MUM TRIBDIEJ r:ST.\: .!.ISIIK!) i K 'S. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, ! 11Y TIIF. TBIEUNB PRIMS COMPANY. LilitcJ i OFFICE; MAIN STHM;T ABOVE I NTHB. ' LONG DISTANCU TIILI.I'HUM;. srnscui l'TlON ECATKI FRKELAND. I 111-YUHH NR is delivered bv j carriers to subscribers In Froolaml at the rato \ of 1-M> cents pur mouth, payftbl • every two months, or SI.VN year, payable in advance- j The Tit I HUNK may BO >r tared DIIA et form tin carriers or lrom the rftioo. '-'omplaiuts of ! -REGULAR or tar-LV delivery service will re- | civ. prompt attention. BY MAIL - The THIIU'NE is rent to out-of- J towu subscribers for $ 1 .5.1 a year, payable in J advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. I •J'lie date when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals be made at the expiration, other- ; wise the subscription will ho discontinued. | Entered at the Poatofllco at Freeland. Pa M ! as Second-Cla-s Matter. Make all money orders, checks, etc.,payable ! to the Tribune Trailing Company, J Amitea. NATURAL REMEDIES. Feeling bad? Just sing: Soon be glad (Sure tiling!) Feeling mad? Here's a cure; Smile, my lad, (Quick! Sure!) "Worrying Breathe deep. (Just the thing - Safe! Cheap!) Cash all gone? Don't groan; Work, my son. (Best known!) Deep in love Here's a cure: Wed the dove. (Great! Sure!) -James Rowe. ia Puck. j HUMOR OF THE DAY. •'lie boosts that he is n man of Iron." 'Then he's 110 .indue of metals. He , can't tell iron from brass- - ."—Chicago I Post. "Destiny.", said the pensive boarder, ' "is like a chicken it isn't everybody j who can carve it to his entire satisfac- j tion."—Puck. Keeper—"This pool* fellow u -u to he | a famous musician." Visiter--"Ah! and now he's a wandering minstrel." — i Philadelphia Bulletin. "Does that young man next door to ! you play his trombone by ear or by ; note'/" "Neiiher. By brute fore"."— Cliicago Times-lierald. Here's advice for the singer To paste in his hat: Alwavs M.ive to B natural And never B l!;p. —Philadelphia Record. | Mrs. Donuoy—"Six moth :•;< s •] J II : dren, you say? And ee.n'i you find j work';" Tramp "Oh, they're not old enough for that yet, ma'am."—Brook- 1 lyn Life. Sissy Siunmergirl cI:::;iI\ • "I'd like ; a good novel." Harold D'Hygoods (the ! erst-while "clubman," abse-mlyt- | "Third floor—second counter to the ' right."—Brooklyn Life. "I guess it's time to go," lie raid, And started. "You've GUT -ED it.''. she replied, and > Tliey parted. —Detroit Free Press, j "I presume you carry a memento of some kind in that I'oekei of yours .'' "Precisely; it is a lock of my Ims- ■ band's hair." "But your husband is still alive." "Yes; but his hair is all j gone."—Tit-Bits. Ida—"l want to have some pictures , taken. Can you recommend a photog rapher?" Ada—"Flashem! I've heard ! that he has away of making the lay •- liest people look absolutely handsome." —Philadelphia Bulletin. Wife (who has been struck by a bi cycle)—" Never mind, dear. Don't , li .ke a scene of It." I lusband— "What! : Do you think I'll let him go without j saying what I think ." Wife—"But ' I'm not really hurt." Husband "That! doesn't mailer. A little more and he • might have run into me."—Tit-llits. The Seaman—"Have you ever been j on a battle-ship when she clears for j action?" The Landsman --"No." The Seaman—"Well, it is the most thrilling i and impressive moment you can eon- ' ceive." The Landsman—"Oh, I don't know. Have you ever seen a golf club j champion get ready to drive?"— Life, Thought a Spirit Grabbed Ifim. "I had a strange experience a few • nights ago," said the man who wants j to know about things. "It was while ; I was getting on a Sixth avenue trol- j ley ear. A damp snow was falling, | and the car platform was saturated i with moisture. Just as my foot touched j the platform I felt a sensation in my j ankle as if some one had grabbed my i leg and was holding on good and hard. ! I yelled and turned around like a Hash, j but the on)7 one near me was an old ! lady. She Gidu't seem to be a person I who would do a thing of that kind. On the contrary, she looked at me as much , as to say: 'What's the matter? Are you crazy?' I took my seat. meek, but puzzled. ••When I left the car the same thing happened, and it set me to thinking. I almost began to believe in spirits. Finally I figured it. out in this way: I didn't have on any rubbers, the ear platform was wet and there were lots of electricity running around loose. In other words, when my foot hit the platform I got an electric shock. Am I light?"— New York Mail and Ex press. Centenui laim in Europ* . A German statistician announces that according to a census taken re cently there are ahout tI'J.OOU centen arians in Europe. By Laura Ellon Boale. JACK POWELL sat with his | back to the wall of the cell. | occasionally glancing with I unseeing eyes ac the few oh- I jo els in the narrow space. As his [ j gaze fell upon the grating which j I served for a window, with Us few J inches ot' the sky of liberty mocking | him through the bars, he sprang up j nnd took a quick stop toward it, just as tli • sweet stratus of music drifted in j from a baud passing near the prison | walls. Then a bell rang somewhere j In the distance. I Oh, those sounds from the groat free world without' How terrible they [ seemed to the grief-stricken man! 1-Ie shuddered violently and dropped 'uavk | on to tile cot. | "No, no! I must not ruin it all now. | Oh, God, help me to live through the ! next two years!" lie exclaimed, and burying his face in his hands, he I groaned aloud in the agony of despair. | Though lie yearned for freedom with a longing that was almost frenzy, still the notion of escape did not often tempt him; but to-day a man had es caped, and the breast of every prison er had been idled with envy and long ing. The year already spent behind those walls seemed an eternity. Could he : live through two more years of such ! misery? ho asked himself. Yes, he ' could and ho would, for he had work to perform when the time of his sen j tence should have expired. Ho must I go hack to Oklahoma and prove his in- I noeence; must live down the disgrace : among the very people who had be lieved him guilty, where no one J thought hfm innocent. I Ah, yes! there was one who had be lieved in hint, who had stood by him | through it all. and the fires of renewed ! courage kindled in his eyes as he 1 thought of Nellie, ids promised wife. ; How brave site had been—how staunch ! and true! Even wli n tlie trial was j ended, and lie had not succeeded in ! making the judge and jury believe liis [ story, she had not wavered In her loy ally, but again assured him of her j love, hogging him to shorten ids term as much as possible by good behavior, j then to come home—be would find her true, and together they would prove somehow, that lie had been wrongful ! ly accused. j In the year of his imprisonment .Tack had been a model prisoner. At times, in the depths of his despair, he had j felt that lie could not stand the mad dening routine another moment, that I he r.iust attempt escape or he would ! surely die; but the thought of Nellie, i his sweetheart, and her confidence, had strengthened him to successful ly combat these hopeless feelings. At tempt at tllglit, even if successful, j meant only the destruction of ids fond- I ! est hopes and those ot the brave girl who had risked so much because of j | her love for him. I To-night, sitting dejectedly in his cell. Jack cursed the folly which had caused his trouble. Many times lie had decided to "quit drinking," but was never staunch in his resolution. Now he meant it, for if he had not been on a "spree" he would never have been arrested for theft. He thought of the farm, the stock, nnd the neat little i house which she had planned, and ; which was soon to have been their home. He groaned involuntarily. When he had begun to "drink," bis loss prosperous neighbors had smiled In grim satisfaction, and when the trouble had come, the general verdict had been, "It serves liitn right." When I he insisted tlmt he had bought the horse and saddle, but that he did not know the man who sold them to liiui, they winked knowingly. The property had been stolen from the Catonsvlllo postoliiee, and was found in Jack's possession. He was here in conse quence. i "Well," ho declared mentally, "it 1 does serve me right, but I'll prove my Innocence to those people if it takes i me years to do it!" j A little before noon the next day his ! attention was attracted to a lino of I new arrivals, walking handcuffed to gether In pairs, In charge of armed | guards. As tliey passed close to where ! Jack stood, the look of hopeless mlsorv ] on the face of one of the men made ! his heart throb with pity. Perhaps j lie too was innocent! Just thou a man j looked up and Jack gave a sudden I start. The face seemed very familiar. Surely lie had seen that man before, j The line passed on into a building, hut : somehow lie could not get the face of tlie man who wore the number "JbOT" | out of his mind, nnd many times dur | lng the day lie asked himself, "Who is I he, and where have 1 seen him?" j When he returned to nis cell that j night, and the guard told liim be was I to have "company" for awhile. Jack I would have been almost surprised bad j the man been other than "1307." In i the closer range of the narrow cell, he was more strongly than ever filled with a perplexing sense that lie had somewhere seen lids sullen, defiant face, but whore lie could not remeui ! her. j In the days and weeks that followed, during which time Joe Stretter rc- I m, 'lined gloomy nnd remorse, repulsing ! all overtures, .Tack vainly racked ids J memory for some clue by which to cs- I tabilsh bis identity. Gradually, how- I ever, the new comer begun to "thaw j out" n little, and the two prisoners be | come sociable, even friendly. Jack ! soon learned that Joe's home was in j Indiana, and as he said lie had never I boon in Wisconsin, whore Jack had | always lived prior to his goin.tr to Olc ■ lahonia, lie was dually forced to the conclusion that his fancy of having j seen .Tee before was but a trick of his i imagination. Occasionally, during the winter, Joe talked of es :;pe; but as Jack did not j enter into any of the plans, the subject would be dropped. The acquaintance of the cell mnies deepened gradually into strong frh ndsnlp, and when, one night in the early spring, the subject uppermost in Joe's mind, escape, was again mentioned. Jack told his friend his reasons for not desiring A o make the attempt—told him sometning of ; his life; lbs brisk: prospects, his fol ly, his ruin. As he related the story, not defend ing himself in the least, of his down ward course, aud finally of his arrest and inability to prove his innocence, Joe sat pale and uneasy. Several times he opened his lips as if to speak, then with feverish nervousness, he would spring up and pace forth and hack across the cell. As Jack finished the recital of his sweetheart's fidelity Joe suddenly stopped, and laying his hand on the other's shoulder, said im pulsively: "Jack, I did not dream—that is, l— of course you are innocent! I have known Hint all the time; but I did not imagine that it was I who could clear you." "You clear me?" exclaimed Jack, In credulously. "What do you mean?" But Joe had turned away and thrown himself upon his cot; then he said, hesitatingly: "I only meant that I could help 3*oll to escape, Jack, that's all." and de spite his friend's efforts to continue their conversation, he would say no more. Iu a short time Jack was fast asleep, and dreaming of the time when his re lease should come and liis innocence he proven. I Joe Streetcr. however, spent the night in fitful slumbers from which lie awoke with a start, sometimes half ris ing with the evident intention of arousing Jack; then his mood would change, and after some moments of indecision, he would again sink upon his bed. Hardened criminal that he was lie knew his duty, but lie was selfish enough to tight against and at last overcome the promptings of his con cience, as lie well knew that his ehances for escape alone were small. If he could but persuade Jacl: to go | with him, why, he could then find j some means of proving his Innocence. | In fact Joe fully made up his mind to j 1 ell .Tack all as soon as they wore free, I so the "slid small voice within" was I silenced. | Alter that night Joe kept constantly j urging Jack 10 accompany him in his I attempt at escape, and at last gained liis reluctant consent. For some time Joe had boon at work in the harness shop of the prison, and upon every opportunity he possessed himself of thongs and Hits of leather. A large steel ring aud a small file were also deftly concealed In his clu ing •tnd conveyed to the cell. Then the full details of the plan were unfolded to lack, who was amazed at the ingenui ty of his coirAade. It took some time for the ring to be tiled into a book, whleb was made very sharp. Then it was carefully covered with pieces of leather wound around in such a manner that only the point was visible. After this was com pleted, many wearisome nights were spent, one of the men standing upon the shoulders of the other, working alternately to remove the bars from the window. At last this, too, was accomplished. I lie narrdw strips were cut from their blankets, which, strengthened by the leather thongs, wore braided into a stout rope to which the hook was se eurely fastened. Now came the most tedious task of all, and many nights were spent in futile attempts TO throw the hook over the edge of the cornice and catch it: firmly there. Hundreds of times the hook fell back, niul but for its leather covering, would have struck the bricks with a ringing sound. Sometimes the hook caught and held slightly, and the hearts of both men would heat fast with hope, only to have their spirits drop to the depths of despair the next moment, when the liool: loosened and fell. But oven in this tlieir work was re warded, and there came a time when the .book caught and held, the com bined weight of both men in the cell failing to dislodge it. The two prison ers stood for a moment gazing at each other, speechless with emotion. The next ii.-Inut their hands clasped, and each promised the other to notify his friends in case any accident befell him. Joe promised 1 0 find some way to tell Nellie of Jack's fate, but when Jack was asked to toll Joe's mother where she would find the last stolen valuables ho drew back Involuntarily, for In the close friendship existing between tliem he had not thought of Joe as a criminal, only unfortunate. But to suddenly realize that even Joe's moth er was implicated, and had 110 doubt encouraged her son was shock to the honest but foolish and easy-going Jack, it was only a second, however, that lie hesitated, then ho pledged his word. Joe insisted upon trying the hook first, and as he pushed himsejf through the window and swung slowly out in to that terrible space. Jack held firm ly to his clothing. Ho feit sick when he thought of the consequence if the hook should slip or the improvised rope break. He breathed more free ly when he saw Joe, after only a slight hesitation, start carefully to ascend the rope., lie soon reached the corn ice. aud In another moment was on the roof. Adjusting the hook somewhat, ho leaned over the edge of it and sig naled to Jack, and, he, too, made the ascent in safely. ( rouching low for a few seconds ( they waited breathlessly, but heard 110 sound. Thus far they had been unob- j served. Taking the hook and rope, I . they crept cautiously along in the shadow of the cornice to the corner of the building, from which they lowered themselves to the roof of another, and j ; from this they swung out and down upon the wall, and then to the ground and—freedom. Jack, who descended first, waited for Joe, and for a moment the two stood in silence. Neither spoke. Jack felt , fairly bursting with emotion. To he outside of those walls —free—was more than he could realize. It seemed too good to be true. But suddenly the booming peal of a boll and the sharp clatter of feet aroused them, and they started to run. Then came a yell, loud and terrible, | changing quickly from rage to exulta- j tion. A shot rang out—then several others, followed liy the spiteful hum I of many bullets. Jack ran as he never j ran before. Joe was slightly in ad- j vance, and Jack saw im hesitate and ! stumble, then with his hands tossed : high above his head, he staggered and 1 sank down. In a flash Jack was kneeling beside him. Joe turned toward him mutter ing: "Are you mad? Go! For God's sake, 1 Jack, save yourself! Don't waste your , own life!" "No! I will not go. Are you badly hurt, Joe?" asked Jack, as his comrade I dropped back into his outstretched j arms. They were almost Immediately sur- j rounded by the guards, but Jack lift ed the wounded man upon his knee, holding him close against him with one arm, while v?ith his free hand he tore open the neck of Joe's shirt, upon which a crimson stain now appeared. As Joe sank back limply, Jack shook him, crying: "Don't give way, old fellow! Here, Joe, don't die!" But Hie head on his shoulder only ' sank the closer. Suddenly lie opened his eyes, and ' seeing the guards, said between gasps ! of pain and weakness: "Jack, I'm done for. Don't think too ■ hard of me because I didn't tell you. I 1 couldn't help it —I knew you wouldn't i come. Forgive me if you can, I knew all the time—since that niglit—that I was—the man who sold you that horse. You are witnesses," he said falterlugly to the guards. "Tell them—governor— ho is Innocent. I stole the horse and saddle and sold liiem to him for twen ty dollars —at Pawnee crossing in Oklahoma. I never knew of the ar rest, Jack, but whim I came here I thought you were the fellow didn't know for sure till that night—you told me about—Nellie. Forgive—l'm done for tills time." Then, arousing himself with almost j superhuman effort, lie again stam mered to the guards: "Sec, I'm dying—you are—witnesses, j Jack didn't steal them—l did—Catons j ville, Oklahoma. Met Jack two days after—coming from Kaw Reservation. " Didn't know him—didn't care—just ' wanted to get rid of—stolon stuff. lie ; was drunk. Forgive me, Jack—if you lie stopped speaking, his head sank, and the body stiffened in Jack's arms. —"Waverley Magazine. THE CHURCH "AD." TAKES. I Ohio Minister Puts It in Display Type unci .Saj-s It Makes Converts. A decided innovation in church cir • cles has been introduced by the Rev. 1 Dr. E. E. Whittaker, of Ashtabula, v Oiiio, pastor of the Park Street Mcth -1 dist Episcopal Church, lie is using large display newspaper advertising . to announce his church services, and " testifies to the fact that two ten-inch ' advertisements resulted in doubling 1 his average Sunday evening attend - ance and were instrumental in mak -1 lug converts to religion. His adver -5 tlsements are set double measure, "top 1* of column next to reading matter." 1 They are written in an attractive man - nor, and are set in heavy, black-faced t type. Here is a sample of one of - them: "Wanted—A few more saints, a few i more men, a few more Methodists, a 1 few more sinners, to become saints. > Meeting to night at the First M. E. * Church. Subject: 'Fools and Their - 1 Companions.'" The dodger cannot take the place of - a newspaper display advertisemc ;t, 1 the Rev. Whittaker says, and he is not - satisfied with the "Church Notices" 1 department. Dr. Whittaker pays full - rates for his advertising. L Mimicking the Queen. \ Few people are perhaps' aware ho\r s thoroughly Queen Victoria enjoyed i 1. joke. A Gentleman-in-Waiting, whon I we will call Mr.' B , distinguishei l'or his imitative powers and dramati e talent, was a frequent visitor at botl s Windsor and Osborne. One day thi ii Queen, looking wilk a certain auster II lty straight into his face, demanded ;x "Now, Mr. B ,I am perfectly wel 0 aware that when my back is turnei 1- you imitate me; I wish to see how yo; t do It this minute!" Poor Mr. B fel 0 straightway into the royal trap, crim soiled, faltered and utterly lost hi t countenance. "Ah!" exclaimed tin 3 Queen, "I see I was right. You ough to he ashamed of yourself!" and tliei li j added, laughing as heartily as an; !i ! schoolgirl, "but, mind you, don't do I i- | again."—London Chronicle. HIS COUNTRY NEWSPAPER. I I Bominlfirences Suggested <0 an Old I'oy 1 by the News of Unionvllle. "It is a fashion, I know, among city , folk to ridicule the country paper," | says a reformed traveling man, "but : I have been a regular subscriber to the ; Unionvllle Banner for over thirty I years. There's one evening in the week * Hi at I look forward to with zest. 1 That's Monday night, when I light my : old pipe, put 011 my slippers and lie back in the battered rocker for a mus ing aud a dreaming over my copy of | i the Banner. I "Yes. 1 here it K Hasn't changed a j font of type, I gait 'in forty year.', j , Same old, queer job type. Same old ! Washington press still grinds it out, I I'll bet, as it did when I was a freckled i ! l" i y and used to hang around the front 1 door of the tumbling rookery where I snowy-haired Editor .Moore used to lie 1 p'eking up the type or methodically | scratching down the fact that 'Miss 1 May Smith is visiting friends in our j neighboring burg,' or 'John Loftus is | preparing to build a new barn. Most of the lumber is already 011 the j ground.' j "I turn to the front page first, of . course, and here, in luy 'Local News.' ' I ascertain that 'Miss Ella Stuart has I quite a class of music pupils here in j town and also conducts a class in Pat- j tons burg. Miss Stuart has a good quality of musical talent.' Why, dear me, dear me; don't it beat all how things do move! Why, I used to go to the high school in Unionvllle with Ella Stuart's mother. And many a time I hung May baskets with her and J then hung over the old white paling i gate and held her hand until an omiu j ous raising of an upper window indi cated that a parent of Ella's mother I desired the daughter's presence witli ; in. "And, let's see! Why, here's some j thing: 'Walter Thomas has been to the city this week, laying in a new stock lof goods. Peter Figel is helping out in I The Emporium during Walter's ab sence.' Well, it is surprising how some • boys'll come up in the worid in spite of poverty and distress. Know who that Walter Thomas is? Well, sir, he's the grandson of old Pap Thomas, as we used to tail him, who used to live away down there by the railroad in that little hut of a place, and had a cabbage patch nil around the house. Desolate a looking place as you ever saw. | "Pap was sort of half-witted and : had a son who I should say was fully ; three-quarters wltted. A peaceable, | law-abiding well-digger He came to be. j Married a real bright girl, really con siderably above the average, and here , tlieir son's become the leading mer chant in Unionvllle! This Peter Figel is a relation—son, maybe—of an old foreigner who settled down iu Union vllle and earned a living at cobbling. Said to he of noble birth he was, and nj yste ri 0u s go nerai Iy. "I shouldn't know the faces that | would greet me 011 Main street, I sup pose now. Most of 'cm come up since : I was a boy. I wonder who really has | made the truest success, the boys who i stayed at home or those who were go : | ing to conquer the great world out- I side. There were my schoolmates who : married aiul settled down in Union j ville, and their sons and daughters are ' to-day's young men and women. I was ! going to do such big things when I ! struck the city that I couldn't exactly : make up my mind to take time to ' ! come back and court Susie Williams. 1 | J kept putting it off and putting it off until I should got a little better and a - little better position until, first thing f i I knew, Phil Kerns up and married 1 j her and I was left. So, that's liow it I is, and bless 111 c if I don't wonder j sometimes as I muse over the old Ban -1 j ner If the boys who stayed at home 1 have made such a miserable failure of j | it after all. | "So, I read along to ponder over the I I' memories that those quaint Items in • the 'Local News' call forth. Well, you ! 1 may poke fun at the country weeklies as you will, but I fail to see why Hie j fact that 'a resident of Uuionville has ' ; lately bought the place of another resi . dent of Uuionville, and intends to I j move into it,' may not lie as well worth j chronicling in the local paper of Union x ville as the fact that the dog of a fa ,! mous actress died 011 the steamer is | j worth two-column pictures and a ; half-column description in city dailies. . J Blamed'f I can see much difference x j in merit between a poodle dog editorial in a city daily and *a big cabbage just _! laid on the desk of ye editor' of a couu -1 try weekly."—Boston correspondence f of the New York Sun. A New Scheme. ': A new scheme to get people to buy t , a paper has be: u 011 trial liy the liof • eree, a London sporting journal. It • advertised that on certain days a num- L *, her of persons in its employ would pa | rol certain thoroughfares and count f the copies seen in the hands or pock • ets of people who pass them. On ! reaching a certain unadvertised num ber the counter would present the per i son with an envelope containing a j check for two guineas. Such a scheme ; would not appeal to American readers, i as they would not consent to make 1 , walking advertisements of themselves, j even though they might capture a $lO I bill for doing so. Duration of the Victorian l:x*n. i The Victorian Era lias taken its ' place in history. It dawned at twenty i minutes past two 011 the morning of 3une 20. 1537, and closed at half-past six on the evening of January 22. 1001, j says St. .Tames' Gazette, 'it lasted i 23.223 days, 557.3,50 full hours, 33,413,- ; 170 minutes and 2,000,590,200 seconds. All but 540 1-2 hours of it were in the j nineteenth century. j The art of dentistry was introduced Into New York City iiy John Green* ! wood in 1 iJ)S. Ho is said to bare made j the first artificial teeth ever inanufac* j lured in this country. PEARLS OF THOJGHT. | The root of all discontent is self- ? love.—J. F. Clarke, j We are as oiten duped by diffidence • as by confidence. —Chesterfield, i Delicacy is to the affections what I grace Is to beauty.—Dogerando. ] Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well.—Chesterfield. 1 The reward of one duty done is the power to fulfill another.—-George Eliot, j The feeling of dh trust is always the I last which a great mind acquires.—Ra ! cine*. i If thou art a master, he sometimes blind. if a servant, sometimes deaf. — | Fuller. i Each hour conies with some little , fagot of God's will fastened upon its back.—Faber. To be traduced by ignorant tongues ,i 3 the tough brake that virtue 11; tgo , | through.—Shakespeare. I Dignity consists not in possessing | honors, but in the consciousness that | we deserve them. —Aristotle. It cannot be too often repeated that j it is not helps, but obstacles, not fa i cilities, but difficulties, that make men. * j —W. Mathews. I Depend on no man, on no friend but i him who can depend on himself, fie. | only who acts conscientiously towards himself, will act so towards others. — Lavator. AN ELECTRIC DIET. Interesting PoMibilitiei for Improving i lie Human Kace. The notion of fattening pigs by elec tricity i 3 at all events novel, and if the inventor of the process be not disap pointed the idea will yet he applied to other animals and even to human be ings. To Dr. W. J. Hcrdman of the medical faculty of the University of Michigan the world owes this discov ery. which is to the effect that the gal vanic current promotes the growth of tissue —that is to say, the increase of flesh. It had previously been ascer tained that plants develop more rapid ly under the electric stimulus, and there was no obvious reason why ani mals should not be equally responsive to it. Hence the idea of Dr. Herdman, which promises well, though its ap plication cannot as yet bo said to have passed beyond the experimental stage. The doctor, for the sake of conven ience, began his experiments with gui nea pigs, half a dozen of which he put in each of two cage 3, taking care that they should all be of exactly the same age, so as to make the conditions of the trial as free from flaw as possible. Around one of tile cages he strung sev eral wires, through which a current of electricity was kept passing night and day, while nothing of the kind was dene with the other cage. Meanwhile for a stated period, the animals in both cages were fed with a precisely equal quantity of provender of the same kind, EO that there should be no advantage in thisfespectoneither side. As a result it was found that the guinea pigs that lived in an electric environment gained -in weight during a measured time 10 percent more than those in the non-electric cage. Dr. Herdman is confident that ordi nary pigs, if subjected to similar treat ment, would exhibit like results. 11a proposes to build suitably wired pens, niul to furnish tile growing swine with regular supplies of electrlcitv, much in the same way as was done with the guinea pigs. Nobody can say what niay.be the final influence of this new discovery upon the packing trade, or whether the "electric bacon" of the future may not command a special price in the m vrket. I The imagination extends the applica tion of Dr. Herdman's discovery to al- . | most any lengths. Why may not the j day come when every cow in her stall shall have her private wire? And if electricity is good for pigs, it may servo to fatten babies, or even grown persons who arc desirous of increasing their avoirdupois, and thus most in teresting possibilities for the improve ment of the human physique are opened up.-—Saturday Evening Post. alio lost Colliii Aliiio. It would bo a waste of time to argue in almost any gathering of miners of the west that the Lost Cabin mine exists merely in the imagination of gold-hungry men. It is popularly sup posed that tlio Lost Cabin mine is somewhere among the Big Horn mountains in southern Montana or northern Wyoming. In the late fifties three men, Allen E. Hurlburt, Adam Cox and Jefferson Jom : discovered it and found it so rich that they could scarcely believe their senses. They built a cabin of logs, fortifying it with v stockades, in which they pa: ■ d the winter months. Win n the spring sun unlocked the waters of the creek, they hurried back to their sluice boxes and worked harder than ever. One day 4 Hurlburt left the sluices to go to the cabin. He had barely lost sight of his companions when lie heard tile report of rifles. Indians had surprised his companions and killed them. Hurl hurt lay concealed In tlio brush for a day and night. Half dead and almost insane ho managed to got across the prairie and down the North Platte river to what is now Fort Laramie. Soon after telling his story he died. Miners have since been searching for tlio log cabin on the creek. In ISCG an expedition of over 200 men was or ganized at Fort Laramie solely to spend two months in searching for tho Lost Cabin mine. Many Londoners Insist that their ap petite has improved since electricity was applied to some of the under ground railways. It is ballcTed to gen irate ozone.