NOW OR NEVER 8y.... Martha McCulloch-Wllliams Copyright, l'.uft, by Martha McCiillocli Williams Billy Wharton's coming did not sur prise Joe In tho least. She had known something out of the common was go lng to happen ever since Saturday, when she had seen the new moon clear, had a black cat follow her home and then dreamed of getting ■gil'e across a clear running stream. All these were omens of good luck. It woa the best sort of luck to have a boarder In the big front room upstairs, a gentleman evidently craving quiet, solitude and country fare. Mrs. Greer, Joe's stepmother, had been set against boarders. She would have none of them even yet but for that dreadful doctor's bill. She had been at death's door lust winter, her first real illness. Though the doctor was in no hurry for his fee, her independence chafed might ily against having him wait Therefore Joe had had no new sum mer frocks. Therefore also she was not going to picnics and parties and • things anywhere, Indeed, but to church, where the wearing of old clothes might be regarded as a sign of piety rather than poverty The board money would change ail that. In fancy Joe saw herself brave In new ■winter finery, holding up her head with the beet. Her head had not really been drooped, for she was by nature spirit ed and full of fun But the stepmoth er was a little morbid on the point of Joe's lacks. In fear, It might be said, •he neglected the girl, who. It was well known, she did not love. Still they had got on fairly together until the epoch of Hansom Farley. It was Mrs. Greer's nephew and prospective heir; hence It seemed to him but right and natural that he should marry Joe, who held a mort gage on the farm. Mrs Greer had fetched her husband and his daughter home with her to live, and the Greer estate had been turned into cash and used to free the homestead from sun dry Incumbrances. Thus common In terest hud kept the two women togeth er after Greer died. Hansom thought It Beautifully lit that they should goon living together and letting him take care of them. At least that was his way of saying it. Joe snapped that the caretaking would be all the other way. She had hated Hansom as a pink and white curly haired model child She did not hate him less now that, although his curls were cropped and his complexion was somewhat tan ned, he still held himself to the model Standard. Joe was slim and dusky—lithe as a sapling, with floss silk hair and eyes outflashtng black diamonds. Wild roses blushed In her olive cheeks, her lips were cherry red and her voice full of flute notes Billy Wharton had a weak ness for pretty girls. He made love to all fate threw In his way. Naturally he made love to Joe. Naturally also he made her love him. He was the man of her dreams, in every way the apposite of Hansom and very unlike any of the farmer lads or callow city youngsters with whom she had been brought In contact. But because she loved Billy with heart and soul and strength she flouted him, laughed at him, made a pretense of quarreling and so kept him puzzled as to her frame of mind. Puzzling over a very pretty girl is bad for the affections If the puzzler wishes to escape free, but Billy did not know that In time. He tried all a man might to read this maiden riddle. He had been quite fair, ha thought—had told her in the outset ; v.. T he couldn't afford to marry until he was gray and bald. "I've nothing In the world now but myself," he had said. "And, though space rates give a decentish living for one, it's little short of criminal under taking to make them furnish rations for two." Then straightway he bad mude Joe guide him to the deepest pool of the trout brook and stay with him •t the stream side ull through a sum mar morning. In course of the talk there she had somehow gathered that a 16ng time ahead when certain lives and leases lapsed Billy would have a snug maintenance. Possibly the information had Its weight. Possibly also It went over ber head Certainly, when In tho sixth week of Billy's stay ut the farm house Hansom was pleased to grow furiously Jealous of him, Joe decided something must be done—and did It. "Did you know there was a wedding coming off Sunday?" she asked of Billy Thursday at noon. Billy pulled out pencil and notebook, putting on his most professional air as he asked: "Will you give me the names of the victims, please, Miss Greer? Also any other particulars of Interest?" "No! Go ask the preacher," Joe said, smiling mysteriously. Billy went, but came l»ack more than ever mystified "The wedding Is a fact,'' he said, "but a solltiiry fact. Brother Jones knows no more than we do —only that he has IMJCII asked to hold himself in readiness at the close of tho morning service. Furthermore, he says you asked him. Confess, young lady. You are getting up a fine hoax." "See if I am," Joe retorted, her head higher than common. She ran off al most instantly and was well nigh unap proachable throughout the next two days But Saturday evening she walk ed with Billy all up and down the yard, the moon shedding silver flecks upon them, the roses In the garden filling the air with perfume. As they walked Billy held her hand, and Insensibly, It teemed, she drooped toward him. Nei ther Bald very much As the clock struck 10 Joe drew away from him with a little shudder, saying very low, "Muybe this is our last walk together.' But Billy, quite beyond prudence, flung his arms about her and kissed her full on the mouth, saying thickly, "It shall not be 1 want you always." He slept little that night, but fell Into a heavy doze at daj light. It lasted un til It was almost time for church The sight of her set his heart beating mad ly. She was all In white, bridelike in deed, with a knot of pale roses nodding on her breast. By their rising and fall ing he knew she was strangely stirred, » yet when she motioned him to follow and sit beside her he obeyed, although Hansom Farley, whom he cordially ills liked, was at her other elbow. All through the service she sat statuu still notwithstanding he felt the tension of her mood Increase After the prayer and the closing hymn there was a gen erul stir of people half rising or cran lng their necks to see who might be going up to the altar. "I'm going to marry somebody. Which shall it be?" JIM- breathed rath er thun whispered In Billy's ear, glanc ing alternately at him and at Farley. He understood With almost a bound he was up and in the aisle, holding her hand tight and almost dragging her forward And then before he knew what was happening he heard the sol emn, "1 pronounce you man and wife." The church buzzed like a hive, but through the buzzing Billy heard Farley Hansom shrieking hysterically, "I'll make you sorry for this, sir, before you are much older!" Joe looked up at him, flushing a love ly scarlet. "It was the only way," she said. "I had to marry y*i now. You never would have come back." BORN FOR A LAWYER. \Vh» Ills Mother llffoninioiKlrtl lllm to Colour! liik«tm»ll. Among the stories which Colonel Bob lugersoll delighted to tell was the following, says the writer of "Amer ica's Most Popular Men:" White studying law with a firm out west the colonel found himself alone in the ofllce one day. lie was interrupted by the entrance of a raw boned, sharp featured countrywoman, who ambled into the room leading a freckle faced, watery eyed ten-year-old boy by the hand. "Air you the lawyer?" she began. On being answered In the atilrmatlve she went onto say that she had brought her boy Jim to town for the purpose of binding him out at the "lawyerln" trade." She was morally certain, she averred, that Jim was a born lawyer and that all he needed was a chance. "But, madam," objected the colonel, "he is entirely too young to begin tho study of law." "Too young, indeed!" sniffed the fond mother contemptuously. "You don't know Jim. lie was born for a law yer." Much amused, the colonel asked her on what grounds she based her hopes of a future at the bar for her darling child. "Why," said she, "when lie was ouly seven years old he struck work, and he wouldn't do another lick if he got killed for it. When he was eight he got sassy and put on more airs than a prize horse nt a country fair, and now, iAir' bless me, he Jest freezes onto everything he can Jay hls_ hands on." A Pathetic Inrltlent, There Is a pitiful story told in the Bookman of Philip Bourke Mnrston, the blind English writer. One day a particularly good Idea came to him, and he sat down to his typewriter with enthusiasm. He wrote rapidly for hours and had nearly finished the story when a friend came In. "Head that," said Marston proudly, "and tell me what you think of it." The friend stared at the happy author and then at the blank sheets of paper in his hand before he was able to understand the little tragedy. The ribbon had been taken from the typewriter, and Mar shal's toil was for nothing. He never had the heart to write that story again I Power of Sulphuric Arid. An instance of the great dissolving powers of sulphuric acid Ls furnished by an accident which occurred in the chemical factories at Mulbouse, Al sace. An operative was blown tip into the air and fell into a trough filled about three feet deep with sulphuric I acid, the temperature of which was found to be 111 degrees C. ten hours after the accident. The death of the j man was only proved by the discovery i of his caoutchouc respirator, muzzle, two porcelain buttons and other insol üble articles. Everything else had chemically combined with the acid.— | London Engineer. A Pair of Snuffer*. Master Pryune, the Puritan, who In lijXi wrote an attack ttpon the stage, tells us that In his day tobacco pipes j were offered to ladies at the theater hi lieu of apples between the acts. A French traveler, M. Torevln de Boche fort, who published his Journal In 1»!7". confirms this by telling us that he found smoking a general custom In England, as well among women as among men Both sexes, he adds, held that life without tobacco would be In tolerable "because they say It dissi pates the evil humors of the brain." When ladles stopped smoking they took to snuff Women of quality about a century ago would not stir without their snuffboxes, beautiful enameled receptacles of perfumed mldll rappee. Lord Bollngbroke said of Queen Anno and her grace of Marlborough: "The nation is governed by a pair of snuff ers No wonder the light of its glory Is extinguished!" IriNlM«»«1 on lhe ( ontrnet. Many of the best Pattl stories are concerned with her early girlhood In the T'nited States, when she was begin ning to realize the great hold she had on the public with her voice. After a concert in which she took part In Ohio on one occasion a supper w r as given to the singers, ut which many notabilities, Including Judge Matthews, were pres ent. Supper over, Judge Matthews pressed little Adelina to sing. Adellna, however, showed no Inclination to oblige, so Matthews In desperation said, "Sing, and I'll do anything you like." "Anything?" asked I'attl. "Any thing," repeated the grave lawyer de clslvely. So the little girl sung "Home, Sweet Home." Hardly had she given the last note, however, than she said, "Now, Mr. Matthews, please stand on your head!" "You're Joking, child," gasped the Judge. "A bargain's a bar gain," murmured the future diva, "Well," said Matthews, "here goes.'' And up went his feet amid the frantio applause of the company AlmoMt it j rngrdy. The woman entered the car and sank moaning into the sent. Her face was haggard, and her escort regarded her with deep anxiety. Suddenly she extracted a tiny via) from her handbag, pulled a piece of cotton out of the mouth of the bottle and was putting It to her lips when a young man opposite sprang to his feet nml dashed It from her hand "Good gracious, madam!" he exclaim ed hoarsely "Just In time!" The woman's escort sprang tip fierce ly, and the two men gripped "Confound you!" roared the lady's | companion "Can't my wife use her j toothache medicine without having ev | ery green, sloppy idiot imagining she ! is trying to commit suicide?" Then the would be rescuer apologized and departed from the car, feeling kind toward the famous worm which has been tr<>d upon. 'I In- Worno■■ I Old Mini, When we become old we want to get off the streets We always sympathize with the old men who have nothing to do, who are not wanted anywhere and who have no place togo When we become old and useless we want a place of our own togo to, a place j that is absolutely our own and that !we can manage as we please. We hope it will be a little place where we can potter with fruits and flowers, vegetables and chickens, and keep j busy We don't want to give people ! opportunity to show neglect nor idle time In which to see visions of the grim monster. Old men who loiter about the streets, it always seems to us, makv s mistake. Atcbisou Globe VICTORIA CATARACT IT IS ONE OF THE NOTABLE WON DERS OF THE WORLD. Tli«»r»* IN !MO oth«*r I'MII* on ICarth Jiixt I.lke 11, it it (ft There Is \o Poa- Mihllify of ( out imi rUon l!«»t ween It mill Our Own .MuKura. It was on tho 22d of November, 1555, 1 that the friendly natives with whom he was traveling brought I»r. I>avld Liv ingstone for the first tiiii»» within sight and sound of the wonderful cataract on the Zambezi river, now known as the Victoria falls. Before finding it, the good missionary had Journeyed for nearly two years, and from his point of departure at Kurnman, in Cape Col ony, had traversed quite *I,OOO miles of hitherto unknown country Today one takes the train at Cape Town on Wednesday, passes through Kimberley on Thursday, reaches Bulu wayo on Saturday, and late in the aft ernoon of Sunday begins to see in tho distance the rising pillar of mist from the great cataract. The natives call it "Mosi-oa tuni," meaning "the roaring smoke." Twenty miles away the spray thrown back from the depths of the tremendous cav ern into which the river tumbles ap pears like a column of smoke rising from a burning village, and during the last mile of the railway Journey tho roar of the falling water becomes no ticeable. Finally, when the edge of the chasm Is reached, if the river is in flood, the eye and ear are assailed by a combination of phenomena that prob ably cannot be duplicated as marvels anywhere else on the planet. The first question that is asked of an American who has seen this African wonder generally is, "llow does it com pare with Niagara?" There is no pos sibility of comparison. The two are as different as day and night. Niagara is a perfect picture in a lovely natural framework, livery point and line und curve of motionless rock, trembling verdure and gliding water is u touch of majestic beauty. Victoria is simply a phenomenon, a terrific gash in the floor of an apparently unending plain, which as one gazes simply swallows a river in a manner that produces almost a thrill of horror. The Zambezi valley for a hundred miles or more in every direction from the cataract Is a rough and broken plateau covered with low brush and stunted trees, with here and there an outcrop of somber basaltic rock, all thoroughly uninteresting. The herbage is but faintly green and the tropical sky only faintly blue. It Is a hazy half tone landscape, wanting in clear cut lines in every direction and lacking, above everything else, that element we always uncouselously seek In a nature picture life. The absence of this produces in the mind a feeling of loneliness and often of fear. Across this solemn scene appears a river that In flood time is perhaps half a mile Wide. If a deaf man were following do\vn one of Its banks he would notice little but the quiet water and the odd looking column of smoke ahead. As this column was approached he would expect to see the river banks bending and the water flowing away to one side of the conflagration and might glance to the right mid left to note the direction taken. But the panorama changes as he gazes. The river Is no more, and there, where It should be, is only the brown plain, as lonely, brush covered and monotonous as ever. One must go twenty miles farther be fore the vanished water and the sur face of the land again commingle, be fore It will be possible to walk along the bank in company with the river. So sudden is the transformation. Meantime the pillar of smoke has re solved Itself into a dense mist forced upward in terrible puffs from a yawn ing gash stretching directly across the bed of the river. This fearful abyss is every second swallowing thousands of tons of green and white water and belching up blasts of mist that rise hundreds of feet into the air and hurry away with the winds as if rejoicing at their escape from the inferno be low. And somewhere, nearly -100 feet below, the entrapped river is fighting its way between sheer walls of black rock toward a narrow cleft in the eastern wall, whence It escapes, foam lng and boiling, through the zigzags and curves of a (V*ep gorge leading yff to tffe eastward. One goes to an edge of this delivering chasm and looks down upon the tossing waters, ever pressed from behind by other floods struggling out of the narrow black gateway, and perhaps the most prom lnent mental sensation is that of thank fulness that even in such a grim and ghastly way nature has provided a means by which the fearful slit of a throat above that has swallowed the stream can disgorge It again without causing an overwhelming catastrophe. The Victoria cataract should be visit ed at least twice before one is compe tent to pass an opinion upon it. When the river Is in flood (July) the scene is simply terrible. One sees nothing but an enormous sheet of water disappear ing into the bowels of the earth with a noise as of mountains falling upon one another, while from the awful gash comes back in lierce gusts and swirls the foaming breath of the tortured ele ment below. But in December, when the water is low, the edge of the cata ract shows as a long, creamy film of lovely lace; the rising mist flows soft iy away through the little rain forest below the cavern's lip; the gigantic vault itself becomes a wonderful spec tacle, a dream of neutral tints, a cave of beauty. Far down in Its dark depths the waters, gliding along the rocky walls and bending gracefully around the corners toward the narrow outlet pass gayly and laughingly to freedom. For a time the demon of the cataract is sleeping. Theodore F. Van Wagenen In Century. liiei' Work Tree*. The inn r bark of many trees, such AS tli • vii.M and horse chestnut, is con tinuous and uninterrupted. In others, such as the ash an I the oak, the fibers are separated during growth and form a kind of network, In the Interstices of which the medullary rays are seen. Of this sort Is the famous lace work tree of Jamaica, whos ■ consecutive layers of fibers Interlaced so delicately as to present n dose resemblance to real lace bolh In color and appearance. A former ;,'o\ rnor of Jamaica Is said to have presented Charles II with fl cravat, a frill and ruffles of this veg etable lace, while bonnets, collars and collarettes madg < 112 it can be seen In the museum of Kew.—London ; Luul u i'il 4ltlfn to 14.ll probably know, the mole plows In the surface of tin- earth, generally making a small ridge anywhere from two to three Inches high, lie moves villi remarkable rapidity even when the groun the recognition of the Southern Confederacy. However that may tie, there wu s nothing about his bearing which looked like a great hope Rev. lir I.eigliton l'ark in Century. I liliiinr} Stack*. The broad brimmed stone and Iron capping-; whi-h one sees on the chim ney stacks in manufacturing districts are not there for mere ornamentation, for they serve an Important purpose. On the opposite side of the stack to that upon which the wlr jay be blow ing a partial va uiim formed, down which the smoke would descend were It not for the brim of the cap blocking the way V chimney stack without a brim on the top would discharge Its smoke in huge nusis for some distance down one side I t arson's Weekly. "There'll B« K® Pl®." An energetic pastor who was mak ing preparations to build a new church received all kinds of advice from par ishioners, and the greatest amount came from those who had contributed the least toward the erection of the church. So at the regular services on the following Sunday he said: "I have been receiving lots of advice during the last few weeks. I have been told by certain members of tho congregation that it will not do to have to i t: '!ty lingers in tho plo. T can assure you that 1 will attend to that part of it. 'I here will bo no pie." —Harper's Weekly. Tin* 'l'lllnn to Do. '/olmson He said 1 was an addle pat I'd Jackass What do yhi advise me to do about ltV .lad:s >n See a good vet erlnary.—Leslie's Weeklv. J J. BROWN THE EYE A SPECIALTY Kyes tested, treated, fitted with ad The next day they went to Lexington, the next to lioon vlile and the next to St. Louis. Occa sionally during high water a boat would leave Lexington at daylight and reach St. I. mis in time for breakfast the next morning. The boati carried from 'J'HI to 4111)111 passengers. The cabin fare from St. Louts to St. Joseph ranged from $lO to sls, whl< h included meals and state room. The boats were all supplied with line cooks, and the passengers lived on the best that money could buy. The average boat carried f>OU to 000 tons of freight in addition to passen gers. During low water freight that now costs 20 cents a hundred cost $2.50 a hundred. The expense of a round trip from St. Louis to St. Joseph, In cluding loading and unloading, was es tUnated at $4,000, and the Income from cost to $7,000. Each boat carried a crew of from 80 to 100 men. The aver age value of the boats In the Hue was probably $45,000 each. The boats were often on sand bars, where they sometimes remained for a day and night, but altogether the time was made surprisingly well. A pilot who had a reputation for keeping his boat olf the bars commanded as high ns SSOO a month. Each boat was pro vided with two pilots, and this expense usually amounted to from $!* X) to sl,- 000 a month. All a river pilot saved he putin his watch chain. You could tell a high priced pilot by the size of the links in his gold watch chain. A rattling good lirst mate who knew how to handle a boat after it struck a bar received $250 a month. l'oker was a favorite river amuse ment, and it was not an uncommon sight to see e g't or ten games going at the same time in the main cabin of a steamboat. And the playing was for actual money, which was displayed in stacks on the tables. Among the famous boats on the river ( at that time were the Kate Kinney, E. G. Aubry, Morning Star, John I». I'er- ; ry, Sioux city, Omaha, Carrier and the 1 James II Lucas. The last named made the fastest run In the history "112 the river 50 hours and 22 minutes from St. Louis to St. Joseph. llow WliieN An» Colored. "Most people thiuk white grapes make white wine and dark grapes make red wine," said a visitor. "That is a popu- j lar error. "Ked wine is made by fermenting grape Juice and grape skins together the skins giving the color, and white ' wine is made by fermenting grape Juice alone. "The Juice of white and of dark grapes doesn't differ in hue. In each sort of grape the juice is almost color-1 less, like the weakest lemonade. "Champagne, one of the dearest of the white wines, is made of a grape so dark as to be nearly black. But the Juice of that nearly black grape is quite as pale as the Juice of the blond est white grape."- Minneapolis Jour nal. •.tii II .iii(*n raliitlriftCN. Mr. Holimtn Hunt spent seven years j on his great painting "The Triumph of i the Innocents." mul then was not at all satisfied with it, while "The Shadow of Heath" took hi:n three years. M 1 " "| | The Home Paper ! ! of Danville. ! i Of course you read ¥ ~ IJHIII I 1 1 1 THE rVEOPLF'S 1 POPULAR I APF.R. i l i EVERYBODY READS LT« j Published Every Mornioi Except I Sunday «'•' I * ; i NO. N E. MR!IT ii Suit- tion o c MI: .'rV* e. !• R _ , £ A HINDU WIZARD. Ill* Trick I lull I'liitlPd nil Occiden tal Mimlrr of Maple. Some of the tricks of the Hindu wiz aids are ,«ist understanding, according to an occidental master of magic who was speaking of n - oriental rivals. This is what he sa\ - he saw a Hindu wizard do in a club in Luck now: "lie toil; a board anil placed it on four glass giblets thus elevating it from the tioor. A youngster sitting on the b iard was reipiestcd to place his hands together, palms up. Then tho jugglei took a glass of water and pour ed it into, the outstretched hands of the boy. in the m< inline the b iv had been mesmerized, and his attention was fix ed on a point indicated by the magi cian. Gradually the turned green in color and then developed into a Jelly which increased in density until it be came as solid as a stone. Out of the center of this appeared the head of a snake, which gradually developed un til in the place of the water there ap peared a hissing reptile. I was amazed, I can assure you, but the trick was not yet completed Hitting the reptile upon the head with his wand, the Juggler took It uji carefully and placed it back in the gl s. As we looked It became transformed Into a Jelly, which in turn melted into a greenish colored water. Clearer and clearer became the tlukl until It was of Its original color, and then the Juggler placed It to his lips and drank the entire contents. This was the most wonderful trick I ever saw performed, and it is as mysterious to me today as it was then." Influence of Siilnli'-Hcnvp. S:":into Roitvo is the foremost literary I critic of the nineteenth century in tlie influence he has exerted upon his fel lows. In ii very real sense Matthew Arnold in England and Talne in Franco are his disciples, or at least he Is their literary ancestor. They dc | rive from him. and the doctrines they have made explicit are often implicit in him. The part of Table's critical theory which lias withstood the test of time is that which Taine acquired from Sainte-Eeuve, and not a few of tho points which Arnold pressed insist ently on the attention of all who read English he took over from his French predecessor. There are no real critics of literature of our time, from Mr. James in America to M. Brunetiere in France, who have not come under his spell at soi: e period of their own de velopment and who have not sharpened their own vision by a more or less de liberate application ol" the methods of Sainte-J'.ouvc. Brander Matthews in Centurv. TREE PECULIARITIES. The eucalyptus tree dries up springs , rapidly. The olive will live longer under wa ter than any other tree. There are forests of leafless trees in some parts of Australia. A nutmeg tree of the largest size i will produce no more than five pounds of nutmegs Whenever a plant is wounded a posi ! tive electric current is established be ' tween the wounded part and the in tact parts In Tilwt there is a most curious frets known as the tree of the thousand images. Its leaves are covered with well defined characters of the Tibetan , alphabet. On the island of Looclioo grows a tree about the size of a common cherry tree which possesses the peculiarity of changing the color of its blossoms. At one time the flower assumes the tint j of the lily and again shortly takes tho color of the rose ttiilr Color. In the case of horses where the skin has been abraded by the harness if the galled region is left to itself the hair will grow in, but be colorless, while if | oil.is applied freely to the abrasion j hair of a dark or normal color will be ; produced, thus indicating that the | color is ordinarily due to the secretions ' of the skin sinking down as a sediment j to the base of the hair follicle, where It is absorbed by the shaft of the hair. J KILLTHE COUCH ' [AND CURE THE LUNGS " TH Dr. King's Hew Discovery /Consumption phc® FOR I OUGHB and 50c & JI.OO OS Free Trial. tiureat and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or MONEY LACK. j ACK A WANNA " -I'ij'KJ DIVISION N KHT. A M \ M. A M. P. V , .Ne\< York . . 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