BETRAYED AND SAVED Martel du Bois, a young man of good family,but of somewhat limited means, was at the breaking out of the French revolution affianced to the daughter of a tradesman named Zoulouche, a man of wealth, but no principle. Suddenly Martel was arrested and thrown Into prison. Mme. Itomaine, a young widow who loved him, determined to save him. She went to the jailer and by means of a bribe—for money was potent in those days as well as in those —obtained an Interview. Du Bois was surprised at her visit. "I have come," she said frankly, "in the hope that I may save a life for which 1 would freely give my own." "1 do not know as I understand you, madame," replied the wondering pris oner. "Probably not, for I am a woman, and women are sometimes enigmas even to themselves. 1 will not ask If you know me, for you certainly do not, hut do you know tny name?" "Yes; you are Mme. Itomaine, wid ow of Jules Itomaine, daughter of Gus tavus d'Auvcrgne young, lovely, ac complished ami rich." "We have ten minutes to converse In private. You must escape from here and fly from France! You may he tried at any hour, and once tried, you will he condemned and executed." "But w lio so base as to denounce me, madame?" "Celeste Zoulouche." "Impossible!" cried Du Bols, stag gering under the mental blow. "Im possible! .Moil Dieu! You are hut try- Jug my faith." "We are wasting precious time," said the oilier, glancing at licr watch. Give ear to my plan. Here Is a pow der, of which you will take a small por tion at a time. It will make you sick; you will look pale. Eat little or 110 food, and you will lose your strength. The physician will he called, and you will he removed to the hospital. Once there I trust I shall be able to effect your escape. You will obey my in structions?" "Religiously." "Then, If your trinl should not eoine on meantime, you may he saved. I go to watch and pray and hope. Adieu!" lie followed the directions of Mine. Itomaine, and Mie third day after her visit he was removed to the hospital. Here he fell under the charge of u lay sister named Agues. "1 know all!" she said to him at the first opportunity. "Julie Itomaine Is my cousin; I am her confidant. We have agreed upon a hold and novel plan for your escape. It Is this: Y'ou must seem to get. worse and worse, and at last, at the proper time, you must felgu convulsions mid appear to die. I will cover your face, and when the chief physician comes Ills rounds announce your death. If lio takes my word for It, all will lie well; If not, we may fail. That Is our risk." "And suppose lie leaves me for dead —wiiat then?" "Then, after dark, I will pretend to have received tm order to have you conveyed to the dissecting room, where you will he provided with a sur geon's suit, In which disguise yqu must escape." Near the close of Ills fourth day In the hospital Martel du Bois was seen by more than one person In convul sions. Ail hour or two later, when the physician made Ids rounds, he was cov ered with a sheet. "There Is no more need of your ser vices here," said Sister Agnes calmly, as she intercepted hint. "The next patient seems worse. Will you he kind enough to see hlui at once?" The doctor passed ou. So far, all well. It was quite dark when the body of Du Bols was home Into the dissecting room. The attendants retired in haste, leaving Sister Agnes and a lad with him. "Now, then, here are your garments. Quick!" said the fulr nurse. 11l less than live minutes the late corpse looked like a very active and important surgeon. "This lad will guide you—follow him!" said Sister Agnes, hurriedly, "l.inger not a moment! Adieu! Adieu!" Five minutes later Martel du Bois, guided by the youth, was hurriedly passing through the streets of Tou louse. On the outskirts of the towu the youth led him to au old stable, where they found two swift horses prepared for a Journey. They mounted and rode southward toward Spalu. When morning dawned, there were 40 good miles between tliem and Toulouse. The second uiglit they entered Spnin ami were safe. "Now, my brave lad." said Du Bois, "go haek to your mistress, Mme. Ito maine, and tell her my hand, my heart and my life are at her disposal." "She will aeeept your hand nnd heart, hut begs you to keep your life," returned tlie youth, with a light laugh. "She will speak for herself!" re joined Du Itols sharply. "She does!" laughed the other. "How Is this?" "I am Julie Roma Inc." Tliey were married In Spain, nnd at the close of the reign of terror re turned to Fruuce and lived long nnd hupplly, Cnnae ami IClleot. "He's quite a prominent politician here. Is lie uot?" Inquired the visiting Briton. "Oh. no; tie's a statesman," replied / • the native, "We*, what's the difference?" "A statesman, my dear sir. Is one who Is lu politics because he has mon ey. A politician Is oue who bus mpuey because he Is In polities."— Philadel phia 1 'less. Called Lorlllnrd'M Ulaff. Heavy bettor as he was, Pierre Lorn lard ouee met his match when he ran up against gray bearded James E. Kelly, who introduced bookmaking into this couutry. It was nearly a genera tion ago and at Jerome park. Kelly was laying 'J I /* to 1 against one of Lorillard's horses in a big stake event. The news went to Mr. Lorillard, seated on his coach on the clubhouse lawn. "I'll Just take a little of the conceit out of that sawed off Irishman," said Lorillard to Wright Sanford, Newbold Morris, John Hunter and a few other congenial spirits. They started for the ring together. "I'll lay SIO,OOO on my horse at that price, Kelly," said Mr. Lorillard in his princely fashion, expecting to see Kelly wilt and refuse to take the wager. "Certainly, Mr. Lorillard." Then turning to his sheet writer, Kelly said: "$2.">,000 against SIO,OOO, Pierre Loril lard." Quickly he turned to the to bacco magnate with a polite "Much obliged to you, Mr. Lorillard; very much obliged. Would you or your friends care to bet another SIO,OOO at the same odds? Should be delighted to accommodate you." "What a nerve!" was all Mr. Lpr-11- lard could say as he turned on his heel and walked away. Jimmy Kelly won the bet, for Lor illard's horse was beaten.—New York Times. The Landlnblier Duck* of Sahara. "The proverbial fetidness of ducks for water would lead one to presup pose that of all the world the most des titute of ducks would be the Sahara desert and that if a stray 'springtnil' happened to drift into that region he would either vamoose or turn up his toes with briefest delay. Well, not at all," said a Frenchman who was for merly a resident of Tunis. "There are parts of the desert where (lucks abound, flourish and multiply with every evidence of perfect satis faction. The fowl is slightly different from any of the varieties we know in this country, but it has the same flat bill, extensive breast and web feet, showing that it was once a water bird, though now it scarcely finds enough to drink and has become too provident to waste any of the precious fluid in ablu tions. Like the other good Mussulmans of the country, they take their prescrib ed bath in the sand, and their web feet come in very handy as snowshoes to walk upon the deep yielding dust. It is claimed by an eminent French orni thologist that the Saharan ducks are the remains of a race of aquatic birds which frequented those seas when the present desert was a part of the Atlan tic ocean." Hole* lii Everything. You are skeptical about the accuracy of this statement and ask why water does not leak from a bottle if there are holes in everything? The answer is simple enough—the drops or globules of water are bigger than the holes. Taking glass as an illustration, we find that air is about the only substance that can get through those holes. A scientist proposes the following as an experiment: Place a bell in a bottle exhausted of air and hermetically sealed. The boll will not ring because the medium for conveying sound is not there. Set the bottle aside for a few months, then try the bell again, and it will ring, faintly, perhaps, but nevertheless there will be a sound. That means that the air has got in. It lias made Its way through the holes in the glass. The Incandescent lamp is a bulb of glass exhausted of air so that the slen der filament may glow when the elec tricity runs along it. The air works its way in gradually and the light be comes less brilliant in proportion. IVitt M a* Food. Nuts contain a large amount of nour ishment, and owing to their oily nature digest easily. Eaten with salt they are palatable. Either as a dessert course or salted and used as a relish their value is the same. They are not ex pensive, for from the peanut through the imported varieties they can be bought in bulk at small cost. The peanut has many good qualities to recommend it.and from its low estate is coming to the front as an important item in dietetics. It Is supposed to cure insomnia if eaten just before retiring. Salted, they are much cheaper than al monds. The small hickory nut, at a few cents a quart, can be used on the most economical table. The English walnut makes a very good salad blanched and used with celery. Fil berts, almonds and Brazil nuts are more expensive, hut as only a few are needed at a time tlie cost is not great- Woman's Home Companion. EKKMIIOII Flowerpot*. Eggshells may be used to advantage in starting delicate plants for trans planting. The half shells are filled with earth and set in a box also con taining dampened earth. A hole is made in the point of the shell to allow drainage. A single seed is then plant ed in each shell, which is easily broken when transplanting is done without the slightest disturbance of roots. This use of eggshells is the discovery of a French gardener, who claims that they are vastly superior to the little pots generally used for the purpose by flor ists. How the Ens* Started. "That hand me down suit you're wearing," remarked Itivers, "reminds me of an unripe watermelon." "Why?" asked Brooks. "Because it's so different Oue isn't cut to fit, and the other isn't fit to cut." It was then that Brooks blazed awuy at him.—Pick-Me-Up. Hamlin'* Soliloquy. Hamlin (standing before the tattooed man in the dime museum)— Heavens, how that fellow must suffer if he ever gets the jlmjams!—Smart Set. HINTS FOR FARMERS Plnntu Polnonoun to An I inn Im. The bulletin from the Montfinu ex periment station gives a list of 14 spe cies of plants which are known or strongly suspected of poisoning ani mals. Among them are the lupines, which killed 100 out of 200 bucks fed on hay and in 1808 some 2,000 sheep from eating ripe lupine on the range. The trouble seems to be in the ripe or nearly ripe seed. The purple and tall larkspur killed 40 cattle in the Gallatin valley when other plants were covered with snow. Aconite, water hemlock and nightshade have proved poisonous to both man and beast. All these are more or less frequent In certain parts of New England, says American Culti vator. The death eamass we do not know and think it is not to be found here. In 1808 a dairyman had a field of oats so badly smitten that he cut them for hay instead of letting the grain ripen. Out of 130 cows which were given one feed of it 12 died with : in 18 hours, having both gastric and cerebral trouble. Ergot on native grass j es is claimed to have killed a number I of horses in from six to eight hours, the muscles of the throat being para lyzed first, and then the whole body paralyzed. Strychnine and whisky seems to be the only remedy having ef fect. It Is better to avoid feeding ergot or smut on any grass or grain. I ne of I.line on Soar Land. The chief use of lime from an agri cultural standpoint Is to sweeten the I soil and to act upon latent plant food, I breaking down organic matter and set ! ting It free so that plants can utilize it. I Lime in itself contains little or no ele ments which plants require and is not properly classified as a fertilizer. It is | used commonly in preparing land for I wheat or .rye, but may also be sown broadcast on meadows. The presence j of red sorrel In any quantity Indicates ! that the land is sour and acid and is a i sign that an application of lime would !be beneficial. Wood ashes in a less de gree serve the same purpose, as they contain n considerable proportion of lime. They also have the additional value of adding potash and phosphoric acid to the soil. Cirnl> Vn Ilosd of Sheep. In Scotland when they have reason to'think the sheep have grub In the ! head the shepherd usually takes each I one and blows tobacco smoke up the nostrils almost to the point of stupefy ing the sheep and the grubs, too; then j gives to each a pinch of yellow snuff to ' start them sneezing, which dislodges 1 the grub, so that It Is discharged. We j never tried this because the putting 1 out a little pine tar on boards and ! scattering a little snlt on it usually tarred the nose of the sheep so that the lly did not trouble them, or for a small liock we took them as they went out of the yard and with a wooden paddle | daubed the nose of each one as we let j them through the gate. Mule Vcrauti Home. I Mules are preferred for farm work in the south because they require less I feed, are less liable to disease, hardier i every way and will do more work than : horses 20 per cent heavier, says Farm and Ranch. They are more reliable | anil have fewer vices. They are not as fast as horses, but get there sooner be cause their gait is more uniform and persistent. A pair of good mules makes ; tin? best farm team on earth. Under the saddlev4be mule does not show off like a horse, but there is far more com fort in riding one. They are more sure footed and in critical junctures find a way out far more readily than a horse. Modern Poultry Iloaaea. i Substantial poultry houses are the ! most durable, warmest and in the end j the cheapest. A neat, handsome and low cost building is made by using un matched tneli boards nailed on two by four* studding, covered with building paper and then shingled. Practical poul try keepers are putting up such build < Ings as fast as their means allow, and those who make a specialty of pure bred stock favor small houses scatter | ed about the place rather than long houses with continuous runs. Stop the lieakn. No man can expect to conduct a farm successfully who is behind the times in enlightenment. A farm can no more be run at a profit without brain work than can tlie manufacturing or mer cantile business. There is no business on earth that could stand the leaks that many farmers have and still pay a prof it. If you wish to succeed, stop the leaks that your own carelessness and i ignorance are levying on you, and you will be amply rewarded, and success j will crown your efforts. Slinde For the llenynril. Ileus suffer from heat and will not do well in a hot, sunny yard. Trees and bushes give the best shade, but weeds are better than nothing. Put up an old door in an airy corner if you have noth ing better. Renew their water several 1 times a day and keep their drinking vessels clean. Millet Fop liens. Millet is a good food for young chicks as well as for laying hens. As the seed Is so small it keeps the fowls scratcii- I ing for a long time to get enough to j satisfy them, and the exercise is just | what they need to make healthy liens I and good layers. Protect the Woodpecker. I Do not destroy the woodpecker. It is a bird witli a keen ear and sharp eye to detect wood boring beetles as well as colonies of ants on apple and other trees. Roth of these insects are in ; jurlous. Care of the Orchard. During a dry summer and autumn , the orchard soil should tie in tilth , until the crop of fruit and wood are i matured or until rains come. A QUIET WEDDING. Hot the Affair Wn. Nat Wholly Des titute of Excitement. "Ves, Jimson's wedding was n quiet affair, owing to the death of a second cousin of the bride's mother, who left the family a little money." "That must have been pretty hard on Jimson. Ue lllces excitement." "Oh, there was excitement enough. One of the bride's little brothers hit Jimson in the left ear with a bag of rice and tore U loose, and another lit tle brother nearly broke one of his floating ribs with an old slipper, and somebody flung a horseshoe after them for luck, and it caught Jimson In the nock Just as lie stuck Ills head out of the carriage window. And one of the uncles came out with a megaphone and let all the neighbors know that the happy pair was spliced, and somebody broke the carriage window with a rab bit's foot made Into a paperweight, and the horses ran away, and the driv er fell off the box, and Jimson had to drive the horses the rest of the way and got to the station Just in time to miss the train. Oh, there was plenty of excitement for Just a quiet wed ding."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Fnllrd at the Critical Moment. "Didn't you tell me you went out west once on a train in which there was a man who drilled the passengers In the proper tactics for repelling train robbers ?" "Yes." "And yet tlie train was held up and the passengers robbed before it reach ed Its destination, wasn't It?" "Yes." "How did that happen?" "The man that drilled us wns the first one who got scared, and of course we couldn't do anything without the word of command."—Chicago Tribune. Two View., He saw her on her bicycle. "Ah," he exclaimed, "such symmetry, such perfection, such grace, such a lovely form!" lie saw her at the seashore. "Great guns, I've got 'em!" he hol lered. It may have been Inelegant to holler, but be was too shocked to ejaculate.— Denver Times. She Didn't Make a Sale. Ugly Customer—What price did you say this gown was? Pretty Milliner—One hundred and ten dollars, madam. Ugly Customer (after a pause)— Don't you think it rather a dreadful figure? Pretty Milliner—Well, madam, since you say so, it Is not the best I have seen, but I think you'll fiud the gown will hide It. In Her Line. The woman of sensations was under discussion. "She's going on the stage, they say." "For heaven's sake, what can she do?" "Well, in view of her matrimonial experience It has been suggested that she might make a hit as a lightning change artist."—Chicago Post. Wliy lie Wan rtnnnlnK. The tramp wns hitting the high places across the meadow, with a big briudle pup at bis heels, and as he passed the owner of the dog the latter shouted: "Hey! Whntcher runnln fer?" "Me dog's too fat, nu I'm glvln him exercise," was tlie reply.—Denver Times. Another Our. I'epprey—That fellow mnkes me tired. Nudel—What's the matter witli him? I'epprey—Oh, there are some people that are never satisfied to know that a tiling is so, but are continually ask ing the why and wherefore. Nudel—That's so. 1 wonder why It Is? A pprrrlnl lon. Mrs. Blank—This is (lie third time I've given you something to eat. Weary Waeltford—Yes, mum, an if you ever are lookln for a position as eook I'll be pleased to give you a rec ommendation.—Chicago News. Gel. Another Chance. Angry Patron—l.ook here! Tills steak Is so tough that I Imveu't been able to bite it yet. and I want a rebate for it! Head Walter—Very sorry, sir, but 1 do not tliiuk we can give you a rebate. Vou might try a rebite, however.— Boltiuiotr American. .Juat I.lke I*a. "What you Chilian been dolu?" "We ain't been doin notbin." "Dealt me!' Vou grow moah like youali pa every day.'- Indianapolis News. P^ICASTORIA fGT!T!¥TT!?ffsEt ■! EJFIw E l^'aliFs CASTOR!A 1 The Kind You Have T H i Always Bought AwgetablePreparalionforAs- M * w similaliiigllieFoodandßegula- M tinglheStoinaclisanrtßowelsof a® JjQcirS tllG Jf a . , /Vta* J Signature /A u Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- I / , / ness and Rest.Conlains neither .1 r> Jf a Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. IS 01 KotNarcotic. | / \\, h T&cipe of Old Br SAMUEL PITCHER | f\tm/Jcui . uj ■ RochtlU Salts - I B AnixtSeed. *■ I 4x w % Jtoixrtruht - ) Jg fl 4 JH R HiCtirtjoiiah+Soda * j 9l\ |J| " 111 Ctaiifitd Sugar ) 'JL y V _ a *3| A* T Aperfcd Remedy forConstipn f | U [V WOO Ron, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea fe I lir Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- v." I \f f" _ - l|( „ ness and Loss OF SLEEP. 'J, rM | yh P | Facsimile Signature of Thirty Years I ERECT COPY OF WRAPPER. I /OTHEMTO HEALTH I j|\ STRENGTH \m\LONGEVITY Jgg|j V|IS Til MB!! TSIOMACH All diMrageN are more or lew comprised In tlie above four ailmentn, nil of H which have their origin In the Stomach. To cure tnirh, nny or all of tlicm, H ht'Rin riiilil. Begin with the Stomach. Begin with Lnxukoln, the great tonic H laxative. It speedily and pninlensly nets on the bowels,eleanscs the stomach* ■ HtiiiiulutcN the liver, corroctn the kltlncyu, iilliijn ncrvouuiiCHS, nNNiHts digcu- I lion, while itH marvellous tonic properties tone* up the N.vntem while curing H it, and speedily causes n natural and permniicut condition of heiillh. M • Laxakola is the best Children's remedy in the world, and the only one that builds up the I children's systems while acting as an all-around blood-purifier ami tonic. It speedily clears tlie I coated tongue, checks colds and simple fevers, and promotes sleep. Children like it mitt ask I /or it. Mothers are its greatest friends; they use it and recommend it All druggists, 25 and ■ 50 cents, or free sample of The LAXAKOLA Company, 132 Nassau Street, New York. I.nugliter Saved the Ship. Humor has been credited with the saving of many things, but perhaps never before has a ship been saved by < its judicious application. In a great ; storm many years ago a ship's crew ; were all at prayers, when a boy burst Into a fit of violent laughter. Being ; proved for ills ill timed mirth and asked i the reasou for it, he said, "Why, I was ] laughing to think what a hissing the I boatswain's red nose will make when it ; conies in contact with the water." This ludicrous remark set the crew laugh- , i ing, inspired them with new spirits, and by a great exertion they brought the vessel safely into port.—Liverpool Post. I I A ProfenMor on Rowing;. | , A story is told about a well known Oxford don who kuew more about the travels of Ulysses than about tbe boat he sailed In. lie went down to the river one day to watch the eight prnc- j ' ticing. He gazed for awhile in silence. "Yes," he said at last, "they look very i nice—very nice indeed, I may say—hut how extremely awkward it must bo for them to learn to row backward." Crying; and t-rounliig;. According to a French physician, crying and groaning in pain are na ture's owi. methods of subduing the keenness of physical suffering. He thinks that men should freely relievs. their sufferings in this way and that crying in children should not be re pressed, as in doing so serious conse quences may be engendered. Lyeurgus being asked why, in his laws, he had *et down no punishment for Ingratitude, answered, "I have left it to the gods to punish." IPIRIISr TlisTG rrouiptly Done at the Tribune Olliee. i I NCRTO Superstition. Many of the negro superstitions in Kentucky are quite interesting. An old philosopher tolil me with great gravity: "If you want peppahs to grow, you must git mad. My old 'oman an me had a spat, an I went wight out an planted my peppahs, an they come right up." Still another saying is that poppers to prosper must bo planted by a redheaded or by a high tempered person. The negro also says that one never sees a jaybird on Friday, for the bird visits his satanic majesty to "pack kin dling" 011 that day. The three signs in which negroes place implicit trust arc tlie well known ones of the ground hog's appearing above ground on the 2d of February, that a hoe must not bo carried through a house or a death will follow and that potatoes must be plant ed in the dark of the moon as well as all vegetables that ripen in the ground aud that corn must be planted in the light of the moon. 1 Some Reasons Why You Should Insist on having EUREKA HARNESS OIL Uneouuled by any oilier. Renders hard leather soft. E s peeially prepared. Kvefia out water. A heavy bodied oil. HARNESS An excellent preservative. Reduces cost of your harness. Never burns the leather ; its Efficiency is increased. Secures tiest service. Stitches kept from breaking. OIL |s sold in all Localities Manufnr,ami by Stniiilurd Oil < umiuiny.