell against a boulder as big as a barrel, and instantly it start ed downward on the jump, rising and falling in long, easy bounds, like a jack rabbit going through sage brush, straight toward Hays. He heard the yell of warning we sent down, and rooked up and saw the boulder com ing; but, instead of flattening himself out behind a ledge rock, ns we expect ed htm to do, he stood with his eyes and mouth wide open, locoed-like, staring up, at us. By good luck the baulder started on n long jump just before It reached him, nnd went whistling 20 feet above his hend. so there renllv was not anything for him to get badly rattled about; but just the same, the next thing we knew he went down in n pile in ns hearty a faint ns nny woman ever hod. Disgusting? Well, that hardly ex presses it. A creature with so little nerve hnd no business trying to be n man. We picked him up, though, and toted him back to camp, nnd after a while brought him back to his senses, lie was too badly knocked out to do any more work that day, and as somebody had to stay in camp to look out for him, the Old Man left me. As 1 have said, I already was sorry for him, and ns I snt there watching his thin, white face, I began to pity him, and to feel ashamed of myself for not having headed the boys off. It was not his fault thnt he came from Boa ton, I .argued; he had to come from somewhere, and Boston was about the best place to come away from that I knew of; snd it was not his fault that he got boosted into a job without having to work for it. It was bard for me to swallow bis stinginess and taek of grit; anythiag else would have gone down easier, but I finally charg ed that to his being a little more than s kid and really, that was all he wan. I had just reached the decision to tell the boys thst they must let him alone or else go up against, me, when he disturbed my thoughts by opening -his eyes snd ssking in a timid, scared sort of a way for a drink of water. Of course I gave it to him. I'd have done the ssme for a dog, but It was the first kindness any of ns had ever done him, and so seemed to get right next to his heart Two big tears rolled out of bis eyes while he was drinking, snd when I reached down for the empty cup he grabbed my hand and thanked me as earnestly as though I had just saved his life. The upshot of it all waa that I met the others just as they were coming in and. telling them what had been run ning in my mind, ended by playfully promising to make dead meat of the first one that should spring another accident on Hays. And the Old Man bucked me up. The boys took it In the right spirit; they had had their little fun, nnd, besides, they were not t half as tough as they thought they were ttoelr hearts were too big. And so Havs came to have an easier time. It was in the first part of the spring that all of this happened. Every day that passed was carrying us farther Sown the country, farther away from civilization, nnd by the time July with its roasting heat came we were swal lowed up by the desert foothills of the Sierra Mndre. One dsy, about the middle of July, we knocked off for Sunday, at least we called it Sunday we'd been away from civilisation so long we'd lost nil track of the day it really was and made camp on a nar row ridge, where a scattering of scrub cedars gave us a little shade. And maybe we didn't need that shade. If you've ever been, out in the desert when there is not a breath of air stir ring, when the sand and rocks and everything else get so hot you can't nfford to sit down without first put ting your hat down to sit on, you will he able to understand just bow much we needed it lor H was that kind of s dar. "Phew!? Tex' fried, mopping the perspiration, trosn his brow, "if that place the parson used to tell about down 't San Antone's any hotter'n this, I hop I won't never git sent there to take a job eurreyin' a fool railroad." "Humph! I'll bet it ain't a Mi hot ter'n this," Bill answered. "All we need is a devil. Now, if old reronimo an' a bunch o' his bucks 'ould come an' jump us, we wouldn't need to ask bell or no other plsee any odds." ' Yen bet!" Tex exclaimed. "Say, let's all handa cut the cards to see who'll go an' bring a bucket of cool water." This was a proposition that aroused interest in all of us, and everybody came in, except Hay he was off by himself enjoying good company. Low man was to win the job, and so of course I had to turn up a duce. That is the kind of luck I usually have. Off to one side of the camp the bare, blistered foothills stretched away hill after hill clean to the Gulf of Mexico, for all that any of us knew to the contrary; and on toe other, with only an arreyo between, towered high above us one nf the peaks ot the spur of the Sierra Madre. Up the ar- royo, about s hundred yards sway, was a deep tenaja, a natural tank formed in the bed-rock, which held nu abundance of water for our needs, and water that was cool, it being pro tected from the sun by a mass of over hanging rock. Naturally, I wasn't In a hurry to get out In that withering heat, but I knew It would only make it worse to delay, it was getting hot ter every minute, so I picked up a bucket and started for the tenaja. I had covered perhaps two-thirds of the distance, following the bottom ot the arroyo, when I heard a wicked little hiss, and a puff of dust flew from the bank of the arroyo at my side. The next instant I beard a faint "spang," the crack of the rifle almost muffled by the dancing, heated air. I dropped the bucket and wheeled around, just In time to see the men In camp grab up their rifles and belts, and start for the rocks on the Jump. The Old Man stopped long enough to yell and wave his hend to me, snd then hustled on; I didn't make out what he said, but I didn't wait to ask him what it was, nor did I trouble to nk who had fired the shot. I just took it for granted thst It was some long-haired, saddle-colored gentle man in gee-string and cartridge belt. who might even then be peering at me through the sights of his rifle from somewhere up on the side of the mountain, and I started running as fast as I could fiek It for a pile of rock a little farther up the nrroyo. The next thing I knew I hit the ground with a crash, and when I tried to get up my left leg wouldn't work; it was paralyzed. I didn't need the blood trickling down in my shoe to tell me what was the matter in fact, I didn't see that until later on, nnd I put out all my strength in an effort to get. behind those rocks be fore my Apache could pump another enrtridge into his rifle. Crawling and hopping and rolling, I did suc ceed in making it, and then turned to my wounded leg. I found no bones J broken, but the bullet had gone clear through, leaving an ngly hole that let the blood out freely. Looking about, I found a crack in the rocks that sheltered me, through which I could get a tolerable view of the mountain Bide, and, crawling there, I glued my eye to it I didn't want Mr. Indian sneaking up unan nounced. Pretty soon the numbness began leaving my leg, but it was aching sad throbbing, and in trying to get into a mors comfortable po sition, X sat up, raking sag head too Bgb. Almost at thst Instant say hat lew off, and half a ansa shots came geating down through the quivering sir. I ducked down sgain, very quick ly. There was a whole band ef Apaches, instead of only one, ft seemed. No doubt they were coming down to the tenaja for water when the foremost one, scouting the way, spied me and took a snap-shot at me, snd the others had crawled up isi time to help spoil my hat. There was plenty of fun In it for the Indians, maybe, but precious lit tle for me; what with my leg hurt ing as if it were paid for it and the heat pouring down on me as if the sun were hung only ten feet above me, I was grttjng feverish, and aa thirsty as a dead fish. There was not a single chance in my favor that T could see. My comrades could do nothing for me without exposing themselves to almost certain death, snd I knew I could not last long where I was the hest alone would kill me. I decided that my game was up, and with that came the determi nation to take at least one of the red .ievils along with me for company. By sheer accident I had one of my guns buckled to me, Again watch ing through my loop-hole, I present ly thought I detected a suspicious movement in a bunch of grass 200 feet or so up the mountain. I watched it closely, nnd soon was re warded by a distinct quivering of its stems. Poking out the muzzle of my 45, I took careful aim and fired. In stantly the grass waa scattered about, a brown arm went convulsively up In the air, stayed there a moment, then fell back on a dark form that was quivering in death. 1 yelled with exultation, nnd then again with defiance as a volley of shots came from up the mountain. But I was puzzled that I heard no hissing or pattering of bullets. Were they not shooting at me, I wondered. Then I heard a rattle of shots from our side of the nrroyo, and I under stood the boys knew now that I was still alive, and were taking n hand at last. To my surprise the firing was kept up, nnd presently I heard somebody running toward me, a white man I knew by the crashing of his shoes in (he gravel, and cautiously raising my bead I saw Haya running up the ar royo, bareheaded and unarmed. Bul lets were knocking up the dust all around him, but the boys were mak ing it so interesting for the Apaches they couldn't shoot straight and he got to me without being hit He looked like he was scared half to death, his face was so white and drawn, and he was panting like a horse with the thumps. Ha nearly faulted when he caught sight of the blood on my leg, but without a word he gathered me up in his arms and started back down the arroyo, stag gering as he ran, for I waa n feather weight. And maybe that was s pleasure trip for me! If you've sver had your face all swelled up with toothache and with somebody punching you in the jaw as steadily ns a eloek ticks, you may be able to form an idea of what I suffered. You see. the bullet had cut a nerve in my leg, and, with every twist and jolt I received, that nerve Just got right sp and kicked, sending excruciating pains shooting all through me. I tried to make believe that I was having a picnic, gritting my teeth together till my Jaws cracked, but it wouldn't work, aad before we were half way to camp I was so sick I'd quit dodging my head from the bullets that kept zipping past us. The rest comes to me busily. As I remember it Hays bad left the arroyo and waa climbing the ridge, when he let out a screech like some wild thing, and I felt myself talking; the next Instant my head ssesned to explode, snd I went to sleep without any rocking. I don't know how long I stayed clear out of H, but the sun hsd got over behind the mountain and things were getting cool, when the siring of red-hot devils snd Apaches and such things quit chasing through my brain, and I found that I was still alive. The sure-enough Apaches had hit the trail, too, owing to a com pany of Mexican soldiers following them up too close for comfort Then the boys told me about Hays. He made the home-run wttb me down that arroyo and up that ridge with out getting a scratch, and was within 20 feet of the rocks that covered the boys whsn a bullet out clean through his heart Of course it rattled me to learn this, but I was aH broka up when they went on and told me about finding letters in his war-bag that said he'd been sending his salary to his Invalid mother. The boys felt pretty bad, too. at the way it ended. It waa Tex that started the ball to rolling. "We'vo got to do somethin' to square thia thing," he said. "Of course, now 't he's dead, lie's goin' to stay dead, an so our only show's with th' old wom an his mother, I mean. Now, I've got four month's pay n-comln' to me, nn' if ever I'd hit civilization with all that stuff in my jeans I wouldn't do nothin' but go on th" biggest old hal leluiah of a drunk n white man ever saw; an' so I reckon I'll Jest chip It all into n pot for th' old girl. Who f oilers my lead?" "Me for one." Bill cams in without hesitation. And now it was up to Jose. "To tambien!" he sang out, talking Mexi can, as he always did when excited. And so it went round. I'd have given a full yeur's pay it I'd hnd It to give. The boys burled Hays that even ing, firing a volley over bis grave, as soldiers do; and when a runner same along a few days afterward, on his way to Chihuahua, the Old Man sent Mrs. Hays a letter telling her all about it and inclosed the orders for our pay. 8n Francises Argonaut GRIT FOR POULTRY. Reasoaa Why It Skoald De Kent Coastaatlr Before the aa la Some Form. There are two kinds of grit needed to be successful in the poultry yard, one of keeping right in the business in spite of discouraging difficulties, the other a substance taken by the hen into her crop fos the grinding of the food. Go into your poultry house at even ing, when the hens are on the roost, walk quietly up to a drowsy old biddy, lay your ear carefully over her dis tended crop and listen; you will hear the process of digestion going on. You will then resliie the necessity of grit snd plenty of it in the poultry busi ness. There sre two kinds of prepared grit on the market to-day, the broken oster shell and the mica grit. The oyster shell is eaten very greedily by the hens snd also aids greatly In the quality of the shell of the egg. The mica grit in a little higher in price, but as there is no waste in dust, as in oyster shell, the hens do not eat It so greedily; still they eat all that s necessary for digestion, nnd as it lasts so much longer In the crop it Is much the cheaper grit to buy. and will also keep your hens from eating eggs. It is a very necessary thing for young turkeys and will surely bring them home at night if it Is constantly kept Where they have access to it. I found one yenr my young turkeys got the habit of going to a distant neighbor's. I followed to know the reason for it nnd found it was char coal they went for, something they lid not have nt home. I purchased grit for them and hnd no more trou ble. But when a lnrge number of fowls are kept, the utmost economy must he exercised and in regard to grit among the rest. I would advise keeping grit con stantly before the poultry in some form. The best plnee for broken crockery tnd glass is to pound it for the hens, also charcoal, hard ce-al ashes and broken bones will he eaten greedily by the hens. Tiara Bansnme, In Na tional Sural. HOMEMADE BROODER. a Katriesry the rontrlmnre Here Deaertbed Can Bee t'aed to Excellent Advitatasre. A very good brooder may be made eaaily and cheaply with a five-gallon oil can from which the top end has been removed. Insert the can (c) with top or open end downward through the brooder bouse platform HOVER BOARD AND BROODER, (d), until the closed end projects above the floor but four inches. On top of can place a hover board 16 or 10 Inches square (a, e), with strip of cloth slit every three or four inches, j tacked clear around the outside edge of board. A piece of tin should be j placed on the under side of the hover . board, with a half-inch dead airspace between tin and board. The oil can abould be wrapped with a single ply of cloth. The hand lamp (b), is placed under the inverted .'can. A tan chim ney is used for safety. The idea is not original, but I have need these brooders in emergency, with satisfac tion. B. I. Ives, in Farm and Home. CHICEElfS AND BEES. Mule chicks should not be kept on a bare plank floor. Warmth is as necessary ae feed in the early life of a chick. A hen must have a big money value to make It pay to doctor her. Do not think because the little chick has a soft downy coat it is a warm one and let the little fellow get chilled. A oold, wet coop for little chicks will knock off all the profits from the early hatched broods. You will be well paid to act upon the suggestion in this note. To get bees in the best condition to store good crops of honey in sum mer when tho honey season is on they should have n constant supply coming In during tho spring months, I and when flowers ore not furnishing j It to them, they should be fed. This will enablo them to breed Up very1 strong, otherwise tliej' win not no so. National Rural. l.lver Trouble In Fowl, ltccently a poultry man talked in public of liver trouble in fowls and expressed the opinion that it is to be met with almost entirely in turkeys. We are certain that it exists to a con siderable extent among chickens, but is often not recognized as such. When apparently healthy fowls drop over dead it Is sometimes, if not fre quently, due to this trouble. The writer had this trouble in his flock at one time, and ascertained the facts in the ease by an autopsy on the fowls, which autopsy showed ths liv ers enormously dilated with the blood that had been drawn from the heart and all other parts of the body. It is probably a germ disease. Farm ars' Review. Building Requires a foundation. That is just as true of the building up of the body as of the building of a house. The founda tion of s strong body is a strong stom ach. No man can be stronger than his stomach. A weak stomach means a weak man. Dr. Pierce's Oolden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion aad nutrition. It I enables the perfect digestion and assimi- i lation of the food which is eaten. Tbua I it builds up the body snd restores 1 strength in the only way known to I Nature or to science by digested andf ' y dlgestsd If. C, yjit assimilated food. While livtna In Charlotte. ST. C vJ.r medi cine cured tnc of asthma and nmnf ourrh of leu years- Manama,- writes I, I. .uniin, Kaq . of asi Whitehall Street. Atlanta, C "At that titaa Ufe was a burden to m. stvl sfter spending hundred.! of dollars tnrlrr numerous doctors I waa dying by Inches. I verigbed only iji pounds. In twenty day after I commenced your treatment I wu well of both trouble1 and in six months t weighed 170 pounds, an' Braa in perfect hearth I have ntvrr frit the tightest symptom of either sines. Am Uty.e years old and la perfect health, sad welsh ifV pounds. No money could repar you for what you ,lia fr me. I would not return to the condition I wu is, tn October, iSys. for Rockefeller's weultb." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets assist the action of the " Discovery," when a laxa tive is required. Ambition. My happiness would be complete With what I have If I Could know thst no one else below The sky had more than I, and no One else stood quite as high. Chicago Record-Herald. ENTIRELY Sin ROSA. Daughter My betrothed must love roses, for when he sends me flowers he always chooses roses. Meggendorfsr Blaetter. Tearalasr for rhe Issnosslble. "It I had a million dollar- " Just then he stopped to think. And said: "If I bad a quarter Pd go and set a drink." Chicago Record-Herald. FrleaaUr Treatment Had Enough. Town I'd hate to have that mail for an enemy. Browne Who la he? 'I'dU'lio T nn'l bnnm" Vl.lt. he punched my head once. my I'd like to Towns Oh, you see it was all mistake. After he punched me m said: "Excuse me. Buddy, I took yei t - M-i . t I... m ' ul:i.juii;i Press, A Slst far Inventors. Church A Frenchman has invented a tobacco pipe which has a whistlei the stem in order to enable the smoltr to summon a eab without taking ' pipe from his mouth. Gotham What we want now 111 cigarette with an attachment to H nal an undertaker without disturb! the pesos. Tonkers Statesman. f A Beennd Washington. Judge What excuse have yot being so disgracefully drunk yi'tf day? n J . .1 , ' ()1 rrisoner iso see, juage, a un told me I was going to have lh( grippe, so I Judgs (interrupting) Oht Ths .u. u ...... t v,.., e.iri tn rmre 't ii.C. UU. nni, j . a ii.w-u w nKO Prisoner No. your honerr! I trie to have one more good time tefor I'd be laid up. Puek. Another Prablens Solved U- CKrok U H.nr Hnn't -v0' th nk that instead ot bu ldin? uou nouse. ana puiung in wv of fttrn tare, it would De or"" " build two So.ooo nouses ana V' wnrth of furniture in ench-" .'11 BjrtaertM w - 11 u 4 uar fnr"? rif nil t , 1 1 . Mr. Suburb So we'll ni"".'3 one liotise to live 111 wall is being cleaned. N. Y. Weekly. To the Letter. "TnVe Hint rlo.r off (lie strc III run you in, oraert" ... , . 1. .. rnir t.inntimla nniloi'ninn. "llut whvv nskecl tnc mnsi ' . ,, corr. lie nns a ricenst; ou. " I h , a , rur if ran 1.11 II a -" r- . it SVSS Ullli 111. 11 s t nitii. ""Tj. ,1 .a ... . . , nnti"" strict, orders to enionts wo- j pcctoration ordinance. ,, iiniiimu" . ..-M TAUlCCO! err"r"..i Ton can be cured of any form of wf eaailr be made wall, atrons. ntssnjtic, new me ana vigor ny uuut mwtZv thst kM weak nan atrong. 9V'm Urn pounds in ten days. Over tUftl aaa ana Hnn ""SLark. SUBMIOT CO., Chicago Of Mr York.