INCIDENT OFTHEWAR A BRAVE DEED PERFORMED ON THE FIELD OF ANTIETAM. Afig Thirty-three Years a Yankees Soldier i Learns the Name of the Confederate Sol- | dier Who Saved His Life at the Risk of | His Own. An interesting war story comes to light from an incident that occurred at | tht battle of Antietam, which demon- stress that even the roar of cannon, the | shiog and chell, the crash of musketry | andl te cold touch of the bavonet ean- the sirit of kindness and humanity. This incident tells of the heroism Linfloess of a Confederate picket the Yadkee : The battle of Antietam had been fin- jsf for ahont 80 hours. The soldiers and cf fwe and McClellan were resting on | tl arms. after a direful eonfliet in. wish both sides had suffered terribly, arf] om the battlefield the dead and | womnd od were stretched out by the! oh omea ds. A shaehing «long his beat keeping vigil dvér the s'~eping Army of Northern Virgipia. Jost ort thers were many of the Federal ¢ ad and wounded. A faint ery « me to the ears of the boy in gray. li was a gasping, despair- ing ery. ‘Water! Water!" that was all that oould be heard The man who gegped out those words was dying Slag of thirst. : ‘he picket resolved to carry water 19 the wormded Yankoe. Near by was a sprig and quickly the picket filled his canfedn and returned to his post.. The ‘wounuled soldier was still begging fiz | water, but the question was how to got | it to him. - The picket knew he to k his | 1ifé in Lis hands, but dropping wp.n his km he began crawling toward the 3 Two shots were dis- | chazged at him {rom the Federal sharp- | - shedters, but he kept steadily on until dving Federal he reached the side of the wounded sol- diese. A wound iu the thigh was letting the life blood slowly out, and the sol- ‘dies, quenching his thirst, thanked the ‘bug in gray for his kindness. The war was over right there and then between those two fellows. The picket then re- turned to his post, and the incident passed into the realm of memory. : Thirty-three years bave passed since that night, but the wounded Yankee and the boy in gray are stillin the land of the living. That drink of water saved the life of the wonnded eoldier, and be had always been grateful to the memory of the ‘‘Johnny reb’’ who gave him the cooling beverage on the field at Ap- - tiotam. : The Federal soldier was Mr. B. L. Burr, who is now editor of the Tolland County Leader of Rockford, Conn. For years be has been trying to find the game of the man who risked his life to ‘bring him n drink of water and has at last succeeded. Through some chance he | happeved to write to Major Ww. B. Pruitt of Athens, Ga., concerning the | incident, and a few days since Major Pruitt in talking with a friend learned that the Confederate picket was Mr. - Matt Norton of Winterville, Ga. Mr. Burr was notified, and he and Mr. Norton bave entered into regular cowaspondence; giving each other maps describing their ideas of how the lines . wee that day, and everything goes to prove that Mr. Norton was the soldier who darried the water to Mr. Burr. Mr, Notton bad long since forgotten the in- cident, but now remembers it perfectly. ~#Asdanta Constitution. es rn an Tormented by Bpirits. Spiritualists and students of psychol- ogy are excited over a statement sworn to hy Miss Rena Leonard, a young - woman of Hamilton, O. She declares that Jim Holly, a farm hand who works | for er father, is tormented by spirits. | She and nine of ber young men and ywopyen companions say that a night or 80 ago they were in Holly's bedroom ont of curiosity and saw a mattress with Eolty lying on it rise from the bed, Hfted by an vngeen power, and rest in oidedr, Sn The alleged spirit throws Holly from his bed and will not allow him to slop. He is 20 years old and has vo ied wo much about it that he is almc.t a liv- ing skelefon. All through . the hot season he has slepé under blankets, tightly wrapped about him, throngh fear of the ghost. — 1'aw York Recorder. Art Not Forgotten. The recent trcubles through which tha republic of Colombia has just passed did not prevent the government from continuing to foster the intellectual in- _terests of the country. It has published a decree ordering a competition, at which are to be examined works upon artistic, industrial and literary subjects relative to the United States of Colom- bin, and prizes are to be granted to the - works which an examining committee declares the best, according to the pro- gramme determined by the government decree. ~New York Tribune. Imitate the Juggernaut, Philadelphia children have a new and jelightful game called ‘‘trolley car. » It is played by from two to twenty ju- yeniles, all but one of whom sprawl on the pavement, while the other pushes a baby carriage over their prostrate forms. —New York Advertiser. Scared In Time. hy ‘woman who proposed to jump from A Brooklyn bridge was scared out of her | was well, purpose by the police. This scare will It is to be trusted that the last long enough to prevent any later: effort to carry ont the woman's plan. — New York World. And No Farther. From her waist up almost any woman looks as well in knickerbockers as she would in rkirts — Washington Times. and grateful remembrance of a wonnded soung Confederate picket was i An Alleged Falling That Has Deferred ‘Woman's Emancipation. : The. bond of fellowship which exists between man and man simply by virtue of a common sex is entirely absent be- tween woman and woman. It is, m fact, replaced by a fundamental antago- the general attitude of a feminine crea | ture toward her kind essentially differ. ent from that of the male creature in jdentical relations. Ip individual casos | this fecling is counteracted hy affectio al sentiment it remains, severing ever; To a great extent this arises from wom- abstract emotion. In life's fray she often, for some one man or VWoms . wham she loves, but rarely for the wel fare of her sex at large. 0 Were it not for this strange lagk of ho manity in ber nature, the emancipation ‘of woman wonld not have been so griev | ously retarded. If the few women sha suffered aforetime under the restrictions which hedged in their liberty had beer able to count on the sympathy and co- operation of all women, the time of their subjugation would have been enor- mously abbreviated. As it was, the first geckers after freedom met with more ‘opposition from their own sex than they did from the other; nor, indeed, do they fare better today. . Enormoms changes in their social status were effected by an incomsiderable minority of women brave enough and logical enomgh to im- press the male powers that be with the justice of their demands. But for their courage they received no s¥mpathy and for their success not one word of thanks —nathing, in fact, but execration from the huge inert feminine mass in whose gervice their strength was spent. —>Sat- urday Review. BRYANT’S MARRIAGE. Union Between the Poel His Wife. | Allusion has already been made to | William Cullen Bryant's marriage. { None could have been happier, no un- jon more nearly an ideal one. Miss Fan- ny Fairchild was a young lady whose parents had lived on the Seekonk, a stream tributary to the Green river, not far from Great Barrington. Early left an orphan, she made her home alter nately with her married sisters in that - place, and there it was that Bryant met her. Charming in person, sweet in dis- ition, lovely in character, she drew im to her through his sympathy with her orphanage, his admiration of her beauty and his msppreciation of her worth. For 45 years she was the stay and blessing of his life. What that mar- riage was to him they knew best who | knew him best. Reserved on the subject to the world at large, he allowed only those who were nearest him to know i the wonderful depth and tenderness of | his affection. Their sympathy was per- | fect, their dependence mutual It Was sn Ideal | He said at her death: *‘I never wrote | a poem that I did not repeat it to her | and take her judgraent upon it. Ifound its success with the public to be pre- cisely in proportion to the impression it made upon her.”” A dear friend of them | both har said: ‘‘The union between Mr. | and Mrs. Bryant was a poem of the | tenderest rhythm. Any of us who re- {| member Mr. Bryant's voice when he | said Frances’ will join in his hope that [| she kept the same beloved name in | heaven. I remember alluding to those exquisite lines, ‘The Future Life,’ to { Mrs. Bryant, and her replying, ‘Oh, my | dear, I am always sorry for any one | who sees ie after reading those line. - | they must be go disappointed.” Beatrice i and Laura bave not received such trib- ; utes from their poets, for Mrs. Bryant's { husband was her poet and lover at 70 as {at 17.—Arthur Lawrence in Century. A Case or Fourteen to One. Queen Victoria, during her reign, has bad 34 parliaments on her hands, and | all her speeches to them eombingd are not as long as one president’s message. | A president who keeps his messages ' down to u column and a half will re- | ceive general commendation and get in | his work far more effectively. —St. | Louis Globe-Demcerat. We're Getting There. The snake and sea serpent stories that sre now doing such.a rushing business | suggest that the imagination of the | American people was never in better | condition. Each new story beggars all | the others. Evidently the great Ameri: | can n@vel is soon to be born. —Philadel- | phia Press. For Fun or For Keeps? A certain young man in our commu- nity entertained his best girl last Sniiday evening by playing her a game of mar- bles, — Roberta (Ga. ) Correspondent. i fp - 3 - A HARVEST SONG. Behind the scythes a trodden path, Bind, bind the sheaves. Wide and wider grows the swath. ‘Either side the bright corn heaves : Billows of gould. Trees a glory of bronze and red, Bind, bind the sheaves. Misty sunshine overhead. Through the chequer of thinning leaves The air is cold. : Breath of the coming frost is thers, Bind, bind the sheaves. = Vines that cling to the house grow bare. Swallows leave their nests in the eaves Empty and old. Apple globes, crimson and white, . Bind, bind the sheaves. Winnowed grain, sunnily bright (Glittering gold that want relieves), The wide bins hold Fill the flagon up to the brim, Bind, bind the sheaves, Until the foam runs over the rim. (It mellowed long where the spider weaves "In dusk and mold.) Fill and drink the cider clear, Bind, bind the sheaves. Bid farewell to the passing year, Close th» book with blotted leaves. Their tale is told. ~Neith Boyoe in Outing. INCAPABLE OF IMPERSONALITY. nism, a vague enmity which renders; or by sympathy, but apart from perscn- | on ¥ 1 Children { vite Wome ( 1 Yes OF 80%, . . \ living woman from the rest of h Lages of 6 and 10, attend the former. not dive from the breast of the soldier 14521 : : { 2 Tari tv for fpersonnt fooll F Children betwesn (la : 8 ineapacity for impersonal fooling o 1 3 an oat Yl ey Lng orf ra eligiblis to the higher grads Fechoolhouse or sol | iar with the highest forms of discipline. | are scared by the bloomer apparitions. JAPAN'S CHIEF FORCE , 80 1 HER EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM. | {| Mast Attend School Up to the Age of Fourteen -The Suljects Taught -Teach- i { ers’ Qualifications. | 1 The commen school system of Japan ix in my opinion the chief support. of the empire and the promise of the fn fuse. are only two schools—tho ordinary and the higher of both betwonn rT 4 1 ~ thera grades « 1 % XP ti SOX, ti wy a ii Bard OF 11 AQ i +4 i Qf his i * ; ‘| Every municipality, township, vii fights either for ber own hand or. rin 13 YOrY mummy PY {tawn and city is uired to build a irothouses, according | to the eensus returns of children of school age. weoording tio the capacity amd require | menfs of the school divisicn. In the | cities the school buildings ere quite are seemingly overcrowded. In ne country many of them are poor wodrien structures, It is obligatory for a'! old 1 dren between 6 and 14 years to attend a common schooluntil (Lc vo Lise is finished. The law is not rigidly en- forced becanse of the poverty of the | ccuntry and the absolute necessity for children to aid their parents by some kind of labor. But where children are permitted to attend scheol there is no trouble shout the attendance. There is no snch thing ig Japan as a schoolboy “creeping like a snatl anwillingly to school.”’ They gp trotting to scheol | with happy faces. They all wear a black 1 | COLONEL COCKERILL DESCRIBES | ho shows the littleness of New York as The horses are constracted | cornmodions and pretentious, though all | | man said rec: tly that he would never | or white cap with a Jeather visor, and they carry their books in a leather | satchel. The majority of thom are sta- | notoriously bad character or who are | comstitationally disqualified for regeiv- ing instruction are not admitted to the schools. : In the crdinary or lower grade school ‘the subjects tanght are readigg, com- position, caligraphy, arithmetic anc gymnastics. The latter is optional, ac cording to the character of the locality. One or more of the following subjects are also taught in addition to the above: Japanese geography, Japanese history, drawing, singing and handiwork. For girls sewing may be added. Iu the high- er grade school the curriculum embraces moral lessons, reading, composition, caligraphy, arithmetic, Japanese geog- raphy, Japanese history, foreign geog- raphy, science, drawing, singing and gymnastics. For girls sewing may be added. Foreign geography and singing may be eliminated. One or more of the following subjects may be added, ac- cording to requirement: Elements of geometry. a foreign language, lessons in agriculture, commerce and manual training. In all the schools great stress is Inid on essay writing. Every class is trained in calistheniewa Where singing is taught, the children enter into it with great zeal, and they make thomselves heard for a considerable distance. In the common schools the summer vaca- sion lasts from two to six weeks and the winter vacation from ome to five weeks. The number of holidays shall not exceed 90 in any one year. In schools of the ordinary grade military drill is left optional. In the higher grade the military training of the male pupils is obligatory. To this branch great attention is given and every boy who leaves school at the age of 16 has in him all the elements of the =oldier, gave perhaps efficiency in the manual and use of arms. They are made famil- Teachers in the schools must have due qualifications. They are selected and ap- pointed by the governor of the prefec- ture or the city in which they are to teach. These teachers are regarded as government officials, and a small pen : sion is provided for them when they are incapacitated by age or permanent ll. ness. Their salaries are small, ranging from 10 yen $c 25 yen per month. Text DOORS are CnOrerx Irom nose auwnarizen . by the minister of education, and are selected by the governor of the district upon the report of a committee selected by him. Last year Japan expended on common schools the sum of 8,055,980 yen. The government maintains a num- ber of high grade schools, and the coun- try is well sapplied with excellent pri- vate schools and colleges, which are maintained by tuition fees, and in some cases by government contributions to cover deficits. Last year the number of children educated in Japan at public expense was 3, 30,452, and the average daily attendance was 2,489,657 pupils. —John A. Cockerill in New York Her- ald ‘ Bloomers Scare. the Horses. The eity council of White Pigeon, Mich., has be petitioned by a consid- erable body of the citizens of that place | to prohibit women from wearing bloom- ers on the stre:. An ungallant ‘‘where-. as’’ in the petition alleges that horses At Coldwater, in the same state, some of the women bicyclists recently passed dious and fond of books. Children of i + ‘nts gets into the city directory. As seen New York, his enthusiasm for his ' Cal, recently, to Miss Grace Pitney, out of the bloomer stage and took to men’s knickerbockers and goli stock- | Ings. For Red Armas. Rough, red arms are a source of much annoysuce to many women, especially to those who are given to wearing short sleeves. They should be washed every night in very hot water and scrubbed vigorously until quite red with a coarse turkish towel. Before drying rub in a little lomon juice mixed with an equal amount; of lime water. nse —————————r—— A. Woman Customs Inspector. The best inspector in the French cus- tom house is a woman, She is in the Havre office, and she has a nose that can’ detect dutiable goods without opening a lock. $he is naturally amiable and slow to anger, but woe to the foreigner or countryman who provokes her ire.— New York Press. : : ‘the boat, waving her handkerchief to air. In striking the mountain side again . burg Dispatch. ~ STORIES OF THE DAY. Bome Confessions as to Chicago by a Na- The sidswalks of Chicago are chiefly. | board planks. Miles of this baard walk 4 i } laos . ¥ : 1 : | Coedneation 8 Feature of the System — All | is elevated ‘much above the lot level Sundry beards are missing, and there. fore Chicagoans are getting to be greas jumpers. * The streets of Chicago are paved with cobhlectenos and blocks of wood. Many of the inhabitants say that the blocks o7 wood onght to be dumped into their Wn «1 bins, 2 puts them to a grea: deal of inconvenience and labor to dig them ont of the street. : ax The postmaster of Chicagl has re- | mariah He without Aanbt thy greatest statistician in tho | city. Tw ie a wick reralarly he quotes statistics to the Chicago papers in which whiskers. 18 wmpared with the city by tho lake. i a | The wearin: of dress suits in the day. | time in Chic "gradually going nb of style. A co spicunous Chicago society | think of wear ng a dress suit before 4 | o'clock ir the afternoon. From 13 to 1 o'clock the business men of Chicago seek the dairy lunch counters. They eat as a rule 15 cents’ | worth and then go back to their work | thoroughly contented. Thera is a railroad that owns the whola of the like front, and nobody is allowed {0 fich in the lake. Ho far th railroad company has not refosed th lake breezes admittance over its tracks Chicago is so flat that tho city has built in some of the parks small hills, People regard these hills with great cariosity "The Chicago river continues to emit | nnspeakabla oders, yet Chicagoans ap- 4 near to like it, for they stand on the bridges ever. the river for hours at a! time watching the busy scencs below. | Occasionally one of them shufles off his | jortal coil by jumping into the river. The atmosphere of Chicago when an- | lyzed yields 40 per cent of suft coal | <noke, 10 per cent of street dust, 15 | or sent of stockyards, 15 per cent of hinago river and some oxygen. The average citizen of Chicago reprs- < nts at least five outside concerns. Fle 1 .kes good care that each firm he reprs- ¢ ich name is counted for four or five 1 ople in estimating the population the 1iillions roll up very handily. The Chicago man who has never berm to New York is rabid in his declaration of Chicago’s superiority. When he has own city is utterly quenched unless he makes a living selling lots. — New York Sub. His Tongue Paralyzed. : : William Hague Wood, once a Metho- dist lay preacher, recently tarned infi- del. He attended a revival meeting sev- eral nights at High Shoals, Ga. , recently and ran an opposition meeting outside the church. He made nightly addresses declaring that the preachers were talk- ing nonsense ; that they were frauds aad deceiving the people. Sunday his tongré was paralyzed while he was making a speech ridiculing the church. his frightened his hearers. : Next evening Wood attended the meeting and handed up thé following note to the preacher in charga: “I now believe there is a hell, and that I wm doomed for it. Pray for me.'” The sen- gation in the congregation was such that in less than five minutes the altar would not accommadate half the moam-~ ers. — Now York World. en esto Yoo Fisndy With Weapons. Last inouth saw 31 homicides in Kan- tucky—a homicide a day. The first 16 dass of his month saw 17 bomicides | there. If the state of Kentucky hanged | anybody between July 1 and Aug. 16 this year for the crime of 1aurder, we | have forgotten the instance. Of the 48 | July and August man slayer: four gave | themselves up and 23 were arrested by | officers ¢f the law. The others, as far as | appears, are still at large. The Ken- | tuckians are a people of many engaging qualities—none more admifable tnd | lovable snywhere. But they are far too handy, some of them, with their weap- ons, and the administration of justice | in their courts is not yet all that it | should be. —Hartford Courant. | SAVED BY SEAWEED. | Remarknble Escape of a Girl Who Fell Down a Mountain. A singular accident and remarkable escape from death happened at Catalina, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Pit- ney of Los Angeles. She climbed to the top of Sugar Loaf monntain, which overlooks the bay of Catalina, and saw | some friends starting out for a sail The ventnresome girl stood on the apex of the peak and called to her friends in tham. : Suddenly ber friends, who vere nearly 800 feet below, saw her step gideways off the peak and roll down the mountain. Her descent was plainly vis- ible tc those on the water. She had} rolled 50 feet or so when she stiuck some brush and was thrown into the she fell upon some more brush and rolled down the mountain into the waters of the bay. She did not sink, but | remained motionless on the surface of the bay. She had landed on a bed of | kelp of sufficient thickness to sustain her weight. Though rendered uncon-| scious by her fall, the sustaining power | of the seaweed kept her from drowaing until she was rescued. The girl was | little injured, except that her left leg, was fractured near the ankle. —Fitts-| Re 3 apon freedom of speech and of acl i They think she | regarding won.en, but this failed, tion and cannot return #8 to her with i visions of the constitution will prevent ! their eonsidering it. | A SUCCESSFUL EXPERIMENT. | A Plan Which Many a Pewn Might Copy | cently closed the first year of its expori- i - 2 . = | merit as the owner and manager of irs own system of electric Kghting. | lights, and turned on theeurrent for the | brought the total outlay for the year up | to $6,050.57. But even this was nearly ' Millions of dollars ame being drawn high prices for inferior Mghting service. | The bugbear of socialism is all that | gurfaoe and make 5 i this city a short time ago : derstood that a company ‘the speed of the boats being pronounced TO BLACKBALL A PORTIA. Oakland Lawyers Want No Women Ia Their Law Association, : Mjss Frances Lane is 8 young wonsin of Oakland, Cal, who isWaunsing con- gternation in the hearts of the members | of the Alameda Law asssointion. Miss! Lane is a lawyer and she has applied | . for admission to the organization, which | is at present composed of young lawyirs | and students of the rssculine gender. | They are nDatmraily overcome. with fear at the thought of huving amenyg them one whose presence woud be a restraint CL might mterfere with their smoking. s Their Bowever, being prepared before “the day of the new | woman, does not provide against her. | As soon ag Miss Lane's spplication wis | received, there was an ofidrt to insert a | prehibitory clause in the constitution | Al two-thirds vote was reqaised to change i i constitntion, the constitution, and tha was Jacking. | Now the young lawyers and students Ip . i will have to act en Miss Bane’s applioa- ; : | the polite arnouncemend that the pro- | They will have either to blackball her unchivalrously or to accept her, Miss Lane expects the blackballing and does wot particularly | concern herself over the whele matter. . With Advantage. The village of Batavia, N. Y., re- It put in ifs plant, which imcinded 88 are first time on Aug. 1, 1884. : The actual cost of romning these 56 lights for a year was $41.62 per light per year, or a little ove? 11 cents per| night for each light. The first year's operation of a new town plant nude many extraordinary expesmes, and these $1,200 less than the tows paid a private corporation to furpish i$ with caly 72 arc lights daring the prepeding year. This is a small but stsiking illustra tion of what it is in the power of every city and sown in the eountry to do. from the American people for unneces- sary taxation to pay priveses corporations stands in the way of pussing an end to private lighting companies and making the supply of gas and electricity a part of the public business of all cities and towns. is being demolished. —New York Re- corder. : — a —. A Tire That Cyclists Desire. John Mariani of Boston, a mechanical engineer, is the author of an invention which, if it iz all that is elaimed for it, will fill a long felt want in the cycling world. It is a tire which cannot be punctured by ordinary means. In a woven tube or jacket lies the merit of the invention, and according to a recent severe test a journey over a yoad strewn with tacks would not result in serious injury. The tube is covered with a light coating of rubber W give it a smooth t waterproof. The very convincing tess by which Mr. Mariani's invention was adjudged of | great benefit to cycling was made in | In a large loft the inventor had pre- pared a bend of broken glass and sharp edged. stones, to which was added - a | piece of canvas six feet in length in which nails and tacks were inserted, points upward. The canvas was nailed to the floor. Over all these obstacles the | tires were nsed a dozen times without i sustaining a puncture. The outer cover- | ing of rabber was badly cut. Ie is un- 1 has heen | formed for the manufactuge of the Ma- | riani tire, nod that it willsoen be placed on the market. —New York Times. : A Long Trolley Line. Among the eastern electrical enter- | prisés likely to be suceessfully carried | out is one to build a tpolléy railway from the national capital to Gettysburg, Pa. There is a great deal of travel be- tween this city and the historic battle- ficld, and the existing ratlways afford only a roundabout and awkward route, Thelnew electric line will be 70 miles long, will tap a rich cosafyy now. pos- sessing but scant means of gommunica- | tion|with the cuter world, and it will be operated as a freight as well as pas- senger line. ~ The cost of the road com- pletely equipped will be $13,000 a mile. —Chicago Times-Herald Colorado Colony on Bellamy Plano. Mrs. Anna L. Diggs, the socialist agitator, and Dr. S. McLallin, editor of The Advoeate, the official paper of the Populist party in Kansas, have returned from Colorado, where they went to help establish the Montrose county co-opera- tive colony on the Bellamy plan. It is to be located on government land which will be taken up under the homestead and desert land act laws. Ten men bave located there and begun preparations for the reception of the colonists and their families. —New York World. Bicyclists and Goggles Here is a pointer for bicycle riders: The officers and sailors on British tor- pedo boats are provided with goggles, injurious to the eyes. If wheelmen keep on breaking records, they may be obliged to add these picturesque articles to their makeup. —S#& Paul Pioneer Press. We May Come to This Slowly but surely this bughesc | | the most eminent Mary E. Lease told the Dallas News that Cleveland, Harrison and a Populist, as yet unmentioned, would be the can- didates next year. Mrs. Lease was too modest to name herself, but: we know whom ahe means, —Chicago Times-Her- ald a — pad bo HOW HIS PULL WORKED. An Incident of the Labors of & Municipal Reform is not absolution from at- tempts to work the political pull. OCom- missioner Roosevelt of New York has found this out. Not Jong ago half = dozen friends of his called on him. Among the number were three Wall street men, a well known lawyer and a down town business man. The lawyer, who acted as spokesman, opened np. “Look here, Roosevelt,’’ he said, *'n3 man to man we want to know if yoii're going to keep an pulling the poolrong, even if they are respectable : “Certainly, if you'll tell me vhore there are any,’ said the commissic her, “That isn’t what we came here © 2,7 was the reply. “Now, Roosevelt, you play the horses now and then, eb?" The lawyer winked. Mr. Roosurelt winked. There is nothing more novom- mittal than a wink. Er ““Well,”’ eontinned the lawye?, ‘‘you understand. It's a quiet little place, vou know. No disorder or anything o (hat kind. If a man wants to place a (uiet Kittle bet, you know, on Saturday sfeer- noon when he can’t gef to the hoach, there’s mo harm, eh?’ The liwyer winked again. Mr. Roosevelt winked again. The lawyer said he suppoied it would be all right. Mr. Roosevell pro- duced a notebook and wrote some hing | in it. ; ; “‘T think I know that place,’’ he said genially. '‘Let’s see, tomorrow's Satur- day, ain't it? I'll pull it ‘tomorrow. Hope none of yen fellows'll be there. Delighted to have seen you. Drop in any time.” : Mr. Roosevelt grinned. There wam’t | an answering grin ou the faces ofl any | of his friends. The spokestnan reflected i andibly on his future fate. Thin he ‘turned and led the way out.—-New York Sun. : A YELLOW FEVER CURE. Nuclein Expected : to Prove » Wonderful Remedy, ; er The newly discovered medicinal agent nuclein, known as nature’s rem- edy, which is the property in the ha- man being which cures and repels dis- esse without any artificial aid, is about to be tried in an entirely new field, and scientists and medical men will ‘watch the result with the deepest interest. : Dr. J. Mount Bleyer of New York, who was the first physician in the world to demonstrate the value of nuclein and give an account of its elinical operation in a large number of cases, has pirfect- od a process of obtaining this ramedy in the purest state from the eggs of fish, and with the nuclein so obtained marvel- treated disease under his direction with the fish egg nuclein have cured several hundred cases of diphtheria, scarlet fever, measles, consumption and canoer, and in all instances where in chronic cases there have not been speedy’ sures In making some recent experimies with nuclein, Dr. Bleyer became con- vinced iv would operate as a speuific in the cure of yellow fever, and his werk in that direction attracted the nctice of the directors of the Laboratorio. Histo- Bacteriologico of Chroniea Medico-Qmi- rurgica of Havana. They were 80 im- pressed with the possible value of this natural remedy that Dr. A. H. Maseors, : of Cuban scientists, was deputized to come to this country, make a study of the subject and inci- | dentally to gather information coneern- ing the practical work of the bard of health in New York and its methods of maintaining a perpetual quarantine against infectious diseases. —New York Recorder. : And We Are Mad Players. The cult of degeneracy is actiog as a boomerang. Dr. Spitzka, an eminent alienist, says that Nordan writes with violet ink and in acramped hand, using a fine pen and crowding his Lines for the purpose of emphasizing his concen- tration of thought. These affectations belong to the same arder with those characterized in ‘‘ Degeneration’ as pe- culiar to the victims of egomanin. Dr. Spitzka declares that Nordaa is generally regarded by alienists as of unsound mind. And if the alienists begin to challenge each other’s sanity, who shall ‘decide for the rest of us? Verily, it's a mad world. —St. Paul Pioneer Press. A Valuable Find. The report of the director of the geo- logical survey for the months of June and July shows that in addition to the purely technjcal work of that burven sn extended report is beivg prepared om the phosphate industry of Florida Duar- ing this period the survey has tested samples of fire clay and other refractory materials discovered in Colorado sap- posed to be valuable for lining furnaces. This pew clay has been found to be suitable for this purpose and will prove a valuable find to the miners of Colors- do, who have been compelled hervtofore to import it. —Philadelphia Ledger. Literature For Sensation Lovers. The Holt will mystery promises to result in a great variety of legal com- plications and is likely to have its prin- cipal habitat in the courts for many years to come, but its special immediate influence will be to give powerful im- petus to the concoction of detective sto- ries and tales of mystery and such like eontributions to modern literatigre.— Washington Star. A Discerning Leader, in Keir Hardie says he has already been in this country long enough to find out that there is cne point on which all face tions of the labor party agree. That is that they cordialls and ntically despise each other.—Boston Herald. = : A Beer Trust. 3 6 Nearly all the old topers are ‘that a beer trust would bea g provided they can get & enough, —Ch Hl
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers