A fv Around the Hearthstone. i A SONG OF THE LANDLUBBER. If you really want a song of the sea, Let no sailor that song sing, Bat some lubberly clown from an Inland ' - - town, His song will have the ring. . There never was a man who went to sea, " Abaft the mast or before, Who could sing yon a rollicking song of the sea With a man who stays on shore. Then pass the steaming pnnch around. When the nights grow merry and long; When the' black tides swirl at the har bor's mouth We'll raise the Iubbersong. Oh, the starboard watch was well wound ap, Likewise the port watch too, When the binnacle fell from the mizzen- - top And the chaplain piped the crew. Twas a close hauled reach to nearest beach, And the spanker floated free, As w stood by oar guns of some thou sand tons ". .- . ,. .- With a gale upon our lee. ; '-Jjijt Then blow, ye breezes, blow, And the guns they go bang! bang! A sailor's joy is the harbor buoy; - Hurrah for Li Hung Chang! Our capstan sail was hoisted up, The garboard strake gave room, And we sailed away from New York bay By the light of the spinnaker boom. The captain found the anchor a-trip In the salt of the sparkling brine, And ; the bo'sun said that the anchor - - ' tripped . 5i When Jhe good ship crossed the line. Then brail away on the topsail sheet, Belay on keel downhanl: It's our cowsprit yard that is safe and hard, - 1 And we'll reef in the sounding pawl. New York Press. MADE IN GERMANY. J Anthony Alexander was a woman hater. He was also a strident of philos ophy, very comfortably,, off, a bachelor, of course, and at 40 the despair of de termined mothers and dutiful daugh ters, who, when he came in their way (he did it as little as possible), scarcely -bad heart for aa attack. . . - AJejode made up his mind to learn German, because, he desired to read In the original the vrrks of Kant, Hegel & Co.' In a weekly paper be came en -"the following advertisement: .- "The German tongue taught on a new and speedy system. Apply Herr Schwabb, 6 May street, Plmlico." "Air Squalp?" said the short, grimy maid of thet tall, grimy looking house. 'Fifth floor; first door to the left Mind your feet when you gets near the top; the carpet's gave. Alexander climbed to the door Indi cated and knocked. A sweet treble voice with a strong foreign accent said: "Come in." "What a fool man Is!" thought Alex ander. "The less he can afford a fe male appurtenance the more sure be Is to have one." He entered. he little room was neat? ness itself, fjfiil to torown dress and Wajjgpron stood up to receive -hlmTShe had a pretty figure, rosy cheeks, large blue eyes and an Immense quantity of rdlr hair rolled Into a tight ball -. . . . Alexander bowed stiffly, and said that, having seen the advertisement of a Herr Sehwalb . "Yes," said the girl, quickly; "he Is x&j fader, at alL You want to learn , German, sir?" J. Alexander replied In the affirmative and added that he hadn't much time to spare; he would be glad to see Herr Sehwalb at once. He stood like a tow er, one bristling with battlements. Thg "My fader, cannot tltch now," she sa!d. "Since de notice appear he has a complaint De troat of my fader is ill, sir. He must not spick." Alexander said he was sorry, and with a second stiff bow moved toward the door. "But I, Hedwlg Sehwalb, I know de seestem of my fader," said the girl, with a bright flush. "I can tltch. I have tltched. It Is a great seestem for de adults, at alL" t She looked Imploringly np Into the face of the 6-foot-2 black-bearded quad ragenarian. - He shook his head. . "I'm much obliged." he said. "Herr Sehwalb may be better soon. I'll wait." Hedwlg nearly let him go. Pride and filial love made a sad to-do with her. As Alexander got to the door he heard a, choking voice. 1 ' "He will not be better soon If I earn no money to get him what he wants. Will you try, sir? I am not young. I am 23, at all." "At alll" . This "was one of the first phrases Hedwlg had acquired on her arrival in England. - She regarded It as an idiom of all work, and brought It in whenever she wanted to be particu larly emphatic. "Look here," she went on. T shall give you two lessons, and If you are not contented you pay nothing noth ing and I beg your pardon of you; oderwise I shall persevere tin de troat of my fader is good. Will yon tiy r,K "1 don't doubt your ability." sM ; Alexander, "but " ; ' " , The' expression of his face enlight ened Hedwlg. . -.. "Is my womanliness an objection?" she cried. "!v: . "Er ah really " stammered Alex ander, feeling, it must be confessed, a bit of an ass. - r -, But Hedwlg swept on. . " ". "' ' "Believe me, you will find no differ ences. I tltch like mv t after I tlntr Inot of my womanliness. I tltch like he." - ;-.',:-- r From an adjoining oedroom a door kvas pushed open, and a gaunt, leathery ace, with frenzied hair and glaring spectacles, looked through. - The girl faodded cheerlngly to this apparition, Which Instantly vanished. The blue yes sought Alexander's 'face again. Something glittered in them which was pot allowed to fall. Oh, well, I don't mind!" said Alei- ntfer, hurriedly (to himself: 'What a er) "Will 10 o'clock to-morrow suit pa? And," he added with mare bu- anlty than gallantry,- "! trust Herr bwalb will soon be able to take your ce." ..; - 7: ': I trust," said Hedwlg. 'The rosy e beamed. -7 7. 7 7 exander's face, when he got down lo the street, did nothing of the kind. Beastly nuisancer he said aloud. - hree weeks passed. Herr Sehwalb Vned nearly well again, but the doe- stijl forbade him to teach. Hedwlg given Alexander three lessons a X H was growing strangely re signed to the situation. As long as the books were open Hedwlg was stem, curt dry; one seemed to see the specta cles of Herr Sehwalb on ber nose. When the books were shut she became a charming girl again; and, the transfor mation having taken place, Alexander did not. after the first, make a point of leaving directly, i ' On the Saturday morning which brought the tenth les-- son, time being up, Hedwlg looked gay ly at her pupil, and said: "Don't you tlnk you proceed?" "I'm astonished at myself," .said Al exander. Herr Sehwalb nodded blandly from his chair. "Ah, I told you my womanliness was nottlng," said Hedwlg with a trium phant air. Alexander looked at the sweet, mod est figure in the shabby brown dress, at the round face, flushed with the July heat and with her pedagogic exertions on his behalf. Her womanliness nothing? Well, poor little girl! He asked if she had ever been to Hampton court. No? Would she like to go? Hed wig's eyes spoke. Would Herr Sehwalb trust Alexander to take her down on the noonday 'coach and bring her back by; .6 in the evening? Allerdings which meant she might go, But how long would the frauleln take to get dressed? Hedwlg laughed, ran across the pas sage and in five- minutes reappeared. having pinned a lace collar on the brown dress, loosened the tight ball of shining 'hair and mounted a fresh little hat like her face, one nest of roses. Oh, fairy day! Happy, happy hours! The very sight of the great gates and great trees set Hedwlg's heart dancing, and then the flaming flower beds and cool alleys and emerald grass and dia mond fountains made her cry, "Ach! heavenly! heavenly!" again and again. And Alexander conducted her through the rooms and courts of the famous old palace, and Hedwlg chattered of Car dinal Wolsey as if he had been her un cle, and of Henry VIII. as If she had been his grandmother; and the next thing In order was to order tea in a queer little shop parlor looking on the park, and while they were at tea a beautiful tame deer, with sad eyes, came, to the window and asked to be fed. "Take care," said Alexander, as Hed wlg leaned forward to touch the crea ture's head. He caught her by the hand and pulled her back. "Hirseh we call the animal so," said Hedwig, standing meekly by his side. "How do you call him at ail?" "Deer, frauleln," said Alexander. He had forgotten to let go of her hand and he spoke very gently, and any Ignorant Intruder, bearing what he said, seeing how close the simple, pretty little Rhine maiden and the woman hater stood to gether In the alcove of the parlor win dow, might have fancied . But It was time to go home. Of course Alexander saw Hedwlg safe to the door of 3 May street "I can enough tank you never," she said earnestly. "Gute nacht" "Gute nacht, frauleln; gute nacht." Turning away, he ran against an ac quaintanceJones. Jones surveyed him with a twinkling eye. . - "Changed your views?" "Don't understand." , . : "I thought according to you the beg t woman that ever breathed was only to tis tolerated. . You seemed a trifle over flowing with toleration Just now. Neat HtUe article! " Made in Germany? Hal lo! no offense, old chap! Alexander! no offense, I say." But Alexander, resisting the tempta tion to knock Jones, who was a small man. Into the gutter, stalked away. And, after dinner, in his luxurious study, he sat solitary, and thought and thought He thought of the girl to whom he had given his heart In early days, and who had deceived him. He thought of the undisturbed, regu lar, independent life to which he was accustomed. He thought of his 40 years . And the end of. these meditations was that be went to his writing table and penned a letter to Hedwig. - He said that he was unexpectedly obliged to ' go abroad. He thanked Frauleln Sehwalb for the pains she had taken with him, and begged to inclose the sum due to her for the remaining lessons- of the course. He much regret ted being unable to receive them. He sent hia best compliments to Herr Sehwalb and remained hers very sin cerely, Anthony Alexander. He went to Switzerland, intending to do a mountain or two. But In ridicu lous, defiance of the most elementary rules of physical geography mountains proved flat, so did other things when he tried them. A blooming face under a hat with roses, an old brown dress, a happy girl's voice, followed him every where. At last, leaning dismally over a hotel balcony one fine evening in Chamounlx, he heard a German lady say to a friend: "Gute nacht!" . He couldn't stand It any longer. "Gute nacht" The words called him back to 3 May street, and he packed his traps that night' and to 3 May street be rushes -as fast as train, boat and cab would take him. -The same maid, apparently with, the same dirt on ner race, answered the belL . "Air Squalp? 'E's dead!" - -"Dead?" . .... . "Yes! 'e died. E got worse, and then e died." iuuiT 'lUUUg couchant beast, stuck over with cruel yes a beast that swallowed llTes down, and kept the secret; by day the . sunny streets mocked him with passing faces, with trim figures that In the dis tance looked like hers, with glimpses of yellow hair. -. j : - Or was she back in the fatherland? Safe with friends: with a betrothed lover perhaps? If it were so, and he could but know of It he thought he should have the manhood to thank heaven. He had been returned to -town four days. As be came in late from a weary stretch of walking his valet met him. - "A person to see you, sir." , ,. "What sort of a person H : Alexander's nerves were tn a queer State. He turced very pale. . : - "A w.oman, sir." - - - - "A lady?" v - "I think, sir, she's a nun." ' . Alexander walked Into his ; study. Amazed he saw rise before him a figure in black, with flapping sleeves and flowing skirts. - - . ' , . , ' , A calm, good face looked from under the white band and sable veil, -v "Is 'it you?" said the nun, quietly, "who liave been advertising to discover the address of Hedwig Sehwalb?" His heart sank. . - "Yes yes." . . " ' 1 "She Is with us." ' - "Hedwig! A nun!" She shook her bead with a grave air. "Nuns are not made so quickly. Our order has a chapel and Infirmary near Soho. We work there. Two days ago I foupd the poor young woman lying on the chapel steps. I am Sister Fran ces. She was 111 Insensible; we took her in. Her name is on her clothes: we could not find out anything about her. She has fever It is on the brain she doesn't speak sense. r But we see she is a good, girl and has been well cared for innocent refined. If you are a relative and wish to see her you can come with me." "Not a relative," gasped Alexander, "an old friend." ... The nun bent her head. . "I am sorry to have to say It but there Is no time to lose if you want to see her alive!" , " ! Beds, narrow beds, white beds, sick beds in rows. Walls gray walls, si lent walls, glimmering walls with pic tures. Lighta dim lights, kind lights, holy lights like flowers. And on a pil low Hedwlg's face, with the roundness and the roses and the splendid hair gone from It and Hedwlg's voice bab bling in German wildly. "She won't know you," said Sister Frances. - But she did know him. He took her hand and bent over her and she began talking in English at once. A light came Into the sunken face. "It is you. I am pleased to see yon, at all. I was knowing you would come. What a fine day! What a blue ekyl Happy, happy!" Her gaze wandered. "And. look only the beautiful tame deer! Can I give him bread? No, no. His eyes are too sad! Take him away. I am tired. Gute nacht r Perhaps Sister Frances had had a love story In her youth. . : She turned her back when she saw how Alexander's tears rained down and how he held the poor, delirious lit tle girl In a passionate, yearning clasp. Was it the warm tears, the warm clasp that brought Hedwlg back to' 1 life s shores rrom wnicn sue naa neen fast drifting? Who can say? As soon as she was better Alexander asked her very timidly If some day she would marry him. Ih a whisper came Hedwlg's reply: "I will at all." Answers. STEALING. INVENTIONS. Few Men of Genius Reap the Benefit of Their Ingenuity. Just why inventive genius and gulli bility should go together It Is hard to eav Part a 1 n It la that Inrontnrs arA Certain it la that Inventors are the roost guileless individuals in tnejr dealings with others on business mat ters, and fall easy victims to the spi ders who lie in wait for such flies. The list of clever men who walk to-day, while those who ride owe their luxury to the other man's genius and their presldent of the Liverpool Engineer own shrewdness, is an interesting one. , Society, has been as followsr In Here are a few cases picked haphaz- lg40 a d of coa, propelUi a du. that failed to benefit the inventor, or, at least, produced for him a little of what was his due, ; It is not necessary to be very old to remember when hooks were first put In men's shoes In place of holes, in or der to save time in lacing the shoe at the top. This was the brilliant idea of an inventor to whom it should have brought a fortune. . It would bave done so had he been a shrewd business man ulnnr m r an Invantiw nA hadn't sense enough to keep his idea to himself until the patent office pad- lock had secured It against theft. In the Innocence of his nature the in- ventor confided th idea to a friend while crossing the North River ferry boat, and" the friend hardly waited for the boat to tie np in Jersey City be fore he excused himself, started back to New York and went -on a dead run for a patent lawyer, in order to have the idea secured for his own especial benefit Another man Is known to-day as the Inventor of the lace hooks. He owns a splendid bouse and is wealthy. The confiding Inventor got nothing. The Inventor of a patent stopper for beer bottles, something that bad lonsr been wanted by the trade, sold the in, . venuon ror w,vuu to a map wno rec- j ognized its money-making vajue. The . purchaser Is now worth $5,000,000, all of which he made from the patent stopr per. Out of the goodness of his heart he presented the original owner of the patent with $30,000, so that this man ' got $40,000 in all for his . $5,000,000 idea. To give some notion of the value ' of patent rights on this bottle stopper ' the price came down from $1 to 6 and T cents a gross, and even at this enor mous reduction a good profit can be ' made. . I This last inventor was treated with princely generosity, however, In com- 1 . , , I ' . T , terlocklng horns with balls at Uie end m Vi sure. The idea was afterward applied to gloves and became very much In fa- vor. The Inventor relinquished his prize for the magnificent reward of a latter having been advanced by the purchaser to pay the inventor's ex pense from Newark to New York. The man who secured the idea and patent- ledjt after treating the Inventor in the' royal manner mentioned made a big fortune by his shrewdness. What be came of the inventor is not known. New York Recorder. Goblets. Goblets, with stem and stand like those we use to-day, were employed in fTroy 900 B. O. Among the valuable bbjects recently found is a golden gob-, Idet -Vessels of this metal were com- Jnonly employed in the service of th temples. A curious goblet with three; stems uaa ueeu luunu ai jrompeu. ira fese is conjectural, but the superstition ; Is that it was used to pour libations to the gods. Contradictory. "Don't do that, Harry, somebody may see us." "I don't care. I'm no stickler to form." "Yon seem to stick to mine all right" Brooklyn Life. What He Wanted. f Boy I want to buy some paper. Dealer What kind of paper ? : Boy You'd- better give me fly paper. I want to make a kite. Scottish Night The right kind of a person Is always glad to get home, after beltg away on a Ttolt. :r ' 3. - I in SHEEP SHEARING. Kxpertness of Professional Shearers In New South Wales. Most of our readers would probably think that, to shear, say. twenty or thirty sheep, would be as much as the most skillful and industrious shearer could do in a long day's - work. They may. then, says Chambers Journal, be interested to f know what ";vasily , greater numbers ra re expected to pass through the deft hands of a capable craftsman in the pastoral regions of the great sheep-keeping colony of . New South Wales. Our , notes have been collected on the spot. . . . ; . , " '.. The, number of sheep a : man can shear in a -day of eight and a half hours is governed by several circumstances over and above the shearer's expert ness, depending mainly on the class of sheep and the nature of the country over which the sheep have pastured. Of all, the breeds of sheep nierimos are. the most difficult - to shear.. In the first place, they are very "throaty" that Is, the skin covering the neck lies in large, loose folds, so that manip ulation with the shears is at best tedi ous and troublesome. Then, again, they possess what is technically known as the "points" of the breed they are wooled to the tip of the nose and down the legs to the hoofs; it is these so called "points" that take np time. . Sheep grazing over pastures where burs, grass seeds, twigs, etc., are nu merous, or over coarse, sandy coun try, pick up in their fleece quantities of foreign matter that blunt the shears during the process of shearing. It will at onee.be seen that this especially ap plies to short-legged sheep, heavily fleeced as the merinos are to the ex tremities of their limbs. The time taken up sharpening his shears . is a serious consideration to the shearer. Bad or careless shearers, in order to give the sheep the appearance of being properly shorn, may either "shingle" or "feather" the fleeces they cut off. By "shingling" Is meant mak ing a second cut over the same part of the body of the sheep, the first sev ering the staple toward the center, and the second close to the skin; yet the whole fleece holds together and the damage may not be detected till closely examined. On the contrary, "feathering" Is plainly seen as soon as the fleece Is shaken out; here the. clip has been uneven, - leaving patches of longer wool to be severed by a sec ond cut This leaves a quantity of short wool In the Inside the fleece, which readily separates when the fleece Is unrolled. "Shingling" Is the worst fault as It quite ruins the sta ple for combing purposes. In the mountain districts west of the table-land the average number of sheep a fairly good man will shear In a day of eight and a half' hours varies from seventy to 120. On the northern plains near the Queensland border the average Is 120 to 170; and It Is on rec ord that the champion, shearer of Queensland clipped 827 sheep In nine hours. Such a man, In the language of "the seed," is termed a 'ringer," In the central plains on the Lachlan River the average Is eighty . to 120, With machines the numbers are, of course, considerably more. The men are Paia Per iw sneep; anq out or this they have to provide . rations, , shears, sharpenlng-stones, oil, etc One Pound of Coal on Steamship, The value of one pound of coal at different epochs of steamship evolu tion na plven hv Mr. A. J. MeGinnls. placement weight - of .578 ton eight knots; but the earning weight was only one-tenth of this, .90 per cent of the displacement representing the hull, machinery and fueL . In 1850, with Iron vessels and the screw propeller, a displacement weight of six-tenths of a ton was propelled nine knots by a pound of coal; but the proportion of cargo had risen to 27 per cent, or .18 ton. In I860, with higher boiler pres sure and the surface condenser, .83 " Wwement was -propelled ten knots, and be cargo was 33 per cent, or 'f ton- In 1870; ater e compound ngl,ne bad fome int0 l;8 t08 VWh ieu auuu., and here the cargo formed 50 per cent, of the whole, -being nine-tenths of a ton. In 18S5 there were two classes of freight boats; the "tramp" propelled n A ' . t , . i i" . . o.- ious displacement eigni ana one half knots, with 60 per cent or two " tons of cargo; at the same time the enormous cargo steamers of the North Atlantic were driving a displacement of 3.14 tons twelve knots, with 65 per cent, or 1.7 tons of cargo. . On the moJern exPres! Passenger steamers - tne car80 welgnt IS down to .Otf ton , per pound of coaL-Rallroad gazette, j was Man n Amphibian ? Man was said to have descended from a g00(j many types, by different In, quiries into ancient history, some ech n2 for monkevs or anes. and others for various species of animal life; but some curious cases of hereditary web bed hands and feet In human beings seem to show that our ancestors may have been amphibian. An Instance of this kind of heredit ary peculiarity has been reported by Doctors W. R. Smith and J. S. Nor well. In the case of a family, nearly all the members of which were affected by a malformation of hands and feet ueuueuieu, me uecoua ana tnira nngers were webbed to the tip, and the bones were dlsPMed In an extraordinary manner ' Each foot ha1 mnra, less webbed, except the fourth, which , - - i was comparatively free. These peculiarities have persisted through several generations, and It was found that twenty-one persons out of twenty-eight had been malformed in this way, and In all cases in both hands and feet Dead Man's Claim. Among the rich mines in Leadville Is one called "Pead Man's Claim." It seems a certain popular miner had died,. and his friends, having decided ( to give him a good send-off, hired a man for $20 to act as sexton, it in the midst of winter: there were ton feet of snow on the ground, and ih grave had to go six feet hein th The grave digger sallied forth Into the snow, depositing the corpse for safe- keeping m a drift, and for three days nothlne was heard from him x eat Ion sent to. find the fellow iii..,. ed him digging away with all his might, but found also the intended grave con- . verted into the entrance of a shaft Striking the earth it seems he had found pay. rock worth $60 a ton. The delegation at once staked out claims adjoining his and the deceased was forgotten. Later, in the season, the snow having melted, his body was found and given an ordinary burial In another part of the camp. Boston Journal - 7;-' . ; ''.Beaton for Confidence. : , Richard But what makes yon feel o sure that she will marry you? I Harry--WeIl, you see, her ; mother I hare engendered a mortal ha of mcU other. Boston Transcript A Common Inequality. Unless you are the one person out of every fifteen who has eyes of equal otfhar lrji right-eyecL : You also belong to the small minority of one out of every ten persons if your left eye Is stronger than your right As a rule,' Just as people are right handed, they are right eyed. This ' probably due to the generally greater use of the organs of , the right side of the ; body, as, for : example, a gunner,, using his right arm and shoul der, uses his right eye, thereby strengthening it with exercise. Old sea captains, after long use of the tele scope, find their right eye much strong er than the left- This law Is confirmed by the experience of aurists. If a per son who has ears of equal' hearing pow er has cause to use one ear more than the other for a long period, the ear brought into requisition is found to be much strengthened, and the ear which is not used loses its hearing in a corre sponding degree. - Proof, v.. "Jinkles is in love," tr marked a young man. - "How do you know?" "I've seen him out bicycle-riding four times with the same girl." "That doesn't prove that be is in love with her." - . - "No. But they were on a tandem and she weighs at least 180 pounds." Washington Star. '"GREAT PERSONAL EVENTS." A series of articles of unique interest has been undertaken by the Ladies' Home Journal. It is to-be called "Great Personal Events," and will sketoh the most wonderful scene I cf populnar enthusiasm and thrilling hit -torio interest which have ooourred in Amerioa during the past fifty years. Eaoh one will be graphically detailed by an eyewitness, while leading artis's have been employed ' to portray the events in pictures made from old ilia trative material The series has just been started in the current number of the magazine, Hon. A. Oakey Hall, er. mayor of New York city, sketching tl e scene "When Jenny Lind Sang B Castle Garden," which still stands the' greatest single concert in the annals of American musio, . Mrs, Henry Ward Beecher in the following issue will tell of a remarkable scene io which her husband was the central figures "When Mr, Beecher Sold Slaves in Plymouth Pulpit " Then Stephen Fieke will portray the furore and exoitement "When the Prince of Wales Was in Amerioa." Parke Godwin will follow this in a succeeding number with an account of the unparalleled exoitement in Hew York " When Louis Kossuth Rode tip Broadway." . Hon. John Russell Young will sketoh "When Grant Went Around the World," Mr. Young being of General Grant's party The great scene in the senate chamber "When Henry Clay Said Farewell to the Senate" will follow. Lincoln will figure twice in the series; First, in a description qf ''When Lincoln was First Inaugurated," and, next, "When Lincoln was Buried," The stirring story of the discovery pf gold by John W, Maokay will be revived iq "When Maokay Struck the Great Bonanza." The series will extend through, all the numbers of The Ladies' Home Journal during 1897. There is no form of energy that is so far reaching in its benefits to the welfare and comfort of the world as electrical energy. A TBSACIOC9 CLUIC I Is that of dyspepsia, than palliate this obstinate complaint. stiii ate complaint. Tn j-kw reiDeti fi nil in 1 1 r . Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, however, and vou wm find that it is conauerabie. aiomt with its symptoms, heartburn, flatulence, nervousness and loss of flesh and Tieor. Biliousness and constipation frequently accompany it. These besides malarial, rheumatic and kidney com plaints, are also subduable with the Bitters. They say in Texas that the cowboy of the future will use a wheel instead of a horse. One cowherder in Atchison, Kan sas, already uses one. ' Piso's Cure for Consumption is our only medicine for coughs ana colds. Mrs. C. Beltz, 439, 8th ave., Denver, Col., Jfor, 8, "95, Sun spots are believed tq be openings in the sun s pbotisphere, or luminous enveloj. e through which the orb is seen. HANDS ForRll kinds of work furnished free on short notice, Address Higley's Employment Of fice, m Tbird street, Portland, Oregon. . ! If you pick up a starring dog and make him prosperous he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man. DIAFJICSg CANNOT BB CURED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by' constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed f ywVft Vsntiriiy dMnu the result, and unless the Inflammation can be SJKWS taken out and this tube restored to its normal ! er.: i nine rn tmn Ant nf Inn m r a nan on A Kv nularrh whiph is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. ' i -We will give One Hnndred Dollars for any case of deafness (paused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Bend for , circulars: free. Sold by druggists. 75c, Hall's Family tint are the best. . 'The chemical constituents of the mush room are almost identical with those of meat, and it possesses the same nourishing properties. "Actions " speak louder than words" aslcypurgro- L i t j .,. -' Dack yOU don t like Scitl- ' 2Wc ?c fM 'j"" est , 4 Scwmn, & cnp, aan rimacuoo This Shoe Picture Shows a stylish shoe; but does not show half of the shoe's strong points. It is a plump calf, calf-tipped, has tough, soft topping, reinforced lace stays, extra broad outside and inside back stays, solid double soles and slug heels that can't be run over. Portland's Greatest Store offers this shoe to its mall order customers as a . special bargain. IN BOYS' SIZES, II TO 2. T 11.80 PER PAIR. IN BOYS' SIZES. 2 1-2 TO 8, AT 12.20 PER PAIR. New square toe, if yon prefer, instead of Vi'a Will n&T the ixnn nr pointi t shown. mail charges on these shoes, and will ' send one of our new Fall Catalogues to mui vuBwwcr wno D9M not jeceivea one. OLDS W KING, 302 Washington St. PORTLAND, OR. FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or "jfuet Don't Feel Wall.' arathsOnaTabia'toua, Sol bybracaistaAttSo. a box 8wspl.asuai.dfr, AddrM Or.taSMtoKMU.rku, fa. Till.,., j 11 1-"-, . Georgia's Convict Law, The next General Assembly relative to the disposal of the convicts will pro vide for a general stockade system that will permit of the constant im provement of the country roads during workable weather and afford other means of employment, during severe weather. . How beet to settle the convict ques tion has been the text of many lec tures and innumerable editorials, and the trend of popular opinion is towards the above outlined plan. Clarke County Is not to wait for the general measure, however, and it will have perfected a similar system long before the State machinery Is put In motion. The Good Roads movement is constantly grow ing, and soon the State of Georgia will be as conspicuous for her graded high ways as she Is now for her dangerous gullies. Banner, Athens, .Ga. : Good Ronda and Prosperity. Good roads are as essential to the prosperity of the country as the proper machinery for cultivation Is to the farmer. A farm that is easily accessi ble, by reason of good roads, is worth double to the owner what It would be otherwise. In no country are good roads so easily obtainable, with so little cost as they are here, and In no State is so little attention paid to them. Little chuckholes are left until tbey become dangerous, a plank breaks in a culvert and It goes until some valuable animal has become crippled. Road overseers tart In some work by tearing up the road and then leave it unfinished for months while the public Is compelled to drive around the obstruction. Our road laws are faulty, we admit and under them it perhaps Is Impossible to have good highways, but at the same time It Is within our power to elect men to the somewhat humble and not very lucrative office of road overseer who will take an interest In working the roads. Let property owners and neigh bors In each respective district get to gether before election day, and decide upon some man who will fill the office right, and not leave It until the last day, and then perhaps by a dozen votes put some one In who cares little and ; has no Interest whatever to prompt ' hJm.Leader, Irving, Kan, Winter Reaort Hoaclp, The advantage of having good roads at summer resorts was never so strong ly shown as during the present season. And what Is true of northern summer resorts Is equaly true of southern win ter resorts. The locality that can "offer the very best roads will present a strong draw ing card, - People with enough money and leisure to go on extended outings, will, hi most Instances, desire to do more or less riding and driving.' T hi is rjartlcularlv true of winter resorts. i,,,i, v.,Hni, nnai,,fo, mii , Inasmuch as boating constitutes a small ! part of winter pastimes. Many of the southern towns and cities are realizing the true condition of things, and axe taking steps toward making the needed Improvements. The wheelmen of Atlanta, Ga., are looking forward with, no little interest to the reorganization of the Good Roads Club, which takes place on Oct 16. It is the intention of those at the head of the club to obtain the hearty co-op eratlon of all wheelmen, and when this has been done and the club fully or ganized, It will be able to work much good In that city. The elub has for Its object, as Its name Indicates, the build ing of and keeping In repair good roads throughout that city and county. Other fowns in the "Sunny South' are looking after their best interests by providing fine streets and good roads. No town with highways of mud or sand need apply. People do not care to go on an outing and pay for such luxuries. Cool Batbs for Coughs, A physician ; advises ' cool sponge baths twice a week In winter and oft ener in summer for the cure of the common "children's catarrh." The baths should be given In a warm room and be followed by friction by rob ing to produce a glow. If they are not followed by a chilly feeling or headache, the reaction has been prompt and beneficial. The baths should be begun with warm water, changing gradually In succeeding baths to tepid, then cool water. It is well, too, to begin this treatment in the spring, sum mer or early- autumn, rather than in midwinter. They will stimulate the circulation, prevent colds and act upon the nasal membrane, as upon the rest of the body, to promote Its healthy ac tion.. .Mothers with children suffering from catarrh should guard them zeal ously from colds In every way pos sible. Every access of inflammation upon such chronic cases is a good deal more than a temporary step backward. Tartar Medicine. Formerly musk was used as a medi cine in various parts of the world; but doctors hi civilized lands do not hold musk in high repute.. In China it is still thought to be a very good medi cine; but the Chinese have queer no tions about cures and charms. . Abee Muc, a distinguished traveler, says that when a Tartar doctor finds him self "without his drugs and medicines, be Is not In the least embarrassed. He writes the names of the needed drugs on slips of paper, And these, being rolled up In little balls, are swal lowed by the sick man. "To swallow the name of a remedy, or the remedy itself," say the Tartars, "comes to pre cisely the same thing." St Nicholas Persia's .Learned Sbah. ' -.; V There Is every probability that the "lion" of London's next season will be the new Shah of Persia. His majesty is a very learned personage. He Is a lover of poetry and has an extensive acquaintance with general science. He wishes to extend his area of knowledge by personal observation.. Hitherto his studies have been founded principally on Plato and Herbert Spencer, but he has now ordered a supply of modern English poetry, by poets still alive, to be forwarded to him for perusal, y. He Is a bit of an author himself, and has even rhymed a little for amusement. i The average woman wears a corset as long as If It cost $20, and she never expected to be able to buy another. fas! rv Co : -' if f .F" ... Given Away j i liSJHlil4Vtfi $ this year in valuable j 8 !j 1 articles to smokers of I " 1 'ijrPill'-. Blackwell'o. .- ; H J I 1 ' D 7 Genuine " " j j I 1 1 "(Durham j 1 ! Y; ' Tobacco j! 0 wilUiiliiilUiHiuiliUu'iii t iill. "' ' Yn wu one coupon In- , J ! x " - " ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 tff 11 Hiin Ul Vth't t i'i Vm ilif iaa - side each 2 -ounce bag, and two X . . I coupons inside each 4 -ounce j J 9 Tne Best I bag. Bay a bag, read the coupon - 2 S bmoklng TObaCCO Made and see how to get your share. 9 v US Greatest Quantity. (W The largest piece of strictly high grade tobacco ever sold for the price Not the large size of he piece alone that has made "Battle Ax" the most popular brand on the market for tO cents, QUALITY; SIZE; PRICE, Cheapest Power..... IN GUARANTEED ORDER i-i H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline. 1-2 H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline. ; 1-3 H. P. Regan, Gas or Gasoline. i-j IP. Oriental, Gas or Gasoline. 1-4 H. P. Otto, Gas or Gasoline. 1-4 H. P. Pacific, Gas or Gasoline. i-6 H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline. -i-io H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline. State Your Wants and Write for Prices.,...,.. i0S-7 Sansome Street San Francisco, Cat... Gas, Gasoline and Oil Bottled Up! Whether in the form of till nowder or liquid, the doctor's Drescriotion for blood diseases is -always the same mercury or potash. These drugs bottle up the poison and dry it uo in the system, but they also dry up the marrow in the bones at the same time. The suppleness and elasticity of the joints give way to a stiffness, the rack-. ing pains of rheumatism. The form gradually bends, the bones ache, while decrepitude and helplessness prema turely take possession of the body, and it is but a short step to a pair of crutches. Then comes falling of the hair and decav of the bones. a con dition truly horrible, t.. Contagious Blood . Poison the curse of mankind is the most horrible of all ' diseases, and has al ways baffled the doctors. Their pot as h and mercury bottle np the poison, but it always breaks forth again attack ing some delicate organ, frequently tne mouth and throat, filling them with eating sores. S.S.S., is the only anown cure tor mis disease. It is guar anteed purely vege table, and one thousand dollars reward is offered for proof to the contrary. It never fails to 'cure Contagious Blood Poison, Scrofula, Eczema, Rheumatism, Cancer, or any- other disease of the iood. If you have a blood disease, take a remedy which will not injure yon. Beware of. mercury; don't do violence to your system.: v Don't get bottled up I Our - books sent free to any address. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. WHEAT. Make money by suc cessful speculation in Chicago. We buy and sell wheat there on margins. Fortunes have been made on a small beginning by trading in futures. Write for full particulars. Best of reference given. Sev eral years' experience on the Chicago Board of Trade, and a thorough knowledge of the busi ness. Downing, Hopkins A Co., Chicago Board of Trade Brokers. Offices in Portland,. Oregon, and Spokane, Wash. - . a .. SURE CURE for PILES IMBtftf IM BUBO, BMMlBfOr mffMlIf FlbM MM t MM BPOTASHf MERCURW 1 I) 5mtet Highest Quality. Rebuilt Gas and Gasoline Engines. ..FOR SALE CHEAP Hercules Gas ....Engine Works Engines, 1 to 200 H. P. HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL III L I0PPERTS FiCI BLEACH. In Tort, Into, Ckbp FNtlurf, Or. MME. A. RUPPKRT says: "I appreciate the fact that there are thousand and thousands of the ladies of the United State that would like to trr my World Senowned PACK BLEACH : but have been kept from doing o on account of the price, which I 13 ner bottle, or S bottlei J2 per bottle, or S bottle n order that all of these taken together Sft. in order that all of these may have an opportunity, I will mall free a ample bottle, safely packed, plain wrapper, on ample bottle, s receipt of 25 cents. FRECKLES, pimples, moth. aallownes, black heads, acne, eczema, olliness or roughness, or any discoloration or disease of the skin, and wrinkles (not caused by facial expression,) FACE BLEACH remove absolute ly. It does not cover up, aa cosmetic do, but it is a cure. i . Send for my book "How to be Beautiful,' free on application. Address all communications or call on MMK. A. BUPPKRT, . Boom , Golden Rule Banding, Portland, Or FRAZER AfjrE BEST IN THE WORLD. - VliVCHwC Its wearing q Bali tie are nnrarpass ed, actually Outlasting two boxes of any other brand. Free from AniTMl Oils. OFT THE gkmiink. - - '- FOR 8A IX BY OREGON AND lay-WABHUeTOM MBKCHAMTSTQ , and Dealers generally. 1111 xw core T ' 5jrera. or . laJULMI r ilCt .....Special frle List of : HOUSEHOLD COOOS. ETC. 77- ,., .. . nisi J U.JII . This circnlari issued for the benefit f ernr-. country customers who eannot avail themeelvee- of our Daily Special Sales. Send us your ad. are.. Yon will and both goods and pr right. WILL FINCK CO., prices 81820 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. TtTJPTTJRK and PIL.KB cured; no pay until XL cured; send for book. Drs. Manhkikld A Pobtebpixxo, 838 Market St., San Francisco. 3 I taiAMknmtim BioSl Pa t I I mfroa, gna bra r I 1 5 1 - (