THE OVTER. DARKNESS. \ IBy SI-DMEV H. COLE. i \ Copyright. 1907, by C. H. Satellite. \ auuu/u moveu his chair from the comer that he might have an unob structed view of Druslila's face. She was seated near the piano lamp, osten sibly examining the score of a recent musical farce he had brought her. Her chin rested in one little upturned palm, and her eyes were !ix(\*#>onslvely on the music In her lap. Ackroyd watch ed her silently for some moments. He was loath to disturb that pose. "I saw Ted Brlggs today," he said at length, and he said It with the evident expectation of a flutter of excitement on Druslila's part. In this, however, he was disappointed. She turned a page of the score without raising her eyes. "Did you?" she said calmly. "I did," he affirmed. "Had a sort of an all gone air about him." Drusllla was silent. "Looked as if he needed some one to sympathize with him—or kick him," Ackroyd pursued. Another page of the score was turn ed, but Drusllla said nothing. "Haven't seen him round here late ly," said Ackroyd, and his tone sug gested much. "It's something over a week since he called last," said Drusllla Innocently. "NOW," SAID HE, HISrNG AND lIOWINO GKAVEIiY. Ackroyd smiled grimly, but Druslila's eyes being on the score its meaning TCOjutASt Oil h«J* "Same old story. I presume," said he. "What's the same old story?" she Baid. with some emphasis. "Got his conge, eh?" "What are you talking about?" "Ted Briggs." "Well, what about him?" "Ho seems to have been cast into the outer darkness with his innumerable predecessors," Ackroyd observed. Drusllla shrugged her shoulders. "I don't see why I should fret my self over that," she said. "For casting him there, of course," j said Ackroyd severely. "Admitting I did," said Drusllla with challenge in her voice. "Ted Briggs is a particular friend' of mine," Ackroyd began. "Must I marry all your particular j friends?" said Drusilla with sardonic I deference. Ackroyd's eyes flashed angrily. "You knew all the time he was tak-1 ing things seriously," he remonstrated.! "You might have a little mercy on | such chaps." "Oh. don't let's squabble every night! you come here, said Drusilla wearily. I "Here's the 'Palm' song. Shall I sing j it to you, Max?" She seated herself at the piano and ; sang with all her inimitable little droll eries. When she had finished she swung about to face Ackroyd. "Did that soothe your savage breast, I Maxie?" she asked sweetly. Ackroyd scowled. "When will you ever be serious?" he said. "I was never so serious in my life," she asserted. "Indeed I am complete ly weighed down with responsibility and remorse. You don't Imagine he'll take prussic acid, do you, Max?" she ended in tragic tones. Ackroyd looked at her with cold dis approval. "Between old friends"— he began. I But Drusilla at once cut him short. "Now, Max, I'm awfully sorry, but if you begin to scatter any of that fa therly advice about here you'll have to go home, and I counted on a delightful evenlng*with you here," she said ten tatively. "Nevertheless," said Ackroyd, "I shall say what I set out to, be the pen alty what it may." Drusilla rested her elbows on the j keys and looked at liim archly. "I was about to remark," Ackroyd { went on. "that In the social sea you j are a sort of uncharted reef on which ! the affections of many serious minded j young men are shipwrecked." hat a metaphor!" she taunted. "Their shipwrecks don't seem to be alarming calamities, however. They filirvlvn thxim " "Ana mere are others who are in danger of sailing straight onto the reef, knowing all its dangers," said he. "Dear me!" said Drusllla. "They should take a course In navigation." "The fear of ridicule may keep them away for a time, but In the end they're bound to tempt fate." he said. Drusllla regarded him amusedly. "I think It would be Interesting to meet some of that class," said she. "I can Introduce you to one," said lie. "WhenV Drusllla Inquired eagerly. "Now," said he, rising and bowing; gravely. "You!" she gasped. "Even I," be said, unsmiling. There was a somewhat emliarrassed pause. Ackroyd broke it. "I shall never be happy until I offer myself to you. I don't expect to be happy afterward. I shall merely Join the others In the outer darkness, and the suspense will be over." Drusllla rested her chin on her palm •rain. A bit of added color flushed her cheeks. Her eyes were pensive. "I've l»eeu very much u coward," said Ackroyd. "I was afraid you'd laugh. That Is why I've been silent BO long." He leaned forward In his chair. Hia manner was pleadingly earnest. Dru sllla moved uneasily. "Why don't you offer yourself, then, and have It over?" she asked. Ackroyd squared his shoulders. "I do offer myself. Drusllla," said he. "My silence has been such a long one the laugh should be doubly merry," he added bitterly. Drusllla turned to the piano. She ran her lingers over the keys la soft little minor harmonies. Ackroyd wait ed Impatiently; then he strode to the piano and bent over her. Something glistened on her lashes, and there was a shining streak down either cheek. "Good heavens!" cried Ackroyd In sudden comprehension. He laughed happily. "It—lt—lsn't funny. I—l—d-don't feel a bit like 1-laughlng," confessed Dru sllla. And Ackroyd was thereupon relieved from any fears of"the outer dark ness." THE WORLD DRYING UP. Possibility That the Hunjin Race Will Die of Thirst. Wo are to die of thirst. Compara tively few persons know the suffering Involved in a thirst for which there Is no help at hand. The consuming thirst more than the pain of any wound makes the battlefield a hell. Yet death by thirst is the doom forecast for the race by grim scientists. Geologists find that the fresh water supply of the globe Is failing. They have data which point to the gradual withdrawal of the streams and other bodies of water from t lie surface. Both in Africa and central Asia and, indeed, in all the great levels the water beds are drying up. A great number of lakes well known in the historical age have en tirely disappeared. For example, Lake Cliiroua, in Africa, has vanished with in recent years, as has also Lake Ngamj. discovered by Livingstone. Lake Tchad is more than half dried up. For centuries bodies of water in central Asia have been evaporating and tile deserts extending. Where 2,000 years ago great cities stood in i east Turkestan there are found only I vast and depressing stretches of sand. ! The river Tarlm, once a principal Asi atic route, Is almost gone, and Lob- Nor, formerly four times the area of Lake Geneva, is now but a shallow marsh. The same sad conditions are noted in European Russia. Novgorod, the most pushing city in the czar's dis tracted realm, was surrounded by wa ter in the middle ages. While we may be sure that the fate which the geolo gists suggest for humanity is very far away, the facts recited to show the drying up process are convincing proofs of the need of preserving our forests with more care. St. Paul Pioneer Fress. A Test Case. "I'm a 'beauty doctor,' " announced the stranger with the band satchel full of cosmetics and massage machines. "Do you think I could get any practice around here?" "Yeou make ugly tilings pretty, don't yeou?" drawled the old farmer in the speckled shirt. "That's my business, sir." "Waal, if yeou'll go down back of my barn yeou'll find an old slate covered cow with one eye and one horn and wrinkles like canals all over her face. She's the ugliest cow In seven states, and if yeou can make her pretty I'll agree that yeou be a 'beauty doctor' an' give yeou a dollar."—Chicago News. Apparent. "Pardon me," began the new ac quaintance. "but are you the Mr. Cad ley Nuritch who wrote that magazine nrtlcle last month for us?" "Yes," interrupted Nuritch, "but of course you'll understand that I don't make a business of that sort of thing." "Of course. I know that. I read the article."—Philadelphia I'ress. A BIT TOO SHREWD. One Venture In Which the Captain Overreached Himsel* One of Uncle Sam's customs officials, noted for his success in unmasking smugglers, said the other day in a dis cussion of a customs officer's duties: "One must be shrewd, but not too shrewd; otherwise one overreaches oneself, like Captain Harrow of Isles borough. "Captain Harrow of Islesborough was trading at Key West iu a small vessel. Business took him up the coast to Tampa bay, and lie bought twenty dozen chickens from a farmer at $4 a dozen. "The chickens were all sizes—some a few days old and no bigger than ca nary birds; some fat and large, like turkey gobblers. The captain expect ed to make a lot of money out of them. He was very shrewd at a trade. "Well, at Key West a hotel man came aboard and looked the chickens over. " 'They are fine birds,' he said. 'How much?' " 'lf you pick them out yourself,' said Captain Harrow shrewdly, 'l'll have to charge you $0 a dozen. If 1 pick them out, I can let you have them for s3.' " 'All right. You pick them out,'said the hotel man. "Captain Harrow picked out a dozen chickens of the canary bird size. " 'Here you are, twelve prime broil ers,' he said, with a leer. "Go ahead,' said the hotel man calm ly; 'another dozen.' "The next dozen was of necessity larger. " 'Go oiV said the hotel man. 'Keep on picking them out' "And the third dozen was larger still. The captain looked at his patron anx iously. " 'Keep right on.' "The next dozen was fine and plump, and the next comprised the biggest and fattest of the chickens. " 'Keep right on picking them out, captain.' "Then at last Captain Harrow saw how ho had overreached himself. The hotel man bought his whole lot of chickens at $3, and thus the captain lost on the speculation S2O In cash, to eay nothing of feed and labor." —Cin- cinnati Enquirer. UPLIFT FOR FARMING University of Chicago to Instruct on Scientific Lines. STUDENTS WILL BE PAID. Ten Gentlemen Agriculturists and the University Have Co-operated to Teach Pupils—Specializing and Rais ing Standard of Products Are O ijectar Promoters Have In View. The University of Chicago and ten gentlemen farmers of the community have joined in an agricultural uplift.j Between the two interests strong young men with an honest Intention and well browned bands are to be paid to study scientific farming. It is to be a guild rather than a col lege or school of agriculture, says the Chicago Tost The gentlemen farmers will furnish the students with work *nd means of sustenance; the unlver »lty will give them lnc' lental technical [ and scientific Instructic i. A pale student look a id a nose peeled from overmuch looking in the pots and kettles of a university laboratory in the quest of a degree will not be so much of a recommendation In the application j for entrance as an honest if rough ap pearance, along with an ability to read ordinary everyday English and write j it with only a little less ease. The young men seeking agricultural knowledge will be stationed at the farms of the ten patrons of the guild under the guidance of an experienced manager who knows fields and their products, animals and their ways, from the practical as well as the scientific standpoint For the work they do they will re ceive $25 a month the first year, S3O the second and $35 during the final season. Out of this—the salary of a good farm bund In these prosperous days—they give $5 a month for their tuition and a month toward a fund which is returned to them when they are graduated. If the student keeps up his course for three years, he will have a bonus of S2OO. This will carry him over the period of work seeking. The founders of the guild believe that hew ill not have to look long or far. They think he will bo worth at least $2,000 a year as a farm manager within the Chicago sub- ] urban radius. Tho furrn owners in the guild are At tuur .neeiier, genera i uuuiuger 01 Armour & Co.; R. R. Hammond of the Deling Coal company; Samuel Insull, president of the Chicago Edison com pany; Professor P. I. Lillie of the Uni versity of Chicago; 11. S. Keeley. traffic manager of the Milwaukee railway; 11. S. Ilart, president of the National Dump Car company; 11. I. Miller, pres- I Ident of the Chicago and Eastern 1111- I uols railroad: J. K. Pering, president ' of the Dering Coal company, ami Ben jamin Johnson, agriculturist and stock i raiser. Tho head of the school or | guild for th« university will lie Pro fessor William Hill. Already twenty students in the agri cultural schools of the Universities of Wisconsin and Illinois have asked for enrollment. The guild will be able to take 100 students, the work to be gin about April of this year. Professor 11111 says the intention of the guild is to raise the standard of farm product:!, form a marketing as sociation to cater to the fancy trade and send intelligent, well trained young men to the country. Owners of spe cialized farms will find men capable of taking change of their places. The farms of the members of the guild all are in the vicinity of Chicago —most of them near Lake Forest, Lake Bluff and Harrington. All are spe cialized along various lines. Students will work on them in rotation so as to gain an all around knowledge or if studying along a certain line will be allowed to remain on the farm best fitted to the purpose. The practical work of the students will be divided into two classes—field and laboratory work and campus work. Many of the courses will be given in the university halls, but most of the instruction will be given on the farms. Small dormitories will be built on several of the farms if the number of students is large enough. ilegular tuition fees of §4O for a three months' term will be charged the students. Making tho Dirt Fly at Panama. [A quartet has been sent to Panama by the government to furnisli music for the Isthmian canal diggers.—News iteT> 1 No longer repine in the blizzard bound north. Take a shovel and pick on your shoul der And toward the canal zone haste happily forth. To battle with sand bank and bowlder. On tho ditch, as you toil the glad hour» alone, Tour labor's made light by inspiriting song. Prny. who could not work when a tune ful quartet, Perched on somo embankment or other, Carols soft. "She's tho Girl that Tou Hopa You'll Forget" Or "Who Can Fry liver Like Mother?" Tho puffing steam shovel puffs fainter and finer, And tho dynamite chords with eath bar ber shop minor! When under your pickax tho rocks seem obtuse As you work in the adamant section. Tho singer, to aid you in Jarring them j loose. Will oblige with a Wagner selection. For "Siegfried," well rendered by moutb 1 or by band, ts a thing in tho nolso line no rock can withstand! Time was when rudo bosses, bull voiced and profane. Drove men at the rock builded barriers By raucously howling, again and again, "Git in there and drill there, ye tar- j riers!" But they didn't succeed, and they didn't' know why. Tou have got to havo song or tho flirt doesn't fly I —James J. Montaguo in New Tork Amer ican. "I observe," said Ilerlock Sholmes of Now York, "that you have recently taken up your residence in Brooklyn." "Who told you that?" asked the oth er, visibly startled. "Nobody, but I notice that you blush whenever any one asks you where you re living."—Philadelphia Press. OrTe Way. Husband—l don't know how much of an allowance to give you. . Wife— You know how much you can afford, don't you? Husband—Why, yes. Wife —Then give me as much more a« you can spare.— lllustrated Bits. | NOTES C.M.BARNITZ RIVERSIDE ' CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED i\ Jff \ life COUNT YOUR CHICKS BEFORE THEY'RE HATCHED. ! To save cussin' the cluck or kicking that Incubator to kindling wood just pass those eggs before a strong light In a dark closet or room. It's fun. It costs nothing, and you may save a whole hatch and the oil. Mr. Farmer, I we mean you too. If it's only one set ting, to test Is best A lamp globe of tin, with a hole the i size of a half dollar and covered with 1 mica, will do. A bicycle lamp may do the trick. Use a dark lantern if the j policeman is tending bar. The invisible ! germ is developed by 103 degrees in the ! incubator. The germ skin (blastoderm) j holds it on the top of the yolk. You j may turn the egg, but you can't turn the yolk, as it Is always kept In one position, with the germ uppermost, by the chalazae, which act as balancing weights. This is remarkable, for egg yolks beaten up with old rye, rich milk and sugar will turn some men Inside out and upside down. Test white eggs the fifth day, but let dark shelled eggs set seven days before testing. Sunday tests bring crooked chickens. If you are a beginner, test the tenth (lay. Don't get nervous, but don't let the eggs get cold, and always have your hen ready (If siic's a saint) or your In cubator warm to return the eggs. Cover the eggs you are testing. If there are many, take only about 100 at .1 time. Place side of egg toward aperture. If fertile, egg shows red spider-like pic ture; clear, no Kerm; black spot, dead germ; red streak, ruptured Wood ves sel; big air space and black floating tfT L/ \ cloud, rotten. Boil f'v r \ clear eggs for the I \i ) 1 chickens. If not j jSI) 'f I certain as to egg, V J mark (?) and re \ jf I \ I turn to incubator Y| tv / for observation. If j\ / you crack an egg, * y heal with black court plaster. If it FIFTH DAY. develops, wet and remove plaster the eighteenth day. If few eggs are tested out, don't crow too loud. Some germs are weak and die of marasmus before tlie tenth day. By the tenth day the chicks begin to TENTH DAT. caters. By the fifteenth day the bird is near ly developed. If there Is offensive odor, you have missed a spoiled egg. "Take it up gently, handle with care," for it ' 1 has vast 11,11 ioti s look. FIFTEENTH DAT. \ ) w a y s mark ten strongly fertile eggs for your thermometer to rest on. Cold rotten eggs knock out hatches as well as poli ticians. The chick now peeps. The white has all entered into the growth of the bird, but TWENTIETH DAY. WAS BUP . piled with oxygen by the allantols. Birdie is old enough now to vote, in " * He tr loves does the TWENTY-PIBST DAY. W ORK UE spreads himself, gives a big kick, the trap door opens, and he Is free. DER DUTCHMAN'S LAY. I lofes to cackle roun' der blace Apout meln yaller hen. Sho lays 80 many pis vtte egga Down py der shicken's pen. She sings HO many leetle songs Afore sho goes ter lay, I dink I nefer hear dor like, Dey vas so sveet und gay. Unci ven das leetle egg pops out You dink she split der headt A-slngin' Bveetly all der day Und ven she shumps ter bed. I ofen hears metn Katrine sing Und often hears her scoldt. Glf me meln leetle yaller hen Vat lays der eggs of goldt. C. M. B. ALTERNATING MALES. It Is tho stylo with some to decorate their pens with two males. One rests a day, while the other rules the harem. This is a splendid plan If the birds are brothers and well matched. A friend was stunned by what he hatched by using two Single Oomb Brown Leg horn cocks of different strains. One batch was perfect In plumage, shape and comb, but had green legs, while another batch had black speckled plumage, flop combs and yellow legs. Our friend was mad and sad. He bad sold the egjn for pure stock uau aiso naa no pullets tor oreeaing nnd customers. The one cock had game In him; but, like our evil traits, it couldn't be var nished over. DON'TS. Don't be euch a goose as to put louse powder on geese and ducks. They are vermin as well as water proof. Don't dust your chickens till 4 o'clock. It will not stop the laying, and they will carry the louse powder to bed and stop the mites. Don't get crazy on the broiler busi ness. If you are anxious to burn your fingers to see how It feels, we have no objections. Don't think you are the only one that has bad luck. If you will just grit your teeth, exercise your think ma chine and shove ahead you'll not have to hire a newspaper to puff you. Don't get too smart and run your In cubator on original lines. Of course you never set a hen on her back—not that big n fool yet Then don't reverse your incubator rules. Don't get scared if those eggs don't hatch right on the exact second. If weather Is mild and the hen is faithful, the peeps may be all out the nineteenth day. If the hen Is nervous and the weather Is rough, hatch Is sometimes delayed to the end of the twenty second. Don't tell your chicken troubles on the street corner, Mr. I Told U So may be present. When you're glum keep mum. Don't say "I have the best in the world." In some back yard you'll find chickens that make yours look like O. Don't be surly to visitors. Looks as if you have a dirty bug house or are selling pure bred *jggs from cull stock. Don't "eggsaggerate" in your adver tisement. "Tell the truth and shame the devil." Don't forget that a fair and square deal is what puts any business man on the pinnacle of prosperity. Don't ride a hobby till you're sure it's not a hobbyhorse. Go slow on chicken fads. Don't get discontented with your chickens every time you read that other fellow's printed statement of egg prof its. Remember the man who is get ting there is too busy to take time to sit down and write up his private egg affairs for other people to gossip over. AGAINST FERTILITY. The main reasons for infertile eggs follow: Overworked, overbred, overfed, underfed, nearly dead, immature stock; egg tonics, red pepper, cattle powder, too mnnv hens to a t>eiL too rnanv roosters to a nen. Eggs don't hatch when they're oversized, undersized, ir regularly shaited, chilled, overheated, oiled, soiled, shocked, old, too young. Eggs just laid must lose their natural heat before being set. Eggs just ship ped must stand ten hours to settle. Hut follow the incubator directions, and don't monkey with the cluck. If you don't get chickens you will get the ex perience. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. The gasoline engine Is becoming a feature in the poultry work. We grind our own shell, bone, cracked corn, wheat, charcoal, pump water, etc., with a two and a half horsepower station ary. Since we grind our own feed the mortality has been very small, and the time nnd strength given to hand ma chinery are put on something else. Take $l5O and do likewise. The bulldog is the proper policeman for a poultry plant. Our dog sleeps right iu with the chickens and runs through the 170 foot scratching shed at night. He Is gentle In the home, but nt night recognizes no friends except the members of the family. lie's a bully burglar alarm. A properly fed cat will not touch little chicks. It Is a mistake to exclude them. If a cat has a reasonable amount of meat, he will not make trouble. We hatch thousands of young chickens, and our big tiger o:;t goes through the brooders and even lies down and lets the peeps crawl under his legs and run over him, but never even steps on them. lie and the bull dog chase all other tomcats from the place, and even the sparrows don't bother us. It is time for you to make out that order for fruit trees. We have plant ed over 100 young trees and expect in a few years to have them pay our feed bills. The Bartlett pear, the Burbank plum, the Baldwin and Smokehouse ap ples are the money makers. When you ship eggs for hatching, do not pack them in buckwheat hulls. They are poor protection and too heavy. Let excelsior be your motto. When a man has a beautiful farm, splendid buildings and a flock of mon grel chickens, the picture's spoiled. That's not thoroughbred. Yes, you may have your idea of this or that, and every other fellow has the same right. However, don't act the mule. You may be lugging round a fragment of an idea that was ex ploded a thousand years ago. Aristocracy. What subsists today by violence continues tomorrow by acquiescence and is perpetuated by tradition till at last the hoary abuse shakes the gray hairs of antiquity at us and gives itself out as the wisdom of ages. Thus the clearest dictates of reason are made to yield to a long succession of follies. And this is the foundation of the aristocratic system at the present day. Its stronghold, with all those not Im mediately interested in It, is the rev erence of antiquity.—Edward Everett Satan Terrified. There is as great genius displayed In advertising as In the higher branches of literature. No problem daunts the modem advertising man. In the window of a little book store in Eighth avenue, New York, was re* cently heaped a great pile of Bibles marked very low. Never before were Bibles offered at such a bargain, and above them all In big letters was the inscription: Satan trembles when he sees Bibles sold as low as these. More than 30,000 specimens of fossil Insects have been collected from vari ous portions of the world. Of these the rarest are the butterflies. SCIENCE OF FOODS, Eugene Christian's Plan For Prolonging Human Life. BASED ON SIMPLE PRINCIPLES Value of Balanced Diet Explained by the Founder of"Food Science"—How to Derive the Most Nourishment From What We Eat. By FREDEHICK R. TOOMBS. Food science is a subject that It Just now attracting a great deal of at tention In many sections of the United States. Its founder, Eugene Christian of New York city, the well known lec turer on diet and health culture and author of "Perfect Health" and "Un cooked Foods," has at the same time been widely talked of as a man who Is doing work of tremendous value to ward clearing up many of the perplex ing dietary problems that confront the public. Food science paves the way for and will undoubtedly lead to a com plete revolution In the manner of liv ing of countless numbers of people. According to eminent authorities, It should have appreciable effect In pro longing human life and In a large measure emancipating people from the use of drugs in the attempted correc tion of ills resulting from digestive troubles. The principles on which food science is based are so simple that when they are understood It naturally occurs to a person to wonder why It is that at this late period they are first reduced to an actual science and publicly pro mulgated. When asked recently how he accom plished his results Mr. Christian said to the writer: Naturally my work relates exclusively to the stomach and other organs that as slst in tho process of digestion and assim ilation. The disorders of these orpans are caused by errors In eating or drink ing. I study each individual case mlnutoly, taking into consideration tho age of tho person, temperature, environment, occu pation, etc., and then ascertain the spe cific chemical elements his body requires and in what quantities or proportions. Aa the body Is composed of fifteen spe cific chemical elements, all of which are well known to tho food chemist, we should take each day such combinations and selections of food as will reproduce these chemical elements In their right proportions. For Instance, a man doing ordinary work would need two ounces of protold matter each twenty-four hours. If ho should take four ounces habitually he would ultimately have trouble or if ho would only take one ounce he would suffer sooner or later. The body contains tho fifteen different elements arranged all the way from one half of 1 per cent up to SO per cent of the whole. The best fed man Is the one that can como nearer giving the body all ot these chemical elements In the right pro portions. The man who gets too fat has fed himself upon an unbalanced diet too much carbohydrates and albuminoids. Tho man who is too thin is lacking In these elements and is taking too much protolds, nitrogen, etc. In other words both men feed upon an unbalanced diet. Mr. Christian has spent almost n life time studying the effect on the human system of practically all foods. At his laboratory in 7 East Forty-first street, New York city, he has the serv ices of a chemist formerly employed under Or. Wiley in the United States government's experimental chemistry department In Washington, and some of the discoveries resulting from In vestigations directed by Mr. Christian have done much to illuminate the mooted question of how to derive tho most nourishment from what we eat One of the fundamental principles of food science is that "chemical har mony" should result from the foods wo eat. Chemical harmony in this sense means that the foods, when taken into tho system, digest and assimilate harmoniously. There is no conflict be tween acids and the natural fluids of the digestive organs. No gases or oth er unnatural poisons result. So striking have been some of the beneficial results to persons following the tenets of food science that they have dispensed with tho services of the family physician to a considerable extent. As a result the physicians in various parts of the United States arose against Mr. Christian and called him a "fakir." The New York County Med ical society went further and had him indicted on the charge that he was practicing medicine without a license. Mr. Christian was urrusted, tried, and the lower court found him guilty, lie appealed to the appellate division of the New York supremo court, and re cently the court handed down a unani mous decision reversing the decision of the lower court. The supreme court justices said in part, "As upon the whole case we find that no crime was committed and that the defendant was Improperly convicted, the judg ment appealed from should be re versed." Inn recent editorial, commenting on the decision in Mr. Christian's favor. Dr. W. I{. C. Latson, the editor of Health Culture,spoke in part as follows: "This decision of course quite ex onerates Mr. Christian, who deserves not only the congratulations of all fair minded men, but credit for his plucky tight against the 'powers that be.' Each nir.n has the right to select his own nie ".i?al adviser as he has the right to select his own grocer or car penter. Only the patient should not be deceived as to tha status of his ad viser." A Municipal Flag. The city of Easton, Pa., has adopted a municipal flag, said to be a copy of the flag which waved over that town during the Revolutionary war. The tins has thirteen ret! and white strlpen In the upper corner, and the remainder of the flag is blue, with a circle of eight white stars In the center. Big Railroad'c Care of Its Employees. Since the organization of the relief department ot the Pennsylvania rail road In February, 1880, $17,43-1,059.41 has been paid out In benefits. Of this sum $10,31(5,090.50 was paid on ac count of disablements and the remain der in death benefits. These figures are taken from the January report of the relief fund, which %as Just been compiled. In the month of Jnnuary payments amounting to $166,785.16 were made—564,216.73 for death bene fits and $102,518.43 for the relief of members disabled or incapacitated for work in the company's service. TO TOUR AND BARTER Object of Novel Voyage Planned by a Financier. OCEAN STEAMER PURCHASED Colonel Robert M. Thompson of New York and His Party Will Visit Indian, Chinese and Japanese Ports In a Floating Abodo of Luxury. The life of a merchant prince on his own ship, with the far east as his des tination, is one that Colonel Robert M. Thompson, a financier of New York city, has chosen to follow, and he will soon depart for the orient with a num ber of chosen friends on an ocean steamer which he has purchased ex pressly for this purpose. The vessel will carry a cargo of mer chandise shipped to various destina tions in the regular course of com merce, for which the usual freight rates will be charged, and the proceeds of the carriage will bo applied toward de fraying the expenses of the outward trip. This original undertaking savors of the times of 1812, when fortunes were made or lost on the high seas, but now no dread of pirate crews can spoil the pleasurable side of the enterprise or in terfere with the commercial end of the plan. Colonel Thompson has con verted a tramp steamer Into a floating abode of luxury, and every fitting has been made as harmonious and comfort able as wealth can make It, says the New York Tribune. The trip will ex tend over several months, for haste Is not part of the programme. Besides Colonel and Mrs. Thompson and the Stephen Pells, the party will include other well known New York ers and several Canadians. Among the latter will be Sir. and Mrs. Wallace Nesbltt, who are residents of Toronto. Mr. Nesbitt is a lawyer and for a time enjoyed the distinction of being the youngest chief justice in the Domin ion, but he preferred a general prac tice and is now an expert on mining rights and claims. In the far east mines are to be bought for a song, but deals must be skillfully handled to be without flaw In title or grant where the orient is concerned. Poking about all places of interests along the coast to be touched will con sume a certain amount of time, and no opportunity for sightseeing will go astray. At each place it is proposed to barter for curios or more popular goods, so that the return trip also will show a profit balance. Tho weeks to be spent In Indian, Chinese and Japanese ports are looked forward to with delight by all of the party, for, while the trading and business side will take the fore most place in the minds of the men. the temples, the native costumes and customs and the rare jumble of the ar tistic and outlandish will appeal to the women, who will doubtless be of great assistance in the selection of wares to return as part of the cargo. Each passenger has all the space he desires to spread his belongings in, and all know one another so well that the length of the trip is an extra induce ment instead of holding the chance that some one of them may end it abruptly and return overland because of disagreement. The voyage as plan ned leads through the Mediterranean and Suez canal to India and other parts of Asia. Eventually a landing will be made In San Francisco after a look in at Alaska. When the United States Is reached and the ship and cargo are sold Colo nel Thompson, it is said, expects that the enterprise will have paid for itself, the provisioning even included, and on the sale of the steamer a profit is thought probable. An especially good chef has been en gaged. who will, it is hoped, preparo such food that even the "third day de spalrers" will be tempted and recover their appetites. The deck has ampin space for the usual .ship games, and, as more than half of those going are bridge players of skill and much prac tice, gray days will not be much no ticed. Their friends hope that the nlonsuras nlnnnorf win nil <•>-.■«« Pullman Cars to Be "Dry." It is reported that an order is being sent out from the offices of the Pull man headquarters In Chicago to dis continue the s»ale of liquor on cars of that company in every part of the Unit ed States, the order togo into effect as soon as the liquors now on hand can be disposed of without loss. It is ex pected to begin In the east and to work westward, anil the order may become operative in New England and the mid dle states about March 1. It Is under stood that the company Is moved to take this step because direct ef fect that anti-saloon laws in the several states have had upon Its business. Not only have the changed conditions of the last twelve months cut deeply into the profits formerly derived from this source, but on long runs liquor can lie sold for only portions of the distance, and the company is constantly in dan ger of prosecution for lawbreaking through carelessness of employees. SlUflf! A Reliable TIN SHOP For all kind of Tin Rooflna> Spoutlne and General Job Work. Stovea, Heaters, Ranges* Furnaces, eto. PRICES THE LOW EST! QUALITY TDK BEST! JOHN HIXSOJN lO.IV E. FRONT IT.